i I Nlco Wo CHENILLE CUR ( CARPETS STOVES TAINS PrleOH FURNITURE PARLORSUITS. Brussels Carpets , offer this week have boon cut follows as Highly i > o Ished SUITS. desiraolo patterns , a. only : BUBO Burners , lows Chamber Sots , tin- Handsomely uphol special drive , for 9ia.GO. Oil Heaters , ; tlguo or 10th cen stered , latest style , this week only 48c. ' $4.25. Cannon These formerly $5 tury finish , cnovnl 10th century or an- Incrnln Carpets , Stoves , $ U ! )0. ) 0-holo now $12.60. or sqnaro dressera. tlquo finish , worth latest style , this Utilises , $12.60. ! Tluno formerly $10 worth $30.00 , thla $10.00 , this wcelt week only 25c per luilo Unices , $9.03. now $ , ) . week only $18.75. only $23.76. yard , worth double. Worth double. now Those J8.CO formerly $15 BOOK Secretaries fASES , , FOLDING BEDS. s IDEUOAHDS. STOVE PIPE PRICES TAMPS ' Ladies' Desks Combination , Tills week . only. Fifty-six different A Solid Oak Sideboard . . u to bo bination Library < j i i A nice Hanging Cases , Parlor Desks , stylos. Ask to sco board , finely finished Stove pipe lOc joint. lower tiian the low Elbows 80each , Lamp for $1.75 , worth Olllce Desks.etc. , wo our - $8.60 Mantel ished , well tundo , Hods 14cenoh. Conl Zinc est. We coiillally Folding Bed and our this week onlyl 1.76 , Invite to oiler at prices which you examine Beards 05o each. $ I3.2J Folding - A fine Hanging Upright other housed would ine and to bo compare wo guarantee Dampers 60 each. Lnmp for $1.05 , worth from 10 to 60 pot- ing Bed , in nntlguo consider it chimp ut Shovels 4c each. them with any house $10. cent below cash store or 10th century fin $ ia In the l\nil. : ish. prices. DEDDING. rpABLES. c iVRPETS. ROCKERS- Rockers , Jl.O'i. Comforts 68e. , Linoleums , 680. C'ino Rockers Sl.iW. Pillows , ! t4c. Dining Tables , Single Lounges , , Blankets , Hoe. $1.95. Kitchen Ta $ 1.83 , worth $7.60. Door Mais , 128c. Children's Rockers , Spreads , 07c. bles , 75c. Extension ] 3ed L o u > n o s , Rugs , 81. Ooc. Tiipeatry Rock- Holsters , 31.U5. Tables , S3.85 , and $7.50 , worth $111 Stair Carpet , 15c. 013 , &M6. Piusli PillowSllps , 17c. all other tables Ohonlllo Couches , Rap Ctirpot , 2'Jo. Rockers , $2.75. Carpet - Worth double. equally as low. $9.75 , worth $10. Oil Cloth , 10c. pot Rockers , $2.43. WINDOW . J INNER SETS. rpERMS J TTCIIEN. T 1NWARE. SHADES , 23c. pURNITURE. Lace Uurtains.OOc. Dinner Sots , $7.50. On iv bill of $10 , $1 Kitchen Tablo,75e. Wash Boiler ? , 75e. Curtain Poles , 6c. Easels , 55c , Tea Sdta , $4.2 j. cash and $1 per week. Kitchen safest , 60. Tea Kettles , aio , Silk Curtains , ScreotiR , 75c. Toilet Sots , $1.95. Special nnd moro Kitchen Chairs , ColVeoPols , lOc. $2.45. Plush Clitrirs.Sl.OO. Wo carry the largest favorable arrangements 34c. Mrs. Pott's Irons , Bedsteads , $1.25. est stock of 34c.Kitchen Soc. Chenille Covers , Crockery ments on larger purchases Kitchen Cabinet , Soc.And Ooc. Springs , 800. and Glassware in chases- $0.50. And all other tin Ooc.Silkalino , lOc. the city. ware equally as low. S 1LVEUWARE. AN IMMENSE CTREE JJ1REE * * --buildlng , with a Heavy Plato large warehouse in With every purchase Knives and Forks , the rear , stored from With every purchase With every purchase uf $10.00 and over a. usual $1.50 of $3.00 and over , n . price , cellar to roof with of Sl.OQ and over a very pretty Smyrna. this week only $2.25. everything neces handsome imported beautiful decorated Rug with a choice of Alarm ( Jlecks , 7oc. sary for housekeep Bouvenir. cup and saucer. several hundred to Eight-day Clocks , ing. select from. $2.03. We are always moving toward the "King K.OW" of success and ever ready to jump at a chance to prove that our prices are far below any otlier house in the city. f * America's Largest Gasii or Credit House. Persistent Efforts to Fix 'the Complexion of the Future Supreme Bench , WILL SOON SAY "WE ARE THE COURTS" Pecullur Methods of Sentlns "SnHnule" Judces Ilio Lobby , It * Influence and Wny of Working II. Got' . ll'm. iMriabee " 'flit RallrnaA Question. " The decision which the supreme court of the United States rendered la the Granger cases in 1870 , afllrmlng the right ota state to control railroad charges for the transporta tion of passengers wholly within the state , was a serious disappointment to railroad men , for It was the first stop toward wrest ing from thorn ttio power to arbitrarily con trol the commerce of the-couatry. Ever since that time it has been their determined pur pose to bring about , If possible , a recon struction of the federal supreme court lu or der to secure a reversal or mollification of the Granger decision. In the ease of Peilc vs Chicago , 91th U. S. , 170 , the supreme court laid down the following broad princi ple of law : "Whoro property has been clothed with public interest the legislature may 11 x a limit to that which shall in law bo reasonable for Us uso. This limit binds the court as well as the people. If it has been improperly fixed the legislature not the courts must bo appealed to for a change. " ID ono of the Granger cases the same court used the following language : "Wo know that this Is a power which may bo abused , but that Is no argument against its exist ence. For protcctibn against abuses by legislatures the people must resort to the polls. " Fourteen years later , In the case of the Chicago , Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad company vs , Minnesota , deckled in October , IbOO , the saiuo court rendered n decision so indefinite that the lawyers differed much in their opinion as to Its moaning , ami It ap pears that the members of tlio court who inado the dccisioa also differed In their opinions as to the meaning of the decision , for Justice Bradley said In his dissenting opinion , la which Justice Gray and Justice Lamnr concurred , that tin decision practic ally overruled Munn * 's. Now York , sub. milled in October , IbOl , and decision ren dered February 20 , Ib'J'J , and opinion de livered by Justice lilatchford In referring to the Minnesota case , after quoting the above statement from Justice Uradloy , said ; "But tnc opinion of the court did not say so , nor did it refer to Munn vs. Illinois , nnd wo are of the opinion that the dcclslon-ln that case is , is ivlll bo hereafter shown , quite dis tinguishable from the present case , ' ' It Is thus apparent that this court has ad hered to the decision in Munn vs. Illinois , and to the itoctrlacs announced in the opinion of the court in that case , and these doctrines have since been repeatedly enforced in the decisions of the courts of the states. Judge Qrowor , whoso zeal for the defense ot corporate Interests seems to amount almost ton cruzo , dissented. He said : "I dissent from the opinion and Judgment In thcso cakes , The main proposition upon which they rest Is , in my Judgment , radically unsound , It is the doctrine of Munn vs. Illinois roafUrmcd. The paternal theory of government is to ino odious. Justice Field nnd Justice Urowu cpiicur with me [ u this Ulssont , " It should be remembered that Justices Brewer ami Brown were both , appointed to the supreme bench by President Harrison. Kallrouil Tools lu High 1'lacei. Wo have every reason to believe that un- l u the people uf the United Slates are on the alert , as railroad managers always are , there is. with further changes in the person nel of the court , danger of Its deviating from the sound principles of law laid down In its decision in the Granger cases. Railroad at torneys have been reoeatcdly raised to seats in the highest tribunal in the land. So great is the power of the railroad interests , and so persistent are they in their demands , that unless a strong public sentiment records its protests their candidates for appointive ofllccs are but too apt to be successful. Rep resentatives of the rallrciads sit In the con gress of the United States , others'aro mem bers of the national campaign committees of both of the great political parties , others control the politics of the states , and their Inllucnco reaches to the whlto housewhether Its occupant is aware of It or not. Other in terests iu the past have succeeded la secur ing the appointment of biased men as Judges of the supreme court who afterwards could always bo relied unon to render decisions In tholr J.ivor. Will the people protit by their experience ; or will they bo indifferent to the danger which surrounds them until nothing short of a political uplicavnl can restore to them these rights of sovereignty of which they have so insidiously been deprived ? Human gratitude is such that oven high- mi ndc-d men -who , through the inilucnco of the railroad Interest , have been placed upon tlio federal bench , iind it impossible to divest themselves of all bias when called upon to decide a case in which their , bene factors are interested. Such Is the human mind that , when clouded by prejudice , it will forever bo blind to Its own fault. Even the members of so high a tribunal as the elec toral commission' , which doslded the presi dential contest between Hayes nnd Tlldon , could not divest themselves of their preju dices ; each ono , republican or domocraf , voice' for the candidate of the party with which ho had cast his political fortune. " \\lilm niul Urcetl" or tlio Majority. Last January , in an address delivered before the Now Yorit State Bar association ut Albany , Mr. Justice Urcwcr reminded his hcaicrd that the rights of the railroads "stand as secure la the eye and the custody of the law as the purposes of Justice iu the thought of God. " And further on they wore told that there nro today 511,000,000,000 , Invested la railroad property , whoso owners In this country number less than 2,000,000 , persons. Can U bo that whether that immense sum shall earn u dollar or bring the slightest recompense to these who have invested perhaps their all in that business , and arn thus aliUng in the development of the country , dcfieiids wholly upon the \ \ him nnd greed of that great majority of 00,000,000 , who do not own a dollar I It may .bo said that that majority will not bo so foolish , sclllsh and cruel as to strip that property of Its earning capacity. I say that so long ns constitutional guar antees lift on American soil their buttresses and bulwarks against wroua , and so long as the American judiciary breathes the free air of courage , it cannot. Unfortunately judicial buttresses and bul warks have not always been lifted against wrong. Judge Tnnoy , like Urowor , supposed - posed it was left at bis tlmo for his court to preserve the peace nnd provide for the safety of the nation ; but history has shown that wo cannot depend upon that high tri bunal for safety when it is'controlloa by weak or inofllciont men. n When wo consider what "that great ima- Jorlty" has done for this country lu the past , unil is doing for it at the present time , and especially when wo contrast its sunso of justice and right with the weakness and in ability of some nf Its public servants , does it not seem to bo n little presumptuous for them to assume that "ihr. danger is from the multitudes the majority with whom is the power , " and that wore it not for their superior wisdom and patriotic action this great government of the people , by the people - plo and for the people would bo a failure ? Mr. Lincoln never feared "tho whim and rceiVlof "that great majority , " but he had at a'.l times implicit confidence In the gnnt mass ot the people , ami they in return had full cpufUloncu that no temptation of wealth or power was auQIclcnt to seduce his in tegrity. NYa cannot dismiss this subject without referring to a atratatjem which railroads huvoliuue past repeatedly resorted to for the purpose of removing from the bench judges of Independent minds whom they have found it Impossible to control. This stratagem consists of a well disguised bribe , by which a federal Judge is changed Into a railroad attorney with a princuly salary. The railroad thus gets rid of an undesirable ludgo and gains a desirable solicitor nt a l > rieo at which they could well have afforded to pension the Judge. The following is a copy of a broker's circu lar letter sent to prominent bankers of Iowa , and shows that even the dork of the United States court is not overlooked : Juno30.1802. MrWo offer , Hublcct to sale at par nnd Interest , note ? 2JOO. ! Jite. July 5 , 1892. Time , six months ; rate , G per cont. I'liyuhlo when do- slrud. Jlakor I2tidorsor , Judge Mr , the milker , Is clerk of United StHtes circuit court at Judge , the well known attorney of the & Hallway company of , staled to us to bo worth 81130,000 to $200,000. Can you use It ? How T.ogUlniurcs Are Worked. While railroad managers rely upon servile courts as n last resort to defeat tlio will of the sovereign people , they are far from los ing sight of the Importance of controlling the legislative branch of the government. By preventing what they are pleased to call unfriendly legislation they are moro than likely to prevent friction with public opinion , and they avoid at the same time the risk of permanently prejudicing their caiiso by an adverse opinion upon a constitutional ques tion , which they may find It necessary to raise hi order to nullify a legislative act. Thcro are Mireo distinct means employed by them to control legislative action. First , the election to legislative ofllccs of men who are , for some personal reason , adherents to the railroad cause. Second , the delusion or even corruption of weak or unscrupulous members of legislative bodies. Third , the employment of professional nnd Incidental Jobbylsts and the subsidizing of newspapers or their representatives for the purpose of inlluciiclng members of legislative bodies and their constituencies. There arc probably in every legislative body a number of members who are in some way or other connected with railroad cor porations. No doubt n majority of thesa are personally Irreproachable and even so hili- mltidcd as to always postpone- private for public Interest , yet there are also these whoso political advancement was brought about by railroad managers lor the very purpose of having in the legislative body servile members who could always bo rolled upon to servo tholr corporate masters. Nevertheless , wcro railroad Interests re stricted to the votes of these men for their support the public would probably have no cause for alarm on aeivunt of the presence of railroad representatives in legislative bodies , but as mariy other interests seek favorable legislation railroad men aro' often enabled to gain support for their cause by a corrupt bargain for votes , and It Is thus possible for them to double , triple' nnd even quadruple their original strength by a policy of reciprocity. As in congress and state leclslnturos , so these representatives of the railroads mav bo fouad in our city councils. The loaders of the railroads In congress and iu the legis latures of tho. various states usually rely upon discretion for obtaining their end , but railroad aldermen , with but few exceptions , seek to demonstrate their loyalty to the causft to which they are committed by a zealous advocacy of extreme measures , and will not infrequently even gala their end through the most unscrupulous combina tions. If their votes , together with such support as they obtain by making trades , are not suDlcleut to carry out or defeat u measure whlcli the railroad interests may favor or oppose even moro questionable means are employed to gain u sUlllclen ( num ber of votes to command a majority' Outright bribery is probably the means least often employed by corporations to carry their measures. While It may bo true that the vote of every weak and unscrupu lous legislator is a subject of barter , monev is not often the compensation for which it is obtained. It is the policy of the political corruption committees of corporations to as certain the weakness and wants of every man whoso services iboy pro JIUcly to uood , and to attack him , if his surrender should bo essential to their victory , at his weakest point. Men with political nmblflon are en couraged to aspire to preferment , and ore as sured of corporate support to bring it about. Briefless lawyers are promised business or salaried attorncysulps. These In financial straits are accommodated with loam. Vain in on are flattered and Klvta newspaper' toriety. Others are given pasiea for their families and their friends. Shippers are given advantages m rates overt heir com peti- sors ; In fact every legislator disposed to bar- : cr his vote a\ay receives for it compensa tion which combines the maximum of vio- cnco to his self-respect. Wlmt the Lobby Is Jin do Ot Those who attempt to influence or control legislative bodies in behalf of Interested parties are called the lobby. As a rule the ; obby consists of piomment politicians likely to have inilucnco with members of their own party ; of men of good address and easy conscience , familiar alike with the subject under consideration and legislative proceed- uro , and lust , but not least , of conlldcntial agents authorized and prepared to enter into secret negotiations with venal members. The lobby which represents the railroad companies at legislative sessions is usually the largest , the most sagacious and the most unscrupulous ot nil. Its work is systematic and thorough , its methods unscrupulous and its resources great. Yet all the members of n legislative body cannot bo bribed cither by money or position or favors. Some of them will not vote for nny proposed mensurcTun- loss they can bo convinced that it is for the public welfare. Tluso legislators , if their votes nro needed , nro turned over to the per- suaslvo eloquence of these members of the lobby who apparently have come to the rapi- tal moved by a patriotic impulse 10 set erring legislators right on public ques tions. Tholr familiarity with pub lic matters , their success in pub lic life , their high standing in political circles , their apparent disinterestedness and their arguments all combine to give theai great Inllucnco over now and inex perienced members. In extreme cases in fluential constituents of doubtful members are sent for at the last moment to labor with their representatives , nnd to assure them that the sentiment of their districts is in favor of the measure advocated by the railroads , lolcgrams pour In upon the un suspecting members. Petitions in favor of the proposed measure are also hastily cir culated among the unsophisticated constit uents of members sensitive to public opinion , and are then presented to thorn ns an unmistakable Indication of the popular will , ' although the total number of signers forms a very small percentage of the total number of voters in the districts In which these petitions were circulated , A common method employed by the railroad lobby in Iowa has been to arouse by ingenious argu ments the prejudices of the people of one part of the state against these of another , or of ono class against these of another class ; for instance , the cast against the west , or that portion of the state tlio least supplied with railroad facilities against that which is host supplied ; or the river cities against the interior cities ; or the country people aRaiust tlio city people ; or the farmer against the merchant , and al ways artfully keeping In view the oppor tunity to utilize onu sldo or the other in their own interest. The Chesapeake-oyster beds employ 30,000 persons. Iso nation has rmado so rapid increase in the tonnage of steamers registered the past twelve months as the United States. Until 1859 no pl | | iron was manufactured in Pittsburp. In 18U2 a total of 1,77C , ' . > 57 gross tons wore produced. Nearly a hundred establishments nro en- caged In the manufacture of bronze powder in and near tboultles of Furth and Nurcm- burg. * It took four months for four men to do seven inches of a cashmere shawl one yard wide , working from 5 in the morning till 5 in the evening everyday , so It was hardly to be wondered at that two yards should cost nearly ? 500. Thcro is big news to bo told about alum inum. It Is m > w on the market at 05 cents a pound , and a thousand fresh uses for it have been discovered. Already It has driven sil ver out of the arts to some extent. It has almost superseded the latter metal as foil for "gilt" worir , because It ir quite as beau tiful and can bo beaten into leaf nearly as thin as gold leaf. The production of it has surpassed that of nickel and will soon ex ceed that of copper and lead. In fact , aluminum Is destined soon to take the place ofluad and copper to a largo degree , as well as that of iron , wneu it becomes cheap enough , Cure indigestion ' and biliousness with Littler Carly Risers. MAKE WAY FOR THE TURKS The Day They Lord It Over the Rest of Fowl Creation. SEASONED MEDITATION AND MASTICATION The Whys anil the Wherefores Discussed mill iiiiciIatml nlth Historical HUilllng Itellcctloiu on the Day Wo Celebrate. Age does not wither nor custom stale the festival of Thanksgiving. It has become a part of tlie national life , and Its Influence transcends the physical features of the fes tival. It comes at a season of the year when the bounties of nature are Inventoried and the bounteous blessings thereof inay bo properly acknowledged. And to give eelnt to the spirit of thankfulness the inner man is gorgeously crratiflcd. Tlien there is the mirth , thochccr , the fellowship of the gen- ulno feast which servo to drlvo dull care away. And there arc abundant reasons for thank fulness this year. The banker sees in his replenished hoard nnd stiff rates much cause for Joy. The borrower may rojolco in being accommodated. Reawakened industry hums a Joyous lay and erstwhile smoKcless chimneys belch soot nnd thankfulness. Sil ver clouds have taken a golden hue. Gran aries groan with nature's oountles. Politi cally , the g. o. p. bus earned its exhilaration ; its opponents may rejoice for the favor of existence. Wo have seen thrones totter and dusky crowns roll In the dust ; war's comic front bristling in other lands ; monarchies trembling on the points of bayoifcts and ox- ccsstvo taxation ; cJivino rightcrs making footballs of the popular will ; civilization marching with rum nnd gun in the dark continent , and the quixotics of Spain pump ing lead and soiiso into Iho Moors nil these wo tmvo witnessed wlillo enjoying peace and national concord. Wherefore lot us ideal- tate and masticate and be duly thankful. Una of the Illc Four. With the Fourth of July , Memorial < lny and Washington's birthday , Thanksgiving day is OHO of the four distinctively American festivals , but though distinctively American the sentiments that inspire them Thanks giving day , faith ; Washington's natal day , hero worship ; Memorial day , love ; and the Fourth of'July , patriotism are common to all peoples of the earth , nnd only for excel lent reasons of our own have wo selected the times -whey wo ourselves shall celebrate these universal feelings. Tlio Thanksgiving day sentiment is indeed a far dosccndcd one , it being an inheritance from the llrst races of manUindof the elation thpy felt over nature's yearly largess the American Indians and ether barbaric trlbos having to this day ceremonies of their own in celebration of autumn's bounty. As a spirit of reliirlon dovcloped this feel ing grow into a worship of deities that were supposed to preside over the crops , like the beautiful goddesses Demeter of the Ureoks nnd Cores of the Homans ; and still later whoa mythology had been cast off , remnants of the same idea remained in the "harvest homes , " and similar , though differently named , festivals of all nations when the praln garnered nnd the fruit heaped up , merry mailings and dances went on beneath the rays of the harvest moon. IJut It remained for that little band of Ply mouth pilgrims to give a spiritual signifi cance to those gala times to provide a fit ting soul for so fair a body , an act eminently In conformity wlU this religious people ; while the American nation at lariro , many decades later , widened this feeling into ono of natl&nal Import , so that this week in stead of flfty-ilvo people observing it. as was the case la Plymouth 273 years ago , 07,000- , , 000 arc participants in its good cheer. The first official Thanksgiving of which there Is uny record in this country was again a Massachusetts affair and the procla mation was issued in the Massachusetts Hay colony for October 10 , lOil : ! . Other ofllcial occasions of a similar kind arc registered as occurring in 1010 and In 1051 , and from then on until 10SOlien Iho form of the recorded proclamation indicated that 'it had become an annual custom. The 1'lrst hy Gcoreo. The first Thanksgiving day proclamation ever issued by a president was signed by George Washington In 1780. The original is in the possession of Kov. .T. W. Wcllman. who inherited it from his grandfather , William Uiploy of Cornish , N. II. This proclamation was issued by request of both houses of congress , through their Joint com mittee. The text of the proclamation follow ing the preamble Is : Now , therefore , I do recommend and as sign Thursday , the 'JOlli day of November next , to bo devoted by the people of thcso states to the service of that great and glori ous Doing , who is the bcnlflccnt author of all the good that was , that Is , or that will be. That wo may then all unlto in reader- ing unto Him our sincere and humble thanks for His kind care and protection of the People of this Country previous to the r becoming a Nation ; for the signal and mani fold Mercies , and the favourable interposi tions of his Providence In the Course and Conclusion of the late War ; for the great Degree of Irnnqvnlity , Union and Plenty , which wo have since enjoyed ; for the peace ful and rational Manner In which wo have boon enabled to establish Constitutions of Government for our Safety and Happiness , and particularly the national ono now lately Instituted ; for the civil and religious Liberty with whlcli wo are b'.cssod , and the means wo Imvo of acquiring and diffusing useful knowledge ; and in general , for all the great and various Favours which ho hath .been pleased to confer upon us. And , also , that wo may then unite in most humbly offering ouv Prayers and supplica tions to the great Lord nnd Ifulerof Na tions , and beseech him to pardon our National and other Transgressions ; toon- able us all , .whether la public or private Stations , to perform our several and rel.v tluo Duties properly and punctually ; to ren der our National Government a Ulchslug to all the people , by constantly being a govern ment of wise , just and Constitutional Laws , directly and faithfully executed and obeyed ; to protect and guide all Sovereigns and na tions ( especially such as hnvo shown kindness - ness to us ) , and to bless them with good Government , Peace and Concord ; to promote - mete the Knowledge and Practice of trno Hellxion nnd Virtue , and the Incrcaso of Science among thorn and us ; and generally to grant unto all Mankind such a degree of Temporal Prosperity as ho ulono knows to bo best. Given nador mv Hand , at the City of Now Vm-ir ihn third Day of October , in the year of Our Lord Ono Thousand. Sovcn Hundred and olghty-nlno. G. WASHINGTON. The Thanksgiving proclamations issued since the time of "G , Washington" have usually been less elaborate. From Washington's tlmo down to Lincoln the custom was intcrmlttlngly followed. IJut only since JSiS can Thanksgiving bo said to have been a llxod and universal American custom , and la that year the gov ernors of the different southern states united with their eastern brother onlclals in issu ing Thanksgiving proclamations , and thp example sot by Lincoln in 1803 of issuing a Thanksgiving proclamation suggesting the lost Thursday in November as an appropriate day bos been followed since without break by every occupant of the presidential chair. Ilio Wny We Celebnile. Ot Thanksgiving rites as such there are but few In existence. In this country the day has always been presumably of a religious nature ; and great is the horror frequently expressed at Its latter day deterioration , Hut it is n fact that oven in the Purltnnlo records of the season more mention is inado of the feasting than of the prayer presum ably because ( ho latter may have been suu- posed to bojilways _ with them. Nowadays tlio religious part of thn day falls somewhat Into the background , The church congrega tions on that morning are so slender as to call for "union meetings.1 People must hurry homo to dinner , and still more lately the inarch of athletics is pushing even tlio dinner aside , and the outdoor sports of the day are the things that take up the time and the attention of the generality of tlio pooiUo , nfiut still the homo gatherings are kept up and the turluy , too cranberry sauce , and that pride and Joy of the Now England heart , the pumpkin pio. are bronchi on the board each year to. celabrato the return Jo the annual festival Bf Thanksgiving. It was Whlttier who wrote : Ah ! nn TlKinktglvinK duylion from cast and f i oin wust , KIOIII north and from south coino the pilgrim and guust , Wliun the gray i nlred Now EiiKlmidor seca round his bouril The old hiokon llnlcsot nlToctlnn rcslorecl , ' \Vhun Iho euro wuuilcd IIKUI sucks his mother once more , And the worn nmtroii smiled where the girl hinllud boforu , WlKit moistens the lip , what brightens the oju ? What culls back the past lllco the rich pumpklu plo'c Xr.KUTItW.lfiUTUS. . Drawbaugh , the telephone inventor , has nntentcd an electric counter scale , which , after weighing an article automatically , puts ic In a paper bag. Tlio Cataract Construction company at n recent meeting closed a contract with Slow- art & Co. of St. Louis for the construction of the Immense electrical power housoat N laguni Falls , and the work will bo com menced immediately. A resident of New York has Invented an electro-hydrogen clear lighter. The gas Is mnUa by nu electric battery and collected In an inverted Jar which holds sulllcloin gas to burn ten or 11 ft eon minutes. A push button opens a gas rock nnd at the sumo tlmo causes an electric spark to bo generated , which ignites the gas. At the close of tlio year I81U there were In. SwlUsrlnml & 3H electric lights run by water fall power , flftv-thrco plants for electrical transmission of power , 121 accumulator or r.torago batteries and 1,050 , ether dynamos and electro-motors. The number of lu- canOcsceut lamps run by moans of water power was IIO.UM , and of are lamps 0,710. The supply of tolcgniph nnd telephone poles appears to bo giving out. Cedar makes the bc4t pole , but the consumption of these lias been so great that of late years chestnut - < nut has been largely used , but these are also I becoming scarco. A good chestnut polo I thirty-two feet long is worth from 1 to M. I Ihey are scarce ut that. The cost of I poles now equals the cost of wlro and labor ] on a line , and a fowmore will usoup tnosup-f ply of chestnut. The Manchester. Hnp. , Courier says ; Thu expiration of various American patents Is expected to give a great Impulse to electr- ) ] cai engineering , alnco a practical monopoly ! \\ill thereby noon coma toun end. U Is under-f stood tluit certain London linns arn prepar-1 Ing to Kiipply Incandescent lamps at a inuohl cheaper late than that atprqscnt oxlsilnfr.l At the sumo tiino a gentleman interested in I electrical enterprises says that thai public will be by no means a certain galnerJ by the lowering of the price , 'J he old lampal were excessively dear , but tho.y seldom Roll outof order. The danger with their suc-J ccssor.1 will bo that ropalrs will bo necessary 1 at very short Intervals. According to our j Informant , no great cheapening of oluotrlot lighting , combined with ofTccllyt'iiuss , can 4 bo expected for soiuo time to coino , Various ! problems uonnucied with storage have tlrst to bo solved , and the oxpo-ts do not acorn much nearer their explanation than they * wcro ilvo or six years au'o. In tlio last issue of the Electrical World rofcrcnro Is inado to n scries ot calculations intended to determine the cdlclencius ol coal and electric stoves forcooltliiK , nnd although tlio calculations nro nccosnanly only very crude , they are of some interest. The cooU- Ing ulllclonoy , that is the ratio of Iho heat used in cooking to the total heat In Iho coal , was founil to bo tlirco hundrcilths of 1 per cent. Adding to that tlio heat used in liuat- Ing the water in Iho articles themselves , as well as that for washing , the total all day offlclenoy was found to bo 4.2 percent. Prof. 1 Tyndall obtained 0 per cent. Similar calcula- I tlons are mtulo for an olcctrio stove to do I lit ] same work , and it Is found that as far as 1 actual cooking Is concerned olo'ilricul cook ing is about 1U per cent cheaper , but It be comes 95 per cent moro expensive if thp water is also heated , lleutlns , ' the wattr in a coal boater Is therefore- suggested , which will have an cdlclency of SO per cent , ana j then do the cooking in nn electric stoYCj. InJ which case thera will bo practically no dlttor-J dice la ontclency , In conclusion it Is stated ! that the electric oven is bound to come. Llttlo pills for great Illi : DeWitl's Uttli ( Carly UUer .