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Don't Suffer! * I had been troubled, a little, for nearly 7 yearr..rt writes Mrs. L Fincher, in a letter from Peavy, Ala., "but I was not taken down, until March, when I wcr.t tc b;d .*md had to have a doctor. He did all he could fj: r.v., but 1 got no better. 1 hurt all over, and I could not rest. At last, I tried Cardui, and soon 1 began to improve. Now 1 am in very good health, and able to do all my housework." QTAKE The mill WomanVTonic You may wonder why Cardui is so successful, after other remedies have failed. The answer is that Cardui is successful, because it is composed of scientific ingredients, that act curatively on the womanly system. It i? a medicine for women, and for women only. It builds, strengthens, and restores weak and ailing women, to health and happiness. If you suffer like Mrs. Fincher did, take Cardui. It will surely do for you, what it did for her. At all druggists. Writ* to: Ladies' Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga Mrd ::: Co., Cha*;anooca. Tenth, for Spccicl Instructions, and til-page book. "Home Tr^atm^n. ior Worn n," seal if ... J 60 Christmas Cheer end Charity SANTA CLAUS' PROCLAMATION. During the month of December, 1911, every piece of mail must carry a RED GROSS CHRISTMAS SEAL on the back of the envelope. Ev ery bill, statement, leceipt and check must carry a seal on its face. RED CROSS CHRISTMAS SEALS can be purchased for one cent each from every live, progressive, chari tably inclined retail merchant in Texas. The money received from the sale of seals will be used to es tablish a hospital-home for children crippled by tuberculosis of the bones, and for other Anti Tubercu losis work. Help us in the fight against the Great White Plague. CHRISTMAS SEAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE. State Capitol Bldg, Austin, Texas. Texa3 Anti-Tuberculosis Ass'n, State Agents. Mail Orders Ac companied by Check or Money Or der Promptly Filled. For cutting buttons from cloth ing an Italian has invented scis sors supplied with a guard to prevent cutting the cloth, too. If two nuts are run on a bolt so that the square sides face each, other they will serve as a wrench in an emergency. A solution of 10 per cent, borax and 5 per cent, resin is driven into wood by electricity in France to preserve it. The United States produced 30,305,t55t5 barrels of salt last year, according to recently is sued figures. Foley Kite'/ !$!fs TONIC 3N ACTION - QUICK IN RESULT8 Give prompt relief fioni BACKACHE, KIDNEY and BLADDER TROUBLE, RHEUMATISM, CONGESTION of the KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION of the BLADDER and all annoying URINARY IRREGULARITIES. A positive boon to MIDDLE AGED and ELDERLY PEOPLE and for WOMEN. HAVE HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION P. A. DarW, R27 Washington St., Corncr«villet Ind., is io hid 85 th year. He v.-. 1 es us: "I hav* lately suffered much from my 1- idno -i and blad der I had severe bark aches ai.f u > kidneyaction its loofriQiWBt, can Inarm to] wzsooliiImb at night, and iti mjr bladder there was constant pain. I took Foley Kiduer Pills for K»mo time, and am now free of all tr«.ublo and again able to be up and around. Foley Kidncj Pills have rnj highest recommendation *' Sold By ALLEN URQUHART The Standard Oil Co., of Now Jersey, called the "Father of Trust," has ceased to exist log ally, but is appearently "doing business at the same old .stand." John D. Rockefellow has resign ed as head of the concern and will retire from active business in the reorganization H. Arch cold was elected president. Nasal Catarrh qu . y. :' * . meut liy tha n^n v.! , c.i- • I'' Cream Balm. Ifc i- j • .v l i -1> i j nostrils and ch itu> * . li ;!•» ti surface over which it ditlus < it - If. ' ri - gists sell the r>:'c. aiz«. 'IV t it :.:n' yo-.i are sure to continue tii trcatim-al till ; - lieved. Announcement. To aeeomuiodito th . wh > ar-i pari .1 to tho use of atomizer * in appl iui» liqt.i.ia into the misal - fur e.ti.t itl t> > the pro;>r; tors p-<•; > ire Or- t:;i :'n ! liquid form, which will lie known L!>'s \ Liquid Creikta B.-.hu. Price inrhxdinq; the ! spraying tube, i' 7-> *ent 1 »rn ; i-*s or i y i mail. The liquid '• > ml.odi sthemed ; ioinal properties ot i.w aoj: I rrepar>. 'or?. Approximately Chicago sells i 100,(XX) pianos each year, valued i at $50,000,000, which is about i one-third of the country's total j product. Where tin* Locality does not Count Wherever th<-re are ppople suffering from kidney and bladder ailment*,from backache, rheumatism and urinary ir regularities, Foley Kidney Pills will help them. Belvidere, 111. E A Kelly, an ex-engineer, sayt-: "Three years ago my kidnevs became so bad that I was compelled to give up my engine and quit, There was a severe aching pain over the hips, followed by an inflam mation of the bladder, and always a thick sediment- Foley Kidney Pills made mo a sound and well man. I can not say too much in their praise." Allen Urquhart. ! Coal ashes are combined with soda and copel varnish by ;i German inventor to make an ar tificial stone that resembles marble. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars the Signature of Keeping it closed by a rub ber cord, a Washington inventor claims to have devised a coin purse that is safer than theusu:il Jorms. Antiseptic Remedies Destroy disease germs. Dr. Hell's Anti Pain is an antiseptic remedy for extern al and internal pains, relief is almost nstantenous. Sold by all dealers The "curfew" rings in 3,000 American and Canadian towns. r R the Spring and Summer season, the International offer the greatest display of all wool Fabrics ever seen in this town. Seeing is believing, and you must see for yourself before you ever think of going elsewhere for made>to>measure Clothes. fjj Every inch of fabric is pure wool, and every fabric is a beauty in color and design, made up in the latest Metropolitan Styles at popular prices only. Ask for the International Genuine All Wool Line. J. H. ADA M H CURIOUS RESERVOIRS. TM Um t» Which B»»b»S Tp«m Ars Put In Africa. I'popi# of ttw Kordofsn province, Afrli-n, uw hn<>hab trws n« r^crvntni fur tlir »<-nnty wnfpr of that district. 'I'fo trw* have to b* prrpnird care fully fur this use. The large branches aro first cut off near the trunk. If this 1< not done the tnink Is apt to split ns soon ns it I* bollowed out A bole Is cut In the trui.k. generally just atnne a branch, which serves as a platform for the man who is filling the tree, and tho Interior Is hollowed out. Round the bottom of tho tree a shallow basin souk' twenty or thirty feet in diameter is made, in which tho rainwater col lects Aa soon as there Is a storm the people go ont and fill their trees. The water so stored remains perfectly good until the end of the nest hot weather or even longer. A few trees, naturally hollow, have n hole nt the top between the branches and fill themselves, the branches catching the water and act ing as gutters. These are called "la gal," and aro highly valued. The system gives a cistern twenty feet high and from eight to ten feet or even more in diameter. Owing to the labor luvolved in preparing and filling the trees water Is usually bought and sold, and on the main roads where there is much traffic, as between N'a hud and Jebel el Ililla on the way to El Faster, the capital of Darfur, the people do a regular trade by supplying merchants and travelers with water. The bucket, called a "dilwa." con sists of a piece of leather suspended by strings sis inches long, from a piece of wood bent in n circle, to which the rope used for drawing the water is fastened by three or four strings. On reaching the bottom of the well the leather opens out and collects the wa ter, however little there may be.—Chi cago News. FAIRLY WARNED. The Old Crook'* Advice to His Bril liant Young Pupil. "All this easy talk about 'honest' j graft," said an author, "makes ine tired. There isn't any such thing, 'lionest' graft is on a par with the l>oini of view of an incorrigible old crook I ran across when I was doing police work on a Chicago paper years ago. The venerable reprobate had n son about eighteen years old, whom he had carefully trained to follow in his own footsteps. They lived togeth er, and every night the old man used to make the boy fork over the pro coeds of the day's pocket picking, al lowing him just enough to live on. "Finally the young crook began to rebel inwardly, and one night, after a particularly good day's haul, he secret ly pawned a diamond scarfpin and kept the money himself lie pave the old thief the rest of the swag, how ever. and it was so goodly a pile that he opened his heart and handed the astonished boy ?T> and told him to go to a prizefight or somewhere and en joy himself. So the boy began to put on his only glad rags. But he seemed strangely silent and distraught. The old man noticed it and demanded to know what was the matter and if the $5 wasn't enough, and so on. "Suddenly the lad burst into tears. 'Guv'nor,' ho sobbed, 'I ain't no right to this five spot. Here's $10 I pot on a pin today, and I was goin' to bold it out on you.' "The old crook took the money and gazed with sadness upon his child. 'Son,' he said, 'I want to tell you one thine Take it from me, folks that gets money that way w!!l never, never come to no good.' "—New York World. Flowers and Blood. A superstition dating from olden times exists to the effect that roses and flowers generally attain greater beauty In soil fertilized by blood, espe cially by human blood, than elsewhere. Persons who have visited Newmarket, England, know of the so called "bloody flower of Newmarket," which is found nowhere etso than in the old moat, now filled up, and in which, according to tradition, a very large quantity of human remains is interred. These flowers bloom in June and July and by the bloodlike hue of their blossoms suggest the name which has been given to them. Right Living. To bo honest, to be klDd, to earn a little and to spend a little less; to make upon the whole a family happier for Ills presence; 10 renounce when that shall be necessary an 1 not to be em bittered; in keep a few friends, but these without capitulation; above all. on the suii. • grim -ondltiou. to keep friend- with himself—here is a task fc a'■ I tint a man lias of fortitude and delicacy Ths Gioomy Englishman. The ^.tp uiay be wildly running, the birds may be making love, and the sun brilliantly shining in a sky of exquis ite blue, but In the heart of the aver age Englishman there seems a per petual «. 1 1'r ! iy and in his mind the lived idea tl if life Is one long, un i ending M^ndav morning and the mouth eti i i^l: November.—London Tat !er A Diceussion cn Talk. T' nni1" v.-[ii.t ts the difference b. ' i i" :md a monologue? I' • n t 'I'pii i'li talk, my son. It but wle n a woman car r (<n . i nversatfon with her hus lit t . teilogue.—Kxcbange A Puzzler. Willie— Pa" Pa—Yes. Willie—Teach er s - u I r • tu help others. Pa — Of < .ur>« > \V1 ;e—Well, what are the others here for? —Chicago News "Best on f it t!i" T1* i m i * i< • • i ! 1 ..111 w »• I r y . | O , * >1 igiit I V fI'iriev and Tar C • »11 i j if f '• * ll*-r « the wor*t I have ever it-vu, ai. I looked i like a hire < utte of r neumption. Iler j loups With - arid »he c lghed aide -t Hi r - i .is t ' m.i 1 i and weak F r >11 a««y ana 1 ar i (' a ; ill I ' ieht f -la' i rp a . I it-- t! in tl • .!!■•» tb ' ted a ('Tl - p ete ( if " \ • n ' '<)'ihart. COUI1 OUfll la lit Santa Claus Found In the Heart "f ■ %lIl!Ki'. whole silver dollar* | apioce!" snlil Margy to (he w l*>y as they sat In the corner of the garret where the uut plie h <1 been and trazed nt their hard earned wealth. "It's like having mon ey instead of nuts fall oflf the trees. Hon* shall wo ever spend It?" "Spend ttr said the boy with a grand air. "Spend It? Why, that's easy My! I could spend" It tf all the nuts we picked up and sold were dollar- It takes a heap of money to buy Christmas gifts." "Uncle Tom said be would take us to the city, so father and mother needn t know a thing," said Margy. True to Ills word. Uncle Tom hap pened in that very evenlns and said iu a careless way to father: "I'm going to town tomorrow, and if (lie children would like a trip I'll (hem." y ■. dressed in their best, with the pre'1 ''i- money held tl^ht In their nurses, thev went . to the city with I'nolo Torn. W hat a d n y that was! Every ihty ■ w i 11 d o w e <• hi <> d full of tifis that, would I <• Just right for some one on the II:-1. Two happy children went homo that nigh; and sneaked up the back stairs with their bun dle Later they stowed them nway in an old chest of drawers in the K a r r e t. wife from the eye. of the euri 0118 " — And father and windows i ull or mother never gifis. made a fcuess as to all the whispering that went on. Nor did they notice that the children were fairly bulRlns with secrets. I'erhaps they were busy with a few on their own nccount. Christmas evo came The boy said carelessly: "Mother, why don't rou and father bans up your stockings too?" So four stockings were bung to the cover of the? sitting room table—no. five, if you could call the baby's tluy sock a slocking. When father had fallen asleep over his paper and mother was in the kitch en planning things Margy and the boy stole in with their gifts and poked them Into the bluest stockings, and, oh, yes, Margy put a bundly In the boy's stocking, and tlie boy put one In Margy's, and then they stole out again and were off to bed so's not to have to wait so long for morning. The boy's eyes popped open about 5 o'clock of the dark morning, and he woke the whole house s lion tin,, ' Mer ry Christmas!" Every one hustled into clothes and swallowed breakfast. Then they went Into the sittinpr room together, and fa ther shouted anil danced like a schoolboy when he found u cup and saucer that would hold a pint of coffee, to say nothing of the motto "Love the Giver" In ^llt letters and a lavish decoration of rosebuds on Its outside. How mother 1 a u g h e d and kissed both the children w h e n she found In her stocking a preut apple that prov ed to be a pin ' ' " '—uituma tushlou and a iATHEit biiol'ted lovely Japanese AND DANCED. fan wltb red. bine and green ladies painted on It: Jt Is not necessary t■» tell v.-bat the children did and said when I he boy found a corker spaniel puppy tied to his leg of the table and Margy opened a basket and found a sleepy Angora kitten blinking at her. When every package was untied and the "ohs' and "ahu" were all uued up. when mother had decked the runnlel with her pin< usblon and fun n.d f■ 'her had dc . ired that never ii i. never again wo . 1 lie drink coffee ' out any comnioo little everyday nip. the boy and Martry snt on the i rt I ■ ■ *'•. ■.<] ' t :r r.ew pets and lli bo.. said "I mi '■ i11 t . to i!.>• old kind of ( ' hi* f- >i.v: hln. Then It u: - just Saul' < < ll: It did every tldrig. Now It's i :.e irit of Santa Ciatls iri i:ie ;; • • <I u mid father nnd niher i'l>> It's like tinv i!.'; a whi'ie r r . f S.iuta Clause#.'' 1 We earu ' ( i.rlstuias money every ye.r nfie ' Is, v. on't we. irother' t'sked V: .*> Ar:d t. ■ I ':c!. "Vou bet we win r "Tin g'cug I.. : ■ " ve and iblnk ■ t »:i r* of can - r'i'tlt off," decI;i '! Mart" •> Uert i' -. ..d the boy. W'e a >h ti i H i ;' :on to I be fa. t t;iHt lie'St nifei t - •• cHHen such an .< t. ; ifij; >|||{|| ,1 ' |.' '1-f .1 Hlid •< ir f vi-r lire n'r.i '•• I * • ii the child ' i- a ■ I. ■ ' 1 ODgh lif • And great v — a tm i ■ r iitrai tliiu ti.cse d)**-a«M. TI, - ti edv 1* faui r it* < ir»-« ,f i I- 11 contain* no ;111»11 r r.tier nur ol:c and may be ' imp it roiifi lenct- v | |,y \ | , 11,rt and all 'Irttfiilitu ' . has tl.-• tif |mi<«ii s if'" iii ' :n v ' i 'I anil ' • tr mit«» \jw»it pin lorn. CHRISTMAS WOOING OF CUPID. | - MpMi« Lav« Ipalli WWh >yplM In i Fw*i|n Land*. Apples enter Into many <>rl*troae *p*>Ha. In Amtrii on < hrUttnai arc ifi" apple must be rut In tuilrea In the ilnrk nnd without lielng touched by th« : band The l«-ft hand half la than plirtd i In tha boaoai of tlio dlvtner and tha I right I.ami hnlf behind tin- door of tha I twdchnml»er Then at midnight, should 1 the have laten fully carried out. the spirit or "aatral" of tha beloved one H|<t«*nra, standing beside tha half which was laid behind the door Another charm Is to cut an apple in | two and count the seeds In each half. , If tli* numbers nr.-> even marriage will | be aoon If a aeed Is cut In two there I will 1m> tronble In the course of love, nnd should two seeds lie cut thero will 1h» early widowhood A Sicilian maiden throws the fruit from her wl-i .w luto tho atreet and j watches Should it llo long without ! being picked up she will be widowed aoon nfter marriage Should It bo pick ed up by a woman marriage will not lie within the coming year, but should It be picked up by a man then she will be wedded beforo the next year Is ended. Christmas Day. How will It diwn. the coming Christmas day. A northern Christinas m h hr paint era love. And kinsfolk, shaking handa but onco a year. And dames who toll old legends by the Are? Red sun, blue sky. white snow and pearled Ice, Keen, r'.nglng air. which sata tho blood on flro And j;mk< « the old man merry with the young. Through the .short sunshine. through the longer night? In whatsoever garh or gay or sad. Como fair, coino foul, 'twill still b« Christmas day. -Charle* Klngsley MEMORABLE YULETIDES. Odd Coincidence of Quun Victoria's Sorrow* at Chriatmaa Tlma. Ono of tho most extraordinary Christinas days Ix>ndon over had vol that of 1801 The shops had boon, aa usual, specially prepared and deoornt I'd with the object of attracting tho buyers when suddenly. ou Dec 22, a tlilck fog came on Not until tho evening of Dec. 20 did It lift This I»nrtlctiInr fog held tha record for be ing tliH heaviest Ijondou had known. Thirty liven were lost and over 200 accidents recorded Christmas. 1800, was the coldewt England and Scotland had ever expo rlenced .lust three yearn later Christ mas day was marred by news that William Makepeace Thackeray, tin; great novelist, was dead The late Queen Victoria's most mem nrablo Christmases were tho most pathetic It was In less than a fort night from Dec 2.r>, 1801, that her bus band, tho prlnco consort, passed away. So afT»lcted was her majesty thai shu allowed tlfteen years to pans before she celebrated Christmas day In tho traditional fashion Then on Christ mas day In 1872 the I'rlnce of Wales, who became King Edward VII., was so 111 that his life was despaired of. Hut he made a retnarkablo recovery. USE MOST CHRISTMAS CANDY. Several Million Dollars' Worth Sold to New Yorker*. Three mill Ion dollars' worth of Christmas candles Is New Yorlr city's annual holiday bill The amount of mon"y spent by New York era during the holidays for candy alone Is so great that It seems out of proportion to the amount donated for charity until it Is remembered that perhaps one-third or more of all the candy bought during the laHt half of December is glvcu away by secular and religious societies, by Sunday' schools and churches, and that con sequently a large part of the sum l>e longs In the charity account Three or four New York manufac turers get the bulk of this class of or ders, and they agree that, even taking the population of the city Into ac count, New York's consumption of candy excels that of any other city. CHRISTMAS IN NORWAY. Richly Cooked Rice a Popular Dish. Brownies Used to Share It. The day before Christmas the holi day* really begin. It is customary to have richly cooked rice served with milk or fruit Jul'-o for dinner In the tureen Is a blanched almond, and he who gets this receives a present. The practice used to be prevalent among the peasants to set out a dlsti of this Christ mas riee in the barn for the gnomes or brownies, whom they thought would do some good turn for them 111 pay ment. Flowers always make a home look festive, and the custom in Norway Is t-> send these as m. xsengers of love at Christmas. The Ma&queradert. Vvs I believe in Santa Claus, In »• 1 v*;H an I falrie.H. too I've j "Vt r *«•* n them, but because Of lovely thtnjf* they do Their nam* s are J«»y and Tender ness And GO"d Will Here on Earth Their rnU : >n la to fas« d!*tr«»« With .•:;>« and mirth And when th- Ir^tiK an fairy folk. In furs an 1 jcauz<» arrayed. They think 'tis '-iti a pit «u&ant joke T > come it! fn;i5<r;era<1e Jo: r» u* end rick Bang* An Marm at \itfbt I >1 Hlnke« terror to the entire house 'ti 'I :* the ud, hoarcci and metalli i i it,(ti of croup' N > miHtaking it, an 1 ■ f r'mate then the lucky parent* *'i • k >•. ; hi. « \ - II ,iie-. »u I I ar < .'on. p . I ii tian>1 H W I »-«elnian. Canton, N. Y kayn "It in «orlh its weight in n I Mini ittl- ihi' lren are trouhleit with i r ;ji aoi! ImirirnNi, an 1 all we give lh. . in t-i |e. h Honey ami Tar Com P ii !. la v 2 j !* have * hottlo of it in • . h u«>' Ailer; Cr juhart, I'lut i ni.. - ir\« r« isinjj m favui i. i • v y in th»' manufacture of ' jewelry. JEFFERSHI mm c mm m EVERYTHING MECHANICAL E. B. McDONALD, Prop. BEST EQUIPPED JOB SHOP IN NORTHEAST TEXAS. N STOCK Boxes and Collars, Lubricators, Oil Cups, Gover nors, Steam Gages, Grease Cups Injectors, Jetts Valves, Belt Dressing. Whistles, Graphite Valves, Gage Cocks, Pipe and Fittings, Babbit Metal, Safety Valves, Emery Grinders, Lumber Bug gies, Water Columns, Fire Fronts and General Lineeastings, Dry Battterys, Patch Bolts, Etc., Etc. I CASTINGS MADE ANY DAY NOTHING TOO SMALL FOR OUR CARFUL ATTENTION AND NOTHING TOO LARGE FOR US TO UNDERTAKE For The Holiday Trade A Fsesh line of Candies, Nuts and general line of Gro ceries. Fresh Celery every Saturday. Free Delivery. Phone 80. CHARLIE SMITH W. J. Burns, the sleuth-hound who trailed the McNamara bro titers to their den and heaped the evidence so high that they could find no way of escap save through confession, is the same Hums who unearthed the mayor alty scandal in San Francisco. Lightning Kills Few. In 190(1 lighting killed only 1H9 peo ple in thin whole country. One's chances of death by lighting are lees than two in a million. The chances of death from liver, kidney or stomach trouble is vastly greater, but not if Klectric Bitters be used, as Robert Madsen, of west Burlington, la., prov ed. Four doctors gave him up after eight months of sutlering from virulent liver troubls ami yellow jaundice, lie was then completely cured by Kletric Hitters. They're the best stomach, liver, nerve, and kidney remedy ami blood purifier on earth. Only 50c at W. J. Sedberry'e P^lies are the main cause of the spread of typhoid fever, cholera infantum and all the diseases of children that are called "summer com plaints." lion's This? We offer One Hundred Dollar* Howard far any ease of Catarrh that cannot bo eured by Hall'g Catarrh (*uro. F\ J. CHKNKY CO., Toledo.(). We. the undersiRned, have known V. J. <,'hcney for the hint 1r) ychrn, and believe him perf»'<• 11 y honorable in all bligine*# tranHaetion«and flnau olallv able to curry out any obligation)* made by bin firm . W a 1.1»ino Kinnan <St MauviN , WholoHale DrugKintH Toledo, O. 11 u] 1' m Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoun mirfae «»f the system. Testimonials went free Prl(H* 75 roil In per bottle. Hold by all DriiKKi^tN. Take Hall's Family Pills for oouatijpfttlon The river .Jordan is said to be the most rambling stream known, it winds 213 miles in covering a distance of 60 miles. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO R I A High speed has been develop ed by a monoplane, the German inventor of which shaped its wings like those of a pigeon. F0I£UKIDNEY PILLS roa Baoraomi Kiomcts and Iuoois One-third of Great Britain's telegraph operators are women. or « >i lisps will curt- any i age of Chills at. ! Hnver. Price 25c. .!0o The bulk of the money ob tained for building St. Paul's cathedral was obtained from a duty then enforced on all coals brought to the port of London. A Des Moines man had an attack of muscular rheumatism in his shoulder. A friend told him to go to Hot Springs. That meant an expense of $150.00 or more, lie sought for a qu'cker and cheaper way to cure it and found it in Chamberlain's Linhuemt. Three days after the lirHt application of this lini ment he was well. For sale hy Allen Urquhart and all druggists.. The inventor of a wireless tele phone claims to have made it so compact that a man can carry it about with him. Rub flie Joints with iiallard's Snow Liniment to relieve rheumatism, It penetrates the flesh to the bone convey ing its soothing and restorative influ ence to the spot where the pain exsits. Price 25c, fiOc, and $1.00 per bottle. Hold by W". J. Sell berry. Controlling aparatus of a new aeroplane is so arranged that it can be operated by either of two persona, seated side l>,y side. Make I p Your Own Mind I When in the need of a cough medicine. If you buy Dr. Bell's Pise-Tar-Honey we guarantee you get the best. Meat Market We have opened up a NEW MARKET and will keep Fresh Meats AT ALL TIMES. BEEF, POLK, SAUSAGE AND BARBECUE MEAT. We desire a share of your patronage and would appreciate an order for any thing in the Meat Line. ()n!y the best stuii handled. Will deliver Msat to place in the city. CARR 6 COLEMAN, Austin Street, JEFFtRSON, TEXAS. mum MOSUL MUC SCHOOL AVIXGER, TEXAS A Boarding School for the Moral Christian and Indrustrial Training of COLORED YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN. STRONG FACU LTY COMPOSED OF GRADUATES AND PAST GRADUATE* OF Spelman-Seminary. Atlanta. Ga.: Atlanta Baptist Coiiege. Atlanta. Ga.; Prarie View State Normal. Prarie View. Texas, and TusKegee Normal and Industrial Institute o( which Booker T. Washington is Principal. All kinds tif Industries and Trades arc taught. The '■"it S( h(«.lin Northeast Tcxa-. for Nc^io yo'iths. Hoard and tuition, s'.t.OO per month. Music extra, For particu lars address i\ \\\ >vhi:kij^:k, PRINCIPAL.