The Chole of Palnt, house is rarer. 1f people knew the real value of paint 2 house in need of palut would be “scarcer than len’s teeth.” There was some excuse for our fore fathers. Many of them lived (n houses hardly worth preserving; they knew nothing about paint, except that it was pretty; and to get & house painted was a serious and costly job. The differ- ence between thelr ease and ours is that when they wanted paiut it had to be made for them: whereas whon we need paint we can go to the nearest good store and buy It, In any color or quality ready for use. We know, or ought to know by this time. that to let a house stand unpainted is most costly, while a good coat of paint, ap- plied In season, is the Lest of invest. ments. If we put off th ief visit of the painter we shall in due time have the carpenter coming to pay'us a long visit at our expense. Lumber is con- stantly getting scarcer, dearer and poorer, while prepared paints are get- ting plentier, better and less expensive, It is a short-sighted plan to let the val- uable lumber of our houses go to pleces for the want of paint. For the man that needs paint there are two forms from which to choose: one is the old form, still favored by cer- tain unprogressive painters who have not yet caught up with the times—lead and oil; the other is the ready paint found in every up-to-date The first must be mixed driers, turpentine and colors is realy for use; the cther be stirred up in the oc: ready to go on. To buy colors, ete., and mix them by hand is, in this twent about the same as ref trolley car because one's bad to walk or ride when he wanted t« Prepared paints have | ket less than fifty yeats proved on the whe convenient and so sumption to-day ty miilion gallons a year ar ing. ] i3 801 Unless they had satisfactory, it would have growth in i Mixed pair than paint o cause they ar machinery I large quantities ! They are necessaril; mixed by hand, } finely I nnd aad paints). cloth, i0 We g hand-loc backw senze in the reg of There 1s scareely a general the no can with Assurance of { ; our use on day be bought money's worth as the established brands of pre- pared paint. The buy to-day may be like a certaln patent medi- cine, “the same as you have always bought,” but not, it will be because the manufacturer has found a way of giving you for your money, and so making sore of your next order. P. not : Fyord 4 tied a Detier articis F118 permanentiy cured. No fits or nervous. Deas after frst day's use of Dr, Kline's rea’ Nerve Restorer, $1 trialbottisandtraat iselres Dr. RB. H, Kuivz, Ltd, 931 Arch St. Phila Ps. bird has a 18 Ried : vird of Probably no famo ha baby smaller abitat than" the paradise Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Childrag teething, softensthegums,reducesinfiam ma. tion ,alinys pain, cures wind eclie 28¢.a bottle The pub Ic executioner of the Grand Duchy of Hesse has been fined £20. The Western Man, Here is someone's conception of t western man: “He rolled the prairie up like cloth, drank Mississippl dry, put Alleghany in his hat, a steamboat in his eye, and for his breakfast, faloeas some twenty-one did whipped whole Comanche tril one day before he dined, and for a walking cane he took a California pine, and when he frowned he was so black the sun it couldn't shine. He whipped a ton of grizzly bears one morning with a fan, and proved him- self, by all these feats, to be—a west ern man.” fry the A PRECARIOUS CONDITION, —————— Many Women Soffer Dal y Miseries acd Don't Know the Renson. Women who are languid, suffer back ache and dizzy spells, should read care fully the experience of Mrs. Laura Sullivan, Bluff and Third Sts., Marquette Mich., who says: “I bad backache and bearing-down pain, and at times my limbs would swell to twice natural size | could hardly got ap or down stairs, and often could not get my shoes on Be. ginning to use Doan's Kidney Pills 1 got relief before 1 had used half a box, but continued taking them until cured, The bloating subsided and I was well again.” Sold by all dealers. BO cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N. ¥. COMMERCIAL kly Review WHOLESALE MARKETS, FLOUR I ry 3 £1 fair 30-16; steady; 1, 00 test, - pls, 3. and t steers, I@isc off; 4 s, firm. Medium and ady; fat cows, strong 7Va; Oxen, 4.30: bulls, 2.10000 4.20 CALVES-—<Market steady, and prime i prime veals, 0.50. Dressed dressed veal’, o@ dressed, 8 and Mmon Sieers, 4.95 1.25( 4.00; cows, ommon t« choice, city ~Sheep, nom- lambs: BR cars um to good Limbs, 7.00 740; choice natives would sell at 7.50 or upward, bu HOGS- hogs sold Chicago, mmon © prime cows, 31.68@4.00; ulls, 260@4.25; stockers and feeders, 2.7804 75. HOGS-—Market sc higher. Choice to prime heavy, 6.50(06.52%;; medium to good heavy, 6.45@0.50: butcher weights, 6.48006.52%5 ;: good to choice heavy mix- ed. 6.45@6.47 VY; : packing, 6.10006 45. SHEEP Market, sheep steady: lambs, best, 10c higher: others steady Sheep, 4.50406.25; yearlings, 8.7. @b.40; lambs, 4.730685 IN THE FIELD OF LABOR, With all Russia's cruelties, she will not allow children under 12 years of age to work in a mill or factory, Dredge and tug men on the Creat Lakes are moving to have their hours cut down from sixteen to eleven hours a day. Chicago (Ill) Cigarmakers’ Local Unions have taken steps to raise a union iabor assassment to thwart the plans of the llinois Manufacturers’ Association to boycott all union labels State good Market? steers, steady: 3856.40; heifers, 2.75@s.35; caives, 3.000 )".00; THE POINT OF VIEW. ey sat before the kitehen I'he corn was bobbing In sweet and brave but ba rang the loving 1a hful He was a man ear on he'd enlied he bore i I "You going to some time ag retire from politics answered the with a “but attention [ ¢ where | Washington nan the statement attracte meciuded 1 without being Star, Was another brought before earnest citizen "My answered Senator now has all it can take care of is some answers.’ “Here is ought to be sald the gir,” “Congress question Congress,’ dea Sorghum the questions What it Washington needs Star “These editors are hard to please “What's the matter now?” “They use to send back my stuff because (hes could'nt read it “You ought to got typewriter.” “I did, and now they send it back because they What's a fellow to do?” Ledger. “The boss insists upon our employ ing his son here, and it's as much as | can do to keep him idle,” said the city editor. “Idle?” remarked his friend “You mean busy, don’t you?” don’t three or four other men busy correct ing his mistakes. "Philadelphia Press can read it Philadelphis An Indian's Love for His Dog. Colonel Post, who sympathizes with everybody Richard Benge, a Cherokee, pack of trail hounds has often music among the Fort Gibson “Will you please let me have & space in your paper? 1 won't much. [ just want to tell you made hills: old Just got sick and died. Poor old Drum go. I feel sorter lonesome since oid Drum died, for I've only old Spot and Mues left. Old Drum was the best. When he barked you knowed it was a ‘possum or a coon. Old Spot is all right, but he won't bark, just wags his tall" Kansas Oty Journal Woodcock Carrying its Young, I was shooting snipe near Angola, N. Y., with when the dog made a point in bunch one On our going up woodcock flus with a it the sl: ( 8 Bparros its legs and flew about thirty plain view On looking in found in nest with In it.—Forest abo at ahead of AnoLner young and Stream, Wedding Finery of 1} Hard to Find. Boome n of Norwas Sues Bar Association, Ww E O'Brien of Bridge port, i * BI ¢ flort to force th 1 if hb Cf ty to adml A Young This burst of dignation was caused by that Grape-Nuts, the saying pre-digested food, was made bread shipped in and sweetened The teacher the subject. \ t nd colored up and There is ing and : an vy ¢ HUE is Absolutely Unrelizble." the ways o ED When the York “teacher” young the “iron put and branded her right sent $10.00 to the girl iw her piu and bravery. THIRD PASTURE. me to 8 SECOND PASTURE. Editors of “Trade” papers known AR grocers’ papers — Remember, we don't put the brand on all, by any means. Only those members of that we papers that require it. These the tribe have carry advertising in and when we do not consider it ad visable they Institute a campaign of vituperation and slander, printing from time to time manufactured riurs on Postum or Grape-Nuts, When they go far enough we set our legal force at work and hale them to the judge to answer. If the pace has been hot enough to throw some of these “cattie” over on their backs, feet tied and "bellow fog,” do you think we should be blamed? They gambol around with talls held high and jump stiff leg ged with a very “cocky” air while they bave full range, but when the rope is thrown over them “it's dif. ferent.” Bhould we untle them because they bleat soft and low? Or should we put the iron on, so that people will know the brand? Let's keep them In this pasture, anyhow, demanded their ound it was passed hundred hours of , then placed on warm soaking in floors and slightly sprouted. deve loping i the barley, which into a gtase In “in form of sugar. Now after A fs . " and it has we have passed it into been Ki is moulded by IR inches } eaded long enough, 1 machinery ong and O is put into convenience jn second These great loaves are sliced by ma chinery and the slices placed on wire these trays, in turn, placed on trocis, and rolled into the secondary ovens, each perhaps 756 or 80 feet long. to a long, low which has not and the heretofore heat been generally known as Post Sugar. It can be seen glistening on the granules of Grape-Nuts If held toward the light, and this sugar is not poured over or put on the food as these prevaricators ignorantly assert. On the contrary the sugar exudes from the Interior of each little granule during the process of manufacture, and reminds one of the little white particles of sugar that come out on the end of a hickory log after stand for a length of time, This Post Sugar is the most digesti- ble food known for human vse. It is 80 perfect in its adaptability that moth. ers with very young infauts will pour a little warm milk over two or three spoonfuls of Grape-Nuts, thus washing the sugar off from the granules and carrying It with the milk to the bottom GIVE EAR! “If You make Foods ingredie Kagoes send us the the pac ay they are made also name of two or three if the clear udgment we will right Hekly “ ‘ name and address Wi lnesses evidence is that wrot Our business has telligen pr lars whenever wherever they can be found Attention is again called to the gens eral and broad invitation to visitors to go through our works, where ther will be shown the most winute process and device in order that! thes may under stand how pure and clean and whole some Grape-Nuts and Postum are. There is an old saying among busi ness men that there is some chance to train a fool, but there is no room for a liar, for you never can tell where you are, and we hereby serve notice on all the members of this ancient tribe of Ananias that they may follow thelr calling in other lines, but when they and Postum, we propose to give them an opportunity to answer to the proper authorities. The New York girl wisely sald that If a person would le about one item, it brands the whole discourse as absalute- ly unreliable, Keep your iron ready and brand these “mavericks” whenever you find them running loose, iy
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers