Democratic Sentinel, Volume 5, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 May 1881 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Newspaper Detjisioitet. Subscribers who do not give express notice o the contrary are considered wishing to continue their subscription. 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their periodicals the publishers may continue to send them until all arrearages are paid. 8. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from the office to which thev are directed thev are held responsible until they have settled their bills and ordered them discontinued. 4. If subscribers move to other places without informing the publishers, and the papers are sent to the former direction, they are held responsible. 5. The cotirta have decided that “refusing to take periodicals from the office or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima facia evidence of Intentional fraud.” 6. Any person who receives a newspaper and makes use of it, whOther he has ordered it or not, is held in law to be a subscriber. 7. If subscribers pay in advance they arc bound to give notice to the publisher at the end of their time, If they do not wish to continue taking it; otherwise the publisher is authorized to send it on and the subscribers will be responsible until an express notice, with payment of all arrears is sent to the publisher.
<h n/ja week in your own town. Terms and s•> kb UOoutfil free Address H. Hallett <fc Co., Portland, Maine. di Ex-dirt Aper day at home. Samples worth kbOtOkbxaUsofree Address Stinson & CoPortland, Maine. dir7naweek. sl2 a day at home easily made. / suCostly outfit free. Address True & Co., • Portland, Maine. ■ a weekm your own town $5 00Outflt vRR free. No risk. Reader, if yon want a wUU business at which persons of either sex T can make great pay all the time they work, write for particulars to 11. Haldett <s Co., Portland. Maine- v«D2S ■■■■ Folks should send a three cent 111 \TI K stnmyfora free nook of nearly I?| II l( V ■lmm 1(j0 large octave pages, full of | UUISM ■■•" valuable notes by Dr. E. B. Foote" the author of Medical Common Sense and. Plain Home ■■■■talk, on Scrofula, Diseases of MenltASM PD pPand Women, and all chronic ail-Ml llf ■ ftfifiments.with the evidence of tiieirHUUl) ■■’■■curability. Address Murray Hill www " Pub. Mo., Box 788 New York City. ««thb PERFECT TONIC.’* A Sats and Reliable Substitute for Qulninat The only 25 cent AGUE REMEDY IN «X*SCZI WORLD CURBS and all MAUAKIAU DISEASES. Sold by all PrtwcUtß. Mailed FREE on receipt of price. Write to DUNDAS DICK * CO., S 3 Wooeraa Btb«bt, Nay You, for their ten cent book, mailed <0 the readers cd Ulapaper FREE on application. ‘ THEI ffl BALD ■Hk HEftDS < WONDERFUL DISCOVERY 1
CARBOUNEI A Deodorized extract of Petroleum, The Only Article that Will Restore Hair on Bald Heads. What the World has been Wanting for Centuries. The greatest discovery of our day, so far as a large portion of humanity is concerned, is CARBOLINE, an article prepared from petroleum, and_ which effects a complete and radical cure in case of baldness, or where the hair, owing to diseases of the scalp, has become thin and tends to fall out It iaalso a speedy restorative, and while its use secures a luxuriant growth of hair, it also brings back the natural color, and gives the most complete satisfaction in the using. The falling out of the hair, the accumulations of dandruff, and the premature change in color are all evidences of a diseased condition of the scalp and the glands which nourish the hair. To arrest these causes the article used must possess medical as well as chemical virtues, and the change must begin under the scalp to be of permanent and lasting benefit. Such an article is CARBOLINE, and, like many other wonderful discoveries, it is found to consist of elements almost in their natural state. Petroleum oil is the article which is made to work such extraordinary results ; but it is after it has been chemically treated -and completely deodorized that it is in proper condition for the toilet. It was in far-off Russia that the effect of petroleum upon the hair was first observed, a Government officer having noticed that a partially bald-headed servant of his, when trimming the lamps, had a habit of wiping his oil-besmeared bunds iu his scanty locks, and the result was in a few months a much finer head of black, glossy hair than he ever had before, The oil was tried on Morses and cattle that had lost their hair from the Mattle plague, and the results were as rapid as they -were marvelous. The manes and even the tails of horses, which had fallen out, were completely vectored in a few weeks. These experiments were heralded to the world, but the knowledge was practically useless to the prematurely bald and gray, as no one in civilized society could tolerate the use of refined petroleum as a dressing for the hair. But the .gkill of one of our chemists has overcome the difficulty, and by a process known only to himself, he has, after very elaborate and costly experiments, succeeded in deodorizing refined petroleum, which renders it susceptible of being handled as daintily as the famous eau de cologne. The experiments with the deodorized liquid on the human hair were attended with the most astonishing results/ A few applications, where the hair was thin and falling, gave remarkable tone and vigor to the scalp and 4, afy Every particle of dandruff disappears on •the first or second dressing, and the liquid so searching in its nature, seems to penetrate to the roots at once, and set up a radical change from the start. It it well known that the most beautiful colors are made from petroleum, and, by some mysterious operation of nature, the use of this article gradually imparts a beautiful light-brown color to the hair which by continued use, deepens to a black. „ ’be color remains permanent for an indefinite length , qme, and the .change is so gradual that the most * ‘ -gte friends can scarcely detect its' progress. “ ltlm -ord, it is the moat wonderful discovery of *“ a * and well calculated to make the prema--Joice. IT fl rUh* t app^icatlou° wil?convince them o? eEact*.— ■Z’iWdwrpA Commercial qf
Oct. 22,1877. oiing its own story in the hands of The article is £ J 1 ™? “ it with the most gratifying thousands who are » and ‘ n f co Fifth Avenue Pharmacy, says. W. H. Bbidl ®£o., for the hair for upward “We have sold prepar ne ver had one to sell as of twenty years, but h. satisfaction. We there, fore recommend 1 it“with confidence to our friend, and the general Opera Mr. Gustavus F. t weeks’ use I am conTroupe, writes: After si Aw ‘Carboa wonderful growth of It’s simply wonderful in my case. B. F. Abthub, chemist, . Ho! Vfterevery- ■“ Your ‘ Carboline’ has restored my hair after everything else had failed.” Tohiph E Pond, attorney-at-law, No. Attleboro, writes : For more than 20 years a portion of has been as smooth and free from hair as a iKfnard ball but some eight weeks ago I.was inISL I shaft ft is cut. CARBOLINE v. rwMnted to the public without fear of con-\ tradiction as the best Restorative and Beautifler of the Hair the world has ever produced. price, ONE DOLLAR per bottle. ~ Sold by all Druggists. KENNEDY & CO., PITTSBURG, PA'.,, Aole Agents for the United States, the Canadas and Britain./
