Farm land In England ranges In price from $00 to $120 an acre. The Kalier hni become on ardent Tlollnlst, and practices diligently and excruciatingly at every opportunity. More emigrants left the United Kingdom and fewer foreigners settled there In 1003 than In any year since 18SU. The production of nickel In Ontario last year exceeded thnt of any previous year. The total was 0,003 tons, val udo at 2,4D0,COS. In the South American regions, where cattle are killed by the tens of thousands for the export of meat and hides, the bones are used as fuel. lletween Jan 1, 1004, and Mny 14, 1004, 133 days, there have been under written and sold In the United States securities aggregating over $1100,000, 000. America's trade with Great Britain last year aggregated $1,000,000,000: next In Importance Is the trade with Germany, which Is little more than one-third as much. Count Zepplln, who wrecked his air ship and at the same time his fortune In Lake Constance, Italy, Iibb raised $4,000 by subscription for the purposes of building another ship. The chalk pits In Kent, 11 miles from London, are found to be extensive an cient llrltlsh enve dwellings connected by galleries which extend for miles. Near the center Is a Druldlcal tem ple. Benjamin S. Moore, of Elizabeth, N. J., recently celebrated his Kith year of actual service with the Central Hall road of New Jersey. For 63 years straight running he has been a locomo tive engineer. In the province of lower Burma, In dia, near the Siamese frontier, tin de posits have recently been discovered and valuable coal fields located. The tin ore Is said to be of as high a qual ity as that mined In the Straits settle ments. Mrs. Cralgle (John Oliver Hobbes), lecturing In Manchester, said that men to-day were losing the desire for im mortality. They desired no more to live forever, but Instead to live as pleasantly as possible here and now, she said. "One of the most significant signs of the tendency of modern thought," says the New York Christian Work and Evangelist (Presbyterian), "is supplied by the Increasing attention which men of science are devoting to religious sub jects." There Is In Sweden a movement, supported. It is said, by the govern ment, to tax all concerns and perform ances given by artists who are not Swedish subjects, the tax varying from $1.50 to $53 each concert, according to the amount of money taken for tickets. According to a recent report of the Geological Survey, the total anthracite production for 1003 was 00,351,713 tons. The average price of $2.50 brought the value up to $152,030,448. The number of men employed to mine the output, which amounted to 0,000, 000 more tons than In 1002, was 150, 403. The President of tho British Board of Trade stated, In answer to a ques tion In the House of Commons, that the average annual earnings of adult males employed In the principal Indus trial and agricultural occupations In the United Kingdom In a year of av erage employment might be estimated approximately at $350 each. The campaign of 1840 had a dram atic and unexpected sequel. Tburiow Weed, before the meeting of the Whig convention, sought out Webster and urged him to take second place on the ticket with Harrison, but the sugges tion was rejected with scorn. An ac ceptance of Weed's advice would have made Webster President In little more than a year. The Income tax was Introduced Into England by William Pitt In 1709 under the stress of the French wnr. It ceased In 1810, but was revived by Sir Robert Peel in 1842, and extended by Glad stone In 1853. From being a tempo rary war tax It has now become a permanent part of the British financial system, and Is resorted to by every Chancellor who finds himself in diffi culties. 1,000 PATENT8 GRANTED. One Year's Result of Inventive Gcnlns la the Windy City. One thousand patents a year aro granted citizens of Chicago. Illinois stands seventh In the list of states that take out patents according to population, Connecticut and Massachu setts still holding their own for native Ingenuity. Alaska and Alabama, first in the alphabet, aro at the foot in patent winning. The patent reports In the Chicago public library were last year consult ed between 80,000 and 00,000 times by 17,000 persons, some of them patent lawyers or their clerks, but the ma jority those contemplating Inventions, and therefore seeking to learn wheth er their Ideas had already been antici pated. A certain percentage of visitors are "perpotual motion cranks." There Is nothing for them In the reports, .so they ask for tho Scientific American and similar papers that contain arti cles on that subject. Their errand can almost Invariably bo detected on their entering tho room and addressing the attendants. There Is a restless, fev erish look and a nervous action be traying the disturbance of mind and the unbalanced ambition that has put them on this quest, While they sel dom If over exhibit anything approach ing lusanlty, or oven a lack of self control, It Is easy to see that they live n ear tho line that Is said to divide genius from madness. There Is nover any outbreak, but the differ ence between them and tho ordinary visitor Is unmistakable. They at leaBt know exactly what they are after and do not have to bother with finding out whether they are likely to infringe on louie already successful applicant. I Among the patents for oddities granted Chicago citizens last year is one for a bag filling machine, a clothes line prop, a churn, a dustpan, a non mailable bottle, a "box," a convertible billiard table, a tobacco pipe, a safety coat hook, though hooking coats Is al ready safe enough in Chicago, a cheek expanding pad, a nose piece for eye glasses, a tipping shelf for garbage, an Improvement on governors, a "model burglar alarm," Implying that Chicago burglars are models, a "con trivance for muting violin strings," and a pocket for golf balls. There was one also for "an attachment to bridles," though not like the bridle the convict said he was sent up for ten years for stealing, because a horse happened to he attached to the other end of IL Among the 1,000 patentees were a dozen women. One invented a hair retainer, another a dress shield, an other a Vooklng utensil," another a dress fitting stand, but it seems to have taken a man to turn out a wom an's skirt, a garter and a kitchen table. Chicago Tribune. ROMANCE OF A FARM. After Many Gcnerntlona In One Fnnilly It Hoe Heroine an Orphanage. A romantic story, one in which a number of stirring Incidents aro re Ihtcd. Is told of a little farmhouse and forty-seven acres of land that have been turned over to a great church or gnnlsntlon for an orphanage. The property Is located on the main line of the Northwestern road, about two hours out from Chicago, and ad joins the little village of Nachus. The land was handed down from genera tion to generation by a family of the iame of Dysart By a member of this tamlly It was originally taken up from the government, and remained In the tamlly until It fell into the possession of Colonel Alexander Dysart, who for years was one of the best known citi zens of the section. He was a man of t-ome eccentricities, but beloved by the whole community. He raised a family of sons, three of whom became engi neers on the Northwestern road and ore now running train. The colonel, during his lifetime, improved tho old home, which In early years was hut a cabin, until it assumed the proportions of a fine country home. He surround cd it with a double row of pine trees, end these for miles may be seen from points along the rood. When the colonel was well along In joars ho fell in love with a widow, and against the wishes of his family married her. only to be divorced In a few years. Within sight of the Dysart home was the farm of Peter Burham, a sturdy German, the father of an in dustrious family. Among the children was a daughter, Mary, who grew up to be as pretty a lass as could be found In all Lee county. A farmer's daugh ter, she In due time became a farmer's wife, marrying Henry Shippert. Both husband and wife had not one but sev eral farms of rich Lee county land, but after the body of old Colonel Dy sart was laid to rest and the property was offered for sale, Mrs. Shippert bought It Then she proposed to tho Evangelical church, of which she is a member, to convert the little farm Into an orphanage. The church accepted the charge and recently the home of the kindly old colonel was dedicated to its noble purpose. Chicago Tribune. BURDEN OF GREAT WEALTH. Its Foseeealon Imparts Obligations that Cannot He Ignored. Doubtless there Is a certain sort of happiness In making money, In being successful In business, and there aro many who take more pleasure In mak ing, In accumulating money than In its possession, Enys the Nashville American. Doubtless, also Inherited wealth tends to destroy ambition, per sonal energy and that spirit of activity calculated to develop the best that Is In man. The man who Is horn rich and who has no need to labor for a living should find unending pleasure in the Improvement of his mind; In wander ing amid the delights of the field of literature, or of art, or of science; U travel and observation of this mighty world and Its changing wonders; In en tertaining friends In a rational rather than In a nshlonable way; In dispens ing thoughtful charity and benefac tions; In laboring, In the many ways offered, for the Improvement of man, of the home, of government; In oh, well, there are so many ways a man or woman of healthy mind and Inher ited wealth might attain happiness It seems absurd to suggest at random any of the methods through which contentment of mind and peace of wul may be achieved. The man of wealth who lives In, with and for his money, who thinks only of himself or his Immediate fam ily, lives a narrow, mean nnd fcelllsh life, and wealth can bard'y give him any moro satisfaction than It can give a monkey, a prize pig or a pet dog. Tho possession of wealth Imparts ob ligations which cannot be Ignored without a resulting penalty Imposed by the law of compensation. Wealth, Inherited or acquired, should be a stimulus to the noblest ambition, to the nearest approach to unselfishness, to efforts to add to tho sum total of human happiness and to tho dissipa tion of Ignorance. Montreal's Treatment or Drunkard. Habitual drunkards nfter conviction In Montreal, Qubee, are now given the option of paying a line, undergoing Imprisonment or taking a certain cure. At present there are 22 under treat ment, ten nt their homes and twelve at tho Jail. Each patient Is expected to take sixteen doses of tho prescribed medicine each day, nnd Is warned not to drink any Intoxicating liquors dur ing tho time of trial. Tills Language of Ours. Irate CItlzeu Look what your goat has done to our little grass plot! Owner of Goat Aw, tho goat never touched your grass plot. lrato Citizen No, I s'pose you would say he "Just barely grazed it," but that's what Pin klcklu' about. Balti more American. It's only ii mutter of time until the fool und his money are on opposite sides of tho market. vjtitye$s$sr$s t Opinions of BMBTOi Women as Wo go Earners. T has never been determined to the satisfac tion of the men workers that It Is n good or a .'air tiling for the women workers to compete vlth them In the open labor market. The men outeml that the women, by accepting a lower vage, decrease the average wage pnld to nil. Hie unmarried women who have no one to 31 work for them maintain that the woman who has a bus band for her bread-winner Is an unfair competitor. Then, again, there are those, generally old-fashioned folk that have, like Webster's veterans, comedown to us from former generations, who devoutly believe that the woman's sphere of labor, as wife ami mother, Is In her own home, where useful, helpful work for the world may be found to en gage much of her time, energy and Intelligence. These ancient people contend that the rearing aright of children, the making of good men and noble women, Is the very best and the most profitable work to which married worn en can put tholr hands or minds. Kcxpivtlng the merits or demerits of any of these three contentions we do not pretend to decide, as we are pi"! masters In neither political economy nor sociology. What we do know on the subject pretty thoroughly Is that the right kind of labor Is a good and beneficent thins for worn en as well as for men, and that day by diy recognition of that fact Is becoming more general. What else Is being recognized Is tliat the woman who works for a wage or salary loses no dignity nor prestige, but rather gains both by her willingness and ability either to work and support herself In womanly Independence or to assist In the sup port of her family who need her assistance. Philadelphia Lodger. Saving Niagara. , OVEUNOU ODELL'S veto has. for the time being, saved Niagara Falls from spoliation by utilitarian enterprise. He rightly considers that sentiment u love for the grand and beau tiful In nature has claims upon the law-making power which cannot wisely be Ignored in liehalf of money-making propositions. It will G be easy to find elsewhere the power necessary to run the machinery of a population five or ten times as great as that of the United States to-day. But we cannot llnd an other Niagara. So the New York statesman has the ap proval of the nation at large, whatever the disappointed Niagara corporation and its tools In the State Legislature may think of his veto. But Governors and Legislatures come and go, and If Niagara Is to flow on forever It Is not well that the fate of the Falls should depend on the bargainings of lobbyists and politicians. Neither should It depend on the chance that there may never be a Governor of New York to whom sentiment may be mere silliness, and Niagara a mere waste of water which should be set to turning mill-wheels The Jurisdiction of New York State over a river which forms part of nu International boundary Is subject to the treaty making power of the Federal Government. That govern ment In conjunction with Canada, can make the destruction of the cataract forever Impossible through a treaty prohlh Itlng any further diversion of the waters of the river. As both countries are now using the water In about equal quan tities the prohibition would be fair to both, and would pre serve to Canada and New York the glorious central attrac tion about which each has created, at vast expense, a mag nificent riverside park. St. Paul Pioneer Press. Cupid in the School Houses. ROM time Immemorial the school bouse Uas b.-en a favorite resort for sly Cupid. Thou sands of charming young women have found the school house the threshold of matrimony, and countless young men have met their fate while eking out an educational existence by teachlng winters and "boarding round." Under these circumstances none but the inot hard-hearted educa tional autocrat would lmve the temerity to seek to banish Cupid and to say that no female teacher could rise In love and marry the man of her choice without losing her posi tion In the public schools. The New York Board of Education sought to banish all married women from wicked Gotham's public schools, and forthwith an Incipient revolution was Htnrtcd. A come- AVOID STRAY NICKELS. Small Coin Lost In Mulla Worrlea Clerka and Costa $18.-13. Ordinarily no man Is rich enough to escape that certain sense of elation which comes from picking up a nickel on a sidewalk, hut for a railway pos tal clerk to find such a coin In a mail pouch where it has worked out from Insufficient wrappings, not only does he miss this elation, but it may pro voke profanity. For a nickel lost In a pouch of mull In transit becomes a matter for na tional concern. It comes to view, per haps, Just as a pouch of mall Is emp tied upon a sorting table, and when It has broken away from the bunches of letters, and cards, and circulars, rolled to an open space on the table, und there settled down, heads or tulls, with a noisy spinning dance, the clerk who first sees It Is It. A necromancer could have no moro Idea than the man In the moon as to what particular package It rolled out of, and If be had and should tell the postal clerk, the clerk wouldn't dare try to restore the coin to the original package. That would he too easy al together. No, It is a lost nickel from the mo ment the clerk has to sco It spinning there before bis eyes and according to Ihe tender governmental conscience tho clerk has to get ready for the Inaugu ration of about $18.43 worth of fuss over It. For himself ho doesn't dare go to bed for a short nap until be has got rid of his 0 cents' worth of responsi bility to the government for tho action of tho fool person from whom the nickel woi parted. He digs up his printed form for such occasions, print ed and provided, and at once fills out a long, blank, describing the coin, tell ing tho circumstances of Its being found, and whether It lauded heads or talis on the table, naming the pouch from which It was emptied, the num ber of tho train carrying It, the date, and a few other Ilttlo details any ono of which In hot weather would have cost n mug of beer. . Tills report with the nickel goes to tho headquarters of the postal division In which the car was operated, and fiom thesu bonded ofllcluls, by the same general red tupo routo, the small coin finds Its way to the seat of na tional government and to the fund representing thnt great constituency of the Postolllco Department which per sists In sending money In envelopes Great Papers on Important Subjects. employ of the Board DESTRUCTION OF s Wm , T-r-- ... .,. . .'-: t . s r -. i ONE OF DALNY'S PltlNCIPAL STKEETS. The necessities of war produce strange conditions. For live years tho Ilussluns had been engaged In erecting the commercial port of Diilny, situ ated on Tollenwnn Bay to the east and north of Port Arthur. It was to be an open port, without n custom house, and free to tho commerce of tho world. Large government buildings were erected, streets were laid out, houses built and great docks constructed, tho entire outlay being In tho neighborhood of $25,000,000. Then camo the wnr, with Ilusslun unpro parednesi on land nnd sea. Tho defeat of the Ilusslans nt KIn-Choii com pelled their evacuation of Dalny. Before abandoning the place, however, they destroyed tho larger docks and many of the utilities which Japan might find useful, thus. wiping out in a few hours works which In times of peace they had created at large outlay of time and money. through tho unregistered mnlls of the service. MANY MEN DIE YOUNG. Moat Irregular, Intemperate, Irritable and Hard WorUlnsT of Aulinuls. It has been said that few men die of old age and that almost all persons die of disappointment, personal, men tal or bodily toll, or accident, says Health Culture. The passions kill men sometimes, oven suddenly. The common expres sion, "choked with rage," has little ex aggeration In It, for, even though not suddenly fatul, strong passions shorten life. Strong-bodied men often die young, weak men live longer than the strong, for the strong use their strength and the weak have none to use the latter take care of themselves, the former do not. As It Is with tho body, so It Is with tho mind and the temper; tho strong are apt to break, or, like the candle, run; the weak burn out. The Inferior animals, which live tem perate lives, have generally their pre scribed term of years. Thus Ihe horse SS years, the ox 15 or 20, the Hon about 20, the hog 10 or 12, the rabbit 8, tho guinea pig 0 or 7. The numbers all bear proportion to ly young teacher named Kate S. Murphy, who fell n vic tim to Cupid's wiles, determined to make a test case In belKilf of herself as well ns of her suffering sisters, and ho brought action against the superintendent for the purpose of preventing the enforcement of the by-law providing that "No woman principle, head of department or meinlier of the teaching or supervising staff shall marry while In the of Education. I The case was carried to tho Court of Appeals, where a victory was won for the matrimonial liberty of the fo male teacher. Following this defeat tho New York Hoard of Education has now amended Its by-laws by striking out the clauo which penults charge- to bo made against a teacher-bride, but It retains tho prohibitive, feature, mere ly tvi demouilr.ite Its continued luMlef that female teachers ought not to wed and still rotaln their positions. In the meantime Knto S. Murphy has won a victory In behalf of her sex In connection with the public schools which will unquestionably be appreciated by her teaching sisters everywhere, and as a token of her good faith she will continue to teach In gay Gotham even though sho has fallen a victim to clover Cupid. Burlington Fro Press. Ilnwil, Peru and Rubber. HEN Brazil and Bolivia entered Into a treaty "V? A T I concerning the territory of Aero last full, it Xf W w,l!' thought that the long standing disputes v I,.,.,, .1,., -,.i.m ttnil limine lien lirnueht to all end. Now It appears, however, that Peru Is still to be reckoned with. A battle lias been fought between Peruvian and Brazilian troops on the ltlver Crandless. tho result being, according to Bra zilian reports, a complete rout of the Peruvians. The Ministers of both countries nt Washington Intra thought It Important to bid for American sympathy by Isju lug statements as to their respective claims and rights Formally considered, these statements have Ilttlo In them of Interest. They deal simply with vogue treaties and vaguer boundaries In nil exceedingly thinly settled region Actually the dispute has great Importance to both eoun tries, because tho prize nt stake Is tho control of some of tho richest rubber forests In tho world. Brazilian cmn panics have begun to work the forests In the course of their progress up tho tributaries of the Amazon, while Perm ion companies have entered them since the denudation of the forests In Mantana. which Is recognized Peruvian territory It Is reported from lllo Janeiro that no war will result from the frontier battle since both countries desire arhitru Hon. Brazil demands, however, that Peru withdraw all her troops from the disputed country heforo arbitration lie gln while Peru Insists that the presence of her troops Is inn ,m the slightest degree derogatory of "good faun and fratoii i 1 sentiment." Certainly If the desire for arbitration Is genuine a provisional arrangement should bo easy to make. Clin ago Ileum! Herald Industrial Changes in China. LOW as Is the progress of civilization In China, compared with Japan, which, In a period cov ered by the memory of men now living, had sprung from a condition as barbarous as Persia to her present place among nations, yet Indus trially at least tho "Celestial" Empire does move, and that In a manner which cannot be neglected In any computation of future trade with that country. The report of the Inspector General of Customs of the empire shows that China Is rapidly getting Into a condition to supply herself with certain articles for which she has depended heretofore almost entirely upon other countries. Those who have not kept themselves well In formed In regard to the Industrial changes which have been taking place In the empire will bo surprised to learn from the report that the nation which for so many years relied nlmo.it entirely upon England and the Fnltcd States for Its cotton goods, now manufactures 50 per cent of all the goods of this kind supplied to the home market. In a year China's Imports of Hour havo fallen off one fourth, not that the Chinese are eating less of It than formerly -In fact, the consumption of Hour Is Increasing In the em pire but because the deficiency In Imports was moro than made good by the recently established Chlneso Hour mills grinding Chinese wheat. These would seem to be signs that, In spite of a cor rupt and Incompetent Government, China Is beginning to awake from her sleep of centuries. New York Press. DALNY'S DOCKS. the time tho animal takes to grow Its full size. But man. of nil animals, Is one tliut seldom comes up to tho aver age. Ho ought to llvo 100 years, ac cording to tho physiological law, for five times twenty aro 100; but Instead of that ho scarcely reaches an nverngo of four times tho growing period. The reason Is obvious man Is not only the mot Irregulur and most Intemperate, but the most laborious and hard work ing of all animals. Ho Is always tho most Irritable, and thero Is reason lo believe, though wo cannot tell what an animal secretly feels, that more than nny other nnliunl mnn cherishes wrntli to keep It warm and consumes, himself with the lire of his own reflections. Ilrokou On". "I can't make you out nt all," ho said, angrily; "you'ro ko flcltlo and changeable. You'ro Just a riddle to me," "Yen?" replied his finnncco. "Since you'ro so stupid, perhaps, you'd better give roe up." Philadelphia Public Ledger. A man Isn't necessarily unhappy Just becnuso n woman marries him to re form him. tjlio muy fall, BIG J.USI1 TO ALASKA. GREAT INCURSION FOLUOWINO UOUNDARY SETTLEMENT. Unci Hum's l"iir)lt Territory IUs ltn tercl Upon n Period of Great Material Kiploltatloii - Privations of Immi grants Greatly ltediu-td. With tho settlement of the boundary dispute Alaska entered upon a period of great material exploitation. Alas ka has new telegraph and eahlo lines, new railways In various progresses of construction, completed water trans- i c mm; ai ask a i Hit rns portatToiT lines, vast oilfields exploited nnd connected with the markets by liiukslilps. mall routes everyw here per fected, coalfields tapped adequate for Its own fuel supply, goldllelds de minuting 1INMKK) odilltlomil miners, copper ledges uncm cred greater than the world's supply, tin ledges defined laiger than those of tho South Pacific, Immense areas ready for the ogrlcol ttirlst, unlimited forests nn ailing llui her operations, nnd o population of on een KKI.iHK) people clamoring to be ; v risiii.Mi us ihe ui s erected Into o territory of the 1 lilted States preliminary to statehood. The Fill ted States lias Just cnniplet cd n geological survey, and General A. W. Greely. chief signal olllcer of the Fnltcd States Army, reports on the hemic operations of his men In constructing miles of Alaskan telegraph and 2.M lulles of cable. "The telegraph lines connect Fort St. Michael on the south shore of Norton HOO TI.AU III I. U.tll. Sound with Fort Dntls and .Nome on the north shore, from St. Michael east erly to tho Yukon; thence up tho t al ley to Fort Gibbon and ltampart; thence up Tnnana and Goodpaster lllvers to Fort Egbert mid Eagle City; thence southerly across tho illvldo through the Copper ltlver country to Vuldes. A sepuruto cable, 1110 miles long, conneclB Skngwny wllh Juneau. Later southeast Alaska will be con. m.W I1A1I.WAV IIOUU!. nectcd up by cable with tho Lower Yukon, dlscnrdlng tho connections west of the 21st luerlilliui via Cana dian government Hues exlendljig from the International boundary near Skng wny to Fort Egbert. Tho greatest revolution In Alaska was caused by the opening of the (li st hundred miles of tho Alaska Central Hallway on April 1. Tho water ter minus of this road Is on ltesurrcctlon Bay, Central Alaska, open all tho year round by reason of tho warm Japa nese current. Tho road will bo rapid ly pushed -118 miles north up the Su uhllna and Tnnana ltlver valleys to und across the Yukon. For -100 miles along IhU projected railway the water iIoch not freeze in winter nor wuik cease. The new city of Sewnid, built iJkw. J.I' I i ! llE- 1 "v o.' u l i , n r ' a . .1 In three months. Is the terminus on the enclosed rtewrectlon Bay, hav ing n oteroge ucptu oi i.vw icti. Here will b America's great Alas, kati naval base and fortress, backed by one of the richest soiled volleys In the world, lammled on either side by tho vast new oil, copper, cool, gold nnd tin fields. Central Alaska Is destined to he lbs real empire of the territory, having a very tropical foliage and wealth beyond conception, it Is a clean, beautiful country, entirely sur rounded by the loftiest mountains, Ilia sentinel of which Is Mount Mclvlnlcy, 20 WO feet high, having nous of Ilia Alaskan pests such as mosquitoes, snows, Ice and cold weather. The ca ble will be landed there and lie con neded wllb a new corporate network of wires Independent of the govern ment system. Electricity at n cheap rate will be Installed as tint universal motor power Troiii colossal waterfall". It now requires twenty-eight days and 2K.1 fare to go from Seattle under fa tumble conditions tlo Ihe I'pper Yu kon lo the new goldllelds teeetitly stampeded at Fnlilmuks on the 'IV nnna lllter. It now requires thirty three days and Jltoo to teach Urn satint place via the liwcr Yukon route. Tim new trip will take four days from Seattle to Hewnid by steamer and twenty hours by rail to Fairbanks nt tl iiist of $1 lo. A licet f sixty steamers now oper ate on the Yukon. The salmon In dustry ranks next to gold mining; furs, oil. sulphur, and tin following. A big sheep Industry nourishes on the Aleu tian Islands and iiitilculturo Is pro jected on a promising scale. Tile Nil shllna nnd Copper ltlver valleys nra marked for the future Immense gran ary. By comparison It Is shown lht it HMioro farm In Alaska produces a larger reieiiue than a l.ittcro farm In Wisconsin The first horticultural fair was held at Dawson In Septem ber. IHK.1. and astonished nil the north- him; ai anuas tin i u-- lis tisl. paitlculaily llin Cniindlan gov ernment. The oil district has been de fined over an area I.Vi miles long and VI) miles wide, or I Mio square inllrs. In which besides the prolific oil bear ing Pennsylvania saniU are lakes and springs of oil, one lake being of large size." HOW TENPINS AHE MADE. Ktery llonllng Phi One. Tltroiiuh Kite l'riH'rra ltrfore rinl.lii-il. Few of Ihe large army of bowlers throughout tho country realize the amount of work ueccsshry to luru out tho plus that they are coustniilly knocking down. Air of the first class tenpins are manufactured from rock iiinple. It Is sometimes utile mouths or a year before the wood has lieeil seasoned enough to be put ill the turn ing plane nnd innvertitl Into pins, says the New York Mall. Every pin that Is innile must go through lire processes before It Is fin ished, the most modem mnrhliicry be ing used. The first cut from the log weighs eighty muiiiIs and Is railed "green stock." This log Is cut Into four quarters and Is allowed a reason able time for air drying and open-air seasoning, it Is then put on Die rough lug machine, which roughly models bowling plus. The wood is put nsldo lifter this process for two days and Is placed In tho first drying kiln. From the first kiln the wood Is put Into the second of n little higher temperature, then tutu t hit third, which has a still higher temperature, and so on through similar drying processes for about six weeks' time. After tho drying treatment Is com pleted the pin Is iilHiut ono Inch short er and weighs about eight pounds, a reduction of about twelve iuuds from the original block. The weight of tint block Is further redueisl after It has been centered anil made ready for tint finishing lathe. The next step Is to fill the pores with a wood filler ami sandpaper It down and polish It. Most of the rock maple obtained for Ihe manufacture of tenpins comes from the fatsklll nnd Adirondack moun tains. The western manufacturers get their wooil from Ihe forests In north cm Michigan. Aecoidlng to the sta tistics compiled by George KIuuipp there were alsnit '.',000,000 tenpins In use this season. A llellce llccoril-lliiok, The shrewd comment of u Lan cashire blacksmith, whoso wits had not been dulled by otoreducntlou, Is quoted by the Coruhlll Magazine. It mny he suggestive to students In our universities who spend tho lecture hours In scribbling notes Instead of listening und irulcrstnudlng. The clerk In charge of n furriery class held by tho county council at Preston, England, guvo n stalwart blacksmith u uotu book and pencil, "Wut'B this 'ere book for?" naked tho mnn. "To tnko notoH," replied tho clerk. " 'Notes'' Wot sort o' notes' " "Why, anything Hint tho lecturer says thnt you think Important nnd want to remember you make a uoto of In the book." The Lniicnshliemnn looked scornful, "Ohl" said he. "Anything I want to remember I must mnko a nolo of In this 'cro Imok, must I? Then wot do you think my blooming yert's for'" What They Nood. Some men havo very ugly views, And llko to vrntllnta llicm. When, really, If they hud their dues, Tliey ought to fumigate them. Philadelphia Press. If you would profit by your own ad vice he n lawyer or n doctor. rTTTOTiifWT r arMTrrTii ti