Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 March 1895 — Page 3
Gall It_a Graze. AN ALARMING STATEMENT CONCERNING WOMEN. HOW BAD HABITS ARE FORMED. The New York Tribune says : “ The habit of taking ‘headache powders ’’is increasing to ac ißfimug extent among a great number of m men throughout the country. These powders as their name indicates, are claimed by the manufacturers to bea positive and speedy cure for auj form of headache. In many cases their Chief ingredient is morphine, opium, cocaine or souk pther equally injurious drug having a tendenc\ ko deaden pain. The habit of taking them is easily formed, but almost impossible to shake pflf. Women usually begin taking them to relieve a raging headache and soon resort to the toowder to alleviate any little pain or ache they mav be subjected to. aud finally like the luorphineoroptum fieud. get into the habit of taking them regularly, imagining' that thev are in pain if they happen to miss their regular dose." : In nine cases out of ten, the trouble is in the stomach and liver. Take a simple laxative and liver 'tonic aiid remove the offending matter which deranges the jstomach and causes the* headache. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are composed (entirely of the purest, concentrated, (vegetable extracts. One Pellet is a (dose; sugar-coated, easily swallowed; mice used, always in favor. They positively cure sick headache and remove jthe disposition to it. | Mr. E- V a REASON, of Qtier lake, I.aperr Co., Mich., writes : “ I uot infrequently have an atj tack of the headache. 'lt usually comes ou in JjjSsßjk 'w the forenoon. At my K4K 1 dinner I eat my regular W/mjeß I men', and take one ot fßlyJl /*TT v s Wo °f Doctor Pierce’s If'” ‘e{3\ [ Pleasant Pellets inlineB# A I djately after, and in the V \ J course of an hour my VA (_) j headache is cured and n jrr—I no bad effects. I feel J better every way sot 1 ~ J having taken them—/l / not worse, as is Usual C\ 'N. after taking other kinds V A of pills. ‘ Pleasant Pel- \ y\ Vs lets ’ are wortli more ' YWI \ than their weight in "* ' gold, if for nothing else B- Varga son. Esq. than to cure headache."
KNOWLEDGE Brings 45pmfort and improvement and, tends to personal enjpyment when tightly used. The many, who live bettc. 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 pleas* ant to the taste, the refreshing and trul * beneficial properties of a perfect la-t ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers 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 $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. —— rho Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
IONAID KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered In one of our common' pasture weeds a remedy that cures e\ cry; , kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula! Jown to» common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred tases, and never failed except in two cases jboih thunder humor). He l.as now in his tossesslon over two hundred certificates' •f its value, all within twenty miles of! Boston. Send postal card for bcok. A benefit Is always experienced from he first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the Jungs are affected it causes ihooting pains, like needles passing Ihrotigh them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach Is foul or bilious It will tause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, pna tablespoonful.i.n water at bedHme. Sold hv,;i'l nrMP'rrio.c Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples, loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things foi everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in the world,especially of women; and itcan all be prevented. Go by the book,free at youi druggist’s.or write B.F.AllenCo.,36sCana] Bt., New York. Pills, aud 25$ a box. Annual uIM more thinl.ooo 000 bpXee. TSrfiuftsvimm alt llseTaiul _ Ea I la Bod Cough Syrup. Taete* Good. Vac H
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Grease may be removed from woollen goods bv sponging it with strong, cold coffee. Pine laces may be cleaned by packing tbem in wheat flour and allowing them to remain twenty-four hours. Black silk may be renovated by a thorough”sponging with stale beer, then placed bet ween newspapers and pressed with a, hot iron. One cooking-school teacher says the making of bread whitens, develops and strengthens the hand, and that really there is no better manicure than kneading the dough. Two sheets of newspaper wrapped about ice will keep it half as long again as ice that is- uncovered. The paper' is much more cleanly than a blanket, and can be renewed every day. Any woman doing her work may so systematize it that it will be the easiest possible for her. She need not follow any other persons methods, unless they are the very best for her own conditions. Do not hinder the beauty of a good picture by grouping it with a number of trivial or even of equally good ones. Give it space in which to Bhine by itself. Other objects beside pictures also detract from them. Gingham, both the silk and cotton, will be worn as much as ever the eomiug season, and the quality is almost as tine as linen. The colorings are exquisite, and are warranted to wash. Among new designs for the spring season is a circular velvet cape with a vest of brocaded satin or silk, or braided cloth. The cape is gathered in a full ruche round the neck and held dti either side of the throat hand with huge buckles. Ladies are to wear white linen collars with colored shirts precisely as gentlemen wear them. The cuffs, bowever, are of the colored cotton. The high, straight standing collar is preferred in linen, but those turned over will also be worn. Stiffly starched shirt bosoms like those of last year are offered again, and are especially appropriate with the white linen collars. TkeTavorite colorings7>F”tKe last London drawingroom were light blue, light yellow and a rich red peach, but many black gowns were diversified by linings or trimming of the most resonant poppy color or grass green. White satin trimmed with lace and fur was mueh worn with velvet trains; velvet and brocades, which appeared to bo very old-fashioned, were the two favorite styles for trains. It is advisable that one should have one petticoat to be used exclusively for walking, and this may be faced for some distance from the bottom with a w terproof cloth. There will then be almost perfect protection for the feet and ankles in wet weather. It is the swishing 6f damp clothing about the feet that constitutes most of the discomfort of a rainy dry expedition, and the waterproof lining does away with this.
A good way to modernize a plain belted waist of last summer is to give it a blouse effect by trimming the front with three lengthwise bands of ribbon two inches wide overlaid with white guipure or with open embroidered insertion. Start the longest band at the throat, letting it hide the fastening of the waist and make it droop two inches below the top of the .belt, then be brought back and inside the belt. The two other bauds start near the top of the shoulder seam, and go into the belt without drooping so much as that in the middle. These represent box plaits very prettily. Eg ,'s are the latest fad with women It has become a common sight at leading ladies’ restaurants in the shopping districts to see whole regiments of women file past the man at the counter busy breaking eggs in wine glasses. The beverage is then tossed down in a single swallow. The eggs are mostly taken “straight,” but sometimes they ara seasoned with salt and pepper, which gives them just about the taste, of a nice fat oyster. This new fad has at least the merit of being sensible. Raw eggs are well known to be nourishing and healthful. As a touic they are unequaled, ami undoubtedly it is for this reason that they have won the appreciation of the shopping woman.
Some of the women writers ought to give a few of the inside facts with regard to the multitude of sins, brie* a-brac and dry goods which are sometimes covered by those huge loose cloaks which the women are wearing now. In the shopping districts it is said these cloaks are causing no end of trouble to theshoDde* tictives, and on account of these cloaks orders hfive been issued at the Fifth Avenue that all the framed photographs of Mr. Crane which appear in the lobby must be attached to a string. Until Monday night a large photograph of Mr. Crane in a handsome frame was exhibited in the lobby. -The photograph rested on an easel, and after the performance it was always surrounded by a bevy of admiring women. When last seen, on Monday night, two women, each wearing one of those balloon cloaks, stood in front, of it exclaiming, “Is’nt it lovely!" Ti\e women, the cloaks and the photograph made their exits at the same time. The mixture of cotton and wool in the manufacture of cloth has been learned so thoroughly that feeling will not detect the presence of cotton. Apieeeof the goods boiled in a solution of caustic potash wiU leavs only the cotton fiber intact. ' v 7 * ‘ ~' -j '
THE FAIR SEX.
Two New York women, Mary N. Gaqnon and Aliee -G. Hands, pupils of the School of Applied Design sot Women, have designed a six- story tenement house of such improved construction that capitalists have been found willing to erect sixteen houses of the kind, each capable of accommodating twenty-two families. These ladies during the past year have won five out of seven competitions with men for architectural work. It will not be a matter of astonishment if in the interior arrangement of dwelling houses women architects shoo’'d easily carry off the honors.
JPrincess Beatrice, the youngest daughter of Queen Victoria, is her mother’s favorite child.' She has teen the Queen’s constant companion for many years and exercises great influence oyer her. The marriage of the Princess to Henry of Batten berg has not changed her intimate association with her mother. Whenever the Queen travels the Princess Beatrice goes with her and occupies the same saloon carriage, day or night. Miss Lucy Thuillier, a sister-in-law of Walter Savage Landor, died recently at Richmond, England, at the age of ninety-eight years.
Dublin has a new paper—called, “To-day’s Woman.’’ It is .pdited and written by a group of talented women, many of whom are university graduates. Barnard College for Women has just received from a woman anonymously a second eift of SIOO,OOO toward erecting the college building tn-ihe neighborhood of the new site of Columbia College.
MRS. HETTY GREEN,
she richest woman in America. Worth $40,000,000, yet goes about dressed like a pauper, and in constant fear of assassination. The marriage & week of an Ameri. tan girl to a German army officer is the average. The latest betrothal reported is that of a Miss Annia Heacock, niece of Clement Griscom, >f Philadelphia, to Lieut, von Megide. A New York widow, in looking over her late husband’s effects, fouud an old savings fund book having but a single deposit for five dollars, dated 1820. She laid claim to the money, and, to her surprise, found that the principal and accumulated interest amounted to $248. The Empress Eugenie is engaged on a volume of recollections. The proceeds of the sale will be given to the fund for the widows of French soldiers killed in the Franco-Prus-sian war. An English translation will be published at the same time as the French. Mrs. Sarah Thomas, of Burrvport, Llanelly, who last year received a check of £sGsfrom the Princess of Wales, or a shilling for each natal anniversary, celebrated, on Feb. 5, her 107th birthday. She is in possession of all her faculties, and is a very amusing conversationalist! The wife of Field Marshal Ovama, commander of the Japanese military forces at Wei-Hai-Wei, was for a uumber of years a resident of Connecticut, and lived in the family of Rev. Dr. Leonard W. Bacon, of Norwich. She is a graduate of Vassar College, and was chosen President of her class.
Maine Reindeer.
Lewiston Journal. About the slopes of Mount Katahdin, and ranging the bogs and woodlands of the country at its foot,great herds of caribou pasture in the fall upon twigs, bark and the marsh grass and moss, from which they have to scrape the snow with their forefeet, as their kindred, the Lap* land and Siberian reindeer, do. They are migratory animals, covering wide regions in their travels, and appearing unexpectedly in localities which, after a* period, they are apt to leave with equ&l suddenness. A single herd recently seen near Mounl Katahdin was estimated to number 200 caribou. In size the caribou stands between the deer and the moose, and his appearance and habits are essentially those of the Arctic reindeer. The well-known Main* scientist, Bill Moriarity, who is a great hunter and woodsman, says that the caribou is “the handsomest, most forlorn-looking critter tbaj travels on hoofs.”
A fc IN 7all receipts for cooking S - requiring a leavening agent w I- BAKING~ f | POWDER, J? ccause it is an || absolutely pure cream of tartar % | powder and of 33 per cent.' || g greater leavening strength than & £ other powders, will give the r K best results. * It will make the food lighter, sweeter, of .finer | A | flavor and more wholesome. M RCVAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. $
Africa's Only Active Volcano.
Philadelphia Record. The most interesting as well as the most important discovery made by Lieut. Count von Goetzen, the German explorer who has only recently achieved the thirteenth trip across Africa, has probably been the finding in Ruanda of the fire mountain, Kirunga. This is the only active volcanoever found on the Dark Don - tinent, and the sole survivor of the [ong line of flaming and smoking praters which once lay with their fiery caldrons "both sides of Victoria Nyanza far to the nort h. Kirfinga rises above the plain to a heigh t )f nearly 11,120 feet. The crater is ilmost a mile in diameter and its [vail is nearly circular. At the foot )f this great volcano Von Goetzen liscovered extensive Lake Kiru, of which Stanley heard vague reports )n his journey. It proves to be halfway between lakes Tanganyika and Albert Edwardj and it sends its waters, nearly as large as Lake Al-, Sert, through the Rusisi river to Tangauyiki. Thus, the last link in Ihe chain of the sources of the Nile, irst sought by Livingstone, has been OUnd. ——- - . :
Prom the Land of No. 1 Hard.
Fargo, N. D., furnishes another Instance of the merits of No-io-bacf in the person of Frank Winters, who writes the Sterling Remedy Co., of Chicago, to say that himself and a friend, to whom he gave a box of No-to-bac, were completely cured of the tobacco habit. He says the druggists there are selling large quantities of No-to-bac. WhoYvantsa woman with her head out >f an enormous rat-trap? Hip, hoop, hurrah!
Rheumatism—Don’t Read This.
The world-famed Dr. Leslie E. Keeley, of Dwight, 111., recommended Dr. Joseph Payne to use “Schrage’s $1,000,000 Rheumatic Cure” because It cured people. He was right; it never fails. “It is all you claim for it,” says Wm. J. Schulte, of 1214 Biddle street, St Louis. Pleasant to take and does not injure the stomach. Never fails. Good agents wanted. Enormous sales. Why? Write 107 Dearborn street, Chicago, for free testimonials. Doctors praise It. Reference: Hibernian Bank of Chicago. A Chicago burglar stole a piano the 4her day. He probably wanted to get lossessiouof the keys.
1,000 Bu. Potatoes Per Acre.
Wonderful yields in potatoes, oats, lorn, farm aiul vegetable seeds. Cut Ibis out and send 5c postage to the lobu A. sVlzer Seed Co., La Crosse, (Vis., for their great seed book and (ample of Giaut Spurry. CNU Mm. Winslow’* Soothing Stiutp for chll Iren teething, softens the gum. reduces inflam tuition, allays pain. Cures wind colic. 25c pe tittle. 'lie Lowest Kates Ever Made to the South fill he in effect via the Louisville ip Nashville tivilroad on Mere-ha. Apr 11.2and-30.185t5. Roun d rip tickets will be sold to points in Kentucky, !■ nnessee, Alabama, Mis>lssippi, Georgia arid Vest Florida, and one way tickets to Florida ,t about half the usual rates Ask your ticket rent about it, and if h- can not sell you excurion tickets write to C. P. A more, General ’ussenger Ag* nt. Louisville, Ky. Piso's Curt* for Corisurnpti on has saved ntr many a doctor’s bill,—S L<\ Hardy, iopkins Place, Baltimore. Md., Dec. ’94, Only twenty-five hours 'Cincinnati to JacfcsonFille or New Orleans via Queen & Crescent tome. Qni kCst time shortest line and 'finest ieryice. Through Sleepers, handsome Parlor, ’ale and Observation cars.
...........A* [DEALERS CfIUGHT| 1 We advertised in this paper to reach * consumers, and are getting orders W from dealers. So much the better. They buy five and ten boxes at a time. If LITTLE TAP SMOKING TOBACCO f ft in two'ounce bags. Six Pound* for # ft sil.oo. Sold to any body. One dozen ♦ ft pipes free with each totr sarpple pack- w ft age and pipe for two cents, alway cash # ft in advance. # ! KENTUCKY TOBACCO CO., t | Owensboro, Ky. £ TAPE-WORM JS sure Cure Within 2 hours. No inconveniences )ne dose (price E 2) go uantetdl sullH-ient. ;,L AKA VI DO.. Dolgevillo. N. Y PATENTS. 'TRADE-MARKS Examination and tad vice as to Patentability o invention. Bend ijor inventor s Guide or How >»let a Patent. Pa iiticu. o Fauuill, Wash u/ton, It. (*’. Free Scholarship, To Capable, Energetic Agents. tt’rltlj for parLculars. INDIANAPOLIS BUSINESS UNIVERSITY
Profanity and Pain
Tod oftei go together. Refrain from swearing if you are suffering tho tortures of rheumatism and seek;the aid of Hostetter a Stomach Bitters, which "will expel the - rheumatic virus from your blood. Kidney and malarial “complaints, dyspepsia, constipation, neuralgia and biliousness are all relieved by this sterling and comprehensive family medicine, which should be kept always on hand for emergencies. An exchange says“ Chicago Is just now posing in a Venetian role.” Is this anything like a Vienna loaf? 7TTr
Catarrh Caunot be Cored
With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, »a they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or eonstit itio i«l and in order to cure t you have to take lnt rad remedies. Hall's eaiarrh Cure is UHn internally, and a Ota directly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is no quack medicine. Tt was deserlb'd by one of the physicians in the ’ou try for years, and is a regular prescript n It is composed of the best tonic* known com blued with the best blood pur flers, acting di reedy on the raucous surfaces. The oerfeet com bination of the two ingredients is what produces such wqud«rful results in curing catarrh. Send lor testimonials free. P J, CHENEY & 00., Props, Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, price 7„c Counterfeit dimes, made largely of antimony, are out; out the worst anti-money is the bullion in tho Treasury-
jiSmfffiZfc* OF PAINS RHEUMATIC, NEURALGIC. LUMBAQIC AND SCIATIC. HAVE-YOU FIVE DR-MORE COWS 4 -Rf I Hso a “ Baby ” Cream Separator will earn its cost for —jJDEH you every year. Why continue an Inferior system . —another year at so great a loss ? Dairying is now the J'jfSE-af only profitable feature of Agriculture. Properly conducted it always pays well, and must pay you. You B JSs&HI need a Separator, and you need the BEST,—the VVlrn \f AllWyra “Baby.” All styles and capacities. Prices, $75. It Vralfu upward. Send for new 1895 Catalogue. Yf9Q\ II Jj|\ THE OE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO., Branch Ofßcsi! General Offices: ' ELGIN, ILL. 74 CORTUNDT ST., NEW YORK. gayaoooeaai>o»»oooc»eoooepWBOoaawoo8we»wao»o»cw IJWMI The Cat | !ISJ|L Came ij HHHP BackoJf > MSj[*gr I Because there was no place like the ] 11 home where they used I Clausj. | [ i! | This Great Soap makes home, home indeed. Keeps j g everything clean. Keeps The housewife and everybody j [ g happy. Try it Sold everywhere. Made only by j j | THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago. || “Use the Means and Heaven Will Give You the Blessing.” Never Neglect A Useful Article Like SAPOLIO
W.L. Douglas S 3 j sls. CORDOVAN. /fit F3ENJH&ENAMELLEDCALK ’ mm v FINE CALF&KWSAHC! (jg- _ -1 >3.SPFOLICE.3SoIes. JggL *2A 7 - 5 BOYSSCHOCLSMUEa. mm&mL • ladiesjG&vSsEmi ", ' SEND FOB CATALOGUE W-L-DOIiOLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3& $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value lor the money. They equal custom shoes In style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices ars uniform, —stamped en sola. Proxi Si to saved over other makes. U your dealer cannot supply you we cub. LN.U 13—90 WML?
AutakftxVV wvA Vvtm H \ xa\\oT\ \s Wu\v} wrw&We&.w THE RICINO SDN VS. STOVE POLISH in / ( TT cates-fhr -general i P AST JA blacking ol a stove. the SDN PASTE 4. POLISH for a quick LABOR 5 ’ after-dinner shine. THE applied and polished with a cloth. Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Mass., 11.8. AIn our adv. two weeks ago we t«»ld of our very wpenor iA> Uael hand and power feed cutler to be offered at $lO worti) S4O Lest week we told of the process of galvanisiof end iU indispensable preservative qualities. Next week we will five jrm the experience ot two representative businesc firms of Ulinoss, one es whom has sold 4*X» and tbc other 600 Aermotors. The .week following we will quote a price on the best pumpe made (hand, wind mill art 4 irrigating) lower than was ever before dreamed of; and the week following that we shall talk te pee of stool galvanized tanks, with wvers, at the unheard es price of 2% cents per gallon. This is cheaper than wood. They de not shrink, leak, rot, rust or give taste to water. The Aermotor Company treats the pu'olie generously. While state legislatures are passing laws to secure repairs foe farm machinery *t reasonable prices, IT 18 A FACT THAT THK AKRMOTOR COMPANY HAS FOR Till YEAR lfitt BERN COMPELLED TO RAISE ITS OR RFPiIRf BKCAIBE SORE OP ITS Cl STOMF.RS HATR BEER ORDFRIKf IXDIVIDUAL PARTS TO HAKE I P COHPLF.TB HACUISE& BINTE IS THAT WAY THEY COILO GET A HACHIK■ CHEAPER THAS BY OROEEUQ IT ASSEHDLKD. P*op/» art not compelled to buy machinery; they are roe*. pelled to buy repair 9, Th* An motor Company wtriiH thti rtepeet ge*- irons to a fault. U sold so low that eus- could buy the repairs and asaaoible a me chine at less than the assemhlad maehine would cost. But since it was uot certain that they efliVr would get the machine assembled in good shape, for the protection of ite own repotation, the AeraJHi motor Company has raised the priee of certain repairs Juat enough to prevent this in future. Not only has the I 1 Aermotor Company always giventhebestgoodsatthelow- I 1 est price and refused to Bed apoorerticleatanvprice.but I I it has now ESTABLISH!# TWENTY BRANCH HOCHKS I I ISVARIOI S PARTS OF THK COUNTRY IN ORDER B I TO HATE HOT OILY ITf GOODS EASILY ACCKSSI- ft. J BLE, BCT TO HAY* ITS REPAIRS WITH 15 EASY ff REACH. It expects soon to greatly increase this B] JM number of houses. Thisui a matter of the greatest ft rft ini|>ortence to those whs are purchaaing machinery, ft y nft Accidents will ba| pen, and a wise man will look to it H/, yft when he is buying an art*, cle that repairs can quick- Ir/i \R ly be had at reasonablg cost. Our very loyv prices and high atandards cn everything connected with water supply end power production by wind, together with the accessibility of a full line of our goods ang repairs, will be appreciated. Aermotor Co.» tV—gn. Ely‘s Cream Balm lia completely cured me of ca MM .cuorc COIDI tarrh when everything els< failed; Many acquai nt ance.s have used it with ex cel lent results. —Alfred W UH^ Stevens, Caldwell, Ohio. CATARRH KLV’S CBK.4M BALM Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages. Allays Pain and InUamnmation, Heals the Sores, Protects the Mem brane from colds. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm is quiekly absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied in each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St„ New York.
Any style;, any price. ¥ Write fully what you want or how 1 much yon want to pay; we willv larsNo interest you can avail fM yourself of this opportunity of lifetime to own a first class wheel j Discounts to Cash easterners. JL WHEELMEN’S CO., Sf Agents Wanted To represent American Musical Association. New plan paying employment, lit K. Obla st Indiana polls. TEACHERS AND PUPILS. Should attend Indianapolis Business Bbil,so sity and prepare tor paying esaptewiM# \ Writs tor Catalogue and PartluUars. iC./.Maet
