Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 October 1886 — Page 7
Extracted from History.
Gen. Howe once started to lead 3,000 .British soldiers up a hill called Bunker’s. They got about half-way up, when they all stopped, and the General turned to reprove them by saying: “Gentlemen, England expects every man to come up to the rack!” He would have said this had he not found an impediment in his stomach in the shape of a two-ounce ball of lead. On further examination he discovered that each one of the 3,000 was similarly affected. It appeared to be epidemic and chronic. They were not wasted by disease, but seemed to have lost interest in the proceedings. No one even made a motion to adjourn. It subsequently got out that they were all dead. Capt. James Wadsworth once sat down in Hartford, Connecticut, to confer with Sir Edmund Andros, an ambassador from King James. Shortly after he discovered that Sir Edmund was not only an ambassador from a king, but that he also held four of them, while he had no less than two himself, which produced a feeling of misplaced confidence in that particular diplomatic circle; whereupon the Captain turned down the gas and made way*vitb the cold deck and hid it in a tree, which was ever after known as Charter Oak, and furnished wood for all snuff-boxes and gold-headed canes presented to Governors from 1656 to 1876, when the racket was called in by the Government and laid on the shelf with the wooden spoons carved out of the Mayflower. A pleasing little incident is related of Horace Greeley which not only shows his love for his fellow men but his great b> illiancy at reply and self-pos-session during a trying ordeal in which scores of editors fail every day. His shoemaker once came to him as he sat in the Tribune office and said: “ Mr. Greeley, I have been your shotmaker for forty years.” “Well, yes, that’s about the size of it.” “Now, I want your advice. I have presented my bill over six hundred times. I have given up getting anything out of it. I fear that I cannot live to take it all on subscription, even if you continue to follow your presont course of sending me the daily, triweekly, weekly, and almanac. My family needs money and something must be done; therefore I ask your advice.” Horace slowly reached for a copy of “What I Know of Farming,” bound in paper, while a light as of inspiration lit up his eye, softened by a faint touch of sadness and compassion in his chin whiskers, and said, his voice trembling with emotion: “Go West, young man, go West and grow up with the country!” —Estelline Bell. “Hello!” we heard one man say to another the other day. “I didn’t know you at first; why! you look ten years younger than you did when I saw you' last”' “I feel ten years younger,” was the reply. “You know I "used to be under the weather all the time and gave up expecting to be any better. The doctor said I had consumption.’ I was terribly weak, had night-sweats, cough, no appetite, and lost flesh. I saw Dr. Pierce’s ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ advertised, and thought it would do no harm if it did no good. It has cured me. I am a new man because I am a well one.”
Origin of the Word Texas.
In a recent article published in the North American Review , Gov. Ireland, of Texas, asserts that the word Texas means “■welcome,” and that on the landing of the first white man on the coast of Texas the Indians greeted them with the exclamation of “Texas,” or “welcome.” This theory, according to a correspondent in the Texas Vorwaerts, is not correct. In the ancient Spanish archives, stored away in the Land Office at Austin, it appears that certain lands were situated en el pais de los Tejas , or in the country of Texas or Tejas Indians, x and j being pronounced alike. It is well known that the Texas or Tejas Indians were a tribe of Indians living in the valley of the Rio Grande, who were exterminated or driven off by a more savage tribe. The word Texas or Tejas is the root of the names of all the Indian tribes in Texas and Mexico. The prefix ihdicated the locality of the tribe. The As-Tejas, or Astecs, dwelt on the high lands of the Anahuac. The TolTejas, or Toltecs, lived as far south as Yucatan. The Huas-Tejas lived on the Gulf coast, between Matamoras and Vera Cruz, and the Teal-Tejas were situated in the State of Coahuila.
We All Know Jenks.
First Banker —“Do you know Jenks ?” Second Banker—“l met him the other day for the first time.” First Banker—“ What sort of a fellow is he? How did he strike you?” Second Banker —“He struck me for $5. ” —Cambridge Chronicle. The editor of the Corsicana, Texas, Observer, Mr. G. P. Miller, had a severe attack of rheumatism in his left knee, which became so swollen and painful that he could not walk up the stairs. He writes that after a few applications of St. Jacobs Oil, the pain entirely disappeared, and the knee assumed its normal proportions. Abernethy, the celebrated surgeon, finding a large pile of stones opposite to his door, on his returning home one afternoon in his carriage, swore hastily at the pavior and desired him to remove them. “Where will I take them to?” asked the Hibernian. “To hades!” cried the choleric surgeon. Paddy looked up in his face, saying, with an arch smile, “Hadn’t I better take them to heaven? Shure they’d be more out of your honor’s way.” Catholics have invaded Mormondom, and will erect a college at Salt Lake. Summer coughs and colds generally come to stay, but the use of Bed Star Cough Care invariably drives them away. Safe, prompt, sure.
Important.
When you visit or leave New York City, save baggage, expressage, and $3 carnage hire, and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot 613 rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million dollars, #1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied witii the best Horse cars, stages, amt elevated railroad to all depots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other first-class hotel in the city.
They Spoke to the Khedive.
The Khedive of Egypt has a country palace at Helwan, fifteen miles from Cairo. There are celebrated sulphur springs at Helwan, and all the tourists who flock to the land of the Pharaohs during the winter months spend a short while at these springs. His Highness was taking a walk alone near the palace, and was closely followed by two very determined-looking ladies. The royal personage seemed annoyed at the intrusion, and suddenly turned, seemingly to escape them, in an opposite direction. The ladies, however, were not to be thwarted, and striding up to the Khedive with a Fifth avenue swing, one of them said : “Aren’t you the Khedive?” His Highness politely replied, “I am. The ladies said, “We thought so.” And then, with a smile, “We are from New York.” The very innocent sovereign said, “I thought so,” and, bowing, walked awav.
Over Many a League
Spreads the miasma, or poisonous vapor, that begets malarial and typhus fever. Wherever there is stagnant water in which vegetation, or refuse of any kind decays, there, as surely as tho sun rises, are generated the seeds of fever and ague, dumb ague, and other endemic maladies of tho malarial type. For the effects of this envenomed air, Ilostetter’s Stomach Bitters furnishes an antidote, and prevents both the contraction and recurrence of such maladios. Even along the line of excavation for tho Lesseps Panama Canal, where malarial disoases are not only virulent but deadly, Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters has demonstrated its incomparable protective qualities. Not only for febrile complaints, but also for disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, for rheumatism and inactivity of the kidneys and bladder, it in very effective. It counteracts tho effects of fatigue, damp, and exposure.
In Early Life.
“Yours has been a very busy life, Mr. Bullion?” inquired the lady reporter. “H’m, yes,” said Mr. Bullion, “I began to rustle around middlin’ airly.” “Will you please tell me of your earliest struggles?” asked slie, poising a pencil. The millionaire looked uncertain. “I can’t remember much about it myself,” he said, “but I reckon my early struggles began when they was puttin’ my first shirt on me. I’ve noticed since that babies ” But she was a real, nice, brand-new reporter, and was down stairs two flights ahead of the elevator. — Burdette, in Brooklyn Eagle.
He Wanted Generous Measure.
A parsimonious individual went into a drug store the other day to have a prescription put up. “Be sure you give me generous measure,” said he to the druggist, fearful lest lie might not get his money’s worth. Said the druggist: “If I should give you one-sixteenth of a grain more than this prescription calls for you would be dead in five minutes after taking: a dose.” The mean man turned pale, and said no more about generous measure. —Boston Post.
“No Physic, Sir, in Mine!”
A good story conies from a boys’ boardingschool in “Jersey.” The diet was monotonous and constipating, and the learned Principal decided to introduce some old-style physic in the apple-sauce, and await the happy results. Ono bright lad, the smartest in school, discovered the secretmine in his sauce, and pushing hack his plate, shouted to the pedagogue, “No physic, sir, in mine. My dad told me to use nuthin’ but Dr. Pierce’s ‘Pleasant Purgative Pellets,’ and they are doing their duty like a charm!” They are anti-bilious, and 'purely vegetable. Mrs. Sudden Rich says that she writes a diphthong between “Sudden” and “Ilich ” now.— Boston Journal.
How Women Would Vote.
Were women allowed to vote, every one in the land who has used Dr. Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription” would vote it to be an unfailing remedy for the diseases peculiar to her sex. By druggists. A man must look up and be hopeful, particularly when he is tlying to drink from a jug. A uniform and natural color of the whiskers is produced by using Buckingham’s Dye. A New Yorker advertises: “Gravestones for sale cheap, to close up an estate.” Now is the time to die. —Oil City Derrick. We have used Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral in our family, for colds, with perfect success. An exchange says lead is an animal production, because it is found m “pigs.”
An Undoubted Blessing.
About thirty years ago, a prominent physician by the name of Br. William Hall discovered, or produced after long experimental research, a remedy for diseases of the throat, chest, and lungs, which was of such wonderful efficacy that it soon gained a wide reputation in this country. The name of the medicine is DR. WM. HALL’S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, and may be safely relied on as a speedy and positive cure for coughs, colds, sore throat, etc.
An Awful Doom
Of any nature is usually avoided by those who have foresight Those who read this who have foresight will lose no time in writing to Hallott & Co., Portland, Maine, to learn about work which they can do at a profit of from $5 to $25 and upwards per day and live at home, wherever they are located. Some have earned over SSO in a day. All is new. Capital not required. You aro started free. Both sexes. AIT ages. Particulars free. A great reward awaits every worker. If afflicted with Sore Byes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Bye Water. DrugfliteaeUlt. 25c.
BOMB THROWERS OF CHICAGO.
A Brief History of the Man Who Received Eleven Terrible Wounds at tho Haymarket Massacre, and Still Lives.
James P. Stanton, ex-Detoetive and Lieutenant of the Municipal Police Force of Chicago, and tho hero of the great Haymarket massacre, iu which he sustained eleven .terrible wounds while leading his platoon to action, has been prominently known in official circles for many years, and is one of the most . energetic and intelligent members of the department. Lieutenant Stanton is a native of England, and was born in Birmingham, the son of John and Winifred Stanton, March 25, 1844, where his father was a well-known bookbinder. In 1842 the latter visited Ohicage, and, February 25, 1850, removed his family to this city, where for eight years the son worked at the’ trade of glazier and painter. At tho breaking out of tho war of the rebellion lie pursued that line of industry under the employ of the Government, being stationed at Vicksburg and along the Mississippi River. July 28, 1864, he enlisted in the United States navy at Philadelphia, and remained in tho service for over three years, being mustered out Aug. 26, 1867. He was on tlio new Ironsides at both attacks on Fort Fisher, was wounded at Norfolk, and served also on the Chicopee and Marblehead. On leaving the service Lieutenant Stanton remained iu Philadelphia for a short time, but later returned to Chicago and joined his father in business. Iu 1809 ho became a member of tho police force, and was stationed at the armory for two years, resigning in 1871, engaging in business until 1873, and then being elected, for a term of four years, as West Town Constable. In 1878 he again joined the police forco, served sixty days’ probation at the Hinman Street Station, was transferred to tho Madison Siroet Precinct, and then, after a most brilliant series of detective exploits, was made Sergeant, and later promoted to a lieutenancy at hiß present important post of duty. Lieut Stanton was married at the early age of sixteen years, Oct 28, 1860, to Miss Mary Murphy, the daughter of an old and esteemed resident of Chicago. They have seven interesting children, named Mary, John, Winifred, Ellon, George, Agnes, and Frank Stanton. The Lieutenant is a member of tho Ancient Order of United Workmen, and of tho Police and State Benevolent Societies, and was President of the Painters’ Union. To him The Chicago Ledges is under obligations for the facts of tho great Haymarket massacre, which form the basis of a wonderful story entitled The Anarchist’s Daughter; ok, The Bomb Throwers of Chicago! the opening chapters of which will appear in No. 43 of tho above named paper. Every lover of law and order will read it with intense interest. Sample copies of this splendid family story paper will be mailed to any address free. Send your name and address upon a postal card to The Chicago Ledger, Chicago, 111.
“ROUGH ON ITCH.” “Rough on Itch” cures skin humors, eruptions, ring worm, totter, salt rheum, frosted feet, chilblains, itch, ivy poison, barber’s itch. 50c. jars. “ROUGH ON CATARRH” corrects offensive odors at once. Complete cure of worst chronic cases; also unequaled as gargle for diphtheria, sore throat, foul breath. sdc. “ROUGH ON PILES. ’ Why suffer Piles? Immediate relief and complete cure guaranteed. Ask for ‘'Rough on Piles." Sure cure for itching, protruding, bleeding, cr any form of Piles. 50c. At Druggists’ or Mailed. Chapped hands, face pimples, and rough skin cured by psing Juniper's Tar Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. “Rough on Rats” clears out Rats, Mice. 15a “Rough on Corns, "hard or soft corns, bunions, 15c, “Roughon Toothache.” Instant relief. 15a WELL'S HAIR BAG SAM, If gray, restores to original color. Am elegant dressing, softens and beautifies. No oil nor grease. A Tonic Restorativo. Stops hair coming out; strengthens, cleanses, heals scalp, 50a “ROUGH ON HIDE” PILLS start the bile, relieve the bilious stomach, thick, aching head and overloaded bowels. Small granules, small dose, big results, pleasant in operation, don’t disturb the stomach. 25c. 3 months’ treatment for 50c. Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. Sold by druggists. The Frazer is kept by all dealers. One box lasts as long as two of any othei. A Haverild woman refused to shoo her hens because her husband, a shoemaker, was on strike. —Lowell Citizen.
TIRED OUT! At this season nearly every one needs to nee some sort of tonic. IRON enters into almost every physician’s prescription for those who need building ur rag'd H Blffa e ak n e m s, -Tun.* "Rn d e» sf Energy, etc., it HAM NO EQUAfi, and is tho only Iron medicine that is not Injurious. It Enriches the Blood. Invigorates the System, Restores Appetite, Aids Digestion It does not blacken or injure the teeth, cause headache or produce constipation —other Iron medir.inee do Mb. M. R. Mius, Chicago, Hi., says: “I have used Brown’s Son Bitters ao a tonic for Debility and Lassitude with strengthening and rallying effect ’’ Mbs. H. A. Smith, 1319 Fulton Ave„ Davenport, lowa, says: “ I have usod Brown’s Iron Bitters for general debility and loss of appetite with much benefit. I can truly recommend it for that tired feeling that so many overtasked with. Mbs. Jane Andrews, St. Helens. Mich, says: “I was suffering from liver complaint, had such a languid feeling and no strength. I nsed Brown s Iron Bitters with great benefit, in fact never took anything that did me as much good." Genuine has above Trade Mark and crossed red Unas on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by BKOWN CHEMICAL CO.. BALTIMORE. MD.
WEAK, NERVOUS AND DEBILITATED MEN and Women seeking health, 1 strength and energy, should avoid Drugs, Secret i&edh cines, etc., and send for The Review,” or “Health and Strength Regained,” a large r Illustrated Journal, publishg stL I M ed entirel y f° r their benefit. C. * It treat* on health, hygiene, physical culture, and me<l, / _ _ __ leal subject*, and is a complete encyclopaedia of lnformv f\ A lAir M tton for suffering humanity afflicted with lona-standing, U BnP&rf £1 i|\E|P 11. chronic, nervous, exhausting anil painful diseases. / Ba FT «*■■*& IIU L| ° Every subject that bears on health anil human bapplO. a IfesWi «■ ■ w t-J ness receives attention in Ita pages; and tbs many ■rr.o;.-’ "rtBiTP-*“ questions asked by ailing persons and Invalids who have despaired of a cur. are answered, and valuable'ln formaMMnmiaA isiaiapi tlon is volunteered to all who are in need of medical id vice. ■ HOffwiFS! No similar work has ever been published. Ever# sics B ■iw 0 ■ •» •or ailing person should have It. . YOUNG AND MIDDLE AGED MEN, and others who suflier from nervous and pbvnlcnl debility, exhausted vitality, premature decline, etc.; are especially benefited by consulting its contents. Everything such sufferers wish to know is fully given in Its pages. If In need of medical aid or counsel, read it before “ doctoring ” or lnvestingin medicines or appliances of any description, and you will save time, money and disappointment. If using medicine or medical treatment of any kina, read It and learn the better way. THE REVIEW exposes the frauds practiced by quacks and medical Impostors who profess to H practice medicine,” and points out the only safe, simple and effective road to health, vigor and bodily •nergy. Electric Belts nnd all curative appliances are treated upon: all about them—which aro genuine, which are bogus. Belts on thirty days trial (?) nud other fallacies reviewed. Thousands of dollars saved nervous-debility sufferers and others by the advice given. THE REVIEW is now in Its ninta year of publication. Com pie to specimen copies mailed FREE Address, naming this paper, Publishers REVIEW, 1164 Broadway, New York* ■ar Apply now or preserve our address; as you may notseo this notice again. For largo or small game, *ll sices. Tbs gtrongeit ibootlar rifle mads, rorfick^*^, accuracy guaranteed, and tbs only absolutely safe rifle on the market. BAX. LA I'D GALLERY, SPORTING AND TARGET RIFLES, world renowned. Send for Illustrated Catalogue, MAItLIN FIRE ARMS CO.j NOW Xld-Ven* C I ODH« S L 1C 1C E l wa!^oat | Non. rennin. unicm Don’t wnsto your money on a gum or rubber coat The FIRII BRAND SLICKER MsUiupea with the at»v* ig absolutely tcairr ami tn'nrt proof, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm. H raxi’K mark. Ask. lor tho “FISH BRAND" slickkb and take no other. If your gtorekeeper doo»
What George W. Childs Is Said to Spend.
Take our good friend George AY. Childs, of the Philadelphia Ledger, for instance. He not only lives in gorgeous style in Philadelphia and has a magnificent estate at Wooton, but maintains a charming residence at Long Branch, and now contemplates, I see, the erection of a monumentally superb mansion in Newport. There are very few noblemen who spend the money annually that Mr. Childs spends. They can’t afford it. Already a very, very rich man, with an income from his paper of over SI,OOO a day, Mr. Childs finds it a very easy matter to spend in the course of tho summer $250,000, and yet he keeps no yacht.— Howard, in Boston Globe.
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n A VC ftITP R.S. & A. P. LAOKY, Patent Bwfft B 8» Eda B Vk Attorneys:Washington, DLL I n m «»■ w ■ W Instructions and opinions ss to patentability FRICK. tOT 17 yearn'experience. UMIC STUDY. Book-keeping, Business numC Forms, PcnmanHliip, Aritlmietic. Shorthand, etc., tboronglily taught by mall, Circulars free, COLLEGE OF BUSINESS, IJumUo. N. Y. AfIIfCDTIGCDQ oroth * ,, ' wr ’° with ,0 HlIVkIl • I Vkflv this paper, or obtain oatimataa on advertising space when In Chicago, will find it on file St 45 to 49 Randolph St., | ABf| A TIIOUBC the Advertising Agency of LUlllJ IS I VaUluAvs Veteran Pension Attorneys, Cliioajjo, Detroit, Cleveland and. W asliingrton. No fees unless successful. Correspondence solicited. No Rope to Cut Off Horses’ Manes. kL Celebrated ‘IyCLIPSIK’ HALTEK JfelL and BHIDLE Combined, cau./JTaV not bo Slipped by any horse. Sample fw; IH Halter to auy part of U. 8. free, oa M receipt of *l. Bold by all Saddlery, JIM Hardware and Harness Dealers. Arn T Special discount to tho Trade. SemlljW V for Price-List. BMHT i A H JsCiUGUTHOUSEjßochcflteriNiTwTl!!^-^ MENTION THIS PAPER whin wbitin* to AOtmvuMM, IF YOU WANT TO KNOW 1,001 Important things yon never knew or thonght of about the human body and its curious organs. How Use is perpetuated, health saved, disease induced How to avoid pitfall* of ignorance and indiscretion. How to apply Home-Cure to aliform* of disease, How to cure Crowp,Old Eyes, Rupture, Phimosis, etc., How to mate, he happy in marriage a h ave prize babies iTFRGfe- Mum Murray Hill Pub, Co., 129 E. 28tU Bt., Sew lorlu L 5 PAGES fStLIQUID GLUE AIinkMENDS EVERYTHING Wood, Leather, Paper, Ivory. Class, jaVlfpFMdPifCHCtdnit. Furniture, Bric-a-hitie, Ac, Strong as Iron, Solid as a Book. VS»Tlie total quantity sold during th* fjMKi nast five years amounted to over it. iVWJr/MSwwoHMfi All dealers can sell it. Awarded BMtoqjttUffiiflfc l ajwiiin'ilirJJjSSr i , ronounccil Strongest Glue known Send dealer’s card and 10c. postage Contains HO Acid. - for sample can FREE by mail. vouuMua uu Atm. Gloucester. Mass. OTlie BUYERS’ GUIDE U Issued Sept, and Blarclk, each year. 49* 383 pages, Inches,with over 3,500 Illustrations - a whole Picture Gallery. GIVES Wholesale Prices direct to consumers on all goods for personal or family use. Tells how to order, axyd gives exact cost of everything yon use, eat, drink, wear, or have fun with. These INVALUABLE BOORS contain information gleaned from the markets of the world. We will mail a copy FREE to any address upon receipt of 10 cts. to defray expense of mailing. Let ns hear from yon. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. 227 dc 229 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, ill. LADIES SEND FOB OUR ELEGANT Stationery Package! Containing the following necessary articles: 50 Sheets Fine Note Paper, latest style. 50 Handsome Wore Envelopes. 25 Gilt-Edge Regret Cards. 25 Envelopes for inclosing cards. 1 Elegant Self-Closing Enameled-Finish Visiting Card Case, containing 50 Fine Gilt-Edge Visiting Cards. The above goods sre all put up in a neat box. and wiu be sent to any address, postage paid, upon receipt of ONE DOLLAR. It you do net wish to send yonr order to us by mail, leave it with the Publisher of this Paper, and he will order the package and deliver it to you as soon as received. Tbesegoods are all of the latest style, a VERY FINS QUALITY, and cannot iail to please every lady that uses them. Address CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, . !i7l Franklin St., Chicago, 111. ■ Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh Is the |B Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ Also good for Cold In the Head, H Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 80 cents. C. y. U. , 1 No. 42—SU WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, ?? please may you saw the advertisement la this paper.
