Crippled by Rheumatism. "Those who have Rheumatism find themslTeg growing steadily worse all the while. One reason of this is that the remedies prescribed bj the doctors contain mercury and potash, which ul- timately intensify the disease by caus ing the Joints to swell and stiffen, E reducing a severe aching of the bones. . S. 8. has been curing .Rheumatism for twenty years even the worst cases which seemed almost incurable., "Capl. O.B. nulies.the popular railroad conductor, of Columbia. S. C, had an 'prt- er.tw with Rlimmuilmn which oonvlaoed bias that tbrr la only one -curator that painful dov vu. Iluy: "lvui -jrraat suflVrer f mm mus culHr Rheumatism for two y.-ara. 1 could pel uo pirminrnt rell.1 from unjr medicine pro. ortld by nj physician. - I took, about a ooznn hot tliou! y,ur 6. S., and now 1 am an well as I eyerwaolnm? Hie. lam sure that your .it-dluine currd inland I would recommend it lj any ona . auBeriug from uny blood disease, Everybody knows that Rheumatism Is a diseased state of the blood, and enly a blood remedy is the only proper treatment, bat a remedy containing pota.ih and mercury only aggravates the trouble. S.Rlnnil .being Purely Vegetable, goes direct to the very cause of the disease and a per manent cure always results. It is the -only blood remedy guaranteed to con tain no pp.ash, mercury or other dan gerous minerals. Books mailed free by Swift Specific Couipary Atluiita, Georgia. SEaPaHy NUSYLVANIiV HAILROAD. cunbury & Lowibtowu Divisiou. In effect June 20, 1898. WEBTABD DI. HT4.T10N. 1 KAITWABD , P W : i.ii ,1k. uj IK -t.ul IM lliil I HI .1.46 l 11. 0 U i: y.M u ,t.r li.trt it .i. n.i'.i an I3ii UK 13 a it : t.oa it :i 1 1 w.' 30 l'l.i. J I l.ll 111.43 ,d jm io : sj J.M W m J CI l'U.i i i.V U.'.l ii I W 1- u4 HI A. h LawlbtowD J. 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I IS : III f.r 1" i ;:i Inn ..!.: . 'I :i ' civl I In'.-: -. .. 11' 1' J..I .: ..i i M...I-H i i;iry dully cv.'"lt fiuudny : ti.d i ' ii i'i..1.i;iiii;i i .nt- Krivund iiniiiidiilifua ;.iv,:ii. Tr 'in' mid tin" Vi:i. . 1'iti- Kim.' a I 'll' .iiiduiKU . mid l:lm:.-:l ii';;.. it ,r l.rn; ;lt:.. , iluvc'l III. i.in.l.iiuu.i :." ( Ul lur w,, -l i,l..l ll . J im .. n 1 II J Itf p 111. ' -IIK'I .. .v.,i: t r.i. . i.- in . I ;i in. iv-'.'k , i p :n i -S'n-itiiuf"ii 4 1 :u c 'n '' iil . .,' j'i , u. Now V A.ii :-.t"'i In ': 4 d 'i .V')W . .1 !'..ill , ti 'ii tor Wllke? .. ji in li.r Sliaui"- ',n'i;'' ' iiirtlnii irnvi'i lit fllll idililit'i , .-.:, n. li uiiitiore 3 II i iu r, . in .1. 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From th penitent Magdalen and the trrttin la the dust Dr. Talmase draws s forcible leaaoo on :! ethics of triu religion. , Text, John vUi, , 'Jesus stooped down and with his finger wrote on the ground." You must Lake your shoes off and put on the especial slippers provldsd at the door If u would enter the Moham medan mosque which stands now where ence stood Herod's temple, the scene of my text ' Solomon's temple had stool Uiere, but Nubuchttdnezsar had thun dered kt down. Zerubbabel's tempi had stood there but that had been proa. tiated. Now we take our places in a temple that Herod built, because he was fond of great architecture, and he wanted the preceding temples to seem Insignificant. Put eight or ten modern cathedrals together, and they would not equal that structure. It covered nineteen acres. There were marble pil lars supporting roofs of cedar and sil ver tables on which stood golden cups, and there were carvings exquisite and Inscriptions resplendent, glittering bal ustrades and ornamented gateways. The building of this temple kept ten thousand workmen busy forty-six years. In that stupendous pile of pomp and magnificence sat Christ and a listening throng tood about him when a wild disturbance took place. A group of men are pulling and pushing along a woman who had committed a crime agalntit society. When they have brought her In front of Christ they ask that he sentence her to death by ston ing. Tht y are a critical, merciless, dis ingenuous crowd. They want to get Christ Into controversy and public rep rehension. If he say, "Let her die," they will charge him with cruelty. If he let her go, they will charge him with being in complicity with wickedness. Whichever way he doee they would howl at him. Then occurs a scene which hte not been sufficiently regarded. He leaves the lounge or bench on which he was sitting and goes down on one knee or birth knees, and with the forefinger ot his right hand he begins to write In the dual on the floor, word after word. Hut they are not to be diverted or hindered. They kept on demundlng that be sottlu this case of transgres sion, until he looked up and told them thHt they might themselves begin the woman's assassination if the complain ant who had never dons anything wrong himself would open the fire. "Go ahead, but be sure that the man who fires the first missile Is Immaculate." Then he resumed writing with his fin ger in the dust of the lloor, word after word. Instead of looking over his shouldiT to Hoe what he had written. the scoundrels skulked away. Finally the whole id.ice Is clear of pursuers, antagonists and plaintifTs, and when Christ hnfl finished his strange chlr.'K- mphy iu the dust he looks up and finds the woman all alnpp. The primer Is the inly one of the court room left, the Judges, the police, the pr wecutlng attorney having clear ed out. Christ Is victor, and he says Id Ihe woman: "Where ore the prosecu -' tors In this case? Arc they all k''' I Then 1 discharge you. (Jo nnd sin ni I mure." I have wondered what Christ 1 wrote oil the ground. For do you re ! all- that that Is the only time he ever i wrote at all? I know that Kuseblus fciys that Christ onc; wrote a letter to At'K.iru.-i, the king of I-Mcssa, but there is no good evidence of uch a corre spond, nee. The wisest being the world ever saw, and the one who had more to say than anyone who ever lived, never writing a book or a chap ter r a paragraph or a word on parch ment! Nothing but the literature of the duHt, and one sweep of a brush or one breath of a wind obliterated it for ever. Among all the rolls of the volumes ef the first library founded at Thebes, there wan not one scroll of Christ Among the 700,000 books of the Alexan drian library, which by the Infamous decr.-e of Caliph Omar were used as fuel to heftt'the 4,000 baths In the city, not one sentence hail Christ penned. Among all the Infinitude of volumes now ntandlng In the libraries of Edin burgh, the iiiitlsh Museum, or Herlln or Vienna, or the learned repositories of all nations, not one word written di rectly by the finger of Christ. All that he ever wrote he wrote In dust, uncer- i tain, shifting dust. My text says he stotiped down and wnrt on the ground. Standing straight up a man might write on me grounj with a stuff, but if with his fingers he would write In the dust he must bend clear over. Aye, he must get at least oil one knvn or he cannot write on the ground. lfc not surprised that he stooped down. II.s whole life was a stooping down. Stooping down from castle to barn. Ktooplng down from celestial homage to monocrutlc Jeer. Krorn residence above the ntars to where a star had lo fall to deatgnate his landing place. From heaven's front door to the world's back gate. From writing In round and silvered letter of constellation and ga laxy on the blue scroll of heaven to writing on the ground In the dust which the ft of the crowd had left In Herod's temple. - If In January you have ever stepped out of a prince's consrvat'ry that had Mexican cactus and magnolias In full bloom Into the outside arr, ten degrees below sero, you may get noma Idea of Christ's change of atmosphere from celestial to terres trial. How many heavens there are I ww not, but there are at least three, for Paul was "caught up Into the third heaven." ay Christ cam dews from the highest kejavsa to the teeontl beartn tad tara from second heaven to first heaven. down swifter than meteors ever fell, down amid stellar splendors tnai aim self eclipsed; down through clouds, through atmospheres, through appall ing space, down to where there wae no lower depth. From being waited on at the banquet of. the skies to the broiling of fish for bis own breakfast on the banks of the lake. From emblaaoned chariots of eternity to the saddle of mule's back. From the homage cheru bic, archangelic, to the paying of tS 1-1 cents of tax to Ceaser. From the death less country to a tomb built to bide human dissolution. The uplifted wave of tlalilce was high, but he had to come down before with his feet he could touch It, and the whirlwind that arose above the billow was higher yet, but he had to come down before with his Hps he could kiss it into quiet. Bethlehem a stooping down, Naxareth a stooping down. Death between two burglars a stooping down. , Tea,' , It that went before, and self abnegations that came after when, on that memo rable day In Herod's temple, he stooped waa in consonance with humiliations down and wrote on the ground. Whether the words he was writing were in Greek or Latin or Hebrew, I cannot say, for he knew all those lan guages, but he Is still stooping down and with his finger writing on the ground. In the winter in letters of crystals, in tJe spring In letters of flow ers, in summer tn golden letters of har vest. In autumn in tetters of fire on fal len leaves. How' It would sweeten up and enrich and emblazon this world could wo see Christ's callgraphy ail over it! This world was not flung out into space thousands of years ago and then left to look out for Itself. ' It Is still under the divine care. If you could see his hand In all the passing seasons, how It would Illumine the world! All verdure and foliage would be allegoric, and again we wou'.d hear him say, as of old, "Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow," and we would not hear In the whistle of a quail or the cawing of a raven or tho roundelay of a brown thrasher without saying, "Behold the fowls of the air. They gather not tn barns, yet your heavenly father feedeth them," and a Dominic hen of the barn yard could not cluck for her brood but we would hear Christ saying, as of old, "How of ten would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings," and through the redolent hedges we would hear Christ saying, "I am the rose of Kharon." We could not dip the sea soning from the salt cellar without thinking of the divine suggestion "Ye are the suit of the earth, but If the salt hath lost its savor it Is fit for nothing but to be cast out and trodden under foot of men." Let us wake from our stupidity and take the whole world as a parable. Then, if, with gun and pack of hounds we start off before dawn and see the morning coming down off the hills to meet us we would cry out with the evangelist, "The dayspring from on hich hath visited us," or, caught In a snow Morm while struggling home, eye brows anil ticard a:id apparel all cov ered with the whirling Ilukn, we ! would cry oui wl:h David, "Wadh me and 1 shall be whiter than snow." In a picture gallery of Europe there Is on the carting an exquisite fresco, but the people huvlng to look straight up, U wearied and dizzied them and bcllt the4r necks alinmrt beyond endurance, so a great looking gliifeH was put near the lloor, and now visitors m-cd only to look easily down into this mirror, and they see the frosoo ut their feet. Anil so, much of the high heaven of God's truth Is reflected in this world as in a mirror, and things that are above are copied by things wound us. What right have we to throw away one of God's Bibles aye, the first Hi ble he ever gave the race? We talk filn.ut the Old T stamen and the New TesUiment, but the oldest testament contains the lessons of the natural world. Some people like the New T tament so well, thev discard the Old Testament. Shall we like the New Tes tament and the Old Testament so well that which was written before Moses as to depreciate the oldest namely, was put afloat on the boat of leaves which was calked with asphaltum--or reject the Genesis that was written ceu turlea before Adam lost a rib and gain ed a wife7 No, no! When Deity stoops down and writes on the ground let us read It I would have no leas appreciation of the Bible on paper that comes out ut the paper milt, but I would urge ap preciation of the Bible in the grass, the Bible In the sand hill, the Bible In the geranium, the Bible in the asphodel, the Bible In the dust, Borne one asked an ancient king whether he had seen the eclipse of the sun. "No," said he. "I have so much to study on earth I have no time to look at heaven." And If our faculties were all awake in the study of (rod we would Dot have time to go much farther than the first grass blade. I have no fear that natural re Hglon will ever contradlut what we call revealed religion. I have no sympathy with tho followers of Aristotle, who, af ter tho telesuope was Invented would not look through It lest It contradict some of the theories of their great master. I shall be glad to put against one lid of the Bible the microscope and against the other lid of the Bible the telescope.' But when Christ stooped down ' and wrote on the ground what did he write? The Pharisees did not stop to examine. The cowards, whlppel of their own consciences, fled pell melt. Nothing will flay a man like an aroused conscience. Dr. Btevens, In his "History of Metho dism," says that when Rev. Benjamin Abbott of olden times was preaching, he exclaimed, "For aught I know there may be a murderer in this house," And a man rose from ttte assemblage and started for the door end bawled 'Jeud, coflfsssfM to r-JTder M M4 . se sn i i pasesafjBBjp euenmltted fifteen years befote. An-' no wonder these Pharisees, reminds of their sins, took to their heels. But what did Christ write on the (round? The Bible does not state, yet as Christ never wrote anything except that once, you cannot blame us for wanting to know what he really did write, but I am certain he wrote noth ing trivial or nothing unimportant, and will you allow me to say that I think I knjw what he wrote on the ground. I Judge from the circumstances. He mlgjt have written other things, but, kn;el:ng there In the temple, surround ed by a pack of hypocrites who were a self appointed constabulary, and hav ing in his presence a persecuted wo man, who evidently was very penitent for her sins, I am sure he wrote two words, both of them graphic and tre mendous and reverberating, and the one word waa "hypocrisy" and the other word was "forglvenness." From the way these Pharisees and scribes vacated the premises and got out Into the fresh air as Christ, with Just one Ironical sentence, unmasked them, I know they were first class hyp ocritea. It was then as it is now. The more faults and inconsistencies people have of their own the more severe and censorious are they about the faults of others. Tes, I think that one word written on the ground that day by the finger of Christ was the awful word hypoc risy. What pretensions to sanctity are the part of those hyocrltlcal Phari sees! u hen the fox begins to pray, look out for your chickens. One of the cruel magnates of o'.len times was go- Ire- to excommunicate one of the mar tyrs, and he began In the usual form. "In the name of God, amen." "Stop!" says the martyr. "Don't iay "In the name of God." Yet how many outrages are practiced under the garb of relig ion and sanctity! When In synod and conferences ministers of the gospel are about to sny something unbrotherly and unkind about a member, they al most always begin by being ostentu-' tloulsy pious, the venom of their as sault corresponding to the heavenly flavor of the prelude. About to devour a reputation, they say grace before the meal. I must not forget to say that as Christ, stooping down, with his finger wrote on the ground. It Is evident that his sympathies, were with this penitent woman and that he has no sympathy with her hypocritical pursuers. Just opposite to that Is the world's habit. Why didn't these unclean Pharisees bring one of their own number to Christ for excoriation and capital punish ment? No, no! They overlook that In a man which they damnate in a wo men, and so the world has had for of fending woman scourges and objurga tion, and for Just one offense she be comes an outcast, while for men whose lives have been sodomlo for twenty years the world swings open Its doors of brilliant welcome and they may si: in high places. Unlike the Christ of my text, the world writes a man's mis demeanor In dust, but chisels a wo man's offense with great capitals upon ineffaceable marble. But while I speak of Christ of the text, his stooping down writing In the dust, do not think I underrate the lit erature of the dust. It is the most tre mendous of all literature. It la the greatest of all libraries.- When Layard exhumed Nineveh, he was only opening the door of Its mighty dust. Tho exca vatlons of Pompeii have only been the unclasping of the lids of a volume of a nation's dust. Oh, this mighty literature of the dust! It Is not so wonderful, after all, thut Christ chose Instead of an Inkstand the ImpreHsioliable sand on the Moor of an ancient temple, and instead of a hard pen put forth his forefinger with the same kind of nerve and muscle and bone and lIcBh as that which makes up our own forefinger, nnd wrote the aw ful doom of hypocrisy nnd full and complete forglveuness for repentant sinners, even the worst. We talk about tho ocean of Christ's mercy. Put four ships upon that ocean and let them sail out In opposite directions for 1,000 years and see it they can find the shore of the ocean of divine mercy. Let them sail to the north and the south and the east and west, and then, after the 1,004 years of voyage, let them come back and they will report, "No shore, no shore to the ocean of God's mercy!" And now I can believe that which I read, how that a mother kept burning a candle in the window every night for ten years, and one 'night very late a poor waif of the street entered. The aged woman said to her, "Sit down by the fire." And the stranger mild, "Why do you keep that light in the window?" The aged woman said: "That is to light my wayward daughter when she returns. Since she went away, ten years ago, my hair has turned white. Folks blame me for jvorrying about her but you see I am her mother, and sometimes half a dosen times a night I open the door and look out Into the darkness and cry 'Llzsle! 'Llxtlo!' But I must not tell you any more about my trouble, for I guess from the way you cry you have trouble enough ot your own. Why, how oold and sick you seemt Oh my I Can it be? Tes, you are Llssle, my own loot child. Thank God that you are home again!" AnJ what a time of rejoicing there was In that house that night. And Christ again stooped down and In the ashes of that hearth, now lighted up, not mere by the great biasing logs than by the Joy of a reunited household, wrote the same liberating words that had been written more than 1,800 years ago In the dust of the Jerusalem temple. Forgiv en nese. A -word broad enough and high enough to let pass through it all the armies of heaven a million abreast on white horses, nostril to nostril, flank to flank. , There are coal mines In, Cuba, but bods of tbem have been developed, and almost all the 4Val used fa the talent If shipped there from America. we Delicate Children They do not complain of anything in particular. They eat enough, but keep thin and pale. They appear fairly well, but have no strength. You cannot say they are really 'J sick, and so you call tbem delicate. - ' Whatcanbedoneforthem? Our answer is the same that the best physicians have been giving for a quarter of a cen- ' tury. Uive them scoirs Endslon mm of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypo- phosphites. It has most re- markabie nourishing power. It gives color to the blood. It brings strength to the mus cles. It adds power to the nerves. It means robust health and vigor. Even deli cate infants rapidly gain in S flesh if given a small amount three or four times each day. ji ;oc and $1.00 ; ill dnicglitt "3 SCOTT & BOW N t, Chtmiiia, Htm York. C Aifflirburg - Garble Works. DGALEK IN R. H- LANGE, MARLE AND SCOTCH GRANITE I UVUUUl ACemetery ' Lotj Enclosures. Old Stones Cleaned and Repaired. Prices as Low as the Lowest. 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The very worst casus or nervous ieuui ty an) alimtli.toly rnrwl by MtFKCTO TABLK1H. lilve prompt relief to Intoinutu falling memory aud tbe waste and drain of vital power. Incur red by ludlseretlouriorojceoHSt.'i of early years. Impart vigor and potency to every iunuuou RemeLPtjer M. L. MILLER. . I keep eonstatitly oo . ,, faoturs to order, all kind8 r,?al Marble and fJ ir. , . utn mm 1 1 ws uBanea and S 5 I DATA nnn t.t tl... i . M ter. iu L.8tator, tn,.. i i. " C"U asi. b)i worK iJ e vb rii KlVOral I . 1 tpectfuliv Kk h nr.tl....: 1 H ' -"imic0; M. L. mJ New War Scars atdyJ Two of the memt popular J liavejuat beet, issued l,Tt f y uoiui-Hnnme, (itdicaUJ aeroesol the U. S. Battle', 3 18 OUfl Of lha fii. oat .....: ' evw written. The music u j Two.Stn" is a line , 'J piece ami will live forever as',l emr of the pvpufnut ,.. i '1 tho world's hiutory. KitUJ COntninirif IS n,n f..n .i 'I dcul ii iMi'isinr. rr t w...i i Address Popular Jltiictl Diaii fan S Is usttl for I'lastorinjr Ht,, 4 1 a. is u nvw aiscven Guaranteed to last J than any other plaster is preferred to Adaman: V... i :....i . ii '.iiwi;uiars can mi or J D.A.KERN MIBDLEEdl alustice of the Pel AND GONVKYAM fVi- Z. STEINiiVGtH F. K. BOWKK. :.f..mJ BOWES & PAWli Attorney8-at-Law ortlci'H In Hunk Uulldliifc. MllK RraMnn thn arstem. Give clicks and lumra to the or old. One boa ronewx. ii noxos at a com t,Ml fmrnnr money rcfliuil- carrleil In vnt pocket. Mold milllvn Iniilnln wrapix-ron bloom to tlie ejri'i of young vital enemy; iilete guaran ihI. Can I everywhere or receiptor price By TUB rmilKKCf 0 CO., Caxtoo Uldg., Chloatfo,lU- For sulo in MiiMleliurjili, l'a., by Mulillt'liiii'K Drug Co., inMt. Pleas ant Mills by I Ifiny llartlinjj;, ami in IVim's Creek by J. W. Sainpsell. WHY? JAS. O. CROUSE, ATTOKKKY AT LAV, All biiHinegs entrust...! i, wlllrenehe .roni)t attiL!;i chas. nash rci:vi Collections, Loans and Invesd iX'Hl I.MntniiMt 1'rUairb.i WUliamsiiOit, Lj'coiiiin,; i Deposits ai:ctiicd, Hiifijoct iuili.,a rom any purl oi Uiu world. 3L K Potto veterinary sUq SELINSGROVC. PA. All protewionnl bUHlni'Ss cnlriKM' will receive prompt and curt-rtil m; '-t'.mli ii rrrl liult-l rlnobl nil I'rm t'luah Iiiim bur lt lH rihor rnn-1 Mr nl um lib rjuua cullrl nulrauwl lell aciiiNllrM." THERE YOU HAVE it, Clear as Mud. Tho original of the above, written with a pen, wliuo dei'lptieroi waaaeento be only ati order lor a typewriter. It reads i "Kuolosud tlnd draft on New York for WO for which please send me at once one of your luteal Improved typo wrllr." lie In putvtiaKlnir a iimchlnn none too soon, you any, HOW AIIOI'T YOlKMKI.t'T YOU may not write an poorly as he does, and your Idler may not lie Illegible, but a typo-wrltten communication haa a liuHlnesa-IIke up)enrunce which a pirn-written oue has not. That's Why YOU aliould use a type-writer, That It does the same work dh lb awalli'd "Htauuard,, tnarhliie. costs but 120.00. and Is biviiik satia- raotlou toS6,ouo uaura Is Why YOU SHOULD USE THE "0DELL." Bend fbr a catalojue and sample of Its work. 00ELL TYPE-WRITER CO. Slitt-361 Dvitrbwrn ft CHICAGO, ILIM 4-ia-viuo, Newly Estnlilislicil- WEST PERRY Olicfonrth iiiIIa KitKi .if Kirn Teams free for traveling mi' to town, before or alW Hates 75-ceuts per Dhv. ut4 RE VIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Miadea iMDay. TntW tvveii Mai n r m - - THKQRCAT sotb produnoa tha aboTs raaalu Intno days. II aM powrtully and qulosly. C'uras whaa all olhsrs tall Vouug man will mala Ihalr lost uaakood, sad old men will ramnar thalr youtkfal viaoc by ualaa StKVIVU. II qalekly and auwly naloraa Marrau bmm, Uwt Vitality, Impoiaaoy, Hlflilly Emission. Loal Vowar, Falllac Mtmory, Waatlaa Oiaaases, sod all aSaoU of aail-abuaa or asmaaaad indlacratloB, wbleh annu for Mady, bnilsMsor aiarrlaca. II not only ran by atartlas at Iba Mat ol dlaasM, but U ssraa nam ton la and blood builder, art or ma oaca toa pina (low to wnn ma aro oi jroata. sad (JonmaBlioa. laalst os sabar. Ii ma be earned la vast poekal. By aaall, I1M paakaaa, ot all tor MAO, with Mai srvo wrrittoa norma taw to oars a la rood akosMMof. Olraulartraa, addrsss VTil ISSXSn GO, 171 f illTi, CICifiO. ILL rsr sals at Mlddlstwgb, Ijr W. Hi WAXWXX 'M HWVH BHUU.r, f 1 U.' r to palo hawks and ro th. It wards on? husDlly I os bSTias MTIVOklM PATENTS Cousult or communicate ait A of this paper, who will give all M matlon. OBTA'5 Comrndra. Aailenllaa T unrvnit Inini V.'J tn 'Rl mill WU 4 10. 1NM. Ill llie llUttlH OI HI" " 1 wnlllil HlfR tn Iihva fnv cnnirunni f Iplerv Klim haa ilnnn mr me. 1 complaint, rhroulo dtiirraliors. uovuirB euiiid not slop , diu i"; cured me. and I am Mice limrc '' KltAMH HKVIIIVH. DWOHhO. AIICD. C Y. V. I. ). tvli-ry Kins Mr the N"" and Kldnoys Is solil In We. and J w if n.w....i..lll.,. M Owl Ulsb. MeClure; 11. A. Kbrurm. aJ Ileanlr Is Dlood DH Plnnn liliuul mnana a clot 4 lirautv wiLliout it. (Inacnretii.tH tic clean your lilood and k"'VjJ stirrinir tin the lazv liver BiiJ irA liurities from tho bodv. J uaniMh pimples, boils, liloU'li 1 and that sickly iiuioiui coiiiu- cascarcta, beauty lor ten gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 1'' Union Steam m Adan3 & Youtz, Prop's.. FAULTU2S8 IJX nivturnliiir fin. turn ot tVUD' Tho UNION FINISH K tliiu laundry wlumoiiH HQ of ltfliiiHtaking care in CollurH ami nitlHiroiieu' Ivobv-uke Edges. Prices the L Welt-atlj others lollop Lace Curtains a $r Q. A. Guteucs, AM