Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 May 1884 — Page 7
A Gardes in Para.
* It is the middle of November, warm, bright, with a cool, fresh breeze; the time, 8 o’clock in the morning; for we are not where November is a cold, gray month, but under the sunny skies of the equator. On our way to a friend’s garden we take the long street bordered with tall Royal Palms (Oreodoxa regina), wind along the crumbling walls of an old convent, which are a mass of White Jasmine, Cypress Vine, and Morning Glories, and soon oome into the great theater square, on the four sides of which are great Mango trees all full of green fruit A ten minutes’ walk brings us to the garden, above the tall fence of which tower many orange trees full of fruit and flowers, which per fn me the air delightfully. Entering through a tall gate, over which twine great Orange Trumpet Flowers, we see before us an avenue planted on either side with oranges, mangoes, and many other trees, the end of the vista being a great clump of the beautiful Peach Palm. We are lost in admiration at the variety and beauty which surrounds us. Caladiums, with bright white and red variegated foliage, cover the ground; clumps of Amaryllis fulgida are full of showy flowers, creepers twine over and hang in luxuriant festoons from the trees, and a very pretty parasite with white fragrant flowers, not unlike those of a Madeira Vine, is very common, so much so as to be an evil, as it is death to the branch upon which it establishes itself. On one side is an arbor some 100 feet long, covered with creepers among which Passion Flowers of many hues predominate, and on the posts and rafters of which are growing many common Orchids such as Stanhopeas, Oncidiums, Gorgoras and Epidendrums. On some of the trees near by are immense Tillandsias, some larger round than a bushel basket, from which hang great spikes of flowers with rosy or scarlet bracts. Meyenia erecta is a large bush covered with purple, yellowthroated flowers and Cape Jasmines that are large enough to sit under. Allamandas are heavy with trusses of golden bloom, and the beautiful Thunbergia lancifolia covering a great wall is a sheet of great lavender blue flowers. Guavas of several kinds were in full bloom and 'fruit; Sapodillas (Lucuma) were covered with a delicious fruit in size and in color somewhat reembling Russet apples, Jaca, and • Beseba, all species of Custard apple, bore both fruit and flowers. But what greatly interested us was the variety of oranges. The trees were heavy with fruit; the navel orange of Bahia, so called, from the protuberance at the apex, and which has no seeds; it is very large and the most delicious of oranges. The Mandarin, the skin of which separates so readily from the pulp; the lied Tungerine, many varieties of the common sweet orange which differ greatly in size and flavor, and the pretty little orange of Cameta, as large as a good-sized plum, growing in such clusters as to make the tree show more fruit than leaves, and of delicious sweetness. There were also the large sweet kind and many small, sour kinds, with lemons and shaddocks. The breadfruit trees are always conspicuous from their large, deep-cut foliage, and the two varieties, that of which the fruit has seeds and that without, bear great fruits nearly as large as a child’s head. There were many bushes bearing fruit which we did not know—eight-sided, flattish, bright red or black, and used for preserves ; the seed came from Bahia. The vflower is white, somewhat resembling a Myrtle; at first we thought it an Euqenia, but it is evidently not of the Myrtle family. Of Palms there were many; the graceful Assie; the Maracaja, with its tall crown of foliage; the cocoanut, with great clusters of fruit; and the huge fan, leafod MiritL Pineapples grow in great masses, and the space reserved for a future home was a luxuriant sweet potato patch. Indeed, to tell all we saw would exceed our limits. The pleasant thought was that all this luxuriance goes on from month to month, fears no winter’s chill, and with the lapse of years increases in beauty, and this in a climate probably as healthy as any in the world. We returned to our house laden with specimens of fruits and flowers, and as we write our room is a horticultural exhibition in miniature. We should add that the owner of the garden told us that five years ago there was not a tree on the ■place.—Floral World.
The Formal “Call.”
Whatever may betide, men have good cause to rejoice that they bear no part in that crowning bore of all bores known as the “formal calL” That is a feminine institution. It is an invention of the sex, and the sex groans under its yoke. Man smokes his Durham in beatific peace, while the wife and daughters pay tribute to the formal calL He hears the sotto voce prayer that parties will be out, and that the matter can be dispatched with a card. He quietly notes the sigh of relief when the exhausted women return after hours of social distress. He observes the tax of dress incident to the affair, the bad temper it invokes, and the hypocrisy and total absence of any equivalent in the way of pleasure for all this slavish adherence to custom, aud then dimly realizes the miraculous felicity of his own escape from such tliralldom, and it maybe takes comfort in the thought that the whole business falls totally on those who have made him pay the piper for countless other freaks and whims of fashion and caprice. The elasticity of conscience with which the gentle creatures endeavor to mitigate the infliction of the formal call by convenient fibs, furnishes the masculine monster some amusing food for study, and it may be doubted whether he would budge an inch to abolish the formal call. It is diamond cut diamond; women annoying women. In such a transaction the wise man holds aloof and lets the dainty belligerents masquerading as friends manage the hollow and artificial show as suits themselves. It is not often that he has an. Opportunity of keeping out of a game in which women array their wits against one another instead of against the common tyrant, man. Ho is at liberty to be judiciously silent and hear the fair prattlers discuss each
other in a style utterly unlike the fancy pictures of novelists and poets, and if he doesn't get some wholesome enlightenment he is hopelessly stupid.—Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph.
Cost of the Capital.
I have been figuring up what this capital of ours has cost us since the beginning, and I find that the amount is over $100,000,000. The subject was investigated by Congress in 1876. The total at that time was a cost of $94,362,423; since then $5,500,000 has been paid out for public buildings alone, and the amounts paid out for works of art, park decorations, and other things, will run the total far ahead of the amount above stated. For a number of years it has cost more than $1,000,000 a year to pay the Government expenses of the District of Columbia, and since 1862 the amounts have been much higher. In 1873 the amount was more than $8,000,000. In 1875 it was more than $7,000,000, while from 1828 to 1852 it was less than $1,000,000 a year. In 1814 only SI,BOO was appropriated for the District of Columbia, and it was not until 1837 that the yearly proportion reached $1,000,000. It is interesting to look over the items of permanent improvements in Washington. These include the original cost of the buildings and their repairs, furnishing, and keeping in order. The following estimate, though not exactly correct, is approximately so. It is less, rather than greater, than the actual cost, some of the minor expenses during the last seven years being omitted. The Capitol has cost $17,672,123, the Patent Office over $13,000,000, the Treasury about $7,200,000, the Washington streets more than $6,000,000, the State Department about $7,000,000, the Navy nearly $4,000,000, the White House, two parks, and public grounds, about $2,000,000. —Washington (D. C.) Republic.
Lincoln, the Peacemaker.
Abraham Lincoln, though a successfttl lawyer, was a peacemaker. Juries trusted him, and his common-sense way of putting things gave him great power as an advocate. Yet he frequently advised his clients not to go to law, but to leave their disputes out to arbitrators. The Rev. Dr. Miner, of Trenton, N. J., who was formerly a pastor at Springfield, 111., Mr. Lincoln’s home, told recently the following anecdote: A farmer once said to me: “Do you know why it is that I, who have been a Democrat all my life, am going to vote for Mr. Lincoln ? I will tell you. I once had got into difficulty with a neighbor about the line between our farms. I went to Mr. Lincoln to secure him. “Mr. L. said: ‘Now, if you go on with this, it will cost both of you your farms, and will entail an enmity that will last for generations, and perhaps lead to murder. “ ‘The other man has just been here to engage me. Now I want you two to sit down in my office while i am gone to dinner, and talk it over and try to settle it. And, to secure you from any interruption, I will lock the door.’ He did so, and he did not return all the afternoon. “We two men, finding ourselves shut up together, began to laugh. This put us in a good-humor, and by the time Mr. L. returned the matter was settled.”
Didn’t Think Any More of Him.
The Queen has often made visits, both of pleasure and policy, to her estate in Scotland, being at such times more than heartily welcomed by the canny Scots, who, almost without exception, highly reverence her and indorse all that she does. On one occasion, shortly after a visit to her estate in the outskirts of Balmoral, Mr. Henry Irving, who was traveling through the country, met an old Scotch woman, with whom he spoke of her Majesty. “The Queen is a good woman,” he said. “I suppose she’s gude enough, but there are things Icanna bear.” “What do you mean?” asked Mr. Irving. “Well, I think tfiere are things that even the Queen has no right to do. For one thing—she goes rowing on the lake on Soonday—and it’s not a Chreestian thing to do.” “But you know the Bible tells us ” “I knaw,” she interrupted, angrily. “I’ve read the Bible ever since I was so high, an’ I knaw every word in’t. I knaw aboot the Sunday fishing, and a’ the other things the good Lord did, but I want ye to know, too, that I don’t think any the more, e’en of Him, for adoing it.”— Exchange. A man cannot tell what the needs and rights of women and children are, because he is not one of them. He will remember well enough, however, that he did not run to his father but to his mother for comfort in his infancy; and this will'be a sufficient argument, if he be a fair-minded man, to show him that in the management of women and children, women ought to have an authoritative say. —Toronto Week. History is a voioe forever sounding across the centuries the laws of right and wrong. Opinions alter, manners change, creeds rise and fall, but the moral law is written on the tablets of eternity.— Froude. Hotel elevators in England, or, as they are called, “lifts,” are continually getting out of order, and would, seem to be defective in construction.
To Be Robbed of Health
by a pestilential climate, by a vocation entaillnr constant exposure, physical overwork, or sedentary drudgery at the desk, is a hard lot. Yet many persons originally possessed of a fair constitution suffer this deprivation before the meridian of life is passed. To any and all subject to conditions inimical to health, no purer or more agreeable preservative of the greatest of earthly blessings can be recommended than Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which inures the system to climatic change, physical fatigue, and mental exhaustion. It eradicates dyspepsia, the ba.no of sedentary brain workers, preserves and restores regularity of the bowels and liver, when disordered from any cause, annihilates fever and ague and prevents it, checks the growth of a tendency to rheumatism and goat, and neutralizes the danger to be apprehended from causes productive of kidney, bladder, and uterine ailments. To be convinced of the troth of these statements, it is only necessary to give this sterling preparation an impartial trial
A TRAGIC EVENT.
A Father’s Despair and Self-Inflicted Death —His Son’s Final Rescue Too Late to Save His Parent. The graphic occurrence that is described below ia one of the most remarkable episodes In the domestic history of America. It is absolute truth which can readily be verified. The inhabitants of the pleasant town of Cortland, N. Y., were shocked one morning by the announcement that Mr. Clinton Kludge, one of their most prominent citizens, had committed suicide. The news spread rapidly and aroused the entire neighborhood where Mr. Rindge was so well and favorably known. At first it seemed impossible that any one so quiet and domestlo could do so rash a deed, and the inquiry was heard on every side as to the oause. The facts as developed on investigation proved to be as follows: Mr. Rindge was domestic in his tastes, and took the greatest enjoyment in the society of his children and pride in their development. And indeed he had good reason to be proud, for they gave promise of long lives of success and usefulness. But an evil day came. His youngest son, William, began to show signs of an early decay. He felt unusually tired each day, and would sometimes sleep the entire afternoon if permitted to do so. His head pained him, not acutely, but with a dull, heavy feeling. There was a sinking sensation at the pit of his stomach. He lost all relish for food and much of-his interest for things about him. He tried manfully to overcome these feelings, but they seemed stronger than hlsgwill. He began to lose fiesh rapidly. The father became alarmed and consulted physicians as to the cause of his son's illness, but they were unable to explain. Finally severe sores broke out on his arms and he was taken to Buffalo, where a painful operation was performed, resulting in the loss of much blood, but affording little relief. The young man returned home, and a council of physicians was called. After an exhaustive examination they declared there was no hope of final recovery and that he must die within a very few days. To describe the agony which this announcement caused the father would be Impossible. His mind failed to grasp its full meaning at first; then finally seemed to comprehend it, but the load was too great. In an agony of frenzy he seized a knife and took his own life, preferring death rather than to survive his idolized son. At that tithe William Rindge was too weak to know what was transpiring. His face had turned black, his breath ceased entirely at times, and his friends waited for his death, believing that the fiend, Bright’s disease of the kidneys, from which he was suffering, could not be removed. In this supreme moment William’s sister came forward and declared she would make a final attempt to save her brother. The doctors interposed, assuring her it was useless and that she would only hasten the end by the means she proposed to employ. But she was firm, and putting all back, approached her brother’s side and administered a*remedy which she fortunately had on handWithin an hour he seemed more easy, and before the day was over he showed signs of decided improvement. These favorable signs continued, and. to-day William B. Rindge is well, having been virtually raised from the dead through the marvelous power of Warner’s Safe Cure, as can be readily verified by any citizen of Cortland. Any one who reflects upon the facts above described must have a feeling of sadness. The father, dead by his own hand, supposing his son’s recovery to be impossible; the son restored to health to mourn the loss of his father; and the agonized relatives with a memory of sadness to forever darken their lives. Hod Clinton Rindge known that his son could recover he would to-day be alive and happy; but the facts which turned hiS brain and caused him to commit suicide were such as any one would accept as true. However sad this case may be, the truth remains that thousands of people are at this moment in as great actual peril as William Rindge, and in as great danger of causing misery if not death to their friends. Liver and kidney diseases are become the most common and most dangerous of any or all modern complaints. They are the most deceptive in their beginnings and horrible in their final stages. They are far more deceptive than Consumption, and can rarely be detected, even by skillful physicians, unless a microscopic analysis-'be resorted to, and few doctors understand how to do this. Their •lightest approach, or possibility of approach, should strike terror to the one who is threatened as well as to alt his or her friends. These diseases have no distinct symptoms, but come in the form of lassitude, loss of appetite, aching muscles and joints, dull headaches, pains sh the back, stomach, and chest, sour stomach, recurring signs of cold, irregular pulsations of the heart, and frequent dizziness. If neglected, these symptoms are certain to run into chronic kidney and liver or Bright's disease, from which there is sure to be great amount of agony and only one means of escape, which is by the use of Warner’s Safe Cure. The importance of taking this great remedy upon the slightest appearance of any of the above symptoms cannot be too strongly Impressed upon the minds of all readers who desire to escape death and pain and prolong life, with all its pleasures and blessings.
The Luscious Peanut.
A Southern paper says the Virginians are beginning to turn the peanut into flour, and says it makes a palatable “biscuit." In Georgia there is a custom, now growing old, of grinding or pounding the shelled peanut, and turning them into pastry, which has a resemblance, both in looks and taste, to that made of cocoanut, but the peanut pastry is more oily and richer, and, we think, healthier and better every way. If, as Bome’people believe, Africa sent a curse to America in slavery, she certainly conferred upon her a blessing in the universally popular peanut, which grows so well throughout the Southern regions that we shall soon be able to cut of the now large importation altogether.
A Great Horseman.
Mr. J. H. Goldsmith, owner of the Walnut Grove stock farm, N. Y., says of the wonderful curative qualities of St. Jacobs Oil that, having long used it for rheumatism and on his breeding farm for ailments of horses and cattle, he cheerfully accords this great pain cure his preference, as the best he ever need, in an experience of twenty yeans.
What Was Lacking.
“Now, here,” said a man to an acquaintance. “You have been owing me $lO for a long time, and I want to call your attention to the fact, that I am in need. ” “I haven’t any money, but I assureyou that my intentions are good.” “Well, why don’t yon pay me when you’ve got the money?” “Because I haven’t the intentions then.” —Texas Siftings. Sufferers from nervousness, early decay, etc., if you valuo lire, avoid advertising doctors and medicines that act on kidneys and liver. Be not deceived by the many bogus certificates of cures from paid or imaginary persons. If a weakness of the sexual system is the cuuse of your distress, Dr. Guysott s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla will strengthen toe parts aflected, stop the drain, quiet the nerves, produce dreamless slumber, and < allow you to regain perlect health. It has cured thousands, and will cure you; for, by purifying the blood and strengthening every weak portion of the body, it removes every symptom of distress. What would comprise a fair match? A woman without arms and a man without legs would be a fair match. How no bees dispose of their honey? Ceil it, of course.
Horsford’s Acid Phosphate.
BEWARE OF IHITATIOVS. Imitations and counterfeits have again Appeared. Be sure that the word “Horsford’s” isos too paper. None are genuine without it
It 1b truly wonderful to see how the name of Mrs. Pink ham is a household word among the wives and mothers of our land. Alike in the luxurious homes of our great cities and in the humble cabins of the remote frontier one woman’s deeds have borne their kindly fruit in health for others. Paradoxical .as it may appear,'the law prohibits keeping men in lunatic asylums when it is admitted they are ln-sane. J. W. Thornton, of Claibom, Miss., says: "Samaritan Nervine cured my son of fits.” A smooth sidewalk is a thing to he desired and generally approved, but people are apt to get down on a slippery pavement. Wakxtclneßs at night Is a terror, Samaritan Nervine cures it, and hence is a blessing. Which travels faster, heat or ooldf Heat, because one oan catch a cold.
A Druggist’s Story.
Mr. Isaac C. Chapman, druggist, Newburg, N. Y., writes us: “I have for the past ten years sold several gross of Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the Lungs. I can say of it what I cannot say of any other medicine. I have never heard a customer speak of it but to praise its virtues in the highest manner. I have recommended it in a great many cases of whooping cough with the happiest effects. I have used it in my own family for many years; in fact, always have a bottle in the medicine closet."
Three Remarkable Interviews.
A reporter has interviewed Hon. Wm. D. Kelley, M. C.; Hon. Judge Flanders.of New York; and T. 8. Arthur, in regard to their experience with Compound Oxygen. Those interviews give surprising results and show this treatment for the cure of chronic diseases to be the most remarkable known to the profession. Acopy of these interviews,also a Treatise on Compound Oxygen, will be mailed free, by Drs. Starkey & Palen, 1109 Girards!., Phila.
A Pleasure to Recommend It.
We take pleasure in recommending Dr. Warner’s White Wine of Tar Syrup to any public speaker that may be troubled with throat or lung disease. Rev. M. L. Booher, Pastor Presbyterian Church, Reading, Mich. Rev. J. T. Iddlngs, Albion, Mich. Rev. V. L. Lockwood, Ann Arbor, Midi.
Level-Headed.
When Fogg was asked regarding the latest addition to the Knglish language, he said he would ask his wife. She always had the last word. His wife said Carbolinc was not only the latest but the best.
My Wife and Children.
Rev. L. A. Dunlap, of Mount Vernon, Mo., says: My children were afflicted with a cough resulting from measles, my wife with a cough that had prevented her from sleeping, more or less, for years, and your White Wine of Tar Byrup has cured them all. Mensman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains bloodmaking, force-generating, and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-work, or aoute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co., proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists. Beware of the incipient stages of Consumption. Take Piso’s Cure in time. Dr. Sanford’s Liver Jnvigorator has a reputation equal to any medicine in the world. The Frazer Axle Grease is the best and, Intrinsically, the cheapest. For a cold in the head, there is nothing so good as Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. "Rough on Rats" clears out Rats, Mice. 15c. Mother Swan’s Worm Syrup, tasteless. 25c. "Rough on Coughs” Troches, 15o; Liquid,soc. Wells’ May- Apple (Liver) Pills, 100. "Rough on Toothache,” instant relief. 150. “Buchu-paiba,” Great Kidney and Urinary Oure. 91. "Bough on Corn*, 1 ' Oorna, Warts, Bunions. 150. Wells' Health Renewer cores Dyspepsia, Impotenoe. “Rough on Dentist” Tooth Powder, 150.
SiJawilisOil
BOYS ANI» GIRLS—A handsome set of cards aud descriptive catalogue for four one-cent stamps. W. H. SISSON,'WeIIs Bridge, Nl Y. 1 EIDII T elerraphy.,or Short-Hand and Type I tAnn Writing Here. Situations furnished. Li Address VALENTINE BROS., Janesville. Wis. DATERI"TC f ThomasP.Simpson,Wash“A I KIW 101 ington, D.C. No pay asked for patent until obtained. Write for Inventors'Guide. UIDITC us how to SECURE aCD C C Wifi I C- PAIR OF FINE SHOES. F ts CC J. E. BICKNELL & CO.. Hroektou, Haas. II AID lift 111 E. BURNHAM. 71 State street, Chicago. mUE FRENCH NOVELTY CO., X 195 & 187 Fulton St:, New York, send all kinds of JEWELRY, GUNS and NOVELTIES for lowest cash price. Send for catalogue. T)ATENT BARREL-HEAD FASTENER-Cheaper than JL lining hoops. Imposslbleforhead to drop in or out. Guarantees safety ot package. Driven in with hammer. Coopers wanted to apply them. TETAMORE ft FORDHAM MFG. CO.,W»fi»bout St. k Wythe Ave., Brooklyn. Save Your Loved Ones FROM A DRUNKARD'B GRAVE By the timely use of Da. SIR JAS. L CLARKE’S salvation Powders, a positive care for drunkenness. Can be mixed with all liquids, ale, liquor, tea or coffee, and administered without the knowledge of the patient. Produces at once a disgust for all intoxicating liquors. One box will frequently cure the worn case. Securely packed. By mall, tl per box. Address THE CLARKE REDICINE CO.. 21 and 28 Ann Street, N. Y. CatabrH ely ’* CREAM BALM IbffTAU BMw]| wh « n *Pi> H ed by the ■ ciloroCOWl fin Ker into thß no »- I u IN I trill, will be absorbed, vjWTmR { m£A / uasal passages°^from / fresh colds, completely heals ,he “ores and , r < troEl restores taste and smell. V , A f,!w applications reN lieve. A thorough X'l s 1 treatment will poninam' v.sa. | lively acre. Agree■Ji AV- re»kfg » ble use. Send tor -FEVER SGSfc.VS&S mall registered. Druggists, Owego, N. Y.
THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves and cures RHEUMATISM) Neuralsla, Solatioa, Lumbago, BACKACUK, HEADAOHI, TOOTHACHI, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS, SPRAINS, Sorsnatt, Cult, Brulwt, FROSTBITES. BURNS, SCALDS, And allothar bodily achat and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by all Druggists and Dealers. Directions In U languages. 4 The Chtrltt A. Vogeler'Co. (Imss U A. VOQZLZm * 00.) Baltimore, U, C.ti.
LONG SUFFERING From Stone In the Kidneys of one of Troy's Beat Citizens—Kile Recovery through the use of Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy (of Rondont, IV. Y.) It is by no means strange that Dr. David Kennedy should have received the following letter. By reading it yon will see in one minute why James Andrews was thankful: Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondont, If. Y.; Dear Bib—Until within a recent dkte, I had for several yean suffered greatly from Gravel, called by the doctors the Brick-dust Sediment. For shout s year past this sediment hss not passed off in the usual Quantity, but has accumulated, causing me untold pain. Having heard of DB. DAVID KENNEDY'B FAVORITE REMEDY. I tried it in my case, and after using about one and one-half bottles I voided a stone from the bladder, of an oval shape, 7-16 of an Inch long, and rough on its surface. I send you the largest piece that you may see of what it Is composed. Biuce then 1 have felt no pain. I now consider myself cured, and cannot express my thankfulness and gratitude for so signal s deliverance from a terrible disease. You have my consent to use tlilß letter, should you wish to do so, for the benetlt of other sufferers. Yours truly, James Andrews. No. 10 Marshal St., Ida Hill, Troy. N. Y. When wo consider that the medicine which did this service for Mr. Andrews costs only one dollar a bottle, it would seem that persons afflicted in lika fashion can afford the expense of testing its virtues. Get it of your druggist, or address Dr. David Kennedy, Rondont. N. Y. DID DdVTo sell our rubber hand*stamps. Terms DID rATiree. Taylor Bros, t Co.. Cleveland,Ohio. 39b LOANS, For men of moderate means. Money loaned in any part of therountry. Adilresa.wltht-i-ont stamp. . MICHIGAN LOAN A TUB. CO., CUABLOTTg. JUCZ.' f)' <£>'-$> m This porous plaster is famous for its quick _ _ __ __ and hearty action In □ I AHi PI? coring Lame Buck, ■ ■ Mam l\ Rheumatism, Sciatica. Crick in tha Back, Side or Hip, Neuralgia, Stiff Joint# and Muscles, Sore Chest. Kidney Trouble# and all pains or aches either local or deep-seated. ItSoothos, Strengthens and Stimulates the parts. The vlrtuee of hops combined with gums—clean and reedy to apply. Superior to liniments, lotions and aalrea, Price 26 oents or 6 for 91.00. Sold by drug- sa qh szi gluts and country £X L|K|lM R storoa Mailed on re- m m ■ sawjSSaS SUCCESS prietors, Boston, Mass. --H—---tK The best family pill made—Hawley's Stomach and Liver Pllla Mo. Peasant in action and easy to take. pEW; ml Liver and Kidney Remedy, Compounded from the well known B Curatives Hops, Malt, Buchu, 'I ■ drake, Dandelion, Sarsaparilla, Cas- m 1 W cara Sagrada, etc., combined with an V M agreeable Aromatlo Elixir, M A THEY CURE DYSPEPSIA k INDIGESTION, A Hr let upon the Liver and Kidneys, ■■ U reoulateTthe bowels, U ■ They cure Rheumatism, and all Url- |H j nary troubles. They Invigorate, i nourish, strengthen and quiet m the Nervous System, V As a Tonlo they have no Equal. A Take none but Hope and Malt Bitters. FOR SALE BY ALL OEALERS.— M Hops and Malt Bitters Oo.lfl DETROIT, MICH. ■■ Q amtfUTfl g| The only known specific for Epileptic Fite. Also for Spasms end Felling Sickness. Nervous Weakness It Instantly relieves and cures. Cleanses blood and quickens sluggish circulation. Neutralizes germs of disease and saves sickness. Cures [[A SKEPTIC SAHri ugly blotches and stubborn blood sores. Eliminates Bolls, Carbuncles end Scalds. prPermanently end promptly cures paralysis. Yes, It Is a charming and healthful Aperient. Kills Scrofula and Kings Evil, twin brothers. Changes bad breath to good, removtog the cause? Routs bilious tendencies and makes clear complexion. Equalled by none In the delirium of fever. A charming resolvent and a matchless laxative. It drives Sick Headache like the wind, prcontolnj no drastic cathartic or opiates. Relieves (the greats the brain of morbid fancies. Promptly cures Rheumatism by routing It. Restores life-giving properties to the blood. Is guaranteed to cure all nervous disorders. when all opiates fail. Re. freshes the mind and Invigorates the body. Cures dyspepsia or money refunded. .. I m J- | i j . LX Diseases of the blood ownlt a conqueror. Endorsed In writing by over fifty thousand leading citizens, clergymen and physicians In U. 8. and Europe. I OTFor sale by all leading druggists. gIAO. (18) ' For Testimonials and circulars send stamp. Tit Dr.SJL Richmond IM Co. St. Josopl,Mo. Lord. Btoutenbnrgh <fc 06., Agents, Chicago, DL UTT OF DISEASES ALWAYS CURABLE’BY USING! MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. •F HUMAN FLKSB. OF ANIMALS. Rheumatism. Scratches, Burma and Scalds, Sore* and Galls, Stings and Bites, Spavin, Cracks, Cute and Bruises, Screw Worm, Grub, Sprains A Stitches, Foot Rot, Hoof All, ConuraetedSluscles Lameness, Stiff Joint*, Swlnny, Founders, Backache, Sprains, Strains, Eruptions, Sore Feet, Frost Bites, Stlflhess, and all external disease*, and every hurt or accident For general use in family, stable and stock yard itii THE BEST OF ALL LINIMENTS
The Host Popolar Medicine litaßi. Allen’s In Balsam, A aZKEDT THAT WILL CUM CONSUMPTION, GOUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA, CROUP, All Diseases of the Throat, Lungs and Pulmonary Organs. The lunc balsam Has cured Consumption when other remedle* and physicians have failed to effect a cure. The lung balsam Contains no Opium in any form. The lung balsam Is strictly pure and harmless to the most delicate person. The lung balNam Is recommended by Physicians, Minister* and Nurse*. The lung balsam For Croup is a safe and sure Remedy. Mothers, try it THE LUItC BALSAM Should be used at the first manifestation* of a Cold or Cough. The lung balsam As an Expectorant has no equal. CAUTION.—Be not deceived. Call for ALLEN'S I.ung Balsam, and take no other. ffST Directions accompany each bottle. » i. N. HARRIS & CO. Limited, Cincinnati, 0. PROPRIETOBB. S9-BOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS.-CS CAIN Health and Happiness. „ f? DO AS OTHERS <■y&cmr have done. .+», Are your Kidneys disordered? "Kidney Wort brought mo from my grave, aait were, after 1 bad been given up by 13 boat doctor* In Detroit.” M. W. Deveraux, Mechanic, lonia, Mich. Are your nerves weak ? “Kidney Wort cured mo from nervous weakness Ac., after 1 was not expected to live.”—Mm. M. M. B. Uoodwln, Ed. Christian Monitor, Cleveland, O. Have you Bright’s Disease? “Kidney Wort cured mo when my water waa Just like chalk and thun like blood.” Frank Wilson, Peabody, Mata Suffering from Diabetes ? "Kidney-Wort la tho moat successful remedy I have ever used. Ulvos almost Immediate relief.” Dr. Phillip O. Ballou, Houkton, Vt. Have you Liver Complaint? “Kidney-Wort cured mo of chroulo Liver Diseases after I prayed to die.” Henry Ward, late CoL Mth Nat. Guard, N. Y. Is your Back lame and aching? "Kidney-Wort, (1 bottlelOcured me when 1 was to lame I bad to roll out of bed.” O. M. Talimage, Milwaukee, Wla Have you / Kidney Disease? “Kidney-Wort made me aoundln liver and kidneys after years of unsuccessful doctoring. Its worth glOabox.”—Sam'l Hodges, WilUamstown, West Vo. Are you Constipated? “Kidney-Wort causes easy evacuations and cured me after U years use of other medicines.” Nelson Fairchild, St. Albans, Vt. Have you Malaria? “Kidney-Wort baa done belWrithan any other remedy I have ever used in my praetlep.” Dr. It, South Hero, Vt. Are you BiHcusP “Kidney-Wort has done me more good than any other remedy I hove ever taken," Mrs. J. T. Galloway, Elk Flat, Oregon. Are you tormented with Piles? “Kidney-Wort permanently toTed mo of bleading pile*. Dr. W. C. Kline recommended It to me. Goo. H. llorst, CaahlorM.Bank, Myorstown, Pa. Are you Rheumatism racked ? "Kidney-Wort cured me. after i was given t* to die by phyricl^a^^g^thl^j^ Ladies, are you suffering? “Kidnoy-Worf cured mo of peculiar troubles of reveraiyears^tog.^^nd^reandlj-r.h-If you would Banish Disease i And gain Health, Take - ItewtfMMßM di i i TWa BtOOP CLKANBBR. per cant. National Publishing Co., Chicago, XIL. TO SPECULATORS. : i :«r- "•“•ssa*™Comments, Chicago. New York. GRAIN A PROVISION BROKERS. Hemberi of ill prominent Produce Exehamres is K vSL Y £ rk ’ st * _V° ul * “A Milwaukee. HS TON WAGON SCALES, baa Levers, Bt*.l h-.rtsr*. Orus Tore Seem and Beam Bes, S6G. M JONBB he pars thefnlzht-fer frt* Pries List mestlea this paper anA addreaelMES Of lIN9HAMTIN, Biafliaattea. N.Ta D* FOOTE 8 Original METHODS fll n EVCC Milt New without doc- OF UUJ 11 LO tors,medicine orglosses IT AII Tji RUPTURE SSUSS&SBSSS u U ffl h PHIMOSIS NERVOUSMSUyjSSr •>«,. CHROHICKSIK?«KS~SS»» illrwl ». B. FOOTS, B.HII, S. V. air. Consumption Can Be Cured. %. HALL’S Iungs.BALSAM Cares Consamntlon, Colds. Pneumonia, Influenxa.UronclilHl Difficulties,Bronchitis, Howraenew, Asthma, Croup, Whocming Cough, and al lDlseaoc* ofthe Breathing Oncana. It soothes and heals the Membrueofthe Longs, inflamed and poisoned by the disease, and prevents tlie night sweats and tightness across the chest which accompany I*7 Consumption Is not an incurable malady. HALL'S BALSAM will cur* CONSUMPTION. ’ Ifisv# s poattlve remedy for the above disease; by Its use thousands of ease* of tho wont kind and of long standing have been cured. Indeed, so strong la my faith In IU eScaoy, that I will sand TWO BOTTLis FBB*. together with aVALUABLB TBBATIBBon this disease, to any sufferer Give Kxurese and P. O. adilreea. v ■ pk T.A.DLQOPM. Ml PearUUNewYork. O.N.U. *L, , , ' 1 WHEN WHITING TO ADVKKTISKRS. v v please say you saw the aqvartUauxmk In this paper. ’
