Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 30, Decatur, Adams County, 9 May 1895 — Page 3
That Tired Feeling
It is remarkable how many people there are who have That Tired Feeling and seem to think it is of no importance or that nothing need Im* done for it. i hey w did nut be so careless if they realized how really serious the malady is. But they think or say “It will go off after a while.” W e do not mean the legitimate weariness which all experience after a hard day s work, but that all gone, worn-out feeling which is especially overpowering in the morning, when the body should be refreshed and ready for work. It is often only the forerunner of nervous prostration, with all the horrible
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Maltes T’txi-o Ulood
Good Idea. Every man living on any public highway should have his name displayed in some prominent place on the house, front gate, or fence, where it can be seen and read from the road. My attention was called to this a few years ago when having occasion to I summon a j'v.'sician. He knew me and knew whai pike I lived on, but did not know w hich house, and drove i one mile past my house. Had my name been on my house it would have saved him a two-mile drive, loss of time and annoyance. I resolved it should not occur again, and soon a boazd on the front gate announced who lived there. It was criticised a great deal, some saying, “He wants everybody to know who lives tlf ir." I did not want everybody to know, but I did those who wanted to know who lived there. It was a subject of ridicule for some time, but now has dozens of imitators. Stockman. To Guard against poisoning a law has been passed in Germany that all drugs intended for internal use must be put in round bottles, and those which are only used externally must lx) placed in hexagonal bottles. MERITED_REWARD. SALES OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Unequalled in the History of Medicine, ] Honesty, Excellence, Faithfulness Fitly Rewarded. <“rr IAI. TO LXDT BEknrr.S ] Never in the history of medicine has the demand for one particular remedy for r> female diseases . equalled that attained by Mr ya Lydia E. frj -f*" .’t?*. V-\ IF ' Jjp'' vk Vegetable >* a IB Compound Hl if ♦?' IM inthehisKi ’ aL*- dj !a torv of E Jk B Mrs - HA ,< • J/H Pinkhams wonderful e YvS, Ii l ' demand for it been j I so great as I D it is today. If V California, from the Gulf to the St. Lawrence, come the glad tidings of woman's suffering relieved by it; and thousands upon thousands of letters are pouring in from grateful women, saying that it will and does positively cure those painful Ailments- of Women. It will cure the worst forms of female complaints, ail ovarian troubles, inflammation and ulceration, falling and displacements of the womb, and consequent spinal weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the change of life. Every time it will cure Backache. It has cured more cases of leucorrhoea by removing the cause, than any remedy the world has ever know n • it is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels tumors from the uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills work in unison with the Compound, and are a sure cure for constipation and sickheadache. ’ Mrs. Pinkham's Sanative Wash is frequently found of great value for local application. Correspondence is freely solicited by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., and the strictest confidence assured. All druggists sell the Pinkham's remedies. The Vegetabk Compound in three forms, — Liquid. Pills, ami Lozenges. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certiorates of its value, ail within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card tor book. A benefit is aiwavs experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Reid the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will Cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tabiespoonfui in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists.
suffering that term implies. That Tired F eeling and nervousness are sure indications of an impure and impoverished condition of the blood. Thecraving of the system for help can only be met by purifying the blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the one great blood purifier. It expels all impurities, gives vitality and strength, regulates the digestion, and makes the weak strong. “In the spring I felt very much run down -no strength or appetite. I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla and my appetite improved and I did not have that tired feeling.” 11. R. Squires, East Leverett, Massachusetts.
A Busy Man. He was a big, strong, healthy-look-ing fellow, and when, he knocked at a kitchen door on Antoine street and asked for something to eat, the woman was not charitably disposed. “Want something to eat, do you?” she snapped. “I am very hungry, ma'am, he responded. “You ought to be.” “I am,” he admitted, humbly. “Why don’t you go to work?” “I haven’t time, ma’am. “Haven't time?” she asked in surprise. “No, ma'am, I'm busy.” “Busy, indeed!” she said, sarcastically. “I’d like to know what keeps you busy?” “Hustlin’ around from house to house ma'am.” “What?” “Hustlin’ around from house to house, ma'am, tryin’ to git something to eat, takes up all my time, so I don’t have any left to work in. That’s the gospel truth, ma'am, and if you don’t give me a bite, I'll have to waste two er three precious hours, ma'am, lookin’ up somebody that will,” and his nerve saved him.—Detroit Free Press. Richer Feed for Holstein Cows. It seems to be generally conceded that the Jersey and Guernsey cows give richer milk than the average of Holsteins and other breeds that have larger frames. But there is great difference in the character of milk given by the larger breeds of cows. It is. perhaps, in part due to difference in feeding, ami in part is hereditary. If more rich foods were given to Holsteins, they also will increase the proportion of butter fats in their milk. The first calf of any eow is apt, if a heifer, to give rich milk. Its dam while bearing it has bail to provide for some growth of her own frame and for that of her foetusf. The fat in the milk is not . required for this. Heifers’ milk is usually rich in fats and poor in casein, or the nutrition that makes strength, bone and muscle. The heifer’s milk is deficient In quantity, and it is better for making butter than for cheese making. Now It is Different. 1 A very pretty young girl was sitting in a Colerain avenue car the other day. At a corner there jumped on a young man evidently a bill collector on his rounds, “Why, Nellie,” said he, “where have you been so long?” “Home," said Nellie demurely. “Thought you was hammering same old typewriter for Plunk & Plunk.” "Well, I ain’t” “What are you doing?” “I'm married.” “Married!” exclaimed the youth. I “IVho’d you marry?" ' "Horace Plunk.” The face of the youth grew blank, j “I can't see what you married him for." Nellie blushed and then dimpled into an amused smile. “I got tired of having him dictate to me.”—Cincinnati Tribune. Wanted a Pleasant Expression. Mr. Grumps—Good morning. Do i you take pictures by the instantaneous process? Photographer—Yes, sir. Mr. Grumps—Well, this is Mrs. Grumps, mv wife, you know. I want her picture taken. Photographer—Certainly. But are you particular about having it instantaneous? Mr. Grumps-Of course. When you get things ready, tell her to look pleasant, and then snap off the machine before the expression fades away. Y ou've gotten be quick'n lightning.—New York Weekly. Paper Pipes. The making of water pipes out of paper pulp is said to have met with great success. It is claimed that they are as durable as iron, and the process of moulding them is about the same in both cases. A Poisonous Mist. 1 This fitly describes miasma, a vaporous poison which breeds chills and fever, bilious ’ remittent, dumb ague, ague cake, and in the tropics deadly typhoid forms of fever. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters prevents and cures I these complaints. Biliousness, constipation, dyspepsia, nervous and kidney trouble, rheumatism, neuralgia and Impaired vitality are also remedied by the great restorative. A Street-Car Napoleon. Old Gentleman—Tell me. my friend, why you are so ugly to passengers. Brutal Conductor—So they’ll hate th’ street-car company wot employes me. See? “N-o, not exactly.” “Why, when they hate the company they'll ust laugh to tbeirselves when ! they see me cheatin’ th' company by not ringin’ up fares. See?” Freshness and purity are communicated to the complexion by Glenn's Sulphur '“llili’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c.
How Electrio Clocks Wort The principle of the electric clock is very simple. A standard electric regu- i lator is placed in the hall of a private I house, or in the chief offices of works. This regulator works by its own action for, say, fifty-nine and a half seconds, i when electric contact is made and a magnetic pull is exerted, and during the remaining half second required to , complete the round of the minute | wheel an ingenious contact arrangement lifts a small ball and momentarily breaks the circuit, so that the wheel becomes free again. Then by ■ ; the aid and momentum of the pendulum the motion is continued, and the automatic electric action goes on perpetually day after day, year after year, for one, three or five years, according to the battery power supplied. The regulators are made to regulate ten, twenty, or thirty secondary clocks connected in series. These clocks can of course be fitted in various parts of the house, buildings, works, or railway station, as the case may be, and can thus be successfully driven by four to six volts of intermittent current within a radius of two or three miles. The secondary clocks, being in sympathetic action with the main circuit clock, are ’ electrically regulated every minute, and it is claimed no clock can deviate from another of the same series for more than one second under any conditions whatever. “Good Enough for the Hoys. Did you ever go to the house of some friend or acquaintance who was the happy possessor of sons and daughters and look at their respective rooms? First you came to the girls’ rooms, dainty white spreads, pretty curtains harmonious colors, delicate hangihgs of all kinds. And then you went a floor higher and saw the “boys’ room” Os couse you didn't come away and tell all you saw, because that would be a piece of ill-breeding that every one knows you would not be guilty of, for a moment, but all the same you saw the battered bureau, the cracked glass, I the three-legged chair and the faded ' worn carpet; and you heart ached that no one had tried to put any beauty into the surroundings of those boys. You had heard the mother's argument that “boys spoiled things so, and didn’t think it manly to care for pretty things, any way,” but you knew ail the time that if those other boys had been brought up as yours had, a love of the beautiful and appropriate would have been early instilled into them, and they would have liked their own clean white spreads too well to put their muddy boots and their fishing tackle on the bed. And they would have learned habits of ne itness and care early in life, that nothing else would instill.—Leisure Hours. SAVED FROM NICOTINE
Little Charley Fogleman Uacd Tobacco Since Babyhood, and Ilia Father Smoked and Chewed for the Past Twenty Years-Both Set Free at Asheville, N. C. “Is that true?” asked the News man at Pelham’s Pharmacy, as he laid down a letter in the presence of a dozen interested customers. Yes. it is. It was written here on one of our letter heads, and signed by J. C. Fugleman,” promptly answered the proprietor. “You know him. don’t you?” _ “Certainly; he lives at No. 5 Buxton street. We all know Fogleman is a man of his word.” “I am glad to hear it. There are so many misleading statements published nowadays that when this came in this morning’s mail I came right over to ask you about it. I read the letter three times, but you read it. and you will with hid th-t it almost !••*<» good to t»e true.” This is what the letter said: “Office of Pelham's Pharmacy. 24 Patton avenue. Asheville, N. C.. Sept. 12. 1894. Gentlemen—My little boy, now 8 years, began chewing tobacco when three years old by the advice of our family physician, in the place of stronger stimulants. Four or five weeks ago I begin giving him No-To-Bac, which 1 bought at Pelham’s Pharmacy, and to my great surprise, and. it is needless to say. my delight. No-To-Bac completely cured him. He does not seem to care for tobacco and is very much improved in health, eats heartily and has a much better color. “Finding such remarkable results from the use of No-To-Bac I began myself, and it cured me. after using tobacco, in ail iis various forms, for a period of twenty years. “I take pleasure in making this plain statement of facts for the benefit of others. (Signed) .1. C. FOGLEMAN.” “Yes, 1 know it’s a fact, and its one of the strongest, truthful testimonials I ever read—and it’s true, for I sold him the No-To-Bac.” "What’s that?” asked Chief of Police Hawkins, whose manly form attired in the new police uniform, like Solomon in all his glory, came to the door. "Why. No-To-Bac cures!” “Cures? Why. 1 should say so. I have used it myself. It cured me.” "Would you object to making a statement of the fact for publication?” "Certainly not,” and the Chief wrote as follows: "Asheville, N. C.. Sept. 25, 1894. Pelham Pharmacy—l bought one box of No-To-Bac from you some time sim e. After using No-To-Bac 1 found 1 had lost the desire for tobacco. I was cured. “I have used tobacco—chiefly chewing —for eight (8) or ten (10) years. "H. S. HAWKINS.” Everybody looked astonished and wondered what would next turn up. “Suppose it don’t cure?” some one asked. “Then they do the right thing when No-To-Bac won’t cure.” "What's that?” asked the News man. “Eve-y druggist in America is authorized to sell No-To-Bac under an absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. No-To-Bac is made by the Sterling Remedy Co., general offices in Chicago. Montreal and New York, and their laboratory is at Indiana Mineral Springs. Indiana, a big health resort they own. it’s the place where they give Mud Baths for rheumatism and skin diseases. You ought to know the president, Mr. A. L. Thomas, of Lord & Thomas, of Chicago.” "Yes. of course I do. We get business from them right along, and they are as good as gold. Well, give me their advertising books, and I will make a statement in the paper about what you have told me. for I kuow there are thousands of good North Carolina people who are tobacco spitting and smoking their lives away, and No-To-Bac is an easy guaranteed cure and they ought to know it.” Colombia was thus called in honor of Columbus.
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Plows Drawn by Camels. Oxen drawing plows is a sight familiar enough on our Sussex downs, but camels employed in this way would be decidedly a novelty. The experiment, however, is being tried in Southern Russia, and, it is said, with remarkable success. Vice Consul Smith states that the bad harvest of the last two years, together with the low prices or grain having forced most agriculturists to look into the question of expenses, and one great difficulty being to obtain animal power which would cost less for feeding than horses and yet be able to do the varying work of a farm, camels have been introduced upon an estate not far from Kieff. At present eighteen camels are at work, and their keep is found to cost much less than that of horses, owing to oats being dispensed with in their , feeding. The price runs between t'li and £7 per head, inclusive of transport from the government of Orenburg to Kieff,— London Daily News. Forty Years Ago in Chicago. A line of omnibuses ran from the Lake street bridge to State street, thence south toUlrieh's Hotelonßinggold place—now Twenty-second street. There was a newspaper printed in those days called the Yo ng America, the plant of which was the foundation later of the Chicago Times, and there was another paper printed in those days tear Thirty sixth street called the Rising Generation. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price 75 cents. Arabia was so called from its inhabitants. the Arabs. The rearrangement of the dining ears on the N iekei Plate road provides breaklast and dinner on the New York and Boston Express No. 2 eastbound, breakfast and dinner on the Fast Western Express No. 5. and dinner on No. 6. This newly established service not only accommodates the through passengers of that line more satisfactorily, but provides a heller arrange for its local patrons. Moldavia took its name from the River Moldau, Dr. PIERCE’S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION FOR WEAK WOMEN. On first introducing this world-famed medicine to the afflicted, and for many years thereafter it was sold under a Positive Guarantee of giving entire satisfaction in every case for which it is recommended. So uniformly successful did it prove in curing the diseases, derangements and weaknesses of women that claims for the return of money paid for it were exceedingly rare. Since its manufacturers can now point to thousands of noted cures effected by it in every part of the land, they believe its past record a sufficient guarantee of its great value as a curative agent, therefore, they new rest its claims to the confidence of the afflicted W//vupon that record. Byall medicine dealers.
S If you have hy fog Rheumatism L i Or any other pain, you don’t take chances with St. Jacobs Oil, for twent y azaaJ years ago it began to kill pain, and it’s been pain-killing ever since. “A Fair Face Cannot Atone for An Untidy House.” Use SAPOLIO
Too Thirsty to Talk. “I notice that your husband has nev- ! er much to say in the morning when he has been out late at nighi,” said the wife's mother. “No.” was the reply of the wife, i “he’s mum then, extra dry.” —New ! Y ork Press. VVOKLD'S COLt MBIAN EXPOSITION Will be of value to the world by illustrating the improvements in the mechanical arls and eminent physicians will tell you that the progress in medicinal agents, has been ! of equal importance, and as a strengthening laxative that Syrup of Figsis far in advance I of all other£ A Philadelphia haberdasher announces: “Our handkerchiefs are not 5 to be sneezed at.” Piso’s Cure for Consumption has no equal as a Cough medicine.—F. M. Abbott. 383 Seneca St., Buffalo, New Y ork, I May 9, 1893. Some men are like sparrows, they I never get high enough to cease being nuisances. one Gives Keliet. It is so easy to 'y* mistaken about indigestion. and think there is some other j trouble. The cure is Ripans Tabules. One I tabuie gives relief Ask any druggist. There are many men who are afraid ' of ghosts who have no fear of spirits. NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION MEETING. Denver, Colo., July 5 to 12, 1895* For this occasion the IVabash Railroad has made a rate of one fare for the round trip to Denver plus $2.00, added for membership fee. For full particulars in regard to this i meeting, time of trains, rates, route, etc., call upon or write to any representative of the Wabash R. R.. or connecting lines, or C. S. CRANE, Gen 1 Fass. & Tkt. Agt., Wabash R. R., St. Louis, Mo. IVhex a woman sends her subscription to The Ladies' Home Journal special I privileges seems to go with it, besides getI ting her full money’s worth in the magai zine. She can take the fullest advantage of a perfect educational plan by which she can educate her daughte-s or sons at the best colleges in the country free of charge, and now the Journal has arranged it so that she can buy her books—even a single book at a time—at prices heretofore obtained only by large buyers. There conies to ms from this magazine a very artistically gotten-up illustrated booklet of over 250 pages, called “5,000 Books,” which serves as an easy guide to the best books in any department of reading. This guide is very well done. The best literary experts of New Y'ork. Boston, and Philadelphia were engaged by the Journal to select the five thousand books which it presents as the most desirable for a home library, and their work has been admirably carried out. Very clear, explanatory comments are given by these men of books, and besides there are given not less than 160 portraits of leading authors. No I took will, perhaps, do so much to extend good reading as this guide, so carefully gotten up, so beautifully printed, and so generously offered, free of charge, by the publishers of The Ladies' Home Journal. Rates are offered on the certificate I plan by agents of the Nickel Plate road to I Springfield. Mass., and Hartford, Conn., I May Bth to Itith, aeeouut Southern Baptist I Association.
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★ ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR * WPERIAr ★ The BEST ★ OD Mothers, In fants Z CHILDREN * JOHN CARLE & SON'S, New York. * Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples, loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things foi everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in the i world,especially of women; and it can all i be prevented; Goby the book, free at vouf druggist’s,or write B.F.AllenCo.,36sCana* St., New York. Pills,io<? and 25$ a box. Annual sales more than 6.000.000 boxes. TAPE-WORM •‘'CT Mir* Cure «••*)»••» 2 hours. N<> incoi.v es. a • Kiiai in red sufficient. GF IRANI Rl.*‘11.1)1 <O., Do Seville, N.Y. PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentabi ity of Ini vtntv’i. Send for In. tutors’Gu id tor How to Get a Patent. Patrick O’Faiiuei.l. Washington. D. C. r> r, T *• tsra Thomas P. Simpson. Washington, i I ► H JFN !>• C. N<> i.tt’s fee until Patent ob- ■ « a u.si a w tained. Wrlteforlnventor’sGuide. Mrs. Winslow’s Soc.tkibg syrup for Children I teething; S' t ns the gains, reduces intlammatioa, sllavs pain. cures wind colic. «5 cent* a bottle. | F. W. N. U. Ao. 19—95 When Writing: to Advertisers, say you law the Advertisement in this paper, — HI cures wnehe AUEISE f *us. „ Ba fed Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ?j£g B 3 in time. Sold by druggieU.
