THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURd, PA. KI1E FLYING AT SEA. An Effective hj- tf rnmpnrlnn lllmh Level Tetniiernturca In Dif ferent rineea. Kites carrying self-registering thr-r-motnptors nnd other Instruments have been Bent up to various heights over land by moans of balloons and kites, and a pood deal has thus been learned about thi condition of the atmosphere over continental areas. It Is possible that the. rate of cooling with asrent may not be the same over the orean. Perhaps (-tiler differences may be dis covered, too, when Investigation has gone far enough. At any rate, for a year or two past this sort of experi ment has been contemplated eagerly by a few enthusiasts, and a little has actually been accomplished. In one rrspert there Is a notable dif ference between the two classes of work. On land the observer and his wlndlnss arc stationary, and the kite runs out as far as it can. At sea tho kite, or string of kites, Is hauled by a moving tug or steamship. W. H. Dines, In Nature, tells of some work done last summer off the west coast of Scotland, under the auspices SCIENTIFIC KITE FLYING. of th Royal Meteorological society. The style of kite employed resembled the Hargrave pattern of box 'kite In general design. It was four-sldtd. and .orupojod of two cells, one ahead of the other. The opening in front, though, instead of having square cor ners, was diamond shaped. Mr. Dines calls it a "rhombus kite." The two diameters of the diamond were six feet ind three feet by six inches, while the length of the kite was seven feet six inches. Steel wire was used for a kite string. Operations were conducted from the stern of a small tug,' 55 feet long and 14 Va feet wide. She was stationed near Crlnan, and, except on Sundays, ascents were made rom her deck every day, no matter what the weather, from July 8 to Au rtist 26. The vessel could not steam more than seven knots, and the wind eloclty necessary to raise a kite la rom nine to 12 knots, so that on oc :asions when it was a dead calm no Lite could be started. It happened, aowever, that no day was calm hroughout, so that some time during .he hours of daylight the opportunity )f reaching at least 1,600 feot elevation --as afforded. Mr. Dines adds, how iver: "Had the tug been capable of en Instead of seven knots, I have lit le doubt that a height of 6,000 feet night have been attained every day." Ordinarily, the strain on the wire vas not allowed to exceed 40 or 50 ounds, although the wire had been .ested up to 300. If more than one :lte was sent up on the same lino the strain for each branch was kept with n the limits specified. This would be ontrolled by altering the speed and ilrcctlon of the boat to suit the wind. )ne of the fruits of last year's work is embodied in the following paragraph: "A further result of the observations ihow3 that the temperature of Ben Vevls (the highest mountain in Great Jritaln, its elevation being 4,40fi feet) .vas in every instance below that of he free afr at the same level some 60 niles to tho southwest, often from five 0 eight . degrees Fahrenheit below. That the two air temperatures should lave agreed was hardly expected, but he difference was very marked, and It 1 desirable that the experiments hould be repeated in the same locality o confirm the result. Tho fact, how ever, that the summit of the nioun aln is go ofren wrapped in clouds, vhen the sky is clear elsewhere, tends o show that the summit must be un 'uly cold, and It seems likely that the ffect is produced by the cooling of the lr as it is forced up the mountain lope. In fact, the cloud level on all ao mountains and hills in the neighb orhood was always much below the olnt at which the kites entered the !ouds. It is also known from the inf erences In the barometer on I3en Nevis nd the values computed from read ngs at iho base that the temperature f tho Intermediate layers of air Is not ruly represented by the mean derived rom the summit and sea levc' temper .tures." Ielielnna Slimmer Siinnahea, Crook necks or saucer, the summer 'quash, Is a delicate vegetable, and one lot served often enough on the aver se table. It contains little real nutil ient, but Is one of those vegetables vhose mission it Is to assist digestion A other food and to afford that variety which helps the appetite. Wash and riare one or two and cut into square ,'ilec.es. Tut the pieces into boiling wa er and cook for 20 or 30 minutes. Orain off every drop ot water and at with a potato masher until quite raooth. Stir into the squash a small -upful of milk, a tablespoonful of melt )d butter, two beaten eggs, pepper and ' tult. Better still, stir all theao togeth er and add to the squash after mixing. Turn into a buttered dlsh.sprlnkle with Vead crumbs and bits of butter and bake. "'iJ lUuEkCULOiiS CAMPcS. Hon- Cnnanmptlvea' et AVcIt, or t l.rnr,; I'rolonu l.lfc, lr l)rllln Out of Doors, It Is truly an ca?y and enjoyable way of getting well for any erne who Is a lover of nature, for, as has boon stated, tho malu principle carried out Ir to get In touch with that which Is out of doors to bo amid the trees, continually breathing the air purified by natural processes, to exercise and eat and skip, If possible, wilh the sky for a canopy. The medical man of the olden time would Indeed bo shocked If he could visit one of these places, to see so-called Invalids hard ot work In the forests making their camps, lolling about In hammocks In summer with heads uncovered, and lying muffled in blankets and furs In the sunlight In tho dead of winter, with no shelter but the blue sky above them. 15ut these are only some of the ways In which health Is sought. rat tents who are able to stand the exercise amuse themselves by clearing away the snow from the. veran das In the winter even the women handling the broom and shovel and en Joying It. Coasting on the hlllslu'8 Is another stranee recreation for these whom we call consumptives encouraged at the Massachusetts Institutions. Phys ical culture Is one of the requisites for those who ere able to attempt It, and daily a dozen or a score of patients are put through the simple movements, un der tho guidance of perhaps one of their number or a member of the medical staff. The tent life Is a part of the rou tine of the women In summer as well as of the men, and It Is an actual fact that in Massachusetts gome of the women have erected their own camps for win ter, decorating the walls with posters and photographs, and converting them Into miniature club houses, where they occupy themselves In conversation, read ing, sewing and various games. These camps are unique in many re spects. The buildings are compng"d of but three sides, that facing the south being left open. They are simply sheds, having a floor to prevent the dampness from the ground affecting the inmates. Some forest trees are used for posts, and the walls made of planks or boughs fas tened to them. If the temperature Is too low for comfort, it Is moderated by tha nee of a small stove, sometimes an open fire. Draught Is furnished by dig ging a tunnel through the earth beneath the shed, terminating In a length of clay pipe. When a Are Is started the air Is sucked through this condnlt. and that keeps it burning brightly, Review of Reviews. METALS AND MINERALS. Here la an Klerlrlcal Appnrntna Wlilt'h Make Easy the IJUcov ery of Hidden Wealth. When Benjamin Franklin made the experiments which put us in touch with electricity he could hardly have had an. idea of the many uses to which the won derful current would be applied by the inventors. Probably the transmission of power over long distances through a strand of copper wire and the sending of messages under the ocean without any wire at all never entered his mind, but we who have all this arc still not satis fled, and the search for new applications of the electric current is yet going on. MINERAL LOCATOR. Now it is to be utilized to discover what the earth has hidden in Its depths in the way of mineral wealth, enabling the prospector to locate a bed of mineral without the necessity of uncovering it with his pick and shovel. The outfit con elstu of a nest of dry batteries, two me tallic poets, an instrument for measur ing the resistance of the current and a coll of wire. To examine any piece of ground for mineral deposit the stake which supports the batteries and meas uring Instrument Is fixed in the earth, the second stake is connected to the ap paratus by the wire and driven In the ground at. some distance from the first. When the circuit is closed the current passes over the wire and returns through the ground, necessarily traversing any body of metal or mineral which may be located In the interval. The prospector can determine by his measures of re sistance of the earth to the current whether or notthere Is any such deposit. Louisville Courier-Journal. l'lnnta Proteetei) hy Nature, ' The reasons why certain plants are avoided by slugs and snails have been Ehovn by experiments to be various. Tannin, acid saps, ethereal oils and bet ter substances prove to be objectionable to these creatures, and some plants are ",-r" " j & protected by acld-secretlng hairs. The ' u e says, -somebody carrot, which is particularly attractive ! 'Be w.m fl.nlsn them weddin' to Kings, remained practically untouched j bo"ts fnr EU 8 Sam! ho after treatment with a one per cent, solu- "Whatever changed tho bear's mind tlon of potassium blnoxalate. Certain ' Cyru8 s,ya h0 won,t swrHr to- Provl aquatic plants were shunned by the wa- 1 donre ,nayue. h suys. Anyhow the bear's ter snails, but were speedily eaten after mln'1 WBS chaneel1. he turned around the tannin had been extracted. When flutter ftela Stronn. Butter that does not tatste quite as fresh us It should may be greatly im proved by putting In a wooden chopping bowl with salt water and thoroughly working it over and over with a buttet worker, or even a potato mashef. Pour off tho salt water and substitute sweet milk, working it into the butter In th same way. , Finally wash wall with clear, cold water. "UL.E.awHt.N." When the god of drenms Is Rood sometimes Ah, then soft aeci mi flow, Ami vision of the Biury liua Ami ways 1 used to go Come down through alumlwrland to me, We're back beneath the old elm tree, We're back to where I lor.g to lie, 1 hear fur whisper low. I hfar tho "lliliaehcn" like a elgh Well from her ripe red Hps, 1 sie llio loveilnht In her eye. l'ay'e orb Bwlnxs low and dips 1'i-low the fur horizon line The world, my world, Is all, all mint, Our lips niel Himus Intertwine, Ah, hunt-en's In those F'.imt 6he Is my world! All mine! My own! lUnenih the c!d elm tree I learned she loved, loved me nlone! Ah, I would to-n!t:ht that we Wire where we stood that fnr-off time, Ili-neath the elm, and glory vine; Jurt she and 1; Just me and mine; Would tte might ever be! But we'll win bunk and acorn the years That sick to Intervene, And we'll forget the lousing tears And mlleathat stretch hetween, And love shall make us glad again, As gind nKiitn as we wtre then, I'll hear the "Uehsuhen" soft as when No years had come bttw.-en! J. II. Lewis. In Houston Pest. The Wedding Boots of Eli's Sam J I frinan from Knob country. "Ell's Bam got his weddln' boots; but If they don't give him corns, then Cyrus Is the forgiviu'est feller-citizen that ever tils- app'inted his ownself to 'commodate a nelchbor, "Now, I like to fish, myself, and I'd go tishin' now aud then if 1 dldn t know tn manv feller-cltlzens. most of 'etu keeuln' two or three yaller dogs, at that who spend seven days in the week seltlu' on a stump vexln' the water In the stream with a worm on a hook, while their wives Is to home vexln' the water in the washtub so as to keep the house a-goln'. That sort o' spiles ilshiu' for me. "But this hero caso o" Cyrus' was dif ferent, and Ell's Sam ought to be ashamed o' his lnconslderateness and selfishness in settiu' that day for his weddin' when that was tho day that Cyrus had laid out to go to the pond for two or three days' flshin', and comln' to Cyrus the day before and sayin' that them boots o' his'n that Cyrus had had on tho last for a couple o weeks back was to be his wlddin' boots, and that he must have 'em next day. "Eli's Sam was so one-sided and un neighborly that he wouldn't oblige Cyrus nnd put the weddin' off till he got back from fishln', and so Cyrus couldn't see no way out of it but to finish the boots, though he was outrageous put out and dlsapp'lnted "1 hem boots o' Ell's Sam was all done but soleln', but Cyrus had to foot it in to the tannery to get the sole leather for flnlshln' of 'em. He took his fishpole along, thlnkln' that he mowt leastways ketch a mess o' trout for supper, and on bis walk back, when he come to the deep hole in the creek, Jest bolow the alders, be stopped and put in his hook, baited with a live mlnny. "His bait run along till It got down to the lower end o' the hole, and Cyrus was glttln' ready to give the trout that was on the p'lnt of bitln' it a chance to try whether he was the best feller or whether Cyrus was, when Cyrus heerd a splash in the water up the creek. With out lookln' round, Cyrus says to hlsself " 'Now who can the unmannerly feller. clti-.en be as'll jump in the water to rile it up on me, when I'm fishia', and spile my glttln" a bite?' "With that he turned and looked round to see who the unmannerly neighbor could be, and he seen that It was a great big don t-glve-a-contlnental bear! "Now, Cyrus Is a law-abiding citizen but when he see that unmannerly bear standin' there and rilyln' up the water on him nnd sp'illn' his glttln' that bite, he pulled his pistol and p'lnted it straight at the bear and fired. The bear kind o' give a hump as If he felt somethln' eat In" him worse than a woodtlck; and ho squealed a little, and snorted. He seemed s'prlsed, but he give a few more kicks in the water, rllyin' It up more than ever, and didn't move a step. "'See here!' said Cyrus. 'This pistol la a six-shooter!' he says, 'and I want tc ketch some trout! You better move on! lie says. "But that bear never moved a step. He Jest stamped and stamped his feet in the water and kept rllyin' of It up. Then Cyrus pulled up and give him anothei shot. "The bear humped hlsself ag'ln and squealed and snorted, but didn't move on. Then Cyrus did get mad! And he plunked Into him every one o' them shots he had left. j. "The boar headed for him them and Boomed as if he was goin' to show Cyrus that he didn't approve o" beln' peppered In the way that Cyrus had been pepprrln' of him. Then Cyrus was moved to say, eort o' positive-like: "If Providence or somethln' don't take short, clum the bank, and trotted away into the woods. "While Cyrus stood t taring ufler him the water the benr had made rlly cleared up and Cyrus got bis bit. He didn't only get his bite. He ketched the trout that done it, and a slammer it was. Three pounds, Cyrus says they told him after ward that it weighed. "But he couldn't get over being mudt bo mad so mad, and unlawful like. " That bear,' says Cyrus, 'dona some- I thin' that mowt a-sp'llcd by gettln' that bite,' he says. And inebbe he mowt do It again. That boar must be settled.' he says, and over ho goes to Joe s lum ber camp, borrles Joe's rlllo, and comes back to the creek. 'It was his belief cot knowin' much about bear, that this aggravatin old fel ler had headed for the swamp up the creek a tulle or so, and so Cyrus took a short cut through tho down timber for the swamp. When begot there he didn't soo no sign 'o boar, but pretty soon ho heerd a snort and a grunt, and looklu toward where they cau.o from, he see a bear's head sllckln' up out of a muck hole at the edge of an old log road.. "When the bear see that Cyrus see him too he stuck his head a little further out of the hole, and buoi ted a louder snort. " 'Kily up the creek on me when I'm flshin' will you?' sajs Cyrus, 'n ho whanged away. "The bear sunk back in the muck hole, and Cyrus had a sweat In" time glttln' htm out on hard ground. Ho was loo ln' the dead bear over when ho heerd a noise la tho bushes ou t'other side 'o the road. "Cyrus looked that way, and If Eli's Sam could a-sco liltn then he'd a-been sorry, I bet you, that ho hadn't put his weddln' off till Cyrus got back from the pond a-fishin", for Cyrus's eyes was bulg in' at the great big head of another bear that was stlckln' out o' the bushes with a look on lis face that said as plain as could be that It was lookln' for somethln' to clutch and claw, and didn't calc'late to look no further than Cyrus. lint there was another load in Joe's rifle, and bav in' gone as fur as lie bad In burnln' pow der aud scatterln' lend, Cyrus throw ed conscience to the winds and banged away. T'other bear come tumplin' down, and Cyrus says: " 'I'm sorry for you,' he say, 'but you're jest as dead as tho unmannerly bear yender that made the creek rily on me,' he says. "But the bear wasn't. Not Jest then It rlz on its hind feet and started fer Cyrus and Cyrus didn't have no more load to scatter. " 'Providence,' says he, 'It looks to me now that If you don't take enro o' them boots of Eli's Sam he'll have to go bare foot to his weddin'!' he says. "Hut Cyrus was wrong. The bear only come a few steps. Then he fell over back ward nnd was deader than a June shad " 'Two bears,' says Cyrus, "and I only started out to git sole leather to finish them weddin' boots, and mebbe some trout for supper,' he Bays. "And then what fo you think? Cyrus discovered that the first bear he killed and the one that ought to had six pistol bullets in it for rilylng' up tho creek didn't have nothln' but a rifle bullet right betwixt the eyes, and the bear that stuck his head out o' the bushes, and that Cyrus wasn't expeetln, had six pistol bullets right scattered around In him, besides a rifle bullet betwixt the eyes! " 'Ding it.' says Cyrus, lookln' at the first bear. 'I didn't have nothln' ag'ln you! What did you go and raise your conk up out o' that muckhole for, and snort?' "But it was too late then. And. Provi dence or not, Ell's Sam got his weddin' boots; but If they don't give him corns then Cyrus Is the ferglvln'est feller-clt-Izen that ever dlsapp'lnted his ownself to 'commodate a neighbor." N. Y. Sun HARD TIMES IN HONDURAS. Commercial Pnralrala Expected Heault When Panama, Canal la Bnllt. British Honduras is sometimes called the Ireland of America. Blessed with a soil of unsurpassed fertility, a mild and equable climate and a variety of natural productions but rarely found within so restricted an area, the colony is yet af flicted with hard tlms. Although one of the most thinly populated of the hab itable regjons of the globe, the number of Its Inhabitants is constantly decreas ing; the labor market is overstocked agricultural industries are declining, trade and commerce languish and the pinch of depression Is felt by all classes, according to the Brooklyn Eagle. The reason for this state of affairs is not hard tp discover. It Is the same curse that has crushed Ireland ab- sentoe landlordism In a little different but not less fatal form. The area of the colony Is only 7.2CC square miles. Of this 2,500 square miles, or one-third, Is owned by one London land company, In all more than four-fifths of the col ouy Is the property or a handful of English proprietors who will not sell nor lease nor permit settlement nor cul tivation. They derive a sure, steady and perpetual income by working the mahogany, rosewood, cedar, logwood and other natural products of the for ests, and for this reason desire to keep their domains forever a wilderness. An effort has been made to compel these absentee landlords to sell their holdings at an appraised valuation However, so overshadowing Is their In fluence that tho laws passed for thl purpose have proved inoperative. It therefore seems probable that the coun try will long continue to be held In pawn by a few English proprietors who have never even visited its shores and that its wealth will be sent abroad to enrich the coffers of the strangers Instead of remaining to stimulate trade and In dustry at homo. Women'a Ilnainaaa Directory. Business women of Boston have bad a new honor thrust upon them, namelv that of huvlng a directory of thbir very own. inoi a man s name appears in any light. But It doeB show women engaged In occupations which many belluve to be controlled exclusively by men. I fact the book reveals that woman en do Just about everything that Is worth doing at all. Aud of course they do it well. The businos women's directory may be called an enlightening aa well as interesting work and In time may bi found chained in every drug store along side of its big brother. Boston Trans xrlpt. TtSE FARMER FAILS In health jurt as does the city-tnon, and be fails commonly from tbe some cause, "stomach trouble." Tho farm is a wholesome place to live; me larme. life Is a healthy life ; '"it no external ad .nntucrea can overcome the effects ot fltaeniiprl atotiiach. When the stomach and its allied orpans of diges tion and nutri tion are dis eased, the food eaten is imper fectly oicofteii and assimilated, and the conse quent loss of nurtition results in nhvsical de bility. Dr, pierce s Golden Medical Discovery cures disenscs of the stomach aud other organs of digestion and nutrition, and enables the per- feet digestion anil assimilation of food. It builds up the .... body with sound flesh and solid muscie. I used ten hottles of Dr. Tierce's Golden Medical liiscovcry and acvernl vinla ot inj ' rtcHnnt 1'eIlcU' a year ago thU spring;, nil'! have had no tr mMe with itidigeiticm inre," vrriita Mr. W. T. Tliomjuoti, ol InwiiMiM llronilwalcr Co., Molilalia. " worcia inii n how thankful I am f..r the ri-li-f. ai I nnd atif frrr.l so much anil it veineil that the floctora Cul.l ilo mo no Rood. I got down m wcirhi m one hundred and twenty-live pound!;, ami mi not Blue to work at all. Now 1 welch nearly one hundred ami ity and can do a day'i woi ic on the farm. I have recommended your medi cine to several, nnd ahall alwava have a good word to any for Dr. Pierce and hl medicinea." foe auhatitution ii'tO permit the dealer to make the little more profit paid by the sale of less meritori ous medicines. He gains; you lose, therefore accept no suoiiuuie ior- uviuna Alemcal Discovery." RAILROAD NOTES. Of Interest io Our Many Readers and the Public i. Goncral. Equalled seldom, Surpasskd never. Niagara Falls Nature's Won derwork. Every section of the United States can claim some special exhibition of Nature's A'ondcrs, as the Yosemtte Valley and "Big Trees" ot California, The Yellowstone Park, The Torrid I uxuriance' of Florida, The.Adirondar ks, White Mounta'ns etc., etc., but Niagara Falls is fully equal if not superior to all others of Nature's scenic beauties and in ad dition is easier of access and at cheap er rates from the Middle States than any other. . The best wiy to reach Niagara Falls from this vicinity at a low rate is to take advantage of one of the Philadelphia & Heading's Ten Dol lar Ten Day personally conducted excursions via the Reading Lehigh Valley Route. The dates for the balance of the season are Aug. 29th and S'.'pt. 10th and 26th, and Oct. 8th. The participants in these trips leav ing Reading Terminal S.30 a. in. have a pleasant ride through the scenic Le high and Wyoming Valleys and arrive at Niagara rails in the early evening A Dining Car attached to train fur nishes meals Table d'Hote at 50 cents per capita. Opportunities are afforded for sev eral side trips and for stop off on re turn trip. Tickets are good going only on special train and good to re turn within ten days on all aegular trains. Round trip Si 0.00. Full information as to Side Trips, (ares and time of connecting trains from other points, etc.," can be pro cured from any P. & R. Ticket Agent or addressing Edson J. Weeks, ueneral Passenger Agent, Philadel phia. Niagara Falls Excursions. Low Rate Vacation Trips via Pennsylvania l.ailroad. September 1 8th, Oc tober 2 and 16, are the remaining dates for the popular ten-day excui sions to Niagara Falls from Washing ton and Baltimore, via Pennsylvania Railroad. On these dates the special train will leave bunbury 12.58 p. m. arriving Niagara Falls o.ji; p. n. Excursion tickets, good for return passage on any regular train exclusive of hruitej expiess trains, within ten Rogers Bros." I tho Trade mark that appear on the old orlginaJ bruud of Knives, Fors and Spoons. There are many imitation-' "Ui7'M. (,l...Ii.,l.,.. n.,w tit the genuine, whichare aolii vy ieuuini( dculrra. beud to the tnukera for booklet tio. 6 of beautiful new acaiifns. THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER CO. Merlden, Conn. 381 ljr ONLY BT rl . 1 rs i'wniaiini ' ria), will be sold at $6 90 from Sun. bury r nd W lH ts liaire, ami at pro portionate tale" fr"1" pnncipal points. A stop-over will be allowed at Buffalo within limit of taket reluming. The special train of Pullman parlor cars and day coaches will be run with each excursion running through to Niagara Falls. An extra charge will be made for parlor-car seats. An experienced tourist agent and chaperon will accompany each exciir sion. For descriptive pamphlet, time t'f connecting train?, and further forma tion apply to nearest ticket agent ot addicts Geo. W. Boyd, General Pas senger Auent, Broad Street Station, Philadelphia. 8-27 31. Tour to the Pacific Coast Via Pennsylvania Railroad, Account Mecta ing National Banktrs1 Association. Oi' account ol the meeting of the National Bankers' Association, to be held at San Francisco, Cal , October 20 to 23, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company offers a personally-conducted tour to the Pacific Coast at re mark ably low rates. This tour will leave Philadelphia, and other points on the PennsyK ania Railroad east of Pittsburg, edncs- day, October 14, by special train ol the highest grade Pullman equipment. A quick run westward to San Iran cisco will be made, via Chicago, Omaha, Cheyenne, and Ogden. Five days will be devoted to San Francisco, allowing ample opportunity to yisit the near-by coast resorts. R; turmni;, stops will be made at Salt Lake City, Colorado Springs, Denver, and St Louis. The parly will leach New York on the evening of( October 3- Round trip rale, covering all ex penses for eighteen days, except five days spent in San Francisco, $190. Rates fiom PiUsourg will be $5 00 ess. For full information apply to Ticket Agents, or Geo. W. Boyd, Gner:il Passenger Agent, Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, Pa. 9-io-3t. Reduced Rates to Baltimore. Via Pennsylvania Railroad Account Meeting of the Sovereign GranJ Lodge of Odd Fellows. For the bene fit of those desiring to attend the annual session of the Sovereign Grand Lodge of I. O. O. F. at Baltimore, Md., September 21 to 26, the Penn sylvania Railroad Company will sell round-trip tickets to Baltimore on September 19, 20, and 21, good for return passage until September 28, inclusive, at rate of single fire fir the round trip, plus one dollar. For conditions, and stop ever at Philadelphia on tickets reading through that point, consult ticket agents. Sept. io-at. Spirits to Live In Planets. New Theory of Evolution by Professor Moore, of Columbia, Mo. Dr. W. T. Moore, dean emeritus ol the Missouri Bible College at Colum bus, Mo., recently completed the manuscript of a book which will cause a sensation among theologians and scientists, says the St. Louis Republic. Dr. Moore is a theistic evolution ist, though his new definition of evolu tion will be quite satisfactory even to conservatives. He traces man in his origin, history and destiny, and in the concluding chapter of the book, enti tled Death and the Other Side, he at tempts to show the meaning of the numerous worlds which now roll in space without inhabitants. Dr. Moore's theory, in brief, is that man- will go on progressing through the cycles of eternity and that when he assumes his spiritual body at the resurrection he then will be prepared to inhabit some of the p'anets or stars which are now uninhabited. He concludes that the infinitude o wor'.Js become intelligible from his point of view. He believes that the spiritual man will be the inhabitant of all these worlds and that, as emigra tion from this earth is the future evolutionary process by which those worlds are to be inhabited, the in habitants of the whole universe will be of the same family and constitute a great spiritual brtoherhood for a" the ages of the future. Dr. Moore thinks that the numer ous worlds now uninhabited are in a state of preparation for glorified mar, as the present earth was a long time in prepaiation fur original man. Dr. Moore is a theologian and journalist of reputation both in America and Europe. He was for many years a resident of London, and is still editor of a leading religious magazine pub lished there. His wife is president of the Christian Female College of Columbia. . Have You Laien "f" ? 1 here nro sci ninny "ready to eai" fuO'li 011 the miuke'l no.v that one hardly know l.nw 10 (listinrjuish between them. "It" shoulil nut he clami-il widi the other1.. There in 110 oilier that compare w th Mf ". bs one trial will convince you. f " is more healihful, ttreng liuniti ami taite-s better. Made by a new pioecsn and ready to eat liy adding milk. (Jet a j aekage to.duy at your grocers. 2-12 ly