New Orleans has a smaller police | force than other American city of cor- I responding size. A French savant has discovered that tears are bactericidal and may be de pended upon to exterminate certain microbes. •'lf people will talk good times in stead of hard times," avers the India napolis Sentinel, "the latter will quickly disappear." John I>. Rockefeller lias given nearly $5,000,000 to the Chicago University and has what the Detroit Free Press terms, "the good taste" not to demand that- it be named for him. Sir Charles Dilke, recently said in the debate in the British Parliament: "The most dangerous illusion any in habitant of the iiuited kingdom can have that we are a popular power. We are probably the most unpopular of the great powers." A San Francisco woman disposed of an estate of SIO,OOO by writing a few lines in pencil 011 an old envelope. Lawyers say that the will cannot he broken, and their opinion that women know nothing about business they ro gard as confirmed anew. - England is having hard times, notes the Cotirier-Journal. Its leading securities declined nearly half a hill ion dollars in value during the past year. Its imports fell off $88,000,000 and its exports $82,500,000. Its trade in coal and textiles dwindled alarm ingly. Navigation of the great lakes dur ing the season of 1893 resulted in the loss of 123 lives. The number of ves aels lost was fifty-three, with an ag gregatc tonnage of 24,258, and valued at $1,040,400. Partial losses by strand 111 gs, collisions and fires bring the total up $2,112,588. The shallow waters of Lake Erie claimed nearly half the lives lost, Lake Huron being second. John Hyde, expert special agent ol statistics of agriculture, has written an interesting monogram 011 what he terms "Geographical Concentration." In it he develops the fact that the pro cess of agricultural centralization works very injuriously to the Ameri can farmer, and that many of his vicis situdes arc due to the single-crop sys tem. He shows, for instance, that while hemp is a product cultivated in Europe from the shores of the White Sea to the Mediterranian, and that it flourishes in extensive regions in Asia, Africa and South America, its cultiva- tion in the United States is almost wholly confined to Kentucky, that .State in 188 ) having produced 93.77 per cent, of all tin- hemp raised in this ! country. Obviously hemp is capable of being produced over a wide area in the ( nit ml .States, hut its cultivation is almost wholly unknown outside of Kentucky. Mr. Hyde makes a strong plea for mixed farming, and says that so long as American farmers persist in devoting themselves to the production 1 in great quantities of a few things, they caunot expect to prosper. Oklahoma is going to knock verv j hard for admission as a State, declares the St. Louis Star Savings. The Ter ritory was organized only three years ago, but in population and wealth it is to-day far in advance of the other Ter ritories seeking admission as States. The report aecompaying the applica tion for admission as a State shows | that she has 2,372,482 acres of land in farm use value I at $13,022, • i 345. In the last year the farmers liar- i vested 284,254 acres of corn, 222,310 acres of wheat, 109,374 acres of oats, 21,311 acres of cotton, 18,755 acres of sorghum, 14.121 acres of Hungarian inillf-t, au-1 1125 acres of br >om corn. It is almost as large as tin- State of Illinois, and has i population of about 280,000, which is greater than that of i any other State when admitted to the Union. Its assessed valuation of property in 1891 amounted to t . 928, which in 1893 had increased to $13.951,'W;. ft has six National banks with deposits 0f5385,574. The Terri torial Legislature has been attentive to educational matters, and there are already in nearly all the districts i school-houses, normal schools, col- i leges, and an agricultural and me- I ehanieal college at the town of Still water. In religious matters it has also j kept pace with many of the older States. In the Territory there are llis Methodist churches, twenty-five Baptist, tweutv-four Congregational twenty-live Catholic, twenty-lour Pres byterian, six Episcopal, aud tiftv Christian Endeavor Societi. . This is a remarkable showing for ()l;hihoinn and wa can scarcely believe, adds tin; Star-Sayings, that Congress can refuse her admission. ; HFATHER BELL. Her pvas are like th heather on the Norland hills a-bloW, Ami her curving lips of laughter like a berry Jn l he snow, Jn a snood of crimson gleaming Do, her locks of amber dwell, And I'm dreaming, Dreaming, Dreaming. Of my bonuie Heather-bell. With footfall light n9 thistle-down she coin eth ere I ken -, Her smile Is like the breaking of the moon dawn in the glen. A myriad fancies teeming Feed the flaino I cannot quell \ And i'm dreaming. Dreaming, Dreaming, Of my bonnic Heather-bell. Her voice is like the thrush's piping carols in the corn ; Its tender echoes haunt ine thro' the ntght tide till the morn ; Oh. her dimples shyly beaming, They linvo - harmed mo with a spell ; And I'm dreaming, Dreaming, Dreaming, } Of my bonnie Heather-bell. —SamuelM. Peck, iu Atlanta Constitution, j THE MASKED ROBBER. BY MATILDA A. WOODCOCK. /\ EW YEAH EVE bad {. VV. again come, and, as 11 largo party '-fj K of us young people lay wg Wj. were invited to see jfisx >j£k{ t,lu 1,1,1 year out at Sl% V! W§, my uucle'a country Mb 1 j Right jolly ill <.y&ki r were t,ie inHt i,oura Ml / AN] t 1 of the old year made jK |'V> nucler that hospita ls J*?.-' ble roof, aud the large rooms rang with merry laughter when one of the party was unwittingly j caught "beneath the mistletoe bough." Having wearied of dancing and games, we gathered in the large, old fashioned hall—another of our time honored customs—and then, in front of the great open fireplace, piled high with blazing hickory logs, we passed the last hours of the old year in story-tell ing. One of the most remarkable of these stories was told by my aunt, and I shall endeavor to repeat it as nearly I as possible in her own words: There is always one story which comes to me on New Year Eve ami seems peculiarly appropriate to that time, although it is not a joyful one. When I was sixteen, my mother died, and soon after her death mv father sold our old home, and removed to a large farm. I had been born in the city, aud until that time had al ways lived there. I keenly felt the change from the gay metropolis to the solitude of the country, but fortunate- j ly 1 was t'oud of reading and was also j a great lover of nature, so that iu a measure I was compensated for the life which i had left. I saw little of the outside world ; therefore the most trivial things became of interest to mo. One afternoon in June, when we had been living on the farm two yearn, I wan nitting on the porch reading a novel and crying over the sad fate of the heroine, when suddenly my attention was at tracted by the sound of wheels, f looked up quickly from my hook and saw a buggy rapidly approaching our house. My curiosity was ut once aromed, and my disappointment aud surprise were great when I found that, instead of a stranger driving behind the thoroughbred little marts Lake, one of our rough farmhands, held the reins. Presently he drew up beside the porch, and his errand was made known in a few words. There had been a runaway about a mile from us, and the gentleman who was driving had been thrown from his carriage and seriously injured. Lake saw the rnnu fall and went immediately to his rescue. He managed to get him to a barn near by and, after capturing the horse and buggy, both of which were unharmed, had driven over to see what could be done. It would be sev eral hours before a doctor could be brought, to him, and he was suffering so much pain that Lake did not like to leave him so long alone. Just then my father came up, and, having heard Lake's story, said that the man should he brought at once to our house, and ordered one of the ; men to harness two of the horses to the farm wagon. A mattress was then laid on it and of! they started, leaving me at home to put things in readiness for the injured man. Our pretty spare room, with its fresh matting and Swiss curtains, was the one which / selected for him. It was on the ground-floor, aml would therefore be more convenient than any other. Our guest, who gave his name as John Graham, soon arrived and was carried carefully to his chamber, and before very long the doctor came. Hav| Ll g the broken limbs, —for one o. his legs an I one of his arms were broken,— and applied some cooling wash to the bruises, he left the patient to our care. It was many weeks before he was able to move from his bed, but, be tween the doctor's skill ancl our eare lnl nursing he slowly regained his j strength. Remember, my dears in those days your white-headed old aunt was young aud romantic, and a man far less fascinating and handsome than John Graham under such circum stances might have turned my silly head. I confess to you that my head was wholly turned, my heart entirely giveu HUUV t this stranger. For weeks I was hands and feet, t< him. Nt vi r a wish was uttered by liim that, were it HI 1113 power, ! did not gratify, lie was very fond of roses, and early every morning i would gather the choicest from our garden for John's room. I was perfectly delighted when tic one day told mo that my "cheeks put the roses to shame. It was the first compliment be had ever paid me, and for days the thought of it made me absurdly happy. At last I felt that John loved me. T , never moved that his eyes did not fol- ; low every motion, and how the light I came into his eyes when I returned to I him after some short absence! This 1 was my first love, and by it my dull monotonous life seemed changed into j i Paradise. The weeks glided by. John had re- ' sovered and would soon leave us, yet j 10 had not spoken of his love J but kfter a while the words came. We j were sitting on the porch in the moon- i light, in the same place from which I j had seen him carried in ou that | Bventful day when he was hurt. My father's consent to our engage ment was soon gained, as John's past life, so far as he could discover, was ' irreproachable, and his worldly pros pects were good. Everything went on happily for the first few months, and it seemed that in our case love was to run a smooth course. I must not for- 1 get to tell you about my engagement ring. Ijt was oue which had been j banded down through several genera- j tions tc John. Ho had always worn it on his little finger. It was a ser pent of silver, its head being formed , of an enormous ruby and the tail of small diamonds. Inside the ring was i written, "Time reveals all things." j On the lay of our engagement John took it from his linger and placed it on mine with these words: "Should aught part us, love, though years roll between, the sight of this ring will I bring me to protect you." At last my cup of happiness was j full, but it was destiued to be emptied | to the dregs. I need not. go over those months of misery, j when John Graham came to I see me with his brain stupefied by ; liquor, and tell how I tried to bring i him back, and how he would try and j fail again. At last, it came to my father's knowl- ! edge, and in one of his fits of fury at j the weakness and loathsomeness of my j lover, he literally kicked John out of I the house. It is enough for me to say j that things went from bad to worse. I j could love John no longer, after he had sunk so low, and at last—it was on a New Year Eve, like this—our en gagement was broken. I returned the riug, but John sent it back to me, praying me to keep it, "as a symbol of a love that had once been true." After this, my health gradually gave way, and our physician advised my j father to take me to Europe, which he j did. We travelled several years and everything was done to divert and amuse me. At first, I prayed to die, but I was young, very young, and as the time passed by, life again became sweet to me. Another love eamo to me, far sweeter and stronger than that j old, wild passion of inv girlhood, and j in your uuelo, my dears, I found the . perfect love of womanhood. I had been married a number of years and was the mother of three i children when your uncle was obliged to go to California to look after some J ; mines in which lie had a large inter est. As he expected to he there for a considerable time, we all went with him, and decided to rent a furnished house in the suburbs of L—. The I ! oue we fancied most was large, and • only one story high. It was hand- | somely furnished and had a great many acres of ground around it. At first, I objected to taking it on account j of the lonely location, but the numer ous attractions which it possessed soon ( overcame this one fault, and before long we were comfortably settled in ! our new quarters. We had been liv- j ing there only a year, when one even- j ing—this also was on New Year Eve . —your uncle came home as usual, and after he had been in the house a few minutes, he received a dispatch which necessitated his starting off immedi ately, to be gone for two or j i three days. It was the first time since our marriage that we had been separated, and that night I did feel a | I little nervous. I went to the nursery and looked at my children, sleeping | ! peacefully, and then, taking a book, I | read until I was so weary that I went i | to bed. My bedroom was large and had four ' windows. Two of them opened on the j piazza, and two on a beautiful green ! terrace. My dressing-table stood be- ! tween the piazza-windows, and on it was my jewel-casket, containing all my ! diamonds, and several other valuable articles of jewelry. Usually, I kept I his locked in an iron safe, but that j evening I hail taken it out, iu order to 1 get a pin for my husband to have mended in L , and I had forgotten to put it back. After 1 was safely iu bed, I remembered my casket, but con cluded that no harm could possibly 1 come to it in just that one night, and 1 thought J would put. it Sway in the morning. [ do not! know how long I had been asleep, i when I was awakened by hearing a slight noise. Opening my eyes. I saw by the light of a dark-lantern the fig. ure of a tall man standing by my dressing-table. My first impulse was to scream, and then came the thought, "If Ido that, he will kill me!" Sud denly the man turned, and I could see j that he was masked. Then I shut my eyes and feigned sleep. Stealthily he 1 walked to the bed where I was lying, and, bending over, looked at me, for j what seemed, in my agony, to be hours. "O, God!" I thought, "if lie would only kill me now!" But no!—he moved softly from my bed, and again walked to the dressing-table. I could hear him take my jewels, one by one, from the casket, and lay them gently down. At last, the box was emptied, and yd lie did not move, but stood as d bound by t spell. I felt rather than ! heard tlmt lie was once more coming toward me. Certainly this time he would take my life, and 1 prayed God it might be done quickly j but, no ! 1 must suffer still more. He knelt down and put his face so close to mine that I could feel his hot breath. 1 was like one petrified. My blood seemed frozen iu my veins, and had the cold steel been pressed to my throat, I should not have felt a single pang. My whole being seemed held by some terrible power. At last, he arose from his knees and, going to one of the win dows, blew a whistle three times. This is all that I remember. My conscious ness must have forsaken me. When T again opened my eyes, the bright light was streaming through the blinds. At first, I had only a va gue remembrance of what seemed to me a dreadful nightmare, but gradu ally the whole scene of the night be fore came clearly to my mind and a terror seized me. My children were my first thought. I Hprnng quickly from my bed, but fell heavily to the Hoor iu a dead faint. The strain had proved too much for me. For days I lay unconscious, only feeling a burn ing pain in my head; but through God's mercy I was given hack to ray husband and children—for not a hair | of my little bairns' dear heads had i been touched on that horriblo night. The subject of the masked robber ! was never mentioned until my health | was fully restored. One day I was in my boudoir, idly lounging, when my husband came in and, seating himself ! on the sofa by my side, took a small piece of paper from his pocket-book. It looked like the fiy-leaf of a book, I and was covered with writing in lead 1 pencil. He handed it to ine, saying, | "I think, little womau, you are strong I enough to read this." It was as follows : "I have come here to-night with a hand of robber intending to steal and, i if necessary, to murder. While taking the jewel h from your casket, I came acrosH a ring. That ring saved you. I looked upon your face and a flood ! of recollections came over me. You | need never fear. I love you still, i Had as I am, the thought of your pure , soul has never left me, and although I am :i robber, the memory of you has | kept my hands clean from blood. I j shall always keep watch over you,— I shall always protect you. J. G." : So the mystery was solved, and the robber, who had robbed me of nothing, I was my old lover. Your uncle tried to search him out but in vain, and it was not until many years after that, haviug been invited to spend a few days with some relatives of my husband's, in the western part of New York State, I again heard of John Graham. One morning, at my cousin's sug gestion, wo walked over to the picturesque old churchyard. We strolled in and out among the graves; stopping now and then to read the quaint inscriptions. A simple gray stone, on which was hanging a small wreath of immortelles, attracted my notice. I to see what might I might be written on it, and then I read the name "John Graham. Died I on the Eve of New Year Day, 18—. Beloved of the people. God rest his soul." I asked my cousin if she knew who this John Graham was? And sli ! told me that some twenty years before a man with a peddler'a pack had come into the town. His wares were good, and he sold a groat many. As he trav- I cled from house to house, staying, as t was the custom in those times, first with one family, then with another, he became very popular, and was in . duced to take his small capi ! tal and open a store. He gave his name as John Gray, ami lie was so self-denying, and did so many ! deeds of charity, that the country folk | almost canonized him as a saint. Their shrewd minds soon discovered in him no common peddler, and when fit his death an old envelope was found next his heart, with the name John GrAhaui in a woman's hand,and inside, 1 a lock of yellow hair, carefully folded in paper, on the outside of which is ! written, "My guiding star," the curi osity of the good people was at its , height. Your uncle aud I could have solved the problem, but we carefully i guarded the secret, and to this day I the village gossips wonder who "John ; Graham" could have been. I have j never known how he happened to fall I into such a slate of degradation as to become a robber, but I firmly believe that by his aft r life he made full atonement for his sins. A New Year Eve never passes but that I think of John Graham, and you will not won der that it is so, for it was a fateful time in his sad life, I felt as though it were almost a supernatural coinci dence that it should have been also the time of his death.—Romance. Two Kills Alike. Young Henry Miller, of New York, got a bonanza when he was paid off the other day. His wages were given to him in the shape of eight new #5 bills. He put them in his pocket, and some time afterward, when he took them out to examine them he dis covered that two of them were ex actly alike. The numbers of both were the same. This gives them great value from a collector's point of view. The bills were printed by the Govern ment and issued by the Southern National Bank of New York. The Government number 011 each is R 476,321. The bank number is 1)350, and the consecutive bank number 10,883. When the exact similarity of the bills was noticed it was supposed that one was a counterfeit. Close examination showed it was not. The signatures on both bills are genuine. Plainly there was an error. Mr. Miller says that several banks have offered him a large sum of money for the bills, and that the Southern National Bank told him I li\ his own price mil they would pur chase. lie says lie will hold lie- bills. —New OrU .nils I'icttvuue THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE TRESS. The Common Lot—A Host on Proposal i —Proximo Access!! —Wholesome Advice—A Matter of Doubt, Etc. Gay winter is not joy unmixed. The married man Is full of woe; Boon as ho has the stovepipo fixed It's time to shovel off the snow. —Truth. A BOSTON PROPOSAL. She—"l'm writing a story. Will you object if I make you my hero?" He -"l'd rather be your Leander." —Judge. A MATTER OP DOTBT. Bank Examiner—"Do you consider your safe is burglar-proof? Bank President "Not altogether so. Our cashier kuows the combina tion. " —Puck. WHOLESOME ADVICE. Grimy —"I have so much on ray hands at present I don't know what to do." Primy-"Why not try some soap and water?"— Truth. DANGERS SAFELY PASSED. Sympathetic Widow—"Have you been fortunate in your love affairs?" Interesting Subject "Yes, very. I never yet fell in love with a girl who would marry me."—Life. PRECISE. "This is a somewhat free transla tion," said the literary young woman in the hook store. "No, miss," replied the new clerk. "It costs a dollar and a half."—Wash ington Star. PROXIME ACOBBBIT. "Dumlev always aspired to be a Napoleon of finance." "Did he come auywhere near the mark ?" "Yes; he spent his last days on the Island."—Puck. ANGLO MANIA. C'hollle—"Oh, she is perfectly love ly ; she paid me such a compliment." F wed die—"What was it?" Choi lie —"She said I was so un- American. " Fweddie—"How delightful."—De troit Free Press. STTOAK-COATEI) PRESCRIPTION. "Mamma, when Willie has a tooth ache you take him to the dentist to have it tilled,don't you ?'' asked Tommy. 4 'Yes, dear," said mamma. "Well, I've got a stummick ache. Don't you think we'd better go to the candy storo and get it tilled?"— Harper's Bazar. KNEW HIS FATHER. "Johnny, suppose I should borrow #IOO from your father, and should pay him #lO a month for ten months. How much would 1 then owe him?" "Six dollars." 'How do you make that out?" 'Pop would charge you interest." -—Harper's Bazar. A COUNTER FAD. Primus —"We hear much about the absurdities of fashion ; but most fash ions have some basis in reason." Secundns (sarcastically) "What, may i ask, is the philosophy of carry ing our canes upside down?" Primus -"That's easy. It's to break dudes of the habit of sucking them." —Ju.lge. A PRACTICAL SARCASM. "You don't look like ye'd had very good luck at dat house," said Plod diug Pete. "J got a cake," replied Meandering Mike. "Den what yer luokin' so sour about?" "'Twas er cake o' soap."—Wash ington Star. THE BILL DID IT. Mrs. A. "Wasn't it too bad about Mr. Poore? Just as everybody thought he was recovering he received an apo plectic shock." Mrs. B. "Mercy! How did it happen?" Mrs. B. "Nobody knows. He was found unconscious with his doctor's bill for service in his hand."—Yankee Blade. IN CHICAGO. Mrs. Weeder (to servant) "Liza, what did you do with the ashes in that jar on the mantel T" Liza—"Sure, mum, you tould me to carry all the ashes out, and I imp tied them in the ash bar'l this morn in ." Mrs. Weeder (angrily) "lf you make such a mistake again I'll dis charge you ! (Tearfully.) Those were the ashes of my first husband."— Hallo. BASH LOGIC. "There's no doubt about it," said the man who muses, "there is such a thing as too much originality." "Do you think so?" asked the friend. "I do, certainly. Take the man who nsed to sell chestnnts on this corner, for instance. He was doing well until he got au idea. He considered it a stroko of genius and immediately pro ceeded to put it into execution." "What was the idea?" "He observed the effects of moth balls in connection with his winter clothes and thought he would try 'em on hia chestnuts. He did so, and lost not only his olieatnnts, but his custom ers. '—Washington Star. WIHHF.P HF! HADN'T TOLD IT. (Mre, 1 wit'kculittui lihb iuvited Mr. I Castleton to dinner, ftnd they are dis cussing the salad.) Mrs. Twickenham—"l hope, Mr. Cas tleton, that you are fond of all kinds of puddings?" Castleton— "Ob, yes, Mrs. Twick enham. And that reminds me of a little incident tnat occurred to me last sum mer. I was visiting some friends of miue in the country (all attention from the other guests), and it seemed that some of them had heard nie say that while I was very fond of all sweet meats, there was one thing I abhorred, and that was tapioca pudding. Well, one day at dinner, the hostess, a most charming woman, said to me, 'I do hope you like tapioca puddiug, be cause we are going to have it to-day.' Well, of course, you know, not sup posing there was any joke about it, I said yes, and, well, I rather dilated upon the fact, wishing to make her thoroughly at ease, you understand, when inwardly I was quakiug at the thought of the horrible ordeal ahead of me. I noticed that the other guests seemed much amused, but I didn't dream it was a joke." Mrs. Twickenham—"Then it was a joke?" Castleton "Oh, yes, decidedly so. You sec, there was no tapioca pud ding, aud it was all a put-up job. You can imagine my feelings, and the em barrassing position I was in, after to be so polite by lying out of it." Mrs. Twickenham—"Yes, indeed, it was most unfortunate." (To servant, 1 with emphasis) "Janiep, bring on the tapioca pudding."—Harper's Bazar A COLONIAL TALE. Tn ft plaiuly furnished apartment in : the city of Philadelphia, some years ! before the American Revolution, sat ; Benjamin Franklin. A table, covered with papers, was before him; but his thoughts did not seem to be upon them. He was, in fact, looking out of a window, with the air of a man who is paid by the day, rather than of a philosopher or a statesman. Suddenly, however, lie exclaimed, "Ah! that is | the abhorism I thought of the other i day, aud couldn't recollect since. I'll I just jot it down for Poor Richard's Almanac." But a difficulty presented itself. He could not find liis peu. It was on the table, and it had not fallen to the floor. He made a careful but fruitless search through the room. Then he tried the table again, though he rea soned, with that force of intellect for which he was distinguished, that if it was on the table he should have found it there the first time he looked. At Inst he happened to pause before a mirror, and saw the pen resting com fortable on his right ear. His obser vations concerning this iucident were more commonplace than might havo been expected from a man of his originality; but they seemed to re lieve his mind. He sat down and wrote the aphorism. It was: "A place for everything and everything in its place." He had just finished the sentence, when it occurred to him that there was another thought which he had neglected to put in black-and-white. He had intended, at various times since the idea first crossed his mi ml, to make a memorandum of it; yet, three weeks had elapsed aud it had not been started ou its journey to pos terity. But lie resolved that there should be no further delay; and, dip piug his pen in the ink, he wrote: "Never put oft' till to-morrow what you can do to-day."—Puck. A Petition Oil a Clierry Stone. Gesa Berger, the well-known actor and newspaper man, has a picture in calligraphy that has a remarkable his tory. It is, in size, 30x42 inches, ami is the work of Joseph Loew, the most noted counterfeiter thai the Austrian Government ever knew. When an application is made for a pardon in Austria the red-tape policy of that country compels the applicant to address the Emperor with all his titles. Emperor Ferdinand had about forty titles. Loew engraved all of these, together with his petition for a pardon, on a cherry stone. i The letters were so tine that it re j quired the aid of a powerful micro j scope to decipherthem. One day when I the Emperor visited the prison Loew j in person presented a cherry stone to | the Emperor, and told him what it I contained. The Emperor made an ex- I amination and was so amazed at the work that he gave him an uncondi tional pardon. Not only did he par j don him, but he gave him a position as a detective to trail down counterfeiters. Loew was a well-informed man in all j the arts and rascalities of counterfeit ers, and in less than two years after his pardon he ran to the earth almost j every counterfeiter in Austria, and died a few years ago covered with detective j honors. The picture, although made fifty years ago, is in a remarkable state of preservation. Do the Sun's Kays Put Out Fire! Last summer while making one of my regular weekly excursions in search of curious natural history spec imens I nappened upon some wood choppers who were burning brush. One of these gentlemen being a regu lar reader of "Notes for the Curious," put the following question: "Why does the sun, shining on a fire, deaden its heat, suppress the rays and often put it out entirely?" I had never even heard a hint of the idea before, and was perfectly staggered. I admitted my inability to answer the question otl hand. Returning home I repaired to the library uud cousulted Brew er's Guide to Scientific Knowledge, where the answer is as follows: "Be causo the air, being rarifled by sun shine, flows more slowly to the fire, and, secondly, because the chemical action of the sun's rays is detrimental t. combustion." —St. Louis Republic, SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Eight cubic feet of snow produce one cubic foot of water. The first electric machine, globe of sulphur, was made by Gueritfke in 1647. j In Germany there is a law forbid ding restaurateurs to serve beer to people who have eaten fruit. The apple has a larger proportion of phosphorus than any other fruit, and is, therefore, an excellent brain food.'* The average cost of building an English ironclad is $240 per ton ; French, $275; Italian, $285; German. S3OO. A wind blowing at the rate of nine teen miles an hour exerts a pressure of but one and four-fifth pounds to the square foot. The newspapers report the striking of a gas well near Portland, Ind., the daily output of which is over six mill ion cubic feet. A Japanese novelty is "glass pa per," which is said to combine won derful transparency with unusual strength and tenacity. The material for making it is furnished by a Japan ese aquatic plant. Saechaine has a rival. A new sub stance called valzin is now being manufactured in Berlin under a pat ent, and is claimed to be 200 times sweeter than sugar, and free from cer tain objectionable properties of rine. Bail way mathematicians calculato that a train which can speed at the rate of eighty-five miles an hour wouhl require from seventy-two to seventy five seconds in which to "pull-up" or come to a standst ill. It would require nearly a mile in which to stop. A new process of making rain was recently brought before the Academic des Sciences, Paris, by M. Baudoin. His theory is that electricity main tains the water iu clouds" in a state of small drops and that if the electricity bo discharged the water will come down. Several farmers who had been sum moned before London magistrates ou the charge of selling adulterated milk, were dismissed on proof that the thiu quality of the milk was due, not to added water, but to the impaired con dition of the cows, in consequence\of tho great drouth. A somewhat widespread belief i that water can be heated only to 212 degrees Fahr. This is true of uncon fined water, but under a pressure of ten atmospheres (150 pounds to tho square inch) the water may be heated to 359 degrees, and under sixty atmo spheres 531 degrees may be reached. The bee works harder than most peo ple would believe. Thereabout sixty flower tubes in every head of clover, and only a tiny morsel of honey in each. In order to get enough sugar for a load the bee must visit about six thousand different flowers, and each bee makes, on an average, twenty trips a day. He Lives on Monkey Diet, A recent session of the Missouri Valley Horticultural Society at Kan sas City was addressed by W. S. Man ning, of Loudon, whose card is in scribed, "Fellow of the Royal Botanic Society aud Hon. Secretary and Lec turer of the Natural Food Society to promote Food Reform Based on Sci ence." Mr. Manning's hobby is, as his card indicates, "food reform." He advocates that tho human family should live solely on a diet of fruits and nuts, and he practices what ho preaches. He said in his address that for eight years past he had not swal lowed a drop of liquid refreshment of any kind nor a morsel of cooked food. He had subsisted solely on fruits and nuts. "My breakfast this morning con sisted of a half pound of California figs, two oranges and two hauanas mashed up together, followed by a tomato salad and a handful of nuts. This meal was caton raw, assail my meals are." "What did you have for dinner?" asked a member of the society. "I have not yet eaten diuuer. I eat but two meals a day. My dinner will come between 6 and 10 oclock this eveniug, and will be a repetition of the breakfast." Mr. Manning claims that an exclu sive diet of fruits and nuts contains all the nutriment that the human body needs, and he claims also that the body fed on such a diet cannot be sick. Mr. Manning is not a crank. He i* de scribed by the Kansas City Time# as an intelligent, well educated, florid faced robust man. He has proved to his own satisfaction by experience that the reform of which he is the apostle is a good thing. A Church Ma:le of Paper. There is a church at Bergen, Nor way, made of paper, which can accom modate nearly 1000 persons. Its ex terior is octagonal, while in the in terior it is circular in form. The re lievos without and the decorative statues within, as well as the vaulted roof, nave and Corinthian capitals, are made of papier mac-he, which has been made waterproof by soaking in a solution of quicklime, curdled milk and white of egg.—San Francisco Call. England's Torpedo Destroyers. The Havoc, the new torpedo de stroyer of the British naval force, can steam as fast HH a railway train, and can turn with such rapidity in her own length that she would cut a good figure iu a marine waltz. There are to be a dozen such vessels, the fastest steamers in the world, and they are expected to do smart service ou occa sion. They could catch anything afloat, or as rapidly retreat. The next, war will bo interesting in more wnv.} than one.—Toronto Kmpire,