The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 19, 1894, Image 3

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    Sm
SHE HAD NOTHING TO WEAR,
But Owned Costly Froecks and Slik Stook=
ings by the Hundred.
What do you think of a woman who
was the owner of elghty-nine dresses
of the very tinest of silk velvet and
other expensive dress goods, 106
skirts of every conceivable texture
and fabric, 114 pairs of silk hose,
ninteen rich and costly shawls, and
undergarments of the finest linen by
the trunkful, and yet had never worn
a single one ot these dresses, skirts,
shawls undergarments, or a pair of
hose?” said a well-known woman to
a Boston Herald man. “It seems
incredible. but those things were
some of the articles of wearing ap-
parel that belonged to Mrs Johanna
Farnham of Milton, N. H., although
no one ever knew it but herself until
she died. She wore the cheapest
clothing all her life, and her common
remark was that she had nothing
to wear.
«+Miss Farnham was 80 years old
when she died. Although she went
from Milton to Doston when she was
a young girl and lived there until
her death, she always calied Milton
her home. She was for years an em-
ploye of Boston hotels, and made no
intimate ac uasintances. When she
died it was not known that she
even enough to give her more than
desent burial, but in ber old trunk
in her room at the hotel were found
85,000 in gold securites,
showing that she had
nearly
$2.000
in aypiecejof paper. On this
was written, “I'his key will unlock a
trunk at my cousin Ann's hous:
Milton.' Th
and th: ky unlock d it. It
wrapp d in a paper, with information
lock another trunk at another plac,
That trunk was found with
sult, with a third key
trunk in still anoth r
went on until twenaty
belonging to (CC
woman bad b
wearing apparel
valuabl chinawar
silverware, la guantiti
very faest t
best English table cu
pi © hoic * brie
in the trun Thi
made a load that it
of oxen to haul «
Farnham's heirs agr+«d
whole of thes: valuabl 8 by
iu Boston.and they
210.00
valu
like
for a
plac
largo
ntric d ad
Besides the
spoken of,
jewelry, and
the
H
il
ror
of
able and bed linen,
, and many
Ww
$s precious stor
two
t of Milton,
the
Sof « urac
Ks Ao
Yokes
Miss
th
auction
netted more than
re o their actual
LOOK
yi
to s:ll
j—-nowh
"
ear
Is RIII—p
Misunderstood.
The young Lai
a character in the Scotch camp life of
the early cighteenth century. He
was cool in action. and full of fun ia
daily life One day he was detailed
to command a burial party, and as he
strolled over the battie-tield his or-
der'y came tv him in great perplex.
ity.
rd of Lu hnow
fellows lying out yonder who say
they're only wounded, and they won't
tet us bury them like the rest What
shail we d 7"
“Bury them at once,
Agoew, without moving a muscle of
his countenance, ‘for if take
their word for it, they won't be dead
for a hundred years to come!”
The man saluted and started off,
in all simplicity, to carry out tue
order, and Agnew had to despatch a
counter-order in haste§to prevent his
joke from being carried further than
he had intended.
This recalls an
border life. Some Galloway
troopers were brought before Sir
William Howard, who was an en-
thusiastic mathematician. He was
deep in his studies when the prison.
ers were marched into the castle
courtyard, and a ileutenant came
running up to get orders to their
disposal. Enraged at being inter-
rupted, he cried, ‘*Hang the prison-
ers!” and went on with his work
He finished his promblem and went
down with a cheerful mind, only to
learn that his exclamation had been
taken for an order, and the prisoners
were all hanged.
II.
3
replied young
you
‘wer true” tale of
OSS~
as
—
No MAN can have a good head snd
a bad stomach.
Dr. Klimer's Swasr-Roor eurms
all Kidney and Bladder troubles
Pamphiet and Consultation free,
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
Beware of little expenses; a small leak will
sink a whole ship.
Karl « Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex.
J and cures constipation, 295 ota, 80 cts. $1
He only bal! dies who leaves an image of
himself in bis sons,
Hal's Catarrh Care
Is a Constitutional Cure, Price 76a
Many think aright, but few execute their
plans when matured,
Impure Blood
Manifests itself in hot weather In hives, pim-
pies, boils and other eruptions which disfig-
ure the [ace and cause great annoyance, The
curs is tonnd io Hood's Sarsaparilla which
makes tho blood pure
and removes all such
disfiguentions, It also
gives strength, creates 19%
| nn appetite and mvigorates the whole sys.
tem. Get Hood's,
Hood's Pills are prompt and efficient,
———————— ip
WE WILL MAIL POSTPAID
® yd Panel Picture, entitled
MEDITATION *'
in exchange for 18 Large Lion
Heads, cut from Lion Coli
wrappers, and a Teonit stam
pay postage. Write for at
our other ine presulums, |
ing books, 8 knife, game, ete.
oC TE
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN-
DAY SERMON.
—————————
Subject: *“The Rustic in the Palace.”
Text*
die. "Genesis xiv, 48,
Jacoh had long sinos passed the hundred
vear milestone, In those times people ware
distinguished for longevity, Inthe centuries
afterward persons lived to great age, Galen,
the most celebrated physician of his time,
{ook so little of his own medicine that ha
lived to 140 years, A man of undouhted
vorneity on the witness stand in England
swore that he ramembersd an avent 150 years
before. Lord Bacon spanks of a countess
who had cut three sats of teeth and diel at
140 years, Jossph Crrle, of Pennsylvania,
lived 140 years. In 1887 a hook was printed
containing the names of thirty-savan per. |
sons who lived 140 years, an 1 the names of
elaven persons who lived 15) years,
Among the grand old people of whom we
have record was Jacob, the shepherd of the |
text. But he had a bad lot of boys. Thay |
were jealous and ambitions and every way
unprincipled, Joseph, howsvar, sesmad to
be an excaption, but ha had basn gona many
vears, and the probability was that he was
dead. As sometimes now in a housa you
will find kept at the table a vieant eohuir, a
plate, a knife, an fork, for dae
member of the family, so Jasah kept in his |
heart a place for his beloved Josaph, There
sits the old man, the k of 140 years in
their flight having alighted long enough to |
jeave the marks of their claw on forahead |
and cheek ani temple, His long hearlsnows |
down over his chest, His Are Soma.
what dim, and ha ean sen farther when they
ars closed than when thay for he
ean sso ciear back into the time when beauti- |
ful Rachel, his wife, was Hying an 1 his chil-
dren oriental abode with their
merriment,
Tha cantenarian
the past when
to the
the doorto see
ROMS span]
floc
“vag
Ara Oopan,
shook the
is sitting drasming over |
he hears a wagon rumbling
Hn gets up and goss to
who arrived, and his
lone gons from Ezvpt come in and
announces to him that Joseph instead of be |
ing dead is still Hviag in an Egyptian palaces,
with all the investiture of prime minister,
next to the king in the mightiest empires of
all the world! The news was too sadden
and tao giad for the old man, snd his chanks
whiten, and he has a dazed look, and his
stall falls t of hand, and he would
have dropped hal not tha eaught him
and led him to a lous ut cold water
ft Yoo
front door,
has
absent
his
on his wo and f
In that hall d«
thing
«0 long
But alter
wardrobe
wagon, and
snd like to
get al
yng fast
wasn
the
TART
yan hy
18
and
¥
: JOIBDN
and
vas us
1 s } al hotter
uen in oa
m
jaugh or ery that we do
ths resoiation 0
him bafore I dle,
What a strong ani un
ental atin Wa
for Jacob to forget Joseph? st w108 of
many summers had blazed on the heath ; the
river Nile had overflowad and rece inl, over-
flowed and receded again and again: the
s+ad had been sown and vout reapsd ;
stars rose and set ; y ! plenty and years
of famine bat the lova of
’ r Joseph in my text is ovarwhelm-
ingly dramatic, Oh, that isa cord ti
not snapped, though pulled on
eades! Thoagh when
the parents may not hava
twenty-five years of age, and
seventy-five vet the vision of
hildish face,
the infantiie lips ars frmah
1 oh
Ro Jacabh kept
he text, “I will go and see
pir-
ohmeant ! time
¢
the har
SRrs oO
had pasasd
11 on,
Jarrah
by ¢
the little ehild
$3 say 3
now thay
the cradle, a
and the first utterances o
to-day. in «pite of
the passags of a half esntury, Jos sph WAS
as fresh in Jacob's memory a) evar, thouth
at seventeen yoars of age the boy had disap-
pearad fromthao i hom stead, I foandinour
family record the story of an infant that had
and I ssid to my
rezord, ani what
AUSWeaEr was a
et to them a very
doas that all mean?
the
dors
is this
Their
It was sy
What
“What
moan?’
parants,
it
lop, deep sizh,
fender sorrow.
doen phil
and that cori of attachment reaching
across the years will bold us uatil it bricgs
us together in the palace, as Jacoh and
That 12 one
thine that makes old people happy. Taey
they have long been separated,
I am often asked, as pastor, ani every |
pastor is asked the question: “Will my
children be children in heaven and forever
children?’ Well, there was no dou't a great
shange in Joseph from the tims Jasob lost |
him and the tims when Jacob found him
bet wasn the boy savantesn years of aga aad
the man In mid-life, his forshaal davaioped |
with the great business of state-—Sut Jacob
was glad to get back Josaph anvhow, and it
did not make much differenns tothe old man |
whether the boy looked older or looted |
younger, And it will bs enough
joy for that parent if he can get bask |
that son, that daazhter, at tho gate |
of heaven, whether the departed loved one |
shall come a cherad or in fall growa angel |
hood. Thers must be a change wrought by |
that oalestitl climate and by those superasd |
years, but it will only ba from loveliness to
mors loveliness and from health to more
radiant health, O parent, as you think of
the darling panting and waite in membrane |
ous eroup want you to know fit will be |
gloriously better in that land whers there |
Yas naver been a death asd whers all the in. |
hitants will live on in the great faturs As
bon as God! Joseph was Joseph, notwith-
standing the palace, and your child will ba
your child notwithstanding ail the reigalog
splendors of averiasting noon.
What a thrilling visit was taat of the old
shepherd tothe primes minister Joseph! I
soe the old countryman seated in the palace
looking around at the mirrors, and the foun-
tains, and the carved pillars, and, oh, how
ae wishes that Rachel, his wife, was alive
arid she could have coma there with him to
$oa their son in his great houss! “Oh”
mys the old man within himssif, “I do wish
fiachel could be hers $0 see all this!”
f wisited the farmhousa of the father
st Millard Fillmors when the son was
President of the United States, and
fie octogenarian farmer entertain.
od me until 11 o'clock at night, telling me
what groat things he saw in his son's house
at Washington, and what Daniel Webster
anid to him, sod how grandly Millard treated
his father in the White House, The old
man's face was illumined with the story
until almost the midnight. He had just
been visiting his son at the capital, Aad I
su it was something of ths samo jo
that thrilled the heart of the old shepher
ns tie stood in the palace ofthe primo minis
ter,
1t is a great day with you when your old
parents come {0 visit you. Your little ehil-
tren stand around ‘with great wile open
Jos, wonderiog how anybody could be wo
oid. ‘The parents cannot stay many %
for they are a little restioss, and es
Wt nightfall, because they sleep butter in
thelr own bed while they tarry
ole own Bn Pant ionon 1 Stars
som in tbe house. They are & littie
faohle, and yon maka it as eqey as vou ean
for them, and vou realiza thay will probe
ably not visit you very o'ten-=parhans navar
You go to their room after thay
rotirad at night to sea if tha Hehts
ars properly put out, for the old paople
un lerstand candle and lamo better than
the mo lern apparatus for illumination,
morning, with real intersst in
henith, you ask them how thay rested last
Joseph, in the historical scans of the
than vou do of your yarents, The probabil
Gran l-
father and grandmother ara mor: lenient and
indulgent to vour children than they ovar
vou. And what wonlers of
Blessa 1 is that
14
they visit
mamorahis
when they onmea,
leave, It
tha two most
memory whila menory lasts, andl vou will
what they said, and at what
figure of the earpat, and at what doorsill
thay parted with you, giving you the final
goodby, Do not be smbarrasssi if
father come to town and he have the mune
ners of the shepherd, and if your mother
anne to town an! thers ba ia har hat no
sign of eonstly miliinsry, Tha wife of tha
Emperor Theo losius sail a wis» thing whan
“4 Hashands, renambsr what you
lately wors and ramember what you are and
bethankfal”
By this tims you all notios what kially
nrovision Jossph ma le for his father, Jacoh
Joseph did not say: “f ean't hava tha old
man around this plase, How clumsy he
would look climbing up thess marble
and walking over thess moses! T
would ba patting his
these frese Paopls won
that old geaenhorn cams
cone
hen he
yg,
from
with his man-
might
HE gut ®
ners at table, DBesidas that
siek on my hands, and hamight be quara
and he might talk to m»
only a boy, when I am the
O1 sours» he
and fs famine
{ hear there js] will seni b
bat I
and intro
ad
Ra man in
ory 11 4
in this country
rn
n
if thors gid
ean't take man fron
iato
visions,
fays him this
Waat a
is to hava poor raiatioas!
Joseph Ald not say that, bat he r she ] out
to moat his father with p {
affaction, and bronzht him up
and introducel him to th ©
fhm ros
srfest lo
PAiAns
and
to thas
y fat
provited for all iors days,
’
snd n
i andl wh
assart,
yang pawpie make it vary hard
{They ars irprissd
*
Tie
A ey
.,
Inst sic ins,
snl got
makes Rim Worse, an
and 1aderiaier
point, giving a note {or ths re i
wialeh they naver pay, I hava
| sf agai proplie whars
have pean 89 inordinately resigaesd to Provi-
fanos that felt like taking my text 4
Provers, “The eye that mo keth at its father
at | refassth to obey its mother, the ravens o
the vallay shall § and the young
aaies shall eat it’ n other words, such
an ingrats oug! , have a flosk of erows
for palibearars songrataiate yoa il you
have ths honor { i for aged par.
ants. The blessings of the Bord God of
Jossph aad Jasob will be on you.
I rejoics to remember that, though
father lived in a piaia hoass the most of
vs, he died lu & maasion provilsl by
sioty ofl a 802 who hvl ashieval a for.
yo. Thers the octogenarian sat, and ths
sarvants waltad on him, and there
pleaty of horses ani pisaty of awrriagss to
waavey him, and a bowser in wilish to sit on
jong sammoer afternoons dravniag aver tho
past, and thers was not a room in the hoasy
whers he wis not walzons and
musioal {nstranimts of all sorts to regale
him. anil when lila had passe] the neizhbors
esme oat and express l all honor possible
ani owrried him to the village Masipsiah
and put him dowa besida the Rachel with
whon he had livel more than hall a cen-
tury. Bhare your Success with the oid
paople. Tae probability is that the priacipies
they inouleated ashleval your fortans, Give
thom a Caristian parrsatars of Kia lly con.
sidaration,
pasture fsids of Goshen an ithe glories of
Daal ths
vasjuion
from
my
his
tha
i
tha store of A «alam, wanirial™ ts Aathrong
his father, Bat all history is beautifal, with
stories of filial fidelity, Epsminondas, the
warrior, found his chiaf delight in reciting
tn his parents his vistories, Thera goss
Fneas from burning Troy, on his shoulders
Anchises, his father, The Athenians pun.
ished with death any unfliisl conduct, There
goss beautiful Bath escorting venerable
Naomi neross the desert amid the howiing o,
the wolves and the barking of the jackals,
John Lawrence, burned at the «take in Col
chester, was chearal in the flames by hic
children, who sald, “0, Gol, strengthe
Tay servant and kesp Toy promise!” And
Christ in the hour of exernciation provided
for Hix old mother, Jacob kept his resolu
“fr will go and see him before I die,
and a little while after wa find them walkios
the tessuliatel floor of the palace, Jueoh and
Josaph, the prime minister proud of his
shepherl,
I may say in regard to the most of you that
your parsnts hava probably visitel you for
# O00 pay you su ‘Hh RK
visit, and I have wonderad i they will ever
visit you in tha King's palace. “Oh” you
say. “I am in ths pitof sin!” Jossph wasin
ths pit, “0h,” vou say, “I am in the prison
of min» iniqaity I” Jossph was ones in pri-
gon. “Oh.” vou say, “I didn’t have a fair
chance, I was denied materndl kindness!”
Joseph was denisd maternal atten lanes,
HOH." you say, “I am far away from the
land of my nativity I” Jossph was far from
home, “Oh vou say. “I have been
traved ani exwsperated Did not Joseph's
brothren sail him to nn passing Ishmasiitish
caravan? Yet Gol brought him to that #
blazonad residence, ani {f you will trast His
grace in Jesus Carist you, too, will be em
palacad.
Oh, want 8 day that
folks coms from an
heaven and flad you amid
pillars of tha throneroo n and liviny
Tansy ars
wad the epiaieteld
rushes in and says:
coming!’
ra
wi
bitte
i~
will ba whan the ol}
adjoining mansion in
siabastur
withthe
coming up the steps now,
waar tha palase
“Your father's coming !
And wasn ander
stones and
sat nach othe
the
of
thers
’
yas Of douse on
14 Ar
ment of porphyry §
Wie WwW wel
Goshen highway whee
ear
1 Ri
ipss the mesling
1, how changed the old folks
. yothed foto the fle
air st100p sefare 13
sir sherk sn
[
aeavas
ram Ia
(yoahien
the sera caslie
ea —
Where the Largest Bird
Th
faraish
forms have been
the Now Zealand, Australia,
Madagascar, and South America, mak-
a countries south of the equator
fossils of the largest bird
that
earth
{ ocean, ail
the various fami
intervening stretches «
present fossils of
of these great bids, attaining in
Zoaland a height of some ten
feet, and in Madagascar a h
considerably greater. During
settlement New Zealand by Earo-
peans the bones still lay seatie
#
5
surface,
in
Cans
the
imbedded
for
foun i
where,
were sis0
marshes some Or
by the hundreds
. ‘
birds ware livers
Bome, in fact, were
are interesting as illustrating the limit
win gless,
ried in the application of natare,
of the sisterhool who romsin unmarried
many annoyancss as they have
you. It is easier to take eareol five rolliex-
who allowad the bloom of life to pes away
while they wera caring for their parents,
While other maidens wary soan i asleap
they were soaking the old man's fast or
the sovars around the {avalid
mother. While other maldens wara in the
sotilion they wera dansiag atten lanss upon
rheumatism and spreading plasters for the
fame back of the septenacian and haating
eataip tea for inso nnia,
In aimoat every cireia of our kiniralthers
jeweled hand after jowslel hand was offered
in marriage, but who stayel on the old
place besauss of the seass of filial obligation
until the health was gone and ths atirastive.
ness of personal pressnce hal vanished
Bratal soslety may call such aons by a niok-
name, (od oalis har daughter, anl heaven
tyr. A half dozan or linary women hava not
as mush nobility as conld be found in tne
smallest joint of the little lazer of her left
hand. Although the world has stoo | 600)
yoars, this is the first apothsosis of maiden.
hood, sithough in the long line of thoss who
have declined marriage that thay might be
qualified for some espacial mission are the
names of Anns Ross and Margaret Breokin-
ridge and Mary Shelton and Anua Etheridge
and Georgiana Willetts, the angals of the
battlefields of Falr Oaks ant Lavgout Moun-
tain and Ohanosliorsyille, an i though single
Iife has besn honored by the fast that the
tires groatest mon of the Bible—John and
Paal and Ohrist-—wars oalibates,
Let the ungratefal world sneer at the
maiden aunt, but God has a throns bur.
nished for her arrival, and on one side of
that throne in heaven thero is a vase con.
taining two jewels, the one brighter than the
Kohinoor of London Tower and the other
larger than any diamond ever found in tha
distriots of Golaonde-<the ons jewel by the
{dary of the palace cut with the words,
Hinsamuch as yo did it to father the othse
jewel by the lapidary of the palace eat with
the worls, “Inasmush as did it to moth
er.” “Over the Hills to the Poorhomss” is
the exquisite balla! of Will Caristoa, wo
es Satie ami CRANE SHO)
o prosperous sons, bat 3
1 hs Aud in my text ‘Over the bills to the
As if to disgust us with
Fi he I Shi rom i
4
at,
who
, and
ocular wing force necessary to flig
material to
at,
stand
phera in aerial propulsion.
Tae still existing emu,
and ostrien,
CASSOWATY
representatives of the
have wings to aid
them as runners, bat they ars all ut
terly incapable of flight. These an.
have no
modern representatives, and in
Espyoranis and Broaternis,
death, It is a curions fact that while
these were strictly land birds their
distribution exteaded around the
it
we may assume that the Southern con:
tinents were nearly or quits con ect.
tion problem arsand the Sonthera
hemisphere solves itsell.—~Pittaburyg
Dispatch.
mm lr
Ezzs in Perpetual Freshness,
Somes months azo a Dablin inven.
tor claimed for a preparation of his
that it would preserve eggs in per:
petual freshness. To thoroaghly test
the eflicacy of the invention, which,
if sncoessful, would revolutionize the
ogg market, an experimand was oars
ried out at the Freeman offise. A
sample of eggs immersed in the pai.
ent solution, which is a thin grayish
aste of the consistency of honsy,
ve remained undisturbed there for
a period of four moaths, andl when
opened the other night in the pros
ence of experts wore found to be all
perfectly fresh.
I SN
When a man takes a partner in buss
iness these days it is an indieation he
wants some one to divide expenses,
not to divide profits, —Atchison Globe.
A —————. ——————
Tenements and high-class apart
ment houses com forty-two per
Gent. of Now ork dwellings,
5
Take no Substitute for
Royal Baking Powder.
It is Absolutely Pure.
All others contain alum or ammonia.
The Phonograph as a Witness,
The phonograph is being used with |
marked effect in English courts. He. |
cently a raliroud company was sued |
by the owner of premises upon a
street under which the road had run |
a tunnel. The complaint stated that |
the noise of the trains going through |
the tunnel was su great as to utterly
preventsleep, while existence in day- |
light was made unbearable by the |
same cause. The railroad company’s
attorneys produced in court a phon-
ograph which they had managed to
have placed in the premises in ques. |
tion. and when it was put in motion,
and falled to emt any of the terrible
noises alleged to have been suffered
by the compla nants, and the fact |
that it has been on active duty in the |
bualldiog occupied by the latter was
sufficiently established, the judge dis. |
Scaxarser (Behool Commissioner)
~1/f I buy meinseliut dree: kegs of
| beer effery day vot vill 1 haf at der
endt of one year? Scholar—De kegs.
Frank Leslie's
. m———
A preErry girl can usually forgive
a man for staring at her, but you
wouldn't think »0 to hear her tell the
folks about it after she gets home.
Somerville Journal,
fii —————
I¥ you are inclined to underrate
the importance of small things, con-
gider how much insomnia there is io
oue ny.
CURES OTHERS
For over a quarter of a century, Doctor
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has been
effecting of Bronchial, Throat and
Lang Weak Lungs, Bleeding
from , Bromeli 4 2, all linger-
ing C 3 or Lung Berofula
and kind are cured by it.
REDUCED TO A SKELETON.
Mre. Mina Miuas, of | iis, Big Stone On.
Mir writes “One
vy 1 was given up
ly physician
: all sid I
My lungs
res
i008
that
the phonograph was more
acceptable than that of the interested |
plaintiffs. This decision will open 1
the remarkable |
is Wo be trusted
wiio
faatnr
iasure
the
As
evidence of
for
but it
are
the perparatior of a history of
times will not press phonograph
4 J C31 t seine ET
service to prove hearafter the truth ’ to give me peed
Discovery’
will be soon began fo
it was not long
upon the devoutly cherished historica before 1 became well
belief of some patriotic t to fake cuarge
i rouschold Cutie
jal gathering thoid duths
Kap tw vasra }
eliect in fifty years hence
and inteliect
iia ograpn loaded
tarift y my recovery
LER 258 , Sl "
s present .
: : Pieroe's Golden
18 THE BEST.
NO SQUEARING
S hl
f ARN TY
SARBARTE
S* w-L DOUGLAS,
? BROCKTON, MASS.
You ean save money by wearing tho
Ww. I. Douglas 83.00 Shee.
oe lareest manciaeturers
runrantes thelz
e on 1
3 Ba. Ll
- |
KNOWLEDGE
mfort and improvement and
ronal enjoyment when
rightly oy The many, who live bet.
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world's best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to Real y of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced In the
remedy, Syrup of Figs
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and 1
beneficial properties of a perfect lax.
gtive : effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing constipation ;
It has given satisfaction to millions and | relist Look tl Hi
met with the approval of the medical | same po Hy
profession, because it acts on the Kid- dug Tarim, ius
peye, Liver and Bowels witheut weak- t., 1
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug
gista in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man-
ufsctured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, yor will not
socept any substitutes if o ered.
Beenuse, We
this gr 3 f%
value by =
bottom,
the
work
Wel
the value given 1
tute. res
Brings
tends to
wh
idleman’'s pre he r thoes equal custom
in style, easy fiting and wearing qu
14 evervebhere al lower pri
sn any ther make, Take Dos
er cannot supply yoU, We Cll.
sve them a
If ye
i
————— ———
LINENE --
OLLAKRC and CUFFS.
dol
TRADE
ees
sid
The best 8
Reversible
are
# ®
foliar Co.
: ‘
Have You? Many Millions Have
accepted James Pyle’s invitation to
try his wonderful discovery, Pyle’s
Pearline; for casy washing and clean-
ing. You couldn't count them in a
lifetime. Some of the twelve million
housekeepers in this land must have
accepted very often. That's the way
with Pearline. The wise woman who
investigates, tries it; the woman who
tries it continues to use it. A daily
increasing sale proves it. The truth
is, there's nothing so acceptable as
Pearline. Once accept its help, and
you'll decline the imitations—they
don't help you. It washes clothes or
cleans house. It saves labor and it
saves wear. It hurts nothing, but it's
suited to everything. Try it when it
suits you, for it will suit you when you try it.
Beware Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will 3a To “this is
as good as” or ‘“the same as Pearline.” IT'S FALSE—
Pearline is never peddled, and if your Gent sends you some.
thing in place of Pearline, do the honest thing—semd if hack, 175 IA
ES PYLE, New York.
a Se eh TR di et ceesecsese’
JOAN P. LOVELL ARMS C0,
Boston, Miass.,
HAS JUST RECEIVED THE
HIGHEST AWARD AND GOLD MEDAL
FOR THEIR
LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES
AT THE
California Midwinter Exposition,
AT SAN A id