r St v X1 I i ' h 4 ! m RAILWAY TO EUROPE Hew Interest In the Project of New York to Paris by Rail. Vbe Idea Jm Not So Chlmcricnl n It Would Scent at Klrnt TliotiKht To Tunnel llcncnth Ilchrlnic Strait. When a few years ago somo explor ers and engineers suggested an all-rail route to Paris via a tunnel under tho Hearing straits, It was considered as the wildest of dreams. But that there Is more to tho scheme than Idle spec ulation Is evident from tho fact that tho projectors of the now road (French and Russian capitalists and American bankers), have Just filed a petition with Secretary Hitchcock, of tho interior department, for approval of tho proposed route. This petition will undoubtedly be followed by an application to congress for a land Brant through Alaska. Col. James Hamilton Lewis, of Chicago, Holmes Conrad, former solicitor for tho de partment of Justice, and Charles H. Aldrlch, of Chicago, arc tho attorneys for tho projectors. Tho petition, it is hclloved, Is a forerunner to asking tho United States to neutrallzo tho straits ns between nations, so that, In the event of war with China and Japan or Russia, no advantago will bo given to the enemies of Russia. Tho tunnel under the Btralts would bo between Capo Prince of Wales, tho most westerly point of' Alaska, .and East Capo, tho most easterly point In Siberia, and will, according to a report of tho engineers, provo a comparatively- easy task, for beneath .tho water, which In n6 place is over 23 fathoms, tho formation Is not of rock, but schlBt or slate. No blasting would bo necessary, and tho Diamedo Islands in tho straits at;o so placed as to offer tho most 'convenient moans of ventilation of the tunnel. Tho .Btralts,. commonly reported 16 bb from , 17 to 30. miles wide, nro actually 40, and tho first iBland Is 15 mllqs from East , Cape; the second is 15 miles from that, ' and tho third five miles' from Capo Prlnco of Wales. Horry q W.indt, tho explorer, Journalist and engineer, who ' , with a party of Russlnna visited the ' , . Btralts in 1898, declared -after lib had .', carefully surveyed tho situation, that , ' 'the difficulties' to bo encountered In tun- -. v 4 Jieflng'nnd constructing retails' in Alaska to connect with the trans-Siberian road wero (ndt' one-qiia.rter thoBO to bo en- "' '-cbunttyed in tho construction of the "iyhit6 Pass railroad, dreamed of ten o ', JWS ng0 by J' J k'11' for furt"cr north , "thtjfnountalns diminish and tho valleys, iy) vtl0&ly wooded to wltlfln 80 miles of , tf. , Caper Prlnco of Wales, run north and ,i ti e6li,th? rs '-' According to the present plans, tho "tO Trans-Alaskan Hallroad company, of 1 -"'"- vh'lch Mr. J. J. Frey, .of Denver, Col., ill 15 vfj cK" T - A MAP OP BEHRINQ STRAITS, f Is president, will construct tho road of 2.G00 miles tc Capo1" Prlnco of Wales. Tho Russian government will oporato tho Siberian side of tho road. The White Pass railroad is paying enor mously, and it is certain that tho pro posed, new road would pay equally well, for there are vast forests, tin doposits at Cape Prince of Wales, copper depos its and gold Holds of a valuo which Is not yot known or realized. Tho entlro cost of building tho con necting lines in Alaska and Siberia, and constructing tho tunnel would not bo ns great as that of tho New York sub way. It 1b planned to make tho road single tracked for freight with sidings, and will enable a train to pull out of Paris, and threo weeks later enter New York city. Forty engineers who were sent out by tho Russian government for tho boIo purpose of surveying tho proposed road have planned no mountain climbing or tunneling. The road by tacking would avoid tho mountains from Irkutsk to Yokutsk, a distance of 2,000 miles. This section Is now under construction. From Yokutsk tho road will extend half way to Verkoyansk, and then strike duo northeast to Verin Kclymsk; then south 100 miles, and thenco to East Capo. Con vict labor would bo used in Siberia, and tho forests would supply the ties and lumber for 1,000 miles of sheds In Siberia and Alaska. M. Locqui Lobet, member of tho Geographical society, and ono of those Interested in the great scheme, passed through San Francisco recently, and in talking of the plans declared that 12 years would see tho road and tun nel completed and trains running;. ISLK IN DISPUTE The Tiny Specks That Both Amer ica and England Now. Claim. Why Thone on the Count of Ilrltlah North Ilornco liclonc to Ua Where Titer Are nnd What They Arc The 1'eonlc. When tho sultan of Sulu (or .Tolo) first saw an American, ho asked: "Why did you como hero to got more land?" having heard that Americans were very rich and possessed immeas urable lands. And if he now knows, or over happens to hear, that our govern ment has taken tho troublo to put her seal on those tiny specks of land lying off tho northeast coast of Dorneo, tho woo isles of Bagnau, Taganac, Bak kungnau, Lihiman, Boaani, Slobcung, and Lankkayan, ho may, indeed, doubt tho tales of boundless wealth and wldo domains belonging to tho United States. But theso weo Islands have strategical value, and therefore we THE DISPUTED ISLANDS. They Ara Shown In tho Circlo off the Borneo Coast; want them. And, anyway, they belong to us. These seven Islands lying so cioso to . British North' Borneo, camo to us along with tho sultan of Sulu. But we lay claim to them, not because this Sulu sultan has spiritual power over tho Mohammedans In some islands without tho Sulu group, and oven over Mohammedans residing in British North Borneo, but because of two trea ties; the first, a treaty between Great Britain, Germany and Spain,' wherein Spain was given title to all the islands "outside a marine league's distance of tho Borneo coast"; tho second treaty referred to tho ono between tho United States government and the sultan 'of Jolo, In which agreement was made that all tho islands ceded to Spain by the treaty of 1885 should belong to the tnltcd States. 'Tho seven Islands recently visited by tho United States gunboat are unques tionably out of tho marino league limit of this treaty, and authorities declare the British have not a shadow of claim to them. Thoy arc uninhabited and reputed uninhabitable; all Ho close to gether and are spread o'ver an area of about 40 miles. The largest of tho seven, Boaani and Tagenac, command tho harbor of Sandakam, tho capital of British North Borneo. Rear Ad miral Evans, recognizing their value from a strategic point of view, sont ono of the Philippine gunboats to tho islands to survey thorn, hoist the American flag and erect American tab lets. The Island of Borneo Is tho largest of the East India Islands. Tho Dutch possessions comprlso by far tho major part of the territory, tho British terri tory (31,100 square miles) occupying tho extreme northern portion of tho Island. British North Borneo has n coast lino of about 900 miles, a moun tainous interior, and much Junglo land! tho population Is 200,000; on tho coast arc Mohammedan settlers, somo .Chinese traders and artisans, and in land dwell tho aboriginal tribes. Bru nei and Sarawak, nolghbpring terri tories, were placed under British pro tection In 1888. British North .Borneo Is under tho jurisdiction of tho Brit ish North Borneo company, held under grants from tho sultans of Sulu and of Brunei. Tho territory Is administered by a governor (English) in Borneo and a court of directors in London. Our friend, tho sultan of Sulu, seems to have been considerable of a person age In tho past and may yot be, for all wo know; both Great Britain and Spain treating him with consideration. Spain used to pay him an annual trib ute, and tho North Borneo Trading company still hands over to him a yearly tribute of 5,000 Mexican dol lars. And yot In his own land tho po tentate has wielded but an uncertain authority; where "each man Is mora or less of a freo lance, and his author ity Is measured largoly by tho number of rifles ho possesses." Following tho word of out putting hand to tho seven tiny Islands off tho coast of Borneo comes tho report that Franco Is going to turn ovor to us her insular possessions in tho eastern Pa cific. A cynical writer, commonting on tho reported transfer, says: "Tho correspondent falls to toll whether wo are to pay for them, or be paid for taking them." Certainly their reve nues aro not such as to make us eagor. Tho local budgets of all for last year amounted to not more than ?300,000; tho Islands altogether have an area of about 1,520 square miles, and a popu lation of 29,000. THE PEDIGREE SYSTEM. Br It American Steele Una Been Ilrotifcht 1'p to Itx Preaent Stand- Hrd of Excellence. We often hear farmers and stock raisers say that they caro nothing for pedigree. They forget that it 1b by a system of registration that well-bred animals have been brought up to their present high standard of excellence, and thnt the pedigree is a guarantee that tho animal Is what is claimed for it; It stands, as a rule, for Individual merit. If it vfco not for the pedigree Bystem, farmers would often be Imposed upon by unscrupulous breeders, by having half bloods or erades put off on them as full bloods. Grade animals have passed with many as full-bloods; and, in fact, from their appearance, they sometimes pass tho most careful observer, as genuine. High-grade animals aro quite as good In many respects as full-bloods but they are not good breeders. They can not bo depended upon to stamp their good qualities upon their offspring. The full-blood Is prepotent over tho grade animal, and to grade up a herd we must use full-blood males; to be sure tho new blood Is genuine, require a pedi gree. This must, of course, be backed up by good Individuality. It 1b true enough that an inferior animal cannot bo made a valuable one by pedigree alone. But the good individual whoso registered fam ily history shows a line of ancestry from which theso excellent qualities have been inherited, can be trusted to transmit the favorable traits to his off spring. While undoubtedly too much stress is often laid on pedigree alone, it will be a fortunate day when more farm ers come to a realization of the lm portanceof the pedigree. We shall then look for a marked improvement in tho quality of the animals found on the farm. W. J. Hayes, In Midland Farmer. CHEAP STOCK SCALE. "5 Hotf One Pnrmcr Keep Trnck of Himv .Much IIIh Hokn C.nln from Week to Week. 1 have an ordinary platform scale that I used to weigh stock to note the gain. I first started weighing vege tables and then to weigh pigs, so now I weigh feed and hogs every week and can tell how much thoy gain and how much feed It takes to make that gain. In weighing hogs I use a crate made of 1x4 slabs, with a gate at each end. I set the crate with one end at the hog houso door, balanced on a platform scale with blocks underneath to prevent FOR WEIGHING STOCK. teetering, open gate in hoghouse end of crate and lot in as many as the crate will hold. After weighing, I let them out of the front end and I am ready to weigh again. In this way two men can weigh 40 hogs in about half an hour, after everything is ready. For weighing cattle, I take two pieces 2x10 Inches eight feet long and cleat them together and lay across the scale as In cut and lead the animal on to It. If the nnl::ils are not gentle you can set four posts in the ground, nail 2x4s on them, so as to make a chute to lead them through onto tho scale. The cor ner of frame (a a) must bo made very strong. Tho piece (b) may be made movable at both ends If desired. Extra weights can be had at any scale house. C. J. Davidson, In Farm and Home. A Iluthtiih for Hour. A breeder thus tells how he prepared a bath for swine: "Some years ago we tried an experiment by making a shal low bath, four foot wide and ten feet long, of planks, with sides eight inches high. This, being bedded in puddled clay, was easily mado watertight. The whole thing did not cost moro than three hours' labor. Water was pumped from a stock well near by and run Into this bath by a spout. Gravel was placed some Inches deep around the bnth to prevent mud. The water was drawn off and tho bath refilled every day. The pigs did not requlro any teaching. We have seen seven pigs in it at once, nnd tho others trying to root them out so they could get possession." lint Fuel for AnlnrUta. Tho most common kinds of smoker fuel used by aplaristB aro rotten wood, planer shavings and old rags. Better than any of theso is tho dried and pul verized dust of rotten corn-cobs; but best of all is tho stuff known as cot-ton-wnste, such as Is used by engineers for cleaning their engines. Take a bunch of the waste just large enough to fill tho smoker and touch a match to it. It will not go out, will laBt nearly half a day, and will be all ready loi business every time it is wanted. Mid land Farmer, BIGNESS OF SIBERIA Surpasses Any Other Country in the World in This Respect. Some PnctH anil FlRtirea Ahont Tlili . MlKhty Colony of thcCnr What the .Slberlnu Hallway la Kow Dolus for It. The diplomatic fight which Russia is making to retain Manchuria, with its lce-freo ports, so as to provide a mar ket for Siberia serves to call atten tion to that great Russian colony and make the statement of a few facts re garding the colony and the railway which has been built across It of spe cial Interest at this time. We in America are in the habit of referring to the bigness of things, but we must admit that Siberia is, par excellence, the land of distances. It Is 200 times the size of Scotland, and its mining and agricultural belt Is at least 50 times as large as England. Of Its Innumerable waterways, nearly 30,000 miles are navigable. It has gold fields many thousand square miles In extent, and for 4,000 miles from the Steppes of the Altai moun tains and thence through the Balkan region of the East Siberian ranges fields of silver,, lead, copper and iron persist in an unbroken metallic chain. The great railroad itself, which trans ports us from gray Europe to the gold en east and the Pacific, is 0,000 miles long that. Is to say, it girdles nearly A TYPICAL RAILWAY STATION. a quarter pf the globe's circumfer ence. As with distances so with num bers. It was decided to build a rail road which should hinge Europe to tlrj far east. Immediately an army of 200,000 appeared to build It. That army of workmen promptly scored a record for Its cosmopolitanism Rus sians, Germans, Americans, French, Turks, Khirghls, Tartars, Tungus, Burlats, Ostiaks, Mongolians, Chinese, Manchurians, Japanese are all con spicuous In It Think of the task of feeding them!- The whole length of line may be di vided into four sections the vast plains of West Siberia, the forested rolling country of central Siberia, the high ranges of tho Baikal region, and the taiga, or .forest country, which Pacific. I give a view of the line in the tlga, or forest country, which shows its character well enough. Ow ing to the great number of marshes and peat bogs the line frequently de velops unexpected curves. On the other hand, when you enter a dry re gion the rails arc laid so straight that if you could shoot straight enough and far enough from the center of tho ob servation car at the rear of the train your bullet might land between those rails a dozen miles away. Russian system naturally dominates everything. Here it is, for example, in the stations, of which, by the way, there are 400. They are built on a strictly systematic plan and graduated Into classes four classes, at least. The first and second class are built of brick or stone; they have very good refreshment rooms, and complete ar rangements at the back for tempora rily housing and dispersing the 250,000 picked emigrants now annually enter ing Siberia. Tho lower classes are built of wood, and uncooked food is procur able at these: All, of course, have a water-tower, and a storehouse banked with earth up to the roof to keep out the cold and to every sta tion there Is attached a small dispen sary, with n dispenser in attendance, which is a welcome enough sight in this land of distances. Last year 2,000,000 passengers and 1,500,000 tons of goods passed along the railway. That is not bad for a single line. What will it be, however, as Siberia develops? fts population has already risen, with the railway, from G.000,000 to 9,000,000. Towns have already sprung up in tho wilderness. Two years ago the junction for Tomsk possessed threo houses, and to-dny it contains 12,000 people! Branch" lines have been built to Archangel In the far northwest and to the Caspian In the southwest. Every outlet of Euro pean Russia is being connected with tho Siberian railroad White sea. Bal tic and Black set; overy where is de velopment; everywhere haste and en ergy In building up Greater Russia. For, whichever way wo look at it, we must never forgot that what we are watching is the expansion of Russia, and that in Siberia and her capacity for almost unlimited growth Russia has discovered and now is founding ber colonial empire. SPORTS AND ATHLETICS Joo McGinnity, known in baseball circles as "the iron man," has long been rogarded as ono of the premier pitchers of the major leagues. Ho is having a very successful season this year with tho Now York National league m leam, having won about two-thirds of the games pitched. In a re cent discourse ou Joe McQInnlty. ng h(J Bad. My 'raise ball, which I have used quite successfully, I first got the hang of from Billy Rhlnes, the famous pitcher of the Cincinnati club. I was much taken with tho delivery, and thought it could bo doveloped into moro ef fectiveness by using a chango of paco nnd adding to it n curve. Every win ter when I went to my homo In Indian Territory I practiced the deliv ery assiduously, but I found it a very difficult ball to control. I kept at It, however, and gradually gained com mand of tho delivery, but it took mo ' five years of almost constant practico to get it down fine enough to mako tho success of it tho public is pleased to give mo credit for now. Tho 'raiso ball cannot be used exclusively to bo effective. With that alono opposing batters would soon get the hang of it nnd hit it a mile. Tho upshoot Is puz zling at first to a batter who has never faced it before, but ho will soon slzo it up. I have found it 'necessary, therefore, to give a slight curve not a big break to It. I have also practiced the underhand delivery, which is nec essary to use with the 'raiso,' so much that I am able to give the ball a drop and also an incurve with tho samo mo tion. The underhand swing I find, too, saves my arm, and is much less fa tiguing than" 'the overhand shoulder motion thnt most pitchers use. -I, of course, use tho overhand delivery when I want to put in a straight, speedy ball and to help mo mix 'em up That Js the whole secret of suc cessful pitching mix 'em up. Don't ' pitch any two balls nlike. unless you are in a hole "nnd forced to. In pitch ing my 'raiso ball I hold the ball tightly in my two forefingers and thumb, the samo exactly as for the overhand outcurve. With "a stooping motion and underhand, swipg I let the ball twist off my fingers with a sail upward. It floats up to the plate with a rise just enough to mako the batter pop it up in the air. But I cannot say that it is always a success) I havo had my bumps, and many of them, and prpbably shall again." Eddie Graney, prominent in western sporting circles, has been selected to referee the battle for the heavy weight champion ship of the world between Jeffries and Corbet at San Francisco, Aug ust 14. When tho articles for tho fight were signed somo timo ago the principals agreed to leave the ques tion of a referee open until somo Eddie Gransy. future date, but when tho matter was brought up recently the selection of Graney was mutual, and there is no doubt but that tho contestants will receive a square deal and that tho best man will be declared tho winner. Robert Fltzsimmons, ex-champion heavyweight pugilist of tho world, has signed articles this tlmo not for a fight, but which unite him in mar riage to Miss Julia May Gifford, an actress. Their honeymoon will bo spent at Harbin Springs, Cal., "where Fltzsimmons is helping to prepare Champion Jeffries for his coming con test. "Billy" Maynard was knocked out in the first round by Champion "Young Corbett" recently nt Philadelphia. Tho men were to havo boxed six rounds. The fight, as far as it went, was fast and nil in the champion's favor. A few seconds before the hell sounded end ing the round Corbett caught Maynard on tho Jaw with a right, sending him down and out. Somo timo ago May nard secured a six-round draw with "Young Corbett." Barney Oldfield has been lowering world's automobile records with monotonous regularity recently. His latest feat was covering a milo ' at Yonkers, N. Y., In 0:55 4-5. Tho best previous record was his own of 0:5G 2-5. England won the national challenge trophy at Blsley during tho recent tournament with a score of 1,821. Wales was second with 1,805. Scotland scored 1,804 and Ireland 1,755. Frank Kanaly, of Cambridge, Mass., the former five-mile A. A. U. national champion, ran n mile in a professional contest at Boston the other day in 4:29. HARRY MARTIN. i h ,A, i VI, tf -trvnr .vj5-- i.ti, ..;.,. "E- , rr-.Hl -tf-TP -ttt8W V-"a