S. Upholds High. Review pects in igh the disputes de and the fut- rywhere trade, liveries is usual gs are rs show- er cent, ast year Aside me con- 1d steel Coke )n main- 250,000 at full used to dicated 2 out of ‘oducers the im- > on do- billets, ow the ‘acts for k cover- quarters - a] is de- s which Nn more 1 hard- there 1s 1d glass steady. engaged les, and sr. Dry- the mar- et with- Splen- nditions s of the larger » raised. he agri- ove the the low 1S0n are nd there . to the years of n com- s favor- 15t year, hile im- ures for y United nd 14 in Dun’s y prices n was e of $1,- vith the still ap- yer cent. to about inflation s past, endency » normal es with ps. The rat the aints as lain the an enor- arvested eturn of sion, al- to turn ed pro- 1e West- stablish- stock. Isle of . to pre- ony. the Co- e battle bout six list, sus- forming in Eng- in, Ger- ation to e effect m Lon- ulalong- d in his nchuria, y. The 'n China and 130 of the e Hague former ge Free and, has t of Ire- - ie Chan- Aretas Y. ess Ma- nd Duke was an- 15, has 1sent. 1] Lucas nounced 1 Meyer vith this h Africa. zolleren, ard, sail- a, where , visit to the Rus- ronation England, ill spend ovember assist in iucailon- the lead- r forces at the lers now with for- m Mad- ontinual rated in | crowds own hall who ap- nowleds- PASSING OF THE SALMON. The Fish Traps of the West Have Guaranteed Its Doom. The redfish of the Idaho lakes will soon be a thing of the past. Its num- . ‘bers now are as nothing when com- 3 rared with the vast runs of 20 years ago. And the reasons for this deplor- able depletion are apparent and easily understood. In the lower Columbia there are miles and miles of gill-nets and hundred of pound-nets and weirs; great seins are hauled in all suitable " rlaces, and the banks are lined with + destructive salmon wheels. The lower river is literally filled with these and other apparatus destructive to the mi- grating salmon. They begin at the river’s mouth and extend up the river as far as the catch renders their op- i . eration profitable. Fortunate, indeed, ; J the fish which is able to steer clear of this multitude of traps set to ensnare him, to pass them all safely by, to ascend the rapids and leap the water- falls, and, finally, to reach the spawn- ing grounds a thousand miles from the sea. And fortunate indeed would he be were the enemies all left be- hind; but they are not. The prospec- tor, the miner, the rancher and the people in the villages have learned where the Redfish spawn, and they } know when to expect their coming. "i, - Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ease, A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes vasy. At all Druggists and Bhoe stores, 25 cents. Ac- cept no substitute. Sample mailed Free. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. In ancient times the addition of a cross to a signature did not indicate “his mark,” . Fi was added as an attestation of good 21th. FITS permanently cured.No flts or nervous- ness after first day’s use of I'r. Kline's Great NerveRestorer. §3trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R.H. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Women are to be employed to work the signals on the Southern Railway in Aus- ira. H. H. GrEEN's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertise- ment in another column of tiis paper. A German specialist est mates that in his country one out of every ten persons has gallstones. ‘ Mrs. Winslow's 8cothing Sy ‘up for children teething, soften the gums, redncesinflamma- tion,allays pain,oures wind cc ie, 25c. abottle For a quarter of a century no new houses have been built in the Sussex (England) village of Slindon. Albert Burch, Wes. Toledo, Ohio, says: - “Hall's Catarrh Cure saved my life.”” Write him for particulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c. The man who has made a fortune has a rofound contempt for the man who has in- on one; and vice versa. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. The only heroes whose reputations are safe are the dead ones My Hair “I had a very severe sickness that took off all my hair. I pur- chased a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor and it brought all my hair back again.” : . W. D. Quinn, Marseilles, Ill. One thing is certain,— Ayer’s Hair Vigor makes the hair grow. This is because it is a hair food. It feeds the hairand the hair grows, that’s all there is to it. It stops falling of the hair, too, and al- ways restores color to gray hair. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supoly you, send us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Be sure and give the name of your nearest hres office. Address, J.C.AY CO., Lowell, Mass. Liver Pills That’s what you need ; some- thing. to cure your bilious- ness. You need Ayer’s Pills. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use Buckingham’s Dye 50cts of druggistsorR. P. Hal! & Co , Nashua N H SLICKERS? EIRENE i WATERPROOF L§# CILED CLOTHING YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT. Made in black or yellow of the best materials and sold with our warrant by reliable dealers everywhere. A.J. TOWER CO., BOSTON, MASS. ESTABLISHED 1856. 3 REE un PLSOISHC TERE Fi be CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FALLS. ’ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use Sold by d GONSUMPTION , DROP SY I5V DISCOVERY; give ©asas. Book of testimonials und 10 days’ treatment Prep. Dr. H. ¥. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. - ’ ea renase Thompson's Eye Water ‘| but perhaps some day they will learn Who is to Blame? “I’m in the saddest sorrow,” said the pocket-knife of John, “Because, you see, I feel to blame for things that I have done. At school on Monday morning last I made my owner late, While with my point he slowly scratched is name upon his slate. On Tuesday afternoon he stopped to play awhile with me By cutting deep his name ag-r'n upon a cherry tree. On Wednesday—oh, what can I say to tell how shocked I am?— He used my blade to open wide a jar of currant jam. On Thursday I was used to do the sad- dest deed of all: : I cut a lock of curly hair from Nelly’s pretty doll. . : On Friday I was digging through the side of Willy’s drum, ‘When suddenly my blade was snapped and cut my master’s thumb. On Saturday (that is to-day) my blades are nicely shut, And John has got a bandage round the place that I have cut. : And so, you see, I'm sorry for the mis- chief I have done; But tell me, please, am I to blame as much as Master John?” —John Lee, in Cassell’s Little Folks. Ray and Archie. Ray has a boy friend about his own age named Archie. They are in the same class at school. The teacher put them both up into a higher class to- gether, they did so well. That is, they were allowed to skip one class. They play for hours together. Archie is a fine boy, and they both like each other very much, but they are always quarreling. Then Ray will say, “I will never play with that Archie tagain.” And Archie will say, “I will never play with that Ray again.” And yet the next time you see them they will be playing away as pleasantly as ever and will be just as good friends as before. Did you ever see such boys? I some- to welcome visitors by jumping up, wagging the tail, and giving a low bark. When the visitor leaves, the dog accompanies him to the door, and bows his farewell by bending his head to the floor. He is trained likewise to pick up a handkerchief, glove or fan that has been dropped and to return it to the. owner. He is taught, further, to walk with “proud. and prancing steps” when out with his mistress. The Tight Rope Walker. We need two corks and four matches. The matches we insert into one of the corks in such a way that they form the arms and legs of the little man, as shown in figure. These arms and legs we can bend in all directions, giving the little man all the possible positions of a tight rope walker. The head we make of a round piece of cork, the nose of a small chip of cork, which we insert into the head; the mouth we cut with a penknife, and the eyes as well as eyebrows we burn in with a red-hot piece of wire. To balance our little man on the rope we cruelly stick two forks in his body. A PUZZLE 0 re 3 i “SOMEBODY HAS TAKE Er N MY times wonder if they will grow up as good friends as they now are, if they will mate and match up as well to- gether ten years from now. Sometimes the other boys, knowing they are really good friends, like to urge them on and set them to fighting, and they are foolish enough to let those other boys get them to do this, better. De you know of any other boys who ought to stop quarreling with their friends ?>—Brooklyn Eagle. Horse No Bigger Than a Dog. A French scientific journal an- nounced a few weeks ago that the smallest horse in the world had just arrived in New York City. Sixpence, it said, his name was, and it gave his height as seventy centimetres. Now, however, the same journal says with some glee that Sixpence has been de- throned since a smaller horse has just been discovered in a French circus. This horse is four years old and only sixty-five centimetres in height. His name is Prince Asha, and he is the son of two small Iceland horses or ponies. Why his stature is so remarkably small scientists are unable to explain. A photograph shows that Prince Asha is only about the size of an ordi- nary dog, and much smaller than the school girl who was holding the dog.— New York Herald. Teaching Dogs Politeness. A school for dogs has been estab- lished in Paris with the object of teaching not letters, but politeness The school room is furnished with or tables and rugs to give the ne®essary “local color” to the sur Te ma RE NX HI wi TRE md ue i Wal aie ¥ X& on i > 7 fi 1 PICTURE. ., - OWN ih EY 7 \ vB ty 0 rR BALL OF YARN.” THE CULPRIT? as shown in figure. cision in one of his legs and give the thread forming the rope a slight slope | to one side, we can make him walk from one corner of the room to the other.—New York Tribune, If we make an in- Queer Home of a Mouse. Mice are to be found the world over, and nearly always infest the haunts of men. They often take queer no- tions into their heads about where they shall make their homes, and one of the oddest of these is here recorded. The mouse built a nest in the tea kettle, and as the lid was not open enough to allow ingress and egress by *way of it, even if the mouse could have reached it, the little animal went in and out by way of the spout. This answered very well until the little fele low grew too fat to get through, as he did in time, and one day stuck fast in the spout and died there. The Busy Bee. Great, indeed, is the amount of work which a busy bee will do in a day. Every head of clover consists of about sixty flower tubes, each of which con- tains a very small quantity of sugar. Bees will often visit a hundred differ- ent heads of clover before retiring to the hive. and in order to obtain the sugar necessary for a load must, there- tore, thrust their tongues into about 6000 different flowers. A bee will make twenty trips a day when the clover patch is convenlent to the hive and thus will draw the sugar from 120,000 different flowers in the course of a single day’s work. One Way to Play Marbles. The boys of Arabia have a curious way of playing marbles. The marble is placed in the hollow between the middle finger and the forefinger of the left hand, the hand being flat on the ground and the fingers closed. The forefinger of the right hand is then pressed firmly on the end joint of the middle finger, which pushes the middle finger suddenly aside, and the forefin- ger slips out with sufficient force to propel the shooter very accurately.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. The number of Jews in New York roundings, The dog pupils are trained City is estimated at 650,000 An Exceptional Accomplishment. She didn% know much Latin; She had never studied Greek; . Yet she met with admiration . Which she didn’t have to seek. For in getting off a street car She created no delay; She didn’t travel backward, But stepped out the proper way. —Washington Star. Stationary. “There's no progress about him.” “No? But he’s still doing business at the old standstill.—Philadelphia Press. ‘Rather Rough on Pa. “What is a vacumm, ma?” “That part of your father that is di- rectly under his hair.”—New York Press. Unappreciative. “Willie, if yer knew how beneficial mud baths is youse wouldn't put up sech a holler!”—New York Journal. Nothing Doing. “What is the matter with Bills?” “Worring over business affairs.” “I didn’t know he had any business.” “That's it. He hasn’t.”—Indianapolis News. Discounted. First American Boy—‘“My papa lives like a prince.” s Second American Boy—“That’s rcti- ing. My papa lives like the president of a irust.”—Detroit I'ree Press. . Porfectioe, “Do you think perfection is ever actually, attained in this life?” asked the serious youth. “Yes,” answered Miss Cayenne; “some people become perfect bores.” —Washington Star, The Disappointed Boy. “Gracious Bobby,” said the second Mrs. Jencks, nee Ann Teek, to her step- son; “what are you crying about?’ “Boo-hoo!” sobbed the boy, “papa promised me a new mamma, an’ you ain’t new at all.”—Philadelphia Record. Another Public Benefactor. Hewitt—*“That plumber claims to be & public benefactor.” Jewitt—“How is that?” Hewitt— “He says that it is a dis- grace to die rich, and that he has saved a good mny men from disgrace.”—New York Sun. y The Only Way, “Ah, Reginald, dearest,” she sighed, “but how can I be sure that you will not grow weary of me after we have been -married a little while?” “I don’t know,” he answered, ‘“un- less we get married and see.”’—Chicago Record-Herald. Easy Proposal. “If I only had an ambassador at the court of love!” sighed the bashful swain. “A” minister would be good enough for me,” replied the demure maiden. “Arabella!” \ “Herbert! And so they were married.—New Orleans Times-Democrat, Suppresscde Tather—‘“Another foolish question and you go to bed!” Willie—“But this ain't foolish! I only want to know what holds the sky up an’ why ducks don’t bark, and if—!"—New York Journal. Her Observation. “Miss Gloriana,” said the college ath- lete in the outing suit, resting on his oars a moment, ‘let us co-educate a little in rowing. Leave the tiller, come and sit by me and take this other oar.” “But this is not co-education, Mr. McCorkle,” she said, noticing that they were a long distance from all the others, ‘This is segregation.” And she put the boat about.—Chicago Tribune. “| SUFFERED TERRIBLY WITH FEMALE WEAKNESS ;” SAYS MRS. ESTHER M. MILNER. “| Had the Headache Con- : tinually--Couid Not Do My § Work--Pe-ru-na Cured.” = Mrs. Esther M. Milner, DeGraff Ohio, writes: “I was a terrible sufferer [rom jemale weakness and had the headache continually. I was not able to do my house- work for my husband and my- self. I wrote you and described my condition as near as pos- gible. Yow recommended Pe- runa. I took four bottles and was completely cured. I think Peruna a wonderful medicine and have recommended it to my friends with best results.’ —Mrs. E. M. Milner. Miss Mamie Groth, Platteville, Wis., writes: ‘Accept a grate- ful gitls thanks for the wonderful ful help I have received through the use of Peruna. Although I looked well and strong I have for several years suf- fered with frequent backache, and would for several days have splitting headaches. I did not wish to fill my system with pois- onous drugs, and so when several o my friends advised me to take Peruna, I asked my physician what he thought of it. He recommended it, and so I took it and am entirely without pein of any kind now.”’— Miss Mamie Groth. Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, has had over fifty years’ experience in the treatment of fe- male catarrhal diseases. He advises women ’ 08080 GIRS. ESTHER MM, MILNER, free of charge. If you are suffering from any female derangement write him a description of your symptoms and he will give you the benefit of his experience in the, treatment of women’s diseases. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. 5000002000000000 ORIRRITATIONS, BABYS DELIGHT --.2iI MOTHER'S COMFORT CHAFINGS,ITCHINGS, Rashes, Heat, Perspiration, Lameness, and Soreness no other application so soothing, cooling, and healing zs a bath with CUTICURA SOAP, followed by gentle anoint- ings with CUTICURA, the Great Skin Cure. relief for skin-tortured babie No amount of persuasion cani It means instant s and rest for tired mothers. nduce mothers who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautifiers to use any others for pre- serving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands of infants and children. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. Together they form the only speedy, economical, and infallible cure of itching, scaly, and crusted humours, rashes, and irritations of the skin, scalp, and hair from infancy to age. Guaranteed absolutely pure Sold ugha! the world. British Depot: F. NEwBERY & Sons, 27 Charterhouse London, E. PotTER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Sole Props., Boston, U. ok CANADA'S GAME FIELDS. They Are in No Danger cf Ever Be- coming Game-Barren. To one who knows what the vast solitude of Northern Canada really mean the dread of game extermina- tion seems rather uncalied for. The latest census of Labrador gives it a population of one man to every 35 square miles. This can Hardly be called inconvenient crowding. There are almost as many persons in a sin- gle East Side New York block as there are in the whole of Labrador. Why should game become extinct in this region? The numbers killed by man must surely he quite insignificant. The same conditions obtain in Northern Ontario, the greater part of the north- west territories, and a very large part of British Columbia, The date is not far distant when there will not be sufficient game and to spare for the sportsman who is content to take the bitter with the sweet and to leave be- hind the luxuriousness of the fashion- ess cof the fashionable resort. SCIENTIFIC AGRICULTURE. Not Enough Attention Paid to It by Young Men. Secretary Wilson believes that not cnough attention is paid to scientific agriculture by the colleges of to-day, and he has taken up the agitation of this matter as a hobby. Wherever he makes a speech, he tells his hearers that this department utilizes the ser- vices of every young man it can find who has a thorough training in some branch of scientific agriculture. There’! is a great demand for this kind of ser- | vice, and the department has the ut-: t most difficulty in holding on to its ex- perts becauss of the growing outside calls that arc being made on them. There are about 2,000 people in the de- partment of agriculture who. are en- gaged in scientific agriculture work, yet hardly one of them came into the government service fully equipped. There are scme fifty agricultural col- leges in the country calling for com- petent teachers, and some 60 or 70 agricultural experiment stations where there is always an opening for a trained scientist. Manufactures Artificial Marble. A new process for the manufacture of artificial farble hag been patented in Berlin, Germany, Asbestos dyeing materials, shellac and ashes are pound- ed into a stiff mass and subjected to high pressure. The produet is sur- prisingly rich and tough, not brittle, is easily worked by means cf tocls, can be given a fine polish, and in appear- ance cannot be distinguished from the genuine marble, For years I had been a sufferer with chronic stomach trouble, pressure of gas and distress of my bowels. I contracted what the doctor pronounced a low type of malaria. I could not take solid food at all, and only a very little of the light est diet would create fever and vomit- ing. The druggist sent me a box of Ri- pans Tabules, saying he sold more Ri- pans than anything else for stomach trouble. I not only found relief, but be- lieve I have been permanently cured. At druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a year. = it : = : 3 IT See THE UNIVERSITY OF KOTAE DAME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. FULL COURSES IN Uconomics and History, Ncience Pharmacy, IL cal and Classics, Letters, Journalism, Art, i 2 Law, Civil, Mechani=- Electric {1 Engineering, Architec- are. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Conraes, ¥ oll coms Free to students who have com- Ploted the studies required for admission into the Junior or Senior Year of any of the Collegiate Courses. Rooms to Rent, moderate Charge to students over seventeen preparing for Collegiate Courses. A limited number of Candidates for the Ecclesi- astical state will be received at special rates. ite wars’s Hell, for boys under 13 years, is unique in the completeness of its equipment. The 59th Year will open September 9, 1902. Catalogues Free. os REV. A. MORRISSEY. C.S. (C.. I'resident. a SE Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in halk, Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “‘something just as good.” P. N. U. 33, "03 |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers