The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 17, 1898, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i Beauty Is Blood Deel, x i
Clean blood means a clean skin. No |
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar |
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by |
We sbi om
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
ities from the body. legin to-day
nish pimples, boils, Diotches, blackheads,
and that sic ly bilious complexion by taking |
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug. |
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢. 0c.
— |
The liqaor question staggers the intem- |
perate man more than any other, |
STATE OF Ono, C11y oF TOLEDO, | i
Lucas CouUsTy, {in
FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the |
senior partner of the firm of F. J, CHENEY &
to, doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sinn of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for |
each and every case of CATARRA that cannot
be cured by the use of Harps Catannu CURE.
FRAXK J. UHEXEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December,
a. D. 1%, A. W, GLRABON,
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the hiood and mucous sur
faces of the systein. Send for testimonials,
free. *, J. CRrESEY & Vo, Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 750.
Hall's Familiy Pills are the best.
§ cto
fom |
A trua friend i8 one who never throws
things up to you.
No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents
Guaranteed tolnceo habit cure males weal
en strong, biood pure. Bue Bl All druggists
The next fcreign eclebrity who will visit
nur shores is Jehan Rictus, of Paris, known |
among bis friends aud admirers as the Poet |
uf the Submerged Tenth,
To Cure A Cold in One Day.
Fake Laxative Hromo Quinine Tablets, All
Drngwists refund money 11it fails to cure, 35¢. |
Tra man who has to straggle fora liging
acquires a auperior education,
A woman shouid never try to bang her
hair by igniting the powder on her face,
Te Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartie 10¢ or She
IHC CC ful to eure, drapes s refund wouey
All things might vom~ to the man who
walls if starvation didn’t get there flrs?
Fits permanently enved. Nofitsor nervons.
ness altar tirst day's nse of Dr. Kline's Great
Norve Restorer. 82 tris] bottie aad treatise free
Li. RH, Knixe, Ltd, 81 Arch St. Phila. Pa.
It docsen’t fatten a hungry mao to make
Bim iaugh,
Educate Yonr Powels With Chuseareta.
Candy (Cathortie, cure constipation forever,
We, 250. IM LC © fall, droegisis refund money.
What some people don't Kuow they fire ale
ways talking abou:
} Catarrh
in the
alion
Head
as
nasal passages, It is cansed
fF 4} v m
of the muoo memes
MMs an inflamn
* oeane lining the
iy a cold or succession of eolds, combined
with
Hood's sarsap wrilia
Catarrh is cured by
which erndlieates from
us taints, rebuilds the
impure blood.
tlood ail serofulo
delicate
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
& America’s Greatest Medicine, 81: six for 85
the
tissues and builds up the system,
a9
Liver Tila, 25 conts
Hood's Pilis cure all
QUAINT CORNISH DIALECT.
“A hitched my foot in the sconce and
knacked my nuddick, an’ A wada’t able
Yor be wo py. 3 3 id
to clunky for a fortnight.
Readers popular dialect
tales will probably take it for granted
that this sentence Scotch. It
Jowever, Cornish, and being inter-
preted means, “I caught my foot in the
pavement. and struck the nape of my
neck, and I was not able to swallow
for a fortnight.”
of recent
is is
varied, but recent authors, with the
exception of Mr. Quiller-Couch, have
10t pressged it into the gerviee of litera-
ture; and even he has administered it
in gently moderated doses to the un-
accepted it at full strength.
A young child is mentioned in terms
of endearment as “my 'ansome,” OF
“tender deear.,” or even “tender
worm.” “Son” ond “sonny” are used
without the least relation to the age
or sex of the person addressed, A
son may sometimes be heard speaking
to his own father as “my son,” or a
husband calling his wife “sonny!”
AN OPERATION AVOIDED.
Mrs. Rosa Gaum Writes to Mrs.
Pinkham About it. Sho Bays:
Dzan Mrs, Pixgunas:—I take pleas-
ure in writing you a few lines to in-
form you of the good your Vegetable
Compound has done me. 1 eannot
thank you enough for what your medi-
tine has done for me; it has, indeed,
helped me wonderfully.
For years 1 was trou-
bled with an
ovarian tumor,
each yeargrow-
ing worse, un-
til at last I
was compelled
to consult with
a physician,
He said
nothing could
be done for
me but to go under an operation.
In speaking with a friend of mine
about it, she recommended Lydia E.
ing she knew it would cure me, I then
sent for your medicine, and after tok-
ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis-
appeared. Oh! you do not know how
much good your medicine has done
me. shall recommend it to all suffer-
ing women.—~Mrs. Rosa Gauvm, 720
~ Wall 8t., Los Angeles, Cal.
The great and unvarying success of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com~
pound in relieving every derangement
the female organs, demonstriites
it to be the modern safeguard of wo-
DISCOURSE.
a
in Heaven'w
Heaven Mas Improved in Numbers,
Society and Knowledge~A Great Con-
solution to Good People,
Text: “And I saw «4 new heaven,"”-Rev,
The sterotyped heaven does not make
We need
tojarouse our appreciation. I do not sup-
poss that we are compeiled to the old
phraseology. King James's translators
did not exhaust all the good and graphic
words In the English dictionary. I suppose
if we should take the idea Thenves and
translate it into moden phrase, we would
early June and of the Indian summer in
October-—a place combining the advantages
of eity and country, the streets standing
for the one, and the twelve manner of
fruits for the other; a piace of musical en.
doxologies; a place of wonderful architee-
ture—behold the temple!
there may be the higher forms of animal
lifo—the beasts which were on earth beaten,
of stupendous literature
tractiveness
pomologieal, ornithological,
worshipful beauty and grandeur.
improved heaven.
you that no eity on earth,
and hundreds of years it has been going
year, and month by month, and
aour, and moment by
ing, and changing for something
the universe—the
mighty.
Immensity was the park sll around about
this great residence; but God’ssympathetic
heart after a while overflowed in
of the
residence
gated, templed, watercd, inhabited.
and be measured heaven on
then he went forth and
on the other side; and then 8t,
came #0 bewildered that be gave it up.
That brings me to the
my theme—that heaven is vastly improved
in numbers. Noting little under this bead
about the multitude of adults who have
or five hundred, or thousand years, I re.
membor there are sixteen bundred millions
of people in the world, and that the vast
majority of people die in infancy. How
many children must have goge {nto heaven
during the last five hundred
years. If New York should gs
generation a million population, if London
should gather in one geasration four mil-
Hon population, what a vast increase!
what a mere nothing as compared with the
five hundred million, the two
million, the “multitude tha
number,” that have gone { that city!
Of course, all this takes for granted that
every child that dies goes as stoaight into
heaven as ever the light sped from a star,
and that is one reason why heaven will
always be fresh and beauntiful—the great
multitude of ehildren in iz. Put five han-
dred million children in & country, it will
be a hiessed and lively country.
But add to this, if you will, the great
muititude <f adults woo have gone into
glory, and how the census of heaven must
ran up! Many years ago a clergyman
stood in a New
that he telieved tha
+ 8
350
more than one person out of twe
thousand persons would be flually saved
Ahere Dappened 10 Da AVOUT (WO tdOUSAnA
peopla in the village wheres
thousand
thought it would be the
deacon.
for a life-boat which will go out to a ship
sinking with two thousand passengers,
ninety-nine go to the
bottom. Why, heaven must have been a
village when Abel, the first soul from
entered it, as compared with the
present population of that great eity!
Agaip: I remark that beaven has vastly
improved in knowledge, Give a man
| forty or fifty years to study one science, or
all sciences, with ail the adyaniages of
laboratories and observatories and philo-
sophie apparatus, he will be a marvel of
information. New, into what intelligence
must heaven mount, angeihood and saint
hood, not after studying for forty or fifty
years, but for thousands of years—study-
ing God and the soul and immortality and
i the universe! How the mtelligence of
that world must sweep on and on, with
eyesight farther reaching than telescope,
; with power of caleulation mightier than
all human mathematics, with powers of
| analysis surpassing all chemical labor.
atory, with speed swifter than telography!
| What must heaven learn, with all these
| advantages, in a month, in a year, in a
century, in & millenium? The difference
| between the highest university on earth
i and the smallest class in a primary school
cannot be a greater difference than heaven
(88 it now Is and heaven as it once was,
{Do you not suppose that when Doctor
| James Simpson went ap from the hospi-
tals of Edinburgh into heaven he knew
{| more than ever the science of health; and
{ that Joseph Heory, graduating from the
| Bmithsonian Institution into heaven,
{ awoke into higher realms of philosophy;
and that Sir William Hamfiton, lifted to
| loftier sphere, understood bettor the cons
| struction of the human intellect; and that
{ John Milton took up higher poetry in the
| actual resence of things that on ¢. th he
{ bad tried to describe? When the first
| saints entered heaven, they must have
{ studied only the A B OU of the full itera.
| tare of wisdom with which they are now
| acquainted,
| Again: heaven is vastly improved {a its
| society. During your memory how many
exquisite spirits have gone into itl If yon
should try to make a list of all the genial,
| loving, gracious, biessed souls that you
| have known, it would be a very lovg list
souls that have gone into glory. Now, do
you not suppose they have enriched the so.
olety? Have they not improved heaven?
You teli of what heaven did for them,
Have they done nothing for heaven? Take
all the gracious souls that have gone out
of your acquaintanceship, and add to them
ail the gracious and beautiful souls that tor
five hundred or a thousand years have
me out of all the cities and all the vil.
ur, and all the countries of this earth
into glory, and how the society of heaven
must have been improved! aes Lone Paul,
the a le, were introdu nto our so
cial circle on earth; but heaven has added
all the aposties, Suppose Hannah Mote
and Charlotte Elizabeth were introduced
into your social cirels on earth; but heaven
has added all the blessed and the gracious
and the holy women of the past ages. Sup.
that Bhan on fo } An
your sert
| but heaven has up ail the
a hiul and earnest istry of t his
ia not atown, or a city, or a vill
hundred years as heaven has fr-proved.
Again: Iremark that heaven has greats
improved in the good-cheer of announced
victories, Where heaven rejoiced over one
soul, it now rejoices over a hundred or a
thousand. In the olden times, when the
events of human life were scattered over
four or flve centuries of longevity, and the
world moved slowly, there were not so
many stirring events to be reported in
heaven; but new, I suppose, all the great
events of earth are reported in heaven, If
thers i» any truth plainly taught in this
Elble it is that heaven is wrapped up hn
sympathy with buman history, and wo
look at those inventions of the day-—at
teiegraphy, at ewift communication by
steam, at all these modern improvements
which seem to give one almost omnipres-
ence--and wa see only the scenlar relation:
but spirits befors the throne look out and
soe the vast and the eternal relation. While
nations rise and fall, while the earth is
shaking with revolution, do you not sup-
pose there is arousing intelligence going
up to the throne of God, nnd that the ques-
is often asked before the throne,
world that rebelled, bat {s coming back to
If ministering spirits, ac-
nre sent forth to
minister to those that shall be heirs of
heaven, when they como down “J us to
bless us, do they not take the news backy
Do the ships of light that come out of the
the earthly harbor,
laden with cargoes of blessing, go back
unfreighted? Ministering spirits not only,
but our loved ones leaving us, take up the
tidings. Suppose you were in a far city,
and had been there a good while, and you
heard that some one had arrived from
your native place—some ens who had
recently seen your family and friends
you would rush up to that man, and you
would ask all about the old folks at home,
And do you not suppose when your child
went up to God, your glorified kindred in
heaven gathered around aud asked about
you, 10 ASC6rtain a8 10 Whetner you were
gottiog along well in the straggle of life;
to find out whether you were in any espe-
elal peril, that with swift and mighty
wing they might come down to intercept
your perils? Ob, yes! Heaven {5 a
greater place for news than it used to be—
nows sounded through the streets, news
ringing from the towers, news heralded
from the palace gate, Glad news! Vic.
torious news!
Now, I say these things about the changes
in heaven, about the new improvements (a
heaven, for three stout reasons, First, be.
cause I find that somo of you are impa-
tient to be gone. You are tired of this
world, and you want to get into that good
iand about which you have been thinking,
praying, and talking so many years, Now
be patient. I could see why you would want
to go to an art gallery if some of the best
pletures were to be taken away this week or
next week; but if some one tells you that
there are other beautiful pletures to come
—other Kensetts, Baphuels, and Buabens;
other musterpieces to be added to the gal
lery-—~you would say, “I can afford to
wait. The place is improving ail the
time.” Now, Iwant you toapply the same
prioeiple in this matter of reaching heaven
aud leaving this world. Not one glory Is
to be subtracted, but many glories added,
Not one angel will be gone, not one hier.
arch gone, not one of your giorified friends
gone. By the jong practicing the music
will be belter, the procession will be
longer, the rainbow brighter, the corons-
tion grander, Heaven, with magnificent
addenda! Why will you compiain when
you are only waiting for somathing better?
Anoiner reason wuy 1 speas in regara to
the changes in heaven, and the new im-
ing good people. I see very well that you
have not much taste for a heaven that was
al] done and finished centuries ago. Alter
vou have been active forty or fifty or sixty
years it would be a shock to stop you sud.
denly and forever; but here is a progressive
heaven, an ever-accumulative heaves, vast
enterprise on foot there before the throne
ol God. Aggressive knowledge, aggressive
goodness, aggressive power, aggressive
grandeur, You will not have to come and
git down on the banks of the river of life
in everinsting Inoccupation, © busy meas,
I tell you of & heaven where there is some-
thing to do! That fi» the meaning of the
passage, “They rest not day nor night,” in
the lazv sense of resting.
400 DoT LINK It was superstitions when,
one Wednesday night I stood by a death.
bed within a few blocks of the church
whore I preached, and on the same street,
and saw one of the aged Christians of the
chureh going into glory. After I had
prayed with her I sald to her, “We have
ull loved you very much, and will always
cherish your memory in the Christian
church. You wiil see my son before 1
see him, and I wish you would give him
our love,” She sald, “I will, 1 willy” and
in twenty minutes she was in heaven
i the last words she aver spoke, It wasn
| swift message to the skies, If you had
{ your choloe between ridiog in a heavenly
i chariot and occupying the grandest palace
! in heaven, and sitting on the throne next
{ highest to the throus of God, 204d pot see.
{ ing your departed lovel ones; and on the
i other hand, dwelling io the humblest place
{ in heaven, without crown or throne, and
{| without garland, and withou: sceptre, yet
{ haviog your loved ones around you, you
! would choose the Intter. I say these things
{ because I want you to know it is a domes.
{ tic heaven, and consequently it is all the
time improving. Every one that goes up
{ makes it a brighter place, and the attrac.
| tions are increasing month by month and
{ day by day; and heaven, so vastly more of
ia heaven, sn thousand times more of a
| heaven, than it used to be, will be a better
{ heaven yet. Ob, I say this to intensify
your anticipation!
I enter heaven one day. It is almost
empty. [enter the temples of worship,
. and there are no worshipers, [walk down
| the street, and there are no passengers, |[
| go into the orchestra, and { find the instru.
| ments dre suspended In the baronial halls
| of heaven, and the great organs of eter.
Loity, with multitadinous banks of keys, are
closed, But I see a shining one at the
gate, as though he were standing on
guard, and I say, “Sentinel, what does this
mean? I thought heaven was a populous
#ity. Has there been some great plague
sweeping off the population?” “Have
you not heard the news?” says the sen-
tinel, : “There is a world burning, there
is a great conflagration out yonder, and
all heaven has gone out to look at the con.
flagration and take the victim out of the
runing, This is the day for whieh all other
days are made. This is the Judgment!
This morning all the chariots, and the cave.
airy, and the mounted infantry rumbled
and galloped down the sky.” After] had
listened to the sentinel, I looked off over
the battlements, and I saw that the flelds
of air were bright with a blazing world. I
sald, “Yes, yes, this must be the Judg-
ment;” and while I stood there I beard the
rumbiiog of wheels and the clattering of
hoofs, and the roaring of many voices,
and then I saw the coronets and plures
and banpers, and 1 saw that all
heaven was coming back again-—come
fog to the wall, coming to the gate,
and the multitnde that went off in
the morhing was augmented by a vast
multitude caught up alive from the.carth
and a vast mulititnde of the resurrected
bodies of the Christian dead, leaving the
cometeries and ths Rbbeys and the manso-
loums and the : of the earth
empty. Procession moving in through the
gates, And then I found out that what
was flery Judgment Day on earth was
Jubl'es in Heaven, and I eried, “Door.
keepers of heaven, shut the gates; all
heaven bas come in! Doorkeopers, shut
the twelve gates, Jest the sorrows and the
woes of earth, (ike bandits, should some
day come up and try to plunder the City!”
id
The joke you play on another fellow
Ja a mean trick when he plays it on
yan, Wn ¥ ;
01a Sheik Read His Koran ns He Led
His Men.
it 18 sad to think that we shall never
tce again the charge of the true der-
vish. I am inclined to think that the
great charge on the second brigade «ut
Tama), which ghattered the square, the
overwhelming attack at Abu Klea, and,
finally, the beautiful advance at Gubat,
were the most pleturesque episodes of
the mahdists’ battles against the Eng-
lish, says the London Telegraph. As
long as I live I shall never forget the
memories of Gubat. It was a grim
moment when the little force of guards
and mounted infantry, perhaps not 800
strong, advanced to meet the huge
army in front of them and to pierce a
lane through, it to the Nile. Aching,
anxious eyeg watched them from the
tareeba, where lay our general, styick-
en early in the day, and many wound-
ed comrades, with only enough water
to last till morning. The vultures,
anticipating a certain meal soared over
the little square, and the gazelles,
rudely wakened by this unaccustomed
strife, rushed madly here and there, or
stood spell bound as we pacsed. At
last we reached an open plain, and the
ing round us, only waiting for a fav-
orable moment to attack, massed on
some rising ground to our left. For a
moment the two forces halted, looking
almost into each other's eyes The
English, despairing of victory, but
calm and steady, each coldier wearing
on his face that stern, determined look
peculiar to an Englishman when he
finds himself in a tight place The
mahdists, all animation and exultation,
led by their emirs and standard bear-
ers, stood forth in all their glory; 10.-
000 tips glistened in the sun-
light, and with loud cries “Allah
Akbar.” this beautiful force dashed at
its enemy. As the charge began the
soldiers of the English square cheered.
Whether there was something ominous
in the sound-—for, indeed, the cheer of
English scldiers going into battle is a
sound which no enemy can hear with-
out emotion—or whatever was the
cause the Arabs checked their charge
and paused for a moment, as one some-
times sees a huge flight of birds stoop
before they turn in thelr flight; it was
but for one instant, then the hope and
flower of mahdism, like a great wave
whose white crest was formed by a
thousand banners, dashed out its
strength against the wall of determin.
ed men, who waited silently at the bot-
tom of the hill Nor is it easy to for-
get the surpassing bravery of the old
sheik who led his men into the square
at Abu Klea. Amid the storm of bat-
tie he rode calmly in front of his men
reading his koran, up to the muzzies
of our rifles, and actually inside
the square. 1 saw him afterward and
never saw a face #0 calm and serene
A ——— IIIS ds —
NONPLUSED JOKERS,
spear
Gi
fell
One Verse of Poetry Pala for lobble
Barns’ Dianer.
Here is a stary told of Robert Burns
n his youth: Burns was living in the
own of Ayr, and, though still young
hed attained more than a local reputa-
lion as a poet. One day he was pass
ing through the main street of the
lown and saw two strangers sitting at
me of the inn winfiows, With idle
uriosity he stopped to look at them.
ing him, and thinking that Lhe
Se
ment while waiting, the strangers cali-
#4 him in and asked him te dine with
Burns readily accepted the in-
vitation and proved a merry, entertain-
log guest. When dinner was nearly
finished the sirangers suggested that
each should try his hand at verse mak-
ing, and that the one who falled to
write a rhyme should pay for the din-
ner. They felt secure in their chal-
lenge, believing that their rustic guest
would pay for the meal. The rhymes
were read and Burns read the follow-
ing: “lI, Johnny Peep, saw two sheep,
two sheep saw me, Half a crown apiece
will pay for their fleece, and I, Johnny
Peep, go free.” The strangers’ aston-
ishment was great, and they both ex-
claimed: “Who are you? You must be
Robble Burns.”
them.
jo i I ——— “
Hardships vi Army Lille,
From the Press, Miiroy, Ind,
One of the first to offer their services for
the country in the Civil War was A. BR. Sel.
ton, of Milroy, Rash Co., Ind, He made a
good record. The life of every soldier is a
hard one, and Mr. Sefton’s case was no ex-
ception. “We were in Tennessee, penned
in on all sides. Our rations were very
wpearee.”” said he, “and we had begun to go
notenoagh to replenish the wells or streams,
oar cantesns went empty, We were hur-
tind on, and the only way to quench our
thirst was to go down on our hands and
knees and drink from the hoof tracks made
Oy the borses,
Our Canleens Were Empty,
"Some of us were taken slek from the
affects of this. I was laid up several wesks
in a field hospital from fever. From that
time I was always afflicted more or less,
“About four years agol hecame much
worse, Our family doctor seemed puzzled
over my ease, and it began to look ns if
there was no hope for my recovery, and
that the inevitable ood was near.
“Last November I was advised to try Dr.
Williams’ Plok Pills. The physicians sala
thay were an excellent medicine, but would
do no good in my case, Dat 1 tried them,
and am giad I did, for I became better at
ight boxes taken according to di-
rections cured me, 1 used the last of the
Jia about a year ago, and have pot boen
bled with my ailments sinew,”
for De in vast number of
oases due to impure 3F poladtud oi has
ances as romarkable as the oae related
RE
ww
HEP
25
PEPER
PEP EP EP EPUPEPU
2»
PUMUP UP URE PEP
soiled.
Coprrighm 1800
iis Hobby
Things not to be smiled at in them-
selves may take on a humorous aspect
through the manner
sion, An English paper says: An old
country sexton, in showing visitors
round the churchyard, used to stop at
a certain tombstone gay: “This
of
and
‘is eleven wolves” On one
lady said, “Eleven? Dear
rather a lot Hy
at her
mum,
sn"
me
fant
gravely, and
yer see, it war
an
EE —————
An Ezxcase.
said she, "that
ball as
said he
‘1 think,”
fancy
comprehend,”
tomary quickness
3 1
to 1h
his
wish 0
with
‘You
rep-
on more than
Indianapolis Journal
i Ino
Pont Tobacos Spit and Smokes Your Life Away,
io have
not
ought to
strong. All druggists, 0c or #1.
teed Booklet and sample free.
The best efforts of
the chairmaker
teething, softens the gums, reducing inflamma
tion, alleys pain, cure wind colic. Bc.a bottle
Positive, bet; comparative,
ative, better not.
Lettor
am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lung
by Piso's Cure for Consumption. Lot
Laspasax, Bethatiy, Ma, January & 184
isa
gives it, that shows his true character.
SOMEHOW AXD SOMEWHERE
ANGE THE NMUW LES
The Pains and Aches of
RHEUMATISM
CREEP IN.
Right on its track
St. Jacobs Oil
CREEPS IN.
AND ANTS
We give every git] ox weinam one
¥rilod adie Slbed wolfe ire Puritan rove
fiamond ring. solid old paltern, for
Ap B packates GARFIELD PURE
It Penstrates, Searches, Drives Cut,
FEPSIN 1M among friends at B
; REE chute 8 Package. Send mane
mall paws, When seid wend tones |
can toll 1 fron penuine gland, Un
GARFIELD GUM (0, Peg, 81. Mond
=
Procured on cash, or easy lostalmentn VOWLES &
BURKS, Patent Attorneys, 8 Broadway, N, ¥,
NEW DISCOVERY; wives
DROP quick relief and cures worm
oasen, Send cor book of testimonials and 10 days’
Geatmsent Free. Dr BN GREEN 8 SORE, Atlsnts, Oa.
itd ———— nism sms
TANTED Cass of bad Lealth that RIP A
W will not benefit Bote tA hs Ary
Co, NewYork, for 10 samples and testinoo
MEAG AGAG TR @R@AEN
ce after the
ithe
nlvory S
lace where
plac willl gk
1
or COQ al
he Fe
Ae ENR eRe eT een eA eR eRe AER AYR eRe
Cinrtunetl
“After I wis lndonced to try CASCA-
bud shape
tad slgmmach trouble
and my head
Now, since tak-
My wile bas aise vsed
bene fic pau its Tor sotr stomach
JOS. KRENLING, 21 Congresh Bt. 51 Louis, Mo
CANDY
CATHARTIC
TRADE sal WEOISTIRLD
Do
Ye
Pleasant. Palawabis Poiernt Taste Good
Good, Never Sigke, Weaken or Gripe. Hie, 2x
«+ CURE CONSTIPATION.
Blorling Remedy Compury. Chienps, Mostresl, Sev York,
wee
i druge
Bnd gos
sto CURE Tobacco Hall
wd
“TASTE
LHILL
TONIL
ISJUST AS COOD FORADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE 50cts.
GaraTia, f118., Xow 16, 1885
Parts Mefieipe On. Si. Louis, Mo,
Gentlemen: We sold last yoar, 60 bottles of
GROVER TASTELYSS CHILL TONIC and have
busicess. have
sniversal satis
Yours truly,
ion as your Tonle.
AUXLY, CARE & CO
A Feme Withentas Parafield.
“TELL MOTHER I'LL BE THERE."
Tresident MeKinley's Message to hin
dytay mother. Peautilnl melody, patie.
ic refrain sian 10 Flotre Sweet Home,
“GRANDER THAN ALL THE BANNERS
OF THE WORLD." Latest F
g ong. "IAN GOING NOME TD MOTH
ER Famous Hobron Waits
tomg. ¥ ceweberted songs, ¢ iar
proce 80¢, each.) sent prepaid for
Wooents, Met ALLIPMUSIC CO,
Columbus. Ohio,
INDIGESTION CURED.
Send 1his notice with Ose Doliar to Hlobt. B. Wilis,
faook Box 8, hagerstown, Md. and got six months’
treatment oi the greatest Vegetabie Brod Parifier
disooversd, with full directions Tor use and a poe
tive Srantes to Cue any chee of Indio stion,
sick Headache, Hbeumatisg and Copstipaiion or
money sfanded, Try it and be convibeed. Ad.
dress as above,
THE LEDGER MONTHL
With its Artistic Lit
and Short
b
i or outdoors,
A $1.20 MAGAZINE
FOR 80 CENTS.
for beauty and low
ari . and Special Departments
® PCONUMY A
Y is Ay rhc deh g
for i
money.
mame |