Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 8 September 1893 — Page 3

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a unique mm.

The Alleged Usefulness of Adversity, Kiaa Dttii'i Day Comfort for thm Afflicted. Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn, last Sunday. Subject: "A Bottle of Tears." Text: Psalms Ivi, 8 "Put thou my tears into thy bottle." : The prayer of my text was pressed out of David's soul by innumerable calamities, but it is just as appropriate for the distressed of all ages. Within the past century travelers and antiquarians have explored the ruins of many of the ancient cities, and from the very heart of those buried splendors of other days have "been brought up evidences of customs that long ago vanished from (the world. From among the tombs of those ages have been brought up lachrymatories, or lachrymals, which are vials made of earthenware. It was the custom for the ancients to catch the tears they wept over their dead in a bottle and to place the bottle in the graves of the departed, and we have many specimens of the ancient lachrymatories in our museums. The text intimates that God has an intimate acquaintance and perpetual remembrance of ail our griefs, and a vial, or lachrymatory, or bottle in which he catches and saves our tears, and I bring you the condolence of this Christian sentiment. Whv talk about larrief? Alas, the

world has its pangs, and now while I speak there are thick darknesses of soul that need o be lifted. There are many who are about to break under the assault of temptation, and perchance, if no words appropriate to their case be uttered, they perish. I come on no fool's errand. Put upon your wounds no salve compounded by human quackery; but pressing straight to the mark, I hail you as a vessel amidsea cries to a passing craft, "Ship ahoy!" and invito you cn board a vessel which has faith for a rudder and prayer for sails, and Christ for captain and heaven for an eternal harbor. First, I remark that God keeps perpetually the tears of repentance. Many a man has awakened in the morning so wretched ffom the night's debauch that he has sobbed and wept. Pains in the head, aching in the eyes, sick ' at heart, and unfit to step into the light. He grieves, not about his misdoing, but only about its consequences. God makes no record of such weeping. Of all the million tears that have gushed as the result of such misdemeanor, not one ever got into Godfs bottle. They dried on the fevered cheek, or were washed down by the bloated hand, or fell into the red wine cup as it came again to the lips foaming with still worse intoxication. But when a man is sorry for his past and tries to do better when he mourns his wasted advantages and bemoans his rejection of God's mercy and cries amid the lacerations of an aroused conscience for help out of his terrible predicament then God listens. Again, God keeps a tender remem

brance of all your sickness. How many of you are thoroughly sound in body? Not ore out of ten. I do not exaggerate. The vast majority of the race are constant subjects of atlmants. There is some one form of disease that you are particularly subject to. You have a weak side or back, or are subject to headaches or faintness or lungs easily distressed. It would not take a very strong blow to shiver the golden bowl of life or break the pitcher at the fountain. Many of you have kept on in life shrough sheer force of will. You think no one can understand your distresses. Perhaps you look strong, and it is supposed that you are a hypochondriac. They say you are nervous as if that were nothing! God have mercy upon any man or woman that is nervous. Again, God remembers all the sorrows of poverty. T her? is much want that never comes to inspection. The deacons of the church never see it. The comptrollers of almshouses never report it. It comes not to church, for it has no appropriate apparel. It makes no appeal for help, but chooses rather to suffer than expose its bitterness. Fathers who fail to gain a livelihood, so that they and their children submit to constant privation; sewing women who cannot ply the needle quick enough to earn them shelter and bread. Again, the Lord preserves the remembrance of all paternal anxieties. You see a man from the most infamous surroundings step out into the kingdom of God. He has heard no sermon. He has receiv3d no startling providential warning. What brought him to this new mind? This is the secret: God looked over the bottle in which he gathers the tears of his people, and be i;aw a parent's tear in that bottle which has been for forty years unans wered. He said, 'Go to. now, and let Me answer that tear!" and forth with the wanderer is brought home to (rod. Now, 1 know with many of you this is the chief anxiety. Yot. earnestly wish your children to grow up rightly, but you find it hard work to make them do as you wish You check their temper; You correct their waywardness. In the midnight your pillow is wet with weeping. You have wrestled with God in agony for the salvation o? your children. You ask me if all that anxiety has been ineffectual. I answer, No. God understands how hard you have tried to make that

daughter do right, though she is so very petulant and reckless, and what pains you have bestowed in teitching that son to walk in the path of uprightness, though he has such strong proclivities for dissipation Again, God keeps a perpetual rememembrance of all bereavements. These are the trials that cleave the sou and throw the hearts of men to be crushed in the wine-press. Troubles at the store you may leave at tie store. Misrepresentation and abuse of th6 world you may leave on the street where you found them. The law suit that would swallow your hon?st accumulations may be left in the court room. But bereavements are home troubles, and there is no escape from them. You will see

that vacant chair. Your eye will catch at the suggestive picture. Now, you have done your best to hide your grief. You smile when you do not feel like it. But though you may deceive the world, God knovs. He looks down upon the empty cradle, upon the desolated nursery, upon the stricken home and says: This is the way I thrash wheat; this is the way I scour my jewels! Cast thy burden on my arm. and I will sustain you. All those tears I have gathered into my bottle!" But what is the use of having so many tears in God s lachrymatory? In that great casket or vase why does God preserve all your troubles? Through all the ages of eternity what use of a great collection of tears? I do not know that they will be kept there forever. I do not know but that in some distant age of heaven an angel of God may look into the bottle and find it as empty of tears as the lachrymals of earthenware dug up from the ancient city. Where have the tears gone? What spirit of hell hath been invading God s palace and hath robbed the lachrymatories? None. These were sanctified sorrows, and those tears

were changed into pearls that are now set in the crowns and robes of the ransomed. I walk up to examine this heavenly coronet, gleaming brighter than the sun, and cry, "Prom what river depths of heaven were those gems gathered?" and a thousand voices reply, 4 'These are transmuted tears from God's bottle." I see scepters of light stretched down from the throne of those who on earth were trod on of men, and if every scepter point and inlaid in every ivorv stair of golden throne, and behold an indescribable richness and luster, and cry, "From whence this streaming light these flashing pearls?" and the voices of the elders before the throne, and of the martyrs under the altar, and of the one hundred and forty and four thousand radiant on the glassy sea exclaim, "Transmuted tears from

God's bottle." Let the ages of heaven roll on the story of earth's pomp and pride long ago ended. The Kohinoor diamonds that make kings proud, the precious stones that adorned Persian tiara and flamed in the robes of Babylonian processions forgotten; the Golconda mines charred in the last conflagration; but, firm as the everlasting hills, ard pure as the light that streams from the throne, and bright as the river that flows from the eternal rock, shall gleam, shall sparkle, and shall flame forever those transmuted tears of God s bottle. Meanwhile let the empty lachrymatory of heaven stand forever. Let no hand touch it. Let no wing strike it. Let no collision crack it. Purer than beryl or chrysoprasus. Let it stand on the step of Jehovah's throne and under the arch of the unfading raintow. Passing down the

corridors of the palace, the redeemed of earth shall glance at it and think of all the troubles from which they were delivered, and say. each to each: "That is what we heard of on earth," "That is what the psalmist spoke of." "There once was put our tears." "That is God's bottle." And while standing there inspecting this richest inlaid vase of heaven, the towers of the palace dome strike up this lively chime: iGod hath wiped away ail tears from all faces. Wherefore comfort one another with these words." Looking Forward. We do not need an Edward Bellamy to look backward from the serene heights of 2000 A. D., to tell us that the time is coming when the moneyless wife of a rich man will be unworthy of our civilization and people then will treat as a myth the story of the wife asking for a dollar and being met with: "Why. Mary, what can you want with a dollar don't you have all you need?" In that happy day no woman will confess to another: "My husband is generosity itself he spends everything I wish on the house and tries to give me all the pleasure he can but, oh dear, I never can get any money for myself any little sum for the many things the children and I need without a positive fight," writes Annie R Ramsey in an article on "The Question ef Allowances" in the September Ladies' Home Journal. Nor will be h?ard the answer, as too often now: "Oh, my husband is just the same, but I take it out of the market purse and put it down to Sundries He never knows, or if he does notice and scold I have the things anyhow." Fine training in honor, this! A Sad Home-Coining. New York Weekly. Winks What makes Bilkins so glum today? Jinks He has just returned from a two weeks vacation in the country and everybody has been telling him what delightfully cool weather we've been having lately.

PELEG'S DIAMONDS' Detroit Pre Press. Peleg M. Bivins, taking him all together, was the provokenest man 1 evnr see. Not that Peleg was not honest and Methodist, pious, and all that, but he did have the shiflessest ways and the carclessest habits of anybody I ever came across. He owned a toFable good farm on the edge of town and somehow made a living on it. and thev did say he had money in the bank, but he wasn't thrifty and didn't seem to know how to make the odds and ends useful. If he had an old plow or an old suit of clothes, or a pig that didn't exactly suit him, he never could tell what to do with it, and was sure to give it to some of his poor neighbors, and one time he gave a man an old horse and the man actually sold him for $50. Fifty dollars! and Peleg M. only laughed that lazy laugh of his when he heard of it. Another thing that I didn't like about Peleg M. was that he took a fancy to me. Me! Mary Kent Colliper, one of the best catches in the country, and the way he pestered my daily life out was terrible to contemplate. He kept on coming around two or three times a week, ambling up to the front door from the irate like a pacing colt and asking where Mary was. when Mary was busy in the kitchen or doing her housework and having no time to waste on any man, much less any man like Peieg M. Bivins. But Peleg M. just laughed when I scolded and set around in the way, talking to mother, for she thought Peleg M. was the nicest young man in the whole State. One night Peleg M. came to see me expressly, so he said, and mother went over to a neighbor's. "I'd like to know," says I to him, "I'd like to know, Mr. Bivins, why ycu annov me with vour attentions."

You see I was on my high horse and used high language. ;'I didn't know I annoyed you, Muss Coliiper," said he, chuckling ki nd of mean like. "I thought I only pestered you. That's what you've said all along. M 'You know what I mean," said I, t:and why do you come to see me." "There isn't any girl, so handy, Miss Mary," said he. "Oh," said I, with my nose turned up. 6,If thats the reason I won't be so handy,'' and I got up to leave the room. 4 Are you going to leave me here alone." said he. "There's nobody to leave you with, is there," said I. "Not that I know of. But I'm right good company for myself and I think I'd enjoy a quiet evening. So run along up stairs." "I won't, either," said 1. finding that he hudn't better sense than to stay there, by himself. I didn't say anything more for five minutes, and he didn't. "I like this," he said after a while. ;Like what?" said I. "Like this quiet evening. I didn't think it could be so quiet while 'Ou were around." "Oh. didn't vou, said I.

"Mary. "said heTd like to marry a woman as quiet as you are. I believe I could stand married life in that way.1' "Donst talk to me about marrying," said I. fcI wouldn't marry you if there was a diamond on every hair in your head." ''It wouldn't do you any good if you did." said he, softening his voice till it sounded nicer than I ever heard it before; "because. Mary, you are such a good dispositioned girl that you never would pull any of my hair out, and what good would the diamonds do you?" L, don't know about that," said I, feeling flattered a good deal. "I'm very fond of diamonds and 1 don't ever expect to have one." Peleg M. chuckled a little, and reaching in his pocket he brought out a tiny silver box and handed it to me. "What s it?" said 1. "Look and see," said he. and I opened the box, "Oh. oh " said I, for there was the shiningest, brightest diamonds in a ring I eve r set my eyes on, and it must have cost as much as $40. "What bre you going to do with it?" said I. handling it as if it were a precious baby. "Going to give ittoag'r.'saidhe. "What girl?" said 1. shutting it up with a snap and holding it tight. "A girl that likes me and that I don't pestf.r half to death." said he. "I think you might give it to me." said I, fe sling hurt. "I'd rather have a diamond than anything in the world.' "But Peieg M. Bivins goes with the diamond," said he Then I hid to laugh a little, for T really didn't hate Peleg M. "Well," said I. "I suppose every blessing has it drawbacks, and it's a rare apple that hasn't a speck in it somewhere." Peleg wasn't saucy a bit when he spoke next "Mary," said he, "do you really mean that?" I just nodded and laughed. "Stand up here," he said, grabbing for me, "and let me kiss you." I never would have thought it of myself, bir: would you really believe it, I got right up and Peieg M. kissed me four times and I seemed to like it. for I had that shining ring on my finger and somehow there was a new light filling the room and falling around Peleg M. Half an hour afterward when mother came home jl tried to make Peleg M. k?ep still, but he told her all about it and she actually kissed Peleg M. Bivins.

r Don't Blame the Cook If a baking powder is not uniform in strength, so that the same quantity wii always do the same work, no one can know how to use it, and uniformly good, light food cannot be produced with it. All baking powders except Royal, because improperly compounded and made from inferior materials, lose their strength quickly w hen the can is opened for use. At subsequent bakings there will be noticed a falling off in strength. The food is heavy, and the flour, eggs and butter wasted. It is always the case that the consumer suffers in pocket, if not in health, by accepting any substitute for the Royal Baking Powder. The Royal is the embodiment of all the excellence that it is possible to attain in an absolutely pure powder. It is always strictly reliable. It is not only more economical because of its greater strength, but

will retain its full leavening power, which

other powder will, until used, and make wholesome food.

no

more

66

99

German

Syrup

Mr. Albert Hartley of Hudson, N. C, was taken with Pneuraonia. His brother had just died from it. When he found his doctor could not rally hi tn he took one bottle of German Syrup and came out soutd and well. Mr. S. B. Gardiner, Clerk with Druggist J. E. Barr, Aurora, Texas, prevented a bad attack o pneumonia by taking German Syrup in time. He was in the business and knew the dauger. He used the great remedy Boschee s German Syruj for lung diseases, "Oiilae;5" TO

Clip

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111

VIA THR

HOME-MADE HINTS.

is always top

some

Colfax Standard. The one idoad man

neavv Laziness is the evil genius of people.

A pretended friend is worse than an open enemy. Some people mistake girth measure for manhood. Narrowness and "eussedness" are very closely related. Too many people measure God with the devil's rule. The womanly woman never attempts masculine feats. A newspaper that is run by the public will never succeed. A 'swelled" head doesn't usually have much in it but swelling. If every one's actions were purer the world would seem brighter. It doesn't require very strong eyes to see to the top of some men's ambition. Some people iove their friends as long as they can use them for their own selfish ends.

The True Laxative Principle Of the plants used in manufaeturim? the pleasant remedy. Syrup of Figs, has a permanently beneficial etfeet en the human system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral solutions, usuallv sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Keing well-informed, vou will rcc the true remedy only. Manufactured ny the California V'g Syrup Co.

On the Kleetrie Motor. Judpe. Passenger "What made the ear jolt so violently just now. conductor? Conductor Oh. nothing much. Boy on the truck, I believe. Cakes of tea in India, pieces of silk in China, salt in Abyssinia and eodiish in Ireland have all been used as money.

Win ile

iitl

the War

I W!is taken ill with spinul dLseusc and rheumatism. I went home and was confined to mv bed, unuble to help myself for W inomhB. After year of misery a companion machinist advised roe to take Hood's SarsaparUlu. T pot a bottle and could iJit kly note a chum?.' for the better. After taking

Mr. Wheeler, seven bottles 1 was well and have not since been troubled with m v old complaints." J as. A Whkklkh, uka Division Ht.. Baltimore. Md. Hood's5 Cures Hooo's Rills cure liver ills. jrc. per box.

Ely s Cream Balm Wllili CUKE CATARRH I'rlee 50 Cent. Apply Balm into each noKtri. Kly Bros.. 56 Warren St..N.Y.

1,000,000

Company in Minnesota.

Urs. They will be sent to you

ACRES OF LAND for sale by the Saint Paul & Pru'Tii Rail-road

Scud for Maps and Circu

Address

HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner. St. Paul, Minn,

l8k Ml

TbB Best faterpof Coat w in tho WORLD !

The FISH HK AND SLICKER Is warranted waterproof, nnd will keep you dry In tho hardest storm. The i.rw l"JilMEL 8I.1CK.EK Is a perfect riding coat, and covers the enure saddle. Bewaroof imitations. Don't f.uy a cnt if the " Fish Brand" is not on it. Illustrated Catalogue live. A. J. TOWEU, Boston, Mass.

AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE : For IndtiretltuN. RIlfou&ncsB.

J lliadtuhc, otii limtion, Ji4 : Com n!e lion. OtiVnMvf Breath, ; and u!l disorders of tha titomach.

uvurfinu r) owe is. R! PANS TABULES aet gvntly yet promptly, Perfect f diar :jtJon fallows t Loir use, I Stay ht obtultted 1T

ajtpIliu'Um to iicurcttt drtigTflut, Wiil'H...iM..,Hi.)iH'-M'MiiMHi.',ai.,,iB

s

AND HEAD NOIGTS CURFD (nvii-iMe K:ir CiuM..t ... V rh, .ird.

hiRox. tit B'way, H .V. Will tor Uof proofs ff lE

WANTED

MKN toTUAVFI,. V nav 50

STONE & WK1.L1NUTON, MAUifcON. Wi&

Made Miserable for 1.1 fe. This you may easily be if you fail to remedy the indigestion and uon-asMmilatinn of the food, which are the attendants and originators of nervousness, that ever present ailment which no narcotic, mineral sedative or nervine can ever do more than temporarily relieve. Of t ourse these remedies have no effect upon the organs of digestion and at-similation, except to d'sorder and enfeeble them, thus aggravating the original difficulties. Among the most alarming and dangerous symptoms of chronic nervousness is insomnia, which is the professional term for inability to sleep. "Where this exists there is always a tendency to mental overthrow, paresis and eventual insanity. Begin at the fountain head of all this difficulty with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters and avert evi! consequences- No sooner does the stomach resume its tone, and the system ain in vigor through the aid of this benign tonic. than sleep returns and the nerves grow tranquil. Chills and fever, rheumatism, hiliiousness and constipation yield to the Bitters. People speak of the face of a note when it's really the ligure that interests them. Scurvy and scorbutic affections, pimples, and blotches on the skin are caused by impure blood which Heecham's Pills cure.

It is announced that "Mr. Carlisle sticks toxoid." If Mr. Carlisle can now make tfold stick to him the Treasury reserve will stay. Deafness Omnot JJe Cured. By local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. AVhfn the tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect nearlntf. and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, nnd unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to itn normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever: nine crises out of ten are '.-aused by catarrh, which is nothing iut an inflamed' condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh- that csnnot be cured by Hall's C atarrtt Cure. Send for circulars: free. F. .1. CIIKKKY & Co., Toledo. O 2f75:. Sold by Bruggin, 7 She Yoo know that Rome wits saved by the cackling of u croose. He --Hut that is only a matter of hiss-tory. This May Interest You. Students, Teachers (mule or female). Clergymen and others in need of change of employment, should not fail to write to B. I Johnson fc Co., Richmond. Va. Their great success shows that they have got tho true ideas about making money. They can show you how to employ odd hours proiitably.

Q)l

lOWSVIUf, HV H AlfiAHY I CHICAGO

Tickets good going Sept. 6, 7, S and 0 and good returning until Sept. 16th, inclusive. Ticket offices. 20 South Illinois Street, Union Station and Massachusetts Avenue.

Looking Better

feeling better better in everyway. There's more consolation in that than well people stop to

ponder. To getf

back flesh and spirits is everything.

Scott's Emulsion of pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites is prescribed by leading physicians, everywhere for ailments that are causing rapid loss of flesh and vital strength. Scott's Emu!:ion will do more than to stop a lingering Cough it fortifies the system A6AIHST coughs and colds. Prep&rvd by Scott Bowoe, N. T. All dnifgistiL

R.KI LfS ERS

rswn n it

MO

oo

Te9' KIDNEt LIVER ss KHSi."

tO

The man with feels "rocky."

a stony .-tare generally

TO THE WOKMVS FA I H .

Some of the Advantages of the Host Desirable Koutc. Of the railways centering at the World's Fair City none have better demonstrated ample ability and facilities for handling larjre crowds expeditiously, safely and comfortably than the Pennsylvania Lines. This system of railways has two principal arteries ruuniiifr to Chicago which are tupped by lateral reaching all over Western P nnsylv ania. Ohio and Indiana. The main lines Htretch in direct routes from

Pittsburg. Columbus, ''inoiunati. Louisvilje, ; and the interme diate territory, touching ai all j the principal cities and towns, (nun which

throiigh trains run without, change to tue very Kates of the World's K.iir !u:ing the pest year the track? or" t sys'.em l ave uedcreone extensive improve incnt.s. the train sc. vice has been anument'-d. and tho p-dley ot the Pennsylvania to adopt every plan or de.ice conducing to the welfare of its patrons is conspicuous in these improvements. In addition to being the most direct route to rr.h a from the territory traversed by them, these Ures offer among other things, the following a leantae.s tor a delightful journey to tho World's Fair. More through daily trains to Chicago from this locality run over the Pennsylvania Lines than any other railway. The equipment includes Pullman Vestibule Dining and sleeping Cars and clean and comfortable modern coaches, embodying every comfort for a pleasant trip. The only rock-ballasted roadbed from this vicinity to Chicago is the Pennsylvania, so that there is no annoyance from dut. and the solidity of the tracks, comfortable cars and enjoyable scenes through which the trains pass add to the delights of a ride over It. V Passengers have the privilege of leaving through trains at South Chicago. Grand Crossing or Fngle wood. These are practically orld's Fair stations, as they are almost within the shadow of the gates to the grounds, which can te easily rtached by a ride of a few blocks in street cars. They are almoin the midst of the hotel and boarding house district adjacent to tho World' Pair, so that

passengers who may have engaged accommodations near the grounds can easily reach them, and have their baggage transferred with the b ast delay and discomfort, as baggage will be checked from and to South Chicago, (irand Crossing and Knglewood. The main station of the Pennsylvania Linos in Chicago is the Chicago Union Kaseenger Stition on Canal street, between Adams and Madison

streets, in the midst of the business portion and near to the principal hotels, and passengers may go with their baggage to that station if they do not df sire to leave trains at South Chicago, Orand Crossing or Knglewood. At all stations will bo found courteous employes who will cheerfully furnish any desired information and direct passengers to certain streets or avenues upon which their hotel or boarding house may be located. Visitors will find special information bureaus of these lint s on the KxptMition Grounds, one being locate t on Midway Plaisance. in the Adorns Kxpress Company's Huildlng, and another in the Pennsylvania KuiUoad Company's individual exhibit building near the tf-Jth street entrance. Time cards, maps, and anv information pertaining to trains, can be obtained there. The city ticket office of the Pennsylvania Lines is located at No. a IS South UarU street, corner Jackson. and at this office as well as at the Ciiion Passenger Stition on Cun J street between Adams and Madison streets, time cards and information can be obtained anil -leeping car accommodations secured. Mr.. 11. K. Der ing. Assistant General Ha-enger A"ent. will be found at No. LM8 South Clark1 stei V and an application addressed to htm will be prompt.lv re-ponf!ed to by that gen.tlom in or one of his representatives to aid passcxigera 1 arranging details of a trip.

La Grippe, Cures the bad after effects of this trying fi-

! ieinic and restores lost vigor and vitality. 111

Excessive quantity and high colored mine.

impure mood, Ec2oma, scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches.

General Weakness, Constitution all run down, loss of ambition, and a disinclination to all sorts of labor. GMnrttiitet t'Rt1 contents of One Bottle, If not tMnoAtod, ih-ugglsts will i snind to you the price paid. At Drugget, 50c. Silste, $1.00 Stse "invalids' Ouiri,' to Ktalth" froe- Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bighamton, N. Y.

nnd Typewriting ftthoc, id lattupoll

l'nifritT. When Klock Elf tar. Oldest, ii

r.nd Iwnt equipped. 1 itividual instruction by eiMrt porters. Jtuok-kepitia . Pnniaiidh!p, EngUh,OSf Trnimnff, etc.. frj. Clx ), boarding, tuition, ray payment. IoitlK mcuhi by oar tfrauntti Bountiful !' t rtrQCata!ugueund rper free. II KICK 4b OSUOH V, mlUtnapoUA, ImL

M

L

L. TV 1 O dv

&r LYE Perfumed

(PATENTKI.)

The titroDgest and purest Iy made. UnMUa other Lye. it being j. tine powder and packed Ina can ivith - nobble lid, the coatanU

Mraayj ready for use Will make (he best perfumed Sard Soap in tt mtnutos withou t ?Uiiipv His the bosfc for cleantaf w.iMo pips. di&mfectiuK slake, cio.se . washing bottle, :?alnU trc'OH. ete. ft'-KXNA, MALT M'FG OO. Uui. -gtt-, Phila.. Vifc.

Indianapolis W USINESS UNIVERSITY

lndinat'ollrcrcoiauitrtci & Shorthand. Bryant St ratton. EMut!ihcHi 1S50. When Block, Elevator day nnd jiiuht. 10,(00 fortoer student holding pap

:ng posnmnv muiy unown uvir endorsement

porr ro oext situations. urtat rnwroad. maui lotunnr and commercial center, t'hcfip bourdlng. Largs faced tr. Individual instruction by txfrt. Kuty piiyafcMtftV Enter now. Writn tisduy for Kleutint ecriit: Ctttelogae and Paper free. Add rem KEEB dt OS BORN.

ica

WOO D, 7.1SC AND H'AKFTONK CL'15

ran be made monthly work-

B. R JOHNSON. Richmond, Va.

$ 7 5,00 to S25D.00

inj.: for

!E Sl S 1 0 IM tin it iiul?.1

Successfully Prosecutes Claims. r.atPHnnipal Km miner V S PeneJon Bureau.

3viHiu iast war, IjaitjutUciW.ngtuum, au sir

tNU 3G9&" INOPL&i

Piso's Ifc-mely for Catarrh tho Be t, K;iU,r to re, oi.d Cheapest.

Sold hv Drnrnist or sent by matU

li

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