People's Pilot, Volume 5, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 December 1895 — Electric Bitters. [ARTICLE]

Electric Bitters.

Electric Bitters is a medicine suited for any season, but perhaps more generally needed, when the languid exhausted feeling prevails, when the liver is torpid and sluggish and the need of a tonic and alterative is felt. A prompt use of this medicine has often averted long and perhaps fatal bilious fevers. No medicine will act more surely in counteracting and freeing the system from the malarial poison. Headache, Indigestion, Constipation. Dizziness yield to Electric Bitters. 50c. and 1.00 per bottle at Frank B. Meyer’s Drug Store. Piles of people have piles, but DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve will cure them. When promptly applied it cures scalds and bums without the slightest pain. Long, Druggist. ■.»

See Fred Phillips’ line of percale, negligee, madress cloth and all the latest novelties in fine shirts. Mrs. Alfred Hoover will spend the holidays with her parents in Boone county, while her good husband remains at home to wrestle the pots and kettles. De Witt’s Little Early Risers for biliousness, indigestion, constipation. A small pill, a prompt cure. Long, Druggist. The window dresser at Ellis & Murray’s, Chase, has done himself credit for the very pleasing appearance of the front window. Fred Phillips has received his line of samples and is now ready to take orders for suits, overcoats, pants, and shirts, made to measurement. His line embraces all the latest styles and fashions, prices no higher than for ready-made goods. Office with Val Seib, opposite the “old court house.” One Minute Cough Cure is rightly named. It affords instant relief from suffering when afflicted with a severe cough or cold. It acts on the throat, bronchial tubes, and lungs and never fails to give immediate relief. Long Druggist. Rev. M. R. Paradis resumed his French class last week. They meet Mondays and Fridays with the view of acquiring the language to be able to visit the Paris Exposition in 1900.

From the German Christmas come ‘ ‘ Santa Clans’ ’ and ‘ * Kris Kringle. ’' The latter is a corruption of Christldndlein, or Christ ohild, of whom they have the beautiful fable that with his own bands he places Christmas toys in the stockings of good children, while in the stockings of the bad ones a birch rod is plaoed by one “Pelsniohol,” literally “Nicholas with the fur”—that is, St Nicholas dressed in fur. The dread of getting the rod from old Pelsnichol on Christmas keeps many a German child in order the whole year round.