Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 1, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 September 1892 — Page 7

M man LTvma, If yon keep at it, la apt to tell upon the lirer. The things to prevent this are Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. ■ corrective or gentle laxative—three . * 1 for a cathartic. They’re the amali- ; est, easiest to take, pleasantest and ; moat natural in the way they act. Z They do permanent good. ConstiI pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Z Sick or Bilious Headache, and all I Z derangements of the liver, stomach, ; Z boards or* prevented, relieved, - and cured. • ~ They’re guaranteed to give satisfaction in every case, or your money is iMnraed. The worst eases of Chronic Catarrh in the Head," yield to Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. So certain is It that its makers offer SSOO reward for an incurable case. “ZorkFi. M EFTS vm mm Kidney, Liver and BladderGure -Rheumatism, Lumbago, pain in joints or back, brick dust In urine, frequent calls, irritation, inUamatlon, i gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder. 'Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, gout, bUlious-headaohe. SWAMP-BOOT cores kidney difficulties, ha Grippe, urinary trouble, bright’s disease. Impure Blood, Scrofula, malaria, gen'l weakness or debility# Saaraatee-UN contents of On® Bottle. If not beoafltad, Prugfiata will refund to you the price paid. I At Druggists, 50c. Size, SI.OO Size# •Invalids’ Guide to Health”free-Oowraltation fro* Diu Kilmer k Co.. Binghamton. N. Y

Fl*C6 a beautifully illus- * trated book, containhv Hart in S over ninety pages of most important in* . formation about the ■ 10 ailmcnt3 of women. ' ’ Also a full code of LsZIUICS established rules of etiquette for women 7" and a perpetual ladies’ ca’endar. Contains not a word of ■objectionable matter, and is crowded from ■cover to cover with information which every woman, young or old, should become familiar with, and advice which xaffiiy has restored many and . many a suffering woman * to perfect health and happiness. No woman 1 'K9 »§» should live without a Send 2 two-'cent stamps to cover postage and packing when you write. Lydia E. Pikkha„t Mid. Co., Lynn, Mass. &&<//*

WHAT OTHERS SAY. BLOOD POISON BODY COMPLETELY COVERED, WITH A RASH AND RED 1 BLOTCHES. 5 •- J EVERYTHING ELSE FiILED BUT LIVURA CURED. aLivtißA M’F’O. Co., Glrtleius “My little girl had Blood Potion ; her system was all nut down, her body was completely covered with a rash and horrid rod blotches, owing to tho Intense itching she coaid not sloop, Uerdigastlve organo Wore in a very VITA Comitt. bad condition; the complained of pain In tho limbs and wa wore very mock alarmed About her. Wo tried everything wa could think of bat netting had tho desired •fleet until wo found PITCHXB’S UTVBA. She had not boon taking UTVBA more than oao week When her eyes looked aataral again, her appetite Improved, and before the ascend bottle bad beta •sad, the rub and blotches disappeared, the Itch* lag left, and sbe Is now FKRPBCTLY Will and has gained flesh. All due to PITCHER’S LIVURA. * Very Sincerty, Mas. John Corbett. Ml Uadleon St., HuntsTllle, Ala. <1

LIVURA OINTMENT Tbe Great Skin Cure. Cares Eczema, Salt Rheum, Pimples Uloerg, Itoh, aad all affections of the skin. Heals Cuts, Bruises, Barns, Scalds, etc. Sold by all DraggiM*or by mall,. Price flit Ceats. 1 Theehnrteet liae to Chicago. Milwaukee. Bt Paa M“*®*wpol‘s. Duluth,Omaha.Uenver.Saa traacleco rerUaalrßmtUe, Tocema, Loe Aagalee, Bpokaaa f :11 P’fptt. '?.*** *fl d r “Mnfuningßoird Pallman Parfected Saf. ITTastlbulad Train,. Tba only llna mining Dining 0«» Indla.apolls «d Chicago. WagaUT east Pullman Bleeping end Parlor oars. Par rates mess lima tabrea. ate. apply to I. D. Baldwin. D P. A M (■ nUnoto »t., ladlanapolts.lad. JameS Barker, w P A. Chicago.

SERAPHS’ WINGS.

A Characteristic Lesson ot Humiliation. This Is an Age of irreverence—Omnipotence Is the Tool With which God Hake. All Things. "V“ - - ■ During the past week Dr. Taimage has been preaching to enormous audiences in the great manufacturing towns of the English midland counties. The sermon selected for publication this week is on Isaiah vi,2: “With twain he covered his face, ,with twain he covered bis feet and with twain he did fly.” | Jaa hospital of leprosy good King XJzziah bad died and the whole land was Shadowed with solemnity, and theological and prophetic Isaiah was thinking about religious things, as one is apt to do in time of great national bereavement, and forgetting the presence of his wife and two sons who made up his family, he hast a dream, not like the dreams of ordinary character which generally come from indigestion, but a vision most instructive and under the touch of the hand of the Almighty. The piacSjthe ancient temple building, grand, awful, majestic. Within that temple a throne higher aud grander than that occupied by any czar or sultan or emperor. On that throne the eternal Christ. In lines surrounding that throne the brightest celestials, not the cherubim, but higher than they: the most exquisite aud radiant of the heavenly inhabitants, the seraphim. They are called burners because they look like fire. Lips of fire, eyes of fire, feet of fire. In additiou to the features and the limbs which suggest a human being there are pinions which suggest a jithest, the swiftest, the most buoyaut aud most inspiring of all inteliifent creation—a bird. Each seraph ad six wings, each two of the wings for a different purpose. Isaiah’s dream quivers and flashes with these pinions. Now folded, now. spread, now beaten in locomotion. “With twain he covered his feet, with twain ho covered his face, and with twain ha did fly,” The probahUity-ia that these wings were not aTTTfsea at once. The seraph standing there near the throne, overwhelmed at the insignificance of the paths trodden by the feet of God and with the lameless of his locomotion, amounting almost to decrepitude as compared with the divine velocity, with feathery veil of angelic modesty hides the feet. “With twain ho did cover his feet.”

Standing there overpowed by the overmatching splendors of God’s glory, and unable longer with the eyes to look upon them, and wishing those eyes shaded from the insufferable glory, the pinions gather over tho countenance. “With twain he did cover the face.” Then as God tells this seraph to go to the farthest outpost of immqiisity bn message of light and love and joy, and get back before the first anthem, it does not take the seraph a great while to spread himself upon the air with unitnaginod celerity, one stroke of tho wing equal to ten thousand leagues of air. “With twain he did fly.” 1 The most practical and useful lesj?son for you and me, when we gee thoseraph spreading his wings over the f.'et, is a lesson of humility at imperfection. Tho brightest angels of God are so far beneath God that he charges them with folly. The seraph so far beneath God, and we so far beneath the seraph in service, we ought to be plunged in humility, utter and camplete. Our feet, - h0.,laggard they, have been in the divine service! Our feet, how many missteps they have taken! Our feet, in how many paths of worldliness and folly they nave walked! Neither. God nor seraph intended to put any dishonor upon that which is one of the masterpieces of Almighty God—the human foot. Give me the history of your foot, and I will give you the history of your lifetime. Tell me what steps it hath gone, down what declivities and in what roads and in what directions, And I will know more about you than I want to know. None of us could endure the scrutiny. Another seraphic posture in the “With twain he covered the face.” How many take the name of God in vain, how many trivial things said agaipst the Almighty! Not willing to have God in the world, thev roll up an idea of sentimentality and humanitarianism and impudence and imbecility, and call it God. No wings of reverence over the face, no taking off of shoes on holy ground. You can tell from the way they talk they could havo made a better world than this, and that the God of the Bible shocks every sense of propriety. They talk of the love of God in a way that shows you they believe it docs uot make any difference how bad a man is here he will come in at the shining gate. They talk of the love of God in such a way which shows you they think it is a general jail delivery for all the abandoned and thescoundrelismof the universe. No punishment hereafter for any wrong done here. The Bible give* us two descrip i tions of God, and thev are Just op- ; posite, and they are both true. In one p’a :e the Bible says God is love. In another place the Bible says God is a consuming fire. The explanation is plain as plain can be. God through Christ is love. God out of Christ is fire. To win the one and to escape the other we have only to throw ourselves body, mind and koul— into Christ’s keeping, says Irreverence, T ‘l want no atouemeut, I want no pardon, I want no intervention; I will go up and face Gcd, and I will challenge him, and 1

will defy him, and I will ask him what he wants to do with me.” So the finite confronts the infinite, so a tack hammer tries to break a thunderbolt. so the breath of human nos- - defies the everlasting God, while the hierarchs of heaven bow the head and bend kflee as ~ the King’s chariot goes by, and the archangel turns away because he cannot endure the splendor, and the chorus of all the empires of heaven comes in with full diapason, “Holy, holy, holy!” Reverence for lham, reverence for the old merely because it is old, reverence for stupidity however learned, reverence for incapacity however finely inaugurated, have none. But we want more reverence for God, more reverence for the sacraments, more reverence for the Bible, more reverence for the pure, more reverence for the good. Reverence is a characteristic of ail great natures. Another seraphic posture in the text. The seraph must not always standstill. He must move, and it must be without clumsiness. There must be celerity and beauty in the movement. “With twain he did fly. ” Correction, exhilaration. Correction at our slow gait, for we only crawl in the service when we ought to fly at the divine bidding. Exhilaration in the fact that the soul has wings as the seraphs have jwingSrWhat’is a wing? -An instrument of locomotion. They may not be like seraph’s wing, they may not be like bird’s wing, but the soul lias wings. God says so. “He shall mount up on wings as eagles. ” We are made in the divine image, and God has wings. The Bible says so. “ Healing in his wings. ” - A dying Christian not long ago cried out, “Wings, wings, wings!” The air is full of them, coming and going, coming and going. You have seen how the dull, sluggish chrysalid becomes the bright butterfly; the dull and the stupid and the lethargic turn into the alert and the beautiful Well, my friends, in this world we are in a chrysalid state. Death will unfurl the wings. Ob, if we could only realize what a grand thing it will be to get rid of this old clod of the body and mount the heavens, neither seagull nor lark nor alba* tross ncr falcon nor condor pitching from highest range of Andes so buoyant or so majestic of stroke, See that eagle in the mountain nest. It lcolcs so sick, so ragged 1 feathered, so worn out and so half asleep. Is that eagle dying? No. The ornithologist will tell' jrou it is molting season with that bird. Not dying, but molting. You see that Christian sick and weary and worn out and seeming about to expire on what is known as his death bed. The world says he is dying. I say it is molting season for his soul—the body dropping away the celestial pinions coming on. iNot dying, but molting. Molting out of darkness and sin and struggle into glory and into God. Why do you not shout? Why do you sit shivering at the thought of death and trying to bold back and wishing you could stay here forever, and speak of departm’e as though the subject were filled with skeletons and the varnish of coffins, and as though you preferred lame foot to swift wing? O, people of God, let us stop playing the fool and prepare far raptur-

ous flight. When your soul stands on the verge of this life, and there are vast precipices beneath, and sapphired domes above, which way will you fly? Will you fly downward or will you fly upward?' Everything on the wing this morning bidding us aspire. Holy spirit on the wing. Anglo of the new covenant on the .wing, Time OB the wing, flying away from Eternity on the wing, flying toward us.' Wings, wings, wings! Live so near to Christ that when you are dead, people standing by your lifeless body will not soliloquize, saying, “What a disappointment life was to him; how averse he was to departure; what a pity it was he had to die; what an awful calamity!” Rather standing there may they see a sign more vivid on your still face than the vestiges of pain, something that will indicate that it was a happy exit—the clearance from oppressive quarantine, the castoff chrysalid, the moltiDg of the faded and useless, and the ascent from malarial valleys to bright, shiniDg mountain tops, and be led to say, as they stand there contemplating your humility and your reverence in life and {our happiness in death. “With twain e covered the feet, with twain he covered the face, with twain he did fly.” Wings! Wings! Wings!

A Disappointment.

New York Press. Confidential Clerk (to employer who has just come in)—“There’s a lady in the private office to see you.” Employer (all smiles) —“Indeed? Who is she. do you know?” Confidential 'Clerk—“Can’t tell. But she’s a dandy. Tall, white fluffy dress, cherrv ribbons, dark hair and eyes and lias a fox terrier with her. - ~ Employer—“ Humph! That’s my wife. ■ Minister—And so you think you are to be a minister when you grow up, my little man ? Little Man—Yessir. Mother suys I’m just cut out for a minister. Minister—Because you bo love to do good ? Little Man— N-o ; bectr.se I’m al ways gettin sore throat and bein’ ordered away for my health.—Good News.

Sympathetic.

Dennis (to Mike, who has fallen from the fourth floor*—"Hov yei leaded yit. Moike?" Milto (faintly)—“Yis.” Dennis—“Th’ saints be praised.”

The Tree Laxative Principle

Of the plants used In manufacturing tbe pleasant remedy, Syrup of Pigs, has a permanently beneficial effect on tbe human system, while tbe Cheap vegetable extracts and mineral solutions. usually sold as medicines, are perma, nently Injurious. Being well informed, you will use the true remedy ouly. Manufactured by the California Pig Syrup Co. Isaac Leadbetter, of Pulpit Harbor. Me., lost nearly 6,000 lobsters lately that he had confined in a pond, by a quantity of_ fresh water flowing in and killing them. A black bass in Sunset lake, New Jersey, chocked itself to death recently in trying to swollow asunfiah. The magnifying powers of water is finely illustrated every summer by the stories of big fish that got away. J. C. Simpson. Marquess, W. Va.. says: “Hall s Catarrh Cure c red me of a very bad case of catarrh.” Druggists sell it, 75c. Many an eminent surgeon occasionally cuts u poor figure in his profession. To the Rescue with Hale”s Tionev of Hore bound and Tar before the baby strangles with croup. Pixs’s Tootkacbx Dhop* cure in one minute. “Call that fellow a baritone?” said the disgusted auditor, ” He's only a bass imitation. ”

A Prominent G. A. R. Man.

Ever since 1 came out of the Army in ’#3 I had been in poor health, suffering from Kidney and Ljyer Complaint. Swamp-Root did me meregood-'thanaU the other medicines I had ever taken. At present am feeling better than for years. It is the beet medicine on earth W. Spencer, 30th, Ind. Inf., Elkhart, Ind. Jagson says the greatest cause of suffering in Darkest Africa is too much watermelon. __________ Dyspepsia, impaire d digestion.weak stomaeh and constipation will be Instantly relieved by Beecham’s Pills. S 3 cents a box. A fatal blow—the investigation of the muzzlo of the gun.

The Only One Ever Printed— Can Yon Find the Word?

There is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike 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 everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, beautiful lithographs or samples froe. - . _

To Colorado and the Far West.

This is the season of tbe year to visit the great West, andto take a trip into tbe wodderful Rooky Mountains. No heat, no dust, and tnsjnoonvenience, but a trip through the most magnificent scenery on earth, through the Heart of the great Rocky Mountains. The Colorado Midland Railway, the "Pike’s J eak Route,” takes tho traveler to all the most Interesting and beautiful portions of the western country. To Denver, Colorado Springs, Mnnitou, Leadville, Aspen, Grand Junotion, Salt Lake City, Ogden. San Francisco, and all Paclfio coast pofhts. There is no other line in the country which p»«ses through an equal ai22V.nl of magnificent scenery. The Rocky Mountains look their best at this time of the year, and a trip now will be a treat to be remembered through life. Double daily train service and splendid equipment. Any ticket agent in the United States can sell tickets and cheek baggage to any point In Colorado and Utah or to any Pacific coast and Northwestern point. Further information can be secured at any ticket office, or by address-, lug Chas. S. Lee. General Passenger Agent. Colorado Midland Railway, Denver, Colorado

A Ramble Through Wonderland.

The season of 1802 brings from the Northern Pacific Railroad company a book entitled "A Ramble Through Wonderland,” with 105 pages and over twentylive handsome illustrations; the printed matter graphically describing the territory between the Great Lakes and the PaciOc Ocean, with brief mention of Yellow Stone Park and A laska. Other interesting publications from this road are the Yellow Stone Park and Alaska folders {illustrated}contain!tig excellent tuapa respectively of the resorts mentioned, and telling in an interesting manner Oitho most beautiful and marvellous regions on the face of the earth. The broadwater folder, relating to the famous Hot Springs and Natatorium at Helena. Mont., and “National gamo reserves of North America," a book of special Interest to sportsmen. If vou wish to take the trip of a lifetime send to Chas. S. Fee. General Passenger and Ticket Agent, St. Paul, Minn., for copies of these books and folders.

Ad Enjoyable Journey to Washington at Smell Expense Over the Best Route.

Tharelgcnlr on* beatroots, end that it tbslPsnuwlYAele Sfort.UiiM. Kxcurrion tfekatl to tbe National Capital for the U. A. It. Encampment al.o to Baltimore, will be eold out tbii popular thoroughfare at very low round trip ratal September LTth to Mth Inclusive. Although the service on this direct route elands out consptcioasiy aa tba ideal In rallwar eouipment, the special coneeeeione is fare will be as liberal ae an? that may ha granted. <3, A. K. Poe's, individual veterans, their families friends and tbe general public will therefore be given aa opportunity <e visit Washington at verr email expense over a railway on sthich traveling is one round of luxury. Tiekete will be good returning up to apd including October lOlb, end holJere will have tba pnvilage of flopping off at Baltimore on the going or rataraidx trip. Tickets for a eida trip to bittoric Oettraburgpa either the going or return trip :nn be obtained If desired at thsumo through tickets to Washington ere purohnaed. Vaet tbrowfh trains carrying Pullman Vestibule P>tn*, Sleeping. Smoking and Parlor Oara and Modern Dey Coaches depart daily over these lines from principle ettiaa and towns la Indiana. Ohio » nd .‘•'•■Vennaylvanla Side tripa to principal bsltlsflslds aad places familiar to veteiaps oan be conveniently made from Washington, and ample >««l»«f*w a pleasant and tatlafactory visit. If yon make tbwjourney tc Washington over the Pennsylvania Hhert Moss you aaa be sure that tbe accommodations and ooavaniancea at Tour command aya tbe. beat offarad, aad iaclnda all improremeAttUMoAd by railn ay aolanea for anjoyeWa trprtilef. JV rate#, apodal folder giving Ihrqagb time to Baltimore andWnebiagton, or any information regarding thaee «rat claea exeuraiona. piaaae apply to the nearest Penneylvaaia Uae Ticket Agent or address F. Van Duses. Chief Assistant Oeneral Passenger Agent. Pittsburgh. Pp. gr

UTAH.

The land of sunshine and flowers—rich also In mineral aud agricultural resources —ls beat reached by the Rio Grande Western Railway. See that your excursion tickets read both ways via that road, which offers choice of three distinct routes aud the most magnificent railroadsoeaery In the world. Send 35c to J. H. Bennett, kJIH? C l ty ’ *°£ * *PP T of lllußtreted * *•«">* Into the Garden Walled 1 rsasury of the Gods. ”

, ALL THE SAME, ALWAYS. ■train of back: could not walk straight. umd two #% | I *:*•***«* bottle, of -»■ I I > and bruised Ins arm very a . bodly. Ha used St. Jacobs Oil, ■■l B Rt j.- nK . mi rjsi N ” '**“ -irnilMEl - M. J. WALLACE. ? FRANZ X. GOF.LZ. A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CURE. forty-third Yaar Open a Monday, Sap tarn bar a. IndianapolisßusinessUniversitY «U22Mi ' , '>*ln*deScboofluan unrlrslld com?£S2!L > !kii23i!2!" _ by railroad, Industrial. professional and buslnmamea

Scrofula Afflicted me 4 years— blotches all over my body K swelling in my neck, and " Ju in less than a year had - fir lust 40 lbs. I was in- — ~• (I duced by H. L. Tubbs, our drrggist. to try HOOD’S SARSAPAjmSmfc&rnßrnSz KIIXA, and the blotches Mr. G. W. Doner, and lump in my neck disappeared, and j soon began to gain in fleefcIn four months there was none of ,the disease left In my system, and I was as well at ever. G. W. Coker, Osceola, South Dakota Hooo »F>iLLa are the best ramily cathar. tic. gentle and effective. Try a box. Only *5 cents.

A Broken Reed, Indeed.

This, and no mistake,ls the individual whose stamina has waned to such a low ebb, for want of an efficient tonic, that be would certainly topple ever.and fracture something if a bulky subject, such us a fat wife. lor instance, were to lean upon him, Build up, ye lean, pithless and strengthless, with Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters, which wiil enable you to eat and digest heartily, and thus acquire strength and vigor The fortress of life will soon capitulate to the grim scythe-wlelder, death, if you don’t. Nervousness, sleeplessness, biliousness, constipation. malaria, rheumatic and kidney trouble are all conquerable by this superb restorative of health and vigor In this connection, with the use of the Bitters, it would be well for the debilitated invalid to study the wants of his enfeebled stomach with a view to the selection of the most digestible articles of diet.

What an/awful thing it must be for a mule to have cold ears.

I seel it my duty to write you In regard to the benefit your Bradycrotiue has been to my wife. Ever since a child she has been subject to the most droadful headaches, usually several times a month. She has trlod doctors from Maine to California, but none could prevent these spalls running their course. Bradycrotlne has not fallod to effect a cure in a single Instance, one dose usually being sufficient. Oscar F. Frost. Monmouth, Maine. Of all Druggists. Fifty cents Despite the bee’s reputation for steady devotion to business, it is a hum-bug.

To Subscriber of this Paper.

After 35 years constant use of various Pile Remedies I never found anything to do me any good until I tried Dr. Kilmer’s UiO Anointment I used it in connection with the Swamp Root, and 1 tell you It made a new man out of me. J. P. Brown, Osgood. Ind.

The tramp prefers-tbe ties because he can go through without change. . FITS—AII Fit* stopped free by Dr. KHno’i Great Nerve Reptbrer. No Fit* after first days tii« r Marvellous cure*. Treatise and S2.ootrial bottle freo to Fit ca§e«. Send to Dr. Kli&e, 931 Arch Bt., Philadelphia, Pa. No, Ethel, It is not stealing to take a cold, whenever you cad find one unoccupied.

l 9 . A JTATOJtA* VtmVJtn., Epileptic Pits, Falling SickneiS, Hygtor* I ftf St, Vitus Dunce, Nerronsntss, Hypochondria, Melancholia, Ins «brity, Sleeplessness, f slnessp Brain sad Spl- * , c nal Weakness. 3^* This medicine has direct the nerve centers, allaying all irritabilities. and Increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It Is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. iIiLl sSLs&su 8 * feiF Umv prepared onderhlg dtreetton by the KOKNIO MED. DO., Chicago, 111. ■eld by Druggists at SI per BotUe. tteflg Large Siam B 1.7&. S Bottles fbr«o.

THE NEXT MORNINO I PEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor ears It acts gently an the stomach, liver end kidneys, aad lee pleasant laxative. This drink Is made from b -he, and li prepend lor use as eerily as wa It u mS4 LURE’S HEDICIHE AS JiasghM Mil Msi (St sat |1 pss pwlip If yse ssaasS pU maCri jeaTsAArsM Wv.hM suapis. laass rsmdy RsOslm smsps ms tswsl* lest Oaf. la to W tsslltr, l*M b asessmss. eeauM oiUTuip. wooDWaae.ua*v.k. v. I •••••••••€ •Tutt’sTiny Pills* A A single does prodoees banedlelal re- A w salts, giving eheerfelMsi of naiad aad w • baoyancy of body to which you wore before a atraagor. Thev enjoy a pop- WD ularity an paralleled. Pries, SScte. PILES Bill

“August My wife Suffered with indigestion and dyspepsia Life became a burden to her. Physicians failed to give relief. After reading one of your books, I purchased a bottle of August Flower. -It worked like a charm. My wife received immediate relief after taking the first dose. She was completely cured—now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat anything she desires withoht any deleterious results as was formerly the case. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Washington House. Washington, Va. <S> IIKID’S GERMAN COUGH AND KIDNEY CUBE. This great remedyjs the best thing on the market for all maladies that arise from colds. These diseases are many, for when a cold attack's the system It produces a congestion in the blood vessels, and whatever organ is affected is weakened just as this congestion is widespread or small in extent. Reid’s German Couoh an© Kidney Cure relieves the System by stimulating the circulation, inciting thq kidneys to action, and thus enabling the lungs to proceed in their work of removing the carbonic acid from the blood. When this is accomplished the cold is cured and tbe person is restored to health. The ordinary cough remedy seeks to stop the cough simply by drying up or paralyzing the muscles so that the sufferer is unable to cough, but thsy do not seek to remove the cause oMbhe trouble. A cough thus checked is often driven upon the kidneys, and serious trouble is the result. REiDHjj German Cough and Kidney Curb’ opens the pores, stimulates the secretions and drives the disease away. Get it of any dealer, Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111.

II ni II .111. .1. ..mi—' IB t N IG! rim ;th, renew •allli Vdk to -ms,sxtßls&gs) - f rlT —, power Increased. 1 1 iniCO ’ e]«, o rwctTens»V«?^ llllltd a^ffee^g & rose bloom on cheeks)\>cantuies C Complexlonf OR. HABTCR MEDICIM CO., ft Leal*. He/

-Be But faterpit <■ Ceat. SUCKER Tbe FISH 2P.AHD SLICKER Is warranted waterproof, and will keep yea dr/ in tbe hardeststonn. Tbe new POMMEL SLICKER la n perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddle. Bewareof Imitations. Don't bay a coat if the “Pish Brand" It not on It. IllustratedCttaiorneites. A. J. TOWER. Boston, M|Sl. [MS ’9B LYE I Powderedaiid Perfumed m (PATRNTBD) * I The strongest and purast Ly tl made. Unlike other Lye, it being e One powder and packed In a can with r movable lid, the contents arealwaya ready for use. VfUl make the best perfumed Hard Soap la <0 minutes without boiling. It 1s tho best for clsanlag waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, olosets. washiqg bottles, paints, trees, etc. PENN A, SALT M’JPO CO. Gen. Agts., Phil*.. Pa

840,000,000 Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent In IMI. Your Invention may be valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address (or full and intelligent adrloa. (res of'charge, W. W. DUDLEY * o*.. Solicitors of Pateata, Paolfle Bld’g.SßF St N.W., Washington,K.O. Mention this paper. .ft I YON A MIALfT" B ♦erg lm as Moaroe St, Chicago. W ■A WUI BsH free IKeir newly enlhr«e4 CsUlefMef Baud irtalruMs«tn. »»4 fcieipßrau. t« r.M 11 l«stv»tieM. 'WmWbi every ml tstareJ by II an As es Drssi Uf|t, ||\l OfftUiM IssUiKtlMM fsr iotlMf Issdt, 1 1 B 111 I*«ftiw»ss4 Uveas Ma)er i TneUen. Hy // i| Uin«aefcl»Ulli*e«>— PATENTS! PENSIONS Sendfer Inventor * Guide or Bow toObtaina Patent Send for Digest of Penelon and Ttvnn ty Lawn. PAT KICK OTABBEIX, Wash lagt»S, D. O. na <fani |S|pSl°J.Ei.*l?i! w^TwJnuaiSHS « 49 FIT FOLKS REDUCEI KPnimnns johx w. mokkis PtNOIUN Washington, D. C. r Suoceasfelly Proseentes Claims. Late Principal Ere miner U. it Peasion Bureau • ' rreln leetwar.ls adjudicatingclaimsattyalnee HEMORDIA THK OSII nCKE CUKK rhc. st.ee by men. ■MOKMA CO.. If Vultoa at, Mae tevh. IN U 30—08 INDfL.9 ICoeeamptlve* and peopieH who hare weak lungs or A »ih ■ ■os, should use Ptso's Cure for ■ Consumption. It has rand ■ thonsaads. It bee aot talar H edone. It n not bad to take-H It la the best cough syrup. B Sold erorywhere. Kda, I TH * """ . J.