Jasper Republican, Volume 2, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 December 1875 — Sehenck’s Mandrake Fills [ARTICLE]
Sehenck’s Mandrake Fills
will be fonnd to possess those qualities necessary to the total eradication of all billons attacks, prompt to start the secretions of the liver, and give a healthy tone to the entire system. Indeed, it is no ordinary discovery in medical science to have invented a remedy for these stubborn complaints, which develop all the results produced by a heretofore free use of calomel, a mineral justly dreaded by mankind, and acknowledged to be destructive in the extreme to the human system. That the properties of certain vegetables comprise all the virtues of calomel without its injurious tendencies is now an admitted fact, rendered Indisputable by stientifle researches; and those who use the Mandrake Fills will be fully satisfied that the best medicines are those provided by nature in the common herbs and roots of the fields. These pills open the bowels and correct all bilious derangements without salivation or any of the injurious effects of calomel or other poisons. The secretion of Idle Is promoted by these pills, as will be seen by the altered color of the stools and disappearing of the sallow complexion and cleansing of the tongue. Ample directions for use accompany each box of pills. Prepared only by J. H. Schenck ft Bon, at their principal office, comer Sixth and Arch streets, Philadelphia, and for sale by all druggists and dealers. Price 26 cents per box. Poultry Argus. —This old, reliable poultry journal is now the leading jonmal of its class in the West. If yon want to make 200 per cent, on an investment of $1.03, subscribe for the Abgus. It will give you in each number practical advice and information relative to breeding and rearing poultry worth ten times the subscription price. It has absorbed the North- Western and the Fancier's Gazette, and gives more reading matter for the money than any journal published. Each number is finely illustrated with splendid engravings of the most popular breeds of poultry. No one who has a dozen fowls can afford to do without it. A sample copy will only cost yon ten cents. Send for it at once; it will pay you. No attention paid to postal-cards requesting sample copies. Subscription price only SI.OO per year. Address Uuaib ft Clinton, Polo, 111. *
Tiib Chbapbst, Thb Largest, Thb Best. —What more can be desired? When obtained in combination it is rare, yet the prospectus of Demorest's Monthly Magazine, to be found in our advertising columns, offers the best family magazine published, and premiums that are valuable beyond precedent. This magazine claims the attention of every household for its valuable and varied contents. Do not fail to observe the extraordinary offer of the value of sls to each subscriber as a premium. * Premature Loss of thb Hair, which is so common nowadays, may be entirely prevented by the use of Burnett’s Cocoaine. It has been used in thousands of cases where the hair was coming out in handfuls, and has never failed to arrest its decay and to promote a healthy and vigorous growth. It is at the same time unrivaled as a dressing for the liair. A single application will render it soft and glossy for several days. Gentian was our grandmothers’ hobby for * tonic, and no bitter would be considered complete without it; hence it enters into nearly all. But experience has proved that it is injurious to the stomach if frequently used. A far better tonic is found in (fuarana Bitters. Farmers and stock-raisers have frequently told us that they have seen very good results from giving Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders to cows and swine before and after they drop their young. The powders put them in good condition and give them strength to care and provide for the sucklings- . We have often wondered whether there is a person in the country who does not know and appreciate the value of Johnson's Anodyne lAniwent as a family medicine. It is adapted to most all purposes, and is the best pain-destroyer that can be used. Bervant: “I suppose, ma’am, I shall not have to wait at table?” Lady: “Oh, no! I want a housemaid.” Servant: “I suppose, ma’am, I shall not have to make the beds?” Lady (surprised, but composedly): “Certainly not I” Servant (thinking (he place will suit): “ And I suppose, ma’am, I shall not he obliged to answer the door?” Lady: “Of course notl The fact is, I want a servant to look at, and I don’t think you’ll dol”— Punch It’s not Artemas Ward’s will which is being contested in Detroit. Artemas was no impecunious rolling-mill owner who didn’t leave enough to go round among his relatives. Oh! no. He was a reporter and newspaper man. The Stupendous fortune which he thereby realized was enough to make every relation independently rich and leave no cause for family quarrel in its division.— Chicago Times Riel, of the Manitoban rebellion notoriety, is now a frook-keeper in St. Paul.
A Valuable Fapeb.—The annou neement of the Toledo (<X) Blade, published elsewhere, will be of especial interest to all lovers of good literature. The Blase has beof*tbe West, but of the whole country, an J as a family paper has no superior. Unusual opportunities are offered for obtaining a beautiful map of the United States, Smith's Bible Dictionary or “Webster's Unabridged;” PBEBOHAL;— George F. Gardner , South VsdUgo.Cal.—" l used the SIMMONS’ LIVER REGULATOR quite E while in Ohio, ahd found it gave me much relief. I now require* a medicine of the same nature, but can find nothing here that is as good.” When you go to Chicago stop at the “ Barnes House,” corner of Randolph and Canal streets. The fare is excellent and everything in the honse is new. Only $1.50 to $2.00 per day for transient
