A Lcson in Savin?. Mrs. Mary TIftllon, of Portland, Mo., Lbs in hrr BATinfrft bank book on intor ORtiiiR proof of tlio vslue of vutting moncT in bunk nml lotmnfl it there. In 8H slie rereive.l $-101), for which hhe hail no immediate rise, bo she de roitel it and Iihb not siuce disturbed the Recount. It now stands at almost $1300. St. Louis Republic. William Smith, of Concord, JT. n., claims to lmvo fired tlio idiot that sunk the Alabama. Ho was boatswain on the Kearsargo and ha many relies of Lis old ship. A 1 1 In Fret. ft the mother lxvotnffl sK'k nn t ltelplr, nml the house Is nil in disorder. When both fnthnr ami mother aru down, you mny as Well close the shutters. Order is brought out of chaos often very easily, and Mrs. John Malln, of South Unite, Mont., Feb. 17, 1!3, found an easy way out of her difficulties, as she writes thus : "My husband and I took very Kid rhenmatism from severe colds, and my arms were so himo I could not raise them to help myself. I sent at oneo for a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and bororo the bottle was half empty, I could po about my work. My hus band became so lmno he could not got out of bod. Two and a half bottles completely cured him. I will always praiso St. Jaeolis Oil nn 1 you may use this as you soo fit." This Is a clear ease of whit Is best at the ritfht mo ment, and how every household can bo made happy where pain abounds. A 500 fellowship In palntlns has been es tablished at Syracuse (N. Y.) University. Ir. Kilmer's Hwamp-Hoot cures nil Kidney and Waddi-r troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory ItliiirliRmton, NY. Tug first line of railroad lu Norway was opened in If 55. X1U Ra. .. nl Prntn One Bus. Srr. This remarkable, almost unlioarjof, ylel 1 was reported to the John A. Salser Seel Co., La Crosse, Wis., by Frank Winter, of Mon tana, who planted one bushel of Great North ern Oats, carefully tilled and Irrigated same, and believes that in 1S94 he csn irrnw irom one buKhcl of Great Northern 0;it.s thro- hundred bushels. It's a wonderful oat. Ir tou wu.t. C JT THIS OIT An 81SND IT with Sc DOStSKB to thesltove firm yon will receive sample package of above oats and their mammoth farm seed catalogue. A There Is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all otlwr diseases put together, and until the liu.t few years was snppom-d to he incurat.lc. For s greiAt many yeiirsdoctors pro ncnueed it a local d tsease, and proscribed local remedies, and by constsntly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a const na tional disease and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man ufactured hy F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doges from 1iitlroi to tesspoonfu). it acts directly on the blood and mucous sttvfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars f-T any case it fails to rure. Send for circulars and testimonials free. Address F. J. Chkkt & Co., Toledo, O. tfft-old by DruKgists, TSc- Smile and save money. Mail your orders for anything in drug line to K. A. Hall, Cimrles tou, S. C. Free catalogue. West's Nerve and llrniri Treatment, tie.; Liver IMIls Vic; Hat Dye, "-Mft," HestWoim Powders, 12c; l'orous I'laters, 12c A Slight f'oi.n, if neclcrted, often attacks the lungs. " Itimnt'H Jltinuhinl 'jYitchr " give and immediate relief, .Wil tmlu in Imitm. l'ricc 15 Cenl. Ir. llxsies Certain 4'ronp Cars Will check an uly cmigh at once and prevent a cold from going to the lungs. 5Ucts A. I Hoxsie, Buffalo, N. Y.. M't'r. Japanese Tonth 1'awder, 4enulne. A large box mailed for 1) cents. Lapp DrU3 Co., Philadelphia. a. Hatch's f'niversttl Cough Syrup takes right hohl. Solde very where.-T cents. Heecbam's Pills are Iwtter than mineral wa ters. Keecliam's no others. 25 cents a box. bnvamuth, New Vurk. ScrofulousBunches Neck Lanced Without Relief Hood's Sarsaparllla. Purifies the Blood and Conquers. V. 1. Hm & r.. Ixiwell, Mum.: iui lrnnn: -I 1ih1 lanM-nihilou limit hr-i tm my m-t k for 7 years. 1 treaU-d will. rtitfrr-t-iit ttii,vi iaii'j auU iriil jn.iny nun'dit liut Did Not Get Any Help lur thMn. 1 winr tDKmiie, N. V.. mid ha I tlinii iMii'i.tHtt lti. ifiivi im mily l'inirHr rt'lu!. My physii inii ihfti invt vnti ti take HimmI'4 Sat'srtimrillH, Mini Ik tort' 1 lmt uhi"1 uueluMtlo the buut;h"i Ih-huu lt kiow bvtU'i'. To-day I Am O. K., and tlie tnmhlr Ims not n'lurned Hiinc I lMik UixmI'h barwti'Mtilla, only ihu ocara beiun lft. Hood'sCurcs T"jvn my rerommiMnlation aud the ffert of HoinTs :-ar.MiHnlU in my crtc tin drtn;t;tit lmh U1 a rfal d-al of iiK1'H Karraparilla iu tii if plarf. J.W. ihs, Savaimaii, New York. lloud'a I'illa rv prompt anl ffTlclent, yet vwty In u' Uuii. Kulu by all dru'inti. ceuta. " COLCHESTER " SPADING BOOT l. M l ,tT.v I! K. 'til OUl,T ttt l.tp 2m 'If if Ot (ill ptwirciiug On liiink in ftiii-liinir, diu itinw. At-. Iil'.rr 4nnhiy 'I'IuhmuIioui Surcfhsf'j'iy Prosecutes Claim. If LAND OF THE TLNNEES. CIVILI7.ED INDIANS OF THE NOHTHWKST. FAR Thry Snbacrlbe For a Taper Printed In Their Own Ianruage and Have a Postal System; TT WAt to the NortbwpRt of Amorica in the mysterious f'i corner of Tritish Columbia, (T bortleroil by "uncxploreii territory" anil hemmed in by mighty mountains, dwells a race of red men who daily grow more numeroue, who have made themselves jirofieient in msny of the arts of poaee, nud who, as they become known in their customs and conditions, must cxeito the won der and attention of the civilized world. The r)oplo are known to the few travelers who hare found their way among them as tho Tinnees, and they have their infrequent communi cation with "civilization" chiefly through tho Hudson Hay Company posts at Fort George and tort Fraser. Their morals are more strictly guarded than are those of any white Nation of to-dny ; they csteom cleanliness both of person and surroundings they do courage ; and they have a saying that "to desert a friend is worse than to slay him." Tho last white visitor to the home of the Tinnees were the men compos ing the Government survey party sent north last summer under A. L. Fou drier, which has recently returned. The appended notes of tho chief of the expedition give some" interesting facts concerning the Tinnees and the laud they live in. "The immense country north of the fifty-fourth parallol, generally de scribed as tho 'lako region,' is hardly known to tho present generation. Years ago, during the gold excitement in Omincca, a great deal of trade and travel waa taken that way, and nearly all tho old pioneers are familiar with tho wonderful scenery of the section. "Sinco tho gold boom the only in habitants of this extensive country have been India is and a few Hudson Bay Company employes. The natives are known as the Tinnees, this name including tho who! race, somo of the representatives of which inhabit the country east of the Rocky Mountains, others peopling tho lake region proper and st;.U others living as far to the south as the Chilcotin lliver. The race is divided into many families : First, the Chilcotin s, living on the plain of that name ; then the 'Car riers,' or 'porteurs,' around Fort Fraser, and, again, the Siccanies and the Nahanies, occupying the country north and east of the Nechaco River. "In language the Tinnees have no relationship with the other tribes of the North, but, curiously, Indians liv ing as far south as California (the Navajoes, for example), or in Okla homa, the Chilcotees, speak a tongue very similar to that of the Tinnees. "Of late years a young and ener getic missionary, Father Morrice, of Btuart Lake, has been giving his time and talents to the upbuilding of a Tinnees Nation which shall compare not nnfavorably in many ways with that of the whites. The mother tongue of the Tinnees, which is ex ceedingly rich in expression, has been through his efforts reduced to a sys tem of phonetio writing, tho charac ters being remarkable for the simplic ity and from the fact that they rest rather than weary the eye of the reader. The written language is so simple and so systematic that a child or a man may with equal facility learn to read or write it to perfection. Not one of the tribe, from a child of six to the old men and women of three score and ten, is unable to-day to either read or write. "The phonetic Tinnees is employed by the Indians in their correspond ence for they have risen to the dig nity of a postal system of their own in the marking of signs for the guid ance of travelers and explorers, and in the hundred and one other ways fa miliar to civilized Nations. "To further develop the theory and render its success more complete Father Morrice, with the aid of the In dians, had special types cast from his own designs, bought a printing press and three years ago printed and pub lished several elementary works on the language and history of the Nation. For the past two years he has been is suing a monthly newspaper, to which every Indian in tho vast district is a willing subscriber. It is called the News. Its first pace is devote! ex clusively to local afl'airs, such as hunt ing and trapping and all else. which may practically interest the commun ity in which it circulates. Another portion is devoted to religious sub jects, and the remainder of its sixteen pagos of space treats of the world in general, a great deal of attention be lug paid to science, the customs and manners of foreign countries, useful inventions, etc. "mere is, says Mr. routiner, "no other part of the province where the Indians are so nignly civilized, so truthful and so honest rare qualities indued for an Indian race. One great advantage traceable to the publication of the News is the development of a taste for and a knowledge of agricul ture. The hunting and trapping are nearing an end in the lake region, and the natives see that the resource which they must in future look to is farming The new generation is fast becoming a community of scientific tillers of the soil. Were all the Indians of America in so advanced a state they would at no time be a cause of anxiety ; the Government would never be called upon to supply their wants, and the white brother could leurii not a little from them that he does not now know." The Tiilismuuic Mooustoue. Tho remarkable peculiarity of the moonstone is, that while in all other gems internal seams uru called flaws, and detract from their value, in the moonstone they ar called "magic mirrors" because tlio&e favored mortals who ar3 gifted with the illumination of tho ustrul i i k 1 1 1 can, lv its aid, read cn those surfaces of milky white re flections of the past nud the promise of the future. Detroit Free Tress. For thirteen years Ferdinand Ilalt zenlund, a (icriuuu veteran, living in Heading, Finn., has not tasted water. Wounds received iu buttle compel to tal abstinence from drink of all kjuds HCept Uiilk (llid coffee. SCIENTIFIC AM) INDUSTRIAL. Birds with long legs have short tails. The pitcher plant snares insects and swallows them, but does not digest them. Rnakeproof aluminum boots have been tried in Florida swamps and are a success. A French surgeon removed a bnllot from tho eye of a child without de stroying the sight of the optic. If a well could be dug to a depth of forty-six miles tho air Bt the bottom would be as dense as quioksilver. In the northwestern part of Colorado there is a region soveral hundred square miles in extent which is a vast deposit of petritied fish. The "tartar" on human teeth is filled with animalcnlre, which are de stroyed by vinegar. Vinegar itself contains eel-like insects, A writer on elephants declares that when very hot the elephant will insert his trunk into his throat, draw up water and sprinkle it over his back. The cause of the superstition con cerning tho opal is found in the fact that this gem is very liable to split, and consequently to become worth less. Thero havo been more romains of mastodons and other extinct mam moths found in Iehtucknee River, Floriila, than any other stream in the world. A. H. Savage Landor, grandson of the poet Landor, has recently returned from a prolonged sojourn among the hairy Ainus of Yezo, J apan. The aver age height of these people is 62 J inches for men and 68f inchos for women. Tho art of collecting provisions, storing and preserving food, domesti cating and managing flocks and cap turing slaves are quite as well under stood by animals and insect as by man in the earlier stages of his civilization. The California woodpecker is an in sect enter. Yet in view of the ap proach of winter, it prepares a store of food of a wholly different character and arranges this with as much care as an epicure might devote to the storage of his wine in a cellar. A grower of pineapples claims valua ble medicinal properties for the juice of that fruit, confidently asserting that it will cure indigestion, no matter how severe, and has proven itself to contain wonderful tonio and restora tive qualities for a weak stomach. It relieves, and, so to speak, warms and nurses the distressed organ. A red-hot wire of platinum has for many years past been used for cutting various orgauio substantances, but it is stated in the London Chemical News that Mr. Warren has discovered a new use for this method and employs a wire heated by an electric current to saw the hardest kinds of wood. At first the wire would break.but he remodied this by using a steel core platinum-plated by a solution of platinio chloride in either. Dwarfing Trees in Japan. The art of dwarfing plants is so lit tle known in other lands that a short description of its process is given by Garden and Forest. The pines may truly be considered the most import ant of all trees in Japan, and great care is taken in their cultivation and preservation. They are generally grown from seed, and great care is taken to select th3 chcicest quality of seed. In the spring of the second year, when the Eiedlings are about eight inches in toight, they are staked with bamboo caaes and tied with rice straw, the plants being beat in differ ent desirable shapes. In the next fall they are transplanted to richer soil Bnd are well fertilized. In the follow ing spring the plants are restaked and twisted and tied in fanciful forms. This mode of treatment is given until the seventh year, when the tree will have assumed fairly large proportions, the branches being trained in graceful forms and the foliage like small crowds of dense green. The plants are now taken up and placed in pots one and a half feet in diameter, and are kept well watered every succeeding year ; great care must be taken to keep new shoot pinched back. After another three years of this treatment the trees are virtually dwarled, tnere being no growth thereafter. The dwarfing of bamboo is another important branch of Japanese nursery business. A few weeks after the shoots begin to grow, and when the trunks measure about three inches in circumference and five feet in height the bark is removed, piece by piece, from the joint. After rive weeks, when the plants get some what stout, the stem is bent and tied in. After three months, when the side shoots grow strong enough, they are all cut off rivo or six inches from the main trunk, they are then dug up and potted in sand. Care should be taken not to use auy fertilizer, but plenty of water should be given. Cut off the large shoots every year in May or June, and after three years the twigs and leaves will present admirable yel low and green tints. Coronets. English noblemen are the only ones iu Furope who ever wear coronets on their heads, and the sole occasion when they do so is at the coronation of the sovereign. They hold them in their hands through tue ceremony, and at the moment when the Arch bishop of Canterbury places the crown upou the monarch s nead every peer and peeress present dons his or her coronet. Iuasiuueh as nearly half of the House of Lords is composed of peers created by Queen Victoria, it is probable that none of them bus taken tho trouble to provide himself with thesilver coronet, lined with crimson velvet, of his rauk, uud were the Queen to die nud the l'riuee of Wulos to ascend the throne, there would doubtless be a run on the court silversmiths for baubles of thin character. The baron's coronet, worn by the poet, Lord Hyron, at the coronation of George IV., and which was manu factured for the occasion, and is now in this country and was in the posses sion of the lute proprietor of the Phila delphia Ledjo-r, who couverted it into a ehuliug dish for the humble vege table known us the potato, having ro moved the velvet cap from the inside and turned it upside down, so that the four silver balls constitute the sup port uf the chitting dull. Ydgue. Amateur classes in nursing are a new fad. A woman's hair is said to weigh on the averago fourteen ounces, In Kansas women own or control property valued at Jtl 1,600,000. Mrs. John Jacob Astor, of New York, is fond of all outdoor sports. Tho female members of Wosleyan's Froshmnu class, havo voted to carry canes. Tho Empress of China has sent fivo Indies to tho court of Berlin, in order learn German manners and etiquette. There are few spinsters in the Cau casian settlements in South Africa, as the men outnumber tho women ten to ono. Mrs John Jacob Astor's fino now house on upper Fifth avenuo, Now York, is beiug bnilt of white soap stone. Mmc. McMahon, widow of tho Into ox-rresideut of Franco, has sold her residence in Paris and romoved to tho country. Tho mother of the Sultan of Turkey is supreme authority in his harem, and is the only person who is allowod to go unveiled. Mrs. Cleveland's favorilo jewel, it is said, is a rose leaf spray of diamonds, a wedding gift from ex-Socrotary of tho Navy Whitney. Queen Elizabeth was annoyed by a rod noso. Her attendants were accus tomed to powder it every few minutes to koep it presentable. The number of medical women in Great Britain is now 18(1, and of theso twenty havo bocomo members of tho British Medical Association. Tho protty fan carried to a recep tion tho other evening by a Gotham "bud," was of pink ostrich feathers, with diamond set mother of pearl sticks. " Sir Edwin Arnold says that thero are 30,000 young women iu England who write poetry and look forward to the day when famo will perch on their brows. England has a woman coroner, only over thero they call her tho "lady coroner." Women in the vestries aro no novelties in Queen Victoria's country. Mrs. Gladstone is an artist in mak ing home-made mince pics. The Queen is so fond of them that Mrs. Gladstone sends ono to her at Christ mas each year. Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, wife of the Standard Oil magnate, teaches a Sunday-school class of young men of which her sou, John D. Rockefeller, Jr . is a member. The dowager Viscountess Sidmoutb, who died the other day at the ago of ninety-six, in England, had ninety living children, grandchildren And great-grandchildren. Mrs. Potter Palmer, of Chicago, has a penchant for Mexican and duchesso laces. She probably owns one of the finest assortments of those delicate embroideries in the world. The palace hotels of New Y'ork are employing maids to wait upon guests at a oost of fifty cents an hour. The maid must be able to do hairdressing and to array a lady for a ball. Twenty years ago Queen Victoria was taught how to spin by an old wo man from tho Scottish Highlands. Her Majesty is very fond of the occupa tion, being proud of her skill. Mrs. Bishop, whose nom de plume is Isabella Bird, has left Liverpool for Core in search of material for another book. Sho is more than sixty, and thinks nothing of the long journey ahead of her. A tiny sachet bag hidden away in the depths of a eoat or wrap will make it smell delicious. The furry odor which often clings to capes and coats, even of the best of seal, will be neu tralized by this plan. Don't look for novelty as much as quality in chiua and glass, for many novelties have no intrinsic merit, while the finer goods liko Coal port, Royal Vieu ia and American cut glass are always dcsirablo. When the wrist bono presents a prominent, ungainly knob, riitfios of lace are a delightful resource, and ho is the Flemish cuff. An over-fat wrist is quite as unlovely, and should bo just as carefully concealed. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the vet eran woman's right agitator, despite her years, is actively engaged in or ganizing a graud rally in tho interest of female suffrage, which w ill bo held simultaneously all over the country. The Czarina of Russia, forgetful of her own serious attack of the grip, nursed back to lifo with hor own hands her third sou, the Grand Duke Mich ael. A mother's lovo is the same ia the palace or in tho peasant's home. Mrs. Hoke Smith, Mrs. Bissell and Lamout aro tho younger three "Cabi net ladies," unless Miss Herbert is counted in. Miss Herbert is then the most youthful, then Mrs. Cleveland, then Mrs. Smith, then Mrs. Bissell and Mrs. Lamont a close tilth. Mme. de Matos is the Joun of Aro of the Brazilian revolution. She enters the field with her husbund attired iua dress which is a mixture aud woman's attire. Sho is about thirty years of age, with blue eyes und bloudu hair, and possesses a groat deal of personal magnetism. Miss Alice Rothschild is one of tho most enthusiastic women horticultu rists in the world, aud her collection of roses ulone is valued at $l,000. It is u rtmurkublo fact, by tho way, that every member of the Rothschild fam ily dislikes scented rlowers, with the exception of roses. Persons who sew a great deal often suffer from soreness iu tho thimble linger. Silver or plated thimbles are the best, ami next to these u lightly burnished steel thimble should bo used. Swelling of the linger and very serious iiitlaiuumtion aro olteu caused by cheup thimbles. The first free public school ever es tabli. lied iu the world was at l)ur chester, Mas., in liiS'.l. The site ol the school is: to be marked by au fell during uiouuuicut, TEMPERANCE. run fool's mkak. A Utile whtaky now and (hen Is rellliel hy the heat of men It annthea the wrinkles nut nt rare, And makes ac-e high look like two pair. When everything looks blasted bin. And misery stieka like so nmeh (flue, A nip that roaches toe and hair Will make a man a millionaire. Whn tt has wandered down our nocks, It tills our eyes with male apeos. Which brlnKS the briR-ht slile full to view, And makes one quarter look like two. An UKly woman looks divine. Our burial lot beeomes a mine ; The tree all walk, the fenees run, ind silly tales sound full ot ftin. -New Vork World. At-COHOt, AND TH PtUIH. T. Morton, M. P.. tn a recent letter to the editor of the ,on-lon Temperance Chronicle, wrltea 'Thare is no known drug, and prob ably no unknown one. that can restore ths tntefcrity ot ths brain-eells damaged by pro longed drinking habits, though natnrn enn do much It alcohol is entirely and permanently withdrawn." A permanent cure forinebrlety upon any other basis than total abstinence is quite Impossible. In the light of Dr. Mor ton's declaration It is vastly better to atop lWore beginning to drink. National Tern perauue Ueoord. FaOOKESS of timpbkancb. Tn a recant editorial review of the progress of the temperance reform the Now York Ob server says : "Friends of ths temperance canee should find little reason for discouragement In the !reeent situation. If politioal prohibition, mlgiug from the returns of reeeut elections, ias not made the progress hoped for it, pro hibition through education has scored a rapid advance. From many quarters eomes eontlrmatory evidenee of the steady growth of a public sentiment against the use ot in toxicating liquors, and in favor o( a closer restriction Of the llguor traflln." A M1STAKKX MOTION. An old but very mistaken notion Is that drink gives strength. A test was onoe tried to determino the strength-giving power of alcohol. Two gangs of men, as nearly equal in size and strength as possible, were put to work breaking stone. Both gangs oontnined nn equal number of men, but to one gong liquors containing alcohol were given. At first the nlcohol gang did by far ths most work, but when tbeeffeoto of the alcohol ceased, the men fell far behind the other men in their work, so that at the end of the day the gang which did not drink had done the greatest amount of work. This was con tinued for three or four days, the result being the same. The experimenters then reversed the gangs, giving tne non-alcoholic gang al cohol, and allowing the alcoholio gnngnone but the men not using the stimulant cams out ahead as before. A WRF.TCHKD SLAVS. Pad companions have ruined many unsus pecting boys and girls and older persons, too. Habits of tippling are formed by taking a so cial glass, and before one is hardly aware of it he Is a drunkard. Iu the same way feast ing on rich viands and rare dessrWs will al lure the appetite to indulgence until one be comes a glutton. And what can be more degrading ttmn to live for eating and drink ing? It is notorious that the love of liquor will make its victim idle and shiftless. lie would rather sit In a saloon and toll profane and obscene stories than to be industriously engaged in his trade or profession. Nor is this all. Indulgence in night drink ing and frolic robs one of strength, renders him drowsy and lazy the next morning, tills his head with aches, his eyes with inflamma tion, tits pulse with fever, bis brain with de lusions and his nerves with trembling and inefficiency. No wonder such a wretched clave of beastly appetite often eoiues to pov erty and rags. lie forfeits his character, de bases his brain and heart, disgraces and mortifies his family, alienates hi friends and employers aud bartars away his eternal soul to Satan. Ob, the horrors of the poor drunk ard's end both in this world and the next I The thought of it ought to keep every older person from evr inviting young people to tasto the intoxicating twwl.- Sncred Heart Itcviow. WIM.KATBI ftnr.WCR. Tlo Keiv Vork World gives a partial list of inillem.-iiri) brfwen of that city, stating their wealth as follows- George Eh ret, worth 15,000.000 -. Jacob Ruppert, worth 10,000,. 000 ; Peter Doelger, worth t7,SOO,000 ; James Kverard, worth 5,000.000 : estate ot Henry Clausen, Jr., worth tS,000,000; George O. Clausen, worth (2,500,000. Anton G. and J. C. U. Iliipfcl. worth 3,500.000, and Bern- belmer and Hclimbl, worth 1 5,000,000. it says of htirnt, now worth 15.000,000. with a daily income of 2054, that twenty years ngo he left his position as foreman in Jluprel s hrewery to start In business on bis own account. Of Kuppert it Bays be has a dally income of $i:ir,.l, uud that "a man who throws a stone anywhere in New York City is apt to hit a house owned by Mr. Huppert. 1 Of Doelgor. now worth 7,5O0.OOO. it says h is ''another man who worked himself up from the vaults of r brewery then he opened a saloon, and then went into the brewing business lor luuisiui. mat was about twenty-live years ago. Of Everard. now worth 5.01(0,000, with a dally Income of US5, it says he was at one stage of his ca reer a policeman, aud then started in the brewing buiinMs as a partner of a well known politician, Sheridan Shook. Anton lliiplei is mentioned as "another of tbe old- time brewers, who, from being a cellar hand, worked his way up, until the businese, worth ( 2.5iH).oeo, now yiHiiis an unnunl income or I'ij.lXKI. an. I a dally income ot 4'2." These figures show the euormous profits of the beer business, and also where much of the money, especially of the workingmen of this oily, who are so largely p.-itroua of the beer saloons, has gone to iu the last twenty-five years. Tney have contributed, largely to these many millionaire brewers' fortunes, while now, with work and wuges suddenly cutoff, many of them und their families are kept from actual starvation by the aid of the charitable aud the philanthropic. National Temperance Advocate. TEHFERASCB XKWB AND MOTFS. The United States had 2111,863 reUll liquor dealers July 1st, IWX The criminal arrests in the United States have inci eased more than fivefold since 1SC0. Out of 4000 liquor saloons in Brooklyn, about 8200 are said to be mortgaged to brew ers. The Chicago Tribune says liquor was the cause ol 741 murders reported In Its col umns in 1393. According to the Swiss Federal Statistical Bureau, Switzerland, though so largely a wine country, has also 814 breweries. A large number of souvenirs, in the form of little square bottles of "Sit. Vernon Whis ky, were given away at tbe World's Fair. At Burgstadt, Saxony, those of its inhabi tants who are delinquent tax-payers are not allowed to be served in tbe beer shops and calea. Of 611 paupers in the Edinburgh poor house not one was au abstaiuer, aud 407 ad- milted that their poverty was due entirely to Intemperance. Alcohol insanity is twice as common In Fruuce now as it was fifteen years ago. aud the number ol persons placed under restraint on account ot it hits increased twenty-live per cent. In the lust three yeurs. The generally invented theory that alcohol is uo good "to koep out the cold" has ouce more received continuation by the fact that the celebrated explorer, Dr. Nunseu, who started on his voyage to the Arctic regions on June 24tb, has taken no alcohol whatever wilu hhn except for purposes of fuel. Benjamin Fruukliu died in the year 1790 (over one nunurea yeurs ugo) ; hut even In those times he hud the sense to know that "Some of the domestic evils of drunkenness 1.. houses without windows, gardens with out fences, ticbis without tillage, barns with out rools, children without clotliiug, prine-l-pics, morals or muuueM." At an inquest beld the other day iu ling laud the evidence brought to light the queer fact that the dead muu's life had been in sured for lUObythe liquor dealer whose bar he chiefly puirouized. No secret was made about the mutter, it being perfectly fair and above board, tbe liquor dealer cniy wishing to lusure himselt aguiust the loss of business consequent onthedeathof avaluablecustom r. The practice is stuted to be quite Ire-quest. Highest of all in leavening MM ABSOLUTELY PURE Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. nOVAl BAKINO POWDER CO., 108 WALU ST., NEW YORK. The Elephant a Coward. "Tlio elephant Is art arrant cow ard," saiil John L. Tcrkins, as lio ro- counted hia experiences in a circus to a Kroup of fricn.ls. "I hail charge of an elephant onoo that had a viciout disposition, Imt ho would do anything that I wanted him to. I usod to prod hint with sharp stool and otherwise impress upon him thnt I was in aster nud iutcndod to remain so. An nn- ilorltccpcr went on tho kindness the ory ami treated tho animal ai well as if ho was a member of his own family. "After wo had been together about a year I was awakened ono night iu litllo Nebraska town by human shrieks in tlio elephant s quarters. Hushing to tho place, I found tho underkeeper being crushed to death. As soon as tho cowardly pachyderm saw mo ho trembled in every muscle, dropped tho man and tried to run, but I gave him a lesson with my Bteel prod that ho never forgot. Then 1 picked np the mail, who, I supposed, of course, was dead, and I found that ho had re ceived only a broken arm and a brokeu rib as a result of his kindness to the elephant. Ho got well in a few weeks, went to tho elephant and punc tured him with a steel prod until the fellow bellowed for mercy. After that wo were all together four years, but tho elephant never again attempted to injure either of ns." St. Louis Globe- Democrat. Strange Avenue ot Trees, A strange avenuo of trees is owned by the Duke of Argyll, and it is year by year growing longer. Each of the trees has been planted by some nota ble person, aud a brass pluto is fast ened to the iron fencing surrounding the tree, signifying by whom it was planted. St. Louis Kepnblic. The houses of Home are valued at $225 per inhabitant. 1 KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and Improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly usea. Tho many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable aud pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and llowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 Inittles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and la-ing well informed, vou will out accept any substitute if oflcred. January 'J, 1 S. Pt-liraary I, I M arch 1, i'l percent. 10 ' 1 I TOTAL, 3t irr rrul. Wr Imve paid Ia mr riiHlomrra lu HO itn. I'rnlllM iuiii twice fach moult); money i'ku Inj wltli.lrnwn any Onic; (JU tuluvcn be lltvcMltr.i; M rile for Itifnrinnliou. rllltl A t'O., Ilnnlti-ra aud lirokera. INiilid'O lli-ttUflwBy, New Vurk. tiut-.P, l. t, ATTOU NfcVH FOR IN- F.NTOKr. l'r aiiie Utt.i Amorlrtta au 1 ForWttu l'liu-iiti. Dujr ami sell hatemU In nil clttMM ol luveutlouu. Employ afiit every where an I Miy HIU ttALAKtbS. Corrw.jKu tlouct from lu vtMiiont aud live axvuitt wilk-iic l. fill 1 1 0 Anti-Rheumatic CtiewiRgGum nALrciul'CfttRrrTuT V i'tiftw Mini rrevfiit rtiifuuittiuiii, iuinf attou. fU III Mil sill, IUnll(fllMlll, C it una and Attn ma. A 1 Kwveri. CU-unu the t M I'ymwDfcls, IttmrllmriJ T I'sufuL lu Miliaria and A Tfetlt ami l'romutcs the Appetite, hwuettm A f llm Jirt-tUb, I'tira ih TuImuvo Haltlt. EnUonttnl f " oy tut racuiiy. twou iur iu. law ' A i vnt ai'kaKe. fc'iitvr, Stanjn ur tMtai Aoe. tlKO. K. UAI.M, 140 Wet 2Vth HI., Ntiw YorK. N Y N U-1 t !i Kfl Tra ted free. 5Y KIEV ntakl cutrri Bitny thou. jnrei hopeieu. Front first doie lymptoms lijitdl? ti-.tfi, I in ten (fairs at lean two-OuiiH of il uiijti.mi lit tumn eil. BOOK tt-Muncmali of miratuloui iuipi lent FRCE TEN DAYS T8EBTMENTJFUItlllHE0 FREE k mail y Wi 1 Wt uru tlin biifrnl uriiw nru 1 Ua n(i fUuta. 86 uatkCri! ru, Ciuv.:r 'inuuttiy, paid for tl 00. 1 pkkrt. UU) Variable am-oa. Wt'. Hey. our tn t'ai nonnorn uoia wMedil6buah fi i.ninelmah. a..wn I hid you evr har the Ukel Pka-. of tblaOata " Ks that Vcrks Easily Works Successfully." 'Tis very Easy to Clean House With SAPOLIO strength. Latest D. S. Cot. Food Report- Powder Businesslike Jtonthlncks. Trobably tho smartest young busi ness mon in Now York are the Italian bootblacks about Broadway and Canal street. They accost tho passerby with tho nsual ".Shine, shine, sir?" When ono refuses to reeogniiro their sol iei tat ions, they beeomo confiden tial, and following their victim ex plain : "Nico-a shine, boss, nioo-a shine only threo cents" (holding np threo fingers). If this appeal dues not produce tho proper effects tho anxious bootblack makes a "coup." Flucking tho man's alcove ho cries out : "Two oenta, boss I Only two ceuta, first-a clnsH-a shine, boss, only two cental" Tho bootblack has Icarnod that the averago man's heart is not largo enough to resist such a plea, and ho succeeds, in nino cases out of ten, iu inveigling tho passerby to stand np against a wall aud have his shoen blacked for "only two cents, boss!" New York Recorder. SMSEPWESSNESS, Nervous Da-' lllty. Nerv ous Exhaust tlon. Neurol-1 jia, Paraly- 1 sis, locomo-1 tor Ataxia,' Melancholia. and kiadred ailments, whether resulting from over anxiety, overwork or study, or train unnatural habits or exoaMa, ar treated as a specialty, with great sucem, by the BUff of Hpeeiallsta attached to the Invalids' Hotel and Btirgleal Institute at Buffalo, N. Y. Personal examinations do always necessary. Many cases are nicoeaa t ully" treated at a dlstanoe. I arpTjir A A nJ wonderfuDy, AD I IllA. successful treatment baa been discovered for Ant h ma and Bay Fever, i which ou be sent by Mail or Express. It it set simply a pallia tire but a raiicml cars. For pamphlet, qviestiea blanks, refer ence and particulars, la relation to any, f the above mentioned dlseaM, Bddrtea,! with ten nuti In stamps, World's Dispens-, ary Medical Aawciatioa, 603 Mais btrwt,' Buffalo, N. Y. rVrtUM of Ut hib f rd at vhirh Circalw few r ra tor fHtwcr is watted in frirtioo than ad im aawiiof hr ttt txuinit of the vhakf, wtm (aw Irani t owl Hi In Him Aimk Kaw Iran. Ihrtniy Ful Hw Pimata w ataJ, tint d.nWtilijr ia alttiii and wfc1li rrfitnt4 tVt-auaf 11IK KKaKIMiK Villi Till SHUT AH HAUfc, HI H1H HlTTIy IT IN TUB Mtt Ol-' A 1 11(1 4r HTVV1. Tl IL TrtwtUfl tubinjtnil tat.!m ar the-tl alillM to ailoU uiww wilh a hxlt. ffc rratwa ta all , rrp rt14, a4 rti4 ltlfer m taai ifaif fi Immm l f Th turd o em, ill tk niw m M -uA it ttmpUfbi? fW nmjf to att Ami t, a f fA ynUt imjmtvmn im War K war bjf mnriil!ni kttmfr. ll twruif frame hih carriaa th wrod to W w4 n4 which aiiltmiativally rtiirr lo tta rlaca haa alto a anl to ! a hI ulf from th fly whffl aud yt dn Mot rauaa It to broaont ry mik h ot an aiict t Uia av Tfta ua ot HW lt. (nimh flj nliarl and M ni'h uw tnikn this raaily pnosiM. It ia IhtrrfiT. a )r drsiral.la Cola Haw, maairti itaaaylacat up tuiylvtif waUriai uiciJjr aud Ui, Another (cat tut of me wt tiftVr this vary opariur saw frsana with I tt tact, superior saw at a much Ifti inua than any cheap i niLr CmM, wiwUn frame ran h t.HirM fr, ar sura Uai ti fnaixta of hm Arriuotur will apprenata tl fart thai wa hava iru dome lha ptiHio a Rirat aarvfa and ha a dMtoifuitltvd ourMlr in ie4ei-i.ni moid articlt aud vlbmj it uil aa inn ! it-1 jr imui.,tr, aLaje. 'or a aaw of miliar sir and quality, and ordinary wood) frnma, yutt wuiihl l charged fi.U. W mni ftM o ateW f, ... rA.a a,., mr ut $,, N tilt K TOI' A CIUM TO tifcT IT IT tlb, - IA UhM . G'anivrf Awrmoim; Wa bars sold an aDf-ruiuus nuiolwr of I'owar Aarmotor outfit with whirh saws aie use. I, aid a ior mw that runt hard drltactt ftoio thnr urfulura ai'd their rrniiaUor. If wa fur nish, a tery superior saw at a Vt-ry low price, Suaiiy fearad out its will ta U-ufht to drive tlum YY harem oua Utarad Aar snblor k, utb'it ara sure tu frlluw. nhrnwa Uka a writ hnwu article, reoVaiaa ft. and pat II in a tiije very suf erior to aiiyllniif that lias ai-peared before, It a ilTit and en 1 arte our rrititatin for dome wall everything to M hii'h we put our hands, and this is I ha thing thai has to the (t.ist tiruufhl au much hot me to our factory, atid which la he future, ia hate no duiiU. Will t-xng, prartirally, ail the lniMiieea ;n o-t line. It is this reputation that of daily Mi-'knitf fur. Wa belicv that Ihta Asrmotor Rteel ftaw Frame and Saw will con b i m and enhance the fame which we have gained ' n Hie nianiif actme ut Hieel Windmills and Steel Towers, hen re. fur the purpose of scattering them so that every bent Itiivhiti-w that a i-d (hum run tw h.l fur a anall prce, ft lllilH THIN STUM, iW a II MUM ft) a nip TAHITi Aa Ht muris.i It AUrt lirt Natftl lie. of this aenea as par (oii.l.lmiii slated in No i- In our next advertisement. Mo. 4. we shall talk of gajtanixjng, and make an offer that will La n el interest. iAuMadu. Jku.., jUhJlojUN . WORLD'S FAIR AWARDS tsraee ftol.M. .reaU. e. iffUMtUALd ' viij A urn a a aa I and on plp'oma lor Hess a ty, fctrn trawl and t'taraaei.uvr K!.uaj til l fi rso vtuivira uatvw . betfii told dlr t to lha people. itseua ai once lor our com pit ia catalogue ' Ktof ever kind ol vrtaK-Iaxt Hsirise a, all book of tfatiruooiala, they ir. tree ALLIANCE CAR HIA (it CO., CINCINNATI w.i.nocoLAs ? an or equals custom work, coMlng- from to 6. best value for the money EGtttUINE. In the world. Name aud price (TfVEIX bottom. Every , Take no tubaif. 1 pajiera for full 1 of our complete ' Indira and gen 1 or tend for 11- ustrattJ Catalogue giving in struction LMB6.T trnir 1 -' how to or der by mail, postage free. You can get tha bet OargiUn of dealer who push our shoe. -J tutlta nninc iui iloz imili. & m 11 Bat Cuutfn )-ip. Ibu. Uuod. Vm f fl Id ttu,& h"ld bT druKITI.IC M u fsu .... A.U., I m l.)lH UI.Ml, . i i,,t uraaaen, rui.ioa. etc., in earllrat' VrKUtll atcda, auuUMit for KaitlvD, Jot nonnouiquatjuvins, i,vww u it. v. - - Wrs.. 11 fas "ae- .-"'N.iaa' 1 I aSMa) atlTHa-.-. ..... ,.- nn faie-UV-ue frw upon rvcrlpt ol ia nioa. iu rutiu r.rW( wui'i. a.la.UMi 1'i.v flur irmat i-itt n ifurui- M H-if-a. fr ftt' T"HtJUf. W r1t to (y. 1