Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 June 1894 — Page 7
A TOBACCO HEART.
Th ouudi of American) Can’t Get Inlaranco Becanso Tobacco Has Destroyed •he Heart Action and Wrecked the Nerrou Sjitem- No-To-Bm Works Many f Miraculous Cores. Delanson, N. Y.—Engineer O. N. Bates stepped off Engine .no. 47 with a long oiler in one hand and a bunch of blue waste in the other. Not a bystander there could help remarking his youthful, healthy look and active, vigorous movements, and contrasting his appearance with his condition of two months ago. “Say, Colonel, how well you look;* I am we’l; better than I have been for j ears. ” “What have you been doing?" “Oh, not much. No-to-bac cured me Oi the tobacco habit and braced me mentally and physically. In fact, made me a new man in more" ways than one. I hid no appetite; couldnt sleep; now 1 sleep like a baby and eat three times a day with a relish, for the first time in years. My heart action is regular and no longer a bar to increased life insurance. You know throttle pulling requires a pretty steady nerve, and my nerves are O. K. now. One box and a quarter of No-to-bao cured me completely in ten days, after using tobacco forty years. No-to-bao is told by all druggists and made by the Sterling Remedy Company of New York and Chicago. You ought to get one of their litt e books called ‘Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away,’ and post yourself. They send them free to any one that writes. It cost me $2.50 to get cured, and I spent three or four dollars a week for tobacco. If I had failed to get cured I would have gotten my money back, as the makers guarantee three boxes to cure any case. I have'recommended the use of No-to-bac to fifteen of the boys on the line, and every one of them,so far as I know, has been cured." The cab bell rang, the engineer climbed up quickly on the footboard, and the big train rolled away.
Must Mastieate Hard Tack.
| Pn examining men desirous of joining the royal ma iues of the English army recruiting offioers are directed to pay special attention to the condition of the teeth of a candidate. Seven defective teeth, or even less if they impair the biting or grinding capacity, will render a candidate ineligible, and the examining medical officer is directed to take into special consideration the probability of the teeth lasting.
No Need of Clocks.
Liberia is the only more or less civilized country where clocks are almost entirely dispensed with. The sun rises exactly at <> a. m. and sets at ti p. m. throughout the year, and is vertically ver head at noon.
Verdict for JHood’s « I was in the army four years, wa wounded and contracted sciatica and rheumatism. Have suffered ever since and lost the use of my left lee and side. I must say that of all the medicines I have ever tried Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best. It has done me the moßt good. Ido not say Hood’s sarß «- JL 1%%%%%% pariUa that it will raise a fel- f f low from the dead; A ULA V 4? but it will come the nearest to doing it of any medicine I have ever known or used." T. H. Saunders, Osceola, Nebraska. Hood’s Pills cure Indigestion, biliousness. Lydia Pinkham’s _ Vegetable /mmz&r Compound CURES Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Menstruations, 'Weak, ness of the Stomach, Indigestion .Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility, Kidney Complaints is either sex. Every time it will relieve Backache, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude, “ don’tcaie” and “want to be left alone ” feeling, excitability, irritability. nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the “blues.” These are sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the Uterus, or Womb Troubles. Every woman, married or single, should own and read “Woman’s Beauty, Peril, Duty,” an illustrated book of 30 pages, containing important information that every ■woman should know about herself. We send it free to any reader of this paper. AU druggist* tell the Ptnkham medicine*. AdAvss la •onfldence, LTPIA X. M*o. Co., LtW2S, Mass. LydW E. Plnkhsm’* Liver Pills, 26 cents. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOYEfIY.
DONALD KENNEDY, Of ROXBUBY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over ejeven hundred cases, arid never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of ijts value, all within twenty miles Of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from •the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. ,Whfcn the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. Thte is caused by the du</s being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or (bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in water ri wne. Sold by all DruggistaI, [
MASSACRE AT BOSTON.
ONE OF THE CAUSES LEADING TO THE REVOLUTION. A Bloody Episode In Colonial History— Quartering of British Troops In Boston Had Long Boon Considered a Grievance —Criapni Attacks Monument. A Memorable Event. The Boston ma-sacre in itself was a matter of unimportance, it was a street brawl between soldiers and civilians, yet really it was cne of the most important of the lesser causes of the Revolutionary war and, in this light, receives a distinction and a place in men’s memories which otherwise it would neither hold nor deserve. The quartering of British troops in Boston had long been considered as a grievance by the people and complaints
THE CRISPUS ATTUCKS MONUMENT.
attempted to renew the battle, but the authorities prevented it. Fighting would have served as the natural outlet on both sides had it been allowed, but, being smothered, it burned more fiercely and the men wore ready to seize any occurrence for an excuse to battle with each other. It happened that on the evening ot the sth two young men undertook to pass a sentinel at the foot of Cornhill, without answering his challenge. A struggle ensued and some soldiers ran from the neighboring barracks to the sentry's aid, armed hastily with any weapon they happened to pick up. The soldiers, in turn, attracted the attention of other citizens and windows were hastily thrown up and heads put out to see what the matter was. Evidently
OLD STATE HOUSE OF BOSTON. [Near which the massacre occurred The building is stilt standing. ]
tbe prospects were fair for some sort of a scrimmage and so, eagerly donning their clothes, the good citizens poured into the street and surrounded the soldiers. The officers were anxious to avoid any encounter and succeeded in drawing the soldiers into the barracks. But the mob did not wish to be disappointed of its sport; it had come out to see a fight and it did not want its wishes balked. An .Excited Mob. In a few moments another sentinel at some little distance was seen. A boy cried out that this soldier had struck him a few days before. It was just the excuse that the crowd wanted, and instantly twenty young men advanced and began to pelt the sentry with missiles. The man loaded his gun, but did not fire, and tried to retire into the building before which he was. He found the door locked, however, and he called loudly for the main guard whose station was within hearing. The officer in command sent to his relief a sergeant and six men and also dispatched a messenger to Capt Preston, the officer of the day, The mob meanwhile, was increasing every moment, and by the time Preston with six more men arrived on the spot it was a huge gathering. Preston behaved with coolness and moderation, but the soldiers were provoked and excited by the constant jeers and insults of the crowd. “Qome on. you bloody-backs,” they cried. “Come'on, you lobster-backs. ’* “Fire if you dare. * “Why don’t you fire?” The Soldier* Fire. One soldier was hit by a olub: he drew back, leveled bis musket and fired. Inspired by his example, seven or eight more di-charged tneir arms and the mob fled. Two metl were killed,
THE BOSTON MASSACRE. [A curious picture of toe event from a contemporary engraving.]
threg others mortally wounded and six injured; slightly. The people were terribly excited at this, and to calm them Gov. Hutchinson addressed them at the Staje House, promising that a full investigation of the affair should be made the next day. The next day Preston gave bimself up to the authorities and, with six of his men, was put upon trial and acquitted. Popular sentiment, however, had its way in the funerals of those slain. These, were Crispus Attucks, a halfbreed Indian nergro; Patrick Carr, an Irishman; and three American*: Samuel Gray, James Caldwell and Christopher Maverick. Their bodies were borne with 1 great pomp through the streets, a sdlemn funeral service was held over them, and they wore buried in cne common vault. The affair of the shooting reoeived then the exaggerated “massacre,” a name which has clung to ft from that day to this. Crtaptu Attacks. A good daallws lfeen made of Attucks sir.caHhta affair, and In 1888 a raoau-
of great bitterness were constantly made of the matter. It does not appear that the soldiers did any considerable damage or that the sufferings of the citizens were excessive, but it was just one of those things which prove a constant irritation and an excuse for oomplaint. March 3, 1770, a party of soldiers and rope makers of Boston had an encounter with clubs about midnight and several men on each side were wounded. The next night it was
ment was unveiledln Boston. He was a resident of Framingham and a man about 50 years of age. The removal of the British troop i from Boston was demanded by the people and, after some efforts to withstand the request, the Governor complied. Not again until Gage’s arrival in 1774 were troops quartered in the city.
WHERE THE FLAG WAS BORN.
Birthplace of the Star Spangled BannerFlag* of the Colonies.
was made by Mrs.
sign for the flag was from, a drawing made by George Washington with a pencil, and the flag thus deigned was adopted by a resolution of Congress on the 14th aav of June, 1777. A committee of Congress, accompanied by General Washington, afterward called, upon Mrs. Ross and engaged her to make
a flag from this design. The flag then made is now known the world over as the Star Spangled Banner bf the United States. There is a striking resemblance between the design of our flag and the arms of General Washington, and it .is believed by many that the American flag was derived from this heraldic design. Several flags were used by the people of the States before the present one Ufa® adopted. In the month of March, 1775. a red flag was hoisted in New York, bearing on one side the inscription, “George Rex and the Liberties of America, and on the other side, “Mp Pqrery." In July, 1775, on Project mu, Sen. Israel Putnam raised a flag upon whioh was inscribed the rflotto of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, “Qui transtulit sustinet. ” In October, 1775, the floating batteries of Bqston carried a flag with the motto, "An Appeal t 6 Heaven,” the design being a pine ttfefe on a white field. Virginia carried & flag in 1776—design, a rattlesnake coiled as if abdut to strike, and the motto, “Don't Tread on Me.” But It was not until Jhn. M, 1776, that the grand union flag,
bearing stars and stripes, was raised on thrf heights, near Boston. A number of flags appeared—.the rattlesnake, the pine tree, and the stvipdfl, the various designs of the different colonies—until July, 1777, when the blue union of tbs stars was added
Once a year It comes With lt-i flags and drums. With Its cannon loud, With Its rockets high And their starry crowd Filling all the sky.
MgfeHE small two-story still standat 239 Aroh \li. stieet.below Third, Philadelphia, has an interesting his1N tory. In it the first Bp 7 flag, containing Sp thirteen stars and thirteen strijes, Mrs, John Ross. The de-
WHERE OUR FIRST FLAG WAS MADE
THE PINE-TREE FLAG.
THE DAY WE CELEBRATE
Music In the air. Powder everywhere. Crackers making noise, Snapping at your feet, For the happy hoys All along the street
to the stripes, and the law adopted this flag as the great national emblem. Afterward a strips was added with every new State; but, as it became manifest that in time the beauty of the emblem would be marred by the enormous proportions acquired bv ad-
THE FLAG OF VIRGINIA 1775.
ditional States, Congress reduced the Btripes to the original thirteen, and the stars were made to correspond with the number of States. The American flag is one of the most beautiful that floats upon any land or sea. Its proportions are perfect when it is properly made—cne-half as broad as it is long. The first stripe at the top is red, the next white, and there colors alternate, making the last stripe red. Tne blue field for the stars is the width and square of the first seven Btripes, viz., four red and three white. The colors of the American flag are in exnuisite relief, and it is altogether a splendid national emblem. Long may it wave untarnished!
WHEN WE WERE BOYS.
A Picture of an Old-time Celebration In th« Country. “Now, Billy, don’t go near them anvils.” “Sammy, will you stand back, or do you want to get blowed up'/ And a stranger to boys and to ttie custom would have concluded that Sammy certainly did want to get “blowed up, for it was the regu ar complaint of the men in charge that there "wouldn’t be a speck of danger if it weren’t for the derned boys crowdin' in so. ” This was at 4 o'clock in the morning of a Fourth of July, years ago, in a country village. The boys Were hurrying toward the public square, where the anvils were located, barefooted and clad for the most part only In tow linen shirts and jean pantaloon'*, and buttoning the latter as they ran. for the affair was too imnortanj to be missed on account of a little Informality in toilet. And cfose aft 6r r them came two or three mothers <with nervous warnings of caution. The rising suaj showed the whole population up, and in the ceurftry as flues boom of cannon or ring of bells could be heard, there was great excitement among the boys, each eager to get his breakfast and be off for the village. The men and women cgme in later if it wasn’t a “good harvest day.” By 10 o'clock all ths town Was out. and so many fsom the country that the village contained Z.OOO Or 4,000 peop a. If the season had been very early “down on the sand barrens, ” rflfew watermelons were for but not often. Of home-made beer, gin&er cakes, currant pies, striped candy and the like, the sale was wonderfu^—a stand under ever*,- big tree. In the village grocery the big cheese was cut and regular customers invited to taste it. “Cuba six” cigars (six cents) we e so plentiful that every#boy oould have one. The men gave way to unwonted generosity, and whisky they had always witn them —*\io cents* a gallon, and that thats good.” Shutting uf> the “groceries"—they were not called “saloons" till near the war—would have provoked a riot. The sp aker gave “old England” a few vigorous whacks, pitied the “objects of foreign despotisms,* congratulated his fellow -citizens on theil- glorious freedom, And generally wound up with a statement that ‘‘but for our noble forefathers, who on this day so many years ago declared these colonies free and independent, We, fellow-citi-zens, would have been the sub. ect ot a depotism like the wretoned Irish, perhaps, trodden ihto the mireaf shivery and compelled to give one-third o i all
Then, hurrah 1 I aa y. Independence Day Comes but once a year. With and smoke, Let. us hold It dear. Bln and little folk.
we possessed to the king and his soldieis.” In the enumeration of the horrors of despotism one count nearly always appeared—tli at one-third of what the farmer raised would be taken by the despot!—Boston Post.
When the Sticks Come Down.
Fourth of July Is cumin' rouu 'ad soon tUrough all the land Will sound the boom of cannon and the music of tho band ; Fire-crackers and torp sdoes will be irackin' evory where. With lire balloons and parachutes a-sallln’ through the airs ’Nd rockets will be whirrin' up In every country town. But you’d better git from under when the sticks come down. 1 find that thar is lots of things that acts In that same a ay. ’Nd starts up with a heap of fuss ’nd makes a grand display. While everybody's lookin’ on, admirin’ from afar, 'Nd sayln’ “Wlio'd a thought they could a sailed way up so turf” But when they bust In mid air, people scatter with a frown, 'Nd try to git from under when the sticky come down. —Arthur Gerrltt
A Question About Firecrackers.
Mr. Magruder had forbidden his boys to buy anything on credit, and ono day he called the children and said he wante to know who had had five cents’ worth of nrecr ackers charged to him at the toy store. The older ones promptly said, “I did not," but the two little ones, John and Harry, seemed not so clear in their statements. John said he had bought five cents’ worth of firecrackers with five cents Uncle Frank had give him, and one time his mamma gave him five cents and he got some firecrackers at the toy store. “Oh, I don’t care about that,” his father said. “Did you have five cents’ worth of firecrackers charged?" Little Harry could not stand It any longer. He must make John understand, and he went right npto him and paid, “Johnny, did you ever get five cents’ worth of crackers with a five cents nobody never gave you?"—Harjor's Young People.
“Let’s break the tilence," suggested one patriotic boy to another on the morning of tnd glorious Fourth. “We can cracker, anyhow. * replied the other.—Detroit Free Press.
Their, Hopes More than Realized.
"Bh®m go splendid, Billy."
She does. So does Billy.
Let us take our part With a loyal heart, Le our Auks unfurled. Little maid and man, Proudest In the world. Free I American!
They Did Both.
Highest of til in Leavening Power,—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Absolutely pure
WHAT THE COMPOSER THOUGHT
She Took Him at Hts Word—And Reported It. "Pagliacci" was to be given on one occasion, but no one knew of Leonoavallo’a arrival. “He went to the door and bought his ticket. The house was full and no one recognized him. He listened, but naturally did not join in the loud applause which'greeted the presentation. Next to him sat a pretty young woman with lively dark eyes, who beat her little hands as though she was td be rewarded for it. “ ‘Signor,’ she said, turning to Leoncavallo, ‘why do you not applaud? Does the opera not please you?’ “ ‘Not at all,’ came the Answer of tho oomposer, who enjoyed the possibility of somo fun at pis own expense; ‘it displeases me. It is the work of a beginner, to say nothing worse.’ “ ‘Then ypu understand nothing about music.’ replied the young woman. * ‘On, yes I do.’ And the oomposer then began tb talk of the counterpoint and other toohnioal characteristics oi the piece with hia fair neighbor. ‘And as to originality,’ he continued, 'there is none. See this motive was taken from ,’ and he whistled a tune to correspond. ‘That air was stolen from Bizet, and that from Beethoven,' he added, as bar aftor bar was chanted. He declined to admit that the opera hail a single merit. “After the curtain had fallon and the young woman was about to leave the theater, she turned again to her discontented neighbor and asked if the opinion expressed of his opera was a genuine one, and received an affirmative reply. With a merry and malicious look she bade him good-by. “ ‘On the following morning’—the composer may be allowed to tell the ending of the story himself—’l was still in bed when the waiter brought me my ooffee and one of the morning papers. 1 hurriedly glanced througu the journal, when my eye fell on tho headline, “Leoncavallos Opinion of His ‘Pagllacoi.’ ” I road it—and—well, you may imagine my feelings at seeing, word for word, wnat I had told my pretty neighbor concerning the work on tho night before. She was a reporter of the paper and had taken her revenge. I vowed thon that I should never again say an unfavorable word about my operas, especially to ladles.” —Bt. Louis Republic.
Worn Out in Harness.
In the Iharneas of every-day buelness work men and women .wear out prematurely. For ■ome of us It Is not easy, for others, attain, It Is Impossible to tret out of harness. It Is the Indexible yoke, the strongly forged, unbreakable shaakle of Imperative servitude needful to ourselves and those most dear to os. The weight of it often bows many of us Into the grave before our time, but ft is undoubtedly true that there it a means of rendering the burthen less onerous, and of mitigating the ailments that unremitting toll—especially of a sedentary kind—has a tendency to produce. Overworked olerks in oountlng-housos, mill operatives, bookkeepers, type-writers, and others testify to tho retiring, reetoratlve effects of Hostetler's Btorutch Bitten., and lta power of renewing physloal and mental energy when overtasked aud on the wane. Dyspepsia, sassing vigor, rheumatic, bowel and kidney complaints yield to thli beneficent medicine, which Is a preventive of malaria and counteracts the effeots of exposure In lnolement westher.
Saves Time.
A New York wood dealer, who handles many cargoes of oordwood annually, finding that the,time consumed in unloading carts at thfe yard amounted to a considerable ■item of' expense, has invented a ctln by which this item is eliminated entirely. The cart has a horizontal platform hung low between a pair of wheels on a crank axle. The platform is kqld In place by a button shutting into a slot in the forward part of the frame of the cart. The driver backs up to the,string piece on the wharf and nis cart is loaded. Then he drives to the yard and when he is at the spot whore It is desired to unload the wood he simply turns the button and releases the platform and the platform tips backward, and thus the cart unloads itrfelf. , The dri'er never stops at all—he just keeps right on to tne wha"f again. The operation is so extremely Staple arid'so obviously economical that it is a delight to the eye of even the most casual observer.
No Longer Secret.
One of the feature? of the projected printing exhibition in Baris will be a model of the secret printing offices which flourished in the cataoombi during the last century, and which a number of artiste went to visit the other day for the purpose of reproducing them from nature.
Will Displace Tin.
It is claimed that alumlhum will soon replace tin for all household purposes. A process for plating aluminum has been devised by a Gernytn chemist, which increases its chance* of becoming universally popular in household economy.
Large Decrease in Population.
The population of Melbourne, the metropolis of Australia, has decreased 4b, 004 since April, 1891. Shiloh’s Conramoi dims is sold on a guarantee. It cures incipient Consumption. It is the best dough Cura St cento, SV cents and *I.OO. A piece of Iron was found in an air passage of the great pyramid, which may have been there since 3700 B. C.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure
Is a constitutional cura Pries 79 cents Clergyman’s sore throat is wrongfully sot down to the score of “arduous labors.” Make life a ministry of love and it will always be worth living.
A BAD WRECK —of the constitution may follow in the track of a disordered system. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery prevents and cures all liver and kidney Diseases. It reuses the liver to healthy action, purifies the blood Sana allays congestion of the kidneys. By™"**. Esq., of Baudentou-n. Pa.sayar “liras for years hmdly able to go about. T suffered from fiver and bMner trouble, six different Doctors treated me during that time but-could So me nojpood. 1 give your “Medical Discovery " thepraise for my cure. Than. too. mi wife had a bad cgse of Asthma which was cured by the use of that G. W. SmcxNET. blood-purl-PIERCE-S. CURE ob nonr Banwwx *
Early Use of the Word “Strike.”
An early use of the word “strike" oocurs in the London Chronicle for 1765. ,in the September of that year are numerous references to a great suspension of labor in the Northern coalfield, and the colliers are stated to hava “struck out" for a higher bounty bofore entering into their usual yearly “bond." In confirmation of Mr. Lea-ton-Blenkinsopp’s statement at the last reference, it may be added that the strike is twice called a "stick."—London Chronicle, Oct 8, 10. One of Harriet Alartineau’s earliest pamphlets was a tra t entitled, “Tho Tendency of Strikes an 1 Sticks to Produce Low Waies,” published at Durham in 18.14. Tho time-honored illustration of profitless libor, “carrying coals to Newcastle, ” probably received its first slap in tho face during the strike of 1/65. A paragraph dated Newcastle, Kept 28, in the London Chronicle, says: “’Tis very remarkable that on Wednesday several pokes of coat were brought from Durham to tKts town by one of the common carriers, and told on the sandhill for 9d a poke, by which he cleared Gd a poke." —Notes and Queries,
Bismarck's Income.
Prinoe Blsmarckt according to tho book recently published by Hans Blum. “The German Empire at the Time of Bismarck,” is not a wealthy man in tho American tense. The mortgage on his estate* lequires him to pay about #IO,OOO every year. Tho income from his Friedrichsruhe property has been as much as $6 V ‘oo a year, but it has averaged only about half that sum. His entire income is not far from SIOO,OOO. ___ _____ Fiuscki.ss. tun, and all beauty- marring blemlabei* vanish from tbs fans when Glenn’s Sulphur Soap Is used.
Statesman Timber.
In the House of Commons there are ton newspa er men, six printer*, four tailors, three stationers, two butchers, three hotel-keepers, six farmers, one coal merchant and one cab-driver.
Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevem ana permanently curing constipation. It haß given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable aubstance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 60c and $1 bottles, but it is man-' ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name ia printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered.
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