Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 June 1893 — Page 7
Jk A PULL STOMACH' ought to cause you no discomfort whatever. II it does, though—if there’s any trouble Rafter eating—take Dr. Pierces Pellets. They’re a iWperfect and convenient vestpocket remedy. One of these |tlnv sugar-coated, anti-bilious B granules at a dose regulates B and corrects the entire system. Sick or Bilious Headaches, Clonic stipatloo. Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and permanently cured. They’re the smallest, easiest to take, cheapest, and best. They’re guaranteed to give satisfaction or money is returned. __ is perfectly, permanently, positively cured by Doctor 1 M Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Pr The proprietors of this med--1 m icino prove that by their 1 % offer. It’s |SOO cash for a case of Catarrh which they cannot cure. Bv all druggists, 50 cents, WHAT OTHERS SAY.~ DREADFUL SCRQIUU SINCE CHILDHOOD. THE BEST PHYSICIANS FAIL TO MAKE A CURE. BANISHED COMPLETELY BY PITCHER’S LIVURA Liyura Mfg. Co. : f ENTtKMKN: Ever ■o I was a child ve years old I have Bred with scrofula, ch broke out all over face, with swellings my neck and knee. My right knee was bo terribly swollen that it was almost the size of .a football. I grew nervous, had no energy, and feltail hrs. d. h.beazley. tired out, and, besides, my stomach troubled me, and I could eat very little food without its causing great distress. Of all the physicians that treated me, not one did me any good. I began taking PITCHER'S LIVURA last fall, and though I have used only one bottle, I am feeling perfectly well, and entirely free from scrofula. The eruptions and Swelling have disappeared, and my food does not distress me now. PITCHER’S LIVURA has done me more good than all the doctors who treated me so long. Yours truly, Mbs.B.H.Beazley, Nashville, Tenn. Cor.N. Cherry and Taylor Sis. 44 LIVURA OINTMENT, THE GREAT SKIN CURE. Cures Eczema, Salt Bheum, Pimples, Ulcers, Itch, and all affections of the skin. Heals cuts, bruises, burns, scßlds, etc. Sold by all drag, gists, or by mall. Prioe 3B Cents. Tux Livtoa Mrc. Co., Nashville, TennUnlike Die Dutch Process ' QjZ No Alkalies jgy Other Chemicals leKv -PWjSh are used In the preparation of |WT W. BAKER & CO.’S J weakktGocoa m jp! ’MI which i» absolutely M ; p: jJrTI pure and soluble. NB | M Ts j| It has more than three timet R 3 ’ fflWTjftW the strength of Cocoa mixed wltll Starch, Arrowroot or Bugar, and is far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mas* Every Month many women suffer from Exceeeive or I Scant Menstruation; they don’t know ” who to confide In to get proper advioa. Don’t confide in anybody but try Bradfield’s Female Regulator • Specific for PAINfUL, PROFUSE, SCANTY, SUPPRESSip and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION, w Book to “WOMAN” mailed free. I BRAOFIELO REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. I BeU by all DraggUta. silefleans Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Constipation, Sick-Headache, etc. 25 cents per bottle, at Drug Stores. Write for sample dose, free. J.f. SMITH & York. Ely's Cream Balm CATARRHoS Price 50 Cents. Apply Halm Into each Ely Bros.. M Warren St..N.T. IhMlSsjis Cures Sick Headache ADlliM Mor i> hlnn Habit Cared la 10 With Pastes, Enamels, and Patnta which stain tbo hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Bun Stove Pollah la Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains aix ounces; when moistened will ■take several boxes of Past* Polish. <•* lAS AN ANNUAL SALEJtf 3,000 TONS.
THE WORLD'S FAIR.
The John Ball Locomotive and Train, —The Microphone. The famous John Bull engine, with its antique passenger coaches, which have so long done duty as chicken houses, arrived in Chicago for the World’s Fair, utter an eventful trip from New York city, over the Pennsylvania lines. Thousands of people congregated at the different stations to watch the old train pass, and at many points perfect ovations were given. Several weeks ago it was taken to the shops near Jersey City, overhauled and placed in a condition for the most momentous trip of its eventful existence. As the illustration shows, the engine presents a strange contrast to the magnificent locomotives of the present day. While the essential principles of locomotion by steam is the same in the old and new, the mechanism is
entirely different. One of the most notable feature of the John Bull is the pilot, commonly known as the cow-catcher. As originally constructed in England there was no pilot attached, but when the engine was placed in service on the Camden & Amboy road it was found absolutely necessary to provide a pilot in order to assist the machine in taking curves. . Mr. Stevens'set himself the task of planning one, and although it was a crude and awkward .affair, it served the purpose. The first pilot was a frame one made of oak, eight by four feet, pinned together at the corners. Under the forward end were a pair of wheels 26 inches in diameter, while the other end was fastened to an extension of the axle outside of the forward drivingwheels, a§ it was found that a play of about one inch oh each side of the pedestal of the front wheels was necessary in order to get around the •urves. Robert L. Stevens, the
founder of the Camden & Amboy railroad, was responsible for the importation, of the engine, as he ordered it from Stevenson, the English inventor. It was completed in May, 1831, and arrived in America three months later. Isaac Dripps, a young mechanic, made the first experimental trip, and after many trials considerable change was made in the machinery. Wood was originally used for fuel. The John Bull weighs 22,000 pounds, exclusive of the tender. The ordinary standard passenger locomotive in use on the Pennsylvania railroad at the present time weighs 176,000 pounds, or more than five times as much as its original predecessor. The curious contrivance, resembling a poke bonnet, which surmounts the tender, was called the “gig-top.” In it sat the forward
brakernan, who not only kept a sharp lookout for other trains approached on the same track, but signalled to the rear brakernan when occasion required, and worked the brakes on the locomotive and tender by a long lever which extended up between the knees. There was no bell-cord nor gong on the locomotive, so all communications between engineer and brakemen was by word of mouth. All these original features are retained in the restored engine. Hardly less unique than the locomotive itself are the passenger coaches on the historic train. Some twentyfive years ago a farmer near South Amboy bought one of the discarded coaches of the old Camden & Amboy railroad. He removed it from its trucks, and, planting it on posts in the ground, converted it into a chicken coop. It served in this capacity until a few months ago, when a representative of the Pennsylvania .railroad, looking for relics, happened upon it, and entered into negotiations for its purchase, 'fhe thrifty farmer, realizing that a lapse of
time had endowed his hennery with increased value, demanded a price which represented compound interest on th§ original purchase-money, but the matter was adjusted, Bud the passenger cnach of fifty years ago transformed into a chicken coop Is once more fixed upon its trucks, and went to Chicago as a part of the John Bull train. After its recovery the coach was refitted and reupholstered, so that appears now in all the pristine glory of its palmy days. The history of the other cpach is not quite so romantic. It was found some years ago in a lumber yard in a New Jersey town among a mass of rubbish, and quietly tucked away in the shops by a far-sighted official of the company, who foresaw that just such an occasion as this would bring it into requisitioh some day. CARING FOR THE CROWD. In the light of actual experience the predictions of the alarmists before the Fair opened are amusing.
THE JOHN BULL LOCOMOTIVE AND TRAIN.
It was said that the city would be so overcrowded with strangers that camps would have to be established for their accommodation in the parks. It was also hinted that the transportation facilities to Jackson !Park would prove entirely inadequate, and there were some doubts as to the food supply holding out. Two weeks of the Fair have demonstrated that in regard to room for visitors, food supply and transportation facilities the apprehensions of the timid were without foundation. Chicago contains from 15,000 to 20,000 strangers, but their presence would scarely be noticed if they were not seen in large numbers at Jackson Park. They are not overcrowding the hotels, nor are they besieging private houses with applications for board and lodgings. They have not as yet been compelled to take refuge in the parks, neither have they been com- ! pelled to walk to and from Jackson I Park. The biggest crowds have, of
REPARING THE WORLD’S FAIR GONDOLAS
THE MACMONNIES FOUNTAIN.
course, not come yet, but when thej r do arrive they will find that Chicago is. able to take care of all of them. The microphone is the latest invention of telephonic science and is the chief feature of the Bell company’s exhibit. It is a simple looking little instrument, but it magni--86- bbunck =a thousand fold. The microphone has no commercial advantage over the ordinary telephone, and is simply shown at the Fair as an exhibit o~f microphonic transmission and loud response. The advantage gained by the microphone is that the speaker can direct his conversation from any part of the room, instad of talking into the transmitter. As yet the microphone is-in embryo and is sent to the exposition just as the telephone was sent to the Centennial—more as a
curiosity than as an invention of commercial value.
THE MICROPHONE.
The ten Sunday _ newspapers in New York, together”with the three in Brooklyn, published one Sunday 420 pages, altogether aggregating 3.000 columns and 5,500,000 words.
A Matter of Health iT costs more to make Royal Baking Powder than any other, because its ingredients are more highly refined and expensive. But the Royal is correspondingly purer and higher in leavening strength, and of greater money value to the consumer. The difference in cost of Royal over the best of the others does not equal the difference in leavening strength, nor make good the inferior work of the cheaper powders, nor remove the impurities which such powders leave in the food. Where the finest food lis required, the Royal Baking Ponder only can be used. .... Where the question of health is no baking powder but Royal can be used with safety. All others are shown by official analyses to contain lime, ammonia or alum.
Rubber Trees in Nicaragua.
Lieut. W. N. King, Jr., in Harper's Weekly. A forest of rubber trees may be detected without the eye of an expert, for they are scarred and dying from the wounds of the machete. The rubber hunter reminds me of the nan who ‘ ‘killed the goose that laid the golden egg.” Each tree will yield mly a certain amount of the precious juice per year and retain its vitality. When one of these improvident fel- . ows makes a discovery, however, mlv a few months suffice to place Pis bonanza in the ranks of the many that have gone before. In consequence you may traverse these forests from end to end without seeing i virgin tree. The ordinary specimen of Nicaragua is from fifty to >ne hundred feet high and about two 'eet in diameter. The bark is white ind the leaves oval, with a slight indination downwards. The cuts are made about two feet apart and generally extend from the ground to the branch, channels being scored in the sides to lead the juice into a bag. The average yield of a tree is from ive to seven gallons of a milky fluid. This is mixed with the juice of the ‘wisth,” which hastens congelation. After this operation the crude rubber is baled up and shipped north So be refined and further prepared for commerce. Another tree very similar to the rubber, and often :aken for it, is the cow tree. This fields a liquid very much like milk n taste and appearance, and more dian once was drunk in coffee by the jngineers.
A Capitalist.
Yankee Blade. Old Gent (to beggar to whom he las given a cent) —Now, my young nan, what shall you do with that -join? —■=- ——— —— Beggar—Well, I hardly know, juv’nor, whether to purchase an anluity or invest in railway stock. Yhich do you advise? George Etiot’s grave, at Higbgate, iear London, is said to be in a sad itate of neglect.
Mr*. Thereto, Hartson Albion, P*. Misery turned to Comfort Kidney Troubles. Sleeplessness, Distress All Cured. ‘•Albion, Erie Co.. Pa., Feb. 18, *93. “I can truly say that Hood's Sarsapllla has done more for me than all tbeperscriptlonsand other medicines I have ever taken. For fourteen years I have suffered with kidney troubles; my back being so lame at times that X Coaid Not Raise Myself up out of my chair. Nor eould 1 turn myself In bed. I could not sleep, and sufl'ered great distress with my food I have taken four bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla with the most gratifying results. I feel like a new person, and my terrible sufferings have all gone. Lllb is Comfort. compared to the misery it used to te. I can now go to bed and have a good night's rest; can eat heartily without any distress. 1 am Hood’s Cures willing this should be published for others good." Mbs. Thebes* Hartson. Ho«d’s Pills cure Constipation by rtstor tng the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal JNU. 23 —O3 TndPL S JCmaawat stive* an* puvpteH who have weak lungs or Asth* ■ ma. should use Plao'tCure for ■ Consumption. It has ewred ■ IksusssSi. It has not Injur- ■ ed ona. It Is not bad to take. ■ It Is tha best cough syrup. ■ SoM evarywhere. Ms. |f.
A soldier with a kicking gun must learn to fire and fall back.
Caution to Customers.
Nothing of original or superior merit but has its imitations and counterfeits, even to imperiling the health of communities. For this reason the proprietors of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters caution their patrons to scrutinize every bottle offered! and it is sold only In bottles) and verify its many marks of genuineness. A sufficient warning to those meditating fraud can be found in the unbroken line of judicial decisions, exposing and severly punishing every one detected in counterfeiting the Bitters, and the redoubled' efforts that are being made to protect the public from the deception of these unprincipled pirates. Remember the Bitters I# sold only in bottles, never by the gallon or in balk. A horse’s age Is told by its teeth; a woman’s age is told—well, it Is not told at all. N. K. Brown’s Essence Jamaica Ginger is a wonderful tonic. None bettef. Try it. 35 cents. It is not unusual for a high-tempered person to make cursory remarks. If you will be truly happy keep your blood pure, your liver from growing torpid by using Beecham’s Pills. 35 cents a box. It does not follow because a voung lady s bewitching that she looks like a witch. Ask your grocer for a dollar’s worth of Dobbins’ new Perfect Soap. 5c a bar. If he hasn’t it he will get it. A bar is worth two bars of any 5c soap ever made. The average college student needs less toot and more tutor,
Reasons Why World's Fair Visitors Should Purchase Their Tickets Over the Pennsylvania Short Line.
It Is the shortest route and an excellent line in every way. It furnishes the best possible accommodations for passengers. It has a reputation for reliability which is beyond question. It runs through trains into Chicago Uaiod Passenger Station via GRAND CROSSING, within view of and only a Short distance from the World’s Pair Grout-ds, and stops them at Grand Crossing for the express purpose of allowing passengers to disembark at that point, enabling them to reach the great Columbian Exposition and the hotels and boarding houses adjacent thereto. In a ride of only ten minutes by train of lUißOjs Central Railroad or by electric street car line—fare by either only fire cents. Tickets to Chicago and return, good until Oa> tober 3lst, are now on sale at a reduction ot twenty-live per cent, at all ticket offices of the Pennsylvania Short Lines. Your nearest Ticket Agent of these lines will promptly answer all inquiries for detailed information.
PTATCs (by prw JQf ■ CQUP Hein* phTjleUn). No lUrrir J. /V* ■ * _ TKoasandi S«*d Sc in ftampai 1 Il f I f O. W. F. SNYDER, M. D„ Mail Dept. 8, MoVicker’s Theater, Chicago, 111, patents! trade-marks. Examination nod \drice as to Patentability of invention. Send for Inventor’s Guide or How to Get a Patent. Pithii k O Fsbkxll. Washington, I). V II II I A* Quick Relief and Positive Cure fruaranMI I ► \ teed Easy to use. Sold by Draggist, 111 or sent by mail, postpaid. 6«e. a boi. ■ 1 fcifciWF Parmeice Med. te.. hansville, N.Y.
uai | ’c ImM I I Lucas Co., [S. S. ■ ■■“■■■■ c State of Ohio. ) Frank J. Cheney makes oathAhat he is 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. Sworn to before me, and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1889. N MjcAsco s fa L : A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public. catarrh’Sjre PIT IODII I 9 al l nil ji upon the Blood and H f§|R I mucous surfaces. ™ ™ ™ “ Tin BTXMOUIAT riH s E. B, WALTHALL * CO.. Druggists, Horae KEV. H. P. CARBON, Scotland, Dak., gays Cave, Ky., say; •• Hall’s Catarrh Cure cures " Two bottle* of Hall's Catarrh Cure complete every one that takes It.” ly cured my HtUe girl." CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMlS,Detroit. Mich., J. C. SIMPSON. Marques*. W. Va.. says says: “The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is “Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad wonderful." Write him about It case of catarru.” Hall’s Catarrh Core Is Sold by all Dealers in Patent Medicines. PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE. WTHE OILY GENUINE HALL'S CATARRH CURE IS - MANUFACTURED BY F. J. CHENEY & CO., TC,>LEDO, O. Testimonials sent free on application. ★ BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
“August | Flower”: “ For two years I suffered terribly with stomach trouble, and was lot all that time under treatment by * physician. He flacßy, after trying everything, said my stomach was worn out, and that I wonld have to cease eating solid food. On the recommendation of a friend I procured a bottle of August Flower. It seemed to do me good at once. I gained strength and flesh rapidly. „ I feel now like a new man, and consider that August Flower has cured me.'— las. B. Dederick. Saugrrties, N.Y.® G))lauttwuLltD»Au*irf«CMcaao ttcatlo The shortest line to Chicago, Milwaukee, St Psnl Minneapolis, DnlatM>W»i»*. Denver .Sen Irrssctscw Portland, Seattle, Tuconta, Los Angeles, Spoksse Falls Helens and all points West and Northwest. The onlT line running Solid Pn liman Perfected Safe tyVestlbnled Trains. The only line running Dining Cars between Indianapolis and Chicago. Magnificent Pullm-T. Sleeping and Parlor cars. For rate* inapt time tab ea, etc. apply to 1.1). Baldwin, D.P.A H. Illinois St., Indianapolis.lnd. James Barket C.P A, Chicago. niIDEATFAiILY MEDICIME' = Complexion, Offensive It rent h, jj and all disorders of the Stomach, f Liver and Bowel*. /(P i RIPANS TABULKS Lcadftfl<SF ! act gentlryet promptly. Perfect ! digestion follows their use. i May be obtained by = application to nearent druggist. ■tii'fiHmfißum—ii'u—iuif uni—inn— ttmmm lunwiim—inn— mim
KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement sod tends to penoual enjoyment when rightly U3ca. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the'necds of physical being, will attest the value to kealtn of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tha remedy, Syrup of Figs. in the form most acceptable and pie:*.*ant to the taste, tbo refreshing nndtrul* beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently cuil“g It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it act* on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists la 50c and $1 bottle* but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also (he taint, Syrup of Figs, and being well infoimed, yon will not accept any substitute if ofi-rcd. nonDQV»m unUr ul^Sf^ o.»o* nrouuniu-na hop. tew. From Ir, • do*-> .i>us»«D» r.pvoiv 4is*n>-»*. Inin <la- ail Ivafct t»<tiiink ot v! sjm; torn* at* ruuov.d. JuuK •? testimonial- o! m.iaciloas ear.s rtn- l it Hr. Ten OdjfsTrdAimsnl FiKiihteJ tree h Mailin s tmi i im. ifranitu muit ttuu* Efe ATCUTC THOMAS P. SIMPSON. Washington, r B 1 EN IaD.C. Noatty's fee until Patriit <>l> * ,IZ!2!,.Z.TZ talced. Write for InveuloFsOuide.
