PREPARING 10 RAISE THE BATTLESHIP MAINE DAKOTA CITY II ERA LD IN SANTO DOMINGO DAKOTA CITY, NEB. 1 JOHN H. REAM. Publisher. FILIPINO CITY UNLIKE ANY OTH EH IN ISLANDS. v . . . t - A- r ,w . r m m u r m 1 i GIRLo UTIES. The young girl who tried dramatlo Uly to tuke her llfo in New York re cently through disappointment Bnd disillusion placed tho blame upon the wrong shoulders. It In no degree rests upon either the business or pub- Uo social side of American life, Bays Washington Tost The responsibility for such an outcome must ho horno by those who are In duty bound to give their children right views of llfo. The slgkt of n young girl, however preco cious, going to a city like New York wlthqut friends or advisers to whom phe would listen, and very evidently head-strong and Impulsive, there to upend two years writing a book and precious manuscripts which she ro mantically wishes to be burled with her, calls forth noihlng but pity. But this sentiment does not obscure the fact that the girl was permitted to ain a false view of herself and her 'relations with tho world. Acts such as hers in no degree Justify the whole sale condemnation of the business llfo of our cities or warrant tho sweeping statement of a young girl facing nt 'once both womanhood and eternity In inaylng that "a girl cannot get alonf ihonorably In New York." Still another use for automobiles The town of Jamaica, L I., had an unpleasant time when a main burnt and the water supply was shut off 'completely. To say entiling of the an inoyance, Inconvenience and danger In jprlvate dwellings, the orphan asylum E--& other Institutions were subjected especially distressing experiences. meet at least partially the demand C.n automcblle service was organized, he machines going with tanks, bar jrela and ether receptacles to points where watsr could be obtained and (bringing It to those In need. This was . 1 . 1 . L.1U..1. M 1 1 ueei uui poor suuHuiuie lur uiu ;ular system, yet It proved that In im of stress the auto Is a valuable lltary. Still they tame, those Chinese stu dents who art) to be trained at Amerl lean educational Institutions. A party ftt sixty-eight has arrived at Honolulu These students are some of the num- jber sent by the Chinese government, tha expenses to be paid from the Boxer Indemnity money returned by the United States, says Troy Times. That kindly act has brought a rich re ward In the form of the esteem, grati tude and confidence of China and tho "influence that will be exorted through the absorption of American Ideas by (the bright young men who are tho (beneficiaries of the arrangement Engineers at work on the Panama canal propose to leave as little as possible to chance. They are now en gaged In experiments to determine (the effect of sea water on concrete. 'an enormous quantity of which is em ployed in the construction of the canal. Concrete in different stages of prep aration and with various forms of protection will be subjected to the ac jtlon of the salt water and the results Iwtll be carefully noted. Probably (there never was a great undertaking of this kind In which so many pre cautions were taken to guard against future risk.' I Germans usually do things thor oughly, and the announcement that there Is no cholera in Berlin, although the disease has broken out in the vi cinity, no doubt testifies to the ef fectiveness of the safeguards em ployed. Modern medical science is visually victorious over the ailments once regarded as scourges, against which It was almost useless to con tend. Yellow fever, cholera and the like are no longer the terror they were formerly. General information concerning in fantile paralysis, Is meager, but since woman of sixty six has died of the malady, the fact Is plain that the scientists who gave it a name were not overcrowded with information either. A Chicago professor says that the law is a hindrance to some people. If by some people he means burglars, pickpockets and grafters, we might add that that Is exactly what the law 1s intended to bo. Farmers will not become greatly in terested In aeroplanes, monoplanes and biplanes until they have worn out their automobiles. Man has at last beaten tho pigeons at flying, but with fair woman's help be long ago distanced them In the pleaaanter art of billing and cooing. A New York man Is taking his piano for a voyage to restore its tone. Probably it got a llttlu shaky on the high C's. We Imagine that h'speranto would be a good language to uso when talk ing back to your wife. A minister calmly announces that automobile scorchers have no chance tot getting Into heaven. This Is good news fcr those of us who contem plate gol ig there. The l.rst hobble skirt casualty Is reported from Newport. TUat town's nothing if not up to date. Peoplo are wnrned to be careful In gating oysters. Yes, first remove the jsbellt Buildings of 8tone and Streets Walled and Paved Native Women Lift Their Cogon Crass Hats in Salutation. The capital of our northernmost province, Santo Domingo do fiasco on tho Island of l!;itan s, is an interesting place. Tho route of our transports lies a few hours steaming west of the group, passing between them and tho Inland of Porihosu on their way to Nagasaki, jet comparatively few Americans have visited thin group of Islands," said Dr. Louis Ottofy, who has recently returned from this part of the archipelago. "Santo Domingo has a population of about 2,000, and is entirely different from any other town In the Philip pines, ,'n t lie first place, all tho buildings are of stone and white washed. The roofs are made of cogon grass .closely trimmed so as to af ford no purchase to the severe ty phoons which sweep over the Islands. "The streets are about twelve feet wide, many of them paved with stone. Stono walls extend along both sides of the streets their full length, giving them the appearance of lanes. The walls are about tliree to five feet In height, broken at Intervals for en trances to the yards, which in turn are separated from each other by stone walls. Most of the yards were clean and exceptionally neat and at tractive. "The provincial building, presl dencla, school house, church and the parochial school are all built of stone, neatly whitewashed, and tho grass covered plaza, fenced vy a low stono wall, was the acme of neatness. "Unlike most Filipino towns, there were no pigs or goats at large; they are confined to walled-ln sections be low tne level or the streets. I no ticed but few dogs and they seemed to be well fed. There is not a single Chinaman in the town; in fact, for that matter pot one on any of the islands among a population of about 6,000. There were but five white men there, the priest, who had been there for 27 years; tho governor, who I was told Is a Spaniard; two Span iards who are cattle buyers, and ono American connected with the bureau of public works. "There Is not a single store on the town. The solo Industry Is tho rais ing of cattle,' which aro called for by steamers from Aparri or Manila. When one of tho steamers anchors thero tho cattle are paid for In cash, ranging from $15 to $10 a head. Some of the residents then take the steam er for the first port on the Island of Luzon, bring some onions and garlic with them and do the purchasing for themselves and their friends. "The women wear a peculiar head dress made of cogon prrass to protect them from the sun and rain and with out one exception each one lifted It In salutation. For three months of the year the islands are typhoon- swept and no steamer can approach them, and at other times, tlough a regi-lar mall service Is now estab lished, they are shut off from outside contact." Manila Times. Children's Shoes. Children are often made uncomfort able by being obliged to wear shoes that are either too large or too small. The mistake Is made in buying. An experienced shoe man who had made children's shoes a special study ad vises that the child wear thick stock ings when trying on shoes. In many cases the child will wear his "best" hose, which are thinner than those for every day, and then the new shoes will be a trifle too tight when worn with the thicker pair. Buy as good leather as you can afford, but It is not wise to buy the most expensive shoes, for the child may outgrow them. The shoe dealer above quoted says that a shoe with a wide, flat, low heel Is better for a child than the heelless shoe, since children usually put the heel of the foot down heavily when walking, ""each chil dren to take care of their shoos. When the shoes have been wet they should bo wiped dry, stuffed with paper to hold their shape, put In a warm place and rubbed with vaseline to keep the leather soft. Forceful English Writer. Herbert Oeorgo Wells, the English story writer and essayist, Is forty-four years old. lie was educated at a pri vate school, but afterwards specialized In science and took his degree at Lon don university. lie UBed his scientific knowledge effectively In his earlier books. He was tho Jules Verne of a new generation. Though many of his books seem setisutional In nature, there is always a VPln of philosophic speculation, and often of delicate satire. He has taken a forceful Inter est In r.octal questions, and some of his later books have a wider and deep er range. Ho has been accused of a tendency to decry his countrymen un necessarily, as In the case of his rcther bitter indictment of KniillHh- nien for their fa'.lure to lead the way In flying ncross the channel; but hi attitude Is explained as broad as on- posed to a provincial view of patriot Ism. Recently he has been dlseuKKlne the question of the endowment of r.'.otherhood by tho state. Stage Fright. Th" curtain rose for the first act of "Thrilling Dangers." a three-net drama, which was shout to bo pro duced before a large audience in one of Manaymik's small theaters. "Now. Kwifty," said the stage man ager to a Ke n and ardent young ama teur. "It It your turn to go on tho st:j All you have to say when the pistol Is fired by Die villain, Is 'Hark, 'tis the pistol." You have no other werds at all. Now. my boy, do your Mif proud." .With tlie:e words from the stage manager "Hwlfty" stalked toward the tti'ge. I.'kewUe. the villain entered. "Swlfty" stood In the wings petri fied with stag- frl',ht. The sharp and const ralr.d crash of a pistol shot r mote ii on Ms car. "Good heavens!" he cried, rushing on the stage, "what's that?" i-.."-.V ,"fi; I "X- 7';., , -. HWANA, Cuba. Tho commission sent here by the American war department to ascertain the best method of raising the wreck of the Battleship Maine has made its preliminary soundings to determine the material on which the vessel rests, and has found that tho work will not be especially dillitult. Divers found several bodies In the hull, but did not disturb them. SEE PRAIRIE Game Bird Rapidly Diminishing in Numbers. Driven Away by Settlers In Oklahoma and Gunners Evade Stringent Laws and Slaughter Few Remaining. Outhrlo, Okla. Hunters of prairie chicken In Oklahoma this season re port them diminishing rapidly Incum bers. Uko the buffalo, tho prairie chickens In tho southwestern prairies do not seem ablo to withstand the ad vance of civilization. This is due not merely to their being ruthlessly slaughtered, but to their Instinct to seek unsettled regions adapted to their habits. Four or five j ears ago chickens were abundant In veslern Oklahoma coun ties borderlnir on the Panhandle of Texas, beginning In Beckham county and running north to the Kansas line. The chicken did not range east of this western tier of counties, save in Wood ward and Woods counties. The few remaining chickens are found now In Harper, western Woodward, Ellis and northern Roger Mills, with scattering bunches In what once was "no Man's Land," now composed of the counties of Beaver, Texas and Cimarron. Across tho line, in the Texas Panhandle, is a good chicken range. Chickens were so numerous In Ellis county for years ago that late In the fall It was not uncommon to see 2U0 OLD PAPER IN NEW HANDS Harrison Family Loses Control London Gazette After Tenure of 130 Years. of London. "Old Subscriber" has plen ty to think over these days. There Is to be a jolt In tho career of the Lon don Gazette, England's oldest news paper, which, established 243 years ago, now Is nearlng Its thirty thou sandth number. For more than 130 years the Gazette has been printed and published by Messrs. Harrison of St Martin's Lane, but the government re cently put up the contract for public bids and the prize has been taken by the firm of Wyman & Co. The paper was started by the court when it fled to Oxford to escape the great plague In the reign of Charles II. It then was called the Oxford Ga zette. On the return of the court to London the name was changed to that which the paper has borne ever since. Copies of the paper are In posses sion of the Harrison family bearing the name of the great-great-grandfather of the present manager, Thomas Harrison, the Issues being dated as far back as 1780. The paper prints all the official announcements and adver tisements under acts of parliament. It also especially announces all state events. Years ago, before the war office and ndmlralty and other government bu reaus gave out news direct to news papers as Is done today. It held all other news publications at Its mercy, for It printed exclusively all such re ports. In those days It was the flrBt to publish war news and to obtain In formation on such events. Paris Salon for Women. Paris. A feminine salon Is to be held in Paris next March under the auspices of the Duchosse de Broglle and the Marquise de Qanay. It will be devoted to an exhibition of all that adorns woman and her home, from footstools to diamond necklaces. NEED GIRLS WHO CAN TALK Normal Instructor Says They Live Too Much by Book New Course Is Remedy. Chicago. "The girl gets her Ideas ,is to how she should act when she Is proposed to from the books she reads. She Iihb no other way to get them. Social standards our young people are getting are obtained from the lit erature they read." Juines V. lloslo of the Chicago Nor mal school made the statement the ;,tlur day at the first monthly meeting .if the Head Asslhtants' association of the present school year. His BUbJect was The New Course of Study" Just Introduced In the schools. L'p to a year ago," he said, "not cui out of forty girl graduates from thi hi jiti biiioola that entered the nor mal Keliool could get up before her fol low ktudents and tell in a pleasing muiiner what the was asked to tell. She could not tell how to make bread ji' how to make a dr - I ,v.'i;' . , Xy" HENS' END and 300 prairie chickens fly over the town of Grand. Out In the thinly set tled country, prairie chicken were a pest. The few farmers were delight ed when hunters appeared, and en couraged the shooting of the hardy birds that were devastating their meager crops. Often 400 and 500 chickens would rise from a single small field. Notwithstanding Its stringent game laws, enacted since statehood, Okla homa has been unable to protect its prairie chickens. The tragedy has been that tho birds were most nu merous In the remote regions, where game wardens rarely went, and where they would have difliculty In overta king law-breakers. The result has been that in addition to the native gunners, others have poured over the border from other states, and helped hasten the destruction of the prairie chicken. The chickens are trying hard to stay In their old haunts In the new county of Harper. Two hunters scoured the Harper county prairies for two days last week, and got only forty chickens. This. In all conscience, was enough, but a poor showing com pared with other years, when that many birds could have been killed easily In half a day. These two hunters had tne good for tune to see a species of game that is disappearing more rapidly than the prairie chickens. Coming suddenly over a sandhill they saw four antelope and a fawn In the distance. They saw four antelope on the same range a FLIRTING IS A DANGEROUS PERIL Preacher Says Coquetry Is Door to Divorce Court. Potent Cause of That Coarseness and Bestial Vulgarity Which Is Do ing So Much to Diminish Home Power. Chicago. "If the true life story of the 16,388 Chlcagoans divorced In the last ten years were written, It would be found that the first station which led toward the divorce court was fre quently a romantic flirtation at an amusement park or fashionable sum mer resort." This was one of the Introductory comments made the other evening by Rev. Percival H. Barker In a sermon on "The Pace That Kills" at the First Congregational church, Maywood. "Flirting Is a potent cause of that coarseness and bestial vulgarity which Is doing so much at present to impair tho beauty and diminish the power of American homo life, degrading mar riage to the low level of a convenience and to the still lower level of sen suality. Flirtations foster the social evil." he continued. "The mother who permits her sixteen-year-old daughter to sail about the city In an automobile until two o'clock In the morning with a counterfeit sport of weak Jaw, and weaker mor als, opens the front door to grief and disgrace. If you don't know what company your daughter keeps or what lime of night she turns in, your roar when gossips get busy will sound about as pathetic as the wheeze from a Jew sharp. "This Is the time for the modern minister to shun Idle and toothless generalities and speak in unequivocal language. There Is something almost criminal In the blank Ignorance of parents concerning the whereabouts ol "She could go home and write an essay on a beautiful sunset. "Parents at home can often teach children to read and to read right. Galvanized methods of reading aro quite unnecessary. "The child as a baby likes to talk It Is his nature. When the children find language a bore, it is not their fault It ts ours. "As a rule a course of Btudy tends to pigeon hole a child's activities; but this course Is mapped out to stimulate useful, sensible, profitable coopera tion. "In tho high schools, sad to say, the teacher of English does not And all the co-operation she should have. The teacher of science uses slang and mur ders the English language. "The pupils in our schools, particu larly in the lower grades, are like Tennyson's 'brook;' they 'babble on forever.' "A principal of a Chicago school ' vwe..j.'WJ - ' year ago. The herd apparently had been able to add one to its number, despite tho constant danger of ene mies that lurked at every crossing and gap. Tho hunters found In the small, nar row creeks of Harper and Woodward counties the best bass fishing they had ever seen In Oklahoma. The streams In this prairie country aro mostly pools, many of them scarcely ten feet wide, yet twelve and fifteen feet deep. No man knows when or how bass first reached theso upland waters. They have spnwned and hatched unmolest ed for ages, and grown to their maxi mum size, feeding on the abundance of grasshoppers and other insect life. SPARROWS GONE IN A NIGHT Birds Disappear Suddenly From La redo, Tex., During Severe Tropical Storm. Laredo, Tex. The thousands of Eng lish sparrows which have Infested La redo for tho last 13 years disappeared from the town ns If by magic a few nights ago. Not a sparrow Is left as a reminder of tho twittering, chatter ing myriads of birds which formerly thronged the streets. They left the town flying before the tropical storm, which whipped up the Rio Grande from the Gulf of Mexico. Where tho birds went to is a mystery. The dis covery of Laredo by the English spar row was made with a suddenness as great as that of their disappearance. One night, 13 years ago, the town was invaded by hundreds of tho birds. They are supposed to have flown down from San Antonio, 150 miles to the north. their children during the evening hours. "It Is more 'difficult to marry off a girl who has been pawed over bj every chap in the community than i is to fatten sheep on pineapple lea And should they come to Hymen's aV tar, they assume the responsibilities of wifehood with the enthusiasm of a one legged man at a society cluH dance, for they have flirted away theilj hearts until they are incapable truly loving their husbands. "The flirt is likely to discover af finities In other homes and put the discoveries Into practise. Thus flirt ing undermines the home; and when home life with Its sanctities, its calm and deep Joys and sorrows, ceases to have its charm for us in America, the greatest breakup and catastrophe la history will follow. "In respect to this menacing evil, a good rule for youth is: Resist the be ginning of flirting. Flirtation Is the first step toward self-degradation. "Tho man or woman who flirts Is hntching a serpent's brood that will ono day wake into life to hiss and sting; he is rearing wild beasts of prey that afterwards will turn upon him and rend him. Shake It at its birth. Flirtations dwarf man's view of life far more than they broaden them." Double of Alexandra. London. Tho Countess of Norman ton Is regarded everywhere as a re markable double of Queen Alexandra, She is a daughter of the late Lord Strafford, who, as Sir Henry Byng, was a valued member of the household of Queen Victoria. She is a tall, stately woman, with a wealth of fair hair, re calling her Scandinavian ancestry, for her mother was a Danish lady, Count ess llenrlette, a Hannesklold-Samsoe, a connection of Queen Alexandra, which may account for the resem blance. once told me that he was satisfied If his pupils could find an excuse for using words. I hope ho is dead dead to the schools. "Our rending has been too much of the prescription sort not enough ver satility in it. There is too little read ing to get the gist of a matter. "Wo say, 'Now, In this coming semester. I will set so many hurdles for my pupils to j-imp over.' Suppose life does not happen to set the hurdles In Just the same way. The pu pils go out Into the world and fall to make good." 1,526,966,928 Rode In Gotham. New York. Mere than a billion and il half passengers rodo c hcj vaiioua transportation lines In ater New York during the year endud June 30, 1310. Traffic figures made public bv the public service commission gave the to tal at J,.ri.b,;uib,:t!s, as compared with l,3961OK0,;."2 for the previous twelve months. The fares collected by the various companies totaled $7,224,179.- 63. Operating expenses ol 'm roadt for the year wire $i;:.2T-!.;57.1' TECHNICAL TELEPHONY? Sounds formidable, doesn't it? But the big telephone com- a panies conduct schools to teach J it to aspiring youngsters, and pay them a weekly wsge to boot Going up the ladder and through the school at the same 'J time The big prizes, and other t positions of authority that pay well The only preliminary to taking up technical, or plant, 'J telephony is a rudimentary edu- -4 cation. By C. W. JENNINGS. 4 a AST week 1 told how a boy starting In as a messenger at a few dollars a week, with application and ambi tion could make himself a power on the commercial side of the telephone industry, now rapidly spreading to every nook and cranny of this country. Today, I pur pose telling how a boy, who doesn't know the flrst thing about a tele phone principle to begin with, can equip himself for high office and in fluence on the purely physical, or tech nical, side of the industry. Technical telephony sounds for midable, doesn't it, especially when you recall that your boy has never displayed, to your certain knowledge, any pronounced leanings to study any thing from the mechanical or tech nical side. But don't, worry, notwith standing. If your boy makes up his mind that he would like to take up technical telephony. Provided he Is about 18, has a rudimentary educa tion, and is chock full of ambition and determination to get ahead, the tele phone company will see to It that he gets the necessary technical knowl edge, that he may bo of value to them and to himself. And If, In good time, he reaches a position of great power In the company he will not have been the first youngster to mount the same ladder to success. Your boy, then its having been de cided that he is going to make a de termined effort to learn everything possible to be learned about the phy sical side of the telephone business applies to what is known as the plant department, tho particular and dis tinctive branch of the industry that installs tho telephones and keeps them in good working order 3G5 days In a year. At once, he doubtless will be surprised to learn that he has to begin by going to school; and his sec ond surprise will come when he Is told that, nevertheless, and notwith standing, he will be an employee of the company and will actually be paid a weekly wage while he Is being In structed In the abe's of technical telephony. The pay of the pupil varies from $6 to $10 a week at the start, according to the city In which he begins his life's work studies. In almost every one of the big cities throughout the country the telephone company oper ating therein maintains a regular school of Instruction in connection with its plant. The school In New York city, where there are 340,000 telephones in use, is typical of all the others, and so its methods and the lines of advancement therefrom, are here described. The school is in charge of an In structor, who, of course, teaches everything there is to be learned about putting the Instruments to gether (assembling, It is called); how the wires are connected properly, and how to Install them and the instru ments in a building and fix them ready for use. After two or three weeks of instruction, demonstration, and listening to lectures, the boy will know enough to be sent out as a help er to one of the regular installers. An Installer makes connection with the outside wires or cables at the en trance of a building, continuing them beneath mouldings and through walls to tho particular room in which the 'phone is to be installed. Then, when everything is ready, he connects the "phone itself with the rest of the sys tem and turns it over, ready for use, to the traffic department. He Is a very important factor in the telephone 'ndustry. As a helper to an installer your boy will receive probably $8 or $10 a week. His work as a helper will continue for several months, and all the time he will be getting more advanced in struction In the sc hool, learning down to the uttermost detail tho Internal construction of the instrument him Bell. Perhaps, by the time he has mastered this bit of technical knowl edge he is receiving $12 a week, as reward for work wt 11 done and les pons well learned; ;m(! t) en, one line morning, he walks into the ofliee to find himself pron.otc 1 to he an in ptaller, with a 1: !;).'! uti r hi:: nt $13 or $1S a week. Alter a month or io i;f actual in stalling, lor which h? i -.'.' is respon sible, he is given vxiV. i.:o:e to 1: nical (raining in the school. Tli.'.i ti:::e i.e learns the principle--, i.i t -!i j.hone eonstruetiou and opiiaMon. and elso how to wire up and oinntet what are, known as privn'e branch rv, iu hbonnls, the central ilist r: in: t ;J: r points in buildings nr.d eCicr. th;:l have numer ous lira eh tckT':"-,es n.i:i.ii g from r.ne ro ., or upart'iient, or ih'.-l;, to another. Alt r I.e !. ,s jrovej to the herd el tie schcri l.ln ability lo do t Veil v H i; prael i. :ill , he liect-nies an instal'er ol' privn'e switchboards, or fxclini :;e-, as I Ley arc popularly .ailed, nt j. bout .'" a week. So is g'es on tl nr.ig'i ihe various fiK lnl.y g: oled covrses of tho school, lir.iil he l.n ;v. - the l-sic phases tr. lie tec' :!(:. 1 work cf telephony, r In.jiu ttie demi's i ine nickel in the-slot Instruments, the party llnesj the Intercommunicating telephoned (local telephones used for connecting various rooms In tho same building without getting outside connection)! speaking tubes, etc. Ouo of the feat ures of advanced instruction Is the hunting for trouble. The teacher fixes up all sorts of devices and cross wires) which might happen In any concelv able mistreatment of or accident to am instrument, and the pupil Is required to discover the cause of the trouble and apply the proper remedy. Si ill another advanced coursa teaches how telephone Installation; must be done In what Is known aa particular work. By this Is meant in-' stallations In costly private resU dences, where every wire must b concealed, and the work done around! rare furniture and bric-a-brac. The company expects every Installer to ns he does installing of the ordinary; kind. After five or six years of Instruction and practical work, first as an Instal ler's helper and then as an Installer,1 your boy, having shown In the mean time that he can handle men, may be made foreman of an installation dis trict, with anywhere from f0 to 1001 men under him, and be paid a salary, of $35 to $10 a week. The next pro motion would logically be to chief foreman, over all the other foremen In a large district, with a salary of $3,000 to $4,000 a year. Not a bad salary in fact, far above the average. But the young man with, ambition with sufficient ambition to cause him to rivet his eyes on theJ headship of the plant department will have realized eaarly in the game that there are various lines of adi vancement In technical telephonyJ and that the best way to become plant; "head" Is to train himself In all thei lines. Including the line Just de- scribed, he will also strive to master the cable department which has to do with the laying of cables In subways under the streets, the wiring of build ings, maklr.g underground connec tions, understanding the wiring neces sary for particular classes of installa- tion, etc. Still another division of plant worK Is that of Inspection. Inspectors are the men who make regular rounds In assigned districts to see that the tele phones are working properly. They begin in the school, Just as Installers do, getting a salary of $6 a week a8 students. When they are put on regJ ular work they are paid from $15 trt $18 a week and work up to what aroj known as special inspectors, at a sal ary of from $23 to $27, attending to such Important worok as the inspecs tion of hotel switchboards. Finally, an Inspector, If he shows ability, mayi be made a wire chief, in charge of the switchboard plant of a central office, at a salary of from $2,000 to $3,000 a year. Then he may become a district inspector, or supervising! wire chief, for a larger territory, ati from $3,000 to $1,000 a year. rruui any one ol ui neaas or me, departments of Inspection, Installa tion, or cable, your boy might be se lected to go out and establish new plants In large communities, starting with those comparatively small, and working up through those of Increas ing importance, till he had proved his ability sufficiently to be the plant head of such a district as Manhattan and the Bronx In Greater New York. The last direct promotion would be to the position of general plant super intendent, who is the head of all physi cal departments of the business, and Is one of the most Important officials of the company. Of course, the man able to administer such a post as this is not far from the general manager ship and the presidency, to which jour boy may at least theoretically aspire. As plant superintendent, his salary would be not Just two or three or four thousand dollars a year; and as president well, It Is needless to say he would be well paid. (Copyright, 191(1, by tho Associated Lit. entry Press.) Says "Chain Prayer" a Nuisance. The "chain l.rayer" craTe, denoun ced by bishops and clergy la this country as the invention of fanatics and a nuisance, has struck England; and the pulpit and press are Inveigh ing against it. The vicar of St. Au gustine's, South Croydon, advised his parishioners who received such "pray- -is, wnii ieiiitsis mat iney De sent on to nine otner persons, to dTop them into the waste basket. "If the whole population, took to writing 'chain prayers.' he says, 'it might be a good thing for the postofflce, but it would be an intolerable nuisance to the gen eral public. Klghty-one persons would be involved In the second round, 72!) In the third, 6,5lil In tho fourth, 59.049 In ihe fifth, 531,411 in the sixth, 4.7S2, !'09 in the seventh, and 43,046,721 In the eighth. Kvery one In Great Bri tain would receive the chain prayer on or about the eighth day, the .whole of Kurope would get In on the nlnnahtd Kurope would get in on the i.inth and the whole world the day after." Telephone on Aeroplane. As the motor of an aeroplane raakei loo much noise for an aviator to heai uny'hing tlse, a French army offlcef has invented a telephone for a passen. gT to use to talk to him. One cf Life's Finest Triumphs. It is a hiautli'ul thing to model a statue and give it life; to mold an ln tellirj r.ce and Instill truth .herein li still more beautiful. Victor Hugo. Progress. The world progresses: Formerly we found only the Police Gazette on bar- lipr khou tabled. 'nw wn flnri t v, jest magazines. AtehlKon Globd.