WOMEN AS uuoiuno. r,,, , iniML- uuuu-aik, fUVVtH OF MEMORY. . HUTTING AWAY OUOTHES. female rliyfdclKns In Kvery IlrHiich ."Mo (II nil l'rnctlce. "It is onlv within tho last twonty- flvc years that women have been per mittcd to enter medical colleges, said a graduate of hc Woman's Medical College of Chicago. "The schools of America wore tho first to admit women," continued Dr. Dickenson, J'and England was forced into conces sion. Thirty years ago Mrs. Frances Elizabeth Hoggan was obliged to leave England and attend a school in Zurich to get a medical education. A short time afterward Mrs. Garrett Anderson, now ono of the most noted of female physicians, as well as Mrs. Agnes Mc Laren, had to leave Edinburgh to get their education in Paris. It seems strange that a city like Edinburgh, boasting of the most perfect school system in the world, had no placo where a woman might study medicine if she wore so inclined. "Ihere are now four medical col leges in the United Suites, situated at New York, Philadelphia, Haiti moro nnu umcago. lncro arc, per haps, ono hundred and fifty fe male physicians now practicing medi olno in this city and many of them are graduates of our own college. Since its existence the college hns sent out two hundred graduates to follow their profession and they aro scattorod all over the world. Some aro in Cali fornia, others aro in tho East, and a numbor aro in Africa and India. Those who have gono abroad and acting as missionaries. It has been tho custom of foroign missionary societies to pay for the education of young women, providing they will pledge themselves so act as missionaries for tho space of fivo years. Many intelligent girls have taken advantago of this oppor tunity to get an education, and after serving their tlmo will bo independent. "Do women who become doctors in cline to any particular branch of med ical practice?" That dopends on where they aro lo cated. If they settlo in a largo city where specialists can do woll, many of them choose some particular branch. In Chicago somo have taken up nerv ous diseases and others tho diseases peculiar to women, while I choso to be an oculist. Thoro aro also somo who arc in general practice, and I have no doubt theroaro women in every special branch of modicinc. Now, I want to tell you something you don't know. There is no school in tho world that teaches students how to fit tho frames of spectacles, although this is fully as important as that tho frames should have glasses in them. Unless tho frame is adjusted so that tho center of the lens is directly before tho pupil of the eye the spectacles never give satisfac tion, and injure tho vision by wearing. "Opticians have become very export in fitting spectacles because thoy study tho subject. They have to bo respon sible for tho mistakes of oculists, and have learned t6 placo no dependence on the opinion of tho average doctor. Physicians in the country have no pos sible means of ordering spectacles that will suit tho eyes of their patients. They may describe tho strength of tho lens that they need, but unless the frame is properly adjusted they might as well not order I'io spectacles. Is it not strango that this simple part of every doctor's education has boon neg lected and that no collego teaches it?" Chicago Neivs. THE GREEN SPORTSMAN. tThat the Old Hunter Think of tho 'ov- let! :md 1 1 In Ways. Tho greenhorn is to bo found in tho woods as woll as anywhoro else in the tho world. His manners, his dress, his very carriage, all betray him. His gun is a now one; his shooting jacket and boots smell of tho shop. Ho has an exaggerated idea of every thing about the woods. To his verdant im agination trout aro as plenty in tho lakes and streams as herring in tho mighty ocean. Thoro is at least ono wildcat in every treo and a deer feeding iif every meadow. To his mind the deep forest is clothed in a halo of mystery, of which ho is to bo tho ex plorer; and, liko Livingstone and Stan loy, ho is to be tho rovealor of these mighty secrets. Tho old woodsman makes nothing of croaking trees, and tho weird sound produced by ono branch scraping against another would hardly command a passing thought.but 1 havo known a novico to sit half a day by tho side of this phenomenon, wait ing for a wildcat to show himsolf from tho branches overhead. Thoro Is a tinge of disappointment occasioned by tho knowledge of tho fact which comes later on, that of all solitary places excepting porhaps tho fiftulous Great American Desert the unbrokon wilderness has tho fewost signs of ani mal llfo of any placo on tho entire continent. You may travel all day and not seo a partridgo, a deer, wildcat, bear, fox, robin, crow or bluebird, and hardly a squirrel. Tho deep wood on a quiot day is tho very personification of stillness. Gamo thoro is. but it gathers in certain localities, according to tho season. Tho newcomer lias oyes, but thoy see not; ears has ho, but thoy hoar not; and you can trust him to make nolso enough to kcop tho game iuat out of sight Forest and Stream. An amiable young fomnlo peda gogue residing in tho Mohawk Valloy prides herolf on tho oloao relations of trust and confidence which oxist be tween her nnd tho many little ones in the primary department. One day a liult follow made lib way to tbe toch er's 4ck. and. with many blushiM and .much vtnbtufi iHt, filially unwaged to K : "V" i, t unre, do yon. Mi , U my f'li.'U dou t luatcih my mf" Houses to He Cooled In Summer by Front That Comes Through l'lpe. The manufacture of cold is likely to become a lnrgo industry. Earlier ef forts in tho production of cold were toward the manufacture of ice. Later improvements wero in tho line of cool ing-rooms, where products could be stored without the use "of ice. Thl method has been In successful opera lion for some time in large packing houses. It Is less troublesome nnd less expensive than ico, but tho process In volves the uso of brine with ammonia and a largo outlay of money for a plnnt This process is effective only in large concerns, and is limited to tho produc tion of moderately cold air, with the objectionable feature of dampness. The newest process of refrigerating produces a dry, cold air that carries tho thermometer many degrees below freezing point, and this degreo of cold A . 1 can no prouueeu so cheaply anil is so thoroughly under control that the world Is promised tho luxury of frost as cheap as heat or light. The concern in Chicago which controls this process is located on tho est Side In a pro tcntious building. In ono room thoy distill the ammonia, reducing tho ro fuse product from the gas house to n pure liquid. This ammonin, known In tho trade as anhydrous ammonia, (lows in pipes to the cooling-rooms. This pipe enters the rooms and Is distrib uted about tho sides like ordinary steam pipes. The liquid ammonia is prevented from entering tho pipes in the rooms, but through a faucet tho gas or vapor which rises from tho liquid ammonia passos into tho pipes in tho room. Ihis vapor is what pro duces colu, and tho degreo desired is regulated by tho amount of vapor that is allowed to pass through tho pipes, I ho gas or vapor returns to tho distil ling-room with its freezing properties exhausted, and is made again into an hydrous ammonia, and is again used for freezing purposes. Fruits are stored in a room cooled to tho temperaturo of forty degrees, Meats for uso in tho near futuro are in rooms a llttlo cooler, and gamo and delicate fishos for winter uso aro in tho coldest room. In this department tho thermometer registers twenty degrees below zero, and tho game birds and fishos are frozon as hard and dry as it would bo possible to freozo them in the dry cold air outdoors. The practical uses to which thi method may bo put do not end with cooling and froezizg rooms In a large establishment, for this puro liquid ammonia maybe drawn oil and carried to a residence in a receptacle some thing like a soda fountain, and from this tho gas can bo forced through a pipe in a rofrigorator and mako that storehouse as cold as may bo desired. So far tho procoss has not been used by families to any extent, but tho pro duction of tho liquid ammonia is a mat ter of such trifling cost that a raid on tho good nousewno s Kitchen is contemplated, and the company promise that tho family refrigerator shall bo furnished with dry, cold air cheaper than ico and servo tho pur pose better. Instead of the daily call of tho icoman tho cold air fellow will como nround onco in eight or ten days with his httlo tank of frost-prod ucor, and after connecting it with tho refrig erator pipe carry away with him the old tank of exhausted ammonia. It Is still further proposed to cxtond the usefulness of this process by mak ing it a means of cooling residences. Pipes may bo laid In tho streets just as gas pipes are now laid, and as tho liquid ammonia will not freeze it may bo run into a residonco just as gas Is, and during tho warm weather, Instead of sweltering In a hot room tho house holder may turn a faucet and lot the ammonia vapor circulate through tho pipes around tho coiling of the room. No ono need suffer in his house or olllco from keat when this point has been reached any moro than ho need now sulTer indoors from colds. Pipes for a houso-coolingplnntnro now being laid in Denver, and during tho coming summer the plan will bo thoroughly tested there Chicago Tribune. THE FALL OF FICTION. A CompurUou lletweeu Gin-Shop Topors mid I.lterury Inohrlittes. Thoro is among tho very poor in our largo cities a class of persons who nightly resort to tho gin-shop to pur chase a mixture of ovory known liquor, tho heterogeneous rinsings of a hun dred glasses. Tho flavor of thl.i un nameablo boverago dofles imagination, but tho liquor has for its lovora one transcendent vlrtuo it distances all rivalry in tho work of procuring swift and thorough inobrlation. Its dovoteos would not thank you for a bottle of tho finest Chatoau Yquoin, when tho groat end and aim of drinking tho being made drunk can bo roachod by such an infinitely readier agoncy. Tho taste for novels llko Mr. Hldor Haggard's is quite as truly tho craving for coarso and violent intoxicants bocauso thoy coarsely and violontly intoxicate. Hut tho victims of this thirst arowithout tho oxcuso which tho indigent topors to whom wo liken thorn may plead. Tho poor tippler might say that ho bought his unutterablo boverago bo causo ho could not afford a bettor. Hut tho noblost vintagos of litoraturo may bo purchased as chonply as their vilest subatltutos. When wo have abundance of oxqulsite grapos in our vineyards, Is it not almost incrodlblo that persons who pretend to somo oonnolsbourship should be content to bosot thomselvo with a thick, raw concoction, dostituto nf fragrance, dwUtuto of sparkle, dot tit ute of uvwry thing hut tho power to luduee h crude inbri(tty of mind ttml a morbid aUUtof tb Intellectual peplleur It lit ludl Ullllti.w I'liTCHlUiUj, but th pity of U i. it d uc t'urhiitfJmy lit lift Fnctsln Vroorortho KxUtenco or rlurnllty or the Attribute. It is manifest that thoro is not ono memory only, but many memories, in each mind, and that ono kind of mom cry Is pre-eminently developed in ono person and another in another. "Mem ory," says Kibot, "may bo resolved into memories, just as the nie oi an organism may bo resolved into tho lives of the orgnns. tho tissues, tho anatomical elements which compo it." deferring exclusively to tho per ceptive faculties, wo need only men tion a few thoroughly rocognized facts in proof of this statement. Persons having a strongly doveloped organ of what the phrenologists call "individu allty" recolvo peculiarly distinct im pressions of external objects, and therefore, of persons; honce thoy Im mediately recognizo them on seeing them again and easily picture them to themselves from memory. Persons abundantly endowed with the organ of "locality" oxhiblt an astonishing power of finding their way in regions previously unknown to them and o remembering tho character of those they havo visited. Porsons. thus en dowed, when strongly Impressed by tho contents of a passage in a book they havo read, romember exactly tho part of tho pago In which tho passago occurs, and whether tho pago itself bo a left hand or a right hnnd page. The number of degrees of capacity of per ception and recollection of colors 1 scarcely less remnrKaolo tho power of recollection of thom bolng al ways proportionate to tho power of perceiving thom and signalizing their differences. Similarly, he who pos sesses tho musical faculty in an emi nent dogrco possesses in a llko degreo tho power of learning and remember ing tho piecos of music to which his attention is directed. A striking proof of tho distinctly individualized char actor of our various faculties and momories is presented in tho often ob served fact that tho perception of time, though both nllko essential In tho montal constitution of a good musi clan, differ greatly in their relative strength in different individuals so that while ono may bo a skillful musi chin ho may bo an Indifferent timelst, and vice versa. In tho former caso the orderly succession of notes of a music al passago is easily remembered, but tho time intervals, which aro a dis tinctlvo feature of it, aro remembered less easily; whereas in tho latter case tho memory of time is stronger than is that of tune. Equally notable Is the fact that persons who aro especially ablo as calculators recollect numbers with peculiar facility. Moreover, por sons especially gifted with tho faculty of languago havo a proportionate facility of recalling words and of quot ing from momory long passages which thoy havo previously heard or read: Cardinal Mezzofanti, who is said to havo known moro than ono hundred different languages, used to declare that he nover forgot a word that he had onco learned." Westminster lie view. RUSSIAN RELIGION. How It Dlsplii s Itself In the Streets ill id in Hull way Curs. One of tho first things that strikes tho stranger in St. Petersburg, and still moro in Moscow, is tho constant crossing that goos on in tho strcots. 11?l 1 lis whenever a devout nussinn passes a church or a shrino or a holy altar, ho lifts his hat and crosses himsolf In tho fashion of tho Eastern Chuiyli. In Moscow tho number of shrlns is so great, and tho sanctity o.fsomo of them so overpowering, that It must bo difficult for tho devout orthodox to got along tho street. In St Potorsburg tho number is much less, but it is still sufficient to keep your isvoslchik's arms In tolerably active oxerciso. Ono thing puzzled mo much. In St. Peters burg tho women very soldom crossed thomselvos. For ono woman who would mako tho sign of tho cross in passing the shrino at the ontranco to tho Gostlnnol Dvor It would bo mado by a dozen men. In Moscow tho women were moro enreful to perform their devotions, but in St. Petersburg tho males woro much moro do vout to outward seeming than tho women. Of tho women who did oboisanco to tho holy places in St. Petersburg nil woro poor. I did not see ono well-dressed lady cross herself n tho street!) all tho time I was in Russia. Officers and gentlemen woro not bo particular as tho isvostchicks and workmen, but it was no uncommon sight to seo them making tho sign of tho cross. I travolod with General Ignatioff from St. Petersburg to Mos cow. Tho moment tho train started tho General crossed himsolf twice, re marking that although you should always pray, it was especially incum bent upon you to do ho whon starting on a journey. 'Tho number of shrines in Russia whore candles aro burning before holy pictures is very great, and nuch greater importanco is attached to tho science of gonufloxion than is easily -ediblo to tho non-ritualistic Englishman, feundny was much more gcnornlly obsorved as a holiday than I expected. Tho shops on tho Grand Morskaya and tho Novski Prospckt are Imost all shut all Sunday. St. Potorsburg Is not Sabbatarian by any moans; it is moro a day of nmuHomont and of visiting than of dovotlon, but thoro seamed to mo to bo a much moro gonural ouumtlou of labor on Sunday in Riitla than either in Germany or In France. UonUmtorary Heviow, A new iionuKliitiinuo, who lately oil orud Kdwln J tooth a olguiutto, got (ho iiif'iriimMnN tiltll Ihu uutor WUB u lliajj ivl!'- ti ho l a plpo. How to TnUe Cnro or Summer Clothln Through the Winter Seiison. Although tho putting away of the summer clothes does not Involvo na much labor or tlmo as tho winter, yet tho careful housewife knows that any enro expended on this work now is amply repaid whon tho clothes arc wanted for uso in tho warm weather. Somo women who are oxtremolv care ful when putting away winter clothes are very careless in regard to sumino clothing. If thoro are woolen good among them, such as soft, light-weight llannol. so popular nowndavs that person's jjardrobo is not thought to bo complete lacking a suit of this kind for summer wear, thoy aro treated In tho samo careful manner as thoso of tho winter. 1nit tho rest of tho summer garments are but indifforontly cared for. As moths do not thrive on a diet of cotton, thoro Is llttlo need of pre caution in regard to their Invasion consequently tho sunimor clothing Is generally hung or packed away care lessly. Thero are somo womon. met excel lent housekeepers, who whon putting away wash dressos, such as lawns cambrics, prints, etc.. always havo them mishcd, starched and done up, so that whon taken out in tho spring thoy only need an airing to mtikotl'em ready for uso. This is not a good plan, for clothes put away In this way aro suro lo cut. Clothes of this kind should not be starched, but If thoy aro, as in tho caso of boing ready to wear, and tho change of tho season forbidding it tho starch ought to bo washed out, and tho garment put away rough dry. If tho dresses aro hung In a closet or room, they should always bo covered with a cambric curtain. Long cambric bags are used by some housewives for putting away dresses, and whore thoro is room enough, thoy aro excollent, but whoro thero is a largo family, ... - i i . . t mure particularly wnero uioro aro children, this plan could not bo fol lowed successfully. Where a woman has a roomy house, sho has very llttlo trouble In deciding where tho clothos shall bo laid away, but whoro sho Is cramped for room, It is hard to decide what shall bo done with thom. Somo women, who was boarding, and was con fronted with this samo problem, had a long, narrow pino box made with hinges at tho top, so it would open liko a trunk Ihis sho lined with whito cambric. and covered tho outsldo with crotonno, first putting, a cushion on tho top. In this box sho put hor superfluous cloth ing. Her wintorgnrments woro placed in it In tho summer, and her summer clothing in winter. When closed it made a pretty divan, and with castors on it could bo moved to anv nart of tho room. A soap box, covered in tho samo manner, answered tho purpose of a hat box. All garments needing repairs should bo mended, if possible, before putting away. It seems a llttlo thing, and It is mostly very convenient and tempting to placo them away just as thoy aro, trusting to inond thom early enough In tho spring. Usually thoro Is so much to do at tho latter season that tho re pairing of summer clothing is wholly forgotten, and only remembered when wanted for uso. There aro fow things as dlscourglng to a housewife as a pile of summer clothos waiting repairs whon her time is required for other work, consequently, if tho summer mending is done ore putting away, it will not havo to bo dono after tho spring cleaning, when tho housewife 1b oxhausted in body and mind. oolon garments will need to bo cared for tho same as winter clothes. using a good pleco of camphor, nnd doing each garment tightly In news paper or trunks, fastening tho edges so as to oxcludo moths. Sunshades brush woll, do up in papor and placo away in drawors or boxes. If hats with volvot or feathers aro to bo placod away put away tho samo as woolen garments, as moths revel In feathers. Lisle thread or any of tho common summer gloves may bo washed in warm suds, rinsed and dried, and thoy will look almost now. Hoforo putting away tho clothes mako a memorandum of all tho articles to bo placed away, and you will find it a great help whon readjust ing tho family summor wardrobe. Boston Budget. A Gotham Fairy Tale. "You seo," said a Hroadway car con ductor, as ho registered two faros on tho indicator in rosponso to throo just received, "it isn't as easy for us con ductors to cheat tho company as tho public seom to think. Wo aro re quired, " lio continued, "as ho collected fivo fares and rang up threo In a buoy ant manner, "to obtain fivo cents from every pnssongor, and thon to register each faro on tho indicator. Of course," ho observed, meanwhllo ringing up ono In oxchnngo for two fares taken In, 'each passenger boob mo ring tho indi cator for his or hor faro, and it is im possible not to do so without bolng found out. "Why," ho added, jorking tho ropo ho gently that tho indicator didn't ring for tho two faros ho had then pockotcd, "if I did not register ovory faro 1 recolvo 1 should deem Jt propor for any ono to havo mo arrested fordlahonosty." So I had him arrested. Puck. "Ma." said a llttlo student of natur- ul hlbtory, "do frogs go to Ireland In tho winter tlmo, whon overy thing 1b frozoup?" "No, my dear; what makes you iialc Hiich a question?" "Hooauso toaohor says thoy always hlborimto in winter, wiih tho reply of tho observing young hopeful. The gonliin of A morion U napping ilgii about Mm dny. Thu uvui-ukm number of mUNiM luyl wyukly N uvur Ihriw lmnili oiL PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. -The man who said that marriaga resombles a lottery labored under n misunderstanding. Whon you patron ize a lottery you havo somo show of coming out ahead. Lincoln Journal. Dudekln (who had just put on a new suit of clothos In tho shop) "Walt a minute. I'll go over to the bank and get a check cashed." Tailor (going out with him)" Well, I'll fol low suit." Washington Post. Tho young wifo who makes a shirt for her dear hubby not only runtO tho risk of shaking his confidence in hor, bt also of losingall her formeradijijra tlon for him when oho sees him with it on. Terrc Haute Express. It Is amazing how quick tho bakers find out when Hour goes up, and how awfully deaf and blind thoy aro whon a slump In tho market knocks $2 off tho price of a barrel. Thoy must want to mako somo money out of the busi ness. Detroit Free Press. Dutiful dnughter "Now, mother, don't ask me to mnrry that man. I ad mire and respect him. but I do not lovo him." Practical mother "O, that don't matter. You won't seo him often enough to grow tired of him. He's n politician." Philadelphia Ilceord. It's well known that there are ab solutely no genuine chamois skins in tho market; but, notwithstanding, an English firm is manufacturing a new cloth in imitation of tho Imitation skins. They will bo just ns good as the real skins, it Is claimed, and will bo sold as Imitations. rhero ought to bo a law in this country providing that none but pretty womon should over wear veils. Thon all tho homely women would break tho law for obvious reasons, while tho pretty women would discard tho voils through vanity and the oyo of man would bo gratified. Journal of Educa tion. Ifo (reprovingly) "lho great trouble with you is, John, you buy a good many things you don't need simply Iwcauso thoy aro cheap. That is false economy." Husband "Horols alady's watch 1 bought to-day for twonty dol lars that's worth ovory cont of thirty dollars." Wife "O, thank you, John; why, it was a real bargain!" V. Y. Sun. Ono of tho latest feats of ondur- anco Is that of playing tho Jilano for thirty-six hours in ono inning. It is tho playor, and not tho listener, who is awarded tho prizo for ondurnnco. a no nsiouor generally becomes ex hausted and wants to dio In tho fourth hour. Drake's Magazine. Miss Clara (blushing) "Do you know, Ethel, that young Mr. Sampson proposed to mo last night and I accept ed him?" Miss Ethel (heartily) "I congratulate you slncoroly, Clara. Mr. Sampson Is a noblo young man." Miss Clara "Do you know him well?" Miss Ethol "O, yos. It was only a fow months ago that I promised to bo a sister to him." Time. Mother, take or send your son to tho barber whon his hair needs cutting. To bo sure, ho may got his llttlo hoad full of political and motoorologlcal chaff from tho lips of tho loquacious knight of tho shears and razor; but on tho other hand, tho boy who habitually has his hair cut by his mother Is likely to grow up a Hoclal pariah, if, indood, ho doos not dovolop into n rod-handed villain. Boston Transcript. In tho courso of a discussion about tho Holy Writ rocontly ovorheard a lady remarked that tho Hiblo was a history of mon; that hor box was raroly and but Incidentally mentioned as com pared with tho space devoted to mon. 'Iconfoss," sho added, "that It strkos mo as Doing most singular, ihoro might have been moro said about us." '0, I don t know," ropllod hor friend. 'Tho nuthors of tho various hooka had probably studied womankind, and know they'd bo ablo to speak for thom- solvos." Harper's Bazar. AN HISTORIC SPOT. A Chapel Crypt In lMrU Full or Italics or tho (.rent Revolution. Ono of tho most interesting placos in Paris is now opon to visitors. This 1b tho cyrpt of tho famous chupol of tho Carmollto friars, whoso convent was used as a prison and also as a human Blaughtor-houso during tho "Terror." Tho crypt has boon thrown opon to tho public slnco tho boginning of last wook. It is Hltuatod in tho Huo do Vaugirard, which may bo reached easily from the main boulevard. Tho ohapol-crypt contains many relics of tho ago of blood, which wiih inaugur ated by tho great revolution, among them bolng tho skulls and bones of tho priests who woro massacred in 1792. These victims woro about 200 In num bor, nnd thoy wore literally hacked to death by the inarHollios, to whom thoy woro delivered up by Maillard. In March, 17!iJ, tho garden of tho convont was turned Into an at fresco dancing plaoo called tho "Hal des THIouIh," whoro tho "Grilles d' Egout" and "La, Gouluos" of tho day distinguished themsolvoB by thoir chorographlo cochonncrics. Later on tho convont prison contained within its walla Jo- Bophino do Heauhilrnais, who had been marked for tho guillotine, but became wifo of tho First Consul Honaparto; tho lovely Mmo. Talllen, tho Mmo. Gauth- oreau of tho directory, who also woro Greek fillets liko her modoru imitator; Vorgnlaud, Mine, do Cimtlno, and tho two poor mountebanks, tho LoIhoiih, who woro found guilty of treason against tho powers that woro by having druBsed ono of thoir marioiiottori in thoir "Gulgnol" thontor in tho Champa- vlyseoi as Cliurlottu Corday and mado It Blng out, "Down with Marat!" To a comparatively runit period omo of tho Insurlptloim wrlttun on tho iionvoiit wulU by iiuhiipiiy and II1uIi1uiin prU- onurn wtiro mill YMm.Pitvil Gor. London Tmjrviw, CALIFORNIA DIAMONDS. One or the lVf-elons l'roduets or Huttciuid Amudor Countlen. Diamonds havo long been known to exist in California, though nono of large size havo been found. Tha principal fields lire along tho north, fork of tho Feather river, in Hutto County, and In tho Volcano grnvol region on a tributary of Dry creek, in Amador County. At Cherokee, near tho north fork of tho Feather, sixty or seventy diamonds havo been taken out. Thoy aro found In the gold dig gings in coarso gravel. In the Volcano fields nearly as many havo been found. Tho formation at Volcano is similar to that at Cher Ace. Thoro is, however, at Volcano a bed of gold-bearing ce ment or conglomerate, so hard that it Is worked In a s',amp mill, a micro scopic examination of tho tailings from which shows pulverized dia monds In considerable quantities. This cement gravel contains enough gold to pay woll for tho crushing, nnd the owners do not believo thoy would bo justified by the number or value of diamonds it contains to attempt tho difficult task of breaking it up in such a way a.s to try to save them. Micro scopical particles of diamonds havo also boon found In somo instances in tho tailings from other mills in Cali fornia. Last winter a diamond expert from tho fields of South Africa, a Mr. At kins, examined tho diamond-bearing placers at Cherokee and Volcano, and. camo to tho conclusion that tho stones from there had at somo period been brought from a distanco, nnd that thoso gravel fields woro not their or iginal bed. Tho samo view, It may bo added, Is hold regarding tho gold deposits for which tho mines aro worked. Cherokee and Volcano aro In tho western foothills of tho Slorra Nevada, the latter placo being about ono hundred miles Houthenst of tho former. The present topography of tho country is not looked to as giving; any clow to tho soureo from which tho precious doposits havo como, as it is evident that tho ontiro region hna boon comiHotoly changod by earth quakes and volcanoos, and tho hlllB aro now In many eases composod of lava which has ovorllowed and covered, tho ancient rivers, mountains and valloys. Tho host gold gravol ininos ' on tho eastern slopo of tho Sacramento valloy aro In tho beds of anolont rlvera. These beds havo boon tracod for lonjf distancos, in many cases passing under mountain spurs or boing cut off by valloys. In other Instances violent upheavals havo so disarranged thom that tho prospootors, following up a woll-dollned and paying river-bed, sud denly loso It, finding It broken off liko a plpostom, and frequently thorough, prospecting has failed to find tho con tinuation of the bed, or it has boon found miles away, showing that tho earth had been cracked at right angles with tho stream, and tho two sldos ot the crovlco had slid in opposite direc tions for miles. Mr. Atkins did not think Calfornlau. promising Hold for tho diamond pros pectors, and loft for tho Pugot Sound region, slnco which timo nothing Iuih been heard from him. Jewelers' Je view. RESULTS OF FRUGALITY. Cliauiirey Depeiv Tell How it Mini Miwtoak Fortune by KeonouiUlni;. Hon. Chauncoy M. Dopow, bosidoH having an inexhaustible fund of funny Htores, has excellent ideas about how to live on a moderate salary. Tho other day ono of tho Now York Cen tral Railroad employes called on Mr. Dopow and complained that his salary was not largo enough to Hvo comfort ably. "Woll," Raid tho railroad magnate, I'll toll you a llttlo story. Somo years ago a man was In our employ, getting. a much Hinallor salary than yours hi. camo to mo with tho samo complaint you aro now making. I asked him how many cigars ho Binokod a day and ho said four. " 'And how many do you glvo nwayP' " 'About four more.' " 'Well,' mild I, 'oconomizo In your tobacco and you will loam to bo sav ing in other things.' "1 told him to try my advico andsoo how ho liked it. I didn't seo any thing; of him for about a year, but ono day ho camo in and asked mo how ho could best invest $1,000 which hp had saved. I advised him to buy Now York, Now Haven and Hartford Btock, which wtw at that timo very low. Ho put hid money into $."5,000 worth of stock, hap pening to Htrlko a particularly good bargain, and to-day ho ia worth $300,- 000. Now, I do not claim that thin man'a buccobb is attrlbutablo to my suggestion, but I do declaro that If a person tries to economize ho will bo Burprlscd at tho result." Tlo applicant for an increnso In Bal- ary listened with keen interest whilo Mr. Dopow was talking, and thon re marked that ho guossed thoro was something In economy and that hu would try it on for awhile. N. Y. Evening Sun. Tho Ono Thing Needful. "Yob," said tho young lady de murely to Hilly HHvon. "Papa has given mo ovory educational advantago. I can sing in Italian, you know, qulto readily." "Yos," Biiid Hilly, "I know." "Then I can converse in French and Spanish and cciinposo vorsba in Latin." "Vox," wild Hilly, "but toll mu oh thing iiioru," "What Ih tbutr "Oiin yuu hnktj broad Ih KngllshP'V-. Mcrnhunf 'Jhn'ilet'i