Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 November 1887 — Page 7

A Reliable Remedy

- yiu. That .very prevalent and exceedingly disagreeable disease, catarrh, is caused by a scrofulous taint in the blood. Hood’sSarsapatilla it»a reliable remedy for catarrh, as by’ its powerful purifying and vitalizing action upon the blood it cures promptly And permanently, Those who suffer ■ from the varivatarrh;;.'xr comfortable flow from the nose, offensive breath, ringing and bursting noises in the ears, swelling of the soft parts of the throat, nervous prostration, etc., shonld try Hood's Sarsaparilla. “I have been troubled with catarrh about a year, Causing great soreness of the bronchial tubes and terrible headache. I saw the advertisement of Hood’s Sarsaparilla as a cure for catarrh, and after taking only one bottle I am much better. My catarrh is cured, my throat is entirely well, and my headache has all disappeared.’’ RroHAKh Gibbons, Hamilton. Butler County, Ohio.

Hood’s SarsaoarillaJ Seld by all druggists. {1; six for 85. Prepared Sold by all druggists. sl;six for?s. Prepared by by C. I. HOOD <& CO., Apothecaries; Lowell,Mass. 0. I. HOOD & CO, Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass 100 D ses One Dollar 100 Doses One Dollar for Infants and Children. KnaMMHMSMBMMaSMmiMKaBMMMMaMamraaMVMMKMMMnMMmet so weil adapted to children that g Castorla cures Colic, Oonrtipatioa, ..recommend it as superior to any prescription I Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, mown to me ” H. A. Anew™, md. I K^S e lti°oT S ’ " leeP ’ 111 So, Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. T. | Witfwttajurioua medicate Tux Onrrxuß Company, 182 Fulton Street, H. T

SEDGWICK STEEL WIRE FENCE kx«| i ’ s nWvM/v 1 t§iii Y ' T W WHWB Th.<- best Farm, Garden, Poultry Yard, Lawn, I >.'--h->:4~jiTHv'FaTk ap.»s-C^iTfetisw-^eßees ! 'rtnd Gateff "j r Automatic Gate. Cheapest and Neatest •5, Iren and wire Summer Houses, Lawn •re, nnd other wire work. Best Wire Stretch •• • i/ij.,r. Ask dealers in hardware, or address '-.TVOWICK BROS RiCHMCND. Ikp Ely’s Creaan Balm ' M | Gives relief at-tnee and cures I^S&“F O^ D in HEAD > “yj Eii!rrti ini m Fto Not a Liquid or Snuff. Apply Balm into each nostri USAJ ELY BROS. 235 Greenwich St N Y (JOSEPH GILLOTTS STEEL PENS ■ SOLD MEDAL PARIS EXPOSITION 1873. NOS. 303-404-170-604. [the most PERFECT OF PENS.) • MTTBTUUHMTCnon salary to sell oil E fii • t’jNursery Stock. Reli ■> all al) ' e rnpn °f energy and push cun ,|W have permanent employment and 11 h good pay. Terms liberal. Business > J4l easy learned. Particulars and out fit free. THE CH ASK MW RIES GENEVA, N. Y. 4®*Stele age and enclose stamp. SURE CURE DISCOVERED FOR GATARRH German Catarrh Remedy. HJ| Price'* 1. Samples free at Druggists. Mailed for 10c. inatampa. THOUSANDS CUKKD since the discovery of this method of treatment. Every mail brings letters from grateful persona CURED. B. & IdjIDEUBACH A CO., Newart, N. J., (J.S.A. |M| \ Iff CURES WHERE ALL f LSEIFAILS? JST ka Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use RS in time. Sold by druggists. g| Business university, Established 37 years. Best place to secure a thor i oughly practical and sound Business or Shorthand ; Education. Catalogue & Commercial Current./rr. ' PHO' OGKAPHS-Sitting Bull for T><cents;'J4 Characteristic Views of Northwest for ti .50 I Cabinet Cards. W. R. CROSS. Miobhary. Nub, i ; hiorPhtue Habit Cured !r It ■ — ; PATENTS enl ft I HAMVBTVDY Secure a Biisiness Education br m»i 1 nUfflDfrdni BRYANT'BBuiIn.M Oqll.g. Buffalo, M.Y J Habit Cured..tirfMta«7Mw.*aypwt i , to I BIItVI l-rof. J. IL BABTOK. MU Ward. aadMuß.* i »Fc 45—87 INDPL When wrlting to Advertisersreisdara wit confer a tavdr by n en ttonh g 1 bis pnper. MRFP By return mail. Full bescriptiui HIHKVIf Moody's New Tailor System of 11 res, 1 laSsi■■ Cutting. MOODY & CO.. Cincinnati. 0- ‘ BTHninnou InEAIuAN liniment S I g su Pfl dg M E Y I ft 1 M MUSTANG HIEAIuAn tINIMENT

Serious consequences aye liable to ensue If catarrh ist not attended to in season. The disease frequently distroys thesense of smell and often developes into bronchitis or other serious affections. Undoubtly many cases of consumption originate in catarrh. Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures catarrh and has also cured consumption in its early stages. /‘Let all sufferers know that Hood’s Sarsaparilla will curb catarrh,” writes one gentleman. “I have suffered with catarrh ip my head for years, and paid out hundreds of dollars for medicines, but have heretofore received only temporCured by take Hood’s Sarsaparillla and now my catarrh is nearly cured, the weakuessa of my body is all gone, my appetite is good—in fait, I feel like another person, Hood's Sarsaparilla is the only medicine I have ever taken which did me permanent good.” Mbs. A. Cunningham, Fallon Ave. Providence. R. I.

PENALTIES FOR CRIME.

The Peapie Getting Awfully Tired of the Present State of Things. Indianapolis Sentinel. We are looking around for reasons why mobs bang people. One reason is our courts and juries. They look leniently upon the taking of human life; but touch property and the whole country ..ionfbused:' 7Tb’ itthstrate, last week a prisoner was taken from Logansport to Michigan City. He was sentenced for two years On the same day a prisoner arrived from this' county. He was sent for seven "years. The two year prisoner killed a man! The seven year prisoner stole a horse! People tire of these things; and occasionally they rise up in rebelion, and do rash things, Two years for taking a human life—seven years for taking a horse! Stop and think of it honorable judges! Ponder over it members of juries! Express opinions on it members of the press!—Lafayete Sundav Leader. The facts stated by the Leader disclose nothing peculiar in Indiana; they apply to equal force to all the States. They indicate a condition of things well calculated to arouse the people. It is of the hightest importance that people should think well of courts—of judges. It is a calamity of no ordinary character, when people doubt the integenty of courts —their efficiency. The slightest deviation of judges from the people’s conception of right, justice, equity, imperils social order, furnishes texts for Anarchists, and is fruitful of tumult; such things degrade law , disgrace courts, and bring the machinery of the law into contempt. Under such circumstances men are required to investigate very little to find the reason why—for mobs, for lynch law, for acts which are said to disgrace countries, States and intire sections of the country. A man is indicted for murder. There is no question about the facts. Following the crime we read blood curdling accounts of its perpetration. Then there is, probably—escape. Rewards are offered, detectives are put on the track of the murderer; arrests sometimes result, and then comes the trial. Note the defense, count the loopholes ih the law, look at the array of lawyers, observe the technicalities that are brought forward, listen to th r orations—the charge of the judge. • This done the jury is usually so befogged that it can scarcely discover between right anc wrong, and all too often the verdict it “not guilty;” or the penalty is so light that the culprit goes to the penitentiary impressed with the idea that he was rightin killing hisman. Not so with the horse thief—prove that he stole the horse and up he goes for a term of years well calculated to impress upon bis mind that stealing horses is a perilous and unpopular business. There are few loopholes in the law for him—few available technicalities, oratory is of little avail. The charge of the judge is clear and concise, and the verdict at once settles the question. „ The people are getting awfully tired of this sort of a thing, and a speedy remedy is requited. Bouquets and. slush when a man is guilty of mtirder have had their day. Weak sentimentality is out of order. Society, ought to take notice of these things. Killing men ,is a worse crime than stealing horses. The penalty should be more severesuch is the verdict of the people. ... Many western farmers report that than when sold at present prices. Some claim that they have made, a dollar’s worth alpprk from a-bushel of wheat

TRADE AND LABOR.

Philadelphia Record. Good authority flay fl that the 'boatbuilding capacity of the y#rds along the lakes will be doubled within twelve or eighteen months. Western machine shops were never so full of orders as at this time. Everything in the way of building material has been ordered way' ahead. A recently returned traveler from the West says some shopkeepers are anxious to pay cash for discounts. There seems to be no scarcity of money among small traders. Iron is being much more largely used for rdofing and tile purposes than ever. A Cincinnati firm is running night and day on tiles, shingles, iron frames for roofs and iron-ore paints and cements. Many maufacturing establishments throughout the New England and Middle States are taking off their old roofs and putting on asphalt roofs and other new compositions. The cost in insurance is an important item. Kentucky mining and manufacturing interests are being stimulated by the influx of a great deal of Northern and foreign capital. Chief attention is now being given to the development of lumber and mineral resources. The tendency in our workshops is to make more complicated and delicate machinery. Inventors are apparently reaching the limit of improvements, and are preparing the 'Way for some radical improvement or departure from existing methods. A great many Americans are constantly going to Europe to seek work. All of the German rolling-mill owners have forced a combination and have divided the work up by percentages. A commission is now arranging a uniform scale of prices. Some railway companies have under contemplation the building of clubhouses for their employes, to be similar to the one ordered built by Cornelius Vanderbilt. The building recently completed in New York is as finely finished as the best appointed club-house. So great is the demand for anthracite coal cars that lumber cars are beings fenced up with boards and used. Much slaty coal is going to market, and more or less of it is subject to dockage toreturn. In the urgent requirements considerable refuse coal is finding its way St. Louis is keeping pace with Chicago in its industrial expansion. Some of the street railways are changing from horses to cables. New manufacturing corporations are springing up. Some fivestorj' structures are being run up to seven and eight stories. Birihingham, Ala., concerns are buying a good deal of machinery in that city. Topeka, Kan., will expend $250,000 on the sewer svstem. A St. Louis fire-brick concern has just been awarded a contract for 105,000 feet of sewer-pipe for the former city. It will lay twenty miles. The same company has an order for 400,000 bricks for a blast furnace at Sheffield, Ala. The new Cairo bridge across the Ohio river is to have two spans 518 feet each, seven 400 feet each, and three 350 feet each; total length, 4,670 feet. It will be fifty-three feet above high water mark, and will cost $2,500,000. It will take two and a half years to build it. It will be the-wonder of the West. The stockholders of the Toledo, Ann Arbor & Northern railroad are paying their workmen on theft profit-sharing system, precisely as if the sum they earned per month were so much stock in the company. The Pillsbury mills, of Minneapolis, are conducted upon the same plan. All eflorts of the kind seem to be yielding satisfaction to the employing interests. English locomotive builders haye been compelled to adopt the American pattern in many respects in order to control their continental traffic. The ideas of American mechanics are permeating foreign work-shops, and the stubborn adherents to old methods have been obliged to admit that much is to be learned on this side of the water. There have been 133 mills and woodpast three months in the South. The total number for the year is 562. During the past two years the number of mills erected foot up 750. If the average daily capacity of these mills be 15,000 feet, counting a run of 200 days per year, the total annual production of lumber in the Southern States must reach 2,260,000,000 feet. The Strong locomotive is attracting a good deal of attention among locomotive engineers and railroad men. Its makers claim four points of advantage—that it is capable of heavier express service than others, that no increased weight is placed upon ihe axle, and that it uses less fuel than the side valve engine, and that it burns either anthracite or bituminous coal. The weight of the Stroag locomotive engine (which has been tested) upon its driving wheels is 90,000 pounds. High speed engines are 'in great demand. Machinists are straining every energy to secure a little advantage over competitors. Western machinists seem to be leading the way on small engjpes, but in the East engines of immense capacity are made with i more economic results. Mechanical appliances of makers because of their greater adaotability to specific requirements. The lumber manufacturers are pur-

chasing immense tracts of timber territory wherever they can be bought cheaply. California red wood is being bought in rapidly. The cream of tae yellow pine region of the South is already controlled. A Michigan firm has lately bought 12,000,000 feet of yellow poplar in North Carolina. Michigan lumbermen say that the cost of logging this winter will be increased about 10 per cent., and that this increase will be reflected in the prices of lumber sold next spring.

Trick of the Imagination.

Buffalo Express. A short time since a man was taken to one of the hospitals suffering intense pain. He informed the doctors that his home was down in the country, and that if he should die he wished to be sent there. The physicians asked him what he supposed caused the pain. “Why, I swallowed my plate and four false teeth while asleep the other night,” was the answer. The patient was put upon liquid food and all the examinations made by the medicos failed to locate the swallowed article. The man’s sufferings were lessened considerably and as a, terfT it was decided to give him a little piece of beefsteak. This was done and the poor patient was writhing in agony as soon asheh d swallowed a mouthful. “Oh, my God!” he exclaimed, “this is killing me. I know I shall die!” and numerous other such speeches. The physicians and nurses could hardly keep him in bed—he suffered so much. Again he broke forth in exclamation. This time he said: “Oh, h0w,.1 suffer. I can feel the teeth tearing my stomach apart. Oh —” he did not finish until a nurse opened a telegram from his wife,., It read: “Found teeth under bed.” The suffering man, who had swallowed these teeth' got up and dressed, paid his bill and left the hospital without a word. This is only an illustration of what imagination will do. Galvanized iron pails for drinking water should not be used. The zinc coating is readily acted upon by water, forming a poisonous oxide of zinc. Without a particle of doubt Bail’s Catarrh Cm* is tLen oat excellent lemecy for the cure off mar. h “n the n arVet We n *•< rn*n c i to F ’

The Youth’s Companion FOR 1888. A Remarkable Volume. Increased in Size. Finely Illustrated. 400,000 Subscribers\ Eminent Authors. Special Articles of great interest, written for the Companion, will appear from the following Eminent Authors of Great Britain and the United States: Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, Gen. Lord Wolseley, Professor Tyndall, Clara Louise Kellogg, Gen. George Crook Justin McCarthy, M. P., Archdeacon Farrar, Louisa M. Alcott. ‘ 1 ■ .......... ..... And one hundred other well-known and popular writers. Six Serial Stories, WILL BE GIVEN IN 1388, FULLY ILLUSTRATED AND BY FAVORITE AUTHORS, INCLUDING J. T. Trowbridge, C. A. Stephens, AND OTHERS. ALSO, 200 Short Stories; Tales of Adventure; Illustrated ArticledonraveTT^ketCfieri^Eminent Men; Historical and Scientific Articles; Bright Sayings; 1000 Short Articles; Anecdotes ; Sketches of Natural History; Poetry. Twelve Pages Weekly, instead of eight pages, will be given nearly every week during 1888, increasing the size of the paper almost one-half, giving an extraordinary amount and variety of choice reading and illastra- . tkms, without any advance In the subscription price. .Two Millions of People Read It. SPECIAL offer: A S2’BO : ■ To any Now Subscriber who will CUT OUT and ■ . ■■■A IA Al 4 send us this Slip, with name and P. O, address n*nr*n ill (Salfl 1 and $1.75 in Money Order, Express Money Order, ■ w wruii if Registered Letter or Check, for a year’s sub- ■ scription to the Companion, we will send the ' paper free each week to Jan. Ist, 1888, and faflP JCI jK IQOQa for a full year from that date to Jan. Ist, 1889. ■ Vll iPlaf Wa! If ordered at once this offer will include The Double Holiday Numbers , I For Thanksgiving and Christmas, twenty pages each, with Colored (.'overs and Fiill-page Frontispiece ; Pictures, which are a-feature of the Companion volume. They will he unusually attractive this year. Address PERRY MASON & CO., 39 Temple Place, Boston, Mass. : s —— : L——.—t - ... .• ...... - >.,■ ■——— ■* —— .. w.'— —.■ ... - —— - W M ... >- - „ , ■ - ~—-t —. -w-r W WMESfW--. ——— - Specimen Copies and Colored Announcement and Calendar free, if3oll mention this paper.

A steal rail will break with ont'fourth the force when the temperature is at zfo that it will at 70° abovo. - r It Wort Bake Bread.—ln other words, Hood’s Sai sa pan Ila will not do jmpossibili'ies,. Its proprietors tell plainly what it has done, submit proofs from sources of Unquestioned reliability, and ~sk you frankly if yon are suffering from any disease or affection Caused or promoted by impure blood or low state pt the system, to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla The experience of others is sufficient as so rance that you will not be disappointed ha the result. John Van Ripen died at Elizabeth - own, Hl., on the 27th, aged 115.

Over-Worked Women.

Eor “worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated school teachers, milliners, seamstresses, housekeefwrs, and over-worked women generally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best of all restorative tonics. It. is not a “Onre all,” but admirably fulfills a singleness of purpose, being a most potent Specific for all those Chronic Weaknesses and Diseases peculiar to women. It is a powerful; general as as uterine,tonic and nervine, and imparts vigor and strength to the whole system. It, promptly cures weakness of stomach, indigestion, bloating, weak back, nervous prostration, dibility and sleeplessness, in either sex. Favorite Prescrip ion is Ki'd by druggists undeA our positive guarantee. See wrapper around bottle Price 81 a bottle, or six hot ties f..r 85 00 A large treatiseon Diseases of Women, profusely illustrated with colored plates and numerous wood-cuts, sent for ten cents in stamps. Address, World’s Dispensary Mrat cal Association, 663 Main -Street, Buffalo, N. Y _ _ A thing that grows upon you—A wen. Dr. P erce’s “Favorite Prescription ’ is not extolled as a “cure all,” but admirable fullfills a singleness of purpose, being a most potent specific in those chronic weaknesses peculiar to women. Progress mid poverty—George 'and McGlynn. No trouble to swallow Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. Robert Garrett is going to winter in Ai'.xico. Jay Gould isnot operating any telegraph lines in Mexico. If afliicuK* with Wore idyts.uMe Dr. Ibbmo san’a Eye Water. Druggists sell it.. 25c. —Piso’s Remedy forCatarrn is agree&bleto

The Still Small Voice.

Sunday school teacher (speaking of the cohscienw) —After you have done something which you ought not to do, I what is it, Bobby, that makes you feel I so uncomfortable and unhappy? VThen Blu r raa siex. we pare hsrCantort*. When she was a ChlM. she cried for ( aetoria. • iVhen she became Mien, she clung ♦"Castorta, When she bad Children, she gave hen. Found floating—Pond lilies.

Offer No. 174.

FREE!—To Merchants Only: An * elegant Carving Set (Knife, fork and Steel), in satin-lined case. Address at once, R. W. Tansill & Co., 55 State Street, Chicago. A railroad horror—the train-boy. ■ • Just double the work with less fatigue, all the Moxie takes away. Well-to-do—advertise.

Attention, Farmers.

We are making a combination wood and iron fence poet which, we believe, excels all others. The base is made of cast iron and the top of wood, which ia bolted to the base. The wood can be painted with a fire and water proof paint that will make it last as long as an all iron post. We furnish these posts complete at 30 and 35 cents each, or the cast iron base alone at 20 and 25 cents each, according to length of bases wanted. Please investigate thoroughly. Address. Enterprise Foundry Co., PATfNTS obtained by Louis Barger & Co., Attorney. Washington. D. 0.. K»*’d 18M. Advice tree JAY EYE SEE’S Driver, Edwin D. Either, uses Cole’s Veterinary Carbollsalve, and a thorough trial enables him to endorse it as the best remedy that lie ever saw for general ata*- 1 -- use. Sold by Druggists at 50c and SI.OO.

ITCHING PILES.

Symptoms—Moisture: intense itching and sting ing; most at night: worse by scratching. If allowed tocentinue tumors form, which often bleed and ulcerate, ’becoming re-y sore. Swayne’s Ointment stops the itching and bleeding, heals ulceration, and in many cases removes the tumors It is equally eflicacious in curing til Skin Diseases. DR. SWAYNE & SON, Proprietors, Philadelphia. Swayne’s Ointment can be obtained of druggists. Sent by mail for nO cents.

PC * Qlf'lN? t 0 Soldiers and Heirs. L. BING oil IN J HAM. Attorney, Washington, D C