The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 10, 1892, Image 7

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    1. 1. TALE
The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun-
day Sermon.
Subject: “Migration of Birds.”
TEXT* “The story in the heaven knowstl
her apponted times, and the turtle, and
the crane, and the swallow observe the time
0 f their coming: but my peanule know not tha
Judgment of the Lord." —Jeremiah viil., 7.
When God would set fast a beautiful
thought He plants it in a tree. When He
would put it afloat He fashions it into a
fish. When He would have it glide the air
He molds it into a bird. My text speaks
of four birds of beautiful instinct—the
stork, of such strong affection that it ig
allowed familiarly to come, in Holland and
Germany. and build its nest over the door.
way. the sweet dispositioned turtledove,
mingling in color white and black aad
brown and ashen and chestnut: the crane
with vo.ce like the ciang of a tru mpet; the
swallow, swift as a dart, shot out of ths bow
of heaven, fallinz, wounting, skimming,
sailing—four birds startod by the prophet
twenty-five centuries ago, yet flying on
through the ages, with rousing truth under
glossy wing and in the clutch of stout claw,
: suppose it may have been this very season
of the year—autumn—and the prophet out
of deors, thinking of the impeonitence of the
people ot bis day, bears a great cry over-
bead. i
Now you know it is no easy thing for ons
with ordinary delicacy of eyesight to look
into the deep blue of the noonday heaven,
but the prophet looks up, and there are
flocks of storks and turtledoves and cranes
and swallows drawn out in long lines for
fight southward, As is their habit, the
cranes had arranged toemselves into two
lines, making ag angie—a wedge splitting
the air with wild val old
crane, with commanding call, bidiing
them onward, wile ths towns: and ths
“ities, and the continents slid under thom.
be prophet, almost blinded from looking
into the deszzling heavens, stoops down and
begins to thins how mu or the Dir is
are in sagaci a 1 peir safety than men
about theirs, and he puts his hand upon ths
pen and begins to write, “Che stork in the
ieavens knoweth her appointe! times, and
the turtle, and the crane, and the swallow
serve the time of their coming: but my
people Know not the juigmaent of the
Lord.”
If you were in tha field to-day, in the
slump of trees at the corner of the fleid you
would see a convention of birds, noisy as the
American congress the last nignt before ad.
journment, or as Eozlisn parliament
when some unfortunate member proposes
more economy in gqu+en’s hous:nold—a con-
tention of binds all mlking at once, moving
and passing resolutions on the subject of
nigration; some proposiag to go wW0O-mor-
FOW, Some moving that they go to-day
sore moving that they go to Brazil, some
to Florida, some to the tablelands of Mexico
but all unanimous in the fact that th *¥ must
go soon, for tuey pave marching oriers
from the Lord, written on the first white
sheet of the frost and in the pictorial of the
manging leaves,
There is not a belter kingfisher, or a
chaffinch, or a fire crested wren, or a
plover, or a red legged partridge t exe
pects to spend the winter at the south, for
the apartments have already been orders |
for them mm South America or in Africa,
and after thousands of miles of flight they
will stop in the ve troc where tasy
last January Farewell, brig plumage !
Until spring weather, away! Fly on, great
bad of heavenly musicians! Strew the
continent with music, and whether from
northern fields, or Carolinian swamps, or
Brazilian groves men see your wings or
bear your voice, nay they bithink them
selves of the solemn words of the text, “The
stalk in the heaven knowth her appointad
timer, aud the turtle and the cranes and the
swallow observe the time of their coming;
ba: my people know not ths ju lgmeat of
the Jord ™
1 propose, so far as God may help me, this
morning, carry out the idea of the text to
show that the birus « th have more %1-
gacity than men And | Zin by particu-
ar:zing and saving that mingle music
with their works. The most serious unfer-
taking of a biry's life is this anuual travel
from the Hudson to the Amazon, from the
Thames to Naturalists tell us that
they arrive there thin and weary and plu
mage ruffl :d, and yet they go singing all
way: the ground, the jower ne of
music: the sky,
themselves, the 10
between,
It is a good sign
man whistle, It isa ix in
hear him hum a rougdeiay, 1
better sign whea you hear bim sing t
words of isaac Walls or Charles Wesley.
A violin chorded and strung, if somethiag
accidentally strike it, makes music, and 1
suppose there is such a thing as haviog our
bearts s¢ attuned by divine grace that
even the rough collisions of life will mage a
beavenly vitration. | do not believe that
the power of Lhristian song has yet been
fully tried, I believe that it you could roil
the “(Ld Huudred” doxology throuzn Wall
street it would put an eni to any financial
disturbance! | believe that the discords
and the sorrows, and the sins of the worll
Are fo be swept out by braves born halle
luiahs
Some ono ashed Haydn, the celebratel
musician, why be aways composed such
cheeriul music, “Way,” he said, “I cans
do otherwise. When I taink of God my
foul is so iui of joy that the notes leap
and dance from mv pen I wish wa mighs
all sxuit melodionsly before ‘the lord,
With God for our Father and Christ for
our Haviour, and heaven for our home, and
angels for future comnanions, and eternity
for a lifetime, we should strike all the notes
of joy. Going through the wilderness of
this world let us remember that we are on
the way to the summery c.ime of heaven,
and from the migratory populations flying
through this autumnal air learn always to
keep singing,
Children of the Heavenly King,
As ye journey sweetly ming
Sing your Saviour's worthy praises,
Glorious in His works and ways,
City the
¥
A
+
the
sent
peat
ih idee
tha Nile,
12 a still
ho
Ye are traveling home to God,
Inthe way your (athers trod;
They are happy now, and we
Boon their happiness shall see,
"he charch of Gol never wili bs a trl
nmphant church until it be omes a singing
church,
I go turther and remark that the birds of
the sir are wiser than we in the fast that
in their migration they fly very high. Dur
ing the summer, when they are in the
fields, they often come witain reach of the
gun, but when they start for the annual
Right southward they take their places
midheaven and go straight as an arrow to
the mark, The longest rille that was ever
brought to shoulder cinnot reach them.
Would to God that wa were as wise as ths
stork and crane in our flight heavenward!
We fiy so low that wa are within easy range
of the world, the flesh and the devil, We
are brouzht down by temptations that
sught not to come witnin a mile of reacaing
{
as.
Ub, for som» of the faith of George Mal.
fer, of Entlani, and Alfred Cookman, ones
of the church militant, now of the church
irinmphant! So poor is the typeof piety in
he ecourch of God now taal men actually
faricaturs the idea that there is any such
thing as a higher life, Moles never did be-
eve in eagles. But, my orethren, bocauss
we have not reachel these heights ourselves,
thall we deride the (act that there are any
moh heights?
A man was once talking to Bruns, the
famons engineer, about tha jength of the
railroad from Lon ra to Bristol, The en.
gineer said: “It is not very great. We
sinll have after a while a steamer runni
from Bogland to New York.” Taey laugh
alm to scorn, but we haves gone so far now
that we have ceassl to isugh at any
hing as impossible for human achievemant,
Then, I ask, is anything impossible for the
Lord? I do not believe that tiod exhausts
ull His graces in Paul and Latimer and Ed.
ward Payson. 1 believe tnere are higher
Joints of Christian attainment to be reached
You tell me that Paul went up to the
tiptop of the Alps of Caristian attainment,
Then [ tell you that the stork and crane
have foun t above the Alps plenty of roon
tor free flying. We go out and we con
tiem agin;
but staying all the time in tae old encamp-
nent we have the same old battles to figat
aver. Why not whip out our temptations,
and then forward march, making one raid
through the ensmy's country, stopping
not uutil we break ranks alter the last vies
bo, my brethren, let us hava som» novelty
ing on, by making advancement, trading
er stawe of Christian character, and routing
never thought ol vet,
Ihe fact is, if the church of God,
if we, as individuals, mde rapid advance.
ment in the Caristian lite, thess steraotyped
prayerswe have been making for tan or filteen
yew s would be as inappropriate to us as tha
shoes, and the hats, and tas coats we wora
Oh, for a higoer
flizht in the Christian life— ns siorg and
the crane in their migration teac iin z us ths
lesson !
Dear Lord, and rhall we ever live,
Atthis poor dying rate
Qur love 80 faint, so cold to Thee,
Aud Thine to us so great?
Again, I remark that the birds of the air
are wiser than we, becuse they know when
tostart, 1f vou should out now and
shout, ‘Stop storks and crane: doa't bs in
sn hurry!” they would say: * No, we cannot
stop; last night we hewrd the roaring in
the woods bidding us away, ani the surill
flute of ths nortan winl has souaded toe
retreat, We must go. We must go”
No they gather themselves into companied
and turning not aside from storm or moun
tain top or shock ol musketry, over and and
sea, straight as aa arrow to tue mar they
go. Andif you come out this merning with
a sack of corn ani throw it in the fields and
try to get them to stop, thay are so far ug
they would hardly ses it. ‘They are on thei
way south, You could not stop tnem,
Oa, that we wer aboat tae
time to star: for Gol and heaven! We
“Wait until it ixa little later in the s
of mercy. Walt until somes o
leaves of hope arasall dried up and have
scatierad, Wait until next vear
awhile we start ani it is tox
and we perish In the way when
# wrath is kindled but a little, There
are, you know, exceptional cased wpers
birds have startel too late, and in the
morning yon hav: found them dead on the
snow, And there ars those bave per.
ished hal’ way between the world and
Christ. Toey waited until the last sick
ness, when the raini was gone, or they wer
on the express train zoinz at forty miles an
hour, and they came to the bridge and the
draw was up” and they went down, How
waz to repent and prav wo a fu!
To do the work of a litetims
Two seconds!
to nrepare for ths vast eteraity in
RO
bos
say
3 BN Wise
AsOr
these gree
been
After
inte
God]
wno
BC
and
goon is!
two
l was reading of an entsrtaioment given
ina King's ecoart, ani thers wera
there with elaborate plecss of muse,
After awhile Mozart came an! began to
play, and he had a blank piecs of paper be-
for: him, and the king familiarly looked
over his shoulder and said “What are yon
playing? I see no muse befors you"
And Mozart put his hand on his
much as to say, “{ am improvising
was very well for him, |
we cannot extempor zs "
not get prepared iu this world, we
never take part in the orcasstral harmonies
of the saved 31, that we wore as
the crane and the stork, flying away, flving
away from the tempest
Some of you have felt the pinching frost
of sin. You feel it to-day. You are not
bappy. [1 look into your tases, and I know
you are not happy. Thers are voices witt
vour soul taat wili not be silenced, telli
You that you aresinners, ani tat witho
the pardon of God you are undone forev
What are you going to do, my friends with
the accumulated transirssions of this
time? Will you stand still anf let the ava.
anche tur you Os, that yo
would go away int) the warm heart of Gi
mercy! The southsa grove, redolent wit
muse any
Wise as
Hie-
ble ovr ug
‘a
}
magnolia and cactus, npesver waits for
nortnern flocks as Gol has waited for
sayinz: *'f haves lovel thee with an
lasting love Com» unto M» al
are weary and heavy laden, an i
you rest.’
Another frost js bildin: you away--it |
the (rot of sorrow, Where do you live no»?
*Oh,” you say, “1 have moved.’ Why did
you move? You say, [ don’t want as
mrze a house now a: formerly.’ Way
do you no: want as larg: a house? You
say, “My family 14 not a
Where have they gone’ “To eternity.”
Your mind goss back throuzh that last
sickness, and throuzh the aimost SUD
natural effort to save life, and throu th those
prayers that seemed unavailing, and through
that kiss which recived no response becanss
the lips wers lifeless, and | hear the bells
toliing and hear the pearts breaking —while
[speak I bear them breas. A heart! An
other heart! Alone, alone, aloae!
This world, waich in your girihooa and
boyhood was sunshine, is cold now, and oh,
weary dove, you fly aronad this world as
though you would like tt» stay, whea the
wind, and the frost, ani the blackening
clou wm would bil you away into the heart
ot an all comforting Goi: Oo, I have no
ticel again anil again woat a boteh this
world makes of it when it tries to comiorta
soul in trougle! ri” How
you
ever
large”
It says, “Don’t cry!
can we help eryiog waen the hwart's trea:
ures are scattersd and father is gone, and
mother is gone, anil com mnions are gone,
and the child is gone, an | everything seems
gone?
It is no eomfort to tell a man nol to ery,
The worki comes us and says, “Ob. it is
only the body of your Inval one that you
have put in tie grounl!” Bat there is no
comfort in that, That boly is precious
Shall we never put our hands in that hand
again, and shall we never si» that sweet
fac: azain! Away wita you: hearties -
ness, oh, worldl Batcome, Jessa and tell
us that when the ters fall they fall into
tiod’s bottle: that the dear bodies of our
lov ad ones shall rise radians in the resurrec~
tion, and all tae breakiags dowa hers shall
be lifted un there, and “they shill hunger
no more, neither thirst ny mors neitase
snall the sun light on then, nor any heat,
for the Lamb which is in tas midst of th
throne shall lead toen to living fountain:
of water, and God shail wipe all tears fron
their eyes.”
You may have noticsd taat when the
chaffineh, or the stor:, or the crans starts
on its migration it calis all thos ol 18 Kind
to come too. The tree tops ate full of cair
and whistle and carol ani the loaz roll eall,
Tae bird doss not stars of alone. It gather:
all of its kind, Oh, toast you migas be as wis
in this migration to beivmn, nal tat you
might gather all your faasulies and you:
friends with youl [ woud that Hanna
might take Samus by tne oand, ani A ra.
ham might take Isaac, ani Hagar might
take Ishmael,
Htart for heaven yourself an take your
children with you. Come thou aad ail tay
house into the ars, Tell your litue ones that
there nrs realms of balm anit sweetness fof
all those who fly in the right directions,
Switter than eagle's stroke put out jor
heaven, Like the crane or the stork, stop
not night nor day uaul you find the rignt
piace for stopping.
- To-day the Saviour calls,
Ye wanderers come,
Oh, yo ovairated souls,
By wnger ronm
The Spr calls to- lay,
isi 0 hus ower,
Oh, grieve nim not away,
"Li miorey’s bude.
One or Grani’s Arabldrrorsos.
One was a magnificent jet black
stallion, but in riding him the minis-
fault,
insisted that the dragoman
to the Sultan
and ask him to senl a better horse,
he could
and he
in the
insisted,
looking a gift horse
But the minister
and the dragoman went to the Sul-
tan and asked for audience. He
by the way, a man of fine sensibili-
tke le-
is the most important of
to Americans in Turkey,
“1 felt very much ashamed
did
at
is,
gation he
men
not know what 1 could do until
last a thought struck me that the
was a let black one and that
black was the color of mourning in
America. When I entered "the pal-
ace the first thing that the secretary
asked me was as to how the minister
and myself liked the horses, and |
repiled that they were the finest
horses that we had ever seen, and
that our President would feel very
proud and would be delighted with
the gift. I then went on to praise
the horses, and especially the black
one, which 1 said was magnificent in
every respect, but—here |
and the secretary anxiously
‘But what? Is there anything the
matter with the horse?’ ‘No,’ sald
I, ‘but you know black is the color of
mourning in the United States. It
means with us and 1
wondered if such a gift might not be
considered ominous if sent the
Sultan.’ The secretary saw the point
at once. Hi the Sultan,
and I was thanked for my suggesti
and the horse was changed to
stopped
asked:
death juss
¥
Oy
spoke to
another color and as sound as a
lar. "Rider and Driver
- —— -
‘A VERY unheaithy
remarked Brown, as looked upon
brickmakers wading through the
ciay “Yes,” remarked
klining work.”—Doston
who had an
OCCup tLicn
Hack,
Transcript.
A MAN
untenante
last bu
to refer to it as
leased. — HB. nghamton Leader.
Guaranteed to cure HBillous Attacks
Small Bile B ans,
customed
not
i
ana
{ onstipation
The Inventive Bociety of Paris has
ecently awarded Mrs. F. B. Mapp, of
Georgia, a gold medal for her is
f a bread-raiser
vention
Good for children as well av adults, Suall
Bile Beans
A three-cornered hat, ‘the Marquis,’’
among
34
8 the new fasionable headgear
the women of Paris who set
fashions.
— - " - o——— §
stion take one Smal! Bile Bean
25e. per bottle
Toaid D
after eat
A prize fight is called a “mii” because the
other fellow is reduced to pulp
tire themselves almost
Any easy place
There are men whe
to death looking for
Fon impure of thin Blood, Weakness, Mala.
ria Neuraigi indigestion, and Billousness,
take Brown's iron Bitrers—it gives strength,
making oid persons feel young asd youn
persons stroug: Jessant 0 take.
An artesian well in Petaluma, Ca!
FLING palin of water every hans
Mrs. A. A. Williams
Lynn, Mase,
FOR THE GOOD OF OTHERS
Rev, Mr. Williams Heavtily En-
dorses Hood's Sarsapaviila,
We arc pleased to present this from
Rev. A. A Williams, of the Sillshee
Street Christian Church, Lyon, Mass,
a layman, who knows whereof he
should hesitate to approve an
Article of Merit
spwaks
been signaily benefited, and whose commend
tion may serve to extend those benefits ts oly
ers by increasing their confidence. My wife
Nervous Headache
for which she found little help.
many things that promised well but performed
Little. Last fail a friend gave her a bottle of
Hood's Sarsaparilla. 1 seems surprising wha
simply one bottle eonld and did do for her, The
attacks of headache decreased in number and
wore less violent in their intensity, while het
general health is improved, Her appetite hn
also beast better. From our experience with
Hood's Sarsaparillia
1 have no hesitation in endorsing its mer
its." A.A WILLIAMS, 8
‘Hood's Pills are the best family catharile, gen
tle and eifective, Try a box, Price fe. ay gon
us
Tih
§ Tae oF eter
few, on
wiih poll, sliver or nicest
Na vaporionse.
Hy empire!
Every howse has “
RS BOS
PATENTS Jxlagmge
no ho -
AMONG THE BROTHERHOODS,
What the Various Fraternal Soctelles
are Doing.
MABGNE,
The order of the Eastern Star is an ad
vanced order of Masonry ; its membership
embraces the wives, daughters, mothers,
widows and sisters of Master Masons, and
also Master Masons in good standing in
their respective lodges. The order was
instituted for women, and by them the
work is exemplified, and nearly all the of
fices are filled by women, Every chapter
is under the supervision of n Master Ma-
son, and the landmarks of the ritual pro
vide that initiation can take place
unless he is present,
no
Orecon has a mem rship of
346,004, At the end of the
not be far from that mark,
your
Maine has now seventeen chapters of
Eastern Star, whereas three years ago it
had Gradually prejudice disap
pears before the light of reason,
Michigan the
2,006 applicants this year,
none,
conferred degrees on
Richmond has four Masonic halls,
California has over 16 000 members,
Over 10.000 Masons were bus
year,
There 1.900 Knights Tem
Ireland.
nr
Can wd + has
21,000,
HM) Caer
Upward
time at th res
wid Fellows
Asylum nt nionport
nerey ont
hit new (
10. 0600 Kniel
of the order
Jack Holsak and the Tiger.
remarkable
produced
“Perhaps the most man,
physically, the ever
was Jack Holsak, a flatboatman 21
known on the Ohio thirty-five or $
years ago,” said Thomas C, Jamison, who
was discussing America’s new champion
slugger “Jack feet 6 inches
without shoes, and weighed 250 pounds,
He muscled like a Hercules, and
used to boast that he was the strongest
animal of his weight in the Ohio Valley,
He was a simple-hearted, good-natured
fellow, who would not hurt a fly. The
told of his feats of physical
strength resembled the miraculous per
formances of Samson, Like the story
of the ‘three black crows,” they probably
gained something by repetition, but it is
pretty hard to say what is impossible to
250 pounds of perambulating spring
steel,
“It is said that he once visited a me
nagerie in Ciocinnati where a man-eat.
ing tiger was on exhibition, and after
listening to the descriptions of its
strength and ferocity given by the animal
country
stond 6
WAS
stories
naked
boots
and ‘whip the tiger out of its
for a gallon
whiskey.” As the proposition was
made at the top of his stentor
like lungs before a tent full of people,
the circus manager could not well de.
cline, It was wranged that the gladia.
tor act should take place after the night
wriormance, the women and children
wing dismissed. Jack, half drunk and
as naked as a Greek god, bounced into
the cage and grabbed the royal beast of
Bengal by the back of the neck and
slapped the side of the head. It emitted
an ugly growl, and Jack slammed it up
inst the side of the cage with a vio.
lence that bent the heavy iron bars, In.
stead of proceeding to make a meal of
the intruder, the man-eater cowered
down in a corner of its eage. Jack
grabbed it by the tail, d 1 it around
the cage, and then, to the horror of the
spectators, threw open the door, pulled
it out into the circus ring abd rolled it
in the sawdust, Now, a tiger that has
been reared in a and fed on cold
potatoes and stale meat is a very differ.
ent brute from one reared in an Asiatic
jungle: still, I hardly think that any of
the distinguished pugilists now posing
before the public would care to tackle
even a circus tiger.” (8t, Louis Globe.
Democrat,
DAYID C. COOK.
The Ploneer Publisher of Sanday School
Literature,
David C. Cook, of Chiongo, whose name
has become a household word through his
Bunday-school publications, is but 4% years
old. He was born in East Worcester,
N.Y.in 1850, a son of Rev. E. 8. Cook,
the hands, injnre the iron, and burn off
8 Methodist minister,
and from a child The Rising Bun Btove Post is Brilliant, Oder.
aa bis, and the © 1,
earnest and devoted a, Dutan band The tems amet Pays lor no tis
A
0M T.EE BENE, and paints which stata
an
member of the church
and Bunday-school
He began
in Ward's Bolling
Mills Bunday-school, in
Chicago, at the age of
17, helping also in one
.
cook, and two
of the
ing at different
fire of 1871
and marked the beginning of his work
on the North Bide, HNeenz the dis
tress and pressing need for help, he left his
home and rented rooms in one of the poor.
est and roughest neighborhoods of the burnt
district, where, with three other young
men whom he persuaded to jon him, he
gave himself to relief and mission work,
Here on North avenue, in a German theatre
nnd beer hall, was started his “Everyboi1y's
Mission,” afterward removed to a building
of its own near by. This mission, with at.
' 450, he started, built up
and sustained without aid from any esurch
or society for five years, untii others were
able to occupy the Held, He also organized
and superintended on the North Side, North
Avenue Mission, Lake View Mission and
Lake View Union schools, and, in Kigin, the
Lirace Church Nchool, besides several smaller
enterprises elsewhere,
His first publications were prepared 3
for his own schoals, then, © divide the cost
of typesetting, be asked orders trom others,
No one could be more surprised thas he at
demand thus created, Alterwards his
schools afforded a place for first testing new
helps and new ideas. It is 10 this love for
the work, and close application to it, thst
schools are indebiad be has dont
for the causs of Bund | Hlerature.
teaching
sometimes
West Bide,
until
DAVID ©,
schools meets
the
plans,
59
hours,
changed I am a farmer at Edom, Texas. T
have used German Syrup for six
| years successfully for Sore Throat,
Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Painsin
Chest and Lungs and Spitting-up of
Blood. I have tried many kinds of
Cough Syrups in my time, but let
me say to anyone wanting such a
| medicine—QGerman Syrupisthe best.
We are subject to so many sudden
changes from cold to hot damp
weather here, but in families where
German Syrup is used there is little
trouble from colds. John F.Jones. &
his
endance of 35) to
the
TrE aeronaut who goes Up out o
Bight is very apt
mw
f
.
VW come down out of
a— . - THE afk IDNEY. FR ax S8LADDER
Have You Asthma ¢ ’ K . LIV Ros Cunt,
Dr. R. Schiffmann, St. Paul, Minn, wil
atrial package of schiffn :
free 0 any sufferer (rives slant
wrest ana cures where
Name Lhis paper and send address.
Dissolves Gravel,
brick dust in urine, pains in urethra,
ng after urination, pain in buck and hips,
stoppage of water with pressure,
._ »
Bright's Disease,
Tube casts in urine, scanty urine, Swamp Flos
ures urinary troubles and Kidney dioulties,
Liver Complaint,
ver, foul breath, bilious-
besdache, poor digestion, gout.
an Cure
relief
anin's Ast
Li i
olbers fail
Cameos, 1 stone,
Life Is shorter in the valleys and lowlands
than among the hills and mountains
For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomac)
disorders, use Brown's iron Bitters, The Best
Tonic, it rebulid« the system, cleans the BH ood
and streng! bens the muscles. A splendid ton.
ie for weak and debilitated persons,
Forpid or enlarged
pens, bi
Catarrh = Bladder,
Inflammation, irritation, uleeration, dribbling,
{requent calls, pass blood mucus or pus.
The mother tongue is protably the
runge of Mars
Cuasrantes Use tents of One Bottle, if not Sen
ofited, Drugwiste wi 3 yd you the gator paid
At Draggisvis, 50¢. Size, $1.00 Siac,
invalide® Guid ta tion Tree,
e 3
Du. Kitwen & Co. iranawrox, N. XY.
Unlike the Dufch Process
Ch No Alkalies
SARE | | |
Ju \ Other Chemicals
ow
: J
Healt Troe Ons
the L
preparation of 7
W. BAKER & 00.8
Fok
ar
+ \BreakfastCocoa
Al which ts absolutely
! pure and soluble.
fd are used in
It has morethan three times
the strength uf Cocoa mixed
with Starch, Arrowroot or
Sugar, and is far more eco
pr at pl BBR
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Qy iors } rans 3h 2 : nomical, costing less than one cent a cup
JIup of I gt 18 taken; it 1s pleasant It i= delicious, nourishing, and EASILY
and refreshing to the taste, and acts = prowsren
genily yet promptly on the Kidneys, Sold by Grocers everywhers.
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
1
tem effectually, dispels colds, head- ~
who will
us the
aches and fevers and cures habitual OVERS MUSIC
¥ and sd dreseel
constipation. Syrup of Figs i .
m™ ¢ r P of I ES 18 the of two musical TPiends pininly written aod age
only remedy of its kind ever Pro- | es close 50 oents in stamps or posial note, will sed
3 * ive, gues f . BN § 3 aife
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac cont Collorion of over ROR TAT RT CO
teptable to the stomach, prompt in
with tie music Tor each 600 LATEST SONCS
its action and truly beneficial in its
ope, bound Io a thick handsceme volume This
grandest collection of Sentimental, Comie, Operatht
effects, prepared only from the most 2 he pepsin favorites = COMMA DERE
healthy and agreeable substances, its == ANNIE ROOXEY." ete 4 whole iGroR
many excellent qualities commend it YU. COMP Y, 603 Broadway, New ¥
to all and have made it the most ~
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and 81 bottles by all leading drug-
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro-
cure it promptly for any cne who
it. Do not accept any
IA FIG SYRUP CO.
FRANCISCO. Cal,
PISO'S CURE FOR
Consompiives and people
who have weak inngs or Asth.
ma. should ape Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has eured
Tt hae pot tnjur
od ops. It is not bad 0 take.
itis vie Dest cough syrup.
fol sverrwhers. Ble.
CONSUMPTION
HIS OWN DOCTOR.
By J. HAMILTON AYERS. A. .. i. D.
This is a most Valuable Book for th:
Household, teaching as it does the
easily-distinguished Symptoms of
different Diseases, the Causesand
Means of Preventing such
Diseases, and the Simplest
Remedies which will
Alleviate or Cure.
B98 PACES, PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED.
3
The Book is written in plain, every-day English. and is free from the te hnical terms
which render most Doctor Books 0 vaneless 1o the generality of readers This Bask 6s
ttended tv be of Service in the Family, and is 80 worded as to be readily understood by all.
ONLY 60 CENTS, POSTPAID. .
(The low price only belug made possible by the immense edition printed.)
Not only dow Wiis Book sontain 0 yntgh Informa tion Relative 3 Digadas. batt prop
y gives a Com nalve everything ning t» C ip: Marriage
and the Prosuction and Mearlag of Heatny | Penk im: together with
Valuable Itecipes and Presoriptions,
Explanation of Botaniona! Practice,
Correct Use of Ordinary Ieorbs,
New Edition, Revised and Enlarged, with Complete Index.
With this Book in the houss there is no excuss for not knowing what to do "
. Don't f
Segeney. Dox St at Yous have Himes your family Lnfore you order, but sed
Bend postal notes or postage stamps of any denomination not larger than 5 cents,
®
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