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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1908-09-03, Page 2ake epoils.1i. i , d t th ght § no in a is en bete are at least three kinds o atheism -that which denies the ex-. istenee of ahy..infinite enitit; that which, while .affirming, with much iaraphasis and elabora- tioneof-detail- -the existence- (4 -s -eel -l- es spirit, yet liyie-a,s ere were none and that Which, whether af- fulseing tor denying thcfac, ulug. of the divine into a eltectUal conclusions as of ...such:, a -Odd. .as tay)ave be:OW:811e -•: little import. s is that, -'as ,,,to the :�f- the Dejty- us particularly by the Past,- wemust ;,1' Off •li*Ing thii7kkerS, ‘1.• , "th.e-Pte, the im- we, will atiOns; ce'ecince gTeri'Sns",.'Whie• tifin as -Olsen- • *VW e '43' 'eons: ne, of hie s Wua to:cfl4tesagc of 8$b3g to the' men' of tii8 city ,for heir hrave deed: (2- Sam: 2, 6)-• 12. 'Valiant -n-Another terns mDtV for "Men ef arms:" Went all night -The' distence_b2 tbe read it was neceesary_toetrevel, -6ifek Oen tes,' IT-fOst" of it throngh, territOrY now ,Acnorningsas sang togetherwjuo he,-;h0.4VenlYseelnni,&444-:-'s-OS.141#W4ho ,deSPOide.'life,-..ef-.:the„..1di*ine',;of - uts ideals, its hope, ts sujhme sac .rifices;,' -who- casts.:.the cynjes' sneer over dreants,'". aver faye'S devotion. . yo rt eanagree.with your-neign,,, box in, yeair Of -thedi- n,o It would be.61.a4 :unfOrtunate njf'' your ida Of that infinite he soo lanaliZed aid oztti4tary.ae to permit.of sat- isfot�ry ' The :think thetsniatteeiS Whether' to''..that roagiey.oler4e.ort:.hof thedivine and the. .oternally.".god-and •. .....••• Ek, P. TO PRAY „ ;, e.eleliyered not from intellectual heism that wall hurt UQ o,/*4:44' pritetiCal:••ritheisni, the'lifel 4 heart that 'albite'. ties itself of the high and holy by it. avarice, • -itS • paseinit , for 'the' hings,';'.thatare low and debasung - tO. 'eScatie.the'dist••• bolic . delusion of the life!..that,ae-2 kiiiiW1edgeiCtbeTfiet'Of.-r4-,:'Ood -4nd. ..yit'd'eniee-.1iiijikeneasin the living: You : andAteighlior might goar.tel,..forevereaSete:your eerieepe. tiOns:1„:4:::Qcio;.,.1*1;-0,:oati..orte seek tO•of,itho' 4ivito .s ourielves Wallcieein the Sarin ,weYe,---13.entiele-en-theafiMe. errande.,- iands":Ynar"•- feetlelialLeati•--Y04.t9,.• 'gether'td•r_heaven's deibe,a0.you..Seele, the' ways : of. the needy and the „sad. and suffering. • - .-ssabis',World,..needs:-.06d,-,-, It- never •Wilthee's‘-Sa.tiisfied- with "pictu.es 5f that great;spiritof ..love • and- JtTwill --Go-c,t, 'only as -that "love and life. We Nell-. • spend'," less .., time preaching about Godifonly we wouldpractice. that ,for which our ideals of 904staucl.- If, ;that Weird' rneanSte:- you, ,a'sere and: more it muStSineen to men, ins. finite goodness tenderness, tenderness; :rieSe; ,aectibie.-then -the SneaSurenf yerirfaith;in mech. a heirig and such :qualities is..your. iewn 'projection, ef them.:'4.intO- the world. '• It is, time maY sUJLflave !:SC,0171-- .9 t� whjcha1l patter �f 49- 14.0teTpf:grenes es:Olivine:is always scfn titi&*helse of that iipton... You have :�. caIl:YenieSelf_an 'atheist. "Terji*.e)ieW,'.0,,re .rejected,„ ijeiSt NO40:-, :Seeks tanst-•••and Ileinray be " raina.pers. atheist.' o--ttia_ ea thus life 'of robs . this ,e4sefrone: elseeselg the, ,.note that ts. 'TERNATIONAL LESSO '' • SEPT..6. ;7/Lesson ,1.0 .and JonaLhan --Shan,-III:Baittiee Golden ' 2 -Verse Now---the--Philistines -fotiglit against Israel --,-..This' was n� beedereSkirmishirinetlieeopenselash .Ofetbe-MASSed. Strength 'of tWO: na- tions; -The mastery of Palestine essias.-atestake , • Mount Gilboas-A mountain peak, and. alee ,the range . Of adjoining hills. It --formed the eastern bentii- deey. of the large -plain of. Esdras. etores and though mentioned in the OM Testament only in connection 'with this particelateliatttee- it: figs' ented in. much of military his- toryof Pale:Stine.' AlOng. its -ridge etheePhilistines fought anctspersued .- 2. Sone of Sau.1-22-One son Ish- boshettijor ESh7baal) was either not on the field, Or escaped .noticee for he lived to ,elaim Sals tlircine for a tinte. Three sons are paid' to shave paidthe priees-of that pow irience in the -line-of -battle. 3: The: battle went sore, against Sant -The Lathi vereion translates etbis,._"The..ydiole weighteoLtlie_tate tle' was directed against Sant."' - The archers -The Israelites do: ,t...tet-seetoilaiie-heen...pre,erninent, ;if the use of the boW... The j'h4ia-, tine archers advancing rapidly in - ,their war chariots and singling out -,the leaders for their aim: caused a pan'e"of . ' He was greatly distressed -- great-Straitsliethea4laisterms , means a condition of in -ward egita- ' stion or of personal danger is ;hard -Thereis some weight in laver ••of the Septuagint which -readil, "146 Wass 'sate- -wriundeii,"1-. AeCording te, the story of 2 Sank I. 6 he "was. lea -hi -eta upon' his. spear. 4. Ariner-bearer A -ire -office. of ,-or,- h•nr,1 protection to -the- king" s •persoti. 1511circurricised -AS citennieieien shad liss611-17 riatinst10---ard r0•11 -p0711* significance, this teem' :would hold. all .themeanieg ,sef oqr words and "3.,Lifid61. '1 1 . Abtig epOrt of me, Saul was' thipkhig, tot orthe intiti- letion of his' body i-kfter death.hutofrthe indigriities sure: to be heaped upo's hite es a prisoter: E,eatill. the ease of Samson. , ttc,i'ses „scre .afissid-A ridegling .of leiya:ty to les go til nd ecver- bees !..er the ' persrin of '',Cod's xat..i:zfod.s! that -We -eeasedste squarrel .over-de finitione".arid‘deiCriPti"otis of the di- vine and bean doStlie de -ed di- vine. ' ' HENRY F. COPE. held bY the .Philietines.- From stlies_well,1_,213,issfact-of-tak-- -ing„.40Wn...the -lhOdios-44d-pscapilig. nttObServed' could he -accomplished if was 'probably the' case - they. Were hung frem the 'gate of an out- er wall which enclosed the market- TJaett:iilst-olitgde the city it, . Burnt' them there -By a slight chenge, these words . would read, `-`made ',lamentation e for. 'them" 'those". This:le-thought necessary byserue.hecalise of the Ilebeisies• abhparence of , cremation,' :and especiallY. since .,theylater took their bones arid buried them; and stuI1 later Driaiicl:keinterred then -ire Satire:own-teririterY of Benjamin (2,4 Saria.- 21; -; PROPHET RETEALS TER/40ES. ,DisasterSon;Disaster Will :Felleir in _ „ ereissno.fallh9°n9;.--0:'ff anthe pure- ber ofdisaaters.;predicted. by, ("Old ..hie-e--glingnae. for MO% ,sayse,46Loildon • .,..itisIderiS"ettrikinge.cleWii of ,Statesniatti 'a Very .destructive city fire,- ar;rnost terrible railway disaii- •ter, and" ant-storna-iti the. of- "fiCeS Of tsV iiewSpaper'." „are, some cheerful happenings :.predict- ed"..for JpashAty,..b4t no hint is.given te the nature the-last-igen- -tioned eruption.' - ebrnaysarmareia •drea.dful 'theatre or public .beiIdieg. :eitasfroPhe in tlissAgenheite-Ftd1s- -tricts-e4aech-svefllsthe7*thaenth .fer.rul' ere - AprilNFi11 'bring disgrace and death to a.,peominent,'finandier;' a tube accident in.lsreW''Yerk is pre dicted fOr 'May,,, and 'the: cliSeoVery: iuiTtins of sil.ver,ere-in Medco upset the ',Market in 41-tioe, aMonti:I,' 'Alarming riOtS in in July an earth tremor will :Shake Birmingham there -Will be a 'railwaysdieester .and an eiceueSion boat calamitY'insthe;-IriSh Seas'.'• ' . Many 'ecienihees o Parliament will _PAPE.S.A.14Y....in August, `feaneing inuelt -eleetiVit . 'exCiteMent,".. there wffl beTa terrible disaster in Hall.. or., PritnalaY,..„.and-s"fashions will run very eccentriejleiSineenth-s. with the ladies." S , An ,awful:.§aithquake in the 'West Indies is pr�rnised for Septeraber, andeeXPIOSiona May he expected in. the..north.-"-during this month: __The_Ainericaei_eagleee_e_a_p_este eto scream loudly in November, but Thee -el -ore -Sail -1 took hiseiword andfell Upon it -Nothing but the extreinity of despair- would -lead a - Hebrew td take his life; his " ideas of thenext,life as a shadowy, -existence- far- away otherwiet,the month willeshe--...comes paratively quiet, and the year will coast. unattractive - end _with -here timeseon the- east - from God, made him cling -to this BAD FOR MOTORISTS. New.Law Enacted in Austria Spells Ruin for Them. life.- ',.There- are -but four.. examples of uicide inail the,'Scriptures (2 Sam. 17. 23; I Rings 16. 18; Matt. 27. 5). 5- Hie armor -bearer . .died with him -It -wasethe-Part-of an -Eastern • servant to:sharethee_efate ofehis lerd whatever it might be; died-Tn 1 -Ie. -there is. another account of his death, told by a mesienger whb comes to_Darid expeetingsa_reward •for the news. The story. may _be understood as a fabrication by the messenger, or as another case of a second independent record of the historic event. In any, case the most trustworthy record is the one before us. • " All his men -This does not mean every Man in the army, but is, a of the notorious hoetitlity-of-eeetasn brief summary _of the awful fataii_ districts to motorists a “dfoarmtuangee ties of the day. might 'easily be Joon a single 7. On the other.'" side of the valley Itnirtn,e,Ys; fiienedClaetrnrs)21,Y50t011.e" The sec - Consternation has been caused among motorists -in Austria -by the new slaw regulataug, motor traffic, the full import of the measure hav- ing been expoundect-by Dr; Emit Frischauer, a well known Vienna „ Dr. Friechauer says that therels absolutely no limit to the amourit if compensation that may -• he ex- acted from a motorist for damage caused by tsr due to ,his car. ' He is responsible for -the damage done by frightened horses, and the amount liehis to paysmay be fixed by any small local tribunal. There ( 309• these great -coal veal 'ttleeraeolves 'at where they have "been.. 0 .. the,,upheaval of the lorvingfitOne • range and- at- Cat Mountain. Thus While it is known that coal exists ieeeenemenlY known__ are • in pa ing qnantities i lmest Parte el this 'vast territery, wh the Crowet Nest 'teal field ;00.141.1)1eS'iont'a Por. tion of the southwestern quarter of • it, extending from the Elk River on thestt .the foothill* of the - - s Iteiekiee -on tneTeast:: eeentee, ef. coal ranging in: thickiteas from, thirty to forty feet has been cut through at Morrissey, Coal Creek,: Hosmer and Miehel,, and is Of thci same thickness' as exposed at Cat "Monntaire on the eastern Slone of the ,Poellies and at other places uj,-3,, Vast New Treasure4lopise of cq41 , ' - - :F.arty:-fiye biUion One of Ceal, ine Great. as ..s.tich a. total apiaeayri, ..elnelest.iitheegeseateeteeo,a1-fields-in-:htivielr'er--ctihe,i01V-,ine-riew-Otleibie.e *cSteria-,4-Orth.--,Anaerica-H--willr. -be. ;went explenatien -andsCievelapiiigi .available as railreecl exs. littte doubt that it fallsefar. shot - tensionSs now- in .progress tapping Of the ectuality. Instead..0 an theSCrowe' .1'04Pe' region .,are area of" 230 square Miles, _used as esimpleted -.genes far toward avert- a basis by- /0. Mcirey, study Of predicted'hiet-famine.'„ the lop and the facts as to the out- Thia'vast'storehouso is located in: eroPpingS o fromtWelVeto-Sixteen 'a reptan,gle150. by :200 .reilea in ex- veins ofCoal :on the. eastern Slopes tent,. 'COnaprising : 30,000 squire of the Rockne at Cat Mountain and 'miles or.19,200,000.eicreS, upon the., property of the Leitch To Pitt this tract in direet COM- -C011ieries:•COMPanY- at,„"the- eastern Muni:oath:0 with t4e., outside world gateway .of :the :Crows' Xest, pass, two vopPosingengineering.. arties ,diseloSes,Ahet. this greet noel .field itc strennotielyeat Work, "0 is Mit cenfinedwithin the restriets .0Orbin President of the Spokane ed area of 230 equare mileseand:tbe 'International rialroad,ehas secured calenlatOr :-inight: have., deabled,. his Charter from the, preyinOel :'gsiv- Attires ,,arid palled his, totat.45,910,-- Cennient of ItritiShs'ColuMhiasfer a 40,000 tons erid • stilt have been, railroad CortinietiiigSWith the Canes .Within acthalitige, •-• ' duan Pecifiee,east Of:Michels:B.:Cs, The confines , of .thitis:vast. fuel, and,extendieg in a,Southeely diree- tieasureehense are:not. hard tor:de- tion Iourteensmileee, ..s,C_enetrieetjani 'tesi_reirseSS__ThseeeasielinesoftliesIda- gangs are. now in the;.field; ruSbing. ho Panhandle,. ifcontinued n�th- worlc The line: will open coal ward On thee 116th meridian of west lands in"Seventeen -sections, a total longitude for 4 diStanee of 1e0 .of '1,9;909, acres, for, which the cora- Miles,' Would -press Aheelsbutielar penY ;heicts crown grants from , the. line which separates "the: -province Prisidneial "gOVerninent, of British ef l3rifiSh Columbia' Oen, „Alkerte, Coliimbia.. : ' • at the siiiiireit'of. the RoelcY 2. inoun- A ' branch' Of the Great 'Northern tains, and, intersect the main line Of railipad, known as the Crows' Nest the:Canadian- Pacific -railioacta: few Southern; Was, extended'from,E,eX-. miles northwest ..of : Banff; , in the ferd on the Montana: Caiiiiiliaii-Nitienat 'Fernie, ,a distance of sixtyetwo Ifaline were runfrom this pont ;miles; a:few year's ago in order to c.f. intersection with the Canadian tender accessible the output of the .Pacific direetly Cast' for a distance coal -miibs-11-4" Or!, v of-200-'-m-iles- to thee-le.-I-th-'meridien-:' -rife. line" id Tr -ea -Claes now 7f longfricle and thence seirth .150 been extended twertir-tiiiree-milet enite-S--theeein isnataorrici-brinndar :-further p the..1;assetSerdiebet,:Ene ..line- worild-::---aga-iriebeecross-e-d-sats.as .gineersat present are engaged in point one longitude degree weSt.of Making a permanent -location of the the midway Point in" the northern line of this branch -road up the Elks .boundary of the state Of Montane,' With the appareet,riitention .andif..continued emith'throtugh. the .cf-ither-liltinroo-'-.6xterigior-i-to-tiw Witte wotild-pa-s-reast- of -Great Falls' "heed ,of theriver,.thence across theat a distance.ef only ,twelve 'divideeto thesSiberta Side and frern In Alberta.. .this ,sarne meridian -that peirits On..to C alga ry; ;which-is---passes-but--a-few: miles -west of -Me- vrt. I ;Ors, 04.5 .sea. A.:0?ERTA h NI I' / POHANE114 4rese *Nee is no damage limit, and 41 view -This could mean across Esdrae- reta,ry .of the Vienna Automobile len to Carmel on the west, or Ta- Club asserts that the position will :heir on.the northwest, or across the. be most .serious if the seseL'43,-rigui_ valley of Sezreel northward among pusly„ adminiitered. the hills 'Oaf Issathar,: Z,ebnlun, and De, .Feiseheeee. says that Snit one 'NaPhtali- Fr4,1 any of these Points avenue of escape appears to be open the_inhabitants plight have been to the motorist, and that i8. to. erafehhig with eager interest the evade the ,law by the formation of' .,cinteonie of the battles,sPilboa jilt: ted out into the plain in such liraited -companies: Several -motor- form a company, Way that the happenings On its ridge eittl•w, eiellbsjeTlt eould,.be-seeti-for-miles-iallvost iscrInsps'$5,000%-nt-toanatirwiti 7 7 d' • g 6 • tv e...merabers will thin -have 2.5,000 ings_cities, as far as the Jordan, Were left unprotected by the fait of this stint:whoa When the Philistines came' to strip the Slain -The uneoncern with whie,h thiseleustom--is-;-nientien throws light upon the inhurnanity of it its conituand, and will purchase the ear e of the five' inenthers, gi+- ing-$5;000, each. The Company now becomes liable for all damage done, Being 'a limit.ed, eencerne er-ehle-tee-PaY feiteseareco pensation to the limit Of the funds ancient warfare, -Compare David's..in- hand, and then becomes batik - •treatment of -the -Philistine giant. rupt„ Pr. • Frisehauer eonsiders TheY Oat off.his head and strip, at sitch a company would he in a ped,--efi chroniestate of hank-ruptcy; but it. of 4ehoyah fates no, better than the would he the Only Nij*ay ofevading tineirenmeised Goliath now that, the tieiA.' law, " .God has forsaken' him." The head, of a foe and his armor Were proud.-, oicE ttiq}layad' )'101 The -heti -Se -of the -Aslitarethees Or. !the- `‘teenple• ,Astarte," of 'ittetrir—rRay.as Orie a Aske15n, teth-shati-A fortified 'town en the easterapeint *Of the Plain of Psdraelote near Gilboa. Itlooked ut witer the: tleeP Sordan :valley; and . western :Palestine against an invaeion leom the east. Sl. Jabeellegileas1-44 • strong tows etrifeally located. eat of the Thr - Whin it,was in danger by -an attack of the 'Ainitinnir udr Xahash, Saul had: gone 'to ita. help 11);' and nOw ft9 filhabitatnU •grateful, reinenibranee iegotio the 0 ,L_--)9:::r:'fll;g47:4" -2. .7 . ' '9«. ".- ' • 9 1....,..........,,9. ... , . • , ' 1 .71t, :'• • ' •: ..,114.4V.77;.07:;‘;‘,./),zs.....ftilli:::::::114::;-:•.•'....;-7.-,• ee'- ffSt.* .4,-' ' •,,F•• .,• sr a, • tP ATES.1- i' -i . ., .,....o.cAlkui;,..LJ • With the opening up _of therect- :tatrileguplraori?iteemrriotforrny sarkting triilieilrdeooaai will be solved. With 'the speed, be- ing made by, the construe ion gangs the day is not, far distant when the -',2,.. Crows' tsTestePass regien will fig- ure materially in the fuel suPPIY problem of. North Americes-F. O. Moorhead, in the. Technical World Magazine.' . .1!7 . LABRADOR GENEROSITY., Striking Instance is -Recorded b,r Dr .threnfell. ' Among, the qualities developed on the, stern Labrador coaSt, Weitee Doctor erenfell;- one is Very con- spicuous. That is the -way in. which every one seems interested in you and. your, affairs,_ and :seems anxi-__ Gus to further your projects, often . going to great trouble for the be- - hoof of a cOrnplete stran,ger. A striking instance of their generos- - -nyeis-reesoreecteas-comingeund'eref'ne - cisctor's notice. 1 -was stranded-last-week,-,in-tEe7= evening, about' fifteen- rniles from' home. Owing to -the crowd in hos- pital and my colleagues being away south, it was imperative that I should get home that No dogs were ohtiiii-able, se I aght the_help_of a:poor-fisherman, the only man available. His right arm aneleg- had been "scrammed" with a "touch of the 'paralyze" when he was a boy. With an imbe- ' cile sister, a mother andsa brother iedulen.x.pipnepntieedrderntIltpi limbs, s thhaietnie,h_ oaafs_npdi vvee.od:tlyiYn. His tiny shack, crowded already, had an aged 'and still poorer stran- ger soecupying -the -best part' of -the hoot- sPace, whom he begged nie examine while he "unspanned." . /V/ seal This I did, but when clear of the, ‘house, I reasoned with him againstr increasing his - liabilities and bur- -- dens. Ile replied: ' 'lEfe 1.14 scrammecta bit just now.""e„. - His dogs were, alriel little better , fed -than he was himself.' One has -- to put it that betause they -• shared equally withliim, hying in -The house. But his sta- da,rd7of diet was mit ours. He was so deligh,teit<is -atecarryingerneseeveneatethat hbui- of night, I ventured to offer a frif. ling remuneration. lie answered it - was "not his faShion,"'and for a - 'while after spoke only to his dogs. „ -',Wheiirwe'reachedethes-hospitals•lee. 'begged him to let the feed his - doge sii1gii-e them tGL THE NEW JOA L DEPOSITS WERE FE:TOND., es. . , , Qi-oWs's-Nesteissnearlyinethe-tetiftbe map and .• " --7*-14.01s*.'thelgreate-:coaleselepositiessecetipy.-------!-- • the railway centre of the southern clicine' Hat, a tiownesiteiated- on the , _ The aminietof coal lying hidden away -waiting the..:•eoneiter ,e -f-- -min- ers ancrtreineport4ien. fa�ilities al- most surpassee, comprehension. Trona -the reports of Cartadian-gea- lOgietsand' 45:Of -n3,440,e19.nk1.P.Oseetre th-at-ifiere is appreici- Mately 100' feet -of Workable 'Niel einderlying.. a -territory' which.,esee :tends from the Elk river on the West to and beyond the Livingstone range, east Of the stinimit Of' the VOckies, and, from; the headwaters of the Elk on the, nortlito the in- ternational boendary. On the. south; On the been. Of tile report Of Dr. Selwyn of the dominion gerilegnali department at Ottawa, of the out- cropping of those seamen:0 they are ti be found three o: four mites mirth of Morrissey, dames MCE•voys geologistfor the CrojyttLAttaaga, VarCOWO37;.iiitimates 'Chit there ar over:22,000;000,000 tons -of toal available-when' transportation fa, cilities have been secured.; Aecording t� Mr. McEiroY's fig- ures; the outcropping of coal just north of Morrissey ineasur'es a to•L 1--of-21-6efeet, Iayeers-ktrnnirigler thielinesS from a few. inches to heel' feety-feetis arid' these layers. of -tock are n ter sperii e Ihrorigh.::strata ol rock which fern), together with the tom. depth of 47736;"feet from the uppet to the lovvcst seam of coal in the series. McEvoy estimates tha,t at least one hundred feet Of this total Of 216 feet of coal sonth branch of -the .Saskatchewan _river, where' the Canadian Pacifie main line croSsesthe stream. A few miles east of. Medicine Hat'the Crews' Xest branch of the Cana- dian-Picific -joins the main; line ,at Dunmore 'Junction. •, t••. ---- These four .lines bound • a .rect, angle -150- by, 200'. miles'. ifire-iiteiit, 30,000 , square _mi1.esoi..49200i000, Fully :three-fourthsof thil, reete angular territory litS east Of the foothills of the •RocIty Mountains.. Poal has.' been found in 'almost ev- ery part.,Of this: distrieteeateMedi-- eine just siverSethe eastern 'bouni,/, Where natural ,gas has also been discovered and, es being used .by the railway •eompanY and hy the-citiiens of. the town •for do, mestio,' Purposes ; 4 Banff; in the eastern slope of the Rockies; at the Knee Hills northeast of :,Galgary-; 'on Sheep dreek,- where...it has been .ntined for ••• chimes* purposes for many years ; and on the headwaters of' High • River, where- it has 'also - been .taken .out for use by the ranch!. -ors 'for-tite-lastAVelity years Iltindreds of tonsof 'it, are mined daily at 'Tabor,: thirty iiiilera:'eait At the Ia.tfei place are situated the Mines of the' Galt CortipanscAlte.'aldest 'coal iij in the territory,....ancLotherAines of other companies of morerecetit de- velopment. • -• • • . Soiith and westof Pincher Creek, along the foothills Cot •the -Rockies, it is found:in l largeeds,- While on tine' OroWe -K-1-;.4.110.1vAyArson ?' ed Yonthr •"I woitld Willingly die for : "Nothinging dei -4;g," • replied the Practical 'What I want is a:man who is willing 0„livO' arid earn a :Hying for rtic.!', .;` End ,.`Datt- p',e th aded e infatuat-. MORE EXPRESSrylt. . He was looking for a tieft 4,41e; and ihnught be had foiind what be required/. 10,0e you'' lie said, in soft,. iwarm tones, "M.Ore than 'I can tell in vier, ftTry fis..:„.eS,)! she replied eol-dly,, .2rael e and mark.et4ble. "Altliongle the ekterit of the &eel la, d in the entire:sere/I Canonlybe sortiewhat trotighly estnnated, the estimate of 280 squire miles should be near etiough' to the truth ,to hied as basie for the. calculation "t4 the 'total' available, Coal supply,' saye;lfr, 14011,voy. A. little figuring diseloseis' what, this mearui. Two hundred and thirty sqiiare irdics &tool to aeres f(10.* a total of 447,- tareg, Ong Ur , f coal Of a thickness of one hundred feet would . '(M 54) tone, rod the tots1 Teindbreeli; -forty. Miles Vied of Macleod, to Morrissey, . nine miles - below I''ernio, numerous mines are in constant operation; ' North of `the -railway through the pass, on The upPer, Elk, from the point:where -Michel Creek empties int O the glk River, large" trrietti of beat lands have been taken up and are being surveyed and prepara- tions are th progress to develop some of these holdings otu h large scale. • On the eastern dope of tho"11,0610. yield 6t 147,20 aeres would be 00046 tons. 4.1 J4 4 "It's got to take :this 'parcel .. Snag Cove," he replied, "so T *Ohl t stay. 'I give you.thanks." that's "eiglitsitiiteeSeseWhats:es - is the parcel, anyhow 'It' s as bit o' mutton -for --Skipper - Alfred, ,whitt's sick there. Good- - bye, doctor, •I'ef.11be home again by breakfast."!. • I 'Slanunedethes ,door.' and turned in, 'feting ever so small. , ::._111,1-01:t..-11::ii:E:yOke7ivaa'ALE:. a Large percentage Of Water. The extent to which •water min, • gles with laodie. apparently solid is wonderful. The glittering opal, which. beauty wears -as an orna, -Monty-is- only -flint -aiill--Tiveiteises-Tlides. aaresee_breathescontaine-fiyeegrains- 9biulkw:ate-I'Thteo'peoateahtoceusbicarifdnioottuorfiptss which are boiled for- our 'dinner have, . ttheiF riti; -State, the one Per cent, and the Other 90 per.. If a Mart. weighing' 140, pounds.: were snheeted flat in dr 'hyatilie ' press; 105 :pounds. of water Would run out and, only 35 -of \dry residue remain. A Man is chemically speak- ing; 45,pounds of carbon and nitro- g'en, diffused throUgh five and a half pailfuls of water.' In plants we find water thus 'mingling in no less wonderful -a -manner'. A sunflower evaporates one and a.quarter pints of water day, and a eahbage abOut the same qnantitY, A wheat 'plant exhales in 172 days about 100,000. rains of Water. An acre of growing'Wheat, on this cai. oulation, passes.:-..nitt about •ten tons of- water „per 'day,, o sap of plarite,.is the' medium 4thnroitgh--which....this -masii-of•Aluid is conveyed. It_fornas a delicate ptrop hy'which the watery partiels run iifith_the rapidity of a swift s ream, BY the action of the sap, 'various peopertieSently. be communicated to the growing ,plant. Timber ' in France is, for -instancedYed by various colors being mixed. With water arid poured over the 'toot 'iltlf4 the tree. Dahlias ate also colored' by a ehnilar proceSs. . Better a tramp in the, '.;voods than ii,holao in the, woodshed. •