Rensselaer Republican, Volume 24, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 October 1891 — Page 7
c V^~> L 6 i \ f /M •*3* '-OM-oun i«»* W*' “Ji makes me tired! People ask me —is marriage a fail-"tge-y- yaint; don’t know my biz —what am I here for ? ” If the women only keep healthy they keep in good spirits and cupid is in demand. Let every enfeebled woman know this —there’s a remedy that’ll cure her, the proof’s positive. Here’s the proof—if it doesn’t do you good within reasonable time, report the fact to its makers and get your money back without a word—but you won’t do it! The remedy is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription—and it has proved itself the right remedy in nearly every case of female weakness. It is sot a miracle. It won’t cure everything—but it has done more to build up enfeebled and broken-down women than any other medicine known.
! » SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure it without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are S lacing a Sample Bottle Free into every home i the United States and Canada. If you have • Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for It will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use'it promptly, and relief b sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price io cts., »o cts. and |l .00. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, ttc Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 ct*. Up A good many different Cough Remedies In my time, and I find that Dr. White's Pulmonaria is the best of all. It in pleasant te take and relieves the eouwlt nt osee, and does not constipate the Dowels. For Croup in Children it has aso equal. .J^i 8 ,. Catarrh CREAM BALM when applied into the BBF ntaVA xl nostrils, will be ab W Z J*ATAR*' ol wrbed effeetuall.v®CO/ rj tleansing the head '•”* n*« I If catarrhal virus. Bfdh « 5? J musing healthy se pHAY FEVER ® sretions. It allays LmT .„ .inflammation, pro-fIL, V J<,' cf/jjt 'leets the membrane v v EEs' from additional colds *■ r / - K®£ tompletely heals the .—f tores and restcre : reuse of taste :.n I ,moll - - TRY THE CURE HAY-FEVER A particle is applied into each nostril and 1s agreeable. Price 60 cents at Druggists or by nail. BLY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York ■a— ii .I■ . m mi r ADVICE TO THE ACED. Age brings infirmities, such ns sluggish bowels, weak kidneys aud torpid liver. Tutt’s Pills have a specific effect oh these organs, stimulating the bowels, gives natural discharges, and imparts vigor to the whole system. |WU I pCndIBEO WETTING.) Ko W PBMT™Sow I^S n i , ‘"! s - wl » h ¥.°J? oker “theatre, Ohlosgo, 111. jw**For sale by all Druggists. Price SI.OO. OB fi If 8 O .'mU» ini INFAI.M-->II II l_ V 1;1E 1 UUK for PILI.B. • BCF ■ ■ ■■ wk Price. $1; at drurffUtfi or iILIO ■ ■ box z nd, New l oss Uni. • 1 The Soap for H ard Water is Lenox.
“IT’S A GIRL.”
The Happy Father, Mr. Cleveland, Says “Thank You ” A Quietly Conducted but Important Event at the Ex-PreaitlenVs Fireside. Born— To Mr. and Mrs. Grover Cleveland, October 3, a daughter. A New York special on -the sth says: The handsome four-storied and gabled house at 816 Madison avenue, which is the home of Grover Cleveland, was stared at by -many curious eyes to-day.-The s >ft li.dian summer air with its delicate autumn haze brought thousands to Central park, which is only one block from the Cleveland home. Hundreds sauntered from the park through Sixty-uinth street, to visit the bouse where Gen. Grant was so long sick before going to the mountains to die, and where his widow lives. Turning Into Madison avenue the sight seers then strolled up the avenueto look at the house' where, according to the morning papers, a new-born baby was. Opposite the house, across the street, all through the afternoon there were loitering curious people, who stopped in little knots and groups to look at the house whose open windows, let. in the soft air. There were many inessages of congatulation, but the doctor and the meisenger hoys chiefly made up the callers during the day.
Mr. and Mm. Cleveland went to Buzzard’s bay early in the summer. They were full of hopes then. Gray Gables, their country home, is a lovely place? The house stands upon a wall, with the water on three sides of it. The nearest house is a mile away. They spent a very quiet summer. E. CBenedict; the Wall street banker, had his big steam yacht, the Oneida, anchored near their house the greater part of the time. Every little while the Clevelands would go with Mr. Benedict on a short cruise. Nearly every day. they would see the Jeffersons, who lived two miles away, or the Gilders, who live in-Marion. Early in the summer Mrs. Cleveland would drive to Marlon. < The queer little town Is eight miles from Gray Gables and the road is a delightful one. They are very fond of Mrs. Cleveland in old-fash-ioned Marion. In July the drives became less frequent. By the first of August they had ceased altogether. After that Mrs Cleveland rarely left the grounds about Gray Gables. When Mr. Cleveland was away she would lie in the hammock on the broad eastern veranda all* the long summer day. ' The summer waned and the summer visitors at Buzzard’s Bay sought their homes in the city. But the Cleveland s re nained at Gray Gables. The wind be came chilly. Mrs. Cleveland eould -qnly sit on the veranda for a few hours each day. Then Mr. Cleveland sent for the family docror to come to Buzzard’s Bay, When,Dr. Bryant arrived In Buzzard’s Bay he directed that Mrs. Cleveland' return to New. York. So Mr. Cleveland’s little blonde mustache butler was sent to New York to get the beautiful home at 816 Madison avenue ready for the home coming. It was thought wiser to make the journey in Mr. Benedict’s yacht. A week ago last Monday the Oneida left her anchorage in front of Gray Gables She steamed along very cheerfully, audit was about noon the next day when she anchored in East river, off Twenty-sixth, street. Mrs. Cleveland was placed in the naptha launch and taken ashore. A close carriage was waiting. The coachman picked his way along the crowded streets. No one had ever seen Mr. Cleveland so nervous as he was that day. The home coming was unheralded. There was no one In front of the house to see them. As the carriage drove up the butler opened the door. Mr. Cleveland gave his wife his arm and they walked slowly into the house. The doctor said it was not wise to let people know of their return to the city, so the curtains in the lower part of the house have all been kept closely drawn. Mrs. Cleveland was in seclusion. The crowd that passed that quiet house neverdreamed of the anxiety which lurked behind the heavy curtains which guarded the windows. There were preparations and all those delicate arrangements which make women whisper together when: they are alone, but the big mansion preserved a sphnix-like silence about all those things.
During the past two days those who noticed closely saw that the wind blew aside tho curtains which hang In the broad windows on the second floor and now and then they could catch sight of thesquaio shoulders of Mr. Cleveland. During the greater part of Thursday, Friday and Saturday he sat there. Dr. Bryan gave a dinner at his home In Thirty-sixth st. Tho dinner had been planned a number of days before and there were a number of famous professional mon and other people of noto there The guests had finished their dinner and were smoking their cigars shortly after 9 o’clock when a messenger came to the door and rang the bell imperatively. He demanded to see the doctor ut once. When the doctor returned to his guests he excused himself, saying In a bored sort of Way that it was a professional call and that ho must go at oncn. Not to a single guest privately did ho explain what, the call was. Straight to tho Cleveland mansion Dr. Bryant went. They were awaiting him anxiously. Mr. Cleveland was banished to the library. At last I “It's a girl,” they said. “Mrs Cleveland Is all right.” He took it very quietly simply saying. ‘Thank you.” 2 The little girl was born at exactly 12:00 Saturday morning and just before daylight the mother fell asleep. The glad news could be kept no longer. Mr. Cleveland must share his joy. The butler glided out of the house with yellow slips of paper on which were telegrauis to relatives and intimate friends. , „ The news was slow In reaching the world at large, because it had been so carefully guarded, aad hours elapsed before it reached the busy people who wen so anxious to hear ofit ’
Lincoin’s Simplicity.
J. G in the Century. There', sis in his father’s cabin, or N.vw Salefff, or Vandalia, or Springfield, the man Lincoln never gave'a fraction of thought or a moment of care to any question of dress. He followed the ordinary fashion and wore what the tailor, hatter, and boot-maker made him. And so clad the humblest citizens stood in his presence without awe, and the high-
est dignitaries with perfect respect. The world has yet to learn that Gen. Scott, or Lord Lyons, or Bishop Simpson, or Prince Napoleon, or Archbishop Hughes, or the Comte de Paris, or Chief Justice Taney ever felt humiliated by the dress or wan 4 of dignity of President Lincoln ir» state ceremonial or private audience. The eyes of these men were not upon the; tailor s suit of broadcloth, but upon the President and the man, and in such a scrutiny Lincoln outranked any mortal who ever questioned him eye to eye in his long and strange career from New Salem to the Blue Room of* the White House.
; As with his dress;. so with his manner. Tempered and modified by the gravity of added years, and an everwidening experience among varied social classes,and conditions in many parts- of the Union, it nevertheless retained to’the last a-strong impress of the essential characteristics of the frontier —simplicity, directness and sincere heartiness. He never learned and never used meaningless or misleading conventional phases. He would say: “I>am glad to see you.” He would never say, “I am charmed to see you.” He always greeted his visitors with a cordial shake of the hand and a winning look or smile, unless, as very rarely happened, his mind was weighed down with a preoccupation of overwhelming care and suspense. He always listened with patience, even when the request of his petitioner might be frivolous or foolish. That he was fond of wit, and jest, and laughter, the world already knows. He gave others-cour-tesy, kindness, and consideration to the last degree, and never by word or look assumed that he demanded them for himself. r
Crops in North Dakota.
New York Press. Mr. John W. Dwight; of Tompkins county, whose great farm of 60,000 acres in the Red river valley of North Dakota has often been noticed, is in New York to take an energetic part in the election of his friend, Mr. Fossett, for Governor; but that does not prevent him from talking about Dakota crops, on which he is well posted. He said yesterday: “There has never been such a period, of prosperity for North Dakotans as now. The crops of this year will sell for more money than all the land on which they were raised would have brought on sale last spring. With a population of only 200,000 people, the crops of the State'will bring between $45,000,000 and $50,000,000 into their pockets at the lowest estimate of prices. There were 3.000,000 acres of wheat, from which at least 50,000,000 bushels have been produced. The price of wheat .there Is now 80 cents. Then there is considerable barley, oats and some corn. There are fully half a million sheep on the rai ges—something new for this section. ‘ ’As a result of this prosperous condition of things,” continued Mr. Dwight, “the farmers in North Dakota are paying off their debts and looking comfortable and happy. The older settlers, who were out of debt, are buying more land to extend their aperations. The bank, deposits at b'argo have increased 40 per cent, in twelve months, and every dollar of the increase is home money. In I’argo, Wahpeton, Grand Forks and Red River there is not a house vacant, and no real estate- agent in Either place has one to rent. There .never has been such prosperity in “hat country since I have known it, ■>r ins the memory of the oldest iniabi.tant of iny acquaintance there.”
A Perfect Baking Powder. The constantly growing l demand for Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder,, the standard cream tartar powder for forty years, is due to two causes. FIRST:—The extreme care exercised by the manufacturers to make it perfectly pure, uniform in quality, and of highest raising power. SECOND:—The recent investigations exposing the fact that certain other brands of baking powder contain ammonia and still others that were found to contain alum. . These unscrupulous manufacturers are being found out, and the consumers are giving them a wide birth. Nothing is left to chance in the manufacture of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder. Chemists are employed to test every ingredient aa to purity and strength. Hence; its marvelous purity and uniformity. Each can is like every other. It never dissapoints. BEST is ALWAYS the CHEAPEST. ' . •1 • • < Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder is reported by all authorities as free from Ammonia, Alum, or any other adulterant In fact, the purity of this ideal powder has never been questioned. , .. _ - .
I remember having often been told in my youth that the kwe of glory was a virtue. Strange must be that virtue which requires the aid of every vice. ■- ■ A great capitalist is Bke a vast lake upon whose bosom ships can navigate, but which is useleib to the country because no stream issues thence to fertilize the land.
CHILDREN ENJOY
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing* effects of Syrup of Figs, when in-. need- of a laxative, and if, the father or mother be costive or bilfous, the most gratifying results follow its use, so that it is the best family remedy known and> every family shoul® have a bottle.
The matter ofaerial navigation is to be treated in the-September and October numbers of The Century in twopapers—the first, a brief one on ‘‘The Possibslty of Mechanical Hight; " by Professor S. P. Langley, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; and the second by Hiram S. Maxim, the inventor of the famous gun which bears his name. For the past two years Mr. Maxim has been experimenting in England with an apparatus for aerial navigation, which he will cßescribe, with numerous diagrams, ia his Century article. Mr. Maxim’s experiments have been so successfußthat he is very confident as to the ultimate result. He believes that aerial navigation is-certain to come within the next- ten years whether he*succeeds or not.
State or Ohio, City or Toledo; I Lucas County, J 3B - Frank J. Cheney makes oath that the senior partner-of the firm of F. J, Cheney & Co., doing business in the City. of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of* Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. L 2 Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day Of December, A. D. 1888. AW. GLEASON, I-. , > Notary Publie. Hall’s Catarrh’ Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonirls, free, F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O Sold by Druggists. 75c. A train consisting of twenty-three ears, carrying 180 tons of heps, left Puyallup, Wash., for London, via Baltimore.' • The Only One Ever Printed—Can You Find the Word? There is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alik? except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from the Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a crescent on every thing they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS or samples free. Artistic Advertising. Undoubtedly the Ivory Soap people de serve credit for the best grade of illustrations now being used for advertising purposes. The series of full-page drawings which have been appearing on the last page of the Century represent some of the most capable book and magazine artists in the country. The series must have cost no small figure. As yet the ‘’way upt’ artists do not sign the work they do for advertisers, but I apprehend that it will!not be long ere we shall seo in the advertising columns such names as George Wharton Edwards, E. W. Kemble, etc. Such men as these bring to their work, besides mere mechanical skill, a trained imagination and an artistic conception of things These qualities, when used in > connection with advertisements, command scarcely less interest than when used in the ordinary literary way.—Printer’s Ink, Aug. 19,158 L Impure Blood is the primary cause of the majority of disease to whicn the human family Is subject. The blood ia passing through the system visits every portion of the body—if pure,carrying strength and vitality; if impure, disease anddeath. Blood poisoning is most dangerous. Prickly Ash Bitters will render the last mpossibleand will regulate the system o that hea.lth will be a sure result. The Home Music Journal, Edited by W, T. Gitte. A new monthly music magazine that ought to be in every home in the land. Twenty-eight pages of choice class lessons, bright editorials, leading articles by able writers, etc. Of vital interest to all music teachers and every one who wants to make the home musical and happy. 11.00 per year. Send for a free sample copy to the Home Music Co., Logansport, Ind. No Opium in Piso’A Cure for Consump ion. Cures where other remedies fail. 33c
Rather Be Without Bread. XI BisHor'rlhsiDEjicE, Marquette, Mich., I Nov. XIBB2. f Tia Bov. J. KoaoMel, of above place, writes: * I hove auflersd • great deal, and whenever I now feel a narvou* attack coming I take a doss of Pastor Koenig's Narva Tonio and feel relievad. I think a gfeat deal of it, and would rather bo without bread than without the Tonic. Tired uffUving. Pound, Wix, ISAM. Two yean ago last Ptomary I comineodM having epileptic attacks, end could not res* a minute without having my limbs jerk. I woo almost tiredof living, when I beard of Pastor i Koenig's NerSe Tonic, and thank the Lord I go*- , well after using only one bottts, and I will never s forgot in my prayers what thfe medicine did for me. MISS MAY WETICK. FRPP"* Tataablo Boo* en Nervous LULL Diseases sent free to any address, Fl< r I and poor patients can also obtain 8 V*LsLn free-of oharze. T/iis remedy has been prepared byJte Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayua, Indi since 18% and bnnrrceparoa under bi* direction bytbc KOENIG MEB. CO.. Chicago, lIL SoUFbyDrugglsteM&aiperßottlfe- 6fcrßs. Larffe Stoe, 81.75. 6 Bottles Cor 89. V IB* NOT, 0 Try jiNow 2 J A Goto your Druggist, hand I V him one dollar, tell him you Hg want a bottle of ... . J PRICKLY ASH I S* BITTERS*! The Best Medicine known gsi .O for the CURB of Km VAU Diseases ts the Liver, 2 /> All Diseases of tie Stomach, It. V All Diseases of tie Kidneys, A AU Diseases of ths Bowels. In V PURIFIES THE BLOOD, JL rj CLEANSES THE SYSTEM, ffl W Restores Perfect Health. p| DONALS KENNEDY Of Roxbury, Massn says Kennedy’s Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years’ standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, except Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root Price si.so. Sold by every Druggist in the U. S.. and Canada. I CURE RUPTURE OR. HORNE’S Have Cared 10,000 Rnptores in 15 Years. •*I .uffered with a doable Hie Trnw cured me la 3% months. J. G. Pnilpot. - ™™ Sept M, >OO. Chattanooga. Tsu* •Tour Electric Truss cured my rapture after snffertig r years. Mbs. A Dwohty." Absecon, si. J. Oct A*M • I am cured sound and w -’I by wearing your Elertrtc Truss. B. HARrßT.”l>avl. City, lowa. Aug. W, *»». The .nly aeealne ElrerHe Teem aed Belt Oeethfeed l ithnwerld. 60-pa«eilln*tr«te<l bonk M-ntfree,aw. o>. HOHN*, luventcr. IRQ WABASH AVE.. CCICf-CO BOREj’S ass’sKiK'S faat-dropping tool* m LOOMIS A TIFFIX. OHIO. FREE. DETECTIVES R&ate4 ia every Coamy to aet ta tho fteeret, fltetvfoe aador InMraelloao from Graaaaa, ez-CbioT of of inelnuatl. Kxoerfmco not aeeoMary. Partie«Ui«free. A4dr<-M Detective Bareeu Ce. 44 AreUe. CldcUmu. O. KANSAS FABMSKvfS “*•*■***•■* “ “*** again. Largest crops ever raised. Buy a farm. Descriptive list free. CHAS. R. WOOLLEY, Osborne, Kan PSIWSIIOWB-M. *ll gOLDIERM K disabled, kite, for increaxe. 26 years experience. Write for laws. A.W. McCdiiMicN < Boms. Wasaiaerox. D. C. & Cincinnati. <r
Indianapolis Busi nessLJniversitY ty j timeshort; expenses low: no fee for Diploma t a strictly BiwtaeasSehool in an unrivaled cont* ; merciairenter; endowed and patronised by railroad, industrial, professional and buslnesamwt / //// '/J' » r// 7// > ' LOGANSPORT, IND. Established 180 T. Decidedly the best equipped and one of the meet thorough and practical Colleges of Itaok-geeptsi I’enman.hlp, Shorthand aud Type Writing In the State. Investigation Invited. Ladle, and geutlemeß trained for bnalne-S and secure tailing aovitioni. low ratee auu cheap boanllnn facilities. Elegant catalogue mailed free. Student, can begin at an> time. E. a II VI.L. Fr«ddeai; Kml Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to'4|h' Hf taste. Children take it without objection. By druggist*. ISfi MH Ili ■I 1! illHlli ■■ ■
"German Syrup”T&e majority; es Well-flead phy* iciaEfr now belie** fh'at Consumption i 9 a ; germ disease. In* other words, instead' of Being in therconstitutiott itself it iS OHtised by i»nnmerablexnall creatur&slivirig-itPtlj® lungs having no business there and eating them away as caterpillars dtr the leases of trees. A Germ k The phfegm that i> £ coughed up •is those'Disease. * parts of the lufigs* which have beeni gnawed off and destroyed. These* little bacilli, as 3&e germs are called, are too small t's* be seen with the* flaked eye, but they are very much alive just the same, and enter-the' body in our foetdv in the air we ? breathe, and through the pares otl the skin. Thence they get into the' blood 1 and finally arrive at the hings * where’they fasten and increase with J frightful rapidity. Then Gertnan 1 Syrup’comes in, loosens them, kills | them, expells them, heals the places ■ they leave, and so nourish and soothe that, in a short time consumptives become germ-proof and well. 9' Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby wsaaick, we gave her Caatotia. When she was » Child, she cried for Chsto«i% When she became Mias, she clung to Chatoria.’ Whoa she had Children, she gave them CastottS. FITS.-AHrit, .topped fne by Dr.. Kitajs Great Nerve Reator.r. No Fit. after Unit day. u». Marvellous euro*. Treathe andS2.M> trial bottl.frMte ; Fit ca.eg. Send to Dr. Kllne.W’ A"*-“• ”•» HF RELIEVES all Stomach Distross. REMOVES Nausea, Sense of Fnllnpua, Congestion, Fain. REVIVES Failing ENERGY. RESTORES Normal Circulation, Cai - Warms to Tob Tips. M. MAITH MEDICINE CO., M. Uate. MR L»- f EWIS’ OTK LYE | POWDX3E2AUDPMTUXXI.. ■■ iraTBUTXD.) ;|yßLg»y The ttrongeii and purest Ly» made. Will make the test per Afumed Hard Soap in 30 minutet boiling. It is the < ttest for softening watei; Ww cleans * n E waste pipes, disinfect , mK ing sinks, closets, washing bob : ■ W ties, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SALT M’F r G CO., i flen. Agtg, PhDa., fa. School oh Sno/tr-HMiD, AAO riLSGMTWr, Meridian and Wash. Sts., Indianapolis Ind. Fre-emlaMitiy tb« l^adlngtluwrrtstu.ll w et the West. Low expenow; uaequaM XazUUiw to every re.p«t. Timo abort. Graduates assiatad to lacratlvo position.. Send for GatologM. DUTHIE « HAMILTON, Prop TAROID A new method or eompoandlng Tar. SURE CURE for PllfS. SALT RHEUM and all Akin DlMaama Send 3 Soutamp. foe Five Sample with Boole 44 Sold by all DrnggM. and W TARtdMBOO . IOBand«»-«- «*.. ChISute.FHO.MM Indiana Hrnrei.t, rn ppi led by p.Btoaprt and A , Keif.r A Co.lndiana; ollt. double MM W MM tn mo*. «»»» Breech-LeadirffgE BAI 5T.99. Em RIFLES »LW Ij ill I WPIHWMJHwW 10* ■ala'Htnw.. FIST OLS 75c n cmatnn*ti,oiuo. Rig emu! Send at once for our Catalogue, too testimonials. C. N. Newcomb. Davenport, lowa. 1 OUISBAGGER &CO. LiaaiaisfePAiaT solicitors. INU 4L-UM INDFLiM.
