THE INFLUENCE OF HEREDITY , That there 5s in each department o : life a tendency to reproduce its owr marked peculiarities is well known , There is scarcely an intelligent farmei who does not believe the axiom thai "like begets like. " immediately or re > motely. In the animals they rear foi money , or for that pleasure which is only another form of profit , breeders see constantly the evidence of the power of that law. Even in the seem ing failures that have led the disap pointed to declare that breeding is a lottery , wiser ones see the operation ol hereditary influences. By skillful man- management these influences have been made to do much to add to the creature comfort of man ; but , because of a gen eral neglect of the aid they offer , they , have done very little directly for the elevation of man himself. By his skill of mating animals having desirable characteristics , man has developed the obese porker of to-day from the gaunt and grizzly wild boar. The lank , flat- ribbed wild ox of vast horns and viciousness has been changed into the substantial bullock of juicy roasts and much docility. The shaggy pony of the crags , the hardy courser of the desert , and the sleek horse of fertile plains have been molded by man's art ful use of nature's forces into the spir ited flying racer , the sturdy hack , and * the massive draft horse of surpassing strength and gentleness. In mating birds the breeder's art has produced re - suits wonderful in the variety of form and size and color they display. Many of the established breeds of the age exhibit no trace of their origin. No man can show the limit of the changes the breeder can make by di recting the mating of animals under his control. But his power does not end with the mating , for , while the influ ence of heredity does much to form and to govern the development and action of the animal , that development and action will be greatly modified by the conditions surrounding the animal : Breeding , which is another name for hereditary influence , may give to the " ox a tendency to grow big , and fat , and gentle. With abundant food and water die will become the embodiment of lordly ease and prosperous content ; but turn away the well-bred calf to "rustle" .for himself upon bleak hills or sparsely-grassed plains and he will be come a tough , skinny and loose-jointed beast , having vast capacity for consum ing food and making little return there for. Send the corpulent and lazy porker of high degree from his well- filled trough , give to him the joys of freedom and the choice between starva tion and working for his subsistence , and he will ere long be'as gaunt and fierce as were his distant progenitors. Yet the animal having in his veins good blood retains the power and the disposition to respond , far more satis factorily than the ill-bred can , to good treatment. The life of every child is a stream made up of converging currents of here ditary influences. They come almost . of necessity where so many races mingle as in America , from many dif ferent sources. Some may be turbid from dirt , torn from the soil of base passions to cloud the new current ; some may become polluted "by long turnings in the swamps of sin , an3 s'hame , and crime , to poison all with which they mingle ; and others may be pure , sparkling streams flowing brightly through the world , making fertile every lield through which they Bass , refreshing with their own pure life every drooping plant they touch by the way , sweetening and beautifying every scene in Ayhich they appear. Whence these streams come and what they are few have cared to inquire in time and with purpose to prevent the mingling of the impure in the new cur rents to be created. The fancy of the . another that is to be is caught by the face and form of some playmate , and , if so aiuch of his uniformed character as ap pears to view will satisfy the easy re- quirements of the Mrs.Grundy of her set , 3he is .accepted , and they marry. Neith- P has risked whether the blood in the Feins of the other is that of beggars , of saints , of scoundrels. Neither has giv en a thought to the influence their mat- Ing will have upon the world ; neither has questioned whether the inherent tendencies they bring together will give to the world demons or angels. Parents do little better in this respect than they do for themselves. Almost the only question asked about the man is , "Has he any money ? " If he have enough they are content By the masses not even so much as that. is demanded. The .young are allowed to follow the fleet ing fancy of the moment , without a single restraining thought of the tre mendous importance to the human race of the contract they make. How shall they be expected to consider the effect of influences of the existence of which they1 have never been told ? Carefully prepared , beautifully illus trated , and expensive books and period icals arc published in great number to teach the breeder how to turn to ac count the forces of heredity ; but little or nothing is said or done to teach the world how to apply the same great forces to the elevation of humanity , physically , intellectually or morally. Many are the , physical , mental and moral weaknesses and diseases result ing from-or perpetuated by ignorance or disregard of the lawl of hereditary in fluence. Is it greatly to the honor of this age that man studies more thor oughly the breeding and character of * theanimals he proposes coupling than those of the persons whom the un- guided fancy of his children lead them to wed ? Breeders so manage their stock as to avoid reproducing defects , and to secure desirable "points. " They assert that the skillful breeder can , in a few generations , develop almost any desired type of animal. Shall princi ples so long and successfully applied to the improvement of the lower animals remain unused for the development of their master ? Shnll not at least as cmirh 'b done for the improvement of , -iitnkiml by the stduy. development , ' Ami appl'cation of the laws of heredity 'to tliat imrp'jsoas ha * been done by their aid for the .mrovcment ; of tue beasts of the field ? Is man less wortli the effort than they ? Most parents love their chjldrer dearly , and intensely desire their ad vancement in all that is good. Hdre- tofore the world has been content tc accept children as chance or unguided impulse created them often sadly handicapped by inherent evil tenden cies they could not successfully resist and then to surround those children by such favorable conditions , educational or other , as were within the means oi the parents. Teach the world the truth about heredity and it will quickly apply this great power for the production ol men and women superior to those oi to-day , and in due time will demand that the same laws shall be observed tc prevent the perpetuation of the evil daises. Hereditary influences will yet become the study of , and their proper application the great aim of man. The momentous truths have long been un heeded by most races , but they should be proclaimed to the world until they shall have electrified and aroused all mankind , and the rapid march oi progress shall have been everywhere begun. By making universal the knowledge of the operation of these powerful influences that control to a very great extent the life of every be ing , much will be done. By inducing general observance of the laws of heredity what may not be accomplished ? The physical powers may be so strengthened and developed that sick ness , deformity and insanity will be as rare as they are now common. The moral character may be so purified and fortified that temptation will no longer tempt , and tho tide of dishonest } ' that threatens to overwhelm the nations will be turned aside harmless. The mental powers may develope until each suc ceeding generation be composed of in tellectual giants , towering high above those from whom they shall have sprung. Then artists with brush , or pen , or chisel , or sound will be in trutli born , not made born with talents so enlarged and intensified that they shall discern beauty and truth more clearly than they were ever before seen , and shall interpret them aright to the world. Since civilized man was a sav age brute , thousands of generations ago , he has made but sorry progress in the the march of improvement. Through natural selection that was not far re moved from chance he has gained more than by conscious design. All this weary time he has been climbing up two steps and been slipping back one. Frequently he has aparently lost sud denly , by the introduction "of destruc tive blood elements , all he has gained by fortuitious circumstance. Is not the teaching of truths so preg- inant with the good of the highest kind a mesion worthy of the noblest minds ? Can a life be devoted to a more Leneficeut cause than that of showing man so to use this natural force at his command that he will quickly elevate all to a de gree of culture now unknown an even uninmagined ? Is it not better that a man be born aright at first than that he be born again ? Is there not in these truths a gospel which , if studied as earnestly and urged as zealously as the ' grand truths taught by 'Christ have been studied and urged , will at least hasten greatly the regeneration of man kind ? E. W. Perry , in the Current. It Is Girl Nature. Now the propensity for wading which is deeply implanted in the female bosom is inexplicable. Unless a girl has the influenza or a bunion she can not resist the temptation to paddls about in the salt water and get her clothing uncom fortably wet. This is a subject full of interest to me from the casting aside of : he shoes and stockigns to the'r resump tion. It is afact pretty generally known in male circles that lad ics prefer sitting on the ground when pulling on ind off their stockings to occupying a jhair or bench. But having my doubts is to the inflexibility of this rule I had ieterniined to convince myself by ex periment After the setting of my ; raps to wit : the benches I had not oug to wait. A bevy of young ladies , me or two of whom I recognized , came ; rooping down the beach , chatting and .aughingmerrily. They evidently won- lered who had been kind enough tp place the benches there for their ac- lommodation , took possession of them it once gleefully , confessed that they , vere just too delightful for anything , ind seemed perfectly and unrestrain- jdly happy. I was rejoiced at having lisproved a moldy theory , but alas , my satisfaction was short-lived. When my quests made up their minds that it was , ime to wade they sprang from the aenches , sat on the beach , and tugged iway at shoes and stockings in the old 'ashion. The following day. resolving o give my experiment every chance , I lad my hireling bathman strew a quan- ; ity of broken bottles , . empty oyster : ans , and rubbish of various kinds ilong the beach and sat under my um- jrella and watched. The girls came lown about the same hour , seemed a ittle dismayed at first , but rallying set x > work industriously , and soon had a : lear space upon which they squatted , not taking the least notice of the 3enches this time. Then I put up my imbrella and moved sadly away. Eye must have sat her fair form down in ifae garden mold of Eden adjusting her irst garment from the historic fig-tree , ind left the habit as an inheritance .o lier daughters for all time. Santa Barbara ( Cal. ) Letter. A Serious Mistake. Minister ( to tailor ) "You have cut the vest wrong , Mr , Misfit I wanted it to button close about the neck. Tlrs is the style that any gentleman wears. " Mr. Misfit "Yes ; it's my mistake. You wanted a minister's vest , and I've and cut a gentlemans's vest But Eone I can fix it. " Neio York Sun. Carl Pretzel's Philosophy. Firtuo vas alvays ready to go to a party. You alvays saw her mit her Sunday close on. Tide dond got eny time to vait on der female vimmens. Every feller dot dishblays some abundance of cheeks vns hafe a bsrson- al blemish. Carl Pretzel's Weekly , t Above the Clouds. One mountain X particularly desirei to climb. It is a splendid mass of rock treeless , high and promising an outlool of 30,000 or 40kOOO miles from its sum mit. Viewed from our camp , it doesn1 look so bad. With me , to wish is t ( will , and to will is to do some easj things. I wished to climb the moun tain and I chimb it I don't know hov to spell it , but 1 did it A smooth look ing mountain , with terraces of lov green bushes and easy ledges of rocl looks well enough to a blind man acres : the lake , but when you essay to slide'i under your feet , it becomes roughei than a pig's back. I stepped on lira looking logs that were rotten as politician's promises. I was precipitat ed down great pits so deep that I coulc look up and see the stars , just aftei reaching bottom. I got lost in briai patches that shred my raiment from me in great shreds from Shredville , and lacerated my inmost feelings. I Ipsl my hat I dropped my alpenstock down a hole that extended 400 feet up inside a mountain in China. I broke my knife cutting another stick. I took oft'my coat and laid it on the inaccess ible top of ail unapproachable rock , in tending to get it as I came down , 'and now , the entire United States Geo- grahphical Commission couldn't find that rock in a million years. I pulled the sole off one buot and tore the up per off the other. I ate a handful of strange red berries before learning that they were poison. I stirred up a nest | of hornets in the dead thicket of a fal len pine tree , and heaven and earth came together in six or seven places at the same time before I could climb a perpendicular cliff eighty feet high to got away from them. But I did it When I saw the boss hornet disappear within his workshop a minute and then come out with an arm full of scythe stones , which he began distributing to the strikers , I could have climbed the north pole. I got along a little faster after this interview with the hornets. The view from the mountain top repaid me. Thirteenth Pond was a gem , a dainty sea of crystal , laughingm : its setting of mountain , woodland , cliff and meadow. Bennett's farm and the Van Dusen place were emerald stretches of fertili ty and Reed's Maple Cottage and out tents glittered like snow drifts in the meadows. It was all so beautiful I stayed upon the mountain top to see the sun set. It set on time , as usual , with a fine display of meteorological scenic effects. Then it occured to me that I had to go down that mountain in the deepening shadows of the gloam ing , 'emitted one of the groans for which I am justly famous you must have heard that groan in Brooklyn and prepared to descend. As I slid down the first incline , a little rush of 200 feet over an abrading surface of garjiel' rock , I brought up against a fine old stump , about half petrified , and noticed a bear , full weight , all wool , sound in wind , limb and condition , walk around the stump and look at me. My heart bounded with a joyous sense of great relief. "Major Ursus ? " I said , and the bear bowed. "Major , " I said , "I am glad to meet you. I have been up in the mountain to see the sun set , although I could see it set from the meadow. I am now going down. I don't know just where , but I have a presentment that I am going down. If you h ve not yet been to tea , would you be kind enough to cat me ? " "No , " sa.d the bear , coldlv , "I never cat fools. " If There's anything I do hate , it's a bear. Well , come up , before the sunset season is over. It's just the kind of a place you'd like , and you are just as safe in the woods as you are at home. I was going to tell about a big trout I caught but I see I haven't time. Bur- detlc , in Brooklyn Eagle. Tlmiider-Stunus. From certain meteorological sta- iistics recently published in Germany ive learn that thunder-storms in that country have , during tho last thirty rears , been steadily increasing , both in requency and severity. The number. ) f deaths per annum from lightning las increased in a far greater ratio han that of the increase of population , [ n the present state of our knowledge ) f the whole subject of atmospheric ilectricity , the cause of the phenomena ) f thunder-storms is confessedly ob- icure. It is , however , very possible , hat some light would be thrown upon he question by a comparative study of he frequence and severity of storms luring a lengthened perios and over a i wide geographical area. The German iavants incline to the opinion that the- ncrease is to be attributed to the enor- nously increased production of smoke ind steam which has taken place dur- ng the last three decades. But al- hough we may admit this to be to some jxtent a probable vera causa , yet when ve consider the very local character of ; hunder-siorms. we should naturally jxpect to find that it would follow that ; he neighborhoods of large cities , and ispecially of manufacturing districts , ivould suffer the most severely. But , he statistics referred to show distinct- y that the very reverse is the case. Che number of storms attended by 'atal results from lightning is far larger n the agricultural districts than in the owns. Upon the other hand , we ought o take into consideration the protective iction of lightning conductors , with ivhich the prominent buildings in the ; owns of German } ' are well provided ! Scientific American. [ t Could Have Been Done For Less. A well-known lawyer once came into i room where Judge Lake and several jthers were seated. He was not in a jood temper and they asked him what : he matter was. "Well , I defended a fellow for mur- ler. He was convicted. I took him ; o -Supreme Court , back again to ; he Supreme Court , and the Supreme Court confirmed the judgment and * ave him ten years. 1 charged "him 53,000. Lake , do you think that was : oo much ? " "Well , " said Judge Lake , "I think , tie might have been convicted for less. " San Francisco Chronicle. . THE POET SAXE. ManVlio Has Boon Sorely Af flicted Ills Qulot lilfe In the City of Albany His Pa- vorlto Authors. In a large and luxuriously furnishec rpartments in a four-story brown-stone touse on State street , in the City of Al- ( any , and almost within a stone's brow of the great capital , sits , or walks , > r reclines throughout the day a mat X ) years of age. With hair that is sil- rery white , a full beard that is graj ehite , a form that is bent and emacia- .ed , a step that is slow and tottering , ind a cheek that is pallid and shrunk- : n his blue eyes yet full and lustrous lone indicate the strength and pride > f other days. The man is John God- irey Saxe , the poet. It is only a few rears since tho verses of Saxe was sngerly accepted by the leading periodi- tals and his-services as"a lecturer were jverywhere popular. In his day he was i bright member of many a literary gathering , being known personally to ill of tho most prominent of con- emporary poets and prose writers. He ras the nation's wit and humorist , ehose delicious rhymes brought to timself fame and a competence and to siany a household tho cheerful smile or .early laugh. Even across the sea he ras known as "the Thomas Hood of Lmer.ca. " . . . The beginning of the aid was the poet's dreadful experience , nd remarkable escape from a revolt- ug death in the western railway disas- er in the spring of 1875 , while on his eturn to Brooklyn at the conclusion of if a lecture tour in the south. The leeping-car in which he had a berth vas thrown down a steep embankment ind he was rescued therefrom by the nerest chance. As he lay wedgtAl in etween the broken timbers , stunned .ml bruised , a fellow-passenger who tad escaped bethought' him of a sum if money which he had left behind urn. On returning to the car he slum ped upon the insensible poet. The atter was thereby discovered and res- uctl from what would inevitably have eon death and destruction by fire as he sleeper in which he wus found , after brief interval following his rescue , lecame a mass of seething llame. His lesh was bruised , but no bones were iroken. Outwardly he appeared to ave escaped with slight bodily inju- ies. Not so. A grievous hurt was here deep , insidious , and lasting , hough at the time it was unseen and tnfelt. The poet's nerve system had ccieved a shock from wh ! it never allied. Exhaustion set ,1 ; slowly but urely the consequent weakness over- pread and undermined his whole > liysical being. He bega i to experi- luce a greater degree of bodily and nental fatigue than had been usual vith him. U'orst of all was its de- > ressing influence on his exuberant pirits , which became mere and more ubdiied , until at last his mind had lost ouch of its wonted buo } ancy. Other \ffliclions were yet in s.ore. During he year just prior to that , of the rail- vay"accident he hud interred his laughter Laura in Gr nwood cem- ; tery. Five years later d-ath again m- aded his Brooklyn honv , the second ictim being his daughter Sarah. Bare- y another } ear had elapsed when the nother of his childrden.a noble woman , vas put tenderly away in dreamless est Early in the year of 1881 the lark reaper for the fourth time laid his : ruel siclcel at his door , this time cut- ing down Ualtie , the poet's only re naming daughter. He had yet two ons living in Albany. Turning his flournful steps thither in June , 1881 , ic sought rest and reiugo from his orrows with his eldest son. John Theo- lore. Once again the inexorable hand if fate was laid heavily u oa him ; death natched away the sou ere the father tad been a month beneath the hospita- le roof. The son's who had died nine reeks before. Here A\HS a daughter .ml a son's wife and tho son himself 11 three cut down within the brief icriod of two months. Thus for the ecoud time was broken up the poet's ionic. Then he turned to his } oungest on and only remaining child , . Charles r. , with whom he has aince lived , and , rho with filial tenderness and solicitude jiuis.lers to the poet's simple daily , -auts. The old poet is now much changed i form and feature , Ltng merely a hadow of his former sc .f. During the rst three years of his i esidencn in Al- any he spent some hour j each pleasant ay in strolling about the beautiful ark near by , or tranquilly sitting there i a shady arbor , , watching the children t their play. But during the past two ears no public eye his su n him , for in liat long interval he hu , of his own hoice been carefully &eHtided in his ooni. He neither ride- , norwalks broad. The apartment in which he pends his melancholy d j. s consists of suite of three rooms , located in the ear end of the house on the third floor , nd overlooking the nobJ : ; Hudson to be south. Here by a window he whiles way much of his time in u-atching the tisy river craft and in contemplating he picturesque landscape. Of street ttire he no longer has a need ; indrcss- ag-gowu and slippers he paces the floor , rith slow and trembling steps , seldom r never going beyond the confines of is own rooms. He prefers to have erfect quiet about him , and oftentimes islikes to be disturbed even by a mem- er of his own family. It is a long ime since he last consented to receive stranger or even a friend or acquain- ance ol former days. ' lean not bear , " he said with pathos , 'to be forcibly reminded of what I nee was of the days of , my hope and trength , when the world had chaims hat now are dead to me ; before sick- ess had deprived me of my health , ud death hid robbed me of my loved nes. " In 1881 , on his first coming to Al- iany , the eminent physicians whom his amily consulted in his behalf , pre- icted that he would not survive for wo years longer. He goes to bed be- vveen the hours of 9 and 10 o'clock in lie evening and rises at about 6:30 in he morning. He complains much of asomr.ia , and during the day is often cry rtatlcftS , suffering from neuralgia u the Lbad. When not sitting in an easy chair or moving leisurely about his room he reclines upon a conch. He eats often , but very sparingly , and par takes of the pla'.nest food , indigestion being one of his principal bodily il's. ' Of his valet , a middle-aged colored man who by reason of prior service with eminent people at Washington and other places is more than ordinari ly intelligent and entertaining ) , the poet is very fond , chatting with him now and again with a more than usual de gree of interest and animation. Until quite recently he devoted a good share of his time to a perusal of tlie standard poets and the leading magazines , those of the latter , to whose pages lie was once a valued contributor , being still sent him regluarly and unsolicited by the publishers thereof , in kindly re membrance of past services. For some years he has not read the daily papers , and evinces little or no interest in current events. "It pains me , " he said , "to meet with the details of so much crime and so many casualties. " Indeed , he reads comparatively little of any kind now occosionly a page or two maybe , of one of his favorite prose authors. That mainly consists of Haw thorne , Dickens and Thackeray , judic iously selecting therefrom matter of cheerful tone and subject When un disturbed he is much given to musing , but at times will converse willingly and fluently , displaying thereby a power of memory that , in view of his feeble con dition is quits unlooked-for , recently surprising his sou not a little by re peating verbatim one of Charles Lamb's longest essays. His thoughts often revcr to his irreparable loss of wife and children , speaking of each tenderly and regretfully and manifest- mg a keen interest in the proper care of their graves ever dwelling on the domestic afflictions which have broken his heart and enveloped his once bril liant intellect in a brooding and incur able melancholy. Brooklyn Magazine. EDUCATING SERVANTS. , How They Can He Taught Habits of In most of the new houses it is notice able that the servants' rooms are much more attractive and belter arranged than the rooms or servants' quarters in old houses. Once a corner of the un finished attic was thought sufficiently appropriate for the servant , and there was no inducement for even a tidy niaid to take pride in her domain and have pleasure in imik.ng it neat and pleasant. No\v , the rooms are well painted , prettily papered , furnished with a closet , and made as homelike as possible. If the servants are disorderly the housekeeper is apt to protest that she is not responsible for the results in the servants' own apartments , for sha has furnished pretty rooms and can not be expected to detect their possessors in untidiness. Although the result may be tho necessity of expensive renova tion upon each change of occupant , the mistress has no thought of educating the new servants to greater neatness. A writer in Good ± Iousekee > iing has made some excellent suggestions upon She "Don't for- the subject says : - jet each day to allow a servant some little time to make and keep order in her room. Insist from the first on the extreme care of the bed. Never allow .soiled clothing to be hung .ip in a bedroom tll a convenient t me : omcs for washing it. Toll the girl to keep her door open when she is out , of ; he room. Thrsw rul-3 are excellent , ind if the mistress ib able to control icr servant , as she should , her dircc- .ions will br > educative and oi great ralue upon the character of tao ser- rant Many mistresses will be often liscouragcd. A In.who ; received a Bright Canadian-French girl , who was xccustomcd to field-work instead of iouse-work , was surprised to find the ; irl's bed had not been used , after a s-eek had passed. Upon questioning ihe found that the girl had slept upon lie floor each night , because she had lever slept upon a bed. The educu- ing of such servants to habits of per- ioiial neatness is most difficult Some English housekeepers advortisa for icrvants with "no bangs , " and many American housekeepers are obliged to iiake rules upon dress , some having Iresses and aprons made for their ser- ants. The insisting upon cleanliness ind order of tho servants' apartments s one of the most delicate tasks of the nistress , but its necessity is imperative or the comfort of the household. If he girl is bright she unconsciously be- lomos more and more refined by simple issociatiou with a cultivated family , md when she begins to imitate tho oxing ladies of the family a natural iourse of education will progress rapid- y. Uoslon Journal. Wait for Recess. Congress really accomplished very ittle that is of benefit to the country. L'he principal reason for this is that here are so many men in Congress rho do not go there with the intention if doing any work. They are very nuch like a little girl who was ques- ioned by a lady friend of the family as o how she liked school. "Etumu , what do you do in school ? ) o you learn to write ? " Emma shakes her head. "Do you icnd ? " Another shake. "Do yon c.j.hcr ? " "No , ma'am. " "What do you do ? ' "Wait for recess. " Congress is full of men who do noth- ng but wait for recess. Texas Sif tings. Not Her First Appearance. Lawyer ( to timid young woman ) . i Have you ever appeared as witness 11 a suit before ? " Young woman ( blushing ) "Y-yes , ir , of course. " Lawyer "Please state to the jury rhat suit it was. " Young woman ( with more confidence ) 'It was a nun's veiling , shirred down he front and trimmed with a. lovely ilue , with hat to match ' ' Judge ( rapping violently ) . "Order a the court ! " .Veto York Sun. A SUBTERRANEAN MYSTERY. Tho Theories ResartHnartheOvornovr. 1'laliio , Icrvvn. l * : lnj : AVell at Bello A DCS Moines correspondent of TJit Chicago Times writes : So far but little has been said to account for the phe nomenon of tho great flowing well al Belle Plaine. A state university pro fessor has visited the well , and has hazarded the guess that it is fed from Lake Bonton , Minnesota. This is in genious , and has some basis of proba- bilit } ' . But it is just as well to consider some physical facts in connection with the well. Take a pack of playing-cards and Jf push them so that an edge of each will lap past its upper fellow. This will il lustrate the rock formations of Iowa when looking west from any point in northwest Iowa. The lower card rep resents the Trenton limestone , whilii half a dozen cards above it can stand for the lead-bearing and Niagara series. Cottar Rapids rests well toward the top of the latter group , while Bello Plaine , thirty-five miles west , probably lies on the thin layer of Devonian rock , which is sca'ntily exposed in Buchanan county. It can be stated as a fact that tho Ni agara rocks aro full of fissures and small caverns. Whether this be tru of the rocks underlying Bello Plain * ! can only be inferred on the action o ! tho various artesian well at that place , but this would seem to be competent evidence that the cavernous condition if of the rocks still prevails at that place. According to tho chart of the Iowa railway comm'ssioners Bello Plaine. station is 851 feet above the ocean leveL Tho surface surroundings of the placo do not warrant the hypothesis that thu source of supply of its great well ia near at hand. "But by reference again to the railway commissioners' chart il will be seen that the Iowa river , whicli rims not far from Belle Plaine , has a long and tortuous course nearly to the f I north boundary of the state , and th * Milwaukee railway station at Britt , where the Iowa slips over the prairie , stands in altitude & 59 foot higher than Bv-IIe Pla n * . But the Ik-lie Pla'no well is said to be 185 feet deep. Probablv , if it could bu piped , the water would rise say two hundred feet above the bottom of the well. Now , if tho well is fed from Lake Bcnton , Minnesota , as tho Iowa City sc entisc asaimies , according to * a well-known lavof hydrostatics the Belle Plaine people would have more worry even than now , for Spirit lake , Storm lake , : md Lako Ucntou all He ap- pivsximatply l,50l ) feet above sea level , or , say 750 feot above the bottom of tlio Bello Plaine spoutcr. Hence , instead ol merely gushing out , the water would have a geyser-shoot upward of hun dreds of feet The Iowa City theory does not work any better than the cone that went into tho well Sunday. The only tenable theory in the light of present faets is that tho Belle Plaiue well is fed from a leak in the Iowa riv er or possibly from tho Cedar for that malti'r. And if it is water from the Iowa that has found a long fissure af fording a subterranean waterway under Bjlle Phiino it has found that fissure somewhere in Marshall county , which satisfies the conditions of tho cose. For tiio Iowa river has a fall of about 85 feet between Marshalltown and Belle Plaine. Add this 85 feot as u pressure- lier.d and it will , after allowing for waste by leakage and friction , supply [ he power that pushes the water into Belle Plaine streets. But if it is the Co- iar that is leaking at such a rate through tho well tho weak spot is some- ivhero above Charles City , say about ihe state line. It might be urged that the leakage from showers conveyed through the soil would answer the conditions , and n connection it would be said that the rravel beds along Iowa streams , all ol .vhich lie above the Belle Plaine well , vould afford the great supply spurting Hit. But if this were truo the manner > f the origin of the well would be the same considered scientifically. It is but fair to mention whilo dis- : ussin < r the latter view that southwest iVisconsin affords some wonderful prmgs. A single spring : runs a flour- n < r-mill at Springville , Wis. . whilo six nilesiway in early times another.noble oimtain used to run a saw-mill. These prings burst out within three hundred eet of tho highest altitude between the .lississippi . and Wisconsin rivers , and he watershed for their supply is very [ arrow. Fayette county. Iowa , affords oiiie wonderful springs with quite as irnited areas of supply as those in Wis- onsin. All these springs certainly de- iend on the molted snow and rains , ut they bubble gayly all the year ' " round , with little 'variation in"the mount of discharge. These springs ustify the view that the water runs liroiigh rock fissures , and so the view ; here fully maintained that the bed oi lie Iowa river needs patching in Mar- hall county , and when patched the lelle Plaine folks will get their well ndcr control. Signs From the Sun. Signs of Jiain , from the Sun. Sun ising dim or waterish ; rising red with lackish beams mixed along with its ays ; rising in a musty or muddy color ; ising red and turning blackish ; settin" nder a thick cloud ; setting with a red ky in tho east Sudden rains never ist long : but when the air grows thick y degrees , and the sun , moon and stars liino dimmer and dimmer , then it ia kely to rain six hours usually. Signs of Wind , from the Sun. Sun sing pale and setting red. w th an iris ; > ing large in surface ; rising with a nl sky in the north ; setting of a blood jlnr ; setting pale , with one or more ark circles , or accompanied with red : reaks , seeming concave or hollow ; jemiiig divided , great storms ; parnelia r mock suns never appear but they re followed by tempest Signs of Fair Weather , from the. Sun. -Sun rising clear , having set clear tho iljht before ; rising while the clouds 3out him are driving to the west ; ris- ijj with an iris about him , and that irig earing away equally on all sides , then cpect fair and settled weather ; rising ! ear and not hot ; setting in red clouds. : cording to tho old observation : The evening red and raorlng gray , Is the sure sign of a fair day. .1