The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 30, 1902, Image 7

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    His Father Was a Juror.
Secretary of the Treasury Shaw tells
this story of a personal experience while
trying a case in an lowa court. A boy
about fourteen years old had been put
on the stand and the opposing counsel
was examining him. After the usual pre-
liminary questions as to the witness’
age, residence and the like, he then pro-
ceeded :
“Have you any occupation?”
*No.”
“Don’t you do any work of any kind?”
No."
“Just loaf around home?"
“That's about all”
“What does your father do?”
“Nothin’ much.” :
“Doesn't he do anything to
the family ?” ;
“He does odd jobs once in a while
when he can get them.”
“As a matter of fact, isn’t your father
a pretty worthless fellow, a dead beat
and a loafer?”
“I don’t know, sir; you'd better ask
him. He's sitting over there on the
jury.”
support
Arbitration.
She had read a good deal, and prided
herself on being pretty well up on the af-
fairs of the day.
“All disputes,” she said, * should be
settled by arbitration.”
“Quite right,” he replied. “Now, we
had a little dispute this morning as te
certain household—" ‘
“There is nothing to arbitrate in that,
she interposed hastily. “I am right, of
course.” Then after a moment she add-
ed: “But it seems so foolish to have war
and strikes when it's so easy to ar-
bitrate.”
The Heat of Australia.
Australia is the hottest country on
record. I have ridden for miles astride
the equator, but I have never found heat
to compare with this. Out in the coun-
try in the dry times there appears to be
little more than a sheet of brown paper
between you and the lower regions, and
the people facetiously say that they have
to feed their hens on cracked ice to keep
them from laying boiled eggs.
snp —
““1 have made a most thorough
trial of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral and
am prepared to say that for all dis-
eases of the lungs it never disap-
points.”
J. Early Finley, Ironton, O.
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
won't cure rheumatism;
we never said it would.
It won’t cure dyspepsia;
we never claimed it. But
it will cure coughs and
colds of all kinds. We
first said this sixty years
ago; we've been saying it
ever since.
Three sizes: 25c., 50c., $1. All druggists.
Cousult your doctor. If he says take it,
then do 28 he says, If he tells you not
to take it, then don't take it. He knows.
Leave it with him. We are willing.
J.C. AYER CO. Lowsll, Mass.
Boardiess Barley
is prodigaily Hae, Je
fag ia 1801 Me. oils,
Orleans Ou, Sow York, 19
bushels par sore. Dens weld
everywhere. That pays.
20th Century Oats.
The sat marvel, producing
from 200 to 390 bus. por sere.
Salxer's Usts we wae
acted to rod nee gem
yields, The U. 8 Ag Dept
oails them the very Bess!
That pays.
]
Three Eared Corn. |
300 to 130 bus. par acre, is
exiremsly profitaiie si pres
ont prices of corn. Salser's
sends prodone everywhere,
Marve! Wheat
rielded in 30 Hates inst your
over 40 bus. per ase, We ales
Bare the griobrated M -
rontW heat, viich risided
Ou our farms 63 bus. per sere,
That pays.
Speitz,
Oreatost sereni food on
oarth-80 bas. grade and 4
tone ifesnt hay per
were. That pays.
Victoria Rape
makes it posaibie we grew
Boge, sheep und satile a1 a
cert of bation ib. Marvel
ounaly Josie does well
everywhere. That pars.
Bromus Inermis.
Mont wonder grass of
he centary. Produces § lone
of hay snd lets aod lots of
per sere.
ws wherever soll a
he wend fe
Atfuitn, Speica, ste. (Pally worth
[ a] ad Ser with
Sur great puisiog. far the
A ———————
SALZER'S MAGIC CRUSHED SHELLS.
Best sarth, Sell 1.58 bag:
wr for 800 Tou. § for 1,000 ba. ,
IBY) [EU Wh EE LEY
LAR
BROADWAY AND 63d ST., N. Y, CITY,
ABSOLUTELY J MODERATE
FIREPROOF. RATES,
Grand Central Ststion take cars marked
DE 1 a , Seven nantes 35 Fugire.
On erossing any of the ferries, take the 9th A
Elovated Nallway to teth Bt, which it is one
tafnnte's walk to hotel.
t
The Hotel Rinpire 1estanrant is moderns rive
gel i of “ag pnd t Br.
Tentres, All cary
Bend to Empire Tor desort
Nor TR sas.
vallYsiriss Thompson's Eye Water
THE MILESTONES OF LIFE
Dr. Talmage Tells of the Duties and
Trials Which Belong te the
Different Decades.
Advice to the Twentles—The Waiting Age
~The Last Haven
Wasningron, D. C.—From an unusual
Jiandpoint Dr. Talmage in this discourse
ooks at the duties and trials which be-
long to the different decades of human
life; text, Psalms xc, 10, “The days of our
years are threescore years and ten.”
The seventieth milestone of life is here
lanted as at the end of the journey. A
ew beyond it. Multitudes never reach
it. e oldest person of modern times ex-
pired at 100 years. A Greek of the name
of Stravaride lived to 132 years. An Eng:
lishman of the name of Thomas Parr lived
182 years. Before the time of Moses peo-
ple lived 150 years, and if you go far
enough back they lived $00 years. Well,
that was necessary, because the story of
the world must come down by tradition,
and it needed long life safely to transmit
the news of the past. If the generations
bad been short lived the story would so
often have changed lips that it might have
got all astray. But after Moses began to
write it down and parchment told it from
century to century it was not necessary
that people live so long in order to au
thenticate the events the past. If in
our time people lived only twenty-five
years, that would not affect history, since
it ia put in print and is no longer depend-
ent on tradition. Whatever your age, |
will to-day directly address you, and I
shall speak to those who are in the twen-
ties, the thirties, the forties, the fifties,
the sixties, and to those who are in the
seventies and beyond.
First, then, I accost those of you who
are in the twenties. You aré full of ex-
pectation. You are ambitibus—that is,
if you amount to anything—for some kind
of success, commercial or mechanical or
professional or literary or agricultural or
social or moral. If I find some one in the
twenties without any sort of ambition, I
feel like saying, “My friend, you have got
on the wrong planet. This is not the
world for you. You are going to be in
the way. Have you made your choice of
poorhouses? You will never be able to
pay for your cradle. Who is going to set
tle for your board? There is a mistake
about the fact that you were born at all.”
But, supposing you have ambition, let
me say to all the twenties, expect every:
thing throu divine manipulation, and
then you will get all you want and some-
thing better. Are vou looking for wealth?
Well, remember that God controls the
money markets, the harvests, the droughts,
the caterpillars, the locusts, the sunshine,
the storm, the land, the sea, and you will
get wealth. Perhaps not that which is
stored up in the banks, in safe deposits,
in United States securities, in houses and
lands, but your clothing and board and
shelter, and that is about all you can ap
propriate anvhow. You cost the Lord a
great deal. To feed and clothe and shelter
the absolute necessities you get
mous amount of supply. Expect
an enor
as much
expect it from the Lord you are safe. De
0 badly
and all will be well
the crisis of life to have a man
means back you up. It is a great
to have a moneyed institution stand
hind you in your undertaking. But it
mightier thing to have the God of
and earth your coadjutor, and you
have Him. I am so glad that
while you are in the twenties
laying out your plans, and all
£1
of large
may
You
your
gig
fa
iit
years of your existence will be affected by
those plans. It is about 8 o'clock in
morning of your life, and you are just
starting out. Which
to start? Oh, the twenties!
“Twenty” is a great word in the Bible.
Joseph was sold for twenty pieces of sil
ver; Samson judged Israel twenty years;
Solomon gave Hiram twenty cities:
flying roll that Zechariah saw was twenty
cubits; when the sailors of the ship on
which Paul sailed sounded the Mediterra
nean Sea, it was twenty fathoms. What
mighty things have been done in the
twenties! Romulus founded Rome when
be was twenty; Keats finished life at
twenty-five. Lafayette waz a world re
nowned soldier at twenty-three; Oberlin
accomplished his work at twenty
seven: Bonaparte was victor over Italy at
twentysix; Pitt was prime minister of
England at twenty-two; Calvin bad com
pleted his immortal “Institutes” by the
time he whs twenty-six; Grotius was at
torney general at twenty-four Some of
the mightiest things for God and eternity
have teen done in the twenties. As long
as you can put the figure 2 before the
other figure that helps describe your age |
have high hopes about him. Look out for
that figure 2. Watch its continuance with
as much earnesiness as you ever watched
anything that promised you salvation or
threatened you demolition. What a eriti
cal time—the twenties.
While they continue you decide vour
occupation and the principles by which
you will be guided; vou make your most
abiding friendonite: you arrange your home
life; you fix your habits. Lord God Al
mighty, for Jesus Christ's sake, have
mercy on all the men and women in the
twenties!
Next I accost those in the thirties. You
are at an age when vou find what a tough
thing it is to get recognized and estab:
lithed in your occupation or profession.
Ten years ago you thought all that was
necessary for success was to put on your
shutter the sign of physician or dentist or
attorney or broker or agent and you would
have plenty of business. How many hours
you sat and waited for business, and
waited in vain, three persons only know--
God, your wife and yourself. In commer.
cinl life you have not had the promotion
and the increase in salary you anticipated,
or the place you expected to occupy in the
firm has not been vacated. The produce
of the farm with which you expected to
support yourself and those depending on
you ahd to poy the interest on the mort.
gage has been far less than you anticipated,
or the prices were down, or special ex:
penses for sickness made drafts on your re-
sources that you could not have expected.
In some respects the hardest decade of
life is the thirties, because the results are
generally so far behind the antfeipations.
t is very rare indeed that a young man
does as did the young man one Sunday
night when he came to me and said, “I
have been so marvelously prospered since
I came to this country that | feel as a mat.
ter of gratitude thal I ought to dedicate
myself to God.”
Vine-tenths of the poetry of life has
knocked out of you since you eame
into the thirties. Men in the different
professions and occupations saw that you
were rising, and they must put an estop-
pel on you or you might somehow stand
in the way. They thin
pressed.
From thirty to for
hard time for young
yers, young merchants, young farmers,
young mechanics, young minieters,
’ rties
°
chief
le of the thi for honest and
plo) and Romnerative ecoguition. But
people know how to trea
them a
one han b ole,
Oh, the thirties! J. tood be
Pharaoh at thirty; Daoarh wood years
s
h
few
at thirty years of age; Judas sold Him
for thirty pieces of silver. Oh, the thir
ties! What a word suggestive of triumph
or disaster!
Your decade is the one that will prob.
ably afford the atest opportunity for
victory because there is the greatest ne
cessity for struggle. Read the world’s his
tory and know what are the thirties for
ood or bad, Alexander the Great closed
is career at thirty-two: Frederick the
Great made Europe tremble with his ar-
mies at thirty-five; Cortes conquered Mex-
ico at thirty; Grant fought Shiloh and
Donelson when thirty-eight; Raphael died
at thirty-seven; Luther was the hero of
the reformation at thirty-five; Sir Philip
Sidney got through by thirty-two. The
greatest deeds for God and against Him
were done within the thirties, and your
greatest battles are now and between the
time when you cease expressing your age
by putting first a figure 2 and the time
when you will cease expressing it by put
ting first a figure 3. As it is the greatest
time of the struggle. I adjure you, in
God's name and by God's grace, make it
the greatest. achievement. My prayer is
for all those in the tremendous crisis of
the thirties. The fact is that by the way
you decide the present decade of vour his
tory you decide all the following decades.
Next I accost the forties. Yours is the
decade of discovery. I do not mean the
discovery of the outside, but the discovery
of vourself. No man knows himself until
he is forty. He overestimates or underes-
timates himself. By that time he has
learned what he can do or what he cannot
do. He thought he had commercial genius
enough to become a millionaire, but now he
is satisfied to make a comfortable living.
He thought he had rhetorical power that
would bring him inte the United States
Senate; now he is content if he can suc.
cessfully argue a common case before a
petit jury. He thought he had medical
skill that would make him a Mott or a
Grosse or a Willard Parker or a Sims;
now he finds his sphere is that of a fam-
ily physician, prescribing for the ordinary
ailments that afflict our race. He was sail
ing on in a fog and could not take a reck-
oning, but now it clears up enough to allow
him to find out his real Latitude and long
itude. He has been climbing, but now he
has got to the top of the hill, and he takes
a long breath. He is half way through
the journey at least, and he is in a posi-
tion to look backward or forward. He has
more good sense than he ever had. He
knows human nature, for he has been
cheated often enough to see the bad side
of it, and he has met so many gracious
and kindly and splendid souls he also
knows the good side of it. Now, calm
yourself. Thank God for the past and de
liberately set your compass for another
voyage,
You have chased enough thistledown:
rou have blown enough soap bubbles; you
have seen the unsatisfying nature of all
earthly things. Open a new chapter with
God and the world. This decade of the
forties onght to eclipse all its predecessors
in worship, in usefulness and in happiness
The world was made to work. There re
maineth a rest for the people of God, but
it is in a sphere beyond the reach of tele
scopes.
one of the greatest battles of the ages-
the
in the evening,
to
but some of
go into camp at 2
you
My subject next accosts those in the ser
ties and leyond.
ratulation. You have got nearly if not
through You have safely crossed
he sea of life and are about to enter the
You have fought
ver—here and there a skir
the remaining sin of your own
1d the sin of the world, but I guess
’ do There may be some
u yet on a small or large scale.
of Germany vigorous in the
The Prime Minister of England
Haydn composing
“The Creation,” at seventy
Isocrates doing some of his
at seventy-four. Plato busy
for all succeeding centuries at
mish with
his oratorio,
age
best work
eighty-one
his world renowned dictionary, hard at
work until eighty-five years old lev,
Daniel Waldo praying in my pulpit at 100
years age. Humboldt producing the
immortal “Cosmos” at seventy-six years.
William Blake at sixty-seven learning Ital-
lian so as to read Dante in the original.
of
|
COMMERCIAL REVIEW,
General Trade Conditions
R. G. Dun & Co's Weekly Review of
Trade says: Little of a novel naturf has
developed in the business or financial
situation during the past week. Condi-
tions of the preceding week were ac-
centuated as a rule, active manufactur-
ing plants becoming still more busily
engaged, while the downward tenden-
cy ol prices was not checked. Fetail
trade is of immense volume and job-
bers have immense Spring orders to
fill.
Conditions in the iron and steel in-
dustry are shown by record-breaking
production at many plants and rapid
mcrease of facilities at others,
Failures for the week humbered 301
in the United States, against 306 last
year, and 28 in Canada, against 46 last
year,
“Bradstreet’s” says: Wheat, includ
ing flour, exports for the week aggre-
gate 3,630,670 bushels, as against 4,600,
202 last week and 4.838.678 in this week
last year. Wheat exports July 1, 1901,
to date (30 weeks) aggregate 161,644,
152 bushels, as against 111,002,372 last
season. Corn exports aggregate 170,520
bushels, as against 208.003 last week
and 3,072,152 gan year. July 1, 1901, to
date corn exports are 21,435.237 bushels,
agaist 111,702,012 last season,
LATEST QUOTATIONS.
Wheat—New York No. 2, BrS4c;
Philadelphia No. 2, 84aB4%4c; Baltimore
No. 2, Rsl4e,
Corn—New York No. 2, 675%4c; Phil-
adelphia No. 2, 64%4a6sc ; Baltimore No.
2, 68c.
Oats—New York No. 2, soc; Phila-
delphia No. 2, 53%4c; Baltimore No. 2,
52}4c.
Hay—No. 1 timothy, large bales,
$16.00; No. 2 timothy, $14.50215.00; No.
3 timothy, $13.00a14.00.
Fruits and Vegetables.—Apples—
Western Maryland and Pennsylvania,
sucked, per brl, $300a1.75; do. New
‘ork, assorted, per brl, $3.50a4.50. Cab
bage—New York State, per ton, domes-
tic $10.00a12.00; do. Danish, per ton,
$13.00a14.00 Carrots — Native, per
bushel box, 3sagoc; do. per bunch, 1a
1%¢c. Celery—Native, per bunch, 3a
3145c. Cranberries—Cape Cod, per brl
$7 .00a7 50; Jerseys, per brl, $6.50a
7.00; do. Cape and Jerseys, per box,
$2.00a225. Kale—Native, per bushel
box, 135a20c. Lettuce—North Car
per half-bar
per full brl $2.5
per brl, $1s50a4
basket, $1 SOR
and Penn
do
5-9 :
¢i Dasket,
2.504
i
best treatise. John Wesley stirring great
audiences at eighty five. William C. Bryant,
without spectacles, reading in my house
“Thantaposis™
Christian men and women in all depart
ments serving God after becoming septua-
genarians and nonagenarians prove that
there are possibilities of work for
seventies are near being through.
How do you feel about it?
be jubilant, because life is a tremendous
ie, and if you have got through re
spectably and usefully you ought to feel
ike people toward the close of a summer
set at Bar Harbor of Cape May or Look-
out Mountain. I am glad to say that most
old Christians are cheerful. Daniel Webs
ter visited John Adams a short time before
He said to Mr. Adams: “I am
hope you are getting
health.
glad to see you. I
along pretty weil.”
wir, quite the contrary. I find I am a poor
tenant, occupying a house much shattered
by time. It sways and trembles with eve
wind, and what is worse, sir, the landlor
to make any repairs.”
An aged woman sent to her Ji] sician
and told him of her ailments, and the doc
tor said: “What would you have me do,
madam? 1 cannot make Jou young again.”
She replied: “I know that, doctor. What
I want you to do is to help me to grow old
a little longer.” The young men have
their troubles before them; the old have
their troubles behind them. You have got
about all out of this earth that there is in
it. Be glad that you, an servant
of God, are going to try another life and
amid better surroundings. Stop looking
back and look ahead. O ye in the seven:
ties and eighties and the ninetiés, your
best days are yet to come, your grandest
associations are yet to formed, your
best eyesight is yet to be kindled, your
best hearing ie yet to be awakened, your
greatest speed is yet to be traveled, your
gladdest song is yet to be sung. mont
of Jom friends have gone over the border,
and you are foing to join them very soon.
They are waiting for you; they are watch
ing the golden shore to see you land; they
are watching the shining gate to see you
come through; they are standing by the
throne to see you mount.
What a hour when you drop the
staff and e the scapes, when you quit
the stiffened joints and become an immor-
tal athlete! t hear, hear; a remark per
tinent to all people, whether in the twen
ties, the thirties, the forties, the fifties
the sixties, the seventies or beyond.
But the most of you will never reach
the eighties or the seventies or the sixties
or the fifties or the forties. He who
into the forties has Am far
of human life, id
Eternity, how noar it rolls!
Count vast
per bushel, $1.15a1.2:
ida, per box, as to siz
Native
Spinach~N
75¢.
CArner,
bushel b
Maryland, §
Richmond,
North Ca
a
Ls
+1.50a1.75
Provisions
clear rib
piec: bulk sh
sides
under, 9izc;
ander, glic;
sured breasts, 12 Ibs an
sugar-cured shoulders, blad
shoulders
sugar-cured shoulders, ; broad,
sugar-cured California hams,
834c; hams, canvassed or uncanvased, 12
12¢ ; hams, canvased or un
10 ibs and over, 12! hams,
d, 15 Ibs and over,
iC.
canvased or uncanvase
t2c; hams, skinned, 1
Dressed Poultry
good to choice,
young toms, n
14¢; do. young
do. old
to cl}
ung,
Leese,
Oa io poor
BK wd to H101Ce,
gatic
Butter—Separator,
23a24c; imitation,
gathered
10a20 ;
2a27¢;
25226
Eggs—Waestern Maryland and Penn
sylvania, per dozen, 2%5a26c; Eastern
Shore, Maryland and Virginia, -——a26c;
Virginia, 26c; West Virginia, 25a26¢:
23a24¢; cold-
storage, choice, at mark, 20a2ic; do. do.,
loss off, 22a23
Cheese.—New Cheese, large, 60 Ibs, 11
to 1134¢: do, flats, 37 Ibs, 11a1134¢; pic-
nics, 23 Ibs, 11%4c¢ to 1134c.
Hides—Heavy steers, association and
salters, late kill, 60 Ibs and up, close se.
lections, 11%%a12%c; cows and light
steers, gl4atoc.
25220 ;
prints
dairy
Live Stock.
Chicago. — Cattle — Good to prime,
$6.50a7.25; poor to medium, $4.00a6.00;
stockers and feeders, $2.25a4.75; cows,
{i sca478: heifers, $2.25a5.55; bulls,
2.2524.00; calves, $2.50a6.25; Texas fed
ateers, $400a6.25. Hogs—Mixed and
butchers, $500a6.40; good to choice,
heavy, $6.30a6.50; rough, heavy, $6.00a
6.25; light, $5.60a600; bulk of sales,
$5.00a6.35. eep—Steady to toc high-
er; good to choice wethers, $4.30a5.00;
Western sheep, $4.25a5.75 ; native lambs,
$3.20a6.10; Western lambs, $5.00a6.00,
East Liberty —Cattle—Choice, $6.40a
6.60; prime, $585a6.00; good, $5.3525.65.
Hogs slow; prime heavies, $6.40a6.45;
best mediums, §0.25046.90; heavy York-
ers, $6.15a6.20; light Yorkers, $500a
6.05; pigs, $5.50a5.60; roughs, $5.00a5.00,
Sheep higher; best wethers, $4.50a4.05;
culls and common, $1.50a2.25; yearlings,
$3004.85; veal calves, $7.00a7.50.
LABOR AND INDUSTRY
Cincinnati is organizing a $150,000
co-operative wagon factory.
A London syndicate is after the en-
tire tobacco industey of Cuba.
Union machinists will renew their
Jsmands for an eight-hour day on
ay 1.
Leadville has twenty-two labor un-
jons, Two years ago one organiza-
tion existed. tl
Toledo's union of coffee, spice, and
der workers is the first of
hhh ddthhtt hhh hhhd Ahhh din
A Safe Prophesy.
Ethel—1 believe she is quite a reliable
fortui.c teller.
Josephine-~Well, she told me that if
father succeeded in carrying through a
certain big stock deal 1 would be married
withifi a Jear,
Bweal wud fruit acids will uo. discolor
goody dyed with Persam Faveress Dyes,
old by sll druggists.
Lies are always in a hurry, but the truth
contentedly awaits its turn
+8100 Rewgad. 8100,
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
lsarn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has been able to eure in all
its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure 18 the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con-
stitutional disease, requires a constitutions)
MRS. HULDA JAKEMAN
Wife of President Jakeman
Elders of the Mormon Chu
Salt Lake City, U
ends Eydia E. k
egetable Compound For
man’s Periodic Pains.
“Dean Mps, Prexnas:—Befors I
k ¢ . Pinkham’
AR ga TAL
approach of the time for my
period, as it would mean & evuple of
the patient stre
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
dred Dollars for an
Bend for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. Cnexgy & Co., Toledo, O,
Sold by Druggists, 1%.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The smaller a man's wit the more pains
he takes to show it.
Best For the Bowels.
cancer, you will never get well until your
easy natural movements, cost you just 10
cents to start getting your health back. Cas-
carers Candy Cathartio, the genuine, put up
in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
In traveling the
the right side.
road to wealth keep on
Tettarine Cures Eczema,
Ring Worm, Barber's Itch, Bealdhead, Tetter
ant and disgusting. 60c. abox b
J. T. Bbuptrine, Bavannah,
druggist don't keep it,
The industrious burglar
doing something, even if it's only time,
a, if
Many School Children Are Slokily.
Mother Gray's Bweet Powders for Children
used by Mother Gray, a puree in Children's
Home, New York, break up Colds in 24 hours
cure Feverishness, Headache, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy
Worms. At all druggists’, 380. Sample mailed
¥rEe. Address Allen 8. Olmsted Le Boy, N. ¥
A wife who is a good cook makes a cheer
ful husband.
FITSpermanently cured. No fits or nervous.
nose after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Gres!
Dr. RH EKurixz, Lud , 81Arch 8¢t. Phila. Pa
: Never ask a favor unless you are will
ing to grant one
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething softenthe gums, reduces inflamma.
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25: a bottle
The world is never cold to the warm
hearted
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spr
as a cough « JW, O'Brigx
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn. Jas. 6, 1900
Key
oh S40
ire 342 Third
Experience may
gives us knowledge
cost in ideals,
na ee
Used for 20 Years.
The Great Pain-Killing Remedy
Never fails to cure.
RHEUMATISNH, SPRAINS,
STIFFNESS, SCIATICA,
NEURALGIA, SORENESS,
LUMBAGO, CHEST COLDS,
And All Bodily Aches and Pains.
There is Nothing so Good
ACTS LIKE MAGIC.
Conquers Pain
Sold in 25¢. and 80¢. Sines.
ST. JACOBS OIL (Limited),
BALTIMORE .
firdrd dried dh dh kd Ard dh dh A
de ede deo foie deoieok
removes from the soil
large quantities of
Potash.
The fertilizer ap-
plted, must furnish
enough Potash, or the
land will lose its pro-
ducing power.
Bod gray ap we
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St, New York,
TT TT TTT
MRS. HULDA JAK
| days in bed with intense pain and suf
Sting. I was under the ph
| eare for over a year without any relief,
{| when my attention was called fo Lydia
| E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound by
several of our Mormon women who
| had been cured through its ufe.
| 1 began its systematic use and im-
| proved gradually in health, and after
the use of six bottles my health was
completely restored, a er over two
ears I have had neither ache or pain.
ou haves truly wonderful remedy for
women. Very sincerely yours, fans.
Huipa Jaxemax, Salt LakeCity. Utah.”
~§ 8000 forfeit If above Lestimonial ls not genuine
Just as surely as Mrs. Jake-
| man wap cured just se surely will
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
| Compound cure every WOman
| suffering from any form of fe-
male ills.
| Mrs. Pinkham advisas sick wo-
| mem free. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Largest growers of GH
Clover, Timothy and
Grasses. Our northern grown Clover, {
for vigor, frost and drouth resisting
pro bas justly beeome famous.
SUPERIOR CLOVER, bu. $5.50; 100 ibs. $3.80
La Grasse Prime Cigver, bu. $5.60; 100 ibs. $8.20
Samples Clover, Timothy and Grasses and great
Catalog mailed you Tor 6 postage.
JOHN A.SALZ
SEED Co.
La Crosse, Wis.
GO
1.D0YS
Said by @ Douglas Storrs and the best shon Sealers
everywhere. CAUTION! The genuine have W. L.
Donging’ name and price stamped on bottom,
Keotice tnerense of soles in tabie beiow:
T6068 mn 145,708 P “
182 Pairs.
1809 5
1900 = 1,250,754 Pairs.
1901 ~~ 1,566,720 Pairs.
Business More Thar Doubled In Four Years.
$
HE RE SONS } and selle more men's 82.00 and
$2.10 slsoes than any other Two tan T's in the world,
WL. Douglas $5.00 and $3.00 shoes placed side by
side with $5.00 and $600 shes of other akon,
found to be just as good. They will catwoss twe
pairs of ordinary $5.00 and $2.00 shoes,
Made of the best leathers, including Patent
Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaros.
Fast Color Kpelete and Adware Hise Books seed,
RieBamnginn 04.00 “Gil Edge Line” anol be
Shoes hy mall Bic, extra. Catalog
nan.
.
reek ton,
W. L. Douglas,
Lead the
World.
Wills Pills =<:
Bend your name and P. 0. address to
The R. B. Wills Medicine Co., Hagerstown, Md,
ated ‘32 SCALES of ever) descr plion,
Write for prives len G A
5. Coates 8t , Barvinony,
P Y NEW DISCOVERY gives
quick relies’ snd cures worst
Chan. of testimoninis and 10 days’ treatment
Free. Dr. BE GREEN SS50NE, Bex 5B, Aslasta, Ou
Gold Medal at Buffale Exposition.
McILHENNY'S TABASCO
SRYEETSL ILI IT PAYS