IRA Ii BAKE, Editor Aia Pbopeietcb SUBSCRIPTION BATES. One Year, cash in advance, .,$1.25. SlxHonlhe, cash in advance 75 Cents. Kntored at theKortbPlatte(Nebraska)potofflceai seoond-cl ef matter. ..TUESDAY. DECEMBER 1. 1896. Russia and Chili are about to inike a change from the silver to -the gold basis. Both countries Tikve experimented with the silver ' basis and found it unsatisfactory. "VTttf r.nhan insurrection has al- ady added a half billion dollars to '.gain's -debt and is increasing that "if7U--.n . a i -if- ,dbt-atbe rate of t welve millions a month. Spam is playing a losing game all around, for her chances of not the sijgktest change in his ex subduincrthe Cubans is anything ression was visible. He was silent but bright. v Ex-president Harrison is men tioned in connection with the ap pointment of embassador to Eng land. Should Harrison accept the appointment his utterances will be vastly different from the anti American speeches of the present embassador, Mr. Bayard. DeMOCRATic papers in Indiana are quite jolly over the fact that Mc Kiilley's plurality in the state is only 18.622. Harrison carried Indiana in 1888 by 2348. and Garfield in 1880 by 664L In 1876. 1884 and 1862 it went democratic. The plurality this year is a landslide for Indiana, "With the revenues of this gov- ernment running from $30,000,000 to $50,000,000 below its expenses, said Speaker Reed the other day, we can never expect to hold up our heads amonsr solvent nations." This would be a good thing for President Cleveland to talk about in his forthcoming message. The Chicago Tribune figures .'out that McKinley's popular plur ality is 935,000, without considering ithe 110,000 woman votes, cast in Xthree states, as these would defeat a. fair comparison with former ;tables. But. of course, all legal Votes must be counted. The plur- ality breaks the record in any case, Bryan might have obtained the 25, 0U0- votes required to give him millions and for weeks his sufier the closer states, and yet the major- ings were beyond description. I had m uuti tiip lj w w.v, WW--. existing sound money majority or forty-seven. This would have been ,an extraordinary circumstance, but such thiugs are apt to be met with -when facts are abandoned for an analysis of what never happened. The gain in bank clearances last week over the same week last year .was seven per cent. This is a true index of the steady increase in bus iness. The increase the second week in November was one and one-tenth per cent, nine per cent the third and seven per cent the fourth. The gold reserve last Sat urday was uptoS130,000,000, again of $16,000,000 since election. The total amount appropriated for the benefit of the Indians for the fiscal year 1897 is $7,189,496. In nthpr words, the irovernment is to expend nearly $6U0,0U0 .per month for their support and education and in payment of various treaty claims and interest on trust funds. It is to.be hoped that this liberal outlay .' is fully justified by the results in the interest of civilization, saysvthe -Globe-Democrat; but there are those ' who doubt, nevertheless, in the . light ot known facts, if the policy thus representea is woriu. us nmtii -as It COStS. The clerical force in the office of the Secretary of State completed -the tabulation of returns on the amendments Friday. The highest berof judges of the supreme court and their term of office, this vote being 84,579 for and 37,896 against, Themallest vote was polled on the amendment relating to merging of government of cities of metro- pohtan class and government or counties wherein locatea.wnicn was ' 56.960. The canvassing board has declared all the amendments de feated, as they did not receive a majority of all votes cast. Mr. Bryan's shrewd wire-pulling which succeeded in nominating him for the presidency and securing the nonnhst endorsement has aroused rthe antagonism of both factions of the newly-born popocracy.now that the extent of his "smooth" work is f ullv appreciated by his '-dupes, savs an exchange. Speaking of the possibilities of the next great fi.rhr Senator Butler chairman ot the national committee, says: "We take the liberty of serving notice on Mr. Bryan that if he desires to head the reform forces of the people- '""""party -in the next campaign he -fWust do" so under some other name than that of democrat. The v name has become a reproach and a. stench among the people, and it will not be supported any more, : now or hereafter We are --done with them now and forever." It iwill require four years of the hard iest work the defeated condidatehas ever known to reconcile his late -supporters and make possible his nomination in 1900. which some of """5more blindly ardent admirers arealreadv advocating. Unless ap ' pearances"are-unusually deceptive Mr. Bryan is politically dead past resurrection. THE PRESIDENTIAL PRIZE. What Six Executives Are Said to Have Told an Englishman. It was my good fortune to be vis iting at the bouse of a man -when he received news of his election to the presidency. To my young mind the mere thought of such high honor was bewildering; I could not picture how I would act in such circum stances. But I did have a vague no tion that a man at such a time would Jicfc in "dramatio" fashion, call to the gods for aid, ask high he&ven to witness his gratitude, register his vow of loyalty to duty and Deity. Here, then, was an oppor tunity to test my theory, and I awaited results with keen anriety. We were at oreaKiasc wnen iuo ituu- gram arrived. His wife tore it open and, her voice all in a tremble , read "You are elected beyond the shadow & J fl ologey flt fche . Not a musole moved: for a few seconds, and then, as ne broke open an egg, ho quietly ob served, "Mother, that egg would suffer no injury if kept another year." Really, I was tempted to throw my cup of coffee at him, his levity seemed so sacrilegious. I hated him because he was so lacking in human nature. Half an hour later I was passing the stables. Looking in, I saw the "cold blooded" presi dent elect standing by the sido of bis favorite horse. One arm was thrown over its neck, his faco was buried in the mane, and his wholo frame was convulsed. That very human sido of his nature which he kept out of sight, oven when sur r0unded by his own family, ho had revealed to his dear old horse. As I passed on I realized that my boy- hoofl idol as agaiu on itg olll pea. 8Sai an knew that the making of a president had not, in this case, been the unmaking of a man. Let mo close with this one page irom Garfield's life. He had won the great prize. Three months o bitter strife with politicians over spoils of office followed his inaugura tion and exhausted the little store of nervous energy which remained after a long and exciting eleotoral campaign. Best was an absolute necessity, and ho started on a brief holiday a visit to his alma mater, in the New England hills. Smiling as walked into tho railway sta- tion at a witty speech of his friend Blaine, he fell mortally wounded at .the hands of a Halt crazea assassin. xuey carried him to tho White House the political Mecca of many a menu wno was with him from first to last, and ho gave me this lit tle picture of tho closing days of Garfield's life. Suffering bred fever, and fever revived his old love of the sea. Ho begged to bo carried to the Atlantic, and his wish was law One morning my friend, at Gar- fioirJ'a rprmpsfc. lifted him so that , - mi ht tako inavvider sweeD 0f tho old Atlantic. And my friend held in his arms tha wasted fisuro of his old friend he told the president how the whole nation was also looking toward the sea, ye3, and praying that God would help and bless their ohiof magistrate. Garfield pressed the hand of his friend and whispered: "He has blessed me. Could man ask more than suoh lovo and sympathy from stick a neople?" A few hours ater tho president had put aside forever place and power paid with bis life tho awful .price of success. The prize is great; the prize win ners aro tho envy of the many. But I have it on the word of six presi dents of the United States that even the winning of this great prize in tho lottery of life but throws into. olearor relief the groat truth, "What shadows we are, and what shadows 0 pUrSnQ?" Fortnightly Beviow, 1 A Coffee Till. Take a mil from your Docket, drop 4fc in n nnn Qf hot Wnt0r and in tho twinkling of an eyo have coffee as u k ag Lat flnd ng gt as a poroherons. That sounds like an apocbrypbal tale, but it is true. This new prep- aration of caffeine, which is to do away with all tbo boiling and olari- tying and fuss which make tho cof- fee barely worth while, has just Deen discovered by two German 0hemists. if their expectations are realized, tho making of coffee will bo simply tho matter of a compound pellet containing tho coffee ingredi ents, along with tho milk and sugar. This is only one of the almost in, credible triumphs of German chem istry, which has already produced a quinine whioh cannot be distin guished, so far as therapeutic quali ty goes, from tho original article. New York Journal. I Aa Optimist Hotel Keeper. Hotel Keeper What did tbe-stran- I ger say -vvhen you gavo him the bill? Waiter Suoh monstrous prices he never saw. We were an abominable gang of thieves. Hotel Keeper Good. So he didn't become abusive, then? Fliegende Blatter. Another Sherlock Holmes. "I don't see how-you got on to me, ' 'said the bunko man sadly. "I've gone and wasted a whole summer growing these whiskers and getting the tan for this farmer make up, and I get pinohed the minute I hit the town. How did you get on?" The great detective smiled (at the prisoner's expense, by the way. "I never knew a farmer to light a match on the sole of his hoot," he said. Indianapolis Journal. VICTIMS OF INDIGESTION. Bales That Have Been Tested Bad Pound to Bo of Service. The number of people afflicted with this peculiar and uncomfort able sensation after eating is by no means sman. it means umpiy un either because the person is fatigued Tl Tl - 4- I or ueuausu uiu xuuu is mumcauuiD i xi r j i t.j:nnt;i,in ' is or because the nervous system which controls the digestive processes is out of order the aot of digestion is either wholly arrested or is very improperly carried on. People trou bled in this way can observe two or three plain rules which will entirely prevent the difficulty and will be of great benefit to their general health. First, eat nothing until there is a positive appetite for food. It will be far better to skip one's dinner en tirely, and far les3 injurious to the general health, than to eat when weary, when oxoited, when nervous or when the appetite is not present. If great hunger comes on in the middle of tho afternoon, an apple or a piece of bread and butter will have a relish and flavor undreamed of under ordinary ciroumstances, and will prevent the faintness which might ariso heforo the regular hour for a nourishing supper. Second, eat somothing which re quires considerable chewing, espe cially at tho beginning of a meal. This involves tho nso of dry food, but it does not mean the entire ab sence of liquids from the meal. Tho reason why food that has to ho chewed is valuable is because in the process of mastication a large amount of saliva is secreted and this j is an important factor in digestion. If liquid is desired at mealtime, it is not likely to do great harm if it is not too cold, proyided it is not swallowed at the same time the dry food is put in the mouth. Tho man who washes down each mouthful of bread with a swallow of milk, toa or coffee has no saliva mixed with his food ; whereas, if he thoroughly masticates his mouthful of dry food, swallows it and then takes hi3 swal low of milk, ho will interfere far loss with tho proper processes of di gestion. Dr. J. H. Kellogg has made some interesting experiments showing the amount of saliva seoreted by the glands of tho mouth whilo dry food is being ohewed. A piece of paraffin ohowed for five minutes produced two-thirds of an ounce of saliva, one ounce of granose a dry food pro pared from wheat inoreased in weight to two ounces, one ounce of bread ohewed for five minutes caused tho production of ono ounce of saliva, and ono ounce of raw apple produced an ounce and a quarter. Third, eat digestible food only. Digestible food is a variable- term, and is determined by tho individual. Articles whioh are perfectly harm less for one individual are very se rious hindrances to tho physical well being of another. Experience is the chief guide, and when articles of food causo distress and seem to hurt you tho part of wisdom is to let them alono. Philadelphia Rec ord. Shedding Its Shell. Odd as it may sound to say so, tho lobster grows before, not after, he casts his old hard shell that is to say, he makes new cells and tissues, whioh aro not at once filled out, but which aro intended to swell to their full dimensions as soon as he has got rid of his binding and .confining external skeleton, when tho critical moment at last arrives, a new soft shell grows entire within the older and harder one, and the animal then Withdraws himself, leg by leg, ClaW by olaw, and swimmeret by swim - merer, out of tho enveloping coat of mail which covers him. The shed- elms of the old coat is complete and absolute. Not a fragment remains; even tho apparently internal hard portions are cast off with tho rest, i for the entire covering forms one continuous piece, the interior por-; tions being really, so to speak, folds of the skin inserted inward. ! An entirely now skeleton bad al- ready grown within the old one, but exceedingly soft and flexible, in tex ture, and the body becomes so almost fluid or jellylike not in structure, but in power of compression and ex- tension that ovon tho big olaws aro drawn out through the narrow apertures of tho joints in a perfectly marvelous manner. After a longer or shorter period of muscular par oxvsm. the soft lobster at last dis- engages itself entirely from tho dead shell and emerges upon the world a new and defenseless fleshy creature. Tho whole cask skeleton, unruptured in any part, but disengaged by lift ing up the body piece where it joins tho tail, looks exactly like an entire dead lobster. Longman's Magazine. Sixes and Sevens, "At sixes and sevens" is an expres sion borrowed from the old time needle makers. When needles were finished, they were thrown into a box and afterward sorted out by boys and girls into sizes. Six and seven were the most common sizes, and as the neodles lay irregularly, to be at sixes and sevens was expressive of hope less confusion. "What is a Guarantee? It is this. If you have cough, .or n co', a tick iug in tbe throat, which keeps you constantly coughing, or if iu are trnuhl d with any chest, throat or lung trouble, whooping cough &c, anJ ou use Bllard' Horehound Syrup as directed giving it a fir trial and no benetit ip experiencd we authorize our idvertized agent to refund your jnoney on reurn of bottle. It never fails to give satisfaction. It -promptly relieves '.mnchits. Prico 25 and 50 cents. h- 'orth Platte Pharmacy, J. E. Bush, Mgr. 1 HOXIE'S DEFEAT. Ho Had Kot Prepared For Sucli s Tor rent of Questions, -r Hoxie had never in his life been on the witness stand, but he made it his boast that if he ever chanced to bo thus situated he'd just like to EQQ thQ ljnvyer conld rartle Lim inhi3 testimony. He fancied, did in ins testimony Hoxie, that ho would prove more than a . matoh for the lawyer who chanced to tackle him. Tho other day Hoxie had a ohance to utterly rout and defeat one of these "little shyster lawyers, "as ho called them, for Hoxie was called to testify. "What is your name, sir?1' thun dered the big, eagle eyed lawyer who was to question Hoxie. "William Henry Hoxie." "What? Speak up so you can bo heard four feet from tho witness stand, can't you?" "William Henry Hoxie." "What is your business, sir?" "I am a bookkeeper." "A what?" "Bookkeeper." "Well, now, Mr. William Henry Hoxie, bookkeeper, I want to know what you know about this case. I want you hat wait a moment. Have you ever served a sentence in tho state prison?" "No, sir!" "Well, are you the William Henry Hoxie who was tarred-and feathered and run out of the state of Ohio six years ago next month? Now think before you answer. Bo careful, bo careful." "No, sir; I'm not," "Didn't yon, William Henry Hoxie didn't you elope from In diana in tho spring of 1890 with an other man's wife?" "I I tell you" "Bo careful, bo careir', now. Re member that you're under oath and a stenographer is taking down every word you say. Have .a care!" "I never oloped with any man's wife," gasped out Hoxie. "Didn't, eh? And you never served a sentence in tho Iowa peni tentiary for pu-jury? Bo careful, "I I oh I" "There, there, my good friend; don't lose your head. You didn't have to leave the town of Pokoville in Illinois in 18S6 for beating your wife and cruelly abusing your chil dren, did you? There, now; just keep cool. Will some one hand the witness a elass of water? He seems to be choking. Now, my good man, will you say yes or no to my last question, not forgetting that you are under oath to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth? Now, how is it about that wife beat ing business?" "It ain't true, and I" "That will do, that will do. Now will you have the kindness, my good fellow, to faco -the jury and toll them if you were not arrested and convicted as a bigamist in the east ern part of Pennsylvania a few years ago? .Remember that much depends on your reply and have a care, have a care. Perjury, my friend, is a very serious offense and you aro un der oath. Nothing but truth will do here. Be very careful or why, tho man has fainted. Could more conclusive evidence of his guilt be asked? And js the word of a con fessed bigamist of any value in this or in any other, court? I ask the court if this man's testimony is worthy of any weight whatever, No, it is not. And as ho is the ohief witness against my client, tho de fendant in this case, I ask and de mand that tho case bo dismissed at. once." Dutroit Free Press. One Tomlutono For Four. ! Last winter, whilo wandering , through the rural districts of south Georgia, I ohanced upon a family : graveyard, in Telfair county, of unique character. There were three graves sido by side. The central ono was marked by a head and foot board, made of thin slabs of marble. The headboard, divided into three divisions, was engraved as follows: Tho first, or top, division, "John Allen, a Just Man." The second division was engraved, "First Wifo," . The third division was sirajlar to the second, only the hand pointed to the grave on John's right, and was ensraved, "Second v ifo. ' These three completed the legonds on tho headboard immortalizing John Allen as a justman. Tho hasty reader may think John Allen had better written "a frugal man." Again, the footboard for the fathor is made a headboard for tho son by I engraving on it, "Son." I havo given things as they actually exist, except that the name of John Allen is substituted for tho real. Nash ville Banner. Mnrrow With. Cheese. .1 Beef marrow is appreciated by few cooks save be English, and still it may be put to various uses in making palatable dishes., put into slices, boil in salted, water, drain and dip in - grated cheese and bread crumbs, place on a tin plate and pur in tho oven until'the cheese i melt-" ed. Servo on slices of toast or on heated plates with slices of lemon. Pittsburg Dispatch. Startled tho Prince. Tho late prince consort recalled with amusement the first timo he pverheard tho queen called by tho homely title 'of "wifq." "How's vour wife, prince? How's your wife, oh?" exclaimed fin pld. counr . ii 1 try gentleman at an pgncuirurai show as he seized, and shook the prince's hand. The young husband was surprised, but ho was pleased, too, with the good, old Yorkshire man's simplicity. PONY EXPRESS RIDING. A Veteran of tli Pioneer Mail Service "of the Plains Telia About It; "There has been a great, deal of glamour and romance thrown arpund the pony express business in the davs before the advent of shoraii- rrvirlq " snirl T. R- Miller, ono of the corps of riders who carried tho mail nnrnsq r no mains in iooc. uu j mo re in an ce i fact is there was little about it and very -little else hut hard work. "I commenced to ride for the ex- - . j. i nress company in lbob, wnen xuu route was laid out and the company organized, and continued to riao un til Butterfield came up and toot tno contract and the telegraph lino was built. My route was from Egan can yon to Antelope Springs, Nev. The riders had to ride from GO to 80 miles. On my section I had two relays and used to make tho trip m from six to eight hours. There was always nioro or less danger from the Indians, but when we met them wo cither ran - ji awav from tnem, crawieu arounu them or fought. The danger has been ereatlv magnified The coun try was so big and the number of In dians so comparatively small that we had to run into a band before there was any serious danger, and then one white man was as good as ten of them. "Our stations were not fortified at all. They were log cabins or sod houses, with three or four men in eaoh, and though they were burned over and over again, they were re built immediately and no serious loss or inconvenience to the service was occasioned. "Wo knew just when to expect the rider from the next station, and the horses wero always ready, so that all we had to do was to change tho mail from one horse to another, and wo wero off. It was the same at the relav stations. Tho horses wero al ways ready, and tho only delay was , in taking a drink of water or a cup . of coffee, and tho mail was on its way. "It was simply hard riding, a cool head and a keen eye that wero re quired. Once in awhile tho men wore caught. I havo a scar or two myself to remember the Indians by, but on the whole the danger was not excessive, and as for romance there was nothing of it. In 18G1 the In dians were speoially troublesome, and some hard fights resulted, but as they never remained long in the same placo they could not do a very great deal of harm. "The first trial of tho pony ex press was tho delivery of Buchanan's messfirro in tho snrine of 1857. Our f, company, which had the route from St. Jo, via Salt Lako City, was tho one which was- afterward operated by Ben Holliday. Butterfield's route was through Arizona. We had the common mountain ponies, and But terfield had high bred horses. Wo took tho message right through, and when Butterfield arrived at Mohave ho found tho messago coming back from San Francisco. Butterfield ran tho southern route until 18G0, when ho pulled off and established a line of coaches from St. Jo to ban Fran cisco via Salt Lako. In 18G1 they commenced to build tho telegraph lines. "There was. always excitement enough in our work, and nearly all of us had narrow escapes of ono kind or another. Wo had to make time, to look out for Indians, and some times to lace with storms which were likely to bar our progress, hut all theso things soon became matters of course. We mounted our ponies and pounded away until wo reaohed our stations, and then lay down and waited until our timo caino next. It was hard work sometimes, and pleasant at others, very much tho same as tho other occupations of hu man existence. " Denvor Republic an. According to that well known nat uralist, Howard Saunders, wild hy brids between tho goldon eyo duck and tho smow havo been obtained. Wi&n$&., When .i woman nn- ally breaks tjpwn com- vJj" kx pletely jiives up the useless fight and goes to bed to die lur husband wakes up to a realization of Ins duties Women are proverbially careless of their health. They don't like to pay out money for medicine. The majority of women have some dis ease or disorder of the organs distinctly feminine. Eventually it will drive them to death or insanity unless it is cured, f here s a cure for such things. It is Dr. Perce's Favorite Prescription. Don't despair be cause doctors have failed. Don't think that a modest woman must be forced to undergo abhorrent local treatment. She can be cured right in the perfect privacy of her own home by that greatest of all great med icines, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Rev. I. T. Coprfze. of F.lnro, Kaufman Co, Texas wnte9: ''About six years ago ipy iic uc - caiafflictcdwith displacement. causing uiflam - nation and much pain '.!MBeM wt ed irreal pain, anc "ul"""J' n v-r at first seemeu 10 mane nrr m.. ..., 7 , , " cn cv t-Mit on till she had taken six bottles. Since .taking the last she has not ufTered a moment with the old trouble. She has been well nearly twelve month." rv. rv.m.nnn fn;f Medical Adviser." Dr. Pierce's 1000 page family doctor book ' with over 100 illutratious and colored plates, will be sent for a limited time. only. abssliitely free, paper-bound, on receipt of twenty-one cents n one -cent stamps to nay the cost qi mailing umy. jiumcw, ores?, hand- Dr. R. V- Pieree. Buffalo, N. Y. For some, cloth binding, send tt cepts thirty-one cents in all). UNWELCOME. . J on Lady Mary, from your - sonnd, t-oimu sleep.' - -What hm LrouKbt you. Lady Maryi.froro tho gravu ive dnp eo deep? . You have dono with mirth and laughtcr.-rWith. thlT tears that follo? after, - Auu -with us who laushand weep. vnh nnsf: mill vest- 11V J V " , With your beads ujxjn you? breast. Bo content: tako your rest, Lady Mary. Wo lef fc the black earth yinf: on your lips and We left your rose wreaths dying as low s ..t, own : And wo bade you softly slumber through the : lwu days time none may uumuer Till tho last of days shaU rise. - Eouud about in calm array : Tho dead await their day. --? Be content : do as they; Lady Hary. ;, rj ' Do yourhear tho church balteiringing aa on i mar riapo morns they rips? v ' Do yf u hear tho children singing as to greet a brido they sing? Never heed tho merry measure, for you drank your fill of pleasure; " " " And tho year has but ono spring. Very mirrow i3 tho bed. - 'Where now you lay your head.. :Bot tho dead suffico tho dead, v Lady 3Iary. : "' ' fl. C. 31. in Bookman. Concarneau. But tho sardinoopolis of Britanny is Concarneau, which lies ten miles south of Rosporden Junction, on the Orleans lino from Landornoau to Quimper. It is one of the most interesting places in the country. Tho old walled town is completely surrounded by water at high tide and communi cates by a bridge with tho newer town built round tho harbor. This harbor, when tho boats aro in, is a very beautiful sight. The sardine nets aro all hanging from tho masts to dry iu tho sun. Thoy aro so fino in texturo that they look irko silken gauzo. Some of them aro brown, others a delicate bluo gray, and as thoy wave in tbo wind they give ex quisite masses and Mendings of color. Sardine fishing and ail the proc esses of nrenaring and packing the i dainty little fish form a big industry which employs many thousands of men and women. It is a fino sight to see tho fleet of boats go out or como in when tho tido is up, 'but when tho tide is down there are cer tain drawbacks to Concarnoau. French harbors at low tido possess peculiar powers in tho way of smells. Indeed thoy aro absolutely unri valed in this respect. A harbor smell is large and powerful. Single handed it could put to flight all the smell ariny of Cologne. It is some thing you can almost soo, and you can certainly feel it. When you run up against it accidentally round a corner, you feel sad and go away and buy French caporal cigarettes to try and kill it. It's a sort of smell that you can hear trying to climb up the wall under your bedroom win dow at night, and you got out of bed hastily and try to push it off with a stiok, and you shut your win dow and use swear words. But we must console ourselves with the re flection that sanitary scienco and picturosquoness of old walled towns; and harbors do not go much togeth er. Wostininster Gazette. Peculiar Jiipnu. In some things tho Japanese point of view is very different from that of other countries. Tho track of the Kama-Kura railway is not fenced in, and crossings rarely havo gates. A boy, can-ring a child on his back, straying on tho line, was rccontly kuooked down by an engine, and both boy and ohild wore killed. Thereupon tho railway company prosecuted tho fathor for allowing hi3 children to trespass, and ho was fined 10 yen. Somo time ago at Osa ka a cow was run over, and tho own er was fined 200 yen besides losing his cow, Now York Tribune. There is a woll attested instanoo in England in which a robin formed such an attachment for two ladies that ho was in tho habit of accom panying them in their country walks. When thoy went to reside in another district, he took liis de parture with them, Hying along by tho side of tho carriage Mental Epidemic) Pint iind Present. In looking bade to tho mediseval. ages we find them to be times in -whioh abnormal social phenomena wero displayod on a grand scale times teeming with mobs, riots, re volts; with blind movements of vast human masses; with torriblo epi domics that ravaged Enropo from end to end. They were ages poculiar for tho strange, striking fact that Wholo cities, extensive provinces, groat countries, wore stricken by one disease, Mon went mad in paoks, by thethonsands. An obscure individual in somo remote country place had fits of hysterics', and soon all Europe was wriggling and strug gling in convulsions of hysterical insanity. Tho dark ages; were strango, peculiar so, at least, do thoy appear to us, who consider our selves vastly superior to, tho poor, ignorant medieval peasant, burgh or, knight, with their superstitious, re ligious fervor and recurrent opi- deinic insanities. I am afraid, how- ever, that a similar fato may over- xt r n fnt,,rn Mat.,, I ;t U M I I 4 II I 1 L V I I J Ii CM O.U&t.lX.U - L. J A. 1IIL1 bMMW MJ w r lookback to our own pimes witu tus- mav. and nerhans with horror? Ho : rr--. - i i j represent our ago as dark and j , , e flf tho Wind aenaele3s , IL IOVjAJ U tJ UUtu flios, ' The Landlady's Opinion. Old Boaider I understand madam, that our now associate at the festal d j Graduate of Eton f a graouate ci irou. Landlady Dou't tyou . b&lievo itl - He'll never graduate froiii eatin as Joug as fieres anything - to ' ahBoston A Guidebook Kcnd. how some of our country - 3Seein , Tieople comport themselves abroad, it i3 really Email wonaer xsonu tno English are so unpopular. I was at the Unurcn oi x.uuu uuis "du mass. By my side sat an English- man, ana m ins seuu m xxuxiu ladies accompanying mm. .aiter having amused himself by penciling: a little note and handing it across the pew to his companions, he delib erately produced his Baedeker and uerused it, from. timo. to time glancing at tno ameroui. x tures of .tho ohurch ..therein le- :-i a wiiof Tt sjvc. AvonldS be 2.1-r 4- nf o TV-rnnnhmnn "Who shQUid attend morning service' at .JVJst- minster auuuy im iuua m. with his Joannis Guide, and staring tiitout precisely as if he were in Epme pilDllO pjuuui:u jjaiioij - the kind of thing that does inqr to :giyo us a bad. namo than merepo litical offenses. Paris Letter yJ Deciding? Point. In the absence of the regular golf editor tho following question from a heginner was ref erred, tpthe turf editor for an answer: "In a game of golf is it right to fuzzle your put, or is it better to fetter on tbVtee?" The turf editor set his teeth firmly, stared hard at tho wall in front of him a few moments and wrote the following reply: "In case a player snaggles his iron it is permissible for him to fuzzle his put, but a bet ter plan would bo for him -to drop his guppy into the pringloand snoo dle it out with. a niblick. "Chicago Tribune. An amateur who undertakes to plaster his own house wilFhe aided by tho information' that 8 bushels of good lime, 16 bushels of sand and a bushol of hair will plaster. 100 square yards. . ' The first American railroad was laid in 1826. It was three miles long from the granite quarries of Quin- cy, Mass., to tho Neponset river. . v Charles III of France was in deri sion called the Simple, or tho Fool, on account of his stupidity v Onlyi J 2 days are required for mail to pass betweon-'Now Yorkrand Car tagena, in Colombia; , The different countries of the world now use 13, J00 different kind3 of postage stamps. v' . . Tho leaves of the common'clover often close upon tho approach Tof- a storm. 1. Mr. Frank B. Martiir, whb engaged in the jewelry business Vt926 Penn sj'lvania Avenue, Washington City, where he is well and favorably known, was a Victim of that -worst jform of dis ease contagious blood ' poison. He realized that his life Wn& about. to be blasted, for this "terrible diseaselias baffled the skill of the physicians.' for ages, and they have never yetljeen 'able to effect a cure- His njental despair can better be imaginedthan described. ... In a recent letter he say's: '.'"About four years ago I contracted 'a severe case of contagious blood poison, and it was not long before I was in a terri ble condition. I immediately placed myself under treatment of two of the best physicians in Washington city. Their treatment, which I tooktfaithr fully for sis months, cost me just three hundred dollars, and left me worse than when I began it. My condition can best-be appreciated, whectfstate that months. My entire pbdwv;a1cpyered with red blotches'iny h;an;a's$and- feet were sore" and my hair" was falling out rapidly. I was in ji truly pitiable condition. "I felt that I was incurable, and wasvin great despair, when a fidend recommended S. S. S., stating t it would certainly cure me. I began its use, and when I had finished the fourth j COitrse. iwas not sure-that I was cumd. ! but am now convinced, as no sijrn of the disease has ever returned for ! four years. S. S. S. is the best blood l m remedy in the world, and my cure was due solely and alone to it." Contagious blood poison is the most. Imrrihlft "of "Sill 'diseases. ttrttV Tins, hopn 7 , appropriately called the curse 'of raan- kind. T- has alwavs named flip Hnc- or a. a. o.. been Acur 'en after all other treatment failed. ' It is guaran- fpd- -niirplv vffttahl- and one thoti. , t - -o " . sand dollars reward is offered for proof 10 .xne contrary. 3. o. o. ueyer xaus to cure contagious blood. poison3 or any other disease of the blood If you have a blood disease, take a rem- 1 edv which will not iniure you. Be- Mvare of mercury;- don't do violence i to your sy ,0ur bo stem. ... i skin dis- hnnlra on 111001! und on'sPi--Trill n. tnn?1d -fret to nnv arl. 'rcs8w' Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Qa. Contagious Blood Poison Dottle, l began to improve, and by the time I had finished eighteen bottles, I was thoroufhlv rid of thf 1sfn.A nf