The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 02, 1899, Image 3

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    BEV. OR. TALMAGE,
THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE,
Bubjeot: Lay Hold ef OhristeThe Help.
fulness of Religion In Fighting Life's
Battie—Bo Hold For the Right and
Trust in the Son of God,
(Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 180.1
Wasnivarox, D, O.—Iathisdiscourse Dr.
Talmage employs a very bold figure of the
Bible to bring out the helpfulness of re-
liglon for all those in any kind of strugiie,
The text is Isaiah xxv., 11, **He shall spread
forth his hands in the midst of them, as he
that swimmeth spreadeth forth his hands.”
In the summer season multitudes of peo-
ple wade into the ponds and lakes and
rivers and seas to dive or float or swim. In
8 world the most of which is water all men
and women should learn to swim, Some of
you have learned the side stroke intro-
duced by George Pewters in 1830, each
stroke of that kind carrying the swimmer
a distance of six feet, and some of you may
use the overhand stroke invented by Gar-
dener, the expert who by it won the 500
yard champiopship in Manchester in 1862,
be swimmer by that stroke carrying his
arm in tte air for a more lengthened reach,
and some of you may tread the water as
though you had been made to walk the sea,
but most of you usually take what {s call-
ed the breast stroke, placing the hands
with the backs upward, about five inches
ander the water, the inside of the wrists
touching the breast, then pushing the
arms forward coincident with the stroke of
the feet strack out to the greatest width
possible, and you thus unconsciously illus-
trate the meauing of my text, “He shall
spread forth his hands in the midst of them,
as he that swimmeth spreadeth forth his
bands to swim.”
The fisherman seeks out unfrequented
nooks. You stand all day on the bank of
& river in the broiling sun and fling out
your line and eateh nothing, while an ex-
pert angler breaks through the jungle and
goes by the shadow of the solitary rock
and, in a place where no flsherman has
been for ten years, throws out his line and
comes home at night, his face sbining and
his basket full. I do not know why we
ministers of the gospel need always be
fishing in the same stream and preaching
from the same texts that other peopie
preach from. I cannot understand the
oliecy of the minister who in Blackfriars,
ondon, Engiand, every week for thirty
ears preached from the Epistie to the
ebrews, It Is an exhilaration to me
when I come across a theme which I feel
Bo one else has treated, and my text is one
of that kind. There are paths in God's
feat. When men want to quote Seripture,
has heard,
When they
waut a chapter
people have been reading, so that
church to-day ls ignorant of three-fourths
of the Bible,
You go into the Louvre at Paris. Yon
opulent gallery of paintiogs.
out your friend says to you, “Did you see
that Rembrandt?” ‘No.
that Rubens?" ‘'No.”
Titian?’ “No.”
asi?” “No.” “Well”
“then you did not see the Louvre.” Now,
confine ourselves to one of the great corri-
dors of Seripture truth, and so much so
that there is not one person out of a mil.
lion who bas ever noticed the all sugees-
tive and powerful pleture in the words of
my text,
swimmer, strikiug out to push down iniq-
uity and save the souls of men,
spread forth his hands in the midst
them, as he that swimmeth spreadath forth
his hands to swim.” The figure is bold and
many sided,
swim. BScme of you learned it in the city
father’s house; some of you since you cama
to manhood or womanhood,
mering on the beach of the sea.
for yourself, but because you will after
awhile perhaps have to help others,
I do not know anything more stirring or
sublime than to see some man like Norman
McKenzie leaping from the ship Madras
had dropped
trying to loosen the sail, bringing him back
to the deck amid the huzzas of the passen-
gers and erew. If a man bas not enthusi.
asm enough to cheer in such
the deep, Any one who has
such a dead of daring has all the partica-
lars of that bravery recorded in a publie
record and on his breasts medal done in
blues and gold and bronze, anchor and moa-
ogram and faseription, telling to future
generations the bravery of the man
save a body from the deep I ask you if it is
not a worthier thing to save ap immortal
soul. Aad you shall see this hour the Bon
of God step forth for this achievement.
“He shall spread forth bis hands in the
midst of them, as he that swimmeth
spreadeth forth his hands to swim.”
In order to understand the full fores of
this figure, you need to realize that our
race is in a sinking condition You some.
times hear people talking of what they
consider the most beautiful words in ail
our language. One man says it is “home,”
another says it {s the word “mother.” an-
other says it the word “Jesus” but I tell
you the bitterest word in all our lnnguage,
the word most angry and baleful, the word
saturated with the most trouble, the word
that secounts for all the loatbsomeneas
and the pang and the outrage and the har-
rowing, and that word is “sin.” You spell
it with three letters, and yet those three
letters describe the circumference and
pierce the diameter of everythifig bad in
the universe, Sin is a sibilant word, You
cannot pronounce it without giving the
siss of the flame or the hiss of the serpent,
Sin! And then if you add three letters to
that word it deseribes every one of us by
patare—sinner. We have outraked the
law of God, not occasionally, or now and
then, but perpetually. The Bible declares
ft. Hark! It thunders two claps: “The
heart is deceitful above all things and des.
erately wicked.” “Toe soulthat sinneth,
t shall die,” What the Bible says our
own conscience affirms,
After Judge Morgan bad sentenced Lady
Jane Grey to death his conscience troubled
tim so much for the deed that he became
insane, and all through his {osanity he
kept saying: “Take her away from me!
Lady Jane Grey! Take her away! Lady
Jane Grey!” It was the voice of conselence,
And no man ever does anything wrong,
however great or small, but the consclence
brings that maliter before him, and at
every step of his misbehavior it says,
“Wrong, wrong!” Bin Is a leprosy; sin is a
puraiysie; #in is a consumption, sin is poliu-
on; sin Is death, Olive it a fair chance
and it will swamp you and me, body, mind
and soul, forever. In this world it only
ves a falot {otimation of its virulence,
on see a patient In the first stages of ty-
hold fever, The cheek is somewhat
Rushed the hands somewhat hot, preceded
a slight chlil, “Why,” you say, “ty-
phold fever does not seem to be mueh
of a disease.” Put walt untli the patient
bas been six weeks under it, and all his
energies bave been wrung out, and he i=
too wenk to lift his Hitle finger, and his
intellect gone, then you see the full havoe
of the disease, Now, sin in this world is
an aliment which is ouly in its first stuges,
but let it get undor full sway, and it is an
all consuming typhoid. Oh, if we could
gee our unpard sins as God sess them,
our teath would snd one knase
would knock together, and our respiration
would be choked, and our heart would
break. If your sins are unforgiven, they
are bearing down on you, and you are
sinking—sinking away from happiness,
sinking away from God, sinking away {rom
everything tnt Is good and blessed.
Then what do we want? A swimmer—a
strong swimmer, a swift swimmer! And,
blessed be God, in my text we have him
announced. ‘‘He shall spread forth his
hands in the midst of them, as he that
swimmeth stretoheth forth his hands to
swim.” You have noticed that when a
swimmer goes to rescue any one he puts
off his heavy apparel, He must not have
any such impediment about him if he is
going to do this great deed. And when
Christ stepped forth to save us he shook
off the sandals of heaven, and his feet were
free, and then he stepped down into the
wave of our transgressions, and it eame up
over his wounded feet, and it came above
thic apear stab In his side-—aye, It dashed
to the lacerated temple, the high water
mark of anguish, Then, rising above the
midst of them, as he that swimmeth spread.
eth forth his bands toswim."”
If you have ever watched a swimmer,
into play. The arms are flexed, the hands
drive the water back, the knees are active,
the head is thrown back to escape strangu-
lation, the wliole body is in propulsion.
And when Christ spraag into the deep to
save us He threw His entire nature into ft
ness, His love, His
heart, eyes, hands, feet. We were far out
short of an entire God could save us,
Christ leaped out for our rescue, saving,
surges of human and satanic hate beat
from the gates of heaven feared He would
go down under the waves and instead of
saving others would Himself perish; bat,
ag the surf from His locks,
and on until He is now within the reach
of every one here, eye omniscient,
infinite, arm omnipotent, mighty to save,
even uuto the uttermost,
down bellowing Gennesaret; it was not a
quarter of a God that mastered the de.
God that lifted up Lazarus Into the arms
of his overjoyed sisters; it was not a frag-
ment of a God who offered pardon and
peace to all the race. No.
swimmer threw his grandeur, his glory,
his might, his wisdom, his
und his eternity into this one act.
both hands of God to save us—both feet,
How do I prove it? On the cross were
not both hands On the cross
wore not both feed spiked? His
patare iovoivad in our redemption!
If you have lived much by the water,
you notice also that if any one is going out
to the rescues of the drowning he must be
independent, self-reliant, able to go alone,
There may be a time when be must spring
7
palled?
boat, and if he goes out and has not
strength enough to bear bimselt up and
sprang out into the sea to deliver us, He
His Fatber did not help
Alone io the wine press, alone inthe
alone on the
shall have all the eredit, for ‘there
was none to help,” no oar, no wing, no
indder! When Nathaniel Lyon fell in the
charge in {ront of his troops, be had
a whole army to chear him. When Marshal
Russian Policemen.
A good story Is being told in St. Pe-
tereburg of the The Russinn police,
which the papers pronounce to be ex-
ceedingly characteristic, A new
ernpor was sent to a certain town in
the Interior, and the [nhabitants nat
once began to complain that the police
were badly organized, since however
much they were wanted they never
would come when they were sent for.
The governor determined to test this
for himself, so one night he set out for
the barracks, where the police and the
fire brigade were quartered. He
costed the sentry: “Do you know me?’
“Yeg, your excelleney.” “If a man was
being murdered close by would you
quit your post?’ “Never, your excel
leney.” “Good,” sald the governor,
know your duty. Well, what
you do?’ “I should blow my
guard.” “Good.
gov-
age.
“you
would
dered here, Whistle.” The soldier
blew, but not a soul answered, He
blew again and again, but the same si
“That will
“you have whis-
fins
lence prevailed. do,” sald
the governor, at last,
tled your utmost, and
come, but, at any rate, your conscience
1 3! wl v
is tranquil, now you can go to sleep.
man could have been murdered
It Is unneces-
io
appear to
The czar should
it wake
who
sary to overdo hy frying
comrades, sleep
the dead.
your
off, «
would
Gngratu
he
the governor went
i
ing himself that no one
«to accuse his police of having
in the midnight murders of
London (lobe,
Rides to the Hounds at Eighty-Eight.
Old age, virility,
ldom coexist in
and
Sport se a mere striking
Witty
Pa.
from
from 1}
is perhaps 80 n
mie nayette Springs,
ritos
place les
Pittsburg amd
of General Braddoct
of
from the
re
Nevossity,
two miles
sil
arave Willie
vod is the site
I forves
retreated after Braddock's at
Washinton and Braddock
: ; Bal
onustract
jong the
Along }
rocd the Not from
ral Jack
Daniel Web ,
linm Henry Harrison
General Zach
bg Ty
alone!
help."
was pot
“Of the people thers was none to
“All forsook him and fled.” Ob, it
a fSotilla that salied down and
It was not a cluster of gondola
that came over the wave. It was one per.
and alone, “‘spreadiog
His hands among 4s as a swimmes
spreadeth forth his hands to swim.’
Behold, then, the spectacie of a drown.
ing soul and Christ theswimmer! I believe
it was in 1%43 whea there were six Eaglish
soldiers of the Filth fusileers who
eapsised boat—a boat that
upset by a squall three miles
It was in the night, but one
man swam mightily for the beach, guided
Heo came to the beach,
with him and save the other men, and they
It was some time before they
after awhile they heard thelr ory,
“Help, help!” and they boge down to them,
and they saved them and brought them to
shore,
know very well that when one Is f. peril
help must come very quickly, or it will be
of no use, One minute may decide every-
thing. Immediate help the man wants or
no beip at ali. Now, that is just the kind
of relief we want. The case is argent,
imminent, instantaneous. Heo that soul
sinking! Son of God, lay hold of him.
understood how urgent
There was a man
this gospel fle,
in the navy at sea
who had been severely whipped for
bad behavior, and he was maddened
by it and leaped into the sea and no sooner
had he leaped into the sea than, quick as
lightning, an albatross swooped upon him.
The drowning man, brought to his senses,
seized hold of the albatross and held on,
The Quttering of the bird kept him on the
wave uatil relief could comes. Would now
ing and savigg spirits might flash from the
ing hold of its potent wing, might live and
live forever,
The world has had stroag swimmers be.
sides the one of the text, perhaps the
greatest among them Matthew Webb, of thy
British mercantile ma¥ine service, He
leaped from the deck of the Hassia, the Cun-
ard steamer, to save the life of a sailor who
had falien overboard, No wonder the
passengers subseribed for him a Iarge re.
ward and the Royal Humane Society of
London decorated him with honors, A
mighty swimmer was he, by the strength
of his own arm and foot pushing through
the waters from Blackwall pler to Graves.
end pier, eighteen miles, and from Dover to
Calais, 39 miles, where he crossed, yet ne
was drowned at Inet in our Niagara's
whirlpool. Ba‘ the strong swimmer of my
text put out alone to swim a wrathler sea
and jor vaster distance, even from worid
to world, to save us who were swamped in
guilt and woe, and brought us to the shore
of safety, although He at lsst »ant down
into the whirlpool of human sad sataule
rage. “He descended into heli!”
New modes have been (invented for res.
ouing a drowning body, but there has been
no new invention for rescuing a drowning
soul, In 1788 Lionel Lukin, a Loadon
coach bullder, fitted up a Norway yaw as
a lifebost and called it the Insubmergible,
and that has been improved upon until
from all the coasts of the round world per.
fect lifeboats are ready to put out for the
relief of marine disasters. [a sixtesn years
the French Society For Saving Life From
Shipwreck saved 2120 lives, The Ger.
man Association For the Rescue of
Lite From Shipwreck, the Royal Na-
tion Lifeboat {nstitution and our
United States life saving service
have done a work beyond the power of
statistics to commemorate, What rocket
lines and sling Ife buoys aod tally boards
and mortars and hammooks and cork mat.
trossos aud Hie saving stations filled with
maehinary for saving the bodies of the
drowain But let me hore and now make
it plain that there has beén no new way in.
vented for the moral nnd eternal rescue of
a st ling soul, Five hundred attempts
at such contrivance have been made, but
all of them dead Ialiures, Hear it!
pL, bb DOS nies whareby we — be
saved” than the nama of Jasas.
3
The World's Coldest Place.
Verchoinusk it
coldest
is considered
world
smal ollection of native
'
fa, In
planted near
The streg i
river. +r call
el. extends on either si IrTOW
armed
Yann.
frozen
‘ i
or driving place for sleds,
sheet of water, a kind o wi |
the
forms a
by the autumn overfiow of
and which winter
promenade
It iz a dreary place enough
mer lasts only four month, and during
t eight of the year it iz bitterly
in
The sum.
he other
cold; the
dicates 86 degrees below zero and
legrees until April
Sd
LE =
thermometer sometimes
dom goes above HO
adnh,
orn
grow in this desolate
will not
Barley and been
fo
there
Onis nye
ie
Of vegeinbiles,
:
the
frosts
the turnip,
perhaps, an occasional and very
the early
are only radish and
Cabbages
rarely
precarious crop of potatoes
all run to leaf. The
ground
Most of the dwellings are ra-
with mud to keep out the cold,
The Common Brick.
The earliest bricks were rudely shap-
ed, evidently made without a mould,
and had their upper faces arched, each
brick being marked by way of stamp
with the impress of the maker's thumb.
These, which were found In some
quantity in the very lowest strata ex.
cavated at Telloh and Nippur, are
considerably more than eight the usand
years old. Next to these came the
bricks made for the city of Sirpula,
bearing the ancient cognizance of that
city, an eagle with a lion's head. And
#0 we go through the stamped and dat.
ed bricks of Kings like Eanuadu, who
reigned In Babylonia some four thou.
sand years before our era, to the bean
tifully painted and glazed ones found
by Lavard on the site of ancient Baby-
lon,
(ih one respect, says Nature, the Mad.
ras University is ahead of English uni.
versitios, since it requires students of
history to possess some knowledge of
ethnology and comparative philology,
which Is not the case in the British
universities.
Seventy five per cent. of the popula.
tion of Manitou, Col, are lnvalids and
exiles from thelr homes, Nearly every
Btate and Territory and civilized coun-
try In the world is represented,
Five ex-mayors of Boston are living,
Green, Martin, Ilart, Matthews and
Curtin,
AN EMPEROR'S ROMANCE.
In the study of Kaiser Franz Josef
of Austria, who, by the way, entered
his T0th year recently, hangs a framed
but withered bunch of flowers, to which
a romantic little story is attached, A
few weeks before the announcement of
Lis engagement Kaiser Franz Josef
and his flancee were walking between
lschl and Lauffen, when she saw a
meadow bright with gayly colored wild
flowers. "Wait, 1 will pick you a
posy,” she exclaimed, and a few min-
utes afterward handed her betrothed a
little bouquet,
The future Empress Elizabeth took
the black velvet riband which bound
her magnificent hair and tied it round
the flowers, offering them with a play-
ful courtesy to the kalser, who kissed
them before placing them in the outer
pocket of his military tunic. Budden-
ly as they neared lschl, the kaiser dia-
covered that thes precious posy was
gone,
A Deadly lasult.
To salute with the left hand is a
deadly insult to Mohammedans in the
East.
Why Do You Nerateh?
When youn can cure yourself for fifty
cents? All skin diseases, such as tetter,
salt rheum, ringworm, eczems, ete.,
cau be surely cured by an ointment
called Tetterine. Any number of tes-
timonials shown for the asking. Noth.
ing else is as good, Unless your drug-
gist has it, send 50c. in stamps to the
manufacturer, J. T. SBhuptrine, Ba-
vannab, Ga., for a box postpaid.
como
Not Qualified to Judge.
Benedict--] have about decided to ge
to Mexico for the summer. Bachelor
Why, that's the hottest place on t
face of the earth. Benedict—Excuse
me; but you're not married -—Rich-
wend Disnateh
he
She Knew What That Meant,
Little Helen—Boo-hoo! | don’t want
to that nasty, bitter stuff. Her
Mamma-—But how do you know it's
nasty and bitter? You haven't tasted
Little Helen—You said It would be
me. —8Biray Stories,
take
i
good for
Save the Nickels,
From Ask
invesiing
EAVIDR, COmesE DAYILE. your
grocer b ean save 15c by
be. He
ons
Ww you
ust ho i Can get
an teil You
inrge 10c package
starch, one large 10¢ package
gor's Best” starch, witu the
beautiful Sunkespeare
twelve beautiful ¢ Je
tiry Gir: Calendar, all f
or for this starch ar
tiful Christmas presents {1oe,
of fw
NE C8 Ps
eax ing «
For
#0 AIOE
the week 1
$i
ding
foremen, salesmen
: BYern
of the empl f tia
week This was
It was the oust
16 earned
iways tell the story of prosperity
ntmber of weeks employed each
the determining factor in the wage earners’
prosperity The Doty ase factory has been
closed bul one week this year, and that for
the usual summer stock taking and it will be
med] bat three days the latter part of De.
ecmber. This would make but nine days out
cioeed, which
of the year that the factory is
is atively ax steady work as the most industri.
ous shoemaker could desire
Owing to increased business, another addi.
tion i= $0 be made to
will be 10D fot |
iy 1
ows the
er
Iw
however,
FORT in
ies high, It i
arly in December
the capacity 25 per cent.
Shoe Company h as the larsest factory in the
world, producing an advertised line $i Ww and
$3 00 shoes,
Mr ines says that the
eanful business for Brockton
Was never so good as now, and th
are Detter than for years
1 hens $
Pros tw t
nutactarers
tions
{for age.
at colle
oi a mine near Butte, Mont, live hundreds
if cats that bave never seen the light of day.
Mow's This
We offer One Hand red Dollars Reward for
Any case of Catarrh that cannot i
Hall's Chatarrh Cure hy: Ye sural by
, Fd. CREXEY & Co. Props. Toleda, 0.
We, the undersigned, have k Down ¥ J. Chee
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per.
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out auy obliga
tion made by their firm,
Wet & TUax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Kisnax &
Ohilo,
/ Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. hal
Warniwa,
Hall's Catarrh Cure ie taken internal
ing directly upon the blood and A hag.
faces of the system. Price, 5c. per bottle,
Eoid by all Drugeists. Testimonials free,
Hall's Family Pilis are the best.
EASY CORRESPONDENCE
Bow a Clever New Orleans
Manage It.
One of the houses on my route is
the home of a traveling man who
spends about half his time out of
town, eald a New Orleans letter-car-
rier to a Times Democrat reporter,
When he goes on a trip he and his wife
exchange a postal card every day, reg-
ular as the clock. The lady always
gives me her cards to mail, and 1
couldn't help noticing that both they
and the ones she received were always
perfectly blank. All they ever con-
tained was the address, and those that
came to the wife had even that printed
instead of written, I confess the thing
made me carious, and 1 thought up all
kinda of theories—aympathetic fk, se.
cret marks on the edges and a lot of
other nonsense for which I never dis-
covered any evidente, 1 happened to
know the drummer pretty well, and,
meeting him one day, I couldn't resist
asking him about the blank cards. “So
you've been trying to read ‘em, have
you?" he sald, laughing. 1 expected
that, and took It good-naturedly, Then
he explained. “My wife and 1 are nat-
trally poor letter writers,” he sald,
“but we want to hear from each other
every day, so as to know that nothing
Couple
3
i
\
LTH RH
TT
1
LIL
-
HHH]
Do not wash your
laundry soap,
:
Soaps are good
i
takes the dirt with
left soft and smooth.
aR
“WN
k other brands for
: are for
}
i
3 +1
having them whan ras 3
SAVIN LIC Whiehh vou |
Winchester Shell:
RS RR RRS
NEWSPAPERS
Have Done More to Buppress
Than Any Other Agency.
that won't print any reports of crime.’
immoral
and if
is and
he was
harmfal
my
to
in line of
his mind The old-time professional
crooks who went in for big game have
ceased almost entirely to operate, and
is
it
Ereat bank robbery, a burglary on a
large scale or a confidence game Iin-
volving more than a few hundred dol-
lars In my opinion this Is due en-
tirely to the newspapers. When a big
crime is committed it gets wide pud-
licity, descriptions of suspects are cir
culated all over the country and the
public generally is put on the alert
This greatly Increases the chances of
catching the criminals, and has made
such jobs #0 dangerous that zs I sald
before they have been practically aban
donned. The newspapers have undoubt-
edly broken up 'bunko’ and other dan.
gerous confidence games that used to
year. They did it by exposing them
#0 thoroughly that at last it became
next to Impossible 0 find a ‘sucker
who wasn't posted in the scheme from
top to bottom. Not jong ago I was
talking to a chap who used to be in
the green geods business in New Jer.
sey. He cursed the newspapers very
bitterly and declared they had taken
the bread out of his mouth, to say
nothing of the Perfecto cigars and two
bit whisky he formerly put into it. |
am absolutely certain that that gentle
man would cordially indorse the new
Journal without any criminal items. |
gathered from what he sald that he
regarded such news as highly damag
ing to commercial interests.”
Ayer’s Pills arc liver pills.
cure constipation, biliousness,
dyspepsia. _ 28e.
4 As
ANTED LADIES to nx married
Ww 1 hequired ae COT Went NX 3
ti
tural oil of
a
&
ete tete
£8)
$y al
all dealers.
het
fight Housekeeping.
“You advertised for a girl for light
’
i
§
i
i
:
1
“Well, this is the lightest houses
the vicinity. It may be bigger
some of the others, but it's a
while they're all
in
than
frame
slontie or
brick.”
Man
whoever
~Behiller
imitative creature
isads the
is an
is faremost
-,od
herd
We can save yom
money, DOmatier whe
you live, We would not
be spending nearly »
million dollars a year if
we could not land goOan
at your station cheaper
than rou oan buy then
for elsewhere. You will
never know how much
You can save uotil you
#0¢ our free Books
: Our 304 page Cata-
ogue Of evervibing Ww
Oak China Closet, $70.05 LRT" USE and WEAR.
tells you about every
thing you buy, quotes
wholesale prices 10 cob-
Supers on over 100K0
different articles, and
has over 10.00 difcrent
Hlgstrations
Duar Lithegraphed
Catalogue shows Car
ta, ngs, Art
Corsets, 30¢ to $3.00 J ps +. Portieres
and Lace Cortaine in
their real rolors,
so by looking at these
rolored plates you ean
tell exactly how these
goods will look on
your floor or at your
window. Carpeissew.
od free, lining farnish.
ed * an freight
prepaid.
. Our Made-to-Order
« lothing Catalogoe with samples of cloth
tlached, offers snits and overcoats from
5.93 to $20.00. (Sent C. 0. D.) Expres.
we paid on clothing everywhere. We
dso issue a Special Catalogue of Planes,
Prgans, Sewing Machines and Bieyoles.
A postal oa will bring you any of our
“atalogues, one of which costs as 8c, If we
were not almost certain of your order, we would
aot be mailing free such expensive [Itersture,
Which Rook do you want? Address this way:
oIYHYS, HINES, 4 SON.
W. L. DOUCLAS
$3 & 3.50 SHOES Ligx
\
d 3
\ ~ VHB
Boggy Marners, $4.20