RETURN OF THE FISHING FLEET. The boats come sailing up the bay, And one by one their anchors ¢ ast; Storin-beaten are their sides and gray; Their flags are at half-mast. And one by one they furl their sails, And slowly pay their ‘anchors out; Ropes, frayed and White, hang from their rails, With broken spars about. Like phantom ships they cross the bay, With hulls and rigging weather worn; See, half their lifeboats washed aw ay, Their canvas pained and torn. And of the men they, carried out But few, it seems, are there on deck; They move as ghosts might move about Upon some battered wreck. Then from tlie shore the watchers ery, ‘Where is my brother, husband, son?” “Lost on the banks,” the dread reply Goes back in words that stun. —Waverley Magazine. P0000 ; S ® CHECKMATED. @® @ By C. Stanley. $ It was a queer old .house, half dis- mantled and overgrown: with ivy. Standing by itself, on .the very borders of a dismal-looking part of the coun- try, where a ‘few travelérs came. Thane Underhill had selected it as the anost secure hiding place for the wom- an he intended some day to make his wife. If he could have A won het consent she would have been his wife long ago; but Alice Miles had a will of her own, notwithstanding her low spirit had been sadly broken by the treat- ment she had undergone, she still re- fused to listen to Thane Underhill’s protestation of love. For three months she had been sée- cluded in that ruinous old house, with only one servant for company and protection, and the dreadful thought surging to and fro in Jer mind that in one week more he would make her his wife, unless in that time she could manage to escape. Out of her narrow windows she could see the moon, and a w hite-robed train of stars, that lighted up the dim fields stretching away toward the sea; she could catch the sweet murmurs of the winds that wafted by, drifting away under the cool shadow of the trees; far away there was the sound of a bell, rising and falling on the lone- some night air. And as she sat there in the moonlit stillness a host of happy memories thronged her brain, whose perished brightness brought tears to her eyes. There was her mother, who mourned her as dead, and who was going down in sorrow to the grave—and there was Acton Lloyd, whose promised wife she was six months before; he thought her false first—then dead—and she had no knowledge cf him at all. It was a long time before she even knew so much. It was one night; when locked in her lonely room, and Thane Underhill had supposed her asleep, that he had jested carelessly with the man who had promised to marry them, and revealed all his own villainy to the shuddering listener. “Hush! not so loud” the second voice .had said. “She. may hgar you!’ “It wouldn't matter if she did!” and that she knew was in Thane Under- hill’s voice. “I have treated her with kindness lon enough, ’in the fin that she would learn to love me; for in spite of the sneer on your face, I love the girl! and would give half I possess if “she loved ‘me in ‘return’ But she never will, and so she must be my wife without it.” “How will ycu manage it?” “I shall take tea with her tomorrow night, and put a powder in her cup which will make" hér’ powerless to re- sist us. It won't injure-her, but for the time, it will so benumb her senses that she wiil do. as I command her. When the old clock in the hall there strikes ten. you will come in and say the words that are to make her my wife.” “And what do ycu propose to.do then? Live here and enjoy yourselves like a pair of turtle doves?” “We must stay here a week or two,” Thane Underhill rejoined, “until I can settle my business affairs, and then 1 shall take her abroad. Her mother and her lover- both suppose that she eloped with me and was killed in that railway collision.: So they sit at home and mourn, and give a chance toc carry out my plans.” 3 Thane Underhill did in reality pose that Ethelyn White, the girl who hal waited on Alice for the last four rh m clasping in her own’ the little hands offered her. The next evening in accordance with his plot Thane nderhill took up the supper tray, carried it into Alice's room, set it down on the round table, and moved. one cup of tea acress to her. Just: then. a draught of air made the light fiare. “What does that mean?” he asked, quickly. “I broke the RE lodar, to get a breath of fresh air,” she replied wearily, beginning to stir the’ tea in her cup; “and. 1 tried fo fasten my shawl up there tonight," to keep the air out—but it won't stay, Tm cold now!” And she shivered slightly. : He got up to fasten the shawl for her, .and .in the instant when his back was turned she changed, the cups. ‘You shall walk in the garden to- morrow,” he said, ‘quietly, coming back to the table and sitting down. “I don’t want your dear cheeks to grow pale” . . : “I must have liberty at some price soon, Thane Underhill, or I ‘think I shall die! I don't suppose you mean to murder me with your unkindness,” she said. : - “My darling, how can you say such dreadful things when you know how I love you—how worth to me without you But Alice would not answer him. She only sipped her tea and took a small slice of cake.” Then she drew back frcm the table, and looRed- at her tiny watch: + =» : Y “It is half-past nine, length, as he made no move to go, I am sleepy.’ Just then there, was, a. tap at the door, and Ethelyn White’ ‘beckoned 10. him. ’” »she' said; at “and . . AS o . “The minister is. wanting you to sign a paper before — before the time,” she said, hesitating and bl ashing. He went out, locking the docr ‘be- hind him. (8 51lE ulde “See that you are‘ ready at ten: o'clock. You will be wanted as a wit- ness,” he said to her. She waited and listened til he, heard him go down the stairs; then hurrying round to the other door, she unlecked it, and admitted six persons. Three of them were policemen, and’ Ethelyn made them walk on tip-toes across the room, where the other door, opening, would -.ide their .immediate presence. The next person who en- tered was the old minister who had baptized Alice ‘Miles, and behind him came Acton Lloyd! For one moment they were speech- less in each other’s arms; then the minister, in low tones, began and con- cluded the ceremony. that made them husband and wife, Acton having. pro- cured a special license. Alice turned to speak to Ethelyn; but the false hair had vanished, and the old brown dress had been replaced by a pretty blue and white lawn—and there was Unett Lloyd, her husband’s brave young sister, who had, in some way best known to herself, come there as Miss Miles’ waiting-maid. But there was,.no time for explana- tion. The door was thrown, suddenly open, and Thane Underhill and his friend stood in astonishment on the threshold. . Unett Lloyd made him a curtesy. “We couldn't wait for such a tardy groom,” she said, laughing, “and so Acton has taken your place.” Just then the clock strucie ten.: Ld ; ‘The hcur: had: come, but it was not an hour of triumph for Underhill.— New York News. SELF-SUPPORTING OLD WOMEN. Gray-Haired Grandmothers Who Find Work for Their, Feeble Hands. The little Sranmolhcs in clean, ctiff white apron, and gray hair so cmooth that it ceemed to be actually stretched across her old brow, was more offended than pleased to'be told that she was ‘attractive because she was old-fashioned. But old-fashioned she certainly was, and attractive. too, sitting in the sunlight of a window where a few brave: red. geraniums were growing, as she wound ball. after. ball of strips of cloth for rag carpets. In the same corner of a part of the building in the West Side district of { New York where the €Charitr Organi- sup- | zation Society provides employment for indigent women, sat half -a dozen others. none of them as quaint nor-as “spick and span’ as the little grand- mother, but all of them just as busy with the raw material for rag carpets. And out of this charity work, de- signed to furnish an opportunity for | earning a litsle money to women not strong enough for harder labor, has | grown cuite an industry—thé making days, bad given her a sleeping potion, and tht her senses e locked in slumber; but for son of her | own Ethelyn had wit , and so Alice had heard eve word of the conversaticn in the ne t room. e crept quiet- and threw an agony Vhen they went out ly away from the herself down on the of weeping 1.40 | viceable a by these old women of the West S but I must give There was at the door, and the little waiting d came soft- ly in, holding up 1 lest it | le on . vou di Alice?” she anid Alice. Speak in se your. courage 1s waiting to I “Heaven be than Alice. “But who are one of my friends?” “You shall 1 time,” the maid rejoined not been your friend vou w had a drink tonight would have sent you to sleep twc hours ago. Have you gained anything by being awak “Everything!” “said softly, nds know vil good 1 had e?”’ Alice, 11d have | of rugs. It is a curious anomaly that women who are among the poorest and most helnless in the whole city important in the making. of an article that is constantly in demand by the dealers of the very highest class who handle this sort of goods. Remarkably ‘pretty and very ser. re the rugs which are made are <, credit for that to Mr. Hinsdale, who is manager of this part of the es iment. The rugs made here are of the sort that are desired for the floors of summer cottages, or for ‘roo which are fitted -with fur- niture of the mi n Sire They are woven «as. rag but are more carefully des made af better material, The old women have ’ the rugs, and the outside. a part in the maki cutting of the nd weaving are ie’s Weekly. The peninsula of India, which in area half the size of the United States, has a nopulatior of 300,000,000, of whom 200,000,000 are farmers. the done dyeing a —Lesl is little life would be | ALUMINUM INDUSTRY. MANIFOLD USES OF THIS RE- MARKABLE METAL. Was a a Process Was Found Both Simple ‘and Cheap. The history of the metal aluminum and“its use in the arts ‘is peculiarly illustrative of the method of industrial development, aided and .fostered by scientific research; says the New York Evening Post. For. three-quarters of a century the metal was a scien mand for it resulted in the almost immediate perfection of methods for its extraction, whereby its cost was so‘reduced as to make it available for common uses: * As, long ago as 1807, Sir Humphrey Davy .conjectured- the existence of a metallic element as a component of clays and alumina. In. 1828 a German chemist, Wohler, actually separated the metal from its compounds, and discovered its remarkable. physical properties of lightness, toughness and ductility. But for more than 60° years n6é use was found for aluminum, be- tion .of scientific. apparatus. At. the centennial exposition in 1876 a. sur- veyor's transit made of aluminum was exhibited, but its remarkable lightness was even less astonishing than “the value placed upon it—alyminum was then about six times’ as expensive as silver: Naturally, in the progress of ‘engi- neering - and invention® that. distin guished the last quarter of the- 19th century, the attention of inventors and construetors was attracted to the new metal, and it was freely predicted that ‘much use would be made of it, if its cost. could be reduced so that it might compete “with cheaper materials, of structicn. Weighing only about one- third as much as an ‘equal bulk of brass or copper, it resists most’ acids, has a' white lustre, is an excellent con- durvtor of electricity, and is possessed of many other ‘desirable qualities. .Here, then, was the incentive.to in- ‘ventors, and many chemists set, out to discover a method for the economical extraction of aluminum. Its ores exist in great abundance, common’ clay ¢on- taining a large proportion of the metal;* but of ‘all substances these very. ores seemed most refractory and least amenable to chemical treatment. A number of processes of a purely chemical nature were devised, - but none of them reduced the cost of pro- duction to such a point that the metal could compete with steel and brass as an element of construction. At last a process was found that is both simple and cheap. It was discov- ered that cryolite, a mineral found in great. quantity in Greenland, and con- sisting almost wholly of aluminum in its fluid state it dissolved .ecrude alumina as readily as water dissolves sugar. A powerful current of electric- ity passed through’ this molten mix- ture was found to extract the métallic aluminum, and the process was also seen to be regenerative; that is, the cryolite is not consumed, but is: used oyer and over, the molten bath" be- ing supplied from time to time with crude -alumina. This material exists in nature as a mineral, named bauxite, after the town Les Baux, near Aries, in the south of France, where deposits of it are found. Vast beds of it exist country. The smelting process is of the sim- plest. In an iron vat, about the size and shape of an ordinary bath-tub, is melted a charge of cryolite, a gas fur- nace supplying the necessary heat. When the charge is melted, powdered bauxite is stirred in, and an electric electrodes immersed in the mixture. The electric current furnishes egecusgh heat keep the mass melted, and the liqui@ aluminum eollects at the bot- tom of the bath, whence it is tapped off from time to time. Once started, the process is continuous until the dirt and impurities collected in the vat re- quire it to be drained and recharged. minum, extracted by this process at iagara Falls, at Kensington, Pa., at Feyers, in Scotland, and at numer- ous cstablishments on the continent of Europe, took its place in the arts immediately. As an element of con- struction, however, it did not meet the expectations of its earlier advocates. It was found to be difficult to work, gumming the teeth of files and stoutly resisting cutting and drilling tools on account of its toughness. But néw uses at once developed. The German army investigated it, and found that helmets of aluminum, as light as felt, would turn the glancing impact of a bullet, Its military uses almost innumera >sides helmets, but- canteens, cart- word and bay- + LO are almost all 1 11 now nade offi The French government built a torpedo-boat of it, but sea water at- the metal, and it is not believed d much use in marine hst the blocks, some ot Eomarmine parts ‘hts have en made of it. tacks titute for Mak- s and op- goods use it and it is disp material for tle cap druggists’ use, etc. An ve market for it is furnished by makers of fancy goods souve medals and tokens, and toi- let arti 3, such as combs. But the largest use was found ir an unexpect quarter. Aluminum has yond -an * occasional: employment of: very small quantities in the construc-- fluoride, was easily melted, and that. also in Arkansas and elsewhere ‘in‘this’ current is turned on between cast-iron |! For . Three-Quarters of a‘ Century It | Scientific ‘Curiosity—At Last | tific | curiosity, but the appearance of a Me | cle every: day or two. 62 percent of the electrical conductiv- ity of copper. Hence a wire about one- eighth larger in diameter than a cop- per wire will conduct equally well, and at the same time will weigh less than half as much. At the present prices of the metals, aluminum is con- siderably less costly, and the lighter wires may be supported by poles placed farther apart.than is safe in the case. of copper. Many power- transmission lines are already using alliminum, ‘and most of those in course of’ construction arg employing it’ ‘An example of this use iS found at Hart- ford, Cohn, . Where. 2009 horse- -power for lighting purposes is transmitted 11 miles from a waterfall at Tarifville. The electric lights at the Pan-Ameri- can* exposition -in° ‘Buffalo *were: fed from Niagara Falls,’ 20 milés away, over an alurhinum line. : Stee] making. also, absprbs large quantities of aluminum, the.metal be- ing used as a deoxidizing agent in the Bessemer and‘ ‘Siemens-Martin - ‘pro- cesses. At present the annual product in- the United: States is about"7,150,000 pounds, and increasing rapidly, "the selling price of the. metal being so low thay, bulk. for, bulk, it is.the cheapest metal produced, except iron; steel and | zine. As an example of ‘an industry en tirely developed by scientific research, aluminum production” iS of’ deep in- terest! *The” career of the metal as an dustrial factor’ is evidently just begun: PN 3 QUAINT. AND ‘CURIOUS : Some enthusidstie” Dundes (Scot- land) anglers are about to convert a morass near, the town into an artifi- cial loch 35 acres in extent, so as to | have Loch Leven. iii near at home. Within half an Hi o ffthe death; of one of a pair of , twin, boys at Leices- ter, England, .the other “‘6me died, through, the “doctor. said,” a certain curious J nang “Which - exists be- tween twins, The South" McAlester: (Indian Ter- ritory) ‘News relates that a’ a criminal’ in the Chocktaw nation wa so badly scared by being arp that he turned; an ashen gray, wand has never recoyered his proper *eol- or. ; Pe’ 1 EET 2S ¥ Lord Wolseley. owns the; costliest sword in: Great Britain. It Was a gift to him and- is valued ‘at: $10, 000; but there is, many an 61d.Yolo “Which has: . in liewing down: bushes: «than the diantond. studded blida or “fhe Bilin general, a . German newspapers mention among the signs of the time recent an- nouncement regarding * Hugo Zu Hohenlohe-Oehringen, the first Ger- man nrince who has turned merchant. With a merchant named Schode he has formed a company, with a capital of $75,000, for using, oil to lay the dust in roads. The most literary monareh in Eu- rope is, without doubt, the young Vic- tor Emmanuel of Italy. He knows English, French and German as well as his native language and has even a reading acauaintance with that very difficult language, Russian. He spends at least three hours every day in his study busy With cufrent literature of every kind. Cats, large and small, make the most careful toilet of any class of animals, excepting some of the opos- sums. The lions and tigers wash themselves in exactly the same man- ner as the cat, wetting the dark, rub- ber-like ball of the fore foot and in- ner toe and passing it over the face and behind the ears. The foot is thus at the same time a face sponge and brush, and the rough tongue ‘combs the; rest of the body. newspapers report a in Australia of the principle of the coin-in-the-slot raagchine, stating that if a stamp can- not We nurchased conveniently it ‘will be, possible in the future to drop a letter’ into one orifice of a. postal ‘becx and a penny into a second orifice, and the words “One penny paid” will be - found impressed on the envelope when the box is opened by ‘the post- office authorities, thereby securing the transmission of the letter. The English new application Mosquitoes Kill Chickens. Big gallinipper mosquitoes, that seem to have can-openers in place of stingers, are attacking chickens in the East End. and they are said al- ready to have killed 22 fowls owned by Mags. Bridget -Gwens of Fulton street. All of the chickens: were at- tacked while roosting. The. mosqui- tees seem to descend toward the earth from high in the air early in the ‘evening ors after darkness and at- tack animals” of "211 kinds. It ds that thoy breed in low, places, but fly high most of thought th “i me. The usual point of attack is the comb; . Chickens which were shape when they went night come limping from their Vg to roost in thé morning with their comb forated and inflamed. Death c in a day or so.—Louisviile Cou Journal, His Charity. Martha—1 wonder that biabot €n- courages Mr. Gay; surely. he c t be worth much or he wouldn't id ways look so shabby. Mary—Oh, that’s no sign; they say he gives artieles of clothing to his un- At any rate, {hat’'s what Fred told me. The uncle, he says, lives down town at the sign of the gilt balls. —Boston Trapscript. . A HAY FEVER ROMANCE. “Will yon be mine ?* the lover cried— (They sat beneath a maple tree.) And bashfully the maid replied, “Oh, Archibald! Kerchig! Kerchee!” “I've loved you long,” he wildly said, “My heart doth ever beat for you. The maiden shyly bowed her head And softly murmered. “Ah, Kerchoo!” “Oh, say,” beseeched the ardent swaill, “1 you will share my cottage snug?” The damsel bent her head again And coyly whispered, “Woof-ker- chug!” ” “I love you, too.” she cried, “my own! And I will share your humble roof.” The youth replied’ in burning tone **Oh, ecstasy! Kerchug! Ah- whoo!’ ? The birds looked down upon the scene, The asters nodded in the breeze: And so they plighted troth, 1 ween, And sealed it with a mighty sneeze. —Philadelphia Bulletin. JUST, FOR JUN. seriously was Barnes—Was Bentley. hurt? Howes—Very seriously; hit ‘on the funmy bone. : "a man to be trusted? Stanley—Why, that’s‘the on- ly way you can sell him anything. : “Is your wife economic?” “Very. She can fix over a $10 hat for $15 so ity will look just as good as a new: Ofie.”—Puck. rs; + Fondmar—Den’t you think biby grows more like me every day? Fondmar—Yes, dear, especially so Fed she began’ to talk.—Life. Bei want tg get a divorce,” she told: Her lower. What has your husband been doing?’ he asked. “Nothing,” she replied. —Cleveland Leader. F<Pob | old Versley died last night.” ' ‘Indeed? ’ died without a strugglé.” “Well, he died easier than -he lived, then.”— New Orleans Picayune. it you're not car- rying a.cane Here days? Theodore— My dear hoy, [ I don’t feel equal to it. Its as much as T can do to walk with- out (it, don’t you know. ‘Kate—I Suppose you consider. your- self handsome? Grace—Oh, dear, no; but then, it’s. just like me. to think dif- ferently from everybody else. I am 50 eccentric, you know. ‘Harry—How is :Hilda—I wonder why it is that sail- | Uncle Hen- OF men are so profane? ry—Why, don’t you know? They Jearn it of the parrots in foreign lands. Hilda—There! 1 might have. known. . Uncle John—Don'’t you think it rath- er extravagant in you to smoke such expensive cigars? - Richard—It would be if I didn’t make it up by economy in another direction—my wife's hats and gowns, Dingus—Old fellow, it is the same old story. I'm in need of a little fin- ancial suceor. Slhadbolt—You'll. have to hunt further. I am not’ ‘the little financial sueker T used to be.—Chi- eago Tribune. Fuddy—Dr. Pellets has in 0 a long experience, but he never doctors him- self. When he is under the weather, he invariable calls in another physi- cian. Duddy—Apparently he draws the line at suicide. “Don’t you think he lacks aplomb?” asked Mrs. Oldcastle. “Well,” plied her hostess, “I don’t know, but at the dinner the other night it did seem to be as though he couldn’t get re- enough . peaches.’ '—Chicago Record- Herald. "Fannie—And what did you = say when he said you were the first girl he had ever proposed to? Blanche—I told’ him he was the first: man who had ever proposed to me. And, do you know, I don’t think he felt a bit fiattered. Funny, isn’t it? Jickers—Hello, Welby!. you. didn’t have to undergo an operation for ap- pendicitis, after all? Welby—No; the doctors discovered that I was too poor to pay for it. So I had to get well without it. ‘The fact is, there's no chance for a poor man in this world. Gifle—What’s your experience with street-car hogs? Spinks—I had one move up and give me the end =zeat this summer. Gifie—Merely from politeness? Spinks—No: 1 think rath- er from prudence. You see, there was a shower beginning.—Philadel- phia Bulletin. “Anyway,” said the Cheerful Idiot. as he looked over the T i Citizen's shoulders at the pictureofan Igorrotte dog. feast, “thal’s one part, of the canine they don’t seem to. fancy. What's that?’ asked the Tired Citi zen, accommodatingly. “The pants,’ replied the Cheerful Idiot, with loud laughter.—Baltimore Americar Ma High Favor. Ma’s vigilance has Court, both th cr in earned re the Dow- General him ¥ SF at and upon him testi- The o other Majesties 1t him two R finest gauze to. make a clothes, a and a heayily-gilded one side of which is a water color painting by the imperial hand of the Dowager Empress herself, and on the other some verses written by the Emperor, with the headi: “Yu Kuo Kan-ch’eng,” which me Wall of Defense to the Empi tentions like these are rare in and the talk in Mandarin now all of General Ma and did future. mer hs on At- China circles is his splen=- “Yes, he turned over and muaber of FEEDS ‘io station swine: feed- justified the follow- Barley ..alone. gets ‘hen combined with Barley and rcots than barley alone. ( cave much better results {hen raw roots, but it is very p obable thnt the individuality of the animals had more to do with causing this differ- than the cooking of the roots. In tite case of cooled roots, one pound of ‘orain proved equivalent to 5.9 poundse of roots. This is not nearly so high a valued as many people place upon roots for Logs; but it corresponds very clos oly | with the results ofiex ten- ‘a Danish experiments. 2 : 110G Cat ents At the in w r Corl). ins ence oT be one of tho. yery Bi Vv a teties of But IL was the never the si CHINE oF Lf Yemales in : thishdgd tother ieties of ithe Mediterranean class it ed’ to. nig anjght well besreplaced ent re comb, without sacyi- hand { to se faction of producing more sed more perfect birds. till now I have A. dalusian cockerels and pullets that not onawhit behind “the bests y specimens inthe country in a ut that goes to make up : ee Andalusian, and ever nye l perfect; one of: The best: tice with regret fhat one breeder 5 “rose comb blue And Jus- 'y pretty. avith *yellow legs.” hrdedex ought not so to Go. A rdse; lue ‘Andalusian should confofm? OC om b in eyery particulay to the stgmdard for: the older (single comb) vauiety, except: in the one matter of comb. No blue: n, either single or ros2 comb, ive yellow legs.—W. B. Trow-' ze, lgiThe American. Cultivator. Andalusi 1 FROMY A SHEPHERD'S BOOK. Bred tha best ewes, to the best rams. rhe way to keep ideal sheep is by trying to improve them. : Sheep are always improving or dey) arc’ deteriorating. g An upeven lot of geod sh eep are bet-| ter than an even lot of poor ones. ¢ Stationary troughs and racks are not! desirable in the sheep stable. Twes will produce larger and better l2mbs if in a plump condition at the time of mating. At weaning, . if - possible, the. ewes should be placed in a field oul of hear- ing of the lambs. It is well to place the ewes on short pasture for a week or more after the lambs are weaned. Slicep are easily managed, are first- class fertilizing machines, good farm scavengers, and yield two harves:s an- nunlly. In waay eases after the corn is laid by, the sheep may be turned into the corn fields to a goed advantage. When purchasing a ram for breed- ing purposes, it should be better {han the best in your flock. If a radical change in the rations is made too suddenly, growth of hoth body and {fleece is liable ito suffer chagk. 5 In localities, : should looked anon as in keeping up the fertility of the land rather than a means of profit. 1 neads to be changed cvery blood infusod things best when b some he and fresh All -0ld ram is consider to iriprove.— American Cultivat FEMININE DAl WISDOM Sweet apples also are most val not one should go to waste. ‘se. plenty of iand plaster. Clea {he stalls at least twice each day Utilize all food io help carry i inter quarters in the best of hice ad thrift. \pples may px a8 thicy 8S be fed, but very oetines make the 2, kins {ed with the grain wiil re- an increasc in yicld of milk over fed alone. The best evidence that a cow has the right kind of food and sufficient foed is 2 sieek, soft skin. Exposure to cold, storins and short, itten pest wa Seduecs, han frost up cle Cail. the sun in; the siabkies Dark stables are al- wi Damp siables are an v ell fitted and the In d frosty before the sunny. cozy corner e calves, a for ti ive them a ci a to be happy and t ty. Their future use 5 depend upon it.—Dorothy Tucker, in Farin Journal. Cold Pe: aring quartz has Boon found in Ceylon, but it xen $ be seen whether it is present in s nt quan. ty to be comumercially successful, . 3 ~ . 3 birds: are How simply periect.§ ix, ‘A SE 8 A STR( FMAN'S . An Adda Confe C. B. néss 1" T.ONDC 5 and dress, e : Remedy, | Conferen LL. ] The s “The Sp Nature, I am‘ no thealogy concerns with em ing arou And 't gard to The age chivalry, or could no they av: against ‘ publicly, pledge truth 1 . churches prestige ‘use the they aré This be works o upon th defense. In thi am not about hu versies 1 settleme: platform an open is becau tions, th vantage tian doc doctrine as betwe possible. A nat not expe has not life of tl Scriptur the Apo his conv to say came un vine tru were ur such an tain. suc zeal, alb e: took take to or to di declares, bent—*“t mind.” Neithe case is ¢ men ma gible fo lives, in them fo There ciples o who hea acceptin irreversi judged 1 as stam formulat The fi notice © the con heathen when th ture wa over, th Paganis: afterwar tianity ing of Church ancy, it treme s underst: the firs practice: due to deeds w ment of things practice But t wholly | Beience duct; if honestly erfect uman pattern Cambri the Dec as rea Ronse, Te ere we Fesponse ecalog ness the was his You roves t ut tha on; tha human deprave depravif life tha saints 11 Christia for ‘pu saints a ship. natural of the c One o final is What 1 him? best wa phemer And s searc hh of sinn the sin at thei If thes spired might s only ex that pr man w was he hie i ‘I obte Ard merciec blasphe he thir dant gi ship, h
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers