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Show Beauty and Strength Strength without weight is the great thing in a trunk. Durability and extreme lightness combine in a Style and finish meet the taste of people who like the correct thing. There are no trunks so good as Drucker's. For sale by W.H. Wright & Sons Co. No. 255. Drucker Trunk. Iron binding, Brass trimmed, heavy Canvas covering, two Strapes. two Trays. Excelsior Locks. Size 32 inch. $10.00; 34 inch. $12.00; 36 inch. $13.00. No. 223. Drucker trunk. Iron binding, Brass trimmed, Steel edges, two Straps, figured muslin lining and two Trays, Brass Excelsior Lock. 34 inch. $14.00 No. 503. Fibre binding, Brass trimming, two Straps, Lock. Hollen Linen lining, two Trays. 34 inch. $15.00; 36 inch. 17.00. No. 208. Steamer Trunk. Brass trimming. Brass Lock, one Tray. 36 inch. $10.00. We also carry a full line of Bags, Suit-ca-es and Telescopes, at all prices. Said Baron Rothschild It takes more wit to keep a fortune after you have made it than it does to make it. So it is with a reputation. The men who make tanner Good Clothes spend more head and hand work to maintain the good reputation which their garments have earned, than the average manufacturer knows how to spend. There is but one clothing standard that we follow the best. Suits $10.00 to $45.00 Watson=Tanner Clothing Co. The Acorn Volume Six NOVEMBER Number One Grandfather's Repentance Life's too short for spite, but long enough for love. And love lives on forever and forever. It links the worlds that circle on above: 'Tis God's first law, the universal lever." Ella Wheeler Wilcox. "Elizabeth," called an old man who was busily engaged in greasing a small, one-seated buggy. Receiving no answer to his call, he repeated the name again, a little louder. Finally a sweet, elderly woman came to the kitchen door and pleasantly asked what he wanted. "Elizabeth, those chickens of Harris' are in the garden again. I wish you would have Mary watch them. I have spent all of the forenoon in driving chickens. It seems to me that Harris delights in seeing his chickens torment me nearly to death." Forgetting to continue his work, as he had intended to do he stood for some time in a thoughtful attitude with a very perplexed expression on his face. Grandfather was a true man of the old type: industrious, economical, fearless in the defense of right but repentant when proved wrong. He prided himself on keeping his word, regardless of whether it was spoken in anger or in kindness. He was exceedingly generous and accomodating to his few chosen friends but never did anything for his enemies. His greatest pleasure was to realize that his lot was the cleanest, best kept lot in all the neighborhood, and that his garden was the finest garden in a day's travel. From my earliest recollection he had always kept a horse and a cow but never indulged in raising chickens for they would spoil his garden. If Grandfather was industrious Grandmother was equally so. Her house always looked as if she had freshly cleaned it. She was known, not only for her housekeeping ability but for her kind and cordial manner. Many a time, people both old and young have gone to her for her encouraging advise. She never failed to sympathize with the sad or enter into the pleasures of the |