I ilB 11$ Lead the World in Size and Method of Construction PART TAKEN BY ROADS imw Invention to Salt Condition Longest llrltlgo at Cnlpo, 111. Brooklyn Mort Expensive Struct Bre In World -Changes Mnat No ticeable In Smaller Construction. To the railroad must be given the oredlt for furnishing the Impetus .hat has resulted In the marked ad fmncos of the past half century. Es eeially Is this true In the United ttutes, whose unprecedented growth rould have been Impossible without .he aid of Its transportation lines. The railroads, In their constant ndenvor to Improve, their u needi ng effort to give the American peo ile a service unexcelled In the whole vorld for comfort, speed and cheap ness, have so Increased the weight of .heir rolllug stock and train loads .hat the light structures which did tervloe when the first transconti nental road penetrated to the Paclfio Ooast have become obsolete and ut rly Incapable of meeting the de nands of standard modern carriers, rhus stronger and better bridges lad to be built. Co-extenslve with the develop nnt of railroading has been that of he Iron and steel Industry. The two lave co-operated In a transforma lon that Is one of the marvels of the' tfneteenth and twentieth centuries. America, the land of big things, HMseBses more striking examples of d vanned bridge construction prob ibly than any other country. It has ha longest metallic structure across iay river In the world that over be Ohio River at Cairo, 111., oxceed ag In length the renowned Tay Bridge In Scotland by 83 feet. The Cairo bridge was finished In il9. It is 10,680 feet precisely wo miles In length, though orlgt tally, with the timber trestle ap iroaches, which have since been led In and replaced by solid em istnkments, there was almost four niles of continuous bridge work. A bridge with the longest single pan ever built is one by an American Inn across the St. Lawrence River tx miles above Quebec. It is de 4gned for both railway and wagon raffle and contains a central suan i.800 feet in length and 150 feet .oove me water, permitting the un betructed passage of the largest ssels afloat. In drawbridges, too, Amorlca loads he world. There was opened at )maha recently a center pier dou de drawbridge each swing span of fhlch Is 625 feet long. This excessive length was neces ary on account of the shifting chan el of the Missouri River, which Is onstantly undergoing changes in Its ourse, and the new bridge was de igned to provide as much as possl le for the future vagaries of the tream. In the common types of steel 'ridges the truss, the cantilever, ie suspension, etc. it cannot be ld that there have been any ex raordlnary changes since these irpes were first introduced. Beyond elng successively strengthened and nproved in minor details so as to ike care of the greater loads they re called upon to bear, these struct res remain practically unaltered In lelr general outlines. Bridge engineers to-day confine 'lemselves chiefly to the study of '.reuses and strains, the provision of laxlmum strength with the mlnl lum use of material, and conse uent minimum cost. Every pin or olt that can be dispensed with is much saved. It Is In the smaller bridges that the reatest changes have occurred in went years. In movable structures ver navigable waterways the devel opment has been revolutionary In its .at lire. The old 6tyle swing or draw ridge is being rapidly superseded; t least where the channels are not xcesslvely wide, by the roller lift ridge, an Improvement on the pivot ascule type which had its origin la ie feudal days when the spans over astle moats were raised up on end o shut off communication with the utsldo world. The original design of the roller ttt consisted of two movable leaves 'hat met In the center of the stream ind were rolled up and down from lers on either shore. Single-leaf Jraws, however, are now being built ".n many instances where this form f construction is best adapted to lo cal conditions. Its advantages over the center pier bridge are overwhelming, in that it leaves unobstructed the full width of the river or canal. Vehi cles or cars cannot fall into the wa ter when the lift is open to vessels. It is more rapid and econonomical of operation, saving delay and ex pense. Concrete, reinforced by steel, is becoming more and more a popular material for the construction of per manent bridges over small streams and ravines. Their advantage over iron structures lies in their greater permanency, and In their economy both as to first cost and mainten ance. The ordinary form of modern bridge construction is known as th truss, and various modifications oi the truss element (the rigid trian gle) are in mora general use than any other type of span up to, say 160 feet In height The corumo highway and railroad bridge Is al most invariably a truss. PHILIPPINE RAT CATCHERS. Bounty for the Capture of the Ani mals In Manila. The Manila rat Is much more In do mnnd than Is tho lluffulo rat. Slnoo the American occupation of tho Philip pines rat. catching lias become a big industry. It has thrived so much un der a paternal form of government that 150, 00(1 of the nnltnais wero caught In Manila during the last year. Incidentally, that, meant 150.00D deaths In the rat colony, for the only good rats In Manila are dead rats. This wholesale slaughter of rats la carried out under the direction of the Philippine Board of Health. It H one of the means used to prevent the much dreaded Asiatic plague. "Although It Is nn established fact that rats are carriers of the Infec tion of the dreaded Asiatic plague, yet comparatively few Americans In Ma nila are alive to tho Importance which the Board of Health authorities at tach to the trapping of rodents, or are aware that the city has an organiz ed corps of seventy-five rat catcher, and that they trap about a hundred and fifty thousand rats a year," said the doctor. "Such Is tho case, never theless, and, were It not for this rat brigade. It would be difficult to say where the pest would stop. "The corps of rat catchers Is divided Into seven sections, one being assign ed to each of tho health stations Each man, who in turn hires small boys to do the actual work, receives a monthly salary of 10 pesos, which Is nnd, In addition, three centavos UVb cents) for every rnt he catches. This bounty amounts to about six pesos a month an average Manila clerk's salary. A rat catcher must bo InduMrious. Ho Is hired by the dis trict medical Inspector, and If he falls to corral a certain number of animals he is promptly succeeded by a new aspirant. "This Oriental professional resorts to many Ingenious ways In attempting to fool the officials and incidentally, increase his revenue. When the trap ping was started the officials were none too strict, and it was soon no ticed that some of the trappers were making quite an amount of money. Investigation revealed the fact that oftentimes one rat was made to do duty several times, being kept on tho grounds earning bounty for its captor until decomposition set In. To remedy this the inspectors now make each trapper bring his rats to the station every morning, and there the right front foot Is chopped off and the rat Is labelled with the street nnd the number of the house from which It came. All rats are then taken to tho crematory. "Hut the clever native found a new means of evading the law. He con ceived the Idea of starting a rat farm, and before the authorities were aware of It the business of breeding rodents, Ir. order to collect the bounty, assumed goodly proportions. "Once a month an auditing Is made, at which time all the trans which are furnished by the authorities must be accounted for by the catchers. "One of the principal acts in this rat drama Is enacted at the water front, where every precaution is tak en to prevent rats from coming ashore from ships arriving from plague Infect ed ports of Asia. Cargoes are closely watched, and while they are being dis charged tin funnels are placed on the hawsers to prevent, the rodents from reaching the wharf." Buffalo Express. Strange Origin of Fashions. The custom of powdering the hair dates back as far as the sixteenth century, and was first introduced by the nuns in French convents. Those who had ocasion to leave the cloisters for any reason were wont to powder their hair, so as to make it appear gray and give them a venerable look. The fashionable dames were so etruck with the novel effect of white powder on dark hair that they soon appropriated the device as one of tho arts of the worldly toilet. Out of thU grew the use of tints in the hair. The Roman women often used blue pow der, and later, in 18C0, Empress Eu genie set the fafahlon of using gold powder, Rome under the empire of Greece during the time of Pericles were selz ed with a mania for golden hair. The belles and fops of the day devised several methods whereby black locks might be changed to golden yellow, but bleaching did not always succeed. Consequently, quite a trade was es tablished with the fair-haired tribes beyond the Alps, who sold their locks to Latin merchants, to be worn on the heads of Roman dandies. Many a dame dampened her raven tresses In the strongest of muriatic acid and sat In the sun to bleach her hair to the coveted yellow, says the Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. There were some cunning devices In vogue among tho belles of the old world for giving expression to the eye. The most reckless of them were wont to place a single drop of that deadly poison, prusslc acid. In the bottom of a wineglass and hold it against the eye for two or three seconds. Or, more rashly still, they would take n email quantity a piece not lnrger than a grain of rice or an ointment containing that mortal drug, atropla, and rub It on the brow. Each of these was supposed to give clearness and brilliancy, expnnd the pupil and Impart a fascinating fulness and mel. lowness to tho eye. Property Destroyed by Fire, Nearly two hundred millions of doV lars property is destroyed by fire an. nually In tho United States. Armand Gautler, a French physician contends that a strict vegetarian diet is Impossible for white races. THE COLUMBIAN, 5IANI1CU.KT OK THK IlLIM). Invading Mnnv Fields of Industry and Turning Out Oood Work. "Don't pity the blind man em ploy him. The blind do not want charity. They simply ask Justice." This Is the keynote of the gospel which Charles F. F. Campboll, sup erintendent of the experiment sta tion for the training of tho blind nt Cambridge, Mass., Is everywhere preuchlng. Mr. Campbell Is the son of the blind Dr. Campbell, of Lon don, whose achievements In striking out new lines of occupation for the blind are well known. He spoke in New York, urging the Imperative need not only of finding occupations for the sightless, but of employing them when they are trained. "Employment bureaus for tho blind," he said, "are a prime neces sity. At present, even when a per son wishes to employ a blind man and woman or to buy their handi work, he seldom knows how to go about it. We need greater co-operation between the blind and the rest of the world. It is one thing to know how to cane a chair, quite another to get chairs to cane. What Is urgently needed Is an employment bureau and handicraft shop that shall be run co-operatively by New York, Boston and Philadelphia. "The definite purposes for which the experiment station wns estab lished were threefold to determine what Industrial occupations other than those already named the blind could profitably engage In; to estab lish such Industries on a business basis, and to enable blind persons, when possible, to become wage earn ers In shops or factories or soiling agents. "We began in a very small way, testing different trades with blind people of average or less than aver age mentality. Our purpose, you see, was not to pick out specially gifted people and exploit them, but to discover remunerative occupa tions which even defectives could follow successfully. "One day I saw a Swedish woman working at a little loom. Next day I set a blind girl to work at a loom. Rug carpets without pattern or color scheme have been made by the blind for many years, but this was the first attempt to produce artistic re sults. Now wo have an expert de signer, a woman, to supervise the work, which Is taught by an In genious employment of a piano key board. Wo are turning out rugs, portieres, table covers, draperies, centerpieces, etc., which no woman of taste would be ashamed to use in her house. "Another Industry that promises well for the blind, nnd it is the di rect fruit of tho Cambridge experi ment station, is mop making. Mr. Campbell expects to 'wlpo up the floor,' literally as well as metaphori cally, with the mop which a blind man has Invented." Miss Pheobe T. Cousins, formerly the most famous advocate of woman suffrage, is heartily in fa vor of the open saloons on the Sab bath. She claims such a measure would tend to reduce crime. CZAR'S BODYGUARD OF SPIES. Amid a Complicated System He Has Cause for Uneasiness. Some of the most valuable and least suspected spies that guard the Czar are women of high rank, who frequent the aristocratic salons of St. Petersburg and Moscow, and even go as far afield as the Siberian cities of Tomsk, Tobolsk, and Irkutsk, says L. S. Farlow in Har per's Weekly. There are also spies among the Imperial Guards; and for these men the entire army and reserves of imperial Russia are ran sacked. Among them one finds men from tho Don and Dnieper Cossacks, the Mohammedan forces from Ka zan, the Caucasian provinces, and even from far Kashgar in Central Asia, as well as from the Imperial Preoabrajensky and Pavlovskl Guards. The unquestioning and doglike fidelity of these men Is won derful. They are absolutely fearless, of great physical strength, and men tally of unusual acumen and fore sight. There are nearly one thou sand of these military guards con stantly employed In and about the park and palace of Tsarkoe-Selo. ' One might suppose that the Emper or Nicholas would sleep peacefully, surrounded by this amazing human network ot protection. Yet revolu tionists penetrate the royal apart ments, and leave letters of sinister menace and warning, which must often suggest to the unhappy mon- arch that It might be as well for him to do away with this far-reaching system of espionage and mingla freely with his people. i BLOOMsBURG, PA. CONSECRATING A HOUou. What Orthodox Hebrews Fasten to the Doorpost. A dozen families of Orthodox Jews were busy moving Into a new Illicit tenement house on Sheriff street, In the heart of the East Side, when a Tri bune reporter was passing. His atten tion was attracted by a ceremony, which seemed to renter about the doorpost of one of the ground lloor Hutu. An aged gray headed patriarch was tacking h little case to the upper right hand doorpost, a hairbreadi.. from the edge. It was of tin, about three Inches long and half an Inch wide, and while fastening it securely In place the old man seemed to be muttering a Hebrew prayer. After the ceremony was ended tho reporter began to ask questions. "Yes. It Is a religious rite," tho the old Hebrew answered. "One of the most Kacred of our religion tho fastening of tho me.uzah. No homo Is blessed without it, and one might better die at onco thun attempt, to live in a flat that did not have a mez uzah on the doorpost." Some of the niezu.nhs one finds In tho East side are of glass. Others, more elaborate and expensive, are ot carved wood. Still others are nicely turned, with knobs at either end. Great care Is taken thnt unclean hands fchall never touch them. They are not allowed to fall Into the hands of non-Jews, If that can be prevented, for fear they will be mistreated. According to a rabbi with whom tho Tribune reporter talked, the obliga tion is derived from the Biblical pass age: "And thou shalt wrlto them on tho doorposts of thy house and with in thy gates." The custom has been known since the time of Josephus. and at one time the mezuzah was supposed to be a powerful factor In warding off evil spirits. In the Middle Ages the practicing of writing the names of cer tain favored angels, In addition tn the passages, crept In. Mninionlde?, the great Jewish teacher, put a stop to the Innovation after a vigorous cam paign, in which he preached thnt inoso wno liven in nouses so branded would huve no share In the futuro world. Policy, Chinese Fashion. It Is a curious thing, says the Ha waiian Star, that here in a community where the Chinese gambling game of che-fa has flourished for many years comparatively few outside of those who are devotees at the shrine of the goddess of'chance have even the faint est Idea of how the game Is played. ( he-fa is a very simple game. In deed, and in Its very simplicity lies the difficulty which the authorities here, as elsewhere, find in suppres sion. It needs no apparatus or "lay out" as do roulette, faro and other games of chnnce. It does not even need a pnek of cards or a supply of chips. Simply judgo as a gambling game and conceding for the moment that it Is played on the square, che-fa has its allurements, for it is. on that bnsls. a game in which every player has an equal chance and the bank simply col leets a percentage of the money stak ed. Unfortunately for the nlnvers however, there Is not the slightest ! reason for doubting that the came n ! ordinarily conducted Is as crooked as mo traditional tiogs hind leg. There are 3G characters In a che-fa ticket, each representing some fa miliar object. The lion, tiger, moon, mouth, silver money, gold monev. box. centlped, dog, rat are among thoso, out many or tne characters represent things which are not generally dls. cussed In polite society. A person who wishes to play the game seeks an agent and gives him what such ha wishes, from Ave cents up, at the same nme indicating what character ho chooses. The character Is marked off on the agent's ticket and the fortune seener receives a slip acknowledging his bet or stake. Should the nnrti,.. ular character prove at the drawing to ue me winning number the lucky play er wins 30 times tho amount of his stake. Thus -If he stakes five cents he wins $1.50, or If he plunges heavily with, say a dollar, he wins $30. But ho does not get all that, he wins. There Is the agent to be considered and he collects 10 per cent or tne amount of the winning, so that the man who won $30 would receive only $27 from tho hands of the agent. It Is one of the odd traits In the Chinese character that make che-fa so popular with them. They are devoted believers In dreams. If a Chinaman earns of a rat, for instance, he will lose no time In seeking a che-fa agent, and backing the rat to win, and no number of recurrent losses seems to upset the Chinese faith in this heaven sent sign for success. Of course, it Is apparent that if a ian played on every one of the 35 characters he would In all probability win, but his win would be a loss, for he would only re ceive 30 times the amount or the sin glo bet on the winning character less tho agent's commission of 10 per cent. Such is the game of che-fa. Boar lng only the dream portion of It, It does not seom to possess any partlc ular allurements, and to some persons even tho chance of betting that their dreams will come true does not seem attractive. Possibly the average American does not have the same kind Of dreams as does the mild-eyed Chink That can easily be Imagined from the casual glance at a Chinese meal and a reflection on the possibilities oj what even a simple Welsh rabbit can accomplish. Inventors In Connecticut. Connecticut, not necessity, seems 1 1 be t BtoUer of Inventions, as mot of tseeful inventions are madt them ....... l1in..ll.A ill, TT...tl,..l I lull inn II II M II I in' , ii in I 1 1 ii j . I 1 1 - ii ill I In the very midsummer of life, nnd lie left I. 1.. i ii .. i taut 'l'l. .1. ..... ....; i: 1113 ItllllllJ vl."fl,i' 'i Tin1 doctor' I'rrtili- ento showed tlmt death resulted fro mi t y p h o lil fever. The doctor himself sulil to a friend: "Tlmt mini was a suicide. He bad h splendid const I tu tion . I could luive pulled til in through If his stomach I):m I been sound. Itnt he ruined lilsxtoitunii bv busty meals, n,,., t..l.,..l In vals of business and by neglect of symp toms which have been warning him a year past, that his stomach wns failing In Its duties." The symptoms of a disordered stomach nre, among others, vnrlslile apiietile, Miur risings, heartburn, undue fullness after en ting, dull headache, dingy complexion, discolored eye, fluctuations In physical strength, nervousness, sleeplessness de pendency. No person will have all these symptoms nt once. The restoration of the stomach to sound health, begins with the first dose of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The cure progresses until flic functions of the stomach nre in healthy operation. Then the nerves nre quiet mill strong, the ap petite healthful, the sleep restful, tho eyo bright, the complexion clear. "I'lense sccent my thanks for the ticiicfH which my elillil received from your im-ill-clne," writes Mix Y. A. Murium, of Silicn, Mo. "lie hml lieen tnitihlcd for netiily a year Willi liver complaint, Imlliroslliiti nncl constlpnlion. I trave him your 'liolilen Medical Discovery ' and ' Pleasant Vellels, anil they illil him irreat good. I iravc him the 'UNcovery' almut elirht months, and several vials of the ' Pellets.' Ho aeeins to ls perfectly well now." If you want a cure accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." CwVdtp T,"',t,, ORKHNAL Little Liver Vi w'v''r' " ,,J' 111,1 Ver. ricrcM over 40 years niro. have heen much Imitated hut never equaled. They're maile of imrelv veg ptahle. concentrated and retlned medicinal Iitinclphis. evtracteil from native American roota ami plants They seelllv relieve mid cure foul, loiiilil ami deraiiKed stomachs. Livers anil Mnwcls anil their attendant dis tressful ailments. One or two a laxative, three or four a cathartic. Vast Valuo of Farm Products- The farm products of this coun try for the present year aggregate $6,450,000,000 in value, according to statistics issued fioin the Depart ment of Agriculture the other day. Of the immense total wheat count ed for $525,000,000, oats for 282, 000.000, potatoes for $138,000,000, barley $58,000,000, tobacco $52, 000, oco, sugar cane and beets $50, ooo.ooo, dairy products $625,000, 000, beef cattle $062,000,000, sheep and swine $283,000,000, com$i, 216,000,000, hay $605,000,000, and the balance represents the value of horses and mules and other pro ducts cf the farm. The products of the dairy and poultry amounted to as much as the iron industry. In the history of the world no country has ever before produced from soil such value in that time. It is small wonder, in view of the facts, that the farmers want batiks and other conveniences and utili ties. They produce the wealth and Have just claim to the right to con trol it in part. But the exhibit does not reveal the vast wealth of the farmers. Thty have paid off their mortgages, improved their standard of living and hold at present lands of the value of more than $20,000, 000,000, horses and mules of the value of $1,450,000,000 and agri cultural machinery and implements to a figure beyond the dream of avarice. In the lace of the exhibit how absurb appears the preteuse that the prosperity of this country de pends upon tariff taxation ? As a matter of fact the tariff policy of the dominant party retards, rather than promotes the prosperity of the couutry. Upon the items of cloth ing, machinery, implements and othed tariff burdened articles which the farmers consume it is safe to estimate a tariff taxation within the year of the aggregate of a billion dollars. We don't say that that amount of their earnings went into the treasury in the form of revenue. But it went into the pockets of the tariff pampered manufacturing bar ons in the shape of enhanced pro fits and unearned bounties and the farmers are foolish for permitting such robbery. Ex. Boy Wanttd. A boy sixteen years old with fair common school education is wanted at this office to learn the printing trade. Full particulars as to work and pay will be given on applica tion, tf HUMPHREYS' Specifics cure by aetinR directly on the lick parts without disturbing the rest of the eyatoni. No. 1 for Fevers. No. 2 " 'Worms. No. 3 " Toothing. No. 4 " Diarrhea. No. 7 ' Coughs. No. 8 Nourulgis. No. 0 " Headaches. No. 10 " Dyspepsia. No. n ' Suppressed Terioda. No. 12 ' Whites. No. 13 Cronp. No. U " The Skin. No. 15 " Rheumatism. No. 16 " Malaria, ' No. 19 ' Catarrh. No. 20 Whooping Cough. No. 27 The Kidneys. No. 30 " The Bladder. No. 77 ' La Grippe. In small bottles of pellets that fit the vest pocket. At Druggists or mailed, 2So. each. Medical Ouide mailed free. ?w Vo??"' " Co"Cor- WUttam John Street, CV 000 BOO opL MVTtHll fifflffc I 1 thiamin! R ij ims PUBLIC SCHOOL IN AMERICA A Most Remarkable Evidence of Pro gression. Within tho Inst docado there l.avo been so mnny ndditltins of depart nionts of education that training in tin? chosen linos of oiio'b vocatiou la an absolute necessity. The time, bas gone by when "Ignorant, Belf niinin men" are possible. There can inner bo any more bucci'hhI'uI uneilueaii ,1 men or women In this country. Mm,, ey getting will alwuys be a ruliii;; jiastilon with Americans, says Mis. John A. Ixigau in the Now York Amer ican, but the standard of requisite knowledge hns been raised nnd hemB decreased the opportunities for suc cess of untutored mlnd.H. State nnd national governments ami phllanthrophy have provided for iiio free education of tho public, while ex perience, native Intelligence and travel have Inspired persons of means with the highest ambitions for tho educa tion nnd training of their sons, daugh ters nnd wards. In every community tho educational Idea prevails ami seems to Inspiro old nnd young with an Insatiable desire for knowledge. Statisticians have estimated that tin - arc In the I'nited States 18,00(1,. (KM students engaged In tho various kcI.juIs In the business of acquiring an education, some for tho love of learn ing, n majority for the purpose of fit ting then ti'lves for useful careers. Including all educators, from the university nnd coirrgo presidents down to t ho "district sc'.iiiiiimanns," thero are moro thau .100,(101) men and women engaged niinunlly In teaching the stu dents In our various educational Insti tulions. The facts seem to Justify tho statement that the teachers in American schools nre second to uono In tho world. Discovering the North Pole. There Is a popular belief in tho ex treme Northwest that tho north pule will bo discovered by a inusher, an! not by any scientific polar expi u This liehei i uaaiM im the conviction that a gold stampede will event. .ally be started toward north latitude ill) degrees, nnd that mushors will rush In where Arctic explorers havo fcaro.il to tread. So completely unknown to fame Is this uowconier in tho raoo lor the polo that to tho majority of peo ple, tho name suggests nothing but cereal breukfust food. Gilbert Parker, the novelist, who finds his most congenial thenio In French-Canadian life, has made hi readers familiar with "Marcho-t'-en'." the cry with which drivers of dog teams urge forward their panting uui mals. French-Canadian trappers were among tho earliest whito men in thn far northwest, and American prospec tors on tho Yukon soon learned to goad their dogs on with the same cry, without, however, understanding the French which, In their mouths, -as rapidly corrupted to "Muchon!" to is day an Alaska dug driver's equivalent for "Gee up!" Dog drivers generally run with the teuni, and therefore from "Mush-on" has come tho noun mush er, used nil over Alaska and the Yu kon territory to designate a trallsman. Tho musber Is generally prospector. Btampeder and trailsman all rolled Into one, anil Alaska trails are such uncertain qunntuties that he has fr quently to make his own precedents over nowly frozen sea aud trackless feuow. The musber achieves most of his stampeding to new gold fk-liU during the arctic winter, for then the rigid sea becomes a highway and mighty rivers need no bridging. Sun set Magazine. Ice For Heatinrj. The use of ice for heating purposes is one of the oddities of our modem civilization. Often it happens that a train carrying fruit from tho South to tho Northern market encounters a cold spoil while en route. If the tem perature goes below a certain point the perlshabl'j merchandise will be ruined. But It hns been ascertained that such a misfortune may be pre vented by covering the fruit car with, a coat of Ice a thing easily accom panied by turning a hose upon It and allowing the water to freeze until the whole Is enveloped In a glassy and glittering blanket. It may. Indeed, be appropriately called a blanket, Inasmuch as it pre vents the radiation of heat from the Interior of tho car. The Ice being a good non-conductor, the warmth is re tained and the fruit, or possibly It may bo vegetables, goes on Us way unspoiled even by zero weather. Cars used for transporting oranges and other fruit from California to tho East are often provided nowadays with large cylindrical "ice stoves," as they might be called, at each nd, which, while useful In summer time for refrigeration, are filled with lco during a cold spell In winter. When the temperature outside Is at zero or below, the Ice, at thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit Is relatively warm and thuit the "stoves' described act as heaten. The Salt In the Ocean. If the ocean did not havo salt It would freezo somewhat more rapidly than It does now, but there would be no very marked difference. The ocean Is prevented from freezing not so much by Its salt as by Its size and by Its commotion. On account of its sizo, largo portions of It extend into warm climates at all seasons, and by rea son of Its great depth It Is a vast store house of beat. Its currents distribute much warm water among the cold. St. Nicholas. A Novel Institution. France has a unique Institution call ed "The Prop of Milk." for the main tenance of lufantg (or the lint months.