Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CITY, NED IOHN H. REAM, Publisher. A lawswt l. no tM f of tluic nml money. If a nuu Is Iniwiipcteut ho usually chorgos It up to bad luck. Ma with long heads ore capable of Using tbom ou short notice. Hnppy in the spirit that makes two lay of sunshine grow whre only one rvw before. The man arrested In New York for marrying eight women ought to he ndd- d to the Carnegie hero medal list. The girl graduate who morrlcs at commencement I the present heroine of the bon-bon school of romance. It Is too late, perhaps, to ask the woodman to snare that tree. What Is needed now la to reproduce that tree. "Eight-hour day for wives," Is Brest Cent Roosevelt's latest slogan. Where's a man going to spend the other sixteen boars?' Owing to the kind of perron he has confessed himself to be It Is oidy fulr to assume that Harry Orchard einokes cigarettes. King Edward has decorated Caruso With the Victorian order. This will help materially to make hJm worth the price he demands. Schoolgirls klRS each other Into grippe and fever, Dr. Drake says. It must be really dangerous for girls to be kissed by anybody but a man. A Baltimore physlclau assures us that kissing Is not so dangerous as many bacteriologists assert. A lot of us have been brave enough to risk It, anyway. A London scientist says strawberries cause people to become sulky. lie may be mistaken. It Is usually the lack of strawberries In the shortcake that makes people Ill-tempered. Emperor William has about made up Ills mind not to hare a world's fair In Germany. Germany Is doing fairly Well, and he probably thinks It would be foolish to disturb her. After the scientists have succeeded In weighing and photographing the soul will they be good enough to furnish di rections for preventing It from leaving borne without permission? Dr. Evans, health commissioner, gives It as the result of his observa tion that It Is better to be born a hog than a human being. Doesn't the doc tor know that somo men find It easy to be both? , , Stories of boys who began small and bave waxed big are still told, In spite of the cry of lesseulng opportunities and all-embracing "trusts." The latest la that concerning a boy who began by aweaptng out a railroad ofllce at three dollars a week. He bus Just been .made freight manager, at u salary of twenty five thousand. But ho has not been aweeplng all the time. W- ' ' . ' Friends of the Indian will rejoice In the fact thst the lives of countless red skins will bo saved by the recent arrest of a 13-year-old Massachusetts boy. He had dug up the hatchet, struck it deep Into the war-post, and sturted for the i far, far West. Ills armament was an air-rifle, a raiiorj a pair of brass kuuek les, two toy pistols and a sword. He bad run away from his home, and. his mission was the extermination of In dians. But ho had thoughtlessly omit ted to put any wampum In his pocket or any parched corn and pemmlcan In bis pouch. lie got hungry, applied for belp at a police station, and there his romance ended. ..-,, If the writer of this ever sets nnt nf the newspaper business and finds that be baa an unsatisfied deslro for more , good reading matter he expects to drop Into a newspaper ofllce once a week and buy a nickel's worth of old papers, lie will probably get twenty-five ex change and half of them will be met ropolitan not more than a week old. Out of the bunch he will get a lot of reading that will bo as good as could be found In any two or three 10-ceut magazines. . The newspapers of this country are filled with good stuff every day of the year, not alone local news matter but matter of general Interest, matter that Is as readable when It Is a year old as when It was first primed. The good feeling which Is develop ing between England and France may Induce English-speaking folk the world over to take a few valuable lessons of the French. They have been tradition ally regarded as a fickle people, much given to the drinking of absinthe, and to social Intrigue, and successful chief ly In the devising of gay and exjieuslve fashions, to the depletion of English and American iwcketbooks. In iKlnt of fact, the French as a nation h.ive certain n at able virtues which we may emulate. For example, the avenge Frenchman, Instead of being a wan derer, Is emphatically a family man. Ills ruling ambition Is to own a home which he may eujoy himself and be queath to his children. If ho has in herited one, It Is his greatest pride to preserve and beautify It. Ho chooses his wife uot only for her dowry, but also for her domes! k virtues. 1hn French wife is the het business wom an lu the world. Household affair are left entirely to her, and mo u.Ktiilly Is til lnret,t:iK'tit of family savings. She nns o ciear iue;i or wii.it make for comfort. 'b:it sh? Iu:s 110 such jui-kU.u fer "thliivii" n oftea weigh fljwn the life of the American !u;ih ,vlfe. Dnip-crl'.-' and carpets and H'-iiVd chair f '-y be Ia:-ki:i;; Ju mml.inw's vw, tut fxeelli'i't cooking and g.w.1 temper are pretty wire to be found there. Ono Botatde illu-tiutlou of the domestic Xlrtue of the FreiHh Is t- by seen in their rcgnrd for niolhprs In-law. It Is not unusual to Ila 1 families In friendly rivalry for the privilege of entertain ing the niMli'T-ln-law, and there Is ninny a lrwr-V.ioM In Fram-e where two mothers-in-law live .respected and happy, witli ch'Mn n and grandchil dren. We have l.mg Imported frowns mid hats from France. It would be good n iw to Import love for the lsnise h'dd. the thrift which by skillful cook ing contrives toothsome ami nourish ing food fr'im l'iexM'iislve material, and those gentle domestic manners which make the roofirce dear, the din ner table pleasant, and family affec tion tv;v r ud deep. There cannot be an oversupply of these admirable qual ities. ' Every one knows In ft general, waj that the navies of the world. Including that of the I'nlted States, have been In competition of late, and that all of them have been Increasing in size at enormous cost to Hie respective coun tries. How swift this Increase has been ciin hardly Iw appreciated, however, un til one examine such a graphic por trayal of It as Is given, for example. In the diagrams contained In the 1007 number of the Statesman's Year Book. In figuring naval strength experts now adays reduce nil their figures to what they call "Dreadnought" units." Bat tie Khl is of the Dreadnought class ore treated as having a value of one point, and other battleships are gjven propor tional values according to their size and efllelency. Our American Louis iana, for Instance, would rank as .80 and our Maine as .'TO. Sluce battleships take about three years to construct, the comparisons of strength can be made for the Immediate future years on the bnsla of battleships under construction as well as for the present and pnt. Now comparing battleship strength in this way, the diagram shows that In 1!00 the British strength was 10.5 point's, which was more than that of any other two pywers combined. Our American strength was Just 2 polnU. and wo held fifth place among the pow ers In this respect. So swiftly do the curves of strength mount upward that by 1010 the British battleships will stand at close to SO points, which Is more than three times as great as In 1000. That will be Just about the strength of any other two powers, the United States excepted. The United States will havo Increased from 2 points to 21; France from 6.5 to 20; Germany from 2.5 to 10.B; Russia, de spite all her war losses, from 8.0 to 0; Japan from 1 to 11, and even Italy from 1.S to 0 points. The curves for armored cruiser strength are almost as striking. In 1900 the United States became the second power In battleship strength ana also In armored cruiser strength. She will remain the second power In battleships until 1910 at least, though In armored cruisers France will equal her by 100!) and Japan will ad vance to second place. Tho diagrams remind one of tho betting In a poker game. Even on the basis of the hard figures. It Is not quite certain how much of the strength displayed by any nation Is bluff. A "rooming house" In , on Arizona town Is often a one-story building spreading over tho ground like a New Liiglnnd cow baru. There Is usually a hull through the center and rooms opening off on each side. One of the most surprising sioelmens of this klud of elongated architecture Is described by a Brooklyn man who recently re turned from tho West. "When I went out," he explains, "I took up a homestead Just out of town, and while I was completing my ar rangements I stayed In the new city, Hi a rooming uouse appropriately named 'The Bowling Alley.' The el trance, led directly Into tho long hall, Into which thirty-four rooms opened seventeen on each side. At the far end was the dining-room, at a point where the tenpins nro set up In a regular bowling alley. "In those days I was not much Inter ested In anything whlch did not per tain directly to my ranch. I was look ing for a house one about teu by fif toen Teet. I wanted" to "juy something already built In town, put it on a truck and move It out to my place. Such houses were to 1m seen daily mov ing through the streets of Douglas, and I concluded that a Becond-hand house would meet my wants. "I asked tho landlord of 'The Bowl ing Alley If he knew where I could buy a little house about the slzo of tho room I had occupied lu hia establish ment. "'Size of your room?' he answered. 'Well, how would that suit you? It's yours for one hundred dollars.' "'What! Why, my room Is In Vie middle of the house. How am I going to take It?' " Tut up your money and I'll put up the house.' "I put up the money. In a little white the landlord, with two men and a team of.liorscs, pulled tho dining roin off the end of the hotel and pried oie the right side of tho outfit That gave them the chance to extract my room as handily us a man might tuke a hook out of the middle of a set on a library shelf. "The iKitel was built on a sectional plan, so that lu case business was bad In town, the building might bo hauled lu jrleivs across the desert by mule power and set up again Where there was a demand. " 'I like to have my house so as I can saw a hunk off when I want to," si:Id the host. At IlrKulnr Rates. Miss Matilda Owens hung on the arm of the editor of the Lauevllle Bugle, to whom she had been engaged for three years, and endeavored to turn his kmi) toward tho ky. "Just notice tho moon, William!" the i' ild. In a melting voice. "At the usual rate. Matilda, I shall bo happy to do ," he replied. IHirrrrnt. "What's tlie U-st cure for love?" "Matrimony." "I don't wish to kill It. but cure It" HoUblou I'ott, TELEPHONES Oil CA-.3. iTaefnl la Train lllisrhlnK C'tin, neetlona u)rklr Ma.de, There are three method followed In the application oT t!i telephone to elec tric railway dlspaf li'ii?: (1) I'lr.e l t;l fplioneui)statloiM In booths placed nt MiltaMe points along the line. (2) .Tack boxes nt poles to which Krfnll telephones carried In the cars may ls hung and connected for temporary liec. (I?) Portable telephone Hot.4 hung Umi the front of the car, the vestibule platform of which prrves as n booth, and attachment tnnde by flexible wires to Jacks at numerous poles along tfie line. On some railway lines, says Techni cal Literature, the method of connect ing n telephone on the car with the line Is not by means of n J.-vk at the Klde of one of the isiles, but by a long slender rod carrying the wires, which may be liookcd upon tho main lines nny place. The telephones used on ehn-trlc rail road systems must give transmission which is clear and loud, nnd must be of types not liable to be placed out of ser vice by the Jar of continuous transpor tation on a car. Application of the telephone to train dispatching on electric railways has re sulted In a marked economy of both plant and operation nnd that the nbll Ity of tho superintendent to b: In formed as to the position of the various cars nnd to communicate with their ojterators gives a greater service efh clency to the road. The telephone Is of great service In severe snowstorms by reason of thi facility which It affords for Informa tion to bo given the train dispatcher as to the condition of she road. In cases of mishap the telephone affords means for quick clearance of the trnck by the facilities of obtaining wrecking cars or repair hands. In cases of accident not only can medical help be summoned for the Injured but means can lie taken to procure Information relative to do tall of the occurrence which may be of great Iniiiortnnce in ascertaining the liability of the company. OF CORN HUSKS AND CARPET. Two Grinding Wheels t ed for Pol lahloir tha Teeth of tba Combs. There are many kinds of grinding wheels, but, perhaps, as curious as any Is the cornhusk wheel, which Is used for grinding combs. The teeth of some sorts of combs. after they have been cut, still need to be be rounded on the edges' and smoothed and finished all around, which could not be done on a solid, flat-faced wheel, says the New York Sun. For this there Is required a wheel of some material that will work around the edges of the teeth and also In between them. Tho corn-husk wheel serves this purpose well. For the making of such a wheel dried corn husks are used. They are laid to gether and tied In little bundles of a dozen or so, the butts all at one end and the points at the other. The corn-husk grinding wheel Is 20 Inches In diameter, made up of such little bundles of corn husks placed with their butts agnlnst nud secured to the pplndle on which tho wheel Is to turn, the husks radiating from It all around. When a sufficient number of bundles of husks to form the wheel hnve thus been placed against the .spindle, tile wheel Is compressed, to make It not solid but compact and give It the width of face required. Tho wheel built up In this way . of corn husks Is mounted and run by pow er. Tho workman, usli water and lxnvdered pumice stone In tho grinding, stands, with a tray of combs to be ground on a table ot hand, and one after another holds the combs against the wheel. The life of a corn-husk grinding wheel Is only four, or five days. " Aliother lnterestlni? wheel to ho seen lu the shop where they finish combs Is I a polishing wheel of carpet covered with muslin. This wheel has a smooth and, when In use, flat rlra, which, how- , ever, will yield anywhere under pres- j sure, and so when a comb is hei.i against it, this wheel adapts Itself readily to all the comb's rounded or molded surfaces, and thus can be muda to polish It perfectly everywhere. A GOOD LAWN. The Beat Way to Prepare the Ground and Sow the Seed. A good lawn may he made either by laying sod or growing seed. If turf Is used, the lawn Is sometimes ready for use In less time than when seed U used, but practically the difference Is very slight. Fewer lawns are made from turf every year. The turf or soil la nearly always obtained from a near by field. It alstuuds In course grasses and pernicious weeds. The former may be got rid of after considerable trouble, but tho latter rarely ever. Sod laid lawns are nearly always uneven, seamy uud vai led In color uiul texture. Their cost, too, Is much lu excess of seeding tlie lawn down. A lawn produced from n mixture ot good, new, reclcaned seeds of the finer grasses and clovers is superior In qual ity and texture to the best wxl obtain able. To obtain the best results from sowing, the ground should be. carefully dug over not too deep,, six or eight Indies will Ih enough and nicely lev eled off; then sow ou broadcast u good fertilizer, 100 pounds to the acre, or ttliout ten pounds to every ." by J.T square feet. Itake tills lu nud roll It or Hutteu It with the buck of a spade; then sow seventy pounds of Koine gssl lawn seed to the acre, or one pound to every 15 by l.'i feet. Sow half this quantity walking one way and half walking at right angles to It, ho as to get even distribution. Do uot bow lu windy weather, and be sure to ruko the sitd In, and after sowing roll It well or beat It flat with the spade. Thoe seeds that are deeply burled will not germinate, and those that are exposed will be searched by the sun, blown or washed r.v.ay or taken by the birds. Wheiiettr licccsxiiry to sow lu summer It Is better to mix with rye or outs to protect th. tender n!iuot from thi ht hiki. Suburban Life. When a mail ban bud luck, hit friends think they have done their duty when they say : "It's too bud!" km mmm AMKjtr.irr av.T jay Of the many different kinds of birds. Some are called perching birds. " These are the robin, thrush and bluebird. Then there arc the swimming birds, as ducks, swans nnd geese, which live on tho water sml tswlm around most of the time. Wading birds are of Mill another spedes, and some of these are rails, plovers, snipe, cranes, flamingoes and turnstones. Birds fitted neither for swimming nor wading are owls, hawks, vultures., grouse, turkeys, pigeons, king fishers and humming birds. There are also creeping birds, noted for i-reopinj along trees. Some of them are the cbleadees, wbltc-breastcd nuthatch and brown creeper. There are about 300 species of the thrush. They are generally larse, hop ping birds, noted for their sonir: are plain In color (as a rule, brown) and usually have spotted breiwts. Tbe'.r tall Is nearly square-tipped, of wide. oft feathers, and their bill rather long and slender. Among the best known to ns Is the wood thrush, which Is a large, common brownish-bneked bird, with white heav ily spotted underpnrts. Including the eyes. Tho crown Is n brizlit clnna- mon brown and the back trradnallv changea In shade to an oil roe brown on tho tall. It Is not only found In the woods, as one might suppose from Its name, but Is often seen on lawns and In shrubbery. It Is a great singer, ETIQUETTE OF DE3EST MIXERS. Never Ask a Man Where Ilia Claims Are, Sara a Death Valley Miner. "Never csk a man anything ubout bis mine because he won't tell you If you do. It Isn't etiquette to ask such questions on the desert." Thus spoke J. Ilelneman. late on Beatty, an old-timer In Death Valley and the desert, now staying ut the Ho tel Mu nn, says the Los Angeles Times, lie still has properties In that region, prospects he calls them, but he has sold his business at Beatty and is stopping a while here In the haunts of civiliza tion. "You see, when one miner meets an other on the desert they stop, talk and pass pleasantries. One will ask the other how he's getting along and he will say 'good' or 'hard luck,' but that's about all. Neither asks for details or where one has hi3 claims located. If nny one wauts you to know hull tell you without being asked. If not, he won't tell you if you do ask. "The fact is that If a man has a great body of low grade ore that he must have a force of men to work nnd ship to the smelters he must record it But if he has a rich iot with free gold easily handled It Is not necessary and ninny times one doesn't care to huve the world know about it and have everybody coming to dig all around. It often leads to trouble und mixtions, Jumping and all that sort of thing. "If a property Is In the mountains it Is more necessary to record It, for it Is easier found. A man can be followed lu the mountains, but never out on the desert. I would like to see the man who could follow me on the desert If I don't want him to. I'll give him a chase tftat will make him very tick of bis Job. Of course, lu such cases a claim is never left unguarded If any one should stumble upon It by accident. In sueU case possession will be nine p iiuts of the lawT "This Is not only about mines but also about private, rtccret water holes. You know some of these give so little water that once known to the general public they would be of no ue to thos-. who went to big trouble (hiding th'mi, or to nny one els ery soon, so they never tell. Let one who bus kik! a place hidden find one In need he will share his water and If necessary, he will go and bring back a supply, but the other fellow doesn't know where it comes from. That's the finder's secret. "Of course, there aro public water ing places, especially along the sta;e routes. Some wells hnve been dug by Individuals or companies who sell wa ter. Lots of money has been expended In this way. The water problem U In deed a serious one on the desert. "At some of the camps water Is hauled by team and sells for as hl'h as $9 a barrel. People who don't know think thut Is a terrible price, but It really leaves a very small profit for the long haul and the time lost and feed of teams. Often much of the wa ter with which one starts is used up by the horses en route." No Plaee for Ilarirlar Voder Bed. With every big robbery rejMirtcd lu hotels furniture manufacturers come to the front with the boast that, wherever else the robber muy have bidden him self, It certainly wasn't under the lied, because beds nowadays are built too low for even the thluncst of villains to hide under them. "For many years losses of money and Jewelry,' said a furniture manu facturer, "were uttrlbuted Indirectly at least to the bed, which was built high enougli to afford protection to the thief. Finally, lu order to save the good name of that necessary piece of furniture we decided to build It so low that not even an Infant can crawl under It, thereby compelling the enterprising burglar to eek a hiding place elsewhere." Pblla telphla Record. Where Titer Come In. "I see that the world's population Is estimated at l,4S0,0UMKi0 persons. 1. our town considered In that calcula tion?" asked a Tuckahoe boy of his father. "Oh, yes, my son," replied the 'fath er; "Tuckahoe's population. Is repre sented In sumo of those ciphers!" Youkers Statesman FZATHEEED SONGSTERS being one of the finest of nny of the fhr.'.iiho. Its nest Is made on boughs of trees, out of grass, weed., leaves and ..)!):! mud. The Amer'can robin Is n common, large red or brown breasted slate-colored l lr l. with white on Its throat, lower bciiy nml tips of the outer (under) tall feathers. The head and tail are much blacker than the back. The breast la unspotted except In very young birds. The robin Is not as great a songster as the other thrushes, but Its notes are always full of melody. At times these note e.rs sweet and cheerful, and igaln are full of sadness and plalntlve ne?s. Over nil the northern parts of this continent, wherever there are' people living, robins are numerous. When they are taken Into homes and made pets of they are affectionate and Inter esting. They are very intelligent, and some think they might be taught to sing anything when In cozes. Thero are several different kinds of robins, among which are the eolden crround. marsh nnd Oregon robins. Their nests are made of mud nnd grass, found In trees at nny height from the rmnmi or In odd places around houses; eggs bluish green. The blue bird, another one of the thrush family, Is one of the first birds to make its appearance In the enrlv spring and welcome In that season, with Its sweet singing. From Southern New York nnd Illinois southward It Is found I NEWEST PHOTO OF KIN ' i . ' X V S , - ' ' K WJk&r fj i ' 4h,A - 4?t r-jt L. rev ..iv-l5y 0r'v I :Jth,, rf& Seldom has England had visitors to arouse such great Interest as have her recent royal callers, the King and Queen of Slam. Chulalongkorn I, King of Slum, bus been twenty-nine years on the throne, having succeeded to the crown at the age of 15. He rules over n country of 244,000 square miles, or slightly. more than twice the united size of (Jreat Britain and Ireland. "Ills Majesty has sent his sans, of whom there nre many, to English, schools, and 1k himself Is quite English In his tastes. This picture shows him with his tecn and his palace at Bangkok in the background. -ririx .-a ---rj-T r HOTHOG TO WORRY ABOUT, W1ku Curl Schurz was In Washing ton in tytiil, waiting for his assignment in the army, lie had to undergo the (rll. illations of persons who are 8ti) poscd to have influence. Tho news hud gone abroad thut lu America thore was u great demand for ofiicers of military training and experience. This demand, writes Mr. Sehurss in his "Reminis cences of a Long Life," could not fail to uttract from all parts of the globe adventurous characters who had seou, or pretended to have seen, military ser vice In one country or another, und who believed that there wus u chuuee for prompt employment and rapid pro motion. One of the many foreigners who sought my intercession was a young (Jermun count whose Ideutlty was vouched for by a member of the Prus sian legation. He had a long line of ancestors, going buck for several hun dred years. Ho was greatly Impressed with the Importance of this fuct, uud thought It would weigh heavily In se curing him a position lu our army. If ho could only have an audience with the President and lay his case before hiin, he believed the result could not bo doubtful. . He pursued me so arduously with a request for a jhthouuI Introduction to Mr. Lincoln that nt last I succumbed, and promised to Introduce hi m If the President permitted. The President did permit. The count spoke English moderately well, und in bis Ingenuous way he at once explained to Mr. Lincoln how high the nobility of his family was. and that they had been CounU Bo-uitd-so many centuries. "Well," said Mr. Lincoln, Interrupt ing hlm, "thut ueed not trouble you. That will not be lu your way If you be have yourself us a soldier." The ioor count looked puzzled, and wheu the audience was over ho asked me what In the world the President could have meant by so utrango a re mark. Treating Ilia I'artner. The Currolls all confidently believe that their Blllyi nited five. Is destined for future distinction. IVrhups they OP THE STJM1IE2 TIME. UP throughout the year. It Is a Very common, small, blue-hacked, chestnut breasted, whlte-bellled bird. The fe male bird docs not equal the robin as a songster, but tho few notes It has are sweet and never loud. There are 400 species of the hum ming bird. They belong to a family of small, bright-colored American birds that are known to be the swiftest-flying birds we have; In fact, their flight through the air Is so swift (and their wings vibrate so rapidly), that they look like a hazy mist The humming bird lives mainly on Insects and nectar found lu flowers, which It obtains while on the wing. It Is seen by most iwople only when It Is around flowers In search of food, and Is therefore thought to be always on the wing, but If you watch It carefully you will no tice that it often rests on the twigs of tree tops. There are forty different specie of American birds which live mainly In the woods nnd around shrubbery. Their tails are as long as their wings," and In one of our common species much longer. The bill Is nearly as long as tho head. The wren and catbird belong to this family. The mocking bird Is a large, ashy-colored,' long-tailed bird, with much white on the center of Its wing and outer tail feathers. It Is the most noted song bird of America, and the most wonderful mocker In the world. It can Imitate almost any sound In nature In fact, has been 3 AND QUEEN OF SLAM. are right; at any rate, he Is not lack ing lu that sagacity In choosing "asso ciates in enterprise" said to be essen tial to success. Last summer Billy was seen walking slowly along the hotel piazza, thought fully scanning the faces of guests seated there. Finally he stopped nt the chair of an old lady with whom he was on friendly terms. "Sny, Mrs. Jones, can you crack nuts?" he Inquired, his hands In his pockets. , "Why, no deary, I'm very sorry, but I can't," replied Mrs. Jones, apologeti cally. "You know I've lost most of my teeth." "That's what I thought," said Billy, relaxing from anxiety to his sunny smile, and extending his two hands confidently. "Say, will you keep these nuts here for me while I go get the rest of "am?" The German Beat of Honor. In the more rigid German circles the sofa Is still the scat of honor, upon which the hostess sits, to which the visitor may be Invited. Tills writer has an acute memory of the reproof of his hostess wheu he dropped easily by her side ou the sofa and searched for his gut terals. Very kindly the baroness explained that the sofa was sncred and a man would do well to wait for the Invitation to sit upon It. Does that tradition linger lu Eng land? rlmdon Chronicle. tin Seeoud Tboojthl. "Don't you remember, you said you would drowu yourself If I didn't many yon " "Vis. I remember; how foolish I was !" io you consider that It wus fool ish?" "Yes; I should have threatened to drown myself If you did marry me." Houston l'ost. tioiuelliliiir -New. "Yes," said the lady gossip. "I know more ubout the aifalr thau I care to till." "That must bo nn unusual experience for you," growled the savage bachelor. Chicago News. If gruy hairs were a sign of witulom fewer men would have thei- 'LOVIJIHHA VATF.P THUVSn J known to Imitate thirty-two different kinds of birds in less than n quarter of an hour. Many people have thejn for pets, and And them very delightful companions. , The woodpecker belongs to a very large family of creeping or climbing birds, with stiff, sharp-pointed tall feathers, which they use to help sup port their bodies against tho tree.; Their toes are four In number, two; going forward and two backward, soj they can hold on to the tree more- easlly. They have strone. straight chlsel-polnted bills, which they use to- cut small holes In the wood when look ing for Insects to eat, and also when they want to make a larger hole for a nesting place. The tongue of the wood pecker Is peculiarly long, with a spear llke tip. which It can thrust out. bring ing Insects from their hiding place under the bark. Woodpeckers are not slneers. TheT only make a tattoo with their bills on the tree, which Is supposed to be their love song. Their eggs are always white. Among the many different kinds or the Ivory-billed woodpecker, the hairy woodpecker, the downy woodpecker. red-backed woodoeeker ond the red-i headed woodpecker. The blue Jay beloncs to the f.unllvH or crows and magpies. It Is a com mon, large, noisy, crested, brightly mnrKea blue bird with white throat. and tips of outer tail feathers. Cincin nati Enquirer. AMEBICA'S FUTURE PLAYGROUND The St. James Bar ne-lon Will Be. ome . Pa,ai.e for Sport. men. , ,.. mSt urpent need of Quebec is L ?1d rom t,,e St- Laurence north ward to St. Jm.m. Till- . , V "a" aiunsey s.1 inTw? ? 1 open 7.0.000 acres of n? ?Kd it"?nnect Quebec with Hudson" H,nC rn,nnd Beo' whlch '8 Skater nS. fr . 1k SPeriors. The sum mer travel alone would probably enable- Sfi F "y t0 I,ay dividends, as the whole reg.on Is paradise for sports- ver ot erre,flre W"d 8n,pe' InS Z ' be"TGr' m,nk' dwr. mrten, and bears in large numbers. At one canip an Indian hunter recently shot! ilt . ke" and ntl rivers Ini ?ih ? wlMerness. " Populous, with trout and salmon "We caught ninety-seven trout In one haul, reports a government surveyor. In the far north," be says, "we found the pike so tame that we killed them with our paddles." For those who wish to hunt big game there are the white whales of St. James w, T ga OId dnys of the New Bedford whalers, these monsters wera . worth $100 apiece to the ships that caught them. It Is 8ald that in forty voyages to St James Bay the whalers harpooned $1,000,000 worth of the blonde leviathans. Instead of being a frozen waste us most Americans believe, this northern region has a lighter snowfall than tho prosperous cities of Ottawa and Mon treal. It is In the latitude of England and Denmark, and farther south than, any part of Norway. "I have bathed In the waters of St James Bay as late us Oct. 3." said one of the few enterprising woodsmen who had made the Journey by canoe. This unmapped land will yet be the playground of the continent. Here Is the Nottaway, a river two miles wide and 400 miles long, but not nearly as well known as the Kongo. Here Is Lnke Mistasslnl. with an area of 1,000 srtuare miles, where the nlash of tm white man's paddle has seldom been heard. And here are the falls of thn. Hamilton Itlver, which have broken the silence of this wilderness for acres wth a wild plunge more terrible thun that or Niagara. Found Its Way Home. The story of a pet seal, captured . when a pup by a lighthouse-keeper on the coast of Engluud, Is given In "Item In! sceuces of a Sportsman." The young seal was fed, and allowed to have the- range of the kitchen, and the member of the household became greatly at tached to It.. It would make Its way dally down to the water, and pass many hour swimming about. It secured more or less food in that way, but always re turned to Its pluce In the kitchen at night Blindness finally came to the seal with old age, but It continued Its Jour neys to the sea, and returned home as regularly as before. As old age Increased, It caused an noyance by Its pecullur cry for faod and its lessened ability to get ubout. At last the family decided they must part with It, and not wishing to kill It they arranged with a fisherman to carry It well off some twenty miles and drop It luto the sen. They expected that it would come to a natural death Jn that element But on the second day It ap- Ioured again at Its accustomed place. Another effort was made to get rlJ of It by arianglng with a sailing ves sel to take It several hundred miles out to sea and then drop It In. This was done, and some time passed away, with out any sign of the seal. But seven days after. Its departure the kitchen maid, who slept near the door of the kitchen, fancied -during tho night she had heard the plaintive cry of the seal ; and the next morning Its emaciated liody was found on the threshold. The Alternative, Muggins I hear you are having your daughter' voice cultivated. Uugglus Yes I'm afraid it can't be cured, so I tun doing tlie next -best tulni;. I'hila- dclpldu Itecord. I'opularlty Is overestimated about as often as the money you expect? to maka in the poultry business. i