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DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON
The Eminent Divine's Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: “Looking Backward”— It Is tfell
to Keview the Past and Arouse the
Soul to liemlnlecencea of Dangers Es
caped and Sorrows Suffered,
Text: “While I was musing, the Arc
tmrned.”—Psalm9 xxxix., 8.
Here is David, the psalmist, with the
forefinger ot his right hand agninst his
temple and the door shut against the world,
•engaged in contemplation. And it would
be well for us to take the same posture
■often, while we sit down In sweet solitude
to contemplate. small
In a island off the coast of Nova
Scotia I once passed a Sabbath In delight
ful solitude, for I had resolved thut I would
have one day of entire quiet before I en
tered upon autumnal work. I thought to
have spent the day in laying out plans for
•Christian work, but instead reminiscence. of that it be
-eame a day of tender I ru
viewed my pastorate; I shook hands with
an old departed friend, whom I shall greet
again when the curtains of life are lifted.
The days of my boyhood came back, and I
was ten years of age, and I was eight, and
I was flve. There was hut one house on
the island, and yet from Sabbath daybreak,
when the bird chant woke me, until the
■evening melted into the Bay of Fundy, from
shore to shore there were ten thousand
memories, and the groves were a-hum with
voices that had long ago ceased.
Youth is apt too much to spend all its
time In looking forward. Old age is apt
too much to spend all its time in looking
backward. People in midlife and on the
apex look both ways. It would be well for
us, I think, however, to spend more time
1n reminiscence. By the constitution of
■our forward. nature we spend most of the time look
ing And the vast majority of peo
ple live not I And So much in the present ns in the
future. that you mean to make a
reputation, advantages you mean to establish yourself,
and the that you expect to
achieve absorb a great deal of your time.
But I see no harm in this if it does not make
you discontented with the present or dls
•qualify ful thing you sometimes for existing to duties. It is a use
look back, and to see
the dangers we have escaped, and to seethe
sorrows we have suffered, and the trials
and wanderings of our earthly pilgrimage,
and to sum up our enjoyments. I mean, so
far as God may help me, to stir up your
memory of the pust, so that in the revie'w
you may be encouraged and humbled and
urged to pray.
Among the greatest advantages of your
past life were an early home and its sur
roundings. The bad men of the day, for
the most part, dip their heated passions
•out of the boiling spring of an unhappy
home. We are not surprised to And that
Byron’s heart was a concentration of sin
when we hear his mother was abandoned
and that she made sport of his Infirmity
and often called him “the lame brat.” He
who has vicious parents has to light every
inch of his way if he would maintain his
integrity and at last reach the home of the
.good in heaven. Perhaps your early home
was in a city. It may have been when
Pennsylvania avenue, Washington, was
residential as now It is commercial, and
Canal street, New York, was far up town.
That old house in the city may have been
demolished or changed into stores, and it
seemed like sacrilege to you—for there was
•more meaning in that small house than
there is In a granite mansion or a turreted
-cathedral. Looking back, you see it as
though It were yesterday—the sitting
room, where the loved one sat by the plain
lamp light, the mother at the evening
-stand, the brothers and sisters perhaps
long ago gathered into the skies, then
plotting mischief on the floor or under the
table; your father with firm voice com
manding a silence that lasted half a minute.
Perhaps you were brought up in the
country. You stand now to-day in men
•ory under the old tree. You clubbed it for
fruit that was not quite ripe, because you
•couldn’t wait any longer. You hear the
brook rumbling along over the pebbles.
You step again into the furrow where your
father in his shirt sleeves shouted to the
lazy oxen. You frighten the swallows from
the rafters of the barn and take just one
egg and silence your conscience by saying
they will not miss it. You take a drink
■again out of the very bucket that the old
well fetched up. You go for the cows at
night and And them pushing their heads
through the bars. Ofttimes in the dusty
and busy ; streets you wish you were
home again on that cool grass, or in the
•rag carpeted hall of the farmhouse,through
which there came the breath of new mown
hay or the blossom of buckwheat.
You may have in your windows now
beautiful plants and flowers brought from
across the seas, but not one of them stirs
in your soul so much charm and memory
as the old ivy and the yellow sunflower
that stood sentinel along the garden walk
and the forget-me-nots playing hide and
seek rniddho long grass. The father who
used to come in sunburned from the field
and sit down on the doorsill and wipe the
sweat from bis brow may have gone to bis
•everlasting rest. The mother who used to
sit at the door a little bent over, cap and
spectacles on her face mellowing with the
vicissitudes of many years, may have
down her gray head on the pillow in the
valley, but forget that home you never
will. Have you thanked God for it? Have
you rehearsed all these blessed reminis
cences? Oh, thank God for a Christian
father! Thank God for a Christian moth
er! Thank God for an early Christian altar
at which you were taught to kneell Thank
-God for an early Christian home!
I bring to mind another passage in the
history of your life. The day came when
you set up your own household. The days
passed along in quiet blessedness. You
twain sat at the taole morning and night
andtalked over your plans for the future.
The most insignificant affair In your life
became the subject of mutual consultation
and advertisement. You were so happy
you felt you never could be uny happier.
One day a dark cloud hovered over your
-dwelling, and it got darker and darker,
but out of that cloud the shining messen
ger of God descended to incarnate an im
mortal sp rit. Two little feet started on
an eternal journey, and you were to lead
■them, a gem to flash in heaven’s coronet,
and you to polish it; eternal age3 of light
and darkness watching the starting out of
•a newly created creature. You rejoiced
and you trembled at the responsibility that
in your possession an immortal treasure
was placed. You prayed and rejoiced and
wept and wondered; you were earnest in
supplication that you might lead it through
life into the kingdom of God. There was a
tremor in your earnestness. There was a
double interest about that home. There
was an additional interest why you should
«tay there and be faithful, and when in a
few months your house was tilled with the
music of the child’s laughter you were
struck through with the fact that you had
a stupendous mission.
Have you kept that vow? Have you
neglected uny of these duties? Is your
home as much to you as it used to be?
Have those anticipations been gratified?
God help you in your solemn reminis
cence, and let His mercy fail upon your
soul if your kindness has been ill required!
God have mercy on the parent on the
wrinkles of whose face is written the story
of a child’s sin! God have mercy on ti c
motber who, in addition to her other
pangs, has the pang of a child’s Iniquity!
Gh, there are many, many snd-.sounds in
this sad world, but the saddest sound that
is ever heard is the breaking of a mother’s
Jieart!
I find another point in your life history,
You found one day you were in the wrong
•road. You could not sleep at night. There
was just one word that seemed to sob
through your banking house, or through
your office, or your shop, or your bedroom,
aud that word was “eternity.” You said:
“I’m not ready for It. Oh, God, have
mercy!” The Lord heard. Peace came to
your heart. In the breath ot the hill and
in the waterfalls dash you henrd the voice
of God’s love. The clouds and the trees
balled you with gladness. You came lntn
the house of God. You remember how
your hand trembled as you took up theoup
of the communion. You remember the old
minister who consecrated It, and you re
member the church officials who carried It
through the aisle. You remember the old"
people who at the close of the service took
your hand in theirs In congratulating sym
pathy, as much ns to say, "Welcome home,
you lost prodigal!" And, though those
hands be all withered away, that com
munion Sabbath Is resurrected to-day.
But f must not spend any more of my
time In going over the advantages of your
life. I just put them in one great sheaf,
and I call them up in your memory with
one loud harvest song, such ns the reapers
sing. Praise the Lord, ye blood bought
immortals on earth! Praise the.Lord, ye
crowned spirits of heaven!
But some of you have not always had a
smooth life. Some of you are now in the
shadow. Others had their troubles years
ago; you are a mere wreck of what you
once were. I must gather up the sorrows
of your past life, but how shall I do It?
You say that It Is impossible, as you have
had so many troubles and adversities.
Then I will just take two—the first trouble
and the last trouble. As when you are
walking along the street, and there has
been muste in the distance,you unconscious
ly find yourselves keeping step to the mu
sic, so when you started life your very life
was a musical time beat. The air was
full of joy and hilarity; with the bright,
clear oar you made the boat skip, You
went on, and life grew brighter, until, af
ter awhile, suddenly a voioe from heaven
said, “Halt!" and quick as the sunshine
you halted, you grew pale, you confronted
your first sorrow. You had no Idea that
the flush on your child’s cheek was an un
healthy flush. You said it cannot be any
thing serious. Death in slippered feet
walked around the cradle. You did not
heurtho tread, but after awhile the truth
flashed on you. You walked the floor.
Oh, if you could, with your strong, stout
hand, have wrenched that child from the
destroyer! You went to your room and
you said, "God, save my child! God, save
my child!” The world seemed going out
in darkness. You said, "I oan’t hear it, I
can’t bear it." You felt as if you could not
put the long lashes over the bright eyes,
never to see them taken again sparkle. If you
could have that little one In your
arms, and with It leaped the grave, how
gladly you would have done it! If you
could let your property go, your houses
go, how gladly you would have let them
depart Jlf you could only have kept that
one treasure!
But one day there came up a chill blast
that swept through the bedroom, and in
stantly all the lights went out, and there
was darkness —thick, murky, Impenetrable,
shuddering darkness. But God did not
leave you there. Mercy spoke. As you
took up the bitter cup to put It to your
lips God said, “Lot it pass,” and forthwith,
ashy the hand of angels, another cup was
put into your hands. It was the cup of
God’s consolation. And as you have some
times lifted the head of a wounded soldier
and poured wine into his lips, so God puts
His left arm uoder your head and with
His right hand He pours into your lips the
wine of His comfort and His consolation,
and you looked at the empty cradle and
looked at your broken heart, and you
looked at the Lord’s chastisement, and
you said, "Even so, Father, for so it
seemeth good in Thy sight.”
Ah, it was your first trouble. How did
you get over it? God confronted you. You
have been a better man ever since. You
have been a better woman ever since. In
the jar of the closing gate of the sepulcher
you heard the clanging of the opening gate
of Heaven, and you felt an Irresistible
drawing heavenward. You have been
spiritually better ever the since last that night
when the little one for time put
its arms around your neck and said;
t’Good night, papa! Good night, mamma!
Meet me in Heavenl”
Perhaps your last I sorrow congratulate was a financial
embarrassment. some of
you on your lucrative profession or occu
pation, on ornate apparel, on a commodi
ous residence—everything you put your
hands on seems to turn to gold. But there
are others of you who arc like the ship od.
which Paul sailed where two seas met, and
you are broken by the violence of the
waves. By an.unadvised Indorsement, or
by a conjunction of unforeseen events, or
by fire or storm, or a senseless panic, you
have been flung headlong and where you
onco dispensed great charities now you
have hard work to win your daily bread.
Have you forgotten to thank God for your
days of prosperity, and that through your
trials some of you have made investments
which will continue after the last bank of
this world has exploded, and the silver and
gold are molten in the fires of a burning
world? Have you, amid all your losses
and discouragements, forgot that there was
bread on your table this morning, and that
there shall be a shelter for your head from
the storm, and there is air for your lungs,
and blood for your heart, aud light for
your eye, and a glad and glorious and
triumphant religion for your soul?
Perhaps your last trouble was a bereave
ment. That heart which in childhood was
your refuge, the parental heart, and which
has been asource of the quickest sympathy
ever since, has suddenly become silent for
ever. And now sometimes, whenever in
sudden annoyance and without deliberation
you say, “I will go and tell mother,” the
thought flashes on you, “I have no
mother.” Or the father, with voice less
tender, but with heart as loving, watchful
of all your ways, exultant over your success
without saying much, although the old peo
ple do talk it over by themselves, his trem
bling hand on that staff which you now keep
as a family relic, his memory embalmed in
grateful hearts—is'taken away forever. Or
there was your campanion in life, sharer of
your joys and sorrows, taken, leaving yie
heart an old ruin, where the 111 winds blow
over a wide wilderness of desolation, the
sands of desert driving across the place
which once bloomed like the garden of
God. And Abraham mourns for Sarah at
the cave of Machpelah. life, As suddenly, you wore mov
ing along your path in People right
before you, was an open grave.
looked down, and they saw it was only a
few feet deep and a few feet wide, but to
you It was a cavern down which went all
your hopes and all your expectations. But
cheer up in the name ol the Lord Jesus
Christ, the Comforter.
There is one more point of absorbing
reminiscence, and that is the last hour of
life, when wo have to look over all our
past existence. What a moment that will
be! I place Napoleon’s dying reminis
cence on St. Helena besides Mrs. Judson’s
dying reminiscence in the harbor of St.
Helena, the same island, 20 years after.
Napoleon’s dying reminiscence was one of
delirium—“Tete d’armee”—“Head of the
army.” Mrs. Judson’s dying reminiscence, toil
as she came home from her missionary
and her life of self sacrifice for God, dying
in the cabin of the ship In the harbor of
St. Helena, was, “I always did love the
Lord Jesus Christ.” And then the his
torian says she fell into a sound sleep
for an hour and woke amid the songs
of angels. I place the dying reminis
cence of Augustus Cffisar againt the
dying reminiscence of the apostle Paul.
The dying reminiscence of Augustus
Ctesar was, addressing his attendants,
“Have I played , , my part we.l ..__ on the stage __ __
! of life?” and they said, answered Why, !n the don afflrma
i tive, and he then, t you
applaud me. The dying r miniseence of
Paul the apostle was, I have fought a
good fight, I have^finished my course, I
have kept the faith, henc.forth there Is
laid up for me a crown of righteousness,
which the Lord the righteous Judge will
give me in that day, and not to^mo only,
but to all them that love His appearing,
Augustus Caesar died amid pomp and great
surroundings, Paul uttered Ills dying rem
imscenco looking up through the troll of a
dungeon. God grant that our dying and pillo w
may be the closing of a useful life the
opening of a glorious eternity.
Who the Plain People Are.
We hear a great deal of talk about
"the plain people.” The plain people
ore the men.—Boston Globe.
France’s New President.
President Loubet, the new president of
Prqpce bourgeois Is, and It anything, utterly devoid calm, of sane, a of trifle self
seuse
Importance. But there Is a strong and Irre
sistible will behind bis bland face, and be
looks like a man who would Infuse into
run-down French politics as much vigor and
new life as Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will
Into the run-down system of anyono whe
uses It. It Is an absolute cure for the worst of
all stomach disorders.
Almonds are found In Asia, llarbary and
Morocco. Those we get are from Malaga.
No-To-Ban for Fifty Gents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60o, SI. A11 druggists.
It Is not failure, but low aim, that makes a
crime.
4 4 The Prudent Man Setteth
His House in Order."
Your human tenement
should be given even more
careful attention than the
house you live in. Set it in
order by thoroughly purifying Hood's
your blood by taking
Sarsaparilla.
Erysipelas— " My little girl is now fat
and healthy on account of Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla curing her of erysipelas and eczema.”
Mas. H. O. Wheatukt, Port Chester, N. Yh
Hovel Disappoints:
Hex!'* Pllls pure I G sr Uls; the noa4rrltat l ng and
only Ca tiiarpo tb~£»k« trlth lioodT s»r»spftrllla.
Lazy “I have been troubled Liver a great deal
with 1 a torpid CASCARETS liver, which produces constipa- claim
tion. found tp be all you
for them, and secured such relief the first trial,
that I purohased cured. I another shall supply be and glad was com
pletely ommend Cssoarets whenever only the too opportunity to rec
is presented. ” J. A. Smith,
2920 Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
mMmm
TRADE MAfVK HSOISTIWSD
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c,50a
... CURE CONSTIPATION.
8t«rllng Remedy Compaaj, Chiengo, Montreal, Rew York. 320
HO-TO-BAC ?. n «l«c y o a A'a d b r ir
THE REASON WHY
For man or beast
SLOAN’S
LINIMENT
Excels—is that it Penetrates $
to the seat of the trouble im
mediately and without irrita
| pain. ting rubbing—and kills the
n 9
Family and Stable Size*
i .. Sold by Dealers generally.
Dr. Carl S. Sloan, Boaten, Mama.
E VERY SUCCESSFUL
farmer who raises fruits,
vegetables, berries or
grain, knows by experience
the importance of having a
targe percentage of
Potash
in his fertilizers. If the fer
tilizer is too low in Potash the
harvest is sure to be small, and
of inferior quality.
Our books tell about the proper fertilizers
for all crops, and we will gladly send them
free to any farmer.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more
than common chimneys. All dealers.
P1TT8BUKG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Fa.
Avoiding a Mistake.
Jagleigh—Shay, old man, can’t
’member where I live. Tell me.
Friend—You don’t want to go home
to your wife in this condition, do you?
Jagleigh—Course not, but ’f I don’t
know where m’home is, I might go
there by mistake.—New York Even
ing Post.
Joy Out of Sorrow.
“Have yon met Jonesby since his
horseless carriage blew up with him?”
Oh, yes. He is taking it quite cheer
fully. He is explaining the loss of
his hair by saying that it is the re
sult of an automobillious attack.”
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
*r
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 50c.
Wbst’s Is a Name P
Mmc. X. had been married to two
brothers. After the elder one died
she was wedded to the younger. The
painted portrait of No. 1 hangs in the
public art gallery. She stood before it,
weeping gently, and was asked sym
pathetically, "is he a member of your
family?”
"Yes, yes," she replied, between sobs;
"he is my poor, dead brother-in-law.”
Misunderstood.
“Do you buy condensed milk, ma
ma?”
“I presume that we must, but I
never thought of it before. I always
order two quarts, but it never meas
ures moA than three pints.”—Detroit
Free Press.
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?
Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease,
a powder for the feet. It makes Tight or
New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun
ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aohing and
Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists,
Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy,
N. Y.
_____
It is better to do one thing good than only
partly to accomplish two good things.
Beauty la Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a olean skin. No
beauty without it. Caacarets, and keep Candy clean, Cathar- by
tic clean your blood it
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im
urities from the body. blotches, Begin blackheads, to-day to
E and anish that pimples, sickly bilious boils, complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
Be cautious with whom you associate and
never give your company or your confidence
to those of whose good principles you are not
sure.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Promo Quinine Tablets. All
Bruggists refund money If It falls to cure. 25c.
Alumlnun feed wires for electrlo rail
ways are coming into use largely. Their
conducting capacity more than compen
sates for the difference in price with cop
per.
Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yoor Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50o or 11. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York
The man who waits until tomorrow never
accomplishes an) thing.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption Is an A No. 1
Asthma medicine.— W.R. Williams,A ntioch,
Ills., April 11,1894.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. 162 trial bottloandtreatlsefrse.
Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phlla., Pa.
H. H. Green’s Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are the
only successful Dropsy Specialist* In the world.
See their liberal offer in advertisement In an
other column of this paper.
Perhaps all men are liars, but there are
times when it’s unwise to say so.
Educate Your Bowels With Caacarets,
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation refund forever.
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists money.
Some girls are kect so busy getting engaged
that they have no time to marry.
■T. C. Simpson. Marquess, W. Va., says:
“nail’s Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad
case of catarrh.” Druggists sell It, 75c.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
‘ t eething,softens the gums, reduces Inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
A fish diet may not strengthen the brain,
•But going fishing often invigoratrs the imag
ination. ___
_
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartio. lOo or25o.
If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money
An honest man is not only the noblest work
of the Creator, but also the scarcest.
Malsby k Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and
Penberthy Injectors. ,
%
41 mm
Manufacturers and Dealers in
SAW MILIjS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin
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SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
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tree by mentioning this paper.
\7A
TBAD* SA8S
For INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
“I have lound immediate relief in every In
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A cure for a try. 25c. a box. Ask your drug
gist, or write lor free sample to Springs,
TIZAKUKK CO., Tarpon Fla.
ANTED—Cass of bad health that E l PA-N S
will not benefit. Send 5 cte. to Rip an* Chemical
Co., NewYork, 1 or 10 samples and 100(1 testimonials.
35 \crsi'!
USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE.
Hard Wood Intervention.
Jones—Dear me! You say you often
lay down the law to your wife; how
do you go about it? Bones—Why, all
you need is firmness. I usually go
into my study, lock the door, and do
it over the transom; all you need is
firmness—in the door!—Puck. i
Expensive Etiquette.
Bull—It would be a great mistake
to allow women in the Stock Exchange.
Bear—Why so?
Bull—Well, just to think of us pay
ing from twenty to thirty thousand for
a seat, and then having to give it up
to a woman.—Brooklyn Life.
PISO-S CURE MX
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE Good. FAILS. „ Use
Cough Syrup. Tastes
In timer. 8old by druggists.
JT,
=72 5 ‘cfs:
w OMEN are assailed at every turn by trouble# peculiar
to their sex. Every mysterious ache or ppia is a
symptom. These distressing sensations will keep
on coining unless properly treated.
The history of neglect is written in the worn faoes and
wasted figures of nine- ... . — ........ -r- —
tenths of our women, WOMEN WHO
every one of whom may
receive the invaluable ad- NEED MRS.
vice of Mrs. Pinkham,
without charge, by writing P/NKHAM'S AID
to her at Lynn, Mass.
Miss Lula Evans, of
Parkersburg, Iowa, writes of her recovery as follows:
'•Dear Mrs. Pinkham — I had been a constant sufferer
for nearly three years. Had inflammation of the womb,
leucorrhaea, heart trouble, bearing-down pains, backache,
— i,, headache, ached all over, and
at times could hardly stand on
my feet. My heart trouble was
se bad that seme nights
\ I was compelled to sit
up in bed or get up
35 EL and walk the floor,
V for it seemed as
|A though smother, I should hfore
**' than once I have
*4 been obliged to
have the doctor
A visit me in the
middle of the
night. I was also
31 very nervous and
W fretful. I was ut
J J One terly day discouraged. I thought I
would write and see
M if you could do any
’ thing for I followed
a me.
your advice and now I feel
like a new woman. All
* those dreadful troubles I have
no
more, and I have found Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash a sure
cure for leucorrhcea. I am very thankful for your good advice
and medicine.”
BOYS
Spalding’s Athletic Library should be read by
who wants to beoome an athlete.
No.S. To. 4. Howto Boxing. bean [lete. Ath
No. 2H How to play Foot
Bali, by Walter Camp.
No.27.C’ollegeAthletics No.82. How play Base
to
Ball. [letics.
No. 87. All Around Ath
No.42. How to Punch
the Hag.
No. 82. How to Train.
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New Ynrk. Dearer. Cliicn go*
'HI DR- MOFFETT'S $§ Aids Digestion,
TEETHINA Regulates the Bowels,
pi- fwittMA*? Makes Teething Easy.
TEETHINA Relieves the
Bowel Troubles cf
Children of Any Age.
£3! ’S ■ A TEETHING POWDERS Ask Costs Your Only Druggist SO Cents. lor It.
S3,000 ’ DEPOSIT
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LI
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fj
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aiNO-tSSY'—
The Chainless wheel girl is helping the chain
wheel girl up the hill. But there are excellent
chain wheels. We make them. The picture shows
that the Chainless Is the better hill climber, be
cause the bevel-gearing cannot be cramped or
twiBted under the extra strain. The same uni
formity of action makes the Ohalnless exception
ally easy running at all times.
New 1899 Models: Chainless, $75; Colum- $35;
bia chain wheels, $50; Hartfords,
Vedettes, $25, $26.
Catalogue free of dealers or by mall for 2-cent stamp
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DROPS Book testimoaials–nd YSilSE IO darn* t treatment worst KIVH*
00808. of
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^'Winchester.*!
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Factory Loaded Shotgun Shells.
r‘ Leader” loaded with Smokeless powder and “ New
• |Rival” I loaded with Black powder. Superior to all
other brands for
1 UNIFORMITY, RELIABILITY AND
STRONG SHOOTING QUALITIES.
§ Winchester Shells are for sale by all dealers. Insist upon ; ■
| having them when you buy and you will get the best.
No. 85. Official Foot Hall
Guide, [ball Guide.
No. M. Official Baskat
No. 87. Athletic Primer,
No. 93. Official A. A. V.
Buies.
No.98. Athletic Records
No,96. Official Base Ball
Guide.
No. 100. How to be a Bi
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|A over 80 degrees colder
I Jk used In refrigerators Just like lyr
■ w o pfi rf®ct ftiiliitltiit® AGH8NTS Iot WANTED.
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FARQUHAR
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Farquhar Vibrator Separator
greatest capacity, wastes no
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Farquhar Galebrated Ajax Engina
Received medal and high- Co
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^x rsfitnlvBFrrr-r> are
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flHBiKp* W BBBpS IH strong two injectors. and dmablo Are and very are
kS/l W 9 ■ ■ Yi’e m# u e M light as Is ccnsls
teat with safety. There I*
no record of a Farquhar boiler over exploding.
Farquhar Variable Friction Feed
Saw Mill.
Most accurate set
works made. Quick re
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lightning gig hack.
Engines Boilers. Generally. 8aw Mills and Agricultural
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