Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901, March 26, 1896, Image 3

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    v riereland at the. Theater.
Mr. Cleveland made his first appear
ance at the theater this winter the
other night, and the way in which the
audience stared at him is sufficient
proof of the hunger in Washington for
a sight at the chief executive, and the
ery small gratification which the pres
ident gives to this popular desire. Of
course, the president is always Wash
ington's chief exhibit. So, it was not
surprising- that when he came to the
theater every opera glass was leveled
at him, and some inquisitive persons
promenaded the ailes past the presiden
tial box in order to have a good look.
The president looked especially well.
. Sitting just under a cluster of electric
lights his every feature was thrown
out prominently. Some one said he
was a regular living picture. Wash
ington Special to St. Louis Republic
The rnkindnt Cut of All,
A bakpeare says, is to poke fun or sneer
at i-pte who are nervous, under the half
belief that tbeir complaint Is imaginary or
an affectation. It it neither, but a serious
reality. Imperfect dizestion and assimila
tion of the fod is a very common cause of
ner outness, especially that distressing
form of it which manifests itself in want of
kleep. llostetter's Mouiach Hitter speedily
rrned ies Beroa-ness, as it also does mala
ria!, kidney, biiiious and rheumatic ail
ments. The weak pain vigor sjeedlly
through lt use.
Good Advier.
'There,'" he said, as he blotted the
letter and put it in an envelope: "I
. T :ii . . ' i. z
viuii i suppose x win fci uuy luauhs lor
"that, but there's some good advice in
it. anyway."
"W ho are you sending advice to?"'
The government at Washington."
"And what's the advice?"
To get a few groundhogs for the
weather bureau." Chicago Post.
rKiaan"a Camphor Ice wit ti Glycerin.
tV orlf1nl Mid only duib. CureaChpped Haiida
d ce, Cota sort-. Itc C. G. Clark Co2.Havea.C-
' A School Itoj's t oaiit loi.
Here is a novel composition from a
progressive school boy:
"One day I was in the country I saw
a cow and I hit her with a rock a dog
bit me a &ow chased me I fell out of a
wagon and a bee stung me and the old
gobbler flopped me and I went down to
the branch and I fell in and wet my
pants."
There's a whole novel for you in six
line! Atlanta Constitution.
If the I in by ! catting: Teem.
as nr iid uxe that old and well-tried remedy.
VnsLow'a soenwe Btkvt tor Children Teething-
Two Sayings From Cork.
A Cork town councillor is credited
with having thus spoken: ''There can
be no doubt of the virulence of this ep
idemic, for I know of people lying dead
from it who never died before."
' The same gentleman thus chivalrous-
1 ' a 1 i 11 a T a. 1
.ry aeienaeo a coneague: i strongiy
'protest against this attack on my ab-
ient ineno, tor sureiy it s not rigm to
trang a man behind bis back." Spec
tator. HOW AREYOUR fences?
ra mad Other Jait Now.
Probably there is nothing that inter
ests the land owner more at this time
f the year than fencing. They are de
sirous of securing the very best article
they can for the purpose they desire to
use it for and at the cheapest price
going. While this is good business,
price should not take the place of
quality. In building a smooth wire
fence you do not build it for temporary
use but expect it to last you for years
r? to get this kind of an article it
requires a certain amount of good ma
terial to make it.
The De Kalb Fence Co., of De Kalb,
111., has the largest and most com
plete line of smooth wire fencing of any
plant in the country. We desire par
ticularly to call your attention to their
foods and write them for a catalogue
which they will mall you free.
No line of goods has grown so rapidly
in demand or given such general satis
faction as the fencing manufactured by
this company. Their steel web picket
fence for lawn and yard purposes, their
cabled field and hog fence for farm use,
their cabled poultry, garden and rabbit
fence for its use, are all they claim for
them.
You will hardly do yourself justice if
you do not thoroughly investigate their
lines before placing your order.
The devil is the onlv tainer when a loy
i whip; ed to make him go to church.
Backsliding tep)iis when
the hart.
j rai-e leaves
Gladness Comes i
With a better understanding of the
transient nature of the many phys
ical ills, which vanish before proper ef
forts gentle efforts pleasant efforts
rightly directed. There is comfort in
the knowledge, that so many forms of
sickness are not due to an3' actual dis
ease, but simply to a constipated condi
tion of the system, which the pleasant
family laxative. Syrup of Figs, prompt
ly removes. That is why it is the only
remedy with millions of families, and is
everywhere esteemed so highly by all
who value good health. Its beneficial
effects are due to the fact, that it is the
one remedy which promotes internal
cleanliness without debilitating the
organs on which it acts. It is therefore
all important, in order to get its bene
ficial effects, to note when you pur
chase, that you have the genuine arti
cle, which is manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co. only and 'sold by
all reputable druggists. ,
If m the enjoyment of good health,
rpcmlar. laxatives or
vttwir remedies are then not needed. If
ffe:t,i ,:tv. ontnal 1icpasp. one
may be commended to the most skillful
physicians, but if in need of a laxative,
one should have the best, and with the
well-informed everywhere. Syrup of
Figs stands highest and is most largely
used and gives most general satisfact ion.
TALMAGFS SERMON.
'HOW TO WARM THE WORLD"
THE LATEST SUBJECT.
Oolrten Text: "lie Cnateth Forth Bis
Mom lAkm Mortar; who Cm-a Stud
fore Hit fcold?" Paalma 147: 17 ;
feunday, March 1 A.
HE almanac says
that winter is
ended and spring
has come, hut the
winds, and the
frosts, and the ther
mometer, In some
places down to zero,
CgM a e n y it. Tne
r?n Psalmist lived In a
more genial climate
than this, and yet
he must sometimes have been cut by
the sharp weather. In this chapter he
speaks of the snow like wool, and frost
like ashes, the hailstones like marbles,
and describes .the congealment of low
est temperature. We have all studied
the power of the heat. How few of us
have studied the power of the frost?
"Who can stand before his cold?" This
challenge of the text has many times
been accepted. October 19th. 1812, Na
poleon's great army began its retreat
from Moscow. One hundred and fifty
thousand men, fifteen thousand horses,
six hundred pieces of cannon, forty
thousand stragglers. It was bright
weather when they started from Mos
cow, but soon something wrathier than
the Cossacks swooped upon their flanks.
An army of arctic blasts, with icicles
for bayonets and hailstones for shot,
and commanded by voice of tempest,
marched after them. The flying artil
lery of the heavens in pursuit. The
troops at nightfall would gather into
circles and huddle themselves together
for warmth; but when the day broke
they rose cot. for they were dead, and
the ravens came for their morning meal
of corpses. The way was strewn with
the rich stuffs of the east, brought as
booty from the Russian capital. An
invisible power seized one hundred
thousand men and hurled them dead
Into the snow-drifts, and on the hard
surfaces of the chill rivers, and into the
maws of the dogs that had followed
them from Moscow. The freezing hor
ror which has appalled history was
proof to all ages that it is a vain thing
for any earthly power to accept the
challenge of my text: "Who could
stand before his cold?" In the
middle of December. 1777, at Valley
Forge, eleven thousand troops were,
with frosted ears and frosted hands and
frosted feet. without shoes, with
out blankets, lying on the "white
pillow of the snow bank. As during
our civil war the cry was: "On to
Richmond!" when the troops were not
ready to march, so in the revolutionary
war there was a demand for wintry
campaign until Washington lost his
equilibrium and
"1 asure those
wrote emphatically:
gentlemen it is easy
enough seated by a good fireside and in
comfortable homes to draw out cam
paigns for the American arnSy; but I
tell them it is not so easy to lie on a
bleak hillside, without blankets and
without shoes." Oh, the frigid horrors
that gathered around the American
army in the winter of 1777! Valley
Forge was one of the tragedies of the
century. Benumbed, senseless, dead!
Who can stand before his cold?" "Not
we," say the frozen lips of Sir John
Franklin and his men, dying in Arctic
exploration. "Not we." answer
Schwatka and his men, falling back
from the fortresses of ice which they
had tried in vain to capture. "Not we,"
say the abandoned and crushed decks
of the Intrepid, the Resistance and the
Jeannette. "Not we," say the proces
sion of American martyrs returned
home for American sepulture, De Long
and his men. The highest pillars of
the earth are pillars of ice; Mont Blanc,
Jnngfrau, the Matterhorn. The largest
galleries of the world are galleries of ice.
Borne of the mighty rivers much of the
year are in captivity of ice. The great
est sculptors of the ages are the glaciers,
with arm and hand and chisel and ham
mer of Ice. The cold is imperial and
has a crown of glittering crystal and is
seated on a throne of ice. with footstool
of ice and scepter of ice. Who can tell
the sufferings of the winter of 1433,
when all the birds of Germany per
ished? Or the winter of 1C58 in En
gland, when the stages rolled on the
Thames, and temporary houses of mer
chandise were built on the ice? Or the
winter of 1821 in America, when New
York harbor was frozen over and the
heaviest teams crossed on the ice to
Staten island? Then come down to our
own winters when there have been so
many wrapping themselves in furs, or
gathering themselves around fires, or
threshing their arms about them to re
vive circulation the millions of the
temperate and the arctic zones who
are compelled to confess, "None of us
can stand before his cold."
One-half of the industries of our day
are employed In battling inclemency
of the weather. The furs of the north,
the cotton of the south, the flax of our
own fields, the wool of our own flocks,
the coal from our own mines, the wood
from our own forests, all employed in
battling these inclemencies, and still
every winter, with blue Hps and chat
tering teeth, answers: "None of us can
stand before his cold." Now this being
such a cold world. God sends out influ
ences to warm It. I am glad that the
God of the frost is the God of the heat;
that the God of the snow is the God of
the white blossoms; that the God of Jan
uary is the God of June. The question
as to how shall we warm this world up '
Is a question of immediate and all-en- j
compassing practicality. In this zone j
and weather there are so many fireles !
hearths, so many broken window- j
panes, so many defective roofs that sift i
the snow. Coal and wood and fian-
Tiv I V. I t
nels and thick coat are better for warm
: Ing up such a place than tracts, and
Bibles and creeds. Kindle that fire
; where it has gone out. Wrap some-
thing around those shivering limbs.
! Shoe those bare feet. Hat that bare
' head. Coat that bare back. Sleeve
; that bare arm. Nearly all the pictures
j of Martha Washington represent her in
I courtly dress as bowed to by foreign
j ambassadors; but Mrs. Kirkland, in her
j interesting book, gives a more inspir
j ing portrait of Martha Washington,
j She comes forth from her husband's hut
j in the encampment, the hut sixteen feet
. long by fourteen feet wide she comes
: forth from that hut to nurse the sick,
i to sew the patched garments, to console
j the soldiers dying of the cold. That is
i a better picture of Martha Washington.
! Hundreds of garments, hundreds of
j tons of coal, hundreds of glaziers at
broken window-sashes, hundreds of
! whole-souled men and women, are nec
; essary to warm the wintry weather.
What are we doing to alleviate the con-
j dition of those not so fortunate as we?
; Know ye not. my menas, tcere are
! hundreds of thousands of people who
' cannot stand before his cold? It is
useless to preach to bare feet, and to
' empty stomachs, and to gaunt visages.
' Christ gave the world a lesson in com
j mon sense when, before preaching the
; Gospel to the multitude in the wilder
! ness, he gave them a good dinner.
When I was a lad I remember seeing
! two rough woodcuts, but they made
j more impression upon me than any pic-
tures that I have ever seen. They were
j on opposite pages. The one woodcut
i represented the coming of the snow in
i winter, and a lad looking out at the
' door of a great mansion, and he was all
j wrapped in furs and his cheeks were
I ruddy, and with glowing countenance
i he shouted: "It snows! It snows!" On
I the next page was a miserable tene
i ment, and the door was open, and a
! child, wan and sick, and ragged and
j wretched, was looking out. and he said:
I "Oh! My God, it snows!" The winter
of gladness or of grief; according to our
' circumstances. But, my friends, there
is more than one way of warming up
this cold world, for it is a cold world
in more respects than one, and I am
here to consult with you as to the best
way of warming up the world. I want
to have a great heater introduced into
all your churches and all your homes
throughout the world. It is a heater of
divine patent. It has many pipes with
which to conduct heat; and t has a
door in which to throw the fuel. Once
get this heater introduced, and it will
turn the arctic zone into the temper
ate, and the temperate into the tropics.
It is the powerful heater, it is the glo
rious furnace of Christian sympathy.
The question ought to be, instead of
how much heat can we absorb? how
much heat can we throw out? There
are men who go through the world float
ing icebergs. They free'ze everybody
with their forbidding look. The hand
with which they shake yours is as cold
as the paw of a polar bear. If they
float into a religious meeting, the tem
perature drops from eighty above to
ten degrees below zero. There are
icicles hanging from their eyebrows.
Recently an engineer in the south
west, on a locomotive, saw a train com
ing with which he must collide. He
resolved to stand at his post and slow
up the train until the last minute, for
there were passengers behind. The en
gineer said to the fireman, "Jump! one
man is enough' on this engine! Jump!"
The fireman jumped and was saved.
The crash came. The engineer died
at his post. How many men like that
engineer would it take to warm this
cold world up? A vessel struck on a
rocky island. The passengers and the
crew were without food, and a sailor
had. a shell-fish under his coat. He
was saving it for hl3 last morsel. He
heard a little child cry to her mother,
"Oh, mother. I'm so hungry, give me
something to eat I am so hungry!"
The sailor took the shell-fish from un
der his coat and said, "Here, take that." .
How many men like that sailor would :
it take to warm the cold world up? j
Xerxes fleeing from his enemy got on ;
board a boat. A great many Persians ;
leaped into the same boat and the boat j
was sinking. Some one said: "Are j
you not willing to make a sacrifice for i
your king?" and a majority of those j
who were in the boat leaped overboard
and drowned to save their king. How
many men like that would it "take to
warm up this cold world? Elizabeth
Fry went into the horrors of Newgate
prison, and she turned the imprecation
and the obscenity and the filth into
prayer and repentance and a reformed
life. The Sisters of Charity, in 1863,
on northern and southern battlefields,
came to boys in blue and gray while
they were bleeding to death. The
black bonnet with the sides pinned
hack and the white bandage on the
brow, may not have answered all the '
demands of elegant taste, but you could
not persuade that soldier dying a thou- '
sand miles from home that it was any
thing but an angel that looked him in
the face. Oh, with cheery look, with
helpful word, with kind action, try to
make the world warm! !
Count that day lost whose low descending:
sun
Views from thy hand no generous action
done.
It- was his strong sympathy that
brought Christ from a warm heaven to
a cold world. The land where he dwelt
had a serene sky. balsamic atmosphere,
tropical luxuriance. No storm-blasts
in heaven. No chill fountains. On a
cold December night Christ stepped out
of a warm heaven into the world's frig
idity. The thermometer in Palestine
never drops below zero, but December
is a cheerless month, and the pasturage
is very poor on the hilltops. Christ
stepped out of a warm heaven into the
cold world that cold December night.
The world's reception was cold. The
surf of bestormed Galilee was cold.
Joseph's sepulchre was cold. Christ
came, the great warmer, to warm the
earth, and all Christendom to-day feels
the glow. He will keep on warming
the earth until the Tropic will drive
away the Arctic and the Antartic He
gave an imitation of what he was going
to do when he broke up the funeral at
the gate of Nain and turned it into a
reunion festival, and when with his
warm lips he melted the Galilean hurri
cane and stood on the deck and stamped
his foot, crying, "Silence!" and the
waves crouched and the tempests folded
their wings.
Oh. it was this Christ who warmed
the chilled disciples when they had no
food by giving them plenty to eat, and
who In the tomb of Lazarus shattered
the shackle until the broken links of
the chain of death rattled into the dark
est crypt of the mausoleum. In his
genial preseure the girl who had fallen
into the fire and water is healed of the
catalepsy, and the withered arm takes
muscular, healthy action, and the ear
that could not hear an avalanche
i
i
catches a
eaTs rustle, and the tongue
that could
nst articulate truis a quai-
j rajn an(j th
e blind eye was relumed.
! and Christ, instead of staying three
i days and three nights in the sepulchre,
! as was supposed, as soon as the worldly
i curtain of observation was dropped he
! gan the exploration of all the under
: ground passages of earth and sea,
! wherever a Christian's grave may after
; awhile be, and started a light of Chris
i tian hope, resurrection hope, which
! shall not go out until the last cerement
i is taken off and the last mausoleum
! breaks open.
Notwithstanding all the modern in
j ventions for heating, I tell you there is
nothing so full of geniality and social
: ity as the old-fashioned country fire-
place. The neighbors were to come in
for a winter evening of sociality. In
the middle of the afternoon, in the
best room in the house, some one
brought in a great backlog with great
strain and put it down on the back of I
the hearth. Then the lighter wood was !
put on, armful after armful. Then a j
shovel of coals was taken from another
room and put under the dry pile, and
the kindling began, and the crackling,
and it rose until it became a roaring
flame, which filled all the room with
geniality and was reflected from the
family pictures on the wall. Then the
neighbors came in two by two. They
sat down, their faces to the fire, which
ever and anon was stirred with tongs
and readjusted on the andirons, and
there were such times of rustic repartee.
and story-telling, and mirth as
th
black stove and the blind register never
dreamed of. Meanwhile the table was
being spread, and so fair was the cloth
and so clean was the cutlery, they glis
ten and glisten in our minds to-day.
And then the best luxury of orchard
and farmyard was roasted and prepared
for the table, to meet the appetites
sharpened by the cold ride. Oh! my
friends, the Church of Jesus Christ Is
the world's fireplace, and the woodB ar
from the cedars of Lebanon, and th
fires are fires of love, and with the sil
ver tongs of the altar we stir the flams
and the light is reflected from all the-!
family pictures on the wall pictures of !
those who were here and are gone now. j
Oh! come up close to the fireplace, j
Have your worn face transfigured in ',
the light. Put your cold feet, weary of j
he journey, close up to the blessed con- j
flagration. Chilled through with trou- j
ble and disappointment, come close up t
until you can get warm clear through. !
Exchange experience, talk over the har- j
vests gathered, tell all the Gospel news.
Meanwhile the table is being spread.
On it, bread of life. On it, grapes of ;
Eshcol. On it, new wine from the '
kingdom. On it, a thousand luxuries j
celestial. Hark, as a wounded hand
raps on the table, and a tender voice j
comes through saying: "Come, for all i
things are now ready. Eat, oh, friends!
drink, yea. drink abundantly, oh, be- !
lovei!" j
My friends, that is the way the cold j
vorld is going to be warmed up, by the ,
great Gospel fireplace. All nations will
come in and sit down at the banquet.
While I was musing, the fire burned.
"Come in out of the cold, come in out of
the cold!"
FACTS TERSELY TOLD.
! The Ascot races, were
founded by
j Queen Anne.
j The largest landed proprietor among
i the peers is the Duke of Sutherland,
who owns more than a millioi acres.
James P. Jump of Owen, Ky.f is not
egotistical In claiming that he is the
champion egg-eater. He recently
cimbed out6lde of twenty-two of them
at one sitting.
Cultivated plums, of which there are
now several hundred varieties, all des
cended from the original species, which
was? a native of the south Caucasian
country.
It is calculated that 10.000,000 photo-i
graphs of the queen, the Prince and the
Princess of Wales are produced annu
l ally, and find a ready sale all over the
world.
So much has the art of dressing and
dyeing feathers been developed that
numbers of the seemingly rare feather
boas worn have already been made
from the plumage of the ordinary fowL
There is a gigantic "rocking-stone" or
. balanced bowlder on the pinnacle of
Tandil mountain, Buenos Ayres. It is
twenty-four feet in height, ninety feet
! long and will weigh twenty-five tons.
': Glass is the most perfectly elastic sub-
- stance in existence. A glass plate kept
i under pressure in a bent condition for
j five and twenty years will return to Its
: exact original form. Steel comes next.
I . . The ancient Chinese and Japanese fre
j quently used to draw pictures with
j their thumb nails. The nails were al
! lowed to grow to a length of ome eigh
j teen inches, and -were pared p a point
; and dipped in Vermillion or sky-blue
! lnk-
i Elbert, the center of the French wool
i en manufacture, Is so well off that it
has abolished nearly all Its town taxes
and now petitions the governmene for
leave to do away with the octori, the
duty on provisions entering the town.
"Experience Is the best teacher," re
marked Plodding Pete. "Yes." said
Meandering Mike; "but my personal ob
servation is that it's a mighty poor way
ter study law."
Marketable. l'nibly.
New York Weekly: Housekeeper
Want any old newspapers?'"
Junk man '.No. Newspapers am t
made o' i-acrs ar.v more. Made o wood
pulp."
'Housekeeper I"-n't wood pulp no
use?"'
Junk man "Guess not: but dump
"em on. If they happen to be made o'
maple wood mavbe I can sell 'em at a
I maple syrup factory."
I SlOO Reward. SIOO.
; The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all Its stages, and
that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is
the only positive rure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a constitutional disease requires a con
stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease and giving the
patient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature In doing
Its work. The proprietors have so much
faith in its curative powers that they
' offer One Hundred Dollars for any case
! that it fails to cure. Send for list of
j testimonial!?. Address
. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
. Sold by druggists; 75c.
j Hall's Family Pills. 25c .
J The man who i not religious at home
often tries hard to te so considered in
church.
j KTerjr mother thoultl alw uya have at hand
; a t iitl of I'arker's l:n.er Tunic. No'hi'iu ele so
i KxJ for rain. eakue& . co;1s, and fcleeplessuess.
Treasures laid up in heaven always
rich oniel.odv on earth.
en-
la the llmr f cure y war Corn
with Hinciercjms. It takes t..eai o t irftctly. (Lire-
The life speaks lowdeat when the tongue j
is dumb. j
I shall recommend Piso's Cure for Con- j
sumption far and wide. Mrs. Mulligan, i
Plumbtead, Kent, England, Nov. S, ISlffi. i
The love that never iaku until it does it 1
on a gravestone, keei still too long. !
SITS Ail Fits stop! h1 fr"ly I)r.Klln'sOrMt I
Nerve Restorer. No Kiuaft-r th nriay:a use. i
Marvelous cures. Treat ise atxi S1I trrl outil fr- t j
frltcbc&. bc-nd tolJr.Khut-.aUl A.t clit.,l'liilu.,l'i. !
When the devil is about to strike to
kill,
he puts on his Sunday coat.
Precious Metals.
The great mining ramps of Cripple Creek,
Coio., and Mercur, Utah, as ell as those
of Wyominsr, Idaho and il out ana, are best
reac hed via the Union Pacific.
The fast time and through tar service on
Tbe Overland Route"' are features appre
ciated by all. Fur information regarding
the aliove camps address your nearest
a?ent, or E. L. L'OMAX,
Gen'l Pass. & Ticket gent, Omaha, Neb.
If good seed is put into good ground some j
of it will l.e sure to grow.
For relieving Throat Diseases, Cornos
j and Hoarseness, ue "Urown's Bronchial
Troches.
Sold onlv in twxeg. Avoid im-
itations.
Every man makes
others have to teep.
unwritten laws that
Billiard table, peeond-hand, for uie
cheap Apply to or address, H. C. Akix,
.11 S. llth St., Omaha, Neb.
KNOCK
A sore spot, preen.
black, or blue, is a
THE
SPOTS
TT,. ct iinnoo
OUT.
Off for a Six
When you spend a dime for 44 Battle Ax 99 Q
Plug, you get 5 ounces. When you spend. Q
the same amount for any other good tobac- Q
cof you get 3 j ounces, or for 5 cents you Q
get almost as much " Battle Ax " as you do Q
of other high grade brands for, JO cents. D
0 C3 CC300C70CCQCCCPQCa7
Steel Web Picket Fence.
Also CABLED POULTRY. GARDEN AND RABBIT FKKt'E.
We manufacture a complete line of Smooth Wire Fencing and guarantee every article to b
as represented. If you consider quality we can save you money. "CATALOGUE FREE.
DE KALB FENCE CO.. 121 High St., De Kalb, 111.
When vou bur
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Sarsaparilla
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Ask for the best and you'll
Get Ayer's.
Ask for Ayer's and you'll get
the Best.
take the
law in your own hands, ladies,
when you ask for
Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding
and don't ret it. Sentence such r.
store to the loss of your trade an',
give it to merchants who are willing-
to sell what you demand.
Look for " S. H. & M.," on the Lab I.
and take no other.
If your dealer will not supply you we
will.
Send for sampis. showing labels and materia
to the S. H. 8l M. Co , P. O. Box 699. New York C r
9
9
MUSH
SMOKING TOBACCO,
2 oz. for 5 Cents.
CUMLASH I
CHEROOTS-3 for 5 Cents.
Give a Good, Mellow, Healthy.
Pleasant Smoke. Try Them.
LYOS t CO. TOBHTh WORKS, Itarkm, K. C
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9
9
9
NO AGENTS.
bnt di'-rx't tothrvi.
uinei at wliolt pri ".
hip anywhere lorexamr,
btion Irf-foit Kale, fcv; -thin?
warranted. lOOrty'f'
.f tarrla, W Ktylr .
Hiniru. tl ty lT KM I or fA
4ln. Writ- for catal.ijT-..
FLkHAKT tABaJAt.K llt -
IBS8 arti. CU., kUiJIlKt.
ISO.
W. B. ttuTT, Se y.
nMCIsVlJO,I!V w.ittomiis.
If) JUlJOl KJIM aaliliiiMori, !. .
I' Successful y Prosecutes Claims.
11 Lata Principal Era-miner L B. Pension Bureau.
12 yra q laot war, laahiulK-atujgclMiiu. attj- war.
nn
and watch the color
GU
WEHAVE
Oil JMUUUO UIL the soreness disappear.
IT IS MAGICAL.
Months' Trip.
0
7;
E
1
4
Cabled Field and Hog Fence.