The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, September 03, 1909, Image 7

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    THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, SEPT. 3, 1000.
TRAINING THE VIOLET.
Experts Make It Climb or Grow Tree
Fashion. Tho vlolot Is ono of those sweot
garden llowora which Is everywhere
found, dispelling Its frngrance in all
directions, but when under cultivation
it often resents the extra care given
It. There are, however, many im
proved and highly bred typos, which
are more amcnnble to the dictates of
tho llowcr gardener.
Soino special methods of growing it
that mny be unknown to the majority
of readers, are nevertheless Interest
ing. Tho violet is a universal favor
ite, nnd It Is trained In various ways.
It produces naturally every year a
certain number of runners, like those
by which tho strawberry Is propa
gated, and when a plant is established
In a pot these runners may be attach-
Showing Trained Violets,
ed to a trellis, and the turfs In which
each runner terminates will bloom,
and when over other runners will
come out, which should also be at
tached, arranging each ono so that
space Is left lor further growths. As
they increase the older oues will
gradually become nearly woody in
texture, and during winter, accoidlng
to treatment, will produco a profusion
of bloom.
One is iiilonned t'int the plants un
der good tieatim nt will last for sev
eral years. Then there is a method
of growing them as standards by
rooting the stem end of tho runner
and tying it up to a stick in a pot. Lot
the top growth go until tho desired
length of stem is reached, keeping all
lower growths cut away. Then let it
fall over a wood trellis, and train tho
runners on it. 'rlieso forms prove
sources of interest and pleasure, and
it Is hoped tho sketches indicate
clearly how the plants are to bo
trained.
The Garden.
People can live without gardens.
Vegetables are not necessary to the
support of life, but they come in
handy once a day in a well regulated
family. Dread and water will keep
one going, but It is a pretty weak mo
tive power for the human body, even
when meat and coffee are added. Vari
ety is tho spice of life, and it is cer
tain that variety in' food promotes
healthful, vigorous life. Only a few
leading vegetables are required by
the ordinary family and they are eas
ily raised. Deans, beets, lettuco cab- ,
bage. tomatoes, o'tra and turnips aro I
all easily raised, and the garden that j
is abundantly applied with these will 1
add much to tho table. Then the gar- 1
doner can tie.1, as many others as ho '
has time nnd ppneo for. Tho man is
a shabby sort of fellow who does not I
prolde for a good vegetable garden.
Plant bemir every two or three weeks,
so as to hae a succession of crops.
If beets r-.ro too thick, transplant
them. They boar that well.
Money In Farm Animals.
Live stock of all kinds Is now on a
high basi; uid no doubt will continue
so for borne time 10 coma. There Is
money In giow mi; farm animals, both
for tho anin.als themselves and for
the good troy do in producing fertil
izer at h'ue. Keep all young stock
growing cm pasture, and do not bo
afraid o l "d a. littlo grain to supple
ment tin v rii i s ration.
A Good Rotation. I
A good rotation for mixed farming
is wheat, c lover, meadow ono year,
cow pasture for ono year, corn tind
oats one yuar. This makos a six-year
rotation. Where thero are permanent
pa- t ires on Uio farm ono year can ,
ho ut cuit by not pasturing tho clov
er tho second year, I
Do you know tho sizo of your vari
ous fields, or do you merely guess at
it? You ought to know exactly, not 1
nnlv Hint vnu mnv ncr.nrntolv null, i
tnato fertilizer needed for tho land,
out, uiai you uiuy jiuuw wiu crop
4.
L
For o
Theme:
DO WE PRAY?
t-
By Rev. George Wainwright.
Text: Give ear to my prayer, O
God; and hide not Thyself from my
Buppllcatlon. Psalm lv., 1.
Recent months havo in some re
spects disappointed the hopes of the
people of God. and tho revival, so
greatly needed, nnd so earnestly de
sired and sought by many, has not yet
begun. In other parts of the world
the lire Is breaking out; and workers
Bend homo news that gladdens while It
humbles us, telling of tho working
of tho living, present, though unseen,
Spirit; convicting and quickening
Christians, and leading tho unsaved
to Christ. Dut for the most part, this
houutry remains untouched. Nat
urally tho problem still engages
the attention of our leaders, and many
are asking why so littlo has been
urliloveil. And we confess to a feel
in;; of disappointment when wo ilnd
so.no eiicouiabii. taeiasolves to hope
for improvement iMvauso (lie churches
tire shoeing a disposition to abandon
past methods of work or to modify
such mcihodj so as to suit present
requirements. I'or v. hat are melh
ocV.' They (io not oteate life, but
rather aie Hie loiins in which life ex
presses Itself, (irauteu that old meth
ods are lotained when tho life that
called them Into bolus at the first has
gone from them, yel now forms do
not necessarily mum new life.
"i'ls life whereoi our nerves aro
scant,
Jlore life and fuller that wo want.
Is theie it known condition on which
this fuller life dopuiulo? There is,
and we till Know k; jet it is to bo
feared that we are not booking to ful
fill the condition.
For that reason wo suggest the
question: Uo we pray?
We know that v. e sl.Mttlii pray. The
presence and poior of the Spirit, the
"u-retiter works" t.mn .le.sus did, the
miracles in tho spun realm as great
as tlni.se wrought by our Lord upon
the bodies of iw- all these are prom
ised; all depend on one condition
the prayer of faith in the name of
Jesus.
Tho conviction is literally hold
that if tho Church gave herself to the
word of prayer, beaihif, on her heart
tho needs of the world, exercising
prayer as a iigatiiig fence against the
forces of evil, failtaes .oulu soon be
turned to victories. "Yo havo noi"
not because your organisations aro
not sufficiently nutiic.oiu, or jour
methods not wis-e, but because ye tusk
not." "Ask and ye shall receive" is
specially true v. lion our n.-'Uiii is for
tho power of the Spirit. "1 will pour
water on him that Is thirsty, and
Hoods upon the dry grounds."
The great promise in 1'zok. :L : :17.
GS is Cod's contribution to the great
question of the day. An increase of
the best sort Is possible on only one
condition: "I will yet be inquiiod of
by the house of Israel lo do it for
them." Is there, then, a nioro pert!,
nent question than this: To wo pi ay?
Wo shall be reminded that other
conditions are needed. True, but it is
a question whether all are not includ
ed in true prayer. Theie aro strifes
and divisions and contentions anions
the people of God, and these render
prevailing prayer impossible. This Is
sadly true; and wo are persuaded
that the continuum e of such condi
tions as render .jtrifo necessary is a
triumph of tao great enemy of souls.
Dut is it not true prayer tho condi
tion on which alouc- we may know
how to conduct our warfare in the
right spirit?
Personal ".'ellug Is exposed and
condemned when wo draw near to
God in prayer. "If thou bring thy
gift to the altar and thero romeui
berost that thy brother hath aught
against thee" why "there romem
berost?" Decauso coming to the altar
is coming near to Cod, and God is
Light, and Light sctrches and the
sin of wrong rclaticm.-.liip towards
others appears there as it Is not eeon
anywhere else. The attempt to pray
and prevail will discover tho true
hindrances to prayer.
Tho purpose of this message will
not fall If those who lead It will put
the question to the in selves. Lot each
one answer for himself, and recognize
how great or how small a part prayer
has in his life. I Jr. Torrey created
some stir, awhile ago. by assorting
that Christians generally do not spend
more than five or ten infinite' a day
in prayer. Many condemned him Un
making such a statement; but was ho
far from the truth?
Andrew Murray, in Ills book on
"Tho Ministry of Intercession," tolls
of attending many uiinentlons on the
subject of pn. yev, in every ono of
which the coi;fe.:io:i was made by
ministers, nilssloi.n.'ii's, and Chrlatlnn
workers In every station: "Wo pray
too little."
Ho also quotes from an address giv
en to ministers by Dr. Alex. Whyto,
of Edinburgh, in which ho said that
"as a young man ho had thought that
ho ought to spend as much as possi
ble with his hooks. Dut ho
had now learned that prayer was of
more Importance than study. Uo folt
ns if It was almost too lato to regain
what he has lost, and urged his breth
fan tn nrav morn "
THE POWER OF WATER.
A Stream from a Fireman's Hose Will
Knock a Man Dawn.
When a man gooa in r "l:x:'z.z r.t
tho seashore and slaps t..o v uer for
cibly with his hand, or i'..cs a bails
dive from a pier tuid la ds s.; i.tro'y
on his back, he realizes ih.it u.c i.i
stable liquid offers not a little resist'
ance. Yet, saj3 a writer in the Now
York Tribune, it would surprise almost
anybody to see what water will do un
der certain conditions.
A stream from a fireman's hose will
knock a mnn down. The jet trom a
nozzle used In placer-mining in tho
West eats away a large piece of land
in a day, toys with great boulders as
if they were pebbles, and would shoot
a man over the country ns though he
were a projectile from a cannon.
There is a story of an Eastern
blacksmith who wont West and made
a bet that ho could knock a holo
through the jet of ono of these noz
zles with a sledge-hammer. He lifted
his arms, swung the sledge, and came
down on tho ten-inch stream with a
force that would have dented an anvil.
Dut the jet, never penetrated, whisked
tho massive hammer out of tho black
smith's hands, nnd tossed it several
hundred foot away into the debris of
gold-bearing gravel beneath a crum
bling cliff. After this the blacksmith
left out Iron when he spoke of hard
Bubstanccs.
There Is also a power plant near
Durango, Colorado, where a United
States cavalryman one day thought ho
had an easy job in cutting a two-inch
stream with his sword. He niado a
valiant attack. The result was Hint
his sword was shivered in two and
his wrist broken.
A little thinner Jet of water descend
ing sixteen hundred foot to a manu
factory at (irenobk . Spain, and travel
ing at Uio moderate speed of ono hun
dred yards a second, fractures tho bctt
blades of Toledo.
Of course sn:i o peoplo will not be
lieve such stories without having seen
the thing, and one may think it a
proof of tho scientific imagination to
cay that an incii-thlck sheet of w.Mev,
provided it li.u'. sufficient volodt;-,
would ward off bombshells as well a-3
ste'd plate.
Nove'h.'lc5.-;, many perrons, wh'lo
tra cling, have seen a hrakeman put
a small hydraulic jack under one end
of a Pullman car and lift twenty tom
or so by a few leisure ly strokes of tin
pump hai'dle, ami the experience of
riding every ! in a hydraulic eleva
tor tends to remove doubts of tin
magic power ro'-i.c. t.ccl by water uitcl.
cd to a machine.
Children's Gsylnss.
Wordsworth's lines of tho child at
play, "as if his whole vocation warn
endless imitation," wore recently re
called by a conversation overheard in
the children's waid at the John Hop
kins Hospital.
A little girl of mine, whoso role was
that of nurse, rang an imaginary tele
phone on tho wall to talk to her com
panion at the farther end of the room,
who played the part of doctor.
"Hollo!" said the nurse. "Is this
tho doctor?"
"Yes," answered a deep voice; "this
is the doctor."
"This lady is very sick," he was in
formed. "Well, what seems to bo tho trou
ble?" a bit gruffly.
"She litis swallowed a whole bottle
of ink!" said tho nurse.
Tho doctor, not Hurried, inquired
what had been done for the patient;
but the nurse, too, was ready in emer
gencies. She answered,
"I gave her two largo pads of blot
ting paper!"
Deri, aged 5, was inolined last au
tumn to dispute the fact, as taught
him by his father, that God gave him
all he had. After an incredulous "Even
those peanuts from the store?" he
yielded to an older mind, and, screw
ing his eyes tight shut, continued his
evening prayer.
After asking a blessing for each
member of the family, he said,
"Thank God for the peanuts and my
express wagon," adding after a slight
pause, "but, o'i. Lord, you certainly
did send baby some wormy chestnuts,"
Cost of Railroad Ties.
The railroads of this country aro
each year calling for more crossties,
nnd they are rapidly shrinking in
number and lin'reaslng In cost. Tho
total number of ties purchased in
1007 was 1.".:!,0!in,t;20, an increase of
G0,S0r,i"7S over HrOH. Tho total cost
of the ciossties purchased in 1007 was
t57S,ti5S, S0.1, an average of 51 cents a
tie. The iiic:vt"-e in total cost was,
therefore, SfSf.l 3f."7 1. or C1.7 per cent.
For 1007 the hivimst averngo cost, 59
cen's, was reporicd tor redwood tio3.
Many experiments have been mtido
With metal tics, with a low of finding
n substitute for wood, but nothing
satisfactory has yet boon produced.
Several of the leading roads have
largo tracts of trees growing, and man
in a dozen years of more may be able
to supply the'r own wants. Growing
trees on railroad lands seems to bo
tho most practical way to provldo for
tho future.
Conservation.
Tho resources or tho earth are the
basis of our national wealth. Dy
means of them alone, in material
things, eomi leadership among tho
nations. Tae coiu,uration movement
now fully under way embraces tho for
est movement as ono of its sources
nnd great divisions. Thus the cause
of forest conservation throughout tho
country has won a powerful ally and
a more effectlvo support for tho work
thnt lies Just beforo us. Gifford Pin
chot In Now F.ncland Mntrnztnn.
DAIRY- ft
"CREAMERY
THE DAIRY PASTURE.
How It May Be Fertilized to Get the
Best Results.
Fertilizer Is expensive to the dairy
man. Dy tho old method of distribut
ing It there was usually enough wast
ed to represent a pretty penny. Then
came along a Virginia man and In
vented the hand fertilizer dropper.
This device consists of an odd-shaped
bucket, running to a point at the bot
tom and having a small opening there,
I
Eliminate the Waste,
ti. rough which the contents filters. A
h hired valve, operated by a rod that
lei'ds to the hnntllo of the bucket, ton
t.'ols the How. The top of the rod Is
connected to a cross-bar, which runs
under the handle of the bucket. Tills
liar is in close reach, and. when rest
ing on the top of the bucket, tho
nlvo is open. To closy the valve the
operator merely extends a linger and
lifts tho liui-, thus shutting off thu
flow of the fertilizer. The valve
Ihues tit tho bottom, spreading the
fertilizer in a broad, fine stream. For
MiiaU farms, gardens and lawns this
device is of giv.t convenience, nnd
Is a money-saver.
Profit In Butter.
There is a goed piolit In making
butter at home. If you can make a
high grade product and havo a good
market for it. The creamery pays
you only for tin exact 1 omul of batter
fat, with two or three pounds of milk
thrown in for nothing. Churning the
cream at home. joti save the cost of
churning which the creamery
charges for; you gain about 1G per
cent, in weight of the butter; and
you gain tho buttermilk. These com
bined gains amount to about 25 per
cent., or one pound in every four. In
other words, you make about -."1 cents
on every dollar's worth of butter;
and you gain the buttermilk. Thosq
combined gains amount to about 25
per cent., or one pound in every lour.
In other words, you make about 25
cents on every dollar's worth of but
ter, if you make as good butter as the
creamery product.
Dy the use of the hand separator it
is possible to make the highest grade
of butter at home, j lovhled the cream
Is properly handled and churned. Dy
the use of the separator you aro not
only able to make a higher grade of
butter and sell It for a higher price,
but you will be able to extract more
cream from the milk and bonce make
more butter. Also, the warm sweet
skim milk will havo a higher food
value either for human use or for ani
mal feeding. If you keep more than
three or four cows, by all means buy
a separator. It will soon pay for it
self. Valuable By-Product.
Manure Is ono of the by-products
of the dairy which should bo figured
In, in estimating the profits. As farm
ing land becomes more scarce and
high-priced, armors In general are
coming to realize the importance of
making their land as fertile and pro
ductive as possible. The large, final
profit of the dairy to the man who
owns his own land Is the manure by
which ho is not only able to grow
larger crops, hut to increase the fer
tility and actual money value of hla
farm.
Transmitting Milk Ouai 'les.
The influence of the male 1 trans
mitting milk qualities to his olfspring
Is a point in which dairymen glvo too
littlo heed. Who is there but has not
been disappointed in his hoifets from
his best cows by tho use of some un
worthy bull, or, If he has been so for
tunate as to secure a hull of some ex
tra milking strain, baa not found his
heifers from cows good or bad excell
ing their dams in yield and quality of
milk? Look well to tho bull, for in
hit. choice lies success or failure.
Coloring Cutter.
Thero is no moral wrong In color
ing winter butter judiciously. Almost
anyono would prefer to eat butter
that pleases tho eye as woll as the
palate. A strain of Jersey or Guern
sey blood in your cows will help you
out on the coloring.
Provide Green Food.
Do ready for tho dry i-pcll when it
comes in summer and havo green
food for your cows bj planting a spe
cial patch for theia now.
Guessing Unsatisfactory.
The only way to accurately judge
a cow Is by weighing and testing her
milk. Guess methods will prove most
unsatisfactorily.
JUOU
SATURDAY
NIGHT TALKS
Q By REV. F. E. DAVISON
8 Rutland, Vt.
ScoccoaxccocccooccocccccS
A FAREWELL SERMON.
International Bible Lesson for
Sept. s, '09 ( Acts 20: 2-38).
Our lesson to
day It, about a
farewell sermon
that Paul preach
ed to the church
at Ephesus. On
his way to Jeru
salem ho ap
pointed a moot
ing with the of
ficial board of
tho church ho
had served so
long, at the sea
port of Miletus.
Tender-Hearted Preacher.
Paul declares, and is nut ashamed
of it either, that he had been a tender
hearted pastor, that ae had warned
them even "with tears." Heroic fear
lessness and tearful tenderness tiro
twin attributes in all truly great
souls. Tiiis great apostle had gone
forth "weeping, bearing precious seed
and thus had often returned rejoicing
bringing his sheaves with him." lie
wtis not ono of your "soft" men, ills
miMltig with fielr constant How of
lachrymal Haiti. G... tear on I'niil'.t
cheek an ant more than streams iiom
other eyes. He nut only had ti mas
sive head, but a retit tender heart,
and that teiuu rues nave him a
mighty Influence a:i.o:r-i men.
Fearless Preacher.
Dut Paul was 110 thue-.-'ervor. "Ho
kept back nothing that was profita
hie." lie did net prophecy "smooth
things." if i.e h .1! l.eeii a coward, a
ii.uii-plon.4c r. a ttme-i-erver. If he had
been afraid ot provoking men he
would hne kept back disagreeable
truth. The test of truth is not what
is palatable, popular, pleasing, but
what is pi editable and permanent. It
in r.o di.sparaseiuent to a preacher to
be cordially haled, soundly berated,
la.mevl and persecuted. Such tveil
ii.ciit 1.1a be tue finest compliment
to 1 eal worth thai heyveit c;m bestow.
No man should murmur when that
comes In the way of duly.
The reason why some preachers
get. along so smoothly is because of
the lacllity with which they straddle
t'-o fence, appear to take both sides
ot (lie same subject, blow hot and
i old at tho same time, and die at last
h the questionable epitaph, "He
r.e0i- had an enemy!" Such a tomb
stone could be erected in a field of
cabbage heads, but doesn't look well
ovr the grave of a soldier. That
eou'id never have been said of Paul,
tl.e model preacher, no more than it
ceiild have been said of his Master.
All truly groat preachers have been
g.'iut lighters, and the devil enjoys
laiiiiing nicne than to get his spear bo
tni en tho joints of such a man's har
!.e.,s. Heroic Preacher.
l'uul said in tills tarewell sermon,
"I .o bound in the spirit to Jerusa
lem, not knowing the things that shall
befall me there." lie was not cow
ardly Hoeing from trouble, ho was go
ing heroically, where ho was sure he
would get worse, and more of it. He
did not know what form it would take,
but lie felt sure that It was Inevitable.
Many a man in his circumstances
would either have "had a call" in
some other direction, or would havo
gone on his miserable way full of la
mentations and gioans, but this great
hero was as calm as if lie was going
to his coronation. And ho was.
Paul was ono of the most abused
men that ever lived, and his troubles
generally came upon him unexpected
ly, like lightning out of a clear sky,
but he was heioic. It was woll tor
him, as it is for us. that it was 20.
Had ho known in advance how many
times he was to bo beaten, and stoned
and shipwrecked and imprisoned, and
how much he was- to suffer from hun
ger and thirst, and cold and weari
ness, and painfulnoss and watcliings
it would have added greatly to his
burdens, it Is hard enu'ua to bear
those thiii 1 s which come as tlioy
come, without anticipating them.
None of us know tne reverses that
shall befall us in this life, tho In
justice, tho oppression, tho bloody
cross of sacrifice. Dut the true child
of God sing3, albeit with quivering
lip and streaming eyo:
"So I go on not knowing;
I would not If I might;
I'd rather walk In tho dark with God,
Than go alone In the light,
I'd rather walk with Him by faith
Than go alone by sight."
"N'cno of these things inovo 1110,"
he saya. Marl; you, he does not say
none of these things hurt him. Paul
was not a stoic, ho wan not thick
skinned nnd Indifferent. As gentle as
a woman, as finely strung ns a harp.
Mights and insults struck tho nerve
of his keenest tot lings. Ho felt it to
iho very core or his being. Dut U did
not sweno him from the line of duty.
Tho hero is no iho man who has no
fear, ho is the can who goes 011 en
hesitatingly in t' c path of duty though
facing the batteries of his oneirics,
and shot In tho back by his supposed
friends. With Paul It was duty Hist,
and lifo second. That Is christian
heroism which counts the cost, and
yet cries out "Neither count I my life
dear unto myself, so that I may fin
IrIi my course with lov."
ROLL of
HONOR
Attention is called to the STHENGTH
of the
Wayne County
TliOjI'INANCIKU of Now York
City has published a DOLL 01'
HONOR of the 11,470 State Hanks
anil Trust Companies of Tinted
States. In this list the WAYNE
COUNTY SAVINGS DANK
Stands 38th in the United States.
Stands 10th in Pennsylvania,
Stands FIRST in Wayne County.
Capital, Surplus, $455,000.00
Total. ASSETS, $2,733,000.00
Ilonpstlale. Pa., May L'O IPOS.,
3TERf
'COM.PA1IY'
Time Table In Effect June 20th, 1909.
SCRAN TON DIVISION
:o.rM.Y.UM.iist,.i,v
11 .'., I no .r ...i .iMsii i,v
11 01 IS r.i ' ...Ihitic c'c ... "
10 .o il! J". " ..Slm-1I,'M..... "
10 in vi:".l i-iw.m JMik "
in ai'ia in " ..winwniii... "
IOir.!ll!O.V " ..l'oynti'lln.. "
J ID,
a 15
2 :i i
6 U6
r, n
5 S.i
5 40
3 I.
i in
6 601
II 11
6 22,
a .i i i i,ii " ' irson "
ti nr. ti .1-,' ri'Msa'it Mr, "
y.'Wil 3V " .. Unloiiilftlo.. '
J-J MSI, " .Kiirrat CUV. "
317
:i -id
3 43!
3.5
G 25
II 3S
0 60
MiHiriiin) " errli'ti'lilo Vil "
fl 0I MB9
u 01 II ill, " ('nrlionilali!.
... I. I " Wlilti'IllliU'i) "
8.1010 51 " .MaWlctil Yd, "
H 1M0 IS " ....Jrrmvn "
S-t:i,l"4f " ..Arclillialil..
BJiMiHO " .... Wlntnn.... "
7 03
713
7 IS
4 K
4
4 3
7 33
4 :io,
25
h Xfilel Kill " ... 1'cckv u... "
4 31 7 29
8 :vj,10 3J ...Olvpliant... "
4 891 7 34
4 43, 7 37
KS win " ., .Dickson....
Ki.'ilO-.Ti " .... Tlirnop "
8 a 10 2-.: " .l'rovlilmico.. "
4 15 7 40
4 48, 7 43
SI
10 l'J
10 I.')'
" ..I'ark Place.. "
4 51
7 40'
S 15
I.v...Scnuiton
..Ar
4 05
P III
7 60
1:
P II
Additional trains lean- Caroondalo for MaT.
field Yard at 0.50 a. in. dally, and 5.30 p m duly
pxcept Sunday. Additional trains leavo May.
field Yard Mr Cartiondali! 0 38 a m dalfy and 6
p. in. dally except, Sunday.
J. C. A siiKimoN, J. E. Wklbb,
Traffic JIanaijer, Traveling Agent,
CO Hearer St.. Now York. Scr&nton. tn.
ARIUVAIj AND DEPAKTUKE OP
TRAINS
Delaware & Hudson it. K.
Trains leave at G:5G a. m and
12:25 and 4:30 p. m.
Sundays at 11:05 a. m. and 7:15
p. m.
Trains arrive at 9:55 a. m., 3:15
and 7:31 p. ra.
Sundays at 10:15 a. ra. and C:50
p. in.
Erie 1. II.
Trains leave at S:27 a. m. and
2:50 p. m.
Sundays at 2:50 p. ni.
Trains arrive at 2:lo and S:02
p. ni.
Sunt! ays at 7:02 t. m.
74 BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS.
A GRAND TOUR OF Tills WORLD
Portraits of the Rulers of the World
Six Montbs' trlol Subscription lo
HUMAN LIFE
AIjL, FOlt (JO CENTS.
One wonderful TO I'll OK THH
VOI5Iil pie'ttire eards done in water
eoloi-.s will brinr;' to .vour view .scenes
Hint eost tlioiLitiutls of dollars and
months of ut'tunl Irnvol to visit.
These cards i.ro made by it new
l'Yeiirli process wldi li prcii!:;c-e.-' pic
tures superior to the ninny cheap
earil pictures now on the market.
Our KL'IdlltS ()!' Till: V.'OliU)
plrtere cards lire priutctl in hi'auti
liil colors, each card ivprcseutiiifja
separate country . The center of
each card is j;!veu to nil up-ln-dale
phcitc).!traph of the ISider or Presi
dent of the country. Mencath each
picture is a hrief MiMmln;; up of
fa -1s rtv.ni'dlni' (lie country, jjoverii
nu - it. area, population, . ir;.'iliic(s,
Industrie's etc.
The two complete sets, "TOl'U OK
T!M WOUId!" and "lSridlilH OK
T!1K WOliM)" and a si months'
snliscriptioti to 1 11" MAX I.1KK for
(JOe. Mend us :S()c. and we will send
you (lie 7 1 cards without the maga
zine. HUMAN UVV, PUBLISHING CO.,
..l Atlantic .enue, - Hofton, Mnss.
CARBON COUNTER. PADS
For Grocers, Butchers and
other tradesmen, made in
businesslike manner at rea
sonable prices
AT OUR JOB PRINTING OFFICE
H 1 ill
i a S 3 Stations
la g I
Y M'rArN.v.w,st.,,h1T ul