Decatur Democrat, Volume 43, Number 12, Decatur, Adams County, 1 June 1899 — Page 6
THE PATH OI’S.U'ETY DR. TALMAGE DISCUSSES OUR NATIONAL LIFE. The Dnn>rer« of Monopoly. Mtiilism and infidelity Pointed Out—Ch»l»tlnnlt, the Pillar ol the Nation's strength and Perpetuity. [Copyright. Louis Klopsch, 1599 1 Washington. Muy '.’b, —ln this disburse Dr. Tiiluiage speaks of some of the perils that threaten our American institutions anil p hits out the path es safety; text. Isaiah Ixii, 4. "Thy laud shall be married." As the greater includes the less, so does the circle of future joy around our entire world include the epicycle of our own republic. Bold. < xhilarant. unique, divine imagery of the text. At the close of a week in which for three days our national capital was a pageant, and all that grand review and bannered procession and national anthems could do celebrated peace, it may not be inapt to anticipate the time when the Prince of Peace and the Heir of Universal Di niinion shall take [x ss< -sien es this nation and "thy land shall le married " In discussing the final destiny of this nation, it snakes all the difference in the world whether we are on the way to a funeral or a wedding. The Bible leaves no doubt on this subject In pulpits and on platforms and in places of public concourse 1 hear so many of the muffled drums of evil prophecy sounded, as though we were on the way to national interment, and beside Thebes and Babylon and Tyre in the cemetery of dead nations our republic was to be entombed, that 1 wish you to understand it is not to be obsequies, but nuptials. not mausoleum, but carpeted altar; not cypress, but orange blossoms. net requiem, but wedding march, for "thy laud shall be married." 1 propose to name s nueef the suitors who are claiming the hand of this re- I public. This land is so fair, so beauti fn) so affluent that it has many suiters, and it will depend much npen your ad vice whether this or that shall be accepted er rejectee!. In the first place. I remark There is a greedy, al! grasping monster who comes in as suitor seeking the hand es this republic, and that monster is known by the name es monopoly. His scepter is made out > f the iron es the rail track and the wire of telegraphy. He d; es everything for bis own advantage and for the robbery of the people. Things went en from bad to worse until in the three legislatures es New York N ■- - for a long time monopoly decided every thing If monopoly favor a hw. it passes, if money, ly epj ses a law it is rejected Met: : iy stands in the rail road depot putting into his pockets in one year 000.000 in excess es all. reasonable charges for services Mv nopoly bi is in lis ne bind the steam power es locomotion and in the ether the electricity : swift ccmmunieat: n Monopoly has the Republican party in one pocket end t*e Demvxiratic party in the other pocket Monopoly decidea nominations and elections —city elections. state ’ecti. tts, national elections. With bribes he secures the votes es legislators, giving them free passes, giving appointments to needy relatives to lucrative |x -itior. en:; ying them as attorneys if they are lawyers, carry :rg • : _ - '•; r . • : .-- :: t. ■ y are merchants, an! if be find a casevery st 0... rn — well ss very imp.Ttaut puts dews before him the hard cash of bribery Ka»Uy Ot erthron b. But ta :. tvly is not s easily caught now as when during the term of Mr Bnchanan the - r slative committee in one of cur states expk reel and exposed the manner in which a certain railway company bad cbtaine! a donation es pwblic land It wiss found ettt tbst IS e f tbs senators cf that state received I’.LUi an -g nei. 6 liter, .si, f the lower hor.se es that -tste received between 4’ and ft is.eb t.-g.-verr.rcf that sts.ts r-.>ivei f‘ ■ s , .- r s ro o -.: v s - * - - - z .=. z t govern, r rec .•; .! ft a.l its . -tied the ci- -.tire ree-si'r ' s' .. while f’ ■>.■■. were divided strong the lobby agents. That thing or a larger r smaller scale is all the rinse c :ng en tn serie of the states latHraks .nt it is net s Ntin i-riig > t n- :to he and therefore not s easily expose.! r arrested. I tell you that the ovsrsrad- . wit-g curse of t o Ur t. I 8: .--.s t is.v is mon te'.y onts. si o.i n: r. every bushel cf wbest. tip n every k of salt, upon every ton ot o ■ and every man. woman snd child m the United s-e-.: toe- i“ : - ' • tie union ah- ady antimcxopcly leagues have t*vn estabi sre-.i God speed theta tn the work cf tiberatxin 1 have nctb .ng t. s.vy cet osr.talists. A man has a right tc a . the mon ey be can make honestly—l have nothing to say against corp, cat - s sr.r without them no great erterpr.se would be pMßihle. but what I d. say is that the same principles are to tv aprhed to capitalists and te .xrrvrati ns tuat are applied to the pacreet mas and the plainest Jabcrer What iswr.rg for me is wrong for great corporations If I take from ye- yoar property without any adeqaate ccrapvnsat z I ant a thtef and if a railway damages the pavperty cf the people w-tr.-nt making any ade-_uate- evsrpersst ox that s a gigastsc theft What :? wrong ex a emt.l scale is wr. r.c .ea large scale M.-®.opely it England has gr. nud hnadrecis of Si: roor ; .s ■ Post p— pie into ■wEtis'arvat: n tn ! in In and has drive® stuhiTudtc. ns tenants almost to madness and inane Unite-! -- :-s p.r> p-s*s to take the wealth cf F cr '. <-c o. ; people a®d pat it ua a tew silkeas wallets Mo&cpo.r. mien raced, ma facered. mimre hearted rror-opciy -ffers bis hand to this reputiic. He stretches it •nt over tie lares and rp the great ra.goads and ever tie nejegrati pc.es
of the continent nnd says, "Here is my heart and hand; be mine forever." Let ' the miiiious es the people north, south, east and w< st forbid the bauns of that marriage, • forbid them at the ballot box, forbid them on the platform, forbid them by great organizations, forbid them by the overwhelming sentiment of nu outraged nation, forbid them by the protest of the church of God. forbid them by prayer to high heaven. That Herod shall not have this Abigail. It shall not be to all devour ing mono(wly that this laud is to be married. Another suitor claiming the hand of this republic is nihilism. The Menace of Nihilism. Ih> uwr.s nothing but a knife for universal eutthroatery and a nitroglycerin bomb for universal explosion. He believes in no God, no government, no heaven and no hell except what he can make on earth: He slew the czar es Russia, keeps many a king practically imprisoned, killed Abraham Lincoln, wool 1 put to death every king and president on earth, and if he had the pow< r would climb up until he ccnld drive the God es heaven from his throne and take it himself, the universal butcher. In France it is called communism; in the United States it is calk'd anarchism, in Russia it is called nihilism, but that last is the most graphic and descriptive term. It means complete and eternal smash up. It wo.ild make the holding of property a crime, aud it would drive a dagger through your heart and pnt a torch to to your dwelling and turn over this whole land into the pcssession of theft and lust and rapine and murder. Where does this moster live! In all the towns and cities of this land. It < tiers its hand to this fair republic. It proposes to tear to pieces the ball, t box. the legislative hall, the congressional assembly. It would take this land and divide it up. or rather divide it d wr. It would give as much te the idler as to the worker, to the bad as to the g Nihilism: This panther, having prowled aer> -s ether lane- has set its paw on our soil, and it is only waiting ter the time in which to spring upon its prey. It was nihilism that burned the railroad property at Pittsburg during the gieat riots; it was nihilism that slew black people in our northern cities during the war. it was nihilism that mauled to death the Chines ■ • ■: ■ .1 •- V: an I- : ism that glares cut es the windows of the drt nkeries upon sober people as they go by. Ah' Its power has never yet bet n tested 1 pray God its jx'wer may never be fully tested. It would, if it had the power, leave every ehnreh. > ae and lege in ashes. Let me say it is the worst enemy of the lai- ring classes in any country The honest cry fer reform lifted by oppressed lalxr'.ng men :?e.r wn< lout ly the vociferation for anarchy. The criminals md the vagabonds who range ti.r citits talking alxut their rights, when their first right is the penitentiary—if they could be hushed up and the downtrodden laboring men of this country could be heard there would be more bread for hungry children In tins land ri, t and - ■ i uevtr can. i any wages i r the pe. i '.e ; er gutmred up any prosperity In this • I.:::.! ' e '.--I weal . u - u t tl - club. I net the shillalah. net firearms, but : ■ t not i: ' - men te beguiled to coming under the I bkvajy banner cf nihilism. It will make | your taxes heavier, y. nr wages smaller, your taele scantier, your children hungrier. y ur suffering greater Yet this nihi ism. wirh feet red of slaughter con -.s f rth an.! ff-.rs its hand for tins rep ■■ i.. c $ b.all th■ banns be pr,vla i med t If so where sball the mart:see altar bet Au-1 who will be the officiating priest’ An-’, what will be the music! That altar will have to be white with hiesched skulk the -Sciating priest trust a dripting -sssssiz the musi. must be the sm there! gr .in , f multitr.! r ;<’ r ..t:i :<. the garlands must le twi?t~! • scots-it- ti:r fruits must e srp.-s f S. i ij. the wine must be ; : St Bai. ' - No it > r t t nizil sm. the sanguinary tn zster that this land is to be I'jisfr 1.-o» IxCaeliry. An r s-.:- r f.r the band of this nat n >-.zzdelity When tie midnight rnffians despoiled the grave of A. T ■ - - - - ziUl'.'v i r i - - - tz-1. rg * . rs- tz.sn tost — to- r . ; ; c t sll til- craves f Ctr.s : -a I----.: It prop- ses t. . nisei - : froin t:s tcm.--st i-s .f y/nr Christian .!- ■-! the w rds. "As eep In .U- - <zl szcstituts the w ris, ■'VU.-.t-.rjti. z—szz._. lati.-.r. luff i-ecty prepo.--< t - take toe letter froaa the world s Father, inviting tl:- nat as to virtue and nippiness and tear it np into fragments s. small that you cannot read a word of it It proposes k take the ccxx .iti.x from the . rcken hearted and the - thing pilaew fr.m the eying Inn’ehty pr.p.-ees « swear it the president cf the United Mates .-.nd tne supreme o;zrt and the g veraocs f states axo the witnesses n the c nrtr.'.'m with their right hand on Fe z- s Age c-f Reis a or VcLtanre s "P: e rhy of History I: pr. pises te t.=. se away from this cenz'ry the b> x that makes the dnfferen-oe between the Untie’ S-ites and the kizg.i u f Dn-betr-ey letween Ameri.ax cfv-.l'jat: z and Bertie- rs oanzizalnsm If inSdeiity ecu : eservy the Sctip-tnr--. t xrc-'d ie i -A years turn the civilirel nations hack t: seta:urtarssw cut t. ex from sezzibarMristz ;ztoEnidx'.izt savagery until the memos a sserjgrt - . f t csrs. rattlesnakes end cfaimpsanr- - s wo r d be (setter than The Bccaas «.f the ssupwenked hzziaE race Th' -iSy izzpuls* iz the right fnrecr -• this w. --! hes e*er bad has Coe e fr.re the Bnblei It was the m. tber c£ Romas law and of be»ithfxl jurisprndence That back has beea the xz-ctner «f all ref truss and all cfaritfa
American Declaration of Independence. Benjamin Franklin, holding that Holy j B >ok in bis baud, stood before an infidel club in Paris and read to them out j of the prophecies of Habakkuk, and the infidels, not knowing what book it was. declared it was the best poetry they had ever beard. That book brought George Washington down on his knees iu the snow at Valley Forge and led the dying Prince Albert to ask some one to j sing "Kock of Ages.' I tell you that the worst attempted crime of the century is the attempt to destroy this book. Yet infidelity, loathsome. stenchful, leprous, pestiferous rotten monster, stretches out its hand, ichorous with the second death, to take the hand < f this republic. It stretches it o it through seductive magazines, and through lyceum lectures and through ’ caricatures of religion. It asks fer all that part of the continent already fully settled, and the two-thirds not yet oc- I copied. It says: "Give me all east of : the Mississippi, with the keys of the I church and with the Christian printing I press- - then give me Wyoming, give me Alaska give me Montana, give me Colorado, give me all the states west of the Mississippi, and I will take those places- aud keep them by right of possession long before the gospel can be fully intrenched." And this suitor presses his case ap- I pallingly Shall the banns of that marriage be proclaimed! "No!" say the j borne missionaries es th west, a martyr band es whom the world is ot worthy, toiling amid fatigues aud malaria and starvation. "No: not if we can help it By what we and our children have suf sered we forbid the banns of that marriage!" "No!" say all patriotic voices. . "our institutions were bought at t 'o dear a price anil were defended at too i great a sacrifice to be so cheaply surrendered.” "No 1 " says the God of Banker Hill and Independence hall and i Gettysburg. "I did not start this nation for such a farce. " "No " cry lO,< I voices, "to infidelity this land shall ne t be married!" Christ as the Bridegroom. But there is another suiter that pre- ■ sents his claim for the hand of this re- i public. He is mentioned in the verse , following my text where it says. "As t the bridegroom rejoiceth over the bride. : . so shall thy Gill rejoice ever thee. " It is net my figure—it is the figure es the . Bible. Christ is so desirous to have this world love him that he stops at no hu- ; miliatiou of simile. He compares his , grace to spittle cn the eyes of the blind i > man. He compares himself to a hen gathering the chickens, and in my text i . be compares himself to a suitor beirging , a hand in marriage. D es this Christ, the king, deserve this land! Behold Pilate's hall and the insulting expectoration en the face of Christ. Bern hi the 1 Calvarean massacre and the awful heli: rr:• tge f five wounds. J.i ? !'>-. rved 14 years for Rachel, but Christ, my Lori, the king, suffered in torture 38 years t win the love of this w rl.l As ften princesses at their very birth are pledged in treaty of marriage to princes r kings es earth, s this nation at its I irth was pledged to Christ f.r divine , ; marriage. Bes re Columbus and his l. men embarked on the Santa Maria, the Pinta, and the Nina. f< r their wonderful voyage, what was the last thing they did! They sat down and te<s the : ly sacrament of the Lord Jesus Christ After they caught the first glimpse es this country and the gun of one ship bad announced it to the other vessels that land lad been discovered, what was the song that went up from all the j ; three decks? ■'Gloria inexcelsis. " After Columbus and his Iff" men had stepped from the ship’s deck to the ec-lid gr and what did they do? They all I knelt and consecrated the new world to God What did the Huguenots do after they landed in the Carolinas? What did the Holland refugees do after they had landed in New York' What did the pilgrim fathers do after they landed in New England! With bended knee and uplifted fs<- and heaven besieging prayer they t <> p.awssi. ecf this o ntinent f r God. H w was the first Ameiican ng-ress --red' By prayer, in the nan- f Jesus Christ. From it- birth this zi'i n was pledged f.r holy marAnd then see how g-'od God has been to _ - J-s: .pen th- map f the e.n---z-zt and s~ h.-w it is szaped for itnnseaszt tie prosterities. Nangs; rivers. more in number and greater than f any .tier land. r.Uizg I.w> ;z all ■ m th-- sea. pr:;i-sMzg Larz. ■--- . . : . .:t the great ranges-.f monntams t:m- --' i w;:_ fee ~ -nt s: ' - metaled witz wealth nz-.'eme»zh Otne nzr-izei and eighty tzizszs-i sjuare EiL.es .if e;a. <_-e hzndrec and eighty th nsand square dies cd :r:z. The land so eintinred tzat extzsxz,e we-atzer : ‘r-'.y -ver lasts m-re than days —extreme beat cr extreme ccid. Cfimate fur tie moat part rraiing and favcntGefor bnws and traia. AHfrwxta. all ■uaerais. all bxrvesfe. Sc-en-ery Cis-p-ayzng as autamaal pageantry that r- land on earth pretenis t; rival. N: S tin Azz-er-.-rz eartzxpnare N: S:;-.-.-. cists. N; L.ni.c figs. N: Egyptian r.agues. N; Gerziaz : h tzsi.zs. The t .e off tie C t ied States are nappier than any people ;x earth. It ie tie testirz zy of every man that has mveled arr « ■ F.- tie peer more syzzpstjy for tie Lz-fzstrkts rzxxe epportanity On z.-w rod Gid was to cur fatxers. and it — ixd be has been to ns and xitgnty nan:-—to him cd .r e* and trinnuph. tc him who still rentezzo>ers tie prayer cd tie Hz--z:ts an! H.Lani t:u -:s this tend extzie-n * ' Ofe. y a c'xr-.stian pitricts by y.nr «m---tr-.rntzccs and year prayers, hasaea os tn-e faXHxneat of the text T&e ImmtCTwri*® Qaeart*®. Ws have .sen r- «- —t'ortrnt leaf is tie mighty terse cd o nr rat.nal k story One year at the gates «f tn.s ccxr.nest .verM- «r:gzaxts arrived. I was toM by the camaaafa oers *d .a * —iat —a. tz-o pCoksaza**ty w-ae
that in that one year 600,000 emigrants would arrive at the different gates of , commerce. Who were they? the pan- • pers of Europe? No. At Kansas City, I ' was told by a gentleman, who had opportunity for large investigation, that ; a great multitude had gone through : there, averaging in worldly estate ssoo. I was told by an officer of the governi ment, who had opportunity for authentic investigation, that thousands and I thousands had gone, averaging SI,OOO iu possession etch. I was told by the commission of emigration that 20 famii lies that had recently arrived brought $55.000 with them. Mark you. families. not tramps. Additions to the national wealth, not subtractions therefrom I saw seme es them reading their Bibles and their hymn books, thanking God for his kindness in helping them > cross the sea. Some of them bad Christ in the steerage all across the waves. ' and they will have Christ in the rail ! trains which at 5 o’clock every afternoon start for the great west. They are : being taken by the commission of emigration in New York, taken from the vessels, protected from the Shylocks and the sharper, aud in the name of God aud humanity passed on to their ; destination, and there they will turn your wildernesses into gardens, if you will build fir them churches and estabi lisli for them schools and send to them ( Christian missionaries. Are you afraid tips continent is going to be overcrowded with this popn- ■ lation! Ah. that shows yon have not i been to California, that shows you have not been to Oregon, that ehi ws that yen have not been to Texas. A fishing smack today on Lake Ontario might as well be afraid of being crowded by other shipping before night as fer any I one cf the next ten generations of Americans to be afraid of being overcrowded by foreign populations in this : country. The one state of Texas is far larger than all the Austrian empire, yet the Austrian empire supports 35.'00.600 people. The one state of Texas is larger than all France and France supports 36,000,000 people. The one state of Texas far surpasses in size the Germanic empire, yet the Germanic empire supports 41.v00.600 people. I tell yon the great want ■ f the western states is more population. While S' me people may stand at the gates es the city, saying. "Stay back to foreign populations. I press ont as far bey- nd those gates as I can press cut beyond them and beckon to foreign nations, saying. "Come, come, all ye people wli ' are honest and industrious and G J kvizg:" But say y. u. "I am s afraid that they will bring their pr-znlins f r f . reign governments and plant them here. Absurd. They are sick es the gi verntnents that have opprel them and they want free Auierica Give them the great gospel of wel,i c. Thr war and them all Christian -pitidit: s They will add their inearned wages to this c .intry. an 1 then we will dedicate all ti t. iirist and "thy land shall be marBr.t where shall the marriage d'.;:r be? Let it be the Rocky mountains, when, thr ugh artificial and . _;:ty irrigation, .ill their tops shall ;e< vers’ as they will be. with vineyards and orchaids and grainfields. Tuen let the B. st. n.~ and the New Y. rks ..i.! tar Chariest, as f the Pacific coast .ae to the n:;-.triage altar n one side, and then let the Bostons and the New Yorks and the Charlestons cf the Atlantic c jast come to the marriage altar n the ether side, and there between them let this bride of nations kneel, and then if the organ of the loudest thunders that ever shook the Sierra Nevsdss on the ne side or meved the foundations of the Alleghanies cn the xther side should open full diapason of wedding march that organ f thunders could net dr wn the voice of him who w.nld take the hand cf this bride es nations, saying. “As a bridegroom rejoiceth over a bride, so thy God rejoiceth over thee." At that marriage banqnet the platters shall beef Xevada sib ver. and the chalices of California gold, and thefruitsef northern orchards and the spices c<f southern groves, and the tapestry f Amer: an roannfacton-. and the c. ngratulatii us from all rhe free ear ns cf earth and fr: m all the trinmptsnt armies f heaven "And sc thr land shall be msrried."
Kate CAa»e 'pracor. Mrs. Kate Chase Sprague, whose zzf.'zzzzate circusjsraz; - - are c zstactiy appealies R> her friends h -.s reeesrly cad reae n ;• ,-sm s neiaizg.;' the g:cd -"e-Izes- f Secretary G.izHer case wz, bz zgzt tisz. zzd he get- L-r a place -t the treasury depatUßtat. Mr - - ----7. - Edgewocd which was her father s zizze. This t...;e is <izly a few mile, zt ;.f Wi-zizct-.Ei but all her efforts tc make it jr .itarle have beets unavailing Sze ass tried farzz zg raisizg cows and cit.keusaz ! garießixs with cut sz rees. the cut.ay :z waz-s for this *-r- f tzizg being far in excess :f Her -.fest daughter Ethel who married a physician iz Baltimcre has rerzruei tc vaoceviUe. as -er nzsiuti is z-c-t itle t_- szzjyzt bet Mrs. 8-pragze has tneir chiil with tier an a i iiucnal rars. Her estate is z: w free fz m del-t. and with the mcos-je trim rue place :t is 1- I * Mt, 'I ' :-- " . ; - --_ - - .; - - -x :-;zzf;,rz —''Vi-: zgt a herzespend
S E-_-ec£ ess Ce: jj M M p-est-rv.r, of mw ,®s::.er ■ az-c tie :es-- movuce o* a i K cls pTxseraL. U I Eureka 1 I Harness Dill K A*- -x—KTth an 7r>- •,. < as » < e ;w.-w-w X MM iB **.’«. xeett -7 ixVCB. teto in oa.
NEVER Till) OLD TO BE CURED S. S. S. is a Great Blessing to feebleness and ill he;d'tJ, I nearly all of the sickness ami Old People. It Gives Them ” but it is xvhollv unnecessary B v C - New Blood and Life. from winch they suffer so generallv. s 8 s ’ the remedy which will keep their systems young, by purifying the bioJ ___ thoroughly removing all waste accumulations, an! inn,,-I’ "sX ing new strength and life to the whole body It inereasw WA the appetite, builds up the energies, and stnds new hi? Imf-t, . giving blood throughout the entire system Mrs. Sarah Fike. 477 Broadway. South Boston, write.. If '<■ J "I am seventy years old. and had not enjoyed good health yY j/** / for twentv vears. I was sick in different wars and in ♦\ _ addition, had Eczema terribly on one of my l eg ». Th “ doctor said that on account of my age, I would nevet well again. I took a dozen battles of S. S. S. and it cured me : ~ co’iipilt'tt'lv. ?«nd I ani liiippv to say that p as well as I ever did in my life. ’’ Mr J W Loving, cf Colquitt, Ga , says: "For eight- X een vears I suffered tortures from a nery eruption | X nwskin I tried almost every known remedy, but they | failed one bv one and I was told that my age, whicjr is sixtv six w’as against me and that I could never hope to£ well again? I finallv to k S. S. S„ and it cleansed > niv blood thoroughly, and now I am in perfect health. ; S. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD /k is the onlv remedv which can build up and strengthen eld people,’because it is the only one which is guaranteed free from potash, mercury, arsenic Md other damaging minerals It is made from roots and herbs, and has no chemicals whatever in it s S S cures the worst cases of Scrofula. ( ancer. Eczema Rheumatism, Tetter. Open Sores Chronic Ulcers. Boils, or any other disease of the 1 Books on these diseases will be sent free by Swift Specific Co., Atlanta. Ga. Decatur 71? National Bank, DECATUR, INDIANA. Capital and Surplus, $108,000.00. Re-organized Jan. i. 1895. Average Deposits l>y4. S 91.447.00. Average Deposits 1b95, 120J1LS.00. Average Deposits 1896, 123,570.00. Average Deposits 1897, 145,023.00. Average Deposits 189 b. 184.029.00. Deposits Jan. 11, 1899, 202,259.0(1 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS. P. W. Smith. President. C. A. Dcgan. Cashier. W. A. Kt ebler. Vice-Pres’t. E. X. Eeixger. Ass t Cashier. J. H. Hobbock, D. Sprang, Jacob Colter. A general banking business transacted. Interest paid on certificates of deposits left six t twelve niotths. A Thresher Feeder: 5 that has everv advantage of efficiency, convenience and economy 3 C over all other feeders is the Nichols-Shepard Self-feeder. It 5 ij- feeds either bound or loose grain evenly and steadily, without 5 H waste or litter, and completely regulates itself to the speed of J j s the separator. The feeding apron stops and starts automatically 5 s and the feeder can be stopped while the separator is in full < motion. It is held rigidly in place when attached to the 5 15 separator frame and its adjustable supports keep it always per- 5 13 fectly level. This Self-feeder is designed for the 2 NICHOLS-SHEPARD 17 SEPARATOR ) ' Large illustrated catalogue that tells a'.l '-"- e "1 -NSL Nichols - Shepa: i > 1 // '"' w ■ 2r ‘d '' jy' I I NicholsI I Sheoard 5 Ifctete ll, . 5 Bittle Creak. Mick. J I [fUC 110111 E I I I E Q^De 3 £ l"^^^l^*^ E * SSiNDIANAPOI - ,s > ,ND ~ai’.ed c 4 feu ct >*e extras. I i C 1X j-T -i 1 t ree - xAA. f .A.A nazvMAA A-hhaucfcer x BelL Agents Decataz.
SEND-NO MONEY uni :it* :<i ■:* uti :t tt* »t aicnit • c « » I 71 “ tuam km mresi 'redrtt aepoC arc r * A** aara-ww- fiwxy as reprrse-r vec j A 2 -I •* '«*bh«•■••>• ••- tb« c.. $?! . , o~ e . p. ?e r . .J C»E ’ -»EE MOUTHS TC Afc - . -. . k .?’ "V*- - ’-•:**.» Say y.'-i a-r --: •» *' ““ •' I»rtu»n »■ »vi€. »•_>«♦. |;i >C »I M ■»: «. a •».- b - reici /H 9 I kMi .•<: BEWARE OF IMITATIONS fcU IiEM h ■ ■ - - - «’■ •■ —. -V- ~• -i~ pB I W 3 . ?: tt •■*• *■»• ■ KVtaCT aa4 Warn a» a-» fV| ;» THE BURDICK ’ -/UM® r.i- ?= Wr -J 1 F K** I■ E BESI » ATEKI AL R(?p DZSI SOLID QUARTER SlttED ! »•<'♦ ose i-assrar r * • •» *T i R_ • •: •2-1 Ur I n nil ££s".-*£~~XV- * * i i ? -= K ! •-^*- : Klci££’TßX»>'Er,. • Si'S fc?S ■ SEI CU*«*«|TEED n, »»« •■■■■ r-— ’“J ’ . > ' 7~?» IW-y,...“*• i>«— »»-«<*»—! »■•-»••< i— ~- Ft- , *" ■'' KU '‘VkWV f w L”vf -3, J - fxxfc-- r• ■ 1_±r A »o-txaSs sixrrxG guaka>~kk * • -'\, ... 1 IT COSTS YOU WOTHIRG , ”7£ i -:‘- ; s i e S ■■■ nil t* ■« ' «*•» f** ' srt fjz ss.xmj w v - --; , "**• •■■J BMaI. (Ssmta. *<V M*tberMa£* ' " • ill* SEARS, ROEBUCK A CO. Inc. Chicago-
