Newspaper Page Text
Markcts—--Continued
S§T. LOUIS CASH QUOTATIONS.
Wheat—No. 2 ed ....ocevseeen... .95%
CorNO, Wi car
OBI=NO By 0l vtk eiass viv B
CHICAGO, May 12 —While the wheat
market was narrow at the openhlf.
there was a nervous feeling shown. Kili
ing frosts were reported over North Da.
kota and northern Minnesota, and it
was cold in the Canadian Northwest.
Corn was firm, but the velume of
;r:g; was small, as prices changes were
W, -
Oats were easier. Provisions were
higher.
Grain quotations:
Previous
. High, Low. ‘Close. Close
May Tl 9% 94
B
o B
DL, ... 4 %
M&)BN- 8% 7 1% 6T
5y T 3
Ju1y..... . 68% 65% 653, 66
Sept..... 65% 6 + 6 65%
OATS—
Mavi.... B% 38% 38% 38%
Ju1y..... 87% 37 37% 37%
5e&t)..... 5% 35%% 35% 35%
RK-—
May.... 19.42% 19.42:2 19.42% 19.30
July.... 19.77% 19.67 19.72% 19.62%
SefltA.... 19.99 1980 19.82% 10.75
RD-—
May..... 9.92% 9.92:2 9.92% 9.9
July..., 1007% 10.62% 10.02% 10.02%
Se{t‘... 10.25 10.20 10.20 10.20
IBS— -
May.... 10.97% 10.97% 10.97% 10.95
July.... 11.17% 11.13%2 11.12%% 11.07%
Sept.... 11.00 11.22% 11.25 11.22%
CHICAGO CAR LOTS.
Following are receipts for Tuesday
end estimated receipts for Wednesday:
| Tuesday |Wedn'sday
Whint ..o v u 219 164
COM ~ s 8. 63 35
R i 99 76
HORR %o 5 eik 10,000 26,000
— PRIMARY MOVEMSNY. -
WHEAT— { I 8 1 B 3
Receipts ...., . ‘ 639,000 385,000
_S_hipmenls R 484,000 941,000
_ CORN— { 1914. | 1013,
Receipts , ', . . . 285.0001 410,000
Shipments. . . . .| 565,000 305,000
CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS.
CHICAGO, May 12.—Wheat: No. 2
red, 95%@9%; No. 3 red, M¥@9%%;
No. 2 hard winter, 95%}?9‘: No. 5 hard
winter, 94@9%; No. 1 Northern: s&fin i
98@98%; No. 2 Northern spring, %5
97%; No. 3 spring, 93@95%.
Corn: No. 2 white, 69%4@70%; No. 2
yellow, 70%; No. 3, 6856@69%; No. 8
white, mg 9% ; No. 3 yellow, 70; No. 4,
66@65%; Mo. 4 yellow, 670‘3\3.
Oats: No. 3 white, 38%@39%; No. 4
white, 38@38% ; standard, 39%.
LIVERPOOL GRAIN MARKET,
LIVERPOOL, May 12.—Wheat opened
%d to %d lower. At 1:30 p. m. the
market was unchanged to i&d higher.
Closed %d higher.
Corn opened unchanged to %4d higher.
At 1:30 p. m. the market was 3%d lower.
Closed Rd lower to %d higher.
NEW YORK PRODUCE MARKET.
New York, May 12 —Petroleum easier;
crude Pennsylvania 1.90.
Turpentine firm, 47@47%.
Rosin firmer;, common, 4.10,
Wool firm; domestic fleece, 24@27;
pulled, scoured basis, 36@53; Texas,
scoured basis, 40@56.
Hides steady; native steers 17 bid;
branded steers, 16% @16%.
Coffee steady; options o§.nd unchang
ed tto"i points advance; Rio, No. 7, on
spot, %
Rice firm; domestic, ordinary to
prime, 3% @5%. 5
Molasses quiet; New Orleans, open
kettle, 35@55.
Sugr, raw, quiet; centrifugal 3.14
bid; Muscovado, nominal; molasses su
gar, 2.45 bid.
Beans firm; marrow, choice, 4.85@
5.50; pea, choice, 3.66@3.75; red kidney,
choice, 5.90 bid
‘Grain Notes
B. W. Bnow wires from Topeka, Kans.:
“Am satisfied that when the returns are
all in from Kansas, the acreage will
run close to 3,000,000, and every acre of
it promises to yield the full capacity of
the land. It looks like a repetition of
the North Dakota crop of two years
ago.”
*t o o
According to the majority of traders, a
rally in finim has been due for some
time, and we expect to see higher
prices made on this movement, as
shorts are very numerous in all the pits.
* . *
Bartlett-Frazier Company says:
“Wheat—The weather mar shows
rain in South Dakota and Minnesota;
clear in North Dakota; rains in Ili
nois and the Ohio Valley. We look for
an easier market to-day. ;
“Corn—While the weather is more or
less cold and wet in parts of corn belt,
we place no importance whatever in the
talk about delayed seeding. We look for
a setback.
“Oats—We prefer the short side on
rallies.
“Provisions—The market shows a
rather heavy undertone, with packers
the best buyers on weak spots.”
- . *
Toward noon wheat was steady, with
little change. Corn was firm, due to
adverse weather conditions, and oats
were steady in sympathy. Weather
forecasts rain in Ohio Valley States
would end by to-night and fair weather
follow for at least two days. Tempera
tures will befln to rise again in west
ern half to-night and it will be sli&huy
warmer to-morrow in the Middle West,
MONEY AND EXCHANGE. |
NEW YORK, May 12.——lon%y on call
1%; time money steady; 60-day bills,
3}4; 90 days, 2% @2%; six months, 3@ |
% .
Posted rates: Sterling exchange. 4.16‘
6'4.865?. with actual business in bank
ers’ bills at 4.8810@4.8815 for demand
and 4.8530@4.8535 for 60-day biils.
Prime mercantile paper unchanged.
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THE GEORGIAN’'S NEWS BRIEFS
' Atlanta Markets
EGGS-—~Fresh country, candled, 23c.
BUTTER—Fox River and Meadow
Gold, in 1-Ib. blocks, 30c.
UNDRAWN POULTRY—Drawn, head
and feet on, per pound: Hens, 16@1%7¢;
fries, 25@30c; roosters, s@loc; turkeys,
owing to fatness, 23c.
LIVE POULTRY-—Hens, 16@1i6c Ib.;
roosters, 30c; broilers, 30@40c per
gound: puddre ducks, 30@35c; Pekins,
5?0&: gou. fiig‘lsc each; turkeys,
owing to fatness, 19@20c pound.
FRUITS AND PRODUCE.
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES-—Ap
pl«ka.'u per barrel; boxed aflflu. 38‘80
B‘3- ; Florida pineapples, $3.00@3.50;
üban pines, $3.00, owing to quality;
strawberries, 8?10«: quart; Florida cel
ery, &)or quality, 3:.00?2.60; Florida
and lifornia oranges, $3.00@3.25; ba
nanas, ’“&" g:r pound; Florida cab
bns:. moving tter, per crate, Ts¢@
gl. ; peanuts, pound, fancy V‘rflnln.
’,fi.g?c; choice, 5% @6c; cauliflower,
?' @3.50 per crate;snap beans, scarce,
3.00 per hamper; South Georgia Eng
lish peas, scarce $1.25@1.50 per hamp
er; lettuce, well headed, $1 small drum;
grapefruit, u.wg:.zs per crate; tange
rine oranges, $3.00@3.50; kumquatz, 7%
@Bc per pound; beets, $3.50 in half
barrel crates; cucumbers, $2.00@2.50;
eggplants, :2.00?72.75 per crate; bell pep
pers, large crate, solid packed, $2.00;
six-basket crates, $3.00; tomatoes,
fancy, six-basket crates, receipts light,
$3.25@3.50; choice, 32.75?638.00; squash
in small crates, tl.OOil. , onions, red
and yellow, $4.75 per bushel; sweet po
tatoes, pumpkin yams, $1.10@1.256 per
bushel; Irish potatoes, $3.00 per bag,
centaining 23 bushels; new crop, 32.00%
2.256 per drum, containing % bushel; No.
2 barrel potatoes, new, $5.00; No. 1,
$6.00.
FISH.
FlSH—Bream and perch, 7¢c pound;
snaptfer, 10¢ pound; trout, lle pound;
bluefish, 7¢ pound; pompano, 25¢ pound;
mackerel, 12¢ pound; mixed fish, s@6c
pound; blackfish. 10¢ pound; mullet, $l3
per barrel.
NUTS.
Bruzil nuts, le?llc per pound; Eng
lish walnuts, 14@16c per pound; pecans,
owing to size, 12% @3oc per pound.
FLOUR, GRAIN, ETC.
FLOUR — Postell's n:legnt, 7.00;
Omega, $6.25; Carter’s best, $6.50; Qual
ity in 48-Ib, towel b@fis. 31.25; ual
ity (finest d)atent) $6.10; Gloria (self
rising), l;)so. ; Results (self-rising) $5.40;
Swan's Down (fancy patent), $5.65; Vie
tory (in tow ncluh $6.25; Victory
(best pnten‘tg, $6.10; onognm, $6.00;
Puritan (highest urttent)‘ .50; Golden
Grain, - $5.60; Faultless (finest patent),
.66; Home Queen (highest patem&.
.50; Paragon (highest patent), $5.50;
urprise (half patent), g.xo; ‘White
Cloud ‘Efib“t lpttent). .35, Waite
Daisy, $5.35; White Lily (high pltentg,
$5.60; Diadem (fancy hlih {ntent). $5.75;
Water Lily (patent), $5.15; Southern
Star (patent), $5.10; Sunbeam, $5.10;
Ocean Spray (patent), 9‘5.10; King Cot
ton (half patent), $4.99; Tuu& Flour
(straight), $4.40; low grade, -pound
sacks, $4.
Beet pulp per cwt., $1.65.
GROCERIES.
SUGAR—Per pound: standard gran
ulated, 4%ec; New York refined, 4'%c;
plantation, 4%c.
COFFEE -— Roasted (Arbuckle), $2O;
AAAA, $14.50, in bulk; in bags and bar
rels, $2l; green, 20c.
RlCE—Head, 4% @s%c; fancy head,
6% @7c, acoording to grade,
LARD—Silver Leaf, 12%c 1b: Scoco,
9%c pound; Flakewhite, 9¢; Cottolene,
$7.75 per case; Snowdrift, $6.26 per case.
SALT--One hundred pounds, 62c; salt
brick (plain), per case, $2.25; salt brick
(medicated), per cage, $56.00; salt red,
per hundredweight, §1; salt white roeck,
per hundredweight, soc; Granocrystal,
per case, 25-Ip. sacks, ’lfic; salt, Ozone,
per case, 30 p!cnges. 90c; 60-Ib. sacks,
30c; 25-Ib. sacks, 18c.
CORN--Choice red cob, 96c; No. 2
white, 94c¢; white new, 95c; yellow, 93¢;
cracked, 9%e.
MEAL—Plain, 96-Ib. sacks, 82c; 48-Ib,
mixed, 94c; 24-Ib. sacks, 96ec.
| OATSB—Canadian white cllpged. bée;
‘fa.ncy white clipped 56c; No. 2, §6c; fan
¢y white, 54c; white, 53c; mixed, slc;
mill oats, 50c. ‘
~ Cotton seed meal (Harper) 3023.50;
Cremo feed, $26.00; Buckeye, $28.00.
Cotton seed hulls, sacked, $11.50.
HAY—Per hundredweight; No. 1, al
falfa ha{, $1.35; Timothy choice, large
bales, I!u'r?s; lu;e light clover mlxes,
$1.20; Timothy No, 2 hl{, $1.16; heavy
clover hay, $1.35; No. light clover
mixed, $1.20; alfalfa cholce, pea green,
$1.35; alfalfa No. ), pea green, $1.35,
clover hay, $1.20; Timothy standard,
$1.05; Timothy, No. 1, small bales, §1.35;
straw, 86c; Bermuda, 90c.
GROUND FEED--Purina feed, 190-Ib.
sacks, $1.70; Purina molasses feed, $1.85;
King Corn horse feed, $1.65; Larro dairy
feed, $2.00; Arab horse feed, $1.80; All
needa feed, $1.65: Suerene dairy feed,
%1.35; alfalfa meal, 10-Ib. sacks, $1.50;
ictory horse feed, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.65;
Fat Maker, horse and mule feed, $1.30;
: el: C feed, $1.56; Milko dairy feed,
1.60. ‘
SEED-—Tennessee blue stem, $1.50;
Appler oats, 75c; Texas red rustproof
oats, 60c; Oklahoma red rustproof oats,
63c; Georgia seed rye, 2%-bushel sacks,
$1.20; Tennessee seed r{:. 2-bushe]
sacks, $1.00; Tennessee rley, zl.oo;‘
Burt oats, 60c; Orange cane seed, §1.95;
Amber cane seed, $1.90. {
CHICKEN FEED--Beef scrag:, 109.
Ib. sacks, $3.25; 50-Ib. sacks, $3.60; Aunt
Patsy Mash, 100-Ib. sacks, $2.25; Pu
rina pigeon feed, $2.50; Purina chowder,
12-pkg bales, $2.50; Purina chowder,
100-pound sacks, $2.30; Purina secratch
feed, bales, $2.40; Purina baby chick
feed, $2.25; Purina scratch, 100-Ib,.sacks,
:2.05; Purina scratch, 12-pkg. bales,
2.30; Vietory baby chick, 3220: Victory
scrateh, 50-Ib, sacks, $2.15; 100-Ib. sacks,
$2.10; No. 1 chicken wheat, per bu., $1.35;
No. 2, per bushel, $1.25; oyster shell, Toc;
Eggo, $2.15; charcoal, 50-Ib. sacks, per
loolrounds. g.so.
SHORTS —Red Dog, 98-Ib. sacks, $1.85;
white, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.85; dandy mijd
dling, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.75; faney, 75-1 b
sacks, $1L.80; P. W., 76-1 b sacks, $1.75;
brown, 100-Ib, sacks, $1.70; Germ meal,
75-1 b sacks, $1.65; Georgia feed, 76-Ib.
gacks, $1.70; Germ meal, 100-Ib. cotton
sacks, $1.70; bran, 100-Ib, sacks, $1.65;
75-Ib. sacks, $1.65; bran and shorts,
mixed, $1.60; Germ meal, Homeo, $1.65,
BAR SILVER,
LONDON, May 12.—Bar silver quiet
at 2674,
NEW YORK, May 12.-—~Commercial
bar silver, 58%c; Mexican dollars, 46%c.
METAL MARKET.
NEW YORK, May 12.—The metal
market was generally firm to-day.
Standard ocopper, ag;m to July, 13.50?
14.00; Bfel!er. 5.10@5.20; lead, 3.85@3.95;
tin, 33.62% @34.00.
JESUS AND PRAYER
A Sermon by Rev. W. H. Faust, Winder, Ga.
Text: “Great multitudes came to
gether to hear and be healed, but He
withdrew Himself into the desert and
prayed.”"—Luke 5:15-16.
The court of final resort in all things
pertaining to Christianity is Jesus, and
what He would de. His example was
set for us to follow. His laws were
given for us to obey. His teachings to
instruct us in the way of the Lord,
more and more perfectly. We can then
make no possible mistake in doing what
he was accustomed to do while here
on earth. As professed followers of
this it behooves us to search into His
manner of life, and find out the sources
of His power. Prayer after such an ex
amination proves to be one of the great.
est forces in His life. He prayed as
man never prayved. When he had on
one occasion withdrawn Himself apart
to pray and His disciples saw their
Lord in prayer, they were profoundly
stirred and immediately came to Him
and sald, “Lord, teach us to pray as
John also taught his disciples to pray.
And in response He gave them not ‘'the
Lord's Prayer,” but the disigfles
prayer—one that was characteriz by
love for God and for our fellows.
Christ stressed rra.ver more than He
stressed other things. To Him some
things were tremendously important,
but other things were mor; sO. He
very naturally placed prayer above
a‘ome of the helpful and worth while of
life.
I. Prayer Was More Important Than
Teaching.
When a boy in a great many Sec
tions of North Georgia there were lots
of members of the Primitive Baptist
Church who in those days were opposed
to flvln‘ money to establish education
al institutions or to send missionaries
to foreign flelds. Especially were they
noted for gressmg home the fact that
“God would give His servant what to
say if he would pray as he ought.”
To-day we have swung too far from
this position and stress it entirely too
little. Jesus thought more bf the vi
tal importance of prayer than He did
of the value of teaching even. For
when multitudes thronged about Him
He withdrew Himself into a desert place
and prayed. God often hears, where
men are deaf. Over in the book of
Acts the expression Peter and John is
often used, Peter talked to men about
God, and John talked to God about men
and who wili say after careful and
prayerful consideration that John's part
was not just as absolutely importdnt
as was that of Peter? Every preacher
has felt that he often failed as he at
tempted to talk to men and get them
interested in God, but whoever at
tempted to talk to God about men in
the proper spirit and honestly feit that
there had been failure? God always
hears. Man often is interested in
worldly affaire and passes along un
heeded the gospel appeals. ;
The importance of teaching can not
possibly be overestimated. Bchools and
colleges are necessary and must be
maintained. Our Baptist people have
felt sometimes that schools and colleges
were essential to their denominational
growth. So have our Methodists and
other denominations. But one of the
greatest Baptist territories in all Geor
fin is under the shadow of the State
Tniversity, and the North Georgia Con
ference has as many members about in
Jackson and FElbert and Oglethorpe
Counties as can be found around Ox
ford. God doesn't limit His work to
educational institutions, but He does
mighty things through men of prayer.
If Christ felt the mneed of prayer
when crowds pressed upon Him, how
much more should we. He has equip
ped intellectually far above the workers
of the present day. He knew more
about human nature than we do, but
He prayed when people in need came
around Him and thus was He able to
heal and save. = 2
Prayer More Vital Than Sleep.
Nature places high value upon sleep
as a restorer and builder up of the
human system.
Mark 1:35 tells us ““In the morning
rl :rut while before day He rose u
‘and went out into a desert place ulg
then prayed,” and in Luke vi:l2 “He
went out into the mountain to pray, and
He continued all night in prayer to
God.”” Early rising and praying, not
onx after hours in prayer, but all
night. No wonher He could heal the
sick and raise the dead and draw multi
tudes and work miracles, and comfort
the broken-hearted and accompliish
work that astonished the disciples. He
had power because of the fact that he
fimyed for it. He went to God and asked
im for what he wanted, and the an
swer came, Do we get the answer?
Do we pray? James tells us that we
have not because we ask not. “Ask
and ye shall receive, knock and it shall
be opened unto you, seek and ye shall
find.”” Askers recelve, seekers find,
knockers have thlntga opened. This day
witnesses few of the marvelous things
seen by men of a generation or two ago.
Where are our revivals of religion, save
as they come through the Jpotentlal in
fluence of men who, like Jacob of old,
are princely wrestlers in prayer?
No sensible man would say that we
could exist without sleep, but how much
of our precious time is slept awa*? i
we could each fully realize that our
time is short and precious, that really
we have only a few years to live, how
differently would we spend our time,
Mother, suppose that an angel were
to appear to you and tell you that ten
more years would end your lease of
life, would you cease doing things that
now gngage so much of your attention
and commence to do others of much
more import? Father, if rou were to
know for a surety that only five years
remained to you, wouldn't there be a
startling change in your life and work?
People that now know you only in PlH
ing would know you well. People by
whom you pass with a mere nod or
careless glance would get a great deal
of notice from you. Napoleon {8 sald
to have gotten along with less than §
hours’ sleep gcr day. How much time
do you u}nn in sleep? Jesus, when
business for the Kingdom demanded it,
bhesitated not to stay awake and wrestle
in prayer all night with God. If sleep
was of less importance than prayer to
Jesus, why then should it not be so
with us? Is the disciple above his
Lord? Could we mnot profitably follow
his example?
Prayer More Important Than Money,
The Master Teacher sald: ‘“Pray ye
the Lord of the Harvest that He send
forth laborers into His harvest.' Why‘
did not Jesus say: *“Pay your thousands
and thus secure men to &übuah abroad
the tidln% of redemn‘rt n to a lost
world.” e gold a sllver under a
thousand mountains are His; so are the
cattle thereon, Gold is of little worth
to the lord, He appreciates the giver
and the motives vastly more than He
does the amount contributed, and thus,
when He was anxious to see the whole
world lying out in darkness and sin
brought to salvation and light, He did
not say, “Pay and they will come,” or
“Pay and the Lord will send them,'”
but He said, “Pray ye the Lord of the
Harvest,” and when the disciples prayed
the Holy Spirit came and at Pentecost
they commenced to enter by the thou
sands. Prayer was the cause. The
weakest saint upon his knees can bring
the mercy seat down to earth, stop the
course of the sun as he wheels his way
acrogs the heavens and draw down all
the power of divinity for the purpose
of being used here by other weak and
frail vessels like himself. We need more
missionaries. The way to get them Is
by not paying less, but by praying more.
Pay and pray and God will héar and
see and bless and honor and make hap=
Py
Prayer Above Preaching.
The Lord taught men to pray, but
He never so far as it is recorded taught
men directly how to preach. Preaching
is marvelous and accomplishes results
that are splendid, but who would at
tempt to preach before praylni. Prayer
comes first. Peter was weak., Satan
had desired him in order that he might
be tempted, and instead of preaching to
him, the gracious lord said, I have
prayed for thee that thy faith fail not.”
Sometimes we preachers in evangelistie
work talk to people and very little it
any Imrres-ion is made. After a while
we fall back upon prayer and then
the answer almost invariably comes,
The throneroom of the King is always
Ofen to the one who has a petition upon
his lips. Our Lord is gracious and
plenteous in mercy and delights to give
more than we can ask. When our abil
ity to ask is ended, then His ability to
respond is scarcely commenced. Prayer!
Prayer! It Ils the life of a Christian.
It is his shield and buckler. It is a
source of inspiration and consecration,
It is to him a source of consecration
and uplifht. Take your troubles and
triumphs to the King and share with
Him your sorrows and your joys. Ask
much of Him every duy, all the while
feeling that your prayer will be ane
swered, for—
'l‘Tht:u al;t fomlng",llo a King,
Arge petitions with thee bring,
For His Ah and prayer are such
None can ever ask too much.”
_ Friendly Interest.
“l 1 want a door spring, please!™
said the pompous little man, march
ing up to the counter. “And one that
won't go out of order half an hour
after it has been put up, too!”
“A door spring, sir?”
“Yes, yes. A door spring that will
close a door firmly, but one that will
not need a charge of dynamite to
open it!”
1 see, sir. I——
“But, on the other hand, it musin’'t
bang the door to so that the whole
house is shaken from top to bot
tom.”
“I know exactly what you want,
sir, You want a spring that just
firmly closes the door hard enough to
clinch the lock—one that does not
make any noise, or need looking aft
er when once it is put up; just a
simple, straightforward spring that
does its work properly with no fuss.”
“That’s the kind of thing. Let me
see one.”
“Ah, we don't sell door springs,
sir.”
Could Not Afford It.
A workingman residing in a large
town in the north of England called
on the headmasster of the local school
the otheér evening and said that he
would take it as a petsonal favor if
they would teach his boy “more
larnin’ an’ less 'teknites’ "—whatever
the latter might be.
The schoolmaster endeavored to ex
plain the advantages of technical in
struction but with very little success,
“If the lad mun have 'teknites,’ ™
said the visitor, “mak him into a cob
bler or a musiclan, or summut o' that
sort. For goodness’ gake keep him
out o' the carpenter business!”
“Your son,” continued the master,
“appears to have a natural bent in the
direction of wood-turning and——"
“Aw knaws that,” interrupted the
other, “an’ Aw jest can't afford it, He
comes 'ome t' other night after one o'
them wood-turnin’ lessons an' he
turns the legs o’ my armchair into
cricket stumps, an’ he'll be makin’ a
rabbit hutch oot o' the chest o' draw
ers if he ain't stopped. Aw jest can't
afford it, that's all!”
The dandy sauntered into the vil
lage shop and asked, with an offen
sively supercilious air:
“Do you sell puppy biscuits in this
rotten little shop?”
“Yes, sir, certainly,” sald the shop
man, suavely, “Shall I put them in a
bag for you to take home, or will you
eat them here?”
I(ARRY--)‘.ny_;ch. eonrnlnl and lnx'-.
fous for companions. Interesting pare
ticulars and photo free. The Messenger,
Jacksounville, Fla.
MARRY _RlCHMatrimonial gapor of
h:&hen character, conulnin, undreds
of otos and descriptions of marriage
lbleJooElo with means. Malled free
Bealed, ither sex. Writs to-day. One
may be your ideal. Address Standard
Cor. Club, Box 607, Grayslake, 11l
AGENTS —Hot weather s bere. Make
850{)9:‘ week gelling Imperial Self-Heat
ing Irons. KEvery housewife wants one,
Gardner Flat Iron Co., Memphis, Tenn,
T BALESMEN WANTED.
SELL, TREES-—Fruit trees, Pemg
trees, Shade trees, Ornamentals an
Roses, Eu{_rio-efl. Bl'&l.‘oflll. Write
to-day. SMITH BROS., pt, 89, Cone
cord, Ga,
11