Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 18 February 1892 — Page 3

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—tho worst forms of catarrh, with tho uso of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It's mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties effect a perfect ana permanent cure, no matter how bad the case, or of how long standing. It's a remedy that succeeds where everything else has failed. Thousands of such cases can be pointed out. That's the reason its proprietors back their faith in it with money. They offer $500 reward for a case of catarrh 'which they cannot cure. It's a medicine that allows them to take such a risk. Doesn't common sense lead you to takd such a medicine? "Au advertising fake," you say. $ Funny, isn't it, how some people prefer sickness to health when the remedy is positive and the guarantee absolute.

Wise men don't put money back of fakes." •v And "faking" doesn't pay.

This GREAT COUGH CURE, this successhi CONSUMPTION CURE is sold by drugcuts on a positive guarantee, a test that no other Curt can stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it frill cure you promptly. If your child has the CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use it quickly and relief is sure. If you fear CON. SUMPTION, don't wait until your case is hopeless, but take this Cure at once and receive Immediate help. Price 50c and $1.00. &slc your druggist for SHILOH'S CURE, tf your lungs are sore or back lame, use Shuoh's Porous Plasters.

I Hate to

'%t% Ask *f

My

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form of Pills or

Xioeengo, on receipt of 91 .©©. hirer Pin,, Sftc. Corn?- -z *,£. «p«odenc freely answered. in /O* £iddrets

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E. Pcorifldcnce,

INKHAM

h-

.MED. CO., 3&*£i£*it+

hTtm, MASS.

•Tuff'sTiny Pills®

enable the dyspeptic to eat whatever 0 lie wishes. They cause the food to asilmilatc and nourish the body, give^ W appetite and develop flesh. Price, 25 cents. Exact size shown in border.

M.M.* 06

PILES

KMlSKivcsin ltd

is

"Washington special.

It disappears

Oh, Woman! a and procrastination are responsible for much of your suffering. We can excuse

Doctor."

"Ttie delicacy of the young, but there is no exdusp for a woman who neglects the freely offered assistance of a woman.

Lydia E. Pinkhani's Vegetable Compound is the product of a life's practice of a woman among women, and an unfailing (Cure for woman's ills. It removes at once those pains, aches, and weaknesses, brightens the spirits, and invigorates the entire system. An

unexcelled remedy

Jor Kidney Troubles. AU Dniffgi«t« eel! it, or eent bj mail,

an

INFnstant

A

ANA KK.SIS uives 1 reiiet, *n is an INFALLI-

[J RE tor Pi at druggists or

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CUKE tor PILES.

I. Samples free.

Price. $i at drill by mail. Address Bos

"ANAKESIS/'

3418,NEW YORK

Cm

A PIONEEK

Jeijgjniah Green, who died recently in Ulster Co., New York, at the age iof 83, was the Pioneer distiller Trintergreen in this country. He amassed a fortune at the business and bought a tract of land where he sought to establish a tomperance camp meeting. He was unsuccessful in getting people to take the pledge, \t--j

and so he abandoned the business Vv'-'«nd became a sporting man. Mr Oreen finally succumbed to the pneumonia, a malady that is particularly -i fatal when it attacks elderly people.

Science has discovered that the rea,'8on of this is because pneumonia is always complicated more or less with .kidney trouble, and the mortality Among aged people arises in a great part because the kidneys are not treated for the disease. REID'S

GKHMAN COUGH & KIDNEY CURE recognizes this fact, and treats both the lungs and kidneys, consequently it is .extraordinarily successful in cases •of pneumonia." Get it of any dealer.

SYLVAN REMEDY Co., Peoria, 111.

Ym 1ST POLISH IN THE WORLD.

5suK

i^t^Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, in juro the iron, and burn off. ill* Rising San Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the conramer pays for no tin or glau package with every purchase. mujmuLtiav§Mttm.

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PENNINGTON'S AIR SHIP.

To Build One That "Will Carry Fifty Passengers Across the Ocean in One Night,

Mr. E. J. Pennington,the inventor of the famous air ship that bears his name, is in the city. For the past nine years he has been engaged in studying the problem of aerial navigation, and is confident that he has solved it. Mr. Pennington to-day talked to a Post reporter. He said that a company comprising some of the wealthiest and most progressive citizens of Chicago has been organized with a paid up capital of $30,000,000 to build the air ships. "We are engaged in constructing several small ones," he said, "at our works at Mount Carmel, III., and e'er long will proceed to manufacture a ship with which to cross the Atlantic and capable of carrying fifty passengers. The last will require about a year to complete. As soon as it is finished I will cross the ocean in it. In fact it is perfectly feasible to travel in it all over the globe. We will be able to go through the atmosphere at a rate of 200 miles an hour. A man can go to sleep in New York and wake up in London. There is hardly any limit to the uses to which it can be put. A farmer living 100 miles from a city could load up a lot of garden truck, carry it to the city and fly home—all in two hours' time. The mails could be carried from New York to Chicago in five hours. Freight and all kinds of articles could be let down into buildings by means of chutes connecting with the roofs. Carrying the mails will be one of the prime uses of the airship." "And what is your ship to be built of "Aluminium, that marvelous metal whose peculiar properties make it specially adapted to serial machines. It is as light as water, or nearly so. A sheet of the metal will float, though a solid chunk will sink. The buoyancy chamber, car, propeller, engine, and entire machine will be made of aluminium."

Mr. Pennington's machine will fly against the wind, and thereby solves a problem that has hitherto baffled all inventors. The entire scientific world has become interested in his experiments, and he has had correspondence with several European governments about his air ship. He says that Maxim, the famous inventor of improved guns, is at work on a flying machine, in which he is essaying to imitate nature, taking a bird as his model. Mr. Pennington thinks that Maxim will succeed 1o a limited extent only, though he does not doubt his ability to produce a machine that will navigate the air. So far from injuring the business of railroads, Mr. Pennington is sure that they will be called on to do more business than ever. The telegraph did not cause people to cease writing letters. He contends that his air ship will be infinitely safer from accident than railroad or steamship locomotion, and travel will be greatly cheapened, seeing that no roadbed will have to be kept up and no wear and tear of machinery.

How Jewish Meat is Killed. February Century.

One of the largest abottotrs in the city, covering an ample block, owned and operated by men of Jewish race and faith, is remarkable for its smooth aud effective working and, admirable distribution of parts. An average of eight hundred cattle, between three and five years old, pass through it in each of the business days ot the year. Arriving from the West at the river-front, they ascend one by one to the fateful inclosure, where an adept employee fastens a chain around the hind leg of each.

Hoisted by machinery, the bovine falls gently upon one shoulder, and in most instances without a cry. Occasionally, however, some brute, maddened by sight and smell of blood, breaks out into the slaughter-house,

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and creates disturbance that is speed ily quelled by its own dispatch. Sub missive companions, with neck twisted to expose the throat, quickly feel the shocnet's long and shining knife. The shochet himself is a stalwart fellow. cool and wary withal, who rarely makes a useless motion. He is a religious man and of good moral character, as his license from Rabbi Jacob Joseph, chief of certain orthodox congregations in the metropolis, avouches. The lifestream in torrents follows the movement of his blade. This ia "chechita," the killing. It insures complete effusion of blood, in which may be germs of disease that otherwise might find entrance into human bodies. Next follows "bediquah," the examination of instrument and victim. If a.nick appeared on the keen edge of the knife, that by extremists is held to imply unnecessary suffering, injurious chemical change, and consequent unfitness of the carcass for market. If there be none, in lungs,liver, and heart, the entire body indeed, are minutely inspected.

The Ladies.

The pleasant effect and perfect safety with which ladies may use the California liquid laxative Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, makes it their favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look for the name of the California Fig Syrup Co., printed near the bottom of the package.

Some Curious Truths.

Harper's Young People,

There area number of societies in the world that bear strange uames, but probably one of the most curious was a club founded in 1735 by an English actor. It was called "The Sublime Society of Beefsteaks," and had among its members the Prince of Wales and other royal personages. They met in the painting-room of the Covent Garden Theatre, and dined upon beefsteaks. The club was in existence for more than a hundred years, and became quite noted because of its odd customs. Another strange name was that of the "Scriblerus Club," which Swift founded in 1714, and to which Pope, Gay, and and other literary men belonged.

Sedan-chairs were first used in England by the Duke of Buckingham, during tho reign of James I. The first chair aroused much indignation among the people, who said that men were to do the work of beasts, but later on they became very fashionable.

The fashion of saying "God bless you!" after sneezing, originated with the ancicnts. These people believed that some danger attended sneezing, so they generallv made a short prayer, such as "Jupiter, help me!" It has been found to be the custom among savages to do the same, and the Jewish vabbis also make mention of the fact An old Roman writer says that the custom originated during a plague, when people who were seemingly in good health sneezed and fell down dead.

Bagpipes are generally ascribed to Scotland, where they have been in use for a long time, but it was an instrument upon which the ancient Greeks and Romans played. Nero is said to have performed upon it.and an old piece of Grecian sculpture repi'esents a player on the bagpipes dressed in the fashion that is known to-dav as the Highland costume.

GOOD ADVICE—Use HAI-E'S HONEY HOKHHOUSB AND TAU for cough or cold. I'lke'e Toothaclio Drops euro in one minute.

Can't Cook as Mother Did!i

"Come home mit me and have dinner." "I vas much obliged, put I has choost had some dinner, Moses." "Ish dot so?" "Ya, I has choost dined." "I don't believe dot. "I have choost dined, upon vord of honor." "Veil, den, come along and some more. Ven yoo has choost dined upon your vord of honor you must be hungry."—Texas Siftings.

How many a young wife's heart has been saddened

by hearing the above remark And yet how often the words are true especially when cake, pastry or biscuit are in question! The reason is plain, yet it is "like telling a

secret." Our mothers iised and are using Dr. Price's Cream-i

Baking Powder. They cannot be misled into using any of the ammonia or alum powders. No dyspepsia no sallow

complexions, when mother did the cooking. The first symptoms of ainimonia poisoning, says a New York paper, which appear among those who work ir» ammonia factories, is "a discoloration of thenose and fore*

head. This gradually extends over the face until the complexion has a stained, blotched and unsightly appearance

Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder is the only pure cream of tartar powder that contains the whites of eggs.

Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder is reported by all. authorities as free from Ammonia Alnm, or ao(y other adulterant In fact the ojmrity of

powder

wb

RRIIBerfi —760

Lafayette

my

eat

IMPORTANT.

Facts and Figures Should AlwaysBe Considered*

The Indiana Mutual Building and Loan Associations have loaned up to date the sum of $380,630.00, which is secured by real estate to the value of $835,200.00. This is more than any other Association has done in the State of Indiana. Its loans are strictly confined to this State. It is a mutual Association in every respect, loaning its money under more favorable terms than any other Association, and on a more conservative basis. Its admission fee is less than that of any other Association of like character, being fifty cents per share. A shareholder can absolutely withdraw at the expiration of five years, and receive the entire amount he has paid in with the full earnings thereon. It also issues certificates on which no admission fee is charged. The stock can be withdrawn at any time without any loss whatever, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, providing the money is left in for a term of twelve months or longer, and six per cent, if left in for six months or longer.

There were 25,190 shares in force January 1st, 1892. This Association has already transferred from the Expense Fund into the Loan Fund $8,000.00, which has been done by no other Association in this State. This benefits every shareholder, the borrower as well as the investor. This unprecedented record has been made in the short period of twenty months.

DIRECTORS.

W JI. E. NIBI-ACK, S E. G. CORNEMUS, CHARLES KAHLO, A. R. SHROYER, N. F. DALTON, CALEB S. DENNY, GEO. VV. POWELL, CHAS. MAYER, CHAS. E. KKEGELO, JOHN C. INGRAM,

P. H. FITZGERALD.

Full information given at the Home Office, Rooms 27, 29, and 31 Thorpe Block, Indianapolis, Ind.

CHARLES KAIILO, Sec'y.

Pledges that are reasonably suro of be in kept for a while at least are those intrust cd to the pawnbroker.

How's Tills?

We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. ,T. CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, O.

We the undersigned, have known 1\ .1 Cheney for the last IB years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm.

West & Truax Wholesale druggists,Toldc, O., Walding. Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale drusgists. Toledo, O.

Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,acting dir»(it,ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists.

Critics aro commencing to find fault with tho designs on the new halves and quarters. There's 110 necessity for any feeling in tho .matter it's very easy to chango them.

Beecham's Pills have been in popular use in Europe for fO years, and are a safe, sure and gentle remedy. 25 cents a box.

'A "War-Time Relic.

Harper's Weekly.

A relic of the war between the Strftes is now on the dry-dock, receiving such minor repairs and cleaning as may be necessary to commission her for harbor defence. This was the second Monitor ever built, and the record of her usefulness and her hard service may be seen in the shot dents of the turrets. These are painted in a color different to that of the surrounding iron, in order to emphasize their story and they serve as an object lesson to show that, after all, when compared with our days, how innocuous were the boasted shot and shell of the rebellion Of course it does not make much difference wheather a giant is killed by a toothpick or hoisted with a petard he is dead all the same, and worms will eat him but we were proud, and with good reason, of those big smoothbores and of their charges in those perilous days. Then the theory was that for every ten pounds of shot one pound of powder was needed, a 90pounder being fired with nine pounds of powder to-day we have for each pound of powder two pounds of shot, the 10-inch guns of the Miantonomoh, the Nantuckea's neighbor, using 250 pounds of powder to drive the 500 pound projectile. The Nantucket has also a sentimental interest fork when the great Ericsson la}' in state on her decks in the harbor of New York, she was the immediate representative of what his genius had1 evoked to save the country in a time of peril, for the original Monitor went down one dismal day off our treacherous coast, and left as the second product of her wonderful type the little

man

/""vpsjy*

if i,

s* 'ti

M&HY LIRE THESE

MEDIO Al j%I A

time no relief from other remedies. About 8 years ago I bought St. Jacobs Oil and made about 14 applications have been well and strong ever since. Have done all kinds of work gad can lift as much as ever. No return of pain in years. eturn ol pain in vear

DolPhin st- Ealto".

I

Mo., Aug. 4, 183S.

IKibUKAIa^MlAa ''Suffered for years witli neuralgia, but was finally cured by St. Jacobs Oil." T. E. SHERER.

Constantine, Mich., Feb. 3.0,1S87: "Was troubled 30 years with pains in the back from strain in bed for weeks at a

D. M. ILEARICK.

Md., Jan. 18, 1890: "I fell down

BRUISEoi the back stairs of my residence in the darkness, and was bruised badly in my hip and side Buffered severely. St. Jacobs Oil completely cured me." WM. C. HARDEN,

A Member of State Legislature.

stock farms.

Lafayette,ino.

Importers and breeders ot the great German Hanoveran Oldenburg Conch stallion, Royal Belgium. Clydesdale, English Shire, Norman, Trotting and Pacing bred StallionB of all the fashionable'breeds. Morgan Horses, Jacks.

Some trotting and pacing staUion* with low records. Our second importation in 1S91 just arrived in fine condition-. We are the only firm in United States that keeps all the above breed«on liand. Our German Coach horses are all registered in German and American' books, and government approved. Have now on hand 75 stallions ready for service. We will compete with any firm in the United States in Prices. Terms a'nd Quality. Write for catalogue for full particulars. Mention this pcupec. Farm adjoining the city. City s-tables 140 and 142 MaittSt. Address LA FAYETTE STOCK FAIIM, li» Fayette, Tippecanoe County Indiana.

BJgbt or M'roug,

Which will ye have? It does seem as if some folks prefer to have the last condition of the liver rather than the first. They perpetually dose themselves with purgatives totally •without virtue as alterative of liver trouble. Hostetters Stomach Bitters is the successful candidate for the people's choice, and yet. popular and well-known as It is. there are unfortunates who keep on trying the drastic remedies of former days. It is to the intelligent portion of the public that the well-known and long tried properties of the bitters appeal. Reason should be guided by experience in the matter of medication. '"The best guide to our feet is the lamp of experience," said a great patriot of the early revolutionary period, and the exclamation is pregnant with truth. For over a third of a century the Bitters daily has met with the endorsement of people suffering from liver complaint, malaria, constipation, rheumatism,debility and troubles accompanied by dyspepsia. Latterly it has declared itself and been thoroughly approved as a remedy for "la grippe." "I wouldn't mind my wife's having th last word," said Mr. Meekins, "il sq would only hurry up and come to it.''

Don't Give Up

and say there is no help

for Catarrh, Hay Fever and Cold in head since thousands testify that Ely's Cream Balm has entirely cured them.

I Have

been bothored witii Catarrh for

about twenty years I had lost sense of smell entirely, and I had almost lost my hearing. My eyes were getting so dim I had to get some one to thread my ntedle. Now I have my hearing as well as I ever had, and I can see to thread as fine a needle as ever I did, my sense of smell seems to be improving all the time. I think there is nothing like Ely's Cream Balm for catarrh.—Mrs. E. E. Grimes, Rendrill, Perry Co., O.

Apply Balm into each nostril. It is quickly absorbed. Gives relief at once. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail.

ELY BRO'S., 56 Warren St., New York.

An unpledged legislator may have "a head of his own," but other men are malvng desperate

0

Vorts to get his ear.

Coucrhs una Hoarseness.—x 11c irritation which induces coughing immediately relieved by the use of "Brown's Bronchial Troches." Sold only in boxes.

a

Sleeplessness Cnrcu.

I am glad to testify that I used Pastor Koe. nig's Nerve Tonic with the best success for sleeplessness, and believe that It is really a groat i'clief for suffering humanity.

E. FIIA.NK. Pastor.

8t. Soverin, Keylerton P. O., Pa.

LOGAN, Ohio, Oct. 18,183a

used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic in the case of a 13-year old boy for a case of St. Vitus Dance

ot

two years' standing. His condition

WAS most lamentable, as his limbs were con stantly in motion, and at table bis hands could not hold knife, fork or spoon. The effect of this medicine was at once noticeable to all, and the boy himself remarked, "I know it helps me," and before tho Becond bottle was used up, he insisted that there was no necessity of tak ing moro as ho was entirely cured

CARIi HELFENBERGEIt. Valuable Book en Kervoas

IJL Disease* sent tree to any address,

W W W

and poor paUents can also obtsib

llUiH this medicine free of choree. This remedy has been jprepared by the Beverenc PMtor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1878, an £B now prepared under his dlrecUon by the

KOENBC MED. CO., Chicago, III. Sold by Draggtsti eA

II

afflraiTTn

per BotUet OftffSft

tan* 81s*. *1.75. OBottlMlbr 99.

I

PLEASANT

piEf!

THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER My doctor says It acts gently on the gtomach, llrer and kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative. This drlnK is made from herbs, and Is prepared for use as easily os tca.' It Is called

LANE'S MEDICINE

AU druggists sell It at ttoc. and •1-0° P®J Buy one MMlay. Lane's Family Medici the bowels each day. I a order to be he

is necessary.

Common Soap

/Rots Clothes and ,Chaps Hands.

IVORY SOAP

OES NOT.

"German)

Boschee's German Syrup is mor? successful ia tlie treatment of Con-' sumption than any other remedy prescribed. It lias been tried under* every variety of climate. In th© bleak, bitter North, in damp Ne-w} England, in the fickle Middle States,j in the hot, moist South—every-' where. It has been in demand by^ every nationality. It has been em-* ployed in every stage of Consump-j tion. In brief it has been used! by millions and its the only true and reliable Consumption Remedy. Sf

It C11resOslds.Ceashs.Sere Throat, Cronj.Influen* M,Whooping Coush,Bronchitis»n4

«aip euro rarUonsnmptionina»t atafei, and a nre rclUr la advanced stsgss. u»«»t«ne». You will see th® excellent effeet after takiar the first doss. MS dnUn Qrv/vbore* ttffi boitlM, SO c«nt wa

"MOTHERS'

To Young Mothers

Hakes Child Birth Ea y.

Shortens Labor, Lessens Pain,

BORE

WELLS

th oar famone Wall

with oar famone wan Machinery. Th» only

perfect self-cleaning uia

Cat DROPPING tools IP

LOOMIS & NYMAN, '.MVrtv "HT«

package

..Ine movei healthy, this

I«11H

•4{INillW. 43*31., H.T..BW

„V

I

Asthma, cer-

i99

rRIEND'

fi"

Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. Booh to "Mother*"mailed FREE. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.

ATLANTA, OA.

SOLD BY ALL DRUQOI8T8. tmooo* —•••••••»•———eai,

GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187& iW. BAKER & CO.'S

Breakfast Cocoa

from which the excess of oil has been removed, Ia absolutely pure and it is eoluble.

No Chemicals

sre a»ed in Its preparation. It has more than thru timet the ftrengtX ti Cocoa mixed with 8tsrr.li, Ariewroot or Sugar, and is therefore far more economical, cottinj let* than one ant a cup. It is

delicious, nour­

ishing, strengthening, EASILY

DIGESTED, and admirably adapted for invalids as well as tor persons in health. gold br Grocers everywhere. w. IRAICEjR fir CO.. Dorchester. Ma**.

SUEVIMn

Overcornea results

afu'aii eaiingivares Siclc Headnuhe ^itorosComploxion cnrcaCopi»tlpation. fc-i a* oiui 11 niAii. mil uer* !r* KBEl scrlptlve circulars

ot

U0OST'8H1W and IfOODT'S UtfKOVBD TAILOR SYSTEMS OF DKEB8 OUXTXHO.

Revitcd to clat*.

These, only, are the

cenulno TAILO* SYSTEMS Invented and copyrighted by FBO*. D.W. MOODT. Bewaro el Imitations. Any lady of ordinary intelligence can easily and r-itak-ly learn to ant and make any garment, In any style, to any measure, tor ladies, men and children. Garments guaranteed to tit perfectly without trying on. ,« MOODY A CO. CINCINNATI.

mOHld' WELL DRILL

'atalosae

P1V PV"

TYTT' TT'C Kemedv Free, ltntent K«lief. I I I r.VFinal cure in 10 day*. Nerer returns •'-s-'-» -"•••"no purge: no salve: no suppository. A victim tried in rain every remedy, ha* illmvyrere'l ii simple cure, which he will mail free to hit follow »ui Iter era. Address J. H. ItKEVKS, 11 ox 3390,

Market valuo, fair assormsnt. guarantead. WrlioforWIeo list. S.F.Oi*l!oW»y.

South Psnn. St.,

Indianapolis. Ind. a a now thali-they, ever will again.-Largest 3

KANSAS FABMS:

crops ever raised. Buy farm. Descriptive lis.l free. CHAS. R. WOOLLKY. Osborne, Kaa

PATENTS! PENSIONS!*

FIT FOLKS

I

MH ill*t

Mnple. Oteghjlr,

"My w»lrM wa»

a reduction of 131

i*r

U*.U.VV.r.d:iV aUTw MaVloWe

will

VARICOCELE MB-*-,—.

to any one. I. S. J'"KANKL 1ST Mashall,

|Br[.-

PATENTS! PENSION ook

and advico free. Coll)

OPIUM

Hforpn SO tlMft DR.J.STK

'MM.irAfTltM.tl

I N il