—————— a rd nd NAT RANI SSO REY. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Subject: “Different Modes of THeasuring the Flight of Time-Life Should Not Be Wholly a Span of Years—The Carse of Wealth«The True Gauge. Text: “How old art thou?’—Genesis xlvil., 8. The Egyptian capital was the foous of the world’s wealth, In ships and barges there had been brought to it from India frankincense and ¢innamon and ivory and diamonds; from the north, marble and fron; from Syria. purple and silk; from Greece, some of the finest horses of the world and some of the most brilliant ehar- fots, and from all the earth that which could best please the eye and charm the ear and gratify the taste, ples aflame with red sandstone, entered by the gateways that were guarded by pillars bewildering with hieroglyphies and wound with brazen serpents and adorned with winged creatures, their eyes and beaks and pinions glittering with precious stones; there were marble columns blooming into white flower beds; there were stone pillars, at the top bursting into the shape of the lotus when in full bloom, Along the avenues, lined with sphinx and fane and obelisk, there were princes who exme in gorgeously upholstered palanquins, carried by servants in scar- let or elsewhere drawn by vehicles, the snow-white horses, golden-bitted and gix abreast, dashing at full run. On Roors of mosaie the glories of Pharaoh were spelled out in letters of porphyry and beryl and flame. There were ornaments twisted from the wood of tamarisk, em- bossed with silver breaking {oto foam. There were footstools made out of a single precious stone, There were beds fashioned out of a crouched tion in bronze, There were chairs spotted with the sleek hides of leopards, There were sofas footed with the claws of wild beasts and armed with the beaks of birds. As vou stand on the level beach of the sea on a summer day and look either way, and there are miles of breakers, white with the ocean foam, dashing shoreward, so it seemed as {{ the sea of the world’s pomp and wealth in the ftsel! up into white breakers of temple, mausoleum and obelisk. It was to this capital and the palace of Pharaoh that Jacob, the plain shepherd, came to meet his son Joseph, who had be- and ten thousand Blessed surroundings. It is the spreading of the table that feeds the ehildren’s hunger, It 1s the lighting of the furnace that keeps you warm. It is the making of the bed on which you rest from ears and anxiety, It is the carrying of you out nt last to decent sepulcher, and the putting up of the slab on which is chiseled the story of your Christian hope, It is simply hypoerisy, this tirade in pulpit and lecture hall Last money, But while ull this {8 so, he who uses money or thinks of money as anything but a means to an end, will find out his mis. take when the glittering treasures slip out of his nerveless grasp, and he goes out of this world without ashilling of money or a cortiflonte of stock. He might better have been the Christian porter that opened his gate or the begrimed workman who last night heaved the coal into his cellar, Bonds and mortgages und leases have their use, but they make a poor gE dutick with which to measure lle. ‘They that buast themselves in their wealth and trust in the multitude of their riches, none of them onan, by any means, redeem his brother or give to God a ransom for him that he should not see corruption,” But I remark, there are many-—I wish there were more--who estimate their life by their moral and spiritunl development. It is not sinful egotism for a Christian man to say: “I am purer than I used to be, I am more consecrated to Christ than Iused to be, I have got over a groat many of the bad habits in which I used to indulge, Iam a great deal better man than I used to be.” There {8 no sinful egotism in that. It Is not base egotism for a soldier to say, “I know more about mill- tary tactics than I used to before I took a musket in my hand and learned to ‘present arms’ and was a pest to the drill officer.” It is not base egotism for a sallor to say,’ know better how to clew down the mis topsail than I used to before I had eve geen a ship.” And there {8 no sinful egotism when a Christian man, fighting the battles of the Lord, or if you will have it, voyaging toward a baven of eternal rest, says, “I know more about spiritual tactics and voyaging toward heaven than I used $0.” Now, Ido not know what your advan. tages or disadvantages are, I do not know what your tact or talent is. I do not know what may be the fascination of your man- ners or the repulsiveness of them, but I know this: There Is for you, my hearer, a flald to cultivate, a harvest to reap, a tear to wipeaway, a soul to save, f you have worldly means, consecrate them to Christ, ment. Pharaoh and Jacob met, dignity and the plain manners of the fleld. The at ease and seeing how white his beard is and how feeble his step, looks familiarly into his face and says to the aged man, “How old art thou?” On New Year's night the opened to let in amid the great throng of departed centuries the soul of the dying year. Under the tweult fth stroke yruzen hammer of the city cloek the night were the funeral torches, t is most fortunate that on this road of life there are just how fast we are going toward the jourdey's end. I feel that it is appropriate question that I ask when I look into your faces and say, as old art thou?” People who are truthful on every other subject lie about their ages, that I not solicit from you any al response to the question I have asi one under temptati b imply this morning to see by what rod it are measuring ourearthly existence, There is a right way and a wrong way of measur- ing a door, ora wall, or an areh, and so there Is a right way and a wrong way of measuring our earthiy existence. It is with reference to this higher meaning hat I confront you tl morning with the stupendous question of the text and ask, “How old art thou?” There are many who estimate their life by mere worldly gratification. When Lord Dundas was wished 8 Happy New Year, said, *‘It will bave to be a happier year than the past, for I hadn't one happy moment in all the twelve nths that have gone.” But that has not been the experi 1 most ofus. We have found that thou the world Is blasted with sin itisa very bright and beautiful place to reside in. We have had joys innumerable. There is po hostility between the gospel and the merriments and the festivities of lite, I do not think that we fully enough appreciate the worldly pleasures God gives us. When you recount your enjoyments you do not go back to the time when you were an in- fant in your mother's arms, looking up foto the heaven of her smile; tothoss days when you filled the house with the uproar of bois- terous merriment; when you he i ® when on the cold, sharp winter night, resounding ice of the pond? Have you for- gotten all those good days that the Lord gave you? Were you never a boy? you never a girl? Pstween those times and this how stowed upon you! How many joys have breathed up to you from the flowers and shone down to you chanted to you with the volce of soaring bird and tumbling cascade and booming gea and thunders that with bavonets of fire charged down the mountain side! Jov! Jovy! the epjoyments of the world, it is everything in the promise, “All are yours.” But I have to teil you that a man who esti. mates his life on earth by mere worldly gratification is a most unwise man, Our itfeis not to be a game of chess, a dance in lighted ball, to quick music, is not the froth of an ale piteher, the settiiogs of a wine cup, Itisnota ban- quet, with intoxication and roistering. is the first step on a ladder that mounts in- to the skies or the first step on a road that plunges into a horrible abyss. “How old art thou?’ Toward what Seatiny are you tending and how fast are you getting on toward it? Again, I remark that there are many who estimate their life on earth by their sor- rows and misfortunes. Through a great many of your lives the plow-share hath gone very deep, turning up a terrible fur- row. You have been betrayed and mis- represented, and set upon, apd slapped of impertinonce, and pounded of misfortune, The brightest life must bave its shadows and the smoothest path its thorns, On the happiest brood the hawk pouances, No es- cape from trouble of some kind, While glorious John Milton was losing his eye- sight he heard that Salmasius was glad of it. While Sheridan's comedy was being en- acted in Drury Lane theater, London, his enemy sat growlin at it in the stage box. While B Stop Cooper was surrounded by the avor of learned men his wife took his lexicon man- uscript, the result of a long Ife of anxiety and toll, and threw it into the fire, Mis- fortune, trial, vexation for almost every- one! Pope, applauded of all the world, bas a stoop in the shoulder that annoys him so much that he has a tunnel dug, so that he may go unobserved from garden to grotto and from grotto to garden. Cane the famous Spanish artist, is disgusted with the erucifix that the priest holds be. fore him because it 1s such a poor - men of sculpture, and so, sometimes through taste, and sometimes through learned menace, and sometimes through physical distresses—aye in 10,000 ways roubles come to harass and annoy. Again, I remark that there are many ple who estimate their life on earth money they have accum He oh the ted, It you have learning, put it all into the poor box of the world’s suffering. jut if you have none of these —neither wealth nor elo- a smile with which you ean anoc disbeartenad, a frown with which yon may blast eall the wanderer back to God, “Oh,” you Ifa!” It is not. It is the only bright view of death, Contrast the death scens mensured the Quin, who has standard, man lite by the actor, In scene will soon be over, and I hope to keep Malesherbes in his last moments to “Hold your tongue! Your miserab puts me out of conceit with Lord Chesterfield in his last when he ought to have been his soul, bothered himself of the slek room and sald “Give Dayboles a chair.” Godfrey Knelie spent his inst hours on earth in drawing a diagram of his own monument, ie st maven." mo praying for about the 4 tare of such men with the serapl on the face of Edward Payson as } his last moment: “The breezes heaven fan me. 1 float in a sea of glory.” Or with Paul the apostle, who said in his jast am now ready to be offered up, 1 of my departure is at hand, RQ good f I have kept faith, Henceforth there is laid up for a wn of righte whie Lord, the righteous Judge, will g Or compare it with the Christian « f that you in yourown bh id, . this world is a false god, ou with the blaze In r sacrifice, ie glow id in 5 Tab the ight me or YUE DOES ia witnessed yuseh while the nembrancs, ana allen and the m nd the worid has p i ban gquet with the conquerors of earth and hierarchs of heaven. This is a good day in which to begin new style of measurement, How old thou? You see Christian way measuring life and the woridiy way I leave it to you to is the wisest and best way. of time has turned very swiftly, and it has harled on. The old vear has gone, The new year jhas oor For what you and I have been lau 1 ap- on it God only knows, Now me ask you made any preparation forthe future? You have made prepara- tion for time, my dear brother. Have you made suy preparation for eternity? Do you wonder that when that me on the Hudson River in indignation t« up the just one word when the thrones onuments have cru erished they ah the SAY The us “ re landed on his coat sleave, river, thut one word aroused his soul? was that one word, so long, high, so desp-‘'Eternity.” an, in ber last back.” “Time,” she said, cannot be ealled * It so broad, so A dying wom- moments, said, “Call “eall it back.” back. On, it We might lose our health, and perhaps our good name and get that back, but time sone is gone forever, Now, when one can sooner gotto the con Does not our common sense teach us fog nervously fast to the tire lest we be suddenly harled into light and felicity? Through all kinds of optical in- struments trying to peer in through the ericks and the keyholes of heaven —alraid that both doors of the celestial will be swung wide open before our en- good for a bad cough, lest we be sudden ushered into a Jand of everlasting heait wherethe inhabitant neversays, I am siok! What fools we all are to prefer the cir. eumference to the center! What a dread. ful thing it would be if we should be sud. denly ushersd from this wintry world into the May time orchards of heaven, and if our pauperism of sin and sorrow should be suddenly broken up by a presentation of an emperor's castle surrounded by parks with springing fountains and paths, up and down which angels of God walk two and two! In 1535 the French resolved that a Ghent they would have a kind of mu. sional demonstration that bad never been heard of, It would be made up of the chimes of bells and the discharge of cannon, The experiment was a perfect success. What with the ringing of the bells and the report of the ordnance the city trembled and the hilis shook with the triumphal march that Was as strange as it was overwhelming, With a most glorious accom ment will God's dear children go Into their high residence when the trumpets shall sound and the last day has come. Af the sig. nal given the is of the towers, and of the lighthouses, and of the cities will strike their sweetness In THE KEYSTONE STATE. sins. Latest News Gleaned from Various Parts. ———— CITY TREASURER SLAIN. Son's Terrible Descovery—Miming His Parent He Searched and Found Him In the Agontes of Death-Awful Struggl® For Life—~Wm. Loush Saffers Terrible Injuries nt Lebamon and Will Die, Lylog face downward in a pool of blood aud blesding from ten ugly wounds, City Treasurer John Blevins, of New Castle, wns found in the last agonles of death late Hat- urday night. had battled until the villainous death blow inid him low, The discovery of the crime was made by the victim's own son, William Nevins, who was almost paralyzed by the horrible sight, The flendish crime was among the worst the county has ever exper- fenced. The Jooted sale showed plainly that the motive was robbery. No one saw the murderer desl the fatal blow, John Blevins attended to his duties as usual in the City Treasurer's office Saturday. Among the last who did business with him ou BSal- urday avening before he went home to sup- por was Adolph Btadler, a plumber, The banks had been closed, ana Mr, Biadler, de- siring some cash, went to the City Treas. urer and bad a check cashed, Bhortly after this Mr. Blevins locked up the office and went home to supper. After his evening meal he again came down the street, and It is said spent a short time in the office, He locked It up before 9 o'clock and went down having some work done on an by the firemen and the members of the liow force. At the tailoring establishment until about 8.80 o'clock. Mr. Blevins From to but would go out and retufn later, the talioring establishment he went lnglon street, whbiie and went out ostensibly to go offices, as he started {nu that direetion, was about 9 o'clock, to cone bave yet been ailve after this time, William Blevins look. On arriving there he found bis sis. alarmed, because father had not coms home, i Willlam Blevins concluded to He went to the office, This was about 11.30, was burning fMside. Upon Ko directly cpening the form of bis father lying face downward In a response, and then turnieg be ran to Second Ward Fire Depariment, where Frank Connery of his discovery. Heo J. K P treasur- Vandergeiit and Cou- or's office. Mossrs. turned Mr, Blevins partly over and ralsed his head on a chair which they had laid down. Mr. Blevins breathed ounce and died with 4% is SAVE TER MDDLEMAY'S Pentre Your business is to get as much as possible for your hard-earned dollars. Our business is to sell direct to consumers and save them from the large prices of the retailers, We publish a lithographed catalogue which shows exact designs of Carpets, Rugs and Draperies in hand-painted colors. We sew carpets free furnish lining free and pay freight, Our Big General Catalogue contains everything for the house and Furniture for all uses. It cone tains many surprising bargains similar to this: Solid Oxk Desk, with rolling top which locks sll drewers Antomabionils. Lin aloo be furnished with § drawers is each pedestal, 1tie 50 inches long, 30 in, dp, nnd has & sliding arme. All highly polished, Special Fries, $10.50 jeu think we would spend a million dollars annually advertising our catalogusés if they were not worth having?! They are free we pay all postage, Which do you want? Or both? Address this way, JULIUS HINES & SON, Dept. *'4 Baltimore, Md. | BAD BREA “¥ have been using CASCAR ETS and as 8 mild and effective laxative Lhey are shimply won- derful. My daughter and [| were bothered with sick stomach and cur LUreath was very tad, After taking & few doses of Oascarels we Lave Improved wonderfully, They are a great help in tho family.” WiLnELMIne NAGEL 17 Rivtegbouse 8. Clucinnatl, Ohlo CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Palstable, Potent. Teste Good, Do Good, Never Sioken. Weaken. or Gripe. io, Zw. Se CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Ohlrage, Montreal, Sow York, 28 NO-TO-BAC wee Soild and be narantesd by all drug- Wists Lo RE Tobacco Habit. WORK FOR RESTLESS FINGERS, Kaolt Rouge May be Made by Children Who Are Kept Indoors Mothers often sigh for something wherewith to occupy the restiess fin- gers of their little girls on rainy days. Why not set them to rugmaking? The materials needed are knitting cotton The cotton cut into uniform lengths of three inches. To cut it an ex- cellent plan is to wind the cotton upon a round ruler, then with a sharp pair is to be villians who had robbed bim of bis life. Almost 100 Years Olid, O0th year of his age, and is probabiy the oldest man in Delaware county, is seriously iH with pusumonia at his home on Becond street, He has been sick very little during his long life, and as he has wonderful vital thought he may yet recover. was a farmer in his active whole the length of the ruler. To begin knitting an uneven number ches is cast on and four or five rows tted plainly, then on the stitch of the row to be fringed one of lengths of cut cotton is knitted in length is simply doubled, and be ing placed end to end the loop 80 formed in the center taken along stitch in knitting. All take a plece of eotion The next row Is tted plainly; them comes another Thus the rows continue ringed, one plain, until the strip ong enough. If this strip is knitted n white cotton the next strip may be in cotton, the colors alternating until the requisite number of strips are of sti second is the the even it stitches TOW, ane in | : : red vate life, ous life, and never used tobacco In any form nor indulged io Intoxioants., Until this last the street nione, and about the house sm- cariag for the flowers and greens, Fell Into a Flywheel. William Loush, an employes of the North Letanon Furnaces, while at work, slipped and fell backward into the filywhesi of a inrge blowing engine. A companion caught him by the fect as they flow into the air and Loush was takes to the Good Samaritan Hospital, but will prob. ably die, Used Dynamite on a Honse, A double frame buliding at Brownsville, owned by Bolomon Hawk, was totally de- stroyed by dynamite, Edward Eberman and Harry Moyer and their lamilies, who lived there, were eating their dinner in the thus The Brownsville escaped injury. and all the windows were shattered, causing a panic among the children. Thomas Me. Andrew, aged 14 years, afid Howard Wester. felt, aged 12 years, were struck by flying debris and badly injured. There Is no clue to the affair, Last Soldier Patient Gone, John MeCauley, a private of the Two Hundred asd Becond New York Volunteer Infantry, who was admitted to the Potts ville Hospital more than two mouths ago, suffering with typhoid lever, was discharged and left for home, He was the Inst soldier patient at the local hospital, which bad eighty-four soldisr patients In all, all hav fog been brought from Camp Meade, But threes of these dled, Cigar Factory Burnt Down, The cigar manufacturing establishment of Joseph D. Hersh was entirely destroyed by fire, Ho had insurance to the amount of $1000, whish covers the loss. The buliding, owned by L. Hl. Merte, was damaged to the extont of $800, also insured, Superintendent Frank L. Kelly, of Westmoreland to make a handsome mat, striped cotton ———— To Cuore Constipation Forever, Take Cascarots Candy Osthartic. 100 or 35a It GC. G fall Ww cure, druggists refund money. The best hotel in San Juan, Porto Rico, charges $2 a day. Mre Winslow's Boothing ® rap for ehfMren teething, softens the guma, red uo hg inlamma- . Sc.a both, Most of the raliroad stations in Hussia are i respectively serve, This Is a precaution ings are thatebed with straw, To Cure A Coiu 1a sme Day. Take Laxative Bromo Uninine Tablets, All Draggists refund men-+ 7 it fails to cure, Bo. The volume of business handled by the saviugs bank department of the London jropor- tions, and at present the staff of the Central Savings Bank numbers more than 2.500 persons. We think _Piso's Oure for Cox the only medicine for Coughs. TEs Pano ARD, Springfield, Ills. Oct. 1.280 It is estimated that the output of the mines of Butte and Anaconda, Mout,, is over 11,000 tons a day of copper ore, Ro-To Rae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure. makes weak b0c, 81. All druggists. The best-managed i dairies io Minnesota bave reduced the cost of manufacturing a pound of butter to 1.28 cents, Fits nently onred, © fits or nervous. r first day's use of Dr. Kiine's Great nes a ya "$TLFial hottie and treatise free LH Kian Lok, $01 Arch Be Phils Por Heversionary bequests, amounting to $100. 000 are made to charitable institutions in Philadelphia by the will of John 8, Graham. Oandy Cathartie, cure constipation forever, 00, Me. If C. C. 0, fall, druggists money. The pen with which Governor Roosevelt, of New York, signed the oath of office was kept by the Governor himsell 4 - — —" —— PEACE PAIN We have and those who are sorely afflicted with NEuRALOIA a perfect cure by using ST. JACOBS OIL. DRINKING IN FRANCE. Growing Censumption of Stromg Spirits on tke Inerease. The Income received by the state last year in France from wine, beer, cider and spirits shows the amount consumed and Indicates the drinking habits of different parts of the country, says the London St, James’ Gazette, While the total consumption hag in- creased, beer seems to be gaining on wine, and spirits on beer. The south- 6rn departments and the wine-growing districts still favor the national drink. In Herault 277 liters of wine are drunk by eech inhabitant every year. The Gironda comes next, with 210 liters, In some of the northern departments, on the other hand, wine is at a discount. In the Nord the annual consumption of beer is 252 liters a head, and the way behind. In ten southern depart- Generally gpeaking the beer-drinking the top of the list for spirite. | i seven liters of spirits annually. drinking is going out of fashion, whole population is: nine liters; beer, twenty-four jiters; Hters. shillings 8 pence per head, as compar- ed with 3 shillings 2 pence per head for wine, € pence per head for beer, and 2 pence per head for cider, The growing consumption of strong spirits and the drunkenness which follows have led the government lower the duty on wine and increase the charge on alcoholic liquors, Persian Colors. Persian colorg are obtained to great extent in the softer shades, Whole gowns are made of the material with the shaw! effect, and one with a pale blue ground, the figures in soft tones to bas long lapels and standing collar of silk In ing effect. Don’t Tobaceo Spit and Smoke Your Life Awsy, petic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take NoTo Bas, the wonder worker, that makes weak men stromg. All druggists, 80o or $1. Cure guaran. teed Booklet and sample free Address Bierling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York is playwright in Germany. Osear Blumenthal the most popular Catarrlhh Cannot be Cured as they cannot reach Catarrh is a blood or 3 . Ana In i it you must take internal rem Catarry Care is taken internally setly on thet Wi and mucous « ‘wiarrh Cure ot a quack medicine, It was prescribed by ane of the physicians in suntrys for vears and is a regular - mpossd of the best tonics knowrt tn bined with the best blood purifiers, acting directiy on the mucous surfaces perfect Lie two oes such wonderful AAT: Send for testimonials, F applications arder 10 cure AN acts di. Hall's beat roe he ingre results in cur. free, ¢ fient rnb nation o Hele fe A what prod 1, Cnexuy & Co. Props, Toledo, 0, Drogeista, prioe, Ti ‘s Family Pills are the best, f France is four times as ngiand, The Bank « as the Bask of ¥ large E Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a cleansskin, No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- purities from the body. Begin today to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that mckly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beanty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10e, 25¢, 50c. Narrow waists and parrow minds often go together, wre ere for olds When the children get their feet wet and take cold J them a hot foot bath, a bowl of hot drink, a dose of Aver’s Cherry Pectoral, and put them to bed. The chances sre they will be all right in the morning. Con- tinue the Cherry Pectoral a few days, until all cough has dis- appeared. Old coughs arc also cured; we mean the coughs of bron- chitis, weak throats and irritable lungs. Even the hard coughs of consumption sare always made easy snd frequently cured by the continued use of er’s Cherry | Decioral Every doctor knows that wild cherry bark is the best remedy known to medical scicace for soothing and hesling infiamed throats and Jungs. Put ene of Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral - Plasters ovor your jungs _ The Bost Medical Advice Freel We now have some of the most emi. pent physiciens In the Dujled Sais, Unnenal oppertoiities 80d Jog sxpery ence eminenny G0 therm for ving ue medical advice. Write Lreely ai & partoulars fu your esse AdCrems, Dr. J.C ! AYER, Lowe, Mass, Potash. I NOUGH of it must be wt otherwise failure will surel» contained in fertilizers, result. See that it is there. Our books tell all about fertilizers. They are sent free to all fanmers applying for them. GERMAN KALI WORKS, g3 Namsan St, New York. 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 Cartronxia 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 Cavrtronyxia Fie 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 Cani- rouxia Fie Sywnue Co. with the medi- cal profession. and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs hak 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 mot gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP C0. SAN FRANCINO®, Onl. LOUISVILLE, ¥r. NEW YORK. NY. AA A A 5A HERE IT IS! a —— Want to learn all abeut a HORAE BOOK, which we will forward, post: ald, on receipt of only BB conte in stamps. W of a ONC-LIES, ALARES or | drilling wells for bouss, i farm, Fae end Vilage I Water orks, Paso ries, loe Phe, Brew. eries. Irrigation, i apd Mineral Prospecting. Ofl and Gus, eto Latest Best. » yours experience. WRITE US WHAT YOU WANT. LOGHIS & NYMAK, Tiffin, Ohio. That is, it is better than very I he best butter that can be pr as Butterine. It fen’! better, Jt And the butter is 8s good snly af the It doesn’t stay Batter and Batterine remain on & parity only The butter begins to deterio- Butterine is be can for a few moments Why ao you not buy Butterine ? Its hecatme you are prejadiced. You have been told that Butterine i= artificial What does sriificial mean * It means & variety of things scoordisg to Butterine 1s nanufeciured by a process. One 8 just as artificial as the other he elements of both are produc. 4 by nature. Both comme froin the sane anos] And these sjemenis are That's why butter can’ be wactioally indentiral witer than Butterine the same whether mm buiter or Butierine— The differance between Butterine and the best proosss of making. Toe purity And with all 1ts merits Butierine costs Jorn than Se. per pound And at this ow it lo you express prepaid. skagen in 1 prints, ages In 1B rollin (wolid). wh 4B pack 0% pac You are & other modern masterpisces of sejence; why or nie wholescine and sconvmics! one? © want you to try 18. ALIENS & C0. 208 NW hod ro Box 363. » Xu 3 tor ook Book 250. In Pe M for Book. k Ponting ry A A
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