Joseph Ladue got a great deal of money in the Klondike, and lost his health. It was a bad trade. There aro about 10,000 musicians in the German army. It is, however, un derstood that under emergency each one of them shall drop the instrument and take up the rifle. k New York leader of fashion has invented a new way of hand-shaking. A man who devotes his talents to such purposeless ends ought to be afflicted with softening of the brain. Ix>rd Wolseley pays the American Army a clever compliment. lie says It is the best of its size in the world. H e might also have mentioned thai its size is whatever the emergjney requires. It would be a relief to many utilita. plans if some arctic explorer would wme back with a plausible falsehood to the effect that he had discovered the north pole and that it did not amount to enough to be worth bother ing about in the future. Scientists are now declaring that the idea of signals between the earth and Mars is extravagant. However, there was no prospect of any practical advantages to be gained by such com munication, and there are opportuni ties for neighborly amenities here be low that are still awaiting improve ment. "London Lancet impresses an old lesson by saying man should not dine alone. It is not good to think much vhile eating, so the great medical au thority advises conversation because 'most people do not think while talk ing.' This sage conclusion must have oome from much listening to dinner table remarks." Florida, according to the last census returns, has a greater amount of land wnder water than any other state ol the Union, while Wyoming has the least. It also appears from this cen sus that New Jersey, within the past 1C years, has gained 70 miles in area, as in 1890 sho was credited with only 7455 square miles, while in 1900 she is given 7525. Professor Willis Moore, chief of the weather bureau, declares that after a ! careful examination of all that has been published in the last two years_ he is convinced that the idea of pro tecting orchards and vineyards from hailstorms and frosts by cannon fir ing is a popular delusion, like that of the effect of the moon on the weather. Mr. Moore says that the great pro cesses of the atmosphere are on too large a scale for any man or nation to control them, and that it is useless for mankind to attempt to combat them. M. De Bloch, the peace apostle and j friend of the czar of Russia, says that the Boor War has shown what undis ciplined troops can do with modern weapons, against superior forces, and, lie believes, the reduction of the terms of military service in Europe is immi nent. Even at The Hague conference, M. De Bloch remarked in a recent speech at Vienna, the Italian military delegate stated that Italy would no longer be able o keep pace with the new armaments in prospect. That statement was stricken from the offi cial minutes, and was never published. But, it is well known that Italy can no longer bear the financial burdens imposed on her by the triple alliance, aad public opinion is clamoring to bring about a dissolution of that op pressive arrangement. The rapid increase in the suicide rate in the United States, and partic ularly in Chicago, has led to an inves tigation by Health Commissioner Rey nolds of that city to ascertain whether grip has had something to do with the case. Commissioner Reynolds says: "Grip, or influenza, ha.3 been more or less prevalent in this city since the fall of 1889, and was espe cially prevalent in 1891. It is claimed that this disease profoundly affects the nervous system, causing all grades of mental disturbances, from simple me lancholia to acute insanity. It is quite possible that the great increase in the number of suicides in 1893 was due to this effect of the grip epidemic of 1891 and that the general increase dur. ing the whole period, 1896-1900, is due to the same disease." Accordingly, the commissioner has requested the coroner to make special inquiry into the circumstances attending suicides, with reference to attacks of influenza. Grip has been especially prevalent in Chicago during the last four or five years, and from 1896 to 1900 the per centage of suicides was 23.8 per 100,- 000 of population. It will be interest ing to learn the result of the commis sioner's investigation. The way In which American anthro pological museums are growing is a source of envy in England, where there is a lamentable indifference to the subject. The recently deceased son of an English earl was regarded as having disgraced himself because ne earned his living as a showman. Neverthe less he earned his living. The number of schools in Cuba has multiplied 10-fold in a single year. That West Indian invasion of New England has been followed by results of the largest practical value. Illinois is adopting drastic means to put down hazing and kidnapping. The maximum penalty for the former is a fine of SSOO or six months in the county jail. Kidnapping for ransnm is made a capital offence. The only two six-masted schooners afloat came in collision off Cape Cod recently. This presents the sugges tion that those who are fond of mon keying with problems of averages can figure out what the chances are for their doing this again. Seventeen years ago, Germany, un der Bismarck's lead, established the state system of accident insurance and old-age pensions for workingmen. It has grown to be a vast machine, and Its payments to disabled, sick and aged wage-earners average $250,000 a year. The red spiders of California that have inflicted th e orange groves to such a fearful extent are in process of being exterminated by a new in sect, which has made its appearance. This latest visitor devours the eggs of the spiders. As long as the eggs hold out the new insect will be all right, but after they are gone no tell ing what he may take a notion to de vour. The hope is held out that w e may yet be able to dispense with elaborate cooking. Several chemists are said to be at work on the problem of com pressed food, and they expect to com pass "in the capacity of a small vial" elements which will sustain life for days. One enthusiast predicts that science will yet be able to extract the life force that is in the heart of the corn, the kernel of the wheat and the luscious juices of the fruits. The Boston Herald takes occasion to analyze some of the statements concerning the amount of money paid by Americans to foreigners for the service of ocean transportation. It derides the assumption that the sum reaches $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 annually, but it does not attempt to make a close estimate of the actual expenditure. One percent of the cost of the goods shipped, it says, would about si?e up the business. If this is the case. $24,000,000 would pay for the transportation of our imports and exports. Perhaps the insignificance of the amount accounts for the fact that Americans have not in recent years made any great efforts to secure the oversea carrying trade. There is some probability that qmtr rymen and stone dressers will gradual ly be crowded out of their occupation by the use of artificial stone. In the manufacture of this stone the sand is heated and the cement added to the amount of 12 percent of the mixture. The steel molds are filled with the dry material and run upon a tramway into an immense cylinder, which is closed and bolted. Boiling water is then turned in under pressure sufficient to force it all through the sand in the molds. The cement slacks, but the steel molds do not permit any expan sion to occur, and the stone is formed and dried under an immense pressure. The result is a very hard stone, which can be supplied in shapes desired much cheaper than the natural st one. It is to be regretted that America has not "launched upon the flood ol time" productive intellects of the very highest order. But there is nothing extraordinary and discreditable in thr fact, observes the New York Tribune It was an amazing piece of good for tune for England that Shakespeare was born on English soil to speak the English tongue. Goethe fortuitously conferred unfading lustre on th» Ger man name. It would bo a c:'.u=e foi profound pride and Joy if another Shakespeare or Goethe should appeal in the United States with indubitable credentials. But in the meantime we cannot admit that we should hang our heads in shame. It would be al most —indeed, for aught, we can see, quite—as reasonable to disparage Eng. land because she has produced only one Shakespeare in a 1000 years, or to blush for the human race because "within tnat circle none durst walk hut he " S TID. | £ EY JENNIE DAVIS BURTON. IF "Do you be Mr. Kane, sir? It's Mr. Peter Tidmore Kane, in the real estate business, I'm wantin' to see." The gentleman addressed looked down with seme astonishment upon the sharp little freckled visage that was upturned as he replied: "I am Mr. Kane, my boy. What do you want with me?" "Sure, I'll be tellin' ye, but it's migh ty glad I am to see you, sir. Shake, then! I'm a namesake of yours, though beliKe you're not knowin' it, and I'm glad that I favor you, now that I've set me two eyes on ye." "Favor me, indeed, you young scare crow!" "On the inside, I mane, and I'd be glad if it was on the outside, for it's a mighty flne-lookin' gentleman ye are, then. They do be tellin' me you have the rintin' of a-many of the houses hereabout, and it's to rint the small place at the foot of the hill I'd be askin'. I'll pay you as much as 50 cents a week far it, and worruk out the rint if you say it's a bargain." Mr. Kane was growing interested. The small boy had a brisk, business way with him, quite out of proportion to his size, which was that of an aver age 10-year-old. "It is a little out of the usual line to take work in return " "Oil, it will be equally satisfactory if ye pay me in cash, then, Mr. Kane, sir, and 'tis a good bargain ye'll have, wid me mother along wid me, and she that aiger tote at rest wanst more. 'Tis the plazed woman she'll be that all's settled so well." "liut hold on!" said Mr. Kane. "I like to know something about my ten. ants. Whnt security can you give me that I shall find you responsible?" "Sure, I tould you that I was named after you, didn't I? It's Peter Tldmore Kane Mulligan I am, and me mother says ye'll be sure to mind Biddy Moran that was cook to ye \van3t. But I'm Tid for short. We'll move in the day. and I'll just come up for me orders in the mornin'," and Tid walked a .vay as contentedly as If he carried a signed lease in his pccket. "Biddy Moran? To be sure. She worked for us one summer a dozen or mo-re years ago,'" said Mrs. Kane, when her husband appealed to her for con firmation of the boy's story. "Not much of a cook, very green and a lit tle queer, as I remember her. I'm afraid they'll be a load on your hands. Tidmore." "Well, the old shell can't be much worse with them in it than standing empty, and I'll warn them out if they prove a nuisance. The boy will get along if he favors me 'on the inside," as he says,"and Mr. Kane laughed in recollection of the sharp, little, un couth figure as contrasted with his own well-favored person. Sure enough, the first sight that greeted Mr. Kane the next morning was Tid. keenly examining his garden beds, shaking his head portentously over poppies and lilies, and getting down on his knees to sniff at the to mato-vines, with a curious uncertainty, not to say contempt, that sent the garden's owner hurrying down to pre vent any possible catastrophe. "It's a fine lot of weeds ye've saved np for me, sir," Tid greeted him, brightly, "but I'm feared they've run over the plants intirely. Or it is a wild garden you do be having here? Me mother tells me that you grow things small in this state, and ye do it uncommon well. I should say. Belike it has to bo tuk out of you that way for the big hearts ye'v e got," with a re spectful deference that disarmed his employer's wrath. "Why, you young jackanapes, where have you seen anything finer, that you should be turning up your nose at my garden, pray?" "Faix, I think it wor in Californay," hazarded Tid, as if he were drawing his recollections from some deep well of memory. "The tomatuses growed on vines as high as the house.l mind, and there were men up on step ladders pickin' them, and the lilies and the vi'lets and the poppies all run wild in the fields, they did. and the roses were like to smother the house, and the coo cumbers were as long as 1 am, and a dal e longer sometimes. That's the country, if it's ganlenin' ye're after." "I wonder you left it," remarked Mr. Kane, sarcastically. "I'd wonder that mesilf, if there wor ary show for dacint Americans out there," admitted Tid. "The pigtails and the greasers have it all their own way. It's quare how there's something forninst wan most iverywheres in the West. In Nobrasky it wor the 'hop pers. and in Kansas the drought. Up in Washington it aither rained all the time or the chinook blasted things, and down in Texas there wor the cat tle every which way. It do be good to get home to the states," and Tid drew a long breath of satisfaction. "But this isn't worruk at all. and if ye'll put me to it, I'll be diggin' in." Mr. Kane found the boy eager to learn and tireless in his efforts to please, and although he made some blunders, by the end of the week he had won the favor of the household, and was allowed to make himself use. ful about the place in very much his own way- This sometimes resuUed in queer turns of fancy, according to the Eastern view of things, as when he was found in the early morning sweep ing up grasshoppers from the lawn to feed the fowls, and carefully treasur ing pocketfuls of gravel while he was still new to the situation. "Sure, it wor the lashings of 'hop pers we had out on the pen-Tries, but nlver a stone to the size of a pea there. Ye have th?m betther distri buted here, and it's a fin? country, though the things do grow small." he decided, appiovingly, when the waste of his efforts was pointed out to him. It would appear that the Mulligans had drifted all over the West in an aiin'.ess fashion, "saking health and bet'.herment," as Tid expressed it, till the death of the father left his mother free to return "for the making of me," he confided to Mr. Kane. "Sure, a lad nades to be looking up to a good man, me mother says, and it's a power of t'achin' I'll nade to came up to me name, I do be think in'." Th 9 amusement that Mr. ICanp de rived from the glorified ideal upon which Tid was basing the formation of his character gave way sometimes to a fleeting wish that, he lsad culti vated more of the virtues which Tid credited him with possessing. There are drawbacks to being held as little less than a saint by even an ignorant Irish boy. Suppose, now, that Tid could look beneath the surface and see the true state of the man within him. how would the revelation affect the lad's moral growth? Mr. Kane shrugged his shoulders and threw off his uneasiness. It was by no choice of his that he had been held up as a model. Let the effects of the disillusionment fall where they be longed. It was not likely that he was going to change his business methods, his sharp dealing, his keen seizure of apparent advantages, simply to spare the tender susceptibilities of this small vagrant; nevertheless 'he thought of T'a was at the bottom of more than cne reform that he made in thesa days. Meantime Tid was cultivating a ten. der heart among other things, and when he had the misfortune to set his foot unawares 011 a toad one Jay, he was the more hurt of the two. "I'd 110 more scrunch the crature, and it sitting by to do me a goo.l turn, than you'd squeeze a tenant, sir," he protested, remorsefully. "There are some tenants that need t'&o thumbscrews put on them. Tid." "Of course, just as there are pertaty. and cutworms and squash beetles to clane out. It's a fine thing to have the head to pick and choose amoongst them as I weed out the docks and lave the cabbages, to houIJ the helpin' hand to tlie wake and nadey, and turn the cowld back on the undesarvin." I'm feared I'll be long learnin' all that from you, sir." "Oh, you aspire to a share in the management of the tenants, too?" in quired Mr Kane, with that sarcastic accent which was cuite thrown away upon Tid. "I'm studying hard to b3 fit togo in the office come fall, when you'll not be nading me in the garding," admit ted Tid, modestly. "I'll be worth me keep there outside of me schoolin', I will that, ye'll see." "Hum-um-m!" That Tid was acting like a prickly bur 011 his conscience, the real estate man knew, and the far. leaching consequences of this pro posed move rather alarmed him. Hadn't he closed up the typhoid well and drained Ague Alley and given a contract for rebuilding Hamshackle Row —all good-paving investments, to be sure, and much-needed reforms — simply and solely through the quick ened moral responsibility that the boy had roused in him? "If this thing feoes on,"he said to himself, "I'll be renewing the Taft mortgage and letting the Hop e farm slip through my fingers. It's sheer im becility on my part. Who wants an inconveniently active conscience in these days? I'll throw off the yoke be fore it fastens tighter. I'll discharge Tid and send the Mulligans packing." But to look into Tid's trustful eyes and make this decision known was more than Mr. Kane cared to do at that moment. It might be better to talk the matter out with Tid's mother, he concluded. A little bribe, now, to persuade her to move on, say, without betraying his part in the transaction, wotild make everything smooth and easy. Mr. Kane had not seen Mrs. Mulli gan. Tid had caught his fancy, but he bad felt sure that th e mother would be a bore, and had avoided the house. Well, they had transformed the deso late shanty into rather a picturesque spot by the vines they had trained over it.and the woman displayed some of Tid's own confidence in receiving him. "Sure, I felt yez comin', sir," she ex plained. "Be sated, piaze. I'd pass the chair if I could step a foot unier me, but it was the Lord's mercy that I kept on me legs till we r'ached ye, that it was, and I've some use of' me hands still, so thiat I do a dale wid ihem, and I can hitch me chair about while I do me chores quite nate and convenient. 'Tis honored I am to have ye come sakin' me—regardin' Tid is it, then? He's a credit to yez. that he is, sir. He couldn't take afther you sthronger if be wur your own blood born." It struck coldly home to Mr. Kane's understanding that his task was none the easier for coming here. This lit tle helpless woman, wRh her useless feet and crippled hands, all gnarled and twisted with rheumatism, and her wistful face beaming with tremulous pride, was scarcely a better subject for his retaliation than Tid himself would have been. Nettled and disconcerted, but unwill ing to retreat, he demanded, sharply: "How did vou oorae by that ridiculous notion of '.raining the boy after nie> Wasn't tirere any better model to be found?" "Sure, I'd want no betther if I'd «< hunder' to choose from," averred th® little woman, stoutly, "but I'd none other fit to pattern him by but yersilf, that's the truth. You see, it wor this way. There wor me brothers and me cousbins in the ould country did be breaking their heads in their fights; and there was Mulligan got so in the way of bating people when he wor on the police that he cudn't lave off the thrick while he lived, and there was you with a good worrud to the fore, and a joke when a poor garrul blun dered, and a gintleman's way. whether it was to the high or l!ie low —and it's the way that comes aisy to Tid, now that he has ye before the two eyes of him," said Tid's mother, proudly, while Mr. Kane groaned in spirit. How could he make these people un derstand that their attitude toward him was both unwarranted and unwel come? Why should he consent to sad dle himself with them? It was only his foolish good nature that had got him into this scrape. They bad no real claim cn him. "It isn't ivery finc» gintleman that. I'd pattern him by, that's the truth," went on Mrs. Mulligan. "There's thim, if you'd belave it, wud see but the im pydince and niver the honor of haying a poor b'y tlirained af'her thim. Like as if Tid wud ba walkin' on the creep, ing things wid no thought for their hurts, that's how some wud be lookin' at the poor people that's to do thim the nood turn." "Oh, I assure you that I feel the honor of it!" murmured Mr. Kane, ironically; but the struggle to express herself filled the woman's mind, and she went on without noticing the in terruption: "But if he thramped thim all out, he'd be thrampin' on the good frinds of him, and thrampin' out the tinder ness as wud make the good man of hissilf, and niver know that he wor more hurt by his hadelessness than thim. That's why I'm thankful to the Lord that I'd the right kind to pattern him by," concluded the woman, fer vently; and no light retort fell from Mr. Kane's lips now. What if this were so? What if he were crushing the better nature that was struggling in him when he turned from them? What if the loss were his rather than theirs? What if these peo ple -A-ere sent to awaken his conscience and show him where he was drifting? It was a new thought to him that the claim of humanity might work both ways. From this point of view, he might owe something to the Mulli gans instead of their owing everything to him. Suppose he turned them out, foreclosed the Taft mortgage, seized the Hope farm, fostered the spirit of greed and selfishness and thrust aside responsibility, as his impulse had been; 'low would his gain weigh in the balance against—what? Surely, the opening vista held more than he had considered thus far. It was no- only that he would shatter their in man's goodness by shat tering t,'ho idol they had made of him. There was the hardening of his own heart, the turning from his chance to become an uplifting force to the people about him. He was no better and no worse than the majority of careless, thoughtless men; but did he not have it in him to be either better or worse? And which should he choose? He was still wrestling with that problem when a small shadow fell across the threshold, and Tid stood in the doorway. He brightened at sight of the visitor, and turned to his mother in triumph. "Didn't I be telling you he would come wan day? She wor cravin' a sight of ye, sir, that she wor, but we wouldn't be askin' a busy man like yersilf to come out of yer way for that." "It's for the good of ye that he's ccme now, Tid. He's said as mucn." "Sure, he's been doin' us the good turn since th > day we r'ached him," said Tid, contentedly. "Thrust his honor for that." Mr. Kane stood.up and shook his shoulders as if lie were throwing off a load. To crush out trust like this, to refuse the blessedness of such simple faith and gratitude, surely that was not work for Ti lmore Kane. Let the name mean as much for him as for Tid. "Blarney!" he said, lightly. "I don't want the roof here coming in on your heads and giving you an excuse to sue nie for damages. I'll just look around and see what repairs are needed. And, Tid," —more slowly—"if you feel ready to come into the office tomorrow, I find that I am ready to have you there." "Hooray!'* shouted Tid. —Youth'a Companion. 'Tffftn H«r Firm Love. On a corner stood a little barefoot girl in her rags. Her soiled, pudgy little hands hugged another bundle of rags caressingly to her stained, dimpled cheek, while she enjoyed all het joys of young motherhood. The bundle was her "baby." Tied with a string near one end, th? rags formed into a head. Another string about the middle produced the effect of a waist line. A young man saw the happy little mother. "What's that?" he asked, resting a hand on the un kempt hair of the child. "My dolly," she said, hugging the rags closer. "Your dolly, eh? What a pretty dolly. And what do you call your baby?" "O tails it—l tails it—l talis it Bum Annie."— New York Times. i A Nebraska physician keeps in com. i munication by mean® of carrier doves with imtlents livin~ over a circuit of j BO miles. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE- Pledge For the Intnmperufn—A Burlesque ' Declaration Which Shown the Pen ■titles a Man I'h.vm Who Itrcoines a Sot —A Double-Barreled Card. We suggest that a double-barreled pledge card, to be kept in the pocket for distri bution, says the editor of the Brotherhood Star, navinc the regular total-abstinence declaration on one side and the following inscription 011 the reverse: I hereby agree to drink all the beer and liquor 1 can get by ca»h or credit or treat. 1 agree to drink in all hours and weather. I also agree to keep this pledge if in so doing my brain, stomach, liver and kid neys are permanently injured, my repu tation lost, my family impoverished and I myself damned forever. I also pledge that I will not murmur a» I look upon the palaces of the liquor deal ers, their fashionably-clothed families and superb "turn-opts, or when I make the comparison with my dirty, squalid quarters, my rag-covered family and my frequent "turn-outs"' on the street for non payment of rent. i further pledge myself to advocate rum and beer, and always to vote as my mas ters direct. This 1 subscribe to with a. clear view of all the penalties that come to a man who makes himself a sot to sup port a syndicate that does more to make hard times in the billions of dollars used to supply the drink habits of its custom ers, the expenses of lawsuits, supporting paupers and criminals than all other trusts combined. Signed Date .; Witness. When signed please hand over to the nearest saloon-keeper and pass it onto the brewer. Directed Against Alcohol. It is not from France that legislation looking toward the restriction or the pro hibition of trade in intoxicants is expect ed. The Chamber of Deputies, however, has adopted unanimously a resolution calling upon the Government to prohibit the manufacture and sale of all alcoholic liquors pronounced dangerous by the Academy of Medicine. The resolution was directed against absinthe, that demor alizing distillation of wormwood, the con sumption of which has increased so alarm ingly in France. Since 1894 the quantity has doubled. Admittedly the use of ab sinthe has done much to increase insanity in the republic, until it is recognized that something must be done to stop its rav ages. For a country such us France, where wine-drinking is as common as the drinking of water with us, to enact a measure prohibitory of the use of even one liquor is almost as radical as general pro hibitive legislation would be in the United States, where the whole traffic stands in doubtful relation to public welfare and public sentiment. The Only Itemcdy. What is to be done to counteract the enormous amount of disease and misery attributed to strong drinks? Ever since humanity has been acquainted with these liquors people have been preaching moder ation, and that has had no effect. In proof of that, look at the increasing con sumption of spirituous drinks, especially beer, among all classes of society. There never has been any real success except where total abstinence has been the watchword, of the masses, for every drink er considers himself moderate. Only those who avoid the fire! -is are secure from the second and all that taight follow. The total abstainer with hisVlmnks that con tain 110 alcohol is a Ttfrpetual -tk-ntoastrut tion against the drink customs, an unan swerable argument against the popular prejudice that a man must drink alcohol to keep well. Ijct nobody declare his in- I ability to get along without alcoholic liquors; people have 110 right to express an opinion on this question who have not i tested the experience lor a considerable time. Drink and tlio Brain. The fact is really moderate quantities jf spirituous drinks diminish the work power of the brain, a fact that has been demonstrated by modern scientific appa ratus. Alcohol never makes a man wiser, it only lowers a man's demands on himself antil at last nothing is too silly or boorish to satisfy him. This temporary injury to the brain, if the use of alcohol is contin ued. leads innumerable people into perma aent brain disease. Alcohol is to-day one jf the most influential sources of mental disease. It has come to such a pass that in some years more than half of the men ivho goto the State insane asylums of southern Austria owe their insanity to the ase of alcohol. And this enumeration joes not even include the insane by rea son of the drinking habits of their ances tors. Neither does it take into account the epileptics, idiotic and defective chil dren obliged to suffer for the want of un derstanding and the crime of drunken parents. The Itoad to Trieon. Alcoholic injury to the brain does not always lead to the insane asylum. Very jften it becomes the road to prison. Seven ! to eight-tenths of all the unlawful trans j actions, from breaking windows to break ing heads, conscientious officials attribute to the influence of alcohol. Countless ac cidents, especially on Mondays, are also nothing but the after effects of alcohol, making people foolhardy and blind to dan ger of every sort. The very worst effect of alcohol upon the brain is the change of character it produces. Sometimes people of the very nest disposition are permanently changed through alcohol and become irritable, vul var, abusive and quarrelsome. Thousands an thousands of marriages have become a liell for both husband and wife on account of the drinking habits of the man. In such cases the children suffer most, are i badlv brought up, neglected, treated with cruelty. Dies of Alcoholic Diseases. Ability to endure much liquor docs not indicate that the organs of the body are protected against injury from alcohol, but only the power to conceal its effect on the brain. Men employed in the manufacture and sale of liquor are seldom seen drunk, but the statistics of mutual benefit asso ciations show that a greater majority of such people die of alcoholic diseases than people in other employments. Drunkenness In Ennland. If I were asked to say in one word what was the matter with England I should reply "drunkenness." What causes this drunkenness? I will not venture to declare, but from it spring practically all the ills to which the British social organ ism is heir. —London Interview with Miss McDowell, of Chicago. The Crusade in Brief. The statement is made on medical au thority that more deaths are due in Eng land to alcoholism than to diphtheria or typhoid fever. A hundred dollars it> not much to get for "cutting out booze »• a year," but the workman who gets it 1 ..m Millionaire Schwab will be more than hundred ahead in twelve months. Mrs. Vina Peeters, of Tiptoi., ind., has been given a judgment for S3OO against W. S. (lough, a saloon keeper, wtho sold her husband liquor while he was in a state of intoxic&'ion. Mrs. Peeters lias four similar eates pending againit other saloon men.