Jasper County Democrat, Volume 4, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 May 1901 — Page 7

A UNITED STATES MARSHAL Thanks Peruna for His Rapid Recovery From Catarrh. - - A , V\ .*' \in sink mm r EX-UNITED STATES MARSHAL MATTHEWS, OF MISSISSIPPI. Hon. S. S. Matthews, ex-United States Marshal ot Mississippi, in a recent letter to The Peruna Medicine Company of Columbus, Ohio, written from Hazelhurst, Miss., says: “/ am happy to say that I am cured of catarrh and need no more attention from you. It is a great satisfaction that lam able to write you that Pcfuna has in my case done all that you claim, and that I will need no more medicine.**

White House Clocks.

There are clocks Innumerable—historical and commonplace—ln the home of the President of the United States. But one of the clocks Is of American make. It was bought by James Monroe and has always remained In the green room. It keeps Just as good time as Its foreign contemporaries, though in the early days America did not 6hine as a successful clockmaking country. The clock in the blue parlor was once owned by Napoleon Bonaparte, who gave it to Lafayette, who In turn bestowed It upon Washington. It has a frame of alabaster and gilt bronze, and Is wound but once a month. It keeps time to-day as accurately as when it was new. The Lincoln clock is In the red room, and Is made of ebony and gold. It strikes the halves and quarters, as well as the hours. In the room now occupied by Mrs. McKinley is a clock which has been ticking away for thirty years. The clock with which the public is most familiar Is on the stairs leading to the President’s office, and many a weary and anxious waiter has watched Its hands creep relentlessly across the face. It Is modern and commonplace. The private secretary has a clock with a cathedral gong, which Is a good timekeeper.

A Miracle Explained.

Bryant, Mo., May 18.—Tha sensational cure of Mrs. M. A. Gobs, of this place, has sent a ripple of excitement all over Douglas County, and Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the remedy In question, are receiving thereby the greatest advertisement any medicine has ever bad In this State" To satisfy the many Inquiries which she finds it Impossible to answer by letter, Mrs. Goss has sent the following statement <pt lief case to the St Louis Globe-Democrat: * "| did not think I could live a day and suffer, as I have lived and suffered for months with Scltftlca and Rheumatism. I used baths and liniments of all kinds. Two physicians treated me, one of them for two months. Nothing helped me In the least I never slept more than fen or fifteen minutes at a time. I was bedfast, and had to lie on one side all the time. I used to wish for death, to deliver me from such torture*. "A friend suggested Dodd’s Kidney Pills, and after 1 had used them a week I began to Improve, and In about four weeks I could sit up In bed. A few days later I walked a quarter of a mile and back. I now do all my own cooking and house work. The pain has entirely left me, and I am a well woman. I have taken altogether sixteen boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's Kidney Pills saved my life. "MRS. M. A. GOSS.” People come for miles to see Mrs. Goss, and hear her wonderful story. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are working marvelous cures In Missouri.

Felt Like a Minister.

"Were yon ever taken for a minister?” asked the soubrette. "No,” said the leading man with the spiritual face, "but I've been treated like one.” "Eh r "I have sometimes been compelled to wait aix or seven months for my salary/’—lndianapolls Press. Plso’a Cure for Consumption Is an Infallible medicine for coughs and colds.— N. W. Bamuel, Ocean Grove, N. J„ Feb. 17,1900.

Cause and Effect.

"I couldn’t find anything at that 9heap hoek counter Jones was bragging sbMt" “Well, recollect he had been'there*”—Exchange.

Value of the Foot Bath.

Doctors who are not too anxious for fees unite in declaring thnt the best way to break up a cold, which certainly disfigures the face of beauty as well as a valuable adjunct in the removal of facial eruptions, the nightly foot bath is invaluable. The largest sweat glands of the body are located in the palms, armpits and soles of the feet. It Is of primary importance that these multitudinous outlets should be unclogged. Where facial eruption exists and the whole attention Is devoted toward the care of the face every pore Is active and open to afford the escape of clogging impurities. This Is all wrong. The feet should be made the gateway for the escape of effete deposits. The temperature of the foot bath should range from 106 and 110 degrees or as hot as can be endured with comfort. Should there exist chronic, profuse and offensive perspiration, add a lump of washing soda to neutralize the acid exudation. The feet should be rubbed briskly to draw the blood down to the extremities. Cool the water before withdrawing the feet, so that they may not become unduly tender. Rub long and thoroughly with a soft towel. Good pedal circulation is a foe to corns and chilblains. Frequent warm foot baths prevent callouses and make walking a pleasure. For beauty and complexion take extraordinary care of the feet

He Caught Her Fairly.

A young man who had been sent by a newspaper to report the proceedings of a political meeting In a neighboring town was occupying his time while on the Journey by writing a letter In shorthand to a brother reporter at home. Having finished the body of the letter, fie proceeded to add a postscript as folows: "P. B.—A rather pretty young woman, by the way, Is sitting on the seat directly, behind me. She seems considerably interested In what I am doing, and I believe she is a stenographer herself, and has rend every word I have written ” “Slrl” exclaimed the young woman, interrupting him indignantly. Then she turned a fiery red and looked the other way.—Youth’s Companion.

Making of a Dachshund.

"Yes, I took that fat png dog of mine ?n board one of the Euclid cars at the square the other evening.” • "Well?" “Well, the car filled up and ran over, and men and women hang on to the rear platform.” "Well?" "Well, when I finally emyged from the car at Lake View and drew that fat png after me, by Jovel I found that he had been squeezed Into a dachshund 1” Cleveland Plain Dealer.

You Can Get Allen’s Foot-Knee FREE.

Write to-day to S. donated, Le Roy, N. Y., for a FRKK sample of Allen's KootKate, a powder to shake Into your shoes. It cures tired, sweating, damp, swollen, acblng feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All druggists sod shoe stores sell It. 33c.

At the Bench Show.

Mr. Dukane—Now, which of all these dogs Is the most Expensive? Mr. Gaswell—Can't say as to that, but I should think that the Skye terrier comes highest. Philadelphia North American.

Private Mailing Card.

Private Mailing Card with colored vlewa of ecenery on the Chicago, Milwaukee and Bt. Paul Railway, sent on receipt of fen (10) cewts in atmnpa. Address, F. A. Miller, Genera) Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111.

Tfce great moltitotre take this remedy without say other advice than the directions to be found upon the bottle Sad in the pamphlets. There are those who prefer, however, to correspond with Dr. Hsrtman during their sickness. To all such he will make prompt and careful answer without charge. Hon. J. P. Crooker, of Buffalo, N. T., who was for years Superintendent of Schools at Buffalo, In a letter dated October 16, writes: 4t l have been a sufferer from

catarrh six or seven years, and after trying many remedies I was induced by a friend to take Peruna. The results have been highly satisfactory. I take pleasure In recommending Peruna to

Hon. J. F. Cbooier, Bupt. Buffalo, N. Y„ Public School*.

any one suffering with catarrh, as my cure Is complete. ** Hon. B. B. Dovlner, Congressman West Virginia, In a letter from Washington, D. C., to The Peruna Medicine'Co., says the following of their catarrh remedy, Peruna: "I Join with my colleagues in the House of Representatives In recommending your excellent remedy, Peruna, as a good tonic and also an effective cure for catarrh.” Mrs. Mary C. Fentress write# from Paradise, Tex., the following: “I think I can say that your good advice and medicine haa cured me of chronic catarrh. I have had no pains In my head since I have taken Peruna. I have been In bad health ever since ‘SO, and have taken a good many medicines which were only of temporary relief. Peruna la the catarrh cure. The Peruna stopped my catarrh of the head so that It did not become chronic, and 1 am very thankful for Dr. Hartman’s advice and medicine.’' Peruna is a specific for all catarrhal diseases. It acts quickly and beneficially upon the Inflamed mucous membrane, tlfus removing (be cause of catarrh. Catarrh Is catarrh wherever located. Catarrh Is essentially the same everywhere. The remedy that will cure catarrh la one situation will cure It’ In all situations. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased te give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of Tfce Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.

Epidemic of Baldness in Japan.

The ladies of Osaka, in Japan, are Is a state of the utmost terror lest they should lose their beautiful hair through a disease which results In baldness. It is not unsual for a fair one to have her hair dressed one day in a most elaborate manner, and a few days later to find every hair come out In the comb This remarkable epidemic prevailed in the Chiba prefecture last spring, and now it Is devastating human beads In Osaka. The disease has also claimed a few victims in Tokio, where tbe police have issued stringent regulations to barben regarding the disinfection of their scl*. sors, combs, razors, etc. The germ of the disease, according to one doctor, is of an ‘‘extremely fine sort, and more dangerous to the hair of women than to that of men.—Yokohama Correspondence Loudon Mall.

A Famous Old House.

The house of Walter Baker A Co., whoee manufactures of cocoa and chocolate have become familiar In the mouth as household words, was established one hundred and twenty-one years ago (1780) on the Neponset River In the old town of Dorcbeater, a suburb of Bostoa. From the little wooden mill, "by the rude bridge that arched the flood.” where the enterprise was first started, there has grown up the largest Industrial establishment of the kind In the world. It might be eald that, while. other manufacturers come and go, Walter Baker A Co. go on forever. What Is the secret of their greet succesiT It ts a very simple one. They have won and held the confidence of the great and constantly Increasing body of consumer* by always maintaining the highest standard In the quality of their cocoa and chocolate preparations, and telling them at the lowest price for which unadulterated article* of good quality can be put upon the market. They welcome honest competition; but they feel justified In denouncing In the strongest terms the fraudulent methods by which Inferior preparations ere palmed off on customer* who aik for and suppose they are getting the genuine article*. The best grocers refuse to handle such goods, not alone for the reason that. In the long run, It doesn't pay to do It, but because their tense of fair dealing will not permit them to aid In the sale of goods that defraud their customer* and Injure honest manufacturers. Every package of the goods made by tha Walter Baker Company bears the wellknown trade-mark, “La Belle Chocolatlere,” and their place of manufacture “Dorchester, Haas.” Housekeepers are advised to examine their purchases, an A make sure that other goods have sot been substituted. An attractive little book of "Choice Recipes" will be mailed free to any housekeeper who sends her name and address to Walter Baker A Co., Ltd., 158 State Street, Boston, Mass.

Their Family Silver.

“Per the land’s sake!” said the woman In the blue Mother Hubbard as she fastened the clothesline to the division fence, “what do you think of them Joneses tollin' around that the burglars got In their houae an' atole the family silver? Family silver! Huh!” “It's so, though,” said the woman In the next lot. "They had. a dollar an' a quarter piled on the mantelpiece for the grocery bill, an’ It was all in silver.’’—lndianapolis Press.

What Do the Children Drink?

Don't give them tea or coffee. Have yon tried the new food drink called GRAIN-O? It la delicious and nourishing and take* the place of coffee. The more Graln-O yon give the children the more health you distribute througb their systems. Grain-0 Is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tsstea like the choice grades of coffee, but costa about % a* much. All grocers sell it 15c ana 25c. Rosewood end mahogany are so plentiful In Mexico that some of the copper mines there are timbered with rosewood, while mahogany is used as fuel for the engines.

A Fable.

There was once an astute manager of k dramatic company which was playing to about $lO a night. Now, the astute manager argued to himself: “There will have to be something doing here pretty suddenly, or It will be a case of hie to the friendly inn, for we cannot eat the papier-m&che turkey.” So he put Out the S. R. O. sign and refused to let any one into the theater that evening. Next day there was a line of people reaching from the box office to the edge of town. Moral—ls you carry something besides hair under your hat you do not need to dramatize a novel or take milk baths.— Baltimore American.

Pronounce It.

Sigridur Jonsdottir, Kirmarstodum, Reykholasveit, Bardastrandarsyslu, Iceland, Europe. This is the address given in an order for Dodd’s Kidney Pills received and filled by the Dsdds Medicine Company of Buffalo on April 16. S*<ls unique direction means, that to flfach the sick people of Iceland, the parcel must travel to New York, then to London, England,.then northwest to Greenland, to be landed finally on the lonely island at the edge of the Arctic Circle. This Is a pointed Illustration of how United States goods find their way to the remotest corners cf the earth. America to-day produces better medicines, as well as better manufactured articles, than any other country in the world, and this fact accounts for the demand for Dodd’s Kidney Pills from every partaof the known universe.

One Strong Reason.

Magistrate—The assault you have committed on your poor wife la a most brutal one. Do you know of any reason why I should not send you to prison? Prisoner—ls you do, your honor, it will break up our honeymoon.—New York Truth.

/ Starts the A/ea/ \ m if Voi/ (i«e a \ f Wickless FLAME | 1 Oil Slove f

—AND HIS “TUMMY”! J fijb Small boys, and many times large ones, I and occasionally girls, too, big and little, IjHM ~ *uffer terribly from convulsive pains or 'O//t v\ “cramps” in the bowels and stomachr—b) pain so violent that it “doubles up” the ji- Vtul ones and makes it imposstme far Some people caH h colic, but mod hoocst, W//IygyLs>7 I ( plain-spoken people call h “belly-ache" and very 1 1 I Jft \ f ro P er *Tf f°* *ke seat of the trouble b In the Ise ¥_ \ I bowels, and caused by the violent efforts of the WiflS. JFL rly \ bowel* to rid themselves of something which My doesn't belong there. The small boy usually / V\V mto It from over-eating or from eating forbidden If /V\ \ fmm S fruit, and suffers mostly in the summer time. If I \l? /A.l'Sk ' It's spring now, and “in times of peace, prepase I I M f°r war." Let' the boys and girls and the big I i MrSt \ j 1 fl W/ /A folks, too, for that matter, dean out the clogged f ' Wf/rrUJ r/ f W/\ channels filled with winter bile and putrid undiLJW'flfflvJLr fftflted food, strengthen the 30-feet of bowel r ICI W— * ’ * canal, Uvcn up the liver, and “summer beDyache* will have no terrors. they won't batmen. The way to make the body ache-proof is to urn sweet, Lgrant CASCARETS, the perfect system cleaners and bowel strengthened Pot fear that anybody in the family should ever be attacked by belly-ache, keep a box of CASCARETS in the house always, and remember that all paint tad troubles in your insides arc LIVER TONIC 25c * NEVER ALL druggists. SOLD IN BULK.

Kail bowel trouble*, appendicitis. Ml- ■ oneness, bed breath, bat blood, wind on tbs stomach, bloataA bowels, root Month, headache, Indigestion, pimples. Mine after eating, liver trouble, sallow complexion And dullness, when roar ho we Is don't move regular If jron are getting sick. Constipation kills nor. people than all other diseases together. It Is a starter (or the chronic aliments and long fears of tfprtsg that corns afterwards. No matter what nils. Ton, start taking CAICARnt to-day, (or feu will never got will and bo wall all tha UMenntf) yen pnt your bowels right. Take our advice; start With OABOARRTt to-day. under an abaalate gaarantoo to enre or usonsy refunded. m

Western Canada's December Weather Equal to that of May In Minnesota.

To the Editor—Thomas Regan and O. Collins, of Eden Valley, Minn., went out to Western Canada last December as delegates, to look over the grazing and grain lands that are being offered at such low prices and reasonable terms. This is what they say: “We arrived in Calgary about the 20th December, and although we bad left winter In Minnesota and Manitoba, we were surprised to find beautiful warm weather at this point, quite equal to what we have In May In Minnesota. There was no snow nor/traee of winter to be seen, and the climate was, really splendid. Horses, cattle and sheep were running out, in prime condition, with plenty of feed on the prairie, and really better than that of ours stabled lb the South. We are impress* ed with this country as one of the finest mixed farming countries w T e have ever seen. The immense tracts of fertile lands well sheltered and abundantly watered leave nothing to be desired. Leaving Alberta, we returned east and visited the Yorkton district in Asslniboia. We drove out about ten miles at this point, and were highly pleased with the splendid samples of grain we were able to see, wheat yielding twenty-five bushels, oats sixty bushels. Roots were also good specimens. From what we have seen, we have decided to throw in our lot with the Yorktoners—satisfied that this part of the country will furnish good opportunities for any one anxious to make the best of a really good country. Any agent of the Canadian government, whose advertisement appears elsewhere in the columns of your paper, will give you full particulars of the new districts being opened out this year In Asslniboia and Saskatchewan, Yours truly, OLD READER. The United States is ahead of all other countries in the art of making artificial teeth. A recent computation makes the number of artificial teeth here as high as 6,000,000 annually.

GUARANTEED ■taller emdtetao la .be world. teabwloto »r»Jd assay rsehaesaTS» boy today, two oOe kom, llro meats Mr, basest trial, as per etaae dtrsetleei. nadir pea ere as* eatltded. after aplaeeee Me bee.retaratbeoaamdsAd bee sad the eaiptp halo as hr well, mlkt dr entet frm wheat no eoroboeed M, oed set year mosey kwkkr tern Sfe-sssfSlSP

In the Theater.

“Dear me, I can’t hear a Ward tkat those actors are saying.” “You have no cause for complaint.""* New York Herald.

If Ton Have Dyspepsia

Band no money, bat writa Dr. Skoop, Raolne, Vk Box 149, for «ix Oottlae of Dr. Shoop’a R»ft«taXr«| 31 praas paid. If cared, pay *6.60- if not, it la boa. In London no fewer than 188,000 p*s> pie live four and more to the room, aaC of these 3,000 are packed to the exteak of eight or more to the room.

FRAGRANT S©22SSST i perfect liquid dentifrice fer tie Teeth and Mouth New Size SOZODONT LIQUID, 25c MWtPm, SOZODONTTOOTH POWDER, 25c /h* Urge LIQUID and POWDER, 75c §m W At all Stores, or by Mail for the prioe. HALL&RUCKEL, Now York. H EXCURSION RATES to Waatorn Canada and pan ticulsra os to how te aeoora 160 acre* as the beat Wm* growing land on the Oentt rca'.XToThyilS temlant ot ImxugnitMh Ottawa, Canada, ortne dir ducted excnraiona will laare St. Aral. Mi on tkaTal and 8d Tueaday in each month, and apaclally law rasa* on all lineaof railway era being quoted for axourOedi leaving St. Pant on March 28th and April 4th, f*r Haa* lobe, Aaainlboia, Saskatchewan and Alberto. Write to F. l’edley, Supt Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or the undersigned, who will mall M atlase*. pamphlets, etc., free of cost: C. J. Breamton, 1223 Mnnndnock Hide.. Chicago; N. Bnrtk&p* mew, 306 6th St., Dea Moines. Iowa; M. V. Me. Innes, No. 2 Merrill Block, Detroit, Mloh,l 1, Grieve, Saginaw. Mich.: T. O. Currie, l/ftiw Insurance Building, Milwaukee, Wl»,i X f. Holmes, Indianapolis, Ind., Agents for tag flat l eminent of Canada. (ST’Special Excursions to Western Canada dating March and April. C. N. U. No. 20-1901 ‘ WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE U? yea taw th< advertlseaeat la this gayar.