Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 March 1887 — Page 3
THE IRISH TRIALS.
Result of the Traversers’ Trial in Dublin—Disagreement of the Jury.
Notwithstanding the desperate efforts of the British Tories to obtain the conviction for conspiracy of Mr. John Dillon, Mr. O’Brien and the other Irish gentlemen who 1 have for six months made heroic efforts to
JOHN DILLON.
save Irish tenants from the exactions of heartless landlords, they have failed. The jury at Dublin refused to agree and were discharged. The disagreement is equivalent to a verdict of acquittal. The Government will hardly undertake to put the accused gentlemen in the dock again. At the trial just closed the chances were entirely in favor of the Crown. The venue was shanged to Dublin County from Dublin City that a jury of landlords might'be obtained. All the leading members of the Irish bar were employed by the Crown to prosecute. The presiding Judge, a son-in-law of tbe infamous Judge Keogh, and a bitter partisan landlord, presided, and in effect ordered the jury to convict. All this did not avail,
WILLIAM O’BRIEN.
and the Irish*campaigners” stand virtually acquitted and the so-called plan o£ campaign has received a quasi-legal indorsement. The result is a staggering blow to the Tory Government and policy, and will be disastrous to the Irish landlords. Tenants who have hitherto held back from adopting the plan of campaign, which is no more than a strike against unjust rents and pooling of issues by tenants, so to say, will be emboldened to adopt it now, and the landlords will have to meekly surrender or go without any rents whatever. Irish Agitations. During the past few months a new form of agitation has arisen in Ireland. The autumn and winter have been a season of distress to the Irish tenants of land, who have found it hard to pay the rent due by them to their landlords. The chief cause of this is the fact that the prices of the products ra;sed on Irish f?oi 1 have fallen during the past year, while the amount of rent, on many of the estates, has remained at the -same figure. While, then, the tenants have received less for their labor, they have been expected to pay the same as before for their land. Bents on very many Irish estates have been lowered during the past five or six years by the land courts, appointed under the land act of lbihl. But these lowered rents were fixed at a time when products brought higher prices than they do now. T he (Tfficulty which th’eTenants*have liad in paying their rents suggested a new plan to some of the Irish .Nationalists, especially to two members of Parliament, Mr. Join Dillon and Mr. William O’Brien, and they organized what is now notorious as “the plan of campaign.” It was the purpose of this fstiin topiotect the tenants from paying to the landlords a rent which the organizers of the movement regarded as too high. In brief, it was proposed that the tenants should pay into the hands of certain designated members of the National League—among others Messrs. Dillon and O’Britn—what was considered a' fair rent for the lands they tilled. Money thus received was to be held as a trust. The trustees w’gre to proffer to the landlords what they regarded in each case as fairrentf and if the landlords refused to accept it, the trnglfes were to hold the money for the benefit and support of the tenants who had paid it in. The “plan of campaign” was harried on successfully in many cases. Mr. Dillon and others went from place to place and t-alled meetings of the tenants, who docked in and paid into their hands the sums agreed upon as fair r'ei.ts. At the same time inflammatory speeches were ni’ude. and the agitation became an excited and serious one. But the Government would not allow it to go on. Mr. Dillon was arrested and arraigned, and one of the Irish Jndg s declined the plan of campai n to be a conspiracy ngainstthe law, and therefore a crime, but Mr. DilloS, when set free on his“bin recognizances. his sp eches and effort, until he was again arrested. Several other prominent movers in the plan were also arrested at the same tune. The noblest part of a friend is -an honest, boldness in the notifying of errors. He that tells me of fault aiming at my good, I must think him wise and^faithful—wise in saving that which I see not ; faithful in plain admonishment not tainted with flattery.
Irresolution is a fatal habit; it is not vicious in itself, but it leida to vice, crcen’ng upon its victims 'with a fatality the penalty of which many a fine heart has paid at the scaffold. The idler, the spendthrift, the epicurean and the drunkard are among its victims.
DANGERS OF TEA-DRINKING.
A Phyaician’s Opinion Regarding tho Fashionable Use of the Mild. Cup. [From the Chicago News.} “The afternoon tea-drinking, after the English fashion, which has been introduced in this country, will very likely lead to an excessive use of that beverage among our women, " remarked a South Side physician. “Wjth the exception of the overworked wives of Northern farmers who are prone to resort to tea as a stimulant for their exhausted nervous systems, hurried factory operatives, and seamstressei who do their sewing at home, American women have not, until lately, been addicted to tea-drinking. Coffee is the national drink. It has been shown that a greater quantity of coffee has been consumed annually in the United States than of any other beverage. True, the use of beer is increasing, many persons thinking it preferable because of its sedative and nourishing qualities. There are good authorities who object to the use of coffee in such a climate as ours. “In my opinion coffee is a more desirable fluid, as a constant drink in this climate, than beer or tea. That is, I believe the use of tea three times a day or beer three times a day at meals will (have a v orse effect than an equal quantity of coffee. “,n England tbe evil effects of constant beer-drinking at meal time have become so evident that a revolt has been organized against 1 it. The English people are now drinking about $5,000,000 worth of beer less per annum than their former average. “Beer, in fact, has been the English laborer’s greatest curse. If used as extensively in this country it will be even a heavier drawback to the prosperity of the working people, because the atmospheric or other influences here cause the brain of the same person to be muddled by a smaller quantity of alcohol in America than in Europe. “I foresee from tea-drinking a harVert for physicians. The ladies will acquire a taste for it from the adoption of a silly fashion which is the outgrowth of this absurd aping of English manners. They will eventually use it extensively at all hours of the day. It is a stimulating defection, and when the system becomes partially habituated to its use it not only creates a craving for it, but requires that the quantity be increased. “I’ve seen a few tea-topers who always kept a pot of tea brewing, so necessary had it become to their existence. Without -exception they were invalids, and afflicted with.nervous ailments. “The habitual tea-drinker, too, eats but little nourishing food, but depends for sustenance on the stimulant. “The injurious effects of an excessive use of tea are far beyond what is generally supposed. Tea contains two powerful substances—tannic acid and theiiie, Tho first is the astringent known as tannin. It is this property, obtained from bark, that converts skin .into leather. Theme is a violent poison. They act on the nervous and digestive systems, causing atonic dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart, insomnia, irritability, and brain fatigue. . “I recommend a judicious use of tea at a portion of the meals. It should be taken with judgment, like all other drugs of a stimulating or tranquilizing pature which.may be beneficial in small doses, but are harmful, if not dangerous, in large quantities.”
Airing Rooms.
It is a great mistake that the whole house, particularly sleeping rooms and the dining rooms, receives little ventilating and purifying the air, when it can be done with so little trouble and no expense. A pitcher of cold water placed on a table or bureau will absorb all the gases with which the room is filled from the respiration Of those eating or sleeping in the apartment. Very few realize how important such purification is for the health of the family, or, indeed, understand or realize that there can be any impurity in the rooms, yet in a few hours a pitcher or pail of cold water —the colder the more effect-ive-will make the air of the room pure, blit the water will be entirely unfit for use. In bedrooms a pail or pitcher of water should be always kept, and changed often if any one stays in the room during the day, certainly be put in fresh when the inmates retire. Such water should never be drank, but either a covered pitcher or glass bottle with a stopper should be used for drinking water, and always be kept closely covered. Impure water causes more sickness than even impure air, and for that reason, before using water from a pump or reservoir for drinking or cooking, one should pump, or draw out enough to clear the pipes before using it, particularly in the morning, after the water has been standing in the pipes all night. —Philadelphia Call.
Every Woman Knows Them.
The human body is much like a good clock or watch in its movemente; if one goes too slow or too fast, ao-follow all the others, and bad time results; if one organ or set of organs works imperfectly, perversion of functional effortof all the organs is sure to follow. Hence it is that tho numerous ailments which make woman’s fil e miserable are the direct issue of the abnormal action of the-uterine system. For ail that numerous class of pymptoms-r----and every woman knows them—there is ona unfailing remedy, Dr. Pierce’s “Favurito Prescription,” the favorite of tlie sex. ' -
Tests for Butterine.
There is no way of telling“good butterinc, costing at wholesale eighteen cents a pound, from the bad butter at twenty-eight cents a pound, unless the microscope is used. In cheap grades of oleo it is sufficient to put a little on the stove, when the smell of burning tallow will become evident; but good butterine does not betray itself. The experts is to place a bit of fine dairy butter in the palm of one hand along with a piece of the suspected article; if it is not real butter it will not begin to melt until half a minute after the real butter.— Brooklyn Eagle. Germany has 28,000 miles of underground telegraph wires and France 7,200, all in successful operation. Our country is bigger than China. We have 3,002,000 square miles, and China 2,000,000.
Lincoln as a “Military Hero."
He.never took his campaigning seriously. The politicians’ habit of glorifying the petty incidents of a candidate’s life always seemed absurd to him, apd in his speech, made in 1848,. ridiculing the effort on the part of General Cass’s friends to draw some political advantage from, that gentleman’s respectable b it obscure services on the frontier in the war with Great Britain, he estopped any future eulogist from painting his own military achievements in too lively colors. “Did you know, Mr. Speaker,” he said, “I am a military hero ? In the days of the Black Hawk war I fought, bled, and chme away. I was not at- Stillman’s defeat, but I was... about as near it as General' Cass was to Hull’s surrender; and, like him, I saw the place i very sbon afterward. It is quite cerI tain I did not break my sword, for I i had none to break, but I bent my I musket pretty badly on one occasion, i If General Cass went in advance of me picking whortleberries, I guess I surpassed him in charges on tlie wild onions. If he saw any live fighting Indians it was more than I did, but I had a good many bloody struggles with the mosquitoes; and although I neverfainted from loss of blood, 1 can truly say I was often very hungry. Mr. Speaker, if ever I should conclude to doff whatever ofir Democratic friends may suppose there is of black-cockade Federalism about. me, and thereupon they shall take me up as their candidate for the Presidency, I propose that they shall not make fun of me, as they have of General Cass, by attempting to write me into a military hero.”— Nicolay and Hay's Life of Lincoln. An old alarm has been revived in Germany by Dr. Hulmann, who lectured recently in Halle on the dangers of living in new houses. According to him, the close fitting of new doors and window sashes and floors prevent the increase of fresh air from the outside, while the moisture present in the pores of the new plastering obstructs the transpiration of air through them. For these reasons, which he enforces by terrifying pictures of the consumption of oxygen and the formation of carbonic acid in the atmosphere of inhabited rooms, he proposes that no dwelling should be occupied until its walls have been completely dried out, which perhaps may take a year or two. A part of this period, he thinks, is taken up by the transformation of the hydrate of lime in the fresh plastering into carbonate, which takes place under the influence of the carbonic acid in the" air, and sets free the water of hydration, which fills the pores of the plastering until it has alt evaporated. He proposes that the reaction should be hastened" by burning charcoal in the rooms, so as to supply carbonic acid more readily/ The health authorities of Berlin do not seem to be quite in accord with this sanitarian, for, instead of requesting the owners of new houses to wait before moving into them until the floors and doors have sunk so much as to admit a suitable supply of fresh air, they propose to insist upon the ventilation of all dwelling houses by more efficient methods.
Useful and Hurtful Medicines.
There is a certain class of remedies for constipation absolutely useless. These are boluses and potions in ado in great part of podophyllin, aloes, rhubarb, gamboge, and other worthless ingredients. The damage they do to the stomachs of those who use them is incalculable; They evacuate the bowels, it is true, but always do so violently and profusely, and besides, gripe the bowels. Their effect is to weaken both them and the stomach. Better far to use the agreeable and salutary aperient, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, the laxative effect of which is never preceded by paiir, s>r accompanied by a convulsive, violent action of the bowels. On the contrary, it invigorates those organs, the stomach and the entire system. As a means of curing and preventing malarial fevers, no medicine can compare withit, and it remedies nervous debility, rheumatism, kidney and bladder inactivity, and other inorganic ailments.
What the Persians Think of Her.
Among the Persians even mothers-in-law have an agreeable position, and are the objects of affectionate regard on the part of their daughters .and sons-in-law. A curious Old World custom is still kept up among the Christian Armenian subjects of the Shah, among whom, in strict households, no wife dare speak in the presence of her husband’s mother. The bride is regarded as the slave of her mother-in-law, and as such may only make use of signs to communicate her wants or make answers to queries, and she must, always stand in the augusi presence. A sad sign of the degeneracy of the times is to be found in the fact that the severity of this rule is becoming relaxed, and that it is reported that “many daughters-in-law now glare to whisper in the presence of their mothers-in-law.”—Saturday Review.
A Strong Endowment
Is conferred upon that magnificent institution, the human system, by Dr. Pierce’s.“ Golden Medical Discovery,” that fortifies it against the encroachments of disease., It is the great blood purifier and alterative, and as a remedy for consumption, bronchit s, and all diseases of a wasting nature, its influence is rapid, efficacious, and permanent Sold everywhere. The grumbler who ’ occasionally finds himself at a loss fox something to kick about is advised to purchase a foot-ball. * * * « Premature decline of power in either sex, however induced, speedily and permanently cured, Book for 10 cents in stamps. World’s Dispensary Medical Associat.on, 6G3 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. Never attempt to handle a snow-shovel without gloves. The Combination of Ingredients used in making Brown's Bbonchial Troches is such as to give the best possible effect with safetv. They are the best remedy in use for Coughs! Colds, and Throat Diseases. It is to be hoped the bonnet has about reached the height of its ambition. Telegraph Operators Rnpid Writers, During the great Bostcn fire an operator in "New York received 24b messages between 7 o’clock and noon, and sent 216 during the afternoon of the same day. The messages, including the addresses, signatures, date lines and “checks,” averaged thirty words. Thus during the five hours he was wielding the pen he copied over 7,5C0 words, or 1,500 words an hour. To be agreeable in society, it behooves one neither to see nor remember a great many things.
Nellie Grant’s Love Story,
I “Nellie Grant,® as the country called her, had been sent abroad by her mother to take her,out of the way of half-grown admirers; she hadnever worn a long gown in her life till she arrived in England, but as the President's daughter she was the object of a very natural attention. Mr. Borie, the recent Secretary of the Navy, was go- , ing to Europe with his wife, and Mrs. ' Grant asked Mrs. Borie to take “Nellie” with her. It was a great favor on Mrs. . Borie’s part, but she was happy to con- ! sent. She thought, however, that she 1 was to take a school girl, and she found 1 she had a half-fledged princess on her 1 hands. She did not want to go to Buckingham Palace, and asked if thedaughters of the Minister could not accompany Miss Grant. But the Queen had not invited these young ladies, and they could not suggest themselves. Then Mrs. Borie had jio gown to wear to court, but this difficulty was overcome, and she went to the palace like a lady “in attendance” on the little girl she had expected to chaperone. I gave Mademoiselle a garden party while she was in London and was delighted with her ease and self-posses-sion. She stood by my side and smiled with democratic grace on Duchesses and Marchionesses as they made her the same courtesy they made to royalty; the higher their own rank the more profound the prostration they performed. On the return voyage the young lady met her fate. Mr. and Mrs. Borie were both ill and kept their state-rooms, while Miss Nellie remained on deck. There she fell in with a young Englishman, and before they reached America the mischief had been done that she was sent to Europe to avoid. “Nellie Grant” was engaged—and to an Englishman. Sartoris told me how he asked General Grant for the young lady’s hand. With all the awe of an Englishman for the head of a state, he was invited to dinner at the White House, knowing what was expected of him. After dinner the President led the way to the billiard-room and offered him a cigar. “Then,” said Sartoris, “I knew my time had come. I waited and hoped the President would help me, but not a word did he say. He sat silent, looking at me. I hesitated and fidgeted and coughed, and thought I should sink through the floor, Finally I exclaimed, in desperation; “Mr. President, I want to marry your daughter.” It took a bold man to say that to General Grant, but doubtless the-bold* ness recommended him, for Sartoris carried away the prize.— General Badeau.
An Arctic Garden.
A curious geological phenomenon exists in the vicinity of Behring’s Strait. At Elephant Point, Kotzbue Sound, a ridge two miles wide and two hundred and fifty feet high seems to be a vast mass of ice, thinly covered with clay and vegetable mold. In this soil birches, alders, and berry - bearing plants grow luxuriantly, with the stratum of perpetual ice as the underlying rock within less than a foot from their roots,.
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SAINT YOUR BUOCY for ONE DOLLAD By using Coirs ONE-COAT BUGGY PAINT; Paint Friday, runJt to Church Sunday. Six Fashionable Shades: Black, Maroon. Vermilion, Olive I-ake. Brewster and 81 wagon Greens. bo VarmJnng necessary. Dnes hard with a high Gloss. Tip top for Chairs. Furniture, Babv Carriages. Front Doors, Fronts, etc. Will send ■ < ■ enough to paint your Buggy upon receipt of One Dollar, and warrant it to wear. Ducouat to the Trade. COIT dt CO,, SOO U 208 Kinrift BL, Chicago, IIL S S
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Why did the Women ■ of this country use over thirteen ~ million cakes of Procter & Gamble’s Lenox Soap in 1886 ? Buy a cake of Lenox and you will soon understand why, I ‘ T— : 7 “7 -x- - '
f March April May
Are the months in which to purify your blood, and for this purpose there is no medicine equal to Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It purifies, vitalizes, and enriches the blood, removin'? all trace of scrofula or other disease. It creates an appetite, and imparts new strength and vigor to the whole body, It is the ideal spring medicine. Try it. *T have been troubled with poor appetite, and also had rheumatism. I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and now my appetite is the best, and rheumatism has left me." C. Arens, 37;)4 Emerald Avenue, Chicago, 111. Hood’s Sarsaparilla “I have been in poor health several years, suffering from indigestion, restlessness in tho night, and in the UuirniTig I would get up with a tired feeling. After taking only a part of the first bottle of Hood’s" Sarsaparilla, I could rest well all night and feel refreshed when I woke up. I must say that Hood’s Sarsaparilla is all it is recommended to be.” Mbs. H. D. Winans, 210 East Mason Street, Jackson, Mich. “Hood’s Sarsaparilla has been our leading blood medicine. It gives good satisfaction, and we feel safe to recommend it to our customers.” Baueb * CVBTIS, 225 S. Division Street, Grand Rapids? Mich.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all dniggisM. $1; six for Prepared by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. (00 Doses One Dollar R A *tFE & P - LaokY. Patent E— Ka 8 B 3 K? H JnS Attorneys,Washington, D.C. B ■ • I Instructions and opinions as to patentability FREE. 43*17 years’ experience. UAUFC CPCC Government land. Cheap deeded nUnilLd I DLL land and claims. 40,000 acres of tho best lands in Nebraska. A mild and healthy climate. Send two stamps for full information and maps. Simpson k Casselman Bkos., Hay Springs, Neb. MENTION THIS PAPEK »»>. w.in.u to .ori.Tiou, WE WANT YOU! or woman needing profltaole employment to represent us in every county. Salary 475 per month ana expenses, or • large commission on sales ts preferred. Goods staple. Every one buy.. Outfit and particulars Free. , „. „ STANDARD SILVERWARE CO., BOSTON, MASS. MA MF PACI N£\Vl SCONS INI— be Jo poHjtLtisTßPcrEn
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is prepared from Sarsaparilla Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Pipsissewa, and other well-known and valuable vegetable remedies. The combination, proportion, and preparation are peculiar to Hood’s Sarsaparilla, giving it curative power not possessed by other medicines. It effects remarkable cures where others fail. “Last spring I was troubled with boils, caused by my blood being out of order. Two bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla cured me, and I recommend it to others.” J. Schoch, Peoria, 111. Best Spring Medicine “During the spring and summer I was troubled with biliousness and loss of appetite. I was advised to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and did so with thobeet resulta. I have Tecomitrended it to a great many of my ctMk tomers, to whom it has given entire satisfaction.” E. H. NOWLANI), Druggist, Indianapolis, Ind. “My daughter had been ailing some time with general debility, and Hood’s Sarsaparilla was recommended to us. After she had taken three bottles «h« was completely cured and built up. It is with great pleasure that I recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla.* Ben M. Mibbihi.ees, Supt. Cincinnati & Louisville Mail Line Co., Cincinnati.
Sold by all druggists. st; six for $5. Prepared by C. I. Mood & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. ICO Doses One Dollar ‘ One AgentXMerehant only) won><»<j in evyry towu fur The “TansHl’s Punch” So cigars are booming. Never Bold so many in so short a time. Will try and give you another order this monffi. P. k A. L. Mu. laud, Ellisburg, N. Y. Your “Tansill’s Punch’’ rc cigar is a good seller. W. D. CitAfG, Druggist, Aledo, 111. Address R. W. TANSILL & CO.. Chicago; MENTION THIS PAPER wnxs wamsa to ibtiktuiu. SBFREES k'v/f/» I ’ rett * est BOOK Printed. Thousands of&-'3 Engravings. Best SEED FTfl 1 A cheapest ever grown. Pkts 3c Cheap as dirt by oz. & lb. 100000 pkts, new iw' 1 torts divided FREK to Customers. I give away more than some firms sell. Send for my F Catalogue. R. H. Shumway, Rockford, 111. WIZARD OIL '&kJfe£ c ° WCEWT * Have been enjoyed by citizens of every town and city in the U. 8. Marvelous Cures have been wit* nessed by thousands of people, who can testify u. - THS #ONDBBrVL HEALING POWER OT Hamlin’s Wizard Oil. Neuralgia, Toothache, Headache, Earache, Catarrh, Croup, Sore Throat, Lame Back, Stiff Joints, Contracted Cords, RHEUMATISM, Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Fever Sores, Wounds, Old Sores, Chilblains, Frost Bites, Sore Nipples, Caked Breasts, and All Aches and Pains, are quickly relieved by this magical remedy. Try it once and you will never be without It. For sale by Druggists. Price. SOe. Our BONO BOOK free to aIL Address WIZARD OIL COMPANY. CHICAGO.
DFliO| fl 110 Send for Pension lawa to FITZr EnoluNo C The OLDEST MEDICINE in the WORLD is elebrated Eye Watelf Tfils article is a carefully prepared physician’s prescription, and has been in constant use for nearly • century, and notwithstanding the many other preparations that have' been introduced into the market, the sale of this article is constantly increasing. If the directions are followed it will never fail. We portionlarly tavitc the attention of physicians to its merit*. John L. Thompson, Sons <£ Co., TROY, N. T. on advertising apace when in Chicago, will find it on silo at ” t;::,x;lord &THoms. KIPPERS PUSTILLEs'SSJSS: - Mau. ■■■■ Ml WEAK from Nervous Debfirty, VL ■fl Su ■! tai Wasting, Ac., send stamp for Book Hl |T Bw Of Remedies. and cure yourself at 111 ■ home. Dr. £. Rtssitr. Peru, Ind. ■ Hao's Remedy for Catarrh 1* the H Beet. Easiest to Uae, and Cheapest. I ■ Also good ibr Cold In the Head, ■ Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. to cents. ~~C.N._U. No.lo-S7~ WHEN WRITING TO ADVERtIUKm! ’ please say yo B saw the advertlsaiaMai In this paper. _, ’ ■
