People's Pilot, Volume 6, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 November 1896 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 6 [ADVERTISEMENT]
MM I fffjp f Fwl 1 miliHHffmr ' r 1 Hit{l}(| 11 |1 fi iTD.Tr ■yVV-' I vfllililllTTmllU j t f -sa i MI IHI mm c^ Fifty Years Ago. This is the stamp that the letter bore Which carried the story far and wide, Of certain core for the loathsome sore That Rubbled up from the tainted tide Of the blood below. And *twas Ayer’s name And his sarsaparilla, that all now, know, That was just beginning its fight of fame With its cures of go years ago. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is the original sarsaparilla. It has behind it a reoord for cures unequalled by any blood purifying compound. It is the only sarsaparilla honored by a medal at the World’s Fair of 1893. Others imitate the remedy; they can’t imitate the reoord: SO Years of Curea^ Master George, son of Mrs. Lottie George, has gone to Chicago to t£ke a position as collector for a steam laundry. McClure’s Magazine for December will contain an a.ount of Nansen’s hard adventures in getting 195 miles nearer the North Pole than any other man. It will be written by Cyrus C. Adams of the New York Sun, one of the best geographical authorities in the country; and it will be illustrated withpotraits of Nansen and his associates, views of his ship within and without, and other pictures. 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 has often averted long and perhaps fatal bilious fevers. No medicine will act more surely in counteracting and freeing the system from the malaria poison. Headache, indigestion, constipation, dizziness yield to Electric Bitters, 50 cents and 81.00 per bottle at *. B. Meyer’s drug store.
In the December Arena will be found Part X of Prof. Frank Parson’s series of articles on “The Telegraph Monopoly,” which are being so widely read and deeply pondered throughout the country. They are crammed with “facts, factß facts,” and their logic is luminous and incontrovertible, while amid the shower ] of sledgehammer blows every once in q while sparkles a gem of hummor that, not only tickles the reader’s risibilities but drives the argument home. Part X , deals with the experience of England in the matter of telegraphs. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous ; surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure manufac- • tured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying" ~ Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. by Druggists, price 75c per bottle.
Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly for December. Prank Leslie,s Popular Monthly is the first of the Christmas magazines to appear, and it is in every respect a beautiful number. Under the title “A Magic Island,” Beatriz B. de Luna writes entertainingly of the picturesque Catalinas of California; Cornell University described by Herbert Crombie Howe in the 1, second paper of the profusely illustrated series on “American Universities am} Colleges;” Major-General O. O. Howard tells something of the “Character and Campaigns of General Robert E. Lee,” and among the illustrations to this article is the last port 1 ait of the great Confederate; there is an interesting paper on pottery by Lawrence Mendenhallan excellent Christmas story is contributed by Margaret E. Sangster; in “Canoeing Down the Rhine,” Rochefart Calhoun takes the readers pleasantly from Basel to Heidelberg; Francis Wilson’s new play ‘Half a King, is described and pictured with portraits and views of the principal scenes; Varina Anne Jeffereon Davis, the “Daughter ol the Confederacy,” has something to say of the preposed Battle Abbey of the South; and there are numerous short stories and poems, and an attractive young folks’ department More than the usual one hundred illustrations are given in this number. ipt
