7 THE DAWSON TRAIL. Get. down to your work, you dog of slave dog! Get down to yoar work, I say! It's tonsht hard trail we've come, dog, Atfo the camp is far away. FiC) for the life of us both, dog. For dark is the end of day! Get down to yoar work, you dog of dog! Get down to yoar work, I say! lied is the sun in the southern sky; Bed is the trail behind the sleigh; lied is the foot of the sled-dog gray; Cold is the end of day. Get down to your work! Shall a man for a dog Throw a man's life away? The trail grows dim, and the tree trunks gray; In the northern sky the maidens play; The goblins dance in the Milky- Way; Black is the end of day! Harper's Magazine. HEN the men of the service left Valdez to build the mili tary lines through the interior of Alaska, Langtield went with them. He was undeniably plain, undersized and 'over sensitive, and that was why he felt certain that Dolly could never love him. To be sure, he had had no intention of loving her, but when six feet two of well-developed manhood, in the person of Tom Terry, came down from Circle City prospecting, Langtield found intentions and love had nothing to do with each other. Tom and Dolly had known each other In the States, and Langfleld watched with hopeless pain the renewal of their friendship. She had grown shy with him since Perry came, and there could be but one reason, he argued. He did notblame her; there was nothing in" him to inspire a woman's love, and Tom . So he packed his flute and his knapsack and left with scarcely a farewell. The men were not fond of Langfleld. He had a way of shrinking into him self that only Shivers, the camp mas-- cot, a lank, mongrel Siwash with the stump of a tall, understood. Langfleld seldom joined the camp fires, but when the fever broke out Langfleld was the first to offer his ser vices. He was not afraid of contagion, he told the sergeant, and anyway there was no one at home who needed him. After that he and Shivers took up their quarters in the hospital tent. The fever had its run, but only one, thanks to the nursing, was borne up the trail and laid away under the snow. Langfleld planed a piece of spruce scantling and drove It in by the mound, but his hand was unsteady, and his eyes were heavy and dull. The top sergeant, on his rounds the next morning, found him sitting up in his blankets. His face was swollen and discolored, and he was talking ex citedly to Shivers. "You mustn't let Dolly get the fever," he said, "she's so little. Nor Tom promise me you won't let Tom." Shiv ers whined and thrust his muzzle into his master's palm. "She couldn't help loving him," Langfleld continued de fensively. "You know she couldn't yourself!" He fell back on the pillow and tossed restlessly for a moment. "It'll be cool up there under the snow," he began again, "and I won't be heavy to pack. And say " He sat up, pull ing the dog close to him, "maybe she'll forget that my hair was red." The men were very tender to Lang fleld after that, and Shivers seldom left his bedside. When, some weeks later, he became convalescent, he seemed smaller and slighter than ever, and his hair shone more vividly red against the pinched, white face. They carried him out Into the sunshine, but his eyes wandered regretfully up to the snow. In a month he was at his post again, doing the work of two men, with scarcely the strength of one. He went down the mountain one night an hour behind time. The trail was slushy, and the early gray twi light lent a soft indistinctness every where. Suddenly he paused. From somewhere there came a faint cry, weak and indistinct, but undeniably human. Langfleld made a trumpet of his hands. "Hel lo!" he shouted, and strained his ears for the reply. Some ten feet down the trail a gla cier stream had gullied out the bank. Its icy, slate-colored waters fell almost perpendicularly over the rocks. Creep ing to the slippery edge, he peered over and called again. A faint voice an swered. A steep, shelving path was just vis ible, and he clambered down to it, scratched and torn by the brambles at every step. A little further on a roll of blankets Impeded his way, and he knew that somewhere in the ravine be low he Hvould find a prospector. The man proved to be a big fellow, but the light was too dim to see his face. The force of his fall had wedged one leg between the crevices of rock, and It took I.angtield's entire strength to extricate him. He pressed his can teen to he stranger's lips, and rubbed him vigorously. "It's no use," said the man at last, "I can't make it!" and he sank limply on the bank. The night wore on. Slowly the gray skirts of dawn swept across the east ern sky. The prospector could not see Langfleld' s face, but the slight, droop ing shoulders seemed familiar. The pain was growing unbearable, and he groaned. Langfleld started. "Yes, yes," he an swered abseutly. "I'd forgotten," and jumped to his feet. The morning light was flooding ev erything, and it fell upon the two men, as they looked into each other's eyes. Laugtield drew in his breath with sud den sharpness. The other muttered an oath and leaned weakly back to ward him. "You!" The man nodded. The lines on Langfleld's face were tense and drawn, and he steadied him self with au effort. "Well." he said at last, "it's three miles to camp, and we'd better be moving." Tfcere were a few drops left in his WONDERFUL BRAIN RAILWAY POSTAL CLERKS UNDER EXAMINATION OF SCHEMES. rrr"HlNGS that a railway postal 1 fersons, and so on. In some instances HINGS that a railway postal clerk must remember have in- II clerk must remember have, in- creased in such volume that one would think every ceil of his brain would be filled with the name of a postoffice or railway connection, and the wonder is that the clerk's mind does not falter under the pressure. De spite these facts, cases of insanity among this class of public servants are rare. One Chicago postal clerk main tained for several years a record of 21,000 cards (which take the place of letters in examinations) with an aver age per cent of correct distribution of a fraction over 99 per cent. He knew how to reach that many offices in sev eral States by the shortest, quickest route, and he knew the correct location of each office in its State. A clerk on the New York and Chicago railway postofHce must know the cor rect location of every postoffice in a group of States made up of Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana, Minnesota, South Dakota and Nebraska. In these seven States there are 12,317 postof fices. Not only is the clerk required to be "up" on the general scheme, which means the correct location of the postoffices in each State, but he must know bow to reach the whole 12,000 postoffices from one or more stations. A clerk running between Chicago and Minneapolis underwent no fewer than seventy-eight examinations In fifteen years, learning 13,306 offices in fifteen different sections of the United States. In some of these examinations he was required to make a Chicago city distri bution, which means that while run ning over the country at the rate of a mile a minute he must distribute letters to the carriers of the Chicago delivery. He must know not only where every public building and leading mercantile house is located, but also how to divide the numbers on a particular street so that he can "tie out" his letters to the correct carrier, according to the route of -the latter. This same clerk made thirteen examinations in ten months, with an average correct distribution of 99.88 per cent. In twenty examinations he came out of nine of them with a clear 100 per cent each. Think of such a task, taking into con sideration the puzzling similarity of names that are used to designate post offices. Then, too, must be considered the fact that there are hundreds of cases where in each State is a postoffice of the same name. For instance, in the States named above there are five post offices named Hamilton, six Grants, four Garfields, four Genevas, four Smithvilles, four Spartas and five Jef- canteen. He offered them to his com panion, converted himself into a prop for the wounded side, and the slow, painful journey down the trail began. Neither of them talked much. The mist hung midway on the mountain, and when they emerged from it the company's quarters lay on the ledge be low. Already the camp was astir. The two men upon the path paused, exhausted. Langfleld eased the sick man down and threw himself beside him. He had not eaten since the day before, and was weak and giddy. For the first time Perry's helplessness tempted him. Why should this man have everything which he had been de nied? Langtield mechanically slipped his hand to the sheath in his belt, stole a glance at his companion, and saw that his eyes were closed. He drew out the knife and held it behind him. Just then Perry gave a stifled moan. The sound brought Langfleld to his senses. What was this he had intend ed to do? A fit of trembling seized him. He rose to his feet, though he reeled as he did so. There was a swift movement of his right arm, and some thing glanced in the light and fell far below them in the brush. "No one needs me," he thought, "and Tom " "Come," he said aloud, ''we must get you down for your wife's sake." The man did not reply at first. When he did his voice was a trifle husky. "I have none," he said. Langfleld stared at him. "Why Dol ly " he blurted out. "She " He began and stopped again, but Perry un derstood. "N o," he replied, with an effort, "she didn't want me." He turned nis head and looked unseeingly across the valley. "There was someone else," he said. "Someone else?" Langfleld stupidly repeated. "Yes," answered the other, "and it aeems the fool couldn't understand!" There was a moment's silence. "She's waiting till the company's ordered back," he added. Langfleld drew his hand across his forehead. The snow, high up on the mountains, seemed a swimming sea of white; the little stream beside them roared like a cataract In his ears. Perry made an effort to rise, but fell back in a spasm of pain. "She loves my God, man!" he cried vehemently, "are you an idiot? She loves you!" Ladies' World. WORK ! Mall Clerks' Jlemories j Heavily Taxed. there is a postoffice of the same name in each of the seven States. As one may imagine, this only tends to confuse the average mind. " Periodically the clerks are examined at railway mail headquarters. Packs of cards, each card bearing the' name of a postoffice, are furnished a candidate for examination. He takes a position in front of a case of pigeon holes label ed with the names of different railway postoffices throughout the country. He "throws" the cards, distributing them to proper.routes, just as he would pack ages in a postal car. After he finishes the examiner goes over the cards and charges up the errors the clerk has made and gives him his percentage of correct distribution. The clerk also is examined on general and "standpoint" or station schemes at different times. There are some features about the work that one would think would ren der it impossible for a clerk to main tain his "lay" of the States, which be is exp'ected to work. He may have a run which lands him in Chicago to con nect three leading railway postoffices running between Chicago and New York. With but little notice he may be taken off the run and be brought to Chicago in the afternoon instead of 2:20 a. m. Notwithstanding this inter ruption, he goes on with his work with but few errors. It is asserted at railway mail service headquarters that there are clerks who have reached the capacity of their minds in the matter of remembering names. They now remember so many that it would be absolutely impossible to learn another State or part of a State. It would seem that of the mill Ions of cells in their brain machinery none are left to fill, all having been taken up in the prosecution of the ex acting duties imposed by their occupa tion. Another queer phase of the work is that not always do the oierks who stand the best examinations and make the best averages show the best rec ords In the car. 4. man may have a State in the most exact manner, but lack ability in remembering railway connections or something else which he is required to remember. The evidence of wonderfully reten tive memories is found in the general run of examinations made at headquar ters. In one year at the offices of the sixth division of the railway mail ser vice in Chicago 2,427 examinations were made. Cards to the number of nearly 3,500,000 were "thrown" and the average per cent of correct distribution reached 98.48 Chicago Record-Herald. RECENT CAPTURE MADE OF A RARE WILD BIRD. The lammergeyer Is a species of the vulture of which little has been written, or, indeed, known, but one of which was recently cap tured. It is found chiefly in Southern Europe and Asia, In mount ainous re gions. Neither fitted nor inclined to lead a life of sanguinary warfare, it ban quets on carrion. Its powers are adapted to its Instincts. Its beak is feeble compared with that of the eagle. The toes are longer, feebler, with huge hooked claws, and incapable of grasping a heavy weight during flight. Where he finds his food, there he ban quets, never attempting to carry it to his haunts. Of a powerful and robust build, he has neither the bill nor thejstraw ls piaCed upon the top layer of talons of the eagle, the former being ' cakes and the packing is then complete, elongated and hooked only at the top Twenty or thirty thousand tons are and the latter comparatively small and feeble. Nor has he an exclusive appe tite for blood, carrion and putrid ani mals being greedily devoured by it. This rare bird attacks lambs, kids and the weak and sickly of the flock. The strong limbed chamois is not secure, nor, when rendered desperate by hun- er, will the ravenous bird forebear an attack on man. Children are said tJ have often fallen pacity. a sacrifice to its ra- Gave Him an Idea. "Well, of all things!" exclaimed Mrs. Henry Peck. "This paper tells of a man who was declared insane and his wife got a divorce and now he gets the courts to declare him sane again. Now, what do you " But Mr. Peck was out of the room and walking swiftly through the hall, murmuring: "I wonder where they give short-time rates on padded cells." Baltimore American. Our Coal-Producing Longs. The volume of carbouic acid exhaled by a healthy person in twenty-four hours is about fifteen thousand cubic inches, containing about six ounces of solid carbon. This ls at the rate of 137 avoirdupois per annum; and, taking the population of the world at a thousand millions, this means that the human race breathe out every year sixty-one million tons of solid carbon. GATHERING THE ICE CROP. Cutting; System Sow in XJmo la More Elaborate than Old Method. In these modern days the catting of Ice is a much more elaborate process than it was fifteen or twenty years ago, when workmen simply went out on the frozen surfaces of lakes and rivers with a one-handled crosscut saw and cut out the cakes, which were drawn up an in cline into the icehouses by means of ropes. Nowadays each cake is handled more or less by about a dozen men be fore it reaches its place in the icehouse. In the first place, if the surface of the ice is not perfectly clear it is swept or scraped free of all snow or anything else that may be lying upon. it. Then the marker, the man who is to scratch the lines along which the ice cakes are to be cut, begins operations. In a frame, to which bandies ''similar to those of a plow are attached for guid ing purposes, are two teeth, one in the rear of the other. A horse attached to this frame drags it over the ice while it is directed by the driver who holds the handles. The teeth cut into the ice deep enough to leave a fissure that can easily be traced. After cutting lines, all running in the same direction, the marker cross-cuts these with lines run ning at right angles, thus marking out the exact size of the cakes to be cut After the marking off is completed, or ometimesbef ore it is finished, the cut ting machine is brought out on the ice. This machine is somewhat similar in design to the marker, but It is of heav ier construction, stronger, and has teeth about ten inches in length. Often both this machine and the marker have an extension arm fitted with teeth, the stretch of the arm being the exact width of a cake of ice. The cutting ma chine Is driven up and down the Ice until the knives or teeth have cut into It their full length. If the Ice Is over ten inches in thickness the cutting is, of course, not yet completed and the old hand-saws are brought Into play to fin- ICE HARVEST, AT ish the job. The cakes of ice are then ready for the man with the crowbar, who pries them apart and sends them floating down toward the point where they leave the water on the way to the interior of the icehouses. The cakes are generally cut about twenty or twenty two inches square, as the most con venient size for handling and transpor tation. The houses for storing the ice are, of course, built so close to the water that the elevator for hauling up the ice can recb from the top of the building down to the water s edge. The build ings are, as a rule, about the height of a three or four story structure, and are from 100 to 150 feet in width by more than that in length. The walls are usually double, with an air chamber of about a foot between the two walls. Sometimes the walls are treble, with two air chambers for the protection of the ice. The interior is divided into several great compartments, which are as separate as if they were in different buildings. This arrangement Is made so that it will not be necessary to expose the whole of the interior to the outer air when taking out a load of ice for market. An endless chain system, more or less like the straw elevator of a thrashing machine, is used for carrying the ice from the water to the building. This chain is operated by a steam en gine placed just underneath it and just outside of the icehouse. The chain is a wide, flat surface, wide enough to eas ily accommodate a cake of ice, or even more. The chain dips down into the water, and while It is moving workmen push the cakes of Ice upon It and they are carried upward and into the ice house, where they are packed evenly together by ice shovers. Nothing what ever is placed about the ice, the old sawdust packing system being quite passe. When the house is nueo nay or often packed away in one house. UNCLE SAM'S POISONER Not Generally Known that This Gov ernment Maintains One. In a little house In South Washington is located a Federal Institution without which the Smithsonian Institution and - National Museum could not exist. It is the department of the chief poisoner, Joseph Farmer. The office of chief poisoner was not unusual In countries ruled by despots, but It may be a sur prise to many to learn that such an office is maintained by our own repub lican form of administration. However, Mr. Farmer, unlike his con temporaries in Turkey, Spain, Arabia, etc., is not engaged in putting obnox ious and exuberant statesmen out of the way, but In placing the objects on exhibit In the institution and museum beyond the reach of thieves, rust, and cockroaches. Everything that Is received by these institutions, whether it is a rare book, J a Filipino bolo, or a stuffed and mount ed animal, is sent to Mr. Farmer to be poisoned. He is an expert in the prep aration and use of preservative com pounds. For stuffed animals and birds he finds that arsenical compounds bring the best results.. Every object of metal receives a coating of something that prevents rust, while fabrics, basketry, I silks, furs etc., are poisoned in much the same manner as stuffed animals. Even the shelves and cases of the mu seum, in which the objects are placed, have passed through Mr. Farmer hands and been treated to a fluid that causes a bug, moth, or cockroach to think that he is walking over a red hot Iron the minute he strikes their surface. By these means the museum is forever freed from vermin. Washington Post. Cloths Woven from Bocks The weaving of stone into material for clothing, the making of flexible and lasting granite trousers black marble coats and fancy onyx waistcoats may be a possibility of the future, the weav era say. They remind the Philadelphia Record that already curtains are made of asbestos and cloth . manufactured from chalk. James McGuck, a Manayunk spinner, has an armchair covered with a soft and silky fabric of Titian red, which he wove toilsomely out of rock, out of "red shell," the crumbling stone of which Manayunk masons build cheap houses. McGuck thus describes the weaving: "I threw about a ton of the rock, in lumps as big as your head, into the picker. The picker blades were dulled. hut the rock was crushed, and came out good stock, with a staple an inch long like asbestos. "This fluffy stuff I threw into my carding-machine, and first it became a soft, inch-thick rope, then a harder, quarter-inch twine, and at this point my mule took it and twisted it till it was an ordinary thread, like that you see on a spool of cotton. I wove it on a hand-loom then. "This little piece of cloth It's elgh teen Inches square Is all I got. It took a ton of rock to make It. I claim it is the first cloth ever woven out of real rock In thchistory of the world." Propagating the Mistletoe. The story of how the mistletoe gets on the trees Is a most Interesting one. Cov ering the mistletoe twigs are pearly white berries. These come in the win ITS HEIGHT. ter season, when food is comparatively scarce, and hence some of our birds eat them freely. Now when a robin eats a cherry he swallows simply the meat and flips the stone away. The seed of the mistletoe the bird cannot flip. It is sticky and holds to his bill. His only resource is to wipe it off, and he does so, leaving it sticking to the branches of the tree on which he is sitting at the time. This seed sprouts after a time, and not finding earth which indeed its ancestral habit has made it cease want ingit sinks its roots into the bark of the tree and hunts there for the pipes that carry the sap. Now the sap in the bark is the very richest in the tree, far richer than that in the wood, and the mistletoe gets from its host the choicest of food. With a strange foresight it does not throw its leaves away, as do most parasites, but keeps them to use in winter, when the tree Is leafless. La dies' Home Journal. Boy Seasick, but Game. He was one of three diminutive mes senger boys hired to remain aboard the big ocean-going tugboat that followed the yachts. There was quite a general swell on when the tug got out about the lightship and the wind, coming up strong, made a nasty sea. The dipping and rolling of the boat made this boy more sick than the others. He lay on the after deck, un able to move and groaning at intervals Once In a great while he raised his dull, heavy eyes to note the positions of the yachts. All day he lay there, refusing to go Inside the spacious cabin. When the tug pulled In at the pier he was so weak he had to be helped ashore. His face was haggard, and, supported by his companions, he dragged himself up the pier, eliciting sympathy from all the yachting reporters. Half-way up the pier he hobbled over to' the reporter who had been in charge of the boat that day, says the New York Mail and Express, and placed two blue and trembling hands on the wrist of the newspaper man. His wan face was raised, and he said in a hoarse, tense whisper: "Hey, mister! If yer want a boy agin termorrer ask fur me, will yer, mister?" He was game. Two Signs. One who is on the lookout for curi ous signs and advertisements can easily find them without going far from home. A dweller in a New England village quotes two which appear on carts that often pass her door. The first comes into sight accompa nied by a jingling of sleigh-bells which, summer and winter alike, decorate the i trappings of an old white horse. It reads: "Home Made Bakery. Mixed Pickles and Brooms a Specialty." The second is in gold letters on the sides of a gay red wagon drawn by a pair of black steeds. This is it: "B. Ware. Tin Ware, Confectionery & Crackers." Amenities, Miss Passay Here's a portrait of me that I consider good. It's by an ama teur, and it's rather faded, but : Miss Slye Yes; it's very lifelike. Philadelphia Press. People are often a thousand times obliged when ten cents would come nearer paying for the service rendered. HAPPY WEDDED LIFE. MANY LIVE .IT, BUT ALL HAVE THEIR DISAGREEMENTS. When the Old Couple at Their Golden Wedding; Sax They Hits Never Quar reled, Do Not Take Statement mm Lit erally True, for They Probata y Hare. An old couple in New Jersey recent ly celebrated the sixty-eighth anniver sary of their wedding. The newspaper reports closed with the statement: "They have never had a quarreL" Fre quently, - indeed, almost Invariably, couples on the occasion of their silver or golden wedding declare that- tbey never had a quarrel; that the serenity of their companionship never has beer. interrupted by harsh words or the most trivial bickering. Never give any credit to such state ments. The persons who make them may really believe them at the time, as warmth and kindness of infatuation Intensified by the occasion corrupt the memory of aged couples and. move them to boast of their good fortune. No one should criticise this falling, which is harmless and even beautiful, but which nevertheless is treason of the cold truths. The old man sits at the head of the table with his old wife at his side. Both have been toasted and it is necessary to reply. He rises and says: "We have lived together for half a century and have never quar reled," and the good wife, In her black gown and her best laces, beams on her children, her grandchildren and assem bled friends, and confirms the false hood with a nod. Frequently, too, younger couples cir culate the same fiction about them selves. In company they are very de voted to each other. She continually gives him playful fiillips on the cheek, and "dearest" is the coldest name by which he addresses her. From their own stories it appears that their mar ried life has been uninterrupted beauti tude. They bask in each other's glances and are exalted, transfigured by love. Other young' couples, who are fond of each other and who get on very well together, though not without little quarrels, may behold how extremely peaceably the first young couple dwell together. Perhaps a young wife will accuse herself of being too quick of temper and too sharp of tongue. Per haps both will "think that their mar riage has not been as successful as it might have been. Then they may put their arms about each other, deplore past quarrels and past hardships, re new their vows of love and resolve to make the future atone for what cannot be undone. Such self-criminations will do no harm. Such renewals of the vows of affection will make a day or a week more pleasant, perhaps, than it would have been. It is well for husband and wife now and then to beg pardon of each other. But no young couple should believe that, because they fall out once in a while, exchange sharp words, lose their tempers and spoil a dinner by quarreling, their marriage is a failure; a failure, at least, by comparison. Nothing could be more untrue or more unjust to themselves. All married couples have had their little bickerings, and when any couple say they have lived together fifty years, or even ten years, without a quarrel, they are either the one exceptional couple out of one thousand or they say what is not true. True, the husband may never have attempted to stab his wife, nor the wife plotted to poison her husband, but be sure they have more than once scolded each other, taunted each other, been angry at each other and, in short, quarreled outright with each other. They have, been reconciled, of course; their life together has been harmonious, except for occasional discords; tliey really love each other; but believe this, they have had their quarrels. San Francisco Bulletin. IS YOUR BUTTER GENUINE? No Need for Doubtinsr When There Are t-imple Ways of Testing It. There are so many kinds of butter and butter substitutes on the market nowadays that the housekeeper is of ten unable to ascertain if she has real ly got the genuine article or not. Here are two tests that will enable anybody to discover whether spurious butter has been foisted on them. One of the best ways to learn just what sort of stuff is being spread upon the family bread is known as the "boil ing test." It was invented by a detec tive about ten years ago, and was, of course, used simply for the purpose of discovering whether or not merchan dise being sold as the genuine article was spurious. This test consists mere ly in boiling briskly a small portion of the sample and observing its behavior the while. Melt the sample to be tested in an old iron tablespoon, hastening the pro cess by stirring with a small splinter of wood, as, for instance, a match with the phosphorus removed, or a tooth pick. Then, increasing the heat, bring to as brisk a boil as possible, and after the boiling has begun, stir thoroughly the contents of the spoon not neglect ing the outer edges two or three times at intervals during the boiling, always Shortly before the boiling ceases. Genuine butter boils usually with very little, if any, noise, and produces an abundance of "foam." "Process" butter and oleomargarine sputter as they boil, and produce practically no "foam." The composition article may produce a little, but the amount is so small that it can easily be distinguish ed from the genuine article. The utensils required for another method of testing are one half-pint tin measuring cup, common in kitchen use, marked at the half and quarters, or a plain one-half pint tin measure, or an ordinary small tin cup, two and three quarters inches in diameter and two inches In height, holding about one gill and a half; a common pan, about nine and a half inches in diameter at the base, and a small rod of wood the thickness of a match and of convenient length for stirring, and finally a clock or watch. This process for distinguishing oleo margarine is as follows: Use sneet skimmed milk, obtained by setting fresh milk In a eool place for from twelve to twenty-four hours, and re moving the cream as fully as possible. Half fill the half-pint cup with this milk, or fill the smaller cup mentioned two-thirds, measuring accurately the gill of milk when possible; heat nearly to boiling, add a slightly rounded tea spoonful of butter or butter substitute, stir with a wooden rod, and continue heating until the milk bolls up. Remove the milk from the beat as soon as it has boiled up, and place In the pan, which has been prepared, con taining pieces of Ice with very little ice water, the Ice to be In pieces the size of one to two hen's eggs. Fragments of ice melt too rapidly. There should be enough of the ice to cover two-thirds of the bottom of the pan. As the Ice melts the water will, of course, rise to a higher leveL Stir the contents of the cup rather rapidly with a rotary and a crosswise motion In turn continuously throughout the test, ex cept during the moment of time requlr- -ed for the stirring of the ice water In the pan. This stirring should be at Intervals of one minute, and is accomplished by moving the cup about In a circle around the edges of the pan. If the sample ls oleomargarine, says the London Mail, by the time the stir ring bas been going on ten minutes, sometimes In a very much shorter length of time, the fat will gather in a lump or soft mass, and will harden quickly. If It does not gather it Is either genuine or "renovated" butter. Either of these two methods of testing will enable you to find out what sort of stuff you are buying for butter. GETS OUT DIVORCE CHART. Gives States of the Union Where the Law la Lenient. An enterprising publishing firm has put on the market a rather unique docu ment. It is nothing less than a divorce chart of the United States, from which unhappy couples can quickly learn In what State they can get be separated with the greatest celerity and ease. "By a mere glance," it explains, "the particular information sought may be obtained. The form and manner in which the laws are placed before the reader are as simple of comprehension for the layman as they are for the law yer." The chart, it Is to be feared, will do much to put a damper on the divorce industry of South Dakota. Idaho, Ne braska and Nevada are equipped with just as rapid-fire divorce laws as the more widely advertised State. In fact, they beat South Dakota on one very material point, for while the last-named State does not permit the remarriage of a guilty defendant the other three lay no restrictions on either party. They also require less notice of an action than South Dakota, construe causes just as liberally and demand no longer residence. But easy divorces can be had in the East just as well as In the West. Staid old Connecticut, Maine and Delaware bother themselves not about length of residence, so long as the cause origin ates on their soil. They also provide a liberal number of causes for couples de siring separation to choose from. South Carolina ls the most inhospita ble State of all to the would-be divor cee, says the Salt Lake Herald. The laws there are strict, to the verge of blueness. But In the majority of States this Interesting chart shows that to a couple so minded divorce can be very easily obtained and In some the untying of the knot is not much more difficult than the tying. Chinaman Gave Up His Seat. A Columbia avenue car, with a good crowd aboard, was wending its way up Ninth street late one Saturday evening. Only a few of the gentler sex were on the car and these had seats. Among the seated passengers were two severe looking clergymen, several prosperous business men and a docile Chinaman who carried a large bundle on his knees. At Arch street a middle-aged woman who carried a small vali'.;e, got on the car. It jolted along and the slender, tired-looking woman glanced around appealingly for a seat. She stood close to where the two ministers sat and her face wore an expression of pain as the car rattled along and she clutched nerv ously at the handstrap. The Chinaman rose from his seat, and, holding his heavy bundle with his left hand, tap ped the woman with his right hand gently and motioned her to the seat he had vacated. She accepted the favor with a smile and a gracious "Thank you, sir." All the men seated In the car stared at each other as If each of them had received a rebuke. "That Chinee Is all right," remarked the conductor, according to the Phila delphia Record. "He's a good sample of those supposed barbarians we are endeavoring so hard to civilize." The Pullman Sleeper. 'I heard a funny conversation not long ago on a Pullman," said a travel ing man. "It was bedtime and two la dies near me were getting themselves ready to turn In. They were talking about the inconveninces of it, when I heard one remark: " 'Well, I must say that I do not like these sleeping cars at all.' " 'Oh,' responded the other In a more cheerful frame of mind, 'wait till you have lived awhile In a flat, as I have, and you won't think the sleeping car ls so bad, after all. "Detroit Free Press. A Proposition. First Summer Girl I liked George at first, but I've become tired of him. Second Summer Girl Yes? That has been exactly my experience with Harry! First Summer Girl Indeed? Why can't we arrange an exchange of pris oners? Puck. According to Contract. .Toaklev I understand there's consid erable talk now in naval circles about some orders that were forged very skillfully. Coakley Aha, another scandal, eh? Joakley Oh, no. They were orders for some 8-inch guns. Philadelphia Press. If you want to make your enemies feel particularly soin, be happy. ,4 i