Jasper Republican, Volume 2, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 January 1876 — The Mamifacturer and Builder. [ARTICLE]

The Mamifacturer and Builder.

edited by Prof. P- H. Van Der Weyde, and published by Austin Black, 87. Park Bow, New York, should be taken by every Manufacturer, Builder, Mechanic,-Architect, and in fact by everyone who desire* to keep posted on the progress being made in Mechanical, Scientific, Architectural and Building matters. Each number is published in large quarto form, profusely illustrated and richly supplied with interesting articles descriptive of the subjects upon which it treats. Designs of houses to suit all classes, the latest improvements in machinery, the newest discoveries in science, innovations in household appliances, article* on domestic economy ana notes and queries are a few of the many attractions offered by the Manufacturer and Builder. The subscription price of this excellent journal is sb low, being but $2.12 per year including postage, that none need complain of not being able to subscribe. The expense Is only about four cents per week, and we do not know where such a small amount can be more profitably employed or bring so large a return as it will if invested in a year’s subscription to the Manufacturer and Builder. Send for a specimen copy to the above address and pass your own judgment , • Schenck's Pulmonic Strut , Ska Weed Tonic and Mandrake Pills.— These deservedly celebrated and popular medicines have effected-* revolution In the healing art, and proved the fallacy of several maxims which have for many years obstructed the progress of medical science. The false supposition that “ Consumption is incurable” deterred physicians from attempting to find remedies for that disease, and pttients afflicted with It reconciled themselves to death without making an effort to escape from a doom which they supposed to be unavoidable. It is now proved, however, that Consumption can be cured, and that it Aos been cured in a very great number wf cases (some of them apparently desperate oues) by Schenck’s Pulmonic Syriip alone; and in other cases by the same medicine in connection with Schenck’s Sea Weed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, one or both, according to the requirements of the case. Dr. Schenck himself, who enjoyed uninterrupted >■ nod health for more than forty years, was supposed, at one time, to be at the very gate of death, his physicians having pronounced his case hopeless, and abandoned him to his fate. He was cured by the aforesaid medicines, and, since his recovery, many thousands similarly affected have used Dr. Schenck’s preparations with the same remarkable success. Full directions accompany each, making it not absolutely necessary to personally see Dr. Schenck unless patients wish their lungs examined, and for this purpose he is professionally at his principal office, comer Sixth and Arch streets, Philadelphia, every Monday, where all letters for advice must be addressed. Schenck's medicines ar* sold by all druggists.