Xiiirht in Horse Stalls. Many unwisely put a small Avindow nt the front of the horse stall , causing the light lo fall directly into the horse's eyes. It is a wonder that a horse has nny eyesight after a feAV months' ex posure Jo such a condition. Entire ab- Bcnco of light in the stall is to be avoid ed , howeA'er , for this causes injury to the darkness into the strong light. Wht-n the light cannot be admitted from the rear , but must come from the Bide , put a grating into the side of the stall , as shown in the cut. If IAVO or more stalls are side by side , put such a grating into each partition. It will let horse's eyes Avheu he goes out from ii t'rtttid- > ; - t'rtttidIP - ribS -ibS . ? * U LIGHT FICO.M THE SIDK. light into even the stall farthest ? ro : the windows. Such grating comes In various sizes of mesh , and is sold at the hardware store. iji Tobicco. "We are working on a new line of to bacco investigation , * ' said Secretary Wilson to a correspondent , "ferments In tobacco. But little is known scien tifically about the curing of tobacco. I tried last year , when in Florida , to find out from the Cubans why they had certain processes in curing the leaves. They had exact methods for proceeding , and they knew what the results \\ould be , but they did not know why they did it. It was because their fathers had done it before them. This matter of ferments in tobacco is a very fni---resting question. We know that fermentation in the silo reduces the Mipply of nitrogen , and we know that in cooking food composed largely of proieids. or nitrogenous matter , a loss Is sustained from a feeding point of view ; but in tobacco curing we know comparatively little ; that is , whether we want to retain or dispose of the ni trogen. The department has now two agenis at work upon this subject , one , a noted German scientist , has been en gaged , and will proceed South on this investigation. ' ' V * hen the Hncltle Is Gone. The accompanying illustrations , from the Orange Judd Farmer , show how to join the ends of the driving reins together - _ gether when the / buckle has been lost. With a pock et knife cut the end of each rein , as shown at a , then by slippiug the ex treme end of each through the tack- shaped opening of the other , a reason ably firm union is effected. The ne cessity of always keeping the reins fastened together cannot be too strongly emphasized. If a horse becomes frightened , and one rein is dropped , there is no possible way pf recovering it , if it is not fastened to the other. Many a runaway has result ed from a failure to observe this pre caution. K eld Peas for Orchards. There is natural adaptability of the orchard for peas aside from the fact that the pea roots increase nitrogen in r the sail. The pea must be sown early , and therefore the plowing is done when it does not injure the tree roots. Then the broad leaves of the pea shade the soil and apparently absorb enough mois ture at night to keep the plant fresh and growing. Then after ( lie peas are ( harvested the hogs can be turned in to eat what have been scattered in har vesting. If the hogs are left without rings in their noses they will root over the surface soil and thus cover what ex crement they have dropped. This with continued extra feeding in the orchard is the best way to enrich it. Flavor of Flesh. The Livf Stock Journal says with much emphasis and with truth that "the meat of all animals is affected by the food they eat : the ducks taste fishy Hint live on fish ; beechnuts bacon from pigs fed on beechnuts has the finest fla vor , and hogs allowed to feed on stink ing , f lly * slops and on dead animals must produce meat that is unfit for hu man food. In th's land of abundant food wo should feed sound , clean , healthy food and fresh , clean slop or clean water. ' ' ' helter for Sheep. Sheep suffer if kept in close , under ground , unventilated stables , which are pretty sure to be also damp and have foul air. Even in warm weather sheep svill prefer to sleep on knolls , not niere- y to be able to watch against danger , but also to secure free circulation of pure air. So long as the roof keeps out the rain , the open texture of the woolen on the sheep's backs will keep cold out , however severe , provided it is not ac companied by wet. The sheep need this shelter from rain , even when the weath er is not so very cold , though the oil which nature provides protects the skin from being AVCT , unless the storm is so long continued that the sheep is chilled through. s : Fruit Trees Inlo Kcarins ; . Fruit trees of any kind frequently grow with great luxuriance. In this they are usually unfruitful. No tree commences to flower and fruit until its vegetative exuberance has been some what checked. Those who understand the art of fruit culture thoroughly can bring these wayward trees into a straighter line of duty by root-pruning them. II is effected by digging a trench around the tree and then filling it up with the earth that has been thrown out. This cutting off the ends of the roots causes check lo the extreme vigor. and the result is the production of flowers instead of branches. The dis tance from the trunk that the trench should be dug will , of course , depend upon the age and size of the tree , and also its ratio of luxuriance ; the aim should be to dig so as to cut off about one-third of its roots. The pear , a well as other fruit trees , is particu larly benefited by root-pruning. It can be carried out at any time during th * fall or winter season. M3ehan's Monfhlv. Fee-l for Milk. Wheat bran and wheat middlings arc pre-eminently milkmakers in the opin ion of Prof. Hills. lie believes them absolutely safe when fed in any possi ble quantities. They carry considerable percentages of protein , and , at ruling prices , are in every way desirable dairy feeds. Cornmeal he considers economi cal according to how it is fed. Some times cornmeal may be used to advan tage in a dairy ration. Some fault is to be found , however , with the extent of its use. It is wiser to feed corn in the form of a silage rather than to pluck and grind the ear. If , however , the sil age is deficient in corn , it may be sup plied in the shape of meal. Indeed , up to the limit of making the ration too heating , it may sometimes be an ad vantage to add cornmeal to the ration even when the silage is well eared , but more particularly because it tends to better the grain of butter. Thimiiiie : Fruit. The practicability of thinning fruit and its feasibility from a commercial standpoint have been pretty well dem onstrated in the last few years. Mr. John Craig reports , in the publications of the ( Canadian ) Central Experiment al Farm , some results in thinning peaches and plums which corroborate the notes given from others. lie con cludes that , when a large crop of fruit is set , thinning peaches is highly re munerative for the following reasons : 1. It increases the weight of the yield. 2. It largely increases the size of the fruit , o. It reduces the number of ma tured seeds , thereby considerably les sening the drain on the vitality of the tree. 4. It renders the crop less liable to rot. Thinning plums likewise proved altogether worth while. Good "Wool. Wool is affected by breed , climate and food. Sheep will thrive in some sections better than in others , and AVOO ! from some flocks Avill bring higher prices than other wools. To produce good Avool the sheep must be Avell fed , but not too much so. If the food is not sufficiently nutritious the AVOO ! Avill lack in strength , be dry , harsh , flabby and rough to the touch. Wool from sheep that are kept on pastures which pro vide abundant herbage Is long in fiber , soft , Avhite and strong. It is claimed that all foods which promote perspira tion produces fine wool , but it is not necessary to make a selection of foods if the sheep have a variety. Stopped. Ili = Paper. "Once upon a time , " says the IIoulz- dale ( Pa. ) Journal , "a man got mad at the editor and stopped the paper. In : i feAV weeks he sold his corn at 4 cents less than the market price. Then his property was sold for taxes because he didn't read the Sheriff's sale. He paid $10 for a lot of forged notes that had been advertised tAvo weeks and ( ho public warned against them. He then rushed to the printing office and paid several years' subscription in adA-ance and had the editor sign an agreement he was to knock him down if he order ed his paper to be stopped again. ' ' Fceditijr for i'jrs in Winter. Many writers advise that farmers should force their hens to lay in winter by heavy feeding , as eggs are high in price in cold Avcather. It is not so eas.A lo force hens to lay as may be sup posed. Hundreds of hens that are wel > fed in winter do not lay. The fact ir that the food is but a factor in the matter. It is not natural for birds tc lay in Avinter. and to induce liens to lay at that season they must have spring and summer conditions , such as warm quarters , an opportunity to exercise any food of a varied character , avoid ing grain in excess. ss of Frisif. Eat some fruit each day , to keep the stomach in tone. The acid of sour fruits , as of the apple and pear , is the best corrective to the nausea that comes from eating too much fat meat , and there is no better way of taking it than in the apple sauce made with boiled-down cider. It is always appre ciated. Growth of Shrubs. It is amazing to notice how much an ordinary shrub will grow in a single summer. A silver fir 21/ ; feet high was lately carefully measured. It hrd put forth 5So new shoots , varying from one-half inch to G inches each. Defective City Streets. The movement for better highways was undertaken mainly to effect the improA'ement of those roads which lie outside the limits of towns and cities and , in large parts , traverse purely rural districts. The mileage of such roads is very great ; their condition is often deplorable ; many of those Avho use them most appear indifferent to their improvement and violently op posed to spending any money on them , or even to changing time-worn methods of maintenance. These conditions haAe proved serious obstacles to the general inauguration of road improvement ; but , by united and prolonged effort , and years of work , they arc gradually being surmounted. The condition , however , of the streets , in most of the IOAA-HS and cities which do not come Avithiu the scope of Ihe good roads moveme'nt is , relatively , about as bad as that of the country roads. In some of the towns and cities few streets are paved at all , and in most of them much of the pavement is rough , badly laid , and poorly kept. This seems the more strange , as the Avealth , progress'n-eness , commercial activity and intelligence of the coun try are concentrated , in large measure , in and around the centers of popula tion. It would appear that the needs of modern life should have long ago led all places of any size or pretense to fa cilitate local development by affording commerce the best possible means lo prosecute its undertakings by provid ing smooth , paved ways within their borders for quick and easy transporta tion. It Avould seem that disease should have been warded off , death rates re duced , and reputations for healthfulness - ness sought after , by laying pavements , easily and cheaply cleaned , and equal to the requirements of modern sanitary methods. It Avould be supposed that the recreation of the populace Avould have been everywhere provided for by Ihe construction of boulevards , park- Avays and parks that would provide place for pleasant change and healthful exercise in leisure moments. In short , there are many reasons Avhy , the more dense the population and the greater the volume of business transacted , the better the pavements should be. It is seldom that such is the case , and it is the more curious because Ameri cans usually demand in large measure all those things that make for their comfort and pleasure , and it is the more disgraceful because the necessity for something better is constantly and painfully apparent , and the facilities and means are at hand to provide all that can be required. A gentleman just returned from abroad has stated that our city streets compare ten more unfavorably Avith those of foreign cities than do our coun try roads. It is not difficult to believe this. Though the round cobble is per haps no longer laid , there are streets Avhere their abominable surface must be traversed. The forms of block pave ment more generally used can be made to give good results but they rarely do so. OAving to beintr improperly laid on soft foundations , whiHi speedily alloAV them to sink in spots , and depressions soon appear in Avhich the Avater stands after every storm. But it is not necessary to enumerate the defects of city streets they are ob vious to the millions who tread them daily. Their improvement on modern , scientific lines is a constantly growing necessity. U A. W. Bulletin. One KiTcct of Keller Koatls. A Long Island farmer says that be fore the roads were macadamized , when he reached the foot of a certain hill Avitli a ton load on his wagon , he Avals obliged to stop and take off half the load ; then after hauling half his load to the to ] ) of the grade he Avould unload that and retrace his steps to the foot and bring up the half he had left there , and , after picking up the part first brought to the top. he Avould con tinue the trip. Now he is able to haul the entire ton'up the hill Avithout dilli- -ulty. QUEER CHANNEL ISLANDS. Odd Mixture of Nationalities , with Adherence to Old Custom'- . During the last five years many American tourists , aroused by the vivid descriptions of Victor Hugo , have vis ited the famous Channel Island's , of which Jersey , Guernsey and Aldernei' are the largest. These are betAveen England and France and their inhab itants arc an odd mixture of the IAVO nationalities. They are very conserva tive and keep up many of the customs of ancient times. Some of them are quite pretty and have been reproduced in England and America by returned travelers. One ito have the bedrooms look into the garden and not the street. When this cannot be done a glass partition with a door is built across the room , and the half by the Avindow is made into a conservatory. Another useful idea is a little clay-lined iron brazier , used for broiling meat over a charcoal fire. It makes 110 smoke and can be ex tinguished quickly. For rapid and comfortable cooking in summer it is invaluable. The islands are warm and fertile and are famous for lettuce , chic ory , salsify , endives , sorrel , crests and other delicate vegetables. These are made into mixed salads and also into omelettes , like the so-called Spanish omelettes. The latter are tasty and very \vUolesomo. Tiio islands excel In pastry. Fruits are the favorite food. They are served raw , sliced Avith tht famous Jersey cream , baked with cus- lard , stewed with a litlle wine and sugar and strangely , in pies , good American pies ! The Guernsey mince pie has no meat or suet in its composi tion. It is made of apple , pear , peach , plum , berries , raisins , grapes , citron , sugar , butter , spices , wine and brandy and is reported to be exceedingly fas cinating. A "Jersey luncheon , " as IIOAV given by experts , consists of bouillon , a mixed salad , a sardine pastry , a Guernsey mince pie , then wine and cof fee , which is not bad for Jersey. THE FRENCH ARMY. It Would Not Strain the Republic to Place in the Field 12,500 OOO Men. The French budget for the present year shoAvs that the peace strength of the French army amounts to 54 < ; ,04-i men. Of this tolal number 20,402 are officers. These figures describe the home army alone and mean that the nation has that many men at hand in France. The army in Algiers consists of 55,911 men , of whom 2,197 are offi cers , and the army in Tunis consists of 13,458 men , of whom 552 are officers. Add the number of the home army to that of the army abroad , and the total Avill be 015,413 , of whom 29,151 are olli- cers. Including all the departments , the French army has 142,038 horses in its service. If France were called upon lo engage in Avar with any European na tion at this time she Avould be ready to put into the field 541.020 for the active army alone , and 25,790 for the gendar merie and the republican guards. Thai is a pretty good fighting force to throw into action at once. France , back of her superb army , has a grand store of men to dnnv on. The number of men liable to military service in France is estimated thus : The active army and its reserves , all Avell trained soldiers. 2.350,000 ; the territorial army ( acrtve ) , 900,000 ; the territorial reserve , 1,100- 000. These give a grand total of 4,350- 000. Such a tremendous force as this Avould not of course be available at once. But if France were called upon to put forth its best military strength quickly she could bring into action Avith no trou ble whatever an army of at least 2,500- 000 men. Shorten oil His Sentence. A man charged Avith bigamy Avas once brought before Judge Gary , of Illinois. The accused had lived two years Aviih the second-Avoman , and he concluded to plead guilty on the under standing Avith the state's attorney lhal the sentence would divorce him from Xumher Two. When he stood before Judge Gary the litlle man looked over his cle < k and asked in a voice of kindness "You full understand what the plea of guilty means ? " "Yes , your honor. " "And do you understand if you so plead it Avill be my duty to send you to the penitentiary ? Do you understand that ? ? " "Yt' < . . ) . " honor. Anything to wt five. " j The judire looked at the man for a moment and then said in his inimitable manner : "I suppose there are some thingbe - ide which prison would be a relief. Any relative or friend of the defendant in court ? " A woman in black stood up on a bench , and said in a A'oice which sound ed like a rip of cambric : " 1 am his second Avife. judge. " Judge Gary , immediately , Avith no change in his voice or face , said : "Some things beside Avhich prison Avould be a relief. You ouirht to be Aviiling to take three years. " The prisoner nodded an as < ent. Judge Gary loked over at the Avoman in black. lie seemed to read her in a second. He turned to the man who had pleaded guilty and said : " 1 Aviil give you one year. You seem to have had the other two before they arrested vou. " Cijr.'stcmnjr Siadc Vl-Jasy. The peculiar and amusing name- borne by North American Indians are obtained in a novel and interestiiiir manner. In the first place the children's names are nut selected by the parent * , as among civilized races , but are bestowed by tli" doctor or medicine man of the tribe. After attending a birth , thi * personage betakes himself to the en trance of the wig-warn * and irazes around. The name of the object or scene which first attract * his attention i * a ! > o the name of the newly born child. Thus should the sun hajvK'ii to be rising , the appellation of "Ilisintr Suu" i * the child's name : or if a bird is flying past , he or sh i * known through life a * "Hird-in-the-air. " On the Avhole. llu > idea is not bad. if fur the s-ike of ' only relieA'inir the pa rents of the vat amount of anxiety ami discussion experienced by parents of other lands when a child's name is to be decided : but all the same it is just as well that the cutom is not general , for how would a young lady or gentleman feel if the doctor had found it expedient to christen her or him "Street car"or "EKvtrict liirht. " use in a Cemetery. Throughout the world there are hun dreds of lighthouses dotted along flu- coast , but a lighthoine in the midst of a cemetery is a rare thing. Such a one , however , has ju t been erected in the cemetery at Tlverston , Lancashire. Eng. A .Miss Wilson had it built in remembrance of her father , who died in London eighteen months ago. A Avorking man often refuses to be lieve that he is getting along well unless he has a debt , when he can represent himself as a hard-working man trying to get out of debt. The hand that rules the dyspeptic makes Che pie. TOPICS FOR FARMERS A DEPARTMENT PREPARED FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. t'oultry ItnlaliiK Business Thin Soils May Be Made Fertile by Turn- ins Under Green Crops Hints on Ice Harvesting. Jn all occupations it is the strict ob servance of business principles that re sults in success. liaising poultry is no exception to this rule , and those who have and are making the business a decided success are but receiving the reward that follows the faithful appli cation of strictly business methods. This so-called luck , good or bad , is merely the effect of proper or improper methods. Success in poultry culture is no hap hazard affair , but is secured only by regular method ? , and the closer the ap- lication and more careful and earnest , the greater becomes the success. One reason why many fail to meet with success when the } ' increase their flocks is that they fail to increase their accommodations in proportion to the increase in their flock ; they fail to rec ognize that large Hocks are dililcult to feed so thru each individual may secure its allotted share ; the various ailments have to be guarded against where large flocks are kept that are comparatively unknown among the moderate-sized flockThe man who has attained success with a fair-sized flock should be very cautious how he increases it , expecting thereby to increase his pro fits , lie should make a careful note of the facts that have resulted in secur ing profit * . A good way to increase the flock is to do it on the colony plan. After you know how to care for , say fifty hens , then start another yard of fifty hens. Then you will either double the num ber of hens with not quite t\vice the amount of labor , and you should have twice the amount of profit. This should be followed up until you can increase by another colony of fifty liens. By method you will be able to care for r 00 liens , and do it as successfully as you did with the first fifty. Ilemomber that it is the little things that make the success good or bad on the poultry farm. Indiana Farmer. Jfow to Help Thin Soils. Shallow , thin soils that are deficient in vegetable mat tor , or , in other words , { re barren from excessive cropping. MU be made fertile only by the turnIng - Ing under of green crops grown by the aid of chemical manures , or by spread ing a thick coat of rotted straw , leaves or swamp grass over the ground and turning this vegetable matter under four inches in depth. The following ipring spread forty bushels of fresh Kme to the acre , and harrow it in both ways. Plant the fi.-ld to corn , apply ing 250 pounds of bone phosphate to the acre in the hill. Work the corn five or six times , and not more than three inches in depth. Cut the corn iff early in .September : harrow the stubble well , and then drill to wheat , putting in with the grain 301) ) pounds of bone phosphate to the acre and .seed ono pock of timothy in the fall and one peck of clover in the spring upon each acre. After the grain is harvested roll the stubble and keep off all stock. If there is a rank growth of grass , fox tail and ragweed , cut it off with the mower the first week in August , set ting the cutter bar high. These weeds and glasses , if cured in the cock , will make excellent rousrh fodder for win tering young cattle. Pasture lands and run-nut hillside fields can be cheap ly improved by spreading a coat of straw on the surface and then spread ing forty bushels o'f fresh lime to the acre over the straw. Let the field lie until next fall , ketping oil all stock , then plow the field shallow ; harrow well and drill to grain , applying 300 pounds of so'iie good bone manure to thi1 acre and seed down to timothy and clover. The American. Prevent ing : Apple Kot. A writer in the Practical Fanner , says : "On my father's farm is a Janet apple tree about twenty years old which IH-V. r produced any sound ap ple * until .ivc-ntiy. The tree bloomed freely an-.l > 't a great many apples , whk-li rni.f ; before maturinir. On ex amining t' ' tree we found the bark rotmh and < ; : : ly. and under the scales liun'hvd-s of bark lice. The leaves also looked badly , having a pale green ap- peari : ; < v. In .May , ISOd , I pulled off tin * sc : ly bark anil applied with a brush a mixture of soapsuds and carbolic acid , half pint acid to two gallons smK In 1H)7 ) we sprayed the tree with the Uordv'Mii mixture ju-t after the bloom ha.l fallen and again two weeks later. During the summer the foliage was of dark green , and in the fall we picked several bushels of excellent apples/ ' irarvcstiiijj Ice. A- soon as the ice is six inches thick ft should be cut. Cat and stack it up alongside of the pond. Clear , solid ice , properly packed in a good house , will keep. Snow ice is very porous , and. being full of airhole.will soon melt. The ice should be marked off and saw ed out in medium-sized blocks. A handy block to handle is one twenty inches square. Square blocks pack more closely. The more compact the ice can be put away the better it will keep. The icehouse should be cleaned out. the rails laid abet six inches apart in the bottom of the house , and one foot of straw spread over the rails. See that the board siding next to the house is in good condition. Holes should be nailed over to keep the ice from coming in contact with the earth. As the ice is put in , leave a ten-inch space between the ice and the sides of the house. This space should be rammed solid with leaves or chaff. Haul and pack the ice when the weather is cold. Ice packed when the weather is severe will freeze Into a solid mass. Tack the Ice layer" by layer , and fill up the holes with small pieces of ice. Snow when It falls , on Ice that is to be cut should be , brushed off rhe next day before It freezes. Farmers living near the city and having a pond of clear spring water can find a profitable market for all the good Ice they have to spare. Keepinjr Potatoes. A correspondent of Farming suggests that potatoes will keep best at a low temperature , a little above freezing. Many potatoes are spoiled by being kept in too warm a place during the early fall and late spring. They should be kept in a dry place. If it will keep dry , a deep cellar is preferable , for the reason that it Js more likely to have a low uniform temperature , and will not be reduced to freezing temperature so readily as more shallow ones. The bins in a potato cellar should not be too large. A three-hundred-bushel bin should be the largest used. Smaller ones would suit better. Slatted floors for the bins and slated walls between the bins , which allow the air to pass around them , arc better than close walls or floors. The circulation of air which they allow keeps the potatoes dry and prevents heating. It is not a good plan to put potatoes in the cellar as soon as they are dug. It is better to put them in pits in the field until the weather gets cold enough to freeze the ground a few inches deep. In pitting them temporarily , if the ground is wet , put the potatoes in a conical pile on the surface ; but , if tap ground is dry , dig a shallow pit for them and use the dirt out of it for cov ering. After the potatoes have been placed in an even conical pile , cover them Avith a layer of pea or other straw about four inches thick , and then cov er them with from three to five inches of dirt. In such a pit potatoes will keep through a severe frost. A POIInil of Pork. It requires 13.50 pounds of skim milk to produce one pound of pork when fed with corn meal , ratio 1:1-1.7 to fatten ing hogs. Skim milk could not be economically fed to fattening hogs unless it was a product which could not be otherwise utilized. It required on an average -JV1 pounds of shelled corn to produce one pound of pork during an average period of four weeks , or one bushel produced 13J4 pounds. It required -l'/t pounds of cornmeal to produce one pound of pork , or one bushel of corn made into meal and fed will produce 12i ) pounds of pork. When dry , shelled corn is more eco nomical than cornmeal to feed fatten ing hogs. It required 1\ \ pounds , or one bushel , of ground oats to produce one pound of pork , when fed with equal parts , by weight , of cornmeal. One bushel of cornmeal is worth' nearly three bushels of oats as food for fattening hogs. Corn-fed pigs gained 4 % pounds pel- week and ate about 21 pounds of corn per 300 pounds of live weight. 1'ork was produced during the cold weather , with corn at 28 cents per bushel , for less than 3 cents per pound. Indian corn is the most economical pork-producing material during the winter months in regions where exten sively grown. Market Basket. To Kill I.scc on In answer to an inquiry , the Orange Judd Farmer gives the following in structions : "Before using any remedy have the pig house cleaned and hot lime sprinkled over the floor , and the walls whitewashed with fresh-burned lime. Then brush the hogs well to remove all dirt from the skin. Stavesacre seed , 1 quart : water , 20 quarts ; I > oil this for one hour ; let it simmer one hour longer , then strain and add water to make it up to the twenty quarts again. Rub a little of this well in all over the body. If the stavesacre seeds cannot be ob tained , use 1 pound of black tobacco to 30 pounds of water in the same way as the skivcsacrc seeds. " > Paper lo IIxclii'lc CoM. Common paper being , if whole , imner vious to air , makes a very good covering where it can be kept from being wet. By using tarred paper and placing it be tween two thicknesses of matched boards , the paper can be kept in good condition several winters , provided mice do not gain entrance. The im prisoned air which the paper will hold between the boards makes the very best kind of non-conductor. Even the news paper spread over the bed , or , better still , placed between the coverings , pre vents much cold air getting through to the sleepers beneath , and a folded news paper at the chest or back , under the clothing , is a great protection against cold in day time. StrcetCars Supplying Cigarettes. An experiment for the convenience ot passengers is in preparation by the North Metropolitan Tramway Com pany of London. Their cars are to be fitted with automatic machines for the supply of cigarettes two ordinary ones for a penny , or one of superior quality for the same coin. This , of course , is for the convenience of out side passengers only , for , as hereto fore , the interior of the vehicle i.s strictly reserved for nonsmokers. One of the cars has been fitted with its au tomatic machine at the company's works Leytonshire , and should the ex periment prove successful others wi7 be similarly supplied. Fooling the Lordly Plumber. Freezing will not injure a newly pat ented water pipe , which has a yielding core in the center , strong enougn to withstand the force of the water under natural pressure , but which collapses as the ice expands , and prevents burst' ing , the core enlarging again as soon as the water thaws and the pressure ia removed.