Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 23 July 1891 — Page 3
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DO YOU LIKE CHILDREN!
Millions of the Little Tots Dwell in Heaven.
thoo Shalt be Missed Beoaue Thy Scat is Emptjr-Dr. Tilmtfc'i 8ermon
Rev. Dr. TaImage preached at Lakeside, Ohio, Sunday. Subject, !TheVacant Chair." Text: I Samuel xx, 18. He said:
In almost every house the articles furniture take'a living personality. That picture—a stranger would not see anything remarkable either in its design or execution, but it is snore to you than all the pictures of the Louvre and the Luxembourg. You remember who bought it and who admired it. And that hymnbook—you remember who sang out out of it. And that cradle—you remember who rocked it. And that Bible—you remember who read out of it. And that bed—you remember who slept in it. And that room— ou remember who died in it. But ihere is nothing in all your house so eloquent as the vacant chair.
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I suppose that before Saul and his guests got up from this banquet there was a great clatter of winenitcher3, but all that racket was arowned out by the voice that came up from the vacant chair at the table. Millions have gazed and wept at John Quincy Adams' vacant chair in the House of Representatives, and at Henry Wilson's vacant chair in the Vice-Presidency, and at Henry Clay's vacant chair in the American Senate, and at Prince Albert's vacant chair in Windsor Castle, and at Thiers' vacant chair in the Councils •of the French nation but all these chairs are unimportant to you us compared with the vacant chairs in your own household. Have these chairs any lesson for us to learn? Are we any better men and women than when they first addressed us?
First, I point out to you the father's vacant chair. Old men always like to sit in the same place and in the same chair. They somehow feel more at home, and sometimes when you are in their place and they come into the room you jump up suddenly And say, "Here, father, here's your '.•hair." The probability is it is an arm chair, for he is not so strong aa he once was and he needs a little upholding. His hair is a little frosty, bis gums a little depressed, for in his early days there was not much dentistry. Perhaps a cane chair and old-fashioned apparel, for though you ciay have suggested some improvement, but father does not want any of your nonsense. Grandfather never fcaa much admiration for \'Our newfangled notions.
But your father's chair was a sa
cred place. The children used to upon the rungs of it for a goodnight kiss, and the longer he stayed the better you liked it. But that rthair has been vacant now for some time. The furniture dealer would not give you fifty cents for it, but it is a throne of influence in your domestic circle.
I go a little further on in your house and I find the mother's chair. It is very apt to be a rocking-chair. She had so many cares and troubles to soothe that it must have rockers. 1 remember it well. It was an old chair, and the rockers were almost worn out. for I was the youngest, and the cnair had rocked the whole family. It made a creaking noise as it moved but there was music in the sound. Jt was just high enough to allow us children to put our heads jhto her lap. That was the bank where we deposited all our hurts and worries. Ah! what a chair that was.
It was different from the father's ohair it was entirely different. You ask me how? I can*not tell but we all felt it was different. Perhaps there was about this chair more gen tleness, more tenderness, more grief when we had done wrong. When we were wayward father scolded, but mother cried. It was a very wakeful chair. If the sick days of children other chairs could not keep awake that chair always kept awake —kept easily awake/ That chair knew all the old lullabies and all those wordless songs which mothers sing to their sick children—songs in which all pity, and compassion, and sympathetic influences are combined. That old chair has stopped rocking for a good many years. It may be set up in the loft or garret, but it holds a queenly power yet. a When at midnight you went into that grog shoD to get the intoxicating draught, aid you not hear a voice v«6hat said: "My son, why go in & there?" And louder than the boisterous encore of the place of sinful amusement, a voice saying: "My
Son, what do you do hene?" And when you went into the house of abandonment, a voice saying: "What would your mother do if she knew you were here?" And you were provoked with yourself, and you charged -with superstition and fanaticism, and your head got hot with your own thoughts, and you went hoine and you went to bed, and no sooner had you went to bed, and no sooner had you touched the bed than a voice #aid: "WhatI a prayerloss pillow? Man! what is the matter?" This: You are too near yttr mother's rock-ing-chair.
I go on a little further, and I come to the invalid's chair. What! How long have you been sick? "Oh, I have been sick ten, twenty thirty years." Is it possible? What a story of endurance. There are in many of the families of my congregation these invalid chairs. The occupants of them think they are doing no good in the world, but that invalid's cnair i* the mighty pulpit from which they
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A pioneer in California says that for the first year or two after his residence in Sierra Nevada county there was not a single child in all the reach of one hundred miles, but the Fourth of July came and the miners were gathered together, and they were celebrating the Fourth with an oration, and poem and a boisterous brass band. And while the band was playing an infant's voice was heard crying and all the miners were startled, and the swarthy men began to think of their homes on the Eastern coast and of their wives and children far away, and their hearts were thrilled with homesickness as they heard the babe cry. But the music went on and the child cried louder and louder, and the brass band played louder and louder, trying to drown out the infantile interruption, when a swarthy miner, with the tears rolling down his face, got up and shook his fist and said: "Stop that noisy band and give the baby a chance." Oh, there was pathos in it as well as good cheer in it. There is nothing to arouse, and melt, and subdue the soul like a child's voice. But when it goes away from you the high chair becomes a higher chair and there is a desolation all about you. In three-fourths of the homes of this congregation there is a vacant high chair. Somehow you never get over it. There is no one to put to bed at night no one to ask strange questions about God and heaven. On, what is the use of that chair? It is to call you higher. What a drawing upward it is to have children in heaven!
And then it is such a preventive against sin. If a father is going awayjinto siu he leaves his living chil dren with their mother but if a father is going away into sin, what is he going? to do with his dead cttildren floating about him, and hovering over his every wayward step? Oh, speak out, vacant high chair, and say: "Father come back from sin: mother come back from worldliness, I am watching you. I am waiting for you." With respect to your child. The works of my text have been fulfilled: "Though shalt be missed, because thy seat will be empty."
My hearers, I have gathered up the voices of your departed friends and tried to intone tnera into one invitation upward. I set in array all the vacant chairs in your homes and of your social circle, and I bid them cry out this morning "Time is short.
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have been preaching all these years trust in God.
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The first time I preached here at Lakeside, Ohio, among the throngs present there was nothing that so much impressed me as the spectacle of just one face—the face of an invalid who was wheeled in on her chair. I said to her afterward: "Madam, how long have you been prostrated?" for she was lying flat in her chair. "Oh," she said, I have been this way fifteen years." I said: "Do you suffer very much?" "Oh, yes, I suffer very m» ch I suffer all the time part of the time I was blind: I always suffer." I said: "Can you keep your courage up?" "Oh, yes," she said, "l am happy very happy, indeed." Her face showed it. She looked the happiest of anj on the ground.
Oh, what a means of grace to the world, these invalid chairs. On that field of human suffering the grace of God gets in its victory. Edward Payson, the invalid, and Richard Baxter, the invalid, and Robert Hall, the invalid, and the ton thousand of whom the world has never heard, but of whom all heaven is cognizant. The most conspicuous thing on earth for God's eye and the eyes of the angels to rest on is not a throne of earthly p»wer, but it is the invalid's chair. Of these men and women who are always suffering but never complaining—these victims of spinal disease and neuralgic torture, and rheumatic excruciation will answer to the rollcall of the martyrs, and rise ?o the martyr's throne, and will wave the martyr's palm. But when one of these invalid's chairs becom« vacant how suggestive it is! No more bolstering up of the weary head.
No more changing from side to side to get an easy position. No more use of the bandage,and the cataplasm and the prescription. That invalid's chair may be folded up, or taken away, or set away, but it will never loose its queenly power it will always preach of trust in God and cheerful submission. Suffering all ended now. With respects to that invalid the words of my text have been fulfilled, "Thou shalt bo missed because thy seat willbe einp ty."
I pass on, and I find one more vacant chair. It's a high chair. It is the child's chair. If that chair be occupied,I think it is the most potent chair in all the household. All the chairs wait on it all the chairs arc turned toward it. It means more than David chair and Saul's banquet. At any rate it makes more racket.
That is a strange house that, can be dull with a child in it. How that child breaks up the hard worldiness of the place, and keeps you young to 60, 70 and 80 years of age. If you have no child "of your own,adopt one: it w.ll open heaven to yourj soul. It pays its way. Its crowiqg in the morning will give the day a cheerful starting, and its glee at night will give the day a cheerful close. You do not like children! Then you had better stay out of heaven. For there are so many there they would fairly make you crasy! Only about 500,000,000 of them! The old crusty Pharisees told the mothers to keep the children away from Christ. "You bother him," tliev said: "you trouble the master." trouble him! He has filled heaven with kind of trouble.
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Eternity is now. Take my flwtef. Be at piece with m* God. Come. where I am. We lived together on this earth,oome let us live in heaven." We answer that invitation. We come. Keep a seat for us, as Saul kept a seat for David, but the seat shall not be empty. And oh! when we are all through with this world and we have shaken hands all around jr the last time, and a 1 lr chairs in the home circle and in the outside world shall be vacant, may we bd worshiping God in that place from which we shall go out no more forever.
thank God there will be no va» cant chairs in heaven. There wo shall meet again and talk over oar earthiy heartbreaks. How much you have been through since
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them last! On the shining shore van will talk it all over. The heartaches the loneliness the sleepless nights^ the weeping until you had no lxxwer to weep* because the heart had withered and dried up. Story of empty cradle and little shoe only half worn out, never to be worn again, just, the shape of the foot that once pressed it. And dreams, when you thought the departed had come back again, and the room seemed bright with their faces, and you started up to greet them, acd in the effort the dream broke and you found yourself standing amid-room in the midnight —alone.
Talking it all ovei», and then, hand in hand, walking up and down in tho, light. No sorrow, no tears, no death. Oh, heaven! beautiful heaven! Heaven where our friends are. Heaven where we expect to be. In the East, they take a Qzqfs of birds and bring it to the tomb of the dea4, and then they open the door of the cage, and the* birds, flying out, sing. And I would to-day bring a cage of Chris tian consolation to the tomb of your loved ones, and I woujd open tho door and let them fill all the air with the music of their voices.
Oh, how they bound in these spir its before- the throne! Some shou with gladness. Some'break forth in to uncontrollable weeping for joy Some stand speechless in their shock of delight. They sing. They quiver with excessive gladness. They gaze on the temples, on the palaces, on the waters, on each otner. They weave their joy into garlands, they spring it into triumphal arches, they strike it on timbrels, and then all the loved ones gather in a great circle around the throne of God—fathers mothers, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters, lovers and friends, hand to hand around about the throne of God—the circle ever widening—hand to hand, joy to joy, juSilee to jubilee, victory to victory, until the day brenk and the shadows flee away Turn hou, my beloved, and be like a roe or a young heart upon the mountains of Bether.
Tough Old Zulu Chiefs.
The old chiefs ia South America know nothing about trekking, and on several occasions became so impatient that they started off on foot ahead of the wagons, writes a correspondent of the London Tel-egraph. One day they had to walk thirty-seven miles before reaching water, and then had to wait* two days on scant rations before we came up with them. One of these men is seventy-fire years old, but the tough old Zulu'(the Matabele rulers are of Zulu origin) was none tho worse for the escapade.
On another occasion, in spite of our warnings, thev left us. armed only with assegais, the worst part of the lion country. When we followed a few hours afterward we saw to our horror that their footprints in the sand had been partially obliterated by the spoor of a lion." Fortunately, however, he had followed them only for some hundred yards, and then, probably not being hungry, he wandered off toward a pool of water.
Such vagaries were to us a source of constant anxiety, for how could wo face the king without bringing back his IndunasP Our own lives would not have been safe. We should hai'e been claimed as impostors or accused oi witchcraft.
However, we managed to direr! their minds and keep them employed at the wagons by shooting twenty-six gray monkeys for them. The skins of this particular species are ouly worn by royalty or big chiefs.
A Favored Child of Fortuue.
A one-armed printer is as much of a curiosity as the armless man who dexterously handles a knife and fork with' bis toes.
There came to Cincinnati two day?' ago such a wonder, and he is now working as a *'sub" in the Enquirer office. His namo is Harry Renrod, he is 27 years old, and hails from Washington, where he learned the trade on the Republican. Penrod six years age went on a trip out West, and while gone lost his left arm in a railroad accident. Only a short stump, extending but a few inches from the shoulder, remains. Nothing disheartened by a misfortune that would have rendered most men helpless, Penrod set to work to manage the intricacies of his craft with one hand, and he succeeded •o well that he now sets as big a "string*1 as the best printer, and lis Justifies his own matter and does if welL In "setting" type, Penrod places the stick on the case in front of him and then nimbly shoots the type iuto place, working very rapidly and with as apparent ease as a man with two hands. Penrod has worked us a "sub'' on all the great newspapers of tlit country and makes a competent livelihood. He is the ouly one-armed rin* ter capable of earning a full day's wages at the case.
The several ministers of the Reformed Presbyterian Church who were recently deposed by the synod on account of the view they held! re* garding the right of franchise, have all united with the United PresbjN terian Church, from which they have received a warm welcome.
OONPIRMKO.
The favorable impression produced on the first appearance of the agree able liauid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ago has been more than confirmed by the pleasant experience of all who have used it, and the success of the proprietors and manufacturers, the California Fig Syrup Company.
Mrs. Partington Alive and Well. Topeka Capital. The life of a probate judge in Wyandotte county is not all roses. The Kansas City Gazette reports the following occurrence in his office last Saturday: "Are you the judge of reprobates?' said an old lady on Saturday as she walked into Judge Monahan's office. "1 am the judge of probate," was the reply. "Well, that's it, I expect," quoth the old lady. "You see, my husband died detested and left me several little infidels, and I want to be their executioner."
"Yes,' said the campaign sDcaker, "I' fight it out on this lyin' if it takes all snm tner" ______
Impukk Blood is the primary cause of the majority of disease to whicn the human family is subject. The blood in passing through the system visits every portion of the body—if pure,carrying strength and vitality if impure, disease and death. Blood poisoning is most dangerous. Prickly Ash Bitters will render the last impossible, and will regulate the system that health will be a sure result.
"My social instincts are always very strong," said the policeman. "It gives me ntense satisfaction to meet soma good •lubable fellow."
HALL'S CATARRH CURE Is a liquid itnd is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the ystem. Write for testimonials, free. Manifactured by
P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Now that the King of Greece has made tome $6,000,000 in speculation on the London 'Change, poker sharps can point to tiim as a good example of a royal flush.t'
Delightful Resorts,
Our readers who are desirous of finding leasant places to spend the Summer •iliould bear in mind that the Chicago & Vorth-Western Railway furnishes every lacility for a rapid, safe and comfortable 'ourney from Chicago to Waukesha, Madson, Lake Geneva, Kecnah, Marquette, t. Paul. Minneapolis, Duluth, Ashland. ..ake Minetonka, Yellowstone National .'ark and the mountain resorts of Colorado Hid the far West. Fast vestibuled trains, •quipped with reclining chair cars, parlor ars, palace sleeping and dining cars, aford patrons of the North-Western every nxury incident to travel by a first-class ailway. Excursion tickets at reduced *ates and descriptive pamphlets can beob.ained upon application to anv Ticket tgent or by addressing W. A. Thkalj,, jreneral Passenger and Ticket Agent, C. & S. W. R'y, Chicago, 111.
Tired and True
the poeitire verdict of people *to take Hood's itrKsparllU. Whan uied according to directions h« good effscts of this sxccllsnt mtdicioa »re soou '•It in ncrrs strength restored, that tired feeling 1 riven off, a good appetite created, headache and yupepsi^relieTed, norofula cured and all the bad iffect* of impure blood overcome. If you are in leedof a good blood purifier or tonic medicine do lot fail to try
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DONALD XEMNEOr Of Mi Mass, up
Kennedy's Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of
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PILES
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1 That hardy perennial, the flannel shirt Is again sprouting upon the manly bosom of tne duae. It will bloom in a variety or colors. ____ •'Knowledge Is folly unless put to use."
You know SAPOLIO, then use it! Sapolio is a solid cake of Scouring Soap used for cleaning purposes.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria*
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla. When she was Child, she cried for Castoria, When shebeoame Hiss, she clang to Oastorte Whaa she had Children, she garetbea Oartofta,
George Gould has a log
the Catskills, where he lolls mound through the summer stud^in/j how he can become a richer ma than his lather. He is a chip of the old block, with an extra hard knot thrown in. riTM.—AuViti stopped fraa by Dr. Xline'a Groat Nerve Restorer. No fits after first 4»'f n»y. Marvellou* auras. Treatise arrd 12.00 trt#t liottie free to .Fit casea. Sind to Dr. Kline.931 Arab fit.. I hiia.,Paf
BpccHAir's Puu curea Slok Heatocfcr,
Best, easiest to use and chc'ip^t. Pieo's Remedy for Catarrh, By drii^sits 80c.
Wke« gambler goes hnntinslM usually succeeds In finding game without llnll
Can'S Isa Catch Oa
To a known means of oTereomlaff that obsti nato disorder, constipation? Of course
FREE
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can. Then why don't you? Ask those who hav tried It, and they will tell that Hostetter': Stomach Bitters is a matchless laxative, ei textual without violence—thoroughly altera tive, but perfectly reliable. Xt invigorates too, no less than it regulates the system, ant it is chiefly to this first quality that It owes th permanency of its regulating effects, since, 1 vigor is lacking in the region of the bowels the stomach or the liver, healthful activity ii those organs is suspended. Deobstruents am cathartics in general are simply that and nothing more they relax the bowels merely without invigorating them, and as their taxation it usually abrupt and violent, they really tend to weaken the organs. Use the Bitters, also, foi malaria, rheumatism, indigestion, debility ana kidney trouble.
Mr. Blair says he doesn't care a fig, but he will be compelled to make another date.
p£T0RKpE)t||£
In Its 1Yors»t Fwm. /m-a Bkntcm, Laf. Co., Wis., Dee. "88.
Iter. J. C. Bergen vouches for the following: James Boonay, who was suffering from Yitur Daaoe in its worst form for aboat one and a fourth years, was treated by several physician? without effeot two bottles of Pastor KoeiUg't Nerve Tonio cured him.
—A Valuable Boott en Kerroni Iise:isei sent free to any address, and poor patients can also obtain this medicine free of chargo.
This remedy has boon prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koeniff. of Fort Wavne, Ind„ since 1876, and (enow prepared under his direction by the
KOENIC MED. CO.. Chicago, III. gold by Druggists at 81 per Bottle. O for 83. Iatso Size, 81.75. 6 Bottles for SO.
La Fayette Michigan City Indianapolis Tipton Lima
niAGARAFALLS fiXGURSIOH
THURSDAY. AUGUST 6, 1891, VIA THE
Lab Erie & Mm R. 1.
"SATUBAI- OAS HOUTJJ."
On Thursday, August 6, 1891. the Lake Erie & Western R. R. will run their popular annual excursion to Cleveland, Chautauqua Lake, Buffalo and Niagara Fails at following very low rate3, viz.: or a 17.50 Ft. Wayne Bloomington 7.00 Muncie 6.00 C'onncrsville 6.00 Rushville 5 00 New Castle 5.00 Cambridge City 5,00 4.00 Fremont 5.00
Sandusky, $4.00.
With corresponding reduction from intermediate points. In addition to the above, the purchasers of these tickets will be given privilege of special excursion side trips to Lewiston-on-the-Lake, including a steamboat ride on Lake Ontario, for 25 cents. To Toronto and return by Lake from Lewiston, 11.00 to Thousand Islands, $5.00. Tickets for the above side trips can be had when purchasing Niagara Falls ticket, or at any time on the train.
Besides tho above privileges, with that of spending Sunday at the Falls, we will furnish all those who desire a side trip from Brocton Junction to Chantaqua Lake and return FREE OF CHARGE.
Tickets of admissien to places of spccial interest at or near Niagara Falls, but outside the reservation, including toll oyer the International Bridge to thcCanadan side, elevators to the water's edge at Whirlpool Rapids on the
Canadian side, will be offered
on train at a reduction from prices charged after reaching the Falls. Do not miss this opportunity to spend Sunday at Niagara Falls. The excursion train will arrive at Niagara Falls 7:00 A. M., Friday, August 7, and will leave the Falls returning Sunday morning, August 9, at 6 o'clock, stopping at Cleveland Sunday afternoon, giving an opportunity to visit, the magnificent monument of the lata President Garfield, and many other Interests
Tickets will be good, however, to return on regular trains leaving the Falls Saturday, August 8, for those not desiring to remain over. Tickets will also be good returning on all regular trains up to and including Tuesday, August 11,1861. Securo your tickets, also Chuir and Sleeping Car Accommodations, early. Those desiring can secure accommodations In these ears while at the Falls. For further Information call on any agent Lake Erie «k Western R. R., or address C.F.DALY, oGen. Pass. Agent, Indianapolis. Ind.
CATARRHju»ia
on
cabin
in
Old Bryant Stratton School, North
rair.i^
Flower
The Hon. J. W. Fennimore is th® Sheriff of Kent Co., Del., and lives at Dover, the County Seat and Capital of the State. The sheriff is a gentleman fifty-nine years of age, and this is what he says "I have used your August Flower for severa! years in my family and for my "own use, and iound it does me more good than any other remedy.
I have been troubled with what I call Sick Headache. A pain comes in the back part of my head first, and then soon a general headache until I become sick and vomit. "At times, too, I have a fullness after eating, a pressure after eating at the pit of the stomach, and'
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Toossauct, Ohio, Oot. 25,18!0.
I used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonio for a lady 26 years old every two or three weeks she had jerioua attack of faUiog sickness, accompanier with headache and w&e driven to madness eb was sent once to an insane asylum. The doc cors could not rolievo her I began with out bottle or your modicine: she had taken three inarterft of it, and sho wrote to me a few dayt ago: "The medicine helps me much I thin) another bottle will cure me."
sourness, when food seemed to rise up in my throat and mouth. When I feel this coming on if I take a "little August Flower it relieves me, and is the best remedy I have ever taken for it. For this reason "I take it and recommend it to others as a great remedy for Dys"pepsia, &c."
G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, YVoodbury, New jersey, IJ. S. A.
PURSUE DKIVERSITTI
The State Institute of Technology! 1. A School of Mechanical Engineering.
2. School of C-ivii Engineering. 3. School of Electrical Engineering. 4. School of Agriculture. 5. School of Science and
Industrial Art.
6. School of Pharmacy.
Has an equipment worth or.e-half miliioa of dollars. Send for a catalogue. Address JAS. H. SMART, Prea't.
S~EWlSr987m
I r379XBS8 AHS PXZF7UX9. (rATMTZS.) The strengtst and purest Ly« made. Will make the but per fumed Hard Soap in 20 minutei without boiling.
tewt
$5.00 r..oo 5.00 5.00 5.00
uUnLE
Ml
owimmi
Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agweable to the taste.
Children
ev. sre noll
take it without objection. By druggists.
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Xt is thd
for softening watei
cleansing waste pipes, disinfect ing sinks, closets, washing toft ties, paints, trees, etc. i| PENNA. SALT M'F'G COf
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put
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crimps" or using curling Irons. Gampen it with Curlotto, and It will retain tbat KlalTy appear* «nc« 3 to A days. Ia positively
uarmlefia to taalr and scalp. An excellent hau tonic. Leaning socioty tnd Theatrical Ladtei regard Curlette as indiapenalble to tfcf toilet. Price 50c. per bottle, at stores and by mall. Agents wanted, address
Mrs. Jennie Marklejr, Logansport. Ina.
lukftg* makei giUloa* Sold t/ all 4ealtr«. tMauttfcl Piolurc Book ini frmtt 1&7 6M M&dlog thdr ftddrtM to Tti C. I. HUB OO*# FbUtA'v
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FAT FOLKS REDUCES
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Indianapolis Business University
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