Jasper County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 January 1899 — Page 7
IKeep | I Coughing [ otkarnm —i We know I I of nothing better to tear the I I lining of your throat and I A lungs. It is better than wet I 1 feet to cause bronchitis and I I pneumonia. Only keep it I I up long enough and you I 1 will succeed-in reducing your I ■ weight, losing your appetite, I m bringing on a slow fever and I ■ making everything exactly I ■ right for the germs of con- I A sumption. 9 Stop coughing and you 1 £ will get well. I Eger’s l Cherry g Pectoral! cures coughs of every kind. I M An ordinary cough disap* ■ I pears in a single night. The I V racking coughs of bronchitis I ■ are soon completely mas* I ■ tered. And, if not too far I ■ along, the coughs of con- I ■ sumption are completely I I your druggist for one I Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral I f Plaster. j I It will aid the action of the 1 I Cherry Pectoral. 8 I It yon hare key complaint what. H M aver and C.ilre th. bo.t medical ■ ■ advico yon can ixattbly obtain, I ■ writ. n> freely. Tou wllfreeefre a ■ ■ prompt reply that may b* of great H ■ Vain* to you. Addreta, M # X)B- J. C. AYER. Lowell, tlaaa. ' WHISKERS DYED A Natural Black by Buckingham’s Dye. frlc* M cent* of all druggist. or B. F. HaU A Co, Maabaa, N. H. iky -j | i I * Send your address on a postal and # we will send you our 158 page Ulus* * f* trated catalogue free. J WINCHESTER REPEATINB ARMS CO., $ * ISO Winchester A ve., HI WEAVES, COSH. J > AA AAA AAA JIAA AA'Jk AAA 'WW TP 9-W-W -Wl -W-W-WT I WHEAT! WHEAT! WHEAT! ■ “Xothlrg bat wheat at Sr as the eye could reach >n cither aide—what yon nigbtcali a sea at wheat* •«ai what a lecturer, .peaking of lanada, said while petering to that country. ror particulars as to , apply to C. J. 11 roughton, 1X23 Monad nock Bldg., Chicago, UL; T. O. Currie. Stevens Point, Wis.; M. V. Jlclnne*, Xo. 1 Merrill Blk., Detroit, Mich.; D. Caven, Bad Axe., or Jas. Grieve, IleedCity, Mich.; X. Bartholomew. 306 6th St., Dea Moines, lowa, Agents for the Government of Canada. PENSIONS WxT, Writs Osyi. O'TAMILI. yniflaUa««t.y«Ma«tw. PA Cm XIII newspMjont—tOttaicirculation per week u lu D ft TCUTMcnee*! or xua«f all letaitsd. Search (A I Lll I CoUamerACeu iFSI Waahiogton,D.C
f often, from no appareat Tu C+J h cause, become languid and vl. u despondent in the early days rSSjSmk I of their womanhood They dfrt JJBSK3* \ V drag along always tiTed, twji/i ft 118^ n never hungry, breathless 1 and with i palpitating : a heart after slight exercise jB so that merely to walk \ /A \ I up stairs is exhausting. llkl | Sometimes a shoTt. dry- cough yy V I leads to the fear that they I are “going into consumption” —-r } A " They are anaemic, doc* / I tors tell them, which means / j J that they have too little ' ¥ * T blood Are you like that? Have you too little blood.? J / More anaemic people have been made strong, hungry, w 4 energetic men and women by the use of Dt. Williams* V j Pink Pills for Palo People than by any othtT means They 1 / are the best tonic in the world. | t ‘ Ml« Coin Stevena, of Casport, Niagara Co., N. Y.,had been a aery jj a healthy girl until about a year ago, when she grew weak and pule. She U loat her appetite, waa aa tired in the morning aa on retiring, and loot flesh 1 1 until she became to emaciated that her friends hardly knew her. The doc- I A tort declared the disease anaemia, and gave her up to die. A physician n who waa visiting in Gaaport prevailed upon her to try Dr. Williams’ pink i w Pills for Pale People. She did ao, and waa benefited at once, she is now U V weU and atrang-the aery picture of health.— BmffmJ* (It. Y.) CmrUr. I a Tilt genuine arc sold only in package*. »h« I ■ always bearing the full name. For sole by all drug* \ l gists ot sent, postpaid, by the Or Williams Medicine , M Company. Schenectady. H Y., on receipt of price, fifty I r cents per box. book of cures free on request. v or A
Balloons Will Soar.
Time and again the plot of a story has hinged on the escape of the villain In n balloon, and his miserable ending when a well-aimed ballet from the hero’s rifle has pierced the gas bag and brought the whole concern smashing to the ground. Nothing could, however, be more false to fact. A simple bullet will no more bring down a balloon than a grain of sand an ostrict. The experiment has been tried, and by no less a person than the Brothers Spencer, the famous London balloonists. A captive balloon was sent np and anchored about TOO or 800 feet np. Then firing began with ordinary army rifles. Impossible as it may seem, over a thousand ballets pierced the silk, yet even then it was three hoars before enough gas escaped to bring the balloon once more to firm ground. One reason of this is that the elasticityyof the material to some extent automatically closes the rents in the material.
A Double Crop of Apples.
On a Long Island farm is an apple tree which bore two crops of fruit the past year, and the fanners are taking unusual interest in this peculiarity of nature. Just as much interest is being shown in Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters, which cores dyspepsia. indigestion, constipation and blood disorders when other remedies fail to benefit. The secret of Gladstone’s long life, the Lancet thinks, “was doubtless due to the fact that he was not only able to sleep easily, but was always ready to abandon even the most important, the m-'vt argent task, and to lie down to sleep then and there, whenever he felt ready fatigued.”
In Winter Use Allen’s Foot-Ease.
A powder to be shaken into the shoes. During winter your feet feel uncomfortable, nervous, and often cold and damp. If yon have perspiring, smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. It warms and rests the feet and makes walking easy. Cures swollen and sweating feet, blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and is a certain cure for chilblains and frost bites. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Trial package mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y.
Boiling to Death.
The last instance of boiling to death took place In Persia In 1890. The offender, who was guilty of stealing State revenues, was put in a large cauldron of cold water, which was slowly heated to the boiling point. His bones were distributed, as a warning, among the provincial tax collectors.
Try Gratn-O! Try Graln-O!
Ask your Grocer to-day to show yon I packageof GitAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well aa the adult. All who try it. like it. GRAIK-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Juts. but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. Vi the price of coffee. 15c. and 25 eta. per package. Sold by all grocers.
Useful Information.
“Muggins called up his first wife at the seance last night, and what do you think he said to her?’’ “Goodness knows.” “He told her he wished she would give his second wife her recipe for mincemeat.” —————— #
Gates’ Mexico Tours.
First tour leave* Chicago Jan. 17; second tour leaTes Chicago Feb. 11, JS99. Price of ticket includes all traveling expenses for thirty days.* These tours are made by special trains of palace cars,'including dining cars. For descriptive books and rates write to Chas. H. Gates, Toledo, Ohio. Her Idea. Little Miss Aylcet—Mamma. Mamma —Well? Little Miss Aylcet—ls the "seventh heaven” one reserved for inferior people?—Puck. I believe Piso’s Care is the only medicine that will core consumption.—Aim* M. Ross, Williamsport, Fa., Nov. 12, ’9sk Light is the task where many share the toll.—Homer.
ILOILO TO BE TAKEN
M’KINLEY ORDERS AMERICAN SOLDIERS TO LAN a Ajrainaldo’s Followers Will Be Overcome by Force, If Necessary, bat Their Peaceful Submission Is Expected— Issne Rests with Natives. The United States will force the issue with the Filipinos. This decision may lead to a harassing war with the natives of the Philippines. It is hoped and believed such a calamity will be averted, but it remains for the insurgents to determine what the result will be. It is reported from Washington that the President has ordered Gen. Miller to land his troops at Iloilo. The American commander is directed to be conciliatory toward the natives, but at the same time he is instructed to use force, if necessary, to effect his landing and establish himself in the desired camp. In other words, Gen. Miller is to act on the defensive. He will not fire a gun unless attacked by the Filipinos, bat if the natives willfully shoot at his soldiers he is to administer a dose of American retribution and marksmanship. Gen. Miller has about 3,000 soldiers at Iloilo, and among them are men of the Fifty-first lowa infantry. lie will also have the support of several gunboats, for Admiral Dewey notified Secretary Long of the Navy Department that he had sent the Concord and the Petrel to join the naval force under Col. Dyer at Iloilo. It is not known how strong a force the insurgents have at that point. The War Department has information which seems to indicate the natives have only about 8,000 stand of arms, and it is assumed that fairly represents their fighting power at Iloilo. They have no modern artillery, while the American force is well equipped In that respect. There is no doubt of the ability of Gen. Miller to defeat the Filipinos in pitched battle, but he has been warned not to be the aggressor. Dispatches from Manila report rumors that Aguinaldo has gone to Iloilo to take command of the insurgent force. He has hitherto assumed an attitude of hostility to American authority, but advices from Gen. Otis lead American officials to believe he will submit when forced to a final decision between peace and war. The instructions of the President relative to the administration of affairs in the Philippine Islands, as transmitted to Gen. Otis at Manila, are comprehensive enough to fully meet present conditions as well as any contingencies that may arise. The President urges that the commander of the forces of occupation shall proclaim that we come “not as invaders or conquerors, but as friends, to protect the natives in their homes, in their employments and in their personal and religious rights.” After promising support and protaction to those who will co-operate with the Government to give effect to these benefits and purposes, the President declares that, while the military authority must be ‘supreme until the legislation of the United States shall otherwise provide, the municipal laws of the territory in respect to private rights and the repression of crime will remain In force,' all ports in the islands will be opened to the commerce of all friendly nations, and all goods will be admitted upon payment of “such duties as ■hall be in force at the time of their importation”; and the officers to administer local governmental affairs are to be selected as far as may be practicable from the inhabitants of the islands after they have taken the oath of allegiance to the United States. The instructions adequately convey the purpose of our Government In assuming control of the Philippines.
Watson Would Succeed Dewey.
Commodore Watson has applied for the command of the Asiatic squadron when Admiral Dewey relinquishes it. Unless Dewey changes his mind, however, there will be no change for nearly a year. The latter officer has declined all offers of relief, believing he esn best serve his country at Manila. Unless the Jaw is amended, he will retire from active duty next December.
Will Welcome American Navy.
A dispatch from Portsmouth, England, says the American squadron is expected to arriTe at Spithead in June. The channel squadron will take part in the welcome to be given to the American ships. The battleship Prince George will lead the squadron and the Duke of York, for whom the Prince George was named, will take a prominent part in the ceremonies.
The Comic Side of The News
Sooner or later Spain is bound to slip np on that manana appeal. It appears that Sampson and Shatter agree that neither of them had anything to do with it. The entiaer Cincinnati has been floated, which proves that the report of her grounding had sufficient ground. Take the oath, boys, As yon stand np in line: “Th* lips that kissed Hobson’s Shall never kiss mine.*’ With Quay’s trial in mind and the prospect of his escaping conviction, the title of Senator-at-large might be conferred upon him. » Not perhaps that it's much of a reason for onr washing our hands of them, but millions of the Filipinos are said not to know the use of soap.'” If it is true that the Filipinos are preparing to resist Uncle Sam they are destined to experience something new and satiating in the way of surprise parties. Measured by the proportion of congressional salaries, the time already spent In debating the Isthmian canal question would pay for digging a large section of the ditch. Admiral Dewey is hopeful that when he announced that with his monitors he could whip the world, Einperor William had his ear to the telephone. Dewey is something of a monitor himself. The Cubans come up here and get pneumonia and we go down to Cuba and gel yellow fever. The anti-imperialists will tell yon that this proves that both Americans and Cabans ought to stay at homes
She Wanted Bare Facts.
The Mayor of a far Western city once received the following letter of Inquiry: “Kind and respected Clr—l see In a paper that a man named John Bipes was atacted an et op by a bare whose kabs he was tryln to git when the she bare come up and stopt him by eatin him in the mountalnes near your town. “What I want to know is, did It kill him or was he only partly et up and Is he from this place and all about the bare. I don’t know but what he Is.a distant husband of mine. “My first husband was of that name and I supposed he was klled In the war, but the name of the man the bare et being the same I thought It might be him after all and I ought to khow it If he wasn’t killed either In the war or by the bare, for I have been married twice an there ought to be dlvorse papers got out by him or me if the bare did not eat him all up. If It Is him, you will know r It by his having six toes on the left foot. “lie also had a spread eagle tattooed In his front chest and a ankor on bis right arm wich you will know him by If the bare did not eat up these sines of its being him. / “Find out all you kin about him without his knowing what It is for. That Is, If the bare did not eat him all up. If it did, I don’t see as you can do anything and you needn’t take no trouble. Please ancer back. “P. S-—Was the bare killed? Also was he married again and did he leave any prop.ty wuth me laying claims to?” —Christian Endeavor World.
NERVOUS DEPRESSION.
[A TALK WITH MRS. PINKIIAM.] A woman with the blues is a very uncomfortable person. She is illogical, unhappy and frequently hysterical. The condition of the mind known as “ the blues,” nearly always, with women, results from diseased organs of generation. It is a source of wonder that in this age of advanced medical science, any person should still believe that mere force of will and determination will overcome depressed spirits and nervousness in women. These troubles are indications of disease. Every woman who doesn't understand her condition should write to Lynn, Mass., to Mrs. Pinkham for her advice. Her advice ia thorough common sense, and is the counsel of a learned woman of great experience. Read the story of Mrs. F. S. Bennett, Westphalia, Kansas, as told in the fol- 1 lowing letter: "Dear Mes. Pinkham:—l have suffered for over two years with falling, enlargement and ulceration of the womb, and this spring, being in such a weakened condition, caused me to flow for nearly 6ix months. Some time ago, urged by friends, I wrote to you for advice. After using the treatment which you advised for a short time, that terrible flow stopped. “T am now gaining strength and flesh, and have better health than 1 have had for the past ten years. I wish to say to all distressed, suffering women, do not suffer longer, when there is one so kind and willing to aid you.” Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a woman's remedy for woman’s ills. More than a million women have been benefited by iL
Prefer Convict Life.
There are at present several old convicts in Fremantle (Wostrolia) Jail who, though their time has long expired, live on there. They give as their reason that all the people they knew In the old country must be long since dead; so they prefer to remain where •so much of their life has been spent. The old fellow's are allowed to go into town, but must be back In time for lockup.
Stax* of Ohio, Citt of Toledo, i * Lucas Couirrx. i Fra it* J. Chkxev makes oath that he Is the senior partner of the Arm of F. J.Chbnkt&Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and Btut* aforesaid, ana that said tirm will pay the stun of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and erery ease of Catarrh that cannot be cored by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cuke. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this eth day of December, A. D., use. J s -.. I A. W. 'GLEASON, ] BKAL f Nolarr Public. Hail’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and acts directly on the blood and ntucons surfaces of the systfem. Bend for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo. O. tar Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Close and Exciting.
First Kitten—How are you getting along? Second Kitten—Fine! My tail and I had a ten-minute race to-day, and I wasn’t half an inch behind at the finish.—Puck.
Genuine Paradise.
In China divorces are allowed in all cases of criminality, mutual dislike, Jealousy, incompatability of temperament, or too much loquacity on the part of the wife.
Lane's Family Medicine
Move* the bowel* each da/. Id order to be health/ thia la neceaaar/. Acta centl/ on the* liver and kidneys. Corea sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. The Coeur d’Alene district of Idaho and Southeastern Missouri together furnish nearly 44 per cent of the total production of lead in the United States.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Brocao Quinine Tablets. All drugirista refund the money If It fails to cure. 25c. The genuine has L.B.Q. on each tablet The best manner of avenging ourselves Is by not resembling him whom has Injured us.—Jane Porter.
CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the y/f>, jT~ Signature es L4jt//z7uZcJUA£
Pains and Aches Of Rheumatism Make Countless Thousands Suffer. But this disease is cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which neutralizes the acid in the blood. If you have any aymptoma of rheumatism take Hood’s Sarsaparilla at once and do not waste time and money on unknown preparations. The merit of Hood's Sarsaparilla is unquestioned and its record of cures unequalled. Hood’s Sarsaparilla I* America's Greatest Medicine for Rbeamatiam. Hood's Pills oar* all Liver till. 26 cents.
FURS IN RUSSIA.
Ike Sealskin So Much Prized at Ilonte Is Useless There. It seems a contradiction to speak of a “cold fur,” but that is what the Russians style some of the wraps that we In the United States ignorantly consider warm enough for the coldest climate. One of the first things an American woman has to do when she reaches Russia is to reconstruct her Ideas on the subject of furs. Her beloved sealskin goes far down on the list. It is one of the “cold furs” that no Russian lady would care to wear as a lining—and It is as linings that all furs are worn—because It Is tpo tender. The only thing It Is good for is a short Jacket to be worn between the seasons, and then It must be used entirely for walking. A woman who sets out on foot in that garb must surely return on foot, for If she took a carriage or sledge she would be running a serious risk of catching cold. The pretty squirrel skin Is reckoned among the “cold” cheap furs, and is given up to the unfashionable world, while the mink, also a “cold” fur, though expensive enough, Is used by men only, just as is the pretty mottled skin obtained by piecing sable paws together. The proper furs for the climate are the “downy” furs that, beginning at the brown goat, go all the way up to that climate of beauty and luxury, the black fox or the silver fox, soft and delicate as feathers, and warm as a July day. The kunl is a fur that was used by royalty In the olden time, and was the unit of currency. It Is costly when dark, and has a tough, light-weight skin, which Is an essential In all furs that are to be used for large cloaks. Sables, rich and dark, are worn like the kunl, by any one who can afford them—court dames, cavaliers, Archbishops, and merchants, with their wives and daughters. Cloth or velvet Is the proper covering for all furs, and the colors worn for driving are often light and gay. Clothed in these furs the Russian seldom takes cold. Few Russians wear flannels. The houses are kept delightfully warm, and at places of entertainment no extra clothing could be borne. No Russian enters a room, theater or public hall at‘any season of the year without removing his cloak and overshoes, and no well-trained servant would allow an Ignorant foreigner to trifle with his health by so doing. The foreign churches are provided with cloakrooms and attendants. In the Russian churohes this would not be practicable, as so many are coming and going, but even here some of the richer people keep a servant to hold their cloaks, Just Inside the entrance.
Coughing Leads to Consumption.
Kemp’s Balsam will atop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Bold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous. The secret police of Paris Is quite distinct from the regular force. The members are generally unknown to each other, and one detective is often employed to watch another.
Mr*. Winslow’s Soothiwo Btbc» for Children teeth In*: softens th« rum*, reduces Inflammation, alleys pain, cured wind folio. % cents a bottle. WANTED. —Case of bad health that RTP‘A-N-8 will net benefit. Bend S Bents to Rlpans Chemical OoNew York, for 10 samples and 1,000 testimonial*.
25 Years of Cure, Covering Tens of Thousands Cured, Millions of Bottles Sold. Cfl. larnkc Hil oontinues its great beneficent QU Jdtmib UH work in the cure of RHEUMATISM SPRAINS NEURALGIA BRUISES SCIATICA SORENESS LUMBAGO STIFFNESS And will always be The Great Remedy for Pain.
“Forbid a Fool a Thing and That He Will Do.” Don’t Use SAPOLIO C. N. U. No a-o»~ _i—- — CURE VOVtSEIF! WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE SAY I Ui? Bit Cl for mniiaiiß
Before Bells.
Before the time of bells vario— to* struments were used to summon ets* gregations to worship. In Egypt they are said to have followed n Jewish cantom in using a trumpet In some Otiea. tal churches a kind of rattle give the signal. In monasteries monks took !| In tarn to go round the cells, calling the inmates to their devotions by knocking with a hammer, which was called the “awakening Instrument.” Bells of one kind or another are, however, of very, great antiquity, having been used In religious ceremonies by many of the an. dent nations as a means of honoring their gods and summoning them to the feasts. For example, the feast of Osiris and Isis was always announced by bells. Pliny says that bells were In use long before his time, being called “Tin tin nabula.” The use of small bells (nolae) in this country, says William of Malmesbury, may be traced back as far as the fifth century, and It is clear from Bede that even those of the larger kind (campanae), such ae sounded in the air and called a numerous congregation to divine service, were employed in England as early ae the year 680, being that In which tho Abbot Hilda died.
What Do the Children Drink.?
Don’t cive them tin or coffee. Hit* you tried the new food drink called GItAIN-O? It i* delicion* and nourishing. and takes the place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give the child re* the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-O is made of pare grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, bat costs about 34 as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c.
Cheaper Postage.
Apropos of the agitation on the subject of cheaper postage between this country and Great Britain, It is pointed out that the cost of a first-class ocean passage between this country and Europe averages about SIOO. Tbs charge for conveying the same weight of letters as the passenger weighs la $lB7. Cough Away if Ton Want to. but If not, oao SaM Honey of Horebound and Tar. Of Druasixta. Fike'a Toothache Drops Cura in on* Uinutn. St. Peter's, at Rome, cost $18,000,000 to build.
Meckison of Ohio Has Been Greatly Benefited by Pe*ru*na. Congressman D. Meckison of Ohio, writes the following letter to Dr. Hartman Dr. S. B, Hartman , Columbus, O. Dear 8ik —I have used several boV ties of Pe-ru-na and feel greatly benefited thereby. I have been afflicted Hon. D. Mekkison. with catarrh of the head and feel en couraged to believe that continued nse of Pe-ru-na will fully eradicate a disease of thirt years’ standing Yours sincerely, D. MEEKISON. The continued receipt of endorsements like this for Dr. Hartman’s great catarrh remedy, prove its value beyond question. Men of prominence everywhere are recognizing the merit of Pe-ru-na and are willing to give expression to their judgment because a certain, absolute cure for catarrh is a public good. All druggists sell Pe-ru-na
