3000000004000000000000000000 o o o o o The pirate of RUPERTSARGENT jh&QT HOLLAND Author of "Th Count t Harvard," etc o Copyright. 1008. by J. B. Llpplncott 9 o o o o o o o o o o o o HE PIRATE "' "" 33j that gives great spirit and variety to happenings along the Atlantic coast. RUPERT SARGL'NT HOLLAND Is the author of this entrancing serinl, and his gifted pen has done fine work in depicting events that are stirring J . . . TL end entertaining, lhere is modern Pirate; there is beautiful Barbara Graham, a fine young girl to admire and love, and the gallant ad venturer, who meets with some thrilling experiences! The air of the mystical about n absorbing and well devised plot The Pirate of Alastair is essentially a story of the times, recently written, copyrighted, and is a serial having features that commend it to every reader as a capital romance! We bespeak for this narrative a very favor able reception, arid do not hesitate to pronounce it one f the leading romances of its class modern, interesting, nd having all the elements of a splendid story. CHAPTER 1. I Ton know Alastair? No how ahonld ou? Very few people know It, and I tare done my best to keep the secret to ftirself. The place lies, however, not o ery far from great cities on the Atlan- Se coast. Ton take a train northward ora Boston, and when you reach the proper station you alight and climb Into ' countryman's wagon, and he drives you through the pines by a twlatlng, sand 'milt road to Alaatnlr. You will know It 'because you can go no farther, unless you ehooae to drive Into tha waver. Few people, come to Alaatnlr. Moat ft tha travelers In thia part of the world Ca off about a mile inland from the ch and go on for another mils and a 4lf to the Penguin Club. The latter la fall of New Yorker who come to the fines and the sea to hunt and fish and forget Wall Street and Fifth Avenue, tliey forget It by keeping close together, fKod dreaalng for dinner, and dancing very other night . Alastair Itself la only a beach between wro great headlands. From the end where my cottage stands, snugly hid in flbe pines on the edge of the dunes, the veach stretohea smooth and white to a Dttle land-locked harbor at the farther etnd. Bit on my porch and look down Jong the aands to the east and you will see a reef of rocks shaped like the tatter U that closes in a little salt water tke with tha aid or a distant cliff. It not quite a lake, rather a email In land sea, for the tides have room to ebb ad flow. A ship la settled Into the ends of this sea. settled upright, ao that on may walk tho decks, and I Often go there of an afternoon when the .ids la low and climb on board. It la a . food place to sketch, and I can leave stay palnta and canvas In the cabin. I stumbled across Alaatalr when I was looking for a quiet place In which to Vrlte. I found the dilapidated cottage, camped In it for a week, and fell ao much In love with the beach that I went to own, bought the bini.se and pnrt of the woods, and moved in. Charles, the man who had nerved my father before me, de- Imirred at first, but finally gave In, and arnod himself into cook, housemaid, and alet for my sake. From my balcony I can see the distant -rocks of the little inland sea and, stand ing up above them, the high aides of the jhip, and its single remaining broken tnast pointing straight to the heavens, Sometime the stars seem lo outline where the inisaing spars and sails should fee, and on a bright night 1 can half close any eyea end fancy that I see the ringing lighted and lanterns burning on the quar ter-deck. There m history hidden In that bat tered hulk. She la no ordinary vessel tuid may once, for all I know, have been pirate craft. She has the long clipper lines of swiftness, and her high, bulging tww is of a tyi long past. ben I first cams to Alastair I made Inquiries ft to her history, but the oldest farmer oald tell me only that she had alwnv Wo there so far aa he knew, and dia- visaed the subject as of no importance. The people of the near-by wintry ap peared never to have boarded the casta ay. I felt the joys of Crusoe when Brat cl untied on tier uvea. '1 he name ta gone, long ago waahed oi.t by th tea ; the deck was hare, and the top of the forecastle cbnk"d with aand. drought a shovel and dug sway the ram' part drifted against the hatches. At last I could open the door and, clearln Che steps of what little wind bad sifted through, I driK'euded into the cabin. It w mildewed with damp and water, but fn time, ty bailing and letting the sun in, I dried it out and found quite a ball liable apartment, furnished with talil od chairs and a row of bunks along the ceawird side. Whatever there had been that was portable the first wrekera must years before hare carried off. All that was left was a heavy oaken cheat, stud 4ed with bras nails, now grt-r-nish-yel low, and when I broke the lock 1 foun the chest bare. My fancy loved to play about the ablp. Often I l named of her and of nan who should come up out of the sea od tread ber deck agnlu. lie was a ejray a uuigueiic ticure, and 1 a ever c e e Q Q C O c o Company. All rights reserved. o O O G o o o o ooo OF ALASTAIR is a romance of love and adventure of great power and interest. There is a charm to this story that is manifest in every chapter. While the incidents deal with modern, every-day life, the author has brought in a glamour of the romantic iL i CL J L the mysterious bhip and the the story is warranted by could resist the call of mystery to fight uesine mm. CHAPTER II. It was the moat beautiful August that I remembered. Tho air waa clear as a bell, and day after day the sun rose on a . tranquil world and amiled at It for Joy. Every morning at breakfast I would say to Charles, "Did you ever know auch weather, Charles?" and he would anawer, "No, sir, I never did, air," and every evening at supper I would say, "It has been a glorloua day, Charlea, haan't It?" and he would answer, "It has, sir, Indeed it has, sir," My family servant made a perfect echo. The afternoon on which I finished the first half of my book I eat for some time on the porch outside my den, smoking. I was too serene to stir. I watched the gulls circle and skim above the pine crowned cliff, and the laiy waves, rising occasionally into sparkling white caps, lift tneir heads and duck again like play ful dolphins. The tide was coming In : could mark the great wet circles on thai beach aa ll advanced, now recedlne for moment, but quickly recovering tha lost ground and marching on, steadily winning over the yellow sands. It would be high-tide by sunset or a little after; everyining waa setting in from sea to land; th salt smell waa coming atrotielv on the east wind. About 5 o'clock I abut the. door of m cottage and started down the beach, con scious of no further plan than to board the ship and, possibly, catch something of the late afternoon color for my can- vaa. inow and again 1 stopped to watch small flocks of aand snipe scurry over me wei, gusieuing sanos, now to watch a wave recede and leave a path of opales cent pebblce in Its wake. There were owels for all the world and to spare as long a;i the water bathed the stonoei. to, walking lulsurely, I came In time to the far end, and looked across tho lmr- lorlng rocks to tho ship. To my surprise. a young woman stood on the deck, and nutlcring from a splinter of the mast was a white handkerchief. She was look- ng across at me, her hands shading her eyes from the eunset glitter at my back. and as she saw me look up she waved her hand beckonlngly. Tho easy path to the ship lay through a small break whern the rocks Joined the cliff, but this break was some distance off. With a smile for what I saw must have happened to the skipper, I climbed over the near est rocks and stood on the edge of the little Inland sea. Sure enough, the tide n rising bad covered the cause a v to the cliff, and waa pouring in, fast tilling the harbor, like the bowl of a flooded fountain. The water waa not yet deep; It barely covered the path by which the cipinrer had come, and even off the rocks In front of it it was scarcely up to my knees. The woman of the ship called, "I'm marooned. I came by the path and for got all about the tide. What shall I do?" She jwlnted towards the way she had come, but I was in rouau clothes and quite used to a wetting, so I waded in and, crossing the shallow bowl, quickly scrambled ou to the high divk. I stood up dripping and laughing. So yon thought you'd go for a sail.' I asked, "but didn't think you'd sail ao far from land?" The girl I saw now that ahe couldn't be more than 'JO looked qulszlcally at me for a second, then imiled, and finally laughed. It waa such a very real ship," aha said, "that I couldn't resist the call. I full asleep sitting against the gunwale, and when I woke up th water was over the path not very far over, but quite enough to ruin these forever." She pointed to her kid slippers. "I was grow ing desperate when I saw you on th beach." 1 waa studying th slippers ; there waa no question but thai the salt water would ruin them. She inspected them also. n waa very foolish ot me t wear them, but I had no idea of going far wneu I left the club. The first thing I knew, I caught a glimpse ot the water, and then I forgot the slippers and walked on until I oatM to that cliff, aad froia ther I mw this llftie nsrW and this boat, tni I couldn't rit that, could IT' I shook my held. "Nobdy could re sist It." "I had Just about com to th point of taking them off and wading in," she went on, and then finished, "when I sighted you." "I can go away again," I etigfeated. "No," ahe said slowly; "I'd rather you didn't do (hat. There miiHt be some other way out of It." "There are several other waya." I an awered. "I've often atudied the problem from thia very deck." I thought ahe looked a little bit sur prised. "Do you often find people ma rooned here glrN. I mean?" "No, but I've often wondered what I ahould do if I did. To tell the truth, I've never found any one here before, but the r hi p look aa If ahe ought to be In habited. She's a good ahlp, and once belonged to a pirate chief.' "How do you know that?" r.he asked. "I'.y tlie oaken chet below-deck. It liaa the pirate look, though there's noth ing In It." "yea," ahe aald; "I made an exploring trip and I found the chest." "Don't you nprrf with me. then?" Again there came tliut quitical look in her eye, and then the smile. "Yea," ahe anid: "it mint have belong ed to a pirate." She atopped abort and the iniile spread from her lip to her eye. "Shall I tell you a eccre'.? When I fell asleep here an hour ago I dreamed of pirates, of a real old-fashioned buc caneer who enme tip out of the cabin fully armed, pistols In hia pocketa and la hia handa and a pb;tol clenched In 'hia teeth. The funny part of it la that he waa exceedingly polite to me. Do you ever have auch foolish dreams aa that?" 'Often ; a buccaneer calla on me every other week, I'm only waiting for the chance to ship with ona. I think their BX r. 'Sndnh.t bit Alaatalr." tola up to captnre soma Ioosf "frauds af hair, and for tha first tim, i not(,d ,he Ana aPun gold in the aim. "Alastair?" ahe repeated. "Oh, so thia la the beach of Alastair and you ?" She pauaed. "You muat be the man they told me abont at the club yon live In a cottage at the far end of the beach, and write books, and never come out of your h" bowed. "I am the man, I aaid, "and yonder is ray home. I pointed west ward to where the tip of my balcony showed between th dunes. "What a beautiful little world!" she said, and then, a moment later, "but how lonely! Who named the place Alas tair?" I don't know. It'a always been called that, apparently." "It s a lovely name. And what do you call the ship?" Oh. just the Ship. Her other name disappeared years and years ago." 'The Ship of Alastair. And do yoo sometime come on board of her to rite?" No, I have a den for that. Some times I come here to paint. I keep my thintta In the cabin.' "Yes, I found them," she said. Xou see, I know a great deal more about you than you think." (To be continued.) POINT OF VIEW DIFFERS. Teamster aad Woman of Fashion Express Their Diverse Opinion. There la little choice between the way of the reformer and the way of the transgressor la the matter of hard ness. Each of them has, as one may say, a tough Job. In mitigation the re former has the comfort of conscious reel Undo find the transgressor the re lief of curse words. I saw the two of them clnsh the other day. The transgressor was a somewhat thinly clad man, who was urging two tre mendous horses and a load of coal up a hill. The reformer was a square- Jawed lady In a Persian lamb coat Now, the yelling of the teamster and tho names he called those horse were frightful. Furthermore, he threw snow balls at the struggling animals and swung about with a somewhat lnef fectlve whip. The lady was horrified. "Ston lushing those horses!" she commanded. Tho teamster cast a wrathful eye at her. How'm I goln to aet'm up the hill?" he demanded. "Speak kindly to them," answered th lady with her best S. P. a A. ninn- ner. Aw, gwan!" roared the driver. "Who's doln" this, mo or yon?" 'I'll report you to the authorities,' tho lady cried. The whip cracked and the huge horses drow tho wagon a few foet far ther. Tho lndy followed. I'll report you," she repeated. You eomo out here and cot this load tip and I'll report myself," shout cd tho man. "You need something to keep you busy." "You're a brute!" screamed the lady. This was too much for the teamster, "Now, you look here, lndy," he said ; I got to get thia coal up, and those horses can do It They ain't even sweatlu' yet. Can't you manage to mind your own business," "It Is my business," declared the lady. You make me tired!" answered the teamster. "Ain't you got nothing to take up your time but buttln In? Ain't you got no moro sense than to follow a man up this way? You ought to bo ashamed of yourself talking to a man you never seen before. Ain't yon got no folks to look after you? If you got to talk ain't you got a husband?' "Yes, I have, and he'll attend to you, ahe screamed. "liet him," answered tho teamster. "I bet he'll attend to you for quarrel li.g with a strange man In the atrect You ain't acting like a lady. Get up! The horses went forward with a lurch and the top or the hill was readied. Tho lady turned away, very red In the face. "The brute!" sho said. The teamster appealed to a by slander. "Talking to me alutut cruelty to ani mals." he said disgustedly, "and her wearing a baby lamb coat." Wash lugton Post. A Logical t'onelnalon. "Mr. Partington says be believes a man should pay as he goes." "Judging from the way ha gets In debt, ho must be accustomed to travel ing backward." Washington Btar. In point of geographical elevation Madrid Is the highest city In Europe. THE IMMORTAL 9TH. Haw Seventeen Members of m nark nrst THe.l to lake Pr Artbsr. In tho grittHl nsniilt ciuntiiencing Aug. HI, tlif Immortal Ninth Iteulment of the- JniHiuwn army nm onlomi to cross tho fiohl to tim foot of the flop on which lay, dciil nml dying, ninny of thpmeri of tho rcsdmnnt which bad g(ine) before. The colour!. TnknCitc!, survey- Ing tho tank net for hlt r.-clmcnt, sent buck fl report tlint it wn not feasible, snjs niclmrd llmry In I'verybocly' The brigade general. rhlnole, replica hotly that one regiment wns enough to Inko one hntlcr.v. Tnkng'tct ulepp.'d out of the ravine, In which he hml been seeking shelter, at the bend of hi otiinminl. P.efore he hwl leen tnnreliinc. .m colonels usu- nll.r do. In tho rear, while bis lino offi cers led the ndviinee. Now be leaped forward tip the slope, out In front of his men. A 1l07.cn pares from the ra vlno lie fell with four bullet through his breast. The lieutenant colonel took up tho lead nnd was shot 11 few yards farther on. The majors were wiped out. Every enptaln but one went down. The last captMin. Nnslilmoto, In charge of I) company, found himself at length under the Chinese wnll with seventeen men. looking down upon the shell-swept pin in. protected for the moment from the sharpshooters above, with that handful of heroes, a mil and n half In ndvnnce of the mnln body of the Japanese army, he grew giddy with the success of his nttompt. Of tt sudden he concluded that he could take Port Arthur with his seven teen men. lie started in to do It. There was only the wnll ahead the wall and a few niiicliine guns beyond, the dry Itself a five minutes' run would hava brought him to the cltudel. lie scaled the wnll nnd fell across It his back bullet-broken. Eight of his men got nver. seating the height beyond, called W:ingt;ii. or tho wntch tower, a place lo which the Russian generals formerly rode on horseback to survey the battle field. On the slope for three months In full sight of both armies the eight iny rofting. The Russians referred to Ihem ns "the Japanese garrison." SHORT METEE SERMONS Suararestton. Suggestion is a method of awaken ing the powers of the subconscious mind so that they may ussert them selves and accomplish great results. Rev. C V. WInblgler. Baptist, Wash ington. lslnK What We Have. You have something of life, some thing of truth, something of reverence, something of the senes of duty, some thing of loyalty; then use what you have. Hev. E. L. Powell, Christian. .ouisvllle. Paylnar (or Itelltlon. The valuo of our church services will be greatly enhanced when It costs us money. Its an enormous misfor tune to get your religion for nothing. Rev. R. S. MiieArthur, Baptist, New York City. When Vlrtaa tomes. Virtue comes only when a man stands at the parting of tho ways be tween right and wrong, and turns his back on the wrong and chooses the right. Rev. J. li. Cndy, Congregation- allst, Dorchester, Mass. Look I nir Back. Iioklng bad: usually results In go ing back. The man who holds on to ;he past of which he Is ashamed will some day find himself back In the old place of shame. Rev. P. M. Strayer, Presbyterian, Rochester, N. Y. Hard Tnlnar to Do. It Is easy to be happy when singing the doxology In church, but the harder .blng Is to sing when iieople act to as to tempt us to swear or to hire some ne to swear for us. Rev. J. H. llobbs, Episcopalian, ITtlea, N. Y. (iod-On tered. When human lives learn the blcss- ng there Is In becoming Ood-centered instead of self-centered the hard things of life will have their bitter ness taken out of them. Rev. S. N, Watson, Episcopalian, Akron. The Vision of I lie Idenl. We have to keep it clear light shin ing in any dark place; we have to teep the flag of righteousness and pur ity flying here; we have to maintain ;he vision of the ideal before us. Rev, Charles F, Aked, Rapt 1st, New York City. Wronai Htart. The weakness and lnstsfliclenoy of much of our thinking is lu that we do not start light. We nitiy spend ages trying to reason from the contradic tion of life to a kindly (!od and fall. Rev. T. K. Burr. People's Pulpit, Mil waukee. t'hristlanllr'a 4-l(t. The gift of Christianity was the rev elation of a person who was to make humanity a s-rpetual institution God in Christ, in whom 'Jod came from fceaven down to earth In the Incarna tion. Rev. E. Perry. Methodist, Mil waukee. Itl-ht her Una. A mail Is best when right feeling stimulates right thought, in a disci plined and finished manner, and turns upon the feelings and becomes their master directing them with right pur pose. Rev. W. W. Kenn, Cnltarlan, Cambridge, Muss. Iiitasliialion. Imagination is the most essential ele ment lu any great Invention. knowK edge, business enterprise and religion. If It was not for the pow ers of Imagina tion, the tin Hons w ould be stranded long before tills.--Rev. '. K. Carpen ter, Methodist Kiilscopaiiiin. Aurora, 111. t hainiiMune Corks. The inn unfurl lire of the ts-st kind ot corks, those made for champagne bot tles, are never Intrusted to machines. The ordinary common tork is made by machinery, but the best work Invarla bly is done by human hands, and th champagne cork cannot be trusted to a machine. All the blemishes In tha cork have to W taken Into considera tion, so thia work is done by hand labor. The amount that people have to lea re Is entirely too great for their leugt of Ufe. LAN! WILL TURN AT LAST. Keop the wagon movin' Iane will turn at last; liong time till daylight. Hut day in tires kin' fast ! t'ountry doin' mighty well - Kcttlin' all tne la.ids; South is smiliti' l.appy The West Is ahakiii' hands! 80 keep the wagon movin' Sky will clear at laat ; I-ong time till daylight, But day is breakin' fast! -Atlanta Constitution. 1 ik ten 01 it 1 Elinor glanced roguishly at the young man sitting dejectedly beside her on the sand at Milton Point. "You may have as many minutes as this sand takes to run through my fingers." she said, taking up a handful of warm, white sand from the beach, "and then if you continue to b dis agreeable and cross, I'll well, never mind, you will regret It, Mr. Jack Rob inson." She let the soft sand trickle slowly through her sun-burued Angers like a minute-glass as she hummed, careless ly, softly, "If I But Knew." The young man turned impatiently and looked out across the broad ex panse of water. How easily the whlte wlnged yachts skimmed over the water! He wished his little craft of love would run as smoothly. "Elinor," he said, turning to her, "will you stop singing that song?" "When your present fit of Ill-temper blows over," she retorted, watching the last few grains of sand fall from her fingers. "If I but knew your heart were true," she hummed on, Ignoring blm. "See here, what can I do to prove to you that I am sincere?" Ho watched her dust the sand from her pretty palm. "Do? Y'ou make me feel like a prin cess of 'ye olden time.' Then brave knights won their ladles by acts of courage, but now " "Yes, now?" he said, looking up St her eagerly. "Oh, now we don't even take a man's word for anything." And Elinor laughed a merry, capti vating laugh, which chased away the IT IS A lOSO. DISTANCE FROM SHOSE. frowns from Jack's brow, lie could never be angry with her for long. "Suppose we piny we are living one hundred years ago," she said, after a minute. "I'll play anything you like." "And do anything I like?" she asked, looking at him dubiously. Her tone was half-serlous, half-playful. "Anything," he replied, firmly "that Is, provided you'll accept that as proof that I love you. I've said all I can, to no avail." Elinor did not reply nor look up; she was tracing her name In the sand thinking. She had tried to believe Jack, but somehow, at times, she doubt ed that he really meant all he said. He was such a serious sort of fellow, and she oh, she was frivolous and scatter-brained, according to her own estimate of herself. Why should be love her? And yet, why should he say so if he did not? At last she covered the sand letters ver and looked tip. "Jack," sho said, "would you really do anything for nie, even If It was silly and and awfully dangerous. Just to prove to me thot you like me?" "Not to prove that I like you, but that I love you yes. He laughed a little at her serious face. "Do you see that big rock out there?" She pointed to n largo rock Just In the edge of the now low tide. "I do." "You know when the tide Is high It Is a long distance from the shore? The water almost covers It and splashes around tt and makes a terrible noise." "Does it?" he asked, amused. "Y'es ; and unless one Is a very good swimmer one cannot possibly get In until the tide goes out again. If one Is ea tight out there. It would be awful to stay there all night." Elinor shivered at the very thought of It. Should she go on? "And whut then? Who ever stayed out there all night?" he asked, know ing well w lint was coming. "Why -why, nobody." She hesitated. "Would you do it 7" "Do you ask me to?" He looked at her Intently, ft.e was building a pyra mid of sand. "I I'd tielleve you If you did." she said, at length, and looking Into bis eyes to see how he would receive the suggestion. "And you'd like to believe me. Eli nor? Tell me that but no, don't! I'll do It. Are we not living 11 bund red years, .a go?" Elinor wished, now thut she had promised to do It, that she bad not asked It. Suppose a storm should come np and the waves should dash over the rock and sweep him off and and he was not able to swim far enough to reach shore! "Jack." she said, a little nervously, "let's mov forward a hundred years; MR. EOOSEVEXT AND S - - - y a 4 'A m v. ; n rm 1$: V - ; j .V -v- .',), - t. I '!'- Tent which will be the Ex-Pt expedition. I don't like the old times. 1 I might believe you." But Jack would not puss over the century so quickly. He would do as she had asked him ; he would spend the night on the big rock, and then she might believe. Elinor sat In the window of their summer cottage on the shore and watched the tide come In, wave by wave. One by one the shadows fell, and the figure out on the rock lecame less and less distinct. At last she had to go out to the bench to see It st all. Higher and higher grew the water mark about the rock, nnd yet the figure did not move ; It sat on the topmost point, looking out over the sound. At last It was too dark to see tho figure on the rock, and Elinor walked up and down the beich In front of t.he cottage. She was fiupposed to have re tired, but somehow it scorned so useless to pretend to sleep. She wondered If the ladies lu the centuries long ago slept on its usual while their knights were in danger. Oh, she wished to-morrow would come, when she might live again in the twentieth century. The searchlight of a passing cruiser was thrown 011 the rock, and hy its light she could see the waves break about the ragged edges. Running close to the water's edge, she looked up and down for a skiff, one of the old flat boats she nnd Jack so often fished In. Finding one far up on the shore, she dragged it down to the wafer and jumped In. Stroke by stroke she pulled out to wards the big rock, but the tide was strong nnd the boat heavy. It seemed hours before she came near It. "Jack. Jack !" she cabled. "I'm Oh. It's such hard pulling." "Elinor!" was all Jack said, as ho took hold of the rope with one hand and bers with the other. The plsce was not nearly so rough as It hnd looked from a distance. "Jump in," she said. "But the night hasn't begun yet." lie replied, still standing on the rock. "What?" sho almost gapped. "I thought It must surely be morning, and that It was never going to get light." "It's only eleven, and that wasn't late one hundred years ago." m j WLim ? Ml US HfflJ " v $tauo- m mm OWA'S law authorizing the establishment of commission gov ernment lu cities of 25,000 or more population, which baa been very successful in Its first year of trial by Des Moines, accord ing to reports from that dty, waa enacted by the legislature in the spring of 11)07. Applying to eight cities by virtue of tho liopuhitloti clause, It wits instituted in Des Moines, a city of 75,MiO Inhabitants, soon ufter the Supreme Court of Iowa, In February, 1008, upheld Its constitutionality without a dissenting opinion, and has become widely known as "the Des Moines plan." In Its general feature, flie plan provides for a method of city government that has been tried, with good results, for several years In Houston and Galveston, Tex. Instead of a mayor and a lioard of aldermen or councilnien, the "Des Moines plan" makes the governing power of a city a commission consisting of a mayor nnd four couucilaien. I .urge powers are combined in the com mission, which inukes the local laws and executes them through a division of authority whereby each meinlier of the commission becomes the head of a department. These departments are as follows: Public affairs, accounlit aud flnauces, public safety, lu -hiding tire and health; parks and public prop erty, public Improvements. The Iowa law may be adopted hy any city win, in the Stale having suffi cient population, which makes It eligible for eight dtles. Cedar Rapids has followed the example of lies Moines and has elected to try it. If 10 per vnt of the voters of 11 11 eligible city petition for the purpose an election must lie held to decide whether the city shall adopt the law. A majority of tlie voters may adopt it or may drop it ufter ttlnl. Initiative and referendum provisions form an Important part of tin- law. At the ieuiund of 25 per cent of the voters there must iie a referendum 011 tiny ailon of the commission, Hisitlve or negative, mid the decision of the majority r.f voters at tho refer endum election is made binding on the mayor and tuuciliuen. All ordi nances granting franchises must be Mibmtttod to the voters for adoption or rejection. Sessions of the commission must be public. To Judge from the report from D's Moines, the plau has been espocially effective In financial snd police mutters. 1'or th second year in its hlstory.lt is said, the city lias Itved within Its lucome. having surplus of about f20.tx, Instead of 11 deficit of f50,0i!0 or more. The hve ineuilicrs of the com mission have been paid $;i,taK) each, whereas coundltnen were formerly jwiid $2!H) each, but It Is estimate! that business methods of administration have saved more thati the $ir,tK)0 total cost of the commission. Every depart ment of the government has lieee reorganized; situ ures have been abolished, and It is even staled that "there are 110 more political Jobs." Streets have Is-en kept oloiin. better lighted at less cost, and paving contracts have btumt oarrbvi out in the spirit and the letter of tlio contract. Each commissioner takes personal pride In bis department and feels persoual rewponalblllt for tt BIS HEW WHITE nOTJSE. v ,.. i i y . : ... I t";' ' ' . ' . 4 if 1 esldent's home during his African "Get In, Jack," she said. Impatiently. She hoped no one was ou the shore to see. "I would, 'If I but knew,'" he said, meaningly. "Then know, Jack, and do come." As Jack walked homo from the little cottage that night he thought one hun dred years was the shortest space of time Imaginable. He broke Into a hap py whistle. "If I but knew. If I but knew !" Philadelphia Telegraph, VERTICAL TRANSPORTATION. Twlre mm Many Folk Carried la K. le vators on Lateral Lines. Vertical transportation In New York has reached enormous proportions, and according to a jwper recently read be fore the Eiectrioal Engineering Society of Columbia University, twice as many people nre carried vertically as are car lied horizontally every twen?J-tur hours, says !je New York Sun. 1 Taking twenty-six of the large office buildings in the lower part of the bor ough of Manhattan, all of eighteen floors or over, this authority states, we find a total of f72 floors In all, aggre gating a height of approximately one and one-third miles. In these twenty-six buildings there nre tlfi express eleva tors traveling an aggregate distance of 275 miles an hour and averaging 243, 000 passengers a day. These same twenty-six buildings have 115 local ele vators running approximately the same number of car miles an hour, but car rying about .172,000 passengers a day. This makes a total of 231 elevators running 4,400 miles, carrying a total of Cl.'.OOO passengers a day. Taking the 8,000 elevators used ex clusively to carry passeriroTs In the borough of Manhattan :md dividing them Into groups, nllowin;: for the num ber of persons curried, we find thut they transport approximately ,."i00,000 passengers a day. From tho last report of the public service commission we learn tbat only 3,500.000 are carried a day by surface, elevated and subway cars In the entire city of Creator New York. No Longer In Control. Knicker Did Jones lost control of his auto? Bocker Entirely; his chauffeur won't let him use It at all.