Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 47, Petersburg, Pike County, 5 April 1895 — Page 7

THE GOSPEL SHIP. ’"Conte Thou end All Thy Family Into the Ark.** •Set Safely Booted for Eterolty-If Wo Got Into the Ark of God’s Morey tt Will Bo Throayh Christ, the Door—Dr. Tabnaffe’s SeroionThe text selected by Dr. Talmage last Sunday was Genesis vi, 18, “Thou shalt come into the furk, thou and thy sons and thy wife and thy sons’ kite* with thee.” In this day of the steamships Lucania and Majestic and the Paris I will show you a ship that in some respects eclipsed them all, and which sailed out, an ocean underneath and another ocean falling upon it. Infidel scientists ask us to believe that in the formation of the earth there have been a half dozen deluges, and yet they are not willing to believe the Bible stdry of one deluge. In what way the oatastrophe came we know not—whether by the stroke of a comet, or by flashes of lightning, changing the air into water, or by a stroke of the hand of God, like the stroke of the ax between the horns of the ox, the earth staggered. To meet the catastrophe God ordered a great ship built. It was to be without prow, for it was to sail to no shore. It was to be without helm, for no human hand should guide it. .It was a vast structure, probably as large as two or three modern steamers. It was the Great Eastern of olden time. The ship is done. The door is open. The lizards crawl in. The cattle walk in. The grasshoppers hop in. The birds fly in. The invitation goes forth to Noah, “Come thou and all thy house into itheark.” Just one human family embark on the strange voyage, and I hear the doors slam shut. A great storm sweeps along the hills and bends the cedars until all the branches snap in the gale. There is a moan in the wind like unto the moan of a dying world. The blackness of the heavens is shattered by the flare of the lightnings, that look down Into the waters and throw a ghastliness on the face of the mountains. How strange it looks! How suffocating the air seems! The big drops of rain begin to splash upon the upturned faces of those who are watching the tempest. Crash! go the rocks in convulsion. Boom! go the bursting heavens. The inhabitants of the earth, instead of flying to house top and mountain top, as men have fancied, sit down in dumb, white horror to die. For when God grinds mountains to pieces and lets the ocean slip its cable there is no place for men to fly to. See the ark pitch and tumble in the surf,, while from its windows the passengers look out upon the shipwreck of a race and the carcasses of a dead world. Woe to the mountain! Woe to the sea! I am no alarmist. When on the 20th of September, after the wind has for three days been blowing from the northwest, you prophesy that the equinoctial storm is coming, vou simply state a fact not to be disputed. Neither am I an alarmist when I say that a storm is coming, compared with which Noah’s deluge was but an April shower, and that it is wisest and safest for yon and for me to get safely housed for eternity. The invitation that went forth to Noah sounds ih our ears, “Come thou and all thy house into the ark.” Well, how did Noah and his family come into the ark? Did they climb in at the window, 6r come down the roof? No;, they went through the door. And just so, if we get into the ark of God’s mercy, it will be through Christ, the door. The entrance to the ark of old must have been a very large entrance. We know that it was from the fact that there were monster animals in the earlier ages, and in order to get them into the ark, two and two, according to the Bible statement, the door must have been very wide and very high. So the door into the mercy of God is a large door. We go in, not two and two, but by hundreds, and by thousands and by millions. Yea, all the nations of the earth may go in, 10,000,000 abreast I The door of the ancient ark was in the side. So liow it is through the side of Christ—the pierced side, the wide open side, the heart sides—that we.enter. Aha, the Roman soldier, thrusting his spear into the Saviour’s side, expected only to let the blood out, but he opened the way to let all the world in! Oh, what a broad Gospel to preach! If a man is about to give an entertainment,* he issues 000 or 300 invitations, carefully put up and directed to the particular persons whom he wishes to entertain. But God, our Father, makes a banquet and goes out to the front door of Heaven and stretches out his hands over land and sea, and with a voice that penetrates the Hindoo jungle, and the Greenland ice castle, and Brazilian grove, and English factory, and American home, cries out, “Come, for all things are now ready!” It is a “wide door! The old cross has been taken apart, and its two pieces are stood up for the doorposts, so far apart that all the world can come in. Kings scatter ti-easures on days of great rejoicing* So Christ, onr King, comes and scatters the jewels of Heaven.

Kowiana nui saia last oe nopea 10 get into. Heaven through the crevices o:! the door. But he was not obliged thus to go in. After having preached the Gospel in Surrey chapel, going up toward Heaven the gate-keeperjjpiied: “Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates, and let this man come in!” The dying thief went in. Bichard Baxter and Robert . .Newton went in. Europe Asia. Africa, North and South America may yet go through this wide door without crowding. Ho! every one—all conditions, all ranks, all jteople! Luther said that this truth Was worth carrying on pne’s knees irom Rome to Jerusalem, but I tltink it worth carrying all around the globe and all around the heavens, that “God j» loved the world that He ga*re Hit only begotten Son, that whosoev er be* lieveth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” Whosoever will, let him come through the large

door. Archimedes wanted a fulcrum on which to place his lever. and then 1 he mid he coaid more the worljl. Calvary i» the fulcrum, and the cross of Christ is the lever, and by that power all nations shall yet be lifted. Further, it is a door that swings both ways. I do not know whether the door of the ancient ark was lifted or rolled on hinges, but this door of Christ op* en s both ways.. It swings out toward all our woes; it swings in toward the raptures of Heaven. It seringa in to let us in; it swings out to let onr minister* ing ones come out. All are one in in Christ—Christians on earth and saints in Heaven. One army of the living God. a At Us command we bow. Part of the host have crossed the Hood. And part are crossing sow. Swing in, 0 blessed door, until all the earth shall go in and live. Swing out until all the heavens come forth to celebrate the victory. But, further, it is a door with fasten* ings. The Bilde says of Noah: “The lord shut, him in.* A vessel without bulwarks or doors would not be a safe vessel to go in. When Noah and his family heard the fastening of the door of the ark, they were very glad. Unless these doors were fastened the first heavy surge of the sea would have vrhelmed them, and they might as well have perished outside the ark as inside the ark “The Lord shut him in.” Oh, the perfect safety of the ark! I The surf of the sea and the light* | nings of the sky may be twisted into a garland of snow and fire—deep to deep, storm to storm, darkness to darkness—but once in the ark all is well. “God shut him in.” There copies upon the good man a deluge of financial trouble. He had his thousands to lend. Now he can not borrow a dollar. He once owned a store in l New York and-had branch houses in Botson, Philadelphia and New Orleans. He owned four horses and employed a man to keep the dust off his eoach, phaeton, carriage and curricle; how he has hard work to get shoes i in which to walk. The great I deep of commercial disaster was | broken up, and fore and aft and across the hurricane deck the waves struck him. But he was safely sheltered from the storm. “The Lord shut him in!” A flood of domestic troubles fell on him.” Sickness and bereavement came. The rain pelted; the winds blew. The heavens are aflame. All the gardens of earthly delight are washed away. The mountains of joy are buried 15 cubits deep. But, standing by the empty crib and in the desolated nursery and in the doleful hall, once a-ring with merry voices, now silent forever, he cried, “The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.” “The Lord shut him in.” All the sins of a lifetime clamored for his overthrow. The broken vows, the dishonored Sabbaths, the outrageous profanities, the misdemeanors of SO years, reached up their hands to the door of the ark to pull him out. The boundless ocean of his sin surrounded his soul, howling like a simoom, raving like an eurocyidron. But, looking out of the window he saw his sin sink like lead into the depths of the sea. The dove of Heaven brought an olive branch to the ark. The wrath of the billow only pushed him toward Heaven. “The Lord shut him in!” The same door fastenings that kept Noah in keep the troubles out. I am glad to know that when a man reaches Heaven all earthly troubles are done with him. Here he may have had it hard to get bread for his family; there he will never hunger any more. Here he may have wept bitterly; there “the Lamb that is in the midst of the throne will lead him to living fountains of water, and God will wipe away all tears from his eyes.” Here he may have hard work to get a house, but in my Father’s house are many mansions, and rent day never comes. Here there are deathbeds and coffins and graves; there no sickness, no weary watching, no choking cough, no consuming fever, no chattering chill, no tolling bell, no grave. The sorrows of life shall come up And knock at the door, hut no admittance. The perplexities of life shall come up and knock on the door, but no admittance. Safe forever! All the agony of earth in one wave dashing against the bulwarks of the ship of celestial light shall not break them down. Howl on, ye winds, and rage, ye seas! The Lord—“the Lord shut him in!” | * , Oh, what a grand old door! So wide, so easily swung both ways and with such sure fastenings. No burglar’s key can pick that lock. No swarthy arm of hell can shove baok that bplt. I rejoice that I do not ask you to come aboard a crazy craft with leaking hulk and broken helm and unfastened door, but an ark SCfcubits wide and 300 cubits long and a door so large that the round earth, without grazing Ihe post, might be bowled in. |41

INOW, li me orK pi un» is w grand a place to live and die and triumph, come into the ark. Know well that the door that shut Noah in shnt others out, and though, when the pitiless storm came pelting on their heads, they beat upon the door, saying: “Let me in! Lei; me in:” the door did not open. For one hundred and twenty years they were invited. They expected to come in, but the antediluvians said: “We must cultivate these fields; we must be worth more flocks of sheep and herds of cattle; we will wait until we get a little older; we will enjoy our old farm a little longer.” But meanwhile the storm was brewing. The fountains of Hea ven were filling up. The pry was being placed beneath the foundations of the great deep. The last year had come, the last month, the last week, the last day. the last hour, the lasfe moment.. In an awful dash an ocean dropped from the sky and another rolled up from beneath, and God rolled the earth and sky 4®to one wave of universal destruction, v men now put off going into the ark. They say they will wait SO years first They will have a little longer time with their worldly associates. They will wait until they get older. They say: “You can not expect a man

of my attainments and of my posi tion to surrender myself just now. But before the storm comes I will go in. Yes, I wilt I know what 1 am about. Trust me! After awhile ; one night about twelve o’clock going home, he nesses a scaffolding just as a gust of wind strikes it, mi d a plank falls. Dead, and outside Its ark! Oi, riding in the.’park, a. reck* less vehicle Crashes into him, and his ; horse becomes unmanageable, and he shouts, “Whoa, whoa!” and takes another twist in the reins, and plants his feet against the dashboard and pulls back. But no use. It is not so much down the avenue that he flies as on the way to eternity. Out of the wreck of the crash hit body is drawn, but his soul is not picked up. It fled behind a swifter courser into tue great future. Dead, and outside the ark! Or some night he wakes up with a distress that momentarily increases until he shrieks out with pain. The doctors come in. and they give him ?0 drops, but no relief; 40 drops. 50 drops, 60 drops, but no relief. No time for prayer. No time to read one of the promises. No time to get a single sin pardoned. The whole house is aroused in alarm. The children scream. The wife faints The pulses fail. The heart stops. The eoul flies. Dead, and outside the ark! I have no doubt that derision kept many people out of the ark. The world laughed to see a man go in and said: “Here is a man starting for the ark. Why, there will be no deluge. If there | is one, that miserable ship w ill not weather it. Aha, going into the ark! I Well, that is too good to keep. Here, j fallows, have you heard the news? This man is going intp the ark!” Under this j artillery of scorn the man’s good resolution perished. And so there are hundreds kept out by the fear of derision. The young man asks himself: “What would they say at the store tomorrow morning _ if I should become a Christian? When I go down to the elpb bouse, they will shout, ‘Here comes that new Christian. Suppose you will not have anything to do with us now. Suppose you are praying now. Get down on your knees and let us hear you pray. Come, now, give us a touch. Will not do it, eh?1 Pretty Christian, you are!’ ” Is it not the fear of being laughed at that keens you out of the kingdom of God? Which of these scorners will help you at the last? When you lie down on a dying pillow, which of them will be there? In the day of eternity will they bail you out? ^ My friends and neighbors, come in right away. Come in through Christ, the wide door—the door that, swings out toward you. Come in and be saved, Come and be happy. “The Spirit and JEftide say. Come.” Room in the ark! RooHKijg the ark! But do not come alone. The text invites you to bring your family. It says, “Thou and thy sons and thy wife.” You can not drive them in. If Noah had tried to drive the pigeons and the doves into the ark, he would only have scattered them. Some parents are not wise about these things. They make iron rules about Sabbaths, and they force the catechism down the throat as they would hold the child’s nose and force down a dose of rhubarb and ealomel. You can not drive your children into the ark. You can draw your children to Christ, but you can not coerce them. The cross was lifted, not to drive but to draw. ‘*If I be lifted up I will draw all men unto met” As the sun draws up the drops of the morning dew, so the sun of righteousness exhales the tears of repentance. Be sure that you bring your, husband and wife with you. How would Noah have felt if, when he heard the rain pattering on the roof of the ark, he knew that his wife was outside in the storm? No; she went with him. And yet some of you are on the ship “outward bound” for Heaven. But your companion is unsheltered. You remember the day when the marriage ring was set. Nothing has yet been able to break it. Sickness came, and the finger shrank, but the ring staid on. The twain stood alone above the child’s grave, and the dark mouth of the tomb swallowed up a thousand hopes, but the ring dropped not into the open grave. Days of poverty came, and the hand did many a hard day’s work, but the rubbing of the work against the ring only made it shine brighter. Shall that ring ever be lost? Will the iron clang of the sepulcher gate crush it forever? I pray God that you who have been married on earth may bo together in Heaven. Oh, by the quiet bliss of your earthly home, by the babe’s cradle, by all the vows of that day when, you started life together, I beg you to see to it that you both get into the ark.

Lome in, ana Dring your wne or vour husband. with you—not by fretting about religion or dingdonging them about religion, but by a consistent life and by a compelling prayer that shall bring the throne of God down into your room. Go home and take up the Bible and read it together, and then, kneel down and commend your souls to Him who has watched you all these years, and before you rise there will be a fluttering of wings over your head, angel crying to angel, “Behold, they pray!” But this does not include all your family. Bring the children too. God bless the dear children! What would our homes be without them? We may have done much for them. They have done more for us. What a salve for a wounded heart there is in the soft palm of a child”s hand! {>id harp or flute ever have such music as there is in a child’s “good night?” From our coarse, rough life the angels of God are often driven back. But who comes into the nursery without feeling that angels are hovering around? They who die : in infancy go straight into glory, but you are expecting your children to , grow up in this world. Is it not a question, then, which rings through | all the corridors and windings and ' heights and depths of your soul, what is to become of your sons and flaugfc* tars for time and for eternity? \ ' - •

SUCCESSFUL SPRAYING. XMu TUm Eaooch to DetktWwk Thou oachly Ud ItotiUriy. Fungous diseases of several kinds hare spread all over the country, and, unless checked, destroy the fruits of apple, peach, pear, plum and cherry trees and of vines and berry bushes. These diseases can be checked, and their effects destroyed, by thorough spraying. This has been proved be* yond a doubt, and the only question now is how to do the work in the most thorough manner. I believe we have not been in the habit of beginning* soon enough in this matter. No doubt the scab, blight and other forms oil fungous disease begin to develop Tpry early in the season, and are at work long before they make any visible signs. It is my opinion, and my ex* perience last year confirms me in hold* ing it, that the best time to begin ii before there is any sign of disease about the trees. 1 would begin before the trees start into growth in the spring, because then I can use a much stronger solution without injuring the trees. After the leaves have started Bordeaux mixture of the standard strength is as strong as can be used without injuring the foliage, but if the trees are sprayed as soon as warm weather comes a solution of copper sulphate (blue vitriol) can be used as strong as one pound to 35 or 30 gallons of water. This copper sulphate is veiy cheap now, and one can afford to use it liberally, and the trees ground should be pretty well drenched with them, and the form of sprayer should be such as will throw a stream against the body and branches of the trees with sufficient force to penetrate the crevices in the bark and wet the whole surface. If this is done millions'of spores that are only waiting for favorable conditions to spring into life and growth will be killed- and much afterwork will be saved. ■ \ Later in the season the nozzle of the sprayer should be one that produces, a fine mist, as it is not well to get too much of the solution on the leaves. The object should be to cover the whole surface of the trees, but as lightly as possible. In spraying for curculio, I have always tried to do the job thoroughly and have always succeeded in getting good crops. I have watched men spraying trees who were not half doing it. It is impossible to make a complete job of it without taking some time to each tree, and, unless this is done, some effects of the prevailing disease may be observed at the end of the season. The only way to spray with complete success is to take enough time to do it thoroughly. 1 hope that no one will think that his frees do not need spraying. All fruit trees need, it, and the man who npglects the orchards is only keeping a nursery for the spores of disease.—A. S. Rogers, in Springfield (O.) Farm News. SIMPLE DAIRY BARN. Aay Farmer Handy w ith Saw and Square Can Build Omi A handy, simple and inexpensive dairy barn, one that any farmer handy with saw and square can build, is shown below. There is no mortising and, no fitting of joints to speak of, the timbers being 2x6 and spiked together. The sills are 2x8, set on edge. Poles will answer for posts as well as the 2x6's. There are no cross timbers to interfere with the use of the hay fork. It can be made as high and as long as needed. „ For a dairy of 20 cows make it 60 feet long, 24 feet wide and 16 feet high. The lean-to for cows is on the south side and has a floor. The main part is for hay and is 24 feet wide and has no floor. The posts, are 2x6 and placed

AS INEXPENSIVE DAIRY BARN. A. shed root; B, drop door of manger; C, manger; D. end of Ranger; E, door to cow stalls; F. door for taking in bay. 6 feet apart. The rafters are 3x6 and 3 feet apart. Braces are 2x6 and reach from a post to a rafter, being1 12 feet apart. The ties from brace to post and rafter are pieces of fence board. Such a frame is stiff beyond the belief of one who never saw one. The side of the hay barn next to the cows is not boarded up. This gives a chance to throw hay or fodder down in front of the manger the whole length. As this would leave it cold for cattle in severe weather, a partition runs from the back of the manger to the roof of the cow barn, provided with drop doors just above the manger, which are closed in cold weather. Less lumber is required to board this way and hay can bn thrown into the passage at any joint. The haymow is divided into 12 foot sections which can a lb be filled at once, or one* or more at a time. This gi ves a chance to grade hay, clover in one section, mixed hay in another, oats, corn fodder or millet in another as desired. A steel track runs the whole length of the barn under the peak and the horse fork will dump where desired. Being but 24 feet wide, it is easy work to move the hay from center to sides. Four doors lead outside from the cow stable for convenience in cleaning out. This barn is suited to farmers who have no money to spend on extra useless timbers and no time to spare in cioring in a big inconvenient show barn.—Farm and Home._ Of Panmout Importance. As it is to-day, the farmer is unable to haul his prodi ict to market d uring bad weather, and as that is the veryperiod when he has the most leisure time to do such work, it must add very largely to the cost of his products. Economically speaking, therefore, lam firmly convinced that there is no subject of greater importance than the subject of good r :>ads.—W. H. Baldwin, Jr., Saginaw, Mi ;h., General Mtmager P. & P. M.U._ Tbs plum net ds a rich, moist soil, and is benefited >y liberal manurimr. 4

—Knights Errant were exactly what they are described by Cervantes in “Don Quixote”—wandering adventurers, ready to succor the distressed or engage in any enterprise that promised a pecuniary cr other rewards Beware eff (Ketmeets for Catena that Contain Mnrvr. as mercury will sorely destroy the sense of smell end completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucons surfaces. Such articles should never boused except on prescriptions from reputable phvsiciaas, as the damage they will do Is ten fold to the rood you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure manafactured by F. J. Cheney ft Co.,Toledo. O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is tidten internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, ll>y F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. rarsold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. ash’s Family PMsT* cents. a “Somxtixbs," skid Uncle Eben, “when er man tells you he's discouraged he doan’ mean nullin’ by it ’ceptin’ dat he’s ’bout made up ’is min’ ter be good an’ lazy de res’ ob his life.”—Washington Star. Ask Aid, If you are troubled with malaria, constipation, biliousness, kidney trouble or dyspepsia, of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, audit will be speedily fbrthcoming. Nervousness, loss of appetite and sleep, and a loss of vigor, are also remedied by this restorative. Physicians of eminence indorse it, a valuable confirmation of the verdict of the people and the press. Take it regularly. : Put a smile on your face when yon go out for a walk, and somebody will be helped.— Ham’s Horn.

“Dos’* pull rwr gun la this hero court,”' said the judge. " You've got to respect tho dignity what yoh see lyin’ nxm’ loose beret an’ if you kill a man while court’s in seeeioa i’ll line you fer contemptAtlantaConsU* tution. Fon Whooping Cough, Pfso*s Cura is a successful remedy.—M. P. Dieter. WKirccp Aye., Brooklyn, h\ Y, Nor. 14,1M. A warren says that the sense of humor very rarely exists in chiidren under twelve yean old. This writer evidently has never seen n five-year-old child prying open the eyes of a four-days-old kitten.—Texas Siftings. WE'” -=QIVE AWAY<Absolutely free of cost, for a LIHITED TinE ONLY,

o’ 6 Z z

The People’* Common Sense Medkmt Adviser. By R, V. Pierce. 31 D . Chief Consulting Physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute. Buffalo, a book of over i.oco large’ pages and yoo colored and other illustrations. in strong paper covers to any one sending at cents in one-cent stamps for packing and postage only. Over 6So,ooo copies of this complete Family Doctor Bools already sold in cloth binding at regular price of Ji.ja Address: (with stamps and this Coupon) World’s Dispensary Medical Association. No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. If. .

Cures ST. JACOBS OILCjga •w* Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Sprains, Bruises, Bums, Wounds, SwelHngs, Soreness, Headache, Backache, All Aches, Stiffness, Outs, Hurts, Frost-bites. ...WHAT MORE IS NEEDED THAN A PERFECT CURE.... THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.

UWKMf M ««• MIS ■« ■■ 300 AERMOTOR8 Vt<OH« attributa tbit hirtj rood record entirely to Mr ef* fort*, bet Jo the lapertarity of tbt goods _which |M make. ■na«m b Sera. Urbana. Ill. February 1*. >*» Mttf Goituo Wa bought ud put op Acrmctoc Ht Mdt W bad tbiHaan that ttat wt hate told about 400 AERIMOTOR8 la our mull territory it represented the hittory of »h* Aarmotor tad the Atrmotor Company boat the beginning to the pretent bear. That hntory » one __ of unbroken triumph. ' > there bate been but few Aside from the Aermotor other windmills put up enough with which to show the infinite suAtrmotor in drsign. finish (all palvanued toon), and ability to run when all others stand We should bare sold more, supplied with wind power peered, it beinr only 66 to rite ' sea the tattle (round larjtst, panics, all beinr located irci or ora bisiskss ruaifi WOODK.6 Alto ton wiius wit■ you have durinf the past mens year's record by yea expect to double yonr tontine year. Count oa us the Aermotor never Mood f_ tation and in fact than to-day. fbbreary 25, IMS.** The next AarwMtor ad. will ho of pumps. Wo shall offer for $7.50 a $15 three way force pump. All dealers should bare it or caa gat it te tell at that price. All Aermotor mea will have it- The week follewias will appaar our advertisement at ralvaaiscd steel tanks at tig cents per pita. They neither shrink, leek. rest, bar aaake muter taste bad. Aermotor Co., Chtags our territory—just compare and periorityof the workmanship, after com pieand do, c(factive work idle for want of wind, tbit ration was well whoa the Aermotor apto Chicago, end had tor tor ton or twelve at the strongest windmill com* within SO miles at us HAS coll IbOl RE. OTMEb nsSATISFAC. AKblOTObS. Ton say year turpassed any pro* about cnc-balf. and that last yoar'a output the _tor our portion of it. tor r abate all co' .patilort in repuSouth A Raiasr, lump, Ul , Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, bilious headache, dyspepsia, heartburn, torpid liver, dizziness, sick headache, bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, loss of appetite, sallow skin, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. Go by the book. Pills 10c and 25c a box. Book FREE at your druggist’s or write B. F. Allen Co., 365 Canal Street, N'w York. ' nnuml sales more Vfcnn 6.000,000 bor.e»

IEWIS 98 '*> Lit I VOWBSSXDAHDttBUnUD. la (PATENTED) The ttnngett and jrarmt Lye I made. Unlike other Lye, it being [v a fine powder and packed in a can ■with removable lid, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the M perfumed Bard Soap in 80 minutes icUhout boiling. It la the heat for cleansing waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles. ^>uicvs. treesetc. PETOl.SALTM_ l Can, Aaeata phh.a., Pa,

W.L. Douglas $3 SHOEr!?Ksrsii 13> cordovan; *

fcfttt&FlKECAl/UCAMM* V »&«PQUC£,330USS, (•■sssnl fa.ttSKNI'SMKSKl P 'LASICS* PfS&ME*'

▲ Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs by mall Tor SI* Canto. Name style and alia. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY. IT Franklin St.. New York. » Kilby 3k, Bos too. The •UNKNK ' are the Beet and Moat Sconces* leal Collars and Cuffs worn: they are made of On# elotfa. both sides ffntshed alike, and. balne rerersh ble. one cellar is equal to two at any other kind. Tlt#» At well. wear uhU and took well. ▲ box of Ten Collars or Fire Pairs of Cuffs tor Twenty-Fir#. Ovtr on* minion people wear we W. L. Douglas $3&$4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory*. They |lv« the best value Jar the money. They equal custom shoes ia style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—stamped on sol#. From Si to $3 saved over ether nukes. . if your dealer cannot supply you we can.

; I4UR*Tput(. ITT THIS OCT ud wad It to .§ to wUk J« bum ini sMnH ;■* aad w» will and yu tkla bautlht MM ntaiM wi*e# »y wpn» m * nukuiH. Th>i»» kit . tktuinaoaet.uklijNtUrii A Hi tojfmte mwnulr yrfc* & aad It I* t«n U knipl* B fkratly ugrmrrd ud MuJ la |iHnnm to a MM ■ AH watah. A pxutH fit ■ in f«» nto iwj »mA, V write to-day, mutin wMttm f m wut (Wto*ar todtra* MM. -tMINATtONALMPC. i ft IMPORTING COu m * rfcnSMhfeaifc !&

LOOK ££“' &3RES7SS NEXT ST.& DAVIS CREAK SEPARATORS “^gs^fissansisaarww pnertMt aw-teUm. Haadaont Utaat Mailed Free. HTAa»r« Wijn» A. N. K., B. 1S4S. WBIH WB1T15« VO AOTKKTMEIi* PUMK Mat* the* jrae taw the AOwHInnt to thto