Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 September 1895 — Page 7

SHERIFF WILKINS FREEH.

Tears of Slavery and How He Bacaped Health la Improving;—Had Kifteeq Ponnda in Weight Talks Abppt His Deliverer Daily. Urbana, Ohio, Sept. 9, 1895.—(Special.) —This town is in quite a boil of excite* ment since the facts about the improved phyaiealcondition of many of our leading citizens became known. Anderson & Cramer, the big wholesale and retail druggists, were called on and frankly admitted that they were the first to start the good work, as Mr. Anderson termed it. “Yas, we introduced No-To-Bac into this town about three years ago. The demand at the start was very light, the folks had no faith in it, but we sold to a few people, and to our great astonishment every one reported a cure. Since that time we have sold hundreds of boxes, and every one under a guarantee to cure or refund the money, and strange as it may seem, we have never had a call to refund money. This is indeed a great record of merit, and it is because of this merit that the big sale has resulted. As every cure brings in at least twenty-five customers, we know that No-To-Bac can be relied upon in‘every respect, and No-To-Bac not only relieves the nervous irritation and makes the use of tobacco‘entirely unnecessary, but at the same time builds up and fortifies the general physical condition. I just saw two of our prominent merchants pass down the opposite side of the street; they were cured by No-To-Bac' a year ago, and they have not used tobacco since and have been greatly improved in health. We have a great many customers, men who are well advanced in years, who have been cured *of the tobacco habit by the use of No-To-Bac, and who continue taking it right along for its tonic effects. As a natural invigorator and stimulant we believe there is no preparation in America to equal it.” “You know R. P. Wilkins, our sheriff, don’t you ?” “Yes, of course, I do.” “Well, you want to interview him.” Mr. Wilkins was called upon, and said: “Yes, November 4th, last, I bought my first box of No-To-Bac from Anderson & Cramer. I had little faith, and to my great surprise, after using part of the third box, I was completely cured and did not have the least desire for tobacco. I had been a perfect slave to tobacco for over twenty-five years; I smoked from twelve to fifteen cigars a day; to-day I feel better, I sleep better, think better, and I have gained fifteen pounds in weight, and there is not a day passes that I do not recammend No-To-Bac to many of the tobacco users who I know are destroying their lives and vitality by the use of the weed.”

Further investigation revealed the fact that there are 500 people living in this town and the surrounding country who have been cured by No-To-Bac. If the cures go on at this rate it will not be very long before the tobacco industry is going to be seriously affected. The sale of No-To-Bac has been phenomenal. The public should be warned, however, against the purchase of any of the many imitations on the market, as the success of No-To-Bac has brought forth a host of counterfeiters and imitators. The genuine No-To-Bac is sold under a guarantee to cure by all druggists, and every tablet has the word No-To-Bac plainly stamped thereon, and in the purchase of the gennine article you run no physical or financial risk.

Where Is the Blarney Stone?

Within a few miles of Cork there stands, in the midst of beautiful groves, the ruined castle of Blarney. When the castle was besieged by Lord Carew In 1602, Cormac McCarthy, the Irish chieftain who held it, promised to give it up to the English general, but always put him off by soft speeches, until Carew became the laughing stock of Queen Elizabeth’s ministers. Hence arose, so it is said, the common phrase, “None of your Blarney.” There was a stone in the wall of the north angle of the castle, several feet from the top, which whoso should kiss became forthwith gifted With great eloquence. It was not easy to kiss a stone In such a position, tasVthe feat was usually accomplished by the performer of it getting himself lowered by means of a rope. This was the famous Blarney stone.

At Play in an Oasis.

There are certain spots in the great Sahara desert—alas! too few, so the naffVes think—where there is plenty of water and the palm tree grows luxuriantly. These delightful places are called oases, and there is one in Biskra in Algeria, on the northern fringe of the Sahara—“where all the prospect pleases and only man is vile.” Nevertheless vile man needs his amusements, and the Caid, or military governor, of Biskra, finds his chief recreation in hawking. The hawks are carried on the men’s) heads and shoulders, and oftentimes on both. Hawking is one of the oldest of sports and is keenly enjoyed by everyone, except the poor.unfortunate victims.

“ For years I had snffeted from falling of the womb, inflammation of ' \iw7 stomach, and weakness of the female organs. * 1 use d Lydia, E. Pinkham's ,M M Vegetable CorerwMHSjF Wt pound, and found a perfect i cure in it for ' tllPse tro,lbll ' p -” 4<j3MHHMKHra*r V Mrs. I.izzir § .7 DeCi.ine, 224 VIB . I Htt Grand Street, Jersey City, New Jersey. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DOUD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, 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 eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its 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. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts 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 jn water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. ISdl In time. Sold by draggiita, m

JOHN R. GENTRY, STILL KING OF PACERS BY THE RECORDS.

A PLEASING' EXPERIMENT.

Try It and You May Get Much Amusement from It. Get a wide-mouthed bottle, closed by a hollow cork, in which is Inserted the

A PLEASING EXPERIMENT.

pipe of a small glass funnel. By means of sealing-wax make airtight and watertight all the crevices th;it might leak, both between funnel and cork and between cork and bottle. Half fill the bottle with water and throw in two powders that are used to make seltzer water, tartaric acid and bicarbonate of soda, which may be bought at a drug store ready for use. Effervescence will at once take place, throwing off carbonic acid gas, and this will escape through the funnel. But If you have placed within the funnel two or three little balls of elder pith, or even of cork, the gas cannot escape except at intervals, for as one ball is lifted from the orifice another will drop down to close it By painting these balls in different colors you may produce a pretty effect. The effect may be made more beautiful by cutting tissue paper in the form of a butterfly’s wings and gluing them to one of the balls. The balls will dance up and down in the funnel and the imitation butterfly will flutter as If over a flower.

FOX TERRIERS.

One of the Most Aristocratic Breeds of the Canine To-Day. The origin of the fox terrier is not certainly known, but they have been bred pure in royal kennels of England for over 100 ears, and in America today the breed is fast usurping the place of the pug and the Yorkshire ter-

SMOOTH-COATED FOX TERRIER.

rier. Fox terriers are very intelligent, have an untiring energy and a great desire to be busy. As guard dogs they have no superiors, and are not generally vicious to people, but it is safest for any stranger to first get permission

JAMES HOGAN.

before he bothers either the person or property of the master.. Although not very quarrelsome, yet when once aroused, they display the greatest amount of pluck and endurance, and will fight to death anything they consider prey, seldom ever showing signs of being tired. As a killer of vermin they have no equal, and they naturally take to all animals that burrow In the ground. They are typical companions for children, as they will watch over them ajid Inspire the child with their own determination,* obedience, humbleness and affection. Their color is pure white, with black, tan or other markings, and their tail, which Is always docked, is coarse and straight. They weigh from fifteen to twenty pounds.

Both Vaulter* Cleared Eleven Feet and Two Inches. At the recent meeting of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association, one of the most stubbornly contested events of the day was the pole vault between Buchholz, of Pennsylvania, and Hoyt, of Harvard. They both cleared 11 fei?f 2% inches, but failed at 11 feet inches. This event lasted all through the meeting, Buchholz finally landing

himself a winner in the jump-off at 10 feet 914 Inches—his winning jump, the last performance of the program.

A. J. Cooley, an inventor, of Hornellsville, N. Y., says he has successfully completed an air ship which will carry one person. It Is about ten feet in length, with two pairs of wings, each pair having a spread of twelve feet Placed between the two pairs of wings is a large hollow box, on one end of which the pilot-house for the occupant will be built The front pair of wings is stationary. Mr. Cooley’s Idea is that his machine will sail like a hawk or an albatross that has been thrown on the air. Having been once stretched, it will skim along on a certain plane, and may be either raised, lowered or turned entirely around by the movement of the rear pair of wind beaters. A public demonstration of the invention will soon be given, after which it will be placed on exhibition to raise money enough to build a larger machine.

Soon after Lord Sydney’s elevation to the peerage, he happened to observe in company that authors were often very ridiculous in the titles they gave. “That,” said a gentleman present, “is an error from which even kings appear not to be exempt”

THE IMPRISONED LABOR LEADERS.

[From a Photograph of Debs and His Associates Taken Just Before the Release of the Latter.]

L. M. ROGERS

W. E. BURNS.

Time—2tO3 3-4.

POLE-VAULTING CONTEST.

VAULTING 11 FEET 2¾ INCHES.

An Airship.

A Common Error.

M. J. ELLIOTT.

GOT EGGS FOR BALLOTS.

Rider Haggard Roughly Treated During His Parliamentary Canvass. Among those who have suffered the misfortune of being on the unpopular side in the recent parliamentary elec-

tions in England is the author of those once popular romances, “King Solomon’s Mines” and the wonderful "She." Mr. Haggard stood for election in East Norfolk and his canvass was attended with various lively and exciting incidents which perhaps may serve him rfs the warp if not the woof for some future romance of real life, since they filled to serve his political purposes. He saved his head from being broken by some of his belligerent opponents in the canvass only to have it badly fractured in a political sense when they got at him at the polls. If this sudden and calamitous ending to his political aspirations has the result of turning Mr. Haggard's energies into literary channels again the reading public may gain more by his defeat than the House of Commons lost. Mr. Haggard has not been much in evidence lately in a literary sense, but the qualities manifested in the production of such remarkable stories as “King Solomon’s Mines” and “Jess” surely justify the belief that we have not heard the last of this versatile and powerful writer. Mr. Haggard is still a young man, only 39 last March, and is therefore good for many more years of work, as life usually goes. It is worth noting in this connection that Mr. Haggard’s first book was of a political character. It related to events In South Africa and appeared In 1882. It had no better success than the writer himself has had in politics recently.

Poole, the tailor, was a most accommodating gentleman, and was often Invited to the houses of “the great” When staying with a certain nobleman, he was asked one morning by his host what he thought of the party who had assembled at table the night before. “Why, very pleasant Indeed, your grace; but perhaps a little mixed.” “Hang it, Poole!” responded the jovial peer, “I couldn’t have all tailors.”

Each black walnut tree planted upon rough, untillable ground will soon be worth more than the whole acre upon which it is planted. A small area of trees will begin to add at once to the value of the farm, and the value will increase with each year’s growth. It’s the man without much mind who always “has a mind to do” something and never does it

S. KELIHER.

B. M. GODWIN.

H. RIDER HAGGARD.

Neat Retort.

Walnut Trees.

E. V. DEBS.

Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Rpyai fesg absolutely pure

A Heavy Burden.

The history of labor strikes, if fully written, would contain some odd incidents. None could be more so, perhaps, than the story of a recent strike in Omaha among the brewery workmen. An agreement had been made between the brewers and their employes which was acceptable In every point but one, and upon this one point they held out. It had been provided that beer should be furnished the workmen to drink without charge at nine, eleven, two, three, four and six o’clock, but the men Insisted upon having it free at every hour of the day! Here is oppression of labor by capital with a vengeance! In point of fact, there are no two things more at odds than efficient labor and excessive drinking. About a thousand million dollars a year are spent in this country for liquors, wines and ales. The proportion of this enormous sum that comes from the pockets of the working people of small means Is quite out of proportion to their number. The loss is not only direct, but indirect Indolence and incapacity always follow in the train of excess. A manufacturer has lately been quoted as saying that he had many men in his employ to whom he used to pay live dollars a day, but who could now with difficulty earn‘a dollar and a quarter; and that solely because they would drink. And the circumstance is not exceptional, but typical. Waste and Idleness are of the nearest kin to vice and excess.

One Fierce, the Other Lazy.

Though the lynx is one of the cats, it has certain un-cat-like points. Its tail is shorter, its ears are longer and graced at the ends with a tuft of hair, and it has whiskers as well as the mustache that ornaments the mouth of the cat. The lynx of Europe Is a savage creature, leaping upon its prej; with a sure alm, and doing great damage among the flocks and herds of the countries where It is yet found. In a wild state, the American differs from the European lynx in being much lazier and less ferocious; therefore Ifwlll live longer, for the latter has no friends, and is gradually retreating before the advance of civilization.

Peace or War.

In the olden days, when the spear was used as a weapon of war, men had to be very careful how they carried it If they were in a strange country and bore their spears with ths point forwards, it was supposed that they were bent on mischief, and was regarded as a declaration of war. If, on the other hand, they carried the spears on their shoulders, with the point backwards, their visit was taken as a visit of friendship, and there was no disturbance of the peace.

A Syndicate of Monsters.

Here nre.the nniiiPß of the abominable trio that compose It, bated and abhorred by man and woman kind—dyspepsia, biliousness and constipation. What Is the most successful way to attack and squelch these united monsters? Take Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, and they will pull np stakes and make tracks for parts unknown, leaving no trace behind. The Bitters also erteririTnntes malaria, rheumatic and kidney trouble and nervous ailment.

Over the Falls.

The project to build an aerial tramway at Niagara Falls is likely to be carried out the coming summer. The plan Is to run a cage-like car in a huge cable strung across the river immediately over the falls. It will be operated by electricity.

Harvest and Home-Seekers’ Excursions.

The hliejouri, Kansas and Texas Railway Company will sell tickets at greatly reduced rates on September 10 and 24, 1895, to points in .dissouri, Kansas and Texas. For further particulars address H. A. Cherrier, N. P. A„ M„ K. & T. By., 31(1 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. As I grow older, I become more lenient to the sins of frail humanity. The man who loudly denounces another I always suspect. A right-thinking man knows too much of crime to denounce a fellow-creature unheard. A healthful clearness is acquired by the sallow skin washed daily with Glenn's Sulphur Soap. “Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c. You are tried alone; alone you pass Into the desert; alone you are sifted by the world. 1 caw recommend Piso’s Cure for Consumption to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D. Townsend, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, ’94. He Is the greatest man who does most for his fellowmen. Thinking right will keep us from doing wrong.

The Foundation of Good Health is Pure, Rich Blood And the surest, best way to purify your blood is to lake Hood’s Sarsaparilla Hrvrtrl’e Pi|lc aretast cless,mii<l,effcclIUUU & nilbtlve. All druggists. 25c. ★ ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR * * The best★ oo FOR INVALID S * JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. A

Children's Rights.

All germs of goodness, order and loveliness exist in the child at birth, and If God’s plan of dealing with human souls is followed these germs will grow, bud, blossom and bring forth fruit; but bis plans cannot be continually thwarted without injurious results. The duty of parent to child exists long before the child owes any duty to parent The child has a right to demand that its life shall begin under the most faorable circumstances—that Its inception shall not be left to chance. ~ It has a right to demand that the months of its development in the mysterious darkness of its motherworld shall be made to contribute to its three-fold perfection—physical, mental, and spiritual. It has a right to demand that all the wondrous laws of inheritance which pre determine capability, which cast the unfailing horoscope of future life, shall be considered by those who have the power to choose its parentage. At birth there are left in the parents’ bands only the forces of education with which to mold the child's character, for all pre-natal influences have already bestotved their dower of good or UL Dr. Mary Wood Alien in Womankind. —___—. . The Moder* Baanty Thrives on good food and sunshine, with plenty of ■o»relge In the open air. Her form glbW with health and her face blooms with its beauty. If her system needs the cleansing action of a laxative remedy, she uses the gentle ,and pleasant liquid laxative Syrup of Figs.

Fire Alarm.

An electric fire-alarm now being Introduced in Switzerland acts automatically through the expansion of a metallic rod under heat This makes an electric connection, and it is said that the alarm is so sensitive that it is put in operatlomby holding a lighted match near it - ... r , HalP* Catarrh Cure. Ta taken Internally. Price 76 cento. We must iot Judge of a man’s merits by his greet qualities, but by the use be makes of them. Mrs. Winslow’s' Boorsrxs Braoy tor ChlUboa tost blns; sottons tbs suns, rsstwss IsSsnnssSioa. allay*pain,cureswinwootlo. Stoont* (bottle.

GREAT BOOK FREE. When Dr. R. V. Pierce, of BitflUo, N. Y., published the first edition of bia work, Th* People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, be announced that after 680,000 copies had been sold at the regulsr price, ft.so per copy, the profit on which would repay him for the great amount of labor and money expended in producing it, he would distribute the next half million fret. this number of copies has already been sold, ha is now distributing, abtolutely fret, 500,000 copies of this a— —■ ' .most complete, Interest- F COUPON | ing and valuable common I No. 112 I sense medical work ever • -• published—the recipient only being required to mall to him, at the above address, this little coupon with twenty-one (ax) cents in ©accent stamps to pay for postage and packing only, and the>book win be sent by mail. It is a veritable medical library, complete in one volume- It contains over 1000 pages and more than 300 illustrations. The Fret Edition is precisely the same as those sold at 51.50 except only that the books are bound in strong manilla psper covers instead of cloth. Send now before all are given away. They are going off rapidly.

LT4 RS. “All women T vX\ are beautiful (~ v —in telegraphic reports.” (N.Y. Sun.) So all washing and cleaning is easy, quick and safe—if you believe what the peddlers and some grocers tell you about certain washing powders. Now, you can test the ease and the quickness very soon. But the safety—that is another thing. You can't prove that to yourself without a long, and perhaps expensive and disastrous, trial. Better stick to the first-made, never-changing, best-known washing-compound—Pearline. Almost any woman .can prove to you the safety of Pearline. And nothing that can be, and has been, thus proved will do all your washing and cleaning so easily, so quickly, and so economically. Peddler* and tome utucnqroloes grocer* will tell you “ this is a* good aa* UJdIU or "the same as Pear line." ITS FALSE—Pearline is never peddled, la and if your grocer scad* yvn something in place of Pearline, ba •* J33.CK honcst-rosJ* hui, KU JAMES PYLE, New Yoda ~“TF~AT FIRST YOU DON’T / SUCCEED, , TRY SAPOLIO i: “SAY BOSS! Them People i i: M Won’t Take This | ' : WWant | santa I CLAUS Lw/U SOAP” i Or ? ■ I Everybody wants Santa Claus ' ' 1 ®°ap who knows the goodness of 1 [ KJ i Ik Try it once and you will refuse i i 1 1 ” / Isx. other kinds, too. Sold every- j 1 ! ' I ' 7 *here. Made only by ; it *• K> FA,R ™ company, ;: ' H CHICAGO. i rTTTiTiiuimiiimim i

best tn me world, Mui tot 4 i) % I / ©THE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH la cakea for central blacking of a store. THE SUN PASTB POLISH for a quick after-dinner anla*. applied and potlabed with a cloth. ■tea* Bros., Props., Canton, ILaaa.. U.S. ABeecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important tilings ft* everybody to learu is that constipation cause* more than half the sicknes* in th* world,especially ot women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book, free at yotu druggist’*,or write B.F.AUenCo.,36sCan**. BL,New York. Pills,lot and 25* a box. ▲■oval aalea more than S.ono.QOn bo Xml

Mr. Myrick Plummer, a wholesale paper dealer at 45 Beekman street, New York, relates that his first experience with Rlpans Tabulae began 18 months ago. Prior to that he could not recall a time when he was not troubled with constipation. Nothing gave more than temporary relief; but, since taking Rlpans Tabules, however, nobody, Mr. Plummer thinks, has more perfect digestive organs than he. The bowels perform their functions with regularity; there is no distress after eating, no headache, no heartburn, no dizziness -nothing of a dyspeptic nature. Blpan* Tabula* are told by druqrl.G. nr by mail g the »rloe (BO oenta » hot) la lent to (he Itlpana CbeoaT ejdOemjing. Na 10 Spruce Street, New Yurt. Huajto

THE BEST TEST IS USE. JSF are a few oondenaed extract* from letter* ra"Ute for my ownbabo. and can truly aay tint it I*«* another pbyalclan write*, After Trial of Ridge’s Food: . -n meat* my moM aanculno expectation*. I axp**t I* ua* It whenever occaalon ultora.’’ "■venbody think* tie 1* v month older than he ta-e cnat. fat, (Irons, healthy boy. . . A great many ar aoy fntnda ar* trying to Induce me to ch align, but It ms baby thrive* on Brodsv Koon, that la eiioush.”--MaL Lula G. vo**, Lynn. Man. iffiSS'SiF 8 Bend to WOOL RICH « CO., Palmer, Mam, for -Healthful Hint*.” SENT FRBE. mteitsssss C.N.U. No. S7-W1 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS plaaae *ay you law the ad vertteanma* i* thia paper.