TITE OMAITA SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 29, 1900. Han Wang, the Big: New Steel Plant in Heart of the Chinese Empire n (Copyright, 130!. by Frank O. Carpenter.) ANKOW. 19U9.-(Spoclal Cotra. T I -pond-nee of Th He.) I writ J I "f the biggest steel plant on ttva mainland or th AalaUo conti nent. It lien here at Hankow, la ti'. 1,'J... the Interior of China. 700 milt south of Peking, and an far went ot the Pacific an Cleveland Is west" of th Atlantic. It In In th very heart of th empire, accessible by water transportation to a population of over 100.0o0.000, and at ft point where railroad will eventually con. verge an they do at Chicago. Tha Yangst Klang Id said to carry one-third of alt tho commerce of China, and by It the blgw geat ocean steamers can come right t theso steel works during the greater part of the year. Boats from half a dozen dif ferent provinces which contain coal an4 Iron mined each reach It In any month ot the twelve and Its product can be aent by water to the edge of Thibet or on tha Vangtso tributaries down to Yunnan, tha great province which borders on Burmah. Hankow, which adjoins Han Yang, al ready has a trunk line of railroad to Peking, and others are projected to Nan king and Canton. The Chicago of China. Hankow has been called tha Chicago of China. It will eventually be tho Pittsburg and Birmingham as well. The smoke stacks of Its factories are already pol luting the air, and It has all the natural resources of a great manufacturing center. It has coal arid Iron on all sides, and de posits of limestone almost equal to Carrara marble In purity lie In its back yard. Take the ore which tha steel plant la now using. It comes from a solid moun tain of Iron about sixty miles down the Yangste. Tha company has something; like thirty-five square miles of iron de posits and upon this are hills 300 feet high. It Is estimated that more than 2o0.000.000 tons are already In sight, and that the mountain which Is now being mined con tains over 150,000,000 tons. The or la 04 per cent pure. I am told it Is 10 per cent better than our best Lake Superior and equal to tha highest grade of iron of Sw. " dun. The coal which this steel plant uses now comes from about DUO miles up tha Yangtse, and its mines are so situated that It can easily be loaded and brought down by water. It makes excellent coke and there are now about) 00 ovens on flra at tha mines. The present coal output Is about 1.500 tons dully; and, with a little extra ma chinery, this can be Increased to 2,000 tons. Both the coal and iron deposits belong to the steel company, although tha Iron mines have been mortgaged to Japan by a long time contract which furnishes so much or per year at a low price per ton. thlun'a "hied City. Hut' let me tell you about th steel plant Itself. It lies on the north bank of th Yangtse, In the city of Han Yang, Just west of Hankow, being separated from it by the Han river. Ther ar thr great cities at this point. Hankow, where I am writing, has a population of over 1,000,000. It In the pi .Miit urmlnus of the Hankow. 1'ikliiK railroad; It is th chief tea shipping city of Cliniu. and is a great Industrial centir. it i ui opi n port, and ha several furelMi co..Yvi-ion. Inhabited by Europe ans. O.i the opposite bank of the Yangtsu KUns. uh.cii l.i hrre a mile wld, 1 Mu chuiu,', aii.tluT great Chinese city. ThU in ttLuiit half as bl.i as Boston, and cove; a murii i;i (-a; r space. It Is the Ice regal capital of l'.j; h und Hunan, two thriving Industrial Mann, both containing millions. Han Yun.T extend fur up the "Yangts above ll.inkow, the three sister cltie com bined exceeding Chicago In st.e. The steel plant lies on a. trlp of lowland at tho Junction of th Han and the Yangtse. Pp to a few year ago tho ground on which it stands was a swamp, but th viceroy, Chang Chi Tung, having decided that China ought to build It own railroad and make It ow n steel, chose thla as tha place,. II was viceroy of the Hukwang provinces at the time, and hi capital city waa Wuchang, which lie In plain lght across the Yang-tse-Klang. He first raised embankments Short Yarns Told on Pertinent Topics Clergyman's Samplei. MINISTER who hud been do- K I lng. missionary work In India I recently returned to thl coun- aa I B .lal. IX waa a cmAiat II jr iim . - - - " at a well known hotel, where everything pleased him except the absence of th very torrid sauces and spices to which h had become accustomea In the far east. Fortunately he had brought with him a aupply of hi. favorite condl Wnts. and by arranging with the head water thes wr placed on hi table. On day another guet aw the appetizing bot tle on hi. neighbor" table and asked tho waiter to give him some of "that auce." "I'm sorry, air," aald th waiter, "but it 1 the prlvat property of thl gntleman." The minister, however, overheard tha other' request and told th waiter to pas the bottle. The tranger poured some of th mixture on his meat and took a liberal mouthful. After1 a moment he turned with tear In hi. eyes'to th minister. "You're a minister of th gospel?" "Ye, sir." "And you preach the doctrine of ever lasting fire? "Yes," admitted th minister. "Weill you'r th first minister I ever met who carried sample." Detroit New. Troatiles ot llnmorisf. Mark Twain one approached a friend, a business man, and confided th fact that gems of thought were forming In hla brain with uch rapidity that they wer even be ginning to parkl In b eye, and that h needed th assistance of a tenogTapher. "I can send you one, fine young fellow." the friend said. "He cam to my offlc yesterday in search of a position, but I didn't have an opening. I am ur you will find him all right." "Has he a aens of humor?" Mark asked cautiously. "Oh, I am sure he has In fact, he got off one or two pretty witty things himself yesterday," the friend hastened to assure him. "Sorry, but he won't do, then," th writer said, with a disappointed shake of hi head. "Why, er, why not?" was th surprised query. , The wouUlb employer assumed a confi dential air. "I'll tell you," he said. "You see, I had one once befor with a sense of humor, and It Interfered too much with th work. I can't afford to pay a man f- a day for laughing." New York Times. Father Mlaht Have Waited. Father wa running on th demoeratio ticket f.r district attorney In Greene county, New York, In the fall of 1S04. and hi canvas for vote took him to one of the river town among the farmer. H found In th field, ploughing, a hard work ing farmer, one of several brother, who took much more Interest In the sutije. t of agriculture than in politics. Father broached the subject of hi candidacy to i farmer, requesting him to coin out lection and asked to be remembered. He then spoke about th other boy and was THE GREAT HAN YANG STEEL WORKS "HB YANGTSE. to keep out the water, and then filled up the several hundred acres of swamp until he had raised the whole area fourteen feet. In this work the dirt and other materials were carried In by coolie In little shovel like baskets alung to the ends of poles on their shoulder. Basket by basket they laid th foundation, and now no one would im agine that the ground had ever been any thing but solid. It 1 covered with great factories and foundries, and there ar smokestacks 150 feet high rising upon It. Indeed, Han Yang reminds me of Pitts burg. It mighty chimneys, vomiting moke, (land out against the sky, and It hug foundries and blast furnaces can be seen for miles up and down th Yangts river. Altogether th work cover about 120 acre, and, Including the mines which sup ply them, they employ a force of 30.000 hand. There are about 4.000 hand In th steel plant Itself, and several thousand more In an armory and gunworks making rifles, artillery and small arm connected with It. Then Han Yang ha a mokeles powder factory, a large eljtrlo work and a military academy which ha 1,000 stu dents. It take about three hour' steady walking to go through th varlou estab lishment. Owned and Ram by Chinee. All the work are owned and run by Chines. Of th 20,000 . employe In the teel plant and mine, there ar only twenty Europeans, and they are merely a foremen and advisory director. As I have said, the works were originated by Chang Chi Tung, and that a a government enter prise. That famous viceroy had memor ialized tha throne that It should not be de pendent upon foreigner, but should build Its own railroad and make It own rails. Th late emperor, Kwang-Su, and th great dowager consented to this and directed Chang Chi Tung to go ahead and carry out hla Ideas. He did so, but It was at a great expense and enormous loss. He sank millions, and was up to his eyes In debt, when the works were turned over to Sheng Kung Poo, China' multi-millionaire. Sheng bought them of the government, and. al though he haa nominally given them ovtr to a stock company with a capital of 510. 000,000 or so, he I still practically their owner. flheng Kung Pao Uvea at Shanghai, but he ha able assistants here In the persona of V. K. Lee, V. T. Tsang and Wnng Rok Shan, all business Chinese, who have been brought up In th work. Mr. Lea, the manager, I a native of Buehow. He was aent abroad to study the Iron and steel plants of Europe and America, and from there brought back th plan upon which the plant was reorganized. Mr. Tseng come from Nanking. He began hi life her a an ordinary clerk, and ha risen to be the vice manager; while Mr. Wang, the commercial director, who come from told that if they got along well with their fall work all of them would be at the pells and cast their votes for father. It then ocourred to father that he bad heard that ihe boys' father had died a ahort time be fore and he said to the farmer, "Let's see, your father Is dead, Isn't he?" "Yes, sir," answered the farmer, assuming a veiy solemn tone and expression, "he died here last summer, right In haying time, when we were Just as busy aa we could be." National Monthly. The Mind that Excels. Colonel George Harvey, the brilliant young publisher and powerful writer, praised a recent address In New York, the country mind. "Even in wrong and Ingoble things," said Colonel Harvey, smiling, "even In driving hard bargains, the country mind excels that of the city. I recall a dialogue that I once heard In the general store of my native Peacham. What Wall street sharp could hav driven such a bargain aa the old Vermont rurallst achieved In. this dia logue?" And Colonel Harvey with really excellent mimicry repeated: " 'Y say, want a dollar for th boot. Tak 70 cenur " 'Ye..' " 'Ye mout throw In one of them woolen throat warmer, too, hey? "'All rls-hL' " 'Hold on thar. The boots ain't got no strings.' " 'I'll give y pair of airings.' " 'Iletter make it two pair. One won't last no time.' " 'Very well; two pair It Is." " 'Can't )' chuck in on of them paper collar, for good measure?' " 'Oh, I guess so, rather than miss a trade.' " 'Look-a-here .when a feller buys a bill o' goods offn ye. don't ye set 'em up?' "'Yes, what'll you take?" " 'Gimme two plugs of chew In' tobacker an' i pound o scrapple.' "New York Tribune. A He volat iouary Hero. Th real origin' ot the greatest fake hero Story ever told ha come to light in a crap book owned by an old resident of Washington. A . group of revolutionary heroes wer landing befor an old bar In Washington, and from the lips of each there fell wond rous stories of what h had don In th hock of battle or th frensy of the charge. Finally on old fellow with long whit whisker remarked: "1 waa personally acquainted with George Washington. "I was lying behind th breastwork on day, pumping lead Into th Britishers, when I heard th patter of a horse' hoofs behind me. Then cam a voice: " HI. there, you with the deadly aim! Look here a moment." "I looked around and saluted, recognlxlng General Washington, and he said; " 'What's your name?' 'Hogan,' I said. 1 1 -. - ' i f THEY ARB SITUATED 600 MILES UP Hongkong, ha had a similar experience. These three Chinese will rank as busi ness men with the managers of the steel works of the United States. Each speaks English as fluently as any reader of this newspaper, and understands our books on steel-making. I had letters of Introduction to the managers from Mr. William Martin, our consul at Hankow, and In the absence of Mr. Lee, my card was taken in to Mr. Tsang.. Dressed In a black cap. a long silk gown and heavy cloth boots, I found him dictating directions to a stenographer. He looked like a classical Chines? pro fessor, and I was greeted In English. After a chat of a few minutes he took me over to the technical director, Mr. Eugene RuppertNand asked him to show me through the establishment. As ho did o a Chinese brought In an Important letter In French and Mr. Tsang and Mr. Ruppert, discussed thla in the French lan guage, as though they were both born Frenchmen. I doubt not Tsang can speak German as well, and that, although he ha never been outside of tho empire. Making Steel Mo7l to Sweden. leaving the offices I went through the various departments of tha steel plant with th technical director. Mr. ' Ruppert has been here for seventeen years. He started In at the beginning with Chang Chl Tung, and Is a t ill one of the chief ad visers and directors of the establishment. I shall not attempt to describe the blast furnaces, the rolling mills and th foun drle. They are Just Ilk those cf Pitts burg, Cleveland, Chicago and other steel making cities. They have th finest ma chinery, and they throw their old ma chines on the scrap heap when they be come worn out or antedated. For Ins'.anoe, at the start, a costly Bcssemr plant was put In, and most of the smelting was dono by that proctss. Then It was discovered that there was too much sulphur In the coal to get good results and Siemens-Martin furnace have been installed. The steel now produced Is said to be among the beat of the world. I saw many tests which proved Its excellence. These tests were performed with cold steel. One was on the llttl Iron fish-plates which fasten the steel rails together as they lie on th tic. These plate are a half-Inch thick, three inehe wide and a foot or more long. They wer put In a machine by which they were doubled up a though they wcru India rubber, and that without the slsn of a crack. This was done with the cold Iron. I saw cold railroad spikes twisted around and around until they looked like ropes, and sections of cold steel rails weighing ninety pounds to the yard twisted into gigantic corkscrews without u crack or breuk anywh"'- showing. I stood tip a piece of one of these rails about five feet long beside myself and a Chines i workman, and had Mr. Ruppert snap my " 'Your first name?" " Pat, sir Pat Hogan." " 'Well, Pat," he said, 'go home. You're killing too many men." " 'I think I'd better get few more, Gen eral,' 1 said, kind of apologetic. " 'No,' he said; 'you've killed too many. It's slaughter. And, Pat, don't call me Gen eral; call me George." "Washington Post. Mot Yet. A Missouri clergyman had in his pas- toral flock a member who was reluctant about meeting the contribution basket. Tho pastor had thrown out many broad hints, but all to no avail. On day the member fell ill and was taken to the Ensworth hospital. When the clergyman arrived the man was delirious, While th pastor was sitting beside his bed a wild yell of "Fire! Fire!" came from across the street. The alck man drew himself up on his elbows. "Where where am 1?" h asked excitedly. "Calm yourself, brother," soothed the pastor, with Just the faintest twinkle In his eye. "You ar still at the Ensworth hospital." Llpplncott'a Magazine. A l'annlbTBIbop. The queen of Denmark once paid a visit to th Danish colony of Iceland, where the good old bishop exerted himself to the utmost to show her everything that was wnrlh a.lnir TIia f-nlri t.aid mnnv f..ttn. . . . . . . i i plment. to her host and having learned that he was a family man graciously in quired how many children he h:td. It happens that the Danish word for children Is almost Identical In sound with the Icelandic word for sheep and the wor thy bishop promptly answered, " Two hun dred." "Two hundred children!" critd the queen. "How can you possibly maintain such a number?" "Easily enough, please your majesty," replied the prelate, with a cheerful smile. "In the summer I turn them out upon the hill to graze and when the winter comes I kill und eat them." M. A. P. A Kick TBtalr-l nil Years Lunar. It was a midsummer evening in the. trou- blous ear of 1&4, relates u writer in the American Magazine, that Joseph Pulitzer, a tall, lean, falr-halred boy Just from an Immigrant ship at Boston took lodgings In a cheap hotel In the German quarter of New York. Th landlord assigned him to a room and changed a 20-franc piece witn which the boy paid him. That ao-frano piece waa all th money the boy possessed. It wa. gone before h found a Job. An empty wagon, a park bench, became his bed; th sky hi blanket. It wa natural that th war contagion ahculd seise upon this lad. The spirit of adventure had turned his bark on his home In a little village near Budapest, Hungary, where he was born April 10, 1M7, the son of a Jew father. Joseph Pulitzer went to war as a pri vate dragoon In the First New York cav- i . - i Av BIO BLAST FURNACES AT HAN YANG. camera to show how It looks. A rail which can stand that kind of a test could not posslb'y break with the cold. It Is as tough as wrought Iron and can be bent up like a rope without cracking. Iron nail for lltuiese Trunk Lines. As we wont through the work I saw great piles of steel rails, weighing eighty five pounds to the yard, which are now making for the Canton-Hankow road. They are being turned out at the rate of several hundred per day. Mr. Ruppert tells me that the most of the rails for the Chinese roads of the future will be made at Han yang. Th government Is granting all Its new concessions, with the proviso that tho rails must bo purchased of this Chinese factory, unless the bids of foreign firms are at least 5 per cent cheaper, the qtiaity being the same. The Hanyang Steel Works has furnished all the Iron for the Hankow-Peking trunk line, which Is o'er 750 miles long. It supplied the rails for the railway from Nanking to Shanghai, and It Is under contract to furnish those for the road now building from Kowloon. the port opposite Hongkong, to Canton. There Is no doubt but that the Chinese can make their own railroad mnterlals. nnd Mr. R'ippert tela me. that they are now making steel rails end all rorls of structural bteel at a profit. ft, Chinese Iron for the Vnlted States. Puiing my walk through the rolling mill I asked Mr. Ruppert whether he ever ex pected to export steel to the American market. He replied: "MoHt certainly not. At least not dur ing the present generation. V.'o have al rady shipped con:iilcrnblp pig Iron to San Francisco and to Japan, and we have sent one shipment to New York by the Puex eanal and sold It Just to show that we could do o and make money. As for ths present and for years to com, we can do better by supplying the Chinese demand. airy, which was known also as the Lin coln cavalry. He served with the army of the Shenandoah until peace was declared in the following year, and he was honor ably discharged In Washington. With the war over, Joseph Pulitzer drifted back to Now York. That winter thing became so bad once that lie contem plated tramping to Now Ueuford and ship ping In the wiinjng fleet. Horace Greeley, In whose life hi a few years this alien was 1 I'lay an Important role, was thundering his "Go West, young man, go West:" It la doubtful If Joseph Pulitzer would have barkened to the western cry had it not been for an Incident which was oes- lined to make one of the big high lights In the picture of his dramil- life, in thr,. days French's hotel stood at Frankfort street and l'ark Row on tho present site of "the building with the glided dome." A homely, fat-bellied stov n the hotel lubby tempted many a starving unfortunate. Jo eph l u ltzer knew well the cheery v armth of that stove. He discovered thut having his boots polished and his faded blus uniform bruehrd by the bootblacks at French's gave him a certain standing In the tyrs of the servants, who would pass him by to elect others. The day came when a husky porter ended uil this by Incontinently kicking the boy Into the ,,,,,,, (lf Julk ,;ow Humiliated and stung to the soul the . . ""y "fled himself out of the street, and , ,hat our AecMon waa d was done with New York, he thought. I'hat porter in French's was a 'wonder ful kicker. Tho kirk with which he landed Joseph Pulitzer out of doors wu twenty-two ears long. When its impulse, ctuscd the ulij. cl of Its attack was able to put his name to u cheek for fiiO.OOJ. seize unto iilmself French' ho;el and all tier 1. 1 tout. lined. Tlitre the World build ing now siiimla. - TuoU Time by the Forelock. The family were to leave town on the 1! p. in. train, so the mother said, as she was lain iiii; along the preparations in the Brooklyn home. "Now, children, ttt ready to io before luncheon. Don't leave an) thing to be done at the very last minute." And the children tuid they wouldn't, ac- coidlng to the New York Globe. Luncheon ended, they hurried into their wraps and started. In the halt the mother said: "Edward, you didn't brubh your teeth." "Yes, ma'am, I did." "But you cuuldn't," she said.' "You dldn t have time. Why. you Just this mln- ute got up from the table." "I know thai," .aid Edward; "but w were in such a hurry that I brushed 'em before I ale," Mark Tnala'i Urvlvanee. Mark Twain was talking about the fam ous robbery in his beautiful country luiuse. "Had I still been living In Hartford." he said whimsically, "some of my Hartford frlend'j would certainly have accused me of robbing myself. They bad a poor opinion of f.i1)i-.vr-.y' -, it i , We have now In hand enough orders to keep us busy until the ei.d of 110. and we re receiving more every day. Indeed, It will be a long time before China can keep pace with her own needs In such materials. W are building new furnaces as rapidly a we ran, ard are already Increasing our capacity. We hav a scheme of expansion Which will keep im busy for five years to come, and when that Is done we shall be turning out 1.000 tons of teel per day. Even then we shall have more than we can do to supply our own wants." "What kinds of steel are you making?" "We make sheets, plates, angles, beam and bar steel, as well aa all sort of struc tural steel and steel rails. We make frogs, spikes, nuts and bolts, and our rails run from fifty to a hundred pounds to the yard. All this Is by the Siemens-Martin process, and that so well made that It will stand the tests of the British Lloyds, the German Lloyd and the British board ot trade. Indeed, we are manufacturing aa good steel as can be made anywhere." I.lttle American Marhlnery Csed. As we walked through the plant and I eaw new machines being Installed I asked as to whether much of the Import cam from America. "Not a great deal," said the technical director. "We use your locomotive In our yards, and we have aom American machines In our steel works, but we find that we can buy better and cheaper In Erf land and Germany, and that the term they offer are easier than those of th United States. As It is now we have three Slen-.er.F-Martln furnaces In operation', two under construction and five under projec tion. Our dally output of steel Is 200 tons, and we shall soon be making 3U0 tons more." As we walked about I was surmised at how the new and old methods of working by the Best of Modern Jolliers me in that town. "Marshall Jewett. the ex-governor, used to take up the collection In our Hartford chuirh. They never asked me to tak It up. I fretted a good deal over this matter. " 'Sec here, Jewett.' I said one day, 'they let you take up the collections every Sun day, but they would never let me do It." " 'Oh, yes, Ihey would,' said Jewett 'that Is, with a bellpunch like the horse car conductors use.' " Boston Herald. Scientist Loses to Landlady. An editor was talking about the famou EiifeilFh astronomer, Sir Robert Hall, who has recently declared that1 radium proves the earth to be 800,000,000 years old. "8 r Robert Bull is as full of fun as of learn ing," said the editor. "One I din d with him and a half dozen other scientists at Stiatford. At the end of the dinner Sir Robert's eyes twinkled und he said to Blue Laws of Old Virginia (Continued from Page One.) for the second offense 5u0 pounds, and If he be unable to pay, then levy for the fine shall be made upon the goods of any other separatist or Uuuker then In the commu nity. For the third offense the offender hall be banished from the colony of Vir ginia. This having put the lid on the disciples of George Fox and other undesirables, the law-makers proceeded In lOfiS to arrange for a proper spirit of humility In the colony. The 27th of August Is hereby appointed for a day of humiliation. fasting and prayer to Implore God's mercy If any person be found uKn that day gaming, drinking or working, upon presentment by the church wardens, and proof, he shall he fined 100 pounds of tobacco, half to th Informer und half to the poor of the parish. Evldent'y a little thing like a couple of yeurs In servitude did not deter tha lover of pork chops from appropriating their neighbor's swine, for In lti79 the assembly delivered themselves of the following act: The first offence nf hog stealing shall be punished according to the former law; ufion a second offence the offender shall stand for two hours In the pillory, and shall lose his curs, and foi the third offence sua I be tried by the laws of Eng land as In esse of felony. As the English law of the peilod usually prescribed hanging for a twice convicted felon. It Is presumed that the third dosa of Justice proved sn efficient remedy. For the benefit of tho.e who muy think thu Virginians were very ruleless with their tobacco in thee early days, it might be well to say that from KS15 until th latter purl of the seventeenth century th legal tender of the Virginian colony waa tobacco, and a 'uw darted In KU making English money the standard of exchange proved so unpopulur and creat'd so much Confusion between the pi. inters and tha merchants that It was repealed In P. 11 and tobacco again assumed its place a standard currency. Not only In the stringency of their law did the gay cavalier of th Old Dominion u T. . t vr xx! V r 1 I; ''J ii ni aiintihi i.rntriii - i MANAGERS or CHINA'S GREAT STEEL PLANT-MR. RUPPERT. THE 1'EI. Ill AN TECHNICAL lUKECTt R. AT RIGHT; V. K. LEE. TUB 1I RECTOR-IN-CHIEF. IN CENTER; MR. TSANG AT THE LEFT. are carried on side by side. The ore Sundays, when they are twenty-four. We conies down from the mines in great work day and night, and hav day and bargis towed In b,y steam and it Is tin- night shifts. On Sunday we chang thn loaded by coolies who carry out tho lumps shifts, and for that reason they hav doubt of Iron stone In little rope baskets as big hours. Thin twelve hours Include one around as a wash bssln. A half doxen or hour off for lunch, with double that time more chunks of red ore are piled up In or more on Sunday." each basket, and the coolla haa two of "lo you have many triker the.o slung to the ends of a pole which "We have never had one. and hav never rests on his shoulders.' his load weighing had to shut down on account of labor perhaps 100 pounds. This Is dropped into troubles. We treat our men well, and they cars and Is thus carried to the smelting ' attached to us. W hav tenement furnaces a half mile farther on. The coolie. ')"'' h'-i w rent to them at low rates; who land the ore each receive 1 cent per nd "t class hospital with Euro hour. Near where such work was going Pn doctors, We expect to establish a on I saw modern cranes operated by steam " "d reading room, and also a tech erglnes lifting great castings und carrying n,e' "diool. them from one end of the yards to the Th PUlll'7tn a. Nat.aell. other; and farther on. Inside the shop Vrton waving the work 1 asked Mr. traveling cranes handling pieces of Iron of Kupper, to Kv. mtt an outUna ory 0f the fifty tons each. In the earn place they J)lant ,n a nutBUelu u.r, u th, Blt of hl were casting steel Ingots and not far away reDv. th ingots, blaxing hot. were passing ..Th"e ,,Bmj yaIlg work were founded In through on set of rollers after another lm by Cnang chl Tun(, th inatallatlon until they became writhing, flaming boa- plBnt henf orderea through th Chinos constrictors, and finally steel rails of tha ministry at London of English and Belgian cold blue color which they hav when rlrnil. Tn, consisted of thre blaat fur first laid on our railroad tracks. nuce of txty ton1 capacity ach, a Ues- I asked Mr. Ruppert s to the Chinese aa steel workers. He replied: "At the start they are not equal to Euro- peans, but we can train them to be as good, man lor man, as any or m worm. I have been employing Chinese for seven- teeu years, and have uaed thousands right In these works. They are quick to leurn. B,,nal for tlulklnaT firearm and ammunition, AH we need to do Is to put a trained cru,.U)a leei and also a plant for Ui man man over each new hand for a couple of ufacture of powder and explosive. Until weeks and after that the amateur can be 1S!)7 bot, tno arsenal and Iron work wer relied upon to do th work for himself. unflKr one management, and then th lrun This I o even with complicated machln- works went Into the hand of hi excel ery. Take our new electric traveling itncy, Sheng Kung Pao. cranes. If I have an employe who under- "it was under Sheng that th new plant stands them I can let a Chinese cooll Wrs bullt. Everything waa then modern work with him for six days and after that Ixed and plana were Instituted which will the coolie will handle the machine. All of eventually result In giving us L0O0 ton ot our operations In making every class of finished steel per day. structural steel are perfected by Chinese. "At present the work comprise two old They do their work honestly and well, blast furnaces producing 130 ton pr day. All that Is necessary Is to have a good and two new ones, on being now under foreman In charge of each shop and this is construction, each of which will produce chiefly to keep the men from going to firty tons per day. sleep. We prefer to use foreigners for fore- "The Bteel work now hava thre 61a- men and now have something like eighteen mens-Martin furnaces of thirty ton each, or twenty In our employ as such. They are and one of ten tons, with two mor under chiefly Germans or Relgtans." ' l.ow Wagriifor Chinese. "What kind of wages do you pay?" "Our Chinese mechanics and mill men get from 110 to W0 Mexican per month, or from 14 to P3 per month, or from fl to $8 gold per week. This Is high in comparison with the wag"8 throughout the country, the common laborer outsido receiving only about 10 cent a day." "What are your hours?" "They are twelve, on all day. except the landludy of the quaint Stratford Inn: " 'Madam, I am going to give you a lesson In astronomy. Have you ever heard of the great platonic year, when everything must return to Its first con dition? Listen, madam. In 26,000 years we shall all b here again, on the same day and at the same hour, eating a din ner precisely like this one. Will you give ua credit till then?' "'Gladly,' the landlady replied. 'It is Just 20,000 years elnco you were hue be fore, though, and you left without pay ing then. Settle the old bill and I'll trust you with th new.' "London News. Th Governor's Governor. Governor Wilson of Kentucky Irtid the misfortune some time ago to strain a ten don in his leg. neoessltatinK the temporary removal of his officj to the mansion, run neck and neck with the grim vlsaged gentry of Plymouth Itock, but tha doubtful honor 'of being the last to relinquish the gentle art of witchcraft persecution prob ably belong, to them as well. The witchbalteis around Salem and throughout New England generally ceased to a considerable extent their punishment for alleged witchcraft before the eighteenth century, but tho Virginian tecords show the arrest and persecution of Grace Sher wood of Princess Anne county for witch craft In 1708. For six month this younir woman was In prisoned, being brought time and again before the court in an effort to convict her. Finding no evidence in her actions to Jus tify th persecution, the attorney general caused the shrtlff of the county to Im panel a Jury of women to examine Graca Sherwood physically and Instructed thein to find something to Indicate that she -vas a witch. This the women failed to do and they were threatened with contempt of court for their failure. Everything else having failed. It was de cided to put Miss Sherwood to the water test, which consisted In tying her ban. Is and feet and throwing her overboard In the nearest lake or river. If she sank she was Innocent, but if by her struggles ihe managed to keep afloat for a few moments, she wa. guilty of witchcraft. The full account of this trial Is pre served by the Virginia Historical society nd th last two court orders In the case ar of Interest as marking the cloud ot wlthcraft persecution in the colonies. Whereaa Grace Sherwood, being sus pected of witchcraft, huve a long time waited for a fit opportunity for a further examination, & by her consent & appro bacon of ye court, it Is oldered that ye sheriff take all such convenient a'KWitincK of boats and men and shall bo by lilm thought fit to meet at Juu. Harpers piaji tucon. In order to take ye Graco Sherwood forthwith, and BUTT her into the water above a man' debth & try her how she swims therein, always having care of her life to preserve her from drowning, A as soon a she comes out that he request us many unllent a-ud knowing women a pos sible he can to acrcb her carefully for all r V w ... 1 r .!1L... i 1 hf"-" 4 -.1; ' " v - semer plant with two converter of fivo ton each, a Siemena-Martln furnace of ten tons' capacity, twenty puddling fur naces with one bloom mill, a plate-aud-bar mill and one rail mill of (.600 horae-Dower. To tna ,nitallatlon wer added the foun- dl.y an(J n llup for Bpnerai r,pajrs. "The work were started In U94 and at thH tlnie were bullt . imperial ar- construction and five under projection. There Is a metal mixer of 150 tons' capac ity, a rolling mill with Ingot-heating fur- ... . ... an m r Art naces, whicn nas a guggio inm ui i, horse-power; a beam mill of 12,600 horse- power, a plate mill of 7,500 and a rail mill v 6,500 horse-power, together with several bar-and-speed mill of 150 horse-power aoh. in addition to this we have a chemical lab- oratory und testing work, large office buildings and all the other appllanc of an up-to-date teel-maklng plant" FRANK O. CARPENTER. where business waa transacted and visitors received. Here he was uttended by Jim, a darky, who has been general factotum to many governor, and ofton had been tho cause of much fun. On one occasion Mrs. Wilson had walt'd luncheon for thirty minutes, and she told his excellency that h must come down und eat with her. "My dear," said Mr. Wilson, "Just aj soon as I see that delegation of men dowu stulrn I'll be with you." Mr. Wilson was determined, and said: "Jim, go down and tell them to wait." "Jim," frown the governor, as that worthy started off to obey the mistress of the mansion, "Jim, you know who 1 gov ernor, don't you?'" ' "Yas, sir," grinned Jlrn, with eemlnK Innocence, "yas, sir. I'll go down and tell tho geinmen to wait, sir." Llpplncott'a. ipottes & marks about her body not usuall on others, & that as they find the same to make report on oath to ye truth thereof to ye court, and further It I. ordered that som women bo requested to shift und such her beforo sha goes Into y watr, that thu carry nothing about her to cause further suspicion. On the afternoon 6f July 10, I'M, th court and cojnty officer and populac assembled on John Harper, plantation, and the arrangement, being completed,' Grace Shprwood was carried out to a nearby inlet of Lynnhaven Buy. Th offic ial court reporter tells yuaititly the rest of the story: "Whereas on complaint of Luke Hill In behalf of her Maglsty, that now is against Grace Sherwood for a person suspected of witchcraft, : having bud suudrey evi dences sworn UKuliiHt her, proving munny cercumslances. Ac which she could not make any excj.su or little or nothing to ssy in her own behalf, only seeming to rely on what ye court should do, and thereupon-consented to be tried in ye water, & likewise) to be scrolled again with ex permlnts; being tried, and site swimming with therein Ac bound, contluy to custom and ye Judgements of all ye spectators, tL afterward being serched by five autlent women who have all declared on oulh that she. Is not llko them; all which circum stance ye court weighing 111 their coir shit racoii, do therefore older that e sheriff take ye said Grace Sherwood Into his custody, & comlt hor body to yecommon gaol of this couufy, there to secure her b Irons, or otherwise there to remain till such time as he ahull be ct her wise directed custody, & comlt her body to ye common gaol of ye County to bo brought to a future tryull there. The woman was finally turned free, and thus ended th lust legal prosecution fur witchcraft iu the colony. A Bachelor's Reflections. A man needs all the senna be Is born with to offset all th foolishness lie picks up' A man put. enthusiasm Into bl. politics bi causa he can', put convictions Into It, As fast as you can find truth anywhere in th world It goes light oft and gel. lost again. Most everybody Is always wishing for something that, It he had it, would make bun wish tor something else. The thing a person likes about alander against unothor Is how he wouldn't like It if it was against himself. New York Pres..