China has itself been for centuries one of the most exclusive of nations. Andrew Carnegie proposes to give 1 000 to help educate American ' people up to something a little better than the so-cal'od historical novel. Between telephones in use in railway (rains and also on the tables in res taurants we have no cause to fear that our native land is slowing down its gait. The experts at the United States fish commission are reported to be puzzled over the question, "Do fish sleep?" We are not experts, but that they do sleep is probably the cause of lots of fishermen's '"hard luck" stories. Some manuscripts of Richard Wag ner are said to have been discovered in use as coverings for jam pots. The story was probably started by a French writer as an insidious and cruel method of shocking Germany's musicianly pride. There is the usual hope that the date of inauguration will be changed, so that the barbarous practice of submit ting a man to the chance of contract ing pneumonia will not be included among the tests of his fitness for of fice, observes the Washington Star Criminals are very expensive mem« bers of the community. They cost the people of the country about $1,000,000.- 000 a year. If their increase could be prevented it would be a paying in vestment to give each of the 250.000 accepted criminals a monthly pension of S3OO, on the condition that he take a life vacation from the strenuous de mands of his profession. The British Museum library contains over 2,000,000 volumes, acquired partly under the provisions of the copyright act, which gives the museum a right to a copy of every book published in the United Kingdom, partly by pur chase, and partly by donation or be quest. It also appears that in the mu seum there are over 10.000 volumes of London newspapers, more than 47.000 volumes of provincial newspapers from England and Wales, about 10,000 vol umes of Scottish newspapers, and some 9000 volumes from Ireland, figures which goto support the demand fo>- increased accommodation. An idea of the enormous passengef traffic of London will be obtained from the follow'ng figures: Thirty-eight om nibus routes converge at Charing Cross. About 700 omnibuses pass there every hour, carrying 9000 pas sengers. At Hyde Park corner there are 20 omnibus routes. 390 omnibuses per hour, with an hourly passenger average of over 5000. At High street. Kensington, there are four omnibus routes, with 112 omnibuses and 1500 passengers per hour. At Piccadilly Circus there are 3D routes. GSO omni buses and 8500 passengers, while along the Strand there are 26 routes, 445 om nibuses per hour and 6000 passengers A new incident in the American in vasion is reported from Egypt. An American engineer has just completed a new system of suspended bridge tramways for unloading coal from steamers in Alexandria. The present apparatus is the first that has been in stalled in Africa, but the Egyptian railway administration has decided to adopt the system, which will undoubt edly meet with further success. The work is done automatically, and only occupies one-fourth of the time neces sitated by manual labor and steam winches; 2120 tons of coal in ten hours is the unloading capacity of these hoisters, two or three ships can be worked at a time, and there is a great diminution of waste and "small." The saving of labor is also one of the grea* advantages of this system. A year ago a philanthropic Parisian matron of wealth and position hap pened to discover a nurse girl in one of the public parks whose inexperi ence brought her into sore distress in the care of her infant charge. After relieving the girl, this philanthropic woman conceived the idea of estab lishing a school for servant girls. The institution was started and is now in a flourishing condition. Girls are taught washing, dressing and properly handling a life-size porcelain infant and all sorts of domestic work, and when armed with credentials of effi ciency from the institution, are eagerly employed by housekeepers. It is said that not a complaint from the mis tresses who have given the graduates employment has yet been lodged with rhe management. Practical philan thropy of this kind is always valuable, as in teaching the recipient of its favors bow to care for others it teachej '.hem how to provide for themselve o On Pitcairn Island in the South Pa cific ocean mail is delivered only once a year. That must be a pleasant place for the man whose bills come by thp post. Every country is disposed to put the construction on the Monroe doctrine that suits its interests. It should be remembered, however, that no inter pretation is valid unui it receives the indorsement of the United States. The tests made on the German mili tary electric railroad between Berlin and Zozzen have already produced speeds exceeding 100 miles an hour, and that within the limit of apparent abso lute safety in the opinion of railwav engineers. Because a pert telephone girl in Seattle, Wash., refused to connect a subscriber with the fire department ■when he wanted to give notice of a fire a loss of $60,000 was incurred, and now the telephone company is being sued for damages by the person thus served and by the insurance company which suffered the loss. Carefully compare statistics of tlu population of the British Empire, pub lished by a trade paper, bring out the rather startling fact that out of a pop lation of nearly 400,000.000 about 48,- 880,000, or less than one-eighth, are ol British birth or descent, nearly 4.000,- 000 are non-British white men, and the colored races number 313,000,000. In 1880 there were seven pulp and 12 paper mills in Maine, having a cap ital invested of about $2,500,000. At the present there are 30 pulp mills and 28 paper mills, with a daily capac ity of about 2165 tons of pulp and paper. The amount of capital invested in the business is not far from $30,000,- 000. These mills consume about 350,- 000,000 feet of lumber each year. Before 1898 there had been no rub* ber planting in Nicaragua beyond a few fruitless experiments on the At lantic coast of Nicaragua. In 1898 the work began on what may be called a large scale, and each year since the number of planters has increased. It is safe to say that in this vicinity $50,000 in gold value is now being ex pended yearly in growing rubber ex clusively. Statistics issued by the British Tu ciian department of revenue show that the mineral production of the British Indian empire is not very promising. Of salt about 1,000,000 tons is annually produced; of saltpetre, about 20.000 tons, and coal to ihe extent of 6,000,000 tons, while the gold was valued at about $10,000,000. mostly from Mysore. Burma and Assam have yielded 38,- 000,000 gallons of petroleum. In the competition for coronation aonors in England it has been decided that no knight in armor shall throw down the gage of battle as champion of j the king against his enemies, that the ancient office of herb strewer shall be j allowed to fall into innocuous desue- j tude, and the bearing of the royal bows and arrows in solemn state may be pretermitted. But even with these old time features of display lacking it can not fail to be a memorable and won derful pageant. The St. Louis Republic remarks that Emperor William of Germany will un questionably be amply repaid in prac- I tical knowledge for the close and I searching study of American naval de- : velopments to which he is now devot ing so much of his time and august , attention. In all probability the Ger- ; man kaiser is witnessing the building of the greatest navy yet known in the j world's history. The supreme teach- I ing of world pontics is that the pres tige of a nation depends upon that nation's sea power. The swamping of the submarine boat Fulton at her wharf in New York City does not necessarily reflect upon her qualities as a diver. She went under because a workman negligently left a hatch open while her stern was being hoisted out of water for repairs. Nat urally the water entered the hole and the craft foundered. The carelessness of an individual has spoiled many an elaborate scheme before now. One man's inattention to orders brought two trains into a head-on collision the other day in Michigan, and caused the death of many people. Yet the rail road is not to be condemned as a worthless institution. The Royal George was lost because somebody blundered, and yet she was the finest vessel of her type afloat at the time. Wh«n some ingenious fellow invents a device which will be proof against human carelessness or error, he will have scored the greatest of all suc cesses. THE VERECUNDITY OF LANQFIELD. *, * By Helen Ellsworth Wright. S When the m'eu of the service left Valdez to build the military lines through the interior of Alaska, Lang field went with them. He was undeniably plain, under i sized and over-sensitive, and that was why he felt certain that Dolly could never love him. To be sure, he had no intention of loving her, but when six feet two of well developed manhood, in the person of Tom Perry, came down from Circle City prospecting, Lang field found that intentions and love had very little to do with each other. Vainly he stood erect, but not one cu bit could he add to his stature, and every morning the square of looking glass impressed afresh the redness of his hair upon him. Tom and Dolly had known each other in the States, and Langfield watched with hopeless pain the re newal of their friendship. She had grown shy with him since Perry came and there could be but one reason, he argued. He did not blame her; there was nothing in him to inspire a wom an's love, and Tom— So he packed his flute and his knapsack and left with scarcely a farewell. The men were not fond of Lang field. He had a way of shrinking into himself, that only Shivers, the camp mascot, a lank mongrel Siwash with the stump of a tail, understood. Mornings, when the "Top Sergeant" gave his first call through the camp, it was the warm tongue of Shivers that brought Langfield into touch with the day, and later, when the company lined up around the mess tent for their ra tions of coffee and beans, the man would seek a secluded stump for a ta ble, with the dog huddled by his side. Langfield seldom joined the camp fires. But when the fever broke out, Langfield was the first to offer his ser vices. He was not afraid of contagion he told the sergeant, and anyway, there was no one at home who needed him. After that he and Shivers took up their quarters in the hospital tent. The fever had its run, but only one, thanks to the nursing, was borne up the trail and laid away under the sncw. Langfield planed a piece of spruce scantling and drove it in by the mound, but his hand was unsteady, and his eyes were heavy and dull. The "Top Sergeant" on his rounds the next morning found him sitting up in has blankets. His face was swol len and discolored, and he was talk ing excitedly to Shivers. "You mustn't let Dolly get the fe ver," he said; "she's so little. Nor Tom —promise me you won't let Tom." He leaned over and looked into the dog's pleading eyes. Shivers whined and thrust his muzzle into his mas ter's palm. "She couldn't help loving him." Langfield continued deiensively. 'You know she couiTTn't yourself!" He fell back on the pillow and tossed restlessly for a moment. "It'll be cool up there under the snow," he began again, "and I won't be heavy to pack. And say—" He sat up. pulling the dog close to him, "maybe she'll forget— that my hair was—red." The men were very tender to fleld after that, and Shivers seldom left his bedside. When, some weeks later, he convalescent, he seemed smaller and slighter than ever, and his hair shone more vividly red against the pinched, white face. They carried him out into the sunshine, but his eyes wandered regretfully up to the snow. In a month he was at the post again, doing the work of two men, with scarcely the strength of one. He came down the mountain one night an hour behind time. The trail was slushy, and the early gray twi light lent a soft indistinctness every where. Suddenly he paused and stood looking intently at a line of fresh tracks in the path. His first thought was of Shivers. He always met him, but seldom so far from the camp. Lighting a match, the only one he had, he bent closer. The prints were too clean-cut for a dog; the opposites al tr.ost overlapped each other, and Shiv ers was broad-chested. Cautiously the man crept 011, peering about for an other mark he knew. It was there — a slight depression in the mud, like the fringe of a feather. Only the edge of a shaggy tail made that. He stood up and looked around him. He was not afraid of death, but he had a de cided preference regarding its medium, ind a she-wolf hunting for a family dinner was hardly to his liking. The camp was three miles away, and the underbrush made a cross-cut im possible; besides, the snow still lay in the ravines. Tnere was one thing to be done, and drawing his hat securely down, he started forward, then paused again, with his head raised to listen. From somewhere there came a faint cry, weak and indistinct, but undenia oly human. Langfield made a trumpet of his hands. "Hel-lo!" he shouted, and strained his ears for the reply. Some 10 feet down the trail a gla cier stream had gullied out the bank. Its icy, slate colored waters fell al most perpendicularly over the rocks. Creeping to the slippery edge, he peered over and called again. A faint voice answered. A steep, shelving path was just visi ble, a.id ue clambered down to it, scratched and torn by the brambles at every step. A little farther on a roll of blankets impeded his way, and he knew that somewhere in the ravine be .jw he would find a prospector. The man proved to be a big fellow, out the light was too dim to see his face. The force of his fall had wedged one leg between the crevices of rock. and it took Langfie'.d's entire strength to extricate him. He pressed his can teen to the stranger's lips, and rubbed him- vigorously, but it was half an hour before he could get him up the path All the while, in his over vrought fancy, he heard the cry of the mother-wolf fcr food, and once he was sure that a pair of luminous eyes were watching them from the dusk. "It's no use," said the man at last. "I can't make it!" and he sank limply on the bank. Langfield took off his coat and rolled it into a pillow, then started below again. In tne outfit there would be matches, and blankets enough for the night. Just as he reached them a long, whining howl broke the stillness. An other followed, and another. They were tracking along the trail. To the man, straining every sinew under his heavy load, it meant but one thing. Mechanically he held to his burden and stumbled on. His head swam dizzily, and the brush about him seemed to swarm with uncertain shapes. With a superhuman effort he hoisted the blankets over the last little ledge of rock and drew himself up be hind them. The sick man lay where he had left him, but creeping toward him on the bank was a lithe, gray shadow. It was less than a dozen feet away. Langfield drew his revolver, then, by the sud spit of fire, he saw what he had done. "Shivers!" he cried. There was a giad whine of recognition, as the dog tried to drag himself toward him. Langfield was kneeling beside liim in a moment. "Shivers, old friend," he said, and somewhere on his "journey to the dog star." Shivers heard. His stump of a tail wagged an answer, and in his glazing eyes t-ere was a look of perfect trust. The night wore on. Slowly the gray skirts of dawn swept across the eastern sky. Langfield still sat with the dog in his arms. The prospector could not see his face, but the slight, drooping shoulders seemed familiar. The pain was growing unbearable, and he groaned. langfield started. "Yes, yes," he answered absently, "I'd forgotten." He put the dog gently from him and stood up. The morning light was flooding everything, and it fell upon the two men as they looked into each other's eyes. Langfield drew in his breath with suuden sharpness. The other muttered an oath and leaned weakly back against the bank. "Tom Perry!" ejaculated Langfield, taking a step toward him. "You!" The man nodded. The lines on Langfield's face were tense and drawn, and he steadied him self with an effort. "Well," he saiu at last, it's three miles to the camp, and we'd better be moving." There were a few drops in his can teen. He offered them to his compan ion, converted himself into a prop for the wounded side, and J.he slow, pain ful journey down the trail began. Neither o* them talked much. The mist hung midway on the mountain, and when they emerged from it, the company's quarters lay on the ledge below. Already the camp was astir. The two men upon the path paused exhausted. Langfield eased the sick man down and threw himself beside him. He had not eaten since the day before, and was weak and giddy. The solitude was oppressive. Blue-faced glaciers smiled mockingly out of the ravines, a raven croaked from the al ders, and the memory of Dolly seemed hovering in the light. For the first time Perry's helplessness tempted him. Why should this man have every thing which he had been denied? He felt again the dumb, pleading eyes of Shivers. Shivers had loved him; he had never known that his master was plain and red-headed, and Shivers — was dead. Langfieid mechanically slipped his hand to the sheath in his belt, stole a sideways glance at his companion and saw that his eyes were He drew out the knife and held it behind him. His breath came in short, con vulsive gasps. Just then Perry gave a stifled moan. The sound brought Langfield to his senses. What was this he had in tended to do? A fit of trembling seized him. He rose to his feet, though he reeled as he aid so. There was a swift movement of his right arm, and something glanced in the light and fell far below them in the brush. "No one needs me," he thought, "and Tom-—" "Come," he said aloud, "we must get you down for—your wife's sake." The man did not reply at first. When he did his voice was a trifle husky. "I have none," he said. Langfieiu stared at. him. 'Why— Dolly—" he blurted out. "She—" He began and stopped again, but Perry understood. "No-o," he replied with an effort, "she didn't want me." He turned his head and looked unseeingly across the valley. "There was some one else," he said. "Some one else?" Langfield stupidly repeated. "Yes," answered the other, "and it seems the fool couldn't understand!" There was a moment's silence. "She' 3 waiting till the company's ordered back," he added, with a whimsical smile. Langfield drew his hand across his forehead. The snow, high up on the mountain, Seemed a swimming sea of white; the little stream beside them roared like a cataract in his ears. ' Perry made an effort to rise, but fell I back in a spasm of pain. "She loves —my God, man'" he cried vehemently, are you an idiot- She loves—you!"—The Ladies' WOIM. UNLOADING IRON ORE SHIPS. Mnclilnery That Ti ow Greatly lieduce* the Lnbo - and Co**'. The use of steam shovels at some of the large iron mJ.nes in the Lake Su perior region in loading cars at the mines has long been an important ele ment in reducing the cost of our iron i ore. The handling of the ore in this manner years ago reached a degree of perfection that is almost incredible. A record of GouO tons of ore dug from the ground and loaded by one machine in nine hours indicates what may be done under favorable conditions. Of course this achievement it not usual j and it would be unfair tD gauge a sea | son's work by this record. The aver- I age output of each shovel per day, j working in open pits and dumping the ore directly into the cars is about 1500 | to 2000 tons costing from 10 to 15 j cents a ton to mine and load. It was long, however, before great ; expedition and economy were secured in unloading the ore ships after their arrival at the receiving ports of Lake Erie. This promem has been solved at last, machinery having supplanted to : a large extent the nand labor which formerly filled the ore buckets. Ore handling appliances now remove the ore from the vessel at a minimum of expense. At Conneaut, on Lake Erie, for in« stance, a 6000-ton ship may now be cleared of its ore in 1-1 hours. A load of ore arriving at that port may be de livered at the furnaces of Pittsburg in 2s hours after the arrival of the ves sel. A steam shovel in operation there loads 35 to 40 cars with ore in two hours. The machine for unloading vessels weighs about 400 tons, has a height of 55 feet, and is mounted on wheels, so that it is moved along the dock as it unloads one part after another of the vessel. The clamshell bucket whicl scoops up the. ore has a spread of If feet, takes out 10 tons of ore at ► time and discharges it directly in< railroad cars or through a hopper in* small cars, which carry it to stc piles at the rear of the dock. Its pacity ranges under ordinary con »- tions, from 250 to 300 tons per hear. It. reduces the labor employed 75 per cent. only six men being necessary for the operation of each machine. Three men are in the hold to cfean up the ore which the machine cannot reach and the other three are engaged in op erating the macnine. The entire cost including the wages of workmen and engineers is 20 cents a ton for remov ing the ore from vessels and depositing it on railroad cars ready for transpor tation to the furnaces. This machine has been introduced at most of the ore receiving ports, includ ing South Chicago. It has brought about one of the most important eco nomies recently introduced I'or lessen ing the cost of producing pig iro Sun. QUAINT AND CURiOUS. Comparatively few horses attain to 17 hands, but Kansas boasts of one that measures 20 hands aad weighs 2412 pounds. This big creature is owned by a man named Stout, who lives in Doniphan county, Kan. The Zuricher Tagblatt published tha following advertisement: "A Swiss family, Protestant, wants money to purchase a grocery shop. In case the help is forthcoming the family will baptize their three children, aged 1 to 10 years." The goose marke_t is one of the prln* cipal institutions peculiar to Berlin Geese furnish one of the staple arti cles of diet to the German people, and the total value of geese consumed in Berlin in a year is said to exceed $3,500,0u0. Three friends of a Russian living at Marienburg gave him 100 marks to shave off his beard. But his wife in terfered with a public notice to the ef fect that she claimed part proprietor chip. The three friends are now su ing the husband for non-performance of his contract. The Chinese have the idea that milk revives the youthful powers, and that it has special virtue as winter food for old people. Pictures and charac ters illustrating this idea as well hs the value of it for baby food, would without doubt increase the sale of American millc in China, as one of the consuls suggests. "Bees" are an institution in the Rus sian village. All summer time they are in full swing, especially among the women. Each one's flax is gath ered and beaten in turn, the potatoes are dug and stored, and so on. But at the end of every clay the evening is full 01' song and dance, for in Rus sia they do not forget to play after work. The ancient city of Babylon seems ta have been protected from floods by high brick embankments on both sides of the Euphrates, while an immense reservoir was constructed into which the whole river might be turned through an artificial canal. This great reservoir, used for irrigation in times of drought, held sufficient water to ir rigate over 2,500,000 acres. Tlieir Kommice. "Let's see; wasn't there a romance connected with their courtship?" "Yes. The one he told her about his vast wealth." —San Francisco Bul letin. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Some Picas For the Saloon Tlie Claim That It is the Poor Man's Club is a Q4Jl>ancerous Lie—Too Much Frequented bv the Youn^. The following is from an article entitled lhe Saloons of Pittsburg," contributed to the Brotherhood Star by the ilev. Di'. Fisher: "The saloon is a menace to good gov ernment, and the avowed and open en emy of the church and the home. It haa justly brought down upon its own head the opprobrium of all good citizens, and yet there are some who look upon it as a necessary evil and lamely attempt its de fense on grounds of so-called expediency. "That tlie saloon furnishes a cheery and bright, retreat from the cares of the day, and stands in strong contrast to the dingy, office, or the dirty and hot mill or factory, and is to the young man a place of socia bility and entertainment is conceded by many of its enemies, and by some writers it has been called 'The Poor Man's Club.' This claim contains only part of the truth' and is therefore a dangerous lie. "The brilliantly lighted room, the daz zling mirrors anil bar fixtures which are usually present in saloons claiming any ; degree of respectability are always men tioned, but the bare floors covered with filthy sawdust, the vile pictures which hang upon the walls and the foul air laden' with ooscenity and profanity are usually omitted in singing the praises of the sa loon. Nor is the gambling annex, which so often forms an important part of the saloon, generally advertised. 'The Poor Man's Club' sophistry doss not prove that the-* ' man's ciub is any less a menace to tj ->n of Pittsburg than is the 112 cessity for the accommo dl olic which is heard annu al! se court, and is recognized bj' ire in making laws provid-, is ansing of this evil, ostensi bl it, but really giving it an air of ity, and the claim that it ia a,; e source of revenue to the Si junty are both very transpar eii ill not go down with the stu de' i.itical economy. at the saloon does for tlie pub the temperance house cannot do, ' and only bad, and the expense en jpon the honest taxpayer as the re jf the saloon is far in excess of the iue received. he suggestion that the saloon is a jtitute for the speak-easy, the opium i or the brothel is usually the last ditch which the interested defender of the sa on takes a stand. "A visit to the saloons of Pittsburg dur ing the evening hours especially will reveal the fact that far too large a portion of the young men of this city go there for amuse ment. This we claim is not entirely due to lack of better places. We have not heard of the reading rooms, parlors o£ prymnasiums of the Y. M. C. A., and sim ilar places of resort being overcrowded;' nor do we believe it fair to charge it to the natural depravity of young men who find it easy to stray from the path of pur ity and temperance. Let us rather ask if the real cause of danger does not lie in the cloak of respectability assumed by reason of its legal status and partnership with the State, and also too Oiten on ac count of the patronage by good people of the restsftirant with a saloon annex. "The writer believes that all the much' talked-of substitute for the saloon will not meet the issue successfully so long as the saloon exists as a strong competitor. Teap off the mask and let this agency of Satan fall, as fall it surely will by its own weight of corruption. "Let the State wash its hands of the whole business and no ro-called 'sumptu ary' laws will be necessary. "When the saloon is outlawed it can he treated as a nuisance and soon abolished." Mighty 4id to Success. Complete temperance—that is, total ab stinence from all poisons—is a mighty aid to success. Life is too short, nowadays, to squander time on the delirium of intoxica tion, or on the mind-clouding reactions that follow the excitements of every stim ulant-habit. "I'm sorry, amigo, but I've no time to> fuddle," Dr. Bence Jones, of London, used to say. in declining the invitations of convivial friends. The truth probably was that he re joiced in a pretext for absolute emancipa tion from a life-blighting vice, for temper-i ance need not limit its arguments to utili-j tarian considerations. Its superior chances of success extend to the pursuits of intelli-! gent votaries of pleasure. During the bonanza period of the Cali fornia placer diggings, the traveler, Ger staecker, noticed that many miners, in- 1 eluding men who had gone exclusively in quest of fun, became temperate under the inspiration of good luck: they preferred the river-bar to the rum-bar, and avoided dissipations that tended to mar their en joyment of more pleasant pastimes. The main objection to the use of stimu lants is, indeed, the fact that they defeat the main purpose of their dupes. The opium-eater, like the dram-drinker, hopes to trick nature out of some extra enjoy ment, and playing that trick is. in every instance a losing game. Its penalties out weigh its pleasures; the net result of the experiment is a loss, in happiness, as well as in time and health. —Success. The Saloon Cursed Town. Localities might be pointed out in the Northwest which were originally entered by a sturdy and industrious band of pio neers. That their settlements should, in the course of time, become the richest gardens of the Northwest, there deemed to be every reason to expect. Yet suet has not been the case. One of ihe fertile sources of this curse upon the community was the saloon. It was built near the church. Saloon and church formed the nucleus of a village which eventually had other saloons. The saloon became a pleasant rendez vous for the young men. Here they could meet a friend whenever they went to the postoffice or to the blacksmith s shop. It was frequented during most of their leis ure hours, and crowded upon election dayt ard Sundrvs. Habits, associations, tone of conversation, ideas about men and af fairs, ambition and purposes of life were formed and molded in the saloon. Water will never rise higher than it? source. A generation will seldom exceei the level of tlie influences by which it it surrounded, and where the saloon is the high school of the community, wo cannot expect the children to discredit their edu cation. —Catholic Citizen. The Crusade in Brief. The alcoholic psychopath, who is susp! cious, gloomy and irritable, with sens, perversions, should come under medica care at once. He is dangerous to himseli and to the community. The Crusade in Brief. The mills of God grind slowly; the liquo traffic mangles horribly. Health is the root of all good; stron drink is health's rooted evil. It is a fact worth mentioning in the? days of social wine drinking that not drop of wine was served at the wedding c John D. Rockefeller, Jr. In Toledo. Ohio, with its 047 license saloons, there were 367 arrests for drunl enness during the past year, or three 1 every 1000 inhabitants. In New Yor there were thirteen, in I'hiladelnhi* thirt f#ur arrests to every 1000.