TACTS IN TABLOID FORM. Three-fourths of tpiiold patients re under 30. In Madagascar everyone wears ellk, Whlch la cheaper there than linen. Great Britain has 600,000 horses available (or the purposes of warfare. Plana are being made for the elec Vlflratlon of the more Important State f&llwaya of Sweden. New Jersey gets 18,000,000 a year from Its oyster beds, but could get $40,000,000 from the same source If the available tide land was properly seeded and cultivated. The Radium Institute of Heidelberg, to be opened before the end of the year, will be the first of Its kind to begin actual work, as an endowment has been raised for It. After having been in use since 1750, the Testament used at the Essex ses sions court at Shelmaford, England, has now been replaced by a new one, the gift of E. North Buxton. The bottle that keeps Its content! hot or cold for hours was no catch penny Invention. The glass vacuum Jacket waa first devised by Lord De war in 1895 for his experiments In liquefying air and gas. Poison from eating vanilla saucei or Ice cream thus flavored Is not un known. Vanllllne favors the growth of certain poisonous germs. Vanilla sauces and Ice cream should be eaten when first cooked or frozen. Lucerne Is to be sole airship sta tion for Switzerland, and a station bouse Is to be erected at a cost o! 700,000 francs. It Is hoped soon to establish regular communication b tween this town and Frledrlchshafen. That pear tree with which Count (Ceppeleln's airship lately came Into collision has been Bold to an ebonlst at Stuttgart. This artist proposes te work the tree up and sell the artlclei as souvenirs of the event in the form of backs for books, pin trays and rul ers. Counterfeits of the same naturt are already ca tie market. A manufacturing acu makes light, strong papr garcwat for hosplUfl use butioas and clotSi edges. Then are paper boUles. Paper horseshoei more durable and lighter than Bteel, stuck on with cement, not nailed. Thus It is invention, not pity and prayer, that relieves the pain and thraldom of man and beast. Papei reinforced with wire mesh makci houses, boats, hospltala, etc.; is Are proof, waterproof, heat and cold proof. New York Press. Browntall and gypsy moths art causing great damage in various parti of New England. People at lust hav learned that if they would preserve their shade and forest trees they must fight the moths, and official moth do stroyers are coming to be regular of ficeholders. The little things have be come such a pest that municipal and State machinery Is working with thai of the federal government In the ef fort to op their onward march. A tig British doctor finds that th tru of the body in which cancel start, such as the lower Hp. liver, etc., are h'.phly electric and radio active. A piece of the lower hp, if laid on a photo film, darkena It the same at does radium, but if a piece of the lung cancer seldom comes in the lung is put on the photo film nothing hap pens. So the doctor argues that high ly electric flesh Is the main secret ol cancer. Woman's flesh is more ele trie than man's; cancer la commonei In women. New York Press. It will be great satisfaction to thos who are fighting for the preservation of the Adirondack forests to lmrn thai the first two of the oil-burning loco motives to be used have proved slg sal successes. The only complaint against them Is based upon the rapldl-j ty with which oil makes steam, but this is hardly a serious difficulty. It . this reform can reduce the number ol Arts by 30 per cent, as is expected, it will prove the most effective meant yet devised to prevent the devastation of the north woods by flames. Troy (N. Y.) Record. The first successful towiug of canal boats by automobile waa accomplished recently on the Lehigh canal. Owing to the liability of the towline to simp in the effort to start, George B. Plum mer, a Camden automobile expert, equipped a seven-ton motor truck ol 45-horse power with spiral springs, Six barges with 800 tons of cargo wen taken from Allentown to Bethlehem In an hour. Present lock capacity and peed limitations considered, It la es timated that automobiles, compared with mules, will handle double thi number of boats In half the time. Philadelphia Record. An idea of what the Panama canal construction means to one Industry in his country may be gleaned from th fact that almost a million tona of ce ment will be used In the gigantic work. Shipments have already begun In steamers owned by the government, which will carry about 8,000 tona at a trip. It Is estimated that it will tak about four years to deliver the 4,800, 000 barrels of cement contracted fot at the present rate of shipment. Th government will profit by using lti own vessels instead of chartered ships, as there will be no charges for de murrage in case loading or unloading la delayed by storms. "In my Bohemian days it was my fortune or misfortune, as the caw may be to meet often and to know well the American burd, Walt Whit man," writes William Winter. "It li scarcely necessary to say that he did not impress me as anything othei than what he was, a commonpluce, un couth and sometimes obnoxiously course writer, trying to be original by using a formless style, and celebrating the proletarians who make the world almost unlnhnbltable by their vulgari ty. With reference to me, Walt'a vlewi were expressed in a sentence that, doubtless, he intended as the perfec tion of contemptuous indifference, 'Willie,' ho said, 'la a young Longfel low.' " Moat of those who say they do thf Jxwt they know how, don't A EBRARY WnLhL - HE development of tli9 free circulating library Is one of the outstanding features of this ng. Mr. Carnegie and others have scattered libraries vo freely throughout the land that, there Is now scarcely a town or vlllcge that has not some sort of a library. But It nas remained fnr the Washington County library of Hngf rslown, Md., to develop the limit of fnr mill t inn of books, ami to demonstrate In a very practical sense that books are published to be road, not to be stored on shelves. The Washington County library docs not wait for reader to come to it; it sends out a colporlour, not only to carry books, but to npread the gospel of literature In isolated rural regions. The itinerant library, drawn by a pair of sturdy horses, has become a familiar sight In the Washington County taction of the Blue Hldge. Like the semiannual appearance of th'- tin peddler' cart. Its approach Is an oc currence quickly heralded throughout the neighborhood. The housewife throws a sunbonnet over her head, nnd, followed by one or two barefooted children, runs out to the roadside to see what the good uatured bookman has brought on this round. The chickens follow hotfoot, certain that such a commotion can only mean that tome app'-C.ins dainty Is about to be distributed. In the middle of this scene of domestic activity the Itinerant bookman stops and descends from his lofty neat. "Good day, Mrs. ," rays he, as he winds the reins about the whip stock. "How did you like the last book?" "It was pretty good. I liked that part where it said, "To be or not to be, that Is the question.' That's the way lots of fanners' wives feel, I reckon. I let Mrs. , down ihe toad apiece, take it. She said she liked the way the wind and thunder and lightning flared around In 'Macbeth, because It reminded her of the way It flares around her house sometimes. She says It's awful; almost, tears the house off the cellar. I reckon she's right, for that's the way It blows around yero. Have you got 'The Duke's Revenge?" I heard that book cracked up once. What do you want, Mary?'' addressing the older of the two girls. llrromtiiFiMla (iotxl Literature "I haven't the book you mention," says the book colporteur, opening the doors of his wagon, "but perhaps you would like 'Marina, the Epi curean,' or Cray's 'Botany.' The 'Botany' would be Interesting, I think, for It describes the plants and flowers, and tells how they grow. Or, if you want a story, there's 'Kenllworth,' or 'A Tale of Two Cities.' Mary would like those books, too, I'm sure." "What cities are they Baltiino' nnd WaKh'n'ton?" "Oh, no. They aro two European cities, Paris and London. The hook (ells about some people who were mixed up with the French Revolution, and had some exciting edventures and narrow escapes." "Well, if you say it's better'n 'The Duke's Revenge' I've heard so much about, I reckon mehbe we 'uns better take it." "Here it Is," replies the bookman, taking the volume down from the shelves and handing it to the woman "Let me leave the 'Botany' with you, also. You can learn something about the flowers as they come along. Mary RUSSIAN JAIL HORRORS Brutal Executions of Men Who Are Condemned to Death by Court-. Martial. SUSPENSE OF THE DOOMED. Member of the Second Douma, Im prisoned at Sevastopol, Telia of His Gruesome Surrounding's. A touching letter has been received rom M. Lomtatldze, a member of the second douma, at present impr'soned at Sevastopol, the essential part of which, according to the London Dally News, are as follows: "Sevastopol Prison, April 2. It is not the first time that I have been a prisoner nor the first time that I hear and see what Is done within prison walls, but that which goes on ljere Is so far beyond the ordinary that the very recollection of It makes me speechless with horror. "Many executions take place here. During the time I have been here that is, from the end of last May more than Beventy persons have been executed. At the present time there are fifteen persons In the prison awaiting execution. Ninety others in this session alone are : waiting sen lence. All cases to be tried by court martial in the government of Taurun are heard in Sevastopol; hence all doomed to death are brought together hern from all the ends of the govern ment nnd here are executed. Such executions take place In the courtyard of the hospital. I'oreril to Willie Kirrutlun, "At times I have to see with m;- own eyes ail me norrors, to uasii my self against the walls in impotent rage, to swear, to shriek, to knock and to listen to the cynical cries of the jailers and police, with the polio master at their head, all this tiin crowding the courtyard of tho hos pital. "Those condemned to death wait several months for the execution of the sentence. Each night they expect i to be taken out, so that they do not lie down to sleep until morning conies; only when it la morning, wearied out aud broken with the strain, they sink down like dead and Bleep all day. "But It turns out that they will hang nobody to-day; it only seemed to the prisoners that they would. Yet it is Impossible to sleep. The authorities open the cells and begin to restore order. Beatings begin; then to pre vent shrieking they gag them; they curse with rich oaths; they take away bed, soap, sugar, tobacco, etc. "Then the execution must lake place in reality. That is already known from the evening, for it Is seen from the number of eofflua brought In how many persons will be executed at night. "The knocking of a hammer begins; they are unfettering the criminal; but to make up for this they fasten, so iignny that even blood Is drawn, his hands behind his back; they bind his LITTLE ABOUT EVERYTHING. The average life of a mouse Is three years. A watch 1b composed of ninety eight pieces. In Japan dresses weight. are bought by There are eighty-Ux annual holidays In Russia. Tho Erxberg, Auatrlu's Iron moun tain, will furnish ore for 1,000 more yeaia. C0EB. NOW FIRST legs aud beat him without cessation, (iiiaranteed not to shriek, they carry hlni to a cell, a dark room, and throw him on tho llocr, where he lies until the scaffold Is ready and the governor and other authorities arrive. "The cotlins are brought '- and put near the scaffold. Ready! T!ie con demned are carried in like lo-s. They are dressed In shirts and drawers; they are barefoot and trembling from cold. First, they put them on tln ground, then with caution they unbind Persian gulf region holds the reo ord for beat. Servla's parliament Is known as the "Skupstchlna." Food commodities In Belgium have risen 20 per cent. An Inch of rainfall represents 100 tons of water to the acre. Mexico has a brewery which has an nual receipts of $6,000,000. Yearly Immigration into Canada is ouefortleth of her population. -? "' m pw-'-KW?. mx&fcfc'0, '- XU&, ' ' . a ' :. , i V i i 1 nnd your ofier girl may be interested In it. Wouldn't you like to have it, Mary?" he Inquires, turning toward the larger of the two barefooted girls with a genial smile. The smile completes the book missionary's conquest, and the barefoot miss looks up from beneath her sunbonnet, extends a hand for the book and takes It with a whispered "Thank you." The Itinerant librarian takes the nnme of the person to whom the book left on the last visit has been transferred, fehuts the doors over his shelves, climbs to his seat, unwinds his reins and, the chickens being no longer under foot owing to the discovery that books are not .good to eat, drives off up the dusty road. So he goes up and down the mountains day after day, helping a farmer to pick out a book which will be of benefit to him in his work and opening windows upon scenes in many lands and times to the uncultivated imaginations of the young people. Work of the Vmnt Year. In the course of the last nine months of 1908 each of the sixteen routes In the county was traveled twice, and some of them three or four times. Several of them require four days for the journey, while others can be covered in two or three days. Only a few can be covered in a day. New routes are constantly being mapped out, and it Is expected that a second wagon will be required soon. Last year 3,700 books were circulated by the wagon. It was estimated that each of the volumes was read twice, and some of them three or four times, as it became the habit in some neighborhoods for the households to exchange with one another. Wfien the wagon does not contain the book desired a memorandum is made and it is forwarded by mail. The zeal of the Washington County library in spreading the use and love of books has found expression in many other ways. The Hagerstown school children were first sent to the library once a week to listen to stories read by an assistant. Then a school circulating library was started, and the teachers throughout the county were invited to enter a race as book circulators. The school at the village bearing the startling name of Rohrers ville last year carried off the palm, having circulated thirty books 387 times among its pupils. The county, at the instance of the Hagerstown book propagandists, established seventy-three deposit stations throughout the county for adults. As a result, according to a careful statistician, the mountaineers in 1908 perused the contents of 11,156 books 22,569 times. The library also received assistance in developing its circulation from six teen Sunday schools. IN THE RACE FOR TITLE OF PREMIER SLUGGER. them, freeing their legs from the ropes and stand them on their feet. "At this time there Is a noise In the prison, the funeral man 'a i.s sung, sol diers run about giving orders to be silent. All this, as is to be expected, raises up In the criminal the desire to live, to live at all costs. He falls on his knees, weeps, prays, tries to kls the people's hands. Hnliti I mil the Kntl. "The executioner comes aud puts his hand on Ills shoulder; he falls on his Epidemics of cholera always travel from east to west. The Arctic air Is very favorable for the transmission of sound. Nine days' sickness per annum la the average for the human being. Corn la our greatest crop, that of 1U08 being valued at 11,616.000,000. Envelopes were Invented In 16S3, and were in disfavor for a long time. Some of the cigars of the Philip pines are two and ouehalf feet long. Cobb his made such strides in hitting: the ball that he has passed Eddie Collins, the star of the Ath letics, and is now at the head of the American league batting; list. face. The Jailers rush forward and lift him up. He begins to kick, to yell and to howl. Oh, I never have heard anything like It! I do not know what howls like that; there Is nothing human in it, and yet nothing of u.o beast. I have seen how oxen and heep and pigs are killed; they bel low; but this is something different. A few times more they kick him, they drag him up with great trouble, they struggle a little with him. "And all this happens under my window. I have tried to get myself to sleep early, lying down at 6 o'clock. trying to go off to sleep. But this does not seem to lead to the desired end, for as soon as they begin to put up the scaffold a sentry always knocks at my door, with the warning that I am not to go to the window, otherwise they may fire and send me, without judgment, iato that other world." A German is bringing to America a circus of trained ants. The Insects throw Bomersaults, make pyramids. dance, wrestle and fence. England spends $40,000,000 a year for eggs and poultry, for one-half of which she la dependent on foreigners. Nebraska Experiment Station has kept a careful lecord for ten years of milk cows, and they report a net prof It of $-10 from each cow a year. Cut a chip of camphor, light it, and set it on a basin of water, when It will continue to burn and float until it is consumed. In 1847 postage stamps were first used in the United States. The entire native population of Si beria does not exceed 700,000. Church Members Increasing According to Census Report Church membership In the United States Increased from 32.7 per cent of the population In 1890 to 39.1 per cent bf the population in 1906. according to the New York Sun's digest of the re twrt of the census of rellgloua bodies Just Issued by the census bureau. The relative gain In the sixteen years Is, for Protectant bodies, 1.8 per cent; for Roman Catholic, 4.4 per cent; for all other bodies together, one-tenth of 1 per cent. The number of rellgloua de nominations In the United States Is given as 186, with 212,230 local relig ious organisations,- 32,936,445 church members, and $1,257,575,867 invested in church edifices. The total for 1906 is 186 denomina tions, against 145 in 1890, an In crease of 41. The total number of or ganizations covered by the 1906 cen sus was 212,230. This is an increase since 1890 of 47,079, or 28.5 per cent. The Protestant bodies Increased 42,- 564, or 27.8 per cent; the Roman Catholic Church, 2,243, or 21.9 per cent; the Jewish congregations, 1,236, or 231.9 per cent, and the Latter Day Saints, 328, or 38.3 per cent. The eastern orthodox churches in creased from two organizations in 1890 to 411 In 1906. All other bodies increased 299, or 64 per cent. Of the 212,230 organizations in 190the 164 Protestant bodies reported 195,618, or 92.2 per cent; the Roman Catholic Church, 12.428, or 5.9 per cent, and the remaining bodies 4,130, or about 2 per cent. In 1890 there were 165, 151 organizations, the Protestant bodies controlling 153,054, or 92.7 per cent; the Roman Catholic Church, 10,239, or 6.2 per cent, and the re maining bodies 1,858, or a little more than 1 per cent. The general order or rank of the principal religious bodies in 1906, with respect to the number of organizations, was: Methodists G4.701 Baptists 54.8S0 Presbyterians 15.506 Lutherans 12.703 Roman Catholics 12,482 Disciples or Christians 10,942 Protestant Episcopalians 6.S45 Congregationallsts 5.713 Evangelical Association 2,738 United Brethren 4,304 Reformed 2.585 Adventists 2,551 Jewish congregations 1,709 Christians (Christian connection) 1,379 German Evangelical synod 1,205 Latter Day Saints 1,184 Friends 1.147 Dunkards 1,097 The Methodist bodies reported 30.5 per cent of the entire number of or ganizations and the Baptist bodies 25.9 per cent. Thus the.se two families embraced considerably mnre than one- half of the organizations in the United States. It is stated that in all Protestant bodies the membership is practically adult membership. In the LITTLE CURTAIN LECTURES. If you don't care any more for wom en than you're always saying you don't, why do you become so mighty show-offy whene you meet a new bunch of women? Tell me that, Mis ter Crafty! There'll come a time when you'll be sorry for treating me as if I were the dirt under your feet! Well, you must have been busy do ing something, for you didn't kill your self writing while I was away, 1 must say. Why didn't you tell me before we came out that my petticoat was show ing beneath my skirt? If only I had my life to live over again, heaven knows I'd never marry such a , etc., etc. When I stop to think of the sacri fices I've made all these years, and all for what? I could cry my eyes out, deed I could. Jealous! Who. me? Pooh! If I was going to be that silly I'd take pains I became jealous of somebody! Well, you're mighty trembly and grouchy and pale for somebody that says he's been on a fishing trip, that's all I've got to Bay. Well, If you wrote to me every day I was away, as you claim, then I'm go ing to write to the dead letter office for those letters, that's all! You'd just love to reduce me to your own level, but you never shall, so there! COLT LEAPS INTO A BUGGY. At Delaware, Ohio, a frightened colt Jumped Into a buggy In which were seated R. K. Willis, his wife and 10-year-old son, causing a runaway. The Willis family and the colt were thrown out In a heap. All were badly cut. PROVERBS AND PHRASES. Praise a fine day at night. Irish. There is a witness everyhere. Greek. Emulation plows, and rivalry reaps. Irish. The sweetest grapes hang highest. Spanish. The remembrance of past labor is aweet. Irish. Woo to him who la alono whea he falleth. German. -is t -y , 'rv4i -; - Roman Catholic Church all baptised persons, including infants, are re turned ns members. In order to rend er the figures more nearly comparable 15 per cent has been deducted from the membership returned from th Roman Catholic Church to cover thoa under 9 years of age. Among the Jewish congregations only heads of families are reported as members, so that the strength of this religious body was greatly understat ed In the report. The total increase noted, 12.367,530, is exclusive of Jew ish congregations. As to the latter it Is shown that the 1906 total repre sents heads of families only, while the 1890 total Includes all members. Of the total number of members re ported 61.6 per cent were returned by the Protestant bodies, 36.7 per cent by the Roman Catholic Church, and 1.7 per cent by all other bodies together. In 1890 the Protestant bodies report ed 68 per cent of the total member ship; the Roman Catholic Church 30.3 per cent, and all other bodies to gether 1.7 ier cent. The rate of In crease shown for the Roman Catholic Church was 93.5 per cent, more than twice that for all Protestant bodies taken together, 44.8 per cent. The census of 1906 collected for the first time statistics of the membership by sex. Of the total number of members returned by 3ex 43.1 per cent were male and 56.9 per cent female. The number of church edifices re ported ws 192.795, an Increase sine 1S!0 of 50,308, or 35.3 per cent. This represents approximately sixty new church edifices each week, or eight each day, for the sixteen-year period. The figures show that in twenty-nine states a majority of the members be longed to Protestant bodies. In sixteen states to the Roman Catholic Church, and in one state, Utah, to the Latter Day Saints. The states and terri tories for which a majority of Roman Catholic members were reported, with their respective percentages, are: New Mexico 88.7 Rhode Island 74.0 Montana 73.1 Massachusetts 69.2 Nevada 66.7 Arizona ' 66.2 New York 63.6 New Hampshire 63.0 Louisiana 61.3 Connecticut 59.6 California 58.0 Vermont 55.9 Maine 53.3 New Jersey 51.5 Wisconsin 60.5 M:clii"an 50.1 In tvo states Wyoming and Colo rado the largest proportion, although not a majority of the members, were Roman Catholics, and in one state, Idaho, tho largest proportion were. Latter Day Saints. I rir 4 t TTTTiri nunrrnTTT TT TFT BACK FROM EAST RETIRED. C.S Having reached the age of 62 year. Rear Admiral C. S. Sperry has been placed on the retired list of the navy. The admiral Is now engaged with the Newport conference at the war college and will continue in that duty until he has completed a certain Hue of work which he has mapped out When this is finished, it is expected he will retire from active service. The ad miral's last important sea commanJ was that of the Atlantic fleet, which he brought from San Francisco byway of the Pacific Ocean and the Suez Canal to Hampton roads. He reached the rank at which he was retired about three years and three months ago. On cigarettes to the value of 6, 250,000 smoked in Spain last year, the government made a profit of 2,- 500,000. The infant death rate of the fash ionable end of London is 1 per cent, while that of the East End la 38 per cent. Submarine cables cost $41,000 a mil to lay, and the length of their Ufa is between thirty and forty years. In a favorable wind a fox can scent a man one-quarter of a mila away. 1; r.I T. V -X'. ': . :.(. ; 1 1 ,1 T I .. L i i i ii in in. I