9 SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR MONTH OF JUNE 1 RED FRONT STORE C4DUKT MOUSE BILOCK 0EMEKN CITY, RE(RN y -y ' y j tap -yp -yr -y- -'-lt-- , Regular 1 2c Percale, per yard hoc Light Colored Calico, per yard 4c Indigo Blue Oil Calico, per yard 5c Curtain Scrim, per yard ........ 5c up Bunting, white or colors 5c Cotton Batting, extra quality, per pound . 12C The Celebrated Dr. Warner's Corset. . . 50c up 26-inch Steel Rod Umbrella 50c Notions Pins per paper. ic Safety Pins, per paper , ;c . Hair Pins, per box 5c Finishing Braid, bunch.......... 5c Darning Cotton, 2 balls for.. 5c Embroidery Silk, 6 spools 5c White Tape, 2 rolls ................. ... 5c Silk Finish Crochet Cotton, spool 5c Sheet Wadding, 2 sheets 5c Sewing Machine Oil, ice size bottle. 5c Vaseline, bottle.......'. 5c White Metal Tea Spoons. . . .6 for 15c White Metal Table Spoons. 6 for 25c Aluminum Thimble. 5c ,' Liquid Shoe Dressing 7c We have a big quantity of Ladies Shirt Waists and Skirts which we are offering at a Big Reduction We carry the J B. Lewis Wear Resisted and Bradley &Metcalf Shoes These shoes are well known and once you use them will call for them again We are making a special cut on shoes We are agents for the celebrated Standard Patterns Call and get fash ion sheet free We carry the celebrated Gilbert Linings Millinery ; ,, ': In our Millinery department we are offering special inducements. , . '.' - Sailor Hats , . '. . .'; , . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ........ 25c up Trimmed Hats . . . . : ............ .$1 00 up Men's Suspenders, full length, from 10c up Men's Balbriggan Underwear, per suit 50c Men's White Handkerchiefs. 5c Men's Blue or Red Handkerchiefs . ......... 5c Men's Heavy Working Gloves, from 25c up Men's Working Shirts, from 2$c to ' 50c Men's Fancy Dress Shirts............ ... 35c to 75c Men's Black Satine Shirts. 45c Men's Heavy Black Duck Shirts 60c Straw Hats 5c up Groceries Tomatoes.......... .,.3 cans 25c Corn 3 cans 25c Oysters 3 cans " 15c Washing Powder .......3 pounds 15c Corn Meal 10 pounds 20c Bulk Extracts. . , ; .per oz. 5c Corn Starch. ... . . .',1. .per pound 5c Roast Coffee .......... ..pound 10c up Scouring Soap. . . .. . ... . ...-.,,. . jc Good Syrup, in wooden pail, per pail 65c "Our Mother's" Starch, same as Celluloid, with j ' ...pound more to package IV; .".'joe We also have on hand a large stock of Mason Fruit Jars Caps and Rubbers. Remember that we pay highest market prices for Farm Produce, Shingles, Etc. I HIS STEPS. "What Would Jesus Do?" , By 0HABLE3 M. BHELDOH. . . OopTrlgt'vd and published In book form by tb Ac ftnoa Pabliahiiig Co. of Chicago.) "That one factor ia the Christian element in Raymond. Say The Newt has lost heavily from the dropping off of people who do not care far a Chris tian daily and from others who simply look npon a newspaper as a purveyor of all sorts of material to amuse and interest them, are there enough genu ine Christian people in Raymond who will rally to the support of a paper such as Jeans would probably edit, or are the habits of the people so firmly established in their demands for the Edward Norman looicea at ner Keen ly, and his face flushed a moment as an idea of Virginia's purpose crossed his mind. He had known her when she was a little girl in the Sunday school, and he had been on intimate relations in business with her father. I "I should say a half million dollars in a town like Raymond could be well spent in the establishment of a paper such as we have in mind, " he answered, and his voice trembled a little. The keen look on Edward Norman's grizzled regular type of journalism that they , face flashed out with a stern but thor- The after meeting at the First church was now regularly established. Henry Maxwell went into the lecture room on the Sunday succeeding the week of the primary and was greeted with an en thusiasm that made him tremble at first for its reality. He noted again the ab- scence of Jasper Chase, but all the oth ers were present, and they seemed drawn very close together by a bond of common fellowship that demanded and enjoyed mutual confidences. It was the general feeling that the spirit of Jesus was a spirit of yery open, frank confes sion of experience. It seemed the most natural thing in the world for Edward Norman to be telling all the rest of the company about the details of his news paper. "The fact is, I hare lost a good deal of money during the last three weeks. I cannot tell how ranch. I am losing a great many subscribers every day." "What do the subscribers srive as their reason for dropping the paper I' asked Henry Maxwell. All the rest were listening eagerly. "There are a good many different reasons. Some say they want a paper that prints all the news, meaning by that the crime details, sensations like prizefights, scandals and horrors of various kinds. Others object to the dis continuance of the Sunday edition. I have lost hundreds of subscribers by that action, although I have made sat isfactory arrangements with many of the old suscribers by giving even more in the extra Saturday edition than they formerly had in the Sunday issue. My greatest loss has cume from a falling off in advertisements and from the attitude I have felt obliged to take on political questions. This last action has really cost me more than any other. The bulk of my subscribers are intensely par tisan. I may as well tell you all frank ly that if I continue to pursue the plan -Whicn 1 nonesuy oeueve oesua wuum iu the matter of political issues and their treatment from a nonpartisan and mbral standpoint The News will not ba able to pay its operating expenses un less one factor in Raymond can be de pended on." He paused a moment, and the room was very quiet Virginia seemed spe cially interested. Her face glowed with interest. It was like the interest of a person who bad h-'cu thinlnr.!? hard of the same thing Noru u wei.t on now to mention. - will not take a paper unless it is strip ped largely of the Christian and moral purpose ? I may also say in this fellow ship gathering that, owing to recent complications in my business affairs outside of my paper, I have been obliged to lose a large part of my for tune. I have had to apply the same rule of Jesus' probable conduct to certain transactions with other men who did not apply it to their conduct, and the result has been the loss of a great deal of money. , "As I understand the promise we made, we were not to ask any questions about 'Will it pay?' but all our ac tion was to be based on the one ques tion, 'WTiat would Jesus do ?' Acting on that rule of conduct, I have been obliged to lose nearly all the money I have accumulated in my paper. It is not necessary for me to go into details. There is no question with me now, aft er the three weeks' experience I have j had, that a great many men would lose vast sums of money under the present system of business if this rule of Jesus were honestly obeyed. I mention my loss here because I have the fullest faith in the final success of a daily paper conducted on the lines I have recently laid down, and I had planned to put into it my entire fortune in order to win final success. As it is now, unless, as I said, the Christian people of Ray mond, the church members and profess ing disciples, will support the paper with subscriptions and advertisements, I cannot continue its. publication on the present basis. " Virginia asked a question. She had followed .Mr. Norman's confession with the most intense eagerness. "Do you mean that a Christian daily ought to be endowed with a large sum, like a Christian college, in order to make it pay?" "That is exactly what I mean. I save laid out plans for putting into The Sews such a variety of material, in TOch a strong and truly interesting way, that it would more than make up for whatever was absent from its col umns in the way of un-Chrlstian mat ter, but my plans called for a very large outlay of money. I am very confident that a Christian daily such as Jesus would approve, containing only what he would print, can be made to succeed financially if it is planned to the right lines, but it will take a large sum of money to work out the plans. " "How much do you think t" asked Yiririni oui1- oughly Christian anticipation of great achievements in the world of newspaper life as it had opened up to him within tne last tew seconds. 1 v..,,,. "Then, " said Virginia, speaking as if the- thought were fully considered, "I am ready to put that amount of money into the paper on the one condi-' tion, of course, that it be carried on as it has been begun. " - "Thank God!" exclaimed Henry Maxwell softly. Edward Norman was pale. The rest were looking at Virginia. She had more to say. . "Dear friends." she went on, and there was a sadness in her voioe that made an impression on the rest that deepened when they thought it over afterward, "I do not want any of you ! to credit me with an act of grat gen- erosity or philanthropy. I have come to know lately that the money which I have called my own is not ray own, but God's. If I, as a steward of his, see Borne wise way to invest his money, it Is not an occasion of vainglory or thanks from any one simply because I '. have proved honest in my administra tion of the funds he has asked me to use for his glory. I have been thinking of this very plan for some time. The fact is, dear friends, that in our com ing fight with the whisky power in Raymond, and it has only just begun, we shall need The News to champion the Christian side. You all know that all the other papers are for the saloon. As long as the saloon exists the work of rescuing dying souls at the Rectangle is carried on at a terrible disadvantage. What can Mr. Gray do with his gospel meetings when half his converts are drinking people, daily tempted and en ticed by the saloon on every corner? The Christian daily we must have. It would be giving up to the enemy to have The News fail. I have great cou- Sdence in Mr. Norman's ability. I have not seen his plana, but I have the con fidence that he has in making the paper succeed if it is carried forward on a large enough scale. "I cannot believe that Christian In telligence in journalism will be inferior to un-Christia.n intelligence, even when it comes to making the paper pay finan cially. So that is my reason for putting this money God's, not mine into this powerful dgent for doing as Jesus would. If we can keep such a paper going for one year, I shall be willing to ree that amount of money used in the experiment Do not thank me. Do not ronsider mv rromise a wonder's! thing. Wnat nave f done Wltn .tfou s money all these years but gratify my own selfish, physical, personal desires 1 What can I do with the rest of it but try to make some reparation for what I have itolen from God T That is the w;ty I look at it now. I believe it is what Jesus would do. " ' Over the lecture room swept that un seen yet distinctly felt wave of Divine presence. No one spoke for awhile. Henry Maxwell, standing there where the faces lifted their intense gaze into his, felt what he had already felt be fore, a strange setting back out of the nineteenth century into the first, when the disciples had all things in common, and a spirit of fellowship must have flowed freely between them such as the First church of Raymond had never known. How much had his church membership known of ' this fellowship in daily interests before this little com pany had begun to do as Jestfs would do? It was with difficulty, that be thought of. his 'present age and its sur roundings. The same thought was pres ent with all the rest also. . There was an unspoken comradeship suoh as they had never known. It was present with them' while Virginia was speaking ' and ' dur ing the silence that followed. If it had been defined by any one of them, it would perhaps have taken some such shape as this "If I shall in the course of my obedi ence to uiy promise meet with loss 01 trouble i the world, I can depend upon the genuine, practical sympathy and fellowship of any other Christian in this room who has with me made the pledge , to do all things by the rule, 'What j would Jesus do?' " I All this the distinct wave of spiritual ! power expresHed It had the effect that a physical miracle may nave naa on the early di.-eiples in giving them a feeling of confidence in their Lord that helped thern to face loss and martyrdom I with courage and even joy. Before they went away this time . there were seveTal confidences like those ! of Edward Norman Some of the young men told of the loss of places owing to their honest obedience to their promise. Alexander Powers Bpoke briefly of the j fact that the commission had promised , to take action at the euiiieet date pos sible. He was already at his old work of telegraphy It was a significant fact that since bis action in resigning his position neither his wife nor daughter bad appeared in public. No one but himself knew the bitterness of that fam ily estrangement and misunderstanding of the higher motive. Yet many of the disciples present in the meeting carried similar burdens. There were things which they could not talk about. Henry Maxwell, from his knowledge of his church people, could almost certainly know that obedience to this pledge had produced in the hearts of families sep aration of sympathy nnd even the intro duction of enmity and hatred. Truly, "a man's foes are they of his own household" when the rnle of Jesus is ODeyea by some ana aisooeyeu by oiu srs. Jesus is a great divider of life. One must walk either parallel with him or directly across his path. . -But more than any other feeling at this meeting rose the tide of fellowship for one another. Henry Maxwell watch ed it, trembling for its climax, which he knew was not yet reached. When it was, where would It lead them? He did not know, but he was not unduly alarmed about it, only he watched with growing wonder the results of that simple promise as it was being obeyed in these various lives. Those results were already being . felt all over the city. Who could measure their influ ence at the end of the year ? : 1 , One practical form of this fellowship showed itself in the assurances which Edward Norman received in support of his paper. There was a general flocking toward him when the meeting closed, and the response to his appeal for help from- the Christian disciples in : Ray mond was fully understood by this little company. . The value of such a paper to the homes and in behalf of good citizen--ship, especially at the present crisis in the eity, could not be measured. It re mained to be seen what could be done now that the paper was endqwed so lib erally. But it still was true; as EdwarJ Norman insisted. " that money alone could not make the paper a power. It must receive tho support and sympathy of tho Christians in Raymond before it could be counted as one of the great Christian forces of the city. . The week that followed this Sunday meeting was one of great excitement in Raymond. It was the week of the election Donald Marsh, true to bis promise, took up bis cross and bore it manfully, bnt with shuddering, with groans and even tears, for bis deepest conviction was touched, and he tore himself out of the scholarly seclusion of years with rain and anguish that eot him more than anything he had ever done us a follower ut Christ With him were a few of the college profewors who had m;i the pledge in the l-'irst church Their exeri' lire uii'l mirur.nx were the h.iujh tv tile prruid iiv'h, t u their iKolu'u.DU from ad lu u.Uica i, citizenship had l cu t'le ku :e T' e same wa aUo true uf Henry Max win I who plnngcd into the horror of thin fight agairiMt whisicy and its allies with a sickening dread of each day's en counter with it Never had he bornt such a cross. He staggered nndpr (t and in the brief intervals when hecii'i in from the work and sought the qe of his study for rest the sweat broke out on his forehead, and he felt the ac tual terror of one who marches into unseen, unknown horrors. Looking back on it afterward, he was amazed at his experience. He was not a coward, but be felt a dread that any man of his habits feels when confronted suddenly with a duty which carries with it the doing of certain things so unfamiliar that the actual details connected with it betray his ignorance and fill him with the sbpje of humiliation. TO b continued. THE HOME GOLD CURE. An Ing-eniotu Treatment ' by whluh ... Uraukkrda ere Boinr Cured D'l . Spite of Themaelvea. lu No Moxloua Doaea. Mo Weakening of the Mervea. A Pl aaant and fmltlve Cure " - for the Liquor Habit. It is now generally known and under stood that Drunkenness is a disease and not weakness. 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