The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 13, 1894, Image 7

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    Th, Women Know B*»t.
■ ment has been caused by
''w'-inlreports of the United States
fll i.n governments, in which
“ the evidences of the su
I'""' ' , |, purity and wholesome
,,r(s he k •'■»!iii,kin* i;°rler- •,
‘ ‘1 #W the rood housewife
’ mindations of the Royal
1 Powder from scientists and
' .. S110h as these very much
, , „‘g of refined goU.” Her
■tio-il experience long since taught
‘ he most convincing way the
, ,,ef,.lness aml *»pe»onty of the
,i Uti.-le. A higher proof than
' ,! ,|(,es not want and cannot have.
‘ is pleasant for her to realize
11 * ... 4.. l.litilitaii V»V 111 PSA
,UIU lur uc* w
facts established by these
lt competitive tests, these scientific
t niinpeimvu u ? “--7
■ illations made under direction of
. eminent, exactly parallel those
!3J I,efore worked out in her own
mil-sense practical way.
i„es not appear that any baking
■. when presented in competi
!;,o, the Koval, either at the Ooy
,nt tests or before World’s Fair
‘ has ever received favor or award
Koval or made an equal show
, purity, strength or wholesome
Intent Idea* in Dregs.
I(we velvet muffs will be used this
•er than in a number of years and
^.oais will also be fashioned for
■ i on wear and for church.
■ ■rcat deal has been said about
■i hosiery going out of fashion, but
vhl continue to bo the correct style
■ Utlie hosiery matches the gown in
H IV will be an epidemic of plaids
, n. the winter is over and many of
■ new designs arc very artistic. The
h!ii lire large and solid in body and
■ check is defined by lines in the
>t est of the new shades. Although
.■ checks make very smart gowns
tiic stout women beware of looking
tcMuie thus draped.
Nrwgpnper* Left In Cura.
,, w York Sun: “What do you do
th all the newspapers you collect?”
■ r. a passenger of an elevated rail
... conductor us he left the train at
city hall station, and following the
ample of half a dozen other passen
r.. handed a morning paper to the
n.iuctor and saw him add it to a
rich already bulging in his pocket,
la. give 'em to the engineers, fire
■n. ticket choppers, yardmen, track
airers and others along the line,”
i„ the reply. “They look to us regu
y for their favorite paper, and we
ways have more than enough of all
its logo round.”
: ■ raw silk from Kansas cocoons is said
If the lest in the world.
KNOWLEDGE
brings comfort and improvement and
ids to personal enjoyment when
htly used. The many, who live bet
than others and enjoy life more, with
b expenditure, by more promptly
ipting the world’s best products to
needs of physical being, will attest
' value to health of the pure liquid
■alive principles embraced in the
■ ly, Syrup of Figs.
ts excellence is due to its presenting
t ie form most acceptable and plena
t to the taste, the refreshing and truly
icfieial properties of a perfect lax
ve : effectually cleansing the system,
jxUing colds, headaches and fevers
J permanently curing constipation.
given satisfaction to millions and
t with the approval of the medical
wssinn, because it acts on the Kid
j,ver and Bowels without weak
1[‘? t''p,n and it is perfectly free from
ry objectionable substance.
'yrupof Figs is for sale by all dni"p
- in oOc and $L bottles, but it is man*
‘ tar"!1 bv the California Fig Syrup
' nly, whose name is printed on every
ii1"*-’*also ^‘e name, Syrup of Figs,
wing well informed, you <vill not
fP- any substitute if offered.
COLCHESTER”
SPADING
BOOT.
BEST IN MARKET.
BEST IX FIT
S1£,1,^)VKARING
QUALITY.
■ • {ends’'l,,er,’r,aP sole ex
•".e "" 'dew hoe lenirtli
^’dowt, t.. the heel? fro!
•itecnnethe bout in »lie
Bwwkani1 iU ulber har<d
asr Tori; Dealer
>ur THEM
*■" Ri bber
co.
Stichinus^ous names
*» letraii-h. the poets
mdtd __F *
pat Men.
■ ..!|rsJ*lh,"net and St. !*«,'.i tv/"* .NaP^le«tt,
^ «'<*'" fcssi
r. me
Handel, the composer:
and J.V •
L ——.-v.(yifflo -—
PSofGQLDP'^S^ENDORpnmTv^
!"'®W,r>'wi">r“:mVe»rriw»,SMRI
gliMsili
IALF,
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LLsTREET
an,) f,,:i ru,'\ handle.)
l . -ationSUCl —m
• -_44 Whilst., New Yorl
I. —-""‘St-, New York
fej|^6-Marks
BIG REVIVAL IS NEAR.
ALL MANKIND IS TURNING TO
WARD ISRAEL,
Dr* Talma*:© Reads the Slgm of the
Times In s Notable Sermon—Real
Meaning: of Electricity, Steam and
Other Improvements*
Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 2.—Dr. Tal
mage chose for the subject of his ser
mon through the press to-day, the
“Objections to Religious Revivals,"
from the text: Luke v:G, “They in
closed a great multitude of fishes, and
their net broke.”
Simon and his comrades had experi
enced the night before what fishermen
call “poor luck.” Christ steps on board
the fishing smack and tells the sailors
to pull away from the beach, and di
rects them to sink the net. Sure enough,
very soon the net is full of fishes, and
the sailors begin to haul in. So large
a school of fish was taken, that the
hardy men begin to look red in the
face as they pull, and hardly have they
begun to rejoice at their success when
snap goes a thread of the net, and snap
goes another thread, so there is danger
not only of losing the fish, but of los
ing the net.
Without much care as to how much
the bogt tilts, or how much water is
splashed on deck, the fishermen rush
about, gathering' up the broken meshes
of the net. Out yonder is a ship danc
ing on the wave, and they hail it:
“Ship ahoy! bear down this way!'' The
ship comes, and both boats, and fish
ing smacks are filled with the floun
dering treasures.
“Ah!” says some one, “how much
better it would have been if they had
stayed on shore, and fished with a
hook and line, and taken one at a
time, instead of having this great ex
citement, and the boat almost upset,
and the net broken, and having to call
for help, and getting sopping wet with
the sea!” The church is the boat, the
gospel is the net, society is the sea.
and a great revival is a whole school
brought in at one sweep of the net.
I have admiration for that man who
goes out with a hook and line to
fish. 1 admire the way he unwinds
the reel, and adjusts the bait, and
drops the hook in a quiet place on a
still afternoon, and here catches one
and there one; but I like also a big
boat, and a large crew, and a net a
mile long, and swift oars, and stout
sails, and a stiff breeze, and a great
multitude of souls brought—so great a
multitude that you have to get help to
draw it ashore, straining the net to the
utmost until it breaks here and there,
letting a few escape, but bringing the
great multitude into eternal safety.
In other words, I believe in revivals.
The great work of saving men began
with 3,000 people joining the church in
one day, and it will close with forty or
a hundred million people saved in
twenly-four hours, when nations shall
be born in a da£. But there are ob
jections to revivals. People are op
posed to them because the net might
get broken, and if by the pressure of
souls it does not get broken, then they
take their own penknives and slit the
net. “They inclosed a great multitude
of fishes and the net broke. ”
It is sometimes opposed to revivals
of religion that those who come into
the church at such times do not hold
out; as long as there is a gale of bless
ing, they have their sails up; but as
soon as strong winds stop blowing,
then they drop into a dead calm. But
what are the facts in the case? In all
our churches, the vast majority of the
useful people are those who are
brought in under great awakenings,
and they hold out. Whoare the prom
inent men in the United States in
churches, in prayer meetings, in Sab
bath schools? For the most part they
are the product of great awakenings.
I have noticed that those who are
brought into the Kingdom of God
through revivals have more persistence
and more determination in the Chris
tian life than those who come in under
a low state of religion. People born
in an ice house may live, but they will
never get over the cold they caught in
the ice house. A cannon ball depends
upon the impulse with which it starts
for how far it shall go and how swiftly;
and the greater the revival force with
which a soul is started, the more far
reaching and far-resounding will be
the execution.
ljut it is sometimes objected to re
vivals that there is so much excitement
that people mistake hysteria for re
ligion.
We must admit that in every revival
of religion there is either a suppressed
or a demonstrated excitement. In
deed, if a man can go out of a state of
condemnation into a state of accept
ance with God, or see others go, with
out any agitation of soul, lie is in an
unhealthy, morbid state, and is as re
pulsive and absured as as a man who
should boast he saw a child snatched
out from under a horse's hoofs, and
felt no agitation, or saw a man rescued
from the fourth story of a house on
fire, and felt no acceleration of the
pulse.
Salvation from sin and death and
hell into life and peace and heaven
forever, is such a tremeudous thing
that if a man tells me lie can look on
it without any agitation I doubt his
Christianity. The fact Is, that some
times excitement is the most impor
tant possible thing. In case of resusic
tation from drowning or freezing the
one idea is to excite animation. Ue
fore conversion we are dead. It is the
business of the church to revive,
arouse, awaken, resuscitate, startle
into life. Excitement is bad or good
according to what it makes us do. If
it makes us do that which is bad, it is
bad excitement; but if it make us agi
tated about our eternal welfare, if it
make us pray, if it make us attend
upon Christian service, if it make us
cry unto God for jercy, then it is a
good excitement.
It is sometimes said that during re
rivals of religion great multitudes of
children and young people are brought
into the chureh, and they do not know
what they are about. It has been my
observation that the earlier people
come into the kingdom of God the
more useful they are.
Rabert Hall, the prince of Raptist
preachers, was converted at 12 years
of age. It is supposed he knew what
he was about. .Matthew Henry, the
commentator, who did more than any
man of his e**ntury for increasing the
interest in the study of the scriptures,
was converted at 11 years of age;
Isabella Graham, immortal in the
Christian church, was converted at 10
years of age; Dr. Watts, whose hymns
will be sung all down the< ages', was
converted at 9 years of age;' Jonathan
Edwards, perhaps the mightiest intel
lect that the American pulpit ever
produced, was converted at 7 years of
age; and that father and mother take
an awful responsibility when they tell
their child at 7 years of age, “You are
too young to be a Christian,” or “You
are too young to connect yourself with
the church.” That is a mistake us
long as eternity.
ii during a revival two persons pre
sent themselves as candidates for thd
church, and the one is ten years of agej
and the other is 40 years of age, I will
have more confidence in the profession
of religion of the one 10 years of age
than the one 40 years of age. Why?
The one who professes at 40 years of
age has forty years of impulse in the
wrong direction to correct, the child
has only ten years in the wrong di
rection to correct. Four times ten are
forty. Four times the religious pros
pect for the lad that comes into the
kingdom of God, and into the church
at 10 years of age than the man at 40.
1 am very apt to look upon revivals
as connected with certain men who
fostered them. People who in this
day do not Jike revivals, never
theless have not words to
express their admiration for the re
vivalists of tlie past, for they were
revivalists—Jonathan Edwards, John
Wesley, George Whitfield, Fletcher.
Grittin, Davies, Osborn, Knapp, Nettle
ton, and many others whose names
come te my mind. The strength of
their intellect and the holiness of
their lives make me think they would
not have anything to do with that
which was ephemeral. Oh! it is easy
to talk against revivals.
A man said to Mr. Dawson: “I like
your sermons very much, but the after
meetings I despise. When the prayer
meetings begin I always go up into the
gallery and look down, and I am dis
gusted.” “Well,” said Mr. Dawson,
“the reason is you go on the top of
your neighbor's house and look down
his chimney to examine his fire, and
of course you only get smoke in your
eyes. Why don't you come in the door
and sit down and warm?”
Oh! I am afraid to say anything
against revivals of religion, or against
anything that looks like them, be
eaus£ 1 think jt may be a sin against
the Holy Ghost, and you know the
Bible says that a sin against the Holy
Ghost shall never be forgiven, neither
in this world nor the world to come.
Now, if you are a painter, and I
speak against your pictures, do I
not speak against you? If you
are an architect, and I speak against
a building you put up, do I not speak
against you? If a revival be the work
of the Holy Ghost, and I speak against
that revival, do I not speak against
the Holy Ghost. And whosoever
speaketh against the Holy Ghost, says
the Bible, he shall never be forgiven,
neither in this world nor in the world
to come. I think sometimes people
have made a fatal mistake in this
direction.
Many of you know the history of
Aaron Burr. He was one of the most
brilliant men of his day. 1 suppose
this country never produced a stronger
intellect He was capable of doing
anything good and great for his coun
try, or for the Church of God had he
been rightly disposed; but his name is
associated with treason against the
United States government which he
tried to overthrow, and with libertin
ism and public immorality.
Do you know where Aaron Burr
started on the downward road. It was
when he was in college, and he became
anxious about his soul, and was about
to put himself under the influences of
a revival, and a minister of religion
said: Don't go there Aaron, don't go
there; that's a place of wildfire and
great excitement; no religion about
that; don’t go there.” He tarried away.
His serious impressions departed. He
started on the downward road. And
who is responsible for his ruin? Was
it the minister who warned him against
that revival?
When I am speaking of excitement
in revivals, of course I do not mean
temporary derangement of the nerves;
I do not mean the absurd things of
which we have read as transpiring
sometime in the church of Christ, but
l mean an intelligent, intense, all
absorbing agitation of body, mind and
soul in the work of spiritual escape
and spiritual rescue.
The difficulty is that when a revival
begins in a church it begins at so many
points, that while you have doused one
anxious soul with a pail of cold water,
there are 500 other anxious souls on
fire. Oh! how much better it would be
to lay hold of the chariot of Christ's
gospel and help pull it on rather than
to fling ourselves in front of the
wheels, trying to block their progress.
We will not stop the chariot, but we
ourselves will be ground to powder.
Did you ever hear that there was a
convention once held among the ice-,
bergs in the Arctic? It seems that the
summer was coming on and the sun
was getting hotter and hotter, and:
there was danger that the whole ice
field would break up and flow away;
so the tallest, and the coldest, and the
broadest of all the icebergs, the very1
king of the Arctics, stood at the head1
of the convention, and with a gavel of
lco smote on a table of ice calling the
convention to order, lint the tun
kept growing in intensity of heat, and
the south wind blow stronger and
stronger, and soon all the ice field be
gan to flow away. The first resolution
passed by the convention was: “lie
solved, That we abolish the sun.”
But the sun would not be abolished.
The hent of the sun grew greater and
greater until after awhile the very
king of the icebergs began to perspire
under the glow, and the smaller ice
bergs fell over, and the cry was: “Too
much excitement! order! order!” Then
the wbolo body, the whole field of ice,
began to flow out, and a thousand
voices began to ask: “Where are we
going to now? Where are wo floating
to? We will all break to pieces.” By
this time the icebergs had reached the
gulf stream; and they were melted into
the bosom of the Atlantic ocean. The
warm sun is the eternal spirit. Tito
icebergs are frigid Christians. The
warm gulf stream is a great revival.
The ocean into whicli everything melt
ed is the great, wide heart of the par
doning and sympathizing God.
But 1 think, after all, the greatest
obstacle to revivals throughout Christ
endom to-day is an unconverted min
istry. Wo must believe that the vast
majority of those who officiate at
sacred altars are regenerated; but 1
suppose there may float into the min
istry of ull the denominations of Chris
tians men whose hearts have never
been changed by the grace of God. Of
course they are all antagonistic to re
vivals.
.Suppose by some extra prolongation
of human life, at the next fifty years
you should walk around the world,
you would not in all that walk find
one person that you recognize. Why .’
All dead, or so changed you would not
know them. In other words, if you
postpone the redemption of this world
for fifty years, you admit that the ma
jority of the two \*holc generations
shall go off the stage unblessed and
unsaved. 1 tell you the church of
Jesus Christ can not consent to it. We
must pray and toil and have the re
vival spirit, and we must struggle to
have the whole world saved before tin
men and women now in middle life
pass off.
"Oh!” you say, “it is too vast on e
terprise to be conducted in so shot
time.” Do you know how long it
would take to save the whole world if
each man would bring another? It
would take ten years, liy a calcula
tion in compound interest, each man
bringing another and that one an
other, and that one another, in ten
years the whole world would be saved.
If the world is not saved in the next
ten years, it will be the fault of the
Church of Christ.
It seems to me as if God is preparing
the world for some quick and universal
movement. A celebrated electrician
gave me a telegraph chart of the world.
On that chart the wires crossing the
continents and the cables under the
sea looked like veins read with blood.
On that chart 1 see that the headquar
ters of the lightnings are in Great
^Britain and the United State.s. I®
London and New York the lightnings
are stabled, waiting to be harnessed
for some quick dispatch. That shows
you that the telegraph is in possession
of Christianity.
It is a significant fact that the man
who invented the telegraph was an
old fashioned Christian—Prof. Morse,
and that the man who put the tele
graph under the sea was an old
fashioned Christian—Cyrus W. Field;
and that the president of the most
famous of the telegraph companies of
country was an old fashioned Chris
tian—William Orton, going straight
to his home in heaven. What does all
that mean?
i uu aui suppose mat me teiegrapn
■was invented merely to let us know
whether flour is up or down, or which
filly won the race at the Derby, or
which marksman beat at Dollymount.
I supposed the telegraph was invented
and built to eall the world to God.
in some of the attributes of the
Lord we seem to share on a small
scale. For instance, in his love and in
his kindness, But until of late, fore
knowledge, omniscience, omnipresence,
omnipotence, seem to have been ex
clusively God’s possession. God desir
ing to make the race like himself,
gives us a species of foreknowledge in
the weather probabilities, gives us a
species of omniscience in telegraphy,
gives us a species of omnipresence in
the telephone, gives us a species of
omnipotence in the steam power. Dis
coveries and inventions all around
about us, people are asking what next?
1 will tell you what next. Next, a
stupendous religious movement. Next,
the end of war. Next, the crash of
despotisms. Next, the world’s expur
gation. Next, the Christlike domin
ion. Next, the judgment. What be
comes of the world after I care not. It
will have suffered and achieved enough
for one world. Lay it up in the dry
docks of eternity, like an old man-of
war gone out of service. Or, fit it up
like a ship of relief to carry bread to
some other suffering planet. Or, let
it be demolished. Farewell, dear old
world, that began with paradise and
ended with judgment conflagration.
Distressed Young Mother, traveling
with a crying infant—Dear me! I don’t
know what to do with the baby!
Thoughtful Bachelor, in the next seat
—Shall I open the window for you?
“Is it really true, as Miss Old Girl
says, that she never married because
her lover was lost at sea?” “Yes;
another girl cut her out of his affec
tions on a trip across the Atlantic."
Anxious Wife, at an altitude of 300
feet, to husband, who is accompany
ing her on her return trip to earth
after having been blown up at a
steamboat landing—John, we arc coin
ing down among strangers. Is my hat
on straight?
To tie most practically useful, make bold I
practical use of “common sense.” j
Highest of all in leavening strength.—Latest U.S.Goi. Food Report.
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Economy requires that in every receipt calling;
for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It
will go further and make the food lighter, svtreeter*'
of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL BT., NEW YORK.
Tim New llutli-r.
Kate Field's Washington: "Now,
remember," said a charming woman to
her new butler, who hail but a faint
conception of a business for which he
demanded the highest wages, "remem
ber, in announcing meals, you are to
say—‘Breakfast is ready,’ 'Luncheon is
ready,’ ‘Dinner is served.'”
"All right, mum,” replied the proud
butler.
Not long after this charming woman
ventured to experiment on a dinner to
n few intimate friends. Fancy the ex
pression of her countenance when, on
appearing at the drawing room door to
announce dinner, this literal butler ex
claimed in clarion tones:
"Breakfast is rendy, luncheon is
■eady, dinner is served!”
This is a true story of the capital.
Oil tt IltlHtllPKS IlnslN.
Detroit Free l’rcss: Tlio banker was
talking to the bachelor broker about
his future state, so to speak.
“Why don’t you get married?” he in
quired. "You've gc^. money enough.”
“1 presume I have, but you know 1
take no stock in matrimony.”
"I’shaw! that doesn’t tnuko any dif
ference.”
"I think it makes a great deal.”
“Of course it doesn’t,” insisted the
banker. “Don't you often make a
mighty good thing by assuming the
bonds of a concern you wouldn’t take
stock in under any circumstances?”
The broker hadn't looked at it in that
light before and he took the proposi
‘.ion under ndvisement.
A UruM Act of Cruelty.
Why should we he cruel to ourselves? It Is
a piece of senseless Inhumanity, for instance,
for uny one of us to Inflict upon his bowels
and stomuch the convulsive, griping, violent
action of u drastic cathartic. Muny people
enamored of pills, powders and putUUIK are
continually dointt this. They are only “keep
lng up the uyuny," perpetuuting the disturb
ance, by this foolish course, wito don't they
tnko Hostetter s Stomach Hitters arid get
thoroughly and promptly set right? This
supreme laxative never gripes, never pro
duces violent efTeets of uny sort. Yet It Is
very effective and Lrings about permunent
results. For liver complaint, dyspepsia, ner
vousness, lock of vitality, rheumatic and kid
ney complaints. It Is eminently serviceable.
In old age and to uccelerute coiivulcseonro It
Is strongly to he commended, Use It for
nnlarlu.,
She’d Keen There.
Detroit Free Press: lie stood on the
corner of Woodward avenue and Wood*
bridge street with an unlighted cigar
in his hand, waiting for a smoker to
come along. By and by a little old
woman with a bundle under her arm,
who had evidently crossed the ferry
came along and observed the situation
and queried:
“Waitin’ for a light?”
“Yes’m,” was the reply.
“Well, I guess I can accommodate
ye.”
She put down her bundle, drew a rag
from her pocket and unwrapped it to
display a dozen “blue-heads,” and se
lecting one, she lifted up a foot,
scratched it on the sole and held the
light out and remarked:
“There—go ahead! I’m an old
smoker myself, and know how it feels
when you want to pufT and can’t.
The Best Magazine and the Cheapest.
In the present increase of cheap magazines
It is well to remember that those which retail
at ten cents are sold at but a few cents above
the cost of the paper and printing. Judged by
mere bulk they contain hardly half the amount
of reading matter that is found in the larger
magazines, and however interesting they may
be. the features that have made the American
magazines, and especially “The Century.”
famous throughout the world, are not possible
in these lower priced perodiculs. Among these
features are great historical and biographical
works such as the War Papers. upon which
there was expended for text and illustration
some *20 . the “Life of Lincoln.” for the
right to publish which in “The Century Maga
zine” the authors were paid ;f>0.000; the “Auto
biography of Joseph Jefferson.” etc. Paper
and printing are only two of many items of cost
which go into such u magazine us "The
Century.”
In a line with its other great enterprises The
Century Co. is now beginning what is pro
nounced
"THE BEST LIFE OF NAPOLEON YET
W KITTEN.”
It is by Professor William M. Sloane. and is
not a mere series of reproductions of prints and
pictures, but a historical work of the nrst im
portance. Professor Sloane has been engaged
upon it lor years, much rf the time having been
spent by him in France, where he had access
iq the national archives: and all the recently
discovered memoirs and reminiscences have
been at his disposal. To illustrate this great
history The Century Co. have made special
arrangements with many modern artists tor the
exclusive reproduction of masterpieces cf
modern art relating to Napoleon, ami in addi
tion. there will be original drawings made
directly for the magazine bv u great number of
French and American artists.
This is only one of many features for the
coming year. In addition, such a magazine as
The Century" finds it possible in its paper,
printing ami general typographical excellence
to preserve the best traditions of the art of
book-making, and each number of the maga
zine. selling for thirty-five cents, contains in
well-printed and convenient form an amount of
literary and a*-t material which could not be
secured in ordinary book form for less than live
dollars. The high standard of "The Century"
in all its departments will be more than rniin
tuined during the coming year. Can you afford
to be without such an educational influence in
your household:'
The buck that won t Lend will some day
have to break.
Coe’a Coach Balaam
I® the oldest and best. It will break up a Told quick*
er iu+u anything el*e. It U always reliable. Try iu
You can tell by tjie flavor of the honey
where the bees have been.
Billiard Table, Fecond-hand. For sale j
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akin, i
511 8. 12th St., Omaha, Neb. |
~~
Tire llrlglitvst Light.
Tlio great searchlight made by th»
General 10 lee trie company, and whick
was exhibited at Chicago, afterward at
the Winter exposition, San Francisco^
has found a llual homo nnd resting
place at Mount Lowe, California It ia
estimated thut the rays of this wonder
ful light enn be seen at a distance of
200 miles when the air is clear.—Phil**
dclphla Ledger.
Statu or Ohio, City or Toledo, I
Lucas County. ) **•
Fiiank J. Chunky umkcx oath that be la
the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cua
NKY ft Co., ilolug business In the City of
Toledo, County and Stute aforesaid, ana
that said firm will pay the sum of ONK
HCNIUtKI) 1)( iLLAHH for each mid every
case of Catahkii that can not lie cured by
the use of Hai.i.’h Cataiiiiii i'uiib.
FIIANK J CHENEY.
~s_ A. W. GLEASON,
I 8BA1, f Notary t*ubllo.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally and'
acts directly ou the blood nnd mucous sur
facos of the system. Send for testlmontataL
free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, (X
Sold Iiv Druggists, 7fic.
flail's Family Fills, 'Joe.
Only a trial of Plso's Cure for Consumption
Is needed to eonvince you that. It Isa good
remedy for Coughs, Asthma and liroucliltia.
Irf>ve is a game at which both players al
ways cheat.
If the llahy la Cutting Tenth.
Re Bure mill uso that old ami well trio<l reinedr. Km.
WiKHi.uw'g BuoTiiiNu Knar fur Children Taathln*
Hulphate of atropldne in tho only known.
antidote for toad htool pofaou.
" llanmn'* HlNgle lorn An!▼•».**
Warranted tupiu-eor inottey rufuAdeU. aalt jamt
druvtfihi for It. I'ru'ti IA rent*.
Nine trouhlen out of ten will ran wrlitm.
you look them squarely in the fa< e
THE BUSINESS MAN’S LUNCH*
Hard Work and Indigestion
Hand in Hand*
Concentrated thought, continued in, rohan
tile Htoniacli of necessary blood, and this is•
also true of hard phynicul labor.
When a five liorse-power engine is made
to do ten horse-power work something is
going to break. Very often the hard
worked mini routing from the field or the
office will "bolt " Ills food in a few min
utes which will take hours to digest. Them
too, many foods are about as useful in the
stomach as a keg of nails would tie in a
fire under a boiler. The ill-used stomach
refuses to do its work without the proper
stimulus which it gets from the blood andf
nerves, 'flic nerves are weak and " ready
to break," because they do not get the'
nourishment they require from the blood,
finally the ill used brain is morbidly wide
awake when the overworked man at
tempts to find rest in bed.
The application of common sense in the
treatment of the stomach and the whole
system brings to the busy man the full en
joyment of life and healthy digestion whem
lie takes Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets to
relieve a bilious stomach or after a too.
hearty meal, and Dr. Pierce’s Coldest
Medical Discovery to purify, enrich and
vitalise the blood. The " Pellets ” are ting
sugar-coated pills made of highly concen
trated vegetable ingredients which relieve
the stomach of all olTendijig matters easily
and thoroughly. They need only he taken .
for a short time to cure the biliousness,
constipation und slotlifulness, or torpor, of
the liver; then the “ Medical Discovery'*
should be taken in tcaspoouful doses to In
crease the blood and enrich it. It has
peculiar effect upon the lining membranes,
of the stomach and bowels, toning up and
strengthening them for all time. The
whole system feels the efTcct of the pure*
blood eoiiisiug through the body and tlie
nerves me vitalized and strengthened, not
deadened, or put to sleep, as the so-called:
celery compounds and nerve mixtures- do
—but refreshed and fed on tile food they;
need for health. If you sulTcr from indi
gestion. dyspepsia, nervousness, and any
of the ills which come from impure blood
and disordered stomach, you can cure'
yourself with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery which can be obtained at auy,
drug store in the country.
It is lltr medicine ulxjn.
all others for catarrh,
amt is worth Us v:ciijhl
in ijold. 1 can use Ely's
Cream Halm with safety
and it dots all that is
claimed for it.—11. 11’.
Hpe rej, fla rtforel, Conn.
ELY’S CREAM BALM
Opens ami realises the Nasal PassageR. Allan* Fab*,
anti Inflanmiath u. Urals the Siren. Protect*- ttm
Membrane ln.ru ('old*. Keatoret* the St'usmof Tast*.
aiul Suieli. The Balm Is t;uiek.y absorbed and vivta*
reliet ut once.
A particle is applied into each nostril ■ ud la trrae
able. Price r*0 cents, at drupKiKts or by mail.
ELY BROTH El CM, M Warren Street. New YortL* f
"XZV FRUIT TRACT*
in hi trope county, folo., with ytryal
ual watf r for lrrlg-j«H«m» at #«&»
cash. haihoitil lair fire to piircliai^rp
OI KI.KV n\. «■«.. »*s ,<>**£
* iinmedlately.
l>eu\er. Atl\
| p THOSE WHO HAVE Af A||fl»
H up airistl he Government 111
■ ■ will write to NATHAN W
BICKFORD, Penwton A Patent Alt’?, 014 P St.,
WMUlnictoii, ll,C.,tk’y will receive a prompt leply,
W I', Oinnliu—SO IN91
b aea Adveribcuieuu ivluiiVy
Mention tint l’aiter.