Hope Republican, Volume 2, Number 48, Hope, Bartholomew County, 22 March 1894 — Page 7
“How Well You Look" Friends Surprised at the Wonderful improvement, “O. L Hood & Co., Howell, Muss. : “Deur Sirs:~I take pleasure la writing the good I have received from taking Hood s Sarsaparilla. Every spring and summer for six years or more, my health has been so poor from heart trouble and general debility that at times life was a burden. I would become so Emaciated and Weak and Pale that my friends thought I would not live long. I could do scarcely any work at all and had to lie down every fow minutes. I began getting worse in January, losing my flesh and feeling so tired. I thought I would try Hood’s Sarsaparilla and I am happy to say I am in better Hood’s’P* Cures health than 1 have been for a number of years. My friends remark to mo: “Why how well you look.” I tell them it is Hood’s Sarsaparilla that has done the work. I would have all suffering humanity give this medicine a trial and be convinced. This statement is True to the letter.” Mbs. Jknnik Decker, Watsoka, 111. Hood's cure liver ills, constipation, biliousness, jaundice,sick headache,Indigestion. Ely’s eras Baim V1UOVBE CATARRH | I^cot'ocS'j .Apply Balm into each nostril. EILYBHOS.. SG Warren BUN.Y.
and Typewriting SohooJ, Indianapolis Bust noun University. When Block. Elevator. Oldest, largest and best equipped. Individual instruction by expert reporters. Book-keeping,Penmanship,English,Office Training, etc.,'free, ('heap Itoarding, tuition, easy payments. Positions secured by our graduates. Beautiful Illustrated Catalogue and Paper tree. 11EKB <& OSBORN, Indianapolis, lud.
Best or All To cleanse the system in a gentle and truly beneficial manner, when the springtime comes, use the true and perfect remedy, Syrup of Pigs. One bottle will answer for all the family and costs only fifty cents; the large size $1.00. Try it and be pfbasod. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only. The student Is at a loss to know how to begin after his commencement Is over. TarUrunil Taxation, Tariff duties and internal revenue taxation on incomes and corporations are exciting public interest, but of .quite as much interest are those tilings which tax the system and require at once an external remedy. On this subject, with special recommendation, Mr. Pierce D. Brown, Bridgewater, Mass., says: “In accidents from all kinds of athletic sport.sj to reduce sprains and bruises, I have used St. Jacobs Oil and always found it most reliable.” Also, Mr. C. R. Sands, Maugum, Okla., writes: “I have used St. Jacobs Oil for sprains and rheumatism and would not be without it for anything." Mr. R. Ledbetter, Denton. Texas, says: “I have used St. Jacobs Oil and it is the only thing I ever saw that would cure toothache in ten minutes’ time,” and it is usually prompt and sure for frost-bites. All of these communications are of recent date, showing unabated interest. Song of the sport’s overcoat: “I’ve been redeemed.” Medical writers claim that the successful remedy for uasai catarrh must be non-irrila-tlnk' easy of application, and one that will reach the remote sores and ulcerated surfaces. The history of the efforts to treat catarrh is proof positive that vualy one remedy has completely met those conditions, and that is Ely s Cream Balm. This safe and pleasant remedy has mastered catarrh as nothing else has ever done, and both physicians and patients freely concede this fact. A grievance mo a man Is what a soru heel is to a boy. ItEECiLAu's I’u-Jus will cure wind and pain in the stomach, giddiness, fullness, dizziness, drowsiness, chills and loss of appetite. An intoxicated man in Meridian, La., didn’t think he was full enough, so he secured a few more drinks from an accommodating saloon-keeper. Mrs. Mary A. Curtis, his wife, brought suit against the salooni keeper, and secured $2,OUO damages.
Many times -women call on their family giysicians, suffering, ris they imagine, one om dyspepsia, another from heart disease, .another from liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion, or prostration, another with pain here and there, and in thi-i way they all present; alike to themselves «md their easy-going and indifferent, or overbusy doc-tor, separate and distinct diseases, for which ho prescribes his pills and potions, assuming them to be such, when, in reality, then are all only symptoms caused by some •womb disorder. The physician, ignorant of the causa of suffering, encourages his practice until large bills are made. The suffering patient gets no bettor, but probably worse by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper medicine, Uko Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all thoso distressing symptoms and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery. The lady whose portrait heads this article is Mrs. Ida Coventry, of Huntsville, Logan County, Ohio. She had an experience which we will permit her to relate in her own fcmruago. It illustrates the foregoing. She writes: “I had ‘female weakness’ very bad—in bed most of the time, dragging down pains through my back and hips; no appetite; no energy. The family physician was treating me for ‘liver complaint . I did not get any better under that treatment so I thought I would try Dr Pierce’s Faronto Prescription and his 4 Golden Medical Discovery. I felt better before I used one bottle of each. I continued their use until I took six bottles of each. In three months time I felt so weU I did not think it necessary to take any more. In childbirth it does what Dr. Pierce recommends it to do—lessens the pain and perils to both mother and child and shortens 4 labor . I would like to recommend Dr. Pierce’s Extract of SmartWeed to those who have never tried it; it surely is the best thing for cholera morbus, or pain in the stomach I ever used ; it works like a charm. I try never to be without it. I The following is from Mrs. Harriet Hards, of Montpelier, Idaho : “ I have enjoyed bei--tar health since 1 began treatment with Dr,
Fierce’s Favorite Prescription, for fencerrhea and uterine debility than I have for sixteen years. I am cured of my trouble, and now weigh one hundred and sixty-six pounds, whereas my weight ror many years stood at one hundred and twanty-flva pounds. With pleasure, I remain," , Yours truly. The following is from Mrs. M. A. McAllister, of Lim Rock, Jackson Co., Ala.; “X was in bad health : age was working upon mo, and I had ulceration of the womb ; could not get about. I took Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and it cured me; I felt ten years younger. I have not had any return of my trouble, I am the mother of thirteen children and I am fifty-three years old, have never seen a better woman’s friend than your medicine. I have recommended it to my friends hero, and it has never failed in any case, so let mo thank you for the good it did mo.” Yours truly, For “worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated school teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, general housekeepers, and overworked and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best of all restorative tonics. It is not a “ cure-all,’’ but admirably fulfills a singleness of purpose, being a most potent specific for all thoso chronic weaknesses and diseases peculiar to women. It is a powerful, general as well as uterine, tonic and nervine, and imparts vigor and strength to the whole system. It cures weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, nervous prostration, hysteria, debility and sleeplessness. A Treatise (10S pages, Illustrated), on “Woman and Her Diseases," sent scaled in plain envelope, on receipt of ten cents to pay postage. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Invalids’ Ho’.. and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. It contains a vast number oi testimonials with half tone, or phototype portraits of their authors and gives the full address of each.
THE HOUSE OF LORDS. Sow the Extinction of That Body Might bo Brought About. ■few York Sua. Let us consider in detail the ncthod by which the extinction of ;he Lords could be easily and quicky compassed. We will assume, is a condition precedent, that the proposal to abolish the hereditary egislature has been submitted to khe people, and has been sanctioned sy an immense majority. We have 10 doubt as to the result of such an ippcal, from which such prudent men as the Duke of Devonshire naturally shrink, foreseeing that the test would reveal the appalling weakness of their order. The House of Commons, which should be the outcome of such a test, would simply need to pass a resolution refusing to send up thereafter any bills to the Lords, and ordering the Speaker to submit all measures passed by the people’s representatives directly to the crown. Such a refusal to recognize the Lords could, of coarse, be described as unconstitutional and revolutionary, but we repeat that the revolution would be a peaceful one, for, sooner or later, the crown would acquiesce in the position taken by the Commons. It could do no otherwise, for the Commons, possessing the power over the purse, have the crown at their mercy. They can withhold the civil list, and they can withhold the appropriation for the maintenance of the standing army provided in the annual mutiny bill, which must emanate from the lower branch of the Legislature. But the crown would never provoke the Commons to such extremities. Its advisers would instantly point out that the principle of monarchy has survived the principle of hereditary legislatures all over the continent of Europe: that it would be an act of madness for the throne to imperil its own existence by supporting a moribund and anarchrouistic institution against the determined purpose of the nation. Nor is there a particle of doubt that if the crown were foolish enough to defend the Lords it would inevitably share their fate, whereas, if it sided with the Commons, it would acquire an immense accession of popularity and Influence. It is, in fine, at the ballot box that the British constitution may be nmended, and there is no power in the country that can set aside the nation’s verdict. Let the electors once return a House of Commons pledged to abolish hereditary legislators and the House of Lords will be ended in spite of legal principle ind precedents and in defiance of constitutional traditions.
Road l.uilding in Maryland. Juoen Anno Marylander. Kent county last year used nearly 100,000 bushels of oyster shells on its roads in the way of repairs and Improvements. Kent buys her shells by the barge load of 8,000 to 10,000 bushels in Baltimore. Somerset eould supply herself even more cheaply than Kent. The time of the year la now approaching when the roads should be worked if there is to be any lasting improvement to result from the work done on them. If the farmer supervisor waits until he has planted, cultivated and laid by his crop before he works the roads, he might just as well not work them at all, for he will only make them worse for next winter. It is impossible in this flat country to have good roads except they are first drained, secondly graded so as to shed the water and thirdly graded and drained in the early spring. If this is done, then they will get so packed by the use of them through the spring, summer and autumn that they will not cut up so soon and badly in the winter. Packing is what makes a lasting road. If a roller, weighing five tons, could be run over the roads as soon as they are shaped up in the spring, a wagon with two tons on it, would make no impression on its surface in passing over it after that until the road was loosened again by the frost next winter. Plain Talk to His Pord-hlp, St. liouis Republic. A venerable and pompous English Bishop was having his portrait painted by an eminent artist. After sitting steady for an hour in silence, the churchman thought he would break the monotony with a remark: “How are you getting along?" he inquired. To the astonishment of the Bishop the knight of the palette absorbed in his work, replied: “Move your head a little to the right and shut your mouth.” Not being accustomed to such a form of address, his lordship said: “May I ask why you address me in this manner?” The artist, still absorbed in his work, said: “I want to take off a little of your cheek.” The Bishop collapsed.
DURING hard times consumers cannot afford to experiment with Inferior brands of baking powder. It is NOW that the great strength and purity of the ROYAL make it indispensable to those who desire to practise economy in the kitchen. Each spoonful does its perfect work. Its increasing sale bears witness that it is a necessity to the prudent—it goes further. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 10« WALL ST., NEW YORK.
A Pleasing Moment. Harper's Magazine. Squire B is the “first citi-. zen” of the New England town in which he lives, and is respected by I all classes for his sterling qualities and abstemious habits: He has much of the courtliness of the old school, coupled with great persfonal dignity, yet tempered with so keen a sense of humor that he can | appreciate a joke, even though it be j at his own expense. Ho relates the ] following episode with relish: Not long since his business called him to New York, which is as much his home as is his native place. He hailed a Fifth avenue stage, and entering it, found it nearly filled. Sprawling across the aisle sat a man in that stage of intoxication which renders one careless of appearances. Squire B attempted to step over his legs, but just then the stage gave a lurch, and he stumbled over them. To the great amusement of every one in the stage, the man sat erect, and with maudlin severity said, “Man ’n vour c’ndish'n oughter take er cab.”
A Slight Cold, if neglected, often attacks the lungs. Brown's Bronchial. Troches give sure and immediate relief. Sold only in boxes. Price 25 cta.| Coal has gone up again, but wait till It striker the chute. Then it will have to go down again. No mor« potent charm can be found at Beauty’s Shrine than an exquisitely lovely complexion such as universally follows the use of Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hardly anybody would like to change place* with the turtle, yet think of tho snap ho has. Fres to Invalid Ladies. A lady who Biiffored for years with uterine troubles, displacementb, leucorrhoea anti other JuritifB, found a tafe un.l simple home treatment that completely cured her without the aid of phyaiciaria. She will wend it free with full instruction* how to use it to any Buffering woman who will send her name and address to Urs, Rev. A. M. Turner. South Hand, Ind.
Th j Laud of Premia® rg the mighty West, the land that “tickled with a hoo laughs a harvest:” the El Dorado of the miner; the goal of the agricultural emigrant. While It teems with all the elements of wealth and prosperity, some of the fairest and most fruitful portions of It bear a harvest of malaria reaped in its fullness by those unprotected by a medicinal safeguard. No one seeking or dwelling In a malarial locality is safe from the scourge without Hostettcr'a Stomach Bitters. Emigrants, bear this in mind. Commercial travelers sojourning in malarious regions should carry a bottle of the Bitters in the traditional gripsack. Against the effects of exposure. mental or bodily overwork, damp and unwholesome food or water, it is an infallible defense. Constipation, rheumatism, biliousi ness, dyspepsia, nervousness and loss of I strength are all remedied by this genial restorative. “Do not recall those painful days/’ is what the young man remarked when the dentist presented his bilk
»10«. Keward, W100The readers of the this paper will bo pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science bus been able to cure in all its stages, and that Is Catarrh- Hall’s Catarrh Cure ia the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternltv. Catarrh being a const! tutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the pat ©nt strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing it* work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials- Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo O £iT"Sold by all druggists, 75o, “Bankstee is not well educated, but he has horse sense enough for a team.” “1 suppose that explains his strong pull.” See -‘Colchester” Spading Boot ad. in an other column. No one can know the value of a little scratch on a red wagon until ho offers it for sale. Uf JCP CANNOT SEE HOW YOU DO Wirt |T AND PAY FREIGHT. CIA Bays enr 9 drawer walnut or «ak bv VI • proved ILJgk Arm Slageraewlngmachb. finely finished, nickel plated, adapted t. light and heavy work; guaranteed for 10 Years; wkh latematle Bobbin Winder, Self-Threading Cylinder Shuttle, BoIf.Sotling Needle and a complete ;»et of Steel Attachments; shipped any whereon 00 Day's Trial. No money required in advance. 75,000now (n use. World's Fs lr Medal awarded machine and attachments. Bny from factory and aave dealer's and agent’s prefits, r-nrp Cut This Out and send to-day for machine or lar<re free r KlCC catalogue, testimonial* and Glimpses of the World's Fair. 0XF0BDMFG. CO. S«W»b«h Art. CHICAGO, ILL.
TR 7 We Offer You a Remedy Cl MM VL PTn " Which Insures Safety to Life of Mother and Child. Mothersxr~“Mothers’ Friend” Robs Confinement of Its Pain, Horror and Risk. “ After using one bottle of ‘ Mothers’ Friend,’ I suffered but little pain, and did not experience that weakness afterward usual in such cases.— Mrs. Annie Gage, Baxter Springs, Kas. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price. SI .50 per bottle. Sold by all Druggist* Book to Mothers mailed free. BHADFIELO REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, 6a.
'COLCHESTER” SPADING BOOT. BEST IN MARKET BEST IN FIT, BEST IN WEARING QUALITY. The outer or tap solo extends the whole length down to the heel, rrotectln* the boot In digging and in other hard work, ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM, and do n’t be put off wlih Inferior goods. COLCHESTER RUBBER CO;
t W. L. DOUGLAS *3 8UOK 1 equals custom work, costing from $4 to $6, best value for the moneyin the world. Name and price stamped on the bottom. Ever* pair warranted. Take no subf ti tutc. See local papers for full description of our complete \ lines for ladies and gentlemcn or send for H/u st ro ted Calalogu t giving instructions how to orderbjr mail. Posta-e free, V-i r-a the best bargains of dealers who push our shoes. i non non , acres of land l.UuU.UUv for sale by the Saint Paul 1 1 & Duluth Railroad Com pahv in Minnesota, Send for Maps and Clrculai*s. They will be sent to you FRBK. Address, HOPEWELL CLARKE. Land Commissioner, St. Paul. Minn. i-N.U 12—04 INDPL.S
