Jasper County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 October 1898 — Page 7

j II HWHUo '*. tolto If it vn only health, wi ■rigkt let it cling. &t it is u cough. Ono cold ■* sooner passes off before Minlhnr comes. Bat Ira tbs same oH cough all the time. And it’s tim same) eld story, too. There is first the cold, titen the cough, then pneumonia er consumption with the long sickness, and life trembKag tn the balance.

Mer’s Cherry pectoral

Ibmms the grasp of your cough. The wfon of the throat A ami lungs is removed; all inftannnanoa is subdued; the Wf parts we put perfectly at rest V and the cough drops away. It ■ has no diseased tissues on B which tn hang. ■ Dr. Ayer’s I Cherry Pectoral Plaster ® draws out inflammation or tne ■■ MstaFyas. Ji ~ * TWf-r* ■ nwnt. toyuu. hav. any complaint whU ■veranit desire the beet medical advice ■ was <an notably obtain, writ* the j| ductor toiy »<”» will receive a ■ gtnmgcreplv. without coat. hddreae. DEL J. O. AYER, ■ Lowell, Meea. A Matanl Black is Produced by tatariiaffl’sDye— SQ rerfdrugfeitMr R. F. Hril A Co-.Nashua.N.H.

m eksibke v swr of ms is Aar not only to the originality and mng&rity <rf the combination, but also ••the oee and skill with which it is maanfiaetnred by scientific procr—a known ta» the €au»obxia Fro SntVP <to mty,ariwe wish to impress upon g* the anportance of purchasing the teue and anginal remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the Cauvoksxa Fig Sybup Co. o£y, a knowledge of that fact Will ewTHt one to avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other park ties, The high, standing of the Cali89831 A Fro Syrxtp Co. with the medial profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has gpama to millions of families, makes the oatne of the Company a guaranty off excellence of its remedy. It u fie-us arfranre of all other laxatives, as- it sets on the kidneys, liver and towels without irritating or weakenfag them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. to order to get its beneficial effects, pEease remember the name of CALIFORNIA HG SYRUP CO. ■as mtaxmacw eu. — n—■■, aj inrYM&K.I. ft I POMMEL I Igg. SLICKER I JtoLJl&ep* boih rider and siddle Ilfesif ,r v in it* hardest storms. •■MSubst.tfite* will lisupp, mt. Ask for ■toEfr' l WrflvrFish Brand Pommel Slicker—■ SWT* it Is entirelynew. If not for si la »* <! kl y ' , . ur . tn Z?<^', r^ fnr ca ‘^<-v u « “J Boston. Maas. to to <* to «. wto W- to?toto to®to to toK «Tto tow * Semi your address on a postal and S wewilt send you our 158 page ill us- ** J ma&sf catalogue free. t MliriFW ITOTBW MRS CO., $ *** TMr rhWimntv quicki

BIG PEACE JUBILEE.

CLOSE OF THE WAR CELEBRAT* ED BY CHICAGO. /■ ; f resident McKinley and the Nation’s Dignitaries Participate in the Great Festival-City la Filled with an Immense Throng of People. Chicago special; Not since the World’s Fair has Chicago witnessed such stir and enthusiasm, such decorations and marchings and festivities; it such massed and cheering crowds as during the peace jubilee week. In some respects the peace jubilee has discounted any of the World’s Fair festivities. The President and a large part of his cabinet took part in the exercises, with numerous Congressmen, statesmen and diplomats, and all the leading war heroes except those in the far-off Philippines. In its military features the jubilee has surpassed anything Chicagoans have seen since the days of the civil war. The city donned holiday attire such as it has never worn before, the display of electric lights alone breaking the world’s record on that score. President McKinley and most of the other high officials, soldiers and civilians who were to take a leading part in the week’s exercises arrived in the city Saturday afternoon, coming direct from a tour of the middle West, which they found brimming over with patriotism. They found in Chicago the same sentiments which animated the people all the way from Washington to Omaha, but reflected on a larger scale. If the West taught the visitors that all other sentiments are merged in the one feeling of patriotic pride Chicago emphasized the lesson. Streams of visitors from all over the country poured into Chicago. Hundreds of thousands Of men and women all over the West turned their faces toward the great commercial capital, and everybody who came has been fortunate. It was worth coming a long way merely to see the miles of bunting, the million flags, the decorated arches, and the myriad electric lights that spanned the line of march for the great civic and military parade. Perhaps never again will there be an equal opportunity to see so many high dignitaries of the nation at once, and so many of the generals and. other officers whose names have become famous in battles on Cuban and Porto Rican soil. It is not likely that the present generation will see the celebration of the close of another foreign war or any other kind of war. Those who witnessed or participated in the Chicago jubilee took part in a unique historic function. Years afterward they can tell a younger generation of the dramatic scenes and events witnessed in Chicago at the great peace jubilee at the close of the Spanish war. Its memories will be worth cherishing, for it has been an organic part Of a great chapter in American history. Chicago’s' peace jubilee, which began with the thanksgiving services at the Auditorium Sunday night, was a fitting commemoration of the deeds of valor that swept the Spanish flag from the western hemisphere. Amid the cheers of six thousand people President McKinley entered the Auditorium and quietly took a seat in a box. The peace jubilee was formally begun. The enthusiasm and interest displayed at the thanksgiving services which constituted the first event of the great ceiebrationof the return of peace wereauspicious auguries of a memorable week. The atmosphere was electric with responsive enthusiasm, and notwithstanding the religious nature of the gathering at the Auditorium, every speaker was roundly cheered whenever the results of the war or any of its heroes were mentioned. But this enthusiasm, which seemed warm enough at all times, grew to a white heat whenever the President was referred to. Several times the President was moved by the spouianeity and warmth of the greetings to rise and bow. Then the delight of the crowd burst all bounds, and. the cheers would last for five minutes at a time. Jews and gentiles, Catholics and Protestants, united their voices in a mighty Te Deum in gratitude for peace. The praises of the Lord were sung that the sword waa sheathed. Glory to God in the highest was sounded that the red stream of strife was stopped in its flow and war was at an end. All the churches of Chicago were represented in the assemblage that filled the vast auditorium from the recesses of the great stage to the highest perched seat in the topmost gallery, and they were represented, too, in the speakers and the singers who gave voice to the services in honor of peace between the United States and Spain. The President of the United States waa there listening to Jewish rabbi, jgatholic priest and Protestant when others stood and ers sang. The Chinese plenipotentiary occupied another box and rose and sat as others did, making himself one of the celebrants of peace. In another place was the representative of the distant and isolated king of Corea, looking with amazement at a gigantic and brilliant gathering that rose upward from the proscenium line like sweeping hillsides that are rich with the crimson and gold of autumn. And above these were the galleries rising higher and higher and painted with the Batterings of ribbons and feathers and flounces like the harvest colors on the hilltops. All the scene was as if it had been arranged to its very details by some great artist who would fix for the eye a living picture that brought to mind the time of gathering the fruit and gram, for that is a time of peace. How many other thousands would have lent their ribbons and feathers find flounces and the lights of their faces to make the picture greater can only be vaguely estimated. The streets all about the Auditorium were jammed so that even in the cool, clear and bracing October air women were suffocated and crushed and were carried away fainting from the surging crowd struggling in vain to get admission to the building. This jubilee, which was projected as if by a spontaneous impulse and developed unexpected proportions as the plans neared completion, surprised even ite projectors. The President upon his public appearances Was greeted by crowds which were counted not by thousands, but by hundreds of thousands.. It has been a week of festival uproar—a week of immense parades, great mass meetings and glittering illuminations, the streets sounding with the trend of soldiery and the blare of bands, naval and military officers in the places of honor, the nation’s dignity $9 head

HOMESICKNESS.

How This Strange Disease, When in Severe Form, Causes Death. There are few of us who have never known the pangs of homesickness, and those few are rather to be pitied than envied. Homesickness in mild form ia a sign of a gentle mind, and indicate* the possession of a love of home and country which is the characteristic of civilized and normal man. This mild form, fortunately, is the only kind which most of us have experienced, for when the severe form takes possession of a person it is a terrible disease, causing untold misery and even death. This severe form, usually called nostalgia, has grown less common in these days of quick communication, of rapid transmission of news and of a widespread knowledge of geography. The element of ignorance of one’s surroundings and consequent sense of helplessness and despair of ever seeing home again, w’hich in times gone by so oppressed the sufferer from nostalgia, is now removed except in the case of the very young or the densely ignorant. , The greatest sufferers are Highlanders, German and Swiss mountaineers, or the Celtic Scots, and men are more apt to be overcome than women. The victim of this extreme form of homesickness is almost always a resourceless person, one whose life is a routine of trivialities, whose ideas are few aud limited, and such as they are, based upon familiar objects and wellknown associates. When such a person is placed in new surroundings no new Ideas are created, but there is a gnawing longing for the past, which is the more intense as a return seems impossible. The patient, for such he really Is, broods over what he has lost, rejects what is offered in place of it, and becomes apathetic and taciturn. Sleep becomes fitful, and is disturbed by vivid dreams of home. The appetite falls, digestion grows poor, and the sufferer becomes thin and haggard. There is headache, with dullne’SS of intellect and finally, perhaps, a condition of complete indifference to everybody and everything which may end in death from a failure of the vital organs to perform their functions. There is little to do for cases of this sort where there is no possibility of a return home, though sometimes a study of the map and of the routes by which return can be made, and the birth of a hope that conditions may change and the separation from the beloved spot not be final, may bring about a restoration to mental health, especially if the hope is based upon the sufferer’s own efforts to that end.

REGAINED HEALTH.

Gratifying Letters to Mrs. Pinkham From Happy Women. “I Owe You My Use." Mrs. E. Woolhiskr, Mills, Neb., writes: “Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—l owe my life to your Vegetable Compound. The doctors said I had consumption and nothing could be done for me. My menstruation had stopped and they said my blood was turning to water. I had several doctors. They all said I could not 1 ive. I began the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it helped me right away; menses returned and I have gained in weight. I have better health than I have laid for years. Itiswonderful what your Compound has Jone for me.”

“I Feel Like a New Person."

Mrs. Geo. Leach, ICO9 Belle St., Alton, 111., writes: a Before I began to take your Vegetable Compound I was a great sufferer from womb trouble. Menses would appear two and three times in a month, causing me to be so weak I could not stand. I could neither sleep nor eat, and looked so badlv’ my friends hardly knew me. “ I took doctor's medicine but did not derive much benefit from it. My druggist gave me one of your little books, and after reading it I decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I feel like a new, person. I would not give your Compound for all the doctors’ medicine in the world. I can not praise it enough.”

Not His Old 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 toll whether the Bostons or the Cincinnatls are ahead." —Washington Star.

“A Short Fight."

The damp of autumn nights and mornings stirs up Sciatica, and then comes atug of pain. Use St. Jacobs Oil, and then comes a tug to cure it. It is a short tight and the cure Is sure. »

The Word.

Bond—“ Don’t you realize that mar riage- broadens a man?” Benedict—“Oh, yes; I suppose It can be put that way, but ’flattens’ is the word I’ve always used.’’—Boston Traveler.

Lane's Family Medicine

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

Te a and Coffee Drinking.

Englishmen drink five times as much tea as coffee, Americans eight times as much coffee as tea. For lung gnd chest diseases, Piso’s Cam Is the best medicine we have used. Mn J. JL Northcutt, Windsor, Out, Canada.

No Undertakers in Japan.

Wheat $2 a Bushel.

Some fanners are holding their wheat because they think the price will to $2 a bushel The price, however, may po down and thus great losses will follow. la all matters delays are dangerous, psitiealarly so in sickness. At the first s«a «C biliousness, dyspepsia indigestion ar constipation cure yourself with Hosteater's Stomach Bitters.

Why They Did It.

At an ancient church at Vatabol. la Russia, it has been customary for the congregation to turn to a blank wall and bow reverently before leaving the church. Why they did this nobody knew, except that their forefathers had done so, and had handed down the custom. In making some repairs recently the origin of the custom was discovered, for beneath many layers of whitewash and paint a picture was fond of the Virgin Mary, which must have stood out brilliantly on this wall five or six centuries ago.

The Youth's feplß Companion... ffijwEL THOSE who subscribe at once for the 1899 volume will '"X receive Free all the November and December issues ZU&j". vX. from the time of subscription to January 1, 1899, IncludDouble Holiday Numbers. Among the ' many famous contributors to these issues will be ... . Rudyard Kipling IlijpAV; ‘ story of a hero. V'j! U ' lv ' W/ n Urh>Arr»llc a Dec. vst Issue. “The Wateryi I I I We Iffw lIU W vlllj melon Patch.” A story of fruit- '» 'CL*■ 1 loving boys. Lillian Nordica Singer’s Life.” An American kiplims. „ prima donna's trials and triumphs. THE volume for 1899 will he the best THE COMPANION has ever published. Each of the 52 weekly issues will contain half a dozen dehghtfal stories, besides articles of rare interest. Famous soldiers, sailors, statesmen, scholars and story-writers will give Ibrfr best work to readers of THE COMPANION.

50-CENT CALENDAR FREE TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS.

Penholder that Gives Heat and Cold.

Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O!

Ask your Grocer to-day to show yoa a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the piace of eoffee. The children may drink it without injury as weQ as the adult. All wbc try it. like it-GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown rs Mocha or Java, but it ia made from pare grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. tbe price of coffee. 15c. and 25 eta. per package. Sold by all grocer*.

Moliere's Last Day.

It is told of Moliere, that on the reaming of the day on which he died, lais wife and friends, seeing how went he was, tried to prevent his doing down to play that night, but in vain. ~A man,” said he, “suffers long ere he dies; I feel that with me the end is at hand; but there are fifty poor workingmen who have only their day's wages to Ere on, and who as to give them bread tonight if I play not?” So be ttont dawn, and played his great composition, the Mala de Imaginaire—dying all the while, then went home to bed. and died.

The Most Common of All.

The most common ©f all ailments from sports of all kinds are sprains and bruises. The most common and Surest cure of them is by the use of St. Jaoehs Oil, which is prompt in its action. Fame is the goddess who keeps hcri favorites’ names in the papers.—Fuck. , He who estaldishes his argument by noise and command shows that his ' reason is weak.—Montaigne.

Coughing Leads to Consumption.

Keiup's Balaam will stop the cough st once. Go to your druggist to-day and ret ■ sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays'are dangerous. It is ever so much harder Io prove that we are right than to let people be- j lieve that we are wrong.—Philadelphia Times.

Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Is taken Internally. Pri ce 75 cents.

We are judged by the meanness of our actions. Dot by the nobleness of our thoughts.—Boston Transcript. Wpmea admnvtton wl» wl» uk OkanS Suqibur So»p t<> Imptwr Ur shin. UiU’l Hair sad Whisker Pye. Itfack «r hnnra. 30c. In all Spanish-America the InJicns form the great mass of the yopnlatica. WAKTE&.-OMMCteaatoMl4Mßl-P-A-XS«ai A 1 1-«- Ir_- r»— - --- Brir Yet*, to Stoan«tatoaWtatotoSb t> . 4 c x .! .

Lighted the Sea Bottom.

AtTWtoaßoatiy tfeebedaf tbeaea wan lighted tens a balloon attached to a tag. *■ the heps that a Isst torpeds wseM ba detected. The experiment was sacßeoeftL

The Fields of Sport.

FTwas the fields of sport we go to bed sad pet op fun of pains and aches. The treat might, by the use of St. Jacobs OH. we ere seethed to sleep and get up cared. We sbeeldaT feel bored a great deal ofteaer than we do if we were not so erewoteoeed to osirelaen.—Puck.

The Fall With its sudden changes. its hot days and chitiy aughts. dampness and decaying veg'tetion. is pecrifarfy trying te the health. A. good FaSB Sfefficine is as important and beneficai as Spring Medicine. Hood’s SarsaperiEa keeps the blood pure, wards off esalarie. creates a good appetite, gives oefteshtor steepu and mahdains the health tone thraugh tine trying season. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Medicine. Hood’S PHIS exre oH ItreeEla. Sctou.

Aha £4.toa. tkas AS wto wHT rat rat sn<i *es4 this »Hp. with name and address and f 1.75, at once, will hee evttrj week, from the first November Usuo until January, IkW, F»EE-JC2 fte JjemTOiAffrarf IMfeem t>»r jinn fff IMB, hiehisiveof the beautiful Double Holiday Numbers. FIXEE Tlbe evwoSw Cffinrinttom. C’ileKtfckr for rteher and eostMer than any of the famous Companion (tostoss rt tamer jwk txcdmied azA Utha«raphe«i in twelve colors exclusively for Ths CaareoMra- A etoratatettrsuurat to tto home. 030 TIE COWANHKEtatteWmetedC»&—»library ta itself. o M 79 ' masfnted Areamreecssrmt and Sample Copies Free. THE YOUTH'S (OHMMON, - - 201 Columbus Avenue, BOSTON, NASS, fe

1 /(iJ* I X I I C f Better than Gold | and better than any other chewing tobacco ever b made:—YOU are not Obliged to dig for it. I is the largest piece of really high grade tobacco, I and you can get it anywhere in the United States. > Pemember the name | v when you buy again.

“A Fair Face Cannot Atone for An Untidy House.” Use SAPOLIO

C.M. C. ..., -Xe 43-tn* Yfe-m ncma w nmansm vuasc say ” yse sac *s atoutaasai it Mis sssw

CASTOR IA For Infants and Children, Ito Kind Ym Have Always Be<tt Bears the . yr * Skpatwoof

’♦♦♦•MPPPPfifi ♦»♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦< What’s the Matter with KANSAS? KailSaS O wns (in round numtvn) 900.000 horses and males, 550,000 milch cows, 1,600,000 ot er cattle, 2,400,000 swine, and 225,000 sheep. Its Farm Products this year include 150,000;000 bushels of corn, 60,000,000 bushels of wheat and millions upon millions of dollars in value of other grains,.fruits, vegetables, etc. In debts alone it has a shortage. Send for free copy of “What's the Matter with Kansas?"—a new book of M pages of facts. General Passenger Office, Th Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway, Chicayo.

®CURE YOURULFI Vm> Big e for unnatural liachargea. inflammatioaa, rritatioua or uloaratiOM >f mucoua membraata. Painleaa, and not aatria* gant or poiaonoua. w Wfc ■ - * ■ v Qrcnlar cant on nw*aat>