The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 20, 1892, Image 7

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    ————————————— SA
BEY. DR. TALMAGE.
day Sermon.
Subject: “Half a Planet.”
}
TexT:
Deuteronomy iit.,
Ro God said to Moses in Bible times, and
fc He said to Cristoforo Colombo, the son of
a wool comber of Genos, more than four
hundred yearsago.
looking chiefly towar i the east,
But while Columbus
called after it was Latiniz»d, stood studying
maps and examining globe: and reading cos.
mography, God said to bim, “Lift up thine
eves toward the west.” The fact was it must
a
ts
scissors with one blade, like a sack on one
side of a camel, needing a sack on ths other
side to balances it.
world with no bridegroom,
I donot wonder that Columbus was not
satisfied with half a world, and so went to
work to find the other half, The pieces of
carved wood that were floated to the shores
of Europe by a wasteriy gale, and two dead
human faces, unlike anvthing he had seen
before, likewise floated from the west, wera
to him the voice of God saying, “Lift up
thine eyes toward the west.”
Old navigators said to younz Columbus,
‘It can't be done.” The republic of Genoa
said, “It can't be done.” Alphonso V, said,
“It can’t be done.” A comm ttee on mari-
time affairs, to whom the subject was sub.
mitted, declared, ‘It can’t be dona,” Vene.
tians said, *'It can't be done After awhile
the story of this poor but ambitious Colum-
bus reaches the ear of Queen Isabella, and
she pays eighty dollars to buy him a decant
suit of clothes, so that he may be fit to ap-
pear before loyaity
The interview in the palace was
ful. Money enouzh was borrowed to fit out
the expedition. There they are, the threes
ships, in the Gulf of Cadiz, Spain. If you
ask me which bave been the most famous
boats of the world, | would, say, first Noah's
ship, that wharfed on Mount Ararat: sec-
ond, the boat of buirushes, in which Moses
floated the Nile: thir !, the Mayflower, that
nut out from Plymouth with the Pilgrim
Fathers, and now theses thres vessels that on
this the Friday morning, August 3, 1492 are
rocking on the ripples,
There is the Santa Maria, only ninety fest
long, with four masts ani eight anclors,
‘The captain walking the dec’t is fifty-seven
vears old, his hair white, for at thicty-live
he was gray, and his face is round, his nose
aquiline and his stature a little taller than
the average.
There are two doctors in this flset of ships
and a few landsmnen, adventurers wao are
ready to risk their necks in a wild expe.
dition. There are en>uzh provisions for a
year. ‘(Captain Colu nbus, where are you
sailing for™ do not know.” ‘How lon
before you will g»t there? *'I cannot say.
“All ashore that are going!” is heard, anl
those who wish to remain go to the laud,
For sixteen days the wind is dead east
and that pleas:s the captain becauswit blows
them farther and farther away from the
Eurupean coast ani farther on toward the
shore ol another country, if there is any.
To add interest to the voyage on the
twentieth dav out a violent stora: sweeps
the sea, and the Atlantic ocean trie: what it
can do with the Santa Maria, the Vinla and
the Nina. The mutinous crew woull nave
killed Columbus had it not Leen foi the gen-
eral opinion on shipboard that ne was th»
only one that could take them back home in
safety,
The promise of a silk walstcoatand forty
dollars in money to the man woo should first
discover land appeasal them somewnat, but
the indignation and blasphemy and threats
of assassination must have been awlal,
On Friday morning at 2 o'clock, just long
enough after Thursday to make it sure that
it was Friday, and so gives another blow at
the world’s idea of unlucky days—on Fri.
day morning. October 12, 149, a gun from
the Vinta signaled “land ahead Then the
ships lay to and the boats were lowered, and
Captain Chr.stopher Columbus first stepped
upon the shore amid the song birds and
the air a surge of redolence anil took pos
session in the name of the Father, aad the
Son and the Holy Ghost,
So the voyage that began with ths swra-
ment ended with **Jloria in Excelsis Ds”
From that day onward yeu say there can
be nothing for Columbas but honors re
wards, rapasodies, palaces and world wide
applavse, No! nol! On his way back to
Spain the ship was so wren~hed by the
terpast and so threatenel with destruction
that he wrote a brief account of his discov
ery and put it in a cask and threw it over.
board that the world might not lose the ad-
vantage of his adventures. Honors awaited
him on the beach but be undertool a se oni
voyage, and with it came all maligning and
persecution and denunciaJion and poverty.
He was called a land grabber, « liar, a
cheat, a fraud, a deciiver of Natioas,
Speculators roubei hia of his good name,
courtiers depreciated his discoveries, and
there came to him ruined health and im-
prisonment and caains, of which he said
while he rattled thom on his wrists, *'l
will wear them as a mement) of the grati-
tude of princes.” Amid k2en appreciation
of the world's abuss and cruelty, and with
body writhing in the tortures of gout, he
groaned out his last words, “In manus
tuas Domine commendo spiritum meun”
~*fnto Thy bands, O Lord, 1 commend my
spirit.”
Of course he had regal obsequies, That is
the way the world tries to atone for its
mean treatment of great benefactors, First
buried in the church of Santa Maria, Seven
years afterward removed to Saville, Twen-
ty-three years afterward removed to Ban
Domingo. Finaay removed to Cuba, Four
postmortem journeys irom fepuicher to
sepulcher.
What most impresses me in all that
wonarous jife, which for the next twelve
months we will be commemorating by ser-
mon and song and military paraile and
World's Fair and congress: of Nations, is
something 1 have never heard stated, and
that is that the discovery ol Americ: wasa
religious discovery and in the name of
Goo. Columbus, by the study of the proph.
ecies, and by wnat Zechariah and Micah and
David and Isiab bad said about the “ends of
the earth,” was persuade | to gooutani find
the “ends of the earth,” and be feit himeelt
called by God to carry Christianity to thy
“envls 01 the earth.”
Atheisin has no right here; infidelity has
no right here; vagabondis.n has no right
here. And as God is pot apt to fail in any
of His undertakings (at any rates | have naver
heard of His having anything ty do within
failure), America is gos to be Gospelizad,
and from the Golden
fornia to the Narrows of New York harvor,
SOAS
Le
foot of Bouth America, from Bering straits
land,
A divine influence will yet sweap the cone
tinent that will wake {aquity drop liks
slacked lime, and mato the most bistant ine
Adelity ducinre it was only fouling when it
wa
atheism announce that it always did be
lieve in the God of Nations
It would not do for our world in ite lost
and ruined state to have communication
with other worlde, Tt would il their
morals, But wait until this world ix fully
redeemed, as it will be, and then perbaos
interstellar correspondence mav be opened,
The great Italian navigator also impresses
me with the idea that when one does a
good thing he cavnot appreciate its ramifi-
entions, To the moment of his death Co-
Jumbus never knew that he had discovered
Ameriea, but thought that Cuba was a part
of Asia. He thonght the Island Hie
paniola was the Oolir of Solomon, He
thought he had only ovened a new way to
old Asia. Had he known what North and
Routh America were and are, and that he
had found a country thres mi
thousand
wide, ten flew Jong, of seventeen
miles Jong,
million square miles and four times
too much for mortal man to endure,
He had no idea that the time would come
intelligent Nations on the other side the sea
for the most part of a year reciting his won-
1t tno’ centuries to reveal the
When Manbattan Island was sold to the
foreseen
America, that now stands on it, Can a man
who
distributes tracts, or a teacher who instructs
a clase, or a passerby who utters encourag-
result?
insignificant in your own eyes or in the eyes
of others, touches worlds larzer the one
Columbus discovere 1.
important things? There are no unimoor-
tant things, Infinity'is made up of infini-
tesmals,
After the battle of Copenhagen, Nelson,
the Admira', went into a hospital an 1 halted
at the bed of a woundel sailor wuo had loss
his arm and sald, “Well, Jacs, what is ths
matter with you?’ and the sailor revlied,
“Lost my right arm, your honor,” and Nel-
son looked down at his own empty slesve
and said: “Well Jack, then vou and I are
both spoiled for fisherman, Cheer up, my
brava fellow!” and that sympathetic worl
cheered the entire hospital,
While studying the life of this Italian nav.
while wo are diligently looking
thing we find another, Columbus starcl
to find India, but found Americas, Go
and do your duty diligently asd prayeciuily,
and if you do not find what you lookel
you will find something better,
Hargreaves, by the upsettinz of a ma.
chines and the motion of its wheels while uo.
pet, discoverel the spinning jenny. So, my
friend, go on faithfully an! prompt'y witi
your work, ant if you do not gat the sucess
vou seek, and your plans upss, vou will get
something jus as goo ian {i prrhaocs htt
Another look at that caresr the ad.
miral of ths Santa Maria persuy les me that
it is not to be expected that this world will
do 1ts bard workers fu'l jas ica. If any mn
ouzht to have bem teeatad well from firss
to last it was Co umbus He had his fauits,
#t others depct them. fat a greater
soul the esntures have nod promos,
Thais continent ouziht to bhava bam
Columbia, after tha her> wad
covered it, or Isabelliana, after the
who furoished the means for the
tion. No. The worid did not do
tice while he was alive, anl wav shoud it
be exoected to do him justices after he was
dead? Columbus in a dungeon! Wagoat a
thought?! Columbus in irons! Whaat a
spectacle!
In one of the last letters which CoHlunbus
sent to bis son, he wrota this lamsatation:
“[ receive nothing of the revenues dus me.
Ilive by borrowing. Little have I profit
by twenty years of sarvics wita suc Tolls
and perils, since at prewat [ do not own a
roof in Spain, 1¢ 1 desira to oat or siesp, |
have no recourse but the inn, andl for ths
most times hive not wheraw thal to pay my
bill,” Be not surprise], my hearar, it you
suffer inju tics,
[.»t us be suras that wa hava the right
pilot, ani the right chart, and the righ
captain and that we stars 1a tas rizat di~
rection. It will be to ev2i of us wh lov
the Lord a voyage more woadarial for die
covery than that waich Columbus tos
Aye, fellow mariners, over the
roigh sea of this life, through thy
fogs and mists of earth, §2
you not already the outlina of the better
country? Land ahead! Land ahead! Near.
or and nearer wa come to heavenly waw
age. Thorow out the p ants, and step asaors
into the arms of your kindred, wao have
been waiting and watching for the hour o
your disembarkation. Tarouzh the ric
graces of Christ, our Lord, may we all have
such blissful arrivail
for one
on
104
of
calle l
dis.
queen
expe Li
him jus
On a Cattle Ranch.
man the East
a ranch comprising six
ired thousand
1 how the
inderstand
he
from on
ACTes
cattle
range are
He
steers here, a by
annot
wandering at large over 1
tod tos the
ected ogether SOPs
ncn of
and a single steer or
i"
{ and
hey disappear
: 1 4 . #1
eyen
as 1
ding
might
away at
i But
le problem to the ranch-
the
Hs
tha
ranch this is
iperintendent of
receives an order call
one thousand head of cattle
The breed of cattle the firm wants is
grazing in a corner of the range
fenced in by barbed wire, and marked
pale-blue for convenience on a beau-
tiful map blocked out in colors, like
a patch-work quilt, which hangs in
the superintendent's office. When
the order is received he sends a Mexi-
can on a pony to wll the men near
that particular pale-blue pasture to
round up a thousand head of cattle,
and at the same time directs his su-
perintendent to send in a few days as
many cowboys to that pasture as are
needed to “hold” a thousand head of
cattle on the way to the railroad sta-
tion The boys on the pasture,
which we will suppose is ten miles
square, will take ten of their number
and five extra ponies apiece, which
one man leads, and from one to
another of which they shift their
saddles as men do in polo, and go
directly to the water tanks in the
ten square miles of land. A cow will
not often wander more than two and
a half miles from water, and so with
the water tank or a dammed canyon
full of rain water as a rendezvous,
the finding of the cattle is compara-
tively easy, and ten men can round
up a thousand head in a day or two.
When they have them all together,
the cowboys who are to drive them
to the station have arrived and taken
ing for
of the firm and the superintendent
of the ranch ride through the herd
together,
the fitness of any one or more of the
attle, an outsider is called in, and
his decision is final. The cattle are
then driven onto the cars, and the
ER — a — ——
A Man with Three Wiwes.
Tn Richafelder township, in Ohio,
lives a man named Adam Roundy,
who recently moved there with his
wife and two other women, who, he
sald, were his daughters, It finally
became known to the neighbors that
all three were Roundy's wives, Fie
nally one explained matters and sald
they were all much in love with him,
and, being unable to agree which
should marry him, determined to all
three elope with him. They seem
contented with their lot.
Cremation In America.
The advocates of cremation have
that “dust
is irrevocable,
inevitable: that
it: we nay
say the mandate
return to dust”
is
Since the
the process Js delayed tne
the living, cremation is a beneficent
Its growth in Europes
has been surprising, and Italy
there are large numbers crema-
tories, and in this country the preju-
dice against the movement is de-
creasing. It is only eleven years
since the formation of the New York
Cremation Society, the first institu-
vion of the kind in the United States,
und not until the year 1885 was the
first operative crematory Iinaugu-
rated, vet there are now in various
parts of the States nearly a score of
Yhese incinerators in more or
gontinuous service. The number
cremations which have been con-
tiucted each year in one of these
temples in Buffalo gives a falr idea of
the progress which the sentiment in
favor of this method maxing.
During 1886 eight bodies were incin
erated. and in each successive year to
the end of 1891 the numbers were re-
spectively, 15, 16, 23, 20 and 47. in
this temple everything possible has
been done to mitigate the sadness of
the last ritual, The temple built
dark-brown sandstone,
tower
in
of
1 as
of
is
is
and its
and deep slanting rool
and surrounds
chancel
and det
f
of
(uare
fare covered with ivy
v The
arved
by sloping lawns and
nave are artistic:
orated and the windows are o
stained glass. Th
place privately alter
vice, and the
the undertaker 10 lispo
the family may dircet, or
he left crematory.
the
“ely
vear 1885
ALY
rica
ration
funeral
are geliver
asnies
he
the
“at
ai
formed after organization
v
I
ioneer so has reduced
the
ince tl unward
bodies, wit at
one of their principal tempies
follows: is of fire |
The Process As CArried
The furnace is of
throughout and scparated
distinct but similiar
The body is placed in a chamber di
rectly above that ir the foe
is consumed. The toms of
retorts are but the an
ends are pierced with holes, throug!
which the
pas direct
the flames are not
proach it. The neat
soon liberates cverything v
the body and
conducted through
heated chamtl
doriess and absolute
into
comparmet
which
solid,
heated furnace
while
permitted to ap
of the retort
latile ir
ions are
NIgniy
Si t
ficress
these
and ndere
18 hoe
they pass through the chimney
forms their
Jo the air The tin
sluciog a body to
what
the person when
nace it is about
others
The {1
six
res
egrest
upon the
: 4 y
“ is a
sol sainal
Hel Used
hours from
a tcumperatur
grees to CL, O00 Gel
be ootained
Swellings
Fus The neek., or Gol.
(re, caused mo terrible
loving. and I spent an
oi
fo
ou
us S&mount
for medicines,
take
ia and
f ftir
fo
. fovy works
swelling ver
Mra. Digeiow, He BRE a
Dreath with Pevieet Fase which 1 had
tot done for years ot with Moaod's
Saresapariiia snd am Permanently
f ured.” Mas J. Bicgrow, Fremont Mich
Hood's Maen
Lillones
reduced,
Outline
' 3 ws 4 4
re liver fils, constipation,
wh, TA
URELY a vegetable compound,
inade entirely of roots and herbs
gathered from the forests of
Georgia, and has been used by millions
of people with the best results, It
CURES
All manner of Plood diseases, from the
pest. ferous little boil on your nos: to
the worst cases of inherited blood
taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism,
Catarrh and
SKiN- CANCER
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swirt Srecimic Co, Atlanta, Oa
Ask you doctor what hap-
pens to cod-liver oil when it
gets inside of you.
He will say it is shaken
and broken up into tiny
drops, becomes an emulsion ;
there are other changes, but
this is the first,
He will tell you also that
it is economy to take the oii
broken up, as it is in Scott's
Emulsion, rather than bur-
den yourself with this work,
You skip the taste too.
Let us send you an inter.
esting book on CAREFUL LIV-
ING; free,
& Chemie Louth sth Avenue,
SEB Commas Sorh
tli
THE BODY AND ITS HEALTIL
Der sy Weram Doctor Pavy, per-
wmps the highest authority on diet, says
hat the average man in a state
ute rest can live on sixtesn i
a man doing ordinary light
vork can live on twenty-three ounces,
nd a man doing laborious work needs
rom twenty-six and three-quarter
sunces to thirty ounces, This is food
of nhso
in ounces of
ood a day:
se remembered that everything we eat
sontains more or less water, so that from
‘orty-cight to sixty ounces
to healthy existence,
weording to the work in which a man is
mgaged, Bir Lyon Playfair, another
wthority, gives the following as all that
s necessary for a healthy man to cat in a
week. Three pounds of meat, with one
wound of fat, two ordinary of
read, one ounce of salt and five pints of
nilk: or for the meat, five or six pounds
f oatmeal may be substituted,
of ordinary
‘aod Are Necessary
laaves
Tue Favrr ov OVEREATING It is,
perhaps, true that most Americans eat too
much, The person who eats much, vet
s hungry and grows thin, is not suffering
rom lack of food, but from lack of pow
r to digest the food taken into the stom
why, from
waste should consult hi
or an abnormal
and
NOrY one puts into his stomach more
ood than is digested by but in many
1s08 a great deal of the mats
LO pot do its full sh
i
We live by the oxidation
finatism,
bs
prot
Lato
histo
philos phic Tr.
mineralogist,
among
brain-work
intellectua
brains of adult
Seotchmen by Dr. Pea
thers found some of which ranged
ron Gloz. to 6! 3402. who wer: a Wy ar
abounds
hae
superiority
mere
little to do
Of 15%
welghed
very with
ock
wen
ently of the artisan class; the occapatior
being sailor, printer
and tailor, resp tively, Turner reeords
the case of a boy of fifteen whose 10
Ghoz Madness itself does not
appear to be incompatible with big
brains. Backnill record«< a male ¢ pile ¥
tic whose brain weiched 64% oz. just
the weight of but in such
cades as this it is considered that the con
ditions point to an aver-growth
of the rth tise of the brain,
producing both tt} epileptic state
and the great weigh The heaviest
cord «1 female brain is momtionsd by Dr. |
skae, the weight being 61 1-2 02. This
was an asylum patient who hibored un
Even idiocy, |!
whica is generally characterized by small
ness of brain, may be the mental state of
large-brained i.divideals, Take lately |
met with a male idiot, thirty. seven years |
of age, whose brain weighed 60oz., and |
Langdon Davis ohserved another male |
idiot, aged twenty-two, whose brain
weighed 50 1.202. At the other ex |
treme, very low hrainoweights are only |
consistent with idiocy. The very small
est brain met with was that of a male |
idiot, of twelve years of age which |
weighed only 8 1-207. much less than |
the average weight of the new-born male
infant, which ie given by Dr. Bovd ne
11.6702. Other idiots are recorded with
weights of from 1002. to 150m. The
average weight of the brain of the adult
male Earopaan is 49 to 59. bat, as has
been seen, both sane and insane, may
greatly exceed or fall below this withom
any connection being possibly established
between the size of their brain and their
mental state. But it is definitely certain
in the opinion of experts, that if even in
the most uncultivated peoples the brain.
weight falls below 800: , and in the most
cultivated below 87ors, ur sa, the limit
of intelligence is reached, ’
of three of them
weighed
Cuvier's:
in
A Difficulty Solved,
mir Frederick Goldsmid tells
amusing anecdote about the construc
telegraph line from Bagdad,
Minor, to the Persian
heran,
The frontier line between Turkey
and Persia was so undeflnable that a
tract of no less than seventeen miles
of land over which the telegraph
would have to be carried was in dis-
pute, each of the two countries claim-
ing the right wo its possession,
Now, the engineering stores which
our Government supplied to the
Turkish Government differed to those
supplied to the Persian Government.
The former had wooden telegraph
poles, the later iron The Per-
sinn Government their jealous
hatred feared that if
is
in
capital of Te-
Ones
in
of the Turks,
disputed territory,
regard them as a proof
ritory was Turkish.
On the other hand,
jected to iron being
in the far future they should be ad.
duced by Persia as evidence that the
land was hers.
The way Sir Frederick contrived ta
get out of the diffienlty te
his ingenuity Be
up first a wooden pole, then
one
would
the ter-
posterity
that
the Turks obs
poles
credit
He
an
then
aid
and resource,
then another w
WGC,
fron again, and so on
wood an iron—for the
Leen miles,
A
he
for har has
'
al INGE
1 “
WTesLerg
demand
imperative
as drive
other parts. For a
nobleman Ww
Ta
Wn
}
80
States 10
mining
() Mervice,
can as if:
4 fey * f
dunger of lmpressmen
i his escape, however.
nT
That's Wha! Breught the Factories,
14 For rise
1aaade goo
te je
\ 2
3 Hight can be seen
tance than a white light; but
erse x the case
When Nature
Needs assistance it may be best fo render it
promptly, but one should remember to use
even the most perfect remedies only when
needed, hie best sand most simple and gentle
remedy in the Syrup of Figs manufactured by
the California Fig Syrup Co.
+e fa shorter i
{
i
than among the
Train Leaded With Steve Polish
seek Messrs, M
well Know Hisiy
in Petaluma
ry bous
y artesian wel
Wi gallons f walter eve
Brown's Iron Bitters oures Dyspepsia Malin.
ria, |} yasness and teneral Deblin Gives
Eire aids Digestion, ton
cronies appetite, The best
Mothers, wank women and
Leen
ir your ack or you are all worn out,
od for nothiug i= general debility.
firown's iron Bitters w 1 ctire you, make yon
strong. Clea your liver, and give a good agp
prelite—tones Lhe Derves,
There wh
sing I
are men
Lo deal Jo
ail drugesia,
r ight is called a “oul” because the
feliow is reduced to pulp
1f afflicted wilh Sore Eyes use Dr. [sane
Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it at
etn. per battle,
it's a queer man who wouldn't
sie oats than his corns
1JACOBS QO]
Cures Pain Promptly.
¢ ADIE wdf vou wid) to make MONEY raer at
i your own hives, address incinding eters
Hiss DORA GG, HOYT, Santh Bead, Ted,
AT HOME, BIG PAN,
KILMER & CO,
Addrecs, With Stang
Mouth Send, Ina |
s La.
'AUTION .~ Beware
stituting »
(Rinne meney uo.
09.897, 5 DfvEmvED and Paints which stain
the hands, injure the ros, sod be i)
The Ristug Sun Stove Polish w Bh itiant, Odor.
sees Dursifie and the consumer pays for uo tin
or glam package Wilh every purchase,
“August
Flower”
“I have been afflicted with bilious.
ness and constipation for fifteen years
and first one and then another prep-
tried, but to no purpose. A friend
recommended August Flower and
words cannot describe the admira-
tion in which I hold it. It has given
me a new lease of life, which before
was a burden. Its good qualities
and wonderful merits should be made
known to everyone suffering with
dyspepsia and biliousness, JEssn
Barker, Printer, Humboldt, Kas.@
DR.KILMER'S
Pain in the Back,
k-dust
i, rheumestism.
Kidney Complaint,
Lniaboetes, dropsy,
joints or hips, sediment in urine like br
reqgueat calls or retents
high colored urine,
Urinary Troubles,
Ringing sensu
Sure io the parts, uretiral
Disordered Liver,
Host or tungue
ooaled, Const pation
scanty or
was when
oiding, disterss profes
rritation, stricture,
dark ier the eye
if not
price paid
Size, $1.00 Size,
Trew ta tion Tres
Mmixouamros, N. 1.
me Bottle
you the
"se contents of (
GCuarsttes
fed, Druggiote will refon
At Drugglsts, 50c,
luwsliae Floss
Di. Knnuex & Co
teem
sulde 1
ones
TEVENTEEN EO VENTY
Bile Beans
Small.
Guarantesd to cure Billous Attacks Sick.
Headache sod Constipation. 40 in
bottle, Price @¢. For sale by druggists
Picture "7, 1%, 70” snd sample dose Tree.
4 F. SMITH & CO. Provrictors, NEW YORK
“MMOTHER’S
. FRIEND”
is a scientificaliy prepared Liniment
and harmless; every ingredient is of
recognized value and in constant uso
by the medical profession. It short.
ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes
Danger to life of Mother and Child,
Book “To Mothers” mailed free, con-*
taining wsluable information and
voluntary testimonials, ’
Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt
of price, $1.50 per botije.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR C0. Atlanta, Ba.
Sold by all druggists,
us the names
OVERS ? MUSIC =5:222
of tes musical friends plainly written and ew
— Close 8) 0enis In stamps or postal note, will red
eet e, portage free. b return mall sur magnifies
cent collection of over
with the musie for esch 600 LATEST SONCS
one, bound in & thick bandssme volume. This is tell
grandest collection of Bentimental, Comic, Ope
and Ethlovian Songs ever published, amd ined
ail ibe populer favorites “ COMRADES
“ ANNIE ROONEY, #80. A whole year's
¥ for the cost of “30d & pleoe of music. ¥ 1 “TO
FO. COMIMY, Broadway, New
FRAZER RExse
BEST IN THE WORLD,
for wearing qualities are ahs pmaeed,
outlasting three boxes of any other brand,
affected by heat. GET THE BEND
FOR BALE BY DEALLAS GENERALL
whe will seal
Peo's Remedy fr Ostarvh 0 Oe
floss, Piasiemt 16 Dee and Cheapest,
sold By douggisis or sent Gy maeill
He BT Hassles Warres, Pa
AAA AU
BX V4