CAPTURING A BOOMSLANGE. S A BY A. R. O'REILEY. 4 4/% At Grahamstown, South Africa, In 1878, I had a large collection of living Bnakes which I kept in glassfronted cages for the purpose of studying their habits, temperaments and intelligence. They were all caught by my own hands. Out in the country, on the veldt and in the bush, I had watched them as much as possible in their native State, and now supplemented this study by keeping them afterward under my eyes at home. This work I had car ried on Bince September, 1875, so that I had acquired a pretty extensive knowledge of the snakes of southern Africa. All the venomous kinds were already In my collection, and of the harmless snakes I had over 30 different species. There was, however, a much desired Dne still wanting to me, one of the larg est, most interesting, most graceful and beautifully colored of all the snakes of the African woodland —the famous tree-snake, Bucephalus capensis, the "boomslange" or tree-snake of the Dutch settlers. Miles of bush I hunted through, but could never find a boom slange. One day I had strained my foot, and It pained me so much that I declared at the breakfast table that until it was better I did not propose to do any walking, but would give my foot a rest. Before we rose from the table, a Kaffir boy came to the door with a letter from Tidmarsh, the director of the Grahamstown Botanical gardens, which said: "Come down here as quickly as you can. I have a large boomslange In the oak trees over the avenue." Up I jumped from the table, seized my hat and stick, and away Iran on the strained foot. Now it didn't pain me. How could I think oi pain, while the much-desired boomslange was waiting for me? At the other side of the town lay the Botanical gardens, but the distance didn't matter; in a few minutes I was there. Panting, I rushed in at the gate; voices rang out; a dozen men called me. They were gazing upwards Into the trees, evidently watching the snake. Tliey stood in the middle of the avenue, each side of w.Hich was bordered by a line of leafy oaks so branching as almost to meet over the roadway. When I got to where the Kaffirs Were gazing upward, they pointed out to me the snake aloft in the tree-tops. 1 looked sharply, but no snake could I see. "He's a big one." said they. "He's six feet long." But size didn't ma\ce him easy to discern among the leaves. Strain my eyes as I might, I couldn't get a glimpse of him. One of the men threw up a stone and then he moved, and as he moved I saw | him. And as I saw him. 1 ran eagerly to a tree and began to climb. "Keep your eyes on him now, every man of you!" I shouted. "I can't watch him and climb at the same time." To take one's eyes from him for a moment would be to »ose him, so closely did his colors harmonize with the greenish leaves and purplish gray branches and twigs among which he lay. Shinning up the tree, I was soon among the limbs, and began to make my way toward where the boomslang was watching the group of upturned Kaffir faces beneath. As I was now among the foliage, I could not see him, and had to let the Kaffirs from below direct my progress through the leaf-clad branches. It was difficult work, for the long snake-stick which I took with me hampered me by running foul of the branches!" "I/pward—now over your left Bhoulder!" shouted the Kaffirs; and accordingly upward over the left shoulder I climbed.| Soon I was near the snuke. I could see him coiled part ly, and partly stretched out, at the tip of a branch. HU tail was well lashed around it, his body half hidden by the ledves. while his long slender neck ami bulldog head were thrust out a foot and a half in uiy direction. Evidently 1 was not taking him at all unawares, for ills eyes, exceedingly large and bright, ware Intently watch ing my efforts to reach hlin, and his Inquiring tongue every moment shot firth its trembling, double-pointed tips, menacing me, as I thought, for Intruding in his leafy dominions. Otherwii-e he was as motionless as the branch on which he lay. I clral'i'd toward hiui until my face came within six feet of him, but still lie never stirred. fXcept for that quiv ering. double pointed tongue, which now almost continually vibrated Its line thread like extremities in th<' air. The warm sun was shilling full upon hi in and his great brght ey«s seeim d tn glitter with malice, but still he re mained motionless; and yet. I believe, he was fully as animus aud as nervous as I was. Here I was face to face with him 111 the tree top What til do, I ktteW Hot Was he venomous* Were they true- • thowe tales I had heard of tils virulent poison, those stories of lingering tliroiilc «,r s caused by his bites, where the bitten part scaled off year after year ami sloughed away* I thought of these things uo* and wa» frightened I kit - * that he had Hot the elal»orete puisou appai atus of the deadly put adder and vubra; but still. I had s>« u In the d«ad ones whi«b I bad 4t*eecled awd «*amlit"«4 that the ISSWIIISIII Was a ' !>«.ut»eii»d bram h to auother I ofte|| had to jump. Hometlliles, Where the IIinb?» were far apart, a springing (tough beneath uie would serve to u» sist the leap by throwing me forward, till I would alight with cnnging hands on auother farther on. Ome I swung uiyself on a yielding bram h over a wide vacant spate, where the break IIIM of the bough would have prev imi tated Uie to death Hull this clase through the biamhes was perhaps easier, than a continual ascending and descending of the trees. When the hunted boouialange had got three fourths of the way down tin w ostein side of the avenue, he stopped once moie and showed light, but after a vigorous shaking of the bram lies he datUd away, eud croselug the avenue upon the overlapping bram h mi made another bail on the eastern | »lde, In the Very tree liuHl which the • base had sunUd uteri? half an hour I befuf* Lflte him I tried to cross the avenui upon the interlacing branches, but their twig-like ends, although stout enough to bear him, were not suffi cient to support me. So I descended from the trees, crossed the roadway, and climbed again on the side where he was. Here I found him at bay, lashed in the very tip of a branch. I had failed so often in trying to grrJ) him as he glided along the branches, that I now resolved to try another plan, namely: to snare him by passing a running noose over his head. Consequently I called for my long stick, which was passed up to me with the noose fastened to the end of it. Then I slowly climbed toward him. As usual, he faced me. By moving very cautiously I succeeded in get ting within six feet of him; but when I pushed out the stick, with the noose dangling from the end of it within a foot of his nose, off he darted. I dashed the stick among the leaves in front of him, and back he turned. I was desperate. I could not grab him, for he was on the very outer ends of the branches. Two were so far apart that there was an open space of perhaps four feet or i»ore between them. Across this open space he darted, and wTiile he was passing, down came my stick on his back, not striking, but pushing him downward. Just what I intended happened. He lost his hold and down to the ground he tumbled; for not a branch was beneath for him to catch upon. I could see him as he alighted oa the grass, and down I dropped after him. As I touched the earth 1 rolled over, for the height was probably 20 feet. I saw the snake. He was only a few yards from me, but he was gliding away at a great rate over the short lawn grass. The shouting Kaffirs were pointing him out to me. Picking up my stick, 1 rushed after him as fast as my legs could carry me. Forty or 50 yards, perhaps, he ran. Then I overtook hint. Suddenly he turned and faced me. The excited Kaffirs, well in the rear, yelled out directions, praises and warnings, but I heeded them not. There before me was the long-de sired boomslange, a picture of beauty, coiled to strike, with the fore part of his body raised after the manner of a cobra. His head was flattened out, his inflated neck purple, the bifid point of his tongue quivering in the brilliant sunlight. Now I was his mas ter, for I was swifter than he was upon the ground. But I lost no time admiring him, for I was ready to sink from exhaustion. I got my stick across the middle of his back to keep him from getting away again. As it touched him he turned and bit it savagely. By a quick movement I shifted the stick, and got it close to his head. Then I grabbed him with my fingers round the throat. He was a furious captive. To and fro he lashed himself, his long body and whip-like tail striking me all over my body, legs and face, so that 1 had to drop the stick and hold him with the right hand at the middle, to keep him from breaking his own neck by his struggles. Within half an hour I had him in a cage in my room; and within an hour after that he had lost his fear of me, and I had lost my fear of him to such an extent that I allowed him to glide along my shoulders and around my neck. Beautiful, gentle and harmless, he was now the gem of my collection, and I treated him as one entitled to unusual privileges; for while the other snakes were confined to their cages, the boomslange was a prisoner at large. He lived on some branches suspended from a wire half-way be tween the ceiling and the floor. On these branches I would put chamelons, and the boomslange would catch and swallow them as contentedly as if he were still free in the wild bush. — Youth's Companion. Removing a Mountain M lift Water. The principal railroad of Costa Rica, now about 117 miles long, is being ex tended to reach from San Jose to the Pacific coast. The general manager of the road, iu speaking of the enterprise recently, said; "There is one place or. the road which has given the engineers a great deal of trouble, and which has cost many thousands of dollars every year since the road wus built. Thisjdaee is about 4Ti miles from Port Linton, and Is called Hluemud. "For about f«oo feet the track runs along a ledge on the side of a moun tain with the river Iteventa /oil below. The mountain Is composed of a bluish clay, which turus Into mud during the rainy tseusoh and keeps constantly slid ing down on the tracks. We havo to keep a tdg gang of men at work day and night cleaning the road of this blue mud, and when the rains are very heavy traffic has to lie suspended In July so much of the mud slid down over the roadbed that we could UOl run train* there for three weeks. "To add to the difficulty there l.i a lake buck of the mountain and (he water from this lake percolate* through the mountain and keeps it c iunliiiilly v.et. The lake was drained by the engineers, but they discovered that It wa* fed by spring* aud still tlu mountain was kepi tu a wet statu aud tn» mud kept sliding dowu over th* track*. "At last they ohtnined what it kiiowfu lu California as a liviraulii giaut. and which throw* a very power ful stream of water with great fine* They rigged up (hi* hydraulic giant aud w ben I I-it Cue!a idea they wert wash lug the mountain away With l» miu the rh<,r." t'Melsud Plait I Oe.lfcJ 08. TALM AGE'S SERMON tUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: Oaten Are Wide Open No Man Is Barred From Receiving God's Grace Christ's Sheepfold Contal'*« Flocks of All Denominations. [ Copyright 1901.] NEW YOKK CITY.—On the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the Bowery mission, Dr. Talmage preached to a vast tudience nt the New York Academy of Music. Ministers of nil denominations were present. The text was, John x, 10, "Other sheep I have which are not of this lold." There is no monopoly in religion. The jrace of God is not a little property that we may fence off and have all to our lelves. It is not a king's park, at which tve look through a barred gateway, wish ing that we might go in and see the statu >ry and the deer and the royal coiu-erva tor.v. No; it is a Father's orchard, and everywhere there are bars that we may let down and gates that we may swing open. In my boyhood next to the country irhoolhouse there was an orchard of ap ples owned by a very lame man who, al though there were apples in the place per petually decaying and by scores and scores of bushels, never would allow my of us to .'ouch the fruit. Sometimes the lads of the school, in the sinfulness of a nature in herited from our first parents, who were mined by the same temptation, invaded that orchard, but thev soon retreated, tor the man came after them at i speed reck less of making his lamenjss worse and ?ried out, "Boys, drop those apples or I will set the dog on you." Well, my friends, ther» are Christian men who have the church under sever? iruard. There is fruit in this orchard for the whole world, but they have a rough and unsympathetic way of accosting out siders, as though they had no business there, though the Lord wants all to come and take tho choices; and the ripest fruit on the premises. Have you an idea that because you were baptized at eight, months of age and because you have all your life been under hallowed influences you therefore have a right to one whole side of the Lord's table, spreading your self out and taking up the entire room? I tell you no. You will have to haul in your elbows, for we will place on either side of you those whom you never ex pected would sit there; for, as Christ said to His people long ago, so He says to you and to me. "Other sheep I have which are not of this fold." Mcponald. the Scotchman, h,i« thou sands of head of sheep. Some of them are browsing on the heather, some of them are lying down under the trees, some are strolling over the mountains, some of them are in his yard. They are scattered all around in many places. Cameron, his neighbor, comes over and says: "l see you have thirty-six sheep. I have just counted them." "No," says McDonald, "I have a great many more sheep than you found in this yard. Some are here, and some arc elsewhere. I have 4000 or .WOO in my flocks. 'Other sheep I have which are not of this fold.' " So ( hrist says to us. Here is a knot of Christians, but they make up a small part of the flock. Here is the Epis copal fold, the Methodist fold, the Luth eran fold, the Congregational fold, the Presbvterian fold, the Baptist and the Pedo-Baptist fold, the only difference be tween these last two being the way in which they wash the sheep, and so thev are scattered all over. And we come with our statistics and say there are so many thousand of the Lord's sheep, but Christ responds: "No, no; you have not seen more than one out of a thousand of My flock. They are scattered all over the earth. 'Other sheep 1 have which are not of this fold.' " Of all the merciful institutions which bless this city not one more thoroughly enters into the spirit of the text than does the Bowery mission, whose twentieth anni versary we to-day celebrate. During the past year 3000 souls have been saved through its instrumentality, and during its existence it has put its temporal and spir itual benediction upon hundreds of thou sands of the poor and suffering and lost. W ith the bread of this life in one hand and the bread of eternal life in the other, it is doing a stupendous work, and to all its patrons Christ is saying: "I was hun gry, and ye fed Me; naked, and ye clothed Me; sick and in prison, and ye visited Me. Inasmuch as ye did it unto Me, one of the least of these, ye did it to Me." We need, :w churches, togo into sym pathy with the great outi ide world and let them kaow that none are so broken heart ed or hard beset that they will not be wel comed. "No," says some fastidious Chris tian, "I do not like to je crowded in church. Do not put any one in my pew." Mv brother, what will you do in heaven, when a great multitude that no man can number assembles? They will put tiftv in your pew. What are the peopl • assembled in Christian churches comparer with the mightier millions outside? Sor.ie churches are like a hospital, that should advertise that its patients must have nothing worse than toothache or runrounds, but no bro ken heads, no crushed ankles or fractured limbs. Bring there for treatment moder ate sinners, velvet coated sinners and sin tiers with a gloss on. It was us though at a great battle there were left 10,000 wounded and dying on the field, and three surgeons gavo all their time to a half dozen patients in II barn hos pital. The Major Genc'rul comes in and say* to the doctors: "Com* out here and look at the 10,000 dvug for lack of surgical attendance." "No," say th* three doctors standing there tanning their patients, "we have a half dozen important cases here, and we art attending to them, and when we are not positively busy with their wounds it takes all our time to keep the (lies oft." In this awful battle of sin and sorrow, where millions have fallen on millions, do not let us spend all our time in taking rare of a few people, and when the command comes, "(io into the world," say practi cally, "No, I cannot go; I have u few choice cases, uud 1 am busy keeping off the files." We need, as churches, to stop bombard ing the old ironclad sinners that have been proof against thirty years of Chris tian assault and take aim in other direc tions. Years ago I visited a New England fac tory village I went up to the door of » factory, and I saw on the outside the wold*, "No admittance" Of course 1 went in. mid coming to the second door I law the wonW. "Na admittance " (Jetting eli u on Into the factory t saw they wer* making pins, useful PUIS, and nothing but puis So I think there is sometime* an collusiveness uiuoug some of th* churches The outside world conies up ami look* at the door aud there is something which seeuis to »*y, "No admittance," and the world comes up to the pew duor and sees written over it. "V> admittance," ami look* at the pulpit aud there is something there which srelus to say "No adluit tame," while we >taud inside of the same churches hammering out out little niceties of religious lieliel making plat Oh. lor dee|ier appreciation d tiu wuti no ut of my lest, "Other *heep I have which are Mot ut this fold " I have to remark that the heavenly Hiephvtd will lilld many cheep amid t ie uou chuichgovr* I here at* • ougregitioit* where iheiesi e all Chi tslialts, aud they see u to lie completely ttuialied aud thev remind one id the skeleton leaves which by cheui ICS I plel .nil Ii haw I. . I ill (lie gltel. B> •11 1 vi i lull taken hers of Baptist and Congregational churches. Circulars were got out telling what fabulous prospects opened before this company. The circu lar had all the hues of earth and sea and sky. The letters flamed with all the beauty of gold and jasper and amethyst. Inno cent men and women who had a little money to invest and that little their all said, "I do not know anything about this company, but so many good men are at the head of it that it must be excellent, and taking stock in it must be almost as trood as joining the church." So they bought their stock, and perhaps received one dividend to keep them still. But after awhile they found that the company had reorganised and had a different president, a different treasurer and different direc tors. Other engagements or an overcoming modesty had caused the former officers of the company, with many regrets, to resign, and all the subscribers of that stock had to show for their investment was a beauti fully ornamented certificate. Sometimes that mnn, looking over his old papers, comes across that certificate, and it is so suggestive that lie vows he wants none of the religion that the president and direc tors of that oil company professed. Rut 1 do not stop now to know how you came into rejection of Christianity. You frankly tell me that you do reject it. You do not believe that Christ is a divine being, although you admit that He was a very Brood man. You do not believe that the Bible was inspired of Ood. although you think tuere are some very fine things in it. You believe that the Scriptural de scription of Eden was only an allegory. There are fifty things that I believe that you do not believe, and yet you are an accommodating man. Everybody that knows you says that of you. If I should ask you to do a kindness for me. or if any one else should ask of you a kindness, • u would do it. If when you are ill I should come to you with a phial of medicine and say, "This kind of medi cine has cured fifty people who were just as badly off a- you are. Take it,"and you replied. "I do not want to take it. I have no confidence in it." I would say, "Take it to oblige me," and you would say, "Well, if it will accommodate you I will take it." Now, you have fount! that this world is insufficient, and you are sick of sin. I come to you with a gospel medicine. It lias cured hundreds and thousands and millions. Will you take it? "So," you say. "1 have no confidence in it." Take it, then, to oblige me. I tell you of a phy sician who has cured more blind eyes and bound up more broken hearts and healed more ghastly wounds than all the doctors since the time of Aesculapius. Be obligmg, and just make the experiment. If you are not acquainted with the ordi nary modes of prayer, say in substance: "Oh, Lord Jesus, this is a strange thing for me to do. I know nothing about the formulas of religion. These Christian peo ple have been talking so long about what l'hou canst do for me. I am ready to do whatever Thou commandest me. If there be any power in religion, as these people sav, let me have the advantage of it." Will you not try that experiment? I do not now say there is unything in re ligion. Do not take my counsel or the counsel of any clergyman, for you may dis like clergymen. Perhaps we may talk pro fessionally. Perhaps we may be prejudiced in the matter. Perhaps our advice is not worth taking. Then take the counsel of some very respectable layman, us John Milton, the poet; as William Wilberforce, the emancipator; as Isaac Newton, the as tronomer; us Robert Boyle, the philoso pher; as Locke, the metaphysician; as Morse, the telegrapher; as Washington, the statesman. They never pnmched, or pretended to preach, yet, putting down one his telescope and another his parlimentarian's scroll and another his electrician's wire, came forth anil commended the religion of Christ an the best thing for the cure of the world's woes. If you will not take the recommen dation of ministers of the go-ipel, take the recommendation of highly respectable lay men. <>h, men, skeptical and struck through with unrest, I peg you to come off that great Sahara desert of doubt into the bright ami luxuriant land of gospel hope and peace. Yoi do not want your children to come up in that skepticism. If you do not believe in anything else, you believe in love a father's love, a mother's love, a wife's love, a child's love. Then let me t«-11 you that God loves you more than all these together. The great heart of Christ actus to have vou come in, and He looks into your eyes this moment, saying. "Other sheep I tune which are not of tin. fold " Again, I remark that the heavenly Shep herd IS going to tiixl a great many of the sheen among tin we who have been full of evil nahit. They were all cheated into sin. The sintler does not i..iv to the tlv, "Come into the wfli where I kill insects.' Oh. no The Spider savs, " I Vareft tly, come and take a morning walk with me on this sus pension bridge of g>>»famer, glittering with diamond* of dew." I*' not be hard on thane gone a«tray It makes me sad to see Christian people give up a prod gal aa lost. People tell us th tt if a man has deli rium tremens twice tie cannot IK- re claimed; that if a woman has sacrificed her integrity she c.inn. t Iw restored The lliiile has distinctly intimated that the l-ord Almighty is ready to pardon tUU tunes Why do I »av 41" times* lleeau»e the Hible says "Seventy tunes seven." Vow figure that out V"U d • not think s man can fall four times, eight time*, ten times, twenty time*. I" 1 times. times and yet he saved. Kour hundred ami nine ty tunes' There are men left.re the throne of IJod aho hate wallowed ISI everv kind of ain, but. saved Iv th- grace of Christ slid washed in His b|o-> I they stand there reliant now There ate th.iee who plungt I into the very lowe»l depth* of the shims .11. 1 wiiii have fut hundreds of tine * * ■ i* lifted up, and ftnail). by th« grace «•! I 'd, they stand in heaven glornmsi* re« u d by the giu.e (ifuliosed to the thie! ui « l* Iter*. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLINC FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Voices of the New Year—A Noted Physi cian Pulls Hack the Curtain of Se crecy and lteveals the Awful Work of Hum In a Ilepectable Home. I am but young, yet I am heir /' To all the thought, as well as carc # Of all the ages past; So listen to my words, and they More than fine gold will you repay, I If you will hold them iu3t. To those who feed the appetite for drink, I cry aloud —you stand on ruin's brink! They who would pleasure have, must pleasure give; Who do most good, know best what 'tis to live. "Bright is the wine cup," poets sing, But every cup conceals a sting. "We can control ourselves; let those who can't abstain," Abstain ere you have lost control, else all is vain! If Temperance is not everything, it tends To guide all good things to their noblest ends. Report exc'.aims "Life in the bottle lies," Echo more wisely gives the answer— Lies! " 'Tis little" is the drinker's boast, But little leads to more and most, If you should plead your influence is small; Tor Temperance, then, make sure to use it all. There is no time for evil deeds. All time is fit for killing weeds. "'lie quickest wav to get a sober nation is to promote the Temperance Reforma tion. Hefore you take another drop of drink, Draw back your hund and set your mina to think. Give not your votes to the great idol Beer, For votes above the bar of God appear: —Temperance Advocate. A Hoctor's Story. "You TTiiow nothing about intemper ance," said a noted physician. "I could write volumes that would amaze you." "Write one," I said. "It would be a breach of honor. A phy sician. like.a Romish priest, may not be tray the confessional.' After a moment he added: "Our profession takes us into homes. And lives and hearts that seem ail brireht and happy ;v e often dark an I miserable from sickness of the soul.'' "There must be some scenes that it would be proper for you to tell me," I urged; "please think of some." "] was called to the wife of a distin guished gentleman. Her husband sat by her bed fanning her, and a lovely bou quet of flowers was on the stand by her side. Two little girls were playing quietly in the room. It was a charming picture of love and devotion. " 'My wife fell down stairs,' said her husband, 'and I fear has hurt herself se riously.' "I examined her shoulder. It was swol len and black, and one rib was broken. " 'How do you find her?' asked her hus band. anxiously. " 'I will ask the questions, if you pleas>e. How did you so injure yourself? • " 'I fell on the stairway.' "I hesitated. I was not in a paddy shanty, but in the houie of a well-known and unstained man. I re-examined her side. " 'When did she fall?' I asked. " 'Last night,' he said, after a second's pause and a glance at her. "Mv resolve was taken. " 'Please show me the place on the stairs where she struck,' I said to the hus band, rising and going out. He followed Die. " 'I was not with her when she fell,' ho said. " 'The injury was not from a fall, and it was not done last night. Never try to de ceive a doctor.' " 'She begged me not to tell you the truth.' " 'Then get another physician,' I said. " '1 will tell you the whole truth. Night before last I had been out to dinner.' "'I saw your brilliant speech in the paper. Was it wine-inspired?' " 'Partly. Most of the after-dinner speeches are to a degree. I came home excited by the fine dinner, wit, wisdom and wine of the evening, and went, not to bed, but to the closet and drank heavily. My wife heard me and came down, hoping to coax me up stairs, as she had uono many times. But she was too late. My reason uid manhood were gone and I pounded her and left her. She tried to fol low me, but fell 011 the stairs. After * time she crawled, she says, up stairs, and went into the nursery and slept with the little girls. I slept, and woke with a fierce headache, and went out at one*, thinking no breakfast and the out-door air would clear my head for my morning engage ments. I pledge you my honor t had for gotten [ struck mv wife. When I came back last night I found her suffering, but she would not permit a physician should be sent for lest it should disgrace me. I think she really tries to believe that sho hurt herself, more or less, when she tell.' And with an honest quiver of the chili he added: 'She is an angel and wine is a devil.' " 'What are winebibbers?' "'Own children of their father. Is my wife seriously hurt" " I cannot tell yet. I fear she is.' "More absolute, untiring devotion no man ever gave a wife than he gave her while she lived and suffered When her noble, true, loving heart ceased to throb he was inconsolable. His lovi' and devo tion were the theme of every lip, and the Providence that so :tfllioted him was called 'strange' in a tone of semi-censure! On her tomb is cut. 'lleloved wife" He ha* gone to her now, 111 that lund of no li cense. "No one but myself ever knew the truth " Sch . ted In New York WitncM. I.atior and Temperam*. Work 111 men, bv agreement, are doing a gr« «t dial of good practical twnperatu* work. At Toledo the or* handler* and 'longshoremen entered into an agii-t-ni-*nf with the dock operators along Like Kiin port* that no intoxirant* •■hall be used by the men during working hour*. It iiivaita the saving of htiudruds of thousand* of Hollars lo the men. Th» I'rusad* lu Itrtrf. The key to sobriet) Sign the pledge, lb alio drinks t.. drown hi* de»|utir i» trvmg to extinguish hell with fuel Cheerfulness 1* the bright weatlnr of tin heart; "strong drink" wither* it. 'I lie only trade that •lol'iinut, degia.h* mid unmake* a man 1* the "ktronn drink" trade Never withhold jour livid from any I' I work, uor let it t.aieh the mi.moat ing nip >r« distilled Spirit* *re «Sported trom 11. 1 .unit Jto to. matt) than U> «U) oliw r luftitfit tvufetr)-