Democratic Sentinel, Volume 22, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 December 1898 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

•‘For Headache I don't believe there ever was so good a pill as Ayeri* I have been a victim of terrible headaches, and never found anything to relieve me so quickly as AYER'S PiILS" QL, NEWMAN.Dug Spur, Va. FARMS *OR SALE. We hsve for sale several tracts f. land varyihg in size from 40 acres to 280 acres, which will be s Id at prices to suit the t mes. Only a small cash payment is required, baK auce on easy payments at 6 per cent, interest. Prospective buyers will find it to their advantage t > call and see us. Hollingsworth & Hopkins, Rensselaer. In Eveby Thursday the Year Round. In more than half million homed The Youth’s Companion comes every week, the welcome guest of youn and old—read with equal interest ny every member of the household The best of fiction, p etiy, sketches of travel, instruct ' e articles, comment on cm rent eve.its an . selec ed miscellany and anecdotes fill its columns from week to week and from ear to year. The publishers rromise ih .ttbev lume for 1399 will surpass 11 former ones, m variety, in ere st and value. Among the two) • > died distinguished contributors already engaged are Hon John D. Long, Secretary of the- Navy, Edward Everett Hale Henry M. Staple-, ar*h • rne Jewett, W D Howels. Poultnay Bigelow, Herbert E II mbl n, Hon a 1 Scuurz. Rt Hon Jametf Bryce, John Burroughs, Robert Barr, Thomas Nelson Page, Bret Harte, William Brack. Ajfred Austin. Andrew Lang nd Dr William a Hamm nd. All subscribers to the 18"9 volume will receive Th Compani -n’s ew Calendar, exquisitely colored, with a borer of stamped gold The paper will be giv a free also from tbe time subcription isre -eiveduntil January 1. 189;), then .» fall year to J inn ary 3, 1900 A h t.dsome ilia tr ted announcem'in and sample copies will be sent free to any one addre *-ing The Youth’s Companion, 211 Coin ml us A Boiton, Mess.

/ <LD MANUSCRIPT INK. ' Reobipt F om Whic an Excelleni QU alu y May Be Maun ’While examining a large number of manusciii-ts ot an i l-decribe, s-.me 2o #ars ago,” said a well-known New York ibrar.an to a Star reporter recently, “I was -t u kwith »te clearness and legibility f the writing, owing, in a great measure, to the permanent quality of the ink. which I ad not fadeu in the le st, al ho’ many of the matiufccripts were nearly 200 le r- old. It wns remarked, too, th..t the writer must h ve been celebrated in bis dai tor his calligraphy, or I met wit . a letter o. two from bi- correspoude; ts in weic-h there was a request for the recipe t the ins be used. 1 found his recipe which I o.pied, and rein one of them, dated in 1«58, I have during the last lb jeais mat e all the inkJ h re used “The recipe lead as follows: Bait, water, 1 ga.lon; gd s. bru.sed 1 pound; t,re.n co ( petas. |£ pound; gam arab'c, lu ounces, 5 ..r, ms ; 1 scruple. sot requi - tug so large a quanti y at a time, 1 reduce I be piojorlions to one-eight. , aud the t 6 tpe siands thus. “K-.iu water, i pint; galls, bruised, l.t ounces; green coppe us. 6 drams; gum ar Lie, JO- d ams tie galls mu t l.e coarsely powdered and put into a bottle with t t other ngieoie ts ndwutei ad - ed Tne bottle, when securely rd, should be | laced i the light ( tiu ir possible) and ite contents < ccaston.illy st rre . until the sum and copp ■rus »re dis so ied. after which it is enough to sh .a the bi tie daily, and in the course o i momh or six weeks tt.p j n k w i4 |f . u e. 1 h ve Ventured t> aud lu drop- o c. boiic acid to ths coute; ts of the but tb, biteuodii J y p>-ev-nts the o unto.> nd pro. i ■/ mold wttho.t i, detr merit to -Jie quality of the ink, .-o far as 1 know.”— ua-b n? lot. »t >r- ■ Whin i. s.li tei ba> Le nitiiveu d<ep i to ch 1 .’b bund it can Le ixtiacte.' r> steam. Nearly JL a wide-mouthed boni with very ot water, place the iujur < part over the mouth an t press it.sli ht \ 1 he sneti n thus pioduced will d aw the fie h down, and i a miuu eor two tm stecm wil’ extract splinter «nd infl .miu ition together. The best plan to remove stop iers tn.i> have become fixed is to | our a ni le gt cerine around the siopper This m ver fails to loosen it. 'io prevent such a thing oecnrring put a bit of thin kid, such as the top of a suede gi<-vi, rohuu tha stoppei or cork of every Little jou use. Yot can then be sure of removing them, however mostly they may fit. The kid also helps to keep out the air Here is an arithmetical problem that is going the rounds-. A is indebted to L $3, B to C, (? to D, D to E, JE to F, same amount. A, B, U 1) aad E each have $1 an no more, and consequently they cur not pay their debt. 1 hey put their mou ey all together. A t ikes the $5, goes tc B, puys his dent and gets his receipt. 1. does the same to U, to D Dtor. mu Eto F. A, B. t, D and E are out of debt, and F has hi- money. Who, if any o. e, is the loser?—New Yoik Tribune The Companion’s New Cadendak. The calendars given ly the Comimj ion in iormer years tv al. subtciibei have been renurkable for tneir delicacy of design and richness of col ring. Bui the Calendar lor LbV9 f : .r surpasses uuy of those The put Ushers have endeavored to make it the finest calendar of thee nturjr, and readers of The Companion will not be disappointed in it Those who subscribe now »ill rec.ive not only the gift of the Calendar, but also all the issues of November and December from the time of subscri - tion Free The new volume will be he b ee t The Gompanion has evdr published. Among the contiioutions already engaged are "The Littit Demons of War,” by Hon John D Long; “Opportunities fir Young Explore.s,” bn Clements Markham; “The Boy with < Voice," David Bispham; “fhi Wonders of Somnambulism,” Dr William A Hammond; “Poti e Spies in Russia," Poultney Bigelow; and “ Where Living is Cheapest,” Ho i Carroll D iVright. Fine illustrated announcement and sample copies will be sent to any one address! g Tax Youth’s Companion 311 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass

SUCCESS. A< WANTED Vi llwr m the tort to SUCCESS art rOSTTOE. BIG PAY-STEADY WORK-NEW PLAN. THESUOCCSS COMPANY, Cooperbnlon, N.Y. City DUhes Made from Rabbits* Mair. Bowls, dishes and plates are madi from the hair of rabbits and other animals in Russia. The articles are felted and afterward varnished. These utensQs bate the appearance of papier mache, or varnished leather, and po*< Sthe properties of being strong, durandexceedlaMy light.