The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 13, 1893, Image 3

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    “The Biagest fre.
saidJ, C. Stephens,
at his anction rooms in King stree
Covent Garden, ‘‘to the egg of the
Aepyornis maximus, Ae biggest bird
living or extinct. It has been extinct
for some time, and only two of its
bones have been found. Aecarding to
the catalogue the bird was more than
ten feet high and was flightless.”
«1 ghould think so,” said 8 prospec.
tive egg buyer.
“It would seem
“Wenow come,”
to me,” said Mr,
egg must have been something hike
thirty-five feet high—about ss b igh as
a house. You will see by the
logue that it measures 34% inches in
ite longest circumference and twenty-
eight inches in girth. This egg is
several inches lsrger than the egg
gold last year. ltis, of course,
rarity, and not more than thirty
these eggs are known.
“This, I think, is the
the lot. It should he
that there are sixty known eggs of the
great auk, and they sell for s conple
of hundred guineas each, 1
we
a great
r
LO
finest eng of
as much as a great auk’s egg, but we
sold one not go good as this last year
for seventy guineas
The egg was passing from
hand in a wooden box while
auctioneer was speaking. It |
too large for an egg, though in
respects it seems natural enough
hand to
the
ed
1
GOR
It
bird that had laid such an egg had be-
come extinet. The strain must have
been equal to the horse-power of an
Atlantic liner, and the eackle that fol
lowed the arrival of the egg mnst have
onde the welkin ring until its
ached.
The egg ie of a brownish gray e«
snd sounds like porcelain
drummed on with the knuckles
bird that was accustomed to lay this
sort of egg lived, it is said, in Mada
gascar, and buried its eggs in the sand.
It is only possibly to find the
digging in the snd
may yet be found, a good
the Madagascar
been dug up vet.
one p.
Bevel guineas,
Cau
lor
when it 1s
[he
Poy i Vv
sand,
mors
CREE
ile al 0}
not
ns
SeRsOre Of bins
was finally sold for sixty
Pall Mall Gazette,
egr
- nO
The Ladies,
The pleasant ¢ffect and perfect safely with
which Iadies may use the California liquid
Syrup of Figs, under all conditions,
makes it thelr
laxative,
favorite remedy. To get the
true and
the California Fig Syrup Cou, printed near the
botiow of the package.
ne article, look for the name of
penal
g. Write
timen als, ¥ « 10 XN, Je
Tio wa Co. N. ¥.
Ladies needing a tonle, or children whe
want building up, should take Brown's Iron
Bitte It is pleasant to take, cures Malar a
Ind ati in. Biliousness and Liver Compinints,
wakes the Blood rich and pure.
If your Back Act
for wotiaie
Willi on
fe *
« Irn H.18
leanse yor Ver, al i give ye
Des Lhe DETVYes.
mn and consti
3S ct a box
Heecham's Ps cfire Indigestic
pation. Bee bain's— no others,
Ope sun by 4
sy, by night ten thousand
if af Micted with sore eyes use Dr. lsaas Thomp
son's Eve-water. Druggists sell at Ze.per bottle
A whale develd
Hops it: tal,
Pe 5 horse power when |
A COOD APPETITE
Is imparted by Hood's
farsaparilla, which tones
the digestion so that all
symptoms of Dywpre ps
mia are removed. Mr.
Robert W. W, Denvir, of
Zi Franklin Street, Long
Island City, N. Y.. sayw
“ For two years | suffer.
ed with dyspepsia, and
Mr. Beavir,
eould find no cure for it,
But | began t+
Hood's Sarsaparilia and in one month
that Hood's *arsaparilia cures both poor
and dyspepsia, for | am
well,” XN. B.- Be sure to get Jiood’'s.
take
find
purge, pain or gripe. Sold by 82) 47006 & ets
BN VIR
JilePeans
Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Con-
stipation, Sick~-Headache, ete.
25 cents per bottle, at Drug Storea
Write for sample dose, free.
J.F. SMITH & CO." New York.
am seventy-seven years old,
anda hava had my age renewed
of Su menty years years by the use
Sits Pecific. My fort
sore for a Je - ig Shunt A]
Hy not ured. Altes taking oi
tras YEARS
sufferers 0
aaa id K hua
Palaer Kana Clty.
DY Sopecily fo
SWIFT arcvic COMPANY,
Atlanta, Ga.
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
The Eminent Brooklyn Divine’ 8 Sun.
day Sermon.
Subject: * Arrogance and Humility."
Text: * God be merciful unto me, a sinner
~Luke xviil., 18.
| No mountain ever had a more brilliant
coronet than Mount Moriah. The glories of
| the ancient temple blazed there, The moun-
tain top was not originally large enough to
| hold the temple, and so a wall 600 feet high
wus erected, and the mountain was bullt out
| into that wall,
It was at that point that satan met Christ
| and tried to persuade Him to cast Himself
| down the 600 feet, The nine gates of the
| temple flashed the light of silver and gold
| and Corinthian brass, which Corinthian brass
| was mere precious stones melted and
mixed and crystallized. The temple itself
| was not so very large a structure, but the
{ courts and the adjuncts of the architecture
{ made it half a mile in circumferance,
We stand and look upon that wondrous
structure, What's the matter? What
| strange appearance in the temple? Is it fire?
Why, it seems as if it were a mantle all kin-
i dled into flame, What's the matter? Why,
its the hour of morning sacrifice, and the
smoke on the altar rises and bursts out of
the crevices and out of the door and wreathes
| the mountain top with folds of smoke
i through which glitter precious stones
gathered and burnished by royal mu-
nificence,
I see two men mounting the steps of the
building. They go side by side: they are
very uniike ; no sympathy between them
the one the pharisee, proud arrogant, pom-
yous ; he goes up the steps of the AG }
@ seems by his manper to say: ‘Clear the
track! Never before came up these steps
such goodness and consecration.”
Beside him was the publican, bowed down,
seemingly, with a load on his heart. They
reach the inclogsure for worship in the midst
of the temple. The pharisee goes close up
to the gate of the holy of holies. He feels he
is worthy to stand there. He says practically
“I am so holy I want to go into the holy of
holies, Oh Lord, Il am a very good man! |
am a remarkably good man, Why, two days
in the week I eat “absolutely nothing. I am
80 good, I'm very generous in my conduct
toward the poor. 1 have no sympathy with
the common rabble ;: especially have I none
with this poor, miserable, commonplace,
wretched publican, who happened to come
up the stairs beside me.”
The publican went clear to the other side
of the inclosure, as far away from the gate
f the holy of holies as he could get, for he
felt nnworthy to stand near the sacred place,
And the Bible says he stood afar off. Stand-
ing on the opposite side of this inclosure,
he his head, and as orientials when
they any trouble beat their breasts,
begins to pound his breast he
“God be merciful
Oh,
bows
have #43
he
as ries,
tO me, a anner
was there ever a greater
neense that walted that morning
ning
utrast?’ The
mm the
the pub
opening
he ph
and rolle
We
©
¥
iy
WRACT WARS DOL 80 sweed as
prayer floating into
while the prayer of
his eontem pic
into his arrogant heart
they in other and
side down the the pharises cross
shed, acrid, saturnine the publics:
his face shi IE with the
for 1 that thi
down to his ho justified
other
Now, I put this
i
nH § the
BYENS, Brisee
‘
tied on IN
down
there,
i
refining
encn side Ly
Bleep,
wret
with
OVS of
heaven, *
went
than the
tadl you
Use rath
yablican's prayer
analysis, and vered in the first
hat he was persuaded of his sinf
was ap honest man ;
he was an officer of
publicans
under
piace
He
rer
The
£ ine sf
iiness
Was & taxgnt}
the government,
taxgatherers, and Cleero
says they were the adornment of the State,
Of course they were somewhat unpopular
beosuse people then did not iike to pay their
taxes any better than people now lke to pay
their taxes, and there were many who dis
liked then :
~t
he
were
il I supp
eTer, WARE Bn Dont
offices of trast
we this publican, th
man.
mas
|
is tax gath-
He
hard ti
rive had
there were
said about him, and yet
that
deme
ling
re of temple an
ah # hs
“5 WAT than
natrations of ( siiness and
int 1 am 8 sinned
eo that «
y weigh
¥ acti to estimate
f the
or fron
I will ' 0
draw my ar
{ the work hat £34
saivation,
You go down in
FOU see
thing «
iment rat
i bas achieved
a storm to the
wreckers put on their rough jackets
and lsunch the Heboat and then shoot
rom kets to show that help is coming ot
the breake re, and immediately ery, 4
shipwreck
Christ putting aside rote and crown and
lannch out on the tossing sea of human suf
fering and satanic hate, going out into the
thundering surge of death, I ery, "A ship
wreck
I know that our souls are dreadfully
by the work that God has done to save
Are you & sinner! Buppose
mercial agent in Charleston or San Fran-
cinco, or Chicago, aad you were paying him
promptly his salary, and you found outafter
begoh, and
it
yOu
lost
the salary be had given ninedenths o
time to some other commercial
ment. Why, your indignation
Bo bounds. And yet that is
have treated the Lord,
He sent us out into the world to serve
Him, He has taken wood care of us, He
tas clothed ue, He bas sheltered us, and He
has surrounded us with 10,000 benefactions,
and yet many of us have given nine-tenths of
our lives to the service o
and the devil, Why, my friend, the Bible is
full of confessions, and I do not find anybody
is pardoned until be has confensed,
What did David say? “I will confess my
transgressions unto the Lord.” What
Isaiah say? ‘Woe is me,
man of unclean lps
mr
and our trespass is grown up into beaven.”’
And among the millions before the throne of
God to-night not one got there until he con.
fessed, The const of eternal sorrow is strewn
with the wreek of those who, not taking the
warning, drove with the cargo of immortal
hope into the white tangled foam of the
breakers,
Heoent! the voles celestial orien,
Nor losger dare delay:
The wretch that scarns the mandate dies
Amd meets the flery day
Bat 1 analyze the publican’s prayer a step
| further, and I find that be expected no relief
{ except through God's mercy. Why did not
| he say. | am an honorable man, When 1 got
#10 taxes, I pay them right over to the gov.
ernment. | give full permission to anybody
to audit my accounts. I appeal to Thy jue
tice, 0 God! He made no such plea. He
threw himself fiat on God's merey.
Have you any idea that a man by breaking
off the scales of the leprosy can change the
disease? Have you any idea that you ean by
changing your life change your heart--that
you can purchase your way to heaven?
Come, try it. Come, bring all the bread you
ever gave to the hungry, all the medicine
you ever gave to the sick, all the kind words
you have ever uttered, all the kind deeds
that have ever distinguished you, Add them
all up into the tremendous aggregate of
words and works, and then you will ses
bis knife as he cuts that spirit
i aren. lia, iio ae ho ex “By the deeds
of the law there shall no flash be justin
Well, a thousand men in this audience
itl am to anything in the way of
from in good works, how am | 0
the pave? BY imesey. iy ! Bn
i ¥
mercy ; sovereign mercy, In
omnipotent a
it seems in the }
exhausted
ng eo a
f ali the
establish.
would know
just the way we
What did Ezra say?
at the feet of
gelist when it tries to describe God's merny,
Ob, says some one, that i= only addine 10
my crime if I come and confess before God
und seek His mercy. No, no. The mur.
derer has come, and while he was washing
the. blood of his vietim from his hands,
looked into the face of God and cried for
mercy, snd his soul has been white in God's
pardoning love, And the soul that has
wandered off in the streets and down to the
very gates of hell has come back to her
Father's house, throwing her arms around
His neck, and been saved by the mercy that
saved Mary Magdalen.
But, says some one, you arethrowing open
that door of mere y too wide. No, I will
throw it open wider. [ will take the re
sponsibility of saying that if all this audi
ence, instend of being gathered in a semi-
eirele, were placed side by side, In one lone
line, they could all march right through that
wide open gate of merey, ‘‘Whoseover,”
“whoseover,”' Oh, this merey of God.-there
is no line long enough to fathom it ; there is
no Isdder long enough to scale it ; there is
no arithmetio facile enough to calculate it |
no angel's wing can fly across it,
Heavenly harpers, alded by
feet like the sun, cannot compass that
harmony of merey, merey. It sounds inthe
rumbling of the celestial gate, I hear it in
the chiming of the celestinl towers, | see it
finshing in the uplifted and downcust
coronets of the saved. 1 bear it in the
thundering tread of the bannered hosts
around about the throne, and then it comes
from the harps and crowns snd thrones and
processions to sit down, unexpressed,
throne overtopping all heaven
of mercy,
How 1 was affected when some one told me
in regard to that accident on Long Island
sound, when one poor woman came and got
her hand on a raft as she tried to save her.
self, but those who were on the raft thought
there was no room for her, and
came and most cruelly beat and bruised her
hands until she fell off, Oh,
~the throne
for the sixteen hundred
room {or one,
is room !
I push this analysis of the publican’s
prayers step further and find that he did
not expect any mercy except by pleading for
it. He did not fold his hands together aa
some do, saving: “If I'm to be saved, I'll
be saved, If 'mto be lost, I'll be lost, and
there is nothing for me to do.” He knew
what was werth having waz worth askin
for ; hence this earnest ory of the text, “God
be merciful to me, a sinner
it was an sarnest prayer and it = charase
teristic of all Bible prayers that they were
answered the blind man, “Lord, that I may
receive my sight © the leper, "1a ed, if Thou
wilt, Thou canst make me clean sinking
Peter, “Lord, save me " the public “(io
be merciful to me, 8 sinner :
Come k f vour
up withthe tip of ¥
f will not
@ the earnestness of
millions of the race
room for all, and yet there
an,
finger
ff the gate 3
have got to have
ir wi
Gper
'
th
defented greed dist
inthered stead ai
ike at the palace
of the speaker,
i} the great
ize your
tf this
mercy
mom
i his praver
humble prayer
publican looke
cannot be saved a8
SAYed as An artist 3
an official. If %
will be a= 5 sinpor.
a sinner
Another e
ar
ann i
3 Be Bver San
God be Im
haracteristic of th
iblican was, it had
tf was not a ery of de
a ring «
He
’
wir
y got wh
at he asked
i tor exe
hint
wm not
ie fsx ™
rou tell me,
fed this
ting
£ man
1
salvation and
It me say that whi
i there enon
i, and
ad
an fo
ther * bes Bere ghee wl
. I want to quit no
very imperiect
waid that 1 shot ald not
how many things [ bave done | she
not have done, | want to change wy ii
want to begin now, jet me say to such as .
God is waiting, God is ready, and you are
near the kingdom, or rather you have ene
tered it, for no man says | am determined to
e sins of my life |
I consecrate mysel!l to the Lord
bat if
to Le belt
has ben 2 a
said,
Dow,
from the depth of his soul says that but bie is
siready a Christian,
My uncle, the Rev, Samuel EK. Talmage, ¢
the strocta
ans: be saw aman, a
step from the sidewalk out lato
take his hat off and bow very
My uncle was not a man who des
and he said, “What
do that for?” “Oh.” says the man,
the other night I was going slong
of Augusta one day,
biack man,
the street,
“massa,
oRme
ur church, and you were
‘God be merciful to me,
and I stood there at the door long
enough to hear you say that if a man could
utter that prayer from the depth of his soul
God would pardon him and finally take him
to heaven. Then I pat my burden on my
got to my
down, and 1 said, ‘God be
but it got darker
and darker, and then, massa, I got down on
my knees, and 1 said, ‘God be merciful
me, a sinner” and the burden got
darker. |
Then 1 got down
home and 1 sat
knew not what to do.
on my iace, and I cried, ‘God be merci.
ful to me, a sinner” and away off | saw a
Hght coming, and #1 came nearer and nearer
and nearer antil all was bright in my heart,
and rose. [| am happy now-the burden
iv all gone—~and I sald to myself if ever]
medi you in the street | would get clear off
the sidewalk, and I would bow down and
take my hat off before you. 1 fesithat I owe
more to you than to any other man. That is
the reason I bow befors you,”
Oh, are there not many now who oan uniter
this prayer, the prayer of the black man, the
prayer of the publican, “God be merciful to
me, & sinner?” While 1 halt in the sermon,
will you not all utter it? 1 do not say saudi
bly, but utter it down i" the depths of your
souls’ consciousness, Yes, the sigh go all
through the galleries, it goes all through the
pews, tome mil through thess alsies, sigh
after sigh God be meretful to me, a sinner !
Have all uttered it? No, there is one
soul that has not uttered it, too proud to ut-
ter it, too hard to utter it. O Holy Spirit
descend upon that one heart. Yes, he begins
to breathe it now No bowing of the Bond
needs to utter it more than my own ou
God be merciful to me, a sinner! |
a ———————————
Chicagoans Most be Thirsty People.
Thera are 7,000 saloons in
with an invested capital of at |
A 5 SI. A UN ES rts
FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS
‘we youn.”
Out in the street Jack found, one day,
An old umbrella, thrown away.
‘ ‘Better than nothing,” he merrily said,
As a cloud sent its raindrops down oo
his head,
Along came Bob, “Any lodgings to let?”
“Yes,” laughed Jack; *‘come in out of
the wet,”
Then Will came up with a ‘*Halloo, boys!
What's the OCCasion for all this noise
“Come along in" said Jack, ‘an’ sce!”
A doggie, who hated such rainy weather,
And a very uncomfortable soaking skin,
cried
Will;
And dogg o Wigged n gratefe) | “4 wil
now,” laughed Juck
fixed, we four,
iL.
An’
more,"
—|8t. Louis Republic,
LOOKING
Little Emi y had been ve ry Baught
because her mamma would not let her go
with whom
8 reamed
FORWARD.
and she
that every in the bouse
tressed and worried, Her mamma had
to lock her up in a room and
till she
would be good snd promised not to
more. Every now and
mamma Wo ald go aod ask her to promise,
but she only screamed louder,
last a silence fell upon the house,
when poor mamma opened the
there, stretched upon the floor, lay the
pretty weary little form, when the
dear mother drew her to her and asked
the oft re peated question, WW vou he
good and promise not to cry any more?”
the eyes looked up, still full of
pretty
the girl Yan,
one
not come out
y
he
and
aoor,
ne wd
iii
and little said,
mamma, I'll be good, and promise 1
never ery any
ions die.”
never
my dear relat
People,
more till
-{ Harper's y
THE B
The =
room and passed
snother
before
He pa
riting masie
} FEVICW
thon
tse] by
Was
preferal
thapen alle
Rol ana
fe master t
£3
tld
fect the
onstantinopie Lave,
girls, In the Turkish
shicago World's Falr,
beautiful booth at
mre sold The
thing you ever
narrow and turn up
a point like the to A
np i
Be ui
there is a
» hich go den slippers
slippers the t
They are
at the making
wp of a Chinese pagoda
of something which looks
like cloth-of-gold, and they are em.
broidered with cunning litt'e gold roses
surrounded by little gold Jeaves,
All the boys and girls who pass the
Are iniest
SAW, very
foes,
light at the
them, but
pair fo wear, then they realize what very
small feet theConstantinople women and
children possess.
Last week, a real funny thing happened
at the Golden Slipper Booth. A party
Americans Tared the booth and ad-
‘angel slippe re,” as they
when
can help doing; but they did not
buy any, although one of the little girls
in the party said she would like to have
Hs pour
§
0 AIM A IN 550 SMES
Why Plenles Are fo Called.
Svervbody knows what a picnic is,
but most folks would find it bard to
say how it got that name, and yet it
is simple enough when you come to
learn it. When a picnic was being
arranged for, the custom originally
was that those who intended to be
present should supply the eatables
and drinkables. A list of those ne-
cessities having been drawp up, it
was passed round, and each person
picked out the article of food or drink
that he or she was willing to furnish,
and the name of the article was
nicked, or ticked off the list. The
open-air entertainment thus became
known as “pick and nick.” The cus
tom is sald to have dated from 1802,
80 that the pienic is wholly an Insti.
tution of the nineteenth century.
sisson A.
Suicide ismnuch more eos
INE
LIMON RINOJE
iviliens
i
st
Man With the Head of a Goose,
The man with a goose's head first
appeared before the public at the fam-
ous ‘Gingerbread Fair,” Liverpool, in
1872. He was twenty yesrs of age at
that time; had eyes perfectly round,
snd & nose eight inches in length, fist,
and shaped exnctly like the bill or
beak of 8 goose. Hie neck was three
times the length of that of anordinary
person, surmonnted by a round fist
head perfectly devoid of heir, He
seemed to have as much common sense
as that of the average country boy of
his age ; learned very fast, and, after
giving up the show business, became a
photographer. Hisname is Jean Ron-
dier and he Jives at Dijor, France, -~
Philadelphia Press.
mts III — s-. ssa
Missouri hes 9301 school districts,
11,744 school houses, 13,677 school
teachers, BZ school nge,
and 610.550 in the public school's,
I
2.45340 PLETEONS « f
a@& 74 %
“ oa
nake Ss
1]
spou »
never SOAT,
never good
.
cooks who cling
1 144
nethod g Or wilo u
If vou want the
Baking Powder:
Regis Leblanc is a Fren
dian store keep r at Not
Stanbridge, Quebec, Cs
ured of a flack
jon of the Lungs by Bosch
man Syn He has
bottle of German Syrup
sonal recommendation.
him a line he'll give
| facts of t se direct,
h Cana-
11 Dame de
Severe a
he on
Bosc] hee's German
through nicely. 1
is a good medicine
its work 9
PDEs. ew Ra VE ETS
mE
ASE
oe
wey
aR
Voy
a
or husky food;
Xx
ory
oo £Y
ogee
»
x
never icaves
ro
os
RB
tc +
dis ;
¥
1
=
:1
ic
pe
dW
¥
?
-
' 1 ff. a
old-fashioned
the
RRR
of WW
best food, Royal
TES
r
v
TX
»
4
SA ALAA ss rt as asst ASRR LAE
Delicious Drink.
——— I Br WS
EASILY MADE
-—
SUMNER
COLD
WINTER
HOT.
“A
PURE
CRUIT
JUICES
pret ion
TTP TTT Tr rr rrr
Aids 1
Prevents Few
Quenches Temperance Drick
Pot uw £ # prod 0 wad
btties, Ask 3 49 ie
v g pet
sd sortiaesset
. Cypress
i we. Al wh
prep
ee
TITER TTI RTE YN
FRANK E. HOUSHM & CO.
£35 Washington $1. Boston, Mass
AGINT» tw owe
SASAAAAS AAS ASARASAASSLSSLLALLLALALLLLLLD
waried
TY TITY TrTTTRTTSTYTY Tess rey
CURED ME.
SUFFERED EICHT YEARS!
Couldn't Eat or Sleep.
1 had bern fronbi
Dr. KE
eight yv
mer & OC
with stomach and bes
I ved mostly on milk,
gs every-thing 1 ate burt
ne My kid and
liver were in a terrible
state. Co neither sleep
oreat. 1 had been treated
by the best Chicago dow tors
withoul any wefit what.
ever. As a last resort
tried your SWAMP.
ROOT, urd now | can eat
anyibing, no maltor what,
Nothing hurts me, and can go 10 bed and got
a good night's sleep, SWARP-ROOT
cured me,
Any one doubting this statement ean write,
I will gladly anewer.” Mrs, German Miller,
Dec, 30th, 18 Epringport, Mich,
SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME.
Had Torpid Liver For | 4 Years.
Bilious all the Time.
Dean Sime“ have been troubled with
Torpid Liver for 14 years and gone through
courses of bilious fever;
many times it has been im.
sosibie for me to do any
ind of mbor, Dr. Kilinet's
SWAMP-ROOT was
first recommended to me
oe re Gif fs
neous
bre
woys of the party came running back
“Please give me a pair of your golden
said he.
tittle girl who passed here just now, and
I stole an over.
shoe of hers out of my mother's hand-
satchel so as to get just the right size,
Please, Mr. Turk, give me a pair just
the size of these.”
The little, dark-skinned Turkish sales.
man took the overshoe and tried to find
a slipper to match it. But although the
svershoe was not a large one by any
means, there was not a single pair of the
golden slippers in the whole booth that
sould match it in size. Yet the little
girl who owned the overshos was only
en years old,
hen the boy saw that he could not
buy his sister a pair of golden slippers
to wear, he was very much disgusted,
and some one heard him telling the clerk
that he did not believe girls with such
small fest could possibly have any brains,
~The Ledger.
TONGUE-TWISTRRS,
Read the following aloud, repeating
the shorter ones quickly half —
times in succession :
Be BR 0
0 . n
a Oana, and Pip us,
Fe roller, low w Toller, lower roller.
x ol mixed biscuits, a mixed
to. (Drugeists) Decatur,
ind. After taking one
bottle 1 was uncertain
whether 1 was really de.
piving any benefit or not:
the pocond
bottle, however, 1 found
1 had taken 6 tooktice.
AMP.
to every one Whe has torpid liver, for
*
Jan. 168 W. CHEISTIANER,
The Great Blood Purifier.
At Druggists, 500c, & £1.00
“Guide to Health” Free, Consul.
tation Pree. Dr. Kilmer & Co,
Misanawron, N.Y.
Dr. Kilmer's .
Parilla Liver Pills
Ang Tae Buesr! € Pills, 3 cents,
Treated free.
Petia STAD
hoi gin Have
oe.
GOITRE CURED hon RE Chega
TE aE]
("Send 6c in stamps tor soOpage
dlwstrated catalogue of bicycles, gues,
snd sporting goods of every description.
John P. Lowel Arms Oo. Boston, Mass.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
with
tromson's BEER
SLOTTED
No tools reamired, Only a hammer nosded 10 drive
cindh 1m easily and guickiy, evmg the clinch
HRoeguiing se ho 2 18 be made in
ihe leaiber nor arr tor Ue Rivers. Ther are
tough snd durable. Nilons pow in we
Enoths, Gndoren of sesortod, put ap In axes,
Ask your desler for them, of send do in
stamps for 4 bok of Joo, assorted sizes. Mand by
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.
WALTHAM, MASS.