150 ed for Flag- EN | he fol- > past terford, sh, $8; John ° ohn A. ses K. nas C. Simon James {ramer, William Michael ; Geo. hilpine Firth, Dupont. Gelnett, « t, East Weston, rce has ecuring ing the which y, Pres- asking 00 will >ennsyl- on will on the 1e here ancient ropriate wre will he con- Central Bufiing- , to the pany at 1 mites ul coke republic interest which cres of will be fTedicine ving of- 1. How- Smith; . RoSs; Smith; Rowe; trustee, scussed and the used to rth, the who on William iil coun- | strike, le Court tT, The reserved nced by Lo pay a mprison- onths at peniten- to mal- ie death f Birds- certifi- in this medical nber in sxamina- tificates, leficient. red Kil- charged » fact in at Jean- rved on 1e¢ Pitts- go Trail- ain side- 10 cars ling sev- learfieid, iquor li- 03, and None of sed. 83 years nty near sen alive posed to of Chief fell to he opera and died son, who igh river d almost e .broke rian, fell wire mill ompany’s probably r of the rel, has te of the at.New- Harvey's s slashed Clelland, to chas- have or- erce. 1 Fergu- urned to tches. old, the robe, was ar. $1,500,000 ce library nt of the mpany, at iter, fell waron and 3; i & A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED %UPPER AND NETHER SPRINGS.” The Rev. Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman Uses an Old Testament Story as a Parallel to Illustrate the Great Blessings We Re- ceive From Our Heavenly Father, /NEwW York Crry.—The following ser- repared some time by the . Wilbur Chapman, the distinguished evangelist. It is entitled ‘The Upper and the Nether Springs,” and gave her the upper springs and the nether non is one of a series since by the Rev. Dr. was preached from the text “And springs.” Joshua xv.: 19. -Half way between Hebron and Beershe- ba there once stood the ancient city of Debir. It was the city of brains and books and the centre of intellectual culture of the At the same point now may e seen a rude assemblage of stone hovels, many of which are half standing, but the olden days. pthers are entirely broken down. One of the names given to this city being translated, means the City of Brooks or gf Nornipgeynnt Athens was to Greece ebir was to Southern Pales- tine. 1t was supposed that all the records pf antiquity of the nation were stored the city of there. 1t was, indeed, a famous place. Caleb, the son of Hezron, of the tribe of Judah, was very anxious to secure posses- sion of the city. It is this fact which gives His name is very familiar He was one of the twelve spies sent by Moses over into Canaan, and he and Joshua were the only two born in Egypt who were given the privilege of en- tering Canaan, with the possible exception of the Levites, and that, not only because they had brought a truthful report of the land they had explored, but were also ywill- ing ‘to take God at His word, and put all rise to the text. to us. their trust in Him. Forty-five years after, when the wander- ings were over, ‘Caleb applied to Joshua which had been promised him, and among other portions there was granted to him Debir, the city of t was still, however, the strong- iants of Canaan, and must be for the share of the lan learning. hold of the espimed to be possessed. aleb then made the proposition that he v in mar- riage to any one who was able to take the city, and one Othniel, whe had been much would give his daughter Achsah of a warrior, for he had delivered the chil dren of Israel from the King of Mesopota- After a great struggle the gates were broken down, the giants were captured or driven away, and the City of Books lay at the feet of the When the victory was won was as good as his word, and his daughter was given in marriage to the sol: mia, marched against Debir. con. Cale ueror. dier. With her he also ance, a peculiar piece o as cl ave as an inherit _ ‘southward toward the deserts of "Arabia the hot winds of which again and again Before Achsah left her father’s house she besought him for his blessing. The south land was not enough, she would also have springs of water, and Caleb responded at once, and gave her more than she had asked, for we read in the text: “He gave her the upper springs From an exceed- swept across it. and the nether springs.” ingly fertile territory: the land was chosen: It contained no less than fourteen springs. The valley was beautiful, for look which: vay you would you could see them gushing forth. Their presenee in the field meant ‘not only a Dlessing Jor the field in which t for all the country ‘they were found, around them. I find in this beautiful story a good illus- tration of all that we receive from our Father. g i+ All that has been bestowed upon us is as- sociated with victory, and that was won by Him whose name was called in the pros It was for Him a came off more than ed 7 to ith Him we have ze- i the gift of salvation, but in Him we are also blessed with all spiritual Paul gives us this when he writes to the Ephesians, “Blessed be the hets the Conquerots erce struggle, but He conqueror. Then, after that, He was ca ‘he bridegroom of the church, which is tbe His bride, and with Hi ceived not onl jblessings. God and Father of our Lord Jesus. Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritua Jesus & I. God starts His children in this world as Caleb started his daughter, with an in -theritance. No one is so poor but God has given him something. + Some have taken the inheritance and #reated, it as the man with the five talents hey have gained world with all its beauty, its green pas ures, its still waters, its rivers and its seas ts ‘starry canopy stretching out above The werld is filled with forces of all kinds em, until to-day he stands himself like the midst of them all. E man has seemed to gain control over conquerer in But the inheritance is better than that. e has given us all the faculties of mind nd all the powers of body. The mind, the eart, the hands, the feet—mo one is sent into the world a pauper.. God hild of His. take hold of the thought of the Eterna he science of geomet and Archimedes, by pure reasoning out o their minds, and on the sands of the floor of the room where they were studying Archimedes traced the curves in which, ac- cording to science, the heavenly bodies ust move. And long after, when the tele- scope was invented, the Galileos and the Newtons beheld with reverent wonder tha the heavenly bodies were sweeping along in the same curves described so long ago by Tt is, indeed, a the great Mathematician. Ti wonderful thing to have a mind. But if these things which I have men- tioned as our natural inheritance are all avhat we possess, then, with the succes that may be gained by means of them we may still be of all men the most miserable. For they are like the south land of Ach- .gah, they stretch off toward the deserts of EOTTOW and care and darkness, and the ho svinds of despair come sweeping past u .again and again. The most miserable peo- ‘ple in the world, sooner or later, are those who have just the world and nothing else. “Men are born unto trouble as the spark “fly upward, and this south land of the world is a poor portion. It is beautiful; i fs the handiwork of God. But we mus have more than that if the soul be satis- “The stars are beautiful, but they pour no light into the midnight of a The flowvers are sweet, but they pour no balm into the wounded “héhrt.” There are times when the hungry, ‘fied. troubled soul. thirsty, fevered soul must have what th natural inheritance can not give, and God has made provision for that. Man sighs with groanings which can not be uttered for the infinite. If vou pat : seashell to your ear you will find in it reminiscences of its ‘original home. the roa of the sea, the wail of the wind, the groan of the dying wave, all discernible therein: It has the witness in itself that it belongs deep. And if you listen at- tentively to your own heart you will find to the mighty constant proofs of its destined abode. T sighs, the yearnings, the dreams, the tears, the sadness, the music, all testify that wi are made for God, and that only God can ) And God knew this. and so, as well as giving us the south land He has also given us the springs of water from which we may drink and be satisfied. God pity the man who has failed to accept satisfy our wants. -the proffered gift. : . The springs of water were given t Achsah because of her marriage with Oth- ~niel, and they are a perfect illustration of that which comes to us because of ou union with the Son of God. The springs property, known e South Land,” valuable for some reasons, but it was mountainous and sloped blessings in heavenly places in Christ ! other five also; others | ner, with all the assurance of a ike the man with one talent, have wrapped it in a napkin, and so they leave the world as poor as when they entered it. Ged has fbeen very good to us. He has given us this has thus placed a fortune in the grasp of every It is such a great thing to ave a mind, for with it man is able to search the deep things of God and really was worked out rom a few simple principles by Euclid were a free gitt, and so is the nether spring of the gospel, which has come to us. ‘For py. giace are ye saved through faith, and a a} , Dob of yourselves: it is the gift of And never a spring bursting from the lains of Gerar, or from the mountains of banon, or from the valleys of Canaan, perform such a mission as this nether spring of the gospel which is the gift of our God. We have seen the fields in the time of a drought looking parched and apparently dead and te and then suddenly, almost in the night, the meadows were clothed with green, and the grain lifted up its head rejoicing, all because the rain had fallen. But in this nether spring of the gospel there is a more marvelous power than that—he who comes to drink of its waters goes away with new life, and his whole nature is changed. The an- cients believed in the existence of a prt in which, if a person bathed, he woul renew his youth and live forever. We have found that spring to-day in the text, for “The gift of God is eternal life.” “The Bible is all a- Sparile with wells and springs, rivers and seas. They toss up their , | brightness from almost every chapter. And , | water is many times the type or figure of that which enlivens; beautifies and gives new life.” Solomon, refreshed by the story of heaven, exclaims, “As cold water to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country.” Tsaiah, speaking. of the blessed- ness of the children of God, writes, “They shall spring as willows from the water- courses.” The prophet, glowing with the thought of the millenium, says, ‘Streams shall break forth from the desert.” The mission of water in this world is to bless and satisfy, refresh and help. “But all the waters that ever leaped in the tor- rents, or foamed in the cascade, or fell in the summer shower, or hung in the morn- ing dew, have given no such comfort to the troubled heart, no such rest and refresh- ment to the sin-sick soul, ‘as that which may be drawn by you and by me from the nether spring of the gospel.” It is a good type of illustration of the gospel because of its brightness. Yet here it fails of giving us perfect description or idea, for where can you find such bright- ness as gleams in this nether spring? “David, unable to put it into words, plays it on his harp. Christopher Wren, unable to put it into language, springs it in the arches of St. Paul’s. Bunyan, fail- ing to present it in ordinary story, put it - | in the form of allegory, which lives on to- day with constantly increasing power. Handel, with ordinary music unable to reach the height and sound the depth of the theme, thrills us with his oratoro.” 0, the gladness, the brightness, the joy un- utterable in that life which 7s hid with Christ in God. And this I may drink in as 1 come to the nether springs. - There is no life on earth so happy as the Christian’s. Take the humblest child of God you know, and why shouldn’t he be happy? According to the Bible he is , | all the time under the shadow of God’s wings. If he walks the angels bear him up; if he sleeps they let down ladders from the skies, up and down which the angels go to and fro. bringing down blessings of God, and bearing away his heavy burdens. Why, to get within the door of the king- dom, to have a plaee, not the nearest, but on the very outer eircle, to bear the lowest title of all the redeemed, to be the weakest | child of all the family of God, to be the dimmest jewel in His erown of rejoicing, to be the least, yea, less than least of all the saints is a hope which sets the heart a-singing. All this I find and more, a thousand times more, as ¥ stoop and drink at the nether springs. Water is also like the gospel in its power to refresh. I remember the River Jordan the day when Naaman eame to its banks with his leprosy. I see him going down into its waters, once. twice, three times, and then on until he had, according to the instructions of the servant of God bathed seven times, and then, marvelous change! his h became as it were the flesh of a little child. : But here is a greater change for the sin- ful soul: yho will {ome to the er Ting e came: Newton, and left be- nd im Mis sins which were as scarlet. Here came Bunyan, cursing with every step until lewd people: rebuked him, and 4 he went away, so changed that he gave to the world the book that stands in the esti- mation of some next to the Bible for sweet- ness and power. Here came Magdalen and the Pippin jailor, Zacchaeus, and the - | poor trembling thief on the cross, and they drank of the waters and stand to-day in the company of the redeemed. T stand by the side of the waters to-day, , | and with all the tenderness of a saved sin- ardoned child of God, with all the alarm of a friend who sees his friends and neighbors going down to death, away from the living wat- ers, I bid you come, come, come; “Whoso- - | ever will, let him come.” s It is a marvelous spring of which I speak. . | I recall the fact that when the Master met , | the man who was blind from his birth He anointed his eyes with Jay and spittle and then told him to go wash in the pool of Siloam; and when he had washed he came seeing. I imagine that first of all he saw the face of the Master Himself. This is the power of the nether spring of the gos- pel. The touch of its waters will cause the scales to drop from our eyes, and we shall be able to see the wondrous things written in the book of God, and not only so, but we shall have given unto us the vision of the face of the Master Himself. It is not . | strange that we are unable, in our sinful condition, to see things as they are in the kingdom of God, for we are blind. But if f | you will only come with your blindness to the nether spring you shall go away re- joicing. It is like the pool of Bethesda. t has healing power, and we are not only saved from the guilt of sin, but we may likewise be saved from its power. The only difference is that in the pool the sick t | people must wait until the waters are troubled before they may step in and be healed, while in this nether spring the wat- ers are always ready. This is no new idea so to represent the gospel of Christ, for I read in the gospel of John these words: “But whosoverer shall drink of the water s | that I shall give him shall never thirst. But the water I shall give him shall be in him a well of water, springing up into everlasting life’ And in the Snoselynss these words are:found: “I am the Alpha t | and Omega, the beginning and the end. I s | will give unto him that 1s athirst, of the fountain of the water of life freely.” O thirsty souls, come and drink! I know what springs of water have done ad for the world. Found in Gerar by Isaac, they make the field fruitful in abundance. t | Bursting forth in Lebanon, they send their t | waters down the mountain side, and as they go through the valley they make it the very synonym of fruitiulness. Closely akin to that is what the nether spring of the gospel does for us. No one knows the fulness of his own being until he is filled with the influence and power of the gospel. e | You walk, in the month of January, over the most fertile place in a field or through the forest, and you will see the illustration of what man is in his natural state. The a | earth is full of rdots and the trees are full of buds, all of which are closely bandaged r | so that they can not expand, but when the spring time comes the roots in the earth commence to push forward and the buds on the trees begin to unfold, and in a very little time all nature is rejoicing. What a marvelous change, simply because the roots e | have been warmed by the sun and kissed by the light! and yet it is not worthy to e | be compared with a change which might be wrought in you, if you will but come to the nether spring and drink of its life-giv- ing waters, for there you will meet Him who has said: “I am come that you might have life, and that you might have it more abundantly.” I I wish I might be able to make o | plain to you all that there is so much more to the Christian life than simply being saved. That is only the beginning. r | The whole experience stretches away from that point, and gets brighter and brighter | of heaven. | a_ distant city a fire was raging. | thought that all the inmates had been | third-story window. as the days go by. With the hope that we might learn the lesson together to-day I have brought before you these two springs. Whether the strict exegesis of the text will allow the interpretation or not, I am very | sure that all will agree that it is a perfect illustration. To drink at the nether spring is salvation, but to drink at the up- per spring is a high privilege that is of- ered to every child of God. I could bring so many passages of Scripture to you which would serve as an illustration of what I mean. Take Ephesians i: 3: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in Christ Jesus.” Or, Col. ii: 12: “Buried with Him in _bap- tism, wherein also ye are risen with Him, through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised Him from the dead.” Or, take Col. iii: 1-3: “If yethen be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth. For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God.” Or, take Phil. iii: 20: “For our conversation is in heaven, from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ.” I would that we might all drink at the upper spring. What peace would then fill our hearts! When we drink at the lower spring we come to be at peace with God, but when we learn to drink also at the upper spring we have the peace of God, and there is a great difference between the two. It is something like the differ- ence between a microscope and a telescope. With the first we can see things near, and in a bulk not larger than a grain of sand I can find a thousand million animalculae, but with the latter I can see things afar off. I can actually study the Milky Way, which is removed from me thousands and thousands of miles. At the nether spring, first of all, I see myself and all my it ness; then I see Christ in all His righteous- ness; then I hear Him say that though my sins be like scarlet they shall be as white as snow, and there at the nether spring I am made whole, but with the up- per spring it is different. Like the tele- scope it is all about the things which are above, and as I drink at its waters I find myself being lifted above this world, and my conversation, not only, but my very life, may be in the heavenlies. And the way to this upper spring is- pointed out very plainly to us. remem- the dream of Jacob as he was going from Beersheba to Haran. It was of the ladder which was set upon earth, the top | of which reached up to heaven. This ladder is set for us. It reaches to the very brink of the upper spring. The ladder is Christ; His feet rest upon the carth. His brow is bound with the glory 2 The events of His earthly life are the earthward end of the ladder; His divinity, His finished Messiahship, His: perpetual priesthood the topmost end. Im i It was saved, when to the horror of the bystand- ers two children were seen standing at a i It was before the days .of the.almost perfect appliances for the saving of lives. T'wo' ladders were hurriedly spliced together and lifted to the side of the building. There was a: shout of terror when it was found that the ladder lacked six feet of reaching the children. In a moment a brave fireman was mounting the ladder; he reached the topmost round, and then stood for a mo- ment balancing himself until he had caught the window sill with his hand, and then over his body, which supplied the gap be- tween the ladder and window the children came slowly down until outstretched hands reached them in safety. And this is what the Lord Jesus Christ did for you and for me! There was no way for us back to heaven. We were estranged from God. And then He came in His incarnation; and on the platform erected by the patriarchal, legal,and prophetic dispensation, He stood, as it were, in His own body, reaching up His hands, He took hold of God, and the way was made complete. And so it has come to pass that not only in Chrst we are saved, but it is also true that we mount by Him into the very secret place of the Most High. And this is drinking at the upper spring. : Thus the secret of this great bigssy is or ‘to be found by abiding in Christ. Dr. don used to tell a little circumstance which came beneath his eyes in New England, which presents to us a figure of it all Two little saplings grew side by side. Through the action of the wind they crossed each other. By and by the bark of each became wounded and the sap be- gan to mingle, until in some still day they became united to each other. This pro- cess went on more and more until they were firmly compacted. Then the stronger began to absorb the life from the weaker; it grew stronger while the other grew weaker and weaker. until finally it dropped away and then disappeared. And now there are two trunks at the bottom and only one at the top. Death has taken Zyay the one, life has triumphed in the other. Massillon’s Secret of Power. It is said that after Massillon, the great court preacher of France, had finished one of his sermons, Louis XIV. summoned him to his side and said, “Massillon, how is it you impress me as you do? many great orators preach. They nearly always please me. But when you preach, instead of being pleased with you, I am al- ways discontented with myself. I always feel that I want to be a better man, as well as a better king.” “Well,” answered the great preacher, “the only way I can ac: count for it, Your Majesty, is because I am always preaching against myself. When I am about to make up a sermon I say to myself, ‘Massillon, what is the sin which you have hardest work to battle to-day? And when I preach against my own sins I generally find that there are similar sins in other hearts which I am also preaching against.” I have heard The Xdeal Home. If from being tossed about in the Togs and storms which surround and overtake us we can come into the home as into a beautiful lan&-locked harbor; if husbands can come from their offices and business perplexities into a peaceful, sunny atmos: phere, bringing with them the spirit which shall exercise care and make home a refuge to them, and if wives and mothers welcome them into such homes where the very air as the doors are opened seems fragrant with love and restful sympathy, and pure and refreshing with cheerfulness, such a home is ideal and a refuge for all its inmates. It is such homes that keep the church alive and develop the same old rev- erence and faith and hope and love which have blessed the world ever since Abraham built the first altar to Almighty God in the long .ago.—Dr. Lyman Abbott. Creeds and Doctrines. Creeds and doctrines are the attempts to explain existing facts. Creeds do not pro- duce the life. The creeds and opinions may change, but the realities remain and are unchangeable. They are the phenomena to be explained. The creeds and doctrines are the varying explanations. The events and active forces are the evidences of the life. force. It is an intelligent personal agency. He lives. He is the life of His cause. By Him any man may come into a new life. Through Him millions have brought their lives ‘into tune with the uni- verse.” If we are wise we shall pay more regard to Him, to His teaching, to His work and His personal fellowship. — A. Wheaton. Luxury. We do not need to go to ancient times for examples of luxury. Luxuries are a prominent part of American life to-day. here are some things that may be said with certainty about it. First, it is the pride of living and ostentation and exalts inordinate self-satisfaction. Second, a life of luxury contradicts Christ and Chris- tianity.—The Rev. T. E. Cramblett, Pitts- burg, Pa. HEALTHY WOMEN Praise Pe-ru-na as a Cure for Golds re MRS. M.J.BRINK FIRST STAGE OF CATARRH. A Serious Mistake Which Thou- sands Are Making. The first stage of catarrh is what is commonly known as ‘“‘catching cold.” It may be in the head, nose, throat or lungs. Its beginning is sometimes so severe as to cause a chill and considerable fever, or it may be so. slight as to not hinder a person from his usual business. In perhaps a majority of cases little or mo attention is. paid to the first stage of catarrh, and Hence it is that nearly one-half of the peo- ple have chronic catarrh in some form. To neglect a cold is to invite chronic catarrh. As soon as any one discovers the first symptoms of catching cold he should at once begin the use of Peruna according to directions on the bottle, EXPENSIVE AUTOMOBILING. Owning a: Horseless Carriage Is Not a Poor Man’s Sport. If a man’s horse should cost more for veterinary fees that for oats, that man would begin to scratch his head and wonder if he wouldn't better sell the animal and charter a special train or some other cheaper mode of travel, particularly if oats were expensive, and the horse’s original cost had been several thousand dollars, not to men- tion the slight faet that the horse was given to periodical runnings away, adding heavy damages to his owner’s liabilities. And if in these little ses- sions of capering over the prostrate heads of a frightened populace he should kill or maim for life a few citi- zens, there naturally would be still greater doubt in the owner’s mind as to the advisability of keeping so trou- blesome a carrier. Yet that is the pre- cise situation of the fast speed auto- mobilist. The wear and tear on the tires of a heavy automobile is reck- oned by experts to be equal to four or five cents per mile, which is more than the fuel to run it costs. Then the fines for exceeding the speed limit mus. be added to the damages for ac- cidents, caused by runaways of fright- ened horses, or, worse still, the runa- ways and explosions of the machines themselves. Taken altogether, it would seem to an onlooker who hadn’t yet caught autocitis that Pucks’ hill-old exclamation might be apropos—‘“What fools these mortals be!” Water Before Meals. While the general opinion of those supposed to be authorities on the mat- ter has been that the habit of drinking water at meals is a deleterious one, it is now stated, according to recent in- vestigations, that a little water, if not too cold, is beneficial, as it assists in the digestion of food. A too copious supply of water dilutes the gastric juice, and if too cold lowers the tem- perature of the stomach below normal, thus impairing digestion. If, however, water is taken in limited quantities the gastric juice on food will be wash- ed aside, thereby facilitating absorp- tion. By this means the undigested food is laid bare and is more suscepti- ble to further action of the gastric juice. During the period of rest phlegm, being very tenacious, pre- vents the free flow of gastric juice for some time, hence delays digestion. A drink of water before meals is recom- mended, because it loosens and washes away this deposit of mucus, thereby permitting the gastric juice to attack the food as it enters the stomach. Slept Seoundly. Paul Kruger, in his memoirs, tells the story of a secretary whom he punished for being drunk by tying him to a wagon wheel. During ihe night 3,000 Kaffirs and about 4,000 Zulus attacked the Boer camp and were not driven off till daylight. The secretary slept so soundly that he noticed nothing of the fight, and the next day, when he at last awoke, he looked around in astonishment and asked: “Have you people been fight- ing during the night?” and a Preventive of Catarrh, oid Sym = oS ~~ “3 2 \ timtek,_ SJ and the cold is sure to pass away . without leaving any bad effects. Unless this 1s done the cold is al- most sure to end in the second stage of catarrh, which is making so many lives miserable. If Peruna was taken every time one has a cold or cough, chronic catarrh' would be I an un- known. disease. Miss: Elizabeth Uber, No. 57 Bassett street, Albany, N. Y., writes: “I have always dreaded unsettled weather because of my extreme liabil- ity to catch cold, “when a catarrhal trouble would quickly develop through my entire system, which it would take weeks to drive away. I am thankful to say that since have taken PE- RUNA I do not have any reason to dread this any more. If I have been at all exposed to the damp,wet or cold weather, I! take a dose or two of PE- RUNA, and it throws out any hint of sickness from my system.”—DMiss Elizabeth Uber: Mrs. M. J. Brink, No. 820 Michigan: ave- nue, St. Joseph, Mich., writes: “This past winter during the wet and cold weather I caught a sudden and severe cold, which developed a catarrhal condition through my entire system, and so affected my general health that I' was completely broken down, and became nervous and hysterical and unfit to supervise my home. My physician preseribed for me, but some- how his medicine did me no good: Read- ing of PERUNA 1 decided to try it. Af- ter I had taken but three bottles I found myself in fine health.”—Mrs: Mi J. Brink. Sibyl A. Hadley, 26 Main street, Hunt- ington, Ind. writes: ‘‘Last winter after getting my feet wet I.began to. cough, which gradually grew worse until my throat was sore and raw. Ordinary reme- dies did not help me and cough remedies nauseated me. Reading an advertisement The First Newspaper... There has been considerable contro- versy of late years as to which country should be conceded the honor of print- ing the first regular newspaper. Claims have been successively put forward for Italy, France, Germany, England and Holland, and all with some degree of plausibility, but it "appears from recent researches that neither one of these is entitled to the distinction, and that precedence should: be. given to Belgium. It has been established by the antiquaries that a certain Abra- ham Verhoeven, of Antwerp, obtained from the Archduke and Duchess Al- bert and Isabelle the privilege of print- ing a news sheet. As the first German paper appeared in 1615 at Frankfort, the first Dutch paper in 1617, the first English paper, the Weekly Gazette, in 1622, and the first French paper in 1631, it would seem that Antwerp’'s claims have some foundation, and that the Belgian city initiated what has be- come one of the most influential fac- tors in modern life and progress. On the strength of this it is proposed to hold a great tercentenary celebration in Antwerp some time during the year 1905. New Chinese Minister. Although the diplomatic circles at Washington lost a treasure in Wu- Ting-Fang, the late Chinese: Minister, his place is likely to be well filled by his successor, Sir Liang-Cheng. That distinguished Oriental will soon marry the daughter of Yu-Keng, the Chinese Minister at Paris. The wed- ding will take place at Peking before the Minister leaves for Washington, arriving early in January. Sir Liang’s fiancee is described as a perfect type of Celestial beauty and as unusually accomplished. She is 22 years old and has lived for the last three years at her father’s legation, being almost as well known in Parisian society as Madame Wu was in Washington. Waterproof Briquettes. Consul B. H. Warner reports from Leipzig: All briquettes which have hitherto been manufactured by means of soluble cements (such as dextrin molasses, lixiviated cellulose, oxidized lignine, resignate of ammonia, ete.) dissolve in water. Richard Bock, an engineer of Merseburg, province of Saxony, has found a method for mak- ing briquette which are entirely water- proof. He heats the finished briquettes until the cement is wholly or partly carbonized, which makes them indis- soluble, In ease the ignition temper- ature of the cement is likely to be at- tained the heating must take place in an air-tight case or by means of hot gases. The Power of Liquid Hydrogen. Every gaseous substance now defin- itely known to the chemist, with the single exception of helium, may be sol- idified with the aid of the low tempera- | tur® furnished by liquid hydrogen. Professor Dewur, of London, to whom the world is indebted for nearly all the discoveries of tnis kind, expects to suc- ceed in solidifying even helium, and is now making a series of experiments to that end at the Royal institution. Liquid hydrogen has a temperature of 436 degrees helow zero, MISS. SARA MCGARAN. .of what PERUNA could! do, I decided to try a bottle, and you: can imagine how glad I felt when it began to relieve me in a very short time. In less than two weeks I was completely cured.””—Sibyl A. Hadley. . Miss Sarah McGahan, No. 197 3d street, Albany, N. Y., writes: . “A few months ago I suffered with a severe attack of influenza, which nothing seemed to relieve. My hearing became bad, my eyes became irritated and feverish. Nothing seemed right and nothing I ate tasted good. I took PERUNA and within two weeks I was perfectly well.”—Sarah McGahan. E Ef you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruma write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving ‘a full statement of your case, and’ he will be glad to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, : THE BAKER’S OVEN. How Bakers Themselves Determine It by Mere Touch of Hand. “Bakers have a curious way of tell- ing just what the temperature of the even is,” said a downtown baker who has been in the business for more than a quarter of a century, ‘and they can tell, too, with almost marvelous accuracy. You take a man who i$ an expert in the business, and he can tell what the temperature of the oven is by simply touching the han- dle of the oven door. In nine cases out of ten he will not miss it the frac- tion of a degree. Bakers have other ways, of course, of testing the heat of the oven. For instance, when bak- ing bread they sometimes throw a piece of white paper into the oven, and if it turns brown the oven is at the proper temperature, or, when bak- ing other things, they will throw a little cornmeal or flour into the oven in order to test the heat. But the baker's fingers are the best gauge and when you come to think of the differ- ent temperatures required in baking different things, it is no small achieve- meht to even approximate the heat of the oven by touching the handle of the oven door. Bakers figure that during the rising time of a loaf of bread, after it has been placed in the oven, it ought to be in a temperature of 75 degrees Fahrenheit. During the baking process, in order to cook the starch, expand the carbonic acid gas, air and steam, and drive off the al- cohol, the inside of the loaf must reg- ister at least 220 degrees. In baking rolls, buns, scones, tea biscuits, drop cakes, fancy cakes, New Year’s cakes, muffins, puff cakes and things of that sort, the oven must show a heat of 450 degrees higher. When the oven is at 400 degrees, it is fit for cream puffs, sugar cake, queen cakes, rock cakes, jumbles, lady fingers, rough and ready jelly rolls. At 350 degrees wine cakes, cup cakes, ginger nuts and snaps, pies, ginger bread, spice cakes, such as raisin, eurrant, citron, pound, bride and so on, may be baked. It re- quires a still lower temperature to bake wedding cakes, kisses, anise drops and things in this class. But whatever temperature the old baker wants, he can tell when he has it by simply touching the handle of the oven door.” Takes No Food But Milk. Four quarts of milk daily, or there- abouts, for 20 years has been the sole | diet of Thomas FF, Laubach, of Hazel- ton, Pa. ‘'Lt'wo decades ago Mr. Lau- { bach, being then 51 years old, was in very bad health, and his physicians gave up his case. Then he decided to doctor himself and has done so ever since, absolutely confining his diet to milk. Now he is one of the healthiest and soundest men in town. The Wheat Area. The statistician of the Department { of Agriculture estimates the newly | seeded area of winter wheat at about 34,000.000 acres, an increase of 5.1 per | cent. upon the area estimated to have | been sown in the fall of 190i. The | condition of winter wheat on Decem- | per 1 was 99.7 as compared with 86.7 {in 19691, 97.1 in 1900 and a nine-year | average of 91.4.