Rensselaer Republican, Volume 18, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 June 1886 — Page 3

New York Dailies.

Correspondence of Providence Star: The practice of having an editorial consultation still prevails in the Harald office, although what beneficial results are obtained no one is able to tell. 'The editorial writers and the heads of deassemble in great solemnity, and the leading news of the day is talked over and is treated thereafter •with no regard whatever as to the results of the consultation. The heads of departments runwieir departments in defiance of the opinions of all others. The other papers are run on different Systems. In the Times office Mr. Charles R. Miller is editor-in-chie'f, and the managing editor is subordinate to him. Miller remains in the office until 1 o’clock in the morning, and devotes himself almost entirely to the editorial page. He supervises and revises all the editorial matter. Mr. John 0. Heid, the managing editor, in the meantime is whooping up the -news, and is not bothering his head about editorial matters. He is not absolute, however, for Miller has the helm. In the World, Mr. John H. Cockerill keeps an eye on every department, and controls every line of copy. He gets to his desk by noon and remains there until after midnight, and he is writing editorials and suggesting news matter all day and all night. Mr. Ballard Smith, who has been the rounds of New York journalism, has at length got back to the World, but in a subordinate position. Probably tho most complete system of management is that of the Sun. Mr. Dana puts in five hours a day of steady work in writing and revising editorial matter, and at about 4 o’clock in the afternoon turns over the entire establishment to Chester L. Lord, the managing editor, and goes home. He hasn’t been down to the office an evening in eight years, and his orders are strict that in no event shall he be communicated with or disturbed after his departure. Lord takes up the work where Mr. Dana has dropped it, and thereafter has absolute control over every line that goes into the paper. The particular strength of the„Sun is the excellence with which the hews and editorial departments are systematized. As much or more news and correspondence is received daily as any of the big eight-page papers get, but the Sun must put the pith of it all before its readers in onehalf the space. It has, therefore, a corps of seven men who do nothing but revise copy from 6 p. m. until the hour of going to press. Each man has a department and all sit in the same room with the managing editor. A constant interchange of conversation is going on with reference to this, that, or the other article, and the amount of space that each article can occupy is settled upon before it goes to the composingroom. Ail the news of the day and the correspondence pass through these men’s hands, and they revise and cut and slash as the occasion demands. In the Tribune the most complicated system prevails. Mr. Whitelaw Reid is supreme, and under him in order are the managing editor, the day editor, and the night editor, through all of whom a trivial order or suggestion must pass. The city editor has to fight them all to get his matter into the. paper, and the night editor, on whom alights the final paroxysm of getting the paper to press, is beside himself with a conflict of orders and instructions when the fatal moment arrives. With all hands bearing down on him to put in the special matter he is at his wit’s end. There is confusion everywhere. The same is true of the methods in the Herald, and in a less degree of the Times— there is a great deal of confusion resulting from the multiplicity of departments and the men who give orders. The World goes to press with a rush and a good deal of noise. The Sun men work with the precision of mechanics, with one man guiding every part, and the time of going to press does not vary five minutes, night after night, from one month’s end to another. It is done without noise or excitement or confusion of any sort. It is the result of a carefully developed system.

A Great Deal in His Name.

There’s something in a name, especially for an actor or author. No man bearing the name of Smith has ever be -nheard -of as an actor, though some have attained distinction in literature and politics. I met Hjalmer Hjorth Boyesen, the Scandinavian author, at Mrs. M. E. Palmer’s reception, and some acquintances were chaffing him about his peculiar name. “My name?” he said, laughing; “I wouldn’t take anything for it. It is a part of my capital. It is my trademark. I might have had some success without it, but it has helped out. I signed my first story ‘H.-H. Boyesen.’ When the Atlantic came out with it the editor had substituted ‘Hjalmer Hjorth,’ in all its jawbreaking glory for the simple initials. I asked him about it. ‘Why, “H. H.” wouldn’t attract attention,’ he said. ‘Anybody could be “H. H.”— Henry or Hiram, or even Harriet or Hannah. But “Hjalmer Hjorth’’—it smells of the North Sea and sounds of the sagas and vikings. Folks will remember it—especially if they try to pronounce it.’ So it has proved. I wouldn’t take anything for it.”— New York Times.

The Small Hoy Again.

A temperance lecturer, who was divorced from his wife, took tea with a family who had a young son of the most frank and impudent type. During a lull in the conversation, this youth, who had heard his parents make comments upon the divorce of the lecturer from his wife, blurted out: “Mr. Comma, where’s your wife?” The question was so loudly put and so abrupt that the man hadn’t the presence of mind to tell the boy he was impudent, but, flushed and cnnghing, he replied: — “I —really —I don’t know." “Divorced, mother says," continued the odious youngster. “Er —well—yes,” coughed the embarrassed Good Templar. “Shoot the divorce!” shouted the son and heir; “what es you don’t agree? Fight it out, the way father and mother does!” ' Doubt is the picket fence straddled by the legs of indecision.

AN OPIUM EATER’S STORY.

Crawling Over Ked-Hot Bars of Iron In His Fearful Freusy—A Scientific Investigation and Its Kesnlts. / Cincinnati Tima-Star. “Opium or death!” , '. This brief sentence wu fairly Hissed into the ear of a prominent druggist on Vine street by a person who, a few years ago well off, is to-day a hopeless wreck. One can scarcely realize the sufferings of an opium victim. De Quiuoey has vivialv portrayed it But who can fitly describe the joy of the rescued victim? FL 0. Wilson, of Loveland, 0., formerly with March, Harwood 4 Co., manufacturing chemists of St Louis, and of the well-known firm of H. 0. Wilson A Co., chemists, formerly of this city, gave our reporter yesterday a bit of thrilling personal experience in this line. “I have crawled over red hot bars of iron and coals of fire,” he said, “in my agony durLing an opium frenzy. The very thought of my sufferings freezes ’my blood and chills my bones. I was then eating over 30 grains of opium daily.” “How did you contract the habit?” “Excessive business cares broke me down and my doctor prescribed opium! That is tho way nine-tenths of cases commence. When I determined to stop, however, I found I could not do it.' “You may be surprised to know,” he said, “that two-fifths of the slaves of morphine and opium are physicians. Many of these I met We studied our cases carefully. We found out what the organs were in which the appetite was developed and sustained; that no victim was free from a demoralized condition of these organs; that the hope of a cure depended entirely upon the degree of vigor which could be imparted to them. I have seen patients, while undergoing treatment, compelled to resort to opium again to deaden the horrible pain in those organs. I marvel how I ever escaped. ” “Do you mean to say, Mr. Wilson, that you have conquered the habit?” “Indeed 1 have.” “Do you object to telling me how?” “No, sir. < Studying the matter with several opium-eating physicians, we became satisfied that the appetite'for opium was located in the kidneys ana liver. Ournext object was to find a specific for restoring those organs to health. The physicians, much against their code, addressed their attention to a certain remedy and became thoroughly convinced on its scientific merits alone that it was the only one that could be relied upon in every case of disordered kidneys and liver. I thereupon began using it and, supplementing it with my own special treatment, finally got fully over the habit I may say that the most important part of the treatment is to get those organs first into good ■ working condition, for in them the appetite' originates and is sustained, and in them over ninety per cent of all other human ailments originate. “For the last seven years this position has been taken by the proprietors of that remedy, and finally it is becoming an acknowledged scientific truth among the medical profession; many of them, however, do not openly acknowledge it, and yet, knowing they have no other scientific specific, their code not allowing them to use it, they buy it upon the quiet and prescribe it in tjiejr own bottles.”' “As I said before, the opiuriT and morphine habits can never be cured until the appetite for them is routed out of the kidneys and liver. I have tried everything,—experimented with everything, and as the result of my studies and investigation, I can say I know nothing can accomplish this result but Warner's safe cure.” “Have others tried your treatment?” “Yes, sir, many; and all who have followed it fully have recovered. Several of them who did not first treat their kidneys and liver for six or eight weeks, as I advised them, completely failed. This form of treatment is always insisted upon for all patients, whether treated by mail or at the Loveland Opium Institute, and supplemented by our special pri.vate treatment, it always cures.” Mr. Wilson stands very high wherever known. His experience is only another proof of the wonderful and conceded power of Warner’s safe cure over all diseases of the kidneys, liver, and blood, and the diseases cause 1 by - derangements of these organs. We may say that it is very flattering to the proprietors of Warner’s safe cure that it has received the highest medical indorsement, and, after persistent study, it is admitted by scientists that there is nothing in materia medica for the restoration of those groat organs that equals it in power. We hike pleasure in publishing the above statements coming from so reliable a source as Mr. Wilson and confirming by personal experience what we have time and again published in our columns. We also extend to the proprietors our hearty congratulatioifS on the results wrought.

Literary Catacombs.

“Shall our civilization be preserved ?” is a question often suggested by Prof. Vambery’s essays on the literature of the medimval Moslems. Their leading races were Semites, but “what lacked those knaves” that a royal Caucasian should have? Certainly not progressiveness nor aptitude for natural science. - The favorite sciences of the ancients were little more than dialectics, but the nations who produced the idyls of the Gulistan and the epics of ,the Shah Nahmeh showed an equal genius, for chemistry, medicine, astronomy, natural history, and the higher mathematics. It is surprising, and, indeed, not a little humiliating, to compare the status of Moslem science in the second century of the Hegira with the con temporary state of affairs in Christian Europe. At a time when the literature., of our baptized forefathers was limited to a few dozen chronicles of imaginary martyrs and paladins, and when, aS Hallam assures us, it was difficult, even in Rome, to find a priest who could read his own breviary, a mere index of Moslem authors would have filled a considerable catalogue. They iiad text-books of all abstract and concrete sciences; they had astronomical tables, maps, globes, and sea-charts; they had universities and agricultural colleges, model farms, parklike gardens, and magnificent, well-lighted cities. Why, then, did their civilization so utterly perish? Was it their physical inferiority to the thick-headed Goths ? Was it polygamy ? Did they underrate the importance of physical education at a time when personal liberty depended on personal prowess? Or should Herr Weil be right that the chief cause of their ruin wks an excess of geographical diffusion ? “They attempted too much,” says the historian of the caliphs ; “they spread themselves over a teri itory too large and too disjointed to resist the attacks of a concentrated toe.—Prof. Felix L. Oswald. - __

Vain Regrets.

Little .Tohn’ny Fizzletop was busily engaged in a life and death struggle •with his lessons. He paused in his labors and heaved a heavy sigh.— “What’s the matter, Johnny ?” asked his mother. v“I was just thinking how nice it would be if I had been born during the dark ages.” “Whats good would that have done you?” “Heaps. I was reading yesterday that education was very much neglected during the dark ages. If I had been born then 1 wouldn’t have to learn this jografylesson.”—TexasSiftings. One of the mokt fatal temptations to the weak is a slight deviation from the truth, for the sake of apparent good. , .

Important. When you visit or Leave New York City, save baggage, expressage, And <3 carriage hire, and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot 013 rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million dollars, fl and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with tho beet Horae oars, stages, and elevated railroad to all depots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other first class hotel in the city.

Human Life in Russia.

On the Russian frontier it once happened that an officer was playing at cards with a friend, when a Jew was trying to smuggle himself into the Russian Empire without proper vise of his passport. The sentinel on guard arrested him and reported to the officer. “AU right,” said he. Hours afterward the sentinel again asked what die was to do with the Jew. The Captain, furious at being interrupted, shouted, “Why, the Jew! Hang him!” The Captain went on playing until the morning, when, suddenly remembering the prisoner, he called the soldier and said, “Bring in the Jew.” “The Jew!” said the amazed soldier; “but I hanged him, as you ordered.” “What!” said the Captain, “you have committed murder.” He arrested him, and the judgment—death—went up to the Emperor. Inquiring, before signing so serious a document, and learning how matters stood, the Emperor decided that the soldier who, without reasoning, had implicitly obeyed so extraordinary an order of his superior, was to be made a Corporal; that the officer who, while on duty, for the sake of gambling had given the murderous order, was to be sent to Siberia, and that his pay was to go to the family of the poor Jew who had been so iniquitously murdered.

Sharp Pangs Athwart the Forehead,

And in the muscles of the neck and shoulder, usually most violent alter nightfall, are among the cheerful manifestations of neuralgia It is an affection of the nerve intensified by a cold. Repose, bringing with it a cessation of pain, is induced by Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which is a fine nerve tonic and tranquilizer. It is also a reliable means of checking rheumatism and gout. Those maladies have always more or less to do with the kidneys that, when inactive, fail to throw off the impurities which engender them. The Bitters can be relied upon to renew a healthy and purifying action of the renal organs, Besides this. it gives tone to thestomach, liver, and bowels, and enriches the circulation. Appetite and sleep both profit by it, and it is a well accredited means of fortifying the system against malaria. It hastens the recovery of strength by convalescents, mitigates tha infirmities of age, and helps the constitutionally feeble. A poor "Man in Turkey claimed a house which a rich neighbor had usurped; he held his deeds and documents to prove his right, but his more powerful opponent had provided a number of witnesses to invalidate them; and to support their evidence more effectually he presented the cadi with a bag containing five hundred ducats. When the cause came to be heard the poor man told his story and produced his writings, but wanted that most essential and only valid proof, witnesses. The other, provided with witnesses, laid his whole stress on them and on his adversary’s defect in law, who could produce none; he therefore urged the cadi to give sentence in his favor. After the most pressing solicitations the judge calmly drew fr’om under his seat the bag of five hundred ducats, whiefi the rich man had given him as a bribe, saying to him very gravely: “You have been mistaken in this suit, for if the poor man could bring no witnesses in confirmation of his right I can produce five hundred.” He then threw him the bag with reproach and indignation, and finally decreed the house to the poor plaintiff. One among the many eminentchuj'eh dignitaries whohave giventheir public endorsement to the wonderful efficacy of St. Jacobs Oil, in case of rheumatism and other painful ailments, is the Right Reverend Bishop Gilmour, Cleveland, Ohio.

The Army of the Revolution.

It is not positively known how many war of the revolution. The official tabular statement indicates a total of recorded years of enlistment and not a total of the men who served. Hence, a man who served from April 19, 1775, until the formal cessatftm of hostilities, April 19, 1783, counted as eight men in the aggregate. On this basis of enlisted years, the following table gives the contributions of the various States: New Hampshire 12,497 Massachusetts 69;907 Rhode Inland ... 5,908 Connecticut. 31,939 New York"... 17,781 New Jersey;A ■ ■• • •• ■ r.~. 10,72 > Pennsylvania 25,678 Delaware 2.386 Maryland .t... 13,912 Virginia.’... 23,678 North Carolina 7,263 South Carolina 6,417 Georgia. ... 2,679 Total,, . .233,771 The only cough mixture before the people that contains no .opiates or narcotics is Red Stir Cough Cure. Price, twenty-five cents.

A Response.

At a la-ge and would-be fashionable wedding, held in a town in this State, the solemnity was rudely disturbed by a rather unexpected answer. The bride bad entered on her uncle’s arm and was met by the groom at the chancel. The uncle then returned and took a seat in the body of the house. All went well until the clergyman asked the question: “Who giveth this woman to be wedded to this man ?” He paused for an answer, and the uncle rose, and placing his hands on the pew in front of him, said, in accents louder than are common at weddings, “Me.”— Poston Traveller.

Earth in Need of Water.

Loto’s first lesson in geography: “What is that, there?” asked his teacher, placing a finger upon a certain point on the map. “There?” said Loto. “Oh, a dirty finger nail.” ~ r ■ - i-—. -- I'nequaled—- Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. , A peculiarity of stage banquets is th* great variety of supes. A Most Liberal Offer! The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., offer to send their celebrated Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on thirty days’ trial to any man afflicted with Nervous Debility, Loss of Vitality, Manhood, etc. Illustrated pamphlets m-sealed envelope with full particular** mailed free. Write them at once.

Thomas Carlyle,

the greet Scotch author, suffered all his life with dyspepsia, which made his life miserable and caused his best and truest friends not a little pain bd'eause of his fretfulnesa. Dyspepsia generally arises from dlse&ses of the liver, and a* Dr. Pierce's- “Golden Medical Discovery” cures all diseases of this great gland, it follows that while all cannot be Carlyle*, even with dyspepsia, ail ean be free from the malady, while emulating his virtues. The man of indigenous bunions may be said to be a person of great resources, since he generally has something on foot. “ Oh, wad some power ths gtftle gle us, To see ourselveffas tthers see us." Few women want to appear sick, and yet how many we see with pain written on every feature, who have been suffering for months from female weakness, and who could easily cure themselves by the use of Dr. Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription,” to be found at any drug story. This remedy is a specific for weak backs, nervous or neuralgic pains, and all that class of diseases known as “female complaints.” Illustrated, large treatise on diseases of women, with most successful courses of self-treatment, sent for 10 cents In stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. You may crowd, you mav jauq the streetcar if you will, but there’s room for one more on the vehicle Still. For imparting tone and strength to the stomach, liver, and bowels, take Ayer’s Pills. When a Chatham street merchant charges sl7 for a coat that costs $2.50, he offers it regardless of cost. ■Soft, pliant, and glossy hair results from the use of Hall's Hair Kenewer. A coal dealer lays up treasures in heaven when he goes out of his weigh to oblige a poor widow.

“ROUGH ON ITCH.”

“Bough on Itch” cures skin humors, eruptions, ring worm, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet, chilblains, itch, ivy poison, barber’s itch. 50c. jars.

"ROUGH ON CATARRH”

corrects offensive odors at once. Complete cure of worst chronic cases: also unequaled as gargla for diphtheria, sore throat, foul breath. 50c.

“ROUGH ON PILES.”

Why suffer Piles? Immediate relief and complete cure guaranteed. Ask for “Rough on Piles. ” Sure cure lor itching, protruding, bleeding, or any form of Piles. 50c. At Druggists' or Mailed.

“Put Up” at the Gault House.

The business man or tourist will find firstclass accommodations at the low price of $2 and $2.50 per day at the Gault House, Chicago, corner 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 appointments first-class. Hoyt & Gates, Proprietors. “Rough on Rats” clears out Rats, Mice. 15a “Dough on Corns, "hard or soft corns, bunions, 15a “Roughen Toothache.” Instant relief. 15a

WELL'S HAIR BALSAM,

If gray, restores to original color. An eleganl dressing, softens and beautifies. No oil nor grease. A Tonic Restorative. Stone hair coming out; strengthens, cleanses, heals scalp, 50a

“HOUGH ON BILE” PILLS

start the bile, relieve the bilious stomach, thick, aching head and overloaded bowels. Small granules, small dose, big results, pleasant in operation, don’t disturb the stomach. 25a Ko Opium in Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. "Soo.

Lost Faith in Physicians.

There are innumerable instances where cures have been effected by Scovill’s SamaPa'billa, or Blood snd LiverSyrgp, for all diseases of the blood, when they had been given over by their physicians. It is one of the best remedies ever offered to the public, and as it is prepared with the greatesfeare as a specific for certain diseases, it is no wonder thit itshould be more effectual than hastily written and carelessly prepared prescriptions. Take this medicine for all disorders arising from Impure blood. It is endorsed by leading professional men.

How’s Your Liver? Is the Oriental-salutation, knowing that good health cannot exist without'a --- healthy Liver. When the els are sluggish and constipated, the food lies in the stomach undigested, poisoning the blood; frequent headache ensues; a feeling of lassitude, despondency and how the whole system is deranged. Simmons Liver Regulator has been. the means of restoring more people to health and happiness by giving them a healthy Liver, than any agency known on earth. It acts with extraordinary power and efficacy. * NEVER BEEN DISAPPOINTED. Asareneral family remedy for Dyspepsia, Torpid Liver, Constipation, etc.. I hardly ever use anything else, and have never been disappointed in the effect produced; it seems to Jbe. almosta perfect_cure for all diseases of the Rtfimach and Bowels. ' W. J. McElroy, Macon. Ga. Rn n RADWAY ' S n n READY ■J LU LL RELIEF CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes. Not one hour a-ter reading this need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. BOWEL COMPLAINTS It will in a few moments, when taken according to directions, cure Cramps, Spasms. Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Summer Complaint. Diarrhea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind in the Bowels, and all other Internal Pains. -- ————•-- - There is not a remedial agent in lhe world that will cure Fever and Ague, and all other Ma anous, Bilious and other Fevers, aided by Radway's Pills, so quick as Rsdway’s Ready Relief. It instantly relieves and soon cures Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Pleurisy, Stiff Neck, all Congestions and Inflammations, whether of the Lungs, Kidneys or Bowels, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, Headache, Toothache, Weaknessnr Pain in the Back, Che»t or limbs by one application. Fifty cents per bottle, bold by Druggists. TWENTY YEARS IN USE! Dn. Radway & Co.: I have used yonr Ready Relief for many years in my family with great effect. For the last twenty years I would have nothing else to expel pain inwardly or from any part of ti.e body outwardly. I have used it lor rheumatic pains, and, always found great relief when applied'to the painful part of the body. Your Pills are indeed excellent, as' you represent them in the papers. . , ■ . knurs truly, ROBERT O'DONNELL. 67 East Lake St., Chicago, 111., Sept. 7, 18s5. DR. RADWAY & CO.. N. Y., Proprietors of Radwans Sarsapan|fian Resolvent and

TIRED OUT! stoian’s proscription for tbowc who arod bafldtegap It Enriches the Blood, Invljorates System, Restores Appetite, Aids Digestion It does not blacken or injure the teeth, oauM headache or produce constipation—»<*«r Iron Lawitado with strengthening and rallying effect?' MBS. H. A Smith, 1319 Fulton Are.. Davenport, lowa, says: ” I have used Brown's Iron Bitter, for general debility aud loss of appetite with much benefit. I can truly recommend it for that tired feeling that so many overtasked inothers.auffer with. Mbs. Jamb ASDBXWS. St. Helens, Mich says: ”1 waa Buffering from liter complaint, had such a Hiuruid fading and no strength. I used Browns Iron Bitters with great benefit, in fact never took anythin* that did me aa much good.” Genuine has above Trade Mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by BROWN CHEMICAL'CO., BALTIMORE. MP. A HIIIII Habit, Quickly end Palnlees- , ■■ lymrrd t home Correspondence I r I I I Iwl solicited ami /rretrmZ of cure sent : J ; I iJIVI iioi.es.lnvestigators.TnglltniANß ■ ■ wff ■■ ■ luaor Company. Lafayette, Ind. I A san be sold here sow, owing to his near nap, Atos, fee 23 eU. la postage pthaija to ■ Ctoveiaad sad Brute. 6.ac 23x28 la. | worth |4. BLDIR PUB. CO., Cbirago, IIC |

a TO A FRIEND who is suffering from Boils and Carbuncles,; no bettor advice can be given than to try i Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. Orlando Snell, 132 Ford st., Lowell, Mass., was terribly afflicted with Carbuncles on the back of his neck. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla cured the Carbuncles, and has kept him free from them. F. P. Coggeshall, Bookseller, Lowell, soys-. I have been taking Ayer’s Sarsaparilla for an impurity of the blood, which manifests itself In troublesome Boils and Eruptions, and can truly say that I have never found any medicine go prompt and certain in curative effect. It has done me great good. ‘ Leander J. McDonald, Soley St., Charlestown, Mass., testifies: One year * ago I suffered greatly from Boils and Carbuncles, and for nearly two months was unable to work. A druggist advised me to take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, which I purchased. After taking two bottles of this medicine I was entirely cured, and have ~ vopyngntea. remained well ever since. For all diseases originating in impure blood take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maae. Bold by DruggieU. Price $1; tlx bottles, $5. Iffls I IP K r DwS.X t i I O!■ IV l\ £ H Ever Male. I None genuine anient Don’t waste your money on a gum or rubber coat. The FISH BRAND SLICKER Maunped with the above [, a b ßo | u t e ly water and wtiui noor, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm ■ TRIPS MARK. Ask for the "FISH BRAND” slickkr and takeno other. If your storekeeper doei Jnot have the "rum uuiid". send for descriptive cstelogue_toA_J J _TOWER 1 JHasa

AGENTS WANTED for tb» best and fastest-sell-ing Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced 33 per cent. National Publish ixo CO- Chicago, Hl. ft nflßßMfl and Morphine Habit Cured in 10 to BMIIiBB BOdays, Refer to 1000 patients cured UI IU Ml ln all parts. Dr. Karsh, Quincy,Mich, n I?Mn NAME QUICK tor Prof. Moody's Wow Iltaitroto* Si LilM D Book on Drew Maklnc, New Dolman, and MkoUs kJCuuinc, etc. AgoaU sell 10odor. PreCJlOOPt.UlaManaU,<b HPCTI EPD A DUV LBB rnher,»nd«xni I Co Im CL Vila Aw S n T good pay. Situations I furnished. Write Valentine Bros.. Janesville, Wls. jn .SCHOOL OF ECLECTIC fl Illi I el Short-hand and type-writing. “• WILL v Unlimited course, |4O. Send for circulars. Positions furnished. 208 N. Clark st., Chicago. MB A -TC4ITO R - s - * A ' p - LaCzt, Patent |w n I Ml M I W Attorneys,Washington, D.C. M_'wN JLJbil” ■ W Instructions and opinions as to patentability FREE. A»~17 years' experience, epages WIQUID GLUE EVERYTHING Wood. Is>ather,Paner,lvory .Glaes, 111 11 Furniture, Bric-a-Brac, Ac. FJ Strong as Iron, Solid as a Bock. \yjjaj The total quantity sold during the > past live years amounted to over All dealers can sell it. Awarded agHUmiHgaW Pronounced Strongest Glue known Send dealer’s card and 10c. postage ■« AcilL FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Best In the World. Get the genuine. Every package has our Trade-mark and la marked Frazer’s. SOLD EVERYWHERE.

LIST OP DISEASES ALWAYS CURABLE BY USING MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. OP HUMAN PUSH. OP AMIMAUL Rheumatinu, Scratched, Burna and Scalds, Sores and Galls, Stings and Bites, Spavin, Cracks, Cats and Bruises, Screw Worm, Grab, Sprains A Stitches, Foot Rot, Hoof AU, Contracted Muscles, Lameness, Stiff Joints, Swlnny, Founders, ? Backache. —Sprains, Strains, Ernptions, Sore Feet, Frost Bites, Stiffness, and all ex t ernal dlseaxes, and every hurt or acelden t. For general use In family, stable and stock-yard, it Is THE BEST OF ALL LINIMENTS

S ’ -* PAIN-KILLER IS RECOMMENDED BY Physicians, Ministers, Missionaries, Managers of Factories, Workshops, Plantations, Nurses in Hospitals—in short, everybody everywhere who has ever given it a trial. Taken internally, it will be found a never failing cube fob sudden colds, chills, pains IN THE STOMACH. CHAMPS SUMMER and BOWEL COMPLAINTS, SORE THROAT, &o. APPLIED externally, IT IB THE MOST EFFECTIVE AND BEST LINIMENT ON EARTH FOB CUBING SPRAINS, BRUISES, RHEUMATISM neuralgia TOOTHACHE, BURNS, FROSTBITES Ac. Prices, 25c, JOc, and SI.OO per Bottle. For Sale by all Medicine Dealers. AVBeware of Imitations.

ja FMTF YourMewsaealartorTHE CHICAGO BA LEDGER, the Bust Story Papes AMhJAXIn the country. Read it. JOJVES EaW p M ß V"eicht ABBte. Sr 5 Ton Wagon Scales, iron Lever*, Steel Bearing, Brass Tare Beam and Beam Box for Every si tr price Us* mention this paper and eddroee F Se. V Joats 9F •IMHANTM. r * BINGHAMTON, N.Y, t$1 0 to S2O A DAY made with a Gem City Combin a tion Wire and Slat Fence Machine, the cheapest and best Fence made. "Every farmer needs one. The Adjustable Reclining - Chiar Swing is claimed to be superior to any in market. A child four years old can swing without pushing or a rope to pull by. Satisfaction guaran- r> S teed or money -zr>«wi »,ti - -■ J refunded . gK nS£9l Fur circulars jdBMMBaSSHMwE an 1 price-list ad- H*U <1 re sb al CARR & CO.. S gWh 1037 Broadway Quincy, 111. DROPSY T>lt. IT. M. GREEN A SONB, Specialists for Thirteen Years Past. Have treated Dropsy and its complications with tba most wonderful success; use vegetable remedies juitirely Remove all symptoms pf dropay Cure patients pronounced hopeless by the best of physicians. From the first dose, the symptoms rapidly disappear. and in ten days at least two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. Some may cry humbug without knowing anvOiing about it. Remember, it does not coat you anything to realize the merits of our treatment for yourself. In ten days the difficulty of breathing is relieved, the pulse regular, the urinary organs made to discharge their sud duty, sleep is restored, the swelling all or nearly gone, the strength increased, and appetite made good, we are constantly curing cases Of long standing—cases that have been tapped a number of times, and the patient declared unable to lira a week. Give full history of case. Name sex, how long afflicted, how badly swollen and where, are bowels costive, have legs bursted and dnpped water. Send for free pamphlet, containing testimonials, questions, etc. Ten days’ treatment furnished free by mail. Epilepsy (Fits) positively cured. • If you order trial, send 10 cents in stamps to pay postage. H. H. GREEN & SONS. M. Ds., 55 Jones Avenue. Atlanta, Ga. CONSUMPTION. I have a positive rested/ for tbs above disease; by Ha ase thoesaads Of eases of the worst Had and es long ■tsaainr have been eared. Indeed, voetrongle nr, faith talueffleaey.thatlwlll eeadTWO BOTTLES fttai. togetherwltka VALVABLETBIATIBB en this disease IS any sufferer, airs express end T. O. addr as. _ ~ M.». I. SLOCUM. Ml reertgUMewYeefc. WDUiunwnuLiM mcal A Life Expertence. Remarkable and quick cures. Trial Packages. Consultation and Books by Mail FREE. Address Dr. WARD A CO., Louisiana. Mo. ■ - - MH-; -- ■ eifflis WH£« All EIS£ lAUS. Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use ■ tn time. Sold by druggiste. C.N.U. No. S5-8S AV HEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, IT please say yoa saw the advertisement In thio paper.