Rensselaer Republican, Volume 16, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 July 1884 — Page 3
Washington in John Quincy Adams' Administration.
I Meantime, at Washington, there had been a great increase in wealth and social refinement since the earlier days. Mr. Josiah Quincy, in his “Recollections of Washington Society in 1826,” presents for us a polished and delightful community, compared to that which had preceded it. Himself a handsome young Bostonian, with the prestige of a name already noted, he found nothing but sunshine and roses in his path through the metropolis. Names now historic glitter through his pages; he went to, balls under the escort of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Webster; his first entertainment was at Mrs. William Wirt’s, where he met Miss Henry, Patrick Henryk daughter, who played the piano and sang to the harp. The belles of the day smiled upon him; Miss Catherine Van Rensselaer, of Albany, and Miss Cora Livingston, the same who in her old age, as Mrs. Barton, sold the great Shakspearean library to the city of Boston. The most conspicuous married belle of that day was known as Mrs. Florida White, so called because her husband represented that region, then new and strange. More eccentric than this sobriquet were the genuine names in the household of Mrs. Peter, grand-
daughter of Mrs. Washington, and the fiercest of Federalists, who had named her daughters America, Columbia, and Britannia, the last by way of defiance, it is said, to Jefferson. With these various charmers Mr. Quincy attended many a ball in Washington, these entertainments then keeping modest hours —from Bto 11. He saw a sight not then considered so modest—the introduction, in 1826, of the first waltz, danced with enthusiasm by Baron Stackelburg, who whirled through it without removing his huge dragoon spurs, and was applauded at the end for the skill with which he avoided collisions that might have been rather murderous. The young Bostonian also went to dinner-parties; sometimes at the White House, either formal state dinners of forty gentlemen and ladies, or private occasions, less elaborate, where he alone among witnesses found the President “amusing.” He gives also an agreeable picture of the home and household manners of Daniel Webster, not yet fallen into those questionable private habits which the French M. Bacourt, sixteen years afterward, too faithfully chronicled. Mr. Quincy also found the Vice President, John C. Calhoun, a man most agreeable in his own house, while Miss Calhoun had an admirable gift for political discussion. The presence of these eminent men lent a charm even to the muddy streets and scattered houses of the Washington of that day. The two branches of Government then met in small, ill-arranged halls, the House of Representatives having huge pillars to intercept sight and sound, with no gallery, but only a platform for visitors, but little higher than the floor. In this body the great Federal party had left scarcely a remnant of itself, Mr. Elisha Potter, of Rhode Island, describing vividly to Mr. Quincy a caucus held when the faithful few had been reduced to eleven, and could only cheer themselves with the thought that the Christian apostles, after the desertion of Judas, could number no more. The houses of Congress were still rather an arena of debating than for set speeches, as now; " and they had their leaders, mostly now fallen into that oblivion which waits so surely on merely political fame. Daniel Webster, to be sure, was the great ornament- of the Senate ; but McDuffie, of South Carolina, and Storrs, of New York, members of the House, had then a national reputation for eloquence, though they now are but the shadows of namea To these must be added Archer, of Virginia, too generally designated as “Insatiate Archer,” from his fatal long-windedness.— T. W. Higginson,. in Harper’s Magazine.
The Commercial Tourist.
A man who lives between a gripsack and Pullman sleeper, who seldom takes more than three successive meals in one county, and who is known to be the most successful commercial traveler in the country, gave some interesting impressions of travel in a recent conversation. “During the last fifteen years,” he said, “I have traveled over 250,000 miles, or ten times around the world. This habit of rapid and incessant motion at all hours and seasons has made me an automaton., The ordinary operation of buying tickets, eating when I can get food, and sleeping in any position, lying, standing, or sitting down, are purely mechanical with me. If I stay off the road any length of time my mind becomes, as it were, side-tracked. I cannot cheek my conversational baggage through from subject to subject, but lose myself in all sorts of vagaries and delusions. I know this sounds absurd, but in a city where I have been detained on business over a certain length of time I have actually ridden fiftriiita into tfie country and back again, simply to compose my thoughts. Of course I feel the thralldom of such a life, and would like to escape from it, But I shall always remain a wandering Jew, compelled to move on until my penance is ended. The most curious part of it all is (and I have compared this feeling of mine with others of my fellow-travelers) the temptation to stop abrubtly in the most out-of-the-way places.”— ‘Merchant Traveler.
What the Monkeys Teach.
“I should like to know what they can teach,” says a little boy as he reads this title, “except to climb poles, keep a sober face while they make everybody laugh, and do all sorts of mischief.” "Well, in some of the heathen temples of Japan there are three small redcloth monkeys, stuffed with cotton, one with Lis hands over his mouth, one with his hands over his ears, and the third with his hands over his qyes. Can't "'you guess what they mean? If you give it up, I’ll tell you. The first signifies that there are some things which ehonld never be spoken; the middle one, that there are others that should never be heard; and the third, that there are those that -should never be seen Now, the next time you are tempted to speak a saucy, or unkind, or angry yprd, won’t you remember the
monkey with his hand over his mouth in time to keep the naughty word unspoken ? When you hear swearing or filthy stories, or unkind remarks about somebody else, won’t you shut up your ears as closely as this second monkey does? And will you keep your eyes from seeing anything you would not want your father and mother, or brother and sister, to know that you have been looking at or reading. If the monkeys help you to remember these things, we shall be very grateful to them.—Mission Dav Spring.
Streaks of Luck.
We have heard of a man who had £2,000 a year left him because he was civil to an infirm old lady in church, finding the hymns for her, setting her hassock, etc. He did not know her name, but she took care to ascertain his, and when she died he found that she had bequeathed to him the bulk of her property “as a reward for his patient kindness.” A clergyman of onr acquaintance obtained a living of good value from a baronet in Norfolk for no other reason than that he was the only curate within ten miles round who had not applied for it when it fell vacant. Another clergyman whom we know got a still better living for having refused preferment offered to him under circumstances derogatory to his dignity. He was a fair singer; and a vulgar plutocrat who had invited him to dinner promised to give him a living if he would sing a comic song at dessert. The quiet rebuke which the young clergyman administered made the plutocrat ashamed of himself, so that the next day he proffered the living with a letter of apology, but the living was refused, the clergyman stating that it would be impossible for him to forget the circumstances under which it was first tendered. This was the more honorable as the clergyman was very badly off Another patron, hearing of what he had done, appointed him to a benefice as a testimony of his admiration. We may conclude with a story of a man who was suddenly made rich because of his great stupidity. He was the only dull man in a bright-witted family, and going to dine with a Wealthy relative who had a horror of fools, he made so many silly remarks that the old man cried in exasperation: “I must do something for you, for you’ll never do anything for yourself. If I don’t make a rich man of you you’ll become a laughing-stock to the whole world, and a disgrace to your family,—Chambers’ Journal.
Tenacity and Talent.
The one is often mistaken for the other. In the majority of instances where tenacity masquerades as talent, and assumes all the corresponding attributes, the world does not detect the difference, and tenacity wins where genuine ability, which lacks this strong element only, fails of its accomplishment. It is a curious psychological study as to just what extent talent can exist, however, without tenacity of purpose. To a high degree the one implies the other. Mere desire is not that power of adherence which purpose implies, and this purpose, this staying power of life, so to speak, is a quality that can hardly be overestimated. The term tenacity, from the good old Latin word teneo, to hold, fully justifies its honorable significance. There is, practically, no conception of accomplishment that may not be realized by him whose purpose shall hold firm. The power to conceive any given achievement implies the power to realize that conception, if one will bring to it the energy and concentration of tenacity. This staying power is too little regarded by society in general It is really that highest form of force, the persistent energy, which Herbert Spencer makes the ultimatum of his conception of power. When the modern Ulysses declared his intention to “fight it on that line, if it took all summer, ”he embodied in his words, not a mere dogged determination, not a settled inertia, but the finest philosophy of that supremo law—the persistence of force.— Boston Traveller.
Successful High Art.
“Talk about ile painters,” said Mr. Saunders, as he threw an armful of weeds over the fence into the pig pen, “why, you should a seed one that my ole woman draw’d with a pound of tea she bought of Alec. Vitties last summer. That actually beat anything since Moses smote the waters and drownded the Pharosees. ” ~ “What was the design—that is—what did the picture represent?” asked the citv boarder, timidly. “Rainstorms just cornin’ on from the northwest,” replied the old man. “When my wife first brought tliat magnificent specimen into the family it actually made everything moldy in the room where it was hung; so moldy that we had to take it out. We hung it in the children’s bed-room next time, and before we know’d it every last one of ’em bad the eroupwHd (our of ’em came near dyin’. The last night we had the picture in the house we stood it on a chair in the kitchen and the stove was crusted over with a quarter of an inch of rust next morning—clean, clear rust And the sugar and salt and soap was all melted and everything in the room sweating so that you would a sworn that it bad rained all night and had been followed by a heavy fog. But the skies were as clear as a bell and there was no gettin’ around but what the picture done the business.” — Detroit Free Press.
The Advantage.
Mr. Blazer took his wife to see an exhibition of statuary, and the good lady was much interested. As they went home, she said to him, sweetly:. “Darling, wouldn’t you like it if I were a statue?” “I hadn’t thought of it, love. ” ~ “It would be so nice if I were'; for then you could have me just the same for all years to come, with no fading, no dimming of the eyes, no wrinkled brow, ho peevish old age, no nothing but pure white marble, the same yesterday, today, and foreveb.” “That would be nice, wouldn’t it? And you couldn’t talk any either, could you, love ?” he said, absently, with a last summer look in his soft blue eyes. —Merchant Traveler.
Monopoly Again.
With a thoughtful brow the tramp contemplated a fence on which were painted the words: “Clothing for the Old, the Young, and the Middle-Aged; for the Tall, the Short, the Thin, and the Stout One Price.” “And so monopoly has come to this, has it?” said the tramp. “I ain’t surprised. Not at all, sir. I told ’em ao last summer when I waft put off a train because I didn’t happen to have the change in my pocket. It was all in the checks the cashier had forgot to certify. But upon my honor as a gentleman, this is the most insufferable outrage of these grasping and soulless monopolies. Ain’t it enough for ’em to charge as much for carrying a bushel of wheat from Syracuse to New York as from Chicago and pooling railway freights, but now they’ve got to pool charges on clothing, and make everybody pay alike? One price! Everybody—the bald-headed and the thin, the young and the stout, the middle-aged and the rich, the mule-driver and the Alderman-at-large, a county Congressional delegate and a municipal club reformer — they’ve every one of ’em got to pay one price. There it is! You can see it on the fence. I’m a thin man—brain work that’s done it. Now, do they suppose that I’m going to chip in and help make a general average? Pay toward some big man’s clothes ? No, sir; not if the court knows itself. I’ll wear this suit another summer, turn it. I don’t mind the expense. ’Taint that. It’s the principle of the thing—paying one price for everything. ’’ —Syracuse Herald.
Shinbones Addresses His Neighbors in Court.
“Jedge,” remarked Shinbones, “dis hyar am pretty tough on a old man.” “The law requires it,” Was the reply. “Wai, cud I be ’lowed ter speak ter this hyar gadderin’ ob culludpussons ?” The permission was granted, and the ex-President of the Anti-Chicken-Steal-ing Society turned to the assemblage. “Breddern and sistem,” said he, “Is’e gwine way fur ter leab yo’ now fur some time. Dey am gwine ter send me whar de wicked cease from troublin’ an’ de weary git a res’. I mean dose dat am weary ob losin’ deir poultry. Now, breddern, all I’se got ter say to yo’ on dis hyar painful ’cashin’ is, es you don’t want ter git inter de place whar Pm a-goin’- ” The speaker paused to add force to his words. The Judge leaned forward to hear the wise admonition about to fall from the old man’s lips, and the crowd of mourning colored men afid women held their breath.
“Es yo’ don’t want ter go whar Tse a-goin’,” he repeated, “make blame shuah dat de boss am dead or gone ter a picnic ’foah yo’ tackle a hen-roost.” And they led him away to prison.— New York Times.
Three Times and Ont.
“How many times did the elock strike, lovey, the last time?” asked the spooney swain at the Sunday night picnic. “Two times, deary,” answered the fair dove as she' gathered herself closer to his paper shirt front and his 37-cent diamond solitaire. “Why?” “Oh, ’cause.” “Does my darling old honey-bunch want to leave his little angel so soonly ?” “Oh, no; but every hour I imagine I hear the manly tread of your choleric papa coming down the stairs.” “But he don’t come.” “Not yet, I know; but when it strikes 3 I must be off.” “Why?” “Because I fear the ‘ third time will be the charm,’ and I would ovoid a meeting.”— The Hoosier.
An Evidence of Greatness.
Just about the time “A Fool’s Errand” made him famous, Tourgee was in Chicago on business. He started from the hotel one morning with his wife, intent on keeping an appointment; but, passing a certain newspaper office, he persuaded his wife to wait a moment in a candy store while he ran up stairs to speak to an editorial friend. It was a time when .lawyers and others were greatly excited over the formation of the Electoral Commission, and before he had been in the editorial room five minutes, Tourgee had locked horns with the editorial corps on a constitutional question and the discussion was continued at white heat for over three hours. The Judge forgot all about his wife until some one said it was 12 o’clock, when he shot out of the room and went down stairs to make peace with his better half.
Didn’t Want a Beauty.
“So you are going to get married at last, Snigger ?” remarked Brown. “Yes, I have at last concluded to do so. I have found a good woman—not pretty, but intelligent—and I propose turning Benedict.” ■' - ’ " pretty! Why 1 thought such an admirer of female beauty as you are would have selected a handsome woman How is that ?” Well, I remembered the old adage; ‘a thing of beauty is jawey forever,’ so I thought I had better take my chances with a homely wife.”— Texas Siftings.
New Use for Sawdust.
A new use has been found for sawdust by employing it, under a recent Eatent, as a substitute for sand in ouse plastering. It is claimed to be cheaper, lighter, warmer, more porous, and by its non-conducting qualities causing the inner surface of the walla to retain the heat which sand plastering allows to escape.— From the Mechanical News.
The new port recently opened at Trieste cost $7,300,000. The bottle of new port we opened the other day only cost seventy-five cents. But then editors get everything for nothing.
Formebly weak, nervous, dyspeptic, and debilitated Individuals who found only disappointment in the various bitters and secret quack nostrums, pretended kidney medicines, etc., arp-agreeably surprised to regain perfect health and strength of . mind and body, and complete heart's ease and freedom from aches and pa.as by the use of Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. It'restores every disordered function to a normal condition.
KER SECRET TROUBLES.
The Unknown Trial* Which a Woman Endured Without Com plain hr-Why They Vanished. Near the close of one of the most trying of the few hot days of the present year a pale, care-worn woman Wight have been seen at the window of her dwelling apparently in a condition of complete exhaustion. Her efforts to meet the accumulated duties of her household had been great but unsuccessful, while the care of a sick child, whose wails could eyen then be heard, was added to her otherwise overwhelming troubles. Nature had done much for her, and in her youthful days she had been not only beautiful but the possessor of health such as is seldom seen. But home and family duties and the depressing cares which too often accompany them had proven greater than her splendid , r^ n ffth,and she felt at that moment not only that life was a burden but that death would be a grand relief. This is no unusual experience. It is, in fact, a most common, everyday occurrence, and a great prayer is constantly ascending from thousands of homes for deliverance from the deadly power which is enslaving so many wives, mothers, and daughters. And yet these duties of life must be met No woman can afford to turn aside from the proper care of her home and the ones who are committed to her care, although in doing these duties she may sacrifice her health, and possibly life itself. The experience of one who successfully overcame such trials, and yet retained health and all the it brings, is thus told by Bev. William Watson, Presiding Elder of the Methodist Episcopal Church, residing at Watertown, N. Y. He said:
My wife became completely run down through overwork and care of a sick member of our household, and I entertained serious apprehensions as to her future. She was languid, pale, utterly exhausted, without appetite, and in a complete state of physical decline. And yet she did not, could not, neglect her- duties. I have seen her about the house, trying courageously to care for the ones she loved when I could tell, from the lines upon her face, how much she was suffering. At times she would rally for a day or two and then fall back into the state of nervous exhaustion she felt before. Her head pained her frequently, her hody wnm becoming bowed by pain, and all hope or enjoyment in life seemed departed. What to do we could not tell. I resolved, however, to bring back her life and vitality if possible, and to this end began to treat her myself. To my great relief her system has been toned up, her strength restored, her health completely recovered, and wholly by the use of Warner’s Tippecanoe, which I regard as the greatest tonic invigorator and stomach remedy that has ever been discovered. I was led to use it the more readily as I had tested the health-restoring properties of Warner’s Safe Cure in my own person, and I, therefore, knew that any remedy Mr. Warner might produce would be a vat uableone. I have since recommended both Warner’s Tippecanoe and Warner's Safe Cure to many of my friends, and I know several Doctors of Divinity as well as numerous laymen who are using both with great benefit.” If all the overworked and duty-driven women of America could know of the experience above-described, and act upon the same, there can be little doubt that much of the pain, and most of the depressing influences of life, might be avoided. Such truths are too valuable to remain unknown.
Be cheerful; do not brood over fond hopes unrealized until a chain, link by link, is fastened on each thought and wound around the heart. Nature intended you to be the fountain spring and cheerfulness of social life, and not the traveling monument of despair and melancholy.
Butter Buyers
everywhere are refusing to take white, lardylooking butter except al “grease” prices. Consumers want nothing but gilt-edged butter, and buyers therefore recommend their patrons to keep a uniform color throughout the year by using the Improved Butter Color made by Welis, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt. It Is the only color that can be relied on to never injure the butter, and to always give the perfect color. Sold by druggists and merchants. A man gets credit for hospitality when he gives a restaurant dinner that he does not pay for. —JV. U. Picayune.
From Death’s Door.
M. M. Devereaux, of lonia, Mich., was a sight to behold. He says: “I had no action of the Kidneys and suffered terribly. My legs were as big as my body and my body as big as a barrel. The best doctors gave me up. Finally I tried Kidney-Wort. In four or five days a change came, in eight or ton days I was on my feet, and now I am completely cured. It was certainly a miracle.” All druggists keep Kidney-Wort, which is put up both in liquid and dry form.
“Nothing but leaves,” as Adam remarked, when admiring his wife’s polonaise.—Goui> emeur Herald.
Horsford’s Acid Phosphate
iy LIVER AND KIDNEY TROUBLES. Dr. O. G. Cilley, Boston, says: “I have used it with the most remarkable success in dyspepsia, and derangement of the liver and kidneys.’ ’ •
Why was the first day of Adam’s life like a summer day in Spitsbergen? Because there was no Eve to it.
Mknsman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains bloodmaking, force-generating, and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-work, or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co., proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists.
Why is a guide-book like a pair of handcuffs? Because it is made for tourists (two wrists.) Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound strengthens the stomach and kidneys and aids digestion. Is equally good for both sexes. l ; should yon he shy of wmiilngwomen? Dealers in sugar candy are not always candid. Simple and Perfect Dyes.—Nothing so simple and perfect for coloring as Diamond Dyes. Far better and cheaper than any other dye. 10c. Druggists sell them. Sample Card for 2c. stamp. Wells, Richardson & Co., Burlington. Vt. What is the height of absurdity? To defend a political editor against abuse is like holding an umbrella over a duck in a shower.
Remarkable Escape.
John Kuhn, of Lafayette, Ind., had a very narrow escape from death. This is his own story: “One year ago I was in the last stages of consumption. Our best physicians gave my case up. I finally got so low that our doctor said I could not live twenty-four hours. My friend then purchased a bottle of Dr. Wm. Hail’s Balsam for the Lungs, which benefited me. I continued until lam now in perfect health, having used no other medicine.” , v
After using a large number of preparations for Catarrh, I have become satisfied that of them all ffiy's Cream Balm gives me the most relief. I can recommend it to any one who may have Catarrh, Cold in the Head, or Hay Fever. —K B. Lewis, Principal Gravel School, Clinton, Wls. [Easy to use. Price 50 cents.]
The medical properties of petroleum have long been known to the alorigin.es, and since Carlo ine has become bo well known as a hair restorer and dressing, petroleum takes front rank among the new remedies; . Piso's Cure for Consumption does not dry up a cough; ft removes the cause.
Hou. Wm. D. Kelley. M. C.,
Judge Jos. R. Flanders, of New York, and T. 8. Arthur, have been interviewed by a newspaper reporter as to thejr experience with Compound Oxygen. Their testimony to its curative action is clear and direct, and shows it to be the most wonderful vitalizing agent yet discovered. Copies of these re-' markable interviews, and a Treatise on Compound Oxygen, will be mat ea free by* Drs. Starkey & Palen, 1109Girard st., Philadelphia.
“Put up” at the Gault House.
The business man or tourist will find Arab class accommodations at the low price of 9> and 92.80 per day. at the Gault House, Chicago, corner Clinton snd Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union DepotElevator; all appointments first-class.
H. w. HOYT, Proprletor.
The greatest good to the greatest number, is the doctrine of every true patriot, and thus is the dlsideratum reached by the new specific, Athlopboros. Thousands of sufferers from rheumatic and neuralgic complaints attest the benefit they have derived from the use of this great remedy of disease. Price, $1 per bottle. If your druggist hasn't it, send to Athlophoros Co, 112 Wall Bt., N. Y. Ely’s Cream Balm has cured me of Catarrh of several years' standing. I have recovered my sense of taste and smell. The Balm has no equal as a cure. Frank C. Ogden, Elizabeth, N. J. [Apply with finger.] The short, hacking cough, which leads to consumption, is cured by Piso's Cure.
The Genuine Brand.
Customer—Where is Mr. Blank? Boy—He has just gone out. Anything I can do. Customer—l want five boxes of Key West cigars, just like those I got last time. Boy—l remember the brand. Here they are. Shall Ido them up ? Customer—Are you sure these are the genuine Key West cigars ? Boy—Oh, yes! We made ’em ourselves—Philadelphia CalL ANo man was ever so completely skilled in the conduct of life as not to receive new information from age and experience.—Terence.
ARE YOU AFRAID OF LIGHTNING? Is your wife or daughter nervous? Conquer all nerve troubles with ZOAJAX. Only remedy lor dread of lightning ever formulated; 20 years' test. Keep in house or pocket.2s rente by mail. Address ZOAJAX COMPANY, ffl John street. New York, DR. JOHN BULL'S StfsfticSyr® FOR THE CURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILLS and FEVER, UNO ALL MALARIAL DISEASES The proprietor of this celebrated medicine justly claims for it a superiority over all remedies ever offered to the public for the SAFE, CERTAIN, SPEEDY and PERMANENT cure of Ague and Fever, or Chills and Fever, whether of short or long standing. He refers to the entire Western and Southern country to boar him testimony to the truth of the assertion that in no ease whatever will it fail to euro if the directions are strictly followed and carried out. In a great many oases a single dose han been sufficient for a cure, and whole fomß lies have been cured by a single bottle, with a perfoot restoration of the general health. It is, however, prudent, ana in every case more certain to cure, if its use is continued in smaller doses for a week or two after the disease has been checked, more especially in difficult and long-standing cases. Usually this medicine will not require any aid to keep' the bowels in good order. Should the patient, however, require a cathartic medicine, after having taken three or four doses of the Tonic, a single dose of BULL’S VEGETABLE FAMILY PILLS will bo sufficient. BULL’S SARSAPARILLA is the old and reliable remedy for impurities of the blood and Scrofulous affections—the King of Blood Purifiers. DR. JOHN BULL’S VEGETABLE WORM DESTROYER is prepared in the form of candy drops, attractive to the sight and pleasant to the taste. DR. JOHN BULL’S SMITH’S TONIC SYRUP, BULL’S SARSAPARILLA, BULL’S WORM, DESTROYER, The Popular Remedies of the Day. Principal OSes, Ml SU, LOUISVULK, KY. EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS. A _ COLLEGE Physicians & Surgeons °f CHICAGO. Regular fesion rrnP I Sept. 23, Fine ft and best arranged OJleye Edifice Id this WlfftWi country. Experienced Faculty. Ml MFllSplendid Clinical advantages. For b. a. ic Seeretary, IMJI State WRd , CHeafa, HL A-k* aacw ASTHMA. HIUUEK O rnOI iUX&bymsiL BfowriiaCte Mass. FRAZERS BEST IN THE WORLD. Uli CROC J Get ths Oentttaa Bold Yvarywher. h jkt ■ Pain i* supposed to be the lot of us poor mortals, as inevitable a* death, and liable at any time to come upon us. Therefore it in important that remedial st ba&t to t* hi raven,earner, when we are made to feel the excruciating agonies of pain, or the depressing influence of disease. Such a remedial agent exist* in that old Beliabl* Family Remedy, PERRY DAVIS’ Pain-Killer It was the first and is the only permanent Pain Believer. ITS MERITS ABE UNSURPASSED, There II nothing to equal it. k a few xbobmbli ft cures Colle, Cramps, Spasms, Heartburn, Di* arrhtea, Dysentery, Flux, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache. Bis found to CURE CHOLERA When an other Remedies firiL WHEN USED EXTERNALLY. AS A LINIMENT, nothing gives quicker esse in Burns. Cuts, Bruises. Sprain*. Stlnr* from Insert*. and Scalds. It removes the fire, and the wound heal* like ordinary acres. Those suffering with Rheum*tutm. Gout, or Neuralria, if not a positive cure. they find the PAIN-KILLER gives them relief when no other remedy will. In sections of the country where ~ FEVER AND AGUE SOLD BY ALL DRUCCIBTB.
STONES IN THE KIDNEY Expelled by Use Use off Mr. MwrK Kemnesly’s Favorite Reasedy (off Rondent, N. Y.), after Several AM. Physicians had Failed, <nd the Patient was Nearly Beady to Abandon Hope—The Sabotaaoo off a Leaf sad Ctrateffal Letter. One of the moat remarkable esse* fftet hag am been brought to the Notice of the public la that es Mr. J. 8. Beach, of Stone Ridge, Ulster Co- N. Y. Mr. Beach had suffered since October lath, UM. from a* presence of Calculus or Stone tn the right Kidney. No less than seven physician* wore employed at different ttmea, to whom Mr. Beach paid hundreds of dollar* for medical treatment, with only temporary relief. By the urgent solicitations of his friend* he waa induced to try DR. DAVID KENNEDY’S FAVORITE REMEDY. He experienced a marked improvemenl from the first day be began to use the medicine; an the 15th of September be voided a atone aa large aa could be paaeed through the natural channel. Mr. Buch conclude* a long letter to Dr. Kennedy by saying: *lt wiU always afford mo pleasnro to recommend the FAVORITE REMEDY to those whe may be suffering from difflcultiea of the Kidneys and Bladder, or any disorder* arising from an impatn state of the Mood.* • * * J**.*..*.*.* f itttaa a e> VEQETABLE COMPOUND • •••IBA.POmnVECDRBFOB»ee • F*lofhl Complahrta 0 Ygggtay _*aaff Weakness Mao common* • ••••••to our beet • vyeale population.* *j • z MsaßteßW^aaurlmmptoj •Be purpeae «e roWy for tin Inglitnatr healing ts «■<< ttol it One, ah it eiaimotodo, UOMOHdr of ladlet oan glatUy tesCffb* geriion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pads. “^T^***? always pernuuieaUy eured bylte wae. • Bond stamp to Lynn, Maaa, for pamphlet, Letter* of aywered. for ARE YOU CONSTIPATED? If you are bilious, dyspeptic or constipated, a few bottles of Hops and Malt Bitters will cure you as they have many others. An occasional use of Hops and Malt Bitters gives tone to the blood, strengthens the nerves and promotes perfect digestion. Do not be persuaded to try something else, said to be just as good, but get the genuine. For sale by all dealers. HOPS & MALT BITTERS CO., DETROIT, MICH. dddddwdiUtfdd QEND FIVE two-cent rtamp* and get a bock on CT HomeTreatiucDt of ORaNULATEB EYEUDC T. J. DOWNING, M. D., Nrw Loxno*, Jfn. GENTS WANTED tor tha b««t and f**te*t aeßtiw Pictorial Book* and Bible*. Prieaa redncedJl pel erot NaTrowai, Pypirretwo Co. Chicago, BL I FARM Vetoffrophy.or Shm-t-Hand and Typw PATENTS! for patent untn obtained. Write for Inventonr Guide. TJOW~ TO ISSUES A WNW rhP.dheed to * qpmtkm «f krewi nVKBKDL to every DSraH. If h b iapiwtiesM* to wovhfe the Hute one with saffieteDt nowrUlMt from nature'* aupply no Utter MbatKnto can be found than Kldae’s Feed. Kldfe’e Fm 4 hto toi Am folly reared more children tibsn *ll w. y. k- A H reuniegu He., tie., tl.tt, *3 *1.15. WOOUtfCHACO, fteu vH S. W P«Jmw, Mm*, for FMBpkUu o* the rr_ w i-hfort. Caution h Farmers & Dtalm. *elud only thore having thereon an *W BWte imprint of ear tbade-m*u, and thereto eave infringement fees. Catalogue* giving reliable faforma. J. PITTSBURGH, PA. Al*o. Mfg* Nelli*’ Mounted and Floating Harrow*. Agri Steel*. (Yrn’t*! Fencing, Road Grader*, etc. THE TIFFIN 4 MACHINERY I A For Horse or Steam Power ■ Hundreds of the beat men in X State* ■ and Territories use it and will have no M other! ■ RELIABLE! DURABLE I SIMPLE ’ I Established overt® yearewe have ample K facilities to fill order* promptly, and Ml to sattefaction of our customer*. Cats-19M. legue nutz. Address LOOMIS a NYMAN, Tiffin, Ohio. institute. EatabUabed, 1872; Incorporated, rn). For the Cure of KEeBBB and Sxtx Dmasca, without tbs tueof kuiiesrioas or blood, sad bi tie psinFar CTbs Oldest Medicine he Me WerM n prebato Dr. Isaac Thompson’s D elebrated Eye Watell stomfliathave been introduced imofts aae of thi* article is constantly tin iitaaltlff, M tbs dh rectons are followed It wifi never tefl. V* parttenlariy invite the attention of phytectans to Me marite. Jgfx L. CTeijean, Sene A Oeu, Troy, M. Y 30 DAYS’ TRIAIi. W i ■C’LBCTRO-VOLTAIC BELT and omroEwciMß Jj ajtuajcb* are seat ea IB Dayp Trial TO pig rrooi itnvacß Debiutt, Leer Tiraunk Waanra WKaawaaae. and all those diseasesU' A reatoretion to Rkslxs, Vieoa and MaaaoOa Voltaic Belt Oa, Marshall Mich* toe BestCooghbyrup. Tmtesgood. BN g-M-O- No-CT-RA
