THE H0N0RLE8S PROPHIT. Jed Hawkins knowed a bank as well a i any man or men J ever see, although he wasn't workln' i at It than; Ho dlil nil kimls o' tlnkerln' but any Hummer ilay He used to slnn' nn' talk nuance In 111 eonvlniin' way: He noweil liat s wrong with currenry, an' what wo otto ilo T' mnkn It mole cluatlu lor til' needs o' me an' you. But when they not a new cashier, thoy lnlil one round an' IiIkIi 1" ccme on frntn B-nne eity bank an' li;i.sed Jed lltivtklns by. Jed Ilnwklns knowed a dry uoods store, 1 I Klli'HH from A to '., An' kimwed de;i;it't'nent stores, whleh was Ills spei-liilly. He'd I n nil tlirmmh tit' Hrnnilwny stot-es an' Intd th' system ilown 80 fine he thniiKht with Im.kln' ho uould vtin on" here In town. lie used f lift en stand In trout on sunny ; dnys no' line 'An' tell how I"' knowe l dry goods stores I from 1. idles' suits t' f.vlne; 'But wlien they unt a nianiiKer lor our one ptnro lnte, why They not one from outside somewhere i and .issed Jed llnwkins by. fled Hawkins knowed newspaper work, I . Kliess llhmit as Well 'As any elltor that wnlks, an' I hate I llPered him tell About 'l'h' Tine-s :tu' Trlhbyonn, them 1 days when bin men run .Th' impels iih they orto be, an' Dana I bud Th' Sun. ilWhy, all th:! t ki.pt Jed off en them was I belli' here, nn' so Th' papers 1 r red o' him, an' so I ho had 1:0 shew, Bui when 1 :i' 1 Courier was short a v. t !: r. v. !. They lib. J :on- smoothfaced eo. )?ed j kid. an, 1 i..-;i,e.l Jed Hawkins by. Jed Jl.iwWiH i- Id a (rood, live man sueh . as lie had hi vi"w .Would inn 'I:, mt half eur business men ; litiht o.itea town he knew; An' fell a lank as he : ml. I run, right Iroin th' lal's Inst drop .Would make tir eld ( '01 nplaiitors Hank vo ieiue or shut up shop. An J.-d I." ain't niia-h dialmijed because. , they pass him ,y, An" taicl it s plain to any one to Fee til" reason wliv: "A prophet," Jed siys, lo.ikln' wise up at til' tnwn hall ilome. "A prophet nils no honor j!st as Ions ns lie Mays home:" J. V. Kdcy, in the New York Times. t : .j. $ .j. ij. 4, ... 4 ! FAMEUA'J PRINCE. Ey l.mMi ff, GerntsQ. il. V ' Pamella snubbed me unmercifully When she returned from Philadelphia. That's where fIio met the prince. AIfo Bhe gave me nn earache on the sub ject of that worthy's charni3 and vir tues. Impressed by Pamelia's elo quence I wan beginning to admire the chap myself. But Pamella overdid V.. Jin her enthusiasm she ndowed his jroyal highness with mote good quail (ties than any one man could piBsrss, end Bti'.l retain a residence, on this Hmundane sphere. So I doubted. I "How do you know he's a prince?" I scoffed. j Pamella eyed me pityingly. "Of course, Billy, ' this sweetly, "you .would not know. But one accustomed to royally could tell at once." ; I took no notice of Pamelia's sar casm; I had frown Immune by now. 1 "Royally!" sneered I. "Whore's all ,the fuss and unroar the advent of roy alty would cause? What's muzzled the !Iress? no you think it would remain dumb If a member of Italy's royal family were loose among us without a keeper?" "Oh ,of course, he Isn't cne of the reigning family," Pamella hastened to explain. "His family, though, by rights ought to be in possession of the throne." I "Ah! I see; a pretender." I remark ed. 1 "No o; that Is, not a real pretend er," corrected Pamella ambiguously. j"He rays ho could not bring himself (to the point of making a public de inland for his rights. Tile quarrel jthat would ensue would be distasteful to him." I "Afraid to fight?" I ventured. I "Not he," defended Pamella. "He'a as brave as as anything. And by the way, Billy, why do you and Jim al ways go smooth shaven? Now the prince has the darllngest mustache pointed at the ends and turned up. And he has those beautiful melting black eyes. But wait till you see hlrn. He Is to be with the Lathams the 20th. We are to have him here on .the 22d. Mamma Is going to ask a few people to meet him and Jim Is com ing home." i Jim is Pamelia's brother. He and I graduated together and are chums. That explains my footing In the fam ily. Pamella lapsed into silence, and was smiling In anticipation of the event she had Just mentioned. As I looked at her I thought this had gone about far enough. Why wouldn't It be a good Idea to get down to cold facts with Pamella, before the prince got another Inning? I thought it would, 60 I made a beginning'. "Do you know, Pamella," I said criti cally, "that you are getting to be a stunning looker." Pamella shuddered and looked at me coldly. "It you intended that for a compliment, you should have labelled it as such,' she said scathingly. "It (was clumsy very clumsy. Now the prince is an adept at complimenting, lie does It so artistically." I "Daubs it on with a brush?" I asked Innocently, but was ignored. ' i "He says,' went on Pamella, smiling reminiscently, "that my hair is like epun gold; that my eyes are blue as he 6ky above Caprl."; , 1 "Isn't Indigo where you get the real thing in blue?" I interrupted. Again I fWas ignored. 1 "And he says," Pamella dimpled de Hciously, and turned rosy, "that my iteeth are whiter than the ivory of Jndia, and that my lips rival the red ot the ruby." "That's no compliment," I Jeered. ("That's an alliteration." j "And when he speaks of love,' re lumed Pamella, not even smiling at r my remark, "h speaks In the Ian ug of the poet" "Which poet?" I said cuttingly. "His sayings are original," informed Pamella airily. "I'll bet he call it 'lofe' and dif fuses the delicate odor of garllo with every breath," I flung out. "Really, Billy," reproved Pamella, "you're grow ins spiteful." A bunch of involeraites arrived Just then for quantities of afternoon tea, fo I bolted for the club, anathematiz ing that prince roundly. On the night of the 22d the prince and the Lathams were a llttlo late. Pal ntella was at one end of the room surrounded by a cordon of admirers, and surrounded by a few protty girls ready to pick up any stray admiration that Pamella did not want Being lwrred as an admirer, I stood out side the pale talking1 to Jim, when the butler pompously announced the prince. Afterwards ho mentioned the Iathams apologetically. Tho prince spotted Pamella and went toward her mulling. I was facing him nnd got a good chance to size him up. There was something fam iliar the upturned pointed mustache, the melting black eyes. Jim turned and then looked at him looked and then smiled blandly. "Good evening, Tony," he eald, and then turned carelessly away. I knew him now. He had been bar ber .bootblack and general servant to some of us fellows at Weld. He quit when he hit tho lottery for $10,000, and none of us had seen him since. Evi dently society had appealed to him. I expected to see him wilt at once, but Instead he puffed himself out like a peacock and glared at Jim. Jim turned on him again. "I said good evening, Tony," he repeated pointedly and there was a hard gleam in his eye that Tony probably had seen brfore. At any rate he cowered. He face went pasty white, and after one last languishing look at Pamella, ho faded away. "Good barber, that Tony," laughed Jim. "As a prince he's a Joke." Pamella turned giddy and was as sisted to her room by the supporting party of pretty girls. Mrs. Latham Tainted outright, and was carded for by a bevy of overjoyed matrons. When Khe was able Bhe went home. Pamella came down again shortly, and it was about midnight, I guess, when I cornered her In a conservatory. "Well, anyhow," she replied to my taunts, "he had tho loveliest eyes!" "I'll concede him that,' I said, "his eyes were certainly all right. They were not blind to your cnarms." "Huh!" said Pamella scornfully, "rank flattery." But all the same she looked mightily pleased. "And now that this distressing af fair Is over," said I, edging a little closer, "wo aro going to announce our engagement" "O oh, are we?" said Pamella, nnd although she sat up stiffly and elevated her chin several degrees, I noticed that her voice was a trifle subdued. Encouraged by this fact, I plunged on boldly. "Yes. I've waited long enough. I've . seen Tom, Dick and Harry come and go, to say nothing of the prince." And then, 1 don't know how In the world I ever mustered up the courage, but tho next minute I was holding Pamelia In my arms, Kissing those adorable lips. Boston Post. QUEER ENGLISH VILLAGES. One Which Has No Public Building Excet a Letter Box. The English village is very dear to the hearts of poets and palnterp, and thousands of them are certainly charming. A few, however, are more amusing than anything else, as, for Instance, one which consists entirely of old railway carriages, even the chapel being composed of four horse trucsk. Another village, with a population of 1,100 and taxed at the valuation of $8,000, has neither school, church nor other public building, the only thing cf the sort being a letter box on a pil lar. Villages with but a single inhabi tant are not unknown, one of them being Sklddaw in Cumberland, ac cordng to Harper's Weekly. The sin gle villager complains bitterly be cause he cannot vote there being no, overseer to prepare a voters' list, and no church or other public build ing on which to publish one, as the law requires. The lonely ratepayer la a Northum berland village has declined to con tribute money to maintain the roads, remarking that the one he has is quite good enough for its use. In the Isle of Ely is a little parish with about a dozen inhabitants that has no rates, as there are no roads or public insti tutions of any kind and consequently no expenses. Kempton, near Bradford, can prob ably lay successful claim to the dis tinction of being the longest village In the world, as It straggles along the road for a distance of seven miles. Sometimes a village will entirely dis appear, having been built either on the edge of the crumbling cliffs that make part of the coastline, or over nn ancient mine. One of the latter class is in Shropshire, and each year ona or more of the cottages tumble as the earth sinks beneath it Gobble, Gobble, Git. "I wonder what the ladles . do at those afternoon teas?" - "Oh, they Just sip and gos-slp." Boston Transcript It is said that a growth of Ivy ab sorbs the moisture from a stone wall rather than imparting it, as Is popu larly supposed, New York To Prink Catskill Water. ONE CF THE GREATEST ENGINEERING ENTERPRISES EVER UNDERTAKEN. AT A COST Or Present Croton Supply Gives New York 336,000,000 Gallons Daily The New Catskill Supply Means 500,000,000 a Day. (From Alfred Danglni Flint's "The World's Urea tost Aqueduct" In the Century.) Catskill Mountain water, gathered from biooks that have fteen fed by melting snows and copious tains, and have tumbled over rocky slopes Into the streams of the mountain valleys, will In a few years he served to the Inhabitants of New Yorjc city. Tho project ranks as the greatest munici pal wetter supply enterprise over un dertaken, and as an engineering work I probably second only to the Panama Canal. Tho need of the water Is much gTeater than is realized by a major ity of the citizens or by the guard ians of their Interests. Nothing1 can so quickly and com pletely disorganize and complex activ ities of a modern community as a shortage of suitable water; no single ngency can so rapidly spread dlseasu and death as a polluted water supply. For several years New York has been using more water than Its sources of supply can safely be depended upon to furnish In a series of (':; years, such as have occurred wi'.al: : mem ory of men who have scarce . reached middle age. Continuing years of abundant rainfall have masked the danger to which engineers have re peated called attention. In 1905, as the result of a move ment promoted by civic bodies In the days of Mayor Van Wyck and Mayor Low, a bill was introduced Into tho legislature, on the Initiative of Mayor McClollan whleh, becoming a law, en able the city to start new systems of water supply that, with the already exiting permanent works should ulti mately give New York the best and largest water supply ever known. As thoufando of water-wise Ameri cans know, Now York city ("old New York") has used Croton River water for more than two genet atlons. SJml larly from the Uldgnwood system of wells?, streams and reservoirs,. Brook lyn has drawn Its supply, often scan ty. Approximately flve hundred mil lion gallons of water are consumed In the metropolis every day, a Btream that would (low hip deep betweeu the buildings In Fifth avenue's fashion able shopping district at a comfortable walking pace. For every man, woman and child this allows a dally average or 125 gallons. Or, to put It still an other way, for all domestic, manufact uring and public purposes New York uses every . day water which weighs almiit eight times as much ns Its pop ulation. Compared with tho 130, 110, 200, 220, and 320 gallons used every day for every person In several largo Ameri can cities, New York's allowance is moderate, especially when one recalls the character of business aud the methods of living1 which prevail In the metropolis. Liberal, even lavish, do mestic U8Q of water Is not waste. The very necessities of life demand that there should be a maximum supply, In order to provide for tho ave a?c demand for the Individual. Tha word "waste" should be properly In terpreted. Its use In writing about watrr supply has been unfortunate, for it lias been employed both techni cally and ropubrly to characterize quite different conditions in the econ omy of water. To let a dozen glass fills flow from a faucet In order to get one cool draft is not waste fo long as this is the least expensive way to get cool water. In a broad sense, to per mit water to flow from the faucct3 through tho cold winter nights Is not waste so long as this Is the least expensive way to protect one's plumb ing fixtures. To allow even large volumes of water to spill over the lowest dam of a watershed is in no sense waste when the city has already taken from the stream all that It can use, or when the saving! of occasional discharges of this sort would cost more than to get the same quantity of wator, of equal cr better quality, from another stream. Doubtless, some water Is carelessly cr wantonly wasted In New York ctly, but not nearly so much as some per sons assume. Waste should be dis couraged and curtailed, but waste of water can no moro bo wholly pre vented than the waste of enfcrgy and time. But if all the waste which it would be reasonably practicable to stop ceased, New York would still re quire more wator works to provide be yond poradvonture for present needs and future growth. Croton IUver drains into New York's reservoirs the wator of 300 square miles of forest and farm, and can safe ly furnish about 330,000,000 gallons dally. Two aqueducts, one thirty four miles long, built In 1842, and having a dally capacity of 80,000,000 gallons, and the other tlllrty-two mllos long, built in 1891, and hiving a ca pacity of 300,000,000 gallons, . bring this water to the city. To procure 500, 000,000 gallons of Catskill Mountain water dally, over GOO square miles of mountain and meadow will be brought under tribute, several larfc'3 reservoirs created, and an aqueduct ninety-two miles long built, with many mllos of conduits within the city limits. The extent of these existing and pro posed works 1b not readily to be com prehended, even when reduced to the common money measure. For tho por tion of the Catskill works needed to $102,000,000. bring Into .the city every year unfail ingly 500,000,000 gallons an expendi ture of ?102,OOO,0OO Is estimated. But those disbursements will be spread over niany years, and the burden will not fall heavily, except for possible temporary difllcultlcs In raising ready money for construction payments. In deed the cost of water for every per son will be on the average lorn than one ceut por day. Furthermore, those waterworks, well managed, will not only pay Interest on the invest ment and cost of operation but in a relatively few years will pay the cap ital cost It is reasonable to believe that the works will be as pormanent as those of ltomc. GREAT STONE WHEEL. Indian Shrine Discovered by Prospec tors In Wyoming Mountains. One of the most remarkable monu ments left by a prehistoric people has just been discovered In the Big Horn Mountains, nenr this place, by mining prospectors. The monument, which Is known as tho "Medicine Wheel," Is looked upon by the Indians as sacred and Is held In tho utmost awe and veneration by all the tribes of the central mountainous country. The "Medicine Wheel" Is a giant stone wheel built on the flat top of Medicine Mountain. It Is laid, out symmetrically and Is built of great granite boulders so placed as to form a perfect wheel with spokes 150 feot long. At the centre Is a great rocky hub. For years the whites have known that somewhere on Medicine Moun tain the Indians had a sacred altar or monument of some kind, but so zeal ously has tho subject been guarded that no white man ever know the char acter or the location of the Indians' holy plnce. The red men always re fused to talk to the whiten on the subject and It was only by ohancethat tho prospectors came upon the great stone wheel nnd mado a snapshot pic ture of the object. The Identity of the builders of the "Medicine Wheel" Is as unknown to the Indians as to the whites. The only tradition possessed by the In dians concerning the wheel Is that It was built by the gods themselves and 13 to remain as a sacred object to the end of tho world. Medicine Mountain, so named by the Indians for the rea son that It was to Its rocky slopes that the Indians went for the "medi cine" or charm which was to protect them through life, hns long been known among the Indians aa the home of tho Oreat Spirit, and for generations those Indian have camp ed around the great wheel whllo en gaged In the mystic rites and cere monies of making Indian "medicine." No Indlnn would pilot a white man to the mystery nnd only chance brought the two prospectors to the place of the "Medicine Wheel." Basin corre spondence Cincinnati Enquirer. Kettle of Fish. Tho slang phrase "a kettle of fish" really mean before It acquired Its present sense? Colloquial, of course, but Is ft slang? Without presuming to establish a hard and fast line of the Masons and the Dlxoiis in our speech It does seem that 1800 might be a convenient divi sion, and to hold that any expression now in use which can establish itself in the eighteenth or earlier century might bo spared the slur that slang generally implies. This locution cer tainly clears the limit thus proposed, for It was first printed in 1742 In Fielding's "Joseph Andrews," "Here's a pretty kettle of fish," cries Mrs. Tow-wouse. Though most kettles of fish are pretty, this Is by no means the only adjective admitted. In "Tom Jones" there Is "a rare kettle of fish," the Duke of Wellington in 1800 wrote of "a fine kettle of fish" and in 1820 Lady Granville called her kettle of fish nice. It has been suggested that this kettle of fish Is really the kid dle or weir in which fish are taken, in effect the shad nets of the North River may be kiddles of fish. The suggestion Is plausible, but there Is no evidence to prove the passage from the weir to the pot. These kiddles are a part of the history of the Tower of London, for St. Thomas's tower, the water gate. Traitors' Gate of bloody fume, was largely built from the license tax which the Bishop of Rochester levied on the kiddles In th Lea, the Medway and the Thames. There were riots over those ancient bargemen have possessed a fine flow of language ever since. New York Sun. A Hundred and Fifteen Miles An Hour. An electric railway la to be con structed between Liverpool and Man chester, Intended especially for the swift transportation of passengers, It Is said that the system adopted will be that of the single elevated rail, the cars being suspended from the rail. Thd projector talk of sending trains from one city to the other, a distance of about 29 miles, in 15 minutes, or at the rate of 115 miles an hour. VMibcMrei VThen voiuo Buwt te sm jM iM At pnaiii ttlMiM 'laotMn tmw BsqIi riq JL tw vui lata, lo buy a butlurtJUl buuqust. The chui to oomt will make thine bum, For hood th solllnir plana will b A plc to go to luk sbuw Of rrl iuwdi mid llii,arle. Luraria W. Sheldon In Nw York Times. felOMM "laogA and Drlghtpupll The change in price. Rod Hen. Teacher When water becomes Ice, what Is the great change that takes place? "What Is your son doing now, Mr. Smart?" "Oh, everybody he can." Baltimore American. "Public servants can be relied on more than private ones." How?'" I'They never quit." Clovtland leader. Youngwed "I always crack up my wife's biscuits." Mr. Bachelor "Heavens! Are thoy as hard as that?" Boston Transcript "Havo a plenmnt trip east?" "Yep." "How did you find New York?" "Why, you can't miss It If you take tho right train." Cleveland Leader. She 'There Is really an art In put ting on one's gloves, you know." He "True; you have to get your hand In before you can do It properly." Los ton Transcript. To Mendicant "You are an explor er? What Instruments did you have with you?" "A sextant, a theodolite, a " "Well; what you needed was a safety razor." Life. Man differs from the beasts in that he can piece out what he knows with guesswork, and thus possess himself of llluskme sufficient on which to build philosophies. Puck. "I want to see the president" "Have you an appointment?" "Not yet, but I have ray eye on something. That's what I want to see hlra about." Lou isville Courier-Journal. "I am afraid Dtilby is putting an en emy Into his mouth to steal away his brains." "Yes," answered Miss Cay enne; 'and It's a case of petty larceny at that." Washington Star. Elslo "So Madge married that old millionaire. I suppose there was a good deal of throwing at the wedding." Ethel -"Oh, yes; rice, old shoes and Insinuations." Boston Transcript. Little Willie "What Is logic, pa?" Pa "Logic, my son, is your line of argument In a controversy." Little Willie "And what Is Bophlstry?" Pa "The othor fellow's." Chicago Daily News. "Pop." "What Is it, son?" "Is an osteopath an end man In a minstrel show?" 'Gracious, no, child! What put such an idea Into your head?" "Well, they told us at school he was a spe cialist in bones." Baltimore Ameri can. t Komutter (enthusiastically) "Do you know that this place is nearer the city hall than Harlem Is, as the crow flies? You ought to move out here, Knickerbocker." Knickerbocker (with feeling) "I will when I get to be a crow." Judge. "Whativcr made thee marry, John and thee 70?" "Because I thowt lad', H 'ud be nice to think there'd be some un to close my eyes when time corned." "Close thee eyes! Why, mon, I'se bad three wives and they's all on 'em opened mine!" Punch. "Couple of fine girls, ain't they? One of 'em is a fine singer, and the other one can cook." 'Yes, old man. But there's a tragedy In your home. The one who slugs thinks she can cook, and the one who cooks thinks she can sing." Cleveland Leader. Auto Salesman "Business Is boom Ins. In fact, we are so rushed that we have filled our orders only up to last April." Auto Owner "I can ap preciate that At the present time I have had repairs made on my car only to the smash-ups of "May, 1908." Puck. "I am sorry to have to Inform you," said the bead of the firm, "that we are compelled to dispense with your ser vices." "Are you?" replied the office boy. "But I 'spose you're goin' to let me keep on workln' here, just de same, alnt you?" Chicago Record Herald. Breaking the News. Patrick arrived much the worse for wear. One eye was closed, his nose was broken and his face looked as though it had been stung by bees. "Glory be!" exclaimed his wife. "Thot Dutchman Schwartzhelraer 'twas him," explained Patrick. "Shame on ye," exploded his wife without sympathy. "A big shpalpeen the lolkes of you to get bate up by a little omadhaun of a Dootchman the slue of him! Why" "Whist, Nora," said Patrick, "don't pake disrespectfully of the dead!" Everybody's Magazine. A Very Queer Man. "He has a queer way of celebrating a holiday." What ! It?" "Instead of blowing all his money In foolishness) he goes around paying his W'Ua." Louisville Courier-Journal. --Mask, IUngllsh astronomers have advamoed the UwNtry tbatt Mars has turned yel lww. That statement Is evidence that l&iffland, In chagrin over losing the North Pole, Is trying to steal a planet whioh we have always regarded as aa Amor lean possession. Ieon Gulllot's and Ch. Grlmth's ex periments on the cementation of Iron by pure carbon show there Is no ce mentation If precautions are taken to prevent the presence of gases, but it tukes pluce If contact is Insured. Moreover, It Increases with the pres sure, but always occurs extremely slowly. For two years past the Pittsburg & Lake Erie Railroad has been test ing a car wheel that was designed by the chief engineer of the Carnegie Steel company. Although the Pitts burg & Lake Brie railroad carries an unusually heavy freight traffic, the wheel lias stood tip so well under the trying service that the company has announced that It will build a 3,000, 000 plant at Homestead for the ex clusive manufacture of the new wheel. A circular has juBt been Issued by the Bureau of Standards discussing electrical measuring Instruments in general, describing tne various types of Instruments, pointing to tho sources of error and explaining meth ods of checking them. The bureau un dertakes to test any Instruments sent to It for this purpose, making a small charge for the work Involved. The cir cular contains tho regulations gov erning these tests, and a schedule of the fees charged. An Interesting discovery haa been made at Reze, a little place near Nantes, formerly under the Romans, the flourishing capital of Pagus Ratla tensls. The discovery consisted of molds for coins bearing the heads of sevwal Roman emperors. The Archae ological society of Loire Inferleure has met In informal session to con sider the find, which was made by ex cavators, but no decision has been reached. M. Soullard supposes that the molds, which are very clearly cut, are the work of modern coiners, and were most probably made after a dis covery In 1859 at Bernard, In Venee. M. Maltre, archivist of Loire-Infer-leure, put forward the theory that they may be. ancient, and extempor ized at the time of the occupation to pay the troops. Among the heads rep resented are Diocletian, Maximianus, Constantlus I., Probus and Marcus Aurellus. BIG ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVES Which Help a Western River to Oper ate a Railroad Tunnel. Electric locomotives ere now shut tling trains back and1 forth through the two mile tunnel of the Great Northern Railroad which pierces tihe Cascade Mountains about a hundred miles east of Seattle. The locomo tives were built by the General Elec tric Company at Schenectady, N. Y., weigh 230,000 pounds each, develop more than 2,000 continuous horse power, and are capable of delivering a traction effort of 80,000 pounds. The use of electric locomotives eli minates the smoke and gasea which frequently overpowered engineers and trainmen, Imperilled the lives of passengers and delayed traffic. The bis electrics are capable of haulmg tho heaviest trains, steam locomotives and all, up the steep grades, which was Impossible for steam locomotives except those of the greatest kind. The electrical equipment represents the best practice and the latest devel opment of electrical engineering. The Wenatchee River has been harnessed about thirty miles south of the tunnel, where 12,000 electrical horse-power is generated by the falling water. The largest pipe line in the Northwest carries the water from the dam to the power house two miles below and 210 feet nearer sea level, where the turbines change the energy Into elec tricity, which Is transmitted at 33,000 volts to the tunnel. On the descending grade the motors will become generator and return electrical energy to the line to assist other trains climbing the hill on the other side of the tunnel. This is the first time this feature has ever been successfully applied to railroad work In America Fans As Bacteria Breeders. Revolving fan3 are frequently used, especially In hot weather, simply to produce a cooling effect by setting up a current of air inside. Mrs. A. Sar tory and A. Fllasier have examined the bacteriological effect of these fang . and ventilators upon the atmosphere within and have communicated results to a recent meeting' of the Societe de Biologle. They find that these appliances enor mously Increase the bacteriological content of the air. Their experiments were numerous and varied. In a res taurant of 400 cubic yards analysis of the air before the fan was working showed 12,500 bacteria per cubic yard. After working the fan for one hour 23,000 bacteria and after two hours 45,000 bacteria. In another cafe of 600 cubic yards the number of bacteria rose from 12, 000 to 39,000 after the fan was working for one hour. In every instance, in fact, the number of bacteria to the cublo yard was doubled or even quad rupled. Chicago Tribune.