The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 10, 1898, Image 3

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    8100 Reward, $100,
The readers of this Joper will be pleased to
learn that thore is at least one dreaded disease
that solence has besn able to cure in all its
stages, and that {s « atarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure known to the
sal fraternity. (atarrh being a constitu.
disease, requires a constitutional treat.
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken internally,
acting directly on the blood and mucous sur.
faces of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the pa-
tient strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature in doing its work. The
proprietors have so much fa in its curative
wers that they offer One Hundred Dollars
or any case that it falls to cure. Send for list
of testimonials, Address
F. J. Cuexey & « o., Toledo, 0,
Sold by Druggists, 5c,
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Football is played with bare feet by the
natives of India,
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it cleen,
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im-
purities from the Jody, Begin to-day to
ish pimples, boils, blotches, blackhe
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug-
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢. 50c.
The Siberian Railway will cost 100,000,000,
Catarrh Cured
Blood Purified by Hood's Sarsapa-
rilia and Health Is Cood,
“I was troubled for a long time with
tarrh and a bad feeling in my head, I
gan taking Hood's Sarsaparilia, and it did
me a world of My sufferings from
catarrh are over and my health is good.”
Mrs. A. A. Libby, Pownal, Maine,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is America’s Greatest Medicine. $1; six for 85.
ch-
be-
good.
Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills, 25 cents.
CUT UP THE WRONG HAT.
How a Scotch University Professor Was
Fooled by a Student.
(From the Pittsburg News.)
A Scotch university professor, irri-
tated to find that his students had got
into the habit of placing their hats and
canes on his desk, instead of in the
cloakroom, announced that the next
article of the kind placed there would
be destroyed. Some days later the pro-
fessor was called for a moment from
the class room. A student slipped into
his private room and emerged with
the professor's hat, which he placed
conspicuously on the desk, while his
fellows grinned and trembled, The pro-
fessor, on returning, saw the hat,
thought some rashly obstinate student
had been delivered into his hands, and,
taking out his knife, he cut the offend-
ing article to pieces, while vainly at-
umph that played about his counte-
nance. He was in a very bad temper
the next day.
srs com sth
Bees Used as Missiles In War.
There are two recorded instances in
which bees have been used as missiles
in war. The first occasion was at the
siege of Themiscyra, when the Roman
general Lucullus was warring against
Mithridates, The Romana
mounds and mines, and the people of
Themiscyra opened these mines by
digging into them, and hurled hives
of bees, as well as wild animals,
through the holes onto the Roman
workmen, Bees were once used in
England with equal success, Chester
was besieged by the Danes and Nor-
wegilans. The town was defended by
the Saxons with Gaelic auxiliaries and
they repulsed the Danes, but the Nor-
weglans, who protected themselves by
tried break
meang of hurdles, to
water and bolled them together. This
mixture they poured upon the Nor-
wegians, who were under the hurdles.
The Norwegians, however, covered
scalded. The Saxons’ next move was
to get all the beehives in the town
and throw them down upon the Nor-
weglan army. The enraged bees stung
the men in the hands and legs, and
the swelling which resulted prevented
them from moving. In the end the
Danes and Norwegians retired, and left
the Saxons In peace.
THE ILLS OF WOMEN
And Bow Mra. Pinkham Heips
Overcome Them.
Mrs. Mary BorriNoen, 1101 Marianna
8t., Chicago, Ill, to Mrs. Pinkham:
“I have been troubled for the past
two years with falling of the womb,
lencorrhaea, pains over my body, sick
headaches, backache, nervousness and
weakness. I tried doctors and various
remedies without relief. After taking
two bottles of your Vegetable Com-
pound, the relief I obtained was truly
wonderful. 1 have now taken several
more bottles of your famous medicine,
and can say that I am entirely cured.”
Mrs. Hexay Donn, No. 806 Findley St.,
Cincinnati, Ohio, to Mrs. Pinkham :
“For a long time 1 suffered with
chronic inflammation of the womb,
pain in abdomen and bearing-down
feeling. Was very nervonsat times, and
so weak I was hardly able to do any-
thing. Was subject to headaches, also
troubled with leucorrhwa. After doe-
toring for many months with different
physicians, and getting no relief, I had
given up all hope of being well
again when 1 read of the great good
Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
was doing. 1 decided immedi.
ately to give it a trial. The result was
simply past belief. After taking four
bottles of Vegetable Compound and
using three packages of Sanative Wash
1 can say I feel like 4 new woman. 1
deem it my duty to announce the fact
to my fellow sufferers that Lydia
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE ENINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE.
Subject: “Make Home Happy''=The Door
sill of the Dwelling House {2 the Foun
dation of Church and State« Let Chris
tian Love Abide Therein,
Text: “The disciples went away again
unto their own home." John xx., 10,
A church within a church, a republic
within a republic, a world within a world,
is spelled by four letters—Home! If things
go right there, they go right everywhere;
if things go wrong there, they go wrong
everywhere, The doorsill of the dwelling-
house Is the foundation of Church and
State.” A man never gets higher than his
own garret or lower than his own cellar,
Domestic life overarches and undergirdles
all other life. The highest house of Con-
gress is the domestic eirele; the rocking
chair in the nursery is higher than a throne.
George Washington commanded the forces
of the United State, but Mary Washington
commanded George, Chrysostom’s mother
made bis pen for him. If a man should
start out and rgn seventy years in a straight
line, he could not get out from under the
shadow of his own mantel plece., I there.
fore talk to you about a matter of infinite
and eternal moment when I speak of your
home,
As individuals we are fragments. God
makes the race into parts, and then He
gradually puts us together. What I lack,
you make up; what you lack, I make
up: our defleits and surpluses of
character being the cog wheels fo the so-
¢lal mechanicism. One person has the pa-
tience, another has the courage, Actor
has the placidity, another the enthusiasm;
that which is Jacking in one is made up by
another, or is made up by all. Baffaloes
in herds, grouse in broods, qualls in flocks,
the human race in circles, God has most
beautifully arranged this. It is in this
way He balances soclety; this conservative
and that radical keeping things even.
Every ship must have its mast, cat-water,
taflrail, ballast, Thank God, then, for
Princeton and Andover, for the opposites,
I bave no more right to blame a man for
being different from me than a driving-
wheel has a right to blame the iron shaft
that holds it to the centre. John Wesley
balances Calvin's Institutes, A cold
thinker gives to Scotland the strong bones
of theology; Dr. Guthrie clothes them with
a throbbing heart and warm flesh, The
diffieuity is that we are not satisfled with
just the work that God has given us to do,
The water-wheel wants to come inside the
mill and grind the grist, and the hopper
wants to go out and dabble in water.
Our usefulness and the welfare of soclety
depend upon staying in just the place that
God has put us, or intended we should oc-
the
Cupy.
PY: more compactness, and that we may
be more useful, we are gathered in still
smaller circles in the home group.
there you kave the same varisty again;
brothers, sisters, husband and wife; all dif.
ferent In temperaments and tastes, [tis
fortunate that it should bo so, If the hus-
band be all {mpulse, the wife must be all
prudence. If one sister be sanguine in her
temperament, the other must be lymphatie,
Mary and Martha are necessities. There
will be no dinner for Christ {f there be no
Martna; there will be no audience for Jesus
if there be no Mary. The home organiza-
tion Is most beautifully constructed, Eden
has gone; the bowers are all broken down;
the animals that Adam
get their names have since shot forth tusk
iron beaks plunge, till
with clotted wing and eyeless sockets the
twain come whirling down from under the
sun in blood and fire, Eden bas gone, but
there is just one little fracment jeft, It
Itis the marriage institution.
from man a rib. Now it Is an addition of
ribs, .
This institution of marriage has been de
famed in our day. Socialism and polyga-
into a Turkish harem. While the
pupits have been comparatively silent,
nolvels—thelr cheapness only equalled by
their nastinpess—are trying to educate,
have taken upon themselves to educate,
this nation in regard to boly marriage,
which makes or breaks for time and eter-
pity. Ob, this is not a mere question of
residence or wardrobe! It is a question
charged with gigantic joy or sorrow, with
heaven or hell. Alas for this new dispen-
sation of George Sands! Alas for this
mingling of the nightshade with the mar.
riage garlands! Alas the venom of
adders spit into the tankards! Alas for the
white frosts of eternal death that kill the
orange-blossoms! The Gospel of Jesus
Christ is to assert what is right and to as-
what is wrong. Attempt has been
made to take the marriage institution,
which was intended for the bappiness and
elevation of the race, and make it a mere
coramercial enterprise; an exchange of
houses and lands and equipage; a business
partnarship of two stuffed up with the
stories of romance and knight-errantry,
and unfaithifuiness and feminine angel.
hood. The two after a while have roused
up to find that, instead of the paradise
they dreamed of, they have got nothing
but a Van Amburgh's menagerie, filled
with tigers and wild eats, Eighty thou.
sand divorces in Paris in one year preceded
the worst revolution that Franee ever saw,
And 1 tell you what you know as well as I
do, that wrong notions on the subject of
Christian marriage are the cause at this
day of more moral outrage belore God and
man than any other cause,
There are some things that I want to
bring before you. I kuow there are those
of you who have homes set up for a ‘great
many years; and, then, thers are those
here who have just established their home,
They have only been in that home a few
months or a few years, Then there are
those who will, after a while, set up for
themsslves n home, and it is right that I
should speak out upon these themes,
My first counsel to you is, have God in
our new home, if it be a pew home; and
ot him who was a guest at Bethany be in
your household; let the Divine blessing
drop upon your every hope and plan and
expectation, Those young people who be.
gin with God end with heaven. Have on
your right hand the engagement ring of
the Divine affection. If one of yon be a
Christian, let that one take the Bible and
read a few verses in the evening-time and
then kneel down and commend yourselves
to Him who setteth the solitary in fami.
Hes. I want to tell you that the destroying
angel passes by without touching or enter.
ing the door-post sprinkled with blood of
the everlasting covenant. Why fs it that
in some families they never get along, and
in others they always get along well? 1
have watched such cases, and have come
to a conclusion, In the first instance,
nothing seemed to go pleasantly, and afl er
a while there came a devastation, domes tie
disaster, or estrangement. Why? They
started wrong. In the other case, aithoagh
there were hupdainps and trials and some
things that bad to be explained, still
things went on pleasantly until the very
last, Why? They started right.
My second advice to you in your home
is, to exorcise to the very last possibility
of your nature the law of forbearance.
Prayers in the household will not make up
for ev bing. Home of the best ple
in the world are the hardest to get along
with, Thera are people who stand np {a
prayer meetings and pray like angels; who
at home are nueom and eranky.
You may not have everything just as you
want it. Sometimes it will bo the duty of
the husband and sometimes of the wife to
yield; but both stand funatflicualy on your
ve a Wat
no Biisher Somihg oy i anoe With
ad Sone Som EIR" I
tor
i
that be a law of your houssholl,: The best
thing I ever heard of my grandfather,
whom I never saw, was this: That once
having unrighteously rebuked ons of his
children, he himself having lost his
wtience, and, perhaps, having been mis.
nformed of the child's doings, found out
his mistake, and in the evening of the same
day gathered all his family together, and
said, “Now, I have ons explanation to
make, and one thing to say. Thomas, this
morning I rebuked you very unfairly. I
am very sorry for it. Irebnked you in the
presence of the whola family, and now I
ask your forgiveness in their presence.” It
must have taken some courage to do that.
It was right, was it not? Never be ashamed
to apologize for domestic {naccuraey.
On the other hand, the hasband ought
to be 83m pat hetic with the wife's occupa-
tion. It is no easy thing to keep house,
Many &« woman who could have endured
martyrdom as weli as Margaret, the
Beoteh girl, hus actually boon worn out by
house management, There are a thousand
martyrs of the kitchen. It is very annoy-
ing, after the vexations of the day around
the stove or the register or the table, or in
the nursery or parlor, to have the husband
say, “You know nothing about trouble;
you ought to be in the store half an hour.”
Sympathy of occupation! If the husband's
work cover him with the soot of the fur-
nace, orthe odors of leather or soap fae-
tories, let not the wife be easily disgusted
at the begrimed hands or unsavory aroma.
Your gains are one, your interests are one,
your losses are one; lay hold of the work
of life with both bands. Four hands to
fight the battles; four eyes to watch for
the danger; four shoulders on whieh to
carry thetrials. It is a very sad thing
when the painter has a wife who does not
like pletures. Itis a very sad thing for a
pianist when she has a husband who does
not like music. It Js a very sad thing
when a wife is not sulted unless her hus-
band has what is called a “genteel busi
ness.” So faras I understand a “‘gentes]
business,” it {a something to which a man
goes at ten o'clock in the morning, and
from which he comes home at two or
three o'clock in the afternoon, and gots a
large amount of money for doing nothing.
That is, I believe, a “gontesl business;”
and there has been many a wife who has
made the mistake of not being satisfied
until the husband has given up the tanning
of the hides, or the turning of the banis-
ters, or the bullding of the walls, and put
himself in oircies where he has nothing to
do but smoke cigars and drink wine, and
get himself into habits that upset him,
going down in the maelstrom, taking his
wife and children with him. Thers are a
good many trains running from earth to
destruction, They start all hours of the
day, and all hours of the night, There are
the freight trains; they go very slowly and
very heavily; and there are the acoommo-
dation trains going on toward destruction,
out when he wants to. Bat genteel {die
ness is an express train; Satan is the stoker,
and death is the engineer; and though one
*
red flag of “danger,” or the lantern of
God's Worl, It makes just one shot into
perdition, coming down the embankment
with a shout and a wall aad a shriek—
erash, crash! There are two classes of peo.
ile sure of destruction: first those who
ave nothing to do; secondly, those who
have something to do, but who are too lazy
or too proud to do it,
I have one more word of advice to give
to those who have a happy home, and that
is, Ist love preside in it. When your be
havior in the domestic circle becomes a
mere matter of calculation; when the caress
you give is merely the result of deliberate
study of the position you occupy, happl-
ness lies stark dead on the hearth-stone,
When the husband's position as head of the
household is maintained by loudness of
volee, by strength of arm, by fire of tem.
per, the republio of domestic bliss has be-
come a despotism that neither God norman
will abide. Ob, y» who promised to love
mit perjury? Let noshadow of suspicion
come on your affection. It is easier to kill
that fower than it is to make it Hive again,
The blast from hell that puts out that light,
leaves you in the blackness of darkaess {or-
over,
Here are a man and wife: they agres in
nothing eise, but they agrees they will have
a home. They will have a splendid house,
and they think that i they have a house,
they will have s home. Architects make
the plan, and the mechanics axecuts it;
the house to cost one hundred thousand
dollars. It is done, The carpets are
spread; lights are hoisted; cartalns are
hung; cards of invitation sent out. The
horses in gold-plated harness prance at
the gate; guests come in and take their
places; the flute sounds; the dancers go
up and down: and with one grand whirl
the wealth and the fashion and the mirth
of the great town wheel amid the pletared
walls. Ha! this is happiness. Fioat it on
the smoking viands; sound it in the music;
whirl it in the dance; cast it in the saow of
sculpture; sound it up the brilliant stair
way; flash it in the chandeliers! Happi-
nossa, ifdead] Lot us bulld on the centre of
the parlor floor a throne to Happiness: let
all the guests, when come in, bring their
flowers and pearls and diamonds, and
throw them on this pryamid, aud jet it be
a throne; and then let Happiness, the
queen, mount the throne and we
will stand around, and all chailces
lifted, we will say, “Drink, O queen! live
forever!” But the guests depart, the
flutes are breathless, the last clash of the
impatient hools is heard in the distance,
and the twain of the household come bask
to see the Queen of Happiness on the throne
amidst the parlor floor, Dut, alas! as they
come back, the flowers have faded, the
sweet odors have become the smell of a
charnel-house, and instead of the Queen of
Happiness there sits there the gaunt form
of Anguish, with bitten lip and sunken eye,
and ashes in ber hair. The romp of the
dancers who bave left seoms ra he: pot,
like jarring thunders that quake the floor
and rattle the glasses of the feast rim to
rim. The spilled wine on the floor turns
into blood, The wreaths of plush have be-
come wriggling reptiles. Terrors eatch
tangled in the canopy that overhangs the
conch. A strong gast of wind comes
through the hall and the drawing-room and
the bed-chamber, in which all the lights go
out. And from the lips of the wine-beakers
come the words, “Happiness is not in us!”
And the arches respond, “It Is not in us"
And the silenced instruments of musie,
thrumbed on by invisible fingers, answer,
App ines is not in us!” And the frozen
lips of Anguish break open, and, seated on
the throne of wilted flowers, she strikes
her bony hands together, and groans, “It
is not {fu me!"
That very pight a clerk with a salary of
a thousand dollars a year—only one thou-
sand--goes to his home, set up three
months ago, just after the marriage day.
Love meets him at the door; love sits with
Lim at the table; love talks over tho work
of the day; love takes down the Bible, and
reads of Hin who came our souls to save;
and they kneel, and while they are kneel.
ing right in that plain room, on the piaia
oarpet.~the angels of God build a throns,
mot out of flowers that perish and fade
away, but out of gariaads of heaven,
wreath on top of wreath, amaranth oh am-
aranth, until the throne is o,
Then the harps of God sound.
ed, and suddenly thers appearsd
one who mounted the throne with eye so
bright and brow so fair that the twain
knew it was Christain Love, And they
knelt at the foot of the throne, and, put.
ting one hand on each head, she blessed
them and sald, “Happloess is with mel”
And that throne of celestial bloom with
eérad not with the passing ; aad the
tfueen left not the throne till one day the
married tr feit mricken in years
themsel called away, and knew not
which way to go, and the queen bounded
from the throne, and said, “Follow ma
. ¢
A Father's Story.
From the Evening Crescenl, Appleton, Wis,
A remarkable cure from na wane which
has generally wrecked the lives of ebildren,
and left them in a condition to which death
itself would be preferred, has attracted no
great amount of attention nmong the resi-
dents of the west end of Appleton,
Tho onse is that of little Willard Creech,
son of Richard D, Creech, a well known
employe of one of the lnrge paper mills in
the Fox River Valley. The lad was attacked
by spinal disease and his parents had given
up all hope of his ever being well again
when, as by a miracle, he wus healed and is
now in school as happy as nny of his mates,
Mr. Creech, the father of the boy, who
resides at 1062 Becond Btreet, Appleton
Wisconsin, told the following story:
Ie
“Our boy was ausolutely His
ower limbs were paralyzed, and when we
used electricity he could not feel it below
his hips, Finally we let the doctor go as
he did pot seem to help our son and we
nearly gave up hope, Finally my mother
who lives in Cavada wrote advising the use
of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale Peo
pie and I bought some,
‘This was when our boy had Leen on the
stretcher for an entire your and helpless (or
nine months, In six weeks after taking
the pllls we noted signs of vitality in
his legs, and in four months he was able tc
20 to school.
It is two ye yok the first of
3a § # « Ow
happy and we other chil
iren., It was nothing el in the world
that saved the boy than Dre, Williams’ Pluk
Pills for Pale People.”
BE —
Goes to School.
ul ry pas
helploas,
just as
war
World's Wine Production for One Yean
According to the Moniteur Vinicole,
the world's wine production for 1886
was 3.262.103.820 gallops; for 1897, 2.-
§43.478.920 gallons. The production in
the United States was in 1896, 17.565,-
600 gallons; in 1897, 30,303,740 gallons,
i ———— -
In a square inch of the human scalp
the hairs number about 1,000,
re ———
No-To Tae for Fifty Centa
Guaranteed totmcco habit cure. makes weak
men strong, blood pure Se $1 All druggists
The nails on amputated fugers continue
10 grow,
Fits permanently eure. No fits or nervons.
poss alter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free
De KH. Kass, Lod, ® Arch S54 Phila. Pa.
Earth has no brighter biossom than the
ittie ohiid smiling through rage.
Mere. Winslow's Soothing Symp for children
teething, softens the gums reducing inflamma:
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. Sc.a
Austro-Hangary is to have a floating ex-
position,
Don’t Tobacoo Spit and Smoke Your Life Away,
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take NoTo
eed Booklet asd sample free. Address
The constant labor of four persons for the
produce a cash
mere shawl of the best quality,
The trues reward of a workman Is not his
wages, but the consciousness of baving done
a good job,
To Care A Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet, All
Druggists refund money 1118 fails to cure. se
It is customary ia Chian 10 congratulate a
fat man, because it is taken for granted that
he must be rioh,
After a man bas made a good record for
himself, it is time esoueh to hunt up
pedigrees somebody has left him,
To» Care Constipation Vorever,
Take Cascarets Candy Cashiartie 10s or Ta
It C C. C. fail 10 cure, drogg sta refund money.
A refrigerator trust has been organized In
New York.
Plan's Care for Consumption has saved me
many a doctor's bill. - 8. FF. Hanoy, Hopkine
Pisce, Baltimore, Md., Dec. 2, 1954
A destructive halistorm swept over the
island of Maia,
Edaeate Your Bowels With Caseareta.
Candy Cathariie, cure constipation forever,
100, 38a. If CCC fail, drogeiers refund money.
American trade with Chinn and Japan
said tn he increasing,
THIS iS
HER IT.
Know by the sign
ST. JACOBS OIL
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica,
Lumbago, Sprains. Bruises,
Soreness,
HEAD A
wife and myseif have been
ARETS and er are the best
& how at
r CASCARETS,
almost
ba
two days, she tried some of
and they Jelloved the pain in her head
immediately. % both: raodintnend ¢
Pittsburg Sato & Deposit Co, Pittsburg, Pa.
CHESTNUTS GROWN IN AMERICA
It was three-quarters of & century
after Du Pont's importation of Buro-
pean chestaits thet Japanese chestnuts
began to attract attention in this
country, Probably the largest grove of
Japanese chestnuts in America is sit-
uated near Cleminton, N. J. Here a
tract of land 600 acres in area is given
over to the culture of thege trees, The
tract was originally a forest of native
American chestnut trees. They were
all cut down, and after the shoots had
Erown two years they were grafted
with the Japanese chestnut. In from
two to three years the grafted trees be
gan to bear, and at the end of ten years
they were yielding a bushel of chest-
nuts to a tree. The orchard, if such it
may be called, is crudely cultivated
with a rough harrow, and the fallen
leaves are permitted to rot and en-
rich the ground.
The European
chestnuts larger than
can, but by no means so sweet
raw state, When however,
they are palatable. They are used not
only for the enlivenment of Hallowe'en
and the Japanese
Ameri-
in the
are the
cooked,
parties, but also for the Thanksgiving
turkey, and bolled as an ordinary veg-
etable. The Italians this country
convert them into from
in
meal,
middle of September:
chestnuts
the
two or three wecks later
In view
chestnut
of the new
article
interest
of
in
a8 an food.
entific
careful
The great enemy of the
agriculturists
study
are making a
of the
nut
worm
i.
pleasantly familiar known
to., is
the
Leling ma
the chestnut weevil
scientific investigation
method of destroying it ie
and
a subject of special
that is destroying the chestnut leaves
is also attracting the
entific agriculturists
these investigations
science have been
with botanists not only in
Spain and Italy, but even in
wrasse eaesmcs—
Machine for Harvesting Gralo.
On a large wheat farm
grain iz cut from the
chaff thrashed out, and
placed in sacks, which are
piled ready for the mill
study,
attention of sci
In the course of
in correspondence
the staiks
the
gewed
all by one
Eels
thirty-eight mules
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the Carironsia Fie Syrup
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the Cawrorxia Fro Syrur Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par
ties. The high standing of the Carr
Forxia Fio Syxvre Co. with the medi
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken-
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
EAN FRANCLIEOO, Cal
EOTRVILLY. Ky NEW YOUR. X.Y.
WE PAY THE FREICHT.
This Couch, freight paid, $9.75.
The shove COUCH ‘« eovaad with the best imnporisd
Velour ori nerdarer, The votive top is derpiy tufied end
wots ® Couch frivged, 11 bes the Soest springs, spring
ofl gos, ned we propey frewbt to 11] points Fast of the
Misda: poi fiver pointe Vest on as equal besie, Op
der: Glisd prompt
Do you want to meke your house a
home? If so, write for our general cals
logue of Furniture, Crockery. Bllverware,
Rewing Machines, Clocks, Mirrors, Baby
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tiores in havi piinted colors,
We sew Carpets free, furnish
Carpet Lining free, and pre-
pw freight on all Carpets,
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think we would spend $100,000
un year on our watalogoes if
thay wers not worth huvineg ?
Whe pay the retailer's profits
Carpets,
when you can buyofthe 529610 $ |
ufacturer ? Address this way, Per Yard,
JULIUS HINES & SON,
Dept 14 BALTIMORE, MD.
LO00000L LIOOOOGO0OOOO0000
LVL
COU
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COOOO0L
aie ai he ie ihe Lee afte aie fie aie af ihe ih lh Lh
ggg ag ya ng ay Sag ag
} *‘A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of
b Excellence in Manufacture.”’ 1
WalterBakera Cos
{
{
{
Absolutely Pure,
Delicious,
Nutritious.
re that you get the Geng
Be ne Article,
rade at DORCHESTER, MASS, by
WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd,
FETANL rl
ag ag ng Vg? Sng Nag Raye Nag Sag? ig tage? tae ge ag ayn
wl
ha ~ a - a a Pe TE
ain ai fi afin fin ai aii. ctf aif
MOREY IN CHICKENS.
Bend 25 cents in stamps for Book,
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
184 Leonard Street, - - New York.
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erics rrigs i
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Gus Latest and Best. 20
years experience. WRITE TS
WHAT YOU WANT.
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» - > .
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DRILLING MACHINES of
ail kinds and sizes, for
ari £ for house,
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i)
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Robt. B. Wills
1d pet «ix months
Hiood Purine
Ome fisr
t Vegetatide
il direct
Cure
cms Tow
wiry
twoney refur
aress as abe
--PATENTS-
Proecured on cash, oreary instalments. VOWLERS &
PUBAS, Patent Attorneys, Broadway, MN. Y.
D mR O Pg FEW DISCOVERY; eives
quick relief and cues worst
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vestment Free. Dr. 8.8 GREEN'S BONE, Atlante, Gs.
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ANTED Cass of tal health: that RIP A-N8
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The officers of the
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