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Lucknow Sentinel, 1890-04-18, Page 3IRE LIQUOR PROBLEM. I Calm Consideration ot Proposed lietl ods for its Solution.. ALCOHOL. NOT Alrfi EVIL. The Beverage Traffic -Sentiment Improv- ing -,-The Treating Habit -High License Irk Practice-ProhIbitloz-Government Control -Drink and Poverty. TRIED PAPER" Perhaps no question that •has ever pre, utt:,� . tEa. is h has been eo earnestly as the liquor traffic problem. Nor ie this at all matter triotrio• 1ul avE irvsi�or, wio.ri uu,toaot �[c, Yap6 in- terests involved and the effects of promis- huone indulgence in intoxicants upon the people of the country Great advancee, both in interest and legislation, have been made within the lifeot the preeent genera. • Sion, and now that as a rale tihe ohurchee --are ranged-with-tboeer-who-seek a -remedy; the need of careful study and careful action is more argent, as it is desirable in legislation that we should not do one day what we find necessary to undo the next ; mit another fu short that we may arrive at a correct eotutiun of the great problem with which we have to deal. I have no pian of notion to outline hero, but ,Merely wash to examine into the existing facto and dirt some side -lights up:n theories nlctdy b._f,ara the public. In approaohieg the eubjsot it will be well to discover what it is we are desirous of , doing away with, how it cause 1i to txiat- enoe, and by what means it euesiets. Dinah that has been spoken and written in the temperance oanse hasrbeen stigma- tized as fanatioal, and, raskieseell due —allowance—fat the aauso -'and the oeoaaion, and with the experience of many yeere in active temperance work, I meted confute that many extremely injudioioua state- ments have been put forward by too en. thaeiastio or ill-informed chempione of temperance. But better counsels prevail now and the maturer thought, while it may bring less of deolamatory denunciation, brings to the nlatforen .and press proposals of reform studied out with greater or lees aoouraoy from sooiological laws azid that b , + liberal morality' that Tooke to the go • • of the raoo, while conserving tree in itridual. liberty. Alooholio liquors, we may concede at once are of great use to mankind. As welt talk of prohibiting the•produetien of opium, (a moot Iasi fel drug) because vicious peo•le contr et the opium habit, or • e mining o ea , .eoauee belligerent humanity uto it in bullets to slay- each other, as to • prohibit the production of alcohol beoanee it is misneed and male a cum .inttead of a blessing. But because opium, etryohina, belladonna, aconite and other drugs in the pharmacepeeia are capable of being, • and are, abused, will hardly be considered.a veld reason for re- fusing the'sthenefits they bring ns, when legitimately used. What are the legitimate uses of aloeholio produota ? To enter upon a discussion of the notion of alcohol upon the healthy human subjeot would unduly lengthen this paper, and the subject has been so frequently_a_nd exhaustively! treated that in so far as the oouent ption of alcoholic pro-. ducts by man is concerned, I may be excused for briefly placing it in the oategory of the drugs above mentioned. Where its 000asional, or even regular, use is indicated in the treatment of a physical ailment it may be as properly employed an 'any other product of natureor chemistry; and it should no more be recklessly prescribed than other powerful aids to medicine. Ana would you relegate it to the pharmacy ? Yes ; if possible. It is essentially a product to be discerningly need, and the necessary degree of discre- tion is not poeseeeed by all, or even a majority, of those who scan accumulate five -tsante andwalk up to G-ealoon'bar,-Pcrbops =few will disagree with this conclusion. Where, then, is the great obstaole.to the desired reform ? Ah I the Sllveremiths'i Yee, it is the aggregation of wealth behind the men whose craft, is the manor traffio that makes is difficult to battle with successfully ; it is the organization in its interest and the exercise of its daily and nightly vigilance over a sooiety "'strongly, even now, under its influence that delays the consummation whioh temperance workers on whatever plan hope ttfn but there ie no cause for discourbgement. There has been a great advance • even within a'' very few years. Fortunately we have had legislators who have been prompt to make legislation keep pace' with improving publin sentiment as nearly as is commensurate with the proper enforce- meat of the law. Sometimes I am inclined to think they have ex.reeded that wise limi-partionlarly when I reflect on repo , d prohibitory enactments which were passed and ill-enforoed, and editors professing . ordinary moral attainments supported in casting disoredit,on attempts to •enforce the laws and chuckling at occasional failures. I am comparatively young, but even within my 'recollection there has been a revolution wrought by improving sentiment backed by legislative fiats. Twenty-five years ago in some districts not to drink, and that to exoese, WAS to be considered peouliar. Whiskey was cheap, " good," and a common bever- age. For years my father was looked.upon se " a fanatic" because hie " raisings" and " bees" were not supplied with the usual kege of liquor, and because the bringing of bottles of liquor to his mills ensured the • disollarge of the workman who persisted in doifiXeo after warning. A country dance, a hog -killing party, a marriage, a christening or a funeral alike furnished an excuse for unlimited drinking. It was the usual ratification of a bargain in bus!- neas, and I well remember how, when quite a boy, a good -old minister who , tried to steer the th gh Harkness, late at night M the olo'iiliettil;.eeome lesson, has urged upon mesa steaming hot whiakey punch as a " night nip. -places for the sale of liquor were plentiful, and the man who made it a tutor to -,pass many of them in travelling Was a marked than in the com- munity. There has been -a great improve- ment. in testes and habits, and also in. idcae of what io good fellowship, and in our laws. Apart from the more aggregation of • inimarmasiiamaiimaiimpammallalaaniarouncomallammaiima money and the employment of -men in its conduct, the 1i nor traffio owes much of its etrength to false ideas of honor and taooiability. Ttleee.false ideas render easier tine progrdse of th-ciiin who have already formed she -appal-to-for liquor, while they are responsible for misleading thousands of youths who otherwise would probably have escaped the toile. I refer .to the treating custom -a custom act Billy.* absurd • and demeaning to real manliness as it id obviously in the- interests of . those engaged in the traffio to foster and stimue late. " Come and have something" has been the password to vice to many a youth. I have no hesitation in saying that were it poseible to abolish thia treating oilstone and restore the publio mind to a healthy condition on that question the majority of i' tx the end of the license year and the whole beverage trade would be seized, with a G[OVlaaac. Another source of strength to the liquor traffio is the revenue it returns to govern- ment. People eee the revenue it brings ; they do not realize what its toleranoeoosta, even when the figuree are burled at them in bursts of fervid and dramatic oratory. Blood moneyfi Yee; yon may call- it that; but a good many whom I have known as " temperance" men, when considering the pros and cons of the gates - tion, hesitated about aoknowiedg- lea ` eople°thswwe nowtaveter cntol:tie`it; acid. s >e'EutInlltt$ IPA worth. -- so�d,a Iiei'sivili.iic DON'a'S. poorly enioroed,it ilea eorry failure. Space _ well not permit enlargement upon the plea Hither wadihither in •the World of Art Even the Baby alga Now Become the Vic.' ilgal<fltet. ;grahiWIi9?t on: the .grounds_ ot" and Pash.ion. ttm of Reform: throwing -men ant of em ployment i but Tho -glop nontrasta with_t n geeQnnse;- tho bevertage+ traffic -)ie waeteP.ul Even the icaby is the victim -of reform. oureiy it their labor could and world be applied to Silk gloves are now woven in one piece. Methode employed twenty a ease ago pro, something of real good to mankind. The shape of Easter egge will be meioh intolerable in the maniere' of to -day. The ciaestion of the Government taking the same as last year. The infantile don'ts are almost an nnmer- contrXol_ of the t.rafc either as they have The rick -rack sunshade for next sum one as the ettgaettieal negatives. dentsin regard to methylated spirits, or on mer'( nee has a rill e# ribbon worked bite- Among the approved are : the Swiee or Bisruprekie,n plop, may be kbt fashion over the silver wire frame. Dont rock the' baby, a worthy ot consideration ; but whatever is Don t.let him - leep in a warm room. done it should square aocuratel with The Alabaster females stop of soda Don'.t let him sleep with his head nnder q y imintairrs are getting scoured,. cover, natural o rights and aim ao the general thwell- Prospective. •brides may like to hear that Don't let bim elect , with hie mouth • being ie the race without regardumin to the the rice Drop will be plenty. open. 1 facilities offered for the accumulation of wealth by private individuals or revenue by The old style tie, passing around the neck Don't "Pat "him to sleep. the State. „ twice and tied in a_bow, is worn again. Don't try to make him sleep if he ie no r to ter ., . ii , .., i a .. acv.... R"t7'�;-'asP?'.'^ uy 4.. ��•z� .i.. .sa.�.^'r. `7=e^:.....scc;v-w ._, by some advanced, that ink is the sole, .or the newest nd perhaps,most �icmiiio-g Don't lat him nap in the afternoon. p p , the moat beset!- Don't let, him be kissed. even the prinoipal,canae of poverty and oaf- ful orris. terwg. tsar of this further in my neat. violets are the Lenten flowers, but all Don.t let him wear any garment that is MASQUETTE. women who wear them do not g waist oto church. wale enough to bind his throat, arms, t or wrists. Huge blank tall° or lace hats, covered Don't have ball -buttons on the back of smokers and Non -Smokers. • with the °hoioeet •flowers,are shown for his dress. Perhaps the most inordinate smoker in spring wear. Don't have clumsy Bashes on the back of the. United States ia Thomas A. Edison, New ant -glass salad bowls and bon bon hie dreee. who aIeo behaves that' chewing toba000 is .boxes are called kq `-i-poor because of the Don �i cool his food by blowing; it. eh a good stimulant for any one engaged incutting. Don't feed him with a tableepoon. laborious brainwork. He le rarely aeon The fencing craze has brought out a new Don't use a tube nursing bottle. , without a cigar in his mouth, and he hexagold lace Doi, c cbange-the milk you started with. rued the, art of chewing and emekii s,�s d. pin in the foram of two foils Don't bathe him iu hot ore 1 that no money price can jastify my entering into partnership wish a wrong. Doubtleee the public's ehare of the business is unprofitable, but, ate in the high tariff, some people eee a large sum collected as revenge and, although they nierve1 that they remain poor, do not see clearly how they are daily bled to produce it, so on the temperance question a good many do oonsider the money as an offset, and failing to see that it far from balances the actual fioanoial account, taking no notice of the moral phase of the question, hesitate about pursuing nee otherwise plain. coiiree. -Tiffs ie equally tree as regards Dominion and mnnioipal revenue, and as long as we are silent partners in the traffic it ill -becomes ue to dettonnoe those who do the drudgery part, The man who grows eloquent in prayer for the stomas of pro- hibition while he pookete his share of the revenue from the traffio-or what is the same, sanotions its use by the public -is not over -consistent. The Efforts of temperance workers are, generally speaking, devoted to gradnaily lessening the number of planes where liquor is sold, and, at the same time in• ortasiug the cost_ ofentering the ranks of the bar=keepers by higher lioense. Let no glance at this method and its results in practice. Premising that that large and growing class o citizens who labor for the exams - non of the liquor traffio in intoxicants do not as a rule support lioense as a revenue- produoing scheme, but es merely an inci- dental check ani means of facilitating inepeotion and control, I may dismiss the money argument forthwith. The traffio is either right or wrong in itself -either good or evil to sooiety. If good why should we create a monopoly in it ? Why forbid any who wish to engage in it? We know that the ory is raised that in numbers of licenses the limit is renally reached. Why make ti limit ? Why is Jones' money not as good as Brown's ? yet Brown is autho- rized to sell and Jones is refused authorize- tion. Simply because we aim by the double checks' of limitation as to number id high -license fess to lessen the number of planes in which saloons can be legally established. Now, experience has proven that white this redaction . in numbers has operated with greater or less success in concentrating the traffio in.. the hands of a powerful few and killed out many drinking planes ,it has, as. por contra, made the traffio more and more .respectable,/,led to the establishment of inviting resorts and made, in many ways, the introduction to the down grade more attractive and the descent easier to the better class of young men who would not easily be induced to patronize .low resorts before they had acquired the appetite. And, , further,the would-be liquor .eel er wbo ie unable, either by reason of price or limitation of numbers, to obtain a license has a grievance over that which he would be able to plead under general prohibition, in that others are given privi- leges deniedto him. Whatever the increase in cost of licenses and limitation of num- bora granted may have don , it must alwae a oe kept in view that the refuel to grant more than a .c in umber is a violation of the rights of it citizens who are by" the law precluded from obtaining such (if the authority to carry on the traffio is a right), and that it has given a degree of strength and reepeotability to it that it could never otherwise have gathered. The weakness of the high lioense system may be briefly stated': It creates it mon- opoly ; it makes liquor places attractive ; it gives the 'traffio an air of respeotability ;- it consolidates all the liquor interests in a degree in keeping with the money invested and to be earned in it ; it is false in prin. oiple, and while it places those refused licenses in as bad a position se they would be nnder prohibition, it does not in p,raotioe materially affect the consumption of spirit - one liquors. Have we the right to prohibit -I mean right, not power? Undoubtedly. Could it be shown that without a beverage traffio sufficient fors anoh purpose as I have referred to as within nits proper sphere of utility could not be obtained, the negative might be loreefally urged. Could it even be maintained that theconsequences of'the beverage sale affeoted only consenting parties -that the drinker took all the con- sequences of his indulgences -I fear the argument for prohibition would be seri- onely impaired. But that, I fancy, cannot be done. The consequences affect families, sooiety, the State,and, will• affect posterity ; and in ouch oases society has'a right to protect its members and itself. Shall we have prohibition, then ? Pause and count the cost -not the money Dost, but the work of enforcement. I have had Bomb%xperienoe in the work ; I know how lukewarm some people become when it come° to be a case of personal action to aid in compelling reepeot for the law. It is astonishing . what a deep sympathy a captured law violater ;gets when that law , violation consists in Belling liquor illegally. The few „get the work to do -not pleasant work - and even moral" support is Sparingly given. The law is all right ; prohibition is ° de- fensible, -but you require a higher state of culture, a more thoroughly imprisoned Act a smoker, he is prettied hard by Mark Twain, wbo al:+owe hiwsat 300 c ;are a month. Oooasionoily Twain has benefit to break himeelf of the habit. At the age of 34 he ceased from emtking fora year and a hall. " My health," he said did not improve, beoanee it was not possible to improve health which was already perfect." But by and by he sat down with a coatraot the faehionable dinner table. behind him to write his book, "3toughingOne of the sensations of the spring will It." and then he found himself most seri- be the new nndorskirte of Rennin (loth, onely obstructed. " I was three weeks whioh is striped in gold, red and black. writing three cht•ptera. Then I gave up theefight,-resamedmy 300• cigars,- burned` the three chapters, and wrote the book in three months without any •bother, or Dark garnets, q difficulty. - opals findfavorfor hair ornaments and Howe never ease toba000, except in a p very tare self-defensivecigarette, where a fancy girdles. great many other people .are smoking."_ Sleevelees oriental jackets, a mase of gold Gladstone detests smoking and so does or silver embroidery, have sprung into John Raskin. Neither Thomas Hardy, fashion for house wear, with one bound. nor Louis Bianca nor George W. Childs,nor The long ends of mantles, wraps and Thomas Wentworth Higginson, nor John- visiles that reach .to the knees are called G. Whittier, nor John Wanamaker has pans.. To:--finielr them_fringing-of-out ever used the weed. Lyman Abbota opinion garnet, filigree gold or ptssemonterie is is adverse to !tat tee by a healthy man. used. Haber Newton deems smoking a habit in- The fashionable soup plate becomes congruous for "a man of the Spirit." But Robert Collyer emokes whenever he wants smweld think soup was goingup is price ler and has very little depth, One . to and thinks it nubody s buaineee except his own ; and the venerable William l3: very soon. Furness, of okPhiladelphia, ban been a Walking skirts become fuller and faller, etenex roma e hie n neap _ ie p egg and a decided change is tgkine p1eoe in is one of the most inveterate smokers in the style and general effect of the " make England. ill? De Witt Talmage was once a smoker, bat • There•ie no end to novelties in fashion he gave up the habit beoanee he found it this year. When she appear° in her spring was getting too strong a hold even him, oatfit the girl of ,the per iod will be a bell- MRS. BOOTH'S CIG 3.BBTT S. James.Payn emokes latakiathe whole time .ii!ini eight to eee —. he is at work, and holds that it stimulates " Bute" ie a technical name among cloak Scriptural Quotations inside the Little the • imagination. Bi.ppoly.te Taine finds makers this year. Many of the jackets and • Paper !toile. that a cigarette is useful between two ideas,' wraps have high collars and sleeve -heads, Cigarettes t I fairly gaaped with aston- " when I have the first but havenot ar- to support which a little rat or roll of wad- ishment, and could not credit the evidence rived at the second." Nevertheless he ding is inserted. of my senses. I was standing in the ape. does not regard it as a necessity. George. Bridesmaids at one of the April wed- Dial sanattlm of Mre. Mand Booth, down Augnstue Cala has been a constant smoker dings are to wear Maud Muller hats, white in the Salvation Army headquarters et for over forty years, but had he his life to tulle gowns, and will carry little gold- No. 111 Reads 'street. live over again,he asserts, he would neverhandled rake°. There have been bride- " Pray pardon me," I said "if I am very touch tobacco in any shape or form. grooms who should have carried that ill-bred and inquisitive, but are those Henry. M Stanleynettries.baia-pipe-eeith-Lima- ' lee3lent, really-nig.rettee4" " Won't yon try one ?" was the answer, ,On rainy days Broadway is bright with and a roguish smile dimpled the face as colored umbrellas, Plum -blue is the most the little case was extended toward me. numerous a great many • tan silks are I drew out a " cigarette." • Itproved to carried, and quite often the red, eilver, be a small °Droll of rice.paper, which. green -and gray of the n�aokintosh is re- unrolled, "disclosed a delicately painted pealed overhead. spray ofmaiden-hair-fern, beneath which The "all over" cloak, intended for travel- was ineoribed in tiny but clear Characters ling and shopping, is something of a a verse from Holy Writ which embodied novelty. It is out to fit like au ulster. No a promise to those who are not weary in lining,is used and the sleeves are of the well doing. •Each little roll bore a different bishop pattern, fall at the shoulder and design of fiowere or leafage and Scripture gathered into a,wrietband. words of cheer. Boas have been prescribed by physioiane , " Yes, these are Salvation Army (igar- ee a presentative against la grippe. They ettee," said Mrs. Booth. " One of our dear are worn on all occasions and grace ball girl'a made them for me, and they affe rd -room as well as dinrieriiailets. At the first-meiihis greateet comfort at times. s non- official dinner at the Elyeee• Mme. Carnot see, I have much to canoe me anxiety ,and kept a'Russian sable boa about" her nook pain, and when I am weary and sad .I all evening. stretch out my hand for one of .these some of the new fade -veiling of point ' cigarettes,' and I am euro to find within d'eeprit ie finiehed with a pointed edge of it something that brings comfort :and eilver, gold or black. Among, the dotted peace." -New York World. , net there isa pattern in which only a few black pastille or polka dots are woven, ' The Maligning Mother -in -Law. placedso far apart as to give the piquant Mrs. Van Bibb -What is the matter effect of paphes. with my husband, doctor ? -- The rooks of oases"in which hymnal and Dr. Sohmerz-Well, he has symptoms of prayer books are carried, usually made of mania a pot(, in' addition toaonte °aphatw. leather, are now shown in etohed,carved and algia and -nasal hypet emia. .F, dui filigree silver. The books are also bound Mre. Van Bibb -Oh, dear 1 What do you in metal. For the relieionsly inclined these euppoee caused it ? novelties will be prized•as Easter favors. Dr. Sobmerz-I think it is due themes - With the low -out coat barques so de- sive °erevisiao and oandagallio absorp cidedly tailor made a little vest is worn, tion. - Origin of. Quinine. and usually two go with the suit, one of Mre. Van Bibb -Poor, dear fellow 1 And cloth like the dress and another of Mansell- mother said there was nothinerathe matter les. This smart little affair coiisists of with him, except that he had been drink - 'standing collar and a bosom five inohei ing too much. Ishall never forgive her. a ea. ed and jet shoulder napes, as before made known, are to be among fashionable spring wraps. Young men will be interested to hear that brown and drab oclored Derby° will continue the style. What are called altar oandleetickr", very tall and of silver, have found their Way to .,..Blaok.._.nnderwear-•---•has- -come- to be- re;- garded as an (essential to a black toilet, whether for street or house. a week. IIo,.'t allow a comb to touch his head. Lon t let him eat at the family table. Don't let bim taste meat until he ie two: - Don't let him sleep on a pillow. Don't coax, tease, torment, mimeo or eoolci him. Don't whip him. Don't make him cry. Don't notice him when he poute. - Don't frighten him. Don't tell him about ghosts, bugaboo or bad places,_._ _ -' -DOW "ishake him. _ e+ Don't put him in short shoes., Don't dance, jump or dandle him. Don't overfeed him. Dont let'him sleep with en adult. ' Don't plane him face to fade on a bed or in a oarriage with another child. Don't let him swallow things or eat aahea. Don't let him roll downstairs. Don't let him fall out of winds ' s. Don't teach him to walk. Don'twitsh Elbe It , ye soap. Don't let him ohew painted cards. Don'texpose his eyes to the sun waken protected by a peaked hat or veil.. Don't scream in his ear. Don't rap him ander the chin. Don't lift him by the wrists or arms. Don't staroh any of his clothes. ' Don't allow him to wear wet bibs, Don't Worry him. Don't give him anything to eat between meals. wherever he goee, and neually carries it in his month. Dr Nausen, though addicted to the weed, habitnealy abstains from tobacco when on hie travels. the same is true of H.H. Johnston and Joseph Thom- son, who have some reputation as African explorers. -Once a Week. The Power of the Voice. . Probably no one can ever fully estimate how much influence he is oonetantly exert- ing through his tones of voice. Nothing is ro powerful to cheer the. drooping energiee of a discouraged group as . the inspiring tonee of hope in the words .of a new ar- rival.Who hes not seen the immediate effect °T a glad ,and sprightly voice break- ing upon a dell and anintererested party of people ? How their eyes brighten, and their brows clear, and their forine become erect 1 On the other hand, let a solemn, or doleful, or fretful voice break in on a gay and cheerful cotnpanyand how quickly the emile dies on the Hp, and the depreaeing influence, goes round ! The infant who cannot understand a word that his mother says is soothed and pleaeed, or grieved and frightened by her tones, and the seeds thus sown of love and gentleness,or of harshness and impatience, aro surd to bear fruit in his later development, and exert a stronginfln- ence in mellowing his future character and preparing it to contend the better with the roughneils of the world. -N. Y. Ledger. • Of the thonranda who say quinine is " good for everything," few are aware that its introduction into the pharmacopoeia is of comparatively recent Elate. Quinine- is one of the most common of homceopatbia drugs and ia need fon all ailments. It is an alkaloid obtained from the cinchona bark, whose powerful properties as a tonic became known about 1637. At that time the Countess of Cinohon, vice-gneen of of Peru, was very ill with a lingering fever, and the beet medical men of South America were in attendance and had almost despaired of the countess' reoovery.. One day a 'Washerwoman appeared at the palace and gave the coni tate' maid a bark whioh she directed, to be given to her mistress. The countess• rallied, and in a , short time recovered. The Estrange bark was then galled cinchona bark, whose praises the vioe-queen Was always singing. -Chicago Times. AtiyOiri Would. George (vain and p0 5poue)--,hissMollie will you marry -me ? Miss M. -Y -yes, George. George -I knew you would t I knew you would just jump at the chance 1 It is fortunate that usury was not favoredin patriarohai times. A bueineao- life of five or six hundred years would enable a pnshing man'to own the whole earth. The prettieet challiea in the market oost only 45 cents a yard. These goods are serviceable for infants' wear and make desirable house drosses. long, whioh is provided with holes to but- ton on the dress collar. -New York World. A Great Power Scheme. A contract was signed at Niagara Falls yesterday between the Niagara Falls Power Company and the Cataract Construction Company, the latter composed of New York capitalists, for the construction of a tunnel 30 feet egnare, starting at a point near the water's edge a short distance below the Fella and extending under the village and above about two miles,'where large manu- factories are to be built, the mills dis- charging water from their wheels into the tunnel. The company also purchased large tracts of land near the river, whioh - will be leased for mill sites. Theannel is of a capacity to provide for the. development of 120,000 horse power, and is to ooet,$3,500,- 000. The work is to be commenced as aeon as machinery and material can be got on the ground. The famous tapestry patterns are repro- dnoed in gingham. Aside from the artietio beauty of design these Seotoh an Rrenoh cottons have a aheen se glossy as Milk and the pliableness of silk. Sateena can only be distinguished from Indian silk by feeling them.' The difference in the Bea is remarkable. Some women can go round the house fixing np things with no noise or bustle at all, while others can't make their appoaranoe "Mannprint" is the new name for the. in the streets without it. - product of the typewriter. Pointers for Advertisers. Don't expect advertisements to gear fruit in, one night. You oen't eat enough in a week to last you a year, and you Can't ad- vertise on that plan either.. People wbo advertise .ono° in three months forget that'fogke cannot remember anything longer than seven days. ' If you can arouse cariosity by advertise menta, it is a good point gained. The fair sex don't hold all -the curiosity in the world. Quitting advertising in dull times is like• tearing out a dam because the water is -low.. His Feelings Were Hurt. First Tramp= ---Bill, I'll never go to -!hat hones again. The woman there ain't got no manners whatever. Second Tramp -What did she do ?• Sete tho dog on you ? First Tramp -Naw; but she gimme a. soft biled egg, and when I asked for a nap- kin, she slid: " Don't be so pertikler."' She ain't no Christian. Colonel 0. J. Murphy, -an American,. Proposes 'to build a corn palace at the Edinburgh interoolonial exposition which will be held this summer. A Texas debating sooiety recently had for a snbjeot, " To it proper to sound elle t' ^in dorg ?"-Siftings. Aar •lp