Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 27 February 1897 — Page 3
|YOU GOING TO WASHINGTON Inauguration of William McKinley? "BIO FOUR ROUTE," in connecrlth th«. picturesque Chesapeake & {Railway, offers the beat facilities |Chlcago, St. Louis, Peoria, lndlan-
Terre Haute, Lafayette, Kenton »r, Detroit, Toledo, Sandusky, I jfleld, Dayton and intermediate via Cincinnati. I pugh Palace Sleeping Cars from St. and Indianapolis. The most beau* jind Interesting route. Scenery unksed and historical Interest un-
All trains are magnificently bed with Wagner Sleeping Cars, Parlor Care and Dining Cars. Ask |kets via "Big Four" and "C. & O."
[thieves of Great Britnin stonl about fcOOJ worth of property every year. IboiOes of Piso's Cure for ConsumpBred ino of a bad lung trouble.—Mrs. pols, Princeton, Ind., Alny 2G, 1895. rabbits and ono RIHSS of beer nre at ?redouia, Kas.— Kunsns City Star.
•tain nn abundant head of -hair of a 1 color ton good old ngu, the hycroine cali must be observed. Apply Hail's
I. Louis negro bell-boy returned fclcctbook containing $40.0j0.
fhing Leads to Consumption. |'s Balsam will 6lop thecouah atorico. lour druggist to day nml got a aucvplo tree. .Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles Bnce delays are dangerous. ols of bagpipes iiave bec-u ordered for Ich regiment.
RETS stimu.atn 'Iver, k'dneys ami bowels. NOTn. woautn or crli e. 10c.
Lanc'a l' amilv AlodicSno ros tho bowels each day. In cr|o be healthy this is "necessary. gently on the liver and kidneys, eick headacho. l'rico 23 and 50c.
ItlMATKM l*s Cause and Cure. (UlllnllOm How to live free from (sense. New blood re-creates tired, prn out human 1 eings. Write fortius
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IND'PLS NO.»9, 1897.
ALL 4T SEA.
AXD
AIJL
.V
MAY BE WRECKED
APU ALL MAY HE SAVED
By Clin^iii^ tr Even One Plank or a Shattered Kaith-Dr. Talmage's Sermon.
Yielding to repeated invitations Dr.
Talmage last
ji.lfeday preached at De Funiak Springs, Fla. The sermon is mightily helpful for those who find it hard to believe everything. The subject of this sermon is "A Shattered Faith," and the text, Acts xxvi. 44, "And
some on broken pieces of the ship." He said: Never off Goodwin sands or the Skerries or Cape Ilattcras was a ship in worse predicament than, in the Mediterranean hurricane, was the grain ship on which 276 passengers were driven on the coast of Malta, five miles from the metropolis of that island, called Citta Vecchia. After a two weeks' tempest, when the ship was entirely disabled and captain and crew had become completely demoralized, an old missionary took command of the vessel. He was small, crooked-backed and soreeyed, according to tradition. It was Paul, the only unscared man aboard. He was no more afraid of a Euroclydon tossing the Mediterranean sea, now up to the gates of heaven and now sinking it to the gates of hell, than he was afraid of a kitten playing with a string. He ordered them all down to take their rations, first asking for them a blessing. Then he insured all their lives, telling them they would be rescued, and, so far from losing their heads, they would not lose so much of their hair as you could cut off with one click of the scissors—nay, not a thread of it, whether it were gray with age or golden with youth. "There shall not a hair fall from the head of any of you."
Knowing that they can never get to the desired port, they make the sea on the fourteenth night black with overthrown cargo, so that when the ship strikes it will not strike so heavily. At daybreak they saw a creek and in their exigency resolved to make for it. And so they cut the cables, took in the two paddles they had on those old boats and hoisted the mainsail so that they might come with such force as to be driven high up on the beach by some fortunate billow. There she goes, tumbling toward the rocks, now prow foremost, now starboard, now over to the larboard: now a wave dashes clear over the deck, and it seems as if the old craft has gone forever. But up she comes again. Paul's arms around a mast, he cries: "All is well. God has given me all those that sail with me." Crash went the prow, with such force that it broke off at the mast. Crash went the timbers till the seas rushed through from side to side of the vessel. She parts nmidship, and into a thousand fragments the vessel goes, and into the waves 276 mortals are precipitated. Some of them had been brought up on the seashore and had learned to swim with their chins just above the waves, and by the strokes of both arms and propulsion of both feet they put out for the beach and reached it. But alas for those others! They have never learned to swim, or they were wounded by the falling of the mast, or the nervous shock was too great for them. And others had been weakened by long seasickness.
Oh, what will become of them: "Take that piece of a rudder," says Paul to one. "Take that fragment of a spar,' 'savs Paul to another. "Take that image of Castor and Pollux." "Take that plank from the lifeboat." "Take anything and head for the beach." What a struggle for life in the breakers! Oh, the merciless waters, how they sweep over the heads of men, women and children! Hold on there! Almost ashore. Keep up your courage. Remember what Paul told you. There the receding wave on the beach leaves in the sand a whole family. There crawls up out of the surf the centurion. There another plank comes in, with a life clinging fast to it. There another piece of the shattered vessel, with its freightage of an immortal soul. They must by this time all be saved. Yes, there comes in last of all, for he had been overseeing the rest, the old missionary, who wrings the water from his gray beard and cries out, "Thank jd. all are here!"
One object in this sermon is to encourage all those who cannot take the whole system of religion as we believe it, but who really believe something, t'o come ashore 011 that one plank.
I do notundcrratethe value of a great theological system, but where in all the Bible is there anything that says: Believe in John Calvin and thou shalt be saved? or, believe in Arminius and thou shalt be saved? or, believe in synod of Dort and thou shalt be saved? or, believe in the Thirty-nine articles and thou shalt be saved? Aman may be orthodox and go to hell or heterdox and go to heaven. The man who in the deep affections of his heart accepts Christ is saved, and the man who does not accept Him is lost.
I believe in both the Heidelberg and Westminster catechisms, and I wish you all did, but you may believe in nothing they contain except the one idea that Christ came tq save sinners, and that you are one of them, and you are instantly rescued. If you can come in on the grand old ship, I would rather have you get aboard, but if you can only find a piece of wood as long as the human body, or a piece as wide as the outspread human arms, and cither of them is a piece of the cross, come in on that piece. Tens of thousands of people arc today kept out of the kingdom of God because they cannot believe everything.
Says some man, "I would attend to religion if I was quite sure about the doctrine of election and free agency, but that mixes me all up." Tho 0 things used to bother ine, but I have no
*4
more perplexity about them, for I say to myself, "If I love Christ and live'a good, honest, useful life, I am elected to be saved, and if I da not love Christ and live a bad life 1 will be damned, and all the theological seminaries of the universe cannot make it any different." I floundered along while in the sea of sin and doubt, and it was asrough as the Mediterranean on the fourteenth night, when they threw the grain overboard, but I saw there was mercy for a sinner, and that plank I took, and I have been warming myself by the bright fire on the shore even since.
While I was talking to another man about his soul he tells me, "I do not become a Christian because I do not believe there is any hell at all." Ah, don't you? Do all the people of all beliefs and no belief at all, of good morals and bad morals, go straight to a happy heaven? Do the holy and the debauched have the same destination? At midnight, in a hallway, the owner of a house and a burglar meet. They both fire, and both are wounded, but the burglar dies in five minutes, and the owner of the house lives a week after. Will the burglar be at the gate of heaven, waiting, when the house-owner comes in? Will the debauchee and the libertine go right in among the families of heaven? I wonder if Herod is playing on the banks of the river of life with the children he massacred. I wonder if Charles Giteau and John Wilkes Booth are up there shooting at a mark. I do not now controvert it, although I must say that for such a miserable heaven I have 110 admiration. But the Bible does not say, "Believe in perdition and be saved." Because all are saved, according to your theory, that ought not to keep you from loving and serving Christ. Do not refuse to come ashore because all the others, according to your theory, are going to get ashore. You may have a different theory about chemistry, about astronomy, about the atmosphere, from that which others adopt, but you are not, therefore, hindered from action. \ou may get all your difficulties settled as Garibaldi, the magnetic Italian, got his gardens made. When the war between Austria and Sardinia broke out, he was living at Caprera, a very rough and uncultured island home. But he went forth with his sword to achieve the liberation of Naples and Sicily and gave 9,000,000 people free government under Victor Emmanuel. Garibaldi, after being absent two years from Caprara. returned, and when he approached it he found that his home had, by Victor Emmanuel, as a surprise, been Edenized. Trimmed shrubbery had taken the place of thorny thickets, gardens the place of barrenness, and the old rokkcry in which he once lived had given way to a pictured mansion. And I tell you if you will come and enlist under the banner of our Victor Emmanuel and follow him through thick and thin and fight his battles and endure his sacrifices you will find after awhile that he has changed your heart from a jungle of thorny skepticism into a garden all abloom with luxuriant joy that you have never dreamed of— from a tangled Caprera of sadness into a paradise of God.
I do not know how your theological system went to pieces. It may be that your parents started you with only one plank, and you believe little or nothing. Or they may have been too rigid and severe in religious discipline and cracked you over the head with a psalmbook. It may be that some partner in business who was a member of an evangelical church played on you a trick that disgusted you with religiong. It may be that you have associates who have talked against Christianity in your presence until you arc "all at sea," and you dwell more on things that you do not believe than on things you do believe. You arc in cyie respect like Lord Nelson, when a signal was lifted that he wished to disregard, and he put his sea glass to his blind eye and said, "I really do not see the signal." Oh, my hearer, put this fieldglass of the gospel no longer to your blind eye and say I cannot see, but put it to your other eye. the eye of faith, and you will see Christ, and He is all you need to see.
If you believe nothing else, you certainly believe in vicarious suffering, for you see it almost every day in some shape. The steamship Knickerbocker of the Cromwell line, running between New Orleans and New York, was in great storms, and the captain and crewsaw the schooner Mary D. Cranmer of Philadelphia in distress. The weather cold, the waves mountain high, the first officer of the steamship and four men put out in a lifeboat to save the crew of the schooncr and reached the vessel and towed it out of danger, the wind shiftily- so that the schooner was saved. But the five men of the steamship coming back, their boat capsized, yet righted again, and came 011, the sailors coatcd with ice. The boat capsized again, and three times upset and was righted, and a line was thrown the poor fellows, but their hands were frozen so they could not grasp it, and a great wave rolled over them, and they went down, never to rise again till the sea gives up its dead. Appreciate that heroism and self-sacrifice of the brave fellows all who can, and can we not appreciate the Christ who put out into a more biting cold and into a more overwhelming surge to bring us out of infinite peril into everlasting safety? The wave of human hate rolled over Him from one side and the wave of hellish fury rolled over Him on the other side. Oh, the thickness of the night and the thunder of the tempest into which Christ plunged for our rescue!
My sympathies are for such all the more because I was naturally skeptical, disposed to question everything about this life and the next and was in danger of being farther out to sea than any of the 276 in the Mediterranean breakers, and I was sometimes the annoyance of my theological professors because I asked so many questions. But I came in on a plank. I knew Christ was the Savior of sinners and I do not propose to go out on that sea again. I have •not for thirty minutes discussed the controverted points of theology in thirty years, ,and during the rest of my life I do not propose to discuss them for thirty seconds.
I would rather in a mud scow try ta weather the worst cyclone that ever swept up from the Carribean than risk my immortal soul in useless and peril
ous discussions in which some of my brethren in the ministry are indulging, hey remind me of a company of sailors standing on the Ramsgate pier head, from which the life-boats are usually launched, and coolly discussing the different style of oarlocks and how deep a boat ought to set in the water, while a hurricane is in full blast and there arc three steamers crowded with passengers going to pieces in the offing. An old tar. the muscles of his face working with nervous excitement, cries but: "This is no time to discuss such things. Man the life-boat! Who will volunteer? Out with her into the surf! Pull, my lads: pull lor the wreck! Ha, Ha! Now we have them. Lift them in and lay them down on the bottom of the boat. Jack, you try to bring them to. Put these flannels around their hands and feet, and I will pull for the shore. God help me! There! Landed! Huzza!" When there are so many struggling in the waves of sin and sorrow and wretchedness, let all else go but salvation for time and salvation forever.
I bethink myself that there are some here whose opportunity or whose life is a mere wreck, and they have only a small piece left. You started in youth with all sails set, and everything promised a' grand voyage, but you have sailed in the wrong direction or have foundered on a rock. You have only a fragment of time left. Then come in on that one plank. "Some on broken pieces of the ship.'.'
You admit you are all broken up, one decade of vour life gone by, two decades, three decades, four decades, a half century, perhaps three-quarters of a century gone. The hour hand and the minute hand of your clock of life arc almost parallel, and soon it will be 12 and your day ended. Clear discouraged, are you? I admit it is a sad thing to give all of our lives that are worth anything to sin and the devil, and then at last make God a present of a first rate corpse. But the past you cannot recover. Get 011 board that old ship you never will. Have you only one more year left, one more month, one more week, one more day, one more hour—come in on that. Perhaps if you get to heaven God may let you go out on some great mission to some other world, where you can somewhat atone for your lack of service in this.
From many a deathbed I have seen the hands thrown up in deploration something like this: "My life has been wasted. I had good mental faculties and fine social position and great opportunity, but through worldliness and neglect all has gone to waste save these few remaining hours. I now accept of Christ and shall enter heaven tlfrough his mercy, but, alas, that when I might have entered the heaven of eternal rest with a full cargo and been greeted by the waving hands of a multitude in whose salvation I had borne a blessed part I must confess I now enter the harbor of heaven on broken pieces of the ship."
PEOPLE.
The death of John Hone is deplored by all lovers of the romantic, for he was the last o^the Gretna Green post-boys. In the days of runaway matches he was in the scivice of the Bush Hotel, which was one of the noted halting places on the road from the south to Gretna Green, and lie is supposed to have piloted many an eloping couple across the border to "the black-smith's."
It is said that Dr. Nansen, the Norwegian explorer, is much annoyed when he sees himself referred to as a Swede.
A few days ago Mrs. J. H. Brown, of Hayncsville, Me., ripped open a needle cushion which was filled with bran, r.nd had been in use fifteen years. On emptying out the contents she found 240 needles, all but twenty-eight being good ones.
A French naval engineer, D'Humy, has devised a method of converting petroleum into a hard, fibrous, solid compound, so that it may be used for fuel more conveniently and can not escape if the tank which holds it is punctured by a cannon shot.
A French professor is the owner of a colection of 920 human heads, representing every known race of people 011 the globe.
Nineteen years after the Patent Office was established in Washington the first patent was issued to a woman—Mary Kilcs—who secured it for a method of weaving silk or thread with straw. This was in 1809.
James Whitcomb Riley said in Chicago a few days ago that he had quit the lecture platform for good and was devoting himself assiduously to the writing of poetry. "I'm tired of being 'managed' and glad to have a chance to settle down and write,' 'he said.
The late Sir Travers Twiss married in Ddrcsden thirty years ago a woman known as Marie Gelas. In commenting 011 that Quixotic union the London Chronicle says: "The older among our readers will remember the painful story —how a charming woman was made an honest one by the man who adored her how she was presented at court how Sir Travers sought to silence the voice of scandal by the bold expedient of an action for libel how scandal crushed its victim, and how the husband sacrificed all his posts of honor and profit." Sir Travers was one of the greatest of recent authorities on international law.
A business firm in Stanford. Ky„ always opens the day's business with prayer—proprietors, clerks, messengers and porters all kneeling together.
Iowa's State fair this year will be open on Sunday. The machinery will be idle, and religious services will be held.
A Biddeford (Me.) couple, "he" age seventy-five and "she" age sixty years, announce an engagement of marriage.
There are only 139 full-rigged sailing vessels now afloat that are owned in this country and by its flag.
The Thames of England is 220 miles long. The river of the same name in Canada is 160 miles long.
It is estimated that there are 5,000 men and horses at work on the ice on the- Kenebcc river.-
J*- S. **j
The Spart.ai) Vlr:ne, Fort11mle Is severely taxed by ilyspe, sla Hut 'Vood digestion will wait-on appetite and hoalth on both," when HosU-tter'n Stomach Bitters Is retorted to ly t.10 vK tim of indigestion. Heart-bt-rn. Ilrilulente Uliubsiiesb will c» use tormi-nt-ing tlie ahti-ic legion and liver il ti.is genial family lorre. live tht- t-s .viij tue fair tr al tint a sterling remedy des.-rve.". llse ii regi larly. not spuMnodivuily—now auii then. It i-onqueia malarial, kidney, nervous und rheumatic ailments.
There are fourteen customs distriets in in Maine,several of which are not sell-sus-taining.
-FAIOI Kit WANTED.
In every township, tliree duysn week, during winter to distribute samples, collect names of sick people nwl work up trade for their druggists on the three great family remedies lir. Kni's Henovatnr. Dr. Kay's I.ung Balm and Kidneykura, Good pay lo man or woman. Send for booklet mid terms. Dr. Ii. J. Kay Medical Co., Western office, Omaha, Neb.
Nothing jilenscs man so much as to bo couxed to do tiling he wunta to do, anyway.—Atchison Glolic.
HOW'.H Tills?
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that can not be cured by taking Hall Catarrh Cure.
F.J. CHENEY & CO.. Prop's, oledo, O. We tho ulidersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last lllteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and Unanciallr able to carry out any obligation made by their linn.
West& Truax, Wholesale druggists, Toledo, I O., Walding, Kinnan & Sarviu, Wholesale druggists. Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh (Juro is taken Internally, acting directly upon tho biood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c. per bottle. Hold by al druggists.
Hall's Family Pills are tho best.
A thou«aud shingles, laid four inches to the weather, are required to cover 10U superficial feet of root. JV.', !IIr». Wliialon'MfeooTinNii SYRUP for chli lrnn tec'tliiiig, niftt'iis lliu Kiiin, roilucBS iu9aiuiuHliou.al lu)-8 l.nin, curpwind coliic '2Tc |er botllu.
Millions of Cook Hooks (liven Away. There is one iartre house in this country thatiius takon business on its turn and means to ride on the rising tide. Alive to the signs of better times und to the best interests of tho people, they are now circulating among families a valuable publication known us THE CHAT.LE9 A. VOGELEK COMPANY'S OOOKKKY BOOK AND BOOK OF COMFOKT AND HEALTH which i-ontnins very choice information on •the subject of cooking. Receipts for the preparation of good, substantial and dainty iiishes, prepared especially for it by a leadins authority, will be found in its liases. Much eare has been taken in its preparation and distribution, with thclopo that it will be just tho thing ni eded for housekeepers, and ju-t tho thing needed, 11I30, for the care of the health and household. As a Cookery Book it will bo invuluable to keep on hand for reference.
It also contains full information in regard lo tho great remedies of this house, wiii.-h provide against bodily ailments, esi ecially the Master Cure for Paiua and Aches, St, Jacob's Oil.
To give some idea of the labor and expense of this output, more than 200 tons of paper hnve been used in its publication, and at the rate of 100.000 a day, it has taken several months for tho issue.
The book can be had of druggists everywhere, or by enclosing a 2c. ntauip to The Charles A. Vogeler Company, Baltimore,Md.
It overpowers,
10*
25* 50•
URSftMlTRIiY GTT1RSHTRRH
i!
flatent
Tour blood. Words of wisdom nt th't icasiin. During the .winter montha Impiriiies have been aecuinu.aiing in yout blood, owin^ to diminished perspiration, close confinement and i.ther causes. These Impurities must now be expelled. Now la the mo to purify
Your Blood
By taking a course of llondv Sarsapariila. I'll!» medicine makes pure, rich nourishing blood, it tt oroui[iily er. ea es tha dangerous 1 oisorts with which the blood is loaded. It invigorates the svstem anrf builds up and sustains all tho organs by feeding them upon pure, rich bio ul.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
II tlie best—In fact, the one True Blood Purifier.
Hood's Pills
JObcatofo CURE CONSTIPATION
4?
CBre
InuOV/uUlDUl UUAP..i!llljull tit*.
(oRSumplIoiJ
P'iso's
For the last 20 years we have kept Fiso's Cure for Con* sumption in stock, and would sooner think a groceryman could
et along without sugar in his store than we could without Cure. It is a sure seller.—RAVEN & CO., Druggists, Ceresco, Michigan, September 2, 1896.
II AD A HIT G? CT
t0 cure the worst
V* Mi I E» & I# we say and lo convince you of this we offer to send you by mail ?52 box of Dr. Kay"a Lunsr Balin on receipt of three stamps lo pav I postage and after you are curcd and sailslled it is all we claim for it vou can send tie balance after deducting postage. Never has thero been a cough medicine that equals it. It never has failed to cure tho worst coughs, even when all physicians and all other remedies have failed. We srunranV-e this why do .vou continue to'suffer without le-jtinc I il? LA GRIPPE and its after cflcctsare speedily cured by it. It is also a 3ure cure lor Hoarseness. Sore Throat, Catarrh, Consumption and all Lung and Throat I troubles, whether acute or chronic. Send for testimonial* and other positivo proofs. It is not only GUARANTEED TO CURE but it is guaranteed not to contain anv I ipecac, tartar emetic, lobelia or any olher nauseating or dangerons drug, it does not cause sickness like ordinary cough medicines but is pleasant to take and children like it so well as to cry for it frequently.
Dr. Kay's Lung Balm.
The following Is an extract from a letter just received from a prominent Iowii1 clergyman: "Many winters have I coughed all winter long. Twice have I been com-1 polled to rest from my ministerial duties for a period of several years. When I took cold in w'nter the coughing would be Intense. L,ust fall I took cold about the isthrfi October and was siok with it for abouta week and began what I supposed was a winter
of coughing. My wife called my attention to Dr. Kay's Lung Halm and after much persuasion on her part, and a free expression (of a not flattering character about1
medicines, on my part. I concluded to try the Lung Halm. I felt nt nuon Hint touched iv ar* in iny initliMty IIHI not lilnc elH« Itittl ever dune. I began to Improve. I used about boxes and can now preueli without coughing. 1 keep it by me and if I take cold 1 use it. If I have a bronchial irritation after preaching 1 take Dr. Knjr'h l-uiig imlm. I can cheerfully say that the Lung Balm has been a great hclpito me. It bus no bad effect upon the stomach. Respectfully yours, J. D. DeTAR,Pastor M. JK. Cliurcli, Spring Hill, Iiiiva, Ilea Moines Conl«rrniv.
Send for pamhlot and circulars. Also '"Womanhood." a spucial booklet for ladles, free. Address, Western Office, Ur. I). J. K»y Medle.il
a a 1 Hood's bar»aparlluk
Blotting upor boiled with soda.
is made of cotton rags
To the 6ailor a yacht is superb, but how much more lovely to the landsman uro the rosy cheeks of young Indies who uso Glenn'* Sulphur Soap. Of druggists.
STOP-LOOK USTEK
pcJOEAR
I# Tne
BEST LINE
TO
CHICAGO
REOJ'51eO TO
4 34 HOURS.
Four Daily Trains
7
#C
Leave Ind'pls I 3 'a
Arrive Chicago,
00 a.m„ 11:50 a.to. :3A p.m., 12 :55 iilghU 18:00 noon, 6:00 p.m.
8:20
p.in,. 7:20 £.m.
Trains 13:30 a.m. 7:45ik.iu. Arrive lud'pls 2:25 p.m. 4:37 p.in. LATESTIMPROVED
1MIMI) TRAIN SKKVICE. Pullman Sleepers, elegant
PARLOR CARS and DINERS
Local Sleeper in Indlauapolis Ready at 8:30 p.m. Leaves Chicago, Returik, lug at 2 :4T» a.m. Can be Taken
A ny Time After 9:30 p.m.
Tiplffif fce.SW. Washington St., I lsftU vlillCa. union Station and Massachusetts Ave,, Depot.
GEO. W. HAYLER, D. P. A.
Master. Xo master is to overpower.
er. lo master is to overpower.
ST. JACOBS OIL!
Is the
Master Cure of
SCIATICA. JaK
subdues, soothes, heals, cures it.
^lANDY CATHARTIC
ALL
DRUGGISTS
*=T of constipation. Cuearctf aratbeldrnl Lixa-ft
nercr
prij or trripe.but rime etiT n*tnrtlrM«lt» Sam.*
pic and booklet frM. Ad. STERMN0 RBXKDT CO., Chicago, Montreal, Cu., erK.w fork. m.(
coughs. We mean every word I
1
Company,
I
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS.
"Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, but Quick Witted People Use
SAPOLIO
Omubx, Neb.
