Jasper County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 September 1898 — Page 3

s voulh If you are youngyou naturally appear so. If you are old, why appear so? Keep young inwardly; we will look after the out-, wardly. You need not worry longer about those little streaks of gray; advance agents of age. Ayers Hair vigor will surely restore color to gray hair: an<f it will also give your hair all the wealth and gloss of early life. Do not allow the falling of Ciur hair to threaten you ngerwith baldness. Do not be annoyed with dandruff. We will send you our book on the Hair and Scalp, free upon request. Wtote so f*u Doctor. It yon do not obtain all »ha baneSts you expected from the n«a of the Vigor, write the doctor about It. Probably there la some dUßaultr with your general ayatem which may be eaally remove. ▲ddreaa. DR. J. C. AYER. Lowell, Maae.

|| slntilaUnglheFoodandßegula-1 ting the Stomachs andßawris of Promote sDigestionnrer fulness and Rest. Con tains neither Opnnn.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Nakc otic. I A perfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms,Convulsions.Feverishness and Loss OF Sleep. EacSiinb Signature of NEW “YORK, EXACT COPY OF. WRAPPEB. j ■— —M

“Use the Means and Heaven Will Give You the Blessing.” Never Neglect A Useful Article Like SAPOLIO . Slashing at shadows 21V —those misguided women who won’t flOk use Pearline because “it must hurt II the clothes.” If Pearline hurt y either hands or clothes, don’t in V/ \jl \ y° u su PP° se th at the women O J who use it would be saying so? !h // >7 A The very ease of its washing i k . eeps T? n Y fro ji. i 'i ng p rr t ‘ *®nw '* ’ me. They ve been brought up ' to believe that easy washing is dangerous. So it is, often. That is a risk you run with new and untried things. But Pearline, the first and original washing-compound, is as well-known as soap, ahd kpown and proved to be equally harmless. Millions Pearline

Swallowed a Needle and Died.

A tailor accidentally swallowed a needle and died as a result of the inflammation, little things frequently have great power, as is seen in a few doses of the famous Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which, however, has an entirely different effect The Bitters make nervous, weak and sickly persons strong and well again.

Where Noah Kept His Bees.

Dr. James K. Hosmer, while recently visiting Boaton, had occasion to visit the new public library. As he -went up the steps he met Edward Everett. Hale, who asked the doctor’s errand. “To consult the • archives,” was the reply. "By the way, Hosmer,” said Dr. Hale, “do you know where Noah kept his bees?’ “No,” answered Hosmer. “In the ark hives,” said the venerable preacher, as he passed out of earshot.— Ladies’ Home Journal.

A B. & O. S. W. Promotion.

Cincinnati, Aug. 29, 1898.—C. C. Riley, at present superintendent of car service of the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railway, with headquarters at Cincinnati, will be promoted to the newly created position of superintendent of transportation on Aug. 29, and the position he formerly held will be abolished. Mr. Riley came to the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railway from the C., C., C. & St. L. Railway about a year ago and has earned his promotion by meritorious services.

Not His Own Self.

“Is your husband very much Interested In the war?” inquired the neighbor. “Interested!” echoed young Mrs. Torkins. “I never saw his mind so occupied with anything. Sometimes he has to think twice before he can tell whether the Bostons or the Cincinnatis are ahead.—Washington Star.

Coughing Leads to Consumption.

- Kemp’s Balsam. will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent sottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous. It*ls a kind of good deed to say well; and yet words are no deeds. —Sbakspeare. My doctor said I would die, but Piso’s Cure for Consumption cured me.—Amos Kelner, Cherry Valley, Ilk, Nov. 23, ’95. A man’s wisdom is his best friend; folly bis worst enemy.—Sir W. Temple.

CfiSTORIfI For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the z. t Signature /%$' of TftXjj IJr ln HJr ® se |lr For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THZ OCHT*UR eoMPAHT,.NKW VSWR CffV.

AMERICAN GAME PICTURES.

• For Decoration of Homes. Probably at no time in the world’s history has as much attention been paid to the interior decoration of homes as at present. No home, no matter how humble, is without its handiwork that helps to beautify the apartments and make the surroundings more cheerful. The taste off (he American people has kept pace with the age, and almost every day brings forth something new in the way of a picture, a draping, a piece of furniture or other form of mural decoration. One of the latest of these has been given to the world by the celebrated artist, Muville, in a series of four handsome porcelain game plaques. Not for years has anything as handsome in this line been seen. The subjects represented by these plaques are American wild ducks, American pheasants, American quail and English snipe. They are handsome paintings and are especially designed for hanging on dining room walls, though their richness Jmd beauty entitles them to a place in the parlor of any home. These original plaques have been purchased at a cost of $50,000 by J. C. Hubinger Bros. Co., manufacturers of the celebrated Elastic Starch, and in order to enable their numerous customers to become possessors of these handsome works of art they have had them reproduced by a special process, in all the rich colors and beauty of the original. They are finished on heavy cardboard, pressed and embossed in the shape-of a plaque and trimmed with a heavy band of gold. They measure forty inches in circumference and contain no reading matter or advertisement whatever. Until Oct. 1 Messrs. J. C. Hubinger Bros. Co. propose to distribute these plaques free to their customers. Every purchaser of three ten-cent packages of Elastic Starch, flatiron brand, manufactured by J. C. Hubinger Bros. Co., is entitled to receive one of these handsome plaques free from their grocer. Old and new customers alike are entitled to the benefits of this offer. These plaques will not be sent through the mail, the only way to obtain them being from your grocer. Every grocery store in the country has Elastic Starch for sale. It is the oldest and best laundry starch on the market and is the most perfect cold process starch ever invented. It is the only starch made by men who thoroughly understand the laundry business, and the only starch that will not injure the finest fabric. It has been the standard for a quarter of a century and as an evidence of how good it is twenty-two million packages were sold last year. Ask your dealer to show you the plaques and tell you about Elastic Starch. Accept no substitute. Bear in mind that this offer holds good a short time only and should be taken advantage of without delay.

Cooks Who Earn $10,000 a Year.

There is a celebrated cook in London about whom it is said that he makes an income of over SIO,OOO a year. He is attached to no house, but in his own brougham sets out toward evening for the house of some rich man who is going to give a dinner at which every dish must be above criticism. Here he alights, and, making for the kitchen, goes through the process of tasting all the soups, sauces and made dishes—advising when his palate suggests a little more salt here, a pineh of herbs there, a dash of sugar in this entree, a suspicion of onion in that salmis, etc. This does, he pockets his fee of $25 and drives on to the next dinner-giving patron who has biden him to his feast in this strange fashion. His nightly list comprises many houses all through the London season.

Diplomacy.

“Could you Indorse this note for me?” inquired young Mr. Happigo. “I'm sorry,” answered the diplomatic friend. “I wish you had asked me to do It before I went in for literature.” “I /ail to see how that affects the situation.” “The first thing the editor cautioned me against was turning a piece of paper over and writing on the back of it.” —Washington Star. *

“A Home in Texas.”

No part of the United States offers advantages that nre to be found in the gulf coast country of Texas. Everything grows, lots of It. the year around. For stock raising you cannot find Its equal under the sun. Write to Southern Texas Colonization Company, John Llnderholm, Mgr., No. 110 Rialto building. Chicago, 111., for lew Illustrated pamphlet, “A Home In Texas.” Cheap excursion rates twice a month.

Production of Pins.

The largest pin factory in the world Is at Birmingham, where 37,000,000 pins are manufactured every working day. All the other pin factories together turn out about 19,000,000 pins every day. Taking the population of Europe at 250,000,000, every fourth person must*lose a pin every day to use up the production of pins per day.

Lane’s Family Medicine

Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c.

A way Off.

“One needs a spyglass to see the point of one of those imported jokes.” “Yes; that’s because they’re ao farfetched.”—Philadelphia Bulletin.

Hull’s Catarrh Curst Is taken Internally. Price 75 cents. >. An eminent Italian doctor has been experimenting with the Inhalation of petroleum fumes in cases of whooping cough, and has obtained good results.

Pimples Are the danger signals of impure blood. They show that the vital fluid is in bad condition, that health is in danger of wreck. Clear the track by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla and the blood will be made pure, complexion fair and healthy, and life’s journey pleasant and successful. Hood’s “JSi. is America's Greatest Medicine. M; six for <& Hood’s Pills cun indigestion, biliousMsa

SHE POSSESSES TWO MINDS.

Their Coexistence in • Girl Shown by a Physician's Experiment*. Among the patients of the Binghamton state hospital is a pretty girl, 13 years old, who, when brought there several months ago, was suffering from acute hysteria. Dr. William A. White, of the hospital staff, has been performing some reiparkable experiments with the girl, demonstrating the dual condition of her mind and the existence of a sub-conscious mental state. When the girl first arrived at the hospital she could not see out of the left eye. Dr. White has proved that this eye does not. see, although the girl is unconscious of the fact. The patient while in one mental state knows nothing of what happens while in the other. The doctor experimented with her before a meeting of the Broome County Medical society. The first experiment was to prove that the conscious mental state acts upon the sub-conscious state. A second experiment proved the reverse. A third showed the two divisions of the brain acting simultaneously yet independently of each other. Dr. White had the girl close her right eye. He held two fingers at an angle from her left eye. “Do you see my hand?” he asked. “No,” was the reply. “How many fingers am I holding up?” “Two, but I can’t see them,” was the correct answer. Under the doctor’s treatment the left retina, which has heen closed, is rapidly enlarging, and the child will soon be able to use the defective eye fully. Next the patient was blindfolded and asked to think intently on some names. Dr. White slipped a pencil and paper into her hand, which was resting on the table. After a moment the pencil began to write. The pencil and paper were removed and the bandages were taken from the girl’s eyes. She was asked what she had written, but said she had written nothing. She did not know that a pencil had been In her hand nor that her hand was moved. She admitted that the name on the paper was the one she had been thinking of. No hypnotism was used in the experiment. The other physicians engaged the girl in conversation, and she readily answered their questions. While she was thus talking with the others Dr. White, questioning the sub-conscious side, asked her to write something, and instantly a sentence learned a few minutes before was written with the senseless hand, but all the while she was talking with the others. She was questioned, but had no knowledge of what she had written. Dr. White says the girl is rapidly improving from her mental disorder for which she is confined in the hospital.— Baltimore Sun.

TO MRS. PINKHAM

From Mrs, Walter E. Budd, of Patchogue, New York. Mrs. Budd, in the following letter, tells a familiar story of weakness and suffering, and thanks Mrs. Pinkham for complete relief: “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— l think it is

ed me terribly. I could not sleep for the pain. Plasters would help for a while, but as soon as taken off, the pain would be just as bad as ever. Doctors prescribed medicine, but it gave me no relief. “ Now I feel so well «and strong, have no more headaches, and no pain in side, and it is all owing to your Compound. I cannot praise it enough. It is a wonderful medicine. I recommend it to every woman I know.”

Sweet Lavender.

The days of our great-grandmothers are coming back to us, and the dainty housekeeper Is not satisfied unless her linen closet Is redolent with the sweet, fresh fragrance of lavender, says a Washington paper. Scented beds are a great fad in England, also. While sachets of lavender laid in press and bureau drawers, In oaken chest and linen closet, are the usual means of imparting this fragrance, the solidified perfume made up in the form of “sweet balls’’ (grandmother’s fashion redivivus) will be found more satisfactory and lasting. The rule for this, as given by an expert in the art, is to mix a quarter of a pound of crushed lavender flowers with ten drops of oil of lavender and make it into a dough'with a little gum tragacanth. Knead this into balls about the size of a marble, roll in powdered orris root, and put in a tight tin box to dry. A supply of these may be made and be kept on hand in a closely-corked bottle, to replace the bld ones when their pungency has vanished.

Anxious.

“Xes, sir; the sooner the war is ended, the sooner we can get back tn work. "May I ask your business?’* “I am a pension attorney, air.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer.

my duty to write , to you and tell you what Lydia - | E. Pinkham’s it* i Vegetable Compound has done for me. I feel like . another woman. » 1 had such dread. A ful headaches \ through my i \ temples and I \ on top of my I head, that I 1 V nearly went ■ I crazy;wasalso 9 I troubled with ■ 1 chills,wasvery I" 1 weak; my left side from my shoulders to my waist pain-

HEROES OF WAR.

Avm the CHoos* Tlmm-HaroM. The feeling of adsrirattan far heroes of war seems to be innate Is the besnnn heart, and is brought to the aorftece aa the opportunity ana object, fl* such hero worship presents itself. Among those who proved their hrrrisw during our Civil War was A. Schiffeneder,

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of 161 Sedgwick Street, Chicago. He is an Austrian by birth, came to America at the age of twenty, and soon became an American citisen. He was living at Milwaukee when the x call for volunteers came, early in 1862, and

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he promptly enlisted in Company A, of the Twenty-sixth Wisconsin Voluateers. In the Army of the Potomac our hero saw much fighting, campaigning in the Shenandoah Valley. In the first day’s fighting nt the battle of Gettysburg, Schiffeneder received n wound in the right aide, which afterward caused him much trouble. With a portion of his regiment he was captured and imprisoned at Bell Island and Anderson ville, and afterward exchanged. He returned to his regiment, which was transferred to the army of General Sherman, and marched with him through Georgia to the sea. In this campaign Mr. Schiffender’u old wound began to trouble hiss and he was sent to the hospital and then burnt. He had also contracted catarrh of the stomach and found no relief for years. "I happened to read an account of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People about a year ago,” he said, “and thought that they might be good for my trouble. I concluded to try them. I bought one box and began to take them according to directions. They gave me great relief. After finishing that box I bought another, and when I had taken the pills I felt that I was cured.” Poverty is not dishonorable In itself, but only when It is the effect of idleness, Intemperance, prodigality and folly.—Plutarch. Shake Into Your Shoes Alien’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen. smarting feet and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Al ten’s Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It Is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, nervous, aching feet. Try it today. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y. Mississippi has only L3S per cent, of the railroad mileage in the country. There ts » means nf eradlrallße telShMms* ths ■kin that can be relied on. ela. Ohan* SNsßar Saa*. HUI’S Hair and Whisker Dye, Mack or keoa*. UKDare to do your duty always; this is the height of true valor.—Simmons. WANTED.-Case ot bad health that rm riwfll not benefit. Send 5 cents to Rimas Onntatf New York, for 10 samples and

M Satisfies U that dry taste W ■ in the mouth. ■ I I I PLUG I Remember die name rv whe you buy again, ■ ■ ' - ' 1 • ■- ‘ ' ■ a

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m EuaußKE w smr w m is due not only to the originality sad simplicity of the combination, but alas to the care and skill with which tt Is manufactured by scientific processus known to the California Fie Sybup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing ths true and original remedy. Aa ths genuine Syrup of Figs is min*ifkr*nrss by the California Fie Srnur On. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other parties. The high standing of the California Fie Syrup Co. with the medical profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, mains the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It Is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, Ever and bowels without irritating or weakening them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company— CALIFORNIA HG SYRUP CO. SAIT <ML —emrvii i■, k». wxw vujk, el x 152 * rage Illustrated Catalogue, descrlb- « J Ing all of the famous S ! WINCHESTER GUNS * AND S S WINCHESTER AMMUNITION I * sent free to any address. Send your 5 * name on a postal card to t* ? WUCBESTER REPEATING ARMS CO., | S ISO Winchester Ave.. New Haven, Ct. 8 BEST SCALE. LEAST MONEY. JONES OF BINQHAMTQN. N- V, PENSIONS Wttta hat. OTAtnU. ftMtaAguMruNagten kA

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