The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 15, 1899, Image 7

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    5
Beauty Is Blood 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 liver and driving all im-
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
nish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug.
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10¢, 2c, 50¢.
Director of the Census William R. Merriam
Was eaneated at a Racine school modeled on
English lHnes.
Ask Your Dealer For Allen's Foot-Ease,
A powder to shake into vour shoes; rests
the feet, Cures Corps, Bunions, Swollen
Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease
makes new or tight shoes easy, Atall drug-
gists and shoe stores, 25 cts, Sample mailed
FREE. Adr's Allen 8, Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Dr. George W, Chittenden, who has just
died at Janesville, Wis, at the age of 79 was
the oldest practicing physician in Wisconsin
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life 4vay.
To quit tobacco easily aud forever, be mag:
netie, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-Te-
Bae, the wonder-worler, that innkes weak men
strong. All druggists, 80c or 81. Cure guaran.
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York.
One of Governor Roosevelt's admirers has
presented him with a rare old Damascus
inde,
His Little Daughter
Was treubled with a painful skin eruption,
and after all other remedies failed, the father
writes: ‘Send me four more hoxes of Tetterine
for my little daughter. It dors her more good
than anything we ever tried. Yours. eto, Jas. NS,
Porter, Lynchburg. 8, CC" At druggists 30c, box,
or postpaid by J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga
General Wesley Merritt brought back with
him from the Pacific a large parrot which
had been the property of a Spanish sailor.
To Cure Constipation Forever,
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or £5.
i C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
The friends of Dr. Asa Gray are collecting
money to enlarge the endowment of the Gray
Herbarium, of Harvard University.
J. 8. Parker, Fredonia, N. Y., says: "Shall
not call on you for the $100 reward, for I be.
lieve Hall's Catarrh Cure will cure any case of
catarrh. Was very bad.” Write him for par.
ticulars. Sold by Druggists, 3c.
In President-Elect Hadley Yale athletics
will probably find a good friend, for he has al-
ways been devoted to sueh sports,
i could not get along without Piso's Cur
for Consumption. Italwayscures.—Mrs E. 7
Movirox, Needham, Mass, October 22, 1854,
Gerald Du Maurier. who is now playing in
“The Musketeers” in London, is the son
the late George Du Maurier.
of
Edueate Your Bowels With Cacearots,
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10¢,20c. If C. C. C, fail, druggists refund money.
Stephen Crane has bought a country house
in Surrey, England,
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething softens the gums reducing inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, She,
a bottle,
said
Rudyard Kipling is ta be
two clipping bureaus.
patronizing
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50¢, 81. All druggists.
constantly enlarging his works.
““ Evil Dispositions
Just so evi in the blood comes out in
shape of scrofula. pimples, elc., om
children and young peopic. Taken in
time # can be eradicated by using Hood:
Sarsaparilla, America’s Greatest Med
cine. BR witalizes and enriches the blood.
many, France, ete., where there var-
ious dialects, those who speak these dia
lects can understand each other
as they drop their dialectic peculiarities
and make use of the common literary
language of the land, this is not at all the
case in China, for the simple reason,
says M. Leisering, that such a common
literary language of the land does not
exist. The various Chinese dialects
have accordingly developed such pecu.
liarities that they have practically be.
come independent tongues. Thus the
average Chinaman from Peking cannot
understand his compatriot from Canton.
Although both employ the same sign for
the same idea, each pronounces it in his
own way, and he cannot be understood
by the other unless he reduces what he
desires to say to & written form.
ein ere ————————
fas Soon
A life mere y of pleasure or chiefly of
lensure is always a poor and worthless
fife, not worth the living; always unsat.
isfactory in its course; always miserable
in its end.
A Story of Sterility,
SUFFERING AND RELIEF.
[LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO, 69,186)
“Dear Mas. P'isguau—Two years
ago I began having such dull, heavy
dragging pains in my back, menses
were profuse and painful, and was
troubled was lencorrheea. [1 took
patent medicines and consulted a phy-
sicinn, but received no benefit and
could not become pregnant. Seeing
one of your books, I wrote to you tell-
ing you my troubles and asking for
advice. Yom snswered my letter
promptly and I followed the directions
faithfully, and derived so much benefit
that I cannot praise Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound enough.
I now find myself pregnant and have
begun its use again. I cannot praise
it enough.” Mus. Cona Gursox, Yates,
Maxisres, Mion.
dsl
“Your Meodlelne Worked Wonders.”
“1 had been sick ever since my mar.
riage, seven years ago; have given
birth to four calidon, Boa had wi
miscarriages. ng of womb,
leucorrhaen, pains in back and legs;
and a nervous trembling of
stomach. Now I have none of these
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE.
Bubject: “Moral Expansion”=0Our Duty to
the Heathens in the Philippine Islands
Suggestions as to What We Should
Do For Their Religions Welfare.
[Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1806.)
Wasnixarox, D, C.—In this discourse
Dr. Talmage steers clear of the political
entanglements of our time and recom-
mends that which will meet the approval
of all who hope for the perpetuity of our
republic and the welfare o pd lands; text,
Genesis xxvii, 14, “Thou shalt spread
abroad to the west and to the east.”
SBincethe Americanc-Hlspanie war {8s con-
eluded and the United States Embassador
is on the way to Madrid and the Spanish
smbassador {8 on the way to Washin ton
the people of our country are divided Into
expansionists and anti-expansionists, From
a different standpoint thap {hint usually
taken I discuss this all-absorbing theme,
I leave the political aspect of this subject
to statesmen and warriors and pray Al-
mighty God that they may be enabled
rightly to settle the question whether the
islands in controversy shall be finally an-
nexed or held under protectorate or re-
signed to themselves, while 1 eall attention
to the fact that a campaign of moral and
religious expansion ought to be immedia-
tely opened on widest and grandest scale.
At the close of this war God bas put into
the hands of this country the key to the
world’s redemption. Heretofore the re-
ligious movement in pagan lands bad to
precede the educational, After fn China
and India and the islands of the sea the |
missionaries have labored over fifty or
seventy-five years the printing press and
the secular school came in. Now to better
advantage than ever before religious and
secular enlightenment may go side by side, |
and so the work be accomplished in short |
time and more thoroughly. Starting with
the facet that in Cuba and Porte Bico and
the Philippine Islands at least three-fourths
of the people can neither read nor write,
what an opportunity for school and print.
ing press! Within five years every man in
those islands may be taught to read not
only the Bible, but the Declaration of in-
dependence and the Constitution of the
United States snd the blography of George
Washington and of Abraham Lioooln.
It seems to me that the Government of
the United States ought by vote of Con- |
gress afford common schools and printing |
presses to thase benighted regions. Our
National Legisiature by one vote Appro.
Now, church of God, now, all Christian
ghlisnthropists, is your opportunity,
Nothing like it bas oceurred sinee Christ
cama, Perhaps there may be nothing Hke
it tili His second coming. Here is a detin.
fteness of aim that is most helpful and in.
spiring. The mililons of dollars given for
the redemption of the world and the thou.
sands of glorious missionaries who have
gone forth among barbaric nations were
given and enlisted under a great aud im-
measurable dea, But when they come te
add to the great and immeasurable ides
the idea of dofluiteness we will infinitely
augment the work. More than three hun-
dred million of heathen in India, more than
three hundred million of people in China
and more millions of heathens than can be
guessed outside of those countries zome-
times stagger and confound und defeat our
faith, But here in these islands of present
controversy we can farm out the work
among the churches and iu flve yours, under
the blessing of God, not only fit the peo-
ple for the right of suffrage, but pro.
pare them for usefulness and heaven,
The difference betwesn the general
idéa of the world's evangeliza.
tion and some particularized flald of
evangelization is the difference between
the improvement of agriculture a mong all
nations and the Improvement of seventy
five acres put under one's especial care
and industry. .By all means fot the gen-
eral work goon. But here is the specific
fleld for religious concentration and de.
velopment, This is not shimerieal or im-
practical, I read this morning that the
American Missionary Association of the
Congregational Caurch has already begun
the work at San Juan, Utuado and Albon-
ito, and all denominations of Christians in
six months will be fu those islandy fields,
and we all need with our prayers and
contributions to c¢heor them on to take for
God and righteosusness those regions
which our American navy has captured
from Spanish perfidy.
It has bean estimated that this Americo-
Spanish war cost us $300,000 000, t wouid
not cost half of that to proclaim and earry
on and consummate a holy war that will
rescue those archipelagoss from satanie
domination. Who will volunteer? I beat
the drum of a recruiting station, Who will
enlist under the one sparred, biood striped
banner of Immanuel? Cuba and Porto
Rico and the Philippines are stepping
stones for our American Christiunity to
cross over and take the round world for
God, We neod a new evangelical alliance
organized for this one purpose. Ian all de-
nominations there are those with large
enough hearts and who have been thor.
oughly enough converted to join in
such an advanced movement -~men who,
putting aside all the minor differences of
opinion, ‘‘belleve In God the Father
Almighty, Maker of heaven and earih,
putated $50,000,000 to give bread and med-
cine to Cuba. Why not by a similar gener-
ing the minds aud souls of those ignorant |
and besotted archipelagoes, In the name |
of God 1 nominate nu school for every neigh. i
borhiood of Cuba, Porto Bleo and the Phil- i
ippines, As soon as the gavel falls at 12 |
o'clock of next December 4 on the table of |
Benate and House of Representatives and |
the roil has been ealled andthe prelimin-
aries observed let some member of our Na-
tional Legislature, with mind and soul and |
voice strong enough to be heazd not only |
{ through those halls, put through Christen- |
{ dom, propose a measure for the mental and
j moral disenthraliment of the islands in|
| sontroversy.,
{ What has made American civilization the |
| highest civilization the world has ever |
| seen? Next to the Bible and the chureh. |
i schools, common schools, schéols reaching
from the Atlantie to the Pacific and from |
{ British America to Gulf of Mexico, Five |
{ years under such educational advantage,
{ and this whole subject that keeps our pub-
| He men agitated, somes of them to frothing |
| at the mouth, will settle fselt. Give those |
{ islands readers, spellers, arithmetics, his- |
tories, blackboards, maps, geographies, i
globes, Let the State Legisiatures at thelr :
next meeting, some of them assembling in |
| early astumn, take parts of those islands
j under their especial educational patron.
| age. What is needed is State and National |
| action in this matter of schools,
Then let the editorial associations of the |
{ United States, as many of sueh organiza. |
{tions as there are States, resolve at the |
| next convoention to establish in every re. |
| gion of those isinnds a priotiog press, sup- |
{ ported by people of this country until it
i ean become self-supporting. Each of these
| State Editorial Associations sending out
to those islands at Jeast oue editor and two
i reporters and enocag! typesotters, down |
{ will go the ignoranee and superstition of |
{ those islands as certaloly as the Spanish |
fleet under Cervera sank under the pound.
ing of our American battleships, and into |
their every port will go intelligences and
love of free lustitutions as certainly as into |
the harbor of Manila went Admiral Dewey |
on that famous night when he was not ex.
pected. Hoe's printing press! Nothing |
can stand before its bombardment. Ed- |
tors of American newspapers and pub. |
lishers of American books! Take the or.
dination for such a magnificent service. |
Eloquence on yonder Capitol hill eannot
meet the exigeney. Epigrams of political
fiatiorma or in State Legisistures will not
iasten the desired consummation one |
week or one hour or one moment,
When Cabans and Porto Rican and Pill |
pinos see the morning and evening news. |
Japa thrown futo the doorways and
iawked along the streets of Havana and
Bantingo and Manila, those who cannot |
read by the foree of curiosity will learn to
read, so that they may know what infor-
mation Is being scattered, and that whieh |
may be missionary effort at the start and
carried on by Americans sent forth to do
the work will soon be done by educated na.
tives, Porto Ricans editors! Porio Rican
reporters! Porto Bican typesetiers! Porto |
Rican publishers! It was a great merey to
take these islands from under the heels of
despotism, but it will be a mightier mercy
to emancipate them from ignorance and
fegradation. Theexpavsion of the knowl-
edge and intellectual qualifiention of ali
those islandy regions fs the desire of all in-
telligent Americans. Awake, all you schools
and colleges and universities and printing
presses, to your opportunity!
Still further, bere is a wide open door for
Christianity, First of all, we havethe at.
tention of those people. The heathen
nations are for the most part soporifie,
The American missionaries heretofore iad
great diffeulty in getting beathendom to
iisten, They excited some comment by
their attire, so aifferent was the parting of
the hair and the shape of the hat and the
eut of the coat and the formation of the
shoe of the evangelizers, but the questions
constantly arose in regard to the mission.
ary: “Who is he?’ “What is lie here for?”
And then the Interrogator would relax (nto
the previous stupid indifference. But that
eondition of thiogs hes passed, The guns
of our American navy have awakened
those populations. They do not ask who
wears, They have found out, They are
now listening to what American eiviliza-
tion and our Christian religion have to say
on any subject, Now is the time, while
their ears and eyes are wide open, to tell
them of the resculog and salvable and in
spiriting power of the Gospel of Jesus
rist, the Baviour of the world, The
steam printing press which secuinr educa-
tion plants there way be used aad whl be
used to print religions newspapers and
tracts and sermons aod mighty discussions
of questions tem 1 and sterani,
The comfortable homes of those popu’s.
tions, when tianized, standing sida by
side with the raded huts of those who
remalg pagans will be revolutionary for
good, e Porto Rican and the Filipino
will come out from this uncleapsd and low
roofed and unin kennel and sav to
bis neighbor of beautiful household, “Wh
cannot I have thi “a have them
And when he fads & gh sha Bitte, with
eas on fam a personal
ne exalted principle, and the
church of God that the reetifion~
tion of all evil ard t!
poses
ho wil CE out, dive fa the Bivie,
a ;
aad in Jesus Christ His only begotten
wn,” and who would march shoulder to
shoulder in such a Gospel campaign. The
resait would Le that those islands, after
such a scene of gospelization, wonld ass
themselves into denominations
themselves, and some would be sprinkled
in holy baptism and others would be im-
mersed in those warm rivers and some
would worship in religious assemblage
as the Quaker meeting house, and
others would have as many jubllant ejaca-
lations as a backwoods camp meeting, and
some of those who preasbed would
yp
La
to suit
be
others would stand in citizen's apparel or
Mark you well that statesmanship, how.
aver grand it is, and wise mor of the world,
More
Rome
in
worst men.
of the most thoroughly edu~ated men
world have been the
time you do not make his morals good, and
you only augment his power for svi,
graphy and mathematios and metaphysics
and philosophy will never qualify a people
to govern themselves, A corrupt printing
press is worse than no printing press st
all, but let loose an open Bible upon those
£3805.
fly over them, and
to besnme either
States Government, or, as | hope Ise
the ease, indepondent republics
God did not exhaust Himself when He
you will prepares thom
1
colonies of the United
their Thomos Jeffersons qualified to write
and Abrabam Liecins,
amancipate their serfs
doms, and Longiallows i Dryants, cap.
abie of putting thelr hills snd thelr rivers
and their landscapes into poems; and the
Banerofts and Prescotis, to make their his.
tories; and their Irvings, to write thelr
their Charlies O'Conors
and Bafas Choates, to plead {o thelr court.
rooms; and their Dantel Webstors and Jolin
liberties;
The day cometh-tienr it all vo who have
no hope for thoss islands of be-dwarfed
and diseased (liiterates—the day cometh
bave a Christian
civilization sgaal to (hat which this eoun-
try now enjoys, while I hope by that time
now is as to-day Washington nad New
York ure better than Manila and Santiago.
Do you eee In this process of gospelized
intelligences those archipeiagoes will as
an nation be protected from the two woes
prophecised in regard to thiscountry—the
and the other woe prophecissd by the
bands on as a nation that, unioss we enter
the door now open for the enlargement of
our national domain, we will decline the
nilssion which God in His providence has
us. Dut surely ho woe will
come upon us or upon them if we
Christianize them as we now have the
opportunity of doing. The political tech.
npisalities are nothing as compared with
the importance of this movement, [ ime
plore all political expansionists to sug.
ment us in this work of moral and relig-
fons expansion, for unless those islands
are moralized and clovated in intelligence
and habits we do not want them, and their
annexation would be political damaation,
On the other hand, I implore all anti.
expansionists to take a band in the gos.
elization of Caba, Porto Rieo and the
Philippine Islands, The only way to pre
pare them to take care of themselves is to
give them the Ten Commandments that
were published on Mount Sinai and jet
them hear the groan of sacrifices that was
breathed out on the heights of Golgotha,
What they most want is the Gospel, the
pure Gospel, the omnipotent Gospel, the
Gospel that i heal the wounds of the
body and freadiates the darkness of the
mind and achieves the ransom of the soul,
But on this platform the so called ex.
papsionists and =o called anti-expansionists
will yet stand side by side, Though I am
not a prophet or the son of a Jobat,
within five years, If this religio-educationai
work Is properly attended to, there will be
a Cuban republic, a Porto Rican républis
and a Philippine republic, one of them on
a iarge seale, but thed will all have their
sohiools and printing presses and evangeli-
onl churohes, thelr Presidents, their Senatos
and House of Representatives, their Mayors
and their constabularies, and ns
der will be observed in their cities ax now
reigns on Pennsylvania avenue, Washing.
ton, or Broadway, New York.
Christ has started for the conquest of the
nations, and nothing on earth or in hell enn
stop it, The Sontinents arg ply roliing
into His domin and why not t
teh for the most part are
he
\ me
robe. and the Shetaal Nop
A Ponderous Flower.
Among the marvelous plants that the
last century has made known none is
more remarkable than the buge parasite
Raftlesin, It derives its name from Sir
Btamford Rifles, who, in 1818, was gov-
ernor of Beneoleen, in Samatra, He
wigs one time on a tour of the island, ae-
companied by Lady Rafles, Dr. Armold
and quite a party of Europeans and ihe
tives. Sudaoaly they alighted upon n
flower of prodigious size und repulsive
oder more than a yard across, and weigh-
ing fifteen pounds. Its color was a light
orange, mottled with yellowish white, the
whole thing livid and visited by carrion
insects. Later investigation showed the
plant to consist of flower alone, directly
sarasitic on a species of ciscus It never
hud stem or leaves of its own, The fun.
ous Robert Brown bestowed the name on
the plant, Rafilesin- Arnoldi, commemo-
riuting thus the title of both discoverers,
Several species ard now known, differing
much in size, but little in essentials,
Their entire growth occupies hut a few
months, They first appenr as knob-like
protuberances from the burk of various
The flowers remain
expanded only a few days, then become
a disgusting muss of putresee pee. As in
the similar cases of one well-known car.
rion flower, the insects, attracted by the
odor, ulso assist in the pollination, These
species of Cissus,
. A :
parasites flower at a diffrent time rom
the host plants, thus making their own
They have
NOssoms more promiment.
botanic gt
y . ‘1 .
been enltivated in various
aens, especially in the east,
his plant is among the giant flowers,
AL
ranking in size with the great water lily
of the Amazon, and with some of the
. 3 £3 # v i153
huge tropical aroids. A peafiower in
I'rinidad said to be several feet in
length, its banner or
aioe
is
upper petal being
long. The range
these titans to the almost invisible
is treme |
little is fashioned
one foot
of water starwort
3 as
iit Nature leaves no con
for th 1 that it is minul
mE
Why Was He an Idiot?
told of a very talks
with
is a story
i * 11 i wy
WHO mos fi Weli-guses
at a social gathering not lor
wsband is 6 man of high
f science, but the lndy re
ge a dreamer of impossible
i
Do vou know,
3 3 4
ius BIE IN DeCIa
she reinarked,
iy are twin
The world regurds John aus a
Now there are times when 1 be.
him to be an idi
nf broken
31 silence § sy
i i overheard the
fie
though your hus.
to understand. madam,’
‘that Prof.
’ slightly esteemm by you
rhat 1 think
John is
she retorted
unmistakably
cause he is vour hosband?”’
was he
ut it
becan
ill p
husband
Yiridl
ill that do?”
W
Making ft
Was
nickel, whi
crack between the boa
1 he Irish
wi 48: uy io
triting
5 Was mu
iu vaagrh it wi
a friend, while walk ng by
Gay
. discovered the man dropping a di 3
:
wo ¥ ES 0 wo
vi fhe same orack
worth
t for a8 ui
wasn me while
i ide wal § i
down a t
B84
¢ad Ache ?
Are your nerves week?
Can’t you sleep well? Pain
in your back? [ack energy?
ppetite poor? igestion
bad 7 Boils or Pity
These are sure signs of
poisoning.
From what poisons?
From poisons that are al-
ways found in constipated
bowels.
It the contents of the
bowels are not removed from
the body each day, as nature
intended, these poisonous
substances are sure to be
absorbed inte the blood, al-
ways causing suffering and
frequently causing severe
disease,
There is a common sense
cure,
insure an easy
movement of
the bowels.
You will find thatthe use of
And burn the cloth
But Ivory Soap
nd lez
SUCC
vé
LOO COMCImATY
HOOTERS SHOOT
ISTER
a postal for 156
ing ail the guns and
NEW HAVEN, CONR.
Chill Walon 18 8 ong
whoo's
d on four high
of canvas tent oven
32 front clear to
wis furniture of its
#istioen, « ight «13
fis roe look is g
if Rr nd of born, soune
from tip
han six, but in
and hardworking
find.
Is oortainsy
iriousiy
fork f
irnt feet
vish to
is 6 strangeness and a fascing
ut it which may draw men to it
pout ne the Alps deaw their devotees
arehes the *voor-looper,
the
frm
{ generaily a simall boy leading foi
4 rein ox
through their nostrils
Ihe
3 .
ag
§ foremost oxen by rope
vr walks with the
154d terrible whip he times wo unspar
on the front of tix
waren nnd gets off o0c asionally to lash
up the whole team with unfailing impar
tinlity The ull
night, starting a little before sunset,
marching till perhaps eleven or b
o'clock; then there is a halt till
before the first signs of dawn, when
go on till the sun begins to
rive Gis ngside
Or cise sits
Ea
ana
ols
elie
little
truveiing 1s ume
they
get hot oy
tiwad, and then they lie by for the day
=
i I ——-
The Rushiight.
rashiights and
candles consfant by the
Scotch Boiled animal fat
gave the required tallow. and the same
green rushes as were used for eraisie wick
su pplic dd it also in this case,
fn making rushlights all the green
conting of these rushes were stripped off,
bat for candle wick a thin strip was left
on cither side of the pith to strengthen
and support it. Otherwise the manufac
ture of these two lights were very simi.
lar. This substance from the rushes when
dried was tied to a rod, then dipped into
the boiling fat and allowed to cool, and
this grocess was repeated vutil the rush.
light, or candle had become the desired
thickness. In later years candles were
made in molds, The tape was passed
through a hole in the centre of the mold
and knotted to prevent it slipping. The
fat was then poured in and allowed to
cool, .
These molds, during the days of the
candle tax, were jenlously guarded by
the owners and hidden in the most secret
corner from the prying eyes of the ex
ciseman., The cundlos were usually
made at night in some outhouse, and
watchers were posted at convenient cor
ners to give timely warning of any ap-
proach of the ubiquitous officer,
Admiral rays that after fils arrival
home he wil
never again go to soa.
manufactured
wore
tome
in 1nd
peasantry
USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE.
PILES
“J suflfored the tortures of the damned
with protruding piles brought on bY CoOnstipa-
tion with which 1 was afiicted for twenty
years. Iran across your CASCARETS in the
town of Newell, la. and never found anything
to equal them. To-day | am entirely free from
plies and feel lke a new man
C H. Krirz. 1411 Jones St, Sioux Clty, 1a
CANDY
CATHARTIC
TRAUE MARK BEOISTINED
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, ar Gripe. Be, Bc. We
«+ CURE CONSTIPATION. ..
Sierting Remedy Compazr, (hlesge, Wovtrest, Sow Tork, 512
= wtesd by ali drog-
CURE Tobaooo Habit
The Greatest Railway Systema of
the United States
Use CARTER'S INK
They wouldn't
Costs
mee #1 if 3 wast good.
ore than puor ink,
on having it,
GREAT BARGAINS
Columbia Bicycles for Woman.
Ladies’ Columbia Bevel-Bear Chainless,
MODEL 81.
1898 Price 8125, Reduced to
$60.00.
LADIES’ COLUMBIA CHAIN
MODEL 46.
1806 Price 278. Reduced to
£42.50.
Thess machines are Columbias of the
highest grade throughout and boar the
Columbia guaranties. They are not
shopworn wheels enrried over from last
oar, but are of 180) manufacture. Com.
pare them part for rt with otherbi.
cycles and you will find reasons for
the admitied superiority of Columbia
Justis + Thestookol t models is
mn
11 there Is no agent in » ur locality,
write to we direet,
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Comn.
puny
lL J