The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 20, 1902, Image 7

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Dr. Talmage Preaches on the lnfluence
of the Gospel in Bosiness.
Christianity and the lntellect—Can You Get
Along Without It.
Wasmixarox, D. C—In this discourse
Dr. Talmage advocates the idea that the
Christian religion is as good for this world
a8 the next, and will Bo us to do any-
thing that ought to be done at all; I Tim-
othy iv, 8, “Godliness is profitable unto
all things, having promise of the life that
row is and of that which is to come.”
There is a gloomy and passive way of
waiting for events to come upon us, and
there is a heroic way of gring out to meet
them, strong in God J fearing nothing.
When the body of Catiline was found on
the battlefield, it was found far in advance
of all .1is troops and among the enemy, and
the best way is not for us to lie down and
Jet the events of life trample over us, but
to go forth in a Christian spirit deter
mined to conquer. You are expecting pros-
rity, and I am determined, so far as I
ave anvthing to do with it, that you shall
not be disappointed, and, therefore, I pro-
pose, as God may help me, to project upon
vour attention a new element of success.
You have in the business firm frugality,
patience, industry, perseverance, economy
—& very strong business firm—but there
needs to be one member added, mightier
than them all, and not a silent partner
either, the one introduced by my text,
“Godliness, which is profitable unto all
things, having the promise of the life that
now is as well as of that which is to come.”
I suppose you are all willing to admit
that godliness is important in its eternal
relations, bul perhaps some of you say,
“All I want is an opportunity to say a
rayer before 1 die, and all will be well.”
here are a great many people who sup-
pose that if they can finally get safely out
of this world into a better world they will
have exhausted the entire advantage of
our holy religion. They talk as though re-
ligion were a mere nod of recognition
which we are to give to the Lord Jesus on
our way to a heavenly mansion; as though
it were an admission ticket, of no use ex
cept to give in at the door of heaven. And
there are thousands of people who have
great admiration for a religion of the
shroud and a religion of the coffin and a
religion of the cemetery who have no ap-
preciation of a religion for the bank, for
the farm, for the factory, for the ware-
house, for the jeweler's shop, for the office.
Now, while I would not throw any slur on
a t-mortem religion, I want to-day to
eulogize an ante-mortem religion. A relig-
ion that is of no use to you while you live
will be of no use to, you when yon die.
“Godliness is profitable unto all things,
having promise of the life that now is as
well as of that which is to come.” And I
have always noticed that when grace is
very low in a man’s heart he talks a great
deal in prayer meetings about deaths and
about coffins and about graves and about
churchyards. I have noticed that the
healthy Christian, the man who is living
heaven. is full of ju
talks about the duti
smnding well that if God he)
right He will help him to die right
Now, in the f ce, 1 remark
godliness good for a man’s physical
health. I do not mean to say that it will
restore a broken down or
drive rheumatism from the limbs or neural
gia from the temples or pleurisy from the
side, but i do mean savy th it It ives
one such habits and puts one in = con
dition as most favorable for physical
health. That I believe, and that 1 avow
Everybody knows that buoyancy
spirit 1s good physical advantage
unrest, dejection, are at war with every
pulsation of the heart and with every res.
piration of the lungs. They lower the vi
tality and slacken the ulation, while
exhilaration of spirit pours the very balm
of heaven through all the currents of life
The senze of insecurity which sometimes
hovers over an unregenerate man or
pounces upon him with the blast of ten
thousand trumpets of terror is most deplet-
ing and most exhausting, while the feeling
that all things are working together for
our good now and for our everlasting we!
fare 1s conducive to physical health
You will observe that godliness induces
industry, which is the foundation of good
kealth. There 18 no law of hygiene that
will keep a lazy man well. Pleurisy will
stab him, erysipelas will burn him, jaun-
dice will discolor him, gout will eripple
hm, and ths intelligent physician will
not prescribe antiseptic or febrifuge
or anodyne, but saws and hammers
and Yeraeiicks and crowbars and pick.
axes. There is no such thing as good
physical condition without positive work
of some Lind, although you should sleep
on down of swan or ride in carriage of
softest upholstery or have on your table
all the luxuries that were poured from the
wine vats of Ispahan and Shiraz. Our re-
ligion says: “Away to the bank, away to
the field, away to the shop, away to the
factory! Do something that will enlist all
the energies of your body, mind and soul!”
“Diligent in business, fervent in spirit,
serving the Lord,” while upon the hare
back of the idier and the drone comes
down the sharp lash of the apostle as he
says, “If anv man will not work, neither
shall he eat.”
Oh, how important is this day, when so
mueh is said about anatomy and physio
Jogy and therapeutics and some new style
of medicine is ever and anom springing
upon the world, that you should under
stand that the highest school of medicine
i8 the school of Christ, which declares that
“godliness is profitable unto all things,
having the promise of the life that now is
as well as of that which is to come.” So
if you start out two men in the world with
equal physical health, and then one of
them shall get the religion of Christ in his
heart and the other shall not get it. the
ene who becomes a son of the Lord Al
ighty will live the longer. “With long
ite will 1 satisfy him and show him My
salvation.”
Again I remark that godliness is good
for the intellect. 1 know some Bave sup
d that just as soon as a man enters
mto the Christian life his intellect goes
into a bedwarfing process. So far from
that, religion will give new brilliancy to
the intellect, new strength to the imagina-
tion, new force to the will and wider
swing to all the intellectual faculties.
Christianity is the great central fire at
Which philosophy has lighted its brightest
tore
3
t
14
constitution
are
er
The religion of Christ ia the fountain
out of which learning has dipped its elear-
est draft. The Helicon poured forth no
such inspiring waters as those which flow
from Juder the throne of God clear as
tal.
ligion has given new energy to poesy,
_ in Dr. Young's x Thoughts,”
teaching in Cowper's “Task,” flaming in
les Wesley's ifn and Fushing with
lie lendor through Tton's
“Paradise Lost.” The religion of Christ
has hung in studio and in ga of art and
in Vatican the | best. Jlotures--. Sian’ Ys,
on, phaei’s “Transfiguration,”
jption “Descent From the Cross”
“ “Burning Bush” and o's
“Last Judgment.” Religion has made the
dn's “Crea
which bu
on the
omontoreis of worldly power
can ve effect upon a man’s intellect
elevation
Duk slevation? mand godliness sa the best
mental discipline, better than belles lettres
to purify the taste, better thdn mathema'-
ics to harness the mind to all intricacy and
elaboration, better than logic to. marshcl
the intellectual forces for onset and vie
tory.
Again I remark that godliness is profit
able for one’s disposition. Lord Ashley,
before he went into a great battle, was
heard to offer this prayer: “0 Lord, 1 shall
be very busy to-day! If I forget Thee, for-
get me not.” With such a Christian dispo-
sition as that a man is independent of all
circumstances.
Our piety will have a tinge of our natural
temperament. If a man be cross and sour
and fretful naturally, after he becomes a
Christian he will always have to be armed
against the rebellion of those evil inclina-
tions.
But religion has turned the wildest na-
tures. It has turned fretfulness into grat-
itude, despondency into good cheer, and
those who were hard and ungovernable
and uncompromising have been made pli-
able and conciliatory.
Good resolution, reformatory effort, will
not effect the change. It takes a mightier
arm and a mightier band to bend evil hab-
its than the hand that bent the bow of
Ulysses, and it takes a stronger lasso than
ever held the buffalo on the prairie.
A manufacturer cares but very little for
a stream that slowly rune through the
meadow; but values a torrent that leaps
from rock to rock and rushes with mad
energy through the valley and out toward
the sea. Along that river you will find
fluttering shuttles and grinding mill and
flashing water wheel. And a nature the
swiftest, the most rugged and the most
tremondous—that is the nature that God
turns into greatest use{uiness.
Religion will give an equipoise of spirit.
It will keep you from ebullitions of tem-
per, and you know a great many fine busi-
nesses have been blown to atoms by bad
temper. It will keep you from worriment
about frequent loss; it will keep you back
from squandering and from dissipation;
will be easily distinguished from that mere
store courtesy which shakes hands violent-
ly with you, asking about the health of
your family, when there is no anxiety to
but the anxiety is to know how many
dozen cambric pocket handkerchiefs you
will take and pay cash down. It will pre-
pare you for the practical duties of every-
day life.
n New York City there was a merchant,
hard in his dealings with his fellows, who
had written over his banking house or his
counting house room, “No compromise.”
Then when some merchant got in a crisis
and went down-—no fault of his, but a con-
junction of evil circumstances—and all the
other merchants were willing to compre
mise-—~they would take seventy-five cents
on the dollar or fifty cents or twenty cents
—coming to this man last of all, he said:
“No compromise. I'll take 100 cents on the
dollar, and I can afford to wait.” Well,
the
man was in a crisis of business, and he sent
out his agent to compromise, and the agent
said to the merchants, “Will you take
fifty cents on the dollar? “No.” “Will
vou take anything?”
on the dollar. No compromise.” And the
man who wrote that inscription over his
counting house door died in
Oh, we want more of the kindness of the
gospel and the spirit of love in our business
enterprises!
How many young men have found in the
religion of Jesus Christ a practical help?
How many there are to-day who could tes
tify out of their own experience that god-
liness is profitable for the life that now is!
There were times in their business career
when they went here for help and there
help until they knelt before the Lord ery
ing for His deliveran nd the Lord res
Ing ior ris nveranee, and the Lord res
cued them.
In a bank not f
his accounts
sick nigh unto death as a result. He knew
that bank, but somehow, for some reason,
balance. The time rolled on and the morn-
under the inspection of the other officers
arrived, and he felt himself in awful peril,
conscious of his own integrity, but unable
to prove that integrity. That morning he
went to the bank early, and he knelt down
before God and told the whole story of
mental anguish. and be said: “0 Lord, 1
have dome right, I have preserved my in-
tegrity, but Bore I am about to be over
thrown unless Thou shouldst come to my
rescue. Lord, deliver me.” And for one
hour he continued the prayer before God,
and then he arose and went to an old blot-
ter that he bad forgotten all about. Ie
opened it, and there lay a sheet of figures
which he only peeded to add to another
line of figures—some line of figures he had
forgotten and knew not where he had laid
them-—and the acrounts were balanced. and
the Lord delivered him. You are an infi-
del if you do not believe it. The Lord de
livered him. God answered his prayer, as
He will answer your prayer, oh, man of
business, in every crisis when you come to
fim.
Now, if this be wo, then I am persuaded,
as you are, of the fact that the vast major-
ity of Christians do not fully test the value
of their religion. They are like a farmer
in California with
wheat land and culturing only a quarter of
an acre.
Why do you not go forth and make the
religion of Jesus Christ a practical affair
every day of your business life and all this
year, beginning now, and to-morrow morn.
ing putting into practical effect this holy
religion and demonstrating that godliness
is profitable here as well as hereafier?
{ow can you get along without ‘this re
ligion?! Is your physical health po good you
do not want this divine tonic? Is your
mind so clear, so vast, #0 comprehensive,
that you do not want this divine inspira
tion? Is your worldly business go thor
oughly established that you have no use
for that religion which has been the help
and deliverance of tens of thousands of
men in crises of worldly trouble? And if
what I have said is true then you see what
a fatal blunder it is when a man adjourns
to life’s expiration the uses of religion. A
man who postpones religion to sixty years
of age gets religion fifty years too late. Ie
may get into the kingdom of God by final
repentance, but what can compensate him
for a whole lifetime unalleviated and un.
comforted? You want religion to-day in
the {mining of that child. You will want
religion to-morrow in dealing with that
customer. You wanted religion yesterday
to eurb your temper. Is your arm strong
enough to beat your way through the
floods? Can you, without being incased in
the mail of God's eternal help, go forth
amid the assault of all hell's sharpshoot-
ers! Can you walk alone asecross these
erumbling graves and amid these ing
earthquakes? Can you, waterlogged an
mast shivered, outlive the gale? Oh, how
been who, postponing the
into
t, although
and like ser.
pen wheels dragging
their mauled bodies under the rocks to die.
So theses men have fallen under the wheel
of awful calamity, while a vast multitude
of others have taken the religion of Jesus
Christ into life, and, first, in
practieal business affairs, and, second, on
the throne of heaven! triamph, have illus.
ls looked on and a uni
ed rious truth that
profitable unto all things,
the promise of the life which now is
as of that which is to come.”
(Copyright, 109, L. Kiopech.)
COMMERCIAL REVIEW.
General Trade Conditions.
R. G. Dun & Company's “Weekly Re-
view of Trade” says: “Consumers of
iron and steel products are still anxious
regarding conditions during the next
threee months. After July 1 it is be-
lieved that deliveries will be ample, Ac-
cording to the ‘Iron Age’ the weekly ca-
gaciy of pig iron furnaces in blast on
arch 1 had declined to 330,710 tons, or
about ten thousand tons from the pro-
duction on February 1. All records prior
to February 1 are still eclipsed and the
resumptiion of many idle plants this
month practically assures new high water
marks in the near future unless some un-
foreseen interruption occurs. Official in
dications of farm reserves on March 1
were not surprising as to corn, but the
statement that 23 per cent. of the enor.
mous wheat yield remained in farmers
hands was not calculated to sustain
values, Needed rains in the Southwest
made the outlook more favorable for the
next crop and further weakness in quota
tions developed. A sustaining feature
was the interior movement of only 2,681,
301 bushels, against 3,002,650 last year.
“Failures for the week were 232 in the
United States, against 209 last year, and
34 in Canada, against 33 in 1001."
LATEST QUOTATIONS.
Flour-~ Best Patent, $4.00: High Grade
Extra, $4.40; Minnesota Bakers, $3.75
3.85.
Wheat-—New York No. 2, 8514c: Phil
adelphia No. 2, 8514a86¢c: Baltimore No
2, Rydsc.
Corn—New York No. 2
delphia No. 2, 65/4365¥c;
2, O7t4C.
Oats—New York No. 2,
69'%c; Phila
BaltimoresNo
s52c; Philadel
No. 1, timothv large bales $15.0
: timothy, $1400a14.50;: No
3 do, $12.00a13.00.
Green Fruits and Vegetables—Apples
New York, assorted, per brl, $3.7534.50:
York Imperials, per brl, $37s5a400
Beets—Florida, new, per crate, $1.000
$00. Broccoli—Norfolk, per brl., 70a8sc
~-abbage—New York, large Danish, pet
ton, $ Booa1900; do, small Danish, per
ton, $16.00a17.00; do, new Florida, per
crate $1.50a1.75; do, Farly York, per
rate, $200a2.25. Carrots—Native, per
hox, 4s5asoc Celery— Native, per
2a3c Egeplants—Florida, per
Grape fruit—Florida,
Horseradish
Lettuce
Hay-
at.
Native, per box, $1.00a1.25
North Carolina, per half-barrel basket,
Florida, per half-barrel
$1 000200 Onions—Maryland
do
asket,
Florida, per box, as tc
do, California seedings,
do, navels, per box,
Oysterplants Native, per
Radishes—F] pet
13%a2c ~Native
35as0; do, Norfolk, per bri
Sprin per 100
Strawberries—Florida
do, oper
Florida, per six
$2.7533.00: do, fair
¢
Oranges
ize, $2.25a3.25;
2'5a3c ida,
" long
per bu. box,
Spinach
onions,
rate, 10215. Tomatoes
yasket carrier, fancy,
$1.50a200
Potatoes. —White. Maryland and Penn
sylvania, per bu, No. 1, 75a78¢: do, sec
nds, 65a70; do. New York, per bu, best
75a78; do, 65aro; do,
‘estern, per bu, prime, 75a78 Sweets
Eastern Shore, Virginia, kiln-dried, per
lL. $225a2 40; do, per flour bel, $2¢a
Maryland, per bri, fancy, $2.00
do, York River, per bri
vv e
ams
seconds,
: do
North Carolina, per
Butter— Separator,
TEAM, 24A2%5C imitation, 20a21¢; prints,
t-1b, 2Ba2gc; rolls, 2-1b, 2Bazoc; dairy
prints, Md. Pa. and Va, 26az7c
Eggs-—Maryland and Pennsylvania,
1saific; Eastern Shore, MarY.
land and Virginia, do, 15316; Virginia,
do, —a15;: West Virgima, do. —ars:
Western, do,; —ats; Southern. -—atg
puinea, do, —a—
Fancy, per dozen —a3oc do, Western and
Southern, do, 28329; do, small and dirty,
do, 27a28 ; goose, 43a%0
Cl eese— New cheese, large, 60 hs, 12a
12%4c; do, flats, 37 Ibs, 1214 to 1254; pic.
nics, 23 Ibs, 123% to 13¢
Live and Dressed Poultry —Turkeys—
Hens. choice, 15 a1fic; young toms choice
~ald Chickens—Hens, rza12%4: old
roosters, each 25330; young —a13 Ducks
~Fancy, large, 13a14¢: do, small 11a12
Geese, Western, ea tare. Guinea
fowl, each. 18a20¢ Dressed poultry
Turkeys—Hens, good to choice. 17a:
hens and young toms, mixed, good to
choice, —a16 Docks, good to choice, 14
s15c. Chickens— Young. good to choice,
12a14¢c; mixed, old and young. 11312
Geese, good to choice, 10a13. Capons—
Fancy, large, 17218¢.
Dressed ae Western Maryland and
Pennsylvania lightweights, 7%4a734c per
b Ib; Virginia and Southern Maryland,
est stock, 7% per 1b. ; medium hogs, 64
aye, and heavyweights irregular at from
6 to 614¢c per Ib. Old boars less—sasiic
Hides Heavy steers, association and
salters, late kill, 60 Ibs. and up. close se
lection, 10a1034¢; cows and light steers
Baltse.
Maxx: pathered
Live Stock.
Chicago—Cattle—Good to prime steers
$6.5006.05; poor to medium $4.2536.30
stockers and feeders $2502.25; cows,
$ryms.50; heifers, $2300560; canners,
$1.4002.40; bulls $2.50a4.00; calves $3.00
560; Texas fed steers, $4.75a5.00. Hogs
Mixed and butchers $6.00a6,50; good to
choice heavy $6.40a660; rough heavy
$6.10a6.30 ; hight $6.0006.25 ; bulk of sales
$6.10a6.45. Sheep—Lambs active, strong,
good to strong wethers $4.50n5.25; West-
*rn sheep and yearlings $4.603%.00; native
larry $0006.60; Western lambs $5.25a
Fast Liberty Cattle, choice $6.6086.55;
prithe $6.20a6.40; good $5.50a500. Hogs
igher; prime heavies, $660a665; best
mediums $6.60a6.65 ; heavy Yorkers $6.55
a660; light do, $6256.40: pigs $6.00
6.15; roughs $s.00a6.00. Sheep steady:
best weathers $5505.90; culls and com.
mon $2.50a3.50; veal calves $7.00a7.50.
LABOR AND INDUSTRY
France has 16,000 physicians: their in
comes average bu a year.
Cleveland's labor unions have united
A labor lyceum building is contemplated
The trackmen of the Pennsylvania
Railroad at Pittsburg will join the na-
tional association.
The iron trades’ strike at San Francis.
co, which has been on for ten months,
may be amicably adjusted.
presidents of the Pennsylvania
coal companies refuse to meet the labor
Nepresctatives regarding the new wage
sca
Evolution.
“This is the church where you hold
rour services, I suppose.”
“We used to call it a church, but we
ave outgrown all that. ‘It is a Temple
f Progressive Thought now.”
B. B. B. SENT FREE
Jures Blood and Skin Diseases, Cancers,
Bone Pains, Itching Humors, Ete.
Send no money, simply try Botanie Bios
3alm at our expense. B B. B. cures
Pimples, scabby, scaly, itching Eczema,
Jicers, Eating Sores, Herofula, Blood
Polson, Bone Pains, Bwellings, Rheuma-
dsm, Cancer, and all Blood and Skin
Croubles. Especially advised for chron:
ases that doctors, patent medicines and Hot
iprings fail to cure or help. Druggists
Pl per large bottle. To prove it cures
B. B. B. sent free by writing Broop BaLx
Jo., 12 Mitchell St, Atlanta, Ga Describe
rouble and free medical advice gent in
wealed letter Medicine sent at once, pre
pald. All we ask is that yon will speak a
good word for B. B. B. when cured,
vastly
The average run of Jeople are
It saves
pleased when their friends elope.
& wedding present.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be eursd by
Hall's Catarrh Cure,
F.J. Cugxuy & Co,, Props, Toledo, 0,
fectly honorable in all business transact
and financially able to carry out any obligs
tion made by their firm,
Ohio.
Warpixo, Kixxwax&Manvix, Wholesale Drug-
gists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure {s taken internally, act.
ing directly upon the blood and mucon
faces of the system. Price, 75¢, per bottle,
Sold by all Druggists, Testimanials free,
Hall's Family "ills are the best,
Postage stamps and small boys learnin
the alphabet are alike. Both get
on letters
Many School Children Are Siekiy,
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children
used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's
Home, New York, break up Colds in 24 hours
cure Feverishness, Headache, Stomach
¥
Free. Address Alien 8. Olmsted, Le Roy N.Y
Crooked ways often lead
circumstances
Best For the Bowels.
Nomatter what alls you, headashe to a san
| are put right,
| You without a gripe or pain, produce easy
| Batural movements, cost you just 10 cents ¢
| start getting your health back.
boxes, every tablet has C, C, C.
| it. Bewars of imitations,
It often happens that the |
the most suits i» the most sha
Earliest Hussian Millet.
Will you be short of bay? If so. plant
5
8 tons of rich hay per acre. Price, 50 Ibs
| $1.90; 100 Ibm, $5.00; low freights. Joh:
| Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis,
The man who's looking for trouble
icine, but when we can get a good
nurse and good medicine, the patient
stands a much better chance of re-
covery. The few words of advice
well worthy the attention of
readers :
nurse, and have invariably found it excellent
such as sprains, braises, rheumatic affections
neuralgia, etc. In cases of pleusisy it is an
excellent remedy—well rabbed in. I
strongly recommend it after several! years
use and experience. It should be in every
household.”
Sister CAROLINA, St. Andrew’
writes : “I have found St. Jacobs Ui] a most
efficacious remedy in gout ; also in sprains and
bruises. Indeed, we cannot say 00 much
in its praise, and our doctor is ordering i:
constantly.”
COMMISSION bi: 5 For gio
BW DUCE Heart Valiure for
salesmen having Ume for side line Staple goots
MANIL FACIL REN, Box 19 Covington, Ky
vi PISO'S
4 RES WHERE ALL
LOR is.
Best Cough Byrup. Tastes Good.
LL in time. Said by drugeies,
Sa, We
RIPANS
The wonderful medicine,
Ripans Tabules, cured me
in three weeks after having
My
trouble was dyspepsia, and as
suffered for five years,
1 believe came from cating
too much sweet stuff,
At druggists,
The Five Cont packet is enough for an
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
0 cents, contains a supply for a year
Wills Pil Are You Sick?
Send your name and P. 0. address to
The R. B. Wills Medicine Co.. Hagerstown. Md.
Lead the
World,
Le
Free,
Book of testimmonis es snd 10 days’ treatment
Dr B KE. GRELN'S BONE, Bex B, At nts, Ge
Gold Medal at Buffalo Exposition.
McILLHENNY'S TABASCO
ADVERTISZ IN THIS IT PAYS
PAPER. BH NUI12
Cens
Hes bl ou enris
ment of Agriovit
Mr Vermeer?
reveluiioniee wey growing
yielde in 1907 ronging fre
€irt oheny
your peighlewrs (he soming Tall fur
Cur
sud
AeA weet gud fn every glace in he |
The tart
The U 5. Depars
* book. Meow So you Like 02
vy
port Goren of Sareasers ie
8 variety this spring to
I: will purely pay you
per Acro
wrt soni
We alee have the oc otraiod Kases
of Creais and 4 tous of tick hay pe are
Wo ore the tarpon prowers and sur
PER eel me — —— upd Coining
Our grest ontslnger sonisine fs
yheiding
SUF poteiees vidi
wt rere
Ost with fie ® tons o* Be
of proes Sulder per mere
wrth BIO te ser
formes wich 18 fer
Btw grt wn wrens
reovipgl of
time G9 »
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. §2trial bottle and treatise{ree
Dr. RH Kuixe, Ltd, 98] Arch 8. Phils. Pa
In the matier of
iieted always happens
wesither the unpre
Each package of Porsax FPanzizes Dre
colors either Silk, Wool or Ootton perfectly
st one boiling. Sold by all druggists.
No man need hope to shake the hand
af fate
[am sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved
my life three years ago. Mas. Taomas Rop-
rive, Maple 8t., Norwich, N. ¥.. Pad, 17, 1800
The worm and the organ grinder will
tum
= [len of
A One may sail the seas and +
which wonld give satisfaction to
exceed all other laxatives combined
and ever beneficial action.
orginal method of manufacture.
effects one should always note the
producing trem 6 io #0 base's
Cine weed LO
seome Corn, going o%
CUS FUR
sguifoent ha
unbein
wiger's great ostalogue
weak ar tenes =
rie
wailed you ou
posinge,
are used by the best
uniform and reliable,
Shoot them and you'll shoot well.
i
—
—
Jfbairs
isit every land and everywhere will find.
all; a laxative which physicians could
. In some places considerable quantities of
fall ueme of the Company — California Fig
i