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Show The Cost of War as an l Influence For Peace jZ? It Will Require tlye Wages of 15,01)0,000 Men to Meet the Daily ' ' O I'll rka. Two cups of sugar, one cup of butler, one cup of cold water, one of soda, three caps of raisins Chopped fine, four eggs, one pound of Pgs, cinnamon and nutmeg to flavor. Beat together sugar and butter, add the eggs, which should hare been beaten together; dissolve the soda In the cup of water. Use enough sifted Bonr to make it stiff as pound cake. Cot the figs in halves and press well In the dongh to prevent burning. Bake In layers, frosting each layer while warm. This recipe makes taro cakes. ul Sweet Griddle Cakes. One pint of milk; four eggs; two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar; two tablespoonfnls of melted butter; one teaspoonful of baking powder and Hour enough to make a reasonably thin batter. Beat the eggs, white and folks separately; stir Into the yolks the butter, sugar and one cupful of Hour in which the baking powder has been mixed. Then add the milk and the whites of the eggs, with more Bake in small Hour, if necessary. cakes. Butter each one, as it comes from the griddle. If for dessert, place Tour on each plate with Jelly or Jam between the cakes and sprinkle powdered sugar over the top. ' Flirt Onmbo, Cat up a pair of fowls as when earv-IhLay them in a pan of cold water till all the blood is drawn out Put Into a pot two tableepoonfula of lard pud aet It over the fire. When the lard feus come to a boll put in the chicken (With an onion finely minced. Dredge (Well with flour and aeaaon with salt Sind pepper, and a little marjoram, if liked. Pour on two quarts of boiling iwater and lot cook for three hours, then stir in two heaped teaspoonfnls of caasafraa powder and let It atew five g. snlnntea longer. It will be improved by stewing with it a few slices of cold 'boiled ham before taking up. This la Che genuine Southern recipe for gumbo, and may oe made of any oort of Tool try, veal, lamb, venison or kid. TV R- - GLADSTONE once, in a KOW dealing with the Crimean war muds the following Impressive statement: "The expenses of a war are the moral check which it baa pleased the Almighty to impose upon the ambition and lust of conquest that are inherent in so many nations. There is pomp and circumstance, there is glory and excitement about war. which notwithstanding the miseries It eutaiis. Invests It with charms in the eyes of the community. and tends to blinds men to those evils to a fearful and dangerous de- The necessity of meeting from year to year the expenditure which It entails la a salutary and whoicsoine check, making them feel what they are about, and making them measure the cost of the benefit upon which they may calculate." The conflict between Bussla and Japan must soon demonstrate the soundness of Mr. Gladstone's view of the Increasing cost of war as an Influence for peace. There can be no doubt In the mlnda of those familiar with the subject that the comparatively small expense attending the war of 1894, In which Japan not only vanquished China but won her footing in the family of nations, d bad mucb to do with tbe enthualasm In Japan for a war against Russia which preceded tbe night attack on Port Arthur. The military glory won by the Japanese in that d short and war, not to speak of the enormous money Indemnity and the cession of tbe rich island of Formosa, were stupendous rewards for such a trifling outlay of moucy and sacrifice of blood. For ten years, therefore, Japanese policy has been more or less blind to the financial devastation involved in modern war on a large scale. With less than 50,000 men she drove the Chinese from Korea, Invaded Manchuria, captured Fort Arthur and WeU Hal-We- i, smashed the Chinese navy and compelled tbe oldest and most populous empire In the world to sue for peace-a- ll within seven months. As a business Investment from a Pagan point of view the war with China was a paying business Investment for gree. light-hearte- one-side- W1M Dark Soap. you suspect the duck of being edgy of fishy parboil each with a car tot inside its body, then take out the Japan. But the present war in Asia is a carrot and throw it away. Ton will Bud that all the unpleasant flavor haa different thing: Russia must send her left the ducks and has been absorbed reinforcements more than 5000 miles by ralL Japan must carry all her by the carrot Cut np the ducks, season each piece troops across the seas. Hundreds of with salt and pepper and lay them in a thousands of men must bo pnt In the soup pot For s large soup you ebould field on each side. All this aside from bave four ducks. Add three sliced the cost of maintaining and operating onions and a tablespoonfnl. of ground warships. age, also a quarter of a pound of It is estimated that Japan's availbutter divided In four parts and each able army at the present time aggrepart rolled in four. Pour In water gates about 400,000 soldiers. The coat enough to mnke a rich aonp and let it of landing this force ou the Korean or boll slowly till all the flesh baa left Manchurian coast at the rate of, say, the bones; skim It welL Thicken It $10 per man, exclusive of horses, arWith boiled or roasted chestnuts, tillery and supplies, would be $4,000-0Upeeled and mashed. A glass of Madeira Mr. lloche, formerly minister of or sherry, or the Juice of a lcinon or commerce of France, believes that orange will be found an Improvement the cost of maintaining the Japanese In taking np the soup be careful to forces will not be greater than $1.95 leave the bits of bone and meat In the a day for each mun, including clothing, bottom of the pot. equipment, food, transportation and munitions, lie estimates the cost of war to Jnpau, including the navy, at t $1,1)00,000 a day. If this be a fair valuation of Japan's fighting expenses, it will take the entire earnings of more than 8,000,000 Japanese toilers to support the war, at the average wage rate of twelve cents a day. To clean sponges, wash them in This out of e total population of about diluted tartaric acid, rinsing them af- 45,0U0,UU0. In other words, more than d of the male population of terward la water; It will make them irery soft and white. Jupnu can barely earn the dally cost Before Laying tinned fruits and of the struggle. Nor Is the loss to Japneats see if the top Is flat or de- anese commerce Included In the pressed. If the top has bulged out, war It cost then air has entered the tin and In the Turko-Russia-n ret In. Iussiu about sixteen cents a day to Vinegar should not be kept Is a support each soldier In the field. But tone Jar, ae the acid may affect the that was lu a densely populated, ferglasing and the vinegar be rendered tile country, with comparatively inex.unwholesome. Class Jars are the best pensive transportation. It is different In Manchula. All supVinegar receptacles. Freshen the house by putting a few plies must he drawn from a great disand drops of oil of lavender In an orna- tance. Clothing, transportation Rusmental bow, then, half fill It with food are dear. Besides, before the .very hot water. This will give a de- sian troops esn take the field aside from the 150,000 said to be in Manlightful freshness to the atmosphere. now they must be carried more churia d To clean tapestry-coverefurniture first brush thoroughly; thru add a than 5000 miles by rail. Putting the naked costof transportation at one cent tablespoonful of ammonia to a qnart for each soldier, the cost of cf water. Wring out a doth of this, per mile 100,000 troops excluding arend sponge thoroughly, rinsing and carrying horses and supplies would be tillery, it gets dirty, turning the cloth ae Changing the water when necessary. at least $3,000,000. Mr. Roche believes that when RusThis freshens and brightens It wondersia has got over the first expense of fully. her war with Japan her army and Plenty of soap and cold water and no cost her from $1,500,000 to oda are the secrete of success In navy will a $1,750,000 day so long as she has to wood and the (washing board floors, In the Far East. Assuming only fight most be scrubbed the way of the to be correct, it will Tain and not round and round. If you tbe larger figure of 7,000,000 Russian the take wages want to get the dirt off. Change the water often. Tou cant expect boards laborers to meet the expenses of the to be a good color If they are rinsed in war. All this relates to the war of Rustllrty water. with Japan in Asia. But If the consia For hanging clothes to dry, first to Europe, if the bang np by the thickest part, waist flict should spread or neckband, etc., because If hung by great powers should take the field the thinnest pert the water would run against each other, the estimated cost Into the thlek pert lodge there, end of the straggle under modern conditake longer to dry. Second, hang np tions Is staggering. Official figures show that In 1871 It everything wrong side out, so that any accidental soil will not do so much cost France more than $2,000,000 a damage ae If it appeared on the right day to keep an army of 600,000 men In tbe field against the Germans. But Ida. If one-thir- esU-inal- e. r . : i POVERTY r TT1"! JAPAN IN CORRESPONDENCE f SL France claims to be able to mobilize within forty eight hours about 2,000,000 men aud (kKUOO horses and mules. Germany can put 2,550,-00- 0 men in the field, Austria 1,300,000 and Italy 1,200.000. Sehaffe, the Austrian economist declared in 1800 that a war Involving tbe European Continental powers would cost France a day, Russia $u,Uo0,000 a day, Germany $5,000,000 a day and Austria $0,000,000 a day. Accoding to Mr. lloche a conflict between the European powers would cost for the first two months. Including tbe Initial outlay, tbe Immense sum of $400,000,000, and If soldiers should take the field the dally cost would amount to a day. With these estimates In sight; even though they are mere approximations. It is not hard to understand why the statesmen of Europe are straining their wits and their energies to coq-fin- e the present war to Asia. If It takes the wages of 15,000,000 men to pay the daily cost of the war between Japan and Russia a war confined within a radius of 1COO miles what would a general conflict mean to the overtaxed population of Europe 1 to-da- y cited by Jj budget speech T o Mr. Murley ae a text to the X chapter of bis biography I to-da- y Wild Tarkaft Hauling Several different methods for taking the wild turkey are pursued, the most popular being the calling" method. The wild gobbler, like his tamo brother, la an inveterate lover, which quality since even before the white man first came to hunt him in Virginia and the Carolinas haa led him blindly into a vastly more serious trouble than the matter of squabbles with hli Jealous brothers. Long, long ago some observing aborigine learned to call him to his doom. by Imitating the seductive yelp of the ben turkey. Tbe ambushed savage, well practised In producing his mendacious call, readily decoyed the love-ma- d gobbler within easy range of bis deadly arrow. The white man learned of the Indian. Shrewd as he Is. the turkey haa not tfca p" r u LONDON a i MAIL i i OKIO, Japan. Deeper than ever plummet koumlrd in p.... O o the oceau of poverty and K human woe have I de- q wCkC svended here In the metropolis of the Far East, and fonnd the world's iioorest poor. Beside these starved subjects of the Ron of Heaven, who cower outside his palace walls, the submerged tenth of London are boa vlvants, and tbe groveling Russians of Gorky's night refuges the polled ehlldren of fortune. What I have seen I doubt if any Occidental lias seen before me, for tbo existence of such absolute wretchedness la not revealed to the tourist, and the ordinary restdeut suspects It not at all. If be haa beard some whisper of the dolorous regions near at haad. It la not regarded as politic to le too Inquiring. Not by any possible chance will the guide or friend conduct the visitor to the quarters where joy la life's unknown quantity. Slumming In Tokio la for the regulation traveler the same aa If in tan-do-n he went to Soho without exploring the East. None but reglona of comparative prosperity are shown, beennse the Japanese are proud of their universal reputation for cleanliness, for artistic surroundings, and for a poverty that It always smiling, and safely removed from acwell-wash- tual want o strm-tnrr- meals a day. Lobb has gained in weight to the extent of over thirty-liv- e pounds In a few months and states that the atom-ae- h trouble with which he used to be a filleted has entirely left him. Indianapolis Sun. ITnnpy From Dmcntjr Calonles af nos. A load of extracted honey, weighing 4000 pounds, was recently hauled from Tuscola to Dnvlson, and was the product of seventy colonies of bees owned by James McKay. This was an average of fifty-sevepounds per colony, and worth, approximately, $000. The bees did almost all the work, McKay's part being merely providing hives and comb foundations, getting stung a few time and extracting the honey a light and pleasing task throughout. The collection of two tone of honey In a single season by seventy colonies of bees was extraordinary doings. Still, tbe bee not only improves the shining hour," but cloudy days and Sundays. Detroit n XMbun Joint Affliction tbe Ha II Id ay twine were babies their mother always referred to them collectively. This was natural TTben enough, for they ehared everything, e from their to chicken-pox- . baby-carriag- Aa they grew a little older, however, there were slight differences between Elnora and Endora, bnt Mrs. Hnlitflnj took no account of them. When they had reached the age of seven she still referred to them in a way which truck casual llatenera ae amusing. Where are Elnora and Endora T' asked a cousin, who had come to spend the afternoon. The twins have gone with their father to have one of their teeth out, aid Mr Ilnlllda eslml question. The wails are decayed and full of crevices and cracks, the roof leaks, and there Is moss and broken tiles, the shojl are full of holes or patched with newspapers, the mats nre ragged, dirty and mouldy. There is foul water In tbe streets and a still fouler stench in ilic air, whose source is often visible to the eye. Frequently one sees dend rats in the roadway, but for foitr of the plague, they are quickly made away with. Afler coming from the daintiness and delightful artistry of Tokio, Khitaya is the abomination of desolation. Tbe most tumble-dow- n of these abodes may be rented for from twenty to twenty-fiv- e pence per month, but then are houses so fine that they cost as high as a penny, or even three halfpence, a day. To afford one of these expensive residences several families club together, not alone for economy, but also tor warmth. In winter all hands crowding together on the mats. Charcoal Is not always to be afforded, and hest Is a great luxury these cold days A whole block will sometimes take turae In warming bnnds st s blbschl, wherein s few chunks of charcoal smoulder In a bed of ashes. baa had a Suppose a good day, and returns to Ills home with, sbj, sixpence. lie will expend this In farthing purchases of mlso, a kind of soup stock, oil, fuel, tobacco and perhaps a little fish, which. If he feels reckless, he will cat raw with horseradish. lie buys In driblets, and like the very poor in all tbe cities of tbe world, pays enormous prices. This lias been a Tery good day, and perhaps he will peep In nt one of tbe templing cake shops, which smell so fragrant to the weary and hopeless. However, h- V h n (il pipe-clean- er lil N. C.. traded hie A loan s' wife uud two children to hli brother for two fishing not. Owing to the clearness of the air con. versutlmi lu the Arctic regions can bs carried on by persons two tubes apart The largest gold nugget ever found weighed 223 pounds and four ounces, and was called the King of Water Moon." In Australia The belle of ancient India wore her hair tied by a Jeweled band two or three Inches back of her head and then s braided Into an enormous ball the size of her head. two-third- In Machine, Me., the roof of s house caught fire from shirks from a burning chimney, and the unique method of fir. y ing snowballs to put It out was used. sue-full- In London streets, as soon as rain has mnde the roadway slippery, street department men scatter fine, hard gravel, from Iron Mum placed at frequent Intervals at the Intersection of tbs busier thoroughfares. henrt-rendln- er Nevertheless, Tokio and other cltlps bave their social purgatories, their Sargasso seas of living, breathing wreck and drift la Tokio not fewer than 200,000 people seldom. If ever, know of a certainty where the neces- sities of the next day will come from, and throughout the laud the great majority are too poor to eat rice. The high grade rice grown on the Islands la exported almost to the last sack, and Inferior rice Imported for those who can afford It Rice Is not in every bowl, as the tourist fondly Imagines. I have spent days and nights In the midst of this Inexpressible residue of Japan In company with a brilliant native sociologist who, like scores of hla fellow students of men and things, believes that Japan has left Its good days of general happiness and general comfort forever behind, and Is entering upon a sordid and merciless age of lsdustrlallsm, in which Its people are sot fitted by temperament to compete, and whose proletariat is, moreover, far too intelligent and too proud to be exploited by capital. He Is crying out a warning to Japan that her seat at tbe council table of the powers Is being paid for In the blood of ber citizens, not expended as they would pour it forth cheerfully in war, but In factory and on farm, in shop and In folly learned that frequently death lurks behind tbe dulcet call of his His desire la tempered by distrust, however, and despite his bluster and hurry to reach the aide of the lovelorn hen, ho If wary, and cautiously dallies in his coming; to assure himself that all la well. He will detect the falnteet error in the most carefully modulated call, or will see the slightest movement Then swift and still as a fleeting shadow he will steal away to tbe deepest cover, these to remain In hiding till office. his fears subside before his rising Think for a moment, he cried, reordor Sj Field and Stream. cently, as we looked at a Japanese battleship In the offing, what a multitude of oor tiny rice fields It takes to Dieting, Galas Weight. "I conld easily subsist on $2 e support such a monster, and then remonth," was the statement made by member that our people can't afford Henry Lobb, the North Fond du laic to eat rice! Jeweler who has been experimenting Bnt whether or not the last state of for several months at the suggestion Japan be worse than her first, let us of the professor of physical culture In proceed to Darkest Tokio. We will visit Ohio State University. Lobb, on ac- the Sliltaya quarter, which Is close count of hie occupation, la able to by the beautiful I'yi-nPark. carry his diet to extremes, and last Tokio Is so vast; It lx such sn Imfall went for a week with no food at mense sea of sheds, that from the n!L At the present time he consumes highest point on the clearest day one as a dally ration one gallon of milk, can see bnt a fraction of Its area but raw oats snch as arc fed to horses, here are fifteen district of mnn and corn. In order to aid digestion he streets. The crazy called pnts his victuals through a coffee houses, which are in reality sheds, nre grinder and sometimes soaks thorn in strung along in a series of dilapidated water. lie drinks all the water he and filthy compartments. To folk as caret for. In the summer time he poor as those who live here, cleanlieats fruit and tales salt, bnt no pep- ness, so dear to the average Japanese per and no sugar, lie cals but two that It Is above godliness, is out of the lady-lov- e. this time, sed will cnn'- - nit.!? with listening to a slnry-lelie- r relating the ancient glories of Dal Nippon. Had our returned empty ban iled. be would have hurried to the pawnbroker, always near at hand, and raised a few farthings on his precious brass pipe, his hibm-hl- . or Ills few poor garment not lu actual use, Willi the money he would have purckaM'd tN'.i outfalls or the offal from lmrses used for food, aud per'iap a handful of scraps from a gtiih:i:e l t.:el With those he would have feasted with his family, aud with them prayed tliat 1'rnviilciicc would gve him a day tomorrow, mi iliat he mi.Jit reclaim his goods. The pawnbroker fatten off these wretches as ill no other kind. It is Inqiossilile to escape them, and they never relent. Anything that cost above flvepener can be pawned. Ilttil November, or even until midwinter, one can exist In Khitaya without bed clothing, hut when the nights get cold, with the fearful piercing frost of a Japanese winter, some covering must be hail. Now appears another plunderer of the poor In the guise of a capitalist, who rents quilts by the night. He charges, anil Invariably collects, from one farthing for a shred of dirty, patched old rag to a penny or eveu twopence for a foul hut heavy covering. Then, too, there are frayed silk quilts for bridal couples, hut these are too costly to be rented by ninny bridegrooms. Rent must be paid in advance, and before the family go to leap the collector come and gets either the money or the quilt. With refinement of cruelty, he does not appear until the lessee has turned in, and the loss of Ids covering will be doubly scenes felt There are when penniless mothers strive to hold the qnllt to protect their bnltes from the chill and damp. Like the pawnbroker and the money-lendetbe quilt-lendla Few of the Inhabitants of Bhltsys ever get enough money ahead to buy bed clothing, and the ghaatly tragedy of renting le again and again for winter after winter. Where there are so many children having bnt a few cotton rags, tbe winter means sente misery. Nothing that was ever edible ran become too bnd for the very poor to use. From tills and slmllnr quarters the scavengers go forth dally searching for food, and they rake the city as with a eontb. Back they come at night laden with bnd rice, decayed fish and meat, scraps from slop barrels, broken food from restanrants, and all manner of queer odds and ends. This secondhand food business has an extensive language of Its own, with special terms for every kind and condition of edible Junk that la brought to tha qnnrter. Thla Jargon la wholly nnlntelllblhla to the uninitiated, and few there are who rare to learn the language of the freezing and starving who rent rags and dine on offaL Foverty has its ultimate expression hero its last worth STEPHEN ENGLAND. plpe-ch-mi- to Be Seen in the Slums of Tokio. By JAMES CREELMAN. JtOK. i Wretchedness Expenses of tlic Japanese-Russla- n Conflict - War a Yet Dearer Lux ury For Europe. s: :: :: :: E O' flinty-hearte- There have Just been presented to the Royal Ulster Yacht Club, of Belfast, by John N. Russell, an old member, two guns that onre formed part of the armament of one of the ships of the Spnnlsli Armada, wrecked off the const of Clare, st s spot still called Spanish Point." A rnrtlnl Pant. There Is still something for tbe hatband nnd father to do aboard the family ship. Mr. Glldlngberry, who figures In s dialogue lu Judge, understood bis duty, Ir." Sir. Glldlngberry said Yes, proudly to the newcomer in town, I gness Ive got oue of the Intellectual-es- t families in these parts always taking up with something that rails for the exercise of the mental powers to the utmost." le that oV politely murmured the newcomer, Yes. Now, there's mother. She's set of upstalra this morning with s puzzle-pictureIf she newspaper solves 'em, and writes s good serial story to go along with 'em, she gets two dollars. And my daughter Lizzie le covering the dlnln-roofloor with sheets o' paper that she's been figuring on, trying to find out how old Ann la. Henry, he's trying to cut down the d on the pus-zl-e. And Jim that's Jim over by the fence he'e studying s new way to work the fifteen pussle. Hes worked on It for three years now, and thinks lie's pretty near got It" But yon," Inquired the new citizen, what problem are you devoted to? "Who me? My problem?" repeated Mr. Glhlingberry. Oh, I work out the problem of keeping the family together." m time-recor- To Outlaw tfca Toy FIstoL Senator Samuel II. West has aimed a blow at the toy pistol evil by the introduction In the Legislature of a Mil designed to prohibit the sale and use of that deadly weapon In Ohio. Mr. Wests Mil provides that It shall be unlawful after June 1 of this yeur to sell, offer for sale, give away, or explode any toy pltol, cap, cartridge or other ammunition used in the same, nr any cannon crackers, or other fireworks which contain dynamite, nitroglycerine, nr other high explosive a, distinguished from gunpowder. Tbe hill provides a penalty of not more tlinn $50 nor less than $5 fine, and makes the denier who the net liable in civil action for any damages or Injury to any person who uses explosives sold in viola lion of the hills provisions. Tills measure provides a sweeping and radical remedy for a great and growing evil. Tin toy pistol uud the eaiinoii cracker claim their victims by the hundred in nil parts of the country at each recurring Fourth of July. In this city last summer nearly a score of persons died of lockjaw due directly to wounds produced by those explosives, mid score of other wounds were Inflicted which put the victims in peril that was only averted by the prompt and efficient aid of surgical skill. There should he no question as to the fiction of the tagiclature with respect to this hill. If any other evil of like proportions ealli-for correction, the action of llie lawmakers would be prompt and effective. Cleveland Leader. vlo-lul- plgs-ln-clov- JToIrpfcpn Suiulivr on Visiting Curd, j The only necessury qualifications tot this set Is to be on the telephone. No business can he transacted or Invlta thins Issued through the post Every member of the set has bis or her number printed In red figures on bis or her visiting card, and woe be to the mean wretch who endeavors to gain admission to the circle liy using a neighbor's When the set meets the talk Is all of telephones, nnd hour useful they might be nnd how tiresome tiu-are. It la considered very bad form, I may mention, to attempt to nr Intercept messages. iIoi-It, you must understand, but everybody is suspected of trying to da It. Sketch. Ich-phoi- r No-iHi- A srnhlc IrnitulniifJoti Nalhnn's teacher believed in reducing poetry to diagram and visible out. line. Therefore, says the Boston Herald, she told the class to make a rough illustration of the poem, The Old Oaken Natlum's illustration consisted of li llia-l- l of do!. Nathan. said the teacher, I don't understand this. What's the circle?" That's llie well. replied Nathan. And why hae you three line Wets?" Two-Mil- a flin-Kura on file nmn, One Is the old oaken bucket, one Is Ilorse races on the ocean are fur- the bucket, and the other nishing fun down at BelfusL Penob- is the bucket which hung scot Buy Is frozen solid from Bel fust in the well." Harbor clear across to Islrsboro, s disAnd what are all those little dots?" tance of almost twenty-liv- e miles, and Those are the loved spots which my teams are going back and forth tbe Infsucy knew. same as on lead. For the entire distance the lee Is twenty-si- x Inches thick, The S3 linn. a thing unheard of before In tbe memHorses arc not very numerous to ory of living man. The horse race In Western Oregon aud Washington, and question took place last week over two those obtainable are tougher than tbo miles out on the ocean, and was wit- cayiises which Inhabit the bunch grass nessed by a large crowd. It is said plains of Eastern Washington. Kim-uio- u weut among the Yakima Indiana that this Is the first time such an event haa ever happened in thla country prepared to buy ae many horses ee Kennebec Journal. they could furnish at $2JK) to $3 head, which Is the prevailing price for Tfca Otnui t:nymi,i Caatle. stock used at Linton. German Emperor proposed to The Yakimas would not consider have a castle st Posen, hoping to con- snch at least $15 ciliate the Poles by living among them. head forprice, demanding horse they should furevery The caatle. If built, will he the fifty-fift- h nish whether young aud sleek or old in the emperora possession. In adthin. The difference In cost was and dition to the castles, the emperor owns too much, aud Kimrnon has returned ninety-thre- e landed estates. U n form- to Linton to continue operations them. at ely, the landed estates do not bring in very heavy rents, whereas tbe casIn Japan there are no drug store tles cost a good deal to keep up, so that The doctors dispense tbs medicine severe economy has to be the order of and If tbe patients call on them they A v v Biii-kct.- " iron-houn- umsK-i-overe- d ns ., -- J |