Jasper County Democrat, Volume 3, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 April 1900 — Page 7
Nothing in the Wide World has such a reoord for absolutely curing female Illa and kidney troubles ae has Lydia E, Pinkham's Medicines that am advertised to cure everything oannot bo spool floe for anything• f Lydia E, Plakhan'a Vegetable Compound will not cure every kind es Illness that may off Hot men, women and children, but proof la monumental that ft will and done oure all the Ills peculiar to women. This la a foot Indisputable and can bo verified by more than a million women. If you are sick don f t experiment, take the medicine that has the reoord < of the largest number of cures, Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Maa*. Liver Ills. DR. RADWAY * 00., Naw Youi . Dearßire—l ha*. boeaeite tor Merly twjun, and have boon doetorin* with soma of the meat expert dootore of the United States. I hare been bathlnc and drinking hot water at the Bet Sprinca, Ark., bet it Beamed everythina failed to do me aood. After I aaw your adrertiaemaat 1 thoo«bt 1 would try your pilia, and have nearly need two boxes; been taHac two at bedtime and one after breakfast, and they hare done me more good than anything else I hare erer need. My trouble has been with the lirer. My akia aad area were all yellow; I had aleapy, drowsy faolinga; felt like a drunken man i pain right abore the navel, like aa if Itwaa bile on top of the stomach. My bowels were eostire. My month and tongue core moot of the time. Appetite fair, but food would not digest, but settle hoary on my stomach, end some few mouthfuls of food some up again. I sould only oat light food that diRests easily. Mease send "Book of Adrtoo.** Recpocb telly. BEN ZAOOO. Hot Springe, Ate. TJadway’s It Pills Price 36c a Bex. Sold by Druggista or east by Mail. Send to DR BADWAY A CO, « Elm Street. New York, ter Book es Adrion. excursion rates I CuZtCir J—nr— growing land on the Conti-S-r ducted excursions will lease fit. Ami. MinaTma the let and *d Tuesday In each month, and specially low rates Write to F. Pedley. Supt. Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or the undersigned, who will mail you atlases. pamphlets, etc., free of eoat: C. J. Broughton, 1223 Monadnock Bldg.. Chicago; N. Bartholomew. KM 6th St.. Des Moi net, Iowa; M. V. McImm, Na t Merrill Block. Detroit, Mich.; J. Griers, Saginaw, Mich.; T. O. Currie, Stevens Point, Wit.; E. T. Holmes,. Indianapolis, Ind.. Adents for the Governnwnr of Canada. ______ MONEY MAKES WiET through ns absolutely guaranteed by gllt edgrd security. References furnished. Stamp for particulars. Nelson A Nelsou.Brokem, 100-103 Wall St-, N. Y. City. D A TCNTQ MsSs IMII 11 I amlners U. S. patent office. I fl I Lail I U Book aud Information free. Dfl D<2 V * EW DISCOVERY; gires U KV “ O I quick reliofi cures worn
Ever Lave "the blues”? Thea you know how dark everything looks. \V( x You are completely discouraged \ and cannot throw of that terri- /. J~ •— wp ble depression. A little work JI looks like a big mountain; a little noise sounds like the roar A of a cannon : and a little sleep is all JR you can secure, night after night fy That’s I Nerve Exhaustion I The troth of the matter is, your nerves have been poi- I R Boned and weakened with the impurities in yottr blood. The thing for you to do is to get nd of these impurities just as R soon as you can. B You want a blood-purifying medicine,—a perfect Sarsapa- S fills,—that’s what you want. You want a Sarsaparilla that R B is the strongest and best nerve tonic you can buy, too. H I That’s AYER’S I -The only Sarsaparilla made under the personal supervision o! three graduates: ■ graduate tn pharmacy, a graduate tn chemistry, and a graduate tn medicine." j| *I.OO a bottle. AU druggists. I W " During tut year Iwu suffering from nerrour proatration. For weeki I grew woree, became thin, route not deep, had no appetite, and waa in a wretched con- H ■gg dition. After taking several kinda of medicines without result, I took Ayer’s Kg Sarsaparilla with more than pleaaing remits. Me appetite returned, I slept soundly, ■ my strength and weight increased, and now lam well and strong without the ® gj slightest trace of my old trouble. Indeed, I would hardly believe it poeaible for Mg medicine to bring about ouch a change in any person. '* — Clam* Msalxt, Winter t HUI, SMBarviUe, Maas., Dec. at, tS9>
THE TEEMING WEST.
The Prairie Lauda of Western Canada ; Being Filled with Excellent Settler*. The salient fact that presents Itself to taking a birdseye view of the Canadian West is that of Intense activity in every department. Whether the glance be turned upon the district east of Winnipeg, the Red River valley south or north, the Dauphin and M. & N. W. district, the southwestern, or whether it take in the great central division along the main line of the C. P. R.* stretching away out to the Rockies and from there bending north and south to Prince. Alberta and Edmonton, McLeod and Lethbridge—whether the examination be made in any of these directions the same activity, growth and hopefulness is observable. The Canadian West is not only a good place to locate permanently, but it is also a good place to invite their relatives and friends to come to. This is the spirit that seems to animate the West at the present time, and its effects are to be seen on every hand. To enumerate the towns where handsome and substantial blocks and residences have gone up this year would be simply to give a list of the towns and villages along the railway lines. And this movement has not been confined to these centers of population, but in many cases it has been overshadowed by the improvement in farm buildings. So far as one can see, this is no passing phrase, no repetition of any temporary boom following a period of good crops and fair prices. It is a movement more spontaneous, more general, more marked than anything that has gone before, and seems to indicate that the great West, like Samson bursting >he encompassing bands, has awakened to a period of activity and development that will surpass anything we have known in the past and which will only be paralleled by the opening out of some of the most fertile of the Western States of the Union.
Look at some of the figures. Over a thousand schools in Manitoba, and the number going up by leaps and bounds. Something like five hundred schools in the territories, Winnipeg as representing the gateway of the West, the third city in the Dominion in regard .to bank clearings, postal business and probably In regard to customs, the customs returns at Winnipeg running about thirty to forty per cent greater month bv month than in the fiscal year of 1807-8, the largest previous year for actual business entries, when over $900,000 was paid through the Winnipeg office for duty. The C. P. R. and Canada Northwest land sales together run over >1,500,000 for the year. These, and a thousand more signs, show bow the West has leaped into new life. This is an inspiring and cheering spectacle, but it brings with it great responsibilities. The business men realize this, the banks realize it, and have spread their agencies through every bustling little town clear out to the coast, the churches realize it, and one denomination alone has opened an average of about thirty new stations in each of the past two years, and will increase this in the year now entered upon, the Government departments realise it, and there is talk of redistribution and additional members. The educational branches realize it aud new schools are springing op everywhere. Over 12,000 settlers came in from the United States alone last year, and these, with the people who came in from the East, prove the most vigorous Westerners. They lose no time in developing their farms, in filling their grazing lands with stock, and in every district are to be found evidences of thrift and prosperity.
The Cheerful Idiot.
“That old pagan precept, ’know thyself,’ ” said the shoe clerk boarder, “la not half bad as a bit of advice.” “Especially for a fat man,” said the Cheerful Idiot. “And why for a fat man any mor« than a thin?” “It gives him a wide acquaintance."
IN -THE -PUBLIC-EYE
When President McKinley selected Mrs. Potter Palmer to act as representative of American women at the Paris exposition he conferred an honor upon the woman who is generally conceded to be best fitted for it. Mrs. Palmer is an ideal type of the American woman. She is handsome, graceful, tactful—a both leader. For years her word has been law in Chicago society and since acting as president of the Woman's Board of World’s
MRS. POTTER PALMER.
Fair Managers in 1893 her name has become well known all over the epuntry. Last year she took up a summer residence at Newport and her villa was the moAt popular at this famous resort. She is generally credited with having made the match between her niece, Miss Julia Dent Grant, and Count Cantacuzene, the rich young Russian nobleman, and it was at her Newport mansion that the brilliant wedding took place. Julian D. Fairchild is one of the few men of Brooklyn who have had the pleasure of declining a $25,000 a year salary.
says the New York Herald. Mr. Fairchild was offered the presidency of the Brooklyn Trust Company a few days ago and was told that if he accepted the salary would be made $25,000 a year. He
J. D. FAIRCHILD.
has declined. Mr. Fairchild was president of the E. Frank Coe Company of Manhattan w-hen, in May, 1893, he was elected president of the Kings County Trust Company, to succeed Joseph C. Hendrix. Mr. Fairchild’s salary then was fixed at $15,000. It has since been raised to $20,000. Sir Alfred Milner, governor of Cape Colony and the Queen's high commissioner for South Africa, has occupied these two positions for only three years, yet he has endowed them—prominent as they have always been—with an importance which they have never had beforb. The
am Ai.rnr.D muwkr.
governor of the Cape is a remarkably able man in a variety of ways. He was educated in Germany and Oxford and krns once pronounced by the dean of St. Paul’s to be “the finest flower of human Culture which had been reared hi the university in this generation.” At 44 (he ia now but 47) he had risen to high eminence in British politics. Mrs. Lillie Devereux Blake la about to organize a second woman’s suffrage assoriation. Mrs. Blake was the defeated
candidate for the presidency of the National Ruff rage Association after the abdication of Rusan B. Anthony. When Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt succeeded to that office Mrs. Blake’s friends openly threatened a second organisation, holding that she by reason of
MRS. L. BLAKF.
long service and seal in the cause was logically entitled to that honor. The new body of suffragists will call themselves the National Legislative Association. In Ran Francisco the Board of Health has created the position of assistant city physician, with a salary of SIOO a month, and put it in the hands of Dr. Beatrice Hinkle. Her duties will be the care of sick women and children in the public institutions. The French have the exclusive right to carry on researches in Persia, but half of the finds are to belong to that country. At Folkstone, England, an undertaker rode a bicycle on the handlebar of which was strapped a coffin containing a child.
FAIR WOMEN SPEAK.
Pe-ru-na Works Wonders for the Gentler Sex in Catarrhal Ailments.
MRS.COLONEL HAMILTON. That Pe-ru-na has become a household remedy in the home of Mrs. Colonel Hamilton is well attested by a letter from her, which says: “I can give my testimony as to the merits of your remedy, Pe-ru-na. I have been taking the same for some time, and am enjoying better health now than I have for some years. I attribute the change to Pe-ru-na, and recommend Pe-ru-na to every woman, believing it to be especially beneficial to them.” Mrs. Hamilton’s residence is 259 Goodale street, Columbus, Ohio.
Mrs. Margaret h a Dauben, No. 1214 North Superior street, Racine City, Wis., says: “I feel so well and good and healthful now that pen cannot describe it. Pe-ru-na is everything to me. I feel healthy and well.
but if I should be sick I would know what to take. I have taken several bottles for female complaint. I am in the change of life and it does me good.” Have you catarrh of the head, throat, lungs, stomach or any other organ of the body? If so, write to Dr. Hartman at once. He will send you directions for treatment without charge. Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, O.
Provender for Horses.
In the field allowance is made, as far as possible, for a horse to be supplied with from six to nine gallons of water dally, soft being the best, each mule or ox requiring a similar quantity. Horses drink about a gallon and a half at a time, and take about three minutes over the draught. Statu of Ohio, City of Tolkdo, I „ Lucas County. f **■ Frank J. Chknky makes oath that he Is the senior partner of the flrm of F. J. Chknky & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said flrm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Sth day of December, A. D. IMS. I t A. W. GLEASON. 1 Ul 'l Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cura Is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. ■. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. pP-Sold by Druggists. 75c. Night Marcbee Slow. On night marches troops do not usually advance at more than a mile an hour. In attack neither officer nor man Is to stop to help the wounded, and no halt permitted until the enemy is driven off. Lane's Family Medicine Moves the bowels each day. In order to bo healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cure* sick headsebe Price 2ft and 50c. The average cost of city bouses In this country is estimated at $4,700; of country houses at $1,050.
HAVE IT READY Minor accidents are no frequent ■nd such hurts so troublesome so household should be without a bottle of St Jacobs Oil for instant * su world knows. fctoa PERFECT CURE for PAINS aad ACHES
<*>•—
MISS ANNIE WYANDOTTE.
Miss Annie Wyandotte, queen of the operatic stage and dramatic soprano, says: “Fifteenth St. and Jackson Ave. ) Kansas City, Mo. ) “Dr. Hartman: “Dear Sir—Pe-ru-na has been my salvation. It has given me back a beautiful voice, a gift of God; it has brought me once more to my old profession. I can talk now, and sing, where before, 1 could scarcely whisper. Can you wonder at my delight? I w-ish every person who is suffering as I suffered might know Pe-ru-na. Only those who have been afflicted can ever know the intense satisfaction and gratitude that comes with a complete cure. My voice was completely gone. April 15 I felt so elated over the restoration of my voice that I inserted an advertisement in The Star for vocal pupils. The advertisement, which cost me 65 cents, brought me five pupils, and that was the beginning of my present large class. Yours gratefully, “Annie Wyandotte.” A congestion, inflammation or ulceration of the mucous membrane, whether of the head, stomach, kidneys or other organ, is known to the medical profession as catarrh. It is known by different names, such as dyspepsia, Bright’s disease, female complaint, diarrhoea, bronchitis, consumption and a host of other names. Wherever there is a congested mucous membrane there is catarrh, acute or chronic.
An Apple Eater.
During a visit to the south of England a gentleman was met with who related a unique and most interesting experience in dietetics, says Chambers’ Journal. It was that for the last three years he had lived on one meal a day, and that meal was composed chiefly of apples. Further astonishment was evoked by bls reply to my question as to what he drank, when he stated that the Juices of the apples supplied him with all the moisture or drink he needed; this, he claimed, was of the purest kind, being in reality water distilled by nature, and flavored with the pleasant aroma of the apple. He partook of his one meal about three o'clock in the afternoon, eating what he felt satisfied him, .the meal occupying him from twenty minutes to half an hour. He looked the picture of healthful manhood, and Is engaged daily In literary work.
What Do the Children Drink?
Don’t give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called GRAIN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-O is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about as much. All grocers sell it 15c and 25c.
World's Hottest Mines,
The hottest mines In the world are the Comstock. On the lower levels the heat is so great that the men cannot work over ten or fifteen minutes at a time. Every known means of mitigating the heat has been tried In vain. Ice melts before It reaches the bottom of the shafts. Coughing Lends to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop ths cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a aampls bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous.
An Enormous Moth.
The largest insect known to entomologists ia a Central American moth, called the Erobus atrlx. which expands its wings from eleven to eighteen Inches.
Carter's Ink.
Good ink is a necessity for good writing. Carter’s ia ths best. Costs no more than poor ink.
The Largest Insect.
The “elephant beetle” of Venezuela is the largest insect in the world. A full-grown one weighs half a pound. Dr. The scholar wbq cherishes the love of comfort is not to be deemed a scholar. Wtnslsw’s nosvwmn ursvy toe Ottens
MISS CLARA STOECKER.
Miss Clara Stoecker says: “I had chronic catarrh for over a year. I tried many remedies, but found no relief until I saw an advertisement in the paper of your treatment for chronic catarrh! X tried it and I think I am now well. 1 recommend Pe-ru-na to all my friend* who are afflicted with catarrh.” Mis* Stoecker live* at Pittsburg, Pa.
Mrs. Margareth Fritz, WilcoxOkla., writes: “X extend my sincere thanks for th* good advice you have given me. X do not believe I ■— would be livMIM mg now if it ffl 0 I were not for I |||9 you. I had U 8 | suffered with I I flow of blood * or four months, and 1 • the doctor* » could help
me but little. They operated on me th re* times. It was very painful and 1 only obtained little relief. I was so tfreak I could not turn in bed. Then I applied to Dr. Hartman. I did not know whether he could help me or not, but I followed his advice, and used only three bottles of Pe-ru-na and Man-a-lin. Now lam well and as strong as I ever was, thanks to your remedies.” Pelvic catarrh has become so frequent that most women ar* more or less afflicted with it. It is usually called female disease.
81 S 'frSfl Iw [slicker] WILL KEEP YOU DRY. Don't be fooled with a mackintosh or rubber coat. If you wantacoat ’’SmBK that will keep y<Wl dry in tfie hardest storm buy the Fish Brand Ty Slicker. If not for sale In your iXflf JeßS* town, write for catalogue to A J. TOWER. Boston. Mass. GHICAGOMMAHA > Double Daily Service Newline via Rockford, Dtxbqqna. Waterloo. Fort llbrarv-sinoklng-cars. sleeping cars, free reclining chair cars, dining cars. Bend to the underslp nod for a free copy of Piotarea and Notes Ka-Nwrte Illustrating this new line as seen from the car window. Tickets of agents of I. C. R. R. and connecting lines. A. H. HANSON. G. P. A.. Chicago. I : Send your name and address on a ! g postal, and we will send you our 156- ' © page illustrated catalogue free. I WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. ' ® 180 Winchester Aranue. Now Haeea, Csss. W. L DOUGLAS S 3 &3-BO SHOES adeeeed by aver ft* B IriKMMMW wearers. flNk ■ ke oennlne have W. L. )O u»l*i' name and price I ‘Aft Dj raped on bottom. TakeMHM, r iilhthuti claimed to bo f goad. Year dealre jMgjrl lould keep them ot. we will ante . v J W? sa lor carriage, state amq. ocieetiMt e, and width plain ar —p *re«, L L MUUM MM (Xl7fl>s*Ba/Utes '‘eNTu * No. 18-UKM) Wfloi WVDMI TO ABVnTHQtS FLEAM UV " yas saw tea itrirtbiniH Is Hth ms*. - —------—•
