SE TS. s Rare - Isola 1igainst of ex- archi- south- ze and anding ile the 1d ter- wvilion, ticated de, be- 1aTTOW below d into h con- Carry xuber- ns. le for yf fur- rT any bulk yropor- nf the se and have ard to how- terest scture, rooms ng on th the { peb- 1 ‘with c low, ipping poet's from anguid water es and 1g mo- weed xreens made ed for lecora- a hot 2tched TS ap- 1odern ' cool- AW, go all rf jus- assure ce by linist. that a was er by ch he an ins in as ip the eeded magic violin, 0 the AESITro th an e had ad io nagni- oraer e had istake tator, entity ¥, he s the ertain vithin then with t and fiers, nany I but was le in on In Ir 25 ng a agon e the and ared men- * His beneficent intentions? wt nN § YY 2 a b { gst £ is a r > ' 2 B A SERMON I'OR SUNDAY 2 Devanes ands dnined fuike} JAPS ARE PROGRFSSIVE | Yet Japan's entire sncome is not nait BIG RANCH. cause 2 Pagiay lower. It is a well-known as-large as that of New York city. The A S0GO0A Pyrets Wash fact that the young of the human species hn = national debt was $253,099,500. The ) cre Garden Patch in as A STRONG DISCOURSE ENTITLED, {is inferior in strength and activity to the { INTERESTING NARRATIVE ABOUT | [2ona’ ¢¢ “ti sh : ' ’ "| young of many of the lower animals True, + ES stock of golg was estimated at $62. ington, 5 ’ ¥ 3 s. - : . : #. AN ADVANCE ORDERED. we walk round the cradle of the’ sieeping THEIR ODD LITTLE ISLES 600,000. The total amount of silver in | wu. Babcock of Walla Walla, and BRAKEMAN KILLED. ———— jfnt Yih soft and reverent step, and To5P oF oo 5 ph eirculation was $20,400,000, and of pa- | ig. p. Benson, of Tacoma, owners of ’ y this is fitting. Heaven itself looks down e Pooulation of Japan is Over 43, | por money, $61.300.000. : i a vey Tr— — The Rev. Dr, John B.adams Tellsaf tlie] 1 0 0 SE i ie om aT Coie rac ory p Mii ig FEY w the largest single ranch in Washing- Butier County Man Arrested, Charged Law of 1 rogress as Exewmplified In the | jf it is too strong to say that God stations pj > the Lountry Rapidly = : ce, thee ict ood of the Japanese, { ton, and probably the largest In the : i ’ ? g Waxing Strong of the Infant — We |, quaternion of guardian angels at the four ing in Wealth—Rice the Chief Food | is the most important crop, and in! northwest were in Spokane recently. With Causing the Death of Should Seize Our Inheritance. gorners of every fits crib ia the Jareg and Principal Crop. 1900, 205,667,080 bushels were pro- | ur. Benson was enroute from the George R. Flannigan. opeed Bre wi 2g Jeon, 2p: righ a ay Piety a Neatly t i + totam duced. Rice land is worth nearly three | ranch to Prosser, Wash., and Mr. Bab — bs o £ pf usand is g - i » i . : : i Sit of iw ee York sl on of what the child will be, rather than from Nearly ons Os hi oa eT Dine arable land, and I 1900} sock was on his way to the hig Lynn Scott, a young man of Buffa- the Ron v. Dr. John KE. Adams, pastor of | #0Y. Perception of what it now is Prise Yhe mpre Of Japan, wieh 2D nearly 7,000,000 acres were cultivated janch at Trinidad. lo township, Butler county; has been Grace M. E. Church. preached his closing ot EE aman A i To or Eig Stusre mee, a as rice fields. A great quantity of Tige The ranch owned by these two men ; Placed under arrest on an information sermons Sunday. During his pastorate of ’ pee y five hundred islands, however, are | js used in the manufacture of sake, comprises 6.000 s. which they | for manslaughter. He is charged a little mor ] he ¥ iad It cannot stand, nor walk, nor even creep. |; : i : s : ; = I $ acres, ac 3 3 : a little mo: than two years he has had 1 4 inl Tc 4 Ye , | inhabited, the remaining isles being | and in 1900 173,051,000 gallons were d 24.00 Tr 1 - with causing the death of George R. ithe stisc The debt of the church, | It cannot think. It does not know. Ii > ts 3 vpwn, and 24,000 acres held by lease. i ) > $20,000, was cz ated in January, 1903, the | as no true perception, nor any mental ac. | mere heaps of rocks. The chief | produced from 27,789 establishments. It is 50 miles from one end to the | l|aDDigan, a young West Penn rail- mortgage burned and the church. is now | tion whatever, apart fron what we call |islands are the Hondo, or “Main Barley was raised in 1900 on 1,579,096 | other The land is in a section where road brakeman, son of James Flanni- free from incumbrance. Sunday morning ipsiingt, It'is utterly without the moral | Land,” area 87.771 scuare miles; Shi- | acres, yielding 42,591,056 bushels; rye | {p ; hare © gan, of Butler. While at work on a DE A bh a without love, without hate, |, } a os 17g eg= | [DT€e years ago there were 900 square | freight train going from Butler to Al: Sr dus preached om "An Advanes BF BoD it h. Though bo. | KOKU, south of and separated from | on 1,697850 acres, yielding 37,176,867 fids wi Si : 0 gone FIO 2h dered.” The text was from Exodus xiv: 0 re, t fait hough bz miles without a single settler. Mr. | legheny a few weeks ago Flannigan 15: ‘Speak unto the chi ildren of Israel, longin ta Lo Rigdon, J od, 3¢ Fnowy | Hondo by shallow channel, area | pushels;” wheat on 1,147,747 acres, Babcock purchased it about five years | was struck on the head by an ns that they go forward.” Dr. Adams said: | @ little of God as Herbert 8 Snencer vsed | 7630 square miles; Kiushin, west of ylelding 21,006,766 bushels. In 1900, |, d believed it 1a b rell’] b ord 3 | to insist he and the rest of mankind knew. = py i J ago an elieved it could be we eer keg thrown into the car from al? ny ee ved, te = 1t is nothing but a Drcdls of Crooner, | Snikekmn, with the Bunge chathel be- | 736,933 acres were devoted to the silk supplied with water and be made a | the steep hillside near the track. His the Red Sea. Before them was the sea. Prganized life, with inherent capabilities | tWeen, area 15,587 Square miles; Yezo, ante. and 120,702 acres to tea, which good paying farm. skull was crushed and death resulted. Suread: out for mi: and Yeaguen: aed they hot yet manifest. It hasn't ability enough | north of Hondo, with an area of 30,143 produced 63,210,100 pounds. Japan The good wheat land is on a bench | Flannigan’s father investigated the [28 Soir bios jo boat, fa, Pontos ea LE 2 alt are ils gad Fon of Ane raises more cereals and other food | 1100 feet above the Columbia river | ¢2Se aon a result made information Bho nnn ot Phe Tohind then and | stage of its being. Wcre it not for that | 03st of China. area 13. Square | products than she needs herself. SO | 3ng two miles back from the river. aszins 0 colt. Scoil wos, released on chariots, with tata rs and skilled first miracle of Providence ia human Life | miles. even should she be cut off by Russia A 30-horse power traction engine is 35 bait. commmnders, tert on. thors tare or —the mother’ 2 love—it would perish from The Japanese Archipelago occupies | from the rest of the world she could used to pump the water from the Col- = destruction. On either side, it would seem, toy Sarth on the fay of 1s bizth. the same latitude as that part of Amer- | support her armies as well as her own umbia back upon the bench and into In a fght With revolvers ai short were formidable obstructions—mountains, ut wait 2 little and sec. Wait until ica between Savannah and Halifax. | inhabit 3 p range between Constable Thomas , iy a etwe Y - | inhabitants. i i . OF fortronsts. or sometning that could not | the mother’s fostering care, aad the fath. : ia a big reservoir holding 100,000 gal- Washabaugh, of Greensburg, and Ital- Tis pasted. dor the Ioatlizes won us ov er’s Trees aoty SE he instruc. | Formosa, which Japan obtained as The =oil is held for the most part ly,ns” "Water from thic reservoir is BIS in i Bis ug, an Th 3 a : tion cf the schools and the churches, and the result of the Chino-Jananese war, | by > peonie w r i i ) ; : : a oe for tar. a0 all the various appliances of Christian civ: | jjes between the same parallels as TE phe ee anes os Lato town, hs offen was shiol twice Prem p Hi pees: of enh | lization have wrought their vast part in he hict ne foudnl gy 2 point where it will be handy for the | and was seriously injured. One bul- ful Je emity to which they had been re- connection with the uaiversal law of de. | Tampa and Havanna. e _chlet | average holding is about ome acre, |yis traction engine that runs the |let entered his mouth, carrying away- duced; whereunon thai holy man appealed Te SE and progrosseeand then i group 's separated from the Pulp which is valued -at about 180 yen. As plough, and is also used for domestic | his lower front teeth, the end of his to God for help, and then came, probably | tf¢ ¢allC, now become the nan. ow | pines to the south by the Bashi chan- | a result of the Buddhist teaching the tongue, and lodged in the cheek. The nos wonderful and indescribable the result! i : the For z or a purposes. < i Ii tons s of thunder Hal sounded fu, tas That Hitle child now Stanly eroct and sie nel, from China by the Formosa chan- | people never ate beef, and regarded A 75-horse power engine and boiler second bullet struck Washabaugh in the roar of the 0 this strange orders | veys the high places of the carth. He | nel, 90 to a hundred miles wide; from | butter, milk and cheese as poisonous. work on the river bank near the trac- | he shoulder, making an ugly wound. “Wherefore criest thou on Nes Sh climbs the heights, and, walkin; with God | Corea by Broughton channel, less than | Since the cnening of Japan to the tion engine, and with a 12-inch centri- Two Pliers Jrom the officer's Tevalyer unto the children of Israel that they go Dy on Jorps of the mouatais, he gee 25 miles wide: from the Russian island | thought of the west. the government foal es Srrigato the tation load Stns Soomsenpe Bara, and he is S ec 3 ne ars : 3 or 7 : 2 ’ 1 E y Tops : he lit od an OE Ny nll He ini of Saghalien by La Perouse strait, 25 | has sought to encourage the establish- where the alfalfa is to be raised. es . 19, by fatally Burk : Shag ig Bl ee De is superipr to cuns and syctems. His | Miles wide, and Kamtehatka by the | ment of dairies and the breeding of The entire ranch is new, raw land rn Sanghi of lewh 2 3 tnnito tat Tes > heart thrills with Isati re urile strai ot wee ¢ 50 ; i : : ? : Pan, /aynesourg, was chok identally, let as attend to the oral hott hs Wid pela rh are } Kurile strait. Between the Japanese cattle, horses and sheep, so that in and this pring the first ploughing |to death to-day irom a candy bean raeanings and uses of the text. The case g 5 solar in- archipelago and the Asiatic coast of | 1899 there were in Japan 1,451,530 : . 5 a : . y . a > fluences. Ide sees. Hc knows. He un- | i, : > ? was done. A 75-horse power traction | entering her windpipe. The parents of cceptional in nothing but the Corea d Manchuria lies the Sea of | head of cattl d 1,5 ) h b . the moral truths and ua. | dcrstands. He reasons, He feels within TOR 2nd Mpnohuna i wr | pead of cattle and 1,500,000 horses, engine is used to draw the big plough, | the child were at Higbee when the ac- en al always himself the mighty raas He calls out | Japan. ; a Spinning and weaving have been the having five three-bottom gangs, cut-| cident occurred, and owing to the dis- and. everywhere presant among the people i Gods and God answers big By The scep- The population of japan was esti- | most important industries of Japan ting 18 feet. This spring 2000 acres | tance from ‘a physican nothing could of God. Indeed, the principles here in- aT a Son , and the crown mated at 43,152,998, according to the | since time immemorial. Before the in- have. hoor ploughed up at the rate |Dbe dome to save the little girl's life. . general and, the anal :ogies of | Ui" oon place on his brow. Henceforth’ last census, taken in 1898. There are | troduction of machinery there were of 60 acres a day. Next spring from | MT- ‘Corwin recently published a news- et I think ory are pushin oS he is king, and alive forevermore, with a | four classes in the following propor- | spinning wheels in nearly every home. 2000 to 5000 roa ior will be | Paper at Ellwood City, Pa. this text as the law of the universe ap: iio fat will rule the world and conquer | tions; Imperial family, 53; nobility, | Osaka is now the centre of the cotton loughed. To operate this plough ne.| A man believed to be John Shall: plied to the church. The physical occasion | 42 : oo ih ie | 4951; gentry, 2,105,696; common peo- | industry, where there have been erect- | 2 Cu sncC. kis . | gle, on his way from Pittsburg to of this text, in all of its essential features, Such is the law of progress which is le, 41.050.568 I hes q 5 v i i cessitates four men and four horses. Glen Campbell, was struck by an en- finds its duplicate in the oral occasion i Appjed it 25 church, both collec: pe ¢ aan n these Ques iy ed so many factories that it has been One man and a four-horse team sup: bi 0 pas Bod di Yin, x of this service. We are the children of | ively and individually. We are here sol- | include 1.575 Ainos, of Hokkaido, | called the Fall River of Japan. In A d coal. One engincer, one 7 : 2 pe LE og Sr ves. I can prove it by St. £ynly commandad to rise up aad ice our | 70.801 Japanese living abroad, and | 1900 there were 1,135,111 spindles in a one plough Coder Gh Siva ual ig 2 Paul “i Yo bo Chriss. then nee ye) Anacriance ever before in all the ages 12,664 foreigners. In addition, how- | operatiom in 79 different spinning os : 1 are ro Bi ng old Abraham’s seed, and foi according to | \VaS there such a concurreat blast of trum : are the 3,000,000 inhabitants of a1 ; 1= o-- | Plete the crew. The engine takes two | sided in Pittsburg. In one of his the promise.” The Red Sea is before us | Pets from all quarters of tie § lobe oaling ever, are the : inhabitants of | mills, employing 12,170 men and 43,375 tons of coal a day and about 4000 | pockets was found an account book of Not that Red Sea that washes the sands of the church to go forward, Tet the co | Formosa, so that the present popula- | women. About $100,000,000 are now gallons of water. The coal had to be! the Burnside Supply Company. He Arabia and- floats the commerce of the | ums for and the march begine tion is estimated at 50,000,000. Hondo, | invested in Japanese cotton mills. taulod this Boring from a half to|had red hair and was rather well . East, but the Red Sea of moral hindrance the chief island, is the most densely Although China is the original home s 1ti- | dressed. - —a sea that is deeper than the Atlantic “I Gave Them Myself.”® . Sag three-quarters of a mile. The culti ; Oooie L 2 ? . - ed, : y : e H. C. Frick Coke Company has and wider than the Pacific. Phar S434 Brmother to Wig one dare’ When populated having 381 to the square | of laccuer work, Japan now excels in vated land will be put into wheat and | The H. C. Frick Cok C h aoh’s army is pursuing us. Not the an- my children were young I thought the mile, and its southern districts have | this art and has driven out Chinese let the contract to Patrick Reagan, of tiquated Egyptian division, now extinct, but the infernal brigade itself, still in the field and strictly up to date in every par- ticular—and these enemies from the neth- ermost pit, inspired with inconceivable ha- tred and, in the words of Milton, ‘armed with hell flames and furv,” and followi ing us in overwhelming numbers and with un- appeasabple fiercen 3 Such is our situa- tion this very hour, and as we stand to- day amid these threatening environments, the captain of our salvation calls to us from heaven, “Go forward,” and in obedience to this order lies our duty, our safety and our happiness. Let us apnroach our subject step by step. God is the author of the universe. ‘The universe existed in the Divine Mind as an ideal before it existed in itself as a substance. The ‘deal was complete and per fect as well as Leautiful and good; but the first states of the actual . averse did not realize that perfect ideal of the Di- vine Mind. What then? Did God fail? Did His active energv “rove unequal to By no means. God gave the universe this imperfect form at first, not because He could not do other- wise and had to abandon His ideal but be- cause He saw it better to realize His ideal gradually Hironsh the law of progress than to realize it r by an act of erea- tive power. 7 ard of His own 12 universe a crude mas3 of unore nized in trer and force; an then, intr. sting His sublime work to the law of progress operated by respon- sible intelligences, He directed that in due time all should be reduced to order, har- mony and beauty. This is Me story of the universe in its entirety and in its parts. This is the story of the worlds and of their productions. This is the story of minerals, vegetables and animals; of general species and individuals; of angels, women and men. This is the story of matter in all its combinations, of life in all its forms, and of mind in all its phenomena. Lh rief, so far as we have yet learncd, story of all creation, and of all pro tion. Let me oak. illustrate what I mean by the God's ideal for the oak is a majestic tree, six feet in diameter and ter feet in height, with mighty roots taking deep hold of the rocks and mighty branches sweeping the clouds—a very giant that can wrestle with the storms and play with the lightnings. But in its beginning, as it sprouts from the acorn, the oak 1s a tiny shoo ®nwhich the foot of a little child could effectually crush. God makes it thus and says to it, “Go forward;” and then the lit- tle plant, obedient to the Divine com- mand, through cloud and sunshine and changing season, soon goes on and out an up, until at last, by means of the law of progress in the form of growth, it has Foltl ed the word of God, and stands be- fore the eyes of men in all the imposing grandeur of its towering and solid matur- ity. Take the cagle as another illustration. God’s ideal for the cagle is an imperial bird of great size and strength, with amazing keenness of vision and with pin- tons for majestic flight, the mountain crag its castle, and its pleasure ground the sky. Such is the Divine ideal for this noble bird. But the young eaglet emerges from the shell a feeble little creature, and if You could see it during the first ‘week or two of its exis tence, and could stroke with Your hand its soft yellowish down an look into its pale bluish eyes, its feeble ness would propabl v excite your pity. But the little thing feeds and exercises, it ws and strengthens, until at last, un- the operation of this law of progress, soar from the nest, launch into the air, gaze directly into the noonday sun, down the storm clouds under its seven foot spread of wings, and sail from continent to continent, through the oceans of azure above, over the oceans that roll del ow. But in this discussion we must rise out of life into mind, and then still asc from the mtellectual to the spiritual. will, therefore, consider man as an illus- on of the truth we are “pursuing. s idea) for man is a most exalted and 1e being, with mental and moral en- ndous scope, so im- in parts and powers , that 1t seems the whole der culminate in him. God de- in IIis own image, intended and companionship communion nself, determined to make him His the earth 1, and. pr e the government Him forever. 1 is an astoni 1 nere last on to shar u ith very best thing I cox uld do for them was to give them myself. So I spared no pains to talk to them, to read to them, ta teach them, to pray with them, to be a ovine companion and friend to my chil ren “I had to neglect my house often. 1 had no time to indulge myself in many things, which I should | have liked to do. I was so busy adorning their minds and cultivating their heart’s best affection that I could not adorn their bodies in fina clothes, though I kept them neat and com: fortable at all times. “I have my reward now. My sons are ministers of the Gospel; my grown-up daughter is a Christian woman. I’ have plenty of time now to sit down and rest, plenty or time to keep my house in order, plenty of time to indulge myself, besides going 2 about my Master's business wher ever He has nced of me. I have a thou sand memories of their childhood to com: fort me. N that they have gone out into the world, I have the swest con sciousness of having done all I could te make them ready for whatever work God calls them to do.”—Life and Faith. Covering Sins. There are two ways of covering sin— man’s way and Ged’s way. You cover your sins, and they will have a resurrec tion some time; let God cover them, and neither devil nor man can find them. There are four expressions in the Bible with regard to where God puts sins: He puts them behind His back. Ti God has forgiven me, who shall bring a cnarge against me? He has blotted them out as a thick cloud. You see 2 cloud to-night, and to- morrow there isn’t a cloud to be seen. He casts them into the depths of the . Some one has said, “Thank God that Is a sea and not a river; a river might dry up, but the sea cannot.” The great: cst bles ing that ever comes to me this side of heaven is when od forgives me. Have you been fo The fourth exy ion is that He re moves them as rar as the East is from the West. Do you know how far that is? some good mathematician will fig: + sins, us ou leanse us from all un I'hen make sure that you DL Mood r Toincipics of Mor: ality, Possibly there is too litt] tention giv- en by the leaders of religious thought to the relations of sin to society and to im- pressing the duty of abstract righteous. upon all classes of men. It is not sin in its relation to God that we mean, but sin as it affects man's value to him- self and to society—the socio logical aspect of a violation of God's law. There are some men who can be rene hed only in this He is faithful § and to > 13, 1teousness. forgiven.— way. Sin against (Ged has no terrors for them. The thouzht of future accounta- bility does not appcal to them; but its temporal consequences, its e Ss on civ il and social life and upon the sinner him- self, may, if rightly presented, have a deterrent influence. ~The world to- day is blinded by vicious ideas of right and wrong. Sin, in some quarters, is less ob noxious than a breach of social etiquette. Iniquity is justified in many quarters if it can be made to pay. But society is safe only as correct principles of morality dom- inate it, and correct ideas will come only through leaders of religious thought.— United Presbyterian. Wrong Acting From Wrong Thinking. In China a man is required to mourn three years for the dea tn of his father, 100 days for the death of his mother, and not at all for the death of his.wife. In- deed, a Chinaman would feel disgraced if he showed orrow on account of the death of his wife. This tells its own storv of life in a heashen country with a civilization thousands of years old.—Re- formed Church Record. Simplicity. Simplicity is the crow jewel of all virtues. Great messa reat truths, great discove e events are ever simple € nDimpiicity makes the g and the ob scure to places of eminence is the bright charm of inn 100d and 1 i the { the old and learned.— 475 inhabitants to the sauare mile. There were 78 towns having a popu- lation of 20,000 or over. Because of the insular character of their home the Japanese in recent years have taken a greater interest in their army, so that at the beginning of the war with Russia they possessed ships with a total tonnage of 200,000. Aside from four torpedo gunboats, 20 torpedo boat destroyers, with 10 build- ing, 46 torpedo boats, with many more building, Japan's fleet has a displace- ment of 111,974 tons. It consists of six battleships, six armored cruisers and 14 protected cruisers. Of the battle- ships four have a displacement of more than 15.000 tons each. The re- mainder are of more than 12,000 tons. All are supposed to have a speed of 18 knots an hour. The armored cruisers are of 10.000 tons. The pro- tected cruisers range from 2700 to 4700 tons disnlacement. One has a speed of 24 knots an hour. Japan has four well-equipped dockyards, capable of both constructing and repairing ships. In the Japanese navy in 1902 tuere were two admirals, nine vice-ad mirals, 225 rear admirals, 65 captains, 119 commanders, 167 lieutenant com- manders, 220 lieutenants, 305 sub-lieu- tenants, besides other subordinate of- ficers and 31,688 sailors. The Japanese army has a war foot- ing of 421,000 men. -Military service is compulsory, and the army has adopted Germany as a model. It is divided into three groups, the perman- ent establishment, of 7500 officers and 190,600 men; the reserve, of 35,000 ad- ditional men; and a ‘territorial re- serve” which would bring another 200,- 000 men into line. The artillery num- bers 1200 guns, and the cavalry 90,0060 horses. Since Japan was opened to the world it has been rapidly growing in wealth. Six great banks and 1802 smaller in- stitutions carry on the banking busi- ness. The Bank of Japan, founded in 1882, has a capital of $15,500,000. In the 681 banks there were deposits in 1900 amounting to $139,534,330, or $2.75 per capita. The unit of circula- tion is the yen, worth 50 cents, which is divided into 100 sen. Smaller coins are 5, 10, 20 and 50 silver sen pieces. zFivefold has been the increase of the foreign trade in the last five years. Ja- pan’s imports and exports in 1901 amounted to $272,406,000. The leading countries from which Janan obtains ber imports, and the value of the com- merce, are as fcllows: England, $35.- 656,800; United States, $31,224,600; China, $14,890,200; Germany, $14,451, - 800, and British India, $11,703,000. The United States leads as the market for Japanese exvorts, and in 1990 bought $26,145,000 worth. The British island of Hong Kong stands second with $19,- 521, China, $15,886,200; France, England, $5,577,500 and ,930,200. From imported in New International Encyclopedia, goods to the amount of $87,946,000. The same | authority gives Japan's exports in 1960. | 1900, according to The as $74,809,800. The total revenue of the govern- ment from all sources in 1901-92 amounted to $138,748,500, and the ex- penditures to $137,943,712. The reve- taxes on sake and other liquors, cus- toms duties and an income tax. Among for the c hr expenses ranks the army, hich $19,000,000 was appropriated in $10,000,00¢ adminis- educatio the navy, ion of justice, pensiovs. legislative departments, all parts of the world Japan. | "kets. wares from many of the world’s mar- In 1899 the value of the output of lacquer finished goods amounted to $2,280,114. Japanese porcelain has also brought wealth to the island em- pire, and the value of this product in 1899 was nearly $3,000,000. In 1899 the bronze and copper product was $691,875. The manufacture of paper employs a greater’ proportion of the Japanese people than it does in any other country. The 65,514 paper es- tablishments of Japan in 1899 turned out a product worth $8,272,754. ' The mineral denosits of Japan are not especially rich. Coal beds, how- ever, have been found sufficient to sup- ply the Jananese themselves for cen- turies to come. The coal output in 1899 amounted to 6,700,000 tons. Of iron the same year, 51,000,000 pounds. Copper, gold and lead are also found. but in no great quantities.—New York Thibune Review. Man and Sheep. A flock of 100 or more sheep, bleat- ing piteously in Starr Garden park, yesterday, attracted the attention of a Nineteenth district policeman, whose ‘Investigations revealed some- without a parallel at least in life. Henry Jarmon was the sheep, and it is about city driver oI the and of him that this item will tell. The aforesaid bluecoat was amazed when he saw the sheep clustered in the cen- tre of the park. He made his way through the assembled animals and was astonished to find Jarmon lying ! unconscious upon the ground. It re- quired only a short while to revive Jarmon, and he told to the sympa- thetic officer the story of his plight. He had driven the sheep for 42 miles without stoppage. He was due to deliver them in a Jersey town at a certain hour, and being conscientious he did everything to carry out his contract. The sheep bravely stood the ordeal of the long march, but Jarmon succumbed to fatigue. Jarmon must have been liked by the sheep, for no sooner did he give out and sink to the ground than they gathered about him, and, as if realiz. ing that disaster had befallen their friend, began the cries that finally brought timely assistance. Jarmon was revived with suitable refresh- ment, shooed his four footed compan- ions in line, and sheep and much loved guardian passed down Lombard strest en route for the South street ferry — Philadelphia Telegraps. Furniture Atmosphere. fiand Rapids, Michigan, ired tne bulk of the furniture until now it has practically no competitor, There are 10,000 skil- led wood-workers in its 40 factories, the’ value of whose annual output is about $12,000,000. Great ‘quantities of mahogany are imported from Cuba, Santo Domingo, Central America, and Aftica,ssand in many houses in the gradually , entrances and even porches are built of rare woods. Skilled design- ers, employed by manufacturers in | other cities, live in Grand Rapids, in | order to work in a nue is raised chiefly from the land tax, | furniture phere.—The World's Work. atmos- They All Went. A mother her was trying to impress on 4-year-old son the importance of fo bed early. know,” she began, tens always go to bed “the little with the ' he interrupted, along, “but 00.” goes oats. In addition to this the company is going into the sheep and cattle busi- ness, using the part unfit for cultiva- tion. As an indication of the size of the ranch, a strip 18 miles long and three miles wide and lying on the west side of Columbia river has been fenced. To do this necessitated four carloads of barbed wire. In addition to this a part of the ranch east of the river is also fenced. The ranch lies in Douglas, Kittias and Chelan coun- ties. Mr. Babcock and Mr. Benson are putting in 30 miles of telephone line over the ranch, which will be in op- eration in a few days. -In addition to these big holdings Mr. Babcock personally owns 11,000 acres of wheat land in the Eureka flat country, near Walla Walla, said to be some of the most valuable farming land in the vicinity. It is all under cultivation.— Spokane Spokesman-Review. Walked Himself Well. When told that he had but three months to live, a wasted shadow of a consumptive, Charles E. Norris of San Francisco, made up ¥is mind, three years ago, to fight death with all the force of his will. Today, says the San Francisco Chronicle, he iS strong and hearty, and the shadow of death has fled from him. His is a new cure for the dread con- sumption. He walks it away. Fe has tramped from the valley of death to sunny health, and expects to keep on tramping to the end of his days. His record now is 11,540 miles. His case is further evidence of the efficacy of the “open-air” cure, which physicians are now recommendirg. He has been asked to take others with him on his tramps, but has refused. unless they agree to go, as he is, pen- niless. “If they are able to afford the Iexuries of good hotels, snug beds, rich foods, they stand small chance of being cured,” he says. His last three years’ experiences have been of hardship and of health, and the one he could not have won, he says, with- out the other Norris is 63 years old. He had trav. eled extensively before he started on his consumption tramp. He knew life and men, and the knowledge gave him the courage it required to leave San Francisco with but $1.60 in his pocket and face the fight for life. His wife and daughter were dead, his brothers and sisters scattered and no one depended upon him. His money had been frittered away on doctors’ bills and medicines. The “Shaking Sickness.” The extraordinary malady known irom its curious symptoms as the “shaking sickness,” which is attacking the pupils at the girls’ schools and col eges of Basle and neighborhood shows a tendency to spread, writes ths Geneva correspondent of the London Express. The attacks commence grad ually with headaches and slight ner vous tremors, which increase until the victim becomes helpless, and, in ex treme cases, paralyzed. Dr. Thomas Linn gives it as his opinion that the malady is a form of spinal meningitis, and closely akin tg the “spotted sickness.” The disease is most common in schools where the ventilation is bad and where the sanitation is neglected Mower; of the family.” ns to be a blcom Uniontown, for the erection of 20 new ovens near Elm Grove. The works may be increased to 400 ovens. In all there are to be three new Frick plants erected in the southern part of Fayette county. James Risbin, of North Hunting- don township, was shot and killed by Thomas Stack. Risbin, John Tray, Martin Thornton and several others were driaking at a shanty on the out- skirts of Irwin when Stack came along. A dispute arose, it is said, as to the distribution of a quart of whisky. Twenty-eight passengers on a car of the Johnstown Street Railway Com- pany were more or less injured when the car left the tracks in the Eighth ward and plunged over the embank- ment into Stony creek. The car did not overturn, fortunately, and the in- juries of the passengers consist of bruises and cuts. John Lowery, of Loyalhanna, whiie visiting friends near Perryopolis, went swimming in the Youghiogheny river and is said to have been attacked by cramps causing him to drown. Marks about the head aroused suspieion of foul play. Nicholas Raugh, aged 17, was rid- ing to work on a coal train at Hazle- ton, when his dinner pail fell from his arm. He jumped, landing on the opposite track, where a passenger train struck fevering his hoad, Mrs. Barton Woodw ard, of Menellen township, Fayette county, was serious- ly injured in a runaway accident near Uniontown. The breaking of a hold- back strap is said to have frightened the horse. Engineers making the survey for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad short line from Confluence te Morgantown have completed the final survey to about three miles beyond Farming- on. him, The Westmoreland Passenger Rail- way Company has secured the right of way for its proposed line through Unity township, Westmoreland coun- ty, from Latrobe to Greensburg. Mercer probably has more spinsters than any town of its size in the State. A census recently taken shows there are 103 “old maids” in that town, out of a population of less than 2,000. Brigadier General John A. Wiley. of Franklin, has accepted the position of Chief Marshall of the parade on Pennsylvania Day at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis. Mrs. John Sarver, 63 years old, com- mitted suicide by hanging herself to the limb of a tree at her home, about one mile from Freeport. She had been ill for some time. William Merrill, of New Castile, was badly hurt by falling out of a second story window. His condition is seri- ous. The Bowser family will hold its family reunion on the W. P. Bowser farm, near Walk Chalk, on September 6 Louis Speece was killed in the mine of the H. C. Frick Coke Company, near Dunbar. He leaves a wife and family in the old country. Eva Koons, two years old, is dead bilt from injuries received from a hammock Governor S. W. fixed October 4 as ecution of John Cal’ at Vander by a fall Pennypacker has he date for the ex- ‘han, of Washing- ton county. Callihan was convicted of killing Moss Bay, colored, with a hatchet. George Conley, of Johnstown, was probanly fatally ht »y being caught 1 with lime, when it upset. near Seward. yenters® union re he agreement ontractors ar n May 1 v