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items of Interst. n 4a s 1ort but exciti.n aeriel gil ;wo aeronaus and a pihOtogra er were dumped i:1 Long Island Soundl. to be re-u&d by a paisin. A wiitnels in the inque-S! over the, body of 3r.Kin n,h was mum'er ed -I te Bronx .1ay9 leae ta the ler 0'r o tie vietim mother bhed mive 1- for L an. BACKWA D. "I understand do water supply Is bad at Colon," said Meandering Mike. "We!l," answered Plodding Pete, "dey ought to be nshamed of de pendin' on a water supply. Dey should have had a brewery, built long ago." -Washington Star. Rome has a water supply of 200, 000,000 gallons a day: London, only 160,000,000, and Paris. 90,000,000. uilding a Girlm C(aaracter at School. ,retts have no uore iunportant and per texing question to eons-ider than the proper oral, mental and pbysieni traininL of their aughter. at seho' 1. Th. -ollege forces and flullnced tell on a ,tui.t:'., future life. Per s Yn school in the ,u-h off-rs as greitt antages to young woenu as ELZABr.TH LLEGE AND CON(leATarot ( F MC*iC. h'at at Charlotte, N. C. Ttis i. a uuique in titutioti. and appeals to thougrtful parents. Scotchmen are slowv. In the noble task of getting rid of his money, it never occurred to :r. Carnegie to lerd it to the Cz: . College I i CONSERVATORY of MUSIC for Wcmen CHARLOTTE, N. C. Experienced teachcts from leading European ard American Univer sities and Conservatores. College plant, ,2v 00; Park Campus 20 zcres. New. firc-proof . buildings. A. B.. and Elective Degree Courscs. Schools of Mesic, Art. Expression. Clim-ate. health and thoroughness unsurpa'scd. Ui-dcnominatioral. Cost. $285 to s-OO per year. Opensscpt.ist. Catalogue on appicatior . CHAS. B. KING, PREstosA'r So. 30-'03. PROMISE TO "OBEY" DIDN'T COUNT. If a bride wishes to make secret reservations to her promises at the marriage altar of course neither bride - groom nor clergyman can prevent her doing so. At a luncheon one day last e'eek frr a bride-ekect the talk ran on the word "obey." The girls de cided that part of the fornua was obsolete. One ycor:g wife was at L--e ~iuon, and ity a efthat she ~d promised to obcy and had pro neunced the word bravely. The girls teased her until at last she explained thus: "You see, in some churches you have to say 'obey,' and I was married in-orne of them. But when I enme to those words I just crcssed my lingers and so the promise didn't erunt at all. I tell girls to do the same when *ey go to the al:or. It wi!! avoid any argument with the clergyman or the other fellow."'-NCW York MO0TH IN CARFETs. If the moths have rot intO a caret t must be taken un, thorutghi.y shalk en, and pressed with a flatiron, as toaa ~ oear w.:a~t scoregng Then liberally sprinklo the floor where it is to lie with spirits of tur pentine, pourinrg it into any cracks there rayr be between..the boards. Seericiary Root left San Juan, J. R., for Rio de Janerio. So. 30- '06. BACK TO9' PCI"IT What Food lDid For a Clergyman. A minister of Elizabethtown teis Ilow Grape-Nuts food hrought him back to his pulpit: "Some 5 years ago I had an attack of what seemed to be L~a Grippe, which left me in a complete state of collapse and I suf fered for some tince with nervous prostration. My appetite failed. I lot flesh until I was a mere skeleton. life was a burden to me, I los:t inter est in everything and almost ins everybody save my precious wife. "Then on the recommtendationl of some friends I began the use of Gpe-Nuts food. At ti time I was 'a miserable skeleton, without appe tite and hardly ablie to walk acros the room: had ugly dreams at nighi, o dispositiOn to entertain or be en tertained and began :o shun society. "I finally gave up the regular min try, indeed I could not collect my oughts on any su-jeet, and became most a hermit. After I had beens ing the Grape-Nuts food for a short eI discovered that I was taking new life and my appetite began to rove; I began to sleep better and weight inzreased steadily; I had t some 50 pounds, but under the w food regime I have regained al st my former weight and have atly .mproved in ex cry way. feel that I owe much to Grape and can truly recommend the od to all 'who reQuire a powerful rebuilding agent delicious to taste and always welcome." Namle given by Postum Co.. Battle Creelk. Mich. A true natural road to regain health. or riold it, is by use of a dish of Grape-Nuts and cream, morning and night. Or have the food mnade into some of the many delicious dishes given in the little recipe book found in pkgs. Ten days trial of Grape-Nuts helps many. "There's a reason." Look in 'pkgs. for a copy of the famous little book, ''The Roa1 to Wellville." THE PULPIT. AN ELOQUE.iT SUNDAY SERMON BY REV. GEORGE '-HOMAS DOWLING. Subject: -The Secret cf Peace." BROCKLYN. N. Y.-Dr. Thomas Edward Dowling, minister in charge of St. James's P. E. Church. St. James place and Lafayette avenue, preached Sunday morning on the subject. "The Secret of Peace." a scudy of the Shep herd Psalm. Dr. Dowling said: Thirty centuries ago there lved in Palestine a king, who in his boyhood had been a shepherd lad. And in his old age, when he had seen life, with its sorrows and its joys, this king. David, sang a song, which it takes less than two minutes deliberately to re peat. Three thousand years have gone since then; and to-day everything he owned has turned to dust except his songs. The throne on which he sat -dust: the palace where he dwelt dust; the harp which his fingers were accustomed to sweep, the banner with which he led the hosts of Israel. his chariots, and his charioteers-all dust! But to-day that song goes sing ing its way to the universal heart, in the cottage of the poor and the mansion of the rich, in the home of the learned and of the unlearned, be cause it sings of what all the world is hungering for-peace. When Edward Irving swept through the .ates it was with this song upon his lips. Luther called it the "Little Bible." Pnd so it is, for it contains in miniature the whole book. Henry Ward Beecher, who once made Brook lyn famous, that greatest preacher the world has ever known since Paul stood on Mars Hill, called it "the nightingale's song," because it sings to us in the darkness. Listen while I repeat it to you, that it may once again sing its way into your heart. (Dr. Dowling here repeated deliber ately the Twenty-third Psalm.) Now I yield Him not simply arlmira tion. but adoration. It is the difference between -He leadeth," and "He lead eth me." If you would know what God may be to you, learn to appro priate. Him. Learn to think of Him simply not as a God, but your God; not simply as a friend. but your friend; not simply as a shepherd, but your shepherd. Xow, when you receive a gift there are three things which you do with it. Yo-i accept it, you examine it, and you use it. And the gift which this royal shepherd poet of three thou sand years ago makes to us in this Shepherd Psalm may prove more pre cious to you than any which you have ever received, if you deal with it in just that way; the way of appropria tion, of appreciation and of applica tion. 'As you notice how very easy it is to appropriate it. because it abounds with those personal and possessive pronouns, in which. Martin Luther said, the preciousness of the Bible consists: "The Lord is my shepherd." "He leadeth me." "Yea, though I walk through the valley." What a great difference there Is be tween the mere apprehension of a fact and the approp::iation of that fact, be tween knowing it and claiming it. When you see a child in a runaway, you are moved: but suppose it is your child. There is the same difference that there is between the stately man sion of a stranger and the little cot tage in which your mother rooked you in her arms and crooned to you the songs of your babyhod. So. my friends, you never can judge of a re Tigi-on until it has been transmuted into a personai exnerience, until it has become your religion. A histori cal Christ is, at the most. only a Chri;.. I can look upon Him with admiration. Ah! but when He has become mine, and I have heard His voice, and felt His touch, He is no longer simply a Christ but the Christ. And then, when you have appropri ated this psalm, seek- to appreciate it. Notice, to begin with, the perfect spir it of trust which breathes through it all. See how much it has to say about Him and how little about ourselves. Mark how every verse tells us what He is doing. My dear people, that is the whole secret. The secret of peace is the putting of God between our troubles and ourselves. I know the dark hours which have come into some of your lives; I know your pe:-plexities: 'or though you are strangers to me as yet, the experience of human hearts is jiust the same the whole world over, and the joys and the sorrows of the men and women whom I learn e. so well to know and to love on the Pacific shores are just the joys and the sorrows which you are having to day. I know of the hour when some young mother in this congregation sat sobbing by the side of her little one. whispering blindly, "I do not know why she should be taken from me: I cannot understand it." Well, my dear chiid, do not try to understandi it. for- you never can here. Some day I shall preach to you on "Things to be Waited For." and one of the things to be waited for is the under standing of these mysteries of life. And yet we may know that while we are waiting we -z.- be waiting in companionship with Him who un derstands it all. And there is no oth er help for us in our dark hours. ex cept in ylacing Him between our troubles and ourselves. Wilbur Chapman tells us of a litile drummer boy in our civil war who was taken into the hospital mortally wcundei. and so they sent for his mother from a distant city. 23ut when. she came they said to her. "You can not go in: he's too sick; L~e couldn'? stand the shoclR." And so she stoo:3 by the door waiting and wesping and listening. And when she heard him sigh, she said to them, "'Let me go in: I won't speak to him. I'll just sit by his ,bedside."' And so they per nitted -her to pass quietly into the~ darkenedi room andl sit beside hi:n But as she sat there the mother hye was too strong, and, reaching rut her hand, she laid it aently upon his ach ing forehead. He did not Open ii -ves. Nit he knew that touch. S.a' saw his lipS move, anid. stoopin-: daw:' to him. she heard him say: "I krew you'd enme to nme, I k-new you'd come to me." And If you arc only willing to welcome Him who loves you more than you ever- loved your little one, you may know that He will come to you, and "as one whom his mother comforteth." so will He comfort you. And notice the blessings which he brings when He comes. As David ex presses it in this psalm. "they that be long to Hinm shall fn.'d that their cup 'overflowetb' "; not onlv abunltdanc'e. but redundiance. It has someitimes seemed os thouzh ther' were a mx tu-e of figures here. and that as the psaimist nzo:rd the en- of his son; the scene chanoed from' the open fields of the fie".- to the guarded But this is not so. One of the m--t importan duties of the shenherd - to find a feeding place for :.is sheen. where they shall not be injured by Poisonous herbs. and where he may defend them against the jackals andl the wolves that prowl around. Our Shepherd will protect us and provide for our wants. not only in the so ei6Ion of the fold. but while we -70 still. if need be. out in the world. An-' so David. sings. "Thou p'eparest 'I iaile befcre me in the pr'esence of mn enemies." Then follows 'zh closina scene of the day. The sun is settinz. and the fiock is being brought home. But some of them have been wounded. and some of .them are weary. And so the shienherd stands at the door of 'the sheepfold. rodding the sheep. aq it is termed: holding them back with his rod. permitting them to enter one by one. Here one has been bruis-fd or torn by the briars, and from the horn filled with olive oil he hathoe the wounded head. And one is tired and worn. and. dipping into the ves sel the lart-e two-lhndle1 -up. he eives him a drink. Thus the shenherd cares for his sheep clear on till the very hour of the homecoming. Noth ing is forgotten. And so the psalm ist sings. still with the picture of the shepherd in his mind, "Thou anointest my head with oft; my cup runneth over." But I am anticipating. "The Lord is my Shepherd: I shall not want." What? Rest. "He mak eth me to lie down in green pastures." But the green pastures have to come first. There is the contemplative life, and the active life. And. my breth ren. we need the first: that is the meaning of these services: that is the meaning of Sunday; that is. the mean ing of Lent. It is a mistake for us to suppose that we can get on in the right life without these green pa ture experiences. Somebody says. "I .iudge of a man by what he does." Yes; but what a man does grows out of what that man Is. And here in these contemplative hours we find Christian manhood and womanhood In the making. And then. there is the leadership: "I shall not want" -guidance: "He leadeth me." That is the other side af the Christian experience: the active side. The purpose of these green pastures is to send us forth to use the strength which here we get. And in this leadership of His there are two facts which I would have you remember. He goes before us: "He leadeth." He will select no path which his sheep cannot travel. But remember also that the sheep. must follow after: we must select no path which He cannot travel. "He leadeth me in the paths of righteousfress." not always by the side of still waters, not always in green pastures- sometimes the sheep track may lie across the wilderness; but if we are following him we may know that they are always "paths of right eousness"-right paths, and that they lead toward home. And finally, "I shall not want" corn panionship. "Yea, ibough I walk through the valley of the shadow of death. I will fear no evil; for thou art with me." He who is following the Master shall find death itself on ly a shadow; and who shall be afraid of a shadow? And though the v'al ley may be there and the darkness, He shall lead us out, as He leads us in. Death is not a blind pocket; it is not a place of tarrying. only of transition. I shall walk "thr'ough the valley: of the shadow of denath." And now, having appropriated this psalm, having sought to appreciate it, let us try to apply it. I mean to-day. here and now, and to-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-nmor'row. every day, For you observe that until we reach the very last verse it is all in the present tense. He is not speaking of any distant elysium, far' away in the futur . "The Lord is my shep herd: he maketh me to lie down in green pastures; He leadeth me beside the still waters." All the blessings which I have described may be yours now. Will you take them for yours. and apply them to the problems of your life to-day? Oh, learn to pr'ac tics the presence of God. Try to think of Him as really at your side. Spstak to Him when you are in trouble or perplexity. Suppose you make a test of this Shepherd psalm only for to-day. Suppose you say: "From n~ow until the hour when I fall asleep a: right I will seek to live wvith this thought supreme: that God is mine. and that He loves me. and is leading me." See what it will mean to you in ucace and comfort and joy. And then reelize that if you can do it for cue day, you can 5o it fcr every (day, and the probiemi of ycur life's mean ng is solved. An;S when the lazt val ley shall have bea pass:d. and pass t d thrcu:, an'l yo:: are dr'awing n~ar ~o that fo~d. which JIames Lane Alien (escribes as "the final land where the mystery, the pain, and the yearn ing of this life will either be infinite' ly catified o:' infinitely quieted," though you shail have chan'ged you:' nace ycu will not change your coma pany:' He who wvas with you here wilt x'' wit'yu the:-e. and this song shall st;11 ga singing its way on and up) into the eternli light: "'Goodness and m'r' shall follow me a!! the dlays of v lfe and I dwzll i4 the oCuse o; te L ord icrever'." All L'erLvatsive. Treis not rocmr enough In all c~::'dhigs for tihe scul of man wv.1 like a ship in a nar:-ow river, hatih no:. room to turn. und besides is ev:and anon: ct:'iig g:'ound! and fouce~Crir.g in the shnilows,.TJesus chri is :: every way adeo:mte o th va desirrs 'f - soul: in Him it br i sea '<"m r:eh there it ma:: Mites and Hawks, Two Chicken Enemies. In. his lectures before the students of the Agriculture Department of the University of Missouri T. E. Orr, sec retary of the American Poultry As sociation, told methods of combattinig mites and chicken hawks that might easily be used by every Missouri housewife. Mites, he says, might be gotten rid of by spraying the chicken house with a mixture of one part crude car bolic acid and eight, parts carbon oil. This mixtut he recommends in preference to mite exterminators sold by traveling agents. Hawks, he claims, may be kept out of the poultry yard by attaching bright pieces of tin, six by ten inches. to the trees and poles surrounding quarters, by strings two feet long so that the wind will make the bright metal dance in the sunlight. Beturn of Foulards. Foulards, volles and other loosely .ava fabrics will be again in favor. TUE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR JULY 29. Subject: Jesus Dines With a Pharisee, Luke xiv., 1-14-Golden Text, Luke xiv. 11-Menory Veis -13.14-TopIc: The Believer's Socia jutes-Coinmeutar3 I. The true idea of Sabbath observ ance (vs. 1-6). 1. "Chief Pharisees." Ii has been suggested that this iman may have been a member or the Sanhedrir with a country home in Perea. "Tc eat bread." Our Lord had no home and, when He was invited to dine, it was as proper for Him to go on the Sabbath u on any other day. 'They were watching Him." R. V. were maliciously watching Him. 2. "A certain man." This man may have been brought there by the Phar isee in order to test Christ. "Befor( Him." Before the company had takeE seats at the table. "Dropsy." A dis. ease in which the body or some part of it is filled with water. 3. "Jesus answering spake." Jesus knew they were deceptive. and He was ready to meet them. "The lawyers.' The teachers of the law who were present. "Is it lawful,*' etc. They are In a dilemma; as lawyers they ought tc know, but if they answered in the affirmative they would endorse Christ and His work, while to answer in the negative would be to show their lack of love and lay themselves liable to a charge similar to that given in chap ter 13:15. It was seriously argued that to walk upon the grass with nailed shoes was a violation of the Sabbath. 4. "Held their peace." Unable to con demn, unwilling to concede. But such silence was our Lord's complete public justification. If the contemplated mira cle was unlawful' why did not these great religious authorities forbid It1 "Took him." Took hold of him (Luke 20:20; 1 Tim. 6:12). "Healed him." Showing the opinion cf Jesus as te healing on the Sabbath day. "Let him go." Dismissed him and turned back to the Pharisees, whose sancti. monious hatred was worse than this poor man's disease. 5. "Fallen into a pit." Jesus silences them completely by calling attention to the fact that they on the Sabbath day would have mercy on a beast in distress. Read Matt. 12:10-13; Luke 13:14-17. 6. "Could not answer Him." Silent, but not convinced. The question was unanswerable. If they would de liver an ox or an ass from a pit on the Sabbath, by what reason or com mon sense could they say it was wick. ed to save a man from his affliction? II. A parable of humility (vs. 7-11). 7. "A parable." The selfish struggle for precedence as they w&e taking their places at the tab:e gave Jesus an opportunity to teach a lesson in humil. ir. "When He narked." Nothing es. capes the eye of the Lord. "How they chose out." To take the highest place when it is not our due is public vanity; to obstinately refuse it when offered, is another instance of the same vice, though private and, concealed. "The chief rooms." The chief seats. R. V. The guests reclined-on couches around the table which formed three sides of a hollow square. On .each side there were three places. The middle place was the most honorable. 8. "Bidden-to a wedding." He speaks of a "marriage feast" (R. V.) because the rules of procedure would be more carefully ins~sted upon. "Sit not down." The pride that apes hu mility violates the spirit of this teach ing. 9. "He that bade." The host who has authority to decide the mat ter. "With shame." Sooner or later pride will have a fall. 10. "In the lowest room." The high lace was occupied very briefly; the lowest place was permanent. "Go up igher." The way to rise is to begin ow. What Christ 'omumandedl He Him slf did. "Then shalt thou have wor hip." "Have glory." R. V. Have everence, respect and honor in the resence of the company. 11. "Who oever exalteth." etc. Now followVs the reat principle illustrated by this para le. Humility is the passport to pro oton in the kingdom of God. The one who is proud and seeks to be hon red above others, shall be abased, or umbled, both by God and man. IHL A lesson on cur duty to the poor (g. 12-14). 12. "Call not thy frjinds." The second parable is to the host. It s a sharp rebuke on account of a fault ,hich is almost always committed in he choice of guests. "Nor thy rich eighbors.'' "He that givethm to the ich shall surely come to want'' (Prov. 13. "Call the poor." Fea.sts to the oor are not forbidden. He that giveth o the poor lendeth to the word. What he Saviour here commends to others e has Himself fulnlled in the most 14. "Shalt be blessed." The pcor hio hafe bieen fed will bless thee. and o will the Lor'd. "Resurrection of the ust." There is to be a future state, we re all hastening on toward the resur etion. At that -time God will re ard those who have done good. for is sake, without the hope of any ~arhly recompense. NEWSY GLEANIlNGS. Several batt lions of Kuban Cos acks have been disbanded. Cities in New Mexico and El Paso, ex., wzre shaken by earthquake. An incipient mutiny occurred in he fortress of Saints Peter and Paul, n St. Petersburg. Complaints of favoritism and in ompetency are being made against istributors of San Francisco relief funds. Three aldermen of New Rochelle, . Y., surrendered and were held in ail to answer charges of attempted ribery. Conditions in Russia are apparent y growing worse:, members of Par iament are campaigning among the easants. The National Convention of Bill P sters in session at Chicago barred rom the billboards pictures of Satan n whatever form. Advices from Rio Janeiro said that he rebellion in Matto Grosso was ractically over and that no further rouble was expected. The coroner's jury at Salisbury rought in a verdict that the wreck f the Piymouth express, on July 1, as due to high seepd. B. F. Yoakum outlines the future f the St. Louis. Brownsville and Mexico Raliway as the longest low grade line in the country. The Navy Department recom ends an international agreement equiring wireless telegraph systemns o exchange messages at sea. Presi 'ent Roosevelt offered '.he arblehead as a neutral ground for eace negotiations between Guate ala, Salvador and Honduras. Counsel for both sides in the artje divorce case were severel:' re uked by the trial judge for inject ing too much sensationalism into EPODID L[ACOE LESSONS SUNDAY, JULY 29. How The Church Can Help the World.-Col. 4. 5-16. The alienated condition of large portions of the population, even in our own and, is evidence that there is great need of some mighty evangel to call people to the consideration of things which concern their eternal welfare. Only a fraction of the youth of our country is found in the Sunday school vnd the young people's qocieties. The calendars of the crim inal courts are lull. The prolific sources of a great portion of the crime and misery, the liquor sa loons, are kept open by government al provision, and are as much pro tected by governmental police power as churches are from molestation. Surely the world needs help. There is graft everywhere, it would almost seem. Another picture lies before us as we write. The door of Christen dom stands ajar, and a comely figure, representing Christianity. is looking out. A "heathen Chinee" is a little way off, shouting to her: "Ho, there! Your doorstep needs cleaning!" These are some of the objects lying on and about the doorstep; the liquor traffic, loot, war, opium, trade, scandalous plays, erotic novels and commercial greed. Is it not a part of the business of the young host of Methodism to clean the doorstep of the house of Christianity? Our daily Scriptures show us the method by showing us, as Christians, what we are and what our relation ship to the world is. Christians are salt; they are light-two essential things. Salt stands for all things preservative. Society would go down into the reek of Sodom if it were not for the element of Christian mor als in it.' And but for these our country would go the way of the dead empires. whose wreckage strews the shores of time. Must our nation join the company of the dead? We hope not; we do not believe it will. Our faith is founded on the fact that the leaven of Chris tianity is in it, and this constitutes a force which can more than neutralize the power of evil tendency, and will at last make every house a house of prayer CHISTN ENBIOH NOITES JULY TWENTY-NINTH. Gardiner, and Missions to Latin America.-2 Cor. 11:23-30. Christ came, as He said, to bring us "the abundant life." The result, when one receives it, is "labors more abundant." The true Christian reioices in his stripes for they bring him into clos er fellowship with Him with whose stripes we are healed. Who could not live nobly if he could live independently and isolated? But the heroic life is the one that is faithful to large responsibilities for others. Do you bear lightly the sorrows and trials of fellow Christians? Then lock to your own Christianity. DIVIDED LIVES. Alternate Topic for July 29: Divided Lives.-Matt. 6:24; 2 Kings 17: 33-41. As it is impossible to be at the same time a citizen of the United Sta'.es and of another ccuntry, so one carnnot belong at the same time to the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of the world. There is only one way to enjoy re ligion, and that is to surrender to it. If you want to knowv whether your life is divided, classify your long ings. You warut God to be wholly for you; must you rot be wholly for God? If the farthest hidden corner of your heart is Satan's, he has a right of way to it. A flesh-and-blood heart, divided, means death; so with the spiritual heart. Wori'dly succcss in any sphere ab solutely requires a whole-hearted de votion to the object sought. So with heavenly success. RAM'S IIORN BLASTS fr~""F\ HE devil w"'l loe. .the preacher alone if only he may conduct the choir. Some o p~le seem to think - that the only way to make sure of - t o Abraham's bosom is to keep her a poor beggar here. A man does not make hay by let ing the grass grow under his feet. It's better to have your feet on ire roicks than you head in the TheC uconitrollable tongue does not have to work long to tell all it knowvs. -LDreaming of great deeds we miss the doing of thousands of little good deeds. There arc too many preachers try ing to make bread of life without the leaven of love. A good deal of summer religion is so thin you cain see right through It takes more than polish to enable one to slip through the pearly gates. His death was the last segment in the perfect eircle of His life. The call to watch and pray means more titan watching your neighbors. The altitude of a prayer does not depend on its high-sounding phrases. The world wouuld get a good-sized lift if we were as scrupulous about the things that come out of our mouths as we are about those that go Many a pull is like a ruber string, most effective when it hits back. HeI cannot be meek before Haven who turns a marble heart to man. When we get to Heaven we shall think most of the mercies we never mntined here. RECIPES. Dark Clocolate Cake.-Cream one half cup of butter, add one and one half cups of brown sugar and beat, then add three eggs beaten light, one half cup of milk and two cups of flour sifted with four level teaspoons of baking powder. Melt three squares of chocolate with one-half cup of brown sugar before beginr.iiig to mix the cake, keep it hot and at the last turn it into the batter. Bake in a shallow pan and cut in squares for serving. Cover with a white icing. Indian Meal Pudding.-Heat a quart of milk to scalding and pour it upon three cups of Indian meal: stir in three tablespoonfuls of powdered suet and a teaspoonful of salt; beat hard and set aside to cool. When cold, whip in three beaten eggs, four table spoonfuls of molasses and a tea spoonful of ground cinnamon. Pour into a well-buttered mould and steam for five hours. Turn out and serve with a hard sauce. -Cheese Crisps.--Butter very slightly salted wafers, then spread with a mixture of grated cheese, mestard and a dash of tobasco sauce. Toast in oven and serve hot with salad. Spinach Salad.-Cold spinach left in the vegetable dish after dinner is good served again in the form of a salad. Season it will with salt and pepper, dress with mayonnaise, and de-crate with a few small lettuce leaves and one or two hard boiled eggs sliced crosswise. A tiny young onion, sliced, may be sprinkled over the salad or alternated with the slices of egg as a garnish. Yankee Apple Slump.-One quart of flour sifted with three teaspoon fuls of baking powder; shorten with one teaspoonful of butter rubbed into the flour; mix with oeld milk or wa ter, the same as biscuit; put two quarts of pared and sliced apples with one pint of water into the dish in which the slump is to be cooked roll the crust about an inch thick, cut into quarters, and with it cover the apples in the dish, then cover the whole with a close-fitting cover anu boil or steam until done; take out on a platter and grate nut-meg over the apple. Serve with sweet sauce or su gar and cream. Padded the Returns. France does not take its censuses as seriously as this country though some Parisian wits are now paying fines for the gayety of their answers to the enumerators' queries. Some towns and villages set about swelling their population. 'Iarseilles and Lyons were jealous about the second place among French cities. Whether they padded the returns or not does not appear. but Cassoulet-sur-Lot, a lit tle town in the South, was anxious to bring its population up to 20,000, so that its magistrates could have their salaries increased by $125. As only a few score of people were wanted, the affaii was comparatively easy. Cassoulet jail was made the work house of a whole district, but entry was obligatory, not permissive, for all the tramps in the neighborhood. This drafting of citizens was successful. Music will be substituted In the Kansas State insane asylums for handcuffs and straight-jackets. A recommendation to this effect was made to Gov. Hoch by the board of lady visitors. FITSSt.Vitus'Dance: evniesepr manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer S'2 trial bottle' and treatice fre?. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,.931.a-en St.. Phila., Pa. A steel chimney 260 feet high was re cently completed in South WVales. Mrs. Winslows Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softenstrhegums, reducesinfiammna tion, allays pain.cures wind colic.25cia bot tle France has 7000 miles of State owned and toll free canals. Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Ccrdial Will convince the most skeptical when it comes to curing Diarrhoea, D~ysentery. Chiil dren Teething, etc. 25e and 50e per bottle. Peter Plump. the pessimist, pester ed portly Pat Perkins. UNABLE TO WALK. Terrible Sore onl Ankle Caused A wful Suf fering-Could Not sleap -Cured b~y Cuticura ini six Weeks, "I had a terrible sore on my r~nkle. and had not walked any for elevenl months. I tried nearly everything without any bente st and had a doctor, hut he dlidn't sem to do any good. He said I would have to have my limb taken off. andl that I ould never walk again. I sufiered aw ful, and at night I couldl not sleep at all. 1 hcught there was no rest for me, but s soon as I began to use Cuticura Soalp and Cintment it commenced healing 1.icely. I br thed the ankle with warm water and Cu.eura Soap, and thlen applied C'uticura Cintment to the aficted part, and l:id a cloth ovr the sore to hold it in place. After two weeks I coul~d walk arouind in my romn realhgood. and in :.:x v~eeks' time my ankle was entirely cured.. aud i was wvalking around cut of doors. Mrs. Mary D~ickersn, Louisa C. II., Va., Apil~ 22, England possesses twenty-eight cows for every hundred of the popu ltion. Australia has 280. TERRIBLE TO RECALL. Five Weeks in Bed With Intensely Painful Kidney Trouble. Mrs. Mary Wagner, of 1367 Kos Sth Ave., Bridgeport, Conn., says: "I was so weak ened and gener ally run down wIth kindey dis ease that for a long time I could not do my work and was five weeks in bed. :A 4"There was con - , - tinual bearing down pain, ter-ri -. ble backaches. - headaches and at tmes dizzy spells when everything was a blur before me. The passages of the kidney secretions were irregu lar and painful, and there was con serable sediment and odor. I don't know what I would have done but fo Doan's Kidney Pills. I could see an improvement from the first box, and five boxes brought a final cure." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a A PRETMJ MILKM Thinks Pe-ru-na is a MediCirk -. MSOS ANNIE HENDREN. Al ,sz A ANN iE H DREN . R)L, ock'Y=, I feel better than I have for over four vears. I have taken sp-ed bot.tles -of crtn.a and one bot:e .4 M,-naoin. I can now do all v- u.; t-tm in th house. milk the cows. talk care of the nik. and so forth. I -insi'k Per-as is a mo-( wconderJu.' mervcine. I believe I wou:4 be In bed to-day it I had not written to you for advice. I had takens all kinds of Udwune, but none did ne any good. -*Peruna has made te da arell adzZ h a iDtPoy arL. I can never -say too mnehb for Peruna." Not only women of rank and Teisare praise Peruna. but the who!emne. usef women engaged in honest toil would not be without 11r. Hartman-s world rnowned remedv. The Doctor haa prescrilwd it for manav thousand women every year and he.nedr fails to receive a mutitude of leftes ihe the above. tbanking him for- 'ai" advice, and especially for the wonderful benfits received from Peruna. =A 5 00 .R. Far .Paid, Votesiskan $5,000 wK WIms 00 FREE COURSES Boardat Cost. Write OQ=k: GORGIAALABAMA USINESSCCLESE, Eacoea Pro dudts All are seleced- meats, 1red - your table in a kitcen as d as ya own.. Ready to serve any time-4it to sen AUaeeconomical-and all are good. Whether your traste be for Boneless C'nicken, Veal Loaaf, Os Tongue, Pond Ham, Duied Beef. there is n.o way you can gratify it ao well as by asking for ' y'a. Try~ibby'sdeliciouscookecdOsToee - for sand'wiches' or sliced cold. B3oolet free. "H4ow to Mako Good ThnpteoErir~' Isaby, McNei! & Libby, Chicalge. You CANNOT all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous mnembrane s-uch as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh causd by feminine ills, scre throat, sore mot rinflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stutbborz. affetions by local treatm2ent with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the diseasegermns,checks discharges, stops pain,: and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most strccessfol local treatment for femnine sits ever produced. Thodisandsefwomen testify to this fact. So cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Bor THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Maas. KIJTH LI LiCE P0WDEjt Sure Death to Lice an Tri Tey can't live where it is. Easy to apply. DenM s~i "illed every louse in mty flock of 250 hens."-D.Per:-y. Monroe.Wis. Prce 25ad 5c aPkg. Erimait,40 adl7 PrnUCUIAN REMEaDY 00-a STe PagrL. MEMa. MeicaI Departmnent TULANE UNIVERSITY CF LOUIsZANA its avantages for practier:1lt' intu 7.rsta in atoe Ial oratories and atmndact hios3dtal rnu5t. are neqlC(IAiE. Free acce.ss lave to the~ cisrt Charity Hosipital n' ith t1" i 1-eds aru~t 30,000) pa1e___ annuly. -'pecial Iistructon is given daily ath beddeoi tlhei.'ck. The next eessia hegins cte,~t& 3. it'*. For cataIoere andi informai on, zridres=a P OF. S. E. C'HAIL2. 1.). Den.. . 0. Drawer, 261, NEW OR 1.M'e, 1ia. ERNWheat, 60 5uasleeew WNE A. C., La Crosse, WIS Be* Thwmpson's Eye Wlater So. 30-'03. Eew He Snw It. Wife-This book says that in Indfa it is the custom to bury the livits wife with her dead husband. Isn- it. terrible ? Husband-Indeed it is! The pooras band-even deat'a brings hima no re lease.-Translated from Tales from Streoza. CA P U DINE3 INI'!CESTION and,". r. ,'rW" wsek tokn~w itsrood. Iter.s - a U ZArsACIKES ALSO k removing the cause. 10 cents.