'I i . -i. 4 i i-.- r-rV'Vr ( ( r..-:.?r".:-VW.( !C' c f t, M- V'1 I 7E TELL-TALE I liaii ! no -ki-ii around in Australia for live year. ju; '.u a year's service In India, nn l bad a v. :u4 at tiw Transvaal Insurrection':-:.-! in a volun teer, only to settle down a; lat. us a telegraph op. tutor at Ilo--ky telegraph station bet w een in. Sioux City. It wan ii. .v In!? transfer me-.-.g, , L--t n places, and to co.rieci with jn ther along. The t - ; i ;.i mi. li r : :i ii: tl.er up llie road, w as Dlsii., ami Id t vo fur miles fur -inal Point, oldest and i and I hail hi together, ami here Tuiu F truest friend, i.vn, ii.; , i. T- ; t: wh roughed it ail ovi a nil when w e M-i to be near ea. !i ( One day Too; me that lie woid ll lloA II I fe er. h-r.,.!,.d d ma to I lucky SM'-ot- hi no day f t loo at r a day'' I-orks next To !r.g. lie xalil he ould com the 5 o'clock train ill the in. wait for me to get off .it n -that we would go up lino ih shoot along ih" points of tin down on ruiliR i.ii'l ill. Ai'i'-r h'.lls and ra vine. I liked tKuhiti,; hi tter than a day's otltilifj with Tom, ami I )iiiekiy ticked back word that in' i.-ould rely on tne next Tuesday, as liiat was my day off. The following day there came a iui-k-Wtfc'e throui;h Omaha that the 1,'niied Express would ship ?11!.(hm).(x0 In bul lion over the road to Sioux City the next Monday night, and that the train would pass through my station, Koeky Korku, at h:15 in the evening. I tele graphed back thai I understood It, and then I opened up the Instrument and asked Tom If he had received his mes sage yet. He said that he had, and would look for the train seventeen min utes earlier at, lismal Point. That day and the next I passed In tny usual way. Sunday wan unevent ful, and would have seeiim! long, ex cept for the constant ticking of the In strument, which was kept busy send ing messages about the iniirtnnt ship ment to be made the next day. Mon day evening at :'.) I looked at, my w atch. "Tlie train will soon lie along." 1 said. "I guess I will call up Tom, nd see if lie knows where It Is." A IiAGGEK STICIilNd THROUGH 1 called up Dismal Polut, and Tom answered. "The expresH train Is one station up the road," said he, "and in ahead of time, ll will wait here five minutes. I'll let you know as soon as it leaves in re. Tomorrow " There was a sudden pause In the ticking and then a strange hand sent the message, "That is all." 1 called up Tom again, but he did uot answer. I kept calling, but no re sponse came, and 1 thought that the wires had become entangled. I waited for tiie eipress wllh Its $lg,i0,000 In bullion until but it did not arrive. Then I telegraphed up road to Tom, but there was no answer. I waited Ave minutes longer and tele graphed again, but still no response. "The wires must be down," I said. I walked out upon the platform and looked up the road. To tny surprise I mv in the distance an engine coming toward me, slowly nwlnglng down the track As it came nearer 1 saw It was empty, and as it passed me I board ed it. Heverslng the engine, I Blurted Wick up the road. I went with such fire us I could get up, back to Dismal Point. Here In front of the station, Ioih1 the exprerm car, rifled of lta contents. Across one of the trunks the express messenger lay dead. The engineer and Cieman were so badly ntunned that at first I thought they, too, were killed, but after dome time I brought breath back Into the life of the former. He, poor fellow, was too dazed to speak, ml I lifted hlra into the car. thankful that he was alive. When I mopped lnt the little -nation where Tom always Mt, an awful night net Diy eye. There anting ai me in- -atroMent with bta back to toe door, wm . . .i... , i i ' . it i . y ' it i Vitt w www 4mk '4$mfMm TICK. my old I.o through him. the table. 1 die, a Mil l'i:h strength, only In my arms. id. a dai,''er btlckiri and fairly pinning lilra t rasped the wooden han .'d It out with all my to reeeive his cold body Well: toot hers of ! been slru.-k f In'-iuher not only long em buried, I n- '. I'orl-.s. and 'l oin's gi a e, loal P.i. nt. I never found out the rob rain. The engineer h:i(J nil behind, and could re- Irtiu; and after waiting :;!'!, to see uy old J"rleilJ . tied iii y p...-ition at Koeky ''He!; oil aK'ain- But on h.-u k in t he woods at DIs put a .-haft of wood, and 1 these words; "Living, I i n to the end of the world, n ;.ie bai l; to you." put Tom's name ami ajje, h.nd the oajh Unit I had on it I V-i r ' u ill pur:- He ; ! :. I. I uiii Below It 1 illi'l Vo.VoJ there iv rii ten find the murderer of peer Tom I'.nii,;i. Three sin: in licit of New Vti vat i? wire later, I found myself e,v lil, worth, a suburb 1 w as In char-'e of a pr meeting with the New Atlantic and P.icilic Telegraph Com pany, which communicated with all parts of the world. It was one of the richest organizations of the new world, and I was proml to be an operator Id Its employ. My duty here was to transmit tha private messages of the company; fot here the president had hl3 summer home, and lu re also were the trustees, and those who manipulated the road. Many confidential messages passed through my hands, and I treated them with becoming confidence. I never liked the president of the company, though he lived In the hand somest house in the place and treated me witli uniform courtesy. He had a cold uncertain manner that did nof seem to be worthy of trust. Certainly I should not have put my millions Inta his hands. One night, when he did not reach home, his wife came down to the tele graph o(!ice ami asked me If I had heard from him. I was forced to tell her no. This happened frequently; and one evening, when he had leen lata U1M, PINNING Hl.M TO THE DESK. j and she had made three trips In her earring? to the telegraph ottb e, lie said to me; "To-morrow I will have a pri-f vate wire put In rny ofllce In Pine street! uud when I am detained, I will tele graph you, and you can send a mes sage to my wife." The next day the wire was put In, hut as the president came liomef promptly that night, it was not used. Put. on the following day at 15 o'clock I got a telegram fro'n him telling Hil that he wouiil not be home until 8 o'clock, uud ordering me to send word to his wife. I did no by the station messenger. An hour later there came another message from the president's ofllce. It was that he would be detained still later, and telling me to send word Lome to tiiai effect. "Is that all?'' I asked. The message came back In sharp ! staccato notes: I "That Is all." I leaned back In my i chair cold ami faint, for the hand wai the siitne that had sent me tne nicwiage on the night ssir Tom Brown wan killed. The next day I came to the dty on a leave of absence to Investigate the life of Anson Trysoii, president of the At lantic and Pacillc Telegraph Company. I found that three years before he had been a Inlsirer on the (sloux City Hall road, with not a dollar to liU name, and that his sudden rise hnd been the talk of Wall street. Well, I ilid not let It drop there, but I hunted down l he case until I proved that Anson Trysoii, with a gnng of accomplice, had robbed the express train that night, and killed my old friend Tom Hrown. And one day I ; , i. .. wi,. ., 1st soil mm iw ni , n.o-. n mo v - for lt.r Milwaukee WlaconalB. f. f v y i -r t ? Vn:0' J ti UCM Every ton evaporate. Atlantic wal' elds eighty-one r, when pounds of sap; a ton of Pacific water seventy nine poiimis; Arctic and Antarctic wrt'ers yield eighty-five pounds: to the ton, and l)ead Sea water 1ST pounds. Am electric company proposes to run 1 tro'i'.y cy!:. along the Chaini.tain Canal, between West Troy and White i..i,i. for the purpose of driving caiiai b-..tt. The power is to be suppled lo neitois. wl,'"ii -x': take the place of mules or ho, -i s in hauiing the boats. Photographs have recently been suc cessfully taken under water at a dis tance of ten or twelve feet. The camera was carried by a diver, the light was supplied by an eh-clrio lamp carried in the diver's he;i'!j!eco. The experiments were carried out In the bay of Ii io de .I;. neiro, iirazil. A !crn:an rlrin, It is reprrt-d, has ; placed u.ion the market samples of i pure ingolin, derived from foal tar, ! whii'ii promist-i to supplant the vege- j t.' ltle indigo, as other dyes have been j M.pplatjtcd by the same source. Vege-' tabic indigo Is consumed to the extent : of .l."i,()Hi.(i)0. chiefly derived from India. l Tli' niimiH-r of astero!In discovered up to the pres'-nt date is 42,'i. A num ber of these small planets have not been observed since their discovery and are practically lost. Consequently It is now a matter of doubt, until the ele ments have been computed, whether the suposed new planet Is really new or only an old one rediscovered. What Is ls-lieved to have been the largest snake ever contained hi the rep tile house of the London Zoological (tardea died there last November, after having lived more than twelve years in captivity. It was a python from Ma lacca, and measured a trllle more than twenty feet in length. Its principal f I was ducks, ami It was fed, usually, once a week, although sometimes It re fused food for a month. As a rule the scent of flowers does not exist In them as In a store, or gland, but rather as a breath, an exhalation. While the flower lives It breathes out it.sflwi-cfness. but when it. dies the fra grance usually ceases to exist. The method of stealing from the flower its fragrance while it la still living is no new thing, and it is not known when it win discoveretl that butter, ajiimai tat or oil would ab-orb the odor given off by living flowers placed near them, and would themselves become fragrant. Vice President Kchoo . ma ker, of the Plit-liuig and Lake Erie Railroad, has a private car which Is fii.teil up in a nov el manner. All Its chair cushions and bed mairtsses are constructed on the pneumatic principle. At night t.tie seat cushions are emptied of air. folded and packed snugly away, and the larger cu-hlons for the beds are brought out j of their place of concealment in thei side- of the car. ami pumped full. It Is said that these pneumatic cushions; greatly reduce the jar of a railway. Ji-uriiey, and that In time they may cau-e a revolution in the building of palace and sbsp!ng cars. Most of us no doubt have cxjierienceu the discomforts of being yei.cd with a 111 of coughing or sneezing at the most inconvenient times and places, ami it is nol u-iialiy supi-osed that any exer-ei.-c of the will power can be made ef-lii-ient In 1-ins king either a cough or a sneeze. lr. l!rown.Seiuard, however, In one of his hs'tures, said that cough ing en n lie siopiel by pressing on the nerves of tii" l!is In the neighborhood of the nose. Sneezing may be stopped t:y the same moans. Pressing In the nei'.'hlsirliooil of the ear may stop coughing. Pressing very hard on the t,,, i of tie' mouth 1 also a uifatis of Mopping coughing. A I-boiling Home. Practically the captain and his wife make their home in the cabin of the bark; and a comfortable home, too, says New York Sun. Fpon the walls of the main room of this cabin, which is a room of spacious dimensions, there are two pictures of the bark Itself. These are distinctly nautical; hut, aside from them, tiie furnishing of the room Is such as might be seen In any room de voted to like purposes ashore. In an alcove on one side is a piano; upon the o'her side Is a sofa. In the center of ; the room Is a table, upon which there j are bo .;..- an. I sewing, ami here in port, ' win-re the slop stands on an even kei-i, ! u vase of flowers. The room Is lighted at night by a lamp like a piano lamp, with a broad, spreading shade, but which, Instead of being upheld by a standard with feet resting on the floor. Is here suspended from the deck beams running across under tiie skylight over head. There are here deep upholstered armchairs and other easy c'liiirs. and there are rugs on the Iloor. It Is a homelike and attractive room. Forward of this room Is l In forvnrd cabin, which is also I lie ship's .lining room. The mizeiimast conn s down through that end of the fixed table, giv ing to tills cabin a decidedly marine touch. Opening off the main cabin there are a number of rooms, Including the captain's room, which Is of ample size. There Is here also a room for the cap tain's daughter, who sometime sails with him. As is etistomnry on Ameri can deep-water ships, there are two or three utaterooms for passengers, who are carried when they offer. On In r last voyage to Africa Mils vessel carried three Dnssengers. Tne captain failed for many .vents; he is scquiiliiicil in ports all around me world, and wherever he goes I here Is no lack Of social life for himself aud Ids wife. Tly have more Invitations ashore than they tan uerept, and they entertain guests alard the ship, which Is Indeed their floatinf- home; but that they do not forget their home ashore may easily be imagined from the fact thai 1 in ship's name is made tip in part of tiie mi me of the captain's home town. CLOTHtS WRINGERS. The U ine if u Familiar Article 01 j Jtotiseliold Cue. 1 j Tiie first American clothes wringer! ' produced, which was put on the mar- I ! he! about tii,rty-live years j.go, was a ' sni.slaul ial and serviceable machine,! lui: ii.. price previ !Ke:l its coming til ; once inlo common use. j After some Improvements the pr!c : ' was reduced, but It is only within the last twelve or fifteen years that thei i ciul iii s wringer has come to he the artl- ! I clc of common household use that It ! i now is. j The price now is about one-fourth of j th - original price. The present output ' of Ami rli-ati clothes w ringers is about i To'i.Onli annually. Clothes wringers are made with rolls I of ten to t weiity-four inches in length; I v, lingers larger than that are made tc ; order. Ten. eleven ami twelve Inch arc tne sizes commonly opera'el ly l,a ml. I hough fourteen, ami even six- ti en, Inch wringers are soiuotlm In that to, inner. Larger machines are operated by other power. American clothes wringers are sold lu many for eign countries; though in some, owing to natural or other conditions specially affecting the use of such appliances, comparatively few are sold. Thus, while many articles of Ameri can manufacture are sold In South American countries, there are not many clothes wringers sold there, owing to climatic conditions, which are such Id I most of the countries that clothes dry quickly there and wringers are not much needed. Pew American wringers are sold Io France, where washing Is done com monly In wash houses, and few wring ers of any kind are used. In Germany, Ittissia and all the Scandinavian coun tries, and in Great Britain, American wringers tind a market, and they are sold also in Australia, South Africa and other foreign lands. They cost more than German or British wringers, but they sell In competition with them, a many other manufactured American products do, liecause of their superior ity of workmanship and better adapta bility to use. Prices I "iiiil Modern Authors. Iludyanl Kipling commands the high est price of any living author, accord ing to the Pall Mall Gazette, which says that it paid JfToO for each of lib "Larraok-Riwmi Ilallads" and that "Thf Seven Seas" brought him .fll.OOO. lie has received ,"0 cents a word for 8 lO.nOn-ivord story. Anthony IIop( charges $4.71 for .1 magazine story, re sirvlng the copyright. Mr. Gladstone'! price for a review Is 1,000. Conan Doyle received $:i..,blo for "Rodnej Stone." Mrs. Humphry Ward $-J0,00( for "Robert FJsmero," $SO,000 each fol "bavid Grieve" and "Marcella," $75, (Mil for "Sir George Tressady" and $75, txj for "Pessie Costrell." Ian Mac la-en has made $.",5,(i) out of "The Bon nli- Pilar Bush" and "Auld Lans S. ne." Rider Haggard still asks froa IjiTo to $1imi a column of 1,500 words and w.ll not write for less than $10,000. The highest price ever paid for t n-vel hi $3X1,000, which was hnndec o'.er to Alphonse Daudet for his "Sap pi.o." Zola's first fourteen books net tel him $-00,000, and in twenty yean he has made at least $1175,000. litis kin's sixty four books bring him in $110, Ooo a year. Swinburne, who wrilet very little, makes $5,000 a year by hit puems. Browning, in his later years drew $10,000 a year from the sale o' his works, and Tennyson is said t have received $t'X',000 a year from th Mai'unllans during the last years o his lire. Mr. Moody is believed to havt b.-ateti all others, as more than $1,250, 0'i0 has been paid In royalties for hii hymns. limner Custom. We are so accustomed to ladles anc gentlerlei going I" pairs to the dinins room tha; we are astonished to lean that this was not considered good font by our grandparents. The custom Ii (d comparatively recent origin. Kvei now In many homes the lady of tin house, (rue to the old fashion, leads tin way to the table, followed by the otlie; ladies in single tile, the genllcmei bringing up the rear. A writer hack In 17H0 tells us that hti loot hoi ,, l.i.-l 11 ' h.-r to liiiiin r. 'fellow is greatly shocked, on boari , nr. w hen the captain askei ' hi arm" on the way U sin- spoke afterwards or un 'h liiipii'leii-'c" In so doing. i Another writer, in ISd-. speaks of lady who tiled in is io whose daughter was born lu 17-is -having "the horrors' w hen she first saw a lady "hook hersei. to the arm of a gentleman lu a bal room." She remarked with Indlgnn loo: If my daughter did that I shouii take her home Immediately." Two Opinion. A well-know n novelist delivered a lec hire recently lu a New Jersey town After the lecture, when the people tnel 11 w as I he proper thing for one to asl the other: "Were you at the lecture'-" and tlv answer lu every case was: "Oli, yes I was there, but I didn't hear a word Iiid you hear llie lecture V" "Well, noi I was there, but I eouldn' hear, either." A friend, who met the novelist, nskei Mm what kind of audience he had am how he liked the town. "IPs a line place," was tha reply, "am I had the most attentive audience tha I hnve ever spoken to. No ovie mad u sound, and I didn't tmve to raise ni; vol .to above a whisper."' IM-.-liW'.ns. In buiidiog a !il.-ii.ay the iir.-st ami most important con-u'era I ion islhatof draiioiei.-, for if this is not good the base of the pavement will begin to yield, ami yielding of ti"' baso means the (le.-tr'.v-tion of the paviim-nt. If the hoil is soft and wet a very good foil n;la tioii may be mud'.' of noxli-raU'iy large stones wt ldei tig.itiy together. Tiny keep their pe-i:ioii well, ami at Hie same time aiiow for dn.iriage. Where there is a clay soil it is well to excavate about six Inches of It and fill in w itli sand or gravel. This allow s the J water to How of:' last! ad of ft ma'tiing j ;ui the clay and developing soft, spots. After taking ample prceaUiions for li.e 'drainage, the bed should In- brought to i Li.e proper grade before the road nia ! t rial is placed upon it. For the road i material it Is 'sometimes well to lc:iii i with a layer of two or three inches f us,.,i!3and. '1 his should be roih-d. Asl'i" iioiii lee iiiui iti ui o i ii , it ii , it .ii " 'I- a sort of cushion for the pavement. The best, and in the end the most economical mate, ial for a highway, is that of macadam construction. This consists of broken stone from two to thre? inches in largest dimension, which Is put on the road in layers about two Inches thick. Each layer is roiled and the interstices tilled with smaller I pieces if broken stone or gravel tieforo t'"' i'"Xi :,ver is piacen. i ms diommi stone should Ik' from six to ten inches in thickness, depending upon the amount of traflie on the road. If the foundation is good such a road will re quire but few repairs for many years to come, or until it Is practically worn out. The addition of a layer of broken stone will make it as good as new. If this road Is considered too expensive a very good roadbed may be made of a mixture of loam and clay. This should also be thoroughly compacted by roll ing before traflie is allowed non it. These are but two of the various kinds of road materials. They are lsth good, but they cannot always be rec ommended. The selection of a road material is a matter which depends largely on local conditions, and no fixed rules can be applied. Tiie judgment of a competent engineer should 1 sought In order to determine the lust and cheapest material for a certain locality. Edwin M. Grimes, in Farm, Stock slid Home. Cost of I'ail KoailH. According to statistics collected by the oflice of road Inquiry of the Depart ment of Agriculture, the amount of loss each year by the bad roads of the coun try is almost beyond belli f. Some 10.(iHi letters of inquiry were i sent to intelligent and reliable farmers! throughout the country, and returns were obtained from alsmt l.'JOO coun ties, giving the average leng-th of haul In miles from farms to markets and shipping points, the average weight of load hauled and the average length per (on for the whole length of the haul. Summarized, it appears that the gen eral average length of haul Is twelve miles, the weight of load for two horses 2,000 pounds, and the average cost pin ion per mile 25 cents, or $3 for the en tire load. Allowing conservative estimates for tonnage of all kinds carried over public roads, the aggregate expense of this transportation is figured at $'.M(i.414.(MK) per annum. Those in a position to judge calculate that Iwo-thirdw, or nearly $i;:U,(KK.000, could be saved if ilie roadu were in reasonably good condition. At $1,(XK) per mile a very good road can lie constructed-, and if any amount equal ing the savings of one year were ap plied to Improving highways, 157.000 miles of road In this country could be put in condition. The effect of this would be a perma nent improM'ment. and an exchange says uot only would tiie farmer be as tonished in the sudden reduction in his road lax, but he would also wonder at the remarkable falling off in co.st of trausjiorialiou. He would also find that he required fewer hors" and less feed for them. He could niaki t wo t rips to market, a dav inMead of one. when abil It y to get his goods there at a tlmel when high prices are ruling is a matter j of great consequence. j Farmers are beginning to apply a lit-! tie t-lmple arithmetic to sonic of til ma tiers, and It i nect that In the not too much to i s oar future we shall him- a decided revolution in the con. titton of our rural highways. Farm, Kieid id Fireside, Acme HiMd-lm;. With some fortunate persons the per ception of sound Is wonderfully keen. An able violinist went to fill an engage ment in a strange city, and engaged apartments in a street where all ilie houses were built according to one pat tern. Returning to his rooms late one night, and lug entirely i'orgoi ten the number of the house, lie was at loss to lind his lodgings, until a musical expe dient occurred to him, lie Imagined that he should be able to distinguish the sound of his landlady's street door bell, and so he deliberately went along tiie nl reel, ringing each bell, till he ar rived nl one of a certain tone, which lie nl once recogiii.i'd ns the right one, ai'.il on hearing which lie waited until lie was admitted. This nicety of ear Is not confined to musicians. An Fiigllsh lieutenant, on leave of absence from Lis regiment, spent u night nt one of the hotels of Manchester. The follow ing inorulng, ns he whs sitting nt break fast, a band of street musicians ciitne past, and In one of the Instruments lie thought be tecoguUed the peculiar s'.yle ff the playing of a man who hal pel formed on that Instrument In the band of his regiment, but who had deserted. The olth cr Immediately ran downstair found li!s surmise correct, and, greatly to the deverter's astonishment, caused him to be at once arrested. LOST SPRiNGti AMD MINES. How the liiiliniis Cooled their Spanish (iiiiiiieror-. T' .-, 'i - :; l!l N'en- 'r'-.'.ct that many in. lies once freely worket have been o-.!. 'J'here is another tradi tion tiiat nwiny springs have also heel I lost, and it Is under -Mood tiiat the lossei ol lioiii mines ami irings were brougln j about by the Indians. New Mexico I si:;,p:i.-' .1 oaet- to have been much rnort ' a'tratclvo than It is now. The Pueblo ' Indians arose in revolt on the first full , moon of Ati'.ru-t, 1 :. When they had driven the Spaainrd? down into oi l Mexico they set to work to cli.ii ge Hie condition so that there ; shouii! be little te.m; t.ition to reconquer New Mexico. This wl:'.i-ii The 1; all if Tills i did to liii'll n: : il.'Hl lr the fir ii t lie lilling of mliw-s a I' lieil and worked i-i- V, latiis-'ti occupation. ';!i gri at care, destroyed iiniiiy mines, It Is fnid. -'.irpri -ing as what they ii-s. It is tradition, and H'OS Of - Illlt SO the stai the si.iti inei.t is commonly accented as historical truth, that in tbeir. labors 1 render t,he country uninviting as jkxsmI bie theso Indians suppressed niumerous r Strings, S.tK-ii restiiits were aceonipMshed in an ingenious manner. The InnHans dug down and cleared away dirt until they found the crevices of the rock through which the water came. They took the ... .... , f a species of llr tree and tanqx-d It into the crevices. A.s the ma terial became water-soaked iit swelled until it plugged. Nothing remained but to throw back the dirt and to give to the surface the general arid appearance of the surrounding country. This wa not a temporary expedient. It res.ul.ted, according to the present theory, in the permanent destruction of many sourc of water. To tills day the a.ppea ranee or1 sligM moisture often stimulates a search foi one of t lie missing springs. Occasional ly these searches are auece-wful. Th earth Is removed, the crevices are found, the bark is picked out, and tin water, after more than two centuries of being turned back, resumed its na lira I tiow. Adventure with a Lion. A portion of the crew of a ship wbicli was anchored off the coast, of India once wenl ashore for the purpose of culling some .rood, and one of the sail ors, having through some cause be come separated from his companions, was considerably frightened by the ap-, pea ranee of a huge lioness which he saw approaching him. Much to his sur prise, however, she did not, on coming up, appear to have any evil designs on i him: but instead crouched at his feet an 1 looked steadfastly first at his face ind then at. it tree some little distance away. For a time the man could not under stand this conduct; but presently, on the lioness rising and walking towards the tree, looking back at him as she went, he found out what it meant. Up In the branches of the 'ree was a large baboon, with two little lion cubs in its arms; and It was lieeause of this that the lioness was in such tribulation. The difficulty now presented itself of hovf to save the cubs, for the sailor was afraid to climb the tree. So, having his ax with him, he resolved to cut the tree down; and this he did. the lioness watching him most anxiously during the whole time. When the tree fell, ami the three animals ' with It, the lioness, It. is said, dashed with fury upon the baboon unci destroyed it; then having gently caressed her affrighted cubs for some time, she returned to the sailor, showed her gratitude by fawn ing upon him and rubbing her head fondly against him. and ut length car ried her children away, one by one. Cedar Forests lieing I sed L'p. Havoc Is being made of the besh cedar swamps in the counlry lo supjulj the increasing demand of the long-di tn nee electric trannnilssiton plants and the power and lighting lines for pole One firm handled 150.00O poles la.s vea.r. and has been niitiking large corn j signiiM'tils to Buenos Ayrs. Souhb America and Canada, us well as ship ments to Texas, Utah and Colorado The poles are rafted from the forest lakes in lots of ao.OOO. ami lifted frour Ihe water by steam ('levators. They are !then sorted and placed in separat piles. Those which are not orf higt sitandard are used for fen if posts, shin gles, railroad ties and paving blocks. A liureau of t'ourtesy. A pleasant, innovation at the Omaha exposition will be a bureau of courtesy. Nearly all the people of the city will be enrolled in the committee. Fvery mem ber w ill wear a badge, and visitors w ill be at liberty to address any one who wears t lie badge and ask for informa tion. The members, .tin. the other hand, will he pledged to treat the visitor cour teously and nnswer his questions, or put 1 1 in in the way of gelling them an swered. The idea is being generally commented upon ns a novelty, which indeed It Is; but why wall for the ex position to put it Into practice, and why let It drop afterwards? The Vanilla Itean. it Is not generally known that the vanilla beau Is the costliest bean on earth. It grows wild, and Is gathered by the natives In Papantla and Mlsnnt la, Mexico. When brought from the forests they are sold at the rale of ten dollars and a quarter per one thousand, but when drid and cured they cost about, ten dollars and a quarter per pound. The yare mainly used by drug gists, and last year over ninety million beans were Imported Into Borland- V f I? 1 I 5 t? i 4 v I I -V 3 i r'-y-t., "i". r'.f -i i t