Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901, June 20, 1895, Image 7

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    Irving' Experience With Hissing.
"In my-early days, -Bays our great
ttent at a provincial theater, and did
not know until I got there that I had
een nut into the nlaeeof an nrtnr who
was locally verv oooular. He had not
left, I believe, on altogether good terms
wiiQ me management; so the auaience
rented their spleen upon his successor.
I was that unfortunate person, and for
a whole week or more I was hissed
every night, not for my bad acting, but
out of love for my predecessor. I re
member how every nicht I walked to
my rooms, some two miles out of town,
very wretched, and walked in again
the next night no less misserable. To
this day I never pass the place by rail
way without a shudder." Tit-Bits.
The Strongest Man Grows Weak
Sometimes. The short cut to renewed vigor
Is taken 07 those sensible enough to use
llo-tetter's Stomach Rltiers systematically.
It re-establishes impaired digestion, en
a) les the system to assimilate food, and
combines the qualities of a lice medicinal
stimulant with thoe of a sovereign preven
tive remedy. Malaria, dyspepsia, constipa
tion, rheumatc, nervous and kidney com-
Vlaints are cured and averted by it.
A Novelty in lllcycles.
A novelty in bicycles went up Broad
way last week, says the New York Sun.
A young colored man rode it and
showed off its fine points in a way that
attracted a good deal of attention. In
stead of being stationary the handle
bar could be moved backward and for
ward. Every time the rider pulled the
bar back the" bicycle shot forward in a
, way that showed that it had some sort
f a rowing machine Attachment,
which worked in conjunction with the
pedals. There were the ordinary ped
als on the bicycles, and the rider used
these the greater part of the time, but
every now and then when the rider
got in a tieklish position among trucks,
cable cars and other vehicles he would
give the handle bar a yank backward
and the wheel would dart ahead.
Coin's Financial School.
Io you want to understand the science
cf money? It is plainly told in Coin's
Financial Series. Every one has surely
heard of W. H. Harvey, the author of
"Coin's Financial School." "A Tale of
Two Nations." etc. Here Is an oppor
tunity to secure at popular prices one
copy or the entire series. In every case
the postage is prepaid.
-Coin s Financial School." by W. H.
Harvey. 150 pages and 66 illustrated.
Cloth. 1; paper, 25 cts.
Up to Date Coin's Financial School
Continued." by W. H. Harvey; 200
pages and 50 illustrations. Cloth. 1;
paper. 25 cts.
"Chapters on Silver." by Judge Hen
ry G. Miller, of Chicago. Paper only.
25 cents.
"A Tale ef Two Nations," by W. II.
Harvey; 302 pages. Cloth. 1; paper. 25
cts.
"Coin's Hand Book." by W. H. Har
vey; 46 pages: 10 cents. "Bimetallism
and Monometallism." by Archbishop
"Walsh of Dublin. Ireland; 25 cents.
Our special offer: For II we will fur
nish the entire series of six books as
above enumerated.
In ordering the series as per above
offer, say "Set No. 2 of 6 Books." Ad
dress George Currier, Gen. Act,. 194
So. Clinton St.. Chicago. 111.
Faith is a microscope for present joys; a
telescope for joys to come.
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet
ter than othere and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world's best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it act3 on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it i3 perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Fies is for sale by all dru
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured by the California Fig 8yrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
j5 You see them everywhere. 55
-
8
olumbia
S Socles
noo
Q.
Colcmbias are the
nrnHurt nf the oldest v
1- i?)
and b?st eauirred bi-
XV I r r - s
cycle factory in America, and are the re- O
suit of eighteen years of successful 55
striving to make the best bicycles in the
world. 1895 Columbian are lighter,
stronger, handsomer, more graceful W
jjj than ever ideal machines for the use of JjJ
35 those who desire the best that's macLe. zi.
M Hartford Bicycles cost less $So, &
JjJ 60. They are the equal of many othfir
POPE MFG. CO.
General Offices and Factories, HAKTFORD.
5?
OfTON, NEW YORK,
CHICAOO,
SAN rMANCISOO,
movioiNci,
BUFFALO.
1
P.
Colombia Catalogue,
telliss ef both Colum
bia aad Hartford,
Pi free any Columbia
O cney, or by mail for
ij two S-ceat tajBp.
35 2Lr
ri. lo it em
THS TALMAGE SERMON
FAULT FINDERS WITH
WORD OF GOD.
THE
Th Allfrl TJnelMnness of th TJlble
Only til Uncleanness of the Hearts
ana Mind of th Would-Be Ei
par gators.
EW "FORK. June
.9. In his sermon to
day Rev. Dr. Tal
(mage deals with a
subject that Is agi
tating the entire
Christian church at
.the present mo
ment, viz.: "Expur
gation of the Scrip
tures." The text
chosen was, "Let
God be true, but every man a liar."
Romans ill., 4.
The Bible needs reconstruction ac
cordlnjr to come Inside and outside the
pulpit. It is no surprise that the world
bombards the Scriptures, but it is
Amazing- to find Christian ministers
picking at this in the Bible and deny
ing tli at until many good people are
lsft In the foe about what parts of the
Bible they ought to believe, and what
parts reject. The helnousness of finding-
fault with the Bible at this time Is
most evident. In our day the Bible is
asaslled by scurrility, by misrepresenta
tion, by infidel scientists, by all the
lee of earth and all the venom of per
dition, and at this particular time even
preachers of the Gospel fall into line of
criticism of the word of God. Why, it
makes me think of a ship
In a September squinox. the waves
dashing to ths top of the smoke-stack,
and the hatches fastened down, and
many prophesying the foundering of the
steamer, and at that time some of the
crew with axes and saws go down into
the hold of the ship, and they try to
saw off some of theplanks and pry out
tome of the timbers because the timber
did not come from the rlsht forest!
It does not seem to me a commendable
business for the crew to be helping the
winds and storms outside with their
and saws Inside. Now. this old '
axes
Gospel ship, what with the roaring of
earth and hell around the stem and
stern, and mutiny on deck, is having
a very rorgh voyage, but I have noticed
that not one of the timbers has start
ed, and the captain says he will see
It through. And I have noticed that
keelson and counter-timber-knee are
built of Lebanon cedar, and she is go
ing to weather the gale, but no credit
to those who make mutiny on deck.
When I see professed Christians In
this particular day finding fault with
the Scriptures It makes me think of a
fortress terrifically bombarded, and the
men on the ramparts, instead of swab
bing out and loading the guns, and
helping feteh up the ammunition from
the magazine, are trying with crowbars
to pry out from the wall certain blocks I
Of stone, because they did not come
from the right Quarry. Oh, men on the
ramparts, better fight back, and fight
down the common enemy. Instead of
trying to make breaches In the walL
While I oppose this expurgation of
the Scriptures, I shall give you my rea-
ons for such opposition. "What!" say
pome of the theological evolutionists,
whose brains have been addled by too
long- brooding over them by Darwin and
Spencer, "you don't now really believe
all the story of the Garden of Eden, do
you?" Yes, as much as I believe there
were roses In my garden last summer.
"But," say they, "you don't really be
lieve that the sun and moon stood
still?" Yes. and if I had strength
enough to create a sun and moon I
could make them stand still, or cause
the refraction of the sun's rays so it
would appear to stand still. "But."
they say, "you don't believe that the
whale swallowed Jonah?" Yes, and if
I were strong enough to make a whale
I could have made very easy Ingress for
the refractory prophet. leaving to Evolu-
tion to eject him. If he were an un- 1
worthy tenant! "But." say they, "you j
don't really believe that the water was '
turned into wine?" Yes, just as easily j
as water now Is often turned into wine ;
with an admixture of strychnine and !
logwood! "But." they say, "you don't
really believe that Samson slew a thou- j
and with the Jaw-bone of an ass?" !
Yes, and I think that the man who in j
this day assaults the Bible is wielding !
the same weapon! 1
I am opposed to the expurgation of j
the Scriptures in the first place, be- j
cause the Bible In its present shape has j
been so miraculously preserved. Flf- j
teen hundred years after Herodotus
wrote his history, there was only one
manuscript copy of It. Twelve
hundred years after Plato wrote
his book, there was only
one manuscript copy of It. God was
o careful to have us have the Bible In
Just the right ehape that we have fifty
manuscript copies of the New Testa
ment a thousand years old, and some
of them fifteen hundred years old. This
book handed down from the time of
Christ, or Ju3t after the time of Christ,
by the hand of such men as Origen in
the second century and Tertulllan In ,
the third century, and by men of differ-
ent ages who died for their principles.
The three best copies of the New Testa
ment In manuscript In the possession of
the three great churches the Protest
ant church of England, the Greek
church of St. Petersburg, and the Rom
ish church of Italy.
It Is a plain matter of history that
TIschendorf went to a convent in the
peninsula of Sinai and was by ropes lift
ed over the wall into the convent, that
being the only mod of admission, and
that he saw there In the waste basket
for kindling for the fires, a manuscript
Of the Holy Scriptures. That night he
copied many of the passages of that
Bible, but it was not until fifteen years
had passed of earnest entreaty and
prayer and coaxin- and purchase on his
part that that copy of the Holy Scrip
tures was put into the hand of the em
peror of Russia that one copy so marv
elously protected.
Do you not know that the catalogue
of the books of the Old and New Testa
ments as we have it, is the same cat
alogue that has been coming on down
through the ages? Thirty-nine books
cf the Old Testament thousands of
years ago. Thirty-nine new. Twenty
even books of the New Teatament six
teen hundred years ago. Twenty-seven
books of the New Testament now.
Marcion, for wickedness, was turned
out of the church in the second cen
tury, and In his assault on the Bible
and Christianity, he incldejntally fives
& catalogue of the "books of the Bible
that catalogue corresponding exactly
I with ours testimony given by tne
i enemy of -the Bible and the enemy of
Christianity. The catalogue now just
like the catalogue then. Assaulted and
spit on and torn to pieces and burned.
i yet adhering. The book today, in three
i hundred languages, confronting four
l fifths of the human race In their own
I tongue. Four hundred million copies
i of it in existence. Does not that look
j as if this book had been divinely pro
tected, a if God had guarded it all
i through the centuries?
j Nearly all the other old
i books are mumified and are
; lying in the tombs of old
libraries, and perhaps once in twenty
years some man comes along and picks
up one of them and blows the dust off.
and opens it and finds it the book he
does not rant. But this old book, much
of it forty centuries old. stands today
more discussed than any other book,
and it challenges the admiration of all
i the good and the spite and the venom
! and the animosity and the hyper-criti-
clsm of earth and hell. I appeal to
j your common sense, if a book so dlvine
1 ly guarded and protected in its pres
ent chape, must not be in Just the way
that God wants It to come to us. and
If -it pleases God. ought It not to please
us?
Not only have all the attempts to
detract from the book failed, but all the
attempts to add to it. Many attempts
: were made to add the apochryphal
books to the Old Testament. The Coun
cil of Trent, the Synod of Jerusalem,
the Bishops of Hippo, all decided that
' the apochryphal books must be added
to the Old Testament. "They must stay
In," said those learned men; but they
stayed out. There is not an Intelligent
I Christian man that today will put the
I Book of Maccabees or the Book of
j Judith beside the Book of Isaiah or
j Romans. Then a great many said: "We
I must have books addwed to the New
I Testament." and there were epistles and
, gospels and apocalypses written and
i added to the New Testament, but they
! have all fallen out. You cannot add
i aiythlng. You cannot subtract any
thing to the divinely protected book
! In the present shape. Let no man dare
: to lay his hands on it with the Inten-
tion of detracting from the book, or
casting out any of these holy pages.
I am also opposed to this proposed
expurgation of the Scriptures for the
fact that in proportion as people be
come self-sacrificing and good and holy
and consecrated, they like the book as
It Is. I have yet to find a man or a
woman distinguished for self-sacrifice.
for consecration to God. for holiness of
life, who wants the Bible changed.
Many of us have Inherited family Bi
bles. Those Bibles were In use twenty,
forty, fifty, perhaps a hundred years In
the generations. To-day take down
these family Bibles, and find out if
there are any chapters which have been
erased by' lead pencil or pen. and If In
any margins you can find the words:
"This chapter not fit to read." There
has been plenty of opportunity during
ine lasc nan century pnvaieiy 10 ex
purgate the Bible. Do you know any
case of such expurgation? Did not your
grandfather give it to your father, and
did not your father give It to you?
Beside that, I am opposed to the ex
purgation of the Scriptures because the
so-called Indelicacies and cruelties of
ihe Bible have demonstrated no evil
result. A cruel book will rroduce
cruelty an unclean book will produce
uncleanness. Fetch me a victim. Out
of all Christendom and out of all the
ages, fetch me a victim whose heart
has been hardened to cruelty, or whose
life has been made impure by this book.
Show me one. One of the best families
I ever knew, for thirty or forty years,
morning and evening, had all the mem
bers gathered together, and the servants
of the household, and the strangers that
happened to be within the gates twice
a day, without leaving out a chapter
or a verse, they read this holy book.
! morning by morning, night by night.
Not only the elder children but the
e i
little child who could just spell her way j
through the vers' while her mother
helped her. The father beginning and
reading one verse, then all the mem
bers of the family In turn realing a
verse. The father maintained his In
tegrity, the mother maintained her In
tegrity, the sons grew up and entered
professions and commercial life, adorn
ing every sphere In the life in which
they lived, and the daughters went Into
families where Christ was honored, and
all that was good and pure and right
eous reigned perpetually. For thirty
years that family endured the Scrip
tures. Not one of them ruined by
them.
Now, If you will tell me of a family
where the Bible has been read twice a
day for thirty years, and the children
have been brought up in that habit,
and the father went to ruin, and the
mother went to ruin, and the sons and
daughters were destroyed by it if you
will tell me of one such Incident, I will
throw away my Bible, or I will doubt
your veracity. I tell you, If a man is
shocked with what he calls the Indelica
cies of the Word of God. he Is prurient
in his taste and imagination. If a man
; cannot read Solomon's Song, without
Impure suggestion, he Is either in his
heart or In his life, a libertine.
The Old Testament description of
wickedness, uncleanliness of all sorts.
Is purposely and righteously a disgust
ing account, instead of the Byronic and
the Parisian vernacular which makes
sin attractive Instead of appalling.
When those old prophets point you to
a lazaretto you understand it is a
lazaretto. When a man having begun
to do right falls back into wickedness
and gives up his Integrity, the Bible
does not say he was overcome by the
fascinations of the festive board, or
that he surrendered to convivialities,
or that he became a little fast In his
habits. I will tell you what the Bible
says: "The dog Is turned to his own
vomit again, and the sow that was
washed to her wallowing in the mire."
No gilding of Iniquity. No garlands on
a death's-head. No pounding away with
a silver mallet at Iniquity when It heeds
an iron sledge-hammer.
I can easily understand how people,
brooding over the description of un
cleanness In the Bible, may get morbid
in mind until they are as full of It as
the wings and beak and the nostril and
the claw of a buzzard Is full of the odors
of a carcass; but what Is wanted is not
that the Bible be disinfected, but that
you, the critic, have your mind and
heart washed with carbolic acid!
I I tell you at this point In my discourse
1 that a man who does not like this book
and who is critical as to its contents,
and who la shocked and outraged with
ly converted. The laying on of the
hands of Presbytery or Episcopacy does
not always change a man's heart, and
men sometimes get into the pulpit as
weJl as into the pew, never having been
changed radically by the sovereign
grace of God. Get your heart right and
the Bible will be right. The trouble Is
men's natures are not brought into har
mony with the Word of God. Ah! my
friends, expurgation of the heart Is
what Is wanted.
You cannot make me believe that the
Scriptures, which this moment lie on
the table of the purest and best men
and women of the age, and which were
the dying solace of your kindred passed
Into the skies, have in them a taint
which the strongest microscope of hon
est criticism could make visible. If men
are uncontrollable In their Indignation
when the Integrity of wife or child
is assailed, and Judges and Jurors as
far as possible excuse violence under
such provocation, what ought to be the
overwhelming and long resounding
thunders of condemnation for any man
who will stand in a Christian pulpit and
assail ths more than virgin purity of
Inspiration, the well beloved daughter
of God?
Expurgate the Bible! You might as
well go to the old picture galleries In
Dresden and in Venice and in Rome
and expurgate the old paintings. Per
haps you could find a foot of Michael
Angelo's "Last Judgment" that might
be Improved. Perhaps you could throw
more expression Into Raphael's "Ma
donna." Perhaps you could put more
pathos into Reubens' "Descent from the
Cross." Perhaps you could change the
crests of the waves in Turners "Slave
Ship." Perhaps you might go Into the
old galleries of sculpture and change
the forms and the posture of the statues
of Phidias and Praxiteles. Such an Icon
clast would very soon find himself In
the penitentiary. But It is worse van
dalism when a man proposes to re-fash-lon
these masterpieces of Inspiration,
and to remodel the moral giants of this
gallery of God.
Of all the works of Dore, the great
artist, there was nothing so Impressive
as his Illustrated Bible. What scene of
Abrahamlc faith, or Edenic beauty, of
dominion DavMic. or Solomonic, of mir
acle, or parable, of nativity or of
crucifixion, or of last Judgment but the
thought leaped from the great brain to
the skillful pencil, and from the skillful
pencil to immortal canvas. The Louvre,
; the Luxembourg, the National Gallery
! of London compressed within two vol
! umes of Dore's Illustrated Bible. But
; the Bible will come to better Illustra
! tion than that, my friends, when all the
; deserts have become gradens, and all
j the armories have become academies,
and all the lakes have become Genne-
sarets with Christ walking them,
; and all the cities have become Jerusa-
lems with hovering Shekinah; and the
I two hemispheres will be clapping sym
j bols of divine praise, and the round
1 earth a footlight to Emanuel's throne
; that, to all lands, and all ages, and all
j centuries, and all cycles will be the best
specimen of Bible Illustrated.
BIGGEST BRONZE CASTING.
1 It Is a Memorial to th Founder
of th
I Children' Aid Society.
The largest bronze casting ever made
In the United States has Just been suc
cessfully completed at the foundry of
A. T. Lerme, in Forsyth street, says
New York World. It was designed by
Architect Leopold Eldlltz and was
modeled by Ellin. Kitson & Co. It Is
a memorial to Charles Lorlng Brace,
who was the founder of the Children's
Aid society, and is to be erected on the
corner pier of the second story of the
newsboys' lodging house. It is In the
form of a Gothic tablet, with a circu
lar opening in the center. In which will
be placed a marble bust of the philan
thropist In whose memory It Is erected.
The height cf the casting, which was
done In one piece, Is 10 feet 6 Inches.
It Is 5 feet 6 Inches wide .and the relief
Is a full 12 Inches. Three thousand
pounds of standard bronze metal were
used In maklnsr this handsome memor
ial. The casting was beun at 6 a. m.
day before yesterday and was not com
pleted until the middle of the after
nn. An heroic sitting statue of Peter
Cooper, by St. Gaudens. is also finished
in bronze In this foundry, but Is kept
carefully concealed behind a draping
of whit, cloth, the sculptor having giv
en positive orders that "not a soul shall
see it" until It Is unveiled In public
Mr. Lorme resisted the touching ap
peal of a World reporter to lift up a
corner of the cloth, saying: "Mr. St.
Gaudens would throw me in my own
furnace If I did so."
This Sound Good.
An excellent relish for the Sun
day night tea table is made with sar
dines as a basis. Take four boneless
sardine, rub them smooth with an
ounce of butter, a teaspoonful of Wor
cestershire sauce, and a dust of cay
nne peper; heat the mixture in a chaf
ing dish and spread on hot buttered
toast. A little grated cheese may be
sprinkled over the top before serving.
To Appeal for Help.
It will cost 1,000,000 drachmas to put
the Parthenon, the temple of Thesus,
and the other monuments in Athens
damaged by last year's earthquake in
a safe condition. An appeal for help
will be sent out to all countries.
An rionest Thief.
"It is plain," said the justice, "thai
you stole the hog and I shall send you
up for twelve months."
"Jedge, ef you kin gimme 'bout one
hour 'fo I goes I doesn't care."
"What for?"
"Well, suh, pork won't keep in dis
weather, en I wants ter go home en'
salt dat hog down."
Giving: Fair Warning.
A negro passing under a scaffolding
where some repairs were going on, a
brick fell from above on his head, and
was broken by the fall. Sambo very
coolly raised his head and exclaimed:
"Halloa, you white man up dar; It
you don't want your bricks broke, just
keep 'em off my head." Mercury.
Strang.
First Doctor weii, aoctor, 1 naa m
peculiar case to-day.
Second Doctor What waa It, pleura f
First Doctor I attended a gnu wid
ow who la afflicted with hay fsrer. Ex.
Too Many Pictures.
Are the works of the best modern j
literary artists improved by illustra- j
tion? Can an artist with his brush or I
pen add anything to the well developed
ohanu-terization of our successful nov-!
elists? In other words, is not the
literary art of a master amply suffi
cient to portray to the appreciative, in
telligent reader all in his Look that is
charming1 or thrilling or pathetic or
humorous? I believe that it is. and
also that it is a literary crime for the
average iliusft-ator to inject into the
pages of a great work ot fiction, of
whose creative forces he can know no
more than the reader. Some of this
sort of illustration is amazingly clever,
but most of it is just the opposite. To
distinguish the pictorial opportunity in
a work requiring rare distinction, and
too many of our illustrators, with the
approval of the publishers, take their
cue for a picture from such inadequate
and puerile suggestion as that con
veyed in the familiar climax of love
stories: "And she fell on his breast
and wept tears of unuterable joy.
Sidney Fairfield, in Lippineott's.
Nicctinized Nerves.
Men old at thirty. Chew aci smoke, eat little,
firink. or want to. all the time. Nerves tingle.
neer f!itiHe.i, nothing's ttautif ul. happiness
gone, a toi iu.-co-S'Situratfil system tells the
fctory. There s an easy way out. No- loBac
will kill the uerve-t raving effects K r tot acco
and make you ttrotr. vigorous, and manly.
Sold and guaranteed to ore bv PnTFists ev
erywhere. J ock, titled "Don't Toravco Spit or
Smoke Your L;Ie Away. frte. Address tter
Un Remedy Co- New York City or Chicago.
The Summit of Ambition.
"Thom3S," said his mother proudly.
ith von for
'I'm very much pleased w
winning- that prize in the oratorical
contest. It was a fine triumph. 1
hope, Thomas, that with this added
spur to your ambition you will come
home to tell me of a still greater vic
tory, a still nobler triumph.
Ye6. Thomas, she continued, as the
youth stood blushing before her, "I
hope that you will yet score a toucn-
down in a football match. Chicago
Record.
The Largest Unman Tooth.
New York Tribune: Dr. Hanson, of
Brooklin. on Friday last, pulled an eye
tooth which measured 1 9-16 inches
in length. On Saturday- Dr. Hanson
took the tooth to New York and several
dentists admitted that it was the lar-
pest human tooth they had ever seen,
and one dentist went to far as to offer
S10O for the tooth. Dr. Hanson re
fused to part with his prize-
J. S. PARKER. Frftlnnia. N. Y.. sav: 'Shall
not call on you for the ilt reward, for I relieve
Hull's Catarrii Cure will cure any case of
catarrtu "Was vrrv l ad." Write tim tor par
ticulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
It Y:tA ;! Ki-hinc.
Apropose of the propensity of Cshinjr !
parties to play poker Amos .1. Cum-'
minirs was recently invited !o join a ;
party bound for a small lake swarming j
with large fish. "You will make six,
and that is the exact party we want.
"That's all very fine," retorted Cum
minjrs, "but you will find that some of
the s-is will really want to go fishing:
and break up the game.' Vanity.
liegeman's Camphor lc -wrll n. Glycerine.
Cur.- Cnapped Hands and Face. Teoder or Sore Fet,
Ctui blauiis. Hit. C O. Claxk Co . New Haven, CU
Doubt of whatever kind can be ended by
action alone
Billiard table, second-hand, for sa!e
cheap Apply to or address, H. C. Akin,
511 S. iah St., Omaha, Neb,
The plumber now steps down to make
room for the mi.iiner.
The
heal.
wounds made by a iriend never
AAA AA A A A
Ve ry Latest Styles May Manton
8S Cent Pattern for IO Cent When the Coupon Below I Sent. Also One
Out Additional for Faatag-e,
63S3-6384 f
6390 6299 C30t f
No. e.TH wi.ti ti 'Iff; vl: 3 r,. is and rt incite., tn-t men-iure.
Ni- b-'.' Skirt; flv slzea, tU: 2a. irt. ni SJ inches wi.-t tuca-ure.
No. 6301 MlweV costume; four size, Tix: 6, 8, 10 and It years.
No. 6 .J3Wai.-t; tls aUts, vis: S3. S4. 3d, 33 aad 40 inches bust measure.
Jo. 634 Skirt; flv sisea, vis: M, 84, l, tS and SO lncl.es waist measur.
So. 637s Girl's waUt; three sizes, vis: 12, 14, ana It jeara.
O 0 TEJ 3EP 0 -KT.
JJHIS COUPOH sent with an order for on or any of th above 35 cent patterns Is credite J
VP as 35 cents on each pattern ordered, 'g- eacn pattern cost only IO rent.
Ob cent extra for postage for each pattern. Give number of Inches waist measure for
skirts aad number ef Inches bust measure for waj.it. address,
COUPON PATTERN COMPANY,
&ock Box 747. 2TECT TOIUE. JT. T.
OTre ayp qswaqyqswy
Altogether Too Honest.
Detroit Free Tress: Hotel Clerk
That lawyer stopping1 with us is the
most honest man I ever heard of.
Landlord Why?
Clerk He sits up in a chair and
sits up
sleeps at night.
Landlord What's
with it?
that got to
Clerk He says after his day's work
is over he doesn't think he ought to lie
in bed.
Make Your Own Bittern:
On receipt of IK) cents in U. S. stamps, I
wiil fend to anr address one raciae Ste
ketee's Dry Bitters. One package makes
one gallon bef tonic known. Cures stom
ach, kidney diseases and is a eeat appe
tizer and bfooi purifier. Just the medicine
needed for spring and summer. 25c. at
your dru 6tor. Address Geo. O. Stb
ketei. Grand Rat ids. Mic h.
Unquestionably that woman whose
hair is short but thick has the best
possibilities for a varying coiffure and
If nature has kindly endowed her with
curly locks sh? has achieved a blissful
cendition of independence In regard to
"doing her hair-"
If the Ilauy Is Cutting Teeth.
Bestire ami ue thatolJ arvi e!l-tried remedy, Km.
Wustow'f SjOTHisa Strip for Ciaiirea Teething-
It is easier to forma bat it than to re
form it.
"Eanitn'i 2ffagle Corn Salve.
Warranted to care or money refunded. Ask your
druggist for 1U I'rice 15 cent.
A happy heart is worth more anywhere
than a pedigree running Lack to the May
flower. For Whoopin? Cough, Piso"s Cure is a
successful remedv. M. P. Dieter, C7
1 ThroP Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y Nov. 14'
Autumn says. "In the midt of life we
are in death." Srrin? says, '-ln the midst
of death we are in life."
Memory is the treasury and guardian cf
all things.
Take Parker's GlBrerTaale haie with yn
Ton lil find it to exc.-d your expectant as ia
abating colas. ad many ills. ches aad weaknesses.
Behind
light.
the shadow there is always a
Pain Is ti t (ndatlie to pleasare.
especia ly wbeu tcsionel by corns H nfitrccru
will pleas you, for it removes them perfectly.
The forgiving spirit is worth a fortune to
anv one.
Foul breath is a
discourager of af
fection. It is al
ways an indication
of poor health
bad digestion. To
bad digestion i5
7L traceable almost all
I 1
iiuniau ins. i.1 is
the starting point
of many very ser
ious maladies.
Upon the healthy
action of the diges
t i v e organs, the
blood depends for Rs richness and purity.
If digestion stops, poisonous matter ac
cumulates and is forced into the blood
there is no place else for it to go.
The bad breath is a danger signal.
Look out for it ! If you have it, or
any other symptom of indigestion,
take a lxttle or two of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery. It will
straighten out the trouble, make your
blood pure and healthy and full of nu
triment for the tissues.
WANTED-LADY AGEH1S
in every town to sell oar Safety MiUine: C!d tea
yean i a physician" private pssotlce. AiiJress, taV
ing experience. Km 134, A. SPl.M)KIi4t CO.
Topeks, Ksbms.
IV. 3f. i:., 0 111 nil it S.-J, 193.
hen apswerinc advertisements kindly
mention this paver.
A
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