. . .Y. + " . . : I. Goes Back to Nature - A son of a Portland ( Ore. ) p11y- clan has created a sensation by the f startling method of living which ho , Jas adopted and which he advises all I :0 : adopt who desire perfect health. He advocates a return to the prlml- I .lve way of living without clothing. , \ Ernest W. Darling , son of Dr. J. I W. Darling , Is the man who advocates : he return to ways primeval. Until L year / ago he lived In Portland , but was compelled to seek a sunnier : lIme on account of his health. For : he last year he has lived on the summit . nit : of a hill on the outskirts of Los Angeles , Cal. He does not occupy a 'louse , nor even a tent. The sale hab- tatton : Is about seven by four feet and WO feet In depUI. In that peculiar lace , wrapped In blankets , he seeks -est. He Is an ardent lover of na- ture : and believes that by his method of living he Is able to commune more : losely with Its Invisible forms and . it the same time build up his oonft- ! tutlon , which was shattered by l1s- . case. I.- 0 < "Good health Is the first requisite for religion or anything : else , " he says , when questioned concerning his novel J Ideas. "I firmly believe that If we , . take perfect care of our health , avoid- Ing all accidents or dlsmse , we shall live eternally In these bodies of ours. , Every person should learn gradually to live outdoors and to live on natural . ural food-that Is , food just as it. . - - - : II Flagged by a Cow . I 7 _ _ ' . "Those people sleeping comfortably , ' rDack In the Pullmans little know how I ' often the engineer grasps the air brake valve thinking that the next minute his widow and fatherless chil- dren will be eligible to rarticlpate In the division of the Carnegie hero fund , " said the fat engineer. "In most . cases there's no cause for alarm , but my hair has stood on end so often ' that It has fallen out and now I'm totally blind. , "One night last week I was coming east on No. 44 , and , though I do say It myself , we were hlUtng the trail at a rate that would make the Empire State express look like a stationary englno. I was pretty sure we'd come under the wire on time all right , when ' out of the gloom ahead sudde.ly flashed a red light comln' at me wav- I . In' violently at right angles with the track-the usual flag signal. "Hem , " I says to myself , "another freight hog laid down ahead , and It's up to us to do the Good Samaritan act and push 'em out. Gettln' a train over this pipe on time makes that stunt of the camel gain' through the needle's eye look like falling out of a hay loft. But why In goldarnatlon don't that wooden headed flagman step out of the middle of the track and let s pass ? lIe can take the steps on . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - GOOD WORK OF FILIPINOS. ! . - Faithful and Industrious In an Unac- I customed Climate. Sixty Flllpinos on the United states cable ship Burnside did excellent work on the rough seas off the coast ' VAlaska last year. Twenty of them were detailed for laying and repair- ing cables. They were thus engaged for three months , during which time they experienced a great deal of rough weather , one voyage having been so trying that the Burnside nar- rowlly escaped destruction. The Filipinos - pines , however , In spite of the severe climate and the difficult nature of the work , proved 00 efficient and trust- worthy that Lieut.-Col. Allen of th" United States signal corps : says : n his official report : "The work was always - X ways cheerfully performed by them and In no case during Ute entire trll was any sort of punishment Ildmlnl ! : . comes from the hand of nalurl Personally . sonnlly I prater the fruit of the tropics -bananas , persimmons , figs , dates- which have been proved to give as great strength and endurance as docs any mixed diet. "The objects in living on natural food are : "First-To make us more natural in thought and In action "Second - From an economical standpoint , It Is far cheaper where these fruits grow. It i9 well known lIy travelers In the tropics that we can live on $ I a month 01' less. "Thli ' d-There Is a very decided hu- manlatrlan Issue In this diet. No animal . mal has to suffer imprisonment and fintll slaughter In order to feed the frultarian. The fruitarian will take his meal directly from the tree and cat. " Mr. Darling has evidently found these results In his mode of life , for ho has built himself up wonderfully. When he left Portland a year ago he weighed ninety pounds , while now he weighs about one hundred and sev- ent ' -five pounds. It was done without - out a. . drop of medicIne. He rises at daylight , takes a cold shower bath , then runs half a mile or . I so. Then he goes through calisthenIc exercises before eating breakfast . of fruit. He eats regularly three times each day and always has a good ap- petite. _ _ " 'L -r- , the tank when we go by and tell me what's the matter. 'I rlut nothing must do but we stop dead and lose mar time , for the object . I ject behind the red light was still comln' up the center of the track with the Intern 6wlngln' vlclo\1sh' I'd have to stop dead or run over the cuss. ; ! tIny this time I was 'most ready to take passage in an aerial grayhol1nd , and I made the mistake of reversln' her to avoid hittIn' the man. Dang ! went the cylinder head on the right side. "With the noise of the explosion the thing behind the red light gave a jump and cleared both tracks ; : , landin' In a ditch. I knew that no human beht' could make a leap like that , so I started : to Investigate "And what do you : suppose I found In the bitch ? A cow. A cow with her crumpled horn passed through the ball of a red order lantern. Evidently she had broken through some farm fence a little further down the line and In rubbing her nose against an order , lamp had stuck her horn through the lantern on the post and brought It away with her. "And there we were for an hour while I disconnected and got the en- gine fixed up so we could move on slowly , using one side. " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - tercd to these nen. They continually grew In strengtah , and with the exceptIon - ceptIon of slight colds from exposure they : were In excellent health through- out. The point desired to bo made prominent Is that these men taken from the Phlllppine Islands and sent directly Into the cold of Alaska were able to perform all the duties required - quired of them In the most satisfactory . tory manner : ' Gen. Greely Ea1' : "The marked success of the past year has caused the chief signal offic , er of the army to engage a Flllpino crew for the operations In Alaskan waters for the coming summer. " Medallion for Loubet. The president of France Is to nt- ' : el\'e n gold medallion In honor ot tits ; 'ecent visit to Italy. A French so1l1 . rose , Marcella Lancelot.Groco , Is the . . .rUst chosen. . . .w..rw + . . . . . . . _ - . . . - _ . . .ua.-lrrc. . .Vw. . .x.rw..w.waf.w. . . . . . . . . . . . SURGEONS USE TUNING FORK - - New Method by Which Fractures Arcs , Located. A very simple method of locating fractures in bones , particularly In long ones , by the aid of a tuning fork , Is proposed lIy 0. Chicago sur- geon. A stethoscope Is placed over the bone as near as possible to the point of : : suspected fracture and on the side where the skin Is thinnest. Then a vibrating tuning fork Is placed against the flesh near the bone , but on the other side of the fracture fC possible. H the bone Is continuous , n. distinct clear sound will be heard in the stethoscope - oscope , but If the break Is between , tween the two , this sound will bo faint and Irregular , as the vibrations will not be transmitted past the brea } Of course this method depends upon the fact that hard bone Is an excellent conductor of vibration , while tissue Is not. Perhaps even a. more valuable application of this idea would be In finding out when a break has knitted properly , for when the joining Is again perfect the sound wlll be as clear as that oC an unbroken bone.-Colller's Weekly. Curious Carving. One of the most ancient bits of carving in England Is a. quaint old religious decoration at Bedford church , \Vorcestershlre. . It dater from early Norman times , although Its exact age Is uncertain. The carv- Ing Is on a fine old Norman arch In . the front of the church. The accom- pan'lng sketch shows the top of file doorway ornamented with Saracens' heads. The symbols In the tympanum above are easily deciphered. The eyes represent ' God the Father , the cross the Son and the dove the Holy Spirit , thus comprising the Trinity. In the sides , with their forelegs upraised , are two animals probably Intended for an ox and an ass.-New York Herald. Uncomfortable Sheep's Talis. A species of sheep common In Syria Is so encumbered by the weight of Its tall that the shepherds fix a piece of thin board to the under part , where It Is not covered with thick wool , to prevent it from being torn by the bushes , etc. Some have small wheels affixed to facilitate the dragging of these boards after them. The tall of a common sheep of this sort usually weighs 15 pounds or upwards , while that of a larger species , after being well fattened , will weigh 50 pounds. Mohammed'a Signature. . Mohammed's signature , which he In said to have traced In the sand , was made of a single unbroken line. Watch , a Year In a Hose , Still Runs. Fireman John Manson of the C. and M. V. railroad , lost his watch a year ago while working on Engine 8803 , In Lancaster. Since then he has worked on several different engines , but to-day , while on No. 8803 again , the hose connecting the tank and engine . gine became clogged , and , when un- jointed , his watch fell out- He wound It and the watch began to run -Cln. ! clnnatl Enquirer. . . . . .n.m : _ : : . : : . : < - ' - ' : : - " ' : ' - . - - . . _ . _ . . : : " - = : . . : . . : : . . : : r . : : . . : : ' : : : : : : . : . _ - , : : . : - " ' " SNAILS FOt\D OF MUSIC. = ranch Nationalist Has Discovered Their Peculiarity. A German scientist recently pointed nit that snails are able to draw 1m- l1ensc weights , antI now a French nat- uralist claims that there arc few , it my , animals which have a higher appreciation - preciation ot music than snails This naturalist Is M. S. .Jourdaln , and his views on the subject are expressed nt length in a paper which he has addressed - dressed to the French Biological so- I clety. Place some snails on a pone Df glass , .he says , and you will fad . that as they move over It they will make musical sounds similar to those which a person can produce by wet- ting his fingers and then rubbing it around a glass tumbler. Complete airs , he points out , have been played on tumblers In this way , and he expresses the opinion that quite as good results - sults can be obtained by using snails Instead of fingers. Designed by the Kaiser. - . - - ir tarbfiurIaif fee . This memorial card was specially prepared lIy Emperor William of Germany many for presentation to relatives of men who died for "emperor and em- pire" while fighting against the Hors reros. This fact is duly Bet forth In the inscription engraved on the card. A Natural Aqllffrlum. The spot In the world which offers fishing of the greatest variety Is Free mantle , Western Australia A man fishing from a boat In that harbor may catch two dozen varieties of fish within an hour. Ho may successively draw up It snapper , a mackerel , a perch , an eel : a hog fish , white grunts ; a hatchet fish , a skate and all the rest. Then ho may bolt over and sea - the sandy bottom a hundred feet below - low ns distinct as though covered only by a faint blue mist , with one or more specIes of fish In sight. Plowing In Somali land. Here Is a sample of the way In i which primitive workers still till the land In the heart of SomallJand. It Is no fanciful sketch : ! , hut a photo' graph made lIy a correspondent 01 . the London Sphere , who found tliia I. strange and Ill.assorted pair of . draught animals hauling the most I primitive of plows In the arable low- , lands. , ! Golfing Feat. At the recent Oxford and Cambridge - bridge match nt Woklng one of the : ompetltors-C H. Alison of Oxtord- landed his ball on the top of the clubhouse . house In approaching to the home green. One might have Imagined that - this would have been out ot bounds , but the player was allowed w get a ladder and play the ban from the top of the house. What Is more to the point , he made a grand recovery and holed out in ftvc.