Red Cloud Chief. PUHLISHUD WKIJKLY. UBI) CLOUD. NKHUASlCA Now York may yot become known as Prizeflghtcnivllle. The Jolly barber In always ready to scrape an acquaintance. The morn you think of some -ram the leas you think of them. The helm Is but a little thtng, yet It governs the course of the ship. "Whim everything else fulln a beau tiful bunnet will turn a womun's head. 'Die indolent man knows nothing or the enjoyment resulting from honeat labor. Tlley will never be able to convince Duller that Dobs Is a great military chlcitnln. The American Steel and Wire com jinny Ir not arranging for an edition of "tlntes Ajar." A woman never thlnkB of anything imeelnl she wants to Hay until Home other woman Ib tnlklng. Down Fast n man Htole n set of har ness and the detectives were hclplesB binitisc he left no trace behind. Success Ib the result of perseverance. Many a boy who began by turning n grlndHtone grew up and became an or gan grinder. If the HrltlHh would only look for the Doers Where they don't expert to find them they would doubtless come upon them with greater frequency. While It would have been gratify ing to many friends of Senator Quay, to havo him seated by the sennte, they have what satisfaction Ih to be gained from the ban- refusal of the M'linto to seat him. The question In volved In his case deserved an ex pression of the senate, and a more decisive one would have been prefer able. A difference of two votes la too small to give emphasis such as ought to be given In deciding one, way or another. It seems quite likely that the Pn-B-byterlan church, North, will be called upon again to consider a revision of the Westminster confession of faith. From various partH of the country come statemeiitH made by Presbyter Ian clergymen ndvocatlng revision or a new creed. The venerable Dr. Theo dore L. Cuyler of New York, who has been considered a conservative, Is one of the latest to declare that there are certain parts of the confession In which he doe not believe. Notable among the overtures from proBby terlcs asking for revision Is a peti tion from the presbytery of Nassau, N. Y praying the general assembly to formulate a short and slmplo creed which "would unite and not divide" and which "would be acceptable to the church." Heavy feeders on Bnlmnl food nre predisposed to all kinds of Inflamma tory disorders, and when any ntich person finds himself getting out of condition he may safely hedge In the matter of flesh food, cutting down the amount of such food or omitting It altogether with perfect safety. A Htrlct vegetarian diet, even, cannot be called an experiment, since we know that millions of people thrive on It, and no one could ever starve on It, With fruit, nuts, milk and eggs added, no lack of variety need be felt. Tho Japanese are a healthy, handeomi race. They are plump nnd hearty, but; little beyond simple vegetarian diet Is the rule there. The rlklsha men walk and trot forty miles a day with a tented passenger and seem proof against fatlguo and they thrive on a diet chiefly of rice. Not the least alarming phase of the situation in South Africa Is tho fact that the black natives out-number the whites In the proportion of twelve to one. In the case of a prolonged con flict between the Doers nnd the Kng llsh the attitude of the natives Is al together uncertain. In Cape Colony there arc 100,000 whlto residents nnd four times that number of blacks. The whlto population of the Transvaal it estimated at 250,000, as compared with 850,000 natives. In Natal tho total number of whites Ib not moro than (30,000, while the blacks number 530, 000. In tho Orunge Free States the blacks outnumber the whitcB In the proportion of nearly three to one. In Rhodesia there, aro 1,000,000 native? nnd a whlto population which rela tively amounts to nothing. In Hritlsh Central Africa 850,000 blacks are op posed to n tiny band of not more than COO English soldiers. In fact, all through South Africa the negro prob lem is likely to grow in Importance during the continuance of hostilities. In Paris It has been customary for cyclists to go to the nearest restau rant and to Inflate their tires with the help of carbonic acid apparatus, which Is used to glvo a head to 'the beer, but It Is found that a pneumatic tire inflat ed with carbonic gas Boon loses Its re siliency, and the gas escapes with re markable rapidity. A seat Ib the New York stock ex change has Just sold for 141,500. It th Increase continues, they will soon be as high a seats In the United f tates senate. FARMERJROWNED Swept From Horse While Try ing to Cross Stream. CUWKNT WAS TOO SWIFT FOR HIM Body Not Vet IleniTereil Hired Man With lllm, Hut Unahln In Kffeit lleeuo le Leave a Wife unci He?en Children Other News A farmer named Ilruthomvcr, living u short tllstaucu west of Ilnvclock, Neb., was drowned about H o'clock Monday evening' while attempting to cross a swollen stream on the back of a horse. While In the center of the swiftly flowing current lie was carried off the horse and downed. His body had not been recovered at a lute hour Monday evening'. On Mr. Ilrcthouwer's farm the barn is separated from the house by a long draw. During the afternoon Monday water came down tho draw In a tor rent. Mr. llrcthouwcr desired to cross over to the house. Ills hired man was with him. Mr. llrcthouwcr mounted a horse ami tried to force him into the stream. The horse was a little backward about going into the water, but finally plunged in and swum the stream. When about half way across Mr. llrcthouwcr was swept from the horse's back and carried down stream. The hired man saw hlni but could oiler no aid. lie was drowned and the body was carried away. Mr. Ilrethouwer has a brother in Lincoln, T. A llrcthouwcr, a clerk for Mayer brothers, lie owns the farm on which his brother lived. The drowned man leaves a wife and seven children. His father is a physician at Hickman. CAR INSPECTOR KILLED. Htrui'k hy t.lRlit tilni; While nt Work la Yurilft at Lincoln. Paul Kobalter, a car inspector work ing in the Durllngton yards at Lincoln, was struck by lightning and instantly killed during the storm of the evening of May il. When the lightning struck him lie was at work on top of a freight train that had just enteied the yards, and evidence that has since come to light indicates that he was struck shortly after the train arrived, lie fell on a box car which was afterwards made up as part of the "orange e. tra" east, and the body was carried as far as Pacific Junction before it was discovered. When found the lifeless body was lying face down on the top of the car, his hands were clutching a small crowbar used in his work, and his lantern was still burning under his coat. BIG STRIKE ON AT ST. LOUIS Twenty-ill Hundred Htreet Car Men to (lo Out. A St. Louis special says: The execu tive committee of thu street railroad men's union have decided to recom mend to the employes of the transit company that u strike be decided upon forthwith. A mass meeting of the employes was at once called to take a Tote on the executive committee's re port. The St. Louis Transit company em ploys about 3,800 men. At B o'clock Tuesday morning the mass meeting of employed without a dissenting voice decided to go on a strike immediately. Twenty-six hun dred men participated in the meeting. KILLED BY THE COLLAPSE Two Women Wern Suffocated anil Seven Other Injured. Ity the collapse of a house at 1 130 North Blghth street. St. Louis, Mo., Cora BveiMm and Melviua Nelson, col ored, were killed and seven others, who are now at the city hospital as a result of their injuries, narrowly es caped death. The two women named were suffocated, ns no marks of injury arc to be seen on their bodies. Flic men rescued the other Inmates of the building, which was a two-story di lapidated sttucture that hail been con demned. All were asleep when the accident occurred. AriiIiiiiIiIo With Tlno. A Manlla.May 7 dispatch says: Tele grams received here from ' General Young icport that Agulualdo has n joined the icbel general, Tlno, In the north, and that they have reassembled a considerable force In the mountains. General Yonngdcslie.s to strike them before the rains and asks for reinforce ments. The tenor of the dispatches indicate., that General Young is conlident that Agulualdo Ih with Tlno and it is pr. -suineil they arc planning to resuin fighting during the rains. Terrllle Hall Nloriii nl Toledo. A terrible hall storm at Toledo, ().. broke many thousands of dollars' worth of plate glass, damaged the city greenhouses, stripped young fruit trees of buds and blossoms and caused a number of serious runaways. The aggregate of losses will be large. Negro limbed for Murder, .lames Nettles, colored, who had twice been respited, was hanged nt St. Louis. Mo., In the jail yard at the Four Courts. He died bravely. Nettles was convicted of the murder of Samuel W. Mann, a conductor of the Suburban street car line, on duly 4, 1SU8. Furniture Factory llurne I, The factory of the Ware Furniture company, at Atlanta, Do,, wbh burned. Forty cottngcb occupied by employes were destroyed. The total loss will be S'-JOO.OCO, with insurance about half. AGENTS OF FENIAN PLOT Light mi Attempt lo lllnw tip Welluiiil ('mini l.nrk. The evidence which will be produced nt the trlnl of the three men charged with attempting to blow up lock No. S4, In the Welland canal, says a Tor onto. (Int., dispatch, it Is understood, will show that the prisoners weie not the Instruments of the labor element of llufTalo supM)Md to be autagoulstlc to a Canadian route for grain trafllc, but the agents of a Fenian plot. It has been learned that the three men concerned in the outrage arilved at ItufTalo from a city on the Atlantic seaboard. They were unacquainted In llufTalo and left for Niagara Falls at tho earliest (tosslble moment after' their arrivnl In llufTalo. JAPS COMING BY THE SCORE Thirty Thotxaail Hmn to lavado IJrU lM Oltiraltta Ofllcers of the steamship Tacoma, which has arrived from Yokohama, speaking of the great number of Jap anese flockiup to the United States and Hritlsh Columbia, say it was current talk in Yokohama that there would be 30,000 Japanese to leave their native country for JJritlsli Columbia alone, this summer, and It is lielleved that the number coining to the United States will be enormous. The steamer Tosu Marn is now due on tho sound with 1,('10 .lapnui'si; on board, and the Dalnyvostock one of the 'J'acoma liners, will be here in a few days with 1100 more. SMALL SCHOONER SWAMPED Five Mini fiiiiionil to Havo Ueeu I.wt Xritr Sllka. The steamer llertha. from Alaskan poluts. -which has arrived at Seattle, Wash.., brings news of the swamping of the small schooner Dora It, and the jHJssible loss of Jive men between Sitka and Lltnyua. The schooner was in tow of the steamer when the tow line broke- the boat swamped and the cargo and men were thrown Into the water. Much of the cargo and the body of one of the men is reported to have washed ashore two or three dajs later. WHOLESALE CHICKEN THEFT Tim Farmer loin loo Fowls lUch u) Itrrefit Night. Kd Young, a farmer living near I'ni versity Ulaec, Neb., notified the Lin coln police recently that he had lost IIKI chickens by theft. They were laucn iroiu ins eiiicKen house. A neighbor of Mr. Younir, Willard Kulcf son. also rcHirtcd the loss of KM) chickens by theft. How the chickens were taken could not be told, and there was no intimation from the losers that they suspected any particular person. Mr. Young lost a team by theft a few mouths ago. Liming No Time. Lord Roberts Is following the ad vantage gained by the occupation of Drandfort and his whole force is ap-' parently moving on Winburg. The place mentioned In Lord Roberts' dis patch to the war olllce this morning as "Nealwelket" cannot be found on the maps and It fs likely that It is a cable error for "Near Vet Kop," in which General Ian Hamilton seems to be, midway between Houtnek and Win burg, and has thus got between Win burg and General Olivler's command from Wepener. which is occupying Thaba Patchoa. Hetween Thnba N'Chu, Ladybrand and Winburg the country is rough nnd suited for Doer taeties, so thu Hritlsh are liable to be consider ably harrassed before they capture the stronghold. Tuke to lllll. A London, May 8 dispatch says: The Doers are everywhere retiring before the Hritlsh. except on the Natal fron tier and at Mafekiug. to the inner cir cle of their defenses. They appear de termined not to fight until the (Croon stail hills tile reached. Lord Roberts Is expected to do another forty or fifty miles and then to wait for a time in order to bring up supplies and to re pair the railway. There are one or two hints in the dispatches from tke front that he may rest for a few daa at Smaldeel. Store Itohliitd lit Oilier. The general merchandise store of Lightner X Hutchinson at Dlller. Neb., was broken into by burglars and about S1,'.".!) worth of dry goods taken. The burglars broke Into the section house and secured tools, then broke the plate glass in front of the store and took what goods they wanted. Tho Fulton bloodhounds were telephoned for and as an iweellent trail has been kept it is thought' they will be able to locate the robbers. Kxtent of Mine llliiHHter. W. G. Sharp, superintendent of the Pleasant Valley Coal company at Seho field, has made a report to the treas urer of the company In regard to the mine disaster at Scholleld, in which he says: "Total killed. Ill!: bodies recov ereil to date, I lift: injured, 7. Of those In the mine 1(13 escaped alive and un injured. There are loft widows and 270 orphans." Find Flouter In the 1'lntte. A floater was found In the Platte river at Louisville, Neb., whose general description leads to the supposition that tho body may be that of Henry J.New man of Omaha, the woman's tailor who has been mysteriously missing for a fortnight. Hurglars entered the First National bank of llrady, Pa., dynamited and looted the safe. Tho bank olllclals re fused to make any statement of the amount taken, but the loss Is said to range from 80,000 to 1),000. The rob bers left no clue. AM TTV AVfYTIlATil .W HP J ill uiil T vai imuuu JlAJ- LAY. "A drink," entreated tho weak voice. "A warm drink, nurse." "I shall bring it to you," answered tho trained nurse. Sho rose, placed the bell connection within reach of tho feeblo fingers, left tho room, her light steps soundless on tho rich, deep car pet. Along tho corridor, down tho stairway, she passed, It was Into after raldnlghL Lights had been ex tinguished In the drawing-room, the dining-room, tho library. Only a Bln glc globe, opaque nnd mellow, lighted the way. This led to the servants' quarters. Under and boyond it tho nurae hurried, a chasto vision. Her blue and whlte-strlped gown and the snowy linen at throat and' wrists and on the colled dark hair accentuated the pallor of the patleat, serene face. It was still In that great houso on Michigan boulevard. Now that tho thaw had come, the crunching or run ners over the frozen snow, the cheery Jingle of nllghbellB, the softened mur mur of gay young voices no longer reached the ear. Not that Nurse Nor ino had anything to do with sleighing parties nor any other form of indi vidual diversion. But there had been nights out of the Inst two months when she had been a bit bewildered nt times by the recollections these chim ing, irresponsible bells uwnkened. She had caught herself standing still, with ono hand at her heart listening to note should they stop before this door. Sho had dropped her hand with a little sweeping gesture of self-scorn. And she had resumed her duties with tho sudden glow In her checks dying out as the flush of embers dies under the pall of gray ashes. Tonight, however, there was no ex traneous sound to divert no personal remembrnncea to distract her. She passed Into tho great, Immaculate, de serted kitchen. Tho servants had gone to bed. Sho saw nn expanse of polished wood floor, tiled walls, sinks of marble and metal that glittered llko silver; gas and alcohol ranges, nnd the numer ous minor commodities which make tho drudgery of domestic labor com paratively light and easy. Hark! What was that sound Just without? A cautions, scraping footstep! She lis tenedthe snucepan poised In one lift ed hand. Silence. Pshaw! It was nothing. It was no one. As If nn at tempt at hurglnry would be mnde In this neighborhood and with tho light burning! "I am getting nervous," she told herself. "Constant vlgllnnce, con tinual wakefulness will tell on tho strongest of us after awhile. I wish I might warn all young girls who desire to become nurses, dreaming only of the romantic nspect of tho profession what the real life Involves what tho actual experience means." She looked around the kitchen, nnd a swift retrospect brought the rose color to her cheek. Here It was down hero that she and Harry ha"d stolen, after the cook was asleep, to attempt the compounding of ono particular, dell clous dish. What a blunder they had made of It! And Bho had cut her hand In wielding a huge knlfo over a small bunch of parsley. Harry had torn his handkerchief Into strips, and tied up the Injured member. He bad kissed the palm, and said: "You have such pretty hands, Norlne!" Sho bad smiled back at him, saying: "They are not afraid of work." And he had answered, with tho pride of per sonal possession, they are not-afraid of anything." Ah, well! Sho roused herself with a sigh. "That was nil so long ago, And tlmo works changes, as we must know." The milk on the range was at boiling point. She ndded a teaspoonful of vinegar to the foaming mass in tho saucepan, and quickly removing tho same poured tho strange-scented mix ture through a fine wire sieve. Her remedy and refreshment were In readi ness tho potent "whey" denr to tho heart of trans-Atlantic physicians. Hark! Again! Sho set down tho bowl hurriedly. Nearer that trend and nearer! It was on the back porch now. He whoever ho was had laid ono hand upon tho window frame was trying It was shaking It softly. Involuntarily Nurso Norlno stepped back. She was not one of your heroic women. Sho could feel her heart pounding, until It seemed to strain Its cords ns a hound strains Its leash. Ought sho to turn out tho light? Should sho try to leave tho spot? "Thank Ood!" sho pantd, "Besslo will never learn nursing." Although tho association of burglary with nursing wns decidedly illogical. There was n grating sound at tho window. Tho window wns lifted by a strong, stealthy hand. A blurred, wriggling shadow fell across the floor. "Now!" breathed Nurse Norlne. "Now!" Her professional habit of self-controlthe sense of responsibility to her patient these sustnlned her. Just us the clump of shoos struck tho floor, sho advanced. A lofty, Ill-clad figure con fronted her. A face, distinguishable between slouch hat and chin bandage, was near her own. A grimy hand gripped her throat. "Keep still!" commanded the voice back of the swathing handkerchief. "Keep still!" The command waB superfluous with the herculean grip of those strong fin gers at her throat. "I won't hurt you," went on the auto eratlc voice. "Not If you don't make a racket. He Isn't home tho master. I aw that In the papers. I want her Jewels phe's dying. Sho won't miss them. Where nro they? Arc they In the secret closet off the dressing-room nt the head of tho prlvato Btalrcase? That Is where my wlfo kept" Ho broke off abruptly. "Where nre they?" Tho grip on her throat relaxed. "I know where you mean," she cried In her surprise her. bewilderment. "I know." Why should sho not know sho to whom this house had been n wedding gift! She, who had once placed her own Jewels In that same receptacle. She who had come back as a paid servi tor to the scene of her only full, real, transcendent happiness! "Quick, then! Quick!" An encouraging oath from outsldo 'the window reached them. Again tho man's fingers closed around the smooth whlto throat. "You know. Drlng them, then or, wait I'll go with you. Dut no noise, you understand. Not a sound, or" His right hand slid back ward. He shook before her eyes tho llttlo toy of metal nnd wood he drew forth. "I can find the place alone," he said. And then, to him without: "Drlng tho cord, Marty!" In that Instant of diverted attention she wreBtcd herself free. "Listen!" 8he gasped. "The womnn Is dying. Any cnmomtlon will kill her at once. And I cannot O!" Onco more the flngcra, fierce In a convolution born of rage, were at her throat and tho masked face bent lower. "Yon must! You shall or, by " Tho fingers tangled In a chain a mere thread of gold. Something fell, with a mellow clatter to the floor. The man stooped hastily. He picked up the fallen bauble. "Don't take that!" entreated tho nurse. She had fallen back once more. "It Is of no value. That Is of no In trinsic value. It is mine only mine. Give It to me!" She was white as death, nnd shiver ing, when she- held out piteous, en treating hands. She forgot fear In dc elre. Dut tho man was staring stupidly upon the medallion In his palm an Ivory medallion upon which was paint ed a girl's face. How sweet that face was how near, reproachful, tender, familiar! A lifted young face, full of love, shyness, half-fledged courage. And tho shyness that was salntllness he knew all these. "Give It to me," the nurse entreated. "Give mo my little girl's picture. Glvo It to me. It Is all I havo of value Bessie's picture." The man hesitated. Ho still looked down on the trifle In his great hand motionless, entranced. From without sounded a crackle of curses. "I will go," tho man Bald, "If you will answer these questions. Where is this child? Where Is her father? Why. are you here?" She put out both hands and felt blindly for the tablo behind her. "She Is nt the Sacred Heart convent. She is good. Sho is beautiful. Her father left his home long ago In a mis taken a jealous rage." She paused. Something in tho poso of tho great bulk confronting her In the echo of tho volco that had Interrogated, mado her nostrils rigid her lips blue. "I am here because I must support my child and myself. That Is all." "Your child!" ho repeated. He was gazing down on the bright thing in tho hollow of his hnnd. That face! Tho broad brow; the eyes, long-lidded and long-lashed; tho serious sweep of hair about the temples these wero his own. And the mouth those squnro cut, sen sitive lips with tho beguiling dlffldenco that was half audacity those wero hers. "Nora," ho begnn. It was his old name for her. "Nora " "Git to work!" ndvlsed a hiiBky volco from tho outer dnrkness. "Git to work, you bloomln' fool." That "bloomln' fool" moved nearer to the nurse. Ho had cast asldo his disguising lint and 'kerchief. "Nora, you remember how we came down hero to cook a post-opera supper ono spring night, nfter we had como back from New Orleans? I did not recognize you at first. Dress tlmo change many things. All these havo caused natural alterations." It was no longer tho' intruder who was speaking. It was the gentleman tho scholar. "Wo were so afraid of the cook, you recollect? And that confounded ome let, des herbes! Wo tried to make It as it was served to us In dim, dark, dear New Orleans. What dinners wo had in that llttlo, gloomy restaurant on tho Ruo Chartres! Whst prowling in the French quarter! How you hated tho lazy old mules on Tchoupltoulas street! Then, there were th mornings in Jackson square! And tho strolls through the French market, and " There was no mistaking tho fervor ot the curse which cum through the opened window. But the man lingered although he had banded back the bauble. "Do you remember?" he insisted. lfcx jj tffu iftm g tM t w "Could I forget?" she counter-queried. The bell rang. "I nin needed." She lifted tho pitch-, cr of wnoy. Sho opened tho door. "Go!" she said. "Will you tell Bessie " "What?" "Nothing, Nora. Never mind, dear." "You have been gone n long tlmo, nurse," objected tho patient, fretfully. "I am sorry, madamc, but tho delay was unavoidable. Drink this." She slipped hor strong arm under tho pillow. Sho directed tho wavering head upon It. Sho held tho cup with firm fingers. But her gaze strayed to a corner where a crib used to stand a llttlo rose-hung crib, where tho origi nal of the portrait on the medallion Daby Bessie had lain! OSTHICH AS A WATCHMAN. Hagacloui Illrd, Named Napolenn, Ueep Unard. An ostrich watchman Is tho latest trained wonder In Florida. Ho can bo seen every night making his rounds through tho pens of an ostrich farm near Jacksonville, says a correspond ent of the Philadelphia Times. About a week ago the sagacious bird, which has been named Napoleon, proved Ids capacity for the appointment. About eight months ago the owners of this herd of ostriches established the farm at this place. Previous to this tlmo and since 1885, when they mndo their first importations of birds into this country.they carried on their extensive farm in California. Attracted by tho salubrious climate and the shorter dis tance to their mnrketB," they determin ed upon this step. When they estab lished their farm at Jacksonville, they added as an especial attraction speci mens of many rare birds and animals capable of easy domestication. Among tho former was a flock of over 200 golden and other varieties of phea sants. In the courso of events this fnct became known to the many color ed gentry, nnd knowing the darky's natural penchant for "chlckin'," tho owners feared for their latest purchas es. The pheasants, they know, would be tempting, because all birds look alike to coons, nnd these resembled more than anything else, nice, fat yellow-legged roosters, nnd so would become doubly tempting. Nor wero the fears of the owners groundless. The "cullod" population rnpidly pass ed through the stages of hearing, In vestigating nnd finally seeing. At this Btnge of tho game tho owners of tho ostrich herd took steps to prevent tho loss of their property, and Napoleon was called Into requisition. RICH PICKING FOR SAILORS. UrltUh Tar Oftim Derive Fortune lo I'rlie Money. As the minister of war has Bald, wo are now at strife with an enemy which does not even possess a cockle-boat, and those brave sailors who are fight ing patriotically with their soldier brothers have not the additional In centives that used to be held out to tars In tho way of treasure ships, the capture of one of which, incredible ns It may seem, in some cases gave each ordinary seaman nB much as 2,000 worth then much more than now prize money. It Is not very long since an old sailor died In London who re membered serving on vessels In the royal navy that sometimes waited oft one station for a year for a treasure ship they had been warned of, and who was present when our craft, the Etha llan, captured the Thetis, with $1,700, 000 on board. About the samo time three of our warships, after lying In wait for months, captured tho Santa Brlgada with a treasure of nearly $2, 000,000 In her hold. It needed Blxty thrco artillery wagons escorted by nrmed men nnd bands of music to convey tho treasure to the citadel of Plymouth, and each captain received as prize money 40,730; each lieutenant had 5,100 and each seaman and ma rlnc 182. Iteitleif Americano. All winter long, and Into this, tho second month of the violet-scented springtime of Mexico, we have heard two distinctive sounds the click of tho kodak and the "taconeo," or tick tack of tho llttlo heels of the American, girl, marching through San Frnnclsco, Profesa nnd Plateros streets. And still they come, this flitting army ot rest less Americanos, male and female, as tho Lord created them, nnd Instinct with the hereditary nomadism of our race, for no one stays close at homo except for financial reasons. That Is also why many of us here In tho trop ics will not go to tho Paris exposition. It Ib well to bo "frnnc" about it. Bos ton Herald's letter from City of Mexi co. A New Mineral, Mohnwkito is tho name given to a new mineral discovered In tho copper mines at Houghton, Mich. It is nn arsenide of copper in connection with nn arsenide of nickel, united chemical ly, not mechanically. An alloy of cop per and nickel is in good demand, nnd the new ore, It Is said can be turned Into copper, nickel, arsenic and cobalt with less than 1 per cent of waBte. Cobalt is the base of tho deepest blue dye. Arsenic Is worth flvo cents a pound, copper 17 cents nnd nickel moro than twlco as much as copper. HarveiU for DentUt. If a child would eat candy once a day and then wash out his mouth thoroughly ho might keep up the prac tice for fifty yeara without harm to his teeth, but It is tho constant suck ing of candy, alwaya having something sweet In the mouth, that eats away tho enamel and reapB mighty harvest tor the dentist. t l-w8s50Z!Z1i