The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 11, 1898, Image 3

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    = When Hot
Don’t sweat and fret, but kesp cool and
take Hood's Sarsaparilla. This is good
advice, as you will find if you fgllow it.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is a first-class sum-
mer medicine, because It is so good for
the stomach, so cooling to the blood,
$0 helptul to the whole body. Make no
mistake, but get only
Sarsa~
Hood’s “ans
America's Greatest Med cine,
Hood's Pills 11s: easy
to operate,
It honesty did not exist, we ought to in.
vent it as the best means of getting rich, —
Mirabeau,
Liver to
Cassy
cure
lane,
How's This
We offer One Hundred Dollars
any case of Catarrh that cannot
Hall's Catarrh Cure,
F. 1. Cuexey & Co... Props, Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che.
ney for the last 15 vears, and believe him per.
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and fins neinlly able to carry out any obliga.
tion m: de by their firm.
Wesr& TrvAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio,
Warnixa, Kinxasx & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act. |
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- |
feces of the system. Price, 5c. per bottle
Sold by all Drugeists, Testimonials free,
Hall's Family Pills are the best,
Reward for
be cured by
Nothing more detestable does the earth
produce thao an ungrateful man, Ansonius,
Beauty Is BDlood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean’ your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy hver and driving all im |
urities from the body. Begin to-day to
Dr pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug-
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢. 60c.
"DR. TALMAGR'S SERMON.
THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE.
S——
“Beetarianism’™ is the Bubject = The
Church of God Divided Into a Great
Number of Denominations—The Causes
of Bigotry-—Evils of Intolerance.
Text: “Then sald they unto him, Bay,
now Shibboleth, and he said Sibboleth:
for he could not frame to pronounces ft
right, Then they took him and slew him
at the passages of Jordan." Judges xii,, 6.
Do you notice the difference of pronun-
elation Fetweoen shibboleth and sibboleth?
A very small and unimportant difference,
you say. And yet, that difference was the
difference between life and death for a
great many people, The Lord's people,
Gilead and Epliraim, got into a great fight,
and Ephraim was worsted, and on the re.
treat came te the fords of the river Jordan
to cross. Order was given that all Eph-
raimites coming there be slain, But how
oould it be found out who were Ephraim-
ites? They were detected by their pronun-
ciation. Bhibboleth was a word that stood
for river. The Ephraimites had a brogue
of their own, and when they tried to say
“shibboleth” always left out the sound of
the “bh.” When it was asked that they say
shibboleth they gaid sibboleth, and were
slain. ‘Then said they unto him, say now
could not frame to pronounce ft right,
Then thev took him and slew him at the
passages of Jordan,” A very small differ.
ance, you say, between Gilead and Eph-
raim, and vet how much intolerance about
that small difference? The Lord's tribes
in our time—by which I mean the different
denominations of Christians—sometimes
magnify a very small difference, and the
only difference between scores of denomin-
ations to-day is the difference between
ghibboleth and sibbolsth
The Church of God is divided into a great
number of denominations, Time would
fail me to tell of the Calvinists, and the Ar-
miniazs, and the Babbatarians, and the
Baxterians, and the Dunkers, and the
Shakers, and the Quakers, and the Metho-
custom, strictly
y newly married couples, was
drinking diluted honey for thirty |
after marriage. From this custom !
the word honeymoon, or h
mouth, i
An ear! Auvglo-Saxon
foliowed
that of
days
Comes
y
t
boney- |
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
tive
Take Laxa Bromo Q A
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. So.
curfousiy alike physie-
The Japaness are
$= ’
ally. Recent irements taken of
fantry regiment showed no variation except
two inches in height or 20 pounds in weight,
me is
Pon't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away,
petic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Bae, the wonder worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or #1, Cure guaran
teed Booklet and sample Address
Sterling Hewedy Co, Chicago or New York
The greatest firmness
merey.— Longfellow,
free.
is the
greatest
I ean recommend Piso's Cure for
tion to sulferers from Asthma a
SEXD, FU Howard, Wis, Ma 4, 18
D. Tows-
.
in Narem-
There are houses still standing
berg that were bulit in
1080,
jowels With Cascareta.
forever,
Edaneate Your
Candy Cath tie, cure constipation
10c, Tc. 11 CC C fall, drugeisis refund mousy.
Educate lailroad Men.
The Vien school for rail-
road employes, now in its sixtieth
t, like
na training
year,
does 1 he Buda-Pesth institu
prepare m
design
adge of
for pr
Course
HANotion.
embraces
neranhyv re
graphy. 1
f goods
house
regu-
fons, raflroad litical economy,
statistics and elec
students are divided
law, pe
ro-technology.
into regular
and the
are
classes,
ool
£CU
extraordinary
and
small expenses of the de-
frayed by the
which give preference when making
exami-
table. —Philadel-
railway companies,
promotions students whose
nations are most cred
phia Record.
—————— I ——————
Talking It Over.
Miss Macfall—-1 wouldn't marry a
man who was less than 20 years old.
Miss Kittish—Ah, selfish to the last, |
Ree
Miss Macfall
about that?
Miss Kittish—-Why, you
want, when you died of old age, t«
leave your husband in hig prime and
have girl
ana
to
What
4 j
is there
wouldn't
a chance
be happy.
to get some young
Women Everywhere Express their
Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham.
Mrs. T. A. WALDEN, Gibson, (a., writes:
‘ Dear Mus, Pivknasm:—Before tak-
cll day. At
uffered untold
to me. I never ¢
my monthly peri
misery. and a great deal of the time 1
was troubled with a severe pain in my
side. finishing the first bottle
of yorr Vegetable Compound 1 could
tell it was doing me good. I continued
its use, also used the Liver Pills and
Sanative Wash, and have been greatly
helped. 1 would like to have you use
my letter for the benefit of others.”
Mrs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, s15 Nuiberry
St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes:
“Pear Mrs, Pixgaaw:—For two
years | was troubled with what the
local physicians told mc was inflamma-
tion of the womb. Every month I suf-
fered terribly. 1 had taken enough
medicine from the doctors to cure any-
one, but obtained relief for a short
time only. Atlast]coneluded to write
to you in regard to my case, and can
say that by following your advice I am
now pefectly well”
Before
Tire. W. R, BATES, Mansfield, La., writes.
* Before wriling to yon I suffered
dreadfully from painful menstrua-
tion, leucorrhiea and sore feeling in
the lower partof the bowels. Nowmy
friends want to know what makes me
look so weil. 1donot hesitate one min-
ute in tel.ing them what has brought
about this great change. I cannot
praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound enough. It is the greatest
remedy of the age.”
dists, and the Baptists, and the Eplscopal-
gationalists, and the Presbyterians, and the
Spiritualists, and a ¢core of other denomi-
nations of religionists, some of them found-
ed by very good men, soe of them found-
ed by very egotistic men, some of them
But as I de-
mand for myself liberty of eunsclence, I
must give that same liberty to every other
man, remembering that he no nore differs
from him. I advo-
cate the Jargest jiberty in all religious he.
In art, in poli-
no meving of the previous
and the
eirenlation, and 1
You know that the air
keep pure by constant
» purification and moral health,
Between the fourth and t sixteenth cen-
turies the church proposed te make people
think aright by prohibiting discussion, and
of the press, aod
and hot lead down the
he
rack, and gibbet,
awl through his eyes.
will hurl off
untain that you threw upon it, and
unsinged of the fire, dut of the flame wiil
make red wings on which the martyr will
mount te glory.
In that time «
fourth and
whieh I speak, between
sixteenth centuries, pe
| ple went from the house of
{ most appalling iniquity,
by consecrated altars there were tides of
| drunkenness and lcentionsness as
the world never heard of, and the very
sewers of !
ed the church,
press was freed, and it
of the haman mind. Then there came
large number of bad books, and
there was one man [hostile to the Christian
religion, there were twenty men ready to
Po
such
After awhile the priming
broke the shackles
ts between
will eon-
as that God is
Let Error run if
in regard to this battle going «
{| Truth and Error. The Truth
| quer just as certainly
{ stronger than the Devil,
{ you only let Truth run along with it,
Urged on by skeptic's shout and transcen-
dentalist's spar, let it run. God's angels
of wrath are in hot pursuit, and quicker
| than eagle's beak clutches out a hawk's
| heart, God's vengeance will tear it to
| plecea,
{| Ipropose to speak to you of sectarian-
| ism {ts origin, its evils, and its cures.
| There are those who would make us think
! that this monster, with horns and hoofs,
{| i# religion. I shall chase it to {ts hiding
| place, and drag it out of the caverns of
| darkness, and rip off its hide. But I want
; to make a distinction between bigotry and
| the lawful fondness for peculiar religious
| beliefs and forms of worship. Ihave no
| admiration for a nothingarian.
In a world of suck tremendous vielssl.
{ tude and temptation, and with a soul that
| must after awhile stand before a throne of
{ insufferable brightness, ir aday when the
rocking of the mountains and the flaming
of the heavens and the upheaval of the seas
| shall be among the least of the excite.
ments, to give account for every thought,
| word, action, preference, and dislike—that
{ man is mad who has no religious prefer-
j suce, Dut our early education, our physi-
| eal temperament, our mental constitution,
| will very th decide our form of wor-
| ship,
i A style of pealmody that may please me
| may displeass you. Some would like to
{ have a minister in gown and bands and
| surplice, and others profer to have a min-
{ ister in plain citizen's apparel, Some are
| most impressed when a little child is pre.
{ sented at the altar and sprinkled of the
| waters of a holy benediction “in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost,” and others are more impressed
{ when the penitent comes up out of the
river, his garments dripping with the
{ waters of a baptism which signifies the
, washing away of sin. Let either have his
own way. One man likes no noise in
{ prayer, not a word, not a whisper. An-
| other man, just as good, prefers by gestie-
ulation and exclamation to express his de-
| votional aspirations. One Is just as good
fs the other. “Every man fully persuaded
in his own mind.” "
| George Whitefield was golug over a
Quaker rather roughly for some of his re-
i liglous sentiments, and the Quaker sald:
i “George, I am as thou art: I am for bring-
ing ali men to the hope of the Gospel;
| therefore, if thou wilt not quarrel with me
{about my broad brim, I will not quarrel
! with thee about thy black gown. George,
{give me thy band.”
| In tracing out the religion of sectarian-
Ism or bigotry I find that a great daal of it
| comes from wrong education in the home
i eirele. There are parents who do not think
| It wrong to caricature nnd jeer the peculiar
{torms of religion in the worid, and de-
| aounce other sects and other denomina-
t tions, I eould mention the names of prom.
| ‘nent ministers of the Gospel who spent
their whole lives bombarding other de.
sominations and who lived to see their
children preach the G i in those very
enominations, often the case
ithat bigotry starts in a household, and
that the subject of it never recovers.
i Phere are tens of thousands of bigots ten
| years old,
! Bigotry is often the ohild of ignorance,
|
i
ma
mu
ou seldom find a man with large intellect
who is a bigot, It is the man who thinks
26 knows a great deal, but does not, That
nan is almost always a bigot, The whole
iendency of education and civilization is
io bring a man out of that of state of
First of all, it eripples investigation. You
are wrong, and I am right, and that ends
it. No taste for exploration, no spirit of
investigation. From the glorious realm of
God's truth, over which an archangel
might fly from eternity to eternity and not
reach the limit, the man shuts himself out
and dies, a blind mole under a corn-shook,
While each denomination of Christians
is to present all the truths of the Bible, it
seem to me that God has given to sach de-
nomination an especial mission to give
particular emphasis to some one dootrine;
and so the Calvinistic churches must pre-
sent the sovereignty of God, and the Ar-
minian churches must present man's freo
agoncy, and the Episcopal churches must
present the Hpotaacs of order and solemn
ceremony, and the Baptist churches must
present the necessity of ordinances, and
the Congregational churches must present
the responsibility of the individual mem-
ber, and the Methodist churches must show
what holy enthusiasm, hearty congroga-
tional singing can accomplish, While
each denomination of Christians must set
forth all the doctrines of the Bible, I fea!
it is especially incumbent upon each de-
nomination to put particular emphasis on
some one dootrine,
Another great damage done by the sec-
tarianism and bigotry of the church is that
it disgusts people with the Christian relig-
fon. Again bigotry and sectarianism do
great damage in the fact that they hinder
the triumph of the Gospel. Oh, how much
wasted ammunition! How many men of
splendid intellect have given their whole
life to controversial disputes when, {f the
had given their life to something practical,
they might have been vastly useful! Sup-
pose, while I speak, there were a common
enemy coming up the bay, and all the fozts
around the harbor began to fire into sach
other—you would ery out ‘National suleide!
Why don’t those forts blaze away in one
direction, and that against the common
enemy?"
Besides that, {if you want to build up any
denomination, you will never build it up
by trying to pull some other down, Intol.
erauce never put anything down, How
stance, against the Methodist Chureh? For
pulpits of Great Britain,
so many of them preached in the flelds?
Simply because they could not get in the
churches, And the names of the chursh
was given in derision and as a sarcasm.
no order, they have no method in their
worship; and the eorities, therefore, in
irony, called them “Methodists.”
I am told that in Astor Library, New
against Methodism,
that church? No; it {s either first or second
amid the denominations of Christendom,
her missionary stations in all parts of the
world, her men not only important in re-
trusts. Church marching on and the more
What did intolerance accomplish against
destroyed the church it
The
tirade could have
would not have to-day a disciple left,
Baptists were buried out of Boston in «
Those who sympathized with them
the men who signed it were Indicted, Has
intolerance stopped the Baptist
The inst statistics in
forty-four thousand
million communicants,
put down anything,
In England a law was made against the
Jew, England thrust
thrust down the Jew, and declared that no
official position. What
came of it? Were the Jews destroyed?
Was their religion overthrown? No. Who
became Prime Minister of England? Who
was next to the throne? Who was higher
thanthe throne because he was counsellor
and adviser? Disraeli, a Jew.
churches and
one hundredth birthday of Montefiore, the
nthropist, Intolesmnos
down anything.
I think we may overthrew the severe
seciarianism and bigotry 10 our hearts,
and in the church also, by realizing that
the denominations of Curistians have
yielded noble Institutions and noble men
Be
hin
this thought,
a Robert
never yet put
m
Hall and an Adoniram
and the blessed Bummerfield, while
own denomination yielded John Knox
and the Alexanders—men of whom the
world was not worthy, Now, I say, if we
are honest and fair-minded men, when we
come up in the presence of such churches
and such denominations, although they
may be differant from our own, we ought
to admire them, and we ouglit to love and
honor them. Churches which ean produce
#uch men, and such large hearted charity,
and such magnificent martyrdom, ought to
win our affection-—-at any rate, our respect,
Be come on, ye six hundred thousand
Episcopalians in this country, and ye four.
teen hundred thousand Presbyterians, and
ye four million Baptists, and ye five mil-
ion Methodista—come on; shoulder to
shoulder we will march forthe world's cone
our
God demands that you snd I help. Fore
ward, the whole lina! In the Young Men's
Christian Associations, In the Bible So-
ciety, in the Tract Society, In the Foreign
Missionary Boelety, shoulder to shoulder
all denominations,
Perhaps I might foreibly fllustrate this
trath by calling your attention to an inei-
ago. One Monday morning at about two
o'clock, while her nine hundred passen-
gers were sound asleep in her berths
dreaming of home, the steamer Atlantio
erashed into Mars’ Head. Five hundred
souls in ten minutes landed in eternity!
Oh, what a scene! Agonized men and woe
men ranning ap and down the gangways,
and olutehing for the rigging, and the
plunge of the helpless steamer, and the
elappiog of the hands of the merciless sea
over the drowning fand the dead, threw
two continents into terror. But see this
life-line until he gets to the rock: and see
these fishermen gathering up the ship.
wrecked and taking them into the cabins
and wraphing them in flannels snug and
warm; and see that minister of the Gospel
with three other men getting into a
life-boat and pushing out for the
wreek, ailing AWAY across the
surf, and pulling away until they had saved
one more man and then getting back with
him to the shore. Can those men ever for.
get that night? And can they forget their
companionship in peril, companionship in
struggle, companionship in awful ecatas-
trophe and rescue? Never! Never! In
whatever part of the earth they meet, they
will be friends when they mention the
story of that night when the Atlantic
struck Mars’ Head. Well, my friends,
our world has gone into a worse ship-
wreck. Sin drove it on the rocks. The
old ship has lurched and tossed ia the
tem of six thousand years. Out with
the life-linel I do not care what denomina-
tion rows it, Bide by side, in the memory
of common hardships, and common trials,
and common prayers common tears,
let us pe brothers forever,
Dead Brothers in Arma,
Two brothers, Mortimer and Emmett
Huffman, sons of D, C. Huffman, of In.
dianapolis, Ind., were killed at Santiago.
The family moved from Lawrenceburg
Ind, to Indianapolis several years ago.and
at that sity & few months since Edna, the
committed suicide because
ANSWER HELD BACK.
S——
Adhesion to Our Peace Terms
Promised,
CHANGES ASKED FOR.
The French Ambassador Communicated
to the President the Tentative Agree
ment of the Spanish Government to the
American FProposals—Cuba's Govern-
ment,
A Washington special says: After a confer
Bunce on the peace question lasting for just
an hour Wednescay afternoon between the
President and M. Cambon, the French Am-
bassador, the later acting as the representa-
tve of Spain, Secretary Day emerged from
the White House and snnounced that the
conference was Inclusive, wherefore the
parties to it had agreed to say nothing pub-
licly as to what had occurred,
The Becpetary did not appear to be dis-
couraged as he made this statement, though
be admitted that no time had been set for
another conference, From that it is gather.
#d that the long expected answer of the
Spanish Government to the President's note,
apon being reeeived, had turned out to be
just as it was expected, either a counter-
proposition or a request for a fuller siate-
ment jo detail upon some of the heads of the
note,
middie of the afternoon It was
parties concerned that the
Spanish answer had not been received: that
the only formal note that had come to hand
was one from the Madrid Cabinet to M,
Cambon, asking for information upon some
points that were not clear to the Spanish
mind,
However, just after 8 o'clock the secretary
of the French Embassy, M. Thisbaut, calied
at the State Department and arranged with
Becretary Day for a mveting between the
President and the Ambassador as soon as
possible. The meeting was set for 5.45
Up to the
to walt
Ambassa-
House io season, but was obliged
No Conclusions Reached,
As already stated, after conferriog for an
bour, the parties separated, having been
unable to reach a conclusion as to the ac
conditions
by the President and binding
the observance of the striet-
&8t secrécy as Lo the proceedings until fur.
made, Thus it is
in advance that any at-
occured at the meeting
will be nothing more
peace
inid down
practically assured
tempt to state what
at the Whits House
than pure guesswork,
Troops to Go Forward,
Meantime, in consonanes with the dee
be
ginning of the overture, this conference is |
not operating to restrain military op-
erations in sony degree, out
for a conference of leaders of the regl-
Orders went
Rico, and within 24 hours some of the
troops for this expedition will be boarding
It is felt that even should an armistios be |
declared before these troops see active ser- |
vios at the front, it will be beneficial for
them to bave made the trip, for otherwise
danger of the morale of the
troops being destroyed through their erav-
fog to got away from the big concentration
camps and at least soo the shores of Cuba or
Porto Rico,
Oo
EXTRA SESSION OF CONGRESS,
if Ponce ie Hestored,
solely be
¥ A {
43 CAaus
If You hav
induced to ask some
&o
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=
se.
then you may try it.
) )
they like it.
foo Particular,
Deldock Why d¢
Widow McHayst and settle
er new sixteen
It has all t
Opie mt ye
the
i $s POM hotles
if 32 rooin Sous
)
he
boulevard?
provements,
Artie Choak— Yes
3
take the GOW
h
with It, and =}
}
a modern improvement, Licag
une,
10
“8 not
0 Trib
ave
Take Cascarets Candy Cashartic
It CC. C. fall 0 cure, druggists refund
night-blooming
. leguminous p
d is pe
ilinated by the agency
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup fore
feet}
aliajys pain, CUres Wing 0olk
! 2
A maj Jerusalem in Mosale,
§
No-To Hae for Fifty Cents
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure
en strong, blood pure. Sic 8
iv
one's days.”
Do you regard late rising as
JG
many
inant of
of bats,
hildren
ricus 7
“i have been using CASCARE
nsomnia, with which 1 have been ay
pver twenty years, and { can say 1b
Vaal
$e
A Washington special says: President Me-
Kinley will call an extra session of both
houses of Congress as soon as Spain accepts
the terms of peace offered by the United
Blates,
It bas always been understood that the
Senate would be convened as soon as the
treaty of peace was ready to be acted upon
by that body. The attention of the Presi.
dent bas been called, however, to a situs-
tion which makes the assembling of the en-
tire Congress nocessary. This situation can
be explained in a few words,
Under the law which provides for the
raising of the volunteer army, that army
As
the following provisions:
The volunteer army sball be maintained
only during the existence of the war or
while war Is imminent,
All officers and men composing sald army
shall be discharged from the service of the
accomplished, or on the conclusion of hos
tities,
When this law was framed it was not for a
moment supposed that after the war had
ing the army intact. It was not known at
that time that a garrison would be required
for the Philippines or that Porto Rico would
be an American possession, with its demand
upon a military foree, or that the establish
ment of ‘‘a stable government” in Cuba
would necessitate the presence of several
thousand American soldiers. The devsiop-
life, fully 100,000 men will continue to be
needed, Ii is the present intention to dis
tribute no less than 50,000 soldiers through-
out Caba, with 30,000 in the Philippines and
probably 20,000 in Porto Rico, Under the
law just quoted, as soon ss hostilities conse, |
the volunteer army is disbanded, and the
regular army goes back to its peaes footing,
thus leaving only 27,000 men in the service.
Other Reasons for the Session,
In addition to this, laws must be passed
to meet tue new requirements of govern.
ment in the Philippines and Porto Rieo,
As long as war lasts, the President, under
the war powors of the Constitution, can pre-
seribe a military government, but when the
war Is over the legisiative branch must pro-
vide for eivil administration. This will be
another reason for assembling Congress.
The Judiclary Committees of both houses
will have an important and responsible task
before them, while the novelty of the ques
tions ted will undoubtedly give rise to
Sonelaeratie debate,
Heavy Mortality Among Colonels,
ave ever tried
them tom
1 shall certainly
y Iriends as being all t
represented Toos Giriarbp, Egil
CANDY
CATHARTIC
«leasant. Palatable, Potent
Good, Never Ricken, Weaken. or Gripe. Hie
CURE CONSTIPATION.
ee
TS for
ted for
r reme.
POCO.
hey are
n, HL
Do
Zc. Woo
wr
NO-TO-BA
Bold and guaranteed by a
khvis 10 CURE Tobsooo
11 drag-
Habis
[Next Best.
VIRGINIA BUST 0
ange coLLEG
Market Bt
.
ed
Is,
NTT)
Sood Stock and Brain Farm For Sale
Good terms, JOUN A JONES, Mayflower,
¥
“TASTELESS
TONIC
IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS,
WARRANTED. PRICE 50 cts.
GALATIA, JIL. , Nov. 36, i088,
Paris Madicive Co., Bt. Louls, Mo.
Gentlemen: ~We noid last year, 80 botiles of
GROVES TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and have
bought three gross already this year it aii our ex
perience of 4 years, in the drug business. have
Bover sold an article that gave such universal sativ
faction a8 your Tonio. Yours truly,
ABREY. CARE & CO
BICYCLISTS
LIOUID PISTOL
2
=
=~ AMMONIA,
WATER,
* COLOGNE,
— OR OTHER
LIQUID,
It te a weapon which protec's Mepriiets agains
viclone doge and foot-pads. travelers against rob
ters and tough homme agains thieves od tramps
and is saspted to many olher satastions
It does not kill or injare it Is perfectly safe to
handle: makes no noise of emo ke: reals ho swan i
erento BO lasting regrets, ae does the buliet pistol
It sbaply and amply protects, by som the
foe to give * attention to Ki for
awhile met ef to the intended victim
11 1» the only real weapon which protects snd alse
makes fun, eughter sud jots of 11; #1 shoots, not
ones, bt many times without rel : snd will
stot by ite ap wee in thee of \ Wie
! loaded only with liquid, 11 does not get out
| of o 1 $e durable, handsome, and nioked
Bent boxed and post-paid by madi with 1 direc
tions how $0 use for
Postage Stampa, Post-ofios Money Order, or
Express Money Oper.
to our relialility, refer to BR. G. Duss or
Dradetreet's merrssiile agencies,
NEW YORK UNION SUPPLY CO.
138 Leonard Street,
‘WERT aRINHLY]