Offer to One Person In Each Family Enclose 10c In stamps or coin, to ■*ay coot of pacldng and mailing, and will send yon a regular 23c bottle of I.inonine to try. Write name and number distinctly and address, "•Jerr Chemical Co., Danbury, Conn. ' LINONINE Warms and Enriches the Blood and drives out colds and inflam mation by that method. We often hear people say that Linonine cured their cold so quickly that they were astonished. It was done so easily and so thoroughly that they could hardly realize their improved condition and their freedom from the customary bad after effects of some remedies. Linonine is effective in all cases of coughs, colds, run-down con ditions and kindred ailments, both adults and children, because it re moves the cause. The weakened and distressed tissues are' bathed in new, warm vitality-bringing blood disease is overcome by the health Linonine brings to the user It is a wonderfully ef fective remedy for throat and lung complaints. All druggists or by mail—2sc. 50c, sl. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have fay! Dr. Edward*, a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treat ed scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his paUents a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredi ents mixed with olive oil. naming them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which causo a 5 normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter that one's system collects. If you have a pale face, sailow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches. a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts. Inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleas ing results. Thousands of women as well as men, take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets now and then Just to keep In the pink of condition. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the suc cessful substitute for calomel—loc and 25i- per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus, O. OH, THOSE PIMPLES! Get a Clear Skin With Ucanol, the New Antiseptic Cure For Eczema There is no longer need to feel ashamed and embarrassed on account of those unsightly pimples on the face, for the new antiseptic ointment, Ucanol, carried by all good druggists, will soon cure the disfigurement and leave the skin smooth, soft and clear. Most of the worst cases of eczema, salt rheum, and even ulcers are cured by Ucanol, as Its antiseptic qualities kill the poison germs in the diseased skin, and the sores and eruptions soon heal, healthy skin taking the place of the old. The almost infallible power of Uca nol to cure eczema and other skin troubles is shown by the guarantee given with It to refund the money if it does not do all that is claimed. Get 50 cents' worth from H. C. Ken nedy and se all Itching, irritation and soreness disappear and the skin begins to clear up.—Adver tisement. ft . . |j Heals Skin Diseases * >) It Is unnecessary for you to suffer with eczema, ringworm, rashes and similar skin troubles. A little zemo, gotten at any drug store for 26c, or 11.00 for extra large bottle, and prompt ly applied will usually give Instant re lief from Itching' torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quickly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful disappearing liquid and does not smart the most delicate skin. It Is not greasy, is easily applied and costs little. Get It to-day and save all further distress. Zemo, Cleveland. Advertisement. EDOCATtOHAIa School of Commerce out our showing Hf |i are cannot refrain from |||| IIP fl We call them $15.00 Suits and Overcoats because that is , what they are at this store of greater value giving. A fifteen dollar Suit is $15.00 here, as well as twenty and twenty five dollar suits are $20.00 and $25.00 THE „cS^3^h«»™ We do not claim to sell $25.00 Suits for $20.00 or twenty dollar Suits for $15.00 right at the height of the season, and we do not believe others are able to do it anywhere, in the large metro politan cities or smallar towns dispite the many claims to the contrary. I KuppenheimerClolhes are always worth their price 1 Wool Gloves, Lined Mocha and 1 Automobile Gloves. Sweaters, Knit Hoods, Scarfs and Hockey Caps. I Pajamas, Night Shirts and Chil- You'll find everything seasonable 1 dren's Sleeping Garments. I $3.50 to $lO tl—SJbi/jpSH 50c & SI.OO £ 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. , been, such great fishes. For that mat ter, the Book says that God "pre pared' a great fish, which phrase in itself eliminates all difficulties for de vout souls who do not balk at miracles. It seems like a device of the evil one that the real message pf the Jonah story should be obscured by the figure of a whale, which has no business In the picture. Jonah, who was a mature man, a sort of court chaplin in the palace of Jeroboam, king of Israel, was call ed to a foreign mission, to preach repentence to Ninevah. Ho ran away from his duty and took ship for the West. When a storm arose, and the sailors began to consider who was responsible for the wrath of the gods, Johan's manhood reasserted itself, and he offered himself as a sacrifice to the waves. When the storm did not abate, he was thrown overboard) and found refuge for three days, or pnrts of three days, in a cavity—the word does not necessarily mean stom ach—of a great sea rrtonster. He was cast up on the shore that he had lnft. I have visited the shrine near Sldon which the Moslems maintain to mark the very spot where they say Jonah came ashore. This experience of stress taught Jonah his lesson. He went back to Israel, and thence overland to the Tigris and down the river—probably on a kelek, or goatskin raft, which is still the present fashion—until he reached Nlnevah, the then capital of the world. He had been disobedient to his first call, but so 'great is the patience of God, that He often gives men a second chance t< do their duty. When Jonah gave up his pride for obedience, he won a success in Nlnevah that makes a modern "Billy" Sunday revival seem small. What Ails Our Cities ? Like many a pastor of a downtown church, whose prosperous members I leaving, Jonah wanted to run away from a hard Job. There is scarce ly any other test of faith like that of a great city. It represents in our time the convergence of all moral and political and religious problems. The heart-lireaklnK difficulty of Christian i work which envisages a whole city, ■ is known only to those who are in the thick of the tight. Yet it is In I the greatest cities that the greatest . victories must be won for God. All profound students of the city problem perceive that religion is Its one hope of final solution. The mod -1 ern city task is not so easy as Jonah's; his work Is many sided, and ever tends to dissipate him from his primary task of preaching repentance. He has to think in large units, for parochialism Is a primary peril of city churches. Not all Chris tians have learned to weep over the city as their Master did. The more prevalent fashion is to move to the suburbs whea conditions 4frow un comfortable. Still the need abides, and those who dare to remain for the task are confronted with the de mand for new methods of presenting the old Message. Going to the Hard Places The Lesson Committee designates this as a foreign uxuision lesson. Ninevah Is to represent the need and call of the world outside Christen dom. Jonah has been termed the first foreign missionary. Dean Stan ley calls him "the first apostle to the Gentiles." What he was reluctant : to do, our own time has attempted more courageously, as notable meet- i ings this winter of the Laymen's Mis sionary Movement illustrate. We have dared to go up against heathendom ' with a victorious message of God's love. "Woe is me If I preach not the Gospel," has come to many men, ma ture as well as young. Only recently the rector of one of the most fash ionable churches In Philadelphia of fered himself to his mission boards for service in the Philippine Islands. As even Ninevah repented under Jonah's preaching, so also both the CASTORIA for Infantum! Children. Boars the ,/rrs, "T"* Till Kird You Have Always Bought of modern city and heathen lands are succumbing to the gospel message. The story of "Billy" Sunday's work In America, and George Sherwood Ed dy's work In Asia, are worth study ing in connection with the Jonah narrative. Great mass movement* towurd Christianity are undter way in India, especially, but also in Chin* and In Africa. "I may not stay to see the day When the great Saviour shall bear sway. And earth shall glitter In the ray That cometh from above; •But come It fast, or come it alow. 'Twill come at last, I surely know. And heaven and earth shall feel the glow,— And men shall call It Love." 15