lopics or the Times 5 When the umbrella trust is turned Inside out may be we all caa afford to buy umbrellas. If the Japanese should take San Francisco there is a' probability that they would soon want to return it. "The crop of children Is the best crop of the nation," says the President. And It is in 110 danger from the little green bug. It takes more than an automobile to make a gentleman, but It Is surprising how many counterfeits are in general circulation these days. Mr. Roosevelt's remark that the best crop f all is the crop of children is probably all right, but nothing couid be better than the crop of June brides' looks. "Knter the Boo sisters Peeka and Carl," says the New York Mull. Well, what's the matter with the others Hugo, Gaza, Ta and Bain? Don't dis criminate. The physician who says that most germs exist only In the Imagination has in all probability been trying to read some of the late offerings in cur rent Action. When two disagreeable people mar ry we are led to believe that Cupid has had the lielp of uu Invisible power in arranging matters In a way not to spoil two families. Judge Iloldom of Chicago, who lik ened the law In certain cases to a kimono because "it covered everything und touched nothing," might have add ed that both supplied an opportunity for redress. A green monkey was born In one of the New York "zoos" "the other day, and a Massachusetts man claims that he has captured a white robin. Have the animals and birds themselves be come nature fakers? . ,A Kansas paper remarks that the al tltudlnous price of bacon Is not ac counted for by any noticeable absence of hogs In the market. No, It Is ac counted for by the noticeable presence of hogs In the beef trust. A Boston preacher announces that in eight yearn the reign of the devil will come to an end. This Is Important If true, and we could name several gen tlemen who would like to know whose presidential administration Mr. Sa tan's relgu Is to end with. When the Queen of Spain wishes to cnll her baby to her she does not say, "Alfonso Plo Crlstlno Kduardo Fran cisco Uulllcrmo Carlos Enrique Ku genlo Fernando Antonio Venanclo, come here!" It would take too long to use all the twelve names given to him at his christening. It Is probable that she simply says, "Oo tootsle, wootsle, darling 'II tie p'eclous sweetklns, tome to 'our own loving momsie woiusle!" The Norwegian storthing has passed a hill providing that women who ac knowledge that they ore more than i!o years of age and who pay taxes on on Income of $110 or more, or who are married to men who pay taxes on such Incomes, may vote. In arranging It so that the women will merely have to confess to more than 2." years the Htorthlng has done one of the most gal lant acts recorded In the history of civ ilization. Citizens of Spokane propose that ad jnoent portions of Idaho, Washington and Oregon be reassembled Into a new State to be called Lincoln. Advocates of the plan maintain that this division Is the natural one, with resect to the geographic formation, and also to the Interests and occupations of the people. Strong ommsltlon comes nuturolly from jieople m Pnrts the three States not Included In the proposed new State. The Idea Is doubly Interesting ut pres ent when the feeling for State lines Is said to lie dissolving oil over the country; It Indicates that the sense of the State unit Is very strong, and that It Is a matter of deep lmiwrtance to a man whether ho lives lu Oregon or "Lincoln." Hallway accidents have bxn usually ascribed to insufficient equipment Prof. I' H. Dixon, tu nu article In the At lantic Monthly, concludes that the real dlltlculty is not uieeiiauleal but human. It Is not the failure or the lack of the- block-signal that causes the trou ble, nor would the Installation of auto matic stops and other devices cure the evil. "The fundamental weakness of American railroading from the tandpolnt of safety Is the wide-spread and almost universal lack of disci pline," This conclusion accords with the experience of the rae. Disciplined armies poorly equipped have triumphed over armies well accoutered and pro visioned, but lucking in discipline. It Is likely, however, that railroad em ployes will point out at once the lack of discipline begins In the poor general ship of the managers who demand lin possible things of their soldiers. A tramp does not tramp, he rides. This Is one of the facts brought out by O. F. Lewis of New York In a paper read by him at the national conference of charities and correction at Minne apolis. Railroads are Infested by trumps. The railroad is the victim of the shortsighted jxillcy of local magis trates, and, In return, not with revenge ful Intent but by a sort of poetic jus tice, Is the chief purveyor of tramps to the towns along its way. A tramp Is arrested for vagrancy. To escape the cost of his Imprisonment the court re leases him on condition that he leaves town within twenty-four hours. That means that he gets on the first freight train and moves oo to the next town. As every town Is engaged In passing Its tramps along the supply is never end ing. If local authorities were not lfr different to the projwrtlons of the tramp evil and wilfully blind to the way In whlcB It Is perpetuated It could be ended. If every town sent to the rock pile every vagrant found within Its borders the trouble would be ended Immediately, and the expense would be no greater than that occasioned by the process of passing tramps along. Tramps steal as well as beg. They set fires carelessly and In "revenge. They cost the town officially, and the citizens Individually, and the heavy burden placed upon the railroads by trampi comes upon the community ultimately. In the first five years of the century American railroads killed 1,000 passen gers, 10,243 employes, and 23,964 tres passers on trains or tracks, the major ity of the latter being tramps. The fact that 4,000 tramps or some such number can be killed upon the rail roads without diminishing the visible supply Is a clew to the number of them. When a town Is unwilling to pay the hospital expenses of a trespasser who Is Injured, but not killed, the railroad settles the bill, but the public does not escape. The maimed man is thence forth a charge upon the community either as a beggar or In some public almshouse. In Europe It Is as much an offense to trespass upon the rail road's right of way as It Is to break the law In any other manner. The magistrates realize that It Is for the public good to keep unauthorized per sons from walking upon the tracks or riding upon trains. America Is an easy going country, but the time has coma when this problem must be faced and settled. The tramp costs too much, considering that he Is not a luxury, an ornament, or a necessity. CHAMPION MABKSWOMAN. Br; MISS MADGE TELFORD. Miss Madgo Telford, the champion woman rifle shot of Australia, has re cently defeated the crack markswotuen In a championship match between the Commonwealth Ladles' Rifle Club and the women of the Bengal-Punjab Klfle Association. She Is a member of the Commonwealth Ladles' Klfle Club, Mel bourne, and has made the highest score yet achieved by any woman In that country. There Is a movement looking toward bringing Miss Telford to the United States to contest for ths world's championship with some of the crack shots among American marks women. No Wif of Jadvlnaj, "What are the running expenses of your army?" asked one South Ameri can ruler of another. "Oh, I don't know," replied the one addressed. "The armv hasn't hnrf chance to run for a long time uow." 1 outers Statesman. No Dtflerenco la Sound. The difference between a good and bad chauffeur Is merely the difference between wreckless and reckless. Cleveland Plain Dealer. La....,,,,,,, Efer MATURE" V3 LAWS DIVERSIFIED' BY MINGLING OF WATERS' Of LAKE AND RIVER Rewrite the Ichthyology of America. Insert under the headings denoting the different species many new varieties unknown to former piscatorial lore. Add new subgenera and change the for mation of varieties. For a great trans formation in the fifth class of verte brate animals has resulted from the dig ging of the Chicago drainage canal and the commingling of the lake's waters with those of the rivers. The digging of the channel across the great divide that once separated Lake Michigan from the Mississippi Valley has let the lnke fish Into the Des Plalnes, the Illinois and the Mississippi rivers. The seeming unnatural commingling of wa ters has produced fishes that soein un naturalthat Is, when compared to our present standards. New forms, new varieties, new types have appeared, differing In color, habits and general description from any other known to the American pisciculturist. Coexist ent with the apKarance of the new kinds of fishes there Is noted a most remarkable Increase generally In the number of the finny Inhabitants of the Des Plalnes and Illinois rivers. The Des Plalnes River fairly swarms with fishes, and fishermen are reaping a har vest such as their fondest fancy never pictured In former tlnies. All along the canal, and the Chicago River, and far down the Illinois River, the same conditions are noted to a greater or less extent. Ichthyologists have marvelled at the seeming phenomena, and from all sections of the country scientists are coming to study the conditions, to make note of the new forms and record them In the new history of American fishes, which now must undergo a com plete revision. True, many dead fishes have appeared In the rivers, but all such show marks of violence and no evidence of disease. It Is evident that great warfare Is going on among them over which families and species shall have the best right to make the river their future home. With the Increase In the number of the river fishes, there appears to be a corresiiondlug Increase In the number of Lake Michigan fishes. At least, all the lake fishermen are complaining, and the assertion Is freely made that the lake's finny tribe are being emptied through the canal Into the rivers be yond the Chicago divide. Formerly this divide formed a wall thirty miles wide between the lake and the river fishes, und the types Inhabiting the two waters, generally speaking, were en tirely separated and distinct. But when the cnual was dug ueross the divide und the Chicago River was turned up side down, and Instead of flowing Into the lake was made to become an out let of the lake and empty the lake's waters Into the canal and thence Into the Des Plaincs and on Into the Mis sissippi Ulver near St Louis, the lake's fishes have gone with the outflowing waters Into the rivers, there to Join the river fishes and compete with them In the struggle for existence. Thousands of these fishes, while being hurried on with the current, have been noted with tlie naked eye by boatmen and people Btandlng on the batiks of the river and canal. Sometimes the water seemed to be fairly olive with them, and fisher men, unable to resist the temptation, hnve defied the law, and, in nets, have hauled them to the shore In wagon loads. Lake trout and perch, never before caught outside of the lakes, have been brought to shore by thousands nil along the canal and the Chicago and Des Plalnes rivers. Lake herring, clseo grayling, chubs, lake trout, white fish and numerous other fishes, heretofore regarded as exclusive Inhabitants of tha great lakes, now swarm. lit the wa ters beyond the Chicago divide. White bass, pickerel and uiuscallmige have been found In giiodly numbers, and two specimens of the Michigan grayling, heretofore found only In Lake Michi gan and In the waters of Michigan State, have been caught. . Once they have crossed the bear trap dam at Lockport, thero is no way for any of these great swarms of fish to return to Lake Michigan, and they must moke their home In the rivers beyond and fight for supremacy with the old Inhabitants of these waters. It Is probable that the conflict which will result In the survival of the fittest, will ?nuse a weeding out of many of the types now abounding, and some of the river fish and some of the Invaders from the lake will undoubtedly become innlhlluted. Indications arts however, that the general result wJl be most En: beneficial to the lake fisheries. The In fusion of new blood Into the old river stock already seems to have added new life to the waters, and nence.'whlle the fishes are fighting for supremacy, they are multiplying enormously, and the splendid specimens of all the varieties this season show that the health and general physical condition have been greatly improved. The fish feed uion each other, and it appears that none of the deaths have resulted from other causes than violence. The season has afforded unprecedented sport for those searching for game fish. Old-time sportsmen have turned their attention from the northern lakes to the Illinois rivers and neighboring lakes. For the small lakes all along the rivers show the same wonderful Increase In pis catorial population. Complaints of the alleged effects on Lake Michigan fisheries at first were ridiculed by the drainage canal trus tees, but they have become so numerous that these officials have been forced to take cognizance of them. The river's gain Is Lake Michigan's loss, It Is de clared, and how to prevent the exodus of lake fish Is a problem that the sani tary trustees are now wrestling with. So fur, the only solution of the prob lem that has been suggested Is the building of flshways at all the dams ond locks. along the artificial water route. But this, It Is feared, would weaken the dams, and It Is doubtful If it would be possible to construct them lu a manner that would permit the fish to make their, way back to Lake Mich igan, once they had wandered so far away as the Illinois River. Two meth ods of constructing the flshways have been proiwsed one consisting of what is known as a fish ladder, which would consist of a series of steps, over which the water In desoendlng would turn the fall Into a cascade, and thus permit the fish to climb back lu pursuing their return Journey to the lake; the other comprising a chute with a sinu ous track for diminishing the velocity and assisting the passage of the fish to the level above the dam. Because of the nature of the locks and dams, their width and number. It is doubted If this device would prove successful, even If the construction did not Interfere so materially with the mechanical opera tions. The appearance of the new types of fish, entirely different from anything recorded by former naturalists, has stirred up the scientists, and the here tofore despised Des Plalnes River hns come Into prominence as the center of piscatorial Interest, for It Is here that the new types and increased number of fishes have attracted widespread atten tion. The strange and new types of fishes, never noticed to any great extent until this year, are undoubtedly the result of the Intercrossing that came about nfter the Invaders from the lake had accustomed themselves to the new en vironments. On finding It Impossible to make their way back to the lake, they Bettled down to make the best of their life In the nnrrow confines of the rivers and necept the condition of mis cegenation with the river fishes as the THE SAME fell qjpjP Cincinnati Post best for all concerned. St. Louis Globe Democrat. HOW TO REDUCE THE FLESH. Increasing the Lnngr Capacity la the Flmt Reqntaite. ,To Increase the lung cnpaclty Is the first step lu the reduction of flesh, says Outing. For this purpose running Is, I think, superior to any other exercise. Boxing nnd handball are also excellent for the "wind." And these exercises will do more to Increase the respira tory functions; they will greatly stim ulate the circulation as well as all the secretory and excretory processes. What leg exercise will not do, how ever, Is oxidize, to any great extent, the soft tissues of the trunk and arms. True, by stimulating the organs of elimination nnd by increasing lung ca pacity, leg exercises will oxidize upper tissues somewhat ; but when fat Is not replaced by muscle, it has a strong ten dency to reform. A bad effoj-t of leg exercises exclu sively Is that they draw a major part of the blood, rich In oxygen, to the low er limbs; whereas If vigorous arm and trunk exercises were executed, beside the leg exercises, much blood would be attracted also to the upper parts which would then be oxidized to tho best advantage, their lost fat being, ut the same time, replaced by solid tis sue, and hence having little tendency to reform. Running, therefore, splen did exercise though It Is, should be supplemented by vigorous ''upper" ex ercises. By vigorous upper exercises I do not mean calisthenics nor any kind of so-called light exercises; . I mean reasonably hard work. Making Baae Ball Data. What becomes of all the baseball bats? Is quite like the old Inquiry of "What becomes of all the pins?" At any rate, big factories are running all the year round, turning out nothing but bats. When one considers the 10, 000,000 small boys lu this country and that each one averages four bats dur ing his early baseball days, the prob lem Is reduced to figures which ac count for the demand, says Popular Mechanics. Bats are no longer whittled out of a piece of board, as was dona forty years ago. but are made on ma chines which ,turn out their thousands dally. The process Is simple but slow. First the logs are cut Into "bdlts" of from thirty-two Inches to forty-two Inches long and the bolts sawed Into billets two and a half Inches or three laches square at the ends. Three years' sea soning Is required for the best bats, either In the log or billet. The'kiln drylng process is rapid, but not con sidered as good. The billets are placed In an automatic lathe, which quickly transforms the stick Into the graceful form of the bat. The bat Is then smoothed and polish ed by being held ogalnrt a rapidly moving horizontal belt which Is cover ed with sand. It is then ready for its coat of oil, varulph or paint, as the cape may be. Something; Like Joihnn. A mountaineer of one of the back, counties of North Carolina was ar raigned with several others for illicit distilling. "Defendant," asked tho court, "what is your name?" "Joshua," was the reply. "Are you the man who made the sunt stand still?" Quick as a flash came the answer: "No, sir ; am the man who made the moonshine." Harper's Weekly, The rich man and .the mule are abused a great deal, but there contin ues to be good demand fpr both. OLD STOEY. (D Uy B0O-H0O! KiNIGIT Off DIS AFTERNOON. B0J5? Mt GRANTODCJT 15 DLAD- voo'-moi