anits himself to engage in a crooked transaction it is easy to see the bent of his mind. — Buffalo Courier, KiNDp, courteous, and polite treats ment of all persops is ope mark of a true woman, and of a true man also. THE messenger boy is wedded to his idles. —Glens Falls Bepullican. vt cn —— Havd Times, Politicians may debate and Congress may legislate, but there is one element of distress which makes the times vary hard indeed, and that is a cold winter and physical suffering. Pains and aches are pot set down in any tariff list, and is reformer, St. Jacobs Oil, that does not delay a prompt eure of such evils, there one Some say that with the greater vse of the telephon~, the messenger boy is beginning to go. He may be, but he's not going {. st, Deafoess Cannot be Cured oy local applications, as they cannot reach the Aisersea portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Dea , and that is by constitu- tional remedies. Deafness is caused Ly an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in. flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper- fect hearicg. and wuen it ie entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam- mation can be taken out and this tube re. stored to {18 normal condition, heariug will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ten ars caused by eatarrh, which i tlamed condition of the mucous surfaces, We wili give One Hundred Dollars for an: case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free, F.J. Canexey & Co. Toledo, O. £9 Sold by Druggists, Thc. A miner may be everso wel can't herp ger ing in a hole cecasisnally. The Most Pleasant Way Of preventing the grippe, colds headaches, and fevers is to use the edy, Syrup of Figs, whe needs a gentle, vet effec be benefited one pet manufactured by Co, caly. For sale and $1 bottles ne Hawaiian unce the Queen's LHGUW AaXAalive reme- never the system To the true iy Fig Syrup in Sc, ive cieans ng. must reme the Californias by al druz Kiss difficulty -How nam to pro- Malaria cured and eradicated from the sys. tem by Brown's Iron Bitters. which enr ches the blood, tones the nerves, aids digestion. Acts like a charm on persons io general il health, giving new energy and strength. A gross outrage— Finding ita few packages short FOR VOUGHR AND Brows’ Broxonias IFIROAT Ie 1D"RY wn Trocags * Have never changed my mind resnecting them, except | think better af ¢ which | baran be think. ing well of V—Rep, Henry Ward Beecher, Sold ouly in boxes. Lumbermen beads. are not ne Brown's Iron Bitters eure« Dyspepsia. Mala. rin, Biliousness and General Debility., Gives strength, aids Divestion, tone« the nerves ereates sppetite. The best tonic for Nursing others. weak women and chi idren. i: AWYers may be versus,’ poets ; they write I afMioted with sore eves use , Dr. beac Thom son's Eye-water Drngrists ani! at Se per hottla It's a wise cow that knows its own butter Mornings Heec with a dr nk of water. BescLam's its 5 box The golden rule sMaiker N.Y. mr. Chas, A. West Walworth, Diseased Bone After an injury to my r.gh much suffering, | was laid payearand ina hospital at Rochester another year, where | underwent seveni surgical ow rations, the last taking away tae limb at the hip. My case was Prono nee i April, 2, | commenced taking Howl's “arsapariiia Aftes y the sceond hott] vandal the hips y healed. A FOF TE, HOOD'S CURES, About twenty-five years After provounced SCROFLA 1 withe me being Lenefited ; % CO fee Rn ion, tad Afi thousand dollars. Cured Send for Tress tie 0% Blood and ATLAY™ A, st ynge as it may seem, is caused greatest fact in connection with digested fat—and the most The only possible hel, newal of new, healthy sumption just this way, I ittle made me | wx ever and How's Pills ar vegetable, perfeothy ago ll was afflicted with a LZ) was treated by several and 1 tried many blood my skin is perfectly clear, and | Mas ¥V. T BUCK, Skin Disessss mailed free by SEC is Sn s sosssscssssd from a lack of that which is scott's Emulsion weakened digestion is quickly in Consumption is the tissue, Scott's Emulsion \ Prepared by Beott 4 Bowne, X. ¥. All druggists. ing caused ne bi pse fees the w tire sialon NX purely -e -» pm nL AK A Starker West parmiocss, always reliable and beneficial, disease which the doctors Y physicians and specialists ~ ear: remedies. without relief. woulda: be in my fer condition for two Delaney, Ark, swirr seeciFic eo, SSS, A Weak Digestion never exactly digested—/at. The appears at this point-—it is partly strengthened by it. arrest of waste and re- has done wonders in Con- REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject. “Shortened Lives.” Text: * The righteous is taken away from the evil to come," Isaiah vil, , | the figures 1803. year. Io January last we celebrated its birth. To-day we attend its obsequies. An- other twelve months have been out out of our esrthly continuance, and it is a time for absorbing reflection. We all spend much time in panegyrie of longevity, live to be an octogenarian. If in youth, we say, “What a Muhlenberg in old age said that the hvmn written in early life by his own hand no more expressed his sentiment when it said I would not live alway. pleasantly ecircumstanced, never wants to go, William the great poet, at eighty-two years of age, standing in my house in a festal group read- ing “7 banatopsis’ ' without spectacles, was Just as anxious to live as when at eighteen vears of age he wrote the immortal threenody, Cato feared at eighty years of age would pot live to learn Greek at 115 years, writing the history of his time, feared a collapse, pity!’ If one be he desirability as when he snuffed out politician, Albert Barnes, so well prepared for the Bo it is all the way down, pose that the last time I sup- his feet wet lest it shorten his days. Indeed I some time ago preached a sermon on the but io this. the last many are filled with day of 1893, and when of their life is closing, and that thev have propose 10 pres weh to #% of an abbreviated If I were an agnostic, 1 would say a man is blessed in proportion to the pumber of years he can stay on ‘terra firma,” because falls off the docks, and if be is set up in some morgus of the universe to see If I thought God last forty or fifty or 100 was to go into mude man only to years, and then he keep alive and even in be very cautious, and to curry an uml Jife preservers and fall off into nothingaess and obliteration. But, my friends, you are not agoosties, residence of the righteous in heaven, and therefore I first remark that an abbreviated earthly existence is to be desired, and is a blessing because it makes one's life work very compact Some men go to business af the morning and retarn at Others go ut ¥ o'clock Others go at 10 and return friends who are ten hours a day in business others who are flve hours, others who are one hour. They all do their work well thes do their entire work, and thea they re tarn Which position do you think the most desirable? You say, other things being equal, the man who is the shortest time de tained in business and who can return home the quickest is the most blessad, Now, my friends, why not earry that 2 sense into the subject of transference (rom this world I a parson die in ildbood, he gets through his work at 9 o'clock in the morning. If he dieat forty-five years of age, be gets through his work at 12 o'clock noon I? he die at seventy years of age, ho gets through his work at 5 o'clock in the alter noon. [fhe die at ninety, he has to toil all the way on up to 11 o'clock at night, The sooner we get through our work the better 7 oclock in 7 in the evening. and return at 12 nt 4. 1 have ood does pot sit down in the stubble field, bat, from under a tree, he makes a straight for the old homestead. All we want to anxious about is to get our work done well done ; the quicker the better, Again, there is ablessing in an abbreviated sarthly existence in the fact that moral dis. aster might come upon the man if he tarried longer. A man who had been prominent in churches, and who had been admired for his generosity and kindaess everywhere, for for gery was sent to State prison for fifteen yoars, Twenty years before there was no more prob- ability of that man ss committing a commercial dishonesty than that you will commit enm- mercial dishonesty. The number of men who be and of age insimply appalling. [If they had died thirty vears before, it would have been batter for them and better for their families. The clone, There is a wrong theory right. You might as well say there is noth- ing wanting for a ship's safety except to get Atlantic Ocean. | have sometimes asked thoes who were sohool- mates or college mates of some great de. “What kind of a boy What Kind of sa young man was he?’ and they havesald: “Why, be was a splendid fellow. I had no idea he could aver go into such an outrage.” The temptation of life sometimes comes far oa in The first time | erosasi the Atlantic Ocean it was as smooth ss a millpond, and I thought the seu captains and voyagers had slanderad the old ocean, and I wrote home | “Tae Smile of but I never afterward could have we got a terrible shaking up. The flest voy- age of life may be very smooth ; Many who start life in The great pressure of temptation comes sometimes in this direction : five vears of age a man's nervous system changes, and some one tells him he must stimulants keep him down, or a man has ing where by one dishonored action he can Jift himself and his family from all financial embarrassment, He sttempts 10 leap the chasm, and he falls into if, Then it is in after life that the great temp- If n man makes a fortunes before thirty years of age, he goner- ally loses ft before forty, The solid and the permanent fortunes for the most do not Some to their climax until midlife or in old eo. The most of the bank president have ite hair. Many of those who have been largely successful have been full of arro- ganos or worldliness in old age. They may not have lost their integrity, but they have become 80 worldly and so fife pndeg th influence of large success t t to everybody that their success has eng a temporal calamity and eternal damage. Concerning many ple it may bo said it seers as if it would have been better if they | wi could have embarked from this lite at twen- ty or thirty years of age. Do you know the reason why the vast majority of people die bolore thirty-five? It is because have not the moral endurance for that roady to overreach you and take afl von have. Defense against cold, defense against heat, defense against sickness, defense against the world's abuse, defense all the way down to the grave, and even the tombstone sometimes | is not a a sufMeient barricade, 1f a soldier who has been on gaard, shiver. | ing snd stung with the cold, pacing up and | down the parapet with shouldered musket, Is glad when someone comes to relieve guard nnd he can go inside the fortress, ought not that man to shout for joy who ean put down his weapon of earthly defense and go into the king's castle? Who i8 the more fortunate, fie soldier who has to stand guard twelve hours, or the man who has to stand guard six hours? We have common sense about evarvthing but religion, common sense about Again, there is a blessing in an abbrevi. ated earthly existence in the fact that one es. eapes so many bereavements, The longer we live the more attachmants and the more kindred, the mora chords ta be woundal or raspecd or sundered, If a man live on to seventy or eighty vears of age, how many graves are cleft at his fest? In that long | reach of time father and mother go, brothers | and sisters go, children go, grandehildreu | go, personal friends outside the family circle | whom they had loved with a love like that of David and Jonathan, Besides that, some men have a natura trepidation about dissolution, and ever and | nnon during forty or fifty or sixty vears this | horror of their dissolution shudders through ! soul and body Now, suppose the lad goes at sixtesn venrs of age, He fifty funerals, fifty caskets, fifty obsequies, fifty | awful wrenehings of the heart, It is hard enough for us to bear their departure, hut is { it not easier for us to bear their departure than for them to stay and bear fifty de partares? Shall we not, by the grace of God, rouss ourselves into a generosity of beregve | ment waich will practically ““It i= hard | snough for me to go through this bercave- ment, but how glad I am that he will never have to go through it!” Bo I reason with myself, and so you will find it helpful to reason with ves David lost his son, Though David was king, | he lay on the earth mourning and labie for some time, At this distance of time, which do you realiy think was the one to congratulated, the short lived child or the | long lived father? Had Davied died as early as that child, he would in the first piace have that particular bereavement, then he would | have escaped the worst bereavement of Ab- { salom, his recreant son and the pursuit of the Phnilistines, and the fatigues of his mili i tary campaign, sad the jealousy of Saul the perfidy of Ahithophel, and IrRe Shimei, and the destruction of his family Ziklaz, and, above all, he would have #8 caped the two great calamities of life, great sins of uncleanness and murder, Hved to be of vast use to the church and the world, but so far as his own happiness was concerned, does it pot seem 10 you that i | would have been better for him to have gone early? Now, this, my friends, explains some things that to you have been inexplicable Tols shows you why when God takes little children from s household he Is very apt to take the brightest, the most genial, the most sympathetic, the most talented, Why? It is { beacause that Kind of nature suffers the most whenit does suffer and is most liable to ation. God saw the tempest sweeping {up from the Caribbean, and He put the deli | eats craft into the first harbor, “Taken away i from the evil 10 come s Again, my friends, there is a blessing in an abbrevinted sarthly exis'enos in the fact that it puts one soocuer in the centre of things All astropomers, infidel as well as Christian, agree in belleving that the universe swings around some great centre Any one who has studied the earth and studied the heavens knows that Gols favorite figure in geom etry i= A circle. When God put forth His band to create the universe, He did not strike that hand at right angles, but He waved it in a circle, and kept on in 8 circle until systems and constellations and gaiaxies and all worlds took that mo- tion, Oar planet swingiog around the sun, other planets swinging around but somewhere a great hub around which the great wheel of the aniverss turns, Now that csntre fs heaven, That i the capital of the universe of immensity Now, does not our common sense teach us that in matters of study it is better for us to move out from the centre toward the circam- ference, where our world is? We are like those who siudy the American continent willie standing on the Atlantic beach. { way to study the continent is to cross #0 to the heart of it, world is deleotive of the telescope piece BROADER Ray, yvoursel INOONKG- be the ot of a the tempt other suns it or Our standpoint in this We are at the wrong end The best way fo study a ol macainery is not to the sugineer and take our place right amid the saws and cylinders. We wear cur eves oot and our brain out from the fnct that we are Mudying under such great disadvantage, Millions of doliars for observatories to | study things about the moon, about the sun, about the rings of Saturn, about transits and ocenitations and eclipses, sito ply because our studio, our observatory, is poorly situated, We are down in theesllar trying to study the palace of the universe, while our departed | Christian friends have gone up stairs amid the skylights to study. Now, when ons can sooner centre of things, | Inted? i man class? We study God in this | the Biblical photograph of Him, but we all | know we ean in five minutes of interview with & friend get more accurate idea of him {than we ean by studying him fifty years | through pictures of words, that died Inst night to-day knows more of God than all Andover, and all Princeton, and ; all New Brunswick, and all Edinburgh, and all the theological institutions in Christen. dom, Is it mot better to go up to the very | headquarters of knowledge? Does not our common sense {teach us that it is better to be at the centre than to be is he not to be congratu- world by | nervously fast to the tire lest we be sud- denly hurled into light and eternal felicity? | Through all kinds of optical instruments trying to peer in through the cracks and the | keyholes of heaven of the celestial mansion will be swung wide | open before our entranced vision rushing about the apothecary shops of this world, | wondering if this is good for rheumatism, and that is good for neuralgia and some- thing else is good for a bad cough, lest we be suddenly ushered into a land of everiast- ing health, where the inhabitant never says, “I am siok.” What fools we all are to fer the ecir- cum ferencs to the centre ! hat a dreadful thing it would be if we should be suddenty ushered from this wintry world into the Haylime orchards of heaven, and if our pap, otf #in and sorrow should be sad- ken up by a presentation of an sror’s castle, surrounded by parks with springing fountains and paths up snd down which angels of God walk two oi two. We stick to the world as though we pre. ferred cold drizzle to warm habitation, dis cord to cantata, sackcloth to royal purple ns though we preferred a plano with, four or five k ys out of tune to an instrument fully Happs h and heaven had signed ahd earth bad taken on bridal array yh ven had e into deep juourning all its waters lagnant, all its on, all chalices crac a cm 3he lawns sloping to the river with dead under den em time hills of thie work 1and soo how it looked, and then they started for a better stop Jing place, They were Hike ships that put hn at | Bt. Helena, staying there long enough to let passengers go up snd see the barracks of | Napoleon's eaptivity'und then hoist sail for | the port of their own native land. They only took this world *‘in transite.” It is hard for | us, but it is blessed for them, we ought not to go around sighing and | groaning because another year bas gone, jut we ought to go down on one knee by the | milestone and see the letters and thank God | that we are 365 miles nearer home, We ought our health or about anticipated demise, Wao | ought to be living, not maxim which I used so hear in my boyhood, that you must live as thoug | the last ; you must live to live forever, for you will, | vous lest vou have to move into an Alhambra, One Christmas morning ons of bore, an old sea captain, died, After departed, he were just going was, he had already gone throug rows,” In the adjoining wWers Caristmas presents waiting for his distribu. | thon, Long ago. one night, when he had i narrowly escaped with his ship from being run down by 8 great ocean steamer, be hal made his peace with God, apd sn ki neighbor or a better man vou wou this side of heaven, Without & moment's warning the pilot of the heavenly harbor had i met him just off the lightship, The captain talked to goodness God, and especisliy of a time | when he was about to go in New York har- bor with his ship from Liverpool, nd he was suddenly impressed that he ougnt to put back to sea, Under the protest of and under their very threat put sea, fearing at the same time he was losing his mind, for it did seem so unreasonable { that when they could get into harbor that ight they should put back to sea, But they put back to sea, and the captain said to his mate, “You will eall me at 10 o'cl night.” At 12 night aroused snd sald ‘What do thought I told you to eall me at and here it is J2 Ww sald “1 did call you at 10 o'ciock, and looked around and told me t« THis sane of Do not be ner. life had into harbor. The fact a the “*Nar- room often me of the of ne O0K a at the #8 this O elock neal I 10 oelock, the mate, you got up keep right on then 10 nptain ’ rance of ht arse for two hour onli ¥ at 12 “Is it possible i 3 i, RNa “lock Maid the bave no rememb ani ory t gas At 12 o'clock the capinin went on deck gh the rift of the cloud the moor 3 showed wreck with 100 struggiiug p beipad them off, Had he or any ater at that point ¢ have been those drowning people. On board the captain # vessel they began to band together as to wi pay for the rescue and what they should pay for the provisions. ““Ab,"” says the captain, ‘my lads, you can’t pay ms anything have on board is yours, | feel too bonored of God in having saved vo any pay.” Just like him. pay except that his SCNow, Ob, that the old sea captain's God might be my God and yours, Amid the stormy seas of this life may we have as tenderly to take care of us as the captain took eare of the drowning crew and the passengers And may we come otc the harbor with as little physical pain and with as bright a hope as he had, and if it should happen to be a Christmas morning when the presegis are being disiributed sod we are eslebrating the birth of Him who came 1+ save our shipwracked world, ail the Letter for what grander, brighter Christ mas present could we have than heaven I — nim a sar Senger He been any earlier f the sea he would of Bo service to it thew she uid greatly 910 lake He never got any ol own applauding con- BIWAYE OMS One California’s Gold Product, Expert miners and prospectors pre dict that the new South fields, of which the wonderful city of Johanunisberg is the commercial cen- tre, will, when fully developed, prove to be the richest ever discovered. The { character and extent of the deposits {in that territory, says the New York Herald, certainly warrant the expeec- tation that further operations place it among the most famous min- ing regious in history, its output al ready exceeding that of any other dis trict of similar geographical area with the single exception of California. It is to California, indeed, that his | toriane must turn the standard with which to ascertain the compars- tive richness of all gold fields The record of that State in the yield of the precious metal stands without parallel in the history of mankind No other territory ever developed gold deposits so extensive, so rich, or #0 enduring, nor has any ever wit. nessed profitable mining operations extending over such long periods of time. The gold produced in California | since 1850 exceeds $81,250,000,000, and the yield at present amounts to about $13,000,000 a year, or perhaps 87,- | 000,000 more than that of any African gold for other State. The output has decreased some- what in recent years, but the decline is not due to any general exhaustion of the territory, but to the suspension of the hydranlic mines, which of them- | selves turned oat something like §10,- { 000,000 annually, These figures set a high mark for | boomers of the Bouth African gold fields. They represent a contribution {to the wealth of the world never equaled by any similar area of terri- tory on the face of the earth. And California, notwithstanding the diver- | sion of vast sums of her energy and capital to profitable mining opera tions for other minerals, is still turn. ing out more than one-third of the gold produced in the United States. nit is Animal Talk, It will be remembered that when some time ago Professor Garner went to Africa to study the monkey Joe guage there were many newspa jokes perpetrated at his expense. ut Paul du Chaillu, who has spent much of his life in Africa, believes that Garner is right in his theory of the ex- istence of a monkey Ia y, Ri though he does not commit himself to the notion that it is possible for man to acquire that language. When there are so many instances of horses, dogs and other animale learning so much of human language as to promptly obey commands given, " yould unrea- sonable to su had not eir own. danger that a AAA. A> S— S. Gov't Report. Baking Powder 1 Baking Powder leavening greatly in * gas per BIG IRONCLADS. Taught by the Hecent the British Navy, lowing are the principal the speech in which Lord Armstrong, at the meeting of share holders of his famous company the other day, expressed his views coun- ning the involved In too ion of gigantic ironclads of the Camperdown though King witl restricted momentum, was bur pide of the Victoria Lie that while great ure effective jectiies, a nett 1 ithst 1 Disaster in The fol points of cet dangers construct The ram sir ii and it armour against doutited mies Wi does, 1 or i M Can Lhnstan iif Lie I v 5 6 ¥ 1 ; HOWE Gi ail i aent Licted he case of 1 f the Llow of incomparably to the ful da mag Was sus tian that due hie ship, ramming vessel Her in imminent her victim to the rs, therefore, that stability of the the ££ 0« h as to pl f ace danger ollowing { : bottom.” It appea y the strength prow anc ram of the {( amperd Own are quite jnsufficient to enable her to deliver an effective stroke against an adversary without the same time imper her fiotation. This k¢ having a great that can- burst, : fired for applies ana ’ at ling own gun shouig what t 1 fear it nd lI apprehend that to the ram of the Camperdown would aps equally the ram of every great battle s British ser- Vice YV esse ming need and they we complications sonal dash, « which want in the British the chief quality fng their such a importance in comparison with of a battie ship. 1 am therefore of pinion that a considerable number of inexpensive ram ships should form an item in any fut ship-buildi pro gramme Wi Hie on frain from sion as ou high explosive vast numbers Against the 16 hip in the & Spec not uata designed for ram- LT iarge bir free | Dattie f 5 be direct. occasional f small that would ired in DAYY requ i The would Lise, Osx VYOLRe | we oO ure ng 1 cannot my apprehen- disastre effect of shells discharged in from quick-firing guns unarmored portions of battie ships. The experiments nade sot ears ago with such shells against the Resistance, which was an armored ship of small value given up for experiment, proved that such shells would competent to wreck the unprotected plating down or possibly below, the water level, and Lhat even where a streak of armor was applied at the water-line the damage might be low enough down to cause the ship to be flooded by the wash of the It was proved also that armor of sma’'l thickness insured the bursting of these shells harmiessly outside of the ship. which, of course, raises the question whether, if armor has to be used at all, it ought not to be applied in varying thicknesses over the whole ship. this subject re- expressing the us ne \ be to, Rea. YOUR GOOD HEALTH, if you're a suffering wo- man, demands Doctor Pierce's Favorite Pre scription. There's no other medicine like it, for women's peculiar ills. No matter bow distressing your symp- toms, it relieves your aches and pains, and if faithfully used will bring a permanent cure in every chromic weakness or deran ment, in catarrbal inflammation, and in displacements of women, West Liberty. O, Dr RV, Pierce: Dear Sir—1 can cheers fully recommend your valuable medicine, the * Favorite Prescription,” to suffering females. Three years ago my health beoame so poor that I was scarcely able to help with the house. hold duties. 1 was persunded to lo uy our with the local trestmment you advised, made My sister has used it in the family with like 8 foun To meet the resent Hard Times on Farmers we HARD {goon sell © om lrect Tor Cass T IM ES flr Fertilipers ut the fol wing Jowest : I eriilinory for oorn, oot Hom and pea: nis 81 913.50, Ferai ners for trucking Send twee Tecenl Crops ard potatos: st $1 4. postage stamps lor hy for tol Qriniar. cata k 1rult at N18 per ton. 5 Yowell & Co, Fertiliner Mire, adtimere, »¥a of powder, a strength Another Great Ship Canal. The great canal between the North and Baltic fast approaching compietion engineers say that it will be ithout fail next { locks or slulces along end there are water level in the evel will be the Haltic. The bed of below normal water width of 8 sides is either one, and the be about 18 trading steam- water than this ich a beam that the canal. he : irvature mace (Hs) and 63 per straight. During 2,000 men nave been al ditch, and up two abot 100,000,000 cubic vation have been eom- about #17 .500,- the canal is es of which Um 00,000 and the URiAnce., Bear An and the Opened w 08s no but at Len, It Al% course, “cach Frisina the average hat in the fopt and it has a The One or gales reg canal The Bane 1 1h Ved as canal is 27 Lotom of the Lire 10 vinrds slop “1 10 is feet L fi eX Dons , The entire « mated at $£35.000,000 niributes $12 Lhe I Fuss C1 German Empire ‘German Syrup gis Leblanc is a French Cana- de an Store keeper po Notre Dame de Stanbridge, Quebec Can., who was cured of a severe attack ¢"Congest- ion of the Lungs by Boschee's Ger- man Syrup., He has sold many a bottle of German Syrup on his per- sonal recommendation. Ifyou drop him a line he'll give vou the full facts of the case direct, as he did us, and that Bosc $s German Syrup brought him ugh noicely. It always will. a good medicine and thorough i ® or THE JUDGES the WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION Have made the HIGHEST AWARDS Medals and Diplomas) to WALTER BAKER & CO. On each of the following named articles: BREAKFAST COCOA, . . Premium Neo. 1, Chocolate, Vanilla Chocolate, . . . German Sweel Chocolate, Corpn Buiier. « a os + 2 « a Yor purity of material & 14 if . y apd "aniform ever * “excellent Saver® composition.” WALTER BAKER & CO., DORCHESTER, MASS. ERRORS oll ANGES The Best for 2 AN or Cookin. Excel in Style Comfort and Durabiki =260 KINDS AND SIZES, EVERY O WARRANTED acamwsy DEF: om ASK YOUR STOVE DEALER To show you SHEPPARD'S LATEST CATALOGUR i oo t BeRr you write to i ISAAC A. SHEPPARD & CO,, BALTIMORE, MD. ARGEST MAMUFVACTURERS IN THE SOUTH A Te Remotes, Have @ cre, © unter woods and * PD. On, TE fet 88, New York. | PATENTS xtiansn, b. Siktvnox: until Patent odd al ved. Write for In Ren! Bargains, RIP DOD AN-S physician for an bor ANE RIPANS CHEMICAL sa Some Sn Kew Yous, |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers