&ti- S .,- v,. N -, '7 f it PERSONAL AND UTEBABT. ' " Horrors oL Hotel Life' is the title of & book recently issued. Tea Garden is the name of ft strong and substantial citizen of Austin, Tex. Beecher's double, the man who goes to theaters and gets the Brooklyn pastor's name . in the papers, is John Wyman. Their resemblance is very striking. Brooklyn Eagle. "Camp Meeting" John Allen, c Wilton, Me., has read the Bible through and the New Testament half way again within four months, although he. ii eighty-three years old. Boston Post. Mrs. W. G. Noah, one of the great actresses of fifty years ago, who played rival engagements with Fanny Kemble, and supported the elder Booth and For rest, is still living in Rochester, N. Y. Rochester Express. Mississipplans feel very proud of their State .library in the capitol at Jackson. It core prises thirty-eight thousand volumes, which include the egal text-books ai.d reports from all ;he States in the Ur ion, making a col lection which r.inks third in cohiplete mess in the whole country. Chicago Herald. Charles Beach 6ays that ho once searched the pockets of Horace Gree ley's historic white coat, in which he found more than two hundred business cards, which had been given him from time to time during the many years he liad worn the coat He was not aware ihat there was a card about his clothes. Ar. Y. Herald. Tho last signature of Peter Cooper was on a postal card written by his secretary. it was aaaressea to a jrcntk-man in tho West, and stated that Mr. Cooper took pleasure in sending 4iim a copy of his work on the protec tive tariit. The card lay unnoticed on Mr. Cooper's desk for several days aft er his death, when it was mailed to the' "jMjrson for whom it was intended. N. Y. Mail. A Boston correspondent of the New York Graphic writes: "I doubt, too, if there is' another city in which avotnen have entered journalism in as large numbers as they have here. There is not a daily paper in Ihe city, and not a weekly of any importance that has not at least one woman, and, in several cases, two or three women on the staff as reporters, editorial tfvriters, critics or special writers." HUMOROUS. Leap-year parties arc popular in isonic sections. At theso gatherings tho irlsyell "rnouscl" and the young men jump on chairs and 6hriek. Detroit Free Press. A country girl, coming from the field, being told by her poetic cousin -that she looked as fresh as a daisy ikissed wita clew, said: "Well 'it wasn't ny fellow of that name; but it was Steve Jones that kissed me. I told h:m that every ono in town would find it out." Chicago Tribune A poet sings: "Let mo die when all is cold and drear.' Now is an exeel len season for the purpose, and the man who would interpose a single objection should bo severely talked to. If a poet wants 10 die when all is cold-and drear and we are not 'surprised that he should feel that way he should be en couraged in his laudable purpose. Ex change. Quite unsympathetic: Birdie Mc- il Icnnepin and her brother were at tiie iseashore: "O, see that!' exclaimed Birdie. "See what?" inquired the 'stoical John. "Why, see that little sioudlct just above the wavelet like a liny Jcaflct dancing o'er the scene." O. come, you had better go out to the -pumplet in the backyard let and soak your little headlet. Boston Tran- script. A. servant girl in New Haven stole 'her mistress' false teeth. The woman fold a policeman that "She sheesh cosh tshwenshy shollarsh, nnsh she shwash -vvosh sliusha wresh ashdo shtcesh fawshe .-Abeeth " "Wait till I lind an in terpreter," interrupted the policeman, ' thinking the woman was a newly ar rived Hungarian; but she was an Amer ican, and when her teeth were in she could talk the bead off him. New Ha ven Register. "Pa," said tho daughter of the house to the man of the house the other evening, "What are wo going to have for beakfast?" "I have ordered Lyon naise'tripe, my child." was the father's answer. "And where does that come from, pa? Does it come from an ani mal, or does it grow?" "It is taken from an animal, my dear." "Oh, I know, then" after a pause to think up lier natural history "then it is taken from lionesses, isn't it, pa?" Pa was weak enough to say "Yes." Lowell Citizen. A great, big, burly fellow stepped into the editorial rooms of one of our morning contemporaries yesterday and said: "I want to clean nut this olticc." "Wha what's the trouble now?" feebly asked the editor-in-chief, turn ing ghastly pale. "Nothing's the trouble. I will clean out the oitice and crub down tho stairs for one dollar." Then the editor's face resumed its natural color, and spitting half way across the room, he shouted: "Get out of here, you tramp, or 1 will spill you liead first into the waste basket" Ptiilatlclphiu Call. f m m Wanted His License Back. A gawky boy and a "gangling" srirl were roamed by an Arkansas masris- trate the other day, and shortly after wards the boy reappeared and said: " Squire, gimme back them license." -"I have cent them to the County Clerk's office where they propeily belong," the Justice replied. " I am mighty sorry, ur I want 'em jack." "What's the matter?" " Why. I don't intend to live with that gal. I never seed sich a crce- Hanson quiet; a lawyer wauted one Some women take a fiendish de tur, Jcdge. You see her daddy give hundred and fifty to see the thing light in placing a pieco of oil-cloth her a cow, an' this raornin' when I went', through; in two weeks he was shorn 01 j where their husbands are sure to step to milk the .blame th'ng, she kicke'd mo five hundred dollars when, recently, fhe on it in the morning, when they sprln heels over head. I wouldn ter minded woman herself lit out .Mr. Rouso calls out of bed, when the thermometer is ibis, but my wife stood thar an' upon the elements for justice, the law hovering about zero, and for a moment laughed fit ter kill lierselt, I thought bein unable to help him. Chicago the marrow-chilled man thinks he ha I was goin ter settle down in a li e oi love an' 'lasses an' all that, but the kick - 1: 1 o that cow opened my eyes. The Coun ty Clerk ken keep the papers if he wants to, but I wush you'd tell him the next time yer see him t at I'll be dad blamed if I'm goin' to live with thai iL" Arkansas Traveller. A Legend f Niagara. A great want has just been filled. Le gends about the Niagara Falls have Been so scarce that it will be a great re lief to many to know that a new one has bcen discovered. Not exactly 'new, either, for it is written on old parch ment, and must have been lying where it was found for many years; but, as it has just recently been discovered, it is to the present generation new. While shoveling snow from the steps of the Extortion Hotel just after the recent heavy fall the above-referrcd-to parch ment was found. The following is a free translation of its contents: John Jackson, a young man .of some pugil istic attainments, who dearly loved a handsome young lady in Buffalo, deter mined to take his darling to the Falls for a trip. Now, John, liko many other Buffalo young men, didn't know much about the outside world, and had never bcon warned to avoid the Niagara Falls trackmen. It was with a light heart that ho stepped from the train on that bright May morning, and with Angel.na Thompson hanging gracefully on his arm, started gaily for the great catar act little dreaming of the terrible fate that awaited him and that was destined to bring to so gloomy a close a day which seemed to have dawned the brightest of all the days of the year. The couple had gone but a few steps when they were accosted by a hack man, who said: "Have a hack, sir?" "No!" "Better take a hack. This is 4one ot the finest' and I'll drive you to all the points.of interest." "No; we will walk!" "What! Do you mean to say that you're going to make that young lady foot it over these rough streets? If I had as handsome a lady as you have I wouldn't be so penurious as to make her tramp around here and have sore feet for a week." Now John, as was formerly hinted, had some knowledge of the manly art. and the remark about penuriousness grated on his liner feelings. Angelina said: "Oh, nevermind him. John." But John's blood was up. So he put up his hands and gave the impudent hackman one in the neck. In an in stant they were surrounded. All the hackmen came to the rescue of their co laborer. Angelina screamed, and that made John nervous, and he could not attend to his counters and guards. The only faint made wag by Angelina, and the blows from wh-ps, fists and other missiles that rained on John from all sides made him retreat in dismay. And this, the day that opened so brightly, closed darkly, particularly in the re gion of John Jackson's eyes. But as he washed the blood from his face and tied Angelina's handkerchief around his throbbing temples, ho was heard to mutter: "iwdl be revenged!" Several weeks had passed. The cat aract was still doing business at the old stand, and waving on high its glorious plume of white spray. The hackmen were also at the old stand. The battle with the young Buffalo man had ceased to be a topic among them, and in the wild rush for worldly gain they hail al most forgotten the face of Jackson. A wild shriek pierces the morning air, and the train from Buffalo, with clanging bell and hissing steam, brings up at the depot John Jackson walks from the train. At his s'de is a person in female attire, but the person has not the hand some form and smiling face of Angeli na. The hackmen, in the aforesaid rush for worldly gain, do not recognize the man. "Have a hack, sir?" "No." "Better take a hack. It's fifteen miles to the Fails." "No; we will walk." "Oh, you're a pretty fellow to make that young girl trudge arouud " That was as far as ho got. Jack's arm had straightened. His fist had come in contact with the nose of the speaker. The noble form of tho hack man was groveling in the dust It was at this period ttiat tho conduct of the person in female attire became not ce able. There was no scream, and no body swooned, whilo the attitude as sumed was not a usual one for a lady. The hat dropped forward until it nearly Couched the no e. whilo tho fsts-very large ones for a lady were tightly clenched and the cloows-were drawn back in a Pat Rooney style, which plainly showed that their owner would put up with no nonsense. The other hackmen rushed to the rescue of their fallen companion, but tho first to arrive received such a sting'ng blow from John's com panion that he retired in dismay. The second was sim.larly dealt with, and he also to.k a back seat. In the mean time John was not idle. He kicked, thumped and otherwise maltreated his antagonist until he felt that the dishon or heaped upon him during his previous visit had been w.ped out. Then his companion took h s arm, and, looking up into his face with a sweet seaside musing smile, said: "Did you see me get away with that red-nosed coon what tried to interfere?" The loving couple went immed ately to a hotel, and shortly after they had disappeared through the doorway two young men came out. One of tlicm was John, while the other was a stranger, and carried a small bundle. Tho woman has never sinco been seen alive. Detroit Free Press. Mr. Anthony Rouse, of Chicago, advertised for a wifo, setting forth as inducements, a manly form and good bank account Mrs. "Hanson, a bloom ing widow, claimed the prize and got it Soon after marriage, Mrs. Ron-e said, M,r. Hanson felt a little hurt at her marriage to Mr. Rouse without being divorced from him; so Mr. Rouse paid one hundred dollars to get the divorce; fifty dollars more jvent to keep Mr. Hanson nuiet: a lawyer wauted one ... . - Herald. Dr. Edward H. Williams, of Phila delphia, is having built ou tne site of the old Williams mans'on at Wood stock, Vt, a library building as a me- , monal of Wiliiams.- his father, the late Norman . -Philadelphia Record. The Baths of Cauquodes Here I am among the Andes. I could not leave Santiago without visiting the celebrated Baths of Cauquedcs, the first lyllable of which word must be pro nounced like our English word "cow." At eight o'clock on a line morning how often journes begin on tine morn ings! I left by the railway, and at 11:15 we stopped to breakfast, ana very badly, at Rancdgua. The Chilians seemed to me to think more about gourds and tunas than about good meat In our two-hours-and-a-quarter journey we passed through much cultivation by irrigation, conducted from the many mountain streams. There was much cattle, and many horses were :; be seen scattered over the coun try, and some of these last were curi ously occupied in wading up the shal low courses of the water in search of some plant growing at the bottom, which they spied through the crystal liquid from time to time and then ducked, their heads to pick up great mouthfuls of it. Dry mud walls and houses appear on all sides, and the dust was abundant indeed. The corn har vest was going on, and the wheat was. being thrashed out on the thrashing- LJloor with horses. Round stones abounded everywhere, showing how the districts have been coursed by huge waters. The people looked rude and free: they wore ponchos, and goilerwas visible on many throats, the result (as in Switzerland) of drinking snow-water. When we came to the station for Cau quedcs, I took the ' coche' for the baths a distanco of seven leagues, which oc cupied us some two hours and a half, with one change o( horses. The teams consisted of four, and these were caught out grazing on the spot and harnessed before our eyes. They were excellent animals, though rough, and were har nessed abreast Our pace was excel lent but there was much delay before starting, and the same at the change. The dust was frightful, as it is all over such parts of Chili as I have visited: the nuisance of it ma be compared with that of the vile coal smoke on their railways; this last being a perfect poison in their magnificent air. At last we came to the baths, finely situated on the Cachapoal River, with dry mount ains atid the cactus all round. Tho spot is extremely rocky and pictur esque, and from the garden of the estab lishment the views are grand; one's im pressions being enhanced by the sense that it is the huge range of the Andes and no mere holiday river-rocks that are before you. The long backbone of the stream, as it winds its long way down from the Grand Cordillera, is particularly imposing. The torrent- rushes by the baths through a deep mountain gorge: all is on'a grand scale. The establishment is built in two principal quadrangles, with pleasant shady walks round. There are three springs cold, tepid and hot; and there are two properties in the water sulphurous and chalybeate. The baths are well frequented and well conducted. The grand range is not visible from the baths themselves, but by mounting a rugged rock, after cross ing a sufficiently impressive and danc ing suspension bridge, the glorious as piring peaks appear on the horizon. The colors on them of the sunsets are surpassing; and as you look upon the west side of the range thee shine full and uninterrupted, liven these districts are not free from shocks of earth uakes. I was startled at night by the shaking of my bed. and on waking and in stinctively calling out: "Quien es?' re ce'ved no answer. Then the city clock tolled two: and I knew that I had felt an earthquake; and the next day's paper gave the following short notice in Spanish, which I translate: "La-t night, shortly before two, a mild shock of earthquake was felt" No harm to any one this time and here I am again at Santiago. Cor. London Graphic. Better Beef and Mutton. At last there seems to be reason for hoping that breeders of beeves and sheep will turn from the alms and ways of brcedeis of porkers, and instead oi striving to produce the greatest quan tity of "tat, will aim to place before the meat-eating public the greatest possible amount of good, nutritious beef and mutton for a given outlay of food and time. Since the ' Tribune ca'.lcd at tention to the gross wastefulness of the old svstem a large number of newspa pers have followed its example. The Cleveland Herald says on this subject: "If it ever comes down to a genuine beef, not a carcass of fat, there is a show that the Devons will work them selves up to the point Those who saw the beeves after dressing at Chicago would hardly select a roast or round from one of them; the fat was so great tliat there was a great waste in the pur chased beef. We need a beef animal sonicth ng liko the hog of a few years since, a streak of lean and a streak of fat. The citizen does not want to buy tallow he cannot eat, but to get a good streak of lean he must buy the fat.' The movement in the direction of the production of mutton and beef, tender and juicy, yet free from masses of tal low, may' be hastened by offering special premiums, valuable enough to Le worth competing for, to breeders who s;iall at the fat-stock shows ex hibit those sheep and beeves which, when stripped of all superfluous fat shall show the greatest quantity and most nutritious and pa'atable quality ol flesh for the food and time given. It is not altogether unlikely that this would oring into greater prominence than they have ever enjoyed breeds of stock not now generally recognized as profit able meat-producing an-mals. What ever else might come from this, the consumer of meat would be tickled in taste and benefited in purse if not in health Chicago Tribune. .. . .. .1 ...I- X' - d'scovered the North Pole. Norristoicn Herald. -Mrs. Gordon, residing near Bluff ton, S. C, now 111 years of age. walks fnnr m!l.- to Hnrtakc of the monthly Lord's supper at the Baptist Church. Detroit lost, Abigail Adams. Abigail Adams, tho President's wire, jvas undoubtedly tiie most conspicuous woman of her day, whether by position or by character. When writing to her husband she often signed herself "Portia," in accordance with a stately, and perhaps rather high-flown, habit of the period, and she certainly showed qualities which would have done honor to either the Roman or Shakespearian heroine of that name. In her letters we sec her thoroughly revealed. While the battle of Bunker Hill was in progress sho wrote that it was "dreadful but glorious;" and in tho depression of tho battle of Long Island she said: "If all America is to he ruined and undone by a pack of cowards and knaves, I wish to know it;" and added: "Don't you know me better than to think me a coward?" When, first among American women, she represented her Nation at the court of St. James, she met with equal pride the contemptuous demeanor of Queen Charlotte; and when her husband was choseu President, she wrote to him: My feelings are not those of pride or ostentation upon the occasion; they are solemnized by a sense of the obliga tions, the important truths anil numer ous duties, connected with it." When finally, aft r four years, he failed of re election, she wrote to her son: "The consequence to us is personally that we retire from public life. For myself and family I have few regrets ...If I did not rise with dignity, I can at least fail with ease." Tiiis was Abigail Adams. In person she was distinguished and no ble rather than beautiful. y.t it is satis factory to know that when she was first presented at the British Court she woro a white lutestring, trimmed .with white crape, festoone'd with lilac ribbon and mock point-Iaje over a hoop of enor mous extent, with a narrow train three yards lon, looped up by a ribbon. She wore treble lace ruffles, a dress cap with long lace lappets and two white plumes, these last doubtless soaring straight into the air above her head in the extraordinary style familiar to us In Gillray's caricatures of that period. It was. in those davs. no verv asrrce- I able task to bo the wife of the Presi dent Mrs. Adams 'has left on record a graphic sketch of the White House, where she presided for three months. The change in the seat of Government had been decided upon for twelve years, yet the building was still a vast un finished barrack, with rooms plastered, no main stairway, not a bell within, not a fence without: it was distressingly cold in winter, whilo the Chief Magis trate of the United States could not ob tain for love or money a man to cut wood for him in the forests which then surrounded Washington. From Wash ington to Baltimore extended an almost unbroken growth of timber, varied only by some small and windowless huts. There could as yet be in Washington no such varied companionship as bad given attraction to the seat of Government at New York and then Philadelphia; yet at Georgetown there was a society which called itself eminently polite, and Mrs. Adams records that she returned fifteen sails in a single day- T. W. Higginson, in Harper's Magazine. Cat's Meat. Correspondents of Knowledge, in treating ot cats, do not seem to have remarked sumo acts of -intelligence which may be observed daily in the streets of London. At the cry of the cat's-meat man all the cats are in com motion, but nil are not excited by the sry of the same man. A dozen men may walk up and down the same streets with tempting morsels, crying "Meat, meat!" but only at those houses they arc accustomed to serve will the cats be roused by the call. No sooner does the proper man arrive in the street than ev er cat he is accustomed to serve rushes frantically to the door, or, if allowed, into the street, running mewing toward him, rubbing against his legs, or some times sitting in a begging "attitude be fore him. but never, as faras I have 00 served, attempting to steal, from the open basket One day I noticed a cat whose man had either forgotten her portion or had beoa nnable to make her mis ress hear, and so had passed on. The eat, however, insisted on being attended to; she ran alter If in, mewing piteously, and when at last she made him understand, she ran back to tne House ueiove mm, where, by this time, tho mistress was ready to take the delicacy so much pri.ed by all London cat-, however well fed. I have often watched this act of discrimination in our own cat. Tom would sit quietly dozing while man aft er man went by with the familiar cry of Meat, meat!" but presently he would jump, rush to the window, and remain in a state of great excitement, and soon after a distant cry of Meat!" m ght bo heard, and we knew that Tom had rec ognized his own man long before we had heard him. As the cry drew nearer, Tom's excitement increased, and he would almost fly to the door. A singular fact remains to be told. On Saturdays the man would leave two portions, as ho did not go his rounds on Sunday. These were often thrown into the area, to which Tom had access. He would al ways greedily devour the one portion, but never touch the other, although they lay side by side. This cat would also open the latch of the kitchen door, as observed by several of your corre spondents, and would also o,.en the shutters in the drawing-room (rlosed. but not fastened), in order to look out of the window. 1 have, however, been told of a c it who would open not only a latch, but an ordinary dravving-room door, rather loose, by taking the round knob between her paws and twisting it round till it opened. The fact of cats distinguishing be tween one meat man and another seems to mo to disprove tho oft-repeated as sertion that cats attach themselves only to places and not to persons, for here we tee them able to pick out a certain man by his voico alone, even at a great distance. Buckland. Mrs. Catherine Dix, tho lately de feased widow of ex-Governor Dix, waJ oorn in lWi. At tiie age ot niteen su was betrothed to the General, the mar riage taking place three years later. O. her four sons Rev. Morgan Dix. rectoi of Trinity Church, New York, is the sole survivor. N. Y. Tribune. Husbands in Alabama can nolongei carry ou business in the name of theij 1 witaa. jSJ. Louis Post, Temperance Reading. THE TEMPERANCE SHIP. Take courase. Temperance workers! You slmH not suffer wreck While up to God tho people's prayers Are risinjr from your elect. Wait cheerily. Temperance workers. For daylight and lor lund; The breath of (Jml U in your sail. Your rudder in His bund! Sail on! yailon! deep f rcfcrlited With Mes slnjrs and with hopes: The jrood or old. with shadowy hands, Are pullimr at your ropes. Behind you. holy martyrs I'plift the palm and crown: Before you, unborn aares send Their benedictions down. Courage! your work is holv, Go-l's errands never fall! Sweep on through storm and darkness. Tne thunder and the hall! Work on! 8ailon! the morninjr comes. The port you yet shall win: And nil the bells of God shall rinir The ship or Temperanco In. J-Jm G. WhiUitT. FEMALE IXEBKIATES. The now common custom of resorting to the use of spirits in times of pleasure, as well as for the relief of pain and de spondency; is fraught with dangers but little appreciated by the average indi vidual. That the custom of the free use of stimulants is upon the increase amongst women, especially in our lar ger citie , is easily demonstrated. A cursor visit to any popular restaurant will result in the visitor's seeing ludies both alone, in parties, and with and without escorts, who ten years ago would not have tasted an alcoholic bev erage of any kind, even in their own homes, taking beer, wine or spirits with their meals, almost as a matter of course, and apparently with no idea that they are doing anything unlady like or unusual. Beer, and especially bottled beer, has of late vears become immensely popular with all elasses. Ladies stop ft restau rants often with the solo purpose of hav ing a bottle of beer to refresh and in vigorate them after a long walk, or when tired from shopping: lamiliestake it regularly by the box; boarders have it pnvatelv at table or in tiieir rooms: and servants, pitcher or pail in hand.no longer make a seeiet of their trips to the corner groggery or the avenue beer saloon. Grocers koep it, and sell it to families by the- bottle or box. The wme sentiment that has made the German style of pen-air concert so popular in tiiis country seems at the sinie time to have brought with it a fore- for convivi ality, and to have popularized the cus tom of beer-d. inking. Ucer has been the entering wedge, and following close upon it has come the more or" less free use- of spirits. And this was natural and to be expect ed. One thing almost unconsciously leads to another in matters of this kind, and beer has proved itself a stepping stone to- the use. of strong liquors. Women who formerly woold have used spirits only under medical ail vice, and even then reluctantly, now resort to them without objection and; upon the slightest grounds, simply because their ircvious use of beer seems to have iroken the ice. To many a poor wreck, the first glass of beer has proven a costly experiment and will be looked back to as the first step in a career the incidents of whick wake her shudder. It has been urged b some fihat the Germans, than whom there is jiot a more hard-working, frugal and studi oua people, are a nation of beer-drinkers, and that the introduction of their amusements social customs and the like, would prove not only not a mis fortune, but a positive boon to Ameri cans. The fact, however, that for many reasons Americans differ from Germans in point of nervous organiza tion, or rather lack of nervous equili bration, if we may be permitted to use the term, makes that which would prove of signal benefit to the latter ex tremely dangerons for the former. That American women are- placing themselves in a position o peculiar dauger by admitting beer,, and later wine and spirits, to their homes and tables, as well as indulging- in them wh le away from home, is u faca beyond que tion. Tiie peculiar satisfaction with which a tired, exhausted or unstrung nervous system receives the stimulation thus derivable leads almost invariably to a further resort to it. The fact tha't a woman's bodily or mental condition is such trial tne slightest eliors causes exhaustion and calls for stimulation be speaks, as forcibly as nature can possi-bly- express it. a very unhealthy, not to say dangerous, state of affairs, for which a physician should be consulted without delay. In such conditions the chances are in favor of the woman's be coming, after a time, wholly dependent upon alcoholics. We have known Mich women to become in tinie.thc veriest sots through this same originally oc casional resort to stimulants. Others of the same class are known to us to day who are fast traveling the danger ous incline. To some the consequences of the course they are pursuing are evi dent; but the craving which has become firmly established seems to be too great for their unaided powers of resistance. They cry, wring their hands in agony, and bemoan their cruel fate in their in tervals ot sobriety, make rash promises to their husbands, and fondly caress their little children that alcohol is fast robbing of a mother's love and care, and whom she is daily robbing of their birthright of a good namo and respectability. How many a poor wretch of this class curses the first swal low that ever passed her lips'. Confine ment and close surveillance in some of these cases seem to do good for a time, but the old craving appears never to be thoroughly crushed out for it keeps cropping up ever little whi'e, some times in its old fury, sometimes modi fied. Not a few of these unfortunates take to opium, or .chloral, or both, and while using them manage to abstain from liquor. They are content to do this and their frends, hopeless of a radical cure, are willing to allow them the narcotics, on the ground that though one form of inebriety is virtually as bad as the other, still that from the habitual uso of narcotics is less painful to the vh-w, and not nearly so prone to result in open disgrace as that from alcohoL Some, however, after acquiring a crav ing for narcotics, relapse into the old habit of drunkenness from alcoholics, and then their state becomes desperate and disgracC'ul in the extreme. Be- tween the class of occasional tipplers and habitual users there is one that is not, after all, so peculiar when itiider stood. Women there are who, being in a condition of "neurasthenia," cravo some 'form of stimulation, and gratify it on preparations containing a certain percentage of alcohol. It is a fact not generally known, but nevertheless true, that thousands of bottles of essence of g'ngerarc consumed by individuals of this class. Others use some form of popular "bitters; while still others, under various pretenses, consumo quantities of various "tinctures" and the like on physicians' prescriptions. Women who are perfectly healthy, or as near so as it is possible to be in this age. certainly do not need and should not use stimulants at any time. " Lt well enough alone" applies to such very aptly. -And. indeed, in many of us, ap parently healthy and robust, tjiere are inherited tendencies and latent cravings that only need for their development some slight lntlulgencies. Any woman who is at all couversaat with the sad histories of so many of her fellow women now swelling the ranks of criminals, paupers and insane, or, what is even worse," of those poor wretches who haunt the by-ways and dark streets, and form the scum and off scouring of every large city, will cer tainly hesitate before she either takes it herself or allows her children to- do so. It has often been said tliat the-father who takes wine before his sons, or visits his spirit closet in their presence, sets them, although unintentionally. per nicious example that may possibly bear bitter fruit in tne years to come. " How much worse, thenthe example of 3 tip pling mother, even though tiie beverage be the "harmless and popular" one of beer! The result can not be other than unfortunate. Children form their characters on the models of their elders. and are very ouick to observe ami ready to imitate. Parents being tin? ( family arbiters of right and wrong, chil dren naturally expect practice as well as pie-aching, and are more prone U follow tha former thau the latter. Both the use and a .us-. of stimulant. by women are largely upon the increase in this country. The police returns of this city are atone sullicient evidence of this. No reasoning individual but must set and appreciate the fact that if. un- , der the strict "old-f:ishIonr ideas re garding the ue of liquors by women, a thousand women, gathe:ei promis cuously from all classes, yielded ten inebriates, now, with the doing away of those ideas largely, and the more popular introduction of stimulants as beverages, the same numberof women i will yield twice as inanu hard drinkers as the first thousand Aad the free nse of stimulants is on tEe- increase. Beer has been and still is the entering wedge that is opening a frightful gap in the happiness of our homes and the purity and modestv of our women. The prison, the almshouse, the police court ay, even the scatlold -bear tes timony to the dangers of this- deadly stimulant- Wrveked homes, broken hearts, blasted lives and hopesvgrow rank upon this sil. The ghastly rl ics of once pure and modest woman hood leer at us from tho dark streets; stagger, tattered and bedraggled wrecks, into the grog-shop; gaeC pale and wasted, from the hospital cot, with large, hungry,, mournful eyes: staru stonily at us from, the marble slab of the morgue, or lloat aimlessly oofr to sea with the changing tide. It is a sad subject tro;n any and every point of view, and the freer use of stim ulants and narcotics by all classes is be coming a problem of serious propor tions. The question mcct- us in even walk of life, whether as private citizens or public officials and demands careful consideration and pain-takiug investi gation. Woman hereif. however, holds the key to the whole matter, and de cides for or against according as she in dulges in or countenances the free use of stimulants, of late become so popular. Her duty tcWierself, her children and her sex bid her use every effort to d s countenance and check by every means in her power this growing eviL Har per's Bazar. Temperance Items Dr. "Howe, of Massachusetts, says that half the idiots of England come from drunken parnts. If a young man begins at the ago ol twenty years to drink but one glass ot beer a day, at five conts a glass, by the time lie is forty years of age he will hae spent $I,"J:. 7.3. A temperance party has been formed in tho British l'nrl'rcnent At. a recent conference of fi."t'-tive mem bers, they appointed a committee to keep watch upon all proposals which promise in any way to ctfe-t the liquor traffic. We are continually making excuses about the inheritance of vices. When i the time to "right about face " ii not the golden . now? li one has a weedy garden, mourning over tho m regenerato mother ear h won't mend the matter. We must out with the weeds! Esther T. Uonsh. Oui: boys and girls must be taught that alcohol lessens the brain powers weakens the muscular strength, dwan? the growth, inilames the baser passions blunts the sensibilities, debases the feel ings and weakens the wilL Possessing this knowledge our children will grow up pure from the dangerous habit, and will bring into mature life unpolsoned bodies and brains with which to 'nieel the problems of their existence. They will know how to resist this evil ol drink when it confronts them, and will be able to legislate concerning .t with intelligence.and power. Hannah Whit hall Smith. That the recognition of the degrada tion which comes through drunkenness is not a matter of the present only is known to every reader of the Bible and o ancient authors. One of tho earlst references, however, is in an extant fragment of the old Egyptian literature, in which the drunkard is addressed iu these words: "Thou art as a temp!c without its god, as a houe without k bread." Tho e who are familiar with V the convivial scenes fre niently depicted on the Egyptian monuments know that total abstinence formed no part of thCw. popular creed in ancient. Eg pt; hence the comparison of the drunkard tQ.,aV temple (compare 1 Cor. 3: 16, 17) lor? sakenof its god 5s the more noteworthy. The figure of "a house w thoid bread is ono wh ch needs no explanation to a drunkard's family. S. S. Times. ,. i V V A ?,w. .j !"S5.v savrtti eorya,. .- -;;