The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 May 1913 — Page 6

The Ascension of Christ By REV. JAMES M. GRAY, D. D. Dean of the Moody Bible Lutitute Chicago

TEXT—When he had spoken these things, he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their sight. Acts 1-9.

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out the ascension, just as that event awaits the fruition of its purpose in his return again to the earth; for it is not till then that the divine plan concerning his manifested kingdom will begin to approach fulfillment. But that which gives peculiar interest to Christ’s ascension is its bearing on cur spiritual life today, for if we- are being established in the faith, enlightened in the knowledge of God, sanctified in our souls and anointed by ' the Holy Spirit for service, all blessings are the result of our Saviours presence in heaven as our interceding high priest at the righthand of God. At the ascension the body of Jesus did not vanish into nothing, for not only did the desciples see him as he ■went up, but Stephen beheld him afterwards, standing at the right-hand of G,gd (Acts VII. 55-56). Moreover, the angels on Mount Olivet said to the desciples that he would so come in like manner as he was seen to go Acts, 1-11). In other words, heaven Is a locality and Jesus Christ, the glorified God-man, is there. We cannot understand how the original body of Jesus was transmuted into his resurrection and glorified body, any more than we can understand how heavy wated is changed into light vapor, or dark flint into transparent glass, by heat; but we know that he is in th* same body, although now in anothe* form of existence and standing unde other laws. How the thought dignifies our conception of . human nature and broadens our idea of theJscope of the atonement! The presence of his glorified body in heaven takes away any vagueness as to our own glorified bodies being there, if we have been united to him by a living faith—because he lives, we shall live also. Was it not the reward of his obedience to the father in his sufferings and death on behalf of guilty men? 'Was it not the joy set before him for which he was willing to endure the cross, despising the shame? And yet there is more to follow, when, in the regeneration of tho heavens and the earth, he shall sit upon the throne of • his power in the sight of the whole universe, and every knee shall bow to him and every tongue confess that he is lord, to the glory of God the father (Philippians 11. 9-11). Os course we speak now, orily of his human nature, of the God-man considered as the mediatorial prince. Such terms do not pertain to his deity, in which sefise his glory could not be enhanced and the thought of reward is entirely excluded. But the ascension of Jesus Christ means great things for us who believe on him as well as great things for himself. It means the reinstatement of our nature in all its lost honors, in reconciliation with God. It means our reception into Paradise and participation in endless felicity. If Christ had risen from the dead arid still remained on earth, we might have been assured of deliverance from the grave, and possibly a protracted residence here; but what we desire before all things is reunion with God, the habitation of glorj 7 and the communion * of his presence. The ascension secures this. Furthermore, the descent of the Holy Ghost on the day of pentecost as the guide and comforter of the church, could not have taken place if Christ had remained upon the earth. It was expedient for him to go away that this might become true. The spirit of God is the successor of the Son of God in his official ministery on earth (John XVI. 7-15). It is his office to complete the image of Christ in every believer, but as another beautifully says, “The Divine Artist could not fitly descend to make the copy before the entire original had been completed. But the complete Christ was not ready to be communicated to his church until he had not only died and risen again, but ascended into glory.” Oh, you to whom these truths have no meaning, in whose esteem they are as foolishnesses, think what you are losing now, and shall forever lose, if they be true! I would have you follow the example of John Kdble, who, conscious of his groveling thoughts which lay half buried, roamed lawlessly around this earthly waste, exclaimed, “Chains of my heart, avaunt, I say— I will arise, and in the strength of love Pursue the bright track ’ere it fade away. My Savior's pathway to His Home above." But it is useless t 6 urge a man to do this without telling him how to do it- When, or how, can one obtain this “strength of love” of which the poet speaks? How can be pursue “the right track” whose eyes are blinded by sin and the things of the present world.” Who will seek the “home above” unless he shall be awakened to its glories? It is God only who can accomplish these things In human ex* perience, and he begins the work by weakening the ties of earth, and revealing the loathsomeness of sin and <b« peril ot unbelief

LAUNCHING OF “VATERLAND,” THE WORLD’S LARGEST STEAMER fc * O. aWm' m ITSRIrIB To the left we see the great ship leaving the ways at Hamburg, Germany, and on the right Prince Rupprecht in uniform on the way to perform the christening ceremonies. The “Vaterland” is 950 feet long, 100 feet beam, speed 22% knots and will have lifeboats to accommodate 6,000.

This period ot the Christian year is appropriate to consider that trjmscendant event in the earthly history of our Saviour referred to in these words viz: His ascension into heaven. The incarnation, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ are each and all of them incomplete with-

PERISHED IN DESERT

Story of Burke and Wills’ Fatal Exploring Expedition Recalled. Disaster Caused by Bad Luck Due to Incompetence —Seven Members of Party Who Attempted to Cross Australia Succumb. Sydney, N. S. W.—One of the saddest stories in connection with the exploration of Australia is that of Burke and Wills, whose monument forms one of the principal sights in Melbourne, a lofty pillar of stones in the Royal park, Showing the precise spot whence the ill fated explorers, accompanied by a party of thirteen others, including two German scientists, together with two years’ supplies carried by camels, started in 1860 to cross Australia from south to north. Stuart had made an unsuccessful attempt fifteen years previously at a cost of £4,000 ($20,000) to perform a similar feat, and Stuart had made two 'failures, although by a singular coincidence he ultimately succeeded in the attempt. The overland telegraph posts still in use mark the course which he took and he was borne through the streets of Adelaide in triumph, though a physical wreck, on the very day that the bodies of Burke and Wills arrived on their way to their last resting place in Melbourne. The story, which is graphically told in Life, is one of remarkable enterprise, equipped regardless of expense, utterly ruined by incompetence and bad luck, the one, indeed, being the cause of the other. Burke, who had been a captain in the Australian army and subsequently inspector of police at Melbourne, knew nothing of the Australian bush, was “haphazard in his methods, kept no journal of his own on the expedition,” and according to one who knew him well, “used to alter his mind so often that it was not possible at times to understand what he really ,did mean.” Landells, who was originally second in command, left the expedition at an early stage, and predicted certain disaster at Cooper's creek. At Menindie, on the Darling, Burke and Wills, the surveyor, with six others pushed forward to Cooper's creek, leaving Wright to follow with the bulk of the supplies “at the earliest moment.” From Cooper’s creek Burke again pushed forward with Wills, King and Gray, half a dozen camels and an altogether inadequate equipment of stores, and made a dash for the sea. leaving Brahe with three men and ample supplies, verbally instructing him to follow on Burke’s tracks when Wright arrived. Burke managed to reach tho Flinders, which had a tidal motion, showing that the sea was not far off, but, as the little party had nearly exhausted their provisions, they determined to return to the camp at Cooper’s creek. On the way they lost one of the men from starvation, the single day's delay caused by burying their comrade being responsible for the death of both. Various expeditions were organized from Melbourne to find the missing men. one of which discovered King, a wasted figure, “covered with some scarecrow rags and part of a hat.” who showed them the place where Burke and Wills had died. It is a curious fact that, whereas Burke’s last orders to Burke were that he should shoot the blacks down at once if they gave any trouble, they were almost the only ones who shed tears over his grave, and it was through their unfailing kindness that King’s life was saved. Altogether seven members of the expedition perished, while the sum actually spent on it amounted to £57,000 ($285,000), by far the largest sum, we are told, that was ever spent in Australian history on a single exploring expedition. And yet, by a strange irony, though the weather conditions were perfect, food abund-

WRITING AS TRADE WANES *aris House Once Headquarters for Professional Love Letters Is to Be Razed. Paris. —Most Americans have read and probably been properly shocked by Abbe Pervost’s famous book. “Manon Lescaut,” but few are aware that this dreadfully frivolous and much loved young damsel really existed outside the reverend writer’s brain. Exist she undoubtedly did, and to-

ant, stores ample, and there was every reason to expect that the expedition would be attended by greater results, it was a failure from beginning to end, from sheer lack of those qualities which, though all else may be provided, are in the long run indispensable to success. SAYS CAPITAL !S HEARTLESS Revolution Liable to Come Any Day, Hibernians Are Told by Dr. Kelly. Sydney.—Dr. Kelly, the Roman Catholic primate of Australia, addressing the Hibernian society here, referred to the recent strikes and the threats of strikes and said; “The contentions and strife between capital and labor may develop into a revolution any day, because capital is heartless and renders labor desperate, and because labor is emboldened by the, success attending violence. Society with us Is in a very parlous and dangerous condition.” Dr. Kelly added that a “man must not put his hand into another man’s pocket unless he is starving and his tongue is hanging out with thirst. Then he may take from another man’s pocket.” Wants National Anthem Adopted. Washington.—A joint resolution to make the “Star Spangled Banner” the official anthem of the United States has been introduced in congress by Representative Levy of New York. It provides that whenever the “Sta? Spangled Banner” is played on any occasion at any public place where persons belonging to any branch of the government service are present they will stand at attention, and alf other persons will stand, such positions being retained until the last note of the anthem.

HELEN TAFT WILSON GUEST

Daughter of President Entertains Former Executive’s Child at White House. Washington.—A pretty friendship has sprung up between Miss Helen Taft, daughter of the former president, and Miss Jessie Wilson, daughter of the president of the United States. Recently Miss Taft lunched at the White House and greatly enjoyed the return to the scene of her former social triumphs. w'x I I > I ll 'x /' 1 ? jk . A' i ■ *■«-. « W I 1 \ I . •< Miss Jessie Wilson. Miss Taft was in Washington to attend the marriage of Miss Alys Meyer, and was one of the bridesmaids. Invited to meet Miss Taft were

day may be seen, though only for a brief time, at one or the houses at which she was a frequent visitor. Close to the prison of St. Lazare, doomed to destruction at the hands of the housebreakers, there stands a little house which is to share the fate of the famous prison. In this the last of the public letter writers in Paris plied their trade when the number of people able to read and write was very small, and to one of their predecessors came pretty, little Manon Lescaut to whisper into his ear the

SHIP KILLS SEA MONSTER Captain Reports Striking What He Thinks Was Species of Whale, Which Hung on Stem of Vessel. New York.—Recently persons en a liner were sure they had seen a sea serpent fifty feet long forging its wav through the ocean at incredible speed. Capt. J. Tutt of another liner, gave this account of a collision with a monster of the deep: “At 12:33 o’clock in the morning,” said the captain, “an hour known as ‘the graveyard watch’ by mariSesf a shock was felt at the fore part of the ship. The liner had left Santa Marta on the day before, and was steaming at sixteen knots an hour along the Colombian coast toward Port Limon. “After the shock the ship’s speed seemed to diminish, although the engines were working well and the sea was smooth. It was bright moonlight. I went to the bow to see what was thq matter, and found that we had struck a sea monster, which I estimated to be some forty-two feet long and three tons in weight. The collision killed the monster, and it hung on the stem so that we had to go astern to get clear of the body. This sank immediately, leaving the surface of the sea a bright crimson.” The captain said that the body had broad stripes on the back and head, with patches like textile prints the size of a hand on the sides. It was a species of whale now almost extinct, he thought. The shock aroused the passengers, who came on deck to look at the dead monster. One of the officers said that many strange serpents and large fish had been seen in the waters off the Colombian coast in the last three years of a species that had not been seen there since the days of the buccaneers on the Spanish Main. They thought that the blasting in the Panama canal had disturbed them in their submarine caverns and driven them to the surface of the sea.

Miss Sophy Johnston, who enter tained Miss Taft aa a house guest: Misses Mary Scott of Princeton; Miss Helen Woodrow Bones, Lieutenant McMurray, Mr. Chaferth, Mr. Ludington, Lieutenant Rockwell, Lieutenant Greble, Lieutenant Claggett and Dr. C. T. Grayson. HUSBANDS LEARN TO SEW Pennsylvania Men Are Training for the Time When Their Wives Will Be Voters. Picture Rocks, Pa. —Asserting they were fearful lest the ballot be granted to women and the husbands will have to do housework, the able-bodied men of this place have formed an organization known as the “Men’s Sewing Square.” At their last meeting they brought sewing bags and their wives’ stockings to mend, and began the task of plying the needle in order to ascertain if darning was as hard, as they had always been led to believe. The Rev. I. N. Earle, pasior of the Methodist church, who has been elected chairman of the “square,” presided, and some of the work that the men performed is declared by their wives to have been far better than they could have imagiued. The men prepared a supper without women’s aid, which they say they ate with relish, and were all home be fore 11 o’clock. The “square” will meet once a week. Sheriff’s Wife Halts Prisoner. Ellsworth, Me. —Mrs. F. O. Silsby, wife of the sheriff here, prevented the escape from the county jail of Edwin Goodman, seventeen years old, the cor. fessed murderer of Capt. Harry C. Young. Goodman, aided by anothei prisoner, had overpowered a deputy sheriff and was taking his keys when Mrs. Silsby appeared. She locked the outer door of the jail and then sounded an alarm.

messages of love she wanted to send to her lover, Des Grieux. The only customers now are much less romantic, illiterate servant girls, who write home to their friends in Brittany. So rare has the necessity for vicarious letter writing become j that the present proprietor of the I place has added another more profit.ble trade to his program, and acts i an informal lawyer and man oi xsinese to prisoners in St. Lazaret ▲ reformer is never out of a job.

What is Castoria. A STOP! A is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 80 years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. Letters from Prominent Physicians Wf i—— J addressed to Chas. H. Retcher. ! Dr - Albert w - Kahl > of Buffalo, N. Y„ says: “I have used Castoria in DltJ p m y P ract * co f° r the P 26 years. I regard it as aa excellent medicine i i— for children.” |Bj|igQ , Dr. Gustave A. Eisengraeber, of St. Paul, Minn., savs: “I have used M your Castoria repeatedly in my practice with good results, and can reccmw H’lSfif mend it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children.” ® Olga £ >r * J* Bennis, of St Louis, Mo., says: “I have used and prescribed your Castoria in my sanitarium and outside practice for a number of years ~ ALCOIIO [ 3 p 2 .Tvr 4 - and ft to au excellent remedy for children.” SI Br. S. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “I have used your CassimilaiingtteFoodantlßcila- tor ’ a Ia 1210 case of owa baby and find R pleasant t 0 take * and have ImgtlieStomacftsaßdßlM'dSQf obtained excellent results from its use.” Br* J- E- Simpson, cf Chicago, Ill.; says: “I have used your Castoria In s cases of colic in children and have found it the best medicine of its kind. - on the market.” PromotesDigestion-Cfeerful-! Dr. R. E. Esklldson, of Omaha, Meb., says: "I find your Castoria to be a nesstindßest.ContJlnsneither standard family remedy. It is the best thing for infants and children I ■ nor?liU£T2l have ever known and I recommend it.” NOT NARCOTIC. p r> L. r. Robinsen, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Your Castoria certainly : has merit Is not its age, its continued use by mothers through all thesePmpkitSetd- years, and the many attempts to imitate it, sufficient recommendation? I What can a physician add? Leave it to the mothers.” BhI©! i Ur. Edwin F. Pardee, of New York City, says: “For several years I hava Him l ®' f recommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do so, as it baa. invariably produced beneficial results.” I Hr. N. B. Sizer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I object to what are called. WBi fn-rnreftoa I P atent medicines, where maker alone knows what ingredients are put in. tirm Sour Stomach Diarrhoea’ them, but I know the formula of your Castoria and advise its use.” Bl SdLosiwSS - . genuine castoria ALWAYS \ _ /f tha Signature of s. Centaur CompasX : a figHHt The Kind You ftaie Always Bought 1 In Use For Over 30 Years. £xact Copy ot wrapper. the cbntaur com pan y, new york city.

WILL REFLECT IN THE FUTURE Mr. Pozozzle Had Found Out That Occasionally Smartness Does Not Pay“Yesterday,” said Mr. Pozozzle ruefully, “I had it brought forcibly home to me that there is a vast difference between a smart man and a smart alec. A smart man may possess a discriminating sense of humor, but a smart alec is one of those feeble minded folk who send out funny boomerangs on the slightest provocation and they always come back and hit him with whizzing sound. This is how I made the discovery: Mrs. Pozozzle and I were out for our daily constitutional. You know some people walk to get thin, but my wife is different —she walks to get fat. Fat is the one dear hope of Mrs. Pozozzle’s existence. She would like to be upholstered. Last evening she said to me: ‘Oliver, if I could get just fifteen pounds, even, I would be so much happier.’ ‘Fifteen pounds?’ said I, the smart alec. ‘Do you mean avoirdupois of English currency?’ She is too smart for me, that wife of mine, and she saw her chance. ‘This time,’ she answered sweetly, ‘I would choose the currency.’ And I had to figure out the amount in pur money and make good.” Abner’s Preparation. Abner, who worked for the summer residents, told Mr. Burns one morning that he was soon to be married. “Well, really, Abner,” said Mr. Burns, “I’m glad to hear it! I suppose you’ve made all the preparatons and got your wedding finery ready?” Abner did not balk at the question, but lie grinned sheepishly. “Yep,” he replied, “maw, she bound my Sunday coat and put a new collar on’t, and I’ve had my shoes tapped.’ — Judge. CLEARED AWAY Proper Food Put the Troubles Away. Our own troubles always seem more severe than any others. But when a man is unable to eat even a light breakfast, for years, without severe distress, he has trouble enough. i It is small wonder he likes to tell of i food which cleared away the troubles. I “I am glad of the opportunity to j tell of the good Grape-Nuts has done j for me,” writes a N. H. man. “For many years I was unable to eat even I a light breakfast without great suffer- : ing. r After eating I would sudd'enly be seized with an attack of colic and vomiting. This would be followed by | headache and misery that would sometimes last a week or more, leaving me so weak I could hardly sit up or walk. ; “Since I began to eat Grape-Nuts I ! have been free from the old troubles. I usually eat Grape-Nuts one or more times a day, taking it at the beginning of the meal. Now I can eat almost anything I want without trouble. “When I began to use Grape-Nuts I was way under iny usual weight, now I weigh 30 pounds more than I ever weighed in my life, and I am glad to speak of the food that has worked the change.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little booklet, “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. “There’s a Reason.” Ever read the above letter? A new •ne appear® from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human hitareat.

What Got Him. “Strange, ain’t it, the new kinds of ailments folks has?” remarked Farmer Smith, after reading his newspaper. “Now I’ve been a-reading an advertisement in here of a new medicine, and it says it’s dreadful good for a sluggish liver.” “Liver troubles ain’t no new disease, pa,” responded Mrs. Smith. “I remember grandfather having liver trouble when I wasn’t more’n ten years old.” “I was a-saying that this medicine was good for a sluggish liver, Martha what beats me is how them slugs gets inside the liver, anyway.”

FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS RICH IN CURATIVE QUALITIES FOR BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS AND BLADDER Don’t Persecute Your Bowels Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They are brutal, harsh, unnecessary. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely vegetable. Act P l». BI'CHC gently on the liver, VArv II EKO eliminate bile, soothe the membrane of the^^SKg™SF z ra ■ » LK bowel. Cure ® PILL S. Constipation, x v MiMinuSS Biliousness. V .Xg Sick Head- . 1 ’ ache and Indigestion, as millions know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature — Vft! H "! , . .w:, u- .Z Os BOIRBON POULTRY CURE down a chick’s throat cures gapes. A few drop.s in the j J drinking water cirres and ; prevents cholera, diarrhoea and other chick diseases. One 500 buttle makes 1.2 gallons of ■ medicine At all druggists. Sample and booklet on-‘Dis- , eases of Fowls” sen t FREE. Bourbon Remedy Co. letiagton, Ky WORMS cause much annoyance to children I and great anxiety to parents. i The presence of worms is; recog- j nized by these common symptoms: itching nose, unsatisfied appetite, [ offensive breath and colic pains. DR. PEERY’S RERMIFDGE “DEAD SHOT” Cleanses the system of worms in aves y few hours MilK Diet Treatment is the world’s most famous coursie for banishing chronic stomach and digestive ailments, rheumatism, liver, bladder and kidney troubles. Makes thin folks :’at and reduces superfluous weight ot fat people. You must know how to take it. Write ttoday for free particulars regarding great two part course of treatment. Lankford Specialties Co.. Dept. No. 4, 1661 Fort St.. Detroit. Mich. nA|T*nr* or enlarged glands of the neck. If I 3ls 8 Mls vou have tried every known remp--11111 111 I ay for the removal of this blemish Wl I llbe to woman’s beauty, s,nd they have all failed, write THE CARR-THOMAS CO., Loek Box 27, Scottville, Mich., for valuable infurmation. JOHN L.THOMPSON SOMSA COwTVoy.N.Y.

SPECIAL TO WOMEN Do you realize the fact that thousands of women are now using A Soluble Antiseptic Powder ' as a remedy for mucous membrane affections, such as sore throat, nasal or- ■ pelvic catarrh, inflammation or ulcera- , tion, caused by female ills? Women ; who have been cured say “it is worth its weight in gold.’’ Dissolve in water . ■ and apply locally. For ten years tho ■ Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtine in their private correspondence with women. For all hygienic and toilet uses it has. j no equal. Only 50c a large box at Druggists or sent postpaid on receipt of I price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. ALBERTA THE PRICE OF BMWI BEEF IIS HIGH AND SO ! ■ |is the pkice oi i K’Attke. For veara the Province Alberta (Western I 1 Canada) was the Big ! ’ Jr *• H JWsMt of these ranches today . a re immense grain fields and the cattle have Offers. given place to the cultivation of wheat.oats, barley and flax; the —changejbas made many thousands . of Americans, settled on these s plains, wealthy, but it has in- < Xwi ''iS-se'rVt creased the price of live stock. v, There is splendid opportunity ! Wi nowtoseta i Free Homestead ’ /7a,« of 16S acres (and another a-; a pre- «■■# <1 eruption) in the newer districts I ■** and producoeithercattleorgrain. ;w® The crops are always good, the ’■ climate is excellent, schools and I churches areconveniont, markets I splendid, in either Manitoba, Saskutehewan or Alberta. 1 z Ml. jfe'.F.i Send for literature, the latest 'lt w Information, railway rates, etc., to £w® w.o.Msr««v. I 413 GARDNER BLDG., TafcJo, Ohio, or >' 'SB 8.8 21-4'l'racllun Termiiuii lUQj.-.,L>diiUiUiwL.A Hills or address Superintendent of i mm! £ rration > o ttawa,tl ““ ,a " THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. No). H»2. N°3. TMES'IM»A|3IOR3 CsedinFcencKI 81 rM Wpj Hospitals with great success, cukes chronic weakness, los t vigor ft VIM. KIDNEY, BLADDER. DISEASES. BLOOD POISON, PILES. EITHER NO. DRUGGISTS Or MAIL Si. POST 4 CTS rOVGBRA CO. 9>>. BEEKMAN ST. NEW YORKorLYMAN BROS TORONTO. WRITE FOR FREE BOOK TO I>S. LE CLERC Med.Co, HavekstockKd.Hampstead. London, eng. , TRY NEW DRAGEEITASTELESSIFOKMOF EASY TO TAIUt TH feKAPIOSM lls?isocu*b. | SEE THAT TRADE MARKED WORD ‘ THERAPIOS ’ IS OH L BLIT. GOVT.STAMP AFFIXED TO ALL GENUINE PACKETS. DAISY FLY KILLER & ft H flies. Neut» clean ornamental . eon venlen t cheap. Lasta all. season. Made ot metal, can’t spill or tip overi will not soil or I njure any thing‘s Guaranteed All dealers orSsent express paid for M.OO HAROLD SOMERS, 150 DeKalb Ave.. Brooklyn, H. Y. AGENTS Best household article out. Sells at sight ioo% profit. Particulars free. Sample 25c. COX SUPPLY CO. DETROIT MICHIGAN ■■■ ■ ■ Cabinet makers, machine UfAnvAfl and bench hands, wood. ■V nllllSll finishers sheetmetal and ■■ plate workers, enameler*. Steady employment, good wages. THE HAMILTON MFG. COMPANY. Two Rivers, Wisconai* naTFRIT'C WatsonE.Coiemaß.Wask. Write Todai ’ big crops. Prices righLtermi. euy. GVYEK ftBOTBjOuf. Dufur, Oregoai