®ke grookkaven grader, j - $ke §r**Mut9r« leader. STANDI NO ADVKRTMRMKVTB. IMCL il WKjiMIIMI IriS „ On* Inch.[»T*r»TM »10 001 l» M * ‘ Two Inches. 5 no II SO 17 M, » » Three Inches. 7 *0 17 » » M( M 00 Four Inches.. 10 00 11 M M SK MM Fire Inches. lt«o T7 SW 4» SOj M SO - -- =r==r=r_____ _ .' Six Inches. H 00 M OP) M OR MM F*r transient advertieemenM,ten cento a Bi B. T. HOBBS. A. Government in the Interest of the People. $2.00 PER ANNUM. sij,*ule»rp'bll*hed free All over six Hoes line for til-t insertion: live cents a line for __ _r _ will be charged for at regular advortlstef each siil>*ci|uciit insertion. — ■ - . -— - -■ _ ..._ ~ - ' , -- — -rates. i^aiNotuestcneentoaiineforeachinser VOLUME I. BROOK HAVEN, MISSISSIPPI, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1883. NUMBER 11. LIKE A JIOI SE. Men an- like houses. They are flats. They, too. have hricks— within their hats. They're mortgaged, hammered, nailed and lli«>red. And have room-attics, and their board. Houses have tenants, and, we guess, A niHU has tell aunts, more or less. Itoth hare too stories, empty ijulto. And each doth take carpenter right. Houses ami men of ancient dates Have scanty lock* and broken salts. Houses on corners stand, with stairs; Men do the same. Both need repairs. Houses are lathed with plaster. Men Arc plastered all with lather when They shavings have. Ttiey'r • -hiuglcd, too, rpon their man s hard roof «o true. A house well huilt will settle some; A mull well hilled will settle—gnitn. Scaffolds on houses hang: hut men Hang on a scaffold oft again. I'nlike a man a house of wood Foundation has for stories good. Both Are insurance need below For manshtins burning much we know. —//. V. Dodge, In Detroit Free /Teas. ACROBATS AND GYMNASTS. The practice of lofty tumbling with out 11 net is so manifestly reprehensible that it needs neither comment nor con demnation here; but it is a curious fact that many more accidents are recorded of ground-tumbling than of aerial gym- i nasties. A member of the Hanlon-Volt a j troupe, who has been doing sensational j business all his life, told me that he i never met with a mishap but once, and j that was in descending from a bar only j bis own height from the stage, when he | sprained his knee rather severely. And j it is a significant circumstance, which cannot be too strongly noted, that the comparatively few accidents which have happened to gymnasts have nearly all occurred through defects in the “life saving apparatus,” the net. When this belongs to the performer, it is generally spread under his own supervision, anil i the strength of its texture anti fasten ings carefully tested, and renewed if re oiiircd; hut where the net is a stock property of a place of entertainment, or, worse still, is provided by an entre preneur who, not a performer himself, farms the gymnast, nnd undertakes to find all the appliances, damaged ma terial and insecure attachments are apt to he overlooked. 'file descent into the net itself is said to l>e not altogether devoid of danger, and an impression is current among these people that to fall upon the side of the head will inevitably break the neck. I am not aware, however, that any ease has been known- to bear out this theory. Many gymnasts now dispense with the rugs or carpets with which the net is commonly padded, on account of their interfering with the view of those seated underneath, and come down upon t he naked meshes without injury. A certain “Little Bob”—a tine joung tiiiiii now—who lias been celebrated for pre-eminently high dives ever since he was a very small boy, sometimes mak ing a headlong perpendicular descent of eighty feet or so, where the building is lofty enough to permit of it, says that lie would have no objection to plunge from a height twice as great into a net of proper tension, andthst he has never suffered any inconvenience from the transit through the air or arrest of mo tion. He comes down in a slightly ob lique direction, with the hands extended for effect, after the fashion of a diver; when he sees the net “getting near,” the arms are withdrawn to the sides and tile heail is tucked in on the chest, so that he falls upon the shoulder-blades and rolls over. In connection with this part of the subject, the elegant and wonderful “dives” of Zazacl at the London Aquarium will doubtless be re membered by many readers. Your special commissioner being taken up to an exceedingly high and dusty place to see some very ingenious mechanism recently invented bv a gym nast, was induced by the enthusiastic arguments, protestations, and twice repeated example of that individ- j ual, to take the direct route to j the lower regions—in plain words, to drop from a swinging bar into the cusli min'd net some Itlty ieet below. rin-| gers seemed to assume an iron grip, and j I lie liar to become magnetic, even after j the trapeze had been brought to a stand still, and the legs drawn up at right angles with the body in a sitting pos ture, as directed. “Now then, go!'' was shouted more than once, before I could unbend those hands which had apparently acquired a persistent rigidity of their own; then the bar and roof with its beams and girders flew away from urn, and a tremendous repentance of the folly I was committing rushed upon me, with a distinct presentation of '■very detail of every' story I had heard of people falling through nets improp erly fixed or badly mended, and a to tally independent calculation of the surgical effect which the legs of the in verted chairs I had observed piled up in the area below the apparatus would produce upon the human frame falling from a height; the whole accompanied by a perception that I was gradually, very gradually, inclining backwards; which opened a new vista of the proba bilities of my demonstrating tlie truth of the sideways neck theory. I seemed to be suspended between earth and sky for about a week, anil was always reconciled to the position, when I sud denly and unexpectedly found the crim son mattresses billowing up about me and surging over my face, and woke to the fact that I had really fallen. I landed on my back, flat; but there was no shock, nor, indeed, was 1 conscious of having stopped; which perhaps was due to the elasticity and rebound of the net. The only part of the adventure which was disagreeable physically was the walking, or rather stumbling and crawling, over the net to the ladder at the farthest end, a very quaky, sea-sick sort of business. Acrobats and gymnasts usually prac tice during the morning on the stage of i some theater. Even when not working ^ at any new trick, they always practice once a day, if their engagement does not include two performances. Some times they have to go through as many as six or seven. When a man intends to bring out some novel and special feat, and wishes to keep it a profound secret until its production, he hires an empty school-room or public hall, or even a theater, for his own exclusive use, and there exercises with his appli ances and assistants until he is perfect. No stage performance is ever rehearsed at home. It is somewhat disappointing to find that the music which seems such an inspiriting accompaniment to the spectators is disregarded by some pro fessionals, who, indeed, aver they would rather be without “hand-clatter!” Salaries^ ary enormously, of course. Of late years, then- lias been a demand for female gymnasts, and some have been forthcoming: but, as might he ex pected, they rarely excel. Still, they draw good houses, and the morbid ta.-te of the public enables some of them to command fifty or a hundred pounds a week. Troupe salaries run even higher than this in exceptional cases; but man agers always want something that no other company has presented, and the art is therefore a progressive one. All manner of things are introduced to impart a spice of novelty to old tricks in every department. Acro bats juggle with balls, knives, hoops, fans, bells and burning torched while tumbling; or throw somersaults while playing the violin or tambourine; or mount themselves on roller-skates and bicycles. (Yvmnasts are “fired” from spring-boards concealed within a gigantic cannon, let off pistols in their flight through the air, or go through their evolutions amid a blaze of squibs , and rockets. The various “lines” of business, too, while more numerous and diversified, are not so distinct and sepa rate as they used to be. Trapeze, liv ing rings and horizontal bar work are now combined: poles and ladders still hold their ground: but tight-rope and slack-wire walking—feats more easily acquired than any others—bottle-per formers, ceiling-steppers, pedestal acro bats, and modern Samsons, are a drug in the market, (it is denied, by-the way, that the ceiling-walking, which at one time created such a sensation, was ever really performed by atmospheric pressure or by magnetism, as was alleged, springs or hooks having been always employed.) Equilibrists are rather in the ascend ant just now. It seems incredible that any one should be able to sit in a chair and maintain it balanced on two legs MjM'ii <111 uoviuaiiu^ i>e gone through with are quite in comprehensible and strange to her, and she has little idea what ought to be done, or of the manner in which the es tate ought to be settled up. In too many cases the wife knows very little about her husband's business affairs, his obligations, his assets, his liabilities. She takes for granted that “he knows his own business," and is not only com petent to manage it in the best way for the interests of both, but that he does so, and that she is secure in any event. Many wires have a feeling that the manifestation of a lively interest in the exact status of affairs would betray or seem to lietrav a lack of confidence in their husbands, and in accordance with this feeling they hand over to their hus bands ail their own property and ef fects. trusting that by so doing they can lose nothing. But unless accounts are kept and the wife's property is protect ed when the husband dies and creditors and heirs come in. and there are fees to be collected, there is no lack of oppor tunity for the widow to be robbed of all which the greed of those in whose pow er she is may be able to swallow. Fortunate is she that can find a trust wormy anuacapanie man who win ad vise ;ut to the winding up of the estate and see that it is thoroughly and care fully done. Women ought to know enough of legal forms anurequirements as to these matters to he able intelli gently to sign papers in their own in terest. and io refuse to sign such as would injure them; but" while their hus bands live, there seems to be no need of this, and when their husbands die they arc often too much bewildered and overcome by the new aspect of things to learn what is best to do and to have done. There are many cases in which widows have resolutely set themselves to work to master all the principles and details involved in the settlement of es tates, and have administered upon them with skill and sagacity. This course can not be too highly commended. In some of our States there are special treatises upon settling estates, giving the law and the forms to be gone through; a woman with such a book for consultation would be able to have an intelligent opinion as to the various steps to be taken in her own case. As months are required for the work of which we are speaking, there need lie no haste in taking the various steps. Where there are minor children it is sometimes impossible to conclude mat ters until the children attain legal ma jority. In such cases there is time for the widow to become so conversant with her affairs that she may act intelligent ly and with the advice of competent counsel before taking any important step. When the wife dies, with or without ft will, there are few legal difficulties, often none at all, for the husband to en counter in settling up her estate; but when the husband dies without a will the wife is hampered at every step, and most of all by her own ignorance. The best remedy for this, in the existing state of things, is for the husband to keep accounts so carefully and exactly that all property or moneys belonging to his wife's estate may be readily identified as hers, and so not at the mercy of his creditors, and to see to it that all titles to property are unincum bered. A widow left with a farm of which her husband supposed himself to be the owner, found after his death tjnit the man of whom the farm was bought had no power to give title, this, by the operation of a self-foreclosing mortgage, having passed into the mort gagee before her husband bought it, A mistake of this kind is generally much more easily remedied by the buyer than by his widow, for human nature is such that the power to oppress too Often be gets the disposition to do so. That this has always been so is amply evidenced by the frequent references in the Scrip tures to the care of God for the widow and the fatherless, and the denuncia tions against those who oppress them. To these the defenseless widow may lie take herself and find in them abundant support anil consolation. There is no truer way for the husband to show his love and care of his wife and children than bv systematically so arranging and ordering his affairs as to leave them, in the event of his death, protected from all who would take ad vantage of their ignorance or their weakness. This he will do if he sets his house in order and keeps it so.—N. 1'. Tribune. Climbing Life’s Ladder. In 18ti7 there came into Cincinnati as a stowaway on a freight train a lad of eleven years, who, tiring of country life, came here in the hopes of bettering his fortune. Looking in the marvelous store windows did not appease his hun ger, and he approached a friendly-look ing little bootblack; who, with kit slung to his back, was engaged in selling papers, and asked the contemporary use of his box so as to earn money enough to buy something to eat. The boot black with great generosity gave him five cents with which to buy something, and told him to wait around until the papers were sold, when, with the twenty cents that would be realized, they would get a square meal together. At the epi curean feast the Cincinnati arab said: “ The first thing yer want is headquar ters—a place where yer can close yer blinkers at night without bein’ pulled bv the police. Yer waut to go to ther Cliildren'8 Home on Third street and give a name that ain't yer own. ao if yer don't like it yer can skip and they won’t find yer.” The advice was taken with the ex eeption of giving the fictitious name. He told the truth straight through. For the succeeding nine years he lived oft and on at the Home, making himself very useful to the institution, and at the same time learning the trade of stone-cutter. He was twenty-six years old when he hade good-by to the officers of the home and went across the river, where he ob tained immediate employment on the Southern Railroad at his trade, at the pay of four dollars per diem. Three days afterward he w as made foreman of the gang at the pay of five dollars a day. At tne end of the month a heavy contractor on the road made him super intendent, at a salary of $200 a month and expenses. One month later found him the owner of some horses and carts, and doing sub-contracting, which netted him in two years $23,000. He now, at the age of twenty-two years, felt that the lield was not large enough for him, and he went West, where he took contracts on the Union Pacific and on the Denver & Rio Grande Railroads, and in connection with this work con structed for capitalists two hotels at Denver. Still restless, he pulled up stakes and went to Texas, where, pur chasing one thousand Texas cattle, lie went with the drove to Chicago and dis posed of it at a very handsome profit. He now found time to take a run over to Georgetown, Ky., on tho Southern Road, and there marry a buxom and lovable country girl whom he took with Dim to Colorado, where he bought a large cattle ranch, that is at present stocked with 1,600 head of cattle and 140 ponies. Indians being too thick around his ranch, lie has established his wife and two bouncing children at Colo rado Springs. lie is now but twenty eight years old and is worth $80,000. Day before yesterday he walked into the Children's Home and revealed his name to the oflicers, who, it is needless to say, are delighted over the phenom enal success of their boy. nor is ins me omv ease mai rram like a romance. Eight years ago a beautiful little girl of four years was given to the institution by its depraved mother, who was one of the city’s noted characters. The father, a worth less sot, disappeared. Within a few months the child was adopted by an excellent family, living in one of Cin cinnati’s beautiful suburbs. Her foster parents brought her up with every care, and now, at the age of twelve years, she promises to be an ornament to her home as well as society. Within the past few days the father, who had not been heard of before in all these years, appeared at the Children’s Home and demanded the custody of his child. His request was refused by the trustees, who have no desire or inten tion to see her bright life wrecked. His demand to know where she was living met with no better result, and he now proposes to sue the trustees, who, it may be stated, will stand the suit, re lying on the aid of justice in their cause.—Cincinnati Journal. -♦ ♦" Buying an Almanac. A goou many years ago an om gen tleman in Massachusetts was the owner of a very rare almanac of whose value he had an idea, but only a faint one. It was bound with fifteen others in a single small volume of sixteen alma nacs. A number of Massachusetts his torians and antiquarians had their eyes on the paper. Several societies felt, each of them, sure the owner was going to will it to them. The late George Brinley, of this city, also knew where the book wa3 and knew its value. He had a way of get ting such books when he wanted them. One day he called upon the owner of the almanac, and after a friendly visit they fell to talking books. The old gentleman expressed his great interest in the (it ntlemans Magazine, then be come very rare, and regretted that he hadn't it. Mr. Brinley, on the other hand, complained of the bulkiness of sets of bound books, and wished the 'Gentleman's Magazine was oft' his shelves. He said he'd rather give the space to different books. One good | volume was worth more to him than I many. Why, he'd rather, for example, have those sixteen almanacs all in one . book than his whole set of the maga zine. The old gentleman's eyes glis tened, but he hated to take too great advantage, so he asked Mr. Brinley again if he was in earnest. He said he was. The old gentleman said he'd make the exchange if he felt it was a fair one. Mr. Brinley said he’d agree to be satis fied. They made a formal agreement, and Mr. Brinley went home. Shortly after a story' spread that Mr. Brinley was “a little off his base" mentally. It was traced back and found to have come from the family of the old gen tleman, who had so easily secured a full half-calf set of the magazine. The idea of Mr. Brinley’s disturbance of equi librium was finally suggested to a lead ing Massachusetts historian. He in quired into the evidence, and when he learned that Mr. Brinley had “got that almanac." his grief and disappoint ment showed only too plainly that a good bargain had been made and that an antiquated treasure had crossed the boundary line from Massachusetts into Connecticut. Anxiety about Mr. Brin ley’s health terminated at once. Mr. Brinley gave nearly $650 for the full set of tire Gentleman's Magazine, which he had to buy to fulfill his share of the bargain. Then he took out twelve of the almanacs that he had re ceived and had them bound separately at five dollars each. When he died these twelve volumes brought $30 each, or $360. Three of the remaining four brought together $130, the sixteenth, the prize of the whole, brought $565 alone. That is, what had cost him about $710 sold for $1,055, or a clean fifty per cent, advance over the cost. Besides this he had had for years the satisfaction of knowing he possessed a great literary treasure, that he had beaten his Massachusetts competitors, and that he had neither lost his wits nor been badly taken in by the kind hearted old gentleman who had scrupled to make so good a trade.—Hartferd Con rant PERSONAL AND LITERARY. —Dr. Tanner, the faster, who has lived in Corrv, Pa., for several months, has removed to Jamestown, in New | York State. —It was observed that when Mr. I Parnell pronounced his name in the | House of Commons lately, he laid the accent on the first syllable—Parnell. —There is hardly any need for the London pa|>ers to say that Gladstone is about to retire. It appears that about all the big men on the footstool are re tiring to enjoy their last sleep.—iY. Y. Graphic. —A great poet is not without honor save in his own country. An Ayrshire paper is authority for the statement that there is not a single copy of Burns' poems in the free public library at Mauchline. —The death of Mrs. Harriet Lane Johnson’s onlysurvivingchild recalls tin; memory of her gracious presence in the White House when her uncle. James Buchanan, was President, and how Lord Lyons, then British Minister, was engaged to be married to her. Mi*t the ;M‘ople get tight; We have nothing to lose. Let them drink when they choose. For we feel not the pain. And we see not the slain; Or the murdered one’s gore, A* It flow-* on the floor. All our fortunes are made. And our taxes are paid. And we stand at the lioad Of the drinking brigade. Sell, sell, sell! We have influence great. In each county and State; And we care not for those Solier |**ople, our foes, Thom* fanatics, who think There’s no good in strong drink. Let them blow ntsmt jails. And complain of our ales. Of the drunkards who die. And the women who cry O’er the graves that are made By the old si-xton's spade, (hi Is half of the ins** Ives And the drinking brigade. Drink, drink, drink! Let each Jolly old soul Hug his firm friend, the bowl; And forever we ll sell Till they sink into hell; A' we laugh at the deed. W hile the children in need To the work-house are led. And on charity fed; Till they blow off the froth. Ere they suck in our broth. Their own selves to degrade. In support of our trade. And the revenue drawn From the drinking brigade. Buy, buy, buy! You should drink while you can, ’Tis by far the best plan. For tlx* use of your tin We’ll till up vour skin With our jolly brown l**er. Which we brew every year. ’Tis to finger your cash. That we simmer and mash The vast mountain of grain From the valley and plain. ’Tis alone by our aid That the drunkards are made. So three cheers, and huzza For the drinking brigade. — 7*. II. Thompson* in -Ye tv Haven Com tram wealth. l tie r oou >aiue or Aieonoi. In 1879 there was a somewhat pecu liar attempt to throw overboard many of the views which had been enter tained as to alcohol, and to assume for it a food value, which insisted that it must Iwve recognition in the list of aliments. The Contemporary Review, Harper's Magazine, the New York Times, etc., put forth these views, as if the army of Temperance reformers had been overthrown, so far as this part of the subject was concerned. The sani tary articles of this paper July 3 and July 17 of 1879 considered the grounds for such conclusions. The new views had been based upon some utterances and experiments of Prof. Binz, which did, indeed, contradict some of the con clusions of Lallemand, Duroy and Per rin: but were not capable of applica tion to the extent to which they were pushed. The address of Dr. Baer on “The Abuse of Alcohol,'’ at the ninth annual meeting of the German Society of Pub lic Health, while it atf ' m demn spirits and er. series of limitations which showed how unduly these views had been quoted in fa vor of a more liberal use of alcohol. But still more important is the fact that Prof. Binz has again been heard from in fur ther experiment and in his own ex pression as to the significance of the views expressed. In response to an invitation of the Congress of Hygiene, held in Vienna, September, 1881, he laid down these two theses:. 1. That alcohol in any form is to be recommended as a means of diminishing tissue waste only under abnormal circumstances. 2. That alcoholic drinks frequently contain, by products of fermentation or of distilla tion, more hurtful than ethyl alcohol itself. To the question whether alcohol can be considered as a food he answers No. as well as Yes. He then defines his Yes. If a body is in disease and nutrition has failed, and “the tissues themselves, especially the fat. are so far consumed as not to maintain the animal heat essential to the working of the machine; when this limit is reached the oxidation of alcohol in the cells acts directly in restoring the energy of the respiratory and circulating centers.” He further adds that on the relation between the consumption of alcohol and the elimination of carbonic acid and absorption of oxygen we must con fess to a gap in our knowledge. Al though his views are disputed as to this oxidation of alcohol, yet he, in defining and claiming its value under these ab normal circumstances of disease, adds that here we have reached the limits of its legitimate domain. Whatever may be said as to the possible value of alcohol as a possible food is based upon the assumption that alimentation in its usual form is impos sible, that the tissue and fat-food in re serve is about exhausted, and that thus alcohol may aid in the emergency. So narrow even is this agency that the good physician will not trust to any such hypothetical use, but bids you to watch very closely the effect. If it is claimed that, by reason of overwork, of undue exposure, or of imperfect foods, very many are in a condition of ap proaching ill-health, in view of the jierils of alcohol, the answer is that we should seek the remedy of these, and also add “the aromatic constituents of tea and coffee, which stimulate the heart and nerve centers and straited muscles, without the subsequent ex haustion that follows the use of alcohol.” It is a sorry excuse to say that, though they might thus appear to be valuable substitutes for it, they must, to obtain these effects, be taken in such quanti ties as, on the ground of cost, can not be indulged in oy the poorer classes. It is delightful to* see now this evidence claimed in favor of alcohol is dwindling. With all that we are finding out as to the power of real foods and the methods of their use it is more and more evi dent that alcohol must be confined strictly to the domain of a medicine. and mnst not be accredited as an ail ment for all the little ailments that may occur. It is very important, too, that Prof. Bins does not at all accept the usual distinctions between spirituous and fer mented liquors. While be can not but I lament the disastrous consequences, both to the individual and to society, of j excessive indulgence inspirits, hemain i tains that “the confirmed beer drinker | is no less an aicoholist than the spirit drinker, though the outward effect on his bodily frame may be different.” The dire effects of beer drinking is at tracting the attention of the German Government, and the resulting race de terioration is making itself felt. The other point stated by Prof. Bin* is no less important. He* urges the hurtful effects of the by-products, and does not confine his view to fusel oil. “It is the duty of science to acquire a more exact knowledge of these by-products, of art to eliminate them from alcoholic drinks, j and of the State to repress the sale of impure alcohols.” Every gain in sani tary knowledge and in a study of the conditions of perfect health tends to drive alcohol from use and to find in those foods which correspond with the human system the aliments which sus tain human life.—A*. Y. Independent. ^ How It Paid. The first saloon licensed by the Board of .County Commissioners, nearly nine years ago, paid fifty dollars for that privilege. It met a hitter opposition from the friends of Temperance and good order; but the rum men were alert, and, bv presenting a bogus peti tion asking for it, the thing was granted, and fifty' dollars are supposed to have gone into the treasury. A change at once came over our | town. Drunken men began to be seen upon our streets. Men who before paid j their bills regularly now paid so much for rum that their bills to honest trades i men had to go unpaid. The air of that saloon, night and day 1 was made black with profanity, vulgar ity and rum. Our young men went thero, | and stayed until the hour of midnight. What effect it had upon them will nevef ! be written A poor hard-working settler down on the river, who had opened up a farm, Hnd theretofore maintained a family, be gan to visit the saloon and to neglect | his home. One morning he was found outside with his head fatally crushed by a drunken companion. A long and tedious series of trials followed, costing {he county over one thousand dollars, resulting in sending the murderer to prison for fourteen years, and breaking up his tamily. The murdered man’s widow made an attempt to keep her family together on the farm, and to furnish them with food; ! hut in two or three years she died—no ' doubt from privation. A daughter soon ; followed her mother from the same cause; then the ragged children were scut to their friends m Ohio, at the ex pense of the county. These facts are given from my knowl edge of them, and just as they are. Now let ns see how this transaction paid: Paid to keep murderer fourteen years, say $200 per year.$2,800 l Convict murderer. 1,000 Send children to Ohio, say. 75 industry for six children, lost to the State ten years, at $100 per year. 6,000 Total expense.$$,875 Deduct license. 50 Lost by transaction. $9,823 —Kansas State Sentinel. - A New England Prescription.' There are a great many intemperate persons who would like to become tem perate; but the over-ruling love of the taste of liquors conquers all their good resolutions, and again and again they I fall. Many years ago there lived in New England a large family of children, the mother of whom, when any sickness occurred, obliged the invalid to swal low a dose of castor oil in port wine— wine was never used for any other pur 1 pose in that family; and the bottle labelled port wine was a horror to each j child. The family grew and separated, go iug to all parts of the Union. I have taken pains to trace each member, and not one of them had any inclination to drink intoxicating liquors. It has been no effort for them to be temperate, their stomachs loathe the taste. Would it not be well for those afflict ed with the “vice or disease” of in temperance, who desire a cure to try the New England prescription?—Sat* Francisco Rescue. Temperance Items. The young ladies of Topeka, Kan., have organized Red Ribbon Clubs, the members of which pledge themselves to reject all attention from young men who use intoxicating beverages. This is practical prohibition.—Ckxcaqo Inter Ocean. The proposed Prohibition amend ment was passed by the Senate of Ore gon by a vote of eighteen to ten, and by the House by a vote of fifty-two to six, two members being absent from each house. The measure will come be fore the next Legislature, two years hence, and if agreed to then will be sub mitted to the vote of the people. I)r. Norman Kerr recently stated in Exeter Hall that of 34,000,000 cases of disease every year in the United States, a large proportion arose from indulgence in intoxicants. Some sev entydiseases are described as arising directly from alcohol. The estimated annual mortality caused directly and in directly by dnnking was given at 120,000. In days past I have seen some drunk enness and the effects thereof. I have seen the dead bodies of women mur dered by drunken husbands; I have seen the "best meu in America go down to disgraceful graves; I have seen for tunes wrecked, prospects blighted, and I have pursued a great many pages of statistics. There are crimes on the cal endar not resulting from rum, but were rum eliminated, the catalogue would be so reduced as to make it hardly wcHh the compiling. Directly or indirectly, mm is cnargeable with a good ninety per cent, of the woes that afflict out country —Fasby, «* Mm Toledo (Q ] Blade.