The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 29, 1899, Image 3

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    ER
The Sommer Hath.
Nothing is more refreshing and invigor-
ailing in summer than a daily bath, But to
have it effectual soft water and good soup
must be used. Ivory Soap is the best for
the purpose; it is pure, dissolves quickly,
sweetens and purifies the cuticle, gives a
bealthful glow, and leaves the skin soft
and white. Early morning, or just before
rotiring at night, is the most favorable
{ime for bathing. Eraza RB. Paggen,
« As Represented.
Hardacre—Zeke answered an adver-
tissment whar they sald they'd send
him a church organ for a dollar.
Crawfoot—What did he get? Hard-
acre—A sample copy of the New Light
marked: “This is the best church or-
gan published.”
Beauty Is Dlood 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-
urities from the body. Begin to-day to
vanish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. drug.
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢.
Pierre Lorillard, having tired somewhat of
his voluntary expatriation, is booked to re.
turn to New York ere long.
Are Yen Using Allen's Foot-Ease ¢
It is the only cure for Rwollen, Smart-
ing, Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating
Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the
shoes. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and
Shoe Stores, 25¢. Sample sent FREE. Ad-
dress, Allen 8, Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
When Captain Coghlan was in command of
Raleigh he was the smallest man in
tare on that ship,
the
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away,
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag:
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Bae, the wonder worl er, that mekes weak men
strong. All druggists, 80c or §i. Cure guaran-
tecd Dooklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York
has resolved to decline
directorship of the Papal
The Abhe Perosi
the permanent
choir.
A Wonderful Germ-Killer.
Skin diseases, such as fetter, eczema. ring
worm, salt-rheum. or anything of the kind, are
cured by Tetterine, It kills the germs, and the
skin becomes healthy, Its efficaey Is well fatal
lished. Hundreds of testimonials can be shown
by J.T. Shuptrine. Savannah. Ga. Send Ido, for
a box postpaid if your druggist doesn't keep it,
Sardou, like Balzac, keeps a store of note
books and scrapbooks for use in his work
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartie 10¢ or $5e.
if C C. C. fail to cure. druggists refund money.
China's delegate to the Peace
gress, was educated at Harvard
x MPa
: ARK-1 0,
Cor
_E. B. Walthall& Co. Druggists, Horse Cave,
hy. "Hall's Catarrh Cure
one that takes IL.” Sold by Druguists, The.
be UPS EVErY
Don Jaime, the only son of Don Carlos, has
just won $100,000 in a lottery.
No fits or nervous.
Dr. Kline's Great
ie and treatise free
veh St, Phila, Pa.
red
Fits permanently cu
poss after first day's nee of
Nerve Restorer $2 trig y
Dr. RH. Kuise, Ltd, 81
The Prince of Wales is
to spend October on
a yacht salling about the
aoast of Norway,
““ Durability is
Better Than Show.”
The avealth of
not equal to good health. Riches woithout
health are a curse, and vet the rich, the
muddle classes and the poor altke have, m
Hood's Sarsaparilla, a valuable assistard
mi gelling and mamitamng perfect health,
Sarsaparill Q
EE ETI
the mulfrmillionames is
A Woman Did It
When Gen. Miles was in..rviewed by
the correspondent of the Kansas City
Star when he made the charges against
the secretary of war, it was at once
suspected that the shrewd old head
of John Sherman was guiding Miles.
This suspicion was so strong that some
one asked Sherman if he bad said any-
thing to Miles about the controversy
It will be remembered t.... at this time
Miles was in Porto Rico and Sherman
in Washington. Sherman replied to
the question practically as follows: “I
have bad no letter from Gen. Miles
since he left Weshington, and have
gent no letters to him. 1 have not dis-
cussed the war department with him.”
After a pause, the shrewd old codger,
with a twinkle in his eve, added: “I
believe, however, that Mrs Miles and
Mrs, Sherman have exchanged several
letters.” He gave a little chuckle, and
said that he had nothing more to say
about the matter. Mrs. Miles ia a
niece of Sherman’'s.— Detroit Journal.
Go Yrs. Pinkham,
Lynn, Wass.
frerren vo wes. piNEHAM wo. 41.207)
* DEAK FRIEND—A year ago] was a
great sufferer from female weakness.
My head ached all the time and I would
get so dizzy and have that all gone
feeling in the stomach and was so
nervous and restless that I did not
know what to do with myself.
** My food did me nogood and I hada
bad case of whites. |] wrote to you and
after taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound as directed, I can
truly say that I feel like a new woman
and cannot tell you how grateful I am
fo you,
“I have recorumended it to all my
friends and have given it to my
daughter who is now getting along
splendidly. May you live many years
to help our suffering sisters.” Mans, C.
SAKrRETER, 253 GRAND S1., BROOKLYN,
Over eighty thousand
such letters as this were re-
ceived by Mrs. Pinkham
during 1897. Surely this is
a i
oma
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE. _
Subject: Art a Mighty Ageney For the Sal-
vation of Mankind « Pletures Potent
Good or Bad—Vralse For Our Artists,
{(Copyright. Louis Klopsch, 1856.)
and salvation of the human race.
Lord of Hosts shall be
pleasant pletures.”
Plotures are by some relegated to the
realm of the trivial, accidental, sentimen-
tal or worldly, but my text shows that God
good or bad, whether used for right or
wrong purposes, is a matter of divine ob.
servation and arraignment. The divine
mission of pictures is my subject, That the
artist's pencil and the engraver's knife
from Herculaneum and Pompei! the walls
a degradation in art which cannot be ex.
negerated.
always wanted the fingering of the easel;
they would rather have possession of that
than the art of prioting, for types are not
#0 potent and quick for evil as pictures,
The powers of darkness think they have
gained a triumph, and they have, when in
some respectable parlor or public art gal-
lery they can hang a canvas embarrassing
to the good but fascinating to the evil,
you have no right to hang in
rooms or your dwelling houses that which
would be offensive to good people if the
figures piotured were alive in your parior
and the guests ol your household. A ple
ture that you have to hang in a somewhat
sechided place, or that in a public hall you
cannot with a group of friends deliberately
knite stabbed into it at the top
clear through
and cut
elear through to the left. Pliny the elder
lost his iife by golog pear enough to
the inside of Vesuvius, and the farther you
ree
sin the Letter.
last day are
Never till the books of the
opened shall we kpow what
has been the dire harvest of evil
and unbecoming art galleries, espoil a
man's imagination and be becomes a mere
The show windowr of Epglish
tres have sometimes
hung long lines of
ing to all propriety, bave made a broad
path to death for muititudes of people. But
so have all the other arts been at times sub.
orned of avil. How has musie
draggied?
in dissgduteness that oto it
carried David's barp, and Handel's organ,
Hp? and the flute, which though named
had an exalted mission? Architecture, born
in the heart of Him who made the worlds
under its arches and across its floors, what
baccehanalian reveiries have been enacted!
It is not against any of these arts that they
have been so Jed into captivity!
were not for what my text calis ‘pleasant
pletures!” 1 refer your memory
mine when I ask if your knowledge of the
Holy Seriptures has not been mightily
8g
tO
in the old family Bible which father 1
the old homestead when you were boys
and girls. The Bible scones which we all
earety in our minds were not gotten from
the Bible typology, but from the Bible pie-
tures. To prove the truth of it in my own
ease, the other day 1took up the old family
Jible which I inherited. Sare snou
what I have carried in my mind of Jacob's
indder was exactly the Bible engraviog of
Gaza, Elisha restoriog
Christ Liessing little children,
My
fdea of all these is that of the old Bible en-
gravings which I seanned before 1
That is true with nine-tenths
It I could swing open the door of
your foreheads, I would find that you are
walking pieture galleries, The
about the Bible did pot
————————————————— SS] SRT A
for the majority of the people read it but
if they read it at ali; but all the
scenes have been put befors the
great masses, and not printer's ink bat the
pictorial art, must have the credit of the
achievement. First, painter's pencil for
the favored few, and even engravers plate
or woodeut {or millions on millions!
What overwhelming commentary on the
Bible, what re-enforcements for patri-
arch’s, prophets, aposties and Christ,
what distribution of Scriptural knowledge
of all nations, in the paintings and encravy.
ings therefrom of Holman Hunts * Corist
in the Temple,” Paul VYeronese's "Mag.
dalen Washing the Feet of Christ,” Ra-
phaei’s “Michael the Archangel,’ Albert
Durer's “Dragon of the Apoeaiypee,
Michael Angelo’s “Plagues of the Fiery
Serpents,” Tintoretto's “Flight Into
Egypt.” Rubens's “Descent Fron
Cross.” Leonardo Da Viset's “Last
“Madonna” at Milan, Oresgna’s
Judgment.” and hundreds of miles of
tures, if they were put in Hine, {lustrating,
truths’ until the Scriptures are not to-day
$0 much on paper as on CANVAS, not so
much in ink as ia all the
spectrum,
eclipse in speed and boldness anvthiog and
everything tha: the world had eter seen
#ipes the first color appeared onthe sky at
vears of age le
lithographs of his own. Baying noth.
ing of what he did for Milton's
“Paradise Lost,” emblagoning it on the at.
published marvelous
Bille, and In iis pictures, “The Creation of
“The Burial of Sarah,” “Joseph Sold by
His Brethren,” “The Brazen Serpent.”
“Boaz and Bath,” “David and Goilath,”
“The Transfiguration,” “The Marriage In
Cann,” “Babylon Fallen” and 205 Serip-
tural scenes in ull, with a boldness and a
grasp asd almost supernetaral nfMatus that
make the beart throb and the brain reel
and the tears start and the cheeks blanch
and the entire natare quake with the tre.
mendous things of God and eternity and
the dead. 1 actually staggered down the
steps of the London Art Gallery under the
power of Dore’s “Christ Leaving the Pras.
torinm.” Proless you to be a Christian
fan or woman and see no divine mission
in art and acknowledge you no obligation
either in thanks to God or wan?
bere us io prioter’'s ink thas by skilful
laying on of colors or designs on metal
through inels on or corrosion. What a
lesson in morals was presented by Hogarth,
the painter. in his two plotures, “Tae
Rake's Progoess’ and “Tha Miser's Feast,”
and by Thomas Cole's engravings of the
id oye of Human Lite” and the "Course
of Papire,” and Tarner's “Slave ship.”
God in art! Christ in art]! Patrlarche,
prophets and sposties {no art! Angels in
ari! Heaven in art!
The world and the shurch ought to come
tothe higher appreciation of the divine
mission of pleturcs, jot the authors of
them have generally bean left to semi.
phil od cd poy
nn : . : it skater,
while on the foe he formed the nequaint.
of General H :
min wo —
i who, through coming to admire West an a
clever skater, gradually came to appre-
ciate as much that whieh he accomplished
¢: by bis hand as by bis heel. Poussin, the
mighty painter, was pursued and had
nothing with which to defend
ngninst the mob but the artist's portfolio,
which be held over his head to keep off the
stones hurled at him.
Richard Wilson, of England, were sold for
fabulous sums of money after his death,
{ but the living painter was glad to get for
his "Aleyone’” a plece of Stilton cheese,
From 1640 to 1643 there were 4600 pietures
wilifully destroyed. In the reign of Queen
Elizabeth it was the habit of some people
to spend mucly of their time In knock.
ing pletures to pieces, In the reign of
Charles ), it was ordered by par-
Hament that all pietures of Christ be
| burned. Painters were so badly treated
and humiliated in the Leginning of the
eighteanth century that they were lowered
i elear down out of the sublimity of thelr
{ art and obliged to give accouuts of what
| pies did with their eolors, The oldest
i
pieture in England, a portrait of Chaucer,
though now, of great value, was picked out
| of a lumber garret. Great were the
{of Quentin Matsys, who tolled on from
{ blacksmith's anvil till, ad nu painter, he won
wide recognition. The first missionaries to
Mexico made the fatal mistake of destroy
| ing pletures, for the loss of which art and
religion must ever lame at,
far back when io this year ofour Lord
be a painter, except in rare occasions,
means poverty and neglect, poorly fed,
poorly clad, poorly housed, because poorly
{ appreciated?
When 1 hear a man is a painter, I have
{ two feelings—one of admiration for the
| greatness of his soul and the other of com-
{ miseration for the needs of his body. But
{ 80 it has been in all departments of poble
work, Some olithe mightiest have been
bardly bestead. Oliver Goldsmith bad
such & big pateh on the coat over his Jeft
breast that when went anywhere he
kept his bat in bis hand closely pressed
over the pach, The vw .rid renowned
Bishop Asbury had a salury of $64 a vear
Printers are not the only ones who bave
endured the lack of appreciation Let
| men of wealth take under thelr patronage
the suffering men art. They Ht ne
complaint: they make no strike lor higher
i wages, But with a keanness of nervous
organization which almost always charae-
terizes genius these artists suffer nore
{ than any one but God ean realize, here
needs be a concerted effort for the sufler
{fog artists of Americas, not sentimental
discourse atout what we ows to artists,
but contracts that will give them a liveli-
hood; for I am in full sympathy with the
Christian farmer who was vere busy
fall apples, and some cne
asked him to pray for a poor family, the
father of whom bad broken his leg, and
the busy farmer sald: *‘[ cannot stop vow
but an go down into the
celinr and got some corned beef and butter
and eggs nad potatoes, That sali! can
do now.”
Artists may wish for
they aiso want practical
who can give them work,
seores of sermons ei
suffering men and women,
sermons that make pleas for
and women
he
of
you
Gur prayers, bat
heip from
You have heard
other Kinds of
but we need
the suffering
American art Fheir
work is wore true nature and {fe than
some of the masterpieces that have
immortal on the other side of the
i sen, but Lis the fashion of Americans to
and to know little
or nothing about our own Copley and Alls.
{ ton and luman sand Greenough and Ken.
sett. Let the afMinent fing out of their
into the backyard vaineless
danbs on canvas and call in these spieadid
but unrewarded men and teil
sdorn your walls, not only with that which
shaii please the taste, but enlarge the
minds and improve t morals an! save
the sonis of those who gaze upon them, All
Americas cities nead great galleries of Art,
not only open annually for a few days on
exhibition, but which shall stand open ail
the year round, and from early
until 10 o'clock at night and free t
would come and go
What a preparation for
tear of the day a five look
morning al some picture that will o
door into some larger realm than that in
which our population daily drudge! Or
what a good thing the ball hour of artistie
6 the way home in the even.
fog from exhinustion that demands
peration for mind and soul as wel
body! Who will do for the city where vy
live what W. W, Corcoran did for Wash
ington and what others have 4 for
Boston and Philadelphia and New York?
Men of wealth, i you are too modest to
nid and endow such a place during voar
lifetime, why not go to your iron safe and
take out your lust will and testament and
make a codicil that aball build for the city
of your residence 5 throne for American
art? Take of that money that
otherwise spoil your children
men
for
;
a;
to
Powe
come
them fo
}
ae
morning
» all who
the
winutes
wenr i
in thn
nen A
rec.
Asn
fe
“ome
would
nod bulld an art gallery that shall asaccinte
not only with great
masters of painting who are gone, but with
the great masters who are tryiag to live,
and ales win the admiration and love of
tens of thousands of people who, unable to
have fine pletures of their own, would be
advantaged, By your bepefactions build
your own musuments and not leave it to
the whims of others, Some of the best peo.
pls sleapiog in Greenwood have 80 montis
fn a few vears will let the rain wash out
while some men whose
death wasthe abatement of a nulsance have
a plie of Aberdeen granite high enough for
& Ring and eqlogium enough to embarrass
a saraph
Ob, man of large wealth, instead of
leaving to the whim of others your monu-
mental commemoration and epitaphol-
ogy, to be looked at when people are going
to and fro at the burial of others, build
right down in the heart of our great city,
live, an immense
setvatory or a free art gallery, the niches
for seuipture abloom with the rises and fall
of nations and lessons of eourage for the
disheartened and rest for the weary and
lite for the dead, and 150 years from now
you will be wielding influences in this
world for good. How much better than
| white marble sthat chills you Hf you put
your band on it when you towel It in the
cemetery, would be a monument in colors,
in beaming eyes, in living possession, in
splendors which under the chandelier
would be glowing and ‘warm aod
i looked at by strolilog groups with eata-
logue in hand, on the January night when
the necropolis where the body sleeps is all
snowed ander! The tower of David was
bung with 1000 dented shields of battle,
but vou, oli man of weaith, may have a
grander tower named after you, one that
shall be bung not with the symbols of ear
nage, but with the vietoriss of that art
which was so Jong ago recognized iu my
text as “pleasant pletares.” Ob, the power
of pleturss! | cannot deride, as some have
done, Cardinal Mazarin, who, when told
that he must die, took his Inst walk
through the art gallery of his palace, say-
ing: "Must I quit all this? Look at that
Titian! Look at that Correggio! Look at
that deluge of Caraceil” Farewell, dear
| pletlures!” ’
As the day of the Lord of Hoste, acoord.
ing to this text, will scrutinise the pie:
tures, | implore all parents to see that in
their bouseholds they have nelther in book
DOr DEWsPApEr nor on canvas anything
that will deprave, Plotures are no
the exclusive possession of the afMuent
Theres Is not a respectable home in these
oF a angie, (nek oF gaining and
or engraving, if n ha "
your whole 1 will feel the moral up
Iitting or .
.
Bibles Distributed in Mexico,
During toe last twenty years the Ameri.
ean
in Meaxieo 600 ,
portion of the Bible.
38 surtals Parisian TALS A quar
ae le arged for be ' "ot the. table.
030, Hibben. Testaments and
on onn pr A
WESTERN MEN
Make the test Snilors In the Best “avy
The American,
Fhe brilliant record men in the navy
in the recent war has set the authori-
ties to thinking, with the resuit that
a brisk effort is be made to turn
(ome hundreds of the wesiera farmers
into sailors (or Uncle Sam. The Hart-
ford, the famous old man-of-war now
serving us a recruiting ship, is now
at Mare, Cal, and as soon as possible
will be fitted up for a long cruise. Re-
eruiting officers are to be sent out all
through the western states, setting
forth in terms as alluring ag may be
the unparalleled felicity of three
years on the briny deep with Dewey
as your lord, with the chances that
more of the sturdy young sons of the
plains will come forward than can at
present be accommodated, Captain
Henry Hawley, who has been assigned
to the Hartford, speaks enthuslastical-
ly of the abilities of the boys he is
to get. “We intend to make the cruise
of the Hartford #8 attractive as pos-
sible, and we will do everything % to
make the service of the landsmen
pleasing. We will have a good band
of music on board; will stop at the
most interesting ports route, and
in other ways do what we can to in-
duce the western boys to adopt the
service as their profession. We tried
this scheme once before, and with very
gratifying results 1 have been in-
formed by commanders who have had
recruits board from Ne-
braska, Missouri, 1llinocis other
wertern states that they made the most
temperate and intelligent lot of sail
ors ever shipprd by them. They
well-behaved, orderly,
to
en
on Kansa
ana
ara
qdiet and and
what they lack in seafaring knowledge
they make up and
When we only supply
men for our ships
to gel good
force has
troubles
in zeal industry
12,00
had to
we
that the
17.600 our
sallors, bat
increased
grown in
hankering for
hops a ot of them be
fore | through.”
now
io
been
»
have proportien, 1
have a western mer
and
am
No-To Bae for Fifty Cents.
unrantoesd tobacco habit cure, makes weak
3 strong. bond pure Go $1. All druggista
pans, the nwt
ergy Ina
I cannot speak too highly
Consumption. -Mre, Frasx Monn
St, New York, Oct, 28, 180)
of i
Co nee vib
in amg
England
Winslow's Soathing
ns the gn
Educate Your Dowels With Cascarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever
10,55. ICCC fal drugmists refund money.
Little, of |
Rite.
are
Tattooing and Snake
While scientific minds
ing the anti-toxin serum treatment of
new thing.
discus
disease as if It were a the
people of ancient Burmah are
material they have used ir
common custom of tattooing has been
an efficient anti-toxin for snake bites
The tattooed Burmess
of poisonous snakes as harmlesss
his, at least, is the statement
gentleman from Burmah, who brings
testimony to bear in corroboration of
his singular statement.
he
Why let your neighbors
know it?
And why give them a
chance to guess you are even
five or ten years more?
Better give them good
reasons for guessing the
other way. It is very easy;
for nothing tells of age so
quickly as grey hair.
Ayers
Hair
Vigo
is a youth-renewer.
It hides the age
Tuxuriant
of 9g
under a
of hair the
out also,
It feeds the hair bulbs,
Thin Bair becomes thick hair,
and hair becomes long
It cleanses the scalp;
ali dandruff,
its formation.
re.
and
bri YW,
make him feel like new.
1
{
Ivory Soap costs
cake of Ivory Soap'will
CONT
Same Man Twice.
The writer intro
of one of
was Lhe
taiwart warden
convict establishments,
indiy looking man
years the
the
where
other day
0 aK
Kk
BO Means unk
OF many
wielder of
haz been
t-0'-nine-talls at
Answers
new prison
me, Bas
t flogged some men
the cat
prison he s
Know
will affect
"1 scarcely
e in
Dig ore of
rs
pay of five
erated ug
my
: i : : men
© whom | have applied men
ranging in weight from eight to fifteen
stone--1 have
bore
gixis
Cat
never known but one
punishment
at least, groans. A great deal
depends upon the man who wields the
as to the pain, and
whether the
toughened
undersized, di
city thief suffers
the wyost, strong fellows who have done
work for being af
same
’ bo
Ol tal
the
8 ho
w No 18
withou
yells, or,
cat extent of the
much also depends upon
al old one,
not The
sireet.-Cornes
a is an
ONRS
gipated
with
or
{ice veArs
ike
behavior
not
fected in anything the de
gree As the
flogged, some of them awful im-
precations, swearing, with awful oaths
revenge themselves
unintelligibly like
The docior present
8 my efforts i
had to flog the same man
pot think any warden in
bad to do so.”
for
Like
whipped children
largely
have
regula
never
twice i do
England ever
own
mms AIS.
WHERE KIPLING CETS
HINTS
Thorough Way ia Which He Explored a
Locomotive Shap,
Kipling's methods of abrorbing de-
tail are very curious and interesting
said Mr. Lyman D. Bentley to a New
Orleans Times-Democratl man
years ago, while he was visiting
locomotive shops at New Haven, he
met a skilled workman named Cresas
and immediately proceeded to
him about engine building
not fully appreciate the honor that was
paid him, but he was flattered by the
novelisi's interest, and the two wend
all over a big eight-whee! expres: flier
that was standing in the yard Kip
fing sald he had lots of books on the
subject, but they didn’t teil him
things he wished to know. What
wanted was a real engineer or build:
er's idea of the machine, and he was
particularly eager to learn the
loguial names of the parts, He took
no notes, but about a month later he
wae in New Haven again and bunts
up the mechanic. ‘look here,
#y," he said, producing a rough ska!
on a card of one of the valves of th:
brake gear, "I wish you'd tell me agi
just how this thing works
explained, and Kipling laughed de.
lightedly. ‘I've got it now!’ he ex
claimed. 1 mention the incident be-
cause it seems to throw some light on
his astonishing command of technicali-
ties”
Some
the
pus
Crecey
bo
sid
pl
re
i ss sso
Looking Ahead,
“And so you've decided to name
your baby James, have you?!” “Yes:
but, of course, we shall call him Jim
right from the start.” “Why bave you
such a, decided preference for that
name?’ “Well, you see, 1 want ts give
him a falr show. Jim, you know,
rhymes with him, vim, trim. grim,
prim, rim, shim, whim, dim,
swim. and probably a lot of other words
that I can't think of just pow: so if
b= ever does anything worth mention
ing the poets will not be likey to over.
look ir"—Chicago Times-Herald.
ae
i
i
CITI
PIMPLES
“My wile had pimples on her face, but
been tak CASCARETS and they
had been troubled
but after tak.
Lave had no trouble
We cannot speak too high
VERD WaRTMAN
578 Germantown Ave. Fhtladelphis. Pa
ng the first Cascaret |
CANDY
CATHARTIC
TRADE wasx ®ROISTERID
Pigasant. Paistable, 1 otent. Teste Gone Dw
or Gripe, He, Be Ax
CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
wen
Boid and gnarartest by ail drug
gists 10 CURE Tobacco Habit
USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE.
Did you ever ran across an old jetter ?
ink all faded ont. Couidn’t have been
CARTER'S INK
~IT DOESN'T FADE.
Cosis yout no more than poor ink, Might
as well have the best.
Add ddd ddd
Dur sown TY Ine
ident | 32 TRARE) and only be
ines soliegeis Ta. and 34 in Ge
South toown | whuiding. ku TV
TO-DATE SCROOL dy and
rxperientel teachers, § of whew
sre authors of veltabie books
Both sexes. BO VADATIONS
AS bosiness bresches, Bug od
ax0 headomue Separiments
* LBAMING BUSIWRER CULLECY
Columbia Bevel-Gear Chainless
$60 to $75.
a N
fi
on
Ask vuiere of the Bevel ony
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Coltamvia
their saperiencs with the whee)
We bave vet to hear of one who dos vot my
that he Chainless is easier to take care of
than the chain wheel: that it has & longer
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the pedals x sade sfective; that 8 sees
to possess an activity and life of its own and
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ek pedaling, iling on Jevels and especially
in ascending grades,
CHAIN WHEELS.
| Columbias, Rartfords and Vedettes
Prices, $25 to $50.
POPE MFG. 0O., Har'ford, Conn.
HPDSHDE SF FIST BRE I @]
e Send vour name and address on 3 @
% postal, and we will send you our 156-8
b page Hlustrated catalogue free.
ie
DROPS Y itera
Dr. WK GREEN