crunu cum th . The madness of the lighthouse is much fine to ylocate te, meg? 'latch',',',? 1:ke that oi tlt desert, for they are portant incident. the Historical accurecy traceable to a like muse. In the desert of which should he 'uftnitelv determined. there is monotony of silence. At sea 1tlrt:rr---u-a" Uere u monotony of sound. One is as Advantage of Being a lute. tad as the other, since both derive their First Deaf Mute (making signal-Mid entire pain from mental effect. It is a Four wife complain because you stayed fearful disease, not yet fully understood, cut till after midnight! though many noted olienists hove made Second Deaf Mute (chtaeklirtg)-Did a study of it. she? You should hue seen her. Bat This government maintains 1,500 light- when it began to get monotonous I just hoses, end about 100 of them ere xso- turned out the light. Lighthouse-Keepers Often Suffer Prom the Inevitable Isolation. People who read books-and all do in this day-will recall Kipling’s story of the lonely lightkeeper who became mad from the monotony of his situation. While the story was tietion. it neverthw Ieu was in accordance with many ac- tual occurrences. A correspondent sub- mitted the question to the lighthouse hard, and found that, while there had bun no Inch cases aa that of Kipling‘s character, Dowse, there had been many which showed the maddening effect of monotony and isolation upon the human mind. Acording to the Westminster Guette, the originator of pictorial pooh] an]: WM a Frenchman. M. _Besnardeau, of tiiih)Guitattrne, in the Department' of la Sax-the. To this gentleman occurred the happy thought. at the time of the T ar with Germany. that. as there Were 40,000 conscripts. most of them some- demand by issuing a second series wit: spaces on whoch soldiers were invited to write the names of any battles in which they might have taken part. Minard's Lineman! ORIGIN or PICTURE Posh" CARDS. Wilson's Fly Pads, Three hun.. dred times cheaper than sticky paper. day owr it imiiing hot, drain, and mix with the fruit n largo teacupful of sugar, tho yolk of an 03:31. a tablespoonful of lnlttur and one flour. moistening with three tub]: spoonfuls of water. Bake in on" crust. cow-ring the top with narrow strips of pastry, crossed, or a meringue. The old-fashioned "pie-plant" pie, like mothor used to make, with a plain fruit filling fan she said, "sweeterid nil the rulo valid for. then shut your eyes and put in scum more") that way of build. In: it has its ardent devotees to this pieces. Cover with co stand three hours. change the water once Drain and press out I a cream sauce with t of butter, two of tiour and one of milk. tablespoonlula of ttne mix carefully and wel Put in a shallow gnu the. top with cheese n1 nvvn. This may be 1 dish with the additio avh. Cook the spin: fine and heat in a very Put in the bottom of Pour over the cmllish Daddie- Wine. Pick "Meient fresh ihtwers to mess- nre three quarts who) stemmed sud pressed down. Rinse them in cold wster pine in n stone jsr end pour over then four quarts of freshly boiling water. Let stand for two days, stirring four times s day: strsin end to the liquid add three pounds of - end the pond yellow rind of one lemon; heat quickly and boil twenty minutes, add three gal- lons more of boiling water, set nside,‘ end when cold add two oranges pared end thinly sliced, the strained juice of one lemon, and one-half of sn yeast cake. Let stand for twenty-four hours, by which time it should be fermenting well; skim out the oranges pieces, add one pound of washed sultana raisins and turn into a keg or barrel if making on n. large scale. Let it stand at least a month before bottling. Dainty Fried Toast. Make a batter of one pint milk, one teaspoonful flour and one beaten egg. Dip into this stale sliced bread or bis. cuit an instant, and fry in ham drip- pings or any sweet fat or oil. The egg prevents bread from soaking the least bit of fat. Very appotizing and quickly made. T er, three pounds of gru'ulnted sugar, of yeast; boil sugar and Inter together one-half of s lemon, three tnblespconluds end pour over the blossoms in the morn- ing, cut the lemon before pouring on inter; let all stsnd till night; " night add the yeast; let stand till morning; strsin into n keg, and put . piece of mosquito netting over the bung, let it stead for six weeks, when it is ready Eldexbeny Biol-om Wine One quart of cldcrbetry bio-com: pick- ed from the steps, three qufrts of wat- GO MAD FROM MONOTONY Tea-Minute Eggs. nanny. that, as there were ts, most of them some- , in the camp of Conlio. 'll sell them cards instead -nvelop09. m did so, il, ards with pietures of mm a. quickly ehared out his mudod to the continuing Cures Colds, etc. What Can We Believe? (Chicago Chronicle.) The esteemed New York Sun having demonstrated to its own satisfaction that Col.Roosevelt's charge up San Juan Hill was away from the scene of the fighting; the Wood inquiry having de- veloped testimony that the "Doc" was in the rear at Santiago when according to his own testimony he was at the front; the Kansas text-book commit" sioner having decided that Funston never swam the Bag Bag River, to. gether with sundry other triumphs of ieotsoelwsm, the next thing in order it to “certain whether Gen. Joe Wheeler actually climbed a tree on the ttring line to locus the enemy. This is an im- rtant inci ent. th his . My 5' whieh an...†t... Le/erin' , _ - The drummer sat counting the flies; The place where he sat wore the print of a toe Of a bot of a very large size; The bitter tears fell on the smoking car floor. While over and over the poor drummer swore. And drearilz chanted the sad "Never- Gets hare, His yearning heart throhbed at the wide myster-ee Of the far-away look in her eyes. He offered to brighten the tedious ride! (Sing ho! but the drummer was wise!) He asked if he mightn't sit down by her side: (Oh, the far-away look in her eyes!) "Why, surely, kind sir," said the maiden, "but, oh, Wait till you Far up in the smoker, alone with his I "Think of the Indian names you know. Don't you accent nearly all of them on the syllable before the last? There are, for instance, Toronto, Mis- sissippi, Allegheny, Appalachicola, Nar- ragansett. Tuscaloosa, Saratoga, Con. 'sl:ohocken, Wissahickon and Hoch'elaga. In all these names the accent is on the penult. i "Niagara is a Huron word, and if you ifimi, tt Huron you will find that he ac- Icents it as he does Saratoga or Tuscal- 'oosu. I don't know how we have fallen into the habit of accenting it wrong." He paused with a sigh and a languish- ing look; (Sing ho! but the drummer was wise!) . He lowered her window and bought her a book: Nor minded her chilly replies: "Flhe'll be a schoolmn'am from Ma. dam!†thought he, "Or n boarding school miss on vacation, maybe!†mm a far-away look in his "Niagara means ‘Hark to the thun- der.' Its accent should fall on the pen- ult, because the Indians themselves ac- cent it there, because in practically all our Indian names of places the penult is the accented syllable. wrong,'" said a philologist. "The accéent of this beautiful Indian word should not be put on the syllable 'ag,' but on the syllable 'ar'-the penult--the one before the last. Therefore the Accent Should Be on the Last Syllable but One. 'ait till the 'eonduetor--my husband, you know, we here. He will help.r-Here he comes --Must you go?" (Sing hey! but the drummer was wise'.) The tower, being circular, and epnce greatly in demand, naturally everything is made to conform, so that no room shall be lost. Even' the beds on which the men slep are curved. Everything is round. The government has done the Inst it could to make life there as bear- aNe as possible, and keeps five men sta- honed there, so that they may go ashore as often as the chance is afforded with- cut detriment to the trerviee.--rndianapo- hs Sentinel. More than a year was consumed in getting a foundation for it, and so high are the tides and so terrihe the storms that the entrance to the light is more than forty feet above the Water. Then, one above the other come the tire rooms crcupied by the keepers and used for storage purposes, then the watehroom and finally the lantern. light. It is well known that the Minot Ledge light is noted for the number of men V. ho have gone crazy in it, and for that mason is an object of interest to stud- ents of mental disenee. It is, as every- body knows, a piece of engineering of the very highest order, being in that respect leeclond only to the famous Eddystone NIAGARA IS A HURON WORD, In a remarkably short time k r end assistant have talked out. 'ftd"1lf,', be. ruin to wear on each other, and soon they fall to quarrelling. Sometimes melan- (holis attacks one of them, and unless he is speedily relieved his mental bal- ance is disturbed. When the disturbance becomes extreme it takes either as homi- cidal or suicidal turn, end the unfortu- nate has to be watched closely and some- times confined to keep him from doing v.0lence to himself or others. If a. man is taken from the ordinary walks of life, where he mingle: with his fellow man, and sent to n lighthouse where no human face is seen except that o' the ever-present assistant, and no sound is heard save the roaring of the mud and wave, he has been transferred from normal to most armor-mu! condi- tions. lated, and eommunieatim, with the out- side world may be interrupted sometimes for months. "Everybody pronounces N iagarq. more I " BREAKING OF A HEART. eyes. The Countess-a iaGrit I do not undo-stand why I do not {all in love with him. What Puzzled the Countess. (Fliegende Blaetter.) Lieutenant (congratulating the teas, who he just been married)- hu.tye is e worthy man. k plant or two in the room with ' piano, to prevent the sounding board from becoming too dry. “What kind of plast do you think would be best t" she asked her husband. "Well," said he, "it you leave it to me, I think a .teiler-mafcing plant would be ubout the right sort.†mum’s Lineman: Cures Curie! in Cow s Trim) recently bought a piano, but med It as soon as his wife and all the children began learning to play. The other evening Mrs. Tripp read in a music journal that it is a, good idea to keep n n._; A- L...- d, AL, __ ... Shiloh’s T ; Qansumption} lo, but it appears to be sueeehtrl Ia is to be given a trial in several other favorable localities. Once frozen, the ice in these shallow rcservoirs is there until the thaw sets in, when ot melts so slowly as to keep up a stly of moisture sufficient for the germination and growth of the early crops. This unique method has been tried so far only in the vicinity of Dil. Cure .New Plan in Montana in Connection , With Irrigation. A travelling man recently returned from a. trip through Montana tells of a. curious method he saw there for storing , ster needed for irrigation purposes. This consists of nothing more nor less than freezing the water until it is want- ed. As soon as the weather becomes such as to melt this ice it is fit for the operations retquiring the water. The plan, which so far is in the nature of an experiment, consisit in Taking a. se~ ries of shallow basins on the slope of a. in! in such locations that, when water is plentiful they may be filled, each of those below the average receivinb sue-1 cresively the overflow from the onol above it. I _ Barwietr, Ont., June 20.--Wprusia1.)- (Wind? Dodd’s -.K.dney Pills will cure Rheumatism, or any other disease re- sulting from disordered Kidneys is the experience of many of the set- tlers in this Jtainy River country. The case of William John Dixon, of this place, is a tair sample of the work the great Canadian Kidney Remedy is doing. , . "I had Rheumatism so bad I had to use a stick to walk. I had pains in my back and right hip and Iliad no comfort in sleeping. " could do no more than dress or undress myself tor nearly two months, and I :was tor nearly three Weeks 1 could not lace my right shoe. "My brother advised me to try Dodd’s Kidney J'illsvvad I did so. At- ter taking three Jroxes I could Walk around and lace up my shoes and do my work. Six, boxes cured me com- l pletely." l Dodd's Kidney Pills are the one sure cure tor sick Kidneys. Sick Kidneys are the Cause of nine-tenths or the ills the human family suffer from. Then his Rheumatlum and other Pains Vanished once and for 'ui-HUC- only one of many. Till Dodd's Kidney Pills Cured his Kidneys. The go'ng is the great tenor bell of the cathedral, whieh weigns 32 cwt., and it is struck hourly by an 80-pound ham. mer. The gong and the striking parts of the clock are some yards apart, commun- ication being by a slender wire. The clock has no dial, The time is shown on the main wheel of the escapement, which goes round once in two hours.--- London Chronicle. RAINY RIVER MAN HAD TRUUBLES The clock is said to be of much more primitive construction than that made by Henry de Nick for Charles V. of France in 1370. The clock chamber is in the northwest tower, some 120 feet high, where the sunlight has not penetrated for hundreds of years. and the winding is Ame by the light of a. candle. ‘Erected in 1320 in One of the Tower: of Peterborough Cathedral. Peterborough Cathedral has the oldest working clock in England. It was erect- ed about 1320 and is probably the work of a monastic clock maker. It is the only one now known that is wound up over an old wooden wheel. This wheel is about 12 feet in circumference, and the galvanized cable, about 300 feet in length, supports a leaden weight of 3 owl, which has to be wound up daily. Prices: S. C. WELLS & Co. 312 2K. Soe. " LeRoy. N.Y.,Toronto. Can. ' The Lung lure Tonic is the only remedy that will do this. It gets right to the root of the trouble. It is guaranteed to cure. You can't cure a cough or cold from the outside. You must cure it through the blood. OLDEST CLOCK IN ENGLAND. The Plant Be Wanted. - a “we! us: out (be 'rdgmeeq m '- . In 'toN--"--' “and." “York." “Mammoth." a. In Shook“ napalm," " Roy-l," "legal." "orient." aa. Use can the son, sun, mus" _ TOILET PAPERS FROZEN RESERVOIRS. Fit." diiltt Iit?h --Your IAIUFAOTUIID " TORONTO 5g 'That several pf the congregutibn looked at their watches frequent] ,†answered the good man, with tact-{er deep sigh. . "mat was a. great sermon you preached this PorNng," said the old warden, "and it muf well timed, too." "Yes," rejoined the parson with a deep i911, " noticed thaf." 'Noticed what t" asked the punk] warden. v _ ,,,',_..‘u ".nll Jul. Poor dog! The family grieved. The children "vept, eoystantly remindful of their beautiful pet. Something over a month had passed, and they were think. ing of trying to buy back the pet they missed so much when they received a lrtter with a Virginia postmark. It was to the effect that the St. Bernard dog bad mourned himself to death. Lonely' and refusing to eat or to be mmfnrtml he had at iLiuCi, ..“.... mm Juno n-ucneu ms tormer owner. he simply grieved to death. Here, his owner, who lives out on the Main Line, made the dog feel like one of the family. The intelligent creature loved every member of the family, espe~ cially the children, and know every friend, and never failed to distinguish between I delivery man and an objectionable eharacter. lie seemed to take a pride in going to shows and to understand and Ike the honor and admiration heaped upon him. So when he was boxed up to be sent to Virginia, where the man who bought him lived, he barked with in,, Sent Away From Kind Family, Be Grier. ed to Death. At the Dog Show to be held at St. Bartin's Gren there will be exhibited a young St. Bernard dog that is expected to distinguish himself in the way of blue ribbons. It was the intention to also exhibit the dog’s sire, which has taken blue ribbons at former shows. This will be impossible, as news of the poor dog's death has just reached his former owner. lie_simplx grieved to death. Mlnard's Linament Cures Distemper. An ounce of miles in worth I. ton i In entertaining royaltv many restric- tions must be observed. One of the strangest of those unwritten laws is that which forbids the use of finger (howls at dinner for any of the guests {except the royal onos. This custom idates from the early days of the :Georgos. when the nobles were divided 'in their allorriauce hotu'ovn the reign- ing house of Hanover and the exiled Stuarts. To many of these nobles: allegiance to the Stuarts. was a religion and often tho outward acts of allegi- ance to the reigning sovereign were per- verted into treasonahle acts of homage to the exiles. No dinner was complete without its toast to "the King" in thosel davs ,to evade which was an act of: treason punishable even with death and loss of titles and estates. The Jacob. ites, however, discovord a way to avoid this penalty without 'uyrrifieing their loyalty. Holding the wine glass over the finger bowl. they draind the glass to "the King," with a mental reservation "over the water." This simple ruse was soon discovered and the use of tinger bowls was forbidden. WHEN ROYALTY IS ENTERTAINED Her deck and for-apart were cumbered with great fragments of ice, weinhing over 200 tons in all, shattered from the berg when she struck, being so wedged into the fractures and gaps as to make it unwise to start them until she was docked. The whole population of St. John's lined the water front to witness her arriva1.--McChuws Magazine. She was headed for St. John's at slow speed, so as not to strain the bulkhead too much, and arrived there thirty-six hours later. a frowning seaboard, while the liner lurched and staggered like a wounded thing in agony as her engines slowly drew her back.from the rampart against which she had flung herself. The vast white terror had lain across her course, stretching so far each way that when deseried it was too late to alter the helm. Its giant shape fllled the foreground, towering high above the masts, grim and gaunt and ghastly, im- movable as the admantine buttress of But the crew were well in hand, .40 oflieers maintained order, and a. hurried examltmion being made, the forward bulkhead was seen to be safe. The welcome word was passed along that the ship, though sorely stricken. would still i1tat until she could make a harbor. Able to Make Port, However, After a Run of Thirty-six Home. The most remarkable case on record. of an iceberg collision is that of the Gmon liner Arizona, in 1879. She was then the greyhound of the Atlantic and the larg- est ship taoat-i5,750 tons-except the Great Eastern. Leaving New York in November for Liverpool with 600 sotrht on board, she was cruising across the Banks, with fair weather, but dark, when near midnight, about 250 miles east of St. John's, she rammed 9. mon- ster ice island at full speed-eighteen knots. Terrific was the impact and in. describable the alarm. l The assengers flung themselves from their Egrths. made for the deck as they stood, though some were injured as to be helpless, and the calls of these for- ward, added to the shrieks of the fren- zied mob of half-clad men and women who charged for the boats, made up a Pandemonium. Wild cries arose that the ship was sinking, for she had settled by the head, and with piteous appeals and despairing exclamations, the passengers urged the boats over, that they might escape the death that they thought in. evitable. DOG DIED or BROKEN HEART, STEAMER RAMS AN ICEBERG. He Had Noted It. to be conrGiii'i of Wheat Food for Oriental. That wheat is taking the place of rice as the principle article of food in Japan and China is a conclusion "rived at bv consultation of statistics, and the red. son is to be found in the development of wheat fields hitherto left to the growth of grass, as in Canada, Australia and Russian. The more wheat is raised the more will be used, the larger yield keep- i the price down, end no it is the tin. 'df grain u, it is bound to take the also: of STU,',. Mrs. "athmrGnii.Liii'ii; you goosie, the recipe lays whites. Following Directions. Mr. Justhuaband (in the l Darling, darling, why are you away the. yqlka pf all those ef Wilson's Fly Pads. cent packet has actually killed of tiiea 7,1, -..... "'""'"'", van "GW. whined the pessimist, crop like this is terribly wearing Boil. ' “Good friend,' a visitor said to the farmer. 'you are fortunate this, tour.' Ho. pruned to the heavy and rich grdn fields tT. ending so far as the eye crould sec. 'h on can’t grumble,' he went on. 'abovi wour crop this season. eh ." ' Br. Richard T. Gottheil, of Columbia University, who has a broad know .dge of (mental tales and proverbs, says the New lurk Tribune, was condemning pessimirm one day at Columbia. "Ptssuism," he said, "ia as old as the hills. Mankind has always regard. ol if and has always derided it. "There ie a Persian story nbon a pessimist. That story is so old that no date can be assigned to it. lc. con. mumQ a ptssimistic farmer. tions. WIISOW’O Fly Pads: the or.igi.nal and only genuine. Avoid cheap unna- Gh‘n- xxulculucl', my (wrung, 1'11 expect you at, '.'t o'eloek, and I hope you won't disap- point me." y F V V"..- - \vul\l IIU‘EI make up my mind if I were alone. Now n member, my darling, 1'll expect you at ll. -)-I--I_ __, 7 u _ “My heart is almost broken because 3our father has forbidden me to call on you, and I know the only reason is be. cause I am not wealthy. I cannot, how. ever, live without you, and so we must meet somewhere. NOVEL “UVERTISEMENT. That sentiment can be used with good effect in an advertisement, the Germans evidently believe; otherwise it is di0ieult to account for the following letter which rsently appeared among the busine>s not. i(es n a German paper: 'My Dearest Charlotte: A neighbor advised up to try Mr. NARD'S LINIMJENT. which we did, and within three days my child was all rig-ht, and I feel so $rrtyterurthat I send you this testimonial, that my experience may be ot benefit to oth- ers. Louis Gagnier. Gent1tsmem-Lmrt Novembnr my child stuck a nail in his knee, causing inflammation so severe that I was 11de to take him to Montron! and {have the limb amputated to save " He. St. Martin, Que., May IB, 1895. C. C. Richards & Co. h 'Oh, that is really a sad Mory.' she replied. 'You Bee, he was poor, and I per- suaded my husband to lend him $50. But that ruined him so far as social p poses were concerned.' " 'How did it ruin him f' I askod. " 'Why, the foolish man wont and tought a suit of ready-made clothes and then actually had his hair cut short! Just fancy, a literary lion with no manel'" "That reminds me of a story. Not long Mo I attended a musicale at the house of a well-known literary woman. In course of conversation I asked her whar had become of that long haired genius to whom she always referred as her liter. ary lion. _ Irving Bacheller at a. recent reception was asked if he could tell the origin of the expression "ltterary lion." Running his fingers through his iron gray hair, he‘ smiled, shook his head slowly and said: Tight little England, no bigger in area than New York State, yet With a popu- lation of M,000,000, is by far the largest importing nation in Europe. The most remarkable feature of Ehg1and's trade with the world is the preponderance of ltrade carried on with the United States. During 1903 Great Britain bought from the United States more than eight hun. dred million dollars’ worth of our pro- duets, and this Anglo-American trade is by far the largest trade between any two countries on earth. The amount named exceeds by more than half a bil- lion dollars the value of imports from the next largest seller, namely. France. Thus at the outset it is not hard to un- derstand that with the output of our plantations, farms. ranches, and dairies, and with the products of our mills and factories. we feed. clothe and shells-r. and provide the comforts and necessities gen- eraly, for the people of Great Britain. --Gilson Willets in Leslie's Weekly. Lover's Y-Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soap Powder dusted in the bath, softens the water and disinfeeta. M Jd then PERSIAN PESSIMIST'S WHINE. ENGLAND OUR BEST CUSTOMER. Anton-comm “5 LOST LION. l the kitchen)--. tWe you throwing tho-e egg" 'Bemuse, James, use only thi One ten a bushel but Jt (-1. he Brimmer--must to please m "but. old tNr-just to please my glean“. “Plea-e your friends t" "Yes, some of them think I look Wall in glasses Ind lame of them don't. All they have to do now is to take their“ of the profile that please. them. Mimi's Lin-cut Cures “other“. Fish m found in who: at iii “In: often play hooker. . z Greene-a any, Brimmer‘ wear n monoeolet Words of our! cannot pictuno tho beauties of a trip along the crest Hudson Rlver. 'Tite to make the 'trln to appreciate It. Full particular. by applying to Louis Drago, Cnnodlon Ptsmengor Agent. 69x Yonca ctr-eon Toronto. _.-.. -v... “u“ Iv‘ul u oluigd "Inâ€| Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls and Buffalo. Tickets good going Thum- dny. July lt, and tor return within ntteon days from date of issue. Passengers also have the privilege or a, trip on Wudqon River .teatttere between Albany and New York in either direction, without extra charge. New York centraCGursion After a brief silence the bore oom- menoed: "Were you ever blind, air!†"No." Another pause. "Did I understand you to any you had a. wife and six children at home, and had never Been one of them?" "Fact." "How can that bet" "Why," we: the reply, "one of them was born after I left." A village inquisitor, having plied I newcomer with every conceivable queoo tion " to bagel, mum, prospects, eta, fimuly naked im if he had 0. family. "Yea," wu the reply, "1 have I wife and six children, nad I never saw one of them." In western Nebraska near the Union Paeiiie Railroad in section lots of 640 acre: each, for almost nothing. The ul- ubrity of these lands in something re- markable. Distance from railroad is three to thirt miles. There will be e grand rush of homesteadâ€; This is the last distribution of free homes the Unit. ed States Government will ever make in Nebraska. Write for pamphlet telling how the lends can be acquired, when en. try should be made, and other informs. tion. Free on npplicetlon to any Union Paeifie agent. Government hands tor Homestead"- a 'ittle higher than is usually asmi,umed for this germ. Typhoid germs are also rapidly destroyed by sunlight, an ex- posure of 80 minutes to one hour usual- ly being sumcient to sterilize a culture when spread in a thin layer. EIpecially Sensitive to High Tempera- tum and Sunlight. Some recent experiments conducted in this country in regard to the viability of the typhoid bacillus are of esoecial interest to Philadelphians. It appears that this organism is rapidly destroyed by cold and heat. Rapidly, however, does not mean instantly " a freezing tem- perature, as the typhoid germ may sur- vive when frozen in ice for a consider- able length of time, although the num- ber of living organisms is rapidly dimin- ished. They are much more sensitive to heat. An exposure of about five min. utes at a temperature from 176 to 135 Fahrenheit is destructive. This fUrure is New yort and return $10.25 from We otter One Hundred Dollars' Reward for any can at Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hull's Cnurrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & 00.. Toledo, o. We, the 'het'?,??',",; have known r. J. Cheney tor the hut tr yearn and bell". il- perfectly honorable In all bunlm-u "an atrium and tiuanttully able to carry on! any oblitrntiotus made by cull firm. Wanna-o, Knnun A luau. Wholouh Dragging, Toledo, o. Halli Cnurrh Cure in taken trtterttnll.r,ae. In: directly upon the Mood and mucous cur (we: at the "atom. Tuumonlaln aunt in. "at'a'fliie bottle. Bold by all druzzln‘. Take 8 ’I FlmllyPllla for coultlpuuul Oboervetl in Their Palace for Over r.. mum. The Monthly Weather Bureau pub. lishw a summary of the observations coveri three remarkable meteors ob. 581'“!de the U. S. fl. Supply, at sea, on Feb. 28 last. The meteors ap- peared in I group, the largest having an "apparent area of about six suns." It was egg-shaped, the sharper and for. ward. This end was jagged in outline. The other two meteors were round, one apparently "double the size of the sun†and the other "about the sizo of the sun.†The meteors were in sight over two minutes, and were carefully ob. served by three people. whose nr‘r‘ountl agree in all details. Curiously. they hm approached the earth'l nurture and then receded. un. “"16"- Sooanug a snow] tegr.u'tgthl 'Sd w:- 'iriiilla?,. a: O W _ cone in te m 'GariiiiiiAi ff,) Dimâ€. tt VIABILITY OF TYPHOID GERMS. MANUFACTURED ONLY " fifr4)if5l NO BRASS EYELETS "tittuM0titi_rRhtttn4 NINE MILLION ACRES Striving To Please. CT2rtrt my) Correctly numbed. MW'S THIS ? FLIGHT or METEORS. 'iNiiti3, NO. 27 1904. ' why dtrroq figure is assigned no also Sunday k t','f2riit,',t, L11 (mud tunnel-H tl [and himself the succenl We, he met the leadd nth- " Shechem. 'Whitt can“: vac called otiutu" rlfttfl, of continuing In: ll kingdom, yc-L the peo “named to exact cerluil A. the condition an theur i [he] had many gnu-u northern trib-s rvtwlhrd n Weâ€; on and asked KPH Belle“) [hum of “Mir mm {ramming if h,. would 1 edge him as king. It. valnbuulu'r: mm s’ou. m. All thw "void“. Tim m referei and n The U the " his do Ionubl thu, w nanny and uh old men ot Wisdt: in his , “Visors But (hr young. mim- the; the up" entirely figurative. It .1 Ilble that the lanes of Blttltes. etc. (chap. 9, 1 been kept at their toils --apeuee. With sum-plum- 'toorTtion--tut inatruuu-m arith tinny luslu-I, like the animal of this mun huh armed with sharp laceratc the nesh--ttt a “bit: scourge than the a .0 will my lewrity ex: Era "small: I But he , ceited H H. It consulted llu- your qmtiates us. ti, U). ot ' lool I. that h tools tot. Ins duh". We a fatal mm“ Ice. 1 Will add. Tt - of tyrant. Il ttter's.-'Nrrt Thu at downlnll. " was the for him to Jake we trough! about ot u. The course of menu ed by Solomon's tra they warm MI by u tttetr natural rc-aulu father was Vlsitod l Lumby. God lursm'l freely do, and order or mercies newt-ng tor. 16-30). All lsrw'! ll' the tel In David, a it. the mu arehy mm ton mum David, “or Sewn: pear 003mb talus 1 lal in would um tl was r Iion t a tit Mutt. xii, tents--Thic war cry, c the exodus. lived in ten' ber also In: How et'owd doubtless n dwelling in David's docs dtuttitety ". w wiich awe were womb but who In Judah. did trim, but [ mitted tn l Whi um Wit 18. Son! lector and obnoxious was prom atom. but total word in the nali blood If: M be heak in Chris' ter ttoth of a dim It In ti INTERNATIONAL him JULY 3. 1004 " Ii char: wrou In". It 1',ll ‘goukl haw Commenury.-I nutter to a a( m my he mm Divided-t Kin. M Ill are" ll t n " O' It St " td Mt me to UK t. With I the cute live. It In lube: of Hm has“ W h Hanan! W MM: