FREELfIHD TRIBUNE. KSTAIILISIIKI) 1 8 SR. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AKD FRIDAY, I lIY THE TRIEUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OFFICE; MAIN STREET A HOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATE* FREELAND.— J'heTiniiUNE is delivered by J c:ii - : i rs to subscribers In Froclandattho rate of 1 cents per month, paj'ahl.' every two months or slsoa year, payable in advance | The TRIUUNE may be ordered direct form tho J carriers or from the office, torn plaints of j lrrejjTiilar or tanlv delivery service will re- j ceive prompt attention. BY MAIL —The TRIHUNB is sent to out-of town subscribers for $1.51 a year, payable iu advance; prorata terms for shorter periods. The datj when the subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals mast bo made at tho expiration, other- Wise the subscription will lie discontinued. Entered at tho Postofflco at Frcelund. Pa., as Second-Class Matter, Moke all money orders, checks etc t paynhlt to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. A compiler of statistics recently an nounced that fifty per cent, of the personages in the "Dictionary of Na tional Biography," a British publica tion, were children of clergymen. The "Soo" Canal was built and Is owned and operated by the United i States. It carries fifty per cent: more tonnage than the Suez Canal, and our Government dors not charge the ships that use it a cent. British vessels have the benefit of it as well as American. The destruction of the Palisades, j which ha- brought the reproach of j vandalism upon two rich States, has Been stopped ly the commission ap pointed for that purpose until the Ist of June next, by which time it is | hoped that the Legislatures of New | York and New Jersey will establish j an interstate park along the river aud I preserve the Palisades forever. The Philadelphia Record observes: •'When free from every form of ner vous debility a person may expose himself to draughts, dampness and other usual causes of colds and escape entirely, while at another time, when weary or depressed from any cause, he may become the victim of a fatal attack of pneumonia from a much slighter • xposure. The nervous origin of colds seems to bo recognized by all ' physicians who have made a special i study of acute diseases of the lungs and throat." Continued satisfactory results are rc- j ported of the operation of the indeter minate sentence and the parole law in Indiana, even exceeding the hopes of those who were favorable to the law. I Much of the improvement in the penal institutions due to the new laws can not he told, but the tangible results shown In figures are very encouraging. From the reformatory 71S men have been paroled since April, 1597, and un satisfactory results are reported in only eighteen per cent, of the cases. Better figures even are given by the State prison, which reports that of the | 2.70 men paroled only twenty-three, or ! nine per cent., have violated the par- ' ole. The wages earned by the paroled men, including the hoard furnished them, aggregate $170,150, practically all of which would have been lost lo 1 lie men and their families under the old system. lliileit in Greece. Consul McGinley reports to the State Department from Athens: "The Greek health authorities require that nil trunks, packages, etc., the personal baggage of travelers, when unaccom panied by their owners, must, on ar rival at any port in Greece, be accom panied by a certificate of origin or a certificate from the health authorities of the port from which the baggage was shipped to Greece. As ignorance of the foregoing rule has caused many American travelers delay and trouble in regaining possession of such hag gage, and as thousands of Americans annually visit Athens and others parts of Greece, this information should he published widely in order that they may come prepared with the necessary certificates to release their baggage without delay.—The Express Gazette. Vienna Wires Cannot Cross. In Vienna effective means of pre venting future accidents through the breaking of overhead trolley wires have been decided upon. All telephone and telegraph wires which cross trol ley wires are to lie placed underground in the form of cables at the point where the crossings occur. Up to 1701 there were hut three banks in the United States, with an aggregate capital of $.2,000,000. Last year there were 3.651 National banks in the coun try and the total capital invested in banks of all kinds in the United States siaouiiu to almost $8.0c0,000,000. In Japan It 13 customary for the bride to give all her wedding pres ents <0 her parents. LOVE AND I. Wf hold hands, Love and I; And bit together; We spread the book of llfo Upon our knees and turn its loaves, In l'air or cloudy weather, To see But pictures there and poetry. There may be hard, dry prose Somewhere upon those Pages; yet we see But pictures there aud poetry; And sigh for those Who only lind the hard dry prose. —William J. Lamptou in the New York Sun. j A Coiiry Cousin. [ Tho news and thu dessert were served simultaneously. "By George, if I hadn't nearly forgotten!" quoth Stafford pere. Ho rummaged in an inner pocket. "Can't find the letter. Must have left it at the ofiice. Any how, it's from my cousin. Godfrey Chester " "Now, Henry!" interrupted the mild voice of Mrs. Stafford in amused ex postulation. "Why will you keep up that Action about the cousinship? It is mythical, and you know it!" "It's certainly remote," conceded the beaming paterfamilias at the opposite end of the table, "but there once was a relationship—a long time ago, I ad mit. But Chester and I have taken the world as we found it. He's a good fellow and I've always been urging him to manage that our young people may become acquainted. He writes that his daughter will pass through Chicago tomorrow cn the way to New York, and will spend a few days with us. He says he wishes one of my family would moot her. Bless my soul, here's the letter after all!" He put on his spectacles and read aloud: " 'You can't mistake her. She's a | curly-headed little girl, in a gray gown aud a hat with gray feathers. She's ti nice child, and I'll he glad to have her meet your youngsters.' There!" I "A child!" groaned Ralph, who was "2 and studious. He swallowed his cafe noir at a gulp and rose disgustedly. "Youngsters, indeed!" cried Dick disdainfully. "Does he take us for klndergartners ?" Ross, who was the eldest, smiled in quite a superior and disinterested fashion. He boasted a flourishing mustache. He was studying law. Plainly, the subject had no interest for him. "Eh, but one of you must meet the child!" cried the head of the house. "You'll go, Ralph?" "Can't, sir. I'm doing an article on tho architecture of the tenth century. It takes a lot of research. I'll he all morning in the Newberry library." Henry Stafford, huge of girth, rose ate of visage and twinkling of eye, turned Ills harvest moon face implor ingly toward his youngest son. "You, Dick?" "Got a golf match on. Can't make it, sir." "Dear, dear! If your sister were only at home " "She'll bo hack tomorrow after noon," put in Mrs. Stafford. "But the little girl gets here in the morning. She must he met. She is from a comparatively small town. She would bo quite bewildered were she to And herself alone in Chicago. Besides, I'm under several obliga tions to Chester in a business way." He sent the good looking young fellow with the mustache an appealing glance. "I wonder now, Ross, If you " Ross laughed leniently. "You poor, perplexed old chap! Yes, I'll see that the child gets here all right." "Good!" said Henry Stafford, with a sigh of relief. "Good!" But when the Western train disgorg ed its jostling multitude in the Union depot the following morning Ross Stafford, standing close by the iron gates, found that he had undertaken a task of greater magnitude than he had at the time imagiaed. There was such a crush of people, stout and thin, tall and short, big and little. There were children—processions of them. But they all seemed to belong to the folks who hurried them along. Never : a glimpse could he catch of a curly headed little girl in a gray gown, wearing a hat with gray feathers. Or —was the dress brown? By Jove! 1-Ie i wasn't even sure of that, j The last laggard group trickled away. Ross knew the conductor of tho Denver train—spoke to him as ho came hurrying along. ! "All off your train, Brigham?" j "Sure." "There was a little girl coming to Chicago—had curly hair—a blue dress —a green hat—blest if 1 remember! Wasn't she on?" j "Alone, was she?" | "Yes." j "No, sir. Didn't come. Sure? Course I am." I Ross wheeled around, j "Well, I'll telephone the folks that she wasn't on. Dad can wire her peo ple and find out —1 beg your pardon!" i And he suddenly found himself bow ing profoundly, hat in hand, before a i young woman with whom he had nl -1 most collided in his haste, a slender i young woman, a graceful young wom an, a lovely young woman, as his sus j ceptible heart Instantly acknowledged. I She accepted his apology with a ' slight bend of tho head—a vivid blush, i Half way up the stairs he glanced back j saw her standing where he had left i her. He hesitated —went back. "You are waiting for some one? Can J 1 bo of service?" "Thank you/' Ye gods, what a sweet voice. "I am afraid there has been a mistake. No one has come to meet me. May I ask you to call a cab?" And when he had done so. when she had thanked him, when he stood bare headed on the curbstone as the vehicle rolled away, he recollected that he had not listened to the address she had given to the driver, and he walked off in a towering rage at his own imbecil ity. Never was there so dreary a day, al though the late August sunshine found its way into his office. Never had the reading of the law seemed such a dull and tiresome drudgery. Never before had the pages blurred into a mass of meaningless black marks. But, then— never before had a bewitching young face come between him and his bookfv a face with reddish-gold ringlets clus tering around a white forehead, and shy eyes the color of woodland vio lets! He leaped from his seat as a bright thought struck him. lie would hunt up the cabman. That was the thing to do! But, although he hung around the Union depot for two whole hours, and questioned every jehu within reach, he could not find the man he sought. It was evidently that particu lar cabman's busy day. Tired and disgusted, Ross Stafford took a plunge at the athletic club, got himself home, shrugged himself into his evening clothes, for he was going out after dinner, and went down to the parlor to find hiself face to face with the divinity of the red-gold ring lets and the violet eyes! "Ross, my dear," cooed Mrs. Staf ford, "let me introduce you to Miss Chester, whom somehow you managed to miss this morning. Why, you " For they were smiling at each other —merrily, spontaneously. "Indeed, no, mother!" Perhaps he held the pretty hand she gave him a little longer than was necessary. "I met Miss Chester this morning. Did she not tell you I put her in a cab?" Miss Chester laughed. Ross Stafford laughed. And the bewilderment of the house of Stafford, of the golfing son, and the studious son, as they v/ere in turn presented, set them laughing again. "Lord bless me!" cried Stafford sen ior, ruffling his hair; "your father said you were a little girl!" "Oh, I shall never be grown up to papa!" criea Miss Chester. "He said," stammered the young man who was getting up an article on the architecture of the tenth century, "that —that you were a nice child!" "Don't you think," queried Adele Chester, mischievously, "that I'm nice?" Whereat Ralph grew guiltily red. "A gray gown!" gasped Dick. "And —and a hat with gray feathers!" "My traveling costume. Don't you," with sparkling eyes, "find this becom ing?" "This," was a trailing, foamy, be rufiled robe, all delicately green and white as the crest of a breaker, a dress that revealed while concealing the snowiness of arms and bosom. Becom ing! Ross told lier then and there how becoming. Not in words—dear no! But words are so stupid—sometimes. Helen Stafford reached home before dinner was over. Her brothers' rap turous reception amazed her! Never had she known how they missed her! Nor could she dream that each of the three young hypocrites was saying to himself, "She won't go oast in such a hurry if she and Helen take to each other." They did take to each other. Ross found it was not necessary to keep his engagement that evening, and permit ted his friend to cool his heels alone at their appointed rendezvous. Ralph learned his tenor went wonderfully well with the pure soprano of their guest. And Dick was so anxious to initiate Miss Chester into the mys teries of flashlight pictures that he made himself no end of a bore. The country cousin of the Staffords did not to go east that week—nor the next. When she did go all the mirth and laughter of the Stafford domicile seemed to go with her. One morning a week after her departure Ralph and Dick said some bitter things when they discovered that Ross had found out he must attend to business in New York, and had left for that city on the mid night train. And when Ross returned, silent, but smiling .and exultant, they wore not at all backward about telling him with true fraternal frankness their opinion of his conduct. "You wore awfully good to go to meet that little country lassie!" com mented Ralph witheringly. "I believe you knew all the time she was the prettiest kind of a young girl!" "Kindness—sheer kindness on my part, dear boy! But, as I have striven to impress on you, virtue is ever its own reward." "Oh, come off!" entreated Dick. "You just got the inside track, and you kept it." "I assure you in taking my late hasty trip I had only the best inter ests of my brothers at heart. My sole ambition was to secure you the most charming sister-in-law in the world!" Helen jumped up. "Oh, Ross! Did you—did she " He laughed quizzically. "Adele gave me a message for you, my dear. She said to tell you that you are to be " "What—-Ross?" "Bridesmaid!" —Chicago Tribune. A Itoor'ft Unkind .Toko. A trooper in Paget's Horse who was taken prisoner writes home that the Boer commandment, slyly pointing to the letters P. H. on his prisoner's hel met, asked; "What does 'P. H.' stand for? 'Perfectly Harmless* ?" —West- minster gazette. Every man has his field of useful ness, but lots of them aro too lazy to | climb the fence. A PSYCHIC PHENOMZNON. In This (nun No Heed Wio raid tm tht Warning*. "Speaking of superstitions and Strange warnings that come to people," said a veteran Washington correspondent, "I had an experience once that i hardly know how to ac count for. 1 may say in advance that 1 don't believe in any of the business that cannot be demonstrated scienti fically. One day, not a great while after the present elevator to the house press gallery had been put in. my mother sent for me to stop at her house on my way down town, as she had something particular to see me about. I went, and she asked me if there wasn't a new elevator to the press gallery. I told her one had been put in three or four months be fore that. She said that was it. and that 1 must not ride in it. for she had dreamed the night before that 1 had been crushed to death in it. I laughed at her, of course, and went on my way. Down on P street I met an aunt who told me she had some thing odd to tell me. She said she had been the day before, with a niece of her husband, to see a fortune tell er, as the niece had taken a fancy to see one of those fakirs. The fortune teller, however, instead of telling the niece anything, had directed her re marks to her (my aunt) and had told her that she had a relative, a young man, whom she should warn, as he would be crushed to death in an ele vator. That was rather a jar to me, as I was her only young man relative, and as I had so shortly before been warned by my mother. However. I laughed at her also and went on my way to the Capitol. "I went about the committee rooms awhile, and at last. Quite forgetful of my late warnings, went to the ele vator to go up to the gallery. The elevator man, an old fellow whom I had known for some time, was in the cage when I got there, and before opening it he talked to me through the bars. " 'J don't know.' said he. 'whether I ought to let you come in here or not.' " 'Why not?' I inquired, laughing. " 'Because,' said he. as serious as could be, 'I dreamed last night that I had run the elevator up too high and that as you started to get in you slipped some way under it. and when I got down to you at the bottom of the shaft you were smashed to death.' "This looked like the 'fatal' three warnings,' and I confess I had a few doubts myself, but I had some nerve left, and I jollied him on his notion and got in. On ray way up I told him what my mother and my aunt had told me, and the old fellow was so scared that he hardly knew what to do, but I got through all right, and up to date I have not been crushed in that elevator or any other, but, of course, that's no sign I won't be, and if I ever am. the cranks will be sure to hold me up as a frightful exam ple. I suppose there are some people who wouldn't ride in that elevator for all kinds of money, and still they may fall down stairs at any moment and break their necks." —Washington Star. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. The highest spot inhabited by hu man beings on this globe is the Bud dhist cloister of Hanle, Tibet, where 21 monks live at an altitude of 16,000 feet. Three miles from the village cf Krisuvik, in the great volcanic district of Iceland, there is a whole mountain composed of eruptive clay and pure white sulphur. A beautiful grotto pen etrates the western slope to an un known depth. In the western part of British Col umbia is a novel railway, two miles in length. The rails are made of trees from which the bark has been stripped, and these are bolted together. Upon them runs a car with grooved wheels ten inches wide. Bug eccentricities are being brought into a special collection by the British museum. It has now motns with male wings on one side and female wings on the other; butterflies with no fore wings, and insects with an abnormal number of antennae or of legs. Ed. Geoghegan of West Point, Ivy., has the most remarkable horse in that state, if not in the United States. This horse has as keen a scent for a par tridge as any setter or pointer in the country. He can scent tliem from 75 to 100 feet, and never makes a mis take. 110 pays no attention to rab bits or to any bird but the partridge. One would think that 12 wrs more entitled to be considered an "even" number than 10, for its half is an "even," whereas the half of ten is "odd." on the Stock Exchango 12 is an "odd" number. The house takes Ave shares as the basis of dealing, remarks Commerce, and all multiples ©f fiv? are considered "even" numbers. Any intermediate numbers arc "odd," and parcels of shares not divisible by five arc difficult to sell, except at a reduced price. Order! Order! The dignity of the House of Com mons consists in inventing all sorts of childish excuses for shouting "Order!" After a few years of it the average member seems to become a sort of au tomatic machine wound up to shout "Order!" The House would shout "Order!" if the place were struck with lightning, just as mechanically as it shouts "Order!" if a member puts an awkward question to a cabinet minis ter. —Ix>ndon Echo. THE MINE BREAKER BOY MOST CROTESQUE AND PATHETIC OF COLLIERY TYPES. Part Ho riay* in tlio Mine*, nil SI C n I-aiiltuage— What He Huh to Look For ward To —The Summer Senaon (.runts Relief from the ilreury Winter Trial*. The strike at the Pennsylvania coal mines is happily a thing of the past, but it will be many years before one of the most grotesque and pathetic of the mining types who figured in it will fade from the memory of those who had the opportunity of observing him at close range, writes the Hazclton (Penn.) correspondent of the New York Post. We heard quite a little during the progress of the strike of the "breaker-boy," but it is hardly likely that the general public has any fair notion of what he really is. He is, for the most part, a mere child; small in stature, as black as coal in face, hands, and clothes; a little lab orer chained to a monotonous toil, but a3 sharp and shrewd as a Yankee. The breaker itself, from which he gets his name, is a huge wooden box like structure. 100 feet or more in height. Its boards have been paint ed only by the sun. winds, and rain, and an ugly workhouse it is. Grim and dusty, it dots the landscape In every direction and around it are gathered the numerous pyramids of culm, for which it seems to stand as sponsor. The interior of one of these build ings can well be compared to the mechanism of the old-time church steeple. There is a maze of wood work, beam, upon beam; winding black staircases; platforms and floors ingrained with coal dust; innumerable troughs down which great chunks of mineral slide with a never-ceasing rat tle; translucent windowpancs, upon which the coal dust has hardened—ln all a realm of blackness, of dust, and everlasting crackling which would soon prostrate the average man. As the coal falls in at the top great rol lers receive and crush it into various sizes. Thence it falls downward, over the spirals or through tho jig ma chines and the screens, and finally tumbles into the railroad cars from the huge bins where it is momentarily stored. In this process the breaker boys are an Important and essential part. In the breakers where there are no spirals or jig machines, every bit of coal for the market must pass through their hands. One can see them sitting astride the troughs where they pick all day and toss slate or bono into re ceptacles at their sides. Amid a weird system of machinery, in a cen tral portion of the workhouse where tho shadows are lost in darkness, some have to spend all their time. When these youngsters begin to work, they must learn to discern defi nitely the differences between coal and foreign substances. The majority of them do this very quickly; some, of course, are backward, and consequent ly their productive powers are not so great. The smaller boys have charge of picking tho small sizes of coal, while among the larger chunks can be seen workers of various ages. Here and there an old man is found, whose hard and calloused hands tell of many years' labor in the roaring work houses, where on the sunniest days the light is equal only to that of the average cellar of a city dwelling. When clouds obscure the sun, a miser able darkness is over everything, and the eternal thunder of breaking and sliding coal is for ever heard. No more drear or desolate life can be pictured than that which is impressed upon one by the appearance of tho breakers on cloudy or rainy clays. Yet in them the little imps of black ness must work. In the winter sea son, when tho dull, sober light is more continuous, they uso minors' ever-wavering lamps. Winter time in the breakers means chilling work for /ill, men and boys. Few are the steampipes which heat the huge wood en structures, and as the icy water trickles down the chutes with the coal, it saturates the woolen gloves of these little mining slaves. But when the summer season comes It brings a great relief from winter trials. As the days grow longer the little fellows of 10, 12. or 14 can trudge to work in the day light, and there is no more walking over the roads perhaps for several miles, in the bitterness of the moun tain cold. Between half-past six and seven in the morning they begin for 10 or 12 hours' toil* while the sun rises and falls and millions of vonug being 3 like their own selves are enjoying the free bounties of na ture. To know really the hardships of work in such surroundings it is neces sary to observe and feel them. A sad sight it is to sco thousands of boys laboring in the grimy breakers for 30, 40 or 50 cents a day, lead ing a narrow, ignorant life, working as dumb machines, plodding away, in nocent of a broader existence, of the unconscious liberty of other children, and slaving because they were born among the mines—because the condi tions under which their fathers work compel It. For a few years all goe3 well, but then a change comes; the boy becomes a man; he recognizes another world living apart from him; he trios to ameliorate his condition; he demands more wages; he strikes and then, after a few weeks' priva tions, goes sullenly back to work once more. And yet, when the breaker-boys are boys, they can be said to be truly happy. In spite of a grimy face and black sooty clothes there is a sparkle In their eyes. A stranger among '.hem is examined as wonderingly as 1 astronomers scrutinize a newly tit* covered star. A sign for his presence is passed along, as it Is useless to at tempt speech, for the little fellows could shout themselves hoarse and not be heard more than a few feet away. Consequently all the boys have the gesture language. To ask a fel low-worker the time one boy will hold up his hand and quickly open and close his fist a number of times. This will bring an answer from another one, who stops work just long enough to make a few motions with his fing ers, designating the hour and the min ues before or after. They also employ a signal when an exchange of posi tions is desired. When the grinding monotony of the toil, the aching backs bent over the troughs, and the never ending roar of coal and machinery become monotonous, a rapid beating with the hand upon the breast will draw the attention of a fellow-worker, and the two will make a mutual and hurried trade of positions. The signal for a drink of water is a twist of the wrist around in front of the mouth, and there are many others. The little fellows, comical in all their ways, make use of various signs, gestures, and furtive glances when the boss, the foreman, or the mine superintend- ent approaches. SOUTH SEA WHITEBAIT, Trt Wliich Vsciflc Islnmlrri Have In Karly Autumn. For a few days In each year, and al ways in the month of September, the South Sea people have a treat In the way of fish—a small stream runner, smaller than the Thames whitebait and better flavored. The natural history of tills fish is obscure. It seems to be the fry of some fish, for when taken away many have the yelk sac still attached to them. The first that is known of it is when schools appear in the mouths of rivers. The river mouths at all sea sous of the tide seem fairly alive with the multitudes of fish not an inch long, but all swimming and leaping, under the impulse of the instinct to ascend the freshwater streams. Then they are simply by sinking a piece of cloth In the water and lifting it by Its four cor ners at once. A square of cloth six feet each way will hold, at an ordin ary draft, half a bushel of the fish, which t-he Samoans and many other islanders know under the name "inanga." During the few days they are running they are taken by millions without diminishing the schools in the least. Enormous numbers of tliem are known to pass up the streams, but once past the bar at the river mouth, they disappear from sight and all knowledge. Even In the height of their return they are not seen in the streams above the mouth, yet they are never seen running back to sea. The run lasts for not more than a week or ten days in any one stream, and on the island of Upolu seems to begin in the eastern streams earlier than in those down to the west. Apia harbor has two streams debouching into it. Not more than half a mile separates the two, yet the school begins to run in the Vaisin gano three days before it make its ap pearance in the Mulivai, which lies io the westward. In native cookery they are wrapped in banana leaves and steamed tor a short time. Dut the catchers eat them raw with great avidity. Once a for eign resident secured a mess of the dainty fish and gave them to a Sanio an cook boy to prepare after civilized methods of cookery. Tlio domestic ty rant was not prepared to venture on blunt refusal, but ho professed to be much shocked at the order. When asked why it aferied him that way, 1 e whispered that of course he would obey orders, but he would have to do it when he could be sure that no other Samoan couid discover >vaat tho was doing. Still further pressed for rea sons for so much secrecy,he announced that the "inanga" was, in his own way of putting it, extremely "tufauna" or low caste, and not at all a fish for one to cat so highly placed as the family he had the honor to serve. It was a clover device, hut it did not bear the investigation which followed, the qius tion of foods proper to certain ranks being interesting if true. The frying of tho fish showed why the cook 3hlrl:cd tho task. They keep their vi tality for a surprisingly long time, and when they are put into a hot pan It is a task of much attention to keep them there, for they hop about like so many winged creatures. It was solely to save himself this bother that the cook had Invented a low rank for a fish t".ai Is really superior to any of the most fa mous whitebait, whether of England, New Zealand or Puget Sound.—Forest and Stream. Metming of " Instantaneons Heath." "The instant of death," says tho Indian Lancet, "Is a vague and indefi nite expression when viewed from tho point of physiology. An animal or plant cannot be considered dead until it has reached that period in disinteg ration where it is impossible to re vive life. Some physiologists still fur ther restrict the definition to that point in decay where every cell in the body of an animal or plant Pas ceased to contain or consist of living protoplasm —ln other word 9, each cell must havo lost beyond recall its life p jwers. Prob ably one of the most striking examples of instantaneous death was that of the person who accidentally fell into a large vat of boiling caustic potash, which at once consumed the entire body, leaving only the metallic plates from the heals of hi 3 shoes and a few but tons from the clothing as remains. Death from electric shocks also border on the instantaneous prooess. It has been fouud that living cells taken from the body can be preserved in a nor mal state for a long time and then have life processes revived '■'/ they are properly treated.