f AGUAS CALIENTES. THE CELEBRATED MEXICAN WATERING PLACE. Pen Pictures of Life and Business in the Old Aztec Town—Expensive Hats and Pantaloons. lam at Aguas Calientes, the famous Hot Springs of Mexico, writes Frank Carpenter in the Courier-Journal. It is Altogether different from an American health or summer resort, aud it might be bodily transplanted to the soil of West ern India and not seem out of place. Aguas Calientes contains about 40,000 people, and nine-tenths of the houses are one-story. They all have flat roofs, and the water is drained off through pipes of clay, which jut out about a foot from the edge of the walls. These walls are very thick. They are built of stone or sun-dried brick, and are stuccoed where they face the street, and this plastering-liko stucco has been painted delicate blues, or pinks, or yellows, making the whole town one mass of rainbow colors, which, strange to say, does not look out ot place uuder this bright Mexican sun. None of these houses have gardens in front of them. They are built close up to the cobble stone sidewulks, so that, in going through the town, you seem to be pass ing between walls of gaily-colored bill boards, ready for the posters, each of which has a hole in its centre for a door. The poorer houses have doors very roughly made, aud iu the galloping mule street-car that takes you from the depot to the centre of the town, you see few houses with windows, and many of these doors are filled with queer looking dark-faced people. The men in their red and gaily colored blankets look picturesque, and the women, with their dark, mahogany faces, their long black hair streaming down their backs, freshly wet from their last bath in the hot waters, are, in some cases, very pretty, and in others as ugly as the Witch of En dor after au attack of the smallpox. As you leave the station you pass the public bath-bouses, low Spanish build ings, where you tan get for from twenty to thirty cents a bath of any kind you want, and go on up a long, "dusty thor oughfare, under wide-spreading green trees, into the business part of the city. The business of this city of 40,000 peo ple is a fair sample of that of the inte rior Mexican town. It is big only in the prices asked for the articles sold. Mex ico it) not a great business country. The most of the firms are run on small capital, and there arc hundreds of stores which have not more than S2OO worth of stock. Many of these hero have even less, and the storekeeper, in the majority of in stances, has a little cave of a store, with out any windows, opening out on the street, and he stands behind a counter which runs right across the store in front of the door, and offers his goods for sale for three times what ho expects to get. In the case of the smaller busi nesses tho trader is generally a Mexican, and there are more peddlers in one city in this country than you will find in ten cities of the same size of the United States. I have jnst come from the market. Imagine a long tier of stalls, around two hollow squares, which cover the area of a city block. These stalls are occupied by the butchers, and bakers and the candlestick makers, who have the big gest stocks, and the squares are filled with the big-hatted men in white cotton clothes, and by red-skirted women in white waists and red skirts, who sit un der whito umbrellas as big as the top of a small camping tent, with little piles of vegetables and fruit around them. I asked as to prices and found that thiugs were sold in piles and not by measures. 60 many little potatoes made up a pile, and I was asked two cents for four pota toes, each of which was as big as a buckeye. A pile of four eggs costs here three cents, and a little pile of tomatoes and peppers was among the things sold. Peppers, both green and red, were sold everywhere, and I saw that some of the bigger market men had great bins of them. They form a part of every Mexi can dish and are eaten in great quanti ties. Tho average Mexican, however, eats very little in comparison with us. Ills market bills are not half as heavy as thoso of his American brother, and a sewing basket would contain the daily supply for a large family. The cheapest thing sold seems to be fruit, which grows in the shape of oranges, bananas and lemons, very abundantly about here, and I got splendid oranges for a ceut apiece. About this market the Mexican ped dlers had collected themselves by the dozens, Ilere was a woman with two freat jars of what looked like very thiu uttermilk before her. Bho was selling it in glasses which held from a half-pint to a pint, to tho passers by, at one and two cents a glass. I asked what it was, and was told that it was pulque, the Mexicau beer, which comes from a species of cactus, and which is drank by the barrel every day throughout Mexico. At the corner beside her, before a caso which looked like a book-cuse, stood a shoe-peddler. His stock was made up of shut ped-toed gaiters, aud by actual count he had only twenty pairs to sell. A little further on a yellow-faced woman in her bare feet sac, with ten pairs of baby shoes beddo her. This made up tho whole establishment, and around the corner 1 found a very pretty Aztec maiden sitting on a stool and rolling black tobacco into cigarettes. The paper she used was thicker thun the newspaper in which this letter will be printed, and she doubled tho paper over the cigarettes at both ends to make it stay together. Near the market I found a few very fair stores, but they would be small affairs in a town of 40,000 in New York or Ohio, and a Western city of 10,000 could show many finer. The counters ran across the whole front of the store, and only the biggest of them had show windows. The dry goods stores con tained chiefly French goods, and the merchants were in most eases French or German, though I found some of them Mexicans. I stopped in front of n hat Btore which had a most gorgeous display in its windows and priced some som breros. They "ranged from a dollar up to Beveuty-five dollurs apiece, and I am told that some of these Mexican dudes wear hats that cost more than one hundred dollars. Some of the hats were trimmed with gold and silver cord, and I looked at a fifty-dollar one which weighed about ten pounds and which measured eighteen inches from one side of the brim to the other. It had a crown a foot high, and there was a cord of gold rope as big as my wrist around it. Many of the ha's had gold and silver letters upon them, and I saw many worn which have tho monograms of their owners cut out of silver and sewed to the sides. They are of many colors—a delicate cream, a drab and a black being very common, and they are beautifully made and are said to be just the thing for this hot sun and high winds. The same firm sold ladies' hats. Most of these came from Paris. They were very high-priced and not at all pretty. Near by I stopped at a Mex ican clothing store and looked at some Mexican pantaloons. I here, again, found that the dude of our sister Republic has to pay for his style. Many of the pantaloons were made of buckskin, and the nicest paii, which were lined with solid silver buttons down the sides, cost as high as fifty and seventy-five dollars, and coats are likewise high. It is not hard for a Mexican country gentleman to spend from three to four hundred dollars on his clothes, and when you take into con sideration that he has to sport a saddle, spurs and revolver of like gorgeous character, you sec that if one of these big farmers has a crowd of grown-up boys his clothing bills amount to some thing. This, however, is the case with only the rich. The poor here are so poor that they don't know how poor they are, and their clothes cost practically noth ing. A pair of these cast-oti buckskin pantaloons will last a long time, aud the ordinary cotton suits worn by the poor, though high considering their character, cost but little. A blanket costs from a dollar or two up, and the leather sandals which are worn almost universally by the Indians, are nothing more than two pieces of sole leather as big as your band tied to the top aud bottom of the foot with leather strings. These cost twenty live cents apiece, and Inst a long time. The dressof the poorer women is even cheaper than that of the men, and Mex ico's nine millions of peasants will have to make more money and have greater needs before the land can become n great cousumer of the goods of any nation. Their houses are hovels of mud, and their diet is simpler than their clothes, consisting of little more than corn-cakes aud red peppers. The National Dead. It costs the United States about sixty cents a mouth to take care of a dead sol dier who losthis life in the service. The sundry civil bill passed by Congress at its last session appropriated SIOO,OOO for expenses for the natioual cemeteries dur ing the fiscal year. In addition to this there was the sum of $76,000 set aside for the salaries of superintendents of these burying grounds, and there were also sonic odds and ends, amounting to several thousand dollars, for supplying headstones where they were lacking, and so forth. The government takes charge of all these cemeteries, which are uuder the direct control of the quartermaster-gen eral of the army. There are eighty-two of them in all, including an aggregate of 327,000 burials. The smallest of the burying grounds is at Ball's Bluff, where twenty-live Federal warriors ure in terred, only one of them identified. The next smallest is the old battle ground on Seventh street, this city. It would be much cheaper to remove the bodies rest ing at both these places to other loca tions, but sentiment accords to them a claim to remain where they fell in brave fight. So, although only forty-three arc buried at the battle-ground, a superin tendent is maintained there in charge at a salary of S6O a mouth and with a house free for his occupancy. The superin tendents, as decreed by law, are all dis abled veterans, none others being eli gible for the positions, and their pay is, according to the size of the cemeteries they have charge of, S6O, $65, S7O and $75 a month. Thus they are divided into four classes. The biggest of the eighty-two national cemeteries are at Andersonville, Ga.,with 13,702 dead; Arlington, Va., with 10,- 350; Chalmette, La., with 12,020; Chat tanooga, Tenn.,with 13,023; Fredericks burg, Va., with 15,273; Jefferson Par racks, Mo., with 11,047; Antietam, Md., with 12,139; Marietta, La., with 13,- 982; Nashville, Tenn., with 10,537; Salisbury, N. C. f with 12,132, and Vicks burg, Miss., with 10,020. Of the 327,- 179 interred, 178,225 arc known and unidentified. About 9,300 of the entire number are confederates.—[Detroit Free Pre ss. Alligator Products. Besides the hides of the alligator, of which fifty thousand or sixty thousand are annually utilized in the United States, there are other commercial products obtained. The teeth, which are round, white and conical, and as long as two joints of an average linger, are mounted with gold or silver, and used for jewelry, trinkets, and for teething babies to play with. They are also carved into a variety of forms, such as whistles, but tons and cane handles. This industry is carried ou principally in Florida. Among tho Chinese druggists, as stated in tho Journal of the Sjciety of Arts, London, there is a great demand for alligators' teeth, which ure said to bo powdered, and administered as a remedy. As much as a dollar apiece is paid by them for fine teeth. All the teeth of the alligator are of the class of conical tusks, with no cutting or grinding apparatus; au years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac tions, and financially able to carry out auy ob ligations made by their firm. West & Tkuax, Wholesale Druggists, Tole do, O. Waldino, Kinnan & Mauvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. llah's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 76c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. The Mafia and the vendetta is the nation al fadiion of {-icily. FITL' stopped free bv Dn. Kline's Uhbat jikrvc Kkstoukk. No fits after first day's uso. Marvelous cures. Treatise and £2 trial'bottle free. Dr. Klin©, ¥3l Arch St.. Phila.. Pa. On moving day in Chicago 13,000 homes were chunged. Weak and Wear? In early summer tho warmer weather Is espe cially weakening an'T enervating, aud "that tire I feeling" 1 very prevalent. The great benefit whle people at this season derive from Ho > L's rilla proves that this medicine "mokes tho weak ttrong." It does not act liko a stimulant, Impart ing fictitious Btreugth, but Hoot's Harsa;will * builds up In a perfectly natural way all the weak ened parts, purities the blood, creates an appetite. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all druggists. $1; six foe Froparai only LyC. 1. HOOD *0O„ Lowell, A ass. 100 Dos is One Dollar EveryMot^ Should Have It In Tho Honqe. Dropped on Sugar, Children Lore to take Johnson's ANor vh Liniment for Croup, Colds. Sore Throat, Tonsillli*. >llc, Cramps and Pain*. He lieves Hummer COMPLAINTS, Cut*, Bruises like tuogk-. THINK OF IT. In nse over 40 YKAIIH In one family. Dr. I. 8. JOHNSON A Co.— lt Is sixty years SINCE I first learned ef your Johnson's anodyne I.immekt; for MORE than forty VEURIL hare used it In my family. 1 regard it as one of the best and safeet family remedies that cam be found, I| Internal or external, in all eases. O. II INO ALLS, beacon 2nd baptist Church. Bangor, MR Every Sufferer IS TOUN Headache, Diphtheria.Coughs, Catarrh, Drotichilis. Asthma, Cholera Morhns, Diarrhoea, !.u mentis, Soreness in Body or Limbs. Htltf Joints or Strains, will find iu this old Anodyne relief nnd speedy cure. Pamphlet free. Hold everywhere. Frteo x> eta., by inall. • buttles, Express paid, 1. 8. JOHNSON &. CO., BOSTON. Mas* HAY FEVER SRLMLSS dress of every sufferer in the O ACTUM A U.S. and Canada. Address, FIT no I Mm A p. Ht>u eijw, * j., IAFCI*, it. Ml R VDLI <> >n tvnnt a Wnteh t WAI UHi vsvlMsf.hl.TMSAx! Alliance, O., for 4 mos. Trial Subscription. Hie best Semi-monthly Story I'aper published. It will also tell how to eitrn the WATCH en-ily. FRAZER a A * L s | BEST IN THE WORLD k C W~ Get the Genuine. Bold Everywhere. WEAK, •> MI volts, Wiuctciikd mortals got TSrImK well and keep well. Health Helper tells how. SO eta. A year. Sample copy free. Dr. J. 11. I> YE. Editor. UuTalo. N. Y. ■ ■ B A litu r Kn'.t Tt>niie"c'ii FINE All s tU v r->/ "JVmaybetrue whahsome men say. Itrnaun say.** fUBUQAePIHIOH Sekpolio.-- * IHs a solid cake op%courin£ soap— For many years SAPOLIO has stood as the finest and best article of this kind in the world. It knows no equal, and, although it costs a trifle more its durability makes it outlast two cakes of cheap makes. It is therefore the cheapest in the end. Any grocer will supply it at a reasonable price. J V J STRICTLY HIGH GRADE IN : I > 'ULAR.WT J I , •,/ °l?y u \■ ' : '- 7 Send six cents in stamps lor 01 itiiogue cf |1 I 3 ' Revalvcrs ' S P ' . I Kii.rf. etc.K !L T^^VT^ * T 'J; " 1 OXB ENJOYS Both tbo method and results when SyrupofFigs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. By run of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in ita effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles bv all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO SAM FRANCISCO, CAL. UUISVILLE, Kr. SEW YORK, N.Y. "German Syrup" " I have been a gTeat Asthma. sufferer from Asth ma and severe Colds every Winter, and last Fall my friends as well as myself thought because of my feeble condition, and great distress from constant cough ing, and inability to raise any of the accumulated matter from my lungs, that my time was close at hand. When nearly worn out for want of sleep and rest, a friend recommend ed me to try thy valuable medicine, Boscbee's German Gentle, Syrup. I am con fident it saved my Refreshing life Alraost the first Sleep. dose gave me great relief and a gentle re freshing sleep, such as I had not had for weeks. My cough began immedi ately to loosen aud pass away, and I found myself rapidly gaining in health and weight. I am pleased to inform thee —unsolicited —that I am in excellent health and do cer tainly attribute it to thy Boschee's German Syrup. C. B. STICKNEY, Picton, Ontario." ® pRTOBUVS UNEXCELLED! APPLIED EXTERNALLY Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains In the Limbs, Back or Chest, Mumps, Sore Throat, Colds, Sprains, Braises, Stings ol Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNALLY It net* like n eltnrin lor Cliolrrit Morbun, Diiirrhirn, Dysentery. Colic, Crump*, Nau sea, tSick Headache. A c. Warranted perfectly linrmle**. (Heeonth nccoiiipn living null Unfile,