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-r A ,ffcy , A, tmmmmi jggmMm&s& It i i i ;N !, J arl &i i Hftl II riff Mb ty ojwmtna gun PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY At Flagstaff the county seat of Coco nino county. VJ.4.J.XXJ.J.XJ OOTOBER-1895. Sm Tub. Wei Tim. Fri. Sat 6 8 9 10 ll 12 13 14 15 16 17 is 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26b 27 28 29 30 31 I TTYTT-rfTT'nrTTY'rfTTTTTTTT CURRENT COMMENT. Tun United States spent 590,000,000 for coffee during tho past fiscal year. AomcuLrvKAi. department experts have been investigating tho cotton boll weevil, but tliey cannot find a way to stop its spread. The three principal street railway systems of 1'hiladelphia havo been con solidated under one company, making 425 miles of road, operated with u capi tal of more than $103,000,000. ' A RKroiiT just issued by the geologi cat survey shows that the quarry value of tho stone produced in 1S94 was S37, 377,810, of which $13,000,000 was used for the construction of buildings. The recent report of the state mine inspector of Pennsylvania showed that the Hungarian and Polish element had complete possession of tho anthracite mining region and that fully five-sixths of them were unnaturalized As a result of experiments hy the German war office it has been deter mined that sixty pounds is the maxi mum weight which an averago man can carry 25 miles a day for several consecutive days without injury to himself. According to statistics compiled by the Railroad Uazetto there wero 132 railroad accidents in August, of which fifty-three were collisions, seventy-one were derailments and eight duo to other causes. Forty-nine people were killed and HO injured. The speculative gold mining fever raging in London and Paris leads an Australian correspondent to predict that the result will bo such a vast pro duction of gold that the metal will de preciate in value until "gold bugs will clutch at the 1G to 1 offer of the silver Ites." The Philadelphia Press, commenting on the downward prices of boohs, said: Before long the great mass of English literature will be accessible in fair type, on poor paper, but still legible, for 5 cents a volume. Rooks will bo bought and thrown away as are news papers. The German leathermakers have been obliged to turn to America to learn tho latest developments in their trade in order to keep pace in the com petition for business, and they are making strenuous efforts to discover the process of manufacture in this country. Dr. J. XV. Was, of West Pullman, 111., is said to have discovered a cure for diphtheria which far exceeds anti-toxine in efficacy. Dr. Was' remedy is electricity, which is ap plied directly to tho throat. It is claimed to havo been successful in a large number of recent virulent cases. Tun Chicago Times-Herald says that tho country w ill firmly sustain Presi dent Cleveland and Secretary Olney in every rational application of tho Mon roe doctrine upon tho American con tinent, but there was no reason for as suming that any such emergency had trrived in tho contention between Sreat Uritain and Venozuela. The French embassy at Washington has received from the international wine exhibition at Hdrdeaux, France, a bulletin on tho wine production of tho world. It makes the statement that tho United States is fifteenth In Importance in the wine-producing countries, being preceded by Chili, Roumania. Servia, Greece, Argentine Republic, Switzerland and other small countries. Health departments generally are giving increased attention to tho sub ject of contagion in schools. The New Yoik authorities have ordered tho ex clusion of slates and sponges, and for bidden the transfer of pens and pencils from one pupil to another. Books car ried homo must be freshly covered with man ilia paper each month, and each pupil is to have an individual drinking cup. The Chicago Times-Herald says: Of tho forty-four state governors in tho American union, thirty-nine are avowed believers in religion, twenty nine being professed Christians. Among them there aro ten Presby terians, fivo Congregationalists, five Episcopalians, four Methodists, three. Unitarians, one Baptist, one Christian and sixteen unconnected with church organizations. The sale of a big block of Anaconda tock in England is boing projected. The Montana mine is rich in silver as well as copper. It is tho greatest pro ducer in this country of both copper and silver, its output averaging about 10,000,000 pounds of copper, 500,000 Dunces of silver and 2,000 ounces of pold per month. It has turned out more of the whito metal in the last four or five years than any other mine In the world except one in Australia. In the production of copper it has no equal. The company was recently re arganized with a capitalization of S30,- Joo.ooa NEWS OF THE WEEK. Gleaned By Telegraph and Mall PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. President Cleveland and Private Secretary Thurber left Buzzard's bay, Mass., on the 11th on the Oneida, Com modore E. C Benedict's steam yacht, for Washington. The French war office received a dis patch stating that Antananarivo, the capital of Madagascar, was taken by tho French troops and that the queen of Madagascar had made peace with the French. Judge Bhadv, of the district supremo court at Washington, on the 10th or dered the dlschargo from custody of Capt George A. Armes, who was ar rested on the order 6f Lieut-Gen. SchoQeld, just prior to tho latter's re tirement from the command of the army, for Having written him an in sulting letter. The judge scored the action of Gen. Schofield as being tyran nical and unjust A REroitT obtained wide circulation through tho country at an early hour on tho morning of tho 11th that Presi dent Cleveland had been assassinated at his home at Gray Gables, near Buz zard's bay. It was impossible to verify the rumor at the time, owing to tho telegraph offices in tho vicinity of Gray Gables boing closed for tho night, but It was thought that the story arose from a woman being murdered in the neighborhood and tho police passing near Gray Gables while searching for tho murderer. Secretary Olney was said to be seriously considering tho wisdom of sending a special agent to Cuba to re port the actual situation there in or der that the administration may intel ligently determine whether this gov- rnment should recognize the Cubans as belligerents, or, if not, what course wo should pursue toward Spain and Cuba. Mrs. Sarah Emery, the well known lectureron woman suffrage and author ot "Seven Financial Conspiracies," died it Lansing, Mich., on the 10th of can cer. There was unusual activity in tho Spanish government dockyards at the different ports, refitting cruisers and gunboats. It was believed that these preparations were due to tho belief that there was a possibility that the United States might recognize the Cuban insurgents as belligerents. The discovery has been made at the treasury department at Washington that thero is a combine among certain consular agents over the world that has worked against tho tariff receipts, and this may to some extent explain the lack of funds received from the new tariff bill. The matter is to be investigated. A revolution was said to have broken out in the interior of Venezu ela. When congress meets again there will be sent at once to the senate for confirmation a list of 200 postmasters appointed during tho congressional re cess, composed principally of offices which have entered the presidential class since congress adjourned. Rev. T. DeWitt Talmaoe was for mally declared a member of the Wash ington presbytery on tho 8th and will soon enter upon his duties as co-pastor of the First Presbyterian church in the capital. The executive committee of the So ciety lor Liberal Sunday Laws at New York at a meeting held on the 9th indorsed the Tammany political nom inations. The society represents the united saloon interests of the city and its action was regarded as very im portant. The United States North Atlantic squadron is to be greatly strengthened by nearly all the best vessels in tho navy, and instead of ceasing their squadron drill they will continue it in southern waters and cruise in tho vi cinity of Venezuela and Cuba. This show of force was regarded as mean ing that the administration proposed to enforce the Monroe doctrine and to have the power ready to enforce it. Gen. William Maiione, ox-United States senator from Virginia, died at Washington on the 8th from paralysis. The London Times on the 8th an nounced that William W. Story, the American sculptor, died at Vallom brosa at the residence of his daughter, tho Marchesa Peruzzl. He was born at Salem, Mass., February 12, 1819, and was the son of Joseph Story, associate justice of the supreme court of the United States. MISCELLANEOUS. Tnn Holland radiator works at Brem en, Ind., were entirely consumed by an incendiary fire at 5 o'clock on tho morning of tho 11th. The loss was estimated at $150,000 and tho insurance placed at only $2,500. An Ellonvlile, N. Y., special on tho 11th said that starvation was staring the canal boatmen in tho face. Their 475 boats were tied up all along tho line on dry land, nnd for seven weeks not a boat had been moved. Clearing) house returns for the prin cipal cities in the United States for tho week ended October 11 showed an average increase as compared with tho corresponding week last year of 23.2; In New York the increase was 33.9; outside New York the increase was 11.2'. Kit Robinson, colored, was hanged at Liberty, Tex., on the 11th, before a large crowd for iho murder in June, 1895, of John R. Johnson, an old white man. The bill providing for the removal of tho intruders from the Cherokee na tion passed both houses at South Mc Alester. I. T., and was signed by tho chief. By tho provisions of tho bill 315 heads of families will be paid for im provements made in the nation. Tho amount of land held was estimated to bo 100,000 acres, and worth $08,000. The bill ends the struggle that has waged for the past twenty years be tween the Chcrokecs and the intruders. Harry, better known as "Butch" Lyons, was executed on the 11th in the county jail enclosure at Chicago. He murdered and robbed a man named Albert Mason last February. , v H iiiiililii m HMlM.Mi'W.sWiM.11 iiiIfflWOTin TlWrTWr TTTTrMfflTi i IT A woman known as Gaetaua Stomoli has been arrested for poisoning twenty-three children with phosphorus at Catania, Sicily. She administered the poison by mixing it with wine and pre vailing upon tho children to drink it. Tho woman confessed and offered as an explanation that she wanted re venge for the death of two of her own children who had been bewitched. Antoine Hoffman, tho anarchist, who murdered Police Inspector Baum garten on June 11, last, was put to death at Prague. Four men were killed and seven others fatally injured as the result of an inexplainable accident at the Cleve land (O.) rolling mills on the 11th. Without warning tho casting house, the largest building of the plant, col lapsed, burying many of ita occupants in the debris. Charles Wakefield was cooked to death bv molten iron. Mrs. Harriet Ryan, aged 65 years, of Wilton, N. Y., was burned to death. The woman, who had been demented for some time, secured some matches and set fire to her night cloth ing. She ran out into the field where she was found burned almost to a crisp. A costly rear end collision occurred on the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie rail road at Beaver Falls, Pa., on the 10th. The wreck was due to an unusually dense fog. Fifteen fmight cars and one engine were rendered entirely worthless, causing a loss of 850,000. A dispatch stated tha t La Paz, the capital of Lower California, Mcx., had been destroyed by a hurricane. The storm was followed by a tidal wave, the waters In the bay rising to an un precedented height, invading that por tion of the city fronling on the bay and carrying out to i.ea men, animals and debris of wrecked buildings as the tide subsided. Henry Meyer, a bey 17 years old, of Toledo, O., objected to his sister giving a birthday party at their home, and In order to discouragi any future at tempts in the samcr line, mixed two ounces of croton oil with the coffee that was served to the guests. As a re sult twelve of tho young people who attended the party were in a serious condition and fatal results were ex pected from some of them. The lad was arrested. A dispatch on tho 10th said that for two months a severe drought had pre vailed in western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and parts of Indiana. On the Monongahela river 8,000 miners were idle because tho barges could not carry the coal on account of the low stage of water in the river. Many es tablishments on the Ohio river had been obliged to shut down for want of water, and farmers were selling their stock because of the difficulty In water ing them. The British steamer Napier, bound from Cronstadt to Rotterdam, was in collision off the island of Aaland with the British steamer Livonia of Lclth. The latter vessel sank and fourteen ol her crew were drowned in spite of the efforts of the Napier's crew who, how ever, succeeded in rescuing ten men. Forty-five persons, claiming to be descendants of the earl of Antrim, met in Chicago recently and took Initial steps for getting shares in tha $80,000, 000 estate left by the earl. ' TnE Saranac (Mich.) Advertiser offiofc and a car factory were destroyed by fire on the 9th. The school board of Perry, Ok., ha! been ordered by the court on a writ oi mandamus to admit colored children to the white public schools. Colored children demanded entranco to the white public schools on the 7th and again on the 8th. RnroRTS from Stokes Bay, Ont,, said the steamer Africa, on Lake Huron, went down with all on board. ADDITIONAL DISPATCHES. A ki.hhyman's yawl boat, in which six persons were crossing tho eastern branch of the Patapisco river at Balti more, Md., on the 13th, was capsized and fourof itsoccupants wero drowned. It was given out authoritatively on the 13th that the fight between Corbett and Fitzsimmons would surely take place at Hot Springs, Ark., on schedule time. In order to comply with tho laws of Arkansas the contest will be limited to a number of rounds, the referee being vested with full power to stop the contest when, in his opin ion, It becomes brutal, the contestants to box with soft gloves. Officehs who arrived at Paris, Tex., recently from the territory bring -news of the butchering of an aged negro woman named Louisiana Fisher, near Shawnectown, in the eastern part of the Choctaw nation. A day or two ago her body was found in the woods. Her head was cut off and a number ol long, deep gashes were in her body. Suspicion rests upon some Choctaws named Impson, who believed her to be a witch and lived in constant terror of her. A serious freight wreck occurred at Waterbury, Conn., on the 13th, two parts of a broken train coming to gether and ten cars loaded with trot ting horses, livo stock and other ex hibits from tho Danbury fair were crushed and thrown down a 40-foot embankment. Mazeppa, the famous champion trick horse, valued at 810. 000, was instantly killed, one man was fatally injured and two others serious ly hurt. Tun United States supreme court be gan its fan term on tho 14th. there be ing 770 cases on tho docket, forty-eight less man inis time last year. Secretary Carlisle, at tho Massa chusetts Reform club dinner at Boston on tho 12th, spoke on tho financial trouble. Ho advocated the retirement of United States notes as speedily as a safe and sound currency could be pro vided to take their placo,and said there could be no financial repose ns long as these notes constituted a part of our currency. Four people wero fatally burned while fighting prairie fire near Winne peg, Man At Eaton, O., John Monroe Smith, aged 17. escorted homo his sweetheart. Gertrudo Lally, and quarreled with heron the way. Arriving at the house he shot and fatally wounded her in the presence of her mother, and then sur tendered to the county sheriff. COTTON GOODS GO UP. A Trade Condition Which Dan Co. Bay Indlcntn a Short Cotton Crop. New York, Oct, 12. R. O. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: The price barometer gives indications that are not entirely favorable. Cotton goods go up with increased evidenco that the crop of cotton is short. Prices of other manufactured products, of wool, hides and leather all show some decline, general abatement in new or ders being the principal cause. With an immense volume of business not much exceeded in the largest month of the exceptional year, 1892, and with evidence that in several branches the volume has surpassed that of any previous year, there is a growing un certainty about the near future of in dustries. Money markets are neither strained or threatening, foreign ex change no longer raising apprehension, all fears about tho great northern crops are passed. There havo been few advances in wages of labor within the past month, and only a few works havo been closed by strikes for an ad vance. s In woolen manufacturers a demand for dress goods and some specialties keeps many fully employed, but most of the works making woolens, for which new orders nro scanty, find not enough to keep them running. To pile up goods in advance wholly in" the dark as to future competition. Involves such risks that some concerns may close for n time. Yet sales of wool continue heavy, 11,134,100 pounds for the week, largely speculative. Wheat receipts havo been 7,531,474 bushels, against 4,090,181 last year, and Atlantic exports only 1,707,029 bushels, flour Included, against 1,998, 780 last year. Tho movement at Du luth is so heavy as to absorb vessels and almost arrest more shipments. Failures for the week have included two banks and several concerns of some size and have been 2GS in the United States, against 231 last year, and 52 in Canada, against 13 last year. FARMERS TALK FINANCE. Drlecate to the National Concress Do ounce Law That Permit Money to lie Exported. Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 12. Papers wero read at tho Farmers' National congress yesterday as follows: By William Lawrence, of Ohio, on "Bimetallism, and How to Secure It," and by J. P. Shafroth, of Colorado, who took tha single standard side 'and argued it. J. O. Offert, of Illinois, offered a resolution reciting that the demone tization of silver was due to a con spiracy of the chief commercial- na tions of Europe and calling on tho president to endeavor to bring about an international monetary conference. The concluding resolution were: Iteson ed. That we arc opposed to any legis lation by congress which will have the effect to cause either Kola or silver to be exported, so as thereby to have substantially only ono of the money metals used In this country. Hesolved. That we will oppose any political party that will not indorse tho foregoing reso lution. The whole matter was referred to the committee on resolutions. GOV. CLARKE SAYS NO. The Arkansas Kxecotlve flays the Corbett Flliilmmiini fight Cannot Ociur at Hot Sprlncr. Little Rock, Ark.. Oct 12. Gov. Clark, who has been examining tho law closely touching the gubernatorial power to prevent prize fighting, has outlined his intentions In communica tions addressed to the officers at Hot Springs and the principals in the pro posed fight. Upon tho mooted ques tion of tho proper mode of proceed ings, the governor has counseled with other lawyers and his pronunciaraento, which is in favor of prcventlvo measures, is re garded as final. The governor will hold himself ready to co-operate with Judge Duffle, of the Hot Springs dis trict, to prevent the fight, should it appear that the local authorities fail to impress upon the lighters and their backers with sufficient force the pro priety of declaring tho fight off. IMPORTATION OF TIN. Tho Armour Piicklne Co. nt Kansas City lifts Itcielvod ,000,000 rounds Re cently. Kansas City, Md, Oct, 12. Tho.Ar mour Packing Co.'s imports of tin havo amounted to 2,000,000 pounds in the past five weeks. The company has paid nearly 850,000 in import duty, more than twice as much as it paid in tho same time last year. The great amount of tin is imported to carry canned meats, most of which will go back to Europe. Tho exports of meats are increasing rap idly and the local packers are making the most of the opportunity they now have for building up a foreign trade, which will very materially increase the local output of meats. A REPLY TO THE POPE. Dr. Joseph Parker Answers Teo's Invita tion for a Kpiinlon ot Christendom. London, Oct. 12. Dr. Joseph Parker has written a letter to the popo In an swer to tho pastoral letter advocating a reunion of Christendom, in which he says: "Were this a personal matter, I could hardly forgive myself for seek ing to approach a presence so au gust and venerable. But inasmuch as you have appealed to all sections upon tho questions which affect tho standing of tho soul before God, I have emboldened myself to bear witness to the headship of tho blessed Christ and to decline communion with any man or church that would officially or pre scriptively come between me and mv Saviour." SWARMS OF GRASSHOPPERS. The Kert-LeEged Pests Visiting Oklahoma and Ihrcateulnir to Devastate Wheat. Kinofisiiek, Ok., OcL 12. A con tinuous stream of grasshoppers has been passing high overhead southward every day this week and a good many drop, so that they aro uncom fortably numerous on the ground. They are. to all appearances, the small red-legged, variety, similar to those that debated Kan sas eighteen yoars ago. Farmers re port their fields of young wheat cov ered with them and are alarmed. '.-Utt - BSWXW SACKVILLE'S DEFENSE. Keho from the Presidential Election f 1888-The MnrohUon Letter KecalUd. New York, OcL 10. A special cable to the World from London says: An extraordinary and, in many re spects, unprecedented publication by a British or other high diplomat has been discussed during the last few days among the foreign representa tives to the court of SL James. This is a handsomely printed pamphlet marked "for private circulation only" and entitled "My Mission to the United States, '81-89," and has just been issued by Lord Sackville, who, as Sir Lionel Sackville-Sackvllle West, K. M. C. G., was the English minister to Washing ton for the period named. It will be remembered that President Cleveland, almost on the eve of the election of 1888, sent Sir Lionel his passports because of a letter written by him to an alleged Englishman in California commenting upon the ap proaching election. This pamphlet is Lord Sackville'8 defense and explana tion, after seven years.of that incident But the unprecedented part of it, and the part which has aroused very ex cited comment, is, first, the freedom of his strictures upon the American peo ple and American public men, and, second, his own expressed indignation that the British ministry should have accepted Mr. Bayard as ambassador to this country when ds secretary oi state of the United States Mr. Bayard had wantonly insulted in peraon its accredited representative. The pamphlet contains fifty-two pages, 15,000 words, and is of very lim ited issue not more than 100 copies. These have been sent under seal only to leading foreign diplomats, the high er English officials and a few personal friends. SEVERE DROUGHT. Pennsylvania. Ohio, Indiana and West Vli Elnla Badly Affected. Pittshuroii, "Pa., Oct. 11. For two months a severe drought has prevailed all over western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, almost the entire state ol Ohio and parts of Indiana. In all ex cept the last named state there haa been a remarkable deficiency in rain fall, according to figures of the Pittsburgh weather station. Since April 20 there has been no coal stage in the Monongahela river. Not a bushel of coal has passed south since that month and 8,000 miners in th river pits have been idle almost the entire period. All the bonts and barges are loaded and 20,000,000 bush els of coal has been waiting three months for higher water on which to go south. At many points railroads are being forced to haul water foi their engines. The Ohio river is sc low at East Liverpool that the in fluent pipes are bare and tht supply is scarcely sufficient for domestic requirements in the towns, some of whoso estab lishments are idle this week. Nine tenths of the small towns have been strictly limited to the consumption ol water by police regulations. A large number of towns have cut off shop! and mills. In Lawrence, Mercer and adjoining counties farmers are selling their stock because of the difficulty in keeping cattle watered. In all of the oil fields surrounding Pittsburgh the work of drilling new wells has been greatly interfered with for a month on account of the scarcity of water. So great has this become in some sections us to cause practically a complete suspension of operations. TROUBLE IS LIKELY. Ambassadors to Turkey Not Satisfied wltl the Porte's Answer. Constantinople, Oct. 1L Late yes terday it became known that the Turk ish government had finally presented to the envoys of the six powers a replj to their collective note on the subject of the recent disturbances here. The reply, however, is not satisfactory to the ambassadors. The porte, in its answer, enumerated the measures taken to preserve order and declared that the Mussulmans were not the ag gressors in the recent rioting, but that, on tho contrary, the Armenians killed Inoffensive Mussulmans. In view of the unsatisfactory nature oi tne porto's reply, the six ambassa dors met to consider what shall be done further. It is expected that the dragomans of the tho different erabas- sies will assist the Turkish officials in clearing tho vicinities of the Arme nian churches of the rioters infesting them and installing the refuges in their homes. The sultan continues to be greatly disturbed by the presence of the Brit ish licet off the island of Lemnos, and has sent again to the ambassador of Great Britain to ask for the withdraw al of British warships from the vicinl ty of the entranco of the Dardanelles. DURRANT QUESTIONED. He Undergoes a Well-Aimed Fire of Cross examination. San Francisco, OcL 11. Whethei W. Theodore Durrant is a mms derer or not, he is a remarkable wit ness. All day, before an audience that filled the court room, he stood a fire oi quostions from District Attorney uiucs, wmen ii seemed at times must break him down, with Imperturbable coolness. His quickness of wit and adroitness were shown a dozen times. He went over the grounds of his direct testimony and entered into th rWll of his movements in the church on the day of tho murder, without varying CONDITION OF WHEAT. The Price Current Sava the Leading Pro cess Is Retarded by Droneht. Cincinnati, OcL lL The Price Cur rent says: There is no essential relief from the influence of drought in re tarding wheat seeding. The area il more likely to be reduced, though con ditions admit of much further seeding. Disappointing outlook for prices is re stricting wheat planting west of the Mississippi river. Drought is tho nrln. lpal factor. Eastward the crop is gen erally reiaraeu, dui position is not di souraging. Not much, enlargement io wheat movement is indicated. rJr& - ,&Waike-v CRIMINALS. Justice Is Not Always Served by ti,. The criminal code has been con eeived through the studv of crime as an abstraction. It must be modified .by knowledge of tjL criminal. There should be in it no dream of theological expia tions, "which man has no right to im pose, but it should aim solely at the defense of society. The greatest crim inal anomaly even insanity should not be considered as an extenuating circumstance. Even lunatics should be arrested in order to protect society especially the morally insane, who are a great peril, and the masked epilep tics. In the punishment of crime the tendency of Its authors should be con sidered. If the author is born criminal he must be confined for life, though the crime itself is not greaL On the other hand, a crime committed bv an honest man impelled by some strong motive should be punished with much indulgence, especially political and re ligious crimes, which often only antici pate by some centuries the thought of the people. In our time, when "hours are years and years are centuries, a political idea which appears to be dangerous and even criminal through its excessive novelty after some time may appear practical and just Such, for instances, were the ideas of Christ and of Luther, and at the present time the ideas of the equality of all classes and of the participation of workmen in profits. There was a time when it would have been a crime to maintain these ideas. Now they pertain to a possible form. Then it must be understood that for these crimes there should be no irrevocable penalty like death. The penalty should be revocable when the novelty has passed away and the idea is no longer criminal. Vice versa, the hand of the law must fall heavily upon the recidivists, putting aside all sentimentality, especially if they have accomplices. And tho complicity must not be judged arithmetically, for whether there are four or ten they are equally dangerous. It is merely pre ferring formulas to facts to exempt an association with less than six mem bers, as it is done in Italy, and to ig nore the perils of any criminal asso ciation. A man who is not contented to steal himself, but enlists others, is more dangerous, and must be treated without pity. Justice cannot be an emanation from the Eternal Father repressing sin and disregarding inter ests. It especially should undertake to compensate the victims of crime at the expense of the criminal, making him work in order to pay the indem nity if he is not rich. It is a blunder also, when society has lost through the crime, to compel it to lose still more for the support of the criminal. All efforts at reform should be concen trated upon occasional criminals. They are the only ones for whom. much can be done. They should be removed from all opportunity by pro curing them employment and protect ing them from the mischievous influ ence of alcohol, not only by prohibi tory laws and fines which are general ly a dead letter, but by giving them mental amusement which will satisfy that cerebral excitement that is grati fied by alcohol. Above all, the ten dency to crime which appears in in fancy must not be allowed to continue in youth and become habitual. Forum. "That was very kind of your uncle to pay your debts." "Humph! I don't think so. ne might have given me the money and let me pay 'em." "What difference would that have made?" "It would have re-established my cred iL" Harper's Bazar. It is the age that forms the man, not tho man that forms the age. Great minds do indeed react on the society which has made them what tbey are, but they only pay without interest what they have received. Maeaulay. Fall edicine I fully as Important and as beneficial as Spring Medicine, for at this season there is great danger to health in tho varying temperature, cold Btorms, malarial gems, prevalence of fovers and other d'scases. All tlioso may bo avoided if tho blood is kept puro, tho digestion good, and bodily health vigorous by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. Hood' Pill cure all Ihcr ills. WUous 1 IUUU a CIIIS ncsSi headaches. iSc PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK Can only bo accomplished with tl.e very let of tools and . lmMI appliances. With a Davis Tjj? Crca,n Sc',a' ratorontho Jem , farm jou are suroof more Jib& ) and better butter, while . tho skimmed milk is aval- KHpft uablo feed. Farmers will 9T make no mis take to geta W . Davis. Neat, Illustrated AjmjMy catalogue mailed free Bmfm Agents wanted DAVIS & BANKIN BLDG. & MFC!. CO. Cor. Randolph & Dearborn Sts.. Chlcajo. "JONES HE PATS THE FKEIOHT." Farm and Wagon SCALES. United States Standard. All Sizes end All Kin". Not made by a trust or controlled by a combination. lor Free Book and Price List, addrcs JONES OP BINGHAMTOV BInehamton, N. 1 .. V. WANTED-SALESMEN Loeilandtnrellnir OoodnaT Prmnet t I.0C&1 and traveling uooapay i i.' ;- ,. I yeare. raasix SCK8IET Cte.fci i,l"',''''i; uunu nnLDE ul a nsv r ISi I BesVCous Brrup. Tastes Good, vx t in ClUlH. Bola DT OTUKKlBlD. PUNISHMENT OF