rii KtJLeiiwi 'ii -" afc" ;..!&. tm su.-.itiEP... wwseanraw niwhrHiHWBBBSBlipBiBWPBPjpyfTiinBByii iifiieVi aW'TsijknirpTlfl u-7 t - -r " c7w -- ii iir-r "iii in i v r m i) j mjmpB W1 , J-- .immLl NWBW tfjfa i i K v 4 HFE BLEMISH. Talmngo on tho Polly of momborintr Past Sins. Ro- IIow rrctrut ChrUtlnu Continually Vex Uoit liy AiMnjc 1'urilnn fur That 'Which !lo rronilur to Ite member No Moro. This enormous nudience which thronpcil tho tabernnclo nt Brooklyn last Sabbath morning hud fresh evi dence of Dr. Tulmngo's originality. Tho value of a retentive memory every one knew by experience anil had heard extolled from their schooldays up, but they learned from Dr. Talmago's ser mon that tho art of forgetting is worth cultivating, and that thero Is the high est possible example for its exercise. His text was Hob. vlll. 12: "Their sins and their Iniquities will I remember no more." The national flower of tho Egyptians Is the heliotrope, of the Assyrians Is tho water lllv. of tho Hindoos is tho marl- gold, of the Chlneho Is tho chrysanthe mum. We hnvo no national flower, but thero is hardly any flower moro sug gestive to many of us than tho "forget-me-nots." Wo all like to bo remem bered, and one of our misfortunes Is that there nro so many things wo can not remember. . Mnemonics, or tho art of assisting memory, Is un important art. It was first suggested by Slrnonldcs of Cos 500 , years before Christ. Persons who had but little power to recall events, or to put facts and names and dates In proper processions have, through this art, had their memory reinforced to an almost Incredible extent A good memory Is an invaluable possession, lly all means cultivate It I had an aged friend who, detained nil night at a miscrablo depot in waiting for a rail train fast in the snow banks, entertained a group of some ten or llftecn clergymen, likewise detained on their way home from a meeting of presbytery, by, lirst, with a pleco of ehalk, drawing out on the black and sooty walls of tho depot, the character of Walter Scott's "Mannlon," and, then, reciting from memory tho wholo of that poem of r.ome eighty psiges of flno print My old friend through great ago lost his memory, and when I asked him if tho story of the railroad depot was true, he bald: "I do not re member now, but it was just like me." "Let mo see," said he to me, "havo I ever seen you before?" "Yes," I said, "you were my guest last night and 1 was with you an hour ago." What an awful contrast In that man between the greatest memory I ever knew and no memory nt all. Hut right along with this art of recol lection, which I cannot too highly eulogize, is one quite as Important and yet I never heard it applauded. I mean tho art of forgetting. Thero is a splendid faculty in that direction that wo all need to cultivate. Wo might, through that process, bo ten times hap pier and moro useful than wo now are. Wo havo been told that forgetf ulness is a weakness and ought to be avoided by all possiblo means, bo far from a weakness, my text ascribes It to 3od. It Is tho very top or om nipotence that (Jod is able to obliterate a part or ms own memory, n we repent of bin and rightly seek tho Di vine forglvenoss tho record of tho mis behavior Is not only crossed off the books, but God netually lets it pass out of memory. "Their sins and their in iquities will I remember no more." To remember no moro is to forget, and you cannot make anything elso out of it God's power of forgetting Is bo great that if two men appeal to him, and tile one man, after a life all right, gets the sins of his heart pardoned, and tho other man, after a life of abomination, gets pardoned, God remembers no more against ono than against tho other. Tho entlro past of both tho moralist with his imperfections, and tho profli gate, with his debaucheries, is as much obliterated in the ono case as in the other. Forgotten, forever and forever. "Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more." This sublime attribute of forgetful ness on the part of God you and I need, In our finite way, to imitate. You will do well to cast out of your recollection all wrongs done you. During tho course of one's life ho is Buro to be mis represented, to be lied about, to be in jured. There are thoso who kcop these things fresh by frequent rehearsal. If things hnvo appeared in print, they keep them in their scrap book, for they cut these precious paragraphs out of tho nowbpnpers or books and at leisure times look them over, or they havo them tied up in bundles, or thrust In pigeon holes, and they frequently rc galo themselves and their friends by an Inspection of these flings, theso sar casms, these falsehoods, theso cruelties. I havo known gentlemen wlio car ried them in their pocket books, so that they could easily got at theso irri tations, and they put their right hand In tho Inside of the coat pocket over their heart and say: "Look here! Let mo show you something." Scientists catch wasps and horuots and poisonous Insects and transfix them in curiosity bureaus for study, and that is well. But thoso of whom I speak catch tho wasps and tho hornoU and poisonous insects und play with them and put them on themselves and on their friends and see how far tho noxious things can jump and show how deop they can sting. Have no such scrap boolt Keep noth ing in your possession that is disagree able. Tear up tho falsehoods and tho slanders nud tho hypercrltlclsms. Imi tate the tord in my text und forget, actually forgot, sublimely forget Thero is no happiness for you in any other plan or procedure. Another practical thought: When our faults are repented of let them go out of mind If God forgets them, wo havo a right to forget them. Having once repented of our Infelicities and misdemeanors, there is no need of our repenting of them again. Suppose I owe you a largo sum of money, and you are persuaded I am incapacitated to pay, and you give mo acquittal from that obligation. You say: "I cancel that debt All Is right now. Start again." And tho next day I come In nnd say: "You know about that big debt I owed you. I have como in Ut get you to let mo off. I feel so bad nbout it I cannot rest Do let me off." You will reply with a little Impatience: "I did let you off. Don't bother yourself and botlier mo with any moro of that dis cussion." Tho following day I come In und sav: "My dear sir, about that debt 1 can never get over tho fact that I owed you that money. It is something that weighs on my mind llko a millstone. Do forgive mo that debt" This time you clearly loose your pa tlcnco and say: "You are a nuis ance. What do you mean by this reiteration of that affair? I am nl raost sorry I forgave you that debt Do you doubt my veracity, or do you not understand the plain language in which I told you that debt was cancelled?" Well, my friends, there are many Christians guilty of worse folly than that While It Is right that they repent of new sins and recent sins, what Is tho use of bothering yourself and Insulting God by asking him to forgive sins that long a:ro were forgiven? uou has for gotten them. Why do you not forget them? No; you drag the load on with you, nnd 80S times a yenr, if you pray every day, you ask (Sod to recall occur rence which ho has not only forgiven but forgotten. Quit this folly. I do not nsk you less to realize tho turpitude of bin, but I ask you to a higher faith In tho promise of God nnd the full dellveranco of His mercy. Ho docs not glvo a receipt for part payment, or so much received on account, but receipt in full, God having for Christ's hako decreed, "your sins and your iniquities will I remember no more." Xot only forget your pnrdoncd trans gressions, but allow others to forget them. Tho chief stock on hand of many people is to recount in prayer meetings und pulpits what big scoun drels they oneo were. They not only will not forget their forgiven deficits, but they seem to bo determined that the church and tho world shall not for get them. If you want to deulnro that you have been tho chief of sinners and extol tho grace that could save such a wretch as you were, do so, but do not go Into particulars. Do not tell how many times you got drunk, or to what bad places you went, or how ninny free rides you had In the prison van before you were converted. Lump It, brother; glvo it to us in bulk. If you have any scars got in honorablo warfare, show them; but if you havo sears got in Ignoblo warfare, do not display them. I know you will . quote the lliblo reference to the horrlblo pit from which you were digged. Yes, bo thankful for that rescue, but do not mako displays of the mud of that hor rible pit, or splash it over other people. Sometimes I hnvo felt in Christian meet ings discomllttcdnud unlit for Christian service because I had done none of thoso things which seemed to be necessary for Christian usefulness, for I never swore n word, or over got drunk, or went to compromising places, or was guilty of assault and battery, or ever uttered a slanderous word, or over did anyone a hurt, although I knew my heart was sinful enough, nnd I said to myself: "Thero is no use of my trying to do riny good for I never went through thoso de nraved experiences," but nfterwnrd I saw consolation in tho thought that no ono gained any ordination by tho laying on of tho hands of dissoluteness and Infnmy. And though tin ordinary moral life, ending in n Christian life, may not bo as dramatic a story to tell about, let us be grateful to God rather than worry nbout it, if wo havo never plunged into outward abomination. It may bo appropriate in a meeting of re formed drunkards or reformed de bauchees to quote from thoso not re formed how despcrato and how nasty you onco were, but do not drive a scav enger's cart into assemblages of people, tho most of whom havo always been dc ceut and respectable. But I havo been sometimes in great evangelistic meet ings whero people went into particulars about the Bins that they onco committed so much that I felt llko putting my hand on my pocketbook or calling for tho pollco lest theso reformed men might fall from grace and go at their old business of theft or drunkenness or cutthroatry. If your sins havo been forgiven and your llfo purified forget tho waywardness of the past and allow others to forget it But, what I most want in the line of this text to impress upon my hearers und readers is that wo have a sin-forgetting God. Suppose that on the last day called the last day because tho sun will never ngaln riso upon our earth, the earth itself being flung into fiery demolition supposing that on that last day a group of infernnl spirits should somehow get near enough tho gate of heaven and ehallcugo our en trance and say: "How canst Thou, tho just Lord, let thoso souls into the realm of supernal gladness? Why they said a great many things they never ought to havo bald and did a great many things they ought never to havo done. Sin ners nro thoy; sinners all." And sup pose God should deign to answer, Ho might say: "Yes, but did not my only Bon die for their ran som? Did Ho not pay the price? Not ono drop of blood was retained In his arteries, not ono ncrvo of his that was not wrung in tho torture. Ho took in liis own body and soul all tho suffering that thoso sinners deserve. They pleaded that sacrifice. They took tho full pardon that I promised to all who, through my son, earnestly applied for it, and it passed out of my mind that that they were offenders. I forgot all about it 'Their sins and their in iquities do I remember no more.'" A sln-forgettlng Godl That is far beyond and far abovo a sin-pardoning God. How often we hear it said: "I can for give, but I cannot forget" That is equal to saying: "I verbally admit it is ull right, but I will keep tho old grudgo good." Human for giveness is often a flimsy affair. It does not go deep down. It docs not reach far up. It does not fix things up. The contestants may shako hands or, passing each other on tho highway, they may speak tho "Good morning," or tho "Good night," but tho old cor diality never returns. The relation always remain strained. Thero Is some thing in the demeanor ever after that seems to say: "I would not do you harm; Indeed, I wish you well, but that unfortunate affair can never pass out of my mind. There may no hard wonts' pass between them, but until death breaks In tho same coolness remains. Hut God lets our pardoned offenses go Into oblivion. Ho never throws them unto usniraln. Ho feels as kindly to ward us as though we had been spotless nnd positively angelic all nlong. Many yenrs ngo a family, consisting of tho husband nnd wife nnd a llttlo girl of two years, lived far out in n cabin on a western prairie. Tho hus band took n few cuttlo to market Be fore ho started his llttlo child asked him to buy for her a dolt, and he prom ised. Ho could, after tho sale of the cattle, purchaso household necessities and certainly would not forget tho doll ho had promised. In tho village to which ho went ho sold tho cattle nnd obtained tho groceries for his household nnd the doll for his llttlo darling. Ho started homo along the dismal road al nightfall. As ho went along on horse back u thunderstorm broke, and in the most lonely part of the road and in tho heaviest part of tlm storm, hu heard a child cry. Rob bers had been known to' do somo bad work along that road, and it was known that this herdsman had money with him, tho price of tho cattle sold. The herdsman first thought it was u strate gem to havo him halt and bo despoiled of his treasures, but tho child's cry be camo moro keen and rending, and so ho dismounted and felt around in tho dark ness, and ull in vain until ho thought of a hollow that ho remembered near the road where tho child might bo, nnd for that ho started, and surO enough found n little ono fagged out and drenched of the storm and almost dead, llo wrapped It up as well as ho could and mounted his horso andresumed his journey home. Coming in sight of his cabin he saw it all lighted up and supposed his wife1 had kindled ull theso lights so as to guide her husband through the, dark ness. But no. Tho house was furl of excltcmentand tho neighbors were gath ered and stood nround the wlfo of tho house, who was Insenslblo as' from somo great calamity. On inquiry tho returned husband found that tho little child of that cabin was gone. Slio.had wnmlored out to meet her fattier and get tho present ho had promised, nnd' tho child was lost Then tho father unrolled from tho blanket tho child ho had found In tho Holds, and lol it was his own child, and tho lost ono of the pralrlo home, and tho cabin quaked with the bhout over tho lost ono found. How suggestive of tho fact that onco wo wero lost in tho open fields, or among tho mountain crags, God's wan dering children, and Ho found us, dying in the tempest, and wrapped us in the mantle of His lovo and fetched us home, gladness and congratulation bidding us welcome. Tho fact is that tho world does not know God, or tliey would all flock to Him. " I ' Through their own blindness, or the fault of somo rough preaching that has got abroad in the centuries, many men nnd women havo an idea that God Is a tyrant, an oppressor, an autocrat, a Nana Sahib, an Omnipotent Uerod Antlpas. It is a llbol against tho Al mighty; it is slander against, tho heavens; it is a defamation of tin infi nites. I counted in my Bible 201 times tho wonl "mercy," single or com pounded with other words. I counted In my Bible 473 times tho word "love," single or compounded with other words. Then, I got tired counting. So I set open tho wido gate of my text, inviting you all to como into tho mercy and pardon of God; yea, still fiythcr, into the ruins of tho placo whero once was kept tno Knowledge or your ini quities. Tho placo has been torn down and tho records destroyed and you will And tho ruins moro dilapidated and broken and prostrate than the ruins of Melrose or Kenilworth, for from these last ruins you can pick up fragments of a sculptured stone, or you can seo the curve of some broken arch, but after your repentance and your forgiveness you can not And in all tho memory of God a fragment of all your pardoned Bins so largo as a needle's point "Their sins and their iniquities will Ire member no more." And none of that will surprise you if yon will, climb to tho top of a bluff back of Jerusalem (It took us only five or ten minutes to climb it), and seo what went on when tho plateau of limestone was shaken by a paroxysm that sot the rocks, which had been upright, aslant, and on tho trem bling crohsploccs of tho split lumber hung tho quivering form of Film whose life was thrust out by metallic points of cruelty that sickened tho noonday sun till it fainted nnd fell back on tho black lounge of the Judenn midnight Six different kinds of sounds, were heard on that night which wero inter jected into tho daylight of Christ's as sassination: tho neighing of, tho war horses, for somo of tho soldiers wero in tho saddle, was ono sound; tho bang of tho hammers was a second sound; tho jeer of malignnnts was a third sound; tho weeping of friends and coadjutors was a fourth sound; tho splash of blood on tho rocks was u fifth sound; tho groan of the oxplrlng Lord was a sixth sound. And they all commingled into ono sadness. Over a placo in Russia whero wolves were pur suing a load of travelers, and to save them a servant sprang from the sled into tho mouths of tho wild beasts, and was devoured, and, thereby the other lives wero saved, nro Inscribed the words, "Greater lovo hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friend." Many a surgeon in our own time has in tracheotomy with his own lips drawn from tho windpipo of a diphtheritic patient that which cured tho patient and Blew the surgeon, and all have honored tho self-sacrlflce. But nil other scones of sacrifice pale beforo this most illus trious martyr of all time and all eter nity. After that agonizing spectacle In behalf of our fallen raeo nothing about tho bln-forgottlng God is too stupend ous for any faith, and I accept tho promise, and will you not all accept It? "Their sins and their iniquities 'will I remember no more-" RETAIN YOUR SENSES! Could You ir You Woro Oonflnod In tin Asylum? Soma IntatrtttnR- facts from n Prominent Relent Mo Mnn Mho Has Hail a Mott Valuable Experience. (Chicago Journal.) Wo sometimes oo in tho papers a thrill ing account of whero n perfectly Bane poi son has been confined In nn asylum. Think of it reader! How long would you rotaln your senses It you wero coullnbd with a number of lunatics, night nnd dny, nnd . ct think of the pliys'lelnns In churgo of theso patients who nro compelled, dny by day nnd year hy yenr, to llvo among them. What wonderful opportunities thoy have for studying characteristics and vnpnrtcs; what a womlorfiil chnuco for learning tho miseries of llfo and how beat to ovcrcomo them. Wo nro brought to thoso reflections by a conversation lately had with Dr. J. C. Bprny, of 10.1 State Btrcet, Chicago. For nearly ton yoars Doctor Spray was In cborgo of tho Jcttorson, now Dunning, In stitute, nt Dunning, HI. This tremendous Institution contained nbout twclvo hundred patients Intliolnsnno Department, nnd fif teen hundred In tho Infirmary. Among this largo number of persons thero wero n vast number of physical nllmonts. Dr. Spray, speaking nhout It, said: "I traced tho great enuso for most of the mental nnd Indeed physical disorders very carefully, nnd wlillo soma authorities mult a an estimate Hint soveiity.flvo per cent, of tho pcoplo in tho United Slntcs nro n'flltctod with some form of kldnoy disease, I do not think that the rnto Is bo high, taking nil ages Into consideration, Boforo mlddlo llfo t Is less than sovcnty-tlvo per cent hut after mlddlo llfo it Is, 1 should think, fully that percentage." "Tills Is somothlng terrible, Doctor. Fow pcoplo cun certainly bo awsro that so large aporccnt.igo uxlstst" Tho Doctor thought a moment nnd then 'sold: "It is a fact not conorully recognized that whero n person has diseased kidneys nnd tho organs fall to perform their func tions of removing tho wasto und tho Im purities from tho system, it noon produces melancholia. As a result our ns.vlumsaro filled to overflowing, whllo If tho pcoplo would htHWo at tho root of tho mutter nnd soo tli.it their kidneys wero In good order, thero would bo fewor patients In tho asy lums. I havo noticed thnt a largo portion of all pnrrsls cases hnd kldnoy dlfllcultlcs." "Whnt hnvo you found, Doctor, to bo the standard and most roliaulo remedy in such cases I" Dr Spray spoko with groat confidence. Ilonnlds "Having so many casus to treat, I tried various remedies, and after n long and cxhnustlvo trial, finally decided that Wurner's Sufo Curo wan tho best, most ef fective ami most rollublo remedy. 1 found it specially rcllablo In cases of Incipient Drlght's disease It Is certain to stop It, and even In tho advanced conditions It al lays thodtseaso, nnd to my snrpriso nt first cured mauy cases. Uoforo structural chnnges set In, It Is certain to curo, If prop erly administered." "Has your cxpcrlcnco whllo at tho asylum, Doctor, been confirmed in your general practice slnco leaving Itl" "Yes. I have occasion to use the Safe Curo almost dally. Whcnovcrlflnd traces of nlbumon in the urlno of n patient, I pro scribe the Safe Curo, and in nearly every instanco whoro I notice Indications of nerv ous troublos, I analyze the urine, and almost Invarlnbly find that It is caused by somo af fection of tho kidneys. I now havo a po tlontto whom I am giving the Bofo Curo, nnd' find that it is having the desired effect Bomo timo ago a gcntloman camo to me, who hnd boon examluod for llfo Insurance, and traces of albumen wero found. I ad vised tho uso of tho Safo Curo, and ho passed tho examination without difficulty after hnvlng used It." "I understand, then, Doctor, thnt you at tribute a largo porccntaco of tho ills of llfo to somo dlsenso of tho kidneys, and that you havo found tho remedy of which you speak tho most effective- In suoh cases" "Yes. I havo no hesitation In saying that Warner's Safe Curo has my unqualified en dorsement I use It constantly, and would not do so unless I thought it possessed curs tlva qualities." Tho high standing, wido experience and great success of Dr. Bpray make his words exceedingly Impressive. Their sincerity cannot bo questioned, and their truthful ness is absolute Impressed with this fnct, and realizing tho importance of tho same, I have transcribed bis words In full and give them uorewith. That Bottled It. Mrs. Darley I really must have a new gown, Frank. Mr. Darley What? Why, you got a now one only two weeks ago. Mrs. Darley Yes, I know, but tho cook has taken a fancy to that one. N. Y. Truth. How's ThUt We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for any ense of C.uurrh th.it can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. V. J. CiiEScr & Co., Props , Toledo, O. Vo tho undersigned, havo known V. J. Cheney for tho lust IS years, nnd beliovo him perfectly honorablo In nil business transactions nnd financially nblo to carry out any obligations raado by their firm. West & Truax, Wholosalo Druggists, To lodo, O.. Waldlng, Klnnan Murvln, Wholesalo Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Curo U taken internally, acting directly upon tho blood nnd mucous surfaces of tlm system. TrlcoTSc. per bot tle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free. A I.f Itary of Angnlih. The rhcnmntla taint transmitted from parent to child Is Indeed a legacy of an guish, Mm rover, trilling causes, such nt Bitting Li n draught, tho uculoot to speedily clinuua damp clothing; readily develop It Whethor rheumatism hn hereditary or con tracted by exposure. Uostatter's Stomach Hitters Is the surest drpuront for expelling tho virus from the blood und for preventing tho Inter rucrnnchmruts of the dlsenso. Kmmll.v potent Is It in arresting mntnrlnus, bilious und kidney trouble and constipation. Ir you want to enjoy tho sunshine, don't find fault with your shadow. Ham's Horn. A Child Enjoys Tho plrnsnnt flavor, pentlo notion nnd sooth ing clTeet of Bvrnp of Klg, when In need of a laxative, mid If tho fatiier or mother be costive or bilious, tho most gratifying re sults follow Its nun; so that It Is tho host family remedy known and evory family should huvo a bottle. Tun flvo o'clock tea Is mnkes tho butterfly of Field's Washington. tho grub thnt fashion. Kate Ir vou nro troubled with malnria take Brcr-lium's rills. A positive spoclllo, notu. IngllUult, !i" touts u box. In A vims ense of tnlsflt-a young girl hysterics. Lowell Courier. No srr.cino for local okln troubles equals Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 60 cents. "Get off tho earth I" ns to the burn. tho cyolonosnld 69.JiqL.RS. SKSHL jfSK will, I .."! " r ' " ih. h,ia inlnrAthn Iran. and DUfn Pit. . . ti.. ii i.ini 'sun sioto HbllH U Brilliant, Oflor-1 lM,burnliio,anil tho eonwmer pays lot as tl or gtsM pirtsie with wry pnrthaw. Tkoy all Testify To tho EfscscT lib WorM-RsneiMMfl Swift's Specific The eld time ttmst I remedy fWm theOorcla nrimni and flclitl has Utona forth to the antlpodtr. ' aitonUhlos t hoikeDllcal and (confounding tho theories of 1 u-.cwvrno depent Mlely on tba rhrtlclnn'aaktlL Tlicro l no ttood ' taint which lulotsnct immediately eradicate. Tolicns outwardly absorbed or tho result of rtk dliraicn from within all jle4 to this potent but simple remedy. It tu an unruualed tonic, bnlldiuptlio old and feeble, euros all itUeasc nxttiatt front Impuro blood or weakened vitality. Bend tor otrctttUc, tiamlnotuo proof. Books on - Blood nnd Bkla Diseases " matted tree. liruggUU Sell Jt, SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Qa. JhSSSI iWVI vSuMfcvJr 1 Jbi W I lUvt) S vJE&Ki TAKE A STAND At once In that most important department of tho house TUB KITCHEN and purchase the best. consequently tho cheapest, in fact, the acmo of Cooking Stoves 1 th KMt itors dwdiri kMp thru. U put ftCM not, irriU direct ti nuohetutri. EXCELSIOR MANUFACTURIHG CO- T. LOUIS, MO. 59 "German Syrup Tudgb J. B. Him., ofthc Superior Court, Walker county, Georgia, thinks enough of German Syrup to send us voluntarily a strong letter endorsing it. When men of rank and education thus use and recom mend an article, what they say is worth the attention of the public. It is above suspicion. " I have used your German Syrup," he says, "for my Coughs and Colds on the Throat and Lungs. I can recommend it for them as a first-class medicine." Take no substitute. 9 Kennedy's Medical Discovery Takes, hold in this order : Bowels, Liver, Kidneys, Inside Skin, Outside Skin, Drlvlna ercrythlnj betors It thai ousht bo out. You Unow whetlier yow need it or not. Bold by ererr druggtit, sufl msauf aatured fey DONALD KENNIIY, IIOXHURY. MAS. EWIS'98LYE L rOWDKRED AMD FERFUKCB (I'ATr.NTBB) The itroiwtit and rurf I.ye made UnllUootlierI.j,lt being a'tlnopoiflcrand packed In a can nlthrcmorablo lid. the contents sro always ready for uie. Will mnlte tho tut perfumed Hard Hoap In 20 minutes utlhout boll' inn, It la the brtt for cleanalng ato plpca. dlalnfeotlng slnka, closcti, watblnij bottles, nalntj, trccH.ctc. PEriW.SJLTM'r'jjCO. Ucn. AU., S1I,, fa, M-KiHITUUMria.n'r HtloMk Jr9l i'A ClLl fctiu lu.lt YON HEALY. e xonroa ninet, uur ill tn Ihtir tnnlr uMrtM Ciulof u it Bitiil liuuvnimu. val- Ictiul Alia KqmpiuvDip, w n liulubuiu. dtwnUni ttuy uticU lauuca uy iMDai or inia tori, -v fconttrtu Imlrnrtkiu for Aiuutur Suidt, EimuMina Drum orl lunn, ujr Unult MMctM Ull M tuna inn THE ONLY TRIM IRON TONIC i lllnorlfy BXOOB. MfCilStf U(C reitore ktaltk ane) IDNKVfl..ri llo rilur. build appetite remove ttreajrimrtneir power Inoreaiad, bonei. nervea. mne elM. receive n force. 1 SBfTerlnir from complaint oe. I cuuarioiiicirMx.uiinaii.Bna HMMa a biiio. Piiuuny cure, mvkuxflv rose bloom 011 cUeoka,DcauU0ei Complexion aii (tannine rooff sear rswp Hold everywhere. All aennlne ro "Crcirenu" Bond niJ cent atainp for US lBmiuiefc. , Dl. HAUTE MIM0INI 00., It Ltvri, H. Upaf NATIONAL BUIINM4 COLLKOI.. TYPEWWT1II1 ELEIMMY, SMRTMANI. wWrile fer Catalog .ir.Cor.KaftUcasV K.uussGlty,Mv r aasa Taw vans sm im : nWrTHHWHHyiyi 1 CTJWnVn PnsumstloOushion an txiiiiaTifs l XI fXiirfMXillk Diamond Frame. Steel Drop Foil lew, Steel Tfff 1 'MU SWffiCi TublBf.AdluittWeBaHBetilnfttoalTiunnlnfpsrl, IB, Ll VflwEsiwlKl StrtoUy BIOS GRAVE ia JCrar fsrfiogJtsn IX MWiOflMW fees A oasis Is ataae for otr 10ie lUattrate cats.) Lj y JOHN P. UOVELL AIWtOOMMfrMHh'BST0''S3-1. Tnn Roman augur. In tils day, wis prob. ably tho biggest boro In the world.-Tica-yutio. The Only Ono Ever I'rlnted-Cau You. Find Mi Word? Tliorols a S lucti display advertisement In this ptmer, this wcok, which has no two words nllto except one word. Tho sumo Is truo of each now 0110 nppcarln? each wepk, from Tho Dr. Hartcr Medlclno Co. This house places a 'Orescent" em everything thoy mako and pnbllah. Look for It, send tnem tno uaino oi wio ivoru unu moj m return you book, beautiful lithographs or samplos free. Wantei a stand up collar for tho neck of tho woods. TnT tho "A. B. O. Dohomlan Bottled Beer" mode by the American BrojylnB Co. of tit Louis. Pure, goldou, sparkling, nourishing. "Tnis is my death blow." remarked ths Whale, as ho camo up for the lust timo. Brats tho world-ttio Impecunious tramp, Tcxus blf tings, 1 .1 Tna Ham's Uoru la published at Indian spoils, Indiana, at f 1.60 per year. AK apology is a poultloo that doesn't al ways cure. A COOSWBIBBlTAMt tBS itj fOOdS clerk, 1 THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN 3 O --.... r Improved 2- SLICKER m $ Guarantee) L.. toiuitif Water. 7T Proof. js NMatththtiiftriiia' 0 rCjL CO Soft Woolen ty St WatCh Pull Collar. vsssa ii intte aj.TowtR.MrR.uosroN.MAU. iijgtosTSfefo. wwiaiima. V&&S!52. ea-KiMa van rarea QAMEM rmmu onUi kahai Boos asa. BUTs., ClaolanaM.O. anatlwiKdUabld. stfeefwla. . M vtaraexnerleaee. Lawa free. a. w. BKoaaics sow, whUh, . c 1 aetieuu, rtHIUr10 create. rstMS tais rata "O8GOOD" CALES U. S. STANDARDwU Best aa Cheat ) tks Marks. Llvo AGENTS Wanted la tfctsCeaotyw HS800D i THOMPSON, UngkamtM, .T. who have weak inns ir At a- sis, sfcoald ns rieo' Car for Coniamptlon. It sm arH tkaasaa. it ha sot Is Jar- ad on. It l not baa M las. It I the beat eooin trrssw BBT J Bold vorrwfar. S)Be . J A, N. K.-D. I3 WH1TLK TO ABVMTSSCBB ViMiM Mt that yea aw Mm ATWa ta 1 fl it i l twmmm&s, SaaaaaBMi ill 1 m siizpa