Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, March 13, 1913, Image 2
CONSTIPATION
?Munyon's Paw-Paw
Pills are unlike all other
laxatives or cathartics.
They coax the
gentle methods, they
do not scour; they do
not gripe; they do not
weaken; bat they do
start all the secretions
of the liver and storn
^ acn in a way that sooa
puts these organs in a
healthy condition and
corrects constipation. Munyon's Paw-Paw
f Pills are a tonic to the stomach, liver and
uerves. They invigorate instead of weaken;
they enrich the b'ood instead of impoverishing
it; they enable the stomach to get all
the nourishment from food that is put intp
it. Price 25 cents. All Druggists.
If You Are an Up-to-Date Ponltryman
Ton should know bow to keep your etfu* fresh, for
three years, without cuet or rhocqlrmlH Send So
In coin for receipt. If hot as represented 1 cheer- ;
fully refund your money.
J. W. OUen, 8 1* roe pec t Ht., Yonkers, N. Y. '
^1/An 1 VC and Hleh Grade
IVUUAIVO ?"i",ahlii|f. Mail
? w S# v*kw W orders given Special
Attention. Prtres rraiwntable.
Her vice prompt. Bend for Price List.
LUIUIS AST STOaa. ClUaLKMTOS. s. u.
Alfonso Enjoys Reminders of Danger.
King Alfonso of Spain is said to bs
a fatalist, and being of this temper
he Is able to derive enjoyment from
occurrences that would affright most
people. A knife that he knocked out
of the handB of an assassin is hung
up In his den. The hides of two
horses killed In bomb explosions have
been made into rugs for his cozy corner.
On his wedding day an attempt
was made on his life, and the next |
day he visited the spot and pointed '
out to his young wife the Bpot where j
the assassin stood
A Confession.
Startled by convincing evidence that
they were the victims of serious kid- t
ney and bludder trouble, numbers of
prominent people confess they have 1
found relief by usln<; KUR1N Kidney
and Bladder Pills. For Bale by all
medical dealera at 25c. Hurwell &
Dunn Co., Mfrs.. Charlotte, N. C. Adv.
Literal.
"Do you like my execution on the
piano?" "I must say I would have
to describe It as an execution for killing
time."
WILL UKI.IKVK NKKVOI'H PKl'KESSIOX
AN I? I.OW HTIKITS.
The Old Htund.rd gem-rut strengthening tunic,
OKoVI'H TASTMI.KSS . hill TONIC, uroiiw-s tlio
liver to action, drive* out Malaria anil build* up tlio
system. A aura Appetiser and aid to digestion.
For adults aud children. CM cent*.
Line on the Great Writers.
Chaucer says "do." Malory "avoid,"
Spencer "study," Sakespcare "be."?
London Athenaeum.
nOF.S YOU It VTKAD ACIIBV
Try nicka' CAPUDINR. It'a liquid? pleasant
to take?effects Immediate?good to prevent
hick Headaches nml Nervous Headache* also.
Your money Itack If not nutiHlled. 10.-., IT&c. aud
bOc. at medicine store*. Adv.
Trading compliments Is a good deal
like swapping green goods.
Mrs. Wtnalow'n Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, Moftenn the toitna, reduce* Inflammation,allay
a palQ,cur?H wind colic,85c a boltlc.Mv
The ofllce hunter doesn't pay any attention
to game laws.
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by
carter's little
liver pills,
Purely vegetable ap
?act surely and ^^HPaDT(-'^
gently on the^^|^Wyl
Biliousnes3,^gg^jj^r H pfojs
aahe, ^Sr yy, i'3i.?-W
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
FREE TC ALL SUFFERERS
If to? feel "out of or??"? 'ran down" or "But th?
blues,"autferfrom kidner.hlaililer.net?ou>dim-ties,
ebronlo mvtnntci. nleurs, skin eruptlons.pl le*..%c?
write form? KKKKbook. u Ultra most Instruct!**
medical hook e*or written. It tells *11 about these
diseases sod I he reinatkuhlecures effected hyi hcNsw
rreni-h MnunU "TH KKAI'KtN" No. 1, No.t, No.?
ml yon can decide for yourself If It lit he remedy for
Tour ailment- Don't tend a cent. It's absolutely
rKKB No"follnw-np'VlrenlBr*. llr.I.eClerrllmt
Co.. llavaratock K?|., 11t* in pet? ?<!, Tea
^Whatii!!?E^
I v A I'"' 1,1 homo or at Sanitarium il<M>k a
I ii i-.i....... Krox l>K It. M.noOl.l.KV,
P,^ ? ?.? * ICTOH hANITAMIt B. ATLANTA. UKOtUIA
SnqOP^Y TRBATBI?. Ulroqtilrk w
IHIVral Hrj usually r?-n>oT? *wrl
ItitlTTMid ahoft orralh In a frw cUta nod
011 tiro roliof in lM5day*. triai trratmailt
HIKE, Jit <il JULkt.SU.NS. Uok A.Alh?nl?,'Jn.
^?%TH0M PSON 8 V^?SX
*?EYE WATER ZWfc&uZ
JOHN I..TIIOM I'.HON SONS* CO..Troy,N.Y.
Mfil m'.V " , I
OltMN ana UmIUm th? htk
Batr to Ito Toothful Color.
PraraoM hair fallm*.
.Wftinifii'YiiPnafr^ .
dfcmim.H 111 afflu
M feaat Coach lyny. Tm?m OmC Caa E3
Pjf to daa M4 by Dnnwa. PI
^jjaaavi'nify.ij^TTT^p
LIVE SNAKES ON
SHIP ST. PATRICK
Hindu Charmers Employed to
Rid Vessel of Reptiles.
GET LOOSE ON VOYAGE
Box Billed as "Samples" Crazes White
Officers and Crew of Lascars, Sailing
From Kobe, Japan?"Keep
Away From Boilers" Warning.
New York.?It was an Innocent
enough looking box that came aboa' a
the steamer at Kobe, Japan, bu' it
was the beginning of several wef- ,s of
horror for the officers and ere- of the
St. Patrick, a British r~ .?nter that
warped alonesM<- -4 pier in the
An.*,.uocks, Staten Island. The
St. Patrick is in from Singapore.
Hangkong and other far eastern
ports, with a mixed cargo, largely consisting
of firecrackers.
To begin with, the box was labeled
"Samples," and bore the warning.
"Keep away from boilers." The warning
was complied with. Three days
out of Kobe, while the St. Patrick was
Bteaming down the Chinese coast. Second
Officer Dawson, who was superWtslllK
the Khiftlne rtf norirn l?i !
hold with the aid of Beveral Lascars,
heard a peculiar mflse in the vicinity
of the box of mystery.
On following the sound Dawson i
found that the noise was coming forth i
from the box. Thinking that rats had
got into the big package, Dawson .or- i
dered two of the Lascars to remove
the covering and investigate.
"Hardly had the cover been taken
ofT the box." related Dawson, "when
the two Lascars let a howl out of
them that shook the ship, and then,
followed by the other Lascars below. >
they began lighting their way up the ;
ludder to the deck. Then I took a
peep In the box. and. holy mackerel!
1 followed the I^ascars and climbed
over them In my efforts to get above.
The box was filled with writhing,
twisting, hissing snakes.
"Well, sir, there was nothing for it
but that the snakes be boxed up
again. The 'First' was given the delightful
task, but when it came to
getting the Lascars to follow him into
the hold it was another story. We
tried some of the coolieB, but they
were no more anxious to get on
speaking terms with the Bnakes than
were the I^ascars. Finally the 'First'
got a couple of the men below with
hltn.
"Hy this time the snakes had disappeared.
They had crawled all over
the ship. That started a snake hunt
that went on by night and by day
until we hit Singapore.
"As soon as we reached Singapore
we sent for the tnan to whom the box
of "samples' had been consigned. We
found him to be an animal dealer.
When we Informed him what had hap
pened he apologized profusely and
said he would attend to the rounding
up of the vipers. In about an hour "he
Let a Howl Out of Them.
v-uiiicn uuuui u me si. faincK witn u
turbaned Hindu.
"The nnlmnl man and his Hindu
nibs proceeded below, and I followed
down the ladder n bit to see the fun.
His nibs with tho turban sits him
down on a box and brings forth a tlute
1 aud began to tweedle-tweedle to the
king's taste.
"When Mr. Rnake got wittiin grabbing
distance the Hindu chariner suddenly
reached out and grabs him by
the neck and flops the wriggler into
a basket. Then he begins with his
; tweedle-t weedle and his singsong.
That Hindu tweedle-tweedled all
night, and finally the animal man said
as how all the snakes had been rounded
up. When he went over the side
with his wrigglers we breathed a sigh
of relief."
Would i"Llckn Newspaper Men.
New York.?Again declaring there
were two or three "fellows" In thli
town who own "nasty newspapers/
Mayor Qaynor offered to lick them in
the old school boy fashion.
Students Shine Shoes
Princeton. N. J.?To pay their ex
penses through college three Prince
ton students are conducting a aho<
thine stand on the campus.
' \
J
The man who pleases only himself
must furnish all the applause.
PIT.E8 CURED IX TO 14 DATS
Tonrdruulil will refund tnuur It FAZU OtlfT.
MKNT faila to euro *nr raw of I lotting, Blind,
Blooding or Protruding Piles In S to Mdajs. 80a
One touch of fashion is apt to make
all women freaks.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure oonstlpatiori.
Constipation is the cause of many
disease*. Cure the cause and you cure thai
disunite. to take. Adv.
Other Means.
It isn't necessary to have an automobile
to run down one's neighbors.?
Salt Lake Desert News.
Wn*^N RUBBERS BECOME) NECESSARY
An<" your shoes pinch. Allen's Foot-Kuso, the
Ar ilseptic powder to be shaken Into the
s* oes. Is Just the thlog to us*. Try It tor
'ireaktnr In New Shorn Sold Everywhere,
J&c. Sample FREE. Address. A. S. Olmsted. !
LeKoy, N.X. Don't accept any substitute. Adv.
Boosting a Mine.
"How's the sale of stock coming
on?" inquired the first promoter.
"Sold 9,000 shares this morning,"
said the second promoter.
"That must mean a good deal oi
money."
"Almost $0. Come on, and I'll blow
you to lunch."
Burduco Liver Powder.
Nature's remedy for biliousness,
constipation, indigestion and all stomach
discuses. A vegetable preparation,
better than calomel and will not
salivate. In screw top cans at 25c
each. Rurwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., !
Charlotte, N. C. Adv.
The Reign of Woman.
Women will serve as public porters !
end dining car waiters on the special
train which is to carry the Illinois :
suffragists to the Washington parade,
and except for the train crew and solitary
man to shine shoes it will he an
example of feminized railway trans- j
portation. The male shoeblack
prompts masculine rellections on the ;
division of menial labor under the
new dispensation. But mere man |
may take heart. The time is still re- 1
mote when there will be women at lo- :
comotive throttles or in the more re- |
sponsible posts In railroad operation.
?New Vork World.
Italy's Fight Against Malaria.
Reports from American consular officers
in Genoa and Leghorn, prepared
in response to inquiries from the United
Sates 8B to the market in Italy
for a remedy for malaria, show that
the prevalence of malaria in that kingdom
has steadilv declined in recent
years, mainly due, it is stated, to the
energetic measures of the Italian government.
Quinine prepared at the
State Military Pharmacy at Turin is
said by Consul General James A.
Smith to b> on sale at all government
tobacco shops at four cents a gram and
j is distributed gratis to poor patients.
Consul Frank Deedmeyer writes that
In 1911 the number of deaths in Italy
caused by malaria was estimated at
( 3,500 in a total population of over
33.000,000.?Dally Consular and Trade
Reports.
VERY ALIKE.
"Did you ever get a kiss by telephone
?"
"No; what's it like?"
"It's like dreaming about something
to eat when you go to bed hungry."
STRENGTH
Without Overloading The Stomach.
The business man, especially, needs
food in the morning that will not overload
the stomac^i, but give mental
vigor for the day.
Much depends on the start a man
gets each day, as to how he may expect
to accomplish the work on hand.
He can't be alert, with a heavy,
fried-meat-und-potatoes breakfast requiring
a lot of vital energy in digesting
it.
A Calif, business man tried to find
some food combination that would not
overload the stomach in the morning,
but that would produce energy.
He writes:
"For years 1 was unable to find a
breakfast food that had nutrition
enough to sustain a business man without
overloading his stomach, causing
indigestion and kindred ailments.
"Being a very busy and also a very
nervous man, I decided to give up
breakfast altogether. Rut luckily 1
was induced to try Grape-Nuts.
"Since that moraine 1 hav? hoon a
now man; can work without tiring,
my head is clear and my nerves strong
and quiet.
"I find four toaspoonfuls of Grape'
Nuts with one of sugar and a small
quantity of cold milk. Is delicious as
1 the cereal part of the morning meal,
and invigorates me for the day's business."
Name given by Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich. Road the little
book. "The Road to Wellville," in pkga.
"There's a Reason."
* Em read the above letter* A aew
aae appears from Mate to tlaaa. They
are traa, aad fall af hnaai
late rest. Adv.
\
mdmionat
SUNWSOIOOL
Lesson
(By K. O. BELI-ERS, Director of Evening
Department The Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.)
LESSON FOR MARCH 16.
THE TEST OF ABRAHAM'S FAITH.
I.E8SON TEXT-Gen. 22:1-IS.
GOLDEN TEXT-"I desire goodness
and not sacrifice: and the knowledge of
God more than burnt offerings."?How.
The birth of Isaac ("laughter")
17:19, and the setting aside of the son
of the bond woman, a story so rich
with BuggestlveneBs, forms the connection
between the lesson of last
week and the one of this week.
I. Sacrifice Required. "God did
prove Abraham" (R. V.) vv. 1-2. Abraham's
ready response, "Behold me.
here am I," gives evidence of his life
long habit of obedience. He was ready
for sacrifice or service. His habit of
taking God at his word prepared him
for this final act of testing, and perfecting,
of his faith. The revised version
"prove" is a better rendering than
the authorized version "tempt." God
does not tempt, 1. o.. solicit men to
evil Jus. 1:13, but he does "prove"
men; see Bx. 20:20 and I Peter 1:12.
Abraham had been tried before but
what father 1b there who will not say
this was the supreme test, for he is
called upop to give up his, "only Bon,
whom thou cherlshest."
Abraham's Faith.
Superficial critics have taken occa
slon to make light of a God who would
make such a demand upon an earthly
father. We need to remember that
Abraham had doubtless witnessed humnn
sacrifices in Chaldea and that
having seen God's faithfulness and his
past deliverances, he had enough
faith to believe that God could in his
own Providence deliver Isaac. Further,
attention has been called to the
exact language of the text, viz., God's
demand was that Abraham "offer* (not
"kill") Isaac as a sacrifice. The literal
language is "make him go up" upon
the altar, doubtless in symbol. We
read elsewhere, Heb. 11:17 that "Abraham
ofTered up Isaac," but we know
he did not kill Isaac. Those who
stumble at that part of the story miss
the great lesson God intended to teach
in the record of this incident. However.
Abraham was ready to do (v. 10)
what God himself did actually do when
he gave his "only son." John 3:16,
Rom. 8:32. Isaac was the child of the
promise, hence the only Bon (cf. Gen.
21:12). This makes the text more severe
for Ishmael had been sent ofT.
21:14. God today 1b calling upon fathers
to sacrifice their Bona, and fathers
are sacrificing though not always unto
God. We must put our children upon
the altar. Matt. 10:37.
II. Sacrifice Granted.. "Abraham
rose up early," vv. 3-10. The writer
of Genesis has left us to fill in the
emotions and the mental agony that
must have surged through Abraham's
heart, yet we again see a wonderful
illustration of prompt obedience, cf.
Ps. 119:60. ,
Abraham's Devotion.
Attention has been called to Isaai
as a type of Christ (cf. John 10:17-18).
(1) His name, given before birth; (2)
His birth, superhatural. predicted; (3)
His offering, a, by his father; b. volun
tary: c. risen from the dead; (4) His
marriage; a, bride selected by his father;
b. servant calls the bride; c. meeting
of bride and bridegroom. In this
connection we behold Isnnc bearing
the wood (v. 6) a reminder of Christ
bearing his cross, John 19:17. The
| test to Abraham's faith was full even
to the point that "he took the knife to
slay his son." when God Intervened.
The repetition, "Abraham. Abraham,"
suggests the urgency of God to save
and the devotion of Abraham In that
! he was not easily turned aside nor
looking for a way of escaping a disagreeable
duty. Abraham was sustained
to the end (Rom. 4:20, 21 R. V.)
and out of It all he Is abundantly rewarded,
vv. 15-18 and 26:4-5.
III. Sacrifice Provided." "A lamb
caught In the thicket." vv. 11-15. Again
! God spoke to Abraham through "an
angel." an old Hebraic way of saying
that God made himself known. It has
been suggested that at this point the
Hebrew broke away from human sacrli
fices. There la nothing in this story
to sustain any claim that God justifies
human sacrifices, but the exact contrary.
for God gave Isaac back to
Abraham (Heb. 1:19 R. V.) and that
he is constantly doing to those who
I surrender their all and their best to
| him, Mark 10:29-30; Prov. 11:24 25.
Ahroham looua
. iiVb I ' C* T \ IIIO llltf tl 111UI II
until he had offered a sacrifice and
who can question but that his heart
! was filled with great Joy and thanksgiving
unto God. 2 Cor. 9:15. Without
the shedding of blood we cannot approach
God.
Abraham is a type of true piety
and Is constantly held up by New Testament
writers as the Ideal of religion,
the reason Is that religion never
ehanges, It Is the attitude of the aoul
to God. Read Horace Bushnell's experience
as related liT "Dissolving of
Doubts." Some men seem to pass
through life without much testing, the
question Is suggested, are they worth
testing, are they of sufficient value.
"Trials are God's vote of confidence."
This Is also a great Illustration of
substitutionary sacrifice, aak Isaac If
he believed It? Ask the question.
"How do we show our faith?"
" J
AN EXPENSIVE DI3EASE.
"The doctors thought he had appendicitis
until he went into bankruptcy,
and then?"
"Continue."
i lie? diagnosed nis case a pain in
the stomach."
RED, ROUGH HANDS MADE
SOFT AND WHITE
For red, rough, chapped and bleedj
tng hands, dry, fissured, itching, burning
palms, and painful finger-ends,
with shapeless nails, a one-night Cutlcura
treatment works wonders. Directions:
Soak the hands, on retiring,
in hot water and Cutlcura Soap, i
| Dry, anoint with Cutlcura Ointment.
and wear soft bandages or old, loose
; gloves during the night. These pure,
sweet and gentle emollients preserve
the hands, prevent redness, roughness
and chapping, and Impart in a single
night that velvety softness and whiteness
so much desirofi by women. For
those whose occupations tend to injure
the hands, Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura
Ointment are wonderful.
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address
post-card "Cuticura, Dept. Ia Boston."
i Adv.
It's awful hard for a girl to get
used to a stepfather.
Only One "11KOMO QUININE"
| That Is I.AXAT1VM HKOMO OIININK hook
| for iho ilKnaturo of K. W UHOVlt. Cures a Cold
in Una Ltoy. Cures Grip in Two Hays. Xc.
Every time a wise man makes a mistake
he learns something. |
II# F01E5TS ?<Hi
HONET^TAR
X*- COMPOUND *? >
STOPS COUGHS - CURES COLDS
Containa No Opiates Is Safe For Children
.? I
Charlotte Directory
^^Tmonu^
J __ D Flrnt oIrmh work. Write for price?.
rW-^^Mecklenburo Marble * Granite Company
?Charlotte. North Carol'na
^^TYPEWRITERS
wHlflfiBW New. rebuilt end necond hand. IIT.UO
np and uoarenteed aatlafector/. We
jMHry) aellauppllen for all uiokm. Ive reV
pair a i-o. *8^X5^
" * CHAtTos a oomraXT, ca*Hou., a. c
'
Great N<
HPHERE'S a farm for you out
* penetrated by the Great Nort]
under tlte xt tl v
New Three-Year
Imiii u HiTEa IUII uuc lu .'iU or IUO RCTCS IT
laat year biggest ever?the Northwest pro
. tremendous ten-bil
year. There are th
independence nil th
w"1' Idaho, Washington,
from CHICAGO to | n j i
MONTANA PoinU .f^LRound"1
- ana 3d Tuesdays <
$38 ivrtfe *
to PoinU in Idaho. , _ ,
W ashing ton. Ore- "?* Fu" '-format
on and British Co- booaleta. mapa. dat
lambia. Propor- data ever compiled
t ion ally Low Fares bend the coupon, 01
to ALL POINTS M
I NORTH WBSTI frtsch
Panama-Pacific International ,
I JW E. C. LEEDY. Gen'l
/ fforat HW Bld|? St. Paul, Minn
B/m.'rrt^? SB tare relating to oppoi
\wNorthern mkamm
g^JUnwAY M AMrr%%
^ H I am in tares ted in
yg^Make the
MfeS
I ?n TUTai "*** motion. Ilttla waar Hia at
EASY ACTION Ding Ikilbi* abaft and stawmrt alt
msmssmm
' Taaches Bookkmplng, Shorthand am the Cuaamai
Focad tnachnrs. On* of tha oldaM and moat re I
Braaniburo, North CkfoUna, for InformatU
WHY INCUBATOR CHICKS DIE
TWO WOMEN
SAVED FROM
OPERATIONS
By Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- IK
etable Compound ?Their
Own Stories Here Told.
Beatrice, Neb. ? " Just after my marriage
my left side began to pain me and
the pain got so severe at times that I
suffered terribly with it. I visited three
doctors and each one wanted to operate
on me but I would not consent to an operation.
I heard of the good Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was
doing for others and I used several bottles
of it with the result that I haven't
been bothered with my side since then.
i am in gooa ne&iui ana i nave two ncua
girla."?M rs. R. B. Child, Beatrice, Neb.
The Other Case.
Cary, Maine. ? " I feel it a duty I owe
to all suffering women to tell what Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did
forme. One year ago I found myself a
terrible sufferer. I had pains in both
sides and such a soreness I could scarcely
straighten up at times. My back ached.
I had no appetite and was so nervous I
could not sleep, then I would be so tired
mornings that I coulu scarcely get
around. It seemed almost impossible
to move or do a bit of work and I
thought I never would be any better
until I submitted to an operation, but
my husband thought I had better writo
to you and I did so, stating my symptoms.
I commenced taking Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and
soon felt like a new woman. I had no
pains, slept well, had good appetite and
could do almost all my own work for a
family of four.- 1 shall always feel that
I owe my good health to your Vegetable
Compound."?Mrs. Haywakd Sowers,
Cary. Maine.
Classified Column
EGGS. BUFF ORPINGTON CHICKENS.
Runner Ducks. Mating list free.
E. L. Green, Lucama, N. C.
WALL'S WHITE ORPINGTONS:
Bred to lay. Direct Import mating,
$5.0o setting. Utility $2.00. Special on
100 lots. 11 entries. 9 winnings. O. L.
Wall, Morristown, Tenn.
FOR SALE?SEVEN MILLION FEET
(estimated) fine oak. poplar and pine
stumpage. through which new railroad
is now building. Also 3,000 acres fee
simple timber/land. Address: Box 103,
Wilkesboro, N. C.
MRS. JOE PERSON'S REMEDY
Cures Rheumatism. Eczema, lndiges- ^
tion. Nervousness. Irregularities, General
Debility. Testimonials furnished.
Dollar per bottle. Froth Druggists or
direct postpaid. Box 24, Klttrell, N. C.
CRYSTAL WHITE ORPINGTON eggs
for hatching. $500 pen; $8 per setting.
Other magnificent pens, $4 per setting.
Unfertile eggs replaced. I^arge lots,
special prices. Crystal White Orpington
Yards, Branchville, S. C. Mrs.
i J. N. Byrd, Prop.
Low One-Way I
onist Fares to the
Drthwest
in that great, prosperous country
hern Railway ? and it's easy to get j
Homestead Law
i tnree years in Montana or Oregon. Crops III
tlnctxl many times its share of the nation's
!ion-d<>Uar crop. Prospects great for this II I
ousands of opportunities to win wealth and ||||l
rough the wonderfully productive states of
Oregon, Montana, and in British Columbia. IIII
'rip Homeseekers' Fares in effect 1st
of each month to all pointsNorthwest. II
fou) for Free Booklets
ion. We will gladly mail you interesting II
a and other literuturc ? the most complete
I on the opportunities in the Northwest,
r a postal or letter to
'BBERT, Of*triel Patten gar Agent
ettnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Exposition?San Francisco?1915
DUMPER CROP COUPON 111
Immigration Agt., Dept. 85 Great Northern
u: I'lease send m?* hxiklett and all liters* |||||
tunities in the Northwest?free.
fltate or locality. Ol&T*
i Horse Glad
er for Work JT} /S2L
ou pat lilm ?t lt? ivrlni work. 1 I I uU
nter coat that holda the wet lul I I ZZ
He'll set more good from hie I JLa M ? ,
t, reet better and glre y?a bet- lv? I Stl ! Iris w
ery way. l>ent buy any but I I I yosr Ut'tf
?art Ball Baaring III
nlnr klarhlnn I I aaMaaf.
at turia sealer. clip# tauter aid III norrxtui
sharp looser thin mo7 other. I >""?ese.
btraudnil from solid ittd C?Wi|
Mad. protected and run In oil. /f free
x foot of now style. easy ran- ^ V. M
KM tension ellpplnc hood. jW
asEEHEsaEssma
clal BrtnrhM. Conrses by mall. Able and or port
labia schools In the stata. Write the HebooI ai
>n before taking a baalnasa ooaree. Mo vaoaUooa
Write for book saving young chioke. Bend ui
names of 7 friends that use Incubators and ge'
1 book free. Haiaall Itemed/ Co., Blackweil.Okla