THE FARM Useful Hints for the Tiller of the Soil ) ppetcamamaa 2 het ecen HOW TO USE A DRAG. The suecessful operation of a read _ drag involves two principles, which, when thoroughly understood and intelligently. applied, make road working with this implement very simple. The first eorcerns the length and pesition of the hieh, while the second deals with tie osition of the driver on the drag. ach influences the other to a large successful manipuala- extent, and tion of the drag is dependent upon an understanding of both - of them, writes Mr. D. W. King. For ordinary purposes the saatch Jink or clevis should be fastened far enough toward the blade end of the chain to force the unloajed drag to follow the team at an angle of 45 degrees. earth to move along the face of the drag smoothly and will give evm- paratively light draft to the team, provided the driver rides 10 the line "of = draft. Sometimes,* however, conditions are met which require special treatment, and in a rolling country such conditions are infrequent. Often a flat place sev- eral rods in length or a seepy svot needs special attention. The distance from the drag' at which the team is hitched affects the depth. of the cutting. Shorten- ing the chain tends to lift the front the ground;- a longer slab from hitch causes the blade to cut more deeply. The length of hitch may be regulated by lengthening and | at the end which runs through' the hole in the shortening the chain This will cause the not Certain sections of the roadway will require more attention than steep grades, seepages, exposure to hillside wash, in meeting these conditions is the knowledge and experience gained while drag- others because of etc. The best guide ging the roadway. be given to a road. become too high in the center. éarth toward the NOTES OF THE SHEEPFOLD. blood. as necessary to study 'adi as it is to have pure blood. seen some extremely as long as your arm will ever thrive on wet footiig. suffer more from bad and overcrowding than any There is one condition, however, in which special treatment should Clay hills un- der persistent dragging anes 0 correct this it is best to drag the center. of- the road twice and away from it once. All pure bred sires are not gool. ram than a puny, ill-formed, pure- In buying rams it is just duality We have seen some mighty poor specimens of men who dyasted of their high lineage, and we have poor speci- mens of sheep what had pcdigrees A flock will go through a winter in good shape in an open shed y ro vided it has a dry roof, but no foci Sheep are nervous avimals and of rather delicate constitutions and ventilation other |} animal on the farm; it is a mistake. therefore, to confine sheep during [WHEN THE EARTH SHER ---- STRANGE PECULIARITIES OF SOME EARTHQUAKES. -- Most Tremendous Powers are Not Always These Which Do the Most Damage. Earthquakes requently come very suddenly and unexpectedly, passing off. with merely ascare or causing widespread ruin and loss of life in a few moments, but although these. tremors of the earth are im- mediately recorded on the seismo- graphic instruments whieh wait ex- pectantly for shivers in various scattered cities, geologists usually reserve judgment and hesitate to make rapid inferences or predic- tions from any particular disturb- ances. Thus, though from hgh pasture to deep valley, from Constance to Geneva, Switzerland shook and feared one day recently, and within two days far-away Mar- tinique, remembered for its horror of 1902, trembled also, men of sclence are not yet ready to link the two phenomena. We would rather have a iarge, At any rate, Dr. Edmund O. well formed, vigorous,. verile scrub Hovey, curator of geology and earthquake expert of the American Museum of Natura] History, is not prepared to say that the two shocks had any connection t may be so, he admits, but it is by no means inevitable. NOT LINKED UP. "The former great earthquake in Martinique was not connected with those in cther parts of the world," said the s@entist in discussing the question, and he ought to know, for he went to tl stricken island soon after the dia: haustive study of and made an ex- the conditions there. "Moreover;'? he went on, "although there were several sub- sequent quakes of less magnitude, mo sympathetic shock was felt at AUTHOR FOUGHT AMAZONS. Frederic Martyn Tells of Advent: ures With French Foreign Legion. "T have held a commission in the British army and I have served in the ranks; I have been a traveller in strange places; I have lived a life full of vicissitude of sorts and I was for five strenuous and not unhappy years in the Freneh For- eign Legion."' With this paragraph Frederic Martyn opens an account of his ex- periences as a member of the French Foreign Legion. He writes of campaigns in French Indo- China and against the Dahomey- ans, and in both cases the fighting was often desperate. Mr. Martyn Joined, hke many others, because of some sort of Scrape at home. So probably did his first and firmest friend in the Legton. "Ivan Petrovshi."? That was what the young Russian called hmself, although he may have been a nobleman for all the author ever could learn; a likable character. absurdly generous, hot temrered, dictatorial, and above all audaci- ous, Perhaps the campaign against the Dahomeyans is the most interest- ing. 'There, at all events, it was that the Amazons figured. "The uniform of these female warriors," says the author, 'was asort of kilted divided skirt of blue -cotton stuff. This garment barely reached to the knees. li was supported at the waist by a leather belt which carried the cart- ridge pouches. The upper part of their bodies was quite nude, but the head was covered with a coquet- tish red fez or taboosh, into which was struck an eagle's feather," In one place he says of Senegalese tirailleurs. "A battalion of Amazons attack- ed them and gave them a very rough time indeed, but the tirail- leurs stood their ground until re- enforced by some marine infantry. Any one inclined to sympathize with the Amazons on account of their WwW Ww ti cl el mM to al $i ay he al a -- Way signalman; he ean put in far too many hours at it without inter- ruption. John Harborough, had been shut up in the little signal-box at the south end of the long wooden bridge over the Erevale river and valley, and the actual work he had been called upon to do in the time could have been performed easily in twen- ty minutes. during which he was forbidden by the regulations either to leave his box or allow anybody to enter it, other than the guard or fireman of an occasional train held up for a few minutes in the siding in order that another might pass over the bridge before it, he had spent go- ing over and over the last scene himself, what there would be in life of waiting and actually gave him up. the stationmaster at Ey each other before he had been three at the Erevale Bridge South That was when John was only twen- ty shared his belief, and looked with signal-box THE. SIGNALMAN J Brooding is not good for a rail- For nearly ten hours The long intervals of idleness, ith his sweetheart, and asking orth living for if Esther got tired | j Esther May was the daughter of ale June- on, his immediate paymaster and | uief, and John and she had discov- | 'ed that they were in love with onths in his position as signalman 3ox. -two, and felt that he was going advance rapidly. because he had reaay been placed in charge of a gnal-box. Esther's father had 2 indulgent eye on the courtship; > himself had been in charge of a at Harborough's age, id had been speedily promoted to more important one, where he f She was waving an official-looking | document in her hand as she hur- | ried her news out breathlessly, and |. 'for several reasons--the smallest of | |which was that he wanted to see} the wonderful announcement with his own eyes--Jack ran down the ne stairs. It was then he was kissing |' her, and reminding her that a rise} of ten shillings a week, and the' prospects offered by employment at a busy junction lke Wendleshaw justified their immediate marriage, and satisfied to the full the condi- tions under which her father would | give his consent, that Esther be- gan to ery. "T don't know how you can want to marry me at all when I have been so horrid !" she sobbed. And Jack had to assure her again and again that she had been the best and most patient of sweethearts, until the sound of the train ap- proaching from the junction re- minded him that he was on duty, and that a signalman must not be seen making love in business hours. Esther remembered it, too, and tore herself away hastily. Jack stood at the top of the stairs watching her swiftly-running figure until it disappeared. At the same moment the train came in view round the curve, and he turned to enter his eabin. The telegraph was tinkling and ticking desperately, but he paid no attention to it; for, as he entered his glance had fallen on a down- pressed lever, and his blood froze with horror. The depressed jever meant that the points to the siding were still open, and that the passenger train, which generally gathered a speed of more than fifty miles an hour coming down the incline from Ere- yale Junction, instead of crossing the Erevale bridge, would dash in- to the siding and the waiting train there. As a matter of strict rule, he should have altered the points be- fore he signalled the line clear, but the two operations were in his or- that floods, away,' when his own ] 4 of life. For a youn terviewed, or Press. 'that he was the hero of From the newspaper it away part of the railway which spanned it; that the had been carried side railway-box j able the signalma an urgent message to hii across the river to s' proaching train, ae Failing to get any respon had kept on frantically rep his message, and the needle in borough's box was busily tic "Stop train. ' been a passenger, top Mr. Willet easy for the traffic manager to eductions, and it wa account of the affair that ap) in the Press, and made Harboron a hero--a man who, by h judgment and action, had saved hundred and twenty-three passen gers from almost certain death at the expense of a smaller ecatastr phe, happily unattended by g man as modest and strnightforward as Jack Harbor- ough, it was a trying ordeal to be- the recipient of praise that he had_ not deserved; and he improved the good opinion Mr. Willett had form: ed of him by the resolute manner -- in which he refused to be feted, in- photographed But no man can be asked to in- the Erevale river, swol lly way Bridge cari who h is qu to the northera -- th : cassia s any loss Ne ss See 4 ' Bs : : : criminate himself, much less to jin- | Martinique at the time of the|S°* and look upon the combat be-| had distinguished himself, and been | dinary routine so nearly simultane- criminate his case aaa aie 4 é ji q é "A yu at i ie a eo eh ee ts : =i = > s Ps % ; 3 eT. r V blade end of the drag. If small j the winter in close quarters. If quakes at Pelee, St. Vincent. San|*ween them and our men as unequal | placed in charge of a small country | ous that the rule could be ignored. Mrs. Harborough knows : out of alk weeds are to be cut the double tree | kept dry their fleeces will keep them Francisco, or Jamaica. However. |™ayY take it from me that their] station. With a pleasant home and} Only to-night the two operations aheswaeid teat fou husbatia nae " should be attached rather closer to} warm. Who ever heard of SHEOD it cna sac of course, be sume con- sympathy would be misplaced. light duties, he thought his position| had not been simultaneous. In ik ae at waugndie in 'is railway : the diteh end of the drag. The} freezing to death? nection between the shocks in These young women were farja perfectly enviable one. and had |the moment between signalling the saroiae ees 'Sie <a 'aale chee drag will now move nearly ditch} The rams should never be fed Switzerland and in the Rhine region | 2U0 away the best men in the no higher ambition for his daugh | line clear and raising the lever, his ee Re Seta his ORES T "it for ay : ; | ; E ) eC Liana ¢ OI fh hd Jahomevan "armv-. < : y eg, : - Fath : LO y s re end foremost, and the driver fattening food, but should be given land the disturbance in Martinique Dahomeyan army, and woman to ter than to see her married to a| sweetheart had called him, and the his dity--Lendan Anwar Be : ; d ; 1d tl rbance in Martir : : ack : eee eit ; : | A : ASS SwrS. should stand with one foot on the | the kind of food that will add The fact that they were so nearly | ™@2 who quite a match au any of | coming station-master. j lever had been forgotten, = ¥ extreme end of the front slab. This | strength and stamina. They miust synchronous would certainly lead| Se pha ers pals Bpene: But he would not allow a detindet He rushed for the lever. Even -- Fe : will swing the drag back to the} never be allowed to run with the to that thought, at any rate. 1|°! " = site § ca apres rae serie: engagement until Harborough had | now he might be in time, but, with CHANGES IN FLOWERS. proper angle and will cause the ewes at will, but should be separ- am interested to see what the fuller cept ee hes ft oe cies t fae fs obtained his first promotion. | his hand on it, he hesitated. The SE G0 7 pF ' : e t me « i©& y > F *} rh Sirs é } 5 od 1 Ma "4 * we Ss blade to plow. j ated from them. records of the two shocks say. As i. Hk a 1 4 pet eA ret ; oi And now five years had gone by, | train was thundering by. He could Many of Our Most Beantiful One | 3 : Fi 'ork at close quarters py ha é : Ee ark | . j ' pipes ee soa The drag does the best work] arse yet we have had nothing but the os CIOSE: GUAELCE ey aC) and the: expected yromotion had j|not be sure whether the engine had ' y § } } } < > rae é ' aes small, heavy backed chopping sword | . yr os re : are Modern Productions. when the soil is moist. but not! WAND AROUND THE DAIRY. | meagre reports which have appear- oF knife: vety teh ae South | 2Ob, come, and. Esther was losing} reached the points or not, and he : sticky. The earth then moves free- | ed in the newspapers ettegs Siie' Spd Bee: ak el eed patience, Other girls, who had| sprang to the window. and turned It is a truly astonishing thing to ly along the faces of the slabs. If | Every dairyman must, if he will} PROBABLE rl a soaes : oak : Th ee Reehe found lovers long after she had.| sick to realize that. if he had acted, | reflect that Shakespeare, for all his : *) i z ee dV DBD hal why. ree SKE CUTION. ey io mal 2 = +3 : ¥ . _ ? 7 the roadway is very badly rutted | succeed, employ a detective in his : : 7 : kas sliaisied demons. and = f | were already married, and were| the inevitable accident would havellove of flowers, would have bee . 1 } . - 'i Sa ad (oi 7 2 ane ayes Mpa & ey Ss rere folt in } I ai te 8, é | + : : 1 } asi ae 8 a pe and full of holes, it may be well to! dairy barn--a Babcock tester. This The shocks which were felt in driven ito a cormek dial ck Sys beginning to despise her as a per-| been prevented. Even now there able to name scarcely a single ise the drag once when the ground | detective is absolutely honest. shows} the Lesser \ les do not nec es: sect hes lise at thats beeth: ee |}manent old maid. Her faher had] was a moment before the engine|bloom in a twentieth century gar- . } Ls * ls ~ ---- a linate B rh SCAN foA , ied : , « | : } _ ee: } ~ n is slushy. This treatment is par-| favors to nobody and always records |Sarily indicate a ' udescence of BES yay | upraided her for giying her thoughts! would reach the points, but the mo-|} den, says the Strand. He would -- ticularly applicable before cold! facts from all the facts. The poor | Volcanic sees BHCEES ae a bh wae in this: sani campaign | to a young man who could not get iment found him paralyzed and the hardly have been able to distinguish spell in winter when it is possible! cows stand no chance against it, | Ported from Port de ogee Bt. iat the followin 1; sida? eee 'on, and, in consequence. poor Es- next it was lost. With a dangerous} the queen of flowers itself, so to have a roadway freeze smooth.| If we allow buyers to come into Thomas, Guadelupe, St. eee red: Soka |} ther had turned upon her lover,!jar, the engine caught the points. } greatly has the rose changed in the A smooth road surface is secured jour herds and pick out the best | 224 se ae eae sais A Dahomeyan warrior was killed | 72d told him, with angry tears, that |; Many men as distracted as he} last three centuries. as et ' : en du ac oveme fe ' ; : ces Chee ey : ] ] a niecawand for . shy by this method. Clay, when mixed cows how can we ever expect ty | 2Cen ue Nee ' no| while in the act of levelling his} 1! he cared for her at all, he would} would have moved the points even} As for the begonias, the chry- With water and thoroughly worked, | build up a profitable dairy ? ae eee gun from behind a cotton tree at| not stick all his life at the South | When it was too late; but, in spite | santhemums, the dahlias, the ger- : : ; : | quake Switzerls ich is : ; : aS | y= or ae . ; ; eae ORM FF ink ; shsias -¢ arna- becomes remarkably tough and im- We knew a farmer who ee Be ee His : se aoe fai Capt. Battreau of the Legion at/| Box. }of his distraction, John Harbor-} aniums, the eset st and earna se Ser < lave been the most é + Sit Rect PRINS Sane nek ae sat RS | F ei x : a ; hese rer c 4 ve . pervious to water. If compacted} cured his calves of scours by break. | &2. Dave ! oe pas B to| Point blank range, and as he fell| It was unfair of Esther. The} ough had nerve and judgment] tions, these it a ee < es eee ee ML ARAWEn Cat tas eee ee F ee | fifty years, \ probably hin ee ae Ny - | young signalman hs old "himeelf) enced ranist. the ati great-grandfathers. an ) an fs gondition it becomes ex: | ng. raw eggs into thei r mouths, Aj \. > : oon | his rifle clattered gas at the of-| young signa - wn Se told Aiea If} enough : é 3 : se bach ma si Sa P aaen Romer. pe remely hard, etter way fever. is drie shor i ; i ficer's feet Capt 5 5 res gsee-| a thousan mes 4 Ing e ai ng tha ). Civer e Man |S rae . : baie --_ cai 3 luabl } ¢ = "Cie ney RDweNeS, is dried ior into f PCe? , veh. ee sree ee suet co , se - | Ag roa 7 Sees pe RO pathogens fais |purely modern productions. ~~ Another valua ile result of drag-| fed in moderate quantities at ; Dis.|19g that it was an old Chassepot. | lonely Gay that ne haa done all alin the middle would cause a worse 8 Tas 2 pea en Sey hers wists ging 1s the reduction of dust, for] start. | picked it up out of curiosity, and|man could do. jaccident than the collision. Fee. CORE BSE ster bor the particles of clay cohere so te-| No matter at what | suddenly became very much inter-| He had performed his simple du Instead, he flung himself forward W ne 5 fa fiat asian ms caine. naciously that there is but little! the poor cows it is ; ested in it. He examined it very | ties perfectly. Not once in the five} at the cpen window, shouting to the de ower hor ens a ng he : fe : H e 4 1 ; se . ) ye ' 7 ¢ ; : } s rere ay rig aces y re wear when the surface is smooth. to say you get all 4 | carefully, and then exclaimed with years had he made a mistake. W ith | It was too late for the driy- | @e28 ni *s one arr ees a ae Dust on an earth road is due to| and a little more a gasp of astonishment: a woman's impatience of Imperson-| hear his warning, but the|?OSemary, mint, rue, yme- and 2 the breaking up under traffic of the} she is to be cla: sed ¢ | Well, this is something like al al rules, Esther had often been | at the back understood, evi- Seer Se sade and veninien' i . 3 3 = oae ' aaa 15 | . } a > ; 8, suUCn aS viloiets frayed and upturned edges of ruts mal. miracle Here is the very rifle TE} éross because he would not let her! den or he could hear the sud-|PUUuVve Diooms, SUCH As Violets 1} ( g ts} mal | Beas ace ; oe ; ee ; and primroses, were suffered to ex- and hoof prints. If the surface is Never milk the cow with wy used in 1870 during the war withj enter the Signai-box, or leave it! den grinding of the brakes, and rh : sf ek gre 1 "AP s thed after each rain ; he | he I< 'e filthy habi ] Be ; the | Germany ! See that hole in the} himself for a strall with her. when |the > crash, as the engine dashed | 18! uch as poppies and corn- smoothed after each rain and the | hands. No more filthy hab s in lower Rhine region, on the O1€ t } NIMSE ror a stra with her, when] then the crash, as the engine dashec 4 ars do ¢ lay road dries hard and even, so edges| dulged in than that cf milking ont "+Hhie Rhine | butt ? That was made by a Prus-]it eould harm nobody and nobody | into the standing goods train, and! MAY SHE ene nlante oneed ' : Pe See ~ 1 i : eae Be sb ie: par BEN ee aphnee a : ee : wany we KI a é ' dé are exposed to crushing and the] the hand in order to strip the Korest; 16; °1@8 hte at Saint Privat. I} would know. leaped upwards as if to climb over | beak developed from specimens ' NJ : riiy° } + = . 7, > hs yy " es ot + 4 : $4 Pa oe : xf 1 oe S. ~ 2 b only dust which forms is that due Milking should always be done 1 s. The for- Bepcns ten that gun trom among 2@| But, in spite of al vemptation; | the guard's-van at the rear. Then | disnopeveds th armen parts of -- the to actual wear of the road surface.| a full. dry hand. ma I the Alps, | million by pce ee stone, but | her lover had held firm. j|came a moment of terrible dead si world, and there is no doubt that aT ae Raviovca rocks of | here ens eer stamped on : At seven o'clock the telegraph-flence. and Ha rborough -- fainted. | a aiehee of charming novelties-are id Sa gary eg =a pea" Sacer -aaeese soicose Tes meats Se ee eGo st ee ha se which} @S well, which is evidence Cnougn | Bal) tinkle ae shad been waitine| The -talooran} mage of dere I aig By haan esr ' ! : re on een a pena _ {greater age than those -- wh oe hate Who Rae ee bell tink ed, as he had been wait ng} Phe telegraph was still elic King | til) lurking undiscovered in DIET AFFECTS | here indicated a field ot research | fringe- the upper Rhine. Her so ce y. oS ; ul< iis i for at to do for the last ten min | furiously. ee spots The chances of va twhich dietetic reftarinicy GS Sat cy : 'e indeed sur.| thought it possible tha could pick! 44. ; me ; ; | a5 ope oer ; which diete tic ms formers might well} earthquake shocks are leed sur-| thoug A See sae Cu, be rs rae | utes, and the customary direetions| When he recovered consciousness, lable finds are, however, becom 2x e niv ow f ae : eq gS 11 n Alrica, as ¢ arptal a rifle} ;; + 4 : 4 | i , 2 Seate rae explore, ut only by way of varying prising, and disturbance which not} a pee ars ALAM, & THe) ticked out on the needle. A goods| he was lying on the floor of his ea rnfortunately less every year --_-- the monotony of incessant reitera-}onlv cl 1 Got eArin vit but | *#at 4 used in' Prance, as aserg-| 4) 200 yn the-43 ' Pets Bee : a Pe } i Pia sats 3 niet. } : , 5 Se ess y a jonly shook up witzeriand, ut | j =| rain was ieaving the junction, and] hin, with a folded coat under his small army of collectors is alway tic yf eriority. 3 ' : 1 14 4 pee tort. | ent, twenty-tw ars ago! S| oR ate + ys rs ' 1; 1 Ra etn ag hoe Fey ¢ a be HAS MUCH TO DO WITH tion of the superiority in food | was strongly felt at Frankfort, | ©? i S My, bwo years ago It 1S! was to be turned into the siding to | head. Somebody was kneeling be- | at work in every ccrner of the werld : / a Tia Y 35 ge, Raab ee ' 7 = 4 es oe ae a ee et e! | ; ; i ' ; ; agtitaa! a } € : sTAe : sg ; =f value' of lentils and haricot b€ans | Stuttgart, Munich, Strasburg, and | avi oe +] epee a he | enable the passenger train which! side him, holding a pocket-flash to | searching for new treasures to en- ITS MOULDING. Oe eaks and mutton chops.|Mavence as well as this is said ea an ae i: ae a whe! followed it to pass, and cross thej his lips. There were other men in rich our floral store ' iad fe -e are ehildra . Ean eas * F ape eee p arrative, € DOOK 1S Valuable as} : 5 : ares joe + - : 'There are children who show an have been, may take rank as anj" a : & z aan ; ie ua 2 : i bridge before it. PS Raa ee ee From South America came many -- eens s va Ce re ¢ Thy Foe ee } 1. 4 3 cA ey jm: | Conve ete 10b1O 3) 1é person- : : : j 5 ' , ' 2 . | ee rey ete for anlmal} earthquake of real geologic eee nye - ware ot the F aaa e Like an automation. Harix | He lay: quite still. He did not}years ago, the recently unfashion= -- Jo fali » : . DOCS and see ) > : vith- Tio 1é i 2 Fore 1 Leg- ee (ay. 4 | : ; 1 f " er Rais : . % : Fatalism of Oriental Due to Diet |f°¢ eee he eevee post witht} portance. ee ee clan tion of these | i8natled back that the lim S; want to come back to consciousness} able fuchsia; from the. hills of yu he aie" nsiols +e L(9eEtaY ' ee WN + . TO MW, ne. €) Lé é nese 49 2 { '. s < ' 4 « f Rice re : out them--'phys iological vegetar QUAKES TREMENDOUS. exc * E . |clear, pulled down the lever yw hich} to be asked questions for which northern India and Tibet have been of Rice, Which_ Also Impels tans' such individuals might be : = Sa : j things Mr. Martyn gives a good | F ie ny 4 } : : PR SES t lled Ot! hild oe P "That is a point which is fre-] many rages, and makes compari-| opened the points for the siding, [he had no answer. He would much} brought thany -- useful varieties ; a ay called. ) >) , '2 Peet Pew si ta Pe ee Eee es i Ma rages, é s nparl : 7 : a | : A ' . ' . Use of Narcotics, eu it ] ee ee oe bot ot Vauentiy-tot ay preciated. An earth none between the Legion and the| 224 strolled to the window of his; sooner have died But a burning/from China we have had among Be it SAVOriIC to i ighter uake or an eruption which causes} 4o.3-00 Jostein e fay Ge: box to lean out and watch for the} anxiety in his mind forced him to| other things many new primulas: ; If you are not c uite satisfied that| foods which the . modern Parent {Aceon OF as | Various Civisions of the British Pee ae | : : : A Ae ue : hi Boe ehitian ca ommonly provides I y ov} an earthquake, may do atremend my, with which he was intimate, | 00ds train's slow approach. | speak. Japan has yielded wonderful irises: y : F r yg Sate commo "O 4S. ay _pan ails SEEPS, ' a Ae 1 y 1 S Intimate. | ¢ < oie he ie : ae : : satan 3 s cs your mentality, your abilities and ) Uy provide t may or us amount of damage and cause} fia ai satiate of ahi aoe? He was conscious no interesi| "How many 'are killed?' he| Africa many varied plants, usual- perhaps even your character are all| May not be true that avolaance of 4 hae f thousands of lives, and|--.+ eo (agi | ee ite "lin it. #H vas asking himself stil] | asked. his voi motionles ly of most brilliant and" gorgeous | _ " ng > . od * é 1e. LOSS O theusanes oO 8S, al eee > a1) . ¥ ese words: ir € Was asking himse! S8tlii | asked, his voice emotionless. : So aay un that they should be. y ¥ se]} animal foods affects the dispos prt ee vigtanat whee ,; value he sums up in these words: : Sig : Be rena ae re saeaity eh os has is eh feel Tie esa eee Ri 'Po Shai He ot alisha and | "Frankly, I think it is the fnest| What there would be in his life | "None -- actually, thank good-| coloring; while numerous eharm- 2 AULY "rested in 1@ aeciara- SUT é 1458 TOWard 1e 'elim L- A ' ; f Pee eee as ax es 2 Sia eagcaee *. "gies iat ee 2 Sai . ei AS 9reieeis am ji . tion of the late Prof. Fy = ee ' tion of the combative instinct: fact little importance from the scienti-| fighting force the world has ever| Worth living for if Esther carried) ness !" said the man bending over|ing members of the narcissus family q 2 te ; 'rledricn sieeahgi 1U¢ St 3 LACUS] mesg . : ge tie ' acy > - + : 3 Pat f '4 fy: em : ; ave , 'iscover i te Nietzsche whose writings hens. now; 4re wanting to decide a qu fers ); BC point of view. For istance,| seen Its value to E rance is not, | out her threat and refused to 'ke ep| him. "'The driver stuek to his post, Hove Geen: yitccyeied 7 ae : LE ' sé rit S$ é ( }.¢ « 4 o Ct € t€ 1Q? . . oe eas y % F a4 ee | <% . S . 'ePNeeS being translated into Enel sl he | so complex 3 Messina and some of the historical however, to be~ measured by its} compan) with him any Jonger jand is badly hurt, poor fellow; the | Pyrenec Be : : Boe ee ee eee pte: Ve tari ho } bef Vesuvius eruptions. On the other| valine as a fighting force. The}! But it was his eustom to e the| fireman was thrown right into the But this cannot continue inde- @ mans die las much to ao with "gctarians who have petore , ; she PESOS * ae 5 5. =< § ik ss eae any Pesta totesias be . '. m7 en ye eae "Wwe j . ai the moulding of his: Seine heen nt | the adopting of that regimen been | band, a shock occurs now and again prestige of the Legion is so great| most of the passing of the trains, | coal-tender, and seems practical) ne i ane hic *« sen Rei saf Me aa . j 8 m a exit ae oS € e eI - : ' Ee ae a » > ° 3 ° ees "i ' 1 ' : rn . oN ge ae "chids ' avhre > est OSG: nial character The British Med-| moderate drinkers and smok ays | Which is almost unh ard of by Ste Fett, 4he ordinary French soldier} and the break that they made in unhurt, Lhe "ent carnage: was ra Pet any, 3 aT is aaa x Ls '. é § Kers ' r pe Eee ay Sere eae 2 - me { } ee e-3 | 3 +4 ¢ ' ee system? = seare é 8 t A : Journal. with apparent appro-| often lose wholly or in Hatt; the public, whose chiet manife ' eves that it occupies much the same|the dead monotony of the day. and | telescoped, but, fortunately, it eon i VENA CEE ' : aie left io he aeniote ' apy ae | c . 2 oaen gos P thes - = | zs . aa : ' 4 rp rob ray » ) . te val of Prof Nietzsche's theories, | taste for alcoholic beverages or | re IN some semis ce pail aa ;/ Position in the French army of meee hen the engine came puting jtained only one passenger, and. he |' 1 e, r ae Sect ' , nov ihiee Ww & 4 ' . at ' Mone hee aS : Se ae a eae +3 + . ous 1 ; 1 Ls 7 <a " 'or our re 4 SW cites the case of Herbert Spencer. | tobacco. If, therefore, the cray.})" consequence, meet loss of " ; | day as-the famous Old Guard oc-| round the curve he counted the} is net so badly injured as you would ns te ar So be al pie n chiehy. one e rt Sy 1¢ R i 5 { : | ; ae ' se ' ' Meg : a = = | "Z : ' ee | i * ' ' F : ' nally he : , who adopted vegetarianism by way | ing for narcotics attributed to rice-| 0" property whic te Seid Bt') cupied in the army of Napoleon.| waggons in his usual mechanical | expect. Luekily for him, the guard ths | ie. f ¢ al ; hybridists, who > ' Swe : : . ay > ¢ y an } q 45 : - | mnt . > s i he nines 4 ' » sk } . OY sts of. experimenting After living} eating races have a dietetic origi. | Which may be vastly significant to} 3g the presence of a battalion of| way. There were three fewer than fof the goods train was out of his} the sku on, iearicte mating : n Ing. d , C gly, ae ote ae ood Pe A ¥ - } A | 3 Pos os dare const: y engaged : for twelve months on a strictly | it is presumably due rather to the |Seclogy and of tremendous power | ;p, Legion among a force of ordin-| on the yrevious day. jvan. Drink a drop more of this. aiff shit ayaa = of tk same fami) vegetarian diet, Spencer was so | nitrogenous factor than to the veoo. | and range. _ oie ary French troops will eony ince! Sometimes the driver or euard |. Harborough would"have liked: +6 ' " de a ony Srosetaritaeees ' RO ie . | § papas Ps ? "i ie 5 (ae = aes Sa LOC vas CO PRCA Ae CE en ¥ Beer i | gens } 1. 1: . & Se Hoare } lt 4, ') st wee struck by the deterioration of his! table. origin of their food. seek h ee shoe A] ~; ; "Se aie every soldier in that force that he | would wave a hand to him as he| refuse it, but the spirit trickled a ure doing. similar work with j ; : | : earthquake in Alaska in sptem-} +. Se ain oo fz : tetict + : : aA : who. are ' § , literary output during that period | Oo) - Sahsd + 'P Herkons pas 1s on the winning side. stood at the window, but to-night down his throat against his will, He different Dee yarn es of the' same that he destroyed the whole of it ber, 1899. eM 3 Mg RA i neither noticed him, andthe train lid not Want ever to get up again. | . Wy ; f ] re, : i , tT r aa NY . v"T af ht : ad meee an ee © - --+ "at + ee oe when (eye ' ek -) 2CTAS » ers * y e : : CLEVER NORWEGIAN: WOMEN. | of the scientific world realized that | gaia . pines eee : ' ; species. The flowers of to-day a : and reverted to his previous diet. Arehtiae, : ecw iggy 3 Seng : . coat Aad "ey e "Bae jran further than usual into the There were two men in the box } rarest Sven hoe eerie dae 7 Spencer and his mi ted Sn : 3 anything remarkable had happen- THE MANSION HOUSE. long siditie. Harborough was ch d jis es Inthe dxh alas Sakon mane the result of Cross breeding, stimfi : fr and his critics noted | In Norway women. have the fran ed. and yet the upheaval was so a : : j 70ng Slang." é FOUsD 3 BAC) peside the man who was giving PMN ating by electricity, drugs and hot -- Improvement in his literary style! apie. . a eget eae, ER Roe Pe fori oi ae _ . 3 sabes [The Mansion House, which will} of it. He felt too miserable to chat} brandy, and whom "he VECGerlZod- a ae pa : ; : eats "2 1 ehise ana may themselves be elect- | ast and the vibration so strone , . ] ae : ; ' water baths. aimost immediately er he began] e, members of parliament Even | vm esse rded in' practically | be the future residence of the new | to anybody to-night, and he turned | now as a locnl dector: One was at % ati ' : Oe at Tce So ern op : "*~*| that it was, recorde actically | : a niet o ; : ick ead | ; eee i Reiki a s eating meat once more et ae F j that 2 or ' , as built by the eld-| away. fie atching the line Sphes "tate ana ad he other---a shor ig meat once more. | the police foree is recruited from Pe se part of the world. At the| Lord Mayor, was built by the « d may a SEL WAUCDNE eat mee Phe | the telegraph; the other---a short, PHONE TALKS MABE CLEARER BUDDHISM DEPENDS ON DIF | women as-well as from men She! ; sy ake fresh cliffs | er Dance lt etween'* 1739 and 1753: telegraph-necdle was clicking im d ick-set man--seemed to be VE Aa OE . : : ahs Ns {dad TUN EI OL see} ™ : ie tp ean ; | local point of the quake fresh ; ROAR ' Thic | are m ee ae bag. : ; ¢ F ae ae } : can use use a ski as skilfully and! ; ; ind athird feet high; says the Westminster Gazette. This | patiently. The passenger train was | dictating in sharp, masterfnl, stac-| . il ' . st9¥scha dea: ' ad ' < . ] ¥ ana 'ty-seve and é eet § * | eae Soe ' : a : Soe iif eck ta onk wns @er ns "AH Se Prof. Nietzsche deals with nation has holdly as<an' man Sha ean ee > $ ey) | prolonged delay was caused by | waiting at the junction for his' sigs] eate tones. | Danish Bank Manager Has 'Prans F 's ation iets rather! ~ i dae Sends eta et 'ere upheaved. 1 . t Sue } ; : | 1 eee pat i i ; « Wap . types: and naKenal diets rather ; bke "an. élder-duck and: cant oe UP the discovery of numerous springs! nal to come ony and-he sent back: sda" turned? abrustiy -- 46 miffer Warmed. x i wit} ; nts bc . ottre nie ; : gah ana od pe: Oh ij \ > . ni 2 Ga oop Bee ae, Rca | . % Be } 1 A aby ay ates Wits see iy 7 Ale attr manipulate a sailboat like a pilot, teas of water in digging the founda-! the signal that the line was clear. ! farboroueh lay, and at the Y \ simple way of making tele. On ox told Ta pee OF 7 LOG) a7, intelligence is great, and, | ELECTRICALLY CURED MEATS tions, which had to be ba sed upon; As he did so, his heart ] uped | of him. the signalman felt very mu phone conversations more audible oe to his clict ts rice. : while' she is "so /acconiplished ant 227 ~~ : eS piles. Originally the facade had | suddenly. Esther's voice was én}-| like fainting i ior he +6 'fs been invented by Herr Peter- mL a profor stil f a3 : fee bats 16 ago we described han Gare a ae leche lle tacos ees : hose ad XN : : fee ak, a nen a I ro! und di 3 LK Ss ee lathlete that we might expect to! some cat ago ah a ie aisiiod a he avy attic story sommes call. | ling him, and calling him py 4} nived the litt] min as Occ: SO. Ahan Minn aeerase Nykjobing, tence gets the upper" han ae eye ks these G ns é electrica enOG od. "The Maree Mavopia Test? 4 ; a : asf (ys pare 2 diet etarossees : ty ce 'ey "th eis ont : eas , '© | find her an Amazon, she is, on the| tese columns an i ee Pate oe The Mare's*(Mayor's) Nest, name he had scarcely hoped to heat Willett; the traffic: man: OF DlO Py onmark On the principle thaé fays » alter effoc ab ore; . ' On eae » hs s "hieh was daise T= om 3 Bae mye = a "hiah sae . a ae iris sche Nae F =a Sid en Sap HE rs ' h te a east ae contrary. daintily feminine. and she | of curing ham Srey sae iss He The famous Egyptian Hall, which 18] from her lips again, ; sound is more readily transmittec srror are teh a ' le- has : . eos | eg yy ¢ inne acker : Inems . ee q + ce = jos Ses . nN I 104 y * net he 3 : "atte ee pyre g ij hit jcan fluently express herself in sey-| ed b3 <h . n aa a } cae shutter the principal room, was so styled | Jack dear--Jnrckie dear rector S34 com, through rarefied air he has cone "GY ong gust some LO ght. ; fh | for | ntroaucing an alter- vey, im , \ » architect | ; : } ae adore ; pale hdd Mieke ' M dh : rae / eral languages. Her features may } found nid Bghken q "+l ee kk] because. intended by the eg hitect ; He was no longer 4 automation | asked. structed an apparatus to warm the [he spread of Buddhism (not its! j hs EE : : "| nating current through the pickl to reproduce exactly the Egyptian| .. } 13 ythenldue dad looked ' 9 oy ae ae a : 1 EK « origin) thus to a considerable ex: | 70b.Pe regular, but she is the see i bri the hams could be cured I ; ro eh ork ny, | as he strode to the door dnd looked | ; IS ab Tigi, 8a tae transmitter, whereby thes air in' i Wigin) ais thus to a eo ere > QX=| : : o 'ine the hams. coulc rea ? 4, Sonatas See : : : le a ; pa E : Aepeage "4 ip Pes ' : ay? tent dependent n ti ESSLV snd | bodiment of health, and she knows | ae 30) ' 23 lays, aS against | Mall desired by SAPRDENS, rhe} out. Esther was at the bottom' of man with the flash Of course, 34} hocomes thinner and the sound ig nt pende rs) le eCXcessive and} * 3 0 00 GAYS, aS against). P MM. <0 ve Eg ' y . P : : te nigh t ae ty hoi? Fig aticaiee Sie? bangs oF the | bow to dress so as to make 'her a eae i tke Pag) erick ad | cost of the Mansion 'dnaiee EAs the steps that Jed up to his box, was a strain, and T imagine he's! jntensifed. Prot Hasnoier ae f St ( ' al i Ce oe 1 = nite dieiony ' ¢ LO 0-0 3 Al} , "bse alloca Fr ave aye} artly B= ee 2 BPE of aE - . é 4 Se ae om bases Wace Hindoos and on the universal en physique. look attractive, though A | lant in Cleveland, Ohio.| (° alleged to have 'nfl Ee tee <n | ooking up at him with a radiant, been working overtiine on very lit-!the Danish Government telephone S ¢ I sé T x at Bye ae Pee oR Sie. arge Tle ' J AZ GC, i i gh ck *7)Y 3G te ae . +7 aH . . , get hat: "keadied Shavett her costume has rather a Teutonic| A large rl cit beige kas | frayed from fines inflicted upon mischevious smile, tle food. | testing station, who has made ex. ervation that results thereform. han a Gallic aspect is now curing meat by ths pro-| Nenconformist members of the pat : Por eee, ; : : rand 1S gat rt : : . Tho immense: prevalence of | 24M & Gallic aspect. : Ten 5,000-pound vats arein! .."' Se wee me : Don-t be "frightened, Jack: Il. <4] the more credit to him," said! tensive experiments with Peter rice eating impel ae ihe' MIS! r| es asta 1 - current is furnished COrroration for not reeeiving the am not coming up," she said!Qscar Willett, in his sharp voice, Je € avin pers LO 1eé sé 0 rh ° : . service. 1e eurrent ; i § ISCE C , zt There are few shade trees in the} Serv opium and narcotics, in like man- ner as the immense prevalence of potato-eating impels to the use of branely. It also impels, however, } in its more subtle after-effects, to} ! modes of thought and feeling|! ? ' which operate narcotically." OPENS UP WIDE FIELDS. : sweeping into a room Mamie wins The British Medical Journal takes| in a walk; but when it comes to up the thread of fhe argument at] sweeping out a reem ¢he goes "There = is this point and says: lame."' Loe werage man's field of labor. Mis. Neurich--"Did you notiee iow grandly our daughter swept nto the room at Mrs. Puppson's. reception last night??? Neurich-- 'Sure, I did. When it comes to by a 100-kilowatt generating plant. | The plant generates direct cur-| rent for use in various capacities. r of Charles IT : J a : jhand to Harborough. 2 ; gations. \ ' and a portion of it.is converted into So ee x ther is waiting for his supper, and{ my life!"' he said, . "Don't move | Nykjobing, a Re some alternating current by means of a POE See ree eon I ran all the way here. What do T know how a strain like. this takes miles; could be oc tar y are rotary converter, to provide the; Every tailor knows a lot of prom-| you think, dear?' Tt has come at| jt out of a man, and the uncertain: some, distance away from the in- euergy used in the euring vats.-- ASL ASX OURS IBONs ee last! You are promoted to the | ty as to what the collision would be strument, insent Popular Science. Heong Forest, which is preserv- Wendleshaw box, where father used |Jike. We've got out of it pretty | plied for patents in differ "eee ed by the Corporation of London] to he, with a rise of ten shillings aj cheaply. I believe, as it happens ;| tries. = . | as a neople's pleasure ground,| week straight off: The letter was and, in any ¢ase. it is better than eipe sirsenent aaron are ' pa & tient pound ta, bent,e0 18 bis! momprises: no. fewer< than 5,900} sent to dad, and E felt I must run} far neal to find ourselves in the Never give .up hope." [ven tengue inclined. ACES. and tell you." ! the oe sacrament according to the ites of the Established Church, as equired by the Corporation Act breathlessly, "'and I ean hide be- hind here if a train passes. to come and tell you, although fa- I had pws : ; : '"'for*keeping his mind-eclear in an | emergency |"' river. A man who can decide on! married m And he held out his }is remarkable. "Thanks for son's apparatus, says in his report that the increase of sound obtained. Telephone conver- sations between Copenhagen and The inventor has ap- aed an has a fighting chance. Ss followed _ emt coun. ox it ae 2