Cave- No. 2 ny at have The liately ce and ~h 150 unica- n this No. 1 ly af- lo. 2. e few drawn en re- he list ive in- ck at rming- to the d Iron E Year, hief of depart- \creage 011,000 080,000 { year. rowing ent, as on July of 87.6 winter ent, as last of 77.8 spring cent, as nt last of 89.3 ated. United waukee, United ummaon- Milwau- o make Jury Is estigate, itself to the gen- so-called rself. years, a r, (Md.) of Mrs. ed Furst icide by cad, just tions for he meet- associa- for the § the sink- ormandie Hudson Norweg- Those vs Dodge ard the Storm of engineer, Y: Miss t $5,000. NTS. ewell to irs spent T. ge in the Matthews . Detroit, by insur- yer, was he alleged om David serving Federal burg, the ashington, ‘many for o rob the Jompany’s he Lake rations, at by two rdwell, 35 the door eath by a an throne rard’s son- Denmark. leration. rsburg an- \l Birileff f the Rus- on to Ad- d. ! informed ip Kansas ard of the ympany at > B. Cortel- 1tment of f Bel Air, ylican Nat- and, to fill resignation nator Louis had all gainst him States Dis- Judge S. Dowie’s at- ounting to off with in- 1t of the Cure For The Blues ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS REVER FAILED Health Fully Restored and the Joy of Life Regained ‘When acheerful, brave, light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that perfection of misery, the BLUES, it is @ sad picture. It is usually this way: She has been feeling *‘‘ out of sorts” « Ra G 28 Ue y gs y PLS for some time; head has ached and back also; has slept poorly, been quite rervous, and nearly fainted once or twice; head dizzy, and heart-beats very fast; then that bearing-down feeling, and during her menstrual period she is exceedingly despondent. Nothing pleases her. Her doctor says: ‘‘ Cheer up: you have dyspepsia; you will be all right soon.” But she doesn’t get ‘‘ all right,” and hope vanishes; then come the brood- ing, morbid, melancholy, everlasting BLUES. Don’t wait until your sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your courage gone, but take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound. See what it did for Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 819 12th Street, Louisville, Ky., niece of the late Gen- eral Roger Hanson, C.S.A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — “I cannot tell you with pen and ink what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. I suffered with female troubles, extreme lassitude, ¢the blues,’ nervousness and that all-gone feeling. Iwas advised to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it not only cured my female derangement, but it has restored meto perfect health and strength. The buoyancy of my younger days has returned, and I do not suf- fer any longer with despondency, as I did fore. I consider Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound a boon to sick end suffering women.” If you have some derangement of the female organism write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. What London Pays Policemen. A London policeman earns, as long as he remains a patrolman from $5.84 to $7.79 a week. He may lodge in a section house for only 24 cents a week, and get his board for $1.70. His uniform is supplied free. FITSpermanently cured. No fits ornervons- ness after first dav’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer,$2trial bottleand treatise free Dr. R. H. KLINE, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. There are in Germany twenty-one uni- versities. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, soften the gums.reduces inflamma- tion,allays pain,cureswind eolic, 25¢.a bottle Winnipeg, Manitoba, is said to be thz fastest growing city in the world. !do not balieve Piso’s Cure for Consump- tionhasanequal for coughs and colds.—-JorN F¥.Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 190). The production of quicksilver in 1904 is estimated at 3321 tons. German shopkeepers are appealing to the government to restrain the rap- idly growing tendency towards co- operative stores. BE HAPPY! The Discriminative Buyer selects Our Latest Model 4 Plaited Skirts Made to measure from the most serviceable and ~ popularcloths. Send belt, hip and front lengthmeasure, giv- § ing color of goods desired and price. At $2.98, $3.98 or $4.98. All charges prepaid and fit guaranteed, 229920932229 209%0 ded MADE IN ALL STYLES. Send for Booklet’ giving full description, BROWN MANUFACTURING CO . ZANESVILLE, OHIO. XTINE - (33: 31(a > FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to “4 rm of their scx, uscd as a douche is marvelously suc- cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrhea and nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for al! TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a boxy Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. THE R. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON, Mass. NEW DISCOVERY; gives D R O BES quick relief and cure« worst cases. Rend for book of testimonials and ays’ treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S BONS, Atlanta, Ga. P. NU. 29, 1905. y | zently squeezed into “}econtinues for several hours, and each Manhattan Skirt ‘Mfg. Co.,2 433 Sixth Ave., New York City. e CATGHING pm ° FISH WITH CORMORANTS %*. x * * %h * * ws How These Birds Are Utilized by the Ingenious Japanese. x * * kx kx x kx TERRAPIN AND GOLDFISH FARMS IN JAPAN. oe moms cami wa ° ing in Japan is lost in a o ' ! \ © very remote antiquity. At Roe | J _ ished, and there is a tradi- tion of its existenee upward of two ery in the early days, ‘and the names of some of Japan's greatest warriors not, however, give ¢mployment to many people and is not conducted in NOs. HE origin of cormorant fish- jeast a thousand years ago it is known to have flour- thousand years ago. Much romance and history are connected with the fish- and statesmen are associated with it. While a commercial enterprise, it does many places. It is confined to rivers, and the most extensive, interesting and River and most noted of the cormor- ant fishing villages is in the outskirts of the large city of Gifu. At the time of my visit, the chief cor- morant fisherman, whose ancestors for many generations had engaged in this fishery in the same locality. attired himself in the peculiar dress of the profession for the purpose of exhibit- ing his birds and the methods of handling them. Later he and all the other fishermen on the river went to a rendezvous and gave a practical de- monstration of cormorant fishing. The cormorants are controlled by means of a slender cord, which passes around the bird's breast and is tied in the middle of the back. The cord is made of woody fibers of the crypto- meria tree, with the exception of a short section next to the bird, which consists of whalebone. There is a sup- plemental cord tied around the neck at the lower end of the gullet for the purpose of preventing the fish from passing so far that they cannot be recovered. The iying of this cord is a delicate operation, for if too tight it may injure the bird and if too loose it will allow the fish to be swallowed. The fishery is conducted from boats, which are of a special type, being long, narrow dugouts, propelled primarily by paddles, but when en route to the fish- ing grounds often provided with a sail. Each boat has a crew of four men and a complement of sixteen cormorants. Late in the afternoon the boats start for a place in the river where fishing will begin, the cormorants being stowed away in pairs in bamboo bas- kets. The fishing grounds cover many miles, and operations are con- fined to successive sections of the river nightly, in accordance = with law. Siretches several thousands yards in length are set aside as imperial re- serves, on which no fishing is permit- ted. As soon as darkness prevails a blaz- ing fire of pine wood is kindled in the iron basket overhanging the bow of the boat, and the boats drift down stream together, sometimes in a mixed group, sometimes in a line extending across the river, each guided and pro- pelled by two men. The captain, stand- ing near the bow, manages twelve cor- morants and his assistant four, the cords being held between the fingers and frequently shifted as the birds move about. With the cormorants diving and darting in all directions, those of different boats often mingling, it is a wonder that they ‘do not soon become inextricably tangled, but so skillfully are they managed that the lines rarely become fouled. In a short time the cormorants’ gullets begin to bulge with ayu: when they are well filled the.birds.are pulled up to the gun- wales one by one and their catch is ‘ baskets. This — cormorant may fil to twenty times. Spectators usually go to the fishing .grounds in a kind eof barge, illumi- nated by lanterns, and eat their din- ner on board while waiting-at a con- venient point for the fishing boats to arrive. During the evening when I witnessed the fishery the seven boats in whose operations I was particularly interested averaged 700 or 800 fish apiecé, and the aggregate catch was worth $150—a very respectable sum to Japanese fishermen. The fishery is prosecuted with en- thusiasm by both men and cormorants, and the shouts of the fishermen, the hoarse croaking of the birds, the rush of the mountain stream, the splashing and creaking of the paddles, the hiss- ing of the embers as they fall into the water, the weird lights and- shadows combine to make a performance which a Westerner is not likely soon to for- get. its gullet fifteen TERRAPIN FARMS. The cultivation of water products has gone hand in hand with the fisheries, and in certain lines has attained greater perfection and extent than in any other country. The raising of ter- rapin, which with us. is an unsolved problem and has only recently been seriously considered, has for years been very successfully carried on by ile Japanese. I visited a terrapin farm near Tokio, “where 50.000 to 60,000 artificially grown terrapin are placed on the market annually. Without any outside aid or suggestions, the Japan- ese have evolved special methods for the cultivation of many kinds of mol- lusks, including the pearl oyster, the ark-shell, several claims, and various other lamellibranchs, and, in addition, the common oyster. That the Japanese should realize the importance of oyster culture is not strange; but that they should have taken it up a century before our mna- { tion was born and have recognized famous fishery is that in the Nagara #22" ns" "en" "a Pe se ee a "a a nn aaa a a a ne a a a a ee xn the most essential factor in successful celtivation, namely, individual owner- ship or control of the oyster bottoms, comes as something of a shock to our national pride when we remember that in the most important oyster re- gion in the world, within a short dis- tance of the capital of the United States, the vital principles of oyster culture are ignored and efforts to ap- ply them are resisted sometimes by force” of arms. The cultivation of oysters las reached greatest perfec- tion in the Inland Sea near Hiroshima, and some very ingenious methods have there been evolved, which are de- seribed in a paper by Dr. Bashford Dean recently published by the United States Bureau of Fisheries. Among the fishes regularly cultivated are the eel, the mullet, the carp, the goldfish, and several salmon and trout. The important salmon fishery in north- ern Japan having suffered from deple- tion of the streams, the government sent a representative to this country twenty years ago to study our hatching methods. It goes without saying that he took home with him a well-filled note book, ‘and, in addition, the plans of one of our salmon hatcheries, and shortly afterwards from those plans built in Hokkaido the first salmon hatchery in Asia. With this as a model and centre, salmon culture in Japan has steadily grown, until there are now eighteen salmon hatcheries in Honshu and Hokkaido, and Japan has become the only competitor of the United States in the artificial propagation of salmon. The carp has been cultivated from very ancient times and now receives much attention. In the Tokio district alone 225 acres of pools are devoted to carp culture, and the annual crop is upward of 400,000 pounds, valued at $15,000. In one village in the Gifu prefecture 250 acres of paddy fields, in which there is growing rice, have recently been devoted to carp culture by the local agricultural society, and 25,000,000 young fish are now procured there annually and sold for stocking purposes. It is a significant fact that the carp net only does not injure the rice, plants, but benefits them by de- vouring destructive insects, whereas in this country one of the very loud- est and longest wails against the carp is that it uproots aquatic vegetation. GOLDFISH FARMS. The goldfish receives more attention than any other species, and the place it holds in the affections of the masses illustrates one of the racial character- istics of the Japanese—namely, the love for the beautiful and ornamental, and the time and money all classes bestow on things that appeal to the esthetic rather than to the mercenary and prac- tical. Although the goldfish occurs in a wild state in Japan, it is probable that China some 400 years ago fur- nished the stock from which the won- derful varieties of Japanese goldfish have been bred. It is reported that in feudal days, even when famine was abroad in the land and many people were starving, the trade in goldfish ‘was flourishing. The demand at pres- ent appears to be without limit, and the output” shows a substantinl in- crease each year. Many thousands of people make a living by growing goldfish for market, and hundreds of peddlers carry the fish streets and along the country roads in wooden tubs suspended froma a shoulder bar, The leading goldfish centre is Kori- Yama, near the ancient capital city of Nara. Here are 350 independent breeding establishments, whose yearly product runs far into the millions. One farm ;which I visited was started 140 years ago; at first it was conducted merely for the pleasure of the owner, but it eventually became a commercial enterprise and is now very profitable. The history and methods of geldfish cultpre in Japan constitute a very en- gaging theme, not less interesting to the biologist than to the fish culturist. Some of the current American ideas of the manner in which the remarkable varieties have been produced are pre- posterous, and evoked much merriment among the Japanese when I mentioned them.—National Geographic Magazine. Full Moon. A New York man named Tompkins, starting on a trip South, fell in with an old acquaintance, and was surprised to learn that the man he had known for so many years was just starting on his wedding tour. Congratulations fol- lowed, says the New York Tribune, and when the old friend mentioned the name of his bride, the daughter of an extremely wealthy man, Tompkins ex- claimed: “Well, man!” The bridegroom gave a smile of mod- est satisfaction, and soon after excused himself to return to his wife. When Tompkins and his traveling companion were alone, the companion remarked: “Appears to have struck it pretty rich, eh?” “I should say so!” exclaimed Tomp- Kins. You are indeed a fortunate eral millions _ “And so he is on his honeymoon?’ added the New Yorker. ° “Honeymoon?” repeated Tompkins, through the" “Of my personal knowledge I | should say that the girl is worth sev- | with a burst of enthusiasm. “Why, I | call it nothing less than a harvest- | moon!” FINE RAD TRADE REVIEW STRUCTURAL STEEL DEMAND Premiums Offered for Quick Deliv ery and Producers Are Consid- ering Advance in Prices. R."G. Dun & Co.’s ‘Weekly Re- view of Trade” says: Seasonable merchandise goes into consumption more freely than usual, retail trade exceeding expectations at many points, and preparation for fall and winter business is on a liberal scale, except in a few agricultural commu- nities, where there is a disposition to await definite assurances regard- ing the crops. The official report was more encouraging as to grain, and later dispatches from the prin- cipal farming centers indicate that good results are being attained, de- spite some excess of moisture. Manufacturing reports are regular, the cotton industry being unsettled by the rise in raw material; woolen mills have a similar, but less sensa- tional obstacle; footwear shops are shipping less freely, but are main- taining the higher level of prices and current dullness in pig iron does not weaken confidence in an early re- sumption of liberal purchases. Dun’s Index Number on July was $98,312, against $98,759 a month earlier, and $97,192 a year ago. Railway earn- ings for the first week of July ex- ceeded last year’s by 5.3 per cent, and foreign commerce at New York for the last week showed gains of $1,520,462 in imports and $580,449 in exports, as compared with the corre- sponding week of 1904. Mercantile collections have improved. In strik- ing contrast a dullness and weakness of the raw material, structural steel is so urgently sought that premiums are sometimes paid for quick deliv- ery, and producers are considering the advisability of a general advance in list prices. Many large building contracts have appeared during the past week, and the tonnage of new bridge work is a feature. Failures this week were 223 in the United States, against 225 last year, and 26 in Canada, compared with 20 a year ago. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red.........evvvnnnes $ 93 95 Rye—No.2........ os 5 £6 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear.. 61 62 No. 2 yellow, shelled. 6) 51 Kl BAY.....s cers 43 45 Oats—No. 2 white............aeeee 35 36 8 WHItO......0usvnneereness 31 35 Flour—Winter patent............ «. ‘565 573 Fancy straight winters........ 40 6 50 Hay—No.1 Timothy............... oy 115 Glover No. 1...8.:.h....0.0nr..... 950 11000 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton........ 2050 2100 Brown middlings.............. iT (0 17 50 Bran, bulk..........icccovenneen 1800 18 50 Straw—Wheat.........ceeeeevunnnnn » 675 57.00 08 eee ccese sane s nas seinen. - 67 700 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery...........§ 22 24 Ohio creamery..... sess severe 20 212 Fancy country roll............ 16 1% Cheese—O0Ohio, NOW...ccceunnnnnnn 4 13 14 New York, New.............. e. 13 14 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per lb....... eg rs skin tee yus $ 14 15 Chickens—dressed.........c....... 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 18 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Apples BDI ....000000p0ee.s «+ 25) 400 Potatoes—Fancy 30 35 Cabbage—per ton 18 00 2L v0 Onijons—per barrel................ 25 3800 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 5 5 25 Wheat—No. 2 red 5 os 9 Corn—Mixed, 51 52 BBB. cet carat, 16 18 Butter—Ohio creamery. 20 5 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 550 57 Wheat—No.2red.................. 99. 1 0¥ Corn—No. 2 mixed................. 50 51 Qats—NO0. 2 White....scenussreanivn. 36 37 Butter—Creamery................. x0 22 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 17 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents.............. ied nad $ 60) 659 Wheat—No, 218d. .....varseusndsses 102 lof Corn—No. 2: Nl, olin. 5 96 QOats—No. 2 white..............0. = 37 33 Butter—Creamery .............. ren 20 2 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 17 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1450 to 1600 1bs .............. 600 Prime, 1300 to 1400 1bs ... 56) Medium, 1200 to 1300 1bs.. 530 Midy; 10500 0 1350." = y 510 Butcher. 900 to 1100............. a 470 Connon to fair... . ....... 375 Oxen, common to fat ............. 27 40) Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 350 Milch cows, each 16 4500 Prime heavy hogs 590 Prime medium weights 610 Best heavy yorkers and mediu 6 10 Good pigs and lightyorkers 575 Pigs, common to goo 48) Boughs tl. ..........0. 415 tags........... 35) Extra........ sssecser.. $e nseomescsses $ 565 580 Good to ehoice................. 5 560 Medinm ....................... 525 Commontofair,,............... 400 8. owen tls cxriols won suitans sk oae 800 Calves, Veal, extra. ......,......;.... Sivesin 500 °fT00 Veal, good to choice........ eee - 330 4X Veal, common heavy.............. 30) 870 Work the Supreme Need. The advice of the President to par- ents to bring their children up to work is sound. What this country impera- tively needs is a system by which men can get money only by earning it. The other ways are bringing all our institutions perilously near destruc- tion.—Baltimore American. ndians Want Work. Indian agent ai sent a circu e Western coun his dispos Sioux lent ior tention of these men will work at ng, sheep Cor Cor HAWK, MEXICAN AND THE CIVIL WARS. CAPT. W. W. JACKSON. Sufferings Were Protrac’el and Severe —Tried Every Known Remedy Without Relief—Serious Stomach Troubte Cured by Three Bottles of Peruna ! Capt. W. W. Jackson, 703 G St., N. W., By shnaton: D. C., writes: “I am eighty-three years old, a veteran of the Black Hawk, Mexican and the Civil Wars. I am by profession a physi- cian, but abandoned the same. “Some years ago I was seriously affected with catarrh of the stomach. My sufferings were profracted and severe. I iried every known remedy without obtaining relief. ‘In desperation I began the use of your Peruna. I began to realize immediate though gradualimprove- ment. “After the use of three bottles every appearance of my complaint was removed, and I have no hesitation in recommend- ing it as an infallible remedy for that dis- order.”—W. W. Jackson. Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of ‘The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. maha ood Products: Lunch Tongues Boneless Chicken Dried Beef Brisket Beef Jellied Hocks The Booklet * How to Make Good Things to Eat” sent free. Weigh= A ing the YY Baby. Physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and chemists throughout the world endorse Cuticura Soap because of its delicate, medicinal, emollicnt, sanative, and antiseptic properties derived from Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, united with the purest of cleansing ingredients and most refreshing of flower odors. For preserving, purifying, and-beauti- fying the skin, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet and bath, Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuti- cura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, is priceless. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may be used from the hour of birth. Two Soaps in one at one Priee-=namely: a Medicinal and Toilet Soap for 2c. otter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. Mailed Free, “How to Care for Baby's Skin, Scalp, and Hair.” Natural : Flavor, 3 They Are Always Ready to Serve Veal Loaf Soups Baked Beans Ask Your Grocer Uniform excellent quality for over a quarter of a century has steadily increased the sales of LION COFFEE, The leader of all package coffees. Lion Coftiee is now used in millions of homes. Such popular success speaks for itself. It is a positive proof that LION COFFEE has the Confidence of the people. The uniform quality of LION COFFEE survives all opposition. LION COFFEE keeps its old friends and makes new ones every day. LION COFFEE has even more than its Strength, Fiavor and Qual- ity to commend it. On arrival from the plantation, it is carefully roast- ed at our factories and securely packed in 1 Ib. sealed packages, and not opened again until needed for use in the home. This precludes the possibility of adulteration or contact with germs, dirt, dust, insects or unciean hands. The absolute purity of LION COFFEE is therefore guaranteed to the consumer. Sold only in 1 ib. packages. Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. regularly you are sick. Constipation kills mo § right money refunded. booklet free. The RNAS GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, fou pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolut enuine tablet stamped C CC. Never sold Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. bad breath, bad ; 1 mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, § When your bowels don’t move J appendicitis, biliousness, rt) re people than all other dis t . x starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. iseases together, It J CASCARETS today, for you will never get well an No matter what ails you, start taking d stay well until you get your bowels [§ e guarentee to cure or § in bulk. Sample and § 502