Jasper County Democrat, Volume 5, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 January 1903 — Page 3

THE OLD FOLKS AT HOME

Are Never Without Peruna in the House for Catarrhal Diseases.

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MR. AND MRS. J. 0. ATKINSON, INDEPENDENCE, MO.

UNDER date of January 10, 1807, Dr. Hartman received the following letter: “My wife had been suffering from a complication of diseases for the past 25 years. “Her case had baffled the skill of some ©f the most noted physicians. One of her worst troubles was chronic constipation of several years’ standing. “She also was passing through that most critical period in the life of a woman—change of life. In June, 1805, I wrote to you about her case. You advised a course of Peruna and Manalin, which we at once commenced, and have to say it completely cured her. She firmly believes that she would have been dead only for those wonderful remedies. “About the same time I wrote you about my own case of catarrh, which had been of 25 years’ standing. At times I was almost past going. I commenced to use Peruna according to your instructions, and continued its use for about a year, and it has completely cured me. ••Your remedies do all that you claim for them, and even more. Catarrh cannot exist where Peruna Is taken according to directions. Success to you and your remedies. ” John O. Atkinson.

Take off your hat to an OLD FRIEND. Sixty years of faithful service spent in successfully fighting the ailments of MAN and BEAST justly entitles Mexican Mustang Liniment to A GRAND DIAMOND JUBILEE. It was the STANDARD LINIMENT two generations ago. It is the STANDARD LINIMENT of the present generation. It grow* on one a* an Old Friend ought to grow.

Bjfifi We Pay 4 Per Cent Interest HUrnl on savings accounts, compounded semi-annua'ly. Wr accept deposits of Cleveland, as the center °i * n,an d manne and one i* of the greatest Industrial {:• qn-Til cities of the country, can ijli. Mfwj aafely pay 4 per cent. Ts JA \g Send your money to u« WSIJ-'U * nci ' nsure protection irom Burglar and Fire kisses. Wffijk Tshe Federal Trust Co. CLEVELAND. O. 4% ' Capital.sLsoo.ooo Capsicum Vaseline Put Up in Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or any Other plaster, and will not blister the most delic&ta akin. The pain allaying aud curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will atop the toothache atonoe, and relieve headache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and aafest external oounter lirltant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and atomach and all rheumatic, neuralglo and gouty complaints A trial will prove what we claim, for it, and it will lie found to be invaluable in the household. Many people say •• It U the best of all your preparations, Prlca 16 cents, at all druggists, or other dealers, or by sending this amount to us la postage stamps, we will tend you a tube by mall. No article should be accepted by the public unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is Dot genuine. CHESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO. • 7 State St., New York City. mjjj E s TE RN V? CANADA. TktTMt ArfMofth'a Remark* aklo Agricultural Country art attract lug more attautton than auy othar district iu the world. "TOE GRANARY OF TUI. WORLD.” ••THE LAND OF SUNSHINE.* # Tka NATURAL FEEDING GROUNDS for STOCK. Area under Crap la 1908- 1,9»T,*§0 Acraa. V laid la 1 000—1 1 ?,088,76 & liuahcla. Ahnndancaof Tfatari Fual, IMantiful. Cheap Build* tna Matarlalt Good Orass for pastures am! Hay,a fertile •oil. a aufiotent rainfall, and a ell mule giving an •daquata season of growth. Ilomeatasd Lands or 100 A eras Free: clo-a to Churohaa, bchoois, p ■"districts. •JmVil* At . lM f nd <* h * r literature to flupcrla. tmi dent es I Ottawa. Canada, of N.w Insurance Ill'll; MilwsokssJlVli.t JODunom, Rig Four Uldg., Indianapolis, ind.. Agents for th# Govarnment of < snadA, who will supply you with oaa ti floats giving jrou reduced railway ratee. etc. 10% TO 50% SAVED On all advertised Miningjudustrial & Oil Stocks. NEW MAHKET LK'TTEH BENT KNEE Full of new ideas and valuable money makers. Also bargain list of stocks in too prominent companies. Write to day. Banking House of EMERSON 8l CO. 171 La Salle Street, 35 Naa.au Street Chicago, 111. New York City For sale... Printing Office Outfits ■EHEMSNuieRifeg!

In a letter dated January 1, 1900, Mr. Atkinson says, after five years’ experience with Peruna: “/ will ever continue to speak a good word for Peruna. In my rounds as a traveling man I am a walking advertisement for Peruna and have Induced many people during the past year to use Peruna with the most satisfactory results. lam still cured of catarrh. " John O. Atkinson, Box 272, Independence, Mo. When old age comes on, catarrhal diseases come also. Systemic catarrh is almost universal in old people. This explains tvhy Peruna has become so indispensable to old people. Peruna is their safeguard. Foruna is the only remedy yet devised that meets these cases exactly. Such cases cannot be treated locally; nothing but an effective systemic remedy could cure them. This is exactly what Peruna is. If you do not receive 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 to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.

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Are you satisfied? Are you entirely satisfied with the goods yon buy and with the prices that you puyf Over 2.000.000 people are trading with us and getting their goods at wholesale trie »s. Our 1,000-pago catalogue will be sent on receipt of 15 cents. It tells the story. 1 * CHICAGO S The house that tells the truth. fl L

RRR Rad way’s Ready Relief Cures Haadacha, Tooth at T.a, Neuralgia. Rhwumatlsm, Lumbago, pains and wank pass in the heck, solna or kidneys, pains ground the liver, pleurisy, swelling of the Joints and pains of al) kinds, the application of Iladway'a Ready aeliaf will afford Immediate ease and its cun tinned use for a few

KANSAS MOB HANGS NEGRO.

Murderer of Policeman la Lynched at ‘ ' Pittsburg. Montgomery Godley, a negro who twt> hours before had murdered Policeman Milton Hinkle, was taken from the jail In Pittsburg, Kan., and lynched. The policeman was killed w ith his own revolver, which the negro took while the policeman was fighting a mob of negroes. The mob gathered, overpowered and captured. the officers, took the uegro from the jail and strung him up to a telephone pole. The rope broke and the of his keys to the jail, but he convinced the members of the mob cut his throat and ended his sufferings. A large number of negro men and women from the various mining camps in the vicinity, among them Mont and Joe Godley, brothers, were drinking and carousing at a ball. Hinkle requested them to be quiet. The Godley brothers answered him in an insulting manner and he tried to arrest them. They resisted and Hinkle began his whistle for help. Then he began to use his club in order to protect himself from the onslaught of the crowd. He was holding his own against three of them when Mont Godley grabbed the revolver from the policeman’s scabbard, and, placing the muzzle behind the ear of his victim, pulled the trigger. Other policemen pursued the negroes, all of whom started to run. The Godley brothers were captured, and locked up in the city jail. The news of the murder spread and a crowd gathered at the jail. Leaders were not slow In coming forward and cries of "Hang him!” “Burn him!” were heard on every aide. The mob surged into the corridors and against the jail doors. An attempt was made to rob City Marshal Higgins negro fell to the ground, where one of the mob that they were not in his possession. A crowbar and hammer were giro cured and the jail doors battered and broken open. Godley cursed the mob when its leaders entered the jail, but his nerve left him when he realized death was near. He began to supplicate and beg the officers to protect him, but they were overpowered and guarded by a portion of the mob.

Godley was dragged from the jail into the yard and given a few moments to talk. He told so many conflicting stories about the affair that the mob became Impatient and Lurried him three blocks away from the jail. Procuring a rope the mob banged him to a telephone pole. The rope broke and Godley fell to the ground. Some one in tile crowd cut his* throat, severing the jugular vein. lie was then hanged ngairi. Godley came from Pierce City. Mo., at the time the citizens of that town drove the negroes out of the city, about two years ago. The body was lefi hanging for several hours before it was cut down.

BLOCKS PLAN TO ARBITRATE.

Kaiser Wants 1,700,000 Bolivars Before Allowing Inquiry. Arbitration of Venezuela’s difficulties with the powers of Europe seems farther from achievement now than it has since the first proposal for such a settlement was made. Dispatches from Berlin and Caracas indicate that both President Castro and Germany have imposed almost insurmountable barriers in the way of arbitration. Germany, it is said, takes the position that Venezuela must pay the Kaiser's government 1,700.000 bolivars before it will consent to submit its other claims to The Hague Tribunal. President Castro conditions employment of arbitration on the return to Venezuela of the warships captured by the allies, a feat which is impossible, because the prizes were sunk in the deep Caribbean Sea. Whether these terms apply in ease President Roosevelt becomes arbitrator cannot be learned. The press of Berlin •ays that it is understood that President Roosevelt's undertaking to arbitrate involves an indirect guaranty for the payment of the sum to be awarded.

NEWS FROM OUR COLONIES.

In Samar, P. 1., Inspector Hendorvx of the constabulary was killed by ladroiu s. The reported eruption of the volcano Kilauea, in Hawaii, amounted to nothing. The flurry caused by the temporary recrudescence of cholera at Manila has subsided. Auditor Lawshe figures the loss to the Philippine treasury on account of the depreciation in silver since January at $1,054,000 gold. The Philippines constabulary captured a man named Balghndia, "Prime Minlater" of the northern Katipunan Society, with the seals of the organization, membership blanks nnd valuable records. The Katipunan is a revolutionary society. The Philippine commission and the Treasury Department have arranged to supply the demand for more subsidiary coinage in the Philippines, aud it is expected the new coins will bo ready for Issue at the rate of $1250,000 a month. The denominations are 50, 120, 10, 1 and V* cent, corresponding to coins now iu use there under different naan's. Revenue returns from the Philippine Islands for the first five months of the ©perntion of the tariff show that the receipts do not cover the expenses of collection. It was thought that $500,000 a year would be realized from tlvt? tax on Philippine product* Imported into tbla country, but the total receipts for five months were only $11,194, and at San Francisco only $1,190 was token as custom dues. Among .principal articles on which duty was paid were tobacco, sugar, porcelain, jewelry and manufactures of clothing nnd wood. The annual report of Hen. Sanger, who was inspector general on lien. Chaffee's staff in the 'Philippines, declares that the restoration of the army canteen is necessary to proper discipline and good health of the troops in the Philippine Islands. His figures show Hint a larye proportion of the men use stltnulnnts, nnd he says if these ore not furnished by the government they will resort to the native liquors aig with worse results. ll* say* the American soldier must have a natural outlet for his "superabundance •f energy.”

■ Miss Alice Bailey, oi li Atlanta, Ga., tells how she was permanently cured of inflammation of the ovaries, escaped surgeon’s knife, by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I had suffered for three years with terrible pains at the time of menstruation, and did not know what the trouble was until the doctor pronounced it inflammation of the Ovaries, and proposed an operation. ■“ I felt so weak and sick that I felt ■ure that I could not survive the ordeal. The following- week I read an advertisement in the paper of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ComFound in such an emergency, and so decided to try it. Great was my joy to find that I actually improved after taking two bottles, and in the end I waa cured by it. I had gained eighteen pounds and was in excellent health.” Miss Alice Bailet, 50 North Boulevard Atlanta, Ga. Of about Ittttr proving gtnutnenen cannot bt protueod. The symptoms of inflammation and disease of the ovaries are a dull throbbing pain, accompanied by a sense of tenderness and heat low in the side, with occasional shooting pains. The region of pain sometimes Shows some swelling.

A Bold Theft.

“The greatest scandal! My goodness!" , t “F'revvensake. what is it?” “Why, young Cholly do Smythe robbed Miss Dimples under her very nose!” “Whatl” “Yes; he stole a kiss.”—Philadelphia Stoqmrer.

/Acts pie&,satr\tlyj I Beneficially* Laxative. ,4 / well-informed and to the healthy, because its comS .. ./jpUr’: f ponent parts are simple and wholesome and be- ' cause it acts without disturbing the natural functions, as it is wholly free from every objectionable r jjo&k 'quality or substance. In the process of ***s' . .. i-. manufacturing figs are used, as they are : V: pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal | virtues es Syrup of Figs are obtained from an excellent combination of plants (iyswy known to be medicinally laxative and to V \ }(%& ac * most beneficially. To get its beneficial effects —buy tho genuine—manufactured by the i ,11 -*, ‘S*d\*’FV^r\ci»eo,'Cal. Loviisvill©, Ky. new Vorkifl.Y. For by all. Price- fifty-cents per bottle.

LIVER TONIC . foftcaftigto CANDY CATHARTIC _ jts°- never SOLD IN BULK CURE SSSSHS GUARANTEED UUIIL ache. Indigestion, pimples, pains after Aat- UUfllini! I UlsU Similar ule.TtVl..., \»t*Z Inc, liver trouble, wallow complexion mul ditf&pcai. world. This Is absolute proof of great rncrli, ami our best tnH linen your bowels don’t move regularly yna arr crulng monliu. Wo have faith and sr)l7 AM ARKTN absolutely kvmut* dldfMfN toffthfr. It 1* » * tirtfrlo r fkf chronlp all" if sou are not aatiified, nrtf r uaing one fiOe box* return thaut* mentft and long yearn ofsnfffrliif that come aftcnproi. umil 50c bo* and th« empty bog to ua by mail, or the drvntat No matter what alia you, atari taking t'AH MIrWTH to- from whom youpurchaiedlt, and gat tour monfy barkfor bdOi day. fbr you will never *«t well and be Well all the time |os«. TjeS• y ~ i curutee to euro or money refunded. 4** WIBUSO KMIOV CO. KIW YORK or CHICA4W

WKMi SSSS Thompson’s Eye Water **£!=£ N* NW tka afvtrtluml |g tkla pgfg,

EARLIEST uses of tobacco.

It Waa Considered a Medicine, Both to Smoke and Snuff. Tobacco was first used in Europe as a kind of rude anticeptic and preventer of infection, and in the West Indies, northern America and Africa, the inhaling of the dried and powdered tobacco leaf was practiced long before the herb was known In Europe, according to a writer In the Detroit NewsTribune. The same is probably true of smoking. The use of tobacco was introduced into Europe by a Francescan friar named Ramon Pane, who accompanied Columbus on his second voyage to the West Indies in 1494. He was sent ashore at Cuba In charge of an exploring expedition, and reported on ills return that he had found the natives snuffing this powdered herb, which they did through a short, hollow cane. He introduced the practice into Europe, but it was not until 1560 that the plant was cultivated in Europe. Jean Nicot, who had been British ambassador at Lisbon, began tobacco growing in France in that year, and through this circumstance the herb got its name nicotine. Snuff was first used as a relief from catarrh and stoppages of the nasal passages, and the first personage to make the use of it popular was the famous Catherine de Medici, and her son, Charles IV., also used it as a relief from chronic headache. The great Catherine’s patronage caused snuff to be called “Herbe a la Reine.” It became enormously popular as a preventive In England after the great plague of 1660.

The Sultan's Way.

“Oh, sublime Sultan, father-in-law to the moon and vice-regent of Allah, here is another note from the 'Yankees regarding Miss Stone’s abductors,” said the Vizier as he bowed himself into the Sultan’s presence; “and, supreme one, pardon the expression; but there is generally the devil to pay!” “The devil to pay,” muttered the Sultan, looking up from his ping-pong game; “that’s all right- Promise to pay him just as soon as we settle up with the other powers.”—Baltimore American.

Masculine Acuteness.

“Oh, yes, he adores me. I’ve known it for a fortnight.” “Then what’s bothering you?” “What's bothering me? Why, I’ve got to wait for him to find it out!”— Brooklyn Life.

Immune.

-My!’’ exclaimed the olf h*7 Wfc* was taking her first trolley rid©t “I should think it would he mighty is .gar ous work in’ on these cars all the rtraa Ain’t you ’feared o’ the 'lectricity strikin' ye?” “No’m,” he replied, as he took h< nickel and neglected to ring it up oa til . register, “you see I’m not a good CM ductor.”—Philadelphia Press.

Record of the Past.

The best guarantee of the futor© la the record of the past and over fifty thousand people have publicly testified that Doan’s Kidney Pills have cored them of numerous kidney Ills, fr©m common backache to dangerous diabetes, and all the attendant annoyance© and sufferings from urinary disorders. They have been cured to stay cured. Here is one case: Samuel J. Taylor, a retired carpenter, residing at 312 South Third street, Goshen, Ind., says: “On the 26th day of August, 1897, I made an affidavit before Jacob C. Mann, notary public, stating my experience with Doan’© Kidney Pills. 1 had suffered for thirty years and was compelled at time© t© walk by the aid of crutches, frequently passed gravel and suffered excrutlatlngly. 1 took every medicine on the market that I heard about and some gave me temporary relief. I b©gan taking Doan's Kidney Pill© ©ad the results I gave to the public in th© statement above referred to. At till© time, on the 19th day' of July 1900, X make this further statement that duijlng the five years which have I have had no occasion to use elthel Doan’s Kidney Pills or any other modi icine for my kidneys. The- cure ©ft fected was a permanent one.” A FREE TRIAL of this great kldngy medicine which cured Mr. Taylor wfll be mailed on application to any part of the U. S. Address Foster- Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists, 60c per box.

Ungraterul

Grandpa—-How did you like the ride on grandpa’s knee, Ethel? Ethel —Very much, grandpa; but I had a ride on a real donkey this morning.

C ASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind Yiu Have Always Baaffc! Bears the /if y yTfTZjT Signature of ( /t T YIT fii (l'iT