Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 October 1887 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

In Brief, and to the Point. Dyspepsia is dreadful. Disordered liver is misery. Indigestion is a foe to good nature. The human digestive appaiatus is one of t'ie most complicated and wonderful things ia exist-nce. It is easily put out of order. Greasy food, tou h food, sloppy food, bad 300kery, mental worry, late irregular habits, and many other thing? which ought not to be, have made the American pecple a nation of dyspeptics. Bur Green’s August Flower has done a wonderful work in reforming this sad business e..d making the America*! people so h« al’hy that 'hey can enj y heir m- • l be happy lieiu mber:— No happiness without health. But Green's August Flower brings health and happiness to the dyspeptic Aik y t druggist for a bottle . £je\ ui . 1. ve oe -s ( o'j ;t :.v, Not Endorsement. -A i teem c 1 e »iit - ;; ; ;orary thinks (b .1 Mr. C rlisie was given the col 1 should r by Georgia Democrats because Mr Randall was invited to open the fair at At'anta. Isn’t this ui.erence lather attenuated? Mr. R. ndall hashes rved a’l tue consideration shown him at the South for his stalwart service in Congress in resisting tyrannical and unconstitutional reconstruction legislation. The people of that section will not turn their backs on a friend because he adheres to a political vagary which does n t command their approval. His speecli in favor of protection was not in the best taste, but it was as harmless as lollipop in the mouth of an infant. —Philadelphia Record.

Wil* some of our Republican protective tariff exchanges please analyze the following table ? Per cent, Cheap whisky, j Cheap tobacco, Cheap beer. ) Tax ou sugar 80 Tax on rice 112 Tax on salt 83 Tax on corn tarc1i....... . 93 Tax on plain silk goods... 50 Tax on woolen dress goods costing 22c a yard 71 Tax on common cloth 91 Tax on woolen hosiery.... 70 Tax on cotton bagging.... 54 Tax o* plain earthenware. 56 Tax on window glass..... 86 Taxon plate glass 147 Tax on steel rails. 80 Taxon crockery 65 New York Times.

PRESBYTERIANS Who do not take the Herald and Pmfoyter, should SEND Five One-Cent Stamps FOR A Sample copy of that paper and a beautiful 8 teel-engraved Calendar for 1888 Size 414x6)4 inches. Or send names and addresses of ten or more Presbyterians of different families who do not now take the paper, and receive the Calendar and sample copy free. Mend at once, mention name of church and pastor, and say where you saw this. Address HEBAin AND PRESBYTER, 176 Elm Stbeet, Cincinnati, O. Advertised Letters. John C. Barnard, Charles Blake, Miss E. O. Connell, Mrs. Maria Dorsey, Miss Lillie Graves, Agnes McNamara, Maud Stodard, Dr. Pavid Strause, William Thompson. Persons calling fer any of the letters in the above list will please say they are advertised. N. S. Bates, P. M.

A Letter of tft Poet Keats. In one of his letters to his sister he says, expressing a momentary high feeling: “Oh, there is nothing like fine weather, and health, and books, and a contented mind, and diligent habits of reading and thinking, and an amulet against the enemies, and please heaven, a little claret wine out of a cellar a mile deep—with a few, or a good many, rata* fia cakes —a rocky basin to bathe in ;* and he enunciates much else, tapering off into a series of rollicking whims, and ending with about thirty-six lines of doggerel rhyme. But Keats always had a breezy way of rattling off hi** wishes and feelings in his correspondence, of which we will give but one more sample. It is from one of the letters to his sister written from Winchester. He says: “I should like no w to promenade round your gardens (?; apple-tagting, pear-tasting, plum-judg-ing, apricot-nibbling, peach-scrunch-ing, nectarine-sucking, and melon-carv-ing. I have also a great feeling for antiquated cherries, full of sugar-cracks —and a white currant tree, kept for company. I admire lolling on a lawn by a water-lilied pond, to eat white ourrants and see gold-fish, and go to the fair in the evening, if I'm good. There is not hope for that—one is sure to get in some mess before the evening."— Joel Benton, in the Manhatr