People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 November 1893 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Smoke the Mendoza cigar For sale everywhere. Read our great offer. Two papapers for the price of one. A New York firm is building twelve locomotives for the Chilean government.

There are said to be nearly 450 varieties of trees in the Brazilian state of Amazonas. Advertised letters: Mr. Peter Andrew, Miss Mary Boulder, MisS Luella Ogborn, Mrs. Ella Porter.

Humphrey’s Specifics cure without drugging, purging or reducing the system, find are in fact and deed the soverign remedies of the world. □ James Frazier, a former Remingtonian, was found dead in his room at a Chicago boarding house last week. It is supposed he.committed suicide.

Have you any books, papers or magazines you want bound? The Pilot will take your periodicals and have them bound in first class style at lowest prices. The last days of the World’s Fair was a harvest for pickpockets and thieves. Reports went in to police headquarters by the dozens of cases of robberies of all kinds. . -

A. Leopold made quite an improvement last week on the east side of his building occupied by Ellis & Murray, by placing a stone curbing the entire length of the brick sidewalk.

Little vegetable health producers: De Witts Little Early Risers cure malarious disorders and regulate the stomach and bowels, which prevents headache and dizziness.-A. F. Long & Co. We still want a few more regular correspondents over the county. We would like to hear from Remington, Medaryville and other points. Send us the news and we will thank you for it. C. B. Stewart was on a tour of inspection of chimneys this week. This is a very important thing that every property owner and tenant should see to before putting up their stoves for the winter. F. J. Sears & Co., successors to Dwiggins Bros.’ & Co., are in the field prepared to loan money cheaper than the cheapest. Consult your interest and do not fail to call on them before borrowing elsewhere. 18-4 t

John Brown, the prosecuting attorney, wishes us to say for the benefit of those who read the bow-legged Rensselaer Republican, that he is not bald headed and that he can go to a real good show if he wants to.—Fowler Leader.

We have received a large number of extra copies of the American Farmer and Farming News, which we would like to distribute among our subscribers. Call and get a copy. This js the paper we are offering as a premium to the Pilot. Read the offer we make you in another column.

Never was there as much hay shipped from this place as has been shipped this fall, prices being uncommonly good. Farmers have let every straw go that they thought they could possibly spare. Should the winter be long and severe, such a call for hay as we have not heard for years -will be made in the spring.

“There was a petrified man on exhibition here,” says the Greenwood Era. Every town has got ’em. They undertake to do business without advertising. , They oppose all progressive improvements. They contribute nothing to build up the city or town in which they reside. As Burke says, the cold, dry, petrific of a false and unfeeling philosophy.’’ —Martinsville Gazette.

The Adrian (Mich.) Times not long since received the following epistle from a fellow who was languishing in the city cooler: “Retreat of St. Wilson.—We, the undersigned philosophers, having for a season retired from the pomps and vanities of this wicked world, for the purpose of meditation and improvement of mind, will be grateful for any old exchanges of your esteemed paper which will tend to the above laudable object. (Signed) Socrates Philoden and eleven other philosophers.”