The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 07, 1897, Image 7

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    Peculiar Con
The peculiar condition of some of the
Connecticut towns has attracted at-
tention. IFor example: The town of
Lisbon, Conn, is nine miles long and
six miles wide and contains 048 in
habitants and 137 voters. Rut there
are in the town eight schoolhouses and
five justices of the peace, and while It
has no postoflice it receives its mall as
follows: The northern portion of the
town from South Canterbury, the east
ern portion from Jewett City, the
southern portion from Greenville, and
the western portion from Versallles,
a e—
Cyclopean Building,
level several of which
long, twenty-four feet
teen broad, each stone
000 tons, all cut, dressed, and brough
are sixty
thick, and six
welghling ove
from distant quarries.
I —
New York Sunday Fishermen.
It Is estimated that more than 75,0 )
+ ¢ > . Farle lL
fishermen go out of New York evel
Sunday, and that they spend on an g
erage of £2 each on the sport.
EE — a ——
If It Only Helped a Little
It would be worth 5 eants. One hour's fre
dom from the terrible ircitatin g itch of totter
worth more than a whole box of Te :
It will cure t
will cure
STH My on
and it's t
drug stores
00 conts ut
from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga
{
The man who sets out for a gold mine. to
often leaves his fortune behind him
Deafness Cannot Be Cared i
by local applications, as they cannot reaches
’ oy 3
iseased portion of the ear. Theres is onl
WAY to care deafness, and that is by con
tional remedies. D-afness is caused by N=
flamed condition of the mneous lining fthe
Lustachian Tube. When this tube ge {in-
flamed you have a rambling sound or {
fect hearing, and when it is o tir
Deafness i « the result. and anleas t}
mation can be taken and
stored to its normal o« hb
lestroy. d for. ver. Ni
cansed by catarrh, whic
flamed condition of the
We will give One H
case of Deafness (caused by «
not be cured by Hall's (at
for circulars, fre
F.J
i013, AI
ases out of
f= ryey
mac
die
arrh) 9
arrh cur
Tol
NEY
a 0.
Sold by Druga
Hail's Family Pills
oi
are ¢
st married
Mrs, Jo
She
The olds
tates are Mr. aod
Cape Porpolse, Mass, AL
101 years of age, and they have beer
ried 77 years,
is OR
To Cure a Cold In Oue Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinn Tabiey AN
Drugzists refund mon fitf
Jim Stevenson of Lexi "
mmense haod, From th r
of the middle flogerit o sur
ches, and the thumb pall is as
dollar,
Mre. Wit va no
feoth ro y »
i ving @
tin lay rr
The finest rubies eo from prmah
ina +
1 turquoi
beryls from Russia, anc
sia.
Chew Star Tobacco ~The Bes -
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes, !
Iu 1843 there were only 350 08 pindies
)r yarn spinging in Russia nN ere are
LOGO 000
F “PY i «Wyre
Da. KR. H. Krasy, Ltd ju
Naw: inst 1 has Mi A i to rot
mid LO make ox lent fer rg
¥
: Cure for Chnsnumption
Nimo HLog. 10% Sout
Ky. Oet 1, |
+
Many a loud amen is nothing pore than a
rag by the man who makes it
Rheumat'sm
-A Woll
bods.
Caused Creat Sufferi
Man Since Taking
“1 was afflicied with rhefnatism and
ave been a great sulJer th this dis
aso and also with stoma and hear
roubles, bat thanks to H 4 Harsapa
fila I am now a well man. My wile has
en eursd of kidaey soap by Hood
arsaparilia,” Avs, Son kn, 317 West
9th Street, New York, N. ¥
5 »
ood’s Sarsaparilla
sthe bea es ! Pa
Hood's Pills cure all liver jis.
Osman Digma a |
Osman Digma, fo has
giving the British thuble on the
according to Pall
really a Scotchman
infact ihe
od 8 ow
Ome]
=3 conta
who Years
yer
« -
pper Nile, |
Mall
8, the
(sazette,
gamed George Nisbet, Ie was bon
n Rouen of a Glasgow ther, who in
1848 emigrated to Egyy. where he
died. His widow margd a Furk
aamed Osman, who adpted ber gon
pd made him heir to fia slave busi
ess. George Nishet tok the name of
ft
it
gman Al, and after baie educated at
e military ea he was
© intimate friend ofthe late Arabi
asha, became a slag trader. The
rin done to his busi by the En
Heh and French fnteryrence in Egypt,
nd the fall of Aral] Pasha, turned
fm against his forger countrymen,
e must be over 60 yrs of age now
dq
Cane with didistory.
Major M. M. Clothjer. of Whatcom,
Fash, has a hicko} cane. cut at
ymouth Rock, Mag, in 1621, by Na-
aniel Pierce, vy ligbame over in the
ayflower. The has been pass
down to the of § son or daughter
Tr many generd §, and came to
ajor Clotheler it lf his grandmother,
rah Mason, + made the 1,700
und cheese whi was given to Pres
ent Jefferson,
"
i
HLS
AIRTENEWE
Cleans he scalp and
puts ov life into the
hair, the
y
i
hai
yo,
WEEKLY SERMONS.
Talmage Preanches on Ornitholo
of the Bible,
Ey
urden Wearing’ is the Title or wane
Becond of the New York “Herald's
Competitive Sermons—~FPreached by the
Rev. W. SB. Perkins, Meriden, Conn,
Text: “Bear yo one another's burdens.”
-Gal, vi, 2.
Every one is a burden bearer, having his
|
|
|
|
}
{
{
ad of want, suffering and responsibility,
§ Bome appear so fortunate that we doubt
hether they share in the sorrows of man
Ind. They have wealth, friends, health,
virtue, What can their burden
be? They have at least a responsibility
commensuraty with their blessings; and,
perhaps, if we knew more of their lives,
seemingly 80 blessed, we would find that
they also have a burden, all the heavier be-
Men often think that {f they could change
their circumstances, even slightly, they
would escape trouble, but this is an {llusion,
The sick recover health, the
rich, the lowly gain the overed positions of
honor, and their common testimony is that
having gained these advantages their bur-
dens are no less heavier. In fact, the nor-
bearer.
sparks fly upward.”
How can this fact of burden bearing be
econelled with our belle! In a heavenly
Pater? Some contend that all saffering is
#ueto sin; that if man had not sinned he
would have had no burden. Jesus, how-
ver, repudiates this thought. Por when
he Jews asked Him, Who did sin, this man
or his parents, that was born blind?
He answered, Neither. Much suffering
eomes indeed as the punishment of sin,
but some suffering has its source in the
exercise of our holiest affections, as that
of a mother bearing the burden of an un-
Jortunate or wayward child,
In seeking further for a solution to this
problem we find that the really great men
of the world bear its heaviest burdens, so
that, it is sald, ‘“‘a man's greatness may be
measured by his sufferings. Burden bear-
ing enables a man to do two things—to
test his strength and by using to i{neréase
KX. And wi plendid characters have
thus been developed! Widows in poverty
giving their all! Martyrs of the sick room
showing marvelous noe! Heroes of
i
the faith made such by their struggles with
unbelie!! Did not God intend such results?
Then that is the reason
lays on men such heavy burdens.
This leads up to the explanation of bur-
¥
den beard in the text Bear
ye one a ne The pleture
of the worl 4 very dark, but it
has in it a bit of | sky, through which
faith looks up ana beholds the eternal
goodness,
Burdens are
help
ne
given to }
sigh in pi
Grant,
men have
one an
uj
two wavs
able ¥
shou
Paul
bear t We
sirength m * u
the burden is ‘ it them "
The iatter is t} effective aid. A word
of instruction, { kindness or an ex
of mpathy iss etimes all that
wit
er once refused to take the ad
eo t and expel & bad boy
The boy, knowing of his
do batter,
n rancs that
‘ He was
th York and
or He was
i al t iry of War
and under of State, A
word of eo proved to be the
turning po t lite of William L.
| Mar How An Y iy have falled be
| eaus ft! A ! n rd?
P27 an ra leg 1 that rans
re reat eily a golden
t down ou ! heaven every day
and whoever should touch
vas said, would acquire cer
virtues, So many tried to
it was always lfted just
em. One day thers was in the |
niting for the descent of the ball |
! man and a little bor.
i e old man sald to the others
| iay npue of us ean reach the ball,
{Jet nus lift "up this child so that he may
i fouch it and receive the blessing.” Aeoting
ion this connael the tallest of them |
i 1 iil, they stood to-
18 boy till, with his
every person form.
fait the thrill and
4 is, nn in life. When men
stand together, shoulder to shoulder. bear-
Ing one another's burdens, then God be-
stows upon them His best blessings
W. 8. Praxrws
Pastor 8t. Paul's Church, Universalist,
Meriden, Conn.
[COD AMONG THE BIRDS.
Bible, fe
Texr: “Behold the fowls of the alr
an
My text is an extract from the Sermon
|
ment when a flock of thirds
hrist waved His
said: “Behold the fowls of the air.”
fe, study their habits. Examine thelr rol.
ors. Notice their spead.
God in their construction. They are al-
most human, forthey have their loves and
affinities and antipathies, under.
stand joy and grief, have conjugal and ma-
ternal instincts, wage wars, and entertain
Jealousies, heave a language of thelr own
end powers of association,
Thank God for birds, and skies fall of
them. It is nseless to expect to under.
tand the Bible uniess we study natural
istory. They were at the creation placed
all around on the rocks and in the trees
and on the ground to serenads Adam's
brrival. They took their places on Friday,
B the first man was made on Saturday,
Jhajever eles he had or did not have,
ho should have music, The first sound
At striek the human ear was a bird's
Poice,
As a bird first heralded the human race
to the world, wow a bird will help the
nuan race back to the world that had
fpped asea that bad overwhelmed every-
ing. Noah stands on Sunday morning
kK the window of the ark, in bis hand a
cooing dove, so gentie, 50 jnnosent, so at-
foctionnte, and he sald: “Now, my littie
dove, fly nway over theses waters explore,
and some buck and tell us whethor it fs
safe to land. It was a bird that told them
when to take possession of the resuscitated
planet. So the human race were saved by
# bird's wing; for, attempting to land too
Boon, they would have perished.
Isaiah rampares the desolati~=s of ban.
ished Israel to an owl and bat oO and eor-
morant among a city’s ruins, N/ould the
prophet illustrate the fate of frand, he
points to a allure at incubation, and says:
‘As 8 partridge sittoth on eggs and hateh.
eth them not, #0 he that getteth riches and
not by right shall leave t in the midst
of his days nd at his end shall bg a foo’ I’
The quickest way to amass a fgrty
by , but the trouble ts a
ing hou
flew past that
That
I nara labor, why not tell 1, ana Ir ons
| counterfeit check will bring the dollars ne
onsily as a genulne seus, why not make {t?
But yonder in this Bible sky files a bird
that is speckled, The prophet describing
the ohureh, cries out: “Mine heritage is
i
i
|
i
unto me as a speckled bird, the birds
round about are against her,” Fo it
was then; so It Is now. Holin ss 3 keked
at, Consecration pleked at. Benevolence
pleked at. Usefulness ploked at, A
spookled bird is & peculiar bird, and that
arouses the antipathy of all the beaks of
the forest, The church of God is a peculiar
institution, and that is encugh to evoke
attack of the world, for it 15 a speckled
bird to be pleked at. The inconsistencles
of Christians aro a banquet on which multi-
tudes get fat. They ascribe everything
| you do to wrong motives, Put a dollar in
[the pour box, and they will say that he
| dropped it there only that he might heart
ring. Invite them to Christ, and they wil
oall you a fanatic, Let there be contention
among Christians, and they will say: “Hur-
rah! the church {sin decadence.” Christ in.
tended that His church should always ra
main a speckled bird,
Disaster, fallure in business, disappoint.
ment, bereavement, 8 God's way of
shaking us out of our comfortable nest in
{| order that we may learn to fly, You who
are complaining that you have no faith or
courage or Christian zeal have had it too
easy. You never will learn to fly in that
comfortable neat, Like an eagle, Christ
bas earriod us on His back, At times we
have been shaken off, and when we were
| about to fall He came under us again and
FLASHES OF FUN,
IAght-houses, from a theatrical poin
of view, always Indicate
ahead,
Kate--1 think that Cholley has some
thing on his mind. Polly
must be good at balancing.
Journal,
Friend-- ell, Ethel, how do you like
married life, Ethel (enthusiastically
It's simply delightful, We've
married week, and have had
beer
el
Ea
n
quarrels,
time,
“Mein Fraulein, I love you!" gald ar
impecunious German youth at 2 Ham
“Ex yonder Is
manager,”
use me
replied the
fan to hu
burg ball [iy
business
lady, pointing with
father,
he:
ing a toreh¥' To which an old bad
i
4
Clara—How under the sun did Edith |
happen to marry Mr. Awkward? Dora |
He was the bane of her life at every
ball she attended, and I presume i
married bim to keep him from wanting
to dance with her,
“1 wonder,” said a young lady, "w {
Hymen is always represented as carrys |
} 3 { , rail y ae $
brought us out of the gloomy valley to lor sneeringly responded F'o Indicate |
the sunny mountain, Never an eagle | = A 2 t+ wars § eo. |
brooded with sueh love and care over her | that he always makes It warm for p
young as Go 1's wings have been over us. ple who marry :
ATH sy Oo ’ ou bl td hav . ks3
Across what eenns of tr uble we have Women somehow get over child !
gone in safety upon the Almighty wings. . ‘ . ]
From what mountains of sin we have been | Dotions that men never outgre ! i
carried and at times have been borne up far | wen celebrate the anniversary of every |
hav iy work y by , "i |
above the gunshot of the world and the birthday as long as they live,
| arrow of the devil. When our time on | banat hiidizh Aisate |
earth is closed, on these great wings of | WOIeED Abandon the childish custom al
God we shall speed with infinite quickness | most as soon as they grow u {
! m th' " na te saven's hills, | v t :
| from earth's mountains to heaven's hill * | “What did her father say when yo
and as from the eagle's elroult under the { ‘2. 3 3 ted | ”
sun, men on the ground seem small and {n- | told him that you wanted to n y “
significant as lzards on a rock, so all sarth- i daughter, Rivers?’ “Well
| ly things shall dwindle (nto a speck and didn’t absolutely refuse, hu!
the raging seas of death so faz beneath | :
Ti 2 ed a very serious condition
will seem smooth and glassy as «a | bh .
Swiss lake, Oh, the goodness of God | Was it? “He sald he would
iin showing the birds to build | hanged first.”
| their nest! What ‘arpenters, what | /
. ww} PY he oians he | His Fellow Feeling. —Paterfamilins
! ns, what weavers, what spinners the |
bir i Out of what small resources | Look here, Dick, you re beens a bit wl
t! ¢ what an exquisite home, curved, {| “ourself In vour day and I'd like s«
. wraathed, 3 Out of mosses, out | ‘ x 4 mY io with Ha
out of lehens, out of horse hair out | #4¥ice. What am I to do w Ha
fapiders ut of threads swept from | The young ras exceeds CANTY
rt » housewife, out of the wool NOP CVery t Cousin D i
of th 1 in the pasture fleld. Uphol- | ease it. Chleag y
stered by leaves actually sewed together | { ¢
by its own sharp bil Cushioned with Bocker—1 obs that Prof
feathers from its own breast, Mortared Rtageg has been jes rng i
together with tha gn ) of trees and the { Recor : (} stimr At i
: 4 ii, ich symmetry, .
3 ruet . “7 1 der what il means? Sageman— 114
the ests worn built by some i SREY One A Christian athlet
wey did not just pen so. Who | ne who Is continually jumping from
i the plan for e bird's nest? |
ie pl f t ird’s nest wait mire m ae
id 4 yon t think that if Ha | "V® eligion to ane er
ans such a house for a shafMneh, for an |! Mrs. De Pink--1 am amazed r. that
for wballnk tor . i . ; ,
{ for a bho ink, for a SPArrow, Ha i vou should propose G 3 a
Willi sea to it that you always have a home? i : be hab fs ¥ “
x are of more value than ma SUGT Vhy, she has only i81 ell Tw »
3 ’ A YR i . a .
row * Whatever alse surrounds ya. you | school. and 3 HAVE Ld Ie ‘ i
‘Aan have what the Bible calls “the feathers week! Young Man-True, madai
of the Almighty.” Just think of a nest £ ae Re wh ia a for we et §
ike that, the warmth of {t the softness of i NAVE KNOWL YOu i
ft. the safety fit the feathers of the | everybody says your daughter takes
Almighty flamingo ontfashing thes after you
tronical toh br of The 1 1m (iy oT
pinion re ever had plum. Bc
on, | $ h ansh » o ONSEN Are 8 gre 1
' lashed th such n and purple =
i orange and gold ia feathers of tha x 1% heen knowt y OULETOW a
ight D » you not feel the t ach of i the rear of the shog
w on forehead and s trot ) [he (
it, and was there ever sue! AAIKIDE to the piree :
wooding "the [feathers { goan—~Huh! We have g gepar
ts yises 50 Dig in Chicago that the
hig arn y > ¢
hg Ais this ornith R f Ik ers t jae bh eu
FOG KeapDs impr ing a with ,
fo i a bird's wing. Over fifty Hana J
rk allude to the wing “Madam.” sald a young lady to her
ar ’ _ _rr
: wing of the orain wecontroas at boarding = (x Mr
wind sun of righteous !
ag in his wings.” "wings Hellfalr hax come to take me i
ty.” “all fowl { very { rive. May I go 1 “3 WwW,
does it all mean? It suggests | «x that ir rales do not alle
2 eH i Pino ¥ ali wii of fio qt
uplifting. It telis you flight apward, less YOU Are CHEAT A re .
f means to remind YOR hat vO, " > ¢ .
yourself, have wings. David cried out gaged to Mr. Belifai: N
“Oh, that I had wings like a dove that 1 |, xactly; but if you Jet me go, | sh
ight Ay away and be at rest Thani yw the time we got back
God that you have better wings than any "
dove of longest and swiltest flight, Caged “Do you believe in a third pa
how In bars of flosh dre those wings, but | seked old Dimming (refer ng t
he « 0% P18 iy Raw $ IT] =
the day 108 when they will be liberated nolitieal situation) of his daughter
Got ready for ascension. Take the words |} them F tn Phi rnslon
of that old hymn, and to the tune unto | Peau, as all three sat in the pario
which that hymu is carried sing “Well,” replies] the young man,
| Rise my soul and streteh thy wing, { had not called to discuss polities, “i
Thy better portion trace, | wonldn't have thought of asking vou te
i = out of these lowlands into the heavens | retire: but since you mention it, Mr
j of higher experience and wider prospect, | ' t 4 c that It ia ¢} ve
{ But how shall we rise? Only as God's Holy | Dimmick, 1 will say that it is Lhe &¢ o
Spirit gives ns strength. But that is com. | eral belief that two are company
ing now. Not asa condor from a Chim- | I don't belleve I quite understand
borazo peak, swooping upon the affrighted | ; tention.” sald the ¢ i»
valley, but as a dove like that which pat | YOUT contention . .
its soft brown wings over the wet locks of | bicyclist; "it seems that the prisoner is
i Christ at the baptism tn the Jordan. Dove a house-mmover; that hz was moving a
a? mantles ' ES 5 ’ 3 * Raw
| ! pontine Dove of peane ! mall frame house at the time of the
§ Come, Holy Rpirit, heavenly dove, ! 4 nuble and that you ran into the
! With all thy quickening powers wl "
| . . ' iy 13° ws what Henne as
{ Come shed abroad a Saviour's love house. 1 can’t see wha off : 3
i And that shall kindle ours, committed “But, your honor,” pro
- - - tested the bieyclist, “lI rang my bell
o
OMAHA'S QUEER EPIDEMIC. when 1 was half a block away, and lic
i $ i ttention to 11." —Dietrol tis i
More Than 10,000 Persons Afflicted With | D210 no attention to It Detroit Jour
i » Strange Skin Disease, { nal {
i . po > § EE ——
All the physicians In Omaha, Neb, are | i
1 « NBD, i : . A . oun CUrusade,
| puzzled as to the natures of an epidemio Female Ants a ul 3 % §
| throughout the city. The disease develops I'he statute of limitations hag barred i
{ in smal! eruptions which cover the body, prosectition upon a charge of malicious
’ ws 3d Liss " i { ¥ ¢
i Che eruptio is are highly infla med and {| Jostruction of property made against
| Anally seale off, like seurvey. The disease ? ’ 3
| was first notieed about threq weeks ago and | & Dumber of woinen of I ithrop, Mo,
since then has spread with great rapidity. who joined in a successful effort to
More than 10,000 persons have been af. drive a saloon from the place. As
Every barber shop in the eity (« provided
with a salve which is designed to ally the
The city Health Depart-
ment has roceived numerous reports, which
indicate that the disease is prevalent in
the public schools, It is the general
opinion of physicians that the disease is
caused by some germ that settles on the
skin, and this is about all that they ean say
about it. It is not regarded as serious,
BRANDING ARMY HORSES.
J. G. Shortall, of Chicago, After Generag
Mik For the Latter's Order.
John G. Shortall, President of the Ha-
mane Society, of Chieago, Il, is after Gen.
oral Miles with asharp stick because of the
General's resent order for a resumption of
the old practice of branding army horses
and mules,
“Considering the abundant means at
their command, the men who have charge
of the Government animals should be com.
petent to take care of them withont having
to recourse to the flend.like brand,” says
Mr. Bhortall, “and branding by means of
the sizzling fron is at best but a barbarous
contrivanen, It is a form of brutality sven
less honorable than vivisestion.”
Mr. Shortall is looking for some law by
which the branding may be prevented,
Feeding Horses to Hogs,
Horses have & 80 cheap in the
neighborhood of Port Soott, Kan, that a
stockman has found it Jroltatie to buy
them, slaughter them, and feed the flesh to
his hogs. An attempt to stop the practice
demonstrated that there is no law which
Marehed Over Sherman's funte,
A ment of United States Infantry has
Intely
traversing, :
a practice b, the ronte used by Kher.
man's army between Atlanta and Chile
we aArrestea;
the
ns th ire every
many
bods
irey
time of the dam
age was summoned to court, The pros
of the county strove
present at
ecuting attorney
for two years to procure a conviction
of somebody: reporters in numbers be
sieged everybody concerned; but pot
one of the women weakened or betray:
ed the secret, Twelve knew who was
guilty of breaking the first window of
the saloon, but they covenanted with
one another to keep the knowledge an
secret, and they bare kept their word
EE ——
Birds’ Egan.
Next to that of the British musenm
the largest collection of birds’ eggs Is
that belonging to a lawyer damed Nebr
Korn, in Braunschweig, Germany. He
Intends goon to issue a catalogue of his
collection, with fifty colored plates de-
picting the more valuable specimens,
of many of which no other sample is
known to exiet,
The misery of it
Is awful,
USE
ST, JACOBS
OIL TO CURE
SCIAREA
You'll feel it Is
Gis
BOOK COLLECTING.
No. 208,
Prizes Occasionally Discovered Ly in “This guar-
defatigable Bibliophiles, totanvid
The thrilling adventures of book-col Gown vol
lectors continue to be told, and perhaps plavo, It
even to be believed, but they certainly pas a 9.inch
have now an ancient and obsolescent piste glass
intopand a
deep drawer
below, Ar
tistic
French legs;
siso uisbed
inmabogauy.
$3.85
air. These wonderful prizes which any
book lover used to pick up on the Paris
quails must be very mysteriously co
cealed {n these days to escape the eyes
of emissaries of the bookworm. Books
priced at a shilling, and worth £100, do |
not grow any longer on every cata- | is our Epeo~
1 Re 11 ¢ y | fal price for
logue, Bo the dear old stories of the ex- | this £10 desk
citement of the chase, the cunning ap- | Mail orders filled promptly.)
proach, the assumed indifference, the | We will mall soyoue, free of all
ah Fv y } { charges, our new 11 page Bpecial Cata
crafty closing on the quarry, and at logue, contaduing Furniture, Draperies,
Mirrors,
iby
0
pay
got
lamps, Btoves, Crockery
Pictures, Bedding, Hefrigerators B
Carriages, ete, This is the most ©
plete book ever pubtdished, and we
all postage Our lithographed Cary
last the flushed and triumphant es ape
with
the rare book not
our
vill probably
did
amuse our child 8 they
ora ndfs pe
grandfathers Ca'slogue, showing carpets ig colors, 8
But there still undoubtedly remains also yours for the asking. If of rput
“s ‘ 2% Samples are wanted, mail us Ke n
what Mi Anna Blackwell, writing in stamps. There is no reason why you
the should pay your local desler 6 per
cent profit when you can buy from
the mil. Drop a pow Ww the
Jour
Book
al,
lunters.”
“Provi-
Rare coin
Chamber's calls
I
den » f
gence oil uae
idences, lucky accidents, pow and then mMOopey Saves,
an astonlshlpg find, do still occasion JULIUS HINES & SON,
ally occu the world of the book-col d
tector % curious render lately Baltimore, Md.
ran upon Richardson's statement that Please ment ion this paper.
5 Yo ¢ something in the
style of ! Po Leslie Rte
frine great ant ( the elg
nan ieee Vegetables
Fomiy Pot Just at t moment a
bookselier's catalogue ame out w -
record of “The Ballad of Tommy | Can be raised at a profit, and
Potis ¥ i re ' . 2 % 4 1
“Life of ona | 1D€ yield eniarged, if properiy
: de- | fertilized. Most fertitizers do
stantly produced his own copy with the | do not contain enougl
les fuplicat Thes re the lat -
-—... Potash.
IY rova
: y $+ }.} J sag #4 -
a KB, ALG 8 from a OOK ‘ & wif 3 eoelabies zi z ple nly of pot-
for a « of fr $. He then gave ee
mel 4 ¢ hecid ec
t to a frie w he behold! the poor | @s/L — at least 1074 — besides
} ex, asking for the ve ‘ 1 1 . . 1 ‘
by FYI 8 “2 11¢ 111
or for a per price. pe . | the phosphoric acid and nitro-
’ ¥ » ¥
£150 I'lie new own 1 not pas oen
i i et : Im Ng rey v o .
A Ig
CXRILpl such Imrga ns this are Write for our books h tx bout
not hones Yet, when an English « fertilizers, They are free
lector pu od, f ree & z GERMAN KALI WORKS
ol if | 1 # of Alfre d de M is ¥3 Nassau My New York.
$ fr fn lac : work scller and the Pe. }
rend ise the § the selle i
NG e like Irtomers to get a r- |]
:
Fain now ther his was this
{ FN = ¥
" , . -
A LETTER TO WOMEN.
A few we ? . ¢ A —_— Hows Shoe & § 0 A in
SF YRIBAINe =i hal ari & Anitied ¥
: v r 1 reading our 100.PAGE ILLUSTRATED
the HOUSE BOOK, whi we will forward, pos
3 eget paid, on receipl of ouly 25 cents in Mamps.
re ani
I ea: BOOK PUB. HOUSE,
i 1% Vi
Yor 131 Leonard So, N.Y. Clay.
VOOKS | are Properiy. Repre.
1 i suff sept Wealth, Can be
' meld, Ay Assvigumble,
ing with INVENT improvements in 1 Snplesnents
diana botsebold articles, ete. Write §. 5, APPLES
iB nal MAN, Patent Lawyer, Warder Bldg,, Was
a ni ington, I). C. Free ciroisr and 3 " SW fee
tion of 4 . .
at Sterling Siher Filagree Pin
CTRL 5 Ihe peowest afd Biosl beaut fe
2 . Bear] | the zuarket
hada ba i r iatesd
elhiarge a He laiogne we nd
the 1 rereint of FIGHT
the i CENTS AT ary Free,
When; BW. WATKINS & 00 . W fg Jewelers
down all 8 Page St. Provideace, B. 1,
the tim -
¢ aite (CONSUMPTION AUD CATARRH
fe quite Are remit of Contracted Nous Prasrgs Cammot
comfort Caer, Rend 8c. for NASAL INSPII IR or bots
. ¥ eltfo GB. Famws Port nt, Chin s
able; but as soon as I would put my | 2rreepkieto 6 >
feet on the SOT } pains woul in all principal cities and
< : we floor, the pains would AGENTS WANTED 8 all jutnet; his wid
come Back, for Ineurance teen and collectors to make bug u ney
Pnited stn on Hegletry Co. 18 Fifth Ave N ¥.
** Every one thought it was impossi-
ble for me to get well. Iwas paying $1 | 1f afte n's Eve Wailer
per day for doctor's visits and 75 cents 379 Byes Thompso - y -
4
a day for wedicine mind BX ©
¥ Mrs. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound. It has effec
I made up my
$ x
VO AT
|
ted
a comnpiete cure
ha rn
for me, and I have all the faith in the oO Ww HERE ALL EL
‘ : h " Rg ot Cong W i ood.
world in it. What a blessing to wo- oS tn ok Pup, a ood =
nan it is!" Mns Jexxiz L No
§ Kauffman St. Pl iladelphia, Pa
Sara
GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE!
Walter Baker & Co.s
Breakfast COCOA
Pure, Delicious, Nutritious.
Costs Less than ONE CENT a cup.
Be
Aras
sure that the package bears our Trad
Walter Baker & Co. Limited,
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(Established 1780)
©;
Ey) Hamiton Ayers, A. ¥,_ WD,
This is a most Valuable Book for
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508 PACES,
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GO CTS. POST-PAID.
jow onl made
Cour gringo he Protein
: an
Rotanical Correct use of Herbs.
Enlarged with Complete Intex. With Book
not knowing what to do in an en "
g