Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 February 1894 — “SWEET SIXTEEN.” [ARTICLE]

“SWEET SIXTEEN.”

An Exquisite Calendar. Hood’s calendar, which is always looked for with Interest and pleasure, has made Its ap nearance for the year 1891. and is in many respects more beautiful than ever. The head ig that of a lovely girl just “sweet sixteen.” lithographed in delicate and natural colors. Besides being a thing of beauty, the calendar is especially valuable for the general information presented. The figures are plainly printed in pleasing and harmonious colors, and the effect as a whole is most satisfactory. The calendars can be obtained of almost any druggist, or by sending six (6) cents in stamns for one and ten (1(» cents for two to C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell. Mass. An edition of over eight millions of these calendars was printed in order to supply the immense demand. This seems a simple statement, but its meaning is almost beyond human conception. The card used for the upper portion of this number of calendars would cover nearly fifty-two (52» acres of ground, and the paper consumed in making the pads if cut in one continuous strip of the same width as the pads, would be oVer eighteen thousand (18.0001 miles in length. These calendars are issued by the proprietors of Hood's Sarsaparilla, the well-known medicine which has gained such renown by its wonderful cures in eases where the blood was poisoned or impure. The history of this preparation is entirely unique, the business having grown from a small retail trade until, at the present time, the great laboratory in which it is made haaa capacity for fifty thousand (50000) bottles a day. and is the largest building in the world devoted to the manufacture of a medicine. The sales of Hood's Sarsarparilla in all sections of the country are enormous. The proprietors have never claimed that it would cure every ailment. but they show by thousands of testimonials that Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies and vitalizes the blood, builds up the system and cures those diseases caused by impure blood and debility. such as scrofula, salt rheum, catarrh, rheumatism, etc. As a preventive of the grip, Hood's Sarsaparilla has proved to be unequalled, and it restores the wasted vital forces after a siege of that dreadful malady and fortifies the system against future attack. The fact that great care is exercised in the preparation of this medicine and that nothing has ever been claimed for it except as warranted by previous cures, has much to do with the confidence felt by the publio in its curative powers. The motto of the proprietors is, “It is not what we say. but what Hood's Sarsaparilla does, that tells the story,” and it is what Hood’s Sarsaparilla has done, as shown by the published statements of persons whom it has cured, that has placed it at the head in the field of medicine in the present day. You generally get a fresh breeze from the salt water. A llard Cough distresses the patient and racks both Lungs and Throat. Dr. D. Jaynes expectorant Is the remedy wanted to cure your Cough, and relieve both the Pulmonary and Bronchial organs. It was probably the plug hat that originated the saying, “There is always room at the top,” Who would be free from earthly ills must buy a box of Beecham’s Pills. 25 cents a box. Worth a guinea. The mosquito knows how to strike, but ho positively refuses to be locked out. See •■Colchester" Spading Boot ad. in an other column.