Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, May 26, 1898, Image 3

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    DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON.
SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED
DIVINE.
An Appropriate Topic— The Great Need »112
Reform—Churches Must Change to
Work For Good—Kellelon That Will
Make a Revolution In the Family.
TKXT: "These that have turned the world
upside down are come hither also."—
Acts xvil., 6.
There is a wild, bellowing mob a-ound
the house of Jason, in Thessaloniea. What
has the man done so greatly to offend the
people? He has been entertaining Paul
and bis comrades. The mob surround the
bouse and cry: "Bring out those turbulent
preachers! They are interfering with our
business! They are ruining our religion!
They are actually turning the world upside
down!"
The charge was true, for there is noth
ing that so interferes with sin, there is
nothing so ruinous to every form of estab
lished iniquity, there is nothing that has
such tendenoy to turn tne world upside
down as our glorious Christianity. The
fact is, that the world now Is wrong side
up, nnd it needs to be turned upside
down in order that it may be right side up.
The time was when men wrote books en
titling them "Apologies for Christianity."
I hope that day has passed. We want no
more apologies for Christianity. Let the
apologies be on the part of those who do
not believe in our religion. We do not
mean to make any compromise in the mat
ter. We do not wish to hide the fact that
Christianity is revolutionary, and that its
tendency is to turn the world upside down.
Our religion has often been misrepre
sented as a principle of tears, and mild
ness, and fastidiousness; afraid of crossing
people's prejudices; afraid of making
somebody mad; with silken gloves, lifting
the people up from the church pew into
glory, as though they were Bohemian
glass, so very delicate that with one touch
it may be demolished forever. Men speak
of religion as though it were a refined im
becility; as though it were a spiritual
chloroform, that the people were to
take until the sharp cutting of lifo were
over. The Bible, so far from this, repre
sents the religion of Christ as robust and
brawny—ransacking nnd upsetting ten
thousand things that now seem to be set
tled on firm foundations. I hear some
man in the house say, "I thought religion
was peace." That is the final result. A
man's arm is out of place. Two men come,
and with great effort put it back to tho
socket. It goes back with great pain.
Then it gets well. Our world Is horribly
distorted and out of joint. It must come
under an omnipotent surgery, beneath
which there will be pain and aiigulsh be
iore there can come perfect health and
quiet. I proclaim, therefore, in the name
of my Lord Jesus Christ—revolution!
The religion of the Bible will make a
revolution in the family. Those things
that are wrong in the family circle will be
overthrown by it, while justice and har
mony will take tho place. The husband
will be the head of the houeshold only
when he is lit to be. I know a man who
spends all the money he mnkes in drink, as
well as all tho money that his wife mnkes,
and sometimes sells the children's clothes
lor rum. Do you tell rae that he Is to be
the head of that housohold? If the wife
have more nobility, more courage, more
consistency, more of all that is right, she
shall have the supremacy. You say that
tho Bible says that the wife is to bo subject
to the husband. I know it. But that is a
husband, not a masculine caricature.
There is no human or divine law that
makes a woman subordinate ton man un
worthy of her. When Christianity comes
into a domestic circle it will givo tho do
minancy to that one who is the most
worthy of it.
Again: Christianity will produce a revo
lution in commercial circles. Find me fifty
merchants, nnd you find that they have
fifty standards of what is right and wrong.
You say to some one about a merchant, "Is
lie honest?" "Oh! yes," the man says,"he
is honest; but he grinds the faces of his
clerks. He is honest; but he exaggerates
the value of Ills goods. He is honest; but
he loans money on bond and mortgage,
with the understanding that the mortgage
can He quiet for ten years, but as soon as
he gets the mortgage, he records it and
begins a foreclosure suit, and the Sheriff's
writ comes down, and the day of sale ar
rives, and away goes the homestead, and
the creditor buys it in at half price." Hon
est? When he loaned the money he knew
that he would get the homestead at half
price. Honest? But he goes to the insur
ance office to get a policy on bis life, and
tells the doctor that he is well, when he
knows that for ten years he has had but
one lung. Honest? Though he sells prop
erty by the map, forgetting to tell the pur
chaser that the ground is all under water;
but it is generous in him to do that, for he
throws the water into the bargain.
The fraudulent man piles up his gains,
bond above bond, United States security
above United States security, emolument
above emolument, until bis " property has
become a great pyramid; nnd, as he
stands looking at it, he thinks it can never
be destroyed; but the Lord God comes, and
with His little finger pushes It all over.
You build a house and you put into it a
rotten beam. A mechanic standing by
says:"lt will never do to put that beam
in; it will ruin your whole building." But
you put it in. The house is completed.
Soon it begins to rock. You call in the
mechanic and ask: "What is the matter
with this door? What Is the matter with
this wall? Everything seems to be giving
out." Says the mechanic: "You put a
rotten beam into that structure, and the
whole thing has got to come down." Here
, is an estate that seems to be all right now.
It has been building a great many years.
But fifteen years ago there was a dishonest
transaction In that commercial house.
That one dishonest transaction will keep
on working ruin In the whole structure un
til down the estate will come in wreck and
ruin about tho possessor's ears—one dis
honest dollar in the estate demolishing all
his possession. I have seen It again and
again; and so have you.
You have an old photograph of the signs
on your street. Why have those signs near
ly all changed within the iogt twenty years?
Does the passing away of a generation ac
count for It? Oh.no. Does the fact that
there are hundreds'of honest men who go
down every year account for It? Oli, no.
This is tho secret: The Lord God iins been
walking through the commercial streets of
our great cities; and he has been adjusting
things according to the principles of etor
nal rectitude.
The time will come when, through the
revolutionary power of tho Gospel, a false
hood, instead of being called exaggeration,
equivocation, or evasion, will be branded a
lie! And stealings, that now sometimes
go under the head of percentages aud
commissions, and bonuses, will be put into
tho catalqgue of State-prison offenses.
Society will be turned inside out nnd up
side down, and ransacked ot God's truth,
until business dishonesties shall come to
an end. and all double-dealing; *nd God
will overturn, add overturn, and overturn;
nnd commercial men in all cities will throw
up their hands, crying out, "These that
have turned the world upside down are
come hither."
The religion of Jesus Christ will produce
a revolution in our churches. The non
committal. do-nothing policy of the Church
of God will give way to a spirit of bravest
conquest. Piety In this day seems to me
to be salted down just so ns to keep. It
seems as if the church were chiefly anxious
to take carp of itself: and if we hear of
want, and squalor, nnd heathenism outside
"What n pity!'" and we put our
our pockets, and we feel around
'-cent piece, and with a great
e put it upon the plate and are
at the world is not converted in
«. Suppose there were n great
there were three hundred thou-
■and soldiers, but all ot those three ban*
dred thousand soldiers, excepting temmen,
were in their tents, or scouring their musk
ets, or cooking rations. You would says
"Of course, defeat must come in that
case." Is is worse than that in the church.
Millions of the professed soldiers of Jesus
Christ are cooking rations, or asleep in
their tents, while only one man here and
there goes out to do battle for the Lord.
I saw in some paper an account of a
church in Boston in which, It Is said, there
were a great many plain people. The next
week the trustees of that church came out
in the paper, and said it was not so at all;
"they were elegant people and highly
conditioned people that went there." Then
I laughed outright; and when I laugh, I
laugh very loudly. "Those people," I
said, "are afraid of the sickly sentimen
tality of the churches."
Revolution! The pride of the church
must come down. The exolustveness of the
church must come downl The financial
boastings of the church must come downl
If monetary success were the chief idea in
the church, then I say that the present
mode of conducting finances is the best. It
it Is to see how many dollars you can gain,
then the present mode is the best. But it
it is the saving of souls from sin and death,
and bringing the mighty population of our
cities to the knowledge of God, then I cry,
Revolution! It is coming fast. I feel it in the
air. I hear the rumbling of an earthquake
that shall shake down, in one terrific
crash, the arrogance of our modern Christ
ianity.
The talk is. whether Protestant churches
or Roman Catholic churches are coming
out ahead. I tell you, Protestants, this
truth plainly: that until your churches are
as free as are the Roman Catholic cathe
drals they will beat you. In their cathe
drals the millionaire and the beggar kneel
side by side. And, until that time comes
in our churches, we can not expect the
favor of God or permanent spiritual pros
perity.
Where and when will that Revolution be
gin? Here, and now. In your heart and
mine. Sin must go down, our pride must
go down; our worldliness must go down,
that Christ may come up. Revolution!
"Except a man be born again, he can not
seethe Kingdom of God." Why not now
let the revolution begin? Not next Sab
bath, but, now! Not to-morrow, when
you go out into commercial circles, but
now!
Ar ihias, the magistrate of Thebes, was
sitt' g with many mighty men, drinking
wir A messenger came in, bringing a
leti. .• informing him of a conspiracy to end
his life, and warning him to lice. Archlas
took the letter, but, instead of opening it,
put it into his pocket, and said to the mes
senger who brought it: "Business to-mor
row!" The next dny he read it. Before lie
opened the letter, the Government was
captured. When he renil the letter it was
too late. To-day I put into the hands of
every man and woman, who hears or
reads these words,a message of life. It says:
"To-day, if ye will hear His voice, harden
not yoiir heart." Do not put away the
message and say: "This business to-mor
row." This night thy soul may bo required
of thee!
A Uullet Its Own Doctor.
In sjiite of the terrible incroase in the
destructiveness of modern warfare, the
tendency of the times is to make a conflict
as humane as practicable. For this reason
the use of copper-covered bullets has been
frowned upon, and a Philadelphia physi
ciau has a plan that he claims will wonder
fully mitigate the suffering of a man whose
body has been perforated by the modern
small-caliber bullet. It is well established
that the velocity and penetrating force of
these bullets are so great that unless they
chance to strike a bone they will pass en
tirely through a man's body without his
knowing it. The physician's idea is to at
tach a small wad of antiseptic cotton to
the rear of tho bullet. This would be cov
ered by the shell of the cartridge, and
could not interfere with loading or firing.
As the bullet passes through a person tho
wad will antisepticize the wound and pre
' <?ut consequent suppuration. It may be
possible to so nicely adjust the adhesion of
the wad to the bullet that as the missile
passes out it will leave the wad to plug the
Hole and stop bleeding. Ultimately this
system might do away with the necessity
of a large medical corps, as each bullet
would carry medical treatment for the un
fortunate it wounded. Philadelphia
Record.
The I-and of the I.nzy.
"In a late sojourn in Honduras," said
Mr. L. B. (livens, "Icume to the conclusion
that it was a paradise for lazy men. Every
thing grows luxuriantly with but little
labor on the part of the nntives, and many
crops do not need replanting more than
once in eight or ten years. The country
offers fine inducements to enterprising
men, but it is hard on a white man used to
civilized ways togo down there and dwell
among nn ignorant lot of nntives who are
100 years behind the times. A man would
have no congenial society, and might as
well be in exile. Tho nntives usually live
in bamboo houses, though in the towns the
dwellings nre of adobe. Children go naked
for the first two or three years of their life,
and the attire of the adults Is rather scant.
The Government is liberal with concessions
in order to encourage development of the
country's resources, but there is no gen
eral rule governing the granting of privi
leges, it all depends on how good a bargain
may be driven. The climate Is very
salubrious, and laziness Is about the only
prevailing disease.—Washington Post.
EX-CONVICT CANNOT CURE,
Doctors Who Commit Jrline Prohibited
From Pra< It-lug.
The United States Supreme Court af
firmed the constltutMnullty of the act of
the New York Legislature of 1895 prohibit
ing persons who have besn convicted of
and punished for a crime from practicing
medicine in the State.
The question arose in the case of Walker
vs. the State of New York. Walker had
served ten years In the State Penitentiary
for an offense committed in 1878 and after
his release set up as n physician, and at
the time the law in question was enacted
was practicing that profession.
The Court held that it was within the
police power of the State to enact such a
law.
GOMEZ'S WIFE AN AMERICAN.
She la a Daughter of Henry Martin, of
Mall'* Creek, East Tennessee.
The wife of Maximo Gomez, commander
in-chief of the insurgent forces In Cuba, is
nn American woman. Her name before
marriage to tho great old soldier was Miss
Tink Martin, and she was a daughter of
Henry Murtin, of Null's Creek, East Ten
nessee .
She married l>, Georgia man, nnd after he
died she went to Hnvnua, and there met
Gomez, whom she married shortly after
ward.
As the Martin family was nn old and
wealthy one, Mrs. Gomez hrn hud all the
advantages, social and educational, of a
refined and cultured Amerionn woman,
CUBA'S FUTURE.
It Will he Under the Btarii and Stripes
Until Peace Is Restored.
President McKinley has authorized as
surances to be given that everybody's
rights will be respected, and that, when
the people of Cuba establish their govern
ment, it will be under the supervision of
the military authorities of tho United
States, nnd all qualified electors, whether
combatants or non-combatants, will be
given an oppurtunlty to participate in the
formation of the constitution. The Island
of Cuba will be under the Stars and Stripes
until pence is restored and some guarantee
can be given that no outrages will occur.
A Great Year For Comets.
The year IMS is the time appointed for
the return of a number of periodic comets.
A TEMPERANCE COLUMN.
THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST
IN MANY WAYS.
The Seven Stage, of Rum—Tlie Unan.wer
able Reason Why the Allowance oi
Grog to the Bluq|acketa In Our Navy
Wu Discontinued.
All the world's a tavern,
And all the men and women merely drink
ers;
They have their cocktails and tbelr whisky
straight.
And one man la his time drinks many
quarts.
His c.ourse being sevea stages. At first a
clear bead, .
Sober and steadfast In all good resolves;
And then the morning bitters, with cherry
red
And slice of mellow pine, creeping like
snail
Unwillingly to work. And then the tippler,
Sneaking back agntn, with a woful story
About pains internally. Then a toper,
Full of strange oaths and loaded to the
guard.
Jealous In plotting, sodden, and quick to
imbibe,
Seeking the bubbling repetition
Even at the bottle's mouth. And then the
drunkard,
In grumbling belly with poor liquor lined,
With eyes bleary and board for days uncut,
Full of rash words and prone to quarrel
ing;
And so he plays his part. The sixth stage
shifts
Into the grim and ragged roustabout,
With carbuncles on nose and patch on
head,
His shrunken face unshaved, while bar to
bar
He beats his way; and hie onoe manly
voice,
Unhinged by sloth and thirst colossal,
pleads
And whimpers for a drink. Last scene of
all,
That ends this sad and shameful history,
Is beastly sottishnt'ss and foul oblivion—
Sans rum, sans beer, sans pipe, sans every
thing.
—John W. Fostgate.
Temperance in the Navy,
Now that the course of events has
brought into prominence the ships of oui
navy and the sailors who man them, it
will b« interesting to know that the prac
tice of serving out a ration of liquor daily
to United States man-of-war's men was
discontinued many years ago. It was
found to be a bad scheme, for while many
of the men used the rum in moderation,
the ration of liquor only served to ntlmu
late an appetite for more, among a great
number of the bluejackets. When this fact
was satisfactorily proven, the serving out
of "grog" to United States man-of-wnr's
men was discontinued. Sailors in all other
of the world's great navies still receive
their daily "grog." though temperance
reforms iu Great ]>ritain have been for
many years working to put a stop to its
distribution on the ships of her Brltanlc
Majesty. It is claimed thut much injury
is done to the apprentices aboard the
ships jy creating the appetite for liquor
among 'them, and this claim is not with
out foundation, for the lads get the same
amount of rum from the boatswain as the
oldest sailor. Another reason for discon
tinuing this practice is now being consid
ered by the British admiralty ofTlce. It
seems that British bluejackets have, many
of them, got into the habit of accumu
lating their grog, Instead of drinking it as
it is served out. When they have aggre
gated a large quantity, they enter on a
debauch for one or two (lavs, and gener
ally wind up in the "brig" iu double irons
for sobering-up purposes. It is consid
ered probable that grog, as a part of the
British naval rations, will soon be cut out
for this reason. It is gratifying to know
that the temptation has been removed
from the men of our navy, and that the
navy of another nation may soon be free
of it also.
The Drunkard.
Under the above caption a recent number
of the New York Independent has an article
from which we make the following ex
tracts:
"That the drunkard should destroy his
own body and consume it in the Ilres of
alcohol is bad enough, but the crudest
side of the picture is t he suffering ho causes
other Innocent people. Heartbroken fath
ers, and weeping mothers, and wives whose
lives are one protracted tragedy, couli'
alone adequately describe the "neediest
misery.
"But the saddest phase of the drunkard's
career is found in tlie legacy he bequeaths
to posterity—ldiocy, hysteria, epilepsy and
Insanity. That a 'drunken father has a
drunken son' Is as old as Plutarch; but the
more comprehensive denunciation of the
Scriptures, 'The sins of the fathers are
visited upon the children to the third and
fourth generations' is but a common-place
observation of all our Insane and Inebriate
asylum superintendents. Doctor 8. G.
How reported to the Massachusetts legis
lature that ot 300 Idiots whose parentage
had been traced 147 were found to be tho
children of drunkards. Doctor Wilson
gives the statistics of one family where all
the seven children of intemperate parents
, were either Insane, epileptic or criminals,
one woman having been arrested forty-two
times for criminal actions.
"And one of the saddest features In the
matter is that tho deterioration ot the ner
vous tissue not onlv makes the child an
easy prey to the desire for alcohol, but
possibly skips one generation to break out
In the third."
Testimony of a Governor.
In a communication recently sent by
Governor Wolcott to the police commis
sioners of Boston regarding the number ot
drinklng-places, the following significant
passage occurs: "I have for years felt
that the number «112 saloons in the immedi
ate proximity of some of the principal
railroad stations is excessive, and tends to
make the approaches thereto disagreeable
to respectablo citizens, especially to women
and children, and to place an extraor
dinary degree of temptation in the way of
the weak. I should personally regret to
seethe immediate neighborhood of the new
station reduced to the conditions whloh
have surrounded some ot the older one;
which are now displaced."
Shafts Shot at tho Demon Drink.
Flenty of beer in the summer means little
fire In the winter.
Chicago, It is said, spends annually tor
beer $23,000,000.
"What maintains one vice would bring
up two children."—Benjamin Franklin.
Some babies are brought up on the bot
tle, and a good many men are brought
down by It.
Tbere Is nothing elevating or refining
nbout drink or drinking places; their whole
tendency is downward.
"In tho bottle discontent seeks for com
fort, cowardice for courage, and bashful
ness for confidence."—Johnson.
The man who gets drunk without suffer
ing injury is not over-burdened with brains.
Drink neither wine nor strong drink, so
long as by It you make weak or cause to
stumble, and tempt into ruin or misery the
soul of a brother.
"A drunken man is like a drowned man,
n fool and a madman; one draught above
heat makes him a fool; the second mads
him, and a third drowns him."—Shake
speare.
There are quite a number of people
who will now begin to drink intoxi
cants for spring medicine. Those are the
same people who in the other three seasons
of the year do not fall to find excuses for
tbelr inclination to drink.
Haymaking- In India.
At Allahabad eight oattings of grass
are taken dnring the season, which
begins early ,in the monsoon, and
lasts, say, from the middle of Jnne to
the middle of March. From manured
lend the total weight varies from fif
teen to forty tons per acre, according
to the quality of the soil and the num
ber of years which have elapsed since
the manure was applied. The jhabau,
a native hook which resembles a scythe
blade, is preferred to the grass mower
drawn by bullocks, as the clean cut of
former is less injurious to the grass
stubble than the clipping action of
the latter, which reduces the number
of cuttings from eight to two. On
poor, unmanured land only one crop
can be cut for hay In October.
The haymaking season begins in
the middle of September. It is im
possible to make good bay before
this time, for, even in periods when
there is no rain, the ground is so wet
that moisture is drawn up by the hay,
which, quite independently of this
circumstance, does not dry properly
in the humid atmosphere. There are
forty-eight good species of natural
grasses, some of which are as valuable
as any British grass, and frequent
cutting develops a fine quality of prb
duce.—Blackwell's Magazine,
The President's War M»p.
Not many of the President's visitors
are admitted to the war room. Those
who are thus favored see something
novel in the way of war planning. A
very large map has been prepared and
mounted with a wooden back. It
shows the Atlantic Ocean with the
Roasts of both sides and the islands
between. The map covers that part
of the ocean from the banks of New
foundland to the mouth of the Ama
zon. When the measurements are
given some idea can he formed of the
scale. The length of the map is per
haps eighteen feet and the width is
ten feet. liittle paper ships have been
snt with the names plainly printed.
These ships, representing the two
navies, are fastened in their places 011
the map with pins, and are moved
from day to dny to correspond with
the movements of the ships. The
President, the Secretaries of War and
the Navy, Lieutenant-General Scho-
Seld and members of the War Council
vud Strategy Board have before them
the exact positions of up to
;he latest information as they discuss
ihe plans from day today. The
whole game of war, so far as the At
lantic is concerned, with the locations
nf the pawns, is before them.—St.
i Louis Globe-Democrat.
A N«*w Motor Carriajtr.
A Frenchman has patented a very
iimple motor carriage, which has only
Iwo wheels and yet keeps its balance,
;he wheels being placed side by side
jn a downwardly curved axle with the
weight of the machinery below the
;enter, the usual gas engine being
ased to propel the carriage.
SINGULAR STATEMENT.
From Mrs. Bank to Mrs. Pinkham
The following letter to Mrs. Pink
ham from Mrs. M. RANK, No. 2,354
East Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia,
Pa., is a remarkable statement of re
lief from utter discouragement. She
says:
" I never can find words with which
to thank you for what Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound has done
for me.
" Some years ago I had womb trouble
and doctored for a long time, not see
ing any improvement. At times 1
would feel well enough, and other
times was miserable. So it went on
until last October, I felt something
terrible creeping over me, I knew not
what, but kept getting worse. I can
hardly explain my feelings at that
time. I was so depressed in spirits
that I did not wish to live, although I
had everything to live for. Had hys
teria, was very nervous; could not
sleep and was not safe to be left
alone.
" Indeed, I thought I would lose my
mind. No one knows what I endured.
" 1 continued this way until the last
of February, when I saw in a paper a
testimonial of a lady whose case was
similar to mine, and who had been
cured by Lydia E. Pinkharns Vegeta
ble Compound. I determined to try it,
and felt better after the first dose. I
continued taking it, and to-day am a
well woman, and can say from my
heart, ' Thank God for such a medi
cine.'"
Mrs. Pinkham invites uLi Buffering
women to write to her at Lynn, Mass.,
for advice. All such letters are seen
and answered by women only
jjADWAY'S
n PILLS,
Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cauwe Per
fect Digestion, complete absorption and healthful
regularity. For the cure of all disorders of the
Btomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous
Diseases.
LOSS OF APPETITE,
SICK HEADACHE,
INDIGESTION,
DIZZY FEELINGS,
FEMALE COMPLAINTS,
BILIOUSNESS,
DYSPEPSIA,
PERFECT DIGESTION wilt be accomplished by
taking Radway's Pills. By their ANTI-BILIOUS
properties they stimulate the liver in the secretion
of the bile ana its discharge through the biliary
ducts. These Pills in doses from two to four will
quickly regulate the action of the liver and free the
patient from these disorders. One or two of Rad
way's Pills, taken daily by those subject to bilious
pains and torpidity of the liver, will keep the sys
tem regular and secure healthy digestion.
Price, Sft els. per Box. Sold by all druggists, ot
sent by mall on receipt of price.
RADWAY & CO., 55 Elm St., New York,
< J »
| No amount of argument can convince the experienced, £
honest grocer that any other soap will give his customers »
<s such general satisfaction as Ivory Soap. He knows that &
§ they prefer Ivory Soap to new kinds, of unknown quality. j|
<|| Ivory Soap will sell because the people want it, the K
<j! other soaps may look like Ivory, but his customers want K
$ the real thing—they may buy a new soap once to try it, j|
<1 but they come back again and again for Ivory Soap, and K
| 1 they insist on having it. g
ALL'S RHEUMATIC CURE. The rarest and the best Sample sent
rRKE 011 iilentiun ot thin publication. THE DR. WHITEHALL MFURIMINE CO.. South B»nd, Indiana.
PAINTiSWALLSiCEILINGS
CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS
FOB DECOMTIN6 WILLS >llO CEIUHGS psi'nyn"'^^
grocer or paint dealer and do your own kal- UMfcUIIHU somining.
This material is made on scientific principles by machinery and milled
in twenty-four tints and is superior to any concoction of Glue and Whit
ing that can possibly be made by hand. To BE MIXED WITH COLD WATEB.
®ay°SEXl> FOR SAMPLE COLOR CARDS and if you cannot
purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and we will
put you in the way of obtaining it.
THE WIKALO CO., SEW BRICHTOX, S. 1., XEW YORK
For tbree years we have been experimenting witb,
developing and perfecting
Bevel-Gear
ChainSess Bicycles.
Price *125 t o all ■lik». I
This work has been in the hands of the
most expert cycle engineers in the pro
fession and we have succeeded in build
ing a bicycle that everyone who has
ridden admits is a better hill climber
than any chain wheel yet made.
GolumblaChainWheels s 7s, HartfordsfSO, Vedettes $ 40,*35
POPE MFC. CO., Hartford, Conn.
Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail for one 2-eent stamp.
" Fool's Haste is Nae Speed." Don't
Hurry the Work Unless You Use
SAPOLIO
nrißitcrt T " "<> AJJFMI,
KXnm&|| The N. C. ft Rubber Mfg. Co..
IKlUulljll ><•« Uuioo St.. TOLEDO, UUIO. Cwlowlak
IIKI and Liquor Habit cured In
lIIJI I 10 to SO No pay till
lirilimcurad. nr. J. Stephen*.
VI IVIYI Dept. A, Lebanon, Ohio.
nrMCIOIU' OHN V.IIOBBIIL
llblvOlvll Washington, D.C.
■f Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
■ Late Principal Examlner UTS. Pension Bureau.
m 3yraiu lant war, 15 adj udlcat lug claims, atty aiuo^
TUMOMNW THIB PAPER WHEN REI'LY
IYLJLIIN 11UJN ING TO ADVTB. NYNU-gQ.
delight to do an iwljr
good tarn. The working part*
MAM IFC^ ANY AIKMOTORW
■ CXCHANQID ■
■ AFIMFOR A ROLLER■
H BEARlNC.x.phyr run. ■
•Ter-foiuj, everlasting, power*
■ doubling. UP-TO-DATE *oß■
■ mQTOR«B FT. FOR $6; " ft. for|i2 ; ll^H
fer 930. They run like a bicycle, end ere made like e
welch, every movable pert en rollere. Doublet geared
■ Mill power. The Asrmotor ran when ell other mille ■
■ stood still, end made the steel windmill business. ■
■ THE NEW BEATS THE OLD AS THEH
■ OLD SEAT THE WOODEN WHEEL. ■
■ On receipt of amount, revised motor (but net wheel ■
■ or vane) will be sent to replace old one then to NH
returned. Offer subject to canoe! letien at any time.
It your old wheel is not an Atrnotor, write for
terms of swap—new for old—to goon old