HOW Hf OOT A STORY. a Haws paper Man'a Paraalt of Om rrtmU la Defalk Tbe other evening the head of tbe m ataf of a local daily wm standing Id front of the Palmer House. An ele fantly dreeeed young woman suddenly stopped before him, mad with evident a bans lenient Inquired th way to the Dsatno. The direction waa given and the newspaper man added that the place' waa canard, "Closed?" echoed the woman Id sur prise. "Tea; tt hasn't been open for several montha." "Oh, weU," ahe continued, "I guess tt la all right, anyway. I am a stranger la tbe city; a gentleman and him wife from New York asked me to meet them at 8 o'clock ki front of the Oaslno to go to tbe theater. I supposed we were toinc to tbe Casino. My friends evi dently are going to some other theatet and asked me to meet them where they thought would be most convenient for me." She thanked him, gave hdm a smile which he remembered afterward, and passed on. A minute later lie news paper man threw away the : eia nam t of hie cigar. A bit of aahee, caught by the wind, fell upon his coat lapel. In brushing It off bis hand accidentally touched hia cravat. The soarfptn which had neat led there a moment before waa gone. "It wasn't worth a dollar, anyway," he said to himself consolingly, "and he's welcome to it; but I'd like te know how ahe did It There's a great story la that woman if I could only find her again and make her talk." Hia Intended visit to the theater wa givea-ap forthwith, and he began pa trolling the down-town streets in search for that story. An hour later be came face to face with the woman tic- was looking for. She evidently bad seen him first, but she made no attempt to avoid him; "I want you," he Bald bluntly. She laughed. "Well," she said, "1 suppose all of ua sometimes want what we can't get." "And some of us," he added, "11 seems, help ourselves to whatever we want." "Oh, did you miss It, really T h asked, smiling like a hourl "I couldn't help taking It, you know; really I couldn't But It wasn't worth keeping .after all. You'll find h in your left hand overcoat pocket." And he did. "Come," be said, "there'i a restaurant across tbe street I w ..you a dinner." . ; When the loot particle of tbe broiled lobster had been washed down and six had told a fairy story which he mental j ly concluded would make at least a col umn they arose to go. "Do you know," she said, "you were ; pretty lucky tonight? Well, you were I When I was talking to you on the street I tried for your watch. Your coat wa buttoned, and It covered tbe pocket hc tightly that I couldn't get tbe watc without your noticing tt See," she continued, pointing to his tightly but toned (utaway. "I couldn't get mj band under there without your know lng It. Notice bow tight tbe coat li j over that packet. There's a pointer foi J juu unaft &cv cwi uuwuun An a crowd. Then you're sale." The newspaper man offered to escort nWi companion to her hotel. She de clined, lie insisted. She hailed a paes- log hansom. Jumped m and was whirl ed away. . He lighted another cigar ami were not ordered to wash, but request t rolled toward, the theater. He won J ed to do so, and that they left of their dered if be would be In time to see tb own accord. The men, however, assert second act I that It was an Imperative order, and What be said when he reached for hi , that they refused to obey It because watch couldn't be printed. Chlcagt , too many men were required to use the Times-Herald. Prowling Wolves Increasing. Tbe gray wolf, the bane of cattle-met! and lock masters, appears to muklplj ami flourish m defiance of the effort of the hunter and the price set upon hi bead. Advices from all sections of tht range country report that gray wolve are as numerous and destructive at ever. Range riders are witnesses tt the fact that the fattest and strongest steers are frequently overcome by thest ferocious beasts, while the weak anJ Infirm surrender to their attacks al mast wLtbout a struggle. The live stock loss of Montana from this source can not n? calculated, but from the nature of tbe case it must be tremendous Professional hunters state that thi gray' wolf Is an exceptionally difficult animal 'to circumvent Hi' cunning :ls remarkable and his auspicious nature causes bim to avoid any localttynrh'icl! his keen sense notify him has beer Invaded by hi human enemy. He ii not a gregarious animal, preferring tt roam la small bunches, which prevenu aucb a wholesale killing as could be ac wmpilabed if a large band should faL within the power of tbe hunter. He avoids poisoned baits and dead car csasea; he la essentially a beast ol prey, preferring fresh meat at all times, and when tbe pangs of hunger are felt he starts out to find something witli warm blood in tt. ror these reasons wolf hunting Is an jajttoartttkPCtng.hMlnff and shooting in praeflkatty the only methods that prooace results, and attractive Induce mesas are necessary' to encourage bunt en to en gage in that work as a means of Ifrer5ood.-Benton Elver (Mont) Cats sag retlectee. Etfwrter It la said that yourself and jrsv eeemde, OHocsarty. were cak AC2 OBscsse. aner use oynanaie ex flia a tt ttrry. ' tar-Wta, It was loike this. O rr c Md orUoesmtj was coi-r.-XACjw Tart - 1 ,1, Oi" ' TOPICS OF THE Tl M KS. A ONC3C SELECTION OF INTER- EST I NO ITEMS Co amenta and Crlticlama Baae-' ''-on ha Happenings ot ttaa lAny aa torical and News Notes No sane man will now presume to dispute the efficacy of a Turkish bath as a remover of grease. ! The Atchison Globe says that a young woman of that place "has begun to look around for means to support a husband." Whose? j Cornell University has itwued an elab orate work entitled "Note on Plums, Such a treatise ought to sell pretty well la Washington nowadays. A Duluth man claims to have seen in the clouds a mirage showing a bioody battle in progress. Boll tbe city drink ing water and use more of it It is said that strawberry boxes are now manufactured for one-thirty-fifth of a cent apiece." But the bottoms surely ootne much higher than that. It is at least passing strange that the fellow who sues for $100,000 for the alienation of his wife's affections never values them so highly while be has them. "We shall welcome the sweet girl graduates," says tlie St. Louis Star, "with open arms." The St Louis di vorce courts may as well prepare for a business boom right now. It is claimed that a pool has been formed to corner Kentucky whisky and hold H for a rltse. It is perfectly safe to bet that whisky will go the other way, no matter where prices may go. I A catalogue of the newly discovered widows of departed millionaires is about to be printed for the benefit of the legal fraternity. It will be in six octavo volumes, handsomely bound in half morocco. A Buffalo man the other day refused to accompany a policeman to the lock up until a physician had examined bim and pronounced himv drunk. Buffalo policemen must be more accommodat ing than bluecoats ordinarily are. The City Council of Hutchinson, Kan., has licensed the sale of "hop tea." For the information of' those who are unfamiliar with the peculiari ties of prohibition it may be said that "hop tea is an insidious beverage which koka like beer, tastes like beer and acts like beer." Gov. Taylor of Tennessee is expected to resign bis office soon and again go upon the lecture platform. The an nouncement of his purpose has caused a chorus of protesta to arise from his constituents, but whether they object to the resignation or to tbe lecture part of the program It is Impossible to state accurately at this distance. One of the queerest walkouts which ever took place was that of twenty -two men in the Lake Shore shops at Buf falo, who refused to obey the request asking them to wash their hands and faces on quitting work at the noon hour. The master mechanic says they same water and they were afraid of contagious diseases. Tbey were evi dently not willing to acquire godliness at the expense of thefr health." Medical scientists, and laymen as well, have been greatly Interested in a new cure being practiced In Ixmdon by which wounds of all sorts are treat ed with oxygen. A home has recently been opened for patients who wish to be treated, and tbe system has tbe ap proval of high medical authority as well as the patronage of royalty. The cure, which is something tbe English have learned from the Zulus, consists in concentrating oxygen on the wound In an air-tight glass. Tbe new appli cation of the gas is tbe work or dis covery, one may call It of Dr. Stoker, an English physician of standing. Suf fering which has lasted many years has succumbed to this treatment, and medical men look for wonderful achievements from it. From Duluth, the zenith city of the unsaltcd seas, comes the story that a wonderful mirage was seen there re cently, the picture representing two armies awfully arrayed, bombarding each other with artillery. The oliserv ers of this phenomenon took it to be a reprec mutation of a battle In Cuba, al though while the alleged mirage was being gaxed upon a conflict much near er Duluth was beirg waged, where the Tanadlan police were shelling Almighty Voice, the Indian chief of the North west Territory. It la nearly time, too, for tlie annual report of the Akwhan mirage showing the mystic, silent city. In tbe Popular Science Monthly Prof. Jordan exploues the last-named fake. No one has ever seen thla mirage, but only alleged photographs of.lt. These photographs Prof. Jordan proves to be copies from a negative of an nnaocceas- ful attempt to photograph the city of Bristol, England. Pbotographe of the battle mirage of Duluth wUI probably dm be on the market. Many lines of trade have complained of tbe effect of the McycW erase, bat oae 4 not expect to bear that wbeel I2j 3 r-ted tbe mating of fonrt tsre. Tet ?at acaertad by tt tzr.:erz. T Orxil Xcrlia. IikmIu for whwliiijC bwone that It Lui ai-tuall.v iiul-iinlui-d the piid-j which the hemls of fuuiiltes formerly took in the. interior furnlshlliKS of their homes. Iimtftid of furnishing their houses with artii-kn of taste at moder ate or wen gn-at cost and constantly adding to or replacing the good, they now put the money into wheels. This is uo guess at the cause of tlie falling off In the furniture trade, but bus been determined by actual Investigation. If this is really so a reaction in the bi cycle fever may be looked for. The Mobile Register is at present en gaged In a very serious controversy with a writer in Scriimer's Magazine on the Important subj-t of the origin of the "Hiss-boom -all." To those very ignorant iersons who may not know what the slss-boonmh is. it will lie nec essary to explain that tills remarkable combination of sounds is something that certain colleges, lrt Princeton in particular, ue at the eixl of their col lege yells. The writer in Scribner's claimed for Princeton tlie honor of or iginating it as a collegiate slogan. To this the Register objevis and sets up the claim of the Hon. Gerald Stith, for merly Mayor of New Orltnn, who In trodtHvd the skyrocket ejaculation as a sort of addendum to 'three clieers" as far back as 18T8. while Princeton did not make use of It until tlie year the civil war broke 'out. The magazine writer lias replied with some warmth to this claim, and several other men have taken a hand In the controversy, which threatens to involve tlie whole country. Chicago Chronicle: It was thought that the Introduction of bh-ycle riding would work a change for the le4tcr in the form and color of men's clothes, the uniform ugliness of which lias been a subject of a great deal of pain even to those not esthetes, but the reverse has Iteen tbe case. It Ui true that tlie lontf trouser, so inexpressibly ImhI, Iiiis been to a certain extent superseded by the knickerliocker, which Is better, but the cotuiue an a whole is far from being an improvement. In fact, the average man or woman upon a wheel la a fright of so terrible a character that It Is a wonder that all the clocks in town have not gone on a strike and ceased to run. The average man who rides a wheel thinks it necessary to get himself up in a costume the ugliest that can lie Imagined. It is haiMlfs, and the combination of colors is suffi cient to give a cat fltu. The materials, texture and colors of the average cos tume are simply tdioeklng, and they are making our streets and boulevards moving panoramas of hUleouaness. The women's dresses are somewhat better, but there is vast room for improvement lu those also. The ungainly, crouching attitudes of many riders and the strain ed expression of their faces add to the uncouth 1 ensemble and tend to keen many from adopting this graceful and expeditious means of locomotion. San Francisco Call: We learn from the Ism Angeles papers that last month the heaviest consignment of os trich plumes ever sent from California was shipped from Paris. This is cou pled with the report that the Industry has completely passed beyond tbe ex Ierinieutal stage and is net only profit able but likely to Increase. There Is a prospect that from $50,000 to $70,000 will be added during tbe coming year to the $200,000 already Invested in tMe business of supplying fashion with fine feathers. ' The ostrich ranches being successfully conducted at Pasadena, Anaheim. Fallbrook, Santa Monica, Corona do and Pomono have made sales this season aggregating $190,000. The profits of these ventures were for a long time in considerable doubt, but now It Is known that so long as the la dles continue to delight in plumes tbe industry Is an assured success. There is no great danger of tbe market being flooded with feathers, for tbe cost of starting an ostrich farm in any effect ive way at all is about $15,000, and a thoroughly equipped one requires an outlay of $25,000 to $30,000. This large investment and the care and time nec essary to obtain good results will deter any disastrous rush of capital to com pete In the work. The prosperity of this growing business is not only pleas ing In itself but lias a suggestive fea ture which enhances Its value! ' It makes clear the fact that there are al ways splendid possibilities of Introduc ing enterprises In California that will afford new uses for capital and indus try and thus widen the extent of the State's resources. Varied industries constitute a safer base for prosperity tban restriction to a few, . however profitable, and tbe lesson of tbe ostrich farms teaches the advisability of mak ing still other experiments In the way of adding to our productive occupa tions. ' Woman1! CnrlnaUy. "Why, mother," said Farmer Gray to his wife, "what be ye hokJn' at John's bicycle so Ion.' forT 'I was a wonderin', Silas," said she, 'If I couldn't have one of tbero 'ere things 'that tell how fur you go bitched to me somewhere, I'm cur us to know how many miles' I travel In a day do ing this 'ere housework." New York Tribune. Mother's Oalla. "Mother," said Mrs. Smarton, "says tbe smell of stale tobacco makes bar sick." "Ah," said Mr. Smarton, filling big pipe. "So she has concluded, ahe says, thai be will stay nntil she gets used to M If It bikes her all summer." Indlanap. oil Journal. There's Mae a Mia. "Is It settled, Mrs. Flyr, that your daogbter to 4) marry- young BveSjoaaf "Not at aX " There's ttottaUrf Ml eriow ttaa aa efCtpt3 13wt3 (i T demand the payment of the I $10.00 in gold," said Miss Ma grader, a little testily and quite determinedly. "I owe this to my niece, who is about to le married. As you know, I am her gusrdian, and I do not wish to diminish her legacy by, any oversight on my part Just now, when no one knows just what effect a possi ble silver victory may have ujmn tbe financial condition of tbe country. On-e married, her husliand may do aa he likes." "Very well. Miss Magruder," said Cashier Holt "Your request will be honored If for no other reason than to show you that this bank is amply able to meet all demands." The lady whom- he addressed as Miss Magruder was a spinster ot uncertain age, regular features and a determined and business like manner. Cashier Holt, a middle-aged man with Vandyke beard and curly flax- rolored hair, had tried vainly to dem onstrate to his shrewd client that her money would be safer In the vaults of the bank than In her house. Now he gave a whispered order to the only clerk the bank afforded. The latter turned an inquisitive face, upon tlie spinster and her comanlon, a pretty country girl of 20 summers. When he returned from the vault he carried in his hand a leather satchel, which he placed on the counter before the cashier. "Here are your ten thousand," said Mr. Holt, whimsically. "Remember my warning! Take good care of the money !" Miss Magruder was not so easily sat isfied. She opened the satchel, took from it a buckskin lag and counted tbe money, which was In $50 coins. Then she pushed it all Imek, locked the bag and left the bank, accompanied by the clerk, who carried the satchel and deposited it under the buggy seat. As the ladles entered their conveyance they were accosted by a tramp. Tbe fi-ilow looked anything but prejiossess ln, and Miss Magruder curtly denied him aid. During the drive from New Bruns wick to the little hamlet which was their home. Miss Magruder gave vent to her annoyance over the cashier's hesitancy to p.y her niece's legacy In gold. His warning against robbers was especially distasteful to the spin ster, who had never been afflicted with fear of anything. Nora Wilson listen ed to her aunt in silence. She was not at all Inclined to share her guardian's confidence that their house was as safe as the bank vault; but out of deference to the older woman she refrained from expressing her opinion. Even when the money was safely stowed away under Miss Magruders bed, Nora felt uneasy. When bedtime came she her self examined every window and door, to see that It bad been securely fasten ed by the servant. Anxious dreams disturbed her slumber, which she woo ed in vain for a long time. In the mid dle of the nlgbt the girl awoke with a start. She was not certain at first whether ber Imagination had played her a trick, or whether she bed really heard a stifled noise in the next room. She hearkened with bated breath, and was soon convinced that what disturb ed her were stealthy footsteps. without a moment's hesitation the girl Jumped from her lied. A door led from her room to her aunt's chamber, but this she would not ojien. After all, it might only have been the vivid play of her imagination, and she dreaded Miss Magnifier's ridicule. So she un latched the door that opened out Into the corridor and groped her way to ber aunt's room. It was ajar. Nora Wilson scarcely breathed as she listened. She could distinctly hear tho respiration of two persons. One breath ed regularly and quietly, the other's breath came In short, stifled gasps. A sweet, penetrating odor eamie from the room. Then all ber doubts were dis pelled. There was a robber In tbe room. He was searching for the hidden gold. ora was a courageous girl. She press ed ber lips firmly together, advancing carefully with outstretched arms. Al most Instantly she came in contact with a human body. The manfor It was a burglar Hutched her around the waist and held a sponge saturated with chloroform to ber nose. Nora tried not to breathe to keep from Inhal ing the noxious vapor. The girl's fierce struggle made the burglar resort to other mean to overcome ber. He drop ped the sponge and plunged his band Into his breast pocket "He has a pistol and be Is going to kill me!" thought Nora. Quick as n flash sbe seised his band tbe moment he withdrew It Her fingers closed over the handle of a large bowle knife, not the butt end of a revolver. The maurauder dragged Nora from the room, down the stairs and Into the lower corridor. There he hissed Into ber ear that he would kill ber If she made an outcry and did not release the knife. Gathering all bis strength he thrust ber Into tbe pantry, tbe door of which stood wide open. , Mlsa Wilson made do reply, bat with an almost superhuman effort attempt ed to wrench tbe weapon from Mm. She rucceeded In clutching 'a few Inch es more of the long hand of tbe knife, and tbe man ottered a terriMo oath. Tbe Made bad sunk into bto band. dnatchlQi bis left arm from ber wilet, be struck, bar a fearfal blow wit mi ta,. ' KetUdej, ttai she eoail M iMgs wpt ICS. Qm fstiar, Kra tarsal quickly and dashed pest him toward the door that led out Into the yard. It wag open, but on the threshold the girl stumbled and fell prone to the floor. When she awoke a few moments afterwards from the stupor caused by the fall, two men were bending over her. They were grappling, and by their voices Miss Wilson recognized In one of them her aunt's gardener. Tbe girl, brave as ever, came. to bis assistance. Their eomlHned cries for help brought one of their neighbors to the scene of the struggle. The marauder was soon overcome, ami when the ser vant maid apjieared with a lamp, Nora and the gardener recognized In him the tramp who had accosted them in tbe afternoon in. front of tbe bank. "Take him to prison," commanded 'Miss Wilson. "My aunt and I will lodge complaint against him in the morn ing." While the two men carried off their prisoner, Nora hurried to her aunt's rooui. By this time the effect of tbe chloroform had disappeared, and Miss Magruder was acquainted with the events of the night. The little satchel with Its precious contents whs fnoved a considerable distance from where It had originally been placed, and tlie splnxter admitted that the cashier was right after all In admonishing her as he did. To relieve herself from fur ther .responsibility she sent for her niece's betrothed early In the morning. In the meantime the prisoner had a preliminary hearing before tbe Judge. Miss Wilson deposed that she had met tbe man in tbe afternoon; that he had seen the satchel which they carried from tlie bank, stowed away under the buggy seat She then narrated her struggle with the Intruder and his final arrest by a neighbor and ber aunt's gardener. Tbe latter corrobo rated her statement Tbe prisoner firmly declared his Innocence, even in the face of these grave charges. He denied having struggled with the young lady in her aunt's room, and said that he had sought shelter In Miss Magruder's woodshed for the nlgbt. When he heard Miss Wilson's cries for help, he Uiougbt a Are bad broken out, and rushed from tbe shed to aid in suppressing It Without a word Nora Wilson. point ed to the prisoner's right hand, which was bandaged with a dirty rag. The judge understood ber meaning and asked tbe tramp bow be had Injured his hand. His answer was that be bad cut himself with an ax, as he cleared the place In the dark to find a comfortable spot to lie down In. His statement was not credited, and be was remanded to jail. An hour later Nora and her betroth ed were on the way to the bank. They had with them tbe satchel of gold, ready to again entrust It to tbe custody of the hank cashier. "Good morning, Mr. Holt" seld tbe girl "Here Is the money! You were right some one did try to rob us last nlgbt" "Ah, ha!" cried Mr. Holt, coming close to the cashier's window to receive the money. A penetrating odor of chloroform waa noticeable. It came from tbe clothes of tbe cashier. "Oh, James:" cried tbe girl, still pale and nervous from lx-r terrible expe rience of tbe night "My name Is Cliff," said James. "I am Miss Wibmn's fiance. Permit me to lead her to yonder conch. She Is not well. A little rest will soon restore her." Holt was not Inclined to grant the request to admit tlie two young people to the back room without opposition. "It's against the rules of the bank," he remarked stubbornly. James Cliff paid no attention to bim, but pushed tbe door open and led the young girl to tbe leather sofa In the "ADVAKCIXe CABriLl.r WITH OOT TRBTCHID ABM." bank room. Kora was far from faint ing. Her mind bad never worked more quickly and to the point A sudden oepk'lou that not the tramp, but an other tried to rob them of her fortune flashed through ber brain. There waa tbe odor of the chloroform, and be side the cashier bald Ma head estv, eal4 In bit one pocket. .. "TTtl la rSt mat9 with mr kand "My band? I sprained It last night while trying to move heavy piece of furniture. I have been bathing It with arnica aud must keep It tmndaged." "Won't you Ik me see It?" The cashier hesitated, but when he pulled tbe band from the pocket at last, the bandage showed other stains than those of arnica. With a bound the girl stoofT before him. "This Is Wood, James," she cried. "A sprain could not liave caused tbem. The smell of the chloroform, his voice, his look; and the hairs wrapied around the button of his coat! Do you recog nize theni?" Her lover snatched the overcoat thrown over the back of the chair la tbe mom In which they- were. "They are yours, Nora," said James Cliff, carefully loosening them from the button that held tbem confined. "I would recognize tbem anywhere!" "This is tbe man who broke Into our house, with whom I struggled, and In the struggle he cut his hand," said Nora, firmly and menacingly. "I wish I had killed you," muttered Holt, now blind with rage over the girl's discovery. They called the clerk and sent for the sheriff, but James Cliff was com- QUICK A8 A FLASH SHE SEIZED HIS BAUD. pelled to keep the desperate bank cash ier at bey with the point of a revol ver. At his home were found a bottle half filled with chloroform, a blood-stained cuff, a bowle knife, a bunch of skeleton keys and other paraphernalia belong ing to the light-flngered gentry. Years afterwards, when Nora Wilson and James Cliff celebrated their mar riage anniversary they learned tin? cause for tbe crime of tbe bank cash ier. He bad been In love with the pret ty country lassie, and aa James Cliff waa then an Impecunious attorney be thought If lie robbed her of tier fortune the young man would not marry her. "But you know better, dear wife," whispered James Into tbe pretty mat ron's ear. She nodded her head In si lence, and wound ber arms around bis neck The 10,000 in gohl were deposited In a larger bank, and the Interest has been piling up from year to year, mak ing a nest-egg for the three tittle cbll dren of the Cliffs. St Louts Republic. The Poor Children or Cities. In tbe I Ad Wn' Home Journal Edward W. Bok makes an earnest appeal that the poor children of tlie cVtles lie given an outing hi the country during a part of the heated summer season. He heartily commends the work In that di rection being done by the various or ganizations, and urges that they be given heartier support and greater co oteratlon. "Strange as It may seem to some," he rays, "the word 'country is only a meaningless sound to count less waifs In our cities. Of a winding stream, of a running brook, of a hill higher than a pile of refuse m tbe street they know nothing. The only water they know is that which flows past tbe city piers. Of a run In a field white with daisies, yellow with butter, -iiiis, or red with clovr, they liavo t:ner even dreamed. Their only piny, ground is the not and ill smelling pave ment Even a clean bed Is unknown to tbem; tbe fire-escape, the roof of an uncovered wagon are then ab-eplng-pkvees on the hot summer nights. Tbe ouly glimpse of Clod's beautiful ky tltey ever see Is through the city's smoke. And yet how many of us think of tbeee little ones? Think of them w msy, perhaps, but what do we do for them? Do we ever stop ami consider how much we nafght? bow much others are doing? "Ten cents will keep a sick baby for a whole day In the country or at the sea shore under the direction of sotui one of these assodatlona One dollar will bring untold happiness to n child for five days. Three dollars will keep a child In the country for thirteen days. Why not look Into the work of the fund or association of summer work for children nearest you, and, before yon take your own children to the country, leave or eend something, even though It be but ten cents, to one or more of tbeee Fresh Aid Funds? It will bring lie 1th and happiness to some little child whose mother cannot afford to do what God baa made h possible for yon to do for your tittle ones. It Is not se much that many of us sre disinclined to be cbarltaMe; It Is rather that we are apt to take the trouble to find out, or. to know how much we ran do with very Mrtle. We would give If we but knew where and how to give. The no blest offering we can make to God Is the saving of the life of one of Ills Mb oe 1 The Chase "Is Jonas still ptnwlag Mtstmrorer Tag, bat he's not coming dp wttft ft yotPlck-Ms-Cp, it .