Of nil ii'oti iu the world, drug clerks end railroad engineer should not lie no overworked a to imperil their pres. ence of mind, observe tlie New York Trilmne, Science luring demonstrated thnt the stomach in superfluous, dyspeptic gentlemen who contemplate n trip to the Klondike region thin spring should lie e ireful to cheek oil uuueeessary baggage at home. The loosening of white dove nt the launching of the Jnpnnefie cruiser prompt the Philadelphia Pre to suggest the appropriateness of Retting free young eagle when a United States war vessel fir.it meets the water. Philatelists are protesting against the proponed new issue of stamp commemorative of the Dinahs (Neb.) exhibition. They say the issue will serve no good purpose.atid speculators will liny the stump and hold them for high price. - The pastor of a London church, in order to popularize his service, per mit the male members of his congre gation to smoke, and furnishes the tobacco. Now Jersey is bound to keep pace, Itoctor Stoddard of Jersey City having started a diuicitig class iu his church. Prussia's paternal government has ordered two private schools in a little town near Potsdam to be closed be cause they interfere with a rival es tablishment. One may be kept open for a year longer provided the pro prietor engages to take in only twenty pupils and to teach them no foreign languages. Eai ly morning exercise is denounced nowaday! by the majority of hygienic teachers. At that time, they say, vi tality is at its lowest ebb, and needs the stimulation of food. About mid afternoon Is the best time for gentle outdoor exercise. At this time, too, it is most desirable that mental labot should cease. A great improvement has been made iu Parisiau duels. The seconds in an affair of honor between a dramatic author and one of his critics made n mistake iuthe place of meeting, there by sending their principals to op posite ends of Paris. This made a subsequent meeting at close quarters unnecessary. A recent writer on the Chinese cot ton industry states, as a remarkable fact, that in China cotton yarn can be produced for ten cents per pound. In our southern mills cotton undershirts can be produced for a fraction ovei ten cents apiece. There is hope foi our cottoii manufacturers, even in competition with the Chinese. The chief aid-de-camp of Don Car los is quoted as saying that all his master wants to enable him to get the crown of Spain is the help pf "God and His Vicar-General." Being in terrogated as to the individuality oi the latter, without whose aid even Divine help is vain, he frankly ex plains that the Vicar-General is nc other than money I A potent vicar, truly! exclaims the New York Tribune. England's scheme to get Chi-i heavily in her debt is shrewd in more ways than one. By that course China can be made to leave her customs in British bands, which implies that the great trade ports are not to be ceded away, nor territorial relations changed. Then by insisting that part of the loan shall be nsed to pay off Japan, the lat ter power is given the means to buy more ships and guns in the British market. The thrifty side of British diplomacy was never more apparent than it is in this Chinese undertak ing, which sufficiently aoconnts, thinks the San Francisco Chronicle, for the alarm in other quarters. ' The present year will not be lack ing in political interest. In twenty five states of the Union elections for governor will be held, and these elec tions will serve to throw much light upon national issues. Governors and statehonse officers are to be elected in Alabsma,Arkansas, California.Con neotiout, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Nevada, North Dakota, Oregou, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin and Wyoming. In the above list of states every section of the country is represented. Rhode Isl. end's state election will ooonr in April, Alabama's in August, Arkansas's in September and Georgia's in October. The remaining ones will all occnr in November. With this outlook ahead, there is not apt to be much idleness Wtong the politicians. FIGHTING SNOW DKIFTS, TH2 WHITE FOE OF TRAFFIC IN THE CANADIAN NORTHWEST. .... hallway Lines Hlorkaded II r Sweeplna; AvalancheaAn Army of Men Ite mi I red to Clear the Traeks (Irani fcnow Sheds For Protecting1 the Trains. "North America is the battle ground of the biggest snow tights on earth. There are thousands of men in the northwest whose only occupation dur ing the winter months is to right snow. It is exciting work, too, a life that in volves the greatest hardships and con tinual risks. Due might search the world over for a more desperate and dangerous employment." It was a Canadian Faciflo engineer who spoke. We were traveling over the Hooky Mountains at midnight. Through the glass-paneled door at the tail of the train one could see the icy crests of the Mountains in the pnle moonlight. In the wake of the sum mer fires the trees stood np thiu and rakish, like the masts of ships. Else where they were shrouded with droop ing branches and spnttered stems, in the universal snow. The snow gave an impressive sense of peaccfiildens to the impenetrable silence of the moun tains. I looked out npon the solemn stillness, the broad stretches of mo tionless white, the deep passages of avalanches carved along the mountain sides, with a feeling of awe for the immensity of tho power thnt had so changed tho face of nature. Hut the railroad man had no illusions. To him the snow was a foe, a foe to be feared, a foe against whom men and engines had often measured their strength in vain. Every now and then tho scenery 1 a, 1 J TIIE ROTARY was blotted out; the glass panols sud denly showed us nothing but the re flection of the car and bobbing light of the overhead lamp. They were snow sheds through which the train was passing. The railroad, cut like a single step in tho side of the mountain chasm, was roofed in as snugly -as a house. Above, for all we knew, the snow might be tumbling head-lung over the slippery lodge in a tempest of passion; but for all its malevolence, impotentto inflict an injnry to the poor snake of a train hiding beneath its shelter. These snow sheds have been erected among the mountains at an enormous cost. They are of massive timber work heavy beams of squared timber, dovetailed and bolted together, and backed with rook. They are fitted into the mountain so that they be come, as it were, a part of the moun tain side, so as to bid defiance to the most terrifio avalanche. Anything may precipitate an ava lanche down the steep declivities of those piled-up precipices, among whioh the single-track railway lodks like a pin's scratch wonld on the hand of man. It need be no more than a loos ened scrap of rock that has started rolling downwards with no forethought of the immeasurable cataclysm that its passage, will create. In a few. yards it has beoome imbed ded in a mighty mass of moving snow, a wool-white torrent licking np the leviathan trees as it passes like straws swept np in a storm of autumn leavas, growing more venomous, more power ful, more h-resistible, until the rush of the wind before it clears a passage through the forest anticipating its ravages, removing all obstaolos as the outriders to- a royal equipage make way through a mass of human beings. It is truly a royal foe that the rail road men of the northwest have to encounter among the mountains. An onrushing, terrifio force, something which can not be checked. It is nec essary to resort to subterfuge, to cheat it, to hide from it, or to make good by artificial means the path that the rail way has strnck out for itself. Among the Cascade Mountains I have seen seven and eight engines linked together charging impotently against the snowbanks, and at night time there is no more wonderful sight than this, each hissing engine throw ing its sheath of firelight on the ten ders, with their heavy loads of wood fuel, on the gleaming snowbanks, on the great trees seeming to press round to mock by their stillness all this use less fuss and fury, this powerless rag ing, this resnltless disturbance of their peace. Under favorable circumstances, the snow parts readily before the onslaught of the plow. At times, however, un der the battery, to which it is sub jected, it only beoomes more rigidly compressed, more solid, more impen etrable at each renewed charge, a olid, nnbndging block of ioe. The engine may go back a mile, the throt tle may be thrown open, it may rush npon the barrier at a speed of forty or thy miles an hour, but whan the how dust has cleared sufficiently for the engineers to see around them, it msy be that they have only advanced a yard, posssibly tr - engine fires have been extinguishes, not improbably the engine may have been thrown off the line. The one recourse which then re mains is to call in the assistance of a smoll ormy of mon, that a way may be forced through the snow with pick and shovel, and, while these opera tions are progressing, the passenger train has to be kept constantly on the move, lest in a few hours it become iucapable of movement at all. At such a time it is no unusual thing to see several hundred men at work on a single drift. Perhaps eight or a dozen platforms are cut in the snow, and thus what is removed from the line is passed upward from stage to stage, climbing the steep walls in tiny shovelfuls, until it finally reaches the open waste, thirty or forty feet above the heads of the workers on the ground level. The men are brought to the spot in special trains and fed and honsed as best they can be. They work day and night, sometimes shoveling for thirty six hours at a stretch. The thing that has simplified the task of snow fighting more than any thing else, especially in the prairie country, Is the rotary plow. The ap pearance of the "rotary," as it is fa miliary called by railroad men, re minds one of nothing so much as the screw propeller of a steamship. It is a huge rosette of flanges, about twelve feet in diameter, that bores its way into snowbanks, clearing just enough space to enable the waiting train to pass through. As the winter goes on, the snow is piled higher and higher on both sides, nutil we have the per- ' ml TLOW AT WORK. pellicular embankment throu gh whioh the train often passes for miles with out a break. As the wheel revolves, the snow chips pass back through the intervals between the shovels, fall into a large sized fan elevator, and are hurled forth on this side or that side of the lino, aooording to the quarter from whioh the wind is blowing. In a graoeful arch of silver dust, the snow is flung into the air' to a bight of sixty or seventy feet, descending like a fountain over the half-buried posts of the telegraph. From the smoke stack a volume of fire is rising. There is an uproar like the sound of artillery gal loping over a cobbled street. As a spectacular effect the snow plow is a great success. Some of the bigger plows weigh over fifty tons by them selves, and with the machinery that operates them the total weight is over 100 tone. The cutter, with its own private en gine, as it were, is placed on a mass ive truck which is iaolosed like the cab of a locomotive and linked to a heavy freight engine, the "Hog." Following behind this travels another engine drawing its load of tools and its complement of workers. The men who operate a snow plow draw high wages, the expenses in this respect on one job amounting to over a 8160 a day. A rotary in good hands will clear a snow blockaded track at the rate from two to twelve miles anb.our; THE ENOI.NEEB ATTEB A BIDE IX A STOB1I. but the consumption of cool is one ton in 30 minutes. With a rotary plow the engineers do not run the same risk as they do on the plow of the old-fashioned type, with whioh it is often necessary to charge the snowbank at top speed, not merely cutting through, but burrow ing nnder the snow. But even the rotary plow is liable to be disabled by encountering the frozen carcass of a horse or a steer in a snowbank, or the debris of fallen telegraph poles, or, among the mountains, the trunks of Khzantio trees. It is nominally the - -m,T1 SIM IILivrr-wn-w. w,. lip duty of the section men to look out for this, and if possible, to warn the engine driver, and to telegraph for a gang of workmen with pick and shovel to olear the track in the old-fashioned way. But it is needless to say that the most vigilant section men cannot always be relied upon in such a matter as this. PREFERS BICYCLE TO BRONCO. This Indian Hides tho Wheel With Ease and Grace. Onward progress - in the case of the bicyole in the affections of the Ameri can people was never better illustrated than when IJole-in-the-Day of Devil's Lake, N. 1)., swapped his sure-footed noLE-lX-TriE-DA? ON HIS WHEEL. bronco for a ''bike." The mann-nvres of the bicycle squad attaohed to the military post at that point filled him with admiration and a desire, and now he can ride with the case and grace of an old-timer. Hard falls and jmuct ures came his way while learning to master the silent steed, but such trials did not cause him to swear in his af fection for the pneumtic-shod vehicle. Uole-in-the Day's example has been followed by other Indians, and an In dian cycling club may now be organ ized. (flow Chamalaon Chnngaa Color. The chameleon is a little lizard, who possesses the wonderful power of changing his oolor to suit bis own con venience. Florida produces several species of these lizards in abundance. Up to the present day no one has un derstood the process by whioh the lit tle lizard effects his changes. Now it is known. Certain colors through the medium of the optio nerve produce a contrac tion or expansion of the pigment or color cells. The result is a protective tint or one whioh resembles that upon which the animal is resting. The eye receives the stimulus or impression, which passes from the optio nerve to the sympathetic nerve, so reaching the various series of the lizard's little color cells under tho skin. The pigment cells are distributed all over the body with more or less regu larity, and upon their contraction and TEB LITTLE CHAMELEON WHEX BLIND FOLDED CAW 'T CHANGE COLOR. expansion depends the prevailing oolor of the animal. "The soientist discovered this by blindfolding a lizard, and found that when it couldn't see the oolor of the surrounding foliage it ceased to chanjo its own color. , Disappointed In Lots. There is an old lady residing south of Kokomo, near the Howard-Tipton county line, who has been a "man hater" for forty years. She is a spin ster leading a hermit's life, and has a comfortable sum of money secreted in her home. Sinoe being disappointed in love forty years ago she has never spoken to a man. She is seldom seen in town, and her small trading is always done with women clerks. She has made a will and purchased a cemefery lot. Explicit directions have been given that no man shall preach her funeral sermon nor act as pall-bearer. A women is to offer prayer at the grave. Women shall act as pall-bearers, a woman shall drive the hearse, and women lower the body and fill the grave. No men are to be allowed in the funeral procession, and newspa pers are forbidden to mention her de mise. Indianapolis (Ind.) Sentinel. Bow to Avoid Golds J Cold and exposed extremities and too much wrapping around the body create congestion and pave the way for diseasei The hygienio and sensi ble method is to give the throat, chest and arms a dash of cold salt and water every morning upon rising. An en tire sponge bath of this sort is of great advantage, but this treatment of the throat and chest is almost absolutely necessary if one would avoid a multi tude of ills that affect this portion of the system. A Mnch-Prlwd Cola. Among numismatics one of the most sought after colonial coins is the Highly copper. They are of several varieties, and were struok in 1737 by Samuel Highly, who w.as a physician and a blacksmith at Granby, Conn. He obtained the copper from a mine neat by and shaped the coins at his forge. Tha Rrarnm Cat. rmelons dolly Dorothy. I ra been having trouble, A tul tha weight of nnjlnusncse Nearly bant me doublet For I tnw tha Hcarum eat, In tha lumber tilllows. Creeping, creeping toward m Through the bending willows. Oh, my dolly Dorothv, I whs frightened, frightened! For the clouds were very dark, And It lightened, lightened! And the creeping Soarum cat, romlng through the willows, M ide my heart (to plt-R-iiit, in tha slumber pillows! And 1 wanted to cry out, Hut. oh dear, I couldn't! And 1 hoped the cat would turn, Hut, oh dear, 'twouldu't! And I tried to run away, lint "onld not leave the willows, And the creeping Kenrum cat, In tha slumber pillows! Then, my Dolly Dorothy, I was nearly (ninth. , When a foamy wave earns np From the bin Athititto Caught me from the, Hcarum eat, Allium; the Lending willows. And dropped me In my little bed, And woke mo on the pillows. Jfnmmn said. though dreams are dread They vanish like a bubble) "Hut, ' mid she, "a simple tea Would save you such a trouble. If you ant just broad and milk. You will not see the willows, And the creeping Hcarum cat lu the slumber pillows. Mary Klizaheth Htonn, Why Ilo Your Skates Slip? Why do your skates slip on ioc? ntos is just as smooth, but you couldn't possibly sknte on it. If you doubt it try your skates on a piece of glass and see whether they will slip or not. The reason why ice is slippery ond glass is not is very simple. Ice always melts a little under pressure and fric tion.. When the steel of the skate touches it a little water is formed, and this acts as til between the skate and the ice, and the skater slips merrily along, The expression in regard to glare ice, "It's as slippery as if it had been greased," is not fur wrong. On glass this liquid lubricator is lacking, and the friction Iret ween the skate and the glass renders slipping impossible. Put two pieces of glass together with a few drops of water between them, and see how easily they will slip about, one over the other. Chicago Itecord. A rurlnna Incident. Horses will form strong attachments for dogs, but it does not often happen that a horse derives any real benefit from having acunine friend. The fol lowing case will show that a dog inny sometimes return a horse's affection in a very practical manner. A man living in the country had a horse which happened to be turned out jusi as bis carrots were ready for pulling. He also had a dog that was on the best of terms with the horse. One day he noticed that his carrots were disappearing very fast, but he was al most certain that no one had gotten in and stolen them. Btill be deter mined to watch and see who was rob bing him. . His vigilance was re warded, for he caught the thief in the very aot of pulling up the carrots. Then he cautiously followed bin from the garden and found that he went off iu the direction of the field where the horse was. Arrived there, the owner of the carrots saw that his horse was the receiver of tho stolen goods. The thief was his dog. In some way the log bad discovered that the horse had a partiality for carrots, aud was unable to gratify its taste; but with a sagacity that is almost incredible, the dog found the means of obtaining the succulent morsels for bis friend, and this he did without scruple at his mas ter's expense. There was something more than instinct in this dog's head. But any one who takes real notice of the habits and curious doings of ani mals must inevitably come to the conclusion that the theory is not tenable which maintains that animi.! cannot think aud reason. Detroit Free Tress. . Raw a Fox Is Caught. Winter is the propitious season of the hunter and trapper. His game is out aud ' nature obligingly acts the part of detective by spreading her mantle of snow to register their move ments. Each kind of animal possesses its own peculiar habits and strategic methods which must be familiar to the pursuer who hopes for success. Any other denizen of the forest is be lieved to be more easily outwitted than the fox. All know how high his reputation is for caution and cunning, yet he has acquaintances of human kind so intimately acquainted with his ways as to see just how to overcome bis scruples and make him an easy victim of the trap. If Beynard has paid a recent visit to the henhouse, or whether he has or not, if his den can be located with ap proximate .certainty he may be ap proached in that locality on the sub ject of capture; not in plain language, to be sure; not by open methods, but in accordance with bis own stealthy tactics. The whole plan rests on the tripod of caution, patience and perse too Take the remainder of the fowl tie partly devoured, or, in absence of thst, a freshly killed animal, or piece of butcher's meat, and at night place It nnder a log to which Ills instincts will be likelv to ld Mm. if i.. . i. - ....... al,ll,pnr in gnawing he will find It and what fox is not hunirrvt Tii t.-.t ill .1 rt- ,- a u v .1 en, " tit HUH nil ! , . CPePte(1 to Rood faith, but it will be sampled. Repest the offering the same place night after night, till its daily disappearance shows that hie confidence is gained and there is no evidence of hesitancy in his approach. Theh set the trap; a strong steel one, well staked and entirely concealed with leaves. He will come as usual for his snpper, and this time be be comes a prisoner. M. A. Hoyt, in Farm, Field and Fireside. Tha lerrl r.rt. This enrionsflsh, which exhibits the singular phenomenon of voluntary electrio power residing in a living animal, is an inhabitant of the fresh water rivers and ponds of Hnriuam and other parts of South America, where it was first discovered in the yesr 1077. The power of emitting an electrio shock is apparently given it in order to enable the creature to kill its prey. Thoso who have seen the electrio eel in the I'ol.vtechnio while being fed will have little doubt of this. The fish given to it are.dircctly it becomes aware of their presence, instantly struok dead, and then devoured. This specimen Is n 11 fortunately blind, bnt it has learned to turn in the direction of a paddling in the water, made by the individual who feeds it. The fish is scarcely in the woter before a shock from theg.vmnotus kills it. The usual length of tho gymnotus is about three feet. ('Aptain Stedman, in his account of Surinam, gives an account of the electrio eel, which he, of course, had many opportunities of seeing. He at tempted, for a trifling wager, to lift np a gymnotus in his hands, but accord ing to his own words: 1 "I tried abont twenty different times to grasp it with my hand, bnt all without effect, receiving just as many electrical shocks, which I felt even to the top of my shoulder. It has been said that this animal must be touched with both hands before it gives tho shock, but this I must fake the liberty of contradicting, having experienced the contrary effect." The eel mentioned was a small one, only two feet long, but one that had ar rived at its full growth would have given a very much stronger shock. An English sailor was fairly knocked down by a shock from one of these eels, nor did he recover his senses for some time. It is said that the shock can pass np a stick, and strike the person holding it. Mr. Bryant and a companion were both strnck while pouring off ice water from a tub in which the eel had been placed. Humboldt, in his "Views of Na ture," gives a very animated descrip tion ( f the method employed by the Indians to take these creatures a method equally ingenious and cruel. Knowing from experience that the powers of the gymnotus are not ade quate to a constant volley of shocks, they contrive (hat shocks shall be ex pended on horses instead of them selves. Having found a pool containing electrio eels, they foroe a troop of wild horses to enter the pool. The dis turbed eels iietuediutely attack in truders and destroy many of them by repeated shocks; but by constantly forcing fresh supplies of horses to in vade the pool, the powers of the gym noti become exhausted, and they are then dragged out with impunity. Detroit Free Press. Cocoannta In Hawaii. Five years ago Hugh Mclntyre im ported 2000 nuts for . Lindemaun, which the latter planted along the sea coast at Wailua, Kauai. Today be has 2000 cocosnut trees in bearing and some of them hsd fruit when only four years old. Mr. Linderaann says that in some places he hsd to dig holes in the rocks to get the nuts planted. As copra and co.oaunt.it is in great demand, the psoduct of each tree being worth at a very low estimate 50 cents. Ton have 81000 net, or say you value the tree (six yesrs old) at 10. There yon have 20,000 worth of property. Mr. Lindemann has now gone east to sell this year's crop. These are no fancy coffee figures, but facts. Yon can get one of these beautiful Samoan cocoanuts, sprouted, of Hugh Mcln tyre for 23 cents. They are worth 85. If you have a place to plant them they will increase' the value of your lot After you get them growing these little cocoa palms are worth a dozen of the almost worthless trees (with fictitious names) that you get from the government nursery tor noth ing. The cocoanut is destined to become one of the most valuable products to civilized man. Honolulu Star. ' Financial Wntki. Boarding Mistress (indignantly) Two of my boarders were brought home last night in cabs. Friend Disgraceful, ain't it? Boarding Miutress Worse) They haven't a cent left to pay their board. Puck. , Mot Apt Kaoack. Mr. Middleflat The professor says my daughter sings like a nightingale. Mr. Topflat Well, the professor is wrong. The nightingale sometime rests. Chicago New, t.