Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 March 1895 — Page 3
WE—GIVE AWAY T A Sample Package (4 to 7 doses) of T & Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets 7b any one sending name and address to us on a postal card. QNCE USED THEY ARE ALWAYS IN FAVOR. Hence, our Object in sending them out broadcast '•am — —ON TRIAL. — ~ BThey absolutely cure SICK HEADACHE, Biliousness, Constipation, Coated Tongue, Poor Appetite, Dyspepsia and kindred - derangements of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Don't accept some substitu. said to be ‘ 'just as good. ” ‘E BThe substitute costs theca. 'ess. ~ It costs you ABOUT the s< HIS projit is in the "just as rood. ’ ’ WHERE IS YOURS? Lddress for Free Sample, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, No. 663 Mala St., BUFFALO, N.Y.
Wte Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable v Compound ; CURES Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Menstruations, Weak, less of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility, Kidney Complaints in lither sex. Every time it will relieve Backache, Fastness, Extreme Lassitude, “ don’t care" and" want io be leftalone ” feeling, excitability, irritalility, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, nelancholy, or the “blues.” These are mre indications of Female Weakness, some lerangement of the Uterus, or Womb Troubles. Every woman, married or single, should iwn and read “ Woman’s Beauty, Peril, Duty," an illustrated book of 30 pages, containing important information that every roman should know about herself. Wo lend it free to any reader of this paper. All drugghts sell the Pinkham medicinei. Address in wnfldence, lydia E. Pinkham Mkd. Co., Lynn, Mabb. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills, 25 cants.
W.L. Douglas •'.<*> CUAE* 13THEBKST. 90 VJIUL FIT FOR AKING, f*ss. Cordovan, FRENCH&ENAMELLEDCALE • ’4*3.59 FINE CAIf&kANfiAROIL P 3.59 POLICE, 3 Soles. *2.*l Z 9 Boys’ScuoolShqex •LADIES* K SEND FOR CATALOGUE ' | W*L*DOUGLAS,. .MASS. Over One Million People wear the • W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for the money. They equal custom Shoes in style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—stamped on sola. From $■ to saved over other makes. L If your dealer cannot supply you we can. WALTERBAKER&CO7 The Largest Manufacturers of GA PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS ANO CHOCOLATES puJT'" On tkk Continent, have received awards from tho great 118 Industrial and Food fl |tß expositions ft hivln Europe and America. ' r- '<l ■HI JMy Unlike the Dutch I’rvccM, no Alkalies or other Chemi rale Or Dyee are '■■laiiLi i n , P( i f n nnv - O f their preparations. Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA Is absolutely pure and soluble, aud-coafs leu than one cent a cup. COLD DY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER,MASS. SMOKE! BUT DON’T PAY iobbers' and retailers’ profits, drummers’ salary and txpeUMM, b.Hik-keepers' salary, interest, discounts, ind bad debts of other people. SEND SI.OO fol dx pounds of » , ' “Belle of the Penerile” fine Smoking Tobaccg. Sample by mail 10 eta. toy from the factory. Money back it not satistled, ietaila 40 ets. a pound. 1 closen Cob Pipes free. KENTUCKY TOBACCO CO. OWENSBORO, KY. ElyTCream Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain v ?° @3 "s*°! and I nil atn innt io n, L 5* nEVE « Restores the Senses ol Taste and Smell. ' Heals the Sores. Apply Balm iMo each nostril. E INkT tvnlxS Eli HBOS., M War ran St., N. ■tFMQinaihIIINW.MOHHIK, | lE. IM O SWUM waahiugton, ».<; B »yr» 1 u 'MI war, u mU i Militating claims, atty since.
A FURIOUS FIRE FIEND.
Tries to Strangle Her Own Child When Convicted of Arson. Extraordinary Scene in a New York Court —The Prisoner and Relatives in a Frenzied Condition. Xew York World, Feb. 11. . After’jmore than twenty hours’ deliberation the jury in the case of Mrs. Ida Lieberman, on trial in General Sessions before Judge Martine for arson, rendered a verdict of ffpilty yesterday. When the foreman of the jury rendered the verdict there was a scene such as has seldom been seen in any criminal court. Men and women, relatives of theconvicted woman, fell to the floor screaming, the prisoner fainted, and when revived, a few seconds later, emitted a series of ear-splitting shrieks. Before any one could prevent her she had seized her child, a bright little-lad of six years, and was attempting to strangle him. Several reporters and Mrs. Foster, the Tombs Angel, sprang to the boy’s aid, but before he was torn
MRS. LIEBERMANN ATTEMPTING TO STRANGLE HER SON. Extraordinary scene in Judge Martino's court when the prisoner was convicted of arson.)
FARMS AND FARMERS.
FOOD FOR GROWTH. Whjn it is desired to force younir inimals to grow rapidly the food nust be of a character suitable for ;hat purpose. Bone and muscle are if more importance than fact. The inimal intended for market fattens ,’eadily as it approaches maturity, nit some of the young animals will mt fatten at all, as the food conluces more to growth than to fat. If the food is not adapted for pronoting growth, the young animal, ihough growing, will not gain as rapidly as when the food is more appropriate. It is the mineral matter n foods, Ijme, phosphoric acid, etc., that creates bone, and the protein, >r nitrogenous element, which proluces the muscles, cartilages, hide, ?tc, The carbonaceous matter, •producing fat, is only necessary for 1 young animal in warming the Jody. Animals gain more rapidly when very young than during any Pther period, and they require food if a varied character. To deprive I hem of some needed substance may put a check to their growth from vhich they may never fully recover. iVarmtli in winter is important also, ind with the suckling animal this is provided by the fat in the milk, but which the farmer converts into butler when the calf is taken from the •ow. I Corn and wheat, so largely used ts staple foods on the farm, are unsuitable for growingstock. The reason is that there is about one pound if lime in 1,000 pounds of corn or wheat,; which is insufficient for the purposes of the young animal, as pone cannot be produced unless the lubstanc.es of which it is composed ire present in the food. On the ioiitrary, red clover hay contains ibout twenty pounds of lime in 1.000 pounds, but the lime does not al ways ‘xist in foods in the form of phosphates, transformations occurring ifter the food is digested. Wheat pran which has been removed from the starch 6f wheat grain, as is well mown to those who understand how it is separated during the process of naking Hour, contains about seven times as much phosphate of lime as Ides corn. There are a grea”t many Moils which largely excel corn, wheat >r oats in their relative proportions if mineral matter. Protein is more ?asily obtainable than the mineral elements where an exclusive grain iiet is practiced. It is a deficiency if mineral matter that causes some young animals to make slow growth. Oiie of the advantages of limestone soils is that animals fed on the protects of such soils are largely beneiled and the young stock thritfr. To feed on one kind of food mostly s not economy, because the animal fails to derive proper nourishment t’hnrwfrom, and more eftpecial'v with
-from his mother’s arms the frenzied woman had Jacerated with her finger-nails the hand of one of the reporters who was attempting to disengage them. Meanwhile several court officers were with the ‘ screaming men and women in the court-room attempting to eject them. Four officers succeeded in carrying out two brothers and the mother of the convicted woman and in depositing them in the corridor. One of the brothers made a quick dash to throw him self over the balustrade to the floor forty feet below, but he was caught by several friends and pullecL back. . It was nearly an hour before the last of the crowd had left the court-room. Even then a number hung about the court building, wailing bitterly. Mrs.. Lieberman, was carried shrieking to the tombs. She will be sen--tehee-d—next—Friday- The penalty for the crime, arson in the second degree, is fifteen years. The fire which Mrs. Lieberman was convicted of starting occurred at 4:30 p. m., Dec. 18, 1893, in her apartments on the top floor of the five-story tene meht, No. 521 East Twelfth—street. Twenty families lived in the tenement, and there were in the house ■ at the time of the fire over one hundred persons, mostly children.
growing stock, which make a gain which proportionately far exceeds that of matured animals. Varied foods supply all wants, whether consisting of grain or vegetables or the products of mills. Linseed and cottonseed meals are rich in mineral e'ements and serve to balance the grain ration. Both bran and mid - dlings are excellent additions to bulky foods, not only because- they contain mineral matter largely, but also because they are concentrated. Rich sweet herbage of all kinds is relished by all classes of stock because such foods are varied and therefore supply what is needed. It is when clover hay and .grasses are allowed that grains may be given, as the food is then better balanced, which results in economy be cause the conditions are then more favorable for the greatest increase in growth and weight. SLAUGHTERING. Animals should never be killed while in an overheated or excited state, but should be kept quiet for twenty-four hours previously and Ted lightly on cooling food. Where cold storage rooms are available in which- the meat can afterwards be reduced to any required temperature, the killing may be done without injury in any weather; oilierwise, a cool, dry day, with the temperature not above forty-five or fifty degrees', nor below twenty degrees, is the most favorable. If the weather j,s wet or damp th« temperature should not be above thirty-five or forty degrees. Tup killing may btr done in warmer weather than this if the temperature on the following night falls to fortv decrees or below.t After killing, the carcasses should be hung without touching each other, and allowed ti remain for twenty-four hours or more until the animal heat has passed off and the temperature is forty degrees or less throughout. Meat thus treated may be shipped or kept for days in a temperature of forty-five decrees, or below, in wet. When the night following’the killing is warm the hindquarters of tin beeves qre sometimes slit open to allow them to cool more rapidly. Temperatures above fifty degrees, with moist air, damage green meats very quickly. Meat, and pariicu larly pork, that has been frozen and afterwards thawed, do -s not keep so well as that which has been simply chilled. Pjitk interfiled for curing shguklnever be frozen. Another way is to shell the corn and put it in the oven of the kitchen stove in a baking pan. Stir it at intervals and leave it until thoroughly charred, and if the weather is cold feed it as warm as you can bear your hand in it. The fowls like it r wonderfully well.
a waste of gold.
A Frenchman’s Prophecy of Future Enterprise. A Frenchman who has been traveling in this country says in Le Temps that what struck him most in the United States was the A merican habit of filling the teeth with gold. About $500,000 worth of gold is thus used every ’ yea’’, he says, all of which, of course, is buried. So he figures that at the end of three centuries the cemeteries of America ’will contain gold to the value of $150,000,000. “I am afraid,” he adds, “that this will prove too tempting to the practical mind of the future American, and we shall see the day when companies will be organized to mine the cemeteries and recover the gold secreted in the jaws of dead ancestors.” The writer then goes on and figures on the average amount of gold in the teeth of each dead person. He has evidently been consulting the records of vital -Statistics, for he says that 875,000 people died in the United States in 1889. This would bring the value of the gold in each dead person’s teeth to an average of about 651 cents, and he thinks that in well-crowded cemeteries the mining of this gold could be carried on profitably, despite the small average value.
A Human Mole.
Maine Paper. - ’ • The human mole is attracting attention in Brunswick, Me., this week. He is the bold man who is- to wriggle through all the eighteen-inch sewer pipe recently laid in the village street and patch up all the imperfect portions. The man will go through all the pipe to the point of discharge. It may take three or four Weeks. This pointing of the interior of this dark cavern is a weird and nervetrying place, and requites a man of experience. ‘ He has a rubber belt ind goes backward. It is dark and jlose and he carries a - little lamp or torch and a pail of mortar. An iighteen-inch pipe will just allow a imall man to wriggle. He must lie arone and keep his legs nearly itraight. Should anything happen le would be hauled out by the feet ind resuscitated. It is a job no 3runswick man hankered for.
Hawthorne’s Short Stories.
5t Nicholas for March. These tales are like those in Hawihorne’s earlier collections, but they ire unlike any stories ever written mywhere else by anybody else. They are strangely interesting, all )f them; they are novel, varied and ngenious; they are full of fancy, and ;hey have often an allegory hidden vithin, and a profound moral also, lever obtruded, but to be found ‘asily by all who take the trouble to seek it. Here may be the best place ;o note that these qualities, ripened, Derhaps, and enriched by experience, Ire to be found again in Hawthorne’s inal collection of tales made six tears later, and called after the first if them, ‘‘The Snow Image.”
<l7 I ■ 'W' ’ te■ f - ■ i 1 i ' MBwo I h■ / I
AN ALPENA MIRACLE.
MRS. JAS. M. TODD, OF LONG RAPIDS, DISCARDS HER CRUTCHES. In an Interview with a Reporter She Reviews Her Experience and. Tells the Real Cause of the Miracle. {From, the Argus, Alpena, NlithOt We have long known Mrs. Jas. M. Todd, of Long—Rapids. Alpena County, Mich. She has been a sad cripple. Many .of her friends know the story of her recovery; for the benefit of those who .do not we publish it to-day. Eight years ago she was taken with nervous prostration, and in a few months with muscular and inflammatory rheumatism. It affected her heart, then her head. Her feet became so swollen she could wear nothing on them; her hands were drawn all out of shape. Her eyes were swollen shut more than half the time, her knee joints terribly swollen and for eighteen months she had to be held up to be dressed. One limb became entirely helpless, and the skin was so dry and cracked that it would bleed. During these eight years she had been treated by a score of physicians, and has also spent much time at Ann Arbor under best medical advice. All said her trouble was brought on by hard work and that medicine would not cure, and that rest was the only thing which would ease her. After going to live with her daughter she became entirely helpless and could not even raise her arms to coyer herself at night. The interesting part of the story follows in her own words: “I was urged to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People and at last did so. In three days after I commenced taking Pink Pills I could sit up and dress myself, and after using .them six weeks I went home and commenced working. I continued taking the pills, until now I begin to forget my crutches, and can go up and down steps without aid- I am truly a living wonder, walking out of doors without assistance. “Now, if I can say anything to induce those who have suffered as I have to try Pink Pills I shall gladly do so. If other like sufferers will try Pink Pills according to directions they will have reason to think God for creating men who are able io conquer that terrible disease, rheumatism. I have in my own neighborhood recommended Pink Pills for the after effects of la grippe, and weak womeja with impure blood, and with good results.” Mrs. Todd is very strong in her faith in the curative powers of Pink Pills, and says they have brought a poor, helpless cripple back to do her own milking, churning, washing, sewing, knitting, and in fact about all of her household duties, thanks to Dr t Williams’ Pink Pills. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 50c. per box, or six boxes for $2.50. « “What do you consider the height of meanness?-:—“To send a comic valentine with a penny stamp.”
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot bo cured byl taking Hall's Catarrh ure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F. J, Cheney for th# last 15 years, and believe htni perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale druggists,Toldo, O. Waiding, Klnnan & Marvin, Wholesale druggist#. Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh ure is taken Internally,actin? Mrectly upon th# blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price <sc. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. The world Is full of lion fighters, but it is hard to find a man who won’t run from a hornet.
BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD.
Stove Poush
DO NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red, The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish-. .. -. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOMS. 7TS™ CURES WHERE ALL ELSE f AILS. EJ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uae Q M la time. Sold by druggists. I.N.U ic>- -Q5
An Eager and a Nipping'Wind.
A continuous downpour of rain, inclement weather, generally in winter and spring, are unfavorable to all classes of invalids. But warmth and activity infused into the circulation counteracts these Influences and interposa a defense against them: Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, most thorough anti effective of Htomachies and tonleg, not only enriches the blood, but accelerates its circulation. For oi premonitory symptoms of rheumatism and kidney complaint, particularly prevalent at those seasons, it is-the bestpossible remedy. It is alm invaluable for dyspepsia, liver complaint, constipation and nervousness. Never set out on a winter or spring journey without it. Elderly persons and the delicate and convalescent art greatly aided by it. Love's season apeears to be about all the year round.
Rheumatism Cured Every Time.
J. C. W. Coxe, M. D., the ablest doctor in Washington, lowa, writing to Swanson Rheumatic Cure company, 167 Dearborn street, Chicago, says; “You may use my name as a reference in regard to. the virtue of youi Schrage's,. Rheumatic (lure; it is indeed a wonderful medicine.” This view is also held by the world-famed Dr. Keeley, of Dwight, 111. Trie testimonials sent free. It has Ten thousand people cured. Good ?.gents wanted. Doctors praise it 'Write to-day. Cures Gout, Rheumatism and Neuralgia., - Reference; Hi hernian Bank of Chicago. When a man has a bono to pick with a partridge his lot is not so very bad.
The Great German Coffee Berry.
Coffee at one cent a pound, that Is what it costs to grow it, good coffee, too. Some say that it Is better than Rio. This we know, while in Europe last summer in search of seed novelties we ofti.i drank this in hotels in France, Hpllcnd and Germany; Thirty-five packages earliest vegetable seeds, $1; not 3 cents per package. —tetrgestuteowers of-Jtarrn useeds as oats, grass and clover, corn and potatoes, etc., in the world. Early heavy yielding vegetables our specialty. If You Will Cui This Out and Send It with 15c postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis„ you will get free a package of their German Coffee Berry shed and their catalogue.CNU, Oddly enough, ills the conversation with no point to it that bores the quickest. The Face or Humanity displays fewei pimples than formerly. Reason—Glenn's sulphur Soap. “Hill s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Blast or Brown. Jagson says it’s always springtime witl| a Waterbury watch.
