Jasper County Democrat, Volume 3, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 April 1900 — Page 5

UON COFFEE ) Used io Millions of Homes! Best Coffee for the Money!' J Accept no substitute Silr Try M? N „,h° FFE u J" 4 Y l !' never ““ 1 ! Insist on LION COFFEE, in lib. pkgs. | These articles mailed FREE in Hantel Clock. Alarm Clock. \exchange for lion heads cut from wh/iRW i Q * front ofx lb. LION COFFEE pkgs. 1 J~ SEuftiny JSbSL. I Gold Collar Button. 41 finished I ’ k. f -iMKMw ® with gut. aßjg «vy k ar - a ■ ■ a« m m —__ a_ ■_ —» ■ i__ rV AtSnikxwr a. Rtfinilo If Un w viWfai I maiieu irec tot o non ncsas cuiironi L-iori .a ftftKsStwßft 3 .v** 1 . lisla r,83l J Coffee wrapper* and a 2-cent stamp. Made ...atJled* Ifr' Sjnchea J""® l of rolled gold and with mother-of-pearl awj* - HvO. % 1 back; aultablealike for ladies and gentle- F* A beauty WCTy w \ v vaw/7 ! men. This shape 1* handy and popular. \Ar ?, nd good WfiJf M Saifir time-keeper. i Daisy Neck-Pin. DI I D ITV A Blit El AVftftl •. I I STRENGTH, rUniTi AND FLAVOR | egag^ss^ssss? 11 * 1 ”* i

I Per 18 Hen heads and | Illustration 1M only two-third* actual rice. I Color a delicate pink, with jewel setting . and gold trimmings Best enamel finish, I stylish and durable. “The Lion’* Bride.” k Mailed free tor 13 Host bead* cut frosn I don Ceffee wrapper* and a stamp. ) An unusually fine picture, from the brush k of the noted German artist, Gabriel Max. 1 It is founded on Chamisso's poem, "The ) Lion’s Bride." The Story is interesting, k and we send with each picture a handJ some folder, containing copy of the poem 5 and telling all about it. size, 15x26 inches. I •» Dorothy and Her Friends.” BRJHH A bright, ' cheery picture. For ß »oa he ° d * and a 2c. stamp. A bright, cheery ftjCTi picture, represent- ) Inga littlegirlplayJ ing with her chickftftWiML, a CttCT ensand herrabbits. ) K?P fzl bmV' Jrn The predominating 5 Bk wJ4-..->or I colors are rich reds t rft.vWWr' J *nd greens. Size, ) ! fti> ' I For 10 Uon heads \ and S cent scamp we 1 wUI mllU n tinned, 4 KK3mC—l ready for hanguig.

Every time you buy a pound package of LION COFFEE you have bought something else, too. Don’t overlook it! You nave bought a certain portion of some article to be selected by you from our new Premium Lists!

the ABOVE ARB ONLY A FEW OP THE UON COFFEE PREMIUMS. Another Ust will ahortijr appear in thi* paper I DM'tnriMltl Tha gtoafiest Hat ot pranriMa* avar oHmdl H Y * ,a *^r 3 ? UON COFFEE by tba wrapper. HtoaaeaMpacfcaa*, with tbaltoa** heat iafrMt. It I* abaolotely pare if the packaga ie unbroken. UON COFFEE is roaated the day tt leave* tbe factory.

THE LEADING INDIANA NEWSPAPER THE NMIS SENTINEL (Established 1823.) Dt)!IJ, StllK® Old M) HUR. THE INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL In lu sever*) editions, continues to occupy the p sitlon it has so long held of The Lead* Ing Indiana Newspaper. It is the oldest and m«>st widely read journal published . in the State. Its rates of subscription are the lowest. THE SENTINEL is a member of the Assocl ated Press and its telegraph columns are the fullest and moat comprehensive of any Indiana papers. Its press reports are supplemented by Special Washington dispatches, covering very fully all matters of Indiana Interest, and-tey reports from Its special correspondents at every county seat In Indiana. The market reports of The Indianapolis Sentinel are complete and accurate. Tlth SENTINEL, pays special attention to Indiana News and covets the ground fully. . >dlsna readers will find more news of in. teiest to them in The Sentinel than in any Culcago, Cincinnati, St. Louis or Louisvi t* newspaper. T ■» NTINKL, although Democratic in lAi'ltics, publishes all the news fully and . irttally and always treat* Its political < < meow with fairness. tewb w.sflßSGfiinion. •© ;me year.,Z. »0 00 b .one year......;..... 8.00 V <-■ v one year .50 Kenaselaer M rket*. ” rats . ~..89t0U4 ~ S7XB 1|..,•*„•. *4.75 to *6 Ou Potato**., 45 Hutter 18 ■oqatcv*.. 0»H Tallow 08

Stylish Belt-Buckle. a <v. Handsomely gold-plated, with Boman finish, and set witb rub y colored jewel in the center. This will be welcomed for “dreMed-up” occasions by the ladies who like to wear different colored sashes. The gold-finish goes well with any of them. Given tor 20 Hao heads and a A-cent stamp, Ladies* Apron. /h rh Made of good /H //I quality lawn, with f<Ai, ZA I alternate revering It jSSmSti 111 and tucks; broad EJ //WMWW l 1 hem at bottom, and O / lIT«A‘ \LJ 18 neatly gathered / 'lrlnii \ at waist; a very I I r VI 1 superior and stylish article. Size, 36x40 Inches. olvenfor2oltoa hemlis fttMt ft 2*-CCHt L ~ J stamp. Fruit Picture. , ifitM inchest Oivaa for •Um heads a nd a 2 cent stamp. 50-Foot Clothes Line. Given tor ffi V Ma< j e closely braided cotton’ threads, strong, and will give the best of satisfaction.

JUNO B E PEERLESS What lady does not hate a feeling of pride and satisfaction when her light ■QSQKQEm and delicious biscuits are I I highly commended by the ULUXljfl partakers of her good tjgUMDfTABTAJ cheer) HoYb eagerly they ask the secret of her success! The answer is, “Juno Baking Po'foder.” Juno, the Queen, June, the Beet, June, the Purest Of All Cream of Tartar Baking Powders. With the Juno Powder you are always sure of success. It is perfectly 'fohotesome, and absolutely pure. Chemists and pure food commissioners tell you so. Grooera Seii Juno, The Poorieaa Weleema>r»wAa— rWeMnrPowaar • , r*mww»*r>.T-r-eww-7 T a lt T-/« containing tha phoaphat** which ear* taektazia white fioar.aad j.. adbeotutely without alum er injurious ingredients-Anti-Trust Baking Powder Co. CHICAGO AND INDIANAPOLIS

Boiy>f Cdored Crayons. S Perl Olton bend* and a 2c. stamp. Fine wax crayons, fifteen different colors, accom. panted with outline pictures for coloring. Each crayon Is wrapped with strongpaper, to prevent breaking. Child’s Drawing Book. A collection gy 1 ..,.i... of nice outline pictures bound - into book form with sheets of tissue paper be- .S'. tween the Ot( leaves. On these S yqtoftagCTJg tissue pages the as^S^ e jraiißMa&. children can trace the picture* beneath, thus affording enjoyment, as well as instruction to the hand and eye. These drawing books and the box of crayons go very well together. There are six different kinds, and each drawing book requires 6 Hon beads and a 2-cent stamp. Naval Box Kite. SeeltFlyl ” Thecele- . brated box kite now so 7-/ / A^Sb / '' long and come* safely folded, but can quickly be spread to \ fly. Every \ American boy ,X. persons also are interested Hailed free tor 40 Hon bead* cut free* Um Goffe* wrapper* and a 2-CMt stamp.

IMPORT ANT NOTICE, 1 When writinr tor premiun* read yaw letter la the aanre iav*l*p* ar padcage with the Hoa head*. H uwre than IS Hm head* are read, yon can WfOLSOH SPtOE 00., TotedO;, Ohto.

Ladies* Scissors. Length, five inches, suitable for cutting, 1 trimming and general household use. , Given tor 12 Hon head* and a 2c. stamp. Given for 38 lion head* and a 2-cent •tamp. A first-class razor, made of best English steel, and extra hollow-ground. I Rubber Dressing Comb. For iOlion heads and a 2-cent stamp, length, 7 inches, full size and weight. Made of genuine India rubber, finely finished. Appropriate for a ladies' dressing -case or for use in the household. Game “India.” Similar to "Parcbesi,” which has been played in eastern countries since z 33 before the daw nos bisu>ry. The illustration shows plan of the game, with usual counters, dice g| and dice-cu|« ac|H> company Ing it. A game which people never tire of playing. Given tor 20um teftftdft ftnd • 2»cciit stamp.

Remarkable Cure of Rheumatism.

Kenna, Jackson Co.. W. Vn. About three years ago my wife had an attack of rheumatism which confined her to her bed for over a montji and rendered her unable to walk a step without assistanca, her limbs being swollen to double their normal size. Mr. S. Maddox insisted on my using Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. I purchased a fiftycent bottle and used it according to the directions and the next morning she walked to breakfast without assistance in any manner and she has not had a similar attack since.-—A B. Parsons. For sale by Hunt Bros. Druggists.

FARM LOANS.

Farm Loans at 5 per cent, interest ;commission 1 to 2 per cent, according to amount of loan and security. No need to pay 3 to 5 percent, commission. W. B. Austin, Rensselaer, Ind.

Spreads Like Wildfire.

Where things are "‘the best” they become the “best selling.” Abraham Hare, a leading druggist of Belleville, 0., writes: “Electric Bitters are the best selling bitters have handled in 20 years. You know why? Most diseases begin in disorders of stomach, liver, kidney*, bowels, blood and nerves. Electric Bitters tones up the stomach, regulates liver, kidneys, and bowels, purifies the blood, strengthens the nerves, hence cures multitudes of maladies. It builds up the entire system Puts new life and vigor into any weak, sickly, run-down man or woman. Price 50 oenta. Bold by Hunt Bros. Druggists. Morris’ BnglWh Stable PowtJer Sold by A. F. Long.

THE TAR BABY.

Another Version of Uncle Remus' Famous Story. The “Tar Baby” story has. been found, somewhere in Africa, very much as Uncle Remus told the boy. It is published in Folk Lore. The hero is, of course, the rabbit. He eats up a whole field of grain. The owner, determined upon revenge, sets up a log of wood in the shape of a girl. He puts clothes and beads upon it, in order the more effectually to deceive the rabbit, and then smears the figure with gum. When the' rabbit came in the early morning he saluted her with “Good morning, little girl!” No answer. So he said: “Do you hate your neighbors, then? They salute you, and you say nothing. I will come nearer.” - He came nearer and spoke to her again, but still received no answer. Then he took hold of her, and his hand stuck fast. He said: ‘.‘Let me go,” but could not get away. “Let me go, little girl, there are people coming.” He seized her with the other hand, and that, too, stuck fast. me go; they are coming nearer. I will put my foot on you.” He did so; his foot stuck fast; then the other foot. Then he threatened to bite her, and as this produced no effect he tried to do so, and was caught by the mouth. Then he sat on her and could not get up again. The people now came up and found him a prisoner. They went to fetch the owner of the field, who loosed him from the gum and carried him off to the village. The culprit, however, thought of a way of escape. “You man! don’t kill me, but boil me alive in the pot; I shall boil quickly. If you kill me first I shall not boil quickly; I shall be hard like a stone.” The man listened to his words, and put him into the pot. The people then went off to hoe the fields, leaving the rabbit to boil and a child to watch the pot. The rabbit, of course, slipped out, put the child in his place and retired, to look on. Presently the people all came back and ate up the child, thinking it was the rabbit. Whereupon he appeared, reduced them to shame and confusion and disappeared in the jungle.

A WEED GARDEN.

Many Beautiful Flowers That Are Ordinarily Discarded. It is remarkable how many really beautiful flowers are discarded because ordinarily they are classed as weeds. A woman who had plenty of land and a taste for experimenting made a “weed garden” this year which is a great success. She doesn’t know the names of all the outcasts she has gathered in, but she noticed last year all the wild things that grew and flowered neglected by the wayside, and transplanted those that appealed to her most strongly. “The main reason,” she urges, “that they attract so little notice when growing wild is that they are not massed and arranged as we place cultivated flowers to get the best effect. Now, that is what I have done. A wild flower, or a weed, as it is scornfully termed, that is too fragile to be thought much of will make a delicate, feathery mass which will be vastly admired when planted together by the score or more.” Even such a despised thing as the common ragweed is worthy of admiration if you happen to look at it aright, and it is finely effective as foliage for cut flowers. This weed gardener lias provided for a succession of blossoms from violets and dandelions to golden rod and late fall grasses, and nothing has repaid the gardener’s z efforts with better results than these absolutely free flowers.—Boston Herald.

Statues to Women.

The third statue in the United Kingdom erected to the memory of women other than royalties was unveiled recently at Inverness. It was that of Flora Macdonald, a member of a formerly well-known Inverness family, and the cost has been defrayed by the late Capt. Henderson Macdonald. The first portrait statue of a woman set up In England was that of Sister Dora, the distinguished Black country nurse at Walsall, who is represented in her professional attire, and the second was that of Mrs; Siddons, erected some two year* ago on Paddington Green.

Hint for the Joker.

Remember when telling a joke that ill of your bearers are trying to figure how many times they had heard it before.—Atchison Globe.

Hustle While They Wait

Moat things come to those who hustle while they wait Chicago Dally New*.

A WILD MAN’S STORY.

Indiana Recluse Who b a JUgitiw from Justice. ' The wild man of Marshall county, Ind., has been interviewed. Dr. Gerald B. Harris, Emanuel Musser and Ira Shively have seen and talked with him and learned his story. The strange character has lived the life of a most ultra-recluse near Bourbon for some years, and has kept out of the reach of people as a general thing, though he has often been seen. Hie long exposure and wild solitary life have converted him into a cross between a human and a beast. Hii feeding is on the order of a beast, while his constant and only companion is a dog who seems to share the same life and finds it to his liking. The party surprised him, and guns were aimed at him before he had time to make his customary attack. He seemed sulky, and laid down near hie bonfire and curled up in the sand and ashes. He said he was a fugitive from justice in Germany. When he was young—just after he had married, about 40 years ago—he was accused of killing a man. Though he was guiltless, he ran away, and finally brought his wife and child to this country. The child died, and later the wife died, and he then began a roving life, which is now having its finish. He has been separated from the world so long that he has forgotten English, and only remembers his mother tongue imperfectly. He imagines, evidently, that the German officers are on his trail, and that all who approach do so for the purpose of placing him under arrest. He is now very deaf and has lost almost all of his human instincts. He lives on an island most of the time.—Commercial Tribune.

THE AUTOMOBILE FACE.

Expression Worn by Women Whe Rida in Horseless Carriktes. She was surrounded by a bevy of eager questioning ladies and she enjoyed it. “Yes, it’s delightful,” she said, enthusiastically. “I can’t describe the sensation, but I imagine that it’s very like that of sailing through the air on wings. And it seems so odd to be moving rapidly along without any visible motive power.” “Where do they keep the motor?” “I never thought to inquire or investigate. I just ride for pleasure, you know.” “I should think you’d be interested in the mechanism,” said the plainfaced little woman. “Not a bit. Do you study the machinery of a steamboat or of a locomotive when you travel? Of course not. It is enough for me to know that you go skimming along, dodging hither and thither like a swallow and enjoying a buoyant exhilaration.” “Puts on a good many airs,” said one neighbor to. another as they walked home after the rapidly disappearing automobile. “You’d think that she invented the horseless carriage and owned the only one in use, instead of taking a few rides by special invitation. And did you notice that she’s getting the automobile face?” ‘1 noticed she looked ’ kind of queer.” “Yes, proud and puffed up, as if she were somebody betteFn any other woman. That’s the way they all look.”—Collier’s Weekly.

THE INQUISITIVE TONGUE.

Seem* to Have an Original Will an* Consciousness of It* Own. The curiosity of the tongue doe* not cause the human being so much trouble as the curiosity of the eye. But the tongue, within its limits, ia the most curious of all. Let the dentist make a change in. the mouth; let him remove a tooth, or replace with his admirable artifice one that has long been absent; let him change the formation of a tooth by rounding off a corner or building up a cavity, and see what the tongue will do! It will search out that place, taking careful and minute account of th* change. Then it will linger near the place. If it is called to other duties it comes back as soon as they are discharged and feels the changed place all over again as if it had not explored and rummaged there already. It makes no difference that the** repeated investigations presently cause annoyance to its supposed master, the man; (he tongue in nothing more than in this matter proves t hat it is an unruly member and will not be controlled. It seems io have an original will and consciousness of its own, and nothing will serve it except th* fuIL sst satisfaction of its curiosity. It will wear itself out, perhaps, but it will find out all about the strangw change.—Boston Transcript