Attorney-General McCormick, of Pennsylvania, has decided that life in surance policies are not taxable, as claimed. It is estimated that the cost of car rying ripe beeves from Australia to London is about S7O per head. Tho cost for sheep is $6. The French Minister of Foreign Af fairs has formally announced that there is no French protectorate of Madagascar, but that Franco has taken possession of that country. The gift of $1,000,000 to tho Chi cago University by Miss Helen Culver, of Chicago, is the largest single gift that university has received, always excepting tho princely gifts of Mr. Rockefeller. This gift assures a further conditional gift of a million from Mr. Rockefeller. It will go to science. The Baltimore Manufacturers' Rec ord says: "Florida furnishes the country from 3,000,000 to 1,000,000 boxes of oranges a year. Georgia ships over 10,000 carloads of water melons every year. In the aggregate, the shipment of early fruits and vege tables North and West probably amounts to $50,000,000 a year. This business is increasing very rapidly. Ten years ago it was of trifling im portance." Methodist ministers in Chicago are still discussing tho caso of the young divine who claims that ho "uncon sciously assimilated" the sermon of Dr. Abbott which ho preached a few Sundays ago, and which unfeeling people accused him of stealing. Ono of the other ministers declared that his defense of "unconscious assimila lation" might be all right, but that if he had it that bad he might uncon sciously assimilate tho clothes off n clothes lime somo dark night. Mrs. Julia Ward Howe is well in formed on the subject of the Turkish massacre of Christians in modern times, and writes to a Boston papei giving the figures collected by her husband and herself. During her own lifetime nearly one hundred thousand Christians have been murdered byithe Turks. In 1822 a Turkish army killed 23,000 Greek Christians on the Island of Chios and sold into slavery 47,000. This is the largest single item, but, as a matter of fact, the slaughter has been almost continuous. As Thomas P. Wood, a resident of Brooklyn, was classing Park row, New York City, on crutches one day in March, 1891, one of his crutches caught in a small hole in one of the manhole covers used by tho Third Avenue Cable Railroad Company. He fell and was severely injured. Ho sued the company in the Supremo Court in Brooklyn and recovered a verdict of S2OOO, which the 1 rial judge set aside on the ground that tho com pany loubl not bo held liable for such accidents. The case was appealed, and the general term reversed tho rul ing and directed tho recovery of the veidict. Jqstice Pratt, who writes tho decision, holds that tho public high way is made for people on crutches as well as others, and that if a railroad company leaves a holo in tho street largo enough to admit the point of a crutch and thereby injury is occa sioned to a person on crutches it is li able for such injuries. How far can the human voice bo heard, asks tho Washington Path finder.' It all depends on tho condi tions. If we had a pneumatic tubo trom hero to London, perfectly smooth inside, it is probablo our "smart set" could acquire the correct Bow Bells cockney dialect *at first bunds without ever going abroad for it. A man's voice calliug "Bob" was recently heard for a distance of eight een miles, through tho Grand Canyon of the Colorado. Tho walls of the deep gorge confine tho sound waves like a closed tube. Lieutenant Foster reports that, when in tho Arctic re gions, he conversed with man at tho distance of 6696 feet, or about a mile and a quarter. It is recorded that at Gibraltar tho human voice has been heard ten miles. When thero are no trees, hills or other obstructions to difiuso the sound, as in tho Arctic re gions or on the water, tho voice, of course, has a good opportunity to bo transmitted afar. In water it i 3 prob able sounds might be still farther heard. Colladon, by experiments in Lake Geneva, estimated that a bell rung under water at sea could bo heard sixty miles. Every boy knows that when his head is uuder water, two stones cracked together by another boy make a sound that is painfully acute. Fraukliu found that he could hear this sound under water for a dis tance of half a mile, whereas iu open air it would have been lo9t at a dis tance of a few rods. FIKE IN SNOW-SHEDS. HOW IT IS FOUGHT BY THE CEN TRAL PACIFIC ROAD. An Important Railroad Department— The Company's Property Is Pro tected by Special Crewa—Their Alarm System—Fitzgerald's Excellent Run. j In the Sierra Nevada Range. There Is In California a lire depart- ! mont which protects property extend-1 ing over a distance of forty miles, and , costing n million and a half of dollars. The property referred to is familiar to every one who has taken a daylight trip over the Central Pacific Railroad, as it runs from the land of sunshine into the land of sage brush. Owing to the heavy snowfall in the Sierra Nevada the railroad has been ENGINEER FIT7.GF.RAI.P AND FIREMAN. compelled to protect its track from win ter blockades by building a series of sheds to cover it. These extend con tinuously from the little telegraph sta tion of Blue Canyon to Trucltee, on the eastern slope of the mountains, a dis tance of forty miles. In the winter the FIGIITIXG FUSE IX TIIE SIIEDS. j snow protects these sheds from all dan ! per from lire, but when summer conies the wind and sun soou melt the cover ing of snow and rapidly dry the tim bers, until by July 1 the lumber in the J sheds is as dry as powder. The forty miles of sheds are constant ly patrolled by men selected for thai i purpose. Each man's beat is loss than j three miles long, and is so arranged that ■ he passes over It a short time in ad vance of every train. Situated at (lis- 1 tances of a mile apart throughout the ' entire length of shed guarded track are 1 placed unlocked electrical call boxes sim ilar to those in use in the cities. <>n the face of these are inscribed the words "East West—rock on track —shed down—train wreck-car off slide tire." Besides these there are thirty four alarm boxes, which are kept lock ed. These are used exclusively for tire. When an alarm is rung in on one of these a gong strikes the number of the box in Sacramento, 100 miles away, and on the different points where the J tire trains are situated. In 1877. J. A. Fillmore, general super intendent of the Southern Pacific, had i occasion to reprimand "Johnny" Fitz- J gerald, of the Summit lire train, who is tho oldest tiro train engineer in the service, for not running fast enough. A few weeks later Mr. Fillmore hap pened to be at the Summit when an alarm was rung in from Emigrant Gap. twenty-two miles away. lie thought he would like to make the run, and so lie boarded the engine. "Johnny" saw his opportunity and determined to make the most of it. As soon as the words "clear track" were received, "Johnny" pulled out, and throwing the throttle wide open let her go. In less time than it takes to tell it, the train was running n tulle a minute. Open places in the sheds a hundred yards in extent seemed little more than flashes of light, and the Cascade bridges were crossed with such speed that the train seemed to P ap them, as a gra.vhound does a fence. Mr. Fillmore sat perfectly still, except that once or twice he asked the en gineer to test his all*. In twenty-three minutes they had made the run of twenty-two miles, and when "Johnny" turned to look at the superintendent, expecting to get a ripping up the back, Mr. Fillmore said cheerily, "That's the way to go to a fire." Near Cisco is one of the highest mountain ridges on tho western slope of the Sierra. On the topmost, point of ! this ridge, at an altitude of nearly 8.000 feet, there Is a little cabin, in which a man and his wife and a boy live from the time the first snow begins to dis appear in the spring of the year until it reappears in the autumn. This man and boy from the point of observation which they occupy can see thirty-five miles of snow sheds. Day and night, no matter how stormy the weather, this man and boy keep their vigil, aud at the slightest sigu of j fire threatening the sheds a telephone message locating it is immediately sent to Cisco, from which place orders are Issued to have it extinguished. These fires are located from Red Top, tho name by which the site of the # litlle cab in is known, by means of a dial in the j center of which an arrow swings like ! the needle of a compass. The point of j the arrow is directed toward the fire , which causes the feather end to cover a I marking on the dial indicating the I name or number of the place toward j which the arrow points. STUDY OF THE MOON. Peculiarities Noted in Ita Appearance at Different Reasons. To the casual observer the motions of the moon appear to be exceedingly whimsical and irregular. If its place in the sky is watched it will be found that it is first north and then south of the sun's path and west of that lum inary. The last two motions are steady and regular from east to west, carry ing the moon in its endless swing arouud the heavens, starting at new moon near the sun and progressing un til at full moon the whole visible por tion of tho sky separates the two bodies. After this there are two weeks in which the moon still appears to move back ward, approaching the sun from the other side, then, again apparently all of a sudden, it passes the sun and we behold a "new moon." Tho north and south motions of the moon are entirely different. While per forming its endless Journey from west to east, there are two special periods in which it either moves far northward or takes up its position low down in the south. In spring the first motion is north, but afterward the general motion is reversed, in December you will note that the full moon occurs at. the most northerly point in her course and in June at the most southerly. This is why we have most light from the full moon of winter and least from that of summer Observations on these various movements indicate to us the path which the moon moves about tlie earth and also show us that that body iti dif ferent parts of its orbit is at varying I distances from the earth. | This indicates that the moon's path I is not a circle, but an eclipse, having I the earth in one of its fuel. The moon I being governed directly and held in j position by the attraction of the earth. holds its primary movements in a path 1 around our globe, hut the attraction ; energy of the sun and of the giant plan ets. perhaps in si lesser degree, pro duces motions in the moon which may he summarized briefly as a combination of tin- six following movements: ill Its revolution about llie earth, (2) its revolution with 1 lie earth about: the sun, (') the vibrating eccentricity of its orbit, ( t) the slow, direct rotation in the "line of apsides." t."i the retrograde ' rotation in the line of nodes and db its rotation on its axis.—St. Louis he public. Incongruous Friends. j A pretty story of affection between ' a cat and a rat comes from the shores I of Lake Ontario byway of the New | York World. A farmer, who is also a shopkeeper, found a nest of rats in pulling down an old shed, and one of two baby rats stole into a pocket of his coat. It seemed so helpless and trust ful that he could not hear to kill it. and kept it as a pet, feeding it with meat and cheese, which it took from his hand. Its life was in constant danger from the cat, and to save it he put it into a large wire cage. By and by the cat grew accustomed to its presence, and finally the fanner one day put the eat also into the cage. It made one or two half-hearted attempts to catch the rat, and then lay down and went to sleep. The upshot of the matter was that the two animals became fast friends. Now they fairly live together. By day they wander in company nbruit the house and shop, or lie side by side in the show window, where tho strange sight at tracts much attention. They are very jealous of each other. If any one pets the cat, the rat runs about squeaking with anger. If the rat is the favored one, the cat in its turn bristles and complains. If thev get separated for any great length of time they are sure to be soon looking for each other, and sometimes wheu | they meet they fairly dance for joy. Not in llin. "I hardly know whether to marry or not," said the count; "her father is in the clothing trade." "There is money in clothes." said tho (hike. "There isn't any in mine.' said the count - Indianapolis Journal. When an Arab fails to make a raise i any where else, lie can "strike" his tent. ARMY OF THE SULTAN A FACTOR THE POWERS MUST TAKE INTO ACCOUNT. A Nation of Soldiers with Brninlcsn Generals—The Turkish Irregulars— Bands of Cutthroats Who A re Worth less Against Civilized Troops The Turk us a Fighter. ■* The interest at present felt in Turkish affairs generally is intensified with re gard to the Turkish means of defense against the aggressions of Europe, for al though the existing difficulty may be smoothed down without an outbreak of war. still any untoward Incident, when affairs are in so critical u condition, may be productive of serious results. The Turkish empire has long been de nominated "The sick man of Europe," but this expression must be understood to apply only to the political state, for, individually and collectively, the Turks are about as healthy a lot of people 11s exist on the globe. The Government is weak and inefficient, as despotisms grown old are wont to be, but tliut is 110 sign that it is near the end of its days, for tin r Oriental despotisms have a trick of hanging 011 to life, sometimes for cen turies after they ought to die. The Greek empire at Constantinople lived for five centuries after its territory had been rediucd to the region immediately sur rounding that city, and it is not at all impossible that the Ottoman empire may not follow its example, ami it probably OKFK liltS OF Tin. I/.AM. will unless the powers show more unan imity in regard to disposing of its estate. But t.hning without their host, for, lazy and degenerate :is they are, the Turks t: mar . i lus fighters, and when their : in n: isui is roused, they show a degree military aggressiveness that has more om-f dutnfounded their opponents. During the last three centuries they have ! a dozen wars with surrounding pow. rs, ami, on each occasion, their op ponents were forced to confess that, had the Moslems been properly commanded, the result would have been extremely doubtful. Their weakness lias always been the miraculous stupidity of the Ot toman generals. Whenever they have been led by trained officers of other 11a lions than their own, their record has beet: good. It has always been clear of cow ardice. Their fatalistic creed makes them strangers to fear; to thoiu every thing is "Kismet," or fate; and if com manded to go forward to attack a battery, where certain death seems to await every assailant, they neither hesitate nor falter, considering that, if it is their fate to be killed at such a time and place, there is no use trying to avoid it. Besides this, they are a hardy race, capable of enduring great fatigue and hardship without break ing down, of inarching long distances without food or rest, and all these quali tics, in a soldier, are invaluable. The Turkish army, therefore, is a fn •tor to be considered in the discussion o the fate of the Ottoman empire, for if tli Turks should make up their minds not t be divided up into parcels without 1 struggle they are capable of offering : very effective resistance to any proposei plan for the partition of their count 17 among the powers of Europe. The area of the Turkish empire is about 1.000,00b square miles, or a little over one-half that of the United States, and the popu lation is nearly 40,000,000, or about two thirds that of our own. These figures, however, do not furnish a definite idea of the strength, or more properly, of the weakness of the country, for comprised in the enumeration of inhabitants are tin people of all the races that were con quered by the Turks, who constitute more than one-half of the whole number. Christians within the limits of Turkey A BUGLER. are regarded as aliens, or rather as ene mies, whom both the Government and the Mussulman population would be glad to see removed or exterminated. They are not liable to military duty, but, instead, pay an exemption tax of about $1.50 n head per annum. Theoretically, every Moslem in the do minions of the Sultan is a soldier on fur lough liable at any time to be railed 011 to serve his master in field or garrison, but such is the corruption prevailing in every part of the Turkish administration, both civil nnd military, that any one can seen re an exemption who is able to pay for it There is. moreover, a system of conscrip tion organized by law that is supposed to lc carried out In every part of the empire. It is bused 011 the military system of Geiv many, for since the last Tureo-Itussian war the army of the Porte has been en tirely reorganized by German officers, who naturally adopted the plan prevailing in their own country, and with which they wero most familiar. The military system consists of the Nizam, or regular army, two classes of Itedifs, or Land wehr, and the Mustafiz, unawering to the Laudsturm of Prussia. At the annual conscription the ranks of the regular army are supposed to be filled by the men of the levy, who must serve six years with the regular army ana nrst reserve. Tliey then pass into the second reserve, to bo called out only on emergencies. Hero they remain eight years, subjected to an nual drill at their homes, then become members of the third reserve for six years longer, thus passing twenty years, either in the army or in one of the re serves. This is the system and, in work ing order, it won Id furnish the Govern ment with an army, in time of war, cf nearly 1,000,000 men. But, like every thing else in Turkey, theory is one thing and practice quite another, and, as a matter of fact, there are very few districts where the system has been put in run ning order, and none where the conscripts of the year do not buy exemption from service whenever they are able to do so. In one case in a military district near Smyrna, the population made a contract with the enrolling officers that, in con sideration of a lump sum, paid down in cash, the district should be exempt. The money was paid, and the conscripting officers returned fictitious rolls, and went hack, rich and contented, to Constanti nople. In another, the conscripting offi cer was prevailed 011 to enroll the popu lation of the prisons; in a third all the beggars and poverty-stricken wretches to be found in tho district were entered us conscripts, while the able-bodied men escaped. In reality, the Turkish army is com posed of young men. unable, under the oppressive system of taxation, to make J V PICAI. K rnnißH PACK tneir uviug on rue rarm or in tlie work shop, who, therefore, entered the army voluntarily, and such conscripts as could he secured in those districts of Asia Minor and European Turkey where the military system has been put in working order. There is another class, comprising wide ly different races of men, who resemble FOR SERVICE IN ARMENIA. each other in nothing but the fact that they are all alike, savages. The Turkish irregulars are all cavalry, and probably not since the time of Atilia has a worse lot of thieves, robbers, cut-throats, mur derers and all round desperadoes been got together. Turks from Anatolia, Kurds from Armenia, Cireassians and Georgians who prefer n wandering life of rapine and murder to the iron discipline of the Rus sian military service, Persians, the de scendants of the Parthinns so much dreaded 2,000 years ago, Arabs from the Red Sea Coast, Druses from the moun tains of Syria and Palestine, negroes from Egypt, fugitives from justice of" every surrounding country, escaped jail birds, anybody is welcome to their bands who has a horse and arms and can ride, steal and shoot. These are the men who desolated Bulgaria; these are the ineu who are now making Armenia a desert. The only discipline they recognize is obe dience to their leader; the}' have no sys tem of drill and the terror they inspire is due solely to their well deserved repu tation as butchers. When they wage war it is not war. but extermination, l'or they make not the slightest distinction between the armed and. the defenseless, killing all alike with equal ferocity. To them an expedition is a raid, during which neither man, woman nor child is spared, and what property cannot be carried oIT is burned. Our American Indians were gentlemen compared with them, for the Indians did occasionally spare the chil dren, adopting them into their tribes and raising them as members of their fami lies, but to the natural savagery of their dispositions the Turkish irregulars add a religious fanaticism of the most exag gerated type—a fanaticism that causes them to regard the murder of a uon- Mohammedan as a religious duty, an act extremely laudable in the sight of Allah and which will entitle them to much credit, both in this world and in the next. Principles, if they can be so called, such as these render the Turkish irregulars ob jects of the tit most terror to defenseless villagers subject to their raids, and have at one time or another made their name a terror word from Vienna to Teheran. Along the frontiers of Hungary and Po land they were equally hated and feared for 200 years; the Popes of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries issued sptciai prayers for protection against them; the inhabitants of Southern Russia for a cen tury and n half had an annual fast day to insure immunity from their raids. | To tho regular troops of any civilized potvei 4 they are contemptible. They are armed with antiquated, hint-lock, smooth bore muskets, 0 or 7 feet long, pistols of equally ancient pattern and sabers. One cowboy, with a Winchester, a pair of good revolvers and a horse tleet enough io keep him froin.being overwhelmed by J numbers, would be more than a match ' for n dozen of them. They are bravo ' enough, in their ferocious, brutal way, I ! but the worthlessness of their weapons renders them a scoff to any organized I body of troops. During the war of 1870, ! oho regiment of Russian foot drove before it, in headlong route, over 0.000 of these marauders. A company of forly Rus sian frontier guards has been known to disperse a band of 700. Worthless for fighting purposes, they are vnluablo only when murder and pillage are to be done. They are picturesque objects, in their Orientul costumes, with belts stuck full of pistols nud daggers, but, lu a soldier, plcturesquouess Is a qunlity of very Hinull consequence. In actual warfare, therefore, with any civilized power, Turkey must rely ou tho infantry and artillery, tho effective forco of thoso two arms being less than 400,- : 000 mou. Such a forco as this could offer I n strong protest to the partition of tho j Turkish empire, but oven after its ro sistanco was overcome, tho trouble would not be at nil end, for before tho division [ could bo norformcd n campaign in every neighborhood would bo necessary. Tho ! fanatical hatred entertained by Moslems j for everybody and everything Christian ' is almost inconceivable by tho Western j mind. When, ut the close of the war of 1870, Bosnia was assigned to Austria, an " A HIGH PRIVATE. army of nearly 100,000 men was needed to complete the transfer of the territory, although there was not a Turkish regi ment in the province. The Moslem pop ulation rose en masse, the women fought sido by sido with their husbands with guns, pistols, swords, hatchets and even pitchforks. Military operation had to bo carried on against every village, and a year elapsed ere there was complete sub mission and order was restored. In case a partition of Turkey wcro attempted, population uprisings might be expected in every province from Albania to the Euphrates. They would all ho ineffec tive, of course, but they would all be bloody and costly. A knowledge of the facts tliut Turkey is by no means help less, even with a bankrupt treasury and corrupt administration, lias probably something to do with the general w.l! ness to give the unspeakable Turk a lu tle more time. Nobody believes he will reform, but his army is too big and its lighting reputation is too well established for aggressive operations to be thoroughly undertaken. | GIANT AND LILLIPUTIAN WED. He Becomes Tired of Her, and Now They Arc Divorced. Pretty little blue-eyed Minehen Beck ! er came to tills country five years ago. She was then about 20 years old. and not more than three feet six inches tall. Since that time she says she lias grown IYj or 2 inches. Minehen will be re membered as the leading lady In the Lilliputian company which made such a success in this country. When Min ehen came to New York her heart was free. Two years ago she severed lier connection with the Lilliputians, and since that time has not appeared in pub lic. Some time prior to that the little wo man made the acquaintance of George HOLT.IIEIMER AND MISS BECKER. Ilolzlieimer, a good-looking Teuton, i lie is a big. blonde raoustached man, , over six feet tall, and weighs 200 ) pounds or more. He wooed and won her. They were married on June 25, 1 1803. They settled down in their cozy little home, and the bride says they * loved each other dearly. But last ] spring her big husband told her he had grown tired of her. They quarreled, and finally they separated. Minehen 1 remained at the home on Fulton ave- J nue, while her husband took up liis Q abode in the neighborhood. In August the little wife brought an action for ? absolute divorce, which was granted her. London funerals cost over $5,000,000 annually. The commercial marine of Canada gives employment to some GO,OOO sail ors. A Japanese seal fishing company has been organized by Tokio capitalists to compete with foreign sealers off the coast of Japan. An area of 5,000 square miles south of GO degrees north latitude in Canada is suitable for the production of all crops grown in England. A Chesterville, Me., couple recently celebrated their golden wedding in the very house into which they moved on their wedding day fifty years before. Almost the only monument of the Ro man dominion in Egypt, the fortress of Babylon, at old Cairo, is being torn down to make way for modern build ings. Ivildare and Wicklow have been just ly termed the garden of Ireland, for no where is nature more profuse in her display of the picturesque and the beau tiful. A footman in an Englism nobleman's house testified recently that his regular pay was $250 a year. He also testified that his average "tips" amounttHl to $3,000 a year. Tho Magna Charta, or great charter, of English liberties is still preserved In the British Museum. The impress of the seal and King John's name are both very distinct. A Kansas district has a written con tract with a teacher to teach the school, chop the wood, make the fire, sweep and find the matches for $35 a mouth. The teacher Is a woman. A mass of eels weighing 300 pounds clogged the water wheel which runs the electric light plant of Riverhead, L. 1., tho other night, and the town was in darkness for several hours. . Of the 4,014 seal skins brought Into Fort Townseud, Wash., during the sea son just closed 3,050 were of female seals, an Indication of the rate at which the seal herds aro being destroyed. The persons of African descent In the United States are classified according to the degrees of colored blood into 0,337.080b1ack5, 050,080 niulattoes, 105, 135 quadroons and 00.03G octoroons. A seaweed of the South Pacific often grows to be thirty or forty inches in diameter and 1,500 to 2,000 feet long. It has no root in the proper sense, the nourishment being absorbed from the water. Down to the depth of 200 fathoms, where daylight appears, the eyes of a fish get b : gger and bigger. Beyond thai depth small-eyed forms set in, with long feelers developed to supplement the eyes. Three times as many American horses have been sold in England this year as were called for in 1894, and their aver age price at the ports of shipment has been $155. They are used chletly for draft in London. The Bank of England lias 1,100 of ficials on its pay roll, which amounts to about $1,000,000 a year, and 1,000 clerks. If a clerk is late three times lie receives a warning, the fourth time he is discharged at once. There is a woman contractor and quarry operator in Buffalo, who has supplied stone for some of the most important structures in the city. She is tho only woman who is an active member of the Buffalo Builders' Ex change. A novel document was filed in the office of the county recorder at Sedalla, Mo., a few days ago. It is a paper Wherein Mrs. Belle Aslier apprentices her daughter, Letha As her, 9 years old, to Mary Jane Love, "to learn the trade and art of housekeeping." A thorough test is to be made in Mari on County, Florida, as to the adaptabil ity of tlie soil for the profitable cultiva tion of tobacco. It is estimated that 1,000 acres will be planted with to baeco seed from Cuba and Sumatra during the present winter. M. Lebeau lias succeeded in obtaining pure glucinum from the emerald by heating t'he precious stone in an electric furnace until the sillicon is volatilized. The residue is combined with hydro fluoric acid, and after a series of puri fications gives pure glucinum. Some people have been making a count and find that not one of the State governors in tlie United States is a Roman Catholic. There are no Roman Catholics in the Cabinet, none in tho Supreme Court, and there never has been one in the White House. A Parisian had the remains of his brother cremated. The ashes were put in a leather bag, and sent by rail to his brother's home. The bag was mislaid, and a suit has been instituted by the brother against the railway company for the value of the dead man's ashes. A Spanish illustrated comic weekly, La Tela Cortada ("The Cut Cloth") ij printed ou cloth tho size of an ordinary handkerchief. After it has been read it can be put in water, when the ink will wash out and only a handkerchief remain. The price of this novel Journal is 5 cents. Experiments Indicate that spiders 'have a long range of vision. It is not always possible to tell, however, wheth er the lower animals perceive by sight or hearing, or by the action air in mo tion has on their bodies. It is asserted that mice are sensitive to motions of tho air which to human ears create no sound whatever. Knew Whereof He Spoke. "He had the reputation of being a good man, but I consider him the tough est citizen I ever struck!" With this remark the cannibal chief tain put the 11(1 on the pot again and added fresh fuel to the fire.