a the public weal. Ay fogmed Pam Somebody Pr Sara A SN has started the ides that ‘pins nre capable of being the promo. | ters of disease, as carriers of infectious ¥ germs, and sounds a warning sgminst | putting them in the month. What- | ever be the capabilities of pins in this regard, it is certainly a bad and dan- _ gerows practice to put pine or other | nmall metallic substances in the month, | 33 The tnouth was never intended to be | 7% 8 pincashion. The fighting power of the new republir, the United States of Central America, is not great. Salvador has an army of $000 men, with a militia of 18,000, Its muvy consists of a custom house eruiser. Hondaras has an army of B00 men, with 20,000 militia, and ne navy whatever. Nicaragua has an army of 2000 men, with 5000 1a its reserve guards. The Chattanoogs News saye: The | : | Whe ‘newspaper helps to build up and oda- cate the people. It formulates and _orystalizes public sentiment, upholds my, pleads for justice and stands for It is certainly the best medinm through which to adver. tise our resomrces, build up trade, quicken thrift, multiply prosperity and emcourage the establishment of factories in our midst. No successful business man can afford to ignore the newspaper. It marches hand in hazd with prosperity, side by side with en- ferprise and is to-day the greatest ad- _ voeate the world lias ever seen for the betterment, enlightment and apbaild- | Mie vaineg epetem of 0 Toiied Btates employs 16,000 locomotives, 26,000 passenger cars and 8000 mail ~ and baggage cars. These figures seem large till the number of freight ears is stated, which is 1,250,000. A pawen- ger train consisting of locomotive, tender, baggage and six passenger to weigh about 184 tons. Freight trains sometimes reach s weight of 550 tons. An ordinary passenger fo $20,000. The system, with its gi- ¢ equipment, is practically the th of a single generation. With the additions of another quarter or half & centary posterity ought to stand _ Bat it will probably be gradu- ‘ally educated out of all its capacities wonder, as w# have been out of A crusade against consumption bas been insugurated by physicians ronghout the world, the object of which is to diminish the ravages of the dootrine of pure air. The n of esmpaign’ varies somewhat ferent places, but in general it concerns itself with the treatment of ase in sanatoris chinfly by aus of an abundance of fresh air. leaders do not lose sight of the that prevention is to be prized cure, and their crusade contem- a propaganda in the press and public lecturss against dirt and in the homes. iny one when in a low state of may become consumptive, but keeps the malady alive atnong as y sud distress, dirt and over | ding, darkness and lack of air. cure of consumption may be at- by fresh air in the open, but its is pure sir in the house.” An English naval officer expresses of Admiral Sampson's operations. his was the daily issue on the flag- of bulletins for the information squadron. The system was ed by Captain Chadwick, it On a small * possible through. , All that could be told obedience to others, This oar costs from $4000 to $5000, nnd » : eo ; | standpoint, will car anywhere from $10,000 pont of it, sometimes as to details | which are by no means unimportant. As onn writer | Vor spa Lupine 3 the su E £33 | fg WL, yet #t w. 1. Wars 8d the pallant Boval Fns:- ¥ Tipperary % Wwe i fiers, at weil ton early to break | Hp went to the veranda, id with another of refreshments was voted, and the conversation turned on tigers sport, as it often does in the East started the topic 1 can't say | When I joined the listeners, Harver, | of the Gunners, was holding forth, as Atm sf re sear in adventure. O ears, with their contents, is estimated chaffed aboat it. : tell the speaker he was fortunate to . have escaped so easily, but we did. psi I SRE AL SI Oo | follows: the right, suppresses the wrong, en- _courages enterprise, advocates econo- “My queerest adventure with a tiger happened years ago when I was quite a griffin, the youngest of 8 party | under the direction of Major B——, a noted shikares, whom we obeyed im | plicity, and whom we expected to show us no end of tigers, “The branches near me served as a gnn-rack, and as, putting rifle to shoulder, 1 sighted right and left, throngh interlacing boughs and leaves, every avenue of approach, I felt my self most favorably situated. The beat began, and at last 1 saw my first tiger. | Instead of passing within any of the ra 1 had marked out for him, he quietly trottered under my tree and Isy down st its foot. Swinjting round | hastily into an attitude not previously rehearsed, in the excitement of the moment I overbalanced, and, my rifis A DNS HAE re going off, descended in a heap on the tiger. Luckily for me, the report of the shooting iron, and the vision of a dark body in the air, frightened him #0 mueh, he was off at a gallop at the moment I crashed down upon him. A braised shoulder and damaged rifle were my only reminiscences of that by preaching and practis- | i dant remembered clearly was secing ion of one minor feature Of course, I got horribly It was scarcely necessary for us to Veracious men who have witnessed the same scene, from almost the same differ in their de- Human nature is liable to err in tiger stories as in the witoess box, beosuse of the difficulty of observing and re. membering accurately in moments of | excitement and danger. Many, many years ago, I knew a man who once saw o tiger serenely basking at the foot of 8 tree under a hot sun, and, taking » steady aim, shot the brute stone dead {sa he thought) with a single ball. To ' make assurance doubly sure, he fired a second time; then, as not a limb or muscle quivered, dashed forward on foot with more valor than prudence to survey his prize. His native shi- karee, having vainly urged him to wait, followed 1u his wake. The next thing the faithfn! atten. the tiger stand upright and the sahib a recognition of the fact that at the gunsand in the engine- s think and reason as truly as the : ) . nearly dead, and a handsome subscrip- \ the bridge, and can be counted | {for greater alacrity and more ef- | ve co-operation if the officers do make a mystery and a monopoly ir information, It may be true s the sailor said who was cap- with Hobson, men in the Ameri- {avy do not know, and do not | know, the reason of the orders | m to execute; but there can bt that they will appreciate ibute to their intelligence and | ght the better for knowing what assault. hanging in his mouth like a bundie of clothes, With nothing but a short, thick spear in Lis hand, the brave fol. low rushed on the enemy and be labored it so fiercely that, amazing to ralate, it dropped the bundle and | disappeared into the jungle without doing farther mischief. The mauled officer hovered between life and death for three months, and the doctor who attended him with great skill told me the dressing of his wounds was enough to make a strong man faint every time that operation had to be performed. The poison of tiger fangs and claws rangement, but the best we conld make | will render the healthiest person dif ficult of approach, and will sometimes finish off an unhealthy, weakly con. stitution before that stage has been Shock often kills before reached. blood-poisoning has had time to set in, especially with the ordinary ran of | the ! nerve and stamina of the European to natives in India, who have not resist the shock of having been in a tiger's grip. Fortnoately for Lo, he pulled through, to swell for many years the noble army of generals and colonels who groan at enforced retire. ment in London clubs, till they are fit for nothing else. * 1ne point sud wonder of the story, sceording to the version of it which lingers in my memory after six.and. thirty years, lay in the tiger's being successfully routed by the shikaree's He could easily have made mince meat of both men, but for some extraordinary reason did not. “How do yonaceount forit®” Iasked a famous hunter of my scquaintance, shortly after I had seen a hole in 1,8 side, into which, though long healed, yon might have put your fist, “Did you ever hear of a tiger with two | bullets in him treating Lis foes with such clemency?” “Never,” he replied. [remember Li being brought to his houose tion being raised for the shikaree; but my private belief is that no bullet ever touched that tiger —though I shonle not | like to say so to Li———, who is firmly persuaded to the contrary, and can’t { believe he missed the beast clean, From what I bave heard, I am in- clined to think the tiger was gorged and asleep when L—— first saw him, | though 1 can't explain why he did not move when the shots were fired It seems pretty clear his blood was not up to boiling point when he hel L-——in his mouth; he may have seen or heard men shouting not far off; he was evidently impressed by the an- dacity of the shikaree's attack, muck Ha oan adpoarn- | relay i and y balieve we oa At any rate, 1 tiger being tracked "marks, and it i» certain no found his skin.’ Oddly euongh, several vears after ‘after this escape, Loo told me he cama aerows a warrior in the smoking. COI orf a Neotel hatel, who arconnted for having lost an srm by a story =ull more thriiling than his own, wounded a tiger from su eleplinnt, the tiger charged, the elephant through the jungle To save himself from being brained and swept off by overhanging branches, he soon caught | hold of a stout one and parted from | the alephant as it crashed through for | est ton thick to admit of his holding | on with any hope of safety. Then, to his dismay, he found he had not strength and agility enough to swing himself up so as to sit on the branch Lookiag down, he discovered that the tiger had spotted him and was waiting below. The horror of the sitanation words can pant it —it seemed to him an jeternity. shonted, ea panes In Foy tr pe Beech (Creek Railroad. NY OCs REROCo Lowes Condensed Tine Table! + Hemi f damn fa, ive op Hail Nas iE Noe #9 5a 2 wa £ *3 YuEL DE subd 8 3 tohenael LA Ting HIER ». - 4 Gat) Ha Plesstaurg HG Ch 3 MNES esa iy A tn Pa Wry mes Erm Fey 2 Lae Fittsburg & Fears Fastern ™ 1. i ANE. TH TAKE ENTLLT RAY 21 133 tomve HY ey Watioe x “ewes Ja sslg van riagite Ria. NAN 3 iemkEs wl ran Matmdey: soa 3 : tL avy Pye Hicks Gangs! Manager, Malady, Pe