Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 October 1892 — Page 3
a*Ac& Aim Maun* it, it you're a healthy a. They’ll hare a r of their ewri, bo p what your feature*. it health. with its clear ■osj cheeks, and bright • enough t* make any a attractir*. ; pet perfect health, use rilf Dr. Pierce’S FaPrescription. That ttes and promotes all ■oper functions of wo»od, Improves digessnriches the blood, disches and pains, brings King sleep, and restores health, flesh aM strength. "“For periodical pain*, prolapsus and other displacements, bearing-down senaktion*, and “female complaints” generally, it Is so effective that it can be guaranteed. If it doeap’t benefit or cure, you have your money back. Is anything ; that isn’t sold in this way/ likely to be “just as good.” \ LIVERS SSlfe fe- Diabetes* * Bxoeeslve quantity and hljh oolored urine, La Grippe, Ouree the bad after effeots of this trying epidemic and restores lost Visor and vitality. Impure Blood, Botemn, scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches. General Weakness,
Constitution oil run down, loss of ambition, and a disinclination to all sorts of work. • Guarantee—Use contents of Ona Bottle, it not buy «st»u. brorsristi will refund you the price paid. At Druggists, fiOo. Size, SI.OO Size, 'lnvalids' Guide to Hoolth" free—Ooniultation free. Da. Kilmer A Co., Bcigoauton, N. 7. A Woman’s I Lydia E. Pinkham devoted a life’s Remedy study to threubject . ... * . of Female Comfor Woman s plaints, working al- - , ways from the stand* y Diseases. point of reason, with a firm belief that a “ woman beet understands a woman's ills.” That she his done her work well is plainly indicated by the unprecedented success of her great female remedy called Lydia E. Pink/iam's Vegetable Compound No one remedy in all the world has done so much to relieve the iwilk suffering of her sex. ML fiSlaf Her compound goes to vtjf the very root of Female HL-, ’W Complaints, drives out Kp Jjf disease, and re-invigo-rates the entire system. All D runic, tell It, or „nt by mall, la fcrm of Till, or O’ |T| lfTintfn”iT rpMOff*, onnmlj.tcnfel.eo. I’hv rill., Sen. Cenv- * uendinoe frooly nntwerid. Jr"*'/* flEermCr Co., WHAT OTHERS SAY, INCIPIENT PARALYSIS, HEART DISEASE, DYSPEPSU, AND CONSTANT HEADACHE. INDUCED BY LA GRIPPE. { COMPLETELY CURED BY LIVURA.
Litubjl M’f'o. Co., I D*a» Sirs!—“Last j m winter I had la Grippe W B in It* wont form, IcuvpS? 1 Pi ing me in a terrible eon. V_Lg) W dition, my Brain was / ..JM yT confnnod, my Jleert we»k, ‘ 1111(1 m J lß ff* refnied to hold mo up, and tho mu»Jg^\„ ele& wer ® 80 BW ® that It painful tn lie down. ! ff Wsy 1 had continual Bead,v echo, and ererpthlntr I H». J. L. vTkavbr. ate dla trowed we. 1 eoald not work, sleep, or eat, and my right aide bocamo namb. Several doctors told me I had Incipient Paralyals, and that I eonld get no hotter. 1 grew so weak that 1 could not lcavo tho house. Hearing of MTCHKR'3 LITER! I got a bottle and It helped me from tho first. I took 4 bottles In all, and am PERFECTLY BELL In every way, and now work all day. I know tkat PITCHER’S UVERA CUBED ME.” Youm truly, John L. Wsavm. tti |t, Clair St., Cleveland, Ohio. M LIVURA OINTMENT The Great Skin Cure. Corea Eczema, Salt Rhoum, Pimples, Ulcern Itoh, and all affections of tho skin. Heals Cuh\ Braises, Borns, Sonlds, etc. Sold by all Drag, gists, or by mall. Price 85 Cents. I g? vv nvmm Jt'fxVL MS Bile Behns 1 >- Small. _ Boarsnteed to core Bilious Attack*. Kek* Headaoho and CsnallSntUn. <8 in oaoh bottle. Price 860. For sale by druggist*. Picture "T. IT, ID" im sample (low free. A r. WITH « CO., Proprlttort, MW YORK. PILES B» AsthmaS-eSftS Cure for Asthma. Care UuwmalM* mr N< Tmj. Export office, 11*4 Broadway, Now York, ForUrnTrlal (WarREK by Mall, addnas APIA ImToatxe. 00.,*1*1 Tla« at. .OtaalaaaM.OMa | oirr polish in thi world'] and PalnU which •tai® *JJ« hands, with .v*rv Bldk® package RM as lMiiiie i r «*• 1 ■ J'" ■ «•: ■, . " ■■ ■ i 'v
CURRENT COMMENT.
- A BOURBON'S BLAST. Another Assault on the Union Veteran* by a Democratic Paper. Rockford (Ill.) Republican. The following editorial appeared in the Durhaqi-{N. C.) Globe, recently: . "Between Harrison and Cleveland ‘--first, last and all the time—l am for the brave Buffalo man who slapped the dirty pensioners, who, for the most jart, are beggars, in the face. rascals who <!aroe into this country and’ who abused women; who burned homes; who stole all that was in sight; and to-day, without an honor able scar, are bleeding this country, and lam helping to pay for it. Let the hired Yankees howl. I am of the South and for the South: and until my blood is cold I shall fight for honesty acid for a white man’s doun ti%” This led the Inter Ocean to remark: “If Mr. Cleveland should be elected again he ought to appoint the editor of the Durham Globe us pension commissioner. He would be just the man to do the in the face when pensioners appealed to the Government they imagined they saved." r The clippingand comment caught the eye of Major N. C. Warner, of tfes city, and he penned the following tcrthe editor of the Durham Globe: Sir:Yj'he inclosed newspaper clipp ng is iroiia the Inter Oceau of this date. As an Md soldier who has up to this date voted the Democratic ticket in the belidrf that the victors could as ford to to the van ; quished, fWrite to ask you ifithe report is trtrs that your paper published the article quoted, and if you will do me tne kindness to state the object or purpose you iiad in view in its publication N. C. Warner.” Instead of rWying to this letter the North Carolina imbecile pub lished the personal epistle and made it an excuse for n second editorial more infamous andYenemous, if possible, than the first. \ He first scores the Inter Ocean, l*efe\ring to the editor, Wm. Penn as a “desperate and dirty skunk,’’ nnd concludes with the following choice bon mot of patriotism and elegante of expression: I “But apart from all mis our Rockford friend wants theifvictors to be
magnanimous to the van|buished. We are glad of this; But l«b us suppose the case just one holy minute. Who Were the victors and #ho were the vanquished? When thtfgreat Lee in peace and the great Giant in love met under the famousjtpple tree at Appomattox, then thetl was no rancor and no discord. Lie knew that impoverished homes ans-homes that had been gutted—everfebit of flour and pound of wcon taken from them—hfc knew tnit in a surrender it was merely*tljp reception by Grant of a cultured people submitting to the brutal force of a tlSlois and a voracious North. ” Talk about your magnanimous vanquished, and let the movers go into the olosfets and bring off, the empty £ray unworms—and,.-t,qi tear drops ere. Tlhlk about your vanquished, in all yoi|r ardor, but the picture, of the Northern prison hells where the brave bots in gray perished, rotted, and had ne worms feed upon them, and whatfdoes Nixon and his Northern clan care about that? Magnanimous, indeed. We want the sneakp and lousy beggars at the North whb ravished our women and
burned oi r homes and plundered our I people, t» shut their guat-blowu i mouths a id let the truth be told, | Aud the jfrlobe, which despises this ' burglary/and grand larceny called the penston system, proposes to see to It tba/t Grover Cleveland sits in the saddle the next four years and slaps j face. The pension fraud must go. Go, add it should go to the depths of hell, and Harrison and his hirelings Jshould go with it." A tier the campaign of 1884 had closed, Mr. Blaine prophetically j stated that the settled purpose of i the Democratic party of this country \ was k> maintain a solid South at ail ! hazards and to depend upon New York anlLßrooklyn to do the rest. I If the fortfcoing editorial is a true index of Yl*po sentiment throughout the and there is nothing visible to the faked eye which would lead a casual spectator to conclude otherwise, the issue will be distinctly drawn between a solid South and a solid North. There is no domain for sentiment to work In, when such vile and rancorous expressions as used by thiß North Carolina editor go unrebuked- It. will reouire good witnesses to show that tne young men of the South are any morepatriotic than the moss-grown reptile
who publishes the Globe and caters to a sentiment in the community which will support such a paper. There is no doubt but what the Democratic soldiery ,of New York State couldjnatl the lid on the political coffin of the South and bury the remains beyond any hope of resur reotion, add probably will if the North Carolina editorial reptile voices the donsensus of public sentiment, as ift appears that he does, not answering a courteous letter except by repeating his original libel and following it up with new matter more infamous if possible than the rot that went before. DEMOORATIO PRBCBDENT. Labor /Commissioner Peck has a good Democratic precedent for refusing to disclose the private correspodeace on which he hosed his report. / That precedent was made by no loss Democratic authority than Grover J Cleveland while President. When He suspended George M. Duskln, District Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama, and appointee John D. Burnett to the vacancy, President Cleveland refused to lay/the papers in the case before the United States Senate. In preference to these papers he said: J "I consider them in no proper Kcnsd as upon the files of ths oepartmenf, but aa deposited there for my convenience, remaining atill oomfrlMVrt*, 1 j 9 custody I might do so with entire
propriety, and If I saw, fit to destroy them no one could complain.” _ Mr. Peck was appointed Labor tJommissfoner of New-Yorfc by. Gov. Cleveland, *ffd he has been a painstaking follower of Cleveland, even to the extent of following his example in refusing id make public thg papers on which he based his report. The Democrats who are blind followers of Cleveland should read his reply to the United States Senate before they push the case too far against Commissioner Peck. —p---’ ' : ■ d A GREAT ADMINISTRATION. In his characteristic interview, published in the Inter Ocean yesterday, ex-G'overnor Oglesby was asked what he thought of President Harrison’s letter of acceptance. Not content with praising its plainness, which is in sharp contrast with the evasive Cleveland letter, nor vet with praising his uniform felicity with tongue or pen, he goes on to speak of hisad ministration as a whole. “He has never, ” said Uncle Dick, “made a mistake, has never blundered once, aud for months he had the State Department on his shoulders as well as the Presidency. Nd man ever made a better record than has GeueiaP Harrison. He is honest, courageous, says what he means so that people understand him perfectly, and he has made no mistakes. *?
The necessary prominence given to the principles of protection is liable to obscure somewhat the splendor and magnitude of the record made by President Harrison and his Cabinet. Had there been no McKinley bill fdr him td sigh, tiphold and execute, the record of his administration outsido of tariff legislation would have been sufficient inspiration for a successful contest. It has been thoroughly and emphatically American. Grover Cleveland may have suited Sackville West better than Harrison, and no wonder. The foreign policy of Mr. Bayard was weak and cringing. The faintest growl from the British lion sent the cold shivers through him, and no foreign natioii was poor enough to do us honor. The flag of our country was insulted with impunity, treaties discreditable to our diplomacy and in abandonment of our established rights were negotiated. Gen. Harrison changed all that. He placed at, the head of the State Department the great statesman, Jas. G. Blaiue, and when the burden became tbo heavy for the Secretary to bear the President took it upon his own shoulders; as Governor Oglesby suggests, and the country suffered no loss. That was one of the most remarkable feats of statesmanship. O-ir foreign affairs were in a very critical condition, and to carry forward the Work so able a man as Mr. Blaine bad in hand, and still keep control of the general affairs of the whole government, was indeed a most astonishing achievement. American influence, so seriously impaired under Cleveland, has been restored,and more than that. Never unless it be when Decatur was on the Mediterranean and Perry on Lake Erie, has American prestige abroad been so high as it is now. Our victory in the Samoan case; the vindication of American rights in Behring Sea, the settlement of the Chilian imbroglio, including the attack on the crew of the Baltimore, with its final outcome, showed the spirit of Andrew, Jackson and the sagacity of a Talleyrand. Then came reciprocity, with its long fist of benefits. Nine-tenths of the imported sugar supply of the United States and from three-fifths to threefourths of the coffee supply are now regulated by reciprocity engagements, aud as some one has fitly said, “a farmer even while he sweetens and drinks bis coffee helps to sell his wheat in a foreign market.” The list of countries with which .reciprocity .treaties .have been made is a long one, and includes besides nearly -all American countries Germany, France and Aqstria Hungary the most important of these being the one with Germany. The increase of the foreign demand for our farm products is enormous and largely explains the present prosperity of our people. The wonderful improve inent since March, 1889, in our foreign relations would be enough, if standing alone, to demand, for business and patriotic reasons, the reelection of President Harrison, especially when the choice is between him and his immediate predecessor.
WHY THE MUGWUMPS RAGE.
The foolish Now York mugwumps, who are so bent on bringing criminal prosecution against Labor Commissioner Peck, may succeed in making him some trouble. Whether he will be annoyed by their operations or enjoy the excitement of the hunt depends upon his temperament. But One thing is certain. They are doing the Republican party a great favor by the renewed attention thus called to the report. It is now five weeks since the original publication of that report, or summary. Manv who passed it by at the time, or gave it no special attention, are now curious to know what there is in it. For the benefit of this class we refer to it especially, as all sorts of misrepresentations have bee made.
The report contains two tables and only two. The first shows the inoreases and decreases of wages and the amount of production in 1891 as compared with 1890 in slxtjr specified industries, those industries embracing a great number of trades. For example, clothing is one induatry made up of 136 different trades. The tablo shows decreases of wages in twenty-two and of production in twenty industries. The wage decreases aggregate $1,193,741.28; the production decreases aggregate $5,927,097.15. Had these figures had no offsetting increases every mugwump would have been happy and Mr. Peck would have been praised to the skies. But to the confusion and humiliation of the free traders, who insisted that protection does not protect, it appears that the increases greatly overbalance the decreases. The net results are: Increase in wages, $0,377,925(09; net increase in K* notion, $31,315,130.68. This, in , is the showing of table No. V. Governor Hill brushes this aafdc with remarks about the increase in
general enlargement of plants, etc., but his friend Peek says that “there were no less than 89,717 instances ing the same yeaiV’that is, during the first year of the McKinley bill. This is a definite statement and no reasonable doubt exists of its absolute accuracy. The second table is entirely devoted to earnings, and the figures given harmonize with those of the other table without duplicating them. There are in this second table sixtyeight industries, and 75 pfer cent of yearly earnings. In the cases of no less than 28,500employes an increase yas shown averaging~s23,ll a year per each employe. Take only the fffty-one industries showing an increase leaving out the seventeen showing a decrease, and the average Increase for each employe is $43.36 a year. One other point is covered by the report, namely, strikes. For the year 1891 the total number was 4,519, as against 6,258 in 1890, a decrease 01 1,740. More than half of these strikes were in the building trades, which, from the nature of the case, are not reached directly bv the tariff. Taken as a whole this report is an irrefutable argument in support of protection as a benefit to wage earners.
CLEVELAND’S LATEST LETTER.
Mr. Cleveland’s itch of scribbling has broken out again. His friends. have warned him to keep off the epistolary reef, and his opponents have guyed him about it, but all to no purpose. On the slightest excuse he falls to quill driving. His .latest published missive must have been written just as he leave the Bay of confederate Gray Gables; for the jungle of the Tammany tiger. It was Addressed to Clark Howells, editor of the Atlanta Constitution, He seems to be disturbed lest he should fail to carry the electoral vote of Gedrgia. Nothing could be more absurd. Wheh General Weaver and Mrs. Lease retired from the State because they could not en joy free speech the carrfpaign virtually ended.
Mr. Cleveland seems to be troubled because stories were circulated by Congressman Watson and others which, if true, would show that the ex-President is not quite so mossy and rock ribbed in his Democratic prejudices as the regulation mossbacks of the South. He makes haste to deny these stories, anxious, apparently, to be credited with all the prejudices and meannesses chargeable to the worst element of the South. His wife did not stay away from the unveiling of the Lee monument because for fear of having to be polite to the daughter of Jeff Davis, and as for Frederick Douglass the courtesies extended to him were purely official. 1 If there is one thing more than all else that Grover Cleveland need not borrow trouble about it is the alienation of the vote of Georgia or any other Southern State because bis Bourbonism is not sufficiently pronounced. If he had done nothing else than make his pension veto record that would be enough. He fairly reveled in the delight of slap-, ping old soldiers, their widows, and orphans in the face. Nor is that record forgotten North or South. It is too conspicuous for that- But even if it were not what can the South do about it? That summer home may or may not have been called Gray instead of Red, White or Blue Gables out of deference to the Confederate color, but certain it is that the old Johnnie Reb element cannot fail to take him in preference to either General Harrison or Gen. Weaver, both of whom drew the sword of victorious battle against the Confederacy. If Mr. Cleveland loses any Southern electoral votes it will not be becauae the moss of his Bourbonism was not thick and long enough. His danger lies in quite a different direction.
But apart from his individual record and sympathies the Democrats of the South could not falter in his support. The record of his party and the character of his platform must have removed all doubt. What if bis wife did not like to pool her honors with the daughter of Jeff Davis, he himself stands on a platform which borrowed its chief plank from nullification and secession. Protection is unconstitutional, said Calhoun aud South Carolina in 1832, Davis and the South in 1860, and Cleveland and the Democracy in 1892. The Chicago platform of last June rendered wholly unnecssaay any such letter as Grover Cleveland's to Clark Howell’s, jr., especially when that platform is read in the light of Cleveland’s pension record.
A Parisian Daniel.
London Telegraph. During a discussion at a local case at Vincennes between a number of the ‘‘bigwigs” of the place, a bet was made between M. Maitre, a councillor of the District and a veterinary Burgeon, and M. Ango, a wholesale butcher, that the latter would not enter the lions' cago in a menagerie then showing at Vincennes in company with the lion tamer Lorange, the proprietor of the wild beasts. The sum at stake was £2O. The news of the wager spread through the little town, where M. Ango is well known, and as a natural consequence the show was packed with anxious sightseers at the evening performance, when the bet was to be lost or won. Punctually at 9 o’clock the lion tamer and M. Ango entered the cage, in which there were no lions, and after the cheers which greeted their appearance bad subsided the former advanced to the bars and in a polite speech informed the public that M. Ango had won his bet, having accompanied him into the lions’ cage.’ “But what about the lions?" yelled the audience. “This is the lions' cage, and nothing was said about the lions being in it,” explained M. Lorange. The public sjsw the joke and cheered M. Ango <o the echo us he withdrew from the cage. Curious to relate, M. Ataitn* flatly refused to pav the money and is to be sued for the amount, as it Iwaa understood that the wager should be spent on a banquet to commemorate tie fete of Sept. 22.
— r * j ■ T StKOEBELT BBXmm K. ll IEVK that I ahonld have b*«r, dead long 1 ago If It had not been for affrrt. y Hood* Saraapar ilia. I W had a bad humor that Tt|_ 1i would not yield to any WP- ) r treatment, and my *tom- »* d ach was very -week. I was hardly able to get 4g^S3mtßSL lßhk around when I began takChaUtlna Temple. In* Hood's SarsparlUa. 1 began to Improve slowly until after I had taken some 10 or 18 bottle*. ( considered myself well once more. HOOD S SARSAPRIfcLA did me so much good that It seems as If It must do tbers goo A” Mrs. Christina Temple, Bangor. Me, - Hooo b Piu.o are the best after-dinner pills nsfttsfr digestion. eureheadaebe.-Try atwa-
EARTHQUAKE WAVES.
A Terrible Accompaniment of Earthquake. Frederick D. Chester, In Oct St Nicholas) While we usually think of earthquakes as taking place on land, they do, indeed, occur with equal devastation in the ocean. Thai point in the earth at which the explosion or breaking takes place is called the earthquake-focus; and from it what are known as earthquake-waves pass to the surface. What do these earthquakes resemble? Take a basin full of water, and dip a glass tube in it. Blow through the tube and you Will see bubles rising to the surface, and circular waves passing out. The disturbance at the bottom of the basin corresponds with the explosion or snappingof the crust at the earth-quake-focus, with this difference that instead of water waves, the latter produces earth-waves, passing through the ground. When the city of Lisbon, Portugal, was:destroyed, the earthquake took place in the bottom of the sea, fifty miles west of the city. Yet it so agitated the water that a wave sixty feet high dashed over Lisbon, destroying it and its inhabitants in a space of six minutes. Another earthquake, occuring just off the coast of Peru, made such a gigantic wave that a large vessel was thrown several miles inland. These are called earthquake waves. They are the largest known waves, and are caused by the heaving and rocking of the bed of the sea. In deep water such waves are not very high, but their motion extends far down into the ocean. When they reach shallower water, however, they heap up like a gigantic wall, and, with a force more terrible than fire or sword, they sweep on, bearing destruction witn them. Huge ships are tossed like straws far inland, or mingle their ruin with that of a harbor town. The Irish-Amealcans of New York are organizing for the erection of a monument in that city to the memory of Robert Emmet.
Keep Off the Enemy.
A foe who larks In ambush Is a more dan?erous antagonist than one who attaoks us In he open field, and for whose assaults we are In a measure prepared. That dangerous enemy to health, malaria, must he encountered fully armed. Its thrust* are sudden, unexpected and deadly, and can only be guarded against with oertalnty by fortifying the system by a course of defensive medication. The surest defense against chills and fevers, bilious remittent, dumb ague and ague cake, is Hostetter’g Stomaoh Bitters, which Is also an eradicator of the most obstinate forms of malaria whloh resist the action ofr -ordinary specific, and the virus of which remains In {her system even when the more violent symptoms are subdued. Constipation, liver complaint, dyspepsia ahd kidney troubles are always relieved by this genial remedy. Governess (reading)—And before an Indian goes on the war path he adorns his belt with locks of human hair and paints his face. Small Boy—Why, Miss Passy, that’s what you do—only you put the hair on your head. The use of Ely’s Cream Balm, a sure core for Catarrh and Cold In head, Is attended with no pain, Inconvenience or dread, which can be said of no other remedy. I feel it my duty to say a few words In gard UVEly’s Cream Balm, and I do so entirely without solicitation. I have used It half a year, aud have found It to he most admirable. Ffiave suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since I was a little boy and I never hoped for cure, bnt Cream Balm seems to do even that. Many of my acquaintances have used ft with excellent results.—Oscar Ostrum, 43 Warren Are., Chicago. —— Apply Balm Into each nostril. It Is Quickly Absorbed. Olvea Belief at once. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mall. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York.
$3.50-TO CHICAGO.-$3.50.
Tho rate from Indianapolis to Chicago over the Pennsylvania Line has been reduced to 83.50. Morning train leave* at 11:20, and night train at 11:80 making close connections at union station In Chicago with trains for the North and North west. Call on nearest ticket agent or address W. F. Brunner, Dist. Pass’g’r, Agt., Indianapolis, Indiana.
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 alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from the Dr. Harter Medicine Co. Thi* house places a crescent on every thing they make and publish. Look for it, send them tho name of the word, and they will return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS or samples free.
The flvo o’clock tea la the grab that makes the butterfly of season, For Indigestion, constipation, slok headaohe. weak stomach, disordered livei—take Bpeeham’s Pills. For sale by all druggists. “Summer Stationery” Is advertised In a a New York newspaper. A little lighter quality of llaen Is desirable for spring use. * No Half-Wat. Cure your oough thorough It. Hale’s Hohht of ho rehound ,of Tab Will dolt. -«ww.»,. , - Pies’* ToevßAsn Peon ear* la oat mtnate. The most exasperating Insect of the present month Is the Presidential May-be. J. A. JOHNSCR Medina. N. Y., says: “Hall'* Catarrh Cure cured me.” Sold by Druggists. 78c. If “the greatest happiness comes from the greatest activity,* an aut up a fellow's trousers leg must be In ecstasies.
Cost and Curo. p or Pottstown, Pa. . „ I was a sufferer from 111 neuralgia for ten years; - a -'- 7 tried aU kinds ofremeYears, dies without relief, and had given up all hope. I tried a bottle of , err. jaoom oil, and it effected such One wonderful relief that 1 4 .M* recommend it to all. Chas. Law, Jr. Bottle.
IndianapolisßusinessUniversitY i ...-JWE S&pmrnUßjHM&JSSfc-
When Nature
Needs assistance it is best to render it promptly, but oae should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed, The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company, ; ’: T
Harvest Excursfons.
Lake Erie A Western B. (Natural gas route), has arranged to ran a series or arvest and Home Seo ker* excursions October 25. 1893, to all pofnts-Alabama, -Argaaaaa, Kentucky. Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi ahd Texas only, „ This Is an excellent opportunity for all those desiring to seek homes In the West, as there are millions of 'acres of valuable Government lands inviting settlement w thln the territory covered DV this series of excursions Bo sure vour tickets read via the “Natural Gas Route,” the great through line traversing the wonderful gas and oil regions of Ohio and Indiana, furnishing elegant Reclining Chair Cars between Sandusky and the Missouri river free of charge. • • , , For tickets, rates, time and general Information call on any ticket agent of the above rente, or address H. C. PARKER, Traffic Manager, Indianapolis; 0, F. DALY, G. P.&T.A. A new foreign Idea Is Invisible microphones in cells to record the secret talk of prisoners. This is proving that walls have ears with a vengeance.
A Practical Farmer.
I received great benefit from the use of Swamp-Boot. I suffered for some length of time With ohronto kidney difficulty, sccompan led by Intense pain in the back and eonettta. tion generally run down. It la a great medicine and shall always be kept on my farm, I recommend it to all my neighbors. S. A Jackson, Liberty, Ind. An afterdinnerspeech: “Check,please.’
Have You Asthma?
Da IL EOoivvuAffir. Bt. Paul. Minn., wiF mall a trial package of Schlffmann’s Asthma Curo free to any sufferer. Gives instant relief in worst cases, and cures where othen .all. Name this paper and send address.. FITS.—AII Fits Bto peed free by Dr. K line’* Great Nerve llejtorer. No Fit* after first day’s use. Mar* velous cures. Treatise and |B.OO trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. HI Arch Bt.. Philo, Pa.
B p lSrll ErJ Meeplesioess Cured. iv I am glad to testify that I used Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic with the best sueoess for sleeplessness, and believe that 'i is really a great relief for suffering humanity. 1 E. FRANK, Pastor. Bt. Bevarin, Keylerton P. 0., Pa. Loo AH, Ohio, Oot. 18,188 ft I used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic la the case of a 13-year old boy for a oase of St. Vitas Dance of two years’ standing. His eondition was most lamentable, as hi* limbs wtre constantly in motion; and at table his hands eoald not hold knife, fofk or spoon. The effeotof this medicine was at onee noticeable to all, and the boy himself remarked, "I know It helps me,” and before the seoond bottle was used up, he Insisted that there was no necessity of tak> tag mom as he was entirely cured ’IIHT, pwr.FHNBRROER. Mill This remedy he* been prepared by the Bevsrend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne. Ind- since UNL and Unowpreparedtmderhlacllrectton by the f. | KOENIG MED. 00., Chicago, 111. Bold by Druggists at •! per Botda. Cftrgg ggttwßtae.ai.7g. « Bottles for *B. , nm as SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof, ami will keep you dry in tho hardest norm. Tbt new POMMEL SLICKER Is a perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddle. Beware of Imitations. Don’t buy a coat if the “ Fish Brand” It not on It. Illrntra* |ted Catalogue ftee. A. J. TOWER, Beaton, Ease. YOU NEED NOT FEAR that people will know your hair Is dyed ff you use that perfect Imitation of nature, Ms Hair Dye It Impart* a glossy color and (Tech life to the hair. Price, *l. Office, 88 Park Place, N. Y.
ADAPTATION.
In the Atlantio ocean, in the mountain lake, in the way side spring, in the dew drop, we may see the re flection of the same great sun. The! sun has a way of adapting himself to ocean, lake, spring and dew drop! and whatever our capacity we may see the sun in each and all,” so says a celebrated preacher. What is true in a general way is true also in minor particulars. It is true of the Laxative Gum Drops that can minister to the necessities of or cure dpspepsia in the strongest man. These gum drops are mild and gentle, but perfect and certain in the action. There is no case of constipation no matter how obstinate they cannot cure. They should however be taken in doses from three to five every night before going to bed until the bowels are perfectly regulated. Taken in this way they produce the best result without pain, griping or annoyance. They come in two sizes. The small size, cost 100, the large onea 25c. They can be obtained of any dealer. Sylvan Remedy 00., Peoria, 111. ■ i i
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ml W JR I I I 1 t-j-rrt nri Ae« AswAAl 1 STStI f yflltlp/ttf 4ft rtf.ni dots- as an exceneni reuieoy in siici villft/ oTdealers wf Aiways insist on Having iioscaee < German Syrup, f at vssmt rj *jj2riz> " it.vtese ■ Em h e
RELIEVES aU Stomach Dlstrcs^^ RE STORE S^Nomalj^arnffiafivn, *«. HARTER MEDICINE OR., BLLWffc MF ' " ujg I Powdered and PfifußWu Bjßf The strongest and purest Lye JA made. Unlike other Lye, K being Aafine powderandpackedlaacaß JMml* <*wlthrmovable lid, the contents readyjcr nea TO A® ■> ■ bottles I (I lUU * " ,U "* Get. Agt*., Phtla., Pa. Earned by the BeU Telephone Patent la ISM. Your invention may be valuable. Yon should protect it by patent Addrea* for full and Intelligent advice, free of charge. W. W. DUDLEY * CO„ Paelflo Bld’g.SMFSt N.W., Waehlagtoo.D.C. Mention this paper. bend for Inventor’s Guide or How to Obtain* Digest of Honainiriou.». c. | , . ■■ttai | i> ! |^P|yO|QJUWBJIWJIoBBIB. I Jyral aTala war, 15adjudicatingelahns. «»?store *7.so. I |s The shortest lias to Chicago, Milwaukee, ** Pan Minneapoiie. Puluth.Omehs.beßver.Sehfraacteo The year 1888 Uvnnwfljnnn Low - r ate ha* been an ex- UAUUUIUUi o eptlonally YWto- frnn for all sections _ ~ , *' of the Great £> OIIIIIW6SI UUKWR Southwest Now Ar(;rsT 30 N^ld^xlc” Agt, walnut vxx Address O. , for free aQIITh rj* nip. AgentA^Sßi'
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