Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 May 1887 — Page 7

SANDY BOWERS’ FORTUNE.

Two Ten-Foot Claim* on the Comstock Made Him and Hl* Wife Very Hlclt. V*n>ly Bowers’ mansion at Franktown, Nev., is torn down, aays the Denver Tribune. Bandy was one of the lucky characters in Nevada in an eariy day. He owned ten feet on the Bowers <-la m on the Comstock, now known as the Imperial Consolidated, and a certain frood-lookinß girl owned another ten feet When the bonanza on the claim was struck, the ownership of a single foot made a man wealthy. Sandy was more than wealthy; he had money to throw to the dogs, and, while he did not literally throw it that way, he threw lots of it to the boys who needed it. To know Sandy Bowers was to have a sure thing on a stake. When money was coming in most plentifully, Sandy and the pretty girl to whom he had; given the ten feet on the Bowers, joined their fortunes and got married, and wont to Europe on a wedding trip. Sandy was no fool. He could well act the part of a cultured gentleman, and Mrs. Bowers could act the part of a lady. They obtained an introduction to aristocratic and royal circlos in nearly every country they visited, and they made their tour last three years. Mrs. Bowers was to Queen Victoria, and she cut quite a dash in Parisian circles. During his absence Sandy instructed his Nevada agent to build him a palace in a certain spot at Franktown. The location was -beautifully chosen. It was on the edge of a plain, close to the foot of a pine-covered mountain, out of whose sides bubbled hot and cold water springs. The palace was built of cut granite. It was a long, wide building, with a wing at each side. It contained seventy rooms, each one large and with high ceilings. The staircases were wide, and of the mos costly and beautiful wood. The bathrooms were finished in marble, and every portion of the interior of the house was as fine as it could be. The hot and cold springs back of the house carried water to the house and the beautiful lawn surrounding it, and mode lakes and fountains. In one small pond was a pretty island, on which was a bird-house made of glass. The stables were filled with blooded stock, and the conservatory with rare and costly plants. The house was furnished with the richest furniture, carpets, and curtains that money could buy, and it was a palace of luxury. Mr. and Mrs. Bowers enterta'ned splendidly, and the latchstring was always out. No tired, footsore, or deadbroke prospector ever knocked at the door in va n. Sandy ne >er forgot his old companions or his old occupat ons, and, as the boys said, “He didn’t feel a d d b : gger than he did before he wore biled sh rts.” But it d dn't last long, for one day Sandy died, leaving his widow with one little yellow-ha red girl. After h s death Mrs. Bowers became the victim of a very unscrupulous swindler, and soon became involved in debt. She rented the house for a dance-house and kindred purposes, and it rapidly went to ruin. Finally the little grl died and was buried gn the mountain side behind the house beside her father. Her death broke the spirit of Mrs. Bowers, who had by that time lost her diamonds and everything she owned, and she gave up the palace to the man who ■ held the mortgage on it. That man was one of the penniless prospectors who had been entertained at her house in the days of her prosper ty. The wliii l'gigof mining lortune brought him his luck, and he is now a solid citizen of lleno. As for Mrs. Bowers, she is an astrologer and fortune-teller in San Francisco.

What Charles Kingsley’s Daughters Did.

Let me tell you how we were taught to help those who helped us in our old home at Eversley Fectory. Of course in a busy house, where everyone has work to do, the servants cannot he helped much week days, except by thoughtfulness in little things. But there is the seventh day, when the children have no lessons to do. This was whitt we were taught to look upon as the “helpers” day of rest, as far as we could make it so. In the morning breakfast was earlier than usual. While we were breakfasting the maids were emptying our baths, for they were too heavy for us children. As soon as breakfast was over we trotted off to our rooms, made the beds, folded up and put away all our clothes, dusted —and in fact put things straight all around. Then we' ran down to the dining-toom and laid the table for dinner; and capital butlers we all became, I assure you. By these means the maids were all ready, in their nice Sunday dresses, to go to church with us at 11. Dinner Sunday—no matter who was with us—was at 1 o’clock instead of 7. This was the only hot meal in the day. No cooking was done after 1 o’clock, as our supper was cold. At both dinner and supper the servants were sent away, and we waited at table. I laugh now when I think of the faces of horror of learned men or gallant soldiers who had come down to spend Sunday .....in the dear old rectory, or riddUfi over from Sandhurst or Aldershot to the morning service. The agonies they went through at being waited on by the daughters of the house! The struggles they made to be allowed to change their own plates! And their resigned submission when, quietly told by their host: “It is the way of the house.* That washowwe we¥?T made to help the faithful and devoted servants who spent their lives in helping ns. It was not much; but it gave them an almost free Sunday. —Rose Kingsley, in Wide Awake.

Recollections of Old Hickory.

As the daughter of the late Senator Benton, Mrs. Fremont’s opportunities to observe and remember date back as far as the Presidency of Gen. Jackson. When Old Hickory and Old Bullion had their talks at the White House, the President liked to have the Senator from Missouri ’’bring his little daughter Jessie, arid Mr* Fremont speaks of these visits with a sweet, tebder arid delicious simplicity. They were accustomed to find the President in au upper room, “where the tall south windows sent in strong breadths of sunshine, but his big rocking chair was :*>■• ■ • i L

always drawn close to the large wood fire.” As Jackson talked with the child's father, he would keep her by him, his hand on her head. “ Sometimes,” Mite. Fremont writes, “forgett ng me, in the interest of d kengsion, his long, bony fingers took an unconscious grip,” but she had been trained not to wince nor tdiow pa n oven if Oen. Ja kson tw sted her curls a little too v'gorously. This description of the stern old soldier President, seated in a rude, old-fashioned rocking cha r in the White House, w th the child by him, wh le he discussed men and affairs with the Missouri Senator, brief as it is, :s a picture.— Philadelphia Times.

The Mob In the Tuilcries.

A most curious event occurred at the Palace of the Tu leries on Sunday afternoon, May 10, IH7I. There was a grand concert given there at that time under the direction of the Communard authorities. The proposed “Concours” was widely advertised in the city, and every effort was made to have it a grand success. As its avowed purpose was a beneficent one, the appeal made to the Communard population of Paris was a very strong one. The attendance was large, and a great amount of money was taken in. The concert was advertised for Sunday evening, but there was an immense affair in the garden of the Tuileries in the afternoon. There were not less, than ten thousand persons present. There was “music with its voluptuous swellthe bands of a great many regiments, and no less than one thousand musicians, playing and singing the soul-stirring Marseillaise. But it was in the evening that there was the greatest interest. The Palace of the Tuileries was thrown open to the public, and the great horde of men, women, and children went through the gardens, and defiled through the gorgeous and magnificent apartments of the palace. Though I knew all about the concert, I did not deem it a fitting occasion to be present myself on a Sabbath day, but I sent one of my secretaries to see what was to be seen and to report to me. He stated that what he there beheld was a most remarkable and interesting sight. Ten thousand people filled ali the apartments, wandering everywhere at their ease, and examining into every nook and corner of the vast palace. The comments of the rabble were most amusing. Mv secretary kept along with the crowd everywhere, seeing all that was to be seen, and' listening to all that was said. Great interest centered in the private apartments of the Empress. The gorgeous belongings were everywhere commented upon by the mob. The bath-room of the Empress attracted great attention. It was represented as very handsome, and as a marvel of luxury, beauty, and taste. It was surrounded by heavy plate mirrors. The bath was cut out of solid marble. The ceilings were covered with’rich blue silk-velvet. The faucets in the bath were of solid silver. All that was seen was described by the Communards as evidence of the profligacy and the lux-* ury of the Court, in the vast increase of the taxes levied upon them. Not one man in the crowd, it is safe to' say, had ever paid a cent of taxes in his life.— E. B. Wasshburnr, in S ribner’s Magazine.

A Famous Detective.

James Jackson, the famous State detecti e, resides in Sing Sing, and is generally in attendance at the prison. His duties are to examine carefully the face of every con wet as he enters, and to scrutinize every visitor in order to prevent any discharged convict from seeing his pals. Occasionally he has to make long journeys in pursuit of runaway prisoners or to ident fy criminals convicted in other States. He never makes a mistake; if once he looks a man in the eye he will know him under ary disguise, as he tells his man by the look of his eyes. Once an escaped convict had his nose pared down one-third, but Jackson detected him at once, notwithstanding this remarkable change of feature. Mi*. Jackson is about 5 feet 8 inches in height, about 85 years old, of a light and sinewy build, with black hair and piercing black eyes, and is altogether remarkably handsome. He knows about 10,000 criminals, and it is simply Wonderful that he can distinguish the features of every one. On his long journeys he eats very moderately, and al ways takes one Brandreth pill at night. When much fatigued by the jolting of the cars on his tiresome trips he uses two Allcock’s Porous Plasters on the small of the back, which give him renewed vigor, and nuickly relieve him of all weariness. These are the only two remedies he uses, and he attributes his vigor and remarkable health to Allcock’s Porous Plasters and Brandreth’s Pills. —Sing Sing (N. Y.) Daily Register.

The World’s Oldest Tree.

The annals of the Cingalese are said to contain an historical record of events extending back over a period of twenty odd centuries. These, with extensive ruins, such, for instance, as those of the ancient cities of Anuradliapopra and Palonnaruwa, which are known to have been inhabited as much as 2,300 years ago, show that the island was originally very thickly settled by a partly civilized and very energetic people. The first-named city was the capital of the island for over J,200 years after the fifth century B. C. In the fourth century B. 0. the annaleof Ceylon record that the city was presented with Buddha’s begging dish, his,collar-., bone, and a branch of that celebrated 80. tree under which he attained to Buddhahood. Nothing now remains of this ancient city but a mass of ruins,crumbling tombs, and the tree mentioned above. This relic of centuries has been flourishing for nearly 2.200 years, and is consequently the oldest living tree in the world of which we have any genuine record. It is one of the most sacred objects throughout the entire Buddhist world, and 'it is esteemed a virtuous act on the part of the pious to make a pilgrimage to it. Its fallen leaves are considered a great treasure, and are frequently carried to Siam, Burmah, China, and Japan by pilgrims from those countries. —Ceylon Cor. Baltimore Sun.

Success Wins.

There is no disputing the truth of the fact conveyed by that celebrated proverb of Horace Greeley’s: “Nothing succeeds like success. ” Mr. Greelev evidently intended to convey the idea of the general inclination of the times to help “boom" any enterprise that was successful, while the undertaking that lagged und really' needed aid and encouragement was left to shift for itself. - A story paper, however, must have real merit before it will secure the fatronnge and support of the public. f it succeeds, it is conceded that it deserves success. It might be said that a story paper that deserves success will succeed, and its success is evidence of merit. The success of the Chicago Ledger is a flattering compliment to the management, and it is hoped that the support and confidence bestowed by an appreciative public may be continued and sacredly maintained. The Ledger is successfully succeeding and certainly has a bright future before it. Persons desiring sample copies can secure them free by sending their names to the office. Don’t fail to read the thrilling Btory, “Irene, or the Iron-Worker’s Daughter,” to begin in No. 19. Address, Chicago Ledger, 271 Franklin street, Chicago, 111.

The White Man of the New South.

Indeed, it is the white man of the South more than the black that has been freed by the civil war; and the greatest blessing which has thus far resulted to the South from the emancipation of the Southern slaves is its effect upon the white man of that region in transforming from him a dependent idler, or “gentleman of leisure,” supported by his slaves, into an independent, self-reliant worker.' We speak of the typical, representative Southern white man, not of all classes, for there were working white men in the old South, and there are idle white men in the new. But the white man of the new South is pie eminently a worker as compared with the white man of the old South, who, if not an idler, was at least a man of multitudinous leisure. But Laving now been set free from that bondage to leisure and that contempt of labor which is inseparable from slaveholding, the representative of that region has‘become a new man, and has entered upon a new probation among the industrious races of the earth. If the old South had a contempt for the worker, the new South has a greater contempt for the do-nothing and the idler—for the man who does no honest work, it matters not how white his skin or how full his exchequer. The “gentleman idjer” has lost caste in the South; he is an institution of the past. Century.

To Dislodge the Enemy,

When it takes the form of disease of the kidooys or bladder, is a task well nigh impossible of accomplishment Renal and vesical maladies are more obstinate than any others. Counteract, therefore, the earliest indications of inactivity of the many Organs with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which possesses, among other excellent qualities.'those of an efficient diuretic. The degree of stimulation apparent from its use reaches, but never goes beyond, the bounds of safety. It invigorates always, never irritates Bright's disease, diabetes, catarrh of the blad der, are diseases successfully combated in their incipiency with this benign medicinal stimulant and tonic. Besides re-enforcing and regulating the kidneys and bladder, the Bitters is a specific for fever and ague, constipation and dyspepsia.

Queer Methods of Composition.

Different literary men have different methods of composition. M. Theophile Gautier, like the poet of society, could “reel it off for hours together.” But he was so bored by the daily round, the common task, that he used three inks —red, black and blue—promising himself a little treat, and saying ‘‘Now, when you have finished this page, you shall have a turn at the red ink.” He added: “That helps me to cheat the tedium of putting black on white forever.” M. Paul de Saint-Victor, on the other hand, at least according to M. Alidor Delzant, wrote in a very odd way. He did not reel it off. When he had to “do” a new play he collected, very properly, all the books bearing on the subject. Then he took a sheet of paper and threw onto that phrases and “mots-images,” separated by spaces of blank. Then into these blanks he introduced other words that seemed necessary for the harmony of the vsentence, and finally he packed it all up in his article and went to press.—Saturday Review . A leading real -estate agent and private banker, Mr. Ira Brown, Chicago, 111., writes: “1 feel it my duty to say of St. 'Jacobs Oil that I lay on my back three months with rheumatism. I tried it, was cured, and have never been troubled since.”

Of the present destroyers of the Indians, according to Dr. Washington Matthews, the chief is consumption. Census leturns show that while the death-rate among Europeans is 17.74 per thousand, and that among Africans is 17.28-, the rate among the Indians is no less than 23.fi; and that while among the whites 16G deaths in the thousand are from consumption, and among the negroes 18fi, there are 286 among the Indians. The influence of civilization has greatly increased the* consumption rate among the Indians, the effect seemiDg to be partly due to change of diet, and partly to causes not yet understood. Mr. T. J. Morphy, 61 Debavoice place. .Brooklyn,. N.Y-,.saiß: “ 1 was affiicted-.with sciatic ihenmntism and found tit. Jacobs Oil very efficacious.” The Profile is a huge ' and very interesting rock conformation upon the side of Profile Mountain in the Franconia Range (White Mountains), New Hampshire. From a certain point of view at a distance it bears a wonderful resemblance to the outline of a human face. This remarkably complete and distinct profile is nearly 1,500 feet above the little, lake below it, and is from sixty to eighty feet in length. It is also popularly known as the Old Man of the Mountain. . Use the great specific for “cold in head,” and catarrh—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.

“What Is Woman’s Worth?”

Asked a fair dam*el of a crusty old bachelor. Ho did not know, bo she said: “W. O. man"' (double you, O man). But a.woman feel* worth * little if disease has invaded her system and is dai v sapping her strength. For all female weaknesses, Dr. R V. Pieree’a “Fivorite Prescription” stand* unrivaled. It cures the complaint aud build* np the system Bend 10 cent* in stamps for pamphlet to World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 6«3 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y.

Changes in the Holy Land.

Even the Holy Land is being deprived of its picturesqneness. A correspondent says that a big soap factory has been built where of old stood the town of Shechem. Bethlehem has been rebuilt and gas introduced; Nazareth has become the headquarters of a large company of olive oil speculators; C i sarea is being rebuilt in modern stylo; Mount Car mol has been bought np by laud speculators; a glue factory is going up at Hamoth Gilead, while Jerusalem bos been delivered over to all sorts of Occidental improvements, including clocks on the public buildings, a street-cleaning bureau, the Paris fashion journals, and even the telephone and an oc asional bicycle.

Smelling the Soul.

A German physician, Prof. Jaeger, has had the temerity to assert that he can smell the sonl. German scholars have discovered, however, that the art of smelling souls was alreadv known in antiqnity, and is mentioned in the Bible. They quote from the Talmud Sanhedrin the following curious story v “Two and a half years Bar Coziba reigned. Then he said to the rabbis: ‘lam the Messiah!’ The rabbis ob-. jected to this assumption, and said: ‘lt is written about the Messiah that He judges according to the smell; if thou canst do it we will believe thee.’ As he failed in the attempt they killed him. ” —Jewish Messmger.

Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets,” Positively Popular; Provoke Traiso; Prove Priceless; Peculiarly Prompt; Perceptibly Potent; Producing Permanent Profit; Precluding Pimples and Pustules; Promoting Purity and Peace. Purchase. Price, - Petty. Pharmacists Patronizing Pierco Procure Plenty. It would appear that gas will furnish more light when employed to drive an electric motor than when used directly as an illuminant. In a paper read before one of the London engineering societies it was mentioned, as the result of many investigations, that 1,000 feet of gas used to produce incandescent electric lighting by means of a gas engine will give twice as much light as if employed as an illnminant in the ordinary way.

The Strongest Man in Ohio

Is said to be George C. Arnold, of Cleveland, 0., who less than one year ago, owing to chronic liver trouble and Bright’s disease of the kidneys, weighed less than ninety-five pounds, but by using Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonlo has gained in strength and weight until now he is admitted to be the giant of Ohio. Pube Cod Liver Oil made from selected, lfvers on the sea-shore by Hazard, Hazard k Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have dec.ded it superior to any of the oth t oils in market The best cough medicine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c.

You Need It Now This is the best time to purify your blood, for at no other season is the body so susceptible to benefit from medicine. The peculiar purifying and reviving qualities of Hood’s Sarsaparilla are Just what are needed to expel disease and fortify the system against the debilitating effects of mild weather. Every year increases the popularity;of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, for it is just what people need at this season. Hood’s Sarsaparilla "For years my blood was in an unhealthy condition. My legs, arms, and face were covered with scrofulous humor, and all the medicine that I received of the physicians did me no good. I was advised to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. After taking four bottles, the sores were all healed up; and after using six bottles, which cost me only five dollars, I was well and healthy as I ever was.” Fbeb J. M. Webber, Lincoln, Mass. 2; -' ■ Creates an Appetite “With the first bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla my headache entirely disappeared, and where before I could not muater up an appetite for my meals, I can not now get enough meals to satisfy my appetite. I am at present taking my second bottle, and feel like a different person." William Lansing, Post 49, Q. A. It., Neenah, Wis. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $3. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO, Lowell, Maas. 100 Doses One Dollar

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rLA.DWA.Y’B , SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT, A potitive care for Bcrofnls and ill Blood and Skin Diseases. RADWAY A CO.. N. V. I fITS NEW TOWN of Beniamin. Wls. On. R. B. kU ■ w Plat* apply Milwaukee Mining Exchange, Milwaukee, Win. Gogebic Stocks bought and Mold. MENTION THIS TAPE* wsaa warn.. TO ..Tsanaaaa. ELY S P*TA ooU CREAMBALMijk-^A 1 was cured hrfurrWjMf CflfA ki RALWN the second bottle ofWM G/}>,. QjloreCOlDl Ply's Cream /yq/mßj&jr.HyP/fyy " NrAnl was exhausted. lW a?t| was troubled wUhTWffVftßjSg: chronic ca ta r r/t,KjL WjX S'dm gathering in - ing, and diarAari/cvß from my ears. —C. Y J. Corbin, 923 Chest. UAA. 1 nus Street, Philo. FEYEW Aparticle is applied into each nostril and is agreeabm. Price 90 cts. at druggists; by mail, registered, 60 eta. Circulars tree. ELY BROS,, Druggists, Owego. N. Y. UCI& DrVOIAVQ Metropolitan Block, IjuJIdIUJID. Chicago, Ilia.

DETECTIVES Wanted in every County. Shrewd men to act undor our instructions in our Secret Service, Experience not neneeeary. fiend atamo for particulars. GRANNAN DETECTIVE BUREAU, 44 Arcade. Cincinnati, O. CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS The Original and Only Genuine. Safe and always Reliable. Beware of wertkleae Iralte ltouo- Ladies nek your Druggist for "CMckeater') English” and take no other, or incloeo 4c. (stamps) tc us for particulars iu letter by return mall. Nam FAraa. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., . ~ *BIB Madlsen Aqua re, I'hllsda. Pa. * IOOO REWARDiATHE VICTOR For any machine holusf sad ♦leaning tor Illustrated hr mailed free. IS” 61 . MACItUIiECO., CeUmbue, * * dlh wto SR a day. Samples worth fit AO, FREE. Lines not under the horse’s feet. Address Brewster's Safety Rein Holder, Holly, Mich. BnßEffgMsmu&SSSl: ■■■■■HnßMMMMßUharleitown, Mas*. RII DTf ISI E la In WT I II Ira r home, send for ■■ wB B W llMfi Dr.J.A.Sherman’s Circular of Instructions. 294 llroudway. New Yorks MENTION THIS PAPER warns watnss to aevseriasaa. nil ■B^apr.WilUsms’lndianPlleOintment §Uf II LWis a sure cure lor blind,bleeding or r pitching piles. Cure guaranteed, ■ , I'M* Price 50c and sl. At druggist’s or mailed by WILLIAMS MFG. CO., Cleveland, O. IIHIFRTIQFRQ or others,wno Wttn to examine Ml T kit 11flbllw this paper, or obtain estimates on advertiting space when in Chicago, will find it on silo st THOMS.

ydPk ONLY THUS pyiRON EfTONIC of Appetite, Indigestion,Lack of Strength and Tired Feeling abaolutelr cured: Bones, motelse and nerves receive now force. Enlivens the mind and supplies Brain Power. ■*aTasS#a Suffering from complaints pecoI A niCQ liarto their sex will find in DR, IsHUICG HARTER’S IRON TONIC a safe, speedy core. Gives e clear, healthy complexion. All attempts at counterfeiting only adds to its popularity. Do not experiment—get Original and B«sr icur. D c r o»^?Jo E „^ L ra.J3t , -. L n? Siekfc ■ Headache. Semple Dose and Dream Book! V mailed on reoeipt of two oents in postage, r THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., ST. LOUIS, MO.

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*I S V Hill All IlSiTAllsT^T^r Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use B - Sold by druggists.

I^SLICKER

LITTLE liver pills. BEWARE OT IMITATIOITB. Al.tr AYS ASK fOK DR. PIERCE'S PELLETS, OK LITTLE SUGAR-COATED TILLS. Being entirely vegetable, they operate without disturbance to the system, dM*. or occupation. Put up In class vials, hermetically scaled. Always fresh and reliable. As a laxative, alterative, or purgative* these little Pellets give the moot perfect jbr tiff Action. si HEADIBHE. Billons Headache, W Dizziness, Conatlpa- AL lion, Indigestion, VX-. AVi Billons Attacka,andall A M/nL. derangements of the stom- Wll flit ach and bowels, are prompt- WJL ly relieved and permanently Jflk cured by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets. In explanation of the remedial power of these Pellets over so great a variety of diseases, it may truthfully be said that their action upon tho system is universal, not a gland or tissue escaping their sanative Influence. Sold by druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the Chemical laboratory of World’s Dispensary Medical Association, buffalo, N. Y. SSOOHE is offered by the manufacturerg of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh N. j. S Remedy, for a case of ssr. Chronic Nasal Catarrh which they cannot cure. ' SYMPTOMS OP CATARHH.— DuII, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes or* weak, watery, and inflamed; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulcers; tho; voice is changed and has a nasal twang; tho breath is offensive; smell and taste are impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with' mental depression, a backing cough and gen- j eral debility. Only a few of the above-named 1 symptoms arc likely to be present in any on# case. Thousands of cases annually, without, manifesting half of the above symptoms, result In consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood by physicians. By its mild, soothing, and healing properties. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy cures the worst cases of Catarrh. “ cold In the. head,” Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. Sold by druggists everywhere; CO cents. • “ Untold Agony from Catarrh.” Prof. W. Hausnek, the famous mesmerist, of Ithaca, N. Y., writes: “Some ten years ago I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal; catarrh. My family physician gave me up as incurable, and said I must die. My case was : such a bad one, that every day, towards sunset, my voice would become so hoarse I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my coughing and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. By the use of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well man, and the cure has been permanent.” “Constantly Hawking and Spitting.” Thomas J. BusniNO, Esq., toot Pint Strut, St. Louis, Mo., writes: “ I was a great sufferer 1 from catarrh for three years. At times I could! hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking and spitting, and for the last eight months could not breathe through the nostrils. 1 1 thought nothing could be done for me. Luck-1 lly, I was advised to try Dr. Sago’s Catarrh j Remedy, and lam now a well man. I believe it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now' manufactured, und one has only to give it at fair trial to experience astounding results and : a permanent cure.” Three Bottles Cure Catarrh. Eli Robbins. Runyan P. 0., Columbia Co^ ' Pa., says: “My daughter bad catarrh when, she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy advertised, and procured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it helped her; a third bottle effected a permanent cure. She is now eighteen years old and sound and'heartv."

I(M CURES WHEREALL ELSE FAILS! B 1151 W I I I? 'S: ■ II J| I CURES WHERE ALL ELSEFAILi Eg M Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use R| in time. Sold by druggists.

Eclectic Shorthand nouni. Average time required . four month*. Send .for circular*. 0411*9 School. Js. Clark St.. Chicago* MENTION THIS PAPER vm warns* is Aomrans, JONES pBpAYStISREICHT JkL. jy 5 Ton Wtcoi Hcalei, lr*o Levers, Su*l Bearing*. Bras* Tare Beam and Beam Box for Eeerr For free price UR V&rocfSg - mention this paper and address r C yfFjP f JOHIS OF BINQHAMTM. : 9 1 BINGHAMTON* N. Ye CThe OLDEST MEDICINE in the WORLD iifsT elebrated Eye Watelf This article Is a carefully prepared physician’s prescription. and has been in constant use for nearly a century, and notwithstanding the many other preparations thst have been introduced Into the market, tha sale of this article is constantly increasing. If the directions are followed it will never fail. We particularly invite the attention of physicians to its merits. John X. TAewpnm, Atoms * Co.. TKOY. N?T. C.H. U. No. 19-87 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, M please gay you saw the advertiaemeat in this paper.