Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 1, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 January 1888 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
la Brief, and to the Poiat Byspepei* is dreadful. Disordered Ivor is misery. Indigestion is a foe to good cat uro. The hum a a digestive* apparatus is one of tno most compl cated and wonderful hings ia exist-uce ' It is easily pot out of order. Grsasy food, tou h food, sloppy food, bad sookory, mental worry, late hours, irregular habits, and nar y other thing? which ought not to be, have mads ths Ataerican psi pl® a nation of dyspeptics. Bat Green’s August Mower has done a wondeifrl work in reforming this sad business arid m iking ih» American people eo healthy tint hey’ car enjoy heir rnealn ami be y Remember:- No happiness wi’h«>ut health. But Green’s August r lower bring.- heai.h atm luq pirnto the dyspeptic. Ask yo ir druggist for a bottle. Seventy-five oCmls. Joel Parker, New Jersey’s great Democratic War Governor died cm Monday last.
Don’t Experiment. You cannot afford to waste time Hi experimenting wl.en you? lungs are in (larger. Consumption always seems at tirst, only a cold. Do not pernin aiy dealt-'. iirq o.«e upon you with some cheap imitation of Di. King’s New Discovery for Con -umption, CouaT.s and Colds, but I. e sure you get the genuine. Because he c .n make more profit he may tell you he has something just -*s good, or just the same. Don’t be deceived but insist upon getting Dr. King’s New Discover , which is guai.-inteel to give relief in all Throat. Lung and Chest affections. Tria! bottle free a* F. B. Meyer’s Drug store. Large Bottles $1 G — Geu. Tom Brown, Republican member of Congress from the Fifth District tips Stifo, stro gly favors a revision of the present tariff law;;. “b ’cause ther re many injustices in them, and we L;o. ■g:<v.;i lu vi i Um c ml’tioiof affairs of twenty-five ye u s tgo, when ti e present Lw, w re enacted.” PRESBYTERIANS Who de not take the Herald and Presbyter, should SEND Five On.-C.nt Btampo FOR A. Sample copy of that paper and a beautiful eteel-eagraved Calendar for 1888 Size 4Xx6S inches. Or send names and addresses at ten or more Presbyterians of different families who do not now take the paper, and receive the Calendar and sample copy free. Mend at one. Mention name of church and pastor, and say where yon saw this. Address HEHAI*D AND PBESBYTZB, 178 Elm Street, Cincinnati, 0.
Comfort from Newspaper*. Many years ago, in one of the sevens winters when there was much hardship among the pour, a city pap-r suggested that old newspapers, spread over the bed. would form an excellent substitute for blank? and cuvcil-ts. This brought upon the journal a great deal of harmless ridicule from other papers, but it brought comfort to many a poor family. In tiie matter of be t-clotliing, e:-p cia.V,y, -we are apt to associate warmth with weight, and do not consider that there is no ■warmth in the coverings themselves, but that they merely prevent .the heat of the body from passing off. Whatever is a poor conductor of heat will make a warm covering. Paper itself is a poor conductor, out shll poorer are the thin layWi of air that are confined when two or three newspapers are laid upon one an other. A few newspapers laid over ths bed will keep one much warmer than some of the heavy, dose-woven blankets. We do not propose newspapers as a substitute for blankets and comforters, but it is one of those make-shifts that it is well to know. In traveling one may, by the aid of a few papers, seeure a comfortable rest in a thinly-dad bed, and if we cannot afford to jive a destitute family a blanket for a comforter, we may aMw them how to increase the usefulnose of their thin coverings by stitching a Saw layers of newspapers between them. It may be well to remind those whe grow window-plants that, by ia» moving them away from the window, and arranging a cover of newspaper! over them, they may be preserved from harm in severely eold nights. With the plants, aa with ounelves, it is not ae much that cold comes in as that the heat goes off, and often a slight protection will prevent the escape of heat—l»Mr> Matrimonial Harmony. “Are you as happy now as you were before you were married?” asked Mrs, Yeast of young Mrs Crimsonbeak. “Yes, indeed,” replied the lady, “and a great deal happier.” “That’s strange,” suggested the philanthropist’s wife. “Not at all strange,” came from the young married woman. “You see, before I was married I used to spend half my time worrying about what dress I should wear when Daniel called.” “But don’t you try just as lurid i;Jw to look well when your husband returns home at night?” interrupted Mrs Yeast “WeH, yon see," <vent on the bride of two summers, “I don’t worry any •bout it now, as I l*ave only one drew to juv Yfc >*r»
