The man behind the gun is espe cially dangerous v/hen the hunting season opens. .Surgeons are doing wonderful .Mings. In France they have supplied i patient with an artificial larynx which can never feel fatigue. What i campaign orator he will be! Says the Galveston Daly News: 'The demand for horses increases, ind the field for usefulness so long aeld by the 'faithful friend of man appears to be growing broader in spite of a cloud of competitors." Times. —But after all the marvel lous thing is that what seemed so suro> !.o happen has not come true, but China, instead of being destroyed ind divided, is today stronger as a political proposition than she has ever been in modern history. The largest educational event of the year is Andrew Carnegie's gift to Pittsburg of a groat polytechnic in stitute, at a cost of $33,000,000, in cluding an endowment of $25,000,000 This will far exceed the largest en dowment of any American university sr college excepting only Girard. London has started a movement against blinkers for horses, which in most cases are useless and harmful to the sight of the animals. Most oi the great railroad companies and one of the tramway lines have done away with them, so that now, it is stated, 30,000 horses are working without blinkers. Germany is beginning to object to the number of foreign students in her universities and technical schools. The latter have protested that something must be done to keep foreigners out, as out of 11,311 students in technical high schools in 1900, 2017, or more than a sixth, were foreigners and of these S9G were Russians. Within a year, reports say, more than 100 mountain climbers have lost their lives in the Alps. Is it now ad visable for the local authorities to ex ercise a proper supervision over par ties which attempt dangerous ascents, and see to it that they are suitably equipped and employ a sufficient num br of competent guides? Such precau tions would seem to be only reason able. An anti-duelling conference has been held in Leipsic. It ought not to be necessary even at the outset of this new century, to hold councils and con gresses. meetings and debates and dis cussions with respect to so detestable a practice as that of the duel. The folly, the unfairness, the contemptibilc nature of such encounters were ex posed to the scorn of all intelligent persons generations ago. The exemption of Cuban cities, es pecially Havana, from the ravages ol yellow fever means a great deal tc the people of the United States, whe have suffered so much from the dis ease introduced from Cuba. Since American sanitation has shown by elo quent example that it is possible tc stamp out yellow fever in Cuba the United States will doubtless insist that it shall be kept out after the American occupation ceases. It is onlj a question of care and money, and il is worth much more than it costs. A series of experiments are to b>. undertaken in the Chicago hospital school to determine the kind of food most conducive to the physical and mental growth of children. These ex periments have been suggested by ob servations made upon the condition o( boys and girls coming to the hospital for treatment and education. It has become the firm conviction of the dean of the school that lack of ob servation, attention and concentra tion, defective memory and self-con trol and a number of other unfavor able conditions in children are due largely to improper nutrition. A story with no love interest at aV would be no new experiment. The greatest thing in this line in our lan guage is "Robinson Crusoe," dear tc the hearts of the youth of every frest generation. And the "professors ol literature," those queer and solemr fogies who want to put everything intc its proper pigeon-hole of classification while pointing out the influence that this "immortal classic" had on the de velopment. of the novel, are careful tc exclude it from the list of novels be cause of the absence of the eternai feminine. In a later day Robert Louis Stevenson showed tn "Treasure Is land," a book for boy«s. young and old In "Kidnapped" and"The Wrecker,' that he could keep his readers awake and interested without dragging in the usual feminine complication, remark.' 'lie New York Sun. I IN THE HANDS OF THE MAFIA. J People will tell you that the days of romance are gone, never to return; but my strange experience In Venice, in the winter season of 1894, changed my opinion on the subject once aud for all. I had at that time a business com mission in the larger towns of Italy, and from Verona 1 was going onto Venice. In my compartment was a young Italian—a rather nasty looking fellow, clad in a curious green travel ing cloak. We did not speak to one another, and as it was very cold, I curled myself up in my corner and wont to sleep, wishing inwardly that 1 had had the forethought to bring a nice warm overcoat with me like that of my companion. When 1 awoke we were apparently nearing Venice, and I was the only occupant of the carriage. Where the Italian had got out I did not know, nut, curiously enough, he had left his cloak behind him. It was a new garment, warmly lined, and I slipped It. over my shoulders, intending to hand it over to the officials at Venice. Ten minutes later the train steamed into the station, and I tumbled out to look after my luggage. There were a 3ood many people in the train, and in my eagerness I quite forgot that I was wearing a cloak which did not belong to me, and which I ought to hand over forthwith to the lost property office. Outside the station there were the usual crowds of persuasive gondoliers plying for hire, and the whole scene was one of bustle and confusion. It was now late at night, and the lights of the station, reflected in the inky black water, had a •weirdly pictur esque effect. Presently a gondolier came toward me, gave me a searching glance which took me in from head to foot, and then inquired, with a courtly bow, if ho might have the honor of taking the signor to his hotel. I signified my assent, and in a few moments my few belongings and myself were more or less snugly stowed away. With a few strokes my gondolier drew clear of the crowd at the station, and we were presently gliding down the broad bosom of the Grand Canal. The night was cold, and there was a kind of damp frostiness in the bit ing wind which sighed across the la goon. Instinctively I drew my cloak closely round me, and then realiltzed with a jerk that I had quite forgotten to deliver it to the railway officials. "How forgetful of me." I thought. "But, never mind! I will send a mes senger from the hotel with it to morrow morning." The ancient palazzo, now turned in to a plebeian hotel, at which I had engaged rooms, was situated on a side canal some little distance from the Grand Canal, and we were presently thread ing a maze of narrow waterways, lit only by twinkling lamps which threw straggling lines of light across the inky water. Everything was ab solutely quiet, for Venice is indeed i silent city when night falls on the se'ene. Occasionally, but very rarely, a gondola would cross our path, and every now and then there came the monotonous chant of my gondolier, as we neared a point where the canal branched off. "Sa sta!" he would chant, as we turned to the right; "sa premi!" as we dived into some devious waterway to the left; while if we were keeping straight on, "lungo eh!" rolled across the water from his lips. It seemed to me that we were taking rather a long time to reach the hotel, but as I not been in Venice be fore, I did not like to say anything. Presently, however, the gondola ran alongside a sort of decayed stono quay, above which towered a closely shuttered house, evidently of con siderable antiquity. "Surely this is not the Hotel ?" I cried, in surprise; "it looks more like a dungeon." The gondolier bowed low. "Tt is not, signor," he said; " the hotel in down the passage on the left, and I will do myself the pleasure of con ducting your excellency thither." He stepped off the gondola, tossed a loop of rope over a stone projec tion, and led me toward a narrow pas sage, which I had not noticed. At the far end of this alley I saw a twinkling oil lamp, which my guide assured me was the light of the Hotel Suddenly, without the slightest warning, I felt something slipped over my head. I heard a few muttered commands, and then I felt myself being carried by strong arms. 1 could not see. I could hardly breathe; but I realized at once that I was the victim of an outrage. And the memory of all the crimes which have occurred in this vast network of silent waterways and ancient houses surged into my brain until I felt sick with terror. Presently I was laid down, none too gently, on a bench. Then come the shutting of a door, and silence. I tried to rise to my feet, but during the brief period I had been carried ilong my captors had contrived to oind me, so that I now found it im possible to move My thoughts at this time were none too pleasant. I realized that if I never left my prison alive no one would be very much the iviser, and the reflection did not make me feel any more comfortable. I was not left to myself for long. Presently I heard footsteps close to me. the cover over my head was inn off, my footstraps removed, and J was led from tha room by a wierd looking figure in a mask and hood lie bore an uncomfortable lesem blance to a member of the Spanish Inquisition. We emerged Into a bril'iantlj' lighted room, filled to overflowing with men, all clad In the same som ber garb of mask and hood. As my gaoler drew me in a kind of muffled roar went up from the assembly, and those nearest to me shook their fists in my face. Suddenly a tall man at the far end of the room moved toward me, the others making way for him respectfully. For a moment he gazed earnestly into my face. Then he turned angrilv to my gaoler. "What, in the name ol heaven, does this mean?" he hissed. "You have brought the wrong man!" Instantly consternation reigned in the room, and everybody crowded round to examine me, while the gaolei tried to explain things. Up to this moment I had been more or less in a dream —the rapidity with which events succeeded one another had confused me—but now I found my tongue. "I do not know what is the meaning of the outrage to which I have been subjected." I said; "but if you have any doubts as to my identity I may tell you at once that I am an English man, Charles Raymond by name, and I have come from Verona today. 1 have papers in my pockets to prove it." The leader heard me out, then he beckoned to me to follow him. Me chanically I obeyed, and he led mo into a small ante-room. Then he turned to me. "Sir," he said, in most excellent English, "we owe you a profound apology, and also an ex planation. But, first of all, will you tell me hqw it is that you are wear ing that green cloak?" In a few words I explained how I came to be possessed of the coat. The eyes behind the mask smiled. "Yes," he said, "I see now how the whole thing has happened. We were on the lookout for a member of out society—a member who has violated his commands. He was known only to the members of our inner circle, but our humble instruments were told to look out lor a man in a green cloak and to bring him hither. I much re gret that you should have been the victim of so unfortunate a mistake. It is a pity, too. that the traitor has temporarily escaped us: he must havo received a warning. At what point did you say he left the train?" I told him as nearly as possible, and he nodded gravely. "It is of little moment," he said; "the scoundrel will not get far." "And now," continued my mys terious interlocutor, "1 can see you are eaten up with curiosity as to who and what we are. Is it not so? I thought so! But, unfortunately, I am not at liberty to tell you anything. I want you now to give me your solemn promise, on your honor as an English man, to say nothing to any person in Venice of your adventure of to night. I know you English: and 1 know that if you pass your word you will keep it. Having given me this promise, you shall be conveyed to your hotel without delay, and we shall be happy to recompense you for the inconvenience we have caused you." The politeness of the man —he was evidently a gentleman to his finger tips—fascinated me, and I gave my parole quite willingly. Forthwith, with a few words of apology, he placed the covering over my head again and led me out through the main room to the ancient quay on which I had first landed, and so into the gondola. "'Farewell, Signor Raymond," ho said; "I rely on you." Then, in a whisper: "It is not every one who enters the judgment hall of the Mafia and leaves it alive!" Ten minutes later my gondolier re moved the cloak from my head and took the strap off my wrists. Three minutes afterward he dumped mo and my baggage down on the broad steps of the hotel, and, with a couple of sweeping strokes, vanished into the night. The landlord of the hotel was in a mild state of wonderment as to where I had been, but, mindful of my promise, I told him nothing, and tumbled off to bed as soon as possible. As I was undressing an en velope fell out of my side pocket, and, on picking it up, I found enclosed Italian bank notes to the value of 250 lire —roughly £lO. There was nouiing else in the envelope, and 1 could only surmise that the 'n-oney had been slipped into my pocket by way of compensation for my weird adventure. One thing more. Two days later 1 was chatting with a merchant in his office close to the Rialto when my eye caught a paragraph in an Italian paper on his desk. It was very brief It simply recounted how a man, un known, who had been arrested foi vagrancy, had been found stabbed tc the heart in the jail at Verona. The dagger with which he had been killed bore an inscription which showed be yond a doubt that the deed was the work of the dreaded Mafia. The merchant saw the paragraph and shuddered. "Fancy being killed even in a prison cell," lie said. No one can escape the Mafia!" And I shuddered with him.—The Traveler. The average cost of horseflesh in France is five cents a pound. Two and one-half million pounds ara eaten vearly. DR. TALMAGES SERMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: Dreams They Are the Avenue Through Which n Human Soul— l'roufof Immortality Warned by Oo(l A\ ASHIXOTOX, D. C.—ln this discourse Dr. Talmage discusses a much talked of subject, and one in which all are inter ested. The text is Joel ii, 2S: "I will pour out My spirit upon all flesh. Your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions." In this photograph of the millennium the dream is lifted into great conspicuity. You may say of a dream that it is a noc turnal fantasia, or that it is the absurd combination of waking thoughts, and with a slur of intonation you may say, "It is only a dream," but God has honored the dream by making it the avenue through Which again and again He has marched upon the human soul, decided the fate of nations, and changed the course of the world's history. God appeared in a dream to Abimelech, warning liiin against an un lawful marriage; in a dream to .Jacob, an nouncing by the ladder set against the sky full of angels, the communication be tween earth and heaven; in a dream to Joseph, foretelling his coniingpower under the figure of all the sheaves of the harvest bowing down to his sheaf; to the chief butler, foretelling his disimprisonment; to the chief baker, announcing his decapita tion; to Pharaoh, showing him first the seven famine struck years, under the figure of the seven lean cows devouring the seven fat cows; to Solomon, giving him the choice between wisdom and riches and honor; to a warrior, under the figure of a barley cake smiting down a tent, encouraging Gideon in his battle against the Midianites; to Nebuchadnez zar, under the figure of a broken image and a hewn down tree, foretelling the over throw of his power; to Joseph, of the New Testament, announcing the birth of Christ in liis own household, and again bidding him fly from Herodie persecutions; to Pilate's wife, warning him not to be come complicated with the judicial over throw of Christ. We all admit that God in ancient times and under Bible dispensation addressed the people through dreams. The question now is. docs God appear in our day and reveal Himself through dreams? That is the question everybody as'ts, and that question I will try to answer. You ask mo if 1 believe in dreams. My answer is ( I do, but all I have to say will be under live heads. Remark the First—The Scriptures are so full of revelation from God that if we get no communication from Him in dreams we ought, nevertheless, to be satisfied. With twenty guidebooks to tell you how to get to New York or Pittsburg or Eon don or Glasgow or Manchester do you want a night vision to tell you how to make the journey? We have in this Scripture full direction in regard to tha journey of this life and how to get to the celestial city, and with this grand guide-' book, this' magnificent directory, we ought to be satisfied. 1 have more faith in a decision to which I come when 1 am wide awake than when 1 am sound asleep. I havo noticed that those who give a great deal of their time to studying dreams get their brains addled. They are very anx ious to remember what they dreamed about the first night they slept in a new house. If in their dream they take the hand of a corpse they are going to die. If they dream of a garden it means a sep ulcher. If something turns out according to a night vision, they say: "Well, I am not surprised; I dreamed it." If it turns out different from the night vision, they say, "Well, dreams go by contraries." In their efforts to put their dreams into rhythm they put their waking thoughts into discord. Now, the Bible is so full of revelation that we ought to be satisfied if we get no further revelation. Sound sleep received great honor when Adam slept so extraordinarily that the surgical incision which gave him Eve did not wake him, but there is no such need for extraordinary slumber now, and he who catches an Eve must needs be wide awake! No need of such a dream as Jacob had, with a ladder against the sky, when ten thousand times it has been dem onstrated that earth and heaven are in communication. No such dream needed as that which was given to Abimelech, warn ing him against an unlawful marriage, when we have the records of the county clerk's office. No need of such a dream as was given to I'haroah about the seven years of famine, for now the seasons march in regular procession and steamer and rail train carry breadstuff's to every famine struck nation. No need of a dream like that which encouraged Gideon, for all through Christendom it is announced and acknowledged and demonstrated that righteousness sooner or later will get the victory. If tlicrc should come about a crisis in your life upon which the Bible does not seem to be sufficiently specific goto God in prayer, and you will act especial direc tion. I have " more faith ninety-nine times out of a hundred in directions given you with the Bible in your lap and your thoughts uplifted in prayer to God than in all the information you will get uncon scious on your pillow. I can very easily understand why the Babylonians and the Egyptians, with no Bible, should put so much stress on dreams, and the Chinese in their holy book. Chow King, should think their emperor gets his directions through dreams from God, and that Homer should think that all dreams came from Jove, and that in ancient times dreams were classified into a science, but why do you and 1 put so much stress upon dreams when we have a supernal book of infinite wisdom on all subject*.? Why should we harrv ourselves with dreams? Why should Eddystone and Barnegat lighthouses question a summer P.relly? Remark the Second—All dreams have an important meaning. They prove that the soul is comparatively independent of the body. The eyes are closed, the senses arc dull, the entire body goes into a lethargy which in all languages is used as a type of death, and then the soul spreads its wing and never sleeps. It leaps the Atlantic Ocean and mingles in scenes 3000 miles away. Tt travels great reaches of time, flashes back eighty yearn, and the octoge narian is a boy again in his father's house. If the soul before it has entirely broken its chain of flesh can do all this, liow far can it leap, what circles can it cut when it is fully liberated? Evert dream, whether agreeable or harassing, whether sunshiny or tempestuous, means so jnuch that, ris ing from your couch, you ought to kneel down and sav: "0 God. am I immortal? Whence? Whither? Two natures. My poul caged now —what when the door of tlie cage is opened? If my soul can flv so far in the few hours in which my body is asleep in the night, how far can it fly when my body sleeps the long sleep of the grave?" Oh, this power to dream, lion startling, how overwhelming! Immortal! immortal! Remark the Third—The vast majority of fireams nre merely the result of dis turbed physieial condition, and arc not a supernatural message. Job had carbuncles and he was scared in the night. He savs, "Thou scarest me with dreams and tcrri fiest me with visions." Solomon had an overwrought brain, overwrought with pub lic business, and he suffered from erratic slumber, and he writes in Ecclesiastes, "A dream eometh through the multitude of business." Dr. Gregory, in experiment ing with dreams, found that a bottle of hot water put to his feet while in slumber made him think he was going up the hot sides of Mount Etna. Another morbid physician, experimenting with dreams, his feet uncovered through sleep, thought he was riding in an Alpine diligence. But a jvcat many dreams are merely narcotic disturbance. Anything that you nee while under the influence of chlor.il or brandy or hasheesh or laudanum is not a revela tion from God. The learned Do Quincey did not ascribe to divine communication what he Raw in tleep, opium saturated, dreams which he afterward described in tlie following words: "I was worshiped. I was sacri ficed, I fled from the wrath of Brahma, through all the forests of Asia. Vishnu hated me. Sceva laid in wait for me. I came suddenly upon Isis and Osiris. I had done a deed, they said, that made the crocodiles tremble. I was buried for a thousand years in stone coffins, with mum ini%s and sphinxes in narrow chambers at the heart of eternal pyramids. I was kissed with the cancerous kiss of croco diles and lay confounded with unutterable slimy things among wreathy and Nilotic mud." Do not mistake narcotic disturbance for divine revelation. Hut I have to tell you that the majority of the dreams are mere ly the penalty of outraged digestive or gans, and you have no right to mistake the nightmare for heavenly revelation. Late suppers are a warranty deed for bad dreams. Highly spiced salads at 11 o'clock at night, instead of opening the door heavenward, open the door infernal and diabolical. You outrage natural law, and you insult the God who made those laws. It takes from three to five hours to digest food, and you have no right to keep your digestive organs in struggle when the rest of your body is in somnolence. The gen eral rule is eat nothing after 6 o'clock at night, retire at 10, sleep on your right side, keep the window open five inches for ventilation, and other worlds will not dis turb you much. By physical maltreatment you take the ladder that .laeob saw in his dream, and you lower it to tlie nether world, allowing the ascent of the demoni acal. Dreams are midnight dyspepsia. An unregulated desire for something to eat ruined the race in paradise, and an unreg ulated desire for something to eat keeps it ruined. The world during 0000 years has tried in vain to digest that first apple. The world will not be evangelized until we get rid of a dyspeptic Christianity. Healthy people do not want the cadaver ous and sleepy thing that some people call religion. They want a religion that lives regularly by day and sleeps soundly by night. If through trouble or coming on of old age or exhaustion of Christian service you cannot sleep well, then you mnv ex pert, from God "songs in the night.' v but there are no blessed communication.? to those who willingly surrender to indigesti- Hes. Napoleon's army at Leipsic, Dres den and Borodino came near being de stroyed through the disturbed gastric juices of its commander. That is the way you have lost some of your battles. All dreams that malce you better are from God. How do I know it? Is not God the source of all good? It does not take a very logical mind to argue that out. Tertullian and Martin Luther believed in dreams. The dreams of John HUBS are im mortal. St. Augustine, the Christian father. givei us the fact that a Carthage nian physician was persuaded of the im mortality of the soul by an argument which he heard in a dream. The night be fore his assassination the wife of Julius Caesar dreamed that her husband fell dead across her lap. Furthermore, I have to say that there are people who were converted to God through a dream. The Rev. John New ton, the fame of whose piety fills all Chris tendom, while a profligate sailor on ship board, in his dream thought that a being approached him and gave him a very beau tiful ring and put it upon his finger and said to him: "As long as you wear that ring you will be prospered. If you lose that ring you will be ruined." In the same dream another personage appeared and bv a strange infatuation persuaded John Newton to throw overboard that ring, and it sank into the sea. Then the mountains in sight were full of fire, anil the air was was lurid with consuming wrath. While John Newton was repenting of his folly in having thrown overboard the treasure an other personage came through the dream and told John Newton he would plunge into the sea and bring that ring up if he desired it. He plunged into the sea and brought it up and said to John Newton, "Here is that gem, but I think I will keep it for von lest you lose it again.' And John Newton consented, and all the nre went out from the mountains, and all the signs of lurid wrath disappeared from the air, and John Newton said that he saw m his dream that that valuable gem was his soul, and that the being who persuaded him to throw it overboard was Satan, and that the one who plunged in and restored that. gem. keeping it for him, was Christ. And that dream makes one of the most wonderful chanters in the life ox that most wonderful man. A German was crossing the Atlantic Ocean, and in his dream he saw a nan with a handful of white flowers, and he was told to follow the man who had that handful of white flowers. The German, arriving in New York, wandered into the Fulton street prayer meeting, and Jlr. Lamphier. the great apostle of prayer meetings, that day had given to him a bunch of tuberoses. 'I hey stood on his desk, and at the close of the religious ser vices he took the tuberoses and started homeward, and the German followed him and through an interpreter told Mr. Lam phier that on the sea he had dreamed ot a man with a handful of white flowers, and was told to follow him. Suffice it to say that through that interview and fol lowing interviews he became a Christian and is a city missionary, preaching the gos pel to his own countrymen. God in a dream! ... ... , John Hardonk. while on shipboard, dreamed one night that the day of judg ment had come, and that the roll of the ship's crew was called except his own name, and that these people, this crew, were all baniwhed, unci in this dream no asked the reader why his own name was omitted, and he was told it was to give him more opportunity for repentance. He woke up a different man. He became illus trious for Christian attainment. It you do not believe these things, then you must discard nil testimony and refuse to accept any kind of authoritative witness. God in a dream! , , , , l!ev Herbert Mendes was converted to God through a dream of the last judgment, and niimv of us have had some dream ot that great day of judgment which shall be 1 the winding up of the worlds history. If von have not dreamed of it, nerhajjs to night you may dream of that day.l here ire enough materials to make a dream. Enough voices, for there shall be the roaring of the elements and the great earthquake. Enough light for the dream, for the world shall bla/.e. Enough excite ment for the mountains shall tall. Enough water, for the ocean shall rear. Enough astronomical phenomena, for the stars shall go out. Enough populations, for all the races of all the ayes will fall into line of one of two processions, the one ascend ing and the other descending, the one led on by the rider on the white horse of eternal victorv, the other led on by Apol lyon on the black charger of eternal defeat. The dream comes on ine now, and I see the lightnings from above answering the volcanic disturbances from beneath, and I hear the long reverberating thunders that shall wake up the dead, and all the *eas, lifting up their crystal voices, cry. "Come to judgment!" and all the voices of the heaven cry, "Come to judgment! and crumbling mausoleum and Westminster abbeys and pyramids of the dead with marble voices cry. 'Tome to judgment. And the archangel seizes an instrument of music that was made only for one sound, and thrusting that mighty instrument through the clouds and turning it _ tins wav. he shall put it to his lips and blow the long, loud blast that shall make the solid earth quiver, crying, "Come to judg ment!" Thrn from this earth'v crossness nuit Attired in stars, we shall forever sit. [Coryrif?ht, lflol, 1.. Klopscli.l THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. The Paramount QiiegtloD In Not One ot Politics or of Social CIMICDH, But Oue Pertaining to Public Health and Morals —Alcohol a Positive Poison. . \ n h} s ad dress before the American Med leal lemperance Association, Dr v si Davis, M. D., LL.D., of Chicago, Presi uent of the association, said: ''The paramount question before the in telligent men and women of Christendom, to-day is not one of politics or of political parties or of social classes, but one solely pertaining to tiublic health and morals. "It is whether alcohol and other well known narcotic drugs are really wholesome; articles of drink or food, safe for general use; or are they absolutely subtle, decep tive and dangerous poisons, stealthily de stroying both public health and morals, and constantly multiplying hereditary de fenerates in all clases of human society? t the former, they are entitled to the same treatment as other articles of com merce and general use. If the latter, then their regulation belongs exclusively to the police and sanitary authorities aided bv the courts. They cannot be both. That alcohol, as it exists in fermented and dis tilled liquors, is a positive proto-plnsmio poison, directly impairing every natural structure and function of the living body in proportion to the quantity used, anil the length of time its use is containucd is proved by the results of every experiment al investigation concerning "it, instituted by eminent scientific men, both in this country and Europe. ''And their ve diet is abundantly con firmed by the history and condition of the inmates of every asylum for the poor, the feeble-minded, the epileptics, the insane and the inebriatacs; those of every refor matory and pribou, and by the records of every police and criminal court, and by the details of every well-kept registry of vital statistics. As concerns danger to human life, every intelligent reader of the public press knows that the ordinary use of alcoholic liquors by pers >ns claim ing to be in health is the direct cai.se of more suicides, homicides and murderers every month than is produced by all ti e other poisons known to toxicologists in a year. Then why not now, at the begin ning of this twentieth century of the Christian era, cease calling alcoholic liquors stimulants or restoratives, and not only speak of them as subtle ind danger ous poisons in every household, but also concentrate all the facts known to science, clinical experience and of economic and criminal records, in favor of having al cohol and all liquids containing tvo per cent, or more of it, placed on the statutes of the several States along with ar.-.nic, strychnine, etc., to be sold and usr 1 un der the same regulations and penalties a < other poisons dangerous to the public 1 'altli and morals? If this were accom plished it would soon remove one of the chief corrupting influences from the gen eral tield of polities, and place it under tin domain of the police and health authori ties, aided by the courts, where it legiti mately belongs. And it would da more to prevent tuberculosis and all forrns of hu man degeneracy than all the other meas ures combined." Price of a Drink. If it were necessary to describe in v.-ord-* the evils and effects of intemperance, one might use tne thoughts of John B. Cough expressed in one of his lectures entitled "Man and His Masters," wherein he rep resents a man overcome with the appe tite for intoxicating liquors as pleading in this manner: "Give me a drink! I will give you my hard earnings for it. Give me drink! I will pay for it. I will give you more than that. 1 married a wife; 1 took her from girlhood's home and prom ised to love hei, and cherish her, and pro tect her—ah! ail! and I have driven her out to work for me and 1 have stolen her wages and I have brought them to you. Give me drink and I will you them. More yet. I have snatched the bit ct bread from the white lips of my famished child —I will give you that if you will give me drink. More yet. 1 will give you my health. More yet. I will isivo you my manliness. More yet. I will give my hope-* of Heaven — body and soul: 1 will barter jewels worth all the kingdoms of earth— lor a dram. Give it me!"— Christian \\ o.k. fitntue From Whisky Money. The Rev. W. F. Lloyd, of the Walnut Street Methodist Church, Louisville, Ivy., m-de an attack from the pulpit on M.-si >. I. W. and 11. lJcrnheim, distillers, who recently gave a bronze monument of Thomas Jed'erson to the city of ijOi..svil'e, lie said: "The city of Louisville is congratulat ing itself on the statue of Thomas Jeffer son, presented bv two wholesale whisky tellers. The iwuey with wh.eii this v. as Hone was blood money, wrung from bleed ing hearts of. innocent women and chil dren. it represents tears of orphanage ind widowhood, and is a sort of concrete expression of destroyed character and despoiled manhood, .jeffer-on held senti ments strong'y antagonistic to whisky,roth in its drinking and sale, and t was cnou,_:i to make him turn over in his grave a the thought of having his statue presented to the city by men who had made tli"ir for tune by preying on helpless drunkards and innocent women and cnildren." "On SicniiiK tire riedee." Why do temperance men waste so muc\ time in debating points which are not Ce batable? What nonsense has recently been written and spoken about thi "ethics of pledge-signing!" Would th' temperance movement have ever attained its present position without pledge-. ing? While we arc waiting for temper ance legislation, and while the puoli " house reformers are hatching out their schemes for improving the drinking tav erns, let every earnest worker keep peg ging away enlisting pledged ali- tame >. Those who wish to ace quick returns for their work and abiding results, will slid goon entreating men and women to si'jn the pledge. no matter how many _ logic choppers declaim against old-fasnioncl methods. In some things the old is cer tainly better than the new. The Crumdo in Hriof. In every Methodist church in Xcw Zealand intoxicating _ wine has been ex cluded from the Lord's table. Some parents who set intoxicating liquors urion tlHr table wonder where their children learned to become drunk ards. Dr. Ganser. a Presdcn physician and alienist, lias found hypnotic suggestions a ; cat aid in reclaiming drunkards a:u stealing their will. The Temperance Permanent Building Society has 8015 members, and last ycr-i loaned $1,590,000 the largest sum _ad vunced by any building society in 13rg land. A vigorous crusade against liquor poi it is in progress at Mount Vernon, 111. Ch. - . local dealers have been fined £2OO an costs for selling liquor on Sunday, the ma.\ imuiii tine under the law. A Columbus (Ohio) saloon keeper, w-i placarded his establishment as a "Soldier Rest," was notified by the soldiers at th garrison that the name was offensive an that it must be removed immediately, ii sigr. came down. The battle against alcohol is the mo significant phenomenon of our ages; mo? important than all political action, wai and treaties of nep.ee.—-Adolf Pick, I\l. 1 Professor of Physiology, University 1 Wurzburj, Bavaria.