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Show V The Cost of War as an V Influence For Peace " I I f I 1 POVERTY " 1 I IN 'f v ) '1 I f..,, n i Y'Quaint: and Vi I JAPAN K 1. - raTip i Require the Wages oi Men to .Heet the Dally 15,001), of the Janineae-Russia- n Lxpnses War a et Dearer LuxConflict :: :: :: ury For IZurope. It Will k -- ' U'Aj? 1'.. k tOK O H 'ak. Sweet Griddle Cakes. One pint of milk: four eggs; two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar; two tablespoon fuls of melted butter; one teaspoonful of baking powder and flour enough to make a reasonably thin batter Beat the eggs, white and yolks separately; slir Into the yolks the butter, -and one cupful of flour in v. IB eli the baking powder has been mlvoii. Then mbl the milk and the whites of the eggs, with more flour, if iioi ss.iry. Bake in small cakes. IBi'ti ea h one, it comes from the gnd 11" If for dessert, place four on eaeh itp with jelly or jam between the d es end sprinkle sugar oer the top. m-iir i pow-flere- d Flit t Gumbo. a pair of fowls as when carving. Lay them in a pan of cold water till all the blood is drawn out Put Cut up Into a pot two tablespoonfuls of lard md set it over the fire. When the lard bas come to a boil put In the chicken (With an onion finely minced. Dredge jWell with flour and season with salt nd pepper. nn,l a little marjoram, if liked. Pour on two qunrts of boiling iwater and let cook for three hours, then stir in two heaped teapoonfuls of sassafras powder and let It stew five minutes longer. It will he improved by stewing with It a few slices of cold boiled ham before taking up. This Is the genuine Southern recipe for gumbo, and may oe made of any sort of poultry, veal, lamb, venison or kid. Wild Dock Soap. you suspect the ducks of being edgy of fishy parboil each with a carrot inside Its body, then take out the carrot and throw It away. Ton will find that nil the unpleasant flavor has left the ducks and has been absorbed by the carrot Cut up the ducks, season each piece with salt anu pepper and lay them in a soup pot. For n large soup you should bave four ducks. Add three sliced onions and a tablespoonful of ground eage. also a quarter of a pound of butter divided In four parts and eaeh part rolled in flour. Pour In water enough to make a rieb soup and let It boll slowly till all the flesh has left the bones; skim It well. Thicken It with boiled or roasted chestnuts, peeled and mashed. A glass of Madeira or sherry, or the juice of a lemon or orange will be found an Improvement. In taking np the soup be careful to leave the bits of bone and meat In the bottom of the pot If r If Bto To clean sponges, wash them In diluted tartarie acid, rinsing them afterward In water; it will make them Very soft and white. Before baying tinned fruits and meats see If the top Is flat or depressed. ' If A- - ihaptir of las b.ograp.i) 'WOW dialing with the inun-.uwar made the lolloping imprcaaixe Btatemmt. The expenses of a war are the moral check wluih it has pleased tiie Almighty to impose upon the ambition and lust of conquest that are inherent in so many nutions. There is pomp and circumstance, there is g,ory and excitement about war, which notwithstanding tile miserus it entails, Invests it with charms in the eyes of the community, and tends to blinds men to those eils to a fearful and dangerous degree. The necessity of meeting from year to year the expenditure which it entails is a salutary and wholesome check, making them feel what they aie about, and making them measure the cost of the benefit upon wiuefi they may calculate." The conflict between Russia and Japan must soon demonstrate the soundness of Mr. i Hailstone s view of the Increasing cost of war as an influence for peace. There can be no doubt In the minds the subject that of those familiar-witthe comparatively small expense attending the war of lti)i, in which Japan not only vanquished Ghina but won her footing iu the family of nations, had much to do with the enthusiasm in Japan for a war against Russia which preceded the flight attack on Fort Arthur. The military glory won by the Japanese in that short and war, not to apeak of the enormous money indemnity and the cession of tbe rich island of Formosa, were stupendous rewards for such a trifling outlay of money 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 smashed the Chinese navy and compelled the oldest and most populous empire in the world to sue for peace-- all within seven months. As a business Investment from a Fagan point of view the war with China was a paying business investment for i Two cups of sugar, one cup of but er, one cup of cold water, oue of soda, three cups of raisins ghopped fine, four tggs, one pound of figs, cinnamon and nutmeg to flavor Beat together (sugar and butter, add the eggs, wtnsh should have been beaten together, dissolve the soda In the cup of water. Use enough sifted flour to make it stiff as pound cake. Cut the figs in halves and press well In the dough to prevent burning. Bake In layers, frosting eaeh layer while Warm. This recipe makes two cakes J-- t It (IkAlMOMt Uinv, m J l Kid 1J lil bliliht'l 1 O Mr. Morlcy u a tex; lu I' e the top had' btiiged out, then air has entered the tin and mentation set In. fer- " Vinegar should not be kept in a tone Jar, as the acid may affect the glassing and the vinegar be rendered unwholesome. Class jars are tbe best Vinegar receptacles. Freshen the house by putting a few drops of oil of lavender In an ornamental bowl, then half fill it with very hot water. This will give a delightful freshness to tbe atmosphere. furniture To clean tapestry-coverefirst' brush thoroughly; then add a tablespoonful of ammonia to a quart of water. Wring out a cloth of this, nd sponge thoroughly, rinsing and turning the cloth as it gets dirty, changing tbe water when necessary. This freshens and brightens It wonderd fully. Plenty of soap and cold water and no eoda are the secrets of success' In washing board floors, and the wood must be Scrubbed the way of the grain and not round nr.fl round. If you want .to get the dirt off. Change the water often. You cant expect boards to be a good color if they are rinsed In dirty water. For hanging clothes to dry, first bang up by the thickest part, waist, or neckband, etc., because if bung by thev thinnest part tbe water would run Into the thick part, lodge there, and take longer to dry. Second, hang up everything wrong side out, so that any light-hearte- one-side- Japan. But the present war in Asia Is a different thing. Russia must send her reinforcements more than 5000 miles by rail. Japan must carry all her troops across the aeas. Hundreds of thousands of men must be put in the field on each side. All this aside from tbe cost of maintaining and operating warships. It is estimated that Japan's available army at the present time aggregates about 400,000 soldiers. The cost of landing this force on the Korean or Manchurian coast at the rate of, say, $10 per man, exclusive of horses, artillery and supplies, would be $4,000-00Mr. Roche, formerly minister of commerce of France, believes that the cost of maintaining the Japanese forces will not be greater than $1.25 a day for each man, including clothing, equipment, food, transportation and munitions. He estimates the cost of war to Japan, including the navy, at about $1,000,000 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. This out of a total population of about 45,000,000. In other words, more than of the male population of Japan can barely earn the daily cost e of the struggle. Nor is the loss to commerce included in the esti' ' mate." In the war It cost Russia about Bixteen cents a day to support each soldier In the field. But that was in a densely populated, fertile country, with comparatively inexpensive transportation. It is different in Manchula. All supplies must be drawn from a great distance. Clothing, transportation and food are dear. Besides, before the Russian troops can take the field aside from the 150,000 said to be in Manchuria now they must be Carried more than 5000 miles by rail. Putting tbe naked costof transportation at one cent per mile for each soldier, the cost of carrying 100,000 troops excluding artillery, horses and supplies would be one-thir- d Jap-aues- Turko-Russia- at least n $5,000,000. Mr. Roche believes that when Russia has got over tbe first expense of her war with Japan her army and navy will cost her from $1,500,000 to $1 ,750,000 a ilay so lout as she has to fight only in the Fat Last. Assuming the larger figure to b4 correct, It will take the wages of 7.000,000 Russian laborers to meet the expenses of the war. All this relates to the war of Russia with Japan In Asia. But if the conflict should spread to Europe, If the great powers should take the field against each pther, the estimated cost of the struggle under' modern condi- tions Is staggering. ' Official figures show that In 1871; It accidental soil will not do so much cost France more thaii" $2,000,0001 damage as if it appeared on the right day to keep an army of 000,000 men In the field'azainst tbe Germans. But Ida. i If i,i mi'll ..vi- - the ,n - i LONDON M nnt Jut . i - i f J4 vn ir ' H f A t ti-- i . ICltll h c L tlt S OHIO. 1 rn I mi : 2 idSi.iSK) men to-da- y Hunting th Wild Turkey. Several different methods for taking the wild turkey are pursued, the most popular being the calling" method. The w ilii gobbler, like his tame brother, is an Inveterate lover, which quality since even before the white man first came to hunt him in Virginia and the Carolines has led him blindly into a vastly more serious trouble than thejnatter of squabbles with bis jealous brothers. Long, long hgo some observing aborigine learned to call him to bis doom by Imitating the seductive yelp of the hen turkey. The ambushed savage, well practised in producing his mendacious call, readily decoyed the love-ma- d gobbler within easy rang of hie deadly arrow. The white man learned of the Indian. Shrewd as he is. the turkey has not fully learned that frequently death lurks behind the dulcet call of his lady-lovHis desire is tempered by distrust, however, and despite his bluster and burry to reach the side of the lovelorn ben, he is wary, and cautiously dallies in his coming, 'to assure himself that all is well. He will detect the faintest error in the most carefully modulated call, or will see the slightest movement. Then swift and sun hs a fleeting shadow he will steal away to the deepest cover, there to remain In hiding till his fears subside before his rising ardors. Field and Stream. e. Dieting, Gain Weight. I eould easily subsist on $2 a month, was tbe statement made by Ilenry Lobb, the North Fond du Lac jeweler who has been experimenting for several months at the suggestion of the professor of physical culture In Ohio State University. Lobb, on account of bis occupation, is able to carry his diet to extremes, and last fall went for a week with no food at sIL At the present time he consumes ss a daily ration one gallon of milk, raw oats such as are fed to horses, and corn. In order to aid digestion he puts his victuals through a coffee grinder and someUmes soaks them In water. He drinks all the water he cares for. In the summer time be eats fruit aud takes salt, but no pepper and no sugar. He eats but two meals a day. Lobb has gained In weight to the ex tent of over thirty-fiv- e pounds in a flew months and states that the atom ach trouble with which he used to be afflicted has entirely left Sun. lis Honey Won tnmtj Colonic ot Ben. A load of extracted honey, weighing 4000 pounds, was recently hauled from Tuscola to Davison, and was the product of seventy colonies of bees owned by James McKay. This was an avern age of pounds per colony, and worth, approximately, $000. The bees did almost all the work, McKays part being merely providing hives and comb foundations, getting stnng a few times and extracting tbe honey a light and pleasing trfsk throughout Tbe collection of two tons of honey In a single season by seventy colonies of bees was extraordinary doings. Still, tho bee not only Improves the shining hour, bnt cloudy days and Sundays. Detroit Tribune. fifty-seve- AIRIrtloa, Halliday twins were babies their mother always referred to them collectively, Tbli was natural enough, for they shared everything, e from their to chicken-pox- . baby-carriag- As they grew a little older, however, there were slight differences between Elnora and Eiulorn, but Mrs. HallWay took no account of them. When they had reached the age of seven she still referred to them In a way which struck casual listeners as amusing. Where are Elnora and Endora? asked a cousin, w ho had come to spend the afternoon. The twin have gone with their father to have oue of their teeth out, said Mr Haltida. calm)- - 'r if ;i o tin' on., R ii u ii. i mu u 'TWC i't hoc i I I H Jeil lii re tin riv him obs g the Far Eiivt, an.t fo.iml tln worf poorest poor lli'Mitt t.'icse Stunts guiijectjj of the Son of lleaten. Who tower outside lus walls, tbe tibmerged tenth of palace Umdnn nrc bonthants, amt the gro cling t i llus-Sian- of Gorkys night refuges the POihl children of fortune. 1 have seen 1 ilonbt If any OcrJenlal has seen before me, for thCttistence of such absolute wretch-dIs not reveniej to the tourist, and the ordinary resident mixpeots it noth all. If he has heard some whls-P- r It the dolorous regions near at bandit is not regurd.-- us politic to he tS0 hquirlng. Not by any possible cbe e will the guide or friend conduct tbe visitor to the quarters where Joy is iais unknown quantity. Stenmlng in Tokio Is for the regtt-letitraveler the same as If In I.on-fiowent to Soho without exploring tbe laRf. None but regions of prosperity nre shown, because the Japanese are proud of their reputation for cleanliness, for artUto surroundings, and for a poverty that Is alwuys smiling, aud safely removed from actual ant Keertheless, Tokio and other cities fcavi their social purgatories, their 8srjso seas of living, breathing wred and drift. In Tokio not fewer the 200,000 people seldom, If ever, kno of a certainty where the neces-lltieitbe next day will come from, and fiiroughout the land the great majority are too poor to eat rice. The big) grade rice grown on the Island Is exported almost to the last sack, aud Inferior rice Imported for those wbean afford It Rice is not In every bowl as the tourist fondly imagines. I have spent days and nights In the mlditof this Inexpressible residue of Japaiin company with a brilliant native sdologlst, who, like scores of bla fellov students of men and things, that Japan baa left its good days tf general happiness and general comfort forever behind, and la entering tpon a sordid and merciless age of hdastriallsra, in which it people are not fitted by temperament to compete and whose proletariat Is, moreen t, far too Intelligent and too proud by capital. He is cry Fxplolted Inflmt a warning to Japan that her s.tjat tbe council table of the powers Is being paid for In the blood of ber cliien. not expended a they would tour U forth cheerfully in war, but In uctor and on farm. In shop and In ' tflce. Thick tor moment," be cried, ii as we looked at a Japanese In tbe offlng, what a multitude of our tiny rice fields it takes to Support such a monster, and then re-- e ruler that our people can't afford to eat rice! , But whether or not the last state of first, let us Jpal be worse than proceed to Darkest Toklo.We will visit the fhitaya quarter, which is close by the beautiful Uyeno Park. Tokio la so vsst; it is such an Immense sea of eheds, that from the blghett point off the clearest day one cto lee bnt a fraction of lta area bnt here ire fifteen districts of mean streets, The crasy structures called booses, which are In reality sheds, are a min? along in a series of dilapidated ted tithy compartments. To folk as poor is those who live here, cleanliness, to dear to the average Japanese tint h is above godliness, is out of tbe 1 com-pargi- uni-veri- fl Well-wavf- ei -- -- t bat-Sesl- hr question, The walls - are decayed and full of crevfes and cracks, tbe roof leaks, and ifitere Is moss end broken tiles, the fhojl are full of boles or patched with; newspapers, the mats are ragged, dirty snd mouldy. There la foul water la tbs streets and a stilt fouler stench In tli? air, whose source is often visible to flu eye. Frequently one sees dead rats jh the roadway, but for fear of the Fugue, they are quickly made wsv with. After coming from the dainjhesg and delightful artistry of wellfmo Tokio, Shitaya is m abom-lnatof desolation. Tbf most tumble-dow- n of these abodji may be rented for from twenty to tifnty-flv- e pence per month, but there eg bouses so fine that they cost as blgl as a penny, or even three day. To afford one of these expensive residences several families club gether,' not alone for economy, but 114 for warmth, in winter all bands eowdlng together on the mats, Charopfi S no? always to be afforded, and list Is a great lnxury these cold days. 1 1 whole block will sometimes take finis in warming bands at a hlbaclfi, wherein a few chunks of charctel smoulder In a bed of ashes. Burflfse a has had A good fl y, and returndAo his borne with, toy, sixpence.' He will expend this irt Lrthlng purchases of mlso, a kind of oil, fuel, tobacco wnt PAapa a little fish, which. If he feels v.lesg, he will eat raw with horserfthb. buys In driblets, and like tit very poor in all the Cities of the wiflfl, pays enormous prices. This, Ijasbrfc, a very good day, and perbapfl be will&ep in at one of thaJenrpting cake ft ps. which smell so fragrant to tbe kary and hopeiess. However, K- tlM1- - V aril'ti, g 11 it half-penc- pipe-clean- fcoup.-stm-- Iir-Ijh- -V il - I ll ;i ,ii 1,1 r i he , i e u..f, , ,i r 'u !;, N O., traded b! J' i two hi art n to hi brother lu o i.m .! hois' A "!e for fa " i"i Ii r lain! It lu impose file la esiiipe l.iciu, hihI they p wriiilK-- s iiv i us m no - l relent Anything that m.--t can lie pawned I'ntil Novph, her, or even until midwinter, one can exist in Shitaya with out bed clothing, but when the nights get cold, with the fearful piercing frost of a Japanese wittier, some covering must be hud. Now appears another plunderer of the poor iu the guise of a capitalist, who rents quilts by the night. He charges, sud Invariably collects, from one farthing for a shred of dirty, patched r,!d rag to a penny or even twopence for a foul tntfHcavy covering. Then, too, there arAfraye silk quilts for fit Ida! couples, hilt these are too costly to be rented by many bridegrooms. Rent must be paid In advance, and before the family go to sleep the collector comes and gets either the money or the quilt. AVIth a refinement of cruelty, he does not appear until the lessee has turned In, and the loss of his covering will be doubly felt. There are heart rending scenes when penniless mothers strive to hold the quilt to protect their babes from the chill and damp. Like the pawnbroker and the money-lender- , the quilt-lendIs Few of the Inhabitants of Shitaya ever get enough money ahead to buy bed clothing, and the ghastly tragedy of renting Is re enacted again and again for winter after winter Where there are so many children having but a few cotton rags, the winter means acute misery. Nothing that was ever edible can become too bad for the very poor to use. From this and similar quarters the scavengers go forth dally searching for food, and they rlke the city as with a comb. Back they come at night laden with bad rice, decayed fish and meat, scraps from slop barrels, broken food from restaurants, and all manner of queer .Odd, and ends, ..Tbts secondhand food business bat an extensive language of its own, with special terms for every kind and condition of edible Junk that is brought to the quarter. This Jargon is wholly untntelHbible to the uninitiated, and few there ere who care to learn the language of the freeslng and starving wjio rent rag and dine on offal. Foverty has Its ultimate expression , here Its last word. STEPHEN ENGLAND. fivijnm-- er flinty-hearte- Ow ,hk to i),o cleanii ss of the a!r con. m tlo- - Arct regions can be lurried on by persons "two tube apart. wr-iim- n The largest gold nugget ever found weighed 223 pounds and four ounres, and was called the King of Water Moon." in Australia The belle of ancient India wore bee by a Jeweled band two or three inches hack of her head and then braided Into an euormous ball two-thirtbe size of her head. hairAied ds In Machlas, Me., the roof of a bout ranght fire from spark from a burning hlmney. and the unique method of fir. tug snow bulls' to put it out was suo fully used. In London streets, as soon as rain has made the roadway slippery, street department wen scatter fine, bard gravel, from irou bln placed at frequent intervals it the Intersection of the busier thoroughfares. There have Just been presented to the Royal Ulster Yacht Club, of Belfast, by John N. Russell, an old member, two guns that onqe formed part of the armament of one of the ships of the Spanish Armada, wrecked off the coast of Clare, at a spot still called Spanish Foint - A Practical Pan!. There is still something for the husband and father to do aboard the family ship. Mr. Glldlngberry, who figures In a dialogue in Judge, understood his duty, Sir. Glldlngberry Yes, sir, said prdudly to the newcomer In town, I guess Ive got one of the intellectual-ea- t families In these parts always taking up with something that calls for tbe exercise of the mental powers to the utmost" "Is that sol" politely murmured the ' newcomer. Yes. Now, theres mother. Shes upstairs this morning with a set of If she newspaper solves em, and writes a good aerial story to go along with em, she gets two dollars. And my daughter I.izzle Piw-Is eoveriig the dUUn-roowi'h puzzle-picture- r sheets o paper that shes beea figuring on, trying to find out bow old Ann Is. Henry, he's' trying to cut down the on the pus-sl- e. And Jim that's Jim over by the fence hes studying a new way to work the fifteen puzzle. Ue'a worked on It for three years now, and thinks he's pretty near got it" But you." inquired the new citizen, what problem are you devoted to? Who me? My problem? repeated Mr. Glldlngberry. Ob, I work out the problem of keeping the family totime-recor- T OotUw I ha Ter Plata!. Senator Samuel II. West has aimed a blow at the toy pistol evil by the Introduction in the Legislature of a bill designed to prohibit the sale and use . of that deadly weapon In Ohio. that it bill provide Mr. West shall be unlawful after June 1 of this year to fll, offer Tor sale, give away, or explode any toy pistol, cap, cartridge or other ammunition used in the same, or any cannon crackers, or other fireworks which contain dynamite, nitroglycerine, or other high explosive as distinguished from gunpowder, The bill provide a penalty of not more than $50 nor less than $5 fine, and makes tbe dealer wbo violates tbe act liable in civil action for any damages or injury to any person wbo uses explosives sold in violation of tbe bill's provisions. This measure provides a sweeping snd radical remedy for a great and growing evH, The toy pistol aud the cannon cracker claim their victims by the hundred In all patts 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 wound produced by those explosives, and scores of other wounds were Inflicted which put tbe victims In Vf the peril that was ettiy averted -prompt. and efficient aid of surgical skill. There should be no question as to itb the action of the Legiclature respect to this bill. If any other evil of Hke proportions called for correction. the action of the lawmaker would be prompt and effective. Cleveland Leader. Two-M- i i Ml 'ill" never above v 'll I M t V a Ml II hi- - iU ) .i .' lit1 ' ' in i .furious i. l . ' ila.ms to be able to 2 n foitj - cigut hours 4 IheJoint 1 TiA'o. ot CORRESPONDENCE and COO.UOO horses ant muli i i.tnuany can put 2,350,-Otmen in tin ticld, Austria 1,300,000 uud Italy 1.2oo 000. Scliaffe, the Austrian economist declared in 1800 that a war involving the European Continental powers would cost France a day, Russia $o.C00,000 a day, Germany $5,000,000 a day and Austria $0,000,000 a day. Accoding to Mr. Roche a conflict between the European powers would cost for the first two months, including the Initial outlay, the immense sum of $400,000,000, and if soldiers should take the field the daily 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 coniine the present war to Asia. It it takes the wages of 15,000,000 men to pay the dally cost of the waf betweeu Japan and Russia a war confined within a radius of 1C00 miles what would a general conflict mean to the overtaxed population of Europe V about Bo D liy JAMES CREELMAN. -- to Slums -- -- : i Wretchedness ODD ' nTM il Boea OB the Ocoa. Horse races on the ocean are furnishing fun down, at Belfaat. Penobscot Bay is frozen shlld from Belfast Harbor clear across to Isles boro, a dismiles, and. tance of almost twenty-fiv- e teams are going back and forth the same as on land. For the entire distance the Ice fs twenty six inches thick, a thing unheard of before In the mem-or- y of living man. The horse race in question took place last week over two miles out on the ocoaft, and was witnessed by S large crowd. It is said that this is tbe first time such an event has ever happened In this country. Kennebec Journal. d plgs-in-clov- gether." . , oa VUitin Card To!ejhen The only necessary qualifications for this set Is to be on the telephone. No business can be transacted or Invitations issued through the post Every member of the set bss his or her num- ber printed tn red figures on his or her visiting eard, and woq bs to tbe mean wretch wbo endesvore to gain admission to the circle by nstng a neighbors telephone. When the aet meets the talk i all of telephones, and how useful they might he and how tiresome they are. It is considered very bad form, I may mention, to attempt to overhear or intercept message. Nobody does it you must understand, but everybody is suspected of trying to do It Sketch. N ombrrs Graphic Imairtnatloa. A " Nathans teacher believed In reducing poetry to diagram and visible out tine. Therefore, eays the Boston Her-aishe told the clase to make a rough' illustration of th poem, The Old d, Oaken Bucket." Nathana illustration consisted of bunch , of dots. Nathan," said tbe teacher, I dont understand this. Wbats the circle?" "Thats the well, replied Nathan. -And why have you three buckets?" One is the old oaken bucket, one is bucket, and the other the d bucket which hung is the Iron-boun- d moss-covere- ,in the well 'And what are all those little dots?" Those are the loved spots which my ' Infancy knew," 7 Th 3 Haro. Horses ere not very numerous In Western Oregon and Washington, end those obtainable are tougher than th cay uses which inhabit the bunch grass plains of Eastern Washington. Kim moa went among the Ytkima Indian prepared to buy as many horse as they could furnish at $2.50 to $3 s head, which is the prevailing price for The German Emperor Castle. Stock used at Linton. Tbe German Emperor proposed to Th Yakimas would not consider have a castle at Posen, hoping to con- such s price, demanding at least $15 s ciliate the Foies by living among them. head for every horse they should fur-Els-b The castle, if built, will be tbe fifty-fift- h whether yonng and sleek or old in the emperor's possession. In and thin. The difference In cost was to the castles, the emperor owns too much, and Kitnmon has returned landed estates. Unfortu-atelninety-thre- e to Linton to continue operations there. the landed estates do not bring In Japan there are no drug stores, in very heavy rents, whereas the castles cost a good deal to keep np, so that The doctors dispense the medicine, call on them they severe economy has to be the order of and if tbe patients ' ad-diti- y, ii ' ' v 11 |