Rensselaer Republican, Volume 28, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 October 1895 — Page 7
It Will Pay To make some provision for your physical feeajth at this season, because a cold or congb, an atticb of pneumonia or typhoid fever now may make you an invalid all winter. First of all be sure that your blood is pure, for health depends upon pure blood. A few bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla will be a paying investment now. It [will give you pure, rich blood and invigorate your whole system. Remember Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. Hnnd’« DiHo are tasteless, mild, eftec11UUU S> Kills tIT9 AU druggy .tfe. How He Took Exercise. Poor Harry Shelman, the long-haired poet, who dressed his entire person to resemble Buffalo Bill, and who was, in fact, startlingly like the greatest of scouts, used to tell of a literary friend of his who had a novel method of taking exercise. His workshop was on the top floor of his house, far from the noise of the street, and he used to write about fifteen hours a day. He was not a Howells or a Bronson Howard, whose working hours never exceed four in any one day. He worked; he labored; he toiled. He had no time for a bicycle and could not afford a horse. He hated walking. Run he could not. Still he must have exercise. He kept his dictionary in the basement and his thesaurus in the kitchen. As he used both very often it was necessary to make many trips downstairs and up again, and in that way he kept himself In splendid physical condition. A visitor once saw him dashing downstairs like a madman and soaring up again like a kite, and was distressed till informed by John’s wife that John was simply hunting for a word and had found It. T-l. The difference in vjiluation gjf property at the last census was very remarkable. In some States the assessment was no more than 25 per cent, of the real value of the property, while in other cases it is believed to have been as high as the selling price. babe, and am wos a vict ' m °! The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONttD KENNEDY, OF BOXBURY, MASS., - Has discovered in one of our common weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates ©f 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 Jungs 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. Sold by all Druggists. i World’s Pair! HIOHEST AWARD, g | *X3rRANUM! Try it when the digestion i is WEAK and no FOOD; : seems to nourish. Tryit: ; w ?,“ seems impossible to ikeep FOOD Z stomach!} 1 3otd by DRUOOISTS EVERYWHERE I § 1 John Carle & Son*, New York. 3 DRHPBYPW ■# I 1 I WF I cured many thoiiHand eaaea pronounced hopeleu. From Brut dow symptoms rapidly disappear, aud In ten day* at leant twothirds of all symptoms are removed. KOOK of testimonials of miraculous cure, sent FJtKR, Ten Days Treatment Furnished Free by Mall. •1.1.1 CIEEN I lONS inCIALISTS NTUNTA CfOISII DIYEHTO Thorn** r. Strapeon, Wublniton, PATENTS P-O. Noatfaf*. until Patent ob- " * ■*” 1 w Ulned. Writ, for Inrantor'a Quids.
_ . The best remedy DR. J. C. AYER S for all diseases The Only ■J of the blood. The best record. SARSAPARILLA Half a century Permitted at World’s Fair* of genuine cures.
SEEKING THE "MESSIAH."
Hundreds with Ills Stand All Night in the Cold in Denver. - A Denver, Colo., dispatch says: It was fortunate for the unfortunate that Sunday intervened to stop the laying on of hands by Francis Schlatter, the New Mexico “Messiah.” He has rigidly observed the Sabbath by going to -St Patrick’s Catholic Church, a small and unpretentious edifice on the north side, within a stone’s throw from the Fox residence, where he is staying. It was expected that a crowd of large proportions woHld attend this morning for the sake of seeing and touching the garments of the healer, owing'to the report that almost fabulous cures have been effected in persons who have merely looked at the face of the strange man. The storm kept persons away from the church. The fact that there would be no treatment to-day had been widely advertised and the crowds that lingered In tbe keen wind of last night melted away before the full brunt of the storm broke over the city at midnight. Five inches of snow covered the ground this morning, and had there been one of the
FRANCIS SCHLATTER.
The New Mexico “Messiah,” who is making marvellous cures in Denver. usual receptions there would have been hundreds of sufferers from the temperature, which dropped below the freezing point. That the prospect of intense cold and dire distress does not serve as a deterrent is proven by the fact: that at 10 o’clock to-night persons are beginnifig to flock jto the vicinity of tbe house, so as to be in line early Monday. The enthusiasm can better be understood when the sudden change of temperature is known. Forty hours ago the thermometer was at eighty, while to-niglit tbe mercury is down to thirty. The crowds are not limited to the poor and indigent by any means, for the well-dressed are visible among the foremost in the line, and to-day quite a number of really wealthy persons essayed to claim the attention of the healer. He was deaf to all importunities, and announced that be would uot give audience to any one who sought relief by the influence of patrician wealth. # Many citizens have tried to induce Schlatter to receive in Coliseum Hall, a large dowu-town building, which has been offered to him by liberal persons who have faith In his alleged divine power. He refuses to entertain such offers, and maintains that “his Father” told him to dwell with the poor, and perform “His works” ;n their midst. Theosophists and Christian Science people are claiming the healer for their own and the result has been to pro voke the liveliest sort of discussion. The Rev, Myron W. Reed, a wellknown liberal clergyman, visited Schlatter this afternoon and was accorded q long Interview iu company with one of tbe judges of the District Court He came away impressed with the power of Schlatter, but said he was puzzled to account for his marvelous faculty. , Schlatter will remain here for another month, and on Nov. 10 will leave for Chicago. He says the Father has fixed Jhe date and that he will never revisit the same places. He is absolutely penniless, but will not accept even the smallest favors, either gifts or money.— N. Y. Herald. "" 1 *' 1 r* m " ■ 1 ■ 1 1 ■ ■ In consequence of the discovery of “argon,” “helium," and other like substances, It Is believed that still greater discoveries are about to be made. Some expect that the apparent diversity of metals Is a result merely of different combinations of a very few simple sulistauees or possibly of only one. It Is on thiji line that researches are likely to be conducted for some time to come.
Beyond- - It aeemeth such a little way to me Across to that strange country, the B*> yond. And yet not strange, for it has grown to be • .' T The home of those of whom I am st fond; They make it seem familiar and most dear, As journeying friends bring distant conn-' tries near. So close it lies that when my sight is clear I think I see the gleaming strand; I know, I fell that those who’ve gone from here Come near enough to touch my hand; I often think, but for our veiled eyes We should find heaven right ’ro. nd ns lies, I cannot make it seem a day to dread When from this dear earth I shall journey out To that still dearer country of the dead, And join the lost ones so long dreamed about. •... . TIT) o ve. this-wor Id, yet shall I love to go —' And meet the friends who wait for me, I know. And so for me there is no sting to death, And so the grave has lost its victory; It is but crossing with a bated breath And white, set face, a little strip of sea, To find the loved ones waiting on the shore, ’ More beautiful, more precious than b*> fore. -—Ella Wheeler Witeox. Eternity; Because the rose must fade/ Shall I not love the rose? Because the summer shade Passes when winter blows Shall I hot rest me there , . In th'e cool air? Because the sunset sky Makes music in my soul, j Only to fail and die, Shall I not take the whole Of beauty that it gives j While yet it lives? | Because the sweet of youth Doth vanish all too soon, Shall I forget, forsooth, To learn its lingering tune— My joy to memorize In those young eyes? If like the summer flower That blooms—-a fragrant death — Keen music hath no power * To live-beyond its breath, Then of this flood of song Let me drink long! Ah, yes, because the rose Fades, and the summer skies Darken, and winter blows All bare, and music dies— Therefore, now is to me Eternity! —R. W. Gilder.
‘‘l Love You, Dear.” She looked at him with quick surprise, She looked at him with tear-brimmed eyes, Her tight-closed hand no motion shaped, No word her curling lips escaped. His eyes were bright, his voice was clear, He only said: "I love you, dear!” Her eyes were deep with afiger's hue, into tender blue; The haughty curve her lips forsook; Her hand lay open cn her book, Then as he spoke he drew more near, And said again: “I love you, dear!” Where sweet love dwells, wrath cannot stav; Her smiles chased all the tears away. She looked at him, “Ah, do not fear, I, too, can say, ‘I love you, dear!’ ” His smile replied, “Our hearts are near," His words were still “I love you, dear I" Ah, when the fire of anger burns, And all life's sweet to bitter turns, When eyes are flashing, lips close set, Prepared to storm and to regret; Then happy we if Greathenrt near Have strength to say: “I love you, dear!” Love at Nine. What though old Boreas roars without And tears about unruly, My sweetheart’s uestling close tb me And says she loves me truly! What care I now for other’s smiles Or frowns, however plenty? She loves me, though she’s only nine, And I am nine and twenty. None know my joy as I sit there, Her arms around me twining. For so-called love of selfish minds No more will I be pining. One can accept without a doubt The love that now is mine. For love can never truer be, Or purer, than at nine. Dear little sweetheart, may I ne'er Betray the love I cherish, May no unwitting act of mine Cause compnment as sweet os this, Though friendship may be plenty, Where one is truly loved by nine. And he is nine and twenty. —Rochester Post-Express. The Wind that Shakes the Barter. Sing hey for the wind in the barley green. And the great clouds drifting over; For the dear brown sails, far out, that lean * To the kiss of the sea, their lover. - . ■ ,1) ■ Sing hey for the fields of barley green, With the mad wind rushing over: And hey for tho path that runs between Where my dearest waits for her lover. —Black and White. /• ' "’’y ’*
Beggars are becoming so Impudent Quit busy people are disposed to neglect their work and hide from them.
Highest of all in Leavening Paw®—Latest U.9LGov't Report Rpya! Absolutely pure
Wretched Vanity.
Twenty years ago a poor woman was left a widow in the city of New Turk with two children. She was honest, energetic and an expert laundress. She succeeded in keeping a comfortable home for her children aud-in-edueating "them. Her ambition wasnOt that they should be honest, energetic working people, but a “lady and a gentleman.” Emma, the daughter, was sent to a private school, taught superficial accomplishments, - and to play on ~ the" piano and dance. She made her way. through some of her school aeqtiainranees, into families who would not have recognized the poor washerwoman, and wore gaudy clothes and cheap jewelry which her mother slaved to buy for her. She married a salesman In a retail shop, a man weak in body and mind. His scanty salary she wasted on finery for herself and her children, and when he lost his situation a year ago she came back w r ith them to the mother whom she had so long declared was too “vulgar” ’to acknowledge before the world. Tom, her brother, was a keen-witted young fellow r , whose only ambition was to be “swell.’’ He bad a place as copying clerk in a shop on the Bowery, lost It at the beginning of the hard times two years ago, and remained Idle, dependent on his mother. When her employers offered to give him a situation as a messenger or porter, he haughtily refused it, as lie “had not come into the world to do menial work.”, Last spring the old washerwoman, worn out at last, fell ill, and Tom found himself starving. He pieked a woman’s pocket on a ferryboat, was caught in the act, tried and-sentenced to six months’ Imprisonment. His defense was that hq was starving. “You could have sold the expensive clothes you wear, or that scarf pin,’’ l said his law'yer. “No, sir,” Tom replied; “I may be unfortunate, but I shall always dress and behave like the gentleman that I am.” There is a sad, if not a shameful future for the boy or girl who lias never learned at home that humble independence is better than polite shiftlessness. And added to this it can be truly said that many a mother who has been indifferent to the cardinal virtues, and has taught her children only the graces of false gentility, has had bitter reason to regret the results that have followed her Unwise teachings.—Youth’s Companion.
A Dime in His Windpipe.
R. J. Hincheliff, a newspaper solicitor of Pittsburg, after carrying a silver dime in his windpipe for nearly two years, coughed It up the other night. Last December a year ago his child, while sitting- ou his knee, playfully placed a dime with which slie had been playing in her father’s mouth. Hinehcliff, by a movement of tbe head, accidentally swallowed the coin. Doctors told him he need not be worried, as the dime Would dissolve and pass away. They refused to perform au operation. Hincheliff was subject to violent fits of coughing after swallowing the money, and hq was awakened from sleep by such a fit the other evening. Jumping out of bed, he coughed up the dime. lis surface had been corroded. Hincheliff is carrying the piece as a souvenir.
Steam’s Up! The Moorings Cast Off.
Majestically the gTeftt ocean gieyhokaJ leaves the dock and steatKgdown the rjv/t outward bouud. But are yoiT^iay. prepared for the seasickness almost always Incident to a transatlantic trip, with the infallible stomachic, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters? If not, expect to suffer without aid. Tbe Bitters Is the stanch friend of all who travel by sea or land, emigrants, tourists, commercial travelers, mariners. It completely remedies nausea, biliousness, dyspepsia. rheumatic twinges and inactivity of the kidneys.
Artesian Wells for South Dakota.
Tbe government has sept artesian well machinery to tbe Rosebud reservation and will at once put down a well to determine whether the artesian basin extends to that point. If .successful in this a number of wells will be sunk on the various reservations. There is uo doubt that In a few years the surface of the interior of the State will be dotted with these spouters and no country on the globe will equal South Dakota for-successful irrigation and bountiful crops. *
Kate Field in Denver.
Denver, Sept. 10.—My journey from Chicago was over the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, one of the best managed systems in the country. I should say, judging by the civility of the employes, the comfort 1 experienced, the excellence of its roadbed, and the punctuality of arrival. I actually reached Deliver ahead of time. The Burlington Route is Bflso the licst to St. l’aul, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City.
A Dead Easy Job.
“What is Smith doing now?" "He is traveling with a circus.” “Pretty hard work, isn't It?" “No. he has nothing to do except to stick his UraiCjjL.to the lion's month twice a day ”
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Is taken Internally. t*rtee Ts cent*. i
Dainty Old Heliogabalus.
Hellogaiislus generally supped brains >f wd thrushes. W« think Plan* Cure for Consumption is the only me<lß-iue lor Coughs.— Jk v 'xie Pi.nckahu, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1,18*4. Hope i« the health of the spirit. Mr*. \Vin«toir*« shot lor OUdrea teetlnug: *Oit"l>fc tu« aiuu*. rraune* Inflammation. *U*jr» pain, eura. wl«<f «hc. tteooU a bottla.
Lightning's Power.
Professor Hoppe reports in the “Ardilv fur Post sttd Telegraphic,” a new example of the mechanical power of a lightning discharge. In a storm that raged at Klausthal, In the Hartz mountains, a bolt entering a house struck a wooden post on whose top two metallic nails one-sixth of an inch in diameter were melted. No forge coaid have effected this; to bring It about, an electric current 'of 200 amperes Intensity and 20,000 volts tension must have passed through the nails. Supposing that the action of the lightning lasted a second, the dynamic power thus developed was eqnal to 5,000 horse power, but if, as is much more probable, the discharge lasted only one-tenth of a second, we get a rate of work that does not fall short of 50,000 horse power.
That Joyful Feeling,
With the exhilarating sense of renewed health and strength and internal cleanliness, which follows the use of Syrup of Figs, is unknown to the few who have not progressed beyond the old time medicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes offered but never accepted by the well-informed.
Causes of Duels in Italy.
Iu Italy in the last ten years 047 duels have been fought over newspaper articles, 730 on account of rivalry In love, 377 for political differences, 289 for Insulting words and the smallest number, 19, for disputes at cards. According to the figures, jonrnaiists aro most apt to fight, and actors least of those who fought at aIL bat there ia not a single banker or capitalist in the list The same effect produced by costly sulphur baths are accomplished by Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. "Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown. 50c. A dude In Philadelphia was turned out of the club to which be belonged because he paid his tailor’s bill two days after he got tse clothes. If the hair ia falling out and turning gray, the glands of the skin need stimulating and color-food, and the best remedy and stimulant ia Haifa Hair Renewer. Count your chickens after they are hatched, and lock the door of the henroost. Great oaks from little acorns grow, if a hog doesn’t eat them. FITS.—AIt FitsstoptKdfrwbj Dr. Kline's (l-ett IVerve i e.tuier, ho Flta after first day’s use. Marvelous cure* TreaUje and ftM trial bottle tree to Fit case*, bdod to Dr. lOlae. IM Arch Ut., Phi la. Fa.
| THE*KINQ CURE over ™ ‘ 'l^^^ I RHESUMATISMt ir§ t pranjRALGiA, wwmm l ni'iii nni A 18 I It’s only a ! question of time V/V II a b° ut your using Pearline. So it /1 ’ II to us. It seems as if every / V j | V | A bright woman must see, sooner or ml j f J ater * bow much easier and quicker and II ! I IMf I and more economical is 1 * way than any - /' other known way of washing. j You can’t think of any drawback or objection to . J! it that Hasn’t been met and disproved, a thou- O sand times over. Millions of women are using | \ Pearline now. Ask some one of them, who \ uses it rightly, hoW much she saves by it Manufactured only by Jas. Pyle. N.Y. “The Best Is Aye the Cheapest." Avoid Imitations of and Sub- - bi; . V.- my'r * ; ———*—a* * stitutes for SAPOLIO I White Washing f j[ j» t* not whit* washing, ; as all fMifi is uot f«uU Claus. Btflfe • - '-"’l--' • ■ I That bath-brick tint when seen in J» « 1 clothes, always proves that they .lag ' ' arr strangers to Santa Claus .Soap. |NraßßPlß§bJ, Try »L Sold everywhere Made by ' I THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, - CHICAGO. I
BEST IN THE WORLD. A/ 1\ mI ini rs \tV\«wvess \Y» 1/ \s \yu\m uwv/aWt&.ml/ @THE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH ia cake* for general' blacking of a store.; THE SUN PASTE' POUi*H for a enich after-dinner thine,: applied and pot) iahed with a doth. Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Mass.. B.A A* Miss Lucy W. Lewis, of Randolph, Mass., a well-known and highly respected lady, writes Ondet date of Jan. 22, 1895: “I can speak only In praise of ‘Ripans Tabulea.’ I am troubled by what my physician has called Nervous Dyspepsia. My work, that of a school teacher, often brings on a state of intense . nervousness, which prevents digestion and results in severe headaches. I have found that by watching my feelings, and taking a Tabule with meals—as I feel myself becoming tired and nervous—l get relief at the time and prevent further trouble. I have derived much benefit during the time I have used them, and do not jntend to be without ft rr-* j Rlpam Tabule* sio told by druge'ots. or by man tm Ibe price (SO cent* a box) la sent to Tbe HI pans cheat, eal Company, No. 1 o Spruce Street, New York Ifimpfol rial. 10 cent*. THE BEST TEST) IS USE. Below an a few condensed extracts from leans received: “Used for my own babe, and can (nils say that it W. Lmhtner, M. D.. Napoleon, MoT 7 | “I am feeding my baby by the ‘Special Directions.’ fir has worked like a charm.”—Us* U. S. Tubman, Boston Highlands, Mass. Another physician writes, After Trial of Ridge’s Food: “It meets my most sanguine expectations 1 expea* to use H whenever occasion rlten." “Everybody thinks he is a month older than he Is—a great, fit, strong, healthy boy. . . A great many sc my friends are trying to Induce me to change, bat if ms baby thrives on hidgz’s Food, that Is enough."-Mac Less O. Vosr. Lynn. Mass. “I have used liter,es Food the past six months, tat find It just as recommended. Iu fact, would not to without It"—Miss Dors 8. Davis, Rockford, lit Send to WOOLRICJI Sc CO , I’alrasr, Msm, for ••Healthful Hint*." BENV FREE. •rrgF^H^ir-'rw— m —»ti—‘MKT* j, ir»'fp~Tt*~*TT*w**‘T C. N. U. No. tl-M — 1 -■ 1 ■■■■—■ ——■■ 1 -w '• m WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS ” please aay you taw the adverttaemoto In this paper.
