Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 31, Decatur, Adams County, 16 May 1895 — Page 7

Spring Makes Me Tired

To many people Spring and its duties Dean an aching head, tired limbs, and hrobbing nerves. Just as the milder reather comes, the strength begins to rane and “that tired feeling" is the tomplaint of all. The reason for this condition is found n the deficient quality of the blood, [luring the winter, owing to various auses, the blood becomes loaded with mpurities and loses its richness and vitality. Consequently, as soon as the . tracing effect *f cold air is lost, there B languor and lack of energy. The jure will be found in purifying and enriching the blood. • Hoods Sarsaparilla is the greatest Ind best spring medicine because it is the greatest and best blood purifier. It overcomes that tired feeling because it

Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the Public Eye To-day.

The Fail* of Niagara. According to the most recent calculations IbOJMNJJJOO tons of water pour •ver Niagara every hour. This re prelents iH.tou.iKO-horse power. The total coal production of the world, either lailv. weekly, monthly, or yearly, frould not furnish steam sufficient to lump it back again. Hold the Fort Igalnst a bilious attack by calling to your lid that puissant ally. Hostetter’s Stomach litters. The foe will then be driven back itterly defeated. Dyspepsia, sick headache, lidlarial. kidney, nervous and rheumatic rouble and constipation yield to the action f this most be loflcent of remedies. Take t regularly and you will soon experience its ;ood effect*. I'njustly Accused. An odd story is told of the table at Fhich Gambetta wrote. A previous iwner, General Lahitte, Minister for Foreign Affairs in 1849, dismissed his lontidential servant because he be-1 loved that he had stolen a large sum if money in one-thousand-franc bank iotes. Years afterward, when the hble had to be repaired, the joiner employed for the work found the missing lundle of bank-notes between the malogany board of the table and the trawers below. They had lain there innoticed for fourteen years. I'nforunately the story does not go on to ay that the poor servant and his misaken master were alive at the time of he discovery, and that the one’s charicter was cleared and the other’s confilence restored. BEAUTY £ POWER. Perfection of Form, Feature, and Mind Render Women All-powerful. [srwnju to ora laot biadib« ] S Yet blended with those perfections must be perfect health, Women are today stronger in their JjK' character, better in gß® T>their nature, truer in their love, warmer in N prl their affections, than J they ever '"’2T\ were - Z 2 ' But most IW ’’ women do jvT / not know K,. themst Ives; / and often A tyC when their \ AZ® \ Influence is doss ; J’ \< \ Ing the most Gj W j ■ good, break I f down. They wjlwy ■/ drift gradually r ft ! > M and unconHSo F H sciously i n ’° Zs "I ¥ BGI that tempestu■s i ■•JI ous sea "°" // E . man’s diseases. f ■ ft. i Then they / / Kn r j should rememIT her that Lydia E. Pinkham VegetableCompi mSu-- WI pound restores , w"' C&SKn natural cbeerT,fulness, de- , y. st toys despondency, cures leucorrhoea, — the great forerunner of serious womb trouble. relieves backache, strengthens the muscles of the womb, and restores it to its normal condition, regulates menstruations, removes inflammation, ulceration, and tumors of the womb, etc. It is a remedy of a woman for women. Millions of women owe the health they enjoy, and the influence they exert, to Mrs.’Pinkham; and the success of her Vegetable Compound has never been equalled in the field of medicine for the relief and cure of all kinds of femaie complaints. So say the druggists. Here is another one of thousands who ■peaks that others may know the truth:— •• For five years 1 suffered with falling of the womb, and all the dreadful aches and pains that accompany the disease. I tried several doctorsand different medicines. until 1 lost all faith in everything. I had not tried your Compound. I watched your advertisements zg from day to %• dav. and each -c day bream- (fk iSS more hopeful, jwa At last I re- tt, Mt ? solved to try it. £ H I have taken J? . \y\ Jfr US seven bottles, Ct, y*- 1 * Ixl andhavegained tlSq) My pah.< I; iv fXFv ywKgySwrau ' all’ left me, and (f i L I am a well woman. I do all my own work, and can walk two miles without feeling tired. Your Compound has been worth its weight in gold to me. I cannot praise it enough.” Matilda Ehnaji, Columbia, Lancaster Co., Pa.

makes pure, rich blood. It gives strength to nerves and muscles because it endows the blood with new powers of nourishment. It creates an appetite, tones and strengthens the stomach and digest ive organs, and thus builds up the whole system and prepares it to meet the change to warmer weather. 11 < wd’s Sarsaparilla is a medicine upon which you may depend. It is the only true blood purifier prominently before the public eye to-day. It has a record of cures unequaled in the history of medicine. Il is the medicine of which so many people write, "Hood's Sarsaparilla does all that it is claimed to do.” You can take Hood’s Sarsaparilla with the confident expectation that it will give you pure blood and renewed health. Take it now.

No Escape. ‘Mrs. Getthere enthusiastic worker at church fair Now, Mr. Slimpurse, you really must take a chance in this beautiful pipe; you really must. Jst think, the pipe is worth $-0 and the chances are only $1 each. Mr. Slimpurse edging off) —Very sorrv. madam, but 1 don't smoke. Mrs. Getthere—O t h, but you can learn, you know. Mr. Slimpurse—Tobacco does not agree with me. I would have no earthly use for a pipe. Mrs. Getthere str ck with a bright idea Well there isn't the slightest probability of your drawing it, you know’ —New York Weekly. Millions of Packages. The Rising Sun Stove Polish factory sold 23.000.1100 packages of stove polish in 1894. These packages, placed so as to touch end to end, would reach 1.000 miles. The factory at Canton, Mass., covers four acres, and turns out the enormous prodtn tof ten tons per day. Most of the material used is mined by natives in Ceylon, India, and brought by sailing vessels to New York. The Rising Sun Stove Polish has the enormous sale of 3,000 tons per year, but Morse Bros, have recently added to their business the Sun Paste Stove Polish in answer to the demand for a perfect stove paste. This Sun Paste is already meeting a large sale. The Rising Sun Stove Polish in cakes is recommended for general blacking of a stove and for economy, and the Sun Paste Stove Polish in tin boxes for a quick after-dinner shine.— Lynn Item. Advice to Law Students. Law students often suffer acutely from two fears. They suspect that they have “no business capacity,” and they dread speaking in court. Mr. Charles G. Leland, otherwise known as “Hans Breitmann,” confesses in his “Memoirs” that when he was a lawstudent he suffered terribly from these two apprehensions. Having in mind nervous young men who are studying law. he offers some encouraging suggestions: "A few months’ practice in a mercantile college w-ill go far to relieve the first apprehension of (no business capacity,) while as regards stage fright, it can be easily educated out of anybody, as I have since those days educated it out of myself, so that rising to debate or speak inspires in me a gaudium certaminis, (a joy of struggle,) which increases with the certainty of being attacked. “Let the aspirant begin by reading papers before, let us say, a family or school, and continue to do so frequently and at as short intervals as possible before such societies or lyceums as will listen to him. Then let him speak from memory or improvise and debate. This should form a part of all education whatever, and it should be thorough. “It is especially needed for lawyers and divines, yet a great proportion of both are insufficiently trained in it; and while I was studying law it was never mentioned to me. I was never taken into court or practically employed in any manner whatever.” Mr. Leland puts his finger upon the weak spot in the education of lawyers and ministers the neglect of training them to express their ideas before an audience. But he fails to mention one fault that handicaps young men the absence in the family of clear, idiomatic, expressive English. There is a professor at Crozier Theological Seminary, Elia H. Johnson—he will pardon the writer, who has known him from childhood, for using him as an illustration, whose English, while he was a student at Rochester University, was the admiration of his fellows. I The students who listen to him to-day wonder at it. He owes it to his mother, who never permitted herself to use a slovenly sentence before her children, and whose voice, even when giving an order, was modulated to the de- . mauds of rhythm. Such a family education ruled both earandvoice. And those who listen to Prof. Johnson hardly know which most to admire —his English or his ideas. I Surprised the Doctor. Dr. Moffat, the distinguished misi sionary and father-in-law of Dr. Livingstone, once preached a long sermon to'a tribe in the interior of Africa. Shortly after he had finished he saw that the crowds were gathering around a very common looking savage. To his surprise, however, the lad mounted a stone and repeated every word of the sermon that had just been finished. Good character is above all thing! eise.

A NOTABLE DINNER. ft waa Cheap, and Prepared by • Social Economist. There was a notable dinner party given at the Washington residence of Charles Sumner Hamlin, Assistant Secretary' of the Treasury-, a few nights ago, at which there were fourteen guests- The host was Mr. Edward Atkinson, of Boston, the famous social economist, who did all the cooking in the dining room in the presence of his guests, upon a stove of his own invention, and the entire cost of the banquet, was $2.80, or 20 cents per plate—without wines, of course. Mr. Atkinson is at work these days trying to solve the problem of cheap living so that the expenses of the working classes may conform, without the sacrifice of health or comfort, to the low wages that he expects to be the rule in this country when Congress adopts bis theories of free trade. He believes that almost every family wastes half the moneyspent for food, and that double the amount of nourishment can be got in a much more wholesome form by a proper selection of their viands and their preparation for the table To educate the public in this particular he is publishing bulletins of information through the Agricultural Department, and has invented a stove which consumes oil for fuel and will furnish heat enough to cook an ordinary dinner for a cent or two. This stove and its apparatus have been patented, but the patents have been conveyed or assigned to the Secretary of Agriculture, who is authorized to permit its manufacture and sale by such persons as will not attempt to make too much profit therefrom. Those who sat down to dinner were Mr. Hamlin and his two sisters, Secretary and Mrs. Carlisle, Secretary Morton, Secretary and Mrs. Gresham, Mrs. Bissell, Mr. Kurino, the Japanese Minister; Mr. Atkinson and his daughter and Miss Lee, of Boston. The bill of fare was follows: Fish chowder. Roast leg of lamb and green peas. Baked beans and Boston brown bread. Fiicassee of chicken and asparagus. Cold baked ham and salad. Indian pudding. The asparagus was not included in the $2.80. It probably- cost more than that sum by itself, as it w-as very fine and of hothouse growth and a contribution to the dinner by a friend. The beans, ham and Boston brown bread were cold, having been cooked by Mr. Atkinson in his room at the hotel on Saturday, but all the rest was prepared upon one of the stoves by- himself and he explained his methods of cooking to his guests as he went along. While they- were eating one course Mr. Atkinson would be cooking another over in the corner of the room. There was not the slightest odor or smoke from the stove—no more than from a pot of water at a 5 o’clock tea—and everything was wholesome and greatly enjoyed. New York’s Old Paths. There are more things in the heaven above and the earth beneath New York than are dreamed of in the average resident’s philosophy. For instance, there are many streets scattered throughout the downtown district that people less than a block away never heard of. There is Edgar street, to mention one, the shortest thoroughfare in the city. It runs from Greenwich street to Trinity place, and is about as wide as it is long. Another funny little by-way with an odd name also runs to Trinity place, and is known as Tin Pot alley. The Mecca of newsboy gamblers is Theater alley, between Ann street and Beekman. 1“ about approximates to the famous Pis alley, of Boston, says the New York correspondent of the Boston Home Journal, and before the issue of the first edition of the evening papers is full of lads playing ‘craps.” One is selected from the number to watch the entrance, and at a cry from him of ‘‘cheese it, the cop,” all disappear at the other end like pills running from the end of a bottle. Lord’s court is another funnyplace. Although a public street belonging to the city, it goes nowhere, and can only be reached by going through some one of the tail buildings surrounding it. These infinitesimal streets are famous for various peculiarities. Gay street is known as Darktown, from the number of colored people there; while Washington Mews is mostly inhabited by cats that make night hideous after hours when the big iron gates at the end o' the streets are closed. Much Oil Needed. • .1 ylu3fw Cholly - Yes, papa, I fix my hair this way by using lots of oil. Papa—Yes, an’ thet keeps th’ wheel a-goin’. bn?

Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Royal Powder Absolutely pure

POWER OF TELESCOPES, Compßrattre Figures Showing; the Weakness of the Human Eye. The following careful statement by Prof. E. S. Holdtm on the power of the eye and the telescope, as they are contrasted in actual experience, is of special and permanent interest: If the brightness of a star seen with the eye alone is one, with a two-inch telescope it is 100 times as bright; with aOfour-inch telescojie it is 400 times as bright; eight-inch telescope it is 1,600 times as bright; sixteen-inch telescope it is 25,600 times aS bright; 36-inch telescope it is 32,400 times as bright. That is, stars can be seen with the 36-inch telescope which are 30,000 fainter than the faintest stars visible to the naked eye. While the magnifying power which can be successfully used on the 5-inch telescope is not above 400, the 36-inch telescope will permit a magnifying power or more than 2,00(1 on suitable objects, stars, for example. This power cannot be used on the moon and planets with real advantage for many reasons, but probably a power of 1,000 or 1,500 will be the maximum. The moon will thus appear under the same conditions as if it were to be viewed by the naked eye at a distance of, say, 200 miles. This is the same as saying that objects about 300 feet square can be recognized, so that no village or great canal or even large edifice can be built on the moon without our knowledge. Highly organized life on the moon will make itself known in this indirect way if it exists. If one were looking at the earth under the same conditions, the great works of hydraulic mining, or the great operations of Dakota farms or California ranches would be obvious. AN IMPORTANT - CASE. IT COMES UP BEFORE THE UNITED STATES COURT. A Suit for an Estoppel—The Eureka Chemical Company, of La Crosse, Makes the Trouble. Papers have been filed in the United States Court of the XVestern District of Wisconsin, by Tarrant Kronshage, attorneys for the Sterling Remedy Company, of Chicago and New York, in a «uit for estoppel and damages against an imitation of No-to-bac, the tobacco habit cure. The action is brought against a concern called the Eureka Chemical Company, of La Crosse. Wis. The principles involved in these proceedings are of the utmost importance to the proprietary interests of America in general, and form in many respects, a test case, the outcome of which will be carefully watched by the many other important manufacturing concerns similarly imitated. Not only the question of imitation of name, trade-mark, form of preparation and package enter into the case, but also the proposition whether the actual advertising literature used in establishing the publicity of a preparation can be stolen with impunity, word for word, by an imitator. The decision in this ease will settle one of the vital poiuts in United States trade-mark and copyright law.—Madison (Wis.) Democrat. Our years, our debts, and our enemies ate always greater in number than we believe them to be. The rearrangement of the dining cars on the Niekel Plate road provides breakfast and dinner on the New York and Boston Express No. 2 eastbeund, breakfast anddinneron the Fast Western Express No. 5; and dinner on No. 6. This newlyestablished service not only accommodates the through passengers ot that line more satisfactorily, but provides a belter arrange for its' local patrons. Ever live excepted within your income.

Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, ST. SAFE, SURE, FR.OXHXPV. “A Good Tale Will Bear Telling Twice.” Use Sapolio! ... Use .. . SAPOLIO For Twenty Years Scott’s Emulsion has been endorsed by physicians of the whole world. There is no secret about its ingredients. Physicians prescribe Scott’s Emulsion because they know what great nourishing ami curative properties it contains. They know it is what it is represented j to bo ; namely, a perfect emulsion of the best Norway ’ ? liver Oil with tho hypophosphites of limo and soda. For Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia, Weak Babies, Thin Children, Rickets, Marasmus, Loss of Flesh, General Debility, and all conditions of Wasting. The only genuine Scott's Emulsion is put in salmoncolored wrapper. Refuse inferior substitutes! I Sendfor pamphlet »n Scott's Emulsion. FREE. f' Scott & Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. 50 cents and sl. I

A Japanese Wedding. A Japanese wedding must be a very melancholy affair. In Japan it is not good for the bride to admit that she enjoys the prospect of getting married, and, therefore, when she is told about it three or for days before the event, she is expected to set up a loud bellowing and keep it up day and night until the ceremony comes on. After she has been richly dressed for the occasion, she is expected to hang back and shriek, and make a show of resisting her attendant's efforts to lead her to the bridegroom. This hollow farce is kept up by one of the bridesmaids finally throwing a veil over the bride’s face, while an old Lag takes her on her back and carries her to a sedan chair waiting at the door to take her to the bridegroom's mansion. When she arrives there she is a wife, the simple ride in a flowery chair having the mystic power of transforming her into a married woman. From that time she begins to brighten up. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally. Price 75cents. The electric wires of a French railroad are so arranged that they can be use for telegraphing or telephoning. Yon Don’t Have to Swear Off, says the St. Louis Journal of Agriculture In an editorial about No-To-Bac, the famous tobacco habit cure. “We know of many cases cured by Xo-To-Bf* one, a prominent St. Louis architect, sn.oked and chewed for twenty years: two boxes cured him so that even the smell of tobacco makes him sick.” No-To-Bac sold and guaranteed by Druggists everywhere. >.o cure no pay. Book free. Sterling Remedy Co., New York or Chicago. If your hands are not usefully employed attend to the cultivation of your mind. NATfONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION MEETING. Denver, Colo., July S to 12, 1895. For this occasion the Wabash 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 rilfeeting, time of trains, rates, route, etc., call upon or write to any representative of the Wabash K. K.,or connecting lines, or C. S. CRANE, Gen’l Pass.’& Tkt. Agt., Wabash R. R., St. Louis, Mo. Keep gooa company or none. Never be idle. They Call It Overwork. Business requires a clear head; yet how few business men — with all ihelr sense—realize what is the trouble with their heads. They call it overwork, worry, anything but what it really is—indirection. This stealthiest of ailments usually comes disguised as something else. W’ouldn’t you be convinced if a box ot Rlpans i abules cleared your head and brightened up the business outlook? Good company and good conversation are the very sinews of virtue. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an A No. 1 Asthma medicine.—W. R. Williams, Antioch, 111., April 11, 1894. Make no haste to be rich if you would prosper. Rates are offered on the certificate plan by agents of the Niekel Plate read to Springfield, Mass., and Hartford, Conn., May Bth to 16th, account Southern Baptist Association. When you speak to a person, look him in the face. Mrw. WlunioW* Soothtns Stiuf for Children ieeiiiiuM. the ff'ime. lenuces inflammation. aUavs paxu. cored wind colic. 25 cenu a bottle. Live up to your engagements. Keep your own secrets, if vou have any.

BEST IN THE WORLD. / aveirg'wai.iao.'ff l\ V Yot % rl V W> \ / % xa\w\ \s Vu\\) THE RISING BUN / - \ STOVE POLISH ia ; cakea for general KwY e FASTE ZJ blacking of a stove. thp sun pa sth 1 POL’ M fora Quick XJeJ-ess after dinner shine, tmE applied and polished with a cloth. Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Maaa., U.S. J k. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptlyadapting the world’s best products to the’neeus of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy. Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevert and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will noi accept any substitute if offered. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR ★ The BEST ★ Dyspeptic,Delicate,lnfirm and AGED PERSONS * JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. * Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples, loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things sot everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in the world,especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book,free at yous druggist’s.or write B.F. Allen Co. St.j New York. Pills. 10C and 25$ a box. Annvtl sales more than 6.000.000 boxes. Raphael, Angelo, Ku ben*, labm The -LINENE REVERSIBLE’' are th* Best and Mort Economical Co liars andOufls worn; they are made of fine cloth, both sides finished al.Ke. and, beinx rf>-ver-ible. one cellar is equal t<> two of any other kind. they fit well wear we., and Iwk uwU. A box of iea Collars or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-five Cents. A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs by mail for Sil Cents. Name style and size. Addres.3 REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, 77 FRINKLII ST.. REW YORK. 27 KILBY SL BOSTOL | EWIS’9B % LYE I Powdered and Perfumed. PATENTED.' Tiie strcnoeKt and purest I mad®. Unlike other it being a fin® \ and packed in a can with •renmva 1»» lid, the contents ar® jWkYw always ready for use. Will mak® twst perfumed Hard Soap in ju IRv 1 1 IS th® Bl best for cleansing waste-pipes, ■ ■ disinfecting Biukc closets, washifcf? bottles, paints trees, etc. PENN*. i H i <1 ißWiftua Gen. Agts., Phi la., Pa. iOlElm re < ■ t v publisted i he iiwiwm pas- enter D t’Artment of the 11l nois Central Railroad. f iitit:t d‘*Noii« hern liMiue-Sucker’s G»iide for 1 It contains over AO excellent Jett-rs from Northern fa ni rs now located in the routh, and ether authentic nd valuab e information Fo a free copy address the undersigned at Manchester, lowa. J. F. MERRY, Assistant Gen’l Passenger Agt. PETHaO I IIJonN w. morris. tiMOIVrEM Washington, D. C. Successfully Prosecutes Claims Late Principal F-Ynminer U. & Pension Bureau* 3 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicatmM claims, auy ■■■■■■QORHQHEnnKS relief»c TUlf 1 KIDDERB PABTILLES.SdS F. W. N. U. - - - - ho, 20—95 When Writing to Advertisers, say you law the Advertisement in this paper. H— MLELSEfAILS. 1 Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Bold by druggie: a gj