Rensselaer Republican, Volume 14, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 June 1882 — Bucklin’s Arnica Salve. [ARTICLE]
Bucklin’s Arnica Salve.
The greatest attraction Ib the tew sct. counter at F. J. Sears & f kin’s. Eger Bros, are here to stay, now oiind that, if yon please. St. Louis White Lead—guaranteed pure and to give perfect satisfaction—at Learning's. Come! Come! Come! Everybody come and secure yourself a aice Hat before the 4th of July, at f Laßue & Crane’s. 1 Have you tried the La Cozadora * 3igar? No? Then you know nothing about the'greatest pleasure of i ife. Just buy one of Bun Leam- • mg and be happy. The finest and most complete issortment of Millinery and Fancy 3oods ever brought to Rensselaer, it Laßue & Crane’s. r The nicest thing out is those fine i Dresses that Laßue & Crane are , making by the dozen. Call and ixamine and bring your sewing of ill kinds. [ Laßue & Crane respectfully incite the ladies of Rensselaer and vicinity to call and examine their tine lot of Millinery and Fancy doods. When you come to town don’t corget to bring your jug with you, md get some machine Oil, —you will be sure to need it during hardest— Learning has the best, and jells it cheap.
Work on the Chicago and Indimapolis Ail Line is again moving iloog briskly, but that the road will ae in condition to run through from Chicago to Indianapolis, by July 1, is nardly probable. It is intimated that Dr. Standford is now pushing the project, who is making an excellent record as a railroad man. To him is greatly due the improvement to the road-bed and equipments of the Louisville, New Albany and Chicago road, which has come to be a valuable railroad property,and will be more valuable when the Doctor gets his Louisville extension to a connection with Cincinnati Southern completed. —Indianapolis Journal.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Sait Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns and a ll Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piies. It is guaaanteed to give satisfaction, or money Trice 25 cents per box. For Sale By lines & Meyer.
In the North American Review for July, the leading article is a profound and sympathetic study of “.Emerson as a Poet”, by Edwin P. Whipple. The author has ly a word to say about forms anti modes of expression, and cheerfully concedes that Emerson had command of only two or three metres; but he brings all the resources of his extraordinary critical acumen to prove that as a seer, as one who has intuition of the deeper truths of nature and the moral universe, in short, as a poet in the highest sense of the word, Emerson must take rank with tne greatest geniuses of all time. In “Hydraulic Pressure iu Wall Street”, a writer who withholds his name but who manifestly is no novice, exposes many of the tricks and devioes by means of which fictitious values are created, and the unwary lured daily to ruiu. Desire Charnay contributes the eleventh article in the series on “The Ruins of Central America,” paid records the crowning triumph of his exploring expeditions, namely, the discovery of a great ruined city in iht hitherto unexplored country of the Lacandones, Guatemala. There are two papers on ithe oivil service question: one, “The Things Which Remain,’' by Gail Hamilton, who labors to relieve the civil service from the aspersions cast upon ti on account of Guiteau’s crime; the other, “The Business of the Office-Seeker,” by Richard Grant White, who forcibly portrays the moral ills that come from the perennial struggle for place. Finally, Francis Marion Crawford, son of the eminent American sculptor, writes of “False Taste in Ait,” and indicates certain directions in which art culture be developed under the conditions of life existing in the United States, Tne Review is for sale by booksellers And newsdealers generally.
TnrnAKCB Pbog&amnk.—The regular meeting of the Rensselaer Blue RiMton TernperaaeeUnton will he held est the Cwrt House, Friday evening, Jane 23d, 1882. The following is the programme ot exercises: 1— Song by the choir. 2 Prayer by Rev. Geo. Havens. B—Reading Bcripturei by Min Wright. 4—Song by theebdir. 6—Reading minutes of previous meeting. 6 Opening remarks, by S. Healey. 7 Song by the choir. 8— Remarks by Dr. I. B. Washburn. 9 Bong by the choir. 10— Remarks by Mrs. R. S. Dwiggins. 11— Hung by the choir. 12— Ten minutes recess. 13— Song by choir. 14— Remarks by E. C. Novels. 15— Song by the choir.* 16— Remarks by Gyros J. Brown. 17— Song by the choir. 18— Closing remarks by Chas. ifr Price. 19— Song by the,choir. 20— Benediction by Rev. B P. Ferguson. ' Remarks limited to five minutes. We earnestly ask the members of the choir to be present early. The society will meet on Friday eve ting this week, to accommodate Eastern Star Chapter. Alfred Thompson, President. Nubl* J. York, Secretary.
