PIT BROW WOMEN. ' Hard Iit of Female Worker A boat English Coal Mine. Tit brow women nre among Hie most remarkable women workers In the world. They work ns hnrd ns inrn nnd dross almost like thorn. Five thousand of 'those women find employment In Lancashire, England, In the ronl mines. Their work lies on the pit brow nt the surface nnd not down below. Once wo men were employed In the oonl scams, but in 1H-I2, in the fnee of groat oppo sition from rolllery owners, mi net wa pnssed prohibiting women nnd children from being employed below tho snrfnoo tn coal mines. At present the duties of the pit brow women consist In dealing with the oonl ns It oomes tip the shaft to the pit bend. When the enrgo renchcs the top they hnnl out the wngons. which contnln several hundredweight of ronl ench, nnd run them on the rnlls to n sort of tipping mnehlne. which shoots the oonl down below to the screen of the rid dling mnehlne. Allium? the other du ties of the women Is tho leveling of tho eonl on the wngons which receive it as It drops from the screen. They start work nt 0 o'clock In the morning nnd finish nt 4 In the nfter noon. They receive 2 shillings or less a day, nnd men thnt do the snme work get 4 shillings. Their costume consists of trousers nnd clogs nnd often enough a enpo which 1ms nt one time been worn by a brother. When going to and from work the girls nnd women wear pettlconts, which they roll tip around the wnlst while engnged on the pit brow. The hnlr Is closely cov ered with a hnndkerehlef, on top of which Is n soft bonnet A Valley of Month In Ilollvla. There Is n vnlley In Bolivia, South lAmorten, which might well be cnlled itho Vnlley of the Window of Death. It has been Inhnblted for nn Indefinite period of yenrs by the Knnnn Indlnns, .who nre kindred to the vnrious South American tribes nnd number now only a few hundred souls. Thnt they were once a very powerful tribe Is Indlcntod by the condition of the bind which ithey ns a tribe still Inhabit. One can not travel any distance through their land without coming upon the old and forsaken burlnl grounds of tho Knnnn dead. These places ennnot bo cnlled graveyards, for tho bodies nre not burled, but rnther plnced upon olcvat ed plntfonns, wrapped In the garments of denth nnd bound to tho crossbeams thnt they nmy not be displaced. In ono of these burial grounds there will be prohnbly fifty high skeleton plnfforms nnd on each will lie from ithroe to five of tho Knnnn dead. The air In thnt part of Bolivia Is very pure and preservative, for It Is one of the highest plateaus of the continent, al though Knnnn vnlley Is Just a little "below the plateau's height A traveler .passing through that hind nt night nnd jby moonlight would bo awestrlcken nt jtbe gloomy vision those graveyards present An Affair of trttm, Wo are much surprised nt meeting little Polly Contossci, formerly of Bow ersvllle. In England. "'Why, Tolly!" wo say. "now Is it we And you here?" "Polly!" sho repents, with a dignity ,we never knew she possessed. "Lndy Oledebts, if you plonse." An upology on our pnrt establishes friendly relations onco more, nnd sho tells us that sho really has won nnd .Wedded Lord Olcdebts and that her fa ther's dollars nre being expended In tho refurbishing of tho Oledebts castle. "But," wo say, "it was rumored In Bowcrevlllo that you were hesitating In your choice between threo honest farmer lnds. In tho vicinity, now was It, then, thnt yon married his lordship 7' "Oh," sho titters, "ho came to Bow eravlllo ono day, When I saw him I dropped my eyes nnd ho began dropping his b's, and It wnsn't long until he In duced me to drop my J's, and now we are both making papa drop his v's and xV-Judg. lie Won Iler. "She has promised to marry you, has he? Did she accept you right off?" "Oh, no. I bad to propose to her four times." "Four times! G melons, but you were persevering! What did she say the first time?" "Sho said If there wasn't another man In tho world but me she wouldn't marry me." "That was pretty strong. What did ho say the second time?" "She said she liked me pretty well, but she couldn't think of marrying me, tor sho might see some one she liked bettor." "Humph! And the third tlmo?" "The third time she asked me If I iwanted to tease the life out of her." "Ha, ha, ha! And the fourth time?" "Oh, the fourth time she suid If I in sisted upon It she supposed sho would have to say yes." A Trick In Letter Writing;, "If you nre compelled to write a let ter In lead pencil because there Is no Ink In the house blow your breath on ithe page after It has been written," aid a woman who evidently had tried the experiment "It will prevent blur Ting after the letter has been folded. at moistens the graphite, aud makes lt- adhere more closely to tho paper. Of (course you cun make It blur by rub ping It with the tip of tho linger, but tor all practical purposes tho words will be as legible as if they had been written In Ink." Now York Press. A Bud Case, The cynical man was staring through the window ut the chesty man swinging down the street. "Does Chesty know anything?" asked his companion. "Know euythlng!" said tho cynical .man. "He doesn't even suspect any tttins;" New York Time. PISCAtORY' STUPIDITY. The Finn's Capacity For learning la . Painfull? Contracted. Most fishes seek their food by light, snys Professor Edmund Clark Banford tn the Intematlonnl Quarterly, and those do not Usually notice It by any other sense. But those that are accus tomed to And It by smell seldom pay nny nttentlon to It when they merely see It. C'ntflsh depend principally on the sense of tnsto, nnd they seem to taste all over, not only In the mouth, but by the outer skin as far buck as tho bill fin. It Is uncertain whether fishes enn feel pnln or not. There Is n good denl of evidence to show thnt they ennnot. A fish thnt hns lost Its sight mny learn to avoid nn obstnele nfter swim ming against it a single tlmo, but flshes Hint can see will jump ngninst the pinto glass wall of nn nqunrlum day tifter day, sometimes for a year. In the effort to eatch things outside. The elements of consciousness in the mind of a fish font up a totnl "equiva lent, perhnps, to the lowest Idiocy when mensured by human stnndnrds." It Is possible that tho fish's cnpnclty for learning Is "about on n level with that of n mnn in deep sleep or preoccupa tion." lllrda That Hxerrlse Ina;enalty. Birds building on high trees are not so wnry nbout tho concealment of their nests ns hedge builders and those thnt seek the springing corn or grass Innd for the shelter of their homes, tmsting to the loftiness of situation for secu rity. A nest plnced upon the ground Is In constnnt dnnger of exposure. A browsing animal might destroy It. Then the scythe with one sweep occa sionally lnys bnre one or more nests, thereby endangering the eggs or callow nestlings. This renders the parent birds very wnry and cnuses them to practice grent Ingenuity In their ef forts to protect the young birds. Tho skylark hns been known to enrry Its egg or offspring to a plnce of snfety nfter nn exposure of the nest, and It hns been said Its long hind claw the use of which hns puzzled many nntu rnllsts is speclnlly ndnpted by nature for more easily grasping and transport ing its treasures from the source of danger. When the young birds nre too bulky to be thus removed the pnr cnt bird carries them on Its back, though this mode of removal Is a some what difficult one. London Tit-Bits. Jefferson and the Patent Ofllee. The first patron of our patent system was Thomns Jefferson, who during three yenrs gnve his personal attention to every application for a patent He used to call the secretary of war and the attorney general to examine and scrutinize with him, and they did It so thoroughly thnt In one yenr the unit they granted only throe patents. The very first pntent of all was given to Samuel Hopkins In 1700 for penrl ash es. Mr. Jefferson held that the patent system wns not one for creating rev enue, but for encouraging a production of thnt which Is to be of benefit to the whole people. In the first twelve years a single clerk In the state department nnd a few pigeonholes were all that the business of the office required. Then a Dr. Thornton took charge of It and devoted himself to It as to a hobby. Spiders Like Mailt, A violinist says spiders are notori ously and historically fond of music. At ono of bis performances the concert hall was made disagreeable by a sud den Invasion of spldors, which were drawn by his violin out from the cracks and crannies of the ancient building. They crawled about the floor and on to the stage, and be could ace the annoyed audience stamping on the Insects. The writer adds that he has known a small garden snake to bo at tracted by piano playing and a young calf to whisk bis tall and prance about most gleefully at the first notes of a French born. His neck would curve about proudly, his hoofs tread lightly and his ears wag Joyously when the tooting began, and he never quieted down till the music ceased. Peculiar Privileges. The speuker of the bouse of commons has several peculiar privileges. Every yenr he receives a gift from the master of the buckhounds of a buck and doe killed In the royal preserves. This cus tom goes back so far that there Is no record of It Later In the year the speaker receives another tribute from a different source. The donors on the second occasion are the Cloth Workers' company of London, who send to the speaker of the house of commons and to several of his majesty's minister a genorous width of the best broadcloth to be found In Euglund. Her Aadlenee. "now are you getting on with your music, my dear?" Inquired a lady of tier niece. "Well, of course," replied the niece diffidently, "It wouldn't be proper of me to compliment myself, but some of the neighbors have told me they have stayed awake at night for hours listen ing to my playing." The Bale Salted Him. The new boarder had been three weeks In the house. "It is usual," said the landlady, with great delicacy, "for my bourdon to pay as they go." "Oh, that's all right," he replied af fably. "I'm not going for a long time." onaded Like It. , "What la that piece you are playlng? Is it by Wagner?" "No; the piano 1 out of tuue." Brooklyn Times. With the Persians the writing of poetry and beautiful and witty sar logs la described as the "threading of. pearls." ZERO AN ANCIENT TERM. I It Was tn re In Rnhrlen Thlrty-sla Centuries Ao. The term zero, which Is nsed to desig nate a cipher and In meteorology the entire absence of heat 10 the atmos phere, was, according to a mathematic al hlstorlnn, Moritz Cantor, used by the Babylonians about the year 17ml B. C. This, however, is merely a suivosltlon. It 1ms not been definitely established thnt zero wns In use nny earlier thnn 4N) A. D. About this time It Wns used In Indln, and several centuries Inter the Arabs begun to employ It. Through the Arabs lis use ho-ntuo known to Eu ropeans during the twelfth century- It wns not generally adopted In Europe until several centuries later, notwith standing Us grent advantages. For ft considerable time there were two par ties among 'ho European educators. One pnrty, known ns the nlgorlsts, fn vored the adoption of the Hindoo sys tem of notation (falsely cnlled Arabic), with Its position mines, while the other, known ns the abaclsts, fnvored tho Ito mnn notation, without zero or position value. The general adoption of the Hindoo system wns grently fnellitnted by tho facts thnt It wns explained In most of the cnlendnrs for more than a century, beginning with 1300, and thnt the me dlirva! universities frequently offered courses devoted to the use of this nota tion. Chhugo Tribune. An American Waterloo. Wellington nt Wnterloo nnd Mendo at Gettysburg ench held the highlands against bin antagonist. Wellington on Mont Solnt Jenn nnd Mendo on Ceme tery Ridge had the blrdseyc view of the forces of nttnek. The English bnt terles on the plateau nnd jtfie Union bntterlos on Cemetery Heights com mantled nllke the Intervening undula tions across which the charging col umns must advance. Behind Mont Snlnt Jenn, to conceal Wellington's movements from Napoleon's eyes, were the woodlands of Solgnes. Behind Cemetery nidge, to conceal Monde's movements from the field gin mhos of Lee, wns a fchnrp declivity, n protecting and helpful depression. As the French under Napoleon nt Wnterloo, so the Confederates under Lee nt Gettysburg held the weaker position. In both cases the nssnllnnts sought to expel their op ponents from tbo stronger lines. I might add another resemblance In tho results which followed. Waterloo de creed tho destiny of France, of Eng land, of Europe. Gettysburg, not so di rectly or lmmedlntely, but prnctlcnlly, decided the fnte of the Confederacy. General John B. Gordon In Scrlbner's. Ladle Who Wore Knlveii. In early English days knives were worn by Englishwomen in Imitation of the nnelnce, a dngger cnrrled at the girdle. Chnucer speaks of them In the prologue to his "Canterbury Tules:" Hlr knives were y-ehaped not with brass. But all with silver wrought, full clean and well. In Ross church, Herefordshire, is a monument to a lndy of the Ruddle fam ily, temp. Henry VIII., who wenrs a purse and a knife. Brand tells us that knives worn formerly pnrt of tho ao couterments of a brldo. In a piny, temp. "Edward III.," occurs tho pns sage: Here by my side do hang my wedding knives. In the "Arehwologla" Mr. Poucp, the antiquary, wrote a paper on this prac tice of wearing knives by European ludles tn tho sixteenth century, nnd an engraving shows a specimen of a enso of these wedding knives, duted 1010, which are described as having amber handles and enses of purplo velvet em broidered with gold. Soma Pysmy Anlmala. A species of dwarf elephant used to live on the Island of Malta and In vari ous parts of Italy. Judging from tho bones which remain, these animals, about the sizo of a lurgo sheep, wore somewhat numerous. A dwarf elephant Is a rarity now and no longer forms a distinct species, but is considered rath er a freak. A very beautiful species of pygmy deer is found on the Sunda Islands. These tittle creatures are not much lar ger than a cat, but have all the points of a "well bred" deer. . Among horses Shetland ponies are the pygmies. Tbo ordinary musk of central Africa Is a pygmy, or dwarf, of only about twenty inches In height at the shoulder and threo feet In length. Maklns- Sore of tllin. "I think," said the thoughtful moth er, "that you ought to object to young Brown paying so much attention to our daughter." "Why?" demanded the thoughtless father. "He impresses me very favor ably." 'That's Just It," returned the thought ful mother. "We must do something to make his ambitious mother think we regard ourselves a little above them so cially If we are to make sure of him." A Hint to Go. "I have something to tell you before I' go," be finally said. "Is It a long story?" she hastily asked. "No; It Is a very short one." "Then I think you will Just have time," sbe sweetly said. Cleveland Plulu Dealer. Her References. "I dou't like these references, said the housewife. "Well, mum," returned the applicant for a position, "I didn't write 'em, so It ain't my fault. If you dou't Ilka 'em Jest you go to the people as gave 'cm to me an' tell 'em so." Chicago Post. A Dedattloa. "Pa, what is a fray?" "Why, my son, that Is what a person who bun never been In a fight calls If'-Puck. HEROIC SELF SACRIFICE. Coaraa-e With Which n Young Naval Officer arreted Death. "Speaking of heroism," snld a navy officer nt his club a few evenings ago, "it Is rare thnt such nn example Is seen as thnt of Hynson, who wns a pnsscd mldshlpmnn nt Vera Cruz In 1H40. It wns renlly more thnn n bit of heroism; It wns fortitude, passive courage, that confronted n peculiar danger, a self sncrillce, that wns most conspicuous. Our fleet wns off the harbor on blockade duty when one day n Spanish merchant vessel mnnaged to slip In without being discovered. Hynson con ceived the Men of aptnrlng the vessel by n night nttnek. nnd be succeeded in doing so. Hut ns be could not take tho vessel out of harbor, for the reason thnt she was under the close rnngo of the enemy's irmis, Hynson set fire to the vessel. In doing so he burned both his arms so badly that be cnrrled them In slings for several days. While In this disabled condition a terrific squall came up nnd played havoc with several of our Utile vessels, nnd the ono on which Hynson wns serving was cap- sized. Hynson mid one of tho other of ficer managed to got bold of n Hunting spar, but ns It wns not snfllclent to keep them both nllont Hynson let go his hold nnd In n fen- moments sunk to his dentb." New York Tribune. Weluht of a tirnwlns Child. Tho weight of n growing child Is the most Important Index to Its iT Miernl health. The standard of weight for growing children, that usually given by authorities in the matter. Is thnt nt five yenrs of ngo n child should weigh nbout as many pounds ns It Is inches high. As n rule, this will not be much over or under forty pounds. Children who come of large parents should weigh something more than that. The rate of Increase should be nbout two pounds for every Inch of growth, with n tendency for the weight to exceed this standard proportionately rather than to fall below It. When n child Is rnther heavier In proportion to Its height than this standard it is a sign of pkkI health. If the child Is growing rapidly It should not be allowed to fall much lx'low It without Ix'iug made to rest more than has been the custom be fore. A deficiency of weight In propor tion to height Is always an unfavorable? sign. Any Interrupt Ion In the progress of Increase of weight, especially dur ing the continuance of growth, must be n danger signal that should not be neglected by those Interested in the pn tleut. Why nc Only Ate the Yolk.. An Amerlcnn woman traveling In England stopped one day at a llttlo country house. Chatting with tbo vis itor, tho woman of the bouse told of her dllllculty in getting nlong nnd of nn experience she had had with n bonrdor. "The first morning this man stopped here," she said, "ho began to eat boiled eggs very greedily. Egg nfter egg he ate throe, four, live, six nnd It wns only the yolk of them thnt be swal lowed; the white ho didn't bother with at nil. "When be dug his spoon Into the sev enth egg my temper got the better of me, and I snld In n severe tone: " 'Don't you ever ent the white of tho egg, sir?' "'Surely not, my woman,' bo nn swered. 'The yolk Is the bird ; the white Is tho feathers. Would you havo me make a bolster of myself?' " Where It Always Ilnliia. There is a group of Islands to tho south of New Zealand cnlled the Sis ters, or Seven Sisters, which lire re puted to be subjected to a practically constnnt rainfall. Tho snme may bo said of the Islands and mainland of Tl orra del Fuego, save for the differ ence that the rain often takes tho form of sleet and snow. On n line running round tho world from 4 degrees to 8 or 0 degrees there nre patches over which rain seldom censes to fall. This Is cnlled the "zono of constnnt precipita tion," but nt tbo snme time thero aro several localities along with it with very llttlo rainfall. Llarhtnlna Pranks. "The most beautiful display of light ning or atmospheric electric currents which It was my good fortune to wit ness," says a resident of Quebec, "was out on the Beauport flats, near Quebec, when two electrically laden clouds, ns though two trees, their heads toward each other nud their longer branches interwoven, kept on for more than ten minutes, Interchanging horizontal Hash es of beautifully colored fire, not one of which ever reached the earth, while occasionally a flash would shoot up ward ns if toward some cloud In that direction." An Experiment. "You Bee," said Corntossel, "a phre nologist ouce told us that our boy Josh bad a remarkable head." "So you sent him to college?" "Yes. Now we're waiting to see whether his head Is goin' to turn out to be a congenial residence fur bruins or Jos' u garden fur football hulr. Washington Star. 11 cr Method. Stella So she married blm to reform blm? How did she begin? Bella By spending a lot of money. You know how hard It is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. Uurper's Bazur. A Cause For M'orry. A man may go along fur fifty years an not bp worried much nliout do here after, but tie in I ill t de barber finds a bald hi lot on bts head he's got a burden to carry fur de rest of liU days. De troit Free I'ress. The son of the self made mun gen erully begins at the top mid works downward. Chicago Bocord-IIuruld. BURGLARIOUS STARS. Planets and Sana Mny Pick 1 p Mlaor Solar Bodies. Jupiter Is much the biggest member of the family of stnrs which revolve around our sun; consequently the pow er ts? bis attraction Is greater thnn that possessed, for Instance, by the rnrtb. Jupiter's exploits ns a hurghir have caused very considerable annoyance and Inconvenience to astronomer In the days before his powers were fully recognized. In 177H there appeared a flue comet which was found to have nn elliptical l.rblt round the sun of so eoinrnrativcly small n slvie thnt Mr. Loxoll, It discov erer, calculated It would return In five nml n half years, but In 177." telescopes were vainly focused on the spot where It was expected to reappear, mid again In 17M It disappointed nil observers. Mr. I.cxell plunged Into fresh calcula tions nod after much research found that Jupiter was the culprit. The un fortunate comet bad been rash enough to plunge Into the sphere of the giant planet's attraction, with the result that It had been completely diverted from Its former orbit and Hung off Into quite n different one of n twenty yenr srlod. It has never been seen again by nny one on this onrth nnd probably never will be. Jupiter was nlso responsible for the delay which occurred In the return of that splendid visitant known ns Hal ley's comet. Hnlley found thnt be wns not tho first discoverer of this big com et. It bad appeared r.t lenst twice pre viously, once seventy-five yenrs before nnd ngaln seventy-six years before that. The astronomer concluded that there would be a further delay In Its third return and predicted that Its next np penrance would be 518 days later. He tl'd not live to see It. But in 17.1H. the year he bad prophesied for Its reap pearance, astronomers wore waiting for It. HUMORS OF MUSICAL LIFE. AmtiNlna; Pranks the F.rrntle Types rinyril With a Composer. Mis Maude Valerie White, author of numerous popular songs, has told a number of anecdotes, many of them nt her own expense. I suppose, she once wrote In the Cornhlll Magazine, all composers havo had n laugh over tho extraordinary mistakes which some times occur In the first proofs of their songs. I remember years ngo writing n very sentimental song, In which the Hue occurred I've never once regretted the vow I made that day. My feelings may be Imagined when I found they had printed I've never once regretted the row I mado that tiny. Miss White also told about nn ntnus lng mistake which occurred In the pro gramme of one of her concerts: A well known singer and very good friend of mine was down to sing my two songs, "To Marry" and "Crabbed Ago nnd Youth." But tho newspaper an nounced something very different. Not content with drawing up a progrnmmo of my concert, it drew up n programme of my future, for I read as follows: Mr. Illnnk To Marry Maude Valeria White Crubbed Age and Youth. As I inn n good many years older than the friend In question, the coincidence struck me as particularly funny, and I cut the programme out of the news paper and sent It to blm. IS.v the first mull next morning I received an iden tical cutting from him. with nn Inquiry whether be wns to take this ns a form al announcement of our engagement nnd expressing u mild surprise that he had not been consulted in the mutter. lie Knew Sir Walter Scott. In n booklet enllixl "Sir Wnlter Reott I nlwl Ilia I'nlltiti-v" Iiillillabnd tn I'll In. burgh the author quotes this reminis cence from mi old man lie met who had known the romancer: "Aye," he minded Sir Walter fine. "I seen him driving out In bis carriage and pair, wi' Tom I'urdio on the box sea. He had on a shepherd's tartan plaid and a glengarry cap wl twa black ribbons banging doon tho back. I mind bis dowg tae Mulda, ho cu'd it and an awfu' work he made ower the beast. But lie wns us pleasant a man ns yon could sjteak to, though bo wusnn thought miickle of as n pleader when they made him slilrru o' Selkirk. Is it his bulks you're spelrlng on? Ou, aye, yc'U find u' bis bulks ben tho house." Carved on the Tomb of luaralls. This extract from IngalU' essay on "Crass" Is carved on the glacial bowl der which marks bis last resting place: "When the fitful fever Is ended and tho foolish wrangle of the market and fo rum Is closed grass heals over the scars which our descent into the bosom of the earth has mado, and the carpet of tho Infant becomes the blanket of the dead." Kansas City Star. Cash lief ore Fame. "Why don't you try to write your miiuo on the scroll of fame?" "My friend." said Scmikr Sorghum very earnestly, "I have never yet seen nnybody tearing leaflet out of the scroll of fame and getting them cashed at tho bunk."-riilladclphlu Inquirer. Au Amutcar. Young Bride I'm to nervous. I'm actually shaking. Matrimonial Veteran You'll get over It, dear. 1hy. when I first began get ting married I thought I should never step having altar fright Baltimore American. When a mnn meets his wife In a rail road stilt Ion he never knows whether to kins her before till the people or to pretend that he Is just a friend of tho family. New York I'ress. A tuau'st strength develops when he has something to do, not when he Is Idle Atchison Globe), " ' THE FIRST 8TOVE8. " They Superseded the Roman Staba In the Eighteenth Cautery. A heating up: ..' i us called a "stubs" (stove) was ,... i;. used among the higher class of Itomnns before the be ginning of the Christian era. This clnss of heaters wns fixed and Immova ble, besides being In several other re spects wholly different from the mod ern stove. In Germany mid Scandina via they wore used In bath rooms and hothouse during the middle ages. They were usually constructed of brick, stone or tile and were of Im mense size. They sometimes covered the whole side of a twenty or thirty foot room and often extended out Into the room ns much ns ten feet, In which enso tho smooth, tint top wns used for a bedstead, the heated surface Impart ing nn ngreeabln feeling of warmth during those cold nights of long ngo when such tilings ns covers were quite rare. Cardinal I'ollgnnc of France wns per hnps the first to attempt the construc tion of n stove wholly of Iron, this at about the beginning of the eighteenth century. The first renl Improvement over the old Itomnn "stubn" was brought nbout by Franklin In the year l"4.-. One of bis efforts produced a typical base burner, almost perfect and a model of workmanship. Stoves were not used In private bouses to any great extent prior to the year 18,'iO. A Piscatorial Onnner. The Jaculntor fish, the piscatorial gunner of the Javan lakes, uses bis mouth as a squirt gun and Is a marks man of no mean nblllty. Go to a small hike or pond filled with specimens of jaciihilors, place a stake or pole In the water with the end projecting from one bi three feet above tbo surface, place a beetle or fly on top of the polo and await developments. Soon the water will ho swarming with finny gunners, each anxious for n shot nt tho tender morsel which tho experimenter bus placed lit full view, l'rosently one conic to tho surface, steadily observes bis prey and measures the distance. Instantly bo screws his mouth Into the funniest shapes imaginable, discbarges a stream of water with precision equal to any sharpshooter, knocks the fly or beetle Into the. water, where he Is In stantly devoured by tho successful Nlmrod or some of his hungry horde. This sport may bo kept up ns long as the supply of beetles and files holds out. Odors of Flowers. It Is u renin rkablo fact that although there me nearly or quite 100,1100 flow ering plants known the relative num ber having odor is wonderfully small, not more than 10 per cent In fact. In connect Ion with this It Is noteworthy that because one species of flower Is endowed with sweet odor It does not necessarily follow that all or nearly all or even a fair proportion of tbo other species of the sumo family will be ns favorably endowed. An Illustra tion of this Is found In the familiar mignonette. Thero aro some fifty sp. cles of this genus known, nud of them nil, but one lias any fragrance. Nor Is it certain that tho most Insignificant looking flower has the greatest fra grance or the most gorgeously colored likely to be without odor, thug seem ingly disproving the theory that color nnd fragrance are given flowers for the purpose of attracting Insects to assist In cross fertilW.atlon. lliiyliiK a 'Wife. In Uganda n man can buy a hand some wife for four bulls, a box of car tridges aud six ni-edles, nnd if bo has tho luck to go a-woolng when woman happen to be n drug In tho market bo can buy a stiltnhlo damsel for a pair of shoes. A Kafllr girl is worth, ac cording to tho rank of her family, from four to ten cows, nnd In Tnrtnry no fa ther will surrender his daughter unless ho gets a good quantity of butter In re turn, mid In certain parts of India no girl cun marry unless her father has been pacified by a present of rice aud a few rupees. How the Orient Gets Its Flonr. "Two women sbnll be grinding at the mill." In tho east the day's suppfy of meal is ground each morning by two women, who sit opposite each other on a large, clean cloth, with the small millstones between them. They push the upper stone around and around by menus of a stick standing upright In a bolu In one side, both women holding it. They usually sing as they grind. The Trouble With Mini. "Well, sub." said Brother Dickey, "I 'frald Br'er Jiukins will never git along In de worl'I" "Why, what do mutter with blm?" "Only ills: lie skeered or thunder en he can't dodge llghtnlii'!" Atlanta Constitution. Tin Logical W oman. Euphemla 1'rofessor, I suppose you would he afraid to marry a logical woman? I'rol'cssor Oh, no; If she wus really logical I could convince her ouce In ii while. Exchange. Flllnif It. Wantanno Why did Mrs. Enpeck speak In such a rasping tone to ber hus band ? Diiznn She wus simply filing her answer.- Mult I more Amerlcun. Fell Short. "Mamma, mamma, Goorgle struck me on the chin!" "Why did he do Unit?" "'Cuuso be couldn't reach uiy nose." Cleveland I'luln Dealer, !i,ir Very Much Stack l'p. "What Is the matter with Fido?" "Oh. Isn't It horrid? I gave blm to the laundress to wush, and sbe starched hiuj."-8lruy Stories, PLUCKING SHEEP. hearlna- I'rncei ,t I scd In Shet land on I'nre II red Animals, The pure bred sheen la Shetland ara not shorn, but plucked. The process takes place generally In June, when the fleece is "ripe" nnd the silky Wool can be pulled off without pain. This Is called "roolng" nud Is much less ibimnglng to the young filler thnn clipping with slienrs. The wool when thus handled retains Its peculiar soft ness, so that any one of experience can tell whether tho material of a knitted article hns been plucked or shorn. It ripens first upon the neck and shoul ders, so that sheep half pulled resemble In some sort n poodle that Is clipped. We must suppose that harsher han dling prevailed at one tlmo, for wo read that In 101(1 the Scottish privy council spoko of the custom us still kept up "In some remote and uncivil places," and James I. wrote to tell them that it hadj been put down In Ireland under pennl-! ty of a fine. Upon this .they passed an act on March 17, 1010, deploring the destruction of sheep thus ennsed and imposing similar flues on those who should persist In the practice. The Trople Home, White men's homes In Indln, the West Indies, west Afrlcn and other parts of tbo tropics to which civiliza tion hns penetrated nre ustinlly run on the prlnclplo of having ns much air aud ns llttlo furniture ns possible. Carpets, rugs, cushions, linngings and portieres are banished. Tables and chairs nre made of light wlckerwork, bamboo or cane. The floors nre pol ished with cocoanut busks until they become as slippery ns a good dancing floor. Indeed, they nre used Tor tbnt purpose nearly every evening In nny settlement where there Is society. A ball In the tropics requires no prepara tion. After dinner It Is only necessary to movo the light furniture to one cor ner of the spacious room, send some body to the piano and start dancing. The ballroom Is practically In tho open nlr. for wooden "Jalousies" form most of the wall space and nre opened like Venetian blinds to let in the cool night breer.es. The American Furmer. When the American farmer rises ear ly In the morning It Is to look over brond nnd fertile acres that lire bis own. Wiien be goes forth it is to fields that no hiiinuu being can lawfully step upon without his consent When be gntbers nnd gnrners the harvest ho stores whnt In a vast majority of cases no greedy and rapacious landlord can take from him. It Is all his. The pro ceeds of It aro to clothe and feed him and bis family and educate his chil dren, to be tho support of his old age and the heritage of Ills posterity. Look ed ut froiu, every point of view, it is doubtful If there Is another human be ing uui'.i r the heavens who has mora cause lor tarrying u light heart and a co. denied mind, for regarding the past with satisfaction and the future with hope, than the Amerlcun farmer. Kan sas City Journal. The "Just Alike." Few people perhaps notice that nil omnibus wheels are painted yellow, says tbo London Chronicle, so that nny whtvl may be worn with any bus color. Every circus ring In tlx- world U of precisely tin- same diameter, whatever tbo sizo of the auditorium, so that tho rider knows the angle nt which bo must lean in San Francisco is tbo an gle of safety In St. Petersburg. Even tbo ladder Is "standardized." Every hodman in England knows whnt bo has to step when tolling up the build er's ladder, though bo may not know it is seven Inches. Tbo sailor who runs up tho ratlines has twelve Inches ns a step, nnd that makes a run Msslhlo, and ' tho firemen's ladder Is crossed with exact equivalence to the ratlines. Death From teloctrlo Shock. The ultimate cause of death, when duo primarily to electric shock. Is gen erally considered to bo stoppage of tbo action of the heart or of tho respir atory organs. That the latter may bo affected Is shown by tho fact that vic tims of electric shock nre sometimes brought to by practice of some of tho woll known methods of nrtlllclal res piration. The cessation of the heart's action mny be duo to stimulation of the nerves which control the beating of the heart These, when stimulated to ex cess, ma.y cause the heart to stop alto gether. Archibald Wilson hi CiiHsler's, Maguzlne. The Consnltlna; Coddle. There Is one personage who of lato years bus rather disappeared from the golfing world, but used to bo greatly in evidence In It tho advisory caddie. Muny of tho caddies of the old Scotch school used to treat their musters (so called) much in tho munuer that a good old nurse treats a baby when she is be ginning to touch it how to walk, in thoso days thoro wus not a stroko played without tho most careful con sultation with these sapient mentors. Westminster Gazette. PlaelasT the Illume. Caller So tho doctor brought you a little sister the other ulgbt, eb ? Tommy Yeh; I guess It was the doc tor done It Anyway I heard him tell ln' pa some time ago 'at If pa didn't pay bis old bill bo'd make trouble fur him. I'hlludolphlu Inquirer. Plain Heasons. Hurry Blanche suys she bus Insuper- i able reasons for remaining single. ! Horace Yes, I know what they ure. j Harry Then she has told you?, Horace No, but I have soon hor,- Boston Transcript. A woman's tdeu of anticipation Is to pack her trunk two weeks before she expocta to start on a trip. Atchison Globe. e