'Have end Woman es, MOF THE Your Scarlet Sins Sisndsd Whiter Than the Driven Snow. Race to Escape a Train--Terrible Fight With a Burning ee Ship. brewery is not quite the kind of Place one would expect to form (Entered according to Act of the Pare luament of Canada, ry "ine year One Wm. Baily, of erences at Foire P.. _~ement of -Agetoule ure, *Ottaus ) A despatch Spott im toe Angeies, Cal., says :--Hev. Frank De Witt T 'almage eae from ihe following tcxt :-- Isaln ii,7, "Wash me, and I shell be whiter than snow." "Absurd = simile,"" say; "that statement cannot oe veclentifically truce. Where is nothing whiter than snow, any more than there is | any- thing deater tian de than a or cmptier than rom a chemist's standpoint, hae superlative whiteness. he sume of all vapors is that found Along comes aan that vapor into og ng just that cold war n freeze 'ailing raindrops into patatonek which yat- ter upon the pavement. 'Then as that a imc slowly drops through | the nit it-comes to-us as while os it bs is possible "hs 'any thing to be. And | yet there is a sense in whic the psaimist is right in saying thot God can wash away our gins until we | Lecome "whiter than snow," the pure snow, the spotiess, wind driven snow. THE DRUNK: ARD'S SINS. We do not bind the imagination: of tho poct with the rigid bonds of wcientific accuracy. e is accorded a license to see spiritual eyes and sounds not scientifically Though -these words of my text may be lilernlly true, in the figura- 'Though your that seem to you indelible as scarlet, you have committed sins have not only corrupted your , but have laid the souls of like the human sacrifice of pated aa poten ify cept them, Like the prodigal i in his rags nud tatters, there is a e for } you in the Father's house. Though, ! like Paul, you have to acknowledge j yourself the chief of sinners, ike him | you may find grace and have the ;§ honor of toiling in Christinn service. the neither in for 'the drunkard's 8 | can man down so that he wil 'ie all sense of dee and respec They can Gate n man into a " candition more imbruted than that of a wild beast. The drunkard after awhile seems to be- come as ee era i in tis pas- sions as the patient whose voracious appetite is insatiable after a long @ The arent: lie we't tombs of the Gadarenes, aod, Ii them, they may be exor "by tl diving power. are ~* game direct and indirect cause 7 'countless other sins. REDDEST OF ALL SINS. 'Yhe drunkard's sins, without doubt READY TO FORGIVE. Sapior's hair went quite. white = « q s ng along the must bo -- among the reddest of "From that oment, sir, that [rogult of the awful strain and fear Strand pavenient, it is a sufficient all scarlet Ne comes the !young fellow Ict loose all his evil lop that race. that a cause celebre is in pro- practical quent, Will God cleanse aealree: He scered to leap into a] 'Trospassers on singl~line railways , and that the limited capacity t drunkard's sins? When we Say |yery whirlpool of sin, Within a few ve many narrow escapes, but what of a particular court will be over- he is a loathsome, heartless, FOOU |months | an expelled from college. | must bave been the nang rest. thing" taxed 2 blic gallery will be for nothing drunkard do we menn, |Within two years he committed sui-|in its wav on record bai antl t & crow wded by fashionable people, or an wey ero is HO hope for the drunk~'cide, and this is the letter he wrote n re obliging tipstafl will secure a seat rd ?"° Seme of us have such a} nett of faith that we do mean this; iv. | a a though by drunkenness you sold 'your honte under t i's s hammicr, though you hate -- ed your business and had your eye horror struck with the eat cmene are found testifying to the glomous rescuing power of the gospel of Jesus . "Though your drunkard's- sins be os scarivt. shall be as white snow; though they be red | liko crimson, they shall be ag wool CHRIST READY TO FORGIVE, | Christ is deol to cleanse also the } @ebuuchee's sin My that 4 mean | Christ is ready al forgive those who have immorally broken up the sanct | He forgave the | who concen led the | Hebrew spies: he forgave the sins of | Javid, who stole the poecr man's ewe: he forgave the = sins tho |} dissolute woman who talked with him at the Samaritaa weil; he for- gave the sins of the woman denounc- ed by the scribes, to who he turned and said: "Woman, wkere are thine accurcrs ? Doth no man condemn thee Neither do I condemn thee. Go and sin no more.' *hris is reudy to forgive the social outeast's sins. ny he was ready to forgive the rearlet. sing of the dying thief and the murderer. jut, though the Bible declares is but one unpardonable -sin i bans against the Moly tihest, yet, fay, most peante are not willing to forgive the sips of libertinism, especially if the social otltcast belongs to the female eex, Alas, alas! Tiven the best of s, are eften ready to look upon way- rier God's giveness, vet when his only daughter, hia motherless girl, wie ono child, who was all to. him. h beon "Into Bin ho turned~to the clerk ¢ of tho yitiage kirk and said: "Aye. blot off the books She is my uae "plot her name off the But, or my brother and sister jtt _ murdered them ded jist rT. as pure as step, his bed, and that my lieve there is no hell?' I answered, vince him e horrible laugh. said: ecll, o ite: dy. my mother and father; but as for me, HM Co sher- j¢8 . the leaders in our churches and |°P tho meckes . led! af men, like the proverbial worm was | t Do theatre of a highly-sensational adven- Ien "woman, yet -- to-day offers |ture--a race with dcath--but the vat- pardon and peace every penitent |room of a big ~ in Petes Magdalene. Procgh mah sins against |New Jetsey, was cade acene morality may he as. scarlet, they |of one of the pli wm thei Penta shall be whiter than the driven snow. : PARDON FOR ALL. Christ is ready to forgive the Lecanet derer's sins. y that. do I mean hat he is ready to forgive the high- possible of imagination. In the vat-| r are three large | mashing-tubs, all under the control of Abraham Sapior, the the thrilling race. t the This tub, like its two fellows, was ho in tho dark |uscd for mixing the malt oe to night drives the "knife into the heart |its boiling, and for the purpo: of of his sleeping adversary? working the malt about it was atted us is ready to forgive the convicted | murderer though he ay be standing upon the scaffold nder the hang man's noose, ebout io expiate his aw- ful crime, 'Pardon for all' is the menning © of text--par and peace and eternal life for all, n no mat- jter how vile, if in sincere repentance ithey will come to him and plead for - mercy through his atoning sacri- shaft, revolved horizontally when the tub was workin the constant friction these knives nal time, become ngly Sapior was being assisted pnacesione by another man, xO SINNER NEED DESPAIR. sd which into the tub, himself remaining in flow false signs, ap WwW gun. e is who have slain by the lip as well as by the hand. In olden times the |gear in motion. so that before Sapior pirates along the coast of Vingland jhad time oe climb out of the huge used to change the positions of the ite he found the lights. Then the sea captains, watch- NEAT KNIVES REVOLVING ing the beckonings of the false lights, | > would drive their boats upon -- the roa . nein to clamber ups the rocks and bo 'wreeliod lasenaesir s shining side with the Knives would rifle the drowned 85 |§0 h ving "wns out nf the question 80 he placed himself between the two sets and walked round after fore him. lIiis shouts to his assist- lant were drowned in the hum of ma- chinery, and the knives quickened their » rapidly tat before Sapior , realized the danger of econ Bagel together the wrecked car- They were murderers--murder- | weapons were false lights. o God will forgive even those inure | derers who have destroyed their low men by false examples as a ill forgive those who with the dagger run hard in keep up with | °F \the knives in front of him and escape | those behind him. To stand out of reach of , nace | Was impossible, for they swe ina = inches of the ehell of the tub. ery mo ment their speed in- | Crenser : the pane to run faster and faste' y ment his feet might aw "slipped on gr polished floor of the tub and 'have = him to those hideous steel k | Howed and geo tay "--_ faster in the grun. "What!"' so.ne murderer says. don fer my scarlet sins? cannot be true. Why, you do 'not |! know what you ore saying. .My sins | are worse than scarlet. They = are black with the hopelessness of de- pair, There can be no pardon jme. Let me tell you story: When I went as a Very wild boy. roommate who was the son of ¢ Tie was a ruddy faced lad and t him how to lhiging v what n mistake ye had com- those be- |5t The high courts. cing curt of sutimmary ction a pray fears " gained, © and. 3 Tu ry. remarka room, or gone over submitted t es arc "* i over OPPH SSSION. At times corridor je miore ani- mated than the Strand outside; peo- start from nowhere, and Without pause fselessly to Fe jury; here, too, of justice; from the | SUF! jurisdic water labor of tillag: pen dr an ssive janitors guard their motion, and t the same ti er ing back the heavily-curtoined you are in one of the eightcen courts | set aside for the yeurly increasing lit- | I ted him . ftep by | into the paths of sin. One night | mitted: 'that i t. and bereft of --I can remember the time as [enee, ba S Ore vesterday--he sat upon the corner of [ing dumbly, -- implored | him to stop the machine! and, with a strange light oa > he turned and looked at m Between fear end exhaustion 'Jim, do you really believe pior was within an eo of collapsing. | mothers Bible is -- a i another workman appeared of. superstitions? che aeene. a momen he realized | = oon, Do you be- "Yes, farey" see danger, flew to the Then Brent on to con Then he laughed a -- he turned and rstition, good- his cyes. said: j ack of it. CHECKED THE illow 'of ome, Jim, could sink in a sense! jmashing-tub floor without jon the night of his self murder: nriam Puelfic line. |Mother--This is the last letter you | ing crossing will ever receive from* have! . broken your heart, but et ta forget ieee supports a single pair of raila and forgive. If there is no kell, as Jim says, this world is a hell enough ts "rom _ your disgraced ch ees you €o | tro *¥es," he answered. my friend, T know not how . but he can and he will. scending into this gully that Marchinont was croee- ing the bridge. He was twicty yards ; or so on his 2 ie | wit oat thay bees verpowering oppression | Sa- | caused ag cet Ml masonry is not ther does thi upon ! paneli igation of the intry. At least, it | is lighter in here; the sunlight st in through the diamond-pa n- so softly suffused | ete the frosted-glass roof. Even to be overcome; nei ng--hea division on any Sporaing a long extendi: sg |at the back of the court; the middle benches manépelized by Tising barris- ters, "anxious to learn some point of yfocedure d to closely study laminations; on the fi h ed in by a formidable array of briebboxe#, arc the solicitors and their clerks. Tho jury are eiiost on a level with the Reni and the press an train. knew Fr war cing for the bridge, but i . 'Whosoever.' Ab _-- echoed aimong the hills that he Whosoever, WhO | could not tell from which direction it - Yes, it ,w coming, an the road curved means you, round mountain sides at ench end of searlet they 18 | the bridge. orrible snow; though they be or crim- tino ef in which_way-he son, they shall be as ol, eseane the oncoming train, Christ is aad to forgive also the | lit it caught hin on the bridge, merciless thief's sins, even as he fore) NEVITABLY KULL HIM: gave the thief onan the cross. He ; is ready to forgive the thief's sins, | The question lust him soime seconds whethes you have by evil jealousy | in hesitation, and when he die turn stolen aWay a man's good reputation ne run saw he had chosen the di- or hate rifled a widow's pocketbook; | 'ction frou Which the train was fust whether you have stolen a gocd name 'curvinus round the cutting. le or a tiilancial income, 'ed and flew. Ie had to cover som fan, you know oe was a desper- | 'thirty yards before the truin flew over a cleanse you, f ya Christ's forgit eness. -- in the word. soever!' UT whie must he ately mean act for you to circulate 2 distance of about a quarter of that evil report hee that physici- | mile. = s life. You know that there never | A stip. the rolling of a pebble under a squarer, truer oman than he, jhis foot, would have given ceuth the be you did it in order to ruin nig /Victory in that race. Even as it practice: we, and you have succeed- | Wes the finish was so close that the | a Myom a worldly standpoint you Whirl of the wina caused by the p can never make atonement for img train sen Mare hmont aptnning | * damage. Lut God will forgive you, 'not more than a few yards from where even you, if you will come and ask the anust have been killed, and he roll- the embankment caught by a tree ,ed down was Womnn. that war an for his pardon. = made about the | he Yo awful statement character of thet sister. ou say breathless, hruiseG, and badiy shaken, that you are sorry, that you did nat | but untouched by the express look into the Jacts before the evil| More than twenty lives were at --_ --_ and she died of a broken stake in the race an oil steamer rec hea t is now too late to wring yently ran over a seventy.mile course her "hack to life. Lut Ged will for- The Cantia was bound for, Wwe are : Colusa with a cargo of paraflin in inen and barrels. but the captain knew that God will some of the barrels aboard contained "Though |ammunition, which was'to be smug- gled into Columbian before port Was reached. When, however, the Cantia Was seventy miles out from the near- est land, the alarming discovery Was made that - THE YESSEL WAS ON FIRE, The ship had but one boat, and that Was so small I that it woula not have held half the men aboard. The pote Pony 'con perilous in the extreme; nothing could saye the ship t to the ive you. Yes, whether thieves who have robbed women of their good names, forgive us if we only repent. your sins be as scarlet.'" 'I you thet menns you. . O woman, acerp endless and eternal forgive ners of God?) Will you have your sin- Stained garments washed in the blood of the Lamb? --_--+ "Hello, old so I hear you" ve lost your job?" Well, put it like that exactly, but the firm has been foolish =" to sever its con- | oil, nection with She Was waning himn about in her usual imperative A og for ae married, of course. he, usually now beginning to retort. you think you rule the universe?" he ask- ed, sareastically, when he. had_ the ichance to edge-ii a word. _ "No;. but | I rule the first folter" of it," was ie th t reply. And once: w though man is hayd upon fallen man, hardy upon ) fae many for him romp realized that his wife wus) La es PR aD tur ' The oldest chemist's ver-|land is said to be at K quaint Yorkshire cane nerally manages to monopolize all so |t the seats allotted to therh, end the stairs as we'll. ~~ is a most inter- lesting sight. when the at- 'tention of the whole court is n- | centra given by the important witness who jstands-in the witness-box, wh n lall the courts is prominently situated and is on a ivvel With the THE LORD CHIEF. The lord -- justice's Sage is the It rmposing, B a o _ ventilated ie back of the toad platform are the royal arms, uisitely ond standing oft grecn plush hangings. in the court sits the lord chief jus- tice, the broad band of vivid vermil- fon of his robes being the only om |of glaring color in the court, unle it t of some smart costume of am fashionable lady present. re spectator might spe a «aor unprofitable time than vn exploring the, Vastness of this legal fortress o the Strand, Fz. = ---- HIGHEST WATERFALL. The highest known waterfall in the -- was the Cerosola Cascade, "1 mo AM. exe a drop of 2.400 f in the San Cuayatan Can: yon, in 'in the State of Durango, Mex ico, ow claims first place. It was dis by some prospectors ten ago in great barranca dis- trict which is Falled the Tierras Des- das, While searching for t famous J mine Naranjal, a great of water was beard. ith much difficulty the v on a iP _ they beheld the cenere fall, which said to be at least 3,000 ft " -------- OLDEST CHEMIST'S SHOP. oe eae to maresboro' town situated jdrains over open drains: | 1. The surface soil is retained re confront the person who wis drain his land which are of a loce! nature and ---- yom, be a by his own judgm are also n oneral rains which, if -ob- served, wili go a long way toward making a drainage system a success. Soils vary greatly as to the amount this cxcc#s of water: (1) by cainepe (2) by evaporation. tter oe a slow process growing season rand by decreasing the OPEN DRAINS OR ae DRAIN nins have ee becn drain large acreas and to remove sur- | They are, however, ine!- tire instead of 'fertile every rainfall, Zlant foods and manures _ carried into it as the water percotates On the however, water. There ground drains onc the sur! oa hun dred ble it is casil severe reeset ly as wi make n parts being jorous atid the roots penetrate more aaiy in the tile drained soile than surf soils, ce 6. The effects of drouth are dimin- able condition of the pase wor pre- venting excessiv other hand it may .o said dry off so quickly seat it will have op- portunity to do but little good. This, m be overcome b ing valves in the tile 'until the soil has absorbed a stficient amount are several kinds of under- drains; board drai for all purposes most cconomical and the only satis- c a / the tile to be laid well below A and should not be less if it is pos- sible to secure In practice they are laid water will pass throvgh it. omimon and satisfactory prac tiles should be uscd in the iaterals as be distance tater increas- oy The tile should be round and well burned. ng and thawing, vitrified operations and tile are little better than the a kind. They should, le, will then be left for the' pg! to get In making t "shaped ang' -direc~ tion In which the water is fuming ra- ther a T. onward mmewdenent of tho water is not The approximate cost of tiles }1,000 fect "ts: For three is ag arse which hes Generally clean: The Pe soil used to rerculo advantages of tile bie: en- ; her the finest and arr j { carried off w 2 soil, 2 | shown by experi- to the enlarged and ye evapora plac- of such es brush drains fall Ks two usually allowed any- d one-half to four Four féet is usu- trou | ated. The size of |T\ to be carr een them cormmo' be laid as tight- for plenty of space he junction should By this means tho Gaeeinair'gio to to cost of such an outlet is of course and the cash outlay thus be material- ly lessencd. DRAINAGE WELLS. . Another agg of drainage which used with water came to within six fect of the top of the pipe, reecived the discharge ; of two four-inch tiles as full as they | ing last two years. As a vetidfags in the Strand constitutes TPS Have been a failure and much |and the water allowed to run in ag a as between tho |?! the Jand has beon abandoned. | two-inch well class of cas¢ taken in each. To those, however, who to twelve acres with ease perly appreciate the amount of work |lieve that, with a proper system of | sce two-inch well and business transacted in this great (te drainage, these lands can be warrem of corridérs rooms would |¥Fought back into cultivation even poreeneen'e Fs spending of a week at Wet years. Preparations ara being least in its' precincts. tok the made for Inying thousands of rods of |} would run, and yot agaiient hall, walk its Jenath, and tile this spring, the success of which |not raised ' select one of the dark op-| fill depend largely upon the know- eninge hich epparentiy say to crypt- dge and skill of those who lay them. |rather large, but no he eyes have.| 7 many long decp cut to a natural outlet. In to |sections where these wells - will work then reaponnible to -- alone for the drainage of his DAIRY NO' NOTES; Buy milk cans Pay age) shat have smooth seams. difficul ter to Main einygpties kind oe ly nse the soft oF 3 A o 225 fod 4 a = e 4 ss satisfaction in some parts of ae state is the drain- + A will drain from three We have in which the water was more 80 na a mat- Golden Text, ~ = gg nee » ee The lesson t is only one par. of the threefold eigen dle of this chap- _ ter, the whole rite Ae forth F eaginaie f love of God, the Fa' ae erri Holy Spirit, for lost, miles lion of sinful man, and also the scif righteousness and lack of sympathy iwith God of many who profess to be His. It is very plain gs neither. of the sons in our lesson his father: they neither trusted nor enjoyed him. It was God's constant complaint of Isracl that notwithstanding all He had done for them they knew Him not (Isa. i., 3; Jor. viil., 7: Hos. iv., 6; v.. 42. Mic iv., 12). Most eo is our Lord's word to Phil- on the night before the crucifix Me, Fhilip?' * (John xiv., It must be a great gricf to Him when we thik er act as if we knew Him not bend or anxiovs care or fretfulness, straw and let them tramp over that. | Don't turn the cow out over mouthful of grass. "a both to the cows and th» lo tramp | field in search of a It will do gre at '. 1 and supply one of the most valu- | Large, able flonds for his animals. | clean windows _-- on the sunny side of the nal end lots of salvation of the young calve drink the fi after calving wilt often save jfrom trouble an land 'the poets safeguard against tub- l terns, losi c " /ease are 'killod by 2 sunlight. Warm bran ee and warm wate germs of this st tnenty-four- houes n cow | d sturt her safely on reriod of usefulness. A grea Bi been carried out during a number of | ¢j frars in various parts of the world | Chetet Himself, and these all go to show that from | | all calving cows re ilk is obtained secthe calving. 'The a are obvi- During the winte man y experiments bout 25 per cent. than from . th 'no water ort exposure to shall surely come to want ( Jok eieceaiie' sce Eecl son's exper 'those believers have the ;the fullneas of and whi sons they often be ything but the rest and quiet of the "force of gravity and find Continue the grain ration for a porte confidence, is an indication that Way upward from the watér table be While after the cows are on grass. By }we know Efim not as we mi low as it is evaporat It is this |the way, would it net pay you to| he youngest son illustrates 'tho: moisture which furnishes the water |Continuc some grain right slong. who prefer God's gifts to God Him 'or pa use of the plant If the barnyard is full of mud or ee -f--a present selfish enjoyment rath- A ted soil is onc in| which |™Manure rather than have the cow or than the love,of God and the com- the pores ee the soil are filled with }Wade through it draw plenty of | fort of His presence. Cain, who went out from the presence of the Lord to do as he pleased, Fsau, who preferred the present enjoyment f pottage to his God given birthright and Israel preferring Egypt ant its of a mrss om [way byw ich =e can hasten the di- , <i rme and especially ; "the | ground fruits to the heaven sent man- ion of this water will be of |Gairy farmer sho raise clover, /na and the promised land are ilteatre - t advantage by lengthening the both to maintain the fertility of his 'tions of some |) of the prodigal son. nm we turn away fron: God, iwho is the fountain of living waters, seck to ourselves with oral For further or 1t nm t¥., 18, on this line of conduct, ; ii, 10, ase of the younger jence seen in the lives of who make more of concen of jentigontoen, adop- and sanctification than of Jesus in whom cwetnth all the G bod suck have their happy sen- in mment There is ntry is this present evil 'ehics licth in the wicked one 4 19) and which cn allures us away ward the \about us on every side. ain ts the. citizen of this -- 'once-the soul begins to ae puss ofttimes there -, huniiliation th omen will "whole ae and eenennceenlirennrniinner | persistently t to God. First oa TENDER AND TRUE. | sense ant, then secking help' from the world, then a beastly appe- often consulted |tite-- these are often the develop- uire Benson cases of tami ing fans clectricaily, tooth. ie is = deprat largely te the | pationt sneezes and the tooth The distance apart of laterals also | in them. en great families club together and buy .a carriage from the storm an or temper, and he derived a of amuseinent from the 'cue told in his little offtce. "Is it true that man cetching 'her breath, 'but I niv- er wint to hurt him, and be knows it . me women t have love our hearts just breaks in- side o ------ PEAT FUEL BY ELECTRICITY. ring 3 process coal, which, according atens to revo- has | without ily" diculty resulting ms time d deal you threw for the manufac- d beat then disintegrate loss of any of; conting ome * g2 at. the pit's mouth. -- PAINLESS DENTISTRY. ag | 2 returning one more the spirit may be sav day of the Lord Jesus. I b xxxili, 1 we read how God d every- his feet turn mew a! and plenty at his father's house. B not yet know his father, and ) welcome and the full restoration awaited him; mg sve can the sinner understand the heart of God free justification mr the full im if he able tells our Father in heaven and teaches us the first. motion See God clothing His sinful Adam of skina which . the -- properties which it pos/ond Eve with coats py Speen to be sone. depth. 03 | sogses. It le moulded and. press- jHe bud mad (Gen.--iii.-21)...... See it is usually beiow the frost line and er, », Aceordin d he he tiles not liable to become ed, and is rea Or UEC co ithe robe of rightcourness and gar rn gxed it he h ' the report, the actual cost of pro- | ments of ssivation of Ixi, 10; pe Id d d cies the wea 2 ucing one ton o' . s $1.25, and 'yy Cor, v. 21; the ring and royalty e il md the die een ith hich oor ee is said t equal in and authority of Gen. xli, 42: the CE en ---- . wile every res] to Welsh stehm coal, shoes und precious promise of Deut. peat, 25, and consider bie na wel- 5 wing ready Ie gorgiven full restoration to pesition - hat he knows his dentist will lowship _ great joy. the advantage of being easily | sat inflict. ony. E. ay ti, and should there be any +3 loc rubs a secret powder over the 2 iv After about five hareer the 'brother rem | when oa Chinaman wants to have a ness and 1 els no nervous alr The latter" falis Many attempts have been made this out, ty Europeans P- imysterious powder, but no one yet suc ' . COST OF engineers, skilled opcrat and mes- sengers, and of those wierd direct theig keep the straight. a CARRIAGES. -° -|, SHARE to get some of has ------- TELEGRAPIS. To Ke*p the 30,000 odd miles _ of telegraph line in order in Great Bri- de for' the proper dis- patch and delivery of messag pass over them every month, entails an expenditure of about £2,250,000 o. es that . accounts A curious custom exists in Genoa. well-to-do people, circu: and horses, then they themscives tho and inheritance and authority, which as Jost in Adam, but also true fol~a ihg Kingdon. See viii, 15-17 ana helpful ae on this. 'The elder us of those Chris- tians who feel envy and irritation when God blesses unworthy | He had a distinct appreciation of his 'own merits, talked of stern perform- lunce of duty, but did not enjoy the privileges of a son. He neither w nor enjoyed the mers love, his father's wonderful word yet in verse 31, and lay it to heart. a caee See % Mrs. Gotham--*'Now, they say Chit cago is to have the most powerful telescope ever made. hat do yok suppose that is for?' Mr. Gotham-- "I presume they want to find out ra ps Coates lle ms teas ti are im i Pretty cold oP ~ ee wasn ) "Cold! Tha name for it. } the earth look | like a pokcising for hours after the How "st "Why, arrange among the different families will use it. Text ot the Kanon, Take 2, '3 5 ees inn Ti * sclf upside down during the night; so ~~ the mercury could get « to go lower.:'