MEN'S ckache, nd that’ , tired 1 find the ad- James of 519 gh St, , who ack was 1d way, painful it felt 1 me to h I did, e start. woman, ork the ts a box. . Y. JND. »f Artist ther. rel een dis- f a poor b of this Ls, all of . authen- ers eight teresting the Em- nforming :d, under berpfalz, tian him- Do. 1 not do to tobe fully od look+. nily Medi- ient aid in 11 do more ® roses to and deal=- S. s waging y paying t in and ket to a 2S, t-Ease, & 2, a nails and tores, 25¢, ple mailed N. Y. 12 rman ad- the com- ctra;’ is art, but winced de- a some- aural tor- It also um is at ' with a ng is the - at the » triangle to learn he music orgy. of oice vain- If heard. nd they in a roof ed sound. resent at + to have Dresden red. One e critics, >sden An- nderstood ontrol, is sition by e Strauss ) the roy- Dresden into two auss, and the Wag- 0, threat- is really iture, the num will thoughen- But the assimilat- f boister- ard. Per: way with ly Was. ing coffee izing that scure but offee and and is of- c attacks abitually, recently: 1d a good coffee. I and the m sure it ldren. had sick alize' that till about sm in my nervous I run down. hat medi- ecided to " Postum. fully re- all expec- my rheu- e’s a Rea- o., Battle 10us little ville,” in r? A new me. They of human 1 Farm Girl Wins Braun Prize. ‘A Missouri girl, born and bred on 4a farm and educated almost entirely by her own efforts, has won the Braun prize in competition with the students of American and European universities, and will start the com- ing summer on a tour of the world with the money her victory has given her. . She is Mabel E. Sturtevant, of Brookfield, Mo. Only twenty-six years old, Miss Sturtevant is a grad- uate of the University of Missouri, secretary of the National Teachers and Students’ Association, has trav- eled for a season in Europe, and has been admitted to the bar of Missouri. Her victory brings her the annual William Braun prize of more than $2500.—New York Tribune. Good Form. Probably the growing interest in athletics of all sorts is responsible for it, but whatever the cause, girls nowadays run in a manner that dif- fers widely from the way their moth- ers did when it was necessary for them to sprint for a car. Watch the average girl running for a car or for any other purpose and you will no- tice the difference at once. They place only the ball of the foot on the ground and they hold their bodies and heads erect, as any one should do who is not indulging in a hun- dred-yard dash. It adds much to the grace of their appearance, a fact that may have something to do with their adoption of the style.—New Haven Register. — Four Walls to Prison Her. Her record being five years of scorn of indoor life, Margaret J. Dunn, a wealthy Scotswoman, holds the record as an outdoor sleeper. She sleeps in the open in summer and winter. A photograph taken two weeks ago shows her in a hammock, swung between two trees, with snow covering the ground to a depth of six inches. Her two maids reach her by a path shoveled in the snow. Her hammock is without roof of any kind. ing out to dinner at home or trail- ing through smart hotels and restau- rants and opera foyers. Gone the days when it was a matter of tact and skill to get near a lady seated amid frivoling flounces that envel- oped the legs of her chair and far be- yond. Ncwadays one hardly ever lets the skirt drop at all, carrying it lightly but closely with the hand dropped at the knee, thus showing the slim ankles and the handsomest shoes that ever were made, even while traversing one’s familiar path out to the dinner table in the private home. While seated, one gives a 1it- tle twist and a kick and the skirt hem takes its place as a mere back=- ground for the folded feet, the shoes and stockings completing the toilet as much as the scarf in the hair.—New Haven Register. A Pot-Hunting Diana. When Mrs. Patricia Knowles, of Reno, Nevada, hits the trail over Diana’s Pass into Washoe County to shoot game old hunters stand aside. No female Nimrod in thé West has a reputation for such bags. For a year or more she has been a pot hunt- er—in other words, shot for the mar- ket, and with such success that game in the Sierras has adopted the advice of Davy Crockett’s coon and notify her not to shoot, but it will come down. Just at this time she shoots ducks on Washoe Lake. The game law names a maximum that may be shot, fifty brace, or some vastly greater number than any other hunter ever reaches. But when the game warden takes the tally Patricia always an- swers all the law allows. There is no place like Nevada for ducks in winter, and strange to say, salt wat- er fowl, too, which gather there to take advantage of the warm waters that rush from the (ot springs in countless places and preserve the growth of vegetation in open lakes and ponds, so that fish, both scale and shell, can be had for food or aquatic birds in abundance. , But until the miners came to Tone is tender. minced vegetable. Paste in Your Scrap-Book. Our Cut-out Recipe, | fresh from the garden it Minced Kale.—Remove all the old or tough leaves. ‘Wash the kale thoroughly and drain, then put on to cook in a kettle of boiling water, to which salt has been added in the proportion of one tablespoonful to four quarts of water. Boil rapidly, with the cover off the kettle, until the vegetable Pour off the water, and chop the kale rather fine; then put back into the kettle and add one tablespoonful of butter and two of meat broth or water for each pint of the Add more salt if required. ten minutes and serve at once. ing kale varies from thirty to: fifty minutes. Cook for The time required for cook- If young and will cook in thirty minutes. ‘At night Miss Dunn is incased in heavy blankets, which are tucked up close to her chin. She wears a tight- fitting woolen cap, which comes down over her neck and ears. Over it is a cap of rubber, with a flap or hood which is used as a protection against snow or rain. A rubber sheet also covers the hammock, so that the young woman is dry and snug in the most inclement weather. Except in heavy rainstorms and ‘snow Miss Dunn keeps her face exposed. She does not mind a soft rain falling on her cheeks. She first slept outdoors at the advice of her .physicians. At the end of three months she was told she might return indoors, but she had found the airy freedom so much to her liking that she decided to make her hammock her permanent sleeping place. When visiting away from her home she takes the ham- mock with her, and when crossing the North Sea on a recent trip the hammock was slung on the deck.— New York Press. Silhouette of Figure. Quite the smartest silhouette is that on which the lines hug the figure about the knees. Evening gowns are drawn back at this point by sashes, or by folds drawn into a knot at the back or on each side. Tailored rigs have jackets buttoned from bust to knees, and if they are slit up at the sides, or on each side of the straight back, this slashing is con- fined by passementerie ornaments or pattes and buttons; while the walking skirt below is so straight and scant that the effect is very mannish. A whole-piece walking gown on these same lines buttons from neck to the heelsdownone side of the back, and it is trimmed only with beautiful - ly ornamented big flap pockets that hang on each side, braidings, em- broideries, fringes, passementerie all being used to make these elaborate in brilliant Oriental or quaint old- fashioned designs. One such gown in smoke. gray corduroy has big flat jet buttons and pockets of gray vel- vet astrachan and black fringe, with some rich silver and gold embroid- ery. A bit of embroidery to match is placed across the decolletage at the base of a guimpe of coarse gray linen net over black satin. TL: long. gray corduroy sleeves .are slashed open down the inside of the arm, and, like the decolletage, is bordered on this slashing with astrachan. The sleeve open is looped together at intervals with small jet buttons, showing an undersleeve that matches the guimpe. Further accentuating this scanti- ness about the knees is the fashion- able habit that increases daily of walking always with the skirt gath- ered up in the hand, this restroussis nouveau being a decided departure. Gone the days when one dragged one’s gown, no matter whether walk- opah and Goldfield there was no mar=- ket except San Francisco, and San Francisco had nearer sources of sup- ply. There were a few hunters for peltry, but game that was not killed for sport was supplied by the Indi- ans. As to Patricia, she is the wife of a master builder, once a hunter himself, who taught her the use of the gun, in the handling of which she soon became more expert than her teacher. But her husband be- came invalid and the building busi- ness dropped off, and hunting as a pastime was relinquished. Then Pa- tricia looked over the arsenal of rifles and shot guns with a view of selling them. At this moment the idea came to her to shoot for the market, and the next morning she was off for Was- hoe Lake, accompanied by her dogs and equipped with decoys and guns, which she carried herself. Her first day’s sport yielded thirty-two brace of canvasback duck, selling for sev- enty-five cents a pair. The Western canvasback is a degenerate glutton, feeding on fish, and has none of the delicacy of the Eastern fowl, which takes eminence because of the flavor of the wild celery which he feeds upon. Still, the Western duck is not despised. She spends days at a time hunting, and sends her game into Reno, sleeping in the open, and shoots, in addition to ducks, quail, widgeon, sage hens and deer in sea- son, mountain sheep, and even bear. She is credited with igh cinnamon bears this year. Mrs. Knowles is a woman of cul- ture, a graduate of a college in Evan- ston, Ill.,, and came West to teach music and married. Physically she is a match for any man, measures six feet, and has no occasion to fear hunting or doing anything else alone, being skilled in the use of her fists, and, with a muscle to back them, is safe anywhere, and thinks nothing of being on foot in the marshes from daylight to dark. As a ‘“pot-hunt- er” she wastes no ammunition, but her record performance is twenty-six brace of duck with twenty shots. She uses a double barreled hammerless shot gun and a rifle with equal facil- ity. With a revolver she can hit a coin thrown in the air twice before it falls two out of three times.—New York Press. A High Stakes. “Well, where's that cook?” de- manded his wife. “Don’t tell me she wasn’t on the train.” ‘She was on the train,” timidly explained the com- muter, “but I got to playing cards and a Lonleyville man won her at whist.” ee ‘A telephone line is being construct- ed over the Alps, which has the high- est altitude of any telephone line in the world. ; The Lu lprt AASB SNGES BS Try \\ A SERMON &*% PY TAE REV~ 2 [RAVE HENDERSON Subject: The Nearness of God. Acts 17:27: “Though He be not far from every one of us.” The consciousness of the reality of a power outside ourgelves is a funda- mental in the religious experience of the race. The understanding that the inexplicable and: universal exter- nal potency is Deity marks an ad- vanced step in the spiritual intelli- - gence of humanity. The sense of the proximity of divinity is characteristc of the most advanced explanations of the religious experiences of men. That religion offers the most satisfactory practicalities and theology which is possessed of the clearest comprehen- sion of the reality and presence of the God in whom we live, as Paul says, and move and have our being. A mighty reason for asserting the supremacy of that religious system that we call Christian lies in the fact that in it we have the efflorescence of the thought that our God is not an absentee but near. The God and Father of us and of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ is not far from any one of us who knows Him and endeavors to keep His command- ments, neither do we postulate Him as far from those who, out in the far country of iniquity and folly and de- ceitfulness, are feeding their souls on food unfit for swine. The God of Christ is as near as ever. His Spirit is with us and with- in us. His presence is a feature and a force, and may be if we will a con- sciously accepted fact and power in our lives. In the consciousness of the near- ness of God there is to be found the power, the peace and the inspiration beyond compare. And in the sense of the all presence of Jehovah there lies the alone hope for the spiritual regeneration and the moral reforma- tion of the race. the nearness of God, moulding force in the moral life of man and intensi- fier of spiritual vigor as it is, is pre- requisite that we may have that re- vival of religion for which we hope and pray. It is impossible to teach a man anything about the supernal God or to make him understand his holiest obligations to God and‘ the children of God until he has a lively consciousness of the reality and near- ness of God. The sense of the nearness of God makes for power. It strengthens the arm’ of man and stoutens the heart of man for Christian service. It am- plifies the moral faculties of men. Just in proportion that a man is con- scious of the nearness of God is he doughty in the service of God and careful of the moral integrity of his life. The man who has little sense of the proximity of God does little for Him and lives little like Him. The man who habitually practices the presence of God, having an ever pres- ent measure of and incentive to right- eousness, endeavors constantly to be well-pleasing to God and worthy of His approbation. A The man who doesn’t have thought of the nearnes of God never feels the need to live as God would desire him to live. The sense of the nearness of God makes for power not only in the or- dering of the internal moral life of man, but it makes for valor in the warfare against sin. No careful stu- dent of history can. be cheerful as he contemplates the morality of the world to-day from the standpoint of one who would transform morals by the power of the will of men. Not more can we hope to transform the world by the energies of man than we are able to rid ourselves unaided of the grace and empowering of God from sin. But when a man under- stands that the God of the world is in the world, and that the God who has commanded that we shall rebuke sin stands with us and abides within us then the mass of sin Inses its in- surmountable aspect and the on- slaught of Satan becomes correspond- ingly less terrific. The sense of the nearness of God makes for peace. It ministers not the peace and comfort of material things, though we should never for- get that by seeking the kingdom of God first we shall soonest enjoy that blessed life when all men shall en- joy the materiai comforts of the world, but it gives to us the spiritual peace of God incorruptible, undefiled and fadeless, which is the gift of God to those who in sincerity and truth try to do His will. It ministers not the : peace of satisfaction with things as they are. But it does give us peace ineffable in that it assures us that though we may be unable to rectify the evils of the day and age, though we have neither time nor strength nor opportunity successfully to overthrow many a mighty wrong, God will labor where we may not, He will be here when we are gone, He will succeed where we must cease, He will accomplish in His time what we cannot. achieve in ours. The sense of the nearness of God makes for inspiration. The nearer we conceive God to be, the nearer we are sure He is, the more are we in- spired to do our work in our own time under His direction, to sacrifice, to suffer, to be patient, forbearing, obedient. There is nothing more disheartening than to attempt to carry on the fight against sin unaided by the help of the ever-present God. Nor is there anything more inspiring than to un- .dertake the positive and progressive program of righteousness that looks toward the kingdom of God as an ultimate and ideal, possessed of the assurance that the God who was near His people in the past is near to them to-day. The sense of the nearness of God gave Abraham hope and Jacob spiritual vitality. It warmed the zeal of the prophet and quickened the pulses of the priests and kings whose names Israel reveres. It aug- mented the spiritual capacities of the apostles, produced Pentecost, com- forted Stephen, surcharged Paul, en- ergized the forces which in the name of Christ swept the Empire of Rome. The sense of the presence of God has an equal inspirational influence to-day, Controlled by it we may dare the impossible, overcome the For the sense of | 81 (John 5:24), for overwhelming, change the age-lon® habits of a sinful world. Without it we can do nothing perdurable, noth= ing eternally superb. He is not far from every one of! us. Therefore, let us be zealous, let | | us be circumspect, let. us trust and be | worthy. power, peace, inspiration, the incen=- tive to live as ever in His sight. The Shepherd and the ‘Sheep. In the nomadic or pastoral state which still prevails in many parts of or less of a shepherd. So much that relates to comfort and subsistence depend upon the welfare of the flocks that the calling of a herder. or sheep- master, in such communities is by no means.an unimportant cne. The shepherd’s life is still attended by hardship and danger. Amid storm and cold he has to protect his flock, to defend them from wild beasts, to guard them from pitfalls. and preci- pices, to find fresh pasture for them by day, with good water, and to se- curely fold them at night, setting a watch over the fold till daybreak. In olden times, the staff and sling were the shepherd’s defensive weapons and in many places are so still. With these, and his warm sheepskin coat and his scrip or bag for food, he was fully equipped for duty. David’s: “Shepherd Psalm’ is a beautiful picture of the pastoral life, with its freedom from the harassing and corroding cares of the outer world and its perfect dependence upon God. David, who was himself a herdsman, in that song tells us how the Good Shepherd supplies every want of body, soul and spirit; how He gives to His sheep food for sus- tenance and water for refreshment, with perfect peace amid pleasant sur- roundings; how He cheers them and helps them to overcome temptation and to avoid danger, inspiring them with courage by His presence and His supporting touch; how He bears them up in afiliction and spreads a rich feast for them, to all of which He adds the sweet assurance of His continuing love and care—His good- ness and mercy—to the end.—Chris- tian Herald. Gone! ““As thy servant was busy here and there * * * he was gone!” (1 Kings 20:40). Gone? Where? Don’t ask the awful question. It is agony to me to think about it! The Spirit said, Speak to him! Tell him of a Saviour’s love. Tell him his danger. But I was ‘busy here and there;” I neglected it, and by and by he was gone. I knew I ought to talk to him. I felt that I was the one God meant to put the gospel before him, and some- how I felt I ought to do it quickly— now, now! But I was “busy here and there.” Now it is too late! He is gone! I shall not see him until IT meet im at the judgment bar in that awful day! I know I shall see him then! I do not fear that day of judgment for myself, for I:beard and believed Cod’s good news, that Jesus of Naz- areth died for me; that He took my place on the cross. where He bore sin | for the whole world. 1 heard that all who believed He hore their sin, and trusted Him. (for He rose from the dead, and is alive now), should be saved, and should not even be judged Jesus was judged I believed this, and I But he—he is in their place! know I am saved. gone! Maybe if I had teld him he, too, would have believed, and with what joy we should have met in glory! But he is gone! Gone without Christ, without God. without hope! “It has pleased Cod through the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.” Oh, if I had only told the gospel to him! If I had only said, “Jesus Christ died for your sin. Will you trust Him?” But I was ‘busy here and there,” and I put off speaking to him, and now he is Jose gom R. New- ell, in Missionary Witness The Life e of the Spirit. If the Spirit of God dwells within us, if we are dominated by its power, if we have surrendered ourselves fully to Christ and belong to Hing, glorious consequences inevitably follow. We will then be filled with and kept in all times by the Spirit presence—kept with untroubled hearts in a world of trouble. We then become the children of God in the richest sense—sons, and heirs of the kingdom eternal, while we must in harmony with the work- ing of eternal laws, come to be more like Him who “hath loved us and gave His life for us.” ‘And we have then, within, the glorious and un- gquenchable hope of the resurrection. ‘For, “if the Spirit of Him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up. Christ from the dead shall quicken also your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you.” This is the glorious consum- mation. “To be spiritually minded is life.”: To surrender -to Christ brings the life of the higher kingdom into the soul of man. If we choose the things that are spiritual and eter- nal, we shall grow in harmony with our choices and find ourselves rich in the treasures that will abide. A Resting Place. It is a great thing to come to Christ. It is the turning point of life. And .it is a great thing to abide in Him in the storm and conflicts and terrors of the world. It is a great thing to come to Christ; it is a great thing to abide in Him; but from His point of view the object of our com- ing and of our abiding is that we should go. He wants us as His mes- sengers, as His fellow-messengers; His purpose is that abiding in Him, we should bear the fruit which is for the healing of the nations, that we should be the communicators of the light that shines upon the people that | sit in darkness and in the shadow of death. If we do not go we are like seed which has spoiled in the ground. He bade us come, He encouraged us to abide in order that we might go. Can You Say, I Love Him? To confess Christ does not imply the ability to make a good speech; it does not require oric and elocution; it simply means the expression of love, which is as appropriate and natural for the young soul as for the ow er to bloom or the J*-d to fly —F. E. Clark. With Him near there | | distance. training in rhet- | The | out ty oof ER — INTHRENATIONAL LESSON COM- MENTS FOR MARCH 21. Sr the world, almost. every man is more | Tieview of the Lessons For the First Quarter — Golden Text: “They That Were Scattered Abroad Went Everywhere Preaching the Word.” Acts 8:4. The lessons of the quarter extend over a period of perhaps ten years, from Thursday, May 18, A. D. 30, to perhaps A. D. 40. They are all con- cerned with the things that Jesus continued to do after His resurrection through the Holy, Spirit. = A profitable review can be conducted along the line of the power of the Risen Christ. Lesson I. shows us the Risen Christ as the Giver of the Holy Spirit. Lesson II. again shows us the Risen Christ as the Giver of the Holy Spirit. Lesson III. shows us the Risen Christ exalted, receiving from the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, and pouring Him forth on the church. Lesson IV. shows us the Risen Christ healing and making strong the man born lame. Lesson V. shows us the Risen Christ bestowing the Holy Spirit upon His faithful servants and making them fearless in the presence of great peril. It also shows us the Risen Christ as the only One in Whom there, is salvation. Lesson VI. Charist executing church. Lesson VII, Christ delivering His faithful serv- ants from peril and filling them with dauntless courage. Lesson VIII. shows us the Risen Christ imaparting power and grace to His faitbful servant. It also shows us the Risen Christ in the glory at the right hand of God. Lesson IX. shows us the Risen Christ bestowing the Holy Ghost in answer to the prayer of His servants. T.esson X. shows us the Risen Christ winning a man of great au- thority to Himself. Lesson XI. shows us the Risen Christ making whole the sick and raising the dead. us the Risen His shows judgment in Our Two Natures. There are two natures in man that are as dista the old Adam within us if we do not keep him down in the place of death he brings us into captivity. It takes us about all our lifetime to find out who and what we are, and when we think we know something happens to make us think we are farther away than when we started. The heart is deceitful above all things. “In the sixth chapter of Romans if is written: “Knowing this, that ou? old man is crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead is freed from sin.” And in the eleventh verse there are just three words to be es- pecially considered: ‘“Reckon your- selves dead.” If we were really dead we would not have to reckon our- selves dead. Judicially we are dead, but in reality we are still fighting the world, the flesh and the devil. Some people seem to think they have got away from the flesh, and that they are soaring away in a sort of seventh heaven, but they getback again soon- er or later. You cannot make the flesh anything but flesh. It will be flesh all the time.—D. I. Moody. His Own Pilot. A bright boy, who loved the sea, entered on a sailor’s life when very voung.. He rose to quick promotion, and while quite a young man was made the master of a ship. One day a passenger spoke to him upon the voyage. and asked if he should an- chor off a certain headway and tele- graph for a pilot to take the vessel into port. ‘“Ancher? No, not IL I mean to be in dock with the morning tide. I am my own pilot,” was the curt reply. Intent uponreaching port by morn- ing he took a narrow channel to save 01d, bronzed, gray-headed seamen turned their swartfy faces to the sky, which boded squally weath- er, and ‘shook their heads. We need not describe a storm at sea. Enough io say that the captain was ashore earlier than he promised tossed sportively upon some weedy beach, a dead thing thatthe waves were weary of—and his queenly ship and cos stly freight were scattered over the surfy acres of an angry sea.—Expositor. A Sign of Greatness. The highest greatnessisthat which is unconscious of itself. The very forth-putting of an effort to be great in any direction indicates that we Jack that greatness. How true this is in art, for example, every one who has had an artist among his friends can tell. The greatest achievements made by the sculptor.or painter have been those in which they have been least conscious of their greatness. So, too, in the Christian life, which is the grandest of all arts, we have not yet attained so long as we are con- scious of exertion. If I make an ef- fort to be humble, then very clearly I have not reached the perfect humil- ity, for if I had, that grace would sit upon me as unconsciously as do my garments. ‘Moses wist not that the skin of his face shone while he talked with Him.”—Dr. W. M. Taylor. No Reason For Envy. We who have the Sun need not envy those who saw the Star. Grows as It Gives. The light of love always grows as it gives itself away. Turn to the Cross. The cross is the great centre of God’s moral universe! To this cen- tre God ever pointed, and the eye of faith ever looked forward, until the Saviour came. And now we must ever turn to that cross as the centre of all our blessing, and the basis of 211 our blessing, both on earth and in ddeaven—in time and throughout all eternity.—D. L. Moody. shows vs the Risen’ nt as day and night. With, MARTYRED PRESIDENT COST NATION $42,517 After careful guarding for more than seven years the facts as to the government's expenditures - incident o the last illness and burial of Pres- ident McKinley, the treasury officials have made a statement covering all of the items of expenditure under the appropriation of $45,000 for this purpose, made by congress on July 1, 1902. The sum spent was $42- 517.88. The items as they appear on the treasury ledgers follow: Dr. M. D. Mann, $10,000; Dr. H. Mpynter, $5,000; Dr. C. McBurney, $5,000; Dr. Roswell Park, $5,000; Dr. C. 'G. Stockton, $1,500; . Dr..B. G. Janeway, $1,500; Dr. H. G. Matzinger, $750; Drs. W. W. Johnston, E. W. Lee and H. R. Gaylord, $500 each; Dr. N. W. Wilson, $250; Dr. G. McR. Hall and Dr. E. C. Mann, $200 each. Undertakers—Druggard and Koch, $2,204.15; McCrea and Arnold, $283. Nurses and miscellaneous—M. E. Mohan and J. Connolly, $500 each; G. MacKenzie, $400; Evelyn Hunt, $200; M. C. Morris, M. E. Shannon, M. D. Barnes, K. R. Simmons, M. E. Dorchester, A. Barron, A. M. Waters, B. F. Simpson, F. Ellis and B. J. Bixby, $100 each; J. Parmenter and H. A. Knoll, $500 each;. Edison Man- ufacturing Company, $250; E. L. Pausch for death work, $1,200; E. Garret, post-mortem cost, $45; ‘West- ern Union Telegraph company, $1,593.61; Postal Telegraph-Cable company, $440.27; New York Electric Vehicle Transfer company, $192; Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone, $187.60; Woods Motor Vehicle com: pany, $128.50; Price & Niehaus, $120; J. Powell, $308; H. O. Hicks, $100; the William Hengerer company, $30; ‘White-Evans-Penfield company, $35.75. Old Animosities Gone. Jefferson Davis, name is to be put back on the tablet of the Cabin John bridge, near Washington, that span to carry the Washington aqueduct across a deep chasm having been completed while he was serving as secretary of war. The name was chiseled off in 1862. ‘There is no good reason why it should not be restored, the animosities which it was once capable of inspiring having passed into history.—New York Tri- bune. Prefessor Percival Lowell declares the end of the world will come when some dark: star crashes into the sun, and he adds that such an occurrence is sure to come. However, the ca- tastrophe seems to be a little too far in the future to worry about, anyhow. —New York Herald. In a scene of a balloon race, repro- duced in a New York moving picture show, R. J. Maller saw his younger brother, whom for three years he had been unable to communicate with, and, writing to the officials of the club conducting the race, was able to ob- tain his address. Clarence B. Cralle, a policeman of Louisville, Ky., at a recent sale of rifles discarded by the government, purchased one which proved to be the identical gun he had carried through the Spanish war. Talks on Alveolar TEETH By E. Dayton Craig, D.D. S. INVESTIGATE MY METHOD I have heard .a definition . for a skeptic, which reads something like this, “A Skeptic is one who first doubts, then investigates.” If you are skeptic in regards my Alveolar Method “Investigate’’ and you will be satisfied that it will do all that is claimed for it. Investigations are being made daily and I wonder if you, who may be reading this article, are ready to start yours. There must be merit in my method, else it would not stand the test of time. I can send you to patients who are wearing my Alveolar teeth—you can talk with them and be satisfied for yourself. But first of all I would have to ex- amine your mouth. No charge is made for examination and there is no obligation to have work done. There is no two cases exactly alike, hence each case has to be ex- amined carefully before ‘I could say whether you could be supplied with these Alveolar Teeth. ‘When by examination it is found that you can have teeth put in that will give you absolute satisfaction, I will be ready to proceed with your work. If you cannot call at this time, send for my booklet on “Alveolar Teeth” which explains my method fully. It is free on request. E. DAYTON CRAIG, D. D.S. MONONGAHELA BANK BUILDING, The Most Complete Dental Office in Pittsburgh, SIXTH AVE. COR. WOOD ST. Bell Phone Grant 362, Pittsburgh, Pa. Office Hours: 9 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. (Not Open Sundays.)