Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 July 1894 — Page 3

HEI<P IS OFFERED every nervous, exhausted, woman suffering from “ female complaint ”or weakness. AIL pains, bearing-down sensations, and inflammations' are relieved and cubed by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. . Haydentmen, Pa. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.; Gentlemen —Wc cannot sufficiently thank you for / sM the great amount of ben- / efit my wife received from I iW VM the use of your medicine. I ' PWMy wife had a bad case of \ '' ucorrhea, and she used l 4 f jy Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- \ /fy scription for it. I cannot V.,. it praise it above its value. I have a daughter who as beeii poorly over a year: she is taking the “Favorite. Prescription." (,\ ys- • and is already feeling Lx’t.- „ "“>/ ter, after taking two botMbs. Sweeney, ties. Yours, GEO. W. SWEENEY. PIERCE a "*^ a CORE OR MONEY RETURNED. A jewler in New York has hit upon a novel scheme for attracting- notice to his window. He has put on exhibition and sale a watch valued at S9O, and every day he takes $5 from the price. The . second day it was offered at SBS, the third at SBO. and so on. A card bearing the dates and general shrinking in price is placed beside the watch, The jeweler knows that somebody will want to get the timepiece for $lO, but will also be on pins and needles lest some other fellow steps in before him and buys it for sls. Boston glass-makers have just completed for Joseph Jefferson a stained-glass window for his house mar Marion, Mass., the motif ot which is the flamingo of the Gul; States. It is for a stair, and is fl piece of thickly plated work done in the mosaic style to produce great richness of colon-—— —— 4 When a Woman Has Constant Backache . she cannot walk or stand, her duties are heavy burdens, and she is utterly miserable. The cause is some derangement; of the uterus or womb. Backache. * s t^ie sure J ? symptom. / Ir ~ For years / \ Sarah HolLI“ V J I stein, who lives at 7 Perry St.,’ Lowell, Mass., suffered with falling of the womb. The best doctors failed to relieve her, and as a last resort she purchased six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. Now she is a well woman. The dreadful pain in her back stopped after taking the second bottle. She wishes she had taken* it sooner, and saved both money and years of suffering. It is a. sure remedy for female ills. OR KI IMF P’S S’y'i’P Wo *»•*»’ KIDNEY LIVER tss The Spring Tonic Makes thin, pale, sickly people well and strong. La Grippe Cures the bad after effects of this trying epidemic and restores lost vigor and vitality. Impure Blood Eczema, scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches. General Weakness Constitution all run down, loss of ambition and appetite, nervousness, tired and sleepless. At Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO Size. “Invalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. YW. L. Douclas isthebest. © WpO WFIVt NO SQUEAKING. ” 45. CORDOVAN, FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALE Oi - A FINEGALf&KANGAROI 4 s.sp POLICE. 3 Soles. « ss S?S' EN s *2.VJBoYSSCHOOISHOES. • LADIES- a SEND FOR CATALOGUE W- L.* DOUGLAS , 7*5 BROCKTON, MASS. You can save money by wearing the ® W. L. Douglas $3.00 Shoe. ' Because, wo are tho largest manufacturers of this grade ot shoes la tho world, and guarantee theli value by stamping the napie and price on th. bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middleman’s promts. Our shoes equal custom ■work in style, easy ilttftig and wearing qualities Wo have them sold everywhere it lower prices foi the value given than any other make. Take no sub Otltute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can. lely’s CREAM BALM cures ■EESZSIEfcfI PRICE 50 CENTS, ALL PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and advice as to Patentability < invention. Send lor inventor's Guide or Hov to Gets Patent. Patrick O Fakbkll, Wash ington, D. C. JL I Consumptives and people B| who have weak lungs or Asth- K ma, should use Plso’s Cure for K Consumption. It has enred H thousands, it has not Injur- |H ed one. Kls not bud to taae. By It Is the best cough syrup. KSg Sold everywhere. ttSc. U ; °f M ™ 1

THE ROYAL GARDEN.

The Church an Oasis in a Desert of Sin. Flowers as Types of Human Passions and Desires—Dr. Talmage’s Sermon. Dr. Talmage’s sermon for the press for last Sunday was from the subject, ‘’The Royal Gardens,” the text- being taken from Solomon’s Songyv. 1, “I am dome into my garden.” The world has had many beautiful gardens. Henry IV, at Montpellier, established gardens of bewitching beauty and luxuriance, gathering into them Alpine, Pyrenean and French plants. One of the sweetest Spots on earth was the garden of Shenstone, the poet.' His writings have made but little impression on the world, but his garden, ‘‘The Leasowes,” will be immortal. To the natural advantages of that place was brought the perfection of art. Arbor and terrace and slope and rustic temple and reservoir and urn and fountain here had their crowning. Oak and yew and hazel put forth their richest foliage. There was no life more diligent, no soul more ingenious than that of Shenstone, and all that diligence and gedius was brought to the adornment of that one treasured spot. He gave £3OO for it. He sold it for £17,000. And yet I am to tell you of a richer garden than any I have mentioned. It is the garden spoken of in my text, the garden of the church, which belongs to Christ, for my text says so. He bought it, he planted it. But I have to tell you that Christ’s life and Christ’s death were the outlay of this beautiful garden of the church of which my text speaks. Oh, how many sighs and tears and pangs and agonies! Tell me, ye women who saw Him hang! fell me, ye executioners who lifted Him and let Him down! Tell me, thou sun that didst hid.eyerocks that fell 1 “Christ-loved the church and ?ave Himself for it.” If, then, the garden of the church belongs to Christ, certainly He has a right to svalk in it. Come, then, O blessed lesus, this morning, walk up and iown these aisles and pluck what Fhou wilt of sweetness for Thyself.

That would be a strange garden in ivhich there jvere no flowers. If nowhere else, they will be along the oorders, or at the gateway. The lomeliest taste will dictate somefiling, if it be the old-fashioned hollylock or dahlia or daffodil or coreopsis. but if there be larger means fiien you will find the Mexican cac;us and dark veined arbutelion and □lazing azalea and clustering oleanler. Well, now, Christ comes to Jis garden, and He plants there Mine of the brightest spirits that iver flowered upon the world. Some if them are violets, unconspicuous, jut sweet in Heaven. You have to search for such spirits to find them. You do not see them vfery often perlaps, but you find where they have jeen by the brightening face of the nvalid, and the sprig of geranium an. the stand, and the window curtains keeping out the. glare of the sunlight. There are others planted in Christ’s garden who are always arlent, always radiant, always impresliye —more like the roses of deep hue fiiat we occasionally find called “glints of battle”—the Martin Luthers, st. Pauls, Chrysostoms, Wykliffs, Latimers and Samuel Rutherfords. What m other men is a spark, in fiiem is a conflagration. When they sweat, they sweat great drops of jlood. When they pray, their prayer takes fire. When they preach, it is a Pentecost. When the fight, it is a TherinopylM When they die. it is a martyrdom. In this garden of the church, which Christ has planted, I also find the snowdrops, beautiful but cold looking, seemingly another phase of the winter. I mean those Christians who are precise in their tastes, unimpassioned, pure as snowdrops and is cold. They never shed any tears; they never get excited; they never say anything rashly, they never do anything precipitately. Their pulses never flutter; their nerves never twitch; their indignation never boils aver. They live longer than most people, buttheir life is in a minor key. Snowdrops, always snowdrops. But I have not told you of the most beautiful flower in all this garden spoken of in the. text. If you see a “century plant,”your emotions are started. You say, “Why. this flower has been a hundred years gathering up for one bloom, and it will be a hundred years more before other petals will come out.” But I have to tell you of another plant that was gathering up from all eternity, and that 1,900 years ago put forth its bloom never to wither. It is the passion flower of the cross! Again, the church may be appropriately compared to a garden, because it is a place of select fruits. That would be a strange garden which had in it no berries, no plums, no peaches or apricots. The coarser fruits are planted in the orchard or they are set out on the sunny hillside, but the choicest fruits are kept in the garden. So in the world outside the church Christ has planted a great many beautiful things —patience, charity, generosity,integrity —but he intends the choicest fruits to be in the garden, and if they are not there then shame on the church. Religion is not a mere flowering sentimentally. It is a practical, life-giving, healthful fruit—not posies, but apples. I have not told, you of the better tree in this garden and of the better fruit. It was planted just outside Jerusalem a good while ago. When

that tree was planted it was so splf! and bruised arid barked men said nothing would ever grow upon it, but no sooner bad that tree been planted than it buddedand blossomed and fruited, and the soldiers’ spears were the only clubs that struck down that fruit, and it fell into the lap of the nations, and men began to pick it up and eat it, and they found in it an antidote to all thirst, to all poison, to all sin L to all death, the smallest cluster larger than the famous one of Eshcol, which two men carried On a staff between them. If the one apple in Eden killed the race, this one cluster of mercy shall restore it.

Again, the church in my text is appropriately called a garden because it is thoroughly irrigated. No garden could prosper long without plenty of water. I have seen a garden in the midst of a desert, yet blooming and luxuriant. All around was dearth and barrenness,but there were pipes, aqueducts reaching from this garden up to the mountains,and through those aqueducts the water came streaming down and tossing up into beautiful mountains until every root and leaf and flower was saturated. That is like the church. The church is a garden in the midst of a great desert of sin and suffering. It is well irrigated, for “our eyes are upon the hills, from whence cometh our help.” From the mountains of God’s strength there flow down the rivers of gladness. There is a river the stream whereof shall made glad the city of our God. Preaching the gospel is one of these aqueducts'. The Bible is another. Baptism and the Lord’s supper are aqueducts. Water to slake the thifst, water to restore the faint, water to wash the unclean, water tossed high up in the light of the sun of righteousness, showing us the rainbow around the throne. Oh, was there ever a garden so thoroughly irrigated? Hark, I hear the latch at the gar--den gate and I look to see who is coming. I hear the voice of Christ, “I am come into my garden.” Isay: “Come in, O Jesus; we have been waiting for thee. Walk all through these paths. Look at the powers; look at the fruit. Pluck that which thou wilt for thyself.” Jesus comes into the garden and up to that old man and touches him and says: “Almost home, father. Not many more aches for thee. I will never leave thee. I will never forsake thee. Take courage a little longer and I will soothe thy tottering steps, and I will soothe thy troubles and give thee rest. Courage, old man.” Then Christ goes up another garden path* and he comes to a soul in trouble and says: “Peace; all is well! I have seen thy tears; I have heard thy prayer. The sun shall not smite thee by day, nor the moon by night. He will preserve thy soul. Courage.! O troubled spirit!” Then I sec Jesus going up another garden path, and I seegreatexcitement amongthe leaves, and I hasten up that garden path to sec wha t Jesus is doing there* and. 10, he is breaking off flowers, sharp and clean from the stem, and! Isay. “Stop, Jesus; don’t kill those turns to mq and says: “I have come into my garden to gather lilies, and I mean to take these up to a higher terrace and for the garden around my palace and there I will plant them in better* soil and in better air. They shall put forth brighter leaves and sweeter redolence, and no frost shall touch them forever.” Andi looked up into his face and said: “Well, it is his garden, and he has a right to do what he wiTl~wTtli~Tt7 ThWwiil be done”-—the hardest prayer a man ever made.

He sat down amid those bowers and said.. “I have lost my road to happiness. lam angry and envious and frantic and despise everything around me, just as it becomes a madman to do.” Oh, ye weary souls, come into Christ’s garden to-day and pluck a little-heartsease! Christ is the only rest and the only pardon for a perturbed spirit. Do you not think your chance has almost come? You men and women who have been waiting year after year for some good opportunityin which to accept Christ, but have postponed it five, ten, twenty, thirty years, do you not feel as if now your hour of deliverance and pardon and salvation had come? Oh, man, what grtidge hast thou against thy poor soul that thou wilt not let it be saved? I feel as if salvation must come now to some of your hearts. Some years ago a vessel struck on the rocks. They had only one life boat. In that lifeboat tfie passengers and crew were getting ashore. The vessel had foundered, and was sinking deeper and deeper, and that one boat could not take the passengers very swiftly. A little girl stood on the deck waiting for her turn to get into the boat. The boat came and went —came and went, but her turn did not seem to come. After awhile she could wait no longer, anc she leaped on the taffrail and then sprang into the sea, crying to tin boatman: “Save me next! Save me next!” Oh, how many have gone ashore into God’s mercy, and yet yov are clinging to the wreck of sin Others have accepted the pardon oi Christ, but you are in peril. Whj not this morning make a rush foi your immortal rescue, crying until Jesus shall hear you and heaven anc earth ring with the cry: “Save mt next! Save me next! R< «ret. Browning, Klng& Co.’s Monthly. Jarvis (in surprise)—Why, Jen kins, is that you? I heard vou wen killed! Jenkins, (sadly)—No; it was nn brother. Jarvis (thoughtlessly)—Too bad—too bad!

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A Bad Darkey.

Texas Siftings. “Keep away from dat nigger, I tell you,”' said Uncle Rube to his sable daughter. “He’s like wot John de Baptis’ lived on.” “How’s dat?” she asked. “Low cuss an’ wild honey,” was the reply. If the foot of a fly is put under the glass of a good microscope, it may be seen how simple is the contrivance that seems able to defy the laws of gravitation. The foot is made up of two pads, covered with fine, soft hairs, with a pair of curved hooks above them. Behind each pad is a tiny bag filled with clear liquid gum, the hairs also being hollow and filled with the same sticky fluid. As the fly glides rapidly over a smooth sur* face, every step presses out a supply of gum strong enough to give him a sure footing and to sustain him in safety if he halts. So strong is the cement that one of his six feet is quite suSicient to sustain the weight of his whole body. Ifjhe stands still any length of time the gum is apt to dry up and harden, and so securely fasten the fly’s foot as to make a sudden step snap the leg itself. I In 1845 a Scotch farmer sued the customs authorities for a penny and won his case. The costs amounted to S7OO. A girl employed in a down-town office says she has._contracted the licker habit by moistening the big Columbian stamps 4

Fair and Beautiful Lands Across the Sea Give promise to the ocean voyager of health ind pleasure, but there is a broad expanse of waters to be passed that rise mountain high In rough weather and grievously disturb the unactustomed stomach, more particularly if it is I hat of ah invalid. Moreover, the vibrations of the vessel s hull caused by the motion of the screw of a steamer, a change ot water and latitude, and abrupt transitions of temperature, cannot, without a medicinal safeguard, be encountered jwith Impuhity. For sea sickness, . and prejudicial influences of air and water, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is a standard safeguard. Tourists, yachtsmen, mariners, commercialtravelers, and people bound on a sea voyage or inland jaunt, should always be provided with it. Incomparable for malaria, rheumatism, neuralgia, sleeplessness, loss of appetite, sick headache, biliousness and constipation. Some orators arc badly stuck by the time they reach the point of a discourse. What is more fascinating than a complexion tinted like the rarest seashell and purified by the use of Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. TKTeves ’drea'i the light, and so does the man who falls out of a balloon.

“Love Rules the World,”

If you, dear young reader, are struggling' with the most serious problem of life—if you are confronted with any difficult questions of love, courtship or engagement—questions that must be met and that you fear to answer for yourself, or if you wish any private advice or encouraging help in these matters (that you would find embarrassing to ask of your family or friends), then do not hesitate to write me, confidingly, as to a trusted friend, and I will try to show you plainly the way to your heart’s happiness; this js my profession. Inclose a 2-cent stamp and 1 will mail you my pamphlet of important suggestions. Sincerely yours, Reginald St. J. Bellwood, Box 429, Van Wert, Ohio. In the stutterer’s lexicon there is no such animal as a coon: he generally makes a co-coon of him. Shiloh’s Consumptive Cure is sold on a guar antee. It cures Incipient Consumption. It is the best Cough Cure. 25 cents, 50 cents and 8.00

BIG FOUR ROUTE,

To International Convention Y. P. S. C. E. at Cleveland, 0.. July 11 to 16. The Big Four is the Official Route from Indiana and Illinois. Special train will leave Indianapolis. Wednesday. July llth, at Ila. m.,and run through to Cleveland, reaching there at 7 p. m.. making 'entire trip by daylight. Hate from Indianapolis 88.25 for the round trip. Tickets will be sold :for the above special and all regular trains of July 9th. loth and I It.’’. good to return until July 31st. A further exten.ion to September 16th may be secured by depositing tickets with joint rigent at Cleveland. For further particulars call on L. J. Kirkpatrick. Kokomo, Harriet J. ’ Wishard and C. J. Buchanan. Indianapolis: alfso Big Four Ticket Offices, No. lE. Washington st. 36 Jackson Place, and Union Station, Indianapolis. H. M. Bronson, A. G. P. A.

It Is Not What We Say But what Hood’s Sarsaparilla does that tells the story. The great volume of evidence in the form of unpurchased, voluntary testimonials prove beyond doubt that Hood’s Baraa - I Parilla Be Sure to Get r’ures Hood s. W

iHood’s Pills cure habitual constipation, I.N.U S 7—04 INDFL3 Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balm Justly celebrated as the Peerless Liver and Kidney Medicine of America.

We will give SIOO reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cored with Hall’s Catarrh Cnre. Taken Internally. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. Talk is cheap. If you don’t believe it see how much of it you can get for the price of a shave.

BIG FOUR OFFICIAL ROUTE.

From Central and Southern Indiana to the International B. Y. P. U., Toronto. Canada, July 19 to 22. One fare for the round trip has been authorized for this occasion, tickets to be sold July 17th. 18th and 19th, good returning July ,31st, with further extension until September | Jsth if deposited with proper agent at Toronto, i The Big Four will have special sleepers leaving | Indianapolis on Southwestern Limited, 3:15 p. i m. Tuesday July 7th. and run through to Ni- : atnya Falls without change. Passengers can stop at Niagara Falls during the day and reach " oronto in the evening, or they can get breakfast at the Falls and reach Toronto about noon by steamer from Lewiston. For further particulars call on Big Four Agents, No. 1 E. Washington st.. 36 Jackson Place, and Union Station, Indianapolis, or-any agent on the line. H. M. Bronson, A. G. P. A.

Low Rates to the Seashore via Pennsylvania Lines.

On July 7th, Bth and 9th. low rate excursion tickets to Asbury Park will be sold via Pennsylvania Short Lines, account National Educational Association Meeting. Asbury Park is adjacent to Ocean Grove. Long Branch, Atlantic City, Cape May, and other ■ delightful resorts on the New Jersey Coast. Excursion tickets good going and returning via Baltimore and Washington, with stop-over privileges. Return trip ample for side trips. For details apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line Ticket Agent.

Big Four Route

To National Educational Association Meeting at Asbury Park, N. J.. July 6th to.lth. Ti ckets good going via Lake Shore and New York Central Rys., and returning via Chesapeake &Ohio Ry., giving stop over at Niagara Falls and daylightride down the Hudson River ongoing trip and stop-over at Washington, D. C., on return trip. 82 for the round trip from Indianapolis, and corresponding rates from other points on Big Four. For tickets and full information call at Big Four Offices, No. 1 E. Washington st., 36 Jackson Place and Union Station. H. M. BRONSON. A. G. P. A.

KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyndent when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with by morer^romptly' adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure, liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c ana $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. FREEf Suppert's FACE BLEACH A pprecUtiDK the fact that of iadiw not l*k* f °° account of price, which is p*-r ixdtle. and U order that all may give It a fair trial, I * Sample*Bottle, safely packed, all ijßl charges prepaid, on receipt of tie. FACE Em BLEACH remove* and curea all /UJffKLx’ BK frecklta, pimple*, moth, blackheads, aallow. Deas, acne, eczema, wrinkle*, or roughne** ot 'XFaL * akin, and beautifies the romp lei ton. Ad«tr*w Mme. A. Ruppert, Dpt. E. 6 E. llth St. N.Y’ Clty ( MfIHLy*VIGOR and vital organs ot animals— Dr. Brown-Serniard's "Jillxer of Life" perfected— SOMETHlNG NEW! HAS ND EQUAL! A positive cure for Jfervo'ut Exhaustion, Right Lotsee, Sexual Weakness. Etc. They restore the lost vital principle. Sena 2c. stamp for a specialist’s genuine recipe and fall directions. Write now, you may not see this again. Address, Dr. Wm. Howard, Logans port, Ind. and Typewrltla* School, Indlonsspolia Bnoineas University. When Block. Elevator. Oldest, largest and best equipped. Individual instruction by expert reporters. Book-ksepiug. Penmanship. English,Office Training, etc., free. Cheap boardins, tuition, essay payments. Positions neeured by our graaUßtes. Beautiful 111 nitrated Catalogue and J’ai*r free. UEEB A OSBORN, Indianapolis. InsL

NUGABA EXCURSION! Thursday, August 2, 1894. "Ltr 1 ..-'---I"'' VIATHK— ■' ■ ■ - 7 Lake Erie & Western Railroad. Qa» Routt." On Thursday August 2. 1894. the LskeUrftr W - Wcstern R. R. will run their popular annual excursion to Cleveland. Chautauqua Lake. Buffalo and Niagara Falls at following very low rates, viz.: Peoria . . . . 17 50. Fort Wayne . . 500 Bloomington . 7CO Muncie .... 500 Lafayette ... 600 Connersville . , 500 Michigan City . .600 | Rushville . , . SXU Indianapolis . . 5 00, New Castle . . 500 Tipton . . .. 500 Cambridge City . 500 Lima 400 Fremont ... 400 ’Sandusky. 44 00 With corresponding reductions from intermediate points. In addition to the above, the purchasers of these tickets wllibe 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 41.00; to Thousand Islands 86.00. Tickets for the above side trips can bd had when purchasing Niagara Falls ticket, or at any time on train. Besides the above privileges, with that of spending Sunday at the Falls, we will furnish all those who desire a side trip from Brocton Junction to Chatauqua Lake and return FREE OF CHARGE. Tickets of admission to places of special interest at or near Niagara Falls, but outside the reservation. Including toll over the International Bridge to the Canadian side, elevators t& 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 excursloa train will arrive at Niagara Falls 7:00a. m. Friday. August 3,1894, and will leave the Falls returning Sunday morning. August 5, at 6 o’clock, stopping at Cleveland Sunday afternoon, giving an opportunity to visit the magnificent monument of the late President Garfield and many ocher Interesting points. Tickets will be good to return on regular trains leaving the falls Saturday. August 4. for those not desiring to remain over. Tickets will also be good returning on all regular trains up to and including Tuesday. August 7. MMr Secure your tickets, also Chair and Sleeping Car accommodations, early. Those desiring can secure accommodations in these cars while at the Falls. For further information call on any ticket agent Lake Erie & Western!' R. R. or address C. F. DALY. Gen. Pass. Agent. Indianapolis. Ind. Low Rates via. Pennsylvania Lines to Cleveland. Special excursion tickets will be sold vis Pennsylvania Lines for Christian Endeavor meetings as follows: To Cleveland, July 9th, 10th and 11 th. The low rate is open to the public and excursion tickets will be sold to all applicants. T ey will be good returning until July 18th, or return limit may be extended to September 18th. For details apply to nearest Pennsylvania Lines Ticket Agent.

t McELREES - SWINE OF CARDULK J ‘ : For Female Diseases.;; TRAVEL. VIA THE UiS 9 k ■llk a ■ 1118 ■ sßyi? thb SHORT LINE to CHICAGO Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Omaha, Denver, San Francisco, , Portland, Seattle, Tacomo. Los Angeles, Spokane Falls, Helena AND ALL POINTS IN WEST and NORTHWEST. The only line running Solid Pullman Perfected Safety Vestlbuled Trains. The only line running Dining Carl between Indianapolis and Chicago. Magnificent Pullman Sleeping and Parlor Oars, For rates, maps, time tables, ete., apply to I. D. BALDWIN, D. P. A„ Cor. 111. St. and Ky Ave. Indinanapolie, Ind FRANK J. REED. G. P. A., Chicago, IU lYouCanPaint i T a buggy or carriage, and < ' make a good job of it, if 1 k 5 you use j ( | Lowe Brothers’ < J ?Carriage Gloss;; I Paint. ;: 0 Only one coat Is necessary. | I It can be applied by any one. ( > h It dries hard and with a Perfect Gloss. ( > A It requires no varnish for finishing. ) * FOR SALE BY ] * d ALL PAINT DEALERS. P p MANVPACTCKBD BY (I The LOWE BROTHERS CO., Daytoa, 0. 4 BIG FOUR K-M boute Summer Resorts —OF THE—NORTH and EAST. Best line to THE GREAT LAKES, NEW ENGLAND AND THE SEA SHORE, Ask for Tickets via BIC FOUR ROUTE E. O. M Cormick, D. B. Mabtin Passenger Traffic General Passenger an< Manager. llcket Agent. • CINCINNATI, O.