Rensselaer Republican, Volume 16, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 April 1884 — Page 7
Sacred Flowers.
The lily deservedly stands first among sacred flowers, for from the birth of history until the present day she has never wanted worshipers 1 The word is of Syrian origin, and means “evening.” It was the personification of the moonlight, and no flower could so beautifully express this idea as the pale, white, golden-hearted water-lily. It has always been a subject of dispute what particular kind of lily is alluded to in the Sermon on the Moujit. If (as it is generally supposed) Cnrist delivered the memorable discourse in the spring of the year, then, at that season, the mountains of Galilee and the shores of the Levant are all glorious with the searlet, turban-like flowers of the Martagou lily. A white species, striped with purple,, is also common in Judea, and this, as combining the idea of majesty and purity, has received the suffrages of manv. It could not have been, however, the small species known, to ns as the Lily of the Valley, because this fairy-like flower, with its little illumination lamps, grows only in cold or temperate climates. . There is an old legend which says that Eve brought the rose out of Eden with her. It has always been a favorite flower with the Jews, and Solomon likens Christ to the Bose of Sharon. In later times the Rose of Jericho has usurped the place of affection so long held by that of Sharon. This rose is a native of Arabia Petrea, and opens only in fine weather. It also possesses, in a remarkable degree, a reviving power, and can recover its life when to all appearances dead; hence the Jews use it as the symbol of resurrection. A Mexican plant possessing the same wonderful tenacity of life is constantly for sale on the streets of New York, so that many must have become familiar with this phenomenon. The white rose has always been sacred to the Virgin Mary, and, mingled with the cross, it was the device of Luther and also of the Rosicrucians (sub rosa crux). The red rose is the emblem of love and also of silence, because Cupid gave it to Harpocrates, the god of silence, in order to bribe him not to reveal any of the indiscretions of his mother; hence it was often placed over the doors of guest rooms to signify that perfect freedom of conversation might be indulged “under the rose,” for nothing so said was to be repeated. And, as stratagem delights in silence as well as love, the Romans placed it on their shields. Over Greek, Roman, and Chinese graves it is a frequent emblem, and the Turks will not suffer a red one to lie on the ground since the day it was colored by the blood of Mohammed. The Arabians have a legend of a garden of roses planted by King Shaddad, and now buried in the desert, which is analogous in many respects to the Garden of Eden. Throughout Southern and Central Europe it is used in love spells and divinations. One common German superstition is to name rose leaves and then throw them into a basin of clean water. The leaf which sinks last is to be the husband or wife of the inquirer. Another superstition is to throw rose leaves on to hot coals; the burning fragrance is thought to attract - good fortune. White roses blooming at an unexpected time are, B believed in England to denote a death in the family of the owner, and red ones a marriage. As the lily is the emblem of France, so the rose is of England, where it assumes more of a historical than sacred character.
A Preferred Creditor.
“Good mawnin’, Uncle Pete,” said Jake Snow; “I hope yon’s prosperin’ an’ kin pay me dat ar’ sebenty-fibe cents w’at you owes me* sence las’ C’rismas. ” “Sorry to denounce, civile, dat de finanshal sitewation am werry embarrassing Use gone inter likerdashin. ” “Am dat so? Sho! wha’r yer git de licker?” “Huh! Tears ter me you’s kinder off de queschun. I means dat owin’ ter de onsartin eondishun ob de pecun’ry affaihs, an’ de pressure ob cred’ters, Pse made a ’ainement. ” “W’at’s dat ter do wid yer payin’ me dat sebenty-fibe cents?” “Hit means dat depropahtyhabgone into de han’s ob de rcceiber, fur de benefit ob de perferred cred’ters an’ dat I doan pay no mo’ ole debts.” “I doan’ see w’at dat ’smement’s got ter do wid my sebenty-fibe cents. ” “Dat’s ’cause you ain’t eddicated an’ ‘"darf-'mdahstanMe” ■ob de way de caperiillists do bisnis. See heah! I’ll jess ’splain fur de incongruity ob yo’ intellect You knows w’at Ifbil’tiesis? ~ ~ “Yes, if it hab anything ter do wid yo’lyin’’bout dat bill ob mine.” “Huh! Dar you goes off de queschun ag’in. I see dat I’ll hab to . narrate. Li’bil’ties am w’at you doan’ pay de cred’ters, an’ assets am w’at you doan’ hab. Now, see heah, I ’p’ints a receiber, dat’s my wife, an’ I makes her a perfehred cred’ter an’ she takes de cabin. Den I makes my darter Susan a perfehred cred’ter, an’ she takes de cow. Den I makes my darter Sally a perfehred cred’ter, an’ she takes de pig. Den my son, Sam, he cum in as a perfehred cred’ter, an’ he takes de yaller dog. Den I doan’ hab nufiin lef’ but a doll ah an’ foah bits, an’ I had to ’sine dat.” “Mebbe you ’sine dat to me. ” “No, my rumatiz hab been pesterin’ me pow’ful ob late. So I jess' makes myse’f a perfehred cred’ter, an’ ’sines myse’f de dollah an’ foah bits to sorter ’pishiate de rumatiz. “Dat’s kinder cur’us. I dopn’ make no sense outen hit no way. But w’en’s you gwine ter pay me dat sebenty-fibe cents?” “ ’Fore de Lawd, chile, you is ign’rent fur a fac’. Hit am de libil’ty w’at go wid der likerdashin.” “Am dat so, Uncle Pete? Den you kin count on me bein’ down ter yo’ house ter night, ter jine in de meltin’ ob cred’ters on dat likerdation or I’ll bust de jug.”—Texas Siftings. The absence of all surgical attendance in the field docs not add to the satisfaction of service in the Chinese army. The theory advanced tpexplam this brutalityis not so- much a callous indifferenee to: human life as asuperstitibrt akin, to that of “the peculiar people,” who refuse all medical advice
to their children. The min who gets a bad wound is regarded as one whom the gods mean to die. For a similar cause the Chinese are reluctant to rescue a jM&rson drowning.
American Cooks and Cooking.
From the dreadful corned beet and cabbage and the fearful fishballs of crude American cookery, the family of Delmonico has, by degrees, led the American public to the consideration of higher things. The favorite dishes of the great republic have been concentrated in New York, and recent arrivals have been hospitably challenged to compare anything in the old world with them. Politeness prevents such comparisons, which would hardly be in favor of either hemisphere. In fish and despite its wide area of river and prairie, America can in no way compare with the raw products of this cpuntry. ’ But it has its specialties. The oysters of Blue Point and Shrewsbury River may not be denied, any more than the canvas-back nourished on the marshes of the Potomac, the terrapin captured on the shore of the Delaware, the snapping turtle from the far West, the gumbo- soup of New Orleans, or the pampano fish which rejoiceth the Mexican Gulf. What the Delmonicos have done is to bring the enjoyments of the two hemispheres into combination. They have known how to make the clams, the oysters, the sheephead, and other strange fishes familiar to the great army of gastronomists who reach Manhattan Island. — London Daily News.
Guide, Advise, and Guard.
A mother, who would calmly see her child rush headlong among the briars and brambles of a thorny path, without even attempting to guide the infant feet into more pleasant ways, would seem indeed to lack both love and care; yet how many devoted mothers there are who view the childish outburst of temper, and each display of willful perversity with genuine placidity, saying, “Oh, they are only children! they will soon outgrow their little faults. ” Alas, the child too often is father to the man. Youth is the see’d time of life, when habits formed become second nature. Stretch out your hand in helpful clasp, and with winning words, firm, loving heart, aid them all patiently to overcome their faults. Fit them for the battlefield of the world with an armor, whose links are truth, bravery, self-re-liance, and kindly courtesy. If your early training has gained for them the shield of self-control, then can they easily buffet with the storms of life, and upward tending win the goal, success. —Farm, Field, and Fireside.
An Agonizing Suspense.
Among the numerous applications for pensions received by the Commissioner of Pensions is one sent by an exsoldier, who has discovered an entirely new ground for relief. He stated that he had no wounds and was not disabled by disease, but while? fighting in the Union ranks at the battle of Antietam he lost his coat, vest, and one suspender. “The other suspender,” he wrote, “was my only stay and support. Imagine my dismay when a bullet came along, and, slightly scorching my skin as it passed, cut the last precious suspender clean in two. There I stood in the presence of many thousands of men. My emotion cannot be described. You, Mr. Commissioner, can imagine them. I am certainly entitled to a pension for the wounds given to my feelings on that occasion. Possibly you may not decide that a pension should be given me, but, at least, I ought to have enough to keep me in strong, reliable suspenders all my life. ” —Boston Journal.
Appearances Deceive.
“Throw up your hands,” said a Chicago garroter to a supposed victim. At the same moment an oil-fashioned “Allen pepper-box” was thrust unexpectedly in the garroter’s face. “That’s all right,” said the sand-bag-ger, “put down that thing. I’ll not harm you, but let me see that shootin’ iron. ” When he discovered that it was an old, rusty, and unloaded weapon, the garroter was mad enough to kick himself, and said angrily, “The next time a man with a pepper-box scares me silly, I hope he’ll blow me into the river. ” He so rattled that he walked two blocks before he discovered his watch and. the “pepper-box” had 1 relieved him while he was recovering from his astonishment Even the life of a Chicago sand-bagger has its ups and downs — chiefly downs.— Chicago Hye.
Cotton in Illinois.
At one time cotton was raised to a considerable extent in one-tljird of the counties in Illinois. At present its cultivation is confined to a very limited region in the extreme southern part of the State. It is generally believed that cotton-growing has proved to be unprofitable for the reason that the seasons have become colder. Mr. Johnston, of Champaign, however, thinks the failure to produce cotton is caused by the impoverishment of the soil. He says it is more difficult to raise corn and spring wheat in Southern Illinois than formerly.— Chicago Times.
How Bertha Von Hillern Tested Prayer.
She is as devout as she is energetic. During the two years 1 she walked she says she lost but two contests of endurance, and these were when she neglected before leaving her room for the trial to ask aid of a higher power than her own. On one of these occasions she made the omission purposely, to see whethet it would affect her strength, and this may be quoted as a singular test of the efficacy of prayer.— Philadelphia Press.
Emotional Insanity.
“Emotional insanity” is now. a common plea of defendants in trials for murder. It means much the same as “justifiable wrath,” or “served ’im right,” but has a pleasanter sound in the ears of the ordinary.jUryman. is the homage the heart .renders to God for His goojness. Christian cheerfulness is the external manifestation of that homage.— Steele.
Sensitiveness.
The charm of not being sensitive is that one is thereby saved much pain. There is, indeed, a foolish sensitiveness which springs only from vanity. This deserves but little sympathy, unless the sufferer be very young; for by the time that maturity is reached a man ought to hive got sufficiently rid of his vanity not to be tortured thereby. Then there is the more rational sensitiveness which proceeds from an exquisite perception of the proper relation of things, and is united with the most delicate tact and kindly consideration for others. The man who possesses this kind of sensitiveness will often feel profoundly for others who.do not feel for themselves. He will blush and wince at an indignity offered to a friend, or even to one who has no special claim upon his affection. Thissubtlepsychologic quality is at once a powerful, a pleasurable, a useful, and a most unhappy gift. It is powerful because it is a substitute for that seer-like talent which enables a man to read the souls of his brethren. It is pleasurable because it prorides the person in whom it inheres with exquisite thrills when any noble thought or action or any grand work of art is presented to his contemplation. It is useful because it bestows a certain knowledge of life and character independent of that acquired by personal experiences. And it is unhappy because it compels its possessor to sympathize too universally with the miseries not of friends exclusively, but of all sentient creatures. The sensitiveness of small people is another affair altogether. The woman who quarrels with her friend because the latter received an invitation which the former did not, and men and women in general who cannot endure, without sharp pangs of envy, some small supremacy, social or professional, obtained by an acquaintance—these are fair instances of petty sensitiveness. The worst of it is that small natures like these have nobody to educate them, to help to enlarge them. Large natures can educate themselves. After years of turbulence and struggle they can attain that supreme and superb calm which nothing ruffles. Not that the grand sensitiveness which renders their perception of misery, small apd great, has wholly died out, but that the emotions have become trained by the intellect, and that vast serene resignanation reigns which is born of a recognition of the inevitable. Possibly religious faith may be united with this condition; but, if so, it is not the faith rooted in conventional theology, but that which is the outcome of an intelligent contemplation of the economy of the universe, so far as we can see it.— Sunday Times.
A Mother Weasel.
A remarkable incident oocured upon a farm in Scotland. A farmer was plowing in one of his fields, which was nearly completed, and was passing to within a foot or two of the fence wall, when suddenly and to the surprise of the farmer, one of the horses became restive and wild, and refused to proceed in his work. This was an unusual circumstance, and the farmer was puzzled to make out the cause of it. Seizing the reins in his hands, he Walked toward the horse’s head, when, to his astonishment, he found that a large weasel had attacked the horse by springing upon it and fastening its teeth in the frightened animal’s neck. It was a moment of excitement and alarm, but the farmer was equal to the emergency. With a well-directed stroke of the reins the weasel was dislodged and killed. The horse soon recovered from his fright, and in due time plowing was resumed. The cause of the daring attack upon the horse was explained upon the return journey, with the plow a breadth nearer the wall, where at the place of attack the stock turned over a nest of young weasels, the object of anxious solicitude to the parent weasel. It was the well-grounded fear of harm to her young that had inspired the heart of the parent weasel to perform an act of daring that one could almost regret should have been so disastrous to itself and progeny.
Skilled Mexican Laborers.
The laborers at Fort Davis are Mexicans, who have neither the ability to lead nor the docility to follow. They plow with a forked stick and hoe with a root. They sleep on a sheepskin and eat prairie dog and hominy. They will beg you for a nickel and murder you for a- doUar. vwjrk three hours a day and steal ten hours a night They can live on $3 a month when they keep themselves, “and eat $3 a day when you have to feed them.— Harrodsburg Democrat. Lager beer, which thirty years ago was practically unknown in this country, is now made by 2,500 immense establishments, with over $150,000,000 of capital invested. The value of this production each year is over $200,000,000. No one can be ill If the blood is pure. Yellow Dock and Sartaparilla root have long been recognized by physicians as. blood purifiers. Don’t be humbugged by the advertisements of the many quack bitters, but occasionally use Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, and you will live to a good old age free from all distress of mind and body. Many of our test citizens who long suffered from bad blood, indicated by weak kidneys, indigestion, sores, aches, etc., owe their recovery to the use of this remedy. It is sa'd that Sullivan made some good hits on the stage. ' 9 Dairymen Prefer It. Messrs. Wells, Richardson & Co.: Since the introduction of your Improved Butter Color among my customers, it has given universal satisfaction. The leading dairymen of this section who have used it give it the preference oyer all other colors, of whatever name or nature. ’ They are especially pleased with the fact that it does not become rancid, like other oil colors, and their product brings highest prices in market. W. 8. Nay, Druggist. Underhill Vt.. April &, DE2. Passe women risk much on the hazard of the dye.—Tero* Mft-w , For dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of sp'rits, and general debility in their various forms; also, as a prev< ntlve against fever and' ague, and ether iniermittent fevers, the ‘•Ferro-Phosphorated Eilkir of Caiiaya,” made by Caswell. Hazard & Co., of New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and tor" patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal ■ It must have been something funny that made Minnehaha,. - ■ . ■ All pain in the nervous system, wind colic eramps cured by Samaritan Nervine.
REMINISCENCES OF ROCHESTER.
The Falls of the Genesee And Sain Patch’# Fatal Leap—One of Its Business Hquaes and Its Great Magnitude. The present floods, which are either devastating or threatening the country in every • direction, are Justly cause for apprehension. No matter whether they eome suddenly or by slow degrees, they are, in either case, a great evil and much to be dreaded, and yet America will always be troubled by these spring overflows. Probably one of the most disastrous that was ever known occurred in Rochester, N. Y., about twenty years ago. The Genesee River, just above the falls, where Sam Patch made his final and fatal leap, became completely blockaded by ice, forming an impassable dam, and the water eoming down the Genesee River overflowed the principal portion of the city of Rochester. This catastrophe would have been repeated the present year had not the energy and forsight of the city authorities prevented IL The writer happened to be in Rochester at that time and was greatly interested in the manner in-which this great catastrophe was averted. Every few moments, a roar like the peals of thunder or the booming of cannon would be heard, and in order to see this ice blasting process the writer went to the top of the new Warner Building, which overlooks the Genesee River. From here he •was not only enabled to see the process uninterruptedly, but also the magnificent building which has just been completed, litis is unquestionably the finest building devoted to business and manufacturing purposes in America, being entirely fireproof, eight stories high, and containing oyer four and a quarter adres of flooring. Mr. Warner treated your correspondent very courteously, and in the course of the conversation said: “We are doing a tremendous business, and are far behind in our orders. This is the season of the year when people, no matter how strong their constitution may be, feel, more or less, the pain and indisposition, 1 the headaches, colds, neuralgia, rheumatism, dull pains, sore throats, coughs—all the 1,001 ills that flesh is heir to, come this time of year, if at all. It is natural, therefore, that we should be very busy. This is specially true of our Safe Rheumatic Cure, and it is crowding us very sharply for a new remedy.” „ ■' ' ...... “Singular, butl had forgotten that yon do not advertise to cure all diseases from one bottle, as is done generally by many other medicine men, but 1 supposed Warner s Safe Cure was for the cure of rheumatism.” “And so it has been until our remedy, which was especially for rheumatism and neuralgia, was introduced. We have been three years perfecting this new remedy. Study first taught us there were certain powerful elements in Warner’s Safe Cure, better known as Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, that made wonderful cures in chronic and acute rheumatism, but during our investigation we learned of a remarkable cure at a celebrated springs, and put experts to investigate and found that the springs did not contain any valuable properties, but the course of treatment that, was being given there was performing all the benefit. By carefully combining the active principles of this remedy with our Safe Cure, we have produced our Safe Rheumatic Cure, and the cures it is affecting are simply Wonderful, and I do not doubt it will become as popular as our Safe Cure.” “You seem to talk freely in regard to your remedies, and appear to have no secrets, Mr. Warner.” “None%hatever. The physician, with his hundred calls and one hundred diseases,'is necessarily compelled to guess at a great deal. We are enabled to follow up and perfect, while physicians can only experiment with their hundred patients and hundred diseases. With the ordinary physician, the code binds him down, so that if he makes a discovery, he is bound to give it to the other physicians, which, of course, discourages investigation, to a great extent. This is why the great iscovedes in medical science of late years have been made by chemists and scientists and not by physicians, and it in a measure accounts for tue great value of pur remedies, also for the remarkable success of all those doctors who make a specialty of one or two diseases.” “And you find that you are curing as great u number of people us ever before.-” “Yes, a far greater number. We never sold so much of our medicine as now, and never knew of so many remarkable cures.” The writer departed after the above interview, but was greatly impressed, not only by the sincerity of Mr. Warner, but by the vastness of all he saw. Mr. Warner’s medicines are used throughout the entire length and breadth of the land; and we doubt not the results they are effecting are really as wonderful as they are related to be. “Beauty is a matter of taste." This exp’alns why the critics are always tasting something.— Newman Independent. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was first prepared in liquid form only; but now it can be sent in dry forms by mail to points where no druggist can readily be reached, and to-day the Compound in lozenges and pills finds its way to the foreign climes of ' Europe and Asia. A hen-pecked husband is often chickenhearted.—Texas Siftings. “Your Samaritan Nervine cured my son’s fits,” writes Mrs. 8. M. Parkhurst, of Girard, Mich. _____ An Indianapolis man has discovered a new plan to eject delinquent tenants. He hires a brass band to serenade them.
Instantly Relieved.
Mrs. Ann LaCour, of New Orleans, La., writes: “I have a son who has been sick for two years; he has been attended by our leading physicians, "but all-to no purpose. This morning he had his usaalspell of miig’sfe®,. and was so greatly prostrated in consequence that death seemed imminent. We bad in the house a bottle of Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs, purchased by my husband, who noticed your advertisement yesterday. Wo administered it, and he was instantly relieved.” . *
My Six-Year-Old Daughter.
Dr. C. i. Warner: Dear Sir—l received the complimentary bottle of White Wine of Tar Syrup you so kindly sent me. Our little 6-year-old daughter had a very sore throat, badly ulcerated, and coughed almost incest santly. We gave the medicine according so directions, and she began- to improve immediately and soon got well Please accept thanks. Mrs. Groves and I have recommended it to others. I shall want to get some of it at thebegrinning of winter, as I consider it a very superior, medicine. Yours very respectfully, Bev. H. D. Groves, Clarksville. Mo. Pastor M. E. Church.
“Put up” at the Gault House.
The business man or tourist will find firteclass accommodations at the price of ft aad $2.50 per day at the Gaqlt House, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison streets. Thia far-famed hotel Is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot JQevator; all appointments first-class. H. W. Hott, Proprietor.
An Extended Popularity.
Brown’s Bronchial Troches have been before the public many years. For relieving: Coughs and Threat troubles they are superior In all other articles. Sold uniy in boxes. Last winter I found, positive relief from Catarrh, with Ely's Cream Balm. Was troubled for years. I have no doubt a thorough use of Creatn Balm will cure a great majority of cases.—E. D. Nobton, Ithaca, N. Y. (See ass.)
■lain Wholesale and retail. Bend for price-list MB IK Goixis sent C. O. D. Wigs made to order, llnlll E. BUBNHAM. 71 State etreet INri/ago. niTriiTO Send stamp for our new book <m isl ITR 1 N Pstente. L. BINGHAM. Patent • “ • Ull IVI Lawyer, Washington. D.O. — L S : DEUOfnilO To eo’dleTs and heirs. Sendrtjunp IlllXlllreN £or <arvula«. CoL L- BINGHAM. • UllVlUnU Attorney. Washington. D. C. AGENTS WANTED for the best and lastejrt-wdllug Pictorial Books an I BiMos. Prices reduced sS percent Matioxal Publmhino Co. Chicajo, HL
loan safely recommend Ely’s Cream Balm for the cure of Catarrh, Cqid in the Head, cte. Before I have used the first bottle I purchased I find myself cured. At times I could .scarcely smell anything and bad a headache most of the time.—Henhv Lrr.v, Agent for the American Express Co., Grand Haven, Mich. (Price 50c.) Mothers, the best dressing for children's hair is Carbblfne, made from pure petrolrum, thoroughly deodorized and delightfully perfumed. It makes the little one's hair soft, silky, and glo:sy; it also eradicates dandruff. II ■ ■ ■ - I.'. ... The increasing sales of Pise's Cure attest its claim as the best cough remedy. Dr. Sanford's Liver In vigors tor —Cathartic, Tonic; will cure when other medicines fall. Use the Frazer Axle Grease.'tis the best in the world-will wear twice as long as any other. Piso’s- Remedy for Catarrh is a certain cure for that .very obnoxiouadlsease. . “Rough on Rats” clears out Rats, Mice. 15cMother Swan’s Worm Byrup, tasteless. 25c. “Rough on Coughs" Troches, 15b; Liquid,soc. Wells’ May Apple (Liver) Pills, 100. l. “Rough on Toothache,” instant *'Bucha-pail»,” Great Kidney end Urinary Onre. SI. “Roach on Corns,” for Coma, Warts, Bunions. 150. Wells’ Health Renewer cures Dyspepeia, Impotence. _ “ Rough on Dentist ” Tooth Powder, 15c. WANTED— Situation by a druggist of 7 years’ experience. Speaks English. Swedish and eome German. Address “J?. L.,* 818 E. DI viaion St.. Chicago, Hl.
NeiwrOiffite Furnished upon short notice, at lowest prices and easv terms. Also all kinds of paper, cardboard and envelope stock required in a printing office. Send tor Monthly Price-List ofPrinting Material and Paper Stock. Address CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 271 Ic 2?i Franklin Street. Chicago, 111. UABW®A® f 5 TON lANTS wagon scales, U boa Unrs, Siwl Brass « fiy Tara Baaa and Basal Bas, BHSHAMTOI SB 60 and ’ JONKB h« paya tteafraifht-ror fraa Fries Litt rotation thia paper aad SCRAPBOSKt® Size 8% x By mail on receipt cf 10c. East Side Agency E. 0. Burt’s Fine Shoes, 081 Grand St., New York. Please mention this paper. D® FOOTE’ 8 Original METHODS ni n CVCQ Made New without doc- of ULU LI Lu tors,medicine or glasses ¥1 Alf fl DIIDTII DE Cured-witho’toneratio-n fill II It HUr IU II Lor uncomfortable trust. 1* V 111 U Cured without cutting; I rninluulu new .painless,safe,sme. 11l n II I NERVOUS CHRONIO»«iSS-!Sffl Address Dr. E. B. FOOTE, Box 788, M. Y. City.
Catarrh cream* balm Causes no Pain. UIT " Once. Thorough rnAYFEVEluShj!Treatment will * nre * a l,iq ’ u,d or Snuff ’ Ap * pjy witl ‘ finger, igg wc* py Give It a Trial, w 50 cents at Druggintx’. 60 cents by mall, registered. Send for circular. ... „ „ v v BRO TH ERB. Drnggista. Owego, N. V. S a M Crick, Sprains,Wrenches, Rheu. Is A ffw ff* mattan, Neuralgia, Sciatica, "*_**_* Pleurisy Pains, Stitch In th* B Side, Backache, Swollen Joints, ■BW mw Heart Disease, Bore Muscles, Pain in the Chest, and all pains and aches either local or deep-seated are instantly relieved and speedily cured by the well-known Hop Platter. Compounded, as it Is, of the medicinal virtues of fresh Hops, Gums, Balsams and Extracts, it is indeed the but pain-killing, stimulating, soothing and strengthening Porous Plaster ever made. Hop Plaster* are sold by all druggistsand country stores, 15 cents or Ove for *l-00. g g Mailed on receipt of Irt ffff V*' price. Hop Plaster Co,, Proprietors and Manu- Qi facturCTS, ■ 1 fcsiSX ""tarCoatedtongve, bad breath, sour stomach and lives disease cured br Hawley’s Stomach and Uver Pills, Meta. S*xrELXfl» new BMntm others. Is cup shape, with SelfiWSSiSE -*y» dn .’Sl > . l M£,d I ,ch Sa ,Bent bfmag. £* CONSUMPTION. I have a positive remedy for the above disease :bvlts use thousands of cases of ths wont kind and of four standing have been cured. Indeed, In iu efficacy, that I wIU send TWO BOTTLES FREE, together with a VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease, te ravsalfoxer Give Express and P. O. address. 1>& X. A. SLOCUM. XU PssrLßU Naw York. TO SPECULATORS. Ji. LINDBLOM* CO., N,G.MILLER*CO, I 6 A 7Chamber of 56 Broadway, Commerce, Chicago. New York. GRAIN A PROVISION BROKERS. Members of all prominent Produce Exchanges tn New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Milwaukee. We have exclusive private telegraph wire between Chicago and New York. Will execute orders on our judgment when requested. Send for drcalarn containing particulars. BOBT. LINDBLOM k CO. Chicago.
Lay the Axe 'to the Root If yon would destroy the cankering worm. For any external pain, sore, wound or lameness of Aian or beast, use only MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. It penetrates all muscle and flesh to the very bone, expelling all inflammation, soreness and pain, and healing the diseased part as no other Liniment ever did or can. So saith the experience of two * generations of sufferers, and so will you say when you have tried the “Mustang.”
THE LIFE LESSON JLEAHNED BY A FHOMIIFEirr H»DSOM ODD FELLOW. from the Hudson (N.T.) Remitter. Mr. John Bting, a faithful Odd Fellow (Past Grsedl CTJndenwald,’’ No. MS), and • member of the Baptist Church, aaya: T have been, as moat of tar acquaint ancea in Hudson know, a sufferer from dyspepsia tor ten years. The symptoms of my malady were those which a million other sufferers in the land would recognize as their own. Beginning with indigestion, sour stomach and flatulence, I became so weak that my body became a burden too heavy to carry, and my mind was weighted down by a gloomy despondency. After eating I felt as if I had a ball of glowing iron in my stomach; my abdomen would bloat, and I waa afflicted almost constantly with a aick headache. A lady learning of my condition advised me to use DR. DAVID K ENNEDY’H FAVORITE KEMEDV. telling me what an infinite deal of good it had done her and others whom she knew. I began taking it in the latter part of August, and uaed altogether only three bottles, when it achieved in me the most wonderful Improvement. I have now gained flesh, and feel stronger, better and happier than I Mavs ia ten years. FAVORITE REMEDY cured my friend. R. F. Hermans, of Ghent, of the lingering remains of malarial fever and of biliousness. Mr. Harvey Thomas, the grocer on Warren street, jnst below the Worth House, says that it has had wonderfully good effects upon him. Scores of my acquaintances say that having once tried it they would turret again be without it. I have given it to my children, and found It the best medicine I have ever known tor regulating their bowels and purifying their blood. The knowledge of this medicine I deem the greatest lesson of physical life.”
SAMABQXR NfiRVIHS (BSD ■mbmmnwmsskn■ pMaMMBaaMMaMRaaHMI > The only known tpedfic for Bpileptic Fita.-B* gar Alao for Spasma and Falling Bickneea.-sa Nervous Weakness quickly relieved and cured. Equalled by none in delirium of fever.“®» garNeutrallzes germs of disease and slckneeg. Cures ugly blotches and stubborn blood sores. Cleanses blood, guickens sluggish circulation. Eliminates Boils, Carbuncles and Scalds. Ba-Pennanently and promptly cures paralysla. T es, It is a charming and healthful Aperient. Kills Scrofula and Kings Evil, twin brother*. - Changes bad breath to good, removing cause. tay-Routs biliousness and clears complexton. Charming resolvent and matchless laxaave.TSff It drives Sick Headache like the wind.-®* Contains no drastic cathartic or opiates. Promptly cures Rheumatism by routing it.-®* Restores life-giving properties to the blood.*®* Is guaranteed to cure all nervous disorders.-®* when all opiates fall.-®* Refreshes the mind and invigorates the body. Cures dyspepsia or money refunded.*®* tar Endorsed in writing by over fifty thousand Leading physicians in V. 8. and Europe.*®* Leading clergymen in U. 8. and Europe.*®* Diseases of the blood own it a conqueror.*®* For sale by all leading druggists. 81.60.®* For testimonials and circulars send stamp. The Dr. S. L Richmond Ned. Co., Props., St. Cosepix, IXo. (12> Lord. Stoutenbnrgh <t Co.. Agents, Chicago, UL WONDERFUL CURES OF // KIDNEY DISEASES AND O LIVER COMPLAINTS, o Because it acts on the LIVER, BOWELS and KIDNEYS at the same time. Because it cleanses the system of the poisonmu humors that develops la Kidney and Uvi nary Diseases, Biliousness, Jaundice, Constip<Uon. Piles, or in Rasnmattem, Neuralgia, N«rV vu« Dlaunlevs nud *ll Female Complaints. ' xr solid psoor or this. IT WUL BuSIELZ CTTRB CONSTIPATION, PILES, and RHEUMATISM, By causing FREE ACTION cf aU the organa and fanctione, thereby CLEANSING the BLOOD x-eetoring the normal power to throw off diaeaec. THOUSANDS OF CASES of the worst forms of these terrible diseases have been quickly relieved, and. in a short time PERFECTLY CURED. FOICE, gl. LiqtTD OB DBY, SOLD BT DBTGGISTS. Dnr CNtn be sent by ynsAlWZLIB, RICHARDSON & Co.. Burlington, Vt. 3 Send tian, for Disry Almuse for 18S4.
H (CBEgbi M h bitters h
BTHSmiBMOBWUBi Liver and Kidney Bemedy, Compounded from the well knownß Curatives Hops, Malt, Buchu, Man* i drake, Dandelion, Sarsaparilla, Cas- B| cara Sazrada, etc., combined with an w agreeable Aromatic Elixir. ■ I THEY CURE DYSPEPSIA & IJDIBESTIOI, A Act upon thaJMverand Kidneys, gfl BEGTTLATE THE BOWELS, U They cure Rheumatism, and all Uri- B ,i nary troubles. They invigorate, i nourish, strengthen and quiet ■ the Nervous System? ■- As a Tonle they have no Equal. fl Take sons bat Hop* sad Kalt Bitten, fl FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS.— Hopsand Malt Bitters Co.U DETROIT, MICH. ■■ Vminre aa lean TBUMBJtFKV and earn YOU ng Wien Ug wages. Situations furniahed. Clrenlvrs free. Valentine Bros, Janesvllle.Wi* CD.. Oldest Medicine in the Worts a probably Dr. Lsaac Thompson’s U elebrated Eye Watell This article is a carefully prepared Physician'* preacription. and has been in constant use for nearly a century, and notwithstanding the many other proper- • atom that have been introduced into the market, the as eof this article is constantly increasing. If the directone are followed it will never tail. We portico- 0 larly invite the attention of phyndaus to it* menta. John L. Thompoon, Sono & Co., Troy, N. x WW _ , mMs_— ” £NIS WKIRE AU ILSIf AIIS?E3 &ms Best Cough syrup. Tastewgood. Bl , LCj Dae tn ume. Bold by druggists. |aj S.M I<K ' N o. , In writing to Ativerlt*er«. r Sense <t» :1 «t tail to iiieution Chit paper. Atlrvrliwi u know uluat medium, pay tlunu UuM.
