Rensselaer Republican, Volume 14, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 May 1882 — Its Star Still Ascending [ARTICLE]

Its Star Still Ascending

Ip a recent, call upon Mr. W. H. McAllister. 206 Front street, general agent for the sale of the Star Chewing Tobacco, he thus spoke to one of our reporters: “I was tortured with pain from acute rheumatism, and cared not whether I lived or died. I tried St. Jacobs Oil,— just two applications of which entirely cured me'—San Franciscn(Cal,)Call,

Matching: “What colored fra m will you have, ma’am?” inquired a shopman of a lady who had called to have her prospective husband’s picture framed. “Well, you ought to know more about it than I,” was the lady’s reply. “I want a frame that will match the picture.” “Ob, of course, ma’am,” said the dealer, selecting one from the large assortment. “How would a green one do?” That man has never discovered to this day why that woman got out so quickly, leaving the door on a wide jar.—Yonkers Statesman. Ex-Sanitary Com Kutus K. Hire man,of New Orleans, was cured of a severe attack of rheumatism by St. Jacobs Oil, so we see by an item in the Columbus (Ga.) Enquirer-Sun, News has been received at St. Paul from White Bear Lake, of the probable drowning, from a sailboat, of C. D. W. Young, auditor of the Chicago, St. Paul & Omaha railroad, Stewart Moore, chief clerk in the freight office of the Northern Pacific railroad, both of St. Paul, and C. C. Gossack, of Shakopee.