Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, July 19, 1894, Image 3

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    ————— ccs ris on ® a —————
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN-
DAY SERMON.
Subject: **The Rustic inthe Palace.”
Texr: “1 will go and see him before I
dle." Genesis xlv., 98.
Jacob had long since passed the hualred
year milestones, In those times people were
distinguished for longevity. Inthe centuries
afterward persons lived to great age, Galan,
the most celabrated physician of his time,
took so Httle of his own medicine that he |
lived to 140 years, A man of undoahted |!
veracity on the witness stand in England
swore that he rememberad an evant 150 years
before. Lord Bacon speaks of a countess
who had cut three sets of testh and died at
140 years, Joseph Creole, of Pannsylvania,
lived 140 years. In 1857 a book was printed
containing the names of thirty-seven per-
sons who lived 140 years, an 1 thea names of
elaven persons who lived 150 years,
Among the grand old people of whom we
have record was Jacob, the shepherd of the
text. Bat he had a bad lot of boys, They
were jealous and ambitious and every way
unprineipled, Joseph, however, seamad to
be an exception, but he had besn gone many
years, and the probability was that he was
dead. As sometimes now in a house you
will find kept at the table a vacant chair, a
plate, a knife, a fork, for soma deceased ||
member of the family, so Jacob kept in his
heart a place for his beloved Joseph, There
glts the old man, the flock of 140 years in
their flight having alighted long enough to
leave the marks of their olaw on forahenl
and cheek and temple, His long heard snows
down over his chest, I
what dim, and ha gon farther whan they
are closed than wher ¥v Are ons
ean soe clear back into the time whe
ful Rachel, his wife, was living and
{is aves are son
dren shook the orien
merriment,
The centenarian
the past when he ha
with all the inva 1 ime minister,
next to the king in the mightisst empire of
all the world! was too sudden
and too glad for th | a, and his cheaoks
whiten, and he has a dazed look, and his
stall falls ou [ hi mand, and he would
have dropped hal t the saught him
and led his a and put cold water
8 Ince and fa sd him a little,
at half delirium the old man mar
sthing about his son Joseph, ¥
jon't mean Joseph, do you
rho has been deal so long
A'tr Joseph, do 1 But after
they had fully resascitated ! and the naws
was confirmed the tears begin their winding
way down the crossroads of the inkles,
and the sunken lips of the old m qaiver
and he brir beat fingers together as
“Joseph is vet alive, I will go and
re [ dia”
not take the old man a great while
to get ready, [ warrant you, Ha put on the
best clothes that the shepherd's wardrobe
could afford, He got into the wagon, and
though the aged are cautious and like to
ride slow the wagon did not get along fast
enough for this old man, and whea the
wagon with the old man met Joseph's ohari-
ot coming down to meet him, and Joseph
got out of the chariot and got into the wag-
on and threw his arms around he father's
neck, it was an antithesis of royalty and rus-
ticity, of simplicity and pomp, of filial affoc-
ton i
n-
i
tion and paternal love, which leaves #0
Touch in Soubt about WHethar we NAT DIRtSr |
faugh or ery that we do both. So Jacob kept
the resolution of the text, “‘I will go and see
him before I die.”
What a strong and unfalling thing Is par-
ental attachment! Was it not almost time
for Jacob to forget Joseph? The hot sans of
many summers had blazed on tha heath ; the
river Nile had overflowad and receded, over
flowed and receded again and again; the
s=a1 had been sown and the harvest reaped ;
stars rose and set ; years of plenty and years
of famine had passed om, but the love of
Jacob for Joseph in my text is overwhelm-
ingly deamatic. Oh, that is a cord that is
not snapped, though pulled on by many de-
ecades! Though when the little child expired
the parents may not have been more than
twenty-five years of age, and now they are
seventy-five yet the vision of the eradle, and
the childish face, and the first utterances of
the infantile lips are frash to-day, in spite
the passage of a half century. Joseph was
as fresh ip Jacob's memory a3 ever, though
at seventeen years of aga the boy had disap-
sare 1 from the old homestead, Ifoundinour
amily record the story of an infant that had
died fifty years balore, andl said to my
parants, ‘“What is this record, and what
does it mean?” Their chief answer was a
long, deep sizh. It was yet to them a very
tender sorrow. What does that all mean?
Why, it means our children departed are ours
yet, and that cord of attachment reaching
scross the years will hold us until It bricgs
us together in the palace, as Jacob and
Joseph were brought together, That 1s one
thing that makes old people happy. They
realize it is reunion with thoss {rom whom
they have long been separated,
I am often asked, as pastor, and every |
pastor ir asked the question: “Will my
children be children in heaven and forever |
children?’ Wall, thers was no doubt a great
change in Joseph from the tims Jacob lost
him and the tims when Jacob found him |
between the boy saventanan yoars of age and
the man la mid-life, his forsheal developed
with the great business of state—bat Jacob
was glad to get back Joseph anyhow, and ft |
dit not make much differenns tothe old man |
whether the boy lookad older or looked |
And ft will be enough
younger,
ho can get back
oy for that pagent if
bat son, that daughter, at the gate]
of heaven, whether the departed loved one |
shall come a cherub or in full grown angel |
There must be a change wrought by |
hood.
that aelestial climate and by those saperasl
years, but i will only be fsom loveliness to
more love
radiant health, O parent, as you think of
the darling panting and white in membrane.
ons croup want you to know it will be
gloriously better in that land wher: there
has never been a death and where all the In.
habitants will live oa in the great future as
long as God! Joseph was Joseph, notwith- |
standing the palace, and your ehild will be
your child notwithstanding ali the reigning |
splendors of everlasting nodn.
What a thrilling visit was that of the old
shepherd tothe prime minister Joseph! I
see the old country man seated in the palace |
looking around at the mirrors, and the foun
tains, and the carved pillars, and, oh, how
he wishes that Rachel his wile, was alive
and she could have come thers with him to
wee their son in his great houss! “Oh™
gars the old man within himesit, “I do wish
Rachel could be hers to see all this!"
I visited the farmhouse of the father
of Millard Fillmore when the son was
President of! the United Btates, and
the octogenarian farmer entertain.
ed mo until 11 o'clock at night, tel'lng me
what great things he sw la his son's house
at Washington, and what Daniel Webster
said to him, and bow gran ty Millard treated
bis father in the White House, The old
man's frees was illaninel with the story
anti! almost’ the midnight, He had just
been visiting his son at the eapital, And I
suppose it was someting of the sam» joy
that thrilled the heart of the old shepherl
#8 he stood in the palace ofthe primo minis
ter,
It is a great day with you when your old
rents come to visit you, Your little ohil-
dren stand sronad with great wide open
eyes, wondering how anybody could be wo
4d, The parents cannot stay many aye,
for they are a little restiess, and especially
at nightiall, because they siesp better in
thelr own bed, but while they tarry you
somebox fool there ia a benediction in every
room in the house, They are a litt
| spoil your children with kindness,
| father and grandmother are moras lenient and |
{ for His old mother,
| visits will be the first an! the ast,
{ two pletures will hang in thea hall of your |
| thay inouleatsd ashileval your fortans,
{ness and from health to more |
faohle, and vou make it As aasy as vou ean
for them, anl you realize they will prob
ably not visit you very often —narhnps navar
again, Yon go to thele room after thay
have rotirad at night to seas if the lights
are properly put out, for tha old paopla
un lerstand eandla and lamp better than
{ the mo lern apparatus for {llumination, In
{the morning, with real interest in thelr
{ health, yon ask them how they rested last
| night,
{ text, did not think any mora of his fathar
| than you do of you” virents,
Joseph, in tha historical scone of the
ha probabil.
«your hones thay half
Grant.
ity is, before thay |
indulgent to your children than they ever
wears with you, And what wonders of re
valation in the bombazinn nockat of the ons |
Joazel [5 that
10 sre Christian parents coma to visit!
Whatavar may have been the style of the
wrehitestura when thay came, it 8 a
palnos bhafora they leave, If they visit
you fifty times, the two most momorahla
Thosa
and the sleavs of the other!
hom
\
memory while memory lasts, and von will
remember just how thay lookal, an where
thay sat, nnd what they sald, anl at what
figure of the ocarpst, and at what doorslil
thay parted with you, giving wou the final
goodhy, Do not be emharrassal i your
fathar come to town and he hava the man-
noars of tha shanherd, and {{f voar mother
ama to town andl thera ba in her hat no
tt vtly millinery, Tha wife of the
wo losing sald a wise thing whan
“Hashands, romember what yon
ani remember what you are and
nklal,
¢ this tima you all notice what kindly
wislon Joseph made for his father, Jacob.
sph did not say: “I can’t have the old
wound this place, How
1 look climbing up thasa marble
clumsy
1d walking over theses moasios
4
ald be patting his hands apon some of |
an {roasn00s, wanle woald wondar wheres |
1 eamas from Ha would
inn conrt with his m
mn my hands, ar
ho tht
aram and jatro lu
y Egvptian Court,
to have poor relations
Josaph did not say that,
: iis father wit
action, and brought
introduced
vided for ail th
ara provoked becaass heo
as he used to, and whe
{the son has t
man'sesr, “lh
2 he must waar ti
ro they got hia
they are at his indepandencs o
grammar! How long he hangs
Seventy years, and not 0
y-flve years, an
years, and not gone yet!
They think it of no uss to hava a dootor
his last sickness, and go up to thy drag
stops, and get a dose of something that
makes lm words, And ssonomies on % sofa,
sad beat the undertaker dowa to ths last
point, giving a note for the redass | amonnt,
wihiah thay never pay.
like taking my text
that mookeath at its fat
an 1 refusath to obey its mother
the valley shiail piok it it
sagios shall saat it I
an iagrate ought to have a
for pallbearers! I congratulate y
java the honor o rovidiz for aged
ents, The blessing { ti Lord Go
Joseph and Jaco’ will be oa you
[ rejolos to remem hat, though my
father lived ia a plain house the most of his
lays, ho died in a mansion providel by ths
lial piety of a soa who hal ashieval a for.
: [hers the ootogen rian sat, aad ths
servants waited on him, and there ware
y of horses and pleaty of earriagas to
and a bower ia witloh to alt on
ner afternoons dreamin? over the
past, and thers was not a room ia ths housy
n
where he was not waloomns, sal thers wars |
3
nasical instruments of all sorts to regale
him, and whan life had passal the neighbors
yam out and exprassel all honor possible
ani oarried him to the villages Maochpsiah
anil put him down besides thas Rauohel with
whom he had livel more than hall a cen.
tary. Share your successes with the oid
psople, The probahility is that the pris Pies
(piven
them a Christian perssatage of kindly con
sideration, Let Josephdivide with Jacsobthe
pasture fleids of Goshen and the glories of
the Egyptian court,
And here I would liketo sing the praless
of the sisterhool who remain unmarried
that they might administer to ag» | paranta,
he brutal world calls thess saarifleing ones
pasaliar or angular, bat if you have hal as
many annoyanses as they hava hal Xaa-
yo. It is easier to take care of five rolllek-
ing, ronping ehildraa than of ons ohlidish
old man, Among the best women are those
who allowed the bloom of life to piss away
wile they wara caring for thair parents,
Walle other maidens wors sounl aslesp
| they wore soaking the old man’s fest or
tusking up the covars around tha Iavalil
mother, While other maidens wars in the
sotillon they wore daasing atten lands upon
rheumatism and spraading plasters for the
iame bwk of tha septenariaa aad hsating
satnlp tea for lasomala,
In almost avery elrels of our kindralthers |
has been 80 ne quoen of self sserifieato whom |
| jawalod hao 1 after Jowslo 1 hand was offered |
in marriage, but who stayal on the oll |
placa beoatass of the seass of lial obligation
| until the health was goons an | ths attrastive.
noss of personal prance had vanished
Brutal sosiety may eall sush aone by a niok- |
pama, (ol ealls har daughter, anil heavan
salle her saint, and I oall her domestic mares |
tyr. A halt dozan or linary womeu have not
| as mash nobility as could be foual In the
| smallest joint of the little finger of hac loft
hand. Although the world has stool 603)
yonrs, this is the first apothrosis of mo lan
hood, although in ths Tong lina of thoss who
have decline] marriage that thay might bs
quaiified for soma espsial mission are the
names of Anna Ross and Mar zaret Breokin-
ridge and Mary Shelton ani Anna Etheridge
and Georgiana Willetts, the angels of the
battlefialds of Fale Oaks an | Looxout Moan
tain an l Ohanoellorsville, an | though single
life has been honored by ths fact that ths
thres greatest mon of the BibleTJohn anl
Paul and Christ—ware oolibates,
Let the uagrateful world saeer at the
maiden aunt, but Gol has a throna bur.
niahed for her arrival, and on ons alle of
that thrones in heaven there is a vase son
taining two jewals, the one brighter than the
Kohinoor of London Tower and the other
larger than any diamond ever found in ths
distelots of Goloonda~the one jewel by the
lapidary of the palace cut with the words,
“inhsmuch as yo did itto father ; the other
jewel by the lapidary of the palace oat with
the wor ls, “Innsmuach ag ya did It to mothe
er.” “Over the Hills to the Poorhousy” is
the exqalsits ballad of Will Carleton, who
found an old woman who had been turnel
off by her prosparoas sons, but I thank Gol
1 may flud in my text “Over the hills to the
lace "
pa
if to disgust ne with unfilial condust,
Wey Bible ’ us the of Micah, who
stole the 1100 shekeis from mother, ani
| ahianon,
Then he |
I hara ofl riate! at |
yhsequies of agel prople where the family |
|
have geen 80 inordinately resigasd to Provi- | the earth
| torly incapable of flight.
| tippe would have basa an angal ed mparad fo |
| Eapyornis and Bronterais,
| fair modern representatives,
common with myriads of other life |
the story of Aealom, whotried to dethrons
bis father, Bat all history is beautiful, with
stories of filial fidelity, Epaminondas, the
warrior, found his chief delight in reciting
to his parents his victories, There goos
Xneas from burning Troy, on his shoulders
Anchises, his father. The Athenians pune
ished with death any unfilial conduet, Thers
goss beautiful Ruth escorting venersble
Naoml across the desert amid the howling of
the wolves and the barking of the jackals,
John Lawrence, burned at the stake in Col.
chester, was cheered in the flames by his
children, who sald, “0, God, strengthen
I'iy servant and keep Thy promises!” And
Olirist in the hour of excruciation provided
Joseph, the prime
shepherd,
I may say in regard to the most of youthat
your parasols have probably visitel you for
the last time or will soon pay you such a
visit, and I have wondered if they will ever
visit vou in the King's Ince, "Oh" you
say, “I am in the pitof sin!” Joseph wasin
tha pit, “Oh,” vou say, “I am in the prison
of mins iniquity !" Joseph was once in pri-
son. “Oh,” you say, “I didn't have a fair
I was denied maternal kindness!"
Joseph was denied maternal attendance,
“On,"” you say, “I am far away from the
land of my nativity I" Josaph was far fom
“Oh,” you say, ‘I have been be.
trayad and exasparated Did not Joseph's
brethren sell him to a pas sing Ishmael
anravan? Yet God brought him to that am-
blazonad residences, and {f you will trast His
grace ia Jesus Christ you, too, will be em-
palnosd
Oh, what a day that will ba when the old
iks come from an adjoining mansion in
and find you amid the alabaster
of the throneroom and living with the
They ars coming up the steps now,
the epaualetel guard of the palace
108 in and says: “Your father's coming!
woming!” And when under
pracious stones and on the
ya groat each other
y soons will eolip the masting on the
minister proud of his
home,
{ Goshen highway when Joseph and Jacob
{ ¢
all on each other's neok and wept a good
, oh, how changed the old folks
't i into the flash of
. posture lifted
amortal symmetry, Their foot now so
then with the sprightiiness of a
yanding roe as they shall say to you, “A
spirit passed this way from earth and told
14 that you wore wayward ipsted
after we loft the world
sated, our prayer has
ya are here, and as we
’ id
sallad
veriasting rest,” Fant is want
salled the “Celestial ( ity
sgrrastion
Satur ay
Mter's Sabbath
dalisbary
ws hills of
ruck Padaoa-
flsids of
siting Joseph at
wsturs
the emerald castle,
a ———
Where the Largest Birds Have Lived, |
The countries south of the equator |
farnish fossils of the largest bird
forms that have been developed on
New Zealand, Australia,
Madazassar, and Soath America, make
ing the circuit of the globe, with great
Ocean, all
varions families
4 taining in New
saland a height of some tea to twelve
st, and in Madagascar a height of
Daring the first
{ Now Zealand by Earo-
peaas the bones still iay scattered in
settlement
| great quantities on the sarface, aad
found imbedded in the
marshes where, for some ocanse or
other, the birds had huddled together
by the hundreds
It is hardly necessary to state that
none of these huge birds were flyers,
Some, in fact, were wingless, Thay
are interesting as illustrating the limit
were also
| to which the principle of flight is car.
ried in the application of nature, ae
sha conld neither concentrate the mas.
onlar wing forces necessary to flight,
nor combine wing material to stand
the necessary beating of the atmos
phere in aerial propulsion,
The still existing emu, cassowary
and ostrich, representatives of the
largest bird life, have wings to aid
them as runners, but they are all ut
These ane
cient birds, known as moas and whose
families are known as Dromornis, the
have no
and ia
lormas, soem to have mot, in some mu
| tation of nature, sudden aad universal |
death. It is a curious fact that while
{ those were striotly land birds their
distribution extended around the
earth, while their habitats whore sep. |
arated by vast expanses of ocean, If |
wa may assume that the Sonthern cons
tinents wore noarly or quite con eats |
od, when the area botweea the Rooky |
{and Apalachian
Mississippi Sea, prior to the rash of |
Mountains was the
waters southward, then this distriba«
tion problem around the Southern
hemisphere solves itself —Pittaburg
Dispatoh.
tsi con A———
Egzs in Perpetual Froshuess,
Somes months azo a Dablin inven
tor claimed for a preparation of his
that it would preserve eggs in per-
petusl freshness, To thoroaghly test
the efloacy of the invention, whieh,
if sacocessful, would revolationize the
ogg market, an experimant WAS oar
ried out at the Freeman offise, A
sample of eggs immorsed in the pat-
ent solution, which is a thin grayish
paste of the consistency of honey,
have remained undisturbed there for
a period of four months, ani whan
opened the other night in the pros-
enoe of experts were found to be all
perfectly fresh,
I ——————
When aman takes a partner in hus
iness these days it is aa indication he
wants some one to divide expenses,
not to divide profits. — Atchison Globe,
on ——
Rengusnte and iy clum
ment houses com orty-two per
cent. of Nev York dwellings.
Jacob kept his resolu |
| ton, “I will go and ses him before I die,” |
and a little while after we find them walking |
| the tessallated floor of the palace, Jacob and |
SABBATH SCHOOL.
IRPEERATIONAL, LESSON
JULY 22.
Fon
Lesson Text: *“ Flight Into Egypt,”
Math. fii. (Golden
Text: Ps. exxl., 8
Commentary,
13-23
18. “And when they wers departed, be.
hold, the angel of the Lo appearsth to
Joseph In a dream, saying, ise and take
y young child and His mother and flee inte
Egypt, and be thou there un I bri: theo
| word, for Herod will se he young ~hild to
lestroy Him I'he four dren
ter (verses 12, 18, 19, 22
| the many timoes
when Go oveniod His wil
\ Tows and (i
sand
and Hi
jars
y Lord »
s und will
) greater relurn is drawing
Russia and all Innds of the Jews snemios
he promise will not have complete fal
flisdant 1111 the rears from the lesasd of the
nomy -4oath, Then will
near Ir
aves these babes
i's
f Hos x
:
significances of
ring to a person or t
the sourse of events
fom, for all the promis
amen in Him
told them to abl
verse 183, so ti
plans for the n r, ba king for
iar from Him, |
21. “And he aro H 1 voung
child and His
isnd of Israel
in the pillar of
at of Eg Mm 1400 vears
helpless babe in Mar arn
ap out of that sane Eas
nystery of Godliness, God manifest in the
(esh He humbled Himsaslf to be born of
Mary, ceadied in a manger, carried :
and baek, live and grow up in the ht
home at Nazareth, remain there unknown
for thirty years, then go Ik yan His public
work to be despised, rejected and crucified,
all for me The Bon of Gol lovel me and
gave Himsell for m
22. "But when he heard that Archolaus
Hid reign in Judea in the room of his father
Herol he was afraid to go thither, Notwitl
standing, being warned of Gol in a dream
he turned aside into the parts of Galllea’
The moment we turn our eyes from Gol
salons to look at peopls or circumstances
foars are sure to come ; winds and waves will
suse us 1o sink, but with eyes fixed on Jesus
we can walk on the sea. lTastead of hesing
what people say, let us hear what Gol the
Lord will speak, for He will speak peace t
His people (Pa. Ixxxv., 8). A mind staid on
Him will havo perfect peace (Isa. xxvi, 3
23. “And He came and dwelt in a city |
valled Nazareth, that it might be fuillliel
which was spoken by the propeests, He sual
bo called a Nazarene.” There seems 10 be
no sinzie direct prophesy to this offset, but
the testimony of all the prophets was that
Heo wo ald be despis»d an | hold in contempt
even as they were, Nazareth must have heen
a town of poor reputation, judging from
Nathanael's question in John v., 46. The
Hebrew for “ranch” in Isa, xi, 1, i= “net.
per” and may have some bearing upon the
pame Nazarene, If we are truly His, we
must be willing to be despised for His sake, -
Lesson Helper,
Returning to the Old Country.
Thousands of emigrants are returning to
the old country, Seven steamships in one
week alone took away from New York 2658
steerage passengers, while eight arrived with
bat 1318, Last yoar thera wora 499,910 alieny
landad here, and the total departures wers
147,680, Friends and relatives are seading
them money to return to thelr former homes,
asthey are unable to obtain work hers,
80 large has becomes tha exodus that Sane
rotary Carlisle has appointed Ruperintendant
Stump, and Assistant Commissioner Moe
fweony a wpocial committe to investigate
the cause,
0 Kxpel Anarchists.
vi, of Ger h
po ohio! of the pitiog
anti-anarchist measares
upon. It is that the
fataure al anarobists wil be ox
their landing io
|
When drastic
!
--
Take no Substitute for
Royal Baking Powder.
It is Absolutely Pure.
All others contain alum or ammonia.
———
Death of a Snake Charmer, A Cure for Diphtheria,
A corre pon lent to the Lon lon
Globe writes: ** re is at the present
moment being 1 in at least one of
Lon lon fever
f diphtheria, which in ite own
Jim Jones, a half-breed Indian snake |
charmer, died at
Monday from the effect of rattlesnal
bites, which he received last Satur
while handling his pets H:
ing an exhibition with his
they struck him on both thuml
arms swelled an
Dr. Knowlton was sent for, bat could
only render temporary relief. Jones |,
was know all over Madera and Fresno
Coarse
hospitals a treat.
Oriental home has
| There
enormons
Counties as a snake charmer, and, un
like the majority of |
ple who handle
% 3
SnAKes, he
f
1d no fk 1 fangs out
of {
re handling them. He
his pets be
ver reveal,
saturday
time ago Jor
An | Ma le rn,
Cn Mere
CURES OTHERS
For over a quarter of a century, Doctor
Pleros's Golden Medical Discovery has been
effecting cures of Bronchial, Throat and
Lung affections. Weak Lungs, Bleeding
from Lungs, Bronchitis, Asthma, all linger-
ing Coughs, Consumption, or Lung Serofuls
and kindred maladies, are cured by it
REDUCED TO A SKELETON.
Mrs. Mina Mirus, of Sordi, Dig Stene Oo.
Minn., writes “One
ear ago I was given up
y my family physician
and friends; all said I
b . must die My lunge
animals, riginall were badly sffected, and
that this wax was ken up body reduced to a skele.
a A Cie 3 ton My people oom.
state from th menced to give me your
os, but reo curl. ‘Medical Discovery’
’ a ; soon began te
on by the leadi t "n It was pot jon
I became we
enough to take charge
of my household duties
Of What
lm yit pure
agnir
Mrs Mais, my recovery
Pierce's Golden
Medion! Discovery.”
WHY NOT YOU?
Have You? Many Millions Have
ed James Pyle's invitation to
is wonderful discovery, Pyles
: for casy washing and clean-
count them i
nd must have
hat's the way
The wise woman who
rates, tries it; the woman who
tries it continues to use it. A daily
he truth
is, there's nothing so acceptable as
Pearline. Once accept its help, and
you'll decline the imitations—they
don't help you. It washes clothes or
cleans house, It saves labor and it
saves wear. It hurts nothing, but it's
suited to everything. Try it when it
suits you, for it will suit you when you try it.
B Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you, “this is
cware as good as” or “the same as Pe " IT'S FALSE
¢ Pearline is never peddled, and if your grocer sends you somes
thing in place of Pearline, do the honest thing—send if Sack, "175 JAMES PYLE, New Yorke
JUAN P. LOVELL ARMS CO.
Boston, Mass.,
HAS JUST RECEIVED THE
HIGHEST AWARD AND GOLD MEDAL
FOR THEIR
LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES
AT THRE
California Midwinter Exposition,
AT SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
Be a a a TT Th Se SE WL WE WN Bin Se No a SS
““ Thrift is a Good Revenue.” Great Saving Results
From Cleanliness and
SAPOLIO
investi:
increasing sale proves it.
J
a Sh
W kL. CLAS ." eae
$3 SH hr co kIN ENE --
fn SIRENS
RT Te
A box of Tem collars or