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4 ?? AN ALTOMILE HEAHSE. ^K lugubrious automobile novelty In the form of a moior-driven hearse has recently made its appearance in the streets of Paris. A nation that rejoices in the grim delights of trolley car funerals is hardly justified in shaking its head at this latest application of the electric auto. After all AN ELECTRIC AUTOMOBILE ] is said and done, no very good reason can be advanced why a man should not be buried in a ceremonious and somber motor hearse, particularly in these piping motor times, when touri ing cars filled with tearful mourners j are not infrequently seen in funeral processions.?Scientific American. I 'v, 11 1 : *' Interesting Toy. ! Toys for the amusement of the youngsters very often prove equal.;'* interesting to the older folk. After a very trying and nerve-racking day at xne omce many ?t uusmess iuau ?ui find infinite pleasure and relaxation l in explaining the intricacies of some novel toy to the children. The illus The Elusive Mouse. tration below shows one of the most recent toys patented. It consists of a small platform holding a small circular box at one end. Close to a hole In the box is a mouse, while at the other end is the ever-watchful cat. In the centre of the platform is a guideway. Attached to the mouse and the cat is an elastic band, directly under the guideway. Normally, the catch is held at the far end of the platform by a spring releasing the catch: the cat springs after the mouse; but unfortunately, the mouse ^ SAVED BY THE H i^'-MgmS^^BflHHg USvj w WBs&RBaBK^^^* $> M^nSH^H^V':':; irtr? w&w ~"WBn^Trr^i9ffiTOifl^' ^ ^ \y'* The Slim Man?"Confound it al the dark, and bumped my nose on tl Tha Stniit Mart?-''Ah that's A t' Curative .Apparatus. An efficient mode of treating bruised, irritated and sometimes diseased limbs of animals?as, for instance, the leg of a borse?is by JkL) Directs Stream. pouring a stream of water upon the limb at a point affected. Heretofore it has been universally customary for tbe person iD charge of the anirail ""v.V simultaneously disappears into tlx hole in the box. Although simple this toy would prove Interesting t< the young ones.?Washington Star Chisir and Table. In households where space is at ; premium the combination chair an< table shown here would be found ex ceedingly useful. Like the foldiDi * . ^ y.,- . ..V HEARSE NOW IN USE IN PARIS. bed, it can be instantly changed foi either purpose required. The im proved article of furniture woulc I I J ' Vi III1 JJ. i j|' "3| Y/ '/ffi*=*w;),//777.?-TTJ //, 1 W1 11 I Z4. probably be most appreciated in the kitchen. When the table is not required, it can be quickly converted into a chair by simply turning bach the top. The !arge space required for the table is thus dispensed with an additional chair being also provided. The top of the table in this combined piece of furniture also constitutes the back of the chair.? | Washington Star. I Churchyard Under the Soa. When the Coast Eros.on Commiasioners visited Walton on the Naze yesterday they were shown a spot north of the pier, and about a milf from the shore, which was formerl) a churchyard. A quarter of a centurj ago the .ombstones could be seer under water at i.bb tide, but since then the sea has further encroached and even when the tide is extraordinarily low ar'1 the sea clear the old lurving ground is scarcely discernible from the sea level.?Londcr Daily News. ADVANCE GUARD. ppf ' ' I II: I went up to ray room just now ir he edge of the door." hing I never do."?The Sketch. I to hold the end of a hose at the poini J desired and pour the stream of wa : ter upon it for such length of tim< I as might he deemed necessary. Thi: ! mode of holding the stream is mor< ; or less defective, in that the stream of water could not be poured upoi the exact spot for any great lengtl of time on account of the persoi holding the hose becoming tired anc unable to direct it uniformly] In or der to obviate these difficulties anc to produce an apparatus not requir ing continuous attention, the devic< j here illustrated was produced. Not Large Enough. I "Mosquitoes large here?" "Purty large," answered Farme; Corntossel; "but I wish they was < ) little bigger. Then mebbe some o I these fellows that's so crazy fui ! huntin' would come down here ii i oilcloth suits an' shoot at 'em."? ! Washington Star. i j In Iceland the horses are shoe | with horn, while in the Soudan thej | wear socks of camel skin. jf J5 CJ7V??/? >- J5?s Cr-J | / ?/? ISfrnnirL ./<6iVa?/?J=aV-jl^ i J ] Subject: Death. y Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, Hamburg avenue and Weirfield street, on the theme, "Death," the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, took as his text those words which are found so frequently in the earlier part of the Old Testament scriptures, "And he died." He said: Death is a subject of which we do not like to speak. It is a subject we avoid. The most of us endeavor to forget that there is such a fact for us. Many of us live as though we bad eliminated it from our lives. It >s the fashion in the church nowadays not to preach about death j with any frequency. For the people quite largely do not desire sermons on that theme. Ministers forbear to press home its consideration. They do not care to urge men to come to Christ by playing on the element of fear in their characters. And strangely enough death and fear have been correlative terms for generations. Death used to ho a forceful and popular subject for pulpit presentation. The divines of a century and more ago made their lasting reputations because of their masterly expositions of the scriptures about death. Many a soul was swung into obedience to God by the impulse of an intense and vivid sermon on death. However unwise it may be to lead men to God and to Christ through . fear of death, it is much more unwise never to bring this fact to their attention. For the life after death I is the major part of our existence. The days that God allots to us here are but a minute fraction of the ages we shall live, if we be righteous, within Him forever. This life is not all of life. Nor does death end all. However difficult and distasteful a subject death may be to discuss, it repays investigation and consideration. We may not care to study it, to face it, to analyze it. But we ought ? :-> "For death is inevitable. It is certain that as we have come into this world we shall, in all human probability, go out of it. We cannot escape death. We cannot avoid it. We ought not to hasten it. We must give it consideration. For it is sure to come. We do not know the dav or tlie hour. We cannot forecast the time. No man can tell the order in which we shall go hence, you and I. But the last day will dawn upon earth for each of us. Tttie chimes -will ring a last farewell upon our ears. The call of relentless death will ring through every soul. We may not be able to forecast death's coming, but ! he -will arrive. We may not be able to enumerate the order of our going, I but we shall go. For death is in; evitable. His coming is inescapable. He stands waiting at the terminus of every life. And we should not fear ' if we fear God. For death is natural. It is as nat' ural as it is inevitable. It is as nat ural as birth. There is nothing un usual about it however mysterious its processes may be. It is as natural to die as it is to be born. Men talk of death as though it were a hiatus. Death is not a break. It is a method of procession. They speak of death 5 as something that ought not to oe. ; We shall not discuss that to-day. j But we shall assert without fear of r contradiction that in the world as it r is at present constituted death is a valuable asset to humanity. 1 For death is not final but tran5 sitional. It is not a goal. It is but . an incident in the life of the soul - as it flies through life into eternity. I Death is not ultimate. It is not ter. minal. Death is not an end itself. 1 It is not the last of life though it comes al the end of this life. For if death is final it is at least questionable whether it were any use to live at all. If death is absolute and ultimate, if it writes finis to the close of every man's life, then in the words of Paul, "of all men most miserabje." There may be use and there may be | wisaom in living simpiy ior me sane I of living and then dying, with no | hope of eternity, with no expectation I of a life beyond, with no promise of immortality. But such a philosophy, however sound it may be for some minds, does not appeal to me. For I am persuaded that we live to some greater purpose than just to die, and go back into the dust and be forever forgotten?forever. I am persuaded that we are more than the flower of the field or the grass thereof, which to-day is and to-morrow is consumed by the quenchable fire. For God has written in my heart, aud I hope He has in yours, a promise of another life and of a nobler and a fairer world. I look for a land and a life that is eternal, a heavenly country. For, to me, death is a portal. It is a gate. It is a boon, a gift of God, a blessing. To my mind it writes "to be continued" after the last word of the last chapter of the record of every soul's earthly me lias been inscribed upon the pages of human history. For death is more a beginning than an ending. It is a door through which wc enter into the undiscovered country. It affords us a vision of another world the view of which is withholden from our mortal eyes. It releases us from the circumscriptions of earth. It unlocks the mystery of eternity. It unfolds the future existence before us. Through it we achieve a knowledge of the unknown. To those of us who have endeavored sincerely, however partially Ave have succeeded, to do the will of God and to submit our1 soiree tr? Mis rlivine rwitrnl. death ~~ ? - - > pomes r.6 a friend over whom we: may fejoice. Not that we should desire jto die. For this is a good life. Not t lhat we should regret that we have . uays ahead that we must fill full of > action and of holy living. Not that ' we should pray for death as a surcease from care and from pain and 3 from disciplines. But we welcome 1 hnd expect death, if we he in Christ, i jis a friend, because it augments our i days, and expands our opportunities, i ant clarifies our vision, and intensi1 fies our knowledge. And that is . good. This death, which is inevitabls and natural in the career of every man, .whether lie be rich or poor, wise or 3 ignorant, good or bad, may be terrible, doubtful or beautiful, according to the manner of our lives and .the quality of our characters. For Ideath cannot be bought off by riches. 'Neither does ho pass the hovel. He r is no respecter of intelligence. His l hand is heavy and his arm is long to seize and to project into eternity r that which is immortal in good and j evil men alike. And it simply depends upon the Icind of man you are whether death will be terrible, doubtful or beautiful to you. To a bad man death must be ter1 ribK That is to say, if he possesses r the least spark of moral consciousness or spiritual susceptibility. Aye, it is tejrible. And it ought to be. A bad man ought to be afraid to die. A man whose whole life has contravened God s law. whose continued and cumulative effort has been to fol- ( low the lusts of his own heart nnrl ' the dictates of his own will, who has sought not to please God, but to find 1 favor with men, who has constructively planned and effected evert sin, ^ who has denied the call of conscience j and deified Satan daily, ought to be afraid to die. Death ought to be terrible to him. In his last hours such 1 a man could best evidence that, he 1 was a man and not a beast by elevating the fear of God to supreme prom- J inence in his mind. A man whose whole life as a consciously active free moral agent has been dedicated to the stultification of the mandates of the Almighty and to the exaltation of sin as a method of living ? ought to be anxious to reverse the I call of death and the decision of fate, c He ought to want another chance in e this life to fit him for the next life. . It would be strange if bad men were not afraid to die. It would be curious if they could face eternity unabashed. For death to a sinful soul must be terrible. To co forth into t a new life unprepared, to enter into c the presence of eternity at enmity / with God; what could be more awful? Death may be doubtful. Many men there are who, obeying tho dictates of God as they hear them and His laws as thoy read them, have at- ? tained a moral eminence that is not inconsiderable; but who, as they * stand in the presence of the usual ^ but inscrutable mystery of ieath, a confess that they await its power n without hope and with simply a sci- j entific spirit of inquisitiveness. There i is for them no certainty of a future ,1 life. They do not protest that death necessarily ends all. They simply express the opinion that, so far as they are concerned, death is a locked gate, a sealed portal, a bolted, barred, impenetrable door. They declare that while there may be a life beyond this they have no valid ground for ex- v pressed hope therein, no reason to to stay their souls in the expectation of 6 eternai existence. They know not. a Theirs is the philosophy of agnostic- b ism. Still others deny that there is another lif? in anpther worlrl. Theirs is the negative philosophy of atheism. And neither is scientific or satisfying in the largest or most enduring way. For we need and desire and demand a as rational and expectant human p beings something more ;han inde- a cision and negation. The soul re- ^ quires a true soul food. It does not ^ thrive on agnosticism or infidelity. ~ Death may be beautiful, it may be ^ welcome, it may be an inspiration. " It is so to godly men, men of faith 1 aud of vision, men who are versed J in the philosophy of heaven and who Cl are acquainted with the scientific for- a; mulae of the discipline of the soul. ~ It is beautiful and gracious to those who are God's in Christ?supremely so. For the Christian knows that '! death is not only inevitable and na- g tural, but that it is simply transi- fi tional, that it is a portal. The D Christian is certain that eternal life tl is. The Christian believes from a f, conscious experience in the fact of God. He hopes, not without reason. r for eternal life and .eternal blessed- c ness within God in heaven. For has ii not Christ assumed him that God and heaven are? Has He not said: "I t! ?? a nlnoo for VOll And :, fiU <-<J n. J 4J if I go and prepare a place for you 1 will come again and receive you unto Myself?" And Christ not only has )* said that to the Christian through the " medium of the Scriptures. He has ft also spoken these words of comfort presently to the human hearts of i; Christian believers. And God has ceaselessly thundered the truth of immortality through the recesses- ol human souls. "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God" eternally. E Death, for the Christian, is to be v welcomed, whensoever it may come, a with a holy awe, without fear. For d death is sublime. It is the cap of s the climax of the Christian earthly life. It is our illumination, our inspiration, our reward. It enlarges 1 our joys and certifies bur hopes. We & should await it in the spirit of that h man of God whom the other day, in the presence of a multitude of men, as he stood upon the eminence of four score years and upon the borderland of eternity, I heard say, "I await death with joy. To me the E thought that I shall die is sublime. For I know that if I die I shall live t again." His hearers were electrified. His tones thrilled. His hope was con- t tagious. We, too, should await death ^ with a cheer. The Color of Life. The world is not made up to the eye of figures, that is, only half; it is also made of color, wrote Emerson. v How that element washes the uui- 1 verse with its enchautingwaves! The ? onrWl hie wnrtr. and be- o hold a new world of dream-like glory, o 'Tis tlie last stroke of nature; be- t yond color she cannot go. In like manner life is made up, not of lcnowl- . edge only, but of love also. If thought is form, sentiment is color. ? It clothes the skeleton world with 1 space, variety and glow. The hues of sunset make life great; so the affections make some little web of cottage and fireside populous, important ^ and filling the main space in our history.?Home Herald. .... The Love of Goodness. h To lose the soul is to lose out of C one's being the pure affections and f the love of truth and right. It is to lose the love of goodness and pious . trust and the heavenly dower of immortal hope. ... He that has * lost his virtuous purposes, holy as- ^ pirations, devout hopes, whose soul f has abdicated its high scat and be- ? 4r\ iUs* wnvl^ Hlrr? lh<a v.ujiic auiij\?c?. *'j niv ? v4 f ***? * sapless and verdureless tree, is al- t ready struck with death.?Ephrann ^ Peabody. * Evil Companionship Destroys a Child, j We put down as the worst thing j, that can come into the life of a child low. vile association. We doubt if any human being ever got beyond s the influence of evil associates for the 1 first ten years of life. Sucli as-ocia- ^ tion will produce an insanity of na- e ture against which the victim will t find it necessary to fight for all the , years that remain to him.?Western ?. Methodist. Brings Out Our Best. * We all have movings of holiness within, but we only half believe them ' till we see them in Christ; it is He 1: I n-iie. nioiroo na mntf-inii? nf mir best ? self. a Spiritually Invigorating. The euro of .1 feeble faith is alone 1 to be found in the invigoralion of our s whole spiritual life by intercourse i with God.?Murray. a s The Twentieth Century Christ. The Christ of the first centuries r was a miracle worker; the Christ of the twentieth century is permanent, t recognized pov/er. i His Income. The teacher of a Sunday-schoo :lass in Wilkesbarre once put the fol owing questions to a new scholar: "What did Moses do for a livinj while he was with Jethro?" There was a long silence, durinf which the other members of the c'as! ;ook occasion to "size up" the new lomer. The latter, however, was un lismayed After due reflection h< mswered: "Please, ma'am, he married one o; rethro's daughters." ? Harper's iVeekly. Water Remarkably Pure. The water of Loch Katrine, ir Scotland, is wonderfully pure. II lolds only quarter-pound of alluvia leposit to every 1000 gallons of wat;r. The Thames averages foui jounds to the 1000 gallons. Three Possessions. Love, joy and peace are the things hat make a man's life. Possession ?f these t'aree make him most like Jhrist.?C. E. Hughes. The Missouri Hen. The farmers' wives and daughters f Missouri marketed 107,155,658 ozens of eggs last year", for which hey received more than $16,000,000. kdded to this are the items of live md dresssd poultry and feathers, aaking the comfortable sum of neary $40,000,000 for poultry- products or the last year.?St. Louis Repuhic. March. March is named from Mars, the god f war. The old Romans called March he first month of the year, so it is a ery good month for us to mend all lie good resolutions we have broken ince New Year's, and to-make war nrTPhnfovor Irooninp* iiq from 5CWXJOI. Ttuuvvtvi **j ^ ^ ? 0 eing the very best that we can be. Diabolical Invention. A staircase has been invented rhich plays tunes as it is walked up nd down upon. A series of pins is ressed bj' the feet and play songs nd drums, while other are connected rith collapsible chambers, which low various instruments.?Kansas ity Star. HJTN AM ilor more (foods brighter and faster colors tnau an; Ire any garment without ripping apart. Write for A Mad Dog. As you well know we are not In ivor of keeping so many dogs. A ood dog may be very useful on a arm, but if you must keep one, do ot abuse it; it is entitled to as good reatment as any other stock on the arm. We hope that none of our eaders would be guilty of such ruelty as is narrated in the followag item from the Dog Fancier: I had an experience last September imf t never shall fnreret. One burn ag hot September day I drove into farmer's barn-yard and stopped uner a shade tree to let my horse rest, 'he door of the house opened and Ir. B? stepped out with a shotgun. "Hello, John, are you going huntng?" I asked. "No; our dog is mad." "Where is the dog?" "Down by the corn crib." .1 stepped out of my buggy and tarted with him for the crib, which fas located about twenty feet from small barn. There was the poor umb brute, with a heavy leather trap around his neck and tied with rope to a ring on a wire running rom the corner of the*crib to the am. As we got in sight of the dog e began to jump and tear at the rope "What is the dog's name?" I asked. "Watch." I started to go to tne aog ana jode aught rae by the arm. "Don't gc lear him, he will bite you!" "How long has the dog been tied here?*' "We went away yesterday morning o thrash for Wilson and we left Vatch here to guard the corn-crib." There /as the poor dog left foi hirty-six hours in a burning ?ur without a drop of water, to guard ? rib of fifteen cent corn. I walked ip to the dog and cut the rope and ed him to the well. I pumped some yater in a cup and gave him a small [uantity to drink. The dog did nol iffer to bit me. He was too glad o get away from such a place. John did not speak for some time rut finally said, "I never thought ol living him water. I will never tie hat dog again." FAMILY FOOD. 'risp, Toothsome and Requires Nc Cooking. A little boy down in N. C. asked lis mother to write an account of how Jrape-Nuts food haft helped theii amily. She says Grape-Nuts was first irought to her attention on a visit tc Charlotte, where she visited the Iayor of that city who was using the ood by the advice of his physician. Ihe says: "They derive so much good from it hat they never pass a day without ising it. While I was there l usea he Food regularly. I gained aboul 5 pounds and felt so well that when returned home I began using GrapeJuts in our family regularly. "My little IS months old baby hortly after being weaned was very 11 with dyspepsia and teething. She k'as sick nine weeks and we tried verything. She became so emaciated hat it was painful to handle her, and ye thought we were going to lose icr. One day a happy thought urged tie to try Grape-Nuts soaked in a litle warm milk. "Well, it worked like a cnarm ana he began taking it regularly and imirovement set in at once. She is now letting well and round and fat as fast s possible o*n Grape-Nuts. "Some time ago several of the famly were stricken with LaGrippe at he same time, and during the worst tages we could not relish anything u the shape of food but Grape-Nuts ma oranges, everything else naueated us. "We all appreciate what your fanous food has done for our family." There's a Reason." Read "The Road o Wellville," in pkgs. Little Chance For Him. 1 A Winfield woman complained at - our office to-day because we made known the fact yesterday that the ; comet story is a fake. She said that she had her husband about in the noj tion of joining the church, but that ; we had sidetracked him. Now, we . don't pretend to be the judge of any . man's salvation, but we are firmly of ; the opinion that any individual who waits for a comet to strike him bep fore he repents has a slim chance for 5 redemption.?Winfield (Kan.) Free Press. Womanly Intuition. l A small girl and her mother were t watching a monkey perform in front I of a show tent. The monkey had . jumped on the showman's back and . was hugging him when the girl said: "He knows his papa, don't he, mamma?"?Chicago Tribune. . What He Knows. t A young man just out of college ; knows a good deal, except about how to earn a living.?Somerville Journal. i No pipe to connect, nothing to set up, no foundation to | make, no experience required, n It Is the most practical enE gine for the farmer, because it 9 Is always ready, compact, adI justed and can be moved any S where. I The price is right?the qualI ity Is the standard of the U. ? S. Government, who use It. I ^ OLDS GAS B Main Office: 985 Scagi Boston: 69-75 Washington St, N. Bingham ton, 1 ^WaWWle r other dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers. Thty d free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colore. MC [w. L. DOUC $3.00 & $3.50 SHOEi mS^SHOES EOR EVERY MEMBER < THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICE ft ft ft ( To any one who car 9*5OpUUU) Oougia* doaa not Dtamaggaaagi ) mora Men'a S3 A J llCr Waf M (than any other me THE REASON W. L. Douglae shoes are worn in all walks of life than any other make, is t excellent style. ea?y-fltting, and superior we The selection of the leathers and other materi ( of the shoe, and every detail of the making is the most completeorganization of superintende skilled shoemakers, who receive the highest wi shoe industry, and whose workmanship cannot 1 If I could take you into my large factories at 1 and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoi would then nnderetand why they hold their s wear longer and arc of greater value than any My $4 OUt Edqoand$S 3ofd Bond Sfi CAUTION! The genuine have W. L. Doug] M,r. A at vonr dealer for W. L. I direct to factory, oboes sent everywhere by ma EVERY MAN HIS By J. HAMILTON A This ie a most Valuable Book for t easily-distinguished Symptoms of diffei ' of Preventing such Diseases, and tho ? or cure. 608 Pages, Psofv. tions, Ezplanations of Botanical Prac ' New Edition, Revised and Enlarged 1 Book in the house there is no excuse . . ergency. , Don't wait nntil you have illn ess i Bend at once for this valuable vo lume Send postal notes or postage eta raps I 5 cents. BOOK PUBLISHING HOI ; Paper From Beet Pulp. A report comes from Utah to the ' effect that Mr. James Brashear, a veteran paper maker now located at Ogden, Utah, having come from Des Moines, Iowa, believes that he can make paper from beet pulp and is willing to start up a plant for this purpole if such a one can be organI ized. He claims to have built the Nar tional Paper Mills, at Rock Island, . Illinois, and to know whereof he speaks, but we should fancy that the ; very skillful manipulators of sugar > beets in France and Germany wouli . have utilized the pulp for paper mak( ing long ago if it could have been made industrially successful. The trouble with some of these ; ventures is that they are scientifically ; correct, but not industrially profitable, and we should think it doubtful as to making beet pulp paper profitable. She Squelched Him. Miss Ellabelle Mae Doclittle, the Leesville poetess, effectively squelched ! a young man at a dance the other night. Miss Doolittle, when the fad first became fashionable, was operated on for appendicitis and the ! young man knew this. In a waltz she 1 had with him he said: "Miss Doolittle, it seems to me you dance better since you had your ap pendix cut out." "Is that so?"replied the great poet ess. "Yes," he said. "Well," came from Miss Ellabelle " Mae, "why don't you have yours cut ; out?" Wasn't that a hot one??Denver : Post. Takes Out Temper. Fine edged tools lose their temper 1 if exposed to the light of the sun for a considerable length of time.?TitBits. N.Y.?37 . . > & j Graft in Iceland. Why can't this grafted country get some immigration from Iceland, where there have been but two thefts in 1000 years? But is there anything in Iceland worth stealing??St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Liberia si Healthy Region. The white population in Liberia ii showing a notable increase. It has been found that African fevers are less frequent and deadly there than in other regions. ; Liberality. Little Jimmy, who had Just received a box of mixed candy, passed it around to treat the family, saying: "Help yourself to all the chocolates you want. I don't like them." ?Judge. Germany's Three Big Cities. The three largest German cities are Berlin, with a population of over 2,040,000; Hamburg, with 803,000, anil \Tiinff>h with ahnut 540.000. OLDS ENGINES ? "best by evert test? . U.S.GOV'T REPORT. /7 This engine Is ready to run when you get It; fill It with gasne, throw on the switch, turn 1?that's all. Write us to tell you about our liberal proposition that will save you money. We guarantee every Olds Engine to run properly. You take no risk In buying It There Is an agent near by to see that everything is all right Seqd for catalog showing 8 to -60 h. p. engines and get our interesting offer. POWER CO., sr St., Lansing, Mich. f. Y.: 23 Washington SL Phfla.: 1818 Market st j S S D Y E S lye In cold water better than any other dye. Yoa can IN ROE DRUG CO.. Qalncy. MIlooU. [LAS A >_THE WORLD ?prove ?/. L make A sell JK ]Vt3|v f3. BO shoo* ffmt.. ^w- aJflk mufacturor. MM ^>i KHJk >eea?se o esare rnnde, you hape, fit better, other make. Ms cannot be equalled at any price* las name and price stamped on bottom. Take >ouglas shoes. If he cannot supply you, send dl. Catalog free. W.L.Douglm, Brockton, Mam. t OWN DOCTOR YEK9S A. M., M. D. . he Household, teaching as it doee the rent Diseases, the Causes and Means ? 1?j. wVii^K will alleviate umpieei/ ncucwvo ?. .. isely Illustrated. This Book is written in plain erery-day English, and is free from the technical terms which render most doctor books so valueless to the generality of readers. This Book is intended to be of Service jj in the Family, and is so worded ag J to be readily understood by all. I 0dIJ" / ; ?O Cts/?faia. I The low price only being made i possible by the immense edition J printed. Not only does this Book ' contain so much Information Relative to Diseases, but very properly \ gives a Complete Analysis of everything pertaining to Courtship, Marriage and the Production and Rearing of Healthy Families: togethet with Valuable Recipes and Prescrip:tice. Correct Use of Ordinary Herbs. with Complete Index. With this for not knowing what to do in an em n vour family before you order, but , ONL\ 60 , CENTS POST-PAID. oi any denomination not larger tbaa USE, 134 Leonard Street, N. Y. To Possess a Healthy and Pearly SKIN use Glenn's Sulphur Soap with warm water daily, and the skin will soon become soft and beautiful. To remove pimples, redness, roughness, sunburn, j nothing compares with ^ ^ j Glenn's i iuijjuui cjuap Sold by druggist* i mil's Hair nnd Vhlilitr Djo Black or Brown, SOc. .. . L (Mica Axle Grease I Best lubricant for axles in tbe I world?long weariLD -ad very ad- I j Mokes a heavy load draw like a j light cr.e. Saves half the wear oa B wagon and team, and increases the E earning capacity of your outfit. ft j Ask your dealer fc ~'ica Axle I 1 STANDARD I OIL CO. JXlitfftfJ* I Imcorpor?v?d I DDAOC V DISCOVH^J U 1% Vr a w a ? ? ? qoia niwr ?"* nrti cuca. D?*k ol tM?l??aUli and W Omjm' ?s*fr. i)ft a U. tiftMS'fl MIS ??t 8, UU*U, V