Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 August 1887 — Page 7
WHITE-HOUSE WIVES.
Intellectually, Mrs. John Adams . Leads Them All. General Washington’s wife was a very excellent housekeeper, and the etiquette around her was fixed by certain young military aides of her husband like David Humphreys and Major Jackson, while the only woman at the -Cabinet who laid any pretensions of high breeding was the wife of .General Knox, a Boston girl, whose father had been a high tory at the breaking out of the revolution, whereas she. had run away with Knox, the book seller and captain of an artillery company. Knox was a man of ability, but of voluptuous nature, and his wife, too, became very stout and good natured in * time, and he* semi-official traditions as the daughter of a British stipendiary of considerable means rather operated to diminish than to expand the Executive circle. General Washington on public occasions led Mrs. Knox in the dance or to dinner, chiefly because Mrs. Knox, in his eyes, represented the best descent and educatian in his Cabinet. Hamilton’s wife had many children, and was not a society voman in her desires, though she was the qaughter of General Schuyler, who was the first Senator from New York State. Her husband’s intellect and her domestic duties absorbed all her ambition, and she is not regarded anywhere as stepping to the front or boosting any other woman out of the line. This Mrs. Knox, who seems to be a woman of as much intellect as style and confidence rather, was the notable woman of Washington’s Administration. Mrs. John Adams, like Mrs. Washington, was a housekeeper, and in her husband’s long absences she had given such attention to the farm and to the dairy and to paying the wages of the hands that she had become rather tight ■on money matters, and did not lay out the President’s salary to keep things lively. Intellectually it seems to be conceded that she led every President’s wife, and her letters can be read with as much charm to day as when they were first published, giving every American increased admiration for the good sense of the women of the time of the Revolution. Besides, Mrs. Adams has been a good deal to Europe, accompanying, both in the Legation. She had seen which constitutes society, but was not desirous to shine in it herself. Jefferson had no wife, and his daughters married young, and were a good deal absorbed with the financial straits of their husbands, who also were men of excessive personality, and not of the distributive and genial nature which constitutes a good host. Madison’s wife was a showy woman who, without having a great deal of mind, made things lively and stylish, and she probably remains the most (distinctive character in the history of the White House, though she had many troubles, her son being a fool and a spendthrift, and her husband was a rather cold man, and better fitted to appear in Congress than t 6 en tertain a crowd. He was peevish and timid, and always left to somebody else the troubles which arose out of the issues of his times, when every nation in Europe was at war, and all of them thought the United States ought to come in and be a partisan or be punished for its neutrality. The Americans were getting rich by having the carrying trade of Europe; and nobody is allowed to get rich without having rivals and pesterers. ■ TZ President Monroe was an uninteresting man, with a countenance which seems to this day full of commonplace. He wore homespun clothing and catered to the multitude which had seen society. His wife belonged to a class of Dutch New Yorkers who did not radiate, and the White House was a dull place, still keeping up that Southern tone which for three or four administrations and for thirty-two out of thirtysix years had distinguished it. The daughter of Mrs. Monroe was in all respects a Virginia girl, with Virginia surroundings. Then John Quincy Adams took his one term, and wife his was a Maryland woman of the Johnson family, living no great distance from the Capital. She possessed the Maryland virtues of hospitality and kindness, but it took a great deal of her time to keep her curious husband on good terms with himself, and she always had domestic troubles, one of her sons committing suicide. So the Southern tone continued at the White House, and when General Jackson came in for eight years he brought with him Kentucky and Tennessee ladies who had married his adopted son of were kin to his wife 'who had been reared in Kentucky. When the next man from the North, Van Buren, Occupied the White House . he was a widower, but he had most engaging sons and was himself the politest man in the Presidency, unless General Arthur be considered equally as agreeable. Arthur, however, had no 'great intellectuality, while Van Buren was a very substantial lawyer and wise manager, and he appreciated the growing social influence of New York, where he had been a poor Dutch boy surrounded by great families like the Livingstons, Van Rensellaers, Van Cortlandts and the Jays. The highest social breeding generally comes from below, where in-
tellect endeavors to please as it rises in the social scale. The absence of women, however, from the White House made Van Buren’s tern! comparatively unimportant in a social way, his sons , being still quite young, and all that strangers noticed there aas the absolute confidence with which Van Buren treated these boys, making men out of them from the outset. He had married his cousin, and consequently insanity developed in, come of bis children, though it may have originated in other causes, as now and then the strongest children are the offspring of cousins. John Van Buren was a powerful pan to the last day of his life. Tyler had two wives in the White House during the almost four years in which he succeeded to Harrison’s term. His first wife died before his influence became considerable, and his second wife was a handsome young girl of Long Island-New England stock, a Gardiner, whose marriage was somewhat analagous to that of Cleveland,except that the President had but recently lost his wife, and to some people who do not like second marriages, his reunion brought a cold chill. He was fifty-four years old when he married Julia Gardiner and he had married as early as 1813 his first wife, Letitia Christian, so that there was no great sentiment throughout the country upon a man who had been married thirty years taking to his bosom a mere girl. Mrs. Tyler is still living, and lives at Tyler’s old homestead somewhere on the James River. If she had the art to interest the society of that day it was premature for a Northern woman to be effective in a society which still continued to be overwhelmingly Southern. The President was himself a Virginian of an old office-holding family, and his methods and diet were probably more Southern than those of any of his predecessors. Besides, Mr. Tyler almost immediately quarreled with the political party which had elected him, and the White House was shunned by the Whigs, while the Democrats were all the while designing to win Tyler to their side and then to throw him overboard. President Polk married a sensible woman of the Tennessee stamp, where the practical and the religious and the social are blended in almost equal parts, so that the social element of character is merely one component instead of being the whole essence. They had no children, and Polk himself, was an anxious kind of a man, whose success had been rather beyond his expectations, and he was a pupil of the old Virginia school of politics, and kept in sight their methods and ideas. Mrs. Polk, however, was so much respected as a hostess and woman that after her husband’s death, which occurred almost immediately after he est the Presidency, gossip said that the Whig Secretary of State, John M. Clayton,whohad been many years a widower, was engaged to be married to her. Clayton has now been in his grave thirtyone years and he never married, while Mrs. Polk still lives, and from time to time is brought to the public attention by the distinguished visitors who go to see her. She has never rushed back to Washington like Mrs. Madison, who could not shake that city from her mind until nearly the end of her days, and she continued to hold a Dowager’s Court in the region of the White Hoase for a good many years. Gath. The Family Doctor. Buttermilk is now recommended for the cure of sallowness produced in the complexion by advancing age. It has long been popular for the prevention and cure of freckles and other injuries to the skin caused by wind and sun. For biliousness a plain diet of bread, milk, oatmeal, vegetables and fruit, with lean meat or fresh fish, is advised by the Medical and Surgical Journal. Exercise in Ibe open air helps. The The victim of aft acute attack will be righted by: First, abstinence; second, porridge and milk; third, toast, a little meat and ripe fruit, coming thus gradually to the solid food again. “Carbolic acid has been much overrated as a disinfectant,” says Robson Roose, M. D. “The spore of the microoganisms discovered in cases cf splenic fever have been found to be absolutely unaffected after lying for upward of three months in a 5 per cent, solution of carbolic acid in oil. It has been found that .yaceine matter mixed with carbolic acid in a solution still retains its efficacy.” Indian corn contains a large amount of nitrogen, has anti-constipating qualities, is easily assimilated, cheap and very nutritive. A doctor of note declares that a course .of Indian meal in the shape of johnny cake, hoe cake, corn or pone bread and mush, relieved by copious draughts of pure cow’s milk, to which, if inclined to dyspepsia, a little lime water may be added, will make a life, now a burden, well worth the living, and you need no other treatment to correct your nervousness, brighten your vision and give you sweet and peaceful sleep, ■ fl Is There Any Other Kind. " - Puck. # The girls who go into ecstacies over a new pattern for knit lace, who grow enthusiastic over making paper flowers, who read novels galore, who go to the opera whenever they get a chance, who wear boots a size too small for them’ who say “awful” forty times a day, etc.’ make just as good wives as the other kind, and don’tjou forget it
OUR MINERAL PRODUCTS.
They Increased from |$ 1 uh. 000,000 in 1888 to $466,000,000 in 1886. Washington special, July 25. The total value of the mineral products of the United States, in round numbers, (increased from $428,000,000 ■in 1885 to 465,000,000 n 1886. The important factor in this gain of $37,000,000 was the increased roductien of pig iron from 4,044,525 ong tons in 1885 to 5,683,325 long tons in 1886 and an appreciation of 75 cents in the average value per ton, making a total of $38,483,360 in this industry alone. The total value of gold produced in 1886 was $35,000,000, ah increase of $3,199,000 over 1885. The production of silver decreased from $61,600,000 in 1885 to $51,000,000 in 1886. The production of copper in 1886 amounted to 160 678,081 pounds, a decrease of 10,284,526 pounds from 1885. The total production of lead increased to 136,629 tons in 1886. In 1885 the product was 129,412 tons. The production of white lead in 1886 is estimated at 60,000 short tons. The total value of the oxides of lead was about $1,535,000. The zinc production was 42,641 short tons, an increase of 1,193 short tons over 1885. In 1886 the production of quicksilver in California was 29,981 flasks. This is a decrease of 2,092 flasks, but the total value shows an increase of SBO,BII, due to an increase in prices. The total production of coke in 1886 was 6,835,088 short tons. This is the largest production ever reached in the United States. The total production of petroleum was 28,110,115 barrels of 42 gallons each, of which the Pennsylvania and New York fields produced 25,799,000 barrels, an increase of 6,6’28 - 074 over 1885.
Spare the Birds.
St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The ornithologifete of the country by careful estimates place the destruction of birds in the, United States for millinery purposes at 5,000,000 a year, or ten times more than the number of specimens extant in our scientific collections, private and public. At this rate they will soon be exterminated from American forests (and only the voice of the English ■ par row be heard in the land). The Boston Transcript says: “Some song birds of bright plumage having been seen recently in one of our suburbs, a ‘professional gunner’ shot ten of them for the milliners, from whom he cents a piece for his victims.” And all this butchery to gratify a senseless and barbarous taste handed down from our savage forefathers. Is there a more revolting sight than a woman’s head decorated with a piteous-looking bird, wntlimg“upon an arrow? The useless and wholesale slaughter of the “innocents” should be condemned from a commercial and agricultural as well as from a humanitarian stand-point. The alarming increase of this evil has necessitated the formation of societies whose mission is to awake public sentiment and lead to the proper legislation regarding it. In England there are two societies for the “preservation of birdsin Great Britain and all other parts of the World.” The Selborne Society, of London, organized by George Arthur Misgrave, appeals to British women to “Foreswear the wearing of bird skins.” Her Royal Highness the Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein is the patroness of this society, and among its members are twenty ladies of title and also the Rev. T. O. Morris, Robert Browning, Sir Fredeiick Leighton and Lord Tennyson. A vear ago last April the Aububon Society of Pennsylvania was organized, and its membership to-day is 20,000. Miss A. C. Knight is President; N. E. Janney, vice-president. Miss Francis Ferguson, treasurer, and Martin V. B. Davis, secretary. The pledges are three in number. No. 1. I pledge myself not to kill, wound or capture any wild bird not used for food so long as I remain a member of the P. A. S., and I promise to dsscourage the same in others No. 2 relates to the robbing of nests and No. 3 is especially for ladies. “I pledge myself not to make use of the feathers of any wild birds as ornaments ot dress or household furniture, and by every means in my power to discourage their use for decorative purposes in others, ostrich feathers excepted.”
Thousands are leins cuied o, Catarrh eve-y year with Hall’. O.'errh Cure, that the uont re had given X’p ano sail that could not le cured. 75 cti. ab.ttle. Sold by all dyuggiatt.
A Chip off the Old Block.
New Xork Times. Jay Gould stood openly all day in the Consolidated Stock and Petroleum Exchange selling his papa’s specialties by wholesale. The young man—just past his twenty-first birthday-swas credited with having sold over 10,000 shares of Western Union alone. This qame lad pursued these same tactics just before the last shake up came to Wall street. It has been estimated that he cleared $50,000 then..
Kindred Souls.
New York Sun, “Young man,” said a long-fraired man solemnly, “do you drink whisky?” “Well —er—l am sorry to say,” confessed the young man, with a blush of shame, “that! do occasionally drink a little, sir.” “Well, try a swig at that,” said the long-haired passenger, passing over a quart bottle.
Far bettor that the harto treatment of medicine* which horribly gripe the patient and destroy the coating of the etomach. Dr. J. H. McLean’s Chills ana Fever Cure by mild yet effective action will cure, Sold at 50 cents a bottle.
Lo. the Voting Indian.
Tacoma (W. T.) Ledger. It is not generally ' understood that the Puyallup Indians werp granted by an act of Congress, at its last session, the right of equal suffrage with the whites. Many of the Indians are expecting to vote at the coining election in November. It is understood that the most of them are Democrats.
An Important Element
Of the success of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the fact that every purchaser receives a fair equivalent for his money, The familiar head line “100 Doses One Dollar,” stolen by imitators, is orginal with and true only of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. This can easily be proven by any one who desires to test the matter. For real economy, buy only Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Sold by ah druggists. Because a woman’s husband supports her, it does not follow that he is “a perfect stick.”
The Richest Man in the World
would be poor without health. The dying millionaire consumptive would exchange all he is worth for a new lease of life. Hecmildhave had it for a song had he used Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” before the disease had reached its last stages. This wonderful preparation is a positive cure for consumption if taken in time. For all diseases of the throat and lungs it is unequaled. All druggists. A great base ball mascot—total abstinence.—Life.
“A Word to the Wise is Sufficient.”
Catarrh is not simply an inconvenience, unpleasant to the sufferer and disgusting to others —it is an advanced outpost of approaching disease of worst type. Do not neglect its warning; it brings deadly evils in its train. Before it is too late, use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. It reaches the seat of the ailment, and is the only thing that will. You may dose yourself with quack medicines ’till it is too late—’tilUtbe streamlet becomes a resistless torrent. It is the matured invention of a scientific physician. “A word to the wise is sufficient. After all there is no finer coupler than the preacher Delicate diseases of either sex, however induced, promptly, thoroughly and nermanently cured. Send 10 cents in stamps for large illustrated treatise, suggesting sure means of cure. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 633 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. He who buys a building site cheap doesn’t give a great deal and gets a lot. We would be pleased to know man or woman who has never had headache or been subject to constipation. As these seem to be universal troubles a little advice may be in order. Why should persons cram their stomachs with nauseating purgative pills, etc. which sicken and debilitate when such a pleasant and sterling remedy as Prickly Ash Bitters will act mildly and effectively on the liver, kidney, stomach and bowels, and at the same time tone up and strengthen the whole system, causing beadache, constipation and all such distressing evils to quickly disappear. Jubilees may come and go, but Buffalo Bill’s receipts go on forever.- — . 7
A GIFT FROM THE SEA.
There are Hundreds of remedies advertised to cure Dyspepsia, but one in all the list is warranted to cure or return your money. That one is “Ocean Wave Lime.” If you cannot get it at your drug storesend direct to the central office. Ad, dress, Marshall C. Woods & Co., No. 9 South Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. Price, JI; by mail, $1.15. A magnifying glass—A tumbler of liquor. People say that Moxie Nerve Food slakes thirst better than anything known. Cheap for a wonder. 50c. a quart bottle. Down by the sea—Faded dandelion blossoms at a shore resort. Sick h laiache is the bane of many liras. To cure and prevent this mnoyiag complaint use Dr. J. H. McLean’s Little Liverand Kidney Pilots. They aie agreeable to take and gentle in their action. 25 cents a vial. Happiness depends verv ranch on rhe condition o the liver and kidneys. The ills of life m«k * tttlit-tlfi-upres i»n on t.ioo whose digistion is good. You can regulat * v >ur tiver and kidneys with Dr. J. H. McLean's and Kidney Balm, tl.oo per bottle. • “U pons de, d. wn the other”—The picnic ant. Dr. .1 H. Moilman’s Strengthening Cord’al and Blo.d Pu ifier M nj& its vitalizing prcpertins, will bng*ium pU- cheeks, an 1 transform a pale, hag»nrd dispirit* 1 woman into one of sparkling health and beamy. $1 per bottle. Persons etdalifeof exposure are subjects to rheuraatßMu, neuralgia and lu ihago, and will find a vain tffl&remedy in Dr. J H. McLean's Volcanic Or- Li »imerit; it will banian pain and subdue iotl immation. hi iig stioa result! from a partial paralysis of the sto A a hanl is ths primary caube of a very large majonty of tn litis tua humanity i< heir to The ■ most agreeable a M d effective remeiy is Dr J. ti. vfcLetn’s Lictlb Liver and Kidney Pillets. 25;cts. avt al. . ,
NO INTIMIDATION. How a Country Constable Prepared Himself for a City Expedition. Detroit Free Press. There was a country constable in town yesterday in search of a fugitive from justice. The fugitive was a boy who was very lame in one leg and who had lost three fingers from one hand. The officer called at various places in his search, and at the Third street depot was inventoried by some of the hackmen. That proceeding disclosed the following stock on hand: One big revolver. One small revolver. One pair of shackles. One pair of hand-cuffs. One “come-along.” One policeman’s baton. One constable’s star. One warrant for a small boy. “Is he dangerous ?” queried one of the hackmen, in speaking of the fugitive. “I don’t know as to that,” replied the officer, “buthere is the point. Suppose I arrest that boy on the street, and after I’ve *?othim shackled and handcuffed a crowd jumps in on me and wants to take him away. D’ye suppose I’ve come in here to be intimidated by any thing like two hundred infuriated men? You bet I haven’t.”
THE SLEEPING CHILD.
' My baby glept-hbw calm his rest. Ar Q.'er hfs handsome face a smile Like that of angel flitted while He lay so still upon my breast. My baby slept—his baby head \ Lay all unkiss'd 'neath pall and shroud— I did not weeporjery aloud— I only wished I. too, were dead.' My baby sleeps—a tiny mound. All covered by the little flowers, Wooes me in all my walking hours Down in the quiet burying-ground.. And when 1 sleep I seem to be With baby in another land— I take his little baby baud— He smiles and sings sweet songs tS me. Sleep on, O baby, while I keep My vigils till be past, G Then shall I, too', lie down at last And with my baby darling sleep.
_ - ' "" X.. - ■ W sick.. we gave her Castorus When she was a Child, she cried for Caatorta sue became Mira she clang to Cantona, Wwa «ba n.«i Children, she gava them Castoria A marked effaot—The work of shipping clerk. R. W. Taneill #Ca., Cllctgo. Our fr«q ii nt orders during the part five Tears •vest the n e.its of jour ‘'Tansill's Panch ’ 5-c«nt cg,r. Winter* Cashing, Druggists, Princeton, 111. The print in question—An interrogation point, Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Plso’ Remedy or Catarrh. By druggists.' SOc. It isn't 'mpcssib'e that th- man who didn’fckrow where he wus «<it>g may • are been going to see. A free easy expectoration is produced by a few doses of Dr. .1. H. McLean’s Tar Wine Lung Balm, in a'l cas -t ot hoarseness, sore throat or difficulty of breathing. Undue exposure to cold winds, rain, bright light or malaria, may bring on inflammation and soreness of t'>e eves Dr. J. H. McLean’s Strengthening Eye Salve wlil subdue the inflammation, cool and soothe the nerves,and strengthen weak and failing Eye S.got. 25 cents a box. Pains in the small of the back indicate a diseased condition of the Liver or Kidneys, which may be easily removed by the use of Dr J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balm. >1 per bottle. No one disputed Dingo'by the other morning when h< c aimed to have had a "sUvinr time" the ireviou- night. He appeared to be "all broke up. . Frequently accidents occur in the household which cause burns, cuts, sprains and bruises; for use in su -.ti cases Dr. J. ft. McLean’s Volcanic Oil Liniment has for many years been the constant favorite family remedy. It's very much like striving for the nnattainab'e t« wear . pair oi light boots And try to Let go.dnatured.
PUTT T Q ■E’T’TT'ir’D cured and vHALiljg g J V JiKprevented The ENTIRE SYSTEM TUT AT* TJT A Y QUICKLY CLEANSED oflll ALi/LIIJUI e KiiKiiSsr FIVER TONIC Ie a sure and speedy Cure In the most stubborn cases. It thoroughly cleanses the system of Malaria,making the cure complete. When taken as directed, A CURE IS GUARANTEED, and should it fail the Druggist is authorized to Refund the Money you paid for it. it a TRIAL! Be sure to ask your Druggist for KRESS’FEVER TONIC. Price, sl. per hottie. KRESS’ FEVER TONIC CO., : ST. LOUIS, MO. Meyeb Bros. A Co., General Agenth.
FOR ALL DISORDERS OF THE Stomach, Liver teF andjewels PACIFIC MIS STIIICTL'Sr VEGETABLE. Cum Constipation. Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Piles, Sick Hb ad ache, Liver Complaints, Loss or Appetite, Biliousness, nervousness, Jaun DICE, Etc. PRICE, S 5 cento. PACIFIC MANUFACTURING CO.. ST. LOUIS, MO SEDGWICK STEEL WIRE FENCF The best Farm, Garden, Poultry Yard, Lawn, .School Lot, Park and Cemetery Fences and Gates Perfect Automatic Gate. Cheapest and Neatest Iron Fences. Iron and wire Summer Houses, Lawu Furniture, andother wire work. Best Wire Stretcher and Piier. Ask dealers in hardware, or address, SEDGWICK BROS.. Richmond, Ind. O~ DI 11 |M|-WIORPHIIiE habit ■ I W Iwl cured in two weeks. I ast no pay until you know yon are cur ed DR. M. C. BENHAM, Richmond Ind. Mention this paper.
This represents a healthy life. Just such a life as they enjoy Throughoutits various scenes. Who use the Smith’s Bile Beans. Smith’s BILE BEANS acting i— —————— 1 directlyand promptly on the Liver, Skin and Kid- The orWnsl neys. They consist of a vegetable combination that , nn%«unt , <rs to has no equal in medical science. They core Constipa- “ Addrew tion, Mailaria, and Dyspepsia, and are a safeguard bile beans, against all forms of fevers, chills and fever, gall stones, at. Loan. Mo. and Bright’s disease. Send 4 cents postage for a Sampie package and test the TRUTH of what we say. Price, 25 cento per bottler ■tailed to any address, postpaid. DOSE ONE BEAN. Sold by druggists. «y. z*. aKaSXDRBE «*> CX>„ PROPRIETORS, st*. XaOLTXS, mo. - - =- 4?y 7 ■■ • L y i l' lIMII 1 for Infants and Children. •‘CMtoriaiasoweUadaptedtodiDdnathat I Castoria cures CoHe, CaadtpaMs. 1 recommend it as superior to any prescription I &>ur Stomach. Diarrhas*, »n»ctatom. , kaowntome.” H. A. Aacma. M. D„ I KiDsWoras, pres sleep, aad promasa ill 8a Oxford St, Brooklyn. N.Y. | Wltooat iajurioM nedlcaMaa. Ts Qtstaue Cota>Ajrr, 182 Fulton ttrest, N. Y.
- Scrofula . Trobabiy r.o form of disease is co gr-.craUydl*. tribute'! ninons oar whole population as scrofula. . Almost every I'ldlvldnat has this latent poison » , I coursing bu veins. The terrible dudlennga enI dured by those affllctoil wltliuserofn'inH sores | cannot bo rrderstoo I by fhrir i-rati-tudeon finding a reiaody tli.-.t w-’’.! .i, lobes a well person. The wonderftt! pvv er ot Hood’s SarsapariHs In eradicating every form cf Lcro'C-la lim been so clearly anil fully demonstrated ibat It leaves x. > doubt that It la the greatest medical discovery ot this generation. It is nmylo by C. I. HOOD <L CO., Lowell, Mass., and is sold by all druggists. 100 Pogos Ono DoHnr „ IT IS A PUREIVVESETABLE PRWARATIOH fli SENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU ■ KIAMO OTHER EqpAUy EIIICIEIIT REMEDIES ■H R h» g ltood the Test of Yean, in Curing all Diseases of the LIV£B, BTOMACH, KIDNEYS,BOWIftT -aACfQ ELS, Ac. It Purifies the fl Blood, Invigorates and I r BIT* EH? DYBPEPSIA,CONBTICURES PATION, JAUNDICE, AILDISEASESOFTHE SICKHEADACHE.BILT rVTR IOUB COMPLAINTS, 4c disappear at once under KIDNEYS its beneficial influence. STOMACH It ie purely a Medicine A N as its cathartic proper13 e ties forbids its use as a DU WEaLD. beverage. It is pleasXla St ant to the taste, and as AILDRUGGISTS pßicKirASHßinEnsco Dropsy 1/ TREATED FREE. DR. H. M. O-RjHJHIM' «3s SOTTS Specialists for Thirteen Years Past, Have treated dropsy and its complications with ths most wonderful success; use vegetable remedies, entirely harmless. Removed all symptoms of dropsy in eight to twenty days. Cure patients pronounced helpless by the best ot fihysicians. From the first dose the symptoms rapidy disappear, and in ten days at least two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. Some may cry humbug without knowing anything about it. Remember it does not cost yon anything to realise the merits of our treatment for yourself, la ten day- the difficulty of breathing is relieved ths pulse regular, the urinary organs made to dlschi rge tbeir full duty, sleep ie restored, the swelling all cr nearly gone, the strength increased and appetite made frood. We are constantly curing cases oflongstandng—cases that have been tapped a number of times and the patient declared unable to live a week. Give full history of case. Name sex, how long afflicted, how badly swollen and where, are bowels costive, have legs bursted and dripped water. Send for frM pamphlet, containing testimonials, questions, etc. Ten days’ treatment furnished free by mail. If you order trial, send 10 cents in stamps to pay postage. Epilepsy (Fits) positively cored. 11. 11. tiKEEN A SOMM, M. IM., »sO>i Harietta street. Atlanta, tla. ______ TJUPTURE retained and IV cured.—We agree to re- -Stain any case reducible or refund your money, also to cure any accepted case. Our Medicated Soft Pad and Rupture Solu- ■ U tion cures bad cases of direct and scrotal ■ ■ hernia without knife or needle. Hydro- • A cele, varicocele spermatorrhea success- W—fully treated either at office or by correspondence. For circulars, rules of measurement, and self-in-struction, call on or address SANITARIUM, 79>i E. Market St.. Indianapolis, Ind. CTfre oldest medtetns tn toe world to probably Dr. Isaao Thompson’s l< ELEBHATED KYE WATEi| This article is a carefully prepared Physician’s prescription, and has been in constant use nearly a centsry, and notwithstanding the many other preparations that have been introduced into the market, the sale rs this article la constantly increasing. If ths dtoon sons are followed It will never fan. we partloulstV hvlte the attention of physicians to Its merits. JOHN L, THOMPSON. SONS A CO- TROY, K K CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS The Original and Only Genuine. and always Reliable. Beware of worthleM Imlta itons. Ladies, your IlrugglMt for “Chichester** Enjfll«h” and take no other, or ineloee 4c. (Rtampe) U. U 8 for particulars in letter by return mall. Najb paper. CH I CHESTER CHEMICAL CO., 2GIB Mud I»on Square, Phlluda. Pa. Sold by l>rujf<l«t* every where. for *‘Clalehe«i ter’a Emkllnlb** Pennyroyal PIUm. Takenoethe* ■ Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is the H|| Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggists or sent by maiL H 50c. E. T. Haaeltine, Warren, Pa. m dtor TOMA DAT. Samples worth ,I.SO FREE. Nark Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write to Brewster Safety *ein Beider Co., Kelly, Mito. By return mail. Full Deseriptiom btfk a Moody’. New Tailor Hystee. of Drees K MOODY 4 CO., Cincinnati. Ou 1 N C 32—MT INDPLB When writing to Advertisers readers wll confer a favor by mentioning thia paper, OPIUM Ul [Mill Dr. J. Stephens. 1-eb.non.Ohio.
