Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 June 1884 — Page 7
THE DECOROUS DUTCH.
How the People tin in Holland, and Some of Their Carious Customs. The man is “lord of all" in Holland, and woman is almost without the shadow of estimation. He is a sort of a bear, tame and good nattired, but still full of the bruin element. His countrywomen are actually afraid of him, especially when outside of their own door. Not that the men are dangerous, for rarely is it heard that the bears have bitten. Look out in the street, and yon will see that the ladies walk in the road and the gentlemen on the sidewalk. Always so, no matter how muddy or dusty the road is, or how many teams are passing. Watch them, and you cannot help but notice that the gentlemen and ladies never speak to each other on the street. That would he a breach of etiquette that society would hardly pardon. Even when a man meets his wife he is not permitted to ask what he shall bring home for dinner! The gentleman bows first, the same as in France, and a lady may have hows from men whose names she does not even know. And the bowing is a marvel! The forehead almost touches the knees in the act, and there is no half-way work about it—no nodding or a sweeping touch of the hat, but an entire removal of the hat to supplement that intense how- Everybody bows, then take off their hats to one another and profoundly bow. A lady is never known to pass a club- * house or a knot of men on the street. If she is obliged to pass up a street where there is a club she does not dare to brave the dreaded windows, but will cross the street until she is past the house, and then cross back again. I have seen a lady of my acquaintance make ihe round of several streets to avoid a club-house, being at the time in a great hurry to reach an apothecary, whose shop was next beyond the club. If a lady, alone, or accompanied by other ladies, must needs enter a confectionery, a library, or other places where men will naturally go, and finds a gentleman or two there, she will retire as precipitately as if she had seen a case of small-pox. The men know this, but unless my lord, the man, has quite finished his business, he will not retire. The lady retreats in a most undignified manner, and the human bear finishes his book or chocolate, even though the lady is waiting at the door for him to leave. But a change comes over the woman at home. No longer is she the afraid body of the street. She has at hand the kettle of hot water, the flat-irons, and other articles of defense that a woman can use if necessary, and no longer does she fear the bears. She is quite “at home.” She does not put herself to any trouble for the sake of her gueßts. In the morning she never dresses for breakfast, but comes to the table en demi-toilette, her hair on the crimping pins, a calico gown loosely buttoned over skirts by no means new, with no collar, her shoes unbuttoned, and frequently without stockings. After breakfast it is quite awhile b e f° re she gets dressed, and meantime, if she receives callers, she goes into the parlor in her breakfast toilet. But the social etiquette is not to be compared to that of the table. If one is curious the other is supremely droll. It is amusing to see the people eat. They take their plateful as soon as they are helped and cut it up into morsels. Then they lay the knife in front of the plate, and, leaning on the table with their left hand, proceed to eat all with the fork. I never saw food eaten otherwise except' that some desserts are shoveled with the spoon instead of the fork, two spoons lying with knife and fork at each plate. All this is etiquette. Beside the plate a hand-rest is sometimes placed, for it is necessary that one should half recline on the table 1 There is no such thing as changing covers, and, be the courses two or twenty, they are served on the same plate, and the same knife, fork, and spoon are used. The napkins are kept in service until the washerwoman has to meet a big bill for soap 1 One supper, at which I was a guest, I shall always remember. At 9 o’clock the hostess left the cardboard, spread the tablecloth, and placed the dishes. Then she brought out a spirit lamp, •which she lighted with a match from the match-box on the table, and. having ground some coffee in a little hand-mill, she set the case tier e over the lamp, where it boiled merrily during the meal. The bread came on in a loaf and in a long basket, and was cut into thick slices, and so passed around. The butter was in a little round earthen pot, each person scraping out with his own knife as much as he wanted for each pidce of bread. The cheese came to the table in a similar pot, and was also scraped and eaten spread on the bread over the butter. Near the bread basket, on a round tray, was a partly out loaf of brown bread, and slices of three or four kinds of cake, including the invariable fruit cake. Preserves were placed on the cloth in a shallow dish, and it was passed around. The milk, fresh from the dairy, was drawn from a jug, that, in the absence of a sideboard, naturally reposed on a mat by my lady’s side. After the meal a china wash-bowl was brought out and the dishes washed on the tea-table by the mistress, who used the snowiest of serviettes, and neither spilled a drop nor wet her fiflgers. While the dishwashing wss going on the family guests remained sitting. — Cor. Springfield Republican.
Shooting Deer in Summer.
It was a delightful evening of May, 1870. I had been to listen to an able discourse on the probable immoitaLty of human and animal life. The faithful dog, the patient and long-suffering horse, and shy wild animals, were ably and mte estingly discussed. I returned home, and, aB my wife was away on a visit and I,was alone, I called my faithful hunting dog into the house w;th me.. Retir ng to 1 est, I fell into a fitful slumber, when I distinctly heard myname called. R sing up, i saw a nnst-like foxm, with beautiful, expressive eyes and a sweet, quiet voice said: “Come with me.” An irresistible power seemed to cont ol me, and we passed up into mid-air, above my dwelling, when, with a seemingly familiar voice, my
companion asked me if I would like to visit the Adirondacks. “Oh, yes," said L and, twining its transparent drapery about me, we flew along rapidly. As we passed along, I recognized the lake and the very place where, a year before, I shot by torchlight at a large doe, wounding her so severely that she was just able to get away out of the water and up into the woods. As 1 spoke to my companion she seemed to sigh, while a a shudder passed through her frame. Slowly we turned from the lake?- and passing up the side, we came to a beautiful glade, and, descending, here alighted where the tall, woody grass and ferns formed a natural bower. Looking around I saw two little fawns emaciated and starving. Their unkempt faces showed the want of the toilet of their mother’s tongue. Their little weeping eyes were glossy and deathstricken. I could only just hear a plaintive whispering bleat of the little dying infant deer. And, as 1 stood there, one, leaning forward, fell prone upon the grass dead. The other settled down on his little knees and closed his eyes in death. Near them lay the festering form of their dead mother. Turning away from the cruel, sickening sight, I spoke to my companion. She sighingly said, “It is the deer you shot at on the lake. Ah I” says she, “the Augel of Mercy passeth by on the other side and hath no tears to shed when the cruel man dies.” Heartsick, I asked to return home, and, as we neared my house, I asked my companion who she was. She replied, “I am the spirit of that deer you shot at, the mother of those dead fawns. —Forest and Stream.
Artists’ Models in New York.
Among the Academy models some time since, was the son of a banker in Wall street, who had failed during a financial crisis. Later, the young model obtained a position in a downtown bank, but such was his pride in his physique and his interost in art that he continued to pose in the evening classes. Another model, valued for his flne muscular development, was a blacksmith by trade. Another was a house painter, who, during the winter months, when all his trade are thrown out of employment, supported himself in this fashion. Still another, also noted for liis fine development, was a German athlete. One model, well known in his day at the Academy, was a halfbreed Indian employed as coachman in a wealthy family. In liis leisure hours he posed at the Academy, and became a popular model, but one day his employer discovered his artistic bias, and forced him to desist. He has since returned to the equine sphere he adorned, and resides in an inland city. Another temporary model was the son of a prominent artist in another city. Many studies of Arabs executed in New York during the past few years have had for their model a negro attached to the Academy, whose head and figure offered a perfect type of that race. A prosperous manufacturer of picture frames in an interior town, having failed in business, became a model in New York. * * * A few artists in New York have their models acting also as domestics or studio-retainers. This is a* foreign custom imported by artists who have received their schooling abroad. Under these circumstances, a sort of comradeship arises between the artist and his faithful model, which has its pathetic as well as its grotesque side, since the renumeration of the model is apt to depend upon the successes or failures of the artist. There is a colony of young artists in New York which possesses a retainer known to the world as “Sammy”—a youth of muscular type, with blonde mustache and hair, and a fresh complexion. His face and figure fit him for all spheres of model life. One day, he poses as a stalwart fisherman, in a pea-jacket, a disreputable hat, and high sea-boots. Another week, in a dresssuit borrowed for the occasion, fee figures as a ball-room gallant, with one arm encircling the waist of a bald-pated lay-figure, arrayed in silken robes, likewise borrowed, into whose glass eyes he gazes with an expression of the deepest tenderness. He has even appeared as a bold horseman seated astride a wooden chair, which was placed on a table, tightly clutching two pieces of clothes-line for reins, with his body inclined at the angle necessary to imply a furious galloping on the part of his fiery steed, and his coat-tails spread out and fastened to the wall behind to illustrate the aotion of the wind. In addition to his accomplishments as a model, this young man does everything an artist’s henchman can be expected to do in the line of general usefulness.—The Century.
That Unruly Member.
As is well known to most of the peo'J pie In Austin, Mrs. Col. Yerger is a fearful scold and scandal-monger. She jaws her husband until Bhe nearly drives him crazy. A few days ago, on his coming home from dinner, he perceived that’ his wife had her jaw tied up. “What’s the matter with your jaw, Mrs. Yerger; is it tired?” “Oh, I have been to the dentist’s and had two teeth pulled, you unfeeling brute 1” “Rappv, happy teeth l I only wish I was one of them.” “What do you mean, Col. Yerger?” “Nothing, except that those teeth are at last beyond the reach of your tongue. They ought to be happy. I would be happy if I were beyond the reach of your tongue. How happy those molars must be!” She made him think Sb more than ever before she got through with him. —Texas Siftings.
No Right to Complain.
A man who had been crippled up pretty badly in a railroad accident, in Texas, went to the office of the company, in San Antonio, and complained. “Why,” replied the cattle-claim agent, “ you ought to keep your mouth shut, and be satisfied, i You only had your legs broken and your shoulder dislocated, and yet you grumble. We kill men deader than Julius Caesar almost every day in the week, and none of them ever come around here raising a row and talking about damages.”— Texas Siftings.
MAN.
Poetic Thoughts Concerning Him. Man passes away; his name perishes from reoord and recollection; his history is as a tale that is told; and his very monument becomes a ruin. Washington Irving. To understand man, however, we must look beyond the individual man, and his actions or interests, and view him in combination with his fellows.— Carlyle. Man is his own star, and that soul that can be honest is the only perfect man.— Beaumont and Fletcher. The scientific study of man is the most difficult of all branches of knowledge.—Oliver Wendell Holmes. The man of wisdom is the man of years.— Young. Han whose Heaven-erected face The smiles of love adorn, Man’s inhumanity to man Makes countless thousands mourn. —Burns. Stood I, O Nature! man alone In thee. Then were it worth one's while a man to be. —Goethe. . A man is the whole encyclopedia of facts. The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn, and Egypt, Greece, Borne, Gaul, Britain, America lie folded already in the first man.—Emerson. Such is man 1 in great affliction, he is elevated by the first minute; in great happiness, the most distant, sad one, even while yet beneath the horizon, casts him down.— Richter. What a piece of work is man 1 How noble in reason 1 how infinite in faculty 1 in form, and moving, how express and admirable! in action, how like an angel 1 in apprehension, how like a god 1 the beauty of the world 1 the paragon of animals 1 And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust? Shakspeare. When faith is lost, when honor dies, Then man is dead. — Whittier. Beading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact man.— Bacon. A man that is temperate, generous, valiant, chaste, faithful, and honest, may, at the same time, have wit, humor, good-breeding, mirth, and gallantry; while he exerts these latter qualities twenty occasions might be invented to show he is master of the other nobler virtues. — Steele. # God, when heaven and earth He did create, Formed man, who should of both participate. —SirJ. Denham. Men are but children of a larger growth; Our appetites are apt to change as theirs, And full as craving, too, and full as vain. —Din den. Consider, man; weigh well thy frame; The king, the beggar, are the same. Dust formed us all. Each breathes his day, Then sinks into bis native clay. —Gay. Nobler birth Of creatures animate with gradual life Of growth, sense, reason, all summed' up in man. —Milton. The proverbial wisdom of the populace at gates, on roads, and in markets, instructs the attentive ear of him who studies man more fully than a thousand rules ostentatiously arranged.— Lavater. Man, though individually confined to a narrow spot on this globe, and limited, in his existence, to a few courses of the sun, has nevertheless an imagination which no despotism can control, and which unceasingly seeks for the author of his destiny through the immensity of space and the ever-rolling current of ages. — Colton.
No Cut in Wages.
The employes of a Michigan railroad had been trembling in their boots over a reduction of wages, when an agent, dispatched from headquarters, passed along the line and said to the various station officials: “I am happy to inform you that there will be no cut in salaries.” “Good. My salary is so small that I could hardly stand a cut of 5 per cent.” “The road is not making any money, but the President feels that every employe is earning his salary, and that, perhaps, the fall business may bring us out all right. Put your name down for what you can afford.” “On what?” “Why, on this paper. It is a subscription to buy the President a $2,000 silver tea-set as a token of the esteem of the employes. Let’s see? You get S6OO per year. If you put your name down for SSO you will be giving all you can afford. Rest easy, Mr. Blank, there will be no cut in salaries.” —Wall Street News.
Women Doctors.
Women doctors are increasing in numbers all the time and have a good practice. I suppose that there are some four hundred women practitionors in the country now. They do a general practice, but, of course, do not attend men except in case of emergency. A woman doctor who attends men is not considered in gpod standing. Many women are educated in this country and then go to foreign countries to practice. There is an especially good field for them in such countries as India and Japan, where male doctors are not allowed to attend women— Dr. Atkinson of Washington.
Cask-Making in China.
According to the Chinese, cask-mak-ing has been known to them for many thousand years. They labored, however, under this drawback: they did not know how to give the final touch by which the lid is fastened—the only method that struck them as feaiable being to place a boy inside while the cooper tightened the hoops and secured the lid in its position. But how was the boy to be got out ? This remained an unsolved problem for 3,000 years. “Yankee Doodle” was written in derision of the appearance of the Continental troops who joined Braddock to beat the French in 1753. Dr. Richard Shackling wrote it as a parody on a song sung in England as a caricature of Cromwell. But it failed in its purpose. as a nation of whistling boys can testify. ~ There is something exquisitely cool in a Yankee’s reply to the European traveler, when he asked him if he had just crossed the Alps: “Wall, now you call my attention to the fact, I guess I did pass risin’ ground.”
The Utility of Pain.
The utility of pain is seen in the membrane which sweeps the surface of the eye, for instance, in several animals, whenever any irritant particle is brought into contact with these delicate structures. The pain caused by the foreign body sets up reflexlv a muscular contraction in this membrane, and thus it is brought across the eye, sweeping the surface, and so the offending matter is removed. When the foreign body is too fixed to be so removed, disorganization of the eye follows, and amid a general destruction of the organ the irritant matter is got rid of. Destruction of the eye in these animals would be a common occurrence if it were it not for this muscular arrangement, and pain is the excitant; it is, as it were, the finger which pulls the trigger, and so the machinery already provided and prepared is set‘in action thereby. In man the suffering caused by a foreign body in the eye calls the attention to the part and leads to its removal. If it were not for the pain so produced, irremedible mischief would often be permitted to go on unchecked, because unnoticed. Not only does pain so defend the eye from the injurious effects of foreign bodies, it often serves to protect the delicate organ from overwork; and where pain is so produced rest is given to the part, and recovery is instituted.
The Big Brewery.
Mr. J. Hirsch, College Point Brewery, L. 1., N. Y., writes that he employs a large number of horses and hands, and, having tried St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain cure, for rheumatism, aches, and pains of his men, and for galls, splints, thrush, wind-galls, and other affections of his horses, finds it a superior to all remedies, and would not be without it.
A Chance for Inventors.
The Boston Journal of Chemistry says there is need at the present time of some electrical devices by which easy communication can be had between houses, manufacturing establishments, stores and offices; between dwellings and stables, conservatories, libraries, etc. It is not necessary that words should be transmitted, but signals representing words or specific wants, suited to the needs of parties as they are found in all neighborhoods and towns. What is wanted is something that may be a substitute for the telephone—something which any one can use; but it may be much less extensive in its capabilities. It would seem to be easy to devise apparatus suited to this want, but it needs thought and the exercise of a considerable degree of ingenuity. If this need can be satisfactorily met, it will serve an important end, and do much to break down the oppressive and outrageous monopolies connected with telegraphy and telephony. The latter as a monopoly is fast becoming more unbearable in its rapacious exactions than the telegraph has ever been.
Who Has a Stomach
Of which he or she can truthfully say, “It was never out of order.” There are some human “Interiors” whose digestive powers seem akin to those of the ostrich. Yet it mav well be doubted if even they have not felt a passing dyspeptio qualm at some time or other. Thousands less lucky, the chronic victims of Indigestion, have, although the inherent w< akncss of their stomachs seemed an insuperable obstacle to recovery, eventually regained complete digestion by the use of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, foremost of Amerioan tonics and correctives. The tone and activity of the liver and bowels are likewise increased by this highly accredited medicine, the purity and efficacy of which long since won for it a popularity which time has only served to augment. Built up with the Bitters, a system no longer weak, may bid defiance to malaria and resist other causes provocative of ill-health. The rheumatic, and persons suffering from inactivity of the kidneys and bladder, also find it a genuine source of relief. There’s always room for one mower— in the hay-field.— New York World.
Don’t You Do It.
Don’t Buffer any longer with the pains and aches of Hheumatism, which make life a burden to you. Relief, specidy and permanent can be prooured at the nearest drug store, in the form of Kidney-Wort. Klbrldge Malcolm, of West Bath, Me., says: “I was completely prostrated with Rheumatism and Kidney troubles and was not expected to recover. The first dose of Kidney-Wort helped me. Six doses put me on. my feet, it has now entirely cured me, and I have had no trouble since.” A barrel of money makes a hog set in society.—New Orleans Picayune.
Horsford’s Acid Phosphate.
MAKES A COOLING DRINK. Into half a tumbler of ice-water put a teaspoonful of Acid Phosphate; add sugar to the taste.
All dogs have their daze when hit with a club. —New York Journal. A Thing op Beautt.—The most brill" lant shades possible, on all fabrics are made by the Diamond Dyes. Unequaled for brilliancy and durability. 10c. at druggist's. Send Sc. for 32 Sample Colors. Wells, Richardson Sc Co., Burlington, Vt. Though a dressmaker may not be familiar with the first four rules of arithmetic, she is usually expert at figures. Ant lady who desires further information than can bo given in the limited public space of newspaper columns can obtain Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkhatn’s pamphlet, “Guide to Health, ” by sending a stamp to Lynn, Mass. It seems strange that no matter how much gold a man may steal he is only sent to the penitentiary for the guilt.
“Put up” at the Gault House.
The business man or tourist will find firstclass accommodations at the low price of $2 and $2.50 per day at the Gault House, Chicago, oomer Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot. Elevator; all appointments first-class. H. W. Hoyt, Proprietor.
A Wonderful Substance.
The results which are attending the administration by Drs. Starkey & Palen, 1109 Girard st., Phfla., of their vitalizing remedy for chronic diseases, give new surprises to patients and physicians every day. If you have any ailment about which you are concerned, write for information about their treatment, it will be promptly sent. Lite had become a burden to L. 8. Hill, of East Montpelier, Vt., but the new specifio for rheumatism find neuralgia made a new man of him. He writes: “I had been suffering for over six months, and had grown so bad as to lose all use of my hands and arms. After taking a few doses of your Atblophoros the pain left me gradually, and the swelling went away.” Price, fil per bottle. If your druggist hasn’t it, send to Athlophoros CO., 112 Wall street, N. Y. I have had Catarrh for year* in its worst form. Before I had used one bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm, droppings into ray throat had ceased, pain and soreness in my head was removed, as well os degfness. It gives me immediate relief for cold in the bead.—Mrs. J. D. Hag adorn, Union, N. Y. [Price 50 cents.]
A Cure of Pneumonia.
Mr. D. H. Burnaby, cf Owego, N. Y., say* that his daughter was taken with a violent cold which terminated with pneumonia, and all the beat physicians gave the case up and said she could live but a few hours at most. She was la this condition when a friend recommended Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the Lungs, and advisod her to try it. She accepted it as a last resort, and was surprised to find that it produced a marked change for the better, and by persevering in its use a cure was effected. Pure <Jo<i-Llver Oil, made from selected livers on the soa shore, by Carwkll, Hazard & Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians havo decided it superior to any of the other oils in market. A bai.dheaded man, who hus heard that the hairs of a man’s head are numbered, want* to know if there is not some place where ho can obtain the back numbers. Carbollne will supply the demand. Skinny Men. "Wells’ Health Renewor" restores health and vigor, ourea Dyspepsia,lmpotence. sl. Chapped Hands, Faoo, Pimple* and rough Skin, cured by using Juniper Tau Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co.. How York. “Rough on Tooth Ache.” Ask for it Instant relief, quick cure. ISo. Druggist*.
The Value of Literature.
The value of literature entirely depends. If the book has a calf-skin cover, it is valuable as a razor-strop. If it is a foot thick, it comes iu firstrate to put under the corner of a bureau which has lost a leg. If it has a clasp on it that will keep it closed, it cannot be eclipsed as a missile to hurl at a dog. If it has a large cover like a geography, it is as good os a piece of tin to nail over a stove-pipe hole or a broken pane of glass. If the paper in which the literature occurs is one of the large ones known as a blanket-sheet, then it is much enjoyed by the young lady who wishes to out out a pattern of anything. Ab we said before, the value of literature enterely depends.— Puck. A remedy that has proven itself a neverfalling cure for scrofula and all ncno.is disorders must quickly euro less terrible blood disease*. Dr. Cuysott's Ye low Dock aud Sarsaparilla is such a perfect blood purifier and strongthener of bodily function*, that it cure* the übove di-ousug even when Hot Springs and all other treatment, ha* failed. Remember, it is absolutely ttoo from tnlnoral poisons, and will not Injure the most dolicate constitution. Its uso will make you feel buoyant, strong, and well, and will rid your system of all blood impurities and every internal and external indication of disease.
Nobody ever thought It nocossnry to urge a pawnbroker to take more interest iu his business.— Button I'ramcrtpt. For a cold in the head, there is nothing so good as Plso's Remedy for Catarrh. “Rough on Pain” Porous Plaster, for Backache, Pains in the Chest, Rheumatism. ‘2sc. Beware of the incipient stages of Consumption. Take Plso's Cure in time. "Rough on Dentist" Tooth Powder. Fine Smooth, Cleansing, Refreshing, Preservative. 150.
ctSSS FOR FAIN. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, ■ore Th root, Swellings, MprolM, Bruise#, Borns. Moulds. Frost Bites, ASD ALL OTHER HODILY PAIRS AID ACHES. o*l4 br Draggltu And D««ler,c,errwhere. fifty Onus boIOS. Direction, is II l.,a(ua(el. TOC CHARLES A. VOL El. Kit CO. HwamiiA vouiuasco.) ItolUsm, Hit., C.S.A.
FAI3XT. j o Pain is supposed to be the lot of ns poor mortals, as inevitable as death, and liable at any time to come npon us. Theretore it is Important that remedial agents should b- at hand to be used in an emergency, when we are made to feel the excruciating agonies or pain, or the depressing influence of disease. Such a remedial agent exists in that old Reliable Family Remedy, PERRY DAVIB’ Pain-Killer It was the first and is the only permanent Pain Believer. ITS MEBITS ABE UKBUBPAS3ED. There is nothing to equal it. In a few mo ments it cures Colic, Cramps, Spasms, Heartburn, Diarrhea, Dysentery, Flax, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache. It is found to CURE CHOLERA When all other Remedies fail. WHEN USED EXTERNALLY, AS A LINIMENT, nothing gives quicker ease in Burns. Cuts. Bruises, Sprains. Stings from Inserts, and Scalds. It removes the fire, and the wound heals like ordinary sores. Those suffering with KlieuniaUsm. Gout, or Neuralgia, if not a positive cure, they find the PAIN-KILLER gives them relief when no other remedy will. In sections of the country where FEVER AND AGUE Prevails there is no remedy held in ffreeter esteem. Persons traveling should keep it by them. BQLD BY ALL PRUCCIBTB. XT ENTCCKY BLUE GRASS and Tobacco Lands for IV sale cheap by C. M. PHILLIPS, Lebanon, Ky. RRA7Y PATCHWORK—EIegantIy assorted Silks. wnMfcl 50c.and *1 a package; sample, 12c. NEW YORK SILK AND SUPPLY CO., 388 Broadway. £f% g% as A MONTH and board for S live Young PATENTS T for patent until obtained. Write for Inventors r Gulde. LCI DU Telegraphy.or Short-Hand and Type CAnn Writing Here. Situations lurnished. Address VALENTINE BROS.. Janesville, Wis. HBimMIHMHHHHHB Sure relief icrrnMl KIDBERB PABTILLEB.KS7,SS Maas. FRAZER cre,s| , OP Get the Genuine. Bold Everywhere.
BUSINESS MEN Risking Health and Llfe-tiatrment of a. Well-Known OfficLol of Lowell, Mass. Chronic Kidney I'iseaoe Cored by Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy, of Rondout, IV. Y. "I must have other help or die,' exclaimed City Assessor Francis Coward, of Sumner street, Lowell, Mass., to his physician. Like so many other puhifo men, Mr. (toward was in early life strong, stalwart and a perfect stranger to physical infirmities. But the excitements of a busy life, and the nervous strain canted by business engagements, together, perhaps, with some inherited tendency (for the tendency In often inherited), had made him, he says, ‘as most of my friends in Lowell are aware, a great sufferer from kidney troubles. As a matter of course I procured the best of medical attendance, but without real benefit." He also bad inflammation of the prostate gland. Utterly discouraged, he invested a dollar in DR. DAVID KENNEDY’S FAVORITE REMEDY, of Rondout, N. Y. That was two or three years up. Under date of Feb. 18, last, he says -. "My health la the best it has been for years. I still nse FAVORITE REMEDY occasionally. I always keep it in the house. 1 have had many 1 otters of inquiry about my case, and I always recommend it as one of the besttof medicine* for snch troubles, for I have need moot jit other medicine* for eimilar troublee without benefit.“ Such an emphatic indorsement from such a source ought to be perfectly convincing to all sufferers. Dr. Kennedy lias used FAVORITE REMEDY In hi* practice for twenty years. It is purely vegetable, non-alcoholic, safe, sure, efficient if taken aa directed. Try it. *; ■ rCXX « • LYDIA K.VINKHAM’g* l VEGETABLE COMPOUND • MtWiQ ••• IS A POSITIVE CO REFOR*** • M those painful Complaint* • **nd Weaknesses se common * • /SraKtN&A *"'*•*• to oar best* ••• *e * female population. • * • * IrieeW laUfsM,pUl«rkssaesferau 1 •ft# purpoeete toleiu for the legitimate healing of fPSV* tU rthef of pain and that it doee all it cialme to do, thoueande of ladiee eon gladly teetO V. • • It will core entirely all Ovarian troubles, Inflaram*. wsrafea. p»» go; tlou. That foellngof bearing down, cansing pain, and backache, Is always permanently cured by Its uso. • Bend stamp to Lynn, Hass., for pamphlet. Letters of fmwwffTft h - ri tvHm AGENTS WANTED for the best and fastest-selling Pictorial Books and Binlos. Prices reduced 83 eer cent National Poulishino Co., Chicago, BL Liver and Sidney Remedy, Ejl Compounded from the welt known Curatives Hops, Malt, Buchu, Man-^; i drake. Dandelion, Sarsaparilla, Cas- m , cam Sagrada, eto., combined with an V i agreeable Aromatlo Elixir, B t THEY CURE DYSPEPSIA & IHDIGESTIOI, M let open the Lirsrjind Kidneys, K RKOUIaATK THU BOWELS, H They cure Rheumatism, and all Urlnary troubles. They invigorate. 1 nourish, strengthen and quiet m the Nervous System. As a Tonlo they have no Equal. A Take none but Bops and Malt Bitters. FOR SALE BY ALL DEAL9RS. Hops and Malt Bitters Co.U 1 DETROIT, MICH. ■■ Ha^BiUßßssß
■ Vlttl ON TUI VBRASDA OF •” tin msiufoa of w.allh and In th. little cotUg. upon (ha bill will th. nfrmhlng IsAimim. KMgo’o Soud Ulan. Kang, bo up. parant. It b nonrltlilnu, ■.ll.fyiny, Mui U [rronwotl In > few hilauUi, Full dlrodtuno accompany i-ncnCan for uuolarcta, puddlngi, oic. Put up 1# four «Imu—Me., 6S«„ SI,SS, and tl.lS. No. 4 Saa oapotdally adapted to fandllM. Send to WOOLRICH A Co., Palme, Maw., for Pampblata. Furnished at lowest prices and easy terms, Also ail kinds of paper, cardboard ana envelope stock required in a printing office. Send for Monthly Price-List of Printing Material and Payer Stock, Address CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 211 ft 218 Franklin Street, Chicago, 111. - XIETFI Al Well Boring A inc I irrm Rockoriiung i MACHINERY! A For Horse or Steam Power If Hundreds of the best men in 88 States HI and Territories use It and will have no other I ■ RELIABLE! DURABLE! SIMPLE! ■ Established over 35 years.we haveamplo D facilities to fill orders promptly, and to satisfaction of oar customers. Cats-Ml loguc KKEK. Address *Bl LOOMIS St NYMAN, Tiffin, Ohio. Important Seduction in the Price ol VASELINE (PETROLEUM JELLY.) 1-ounce bottles reduced from 16c to 10c. 2-ounce bottles reduced from 25eto 15c. 6-ounce bottles reduced from 50eto 25c. The public must not accept any but original goods bottled by us, os the imitations are worthless. ChoMbrongh manufacturing Co., New York, CTho Oldest Medicine in the World i* ■% probably Dp. Isaac Thompson’s D elebrated Eye Watell „ • carefully prepared physician's prescription, and has been in constant use for nearly a century, ami notwithstanding the many other preparations that have been introduced into the market, these e ofithig article is constantly increasing. If the directions are followed it will never tail. We particularly invite the attention of physicians to its merit*. John L. Thompson, Sons Je Go., Troy. N. Y 30 DAYS’ TRIAL, 1 TdyesT a# I 7? Lectro-vOLfAIO BELT end otherKt*cTsi<» Ahtuajcm are aent on 80 Days’Trial TO MEN ONLY, YOUNG OB OLD, who are sufferlng from Naavous Debility. Lo*t Vitality,, wastwo WrAKitESSE*. and all those diseases of a. PansoxAL Natube, resulting from A Beau ana Otbeb Causes. Speedy relief and completerestoration to Health, Vioo* and Makhooin Guaranteed. Bend at onoe for Bluatmted. Pamphlet free. Address 5 Voltaio Belt oo. t Marshall, Mich* 4 m£L MKS WHCKAIL UStrAllsTGfl Best Cough 8y rup. Tastes good. M Use in time. Sold by druggists, wf ' oik ' NoTeA—B4. "'" WHEN WIt&ING TO ADVERTISERS* please say you saw the udverUeemeufe in this paper.
