Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 May 1895 — One Gives Relief. [ARTICLE]

One Gives Relief.

It is so easy to'be mistaken about indigestion, and thirfk there is some other trouble. The cure is Rinaiis Tabnies. One tabule gives relief. Ask any druggist. The nearest approach to the north pole was on May 13, 1892, when Lieutenant Lockwood stood Vvltliin 396 miles of that coveted spot, Mrs. Winslow's Boonmra Snror tor Chlldna teething: softens the jnnus, reduces inflammation, aUayt pain, cures wind co 'e. ascents*bottle.

The Art of Keeping Warm. The Russians have a great knack of making their winter pleasant. You feel nothing of the cold in those tightly built houses, where all doors and windows are double, and where the rooms are kept warm by big stoves hidden in the walls. There is no damp in a Russian house, and the inmates may dress indoors in the lightest garbs, which contrast oddly with the mass of furs and wraps which they don when going out. A Russian can afford to run no risk of exposure when be leaves the house for a walk or drive. He covers his head and ears with a fur bonnet, his feet and legs with felt boots lined with wool or fur, which are drawn over the ordinary boots and trousers, and reach up to the knees; he next cloaks himself in a top-coat with a fur collar, lining, and cuffs; he buries his hands in a pair of fingerless gloves of seal or bear skin. Thus equipped, and with the collar ol his coat raised all around, so that it muffles him up to his eyes, the Russian exposes only , his nose to the cold air, and he takes care frequently to give that organ a little rub to keep the circulation going. A stranger who is apt to forget the precaution would often get his nose frozen if it were not for the courtesy of the Russians, who will always warn him if they see his nose “whitening,” and will, unbidden, help him to chafe It vigorously with snow. In Russian cities walking is just possible for men during the winter, but hardly so for ladies. The women of the poorer classes wear knee boots; those of the shop-keeping class seldom venture out at all, those of the aristocracy go out in sleighs. John Adams had a cool, deliberate way of speaking, that carried conviction to the minds of his hearers.