Ill the course itf some d'sglug oera Uuu iu a garden at Ilaaleinere, En gland, a gardener unearthed a num ber of ancient vessel of eculir shape, UsgfJ-.'-r with S quantity of eal uueil liaiuan boues, at a depth of about two frt-t bWow the surface. Tbe British luunfuia authorities, who bare examined the dloovry, prooouiioe the vessel Ut leliig to tbe late Celtic age, about It. 0. IT;. Only three or tour v eases were found to be in a perfect condition. He computed that -twenty two onw and pot were orlgl aaUlf Interred at the spot llrlglit color assumed by uiapies, n Ionian and auipelopsl during the au tumn months are the result of tbe oxl sttciag of the color compounds, or col or generators, of the leaf ccllk. Ias .roLnu Ld cool weather in u.0tt favor able to the production of autuuiu tints aad alight frosts that are not He vera enough Ui kill the cells hasten the dis play of beaut by producing an eiixy im that brings forth the bright pur plea, uraugiM and red. Iearoi con taining niuch Unule arid never give bright autumn tinU, while those cou Mining sugar give the very prettiest. Ail Italian scientist claims to have -tabllbed that electric tramway an; great medium lu the disinfection of ionj. lie point out that the elec tric HMrfct which hi bo frequent an oc-i-nrreuce to the overhead trolley, aud tha eiobutiou of light from the car waml wbeu the rail U used for the return current transform the oxygen f the air Into ozone which hua a puri fying and disinfecting Influence. The .l.h r!lulini.wkA lll Utt IT U l fr.Vltlellt ruough to influence greatly the atmos pheric constituents, especially where tbe line passes through narrow tbor vughfanw Tbey become autlHeptlc Refit. Sailor vbtitUig the Island of Iy an. In the Hawaiian group, are great ly amtuwyl by the curious antics of the )ayan albatross), or gony. These bird MtuetlrneM perform, In pain, a kind of fiance, or. ia the sailors call It, "cake walk." Two albatrosses approach ono another, nodding end ranking profound bowa, croan their bills, produce uap )lug and groaning ftoumla, rise on their toea, puff out thlr breaata, and fiually part with more nodding and bowing, only to coma together again and rpt the performance. Occaalon aQy three engage at once la thla alngu lar amuaeaient The apectators axa 1 waa Inpreiuted with the extreme "po Iiteoeaa" of the blrda. . HU OUvar Lodge, eminent by hla dla rHea about electricity, believe that na baa found a method of electrifying the atmoavhere on a large ecaie, and that la thla manner duugeroua foga war rirera and harbor may be dlaal jiatad. In aome ex perl menu at IJver voot he waa able to clear a apace moro than 100 yards wide In a deiiae fox. He alio think It poaaible that nili) iaay tie produced by the elncirlncation t clou da. At a recent meeting of the lhjralcal Society in Ixindou he diMuon rtratad hi method. Klcctrldty de rtved from a blgb frequency alternator im most effective, but It must ft rut be tented Into a straightaway current, and Profcaaor Lodge employ for thla parpoae the Cooper Hewitt morcury vapor-larap, which pottneaaea the pow er to rectify an alternating current ' BOY HAD PLENTY OF NERVE. Waa Nat Ulaaonraaeil by tha Had hash of InfurUtad Hall. There win an accident shortly after the clone of a novlllada at the Plain Mexico tlial iniiiii ncmr rcM'tllling m tlx death of a few young hopeful who took It Into Uii'lr head that tbey would ilke to Join In tJip national Kport Shortly after tins crowd left Uie ring a half dosen young boys of ages rang ing from 12 to 15 year got down Into the buij ring to piny bull iigui. Que of the number thought the game wn too alow, o whllo the ring attendant were busy about other work he enLered the pen where the bulls were confined and slyly let one of them Into the ling. . With a mad rush the big black bull entered the ring. One of the little .boys bad been using bis plunli linen cape for a caps In his plays with the lOther boys and be was near the dour erhen the bull entered. Although one f the opposite gate was open the bull made no effort to get away, but rushed at the boy with the cape. There wa but one thing for the boy to do, and be did it. With all the knowledge which be had gained by .wntcbing the matadors In tlie ring he let the bull charge tb cape. But his fiirtns were too short and the bull truck blui a bard blow, knocking the little fellow fully fifty feet and tearing Ills shoulder with his horn. The angry bull then turned bis attention to the red cape. When the otber boy naw the bull charging theru they fled for 1he fence and climbed to fufety, wbere they watched the bull tearing the cape. Finally It occurred to one of the older boys that by all charging for the bull be might poaslb'.y tie scared away from the prostrate body of the Injured lad. Bo with clubs and boards they drore the bull from the ring. They gare their attention to the bull none too quickly, for he bad tired of pawing the cape and was making for the boy. Whoa the doctors got In their work on the little fellow, whese name is Angel Moreloa, they found that the wound was the only thing of cuuse !, and that although the boy was from the blow there was uotliing of a really djugervu uatur to fear from the a.-cideut. a tbe hurt was a flesh Koiiiid W'll' KD Herald, i CAIRO STREET CRIES. Soa aud Voire that Innlara : Uaar la tb I (rptUa Citr. Take a rhair ouuide a biuy cafe near the market pla.-e aud Irani -enter and wuteii itlr-t life. There arc no p hungry Ui(-u, u starving pinched ; ehlld face, uo nuger worn mothers, ' for thl Is tut laud of iufy. and iuv peupie' want are few and simple. Tbu suniihiue aud laughter spray a weh-onie fragraui e over the novelty and romance of the gay city's street. Here is a street melodist twanging a monstrou one Mtringed "souiHhiug," and acuipauled by a nose-ringed girl, who taps deftly on a speeles of tam bourine, while bystanders ejaculate 'Allah! Allah!" the Arabic word for applause. If not iUl!e in accord with your prejudices com-ernlng niualc, well, maalaiah (never intitdj. It Is not nearly ho distracting as a street cornel at home, aud they will go away If you tell them to. The balmon, the donkey aud boy are In evidence, with a si-ore of performing trick that are verj orig tnat and certainly funny, and you con sole yourself with the hope of a mini mum of cruelty lu the training A fruit seller, basket on head, wllb luscious grapes aud lig-4, aauuter by singing in a yualnt minor: "() graie4, O tweet grapes, that are larger than doves' egg and sweeter than new cream! U angels' food, delicious flgi, bursting with bnoey, restorer ot health!" There Is a drink seller, bent under the weight of the odd shaped jar slung over his shouider, a. lump of lie pro jecting from Its mouth, conjuring cus tom In a similar strain, as be struts up aud down, making the air resound with the rythmical clap-clap of two brazen saucers: ' O refreshment of the weary! O tjueiicher of parched Hps! O blessing of heaven!" Another street cry which uisy be beard In the main street of Abbassieh, a suburb, contains the following en ticing announcement: "To-morrow, J people, I am going to kill a camel. The doctor says It U youug and healthy. Oh, its flesh will bo tender as the quail and Juicy as lamb. Its price la but IVi plasters (7 cents) a pound. Io you love the sweet flesh of the camel, then come early and be satisfied." Not the least plctureaque figures iu the street are the city police in their neat white drill and red tarbouches In summer and blue serge In winter. Loudon Traveler. FIR8T USED IN CIVIL WAR. Hapodaraalc Hyrlaca Owed Ita Fx (st atic to tha atilganet of Battle. "The subject of the first use of the hypodermic syringe was discussed at the laat meeting of the army surgeons lu New Orleans last spring." said Dr. R. It. Jackson, "and one surgeon stated that the first time It waa used, ho thought, was In the army of the Ten nessee. Whllts In the Tennessee army I wrote to a friend In Augusta, J. P. K. Walker, to try to get mo a hypodermic syringe and send It to me. I never had seen one, but thought from what 1 had heard about It that It would be very useful lu relieving the woUwded sol diers of palu. "My friend was fortunate uuough to secure one from a physician and sent It to me while 1 was ou duty at the hospital at Hlnggold, Ua. I exhibited It to my frieuds the surgeons there, alghteeu in number none of them had ever seen one before. At that time 1 was treating a very severe case of dys entery, the patient being a chaplain from Texas and one of General Bragg'a most reliable scouts. One of the sur geous suggested that we try the hypo dermic syringe on the patient, which was doue by inserting quarter of a grain of morphine In the back, it Is possible that the army surgeon at the New Orleans convontJou who referred to the first use of the syringe In the Tennessee army was one of the eight"!en I have referred to." Chatta uook New. Intoxicated Inseols. A dahlia garden where the flowers sro cut at alout uooti Is a regular pot house for boos and wasps stud even the big bungling bumble bees do not refuse to imbibe. From the cut stem of the plant ou sunny days about noon a Juice exude that seems to be a whole aide-board of intoxicants for the In sects, and, for two or three hours after wards the won't go hoiue-tlll-morning state Is a Impure lit The Industrious, steady going bees, misled Into tasting It. will first slugger then drop to the ground and with head down attempt to drag themselves home, only to final ly roll over and give up to it. Pret ty soon they recover and are ready to try it again if the temptation remains. If not, they take up the burden of work and probably have some excuse to offer for the time lost and no re turns. Ilecs and wasps and bumble bees are not white rlliboners If oppor tunity offers. liig and Utile Purchases, "() Itudolph, you musl get an auto mobile." ' "I can get the automobile ou cred it, nil right, but how long would your grocer trust us for the gasoline' Kliegenrte Illaetter. tilanl of the ICqulne User. The greatest siue a horse bus la-en known to grow Is '&) hands high. This is the record of a Clydesdale which was ou exhibition In IHSb. Then are some women who never play the piano In any other way than as if trying a plcc-e for the first time. When you observe some one's fault, am If yMi can't find a virtue, too. IVC BUR'ED IN JiODAK Willi. as K. CartU Telia tor af Prt for Mecca la Mooleao Writ Half way down the Ke jsea. ou the Arabian coast, ia the purt f Jiddab. wbere the pilgrim for Mecca, "b com by land. It Is distant abmit sixty five mile from the sacred iiv of the Mohammedan, ha a population of about ,0U0, ao Lmpoaing and at tractive appearance rroui the w-a and is aurroundrd by funny looking Int-h windmills, whbb pump water from the artesian basin undrr the sand Hut tbe ixiuineiit you land on the shore the Illusion hi destroyed. Tbe street are narrow, dirty and full of all kinds of smells, while the population i mad up of the human cormorant who fat teu off the pilgrims. Jlddah 1 of particular interest to us because It contains the toiub of our Mother Kv. I never knew before where she was buried, but It is a com fort to know. It will surprise her living relativea lo know that b was 14o feet tall a very larre woman lo Is- re- ated from a single rib. According lo the tradition of the Moslem, when our first parents fell from Paradise Adam landed on a mouutaiu iu Ceylon and Eve was unfortunate cuotii.'h to light at Jiddah. Afler year of wander ing they finally met at -Mecca, where Adam to show his grjtitude, construct ed a tabcruaele ,,1) the site of tbe pres ent Kauba, or Holy Mospue, which is exactly beneath Cod's throne iu heav en. All that Is left of the original tem ple of Adam is the famous toiie of Mecca, which was once whiter than snow, but has been turned as Mack as coal by tbe kisv-s of the wlnful pil grim. Wheu hive died Adam buried her at Jiddah. Her tomb is a cenotaph 140 feel long, built of masonry about four feet high and narrowing to a point at the top. It is white washed and kept quit clean. Pilgrims place flowers iiku it and reverently kiss the hot masonry Itich people often throw over the cenotaph valuable shawls and pieces of silk as offerings to the Mother of L's All, but they are stolen the first night by the vandal of Jiddah, who rob the dead and pick the pockets of the dying. W. E. t'urti lu Chicago Uecord-Herald. HAS CLOTHING TO SPARE. Now York Btate Hun Astonishes ths alaiicuna bj His Wardrobe. Kdgar Perclval Whipple of iloehe ter, N. y., arrived lu the city yesterday and has a suite of fine rooms at Por ter'. Mr. Whipple Is somewhat of a globe trot tar, having visited all the principal cities of the United States and Europe. He bad some trouble at the border with the customs officers in the examination of bis baggage, being delayed at Kl Paso two days in obtalulng tbe necessary paper where by be could pa his personal baggage without being compelled to pay duty. Hi effect consist of fourteen trunks. Light of these are of the Saratoga make and larger than the common traveler's trunk. There are four differ ent style of cane case aud five um brella holders; eleven leather batboxe and twenty-three grips of dlffereut style. Nine of these he brought wllh him In the Pullman, having engaged two sections for traveling from th Pas City here. He will be la the city several week on a pleasure trip aud will no doubt be a conspicuous figure iu the parades on 8au Francisco street. His ward robe 1 tbe work of merchant tailor; from all over the world. Mr. Whipple will probably not visit the tailoring establishments of thl city, a the following list of wearing apparel seems sufficient to hold him for a while, althuugh only a part of bli outer garment, which consist of l.'iS pair of trousers, 81 coats, 70 vests, 83 pair of shoes, 38 hats, 50 canes, 2-i umbrellas and pairs of gloves. It Is needless to say that Mr. Whipple will change clothes at least five tlmei a day to be able to keep In step wltb others who parade along the prlncl pal streets of the city. Ills valet, Ceorge II. Franklin, suyi that Mr. Whipple has only a small part of his regular traveling equipment with him, for when be went to Paris lust year be had Reveuty-one trunks, to say nothing ubout other small hand' bags and bat boxes. Mexican Herald. Willie Waa a Puzxler. Ill a case heard in a Scottish court some time since a rural witness, after relating how McL., the defendant, came to him and struck bim, proceed ed: "So, your honor, I Julst up and gled him one, too. Juist then bis dog cam' alang an' I bit him again." "lilt the dog?" "No, yer honor, hit McL. And then I oops wl' a stane an' th rawed at him and It rolled him over an' over." "Threw a htone at McL.?" "At the dog. yer honor. An' he got oop an' bit me again." "The dog?" , "No, McL. Au wl' that he gl' a bowl nn' weu aff." "McL.?" "No, the dog. An' when ha cam' back at me be pounded me, yer hon or." "The dog came back at you 7" "No, Mel.., yer honor. Aji' ho Una hairt a bit." "Who Isn't hurt?" "Tho dog! yer hoDor." Tlt-Blta. Another Interpretation. Naggsby (fncetloualy) "If yon think I'm a perfect gentleman, yon ought to see my brother. Waggsby Yes, I suppose ha would set tue right on tbe matter. Baltimore American. After a woman reaches 900 pounds In weight, she couldn't help looking superior if she wore old ctotfew. Opinions of iuiMtinitii.il 1 1 1 1 1 j t i m; a limn t lb Hired Mm. i is iaaportaat that the hired aua ca ibe farm should be aorta ble and ''chipper." That leason protrudes from nearly every page of the inter esting goferament bulletin ou "Wages of farm Labor la tbe In (ted .Stale.." The relations of the hired mas and his employer are per sonal aad seat i mental, and democratic to a de 1 ft e found In few other occupations If tha farm hand hat a likely tongue and a cheerful manner, tbe employer may do any number of thing for him that will not figure in tbe contract H will let a I in rut firewood from the wood lot, raise as many hens and pigs a he choose on the farmer" land, grase a cow or two, have a horse and buggy whenever be want to drive Into the village, aud If be Is married, occupy a house and garden patch, rent free. It pay to be agreeable on the farm. Aud It pays every fanner to havt as diversified crops as poHsihl. particularly if he it hiring help. The oue-erop farmer, be his product corn or cotton, crowds into about four months all the work of ibe year. If be use his acres at other seasons for dairying or lumbering, he could profitably employ a good part of hi own surplus time and energy and lbco of fcis sons if be ha any, or of bis hired man if he has engaged one. As th government bul letin Intimates, tbe season of idleness ou the farm, when there is none or little employment of labor, a contrasted to steady employment In a factory, constitutes "tbe great en difficulty hi procuring help for the farm." The hired man's wage are highest In the Stales where the farms are well wooded, lowest tn the treeless prairie States. Jhe farmers of the country earn a pretty penny every year nrr I10O.OH0.000 from tbe product of their wood lots; the annual v.ilue of sawlogs rut for the lumber business ex presxly Is only SMVHKI,!) more than the farmer receives as -'de Wane from his winter's work with tbe ax and sw. New ork Mail and Kxpress. Why r wests Are Useful. UT us take two hillsides of identical slope and exposure, one being forested, the other cleared. The rain falls ou the canopy of trees In the one Instance and drip softly from leaves and branches aud trickles down the trunks. The soil beneath is soft and loose (even In winter It doe not freeae bard), a composition of disinte aaaaaasaaaaa. grated rock, decaying leave and twigs and even logs, ami all tied together by a dense mass of roots and rootlet. The rain comee upon this forest soli so softly through the trc'-s that the ground Is not compacted and hardened or gulUM k ti would be If the rain fell directly on tbe soil. The looMe aud spongy earth takes up the water as fast ti It falls, and that which la not seised by the roots for the nourishment of the trees Is carried away into underground huHine. from which It slowly percolates and eventually xmii- out upon the surface again a springs. So slowly does this filtering go on, the spongy soil holding the water back, that the spring are given a constant and almost steady supply. Ken drought will actually dry up but fen sm ii. Snows also melt more slowly In tbe forcet, there b.r preventing disastrous spring freshets. In the oilier case, that of the treeless slope, the rain fil:! il'veeilr ou the bare ground aad pounds It hard and im;fivloiix. Tii water for the moat part runs off super ficially from a roof. Not enough water sinks Into the ground to help feed constant springs. Tbe surface run-off of h hard ruiu uu a bare hillside I moreover conducive to iruUyluit aud washing of a most destructive nature, and the water being poured Immediately into the stream beds i-aiiHe freshets. The freshet waters quickly rush by, wreak iu liuioe with fields, toridgea, mill aud the next week the streams are nearly run dry. Boston Transcript. Economic Independence. T Is probable that $100 per capita is a moderate estimate of tbe value of tbe food annually ran umed by the people of the United Stales, In other words, the grocery and provision bill of this country approximates 98,000,000,000 a year. The impossibility of ascertaining with accuracy the money value of these "ources of table sup 1 1'-T Y 1 ply iu which no commercial transaction Is involved the fa 'lucre kiteheu garden; the fish and the game of those v, N eat what they catch and shoot; and the beef, mutton THE LAZIEST PEOPLE. Korean Make Their Women Beasts of llunlcn Seoul a Pilthr CI It. P.romlly t.peaking. It is hardly au ex iigei'iitmu to sav that the Koreans are the laziest people ou earth. All thi.v long ihey lay about the streets smoking their gigantic pipes (a native pipe i 11 six-foot length of bamboo with a metal bowl, and is carried tucked Into the neckband aud down the iruuser legi. All work, of very nearly every kind, Is doue by the wo men, who occupy, perhaps, the most degraded position held by tbe sex of any nation. Tbe unfortunate female population Is collectively a beast of burden, and denied even the most ele mentary recognition as human beings. A Korean girl has no name; she is merely known as "Daughter of " 1 luring the first moon of each new year the Cho-scneae throw off their inordinate laziness and allow their naturally quarrelsome proclivities full piny. This is the period permitted by law when anyone and everyone tuny tight hi tbe public streets, or any where they choose, with Impunity. And full advantage of 1bo license Is taken! Now are family disputes, which have been seething for a whole twelvemonth, settled in the most prim itive fashion, and often half tho town is drawn Into the brawl. The creditor, catching bis debtor abroad, may thump and pound him to bis heart's content, and no one may Interfere. Kor fourteceti days a veritable pande nioulura reigns, and as a method of "clearing tbe air" it Is certainly not without Interest for the spectator. Seoul, tbe capital, on the Hang-Kang river, la an untidy, lll-bullt city, sur rounded by twenty-loot walls. The curfew system, common to feudal England, still prevails as In moat Korean towns. A great bell Is rung at sunset, and the gates are Immediately closed, not to be reopened until the Great Papers on Important Subjects. ATlrallroad yfy I States, amount following sunrise. No lights may then be carried In the streets, and no one may go out of tbe city, with one rather startling exception.' All funer als, by immemorial custom, take place only at night, and for this purpose there Is a Rpecial exit culled "Tbe Gate of the Head." Between the hours of sunset and tlawu, uo uinlc is allowed to be abroad iu the streets; these hours are sacred to the women, anil constitute their only privilege. They usually employ the time in paying vis Its. Up to a few years ngo, any mas culine philander found out after dark was beheaded, but since the Eu ropeans have Introduced their own customs, the entire system is in danger of revolution, Seoul is one of the filthiest and worst-kept towns to be found in all the east. The idea of drainage lias not yet entered the olfieinl mind, and that pestilence lias not made there IU abiding home Is proof of a benefi cent Providence. During the writer's sojourn some years ago, it was not mi unusual occurrence for the agile leopard (Korea's most common "wild fowl"), to acule one of the walls, and entering the nearest house, carry off a child In tho darkness. To-day, however, tliey have changed nil that; but Seoul's greatest need, from a western point of view, is still a de cent hotel. The native dwelling- house ia an Impossibility In all but id salamander. The flooring, in most cases, Is composed of neatly-Jointed flat stones, over which mats are l;ld. Underneath Is a hollow space, In which firewood Is laid in bundles and lighted. The paper doors are then slid Into their grooves, excluding all air, and soon you find yourself In a Turkish bath. The average new comer only tries It once. A new baby looks like n lobster. This will make mothers mad, but It Is true. We have a right to sny so, hav ing once been new, line" a baby. aud pork killed and eaten by thonr who raise Ike auimale leaves any statement of the com of feeding the natkia a matter rather of estimate than of known amount. Some idea of our absolute economic Independence, ae far as food products are concerned. Is obtained by a reali zation of tb fact that about 97.5 per cent of the 8.0U0, 000,000 grocery and provision bill is supplied from domes tic sources. If the remaining 2.5 per cent obtained by Importation, be analyred, it is seen that a half dor.es. items, such aa coffee, tea. cocoa, sugar, spices and tropical fruits, represent more (ban three-quarters of the foreiga supply. The !uipoiia;ioii of articles which might I' even could lie rained In this country is probably Ies thaa one-half of one per cent of the total alue of our annual food consumption. Not only does our ailual domenlic supply of alimentary substances exceed in Its percentage that of any other natiol or people rightly claiming to be civilized, but there is tin further fact that in joitii of variety our menu is almost' unlimited. Tbe question of cookery is a side Iskuc depend lug on Individual taste. But the fact remains that w have the food In limitless quantity aud Infinite variety, the product of American farms, gardens, held, orchards, forests, rivers, lake aud oceans. In addition to this generous supply of our dometti needs, we sold to other countries, last year, about $900, 000,000 worth of surplus crop. It may be remarked that w also have a few acres of land not yet under cultivation. New York Sun. Your Share of the Public Debt. (H it father can rememlier when u 7 hit . .-n. Y government bond served as a sort of interest standard. Of course, it was a gilt-edged securi I . t. . . . T , , , 1 lj, oul i oer eruv. iui uiouey was consmerea, about the proper figure. That was not very long ago. It was In a day wheu tbe public debt of the nation, measured by the resources of tht people, was a heavy burden. Now we have 2 per cent bonds. In fact, more than half of our bouds ate 'J pi i cent securities. In tbe face of a thousand alluring invest ments, including farm mortgages and municipal bonds, U14 government can have all tbe money it wants at 2 per cent Your share of the Interest on the public debt Is 34 cent annually. Your share of the Interest-bearing debt is Sil. We plied up millions of liabilities during the Spanlak, war, and yet the total of the public debt Is less than tlx capital of the Bteel Corporation; less than the total amount of life Insurance credited to at least two concerns. Th Interest -bearing debt on Dec. SI, 190.1, was $901,747,220, Eleven dollars per bead. Ia Great Britain the debt is 7I per capita, and in Holland it Is U0. France has a national debt so great that each Inhabitant owes $150. The ray of sunlight there Is the fact that franc ha borrowed froa) the people, and there la no danger of foreign creditors for closing a mortgage on that country. Argentina owes S12t per capita, and Australasia 26S. N We talk much of our natural resources, our loyal people and our new nary. Don't forget thai one of our greatest Items of strength in foreign lands 1 our financial stand bag. The nation with unlimited credit, with a big treasure chest, Is la a position to command and direct and Influ ence. Financially, the United States has no competitors.- St. Iioule Chronicle. Too Many Railroad AccidenU. ITI1IV a month 19; nnU K ,. i 1.111 ... 1 . accident In the Eastern and Mlddt and more were Injured. It may be ar is iHtroij more inan a normal of destruction in so larre a ninnb.. as ours, but there Is no normal rate of vio lent death. If accident proportion, it will mean that whole regiments ef our cltl sens will be eIerminated by trains In tbe course of thai year, aud that Is entirely too many. Our authorities are always lenient toward the people who are primarily re sponsible for these slaughters, because presidents, super intendents and directors are not personally cognisant of defects which caused the slaughters; but if we were to acquire a habit of holding the officers of railroads to aa account. the.T In turn would exact more fulthf.il mrut o.c quate service of their employes, and there would be a les- scuiug iu me uuuioer or accidents as a result Brooklyn Kagle. RANK POISON IN THE BODY. Generated in the System It Frequent ly Caaaea lHsease aad Death. The body is a factory of poisons. If these poisona, which are constantly being produced in large quantities Is the body, are imperfectly removed of are produced in too great quantity as the result of overfeeding, the fluids which surround the brain cells aud all the living tissues are contaminated with poisonous substances which as phyxiate and paralyze the eclls and so Interfere with their activity. This fact explains, In part at least, the stupidity which 1b a common after-dinner ex perience with many persons. When food is retained In Uie stomach beyond the normal time, either because of its indigcstibillty, the taking of too large a quantity of it or a crippled state of the stomach, those changes are certain to take place. This fact explains a very largo share of tho myriad symptoms which afflict tho chronic dyspeptic. The giddiness, tho tingling sensations, the confusion ot thought and even partial insensibility, which are not infrequently observed a few hours after meals In chronic ilys poptics, arc duo to this cause. Ilora Is, the explanation of the Irascibility, tbe despondency, the pessimism, the inde cision and various other forms of, mental perversity and even moral de- prnvlty which are not. infrequently as sociated with certain forms of giiHtro lntestinal disturbances. London Fam-( Ily Doctor. Thawing out an Oil I'lpe Line. An eight-Inch oil pipe line from the, Bakcrsfleld region to Sau Francisco has1 to be heated at Intervals so Unit thej oil will flow. When a number of poor cooks get' together, what a lot of blame you will" hear given the flour! A man naturally believe In the sur vival of the fittest as long as be lives.1