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^tumorous Jlcpartmrnt. Finished the Doctor.?A gaunt and kilted Scotsman made his appearance in a country village and was endeavoring to charm the locals to charity with selections on his bagpipe. A shaggyhaired man opened the front door of a house and beckoned to the minstrel. "Gie us a wee bit lilt just oot here," he said, in an accent which told that he also was from the land of the haggis. "My auld mither's in a creetical condeetlon opstair. The doctor's wl her the noo. and says the pipes may save her life." Up and down in front of the house marched the bTaw Hielander. discoursing music that might well have been incidental to a cat and dog fight. Presently the shaggy-haired man came out again. "Gie us the 'Dead March.' noo," ne said. "Is the puir auld lady gone?" questioned the piper. "Na. na. mon; ye've saved mither." came the reply: "but ye've killed the puir doctor."?Boston Transcript. Unseemly Haste.?Walter J. Knighi, who has a fund of good darky stories, surrendered this one yesterday: "Jason, black as the ace of spades, was tried for murder in Mississippi, and found guilty. He was led before the judge on a sultry day late in July for sentence. " 'Jason.' said the court, 'you have '..on/I ?nllfv c\f hv n inrv of your peers. Have you anything to say before sentence is imposed upon you?" "Jason had nothing to say. There was a pause, and the judge proceeded. "It therefore becomes my painful duty to sentence you to be hanged by the neck until you are dead on the 13th day of August." "There was another pause, and Jason, shifting from one foot to the other, looked up. " 'Sho'ly you' don't mean this comin' Augus", does ye', jedge?' he asked."? Newark Star. Studying Gosintos.?The teacher stood it as long as she could. Then she said: "Annie, what, are you doing? Why are you mumbling so?" "Please, teacher," responded Annie, "I'm studying my gosintos." "Your what?" asked the teacher nuzzled. "My gosintos." The teacher pondered. And Annie went on with her mumbling. "Annie, what is gosintos, or whatever you call it?" now questioned the teacher. "Gosintos," started Annie, "why gosintos is?is?" she halted in confusion. "Well," resumed the teacher, "then show me how you study your gosintos." A .nie quickly responded as follows: "Two gosintos two. once; two gosinto, four, twice; two gosintos six, three times."?Woman's Home Companion. Would Steal Gabriel's Horn.?H. K. Adair, the western detective, was discussing a Cleveland crime whereupon he had failed. "I take no shame to myself." said Mr. Adair apologetically, "for having failed on this Cleveland matter. The Cleveland crooks, you know, are the best in the business." He relighted the stub of his cigar. "You know what John B. Gough said about Cleveland," he continued, witn a faint smile. "In taking leave of the town," Gough said solemnly: " 'If the Angel Gabriel happens to light in Cleveland, there will be no resurrection, for some Cleveland crook will steal his trumpet before he can blow a single blast.'"?Washington Star. Not to Be Cheated.?"This is a mighty dishonest world, you know," said Henry Dixey, "and it doesn't hurt to be suspicious of some people. I sympathize with the old negro who came to a v tchmaker with the two hands of a clov.;. " 'I want yer rer to nx up aese nun Dey ain't kept no correct time for mo* den six munts.* "'Well, where is the clock?' demanded the watchmaker. " "Out to my cabin.' " 'But I must have the clock.' " 'Didn't I tell yer dar's nuffln' de matter wld the clock 'ceptin' de han's? An' here dey be. You jes' want de clock so you kin tinker it and charge me a big price. Gimme back dem nan's.' "?Young's Magazine. ii 1 il Oi^__ A K.mr-h numwr or tnc ok?ic ni|?.?.. of merry souls had gathered in the den of Ab. the cave man. A tender young pterodactyl had been slain that day, and as they dined off the toothsome mess sly jests went round. Flint, the hammer man, told one on his motherin-law; Jock, the arrow hewer, said that all the Cave City policemen were Irish; Hitt, the corn pounder, told of the fire sale in Jerusalem, and every fresh quip brought out roars of laughter. Then Nip, the hunter, who had been vigorously sucking a bone, looked up with a merry twinkle in his eye. "I know whose grandmother will be dead tomorrow," he announced. "Whose?" cried the bunch, springing from the tloor of the cavern. "Everybody's," said Nip. "It's the opening of the Cliff Dwellers' baseball association season." Then everybody groaned. The joke was so everlasting old.?Judge. Sell in* a Sheep.?Two Highland farmers met on their way to churcn. "Man," said Donald, "I was wondering what you will be askin' for yon bit sheep over at your stead in".'" "Man," replied Dougal, "I was thinkin' I wad be wantin' 50 shullin's for that sheep." "I will tak' it at that." said Donald; "but, och, man Dougal, I am awfu' surprised at you doin' business on the Sawbath." "Business!" exclaimed Dougal. "Man, sellin' a sheep like that for 50 shullin's is not business at all; it's just charity!"?Ladies Home Journal. "All Things Come."?The magnate looked up Impatiently from his work. "Well, .ny good man," he snapped at the diffident and rural person who stood twirling his rusty hat, "what can 1 do for you?" "1 guess ye don't remember me, Hank," faltered the caller. "But you an' me useter go swimmin* together in th' ol' town. Then you got a job in th' bank, an' 1 got a job in the grocery store." "This is all very interesting, and I seem to remember your face. But come to the point?my time is valuable." "Yes, Hank. You got a better offer tin' left the old village. I stayed pluggin' along in th' grocery store." "Well?well?" "Well, Hank, when you left you owed $73.62 on a grocery bill. Here's where you pay up!"?Cleveland Leader. JttiscrllnnroHc. ^tending. , - I THE STORY OF THE MAINE. Shocking Tragedy of Havana Harbor 1 In 1898. ? The Maine was our first modern bat- ' tleship. She was a vessel of 6.682 } tons, with a main battery of four 10- 1 inch suns. She was built in 1888 from * English plans?for we didn't know 1 much about battleships then?and she * cost in round numbers $2,500,000. On 1 February 16, 1898, she was blown to * bits while lyins in the harbor of the % friendly city of Havana, Cuba. From r that incident sprans the Spanish 11 war. Since then the wreck has lain, half in and half out of the blue water of Machina, with 68 skeletons of the brave men who manned her lying inside her shattered steel hull. Despite repeated efforts it was only on Wednesday of this week that congress passed the bill making possible the wreck's removal. The feeling between Spain and the United States had been growing more and more bitter during 1897. Gomez and Maceo, with the rag tag rebel "army" had been harrying the Spanish forces on the island and Capt. Gen. Wavier had put into execution his scheme of reconcentration, whereby the people of the rebellious districts were huddled into camps under military guard. Here, according to report, they were scientifically starved. Meanwhile Gomez and Maceo were adding to the suffering by burning all the tobacco and sugar plantations they could reach?each side was trying to ruin the other physically and financially?the Hearst Journal had rescued Evelina Cisneros from a dungeon keep, the Three Friends was busily running in filibuster and ammunition rrom fionaa, a congressional coimiuitee had made a solemn Inspection and report of conditions on the island and all America was sizzling with the ( growing belief that Spanish rule in c Cuba was one of tryanny and hideous t cruelty. "The flag of blood and gold." a the Journal called the red and yellow c ensign over Morro. So did most con- j temporaneous high school orators. ^ Enter the Maine. r In the midst of this feeling the c Maine, then lying at the Pensacola yard, was dispatched for a "friendly r visit" to Havana. The order which t sent her there has since been most r bitterly criticised. The presence of a ^ white fighting ship with the Stars s and Stripes over her staffrail was j. bound to rouse violent anger in the t T ntln_ 4 morlnon Kncnmo hnnn/I tit nffl. uauii-nuiviiiu.. ? S mote jubilation among the revolutionary Cubans, bound to make things ? more unpleasant for Minister Fitzhugh r Lee and other American citizens in f Havana. However, the state and navy r departments seemed to think a warship v the necessary protection for Americans. a The Maine went. c It is related that when the Maine, r entering the harbor, barked a salute a from her little six-pounders at the ^ grim Morro her men were all at quar- f ters behind the 10-inch guns in the turrets and the ship was stripped for t action. It is also related that there g never was a more serious and solemn ^ naval function than when Capt. Sigs- j. bee, in full dress uniform received the j Spanish officers who came over the t starboard gangway. A Spanish cruis- ( er lay nearby, but the blue-jackets of r the two vessels did not fraternize. Indeed Capt. Sigsbee allowed his men no 8 shore liberty. r The Maine came in on January 25. f Havana harbor was filthy beyond be- t lief in those davs. To avoid stirring , up the sewage which formed the harbor's bottom ships did not anchor: , instead they were assigned by the cap- ( tain of the port to fixed mooring j buoys. The Maine's first mooring was , well up toward old La Punta Fort, j Subsequently she was moved down op- , posite the shears of the old Spanish j navy yard. Afterward this change by , Spanish authority was regarded as in- , tensely significant. j The Tragedy. j February 16 was a quiet, starlit i tropical night. Capt. Sigsbee was writ- < ing in his cabin. Marine Private Wil- t liam Anthony was the orderly on duty i outside his door. Most of the twenty- i six officers and practically all the 328 ? enlisted men were aboard. A stringed ' orchestra was playing on the Spanish i T-Taenne umc o hlo 70 U'ltH lights. From the Calle San Isidro, , which lies close to the water front. ) floated the sounds of revel. I At 9.40 there came a terrific explo- j sion. The forward part of the Maine, | where was situated the forecastle, | leaped high out of the water. Instantly f followed another explosion amidships? < at least so say some of the Maine's < survivors and several good American , citizens who were sitting on Machina t wharf, or what is now the Malecon? the ship seemed split asunder, there was i a i u i MI m?u <*, >III>\\iiik i"i ?iii 111 i (i ' i ] the rending hulk with bodies flying ( through the air, then darkness. Sigsbee came charging from his , cabin. Here was whore Bill Anthony , won undying fame. I.ike Bulwer Lyt- , ton's Roman sentry, who stood at his post by the gates of Pompeii, while , the terrified city fled past him and the | red glare of Vesuvius shone on the | brazen helmet and grim face of a man , who knew only that lie was a soldier of Rome not yet relieved from duty, , Anthony remained the captain's orderly. In the blackness Sigsbee rushed against him. The deck was a slew. Anthony saluted. "I have to report, sir, that the ship is blown up arid Is sinning." hp said. Boats came flying from the shore, from the Spanish man o' war and from a Ward liner lying close at hand. For the most part they were too late. The sleeping men in the forecast probably never knew what had happened. They were shattered by the explosion or plunged too quickly into the murky waters. The Heroes. Of the officers and men 2.r>4 were killed outright or went <l<>\vn with th< ir ship. Thirteen others died in the Havana hospitals of their injuries. Two or those who went down were officers. Coxswain Job Anderson swam ashore towing two messmates. When he got there both were head. A lieutenant of marines held up an engine, r officers until a boat reached them, then sank, but was pulled to safety by a Spanish sailor. Capt. Sigsbee stayed on his quarterdeck until the ship settled under him. In his report to the secretary of the navy, sent on the night of the explosion. Capt. Sigsbee wrote: "Public opinion should be suspended until further report." With what restraint the American people bore themselves is a matter of history: but the destruction of the Maine is fitly described by Capt. Sigsbee as "the ultimate incident which compelled the people of the I'nited States to regard Spain as an impossible neighbor." An American court of inquiry which conducted its deliberations aboard the ighthouse tender, Cangrove, while the I ittle cruiser Montgomery took the Maine's place as guardship found that he ship was destroyed by an explosion i >utside her hull. A Spanish court 3 ound that the explosion came from in- i dde. It opined that her forward s nagazine had blown up and that the 1 second explosion was the waist mag- c izine. In the state of public mind no>ody in America believed the Spanish 1 eport. There was a cry for war and 1 var came. Roosevelt's Rough Riders c vent up Kettle Hill with the cry. "Re- 1 nember the Maine." So the Texans t it the Rrazos, "Remember the Alamo." fc wny the ueiay. I The Maine sank in six fathoms of s vater. For twelve years she has been lettling in the mud. At any time it ( vould have been a comparatively easy ( ob to raise lier, but for some reason r he United States government would e lever do this?not even to give decent n lepulcher to the bodies inside. Once, i n 1904, the Cuban government began v ler removal because she was a men- t ice to navigation, but here our navy r lepartment stepped in with the an- u louncement that the wreck was United States property, which could not be c ibandoned without act of congress, s "'or twelve years congress declined to e iass the act. Now the wreck is to be t emoved. Why the long delay? v In Cuba there are people who be- t ieve that when the rusted plates are d ifted they will be found bent from the J nside out, thus tending to show that r he explosion did not r;ome from a mine t ir a Do hid, but from sometntng in tne r ship's interior. But as the man on e he Malecon says, "Quien sabe?" , > , v UP VESUVIUS. r li a rhe Only Railroad Built Up a Vol- f cano. r Only one railroad in the world s rawls up the side of a furious vol- c ano and discharges passengers in a ' ruly infernal region of wild, fantastic md contorted lava masses; deep ashes, ' :inders, rocks and boulders wreathed v n steaming, sulphurous vapors, and * >lack eruptive smoke from the crater t >f Vesuvius, the most dreaded volcano 1 >n earth. v No railroad ever had a more preca- i ious roadbed than this; for If the 1 owns and villages of the smiling Cam>agna Felice are apt to be, and have r >een, overwhelmed by Vesuvius at r ihort notice, though well away from 0 ler base, the railroad actually crawling f lp the mountain's dreary flank is a S till more precarious undertaking. f Why was it ever built? When word c roes forth that Vesuvius is in eruption v noneyed travelers flock Into Naples i rom all parts of the world?or at any t ate from those parts lying within a r veok's travel. Beyond question the a pectaele of Vesuvius in eruption is one * if unexampled splendor, with rivers of t nolten metal gushing from the main c ind auxiliary craters. In torrents i vhlch have been known to exceed 90 c eet in depth and 150 feet in width. 1 Since the Messina disaster nearly ^ wo hundred thousand visitors have g iscended Vesuvius, though it often t lappens the track is buried with great s jeaps of lipilli, otherwise scoriae or ? ine ash and cinders, thrown ten or t welve thousand feet out of the central c rater and falling in pattering tor- ' ents over an area of many miles. The proprietors of the railroad keep 1 i special staft of expert laborers for epairing the track, but It Is significant j hat the engineer-in-chief. Herr Faer- i )er, is not a Neapolitan at all, nor even t in Italian, but a German. The Ferrovia Funicolare, as the ,vlre-rope railway up Vesuvius is call- t 'd, is about three thousand feet in ( n engtn, and its terminus is nearly two j housand feet above the Stazione In- j 'eriore, which is itself nearly three r housand feet above the level of the x jay. The gradient is in places as steep J is 66 in 100. The run up or down is j oade by the cable cars in less than fif- i :een minutes, and at the upper sta- J don there are a number of guides . .vho conduct passengers through the i leep ashes and slag to the summit of I "ne crater. Almost every distinguished x nan and woman alive has made the i ipont?Iflntr nml nrinr*nc ?tntP?mon i dngers, actors, engineers, novelists. f rho proprietors of the railroad have a | nonopoly, and even on the government , carriage road, which ends about a ? tuarter of a mile beyond the Meteoro- 1 ogieal observatory, the traveler must r provide himself with tickets purchased > from the management. During the ast violent eruption three swift-run- j ing insidious torrents of molten metal , glided across the tracks, then cooled, * were flowed over by other streams, and > on until at length a wall of ada- J mantlne rock was thrown at right an- ( gles across the track. I Herr Baerber and his assistants < were soon on the spot, but it was ( found necessary to use large charges | f guncotton and dynamite before the i rock wall of cooled lava could be removed from the road. It Is no wonder < that a return ticket on the railroad r cost $4.10. I When the mountain is in active 1 eruption the cars ascend by night, af- , fording passengers an inspiring spectacle?particularly if a river of lava be * ebbing and gurgling erratically over j the fantastic wilderness of lava blocks , cooled ages ago. and probably dating i from the destructions of the Roman ' cities. , Leaning out of the cable car one < sees the great, glorious southern moon 1 partly obscured by the colossal smoke \ plume, and this in turn glows a fright- j ful dull scarlet, not so much through ; flame as through the reflection from ' the stupendous mass of molten lava, roaring anil bubbling in the abyss. On leaving the upper station guides are in i attendance, and some of these earn ' considerable sums by making Impress- J es on hot lava with copper coins of 5 , centesimi (1 cent), and selling these ' for 20 cents. A guide is an absolute necessity, ] however, on leaving the car: for even . If . .... rlok ,.f t I,,, n.l f.,1 f;t.. ,.f certain tourists who have fallen j through a lava crust into a river of li- , quid fire precisely as the skater falls through ice. one may very easily cut one's shoes to pieces and hruise one's \ feet on the old lava, which in places is sharp as glass fragments and hard as steel. The receipts from the railroad ' amount to several hundred thousand | dollars a year, but. as has been ex- < t.1r>Snn/1 /touf ??f m?iinlnn'in/??. S J heavy and no man can safely predict anything about Vesuvius. Remember, rattle grazed in the crater not long 1 before the frightful upheaval of A. I). 79, which wiped out the Roman cities for nearly 1,800 years. Next, or the week after, the Vesuvian cable railroad may be utterly destroy 1 by the fiery breath of the monster, and the hotel near the summit may be sought for but not found.?Travel Magazine. ON MARK TWAIN'S OLD RIVER, c > Picturesque Steamboat Traffic Has 1 Disappeared. I Now that Mark Twain is gone there 1 s a great telling over of old steamboat c ,'arns out on the big river which gave t llm his name. Old days on the Mis- I ilsslppi and the Ohio had a plct- r iresqueness which cannot be dupli- t ated anywnere. The levee in those times, says the Travel Magazine, resembled a modern t ininn station in an important railway s centre. Daily packets were constant- 1 y arriving and departing for all points v ip and down the river. Fine boats ran P letween Cincinnati and New Orleans, ? ?ut St. Louis was the centre of the 0 teamboat traffic. v Daily packets ran to Omaha, Sioux ^ Tity, Council Bluffs, St. Joseph, Kansas * Jlty, St. Paul, Dubuque, Chester, Caio. New Orleans, Nashville and all oth- * r important river towns. In 1839 there P rrived at the levee 1,476 steamboats, * n 1841 there was an Increase to 2.105. chile through the month of Mav, 1846, ? here was an average of twelve ar- 3 ivals each day, not including the reg- u liar packets almost daily from Alton, d Pilots at this time were of special r onsequence. Every courtesy was d hown them hy captains and crews and P xtreme deference by the negro bar- * ers, waiters and roustabouts. Their cages were high. As a general rule 0 he scale was about $400 a month, but 1 luring the flush Kansas trade on tne '' ifissourl river a good pilot received as c nuch as $900 a trip, which amounted ^ o $1,800 a month: but a pilot only * nastered his trade after long experi- ^ nee and close application. ' He had to be well versed in his 'ocation, for in those days there wer? 1 q io snag and dredge boats, beacon *amps or powerful searchlights to play ^ head of the vessel. The pilot must ' lave a mental map of the river, re- ^ nembering the location of every snag, ^ andbar, snallow and other danger, not inly on clear days and nights, but also ^ n the darkness, fog, sleet and snow. ' No dantrer must be considered. In v act many of the steamboat disasters 1 vere due to sheer foolhardiness. Up to F f 850 there were 576 steamers lost on v he two rivers. In the year 1860 here were 179 steamboats partially ^ wrecked and 120 wholly lost. The ex- a dosion on the Sultana in 1864 killed ^ .647 soldiers and civilians. Although at first it may seem an uiiellable statement, the great steamboat aces in those days were less danger- J ius than during ordinary trips; or during that exciting period greater precautions were taken to 9 iveul an accident, and besides only a e ertain number of pounds of steam 9 cas permitted. Racing was never pop- * ilar with the people at large, but to 1 he people of the valley skirting the 1 Iver and the steamboat men then- r ielves it was a great event. The ad- ^ ance advertisement of a race between r wo popular boats sot the entire river * ountry talking. Cotton and the tarff became side issues, betting began t >n the favorite and the race was anxously awaited. While discussions and wagers were foing on the captains of the rival iteamboats made contracts with wood mats and coal tlats, which were to be itationed at various points up the riv>r with the crews ready to lay alongilde and transfer the cargo of fuel on he move. Also the steamers must be completely overhauled and all spars renoved, as well as all dispensable veight and equipment. If a boat ran faster at a certain balast she must be loaded to that depth, rhe services of a good pilot must be secured, for his knowledge of the stream and management of the vessel neant the gain or loss of valuable :lme, and perhaps of the race. Few passengers were taken and only short stops made. The greatest race ever run was beween the Natchez, a boat built In Cincinnati and commanded by Capt. s r. P. Leathers, and a New Albany t >oat. the Robert E. Lee, under Capt. . iohn W. Cannon. There was spirited 1 ivalry between the two vessels and vhen the Natchez made the fastest Ime on record between New Orleans ind St. Louis (1.27P miles In 3 days !1 hours 58 minutes) Capt. Cannon esolved to beat it. He engaged the tenmer Frank Pargoud and various uel boats, and arranged for them to neet him at various points up the iver with wood and coal. Then he lad his boat cleared of all her upper vorks likely to catch the wind, or nake the vessel heavier. On Thursday. June 20, 1870, at 4.45 5. m., tne Robert E. Lee steamed out if New Orleans. The Natchez follow>d five minutes later. The race had >een advertised in advance and was low awaited with gathering interest it all the river towns. Large crowds ,vere assembled at Natchez, Vlcksnirg. Helena and other large places, relegram reports were sent out from ,-annus points, some even to Europe. Petween Cairo and .St. Louis the S'atchez afterward claimed to have ost seven hours and one minute on iccount of a fog and broken machinsry. The Robert E. Lee, however, ,vas not delayed and arrived in St. L.ouis thirty-three minutes ahead of f nwAifl/Mio mnnrrl ocfohlichorl hv hop ompetitor. Fifty thousand people from the housetops, the levee and the * leeks of other steamers welcomed the t t inner as she steamed Into port. Capt. ^ 'annon was the lion of the hour. The , business men gave a banquet in his tonor. 1 Some steamboats like the John Sinonds during the busy season did a j MO.000 business every round trip. Phis, however was exceptional. As a 1 general rule steamboating was not a ' paying industry, the most fortunate t wners making but 6 per cent, on the money invested. Many a hungry mouth did the steamboat business fill in those days. In 1832 the number of men earning | heir living in the various departments of the trade has been estimated it 90.000; ten years later, counting inly the laborers, engineers, pilots, t repairers and others of actual crews, here were about 180.000 men employ- A id. In 1S30 there was $3,000,000 in- t listed iii steamboats, with a yearly i expense of $1,671,$40 for wages, $1,- . 593.200 for wood, $835,820 for provisions and $7 13,040 for other expenses. v in 1839 almost $2,000,000 was spent < for wood alone along the shores of t western rivers. The steamboat age began about IS21 and nourished for fifty years. As f ?arly as 1 834 the number of steam- i boats on the Mississippi and its tribu- i laries Is estimated at 230 and in 1842 there were 450 vessels, with a value f if $25,000,000. Put the golden era was from 1848 till the war. Never did t the valley and steamboating prosper more than then. Thousands of hales * >f eotton were annually shipped to * southern markets, and the wharves t of St. Louis and Memphis and Vieks- f Inirg and other large ports stacked with piles of merchandise and lined s with scores of steamers. c Put the war came on. cutting off j communications neiween ine norin riiul south an?l sweeping the trade s nvay. Ironclads bu'lt from former I packets policed the mighty river. It j was n period of storm and stress and chloroformed prosperity on the Mis- ' sissippi. When peace was finally de- ' dared the survivors of the old steam- i boat days were dead or engaged In r>thcr industries. , m r How Rubber Is Cured. Rubber reaches the market in almost ' every possible shape and color. In ' most cases the queer names in the * market reports are mostly decriptive Thin, pale crepe, for instance, arrives c in long strips generally about four feet f long and eight to twelve inches wide. ? It varies in thickness from one-six- s teenth to one-half inch and has a c roughlsh surface, from which the name ; repe is derived. This rubber is pale reIlow in color, and when held up to the Ight is quite transparent, which proves ts purity and accounts for the very ligh price obtained therefor. The soailed sheet rubber is similar to crepe, >ut slightly thicker and not so trans arent. It is prepared in a different nanner, and unlike crepe, must be put hrough the washing mills before it an be used. Hard, fine Para is prepared by naive labor of the Amazon by dipping a o-called paddle In the rubber and hen holding It In the smoke of a tire, ,-hich hardens the coating of milk. The addle is then dipped again for a sec nil coating and again smoked, and so n until quite a large biscuit, generally weighing about sixty pounds, has bom uilt up. The operator with a knife hen slits the biscut down one side n order to remove it from the paddle, tubber so prepared contains a large iroportion of moisture, but is stronger han any of the plantation rubbers. From the Congo come large supplies f clean, black rubber, coagulated orl:inally in large blocks and then cut ip into small cubes to permit it to iry and ripen. The Congo also ships ubber in reddish sausages collected irectly from the tree, the reddish aplearance being caused by small porlons of the bark adhering. The Gold Coast ships rubber prepard by the natives digging a trough in he earth and running the latex into t. In time the mass in the trough oagulates from the outside, forms a lard skin, and finally becomes hard hroughout. But this kind of rubber lolds the moisture which was originaly in the latex and therefore such limps often contain 50 per cent of waer. On the ivory coast, the French iuilan, and in the Sierra Leone neightorhood the natives collected rubber rom the same trees, but give a great leal more pains to the preparation, 'he resulting product is known as Sierra Leone niggers," or "konakry." nis ruuDt-r is in mrgc uuus, ng of strips carefully wound together, arying in size from that of an orange o that of a man's head. The rolling trocess |3 done while the strips are resh, and they become one compact tall. Rubber treated thus is of a redlish color, for which reason the balls ,re known as "red niggers."?Harper's Veekly. HIS F'M,M .EPORT. apanese Officer Keeps Record of His Death. Death news from the bottom of the elf-humiliation seldom encountered ven in naval circles, is recounted in a ea, showing a degree of heroism and ransmisslon pubiisnen m tne Lonaon rimes of a message written by Lieut. Tsutoma Sakuma, who was In command of the Japanese submarine No. P, rhen It foundered last week while maleuverlng In Hiroshima bay, all on toard being lost. In the message, which was found XJ\ he conning tower of the submarine vhen it had been brought to the surace, Lieut. Sakuma explained that he done was to blame for the disaster to he craft and the death of fellow officers and men. He describes In detail he heroic and almost superhuman eforts that he and the doomed men with dm made to save the submarine and heir own lives. The message was as ollows: "It Is with the deepest regret that write this message to describe the oss of this boat, with my fellow-officers ind men, due to my own fault. I would lere specially mention that all steps lave been taken to raise her, my comades and men working earnestly and calmly till the end. I ordered the ship o dive with the engine running, but. is I found she went down too far, I ried to shut the valves which admit he sea water to the ballast tank, but inexpecteuiy me cnuiu i. waives broke. and I was left helpless, mable to control the boat. . "Meanwhile the tanks were fulled vith water, and the boat went down at in incline of about twenty-five defrees. After striking the bottom the vater began rushing in, the switchward was immersed In water, all elec;ric lights went out, the fuses burled iway and the boat was filled with poitonous gases, so that we experienced he greatest difficulty In breathing. Jnder these conditions we worked our rery utmost with the hand pumps to impty the main ballast tank, which, believe, we succeeded in doing, alhough we could not read the gauges iwing to darkness. No electric current ,vas available, as I mentioned before, ind our last hope of rising'to the sur-1 'ace lay In working the hand pumps I >nly. "I write this in the dim light coming 'rom the conning tower?11.45 a. m. "I earnestly beseech his majesty to jrant me forgiveness and to succor he families of my comrades and men ,vho have lost their lives in this pcrshing boat. This is my only wish?i 12.30 p. m. It is with the utmost difficulty that ! can breathe, though I am sure we nust have blown out the gasoline enirely from the tanks. I can not con:inue any more?12.40 p. m." THIEVES WHO HIDE THEIR LOOT. Recovered Later, and the Ex-Criminal Lives In Wealth. It is well known to the police that here are a number of ex-convicts vho are literally rolling in riches and Iriving about London and the provnces today in their own motor cars mil carriages, said a detective to the vriter the other day. The majority if these men are old embezzlers and here seems to be little doubt that hey are able to live well and keep joing lavishly furnished residences >ecause the money they stole was lidden by them before being arrest>d and sent to prison. It may surprise you to know that housands of pounds worth of va'ua>le property looted by thieves from rarious sources lies buried in odd orners of Hritain and will probably ?nly be recovered by the men ihemlelves on their release. Cases are onstantly occurring where an emtezzler after running off with a large lum in gold refuses to divulge the tiding place of his ill gotten ?alns. Ie is sent to prison and the loot remains unrecovered. In nine cases out >f ten the embezzler finding arrest mminent buries his stolen property ind digs it up again when he comes >ut of prison. A man who was for many years an nmate of one of our prisons is now iving in affluence in a town up north, de was imprisoned for embezzling iTO.OOO from his employer and he dedared at the trial that he had spent very penny of it. For some time ifter his release from jail he lived in i cheap lodging house at Hoxton and hen one day he declared that he had ome into a fortune, a brother in Vustralia having died and left him some thousands. As a matter of fact, ever although the police had no proof, and he had recovered the money which the he had embezzled years before. ligh A man of considerable means notf* stoU living in the states served a term of had imprisonment for forgery, having ob- in a tained ?15,000 by means of false S( checks. Not a penny of the money mcr was recovered by the police. During to n the forced confinement of the thief bed his wife, in pursuance of a previous- The ly agreed plan, went out to service wea in a gentleman's family. As soon chai as the husband was liberated, how- thei ssvm mgiu Sclen SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. W 04-i- -/ C/...4U r..ni:>i. rn..n?u n* York. In tlie Court of Common Plena. S. G. Feemster and W. T. Feemster. rri Plaintiffs, against Annie V. Feemster X and Johnnie Leroy Feemster, Defen- coll dants. Summons for Relief.?(Com- spU( plaint Filed.) Cou To the Defendants above named: a, n YOU are hereby summoned and re- flfpe quired to answer the complaint in ship this action, which has this day been be < filed in the office of the Clerk of the est Court of Common Pleas for the said vide county, and to serve a copy of your an- ing swer to the said complaint on the sub- arsi scriber at his office in Yorkville, South SOn Carolina, within twenty days after the arsi service hereof, exclusive of the day of s< such service: and if you fall to answer tuit the complaint within the time afore- Sep said, the plaintiffs in this action will mat apply to the Court for the relief de- B. J manded in the complaint, 3f J. S. Brice, Plaintiffs' Attorney. 99 Dated Yorkville, S. C., April 12. A. D. The 1910. Rigl NOTICE gra To the absent Defendants, Annie V. Feemster and Johnnie Leroy Feem- |& ster:? 34 Please take notice that the Sum- H| mons, of which the foregoing is a copy, Kg together with the Complaint in this ac- Kg tlon. were filed in the owfce of the Clerk G of Court of Common Pleas for York county, South Carolina, at Yorkville, S. K C., on the 12th day of April A. D. 1910. J. S. Brice, ft Attorney for Plaintiffs. ?3 Yorkville, S. C., April 12. A. I). 1910. ffij NOTICE H To Annie V. Feemster, mother of John- El nie Leroy Feemster, a minor under H the age of fourteen years, residing |g with her:? 3B Please take notice that unless you B shall in the meantime procure the ap- IE nnlntm?nl nf n 7itnt'i1lnn nil litem. the Ki plaintiffs will on the twentieth clay after the service of this notice upon you, exclusive of the clay of such service, apply to J. A. Tate, Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for the county and state aforesaid, at his office in Yorkville, S. C., at 10 o'clock in the forenoon or as soon thereafter as counsel can be' heard, for an Order appointing some suitable person guardian ad litem for said Johnnie Leroy Feemster and directing said guardian when appointed to appear and defend the action in his behalf. i J. S. Price, I Attorney for Plaintiffs. * Yorkville, S. C., April 12, A. D. 1010. j 30 f 6t ' I NEW PERFECTION I m n nil WICK oiuc riaiuc nil Cook-Stove Ideal for Summer cooklni;. Cute fuel expense f In two. Haves labor, (lives clean nuluk re- < suits. Three sires Vui'v wer-n." ' STANDARD OIL. CO. (|m-.>ri?..riU?-- V professional Cards. i B. O. BLACK j SURGEON DENTIST. i Office In McNeel Building over J. C. Wllborn's. i In Clover, S. C., Tuesdays and Fridays. 23 t 3m. ' D. E. Finley. Hudson C. Miller. FINLEY & MILLER j ATTORNEYS AT LAW \ YORKVILLE. - - - S. C. OIHc opposite Court House?Main St. H JOHN. L. STACY | Surveyor. M 1 RESPECTFULLY te nder my ser- Kg vices to tiio.se in need of Land Sur- Ex veylng and will give prompt attention H to all calls. Address me at Clover. S. EE C. Phone No. 40. Geo. W. S. Hart. Jos. E. Hart. R HART & HART I ATTORNEYS AT LAW 1 YorkvilU S. C. M I No. 2, Law Ranare. 'Phone (Office) 58. Ilj gg JOHN R. HART | ATTORNEY AT LAW M \o. :$ Law Range W YORKVILLE, S. C. || J. S. BRICK, I ATTORNEY AT LAW | Office Opposite Court House. A? Prompt attention to all legal busines- BB of whatever nature. his wife resigned her position d the pair sailed immediately for E colonies. It ultimately came to T t that the money which had been b ;n by means of the forged checks tl been buried under the flooring it i Soho house. )me fifteen years ago a Hindu w chant who had come to London k aake purchases of gems was rob- a of many thousands of pounds. T thieves carried their ill gotten si 1th to a cheap tenement in White- n pel, but finding the police hot on t' r track they carried the loot one ii silll tific Authority lemonstrated that ol two Ui s of bread, one raised 1 Dnvnl Rnlrtnn PawjIap ? ? be other with alum bale- A! >wder, the Royal raised P s 32 per oentm more title than the otherm Avoid Alum INTHROP COLLEGE ;holarship and entrance examination. HE examination for the award of vacant scholarships in Winthrop lege and for the admission of new lents will be held at the County rt House on Friday, July 1, at 9 i. Applicants must be not loss than ien years of age. When Scholar>s are vacant after July 1, they will i iwarded to those making the high- ( average at this examination, pro>d they meet the conditions govern- | the award. Annlieanfs for sohol- < ilps should write to President Johnbefore the examination for Schol- . lip examination blanks, iholarships are worth $100 and free ion. The next session will open tember 21, 1910. For further inforion and catalogue, address Pres. D. IOHNSON, Rock Hill, S. C. I f 6t "Your Job Printing? Send it to Enquirer for the Best Work at ht Prices. J WINDFALL 0 CHANCE T Good Timepiece f Liberal Offer Gonside The Publishers of THE ?N( ty-fivc BANNATYNE NICKL each, that they desire to distribut to increase the already large subs pose to make this distribution, in Saturday, The conditions of the distr Each of tlic Winners of Nine Cc augurated for Nine Competitive more if necessary, to each clubm; as many as Five Annual Subscri For the purposes of the comp< el,;nr rs( t1,? ,?;ti 1 \n /vine OHI|7v3 \J 1 111V, V.UUUH Will l/V VVUJ and competitors living in the con ed in the township to which they The competitor in each of the Paying for the Largest Number JUNE AT 6 O'CLOCK, prov than Two, will be entitled to the 1 Each competitor who returr Five Names during the contest v gardless of whether his club is ti Competitors who return Two the Watch offered for the large district, will be allowed to add i the requi 'te number to entitle tl The BANNATYNE IVATC\ ter than anv dollar watch made ; ble a timekeeper as can be had price. The Bannatyne Watch Cc Year. The guarantee means tha feet, not caused by abuse, will 1 the watch to the factory, the owr portation both ways. But this re dom necessary, most of these \ perfect order for years. All who desire a good Watch petition at once. There is every to lose. Make a Start Today. It is preferred that all order: panied by the Cash; but upon th will be entered, at the Clubmak ferrcd until the closing day of tli Subscribers who want one of es. may have T1IE EN'Ql'IRER on the payment of $3.00, either 1 Premiums or by paying at The who names are already on our 1 have their subscriptions extendi Watch on the payment of $3.00. COMMENCE AT ONCE. L. M. GRIS ark night to a remote spot on the Issex marches and secretly buried It. hey then disappeared and have no' een seen since. It is believed that lie money remains to this day where a ; was buried. Not so very long ago a burglary ras committed by a couple of well nown thieves who got away with bout ?500 in coin and banknotes, 'hey were arrested, but refused to tate what they had done with the innnv dnnl.t? UU?A/1 ailliuu^ll Wlic uai IV1JT IIIIIICTIA hat it had been buried in a garden n a suburb of London.?Tit-Bits. ROYAL 1| king Powder || -> enders the i ood more | Ligestible ff ana ^ vholesome 1 SB 4 f! * '0W0?H| tsolulely >J|| A ri rvii i Advantage i In dealing with us Is that YOU are lot too small for us, nor We too large 'or YOU. We are Just as attentive In our dealngs with the small depositor as with he large one. Our funds are amply protected by Manganese Steel, Time Locks, Fidelity Bonds and Burglary Insurance. The Bank of Glover, 1 OIjOVHR. 0. o. L'V* Send your ordere for all kinds of lob Printing to The Enquirer. SESi^SS F WATCHES O GET A or a Little W Well Worth ration. }UIRER have 011 hand TwenE WATCHES, worth $1.50 e among friends who will help .cription list, and it is our purwhole or in part, on , June 4. ibution will be One Watch to nnpetitive Contests, hereby in TTstricts. and the balance, or aker who returns and pays for ptions. etition each of the Nine Townidered a Competition District, ntipc arlioininor will hp incllld are closest. Nine Districts Returning and of Names by SATURDAY, ided that number be NOT less Watch offered for that district, is and pays for as many as vill be entitled to a Watch relie largest for his district. or more names and fail to get :st number of names in their other names until they obtain icm to a Watch. U is a Good Watch. It is betand it is as good and as reliafor three or four times the >mpany Guarantees It for One it any ordinary trouble or deje corrected on the return of ler of the watch paying transturn to the factory is very selvatches continuing to run in are invited to enter this comchancc to win and no chance i for subscriptions be accome order of contestants, names :er s risk, and collections dc le contest. B these BAXXATYXE Watch- B for one year and a WATCH B o Competitors for the District P Enquirer office. Subscribers fl ists, and want a Watch, may B ?d One Year and receive a B T'S SONS. I