Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 April 1895 — Page 7
HelplessTenWeeks *1 vm attacked with acute rheumatiam and waa laid up in the house ten weeks. My right arm was withered away to skin and bone, and I had almost lost the use at it. A friend adi me to try Hood's jPL Sarsaparilla, which I *JW- did. and by the time the \ Jr 6x84 bott l® WM used I I was feeling a little better. I could see and fetl * «r• * t change. z^? T “ e flegb w “ return<?£7 ■ E3V J x Ing to my arm and the Mr. R. Forrests!! soreness was leaving my body and limbs. Every spring and fall since, we have used from three to six bottles in our family. I find to use Hood’s Sarsaparilla is cheaper than to pay doctor's bills. I HoodWCures }t am thankful that I have fpnnd a medicine which will help a man who has rheumatism. It keeps me in gpod health." Richabd FobBISTAII, Oelwein, lowa. Get HOOD'S. Hood’s Pills cure all Liver His, Biliousness, Jaundice, Indigestion, Sick Headache. .
Rob Roy, the Philanthropist.
During more than forty years John MacGregor (Rob Roy) was a great exemplar of the best sort of philanthropy, There was some narrowness, T erhaps bigotry in his religious creed; but none wnstevcr in Ins practice. He was a man of considerable atta nments in literature, science, art. anl music; above ail, he was a born adventurer, as his voyage s n his “Rob Roy " canoe testify; and all the profits that he obtained from his bcokp and lectures were handed over to the charities—charities ot the Lest tort—in which he was interested. By lecturing alone he earned and thin applied £IO,OO, and, having set himsqif to collect that sum, he persevered in the work during several years, a d afte • h's health had begun to fail, until the total had been reached. Dying in 189?, at the age of 87, he left a recor ■ ot steady heroism and of real service to his feTow-men which is almost unique.—The Academy.
SDR. ,v Rool* «^ T kidNEXLIVERajs BL ctt ß x>! Pain in. the Baek Joints or hips, sediment in urine like brick-dust frequent calls or retention, rheumatism. Kidney Complaint Diabetes, dropsy, scanty or high colored urine. Urinary Troubles Stinging sensations when voiding, distress pressure in the parts, urethral irritation, stricture. Disordered Liver Bloat or dark circles under the eyes, tongue coated, constipation, yellowish eyeballs. At Druggist*, 50 cents and SI.OO size. “Invalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y. Lydia KgS / <E. Pinkham’s Vegetable CURES Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Menstruations, Weak, ness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility, Kidney Complaints io either sex. Every time it will relieve Backache, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude, “ don’tcare” 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. All dnimjta nil the Pinkham medicine.. Address la sonfldence, Lydia E. Pinkham Mkd. Co., Lynn, Mass. Lydia E. Pinkham'* Liver Pills, 25 cents. WALTER BAKER & CO. -a. The Largest Manufacturers of UA PURE, HICH GRADE M COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES Continent, h aTe rooefered JgKW highest awards 1 11 Wustrial and Food ffl Wk EXPOSITIONS , ii W'nEmopeaiiifAoiem. JOTSI ! - Unlike the Dutch Procew, no Alkaor other Chemicals or Dyes are used in any of their preparation*. Their dellciort* BREAKFAST COCOA is absolutely pure and soluble, and costs less than one cent a cup. ■ ■? T 3 .«•« H BOLQ BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. • WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. Dr. J; H. McLean’s i LIVER and KMEYBALM ! V Cures Bright’s Disease, Diabetes V I and Torpid Liver. SI.OO per bottle, d . Ely’s Cream Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, ,yk- ? ki3 Restores the Senses of BF 1 /kkWa Taste and Smell, aSfer— Heals the Sores. Apply Balm into each nostril. Ely 8k05., ,W War™ St., H. Y. By Successful Ify Prosecutes Claims. ■ Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. P !»'-T-s in last war, 15o<Xjndicatln&claiins, atty cinco. MENTION THIS PAPER width wamwo to rnnTunt, CnnSALESMEN □OU ••WANTED.. W W the JEWELU NURSERY COMPANY, lArgPAt Nursery in the North weak LIKE CITY, MINX. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothino Sybot" for Children teething: sort’us the gums, roanoee laflammatloc, »U»>v -«Au. cure, wind colic. 25oeato*bv»<n.
n UsSS, “Oh, yes. Only— And that v “i ( ihi s. your sister? Did you know she was ' ■SfL Ibe there?” Silence spoke with hesitation, e' wlth a slight constraint s ’! *ll*l not know, or I should not hi £° ne >” sai, l Roderick, decidedly. "1 TfwMJ kJ kJ perhaps it is well. Poor Bella! 1 1 on n °tice her husband?” 3Siß<,J3s= I y,<« y “Yes. Was she—was she always 1 that, and not like you?” asked Siler after a long pause. “We were never very much ali
CHAPTER X—Continued.
To get quietly away, that was the young husband’s first thought, especially as, though she looked and smiled so sweetly, he detected a shade of weariness in the dear face he knew so well. If he could only carry her safely off before the admiring circle round Bella broke up, and before Mr. Alexander Thomson appeared in the draw-ing-room—as he was sure to do in a condition euphuistically termed “merry.” But Mrs. Grierson had first to be spoken to a little, and she sat close beside his sister, who, in passing, he felt catch his hand. “Rody!” ■ Was there ever a man, old or young, who hearing himself called by a familiar voice, the pet name of his childhood, could stonily turn away? Poor Roderick, anything but stony-hearted, certainly could not “What do you want with me?” he whispered, pretending to turn over a large volume of photographs which his sister held. “She—l came here on purpose to look at her—she is much nicer than I expected.” “Thank you. Is that all? Then I will pass on. I was going to say good-night to Mrs. Grierson.” The tone, studiously polite, was exactly what he would have used to any strange lady. It seemed to cut his sister to the heart. “Roderick, what can I do? I dare not vex mamma. She holds all my pinmoney; and he is—oh, so stingy! so If I had but known!” “You did know; I told you myself,” said Roderick, sternly. “But it Is useless talking. As one makes one’s bed one must lie on it” “I know that. And you?” “There is no need to speak—we had better not speak—either of me or mine.” At this instant the gentlemen were heard coming up; and one of them, approaching, tapped her on the shoulder, with a jovial, “Well, my dear!” A shiver of repugnance—almost of fear—passed over poor Bella from head to foot Well might the sapient Mr. Alexander Thomson observe that “women are fools;” but the greatest of all fools is the woman that marries a fool for his money. “Jardine! here still? Do introduce us —my wife and me—to our charming sister-in-law. Or, rather introduce her to us, if Bella thinks it more proper.” “Yes, yes, bring her here. I beg you will, and quickly. Don’t you see everybody is looking at us?” said Bella, hurriedly. “Let them look; it is nothing to me,” said Roderick, and was walking away, when he felt a little hand slipped under his arm. “I came not to hurry you, dear, but to tell you that Mrs. Grierson offers to take us home in her carriage. She is so kind. I like her so much.” “I knew you would, my darling!” Bella heard the words, saw the look and the look which answered it. A sudden spasm, almost like despair, passed across her face—the despair which a woman, any woman, cannot but feel on catching a glimpse of the heaven she has lost or thrown away. But she righted herself speedily; and having much of her mother’s cleverness, slipped out of the difficult position by coming and taking Silence’s two hands with an air of frank pleasure. “You would not carry off my brother this very minute, when I am so delighted to see both him and you? I am Bella. Of course you have heard of Bella? Nay; you must let me kiss you, my dear.” The tone, if a little patronizing, was kind; and though the soft cheek turned scarlet, it did not shrink from the kiss. Silence stood, neither shy, nor afraid, nor ashamed, to receive the greeting of her husband’s sister. But when Bella’s husband came forward, with rough exuberance, to take his share in the salute, she drew back. “It is not our custom in Switzerland,” she said in French to her husband; and, as she extended the tips of her fingers, 'it would have taken a bolder man than even Mr. Alexander Thomson to offer a kiss to young Mrs. Jardine.
All this little scene passed within half a minute, attracting no attention except from the Griersons, who stood by. “We are detaining you, and making our family relations needlessly public,” said Roderick; “but the fact is, my wife and sister had never met before. They will meet again shortly, I hope.” “I hope so, too,” responded Mrs. Grierson, in a tone which showed that the gentle old lady was fully cognizant of the Jardine history, as no doubt, in some form or other, was everyone present, or would be, within ten minutes. Indeed, as Roderick took his wife from the room, he felt that, like the celebrated wit in the anecdote, they “left their character behind them.” What matter? What did anything matter, so long as he held fast that tender hand, which, in the friendly dusk of the carriage, he had taken, for he felt it trembling much. But neither they nor Mrs. Grierson made any save the most ordinary remarks, on the way “home,” which yet was so sweet. . Arriving there, Silence threw her arms round hes husband’s neck. “I am so glad, so glad!” “Glad of what?” “Of—everything, I think. But most of all to get home.” “What a little home-bird you will grow to. Exactly suited for a poor man’s wife. Suppose now I had .married 2 fashionable young lady, who wanted to have, every day, a dinnerparty, like the one we have left! But you did enjoy it’”
“Oh, yes. Only And that was your sister? Did you know she was to be there?” Silence spoke with hesitation, even with a slight constraint “I did not know, or I should not have gone,” said Roderick, decidedly. "But perhaps it is well. Poor Bella! Did you notice her husband?” “Yes. Was she—was she always like that and not like you?” asked Silence, after a long pause. “We were never very much alike, but ” “But you are brother and sister. I am very glad you met And, if they wish it, you will go?” “With you—not otherwise. But no need to talk about that. Let us talk about the dinner—a regular grand Richerden dinner, and some of the best Richerden folk at it—the little leaven which leavens the whole lump. I like the Griersons. And you?” “Yes; they are your friends, and this is your country; I wish to love it, and them. But lam afraid you will never make a grand lady out of me, likelike your sister.” Heaven forbid! Roderick was on the point of saying, but he did not In his tender heart there was a pitiful sense of apologizing to his own people. He knew all their faults; but they had belonged to him all his days. Kissing his wife, he said with a smile, “Sisters are sisters, and wives, wives; I am quite satisfied with mine.”
“It never rains but it pours,” said he, two days after, throwing over to Silence a heap of letters which had succeeded a whole pack of cards, left luckily during a day’s absence, when he had been showing her some Scotch mountains, and apologizing for their not being Alps. “Here are invitations enough. The way of the world! Once met at the Griersons’, all Richerden is satisfied and delighted to visit us. Even my sister; did you notice these?” The cards of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Thomson and a formal dinner invitation sufficiently proved Bella’s sisterly feelings. “We shall go?” Silence was still feeble in those auxiliary verbs, which to a native can take such delicate shades of meaning. Her husband could hardly tell whether or not she wished to go. But he knew she ought to go, even if at some slight sacrifice to both; therefore he merely assented without opening any discussion pro or con. She tacitly accepted his “Yes,” and he went on explaining or criticizing the other invitations. “After all, the world is exceedingly like a flock of sheep. Let one jump the ditch, the others are sure to follow. And this was a very wide ditch to jump, truly,” added he, looking round the room. “We ought certainly to take a house, if only for the sake of our friends. What agony it must have cost some of them to stop their carriage in front of a flat!” Silence laughed merrily. “And yet we are happy in It! It is ugly. I know that; but I think I have never been so happy in all my life; and as for all this visiting, is it quite necessary?” He hesitated a little; then said gently, “Yes, my wife, if you do not dislike it very much, I think it is quite necessary." “That is enough; we will go.” “Out of mere obedience, my darling?” “No,” she said, answering his smile with a sweet gravity, “I do not think it is in me blindly to obey any one, not even you. But I honor you so much in all things I can understand that in things I do not quite understand I trust you. That is the only true and safe obedience.” So they went to dinner after dinner. At Richerden the only Idea of “society” consists in dining. One invitation followed another rapidly, for it was near the end of the season, and most families were beginning to think of the periodical “going to the coast” Yet Roderick liked it; she too, after a fashion. “It makes one feel,” she said once when they had come back, “in the sma’ hours,” to their quiet flat, “like sitting safe in a sheltered hut, with the rain pelting outside.” Roderick laughed. “This place rather resembles a hut, certainly; but would Richerden be flattered by your likening its splendid hospitalities to ‘an even downpour?’ ” Silence colored. “I don’t mean that. You know what I mean. Visiting is pleasant. I am glad to feel you are not ashamed of me, and oh, I am so proud of you! But still, that Is only our outside life. The real life is this.” She crept close to him. She felt the beating of the strong, true heart that she knew was wholly her own. Then lifting up her face, all wet with peaceful tears, she looked earnestly at her husband. “I am sorry, I never can tell how sorry, for the women who are not happy.” There is a proverb— Roderick sometimes thought of it nowadays and felt that he could almost understand it—- “ Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a house full of sacrifices with strife.” Their “dinner of herbs” was growing nearer than they thought. Roderick one day came in from a call on Mr. Maclagan whose hospitalities they had also shared, and Silence, with her sweet nature and wide power of sympathy, had persisted that even Mrs. Maclagan was, when you came to know her, not so black as she was painted. Mr. Maclagan, Roderick allowed, was always liked and likeable—till now. She saw Immediately that something had gone seriously wrong. “What is it? Your mother?” “No, dear; not my mother this time. She is well and happy in England. I may safely forget her, as she does me. It is only—oh, Silence! did you ever know what it was to owe a lot of money and not have a half-penny to pay it with? At least, I don't mean we are at our last half-penny, but we—that is, I—have been spending a good deal more than I ought, and Maclagan has just told me so, and—but this is childish—you must not heed it, darling,” said he. trying to hide his extreme perturbation. He leaned his head on nis hands in deep depression. Silence came and
knelt beside hhn. She was very young! very childish, or childlike, In many things, and hitherto her husband had treated her like a child; an idol, certainly. but still a child. Now their positions seemed reversed. He looked up at her for a moment, then laid his head on her shoulder with a sigh of relief. “Oh, It would lie such a comfort to tell you everything.” “Do so, then.” The “everything” was not very serious, but It seemed so to him, who had never in his life known what it was to want anything he wished for. “I am an idiot, I know I am, to feel so keenly the lack of a few pounds; but I never was used to this sort of thing. Maclagan asked me to show him my ‘accounts.’ Why, I never kept accounts In all my days! My mother allowed me so much a year, or half year. I spent It, and when It was dona I came to her for more. Not that I was extravagant; she knew that—but, oh, Silence! money seems to slip through my fingers In the most marvelous way. As Maclagan told me, and I could not deny it, I no more know how to make the best of a small Income than If I were a baby. Do you?" He looked up in such a piteously helpless fashion that she could have smiled, had she not felt so infinitely tender over him. But it was the tenderness which' is born of utmost reverence. Without any urging she answered simply, “Suppose I try;” and began looking over the mass of papers before him, and which he himself regarded with an expression almost of despair. Poor fellow! b-e had got into what wopien call “a regular muddle;” like many another man who, neglectlngordesplslng thesmall economies which result in large comforts, and regardless of the proportion of things and the proper balance of expenditure, drifts away Into endless worries, anxieties, sometimes Into absolute ruin, and all for want of the clear head, the firm, careful hand, and, above all, the infinite power of taking trouble, which is essentially feminine. Roderick watched his wife slowly untying the Gordian knot, which he, man-like, would have liked to dash his sword through. “What patience you have!” he said. “Do throw it all aside. You must be very tired.” “Oh, no; it Is my business; I ought to have undertaken it before. My mother used to say It was the man’s part to earn the money, the woman’s to use it I can, a little. Mamma let me keep house ever since I was 17. I managed all her affairs. Perhaps, if you would let me try ” “To manage mine, and me?” “No!” a little indignantly. “I am afraid I should despise the man I ‘managed.’ But I would like to take my fair half of the work of life. Yours is outside, mine Inside. Will that do? Is It a bargain?” . “My love, yes.” “Now”—with a pretty imperiousness —“you must give me all the money you have, and all the bills you owe, and tell me exactly how much you have a year. Then, take a book and read. No” —pasing her hand over his forehead, which was burning hot—“go and lie down for an hour. When you wake up you shall find ail right.” |TO BB CONTINUED.!
JOHN BULL’S HUMOR.
It Is of the Fat-witted Kind, that Is What Americans Think. Hawthorne, observing Englishmen in England, speaks of tuem as “heavywittel;” Emerson alludes to their “saving stupidity;” Howells has introd. ced to us so re tvpical specimens of English respectability and rank baffled in their chase after American h. m r, but on the scent and arriving at a point of appreciation after considerable silent thought sometimes lasting into the next day: and here is the testimony of J owell, from his recently published “Letters.” In a letter written in from England to Professor Norton he thus explains the. warm reception given to Buffalo ( by London society. • I “But I think the true ,kev to this eagerness tor lions—even of the poodle sort—is the dullne-s of the average English mind. I never come back here without being struck w.th it. Henry .lames said it always stupefied him at first when he came back from the continent What it craves beyond everything is a sensation, anything that will serve as a Worcestershire sauce to its sluggish palate. We. of fine -and more touchy fiber, get o:r sen-ations cheaper, and do i ot find Wordsworth s emotion o er a common flower so very wbnderful. “People are dull enough on our side of the ocean stream, al o, God wot; but here, unless 1 know my peo >le, I never dare to let my mind gambol. Most of them, if I ever do, look on like the famous deaf man at the dancers, wondering to what music I am caoering. They call it superficial. Let us thank God, dear Charles, that our nerves are nearer the su: face, not so deeply imbedded in fat or muscle that wit must take a pitchfork to us.’’—Outlook.
How It Came to an Untimely End.
A party of three policemen got leave of absence, the other day, and went on a hunting and fishing excursion, their ob ective point being a secluded spot in a locality of whose whereabouts it is only necessary for the purp ises of this narrative to mention that it was teveial miles from anywhere and could only be reached by a long and laborious ou -ney in a wagon from the nearest rai wav station. The party arrived at its destination an hou- or two before nightfall and proceeded to unload. The tent, the camp-stove, blankets, eatables, guns, ammunition, game-bags fishing-rods, and other necessities ot the campaign were taken out of the wagon by Mike and Larry and piled on the ground. “I guess that s all,” said Mike, preparing to climb out. “Not by a ju_ful,” responded Tennis, the ranking officer of the squad. “Look over in that corner beyant ye. There's a jug. It’s full. Mind, now, how ve handle it!” Larry picked up the jug with great alacrity. Put in handing it out he had the misfortune to strike it against the hind wheel. And it broke all to pieces. Thote was a ghaitly, horrible silence. it was broken at last by Dennis. “Boys.” he said, in a hea 't-broken, world-weary, but resolute voice, “git out o’ that an’ help me pile these things back in the wagon. —Chicago Tribune. j . Dr. Cathell, in the Maryland Medical Journal, advances the 'opinion that fasting during the long interval between supper and breakfa t, and especially the complete emptiness of the stomach during sleep, adds greatly to the amount of emaciation, sleeplessness and general weakness so often met.
Highest of all in leavening strength.—Uteit U.S. In. Mlapert Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., ■<* WALL ST., NEW YORK
A Matter-of-Fact Man.
A tourist wandering alone upon the | edge of a bog at the foot of Ben N evls had tne misfortune to miss the proper path and stumble into a bog, where, ere long, his st; ugg ling served to sink him to his armpits in the tenacious mire. In this terrible plight he espied a stout Highlander not far away, to whom he c.'ied out at the top of his voice - “Ho—what ho, Donald! Here-come here.” "My name is nit Donald,” the Highlander said approaching the spot. “Never mind what your name is! Do' you see t e plight I am in? I can never get out of this alone." “Indeed, mon, 1 dinna think you ■ can.* And wi h that ho turned away. ' “flood heavens, are you going 10 ' leave me here to die?” tho tourist cried. “Ed—-d you want me to help you’" “Do I w«m \ou to help? What can I do else?” “Sure, 1 didnaknow. " “Will you help me?" “Ay—if vou want me.” “t h, help, he p, help me, in heaven's , name * - “Indeed, mon, why didn't you ask that in the first place?” And the Hi hlander quickly lifted I him out and set him on hard ground.
A Gross Act of Cruelty.
Why should we be cruel to oureelvcs? It ie • a niece of senselees inhumanity, for Instance, for any one of us to inflict upon his bowels and stomach tho convulsive, griping. violent action of a drastic cathartlo. Many people enamored of pills, powders, and potions are continually doing this. They ere only "keeping up the agony," perpetuating the disturbance by this foolish course. Why don't they take Hostetter's Stomach Bitters and get thoroughly and promptly set right? This supreme laxative nover gripes, never produces violent effects of any sort. Yet it is very effective and brings about permanent results. For liver complaint, dyspepsia, nervousness, lack of vitality, rheumatic and kidney complaints, it is eminently serviceable. In old age and to accelerate convalescence it is strongly to be commended. Use it for malaria.
Poky Old Spain.
To what extent Spain Is still under the influence of me :ieval laws and restrictions which hamper its progress and development may be gatheied fr m the fact that among other Imposts which the tax] ayer is called upon to pay is that entitled “The Crusalo,” which was originally instituted so • the purpose of providing fun is so • the irusa e s, an I wh oh has remained in existence ever sin e. Its proceeds are now applied to the repair of the churches, the payment of the stipend of the clergy and other ecclesiastic purposes.
Going to California?
The Burlington Route Is the only railway running “personally conducted" Excursions via Denver to Colorado Springs, halt Lake, Ogden, Sacramento, Fan Francisco, Stockton, Merced. Fresno. Bakersfield and Los Angeles at the lowest rates. •Pullman tourist sleeping car through without chauga Leave Chicago every Wednesday. Write or call on T. A. Grady, Excursion Manager, 211 Clark st, Chicago.
Immense Concern.
The Westinghouse Electric Company has contracted for a glass factory with a capacity t > turn out bulbs and stoppers for GO,' 00 incandescent lamps a day. The company now receives t',ooo bulbs and s oppers per day.
Not an Experiment.
The use of Rlpans Tabules for headache, dyspepsia and other stomach disorders ts not an experiment, but un assured success. They will do all that we sav they will.
Hadn’t the Cow Two?
A citizen of Wilcutt, Fla,, has a curiosity in the shape of u cow horn 5 feet long and 18 inches in circumference at the base. Send your full name and address to Dobbins’ roup Mfg. Co. Philadelphia. Pa., by return malL and set, free of all cost, a coupon worth several dollars. If used by you to its full advantage. Don’t delay. This is worth? attention. In 1882 poll tax was paid in Russia by tif)3,oCo land owners and gentry, 1,347,000 Cossacks and 23,;j42,0<ji) serfs. Lovely warmth of color, with traces of pink and white, is the exquisite complexion which follows the use of Gleun’s Sulphur Soap. Don’t go where you would not be w illing to die. We have not been without Plso’s Cure for Consumption for 20 years. —Lizzie Ferrel. Camp St, Harrisburg. Pa.. May 4. ’O4. Omaha signified “Up the River.”
4HREOE3RBHF for* BSBS I S/C I ATI C A.
Are You Fortified? When you are in a low state of health, and on the verge of illnesq, there is no nourishment in the world like Scott’s Emulsion to restore strength. Scott’s Emulsion nourishes, strengthT~| ens, promotes the making of solid flesh, enriches the blood and tones up - the w holo system. For Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Week Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Amnmm, Loss of Flesh, Thin Babies, Weak Children, and conditions of Wasting. •, Buy only the genuine! It has our tradefliyjjmMMa mark on salmon-colored wrapper. wmmss. Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. EXEE. Scott & Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. 80 cento and SI.
In the Country in Autumn.
Away into the clear, far distance stretches the road. On either aide are masses of green and gold and crimson foliage. I'he scarlet oak rears its lofty head, its leaves turned to a brilliant red by the early frosts; while the white oak adds yet another hue in the beautiful purple of its fading leaves. The golden-rod waves its plumes in contrast to the purple aster. Here are patches of white yarrow, and there gleiims the yellow arnica. Over the low stone walls creeps the Virginia creeper, with leaves of brown and crimson and punches of purple berriea The sumach, with its graceful leaves and crimson head of blossom, grows abundantly, adding its quota to the mass of color. The pale Valerius lift their heads, the tall reeds and grasses sway in the warm air. Here the bulrushs, too, stand sentinel round the pools of shallow water, covered with the leaves of the arrowhead and the water-lily. Where the land rises a little, wo find banks ooveied with the checkerberry. In the hollow are clumps of ferns, some turning brown, others of a tender green. Everywhere there is beauty: the air is sweet and invigorating, and one feels that it is good to merely live.
There is more Catarrh In this section or the country than all <aber diseases put together, and until the last tif.v years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doetori pronounced It a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by conitantly tailing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science ha a proven catarrh to ba a oonitttutional disease, and therefore requital constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, it the only oonatitutioual cure oo the market. It ie taken internally in doses from Un drops to a toaapoonful. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the ayetem. They offer one hundred dollar* for any case It fail! to cure. Bend for circular* and taitimoniale. Address. F. J. CHBNBY A CO., Toledo, 0. Sa-Sold by Druggists, 760.
Surprise for Future Explorers.
An English dentist, who hod collected from his patients about 30,000 teeth, died lately and lalt directions to have the molars, cuspids and bicuspids Sut in tho coltin with him, which was one, , •
What For?
A New York man has had tho came carpet stolen three times during the last three months, f roup is QuiOKi.r KSlicved. and Whooping Cough greatly helped, and Induration shortened by Dr, D. Jayne's Expectorant, the old family stand-by for Coatrhs and ‘olds. and all I.ung or Throat affections. The first negroes brought io Virginia were sold at various prices, from Jt-iO to £tlo each.
THE BUSINESS MAN’S LUNCH, fiard Work and indigestion go Hand in Hand. Concentrated thought, continued In, robs the stomach of necessary blood, and thia is also true of hard physical labor. When a five horse-power engine Is made to do ten horse-power work something is going to break. Very often the bardworked man coming from the field or the office will "bolt” his food in a few minutes which will take hours to digest. Then too, many foods are about as useful in the stoniach as a keg of nails would be in a fire under a boiler. The ill-need stomach refuses to do its work without the proper stimulus whioh it gets from the blood and nerves. The nerves are'weak and “ ready to break,” because they do not get the nourishment they require from the blood, finally the ill-used brain is morbidly wide awake when the overworked man attempts to find rest in bed.’ The application of common sense in the treatment of the stomach and the whole system brings to the busy man the full enjoyment of life and healthy digestion when he takes Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets to relieve a bilious stomach or after a too hearty meal, and Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery to purify, enrich and vitalize the blood. The "Pellets”are tiny sugar-coated pills made of highly concentrated vegetable ingredients which relieve the stomach of all offending matters easily and thoroughly. They need only be taken for a short time to cure the biliousness, constipation and slotlifulnesa. or torpor, of the liver; then the “Medical Discovery” should be taken in teaspoonful doses to increase the blood and enrich it. It has a peculiar effect upon the lining membranes of the stomach and bowels, toning up and strengthening them for all time. The whole system feels the effect of the pure blood coursing through the body and the nerves are vitalized and strengthened, not deadened, or put to sleep, as the so-called celery compounds and nerve mixtures do —but refreshed and fed on the food they need for health. If you suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia, nervousness, and any of the ills which come from impure blood and disordered stomach, you can cure yourself with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery which can be obtained at any drug store in the country.
For General Blacking is Unequalled. Has An Annual Sale of 3Dootons. AjWE ALSOMANLTACTUTOETHE -nrft TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENrTIN BOXES. DC ONLY PERFECT PASTE. Morse Bro strop’s. Canton,Massl ...EVERY... Home-Seeker BHOI I.D HEAD Tbs pamphlet recently published by the Passenger Department of the Illinois Central Bailroad, entitled “Southern Home-Seekers' Guido for 1894.” It contains over 50 excellent letters from Northern farmers now located in the South and other authentic and valuable information. For a FBEB COPY address the undersigned at Manchester, Iowa: I. F. MERRY, Asilttant General Pattsnger Agent,
KNOWLEDGE 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 beat products to the’neeus 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 end fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has 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 substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and fl bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if cuered. You want an ORHAN. Of courae You want the IAISST. The ißisonOamlin ■ Has won HIGHEST HONORS At ALL IMPORTANT World'* Fair* since that of Parle, 1807. including Chicago, 1803, and ii absolutely UNRIVALED. It your local deale* doe* not sell our Plano* and Organs, we will send oil approval direct from factory, to responsible parties, at our expense. Writs Niw siyit *>m. for partlculere. Naw Sty lea at Popular Prleaa Juat Out. Hold on onr Easy Payment Plan or Rented Until Purchaaod. Catalogues Free. MABON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO., 180 WABASH AVE., CHICAGO.
Or She is rathpr good looking , But lacks senso I She dissolves A • Ripans • Tabule On her tongue Instead of Swallowing it whole. It does its work Either way, But the last Is the way Intended, Nevertheless. A It should not be forgotten that the Lines of the WISCONSIN CENTRAL extend from CHICAGO end U/IQmkiCIAl MILWAUKEE to ST. PAUL, W IOUUII 01 11 MINNEAPOLIS and ASH, PCNT Di | LAND, passing through some vEHIIIIAL of the largest towns in CenI IhIPQ tral Wisconsin,and that close LIIIE connections are made at Bt. Paul for all Western points: at Ashland tor Duluth and Lake Superior points; and at Chicago for all Eastern and Southern points. For number qnd variety of summer resorts and accompanying sport la the way ot fishing and hunting the Wl- cousin Central is not excelled by any line. Full information can be bad upon application to any Agent of tbs Company. B. P. WHITCOMB, Oes. Mgr., JAS. C. POND, 0. P. Aft., MILWAUKEE. WIS, Raphael, Angelo, Itubens, Tasae The “LINENE REVERSIBLE" are the Best and Most Economical Collars and Cuffs worn: they are meds ot fine cloth, both sides finished alike, and, being ro-ver-ible. one collar is equal to two of any other kind. Thev.fU well wear will ana look well. A box ot Tea Collars or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-five Cents. A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs bi mail tor SIX Cents. Name style and size. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, 11 fMUKLIII IT,, HEW YOM. » KUBY IT.. 808111. CALIFORNIA Weekly Overland Parties—Personally Conducted—ln New Pullman Upholstered Tourist Sleeping Cars, without change, leave Chicago every Thursday for all points ou the pacific Coast For particulars address JUDSON r- CO.. 195 South Clark St., Chicago. C. N. U, No. SO-fr4~ \VHEN writing to advertisers, P le a»o »»y x«u saw the advertisement tn inf* paper. IB , / „ „ \ ~ /■—ls/' in tim,. gold by druggists, |||
