FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISH FD KVEUY MONDAY AND TIIUIiSDAY. TRIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STRKKT ABOVK CENTO*. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Ono Year jl 3o Six Months 75 Four Months 60 Two Months 23 Subscribers are requested to otwerve the date following tho uamo on tho labels of theUf papers. By referring to this they can tell at a glanc© how they stand cm tho books In thti offloo. For instancc: Grover Cleveland ZSJuneifi means that Grover la paid up to Juno 28,1H96. Keep tho tlgurcs in advunce of the present date. Report promptly to this office when your paper W not received. All arrearages must bo paid when paper is discontinued, or collection will be made In tho manner provided by law. Official steps havo just been taken, without opposition, to abolish tho only remaining toll road in Connecti cut, the Derby turnpike. The com pany was chartered about ono hun dred years ago. It is said that Thomas A. Edison has been the subject of more biogra phies than any other living man. Tho latest, entitled "Tho Life and Inven tions of Thomas Alva Edison," has j just been issued by an English firm. Sixty-three years ago Daniel Web ster hail Isaac Barrett appointed a pago in tho United States Senate. Fifty-two years ago the special posi tion of doorkeeper was created for him, and he has held it since. He now has the distinction of having been in the service of this Government longer than any man living. Expert Moore estimates that it will require about 89,000,000 per year for the next five yeai3 for the physical needs of the Atchison railroad system. This amount is considered moilernte, as it amounts to less than 81000 per mile and includes many extraordinary expenses, such as replacing wooden with iron bridges, and contemplates putting and keeping the road up to the highest standard. A Las Vegas (Now Mexico) news paper oalls the attention of patriotio New Mexicans to tho fact that Arizona has 119 inmates in its State insane asylum,while New Mexico, with nearly three times tho population of Arizona, has only fifty in its asylum. Further, Arizona's insane population has in creased thirty per cent, in the last eighteen months. The newspapor urges that "the next Legislature should remedy this crying defect." The Ohioago Record states that in a very ablo and scholarly addross de livered before the Kansas Irrigation Association Judge J. S. Emery, of the National Irrigation Society, put for ward some faots of vital interest not only to the inhabitants of arid States, but to the whole Nation. It will doubtless be a surprise to most read ers to learn that that portion of America which may be considered as practically arid and unproductive is nearly half as big as nil States, save Alaska. Judge Emery vouches for this fact and also for the other fact, sustained by tho opinions of expert geologists, that of this enor mous area 100,000,000 acres can be re claimed by tho use of proper methods of irrigation. The annual of Governor Renfrew, of Oklahoma, furnishes an interesting picture of tho wholly unique American way of colonizing and State building, according to which new commonwealths grow up into the Union as naturally as a younger child is born into a family, on equal tonus with the rest from the beginning. Oklahoma, it is true, is not yet a State, but it is getting ready to become one. As the Governor remarks, at the orig inal opening of Oklahoma proper the world beheld the strange spectacle of a city of 10,000 inhabitants built in u day, and a Territory of 9400 square miles settled in half a day. That was four years ago. Its present popula tion is given as 250,000, and tho value of its property as $20,000,000. Noth ing thero was begun moro promptly than provision for churches and schools. Already thero is a school house conven ient to every family, a Territorial uni versity, a Normal School and an agri cultural and mechanical college. As for churches, thero are ninety-five Baptist, fifty-five Congregational, for ty two Methodist, thirty-one Presby terian, twonty-four Catholic, and so on. Afi to Statehood, some desiro to have Oklahoma admitted at once; others would wait a little, hoping that Indian Territory may yet be joined with Oklahoma, both muking one great State, in which case, says the Govern or, "it would be equal to tho greatest and, in my opinion, tho finest State west of the Mississippi." THE RIDDLE OF WRECK. Dark hemlocks, seventy and seven, High on tho hlll-slopo sigh In dream, With plumy heads In heaven ; They silver tho sunbonm. One broken body of a tree, Stabbed through and slashed by lightning keen, Cnsouled and grim to see, Hangs o'er tho hushed ravine. \ hundred masts, a hundred more, Crowd clo9o against tho sunset llrcs. Their late adventure o'or. They minglo with tho spires. Cut ono Is lying prone, alone, Where gleaming gulls to seaward sweep, White sand of burial blowu In sheets about its sleep. When lightning's loashed and soa is still, Ye sacrificial mysterios dread, Scapegoats of shore and hill, I Your riddle may bo read. IDlen Gray Cone, in tho Century. LOVE IN A SNOWSTORM. BY M. BABIXGTOX BAYLEY. SUE was a little Puritan maiden, with honest gray eyes and a sweet, bashful face. Her Aft . parents called her /rLrff- vk-'i') r Dorothy; her 1 friends, Dolly. WI&Z AV'l. lu bad been W~y 'wouglit up very strictly, and it WiSTH-™ ■ .1 W " H not wi H ou t (*j misgivings that bor family allowed her to visit her rieh unele and aunt in in London, but they could not well refuse the invitation. Dolly had been in London only one short week, aud she was bewitched with everything sho saw. She loved her unele and aunt, both of whom dis played strong affections ior her, and indulged her in a freedom she had never tasted before. She was delight ed with tho substantial old house, with its largo rooms, big fireplaces and comfortable furniture. More than all, she admired Loudon itself. The busy streets, with their palatial shops; the colossal buildings—St. Paul's, the Abbey, the Houses of Parliament, the broad, quiet squares, which seemed to have been dropped down at random among the wilderness of houses; the gay restaurants and tho brilliant, fas cinating theatres. Sho particularly liked it at night, when illumined by countless lights, whose reflections glittered on the pavement; and when the black darkness of the sky, unac companied by the deathly silence that it brought in tho country, seemed rather to enhauce the noise aud bustle of the prodigal streets. There was something romantic about it all. It thrilled her, sho knew not why. Her heart heat faster, her pulse bounded moro quickly. She feit more alivo than she had ever felt before. There was another source of pleas ure. Never before had she been thrown into the company of so en gaging a young gentleman as her cousin Tom, the only child of her uncle and aunt. He was Dolly's sen ior by some half dozen years. Had Dolly's parents sUßpected what man ner of young man he was, they would have made a special journey to Lon don to bring their daughter home. Fortunately, they were ignorant. There was nothing really bad about tho lad. He had a very good heart, but he wanted steadying a little. Ho was exactly the sort of dashing, reck less, freehanded young Englishman that a handsome, manly fellow be comes when placed in circumstances of wealth and freedom. The first time he saw his cousin Dolly ho decided that she was a very pretty girl, but shy, and that it would bo worth while to draw her out. Ho found it not cosy; and that, not withstanding tho fact, hd he known it, that there was in Dolly's heart an intense -willingness to be drawn out by cousin Tom. Rut that shyness of of hers B was a fashionable barrier. She could not chatter 1 tho thing was impossible. Her silence had been in bred so long that it had become part of her anatomical structure; and Tom, in spite of all his convesrational tal ents and social polish, frequently found himself reduced by it to a cor responding state. On the other hand, if Dolly could not speak, she could look. Sho had extremely eloquent oyes ; eyes that spoke far more than her lips. Tom soon began to watch those eyes and to love them. He no longer attempted to make his cousin talk; her eyes rendered conversation unnecessary. One afternoon, in tho first week of January, ho sauntered into his moth er's sitting room, and there discov ered Dolly, sitting, liko tho historic Miss Muffit, on a buffet in front of the fire. Her fingers wero busy with some crochet work. Tom drew a chair to the fire. "Are you going out to-night, Dolly?" She lilted her eyes from her needle. "Not to-night." "Not. Are you sorry?" "No." "I supposo yonr'o getting rather tired of it. You've been out pletty nearly every night lately, haven't yon?" "Yes. I'm not tired of it, though; I liko it. But auntie and I are going to have a quiet evening to-night, and I shall like that just as well." There was a pauso. "Are you sure you will liko it just as well?" "I beg your pardon?" said Dolly. Ho injured on his chair. "Well," he said, "I want you to come out with mo to-night, if you will." Sho looked at him in amazement. "Out with you? Why, where'to?" "The theatre," he responded. l'leasure shone in her face. She gasped with delight. "Oh, you are kind! But do you think auntie wili allow mo?" "I'll ask her," said naughty Tom. It was really very wrong of him, for Dolly's parents would have been scan dalized at tho idea of their daughter being seen in a theatre. However, they were not there to see it. It nevor occurred to Dolly that it could be wrong for her to go after Tom had proposed it, and so, as Tom's parents raised no objections, they started in due course. Tho only condition im posed on thorn (and the sequel proved it a sound one) was to wrap up well, which they did. llow Dolly enjoyed the performance it is unnecessary to relate in detail. She did enjoy it immensely ; and she frequently turned to Tom and thanked him so earnestly for his kindness in having brought her that Tom began to feel the ecstasy that follows virtu ous conduct. Her enjoyment robbed her, for the first time, of her shyness. Her face glowed with an unusual ani mation. There was a color in her cheeks and a sparkle in her eyes that had not been there before. When a shy maiden does wake up to anima tion she is ten times more dangerous ly attractive than her vivacious sis ters, who sparkle all day long. Tom thought his cousin's face more seductively sweet than he had imag ined it could bo. Ho warmed toward her. Ho no longer wanted to draw her out, to flirt with her. He was in love now, all tho way. They made no haste out of the the atre, with tho result that, when they reached the street, there was not an available hansom. "We'd better walk on a bit," said Tom. "We shall como to ouo pres ently." There had been a heavy fall of snow during the performance, and the pave ment of tho Strand was all slushy and sloppy. "It's rather unpleasant under foot, Dolly," said Tom. "You'd better tako my arm." She did as she was bid, and imme diately experienced a curious sense of being owned. It seemed to her that sho belonged to her cousin. While, as for Tom, the soft touch of those small, gloved fingers on his coat sleeve gave him more pleasure than all his previous flirtations rolled into one. When they came to Trafalgar Square Dolly gave a little screum of delight. "Oh," she cried, "how pretty 1" It was pretty. The whole square— fountains, statues, and all, wherever the snow could find n lodging—lay draped in white. The portions that were free from snow looked doubly black by contrast. It was a study in white, with just a little black to help it out. Overhead fleecy clouds scudded rapidly, nnd a full, brightmoon stared down at the glittering panorama. The square was as light as day. "Oh, how beautiful 1 I didn't think London could look so lovely 1" Tom looked at the speaker, and thought her lovelier than the scene she admired. "Yes," ho said, with his eyes on her face, "it is beautiful, very beautiful indeed." "Oh," said Dolly, "let us walk home. We don't want to tako a cab on a lovely night like this. I wouldn't miss the walk for the world. It isn't far, really, is it?" "About a mile," said Tom. "Only a mile. Oh, that is nothing. Let us walk. Shall we?" "Decidedly, if you wish it. You'd better take my arm again," for in her rapturous admiration she had slipped her hand loose, "the streets are slip pery." They walked on for three or four minutes. Suddenly Dolly's foot slipped. Tom, with remarkable pres ence of mind, prevented her from fall ing by putting his arm round her waist. That was a new experience for Dolly. It had never happened before, ami she was overcome by tho strange ness of jt, Sho didn't say anything, but she blushed, and her face looked exquisitely pretty. I don't think Tom wns to bo blamed very much for bend ing down and kissing it. He should not havo done it, of courso; it was wrong; but the temptation was con siderable. Dolly released herself in dignantly, pushing him from her, Thoy walked a short distance in awk ward silence. "Dolly, aro you angry with me?" No reply. "Dolly"—very humbly—"l'm aw fully sorry ; but you looked so pretty that I couldn't help it." Still a severe silence. "Won't you forgive mo, Dolly?" Tho gray eyes wore fixed on the ground, and the pretty lips were pressed firmly together. Ho caught her fingers. She triod to pull them away, but it wns useless. "Won't you forgive me, Dolly?" he said again. Sho found her voice at length. "I wish you wouldn't make me say things. Of course, I forgive you, but —you oughtn't to havo done it." "I am really very sorry, Dolly," he said, repentantly. Then the snow came down. There was no mistake about it, either ; it did come down, with a ven geance. The flakes wero nearly as large as a man's hand, and the sky was full of them. "Dolly," Buiil Tom, firmly, "you mußt take my nrm anil hold it tightly. Wo am going to catch it." She took his arm, and ho hurried hor along as fast as he could. It was no uso. The snow pelted their faces so severely than in less two minutes they were nearlyj numbed with the cold. "We must shelter somewhere till the violence of the storm is spent," said Tom. Ho looked about him for a convenient doorway. Fortunately, there was one near. Ho placed Dolly inside it, so that the snow could not get to her, and stationed himself at her side. "Are you cold, Dolly?" lie said. "Not very, thank you," she replied. "Are you?" "1? Oh! it doesn't matter about me, dear. You ere the important member of this small community. Are you sure you arc not cold? Will you have my muffler?" He commenced to take it off. "No, indeed!" exclaimed Dolly, preventing him. "Do you think I would take it from you? But it was kind of you to offer it—very kind I You arc kind to me." "Kind !" said Tom, warmly. "Who could help being kind?" lie pressed more closoly to her. Outside the BUOW was descending heavily. "Dolly," said Tom, speaking low, "have you quite forgiven me?" She smiled, but did not say any thing. His arm stole round her again. She made no effort to repulse it. Ho looked at her face. The cold had turned it a dead white, but it was beginning to glow again, and he thought it had never looked prettier. "Dolly," ho whispered, "I love you." Her heart bounded. He loved her ! Oh! the blissful thought! "Dolly," ho whispered again, "could you cure for me ever so lit tle ?" "Yes," she murmured. Their eyes, and then their lips, met. After that I don't think either of them minded the cold much. They were prisoned in that sancti fied doorway an hour before the snow abated, and then it took them another twenty minutes to get home. They were received with rejoicings. "We thought you had got lost," said the master of the house. Dolly ran straight into her aunt's urriis, and burst into a lit of sobbing. "My poor child!" said tho lady, ca ressing her, "you aro overwrought; and no wonder. Tom, you haven't tuken proper euro of her." "Oh ! but he has," said Dolly, smil ing through her tears. "It isn't that." "She has promised to be my wife!" said Tom. The rest isn't worth telling. A Useful Python. Once, while passing through a Dutch farm, writes the author of "Three Yeurs With Lo Bcnguln," in Africa, I went up to tho house to buy some eggs; standiug iu front of tho door was a largo barrel, and while passing I carelessly tilted it up to see what was inside, but promptly let it down agnin, as there was a big python un derneath. The Dutchman told me ho had shot at tho snake some months previously, and a few grains entering the head, the reptile appeared to be come stupefied nud unable to move quickly. He then dragged it home, aud extracted the fangs, and it gradu ally became tame. The pythou, which measured sixteen feet, was allowed to crawl about the place at night, never attempting to get away or do any dam age ; in fact, they found it useful lor killing rats and vermin. By day it was kept under the barrel. The chil dren fed tho snake, aud played with it. I saw one of the little Dutch boys drag it out, and pour two bottles of milk down its throat, and then givo it six eggs, wlrchit swallowed. When they teased the python, it made a hiss ing noise unit reared up on its tail; they wero not a bit frightened, and would catch hold of it by tho head, and drag it along tho ground over their shoulders. Use!illness ot Diamonds. Diamond powder aud chips, and even the finest dust, are of great value in tho mechanical arts. Braziliau diamonds aro now put to a novel and interesting use. A thin disk of steel, seven feet in diameter, lias spaces at intervals of about ouo and one-half inches. These sjiacos aro tilled in with pieces of steel that exactly lit, aud iato these are set tho diamonds fixed in countersunk screw-lieads. They aro arranged in groups of eight, and are so placed that they do nob follow 0110 exactly after the other in the cut, but each line takes its own course. This circular saw is used for cutting up blocks of stone, and so efficient is it that in less than two and one-half years it has to cut out four hundred and twenty thousand square feet of stone, at a cost of a trifle less than two cents a square foot. In this time it has been necessary to renew twenty of the teeth, the average cost of wliicli has been about two dollars per tooth. —Tlie Ledger. Rules lor Gum Chewing. The visible working of tho jaws in chewing gum is' not a pleasant sight, and that it exasperates sensitive peo ple beyond measure is not unnatural. A Buffalo coachman lost a good posi tion tho other day because ho would persist in chewing gum on tho box while driving. The severest criticism levelled at certain regiments of tho Massachusetts National Guard at a recent inspection was that many pri vates and some officers chewed gum on parade. Tho only persons who really ought to bo allowed to chew gum are policemen, on night service only, and members of football teams in actual coullict.---Buffalo Commer cial. An Eye to Business. ''A proposal having been mado in London that boxes should bo erected iu public thoroughfares for the recep tion of orange-peel and matches, re calls tho story told of a young gentle man of excellent principles walking with an omineut surgeon. As they neared his house, the lad kicked away a piece of orauge-peel that lay on tho pavement into the road. The sur geon said, "My dear boy, what aro you about?" aud replaced it exactly opposite his own door.—Afgonaut. THE ART OF SAW MAKING IIOY/ AN AMERICAN TOOL HUM BLED A TOLEDO ELADE. The Fine Points of a Good Handsaw —Tempering Is a Mysterious Pro cess—The Hand Saw. SOME of thoso swords of the middle ages and tho crusades aro still in tho museums of Europe, and tho modern steel makers who have examined them with professional criticism, while admiring their beautiful workmauship and ex quisite art, unhesitatingly say that uone of them can compare with tho 6teel made to-day. An American manufacturer of tool steel declared that an American hand saw was made of stronger, tougher and better steel than a famous Toledo blade exhibited in France. Ho proved his assertion, for a sword made of tho samo steel from which tho saw was made stood tho test to which both swords were subjected, and then cut the Toledo blade in two without nick ing tho edge of tho American sword. A good handsaw must of necessity be made of good steel. Its temper must be such that tho thin saw-blade must spring in an even curve from point to butt when it is bent. It must be elastic without being brittle, tough without softness, and the steel must bo of an even temper. From good, honest steel alone can such vir tues spring, and when a carpenter has such a saw, polished to a silver luster, rightly "hung," well ".set," with tho handle properly litted to his hand, ho has a treasure. Tho making of saws, from the tiny scroll saw blade to tho long pit saw, from the diminutive buzz saw of the dentist to tho seventy-iucli circular used to slice up tho redwood of Cali fornia, requires tho best of raw ma terial aud the most skillful and expert of steel-workers. The best Swedish and American irons only are put in the melting pots to mako the steel, and powerful steam hammers work tho ingots before they are roiled into plates, sheets and flat bars. The largest saw works iu the world are near Philadelphia. The high perfection attainod in the metal-workers' art is not in evidence until tho saw blade or disk, after beiug cut to shape and having the teeth cut, reaches tho tempering and hardening stage. Tho steel making, tho "cog ging" of the ingots under the steam hammering and the rolling mill are interesting, and so is the great shears which cuts aud shapes the saw blades aud circular plates for buzz saws. The teeth-cutting machine is an attractive piece of mechanism, but tho harden ing and tempering are done by men, each one uu expert, a master of his art. When the saw blade roachos this department it is soft. When bent it is slow to return to its original shape, and if bent beyond its elastic limit it remains bent. To make u saw of it tho blade must bo tempered, an 1 each variety of saw must have a different temper. Tho circular saw which is to go through pine logs must have a toughness, hardness and stiffness dif ferent from the saw which is to cut up steel rails into thirty-foot lengths in a roliing-mill. Still, tho process, the simple manipulation of the blade and disk is about the same. The de sired results are secured by a varia tion in tempcraturos in the hardening and annealing furnaces, the time in which tho blades are kept in the fur naces, the composition and tempera tures of the tempering baths. Tho blades are first hardeued by be ing heated and then suddenly cooled. Tho greatest euro must be exercised in dipping tho heated blado in the water, for if one side cools quicker than tho other the unequal teusiou distorts tho blado and it is warped. Tho larger the saw the more diflicult is tho process. Tho workman poises tho blade ovor tho bath, watching it keenly. Tho lilm of oxide on tho steel changes color as it cools, aud when tho proper tiut glistens in tho blade it is plunged hiss ing into tho water. When it is cold tho blailo is hard, but its toughness has disappeared, for it is as brittlo as glass. A hammer blow will shatter tho steel to bits, lor all its molecules aro in a state of extreme tension, ready to fly apart 011 the slightest provocation. To restore tho tough ness, tho essential elasticity, tho temper must bo "drawn," so the blade must bo heated again. Here the mysterious art of tem pering is seen at its best. The work man gives tho steel just tho right amount of heat, and then withdraws the blado from tho furuaco. Again ho watches tho chamoleon-liko oxide or skiii; it changes and blonds from ouo color to another, sometimes a pigoou's egg blue, an amber, a straw, a yellow or a deop-bluo color. Wheu tho proper color appears tho blado is dipped iu tho cooling bath, oil or water or some socret mixture, an I it is ready for auothor set ot experts, tho men who handlo tho cold blado to tho proper thicknoss. This in itself is a sovere tost of tho temper, and a saw blado which successfully passos through this departmont not ouly re ceives that "tension" which tho ham mering gives it, but can bo guaran teed, so far as tho temper is concerned. Tho hammering makos tho blado or disk truo, perfectly flat aud of uni form texturo. Up to this point tho blado has been of the same thickness, but in a saw the tootliod edgo must bo thicker than tho middle aud back of tho saw or tho saw would liavo no clearance and would stick in tho wood. Tho smiths hammer tho blado thinner back of the teeth and this gives tho saw that stiffness and tension which uro all-impoitaut. The blado passes from this depart ment to tho polishing-rooms, where it is ground absolutely even and highly polished. Muchiucrv lias to u great extent taken the place of manual la bor in grinding and polishing saws. When the saws are polished they are placed in a machine which automati ca ly sharpen tho teeth. Then the handles are fitted on and tho laws aro tested and packed. In some circular saws tho teeth aro inserted instead of being cut in tho disk. The teeth with their holders are fastenod in tho rim of the disk so that they will not fly out when tho saw is zipping through a log with its edge racing 10,000 feet a minute. Yet, when dull, tho teeth can be easily removed and new ones inserted at tho saw-mill. To the unobservant all saw teeth are alike, but tho saw-maker knows teeth as chisel, solid, beveled, gullet, diamond, hook, lancet and scores of others. If a rip-saw is ex amined it will be seen that the teeth are the largest at the handle, gradually diminishing in size toward tho tip. Yet, to such perfection has Raw-mak ing machinery been brought, a ma chine will take a blank blade, and, be ginning with large teeth at the butt, will bito out tho teeth in uniformly decreasing size to the tip. The strip of steel, sometimes eight inches wide and fifty feet long, which makes a band saw, has its teeth cut by ma chinery. Tho strip is fed into the machine ; after each bite it moves along a certain distance and tho inachino bites again. Band saws are gradually superseding circular saws in saw mills, for on largo logs two circular saws aro required, one at the botton and the other for tho top, and some times tho saws getting a trifle out of alignment, do not track, and damaged lumber results. Tho band saw is an endless-tooth stoel belt running at a high speed over a wheel above tho log and under a similar wheel beneath tho log. With it the largest logs can bo sliced up into boards, and, as tho baud saw is thinner than the circular saw, the loss of lumber in sawdust is less and more can be obtained from the log.—Chi cago He cord. WISE WORDS. You can't tell what a woman means by what she says. We can tell you what you like best: whatever you have the least of. Time heals all troubles save one, and that it makes worse: growing old. A man with a pint of importance or dinarily has u quart on election day. It must bo mighty louesomo to he a woman and wait for an ideal husband. Many a man is compelled to stand punishment who never tought a prize fight. No man who dobuts tho worthiness ol his principles can be bravo in theii defense. It is hard to believe that a sin will bite when it comes ulong with gold in its teeth. The scholar has no place in politics if ho has no money wherewith to buy influence. Don't allow yourself to be hoodooed , into tho belief that life is only a pre tentious strut. If you really love what you beliovo to he a duty, oppositou only makes you stronger. Nearly any man will sign any peti tion, or give a letter of recommenda tion to anybody. It is a good maxim to forgive many offenses of others before you fully ex culpate yourself. The man who is so straight that ho | leaus backwards looks worse thau tho fellow that stoops. The best stimulant toward right po litical action is a healthy interest iu what is to bo done. To make a well-roundod citizon the moral sensibilities must bo oue with tho mental faculties. It is worth remembering that Gov ernments as well as individuals have rights of self-defeuse. What aro you doing to mako it easier to do right and harder to do wrong in your own town? A man who is always boasting oi what he has douo is not nl ways the boldest in tho honr of danger. The L router New York. Some of the larger cities that aro to bo distanced by Greater New York aro content to boast of their acreage. Chi oago has the biggest municipal acre age in tho country, covering over 100 square miles, while New York covers only about forty. Some idea of the eardiue civili/.atiou of New York can be had by reflecting that it covers but little more ground than Boston. What is still more astonishiug is that when the Greater New York comes to covei oIS square miles it will still be more densely settled than Chicago. We fancy Boston to bo a very crowded city, with 18.5 persons to thi acre. New York has over 58 persons to tho acre, and Chicago, witli all her boast ing, has but 10.7 to tho acre. If wo are to estimate population by tho aero it greatly disturbs all previous calculations. When tho greater me tropolis is completed it will still have more peoplo to the acre than London. —Boston Gazette. The Yosemite Park Threatened. Galen Clark, tho guardian of tho Yosemite Valley, iu his report recom mends that much of the underbrush in the valley ho cleared out. Ho de clares that tho Indians by their an nual burning over of the valley kept down this youug growth, wiiioh is now a hindrance to tourists and an obstruction to clear views. Mr. Clark declares that thero is serious danger from fire, both iu the valley and iu tho Mariposa big treo grove. Two hotels will be open next year in tho valley, the Stonemau an 1 the Senti nel. Upon tho latter improvements have been raado amounting to ,- UUo.—New York Tribune. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Dews aro less abundant on islands and on ships in midocoau. Darwin declared that insanity is not peculiar to human beings. lie as serted that animals often become in sane. Tho earliest known attempt at an explanation of tho rainbow was made by Aristotle. It was along tho lino of modern scientific investigation. Many physiologists believe that in sanity is a return to the habits of tho wholly undeveloped man. Professor Freeman writos that at difforont peri ods of insanity tho action of tho un fortunate patient becomes "horribly monkey-like." Milk should be kept at a distance from every volatilo substance, and milk which has stood in sick chambers should never be drunk. The power of milk to disguiso tho taste of drugs —as potassium, iodide, opium, salicy late, etc. —is well known. The depths to which the sun's rays penetrato water has recently been de termined by the aid of photography. It has been tound that at a depth of 553 feet the darkness was to all in tents and purposes the same us that on a clear but mooiiless night. Tho Canadian authorities have de cided to test all cattle imported into the Dominion with tho Koch tuber culino lymph. "If any animal is found to be affected with tuberculosis the owner will have tho alternative of taking it back to the place whonco it. came, or having it slaughtered with out compensation." As far as is known swallows' mi gratory flights are always carried on by day. The fact that, though warb lers and other migrants aro constantly found dead around lighthouses, hav ing dashed themsolves against tho windows of tho lanterns, swallows have never been known to meet their fate in this way, furnishes strong presumptive evidence of this peculiar ity of the swallow tribe. Tho habit of feigning death when attacked is widespread among animals, and Angus Gaines has found it in the microscopic insect which produces the itch. When he touched an itch in sect with tho point of a needle it feigned death, remaining perfectly still for some time. This it did re peatedly. The same habit of "pos suming" has been found to character ize several varieties of snakes. A medical paper reports cases from Philadelphia hospitals where men who have recovered from electric shocks of upward of a thousand volts "felt no pain whatever." As in tho reports of several of theso casos it is said that the subjects moaned and writhed be fore recovering consciousness, it would Beom to be more accurate to say that they did uot recall their suf ferings at the time they made tho statement to their physiciun. The Last ot Her Tribe# The last survivor of the Delaware Indians, who formerly owned all of the lauds in this section of New Jersoy, died a duy or two ago in her humblo cottage in Southampton township, N. J., and was buried from tho little Methodist chapel at Tabernacle. Her name was Anu Roberts, and she was the widow of John Roberts, a mulatto, who died a number of years ago. They had several children, some of whom are still liviug. A picturesque figure she was as she stood erect in front of her cabin with her loDg black hair streaming over her shoulders, and tho neighbors all had u wholesome respect for her. She was nearly six feet in height, very muscular, and despite her years—she was past ninety—could do a day's chopping in tho woods with almost any of tho men in tho neighborhood. Tho houso she lived iu was bought with eoino pension money she had secured on account ol' the death of one of her SDUS iu the war. Somehow sho managed to pick up a living for herself until her last illness, when tho neighbors kindly supplied her wants until tho end came, when they gave her a Christian burial. "Indian Ann," as she was eallod, was tho last survivor of the E Ige pillock Indians, a branch of the Dola wares. They wero assigned to a reservation in Shamoiig township in 1757, where they remained for a long time prosperous aud happy. Then they were removed to another tract of laud in Oneida County, New York. Indian Ann's parents accompanied them, but soon became weary and returned to Burlington County, where they lived in a cabin on the Woolmau farm, near Mount Holly, until their death, which occurred some time iu tho fifties.—Philadelphia Ledger. Wanton Destruction ol (btine. Our attention has recently boon arrested by a recent invention which is a menace to wild water game, aud an outrage ou tho sentiment and prac tice of all true sportsmen. A recently devised pneumatic boat has for its upper portion simply a circular rub ber float, arranged into water-tight compartments, easily inflated with air. Attached to this on the under side is u pair of rubber wadiug boots. Tho operation is very easy. Tho boatman legs into tho wading boots, inflates his boat with air, propels him self with his feet; his body being con cealed in his boat, which is covered with loose sea weed, he can easily ap proach and mingle with the unsuspect ing water fowl to his profit and their destruction. Wo do not know whou wo havo hoard of a more piratical rna chiuo for tho extermination of our wild game. Some gunners will un doubtedly use it, but the true sports man never will. It might be woll to mako a target of this pirate boat and its vandal occupant whenever it makes its appearance on tho water. —Atlanta Constitution.