ee n—— ndone hy the ast is a scene a crucifixion. ndoing. Come un! Kiss my v of comfort. -no help from n to my com- on_the mid- at He knows is in trouble. re the wound: an pardon the wanderings up ever saw one ness! Blessed ilt Thou turn om Thy own is not to have et taken from this, but, oh, hey pierce me ey tell me I | push me out hou wilt help the cry of the ber me when gdom.” I ask no throne in e me to the ‘hen this day’s of me a little 1 at Thy side nly welcomes glory. Thou Chou? ‘Lord, comest into member me.” lv: “We have liest felony of robbed God— obbed Him of our services.” t as an agent onth you pay d of ten years en serving an- salary, would im as dishon- world to serve s all the time. been serving man is con- ought out; a the command apany! Take 1 falls with a heart. There tory when the his iniquities, vy pour intd torture. k, that your you the right ou might see >» be unbeliev- 't hand cross s to repent. dle cross that : done to save 1g its praise, 0 commemor- ve clung to it dying quietly ‘their heads ls embrace it Lay hold of will fail you. at you perish. you are safe, beneath your on your souls es, so that if vou will not at night you Jerusalem the wand cross thout Christ; t it is to De | cross pours of heaven as Is I plead for hee with an not quench it. it for such a roused mood of that mid« death—ev ery+ st give deliv< are thirsty; tion to slake ; Jesus says, We are con- , “Save that pit; T am the n the sea of t, saying, “It in darkness; and morning is the “balm shrouds rend were . "want justifi- faith, we r+ Lord is I'here is now, 'm who ross—He car- —He suffered red it. The s of heaven to worlds of cry, ' Glory, d gather the lconda mines from Ceylon ls; from all her precious littering bur- > the feet of are Thine. forth again me sheaf we Caesars and ars and the d dominions, f of scepters of Jesus and gs; all these then we go rophies, and es, the song Almighty, to ieaven bring and here by 5 riven side “Blessing 2 unto the LE, about at the ased les mmands the nese waters ex- be sti- man istinctaess, e for gov- . Bohmrich, awyer who five years 1 ¢ men from ther person been ask- ra course of the istory ifornia mil- Il wears the in vogue ntury he r the same rnia poet, :w that in ‘orks which ition only Cincinnat- Japanese been in the rument for rraduate of een a mips ly. normally ders. Why is a ques- GC,» »f Foreign 1 the foun- ol in the unces was rold mines of Oren- ng at Ash- an Indian vhich end- ’ - - - ¢ AT “a > ’ . { 5 . § = : 5 a AE ———— e—————— = ee Ch Fr ITS LEGAL ASPECT. body of the deer; and now the horde SCIENCE NOTES. MINES AND MINERS. No Tasie Selior Than 3 Bad Yaste. Not Typewritten, Play Rejected. | groing Seeks fo Retrench ia Coal. rushed all to, ethér pell-mell down the eid | a The Germans and the Austrians have Struggling authors who feel that the For illuminating purposes we now Necessity knows no law. 3 bluff in the <= s of the carcass, over-| The Insect Vedalia cardinalis, intro- Cheap Power in Colliery Districts—Ircreass |for many years drawn their teas from |work waits long for appreciation m ve gas and elect d, from the But her rulings no man can aie Decisions are often rdw When Necessitf acts as judge. But, howéver aggrieved you feel, Just pay up your costs and trudge; You bet there is no appeal When Necessity acts as judge hicago SPP P000000000 00000000000 Eieora, The Wolves —OF— S The Baraboos. $ BY FRANKLIN WELLES CALKINS. Rs EB a i yy One of the most stirring encounters with wolves related in central Wis- consis is that of the two Barbours— father and son—and “’Liph” Jones. It took place among the b'g woods of the Baraboo “Bluffs. The Barbours had a cabin in the woods at that time, and were making logs of the great white oak timber. Heavy snows fell in February and about the first of March of that year and when there was no crust the chop- pers had often had to wade to their knees to and from the bluff. Anxious to get a lot of logs down to the river in time to make a raft for the spring overflow, the choppers cleared a wide roadway, or rather rollway, down the bluff. They began at the top at a point where a great many of the logs al- ready cut could be “drifted” down with “handspikes” until they should be at the brink of the descent, which pitched off rather suddenly. From this point the logs plunged and slid and rolled some 300 yards or more down a swift incline, lodging in a bayou-like depression, a sort of elbow from the river, at the foot of the bluff. The stumps in the roliway were cut 80 close to the ground that they inter- fered only when the snow was light— barking and sometimes splintering a log. A week's rolling would clean off a moderately heavy snow, and when the stumps showed too bumptiously, the rollers would quit that part of the work, .and wait for a fresh snowfall. One evening at sunset, when the men had just finished skidding the last log up on the pyramid at the brink of the bluff, Perry Barbour. a youth of 17 years, suddenly rushed for the flint- lock musket which leaned against a tree. The others saw that Perry meant to shoot a yearling fawn, which was plunging in the snow not 20 yards distant. It sank above its knees at every jump, and was nearly worn out with running. The boy's shot killed it. “Good for you, Perry!” ’Liph Jones shouted for they needed fresh meat. The words were hardly out of his mouth when there was a sudden burst of yip-yip-yi-yi-ying, and the astonished loggers saw, coming over the rise of the bluff, one, two, three, a dozen, a countless pack of big gray wolves run- ning laboriously, tongues lolling and breath steaming. They were hot upon the trail of the deer. Perry stared at the lunging brutes an instant, and then, dropping his gun, ran to the fawn and siczed it bf the hind legs. “I'm going to lave this deer!” ho shouted. “Shoo! shoo! H: Yip” and he hurried backward, dragzing the cap- cass after him. But the big brutes. embaidencd hy their numbers and maddesed by a long, fruitless chase, came on at full jump, yelping viciously. Three of the foremost actually pounced upon the head and fore parts of the deer, and had nearly jerked the animal out of Perry's grasp before his father and ’Liph came up and beat them off, with their spikes. The boy piuckily held to his game and dragged it back to the log-pile. POOP PIV O06 ov hauling it, pouncing upon it, and piling upon and over each other in their des- perate eagerness, a confused and scrambling mass of jaws, legsand tails. As the loggers, immensely relieved at the sight, craned their necks to look down at the turmoil, an inspiration came to 'Liph. “They're square below us!” he cried. “Let's give em a log. It'll smash the whole crowd!” With the backwoodsman’s quick in- stinet for action, the three sprang to- gether back of the top log, a 20 foot cut nearly three feet in diameter. The elder Barbour and ’'Liph thrust their handspikes into the crevice and got a “bite” against the lower log, and Perry in his eagerness heaved with his shoul- der for want of a spike. A steady pres- sure upon the eads of their levers raised the big log above the level of its opposite and lower neighbor, and an extra heave tilted it over. From the top of the log-pile the great trunk plunged, going over the brink of the bluff straight down upon the struggling pack, as if discharged from a catapult. The clamor and struggle of the piled-up mob of wolves prevent- ed them from seeing or hearing, until the huge missile bounced directly among them. Then the destruction, the howls, the bounds of the survivors! 'Liph said it was “like striking your fist into a tin plate full of parched corn.” Those animals which had es- caped crushing leaped and scrambled in every direction, frightened out of their wits, some of them darting off over the brush and debris into the woods on either hand, and others plung- ing with tremendous springs directly down the roll-way, the log bumping and boomi close upon their heels, with a noise and rush that might well have scared the boldest of animals. To the hindmost of these wolves a curious thing happened. He was over- take». and the log rolled over him and left him kicking. Then he scram- bled to his feet and fled howling along the side-hill. He had been overtaken just above a lollow that contained considerable snow, and into this he had been pressed deeply. The triumphant logmen gazed long enough to discover that seven dead wolves lay scattered about the carcass of the deer, and that an eighth, severe- Iy hurt, was dragging itself toward a brush-pile. Then they set to and heaved over log after log, until six had gone booming and crashing down the bluff. Then, fearing that the pack, which was still very numerous, might return when their logs were exhaust- ed, they picked up their coats and the gun and hurried across the bluff, making a slight circuit to keep high, clear ground in getting to their camp. They saw no more wolves that night, however. They did not return to the scene of their exploit until the next morning, when they found the pack had re- turned some time in the night, and cleaned the bones of the fawn. Seven dead bodies of big. gray wilves lay close about untouched, and the wound- cd one was also found dead under a brush-pile.—Youth’s Companion. PEARLS OF THO JGHT. The child is father Wordsworth. On their own merits modest men are dumb.—George Colman, of the man.— The gods approve the depth, and not the tumult, of the soul.—Wordsworth. Necessity is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.— William Pit. Sweetest melodies are those that are by distance made more sweet.—Words- worth. Conscience has no more to do with gallantry than it has with politics.— Sheridan. while the two older men followed, holding back with their spikes the snapping pack, which inc d in | numbers every instant. Four wolves were knocked sprawling. and yet when the three men had reached the log-pile with the deer, the whole savage crowd was pressing upon three sides, snap- ping, yelping, bounding over one anoth- er, and back and forth as blows were aimed at them, It began to look to the men as if it would be a fight for life, The biggest and boldest of the pack did not hesitate to leap directly at the loggers, with vicious snaps of the teeth that sounded like the clicking of so many pairs of shears, and yet the brutes were care- ful to keep beyond the swing of the clubs. Perry.© however, while the others were fighting, succeed=d in drag- ging his venison to the top of the pyra- mid. ’Liph and Perry's father then sprang upon the logs, and climbed to the top of the pile where the boy now stood. One hardy wolf immediately followed with a jump, alighting on the lower logs: but a downward sweep of 'Liph's bandspike knocked him heels over head, and sent him limping and howl- ing away with a broken le gz. This had he effect of intimidating the pack from making any immediate atte mpt to rush upon the loggers. The wolves—Liph counted 38 of them-—squatted about, licked their Jaws anxiously, or shifted back und forth as if tempted to make a leap upon the logs. The besieged stamped about upon the top of their: pyramid, shouted and waved their clubs to scare the beasts But the gaunt horde, desperate with fasting, pressed abouf the log-heap on all sides with snapping jaws and eyes that] even in the deepening twilight, gleanied ferociously. Aside from immediate danger at the jaws of the brutes, the situation of - the men, soon became most uncomfort- able, for the night was coming on with a cutting wind from the north. and their puter coats were all hs inging upon the’ stump of the first big log they had rolled down to the heap af- ter dinner. Exposed as they were on the "brow of a bluff facing the north, the cold Wind pierced to their bones the more quickly because in tugging at the logs, they had been sweating. “Something's got to be done!” shout- ed Mr. Barbour to 'Liph, who was still making demonstrations at the wolves, “Something's got to b>» done or I'll freeze plumb to death, let alone being eat up by these vermin!” ’Liph turned about. “Tell ye what,” said he, “let's fling that fawn down the bluff, and while they're chawing it up we'll run for home.” Even Perry, who had been so fool- Dardily anxious to save his game, saw the wisdom of this plan, and seized the hind legs of the fawn to assist 'Liph. Together they swung the deer to and fro. once, twice, three times, and as it weighed not more than 60 or 70 pounds, they flung it several yards | down over the brink before it struck | the smooth, steep surface, where it slid rapidly for some distance. The whole surrounding pack wolves had heen Jumping back and forth with expectane Vv as they watched *Liph and Perry heaving the swaying | of | | you; When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself public prop- crty.—Jefferson. A life spent worthily should be measured by a nobler line—by deeds; not years.—Sheridan. Nothing except a battle lost can be half so melancholy as a battle won, — Duke of Wellington. To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.—George Washington. The impulse to patiently wait and the impulse to trust are both the voice in the soul of that eternal power on which it is stayed.—G. S. Merriam. It takes far less insight to discover defects than it does to discern noble and lovely qualities. *‘It requires a god to recognize a god.” —Lilian Whit- ing. Love is the genius of the heart, pene- trating depths, passing behind snows, revealing secrets. Only whom. we love ‘do we ever truly know.—Charles Beard. The Diamond's Origin. The dispute among geologists as to the origin of the diamond seems to have heen settled by Professor Bonney na paper read recently before the Roy- al society. In the localities from which the previous supply had been drawn, both in India and in Brazil, the gem occurred, 1 ke apebble, in certain gravel- Iy materials, but had not been traced back to any rock that gave an indica- tion of its genesis. But soon after the discovery of diamonds in river sands on the Orange and Vaal rivers, in South Africa, they were found in a peculiar material, not of a superficial character. At first extremely incohe- rent and of a brownish buffy color, it assumed, as the miners dug deeper, a =~iull dark greenish or bluish tint, and hecame harder. In this stuff which they called “yellow ground” and blue ground,” according to its color, lay the diamonds, together with several other minerals, such as garnet, various iron ores, olivine, augite, and its allies, Dig- zing was begun nearly 30 years ago, at first unsystematically; but from these early efforts the great diamond- mining industry has been developed, and the excavations have been carried near Kimberley to a depth of more than 1400 fect, Here the rock has become so much more solid that it is at first about as hard as or- dinary limestone-—Tondon Standard. “Out of the Mouths of Babes,’ A 13-year-old girl wrote the follow- ing to her brother, who is in exile for reasons unknown to the young sister; “Mother says I may write to you, and I will, because it is not weil to forget one’s family. T wouldn't worry if I were a man like you. A girl can’t help things, but most things a boy wants he can have by working for them and all the others by praying.” New York Commercial Advertiser. "The Mean Man. “Look, Alfred, here's a hat would make me look 10 years er.” “If that's the case I ean’t buy it for you would become entirely too young for me,”—Fliegende Blaetter, that young- duced to California to feed on scale insects, has succeeded so well in its work that there is nothing left for food, and they are now in danger of disappearing through starvation. Professor Newcomb has calculated that in 5,000,000 yedrs the sun will have contracted to one-half its present diameter, and it is unlikely that it can continue to radiate heat sufficient to maintain life upon the earth longer than 10,000,000 years in the future. The sight is much less keen than thought. When revolved at a speed no faster than 24 times a second, a disc, half white and half black, will appear gray. We also hear more rapidly than we can count. If a clock-clicking movement runs quicker than 10 to the second, we can count four clicks, while with 20 to the second we can count only two of them. Mr. Beddard, in his new book on whales, reminds readers that although the imagination is apt to picture the giant reptiles of the Jurassic and Cre- taceous animals, yet in fact there is no evidence that the earth has ever contained, either on the land or in the sea, creatures exceeding the whale in bulk. The mammoth was larger than the elephant, but the ichthyosaurus could not match the whale for size, al- though with its terrible jaws it would doubtless have been the whale’s mas- ter. Mastication does not separate fresh bread, but condenses it into a soft, doughy, glutinous mass, very difficult for the saliva to affect. In weak stomachs, the saliva-coated ball, like any foreign body, irritates the stom- ach and brings on indigestion. If the person is strong and has plenty of out- door exercise, the new bread is finally digested, but the effort of digestion is greater than it should be, and is liable to overcome the strength and produce more or less of trouble. Stale bread is more “crumbly” and does not stay to- gether so firmly in a sticky mass. Cyclones or general storms may be 1000 miles ‘in diameter. Hurricanes operate on a path averaging six to 800 miles wide. Tornadoes are very much smaller. They may be only a mile wide at the top and but a few feet at the bottom, but they are much more dangerous than either a cyclone or a hurricane. They form in all parts of the temperate zone—at sea they are water spouts, and on the desert they are sand storms. Sometimes a whole family of tornadoes will be born at once from the same cloud. As many as 15 tubes have been observed at one time. * THE MOOSE HUNTER. How the Sport of the Maine Woods Tries a Man’s Mettle. There is no better test of what there is of a man than to strip him of the conventionalities and accessories of civilization and leave him to his own resources in the heart of a wilderness like that of Maine. Some of those whom the world esteems great and wise would starve forthwith, while many of those who live and die un- known to fame would “wax and grow fat.” There {is one denizen of the Maine woods that stands pre-eminent in the time, patience, labor and skill in- volved in his capture, and pre-eminent in power to thrill the steadiest nerves and cause the blood to flow in quick throbbing beats like quicksilver in the veins, The sportsman who has not con- fronted a bull moose in his native wills has missed an experience whica is worth the best year of his life. 1 speak advisedly, for I have been there. Imagine, if you can, a huge bundle of muscular power, reared on great, stiltlike legs to a height of seven feet, with bristling mane, and eyes which gleam viciously from beneath bro: ld, massive antlers which sway with the huge head eight to ten feet above the ground. Imagine yourself standing, if you have strength to stand, in front of this frightful apparition, and only a few yards distant, with the knowledge that if you don’t kill him he will very likely kill you, your heart throbbing so painfully that your ears fairly ache with its pulsation, the blood racing through your veins like molten lead, the sweat starting from every pore in your skin, while your brain labors in vain to regain control of the wild tu- mult which possesses you. Imagine all this, if you can, and then multiply the sensations which it calls up two or three million times, more or less, and you will have aresult which approaches the reality in magnitude. The man who sends every bullet straight to the mark under such conditions as these should be excused if he brags a little about it afterward. He should also b> excused if he does some very foolish things when he sees the awe inspir- ing monster collapse under the para- lyzing shocks of the well directed bul- lets—i. e., dropping his rifle and trying to hug himself, attempting to turn somersaults which only land him on his head, trying to shout the good news to ~verybody within a hundred miles, and only succeeding in making a poor little squeak somewhere down in his throat, trying—Dbut let us drop the cur- tain. The ethics of sportsmanship for- bid me to disclose all the absurd things even the most sedate and dignified of our craft will do on such an occasion.— Forest and Stream. A Watchmaker, The late Aaron Dennison was called “the fatlfer of American watchmak- ing.” He was Interested in his work, because he hoped thereby to benefit his fellow-man. Often he worked late into the night, so late that his loving wife would go and beg him tq “wait until tomorrow.” One night she sald to him: “Are you not going to bed at all? What are you doing?” And he turned and slowly answered, “I am trying to make it possible for every poor man to have a wateh”—a result which he very nearly accom- plished. . Intelligent Pet White Rat. A pet white rat that does tricks like a little dog and shows real affection for its mistress isone of the attractions, especially to the children, of a White Mountain resort. The rat traveled with its owner all the ways from Philadelphia to enjoy the cool breezes. The little fellow answers promptly to the name of Babe, and enjoys the freedom of the house while at home. His faith in human nature has as yet received no shock, and he knows no fear where people are con- cerned. High Farm Wages It is a noteworthy fact that farm wages run highest in Scotland, where schooling has long been beffer than elsewhere, . PENSIONS GRANTED. Wilkesbarre Mayor Makes a Wise Ruling. Carousal Winds Up in Bloodshed. New Glass Company. Among persions granted last week | were: William H. Fultz, Mount Un- ion, $8; Robert P. Thompson, dead, Coalport, $12: Lehman L. Koons, Port Royal, $6; Lerina Thompson, Coalport, $8; Robert Stroble, Natfona, $6; Gooden, Waynesburg. $8: Warren Dewitt, Beaver Falls, $8: Jackson Pugh, M. position to furnish fuel by the time the Tarentum, $8: Harmond Clouse, Con- | PSs demand opens. fluence, $10; John A. Harman, Stain. | Cheap power distribution from the town, $8; William M. Boone, Coalpo t, | colliery districts, where ¢ > coal m $10; William G. School. Richfield, $23; | be had. is again on the tapis. The ide Ephraim Moyer, Port Royal, $8; Sam- | as of old, is to make gas fiom the wa wel F. Swauger, Coalport, “$10: William rimore, New Brighton, $8; Robert | Z. Newton, New Brighton, $12: Isabella | Wylie, New Galilee, $8 Sentenced to the Sestern penitentiary when a dying man, death finally re- leased and ended the mis sery of Millard Fillmore Johnson, one of Clearfield county's most prominent officials and citizens, after serving less than four months of a four years” term. He died at 8:30 o clock Sunday night, of cancer of the stomach. Johnson was but 35 years of age and was connected with some of the leading families of Clear- field county. He was elected auditor of the county a few years ago and was regarded as one of its most upright and efficient officers. Last spring Clearfield county had a sensation. Auditor John- son was charged with approving illegal charges amounting to thousands of dol- lars. He was brought to trial, and after a long and bitterly waged legal contest was convicted. What is said to be the longest and steepest inclined plane in the country was put in operation Wednesday at the quarries of the Conemaugh Stone Com- pany, just east of Conemaugh furnace, Cambria county. The incline is 1.475 feet long and the grade is 352 feet to the 100. Five cubic yards of stone will be lowered at a time, and it is expected that a trip can be made every 10 min- utes. This will permit of an output of 300 cubic yards daily, which will make 60 car loads. or two train loads. The soldiers’ orphan schools have re- opened with 1,169 children. The num- ber of applicants for admission is con- stantly growing smaller, and it is expect- ed by the commission that in a few years it may be found convenient to abandon the schools at Chester Springs, Hiram ! in Coal Exports—-Cther Items of Interest to the Craft. During , bitumino the last 20 us coal re coal produced. | The Pittsburg Coal Co., Mich, h | are now | paratory | coal and [ing high-tensicn | whose output is to be [to the various With the inevitable development of the gas engine the scheme is every day suming a more practical aspect, require little would se now to as a supply o adjusted, A man soft coal estimates Luzerne were good wa the into one counties Hartford and Uniontown and concen- trate ali the children at Scotland. The | commission expects to ask the next | Legislature for a special appropriation to be applied to the erection of addi- tional buildings at Scotland. George W. Youngson, census super- visor of Westmoreland county, has an- nounced that the population of West-' moreland county will slightly excee A! 158,000. The addition of an orphan’s | court judge. the creation of the office of county controller and the abolition of the office of county auditor depended upon the population reaching the 150,- 000 mark. The fee system of paying county officers will also be abolished. he gain in 10 years has been almost 46,000. Two talkative women worried Mayor Nichols, of Wilkesharre, and then he made a ruling worthy of Solomon. One was arrested for slander, and when both came into court they had a war of words, which protests could not stop. They were put into a room together and told to talk themselves out. They did. After three hours they had talked all animosity away and become friends. With tears of happiness they assured the mayor that they loved each other dearly and he released them. There are now 220 looms in operation at the Lock Haven silk mill. There are 40 looms that have been set up but are not in operation. In addition to these there is room for upward of 30 more looms, which will complete the capacity of the mill. At present 2,500 yards of silk are made daily, and ship- ments to New York are made twice a week. William Kimmer and Absalom Con- way, brothers-in-law, quarrelled over business matters in a blacksmith shop on the latter's farm, near Penfield, Clearfield county. Kimmer got a grub hoe and struck Conw ay, cutting his scalp to the bone. The doctors thing Conway is fatally injured. Kimmer fled to bis home several miles away. The barn owned by William Hites, at Darlington, Beaver county, was burn- ed with il its contents, including a splendid matched bay team of horses valued at $5.000. The team was owned by Assessor R. A. Harrison, of Darling- ton, and was considered the best pair of horses in Beaver county. The origin of the fire is unknown. Mrs. William Kirkpatrick, of Punx- sutawney, died Tuesday afternoon at the Wayne hotel, DuBois, from the ef- fects of carbolic acid, taken with sui- cidal intent. The woman was found un- conscious in her room by the chamber- maid, and all efforts to save her were unavaiiing. Her husband is State or- ganizer of the United Mine Workers of America, at Birmingham, Ala. At the meeting of Rutherford B. ayes Post No. 167, G. A. R,, of Oil , Enoch Perrine. commander of the host, mustered into membership his father, Isaae Perrine. 81 years of age. The event was one of the most remark- able in the fraternity of the place, and has probably never been duplicated in this country. The Wilkes rolling mill at Sharon, the only independent iron works in the She- nango and Mahoning valleys which is at present in operation, has quit taking orders, as it is impossible to get out the stuff fast enough. An order for 1,000 bundles of sheet iron has been refused. The plant is running day and night. Seven colored men and women, two kegs of beer. a meat ax and shotgun were involved in a general mix-up, and as a result Nip Davis is lying at his home in Washington with a big gash in his skull, in a serious condition, while Fay Marsh is in jail, charged with a murderous assault upon Davis. J. L. Myland, of New Castle, has an- nounced his intention of building a mammoth cracker factory in that city at a cost of $75,000. The plant alone will cost $50,000, ard it will give em- ployment to 60 girls and 25 men. Sev- cral other New Castle capitalists will be associated with him in the enterprise ‘the Parnassus Plate Glass Bending Company, a new corporation, will erect a glass bending plant at New Kensing- ton. It will be under the direction o Thomas Connington, an experienced glass bender of London, Eng. The works will be completed within 60 days and employment giver to 50 men. Fire broke out in No. 10 vein of the Neilson shaft Tuesday at Shamokin has become so serious that the mine had to be flooded. The origin of the fire is unknown. Ywelve hundred men and boys are rendered idle. The shaft is owned by J. Langdon & Co., of Elmira, NY An Object Lesson. Only a few years ago and Sockalexis, a full- holed Penobscot Indian, was a rominent figure in the baseball world. Te was the star player in one of the big league teams, and his name was one to conjure with. Strong, wiry and agile, was the iaeal of an Indian athlete. He drew a large salary, and his future seemed unusually bright. To- day that same Sock- alexis, or rather the same in name only. still a young man, is locked up in a Mas sachusetts workhouse on the charge of va grancy e is a victim of that worst en- emy of his race. IFire-water has got the beter of him, and now he is but a brok n, Satered wreck of his former self. Sock- alexi ng object lesson of the evils three months. miners were also coming rapidly of the zinc deposits they contai as at last comp : down to the coal level and the miners work drivin mining. at for several weeks to complete { the work, but the company will be in a to use this in gas clec points of to to the cm give worlc shape the dreams of the years. An interesting apparatus to be worn by rescue workers in coal mines has recently been patented in Vienna. It consists of an india-rubber cloth -icep- tacle made in the form of a collar which is worn close about the n breathing 1 bag, as f quicklime for bonic acid gas and wate face is enclosed in a mas! for breathing is carried in a A man wearing this apparatus, properly can remain in with irrespirable gas as long as his sup- ply of oxygen holds out. prominent in 1 bor union circles is responsible statement miners and region are leaving here we that a larger laborers regions about that fully 1.500 county a the While ’oles many ges offered. Pehaps the most interesting phase of rapid evolution of zi industries of country is the addition of the district to the Southwestern field. 1 of the grea! of Northwestern into promt counties are in the rough the Ozarks. Their top sists of narrow but exce valleys, lofty ridges and tortuous w cany courses, affording | between Rockies. -egion has deterred railroad Exports of States during $20,000,000, and $6,000,000 1n months e ports were bounded bv the finest scene the Alleghanic The broken ch coal from 1900 are li against 1800. nding with July, 2,375.451 nonths of 1899, they were and in tl 1000 they the period from 1890 to 1900 the expor- tation of coal has quadrupled, with American countries. recially to the Cuba fi months tons, an to Puertc from 2,2 in 1900; ports in 1000 2.261 21,001 ie corresponding were 4.C01,755 marked le: exports in of din » Rico tons in 1900 241.7 the expo 1808 to the Hawaiian islands the ex- 1800 were 10,381 tons: to islands the exports in 18¢ teas, and in 19Cc0 41,068 tons. | INDUSTRIAL NOTES. A Weekly Review of the Happenings Throughe out the World of Labor in This and Other Countries. Child labor in North Carolina mills has decreased fifty per cent. in the past three AT'S. The Journeymen Barbers’ Union has begun an agitation in New York Cit for cleaner barber shops. There is a growing demand in At- lanta, Ga., for an employment bureau under control of the city authorities The Central Federated Union decid- ed to refuse labor statistics to the Unit- ed States industrial commission A co-operative laundry is under the | course of construction in Dayton, Ohio, | be the striking laundrymen of that | ci | Fire Taff Vale railroad strike in Wales has becn acceded to the Over 100 workmen in the glass s of Belgium have decided to em- United States because to igrate to the failur A curt nounced ing nine year. Bao gav cof maiit been raised by the Uni Workers, these manufacturers Compauy, thus affecting A well-known economist has otit that out of ninety-cight chict nation- al industri settled, the con demands the ¢ of their ailment by the recent Somerswe 300 operati ies in a given yea e men work 300 days in the ts in force against clothing wcturers in Rochester, N. Y., unionized their shops. The V ern car the Soutl 1,300 mel There ge scale of the mn of Iron, combine for all gion of Pennsylvania | 2.500 miners have Sonn killed in mine | explosions and other accidents | miner kilied for each 3 i carrie d by absorbing ¢ Vest in the past nd Slavish, Germans, Welsh who are attracted West $10,000,000 in tons: 1808 w the of production is Great Falls Manufactur- H Steel cers 3 has been signed by the Sout! h- years in the or ona 5,600 tons ef Bay City, leted its g entries pre- It will take this part of s engines driv- c eneratoss wire consntmpticn. as- and it more just Id in concrete bast hali-dozen eck. It serves it contains a vapor. The , and oxygen “container.” a mine filled and la- for the number of anthracite ekly for the | Farr, rg and men have leit nining the there and the most of Iris! he nc production the Arkansas Arkansas are nence because . The est portion of neither Indian e the ( “hina will unknown hines¢ nor present complica- ; 2 tions in not affect them. 'h orge Eliot and George Henry a for the first time in Ber- lin the latter for a cup “It tastes like ing at all,” when it was brought to him thank your stars.” remarked his com- | panion, “for it might taste bad.”—Lon- don Illustr, rated Ne ws. More than f the population of the earth has direct access to the Pacific. | The secretary of the interior has od sued an order withdrawing from entrv | at the land office 300 square miles of ter- ritory in New Mexico. The section in-| cludes most of the more important clif dwellings thereabouts, the intention | ing to 1 of it the Pajarito Chiff Dweller Park. tional Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applica nhios ns. asthey cannot reach the diseased por of the ¢ 2 re is only one way to cure de atness, Soa ishy ¢ onsiin. tional remedies. nessise Gy by flamed gondigion of tt he mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube en this tube is in- flamed you have a rumbling. sound or imper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless th inflam and Fever 1s a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC. a tasteless form. It is simply iron and quinine in Bo cure--no pay. Price boc, The Prussian government is about to take measures to preserve various kinds | of trees that are in danger of extermina- tion. Drugs have their use, but don't them in your stomach. store Beeman’s Pepsin Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an Infalll- ble medicine for coughs and colds. —N. ¥ 84uUEL, Ocean Grove, N. 7 Feb. 17, 190¢, Next to Gitalt tar, M: alta is ihe strong- est fortress in the world. ography con- edingly fertile -onlike cli y to be found s and the aracter of the building. the United kely to reach 1808, In the seven 1808, the ex in the sanie 3.0006,082 tons, months of tons. During Tt is es- frinenon the ere 12 tons, rts to seven 114.633 while increased 15,313 tons In Colorado wild ducks have become SO numerous that they are regarded as a nuisance, and some counties are offer- ing premiums for their destruction. In nearly all other States these wild fowl are protected by the game laws. All Women Know That ordinary treatment fails torelievepainful periods. tons, and in Philippine R were 4.810 having men. fac- 1pany oi the of strike. an- orth, N. ves. . fignred r only twenty- have Garment having ted Ams gamate d and in its mills in| i. This means work for about 1. are so many women employed as binders in Washington that they | have formed an active club, under the | name of the Women's Bindery Union. | Its object is to maintain a uniform rate of wages. NEWSY GLEANINGS. Count Leo Tolstoi’s health is improved. The Japanese gold yen is being im- ported into India. A coal famine now threatens the col- The of Newfoundland. ongress of Peru | | | | | much | | | | | | | has declared full amnesty for all political offenders. | Sweden is the latest foreign country | to come to the United States secking a oan. Over $1,324,000 worth coins we August. The ol celebrate of its foundatio: Ten square miles of forest reserve in the San Gabriel reservation, re minted at Ph d Russian city next yea have been burned. In an interview Sir Thomas Lipton subsidary n of iladelphia of Riga will] r the 700th anniversary California, said that he intended to name the new | challenger the Shamrock. | "he pr Atl: oposed new antic line of steamers will save cieht hours in time | from New York City to London. Many residences in have been have bee robbed while n summering in New York city the families the country. Western Manitoba and the Territories have been swept by a storm which has heavily damaged crops and property. The Republic of Guatemala posed a tax of $70 a head on all cattle exported from the country. It is tended to be prohibitive. The reform i for in- higher | | | | has im- | | the | | schools of Prussia now adopted renders | the study of English obligatory, only in the higher classes. General Bartolomeo Maso, zanillo. Cuba. has refused an at might ment th have «oc appoint- ntlicted the chance to be president of the isl- and. Growers in Delaware are ed over year, the yield tons to is i of nan erance, —WW, ashington Star, was five the scarcity of being onl the acre, while and a Tali tons. disappoint- tomatoes this y about id last season | Pinlcham and she cures but | at Man- | with | clock was first set going in the tow: 3 Largest Make a Shon i BRR of Men's 83 and $3.00 They know LydiaE. Pink- Is Ig Se P een = i 5 = Sn the § ham it 87 ham’s Vegetable Gom= |i... Tach of the four dials ie fect } E & pound will and does and |0 inches in diameter, and the clock ‘s ga 2 has, more than any other 180 feet above the ground. The quar BS 5 | 7 ters are struck on four bells weighing 2 = | medicine. from one ton to four tons cach. EF E 2 ” The large bell cracked before leaving s 5 Every woman knows the foundry, and a similar refell £ 5 about Mrs. Pinkbam’s | thc sccond Dell of the same size, the Gf medicines hours being ri: for several years.on 5 the largest. of the quarter bells. Every woman knows Sen’ the Second, a undergo fice some woman Mrs. Pinjc. | P27 was again brought into us Rs mm Ere has performed satisfactorily ever 7g that wears tien 3. $3: ham has cured. The clock part proper takes only abo ot $3 $3 s3 $3 $3.50 % ¥ > Ss te d 1c . But ning women owt of |," VL UL 'WLDOUG fen put off getting this re- 1c remembered that the first po HOE pire ome : Ni ~ °320 liable remedy untii their is bev’ denotes the hour the Mane 30.90% jer bells indi g the quarters he health is nearly wrecked ||, coil: ened oY dniton The Beal fh g Dur $3 and sao: = H 1S re ed with othe 4 by experiments or meg- Sih {ravine ime Jaret 61 na 5 shoe os lect ¥ its permanently cured. No fits or nervous. i ol jpérfe of | them, but of course i’ takes longer to do so. ° Don’t delay getting help if | you are sick. She has heipod a million | women. Why not yous ? | | submitted to him. | Present Compensation is Inadequate fo Prop- politan ances is an absolute mation can be taken out and this tube re- (tiness and meanness and certain sorts Shorted fo iis normal eonaition, hearing willbe | of small economy bring us into con-| destroyed for. ine cases out of ten are S 7 1 caused by cats Wit which isnothing butan in. ; tempt and minimize our influence with flamed condition of the mucous surfaces _ European powers, which in their long | smo Pgs. One Blunded Dollars fof any | experience have acquired a very sali | Oy To mee) Hh ‘Send | tary worldly wisdom. There is hardly | for circulars, free. a consulate in the world where the | Sold by Doi, ghesEy & Co., Toledo, O. Ame can representative is not the most | Hall's Fami & 115 are the best. shabbily housed, poorly served and]! eerie poorly paid man among his consular | The man who crossed Niagara Falls ‘associates. Frequently his means are | on Blondin’s back lives in Chicago. {so inadequate that he is unable to return | Blondin was the greatest rope-walker |in any proper degree, the soci: favors | of that day. that have been shown him. Through | . — = | parsimony that curtails expense here| k “Well, I say that the very The Best Prescription for Chills that the Government may be wantonly | 3 — abroad are often placed in the humiliat- | ing attitude of mere hangers- on—inen | tolerated, but not respected. It also fancy that they are a-wrestling explains why so many entirely objec Gum aids nature to perform its functions. which fitness, intelligence and ordinary 7 = Er | goad breeding cut no figure. Men of “Take my old man. A kinder Mrs. Lucy Te sons, the anarchist, refinement, of Rt and experience Washand . d b 1s threatens to throw the entire police (fuse to be so abased.—The Chauta usband never rew reath; 2.650,000,000 lire (£ 106,000,000) for her 3 3 . > 7, but the increases in the Budge Election, fill 1 say, “I'd be have been irregular and fitful and = Frey's Vermifuge makes ha py homes and | Sreatest variations have occurred with ~ : | re ag well. Entirely vegetable. | the changes of governments. Thus the minister with my doubts when ee Ita . which in 1890 occupied the third os in the list of world’s flests. of works in Then they write to Miss | fom after first day s use of Dr. Kline's Great ( > | 32 free. Dr.R.H. Ruynlid.fl Arch St.Phila, Pa. take some comfort from the hist it of view of coal a play which has been the one re : in a canter. cess of the past year in London, a t steanl | engines are when almost nothing has succeeded, : the electric crrreft. even war dramas. This summer on ones gas engines are emp the most prominent and succes in is own : Iva ges of American actors sat in a box and saw ay Ie ithe performance and suddenly realized v [that 14 vears ago the play had beer It was not typewrit handwriting was actor never 1m play.—Saturd has been calculated flame consumes h coal energy to nount of light as ent electric lamp, and as m much as produces an I ¥ umination in the elect ric arc. author's that the into the en, and the o illegible ged to get Evening Post. OUR CONSULS NEED MORE PAY. erly Meet Requirements. To Cure a Cold in ono Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS Al The meager pay of our consuls is a druggists refund the money if it fails ure, = ’ 8 2. W z ° 1 each b < matter of whose importance congress- E- W. GROVE'S signatur 1s on each box. We. me v are themselves essentially| .. ien who are themselve entiall) The average watch is composed of 175 convinced. | rovinci REN b F : al ca over De j different piec Knowing little of any world but that in which they have moved and had tl being, entirely ignorant of the establi ed usage of diplomacy and the cosmo- society in which the consular representative must dwell, they forget that a proper consideration for appear- | necessity; and pet-| best of men don’t know the difference between their souls and their stomachs, and they and | representatives ish with certain species of bold riotorious jobbery, its with their doubts when really it is their dinners they're a- wrestling with. tionable persons are sular posts, aside reward for purely appointed to con- from the political service in Guan. yet so sure as he touches a bit of pork he begins to worry hisself about the doctrine of Italy’s Navy Ranks Seventh. From 1860 until now Italy has spent ashamed to go troubling the an Ayer’s Pill would set things seventh straight again.” — J. C. Aver Company, Swoat and fruit acids wi 11 not discolor Lowell, M £00ds dyed with PurNam FapeLsss Dyes. Welly uv ase, Sold by all drugg to the Mail has now fallen place.— London Daily Practical Chemi HOW BIG EEN | GoT HIS NAME. Facts About the Famous Cock So Dear io the Hearis of Foreigners. Ayer’s Hair Vigor Ayer's Cherry Pectoral | Ayer’s Comatone | Ayer’s Sorsepatills | Ayer’'s Pill | Ayer’s Agee Cure has ceased from booming , and a lar s in consequence “Big Ben” for a brief s London mi ge section of one of its most familiar sounds. But there is nothing very wrong; a little cleaning is be ug done. How many people bhiow hy the famous clock called “Big rg The name, in fact, is that of ts hour bell—which weighs 13 tons 11 cwt.—and wg as so called after Sir Ben ho was first commissioner 1860, the year in which the jamin Hall, aly rve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise Tre population of F inland includes 7.800 Russians. oothing Syrap Torchildren 1e gums, reduc res wind coli n ame andor ous 1 ach you anywhe re roads in China are entirely Country undefined TAR ALIMFN TARY oAN CAL. Shh st a: 55 x: 9.A nolL enum is ER duoc e Snail int be at the cmen arro i tha direction which tha « passing through the alimentary canal. Get the genuine 10c. 25c. 50c, BE: ) never sold Lower end of conveys the ood from thothroat yloric empties into ntants of the bowels must take in Made CLEAN and STRONG by sold in bulk, oa only and always in the light blue metal box with the long-tailed ** C.” r the trade-mark—the C witha long tail—on the lid! To any needy mortal, who can’t afford to buy, we will mail a box free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicage or New York. are packed away in your insides and must be Be HR in order and doing business. It’s a long way, with many turns and pitfalls to catch the refuse and clog the channel if not most carefully cleaned out every day. en this long canal is blockaded, look out for trouble—furred tongue, bad breath, belching of gases, ellow spots, pimples and boils, ficadaches, spitting up of Ts after eating—an all-around disgusting nuisance. Violent pill poisons or griping salts are danger- rs ous to use for cleaning out the bowels. They 7 force out the obstruction by causing violent £ spasms of the bowels, but they leave the in- testines weak and even less able to keep up regular movements than before, and make a larger dose necessary next time. Then you have the pill habit, which kills more people than the morphine and whiskey habits combined. he only safe, gentle but certain bowel cleansers are sweet, fragrant CASCARETS, because they don’t force out the foecal matter with violence, but act as a tonic on the whole 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the muscles and restore healthy, natural action. Buy and try them! (Look out for imitations and substitutes or you can’t get results. Cascarets are never sold in bulk. Look for the trade-mark, the long-tailed “C” on the box.) You will find that in an entirely natural way your bowels will be promptly and permanently end of Small intes- ending colon oid flex- uous with Eo a »ws indicate Tablet is marked “CCC.” Cascarets are never if you want results! Look ALL DRUGGISTS £4 DROPSY iY ean cares fin: a eaees. EBook of testimonials 3 znd treatment ¥ree, br, BH, B, GREEN'S BONS, Box 3, Atlanta, Ga, That Little Book For Ladies, ? 53 zen ALICE MASON. ROCHESTER, N i wie {I'M Moore ayes ves | TNOMpSON’S Eyc Water