What Can’t Pull. Out? Why the i ! i I Bow on the Jas. Boss Filled | Watch Cases, made by the j Keystone Watch Case Com- I pany, Philadelphia._It pro tects the Watch from the pick- j pocket, and prevents itjrom j dropping. Can only be had with cases stamped jwj. with this trade mark. Sold, without extra charge I for this bow < ring), through Watch dealers only. Ask your jeweler for pam phlet, or send to makers. A STRAM CASE. How an Enemy was Foiled. The following graphic statement wl'I he read with intense interest : *‘L cannot deserilie t he nurnh. creepy sensation that existed in my arms, hands and kgs. 1 had to rub and beat those parts until they were sore, to overcome in a measure the dead feeling that, had taken possession of them. In addition, 1 bad a strange weakness in my back and around my waist, together wit h an indescribable ‘gone’ feeling in my stomach. Physicians said it was creeping paralysis, from which, accord ing to their universal conclusion, there is no relief. Once it fastens upon a person, they say, it continues its insidious progress until it reaches a vital point and the sufferer dies. Such was my prospect. 1 had been doctoring a year and a half steadily, but with no par ticular benefit, when I saw an advertisement of Dr Miles’ Restorative Nervine, procured a bottle and began using it. Marvelous as it may seem, hut a few days had passed before every bit of that creepy feeling had left me, and there has not been even the slightest indication of its return. I now feel as well as L ever did. and have gained ten pounds in weight, though I bad run down from 170 to 137. Four others have used Dr. Miles’Restorative Nervine on my recomen dation, and it lias been as satisfactory in their cases as in mine.”—James Kane, La Rue, O. Dr. Miles* Restorative Nervine is sold by all druggists on a positive guarantee, or sent direct by the Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.. on receipt of price, SI per bottle, six hot ties for §5, express prepaid. It is free from opiates or dangerous drugs. TALES FROM TOWN TOPICS. OH year of the most successful Quarterly « vi ever published. More than 3,000 LEADING NEWS PAPERS in North America have complimented diis publication during its first year, and uni versally concede that its numbers afford the brightest and most entertaining reading that can be had. Published ist day of September, December, March and June. Ask Newsdealer for it, or send the price, 50 cents, in stamps or postal note to TOWN TOPICS, 21 West 23d St., New York. This brilliant Quarterly is not made up from the current year’s issues of Town Topics, but contains the best stories, sketches, bur lesques, poems, witticisms, etc., from the back :lumbers of that unique journal, admittedly the crispest, raciest, most complete, and to ail I?IEN AND WOOTEN the most interest ing weekly ever issued. Subscription Price: Toth Topics, per year, - - $i03 Tale3 From Tovrz Topics, per 7ear, 2.00 The two cWbbei, ... g.co Town Topics sent 3 months on trial fix 81.00. N. B.—Previous Nos. of “Tales” will be promptly forwarded, postpaid, on receipt of 50 cents each. Htu | ... | j "I I YOU HAVE BACK-ACHE CONSTIPATION ! LGSSofAPPETITE : Failing Eyesight LOSS OF FLESH SCALDING PAINS COLD FEET BAD TASTE IN THE IYIOUTK ; | BAD DREAMS W IRRITATION OF BLADDER ? j BRICK DUST DEPOSITS ,, _A NERVOUS UisE COUGH » Obeooh Kidney JW THESE SYMPTOMS INDICATE KiD'JEY DISEASE.'" |, ;3«wa« Oar PZEP3CT101T 8YRIS0B fV?e vlth every bottle. U CLEAN. I>.rt not STAIN. PREVENTS STRICTURE, Care* <;OSOBR»I«EA ne-1 OLETIT ia On to Foos daya* A QUICK CUKE ur LFUOOREHCEA or WHITES. Sold by «ll DRUGGISTS. Sent to any Addre** Ibr 91.00. |UWI>0& MAJiUFACTURlHa CO„ LAiiGASTiS, OfliGr SETOF f£ETH RUBBER$5100 Work Guaranteed. Teeth extracted in the mormng, ne w ones inserted evening of same day. Teeth tilled without pain, latest method. Finest parlors in the west. Paxton OR- W. BAILEY, >r«Dc«. OMAHA, --- - NEB. » j A NEWSPAPER TRUST.1 A PROJECTED COMBINATION FOR NEW ENGLAND JOURNALS. A Proposal Combine With a Capital ol 910,000,000 About to I5<* formed to Con trol the IIiiKlne.HH Intermts of the Lead ing Caper* of New Lngland. The Providence Nows is informed by j an authority that has always been con- ] unb red reliable that another big finan-: rial project is under serious consiclera-! tion by a number of capitalists of Ne w York, Philadelphia and Chicago to se cure control and to manage a number of properties in the New England states that are very valuable and profitable, but which under such a consideration as the one proposed will prove even more remunerative and influential by the re duction of tho expense in operating, and by the purchase of supplies in quantities so large as to demand great reductions in the price of material used. For years it has been recognized that a good paying newspaper is one of the most solid and stable investments that money can be put into, and the majority of the newspapers of the country, too large to bo the personal property of sin gle owners, have been managed by stock companies. This consolidation of newspapers un der one management is not a particular ly new idea. It has been very successful on a smaller scale in the west, where the Scripps league is widely known as a big syndicate, managing a dozen valuable ! newspaper plants. It was one of the dreams of the elder Bennett which a number of years ago came near to realization. The New York Herald and The Times, the Chicago Times, St. Louis Post-Dispatcli and the Boston Herald at one time came very near being controlled l.y a syndicate, with the elder Bennett at its head, but disagreements arose, and the negotiations came to naugni. The enormous earnings of big papers j like the New York Herald, Sun and : World, the Boston Herald and Globe are the natural results of serious and inde- j fatigablr efforts extending over a series ! of years. It is popularly reported that the income of James Gordon Bennett of the New York Herald from his paper is $750,000 per annum. The World closely follows this with over $500,000, while The Sun probably makes half that amount. The Boston Herald is supposed to divide $300,000 a year between the owners, while The Globe pays at least 10 per cent net on $'2,000,000. The proposed combine, however, deals with New England newspapers, and even this is a deal of immense magnitude. The capitalists alluded to propose to purchase the leading daily papers in New England, managing them of course as individual papers and preserving their separate autonomies, yet controlling them by a directorate, to whom the agent or manager in charge of each paper shall report directly. It is esti mated that $10,000,000 in capital will be required. The plan is to purchase these proper ties by issuing bonds for $5,000,000, pre ferred stock of $5,000,000 and common stock of $0,000,000, the bonds and the common stock to be sold for the pur chase money, the bonds to carry an 8 per cent guarantee, the preferred stock to be a 7 per cent stock, and the common to declare whatever dividend might be left over after an allowance for a sink ing fund. At the present cost of operat ing the common stock could declare a 10 per cent dividend and carry 5 per cent to the sinking fund. The cost of operating would be great ly reduced. Take for example the Bos ton dailies or the two big Sunday issues. The Herald and Globe each run trains out over the roads leading from Boston Sunday morning, seven trains each. One of them could be cut off and a joint train run, saving at least $30,000 per year. By pui Liiaoiu iu ou^u imiuru3CV|uau* tities the very lowest possible price could be obtained, and a very small fraction of a per cent saved would in the aggregate amount to an enormous figure, and as with paper so with type, presses, ink and all other materials. In the matter of distribution of papers in Boston alone an enormous saving would be made. By the control of all the newspaper properties in New England by one con cern a new era iu the collection of news would at once follow. A system of leased lines, with operators in the em ploy of the combine, would be inevitable. The New England Associated Press would either be merged in it or go to the wall, but this system of leased wires would bring a saving of such propor tions as to be absolutely startling and which is at present impossible by any one paper. It is expected that expenses of operation would be reduced fully 23 per cent. The plan is not a political one and has i no political significance. The combine is said to be evenly divided between both the great political parties; otherwise this absorption of such papers would give a political influence that would be so power ful that it could not be tolerated. Agents of the syndicate are now in New Eng land making inquiries and investigations. The successful management of the Stand ard Oil company, of the big street car combines and other trusts seems likely to be followed by a newspaper trust.— Journalist. ISanks In the United States. There are 3,700 national, 3,000 state and 1,300 private banks in the United States, a total of 8,000, somewhat dimin ished since May by isolated suspensions and insolvencies, but still in excess of 7.300, several suspended banks having after suspension resumed. The gross deposits in national banks of the United States amount to $1,500,000,000, in state banks to $650,000,000 and in private banks to $100,000,000, a total of $2,250, 800. The gross deposits in American banks are 50 per cent greater than the national debt and equal to about 60 per tent of all the gold coin in the world.— Hew York Sun. Storlea of Great Luck. Captain Ben Ferguson, collector on the ferryboat Hite, is always reminiscent, The other day the captain said to me: “You seldom hear of a man making $90,000 in one night in these days, but I know of such an instance. Mr. Cole man, who ran a foundry on Washington street, near Brook, did it. In relating it to me he exhibited no delight whatever. His words were: ‘Captain, I made $90, 900 last night: went to bed early and slept soundly. You know the price of iron went up, and fortunately I had enough on hand, which I had purchased at a low figure, to net mo a fortune.’ As Captain Ferguson concluded the story he told another of how Dennis Long made $200,000 becauso the price of iron dropped out of sight, It was just at a time when Mr. Long had failed in busi ness and told Captain Ferguson that he was $400,000 in debt. “Well,” said thecaptain, “Dennis Long went up to Indianapolis to bid on the construction of the city waterworks. There was but one other bidder, and Mr. Long was awarded the contract. Not long after iron began fluctuating, and Long’s estimate having been made on the basis tnat iron would advance still more in price, it already being high at the time, he of course found that as it decreased ho was reaping a golden harvest. Well, iron went down and down. Wiien it stopped, it was worth hardly anything. Mr. Long, as I said, made $200,000 by this, and he’s been making money ever since.”—Louisville Courier-J ournal. lints Are Great Travelers. Rats do not, as one would suppose, re main on the ship, but get off at various ports, and after remaining a while ship on some other vessel for another voyage. The water rats or wharf rats are great travelers and make frequent voyages around the lakes and even around the world—the latter as I discovered while engaged in West India service. There are here now rats from almost every part of the globe. Why, I saw four colossal Jamaica rats, with their white bellies, skipping about in the moon light a few weeks ago, and only yester day I killed two Indian male rats not 200 feet from where we were standing. Rats are great climbers when they find it necessary to be so. Upon one of my voyages not long ago we had a long spell of warm weather, and there was no water in the hold which the small army of rats on board could get at. One night we put some water up at the cross trees and waited for the result. Well, the rats just swarmed up the ratlines and went for the water. We killed as mail}' of them as we could as they came down, and some of them jumped over board and were drowned. But we could not kill them all, and a few made the •ntire voyage with us.—Interview in Chicago Tribune. Bismarck's Advice to Students. Only now, and in a roundabout way, via Bonn, has the text of the speech which Prince Bismarck made at the re ception of Bonn students become known. The prince confessed that at the univer sity he neglected study, but added: “The only thing that I am sorry for on look ing back to those times is that I could not later on make up for what I had neg lected then What one has learned aft erward does not remain so firmly in one’s memory. 1 do not dissuade you from working, but I am not horrified if my sons commit studentlike excesses, and above all things I believe that the stu dent’s life in corporations has this ad vantage--that it somewhat steels the character by subjecting each to the crit icism of his comrades. This is a great thing. As long as one belongs to a cor poration, to the opinion of which one at taches much importance, one does not easily go astray. The same thing plays an important part later on in life. What is it that is the backbone of German of ficials? The university and the sword knot.”—Berlin Cor. London News. How to Live if You Wish to Live Long* Aside from the very important and controlling influence of inheritance, of diet and of temperate habits, the points to be learned from the few statistical data attainable are that longevity is pro moted by a quiet, peaceful life in a re tired and rural community, where there is freedom from nervous strain and wor rying and e*cessively laborious toil. The business man, with increasing cares and responsibilities, the mill operative toil ing hard to keep together the souls and bodies of himself and his family, the politicians, the hardworking professional men, are not the chief contributors to the centenarian ranks. Dr. Holyoke in deed became a centenarian, but his ex ample has rarely been followed by his professional brethren.—Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. Where ‘'Sterling” Came From. Sterling signifies money from the le galized standard of coinage of Great Britain. According to one theory the term originated as follows: It is a cor ruption of Easterling—a person from north Germany, on the continent of Europe, and therefore from the east in geographical relation to England. The Easterlings were ingenious artisians who came to England in the reign of Henry III to refine the silver money, and the coin they produced was called mon eta Easterlingornm—the money of the Easterlings.—New York Evening Sun. Lightning and Rain. It is popularly supposed that the sud den downpour which usually follows a bright flash of lightning is in some way caused by the flash. Meteorologists have proven that this is not the case and that, exactly to the contrary, it is not only possible but highly probable that the sudden increased precipitation is the real cause of the flash.—St. Louis Re public. Why Fogg Is Puzzled. “There are two things,” remarked Fogg in a contemplative mood, “that I don’t understand. One of these is how the world got along before I came into it and the other how it is going to get along after I have left it.”—Exchange, WATERMELON PARTIES. They Give RIko to a New Question of Ktl quette In Maryland. One of (lie things in society is the water melon party. The new diversion was in dulged in in Howard county, just above Ellicott City, the other night, and from the latest accounts it lias broken out and promises to become epidemic down in Anne Arundel, where the melons grow in all sizes, species and flavors. Just lio%v a watermelon should be served at a watermelon party is a knotty question, and it has caused considerable debate and some little unfriendly controversy among the Four Hundred of the melon growing counties. Some contend that it should be cut crosswise. Others say it should be split longitudinally nnd eaten without fork or knife. This diversity of opinion may relegate the melon party to the rear of the picnic for the present season, as the time of the fruit is limited now to a few weeks, but the latent element in favor of the pastime may break out again next season, just as the ague does every year down in Piney woods. Another difficulty in the way of eat ing a watermelon artistically is to get clear of the seeds. It is said that on one occasion a guest at one of the parties in sisted that it was proper to pick the seeds out with the right index finger, and if by accident one should get into a guest’s mouth it should be swallowed. A debate followed the proposition, in which one man said he did not propose to make a watermelon patch of his in ternal makeup by planting seeds in it. The party broke up, and the hostess had a lot of melons and an antipathy to such parties left on her hands. The outcome of the new fad is puzzling the people in uppertendom in the cities and villages and rural districts. From what could be gathered in the last few days on the subject, the watermelon part}’ does not promise to be a pro nounced success. One of the great ob jections is the uncertainty to what they may lead, for if the watermelon party takes with society it may in time be fol lowed by a squash party, or a yellow pumpkin party, or a green tomato party, or a sassafras root or tea party, or some other thing just as erratic, and the Four Hundred it seems, would rather content themselves with the pink tea and other diversions whereof they are familiar than rush into new ones that might lead to an endless amount of unrest.—Balti more American. A Bear, a Cab and a “Sergot.” On Sunday evening an amusing inci dent occurred in the Champs Elysees quarter. A man named Haja, employed by M. Marseille, a wild beast tamer, thought he had a right to add to his wages by exhibiting his master’s bear in the streets. With this object in view Le installed the bear in an open cab, and taking his seat beside the animal told the coachman to drive to the Champs Elvsecs. The vehicle reached the Avenue Victor Hugo, followed by a crowd of boys and young men, who by their de risive shouts attracted the attention of two sergents de ville. They stopped the cab, and after ascertaining the truth one of them got into the vehicle and or dered the cabman to drive to the nearest police station. The presence of a stranger beside it so excited the bear that by its swaying backward and forward it very soon upset the vehicle. The merriment caused by the sight of the cabman, the sergents de ville and the tamer sprawling on the ground, with the bear almost under the upset cab, can easily be im agined.—Paris Cor. London Standard. Old Sonss Before the Queen. A very pleasing innovation was intro duced in a musical programme rendered before the queen at Osborne house a night or two since which deserves note. Mme. Nordica and Mr. Plunket Greene were the vocalists, with Sig. Tosti as ac companist on the piano, and in addition to the accustomed repertory there were given two old Irish songs arranged by Dr. Villiers Stanford, an old Scotch song arranged by Miss Lucy Broad wood and an old Cornish song, “Where Be Going?” arranged by Mr. Arthur Somervell, all being sung by Mr. Greene. The introduction of this last into a royal programme may be considered due to the labors of the Rev. Sabine Baring Gould, the well known novelist, whose collection of the words and tunes of the half forgotten songs of the -west country deserves all praise.—Birmingham Post. Inspectors Pay to Enter a Postoffice. Postoffice Inspector Fleming has a A1 bill which he says he will have framed. He got it from the bureau of admissions at the fair on demand for the return of money paid at the gates. Nearly a month ago the inspector and Andrew Irle of the inspector's office had a special call from the office inside the grounds. It was a case of stay out or pay to get in. They paid under protest and got a re ceipt. “This bill is a curiosity," said Fleming as he opened a letter from Horace Tucker, “because it represents the first case on record where a post office inspector had to pay to get into a postoffice."—Chicago Times. A Silver Statuette of Sunol. The Ames Manufacturing company of Chicopee, Mass., has completed a coin silver statuette of Sunol hitched to a sulky, upon which is seated an equally well known driver. The piece of statuary is one-fifth life size and is mounted upon a bronze standard. The sculptor is C. E. Dallin of Salt Lake City. The whole piece of statuary was molded from silver dollars. It required 331 ounces of silver. The sulky is an exact facsimile of the one in which the mare made her record of 2:08i. The piece is to be presented at a coming banquet in New York. Sir. and Mrs. Baker. On Baker’s island, where ex-President Harrison went fishing recently with his grandson, there stand two lighthouses of irregular height and clear white light known familiarly to dwellers on the north shore as “Mr. and Mrs. Baker.”— Boston Transcript. Ev«m With tlie Liglitiiintf ltoil Men. A gang of lightning rod sharks made an attempt to rod a farmer’s house against his will Saturday, but got the worst of tho bargain. Tin.- farmer is an old soldier, living 10 miles south of this city, named John Snyder. On Thurs day one man called and inquired who the owner was, got a drink of water and departed. The next day another called and proposed to make the farmer a pres ent of 100 feet of rod, charging him 75 cents a foot for 10 feet and charging him extra for the necessary points, insisting that the farmer sign a contract for tho balance. This he refused to do, and the fellow left. Saturday two more men drove up to his place, threw out rods and tools and proceeded to put up tho rods. The farmer objected, hut they claimed to have an order to do the work and laughed him to scorn. Snyder got his gun, and covering the man in the wagon, who had drawn a revolver, he ordered him to clear out or he would let daylight tlirough him. The fellow drove off at a lively rate, leaving his pal at the j mercy of the farmer, who served him in like manner, and now the farmer has 10 feet of lightning rods to sell.—Warsaw (Ills.) Cor. St. Louis Republic. The Duke of York In u 11 rick. Several weeks ago one of the boys at tending the Queen Elizabeth grammar school at Kingston, Logan by name, wrote privately to tho Duke of York and suggested that he should use his influ-1 ence to secure the boys of the royal school an additional week’s holiday at midsummer as an appropriate way of celebrating the recent auspicious mar riage. The Duke of York appears to have approved of the idea, for a few days ago the governors of the grammar school were surprised to receive a letter from Sir Francis de Winton stating that his royal highness would be pleased if they would grant the asked fur holiday. Nothing was known by the masters or other authorities of the request made by | the boy till the letter was received from Sandringham. At a meeting of the gov ernors it was unanimously agreed to ac cede to the request. The announcement was received with ringing cheers for the Duke and Duchess of York.—London Telegraph. Long Walk of a Somnambulist. Mrs. Jennie Finkin of Eighth and Spruce streets, Camden, was found wan dering on the streets at 1 o'clock yester day morning by Officer Frederick Voight at Broadway and Bridge avenue, j The woman was attired in a wrapper, 1 and her hair was hanging loosely down her back. She was walking slowly, and . when the officer approached her side he was astonished to hear her snoring, ■ although her eyes were open. He ad dressed her in low tones, but received ! no answer. He then grabbed her by the arm. This aroused her, and when she found that she was on the street she fell to the pavement from astonishment. She recovered in a few minutes and ac cepted the protection of the officer to as sist her home. Mrs Finkin is said to be subject to attacks of somnambulism. When she was found by the officer, she was nearly two miles from her home.— i Philadelphia Press. Where the Blamo Delongs. One of the lovely nymphs who was floating about among the sylvan woods and streams during the summer has among her belongings a gown which the prosy man who pays the nymph's bills considers not a dream, but a very sub stantial reality, as it cost him 8500 over and above the original price. That was the sum he paid for one of the horses 1 that took cold while the carriage waited at the door of the modiste when the 1 gown was being fitted. He had been 1 clipped, and the illness resulted in his i death. The owner of the “creation,” however, thinks the unreasonable man should place the blame where it belongs —on the modiste of the fashionable horse.—New York Times. A Query About Electrocution. it is a noteworthy fact that post mortem examinations have been held on the bodies of electrocuted criminals in » very short time after they were shocked. Who among us all can positively and certainly declare whether life has left the body after a passage through it of an electric current? A shock of 2.000 volts will undoubtedly kill some men and may only stun others. Is there a competent physician who will state upon his honor that the criminals who have been electrocuted in New York state were dead when they were carried from the chair?—Electrical Review. All the Comforts of Home. Funny sights are often seen in the Pullman train tourist cars as they pass through the city nights, and curious noises are often heard. One sight that attracted considerable attention on train 71 Wednesday morning was a good sized washing hung out on the starboard side of the car. It is only one more evi dence of the many conveniences fur nished its patrons by the Maine Central. Experts, all of whom are married men, testify that the articles were those worn only by infants.—Kennebec Journal. Sparrows Killed by Lightning. The electrical storm on Sunday morn ing killed many sparrows in the vicinity of the nav}’ yard in Brooklyn. In the hospital grounds was a wheelbarrow full of tlieir bodies. They had fallen from a tree. In front of the house of Commander White, in Officers’ row, Flushing ave nue, 210 dead sparrows were found un der a tree. There was no mark on the trees to show that lightning had struck them.—New York Herald. Suffering From Too Much Currency. C. H. Boston, an employee of the United States Express company, had his left foot badly mashed in front of the treasury building yesterday afternoon. He was assisting several other express employees in moving a safe full of money from a wagon into the building when it slipped, and one comer of it fell on Mr. Boston’s foot.—Washington Post. Australian Plutocracy Nil. Wi !i all i: > I -:11s, wi;h ,.11 its igno rai!<. ■:L all its pusalons the de iti r,. ' Australia has a political iih- 1. The plutr < racy has none. It is fully occupied with its own affairs. It rallies to no public cry. This is the feature of Arts'.’-'1 i lifo which rectus to threaten most danger to the future. The < onntry which is not governed by its ablest men is badly govern.and the inclination of th” more enltiv.-i'- 1 classes to abstain fro:. In-; liamentary machine docs iutbiiteh r, ... er damage to the colonies than any at tempt on the part of trades hall social ists to "capture" it. But it does not follow that this atti tude is permanent! It is the fi-.i.iou to say that the labor people have every thing their own way and have luu pol itics impossible. It was the fashion to say the same in regard to industry be fore necessity taught the employers to unite. Let any political need press hard enough, let any political cause stir warmth enough, and the same ability, the same energy, the same public soirit roused again to union on a wider held are not likely to achieve a less result.— Melbourne Cor. London Times Small Demand For Shoes. People have not been lavish in their purchases of shoes of late years. The surplus of them is undoubtedly smaller than usual, and yet tho quantities dis tributed throughout the country have been sufficiently extensive to enable deal ers thus far to meet all the require ments of their customers by simply buy ing a few stray lots hero and there to piece out assortments. The accumula tions are dwindling, however, day by day because there are more shoes being consumed than there are being manu factured. When the clouds vanish from the com mercial horizon, as nobody doubt.-; they will—and it does not look rea -unable they should obscure the prospect much longer—there will be greatly enlarged markets all over the land for shoes, lint for the present there is not much to be done except to get under cover, if there is any shelter anywhere, and wad until the storm subsides.—Shoe and fvatlier Reporter. A Junior on .if I'iii:;n(:i. Who pays that the Afvi•• m r. ji.it going forward, that it is in.t •-» it it lacks method and economy a'.,-, di sire to prepare for the rainy day/ On Pennsylvania avenue is a bootblack who will he a millionaire if he lives long enough. A gentleman took hi- i s ry.-s terday morning and requested ids “russets” he shined. The darky went across the street and returned with a banana. “Dese ig’nuut comfiel nigger..,” iu said, “rub on lemon peel. Day ain't. in it wid dis.” Stripping the rind from the fruit and usingit asa towel, heimparlcd some sort of gloss to the shoes and nr; ;v. .1 hi;, •<) cents. Then he made his break fa • .IT the banana. Breakfast for a cent, with shoe polish thrown in and 0 cents to the good, is not bad financiering at a lime when the banks are breaking.—W- hing ton Post. Pathetic Ignorance. Thoughtless persons may be moved to laughter bythe report that an inhabitant of the city really supposed that ii« nad been divorced from /he bonds of matri mony by an unjudicial per- u tor the sum of §2. But the fact is i - ally jm 1 ic rather than jocose. It is probably only a single example of the large aud multi farious ignorance prevailing iu some parts of the community. It wou’d be sufficiently distressing if the wavs of these uninformed persons lay among a pure and pastoral simple people, never disposed to take any advantage of the unskillful. When in thc-se metropolitan districts so many ravenous wolv ... f all sorts are abroad intent upon preying on few and hard earned dollars, the phi lanthropist and educator may wd, be stir himself.—Brooklyn Eagle. Atlanta’s Half O.ntnry. Atlanta is about to celebrate her fif tieth anniversary. By that time her pop ulation will be in close neighbor^ of 120,000. The next 10 years at the --ame steady rate of increase will pl"-» her among the 10 leading cities of t’ coun try. This is not visionary or specula tive, but is based upon the natural ad vantages of the place and theqn.,;;:;. ami temper of its citizenship. Already At lanta is more extensively known at, the north than any other cily south of Wash ington. She has more energy, more pur pose and a more resplendent future than any city of her population in l . land. There is every reason why the n ,nt,s of Atlanta should not he despondent over the situation.—Atlanta Constitution. A Disgusted Questioner. There was a new arrival at Pauline's house, hut to her disgust, not u> .-ay wrath, it was a girl. Throe ri ' >r oc currences have taken the edge off her enthusiasm as to the advantage- of hale sisters, and she stood glowerin t the little bundle of wails and inquired, ‘ 'How much you gave for it'r” “Tw> -v-iour dollars,” she was told. "Huriip.i. arid Polly’s disgust deepened. "Win you were about it, why didn't you ti... more and get a boyd'—Exchange The cornerstone of the national capiiol was laid Sept, ta, 1793. it is l -s-ed to celebrate the centennial arm ini virv of this event by a parade, address--, nre works and a night illumination ,. me capitol by means of 21 searchlights. A St. Louis woman has lately p- ; t. oted an invention for making s\ve<" y dato flour. The process includes pee’ _ the potato and drying the peel as a i t tor live stock, drying and grinding the po tato into three grades of flour. It is said that the Duchess of Y<»tk has spent a good many hours of htr mmej moon “knitting comforts of a ..Hy nature” for her proteges. Th ’nke meanwhile read aloud to his hriu , imia pleting a charming tableau.