Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 20 February 1891 — Page 3
FAirH WITHOUT, WORKS
GOOD WORKS UNAVAILING IN THE ABSENCE OP FAITH.
Practical ih« Want of the World _Off-rln a From Ill-Goit«n Gaines Not Acceptable—Ir. TalmaRet Sermuii.
Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn and New York Sunday. Text: Jamess. II, 20. He said:
The Boman Catholic church has been eharged with putting too much stress upon good works and not enough upon faith. I charge Protestantism with putting not enough stress upon good works as connected with salvation. Good works will never save a man, but if a man have not good works he has no real faith and no genuine religion. There are those who depend upon the fact that thty are ail right InBide, while their conduct is wrong •utside. Their religion, for the most part, is made up of talk—vigorous talk, fluent talk, boastful talk, perpetual talk.
They will entertain you by the hour in telling you how good they are. They oome up to such a higher life that they have no patience with ordinary Christians in the plain discharge of their drty. As near as I can tell this ocean craft is mo--tly sail and very little tonnage. Foretopmast stay-sail, foi etop« mast studding sail, maintop sail, mizzentop sail everything from flying jib to mizzen spanker, but making no useful voyage, Now, the world has got tired of this, and it wants a religion that will work into all tke
Do
you
'"••f
the spot
fit
r*
circum^
stances of life. We do not want a new religion.but the old religion applied in all possible directions.
Yonder is a river with steep and rocky banks, and it roars like a young Niagara as it rolls on over its rough bed, it does nothing but talk about itaelf all the way from its source in the jnountain to the place where it empties Into the sea. The banks are so steep the cattle cannot come down to drink. it does not run one fertilizing rill into the adjoining field. It has not one prist mili or factory on either side. It jjulke in wet weather with chilling fogs. No one tares when that river is born among the rocks, rind no one cares when it dies into the sea. But yonder Is another riv. r. and it mosses its banks with the warm tides, and its rocks with floral lullaby the waterlilies asleep on ils boson. It invites herds of cattle and Rocks of sheep and coveys of birds to come there and drink. It has three gristmills on one Bide and six cotton factories on the other. It has the wealth of 200 miles of luxuriant farms. The birds of heaven chanted when it was born in ^mionaires in one ur tvu^enrs, the mountains, and the ocean shipping gx
will pres-j in from the sea to hail it as
It comes down to the Atlantic coast. The one river is a man who lives for himself. The other river is a man who lives for others.
know how the site of the
j^ncient city of Jerusa'em was chosen? ^iThere were two brothers who had adjoining farms. The one brother had a l»rgo family, the other had no family. The brother with a large family 6aid: "There is my brother with no family: he must be lonely and I will try to cheer him up, and I will take some of the sheaves from my fiald in the night time and set them ovjr on his fa and say nothing about it.
The other brother said: "My brother
2$, but eve^y morning things selm-
.A. hft in9t
,hev were for
bach farm, sheaves had also been
that
that tradition should prove unfounded,
for some tumplo of com-
memoration.
dead." I think you will
was made in one factory when it was
manufactured in Geneva, Switzer-
Massachusetts. It will not allow the world. 1
merchant to say, "That wine came
along by the storo shelves, and tear off all the tags that make misrepresentation- It will not allow the mer» chant to say, ''That Is pure coffee."
UUaUb IA/ A uuu 10 JJUIO wiico« gv
duet that is sold for cayenne pepper and it will shake out the Frussian olues from the tea leaves, and it will ship from the flour plaster of paris and bone dust and soapstone.and it will by chemical analysis separate the one quart of Rid^ewood water from the few honest drops of cow's milk, and it will thiow out the live animalcules from the brown sugar,
There has been so much adulteration of food that it is an amazement to me that there is a healthy man or woman in America. Heaven only knows what they put into the spices and into the sugars and into the butter and into the apothecary drug. But chemical analysis and the microscope have made wonderful revelations. The Board of Health in Massachusetts analyzed a great amount of what was ca'led pure coffee, and found in it not one particle of coffee. In England there is a law that forbids the placing of alum in bread. The public authorities examined fifty-one packages of bread and found them all guilty. The honest physician, writing a prescription, does not know but that it may bring death instead of health to his patient, because there may be one of the drugs weakened by a cheaper article. and another drug may be in full force, and so the prescription may have just the opposite effect intended. Oil of wormwood pure from Boston was found to have 41 per cent, of resin and alcohol and chloroform. Scammony is one of the most valuable medical drugs. It is very rare, very precious. It is the sap or gum of a tree or a bush in Syria. The root of the tree is exposed, an incision made into the root and then shells are placed at this incisi jn to catch the sap or gum as it exudes. It is very precious, this scammony. But the peasant mixes it with a cheaper material then it is taken to Aleppo, and the merchant there mixe3 it with a cheaper material then it comes on to the wholesale druggist in London or New York, and he mixes it with a cheaper material then it comes to the retail druggist and he mixes it with a cheaper material, and by the time the poor sick «n gets it into his bottle it is ashes and chalk and sand, and some of what has been called pure scammony after analysis has been found to be no scammony at all.
Now, practical religion will rectify all this, It will go to those hypocritical professors of religion who got a "corner" in corn and wheatin Chicago and New York, sending prices up and up until they wer^ beyond the re:ich of the poor, keeping these breadstuffs in their own hands, or controllidg them until the prices sroing up and up and up, they were after a while, ready to I sell, and they sold, making themselves millionaires in one or two years, trying
ma
buildiner
Ah! my friends, if a man hath got his estate wrongfully and he build a line of hospitals and universities from here to Alaska, he can not atone for it. After awhile, this man who h^s been getting a ''corner" in wheat, dies, and then Satan gets a "corner" on him. He goes into a great long Black Friday. There is a "break" in the market. According to Wall street parlance he wiped others out, and now he is himself wiped out. No collator
ilie other orotner saiu. ''iviy oioi-nei which to make a spiritual loan, much about. So this electric Gospel has a largo family, and It is very dull- practical religion will not needs to Hush its light on the eyes and eu 'or him to mpportthem and rectify all meroba„au« it will ears and souls of men, and become a will help him a rectify all mechanism, and all telephone medium Jto make the deaf dome of the sheaves from my farm in
A
ti|1
como
„bm
Ihs nighttime and se i, "'ill work as faithfully by the job as' invitation and warning to all nations his far m, and say nothing about it
doe bv th9 day
though
the hour or by
You say when a!
the swiftness or slowness with which
Reaves had been subtracted from Packman drivesj whether he is hired by
added, and the brothers were perplex- hired by the excursion he whips up to Him your store, your shop your ed and could not understand. Bu{ one the horsos so as to get around and get baking house, your factory and your flight the brothei-3 happened to meet another customer. home. 1 ey say no onei
while making this generous transfer-! All styles of work have to be That is enoug ence. and the spot where they met spected. Ships inspected, horses in- anyone else than was so sacred
it was chosen as spected. machinery inspected.
the site of the city of Jerusalem. If to watch the journeyman. Capitalist but he
coming
It will, nevertheless, stand as a beau- the boss. Conductor of a city car cavalry and the Ryland re^ments and tiful allegory setting forth the idea
sounding
that wherever a kindly and generous honesty a-3 a passenger hands to him and the and loving act is performed, that is a clipped nickel. All things
watched
in the wood
all kinds
agree
religion. We want practical religion ses. by skillful dose of jockeys, for sev- On morning
to go into all merchandise. It will eral days made to look spry. Wagon were to^nter that home the young wite supeivise the labeling of goods. It tires poorly put on. Horses poorly arose at 4 clock, entei-ed the front will not allow a man to say that a thing shod. Plastering
that
any
provocation and falls
made In another. It will not allow ing that needs to be plumbsd. Imper- euin vow. or ou \vi the merchant to say, "That watch was f'ct car-wheel that halts the
train
tell you, my
of man will never rectify
from Madeira," when it came from It will be the all-pervading influence one a member of Pariiment. in a pubCalifornia. Practical religion will walk of the practical religion of Jesus Christ lie place declared thathis successcame ... i.t.i
..111
that will make the change for the better. Yes, this practical religion will also go into agriculture, which is proverbs
when dandelion root and chicory and ially honest, but needs to be rectified, other ingredients go into it. It will and It will keep the farmer from sendpct allow him to say,
,(Tbat
is pure
1
store and rip off the fictitious soles of
many a tine looking pair of shoes and show that it is pasteboard sandwiohed ipetween the sound leather. And this practical religion will go right into a grocery store, and it will pull out the plug of all the adulterated sirups, and will dump into the ash barrel in
ing to the New York market veal that
Sugar," when there are in it sand and is too young to kill, and when the ground glass. farmer .farms on Bhares it will keep When practloal religion gets its full: tho man who does the work from makpwlng in the world it will go down the ing his half three-fourths,^and^h will Streets, and it will come to that shoe'"
I gpeak will eonoe into the learned professions. The lawyer will feel his responsibility in defending innocence and arraigning evil, and expounding the law, and it will keep him from charging for briefs he never wrote. and lor pleas he never made, and for percentages he never earned, and from robbing widow and orphan because they are defenseless.
Ye3, this practical religion wik come into the physician's life, and he will feel his responsibility as the conservator of the public health, a profession honored by the fact that Christ himself was a physician. And it will make him honest, and when he does not understand a case he will say so, not trying to cover up lack of diagnosis with ponderous technicalties, or send the patient to a reckless drug store becau:« the apothecary happens to pay a percentage on the prescriptions sent.
And
tter up with the Lord by
a church or a university or a
building a church or a university or a hospital, deluding themselves with the idea that the Lord would be so pleased with the gift He would forget the swindle.
this practical religion will come to the school teachor, making her feel her responsibility in preparing our youth for usefulness and for happiness aud for honor, and will keep her from giving a sly box to a dull head, chastising him for what he can not help, and sending discouragement all irough the after years of a lifetime.
This practical religion will also come to the newspaper men, and it will help them in the gatheringof the news, and it will help them in setting forth the best interests of society, and it will keep them from putting the sins of the world in larger type than its virtures. and its mistakes than its achievements.
Yes, this practical religion will have to come In and fix up the marriage relation in America. There are members of churches who have too many wives and too many husbands, Society need to be expurgated and washed and fumigated and Christianized. We have missionary societies to reform Mulberry street in New York, and Bedford street. Philadelphia, and Shorediteh street, London, and the Brooklyn Docks but there is need of an organization to reform much that is going on in Beacon street and Madison Square and West End and Brooklyn Heights and Brooks Hills. We want the practical religion to take hold, not only of whatiare called the lower classes, but to take hold of what are called the higher classes. The trouble is that people have an idea that they can do all their religion on Sunday with hymn book and prayer boo'c and liturgy, and some of them sit in church rolling up their eyes as though they were ready for translation, when iheir Sabbath is bounded on ailsid by an inconsis ent li e, and while you are expecting to come out from under their arms the wings of an angel, there come out f^om their forehead tne horns of a beast.
There has got to be anew departure in religion. I do not say a new religion. Oh, no but the old religion brought to new appliances. In our time we have had the daguerreotype and the ambrotype and the photograph but it is the same old sun. And the arts are only new appliances of the old sunlight. So this glorious Gospel is just what we want to pholograph the image of God on one soul, and daguerreotype it on another soul. Not a new Gospel, but the old Gospel put to new work. In our time we have had the telegraphic invention and the telephone invention and the electric light invention but they are all children of old electricity, and element that the
philosophers have along while known
a mall!JfearP. a t0,egraphiS
aQ
ni„htiter thing Is slightingly done. "Oh. that ern and Western hemispheres. Not a
«ho**•"
a a
electric light to illumine the Iiast-
new work.
Give your
the excursion, If he is your ire with good works. Consecrate
Boss
the punch bell to prove his Kempt^s infanltryani* the &^ots Grays
must
covered with putty. Gar-1
I have often spoken to you about' ments warranted to last until you put, maid in a farm house. She had many faith, but now I speak to you about them on the third time. Shoddy styles of work and much hard work, works, for "faith without works is
with beck. Diamonds for $150. Book- son of
me in the statement that the great bin.lery that holds on until you have industi iuu eyeave ney enoug want of the world is more practical
read
U""J
keep the farmer from building his post and rail fence on his neighbor's premises, and it will make him shelter his cattle in the winter storm, and it will keep the old older from working on Sunday afternoon in the new ground where nobody sees him. And this practical religion will hover over the house, and over the barn, and over the
jp oat of the store the oassia bark that field, and over the orchard. m14 fa* aiattamos and tho brick Yes, this practloal religion of which
bi day was won i.ai
and inspected. Imperfections In the latter part
a
whole
with a hot-box. So little
land," when it was manufactured in tical religion in the mechanism of the
Mnf
girl England became
of clothing. Chromos. Pinch- lime rolled on, and she married the
a
the third chapter. Spavined hor- after a while^to build them a horae.(
,iw
of
the last century
oi
cracks without door-yard,
off. Plumb-
me
is
prac-
6 on aQa a
INDIANA LEGISLATURE.
The Senate devoted all of the 11 Ih to!
.1 n^_
The House devoted all the day to considi eration of the fee and salary bill. The Senate on the 13tn passed four or five bills, none of which were important. The bill to extend the Barrett law to a'.l incorporated towns that want it was passed.
The House resumed consideration of tlie fee and salary bill and made considerable progress. A resolution was adopted by a large majority to the effect that the law should not become operative upon officers elected prior to its enactment.
The Senate, on the 14th, passed the following bills: To suppress bucket shops' and gambling in stocks grain and produce, relative to insane convicts, authorizing Marion county to issue bonds for a new jail relative to the school for feeble mind" ed legalizing incorporation of Osgood relative to private gravel roads relative to savings banks. Several bills were engrossed. The dea.h of Gen. Sherman was announced and the Senate adjourned.
The House considered the fee and salary bill finally sending it back to commit'.ee for reconstruction, to be again z-eported Tuesday. Several bills were engrossed. The death of Gen. Sherman was an« nounced and the House adjourned.
The Senate on the 16th voted to recon* sider the vote by which the appellate court bill was indefinitely postponed. The bilj was passed by ayes 33, nays 12. The bill providing for a State Board of Arbitration, after lengthy debate, was passed by ayes
2S,
nays 14. The bill providing for live stock insurance companies was passed: also a bill exempting from taxation five sections of land in Allen county owned by Indians.
The House devoted considerable time in the absence of ,a quorum to routine busi ness, introduction of bills and advancing bills on the calendar. Patton's bill re quiring all candidates before nominating conventions to file with county clerks within ten days after such conventions sworn itemized statements of all moneys expended, directly or indirectly, in their canvass, was killed. A resolution by Mr. Kern was adopted withdrawing his bill amending the taxation act so as to compel merchants to return a fair valuation of their stocks
from
medium to dart
G««*
heart to God and then fill
nftw
nected with the victory at VVatetloo.
dldno*do
toe
down unexpectedly to watch jlhe har &
h^rd
the ways and means committee and recommitting it to the committee on coun" ty and township business. The bill exempting union soldiers from work.ng on highways was engrossed. A bill lor the relief of John W. White, of Clay County, was passed. Also a bill placing the appointment of members of the State Board
of
Health in the hands of the Governor Secretary and Treasurer of State. The Indianapolis city charter bill came up for passage and the form of reading a couple xrf sections and calling it "third reading of the bill" was gone through with, after which the measure was passed by a vote of 65 ayes to 13 nays. Messrs. Haggard, Parker of Hendricks, Sleeper and Stcne voted with the Democrats in favor of the bill. Other bills passed: Authorizing Indianapolis to issue bonds to erect library buildings, and to levy a tax to erect additional school buildings appropriating 3J7 to reimbursed Perry county fo:- exs oenses incurred in advertising certain iand* providing that moneys received for sale of county lands go into the schoo fund authorizing formation of abstract companies making unlawful to make or use counterfeit labels, tradesmarks, brandy stamps or wrappers establishing a uni-. form system of weighing coal at mines:relating to Street car companies exempting from taxation lands owned by Indians amending an act concerning inclosures trespassing animals and partition fences by defining a lawful fence as a straight board or wire, requiring a picket or hedge fence, be four feet in height, a straight rail fence four and one-half feet high, a worm rail fence five feet high, all fen ?es of every
Sructure
a
kitchen
weaver of Halifax 1 hey were
ay en ey
kneit
down.consecrated the
place ao an en ma
ace poors a
share
1-
rune
friends, the law in. grew up and around
these things, them, and they all became affluent,
nhonrro t.hp, from the prayer of his mother in the
from the prayer of his mother in the door-yard. All of them were affluent. Four thousand hands in their factories They built dwelling houses for laborer* at cheap rents, andwhen they were invalid and could not pay they had the houses for nothing. One of these sons came to this country, admired our parks, went back, bought land, opened a great public park, and mid it a present to the city of Halifax, England. They endowed an orphanage, they endowed two aim houses. All England has heard of the generosity and the good works of Crossleys. Moral: Consecrate to God your small means and your humble surroundings. "Godliness Is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come." ••Have faith in God by all means, but remember that faith without works is dead,'
to be sufficiently tight to hold
hogs, sheep, cattle, mules and horses and partition fences dividing lands occupied on both sides, except waste land and unin closed woodland, to be maintained through oat the year equally by the owners or occupants of said lands. Making it unlawful to sell, or expose for sale, artilical dairy products unless properly and plainly lal). eled.
LBQS1LATIVE NOTES.
The House committee on apportionmen
has
.ave
a
prepared bills, which have been ini dorsed by the Democratic caucus, and which will be reported to the House in a day or two. Comparatively few changes from the present law are recommended. Those affecting the congressional districts are the following: Jefferson county is taken out of the Fourth district and put in Third Union is taken out of the Fourth and put ia the Sixth, and S iulay ta'c out of the Seventh and Rush out of the Sixth and both put in the Fourth. Ten changes are made in senatorial districts and about as many in the representative districts. Under the new apportionmen*. Marion county will have three Senators* six Representatives and one joint Repre: entative with Shelby.
Senator Foley's arbitration and mediation bill passed by the Senate on. the Hth
Tlrovidesa
board to cosist of three mem*
hers, to be appointed by the Governor. One is to bo a member of a labor organization, another an employer of labor, and the third is to be appointed on recommendation of the other two, if they can agree. Other* wise the Governor is to make his own selection. The functions of the board arc purely advisory,
except
that event its decree
a.
*.111
consideration of the appellate c^urt bill. The bill is proposed as a relief to the Su pre me Court. A test vote upon the pass age Ox the bill showed that
2i
of the 43
members present were apparently in favor of the bill. The House devoted all the day to the fee and salary bill. Considerable progress was made. Every attempt to increase or amend the fees fixed by the bill was de feated. There was a strong lobby present
The Senate on the 12tli, after debate on a question of personal privilege indefinitely postponed the appellate court bill, by ayes 2 i, nays 20. The bill to abolish the State Board of Agriculture and create the State Agricultural Board was discussed.
fs
to he rcoorcted and
enforced in the county
where
t. Where the board learns of a pro «.
...A
Representative Beasley on the Gth introduced a bill which is intended to strengthen the school book law, and remove all of those features which have been criticized and held to be ob.ect:on* able in its operation. It is an act concerning text books for use in the common schools. It provides for the appropriation of SI ,('00 to defray the expenses of advertising for the remaining book3 not heretofore contracted for for changing the standard of physioN ogy Irom Dalton's to Hutchinson'3 elementary and Hutobinson's advanced physiologies for raising the price on history from 50 to 65 cents that the standaid of the spellars and grammars remain the same as now that the ti'ustees shall orde.books for each years' school on the first Monday in June and that intermediate orders may be made if more books are needod: that, trustees shall gather as much information as possible before ordering books and to order ouly such number as seems actuall ,* needed lhat trnstees shall furnish all poor or indigent children with books who are so poor that they cannotget the benefit- of the publiu schools that al' hooks hereafter furnished shall be shipped to the nearest railroad station to the cor noratlon where the books are to bs used that all books furnished shall be securely wrapped in substantia, paper in packages of five or ten booksl and that each package shall be plainly mai'ked on the outside what kind of books it contains and how many that when he books are received by the trustee they shall be carefully kept «n the original packages and that no packages shall be opened until all heretofore opened have been sold that trustees oshal be allowed to pay for the books when received out of any school funds which are not then needed for other current or specific purposes,aside from the common school or tuition funds, that where such payment is made, the fund out of which the advancement was mado shall be immediately re-imbursed as soon or as fast as the books are sold that when books are settled for in this wav the trustees shall not be required to make settlements with the contractors every three months, but instead they shall only be required to settle with the county corn', missioners and the county superintendent once a year, and that settlement shall be on the first Monday of August that the adopted book shall be uniformiy used throughout the State that in case trustees do not settle for books when receive4, they shall be required to continue makiug settlements every three mouth, as the law now provides that this a^t shall be supplemental to the former law on the sub^ ject and that no obligation or contract here to fore made shall be impaired or inthrfer-. ed with,
PREACHER ELECTED SENATOR'
Kev. James H. Kyle to -uccoad Mr. .VTooiiy frum South D.ikotw.
James H. Kyle was elected United States Senator on the fortieth ballot by the South Dakota Legislature, on tho 16th, by a combination of Independent and Democratic votes, the result standing: Kyle, 75 Sterling, 55 Tripp, 8 Campbell, 1. Thirty members were paired. Tho result is regarded as having been brought about in some measure by the agitation of the Illi-nois-South Danota reciprocity scheme.
Kyle is a native of St. Lawrence county, New York, is about thirty^seven years old, and is a Congregational minister of oroad views. He attended school and college while earning his own livelihood and was ordained in U84. He has since held pastorates at Crested Butte, Col., Ipswich and Aberdeen, S. D. Last summer he accepted the position of financial agent for the Yankton College, and in the State election last fall was elected State Senator from Brown county on the Independent ticket. The nomination was against his inclinations, and during the campaign he took no part in election affairs. Early in the contest at Pierre, which has resulted in his election to the United States Senate, he was asked to be a candidate foi United States Senator in independent caucus, but refused until it was apparent that it was the only possible chance foi the Independents. He is a staunch pro hibitionistand was a Republican tho las election.
THE MARKETS.
INDIANAPOLIS, February l-', l»»i.
OKAIN.
Wheat. Corn.
Indlftnapol'8
2 r'd 9Si 1 Wi'l 40 3 r'd 'iye Viy7-&0 .. ... 2 r'd *J6
Chicago— ....
Cincinnati... St. Louis
'2 r'd 1 00
51
'2 r'd 1 0» .'2 r'd 1 10
49
New York....
63
Baltimore Philadelphia.
1 04
Toledo
63
2 r'd 1 04 98
Detroit Minneapoli«
when
both
agree to abide by the
fSsKiSjE
1 wb 99
parties
board's decision. T»
feu. isriaSti U, *!,
rendered the
same as any orderer judgment aorc
cour
ia rrflilfi its
pective strike or lockout it is duty to proceed to the scene of the disturoancQ and endeavor to secure a coicp- oinis It is authorized to inquire into ca-»es alleged black.i-iting, the discharge employes without reasonable excuse, an employers may be heard upon anv gue\-» anues they may have against laboiers oi labor organizations. The salaries of
m®m""
bers are fixed at SI,000 secretary, SI,~0U oliice expenses, $1,000. TO STBENOTHBS THE SCHOOL ROOK LAW,
80
62
Clover
52
4 4
52
95
-.ouievllle
LIVE STOCK
GvrTLB— Kxport grades #t.Aao.OO uoou 10 ouinee snippers 4.10^4.40 ijouiuion to medium snippers OtooKors, oUU to lb 1..50 Ouou to cuoice neifers 2.7 (,o 3..!0 Common to medium heifers 0(Oj2.60 Good to cuoice cows 2. 0#) .-5 jf'air to medium cows. 1. 5(0)2. J5 Hons—Heavy 3.ti.jcks,t T.» Liiznt 3.4 (53.fi Mi.xed Heavyrougas r$V2 bBBiif-Goodto choice.......... 4.2 @4. 3 fair 10 medium 3. 0(£ ,3'j
J/r*
"If
rj 2
K-J?
1. Its the lest. I. Si lafsts.
3. It a jjkasure tocljwi it
4 if satisfies. 5.Always 6.Cv?rykody braisss if. ?. You
will like it.
8.
You sbutA try
pop had blanketed you in
the stable
wi'.i
rn.
51A Flvd 5/A
Boss i'iibis
Ask for
5/A E5ectnc 5/A Extra Test
M0 other stylos everybody. If yo'i can't t" t'"'" 'rdealer, write «is.
5/A
BLANKETS
ARE THE STRONGEST.
NO N E N UIN E WITH 0 HE 5'A A BE ManuM oy WM. AYBES & SONS. Pbllada.. who the Horse Brant! Baker Blankets.
NO MORE OF THIS!
MfrfT
lL
"lubber Shoes unless worn nnoomfortiibly will often slip off tli« feet. To remedy this evil the
COLCHESTER" RUBBER GO.
offer a shoe ith tlio inside of tlio heel lined with rubber. This clings to (he shoe and prevents the Rubber from slipping off. "Call for the Colchester»
ADHESIVE COUNTERS
fend you enn walk, run or junip iu them.
Kii
•m
a
it.
Askfasr it, Insist on fs&iring it,
iobfcFmzirSJras..,-
,3
-v?
4
you would be fat, tdof"
FREE—Get'
from yo'.:r dealer i'rei', the
$4 Book. It has handoorsie [klu,o- "L valuable information aboi.t Inix..*. Two or three r!ul! ii- Kt a 5 a i'' Blanket will make your ho v.1 ulh n.-ii-j and eat ie.is to ke 'P
A
"41
AGENCY.fr
A pamphlet or biformp.!!ou tv,ui nh» r-tctoi' tho laws,ohowi:irIi«w tr/* Ohliiiu I'iitcnts, OrweiiM,
Marks, Copyrights,
«cnt frecy
Ac'drOJS MUNM. A ffew "V m-fc.
1.
