.1) h W' g i (i' 2 H to qirnGtJ"t'iaraii.T,'t 'pem" Tiii resignation which Ibould be the pow tion ot out, an. Wot. N no! thii a true parable of life to. day. my mi,uers? The, storms of We break upon m. and we invoke the aid of the Msrqter. toning and Noni-ling lent monte evil should betitim. And then the loving Christ "who no for our lack of faith. Me - III that an followers ot Him we ought not to In â€my shins; trouble II. but rather the Bison]. ott tire dawn-p geeks there v gave 14 the " 'ship p the like of which the world has never kin-n qinve. Then llo was put to death. m. mu nailed to the CYOII! in shame and those. who iollowed Rim were qenttered nr killed. And then, trom this little benrinnintr. lli-i religion sprawl until htm. .lmlu of million, have taken His name "pun the:- lim. and millions have been ready to Ill? rstMr than surrender the faith that We put into their hearts. To me it h main to believe Hi- divine than to explain in any other way what ll" Mid or did.-EX. [ rid He 'lied. and the" I wol explain it by any other tt he i, divine. Rented in Junp. having no new“ to the other new and people ubout thirty years of " um’M a with of moralil whirh the world had not " " I were to attempt to prove the di. nnity of thrirst. instead of beginning "ith my"tery or miraeie or the history " the atonement. I should nimply tell you the story of Itis lite and how He lived no what He said and did and how He tlietl. and then I would " you to explain it by any other theory than that lw N divimn Round in a "arprteter's Murp. Inning no "we“ to the wisdom of the other rumu and people, He yet, when about thirty years of age. " to the world a rule of morality fl', like at which the world had never ween before, the like of which the world has never Mi the sky; lint all the not was filled with won- almus light, And Abraha- knew the Lord his God was nigh. "Where is that tttted man?" the Presence said, "That naked for shelter from the am. lug Nut? Who made thee unto-r ot thv Mann’- It What bread.' that right man thun the wanderer forth to out?†Forgive mr, Lord," the Patriarch an- our made, Lith dunno-st look. with bowed and trailing ha. th. med the stranger might. with me have tuta.vrd, ut " my God, he would not worship Thee." " the w ' like of ‘n since. ' [ w†mild Ho- who l: " “w The The. m. (An Eastern Legend.) An aged man name lute to A tent. Christ in the Storm. (iii. 2iiiiiij"i,?iirl i,ef,j,ie,a ?ii1i',ii'iiii.f,, Jill l tldst th in the Proving Christ’s Divinity. m-n- to attempt to prove the di. of lhrint. imtrad of beginning "t.riry or mirach, or the hi-tory ' atonement. I should simply tell he “my of His liie and how He I left “one till he had their unbelief. this a "1â€]:an ol sisters? 1 my. if night hug]: I and happiness. Evety dere. i Worse and Bot better. every kw Iter frame and ultimately go to pieces. So the sinner n baldness. deceiving and be, red. Every derelict is I menace itiun. Governments have been i send ottt suitable vessels to and destroy these floating ob. The ninner is I menace. He is ended and avoided. "Go not ' oi evil men." Who does not thcr not my _oul with simian, Me with men of Mood." Doro wine-{hues taken in tow to ttet palh'Wd a derelict in the Bay of the bore signs of having been eable chains dangled horn the P, the masts were gone. the m- green with marine grass, 9 no life. only the cargo of log: br in" Red " ii u dx-reliut. Adrift, car- hy foul windy moving to. 1rklrouml shore. The derelict .u goodly ship. well formed, d. with a. (tumble commander, or com-ion. or tire, made her I her. So man mu once noble . but he has drifted I'D! Hill happiness. Every dere. 'Il't no him long I wait; run! ad grinding groan. Where had tte'.' Perhaps a passing them up; perhaps they " boat and were lost. so The Derelict an (In will I, q dark, um] all pr bread; bin glt we“; hunk implored not Btrrt' ‘0 master of thy Mann" ml had touched the tempt sumo thst wild and fearful A m gm way. and [mute heing repaired. and a valuable cargo. strong cables are purpow. and they Man is capable ot mare loam him one night say from dark and angry and leaning on his tot the storm mt His dis- trouble Him, Hi, disciplt-s' Inst tl '"'ent and darker grew Goel «aid Iwrltapi away Jr The Patriarch bowed he. to a "mum- Minard's Lininent for sale everywhere, to Abraham’- the plain “I strength w“ I Ile sat with] tlw tendered 1m t term! thin little until hun. His name m not wot um u not how " not my! , for soul Jul! -11. of in at royal and 'Tr the in, you clump than would he little left of the etternr."-Nered new: Review. The peineiiUl reason that tsrGisrit" Tri deaim foe self-destruction among these people were insanity, love and poverty. "Why, what do you mean. Mist; Min- nie I we: only going to say that my use and my liking for you ought to give me the privilege of advioing you to ab- andon the idea of being an actress. You haven't the voice or the physique. my dear young friend. Besides, it's I had and exacting life. Try teaching, (I: stenograph.v. or bookkeeping." "I-I thank you, Mr. Rypun. I’ll hear your advice in mind. Horrible weather, don't you think t" There was a large list of suicides in Austria during the Fear 1907. In Vienna 356 men Ind 108 women killed them. selves, as against 315 and 110, respective. ly, in 1906. Some 441 men and 298 wo- =n at'telnpted suicide without success. Her Narrow Escape. ‘Broezes. Street "ylitm Minnie," began the elderly m. , tudes. '1tptt.t oi, ler, clearing his throat, "it is true that Feet,, of h" l have known you only a. short time. Ten .Ihousnnd m'rttparatively speaking, but I have tak. Manifold BURN en a strong liking to you. It is true, " cumulated Good; so. that I cm old enough to be your; - father, and------" I Owing to the l "O, don't “y anything more, Mr. Ry- l price of tears at pun." hastily interrupte the young girl [rut uightwn m a deep flush minding her cheek. "NCO, have had 1 nhould be sorry to give you pain, I... "brown LaireC it can never---" i"Gross" Isl-J" Luther is composed of a mus of tiny’ fibres, interlaeod and interlocked, one with the other, very intimately. If they are in good. live condition, they will be very pliable and elastic and stand a great amount of stretching, but if hnrd Ind dry, when strain is placed upon] them they will break instead of yield; ing. Hood lesther oils are offered for,! sale at most shoe stores, but if one pre- L feres to make his own mixture. he can do so by melting together slowly one; part of beef tallow and two parts oil pure neataloot oil. Apply this mixture worm to the shoes, rub in well and the life of the shoe will be doubled. _ Mixture Which Keeps Leather Good Condition. Zsm-Buk builds up new tissue in a wsy that in not possible with ordinary preparations. For hauling Naomi. run- ing sores, cuts. bruises, burns, boils, " uptions. scalp sores, itch. cupped hands 3nd disease of the skin it is without equal. All druggists and stores all it, Mk a box or post-paid from the am. Buk 00.. Toronto. nu Ill-III $ttigt In Hum, this. The unique power belonging to Lun, Buk for growing newhealthy skin when it has been destroyed by injury, dis- ease or operation is illustrated by the recent ex ience of Mr. J. fkltofield, of 467 Hmnimn Road, London, Ont. He says: "A friend of mine (Mr. William Ball, of London) was severely and ter. rihly burned through an explosion of kerosene oil. He was taken to the hos, pital where he suffered intense pain. The wounds refused to heal. and the doe, tore decided to resort to skin grafting. and I consented to have some skin transplanted from my legs to his body. Although this was done on several oe. casions. the skin refused "to take" un- til Mr. Ball heard of Zam-Buk. From the time he applied Zam~Buk. new heal. thy skin began to grow. I then used Zam-Buk for the places on my leg from which the skin was removed, and I am glad to report that new skin has grown. and therefore (maider lam-Bulk the but Skin food I have known." In. into law initead of in} IGF." 'ewrtr--Whyt A restoration of the skull of n great horned dinosaur has just been installed for exhibition in Peabody Museum. Yale University. It is nearly nine feet long and about six feet broad. and is said to be the largest skull of any prehis- torie land animal. Despite the closest scrutiny of their movements the Kalli" of the Kimber- ley diamond fields area! near] " million dollars' worth of stones in the course of a year. On the Pantorn (out of Africa there is a. body of cavalry mounted on oxen. The beat. an lean creature. 1nd move with nunpriging agility. . The cut-off uniforms of London lieemen Ire in demand by dealers African traders. who sell them to natives. The English potato crop in 1907 is es- timated at 2,977,910 tons, which is a serious decline Is compared with the previous you. Tilting ilitn ronsideration the propor- tionate weight, the wing of a bird is 20 tire wrong" than the arm of a mun. 'rsrpoor children of Enter. England. are provided with breakfasts at whoa! at . cost of a farthing. 7 General Booth’s driarn in a fleet of Salvation Army steamers carrying the Army's emigrants across the tktlantic. Av 85,000,000 knee was recently erected in Amtralin to keep the rabbits out of tttatrrieultrrrtu district. - _ _ . The French Government will build a college for Women in St. Germaine!» A $750 nugget of gold Wu found re candy imbedded in the skull of In do pant. _ - ___ _ --- Some of the larger boats of the At hntio service carry In many as 130 fire men. Only 3 per cent. of the world's popu- htion gains its living directly from the " computed that the English lan. 'li,r,_,ilii) page is s ken by 650.000,000. .all 'hut; A 'dur' buolding on the Island of l Sim-um Malia is built of blocks of white coral. i A rat recent!) auttht it Gateshead on-Tyne measured 18% indict. - - The coal trad. of the United King dam in 1905 employed P7,l00, _ _ Eighty miles " hour is tho open! of n hurrieane'. movement. Eda} you fluke} mistake in Vienna's Record OILING SHOES In pr for the Mr. txturvaierL-iitiit., It donn’t lulu t"J;Prie',5 in the use. No ma lire ever tea ty mt next to old Yin!» They Certainly Lack Neither Longti- Nor Sentimont. The name- proposed as a substitute for the present commonplace title of Six- )teenth stren-t in Washington, D. c., is the Avenue of the Presidents. To this “or" persons object became of its I lemzh. Mrs. Chugwaur-Josiah, this paper on,“ a man named Birkmnn bu sued tho city as Jned Yipsley's next friend. What does that mean! that ihn working too hard a my brusi- new I go and mmult my Mot. If he '.l.v* I'm all right I go back to work. Jibbit--Thvrea nothing original in that New. Whenever I get uneasy about myself I apply for another thou. sand or two of life insurance. If I pass tho examination I know I'm o. K. priee of teas at the gardens during the WI“! uightccn monthu. the "Salads" Tea Co. have had to raise the prices of “brown Label" trom 250 to Mk. and "Green Lain-l" from Mk to Me per pound. No other changes in prices have been made. The chief rcason for the ad. vance in the price of Ceylon Tea in due to two names: First, the enormously in. trrettsierl demand coming from Rumia. whieh country is abandoning Chine Tea in favor of the finer (can of Ceylon. The other came is due to the planting out of Rubber, which is m, profitable to the grower than tea. Street of Golden Profits. Street of Benevolvmw and Love, Street of Eyer. lasting Love. Street of Longevity, Street of One Hundrul Grandson, Street " One Thousand Grandson. Street of Stunting Dragons. Street of the Reporting Dragons. Street of Re. freshing Bret-mes. Street of Sweeping Breezes. Street of One Thousand Beati- tudes. Street of a Thousandfold Peace. .reet of Fire Happinoaeos. Street of Ten Thousand Happinessâ€. Stnet of Manifold Brightness, Ind Street of Ae. tnunulated Goodness. Ilow would they like to import a few street names from China, where such poetie titles as the following are in vogue.' i One of the old families of Philadelphia iowns a quaint silver tureen on which is engraved a. cat seizing a rabbit. In the early days at Philadelphia Elizabeth Hardy was living with her husband in one of these dug-out caves. while he was building their house. The work went very slowly and Elizabeth often helped her husband. She brought the water to make the mortar for the chimney, and even helped f, one end of the saw. One My 3 e was 'err' tired. for she had helped," all the mofning. He hus- bond told her to rest a while And theh think about dinner. Mrs. Hardy walked sadly away. Their food was nearly gone. Only A few biscuits and a little cheese were left. Just then she saw her eat coming toward her with a large rabbit in its mouth. Mrs. Hardy cooked the rab- bit and had a nice dinner ready for Mr. Hardy when he came for his noon rest. So kitty helped. although she did not know it. These raves-“ere used only until the men had time to out timber and build the houses they wished. Brought tt Rabbit to Hungry Philadel- phia Cave Dwellers. When the first settlers came to Phil- adelphia, of Nurse there were no hour e. ready for them, any; Sal, in The Cat Juurnnl. So a good many of the men dug small Uares in the bank of the riv- er. They would dig seierul feet into the bunk. then build walls of land in front of the little care. The: made the roof by laying branches of trees on top, cover- ing these with rushes from the river and putting pieeer, of sod on the rushes. The chimney was made of stones. plu- tered with clap. Same Result H,'ibberty-When I beg I Scotts at Lowell's Theory. . Alfred Kuhn-ll Wailttee, the English I scientist ~mut~ Purim-for Loin-H's theory that tlw plum! Alan in inhabited and that the "vanilla" are the work of Martians Mr. Wallace my: that "the annals run for thonnands of miles across uaterless deserts. losing enormously in I the process of evaporation. if we assume them to contain water. The mere " I tempt to un- upon canal. for irrigation I purposes would argue ignorance and stu- lpidity. Long before half of them were Joomph-tad tlmir failure to be of any use iwould have led any rational being to “was? constructing them. The tempera- l ture of Mars is prohibitive of any animal ( life such as is known to the earth.†Owing to the anon-mans advance in the i "For seven years I have ind indigea- Itlon and dynpepsil. I tried score- of (remedies. My room resembled . drug 5 "tore with mmtrumg which I had bought. Foeutually l usual Pm.vehine, and every ‘duw brought rmanent relief." I All throat. may and stomach troubles quickly cured by Psycltine. It is the _'p,ryTr'trrti.on of a gm†mpeeialist. At I all drug}:in 50(- and $1.00, or Dr. T. A. [pm (gree mu. iii 3 Mr. Arthur Tami-on, 88 London street, y Toronto, writes enthusiastically of the P.erits of Psychine for all .tomach trou- Mes STREET NAMES IN CHINA Black Wale]! Black Plug The Chewin Tobacco of (him PUSS TO THE RESCUE. As to Yipsloy. lly got next. io af iii: imitc d. Toronto, begin to suspect hard n my busi- my doctor. If he (mum UAW" as TORONTO It includes an abattoir, where horses ‘thut are injured or otherwise reryitret unfit for service will be turned into' butcher's meat. About 5,000 horses are slaughtered for food in Paris every year. and the number is on the increase po the need of a special abatoir, well organized and clonely inspected, has long been felt. The market and ttMtatoir were built by . print. compeny, which will tare the property our to the city It the end of seventy - Children an lurdly have too much fresh " in fine wuther, and should be wheeled briskly, but not eareleestslr, along to straight a road " possible. Whaling I. baby earringe downhill in bad for baby's brain. The new horse market, in the Rue Braneion, which was inaugurated recent. ly. is I model of its kind. it com rises stables and sheds sufficient to 31:):er 800 horas), more comfortable than most of the poor beasts which come to it have ever known. Original of Rosa Bonheur's .Horu Fair" No Longer Exists. The famous old horse market in the Boulevard de l' Hopital in Paris. where Rosa Bonheur used to plod about in man's attire with pencil and sketch book, has ceased to exist. No one who loves horses will regret it, uyl the Veg- etarian, for it represented the acme of equine discomfort.' Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. FAMOUS HORSE MARKET GONE "You saw that solemn-looking chap making a get-away as you name in?" rejoined the. man behind the NIH-ant spirkler. "WAI. he wish-red about he" an hour ago and was shown to big room. Now what do you supposed happened?" " put,†said the pencil plum. "A few minutes hum," continued the key jugttier. "he rushed back to the " fiee,.mad as a March hare, and jumped all over me. figuratively sputum. It seems that he had come hm for the purpose of doing the nuidde not by turn. ing on the mm. and l assigned him to n, room lighted by electricity." Minud's Lininwnt Co., Limited, “Some people are vhrunic Kickers," grouied the hotel clerk. "and it's no use tryieqr to satisfy them." Herve used MINARD'S LINIMENT for Croup; found nothing equal to it, In" cure. CHAS. E. SHARP. Hawkshaw, K. B., Supt. Int. 1906. ""iii'L/iiii%,,Ti,ie" now.'" queried thrHeporter. _ _ mo .... .....v....5 was found frozen stiff and cold in the, drifting snow outside the village. "The only thing he died possessed of besides the rags he wore," says his biographer, Zuinglin. "was a pen." . Baint-8imon, the celebrated French author who wrote "The Reorganiza- tion of European Society," was twice driven by want to attempt his own life, and. although he died a natural death in the end, it was among the most lamentable surroundings. "For fifteen days," he says. writing to 8 friend just before the end came, "I have lived upon bread and water, without a fire; I have even sold my clothu.†Very sad was the fate of Ulrich von Hutten. one of the greatest writers Germany has ever produced. Unable to earn a living he was reduced to tramping through the country. beg- ging food and shelter from the peas- ants. One bitter winter's night he was refused both, and next morning an.“ Chum-I l_.__7 s... . . _ ‘ ,,_.. lgvv. I~II\I 11": Ill all alley. Go and tell him his soul lives in an alley." Llorente. the learned and talented historiographer of the Inquisition. was glad during the close of his bril- liant but unfortunate career to hire himself out of a few sons tt night to keep watch over the dead bodies at the Paris morgue. and died eventual- ly of starvation. Cumeons begged his bread from door to door until compelled to take refuge in an aims. house, where he died. It is told of Ben Johnson that when in his last illness King Charles sent him a small sum of money he re- tumed it, "He sends me so miserable a donation," cried the dying poet, "lzecaune I am poor and live in an gar Robert Burns. writing only " days before his death, implored his friend Cunningham to use his influence with the Commissioners of Excise in order to get his salary raised from 235 a year to 250, "otherwise, if I die not of disease. I mast perish with. hun- orh, or's prison," and evehtfxally diéti iiGi, b.v_ his own hand. For instance, Richard Savage, the ’gifled poet, died in a debtor's, prison at Bristol, after enduring the pangs of semi-starvation tor years. Chat- terton, driven desperate through hun. ger, poisoned himself at the age of 18 Swift died mad, as lie-had all along predicted he would. Dr. Dodd, whose “Beauties ot Shakespeare" is well known†was hanged for forgery. George Gissing, after suffering hardships that embit- tered his whole existence, died just as fame was beginning to be assured to him. Stow. the famous antiquarian. au- thor of the "8urvey of London," be. came in his old age a licensed beg- gar. asking alms from door to dopr, "'through thirty-six counties." Wycli- erley. from being the spoiled idol 'tt society, fell to the lowest depths of destitution. and was eventually con- signed to the Fleet Prison for debt, w Jere he spent many years in a debt- Mural-y 0mm Who Diod “lur- ably Poor and Donna“. That Ouidn would huddled a. she did in poverty and loneliness, an ex- ile. though a voluntary one, from the land of her birth, was an undoubted- ly pitiful ending to an theeiitiGilifs. brilliant career. Equally sad has how. the inte reserved for Home " erury geniuses iu the past, my; Tit.. Bits. END OF FAMOUS WRITERS. Why Ho Kicked. is that everybody I faster than I have." "You havent been back here before for thirty years, Bill? Gosh, thnt'l a long time! What changes do you see that surprise you the most.'" "Well,- to (all you the truth, Dave, what I notice more than anything else It is of no use to try to keep them in captivity, says the (“bingo Tribune. un- less possibly it were in I greenhouse, where there were plenty of flowers, for no articifiel food ever has been' found which will nourish them. Yet even in I greenhouse they probably would kill themselves b. flying against the glass. They even have been known to visit the artificial flowers on u woman's hat when she was walking out, and other writers speak of their taking - from between a person's lips. In a room they become confused. and being frail they are Apt to injure themselves by striking agnimt. objects. Fearless birds are humming birds. So, unafraid ere these charming creature- that they readily will enter open trim, dows of houses if they sm- the flowers within. "Whnt did you do'on your hut auto- mobile tour?" "Swallowed dust 3nd spent mum-y."v.<mnrt Set. Tommy Figg- Sister‘s beau kicked my dog yesterday, but I got even with him, you bet. Johnny Briggs- How? Tommy k'igg---1 mixed quinine with her face pow. der.- Piek-Metp. Gain has oft "with treacherous, hopea led men toyyim---ts'ophoclms. “"“' . l, “no OINTIIINT u gamma co can a; One way to make A man quire spx-uk- , an ot "china. Blind. 813041“ or Protra- inf to you is to accommodate him with, ing Pum "I 6 tit " days or â€My "hi-“t I tHut.-- Florida Times-Union. I u. ‘- - ,, "That young foreigner has a lot of debta, hasn't het" asked Mr, Cutnrox. "Yes," answered o, daughter. "Think how proud we should be to have a man in the family who could i-nmamnd such extennive eredit."- Washington Star. Even I single lmir has 'it, taadoir.-- By_tus. Wise and Otherwise. "My five daughters are all married now." “I luppme you had considerable difficulty in getting no lug:- a numb" of girls off your hands." "No. The diffi. culty is in keeping an large I number of husbands on their feet."-Boaton Re. cord. From Camber to la. Gold: In tho most frequent cause of awn-he. LAXATIVE BROMO CUISINE remove. muse. E. W. Grove on box, Sie. _ At "The Welland," St. Cntharinel, where these waters are dispensed, on found conditions which tend to give that rumh desired rest which tired human. ity needs. Here treatments of the St. Catharines well water of a strong saline notun are newmpnnied with manage ond electricity in varying forms. Alt tmtmente are given under direction of experienced attendants and nureen in chorge of n physietitut. Bun Parlors, Roof Promenade, lenry, Music Room, all contribute their quote to the comfort of the visitor. The environment is more like-lap family hotel, and the underlying principle in to furnish A place where people afflicted with the ills of life will recuperate under the molt favorable conditions. Thu accommodation, too. is provided It 1 priee within reach of the average men. For further information apply tbs}. ever,vyrdj/parFroTif "iiii"l,,i,7i - - Modern conditions have to be met win: modern methods. The pace of the Ivenge man of to-day brings in its tnin nerve exhaustion, frequently “kill. the form of rheumatism. sciatica, neunnthonis and kindred tronblu. To pra- vide . place where tired humanity may rest and at the mum time enjoy tonic influences is the mission of the mnmement of the famous "Nt. Catharine- Well." . This Famous St. Catharines Well Bravery of the Smallest Birds. "SWLENT" PARLOR MATCHES EDDYS “THE WELLAND," ST. CATHARINES, ONTARIO WHAT The Usual Delusion Beyond H is Powers Silent as the Sphinx! "The cortjunotaUn of Venus with Sat. urn is fortunate for the tair hex, roped- all)‘ in Portugal." Raphael, another of London’s lending aMrologerrs, mtg this proditu'nn: "Uranus on meridian in mm Europe is mil for thm rulilg powers, all some otrka'aV are in danger of W or "mumioaeion."--iaii, Record mr. _I.l ankid. the London lthkIaer, in forecast for February. mid: _‘“Whu do you new with your Nan overboudt' would tho captain, who madam can, 'timf Hermann won Huldmtein. Duke of Nubia and Prime of the Holy Roman Empire, is over- "A German ywmw “new You from the deck of his 'hip into the sea, and . ulnar, suing him (War with I M: cried. 'Maa (unkind? A welknown captain of an: od the meburg-Anwrimn liners. It“. on A recent visit to Nun, York. Wu biking of pride of binlt. and he told this mec- dote of a mrrtain brother napkin in th. mmmhmk service: liurd’s Liniment Cures Burns, etc Current Shows Cablon' Strength. To determine when wire hoisting mp" have depreciatad beyond the limit: a! safety hm- been u diffivully of mining en- gineers and to mold riéin- in the " nence of PXM'l tints many rope. have been doubtless discarded while "ill in fairly good condition. The strength of the ropes is now gauged by n novel use of electric induction. The rope. are passed through 3 mil of copper wire traversed by nn alternating electric cur- rent-which exactly (one. nd to changes in the thicknese of 1%; rope-- me recorded on n nuiubh- imtrumt. Dangerous wmr or broken strand. an†the indicator to give warning. Blessings of the Blind. The calamity of the blind is immense, irreparable. Hut it does not take away our share of the things that eouttt--- FILES WEED ll 6 Til " DAYS The Astrologer. Not I Mere Man his I Chance [or I In the aote-beiiw i P. Menu, of 1m. first run for Cm his opponent met that notion do.†I"!!! on M. .u M {glam m m was xenon dovly jogging along the mad on his old horde Iad hailed him with. "Who at you going to vote fort" "Well," dd the old man, "I though, I drank! gins Amon . vote. Anon in. good (inherit: him, I believe." "Oh but U,ts,fteehiiT.i'G"i'tTi'dil'r"i2,1", Don't you know in in . thtiverantUtt 1tffrttiaiiurin"iLr.ll With c quiet hut-u. in H- m. the old In. dd: 222 In! ht to “MIN“ Win at"! two you. . a I ha very ttttt H». , Lht!1 9-H much -iiiar. u "I. color has been taken from silk: by Add! it may be factored by applying to the upon 1 little hard. horne an! volntile. When sprinkling linen for ironing. it it better to use hot water than cold, for it cosh into the linen more “can and A. much is not required. en the clothes He dampened roll them up tightly until they can be iron. Wash and smell dailies having knitted or crochet Inc. borders. When thry ue halt dry wrap them up in a cloth and lay them laide. Iron only the centre ot the deities and pull the bee gently into shape with the ti . 'd the color has been taken from silk- by Acid: it my be moored by Ipplyim to the spot: a little hard. hog): nl volatile. Soup should never be allowed to cool in my vessel of tin. copper or iron: it mm be pound while hot into a shullow. well-glued We!) pun an: behnirred. II I res stun- upon w: Per, w m pl. have mud their heads. can tC",",,',",,,,',','.','; by covering the s t with . mixture "utters, ll?" water made into a pate and letting it rennin over night; then brush " “it? t "ittrhiik broom. {action} 200 and 7†but, according to the auntie and other load condition. But, whether the height be 200 or TMt feet, the pigeon flies in I sorts of air- cles, but always return- to a ttettttral position immediately Above the spot from which it bu been reload. " loot u it hae accurately determined it. di. notion it darts off for home. The laced uriu according to Lions. With I “rung they will fly It I v 1,000 yards A minute, mum'- Unmet-'1‘. Damn “mmumtnd iaEiai-g--sr-ernatmdu-ed lt2dnt8t'Llfe"f22te"'""" have“ W,†material and eoiUtrtaetion, “Weasel I. much light than if builti of use] or wood. e mm Mâ€. and po- peller no also of hone. Bmlllon But Built of Bronze. Owing to the great amount of dawn» gold V‘buble matter contained in "aitua, Intel's, which “use: rapid de- terlomtimt of thin steel, the hull of an new (la-puck boat Gulnnhun, built foe the Bruins. Oonrmnent, I. construct“ entirely of bro-u. Allin", thin metal, lay: 1’0?qu Mach-aka, the corrosive union " the Brazilian waters In. no " fect, and mm mor, costly, both in lonov- .11 hand, no“ and 'sailors-d lumps and Mani-bu from torus, Mood ninth. curbs, I’ll-u, limoâ€, "many, itif1es, "at... not. and two“. throat, cow ate. Sn. “0 by use of an. bottle. Wurnud the no“ wonder.) Bimini ' "I known. Sold by drug- - "Why lion" aaked the wile, with u smile; “he's married and settled down.†*leper'l “'cokly. - A certain number of the fuhiomblo Metropolitan 1nd Chevy (Thug Chib- " the national 'mpital In" all his tifi bone many quips by rum" of his esteedir4dy diminutive sine. "Mn. Blank," said I friend one day recently, "I have just noel your husband for the first time since hi- mrrinp. Do you know, he seem. shorter than ever?" Last spring the diminutive ciub nun took unto himself I wife, the fy,t',t,', of I well known Federal official, w n in aid to be u witty u her father. The lubjm-t is one of (-onnidenble im. portance. for the won! "keiv%" If it should be fimlly “notional by illum- tionnl agreement. will be In 4-.in In. among pranks! Ola-trial men. Such objection. " there may be to the word should therefore be carefully eon-MOM 37h; Faint time. before" the noon:- mendnuon " finally “W by the mmmiuion. W New Town for an, Emu: link. A migration of lime. inure-t come: from .ngland. " in that (he Ila-a "kelvln" he adopted for the kilowatt- hour or (in l-anlandl Board of Trad. unit. The kilowatt-hour boil-3 a mea- sure of practical olovlrioal work, in on of the moat fn-quvmly uaed of all tho electrical tmite and one with which (a. general public ia pertain aa familiar aa any other. The manual that the mem- ory of Lord Kelvin be honored by apply. ing his name tothl- unit in now derived, for it was originally madc- a number of year- "o, during the great man's life- time. America- cleetrical quince" will ha auto to give this propoaal a cordial wal- oomr and careful consideration, lays (In Weatem Electrician. Add: from honor- ing a man whom all delight to humor, the word "Kelvin." with two ayllahlaa, is abort" and more euphonioua than “killowaN-hmnr." with four. In taking ita om tho - I PM "a. ieyte PM“ twin $2200 “The ENGUSH SPAVIN UNIIIENT alone“: KELvm'c iiiiwE NO. 12. we. wail-c to â€9991.93 Judi With a 'iitroUVrrL"iiiiiiid Tiiiiir. ill fly " a. velocity of t,M0 or an . - H -- "I. t:8'A'"A"GsTiiru Tho J. L. Nichol! Co., 1pmttod,'Nrot"o (PI-nu muo- an m.) Manon.» â€can. How it " apponod. I for Gonna!" 1eilurn d-ya. nhe, u. '- Taldrttt his "'-rtuir I bomhm." of tth " oh.i minister of ITOH ’ "oyeripe the s a' GG ipe-eliy ll?" “my Ul was and letting it “by then brush " Knowing. for an Electrical "ty Amo- NAME b h of