The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 14, 1893, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ~ ws wm
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S
DAY SERMON.
SUN-
Subject: ‘The Mission of the Frost.”
is
Text: “By the breath of od frost
given,” Job xxxvil., 10,
Nothing is more embarrassing toan organ-
fst or pianist than to put his finger on a key
of the instrament and have it make no re
sponse. Though all the other keys are in
full play, that one silence destroys the musie,
8o in the great cathedral of Nature,
waited and lost. While fire and ball,
tion, if the
orchestral
damaged
frost made no utterance the
rendering would be hopelessly
and the harmony forever incom-
plete. Iam more glad than I can tell that
the white key of the frost sounds forth as
mightily as any of the other keys, and when
David touches it inthe Psalms it sounds
forth the words, ‘‘He soattereth the hoar
frost like ashes." and when Job touches it in
my text it resounds with the words,
breath of God frost is given,”
As no one seams disposed to discuss the
mission of frost, depending on divine help I
undertake it. This the first Sabbath
winter, The leaves are down.
has gone out of the air. The birds have
made their winged march southward, The
landscape has been scarred by the autamnal
equinox, The huskers have rifled the corn-
shocks. The night sky has shown the usual
meteoric restlessness of November, Three
seasons of the year are past, and the fourth
and last has entered, Another element now
comes in to bless snd adorn and instruct the
world. It isthe frost, The palaces of this
king are far up in the arctic. Their walls
are glittering coneelation, Windsor eastles
and Tuflleries and winter pa and
Kenliworths and Alhambras of foe,
temples with pendant nandeliors of
fee, thrones wf + on which
eternal theaters on
whose stag dr tmintizes eternal
winter, HM dee, crowns
of ive, sepulehers of jee
mountains of jee, dominions of ice ster
frigidity ! From those hard, white,
portals King Frost deseends and waves his
silvery scepter over our temperate zone,
You will soon hear his heel on the skating
pond. You already feel his breath in the
night wind. Iv most considered an enemy
here to benumb and hinder and
slay, I shall show you that the frost is g
friend, with benediction divinely
nounced, and charged and surcharged
lessons potent, beneficent an
The B sn tie alinde
and we must not ignore it,
of God frost is given,
First I think of frost
gins his work on the
on the window panes,
ith all manner of col
aod pencil of erystal in his right hand,
sits down belore the humblest hush in the
latter part of September and begins the
sketel } Now he puts u
the foliage a faint pallor. and thea a tous
brown, and then a hue of orange, and
fame of fire, The beech and ash and oak are
turned first into sunrises and then into sun
sets of vividoess and splendor. Al ithe
are penciled by one, but son
whole forest in the course
shows great velocity of work,
Weenix, the Datel painter, couid make in
a summer day three portraits of life sige.
the frost in ten days can paint ten mo
tains in life size, It makes the last dave of
an automaal wool the days 0! its ehinfest
glory— Luxembourgs in the Adirondacks
Louvres in the Sierra Nevadas, Vaticans in
the White Jiguniaing The wor: of
painters you must see the right
fully app preciate. but the paintings
frost in all lights are enchanting from
time when the curtain of the morning Hiftsto
the time when the curtain of the night dr yp,
Michael Angelo put ne
representation of the | judgment, bu
frost represents univers Me nfl: Td
upon 3000 miles of stretehed our grandear
Leonardo da Vinei put upon
canvas our Lord's last supper :
admire, but the frost puts the gleamis
ices of the imperial gle
per of the dying year
lengths and breadths
When Titian first gazed upon
Correggio, he was wrought up iuto
ecstacy that he eried out, “If [ were
Titian, I would be Correggio.” and so
and overpowering are the autumnal scenss
of our American jorests that
nature might well exelaim to ano a
were not the stinlight, I would be the fros:
RBugzendas, the on n painter,
from weaknese in his right hand
learnad to paint with bi
frosts paints with be and
them more skill than all the Rembran
Rabens and Wests and Poussins ani
Durers and Paul Yeroneses and
gathered in one long art gallery. Bu: the
door of that great museum of autumsal oo’
oring is now closed fora tw sivemonth,
another spectacle just as wonderinl is now
open, I put vou on the alert and ask vou to
put your children on the alert, .
Tired of working on the leay the
will soon turn to the window ve.
will soon waken on 8 cold morning
that the windows of your home have
the night been adorned with curves
coronets, with exquisiteness with i
with almost supernatural spectacle
you will appreciate waat my text says as it
decinres, By the breath of God fros is
given, You will see on the window pane
traced there by the frost, whole gardens ot
beauty —ferus, orchids, daffodils, heliotropes,
china asters, fountains, statues, ho unds on
the chase, rosbucks plunging into the stream,
battle scones with dying and dead, eats-
falques of kings, triumphal processions——and
as the mornin =un breaks through vou will
see cities on fire, and bombardment with
bursting shell, and illuminstions as for some
great victory, coronations and angels on the
wing,
All night long while you were sleepin the
frost was workine, and You ought not let
the warmth obliterate the scene until vou
have admired it, studied it, absorbed it. set
it up in your memory for perpetual refresh.
ment and realized the force and magnitude
is of
aces
stlen~e r
+ eternal cold
piilars of ive, arches
chariots of ice,
isl
aming
oming
ro.
’
with
i 5 v
ible sowve nes
as a pain
leaves an
Wit
Ir his je!
[3
¥
VEY 6h
ol a
in
sing his
the
ation
ries of the
in the |
of the
and
Alleghanies
a sket
great
ne fores
ther
. Imboriog
¢ loft brut
has in
Itean i
Albert
Cla les
frome
You
God frost is given.” Ob, what a Gol we
have! What resonirces are implied by the fact
that he is able to do that by the finger of the
frost fifty times in one winter and on a hun
dred thousand window panes for thousands
of winters |
The great art galleries of Yenles ani Xa-
ples and Dresden aro ecarolully guarded,
and governments protect them, for once lost,
such as no human art could ever produce,
hundreds of thousands of them, only for
four or five hours, and then rubs them out,
making the place clear for a display just as
magnificent the next morning, No one but
a God could afford to do that, It would
bankrupt everything but inflaity and omni
potence,
Standinz here between the closed doors of
the pietured woods and the opening doors of
the Srausdgured i ndow Hint, I want to
etre my folly an Jous olly of longing for
glorioas things in the distance, while we
neglect appreciation of glorious things near
by. “Oh, it I could only go and see the
factories of lace at Brussels BAYS SOM One,
Why, within thirty feet of where you awaken
some ber morning you will see richer
Ince interwoven for your window panes by
divine flagere. Oh, if I could il, ihe fac.
tories of slik at Lyons! I" says some one,
Why, without leaving your home on the
h side of your own house on Christmas
you may see where the Lord has
spun threads about your windows this
way and that—embroideries such as no one
but God can work,
! sion in expenses to look at that whish is not
| half as well dons as something we can ses
| by crossing our own room, and free of
frost, will soon be busy at
| your own home!
Next I speak of the frost as a physician,
| Standing at the gates of New York harbor
autumn before last, the frost drove
! the cholera, saying, ‘Thus far shalt thou
come and no farther,” From Memphis and
i New Orleans and Jucksonville he smote the
faver plague till it reeled back and departed.
The frost is a physician that doctors cities,
| Nations and continents,
world. Quinine for malaria, anti-febrile for
| typholds, sulphonal for sleeplessness, anti-
| spasmodic for disturbed nerves, but in
therapeutics there is no remedy like the
small pellets prepared by the cold, and no
physician so skilful or 50 mighty ns the frost,
Scotland has had great physicians, but her
greatest doctors have been the Abernethies
and Aberorombies that have come down
over the highlands horsed on the north wind,
| Enziand has had her great physicians, but
| her greateat doctors have been the Andrew
Clarkes and the Mackenzies who appeared
the first night the fields of England wera
rimmed with white. America bas had its
| great physicians, but her greatest doctors
have been the Willard Parkers and Valentine
Motts who landed from bleak skies while
our fingers were benumbed and our ears
| tingled with the cold. Oh, it is high time
{ that you add another line to your liturgy!
It is high time that you make an addendom
to your prayers. It is high time that you
enlarge the catalogue of your blessings.
Thank God for frost, It is the best of
feldes, It is the only hope in bacter
It is the medicament of continents, It
is the salvation of our temperate zone, It is
the best tone that God ever gave the hi man
race. It is the only strong stimulant which
has no reaction. The best commentary on
{it I bad while walking near hero ons cool
morning with my brother John, who spont
the most of his life as n missionary in Chins,
and in that part of it where there are no
frosts, He sald there was a tingiing glad-
ness in his nerves indesoribable, and an almost
intoxication of delight from the fact that it
was the first time for years he had felt the
sensation of frost, We mplain of it, we
scold it, we frown upon it, when we
to be stirred by it to gratiiudeand hoist it on
| a doxology
jut I must go farther
frost as a jeweler, As the
rain, 80 the frost is frozen dew,
forms it from a liquid into a erystal,
the dew glorified. In thethirty-eighth «
ter of that inspired drama, the boo
God says to the inspired dra
sowtatie interrogation. "The hoa
heaven, who hath gendered ity
Job if he knows the
frost, He inquires about
that Job
eal line, An
the parentage of a raindrop in
YO4Urs ago gave a suggestive
“Hath the rain a
Almighty is catechising
He practically says
father? Do you know its
ther? In what eradie of the leaves did
we wind rock it? ‘The houry {rost of heaven,
rive hath gendered it 7
Heo is a stupid Christian who
much of the printed and bound Bible that
he riecls the Old Testament « he fields,
reads the wisdom and Kindness and
1G yd written in blossoms on the
n sparkies on the lake, in sl
the m MWA,
in frost
is the
Jew sk
nothing more wonderful in all
ryvstallography. Some morning in Decem
'r a whole « tinent i= found besprent with
diamonds, the result of one t's work by
this jeweler,
Do 3 wke the deprocistory re nark
the frost is impermanent and will last
two orthree hours What of that Wa
into London tower ani look at Crown
jewels of Eagland, but weare ina procession
that the guards Keep moving on, and five
minutes or less are your only opportunity o
looking at those crown jewels, but at the
rown jewals bestarred of the frost parks
and flelds youn may stand to look deliberntely
and for bourse, and po oaeto tell you to move
all
iol-
ought
an l speak
snow is frozen
God trans.
It i=
shape
{ Jou,
if with
ry frost of
God there
asks
the
He
gene eal ot
parentage
its pedigrees
iv up the
God hal
Su zrests stu frosts
inute t
r
slope
asked about
words that
text for a sermon,
But now the Lord
Joi about
out
“Poy
me
fathe r
the frost,
wi know its
inks a0
LH
of
orchard,
the sy,
groates]
Ferre is
ars
I'he
ser { the earth frost,
mga
the
¥
ir
in
and disder
Kings
ties regains
! it of heaven!
Lrative days has
t wireetn {1
a¢ *hkrouzh
sliver and
if the
5 rich enough
throw pearis, st th King of frost the
uly king riel throw opals and
sapphires and d Homer dmioribes
kines of amber given to Penelope,
frost necklinoes a continent, The cary
precious stones given to Harmonia
pinions of orange jasper and white m
stone and Indian agate, bat it was a mis’or
tune to any one who owned or inherited
and its history, genorntic generat
was a history of t the regalia of
frost is the goo SYery morning
that owns it,
Ihe imperial bh
somild not afford the
(Une
sis after
disaster, Lu
i fortune of
isehold of Louie XVi
diamond necklace which
ha { been ordered for Queen Marie Antoinstte,
and it was stolen and taken apart and lost,
but the neckiaes that the frost puts on the
wintry morning, thoa rh made 8% Many
br:lliants as the withersad glass blades, is
easily afforded by divine opulence and is
naver lost, bul after ifs use in the eoronstion
of the flelds is taken nek to heaven, © men
and women, accustomed to go into ecstasy
when in foreign teavel you eome upon the
historical gems of Nat. ons,
sailed the Mountain of Glory,
o! Light, or the Crown of ]
Eye of Allah, or the Star of Barawakx, or the
Kobe -noor, 1 implead you study the jewels
strewn all round your wintry home and rea.
lizathat “oy the breath of God frost
given,”
But I go a step farther and speak of the
frost as an evangelist, and a text of Seripiure
is not of much use to me unless I can find
the gospel in ft. The Israelites in the wil.
derness breakfasted on something that
looked like frozen dew, and the dew evapor-
ated and left a pulverized material, white and
looking hike frost, but it was manna, and of
that they ate, So now this morning, mixed
with the frozen dew of my text, thers is
manta on which we ean breakfast our souls,
You say the frost Kills, Yes, it Kills some
things, but we have aiready seen that it gives
health nnd life to others. This gospel is the
savor ol lite nuto life or of death unto death
As the frost is mighty, the gospel is mighty,
of
| be 0
or the
the Moon, or the
Nea
1)
{ descends from heaven,
{| God frost is given,
gospel is given,
grace of God purifies, As the frost bestars
| the sarth, 80 grace bejewels the soul. Asthe
By the breath of
| otherwise would beinedible, so the frost of
| trinls ripens and prepares food for the soul,
walnut and chestnut and bickory opea, and
| the luxuries of the wood s come into our laps
| or upon our tables ; so the frost of trial takes
many a hard and prickly shell and erushes
® ath that which stung the soul now
sit
There are pastngay ot Seripture that once
were cnigmas, puzzles, riddles and phposdi.
bilities for you to understand, bat the frosts
oftrouble after awhile exposed the full mean
ing to your soul, You said, “I do not see
why David keeps rolling over in his psalm
the story of how he was pursued and perse-
cuted.” He describes himself as surrounded
bY boss. He says, “They compassed me
ut like bees ; yaa, they compassed me
about lke bees," ou think what an ex-
Aftgerating thing for him to exclaim, “‘Out
u Fhe Sapa of hell have I cried unto Thee,
And there is 80 much of that style of lam-
entation in his wEtings you think he over-
foe It, pu after awh the frou gon POMS Upon
you inthe shape of persecu and are
attick With this censare and stuck with that
defamation, and stuck with ome | Jattehood,
and Hes fo swarms are red
sboat aur ny using
vid meant when
passed me about like ag id Yoo, hey
his | Sompasd 10 bout ix been,” and you go
and feel
What opened all thos: chapters that
hitherto hud no appropriateness? Frosts!
For un long while the Bible sosemeld lopsided
up to the consolatory, Why page alter page
after chapter and book after
in the Bible taken up with allevia-
with pacifications, with condolence?
The book svems like an apothecary store
with one-half of the shelves oceupiel with
balsams. Why such a superfiuity of ba.
sams? But after awhile the membransous
eroup carries off your ehild, or your health
gives way under the grip, or your property
Is swept off by u bad fovestme ut, or peranns
all three troubles come at onee-—bank-
ruptey, sickness an | bereavement, Now
the consolatory parts of the Bible do not
soem to disproportionate, You want
something off almos: all the shelves of that
snered dispensary. What has uncovered
and exposod to you the usefulness of
mach of the Bible that was before hidden?
The frosts have been fulfilling their mission,
Put down all the promises of the Bible on
for study, and pat on one side the
table a man who has never had any trouble,
or very little of it, but pile upon the table
beside him all encyelopadias and all diction.
aries, and all archmologies and all come
mentaries, and on the other side of the table
put a man who bas had trial upon trial, dis.
aster upon disaster, and let him begin the
study of the promises without lexicon, with
out commentary, without any book 1o ex.
pinin or help, and this Intter man will under
stand far more of the height and depth, and
lsngth and breadth promises than
the learned exeget opposite, almost sub
merged in sacred literature he has
the advantage over the other because he has
felt the mission of the frosts Oh, take the
consolation of this thet ye to whom life is
and a disappointment, and a
a pang. That is a beautiful
the Hebrews which
i, then
of bricks is doubled,
book
be
80
of those
one
41
a struggle
gantiet and
provers and
“When the tale
Moses comes,
Mild dos
sickness, but violent
and so I stand
drops that will
if you will only take
it is: “In the world
bat he
ng BAYS,
medicine will y for mild
patos need strong d
ou and count out
alleviate your worst
the medi
ma of
PRA
over
t eclne
shall bave
have
endure
on
greatest of 3
Forge. What mi
issing John Banyan's
‘ Mle an,
frosts of im
Fhe greatest
is the
I SRO
ihe
graduste
trial fits
and vou will seo
and edu wiional,
which baltic axes
always noticed in o
wd had son
by #
is 80 proveroial
ymething {say o
ay
wife alway
portunity
¥ svn d gos
proce fed
1% ’
Ny «
the 0 Ta
Pants wr,
Or,
may
breath of
hn
serve the 1
hard kn
Bwhiie though vou
it now. that hy the
g Gol frose iv
rae of your
pining Taxes
after
inte
lovin I» i ot
Owen in o
tent,
For many ya
selebrated the grace and wilt
Arabian b :
bition of horseman
was just outside t
Arabia inte] Aral i»
know wher Araldan raow got
fl and postr 3 Vi |
Mohammed, with 30.000
a the march, cou 1d for them
f water for three da Comin
A river wa 3 sight
30 000 he
ite alt
ing. an
ympaint,
ols yy ind
fran
OPEes wonderfa: #xhi.
Yer Witness
Jorofa ley
n steed no
» thes their
wd frows VOR
BYAIFY
Bot & drog
r 10 the tog
With a wil
yr the st reas
turies ago
fa hill
the spins Sart od
araed host was seen
af Mohammed's commas 100
orthe bh
or An ad
t
£ reese |
ail the 30.000
the river ex
with thirst, wheeled y fine
Nothing in human bris
os exonis that bravery and ssi!
arabia i war horses
I Mohamned chose
those flve onthe
wad
apt fis wee i
batt ie
sell saor
sacrifice
rv and
ae five
svien ki 1 alee
use, and from
Arabi em Ages
equestrian world, And jet
war of troth against err
eas aoninst sin and heaven agains
teat war horses are fed Ir
' under pany and self denial and
swered the gospel trampet
ato fine, Out of great tribulation
great fires, out of great they
And let say It will not take
301 10 make up to you in the next
all vou have sulleral in this Ae §
braven He may say, man one of
thous rowernd and « palaces
that ridge of gold overlooking the sen of
ginss, Give this woman = home among
those amarant hine blooms and bet weon hows
fountains toming in the everlasting sunlight,
Give her a couch manopied with rainbows to
pay her for all the fatigues of witehood and
motheriood and housexeeping, from which
she had no rest jor forty years
“Capbearers of heaven, give these
arrived souls from earth the costliest Lever.
ages, and roll to their door the grandest
shariots, and hang on their walls the sweet.
=! harps that ever thrammed to flaggers
seraphic. Give to them rapiure on rapture,
celebration on eeiebhration, jubilee on jubi.
lee, heaven on heaven. They had a hard
time on earth earning a livelihood, or
ing six children, or waiting on querulous
old age, or battling falsehoods that were told
about them, or were compelled to work after
they got shortbhreathed and rheumatic and
dimsighted,
* Chamberiaing of heaven! Keepers of tha
king's robes! Banqueters of eternal royalty |
Make up to them a bundredfold, a thousand.
Lhoreea for the
me say
thas gront
dencen
CRM
long
world for
snter
frosts,
-_ ¢
the or
Hive this
otnaded
swaddling clothes to shroud, and
thos wlio, whether on the hills, or
fot all
in the
ol the
frosts stand up and wave their scepters?”
And 1 looked and, behold ! nine-tenths of tha
|
that on the coldest nights the aurora is
and that
“‘by the breath of God frost is given.”
A Ferocious Little Fish,
In an article on “Jamaica Fishing,”
in Outing, the author says: The
only drawback to the use of the tuck
net is tho liability to ensnare those
ferocious little cannibals, ‘‘tripe-eat-
ers,” so called because they soon pen-
etrate to the abdomen of any suimal
they attack, and speedily reduce it to
a skeleton. They usnally £0 in swarms,
their jaws wide open, tearing whatever
comes in their wai. especially the
meshes of a net, which the oy ich
render useless, This bloodthirsty lit-
tle creature is of a bright orange hue,
shading towards the back ay
ash color, while its gill-covers are
tinged with red.
5 ASA.
The largest bell in the world is the
Kremlitt, ast Moscow, Russia; 432,000
pounds,
|
A TENNYSON STORY.
Was Not Only sn Great Poet, bot a
Good Business Man.
A capital story, which Is
authentic, Is told atout the
laureate and his wonderful
“The Hevenge,” says a correspondent
of the Leeds (England) Mercary., It
was first published in the Nineteenth
Century In 1878 or 1879. On the
eve of its publication Tennyson in-
vited between thirty and forty of his
most intimate friends to his home in
Eaton Square,in order that he might
recite this patriotic plece to them.
It is well known that Lord Tennyson
was an excellent man of business
Had he written “Paradise Lost” he
would have been both very hungry
and very cold before accepting £10
for the copyright.
in existence which,
right to publish his works at a cer-
tain price, ends with a declaration
that, whether
his offer or not, he (Lord Tennyson)
would not accept “a blessed
less! In fact, he was very much
like a certain Leeds banker who,
when asked by a cust to cash 4
draft for a large amount over the
ounter replied: “We do
for nothing for nobody here” in
Wemyss Reld's “Life of Lord Hough-
ton” there is an amusing letter from
the late laureate which compares the
writing of poetry for nothing to the
milkirg of he goats When the re-
eital of “The Revenge” in Eaton
Square took place there was much
fingo feeling about in shion
society in London, and not a few in
persons were among the select
AS Lhe proceeded in
SODOrous tones, rendered
attractive by his Lin-
coinshire accent, the few
upon his words he
the las
He
quite
late
poein,
Hner
athe
fected
audience.
his rich and
aii the more
poet
favored
Ww he
S43 13 4F
h 0g
reached
island cra
GL EVETINO?
present were
ment ana
Amaze
added
the
th
Lie
ate
A Child Enjoys
The pleasant Save
ing eect of
he
need of 8
Tr. gen! action and
of Figs,
father or mother
tat
hyraug when in
MERI: be cos
five or bilious, the mos gratifying result
bread
ow
oly known and
bottie.
Me use: so thal it is the family rem
every family should have 8
I ye
by
detested don
Deafares Cannot be Cared
weal appl
EH]
cation as they cas
portio of the sar There is on
Deaf and that Is b
eal nien is CRG
When
Time
¥ Con
Lh
fF 1h
this tu
ng sound or
is IR eniiiely
d uniess the
ar uh this t
¥
e gels in
MY
vhf
intan.
ie ee
in
# normal
forever:
TE a by catarrh)
by Hall's Catarrh ( ure,
F.J1. Caeser & Co, Tol
nuggets, T5c,
Mane persons are broken down from over.
work or household cares Brown's Iron Pit.
ters rob 8 the svete, aide digestion, re
Yes vxoeMe of ir, ABH cures medaria. A
apiendid (onio for women and children.
Pewnre
wi
of the man or woman whown
i BPs wn Mer,
Throat, «
InoxemiaL Taocaes
home
tather fo pinish
than to
your
be punished by them,
appe
Brown's Iron Bitters cure I» ia, Ma's.
Ha Billovsnees and General rom Gives
rength. aids Divestion, tofies the nerves
Sh appetite. The Dest tonie for Nursasg
Mo Avera, weak women and childres,
Ithium
an Dature to hate him whom you
have ip
tres),
Beecham’ s Pills with a drink k of water morn.
ings. be cham s- no others. 2 cents a box
Ugliness has this advantage over beaut ¥ ne
it never Indes.
1 aftiored with sore eyes use Dr, Masao Thome
“ons Eye-water. Diruggists sell at Ze. per bottle
The be ot preparation for ‘behaving right is
to think right
For Severe, Lingerin
Lungs, Bleeding from i
Asthma, and Consu
stages, Dr. Piloroe's Go
ery is a sovereign ign remedy.
Erg ani Hoh
win not make fat
itis,
jon. 1 in its early
Medical ve
It not only
but also builds up the
of those reduced Delon
standard by “ Wasting Diseases.”
folks more corpulent.
BF, Whey, of
Eider, Box
Take no Substitute for
Royal Baking Powder.
It is Absolutely Pure.
All others contain alum or ammonia.
Halrpios,
Five hundred millions of
That what the wowen
land annual'y buy, beg, or borrow,
the Million Now, a hairpin
sometinies
with
is A
The Bay View Reading Circle.
Ever since the well-known Chay
tauqua Circle was started there has
been an insistent demand for a short,
well-planned and low-priced course of
be. | reading for the thousands for whom
age the above circle course is too expen-
there sive, and requires too much time.
therefore, these | The Bay View Reading Circle has
millions? During the last ' beep organized to meet the demand.
5, 000,000,000 of hairpins | Many of the leading educators and
made and sold At ministers of the country are among
about 100, t+ promoters, and Mr. J. M. Hall, of
lint, Mich., is the Superintendent.
To him application should be made
for information The circle ;:15 a
fuur years’ course of reading, and has
the advantage of specializing sub-
jects. The first vear is the German
beginning with November.
is much aimless acd hap.
ng, that the well-planned
attractive Hay View course
therefo ought to meet with instant favor,
hairpins!
of this
is
it
Comes bent
its
What
pale and
avoirdug
His
becomes of
ten years
have beep
ent there
in circ
pres
are only J, D3)
Now, wher were |}
§. B00, 000, GUD?
On
other
aiat
I hey have been sown
l.Land’'s Eod to California
ieft not a trac
some of them
have
year
There
hazard read
anda
fi
fulness,
3 f
most women
strange nairpins
but
i adopting
are of acce
toothbrush
1
go Lo
8)
uniden
» hafirnir
¢ hairpins
ake Hulsam
thrown oi
Ana
WAS A PHYSICAL WRECK.
Jide or Walk.
18 Years!
Could Scarcely
Suffered for
when a pack
bought for
age
alew pen
old
COMOT Nias
) Ya. 5, 1888.
Dr. KB . Binghawa
Gentlemen: ¥
4 mer & Cx
gg to Lthelr
ge of
ay
OL BY 1s mony with
{ ' for 1 would
easily count thel aning of e like todo what 1 oan
DET.
tins
Tering we
red Bae
teen Years
tikes for
with
wer own hal Female Weakness
own baby, no matieg OW num . every form an
and ‘ irned to
srthae ely iI have
x fise bottles of
riwamp-Reoeot,
of Femgle
bottles of U & O
ill
14
av
is
ana
resort 1
i for
ye
eizion i ef 5
two
bast 1 Ie
ad aw
flure. Other generat il
ind Swamp-Root Cured We.
one 8 low 4 L503
Oat ‘ata When 1 commonos
: i 5 > y ither ride or ithout suffering
intenee pain: now | can do both as well as |
entirely cured
my own house
restored 10
hair
jar
PEAIHUNEY
friendsh
slrot
He
Hiar
to i taking your remodies §
Tw
ip filial
Ig enough to i
part with her tre
laugh and offer you
*
oould ww walk
devotion
ove my life, for lam
of Vemale weakness, | can de
work, and 1 foel that | an entirely
will ¢ t ami hepith, 1 shall never conse 10 thank
rill reserve her pe .
1 rest wey pe ; you for making me a well boaithy
COOGI girl can 1» OW 3 EB ren Lhe Wk,
«1 her particular hairpin
bureau. nav, from the
some friend who had al
“German
= Syrup”
Juror J. B. Hn, of
Court, Walker county, Georgia
hinks enough of German Syrup
send wus voluntanis
sing it hes
1 thus use and
le, what they
worth the eiion of th
It is above suspicion
your German Syrup
my Coug
233 ir
AUT
God and
and WOInan
physionl wreck that i
At Druggistis. 50 cent and $1.00 Size,
svalidy uid 10 Real msaitatdon
Kilmeer & Co, - Bia
from
RK. Y.
Very from 4
of Sra In hamton,
the Superi 101
a strong |
andor
and ed
ey
3
gem tg
ucauon
PHOTOS phirATIamEs 430
Nic smm———— Min, Red
‘* 1 have used Sherman, Biaine, Depew Russell,
lave used Butier. Congling, Whitelaw Reid,
he SAVS, Horace Greely, Daniel Webster, Bis.
hs and Colds on the Throat BE ATE rst Toe
and Lungs. 1« an recommend it for are munted in A
tyle. Abo
them as a first-class medicine,
Take no substitute,
arti
€ put
201
am, «
— POY compieie for 19 cents
@ | i or sismps AUR TS,
i HOY AND GIRLS are relling
co ng money
WIFT'S SPECIFIC»
For renov ating the entire system,
eliminating ail YVoisons from the
HOt SH & CO. 4 Exchange Building,
$
Biogd, whether of scrofulous of
Boston, Mass
malarial origin, this SA bas no equal,
and
SH
“ For eighteen months 1 had an
eating sore on my tongue I was
treated by best Jocal physicians,
bat obtained no relief | the sore gradually grew
worse. 1 finally took 8, 8 8 . and was entirely
cured afte: using a few bottles.’
C. BB. McL EMORE, Henderson, Tex.
? cp —
Treatise on Blood and Skin
oases mailed free,
Tue Swirr Srectric Co,
ANA, Ga.
purity of material,” “excellent favor,”
FAMILY MEDICINE]
and “uniform even oop
|GENTS Sn So. aa] | MALTERBARER® Ph, DORCHESTER, fuss,
or commision 10 hal $ PEC 1A 1: OFFER. ~To advertise our “Victron
eal Ink Erasing Pencil. Agents ag a per i Uotom Proc, on reeeipt of your photogra
reek, Monre Bras Mig Uo X wo, La Crosse, | and se. (mote wr ste ) we will re: a y
CHANC | BEAL ey LLY LO LOMED nd FRAMED.
usands A
Presche
{ same price
We have Poels
Presid
ts, Aciresscs
ents 6
‘THE JUDCES
WORLD'S COLUMSIAX EXPOSITIO
Have made the
HIGHEST AWARDS
Medals and Diplomas) to
WALTER BAKER & CO.
On each of the following named articles:
BREAKFAST COCOA, .
Premium No. 1, Chocolate,
Hin.
Vanilla Chocolate, . . .
German Sweet Chocolate,
Coco Butter, « + « « « +
For
FLAKE & CA BN Peart Siren. Almay.
BRU
any Boggy oh to pr in 3 twats
with my « ow y mail, pais,
AGENTN. BRINK. Boom viite. O
PATENTS INGE © &
{
i
until Patent obtained. Write for Inventor's Guide
3 weekly & board wanted, mechanic
B ——"
PRON,
0 MP foe
with tools: references, 325 ¥ Ta ow York.
PIERRE
chanoes for small investments,
i Tada — mr Juw 4 howeagin
next ten
MENT RAVKE
10 thousands in
Cram RYBRITVES.