Long Drive on Automobile A Trip to Chicago from St. Loviis Made in 36 Hours - John L. French of St. Louis in tho first man to muko a trip from St. I)IiIh to Chicago on an automobile. He mude (ho distance of ISO in 1 1 oh In thlrty-nlx hours, notwithstanding the fact that tin encountored hail roniln and whh frequently retarded hy fol lowing wrong directions. Ho traveled without a chart, and did not try to u ho the most direct route, llu made tho Journey to prove thnt the horse less carriage could he iihciI sntlsfae lorlly on dirt roads of the country und that It could lie depended on to climb IiIIIh and to wheel through deep mud. The automobile In which the Ion 3 drive wnx made la of phaeton pattern and weights 1,000 pounds. It consum ed olghteen gallons of gnsollne nt n coat of $2 for the trip. The average speed wns twelve miles and a half an hour, nnd the only accident was tho puncturing of n tire. "When I left St. Louis I decided to tako the roads us they came," said Mr. French, when neon aftor Ills ar rival In Chicago. "Tho farmer may understand all about tho highways and byways of Illinois, but I found tho roads a perfect labyrinth. The per sons whom I met on tho Journey, nnd from whom I humbly Inquired tho best route to Chicago so often mlsdlrectod mo that I lost much time. Owing to tho section divisions, tho roads are short nnd I found that I had to turn n corner every ton minutes. As the speed of the automobile had to be de creased In order to mnko each turn, I could not cover as great n distance as If I had been on a straight road. I am sure thnt I could make tho trip In much better time if I wero to re peat It, as I know tho route now. "Leaving St. Louis at 8 o'clock In the morning, I spent tho night at 1)1 voruou, eighty-live miles away. I ran 125 miles during tho day, but lost fif ty miles by going out of my way ac cording to directions glvou mo by per sons of whom I asked Information. I took luncheon at Staunton. Near Litchfield ono of tho tires was punc tured nnd I had u bad time until I renched Dlvernon. Tho country peo plo hud never seen an automobile, and my machine created a great deal of excitement. Men, women anil child ren rushed out of the houses to look at tho horseless carriage. I wns sur prised when I saw the astonishment with which tho automobile was exam ined. Kveu tho horses wero amazed, nnd ninny times I was compelled to Btop my vehicle In order to prevent ruuawnys. Tho dogs barked nt mo, but they fled In terror when tho ma chine whizzed by them. "At Dlvernon I patchod tho punc tured tire with rope nnd went on to Bprlugfleld. After leaving Dlvernon tho roads were much Improved for a long distance. In Springfield I had tho tire mended, nnd then I decided to como to Chicago. I came through Sherman, Mlddleton, San Joso and Delavon. From Mlddleton to San Joso the roads woro good. At Pokln I wheeled Into deep sand as far as Chilllcothe. Near Peoria I was com pelled to get out and push my ma chine. "From Chilllcothe to Henry tho roads wore fine. I spent the night in Henry. The next morning I had a splendid drive to Seneca. I ran Into a heavy storm at Mluoka, nnd tho trip for tho remainder of tho way Into Chi cago was through mud, In somo places six luchcs deep. My brother Joined mo At Jollet, and tho additional weight made little dlfforenco with the upoed of the automobile." largest Hall In Worl.l, The Chinese, hnvo claimed to hnvo tho largest bell In tho world, In u Bud dhist monastery In tho vicinity of Can tou, but a bell In tho Moscow cathedral . 1 - . ; ii , THE ROUTE FROM ST. LOUIS TO CHICAGO. Is really tho lurgcBt. The Canton bell, which was cast In 1400 A. D., Is said to have cost tho lives of eight men, who were killed during the process of casting. The wholo bell Is covered with an Inscription In embossed Chi nese character" about hulf un Inch long, covering oven tho handle, tho total number being 84,000. Theso char acters tell a story, ono of the Chinese classics. TIMBER QnOWINO SCARCE. , Timber MI11111I Will Htinnly Conitiinpllon About Fifty Your.' In the manufacturing Investigations of .thc'tlcvontli censtiR, made In 1890, lumbermen and mill owners were nak ed how much timber land wiib owned by them, nnd what was tho stand of timber upon It. These questions wero quite generally answered, nnd tho re plies showed that a total urea of 27, CC4.G2G acres, or about 43,200 squaro miles, wns reported upon, with nn ave nge stand upon It of 7,830 feet per acre. Nearly nil of this area was In tho east ern atutes. Tho stand of timber nvor nged by stntes ranged from 3,000 up to 41,000 feet per acre, the latter stand being In the state or California. Tho orngo stand In the southern stntes, In cluding pine und hnrdwood, was 6,000 feet, and In New Knglnnd G.G00 feet. These figures of nvcrngo stand, how over are misleading, since they repre sent not tho average of tho timber land of tho country, but the" best of It, quality having largely determined the selection of lands. It woud, there foro, be unsafe to accept these figures of stand ns the average, oven for the lands which nre covered with mer chantable timber. The uvorago stand of the wooded regions of the eastern country must be far below theso fig ures. Indeed, estimates of the stand of southern pine show the much low er average of about 3,000 feet per aero for tho entire region. Judging by the nbove facts and numerous other strnws of evidence which It would be tedious to enumerate here, I have como to tho conclusion that tho nvor ago stand upon the wooded lands In tho east probably does not exceed 1,1500 feet. Tho area of woodland In this part of tho country is n little less KITE than half a billion acres. The stand of timber upon It, thereforo, may be In tho neighborhood of 760,000,000,000 feet (11. M.). With that estimate In the west, 630,000,000.000, tho total stand In the country would appear to bo, approximately, 1,380,000,000,000 fcot (I). M.). In 1890 the cut was about 20,000,000,000 fcot, nnd since then tho annual cut has somewhat increased. Tho present stand, would thereforo supply tho present rnto of consump tion for about fifty yours. As a ran dom statement, then, It may be said Hint we have timber In slock sufficient to Inst the present demands of our In dustries for nearly two generations. Somo species, howovcr, which are ap pllcahlo to certain purpose's, such as tho southern pine, tho redwood, nnd tho red fir, will Inst longer than others, nnd some species, llko the black walnut nnd the whlto plno, nre already Very nearly oxlunistcd. Hen ry Gannett In Forum. ,(lrnt (Inilil of Worklng.tToiiien. The women's co-operative guild of England, nn organization claiming to be the only ono made up of working women that holds annual congresses, held Its seventh annual congress at Woolwich in August. The guild has a membership of 12,809 nnd hns 273 branches. Its delegates represent nil parts of the kingdom. Subjects debat ed woro "The housing problem," "Fac tory legislation," "Women and local government," etc. Ilall-llooiut for Apartment lliillilliie. Convenience of npartment lire In New York has been yearly Increased, and there seemed to be no detail in which it could be improved until the enterprising builder of an upper west side block thought of n feature which hns hitherto been lacking oven In the most expensive hoises. Only half a dozen Now Yorkapartment houses are so built that It Is possible to entertain In them on nny but, a modest scalo. Uirgo gatherings nre, as a rule, out of the question. Now nn architect haa planned a building which Is to be sup plied with a largo ball room sufficient ly spacious to accommodate several hundred guests, nnd there are also rooms of smaller size for loss claborato cntertnlnments. Tho builder who set nsldo so much space for this purpose bolicvos that It will be nn excellent In vestment, ns the Increased rent of the apartments Is expected to pay for the loss of practically the space needed for an entire apartment. New York Sun. FLYINO. u L A PUEBLO LEOEND. Btory of Ilellvorence of the 1'aebloi by , the I'attfarei. Through nil tho grotesque darkness of Pueblo superstition, writes Marlon Hill in Frank Leslie's Popular Month ly for Ootober, runs a bright thread of poetic legend; nnd ono legend, since It is woven around tho ruined cstufa In tho ruined Pueblo of Pecos, has a right to bo told here. Pecos was founded by tho man-god, tho great Montezuma himself, nnd he therefore probably felt a protective Interest in It; nt nny rnto when tho usurping Spnnlards lay upon the conquered Pueblos n cursed rule of restraint nnd wrong, Montezuma Invoked ngnlnst them the nld of his brother gods In heaven. These told him to plnnt n treo upsldo down beside tho chief cs tufa t Pecos; nnd to light a holy lire upon tho nltnr, and If tho tiro wore kept burning until the tree fell, then would thero come to tho rescuo of tho oppressed a great pale-face nation, nnd deliver them from tho Spanish thrill. So the flro was lit, nnd n sentinel wns lasted to guard Us Barred flame; and tho treo wns planted under tho cir cumstances tho planter would bo ex cusable In planting tho troo ns Inse curely ns possible. Hut year after year passed, and the tree remnlned stand ing. . Sentinel succeeded sentinol, and the flanlo lived on Generations with ered nwny, yet deliverance seemed no nearor. Ono day there camo a rumor from old Santa Fo tllat tho city" had surrendered to a white-faced people. Wns this tho linnd of deliverers? That day at noon tho gncrod treo lopp'ed and fell. Spanish rule was no more. The prophecy had been fulfilled. If there be an unbeliever of this legend, let him go to tho ruins of Pecos and see for himself that whereas the city was built upon a mesn so Imrrcii that no trees aro thoro nor ever have been thero, yet ucross tho crumbling estufn lies tho fallen body of a plno of mighty growth. Tho llko of It Is not for many mliea around. Whence then did It come? SUASION IN DOG. MlnUter Overcame the AnlinixUy of n Ilellleernul Ciiiiliie. A clergyman who wont up Into tho country to preach nnd lived thero a considerable tlmo had occasion In his ministrations to drive reguinrly over a cortaln road. At u house on that road lived a big bulldog, which always camo out and attacked him viciously, says the Clevclnnd Plain Dealer. The min ister stood this for a good while, un til finally, ns ho drove past one winter night in a low sleigh, a means of cor recting the dog by moral suasion oc curred to him. He stopped his horse In the road before tho house. Tho dog rushed out madly, barking nnd threat ening to Jump .Into the sleigh. Tho minister sat In his sleigh and paid no attention. The dog retired, returned to tho nssnult, retired nguln, nnd a third time rushed out to the attack, but did not touch tho man. Then ho loturned to his doorstep and lay down, apparently utterly crestfallen and dis gusted with such a mun; and, as ho paid no further nttention, the minister drovo off. After jthls the minister drove many times past the house, but the dog paid no attention to him nnd never seemed to see him nt nil. Ho was cured. THE FISH KNEW HIM. A School of Ten Thontntitl t'ollimoil a Man to lie Fnl. Mr. Albert Jeffries of Aurny, Col., tells a new fish story. He hns recent ly started n hatchery on the Beaver creek, five miles nbove Gunnison, Col., nnd hns a number of pools constructed to hold his fish. To keep the fry In the pools he put screens nt the lower ends. Hits of liver, which ho used as food for tho fish, caught In the meshes of tho screens n fow days ago, causing an overflow and permitting the escape of nbout 10,000 trout. Planning to recapture the wholo lot tho following day ho went to look for a place where he could build a dam further down tho stream. Ho was much surprised, he says, to find thnt the whole school of llttlo fish wero following him as he walked along tho bank. He turned back and the fish turned and still fol lowed him. He kept on until he reached the pool from which they es cape!, and nn nsslstnnt let down the screen, making tho wholo school onco more prisoners. Mr. Joffrles' explunn tlou Is that tho fish wero hungry from twenty-four hours fasting and Instinc tively followed the man who had pre viously fed them. Ono Nlxn Told the Truth. A countryman on a visit to Glasgow, while walking along Argyle street, reading tho sign boards and the tickets In the shop windows, said to his com panion: "Hoo can a' time ham shops bo the best and cheapest? Every yln o them says that and the some wl' tho clothes shops tne; they nre Jlst a lot o leeara." They continued along the street until, coming opposite a plumb er's shop with a big bill In tho win dow with the words, "Cast-iron Sinks" printed In largo letters on It, he ex' clalmod: "Well, Jock, hero's yin that tells the truth at ony rate; but any danged fool kens that castlron wad sink." Paper Bhlnglet In Japan, Paper shingles have been Introduced Into Japan by an enterprising Toklo Arm as a substitute for the wooden article. Tho new Idea Is a slag of tlilck-tnrred pasteboard, more easily managed than ordinary shingles, and costing only half as much. THE KINO OF COOKS. HOW HE MADE OVER 100,000 IN THE KITCHEN. A Hklllcd Cook Mar Uevel In the In come of a Cabinet MlnUter Sketch of Charles llanhofer, . Who Wa Horn a Cook. It Is ono of life's mnny perversities thnt tho man who cats n dinner is often poorer thnn the man who cooks It, and that, whllon man of high in tellect mny hnvo n hard struggle to earn n few hundred pounds a year, a skilled cook may revel in tho Income of n cnblnct minister. It must bo as sumed, however, that theso Incomes nre within tho reach of any but men of "culinary genius," the Napoleons of their profession, who arc as great artists In. their way as a Mll'als or a Lelghton. Theso aro tho men who "put brnlns In their sauces," and compose n new dish with' as much lov ing care nnd skill as Mr. Swinburne puts Into one of his sonnets. Ono of the greatest of these "kings of the kitchen" hns Just died, but not until ho had coined his art Into .C 100,000, und had enjoyed for nt least thirty years the Income of a minister of the crown. Charles Ranhofer was born a cook, Just as Byron was born a poet; and ho held his nrt In Just ns high reverence. Even as a boy, when ho was learning tho mystery of washing dishes, ho would sny, "What Is more Important thnn our food? Nothing. Then can there be any higher art thun Its prop er preparation? Persons who eat three times n day often consider the nrt of cooking as n matter of little Im portance; but Isn't a mistake in cook ing that affects the health more vital than ono In architecture that may of fend the oye?" After a period as chief baker to Merclcr, of tho Boulevard du Temple, young Rnnhofer, whoso famo wns now known throughout Paris, was taken Into the kitchen of the Prince of Alsace, of which ho was quickly mado chief. It was in 1850, when Ranhofer, even then not of nge, went to the United Stntes, that his fame became world-wide, nnd he began to feel tho power of an ajitoerat. "It Is a won der," this beaidiebs boy said, "that you have not entirely ruined the na tional digestion with your careless WSAWWNAWSAAAAWWWAnAAAAAAAAAAAAASAAMSAAAnAWVAA The Chocolate KingN N N N N? M. Menier of chocolate fame, who recently attracted much nttention and criticism by evicting the Canadian fishermen from his island of AnticostI, In tho Gulf of St. Lawrence, is now said to be fortifying his little princi pality, and the Canadian authorities nre looking rather askance at the pro ceedings of the "man who would bo king." Menier bought the Island sev eral years ago und paid five cents an aero for the 3,000,000 acres which It contains. Then he set. to work to build up his domain and establish himself 11a Lord Paramount und the law and the lawmaker generally for AnticostI. He has gone so far that the Canadian government has cautioned him not to exceed his civil rights, and his status Is a burning question at Ot tawa. Ho lives In n castle, when he Is on tho Island, and having driven away the Newfoundland and Canadian "squatters" has peopled the land with Frenchmen, who are more umenablo to his law than to thnt of the Domin ion. He has n nnvy of two armed ves sels, which vessels alone aro allowed to carry supplies to the Island and to fetch away Its products. These gun boats, when not employed In trade, have been cruising about the Island waters with shotted guns run out, warning all fishermen to keep outsldo the "three-mile limit," for the Prince of Chocolate and Grand Duke of Anti costI asserts that his Jurisdiction, llko that of other sovereign rulers, extends a marine league from his chores. Me nier has spent vast sums In the Im provement of AnticostI, nnd It ,j sur mised that the French government la The population of tho city of Lon don within the municipal and parlia mentary limit, is very much smaller than most pcoplo imagine, and Btrange to say it is decreasing as years go on. In 1881 it wns 50.G58, In 1891 it had fallen to 37,703, and In 189G It was only 31,148. This is due to tho fact that the city Is devoted entirely to business, nnd tho tradesmen nnd oth ers who have their shops and offices thero nre gradually moving out Into the suburbs. It Is only the residents In a district thnt are Included In the census, so that no mutter how many people are there during the day, If thoy live elsewhere they are not To Lengthen the IUI1. The new tendency in railroading Is to longthen the rail. The present standard length Is thirty feet, nnd a sixty-foot rail has been tried In its stead. This length showed good re sults, but did not afford space enough for expansion In hot woather. The longer tho rail, the fewer Jolnta in tho track and tho fewer Jolts. But the mntter of expansion In hot woather Is troublesame, and It Is bellovod that tho standard length will be 45 feet. I Population of London rnnllnr ntit finati !.- . teach you something." And he pr. ceoded to revolutionize American cook Ing In New York, Washington nnd Now Orleans. In 18C0 he returned t0 Pnrls, whoro ho reigned for two years as emperor of French cooks before again returning to America and enter. Ing tho service of tho famous De. monlco at an Initial salary of 2.01)0 n year. Even Dclmonlco had to take tho role of oubject to this kitchen an tocrat. "You are tho proprietor," Han hofor said to him. "Furnish the num and provisions, toll mo tho number of guests nnd whnt they want. I do the rest." Ranhofer was now recognized as king of tho world's chefs, and he wi consulted by all the world's epicure Ho founded a school for chefa, and counted nmong his pupils such gluim of the kitchen as Lnlouette, Heiletcr Lnperruquc, nnd Wcndllng. His din ners were n now heaven to epicures, and furnished the talk of tho world s clubs. Some of his dinners have pjm ed into history. It wns Rnnhofr wtio prepared the famous "Swan Dinner nt which tho seventy-four guests wore enchanted by the spectacle of a num ber of gaily decorated swans swim ming' gracefully in a miniature lake In the center of the table. This dinner cost a "king's ransom," and was en. thuslnstlcally described by one of the guests as "nn exquisite poem from the first course to tho lust." Ranhofer, t.io. prepared the dinner which Sir Morton Peto gave, in 1865, to a hundred prominent men of New York. The dinner cost 4,000. The saloon w.is smothered In tho rarest and costllou exotics, the menu was printed on em broidered satin In letters of gold, ami much of tho wine cost G a bottle. Hut Ranhofer, although ho wus petted ami almost worshiped by many of the greatest of the earth, always recalled with especial pride the dinner g cii to Charles Dickens In 18G0 by 200 Journalists. "After the dinner," the great chef used proudly to relate, ' he asked to seo me, and his ono wonl 'Perfect' with which he opened the conversation, told tho whole storj Think of a mnn who knew better how to dine thun any man of his time tell ing 1110 that my dinner wns pcrfot' Why, I haro been seeking perfection ull my life, and I nm told that I lue reached It by n man who could wr.te out a mutton chop In a way that makes the reader's mouth water' OF ANTICOSTI AND HIS LITTLE NAVYvvvvw behind him. At nny rate, the French government sent the cruiser Isly to make a survey of the waters around AnticostI, and nn army of French workmen Is employed In making roads and in Improving the bay at Gur manche, at the western end of the in land. When M. Menier Is not on the island a French "governor" lives in the castle nnd rules In his stead. An ticostI abounds in game, and its streams nnd tho wntera which wa-h Itii shores swarm with fish. The Is land Is 135 miles long, and its maxi mum width Is forty miles. Until ie ccntly It was spoken of ns n barren place, and government llghthou."o keepers and tho fishermen who had "squatted" there mostly from New foundlandwere Its only Inhabitants, But chance visitors to the Island be gan to speak of Its possibilities, ami it was found to be nnythlng but bar ren. Most of the coast Is dangerous, and it wnB n place, of frequent ship wreck when the winter storms stirred up to rage and thunder the waters of the Gulf or St. Lawrence. Menier owns a great nnd magnificent steam yncht.ln which ho travels from France to his islnnd domain, and In It he fre quently steams up to Quebec, where his arrival makes a sensation. This !b gratifying to the Island prince, and among tho Canadian French he is looked upon with awe. Quebec society, also, receives him with open arms. and the French clement In the Cana dian government are disposed to close a kindly oye to his erection of Anti costI into an independent principal ity. counted In the population. The real population of London, however, Is very much larger than the above. Us ing tho term In its widest Benso, the city may bo said to includo all tho territory within tho Metropolitan Po lice district. This extendB ovor a ra dius of fifteen miles from Chnrlng Cross, and embraces an area of up wards of 688 square miles. The popu lation of this district Is not shown in the census of 1896, but in 1891 it wna 5,G96,101, exclusive of tho city proper, or, Including the city, 5,633,332. In tha middle of 1898 the total population of London, as estimated by tho registrar general, was 6,408,321. Return Stolen Money with Interest. Nearly thirty years ago Jonas Sil verman, n farmer living near Spring field, O,, was swindled out of ?1,500 by sharpers whllo on a train near Val paraiso, Ind. Tho criminals escaped and ore long one of the three died. Tho other two drifted to tho Klondlko a year or two ago, becamo rich and hnvo Just returned to tho states. Thoy hunted up Mr. Silverman, paid him tho $1,500 nnd gave him $1,000 moro by way of interest on the forced loun. ! Stl