The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 16, 1899, Image 7

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    Like Finding Money.
The use of the ¥ndless Chain Starcn
Book in the purchase of “Red Cross’ and
“Hubloger's Best” starch, makes it just
like finding money. Why, for only 3¢ you
are enabled to get one large 10¢ package
of “Red Cross” starch, one large 10¢ pack.
age of “Hubinger’s Bust’ starch, with the
premiums, two Shakespeare panels, print.
ed in twelve beautiful colors, or one Twen:
tieth Century Girl Calendar, embossed in
gold, Ask vour grocer for this starch and
obtain the beautiful Christmas presents free
A temperance organization which should
lay down as its fundamenial law abstinence
from excessive eating would do away with
the greater part of the ordinary sickness
among persons who should live up to the
law,
(1d Case of Tetter in Toes.
“OpawrorpviLLE, Fra.: Tetterine
is worth more than its weight in gold
to me. One application cured me of
tetter in my toes of seven (7) years’
standing. John M. Towles.” It cures
all skin diseases, At druggists 50
cents a box, or by mail postpaid from
J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
Universal Reltef,
Professor—"Now, Mr. Doolittle, what
have you learned about your tople, the
diamond?” Mr, Doolittle—"That every
woman believes it harmonizes exactly
with her complexion.”
Weekly.
“The Best is
Cheapest.”
We learn this from experience in every
department of life. Good clothes are mos?
serviceable and wear the longest. Good
food gives the best nuimimenti. Good
medicine, Hoods Sarsapariila, is the best
and cheapest, because it cures, absolutely
CURES, when all others fai.
3 Sarsaparilla
- Jewelers’
Rind Friend.
Mudge—A man's life is own
Now, if 1 took a fancy to commit si
cide, what right would you have
prevent me? Yabsley—I
try.—Indlanapolis Journal,
Al
of al
in them, but
fellow.
his
1 that § Des in the great
countries is not what is
po o
te
national
Dr Bulls
COUCH SYRUP
Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough
Unexcelled for Consumptives., Gives
wk, sure resulis, Refuse substitutes,
q ‘
Dr. Bails Pillsewre Biliovsness. Trial, 20 for sec.
BE@s@wa sm ees visisissis es Wane
“JyINHEsTeR= |
OO
@
BEE
LAO CICK
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO,
176 Winchester Avenue. New Maven, Conn
a |
The Law of Compensation.
From the Argonaut: Richard Cum
berland, playwright,
Jealous
Sheridan. It is related
his children to see one of
formances of “The School for Scan
Fila i I
th
5
aa
¢ hia i
OF ai
Ri
ue
farm §
Fivas,
that
oun
young
took
dal,”
and when they screamed I
their irritable
saying: “What
You should not laugh,
is nothing to laugh
undertone: “Keep
dunces.” When this
Sheridan, he sald:
in Cumberland be displeased with
his children for laughing at my come-
dy. for when | went to gee his tragedy
I laughed from beginning to end.”
father pinc
are you
augh
rey
1
at.”
still,
was
angels;
adding
you
reported
there
in
to
Two may talk and one may hear, but
three cannot take part in a conversa-
tion of the fost sincere and searching
sort.—Emerson,
Mrs. Pinkham’s Medicine Made
a New Woman of Mrs. Kuhn.
[tarrex To Mus PiwEmAM WO. Sa.q2)
“DEAR Mes. Pisguas—I think it is
my duty to write to you expressing
my sincere gratitude for the wonder
ful relief I have experienced by the use
of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com.
pound. I tried different doctors, also
different kinds of medicine. I would
as bad as ever,
‘* For eight years I wasa great suf-
ferer. I had falling of the womb and
periods I could not work but a little
before I would have to liedown. Your
medicine has mads a new woman of me.
I can now work all day and not get
tired. I thenk you for what you have
done for me. I shall always praise
your medicine to all suffering women.”
~Mzns. E. E. Kvay, Germano, Omio,
—
*1 have taken eight bottles of Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
and used two packages of your Sana-
tive Wash, also some of the Liver Pills,
and I can say that your remedies will
do all that you elaim for them, Before
taking your remedies I was very bad
with womb trouble, was nervous, had
_ ho ambition, could not sleep, and my
food seemed to do me no good. Now |
am well, and your medicine has cured
me. Iwill gladly recommend your med-
: to every one wherever I go,"
Mgrs, M. L. Suzans, Gux Mansi, Mic.
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE.
Subject: Our Father's House — God's
Homestead, Ballded on the Hills of
Heaven, Provides Rooms For Alle
Vivid Pleture of the Celestinl Home,
{Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1888.1
Wasmixaron, D, C.—In a unique way the
lisavenly world is discoursed upon by Dr,
a home; text, John xiv, 2, “Iu My Father's
houses are many rooms."
Hero is u bottle of medicine that is a
cure all, The disciples were sad, and
Christ offered heaven as an alterative, a
stimulant and a touiec, He shows them
that their sorrows are only a dark baok-
ground of a bright pleture of ecomiug
felicity. He lets them know that, though
now they live on the lowlands, they shall
yet have a house on the uplands, Nearly
all the Bible descriptions of heaven may be
figurative, I am not
heaven there {8 a literal crown or harp or
pearly gate or throne or chariot, They
may be only used to illustrate the glories
of the place, but how well they 49 it! The
favorite symbol by which the Jible pre-
sents celestial happiness is a house, Paul,
who never owned a house, although he
hired one for two years in Italy, speaks of
heaven as a “houses not made with hands,”
aud Christ in our text, the translation of
which is a little changed, <0 as to give the
more accurate meaning, says: “In My
Father's house are many rooms.”
This divinely aathorized eomparisou of
heaven to a great homestead ol large ac-
commodations I propose co earry out, In
some healthy neighborhood a man
a very commodious habliation, He
have room for all his children,
come to be called after the different mem-
bers of the family, That {s mother's room
that is George's room, that is Heorv's ro
that Is Flora's room, that Is Mary's room,
and the house is all occupled. Bat time
goes by, aud the sons go out into
world and build their own homes, and
daughters are married or
enough singly to
work in the world, After a while
father and mother are almost alune in
big house, and, by the evening
the
+
the
sonted
larger now than when we started together
forty years ago.” Dut time goes
further by, and some of the children
unfortunate and return to the old li
stead to live, and the grandohildren come
with them and perbaps great-grandelii-
dren, aod agaia the house is fall,
Millennia ago God built on the hill
heaven a great homestead for a fam
numerable, yet At first He lived aioue
in that gre use, but alter
was occu ple ¥ A very large family,
uble, seraphic, angelic. The elernities
passed on, and of the Inhabitants
beonme way
and many of th were vacant,
I refer to augels, Ni
apartments are ig up again. Thereare
arrivals at the old homestead of
children every day, and the day will
when there will be Do unoe
all the house,
As vor
thers eternal
still
are
8 of
ifi-
ther.
tmenis
yw these
me
residence, I th
wouid like to got some more parti
about the ny roomed homestead,
oy Father's house are many rooms,"
see, the piace i= to be apportioned
Wo shall love all w
agal
off iuto
Apartments, JO Are in
heaven, |
ple whom we would not
in the same r¢ They may be better
than we are, but they are of a divergent
temperament. We would like to meet with
them on the golden strests aod worship
with them in the temple und walk with
them on the river basks, but I am glad t«
say that we shall live io different apart.
ments. "In my Father's house are many
rooms.” You see, heaven will bea so large
want
or bersell it can be afforded,
An ingenious statistician, taking the
statement made in Revelation, twenty-first
chapter, that the beuvenly Jerusalem was
measured and found to be 12,000 furlongs
and that the length and height and breadth
of it are equal, says that would make
heaven lu size M48 sextillion 93% quintillion
cubic feet, and then, reserving a certain
portion for the court of heaven and the
streets and estimating that the world may
out that there are over 5.000.000 000 000
teen feet wide, fifteen
no faith in the
tion.
ail I can read the rooms will
and those who bave not
But 1 have
fect high
accuracy of that caleuia.
the last,
out as only seventeen feet by sixteen, it
Jeriin, Bt. James or Winter palace, “la
my Father's house ure many rooms."
Carrying out sul] further the symbolism
selves,
welcome of heaven,
where the departed spirit
celestial.
must have witnessed since the first guest
pious Abell In that room Christ lovingly
greets all newcomers, He redeemed them,
and He has the right to the first embrace on
arrival. What a minute when the ascended
apirit first soes the Lord! Detter than ali
wo ever read about Him or talked about
Him or sang about Him in all the churches
and through all our earthly lifetime will
it be, just for one second to see Him.
The most rapturous idea we aver had of
Him on sacramental days or at the height
of some great revival or under the uplifted
baton of an oratorio is a bankruptey of
thought compared with the first Sash of
His appearance in that reception room. At
that moment when you confront each
other, Christ looking upon you and you
looking upon Christ, there will be an wo.
statie thrill and surging of emotion that
beggar all description. Look! They need
no iatrodustion. Long ago Christ chose
that repentant sinner, and that repentant
sinner chose Christ, Mightiest moment of
history—the first kiss of
heaven! Jesus aud the soul! Thesouland
Jesus!
But now into that reception room pour
the glorified kiosfolk, enough of earthly
retention to let you know them, but with-
out thelr wounds or their sloknesses or
thelr troubles. Hes what heaven bas done
for them-so radiant, so glealul, so
transportingly lovely! They call you by
name, They greet you with an ardor pro.
portioned to the nnguish of your parting
and the length of your separation,
Fatherl Mother! There Is your ohild,
Bisters! Brothers! Friends! wish you
joy. For years apart, together again in
the reception room of the old homestead,
You mee, they will know you are coming,
There are so many immortals filling all the
spaces between hers und heaven that news
Hike that flies like lightning, They will be
there In an (nstant. Though they were in
some other world on errand from God, a
signal would thrown that would
futeh them, Though vou might at first
dazed and overawed at their super.
nal splendor, all that ftesling will be
gms at thelr first toueh of heavenly
salutation, and we will say: “Oh, my lost
boy” “Oh, my lost eompanion!” Ob,
nl lon friend! Are we here together!’
nt scenes In that resantion room of the
aM, Bomastesd have heh ausiaeds There
oseph and Jaoob, it a brighter
room than anythi saw in Pharaoh's
arus after the heartbreak of Bethany;
Timothy und grandmother Lole; Isabolia
Grabam and her sailor son; Alfred and
George Cookman, the mystery of the sen
at last made munifest; Luther and Magda.
lane, the daughter he bemoaned; John
Boward and the prisoners whom he gos.
pelized, and multitudes without number
who, once 50 weary and so sad, parted on
earth, but gloriously met in heaven, Among
ull the rooms of that houso there is no one
that more enraptures my soul than that
reception room. “In my Father's house
are many rooms,"
Another room in our Father's house ja
the throne room. Wa belong to the royal
family, The blood of King Jesus flows in
our velns, 20 we have un right to enter the
throne room, It is no sany thing on earth
to gat through even ths outside door of a
king's residence, During the Franco-Ger-
man war, one eventide In the summer of
1870, 1 stood studying the exquisite seulp-
turing of the gate of the Tulleries, Paris,
Lost in admiration of the wonderful art of
that gate, I knew not that [ was exelting
suspicion. Lowering my eves to the crowds
of people, I found myself being closely in-
spected by the government officials, who
from my complexion, judged motobea Gere
I might be examining the gates of the pals
ace, My explanation in very poor French
did not satisfy them, and they followed me
long distances until I reached my hotel
and were not satisfied until from my land.
lord they found that 1 was only an inoffens
sive American, The gates of varthly pals
aces ars carefully guarded, and {f so, how
much more the throneroom! A dazzling
No one who ever saw the throneroom of
the first and only Napoleon will ever for-
get the letter N embroidered in purple and
gold on the upholstery of chair snd win.
dow, the letter N glided on the wall, the
letter N chased cn the chnlleeas, the letter
N flaming from the ceiling. What a cons
fiugration of brilliance the thronsroom
Charles Immanael of Sardisis, of
Ferdinand of Spain, of Elisabeth of
ogiand, of Boniface of Italy, jut
throneroom of our Father's house
sry eclipsing all the throne.
rerown
glitter or foreign embassador bow, for our
Father's throne I8 a throne of grace, a
throne of mercy, a throne of holiness, &
throne of justice, a thrones of universal
We need pot stand shivering
and cowsring before it, for our Father says
we may vet une day come up and sit on it
"Him. “To him that overcometh
*
bath an gl
beside
You sew, we nre princes and princesses,
Perhaps now we move about {ncognito, as
Peter the Great in the garb of a ship oar
penter at Amsterdam or as Queen Tirzah
the prophet for her ohild’s but it
curs,
the thronerod
ntil We
aud spiritaal uplifting
this moment ar the thr ith, 0
King forever! We tofich the scepter
and prostrate ourselves at Thy feel,
Another room in our Father's house is
the musie room, St. John and other Bible
writers talk so much abo the music of
heaven that musio
perhaps not such as on earth was thrume
ned from trembling string
of ivory key; bat, il ant then
bing better, 1 nee WARY
) harpists and Christian composers
rganists and Christian hym.
have g up from earth,
there must be for them some place of
Hhall we have
fiscoris and muse iz
when we get into
wo neod not wait
ym
Aye,
then. may by
ner
v
live
there must there,
or
yr al &0
bLrist
are
ae
in this world of
the land of somy
no
: ste harmony?
In that music room of our Father's house
you will some day meet the old masters,
Mozart and Handel! and Mendelssohn and
Beethoven and Doddridge, whose sacred
poetry was as remarkable as his sacred
prose, and James Montgomary and William
ancholy, and Bishop Heber, who sang of
fey moustaios and India's
coral strand,” and Dr. Baffles, who wrote
of “High in yonder realms of light.” asd
Isane Watts, who went to visit Sir Thomas
Abney and wife for a week, but proved
himsel! $0 agreeable a guest that they
stay thirty.six years, and side
by side Augustas Toplady, who bas got
over his dislike for Methodists, and
Charlies Wesley, freed from his dislike for
Calvinists, and Oesorge W, na
sweet as A songmaker as he was great
as a preacher aud the author “The
Village Hymas,” ane wrote
Seas
ethane,
of
many who
in verse or song, in churel or by evantide
eradie, and many who were passionately
fond of music, but conld make sone them-
selves, the poorest plunger there mors than
any earihiy prima donna and the poorest
playersthers more than any earthly Gott.
sehalk. Ob, that music room, the head.
quarters of cadence and rhythm, sym.
phony and ehant, psalm and antiphon!
May we be there some hour when Haydn
#ils at the keys of one of his own oratornios,
aud Miriam of the Red sea banks claps the
lees duet in the musie room of the oid
beavenly homestead! “Io my Father's
house are many rooms.”
Another room in our Father's house will
be the family room. It may correspond
somewhat with the family room on earth,
At morning and evening, you know, that
is the place we now meet, Though every
member of the household have a separate
room, in the family room they all gather,
and joys and sorrows and experiences of
all styles are there rehearsed. Sacred room
in all our dwellings, whether It be luxari-
ous with ottomans and divans and books
or there be only a few plain chairs and a
eradie., Bo the family room on high will
be the place where the kinsfolk assem-
bie and talk over the family experi-
snees of earth, the weddings, the
births, the burials, the festal days of
Christmas and Thanksgiving reunion.
Will the children departed remain chile
dren there? Will the aged remain aged
there? Ob, no! Everything is per.
fact there. The child will go ahead to glori-
fied maturity, and the aged will go back
to glorified maturity. The rising sun of
the one will rise to meridian, and the
descending sun of the other will return to
meridian, However much we love our
ehildren on earth, we would consider it a
domestic disaster if thev siaid children,
and so we rejoices at their growth here,
And when we mest in the family room of
our Father's house we will be glad that
they have grandly and gloriously matured,
while our parents, who were aged and in.
firm here, wa shall be giad to find re.
stored to the most agile and vigorous im-
mortality there,
I hops none of us will be disappointed
about getting there, There isa room for
us if we will go and take it, but in order
to reach it it Is absolutely necessary that
we take the right way, and Christ {2 the
way, and we must enter at the right door,
and Christ is the door, and we must start
in time, aud the only hour you are sure of
is the bour the clock now strikes, and the
only second the one your watch Is now
ticking. I hold In my hand a roll of
letters Inviting you all to make that
your home forever. Tue New Testa.
ment Is only a roll of letters foviting
you, as the spirit of them practioniie
says: “My dying yet imm ohlld in
earthly neighborhood, I have bullt for you
n great dence, Itis full of roexms I
have furnished them as no was aver
Juraiibed. Pearl are nothing ui ioside
aren ehrysoprasus is nothing, ila.
mined panels of sunrise and sunset nothe
ing, the aurora of the northern heavens
nothi compared with the splendor with
which I bave garnitured them. But you
must ba clean before you can enter there,
and #8 I have opeurd a fountain where you
your sins away, Come
How to Get Through the Winter Withe
out nn Cold.
“This iden that many people have,
that winter is an unhealthy season, is
all wrong, Winter is just as healthful
as summer, if people will take care of
themselves, If you want to go through
the winter without a cold, observe these
few simple rules;
“Dont overheat your and
don't stop all ventilation. Sleep in a
cool room, but keep warmly covered,
Always take off your outdoor wraps
when you come in the house, and al
ways put them on when yon go out.
And, lastly, just as long us there |
snow on the ground, don't go with
out your rubbers. This last rule is
the most important of all, for two colds
hanse,
Independent,
Bessonlug Timber by ¥
The seasoning of timber by means of
electricity has passed from the .experi-
mental stage to one of assured success,
The stick to be treated is immersed in
a solution containing 10 per cent of
borax, § per cent of rosin and three.
fourths of 1 per cent carbonate of soda,
the borax being used on account of its
antiseptic properties and the sodium
carbonate to assist in dissolving the
resin. A porous tray, the bottom
which is lined with two sheets of can-
vas, with a sheet felt between, is
placed over the log, and above this is
placed a sheet of lead connected with
the negative pole of the dynamo. The
positive pole of the dynamo Is connect.
lead grating, upon which the
treated stands. The current
and the treatment
irs. By
driven out and
The
being thus carried ou
accomplished; the
of
of
ed with a
OF to be
is then turned on
continued six to
simple means the aap is
taken
various details
the
Fd
eight hot this
its place by the solution.
process is
withdrawn
requires,
is now and seasoned
drying, which under favora-
i umsetances, a period of several
Wi
pe eine
§
EKE,
Save the Nickels,
From saving, comes having.
w yo
He ean tell you just bow
10¢ {
package ol
inrge 100
rocer hie
i can save 156 by
one
args
starah
1, On
packages
starch, with remium
ger's Dest the |
beautiful Shakespeare
twelve beautils
Cant
gros
beau
redght rates In England
fzher th t United
xed t i Parliame«
inborate tal
% §
ogether with the
fare
3] i Hates
ot and set
es of classification
lines over
Erare or Ome, Cry or ToLepo, }
Lrcas Couvxry, a”
senior partner of the firm of ¥, J
Styl To
Cursey &
y edo, County
nd State aforesaid and that said firm will pay
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each
and every case of CATAREN thal cannot be
cured by the use of Hart's Carannn Crue,
Fraxg J Cugssy.
mfore me and subscribed in my
presence, this 85 day of December,
< SEAL A.D. 18, A.W, Gimasox
fo } Notary Public,
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken ernally. and
acts directly on the blood and muootis surfaces
of the system. Nend for testimonials, free.
F.J.Caexey & Co, Toledo, O,
Bold by Druggista,
Hall's Family Pills
Sworn to
{ mt §
are the best,
California's dried fruit cron this year is
worth approximately $15,000,000,
We refand 10¢ for every package of Por.
¥am Favriess Dye that falls to give sstis
famtion, Monros Drug Co, Usionville, Mo,
i by all druggists
The Burlington Raliroad is talking
nductiog a special chicken train once
month
Ne Cure, No Pay,
Is the way Findley's Eye
Chronie and granvisted |
Fo common Te
ster back fe the asking
druggists, by mall, Je.
Havren, Decatur, Texas,
STORYETTES.
eres
or
In Justin McCarthy's “Reminis.
cences’” there is a story about Thomas
Cariyle and his friend Allingham, the
poet and essayist, one of the gentlest
of men. One thing that would never
have occurred to any of his friends as
possible was the chance of his takin
on himself to dispute with Carlyle
But once when Caririe was denouncing
an English statesman he gently urged
that something might be said on the
other sid “Eh, William Allingham.”
Carlyle broke forth, "you're just abou
the most disputations man I ever mei.
Eh, man, when you're in one of your
humors you'd just dispute about any-
thing.”
Mrs. Sallle Marshall Hardy, who iz
a descendant of Chisf Justice Marshall,
visited the Bupreme court chambers in
Washington recently and was intro-
duced to Justice Harlan by a function
ary of the court. She was then seated
under the bust of her distinguished an-
cestor, and Justice Harlan whispered
to Chief Justice Fuller: “That little
woman there under Marshall's bust is
his great-granddaughter.” The chief
Justice looked toward the little woman
and then said: “Tell her | am afraid
the bust may fall on her” “I'm not
afraid,” returned Mrs. Hardy; “noth-
ing on earth could please me so much
as to have my great-grandfather's head
fall on my shoulders.”
When Sir John Steel, the noted Eng
lish sculptor, had the duke of Welling
ton sitting for a statue he wanted to
get him to look warlike. All his efforts
were In vain, however, for Wellington
seemed, judging by his face, never to
have heard of Waterloo or Talavera.
At last Bir John lost patience. “As
I am going to make this statue of your
grace,” he exclaimed, “can you not tell
TT] A
. —
p——
—
C ”
A WORD ¢
as the lvory
the genuine
MUSICALCLUEBSINSEMALLTOWN
Branches of Work It Is Advisable for
Them to Take Up.
is one principl
ndoor practice
i
work that the vocal
town must
and it is best to
¢
tand from the outset,
voted assuimte a hig
and establish an
society,” rather than a "chor
wal club.” For this purpose
a well-baianced group of thirty or forty
volees is sufficient if it
members who can really sing
{ unexpected
oratorio
us" or "che
#
is composed
Asmall
chorus « Yolume
inrge music
soe in Bost
phia and Chicago
vd 3 give advice
the selection of
members of ciubs,
silectively, 40 not know
best for thelr purpose
are
Resint.
where
and
and
music
individu
just what
eee vel,
Ore fat.
Which
his way
.
FOW,
*11
¥
165ry thas 3 wl ore
¥ want
JULIUS HINES &
LTINORE, MD. Dept.
ARTERS ENK
Make: writing a fore.
The Ward Won Him.
Sprockett — Wheeler
stuck on that new doctor of his
cha Yes he likes his up-to-dateness
When Wheeler was sick in bed the firs!
thing the doctor sald was “0! we'll
bave you on pedals again in a few
days." ~Catholie Btandard and imes
An Inwult to the Dog. : Ww. La DOUCLAS
Mr, Newlywed $3 & 3.50 SHOES union
MADE.
n y a :
me a brite and Worth $4 to $6 compared, ~~
Newlywed You :
with other makes.
present !—Pack.
goems to be
Ekor
Why don’t you cal
done with it° Mrs
forget that Fido is
Iundoreed by over
1 000,000 wearers
The genuine have W_ |
Dhemplias and price
stamped of bottom. | ake
ste claimed to be
Your dealer
should keep them
not, we will send a pair
on receipt of price. State v
kind of ewther. sige, and width, plain or
ap toe. Catalogue C free
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass,
ARNOLD'S COUGH
Cares Conghs and Calds K | L L FE R
| Prevents Consumption,
All Druguists. 280.
name
BN Uw
is
DROPS NEW DISCOVERY; gives
best quick re def and cures worst
vos. Bow of ast amon ins snd 10 days’ brestimens
Free. Dr. BM. GREEN'S BONA, Box B Atlante. Ga,
sick headache. 25¢. ruggists.
incustache or beard a brautitul
BUGKINGHANS DYE Gre.
, B®
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
+ GIVEN * AWAY. -
The first five persons procuring the Eadless Chain starch Book trom: their
10c package of “Hubinger's Best” Starch, two Bhakespears panels, printed tn
twelve beautiful solors, as natural as life, or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar. the
finest of its kind ever printed, all absolutely free. Al othuse procuring the Endices
Cunin Starch Book, will obtain from their grocer the above goods for So. “led
CUross'’ Laundry Starch is something antirely new, and is without doubt the groat-
est Invention of the Twentieth Century, It has no equal, and surpasses ail othors, It
bias won for itseit praise from all parte of the Unived States, It bas superseded every:
thing heretofore used or known to science in the lnundry art, It is made from wheat,
ries and corn, and chemically prepared upon seluntifio principles by 3. ©. HM +hinger,
Keokuk, town, 80 export in the laundry p.ofession, who has had twenty-five yours"
practioal experienc in taney lanaderiog, and who was the first sucessful and original
laveator of uli fine grades of starch lu the United States. Ask yuu: grocers tor this