eaven e an d into n the roken You } say: 1 thee It is chap- never e, the cession never e cap- til we r eyes 101 ear ksgive to a where vorsill. in on » gate.” eacher d with astoral ed the [ shall go to edeces- . sub- longed . And > mod- tators. k, and to do delity. the ac- ere to in the of the ey are us acs » begin essary Every ece of d and id do cessor. y falls an ac- h can- nly be Is it ich on simply o that Per- > only t any clse is hip to ce. z into to be- works Season exities uplite »f the ar. Tt of the nd of ‘OSS NS, are ‘obe. d, but ‘h you h fur- riners cher. zg love i. © ——————— i — » - « ” a ad ¢ You will never find our Doc. tor out. He is here to give advice without charge to those who need him —to those who don’t, sometimes. He doesn’t always recommend the Ayer medicines, because the Ayer medicines are not “cure-alls.” Perhaps if we tear a leaf | from his correspondence it will show you what we mean. Here is a letter which came last March. “DEAR DR. AYER! I want your advice for my little boy. He is getting very thin. He has no appe- tite. He is fifteen years old. When he was four years old he had lung fever, but his health was good until two years ago. Since then he is failing fast. The doctors here say he has the bronchitis. He spits all the time awful bad. The spits are big, thick, and white. Yours truly, Mis. MARGARET MURPHY, March 30, 1900. Kinbrae, Minn.” And this is the way the Doc- tor answered Mrs. Murphy : “DEAR MADAM: “We enclose our book on The Throat and Lungs, in which we trust you will find just the information you desire. “You should begin at once the use of this Cherry Pectoral for your son, giving it in moderate doses. Then procure some good preparation of cod-liver oil, as Scott’s Emulsion, and give him that, as well. Pay particular attention to his diet, giving him such nourishing foods as rare steak, lamb chops, good milk, eggs, etc, Above all, keep him out of doors all that the weather permits. There is nothing that will do him more good than plenty of fresh air. Let him live out of doors all that is possible. By carrying out these general suggestions we shall hope to hear soon that your son js improving in every way. Very truly yours, April 5, 1900. J. C. Ayrr.” ' You see, it wasn’t only the Ayer medicines that we recom- mended. The first idea of the Doctor was to cure that boy. The result is told in this letter: “DEAR DR. Avi “My little be improved so much since I received your advice that T want to write and tell you AH the “When I first wrote you, on March 30, he only weighed 50 pounds, but now he weighs 82 pounc and all this gain since the 8th of April, ‘when I first began to follow your directions. “Please let me thank you again for what you have done for my boy. July 17, 1900. MARGARET MURPHY.” Perhaps it was the cod- liver oil; perhaps it was the Cherry Pectoral. Probably it was both. But, more than either, it was the good, sound advice the Doctor gave in the first place. We are here to serve you in just the same way, and we will tell you the medi- cine for your case or tell you what medicines to avoid. Five out of ten of our cor- respondents need a doctor rather than a prepared medi- cine, and we tell them so. If the doctors only knew it, we are working with them every day. iw J. C. Aver Company, Practic.. hemists, Lowell, Mass. ’ a Ayer’s Sarsaparilla | Ayer's Hair Vigor Ayer’s Pills Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Ayer's Ague Cure Ayer’s Comatone The Evaporation of Trees. Some curious facts concerning trees have been discovered. A single oak of good size is said to lift 123 tons of wa ter during the months it is in leaf. moisture is yorated and rises to form rain clouds. From this estimate of the labor of a single oak we can gain some idea of the immense force which forests exert in equalizing the ¢ the POT: 1- tion and precipitation and preventin periods of inunc ition and drought.— Cincinnati Enqui Gold Medal Awarded Walter Baker & Co. Parts, Aug. 20—The Judges at the Paris Exposition have just awarded a gold medal to Walter Baker & Co., Ltd. Dorchester, Mass., U. S. A,, for their preparations of cocoa and chocolate. This famous company, now the largest manufacturers of cocog, and chocolate in the world, have received the highest awards from the great international and other exposi- tions in Europe and America, This is the third award frem a Paris Expo- sition. Free From Cyclones. Sunstroke in the arid region is prac tically unknown. The rainless air that sweeps over it is necessarily dry, and neither breeds disease nor carries their germs. Further than this. the lack of moisture, combined with the configura- tion, forbids the presence of tornadoes and it is claimed that the Weather Bu- reau has absolutely no record of a cy- clone or tornado west of the ninety- seventh meridian. It requires no Areas to dye with Pursam Fapeness Dyes. Simply boiling your goods in the dyeisall that is necessary. we admirable public o miles long The Peruvians roads. One is ading vessels leave the all parts of the world. Five hundred t Thames daily for Do Your Feet Ache and Burn ? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New L feel easy. Cures Corns, Ingrowing Nails, Itching, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Sore and Sweating F et. A Druggists and Shoe Stores sell it, 25e. 5S ple sent FREE Address, ALLEN 8S. y Ory EAD, I cHo% N.Y The only Denmark is consequence in Copenhagen. sof capital, fortres the 1 enrol; No fits or nervous. pss after first day of Dr. Kline's Great erve Restorer. $2 al bottle and treatise Dr.R.H.KL 18 La U3) Arch St.Phila.Pa ermanentl An oil identical with that of bitter almonds is extracted from coal tar. The stomach has to work hard, grinding the food we crowd into it. Make its work easy by chewing Beeman’s Pep sin Gum. Russian offi- mache. The scabbards worn by gers are me de of papier The Best Prestilption for Chills and Fever 18 a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS Cri. Tonio. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No care Eo pay. Price 50c. The average Notght of of an Englishman is 5 feet 83 3% inches. 9250. by mail to E. & 8S, Frey, >. 0. Box 248, Baltimore, Md., will get a bottle of Vermi- fuge. Your little one may need it. A Philadelphia andertaker has had pn automobile hearse constructed. lcoeeee TWO MYSTERIES. | Death is a mystery to me no more That yesterday departed from the strife, | "Tis now I dream upon the misty shore About the greater mystery of life. —R. K. eM. in in Harper’ s Bazar. § HER JEWELS. | lg = CVD VV | It ought to have been a radiantly | contented face that was turned toward the toilet, lying like a snowd ACTOS the lounge, so beautiful, so tasteful it was, and so certain to be wondrously becoming to the fair, dainty little lady who stood looking at it, her blue eyes frowning, her red lips a little pouty. Mrs. Clifford touched the thick, shin- ing satin waist caressingly, and looked up at Jennie. “Don’t you like it, dear? I can’t see where there is room for the slightest improvement. The skirt is elegant, and the waist is exquisite.” Jennie laughed at her mother’s evi- dent distress lest she was not perfect- ly satisfied. “It is perfectly lovely, mamma!” she replied. There can be no doubt of that, and I am quite sure I shall lock nicely in it, and I am also quite sure P’hil will admire it. Only—" And the little discontented look came back into the pretty blue eyes that Phil Courtenay swore by, and that had played sad havoe with his heart, until he had conquered their owner. Mrs. Clifford jooked inquiringly. “Only what, Jennie?” Then the secret dissatisfaction came out, in a burst of emphatic earnest- ness: “If I didn’t have to wear flowers, mamma, with it! Oh, I am so sick of flowers—flowers, always flowers, for crnaments—and I am just dying for jewels—a diamond cross and ear- rings.” And accompanying the words was a defiant little nod of the head, and a compression of the red lips. Mrs. Clifford gave an exclamation of startled astonishment. “Jennie! A diamond cross and ear- rings! The idea! Why don’t you wish for a queen's crown or an angel's wing, and be done with it? A diamond cross and rings! Child, how silly to waste even a thought, a wish, much less a word, on such an utter, absolute impossibility!” Instead of being hushed by Mrs, Clifford's positive determination, Jen- nie only smiled, with a little more of defiance in her blue eyes “But I do wish for them, all the same, mamma; and I think I ought to have them, too. And so does Phil, and he has as good as told his rich old granduncle to give me just such a present. IIe's horribly stingy, old Mr. Bemerton is, and if I wait until he gives them to me—" The wilful little beauty crested her head and shrugged her shoulders very becomingly. “But, dear, I cannot see what that, or anything else, can have to do with your insane desire. Wait until Mr. Bemerton sees fit to present you with some handsome jewels; and, mean- while, you will look just as sweet as ever in fresh, lovely flowers!” Mrs. Clifford had a caressing, gentle way of speech, that was the very es- sence of motherliness. “But, mamma, you see, I will have the diamonds, or else I won't go to the ball.” Her mother sighed over the sweet, wilful girl. “And,” Jennie went on, in a decisive sort of way her mother knew would be of no avail attempting to prevent, “I can easy enough have them, mam- ma. I'll hire them for the occasion!” The girl's audacious suggestion fair- ly took Mrs. Clifford's breath for the minute. PAULINE MONTAGUE. rh - “Jennie! Hire them! Child, what folly you are talking! Wear hired jewels—hired finery! Jennie, surely you are not in earnest, when you pro- pose such an unwomanly, such a per- fectly disgraceful thing?” Jennie’s eyes sparkled, as she lis- tened, impatiently. “Mamma, what nonsense! Better people than we do such things, and I am sure it can be no worse than hir- ing masquerade suits, and everybody does that, or imposing upon people with hired wedding presents, as cousin Amy did!” “What your aunt Olive does is often very different from what I would do. Besides, Jennie, you know Philip would De indignant. You know he would never tolerate such a thing.” Jennie's cheeks flushed. “I will tell him, if he says that it is because his cross, there'll not be anybody at the with no ornaments. going to have them, there is about it! And I'll look so per- fectly fascinating that even you will forgive me, you dear little over-con- scientious mother you! Now let me kiss you, mamma, for I assure you I | shan’t stir one step till you do, so I'll | know you aren't mad with me.” And, for all the mother-heart was sore at the girl's headstrong wilful- ness, yet it was no easy matter to re- fuse the kiss on the sweet, tempting lips so near her own, or resist the clinging coaxing arms that were around her neck, And then the little grand tycoon danced laughingly away, knowing that victory was on her banners. Of all the beautiful women in the ball-room that eventful evening, Jen- nie Clifford was undoubtedly the belle, and in that conscious satisfaction that is so gratifying to a woman. Jennie’s checks grew daintily pink, and her eyes sparkled even brighter than th shining brilliants that swung from her ears and lay on her bosom, suspended by the black velvet band at her throat. Tor she had accomplished her desire, Mamma, I'm just and that’s all and had hired the diamonds, and thoroughly enjoyed the limpid, daz- zling elegance than enhanced her own fair beauty, and that of her snowy white costume. At home, when Mr. Courtenay had kissed her before they took the coach, Jennie had taken care her opera-cloak should be around her shoulders, and a white, fleecy covering over her fair hair, so that, when he had met her at the dressing-room, in the crowd about them he could anly look his complete astonishment. As old Mr. Bemerton did, when, an hour or so later, he was watching Jen- nie dance—only look his astonishment —and, after a prolonged stare. give a little surprised “Humph!” and then go off to the card-table for a rubber of whist. Jennie laughed and danced, ani the dimples and flushes vied with each other in their bewitching attractive- ness. People looked at her, and re- marked how perfectly lovely and graceful she was; and the evening was one long ovation to ter a word, miserly | old uncle refuses to give me any, and | ball | ! beauty, until at last she was surfeited with the nectar, and asked Philip to take her home, when, in the coach in waiting for them, which was old Mr. Bemerton’s, they found the old man himself patiently awaiting them and very enthusiastic over the furore Jen- nie had created that evening. “Only there's one thing I'm sorry for, and that is that I shall be disappointed in giving you these, and I hurried Tiff- any up so's to hand them to you to- night, thinking you'd be so pleased to wear ‘em. But, seeing you have one set, you won't want these, and I'll take them back.” And as he spoke he took a Russian leather casket from the seat behind him, and sprang the lid, revealing, in the light of the carriage lanterns a magnificent cross of diamonds, a broach and earrings, a star for the hair, and a bracelet—one glittering splendor, lying on their bed of black velvet. A little scream of rapture burst from Jennie. “Oh, oh, oh! How glorious! What exquisite—exquisite beauties! Phil, did you ever see anything so perfectly lovely? And they are for—" And then the actuality of her posi tion, with all i*s shame and mortifica- tion, occurred to her, and she sank back against the cushions, hot, angry tears forcing themselves from her eyes, and dropping on the hateful, fateful diamonds on her breast. Philip, who began to understand it all, said not a word, doubting whether to blame or pity her. And old Mr. Bemerton, with most tantalizing calmness, carefully tied up the precious package. “I meant em for a wedding present; but so long as you've got a very pretty set, why you won't want these. Tiff- any'll take ’em back. No; I'll give 'em to Fletcher's daughter. She hasn't any, I'm quite sure. Hello, there, Lumley! Let me out here at the ‘Bastminster,” and take these young- sters home afterward.” Poor little Jennie! The hot tears came in a torrent now, instead of in slow drops, and she turned to Philip, her heart almost breaking with the shame, and regret, and disappoint- ment, and told him the whole story, while he listened, still not knowing whether to pity or censure. In Mrs. Clifford's parlor a day later, Philip very gravely discussed the sub- ject with her. “I can overlook your foolish pride, Jennie, for I know you will never re- beat the fault. I will forgive you, but my uncle never will.” And Mr. Bemerton never did; and Jennie had to bear her three-fold har- vest of reward for her vanity, and an expensive lesson it was.—Saturday Night. AN ueLY WOMAN'S CONFESSIONS, The Duchess of Orleans on Her Own Per- sonal Looks. Perhaps no woman was ever better reconciled to positive ugliness in her own person than the Duchess of Or- leans, the mother of the Regent d’Or- leans, who governed France during the minority of Louis XV. Thus she writes of her own appearance and manners: “From my earliest aware how ordinary my was, and did not like that people should look at me attentively. I never paid any attention to dress, be- | cause diamonds and dress were sure | to attract attention. On great days my husband used to make me rouge, which I did greatly against my will. One day I made the Countess Soissons | laugh heartily. She asked me why I was appearance years 2 i | | I never turned my head when I passed | a mirror—everybody else did. I swered love to bear thesight of my own homeli- an- | ness.” I must have been very homely in my youth. I had no sort of feat- | ures, with little, twitching eyes, KEYSTONE STATE NEWS CONDERSED PENSIONS NS GRANTED. Eagle Killed in Mercer County—New Elec- tric Railway for Tarentum and Springdale. Miner Injured by Dynamite. Following persons were granted pen- sions last week: Jeremiah Ramsey, Bedford, $24; George Castor, Canonsburg, $6; An- drew J. Bruer, Millhall, $6; James Fitz- gerald, Pleasant View, $10; Alexander M. Bitner, Ligonier, $10; Daniel B. Crawshaw, St. Clair, $10; Horace A. Watson, West Middlesex, $10; Lotten H. Breden, Shoustown, $6; John Mc- Reighton, Cannellton, $8; Jeremiah Burgess, Canonsburg, $10; trin Matthews, Beaver, $17; Joseph B. Shir- ley, Long Run, $10; Louis N. Morgan, West McKeesport, $6; James L. Long, Reynoldsville, $6; August Floto, Myers- dale, $24. Martin Hession, a miner at Pittston, received injuries which may result fa- tally. He was smoking his pipe when it suddenly exploded. The supposition is that he had a dynamite cap in his pocket mixed up with his tobacco. Emil Rossberger, of Wilmington township, Mercer county, had a fight with an eagle in his barn yard Friday. The bird attempted to carry off a chicken and Mr. Rossberger knocked it down with a club. It then flew at him, badly clawing and lacerating his face with its talons. He killed the eagle, which measured six feet four inches from tip to tip. Anrother coke town is proposed for Westmoreland county. The Ocean Coal Con:pany has began the construction of 1,000 coke ovens on the Gardner farm near Herminie. The Hempfield branch of the Pennsylvania railroad is being extended to the field, and one shaft has been opened to the depts of 350 feet. An excellent vein of coal has been struck and the erection of the ovens will be be- gun at once. Silas A. Kline, of Greensburg, exec- utor of the estate of an aged woman named Sabina Beer, who died at Madi- son, Westmoreland county, some time ago, sent his son Wade and Kirk Mc- Connell down to Madison to look after some of the belongings of the deceased. In going through an old chest they found $16,000 in cash, over $5,000 of which was in gold. The peach crop in Center and adjoin- ing counties is beginning to ripen and the fruit will soon be ready to market. The crop this year is probably the larg- est ever grown in this section. In Nit- tany valley alone it will aggregate over 10,000 opis while the total will pos- sibly reach close to 20,000 bushels. Growers expect to clean up from $25,000 upwards from the crop. George Henderson, of Shenango township, Lawrence county, heard a noise in his cornfield and slipping down with a club he jumped upon what he supposed to be a cow, but which turned out to be a huge black bear. A desperate encounter ensued. Hender- son finally breaking away and escaping to the house. The bear is supposed to have escaped from a show. At Wilkesbarre twenty-one young women took the final vows and receiv- ed the black veil at Malinskrodt convent Tuesday morning. Eight of them are natives of the United States and the others are from Germany. Rev. P. Christ, of Scranton, officiated at the high mass and Rev. D. Mackerel, S. J., of Buffalo, delivered the sermon. Friends of Judge John G. Love, of Bellefonte, have sent to Governor Stone a petition signed by almost all the mem- bers of the Center county bar praying for his appointment to the place of the Supreme Court bench made vacant by the death of Chief Justice Green and consequent promotion of Judge McCul- | lom to be chief justice. John H. H. Lewis, justice of the peace | and ex-postmaster of Franklin Mills, Fulton county, is in custody at Magers- town, charged with receiving exorbitant ees in securing pensions. Lewis once served six months in jail at Pittsburg | for extorting an illegal fee from George ail e a r pension F , ‘Because I have too much selt- | Peter Barnhart, a pensioner of alton county, Pa. William Bingle, a farmer near Laugh- | lintown, Westmoreland county, respond- ed to a knock at his front door in broad a | daylight and was beaten into insensi- stort, stub nose, and long, thick lips. | bili: ty by men with sandbags. Neighbors The whole of wy physiognomy was far from attractive. “My face was large, with fat cheeks, and my figure was short and stumpy; | in short, I am a very homely sort of | person. Except for the goodness of my disposition, no one could have en- dured me. It was impossible to dis- cover anything like intelligence in my eyes, except with a microscope. Per- haps there was not on the face of the earth such another pair of ugly hands as mine. The king often told me so, and set me laughing about it; for as I was quite sure of being very ugly, 1 made up my mind to be always the first to laugh at it. This succeeded very well, though I must confess it furnished me with a good stock of material for laughter. “One thing that always surprised me was how anybody could ever fall in love with me. I was notoriously the most homely woman in the French court, and yet I was only 19 when I was married. I often asked my hus- band whether my looks did not repel him, and what he saw in me that he should fall in love. To my questions 1 have never received a satisfactory answer, but it seems to me that other qualities, in lack of beauty, caused his attraction.”—New Orleans Picayune. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. The only failure a man ought to fear is failure in cleaving to the purpose he sees to be best. It is only as a man puts off all foreign support and stands alone, that he can be strong and prevail. Nothing is useless to the man of sense; he turns everything to account. Instruction ends in the scholroom, but education ends only with life. Common sense is, of all Kinds, the most uncommon. It implies good judg- ment, sound discretion, and true and practical wisdom applied to common life. Order is the sanity of the mind, the health of the body, the peace of the city, the security of the state. As the beams e' a house, so is order to all things. Right in one thing becomes a pre- liminary towards right in everything; the transition is not distant from the feeling that tells us that we should do harm to no man, to which will tell us that we should endeavor to do good to all men. Life's attav of roses is as rare as it is precious, and it takes the sunshine of many summers and the braving of many thorns to make a single drop. 3ut that drop when produced is worth all that it costs, and the perfume of it will last forever. The grand difficulty is to feel the reality of both worlds, so as to give cach its due place in our thoughts and feelings, to keep our mind's eye and our heart's eye fixed on the land of promise without looking away from the road we are to travel toward it. A Chinese Segment ons a gay appearance to the foreign observer. youth and | Nearly every man bears a banner. | ance. | | and the Gray heard his cries and came to his assist- The plunder secured by the rob- bers was trifling. General orders have been issued from | the headquarters of the National Guaid of Pennsylvania announcing the honora- ble discharge of the Twentieth regi- ment; Company K, Sixteenth regiment, Invincibles, which were recently mustered out of service. A portion of the old Pennyroyal coal mine which has been operated in the Second ward of Connellsville for 30 years, caved in under some of the Bali more and Ohio tracks near the Sodom shops, letting some cars into the cre- vice. As the result of a request by the American Iron and Steel Manufacturing Company, at Lebanon, to their striking ironworkers to return to work, the men held a meeting and decided not to return unless the puddlers are paid at the rate of $3.50 a ton. Work has been started on an sori railway connecting Tarentum, Kensington and Springdale. At the New rentum end it will join with the line already in operation between that town an Jatrona. Attorney W. H. Martin, of New Ken- sington, has been arrested, charged with violating the act of assembly and also “with setting himself up as a lawyer when not a “member of the Westmore- land county bar.” He gave bail. The Beaver Falls Steel works, recent- ly absorbed by the Crucible Steel Com- pany, has been ordered closed in- definitely. ihe remains of Harry A. Griffin, who died July 31, at a hospital in Vienna, Austria, from pneumonia cotnitracted on one of Cooke's European tours, were his mother, brought to the home of Mrs. Julia Griffin, in Beaver. Arrangements have been completed hy which the Banner Silk company, of Paterson, N. J.. will establish a branch mill at Meadville. It will start with 60 hands and will eventually employ 250. The management of the Meadville city hospital are about to build an addi- tion to the hospital to be used for the treatment of patients suffering from contagious diseases. At a meeting oi Franklin citizens $100.000 was subscribed for stock in the Grant Machine Too! Company, of Cleve- land, O. ‘he amcunt was subscribed in less than three days. The plant will be moved to this piace and enlarged. Company K, Sixteenth Pennsylvania cavalry, held its reunion at Old Con- cord, Washingtor county, Saturday, and Captain Edmund Dunn, of Wash- ington, Pa., was present. He 1s the only surviving ofticer. The East Brady Oil company brought in their No. 3 well on the Solomon Mays farm, and it proved to be one of the largest gas wells ever struck in this vicinity. Opposed to Treason. The Independent People’s party of Michigan held its state convention at Saginaw Wednesday, with a majority of the congressional districts in the state represented. Daniel Thompson was nominated for governor. Resolutions were adopted favoring tqual taxation, municipal ownership of public utilities, nomination for public pffices by popular vote and equal suf- frage regardless of sex. The resolutions 1lso condemn the political policy of of- fering aid or encouragement to open enemies of the United States. MINES AND MINERS. After New Coal Areas—Science to Cume to the Consumers’ Aid in Great Britain. The English Admiralty has contract- ed with Cardiff firms for 150,000 tons of the best Welsh steam coal, at ranging from 23s to 27s 6d per ton, de- livery to be within four months. This is the highest price the government has yet paid, except in times of strikes. There is no doubt that when business settles down after the holidays there will be a sharp advance in prices for steam coal, but this will furnish no legitimate excuse for further forcing up the price of house coal. Will the serious consideration which is now being given to the coal question lead to scientific research and the dis- covery of new coal areas in different arts of the United Kingdom, says the ondon Daily Mail. A coal expert to whom the question was put by a Daily Mail representative expressed an af- firmative opinion. “It will be found,” he said, “that our coal reserves are far from being ex- hausted. The readily accessible seams of coal near the surface are the chief seams which have been worked in this country, and it is these which are show- ing signs of exhaustion. “New sources of supply will be found at greater depths and will involve the initial outlay of much larger capital ex- penditure and the establishment of shafts with appliances of much larger capac- = y. “The small coal owner,” he continued, “may become extinct, and there may only be room for the great capitalist, but this fact will guarantee greater ef- ficiency in mining and less waste. Science will be sure to unite with capi- tal and prevent any very appreciable in- crease in the cost of coal mining. “In various parts of the country bor ings are being put down to thoroughly test the geology of the district, and in several cases, where upper seams have been worked, tests are being and will be made at a lower depth. “An old-fashioned notion was that coal did not exist under the chalk, but,” he pointed out, “as far back as 1856, in a paper read before the Royal Geologi- cal Society, Mr. Godwin Austen con- cluded that coal would be found under the secondary rocks in the southeast of England, and this opinion was support- ed by Professor Sir. J. Prestwich at the Royal Coal! Commission in 1871. “The experiments which were a few years ago made by Professor Boyd Dawkins and Mr. F. Brady in Kent also proved this thing correct. The boring was put down through the chalk, and the first coal seam of two feet three inches thick was struck at a depth of 1,130 feet. Between that and 2,000 feet eight workable seams 'wvere proved. COULD BE A POWER. Female Suffrage Would Represent a Host o Strong Organizations. _ It is very hard for women, who have just as much interest as men in the po- litical outcome, to sit in idleness throughout the campaign, neither by pen, voice nor organization helping the party whose success they earnestly de- sire, when they are very strong at the present time on all of these three points, says a writer in the New York Sun. Men themselves are no more systemati- cally and thoroughly organized than are the women o the country—the Woman's Council, with a million and a quarter members; the W. C. T. U., with 200,000; the Federation of Clubs, with perhaps a larger membership; the Women’s Relief Corps, the Ladies cf the Maccabees and on through the list, representing millions of women. These hold together, constantly augmenting their numbers and increasing the sphere of their activities. It would be entirely possible to organize these great forces for campaign purposes and bring an un- dreamed of power into politics. Woman's strength with the pen and on the platform is universally recog- nized. Some of the strongest writers of the day are women, and many a “leader” for which a masculine editor receives the credit is written by some woman on the staff. Audiences to-day would rather listen to a woman speaker than a man, provided the ability was equal. And yet one of the strangest features of the present political situation is that the voices, the pens, the great organized force of women are absolutely rejected by the very party leaders who are scouring the earth to gather up the elements which will bring strength to their tickets. Two-thirds of the public schools in Belgium have savings banks for the re- ception of the hoards of the pupils. It has been estimated that from 90,000 to 100,000 deer feed in the forests of Scotland, and that 4,000 stags are killed annually. The penal code of the Chinese em- pire is at least 2,000 years old, and un- der its provisions about 12,000 persons are annually executed. The new forts at Dover, England, are to have six nine-inch wire-wound guns, having an effective range of 11 miles. They are nearly 4o feet long. If the average man were to attempt to read everything the Government pub- lishes in one year he would have to de- vote about half a century to the task, taking eight hours a day. The winter and early spring are usu- ally considered the best months to visit Sicily, but a German author declares that Taormina and Aetna are really at their best in May, June and July. An English expert declares that he knows of at least 600 counterfeits of the old masters which are now hanging in the private galleries of the United States, and all of which were originally purchased i in Europe at very high prices. The principal cotton mills in China are those at Shanghai. They now num- ber eight and have 273,000 spindles and 3.450 looms. At Ningpo there is one mill at work with 11,000 spindles and at Hankow there are two with 30,000 and 50.000 spindles respectively. Two more vessels of the British navy, the Diadem and the Furious, have been equipped with Marconi’s wireless ie raphy apparatus. The receiving coil i suspended to a gaff attached to Ti mainmast above the semaphore, which is the highest point on board. he ap- paratus is fitted to work up to a dis- tance of 20 miles. War Room of the White House. The “war room” is still maintained at the White House, and maps of Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippine islands still hang on the wall. Colonel Mont- gomery, who is a sort of military secre- tary to the president, keeps up the prac- tice that was commenced at the begin- ring of the war and marks the position and movement of every regiment and detached battalion and man- -of-war ana transport in the service by means of dii- ferent colored flags mounted upon pins. By a single glance at the map of the Philippines, for example, the president can locate every company or battery in the army and every ship and transport in the navy, and the flags are moved as the changes are reported to the adjutant general or the bureau of navigation, for all the dispatches they receive are for- warded to the president promptly. Each flag bears an inscription to show what it represents. Thus the president can obtain all the information concern- ing. the movements of the army and navy without a guide. For example, the Philippine commission left San Francis- co the other day on an army transport which will make an average speed of 300 miles a day. The flag that bears the name of that transport will be moved forward that distance on the map every morning until it comes to the end of the route in the harbor in Manila, when the president expects to receive telegr aphic notice of its arrival. Another transport, going the other way, was at Malta when last reported. It is more difficult to keep track of her because the speed is not 30 regular in the Mediterranean and the canals as in the open sea, but as she reports every time she stops anywhere it is easy to keep track of her. prices | AFTER THE S1ac. Royal Sport Which Exciies Interest in the | West of England. | In describing the preli annual meet of th staghounds at C newspaper says excites a great a west country. The rendezvous lying under Dire Beacon : manding some of the views of land and s ren moor and fertile west country can ese The meet, it is anticipated, tended as usual by thou sporting element of West be there, and hunting visit parts of England, Cloutsh which the meet takes . be crowded with vehicles of every size and shape, from the four-horse coach to the ie s of the | will be at- the oil on char-a-banc or bre ak and down to the farmer’ s two-wheel dog-cart. The first day is a great picnic, yarade of hounds, ending probably with a il, af- ter an easy run, but the real business of hunting only commences at the meets that follow, and a 20-mile point is by no means an unusual circumstance. e master of the Devon and Somer- set stag-hounds has already several bye- meets to get the new entry into trair of my house for a walk when a funer: ing before the season actually. begins. The herds of deer are very plentiful, as the farmers in the deer country can tes- tify by the damage done to their crops. Look These Up. In many educational journals now ® days we see pronunciation tests, cate words, etc., which may be valuable for technical use and yet not being needed | every day in everyday talk are, like certain folks I know, chiefly interesting on public occasions. I should like to put down here a list of words that are generally mispronounced. Everybody knows how to pronounce them, perhaps, but being such common | little things, mere street waifs, washed faces, nobody takes the troub! ef to “speak them fair.” Now, to know what 1s our duty and fail to do it is a much more culpable thing than not to do it because we don’t know what our duty is. So here they are, litle, com monplace creatures, which are mis pro- | nounced every day: Toward, again, bade, brooch, apri- | cot, often, catch, hearth, lien, greasy, sew, scare, years, ide 2 bouquet, ague, bleat, rise (noun), tic, shone, route, gaunt, canine, juve- | nile, infidel, corporal, tete-a-tete, trou 15- | seau, amendment, restaurant, le were, recipe, frontier, depot, recess, romance, tirade, essay, tarpat Hh and of them, of on. The above are in common use common abuse. Some of course, come from our si France and people are likely to say that are not expected to pronounce ic Joss correctly.—Texas School nal. sister, A Dream That Came True. “Talking Smith as we “I once had a very dreams,” around the about sat strange experien I drcamed that I was just stepping i passed by. A man with a cap marked nine and a red scar i across his forehead jumped e hearse and, approaching me, a ‘Are you ready? ‘No,’ 1 replied, ar 1d with that I awoke. “A few months later I was in Chicago. was on the top floor of one of the big houses and about to step into the clevator when I re- membered another thing I wanted to buy. 1 stopped and looked through my notebook ‘Down!’ exclaimed the elevator and then asked me, you ready No,’ 1 answered, and the door closed. ‘The next instant a great crash was heard, and the occupants of the eleva- tor were dashed to an untimely Jom “The cap of the boy hore the figure 9, and he had a red scar running acros his brow.”—San Francisco Chronicle. | stopping just Glass Dissolved in Water. Every kind of glass at a sufficiently high temperature, says Professor Ca Barus, must eve ntually show complete | solubility in water. Under pressure glass dissolves in water heated to 410 | degrees Fahrenheit. Sea water more | than about 66o feet beneath the surface will remain liquid at that temperature, and if it penetrates the earth's crust where the temperature is equally high, it will, apart from the pressure, liquefy the silicates, or glassy rocks. Professor Barus concludes that at a depth of about five miles, silicates in contact with wa- ter are virtually fluid, and that the level of aqueous fusion in the earth is five | times nearer the surface than is that of | igneous fusion.—Youth’s Companion. ! A Unique Piece of Engincering. An extension of the Mexican Na tional railway so miles, from Patzcuaro to Uruapan, was completed a year or two ago, and is a unique piece of en- gineering. Probably a more crooked railroad is not to be found anywhere in the world. After winding along the shore of Lake Patzcuaro, then past beau- tiful Lake Zirahuen, it crosses a moun- tain range by the devious course of four long, adjacent loops. In an air line covering the four adjacen loops the di tance is 2,673 feet—just about half a mile —and the fall 426 feet, but the train travels two and a hali miles in the descent.—Los Angeles Times. 10c. 25¢c. 50c, IN TEE 14%D OFMAGIC, | Wonderful Sight veler in Thibet. A Florentine suc i i to death o hat he traveler ceeded r the 1 iY with the who g child. temple te 3uddha founc a priesthood, secret signs to mself in a ;, but a few ! pre ence of the people y ed upon the altar. reincarn fant brought and re Sudde child be to utter in a loud, + 1 SheasT " Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All ce the following sentences: L am gry ists refund the money if it falls socese am his spirit, and I, Buddha, We G GROVE'S signature 1s on each LOX. 2c. your have left my old t | decrepit body a the temple of * The averag when re- and selected the body ef this young marrying is 42; babe as my earthly dwelling.” ETT TT ? T : Jlorentine says he was permit- I do not believe Piso’s Cure for gensumpties ted by the priests to take the baby in bas an equal for coughs and colds—Jonx F. irry it off some distance, y himself that it ventriloquist. his arms and SO as to satis trick of the look that it made his flesh creep, then repeated the same words, 1d 1 o stal bout it. This ac- could be no mistake about i count is confirmed by Abbe Huc, who KIDNEY TROUBLES OF WOMEN states that the child answers questions ey 2 and tells those who knew him in his | nies Frederick's Letters Show How She past life the most exact details of his Relied on Mrs. Pinkham and Was anterior earthly existence. Cured. The e Barber's Revenge. “DEAR Mgs. Prxgiam:—I have a “Does a barber ever deliberately and yellow, muddy complexion, feel tired with ma bad shave? asked the inquisitive customer, as he tiled comfortably sometimes am troubled with a white back in his ch “Well, that's a | discharge. Also have kidney and blad- rather leading question,” replied the | der trouble. barber. “I can only speak from my I have been this way for a long time, own experience. In confidence I will 1 admit to you that occasionally 1 have instance, with un- | I shaved a man this morning who will the He has been coming here and nothing done my very worst. For have a sore face for a week as result of it. ‘now for about six months, has ever Seed him. He k they tip cae had never given up is a chronic but this price of his shave. I nearly dropped medicine a more miserable person you dead the other day when he handed | never saw. I could not eat or sleep, me a nickel, with the air of a man; and did not care to talk with any one. lw ho is doing something wonderful. | Now I feel so well I cannot be grateful After he had gone I discovered that enough to you for what you have done o ick 12 lnooe Je us n n drm de eet ns hd nd fost for me."—Miss EpxA FREDERICK, Troy, 1ade 4 V NC ). gel: § are, a 3 3 9 did t morning. He kicked and Ohio, Sept, 10, 1895. squirmed in the Tats, but I had him Backache Cured where I wanted him, iit, good and hard. That ten happen, though.’ Record. doesn’t of- The Golden Honeymoon. intr epid soldier of fortune an- of the best physicians in the city of ed joyfully the other day that New York, but received no benefit. I ooed and won the rich Miss | haa been ailing for about sixteen years, T he man to i hom jis go was 50 weal and nervous that I could ji Se : dod = Og Hh apd hardly walk ; had continued pain in my _ his triend would have mar backand was troubled with lencorrheea. { herself if she had a| Menses were irregular and painful. fortune, so ne felt rather sorry for | Wordscannotexpress the benefit I have Miss Blank, but knowing that Miss | derived from the use of your medicine. Blank had an uncertain temper, white c¢yc lashes and a do the newly en- n “Don’t harvest moon!” — il Advertiser. ed soldier « eymoon! Itis my York Commerc Importadt Stone Industries. New Yorl yout 55 miles 1 New k-Vermont slate belt ex- north and south in ston county, New York, and that hold their shape R utland county, Vermont. The larger and fit until worn out, I at of the quarries, however, now be- Over 1,000,000 satisfie ng worked are in Vermont, whicl ean contributes the lion's share o the product. Directly east of the quar les 7 e the picturesque Taconic moun ains, a branch or continuation of o\ canbuy W.L.Douglas jit Green mountains, and just h_shoes for $3 and east of the Taconic range are the % $3.50 which {marble quarries of Vermont, where | Senator Proctor made a fortune in mar- ble quarrying. Thus these mountains are the dividing line between two im- ie . portant stone industrics.—New York Sra = Sel TF A $5 SHOE FOR $3.50. A Country of Clear Water. A $4 SHOE FOR $3. { § s. T 50 About one-half of Southern Alaska Ta Epa Sith ihe ice 1 85.50 is water. The inlets and bays are so re o the largest makers and retailers of 5 men 5a he wor numerous as to be one of the wonders ecll more 23 and oe than any live Cr on tr S facturers in the U of the world. Both the salt water and ters in the Unites foe business In the fresh water are remarkably clear. Fish world, and a perfec a & aa ng, enables and other marine animals may be seen ne $3und $5.40 shoes lan 6at to the depth of twenty and thirty feet THE REASON more WL. Douglas $3and 43.50 I 1 There a yencath the surface of the water. jets ARE TIE BEST. Your or san 2 2 ats them; we gi lealer exclusive wi re no sandy beaches and no tide flats Take no substitute! Insist on having Tre timber edge. The waters are so cold that fish as well as shell-fish, out the year. =H ns: s City © Journal. Mrs. W tnslows| s SoothinE Brian forchildren t hin, softens the gums, reduc es inflamma. bot tion, allays pain.cures w ind colic. 25¢ a Ancients Made Cast Steel. The manufacture of cast steel in India can be traced back for over 2,000 years le there are also examples wrought iron work nearly as old. Near Delhi, close to the Kutub, there is ar enormous wrought iron pillar whicl weighs ten tons, over 1,800 years old. —Chicag 70 Journal one. liver is dead. workshops. winter. the body when driven out. Seen by a Florentine Tra- and recog- have new-born in- days old, is 1 r to a sitting posture the manly was no The infant opened his eyes and gave him such a and so there ice aforethought give a man a ¢ can stand that kind when fellow a cent over the and I let him have Philadelphia waist almost as big her fortune he felt rather sorry | windsor, Pa. impecunious friend. jut he ? Coma to smile as he shook his you think call it comes down to the water's e¢ good through- and is thought to be! Ho thinks hie lives, but he's 5 dead No person is really alive whose most people spend nearly all their time in yam, stuff Many don’t get as much exercise as they ought, and everybody knows that people gain weight in As a ryle ft weight, but means a lot of flabby fat and useless, rotting matter staying in But the liver was over- burdened, deadened—stopped work. you are, With a dead liver, and spring is the time for resurrection. Get all the filth out of your system, and get ready for the summer's trials with clean, clear blood, body, brain free from bile. Force is dangerous and destructive unless used in a gentle persuasive way, and the right plan is to give new strength to the muscular walls of the bowels, and stir up the liver to new life and work with CASCARETS, the great spring cleaner, disinfectant and bowel tonic. Get a.box to-day and see how quickly you will be BROUGHT BACK TO NEW LIFE BY Of the 3 700 Chine se in New Zealand only 26 are women. | Beware of ointments for Catarrh | That Contain Mercury. smelland compl v he e Be nie Hogi! h Jonld never Be usec t. vder actured by F. J. Cheney y, ontains no fnste ury, and is taken cting directly upon the blood and tl ster In buying ‘tthe genuine. de in Toledo, nonials free. i . J. he erie by Druggis Hall's Family Pill il In 1810 public bal were prohibited in To Cure a Cold in One Dray. Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. A pet chameleon Tied because it ate a fly taken from flypaper. Hereafter boys who enlist in the navy will not have to buy their uniforms. and have bearing down pains. Menses have not appeared for three months; and feel so miserable I thought I would write to you and see if you could do me any good.” — Miss EDNA FREDERICK, Troy, Ohio, Aug. 6, 1899. “DEAR MRs. PINKHAM :(—I have used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound according to directions, and can say I have not felt so well for years as I do at present. Before taking your “DEAR MRs. PINKHAM :(—I write to thank you for the good Lydia E. Pink- ham’'sVegetable Compound has done me. It is the only medicine I have found that helped me. I doctored with one I heartily recommend it to all suffering women.” — Mis. MARY BARSHINGER, [ovis be MADE Douglas $3 and $3.50 shoes. Perfect shoes i| orien 7 mE Why do you pay $4 to © \ $5 for shoes when you Douglas shoes with name If Your qdiler will pat pot hen for os sen nelosing price and 25c. extra for carriage. Bate kind of leather, size, a dt nin or ca joe, s will reach you anywhere. Catalogue W. E ‘DOUGLAS SHOE co. Brockton, Mass. THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME, RE DAME, INDIANA. Clots Tiers Economics and Hatorys Journalism Science, Pharmacy, Civil, Mechinicn and Electrical Tears | Ing, Archi ure. of Hail eanpntory and Commerciai Courses. Ecclesiastical students at special rates, | “Rooms Free. Junior or Year, Collegiate a! Courses, oms to Jfeni moderate ¢ i Hall, for Dove nader 13. 1! The 57th Year will open Soniember 4th, Catalogues Free. Addre: | REV, A. MORRISSEY, C. s. C., Pres, ’ During the winter v houses or offices or is not sound it ought to have been There Wake up the dead! DRUGGISTS To any needy mortal suffering from bowel abl od too poor to buy CASCARETS we will send a box free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, mentioning advertisement and paper. 424 New Athens O. $13! pata. | ” x NEW E. FRAKLINGOLLEGE [5.0.0.0 05%. DROPS YY Epscoyea. en of PERU 5 ‘00 cases. Book of testimonipls an eatmons | Co Free . H. HE. GREEN 8 or. 29 B, Pili Ga, ©. Tastes G 5 el n time. Sold by i - That Little Book for Ladies, Wis a 7 E MASON, ROCHESTER, N, x. re ered uae” { Thompson's Eye Water