Rensselaer Republican, Volume 17, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 March 1885 — Page 7
THE WEIGHT OF CHILDREN.
Bow It Yaries from Day to Day—Ported* benaw and Decrease. Pastor Malling-Hahsen, the director of the Royal Deaf and Dumb Asylum in Copenhagen, has published an interesting pamphlet on “The Periodicity of the Weight of Children.” His observations, obtained by the daily weighing of the children under his car e, are very interesting. According to his evidence the weight of children differs so largely from day to day that no trustworthy result can be obtained from weighing at long intervals. A child may be two pounds heavier at night than in the morning, and may be one and a half pounds lighter in the morning than the night before. Eating seems to have more influence on weight than exercise, bathing, or occupation. , The ultimate increase in weight, corresponding to increase in growth, does not go on regularly throughout the year. There is a period of stoppage in the increase of Weight, with corresponding loss, from the beginning of May till past the middle of J uly, in which time the loss of weight may exceed double the average ultimate gain. During August, September, and October, there is a very steady period of increase in weight, sometimes rising to five times more than the average increase. During the rest of the year the weight varies from less to more around the average figure of increase. During the summer holidays the increase in weight is twice the average, and in September and October even thrice. Besides the serious period of lose from May to July, there are at other times frequent sudden stoppages in the increase of weight, sometimes followed by actual loss. These hindrances, lasting six to fourteen days, are not made up for by extra periods of increase, and seem to indicate real damage, so that the actual increase of weight seems to take place during about-the fifth part of the year, while the remaining time is occupied with loss and its replacement. There is a decided correspondence between the vacillation of temperature and accompanying vacillations in the weight of the child —increase of warmth and of weight and decrease of warmth and of weight go hand in hand. A decrease of 2 degrees of warmth in the temperature of the five days is accompanied by a ninefold decrease in the weight of a child, and 3 degrees more warmth by a thirteenfold increase in weight. The hindrance and loss of weight that accompany a decrease in the warmth of the temperature may go OH 6ven after the temperature has begun to rise, as if the loss depended on sickness induced by the cold temperature. A year that has had most changes of temperature is far more unfavorable to the normal increase of weight in a child than a more steady year, and a series of such unfavorable years will, for many following years, result in less strong children. The reason of the great period of loss from May to July, and the rapid increase during the autumn months, does not seem to depend on the conditions of warmth. The increase of weight in the children experimented on was always greater during the period when the moon was receding from the earth, and less during the period when the moon was approaching the earth. During the former period the children increased in weight twice as much as during the latter period. Pastor Mailing-Hausen’s inquiries are considered so important that the Danish Government and the “Carlsbergfond” have granted sums of money for the continuance and extension of such experiments.
Glittering Wealth.
Do you see that elegant mansion with the fountain in front, the spacious grounds around it, the diamond-studded door knob, the gold steps, and the silver sidewalk leading to the nickelplated hen-heuse? Yes, I perceive that magnificent palace. Do you also behold the barn shingled with rubies, the wood-shed with damask curtains, the stately grove of magnolias, Abo vast conservatory filled with countless plants and perfumed flowers imported from every clime, the liveried servants and elegant carriages, the variety of beautiful animals in the park, the $60,000 swans floating gracefully around in the pond filled with cologne? Yes, I observe these beautiful things. To whom do these gorgeous luxuries belong 1 ? O, they are the property of a porter on a Pullman sleeping car. He started in the business poor but honest. In three years he earned enough at his profession to surround himself with these luxuries. What salary does he receive? Twelve dollars a month and boards himself. How much does his board cost him ? . Eleven dollars and 75 cents. Thus by carefully handling the savings of his princely salary he has purchased all these grounds and luxurious luxuries. Does he own anything else ? Yes, he is the owner of two or three railroads and sixteen members of Congress; Let us take tbe first train for Cbicago and apply to the magnanimous Pullman Sleeping Oar Company for situations as porters. — Chicago Ledger. s
The Care of Children’s Teeth.
The ignorance of many a mother determines whether her children shall go through life with poor and constantly poorer teeth. Not half the mothers of children, who are intelligent in other directions, knows that the “six-year molar” comes to stay, and that if it is allowed to decay the child loses a tooth he needs and ought to have. Care should be taken of the first baby teeth, even. A dentist of good standing says' that a very smooth bit of wood dipped into myrrh will remove discoloration and tartar from the baby’s teeth without injury to the gum, and with benefit to the teeth. Nothing is more common than to see little boys and girls whose first teeth have decayed, and of whose use they are deprived before the second teeth are near ready to appear. Some people attribute this to the constant munching of candy, particles of sugar and candy being left .upon or between the teeth, but it is true also that particles of food will act in much the same way; perfect cleanliness should lie
observed. The children should be fed with reference to their teeth. The com bread upon which the negro depends may well be given to our children. The good effects of forming the habit in early childhood of caring for the teeth will be felt at three score and ten.— New York Evening Poet.
Room for Immigration.
'With advancing spring the raijroad companies of the West -are preparing for the immigration of 1885, which bids fair to assume enormous proportions. The question naturally arises in the minds of those unacquainted with the country as to where so many people are to find settlement. Years ago the alarm was sounded that the available limits of the great West had been reached, that the agricultural lands were about all taken, and that all that lay beyond was a rainless region, fit only as uncertain grazing grounds for the venturesome herder and shepherd. But the settler has kept steadily encroaching upon the boundaries of this vast region until he has finally pushed his corn and wheat fields into the very center of the mythical Great American Desert, exploding the theories of the explorer and spoiling the map of the geography. The Government lands of Dakota have been rapidly disappearing until all of the free lands south of the fortysixth parallel are for the most part confined to the counties of Oampbell, McPherson, Walworth, Potter, and the recently opened Crow Creek Reservation. These comprise some of the finest and most productive* lands to be found in the great valley of the Missouri, and the present season will no doubt Bee the entry of the last available acre in South Dakota, lying east of the Missouri River. However, this will be far from exhausting Dakota’s homes for the poor. The Mouse River District in the north is in itself a State in extent of territory, of wheat lands excelled by neither the Bed nor the Jim River valleys, while in the Blaok Hills region are to be found some of the most fertile valleys in the whole West. Northwestern Nebraska, which is best reached by the Sioux City and Pacific Railroad, is the latest scope of country opened to settlement by railway construction, and the indications are that within the coming eighteen months but little of the Government landß in that part of the State will remain unclaimed. But it is many miles from the Wyoming line to the moontains beyond, and so long as the free lands of the Government domain prove to be productive so long will settlers, .in thousands, continue to flock to this rich and fertile section of the West.
Two Hundred and Eighty-eight.
Dark was the stilly night, and the distant glare of electric lights and the occasional fitful flashes of a meteor only served to deepen the shadows of the massive brick buildings which line Fourth avenue, when two Pittsburg attorneys ran into each other. “Oh, is it you, R. A. ?” said one, and was immediately answered by a deep “Yes.” “Say,” continued the first speaker, “did you hear that story about ‘2BB’to-day?” “No,” answered the other, excitedly, what is it?” “Oh, it’s too gross, too gross entirely, ” replied his companion, in a mournful voice. “Tell away,” resumed the first, “and Fll try to Btand it. If I must hear Buch dreadful things, I must. ” “Well,” exclaimed his friend, “144 is one gross, and 288 is two gross, isn’t it?” A meteor shot across the sky like a flash of lightning—a thud—a moan—a chuckle—a dark form stealing away in the darkness—and all was silent. — Pittsburg Dispatch.
My Dog.
We two are together in the study, my dog and I. Outside a fearful storm is raging. The dog sits before me, and gazes straight into my eyes. I also gaze into his eyes. He seems as if he must say something to me. He is dumb, has no language, no ideas of his own. Still I understand him. I understand that the same feeling exists in him as in myself; that there is no distinction between us. We are homogeneous; the same flickering little flame glows and shines in each of us. Death draws near, one single tonch of his cold, mighty wing. And that is the end ! Who can discern, then, what special flame glows in both of us? No! It was not merely a man and an aniihal gazing mutually at each other. They were not two pair of eyes, belonging to equal beings, that criticised each other. And in each of these pair of eyes one existence anxiously humbled itself before another that was its equal. —Choice Literature.
A Mine of Mica.
For some time stove manufacturers and dealers have seen mica grow scarcer and scarcer, and have heard the steady complaint of stove owners and stove dealers about its rapidly increasing price. There has never been a very liberal supply of mica in the world, what there was coming from the Rocky Mountains and the South. Recently a mica mine has been discovered near Tallulah, Ga., which is pronounced by an expert and successful mica miner to be the richest mine he ever saw in any section. The mine contains blocks that will square one foot, and the vein is adjudged to he inexhaustible. Should it so prove, it will be of immense value to people in every station in life, as well as a bonanza to the fortunate owner. Mica has come to be one of the absolute necessities of American economy.-- Chicago Herald.
Agreeable to Everybody.
Col. Bobert G: King, for ten yean Deputy Collector Internal Revenue, Baltimore, MA, writes: "I indorse the Bed Star Cough Cure. I have used it in my family for a violent cough, and found it excellent Its use was entirely free from the depressing effects of other cough remedies. It can readily be taken, and agrees with and benefits everybody suffering from throat and lnng troubles. The relief is permanent, and there is no reaction. When a man is driven to desperation, he generally holds the reins and loosens the brake himself.
HENRY WARD BEECHER’S BROTHER
The Her. Henry Ward Beecher has three brothers 11 Tin*. One of these Is the Her. Charles Beecher, known as the writer of some of the most quaint and touching hymns in the English language. Another is the Bev. Edward Beecher, a profound theologian, far advanced in years, and living in Brooklyn, where he preaches from time to time. A third brother is the Bev. William Henry Beecher, who is spending the serene years of a mellow old age at his home. 8 Honors street, Chicago. Mr. Beecher is 84 years old, and with the exception of the natural infirmities of age, is a hearty and vigorous old gentleman. A gentleman who recently visited Mr. Beecher at his home, found him in an exceedingly genial frame of mind and by no means indisposed to talk about the relief he had obtained from the rheumatism, which for many had been a source of trouble to him. In rdply to a question, the venerable gentleman remarked: “Why, you want to know about Athlophoros. It is the greatest medicine in the world for rheumatism. I had suffered with that disease for fifteen years. My hands and my Joints were swelled. I had much pain, and many sleepless nights. It took my pain away, and gave me power to sleep. Do not understand me to say that my rheumatism is all gone. It would be a miracle if rheumatism could bo entirely driven away from an old man like me, who has had It for years. I have Some of it left, and occasionally I feel its pains. Then I take more Athlophoros, and the pains are driven away. Even if it can’t entirely drive out the cause of pain from a man who has had it so long, it takes the pain away, and that is a great deal. Sometimes I had frightful pains at night before going to bed. Then I would take a dose of Athlophoros, and I soon find the pain all gone, so that I could enjoy a calm and refreshing night's rest “I believe Athlophoros will cure chronic rheumatism. I know that is saying a great deal for it: but I say It. A tough old case of rheumatism like mine is very hard to cure, I know. But see my hands; they are noTonger swelled as they were. I am free from the pains I used to have. I sleep well, and What more can an old man of 81 ask for?” Mr. Beecher’s daughter cheerfully confirmed what liter father had said, and gave her testimony to the great advantages he had received from the Use of Athlophoros. For a number of years, Mr. C. L. Wetmore, of the well-known wholesale clothing house of Messrs. Thompson & Wetmore, 151 and 153 Fifth Ave., Chicago, was greatly afflicted with rheumatism, which interfered not only with his personal comfort, but also with his ability to attend to business. He is now well. Calling on Mr. Wetmore, at his store on Fifth avenue, the gentleman, found him willing to converse as to his experience in regard to rheumatism. “I am told, Mr. Wetmore, that you got rid of your rheumatism by the help of Athlophoros. Is that true - ;’’ “Well, I had been for a long while troubled with rheumatism, and I had tried almost everything in the line of medicine. I may fairly say that Athlophoros finished the rheumatism, and finally overcame it. Some of the other remedies had given me relief, which proved only temporary and incomplete. But it was not so with the Athlophoros. Since I have taken it I find that I have no more rheumatic pains, either to annoy me by day or to interfere with my sleep by night. My rheumatism was at times very severe. All iny Joints were swollen, and were very painful. I was detained at home sometimes as much as a month at a time, suffering acutely and unable to attend to business. Now that Athlophoros has finished the rheumatism, 1 am happy to say that my sleep is good, my appetite is regular and healthy, and I am every aay attending to business.” If von cannot get Athlophoros of your druggist, we will send it express paid, on receipt oi regular price—one dollar per bottle. We prefer that you buy it from your druggist, but if be hasn’t it, do not be persuaded to try something else, bat order at once from us, as directed. Arhlophobos Co., 112 Wall street. New York.
A Will Question.
A will case involving a law question of some magnitude has recently arisen in a town near Augusta, Me. A person worth a property of some SIO,OOO died, and in his will he bequeathed the entire amount to the town. -Three citizens of the town were witnesses to the testament. The will was admitted to probate about a year ago. Now tbe law says that beneficiaries of a will shall not be witnesses of such document. It is held that the witnesses of the above-mentioned will, being inhabitants of the town which receives the benefit, are such beneficiaries, and on this ground the direct heir of the testator will bring an action to break the will.
Beset on All Sides
By malaria, how shall we escape the dread inlection? is the question which the denizens of fever and ague districts ask themselves. The answer comes from former sufferers who for years have escaped the visitations of the periodic scourge, through the protecting Influence of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. When the necessity for using preventive measures arises, use this means of prevention at once. It regulates the liver, facilitates digestion, and liberates impurities from the system, when such exist, by promoting healthful action of the bowels and kidneys. Act early. In all regions where miasmatic vapors breed disease, it is absolutely necessary to be provided with a safeguard, and this is true, though a sojourn in such localities is destined to be brief. No one con afford to breathe malaria for a short time. The Bitters is a sovereign specific for rheumatism, debility and nervousness. Keep it on hand.
Not a Bit in His Mouth.
Australians have discarded the horsebit and' substituted for it a carrago, consisting of a steel band placed over the front bone of the horse’s nose, to which appliance the reins are attached. It is claimed for this substitute for the bit that it gives complete control over the horse without inflicting the least discomfort or torture. Thebe are no hod-carriers in Germany. Brinks are passed from hand tq* hand. The higher up the bricklayers are the more men are required to toss the bricks. Two men to a story is about the average, with enough more to lead from the front of the building to the place where the bricks are needed. One may sometimes see three men on the ground, eight on the front of the building, and five on the top, making sixteen men through whose hands each brick passed before reaching its place of destination.
“ I Feel So Well.”
“ I want to thank you for’telllng me of Dr. Pierce’s ‘Favorite Prescription,’” writes a lady to her friend. “I or a long time I was unfit to attend to tbe work of my household. I kept about, but 1 felt thoroughly miserable. I bad terrible backaches and bearing down sensations across me, and was quite weak and discouraged. I sent and got some of the medicine, after receiving your letter, and It has cured me. 1 hardly know myself. I feel so welL” '' ■ 1 Engineer Melville wants to get up another starving and freezing expedition to the frozen regies of the north. We should think the hardy officer might rent lodgings in an ice-house somewhere, and manage to get along in passable comfort until he could become somewhat acclimated.
WILD NAN
Quaker Testimony.
Mrs. A. M. Dauphin, a Quaker lady, of Philadelphia, bas dene a great deal to make known to ladies there the great value of Mrs. Pink ham's Vegetable compound as a cure for their troubles and diseases. She writes as follows: “A young lady of this city, while bathing some years ago, was thrown violently against the life line, apd the Injuries received resulted in an ovarian tumor which grew and enlarged until death seemed certain. Her physician finally advised her to try Mrs. Pinkham’s Compound. She did so, and in a short time the tumor was dissolved or caused to slough off, and she is note in perfect health. 1 also know of many cases where the medicine has been of great value in preventing miscarriage and alleviating the pains and dangers of childbirth. Philadelphia ladies appreciate the worth of this medicine and its great value.”
The Parrot’s Rebuke.
Parrots are queer creatures, and, like monkeys, sometimes seem like a very burlesque upon humanity. One South American bird had unfortunately learned on shipboard the habit of profane language. The mate, a little ashamed of the creature’s profanity, undertook a cure by dousing it with water at each offense. Polly evidently imbibed the reproof, for during a gale, when a heavy sea broke over the hen coop, and deluged hens and cocks pretty thoroughly, she marched up to the dripping fowls and screamed out, "Been swearing again, hain’t ye?”
“All Played Out.”
“Don’t know what alls me lately. Can't eat well—can't sleep well. Can’t work, and don’t enjoy doing anything. Ain’t really sick, and I really ain't well. Feel all kind*)’ played out, someway.” . That is wbat scores of men say every day. If they would take Dr. Pierce's “Golden Medical Discovery’’ they would soon have no occasion to say it It purifies the blood, tones up the system and tortifles it against disease. It Is a great antt-bU-ious remedy as well.
The front steps are deserted now. The season has passed when she stoops to conquer.—Boston Budget. Don't disgust everybody by hawking, blowing and spitting, but use Dr. Sago’ll Catarrh Bemedy and be cured. a 1 " The easiest way to take a joke good-na-turedly is to do it with the scissors.—St. Paul Portrayer.
Important.
When you visit or leave New York City, save Baggage Expressage and Carriage Hire, and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot: 600 elegant rooms fitted np at a cost of one million dollars, reduced to $1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cabs, stage, and elevated railroad to all depots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union than at any first-class hotel In the city. A father who has put his boy Into a law office, speaks of him as his son-in-law. —Boston Star.
Horsford’s Acid Phosphate.
INVALUABLE AS A TONIC. • Dr. J. Li. Pratt, Greenfield, 111., says: “It Is all that it claims to be—lnvaluable as a tonic in any case where an acid tonic is indicated.” Parting is reputed to be a sweet sorrow. The divorce courts are full of it. —Carl Pretzel's Weekly.
“Put up” at the Gault House.
The business man or tourist will find firstclass accommodations at the low price of 92 and $2.60 per day at the Qault House, Chicago, oorner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot. Elevator; all appointment* first-class. Hoyt & Gates, Proprietors.
Why Sufler Pain?
»* *7»i»va * (uu< When by using the Compound Oxygen Treatment of Drt. Starkey It Palen, 1109 Qirard st., Philadelphia, the chances are all In favor of your gotUng relief; es|>cclaUy if the pain haa Its origin in nervous derangement! In Neuralgia, sick headache, and the various affections of which these arc among the moat distressing, this new treatment acts with remarkable promptness. Write for pamphlet giving information about this Treatment.
Sudden Changes of Weather
are productive of Throat Diseases, Coughs, Colds, etc. There is no more effectual relief in these diseases to be found than in the use of Brown's Bbonchiai. Troches, Price iScts. > * “Eureka! I have found it.” Happy the man who suddenly finds a long-lost treasure, and this is how W. C. Field, of 1232 Cedar avenue, Cleveland, felt when, after suffering thirty years with rheumatism, he found Athlophoros, the sovereign cure. It is what he bad been looking for, and now his joints are free from pain. Price, $1 per bottle. If your druggist hasn’t It, sent to Athlophoros Co., 112 Wall street, N. Y. a buoxn for a moment the thousands upon thousands of bottles of Carbdine, the deodorized petroleum hair renewer, annually sold, and the fact that not a single complaint basbeen received from ah these thousands, and you may have some idea of its good (jnaUtiea. Ip afflicted with Sore Byes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c.
DR. JOHN BOLL’S Sml’sTuSn'iii FOR THE CURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILLS and FEVER, AID ALL MALARIAL OISEASES The proprietor of this celebrated medicine justly claims for it a superiority over all remedies ever offered to the public for the SATE, CEBTAOT, SPEEDY and PEEMAHEHT 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 bear him testimony to the truth of the assertion that in no ease whatever will it foil to euro if the directions are strictly followed and serried out. In a great many cases a single dose has been sufficient for a cure, and whole families have been cured by a single bottle, with a perfect restoration of the general health. It is, however, prudent, and in every ease mere certain to ours, if its use is continued in smaller dotes for a week or two after the disease has been checked, mere sspocihlly in difficult and long-standing oases. Usually this medians will not require any aid to keep the bowels in good order. Should the patient, however, require a cathartic medicine, after having taken throe or four doses of the Tonic, a single dose of BULL’S VEGETABLE FAMILY PILLS will bo sufficient. BULL’S SABBAPAEULA is the old and reliable remedy for impurities of the blood and Scrofulous affections—the Xing of Blood Purifiers. - .1. DR. JOHH BULL’S VEGETABLE WORM DESTROYER it prepared in the fern of candy drops, attractive to the eight and pleasant to the taste. DR. JOBS BULL’S SMITH’S TONIC SYRUP, BULL’S SARSAPARILLA, BULL’S WORM DESTROYER, The Popular Remedies of the Day. Prisclpsl Office, 8n lain St., LOUIS TILLS, ET.
*We Have Used It.” aa———up To thaPablle t From personal experience, as well as from observation of ID marked efficacy in other cases that have come under oar notice, we cheerfully recommend Bed Bt*» Cotas Cure as a safeandrellable^fsmiljjnedlclße. Combining the power to relieve and cure promptly, with the rare quality of being entirely free from opiates, poisons and narcotics, as demonstrated by the analyses of recognized medical authorities, it may Justly be termed a valuaWedlscovery^ We concur in the oflicial opinion of the Commissioner of Health of Baltimore, that “It happily supplants the objectionable and not unfrequently harmful features of other cough mixtures." i Baltimore, Md., Feb. 9, 1885. R. M. McLANE, Governor of Maryland. CHAN. B. ROBERTS, Attorney General. ■ • F. C. LATROBE, Mayor of Baltimore. A.. F». GORMAN, United States Senator. HARRISON ADREON, Postmaster, Baltimore. JAMES R. HORNER, City Comptroller. EDWIN 11. WEBSTER, Collector of the Port. J.H.SELLMAN, Collector U. g. Internal Keren ue a HART B. HOLTON, Member of Congress. 11. CLAY DALLAM, Judge Appeal Tax Court. . SAM’L A. CLAGETT, Sanitary Inspector. WM. 11. HISS, Purveyor Bay view Asylum. JAMES S. MORROW, Chief Judge Appeal Tax Court. Over fifty physicians of Baltimore, including those of leading hospitals, charitable institutions, colleges and schools, have voluntarily endorsed Bed Star Cough Cure, not only as the best thing of the kind ever discovered, but as being entirely free from the harmful features of other cough mixtures. Every one will find It a safe, sure cure. It Is entirely free from opiates, narcotics, emetics and poisons. It leaves no bad effects. It does not derange tbe system. It is pure, pleasant, prompt. Sold by druggists and dealers In medicine throughout the United States at fifty csnti a bottle. The Charles A. Vooelsr Company, Sole Proprietor*, Baltimore. Maryland.
Red Star TRADe\„co/ MARK (oUGIifuRE Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons. A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE Far Cengfcs. tore Throe*, Inihmi, lafincaza, Cold*. BreaeUtta, Crenp, Wh***leg Ceagh, Asthma, Qalasy, Pal*»l» Chart, of tbe Throat end ItiwffPrice BO cents* bottle. Sold by Druggists and Dealer*. Parties unablt to induce their deafer to promptly get it for them icilt receive two charges paid, by tending one dollar to 1U CHARLES A. VOGXLRR COMART, Sel*o*Mn**d M*DulActer*r*. liW*iw, M.ryiel, U. f. A. This remedy.contains no infurUme drugs. ELY’S |>f TADDLI CREAM “4js£y=yjs nostrils,‘wOmL absorbed, QRltjN effectually cleansing tbe MDrt’,y| bead of catarrhal virus. ■ STvtdeeCtWftWifi caurang healthy secretions. ■jgyUl|W < *|ttal heals the l< sores?'ani et nv stores of^ taste, NOT A gj LKJUID OR A few application* relieve. A thorouah treat- USA.I JTTv rrifCD "FEVER ELY BBOTHHg. DnMßttata.QwtoQ.F T. UimUDll Fill POND, Aurora, Kane Bn Address VALENTINE BBOSI, Janesville. WU. ASHA JA I srtow them myself sad test Q E E|l Qthem before selling. They are I and reliable: don’t buy any W !■ InU Wseeds from second-hand dealer*. Write tor rev splendid HLAlmanac Catalogue, FRICK. R. W. BC-ckBEE. SON E. State Street. Bockford. 111. TN DZUBALZR.nuadaltant.nnab Ei. lin street, P. O. Box 15W>. New York, Buyer and Forwarder to all part* of the country of every dencrin- , tion of eoods in large or (mail quantities. HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, CLOTHING, DRY GOODS, Kgk B s® 1%: ING IMPLEMENTS, *e, he. Correnpondence aoheltcd from tamlliea and responsible private parties. GOSSAMER GARMENTS FREE! To introduce -Hsppv Day*,’ our new tt-page Illustrated Magazine, we will send free to any lady sending 26c in stamps for Smooths’ subscription two Ladles’ Fall-Kite Waterproof Gossamer Garments with catalogue of other rubber goods, provided they will show them to their friends and induce other sales. Addrem PUBS. HAPPY DAYB. HASTTom). Coxa. HOME BEAUTIFUL-—Cheapest place for materials for art needle-work. Bend Sc forilluetnted catalogue. Mra.TUJFOTham, 10West 14thBt- N.Y. Did you Suppose Mustang Liniment only good for horses? It is for inflammation of all flesh. °\
ComiiDSniines He Wh* Become* a Treasurer of Money for Another la Responsible for a Safe Return. in preparing our AXaL£N’S XaUJfO JE remedies for all Throat and Dane Diseases, w» dSn'to t tasayform' eMtsrs ItsSmposition. It is to your Interest to stand by the old and tried remedy, ALLEIT* LDHO BALwTreAD thk tnrfjnw* NEW EVIDENCE: ~... «*« cm JgVS&B-JSiSj, uwa.M °“ t *» times Dijjß Wood. jU.miTOW 1 wepecWsW. A.J. HJXXMAN. ESCttfSSSSrE&SgBtSSSB La Fayettx, R. 1., Oct. 12, 1 HM. Gentlemen Allow me to isy that After tufas tines bottles of ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM for * badfattack of Bronchitis, I am entirely cured. I send tide voluntarily. that those afflicted may be benefited. ... Yoon respectfully. BURRILL H. DAVIS. J. H. HARRIS & CO. (Unite!) Props. CINCINNATI, OHIO. FOR SALE by fill MEDICINE DEALERS. HEALtH AND STRENGTH. Complete heart-ease and freedom from aches and pains follows tbs use of Dr, Guy soft’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. R gives tone and strength to every part of the body, and ia especially efficacious in curing diseases brought on by functional derangements. such as impure blood, weak kidneys, poor digestion,etc., causing headaches,constipation, sores, pimples, urinary sediments, aching joints and limbs, lame back ; general weakness, universal lassitude, etc., etc. Under the influence of this excellent remedy the heart beats regular, tbe blood circulates with vim, the lungs breathe easy, the kidneys and liver now healthy and strong, and the whole physical organization becomes more capable of endurance. Thought and action are compassed with greater freedom, and the individual approaches as near perfection as healthful humanity is capable. Unfortunates who seek health do themselves great injustice if they fail to try this excellent remedy. It is as farahead of all other preparations of sarsaparilla, blood purifiers, tonics, bitters, etc., as gold is superior to silver. Thousands have at- “ tested to its worth as a sure reviver of health, strength and vigor. fiflT Remember to have your druggist get it for you, and take no substitute. gggSSalS: DON'T MISS THIS! SfSPSEfVV* tog their addres* on post*] for my SHEET MVBIO WST of VocOl sad Instrumental Selection*. H you ms?. gjgjgjMgfeßA. • R. U. AWARE ' THAT 1 LorUlard's Climax Plug, SUUwb «W I—U.*q«.«a*md ■iliitw«rktaa«fc«ll«™a gsrs: luillufiMlany ftnm wk* *Ol am* «®»W» *mthsOmto IkOr mMOms «>4 «*<«« to Mm* Htotar m. S«< Mk “sent by mail (distance no objection); $2 t 095 tdav cube quietly made; no canvassing; no stamp for n£ ply PterocsidrcroßslsMfc.tojNNa, Hlli fat 3944 Geo. E. Brown & Co. AURORA, ILL CLEYELAJID RAY A ENGLISH DRAFT CATTLE. »nd term* liberal. AST Send for Illustrated Catalogue No. Ij. SSTMsaOTOX nos 1 11 si gg KIDDER’S PMTIuI&sSg^SS: Mass* sates WnsulptTM^ •ÜBdtncfc*.. >»e» eared. I »d**d. MamKlmMik la iu.ateery.MaU I *lll Wad TWO BOTTLES FEU. together with a VALUABLE TSZATISK on. thU disea** u WHEN WRITING TO ADVKRTIKKBS, W please nay yon saw the aSmSmtH In this paper. ' A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty; but it is a part Every lady may have it; at least,, what looks like it Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies*
