Most Kansas counties pay a bounty on wolves killed. Yet wolves in that State have in a year killed only 1150 sheep, according to statistics collected by a member of the State Board of Agriculture, while tlia 155,570 dogs owned there have killed 1291 sheep. Bussji will have a new labor law after January 1. The working day is fixed at a maximum of eleven and a half hours; for Saturdays and the days preceding holidays it is ten hours, and ' on Sundays and holidays there is to be no work. Workmen who are not Christians will not be compelled to i work on the days held sacred by their sects. For night work eight hours will constitute a day's work. E!woodS. Eeary, a lawyer of Newark, 1 N. J., will be a model husband if he keeps the pledge he has taken, pre dicts the New York Press. He had to choose between it and a suit for di vorce. He promises to cease abso lutely the use of spirituous and malt liquors of every description; to spend his evenings in his wife's company at home or elsewhere, at her pleasure, and to give to her all the money he 1 earns. Bicycles are not yet very common in Spain. The authors of "Sketches i Awheel in Modern Iberia" were con- ! etantly frightening animals and an gering their owners; in one case a murderous assault by a drunken driver was narrowly averted. The writers comment on the noisiness of Spanish towns, the badness of coun try roads, the beauties of the scenery, and so forth, Postal afl'airs do not seem to improve at all. The writers mailed from Granada seven small ar ticles to the post in other countries, i and only one of them reached its des tination; and this was but a sample of their experiences. The New York Herald remarks: Science is at work on somo difficult matters, and up to date it has made a good record a3 a miracle worker. We are living in an exceptional epoch and the word impossible will very soon be expunged from the dictionary. Tesla tells us that he can telegraph without wires. He has been at work on the problem for a long while and has at last solved it. Wo are on the threshold t of great changes, and every man who j didn't die fifty years ago ought to shake hands with himself. There are two puzzles which remain. Somebody must discover the secret of the fish's tail, which puts our best propeller to 1 Bhame as a sort of stage coach affair, and then we shall have rapid transit across the ocean with a vengeance. Some one else must find the secret of 1 the bird's wing, and then we shall have air ships for passengers and merchan- ; dise. When we have made these two ; discoveries and applied them we shall look for the millennium, David 11. Brackett, who recently re turned to his old home in Portland, Me., after a residence of many years in Alaska, claims that he is the man who found the first nugget of gold in what is now known all over the world as the Klondike region. Brackett went to Alaska in 1877, and for a long time divided his energies between running a sawmill at Sitka and buying furs of the Indians. To carry on the latter industry he made long trips into the interior oil foot, and in the course of them he kept open an attentive but not very hopeful eye for signs of gold. "It was while on ono of these journeys in 1879," he says, "that I found the nugget. I had crossed the great back bone of the Alaskan mountain range and traversed the valley where Circle City, Fort Cudahy, Dawson City and Fort Beliance have since been built. One day I camped on the ledges above what I am sure is now called Bonanza Creek. Two of my Indian guides came in with furs at 10 o'clock that night, and I traded with them. Then, as it was still light, I walked down to the mouth of the creek, and there picked up a stone which had gold in it. 1 looked around for more, but, not find ing any, I put the stone in my pouch and did not think much more aboui the matter. Later, at Sitka, I showed the nugget to an old miner, who offered me $75 for it. I took the money, but wouldn't tell where I found the gold. I went up the Yukon in 1881 and tried to locate my creek again, but failed. Clarence Berry, of Fresno, Cak, went up the river in 1890, and, I suppose, located near Klondike and Bonanza Creek. He and Frank Pliiseator, but I have always claimed that I picked up the first nugget on Bonanza Creek. ■' Brackett declares that the mountains on the American side of the line are the real backbone of the range, and that all the [creeks and tributaries o' the Yukon Itiver are full of gold. There, he thinks, is the real source of the gold streak that reaches down through California, WAITING. Do the little brown twigs coinplaifc That they haven't a leaf to wear? Or the grass when the wind and ruin Pull at her matted hair? Do the little brooks struggle and moan When the lee has frozen their feet? Or the