People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 July 1894 — Feed and Boarding Stable. [ARTICLE]
Feed and Boarding Stable.
I wish to aiiifoiihCb that f am now located in tile barn formerly occupied by Robert Randle; atid am rhaitifijf feeding dnd bearding horses a speolalty. I also liavS a few livery rigs to let at reasonable prices! Please give tne a
Bali.
W. E. Overton.
Urge reduction to 1 per cent per annum of legal interest. Insist on passage, of stay laws to prevent collections till consent to lowering of usury rates. —San Francisco Press.
A horse kicked Hi Si Shafer bf the Ereeinyei* HOuOe; Middle burg, N. Y. on the knee, which laid him up in bed and caused the knee joint to become stiff. A friend recommended him to use Cnamberlain’s Pain Balm, which he did, and in two days was able to be around. Mr. Shafer has recommended it to many others and says it is excel* lent for any kind of a brtiise Of Sprain. This same reffiecly is also famous for its bureS of rheumatism. For sale by F. B; Meyer, Druggist.
There are no usurers in the Populist party. And in this connection it is proper to say there are none in heaven. They are all in hell and in the old parties.—Ohio Populist.
Small iu size, great in results: De Witt’s Little Early Risers. Best pill for Constipation, best for Sick Headache, best for Sour Stomach. Do you wish to encourage homemaking? If so, how would a state law do exempting a home worth, say SI,OOO, from all taxation, for every family?—Kansas Commoner.
All the talk in the world will not convince you so quickly as one trial of De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve for Scalds, Burns, Bruises, Skin Affections and Piles. The democratic executive committee of Panola county, Texas, has invited the colored voters into their primaries. Wonderful change!—Grand View (Tex.) Sentinel. “There is a Salve for every wound.” We refer to De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve, cures burns, bruises, cuts, indolent spres, as a local application in the nostrils it cures catarrh, and always cures piles. The Pilot from now until Dec. 1, for only 25 cents,
