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-7T "\ CL In purchasing a piano you want to be particular that it contains the SEAVERNS PIANO ACTION. C. The action is the most vital part of the instrument; being practically the works. You want the best to be had in your piano, and when you secure the finest action manu factured you give life to the instrument. cl The SEAVERNS ACTION is the best action made. It has been on the market for over fifty years. It has a light touch, as well as delicacy and power. c. Insist upon having a SEA VERNS ACTION in the piano you purchase. c. If you wish further infor mation, write: SEAVERNS PIANO ACTION nnmdaiiv Established 1851 uumrart Cambridge, mass. If YOU HAVE no appetite, Indigestion, Flatulence, Sick Headache, "all run down" or losing flesh, you will find tuff's Pills fust what you need. They tone up the weak stomach and build up th? flagging energies. Restores Cray Kair to Natural Color; REMOVES OANDRUFF AND SCURF Invigorates and prevents tho hair from falling off. For Sal* by Orufcglata, or l?nt Dlract by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia #rlM SI Far tattla! Sampla Bottle j$?. Sand (or Circulars CURED Gi vos Quick Relief Removes all swelling in 8 to 30 days; effect a permanent cure in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment (given free. Nothing can be fairer. Write Or. H. H. Green's Sons Socialists, Bex B, Atlanta, Qa. TWO WORLD FAMED GRANNIES 0?e of These Talented Women is Sarah Bernhardt and the Other Ellen Terry. Two famous grandmc -hers are dis tinguished visitors of this country. Re ferring to these talented ladies The Rochester Post Express says: "One of the grandmothers is Mme. Sarah Bern hardt; the other is Ellen Terry. Both actresses hare reached an age when It Is permissible to retire from active life; but the French actress is said to be as energetic as a woman half her age, while Ellen Terry is declared to be as ^oung as ever she was in the palmy days when she and Henry Irv ing ruled the theatrical world of Eng land. Miss Terry has retired from the stage so far as acting is concerned, and has taken to lecturing on Shakes peare's heroines. And who could do better than she who has played so many of tie womanly women of the great dramatist? Readers of her breezy biography know what she thinks of Portia, Beatrice, Voila, Rosa lind and other famous women of the tragedies and comedies, but no print ed page could charm as does the won derfully expressive features and the velvet voice of the greatest living English-speaking actress." "You write of your hero as stealing home In the darkness," said the ed itor. "Yes," replied the author. "Well, you ought to know better than that. He couldn't steal home in the dark. If it was dark enough to be worth noticing the game would have been called." "The count has promised that he will never beat or kick me if I will marry him." said the beautiful heiress. "But has he promised to work for you?" her father asked. "Oh, papa, don't be unreasonable." It's a pity that more sermons are not as deep as they are long. Gives Breakfast Literary Accuracy. Asking Too Much. Zest and Relish Post Toasties A sweet, crisp, whole some food made of Indian . Corn, ready to serve right from the box with cream and sugar. Flavoury Delicious Economical 'The Memory Lingers* Postnm Cereal Company, Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. Farmers' Educational and Co-Operative Union of America Matters ^Especial Moment to the Progressive Agriculturist A good start is not so much good If rou don't keep going. Worry is simply trying to live two lays at a time?one is enough. Don't measure your succees by the amount of money you can Jingle. Lying down on one's joo io ?* Quick way to become open for an other. Don't worry about the market; raise what you cat and eat what you raise. Bell the surplus. The successful farmer laughs at ob stacles because he believes that he la luperfor to them. Agriculture, manual training and gardening should be given a place in every rural school course. Isolation, hard work, and small compensation is too often the lot of the farmers' wives. These are bur lens that need lifting. Baby pigs squeal for the same rea ?on that human babies do. There is lomethlng the matter with both of them, and it is your duty to find the trouble and correct it. When you persist in doing two menJfl work, you shorten your days, and enchance the chances of your chil dren for a step-father. Just because one has made a good many mistakes is no reason for his petting in the habit. The way to suc cess is to profit by our mistakes. The farmer that refuses to adopt luccessful Ideas is 1n such an ad eanced stage of decomposition mat the undertaker can do nothing for him. If some farmers put as much money Into feed for their farm pigs as they Jo to support the "blind pigs" In town their families might have more to eat and wear better clothes. There Is always a best way of do ing things on the farm, but it often takes study to find It The result Is worth the effort. If Bome one else Is netting better results than you are, Snd the reason. MUCH GOOD IN CO-OPERATION System Brings Farmers Together, As sures a Square Deal and Main tains Steady Market. A year ago the farmers of Ham mond, La., organized a co-operative milk-selling association. Hammond was the chief supplier of milk for New Orleans. When the dealers proposed tOi reduce the price to 20 per cent, the association objected and at the end of negotiations it was unanimously de cided to set up their own city pasteur izing;. bottling and distributing, writes N. O. Nelson In the Southern Culti vator. On their Joint responsibility they borrowed the large capital re quired at 6 per cent interest, to be paid by 7% per cent, of the milk. They maintained the former price and soon secured the largest business in the city. The dealers were compelled to pay the same price and to look up new sources of supply. This and the activ ity of the co-operation plant has given a great impetus to dairying. Many lo calities which had never shipped any milk have been waked up to the profit ableness of dairying. The co-operative association has formed local asociations agreeing to sell together for two years and of emirsa thev shiD to the co-operation. There have also been formed credit societies, made up of 16 to 20 farmers, who on their joint responsibility bor row money, buy carloads of cows and sell at. auction to the members. The cows are paid for in milk at $3.50 or $5.00 a month per cow, the society owning the cows until paid for. The milk must be shipped to the co-opera tion, which hold out the monthly pay ments and pay the sum over to the credit society. The profit on the re sale of the cows belongB to the soci ety, which thus accumulates Its own capital. Creameries are organized in the same way. The state health board and the agricultural college have joined In pushing dairying in the state. The co-operative plan gives the move ment stability, it brings the farmers together, it assures a square deal, and maintains a steady market. Georgia should Imitate Louisiana. It needs getting together, some energetic leadins: spirits, devotion and disinter estedne8s. Moat of all It needs to stick to the unimpaired co-operative plan, not a corporation wherein the capital controls and takes the profit, but an association In which one man counts the same as another and each one gets all the proceeds of what be supplies. Uncultivated Spots. The farmer who Is so careless as to leave uncultivated spots along fence roads and other places, might at least plant fruit trees In them. They will require less attention than other crops and If the weeds are kept down In their vicinity for two or three years, the trees 'will produce crops, big or little, according to the good senae of \he owner. For Fattening Sheep. Cottonseed meal has not yet been I extensively tested as a feed for sheep, | but 6uch tests as have been made Bhow that It has held its own with other forms of concentrated feed and many good feeders prefer it to linseed meal when fed in one-fourth to one half pound at a time, to fattening Bheep. Cottonseed Meal for Sheep. In some localities cottonseed meal can be made to take the place of con siderable corn that is now being fed to sheep. It is not advisable to feed it in large quantities to young animals or to breeding stock. LABOR OF BUSINESS AGENT"! Many Brethren Fume and Froth Erro neously?More and Better Edu cation Is Needed. Did you ever think of It, brother, that there are two ends to the Golden Rule handstlck, and It requires an even pull on both Bides to elevate and balance accounts according to equity and Justice. Brethren, always examine the good9 carefully you have shipped by railroad i before taking them out of the station. If they are damaged in part and you are willing to take them, have the railroad agent endorse on the freight mn nov th? word "damaeed." By doing this you bave a document In the freight bill that enables you or the merchant who Bhlps you the goods to recover damages, writes J. L. Collins In the Union Advocate. Many of our brethren fume and froth at the bust- J ness agent erroneously, that is to say, for want of better evidence than Imag inary conclusion. When what they or der is not forthcoming in a JlfTy they suppose (judging from the way some of them write) that the business agent is holding their money for a sinister ! motive. They don't aeera to compre hend the methods I have to do busi ness under; however, if they will stick ' to their job In patronizing through the ' agency, In the course of five years the education they will receive will be of J great benefit to them in a commerical sense. This is what we all need, more , education and better education, and is the only way we will ever be able to handle our own affairs in a way that will be satisfactory. The truth of the matter is that we have let the other fellow, or the business world, so to Bpeak, measure out of the products our toll has honestly created, a preav tory harvest unto himself and his household while we have borne the burden in the heat of the day. ,pro duclng yet neglecting the business end, or running along In a Blip-shod way, taking just what the business world was disposed to give for our products and giving them a wholesome profit for whatever merchandise we had to buy from them. So they make it both going and coming and we need never to expect a change until we or ganize thoroughly and begin to look out for self and family. My theory the speculators that stand between us and the manufacturer, for he always leans to the Bide of the manufacturer. This is but natural, for he is virtually in his employ. They talk about the Farmers' union killing the bulls in the cotton exchange, their best friend they say. Then if this be true why not our best friend get Into our order and ! help fight for working on legitimate lines instead of wanting to gamble on that game in which the farmer has to furnish the stakes, but has no say in conducting the game. One brother writes and wants to know If we need stamps to send bills of lading. Yes, brother, and i somebody to address the envelopes. If all matters were properly re corded, filed, answered and mailed, it would keep at least three efficient servants constantly employed to clean up the daily accumulation of business in the business agent's office. Feather Pulling. The trouble with your chickens is IJ not a disease, but a so-called bad hab* , It which is frequently observed in poul- ] try yards during the late winter and early spring, says a writer in Balti- ( more American in answer to a query. Many people believe it to be due to Idleness in the flock, and they rec j ommend exercise as the cure. There \ is a good deal in this, and flocks have ( been helped by being obliged to ( scratch in straw or leaves for the greater part of their food, that is, ; their grain food. The cause, however, j is not so much lack of exercise as ( lack of salt in their food. Idle fowls ( will pull the feathers from one an- - others' necks and get a little flavor of the salt in the soft part at the base i of the feather. This taste prompts | | continued pulling, and often the fowls' I | necks are Dar? almost iueir mu i length. The remedy is to give abund- 1 dant opportunity to exercise and feed | a 6mall quantity of salt in the wet < mash, just enough to season the mix- ] ture. The habit is rarely observed I when fowls have free range. At least, i it is far less common among them ' than among those shut up in city i yards. 1 Looking Toward Better Poultry. 1 It is probable that some farmers ] will never raise pure-bred poultry, j But there is no good reason why they , should not have a flock of pure-bred | fowls. A coop of nice birds of one ( breed and color will always bring a , little more in the market, other things ( being equal, than a coop of mixed breeds. The infusion of new blood by the use of pure-bred males is a , good way to start and does. not in- , volve a large outlay of money. Then, ] by getting eggs from reputable breed- , ers, a farmer may soon have a flock , of. birds to be proud of, and these , will be found much more profitable than scrub or even crossbred stock. ( Farm Improvement. f XTULe&SUl OJLLAAWJU VW?B WA. j ~ farmer In Michigan who bought a ' thousand acres of farm land at one dollar per acre. He Is Improving the 1 quality of the soil by plowing In 1 vetch as a green manure. He also 1 grows the vetch for seed, selling It at four to five dollars per bushel, and getting six to ten bushels per acre. Prepare for Orchard. If you think of setting out an or chard next spring, clean out and culti vate the ground as thoroughly as you do for corn or wheat. Plow deeply 1 and harrow thoroughly. It Is a good - . .. . i plan to plow the ground in me iaii, - sub-soiling If the soil Is heavy, then ' disc and harrow well In the spring ' before planting. ' Care for Hen. ? Feed the hen; give her water; see < that she has warm winter quarters, < and she will give you eggs "when i eggs is eggs." ?Abinet HERE are thrtse kinds of peo ple in the world; the wills, the won'ts and cant's. The first accom plish everything, the second oppose every thing, the third fail in everything." Delightful Southern Dishes. A history of some of these ?ild southern dishes affording a glimpse into old creole hospitality makes in teresting reading. The following reci pes are a few of the many that make urevio cuunery lumuus. The greatest difficulty In getting a southern dish to taste natural la the fault of the measurements. The old cookB had no standard of measure ment and In passing on a recipe to another the results were never very uniform. Chaurice.?This la a distinctive Cre ole sausage and the nicest and most highly flavored of all sausages. Chop four pounds of lean and two pounds of fat fresh pork. Season highly with salt, white pe/jvir, cayenne, and sweet red pepper " ^(fhiB seasoning distin guishes ^ 'creole sausage from the more c^lfmon variety. Chaurice must be seasoned very hot Mince two large onions and a clove of garlic fine, add to the meat, then the following portion of herbs and spices, the herbs minced fine: One sprig of thyme, three sprigs of parsley, two bay leaves, tooonnnnfiila nf rouanno nno tan* ! n V WUUj/UUULUtU U1 VU/ VMUV| W*?v spoonful of chopped sweet pepper, two teaspoonfuls of white pepper, three teaspoonfuls of salt, one-half a tea spoonful of allBpice. Mix all together and fill the casings. Chaurice is fried- for breakfast and served garnished with parsley. A few chaurice thrown into the kettle with boiling cabbage or beans add greatly to the flavor. Creole Jambalaya.?This is a Span ish-Creole dish, which is a great fa vorite in New Orleans. Cut one pound of fresh pork into pieces half an inch Bquare. Chop two onions very fine and mince two cloves of garlic and two sprigs each of thyme and parsley and a bay leaf. Put a tablespoonful of butter into a sauce pan and add the onions and pork; stir frequently. When Blightly brown add a slice of bam chopped fine, the garlic and an eighth of a teaspoonful of ground cloveB. Cook for five minutes, then add a dozen chaurice and cook five minutes longer. Add three quarts of of beef stock and cook ten minutes. Add a cup and a half of mashed rice, pepper and salt and cayenne to taste, Btir often and serve hot. HE under Bide of every cloud > Is bright and shining; Lnd so I turn mine round about. And always wear them Inside out. To show the L'rtn*." Creole Dishes. With the passing of Mme. Begue, New Orleans has lost one of its fa mous attractions. Here is one of her recipes, which she and her husband knew how to serve so well: Liver a la Mme. Begue.?One pound of liver, cut in slices one inch thick. Lay the liver in salted water while you peel and slice five large onions. Dry the liver and lay in layers with the sliced onions. Let Btand an hour or two, then cut the liver in cubes, iredge with pepper and salt and flour. Treat the onions in the same manner. Put the liver in a frying basket and Pry a deep brown. Fry the onions in the fat. Make a heap of the liver in the center of a platter and surround with onions. Grillards.?Cut a pound of round 3teak into pieces two inches square. Season with salt and pepper. Into a sauce pan put a tablespoonful of but ter, add a few (slices of onion and a tablespoonful of flour, when all is brown add a tablespoonful of tomato Dr tomato catsup and put the meat Into the saucepan. Cover closely and Pry brown on both sides. Add a table spoonful of vinegar and a cup of water, set back on the stove and sim rner ior uan au uuui. Flank Steak a la Creole.?Slash a pound and a quarter of flank steak on both sides with a sharp knife. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and a half tear spoonful'of curry powder. . Pound these seasonings and half cup of flour Into the meat. Brown In a frying pan with a tablespoonful each of lard and butter. Add two cups of boiling water, lover and simmer for an hour, when the meat will be tender and Juicy and the gravy rich and brown. Creole Sauce.?This sauce Is nice served poured over a steak. Slice two onions, two green peppers, two imnces of lean ham. one clove of gar ic. Fry five minutes, then add a half :an of tomatoes, a bay leaf, four oicrht nlinnlo.p. Roil and thicken with a tablespoonful of cornstarch. \dd a dash of red pepper and on ex :ra occasions a half can of mushrooms. Creole Daub.?Take a pound of rouDd steak, score It on both sides md dredge with flour. Pry a table spoonful of suet, put In the meat and Srown on both sides. Cover the meat with a cup of tomato and an onion minced, add a little water and cook slowly for three hours, turning the neat once during the cooking. Thick jn the sauce with flour and pour ovex Nearly every gift that is made haa some sort of a string tied to It Women and Dress. In the matter of dress variety Is to he civilized woman what flnery is to he aava*e. says the London Specta .or. The more civilized women be :ome, the more variety they must lave. TDing8 nave como to sucn a lass cow that the daily papers must :ell the news of the fashions; the rravest Journal dare net ignore them, side by Bide with the affairs of the calm and the annals of court and of :rime stand the kaleidoscopic details )t eolored stuffs and fantastic stylos phlcb delight the famlnlne' public. x I ; s . i -1 The Surprise of the Spiritual By REV. HUGH T. KERR Put or Follerton Anno* Presbyterian Church, Chicago TEXT?The kingdom of heaven Is like Jnto treasure hid in a field, the which when a man hath found, he hldeth, and for Joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath and knoweth that field.?Mat thew XIII, 44. The discovery of hidden treasures was one of the expectant surprises of the past, said the Rev. Mr. Kerr. Tho secrecy of the soil was once" the saf 381 security. Nero became the laugh ing stock of his people because he was induced to investigate a marvel ous treasure-trove In a distant part of bis dominions said to be waiting for a finder. Men of our day, too. have be come the laughing stock of their fel lows by selling their nil to invest in mountains of rock said to contain acres of gold and stratas of shale and to Eecrete rivers of oil. But this man of the parable was no laughing stock, but the wonder of his age and the envy of many men. Without searching for It, he discov ered a treasure. The glittering gold Bhone before his very eyes. Accord ing to the law of the land It was his. His heart danced for very joy and in his Joy he parted with everything he had and possessed himself of that miracle-working field. God is better far than mountains of gold, said Jesua. To find God. to possess him, is worth the sacrifice of every other thing. God 1b the greatest discovery a man can make. Job cried out for God. Philip asked after the father. Tennysony said the greatest desire of his life was to have a new vision of God. Let us follow the path of this unnamed discoverer and, if we can, learn his secret. He was surprised into his discovery. It was all so unexpected and bo amaz ing and so wonderful that he could not believe hia eyes when the glitter ing gold and the shining silver lay spread out In a heap at his feet So does God sometimes surprise the souls of men. We would not be seek ing him had we not already been found of him. Our search for God has been so long and so patient as has his search for us. Sometimes he discovers himself to us and ere we know it ^e are in his presence. Like Livingstone in the African wilderness suddenly facing his discoverer, so does God discover us. Nlcodemus may search for God 'n tne secrecy of the night, but in the broad daylight Jesus reveals himself to the surprised Sa maritan woman. Zacchaeus may climb the tree to see the Christ, but Jesus unexpectedly calls Matthew from his customary place. So do men stumble upon God in life. Men are surprised Into the spiritual by the very act of the eternal spirit they are not looking fcr God, they are found of him. Paul went wit? slaugh ter in his heart to Damascus and lo! he found not the Christian^ but the Christians' God. Verily, said the prophet, thou art a God that Widest thyself. Tne spiritual me iruui w ginning to end is one long series of discovery. The hidden treasure of God's all-pervasire presence Is ever revealing new wonders to our souls. He was surprised into a new men tal temperament The very grammar dances with Joy. The words as they fell from the lips of Jesus are bub bling over with a new found delight. The man walks as it were on air and lives his life in gladness of a present possession. So rejoiced is he in his new found treasure that he again hides it away as something too pre cious to exploit, and holds his secret for a little while at least, in selfish monopoly. The spiritual life must ever sur prise men into a very intoxication of delight. The early church was one great merry making community. The people of that age did not understand the abounding Joy and the overwhelm ing gladness tnat possessed me unns iians who sang in the midst of defeat and who rejoiced in tribulation. When Gods surprises the soul there is abounding light-heartedness and a burst of melody. Every revival of true religion has been accompanied with a burst of song. The miners of Wales went down in to the darkness with gospel songs up on their lips. In the prison-house of Phlllippi Paul and Silas sang songs of Joy until the very prison was smit ten as with an earthquake. God, pity us for our dry-as-dust religion! There is no gospel in the religion of many of our people, and the missing note in our modern Christianity is the note of abounding Joy and spiritual cheerful ness. Our missionary meetings are too often places of tears and trage dies. Our prayer services are too often a rendezvous for dispirited fol lowers. Awake, awake, put on thy beautiful garments. Our Christ is a conqueror and our treasure is pure gold. He was surprise! into a new inter pretation of sacrifice. In his Joy he goetb and selleth all that he has. and buyeth that field. There Is nothing to weep over In that transaction. There is no use to shed tears over that sacrifice. Indeed, there is no sac men talk abou. sacrifices, said the immortal Livingstone; God knows I never made a sacrifice. This from the man who wore hit life out to heal the open sore of the world, and wo, with out -etty self-denialB talk about sacrifice! If we wish the priceless treasure we must pay the price. Determining One's Attitude. Every man determines his own atti tude to the life of heaven by his re ception or rejection of Christ's teach ing.?Rev. John Whitehead, Metho dist, Boston. . Organized Labor. Organized labor has too largely overlooked the deeper side of life in 'ts struggles for material things.? Rev. W. H. Foulkes, Presbyterian, Portland. Ore. ; Learning to be a good neighbor is splendid schooling for the land of the saints. I Stranger?Is this the nursery? Host?No; that's the bawl?room. His Meant. "You are charged "with vagrancy, prisoner at-the bar." "What's dat, judge?" "Vagrancy? Why, you have no visi ble means of support" "Huh! rieab's mah wire, judge; Mary, is you visible." No matter how long your neck may be or how sore your throat, Hamlins Wizard Oil will cure it surely and quickly. It drives out all soreness and inflammation. Steal a march on your enemy by ad mitting you were In the wrong before bo finds It out. ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT /Vegetable Preparation for As similating the Food andReguIa ring the Stomachs and Bowels of Infants : ( hilukiIn Promotes Di^csHon.CheerfuI ness and Rest.Con tains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic jt*ip,yot<i DrSAwei firms* >? 1 I ftampldn 2t?d: JtxSmtui M. lW**w*7fc Aperfect Remedy forConsHp? Hon, Solu- Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. : I?e Simile Signature of The Centaur Company^ NEW YORK, s? m The Rayo Lamp I jr STEADYSiring device. Brer WHlTI<^Ak^Ek aeacnptlre circular^ U?hT*Sfi0^ STANE price. " Constructed o __ __ ornament to any room Of lamp-making that W. L. DOU *3.00 *3.50& *4.00 8H BOYS' 8H0E3, $2.00. $2.80 AND $3.00. If la large t Mau., fullv "W made, tl mod the you wot Dollar 1 My She look at longer tl or $4.00 Do yon realize that my ahoei hare been the 1 years; that I make aDdsell more 83.00 >3.50 ar other manufacturer in the United States ousehold it w. L. r edonthe V. I.. Don OOOO Tha benefit a of froo hide*, which apply principally to ufa leather, ana thm reduced tariff on mole Immthor, now enablom mo to ahro tho wearer own value for him money, bat tor and longer wearing $8, S3.5(9 and $4 shoes than I oould give him pro 1rloua to thotarlffrovlalon. any Jt nas made W. L. Douglas shoes a household tf* A IITIAM T None genuine without W.L.Z VMU I IVn t muneaodprlcestaBipedonttie It your dealer cannot (apply you with w, L. Don EUREKA iiinuroo Sold by D* HHKNLdO OIL Househo THE ALL IN THE HANDY, Is specially sel home. Saves t< not break. Doei BaaJtrs Eiiryirtiri CO SPOHN MEDIO/S. C<* CURETHATCOLB TODAY % "I would rather preserve the he?lA of nation than he Ita rnUr."?MlIJl* YON. Thousands of people who are suffering with colds are about today. Tomorrow they may be prostrated with penumonia. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Get a 25 cent bottle of Mun yon's Cold Cure at the nearest drug Btore. This bottle may be conveniently carried in the vest pocket. If vo? ar? not satisfied with the effects of the ren* edy, send us your empty bottle and w? will refund your money. Munyon's Cold Cure will speedily break up all forms ot ^ colds and prevent grippe and pneumonia. It checks discharges of the nose and tyt$* < stops sneezing, allayj inflammation ana fevr. and tones im the system. If you need Medical Advice, write to Munyon's Doctors. They ,will carefnBy dissnose your case ana advise yon Vf . mail, absolutely free. Prof. Munyon, 53d and Jefferson streets, Philadelphia. Pa. Ml Inrentlrm. Frw> prelimin- \ BHB I p N I ary search. Boofcleifrw. M1LO HI kll I B.8TKV JSN8 * CO., B?ab. MM, 868 UU? St.. Washington; 2UJ Dearborn Ht, Chlcr? PATENTS Watioa E. Colemaa,tTaidk> d.D.C. Bookafrw. HIT" Best: W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 51-1910. 'm Vvtej For Infants and Children. rtis Kind You Have Alwavfi Rmwhf i a high grade lamp, cold at a low price. co it mora, bat tberels no better lamp made a* any f aolld bran; nickel plated?easily ifpt cIoob; an In any bouse. Tfaerela nothing known to the art, can add to the rain of the BA TO Lamp as a ttjkt j dealer everywhere. If not at your*, writ* for > tbe nearest agency of the >ARD OIL COMPANY Oacorooratod) GLAS OPS for men WC,Q A WOMEN Best in the World. sold take yon Into my actorics at Brockton, and show you how care '. L. Douglas shoes arc le superior workmanship high grade leathers usea, ild then understand why for Dollar I Guarantee >es to hold their shape, id fit better and wear lan any other $3X10, f&ft) shoes you can boy. i tan dor d fororer30 _ - ....... td 14.00 shoes than . mp a vtl tax Quality counts, i ord ererywhere.' KKS.TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE oes, write for MaU Order Catalog. 1*4 Spark St., Brockton, Ma Will Keep Your Harness soft as a glove tough as a wire black as a coal far* Ev?rywti?r* STANDARD OIL COMPANY (IaoorporsUd) Id Lubricant AROUND OIL , EVER-READY TIN OILER ' lected for any neea in me >ols from rusting. Can can i not gum or become rancid. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) LT DISTEMPER indled rerr easily. The sick are cored, and all other* la ile, no matter how "exposed "kept from ha?ln? the dia mine BPOHN'S LIQUID DISTEMPER CUKE QIre on ie,or lu feed. Act# on the blood and expeli germs o of distemper. Best remody ever known (or mare. In lot. sn.nnteedtocare0D0c.se. fiOcan^tla bottle; Ma^ ordrugglit* and barnees dealer*. orient express paid by arera. Cut show* how to poultice throats. Our fre* " lorwythln*. Local agents wanted. Largest "" ' la exlsteno*?twelve ycer*. "wJetswiBedwioUeirt^ Qo*hen, lnd.? V?I>A?.