Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 July 1893 — Page 3

JTOOVfBSA GOOD DEAL OF GROUND

IT. Fierce Golden

'Medical Discover v.

And when you bear

that it cures so many diseases, perhjps yon think -"its coo good to ba true," But it's only reasonable. As a bloodckfioser, tiesn-bailder, and strength-restorer,

nothing like the "Discovery Is taront to medical science. The tHswwra that it cures coxae from a torpid trer. or from impure blood. For everything of tnis nature, it is the only guaranteed remedy. In Dyspepsia, Biliousness; all Bronchial, Throat and Lung affections; every form of Kcrofula, even Consumption (or Long-scrofula) in its earlier stages, and in the nHMt stubborn Skin and Scalp Diseases if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. ' The worse your Catar rh, the more you need Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Its proprietors offer $500 cash for a case of Catarrh in tbo Head which they cannot cure.

R.KILMECR'S

BDSIESSTRIALS, And Divine Consolation tor Financial. Ruin.

mm liver & ym

Gall

Ten GrBwely pat la urine, pain in urethra.

rtatte,panui the back and

of water with pressure.

Disease iaohhty urine. Svxtmp-Root

oipe, sudden,

If

TnbecasnV

cures urinary trc fbjkwtarf&Riney difficulties.

LiveivRoiajpIiJlnt,

Torpid or

- TI1V V - I

lafhuoma

frequent

foul breath, HHous-

poor digestion, gout.

ladder,

ftrftatioa, tucerationdribbUng, , ms& bksdnV mucus or pus.

Kenufjt ypt not bowuuw,

$1.00 Sue,

GotNdtetton free.

K , N. Y.

At DrMTiMtM SQawttM

-nww c'iiiiiitiiatin

!to-e- C

inCtPiEHT PARALYSIS, HElJrr DISEASE, DYSPEPSIA, ABD CONSTANT HEADACHE. DCDUCKD BIT JJL (SRIPPEU COMPLETELY CURED BY LIVtlRA.

Co.

uLast

Dxab Sixs$-

winter I had la Griff in Its went form, leaving me in a terrthleesaftttlan, my Brain was eeafued, my Heart weisk, and my tegs renvoi to koU meapy and the muscles were so sore that It

'was falafnl to Ue down.

I had eoatlaoa Headache, and everything I

Ma. J. I wtATXR. nte distressed me. I

teaU not werkf sleep, or est, and mv right sWo lu i iimi snsji, Sererat doctors told me I had fsriaiiojiPsfalfsIs, and that I could got no better, i grew aweak that 1 could not Icaro the house. Hearing of fHCnS2,S LIYUBA I got a bottle and It helped mo from the first, I took 4 betths fa all, and am F$XFBCTXT WELL in erery way, and now work all day. I kaow tkat PTTCBSB'S UTVaU otbebmb. Tours truly, John L. Wsayxb. m Qi. Clair St, Clereland, Ohio. 36 UVURA OINTMENT

feV-

Cuxos Seaema, Salt Rheum, Pimples, Ulcers Hon? and all afflictions of the skin. Heals Cnts, Bnrfms, Boras, Scalds, etc. Sold by ail Drugs gistB, or by mail, rrleo Sft Coats. Tn LmraA Krc. Co., Nasixtilkb, Txmt.

i

HIT i s 5PtuiriuFor renovating the entire eysteir

eununaons; au iossons from tn

scrofulous c

no equal

5Wr eiten'taath I had ai eating sore on jnytaugue. I wa treated bv best, local nnvaicinro

bat nttfatnfirt no relief: tfwi nora eradnallv im

woriei 1 ftnally took fe. &. 8., and was entirel cared after using a few bottles."

c a. MTLmosy, Henderson, Tex Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis

eases mailed free. Thx Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga

Indianapolis W OSniESS UNIVERSfT V

Bma1 AStnMoB. Established I860. Whm Block. El.

maarda4 wight, 10,080 former ttadant holding payisCpoiMkHN. widalrlaowii. Oar endonemrat passporlto bf0t itturtions. Oreat railroad, manufacturing agaamiawwi lalaantar. Cawy a rlwg LaraafacalSr. aW trfanaT inatrnctioa toKPrta. Eur paramcata. malar aow. Writ today for Siaaant Daaoriptive CataiaaStadraparfraa. AddnasHECB & OSBORN.

iffs Crian Bain Wllifi CURE CATARRH Price 50 Genta.

m Into each nostril

Warren St. W.Y.

B!zrj8iorj.f Wr8tKefuMv Piuwute Claims. H a Frtocipai Bumtnn U.S. Panaioo Bara. sajralM war, l&adjudkaiiiigclaAaMu attj aii

POUSH III THE WORLD.

IQTCl DECEUEIi

with Pastes, Ifnamds. and Paints which

stain the hands injure the iron , and burn red. The Rising Son Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened wilJ make several boxes of Paste Polish. MS M mm SALE OF.3,000 TOSS.

The Desire for RIchaa Candalde Uut Not All-luiijortant Ir. Xalmncc'a Sermon , Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn, last Sunday. Subject: "Comfort for Business Men." Text: "Speak 3'c comfortably to Jerusalem." He said: What an awful six wcmvS in commercial circles! The crashing of banks from San Francisco to New York and from ocean to ocean.

Some of the best men in the land hare faltered; men, whose hearts are enlisted in every ood work, and whose hands have blessed every &reat charity. The church of God can afford to extend to them her sympathies and plead before heaven with all availing prayer. The schools such men have established, the churches they have built, the asylums and beneficent institutions they have fostered, will be their eulogy long after their banking institutions are forgotten. Yet not only now in the time of financial disaster, but ah through life, our active business people have a struggle, and I think it will be appropriate and useful for me to talk about their trials and try to offer some curative prescriptions. In the first place, I have to remark that a great many of our business men feel ruinous trials and temptations coming to them from small and limited capital in business. It is everywhere understood that ittakes now three or four times as much to do business " well as once Tt did. Once a few hundred dollais weie

turned into goods the merchant

would be his own store-sweeper, his own salesman, his own bookkeeper. He would manage all the affairs himself, and everything would be net profit. Wonderful changes have come. Costly apparatus, extensive advertising, exorbitant store rent, Beavy tation, expensive agencies, are only part of the demands made urxn our commercial men. And

when they have found themselves in such circumstances with small capital they have sometimes been tempted to run against the rocks of moral and financial destruction. The small craft that could have

stood the stream is put out beyond !

the lighthouse on the great sea of speculation. Stocks arc the dice with which he gambled. He bought for a few dollars vast tracks of western lands. Some man at the East living on a fat homestead meets the gambler of fortune and is persuaded to trade off his estate here for lots in a western city with large avenues and costly palaces and lake steamers smoking at the wharves and rail trains coming down with lightning speed from every direction . There it is al 1 on paper ! I would not want to chain honest enterprise, I would not want to block up any of the avenues for honest accumulation that open up for young men. On the contrary, I would like to cheer them on and rejoice when they reach the goal, but when there are such multitudes of men going to ruin for this life and the life that is to come through wrong notions of what are lawful spheres of enterprise it is the duty of the ministers of religion and the friends of all young men to utter a plain, emphatic, unmistakable protest. Again a great many of our business men are tempted to over anxiety and care. You know that nearly all commercial businesses are overdone in tjjis day. Smitten with the love of quick gain, our cities are crowded with men resolved to be rich at all hazards. They do not care how money comes. Our best merchants are thrown into competition with men of more means and less conscience, and if an opportunity for accumulation be neglected one hour some on else picks it up. Men who are living on salaries or by the culture of the soil cannot undetand the wear and tear of body and mind to which our merchants are subjected wheA they do not know but what their livelihood and their business honor are dependent upon the uncertainties of the next hour. Oh, I wish I could to-day rub out some of these lines of care; that I could lift some of the burdens from my heart; that I could give relaxation to some of these worn muscles. It is time for you to begin to take it a little easier. Do your best and trust God for the rest. Do not fret. God manages all the affairs of your life and he manages them for the best. Consider the lilies the7 always have robes. Behold the fowls of the air they always have nests. The merchant comes home from the store. There had been great disaster there. He opened the front door and said, in the midst of his family circle: "I am mined. Everything is gone. I am all ruined." His wife said, "I am left," and the little child threw up its hands and said, "Papa, I am here." The aged grandmother, seated in the room, said, '"hen you have all the promises of God besides, John." And he burst into tears, and said: "God forgive me that I have been so ungrateful. I fijidlhave a great many things left. God forgive me." Again I remark that many of our businss men are tempted to neglect their home duties. A man has more responsibilities than those whicn are discharged by putting competent instructors over

his children and giving them a draw-

ing tn lister and music teacner. lhe

physical culture of the child will not bo attended to unless the father looks to it. He must sometimes lose his dignity. He must unlimber his joints. He must sometimes lead them out to their sports and games. If you want to keep your children away from places of sin, you can only doit by making your home attractive. You may preach Sermons and advocate reforms and denounce wickedness, and yet your children will be captivated by the glittering saloon of sin unless you can make

I your home a brighter place than any other place on eurch to them.

j. sympatnize wun tne work oemg done in many of our cities by which beautiful rooms are set apart by our Young Men's Christian Association, and I pray God to prosper them in all things. , - But I tell you there is something backpf that and before that. We need more happy, consecrated, cheerful Christian homes in America. x .Again, i remark that a great many of our business men are tempted to put the attainment of money above the value of the soul. It is a grand thing to have plenty of money. The more you get of it the better, if it comes honestly and goes usefully. For the lack of it sickness dies without medicine, and hunger finds its coffin in the empty bread tray, and nakedness shivers" for lack of clothes and lire. When I. hear a man in canting tirade against money a Christian man as though it had no possible use on earth and he had no interest in it, I come to almost think that j the hea ven that would be appropriate for him would bean everlasting poor house! Have you ever ciphered out in the rule of loss and gain the sum, "What shall it profit a man if he train the whole world and lose his soul?" However fine your apparel the wings of death will fluter it to rags. But I must have a word with those who, during the present commercial

calamities, have lost heavily or perhaps lost all their estate. If a man lose his property at thirty or forty years of age it is only a sharp discipline generally, by which later he comes to larger success. Itis all folly for a man to sit down in midlife discouraged. The Marshals of Napoleon came to their commander and said: "We have lost the battle, and we are being cut to pieces." Napoleon took his watch from his pocket and said: "It is onlv 2 o'clock in the afternoon. You have lost that battle, but we have time enough to win another. Charge upon the foe!" Though the meridian of life has passed with you, and you have been routed in many a conflict, give not up in discouragement, There are victories yet for you to gain. But sometimes monetary disaster comes to a man when there is something in his age or something in his health or something in his surroundings which makes him know well that he will never get up again. Sons and daughters of God, chil

dren of an eternal and all loving Father, mourn not when your property goes. The woi'ld is yours, and life is yours, and death is yours, and immortality is yours, and thrones of imperial grandeur are yours, and rivers of gladness are yours, and shining mansions are yours, and God is yours. The eternal God has sworn it, and every time you doubt it you charge the King of heaven and earth with perjury. Instead of complaining how hard you have it, go home, take up your bible full of promises, get down on your knees before God and thank him for what you have, instead of spending so much time in complaining about what you have not. Some of you remember the shipwreck of the Central America. This noble steamer had, I think, about 500 passengers aboard. Sudd only the storm came, and the surges trampled the decks and swung into the hatches, and there went up a hundred -voiced death shriek. The foam on the jaw of the wave. The pitching of the steamer as though it were leaping a mountain. The dismal flare of the signal rockets. The long cough of the steam pipes. The hiss of the extinguished furnaces. The walking of God on the wave! The steamer went not down without a struggle. As the passengers stationed themselves in rows to bail out the vessel hark to the thump of the buckets as men unused to toil, with blistered hands and strained muscle, tug for their lives. There is a sail seen against the sky. The flash of the distress gun sounded. Its voice is heard not, for it is choked in the louder booming of the sea. A few passengers escape, but the steamer gave one great lurch and was gone! So there are some men who sail on prosperously in life. All's well, aH's well. But at last some financial disaster comes a euroclydon. Down they go to the bottom of this com mercial sea strewn with shattered hulks. But because your property goes, do not let your soul go. Though all else perish, save that. For I have to tell you of a more stupendous shipwreck than that which I have just mentioned. God launched this world 6,000 years ago. It has been going on under freight of mountains and immortals, but one day it will stagger at the cry of fire. The timbers of rock will burn, the mountains flame like masts and the clouds like sails in the judgment hurricane. Then God shall take the passengers off the deck, and from the berths those who have long been asleep in Jesus, and he will set them far beyond the reach of storm and peril. But how many shall go down, that will never be known until it shall be announced one day in heaven, the shipwreck of a ivofld!

Economize

-1

You can

By usinj; Royal Baking Powder to the exclusion of al! other ieaveaing ageiUs. The official analysts report it to be 27 greater in leavening strength than the other powders. It has three times the leavening strength of many of the cheap alum powders. It never fails to make good bread, biscuit and cake, so that there is no flour, eggs or butter spoiled and wasted in heavy, sour and uneatable food. Do dealers attempt, because times ere dull, to work off old stock, or low grade brands of baking powder? Decline to buy them. During

these times all desire to be economical,

IT t

it

ana

Royal is the most Economical Baking Powder.

MUfcAT .Sl.NKS OF &EVAHA. Ueport that They Are K.vplained by f the Discovery of a Subterranean Hivcr. The Walker Lake Bulletin publishes an account of the discovery of a subterranean river in Nevada by John L. Obendorff, a prospector and miner well known in that State. Mr. Obendorff says: "It has long been a mystery what became of our sunken rivers. Now it is probably explained by the discovery of a huge subterranean tunnel which I have named the Monarch, which contains a running stream, how wide I could not tell, as the light was insufficient. "The discovery of this tunnel was purely accidental While working in the bottom of the shaft of the Monarch mine I put in a shot, and in descending to see what execution had been done I found that I had broken through into' what looked like a cave, with a strong current of air coming up from it. On investigation I found tha t t he open in fj continued down on an Lie line. Determined to sec what there was below I put in a cross-timber and attached a rope to it. I went down a considerable distance. In some places the opening was very narrow and at other places four feet wide. In some places it was nearly perpendicular, but generally it was about half pitch. I proceeded down to the end of my rope, put in another cress-timber and so I continued. It took three days hard work before I reached the bottom. ,vWhon I got to the bottom I saw a wonderful thing a large cavern and a river flowinir through it. At

Improving. Le Kain Jaunt. Mile. S. (to riding master) Well, sir, do you think I have made any progress? Riding Master Certainly ; you fall now much, more gracefully than you used to do. Come co the Ketone. As saicly :is any known effect follows a cause, just as surely will disease of the kidneys succeed ".belr inactivity, if that inaction he not promptly letnedicd. Como to the rescue with Hos tetter's Stomach Bitters, which gives a healthful impure to the a. tion of both the kidm ys and the bladder, without exciting them, like ac unmcUKuteU stimulant. Kentiered active bv thi3 genial diuretic and tonic, they perform their functions th roughly aud regularly removing from the system impurities which beget rheumatism, dropsy, gravel, Bright's disease, diabetes and catarrh of the Madder. The contraction of either one of these formidable maladies is the penalty fixacted by nature for indifference to that plain warning sluirzish action of the kidneys. When this exists, not a moment should be lost in the use of the remedy indicated. Boar in mind that the Hittf rs will relievo with equal yremptHude disorders of the stomach, liver, bowels fl nd nervous ; yatem, and cure or pievent malarial etmplaints.

Some people send out first.

their reserve force

Bki:cham. Pii.ls are not a now remedy. They have ben used in Europe for fifty years, and arc well tested anexeeUent.

Syrup

I simply stale tht I am Druggist and Postmaster here and sun therefore m a position to judged I have tried many Cough Syrups but for ten years past have found nothing equaJ to Boschee's German Syrup,

with the most satisfactory results. Every mother should have it J. H. Hobbs, Druggist and Postmaster, Moffat, Texas. We present facts, living facts, of to-day Boscboe'i German Syrup gives strength to the body. Take uo substitute. "What's the name of your new boat?1 tfI named It 'Bridget. after the cook, because it makos such heavy rolls." Sample Ji.ckaffe Mailed Free Address Small Bile Deans, New York. A ballot dancer isn't so disagreeable creature aa one might suspect from th fact Jiat she is always kicking tor .more

pa?.

N. K. Brown's Essence Jamaica Ginger in a perfect pain killer None better. Try it. 85c. This is the season when th mixed drink and the mixed drinker are involved. - To the Mountain and Ocean Beeorte via Penutiylvaola LineThe advantage peeuiarto the PcnnsylYanta Lines make thrr: th: creirable thoroughfares to Bedford Sprinfra. Alteon, Kbenaburg-, or any of the delightful Hummer havens In the cool Allegheny Mountains. By ao other route ean Cresson. the Meal retreat on the crest ot that romantic ie fun tarn range be reached, as the Pennsylvat ia is the only line direct to It, and the only one eaditig past the Pack Saddle and the Allerrippus. around the faznouft Horaa Shoe Curve and alonpr the Bine Juniata, the richest of Amer ca'.i scqbJc gvma. For reaching Atlantic City, ( ape Afay, Ocean Grove, Atbury Park, Com? Branch, Sea Girt. tUberon, Ocean Beach, Berkeley, Newport. NarrarBsett Pier. Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket or any of the numerous watering places that dot the Atlantic seatourd from the Carolina to Maine, then? lines arc particularly desirable. For n trip to tl:i Airondacks. the Catskills and resort: in Northeastern New York, Connecticut, R iode island. Massachusetts, Vermont. New Uam p.Hhirt and Maine, exceptional facilities for a delightful journey are offered passengers via rhis direct route. For. detailed information pleae)? app'.y to your nearest Pen nHylvania Line ticket :ient or address W. F. Brimner, District Passenger Agent, Indtanapoli?. Ind. , . Big Four KooteLou fsvllie Line T?ow Ope Two tbroi:glruMn? 3aily leaven Indianapolis at 2 55 p, id, and 45 a. nr. reaching Ioulsville at?:C0 p. m.. sind -10 a. m ' ' Ticave Touisv il c at 4 a. in., and 8;6p. m. Arrive Indianapolis at 11:45 a, m. and 18:36 Midnight, Sleepers and free ccllp.ing Chair Cars on trains leav'tig udianopjlia at 3,46 a. m., and r.ouisvilleai s. t.S p. m.

TRAVEL VIA THE

"Pay as you come back on.

go" and save enough to

Dobbin's now Porfett Soap retails for fx and is miapproachorl in purity ,QiiaUty, and appearance ly anv 5c soap made. Your grower will got it. Try at once, if you are using 5c soap.

An active Juno out? down a jjiri's !ack

will dive her Uio clearest

earthquake feels like.

idea of what an

cfeoottymi; Sc vai writ Owfo gy.C aS

THE SHORT LINE CG-IUCACe

AND THE

Hrw art' of Ointments far Catarrh that Con tain M?r ur,v.

U9 inr-ury w i I surely U stroy iht se ne of j fulfil ami completely derange the whule t ystem

v.-uen Mitormj, u through tbe mr.coes st sface. Such nrt den tliouM ever be used oxespt on prescription from repuuUe physicians, us the 'inmate they will d is ten-fold to the good jvn can possibly derive from them Hall's Catarrh Cure, m-nut'ctiired by F. J- t henry & (Jo., of Toleeo. O , eoutoit s rio mercury, arid is taken

t v,.i,4- ; . iu ernaijv una t.e:s eirccuy upo-i ,ne ojooa ana first 1 thOUffbt It Wlb U lake, but OU : InuooR WfM , of the syiem. In haying Poaching the Odgc Of the water I j HatTe Catarrh Cure he su e von pet the genuine found that it was a flowing stream, j Vr"ney a a 'u,t madeiaTolel4 ol,ia and by throwing in a piece of lighted ; "W-Soid by finiggr f.ts. price .v per bottle.

paper I found that it had a current of about three miles an hour. UI was on the southeast shore, and

the bank sloped down to the water's;

edge gradually, like the sea beach.! Sick headache relieved by sm am. 3Ue Beans.

Hoggs Well, Lawyer Sharp, what do you think of my plan'.1 Lawyer Sharp nvith an eve t-o business Well, it's foi-

The roof was thirty or forty feet !

As to riding tho bicycle, 1-hn men appear

They increase the appetite, purify the W'holc system audac: un the liver. Hile Beans Smau..

high, the temperature was mild and ; to" be mere bent on it than the girls.

a slight current of air was perceptible, flowing in the name direction as 1 the water. Being without facilities! for further explorations T relumed: to the surface. "The next morning 1 lowered three ; four-foot planks to the bottom of the1

shaft, and supplying myself with . wny Worlds i lunch, rope, candles and matches Ij xhoir ri , ' , i i . i Pennsylvania

aescenaea to tne oottom, wnicn i think is about 600 feet below the sur

face. 1

.Milwaukee, St Pail, Minneapolis, IHiluth Ontai i, De ner, San Francisco, Portland, Seatla, Tacomo, Los Angela Spokane Falls, Helena, AND ALL POINTS IN West and Northwest The only line r i)ni;lng Slid P-allmam Perfected 8ftty Vetibnld Trai ds. The only line running Dining Cars between Indianapolis mi d Chicago. Magnlfl rent Pullman Steeping and P irior car. JVr rate napa time tables, ate. apply to I. I. BALDWIN, D. P. A., No. 3) S, Illinois Si. Indianapolis. Ind. Frank .T. Kked, G. P. A-, Chicago

'Ja'k the .'lippT." who mjops upon victims and uts their back hair off, may sorve to remind t.h barber that such thing! Can bo accomplished noiselessly.

Fair Visitor Sho'lM

Ticket a Ovor the

tijlvanta Short Line.

H is iho shortest route ;inrt an excellent Hue In every way. It furuisnes the best possible

l'mhrl mv iKnk3 tnirMhr accommodftiioiis ior passengers. it nas a IdSneCl UIV pUinkb lOtff.mei Ppmitiit.inn for rol anil tv whioh Uhavond hum.

and made a raft, placed two lighted j tion. findlp; nn it and 1 t hpr irn tn th lt runs throl:tr1' trains into Chicago Union tanaies on u, ana i z nei go xo , 1aQSPnger staljon Via uhand ckoinu, end Of the rope. In this way I ftS- ' within view of nnd only a short distance from rertainpd thre wpw nn falU'in thn.t the World's Fair (.irou i ds. and stops them at ceiitunea mere Aveie no iau in mat njrand Crossing for the express purpose of aidistance, and continued in this man-1 lowing passengers to disembark t that point, npr for nvr t.wn milps Tn th'q di- ' rn;it)lin lnem to reach tne. preat Columbian net ioi over iwn miles, in Tii.s uis- , Kipositlon and thB hotels and boarding houses tatiee I met With no obstacle-, only j adjacent thereto, in a ride of only ten minutes hpvP nnc thirp whw tho tnnnpl n't l)? lrain of Illinois Central Railroad or by nere ana inere wnere inc. tunnel cut (,lectric street car liao-fare by either only fiye through a hard formation there were : cent. rnek nrniptino tn the wati-r ivltro Tickets to Chicago and return, good until Ocruxh& projecting 10 tnc wdiei s eage. ! tober 3Jst are now on salP ilta reduction of but not preventing me from walking twenty-five per cent, at all ticket u rices of the nvm i h om : Hennbylvania hort Mnes. Vonr nearest

; swer ull inquiries for detailed information.

HIG FOL K WDKMl'S FA I K ROUTK. l.aily Kxeurslons to Chteaso414,50 for tU Kound Trip. Tickets ood for ten days. For tickets and sleeping and c'nulr car accommodations call at No. 1 Hast Washington St., id Jackson

lss. Ave. andbnion Stc

I EWIS' 98 I? LYE

I Potrderedaad Fdrfomed

The strongest an4 pureti Ly made. Ur.Uhn thw Ly.ll binr i One powder and packed la can vr: tn r nooTfcble H4, Una coat en ta

are always ready for us. Win mike the best perfumed Hard Soap fa to minute TTithoul boiling. It Is th t for. cleaning wist pipes, dislnfoftlnf sink, clneti, wasting. hot Uea, painty tr?es( etc. ENNAt SALT V9F OO. Qea. a PWla., F.

1,000,000

'oPANT in Minnesota.

iars. They will b 3 sent to you

ACRES OF LAND for sale by IheSanrr Paux

Send for AUpa and Circa

3

wnu. . . e a,

is about 100 feet, and from bank bank is over 200 feet.

to

Natural Kesults, New York Weekly. Jess Jack virtually told that she used powder. Bess Wat did she say? Jess Simply exploded.

.Maud

inace, Ma:

Station

Addieu HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, fit, Paul, Minn

; EVERY PERSON USING A PEN l JJ MONKOK CHEUlC4t ERASER. ' Erases perfectly in two seconds. Guaranteed ; Satisfaction. Samples 85, 50 and 75 cents i postpaid. AO K NTS WANTED, 3.00 to j 45. OO per day easily made, J. R. JOHN i STON. General Agent, P. O. Box 1, Hartford City, Ind.

The Ladies.

I lio pleasant effect and perfect sufotv

nii-t ticket j to resorts in Northern Michi- j nd the Lake Kejflon are now for sale at ;

l.i . I 1! -1 .. I-- . 1

twiicn juimcs may use ine i. aiirorma Milliu 1 reuucea rates via, Pennsylvania I-

laxative Svrui) of Fiis. un:ior all enndi- principalt.cketiitationsouihis

tion. niala's it, thtdrfitvoriie remedv 'IVi j Tne return limit will be valid duri

ret, the trno nnrl i.nino ur Wiib in For detaiU tllcaae apply to

. " 1 :.. i?. . ".VV'-V. . Pennsylvania lAne ticket utrent

. in- name tn nc miioriwa nyrup v,o f ; w b Brunner, District Passenger

ul ii nu ii'UI UJU UKjLunn oi in. iiacKiLCtt. 1 ftnnnn hi ln1

Tourist Tickets to Cool Retreats In the Lake

Regions vin tlio Fenusylvanin Lines,

Toui

Kan ai

nes from

desirable route.

ng the sea-

your nearest

or address

Agent, Indi

anapolis, ind.

, AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE

1 For Indigent I on milunsnrM I He4o i,r Ci'itsttpatton. Um4.

The housewives in Florida have found a new use for oranges. They scrub the floors with them. Go into almost any town in the orange-growing districts and you will see the women usi the luscious fruit ex

actly as our housekeepers use soap. ! They cut the oranges in halves and

rub the flat, exposed pulp on the floor. The acid in oranges doubtless : does the cleaning, but at any rate the boards are as white as snow after ; the applanation. It is thought that1 lemons would be better than oranges, for this puriose, because of the ad-! ditlnpa! aciditv.

Life and Strength Arc given to weak and frail children hi wonderful manner by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Mr.

Kdward ililbert. Lawrence. Mas.. says Our daughter, Ktta, h vd little strength when a baby.

When two and one half

ears old she had fre

quent fainting spoils,

caused by heart trouble.

We gave her Hood s Sar Ktta tiiiOtr.. stiparilla. Her sreneral health improved until rh became health v and rugrged. Wo give her Hood's Sa'saoahlla O.'c is onally i o .v, whenever bho complains of that tn. d feeling iu spring or summer. Hoo's Ptus cure Constipation by restor-iii-. the 'Hristaliic action of the Hlim- ntary ccn).

Cotnnle ifteiu CanJvn I!rtlu

and all dtmirtlers of Um Stomorh,

RIPANS TABULE8

act trentiT ret, nrnmi)tT

. ,7 r ,

Pcrfeet

digestion f ollovm their ufo I May bo obtolnrd br

b AppllrttttoN to nearest drnniBA

v j

hubbaro Desilner&EhlraeK WOOD. 5!1C AND 11 4I,FTONE CC1S

DM'6.0''

tnoulb. Harm

O..W. K SNVDKH, M- Mail Dent.

0

NU, 3093 INORUB

n

&t3

U aa

Pwo'ii licmedy fo Onw.rrn n tat ISest. ieai to Vs9, nd Chept.

6o Id by druggisis or sent by null,