Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 February 1890 — Page 3
March April May
Am M hast month* In which to purify the blood for at no other aeoaoi does this system so ranch nmd ft* aid of a raliabl. medicine like Hood's Snrsaparifls. Os sow. Daring; the long, cold winter, the blood become* this end impure, the body becomes west sod tired, the appetite may be lost. Hood’s bases perilla ia adapted to parity and soaieh the Uood, to oreate a {good' appetite and to soar some that tired feeling. It has a larger sale than any other sarsaparilla or blood purifier, apd it. increase* in popularity every year, for it is the ideal Spring Medicine “•srly laat spring I was very much run down, had nervous headache, felt miserable and ail that. I was very much benefited by Hood’s Sarsaparilla and recommend it to ray friends.” Mas, J. M. Tayui, 111# Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, 0. **Hood’s Sarsaparilla has oured me of salt rheum, which I have had for years. I do think it is a splendid medicine. lam 40 years of age and my akin is just as smooth and fair as a piece of glass. I have six Children, and when anything ia the trouble with them the first thing I go for is Hood’s Sarsaparilla." MBS. Li 1 i.a Clash, South Norwalk, Conn.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
gold by all druggists. 11; six for $5. Prepared only by C. L HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, .Lowell, Mass. 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR
KI - V ' S Catarrh CREAM Cleanses the pi Nanai Passages, IN I Allays Pain and OTiAf M Inflammation, ... Heads the Sores, Ml Restores the Senses of Taste and_Smell. Try the Cure. hay-fever A pftticle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Trice SO cents at dr iggists; by mail, registered, 60 cts. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., New York. • [ =SA gain | ONE POUND mmio-mm rwui,u Day I A GAIN OF A POUND A DAY IN THE j CASE OF A MAN WHO HAS BECOME “AI.L 5 RUN DOWN,” AND HAS BEGUN TO TAKE 5 THAT REMARKABLE FLESH PRODUCER, 5 SCOTT’S ! Fmulsion I OF PURE COD LIVER OIL WITH | Hypophosphites of Lime & Soda 9IS NOTHING UNUSUAL. THIS FEAT 5 | HAS BEEN PERFORMED OVER AND OVER | j again. Palatable as milk. En- 9 9 DORSED BY PHYSICIANS. SOLD BY ALL j 9 Druggists. Avoid substitutions and { | IMITATIONS. T. A TB»A ’V IMPORTING AND BREtDINS FAR M, La h Aiiti us, Tippecanoe County, lnd. CROUClT&^^^^'prop’s. Breeders and Importers of Clydesdale, English Shire, lioyal Belgium, Norman, Coach, General Purpose and Trotting Breeds, ilnmblotonion. Royal George and Morgans, some high grade, Draft and Coach horses and Jack. Farm adjoining th e city. We guarantee every horse we sell and we sell on as good terms its any firm. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED: «It 1. (11 &TR , VIS, l«*ndl42 M„iu a.. -- LAFAYETTE, IND. S 3 SHQSI gentlemen. BEST LN THE AVOKED. OTHER S ’KOI At, I 1 IKS KOIt GENTLEMEN, LADIES, M.ISSKS AND BOYS. None genuine unless name and price ore ■tamped on bo tom Sold everywhere. •WSend address o i postal lor valuable information. W. L. DOUGLAS, Hreeltlo , Mass. NEW HOMES] 800,000 Acres of New Agricultural Lauds of excellent quality, just «.bt ined by the St. Paul, Hinneapod. aui Man tuba Railway, now forsale oa easy terms to >etilers Write to ! •> ! " ’ -t f'Airr. Mink. «1 prevent* end fully time Big U ai the only ieciflc lor the pertain cure r this disease. .H. INGRAHAM, U. D.. Amsterdam, N. Y. We have sold Big G tar tany years, and tt bat pven the best of satis*D. aI'DYCH® * 00.j l 1.09. Sold by Drugging, HiWtVn a J.S.ZEIG. fK* CD.,IIS Adam* fc. I|U Sx- <' i *v ■ il . iivvr* w.iTtn *we ■ll PENSION S Fatxicx O’Fasskll, A tty .at Law.Waihlngton.D.C. ■on's Eye Water. Druggists seld It.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is prepared from Sarsaparilla Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Juaiper, Berries, anu other well-known vegetable remedies, in such a peculiar manner as to derive the full medicinal value of each it will cure, when in the power of medicine, scrofula, salt rheum., sores, boils. Ipimples, all humors, dyspepsia, biliousnee, sick headache, indigestion, general debility, catarrh, rheumatism, kidney 1 and Uver complaints. It overcomes that extreme fiwling mnuftri hy uhcngß (if aAajmn | or life, and imparts life and strength to the whole system. Blood Poison “For years at irregular intervals in all seasons, 1 suffered the intolerable burning and itching of bieod poisoning by ivy. It would break out on ray legs,, and in my throat and eyes. )Last spring I took Hood's Sarsaparilla, as a blood purifier, with no thought of it at a special remedy for ivy poisoning, but it has effected a permanent and thorough sure," Calvin T. Shot*,’ Wentworth. N. H. “I bad boils all over my neck and back, troubling me so mnch that I could not turn my head around, or stoop over* Hood’s sarsaparilla cured me in two weeks- I think it is the best blood purifier.” Daniil Rial, Kansas Oitv, Mo.
Sold by all druggists, il; six for $5. PrepaTf d only by.C. L Hood & CO., Apothecaries, Lowe 1, Mass. 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR
When a man knows that he cannot get out of the mud his next impulse is to go in deeper. Progress. •' : “ It Is very important In this acre of vast material progress that a remedy be pleasing to the taste and to the eye, easily taken, acceptable to the stomach and healthy in its nature and effects. Possessing these quali ities, Syrup of Fies is the one perfect laxative and most gentle diuretic known. Temper should be kurbed, not broken. It is a risky business to engage a chemist in a war of words, as he is always ready with a retort. A nation of housekeepers tell us that Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder is the sweetest, purest, most efficient and most wholesome on the American market. With baking powders as with drinking and cooking water, housekeepers go by experience. The place to prove Dr. Price’s Baking Powder is by the true test—.he test of the oven, The switchmen’s interest in the railroads they represent seems to be flagging. How’s This! t We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Htfll’a Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO,, Props., Toledo, 0. We, the un ersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him peifectiy honorable in all business transactions, ! and financially able to earry out any obligations made by tbeir firm. ! Toledo, Ohio. E. H. Van Hoesen, Cashier Toledo National Bank, Toledo, Ohio. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon th ; blood and mueoiis surfac s of the system. Price 76c per bottle. Sold by all Druggists “My soles in arms," as the man said when carrying home his new shoes. Never Say Die! Scourged with ulcers, boils and tetter, Weak ot limb and sore oi eye, Hopeless now of growing better. Surely one must die. WNot at all, poor, disoouraged sufferer from disordered blood and scrofulous trouble. Take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, the great blood purifier and life saver of modern days. All those unwholesome sores and blood disorders may be cured, and the victim will look and feel like a new man. It is warranted to benefit or cure or money paid for it will be promptly returned. Perfection is attained in Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. It cures the worst cases. The game of blind man’s buff suggests a fellow feeling for a fellow creature. Entirely Helpless to Health. The above statement made by Mrs. 8. H. Ford, wile of Gen. Ford, can be vouohed for by nearly the entire population of Corunna, Allah.-,.her home for years. She was for two years a terrible sufferer from rheumatism, being confined to her bed most ol the time, her !eet and limbs being so badly swollen she could soai cely move. Khe was induced to try a bottle of Hibbard’s Rheumatic t-yrup. It helped her, and two adaltional bottles entirely oured her. To-day she is a well woman. First ask your druggist; should he not keep it, we will send on receipt of price, $1 per bottle or six for J 5. Rheumatic Sybup Co. Jackson. Mich. Hibbard’s Rheumatic and Lirer Pills. These Pills are scientifically compounded, uniform in action. No griping pain ao commonly following the use of pills. They are adapted to both adults and children with perfect safety. We guarantee they have no equal in the cure of Sick. Headache, Constipation. Dyepepsia. Biliousness; and. aa an appetizer, they excel any other preparation, A song-writer says he prefers to turn out lullabies because there is luck iu nod numbers. Card of Thanks. If the proprietor of Kemp’s Balsam should publish a card of thanks, containing expressions of gratitude which come to him daily from those who have been cured of severe throat and lung troubles by the use of Kemp’s Balsam it would fill a fair sized book. How much better to invite all to call on any druggist and get a free sample bottle that you may test for yourself its powr. Large bottles 50c and sl. { A man is the happiest when he can for- ! get all the mean things he knows about himself. 1 People do not discover it until too late, ’ that the so called washing powders not onjy eat up their clothes, but ruin their skin, and cause rheumatism. Use nothing but Dobbins’ Electric Soap. Hare your grocer keep it. At what age should a young girl marry! * askw a correspondent. •‘Ob, ray time after she is won." I No Saf*r Remedy nan be had for soughs or colas. <t any trouble of the throat, than Brown’s j Bronchial Treehet. Price 25 cts. Sold only la b xea. Smoke the best-’Trasill’a Punoh cigar Euekoae One Dollar With a history of your case and I will send you two written prescriptions, which can be filled at any dr. g store, guaranted to cure the worst ioruisof Catarrn of the nose, throat nr stomach. ' , „ • ; , DR, 8. J. DECKARD, Specialist in Diseases of the nose, throat and limes, Logansport, lnd. Enclose stamp for particulars. PUGET SOUND COUNTRY: For cheap rates and full information regarding !ug t Sound country and the great Northwest- jddresa Geo. WT Andress, IB Clark direct, Chicago, Illinois BeSst, easiest to usd raff cheapest Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50c. The best cough medicine is Piso’s Cute for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 250
SORROWS IN PALACES.
The Death of Empress Augusta Recalls Princess Rads; will's Romanes. How Wilhelm’s Xove Tor the Polish Princess Was Discovered and Forbidden—Her Sorrowful Fate—A Double Marriage do Covenasee Augusta’s Youth at Weimar. ' At the royal palace in Berlin on Jac. 4th of the current year, occurred the death of the Dowager Empress Augusta. All day the bedside of the aged empress was a scene of sorrow, and Emperor William, Crowu Prince William, Prince Frederick, the grand duke and duchess of Baden were with her until the moment of dissolution, when the lowering of the imperial (flag of the palace told the great crowds which had gathered in the Unter den Liuden that the grand old empress had passed away. Few women in Europe have had a career at once so eventful and romantic as that of Augusta, writes Baron Yon M. from Burlin. She was the daughter of Charles Frederick, grand duke of Saxe-Weimer, and was born in 1811. at a period when that famous court was the most distinguished in Europe for its culture and art. and when the presence of Goethe, Schiller and a host of other bright intellects made it the literary center of the age. Wolfgang von Goethe, the prime minister, was then a,l most at the zenith of his fame. Among his poems i 9 one
EMPRESS AUGUSTA.
dedicated “To the Princess Augusta.” With such surroundings, the youthful princess grew tip a clever, studious girl, but with a strongly romantic strain, which her parents carefully strove to subdue. She had no pet accomplishment like the Emperor Frederick, who is both painter and sculptor, or like the talented queen of Roumania, who has redeemed the reproach that royality is almost incapable of literary effort; but her appreciation of art and letters was keen and early developed. It had been the life task of her grandfather, Duke Carl August, to make Weimar a center of culture and fashion. If there was, as some have declared, a hidden romance in the life of the dis-tinguished-looking but not beautiful girl whom Prince William of Prussia met in the gardens of the grand duke of Weimar when he visited that court in 1825, there was an equally dramatic episode in the prince’s career which was not concealed. The tall and soldierly Prussian, about two years before meeting Augusta, had fallen violently in love with the Princess Radziwfll, the beautiful and accomplished daughter of a nobleman whose family emigrated from Poland to Prussia 200 years before. Emperor Frederich William 111, on being told of this adventure on the purt-af his. son -and the princess, instantly forbade their furthor companionship. Attempts at clandestine meetings were frustrated and the princess afterward died, it was believed from a broken heart This episode cast a gloom over Prince William’s life, and when the formal announcement of his betrothal to Augusta was made it was an open secret at Berlin and Weimar that the union to follow would be loveless, and one of interest and convenience merely. Very old residents in Berlin still recall the interest that was felt in the simultaneons annuncement of the approaching marriage of the brothers, Princes William and Carl, to the sisters Augusta and Elizabeth of SaxeWeimar. Prinoe Carl, the younger brother of Emperor Wilhelm, was the father of the “Red Prince,” Albrecht. When the bride came to the capitol in 1829 there was a season of rejoicing, and Augusta at once became a favorite in Berlin society, securing a popularity whioh was increased by her activity and amiability after she became empress.
EMPRESS AUGUSTA VICTORIA.
There is &n artistic and historic interest surrounding the little palace on the Unter den Linden, in which Wilhelm and August* passed their married lives, the late Kaiser used to point out to his friends a certain panel that played a pan in the harrassing "It was at the time when I had to fiy to England," he said. The mob took possession of'the building and some one wrote in ehalk upon the
panel the word*: «TM* 1* aaftami property, ’’ in large letters across it When matters had quieted down and we had returned, it remained us noticed for three days. Then it Wh* effaced. Ifc was like rubbing out the last vestige?, of the revolution.”
EMPRESS FREDERICK.
In the kaiseri n’s suite overhead ia the little concert-room, with a seating capacity of less than fifty persons, in which the most famous opera singers, musicians and actors of the past fifty years have rehearsed before royal audiences. Augusta was the most consistent of princesses in her unwavering patronage of the drama and her Thursday receptions were famous. They generally began with a comedy, an operatta or one act of an opera, players being without costumes and occupying a little improvised stage from which they delivered their lines very much after the manner of recitations. Occasionally the leading actors and actresses of the German theaters, and even those of the Theater Francais. would occupy the little stage by invitation, having been brought to Berlin by special train for that purpose. It would be a day of delight in the litte palace when the empress announced that M. Faure, the celebrated singer, the divine Patti, Lucca or Nilsson would appear. On such occasions the concert room was always filled to overflowing. No scenery was used, but at such times costumes were worn hy the performers appropriate to the play. There was no orchestra, but the presence of the famous Meyerbeer, who never failed to respond to the empress’ call and who was for fhany years her favorite conductor, was ample compensation for the lack of other instruments than the grand piano at which the maestro presided. Of late years the concert room has been silent With the old empress’ last illness all festivities at the palace were discontinued. Almost within a year death has robbed Augusta of her husband, son and grandson, and these domestic afflictions tried her sorely. She became a recluse and found pleasure only in her books and her religion. She read and spoke German, English, French, Italian and Russian with equal facility. Although a protestant, she entertained extremely liberal views regarding Catholics. Her summers were passed at Coblentz-on-the-Rhine, the very center of German Catholicism. In the gallery of the great palace ol the Schloss, among other portraits ol the royal Hohenzollerns, is one of the mother-in-law of the late dowager empress, Queen Louise of Prussia, the wife of Friedrich Wilhelm 111. The face is one of remarkable sweetness,
QUEEN LOUISE.
and the portrait is venerated as being that of the guardian angel of the house of Hohenzollern. Louise was the poetic and patriotic ideal of the Germans during the war against Napoleon. Near by is the portrait of Augusta in reception dress, and at a period when she was in the prime ol her beauty and one of the handsomest women in the empire, with a regal aspect and magnificent shoulders. Her Russian descent then, more distinctly than in her later years, coqld be traced in the strongly-marked profile. Her mother, the grand duchess of Saxe-Weimar, was the Princess Marie, a daughter of the Emperor Paul of Russia. The ex-Empress Victoria, daughter of the queen of England, has characteristically German features, and so also has the present empress, Victoria Augusta. The palace in which the dowager empress died is on one of the prominent corners of the Unter den Linden, about five squares distant from the Schloss. Fronting its windows is the heroic statue of Frederick the Great, and almost opposite-are the Royal opera house aud Royal library.
The Earth Is Growing Larger.
The American Geologist is responsible lor the statement that the earth it slowly but steadily growing larger, ae it is constantly traversing new region; of space, which it depletes of meteoric dust and meteorities. They may, therefore. be room for all of us yet, in spite of the gloomy predictions of Malthusian mathematicinns.
Up Went M’Ginty.
“Wfaar’s Bill?” “Gone ter Heaven, I guess.” “Dead?” “Grass so. Tried to ride my broo’ cho.” “Whar’s he buried^" “AliPt barted. He never ooa< town.**
Ite takes mere p*eto-tt> fill the ersp of * j bsatam pallet than it does-to All a Buffalo grain elevator.
Low Priced Lands.
Attention of tbe reader is called to Che advertisement of "New Homes* In soother column of this paper. The st. Paul, Minneapolis and Manitoba Railroad Company have obtained 5u0.000 acres of new lands of an excellent quality/ which that company is offering to settlers at reasonable terms. Bt addressing J. Bookwalter, Land Commissioner. St. Paul. Minn., home seekers will receive valuable information la relation to these lands. . The man who makes the longest prayers can’t, always get the>longest credit oa his purchases.
FASHIONABLE SOCIETY. The faying ordeals which fashionable society imposes on its devotees are enough to severely test the physical strength and endurance of the most robust. Irregular and late hours, over-rich and indigestiblefood, late suppers, the fatigue of the ball-room, the bad air erf the illy-ventilated, overcrowded theatre, are each, in themselves, sufficient to upset the system and ruin the health of the delicate and sensitive Combined, they can hardly fail, if persisted in, to seriously impair the health of the hardiest. Ladies generally possess lees powers of endurance than their male consorts, and so the sooner succumb to these deleterious influences. They become pale, haggard and debilitated, and constantly experience a sense of lassitude—that “tired feeling,” as so many express it The least exertion fatigues them. Various neuralgic and other rains harrass and distress the sufferer. Headache, backache, “bearing-down” sensations, and “female weaknesses” follow and sorely afflict the sufferer. As an invigorating, restorative tonic, soothing cordial and bracing nervine, for debilitated and feeble women generally, Dr. Fierce’s Favorite Prescription has no
no DICDPC’O DCII CTO. PURELYVEfiETABLEa "'i un.ricnuc u r CLLt I o: perfectly harmless. Unequaled as a LIVER PILL. Smallest, Cheapest, Easiest to take. One tiny, Sugar-coated Pellet a dose. Cures Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the Stomach and Bowels. 25 oents a vial, by druggists. HUNTINGTON'S SEED CATALOG 7k T. Y . It contains 64 pages, printed on finest boot • paper, fall of illustrations, from nature, of Gar den, Field and Flower Beeds, Bulbs, Plants, etc., together with Garden and Farm Tools. Fertilizers, etc Our stocks are ofthe best and at moderate prices. Address: C, HUXTIXGTON «Se CO,, Indianapolis, Ixid, tunm piiSO’S ItJiMEIiV f‘OB CAi^u»au.-nest. Lasiest (O use. M *s® x Cheapest. Belief is immediate. A cure is certain. For K?sa |M Cold in the Head it has no equal. It is an Ointment, of which a small nartlcle Is annlled to the jjhai ZijjfM nostrils. Price, soc. Sold by druggists or sent by mail. Address, E. T. Hazkltink, Warren, Pa. KM
SYKLE’S Sure^ure. THE GREAT REMEDY FOR CATARRH The large number of certificates received ol the virtues of ihi. preparation in the treatment of this unpiea-uint disease, abundantiv attest its efficacy, it is the only medicine now on the market adapted to Catarrh, t at performs wbat it promises and effects not only speedy relief but a permanent cure. Unlike many nostrums u»w before the public, it does not dry up temporarily the nasal discharges, bat eradicates the producing cause, thus leaving the system in a 1 sound and healthy condition. Ask your druggists for a bottle of Sykes’ Sure Cure for Catarrh and Atmospheric Insufflator, and you will be healed of the malady. For sale by all Druggists. BOSS GORDON, Lafayette, Ind, Whole ta e Agent, Carden nEM» SEEDS Agrtealtanl lapVmtsto, Bead Certs. Upr SEND FOB CATAUHIinE. KBBlh BBiM., Logausport, lad i. ,/R%\ PtoD. SvroTia, U. f). Frits HI if) £ • 1 have haa (ora) year.; found no «etl relief until I tried Tour Spec) iC Sc. w leh rrlu-r-il me ti ,m* dlately." Sold hj all l>ni«gw giata. SI per box.bj iua.lL i>o« Kut PACKACK VUtX. address, T. POPIUM. f MOTHERS’ Mil HCHILB BIRTHB IF VHO BIFOM CONFIX MMBWT. BR ml.' aTUAMT.A. U. MMiniUßMuam.
_ CURES PERMANENTLY FROST-BITES. Frost-Bitten Sere Feet, Stockton, Cal., April; IMA After rubbing his feet with St Jacobs Oil, In, ? of SSfe.* 01 ** bed ’ ■* W r . Mra LEON* GLASER. At Drcooists and Dkalxm. IKK CHARLES A VOSEUK CO.. Saninefa FA
equal Ih tact, It Is the only medicine far the peculiar weaknesses and ailments incident to females, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from its manufacturers, that it will, in every case, give satisfaction or its price ($1.00) will be promptly refunded. It improves digestion, invigorates the system, enriches the blood, dispels aches and pains, produces refreshing sleep, dispels melancholy and nervousness, and builds up both the flesh and strength of those reduced below a healthy standard. It is a legitimate medicine —not a beverage. Contains no alcohol to inebriate; no syrup or sugar to sour or ferment in the stomach cause distress. It is. as peculiar in its composition as it is marvelous in its remedial results. Therefore, don’t be put off with some worthless compound easily, but dishonestly, recommended to be “ just as good,* that the dealer may make more profit. “ Favorite Prescription* is incomparable. Tbs manufacturers’ unprecedented offer to guarantee satisfaction in every case, or money refunded, ought to convince every invalid of this fact. A Book, on Woman’s Ailments, and their Self-cure (160 pages), sent under seal, in plain envelope, for ten cents la stamps. Address, Wobld’b Dispknsabt Medical Association, 668 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
wU, “* t Ka ,j y return mall, mmw&B\ full descriptive w WSfSyjk H. MfWmEih circulars of MmL ■"•w* ic* TAll °* swum ] ar'REstcoTTmt jK>gS'ggssß®f2W Any !ady of orffl. nary intelligence can eaelly and aW^BMwßMßrgwifg*ai quickly iearu te cut and make any garment, la fs3tißK2L*£2j| any style to any measure for lady or cW, d. Addreai fs&mßSßSmmmß cinehmet.. oP_ ©CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PHIS. Bed Crose Diamond Hra»4, »•>< Bread, in red axuUie taxa.NsLd «ltk blnertbboa. Takes* ether. Smite (.imp.) lie particulars aid “Kail rf far DUdutic cJgs&rjszz t7K tn t9Rfl A MOMH <»<» ***• PI 3 II) gZOU working for us. Person* preferred who can furniah a home and give their whole time to the mine*. Spare momente may be profitably employed alao. A few va ancles in towp* and citlea. H. p. JOHN9OII A CO., UlO9 Main Bc. Richmond, Va FIE N 81 » yra iu last war, IB adjndicattag ciaiasa. atty aktee. UnyCSTiJQY. Book keeping, bnainraatarwt 1111 ISC Penmanahlp, Arithmetic, Bhort-band,e*S BRYANT'S Bnflf E NEW S COLL*GK. ( N*T B£ cured. I kyanwaalfaraw. Br.AK«lW«iß,Rhal,Mlia S BURIES NHDSSKKKKXKB S'-«id M i3Sa.“i£i, , ilg iSSHfif OPIUIWSrHSSS ; YOUNG NEI ffiSS^dSLTSSB I frep Add -ese VtLiNTtwaßaoa., lane vUU, Wls J’ c !”». E " >PM ~ Wh.o writing to Advertta.ra reader. wCX «e|te * favor by ——m thla paper
