Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 December 1894 — Page 3

PROGRESS. IF/ People who get the greatest -AjC. degree of comfort and real cn/MMEnja joyment out of life, are those UnijffiiA. wl '° " iaK " 'he most out 01 their opportunities. ■ Quick perception and good judgment, lead such promptly to adopt and make use of those refined and improved products of / ’BwbTrtJw modern inventive genius zJK&nwp- which best serve the Z needs of their physical Huft /\\ being. Accordingly, RlkllßWKv'W tl,e nlos t intelligent \ Xis || and progressive people \ \ Vzsz \V/K v ') I arc f° un d to employ y' -CWl' 11 the most refined and x. perfect laxative to reg- ' f ulate and tone up the \ liver, and ' bowels, when in need of such an agent—hence the great popularity of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. These are made from the purest, most refined and concentrated vegetable extracts, and from forty-two to forty-four are contained in each vial, which is sold at the same price as the cheaper made and more ordinary pills found in the market. In curative virtues, there is no comparison to be made between them and the ordinary pills, as any one may easily learn by sending for a free sample, (four to seven doses) of the Pellets/ which will be sent on receipt of name and address on a postal card. QNCE USED THEY ARE ALWAYS IN FAVOR. The Pellets cure . biliousness, sick and bilious headache, dizziness, costiveness, or constipation, sour stomach, iossofappetite, coated tongue, indigestion, or dyspepsia, windy belchings. “heart-burn,” pain and distress after eating, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Put tip in glass vials, therefore always fresh and reliable. One little “Pellet” is a laxative, two are mildly cathartic. As a “dinner pill,” to promote digestion, take one each day after dinner. To relieve distress from over-eating, they are unequaled. They are tiny, sugar-coated granules; any child will readily take them. Accept no substitute that may be recommended to be “just as good.” It may be better for the dealer, because of paying him a better profit, but he is not the one who needs help. Address for free sample, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main Street,Buffalo, N. Y. With Tables. Kate Field s Washington. The hardships of the cuisine were experienced in another form by a resident of this city who has been looking for a butler. The number of men out of work has made the recitation of qualification desired in a “help wanted” advertisement a useless precaution. Men are willing and anxious to try hands at anything at all, and, trust to luck in discharging the duties. It was a Hibernian who answered this gentleman’s advertisement. r “You know all about looking after a table, do you?” he said. —“Oi do, sor,” was the prompt response. “Oi hov had experiencejin thot same.” “Where?" “Wid the Washn’t’n an’ Georrudgetown railroad. Not only hov Oi tinded the turn-table, but Oi hov superintinded the toime-table.” Why Consult a Man 1 “No man ever suffered pangs like unto woman. “ Women, therefore, gladly turn to a woman for sympathy, counsel, and help in their peculiar troubles. “Lydia E. Pinkham, ir m Lynn, / Mass ” deft F 4 serves the B V'.rst< I { confidences r 1I showered upon her by thousands. “ Her Vegetable ComMrs. Hannah Hyde, , , Bethel, Ind. pOUDCi DHS done more for women than any other remedy. “The great cause of woman’s misery is in her womb. Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound goes direct to the source of trouble, drives out disease, and cures backache, fainting, despondency, bloating, ovarian troubles, and leucorrhoea.” All druggists.

The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICALDISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY. OF ROXBURY. MASS., Has discovered In one of our common Easture weeds a remedy that cures every ind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except |n two cases (both thunder humor). He Las now In his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for bcok. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity js 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 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. SnW 1" • General Blacking is unequalled. ' Has an annual Sale of aooo tons. ALSO MANUFACTURE THE f TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH 1 MAKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXESb Morse &W«,Masx

RELIGIOUS REVIVALS.

Phe Miracle of the Fishes a Type of Modern Revivals tome Objectton* to This Method of Salvation Answered by Dr. Talmage. Dr. Talmage chose for the subject his sermon through the press last Sunday, “The Objections to Religious Revivals,” from the text of Luke v, 6, “They inclosed a great Multitude of fishes, and their net brake.” Simon and his comrades had experimced the night before what fisbernen call “poor luck.” Christ steps )n board the fishing smack and tells ihe sailors to pull away from the Deach and directs them again to sink ;he net. Sure enough, very soon the let is full of fishes, and the sailors legin to haul in. So large a school >f fish was taken that the hardy men begin to Idok red in the face as they lull, and hardly have they begun to ■ejoice at their success when snap joes the thread, so there is danger lot only of losing the fish, but of osing the net.

The church is the boat, the gospel s the net, society is the sea; and a jreat revival is a whole school jrought in at one sweep of the net. 1 have admiration for a man who joes out with a hook and line to ish. I admire the way he unwinds the reel and adjusts the bait and Irops the hook in a quiet place on a still afternoon, and here catches one and there one; but I like also a big boat and a large crew, and a net a mile long, and swift oars, and stout sails, and a stiff breeze, and a great multitude of souls brought, so great 1 multitude that you have to get help to draw it ashore, straining the net tp the utmost until it breaks here and there, letting a few escape, but bringing the great multitude into eternal safety.

I have noticed that those who are brought into the kingdom of God’ through revivals have more persistsnee and more determination in the Christian life than those who come in under a low state of religion. People bot*n in an ice house may live, but they will never get over the cold they caught in the ice house. A cannon ball depends upon the impulse with which it starts for how tar it shall go and how swiftly, and the greater the revival force with which a spul is started the more farreaching and far-resounding will be the execution.

We must admit that in every revival of religion there is either a suppressed or demonstrated excitement. Indeed, if a man can go out of a state of condemnation into a state of acceptance with God, or see others go, without any agitation of soul, he is in an unhealthy, morbid state and is as repulsive and absurd is a man who should boast he saw a ’hild snatched out from under a horse’s hoofs and felt no agitation, or saw a man rescued from the fourth story of a house on fire and felt no icceleration of the pulses. It is sometimes said that during revivals of religion great multitudes )f children and young people are arought into the church, and they io hot know what they are atiout. It has been my observation that the sarlier people come into the kingiom of God the more useful they are. Robert Hall, the prince of Baptist preachers, was converted at twelve fears of age. It is supposed he rnew what he was about. Matthew Henry, the commentator, who more than any man of his century :or increasing tire interest in the study of the scriptures, was converted at eleven years of age; Isabelle Graham, immortal in the Christian church, was converted at ten years of aire; Dr. Watts, whose hymns will be sung all down ihe ages, was jonverted at nine years of age. I am very apt to look upon revivals as connected with certain men ivho fostered them. People who in this day who do not like revivals nevertheless have not words to express their admiration for the revivalists —Jonathan Edwards, John Wesley, George Whitefield, Fletcher, Griffin, Davies, Osborn, Knapp, Nettleton ind many others whose names come to my mind. The strength of _their intellect and the holiness of their lives make me think they would not nave anything to do with that which was ephemeral, Oh, it is easy to talk against revivals.

Oh, lam afraid to say anything against revivals of rdligion, or against anything that looks like them, because I think it may be a jin against the Holy Ghost, and you know the bible says that a sin against the Holy Ghost shall never be forgiven, neither in this world nor the world to come! Now, if you are a painter, and I speak against your pictures, do I not speak against vou? If you are an architect, and I speak against a building you put up, do T not speak against you? If a revival be the work of the Holy Ghost, and I speak agaist that revival, do I not speak against the Holy Ghost? And whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, says the Bible, he shall never be forgiven, neither in this world nor in the world to come, I think sometimes people have made a fatal mistake in this direction. • Now 1 come to the real, genuine ?ause of objection to revivals. That l« the coldness of the objector. It is the secret and hidden, but unmistakable cause in every case, of a low state of Religion in the heart. Wide awake, consecrated useful Christians are never afraid of revivals. It is the spiritually dead who are afraid of having their sepulcher molested. The chief agents of the devil during a great awakening are always un-

converted professors of religion. As soon as Christ’s work begins they begin to gossip against it and take a pail of water and try to put out this spark of religious influence, and they try to put out another spark. Do they succeed? As well Chicago was on fire might some one have gone out with a garden water pot and try to extinguish it. But I think, after all, the greatest obstacle to revivals throughout | Christendom to-day is an uncoverted I ministry. We must believe that the vast majority of those who officiate at sacred altars are regenerated, but I suppose there may float into the ministry of all denominations of Christians men whose hearts have never been changed by the grace of God. Of course they are all antagonistic to revivals. I could prove to a demonstration that without revivals this world will never be concerted, and that in one hundred or two hundred years without revivals Christianity will be practically extinct. It is a matter of astounding arithmetic. In each of our modern generations there are at least thirty-two million children. Now add thirty-two million to the world's population, and then have only one hundred thousand or two hundred thousand converted every year, and how long before the world will be saved? Never —absolutely never!

We talk a good deal about the good times that are coming and about the w ■rid s red mp io .oHow long before they will come? There is a man who says five hundred years. Here is a man who says two hundred years. Here is some one more confident who says in fifty years. What, fifty years? Do you propose to let two generations pass off the stage before the world is converted? Suppose by some extra prolongation of human life at the next fifty years you should walk around the world; you would not in all that walk find one person that you recognize. Why? All dead or so changed that you would recognize them. In other words, if you postpone the redemption of this world for fifty years you admit that the majority of the i two whole generations shall go off ■ the stage unblessed and usaved. I 1 tell, you the church of Jesus Christ cannot consent to it. We must pray and toil and have the revival spirit, and we must struggle to have the whole world saved before the men and women now in middle life pass off. It is too much to expect each one to bring one? Some of us must bring more than one, for some will not do their duty. I want to bring 10,000 souls. I should be ashamed to meet my God in judgment if, with all my opportunities of commending Chirst to the people, I could not bring 10,000 souls. But it will all depend upon the revival spirit. The: ; hook and line fishing will not do it. i It seems to me as if God is pre-' paring the world for some quick and* universal movement. A celebrated electrician gave me a telegraph chart i of the world. On that chart the ■ wires crossing the continents and, the cables under the sea looked likel veins red with blood. On that chart 1 I see that the headquarters of the ' lightnings are in Great Britain and the United States. In London and , New York the lightings are stabled : waiting to be harnessed for somel quick dispatch. That shows you ( that the telegraph is in possession j of Christianity. It is a significant fact that the J man who invented the telegraph was an old-fashioned Christian—Prof. ; Morse —and that the man who puti the telegraph under the sea was an old-fashioned Christian —Cyrus W. i Field —and that the president of the J most famous of the telegraph com- j panies of this country was an old-; fashioned Christian —William Orton j —going from the communion table on earth straight to his home in heaven. What does all that mean? I do not suppose that the telegraph was invented merely to let us~kiiow! whether flour is up or down, or j which filly won the race at the derby, 1 or which marksman beat at Dollymount. I suppose the telegraph was built to call the world to Goc. In some of the attributes of the Lord we seem to share on a small scale -for i istance, in His love and in His kindness. But until of late foreknowledge, omniscience, omnipresence, omnipotence, seem to have been exclusively God’s possession. God. desiring to make the race like himself, gives us a species of foreknowledge in the weather probabilities, gives us a species of omniscience in telegraphy, gives us a species of omnipresence in the telephone, gives us a species of omnipotence in the steam power. «Discoveries and inventions all around about uS, people are asking, What next? I will tell you what next. Next, a stupendous religious movement. Next, the end of war. Next, the crash of despotisms. Next, the world’s expurgation. Next, the Christlike dominion. Nr*xt, the judgment. What becomes of the world after that I care not. It will have suffered and achieved enough for one world. Lav it up in the dry j docks of eternity, like an old-raan-of-war gone out of service, or fit it up like a ship of relief to carry bread , to some other suffering planet, or let it. be demolished. Farewell, dear qld world, that began with paradise and ended with judgment conflagration! Country Customer—“ How many yards of this g'Kxis does it take to make a dress?” , 1 Seller —“With or without?” I Country Customer—“ With without. What do you mean?” | Seller—“ Puffed sleeves.’’

Clear as Mud.

Cincinnati Enquirer; Billy Pistor was trying to explain to a friend the process of manufacturing artificial ice. “Don't you understand the philosophy of it?” quined Billy. “No, I don’t. I never saw it dobe.” “Well, you see,” continued Billy, “they have a kind of a tank.” “Yes.” “And they fill that tank about twothirds full of water.” “Yes; what then?” _ “Why, thefi they freeze it. w

IMPORTANT FOOD TESTS.

How to Produce More Economical and Healthful Articles for the Table. The official food analyses by the United States and Canadian governments have baen staditd with interest. The United States Government report 1 ives t .e names of eighteen well-known baking powders, so eof them advertised as ure cceam-of-tartar powders, which contain a.um. The report shows the Royal to be a pure cream-of-tarta barinr powder, the highest in sire gth. evolving 160.t> cubic inches of leavening gas ■ er single ounce of powder. There were eight other brands of cream-of-tartar . owder=> tested, and their avei age strength was 111.0 cubic inches of gas per ounce of owder. ———— ——— The Canadian government investigations were of a still larger n.imber of powders. The oyal . aking Powder was here a so shown the purest and h ghest in strength containing fortyfive p.:r cent, more leavening gas per ounce than tae average of all the other cream-of-tartar powders. These figures are very instructive to the practi. a: houseKee er. They indicate that the Royal Baking Powder goes more than 311'per cent, further in use than the others or is one-third more economical, t till more important than this, however, they prove this popu ar article has been brought to the highest degree of purity—f rto it super ative purity this superiority in strength is due—and consequently that by its use we may be insured the purest and most wholesome f od. The powders of lower stren th are found to have large amoints of imp ,r» itie in the food. This fact is emphasized by the report of the < hio State Food Commissioner, who, while finding the Royal ; Tactically j ure. found no other powder to contain less than 10 per cent, oi inert or foreign matter. The rtati tics how that there is used in the manufacture < f the Loyal Baking Powder more than half of all the cream-of-tartar con,i med in the United States for all pur oses. The wonder? 1 ale thus indicated for the Royal Baking Powder —greater than that of all other baking powders combined —is erha s even a ni her eviden e than that already quoted of the su eriority of this article, and of its indispensableness to modern cookery.

Children and Sleep.

Mrs. Phebe Hanaford, in a recent address, condemned the present system of educating children. Making them early risers, as she put it, in classes was productive of making them conceited all the forenoon of life and sleepy all the afternoon, the energy which should have been meet the < trials of later years being all dissipated in their youthful da’ V.. T

Surely [?] Wrong Person.

Harper a Bazai “ “Go down-co the Great Northern Hotel and interview the female suffragist leader there,” said the city editor to one of his reporters. The young man returned in about an hour and said* — “1 saw her, sir, but she wouldn’t talk” “Then you must have seen the wrong woman,” replied the chief.

A Denver Detail.

New York Recorder. “Great Waite! Why didn’t you get out the Republican women in the Fifteenth?” “We did get ’em out: but that fly Pop inspector sneaked, a mirror into every booth an’ the delay kep’ us from voting ’em alll”

A Little Mistake.

New York Weekly. Young Lady—What is the price of that bicycle costume?” Dealer —That’s not a bicycle costume, miss; it’s a suit of sanitary underwean” Mrs. Dent Casey, a sister of Mrs. U. S. Grant, has leased her residence in Washington, and will spend the winter in New Orleans with her young daughter.

Breakers Ahead!

Prudence, foresight, that might have saved many a good ship that has gone to pieces among the breakers, is a quality “conspicuous by its absence" among many classes of invalids, and among none more notably than persons troubled with inactivity of the kidneys ’ and 1 ladder. When these organs fall off induty grievous trouble is to be apprehended.; Bright's disease, diabetes, catarrh and stone in ' the bladder. are among the diseases which a disregard of early symptoms confirm and ren- j der fatal. Tnat signally effectual diuretic, Hos I stetter's Stomach Bitters, will—and let no one so troubled forget this—remedy the symptoms of approaching renal disease and check its further progress Equally efficacious is the Bitters for constipation, fiver compiaint, malarial and rheumatic trouble and debility. The tippler is apt to become not only boisterous but. oysterous—he slips down easy. Asthmatic Troubles and Soreness of the Lungs or Throat are usually overcome by Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant—a sure curative for Colds. •’What I want.” said the man who was finding fault with the assessor, "Is taxatian without representation.”

Tourist Tickets

To all Florida and Southern points are now on yale via Pennsylvania Line Good returning until May 31 1896. Through sleepers from I-ouisville to Jacksonville. Tampa Fla., aud Intermediate points For tickets and sleeping esr space taH on Agents, -is W Washington sl 46 Jack son Place and Union Station or address’ Gxo. K. Rockwell D. P. a.. It.diadapolls.

“RHEUMATISM cure your ■ I It will give you a chance to CO TO WORK OTJKJEZX>

Highest of all n Leavening Power.—Latest U» S» Gov’t Report ■> Absolutely pure

The Dear Old Soul.

New York Tribune. The old lady who entered a train at a country station had an anxious face, and soon confided to her neislU bor the fact that she had but once before been on a railroad train. The lines in her forhead appeared to deepen as the hours went on, and every time the train stopped she inquired: “Is this New York?” “S’posinthis train would be late, ” she said; “mebby Lyddy would think I wa’n’cornin’.” “Did you tell her which train you would take?” “Oh, yes; I made sure to tell her to meet me at the New York afternoon train. They isn’t more’n one train, is they?” She was calm for awhile after the neighbor had assured her she would j try to help her find Lyddy, but pres-) ently she remarked, “How’ll. I let I ’em know I want to get off at New 1 York?” Just then the conductor passed, and she seized him by the coat sleeve, exclaiming, “Look here, mister, I’ve got to land in New York. Won’t you please stop the train for me when we git there?” ■ “All right, ma’am,” said the man, soberly. — —- “You’ll not forget?” “Trust me for that. I’ll remember, sure.” “Thank you kindly, sir,” sne answered gratefully. “I’m much obliged.” And the man did not smile till he left her.

Partial Success.

Indianapolis Journal. “I thought I had hit on a great scheme not long ago,” said the fat man. “What was it?” asked the man with the straw-colored vest. ’’Why a feller down in the country had occasion to send me $35 by mail. Now, you know’ it is a well-known fact that money can be detected in an envelope by the smell. So I wrote to him to perfume the letter inorder that’the scent of the money could not be noticed. ” - *‘Um. How did it work?” “Oh. the letter got through all right, but the idiot addressed it to the house. And the letter being scented my wife opened it and only got sls out of the $35.”

Holiday Rates

Via Pennsylvania lines. Tickets will be sold December 24. 2> and 31, and January!. 1H95, at rate of one and one-third first-class limited fare for the round trip. Tickets good returning until January 2, 1895. For further inform aion call on agents or address Geo. D. Rockwell D. P. A.

A Low W ater Level In Rivers, Ponds, Wells and other sources of drinking water threatens danger from malarial germs. This condition is usually found in the Fall, and it points to Hood’s Sarsaparilla us a safeguard against attacks of disease. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes pure blood, and thus guards the system from all these perils. It creates an appetite and gives sound and robust health. Hood’s Saraa - %%%%%% purilla “I have been using f Hood’s Sarsaparilla oc- ■ casionally for the last three years. I have suffered from malaria fever for five years, and have tried many kinds of medicine, but found no relief till I commended to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. 1 have all confidence in it. and believe it to be far superior to any other tonic.” P. J. Fitzgerald, 121 Ninth St., So. Boston. Mass, Hood’S Pills cure all liver ills. 25c. | A QUICK | A Remedy in cases of accidents, as cuts, A v burns, bruises, severe scalds, sprains, \ v etc. Can be applied by keeping on f , A hand a bottle of 1 v dr. J. H. McLean’s v f Volcanic Oil Liniment. f 1 It acts at once, gives instant relief and I F restores vital heat to the injured or dis- V 4 eased parts. Price 25c, 50c and SI.OO J \ per bottle. Sold by all druggists. a HI suffered terribly from roaring in my head during an attack of catarrh, and because very deaf, used Ely's Cream Balm and in three weeks could hear as well as ever,—A. E. Newman, Grating, Mich. ELY’S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation. Heals the Sores, Protects the Membrane from colds. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The B«lm is quicky absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 36 Warren Street,New York

..j j Webster’s International Dictionary! : / @ \ The Best Christinas Gift • [ WFRSIFRS \ A Dictioiuwy of Entlish, Geography, Biography, Fiction, Etc. : i I INTERNATIONAL I Standard of U» U.S Supreme Court, the US. Government Printing Office. «hd at • • \ DJCTHMART ) nt * Lrl l U** Schoolbook* Commended by every State Superintendent ol bebooio. . • X. _/ G. &C. Merriam Co., Pulm., Pprlnrfleld, Maaa. • • earsend for tree pamphlet oonlalalnsspedmai m*m, Ulastrattoae, ete

How's This?

We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of eatarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall’s Catarrh ure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F. J, • ’honey for the last IS years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transaction* and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. „ West & ’i’ruax.Wholesale drngglsts.Toldo. O. Waldfng. Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale druggists. Toledo, O. - Hall's Catarrh ure is taken internally,acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free.’ Pries 75c. per bottle. Sold by Don’ L trust num who write epi taphs. _ They are all monumental liars, Mrs. Winslow’* Soothing SYRUP for chll dren teething, softens the gum. reduces inflam mation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 250 ar bottle. The Bluejaw folks desire to see the day of rest made a day of arrest. After six years’ suffering. I was cured by Piso’s Cure. Maby Thompson, Ohio Ave., Alleglieny. Pa., March 19, ’94. Bluebeard’s trade was evidently that of belle-hanger. What I* more fastnwtlng than a complexion tinted like the rarest seashell and purified by the use ofGleun’s Sulphur S >ap.

r .Ju KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement ami tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. 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 needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and trul f beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, ; dispelling colds, headaches and feyere ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts 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 in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. ouly, whose name is printed on ever) package, also the name, Syrup of Figs -- and being well informed, you will .cot accept any substitute if oflered.*

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E taUme So»dly JM /JV.U INDPL9 A 9.