Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 June 1894 — Page 7
ENLIGHTENMENT enables the more advanced Ju and Conservative SnrJEe ®S$ S geons of to-day to cure H®* many diseases without cut<&U Mad ting, which were formerly W BkS® regarded as incurable with®ut resort to the knife. « RUPTURE or Breach, is Sa LJ/aK-ftow radically cured witbfSTarrM out knife and without ~ ' JK A\\sE P aln - Clumsy Trusses can V n\ be thrown away! < A'b TUMORS, Ovarian. Flbroid ( Uterine) and many \ £W offers, are now remdved 'Gr without the perils of cut* i 22 \ \®w tins' operations. *A \ W PILE TUMORS, howls ft V- W ever large. Fistula and As . \JKS other diseases of the lower /mA' \ jeS bowel, are permanently Cured without pain or reHfl| \ \Hr sort to the knife. \ > STONE in the Bladder, no matter how large, is crush3jKa N 1 ed, pulverized, washed out \ I and perfectly removed ivu without cutting. WBS3 1 V*> For pamphlet, references eg® IX 1 and particulars, send 10 ®g3j I ra/ cents (in stamps) to World’s ■ * ~ ■’) n y Dispensary Medical Asso--7 jv* elation. No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo. N. Y. [W Wly Lydia lAa 7/ e. , Pinkham’s Vegetable y _ Compoiamd CURES ALL Ailments of Women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. It has cured more cases of Leucorrhoea than any remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. That Bearing-down Feeling Odusing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water, Alt drug’irts sell it, Address in confidence, ' LYUIA ihNKHAM MED. CO., I.YNX, MAS? Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills, 25 cents. | JF this should | I ... meet the s 111 z ■ ' (I I 'i I jjgMMMMP/ In i! ' | 'iJ OF ANYONE Q L troubled with Dropsy, Bright’s Disease, !_■ || Seminal Weakness, Gravel, Reten- j t tion of Urine, Diseases of the IBladder, Liver or Kidneys. jl They are strongly advised to take a few j| I! ... doses of . . . [I 3 Dr. J. H. McLEAN’S [0 8 LIVER AND KIDNEY | p BALM. 4 jl Justly celebrated as the standard liver jl t and kidney remedy of America. .j! U SI.OO A BOTTLE SI.OO l] O The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL mSGOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBDRY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down ton common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He Das now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious It will 1 cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat /the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful.in water at bedtime. Sold bv ah ririiprists.
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THE CAMPAIGN
Cleveland and the South—Who Is Responsible. Tue President and the Southerners Chicago Inter-Oeean. - The Memphis Appeal-Avalanche makes a double-leaded prayer to its readers that, they, all and singular, shall forever cease from complaint or abuse of President Cleveland, and shall join with it in continual laudation of his great and glorious policy. For, says our Southern friend and con temporary, “What is the'matter with Grover? Isn’t he all right? Hasn't he done the square thing by the South? Isn’t Eustis, of Louisiana, Ambassador to France? Isn’t McKenzie, of Kentucky, Minister to Pern? Isn’t Porter, of Tennessee, Minister to Chili? Isn’t Coruth, of Arkansas, Minister to Portugal? Isn’t Hoke Smith, of Georgia, in the Cabinet? Isn’t Herbert, of Alabama, in the Cabinet? Isn’t White, of Louisiana, on the Supreme bench? And hasn’t Grover the Great and Cleveland the Good made all these appointments. .of Southern men? What more, beloved friends of the South, do you want? Isn’t this a good showing? Let us give thanks.” Thus, in effect, pleads our esteemed friend and contemporary.
Not for this world in one entire chrysolite would we exceed the courtesies of debate. But we are constrained to say that our contemporary is talking through its hat. The Southern Democrats are not complaining of Cleveland that he has failed to honor and to reward certain members of certain “first families.” The Southern Democrats—the plain, tax-paying, ballot-casting part of them, we mean—are expressing considerable want of affection, or even of esteem, for “first families.” They are of opinion that “first families” have had their inning, and that the plain people, who hitherto have been kept running after the ball, ought to have a chance at the bat. This is what is the matter in the South just now, and, in our mind, it is a very healthy sign that it is what is the matter. The ranlcand file of the South are dissatisfied with Cleveland because he has done nothing that they wanted him to do. They demanded “free and unlimited coinage of silver,” and Mr. Cleveland has shown himself to be the extremes! of all go,ld standard Presidents. They demanded the suppression of trusts, and Mr. Cleveland has intrigued,and bullied, and traded most shamefully for the passage of a tariff bill that is framed for the special benefit of trusts. They inherit the old love of the Monroe doctrine and the old hatred of royal governments on the American continent’ that gave romance and sentimept to the old-time Southern filibustering expeditions against Cuba. Mr. Cleveland has been the affectionate champion, of the negro-blooded Queen of Hawaii. These area few of the causes that make Mr. Cleveland unpopular with the plain voters of the SoAth. His appointments of a dozen, or of a Bcore, of members of “first families” are not regarded as atonement for his failures. In point of fact, the President is all right with the Southern oligarchs, and because he is all right with them he is out of t.jui.P with the Southern people, who a .re beginning to assert themuahes against the oligarchs.
The Real Culprits., Indianapolis News. Much has been said regarding the treatment of Senator Voorhees by certain Republican Senators by habitually compelling hi-n vo show his ignorance regarding the pending tariff bill, or the latest bill witha 400-amendment attachm|ent. These Senators, Aldrich, Chandler, Hale, Teller and others, have been censured for bear-baiting Voorhees. True, they have done so every day for two weeks, and tt is very reprehensible. But these Republican Senators are less giilty of offense to the statesmanship and information, or rather misinformation, of Mr. Voorhees, than such Democratic colleagues as Gorman, Brice, Smith and others who are responsible for the 400 amendments. His associates and party friends led off
in putting Mr. Voorhees intheattitude of ignoramus-in-chief in the Senate. When Mr. Aldrich declared in the Senate that another tariff bill was being prepared, Gorman, Brice et al. put Mr. Voprhees up to denying that anything of the sort was being done. Accordingly, with that affluence of flamboyant epithet for which our Senator has no equal, Mr. 1 ’Voorhees denounced the " Aldrich statement as preposterous. Two" days later the 400 amendments to which Mr. Aldrich referred were printed as the amendments of Mr. Vobrhees’ committee. Therefore, these Democrats were the men who humiliated Mr. Voorhees before the country as being the chairman of a committee who is not consulted, apparently, by other Democrats as to j what his coinmitee shall put forth, |as its work. After Mr. Voorhees had t defended ad valorem duties, these men Changed most of them to specific duties. After he had declared ! that the bill which he reported was a perfect measure as far as it went, these schemers reported 400 amendments in his name. Compared with such humiliation by Democrats thc r assumption of Republicans that Mr. Voorhees had some accurate infor- 1 mation regarding the measure is mere badinage. To be asked why, after advocating an ad valorem system, Mr. VoorheeJ ‘turned his bill into one of specie duties is annoying, but annoyance is trivial compared with the humiliation which Gorman, Brice et al. have ponred upon our Senator by placing upon his head the cap and bells and exhibiting him to the country The. Democrats who are running the Senate in the interest--of- 4he trusts seem, not to appreciate thv quality of Mr. Voorhees’s statesmanship. He has no knowledge of facts like tariff schedules. He has learned that misinformation is more effective in influencing the Indiana Democracy than information. Consequently he has the most extensive and valued stock of misinformation that an overdeveloped imagination caji produce. He may not be informed on tariff schedules, but in that statesmanship which consists in assailing the money power-in the Senate and in hanging monopolists like Carnegie in campaign speeches in Democratic counties away from railroads and telegraphs, he has no equal. He has covered a large part of Indiana with the graves of monopolists and Wall street. He has raised the prices of farm products in Indiana 50 per cent, every year during the past two decadhs —in the minds of the “onegallus” Democracy of Indiana. To-
day Democratic papers in Indiana have/nailed his name to their masts as the next Democratic presidential candidate, as those in Missouri have hoisted the name of Richard. Parks. Bland; And this Indiana Democratic statesman and leader is he whom Democratic associates in the Senate have deceived into publishing himself to the country as the bluej ribbon ignoramus of the period. The ex-Empress Eugenie has been engaged pn her memoirs for many years. As soon as a page is written it is placed under lock and key, and not even her most intimate friends ever see it. The work is not to be published until twenty-five years after her death. The ex-Empress uses in writing a penholder which is ornamented with diamonds. It was used by the fourteen representatives in signing the treaty of the peace of Paris in 1856. and was given- to the ex Empress as a memento.
Puck. Miss Lakeside—Over there is the bovina peristyle. Visitor—What is that? Miss Lakeside —The entrance to the stockyards of course!
Puck. Mrs. Henpeck (visiting her first husband’s grave)—Yes, here lies a hero. You would not be my husbani 1 to-day had he not been killed in thi war. Mr. Henpeck (fiercely)—Yes; wha'. a curse war is!
puck)
i Lakeside Your wife has bee; dead only six weeks, and yet yoi want to go to the ball game? Wabash—But it is only to see th Chicagos play
THROUGH FIVE ADMINISTRATIONS.
Culture Rampant.
The Terrors of War.
In Mourning.
Filling an Elephant’s Tooth.
Globe-Democrat, f- ' “I gave a dentist the toughest job he ever had, once,” said James Tompkins, otherwise known as Cherokee Jim of Stamford, Conn., at the Laclede. “I was tending the anV’ mals in a circus while in winter quarters. We had a big elephant we called Sam. -He was a good tem„p£red. r .liv&lyi chap, but all at once he got into the dumps. His trunk and tail, hitherto kept in a state of perpetual cheerful motion, hung, limp and lifeless, and he would lay for hours rubbing his right jaw on the ground. Be got off his feed, and became so cross-grained thai no one could fool with him safely. We never thought what was the matter with him until his keeper finally said he believed the beast had the toothache. I got a dentist to come and examine it. It was mercy the man was not killed on the spot when he touched the unsound tooth. The elephant trumpeted in a rage, swung his trunk, and but for the dentist jumping behinfl a beam he-would liave bt>en a goner. Then w’e chained the elephants legs and hooked his trunk up to a rigging from above his head. The dentist had a good show then. He found a rotten tooth, and proceeded to fill the cavity. The elephant could only trumpet; he could not move, and the dentist kept on quietly at work. We had not been long at it before the beast discovered that the treatment was being given him for his relief. His manner entirely changed. He trumpeted and struggled no more, and his angry eye gave way to a docile look, and I am satisfied we could have loosened his bonds with perfect safety to the dentist, no chances. As ter the job was done, the animal regained his wonted appetite and spirits in no time. He was grateful to the dentist, and every time he approached the elephant house Sam welcomed him with outstretched trunk and a few extra flourishes of his tail.” The Empress of Austria, who has a castle of Corfu, is said td have added a codicil to her will to the effect that she is to be buried upon the island, quite near.the shore, so that the waves may continually beat over her tomb.
In Olden Time
People overlooked the importance of permanently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action, but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well-in-formed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally impair the system.
A Little Country’s Big Army.
London News. Gallant little Switzerland, which took such energetic measures in 1870 fcr the enforcement of the neutrality of her ter ri tor y.still continues to make a military display that is astonishing, considering the smallness of her population as compared with that of each of the great States by which she is surrounded. The latest return shows a total “effective” of no fewer than 488,526 men of whom 134.932 cor-, respond te what in other countries would be called the regulars.
Poor, Dumb Brutes.
Tommy—Paw, the teacher told us to-day that the atiimals, even the ants, has games and wrestling matches, just the same as folks. Mr. Figg—Weil, I suppose it is the truth. If the poor things could talk I don’t doubt that they would have prize fights as well. Paper has been made from banana skins, bean stalks, pea vines, fur. wool, as bes tos,h usks, hen p! an t and every kind of grain. M. L. THOMPSON & CO.. Druggists, Coudersport. Pa., say Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the best and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it, 75. It is impolite to whisper in company, but it is sometimes impolite not to. Shiloh’s Consumptive Cure is sokl on a guar iptee. It cures Incipient Consumption. It is the best Cough Cure. 25 cents, 50 cents and SI.OO “Keep it before the people’’ls what the iressy woman thinks of her opera hat-
Seashore Excursion Over the Pennsylvanl Short Line[?]s.
Low rate round trip tickets to Asbury Park will be sold via Pennsylvania Short Lines. July i'th. Bth and 9th. account National Educational Association meeting. Asbury Park adjoins Ocean Grove, Long Branch. Cape May. Atlantic City. Elberon. Sea Isle Park, Barnegat and ither delightful watering places on the New lersey Coast, to all of which the Pennsylvania Lines form the only route comprised by one railway system. Return limit on excursion tickets will be ample for side trips. For any desired information apply to pwarest Ticket Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines, or address W. F. BRUNER, District Passenger Agent, Indianapolis. It may be a good thing to be “in touch with the people”, but it dipmda a good deal on how the people take hold of a fellow.
To the Mountains, Lakes and Seashore via Big Four Route.
The favorite tourist line to Put-in-Bay and all Lake Erie Islands via Sundusky, Lake Chautauqua. . Niagara Fa Is. St. Lawrence River, Thousand Islands. Lake Champlain. Adirondack s. Green and White Mountain. New England resorts, New York and Boston via Cleveland. Lake Shore. NcwlYork Central and Boston & Albany Railways. To the Lake regions it Wisconsin. lowa, and Minnesota via Chicago. To the cool resorts of Michigan via Benton Harbor. When you go on your summer vacation see that your ticket reads via the Big Four Route. E. O.McCormick, D. B. Martin, Pass. Traffic Man'g. Gen'l. Pass. &. Tick. Agt. Cincinnati. s
The Lake Resorts of Michigan and the Northwest
Are brought within easy reach by the Pennsylvania Short Lines. During the sumnler Tourist Tickets are sold over this direct route to Mt. Clemens. Mackinac. Petoskey. Charlevoix, St. Clair, Muskegon, Traverse Citv, Sault Stc Marie. Gogebic Lake, Mackinaw City. Au Sable, iron Mountain and cool retreats in Northern Michigan. Tourist Tickets will also be sold aver the Pennsylvania Lines via Chicago to Ashland, Pelican lake. Devil s Lake. Waukesha, Wls.. and other lake resorts in the Northwest. Return limit will be ample for an extended sojourn. Fer details Apply to any Pennsylvania Line Ticket Agent, or adoress W. I'. BRUNER, District Passenger Agent, Indianapolis, ipd.
o Do You Wish Bread and Cake? It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest and strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweetest, most delicious food. ..The strongest baking powder makes the lightest food. • That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most food. Why should not every housekeeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food with the least trouble ? Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sulphuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. Certain protection from alum baking powders can be had by declining to accept any substitute for the Royal, which is absolutely pure.
The Candidate’s Position.
Indianapolis Journal. “The man who attempts to stand on his dignity,” said the man with the hay-colored waistcoat, “won’t amount to much when he gets into a political campaign.” “No,” said the man with t ,a new straw hat, “he will do about as well as the fellow who attempts to run on his merits.” 2 “Correct,” said the man with the yellow shoes." “The only stand a man can take when he is running for office is to lie on general principles,”
A Siamese-Twins Egg.
Oil City Derrick. The residents of the Fourth ward are bragging of the achievements of a hen, owned in that vicinity, that on Saturday delivered itself of a regular Siamese twin egg. The freak consists of two eggs, one of average size and the other about the size of a pigeon egg joined by a membranelike tube an eighth of an inch long. The eggs are without the usual shell and instead are covered with a sort of parchment similar to that covering a turtle egg.
Born, Not Made
Weak by imprudence, are many stomachs. Puny people have, invariably, weak digestions. The robust as a rule eat heartily and assimilate their food. A naturaHy weak stomach, or one that has become, although not so originally, derives needful aid from this thorough stomachic, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. The restoration of vigor to the delicate is the prompt effect of a recourse to this professionally sanctioned and universally esteemed promoter of health. Nervcjsness—a symptom of chronic indigestion—is overcome by it. So are liver complaint and constipation. Incipient rheumatism and kidney trouble it defeats thoroughly, and it constitutes an efficient defense against malaria. But in order that the full benefit derivable from its use should be availed of! it should not be used in a haphazard way. but continually. The same suggestion holds good of all standard remedies. An umbrella trust has been formed and umbrellas will soon go up. She was a dear, sweet girl, witha complexion of angelic loveliness, such as all young ladies possess who use Glenn’s Sulphur Soap.
Mr. John It. Lochary Roxbury. 0.-.io, Real Merit in Hood’s. Rsbelloug Stomach—Heart Palpitation— Hot Flashes. “I think Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best medicine ever offered to the public. I am certain there is real merit in it. because I have taken it and it nas done me good. From the very first dose I felt its merits. I did not dare to eat any meat or anything greasy for the past four years. as it would surely sour on my stomach and come up within an hour after eating it. Many nights I have been frightened on retiring, for as soon as I would lie down my heart would Commence to Flatter, and then all of a sudden it would, seemingly, stop beating. Hot waves would then pass over my body and legs. I was In a bad condition, but Hood’s jx j Cures /**%***%*%*% after taking Hood'S Sarsaparilla. I am thankful to say I feel as sound as ever in my life.” John K. Lochahy. Roxbury. Ohio. Hood's P/cls cure liver ills, constipation, biliousness, jaundice, sick headache.lndigestion. IJL CURED _ ■ 3 ■ Vvl ok | M ■ /I NO PAY, KI-SOL-SE, .An Infallible Cure for Epilepsy, Con 1 vulsions and all falling diseases. Tne Wk only remedy with apositive guarantee T 1 nf no cure no pay. Call on or write IL KI-SOL-SE REMEDY CO., 19 V irrlnia Av. InJianapol is. In:! mFMOiQIHJOHN W.7IOHBIS I IELIMOIKJ?kN Washington, Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ■ Late Principal Examiner V S. Pension Bureau. ■ 3yr<iulast war, ISadjudlcalmgcUiuu, atty since.
XU.OUlti.olu uuu ..... Are readily reached via Pennsylvania Short Lines. The only route to Cresson and otnei coo! retreats in the Alleghenies. Solid vestibule trains daily over these lines to Cresson and Altoona, run through to New York, where con nection is for the White Mountains. She Adirondacks/Mt. Desert Island and places 01 summer sojourn In the mountains of Easterr New York. Vermont, New Hampshire ant Maine. At New York connection is also made for Fall River, Newport, Narragansett Pier Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, and famotu watering places along the Atlantic, to whici passengers via Pennsylvania Lines have chofc« of all rail route or palatial steamers of the Pal River Line from New York. Atlantic City Cape May, Long Branch, Ocean Chove, Asburj Park and summer havens along the New Jersej Coast, are on divisions of the Systexn. which comprises the most desirabh route to them. Any desired information wil be cheerfully furnished by Ticket Agents of tin Pennsylvania 1 ines. or may be obtained by ad drossing W. F. BRUNER, District Passengei Agent, Indianapolis.
Free to Invalid Ladles. A lady who suffered for years with uteritu troubles, displacements, leucorrhoea and other irregularities, found a safe and ample homi treatment that completely cured her withotr the aid of physicians. She will send it fret with full instructions how to use it to any suf sering woman who will send her name and ad dress to Mrs. Rev. A." M. Turner, South Bend Indiana.
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