OCR Text |
Show . 4- f 25 SUFFERED With Cannibalism Among Brooder Cbleka. (A. B. R.) Can you tell me how to D. Arnold, President German Womans Club, Grand Pacific Hotel, Los Angeles, Cal., Relieved of a Tumor by; Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. Mrs. I suffered four years ago with a tumor In my womb, and the doctors declared I must go to the hospital and undergo an operation, which I dreaded very much and hesitated to submit. Dear Mrs. Pinkham : My husband consulted an old friend who had studied medicine, although he was not a practising physician, and hd said he believed that Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound would cure me. That same day I took my first dose, and I kept it up faithfully until twelve bottles had been used, and not only did the tumor disappear, but my general health was very much improved and I had not felt so well since I was a young woman. As I have suffered no relapse since, and as I took no other medicine, I am sure that your Compound restored my health and I believe Mrs. D. Arnold. saved my life. IF THE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT GENUINE. FORFEIT $5000 When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhcea, displacement or ulceration of the feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, womb, that bearing-dow- n flatulence), debility, indigestion, and nervous prosgeneral (or bloating tration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, and feelings, blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tiled ana true remedy. Lydia E. Plnkhams Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best all-go- DONT STOP TOBACCO money refunded, I. EUREKA Suddenly. It injures the nervous system to do so. UseBACO-CURand it will tell you when to stop as it takes away the desire for tobacco. You have no right to ruin your health, spoil your digestion and poison your breath by using the filthy weed. A guarantee in each box. Price $1.00 per box, or three boxes for $2.50, with guarantee to cure or At ail good Druggists or direct from us. Write for free booklet. CHEMICAL CO., I Renton It REVENUE of Ihe POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT for Ihe year endmq June will be $ I figure il will be about Whotdoxx-- , ' Estimate I20.000.000ij 50 '.d La Crosse, Wis. A FORTUNE joisoe '2 - V?l20J0Q00a prevent cannibalism among brooder chicks? I have a lot eight days old that are doing nicely except that they have already killed one of their number and mutilated three others. They attack the victim around the vent and keep picking it until it is dead. They have had an abundance of grit and oyster shell all the time. Thinking the lack of animal food was the cause, I have given two feeds of green bone, but I dont see that it has done any good. The trouble la not peculiar to brooder chicks, I had some cases with chicks with hens a number of years ago. I am not sure that I am right as to the way the trouble begins, but think it is when a chick, because of Irritation at the vent, such as might be caused by any bowel, disorder, picks itself there until blood appears. If this then attracts the attention of some of the others, and they begin to pick and get a taste of blood, they keep it up. It is possible that even when no blood has started the chicks seeing one ot their number pecking itself, and evidently In distress, join it and, soon create serious trouble; but I have seen little chicks, only a few days old, literally tear themselves to pieces without aid from others. Farm-Poultr- y. Filthy Yirdv. We talk about cleanliness In the about dairy, but let us not forget cleanliness In the poulfy establishment Dirt and disease seem to go together tn all places. Filth makes a good medium for the development of disease microbes. If a hen house and yard are kept clean there is seldom that any visitation from diseases sweep away the fowls, v ery often the part of the yard directly in front of the hen house door becomes very filthy. This is especially so in the spring and fall when the precipitation Is considerable. This occurs more with large flocks than with small ones. No matter how large the run for the poultry, the birds spend a good deal of their time near the poultry house. They seem to have but little aversion for splashing through soft mud. Sometimes they will eat up every green thing within a dozen feet of the hen house door and leave the green sward farther away. Thi3 is more so with the large breeds than with the small ones. The solution appears to he small flock3. Enthusiasm of Poultry Raising worlds most successful because of the enthusiasm that they had in their particular lines of work. It Is unnecessary, then, to say that a man to succeed in poultry keeping must be enthusiastic. Wheh a man that has a big poultry establishment finds his enthusiasm waning or being diverted to some other occupation it will probably be found the part of wisdom to drop the poultry business. A while ago the writer visited a poultry establishment where the owner had evidently had his enthusiasm for the poultry business diverted into another channel. He had another business, and that appeared to be thriving. His large poultry establishment, however, showed every sign of neglect The pens had evidently not been cleaned out for a month, and sick hens were apparent here and there in the flocks. Enthusiasm would never have tolerated that condition of affairs. All of the men succeeded $15,000 GIVEN AWAY to those making the nearest correct total Postal Revenue of the United States for the year ending June 30, 1903. IN 1000 CASH PRIZES, estimates of the First Prize $5,000; Second $2,000; Third $1,000 VALUABLE INFORMATION: To aid In forming vnur estimates, we furnish the following Injures wh.ch we obtained direct from the Post Office liepirtment at Washington, D. C., glvine the gross or total revenue of the department for edch and ever; ;ear from 1897 to 1901 Inclusive. The fractional part of a dollar Is not considered. The Total Revenue ot the Post Office Department for the year V WAS $82,665,462,' WAS 89.012,618, INCREASE 7.68 PER CENT WAS 95,02 ,384, INCREASE 6.75 PER CENT WAS 102,354,579, INCREASE 7.72 PER CENT 1901 WAS 111,631,193, INCREASE 9.06 PERCENT 1897 1898 1899 1900 1 The Total Revenue for the first half of the year was S58.876.016. Total Revenue be at the end of the fiscal year, June 30, 1903? What will the Rend yoor estimate and 1 2c In postage stamps to the PRESS FIBLPHIXG ASSOCIATION. DETROIT, MICH., amt we will send yon a ropy or onr Catawill entitle you to share In the prides. logue, and a certlflcate-whlc- h PRESS PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION, Detroit, Michigan The Reward of lilanrna OF WOMEN Poultry Points Picked Cp. We have been- - asked If a cracked That egg can be used for hatching. will depend on several kinds of circumstances. If the crack Is not too large, It may be mended by pasting Jokat Maurus Jokai, Hungarys aged laureate novelist, has received a grant of some $2,000 from the government after a debate that was heated, owing to the fact that his political views differed greatly from those of some of the members of the Hungarian diet. it a strip of thin, tough paper. The hen, If large and heavy, may break It even then. If the hen be light, or if an Incubator be in use, the egg may come through all right and produce a chick. It is a superstition that salt Is poisonous to hens. A lady saw the writer salting the warm mash for the poultry and said, with surprise: Why do you put salt in their food? I thought salt always killed hens." When salt Is thrown out in the forpi of rock crystals, fowls sometimes eat them for grit and are killed thereby. A man would be killed by salt also if he ate It in proportionate quantities. The danger to heils from the presence of salt crystals should remind us that there are many other substances that If left around may prove injurious. But poison must not be left where fowls can find it Bits of mire, tacks and even nails rfiy prove deadly. The writer once had a fowl suddenly go lame and killed her. The lameness wa3 found to be caused by pieces of wire exceeding an Inch in length. These had worked from the gizzard into thq flesh of the fowl, and one piece wa3 In process of working out between the body and leg. CURES EYES SfiSWSfc GRANULATION, INFLAMMATION. TCS BfliGHTCMC OUU EYE, CURE PINK CY SO AT QRUCCIST34 OPTICIANS 0 AY MAIL over Jl MURINE EYE REMEDY CO. CHlCAStt Preserve, Purify, and Beautify the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands with A Potato Crop Episode, Mr. D. C. Prosser, a correspondent of the Farmers Review in Oceana County, Michigan, tells how a neighbor of his made a fine thing out of a Millions of WoMwr us Ctmctraa Boap, assisted byCtJTicOHA Oi.ntmknt, for beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp, aud the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itcbmgg, and irritations, and for all the purposes of the toilet; hath, and nursery. Millions of women use Cvticvba Soap in baths tor annoying irritations, inflammations, aud excoriations, ortoofreeor offensive p respiration, in waslies for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic purposes, which readily suggest themselves to women, especially mothers. Complete Treatment for Humours, $1. CoObistttiif of Cu rictiRA &OAP(.6c.),torte&DSQ of crusts ani scales, ana soften the uiiokenedeuticle.CU'louKA Ointient(50c.). Jo instantly allay Hrhin. Inflammation, and jrnUtion, and soothe ana heal, ami CuTiuuaa (26c.), to cool and ele&noe CtmcDRA Kksolvknt Pill (Chocolate Costed ) are anew, tasteless, odorless, economical ubs&tiute for the celebrated liqttia Cutioura Kbsoltknt, as well as other blood pari sers aud humour cures. for60 all doses, 25c. riLihwah,Ma. GOBiS bote th "arid. British Depot PoTTBEctcc as Cum ikaloa, U. S. A When Answering Advertisements Mention This Paper, Kindly Oort,cell! Silk sews smoothly; su. and alwaya full length and full strsngth. A. CorticeUi oosta yoa HO MORS than poor ahk, why dont yoa buy itl Ask your dealer for Cortieelli . Mado hr CoBTicxxxt Blue Mills, Ploedtc. Mass. IB I I I I I ir.'JasvB.HJ pension they BICKFORD, Washington. D. Cm II will receive quick replies. B. fth N.H.Vols Staff 20th Cory. Prosecutini Claims since 1878 wbediatilt u with hit to Ufflmrn 1If nil I L- - Advertiso and Introduce our Goooa. Btralfrhtsaiarv.tMa Werkand Expenses. Enclose CO,, IsdiaupoUi, leA. tamp. DpL t, BUT AJL V W. r. N O.. Salt Lake-N- o. lSOXSeCUREFO 22. 1902 tUKtb WHtKL ALL tlbt rAHo. Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Vl In time. HsfM br dnwrlsts. N6UMFT0 Wisconsin Cold, dry weather has to meadows and been unfavorable pastures, which are in poor condition not so much on account of severe winter weather as late pasturing In the fall, which left the roots exposed. Clover winter killed badly. Germay has Imported as" much as $10,000,060 worth cf apples in one and $2, 500, COO worth ofpears. year of t&i lC, j t. ML. Pasteurisation of Milk. A series of experiments in continuation of those conducted in previous years, was carried on this past year, chiefly to determine the effects of different pasteurizing temperatures, between 140 and 200 degrees, on the bacterial content of milk, and upon the quality of the butter. Briefly, the results indicate thet a temperature of 180 to 185 degrees Is very favorable In reducing the bacterial content to a low point, and this temperature also adds keeping quality to the butter. If we wish to establish a good reputation for Canadian butter In the British markets, we shall uave to adopt pasteurization; and it we wish our butter to retain its fine flavor for some time, we Bhall do well to pasteurize at a temperature ot 180 to 185 In our experiments, the degrees. was ' pasteurized bewhole milk fore separating and the skim-mil- k before It was run over a water-coolto the patrons. We was returned found that this plan enabled ua to send to the farmer a good quality ot 6klm-mll- k for feeding purposes. Report Ontario Experiment Station. , er Two Typos of Dairy Cows. Prof. T. L. Haecker: We feed each cow all she can consume and assimilate. At the end of the first year we found that some cows charged us .1 cents per pound tor butter made from their milk, while others charged only 12 cents, and others ranged between these two sums. The, breed made no difference; some Shorthorns made cheap butter, and some Jerseys costly butter. Breed had nothing to do with the cost, it was all In the cow. Size or color had nothing to do with 1L We put all the cows that made cheap butter on one side, and ranged the cows who charged the most for butter on the other side. Each elde, no matter what breed, showed similar characteristics. Those that charged a high price were sleek, nice looking animals that would answer the description of the general purpose cow, while those that made butter cheap had the genuine dairy type, the light quarters and the heavy wedged shaped barrel. Every pound of food consumed was put to good use. Composition of Milk H. D. Richmond, analyst, reports in the Dairy, London, England, results of his work on the composition of milk as follows: The average composition of milk as shown by the analyses of 13,978 samples during the year 1900 results as follows: The average for fat was 3.64 per cent; for solids not fat, 8.93 per cent, and for With regard specific gravity, 1.0323. to the variation of the constituents of the solids not fat the author states that any deficiency of solids not tat below 9.0 per cent Is chiefly due to a deficiency in the milk sugar; any excess above 9.0 per cent is chiefly due to excess of protelds. As the result of a considerable amount of work on the relation between the protelds and salts ot milk, he considers that one-thiof the base with which casein Is combined in milk is soda, and not lime; and that casein forms a molecular compound with calcium phosphate. rd Dairy Husbandry at Champaign. A course of study in Judging dairy products has just been Introduced In the dairy husbandry department of the College of Agriculture at the University of Illinois. The course Is principally designed for students In general agriculture and includes a brief treatment of the subject of dairy sanitation, the production of milk and the methods employed for the manufacture of . common dairy products. Following this great stress will be laid on the proper selection of milk and the judging of butter and cheese. In judging the products score cards are used to illustrate the relative Importance of each of the points to he considered essential In a standard product The object of the course la to give the student who specializes in lines of agriculture othec than dairying an opportunity to gain a proper conception of the qualities good dairy products should possess. potato crop. Some years ago he had a crop and held it for the He overdid the late spring market holding . to such an extent that the market dropped on him, on account of the near approach of the timo for new Instead of letting go tha potatoes. owner of the old potatoes rented all the land he could in the neighborhood and succeeded in getting in 120 acres of potatoes, thus using the bulk of his Honei to Argentina, old crop for seed. The harvest gave With a population of 4,780,000 the him a good crop about 14,000 bushels. These he sold at a good price, and Argentine Republic possesses 5,081,000 horses. It is the only country In the so made a large profit on the operaworld that has a horse for every Intion. good-size- d SPOOL SILK it i. alw.yi.vra Irish and Danish Methods. Let us draw a contrast by picturing one of our own creameries about 7 oclock a. m., and any creamery In Denmark at, say 6 oclock a. What do we see In the former? Is .not the creamery surrounded by a double line of men, women and child, en, all either fighting their way to the receiving platform or else scrambling for skim milk, and altogether creating the Impression m the mind of a stranger that certain political Issues were Involved, rather than the carrying on of an Industry whose object Is the Improvement of our social and economic conditions? In the latter case we see one large two horse spring wagon holding between thirty and forty medium sized cans, beside the receiving platform, and one man standing on It unloading the cans, which are taken In by one of the dairymen. When the first wagon is unloaded, matters are so regulated that another wagon arrives just In time, so as to cause no delay either in the creamery or on the road. While one wagon Is being unloaded, the other Is being loaded with skim milk. The two pictures constitute a striking contrast May we call them Peace" and War? No doubt Irish Homestead. Catarrh r" habitant i Although ordinary wood alcohol la a poison, Ohio is the only state which prohibits its sale on that account -should make a study farmer Every With many of seeds as to vitality. there ts a sort of fatality as to the germinating quality of their seeds. They take It ter granted they will grow. - it seems as strapped on your back, and several tiest, stood at the northwest corner Of the careers involving danger grew ropes dragging behind you among Greenwich and Warren streets, bo with equal strides. The submarine trees and rocks, each separate rope be- close to the blazing drug bouse that diver, the locomotive engineer, the pi- ing to you as breath and blood! That Driver Marks thought it wasnt safe lot, the city fireman, the miner, all is precisely the divers case. So it there for the three horses, and led v, As civilization advances, if And whun they are products of recent times, while goes; so he works. the building of vast iron buildings offer him pretty apparatus to increase and enormous bridges, tne advent ot his load, he will have none of it. Nor the automobile and of the navigation will he tug any extra ropes. I have matters ways enough of dying as it is, says of the air are apparently which will increase enormously in the he. Another man told me the story of future the need for men of daring and of steady nerve. Cleveland Mof-fe- t, a falling bridge that thrilled me in a volume on Careers of Danger although theie was in it no loss of and Daring shows conclusively that life. I always feel that a man who it is not alone on the battlefield that faces death unflinchingly for a fairly The long time shows greater heroism, even heroism is to be encountered. volume Is full of Incidents, showing though deatn be driven back, than that men are constantly risking their another man who suffers some sudden lives for small wages in many of the taking oft with no choice left him. This bridge was building at White everyday occupation which contriThe River Junction, Vermont, over the upbute to our modern paragraphs per waters of the Connecticut. There following representative will give the reader a taste of its en- was a single iron span reaching 200 feet between piers of masonry, and tertaining contents: We were In "our saddles, Merrill everything was ready to swing her off (the steeple climber) explained, the false work except the driviijg of a few Iron pins. And a bridge swung is a bridge practically finished, so it was merely a matter of hours to put at ease of mind the contractors against any dangers of the torrent Meantime the dangers were there, for heavy rains had fallen and angered the river with a gorge of mountain streams. At five oclock of an afternoon the engineer in charge saw that a crisis The waters were was approaching. down runaway logs In sweeping fiercer and fiercer bombardment, and It was a question If the false work could hold against them. And for the time being, until morning surely, the If false work must carry the span. the false work went the span would go, and the bridge would be destroyed. So the chief engineer ordered all hands down on scows and rafts, which close were jammed straightway against the false work byjthe current. Down on these lurching platforms went seventeen bridgemen and set to s, spearwork with Iron-sho- d ing and plunging logs as they came by and swinging them qut through the bents of false work, down roaring lanes of water twenty feet wide between the legs of scaffolding. If these could be protected from the logs, the bridge might be saved; if they could not be protected, the bridge was The Btoep'e Climber. down of the doomed. It was the strength and skill about swung e smoke-stack- s against the fury of when some of the pike-pollength, black clouds warned us of danger, and the river. For nine hours the battle lasted, and we hauled ourselves up to the roof. My the bridgemen worked partner, Walter Tyghe, got off his all this time down in the black night, wonders and where stood there saddle, my torwife was waiting (she often goes to with the rain beating on them in and faster rents the and coming logs climbing jobs with me shes less Every anxious when she can watch me), but harder as the hours passed. I thought the storm was passing over, man in the crew realized that the false and kept on scraping, sort of half work might give way at any moment, for the Whole structure was groaning resting on the cornice, half on my and shivering as they swung against saddle. Suddenly a bolt shot down from a little pink cloud just overhead, it, and they knew that If they went at and splintered a big flagpole I had all it would go as one piece, without And that would a moments just put halyards on, and then jumped mean suddenwarning. death in the river under (past us all so close (Bat it knocked Walter over, and made me sick and giddy so that I fell back limp on my saddle-boarand swung there helpless until my wife pulled the trip-rop- e that opens the lock below and drew me In from the edge. Thats not the first time shes been on deck at the right minute. Once she came up a steeple to tell me something, and found the hauling line smoldering from my cigarette. If that line had burned through It would have dropped me to the ground from the steepletop, and all. The man saddle, lock-blowith the cigarette was so scared he quit smoking for good and all. Merrill says that men of his craft, whether they realize it or not, work, under constant nervous strain. It Is not looking down Into the gulf around him that he minds (the climber Who cannot do that with indifference is unfit tor the business); what he sees he can cope with; It is what he cannot see that does the mischief what he A steeple-climbis fears vaguely. like a child In the dark In terror of the unknown. In all the world, perhaps, there Is no one so utterly alone as he, swinging hour after hour on his steeple-toThe aeronaut has with him a living, surging creature his balloon; the diver feels always the teeming life of the waters; but this man, lifted into still air, poised on a point where nothing comes or goes, The Firemen. where nothing moves, where nothing Yet no makes a sound he. In truth. Is alone. the crush of broken bridge. "This will show you, said an ex- man shirked his duty, and long pert, what a diver has to contend midnight they were there on the with at the bottom of a river. He ecows still, fighting the logs with the often sinks four or five feet in the bridgemens grit and the comfort of mud, just as those bags Blnk, and steaming hot coffee well, we may sometimes the mud guctlon holds him call it coffee. But it was a hopeless fight now; the down so hard that three men pulling can scarcely budge engineer saw this, and at 2 oclock on the life-lin- e him. And when the mud lets o the ordered all hands off the scows and diver comes out of it like a cork from back to the shore. There is a point a bottle. You can hear him flop over, beyond which you cannot allow men clean tuckered out with kicking and to go on offering their lives. And working his arms. They let him lie scarcely five minutes later indeed, there a minute or two to rest, and the last man was barely off the structhen pull him up. Why, vessels will ture, so our friends declared, and he sink ten or twelve feet in the mud, was one of the seventeen the false so that the diver has to take a hose work ripped loose and was swept down, and wash a tunnel out below away, and the iron epan crashed down , the keel to get a lifting chain under. Into the furious flood. All firemen have courage, but It fact Is, a diver has quite as , The much as he can attend to with the cannot be known until the test how burden of his suit (about a hundred many have this particular kind Bill and seventy-fiv- e pounds), and hls two Browns kind. What he did seems a lines to watch and keep from kinks little thing and it took only a minute and entanglements. Touch one of to do, and it saved no life and made these lines, and you touch hls life.1 no difference whatever in the outcome Fasten a new line to him, or two new of the fire, yet to the few who knew lines, and you enormously increase hls it stands as a fine bit of heroism. What happened ' was this: Engine peril. Imagine yourself stumbling About in a dark forejt, with a man 29, pumping and pounding her pret well-bein- g. them away. That was fortunate, "but it left Brown alone, right against the cheek of the fire, watching hls boiler, stoking In coal, keeping hlB steam-gag- e at 75. As the fire gained chunks of red hot sandstone began to smash down on the engine. Brown ran hls pressure up to 80, and watched the door anxiously where the ' boys had gone in. Then the explosion came, and a blue flame, wide as a house, curled Its across the street, entongues half-wa- y wrapping engine and man, setting fire to the elevated railway station overhead, or such wreck of It as the shock had left. Bill Brown stood by his engine, with a wall of fire before him He and a sheet of fire above him. heard quick footsteps on the pavement, and voices that grew fainter, He Run for your lives! crying: p. aer A J yV 5 1 y At a sale just heli te historic letters writtesdu war, a letter written y coin to General Grant ffifc brought 81,050. A giro's idea of gens! get a new bonnet on Sf have it rain all day klj A WEEK AND to men with rl(? to tntrodwewY Sendstp. JavelleMfg OlOwpaa 0 ' As to Much as worthy fritadi, happiness and value. In the main depend tv every one Is his ov worst enemy. ro DEFENDT THfc'ffv at tha Champtona Society . er In a recent letter 'AvW.mitskn ' ' Congressman Botkin is- My Dear Doctor I;. j ure to certify to the eswtv ouallties of your medadnsas. i ' Manalin. I have been aSfii less for a quarter sf . w tarrh of the stomach , r,A residence tn Washiotgiiwtto-b,l&A t i these troubles. A W,ri medicine have f prw plete rcl lef, and I am eirr i b i nation of them will cure. J. D. Botkhu Mr.U F. Verdery,, I estate agent of Atj urtuaia.a rtesv 7 have been a s catarrhal dyspepsia. J I alclaaa, visited m gu but I believe Perm mexsimbr9 tor me than ell g time I 1 feel 5 tocher. L. P. Verdery. , - The most common ffcra?JoKtfitWti31r catarrh is catarrh of tiinKSHnaMV.'1- Xhjp j is generally knowm an ruua cures these cnaas t If you do not derive v factory results from write at once to Dr. EarttnaW' , ' full statement of yomr asw, &i be pleased to give jsm tarv ' vice gratia , Address Dr. Harfmani, The Hartman Sanitarmn. J 1 two-thir- ck a i pike-pole- d, iMii, Botkrf th.fc,. gfci I Congressman The Bridge Builder, heard the hose wagon horses somewhere back in the smoke, go plunging away, mad with fright and their burns. He was alone with the fire, and the skin was hanging in shreds on his hands, face and neck. Only a fireman knows how one blast of flame can shrivel up a man, and the pain over the bared surfaces was well, there Is no pain worse than that of fire scorching in upon the quick flesh seared by fire. Here, I think, was a crisis to make a very brave man quail. Bill Brown knew perfectly well why every one was running, there was going to be another explosion in a couple of minutes, maybe sooner, out of this hell In front of him. And the order had come for every man to save himself, .and very roan had done It, except the lads inside. And the question was, should he run or should he stay and die? It was tolerably certain that he would die if he stayed. On the other hand, the boys of old 29 were In there and McArthur, and Glllon and Merron, hls friends, his chums; hed seen them drag the hose through that door there Jt was now, a long, throbbing snake of it and they hadnt come out Perhaps they were dead. Yes, but perhaps they werent. If they were alive they needed water now more than they ever needed anything before. And they couldnt get water if he quit his engine. Bill Brown pondered this a long time, perhaps four seconds; then he fell to stoking in coal, and he screwed her up another notch, and he eased her running parts with the oiler. Explosion or not, pain or not, alone or not, he was going to stay and make that engine hum. . He had done the greatest thing a man can do had offered his life tor his friends. It is pleasant te know that this sacrifice was averted. A quarter of a minute or so before the second terrible explosion, Devanny and his men came staggering from the building. Then It was that Merron fell, and McArthur' checked his flight to save him. Then It was, but not until them, that Bill Brown left Engine 29 to her fate (she was crushed by the falling walls), and ran for hls life with his comrades. He had waited for them he had stood the - . great test. De-van-ny Ancient Temple Discovered. Dr. Sieglin, professor of ancient history at the University of Berlin, has discovered during his recent tour of smithern Spain what is probably die oldest temple of the ancient rivers Od-iand Rio Tinto, near Huelva. The temple was dedicated to the Goddess of the Lower World and is connected with two caves, which are filled with debris. I Marvels will neror ueassriA of the general cam&iiSfc at temperance and th aliuaw ofi v drinks, especially t&antha c has actually issued! aa psospt. glorification of tfc grreo. liquor, It Is called The General': Cat. the Defense of Atwmtvi.,'' and- l i ' Ject is to found in Farm a& wC -- ? the provinces and aiirrotL ceat the purpose ot cemtixUB.: ganda carried on jsKumt intwaevranc ab in general, and the mirittExptloa sinthe in particular. ' A perusal of the area pectus leaves one wondering wta, aadines- - are these, but the' cat is let out, of the bag in the final clause, wnicte refers t? the "rational defeaaa- off atbsrathe ai.i the Interests it Jhf whole thing thus 6ira& out to be i move on the part of maah&cUirer who are seriously ti armed by, tin growth of the temjertnua mimmeBt, -- I Feel So Tlrcji ad tlaslUf How often do we isac thuv expressions from tirL overworked and weary men, who 4 not' know whsre ts find relief. For that intwrso werioe, & common and so drscouragmg, w recommend Vogelers Cawtivw It is not a stimulant but a true blood and strength restoring tonic, safe sodium which will gradually build up all the'sevi organs in such a way a to. W $ k-u-: g benefit A fair trial f a froo sample jbou, which St Jacobs Oil, Ltd, ot altiu.ot Md, will send you foe tha aski, ;jf " vince anyone of its wondey value. It will drive all blood, give nerve, mental and vigour and make th new being. It creates an sleep and makes the we. forget that Vogelers C is made from the form physician, who has gi vet same. Sample bottle Oil, Ltd., Baltimore. Mks. Soak, The RopFv. Road, Frimley, writes ; I was a sciatica for many years. I tried au and embrocations which had no foes 6t Jacob Oil, and the pain left me a f the cd:itehted: never man Is the who sets splendid has a rereturns for hit . "bst p l ranehins lands of Manltoi and Saskatchewan. Exot and low rates of fare are. ous of inspecting the handsome forty ai ada cent free to pag' Pedley, Superintend Canada, or to W. eminent Agent, t f ' Omaha. Neb. HOWARD E. 111 East Four Specimen prices: i Surer A Lead, H: tug envelopes sen Ida tests, 10to2b . Gold........ Lead PROMPT BELIAs a Ml, l RCTCh- - OGDEN ASSAY-- v OUYEilCXHtt men7,eadpaosforrsc. l ki |