Duke Henry's creditors do not seem to have realized anything on his mar riage with Holland's Queen. A phonograph with rag-time music attachments has been sent to the Per sian court. Now, will the Shah be civilized? The Victoria memorial statue to be erected in London is to cost $1,000,000. The sculptor chosen to erect the statue is Thomas Brock, and it will be erected in Trafalgar square. At the bicentenary of the Kingdom of Prussia the East Prussians collect ed 100,000 marks which the Kaiser has assigned for the education of boys who are no longer under the care of their parents. The area devoted to the cultivation of rice in the South will be very ma terially enlarged this year. If the ratio of increase keeps pace with what it has been during the past few years this country will be able to supply its own demand. Small potatoes are not to be sneezeo at any longer. They are all used in the starch factories. About 16,C00 tons of potato starch is made in this coun try every year. Here is where the small potato is just as good, so far as it goes, as the big one. Street trees, properly planted and cared for, work a remarkable change in the value of residential property. Any one with doubts on this subject should look into the history of Wash ington, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Buffa lo and other cities, where a compre hensive system of street planting has been carried into effect. The inventors of names should find out a briefer and better word than "automobile" —something short and snappy. The "wheel" is easier to men tion than the "bicycle." A fit word of a few letters should be chosen for the motors. And something Anglo- Saxon might be found to chase away the "chauffeurs." That is decidedly too foreign a term. The latest statistics of the Salva tion army show that there are 732 corps now in the United States, with 24 food depots, which has furnished 110,000 monthly meals, and 190 social institutions for the poor, with a total daily accommodation in the same for 7200. The workingmtn's hotels num ber C 6 and the workingwomen have %, with an aggregate of 0325 inmates. Five labor bureaus and three from col onies are established, the latter hav ing 240 laborers. Other minor insti tutions and slum settlements number about 80 in all. The expenditure on all these institutions in 1900 was $253,000. of which $210,000 was raised by the work or the payments of iDmates. Minnesota is a poor place of resi dence for a man who does not want tc support his wife and abandon's her The legislature has passed a law mak ing wife abandonment a felony, pun ishable by imprisonment in the peni tentiary for not less than one year and not more than three, with a provision for a suspension of sentence provid ing the husband give bond to the state to support his wife and family. Under this law it is believed, that deserting husbands can be arrested in and ex tradited from other states. If the law stands a proposed test it is not unlikely that other states may follow Minnesota's example. The courts have to deal with no more difficult problem than this, and the total an nual expense to the public in caring for abandoned families must be enor mous. So long as the husband re mains in the same place with his fam ily he can be got at and made to pay, but once out of the jurisdiction of thP court, he is practically a free man. The African quagga is extinct, and several families of antelopes have been wiped out of existence. Zebras are scarce, giraffes are few in num ber, the rhinoceros and hippopotamus are passing from view, but the hella dotherium (hitherto only known through fossil remains found in Greece) still roam through the for ests of Uganda. The helladotherium is of the size of an ox, its neck is a little longer, proportionately, than that of a horse, the ears like those of the ass with silky black fringes, the head taperlike and the nostrils like those of the giraffe. The forehead is a vivid red, and the neck, shoulders, Btomach and back a deep reddish brown, and the hindquarters and legs and boldly striped in purplish black and white. Great is the helladotheri um, for has it not survived the vicis situdes of two or more geological ages. And does its existence provide the narrators of tales about the sea ser pent—that antediluvian leviathan of the deep—with badly needed evidence of their truthfulness? A manuscript of Milton's "Paradise Lost" recently sold for SB3O. If poets possessed Methuselah's longevity they might make good money. Male mosquitoes do not bite, but get their living from the juices of flowers. It is evident that in mosquitodom, at least, the female sex is privileged. The Loudon county council is going to spend $7,500,000 in building model cottages for workmen. The new mu nicipal houses will accommodate 42,000 people. Boston intends to spend $6,000,000 this year in street building and re pairing, but it is not likely to attempt to make its crooked paths straight. That were a hopeless undertaking All Europe produces beet sugar with the exception of Switzerland, and Persia and Egypt have entered the field. The beet sugar-industry is one of the great sources of France's wealth. An electric railway which is being built in India has filed an order for 1,000,000 pounds of trolley wire with a Connecticut manufacturing firm. This is another triumph for American over British manufacturers in their own field of operations. The American city milkman is not the sole occupant of the milk-water trust. Our consul at Frankfort, Ger., reports that of 122 samples of milk examined by the board of health, over half were diluted with from 10 to 60 percent of water. A test of 3704 sam ples in Hamburg resulted in proving 475 objectionable. Illustrating the cheapness of the parcels postal service in Germany, it Is enough to cite the fact that the department allows packages to be sent by soldiers at the low rate of 20 pfen nigs (5 cents) up to three kilograms (6.6 pounds) in weight, regardless of distance. During last year 3,562,800 6oldiers' packages were sent through the parcels post. A consular report from Vienna gives results of'the census recently taken in Austria-Hungary. It shows that the present population of the country is about 46,590,000, 39,200,000 of which is furnished by Hungary. During the last decade the population of Austria increased 9.3 percent. Hun gary shows an increase of 10.7 percent for the last 10 years, which is slight ly less than for the 10 years preced ing. We not only furnished millions of dollars' worth of animal horses for South Africa, but have received orders for millions of dollars' worth of iron horses for Russia. The Russian min ister of roads and transportation has allowed the government railroads the following sums for 1901: For loco motives, $10,300,000; for freight cars. $9,270,000; for passenger cars, $3,605,- 000; total, $23,175,000. American firms will get about $20,000,000 of this. An interesting supreme court de cision in New York holds that a worn an in getting off a street car must be given time to gather up her skirts, in addition to time to step down from the car platform. It is further held that it is the conductor's duty to see that her skirts are clear of any cai fittings or attachments before he starts the car. If he starts before he as sures himself that they are free he is guilty of negligence. The court, on the other hand, does not consider thai a woman is negligent to travel upoD a car with a dress so long that it will be more likely to catch upon such ap pliances as necessarily extend above the platform, such as bell plungers etc. The death in Balse of Emilie Kem pin recalled an era that already swms ancient. Its date was 1889. There was then in New York City no oppor tunity for a woman to study law; nor had any woman advocate invaded t'he city, though the legislature had in ISB6 legalized the admission to the bar of the gentler sex. Mme. Kempin graduated in 1886 from the University of Zurich, but meeting with opposi tion in her application for a law pro fessorship she came to New York City, where she applied for admission as o law student at Columbia. Her appli cation was refused, but she was per mitted to attend the clssses as a "vis itor." In the fall of 1889 she founded the first women's law class in the city. Later she returned to Europe. The number of women lawyers in the me tropolis is not yet great—not so great proportionally as in Boston or in the west—but enough have entered the profession to remove such action from the realm of experiment. Truly an amazing change for a single decade to hßve witnessed, exclaims the New Fork World. AN ADAPTATION OF EXODUS. Why There Were Many Plagues in the Captain's Quarters. BY GWENDOLEN OVERTON. To a certain sort of mind a saint is only to be known as a saint by the halo above his brow, and the Prince of Darkness himself would be devoid of Identity without a pitchfork and cloven hoof. To such as these the knight-errantry of Drayton and Bart lett may seem problematical; but a knight-errant'is one who succors beau ty in distress, and who rides abroad redressing human wrongs. Whether he employs an obnoxious insect rath er than a sword, as Drayton did, or whether he rides a S. C. govern ment mule, as Bartlett was wont to do, is neither here nor there. Bartlett was riding the aforesaid mule shortly after the time my story begins. He rode it up the line, its long gray ears waggling evenly and rest fully, and came to a halt in front of the set of quarters where Drayton and he roomed. Drayton was sitting on the porch, his feet on the railing, his chair tipped back, and the visor of his cap pulled down on his nose. He pushed the cap to the back of his bead as Bartlett came slowly up the steps. "I wish you woud get a horse," he complained. "If you could just realize the figure you cut on that old ele phant!" "That's a mule," corrected Bartlett, his arm around a pillar and letting his heels dangle as he perched on the Tailing. "It's also a very nice mule. It is no longer a shave-tail, but has reached years of discretion. The mo ment man or animal does that, his ap preciative country straightway has aim inspected and condemned. Horses may do for some, but not for one who has the duties of post quartermaster to perform. And, besides, I believe in the infantry and scorn a horse." "The scorn," observed Drayton, "of the fox for the grapes." "Don't rub it in," said Bartlett, de lectedly; "I'm miserable enough as it is." "Thought you looked rather triste. I'm all sympathy. Goon." Bartlett released his hold upon the pillar and folded his arms on hisbreast in an attituue combining stern endur ance and precarious balance. "The Collinses are going to rout the Law rences out." Now, the Collinses were the family of Captain Collins—wife, mother-in law on both sides, and three small children. They had that morning ar rived in the post. Collins was in com mand of Troop L, which had been moved on some weeks before. If he bad been well-disposed his entry, ihould not have put the whole garri son, below his rank, in the throes of •»ar of a progressive "turning out." For there were empty quarters into which he might have moved exactly as well as not, and no one have been any the worse off. "But Collins won't see it that way," Bartlett went on."He ranks Law recce, and his wife ranks him, you bet; and its the wife and the mother in-law who are going to have the Law rences' set or bust." "Throw them a few buckets of paint end calcimine, by way of sop," Dray ton ventured to suggest. "Did," said Bartlett, briefly. "Of fered them half the quartermaster's department, and a carpenter, and a blacksmith, and a farrier, too. if they happened to need one. Told them they could hate any or all of me colors of paint in the rainbow, if they'd just >e good—but those three Graces are going to have the Lawrences' house." Drayton opined, with a little of the placidity, nevertheless, with which we all bear one another's burdens, that it was a very great and very profsne 6hame. "There's that poor little wom an with those little bits of kids, and just moved into those quarters, and got them all fixed up so prettily, and her garden started, too. Then, those Collinses; They're a mean lot of cat tle, anyway." He made a gesture of disgust, which turned the visor around over his left ear, and was silent for a minute through sheer wrath. "I told Mrs. Lawrence they would be serpents on the wood cutter's hearth—" "Serpents, now?" asked Bartlett: "they were cattle before; and you called that" —he pointed over his shoulder —"an elephant, whereas, in point of fact, it's a mule." "I cold her," continued Drayton, unmoved, "that It wouldn't pay. I know all about the Collinses —served with them in Texas. I was sitting on Mrs. Lawrence's steps—l know that I usually am, so you can save yourself —I was sitting on her steps when the Collins outfit drove up. The ambu lance stopped in front of the C. O. s house, next door, and Collins jumped out and went in. The rest of them just waited. All would have been well if Mrs. Lawrence hadn't become tender-hearted in a most unnecessary way, and hadn't chosen to disregard any advice." He assumed the look of prophecy fulfilled. "I told her to sit still and not get excited and do some thing rash"; gave her the benefit of my knowledge and experience. But it wasn't any use. She made m? dry up and liang onto the kids, while she ran down to the ambulance and invit ed the whole caboodle to come in and rest and refresh themselves. They cfftne. You can bet your life they came—or they wouldn't have been the Collinses. I saw Dame C.'s weather eye taking in the house. I could see she liked It, and I knew there'd be trouble. Mrs. Lawrence kept them to luncheon—the whole seven of them. Asked me, too; but the kids were raising Cain, and the abode of peace was transformed, so I lit out." "Well, I guess she's sorry now—if that's any comfort to you. For the Collinses are not only going to have those quarters, but they're going to have them quick. Even the C. O. got at Collins. But it wasn't any use. "My wife likes tue quarters,' says he. And that's all." They sat in meditation for some time. Then Drayton spoke. "I like those quarters, too. I'm go ing to have some of them myself," he said. Bartlett did not understand, and Drayton undertook to explain. "Well—see here." He took his feet, down from the rail, in his earnestness, and straightened his cap. "It's like this. You and I have got one room each in this house, haven't we, same as the most of the other bachelors?" Such was the case. "And we're en titled to two rooms each, aren't we?" Bartlett agreed that they were. "And we've been keeping these ones because we've been too lazy and good natured to ask for more, haven't we? Well we won't be lazy and good natured any more If the Collinses move into the Lawrences' set, I'll vacate my room— turn it over to you—and I'll apply for the upstairs floor of the Lawrences house. Oh! I'm entitled to it, all right," he chuckled. "1 know my rights as a citizen of these United States and as a first-lieutenant of cavalry. The Collinses, the. whole sweet seven of 'em, may have the low er floor. It's all they can claim under law. That's four rooms, including the kitchen. I dare say they won't mind living like that any way. They're pigs." "Pics, too?" asked Bartlett. Drayton went on unfolding his plan. "Once I have that top floor, you watch the interest in life I'll provide for them. I'll make their days pleasant and their nights—particularly their nights—beautiful. I'll have suppers up their every evening, and do songs and dances until reveille, if 1 have to hypothecate to pay my commissary bill, and if my health breaks down. You watch!" He stood up and began to button his blouse. "So you are warned. If the Collinses move in. such is my devotion to them that I'll move in. too. And I'll putin my formal ap plication for those two rooms. No other two in the post will suit, either, you understand." And it all came about exactly as he said. There was a hegira of Law rences and an ingress of Collinses, and great was the latter's wrath when they found Drayton taking possession of the upper floor. They protested to everybody in general, and to the com mandant and the quartermaster in particular. And the commandant and the quartermaster said they were soiry, but that Drayton was "certainly within his rights. He had applied for the quarters in virtue of the general turning-out that D troop was causing ing the post, and he was entitled to occupy them. There was nothing more to be said. "I can't pretend to be sorry forthem, exactly," Mrs. Lawrence confided to Drayton, when he advised her not to try to settle in her new quarters very elaborately; "I'm only human, after all, and my house did look so sweet, and my garden—. But I'm sorry for you. I think those children are the very imps of evil." Drayton nodded. "There are others," he said. It was emigmatical, but Mrs. Law rence looked doubtful and ready to be hurt. "You don't mean mine?" she said. "No, my dear lady," Bartlett reas sured her, "he doesn't mean yours. He thinks yours are all that tender infancy should be. I don't know what he does mean, however. And prob ably he doesn't know himself." "Don't I?" queried Drayton, enigmat ical still. "Don't 1 just?" "Perhaps," said Bartlett, "you mean Jimmy O'Brien. 1 sav you hobnob bing with him today. Would it be Jimmy now?" I>rayton would not commit him self. But is was Jimmy and one other, nevertheless. Drayton had come upon him when he was playing duck-on-a rock all by himself, near the sutler's store. The duck was a beer bottle, and Jimmy was pitching stones at it, with indifferent aim. The father of Jimmy was first-sergeant of Drayton's troop, and so the lieutenant felt they had enough in common to warrant a con versation. It began by a suggestion as to a better way to throw a stone, and it ended with a bargain struck. "Then," said Drayton, "if I promise to pay you two bits for every centipede, four bits for every tarantula, ten cents for every lizard, a nickel for every toad and a cent for every big spider, you will catch all you can and bottle them for me?" Jimmy nodded solemnly. "And you won't say anything about it to any one?" A quarter was pressed into a chapped and grimy hand. The very next morning before guard mounting, ne clambered up the stair way to Drayton's rooms. Drayton was only just dressing. He had kept late hours. Bartlett had helped him, and until 2 o'clock they had alternated pacing heavily to and fro with drop ping weighty bodies on the floor. The Collinses were kept awake. "It's a question of endurance, be cause we are two," said Drayton; "but 1 expect we can hold out." He inspected Jimmv's first catch. There was a centipede, two lizards and three toads. Jimmy's pockets bulge*! with bottles. There were also five large and unpleasant spiders. "Good toy," said Drayton, and paid as per schedule. Mrs. Colline and the mother-in-law's nerves were not calmed, any way, Uy the wakeful night. It was the harder for them when they found three large toads in their rooms that day. To have a toad hop at you from a dark corner is not nice. It is still less to step on one and crush it It gives a peculiar sensation. Mrs. Collins found it so. There was a lizard in the milk bottle, and another on the back of a chair, whence it climbed into a moth er-in-law's hair. Big spiders infested the place. Toward noon Drayton came down stairs carrying on the end of a pin, and examining it critically, a centi pede. "Large, isn't it?" he asked, with some pride; "I killed it myself at the topof the stairs. They always come in families of three. The other two will be along pretty soon, I suppose." The mother-in-law shuddered. "You and Mr. Bartlett made a great deal of noise last night, Mr. Drayton," she re proached. Drayton looked concerned. These government quarters were so thin floored, he explained. "Did he always stay up until 2 o'clock?" He admitted being of a restless dis position and given to insomnia. "All right," he reported to Mrs. Lawrence, shortly after. "You just rest on your oars. We'll have you back in those quarters before the kids have had time to do much dam:ige to the place. 1 should say that a fort night. at the very outside, should see Mrs. Collins suing for another set— any other old set. Bartlett will let her have them. He's an exceptionally obliging Q. M., as Q. Ms. go. That's his reputation." It did not run as smothly as Drayton might have wished. The women of the Collins family did not surrender without giving fight. They attacked Drayton himself first, but were met with an urbanity which parried every thrust. It was the thinness of the walls and floors, and that was mani festly the government's fault. As for his insomnia, the blame of that lay with the doctor, he should think. He did not like staying broad awake un til nearly dawn any better than they did. Of course, however, he would try to control his restlessness. The at tempt met with failure, though, and the women appealed to the command ant. The commandant was urbane, too, but the insomnia of his officers was evidently not a matter to be reached officially. It was plain that the insomnia aroused the supicions of the Collinses. But the insects did not. They had never—not even in Texas —seen a house so overrun with reptiles. There were lizards in everything. Thprcwer? frogs and toads in dark nooks. They hopped into your lap when you were least expecting it. They were always getting under your feet and —squash- ing. Spiders spun webs and dropped from the ceiling and the walls. And as for more venomous things! A day hardly passed that Drayton did not kill a tarantula or a centipede some where around. They seemed to emerge only when he was near. The wrath toward him was tempered with unwilling gratitude to a saviour. There had also been a garter snake on the front porch. And one terrible day they had come upon Drayton, sabre in hand, standing in the front hallway beside the decapitated body of a rattle snake. They neglected, in the excite ment, to notice that the body was not wriggling. Jimmy had that morning produced a newspaper package. "Here's a dead rattler," he had said. "I didn't know as you could use him. But I found him, and you can have him for a dime." And the rattler had proved the best investment of all, as well as the last straw. Captain Collins had carried him on a stick out into the road. Then he had gone to the commandant and Bartlett. He was heavy-eyed for want of sleep. The whole family was that way; and Drayton was, too. In all humanity he asked the favor of be ing allowed to change has quarters. Any other quarters would do, provided there were fewer insects. He was not particular at all. He asked so little, in fact, that Bartlett took pity on him. He renewed his offer of paint. "Now," he said to Mrs. Lawrence, "you can come back to your own. They'll move out tomorrow. I've just been inspecting the premises, and there hasn't been much harm done. They are still the best quarters in the post. The kids have knocked a few holes In the walls and the woodwork's a little scratched. But I'll give you some paint, too." Paint was Bartlett's idea of the panacea for all earthly ills. He had not much else in the world, being a second-lieutenant; but he had paint, and he was liberal with that. The Collinses moved next day. Drayton waited until the last load ot furniture was gone, and the three women were taking their final look around. Then he came down the stairs holding out, at the length of his arms two centipedes on the point of twc large pins. He exhibited them. "These quarters are too much for me," he said, "I'd rather have a corner of a housetop alone, than a wide up per floor with crawling things. I'm going togo back to my own room." A fierce light of suspicion broke In on Mrs. Collins' mind then. "1 be lieve, Mr. Drayton, that the whole thing was a put-up job." "Do you? Do you really?" asked Drayton, smilingly, deprecatingly. "But consider, my dear lady, consider the centipedes."—San Francisco Argo naut. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING PACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. EIJa Wheeler Wilcox Says : Do Not ITar negß Bacchus to Your Load of Work, Then Yon Will Have Plenty of Courage, Hope and Energy. If you were lost in a dark wood and could not see the moon or the stars you would not extinguish your lantern, would you? If you found yourself in a desert you would not throw away your bottle of water. Well, then, do not talk about being driven to drink because you are out of work and in trouble, or because times are so hard that your business barely pays your office rent. Of course drink gives you a momentary or "hourentary" exhilaration, and causes you to forget your worries. But the corresponding depression fol lows, with increased gloom and enfeebled courage and strength. If you are a sensible man, with good av erage intelligence, vou will hoard your strength and save all your faculties unim paired by drink or drugs to carry you through this dark place in life's woods, and you will keep your light of sober rea soning aflame. If. after vou pass through the woods, you have still the desert to encounter, you will not add to the pangs of thirst by "fire-water." You will, instead, endeavor to keep your head cool and your brain clear. As well tie your feet in a bag when you nre in a hurry to reach a destination as to fill yourself with drink when you have a hard and difficult path to pursue. If you want to trv the exnerienee of drunkenness, wait until you achieve a suc cess and then "celebrate," if you are de termined upon it. Then you can afford to rest and repent at leisure, and if 5 - ou have 1 strata of good nrinciple and moral worth in vou one experience will be enough. You will not want to trv it again. But don't harness Bacchus to your load of work and worry and imagine he will pull you through. He is not that kind of a rod. He makes excellent promises, but he takes you onlv a little way and dumns you in the first ditch, much the worse for his brief merry companionship. Keep yourself perfectly normal in times of anxiety. If you are in the habit of using stimulants and nicotine, reduce your usual quantitv, and if you have the will power, give them up entirely for the time being. I know a man who did this during busi ness depression, and he was amazed at the result. Where he had been despondent and nervous all the time, when not under the influence of a stimulant he found him self full of courage, hope and energy. Instead of waking with a weight on heart and head he woke full of ambition for the new day before him. Instead of trying to kill dull time by drinking, experiment upon yourself by finding the strength of your will in giving up the use of all stimulants until you can "celebrate" a victory. It is more novel, and nays better in the end.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox, in the New York Journal. Drink and Tonne Criminals. The National Conference of Charities and Corrections in session in Washington has given prominent recognition to the terrible increase of criminals, the appalling growth of the population of our penal in stitutions. A paper read before the con ference by Mrs. Ophelia Amigh, superin tendent of the State home fot; iuvenile of feni?rs at Oeneva, 111., on its vahiabln light upon the important question. Mrs. Amigh is reported as saying that every girl now in the home under her care had one drunk en parent, and in the case of many of them both parents were confirmed drunk ards. Mrs. Amigh says: "If we desire to raise fine stock we never think of keening the sires and dams drunk all or half the time, and yet nearly all the children who come to ua are the products of such conditions." She goes onto say: "One has to sit but one dav in the Juve nile Court in Chicago to realize what it is that fills all kinds of charitable and penal institutions in Illinois as well as in other States. All kinds of crime follow in the «ake of intemperance, and something must be done or we shall become worse than a nation of leners." Mrs. Amigh mentions one particularly startling instance which has unfortunately been paralleled many times. She says: "We had one girl brought to us not quite fourteen years of age who had deli rium tremens, and we barely saved her life. She had drank more or less since she was ten years of age. What can we say of the brute in man's form who would ever give or sell intoxicants to a child like that?" It might not be irrelevant to ask: What shall we say of the man who legalizes a traffic the result of which, by centuries of experience, is known to be such things as these? Prohibited H1 ft Own B»r. Recently Guinness, the great "beer ba ron," of Dublin, erected some model tene ments for the use of working people, and among other things prohibited all intoxi cating liquors; even his own beer is not allowed to be sold. Lemonade and mineral waters can be had, but intoxicants of every form are shut out. Plenty of baths, but no bars. Very significant.—National Temperance Advocate. A I'ontinuoui Performance. O how many are waiting to see if some thing cannot be done! Thousands of drunkards waiting who cannot go ten min utes in any direction without having the temptation glaring before their eyes or ap pealing to their nostrils, they fighting against it with enfeebled will and diseased appetite, conquering, then surrendering, conquering again and surrendering again. Tlie Crusade in Brief. Divest a saloon of every possible social facility or appurtenance and men will still patronize it. Men drink for the feeling of mental ela tion and satisfaction that it gives, not for social enjoyment. The fifty-four saloon keepers of Spring Valley. 111., recently paid to State's Attor ney Porter at Princeton S3OOO in tines for operating saloons on Sunday. The little village of Phoebus, situated between Fortress Monroe and the Hamp ton Soldiers' Home, is cursed with, per haps, the most disreputable and indecent aggregation of saloons that surrounds any military post. The liquor traffic is at last frightened. To make it still more frightened do your best to circulate in your community the news that there is a fight going on be tween God and the devil, with a good prospect that the devil will be worsted. As a matter of fact, there i-Pno substi tute for the saloon, because there is no substitute for alcoholic stimulation. The South Dakota Legislature has a bill under consideration which makes intoxi cation a misdemeanor, fixing the maximum penalty at S2U. The English House of Commons on March 20 passed on second reading the bill prohibiting the sale of intoxicants to persons under sixteen years. The vote stood 372 to 54. This important legisla tion is known as "the children's bill," and has been actively supported by the promi nent temperance people of England, in eluding the officers ot the World's W. C. i. U.