.1. .'jxota Cotmty Herald DAKOTA CITY, NEB. IOHN H. REAM, Publisher. . '.-m Rppa1.iT Cni'i 'M s:v-, .-. egress wlii to slow. And ho know., if anybody flees. Generally 11 Is t!n Minn who iIim nut Own btit hil t s nil aUti.illoMlo V. ill ic.nls tlie fastest 1 i : o. Some iiji'ii r.ro welched In tho bal ance nnd r mini wanting, while ollics are wanting something nil 1he time. A steer from Oiiinlii h.ts taken first honors nt tho ('hie.igi livsiook s')w. Wo limy have to nimo. hat presump tuous country jot. . . . . A Ixi- in jdwayi; tin acceptable Christmas gift. 1r.it a !!:; leaf I'mvi a .check lxiok generally brings more happiness In its tniln. Some of tin- men who this season were mistaken for deer mill shot, pruii ably loft families wlni nre now tryin;; ts keep the wolf from tho door. A California limn named Pitcher h:is boon awarded, u divorce because IiIh wife drunk to excess. Pitcher mast have grown tired of suolng her rusli the can.' Two nttsbnrg nion have been sen tenced to the penitentiary for stealing S cents. lA-t ooplo who nre niMieteil t the hHhlt of robbing their babies' bnnks liewiro. A faint Idea of the destitution pre vailing la nvtnln portions of India may hi gathered from the fact that seme of the naliolm have only thirty automobiles apiece. A Brooklyn magistrate has divided that no woman has tlie right to compel her- hnsband to scrub the Door. How can there be equality f the koxcs while such decisions are handed down? It Is. alleged that the eagle on the new ,20 jold piece looks like a goose. We have been so busy keeping our $'.) Bold piece la circulation that we have had no time to notice the contour of the bird.. It seems like the most natural thing In the world to hear a Uusslnn prais ing our. navy. Indeed. It Is one of the distinctive ehnrnoteiiHtios of the Bus elnns( tht they have , always kind words for the United Ktntes. Please emit n sigh Tor the woman who mini a New Yorker to rei-over $ln,000 a damages for two kisses he hod taken without permission. She Rot nothing. The jury at least might hare been yinpathetlc enough to ren der a verdict that ho return the kisses. As usual after a financial crisis, banker. uro the need of establishing 1 this country something like the Bank of England to manage the nn- , tlonal currency. Tho present system is antiquated and bad, and. any su Bertlon fsr Improvement deserve re- vspoetftfl examination. , SurgeoaOenoraT Blxoy ha, r'tvom. mende In his annual report that an order be issued forbidding the use of cigarette to all persons In the navy under 21 year old. If the order were made and enforced. Dr. Wxey says, the nick-records would be Hmaller and the general chVleuoy of the service would be Improved. ' That wt a wise word which Ambas sador llryco uttered at the oponlug if the. international Young Men's Chris tian Association convention In Wash ington tho oUier day, when he aald that very upright life counts fur good gov ernment Tho source of reform n gov ernment baa always been In the pur poses of an awakened voter. In the very American stnto of Okla homa is a little group of fifteen indi viduals of as. puro American blood as can b found In -tho oolmtry! They . own property to the extout of twelve square miles, .and are reported to be In a flourishing condition. TUey are fifteen buffaloes which were formerly part of the herd lu the New York Zoo logical Park. Their Dew home la like that to which fbelr ancestors were ac- . customed, and it Is boied they will thrive better than they could In n city, and that they will have thousands of descendants.. ."A man." says a newspaper story, , "made millions In his ninety years of life by never'" doing the . usual thing." These are nmuc uf the things he never did: 'He never traveled;, he never Joined anything;' he never paid for a ticket of admission j he never ate In a tint el or restaurant; his total expendi ture for csr fare was less than ,no dol lar; for forty years he had not voted; he wouldn't smoke, not because 'it was .harmful, but because It cost him twelve cents a week. And when he died he bad amassed f I.fKKVriX). Poor, lone some old man: The world was no let ter off for this man. lie took all It would give, hut he gave nothing In re turn, either of money or sympathy or life. So, when he died, Jhoy told about blin In tho newspapers, und uow'oihers will upend the money that 'he gave up everything to gut her. Thvbt, can't 'be many who care whether he is gone or not. -Probably !u hn l a few who loved lilm, because the moat unlovable us are nearly nlweys loved l y o;ue, '.ly I!ut there Isn't any nre. t full of fri."i,V. who feel tlint snii'.r!.l -g leu goiie i,::; of their live'. IK ha.-irt left an empty phHv; for he i:eviv cired ii'i.mt -otlr H?op!e cr other thiivji, or to nee nrf know and li:i(t; r:'!iMnl r,.d f el. linj fn put out his hind g,.i 1-...M toe hiind of the -fir. Volmr. Ilvlir: w.ir!d nroirid h!''.i. I'e.iple . :y "'"Init's a ijueer'sN'ry !" It's ino-v i!:ii( a i)i'. 'er H.iry.' It l a tr;-g-.:y, Iicmus:- i U till- s'ncy ' a i in.i y.-.'io .1! -.1 j,ihj be h.:d hr.i:i ;.- i!ve, Ry a happy dh: M r e. i n unveil ing of ii ii'.iinir;i:l il.itiii to (J' icon vic toria at I.eiiii.- K'.-o'IaiiiJ, fcl ou the day of the publication of tbs first vol umes of her , letters. Lsrd Btusbory mrile the address at tho un. tilling, nnd although he did not allude to the letters, his oration was. precisely In the spirit of them. They rsvoal a simple, oaruoHt, womanly' nature, with V.o hint of the Intrlgno and Jealousy mid self-seeKlug which so commonly hedg.. a throne. The queen's devotion to tlm dtitles of every day, as her lot tees reveal It, her rigid Impartiality when she wns called upon to deal with men some of whom she disliked as much as she HkM others, her gentle tlrniiN'ss when her ministers tried to igi;o'e her, and her Insistence that she would not delegate her actual rospon MMIity to any other hand these ara Cie trails of a good mother quite as iiuiHi ns those of n groat qneon. Txird llosebory dwelt upon her womanliness m il its utiroekoned powers for good. Speaking of the tlsy when, ns a mere girl, s'le came to the throne, he snld, "'Jiieen Vletorln was then, as It were, th. child, the darling of tlie peojile, and she lived to become their venerat ed mother." "Mothering" her subjects wns n noble work for a lifetime. To this Ixird Itosobery bad the courage to add one other ground for natlonnl obligation to her. "Not tho least of Ihe service that she reidered to us," he boldly dnelnrod, "Is the effect of her Ir.ilulng and example iiihiu the present King." It was a fitting time and place for n grave tribute to tho royal moth-j -i n lojiii will. in uuriwnr, wme lll)l(- matist, peueemakor, he Is doing honor to her training, nnd showing the world how the mother be sho high or lowly -rwlelds s power beyond tho queen's. Nothing In the development of Amer ican taste Is more hopeful than the! waning of tho spread-eagle oratory' and of turgid rhetoric In writing. The, passing of tho pompons and artificial; In public discourse may be witnessed! throughout tho Kiigllsli-fqieaklng world.i for the faults of tho old style, like many American fallings, were not po-l miliar to this country. In a recentl address at Edinburgh University Mr., lialfour said that.. good public speak In:? Is merely heightened conversation.! That Is. It Is nntural. sincere, but pol-i Ished and correct; Just as In fiction the conversation sounds like peoplai talking, but Is easier nnd mors firmly' constructed than the spokpw sentences; of real life. In the old ,day the law-' ery: manner, employed by a master,; could convey groat matter and achlevej poetic lieauty. Webster could talk ln periods 'and " not "sound like play- acting." But much which pa.sned with! our forefathers for eloquence would seom to us prolix and falxe. The mas ters of the old style were splendid, but their imitators were dull and hys terical. The lieghinlng of the change came when men, like Lincoln and Ileecher and the cool headed politi cians of moderij England and America turnnd flielr thoughts, not to the sounding-board nor to a select audi ence, but to millions of people. Their words had to stand the test of print, and be road by a growing multitude, which wished above all things to un derstand what was meant. Tna Speak er of the Urltlsb. House of Commons, 'in a recent address, gave a hint which explains tho change. He said thnt the most elToettve orator at the present time is he who best understands and has mastered his subject In former times the punos of the crator was to stir up his hearers to lead them to act, although they might not know why they were to act To-day the ob Jict Is .to coavince, and thorough preparation and simple, direct dis course are mora effective for that thaa ornate sentences and the abundant gesticulation of the earlier method. CLOTHES SHOW NATIONALITY. Chararterlatls Fmtmrrm mt Ilea's nraaa Hers u4 Abroad. A man's dresw Invariably proclaims whonud what ho U; it la an Index to his character, his tastes and his na tionality; and without maklag a too nbtnwe stuily It Is posalMa to Indlcato those feature which proclaim tha na tionality of the wearer, says the Tailor ami Outter. Of course there la an aris tocracy of the nations who ars difficult to distinguish except by some, peculiar ity of face or figure. Tlia4r clothing is rotlnad and tasteful and leads one to bellevo that their garments are Londoa made, us they are free from those glar ing peculiarities which characteri the products of other countries. Tlw American's garmssts are gener ally quite two sizes too largo for him, the collar of his cost is ssooedlngly narrow awl tlie Blsmhlers and back ex cessively wide. Ills Jackets are often extremely long ami hU 1 rowers peg tops finished with raised seams. Ills favorite (jsnnenta are the lounge and Chesterfield, and these are often fin ished with as much ornamentation as possible. Bilk facing, braided edgss and fantastic flaps are all characteris tic of his dress, while he also pays a good deal of attention to his hat, tie and cuffs. The Cerman Is In many Instances n modified American. He likes plenty of room, especially about his chest, which part, of .his anatomy he delights to make much of; consequently there Is often n seam up the front of his coat from the waist. In cut his garments are angular and In style he favors the (nornlng coat and lounge. There Is a lack of personality alnit tho attire, and one can invariably detect the result of his military training In tlie uniformity of his garments. The Spaniard Is a imxIinVd form of the Frenchman. Ills g-irnients are tast.'ful nnd neat. If t!i. weather Is nultalile 'he dUinrili n vest, mil bis ; '.! are ilo-e titling and U'iU'1,',1 with a low roll. Ceuer.illy speaking there Is l.'s pjvulliuit.v to note alhuit the Spaniard's dress t tin u whli many others: A I n a )- it t II. , Mi!. Prase My husband and I nev er diiipu'e liefore the children. W nlva (.end them out wlien n quarrel Keeii!.s IniJiilnejit. Mis Sharp Ah, I'va ofnu wondered why they're so much ill the snvet 1 ! you know a man who docs his work with greater case than you do jours? Why'not leuru from hliu? tTNCLE SAM'S Chicago Tribune. NEW ARMY BXTLLET.' Bellavad to n Improvement Over On Son In Vnr. The new army bullet has a sharp point It will Increase the effectiveness of long-range infantry and cavalry fire in battle, because the de crease fn the trajectory enlarges the danger ssone. Tho new bullet re quires an elevation of the rear sight of the gun i - ( .i , . S I J juma less lor 9 Q 1,0()0 yaixls fire than the 100(1 standard govern ment bullet It requires half the wind allowance, has a trajectory of about 33 per cent less than the oj old bullet, and Its muzzle velocity Is 2,700 feet per second, as against 2,200 feet per second of the loot! model. It has a sharp Instead of a round point, and Is slightly longer than the one now In use. The philosophy of the new bullet Is thnt the sharp point cuts the air as the prow of a boat cuts the water, and sends It off from the sides at an angle of about 30 degrees. The round point of the old bullet causes the air to hug Its sides, and the resistance to be over come Is on the sides ns well as at the poiut, and Is, therefore, greater than that which the new bullet has to en counter. Thl9 tends to Increase tlie ve locity nnd flattcu the trajectory nnd so not only renders the fire more accurate but considerably enlarges the danger zone of long-range fire. With the pres ent style bullet In nse, at 800, 1)00 or 1,000 yards, an opposing force of Infan try Is absolutely wife at any point within the range up to 230 yards in front of the firing line, and a cavalry force Is absolutely safe at some polU( within the range. This Is due to the height of the arc descrllied by the pro jectile In Its flixht through the air, and Is frequently taken advantage of In time of war by scouts who wish to get nearer the enemy than the main body of troops can approach. In tho recent rifle contests at Kansas City team captains and others who were In terested In the work of the men shoot ing spent much time between the firlm: jHiInt and the targets In order to ob ' tain a better view of tho targets, nnd 'their position, apparently dangerous. ' was perfectly safe. With the flatten ing of the trajectory, or arc, this safe ty tone Is greatly decreased and the effectiveness of the fire, therefore, In creased In tlm same proportion. From a humanitarian standpoint, the new bullet Is said to be suiHTlor to tho old one becauso It cuts a cleaner hole, with less tearing and mutilation of the tissues, thau did tlie round pointed bullet, nnd. paradoxical as It may sound, is really less hurtful. a STRENGTH OF LEADING NAVAL POWERS A - IL I i m ' ' mm af itiM i n ii L-a' y ..-. cv royy Itrltunnln .tlll rules the seas, as the above picture hos. wi''!o l'ncl 8iuu Is now second in lighting tonnage, having passed France' rcvrtly Ii number of enlisted nieii tlreat ltritaln's lead is even more htriklng. as de plctinl In black figures. England has !is.l7:i men. tho L'niteil Stute OI.'J-HJ. Urance 42,40i., tienusuy 41,070, Januu 31,002. PIPE . OP PEAC. though more deadly, than . the bullet now In use. The new bullet Is superior to the old for long-range fire only, and has not yet been adopted by the army for rupid-ilre or skirmish work or for any work at less than (MM) yards. The pointed bullet Is uot a new Idea. Various types of It have been In usu In other countries for more than ten years. Thu United States is the last nation u to adopt it, but by delaying has been able to produce the most ef fective bullet yet manufactured. This wns proven In the recent International mnteh for the Palnm trophy, when the American team, using the new bullet, not only won the match over six teams from other nations, but. broke the world's record for Individual and team rifle fire. Liked the Test. Spejiklng of the letter "h," a writer snys: "Curiously enough, the 'h' Is not dropiied north of Yorkshire, nnd Scot land, with characteristic thriftiness. takes the utmost care of It Ireland Is prodigal In emphasizing It, and si far ns I know tho colonies are also sound on this point Only England re fuses to aspirate. Sometimes her con istent inaccuracy In this niattcr, Is Amusing enough. "For example, there Is n village In the custom counties which rejoices in tho name of Haw. A parishioner wns nskod what he thought of n stransu preacher who hnd been holding a serv ice in tlm village. "'Well,' he snld, 'I liked the gent Io nian. 'Is tex' was Just suited to u:i folk.' "'Why, what wns his text?' " 'It wore n tex' from the Psalms, "Stand In hawe and sin not" it sound ed so 'onioly lolko. " It IMdu't Work. "I can't keep the visitors from com- lng up," said the office boy, dejectedly. "When 1 iy you're out they don't be lieve inc. TJuy suy they must so you." , , , "Well," said' tho editor, "just tell them that's what they all sny. I don'l care if you cheek them, but I mus! have quietness." That afternoon there called at th office a lady with hard features and an neiil expression. She wanted to see tlu editor, and the boy assured her thnt it was Impossible. "Hut I numt see hliu!" sho protested. ''I'm his wife!" -That's what they all say," replied the Imy. That Is why he found hlmseif on tlm floor, with the lady sitting on his neck and smacking his head with a ruler, and thnt Is why there Is a i.ew boy wanted there. Don't be like the hen; When It lays nn egg It does nothing else all day but call attention to It. qtimm flirfNlf idt.Hl, tr --n 7'i; V. V' 7 I ', i h - i J II rr n ; t ! L" ' C V - . I I THE CHILD AS A C0i:i. ... Just en ( 0 ) Iron, or . so they struggle to g';t hold of ihildren to make money out of them. The annual report from the Southern co'.tou mills tells u Unit tiO.t'OO children under 14 yours of age out of 200,000 taxtilo work ers are In the mills. More appalling still Is the story of child labor In the glass industry. KXV. It. D. HI I.MS. Carry the atmosphere of overflowing kindness and sym pathy toward all children. Make friends with bootblacks and newsboys on the streets. P.eioiig to nt least one boys' club, class, Sunday school or settlement. Become a friend of some poor family. Give thoni good counsel and advice, and In the time of crisis tide them over their emergency. Keep In touch with those noble physicians who always will step in, and, without any charge what oever, help carry your oor family or poor child through their trouble. Make friends with tlie schisil teacher re lated to the workiugman's household. Sjieak for chil dren's playgrounds and tho park. Help see to it that u9 man In store or factory hns degraded childhood or coined children Into business ns a commercial assot, lest you full under condemnation. DON'T TAKE LOVE FOR GRANTED. By Helen Oldficld. i There Is an old story of a man who wroto to the editor of a famous newspaper asking for simple and certain directions how to distin guish toadstools from edible mushrooms, lie complained that he was uunble to undurstand the difference as explained lu the book, and said that he wanted something plain and defi nite. Tho answer given was: "Eat thoiu. If they kill you, they are toadstools. If you nrvlve, without the aid' of a stomach pump, you may conclude they are mushrooms." In like manner, when a man In In low with a woman DAWN IN THE COUNTRY. The sun is lifting up its bend . And nodding to tlie world ; Ths morning glory's left its bed. Its petals psdc unfurlud. I)awn chased away tho will-o'-wisp ; The owls no longer soe ; Tht bird-notes float out clear ami crisp From yonder willow tree. The brook is rippling fresh and bright Along ths deep ravino. Past violets blue and violets white, i Past ferns and grasses green ; The dew has left the clover sweet Where bei begin to hum; And to the poppies in tbs wheat i The butterfllm have come. So waken, ere the scene is gone: ' Refresh your weary eyes Upon the beauties of the dawn 'Neath summer's country skies. ' Ladies' Horns Journal. 1 5n Everybody in Three Pine,- said It wu a good thing whou at' ttio close of tha Bpring term of court Legale lilnglu a divorce from Tod Iliuglc. People said they were surprised that she showed enough sense to take back her maiden nume. For over since she had run away at the age of 1(5 with Ted lliugle, who was not so very much" older, and married him with a future assured by nothing further tiian Ted's contagious laugh and ability to see a Joke, Lesste had been regarded by the populace as beyond hope. They did net relent even when all their prophecies of wim to follow were fulfilled. They said they did not sec what else she could have expected and It was ouly a proper judgment upon her. To some people It Is one of the chief joys of life to witness retribu tion descending where they think it is most needed. . It certainly descended on Iessle. The four years of her married life had gono stendlly from, bad to worse ana ut last even the two-room cottage, with the leaky roof and broken window panes, was no longer possible, because tho cold weather was coining ou and there was uo fuel, even If there had been a decent stove in which to burn It The lack of proRT food she was used to one can get used to many things in four years but the cold was diffpr ent, especially as sho had tho baby to consider. After she had taken the fat and pla cid 0-uionth-old youngster aud herself back to her own people In sheer des peration the maledictions which her relatives poured out on Ted Uingle en couraged her to the point of socking a divorce. The current of bitterness In I.eshle's owu heart had only required accelerating. If Ted had boon consis tently brutal toward her sht could hne hated him with bettor grace, but she could not forget the brief Intervals when he could stay at home, laughing and careless and attractive as ever, with the few dollars he had earned trapping up the river or working by the day. Then would come long spells of ab sence or drunkenness, followed by re pentance. Meanwhile the family ex chequer was absolutely empty. Those had Ik-oii years of hard tin! for Lessle over washlub aud In other wom en's homes at Iiousccleaiilng time, 'i'lie town.-people gave her credit nt least for IxNirlng her lot uncomplainingly. P.ut the Imliy had changed all this. What s!'o had s'o.h! she refused to en dure for I lie child. After the decree I.essie left tk; baby at h.iuse with her mother and sister nnd went to work for the Grahams. TV Grahams had the nicest house lu town. lassie's room, which was gor goousncss itself compared with what she had always h-id, was uot the least of her good luck. Them actually una a servants' bathroom at the Grahams 4ou lu white enamel. Likewise she I Her Faith i u, m. - ASSET. D wight HllUs. struggle over oil, or CAUiOIX d. whig n r. had a gas stove and Mrs. Graham rarely came Into the kitchen to Inter fere. Three Pines, looking over all these items of good fortune, sighed In satis faction and said It hopsd.LessIe ap preciated what luck she was in. Sho wns more comfortably housed than nlne-tentlis of the population and actu-. ally earned money, though she did not work ns hard as she had done previous ly. Since sho had seen tlie .4f: of her ways there still might be hope for her. Ted Hingle was eliminated from her life and perhaps now she could gain a little ieaee and happiness. Three Pines was disposed to mitigate Its opinion of Lcssie's Intellect nnd to think that perhaps she had some sense after all. ' Whenever she could take time from her work Lesaie always hurried home to see the baby. "Of course he's getting along all right !" her mother would say. "Better'n when you were with him ! Oh, he cries some, but thou 1 have to do my work and can't hold him all the time. That's foollshneiis!" Lessio had been working for the Gra ham's four months and was thinner and paler than ever when Mrs. Grn- I ham came into the kitchen doubtfully one day. "Lcssle," she said, "Tod P.ingle Is In town. Mr. Graham saw him lu the .street yesterday. I thought you might like to know " I.ossle tightened her lips and the cake spoou bent In her hand. "I don't rtli PUT OUT A DETA1NIN0 HAND. care," she said lu a hard littla voice. "What difference does Ted ISiugle make to me ?" "I.essie lias got all over her Infatua tion for that worthless fellow," Mrs. Graham explained to' her husband with a satisfied sigh that evuu'.ng. Lessie was iroliiL' In nt tlie Lit. !,..., door at dusk a few days later when iwi put out a detaining naml and stopped hor. "I I 'want to talk to you, Lesaie," stiinmii'ivd he. "An" I want to hear about the the baby." When Mrs. Graham handed Lessle her wages Saturday night tlie girl raised her head defiantly. "I'm going to leave," sbe said. "Ted and I were married Hgnlti this afternoon. We the baby an' I nre going back to him. He says he's hud his lesson, Mrs. Gra ham. He snys he'll work steady:" Throo Pines hnd no words to express Its disgust with Lessle F.iwtle. People siy that the next time she has to leave Ted find strike out for iKMstOf she mav Ii l i work, but she c.iu never ho;.e for a white enameled bathroom nnd a gas range su 'h as sho had before und de liberately threw away. Moreover l'iv say, It w ill only serve her right. 1 ul cago I "ally New s. Ihe liurrh Fair. "None but the brave deserve the fair." Aye! None but the brave a fair would dare ; For when the "fair" ladies begin their advances Sure, every man present has got to take cliniuvs. Tho Catholic Standard and Times. ml ' Hfe and desires to know whether sho n-clprocatcs his attach ment, the inot certain and quickest way of finding out Is to ak her. True, women nre "kltlle cattle," and do not always know their own minds, nor menti what they say; still, generally, the presumption Is thnt when a woman promises to marry a man she Intends to do so, und Is In lovo with him. Of course it must be remembered that (here Is a great deal in knowing when and how to ask. Many a uiUn, who otherwise niiht havo won, has failed because he had no discernment of the' proper psychological moment, nnd has proposed Inopjiortuuely, when his Inamorata was not' 4u the humor to be pleased with him, or, fur that hiatter, with anything else in the world. WOMAN IN INDUSTRIAL UPBUILDING. By Carroll D. Wright The rich nnd. powerful employer, with the adjuncts of education and great bushiest training, holds in his I ii 11 nonce something more than tho meuns of subsistence for those he employs; he holds J heir moral' well being In his keeping. In so far as it is in Ills Hwor.-to hold their morals. He Is something more than a producer; he Is an Instrument of God for the upbuilding of the race. Woman shares In this upbuilding, for the new Industrial order has opened u field of Independent em ployment for her. From tho opportunity to enter Indus trial pursuits she has fought her way up in the ranks of labor until she can stand on the plane of the highest, whether in the professions or In the nrts. She Is au economic factor now, nnd her Importance Is recognized. To-day, both for men nnd for women, the whole matter of the consideration of their condition be comes Intellectual. They nre curried onward nnd up ward by the power of mental activity, and cannot be treated separately, as of a class, ns they could In the oldoii time, because lu the olden time they were neither a social uor a political factor. jf. .tin Invention The liunimlug bird In Australia, na less fliiin man, protects Its habitation with a lightning rod. The humming bird, before a devastating thunder, storm bursts, prudently covers the out skk of its little nost with cobweb. Silk Is a non-conductor of electricity, and since cobweb is silk tho humming bird's nest Is thereby rendered light-ulng-proof. In a recent article in the Street Hail, way Journal on "Transportation Fa cilities In South America" it is stated thut transportation Is so difficult over the mountains that the coal imported Into Eollviu for the railway's own use costs about $'!() jht ton. At La Paz abundant timber grows within lifty miles from the mountains, but trans portation Is so diilicult that trolley poles and lumber for building opera tions are brought from Oregon, a dis tance of thousands of miles. A- sanitary garbage wagon used In Berlin, says Popular Mechanics, is com pletely covered by a large hood of sheet metal, with a rt or chute or funnel, which elongated upon the roof of the hood curves downwnrd at the back end, where It Is open to receive the refuse. The garbage is placed upon a movable platform under the mouth of the chute and raised by chains into the luteiior. A trap ihKir opens by tho turning of a lever und tho box diverts its contents into the body of the wagon, odor and all. The British Admiralty has Instruct ed tlie commanders of nil ships of war furnished with wireless telegraph up-, pa rat us to telegraph to meteorological stations with which they may be in communication full details concerning the weather at sea. This. now brunch' of the English meteorological service has already proved valuable, and-it is .believed that Its importapce will con tinually increase. Weather information from the sea Is of special value In the British Isles, been urn the great storms generally approach across tlie ocean, and not, ns In the eastern half of the I'uited-States, across a broad con tinent nutted with telegraphs. By crossing and selection, a now va riety of cattle, known us the Bordolalse race, bus been developed in Southwest ern France. Tlie two parent varieties nre the Holland and the Breton cattle, the one famous for the abundance of their milk, the other for their vision of butler. The I'.ordelnlse pro race. whoso tlrst herd book appeared lu issn. vSl, of Is said to combine the excellences Us two progenitors. Its most charac teristic pxtoiv.itl mark s tho black-and-white tiger pattern covering tlie body. In tlie pure breed the head is entirely black. Tb;- mine, conies from the city of Bordeaux, the metropolis of tlie re gion where the new race Is bred. It Is a matter of i o;:;:nim observation that grass dues in t grow ro well cioso to trees as in the open. Tho same Is true of graiv:x. Experiments in Eng land and In ihis country hive shown that the deletcr;i its etVi.:-;s of the near niig'ilx'irhood t-f grass and trees 'are mutual. The live- suTcr lis well as the grass and gnin. This is especially true of fruit trees. Ti'.ii cause Is us crltuil to tin- eeie!i n by the trees, on the one hand, of substances prison ous to the grass, and by the grass, on the other h.ml. of s;ibs;ai:oos poison ous to the ire s. it ,1 s e.:rs that the iaihire '1'.; -ass I . . . well near 'V trees should nul ' ' to torn much sb i le. the tree Vool id by the :; r o , ii. ion by -J f t ';e ii i 0 .'.' need- Tour. in 'i ii "Some men," i close wif in-.:. i. much I'uiii a I would f'ui.i a br ton Star. 'r llt-uriihtrlutfa. 1.1 t'l: -i." Klicn, "Is so ii;.( ('. y s. lifers ns ''.I'll !?-'! bill as (ley ;'u iic.iri." Washing- It Is mi oas matter to accomplish some great things, otherwise the av erage uiuu wouldn't e. en have a look-lnw