NEED MONEY FOR , GOOD WORK Flint of the National Association for tha Study and Prevention of Tuberculous. What "a Million for Tuberculosis from Red Ooks Sea's" will do In pro viding some of the f TG.OOO beds need ed nt onee In the t'nlted States for ronxuiuptlvps, Is explained In a recent bulletin of the Natlonnl Association for the Study and Prevention of Tu berculosis. There la Just about one bed for every ten indigent consump tives, and If all tuberculosis person In the country are counted, both rich and roor, hardly one for every 25 or 80. If gufllclent hospital accomoda tions aro provided only for those who are too poor to pny the full j.rlee for their treatment, fully 273,000 more beds In. special Institutions for tuberculosis would be needed at once. The Immense outlay necessary to pro ride and maintain ho many bedU In hospitals, make It Imperative, the National Association for the tftudy and Prevention of Tuberculosis) de clares, that uch Institution be erect ed from public money, either muni cipal, county or state. In order to get appropriations for public hospitals for tuberculosis, agitation U neces sary. and In order to create a cam paign of agitation, organization Is de manded. Hut in order that un organ! gallon may carry on an effective cam paltm, funds are needed. These funds It Is pioposed to secure In as many communities us possible from tho sale of Red Cross seals. REST AND PEACE Fall Upon Distracted Households When Cutlcura Entera. Fkcp for (skin tortured babies and rest for tired, fretted mothers Is found la a hot bath with Cutlcura Soap and a gentle anointing with Cutlcura Oint ment This treatment, In the major ity of cases, affords Immediate relief la the most distressing forms of Itch ing, burnmg, scaly, and crusted hu mors, eczema, rashes, inflammations, Irritations, and chaflngs, of infancy and childhood, permits rest and sleep to loth parent and child, and points to a speedy cure, when other remedies fall. Worn-out and worried parents will find this pure, sweet and econom ical treatment realizes their highest expectations, and may be applied to the jojesetit infants as well as chil dren of all ages. The Cutlcura Rem edies are Bold by druggists every where. Send to Potter Drug & Cheni. Corp., sole proprietors, Boston, Mass., for their free 32-paso Cutlcura Hook on the rare and treatment of skin and sculp of infants, children and adults. The Spots Disappeared. ' Mrs. Dolan lived in a district which was not as favorable for the outdoor household experiments rccommendud by the Ladles' Helper as it might have been. This fact Mrs. Dolun was rapid ly assimilating, and In a manner not k uncommon as it might be she blamed the estimr.blo periodical for her difficulties. "I wlnht I had a holt o' that woman that rung the 'Handy Hints' depart ii.ent," she remarked to her husband me rrorr.lng after an early excursion li.to the back yard, whence she re turned In V.'.ah dudgeon. "I fought you fought ' she was a prand wan," said M,r. Dolan, cautious ly testing his cup of tea. "Well, I've changed me mind, as I've the rights to do," replied his wife. "She said to put sody on thlm stains In the tablecloth, and I'ave It out over flight on the line, an' they'd be gone entirely whin morning come. Sure 'tis the tablecloth that's gone the de saving woman that she is!" Youth's Companion. TRY MURINE EYE KtMEDY for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes andUranulatedKyellds. Murine Doesn't Smart Soothes Eye Rain. Druggists Hell Murlno Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 60c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptle Tubes. 2."jc. $1.00. Eye Hooks and Eye Advice Free by Mall. Wurlue Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. No Hurry. "What are you lu such a rush about?" "Promised to meet my wife at three o'clock down at the corner." "Well, there's no hurry. It iBn't four o'clock yet." TO DRIVE OCT M HI A AMI IK II. li I ! THE S.YSTFM Take the Om B'nwar.i i,m,n ., ta.u K.i.k.iS Lllli.1. 'IMO. u know wt.ut ,.u tm Ukwitf. tttm formula 1 plnl, t-nni.-t 4,0 prer? bottle. J bowing It Is wmiiiy Oiilntnit and Jrnn In ft lt. m form. Tha O ultima drlvi-n out tl-e malaria rid Uwi Iron tiu'.Ma nt, Id kyit.-tu. bold by ail Oaalaia fei 'A yurft- 1'rloe oO oauia ileware of taking kindness from others aa matters of course. Glad stone, j iilsousness "I have used your valuable Cascarets t id I find them perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have used them for some time for indigestion and biliousness and am now completely cured. Recom mend them to everyone. Once tried, you will never be without them in the family." Edward A. Marx, Albany, N.Y. Pleaaaot. Palatable, Potent. Tail flood Do U'Kxl. Never Sicken. Weaken or Oripa. ICc.ZSc.Wc. Never loldlo bulk. The alna tablet etamped C C C. Guaranteed 10 cure or your tuooey back. am a.fM ktmt Ramnrae Unreal :nlarjrmente J asuad, Hwolleu 'iluiii, I uroa, t ilf I auduiie, hurtineae fniui to, IsruUs urMraln, Iuri4 hliavlu I.ainxnoM, Alia I'alii. Horn not liliater, remote ttie hair ;r lajr the Intra Ui, UO a Will Im II. It. . L 1 M AllrUIHIII NK, JR., (mankind ll and 13 bntlb,.l lor SjuoTltla, BUatni, Outily or Ituauiuatla lMi p.M,a, varicvp ,ina, vaneoeaia, llrdronMla aliari pam. Vmr dmatlat caa aupply ana jure reOrMtcfe. Will 111 you more If ?uu wrllA. 0oli4 fu Iiim, lik aud u,kUiA(Mj.. aifd. oolybf m. t. lovaa, r. . ui tame a r--ir . Bate. Yoe aul kaa kaooa, If Jon ou autgtilourulroa la an4 lna regp v BajPress Mauvn. (la., or Ollitir'i'li lI HNKii uaiuuxirM. Mi , 01 flBNNlM.Jl Nucuula IkiUUOtMmtm T I fat IMfc for CoucHfl t Cour? Make Use of Your Gifts By REV. ABNER H. LUCAS, D. D. I Text And he aM. lfnv us not. t prsy tliee, fur an inucli a tliou knw-t how we are 10 eruntiiii In tl.e wlltinrnfK, und tbr.., b9 wll h in Instead of eyes. Num. 10 21. . What mure glorious use can be made of knowledge, Influence, and per sonal strength than to turn them to the help of the needy? If your vision Is penetrating and clear, what nobler service can you render then to "be eyes" for those who may not see afar? If your hand has strength and cunning, to what better use may It bo turned than lifting the burdens of the weak and ti achlrg the unskill ed how best to accomplish their task? If you have wealth you have pos session of a power for good which Is nearly omnipotent, If rightly applied. What more worthy aim can lead men and women of wealth than that through their help the poor may catch visions of the highest and holiest llfeT If we have the gift of prophecy, we must use It for the Instruction of the Ignorant, If we retain It. To hesitate is inglorlously to fall; selfishly to keep for ourselves what God has In tended shall serve his children, Is to lose life wKli all Its opportunities of good. Hobab's knowledge and Influ ence never were more precious to him than when, having refused the appeal to enrich himself, he accepted the op portunity to assist others. As the new dangers arose, and he helped Moses meet them and conquer them, his own mind and soul grew Imperiul. By the number, magnitude, .and stress of the responsibilities of others, he was de veloped into his own worthiest life. When a great Italian commander was defeated he Issued his immortal ap peal: "Soldiers, I am without money and without reward. I have nothing to offer you but cold and hunger, and rags and hardship. Let him who loves his country follow me." But with 'that summons to self-denial and patriotism he gathered to his side the choicest snails of his generation. The niqn.w.ho folio v. d in response to that reppeal became courageous heroes'; themselves. When our Lord turned.' and said to the multitude, "Tho Son of man hath not to where to lay his head," and invited them to follow him, be was calling to men and women who had counted the cost, and were ready to surrender themselves to the cause of purity, truth, and human helpfulness. The way of life is narrow; the gate to It Is narrow; but the narrowness of the way and the gate are Its glory. Nar rowness of the way demands energy, high purpose and noble perseverance. There Is no other way. To invite a great soul to a broad path is to invite him to smallness, to the cessation of growth and Impotence. The cry has been heard In every age, "Would Ood it were easier to be good!" "And would God it were easier to redeem the earth!" Dut that Is a mistaken cry. When the ten spies returned from Canaan murmuring because of the obstacles to their conquest, their murmuring was an evidence of weak ness of character; but the try of Ca leb and Joshua was, "Up, let us con quer these giants, and take their walled cities." That was the token of the greatness of the two. Jesus Christ did not come primarily to change the circumstances that should make life easy, but to give a new incentive and lofty inspiration that would enable men to meet life's circumstances as they are. lie never promised his friends that the path of duty should bo free from danger. In the spirit of the Spartan mother who charged her soldier son, "Come home with your shield or on it," Chrltit says to his disciples, "T&ke the field and save humanity, cost what It may." It is always true that the choice of the broad path of personal eoe and com fort. Instead of the narrow path of duty, leads to the loss of self-respect, the world's esteem, and true success. Sir Henry Stanley describes bravery as a requisite for those who push into the African foreBt, and says: "The bigger the work the greater the Joy of doing it. The whole hearted striving and wrestling with difficulty to lay hold with a firm grip and level head, and the calm resolution of the mon ster, and tugging and tolling and westllng at It today, tomorrow, and the next, until it is done Is the sol dier's creed of forward, ever forward; It is a man's faith that for this task he was born." When McKay wroto from Uganda in Africa to the home church, be said, "For our work at this station we want the best men In England; not a man who can be easily spared, but the man who can not be spared." Christianity from the beginning has grown upon tasks that were so great as to require the consecration of all its power, "O, pray not for easy lives, pray to be stronger men; do not pray for power equal to your tasks; then the doing of your work shall be miracle, but you shall be a miracle; every day you shall wonder at yourself, at tha richness of the life which has come to you by the grace of God." Final Aim. Tho main reason why men aro so quickly swept oS their feet by passion, why gambling and lust and drink art o strong. Is because God has not been chosen as the Dual aim of Ufa to fur bish a standing check upon tha tiger And the apa in tha menagerie of tha soul. Rev. J. P. D. Lawyd, Presbyte lan, Beattla. Cars of the Eyes. Keep the ayes cool and clean by washing them ones or twice a day ir rose water or In equal parts of witch hazel and warm water. Keep tha eya brows and cya lashes free from du by brushing them with a tiny eyebrow brush. Eya strain and Inflamed eye lids sre two of tho almost unavoidable results of a summer holiday. Rathlnt tba lids In much diluted tea will aradl cata tha redness, whlie rest In a dark ened room with a bandage of cool tei leaves placed acroa tba ayes will r a Uave tha strain. GI ViNP MACHINERY ON THE PANAMA CANAL ISIS J ,u m a at tt-..'.- ' iJT -V 4 f -II Wl VUcst 1 I r I i ' : -I IAI t iu ,-wy a n f KaVlf 4Tal - a t ejwarVre? a: -L' ' -if " aWXl fE-ORO fHQUZL LOCKS PANAMA. Visitors to the Isthmian canal, who are especially numerous at this tlmeyot the year, never tire of expressing their wonder at the immense cranes that are used at the Pedro Miguel locks in the erection ot the great walls. The ttolBtlng and placing of building material is done with the utmost ease and rapidity by these gigantic machines. In general the work on the canal Is progressing most satisfactorily this autumn. GERMS OF ANARCHY Rev. C. H. Parkhurst Constructs Main Line Through Youth. Men Who Learn What They Choose More Likely to Observe Only Laws They Like, 8ays Eastern Critic. Chicago. American homes of the present day are breeding anarchy be cause of their failure to teach children obedience. American colleges, through their elective curlcula, are aiding the work begun in the borne. And the automobile, by tempting men Into defiant attitude, who always before have respected the law, Is do ing its share in creating an anarchi cal Bpirlt in this country that is a more difficult problem than either Ig norance or pauperism. Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst, pastor of the Madison Square Presbyterian church in New York, analyzes the pres ent and coming generation's attitude toward the law after the fashion above in an article contributed to The Con tinent, a Presbyterian weekly pub lished in Chicago, as an enlargement of The Interior. "Tho pity is that the average home Is not what it used to be In this mat ter of obedience," sayc Dr. Parkhurst. "It is a great thing to be brought up. There Is a vast difference between HAS PLATT'S OLD PAY CHECK that and coming up. And If one is not brought up before leaving home, the chances are he never will be. True and safe manhood is founded on obedient boyhood." He Is even more emphatic in bis ob jections to existing college methods. "The effect of much of our school and college training," he says, "is to foster the mlscellaneousness permitted In the modern home. Things there are all running In the 'optional' which is Latin for 'do as you like.' If you do not want to study Greek, study some thing else anything that you do like, end that will be the least drain on your gray matter; or as it was stated In the bulletin hung in one of the halls of a New England college recently! "Do not allow your studies to Inter fere with your regular college course.' "What all of that will issue in when youth arrives at years of adult life there Is no difficulty in foreseeing. The young have learned to believe In the optional method, and they will con tinue to practice it Authority, as such, tbey hardly respect. Laws that are the expressed will ot the state they transgress if they do not like them, and are not afraid of being held up for it forgetting that laws are made for those that don't like them; other peo ple don't need them. 'Law or no law, we are going to do what we want to do If we can do It without taking too much risk.' That is the spirit ot the times." In speaking of the Iniquities of the Automobile, Dr. Parkhurst supposes the case of a man of character, who Is religious and Christian, but who owns a car.- The speed limit Is ten miles an hour, and there is the rub. FISH ARE! MADE VERY CHEAP Water Shortage Dries Reservoir, and Many Fine Specimens of Finny Tribe Are Taken. New Yoik. Fish were cheap ana plentiful at Sleepy Hollow during the recent water famine at Tarrytown Small boys and thrifty men learned that tbe muddle of murky water in the bottom ot the reservoir was full of big fish perfect whoppers and that to prevent their dying in the res ervoir the water would be let out into the brook below the dam. Then there was a rush of persons with baskets By the middle of the totenoon there was an amazing scene. Tbe fish had ben let into tbe brook and the gush of water had subsided, leaving them in pools among the rocks. There was fat German carp, 30 inches long; lazy suckers nosing around the bottom, bright-colored perch, ugly, scrappy old black bass, that fought for the deeper spots, and eels that took their time in sliding from hole to hole. Men waded Into the water bare legged and caught the fish In their hands, chasing them from rock to rock and struggling with giant old eels that must have seen Rip Van Winkle poaching along the streams before he went to sleep, and who might have beard the thunder of Ichabod's horse's hoofs on tbe bridge below when the Headless Horseman pursued him. Some eels were nearly four feet long. Note for $5 Issued Ly Ohio Bank In 1852 In Hands of Veteran of Civil War. Masslllon, Ohio. A relic of the" days when Thomas C. Piatt, lata Sen ator from New York, was a drug clerk In this city was brought here the other day by A. J. Zimmerman of Great Falls, Mont., a veteran of the Civil war. The relic s a note for $5, issued in the name of Thomas C. Piatt by the Hank of Masslllon 1. 1852. It was brought by i-Matt's employer to lay him his weekly stipend. The note was picked up In Mobile, Ala., during the Civil war by Mr. Zim merman, who gave a $2 greenback for it and two $20 orders on the state of Ohio. The note, discolored and ragged, Is printed on one side only. It was Is sued under the Ohio law that a bank might IsHue notes payable to any one and redeemable at any time. Many of these notes remained in circulation (or several years. Peace Congreaa for London. London. There will be bold In Lon don in July, 1911, the first universal peace congress which will have for Its object the encouraging of friend lier relations and a heartier co-opera tion among the peoples ot tbe West and East Lord Weardale will pre side. London Filled by Amertoans. London. All the WeBt End hotels have been crowded with returning Americans spending a few days before embarking for home. Tbe hotels are dotn a rushing business, which shows that a large number of Americans made tho trip this summer. WOULD OUST MOSES Divine Says People of Chicago Would Put Him Out. If Prophet Came to Windy City, Says North Shore Pastor, Modern Idolators Would Destroy His Tablets. . Chicago. If Moses came to Chi cago today the people would soon dis pose of the old gentleman and of his precious slabs' ot stone. "It might serve to give him a bet ter opinion of the idolatrous Israel ites," asserted the Rev. Ingram E. BUI the other day from tbe pulpit of tbe North Shore Baptist church. At work, be asserted, the typical Christian worships mammon; at leis ure he offers up Incense to his de sires; modern cheap shows debase his mind and sap his strength. "It la a long leap of tba Imagina tion," continued the north side pastor in his sermon, "If Moses Came to Chicago," "from the desert vastness of the plains that lay at tha feet of Sinai to this great wilderness ot city life with its crowded rookeries. Its gilded houses of shame. Its populated shops In which competition strikes down the weak and the race Is only to the strong. And yet the elements that make for sin and mortality cre ate a havoc that is yet mora deadly than the spirit of creature worship as It appeared again and again among the sojourners of the wild. "The query occurs to us. If Moses should make his appearance In Chi cago, how long would it take him to THE ANOINTING OF JESUS Saaaay School Una for Oct. 30, 1910 Specially Arranged tor Thlt Pa par PRIZE EAR OF CORN $43.60 Mlnneaota Farmer Tells How Ha Lives Well on 32 Ac re a CuItU vatlon Is Secret. St. Paul, Minn. Tho prize ear of corn at the agricultural department of tba state fair yielded lu owner, C. N. Howe of Aitkin $43.60, and bis exhibit of 22 ears of tba yellow prod uce brought him $1.48, a record that attests to tha profits of farming and ranks Dad Howa aa tha prize fanner of Minnesota. Mr. Howa, besides winning tha sweepstakes on all kinds of corn, took tha first premium on tba best tan ears ot whltocap dent com. tha Drat premi um on tba yellow dent corn, first placa among tba Aitkin county exhibi tor and was tba bead of tba private farmers' exhibitors. Ha also took premiums In bundle grain and ranked third In his exhibit of 12 varieties of bundle and sbeatb grain. Cultivation, according to the prise farmer, Is tha secret of bis success. "You can use all tha long drawn-out name you want to, but Utey tneaa plain cultivation," be said. "I ow-n and work 82 acres of land In Aitkin coun ty and I make Just as good a living as tbe farmers around me wbo own 160 acres or more. I make a good living for a family of five, go to all of your conservation congresses and state fairs and have all the money I want. I cultivated that field of corn that won tbe prizes 82 times, and I even cultivate my bay." Mr. Howa keeps two horse and two cows on his 82 acres, has fruits of all kinds and everything be wants for himself and family. dispose of the ten commandments? It Is a patent fact the people ot Chicago do not care for Moses, and every one of the commandments is broken every day. The Idolatry of the daily life Is evident. "Prosperity born of a competitive or ganization of society breeds a regard for material standards of life and action. When a man thinks In terms of dollars arid cents, acts upon the basis ot dollars and cents, determines from the standpoint of dollars and cents, Judges by the measurement of dollars and cents, sinks manhood brotherhood, and every higher Ideal in his Insatiable thlrBt to make more money, he plays the role of tbe Idola ter whose god Is the Bpirlt of mam mon. ' "The Idolatry of today presents a variety of form. The animalism which bas Infected a good deal of the popu lar amusements ot the period la but tbe token of a sensualized people wbo have made a god ot the unbridled pas sions. "A startling situation la Involved In the phenomenal development of amusement features of the cheaper variety, the danger of which Is their ability to appeal to the human Inter est In the sensational. There Is ev erywhere a shameful dissipation ef time and strength. a - "In these beautiful houses about us tonight there are plenty ot rounders and highflyers wbo care mora for some clandestine flirtation, the seduc tive muslo of tbe wlneroom, the allur ing appeal of the midnight world, tbe glitter and the gleam of the great white way, than they do for home and heaven and humanity." called at Andrew's home. Tbey recognized each other as long separated cousins, although living only five miles apart, and a famljy re union was arranged. Remarkable Reunion. Pittsburg. Through tbe publicity given his rescue work In an automo bile accident. Andrew Freeborough bas found a cousin of whom ha lost trace thirty-five year ago. Freeborougb's name appeared In the papers as rescuing two woman from an automobile that went over an em bankment a few days ago. and Henry Freeborougn, attracted by the name. German Cattle Sick. Berlin. The foot and mouth dis, ease Is epidemic In Germany. It was officially gazetted that the disease had appeared in fourteen districts, extend ing from Koenlgsberg In the north east to Baden In tbe south. Three otber centers of Infection pre viously bad been reported, tbe largest of which was adjacent to Frankfort-on-the-Oder. Fifteen hundred animals are sick. Russian cattle are held to bare Intro duced the disease. Radium for All. London. Sir William Ramsay In a lecture here stated that radium now costs $2,100,000 per ounce. Last Jan uary the price was said to be $3,000,000 an ounce. A year ago there was about a quarter of a pound of radium la the world. The quantity la now sauca greater. I Lemon Text Matthew 26:l-lo. Memory verse II. Uolrlen Text "She hath done what aha could. "-Mark 14:8. Time Saturday. April L A D. 80, tha Say before tha Triumphal Propeaalnrt. I'lare Home of Simon the leper, at Bethany, on the Mount of Ollvea. The place of the supper was Beth any, In the house of Simon the leper. We have met this family twice before this in their home. One picture of them Is presented to us in Luke 10: 38-42. ' Here we see Martha busily preparing the meal for Jesus' enter tainment; a busy and anxious house keeper. This was In tbe autumn pre vious to the present occasion. The second picture is presented to us by John (II: 20 44). Since tbe first picture their brother Lazarus had died, and been restored by Jesus; and although Martha is even more busy than before, yet she is restful and peaceful In ber work. She Is not cumbered with her business, nor an gry with Mary, nor casting reflections on Jesus. She has learned something In the day of sorrow and darkness. She has not lost any of her power to serve, but the manner of ber service has been transformed. Thus the two sisters each gained something of the virtues of the other. At the present feast Mary and Mar tha were each serving in the way natural to them. Lazarus sat at tha table as a guest with Jesus In whose honor the feast was given. Simon was at the head of the table. As was cus tomary In the Orient the villagers were attracted to look upon tbe scene, and see tbe distinguished guests. It is a great blessing to have such a home as is presented to us at Beth any, as a living picture to be held up before all tbe homes In the world, especially when we add to it the scene where Jesus takes little children in his arms and blesses them. The star of Bethlehem for morals and religion, for the' millennium, stands over tbe home where Jesus is. There came unto him a woman. This woman was Mary, the alBter of Mar tha and Lazarus. Having an alabaster box, rather, a cruse or flask. Of very precious ointment, a liquid perfume, more like an oil, as oil of roses, than the thicker compositions we commonly know as ointment. It was so strong that it filled the whole house with its odor. Very precious. Horace offers to give a cask of wine for a very small box of It Compare the attar ot roses, made at Ghazlpoor in Hindustan, and which requires 400,000 full-grown roses to produce one ounce, and which sells when pure, in the English ware houses, as high as $100 an ounce, or $1,200 for as much as Mary's pound ot Spikenard. Anointing the head of a rabbi at such feasts was not an unusual honor; but anointing the feet was unusual, and expressed the tenderest, must humble, most reverential, unutterable affection. Mary not only anointed Jesus, but she took "woman's chief ornament" and devoted it to wiping tbe travel-stained feet of her teacher. She devoted tbe best she had to even the least honorable service for him. John says that "tbe house was filled with the odor," as Indeed the church and the world have been filled with the odor of this loving deed. When his disciples saw it, they had Indignation. John tells us that Judas Iscarlot was the leader and the mouthpiece of the indignation against Mary. The plausible arguments of a positive man, wearing a mask of vir tue, and speaking In behalf of some of tbe very principles their Master had enforced, had brought some of the disciples Into mora or less sympathy with his feeling of Indignation. It Is easy to see how it might seem a useless waste, as some now Imagine that the money spent ' upon great churches, and on foreign missions, might better be given to the poor. , She hath wrought a good work upon m. The Greek adjective Implies something more than "good," a noble, an honorable work. "Tbe spirit which offers precious things, simply because they are precious, ... is a good and - Just feeling, and as well-pleas ing to God and honorable to men, as It is beyond all dispute necessary to the production of any gTeat work In the kind with which we are at present concerned." "Costliness is an external sign of love and obedience." "It is not the church we want, but the sacrifice; not the emotion of admiration, but the act of adoration; not the gift, but the giving." Tbe act was even better than hei thought It was her last tribute of affection. "Jesus was at a crisis of his life when it was of tbe utmost value to him to know that he had won a place In a human heart." This story baa been told In every known tongue, and Is now being re lated in more than four hundred dif ferent languages to every great nation, on the earth. No monuments,, not even the Pyramids, are as enduring, Mary Is still pouring out tbe precious nard In an endless living stream, the fragrance thereof still Is filling human hearts and lives all over the world Like Abel, "being dead, she yet speak- eth." For a memorial of her. By which her deed shall be remembered; not to glorify her, but to continue ber usefulness, to give Immortality to her character and Influence. She Is like the fabled fountain, each drop ' of whose water was the source of an other similar fountain. We are told In tba Brltannlca that the late. Dr. Septimus Please "endeav ored to show tbat a certain scale or gamut existed among odors as among sounds, taking the sharp smells to correspond with high notes, and tbe heavy smells with low." "He assert ed that to properly constitute a bou quet, tbe odors to be taken should correspond In the gamut like the notes of a musical cnora one false note among tbe odors, as In music, destroy lug tbo harmony." Bo tbe fragrance from Mary's flask ot card fills the world with a chorus of odors, the many forms In which the fragrance Of ber deed has been expressed by count- lues numbers. For Spraini V A Ml dttr "Gave' Me Instant Relief "I fell and sprained my arm and was in terrible pain. I could not usa my hand or arm without intense suiTering until a neighbor told me to use Sloan's Liniment. The first application gave me instant - relief and I can bow use my arm as well as ever." Mrs. II. B. Springer, 921 Flora Si, Elizabeth, N. J. SLOAN'S LINIMENT is an excellent antiseptic and germ killer heals cuts, burns, wounds, and contusions, and will draw the poison from sting of poi sonous insects. 860., BOo. and $1.00 Bloan'a book on horeea, eattla, aheap and poultry aant f raa. Addraaa Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mail., U.S.A. JL We often hear the expression, "as poor as a church mouse." But even a church mouse doesn't have to live 00 the collections. an Hlcka CaeuDiMB ta the beat remrfr-ra llevea tha ai'hlnir and f e erlahneaa vurea tba Cold and rtHtorta normal coudltlona. It'i liquid ctTrcta lmuiedlatly. 10u., Kc., and 90a, At drug alorea. Deadlock. "Who is that man who has been sit ting behind the bar day after dayT Inquired the stranger In Crluieoa Oulch. "That's Stage Coach Charley. Hs'i In a peculiar predicament. He went to town last week and got his teeth fixed. Then he came here, and, beln' broke, ran up a bill on the strength ot his seven dollars' worth of gold flllln'. Charley won't submit to bavin' tha nuggets pried out an' the proprietor won't let him git away with the col lateral, and there you are!" Fable of Pan of Biscuits. A VaBsar girl married a Kansas farmer. - Two weeks later a cyclone made tha happy pair a friendly call. It cavorted around the premises, ripping up the fences, scattering tha haystacks and playing horse with tba barn, but when it looked through tba open window it drew back In alarm. There lay the bride's first pan of biscuits. "I ain't feelln' very strong tbli morning," murmured the cyclone. And with' another glance at tbe ten rlble pan it blew Itself away. Was Getting Monotonous. A handsome woman who bad bea so unfortunate as to find occasion to divorce not one but several husband! was returning from Nevada. In Chi cago sh'e happened to Wet her flrit husband, for whom, by tha way, sha always has entertained a real afleo tlon. , "Upon my soul, if It Isn't Charliet exclaimed the ex-wife, cordially shak ing bands with tha gentleman whoia name she had formerly borne. "I'a awfully glad to see you, Charlie!" Then, after a wistful expression had come to and been banished from htt countenance, she added: "Old Chap,. I've often wondered where you were and what you were doing. It was too bad we didn't set on better together. I hope your ex perience hasn't been as unpleasant a mine. I'm sick and tired ot mar rying strangers!", 'N , wioe WUKUa, r A Physician' on Food. - A physician, of Portland, Orecon, has views about food. He says: "I have always believed that tba duty of the physician does not ceaaa with treating tha sick, but that owe It to humanity to teach them bo to protect their health, especially W hyglenlo and dietetic laws. "With such a feeling as to my duty I take great pleasure in saying to tba publio tbat Id my own experience sos also from personal observation I bar found no food equal to Grape-Nut, and that I find there Is almost no llni to the great benefits this food bring when used In all cases of lclr ness and convalescence. "It Is my experience tbat no pb7l eal condition forbids the use of Orapa Nuts. To persons In health there nothing so nourishing and acceptable to the stomach, especially at brei fast, to start the machinery of tha man system on the day's work. "In casea ot Indigestion I know tbJ. a complete breakfast can be msd drape-Nuts and cream and I think It w not advisable to overload tbe t"n' at tha morning meat I also know w (rest value of Grape-Nuts wbes stomach Is too weak to digest oUar food. , -This to written after an experlenca of mora tbau to years, treatln" manner of chranlo and acute dlea and the letter Is written voluntarur on my part without any request for Read the Uttto book, "The 1 Vtill vlHe." In pkus. Thare's Ha-9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers