Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 October 1888 — Page 3
COURTING IN AUSTRALIA.
The Energetic Process by Which Bushman Secures a Wife. Chicago Herald. “Our blacks,” said Mrs. J. R. Reid, a native of New South Wales, “are different in type from the African. Their hair stands up,.wirey and bushy,like that of the Circassian woman in your your dime museums. In the bush they wear no clotkeß, but when they come in town the authorities compel them to be clad. Th 6 women object most strenuously to clothing. If you give a woman a gown she will seldom put but one arm in a sleeve, letting the gaiment hang from her shoulders and displaying one side of her bosom. The blacks find an abundance of food, and there is thus no incentive for them to accept civilization and learn to wort. The country swarms with kangaroos, walvarbies (an animal similar to the kangaroo), rabbits and birds- Then the blacks make a large part of their diet of snakes and Worms. Worms they eat raw just as the dfg them, from the earth. They eat snakes of all kinds.
“The blacks are not prolific, a couple seldom having three children. The women, of course, are brutally abused by the males and kept in the most degraded state of servitude. When a black wants a wife he falls upon some young woman, chokes her so she cannot cry out, and'runs with her to the bush. There he must stay with her for three or four months. He cannot return to his own tribe until the expiration of this period. When he does take her back, if she utters no complaint against him—that is, if she does not show that he has utterly failed to supply her with worms, kangaroo meat, and snakes —he can keep her. But for a year he must stay out of the way of her tribe, for if they catch him they will kill him and take the young woman back. The sign of the married state adopted by the women is the pulling out of one front tooth. When the male becomes a Benedict he indicates the joyful fact by cutting off the little finger of his right hand at the first joint. They live in low, skin-covered huts, and I think are in eveey respect beneath the North American Indian in intelligence.”
A Good Hedge Fence.
For general purposes the common American arbor-vifce is one of the best hedge plants, as it thrives on almost all kinds of soils, from those of swamps to the high, dry, and sandy. The plants can be obtained at very low rates—are not at all difficult to make live, and as they grow up may be sheared into any desirable form. It is true that the foliage turns brown in winter, but in summer it assumes a bright green, and holds this well till late in autumn. The plants should be transplanted in spring, and the distance apart at which they should be set in a hedge, depends upon their size. As a rule they may be placed so that their lower branches will just touch when the plantß are in position. If the branches spread two feet, then the main stems should be set two feet apart in the row. The height of the plants is not to be considered, because if raised in nur—scry er&w&ed, tbey will be tall and slender, and require severe prunings to force out the side branches and secure a good breadth to the hedge at the base. When the plants are set out in the hedge row the first pruning should be given them with a pair of hedge shears, cutting the top or leading ‘shddfs 'ainb one height, and cutflng in the side branches to a straight line, thereby giving a somewhat rough outline of the future hedge. The form of .the hedge should always be broad at the bottom and tapering up to the top, with
a slight oval shape, thus forming an ovate cone. With this form snows will not lodge on the hedge in winter as it always will when pruned with a flattop a practice far too common in pruning evergreen and other hedges. All other kinds of evergreen hedges should be planted and pruned as directed for the arbor-vita.
Letter From the Ex-Sheriff of Chau-
tauqua County, New York. Mayville, N. Y., Dec. 2, 1885. I am glad to say, from a long persona experience with Allcock’s Porous Plasters, that I am able to endorse all the good things that have ever been said about them, and supplement these by saying that I frankly believe their value cannot be' estimated. Their breadth of usefulness is unlimited, and for prompt and sure relief to almost every ache and pain that flesh is heir to, no other remedy, in my opinion, either external or internal, equals them in certainty and rapidity. I have used them at one time for rheumatism, another for backache, again for bronchitis, always with the same result—a speedy cure.
Amsterdam claims to have become account of the fine quality of the Sumatra tobacco which is brought there. American cigar manufacturers are said to be specially eager to get this tobacco. Sumatra sent to Holland in 1887 138,000 bales, worth about $13,000,000, of which $5,800,000 worth was purchased by American buyers. The Dutch tobacco companies make enormous profits, the dhriduds of the Dell Company having been 109 per cent, and those of the Arendsburg Company 209 per cent, in a recent year.
T. L. HARRINGTON.
LOG CABIN LOGIC.
Br&Wn and Brain! The powerful engine, with its wonderful propelling .power, coupled to the long train full freighted with the richest fabrics of the intellectual looms of the centuries—what obstacles can stay the progress of this mighty foree, when once under full steam along life’s highway? • The American with brawn and brain does not see the necessity for titles of nobility, does not care for elevation by descent, he can reach out and pluck the stars. V ' But w T ith brawn or brain impaired, a man is badly handicapped in the mad race for success Which is the marked characteristic of the present age. The physical system is a most intricate piece of machinery. It ought to be kept well regulated so that it will work harmoniously in all its parts, then it is capable of an immense amount of work. , ‘v _ It is said that a watch, if expected to keep perfect time, must be wound daily. It will not keep good time unless it “runs regular.” More men break down because they don’t “run regular” than for any other reason. It is claimed by physicians that few men are killed by hard work.' It is to the irregularities of modern soefal life that the high death rate is due. Men burn their candle at both ends, then wonder why it burns out so quickly. The main thing in keeping the human machine in good working order is to keep the regulator all right. “The blood is the life,” and sound health is assured so long as the blood flows through the veins a limpid stream of purity. Regulate the regulator with Warner's Log Cabin Sarsaparilla,the old-fashioned blood purifier, prepared after the best formula in use by our ancestors in good old Log Cabin days, and with the vigor of brawn and brain which must ensue, in your life’s lexicon you will find no such word as fail. Z
New York Chinamen.
New York Sun. We have a Chinese population of nearly ten thousand in this city, but it is a rare thing to see any Chinaman applying for help at any of the publi charitable institutions of the city Our Chinese residents are always ready to assist each other in all the emergencies of life. Most of them belong to societies of mutual assistance on the Chinese plan. When one of them is penniless he can borrow money. When one is out of work he finds others ready to aid him in procuring it. When one is ill nurses furnish the needed service, and, if he dies, the expenses of his burial are always easily obtained. Several hundred of them have become well off through the business of their washhouses. There are no loafers among them, and all of them are noted for their industrious lives. There are few of them addicted to the opium habit, though many of them occasionally indulge in the fumes of the drug. Ijt is mainly the wealthy men among them who indulge the luxury of Chinese wives, but others who desire to form white matches find no difficulty in doing so, as far as the procuring of mates is concerned. As a rule, •thAfMdren.bprn of these unions adopt the American style of life. The Chinese of New York boast that they produce proportionately fewer criminals than any other element of our population.
The Paper Money of Peru.
Reports received in Washington from Callao describe the sudden collapse of the paper money of Peru. Part of the currency amounting to 20,000,000 soles, was issued by the banks at Lima ten years ago, and guaranteed by the government. The remaining 40,000,000 soles is government money. Its purchasing capacity declined several years ago to one-twentieth that of silver, but, in the absence of any other circulating medium, it continued to be used by the people. Finally in the brief period of ten days, confidence was lost in it so rapidly it was virtually repudiated in all business transactions not directly connected with the government, which receives it in half payment for duties on imports and pays it out to its employes. The amount of silver in circulation in Peru' is very small. The banks and commercial houses of Lima and Callao could not produce 2.000,000 soles.
Exerybody has heard of persons who have been swallowed up by quicksands, and a dreadful death it must be; but here is a form of death quite as bad: Recently Frank Glidden a lobster hunter, went about his task on the Beverly Mass., flats, and while so employed stepped into a bottomless mud hole. He couldn’t get out, and gradually sank until the mud closed over and smothered him. A novel electric railway is undergoing construction in a suburb of St. Paul, Minn. The railroad is an elevated structure and the cars are hung below it close to the street level. They hang from sets of wheehr taking their power from the tracks, which are charged with electricity. A speed of from eight to ten miles an hour is claimed for the cars. - . If a man knew as much when he is sober as he thinks he does when drunk Solomon’s sayings would be nowhere compared with his wisdom.
BAHBED WIRE. If you have barbed wire fences, keep VeterHairy CarbolluJve in your stables. Ii cures without a scar and renews the Bair Its original color. 80 cents and SI.OO at Druggists or by maiL Cole A Co., Black River Falls, Wla.
Beats the Plumber’s Profits.
A Retired Jeweler. There is more profit in the repairing department of watch-making than there is in any other trade in the country, unless, possibly, it is plumbing. Take, for instance, the main-spring of a watch. The general price for replacing one is saving, and of course instances of the sort crowd one another, but it is not the rule in New York. The Vanderbilts are all rapidly increasing their wealth; the Astors have never known a prodigal in their family; the Geoelets of to-day are as thrifty as their ancestors; Peter Cooper’s wealth is in good liandß; Jay Gould appears to have no child who will throw away money. His e’dest son is a moneymaker, like the Vanderbilt and Astor men. Perhaps there is a field of sudy in this subject. All these millionaires, whose money is now or soon will be in safe hands, were thrifty and successful from the first, while the elder George Law, who left eight millions, was aworkingman until middle age, and only then began to make his pile. . He began to make it by building public works and then he became a pioneer horse railroad constructor. The faculty for gaining wealth may have been born in him, but it only showed itself when other men are preparing to lay back and rest on the fruits of earlier enterprise.
Log Cabins, lacking elegance, were yet comfortable homes. Health and happiness were found in them. The best of the I simple remedies used are given to the World in Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies
made by Warner of Safe Cure fame. Regulate the regulator with Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla. A matter of great interest: Ten per cent, a month. Moxie bas crerted the greatest excitement as a beverage, in two years, ever witnessed, from the fact that it brings nervous, exhausted; overworked women to gooix powers of endurance in a few days; cures the appetite for liquors and tobacco at once, and has recovered a large number of cases of pld, helyless paralysis as a food only.
Necessary to every yacht race— Wind. "i* ’ Yes, he loves you now, ’tis true, Lass with eyes of . violet blue, Lips as sweet as honey-dew, Bonny little bride! Will he love you as to-dav, When your bloom has fied away, When your golden locks are grey,— Will his love abide? Yes, if it is the true kind it will survive all the inevitable wastes and changes of life. But, it is every woman’s desire and duty to retain, as long as she can, the attractions that made her charming and beloved in youth. No one can keep her youthful bloom or equable temper if weighed down and suffering from female weakness and disorders. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a remedy for these troubles. Sold by druggists. Lawyers ought to make good poets; they make lots of “versus.”
Inventions of the 19th Century.
The-steamboat, the reaper, the sewing machine, Cars running by night and by day, _ _ Homes ilg -ted by gas and heated by steam, And bright electricity's ray. The telegraph’s click speeds like lightning released, Then the telephone comes to excel it; And, to put on the finish, the last: but not least. Is the lamed little Purgative Pellet. Last but not least is Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellet, because it relieves human suffering, adds to the sum of human comfort, and enables the relieved sufferer to enjoy all the blessings and luxuries of the age we live in.
Don’t Bandage a Sore Eye.
Health. The custom, prevalent among physicians as well as the laity, of tightly bandaging or tying up the eye as soon as it becomes inflamed or sore is a bad one. The effect upon the eye is bad. It precludes the free access and beneficial effects of the cool air, and at the same time prevents or greatly retards the free egress of hot tears and morbid secretions of the inflamed conjunctiva or cornea, or both. In those cases, too, where a foreign substance has got into .the eye the bandage ( which is usually popped on the first thing) presses the lids more closely against the ball and thus increases the pain and discomfort by augmenting the lacerations caused by the foreign body. This can not fail to be harmful. In those cases where the light is painful it is my habit to adjust over, the organ a neatly fitting shade, which, while it excludes the light, allows the free access of air.
JACOBS Oil For Strains, Injuries. RECENT, PERFECT CURES. Crippled. 11 Btreator, 111., May ,O,IUS. Hr. X. ZACK, professional (tilt sinter, in January, 1887, wrenched hie ankle and vat crippled far two month* on crntehee; he nnod two bottles of ■t. Jacobs 0U and was permanently cored. 0. E. CROBWILL, Druggist. Crashed. ChnndlerrMe, 111., May If, 1(8,. About llx months ago I wan Jammed between can; in bod IS days; Buffered four months; used thro* bottles It. Jacobs oil; was able to bo about in on* wash. J. ABHTTRBT. Strained. Ift. Carmal, 111., May (I, 14(8. (trained my back In February last; could not got round for two weeks without a cane; wan cured In throe days by Bt. Jacobs OU. J. F. WARNER. AT DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. *HE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO..ft>|tlinon. Md. Diamond Vera- Cura FOR DYSPEPSIA. A POSITIVE CURE FOE INDIGESTION ASD ALL Stomach Troubles Arising Therefrom. Your Druggist or General Dealer will gel VeraCura for you if not already in stock, or it will be sod By mqq on rceripl oftt'd*. ft boxes $L00) *» , IHI CHARLU A. VOGELER CO.. Balteoft. Ml . ' Bole Proprietors and Manufacturers. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castorla. When Baby was'slck, we gave her Castorla, When (he was a Chlld-ahe cried lor Caatorla. Whoa (he became Him, the clung to Castorla When afcebad Children. (he gave them Castorla V 4 ”
BURIED HIS LEG IN THE GROUND.
An Old Indian Remedy Cures a Dan-, gerous Rattlesnake Bite. N. Y. World. A boy ten years of age* son of Albert Farley, of Branch District, Summers county, wAs bitten a few daya_ago by an enormous rattlesnake. The wound, which was made on the leg just below the knee, soon began to swell, and none of the usual remedies being at band, the boy’s parents despaired of saving his life. , It happened that an old settler, who was on the spot at the, time, recollected an Indian remedy, which in bis early days was said to be an infallible cure. The boy’s parents, as a last resort, determined to try the remedy. A hole was dug in the clay about two feet deep, and the boy’s naked leg' was placed in it. The loose clay was then placed around the leg and water poured upon it until it formed a thin mortar.
The boy’s leg was kept in this for a couple of hours, when it was found that the swelling was rapidly becoming reduced. A vessel was then secured and filled with the thin mortar and taken into the house, and the boy’s leg placed in that and kept there all night. The next morning the swelling had disappeared and the limb was found perfectly well and sound. The boy has felt no ill effects from the bite since. = .
A Double Help for the Bilious.
—Xjm4eHtirmtO that chief remedial measure—tte use of Hosteler's Stomach Bitters—persons suffering from an acute bilious attack, willfacill-, tate recovery by the use at first of milk and lime warer and thin gruels, and by a very gradual return to the use of solid foods. Fatty substances should be excluded from the diet. Blue pill is a remedy of doubtful safety, particularly if there be nau-ea and vomiting, frequent concomitants of liver trouble. The B tters, provided its reformatory action be not retarded and marred by gross indiscretions in diet, will soon lestore the eqnilibruim of and action of the liver, stomach and bowels, all three disordered by biliousness. In all forms of malarial disease, which in every one of its phases presents indications of liver trouble, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is the foremost of specifies. The light of over thirty, years' experience also shows it to be a fine remedy for rheumatism, kidney troubles, dyspepsia, nervousness and debility. Walla Walla, Walla Walla county, Washington Territory, has a Volapuk club. And there is now in Volapuk.
An Offensive Breath
is most distressing, hot only to the person afflicted if he have any pride, but'to those with whom he comes in contact, it is a delicate matter to speak of, but it has parted not only friends but lovers. Bad breath and catarrh are inseparable. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy cures the worst cases as thousands can testify. Forced politeness—Bowing to necessity.
A Sensible Man
Would us# Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat and Lungs. It is curing more cases of Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup and all Throat and Lung Troubles, than any other medicine. The proprietor has authorized any druggist to give you a Sample Bottle Free to convince you of the merit of this great remedy. Large Bottles 50c and sl. Makes the masthead light—Kerosene.
CANCER CURED.
Dr. F: L. Pontf is ' having wonderful success in the treatment and cure of cancer at the cancer hospital at Aurora, 111. There are numbers of cures recently made by him which are truly wonderful. Those afflicted should not hesitate, but should go there for treatment at once. For information, address Dr. F. L. Pond, Aurora, 111. Ladies why not vote for President? This is your chance, see “Sunset” for
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is carefully prepared from Sirsaparilla, Dande lion, Mandrake, Do<k, Pipsissewa, Juniper jflerries, and other well-known aad valuable vegetable remedies, by a peculiar combination, proportion and process, giving to Hood’s Sarsaparilla curative power not possessed by other medicines. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the best blood purifier. It cures Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Bolls, Pimples, all Humors, Dyspepsia Biliousness, Sick Headache, Indigestion, Genera! Debility, Catarrh, Rheumatism, Kidney and Liver complaints, overcomes that tired feeling, creates an appetite, strengthens the nerves and builds up the wholesystem. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Has met peculiar and unparalleled success at home. Such is its popularity in Lowell, Mass., where it Is made, that whole neighborhoods are takiDg it at the same time, and Lowell druggists sell more of Hood’s Sarsaparilla than of all other sarsaparlllaS or blood purifiers. It is sold by all druggists, tl : six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar
M. W. DUNHAM’S OAKLAWN FARM. SO PERCHEROIK ench Coach horses, IMPORTED. STOCK ON HAND: - 300 STALLIONS of serviceable age; 150 COLTS with choice pedigrees, superior Individuals; 200 IMPORTED BROOD MARES (80 In foal most famous living sire). Ity. Prices Reasonable. , Don’t Bay without lnspectteat and Moat Successful _ tahllahment of America, blending purchasers, address, far ItO-pag* estalsgu*, M.W. DUNHAM, WAYNE, ILLINOIS. 85 wwtChleAgo ons. A X.W. R*y hft.Tnrtter June b Bl(ta. f%~JONES fe^WP^YSth^REICHT iMfei,. Jr# 5 Ton Wagon .Scale**, jEßlijjaaa /9m Iron Levers, Bteel Beariogß. Brui Tare Beam and Beam Box for S6O. Everr Bize Seale. For free price Hsi i \jpnr ,;afeiiy. PALE SICKLE =LOOKING CHILDREN snbjast to BPABMS -am most Ukely troubled with U/nbUC The brs-, romedy fhr this la the celebrated R. A. WUnNO. FAHNESTOCK’S VERMIFUCE. Been 60 year* In nsa and never falls. Observe pmrtfor VI "»* Initials are B. A. thus srehllsglamifaOß. __ Piso’a Remedy for Catarrh la the I Best, Easiest to Use. and Cheapest WiWaslslll ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mail. M son. E. T. Hazeltine. Warren. Pa. flp
THE CHAMPION Blood-purifier, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla leads all others In age, merit, and popularity. It tones up the system, Improves the appetite, strengthens the nerves, and vitalizes 124 i Blood. Just what you need. Try It. “ I am selling your goods freely, and mep of Aver’s Sarsaparilla than of all other blocdmedicines put together.”—R. A. McWUllama, Grand Rapids.. Mich. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. CREAMJALM I suffered catarrh 12 years. Th e droppings into H ggyv/fyalfflS Hr* n I the throat werenau- ■^§fSbv c O/qGI ./> n tADJ seating. My nose &; A hied almost daily, Since first day's weWtf- , wfij Balm have had nol bleeding,soreness is entirely gone. 1 G. Dai'idson 11 rifiKfllri | Boston Budget. HAY-FEVER A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 60 cents at drnegtat*: by mail, ren St., New York. HERS, CC WasSpLECTRITY lariN A BOTTLE. t WEST’S ELECTRIC CERE for < atarrh, Hay Fever, Ncuialgia, Headache, Asthma ana Kheuma. tisin. It bas no equal. Every bottle sold on 30 days’ trial. Price 81.00. AGENTS WANTED. Local Agents sell fmm 12 to 21 bottles daily. »a.Terms to agents and cammed* Descriptive Pamphlet free. ■» HE WEST ELECTRIC CURE CO., 161 Washington Sr., Chicago, 111. Barnes’ Foot Power Machinery. A WORKERS OF WOOD OR METAi.. without steam power, by using outfits of these j Machines, can bid lower, and save more money from their jobs, than " Y by any other means fordoing their work. LATISES, SAWiS, TIBERS, TENONEItS, ETC- Sold ms on trial* illustrated Price-List Free fijf W. F. & JOHN BARNES CO., No. 699 Bnby St., Rockford, HI. «t prescribe and fully irse Big C- as tha only leciflc for tho certain curs 1 this disease. _ . H. INGRAHAM, M. D., Amsterdam, N. 7. We have sold Bie Gtoiany years, and It hat given the beat of sati3 faction. _ D. K. DYCHEA^Ch^ 1.00, Sold by Druggists. NORTHERN PACIFIC II LOW PRICE RAILROAD LARDS » FREE Government LANDS. O~MILUONB Of ACRIB of each in Minnesota. North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon, (run BAD Publications with Maps dcscribingTks oenu run BIST Agricultural, Gracing and Timber Lands now onen to Settlers Sent Free. Address CHIP. UMBOM, L W. gkCEfltfi'Sil?” nHAjpfSHOfGM 1 oftr ■£.&’; ■ - y g( Insist upon getting the “ Champion ;If dealer *.asn\ it, send to us. Send 6c, In stamps for Illustrated 100-Page Catalogue of Guns, lllfles, Kcvolvers, Police Goods, Ac. JUHK P. LOVKLL ABUS CO., HanuTrs, Boston, Mas*.
FOR SKIN DISEASES OF diseases of the skin there V-’ It KY title boy has been troubled - are some 12 or i S classes, £ DisLVw7tM£e°ftbh!S in each class fj-om two to Sr and burning, which constantly gTCw four varieties. These are mod- ■JBfc’ijßfa. worse until his face was covered with ified according to the particu- *" |P abs - s f ein f. H l ß ! >ard ' s Rheumatic , .... 6 . (JSf Set Syrup advertised to cure skin ana lar condition of the bioad, for jMteXTjSS® blooAdistascs, wetned it, hnd ~ disease of the skin means dis- day our child’s Skin is as clear and ease of the blood. These wSKWgSF sm<x>U. as ever We believe Hjb- ,, ~ - , bard s Rheumatic Syrup is a posiare either the result of stom- live cure for skin 3 " d «l<»d Disach, liver or kidney difficul-, agates— eases. Mas. Edmond Palmer-, ties, and for a cure depend stjfk ßß Surolnlt St, Rochester, N. Y. upon ah.al.hjacUon of these SALT RHEUM 4 I have been troubled with irysipelas, or St. Anthony’S Firo Salt Rheum has been nearly all over my body. _ I have used nearly everv remedy but found no relief Is the result of an impure condition of the except from Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup. I could blood, and for a cure depends, primarily, not “ e m b«d at night. Hgve taken ten bottles, and ’., ,~r . ’ r . am now a well man. It is truly a great blood puriupon the condition of the stomach, liver Nelson Mookx, and kidneys, and, secondarily upon the Wolcott, N. Y. condition of the blood as manufactured by ~~ _- these organs. a Whole Family Cured HIBBARD’S RHEUMATIC SYRUP, My wife, and babe fourteen months old, and toy r-< • nnttr iwmnmu, u junmvr five years old, have suffered with Scrofula or King’s Containing POKE r BURDOCK, MANDRAKEf Kvii,.it being hereditary. They wQuid.at times, CULVERS ROOT, and others of the best break out in sores. 1 have employed the best physiBMtom'di,..™ ry e.refully .nd .cto,. tlfically compounded, strikes at the root of my astonishment we are all well. Words cannot the evil and eradicates the disease, whether describe how highly we value your medicine. .dflißißßfa . No remedy known so highly endorsed bv its home Syrup cured me, B. F. Knapp, "Wolcott, N. Y. RHEUMATIC SYRUP CO., JACKBON, MICH.
Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup UNRIVALED in merit. It is a Safe Family Medicine because it contains no poison or opiate*. Children,,invalids and delicate persons will And it the best medicine and tonic they can use. No home should be without it Always in season, Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. q If you cannot procure it of your druggist send direct to us. Price si.oo; 6 bottles $5.00. Plasters ajc. A SURE CURE FORRHEUMATISM. ■V! For the House, Lawn and Carde* S FLORAL WONDER* dbo distinct that Mr. Esin K. Rkxpord admits, H I un not t." Fancy, if yon can, a mans of shapely leaf and blsom 1 rich tints and varying glow of a gorgeous sunset. Yhls Is [Uiflcent? Equally important, it resists extreme Iteat and ng anywhere, indoors and out—North, South, East or West, discovering it 3 years ago we hare obtained maar ehokw nuns which we now offer,postpaid,at {We. ea. or 3 fbr f 1.25. tiler sise, otherwise the same, at 40c. ea. or S for fl. These -rong and stocky, and potted or set in the open ground this 111 establish themselves at oooe. Elaborate in texture ami as! Pussling Botanists I Caring for itself! Lasting a WT Xerer sporting or disappointing. You hare in this the most live and interesting plant extant. The grand specimen iin sketch will be forwarded to the private grounds c 4 Mr. Harrison or Mr. Cleveland, Staled by * votejsf »ur customers. AD persona, the Indies re allowed one rote for each plant bought. Send this tea. «»ioidrswo/wtier Its OoniUate. r§£ EHrIS wesce: The recentwooess of “West Tesrteel-ery Slats erritory. Sond JOr erne PaU Catalogue tor pardon Iww JS •j'Jg"!^VVPI'VV , t to i*l4 The man who has invested from three SB Wo otter me man who wants service W Are dollars in a Rubber Coat, and m » (not ntyte) a garment that wiU few, at his first half hour's experience in mmaan H| him dry in the hardest storm. It * a storm finds to his sorrow that It Is tlu B called TOWER'S PISH BR-Wlt hardly a better protection than a mos- V f 3 “ SLICKER," a namefcmUar toeWt? qutto netting, not only feels chagrined * ■ Cow-boy all over the land. With that at being so badly taken in. but also ■ ■■■■■ the only perfect Wind and feels if he does not look exactly like Ufa |%| Coat Is “ Tower's Fish brand Sliefcet^ for the “FISH UR AXD” Bucke» I 9 ft*i «XI and take no other. If your storekeepof gw, m* hove the vish B*» m. ft-A (■ >r dewrptte.e*talorm \ A.. 1 T.rwru.S' —non, SI., Boston. M *sp. J a-»- r < % J - ~ ~~
KELP «22 YEARS 01(11/ EXTHACTOF MQJv TARa» WILD CHERRY Hus cured all coughs, colds, bronchitis, and reiiAvad Awthma afid consumption for all W[fio have used It. Is not this an evidence""* of its merits and reliability? It is a sure and safe medicine tor all bronchial troubles. * ■ and never foils to give satisfaction. Try it under a full warrantee. Price. 60 cents and' SI.OO per bottle Prepared by Sickest Peopbibtaby Co.. Chicago. 11l WEBSTER 3000 more Words and nearly 8000 more Illustrations than any other American Dictionary. An Invaluable Companion - hi every School and at every Fireside. - . Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated Pamphlet sent free. - G. A C. MERRIAM A CO., Pub'rs,Springfield,Mas*;-, QTlie oldest medicine in the world li probably min Dr. Isaac Thompson's if ELEBRATED EYE WATF.II Tide article is a carefully prepared Physician’s prescription, and has been in constantnse nearly a century. CAUTION.—The only genuine 'Thompson’s Eye Water has upon the white wrapper of each boMle an engraved portrai t of the Inventor, Da. ISAAC Thom mow, with his signsture: also a note of band signed John L. Thompson. Avoid all others. The genuine Eye Water can be obtained from all Druggists. JOHN L.THOMPSON.SONS&CO.,TROY,N.Y.
“OSGOOD" iMi u. s. aunlard Scales. Sent os trial. Freight paid. Fully Warranted. Other site* proportionately lew. Agents well paid. Illustrated Catalogue fees. Mention this Paper. OSGOOD ft THOMPSON, Binghamton, N. I. DOUBLE ■ ■ m ■ All kinds cheaper th&a Brtech-LMderfl I I II PggSgS sago lIH QsS' ofalo. LADIES,’ LOOK’- A nqyelty Rug Machine sent by mail for 81. guaranteed or money ' refunded. Wholesaleprice reduced to Agents. New Price List of machine?, yam, patterns, etc., and a book of beantiful colored pattern designs, sent free. Agents Wanted. E. Ross & Ci».- Toledo, 0. Csttss Ueet Compound.—Otto-K/255-cv posed of Cotton Boot, Tansy and PennyKWIMP royaL Successfully used monthly. Safa ■ TB3r*\ Effectual, Pleasant. 11 by mail, or dragUfIMC STUDY. Book-keeping, Business nUmt Forms, Penmanship, Arithmetic. Shorthand, otc., thoroughly taught I y MAIL. Circulars fres BBY ART’S BUSINESS CUH.LEBB Buffalo. E.T. COLDIERS tiWMrawsg SULUIkIIC bonstyooUseted; Deserter J ” relieved; sneoeas er no fee. Laws seat lree. k.'W. MeOenaieV * ten. *nhta*iea».S.e OeoUas** GLEK. -Best Blood Food known. 81 bottle; sent prepaid. House lot free with each bottle. Send for description GLEK CO., 33 North State street, Chicago. SCARCE, Grand Sunset Plants now by mai only 50 cents each, E. C. Shenvin & Co. Cot ton wood, Idaho. flrtf fl at r oma ana mice more t»oney working for.?* ftHUI yUaHul «t anrthlngd*o In tha world. Either §ex. Coutlvoatfil rskfi. Term* fueb. Address. Tbub * O' August*, Uv'fiKh gK Kto 88 a day. Samples worth 8160, FRES 8k yKlines not under the horse’s feet. Write BrewsSafety Rein-Holder Co., Holly, MLriu RTTRS Revolvers, etc. Send stamp for priWOTB uUflO, to J. H. Johnston Gun Co..Pittsbnrg,Pa I N D 42-88, INDPLB When writing to Advertisers readers will confer a favor l»v mentioning this papen
