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CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT; Painting with Pure W h ite Lead does not necessarily mean painting white. Any color may lie added to Pure White Lead, producing any desired shade of color. The standing of Pure W h ite Lead Paint is attested by the fact that every other paint pigment is sold either mixed with Pure White Lead, or fraudulently labeled as Pure White Lead, or as a composition of unknown ingredients claimed to be “good as Pure White Lead,\ “ better than Pure White Lead,\ etc. When the Dutch Boy trade mark shown below appears on a keg, it i a positive guaranty of genuine, unadul terated White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process; look for it on the side of the keg. S E N D FOR BOOKS •‘A Talk e n P a i n t \ ur.«l \ A r t in H o u ie P u in t i n j i .\ w h i c h H ire valuable infur- m a tit-n i*u t h e p a in t Fuhject nnd »h<>w rn l o r schem e * fo r house-paintint: S e n t 1907 bear* tUia m a r k fre e upon req u e s t. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in w h ichever o f the follow , in 'j cities is nearest you • Uew Y o rk, Bos t e n , Buffalo. C leveland. C in c in n a ti, C h icago, S t. L o u is . P h i l a d e lp h ia [Jo h n T. Lew is d B ros. Co. 1 ; P i t t s b u r g h [N a tional Lead <fc O il (k>.) LITTLE PItUE. G o o d Exaniph* of Doctor anti Patients A true story is told of a San F ran cisco woman and a doctor with a con science. Th'd doctor perform ed a successful operation for a rich wom an, and when asked for his bill pre sented one for $'>0. The lady smiled and said: “ Do you consider th a t a reasonable charge, considering my circum stances?” The doctor replied: “That is my charge for th a t opera tion; your circum stances have noth ing to do with it.\ The lady drew a check for $500 and presented it tc him. He handed it back, saying: “ I cannot accept this. My charge foi th a t operation is $50.\ “ Very w e ll,’ th e lady replied. \K eep the check and put the balance to my credit.’ Some m ouths after she received o long itemized bill, upon which were entered charges for treatm e n t ol various kinds, rendered to all sorts of odds and ends of hum anity, male and female, black and white, whe had been mended at her expense She was so delighted at It th a t she im m ediately placed another check for $500 to his credit on the same term s, and It Is now being earned in the same way,— Boston Evening Transcript. man was hurled unconscious to tho side of the track, amid a pile of wreckage. Three hours later he was found unconscious by a searching party, and over him, sheltering him from the piercing wiQd with its body, stood the devoted horse. The animal had evidently refused to desert Its driver and seek shelter, although blanketless and exposed to a tem p e ra ture of fifteen degrees below zero. But for its faithfulness M ontgomery would have perished of cold. As it was, his injuries did not prove fatal. — New York Tribune. Colored Wit. Minerva had been in the family a num b er of years, and she thinks that her long term of service entitles her to a certain am o u n t of authority, es pecially around the kitchen. Not long ago a negro servant girl, who worked in a neighboring home, came to the back door and knocked. Min erva opened the door. \M o rnin’, M inerva,” said the girl from the neighbor’s house. \Ah w a n ts to do a little borerin’ this m o h n in’.\ “W h a t yo’ w a n t?\ asked Minerva. \Ah wants to borrer two hens’ algs, a cup o’ sugar, some lemons, en a pie pan. Ah w ants to m ake a lemon pie.” Minerva saw im m ediately th a t she m u st exercise her authority. She stepped outside and looked over the door. Then she said, half to herself, ‘‘No, they ain ’t none theh.\ ‘‘No w h a t?\ asked the other girl. \Sign readln’ ’Groce’y Stoah,’ ’ said Minerva. “Ah didn’t know but w h a t yo’ seen one on this house. They’s a groc’y on the next’ c o h n ah,’ and Minerva went Inside and shut the duor.— B a p tist Commonwealth. CHILDREN SHOWED IT. rSflfect of T h e ir W arm Drink in the M orning. I “A year ago I was a wreck from coffee drinking and was on the point of giving up my position in the school room because of nervousness. \I was telling a friend about it and she said, ‘We drink nothing at meat tim e but Postum Food Coffee, and ii Is such a comfort to have something we can enjoy drinking with the chil dren.’ \I was astonished th a t she would allow the children to drink any kind of coffee, but she said Postum wai the most healthful drink in the wmrld for children as well as for older ones and th a t the condition of both the children and adults showed that to be a fact. “My first trial was a failure. The cook boiled It four or five mlnutee and It tasted ao flat that I was In de spair, but determ ined to give It one more trial. This tim e we followed the directions and boiled It flfteer m inutes after the boiling began. H was a decided success, and 1 war completely won by Its rich, dellclouf. flavour. In a short tlm^ 1 noticed a decided improvem ent In my condition and kept growing better and bettei m o n th after m o n th, until now 1 am perfectly healthy, and do my work In’ the school room with ease and pleas ure. I would not r e turn to the nerve- destroying regular coffee for an; m o n ey.\ \There’s a Reason.” Read the fa mous little \Health Classic,\ \The Road to Wellvllle,\ In pkgjB. © cv*r H Sewing all day for her dollies; Washing and ironing, too; From morning till night so busy Is our dear little Miss Prue. She is never idle a minute, Save whert she’s asleep, you know; And then she is only resting. And taking time to grow. —M. W., in the Birmingham Age Herald. THE KING OF THE IROQUOIS. In the dram a tic struggle between France and England for the m astery of this continent it was one Irish m a n ’s genius that gave the m agni ficent prize to Great Britain. If the great Iroquois confederacy, known as the \Six N a tions,\ had thrown its power upon the side of the French it is m orally certain that England would have lost the battle, and the supremacy would have gone to the Latin r a ther than to the Saxon. But the Iroquois sided with the Eng lish and that fact was the death- knell oi French aspirations. It was the great good sense, con sum m ate tact and marvellous per sonality of Sir W illiam Johnson th a t won over, and held fast the friend ship of the powerful red men. It was a disappointed love affair th a t sent Johnson to America. In the land of the Shamrock, a land th a t he loved with all his heart and where, doubtless he would have been content to rem ain, he fell in love with a beautiful girl who was un able to reciprocate his affection, and, brokenhearted, the young man sailed for the New W orld. He was only tw e n ty-three when he landed In New York, but young as he was he was intrusted with a most im p o rtant task— th a t of the m anage m ent of a large landed estate in the Mohawk Valley belonging to his un cle, Sir Peter W arren. Sir Peter could not have picked out a better man to look after his Interests In the New World. John son attended to his responsible tru s t in a way th a t was both businesslike and honorable, and his uncle never regretted the confidence he had put in him. In the m eantim e Johnson went Into business for himself, and at a point some twenty-five miles west of Schenectady began a system atic In dian trade. In all of his dealings with the red men he was scrupulous ly fair, never perm itting his agents to wrong them in any way. He ilso, diplom atically and yet firmly, deld the red men to the rule of s tr ict est justice. He never cheated them aimself, nor would he allow them to :heat him. Johnson’s absolute integrity ap pealed to the Indians, and they soon grew to trust him implicitly. The savages felt that at last they had struck a paleface who intended, come what m ight, to speak and act truly ind honorably. •The wild Mohawks had such rev erence for the great-hearted, good- aatured Irishm an that they made him i sachem, and when Sachem Johnson spoke the braves listened and obeyed. By the time of the breaking out of hostilities between the French and English Johnson had made the pow erful m asters of the Mohawk Valley such fast friends th a t it Required but a word from him to make them the friends also of Great Britain. The French would cheerfully have given millions to have procured an Iroquois alliance, but the mingled blarney and fair dealing of the Irish man defeated the realization of their wish and with th a t the consum ma tion of their high designs upon this N o rth American continent. A fter the treaty of 1763, as a tok en of its appreciation of his services during the war, the British Govern m ent gave Johnson a hundred thous- nnd acres of land north of the Mo hawk River. He had previously been knlgnted by the King, and full of honors Sir WlUiam died at Johns town, N. Y., 1774, in his fifty-ninth year.— T he Rev. Thomas B. Gregory, In the New York American. A REMARKABLE FUNGUS. I was following an old wood road and paused for a moment to enjoy the beauty of the sun-flecked path way; a bit of orange color attracted my attention. On closer exam ination I found a slim, club-shaped object about an inch long th a t appeared to be the cap of a small fungus. It re minded me of the spadix of a calla- lily. W ondering from w h a t source this strange little parasite had been getting its food, I poked away the decaying leaves from the short stem and found to my great astonishm e n t th a t the small, branching roots of this rem a rkable fungus were embed ded in the head of a brown chrysalis about an inch in length. The chrys alis had lost its plumpness and was light to the touch, plainly showing that while it had served as a host for the little parasite a wonderful transform a tion had taken place. M other nature had changed the or gans of an insect into this odd little ovange-coldted fungus.— F rom Na ture and Science in St. Nicholas. The first requisite of a good m o ther is good health, and the ex perience of m aternity should not be approached w ithout careful physical preparation, as a woman who is in good physical condition transm its to her children the blessings of a good constitution. Preparation for healthy m ater nity is accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkham ’s Vegetable Compound, which is made from native roots and herbs, more successful!}- than by any other medicine because it gives tone and strength to the entire feminine organism, ctir'ing displacements, ul ceration and inflammation, and the result is less suffering and more children healthy a t b irth, than thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound has been the standby of American m o thers in preparing for childbirth. NotewhatM rs JamesChester.of427 W. 35th St., New Yflrk says in this letter:—r jar Mrs. Pinkham :-\! wish every expectant mother knew aboxit Lydia E. Pinkham ’s Vegetable Compound. A n eighbor who had learned of its great value at this trying period of a woman’s life urged me to try it and I did so, and I cannot say enough in regard to the good it did me. I recovered quickly and arn in the best of health now.” Lydia E. Pinkham ’s Vegetable Compound is certainly a successful remedy for the peculiar weaknesses and ailm ents of women. It has exired almost every form of Female Complaints, Dragging Sensa tions. Weak Back, Falling and Displacements, Inflammation, Ulcera tions and Organic Diseases of Women and is invaluable in preparing for Childbirth and during the Change of Life. Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free. MRS. JAMES CHESTER For more DYSPEPSIA I^Harl rln e taken ronr wonderful ’ Caseareta’ for m o n tln aud being entirely cured of ev-maeli h and dyspepsia. I think a word of praise !• ju t without avail and I Oml that Cajcarets relieve more in a day thau aU the others 1 have taken would in a year ” Jamee McGuoe. JR M e u e r S t Jersey City M J, z - dURTMitoed to cure or y o u r m o n e y Luck Sterling R e m e d y C o ., C h icago or N . Y. 591 IMNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES I d D O Q e ^ tfKW DISCOVMBY: ■ Vs 0 U yitc~ quirk relief ztx£ cores 5H>r*t CC5CJ. B c o h o l t- e t l m o n l a L ld i ! S O E » t*y u ' irr& im a a tf iTrc»tt» 1 L 1 L iUUkLVa aoatk Uox O, Alloataj til* EVERY IM S OWN BOCTGP, IRSERS A.. M... M.. D.. B o o k fo r t h e H o u s e h o ld, fily - d ^ t l n g u l s h e d sym p * th e C a u s e s amd i M oan a n s uk By J. HAMILTON AY A M. M D T h is la a m o s t V a lu a b le te a c h i n g at\. I t tloca t h e eai to m s o f d i f f e r e n t D isca os, t h e C a u s e s a n M o P r e v e n t i n g su c h Dlse-isog, a n d th e S im p l e s t Kom- t d ic* w h i c h w i l l al w a o o r o u ro . P a i j c * * P r o f u & e l y H l u p t r u l e d . HOc. p<»«i i>a i d , Sond iMKtal n o t e s o r p o s tag e sta m p s . H O O K 1’ l l l O L S E i 1 3 1 L e o n a r d h t , . N e w \ o r L . HOW TO MAKE A NET. The first thing to learn is how to m ake the knot. It is easily made, and I won’t have it to explain, as you can make- one by using the illustra tion as a guide. W hen you get that “down p a t ’’ m a k e your needle. It may be a darning needle or a bodkin, if you have one; if not, you can make one out of wire (Fig. 1). fig i W rong Proportions. A w ealthy Illinois farm e r, one of a num b er, perhaps, has a habit of in vesting some of bis surplus money in South Dakota chattel m o rtgage paper. He recently visited one of the Lake County (South Dakota) banks, where he Is well acquainted, and bought quite a bunch of this paper from the bank. In looking over w h a t they had to offer, he came to a note secured by a m o rtgage on eleven horses and one cow, all the live stock owned by the farm e r who had given the note. “I won’t touch it,” he declared. “W h y ,” said the cashier of the bank, “he is one of the best fellows in the bunch.” “Makes no difference,\ was the re ply. “If it were eleven cows and one horse I’d take It in a m inute.” And that ended it. The story is tru e and the lesson plain.— F a rm News. HOME W E E K IN BOSTON. Happy Occasion. The people of Bushby had great tru s t in Mr. Oscar H a ll’s eloquence and tact. He was their greatest pride, and they gave him freely to distinguished guests. \Owing to the fact that1 Senator Spring was brought here by two of H a rm o n v ille's most prom inent citi zens in their fast-speeding vehicle of modern invention,\ said Mr. Hall, at the reception tendered the Sena tor by the adm iring populace of Bushby, “ we were unable to provide a fitting musical welcome, but ar rangem ents have been satisfactorily made, and it is with all due modesty that I say Bushby may raise her head to-morrow when the Senator leaves us, escorted by the Bushby band and a barge filled w ith Bushby children waving flags, their glad young voices singing our national hymns. All will see our visitor safely to the outskirts of the town, and the occasion will be one of the greatest satisfaction, I feel sure.”— Y o u th's Companion. Now we will first make an oblong net— a minnow net. M aterial: Four big nails, five yards of one-eighth- inch cord, two balls of wrapping cord and one needle. Mark off on a board or table an oblong one and onc-half yards long by one yard wide, and drive a big nail in each of the four corners, then run your one-eighth-inch cord around them , and tic it tight. Then begin to knit, tying the knots one-half inch apart (Fig. 2). S tart string as shown in Fig. 2. Next we will make a dip net. Ma terial: A hoop five Inches larger in diam e ter than the finished dip net-is to be, one-eighth-inch cord and string. Sons and D a u g h ters of New England Capital to Visit Scenes of Youth. The greatest event for Boston and for all New England this season will be the home-coming week in Boston. This will occur at the end of July, and will attract thousands of persons from every part of the country to the city and the section of the country w'here their ancestors lived and where their affections are centered. The citizens of Boston have made liberal preparations for a grand cele bration of the history and achieve m ents of Boston and the Common w ealth of M assachusetts. There will be a week of m idsum m er reunions of fam ilies and of public festivities. The tim e selected is from July 28 to Au gust 3. The home-coming week in Ken tucky attracted half a million visit ors to Louisville and the home-com ing for Georgia was likewise grate- I fully accepted. There is no doubt of | the attraction to Boston of a far great- 1 er num b er of sons and daughters who i cherish the traditions and the The Ordnance Survey Departm ent of Great Britain m akes use of cam eras carrying plates forty-five by thirty inches. N.Y.— 21$ FITS, St. Vi t us' Dance, NervousDiseases per manently cured Dy Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H.R. Kline. Ld..931 Arch 8t.,Phila..Pa. The boycott against American goods in China has been suppressed. SORES AS BIG AS PENNIES. cesses of the people and who venerate the history of the famous city which is the leader in the literature, art and the civilization of America. W hole Head and Neck Covered— H a ir All Came Out— S u ffered (i Months — Cured in B W eeks by Cutieura. “After having the measles my whole head and neck were covered with scaly sores about as largo as a penny. They were just ns thick as they could be. My hair all came out. 1 let the trouble run along, taking the doctor’s blood remedies and rubbing .on salve, hut it did not seem to get any better. It stayed that way for about six months; then I got a set of the Cutieura Remedies, ami in about a week I noticed a big difference, and in three weeks it was well entirely and 1 have not had the trouble any more, and as this was seven sue- | years ago, 1 consider myself cured. Mrs. 1 DEVOTION OF A HORSE. Animal devotion has received a fresh illustration in the action of the horse of Archie Montgomery, a young farm e r of East Coldenham, N. Y. W hile going home from his milk route in a bitter cold wind last w inter M ontgomery fell asleep. His faithful horse was finding its own way in the darkness, as It had often done before, when at a grade crossing about fif teen miles above Cornwall-on-Hed- eon a southbound train struck the You can see in Fig. 3 how to start. A is the hoop, B is a lot of loops to hold the cord to the hoop. K n it around and around. W hen you como to the centre a few more knots will m ake the net “fish tight.\ Then take > It off and run a hickory band around it, allowing plenty of sag, and tack your net on.— Bernard W ills, Ago j Fifteen Years, Cincinnati, Ohio, in j the W o man’s Home Companion. Noise a Soother. ! Noise is as essential to the sleep j of some persons as silence is to oth- ; ers. Persons accustomed to the street j noises of a city sleep restlessly in the i c o u n try. A man who had lived eigh teen years on a corner in Kansas City where two double tracks of street ear lines cross sold his proper ty a few m o n ths ago. He was ad vancing in years and thought he needed a home away from the rum ble, clatter and clang of the cars. A week after he had moved he m et a friend. He told his friend he thought his health was failing rapidly. He did not know w h a t was the cause, but he had not been able to sleep since he had moved. “ Get back on a trolley line,” was his frifcnd’s advice. He took it. “Never slept better in my life than I do now. I needed the noise,” he said a few lays later.— K a n sas City Star. Henry Porter, Albion, Neb., Aug. 25, ’Uti.\ Three hundred thousand Russians are piopuiing to emigrate. ReSresMng S l e e p C o m e s A l t e r n B a th w i t h warm water and Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. It allays irritation and leaves the skin cool, soothed and refreshed. Used just before retiring induces ([uiet and restful sleep. Always insist on G l e n n ’s S u l p h u r S o a p Ail druggists keep it. U l t r a l l n l r e n d W h l e W v r D y e m a r k o r l l r o w n , B O e . Food Products' Libby’s Veai Leaf Wzih Beef and Pork Do you like Veal L o a f? You w ill surely be delighted with L ib b y ’s kind, made from choice fresh meats, in L ibby’s spotless kitchens. It is pure, wholesome and delicious in flavor. R e a d y for Serving A t O n c e .- S i m p ! y g a r n i s h e d w ith sau c e it is an a p p e t i z i n g e n t r e e lo r lu n c h e o n o t. d i n n e r A m L your it *cor for Libby Vi find Insist upon irettlnn Libby’s. L i b b y , McNeill & Libby C h icago Don’t Push The horse can draw the l load withoufhelp, if you reduce friction to almost nothing by applying A x ! E tfygg i | ■ to the wheels. No other lubri cant ever made wears so long and savesso much horsepow e r. Next time try M ica A xlv G rease . Standard Oil Co. le e o r p o r s t e d I A WONDERFUL GAIN. A STAMP MENAGERIE. A very complete m enagerie may ba formed from a collection of postage stam p s haviug animals, birds and fish as the central figures. The anim als represented are lion, tiger, elephant, giraffe, jaguar, camel, hippopotam u s, buffalo, bear, leopard, dog, kangaroo, deer, horse, cow, llama, goat, mon key, donkey, beaver, duckbill, seal, sable, gorilla, cobra, crocodile, tor toise. The fowl family is represented by th e peacock, owl, heron, eagle, parrot, turkey, snipe, swan, goose, quail, dove, huia-bird. emu, pheasant, lyre-bird, apteryz, torea. Of fish there are but two— the cod and carp. The insect kingdom has one repre sentative In the butterfly, nestling In the coiffure ot former Queen Lllieo- kalaoL—From Frank J. BUIlmen'e BASE BALL-SPALDINCS $ 1 . 2 5 E a c h . For Thirty Years Standard of the World. E v e r y t h in g to r th e a t h l e t e . U u lto rm * an d : l o r e v e r y a t h l e t i c u p o n , s i x n e w cata wheels of the waaon. The jroonar Iratamn Collecting.\ In 8L Nicholas, c ........... V..; *k„ A Utah Pioneer Tells n R e m a rkable Story. J. W. Browning, 1011 22d St., Ogden, Utah, a pioneer who crossed the Plains in 1848. a i w? «_ say a: “Five years O f f i c i a l E v e r y w h e r e * ago the doctors said I had diabetes. My kidneys were all out of order. I had to rise often at night, looked sallow, felt dull and listless and '<ed tost 40 pounds. My back ached and [ had spells of rheum a tism and dizzi ness. Doan's Kidney Pills relleve» me of these troubles and have kept me well for a year past. Though 75 years old, I am in good health . \ Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Bvlalo, N. Y. munt lor every athletic eporv nix new catalogutu frree to an) addreee, F r e e . BOOKS YOU NEED-- 1 0 c . per copy. Postpaid. No. i, spa.(ling a upictai oasti o ali uunla. No. Att, now to Clay naae Hull. No. zXA y . tluw to Hat. . No. iU, How to Run Bawl. C a tc l No. J N o . JJU, No. Zii. H o w t o C lay M ral No. JJo, H o w to Clay aeoouu R aw . N o . Z ti, rio w to i'i a y T u i r a Uave. No. ete. H o w to Clay e o o r u i o p . No. t i l . H o w to Clay m e u u t o e l t. No. Zfl, How to organize a tiaoe Hall League, Mon ................ 1 Club. Train anti Captain a Team ag e a Base b a l l and Ui mlitre a ‘Jan bend for new Haw halt Catalogue FREE. Base £ail Goods for Boys Especially. *UUI O rder Dept. A. Q . •F A U M N Q A I «M M m c m Ot* New Vevk. CHICKENS EARN MONEY! If You Knoxv How te Handle Them Proi*erly. Whether you raise Chick ens lor iuu or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this is to profit by the experience of others. We offer a book telling all you need to know on the subject —a book written by a man who made his living for 25 years in raising Poultry, and in that time neces sarily had to ex periment and spent much money to |H learn the best way — 1 to conduct the S tam p s business — for the email sum of 25 cents in postage stumps. It tells you how to Detect nnd Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which l o w Is to Save for Breeding Purposes, and indeed about everything you must know on the subject to make a success. 25c. Sent postpaid on receipt ol S3 cento in stomps. 1801IHBUSHK HOUSE, 1*4 Leeeeed fltreet, Y w k CMjr. *, ..... .... .♦ Jr,. .. . .............. ................