ylr- T. " 5 ''wToe x" v ?'' I "T a. - 4 , H - - i. 9!f I- I PREVENTING PAINT TROUBLES. f It's eas-$nough- tBi. recognise Ota. symptoms "of poor paint, after it has teen oa awhile after its inherent tendency to'cwkaaA peel iad scale and blister, eta. has developed into trouble. Ton know, these paint- o1b eascs" usually indicate adulteration or substitution in the paint materials. And you know the only remedy is re painting. A little knowledge, of paint and jaintiCvreqnireniets, ,and bow to made .'sure of thej-mrity and quality of materials, wonli' prevent all tron Me, and -save the big extra expense of re-painting; Just, as a proper knowl dge of simple health-laws, and ob servance of them, prevents sickness. A complete painting guide, includ ing a book of color schemes, specifi cations for all Irindrof painting work, and an instalment' for detecting adal- rtinn in naint. materials, with di-4 rectionsfor maing 1L can be had free by writing National Lead .Co., 1M2 Trinity Bldg. New York, and asking for ilouseowncr'a Painting Outfit No. .- " r A -eryvntople guide ta; the .par: .chase of while lead (the only sure and safe paint material)' is the fa tuous "Dutch Boy Painter- trademark; that trademark in an absolute guaran tee of parity, and qnaiHy.. ' INADEQUATE. Doctor' Monk Did those mustard plasters that t left seem to relieve the pains in your chiist to any consider able degree? Ostrich Well, no; I can't say they have: !trt ( apologetically) eaten, only five of M.em! COVERED WJTH HIVES. that I've ChJ-d d' Msss of Dreadful Sore, Itch ing, "Irritating Humor for 2 Months LiKJfr Sufferer in Terrible Plight. Disease Cured Dy Cuticura. "My six. year old daughter had the dreadrul diseaKH called hives for two months. She became affected by play ing v.ilh children who had it. By scratching she caused large sores which were irrilating. Her body was a complete core but it was worse oa her arms and back. We employed a physician who lett medicine but it did not help her and I tried several reme dies but without avail. Seeing the Cuticura Remedies advertised, I thought I would ry them. I gave her a hot bath daily with Cuticura Soap and anointed lit-r'body with Cuticura Ointment Th- first treatment re lieved the itching, and in a short time the disease disappeared. Mrs. George L,. Fridhoff. Warren, Mich., June 20 and 'July 13,100s" I:ter Drag & Cti.ni. Crp., Sulo Zrops., Boston. ' Slightly Mixed. . TJttle Oliver, six years old, had learned the song in which is oft re peated the refrain: "Glory, glory, hal lelujah." and for some- time he had been singing It with great enthusiasm and vigor. Finally he became silent, and after a brief period of cogitation he said: ' : "Mamma, what docs 'hallelujah mean?' ' ' As simply as she could his mother explained that.it was a religious ex- clamation meaning '.'praise the-Lord." He seemed rather surprised at the information, but his next question of- fered ample explanation of why he had thrown so much vigor into his singing. "If that's what it. means," he said, "why do they throw corn '"and have jack lanterns on hallelujah nightr Piecing Out the Prayer. Of curious prayers a writer says: "I have heard a layman utter this petition during the prayer: 'O, Lord, be thou -with us in our upsittings an our down risings' a variant of the text in the psalms. Thou' knowest my downsit tings and jninaguprisings.' A. minister occasionalfy. introduced a Latin '-sentence into his prayer, and. forthwith .proceeded to translate it Another mln 4ster in his arly days experienced con siderable difficulty with the longprayer before the sermon. .rIn nonconformist churches this usually' occupies a quar tor.ot an hoar, hnt long before this pe rlod had been, reached he was wound up., On one occasion, while in this di lemma he startled his hearers with the words: 'And now. O -Lord. I will re late uato thee a little anecdote!'" V'':UEt'EAT. 1 Advice ef Family Physician. Formerly people thought .meat nec essary tor strength and muscular vigor. The nun who worked, hard was sup posed to require meat two or three limes a day. Science has found out differently;. 5 7 It is now a common thing for a fam ily physician, to order less meat, as in 4fie fokwlng letter from-a N. T. man. 'I had Battered for years' with dys pepsia and'nerv0usnes8. My physician advised me to eat less meat and greasy foods generally. I tried several things to take the jlace of my usual breakfast of chops; fried potatoes, etc., but got no relief until I tried Grape Nuts food. "After using Grape-Nuts for the cereal part of my meals for two years, ' I am now a welf man. Grape-Nuts benefited jnx.heaUh far more than the $500.06 worth of medicine I hadtaken-H before. "My wife and children are healthier than they had been for years, and we are a very happy family, largely due to Grape-Nats. '' "We have been so much benefited by Grape-Nats that it would be un gratefarisot to acknowledge it" - Name given by Postum Co.. BatUs Creek, Mich. 'Read "TheTtoad to Well Tine," in pkgs. "There's a Reason.'' Rtm wad the ahve letter -A Mir raeT Js- Law1 y vPBBS"-""fcfh ut umanaaamVfvT 1 aaaaE! ir JklS vhqhh ij-"l v eatr)i i-tanaas n saaeani wwwmk.vmmm .. - . s. A Pin for a Glew x By an Ex-Operative Capt. Dickson Illustrates a De tective's "Nose for Details' HAT do I consider the most important thing to notice when firit investigating a crime? Capt. Dickson, a retired secret serv-i ice officer, had re peated the words of my question. After some moments of thought, he replied: -. "Well, trom my own experience, it has become affixed conviction with me 'that no crime'' is ever committed where. the criminal fails 'to leave be hind some clew that, if it Is only found and its worth appreciated, will In variably lead to the detection of the culprit "I have a case in mind, a po3t-office robbery- It happened when I was con nected with that department, before I was transferred Jto the broader field of the secret service. I will never forget the village where it occurred!. It was a town of some 200 or 400 souls in the Green mountains. It had only one hotel, and in the three weeks that I was detained there, I almost de stroyed my digestion endeavoring to support life on its abominable fare. I believe that I felt a keener satisfac tion in the royal meal I secured at Boston, on my return to Washington, than I did in capturing the author of the robbery. "The post-office safe had been tapped for a large quantity of stamps, about $500 in money and a .brand new money-order book. This last item gave importance to the case, because a boot of moneyKrder blanks in the hands of a cle.ver crook can cause the government more trouble than a ses sion of congress. "The safe was a crude Iron affair which was fastened by means of a clumsy brass key., The key was too large and too heavy to be lugged about, and after the safe was locked it was hid away in a corner of the cash drawer. A peculiar' circumstance of the robbery was that the safe had been found locked and the key was in its place of concealment. The cul prits had possessed an intimate knowledge of ,the habits .of 'the post master and his assistant, Miss Lundy, a young lady of fine appearance and charming pcr;;caali!y- ''Mason, the postmaster, had a theory that two tramps had committed the theft - He said that two suspicious characters had come into the office the afternoon before the robbery and had bought five two-cent .stamps. He con sidered this a suspicious circumstance, as 'he said that persons of their type always bought stamped envelopes no more than they needed at the time and that U:cy always mailed their let ters before leaving the office,' address ing them with the dilapidated pen lnainrameu-- oy me postmaster ai an country offices for victims who have no alternative than to use it. At the back of the building, a window-glass had been broken out, and Mason espe cially directed my attention to it, as he said it must have been by this means that the robbers gained en trance to the building. All of the doors had been securely locked. I made a minute examination of the premises, and the only thing I found was 'a' small' steel pin with a green glass head. It was in a crack of the P.oor immediately in front of the rifled safe. Without attracting attention, I secured the pin and stuck it beneath the lapel of my coat I thoughr it might prove cf value. -It did. It was the kej to the situation. "My examination showed that the robbers had entered the post-office through the front door, and that the broken window was merely ja blind or else it had been broken by accident. I didn't take much stock in this last theory, but put the window down as a deliberate effort to muddy the water. There were two doors, a front and a back one. The rear one was. kept locked, and the key to it hung" on a nail in the office. Only Mason and Miss Lundy had keys to the front door. "It was not so easy to trace Mason and the young lady on that evening. After some considerable work I learned that neither of them had been at home the early part -of that par ticular evening. Nd one knew where they had been nor what they had done during this period. Mason had left his home -and. Miss Lundy her boarding ihoaser-early after supper on that night on the pretext of takiagta walk." Mason 'had returned sometime after midnight The hour of Miss Lundy's return was uncertain. "Already sorely puzzled over the evi dence which was accumulating, one morning, upon arising, I was more than ever mystified by finding a slip of paper under the door of my room. In a sprawling; unnatural hand, four words were written upon it Mason robbed the safe. "When I visited the postoSce, I no ticed that' Mason was pale and hag gard and he was as nervous as a caged leopard. s v "When I went to the hotel at noon, I fou-d a tiny note on the table in my rbomr It was a dainty, perfumed bit of paper, just the kind that refined young ladies employ in their polite correspondence. I jumped to the con-A elusion-that it must: he a further mes Are Learning Only Lately Have the Japanese Even Tolerated the Beverage, Japan is learning to drink milk. A Japanese newspaper says of the phe nomenon: "There was a time when mhk was regarded in Japan with the same abhorrence as cheese hi in China," especially the pungent and strong-smelling variety: Recent statis tics however, sbow'tthat tlfKy-'has - , of the Secret Service sage of the same character as the morning's note. It was,, but there was a decided conflict In the news it !con tained. In a cra-nped d'sgnised writ ing, evidently a woman's, were five words: Miss Lundy is the robber. "Frankly, I didn't know what to think. Suspicion and these mysteri ous notes pointed to the postmaster and bis handsome assistant The let ters Were written by different persons, and it was easy to imagine that Ma son and the young lady had robbed the-' salev arid' that4 each; of them had been seen, by a different person as they left the building; that these per- "dfff Duvrirvr arfmff 0cxgm ALQNEM G(.rr. sons were a woman and a man and that they had taken the pains to ad vise me of what they had seen by means of the brief, unsigned notes. "The situation puzzled me more than ever and I didn't fall asleep until late that night, having tossed away many restless hours upon the instru ment of torture which did service for a bed in -the stuffy room of the ho tel. Involuntarily, next morning, I as soon as my eyes opened. It was there, a third note, on-the same pa per, in the same hand and of the same purport as that of the morning before. The only change was In the wording of it. Why don't you arrest Mason? He robbed the postofflce. Ask him if he didn't broak the window-glass. He won't deny it. "I worried through the morning somehow, never 'trusting myself to show up at the post-office. At noon I was forced to go back to the hotel, as it was the only place .of public enter tainment in the village. I headed straight for my room, expecting to find a fourth note on' the table. I was not disappointed, for there itwas, as big as life, the exact counterpart of the, day before: Miss Lundy is the robber. "More .than ever puzzled, I strolled over to the postofflce after lunch. Ma son was there and alone. Miss Lun dy had not returned from her dinner. The postmaster's face was piteous to behold. He shrank from me as I greet ed him and put his hands over his face. His hands shook. like a mans with the palsy. Before I could find a seat he arose and went into his pri vate office, beckoning me to follow. "I seated myself and watched with patience while he strode back and forth across the limited space of the office. Suddenly he stopped squarely before me, and bracing himself with a painful effort, blurted out a jumble of words, confessing that he had robbed the safe. I was struck all of a heap, but never for an instant did I believe him. There was something to Drink Milk worked a great change in this respect and milk and butter are now in great favor in Japan. Whereas 25 years ago not more than one or two per cent of the persons visiting a European restaurant or .eating a ..European, meal at a friend's home would have thought of touching butter, fully .40 or 60 per cent -now eat it with a relish. , They are, however, quite content 'to do without it. about the very language of his inco herent confession and his manner in making It that told me that Mason was not the thief. "'What more do you want?" Mason breathed. 'I 'did it, I tell you. and I shall be convicted of it I can't re store the stamps and the money-order book because I have destroyed them, but here is the' money every penny of if "He threw a rojl of bills in my lap and continued: " 'My confession is sufficient to con vict upon. I will repeat ,it in court and I want you to arrest me and get me away from here 3ust as soon as you can. "Just at this juncture the depot agent entered the office with a tele gram for me. It was' a cipher mes sage from the department. Taking out my' code book, I translated it in a moment and the contents of it, in the light of Mason's confession, was noth ing less than unnerving. "Without a word I wrote the mes sage out and passed it over to Mason: Money orders being- passed Waco and Other Texas towns. "'Whatdoes ifmean?','he cried. "Before 1 could answer him, Miss Lundy came into the office. With a woman's intuition, she saw that some thing was wrong. A look of terror, which smote me to the heart, swept over her face. She sprang forward and stepped between Mason and me, who stood staring at each other like wooden images. "'Oh, Capt. Dickson,' she sobbed, 'don't you believe him. He didn't have a thing to do with it. I did it myself. The money is in my trunk. I have burned the stamps and the money-order book.' "'She didn't do it, Capt. Dickson,' ranted Mason like a man demented. 'She knows nothing about it. I alone am guilty and she is merely trying to save me from prison; she is my af fianced bride.' '"Hold on there,' I cautioned, 'you are a pair of sentimental young inno cents, and while I am willing to give youjny blessing, although it is a bit out of my line, I am not going to be lieve a word either of you say about this robbery and don't either of you dare to breathe a word of sucn absurd nonsense to any one else. I know that neither of you, robbed the safe and you couldn't 'convince me of it if you talked a thousand years and produced the charred remains of that money-order book Itself. Dry your -eyes. Miss Lundy; shakeyourself together. Ma son, and let's get down to serious talk and clear this thing up. See here,' I continued, producing the four notes that had been left at my room, tumor bright, now, you wrote these notes, didn't you? T "I didn't stay to hear more but beat out of the office as if the furies were at my back instead of two lovers hap py beyond expression in the knowl edge that their doubts were unfounded and that there was happiness still re maining for them. I wasn't going to take chances on their being disturbed, so I took possession on the porch be fore the post-office door to head off any .persons who might feel inclined to-intrude upon their privacy. TT -"As to dalrv farms, they have In creased notably in recent years. Thirty or 40 years ago milk was abhorred The average Japanese could not, in duce himself to drink it. But to-day many a household consumes one or two bottles of milk dally, partly be cause people have come to like it and partly because the doctors have recom mended it as a unique and wholesome beverage. "'Milk halls,' too, are now quite 'numerous. 'Butter will probably take much longer to come widely into "After some time they called. to Between the .two of them they ex plained everything. They had long been lovers and. with the aversion that lovers have for the 'clattering of vil lage gossips' merciless tongues, they had succeeded in keeping their attach ment a secret. They had been en gaged for some time, and it was their custom to meet at the home of a kind ly old widow lady of an evening, she alone knowing of their engagement. On the night of the robbery they had spent the evening together at the wid ow's. "She and Mason had left the wid ow's about ten o'clock and Mason had left her at the gate. After leaving her. Mason had taken a long stroll and, about midnight; had passed the post office in returning to his home. As he approached the building he had seen a lady leaving it, closing and locking the door after her. "Next morning, when he opened the safe he discovered the robbery. His suspicion of Miss Lundy had thea come upon him. "It'was a pretty tangle. The lovers had straightened it out to their own satisfaction and: while 1 knew that neither of them had any guilty knowl edge of the deed, I was far from being satisfied and felt that my work had just begun. "With my suspicion of Mason set at rest, I could confide more fully in him, so 1 .set out with two clews, the wom an visitor that Mason had seen and the pin with the glass head. There v.ere many women in the village that fitted the description in a general way and that was a hard clew to follow, so I fell back upon the pin. There were none of the kind for sale in the village nor bad there ever been, so I knew that the pin must be an imported one. This was some progress, but I was still far t from shore. "I don't know that I would ever have run the thief to earth if it hadn't chanced that I met a lady one after noon who wore a flower pinned upon her. breast. A glance showed me that the pin which held it was the twin brother to the one I had found. The lady, I learned, had been in the vil lage some four or five months, teach ing a dancing school with great suc cess. No one knew where she came from. "It was an easy matter to clear up the robbery after this. She was an old timer- in criminal- deeds and as slick a crook as ever wore petticoats. She had easily learned the careless methods of the post-office and, when she deemed the occasion ripe, had-se Iected a skeleton key from her stock and pulled off the robber', a neat job except for Mason's untimely appear ance upon the scene. She had most of the stamps in her possession, but she had sent the money-order book to her husband, who was then operat ing in the profitable field of the south west ' "How about the lovers, did yqu say? They were married in due time and I had the pleasure of officiating as best mat." (CopyriRm. 19G9. by W. G. Chapman.) (Copyright in Great Britain.) Some tropical daisies measure a foot in circumference vogue, because of its expenslveness. A pound of fresh butter costs at least one yen (49.8 cents gold) In Tokyo to day, an extremely high price for Japan." News. Some persons are disturbed by the fact that evil-deeds seem to predom inate in the news.. Of course! It is necessary that evil be exposed, 'but good conduct, which is , the rule, does not particularly call for the limelight of publicity. MijpmNmi! B-Saw .bbbbw. .frioiBmwhw. bbwV9(bbbbW BVKyj BBa- .BBaVSKa4S9BTBam ABbbT ' ab ZJti 'y &bBb. 4'Bam BBBBBE f MWJZm.mW . ABBlBBa . B BWBBrW wBBBfAr, sBBBBK 1 mgm Know These Wm VbbV BBBViT VjjjS Picture a bskexy costkx $l,Wt,0it, Wm B Think of write tOe ovens on the top flow F fl flooded by sunshine. M H Trieii,thetripte.siratodprcBtctk)nrrkfs H "Bananas " & iTaKomaBiscuitl Banana VvM H These are the Mth Century Sods Crackers. H H You can always be sure they will be fresh B M and crispflaky and whole H. jm Yet they cost no more than the old kind-- H fm Takorna Biscuit are at your grocer's in Sc E and 10c packages. Try them. bb- 3 3s nam Baa!?Bw VH lpSE-WlLES BtscuiToa KT9 aBaTaBfnwBnwBBBBBBn nnBBBBrkSCnBr DBW wrvli.& . 4uV3?- " "USE . rBBBF B& :3SBsn:. 3nT '1sbbbt waWaS- BBBXBBaDBBBBBES.A ""SbW a v1BBBBBV ssat)r.. ."rBSBnS .7: :i9sw wJk?.?---1- -. vVJ3BBnn3c&tf-..-f--.'--'-3nBW WBaBfcc j ha: J-.v'.mO'S SSK7SusA9aBW BjBacSBjSSp CgfcgBBBMpEBy M W I W 1. mm ilMAt tS.tv tiwlfl nT in m itiinmiwiiMil Wrrm .ii aionSt i .r wwit anil bcra at slantlag SoUar'a Elliloa Pk..ta.MMil.flMiAfllMAlBl Seed roets let CO to SS per -eraa tfiUMl- wma MMtnMpi ecstbayeracrci . hlhlfm aura iii i v. n II i I ii II I ii ill i ri ii ii Mum iiaa .t Tii.. a wm--. .r-A. .(wvfi- aaaaaLaak Mth nf iniQvnt bav or at therata of otot SMO per aero. Onrciaixntnry Alalka ctorer and ciaaats an tne pare wa douvt w IWUIM1inM Bt Baca aa Barter. CoratJIax. Cats aad Wheat especially recomocailedaaj Introduced by aArl- cuitoni ceaaxea or. wa rueeaala. Iowa. Korta Dakota, aisaeeota.boata Dakota, etc VCCKTi W are tha ktrceet grower of refutable eee irsvaRBBt our tcedatopruOzcaCta earliest. fiet.YecctaIiee crown, uorieeaaaraconazi I tslla ay wm kav I WJSW &w VOUeSSW wSOwajMBM BFwBaaT fAWJaWVW 1 TryerpaetactscarUatTegeUbUaMdapoetpaldforfUL WOSTH SI OP Bare real Ttt tnealkae wll will W war S11 nAMfanwtnanamrinVtOMtaitSrt HaCraWtth. awaaaa ea i a. a a w wa fc-i vawaw a. a j au j -- Or.eaadt4aaadwealdaiapletnaeuea-faltyaaTieaBtotorbyyoB For DISTEMPER Bare eare and poeiaraprertntlTe.BOBMtter bow hones at ear ace are exposed. Llquld.irtTea on tba tongtie; arts oa the Btood and Pieman polaoBoaaKerautroratliebodT. Cnret mstesaper la Dogs sad Wherp and Foultry. LanreetasUlaeMlYestock remedy. Cures La Urtpca asaaar aadUatoeKldBQrrvaedy. Meawinabott.e&aadHaadasasvCat It. Bboi iw to Totir draesist. Cures.'' Special scents STOW MEIICAL CO.. Ssrs Aesthetic Lily. "Here comes my little Lily!" ex- ( claimed a doting mother to a roomful ' of guests, "i. have nursie take her for a walk in the park every afternoon. and you have no idea how rapidly it is developing her sense of the aesthet ic the beautiful! Come here, my dar ling. Tell us what you remember best about your walk in the park to-day." Lily's breath came hard. She paused a mo t, then answered in a snrlil, .eble: u.anima, the bears smelt aw- excitt "Oh. fttL" Starch, like everything else, Is btv nig constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago are very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the lat est discovery Defiance Starch all in jurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient. In vented by us, gives to the Starch a strength and smoothness never ap proached by other brands. A Bad Break, was a bad break Dr. "That Green made." "What was it?" "He advised our traveling man to give up work for a while and travel for his health." Detroit Free Press. Thousands of country people know that in time of sudden mishap or accident Hamlin Wizard "Oil is the best substi tute for the family doctor. Tliat U why it is often found upon the shelf. He who is falge to duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will find, the flaw when he may have forgotten the cause. H. Ward Beecher. Rett. AVeak. Weary, Watery Eye Relieved by Murine Eye Kemedy. Com pounded bv Experienced Physicians. Con forms to Pure Food and Drug Laws. Mu rine. Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Puln. Try Murine in Your Eyes. At Druggists. Women would have no use for mir rors that would enable them to see themselves as others see them. i?lXS CCREO IX 6 TO 14 DATS. PAZO OlXTMEXTUiroarsnteedto car anr cast of ltcninir. Blind. Bleeding- or rrotredlng- Mies la Ctoltdaysorauiney refunded. SQo. Nine men out of a possible ten wear a sad look after they have been mar ried a ear. - - lewis Single Binder straight 5c. Yon pay 10c for cigars not so good. Yoar deal tr or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, HL A man's idea of values depends on whether he wants te buy or sell. XBBBBBBBBBBBBBSM? rtmfn!-ioi rirahtad- tmramzn WBttWma ' tnlltn tun irairn i rT tfct nnt tndftY tha S-st Carmen of Anartea wwwn- Dollar Ctaca to their faltast MtMhetlon. lallalmi'e TTTi rrntTtTT '? r"" -- rtialaa of AltaUa. itmllaxa, ITinta Kwi aa om cans. AAaietavrt w bettore la America. operatise orar Braarrea. itneehCWi AWT - . a, Pink Eye. EptaeeUc ShlpylBJ Fever & Catarrhal Fever tsfectedor expels the Cholera la human balnea thlaaut. Ins wbo w I riiigctitior-foo. rree woosier. Plstemptr.Caasse wanted. ?cKlU'r.i Mm, M., I. S. A. Fmm Swa lateh hcititirt Will be ftold CHEAP the next few weeks. Best machine in the world. Built for real business, and wiM snaka yva aaoaww. Get Into tbebaalneaa now and ralae chlckeaa -while Poultry and Kgg are bih priced. Send for bijr free book about our Incubator and the Poultry Business. Hatch hertslirCsL, 173, FIDO DULY WARNED. Look here, Fido, if you can't be a better- horse than this I shall have to discharge you an' get an automobile!" Laundry work at home. wouM Tm much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. la order to get tha desired stiffness, It Is usually neces sary to use so much starch that th beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varylas thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by usJag Defiance-Starch, as, it-can be applies: much more thinly because of Its great' er strength than other Bank Balance ana inavaenssncs. Business women have evolved the Idea of saving, and the thrifty Incen tive was not inspired by their broth ers, but rather envelops the girl with pendence which evolves thri girljwith $300 or $408 to her credit and spars her on to sdd more sad more te the reserve. Examine carefully every bottle, bf CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears tie Signature of i In Use For Over 30 Years, The Kind You Have Always Bought. Young America. Dad Do you know what happens to little boys that tell lies? Tad Yep. If they tell good ones, they get away with it. Cleveland Leader. Asthmatics, Read This. If you are afflicted with Asthma write me at once and learn of something for which you will be grateful the rest of your life. J. G. McBnde. Stella. Nebr. Adversity is a searching test of friendship, dividing the sheep from the goats with unerring accuracy; and thi3 Is a good service. John Watson, D. D. 559flpVaP9pVaBSKBdBBsw' '-aaaaaaaaaanBr Sm vaTer"!51, V i a t 4 - I 1 ) f r ry I&S&SS 5' -f-Jfea- v--. kiiiM&k-f'i: l5Sjs5-f yg-f -X-V TL"eT t w-? .--" , s SZr, A fa-wAaT frrtrvw. - fiww-tjaSfeaSy.- j.-ut zfZ&gyu-,