Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 April 1888 — Two International Nobodies. [ARTICLE]

Two International Nobodies.

Chicago Journal. George W. Smalley, London correepondent of the New York Tribune, says that Matthew Arnold’s petulant assault on the American people in an English magazine is “an international calamity.” Mr. Smalley and Mr. Arnold are both international superfluities. Don’t ruin your stomach by using pil's and cathartic mixtures advertised as a cure for indigestion. Chronic weakness of the digestive organs is the result. The best ramedy for giving real strength to the liver and kidneys is Dr. Gnysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. It is not a mew relief, hut truly cures impure blood, and all disea es' of the urinary and digestive organs.

It seems odd, bat when a man is worth a million or eo his crimes outlaw in about six months—Jadga. *— We ought not to be too anxious to encourage untried innovations, in cases of doubtfal improvement. For a quarter of a century Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy has been beforethe public and passed through the severest tes 1 ;, and is pronoun ead the most reliable remedy for that disagreeable malady. Thousands of testimonials of its M -canta per 1901116. ;By druggists. / A St. Louis man wants a divorce because his wife snores, whistles, smokes, and swears. Safe, permanent and complete are cures of bilious and intermittent diseases, made by Prickly Ash Bitters. Dyspepsia, general debility, habitual constipation, liver and kidney complaints are speedily eradicated from the system. It disinfects, cleanses and eliminates all malaria. Health and vigor are obtained more rapidly and permanently by the use of this great natural antidote than by any other remedy heretofore known. As a blood purifier and tonic it brings health, renewed energy and vitality to a worn and diseased body.