TV AEAL tune Eager ch3 drenl A Hungry grown-ups -Keen appetite to be appeased - And Irfyt Dried Beef aVCnuMd plait I aulas dandy dith. It's easy la pupil auprem ia quality, and coats ao bmm naa ordinary kinds. UCaueJenerTIa AtaWyCm Llbby, MsNedll Llbby HAD THE BANDMASTER GOING Governor Suffered Because Hie Re quest Was Not Couched In Plain Enough Language. Mr. Melvil Dewey, state librarian of New York, said recently that libra ries would do well to furnish free mu alo rolls for player-pianos, just as they now furnish books. "In Toledo," said Dr. Dewey the other day, "my project has been late ly Inaugurated. It will accomplish much for the musical art." Then, apropos of music and Igno rance, Dr. Dewey told a story. "A certain governor," he said, "was being lunched at a seaside town. Dur ing the repast the local band played on the beach outside the hotel. The drum was in charge of a blacksmith, and he beat it so resonantly that at last this message was sent out: "'The governor requests the drum mer to desist.' "The bandmaster was puzzled by this message for a moment; then his face brightened in a smile, and he said: "'More drum, Joe; the governor likes it.' " TOO MUCH. I begged Loralne to smile to me, For I with love was daft She smiled! She more than smiled, for she Just held her sides and laughed! Telling Comment. Ty Cobb of the Tigers said at a recent baseball banquet in Philadel phia: ' "I admit that there Is too much loud talk, too much arguing and wran gling and chin music in a game of baseball. "I know a man who was seen the other day getting into a taxlcab. "'Where are you going?' they asked him. " 'I'm going to hear the ball game,' he replied." FAMILY RUNT Kansas Man Says Coffee Made Him . , ,, ' That. "Coffee has been used in our family of eleven father, mother, five sons nd four daughters for thirty years. I am the eldest of the boys and have always been considered the runt of the family and a coffee toper. .. . "I continued to drink It for years un til I grew to.be a man, and then I found I had stomach trouble, nervous headaches, poor circulation, was un able to do a full day's work, took medi cine for this, that and the other thing, -without the least benefit In fact I only weighed 116 when I -was 28. "Then I changed from coffee to Pos tum, being the first one In our family to do so. I noticed, as did the rest of the family, that I was surely gaining strength and flesh. Shortly after I was visiting my cousin who said. Ton look so much better you're getting fat'-." ...-.v, -?1 "At breakfast his wife passed me a cup of coffee, as she knew I was al ways such a coffee drinker, but I said, ! 'No, thank you. "What!' said my cousin, 'you quit coffee? What do yon drink r " 'Postum,' I said, 'or water, and I am well.' They did not know what Postum was, but my cousin had stom ach trouble and could not sleep at night from drinking coffee three timet a day. He was glad to learn about . Postum, but said he never knew cof fee would hurt anyone." (Tea la Just 'as injurious as coffee because It con , tains caffeine, the same drug found In coffee.) ,". , "After understanding my condition and how I got well be knew what to do for himself. He discovered that coffee was the cause of his trouble as he, never need tobacco or anything else of the kind. Ton should see the cfciange in him now. We both believe that If persons who suffer from coffee drink ing would stop and nse Postum they could build back to health and happi ness." Name given by Postum Co, Tattle Creek, Mich. 's "Ttre's a reason." Read the little I -. "V.,e r.rmd to Wellvllle," in pkgs. r r i th8 above letter. A new iron time to time. They j t t. and full of human . ? t A w Jim Bushwick's Widow By Lawrence Alfred Clay (Copyright, 191J, by Associated Literary Press.) Jim Bushwlck of the village ot Rawlins, was a ne'er-do-well. He was born lazy and without business acumen sufficient to sell or buy a peck of potatoes. He didn't drink, smoke or chew, and when he married it was to have a wife to take care of him. She was a bustling, ambitious woman, and if she could have had his help they could have been well off after five years. She didn't have it, however. Jim was always going to do this and do that, and he never even got up energy enough . to set out a bed of onions. The wife seldom scolded or com plained. She was the village seam stress, and by steady work she man aged to keep a roof over their heads. Now and then there was talk of do ing something to Jim tar and feath ers a whipping the law or some thing else, but It never went beyond talk. As for tar and feathers, there was no tar In the town, and no citi zen would have been willing to con tribute the feathers. Thus things went on for eight j ears, and then Jim Bushwlck was taken with a hopeless illness. When this disease took hold of the man he galloped to the grave very fast. It was only after the doctors had told Jim there was no hope for him, and that his flame of life would be snuffed out In a couple of weeks more, that the true spirit of a manly man came out. He called bis wife to his bed side one day and began: 'Sarah, you are going to be a widow soon." 'Yes," she replied, as tears filled ber eyes. "I've been a no-account man and husband." 'But you've done the best you could." "Mebbe so, but when I look back I'm ashamed of myself. I can't leave you a dollar." "Never mind, Jim. Everybody will be kind to me and I shall get along. VfT He Had Signed Without Looking. Let us hope the doctors are mistaken, and that you will live many a year yet" ' "Let us do nothing of the kind, but get ready for business. Sarah, you know what breach-o'-promise is, of course?" , "Yes." ' "If you have a pretty good case agin a man he'll settle for cash." "But how can I have a breach-of-promise case?" .... "That's , what I am going to pro vide . you with several of them. Bring my ' pen, ink and paper, and then run over and tell Deacon Harri son I want to see him." The deacon was a widower and well to do. He was one of those who had spoken of tar and feathers,' but he had a neighborly feeling, for all that When be had come in and ex pressed his sympathy, the dying man said: "Deacon, Sarah will soon be left alone." "Yes." "I want folks to be kind to her when I'm gone." "They will be, Jim they will be." "I'm not so sure of that Folks get tired of being kind after awhile. I know how good you are, but if you'd only put it in black and white that Well Planned Prince Kropotkln't Escape From Prle on Hospital One of the Most Daring Recorded In History. In originality of conception and In genuity of execution, the escape of Prince Kropotkln from the prison of the Nikolalevek- Military hospital In St Petersburg in 1878 it probably un paralleled in prison annals. Twelve conspirators outside the prison took part In it, but not one of them was ever arretted or suspected, although many of them were subsequently ban ished to Siberia for other political of fenses. ' The escape was made in broad day light, about five o'clock in the after noon, in the presence ot three armed soldiers, and With such novel acces sories at cherries, opera hats, a mouse, music, a black mare and a microscope. The chances were at least ten to one 'that it would fail, notwithstanding the er,... . ,.T ir:,j9nuity with which it j i' , t' t every device and you'd ' be kind to Sara after I'i gone I should feel a heap easier about going. Here's a paper I've drawn up that say you'll be kind." "Why, I'll sign that, of course," was the reply; and the deacon, for once in hit life, signed a paper with out reading it and looking for traps. He did more than that He offered to boss the funeral when it came off and to be one ot the pallbearers. . Then Cyrus Barnes, another wid ower, was sent for. He was awfully sorry to find Jim so near the grave, and he waa going to pull out a dollar bill and leave It with him when he didn't He Indulged In further words ot sympathy, which made it 88 per cent cheaper for him. "Cyrus, I've been a poor ctlck ot a man," tald Jim. "You have that," was agreed. "I ought to have been at work every day." "We all know that." "It's a wonder' you folks didn't stir me up." "So 'tis so 'tis. We talked of it many times, but wi knowed that If we put on the tar andfeathert you'd be too all-fired lazy to scrape -em off, and your wife would have the Job." 'That's right. She is good, Cyrus." "None better." "And that brings me to what' I want to ask. She won't have a dol lar after I'm gone." "Of course she won't." "She'll have to depend on the kind ness of the neighbors." "She will." "Cyrus, you don't belong to any church, but you believe in heaven, don't you?" "Yes. kinder." "You'd like to feel that I wae look ing down on you and acting at your guardian angel, wouldn't you?" "If you are going to keep up your laziness " "But I'm not, Cyrus I'm going to hustle. I'll do all that I can for you If you'll sign this paper." "What is it?" "Just a promise to be kind to, and that vou will look after, Sarah. We shall both feel a great deal better if you will." The caller looked upon it as a dy ing man's whim, and signed. When ready to go he said: 'I hope you will get a hustle on you up there, Jim." Then three more widowers ana one old bachelor got the word to call, and In the course of three days the business was wound up. Then lawyer was sent for, the signed pa pers handed over to bim, and a great calm fell upon the dying man. He smiled every few minutes, and made no understandable explanations regarding what he had been up to. A few days later he passed away, and almost his last words were: "Sarah, if they want to be kind to you, let 'em go ahead." There was kindness from every di rection, from contributions to pay the funeral expenses to groceries and provisions sent in for the widow's sustenance. After about a month bad elapsed Deacon Harrison received a letter asking him to tall at the law office of the attorney who had the dead man's papers. When the good man came strolling in, only mildly curious as to why he had been sum moned, he was greeted with: "Of course it won't take place for a year, but allow me to congratulate you In advance." "What d'ye mean?" asked the dea con. "Your marriage with the Widow Bushwlck." "Shoo! What ye Joking about?" "Only this." The paper he had signed for Jim Bushwlck was banded him. He bad sign ed without reading, and now behold: "I not only promise to be kind to James Bushwick's wife after she be comes his widow, but to marry her one year after his death." "By thunder!" exclaimed the dea con as he danced around. "No better evidence wanted in a breach-of-promise case," quietly re plied the lawyer. "She can sue and be hanged!" . "Better settle for a couple of hun dred, deacon, and carry off your pa per. It wouldn't ' sound well to have people saying that you had your second wife picked out while ber husband was alive." : The deacon bung off for a week and then came down. One by one the others followed suit. Each one was financially well able to do so . "Money contributed by your good friends, and nothing is to be said about it," remarked the lawyer to the widow as he handed her $950 of the thousand. To this day she hat no other idea about it Now and then some one says something about Jim Bushwick's laziness in Deacon Harrison's hearing, and he turns and replies: " ' "Why, there wasn't a lazy bone In his whole carcass! He made more clean money In the last two weeks of his life than I did, In the hull year! Yas, drat him, he did!" Enjoyment Within Ourselves. We have much to enjoy in the quiet and retirement of our own thoughts. Longfellow. : and Carried stratagem worked perfectly, and the liberated prisoner dined that night in Donon't restaurant, the most fashion able in St Petersburg, while the entire police of the capital was ransacking the city In search of him. Nobody even imagined that he would be shrewd and bold enough to take bit dinner In to public a place, and not a tingle detective looked for him there, although search waa made In scores of other places, and every exit from the city waa so carefully guarded that a mouse could hardly nave crept through unobserved. Century. i - .... Foxes Not Easy Prey. Foxes often kill buzzarda and the smaller hawks that' nave been im pelled to attack them through hunger. They have mainly done this by drag--gtng the birds through branches and brushwood; tor they usually have their talons deeply imbedded in the'r intended victim, -and are unable to 14 them go. NOTES c5?wt. MEADCWBROOK FARM Keep the hoe going. Feed the hogs a variety. The best feed is cheapest Turkeys devour many Insects. Separating cold milk means a loss sf cream. This season of the year ia trying on tows and dairymen, Get a die and stamp your initials on the cream or milk cans. Paint will rub off In time. The cow that can hold up well In milk production In August Is a valu able animal Selling all the hay and grain raised on the farm Is a sure method of sell ing the farm. From 10 to 60 per cent, of cream Is lost by "setting" milk in pans, say the experimenters. With the exception of the plow, the harrow is perhaps the oldest of till age Instruments. Less Kaffir corn in the feed as the weather gets warmer will keep hens from getting fat and lazy. Don't fail to divide the buttermilk between Biddy and the pigs. She rel ishes it as much as they. All fowls, chicks, ducks and duck lings that are kept in yards should have plenty of green food every day. A chicken takes naturally to having feed banded him, but the turkey Is al most self-supporting until cold weath er. Don't allow the hen-mother to drag around all day with her brood, as many chicks succumb through exhaus tion. One advantage In keeping feed al ways before poultry is that they do not have to hurry so to get their meals. In building a wire fence for hogs put one barbed wire at the bottom and the worst rooter in the pasture won't root out. One mite on the back ot a fellow's neck makes him Just about wild. What must.it be to have a million crawling? There is still time to put put a crop of roots for cow feed next winter. Rich light soil it the best place for them. Turkeys always find a ready tale and are almost" clear profit There is always a demand. The market Is nev er glutted. Neat, clean crates and boxes help to eell fruit even though it may not be quite up to standard of excellence let by the grower. ; , If the season is dry, haul a few bar rels of water to those late planted trees. Don't let them suffer for water during a dry spell. If hogs are lousy, set a small post, wrapped tight with an old rope, in the ground and soak the rope with coal oil. The hog will do the rest Don't imagine a chicken does not need a change of diet because it la a chicken. They need a change of food quite at much as a human biped. ( If you use the litter In the house keep it dry and clean. Musty and moldy litter la particularly liable to cause trouble at this teaaon ,of the year. : ' 1 ... ,. ;, ?,-. Plymouth Rocks have been made to weigh seven pounds, dressed, at Thanksgiving time, by judicious feed ing for growth and -development while on range. . .' ' . Don't expect the hired man to work in hay and harvest till dark, and then milk a dozen cows after dark, and be very gentle about It He isn't built that way. , Land platter hat a very small per centage of lime; Jump limy ha the largest percentage and hydra ted lime next Marl It usually a little richer In lime than ground limestone. ' The peanut la becoming more impor tant at a feed for stock, especially In the southern states. The vines with the nuts attached are often cured and they make a palatable hay- for' all kinds of farm stock. ',. Where one finds a bird with a con gested crop, they can cut into the crop and remove the Ingredients, after which they should thoroughly cleanae the interior of the crop with a solution of warm watetr and boracic acid. Aft er the crop has been treated thus, it should be tewed with silk cord. The cheapest food la not that which costs the least but which gives the best results. The best food It the cheapest and an reasonable care should be taken to tee that each ani mal on the farm it well supplied with not only good food, but which is well adapted to Use purposes for which the ei.hT.al Is k-'t ; Train the colt early. Dampness favors gapes. Train the horse carefully. ' ; ; Flies cut down the milk supply. You cannot begin to feed and train a colt too early. The cow that gives much milk must have plenty to drink. Climate is an element in the diffi cult art of turkey raising. Continue the spraying of grapes with bordeaux mixture to prevent rot It't an 111 wind that chills a new born animal Time of year cuts no figure. When chicks stand around listless ly and peep, lice are very often to blame. , ' ' In hard timet or prosperous years the man with a few good cows is well Insured. A good cream separator with sev eral good cowa will toon abolish a mortgage. . - Be patient with the' cows .They can't help giving you a twat In the face with their tails. Wet mashes are better for fattening fowls because they are more easily digested than dry feeds. Strips of cane sown at intervals, near the cow lot, will come in handy when pastures fall in early fall. No land Is so rich that its owner can afford to waste the manure that is made by hit farm ttock. The work of lice Is often mistaken for disease. When a fowl seems to be ailing look for lice first When cultivated cowpeas are to be cut for bay, the ground does not want to be ridged up very much. ( Move the colony houses and brood coops on to fresh ground every day or two and the chicks will grow faster. Feeding the chicks too much is worse than waste, as feed lying about will soon sour, and then comes trou ble. Chickens at ten weeks old are ready for the broiler market and they ought to weigh two pounds by that time. . Crops must be gathered in proper condition and sent to the - market fresh and clean. Careful grading is essential. , Growing fowls cannot be expected to do their best in healthy develop ment if not fed properly and given plenty ot feed. It costs a good deal ot money to buy a satisfactory team. In most cases this can be avoided by the farmer raising bis own. Two pounds of mixed shorts and bran per cow per day is not sufficient for cows that are expected to give liberal flows of milk. Overheating Is to be avoided by cau tious working and careful watching of work horses; with shade and water at intervals, it possible. : In dog-day weather carelessness often breeds trouble, but common sense care will prevent a whole lot of discomfort and disease. The breast of the Indian game is very much like that of the pheasant or the prairie chicken. The heft of the meat lies on the breast Veal calves In hot weather will grow better If kept during the day In a dark, cool stable, but the stable must be cleaned out and well ventilated. Unless the little turkeys are allow ed free range all the time, "they should be kept shut in on rainy days and mornings when there is a heavy dew. If the peas are obstinate about us ing the supports provided for them, give them a start up to the brush ot wire, and they will cause no more trouble. In order to get the greatest profit from the pigs on the farm, it is neces sary to encourage them to consume as much of the cheap feeds at possible early in life. , Clover should be cut for bay when in first bloom. If left much longer than this, the seeds form and weaken the plant and there la also a loss, due to the shattering of dry leaves : To insure the highest per cent of fertility in the eggs, stock dueks need bathing water, but this does not nec essarily mean, that they must have - a stream or lake On which to disport themselves. ... . . If many - chicks are raited it Is a good plan to keep a large kettle near the poultry house In which the drink ing vessels can be boiled at least ones a week. A handful of common aoda thrown in the water will help. V The farmer who adopta a wise rota tion of crops, who raises upon the farm the products tor the support ot his ttock and hit family, who seeks to increase his stock of manure from ev ery available source, and applies It back to hit land, will not likely com plain of hit farm running down... . . Turkeya are more creatures of habit than any other of our feathered fowls. They live on worms. Insects, seeds and grass. . While they roam over the prairie during the day In search oi food, they will always come home at night if one will always make a prac tice of feeding them, however lightly. Turkeys love Insect life, and . when this Is abundant they enjoy the woods and prairies. ' ' .. . . Conducted by the National Woman's x Christian Temperance Union.) REACHING THE LOGICAL GOAL 3radualbut Praotlcal Sains of R - form Movement From 8tart to Present Date. By CHRISTINE U TINLINd.) At the beginning of the reform novement, when an earnest minister luggested tome Improvement iu the Irlnking customs, a leading paper aid, "None but an Insane person sould advocate such a cause." Those were the days when liquor reigned su preme. , Then came the moderate pledge igalnst wine and beer, not more than s glass at a sitting, not more than a pint a day. A total abstinence pledge waa considered absurd, there was no tense In going so far. What would those old folks think If they could to lay see the vast army of total abstain srs? What would they think ot that decision of the United States Supreme Court that "there is no Inherent rlglH In a citizen to sell Intoxicating drinl. and that the business Is attended with danger to the community?" What would they think ot the authoritative statements of our great doctors that the value of alcobol, as a medlciLs, It practically nil. and that It would have been better for the world it It had never been known? We have eome a long way and the only logical conclu sion will be found In national prohibi tion. MUCH DRYNESS IN MISSOURI Difficulties Encountered by Party of Convivial Friends While Travel ing in West. A party of convivial friends got on the train at Memphis, Tenn without replenishing their whisky bottles. They were going West By and by one ot the men got off to get a drink. It was a dry Arkansas town. He got Done. One of the othert tried It at the next good-tlzed town, but no handy lepot saloon appeared. Three timet they made a rush on Arkansas soli. only to come back dry and disconso late. "Wait till we strike Mlsourl, boys!" they said. At West Plains, Mo., their best forager did a lightning act but came back empty handed. A county map was procured. "Try the next county." So at Cabool, Mo., two thirsty men made the run, but all In vain. . ' At Mountain Grove, In the next county, the entire party ot three, fran tic tor a drink, dashed out of the coach as it stopped. They came back soberly end sadly. "Boys," said the leader, "you cse how It's a-golng. We'll soon have to cross the ocean to get a drink of beer. Blamed if the whole Mississippi Val ley isn't going dry!" , . ; RIGHT TO PROHIBIT LIQUOR Only Reasonable to 8top 8ale of Al coholic Beverages, caute or -. Mltery to Mankind. Some one tayt he doet not believe In prohibition. Then be ought to move out ot the United States, for more than half ot the laws under which he lives are prohibitory. The law tayt we shall not steal, burn houses, make counterfeit money, kill men. If it is right to prohibit shoot ing quail out of season, letting down a neighbor's fence, using a cancelled stamp, throwing dynamite Into the river to kill fish, a man gadding about when there Is smallpox In hit family then why la it not reasonable and right to prohibit the sale of al coholic beverages, which cause more misery than all these other things combined? To Love at Christ Loved. To be perfect as our Father in hea ven, to love as Jesus loved is the holy inspiration behind the law ot love, as our Lord taught it He says more than "As ye would that men should do unto you do ye even so unto them;" he reaHy ays, "Do unto oth ers as you would have God do Tinto you." To render good for good it manlike, but to render good for evil It godlike. The mercy we seek for our selves we are to show to others; we are to be children of the highest whose indiscriminate bounty blesses bad and good alike. It Is the forgiv ing spirit that alone can open the di vine fountains of forgiveness. This principle makes God the center of the moral life. . We dare not take the pun ishment of an injury into our own bands, for the real Injury of . all sin is against God, and he alone can allot righteous retribution. To love an enemy is a mute appeal to the eternal justice; "I will repay, salth the Lord." The only ground on which. any of nt dare stand before God is not that ot Justice, but of mercy, and the mercl ful shall, obtain mercy. ' ; ; Love is the divine cure for the plague of tin. It it the only weapon by 'which we can surely conquer the evil of the world. ; "Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good." Old You Know It? -We run the government pay -the most liberal pensions ot any nation of the world, and more of them; we have & nnhlio school system of which we are intensely proud; we have universi ties, colleges, academies and normal nhnoia all over our broad land: we pay in the United States fifteen and sixteen years' schooling for twenty five million children. And yet the cost nf Rimrsment of censlons and of edu cation combined Is but two-thirds the amount of our drink DHL Eschew Alcohol. One hundred and eighty-nine physi cians of ' southern California have signed a pledge not to use any alco holic medicines in their practice. ": Boy's Heart A boy's heart is not set In him to do evil any more than a girl's. Frances F. Willard. ' I WELL WATERED. , aw zr , First Hobo Why am yu looking so sad dlt mawnin', pardnerf Second Hobo Why, I am suffering from irrigation. , . - First Hobo Irrigation? You mean Irritation? Second Hobo No; irrigation. Do woman In de wayside cottage emptied a pail ot hot water on my head. Ht Was Willing to Work. The Democratic members of the house of ' representatives have been besieged ever by a horde of office seekers, willing to serve their coun try. it ia reireBiung, kuu uuf reyrv tentative In discussing the office ques tion, "to hear ot an aspirant tor pub lic office who frankly admits his ambi tion, vet disdains to seek a position In which he will have nothing to do but to draw his salary. . "Two wayside pilgrims were talking over things when one of them asked: "'Dick, you ain't a-hankerin' after no government place, are ye?' " 'I don't mind sayln' I'd take one of 'em ef I could git It' responded the other, 'but I dont want no Job that's all fat. I'm wlllln' to earn my wages.' " 'An' what tort o' job would be about your size?' ' ., - " 'Well, I'd like to fill fountain pent fur tome assistant secretary of the treaaury.' "Judge. ' Solemn Warning to Parents. Th Aain fnp IiawaT trAtihla Is fast approaching and you should at once provide your home with King's Diar rhoea Cordial. A guaranteed remeuy for Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Flux, Cholera Infantum and all kindred dis eases. Numerous testimonials on our flies telling ot marvelous .cures can be had by request Burwell ft Duns Co, Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Inetancs. I ' Knlcker Do you use labor-saving devices? Bocker Yes, a fishing pole will pre vent you from having to take up the carpet .- . ' . - Education should' Rive the child more capacity tor doing . work and helping itself to the good things of life. Too many try to help themselves without nerfarmlnz anv useful labor. For ttTSTMKR BXADACHB8 Hicks' CAPUDINC Is the boat remedy no matter wbt ense them- whether from the hA, sluing In draught. fverih condition, to. ion, SSo. nn4 5Uo- par botUa nt madlalne ; And many a father loses all inter est in the prohibition movement when the baby cries for water at 2 a. m. Sharp Pains In the Back Point to Hidden Kidney Trouble. Have you a lame back, ach ing day and night? ' Do you feel a sharp pain after bending over? When the kid neys seem sore and the . action irregular, u t Doan't Kidney Pills, which have cured thousands. A New Jersey Case Louis Hunter, 40 K. 82nd St., Bay onne, N. J., says: "I was In such baa shape I often fell. The eufferlnc I un derwent Would have killed a weaker man. I doctored constantly, but grew no better and the last doctor save no bop. Doan's Kidney Pills cured m entirely, and I feel they saved my life." r Get Dosa's at any Drug Store, 50c a Box Dodn'o KKiir Tfc3 Oldest SGiitiisrn Cc!!::3 ' Call at el Willis-) sue Msry. Feea Is 16M Healthful altiuttloa and hiatorie Maoetatlons. On O. O. Railway, half-way batween Fort Monro and Blehmona) s nu- srom jameawwa, 19 ml. from Yorktown. Degraas of A. B., B. t., II. A., Bpoclal Teachers' Courses. Bicellent athlatle Bald. Total coat par session ot nine months (board and fM)tsss. Write for annual catalogue. s.LMIWU.Irr.Wlllkrtlrfll9 Fw" it a SKI ' 11 Oil 0 thamhrt the terpM Hvar, stransthea the dlreativ arsaas, rasa lata the bowel.. , A rem 4r for sick headache. Uaeeualed as ANTI-CILIOUS MEDICINE, r v Btotaatlv a tar coated. Small des. Price, 28c DEMAND FOR OUR STUDENTS j?. CrasalaMiuppir f-"5 yU aVty'iewaialnsrouiisaian PVl fi.and womea (of bunoaa. Seekkeaalet. IWtkaU. e4 faarr' No vacanoa. wmw andiucfet. Seal far catalea. Ls & C3s Est ICC3 (THE OLD RELIABLE) We are In the market at all Udh for BCRAP Rl'HHFK, Kt(.M. IMSTA1S, J IKIKi AND HMXlNO-taAND a. At J iJlt ttl. Ve par blsheetprtaea, Vnr lanje liat of men-out beet aarerUeement. Writ for prtoe hat. I, ROg3 CO MP A NT die-44 BrouJt Are, bickuioud, Virginia MnaSffn and Plih 0- a. j ( " i t-inialm 9 fctoa4W ortlera (t'ven elal Attention. Prir reonal.e. Serrlce prompt. Pud 'r Prii- Lit. laaaaws aU trout, uuiumi, 8. b f:ac::::ir:f irr 'rt own r X-t fini-i fjr ' f ev u i -...' nt?? JftUsf U ... f f r 1 gs2& -4 JUcAjmwA Vm. i - 7 i

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