Rensselaer Republican, Volume 28, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 October 1895 — Page 3
BEST IS THE WORLD. 4vwa>o\\\\vi mvA \ot % r) \ xtiVm \s \vu\\\ wmaWeA.w @THE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH in cakes for general blacking of a stove. _ THE SUN PASTE Polish for a quick after-dinner shine, applied and polished with a cloth. Hon* Bros., Props., Canton, Maas.. D. 8- A. Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet* ter than othersand enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to , the'neeas 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 trulybeneficial properties of a perfect laxative; 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 wakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists inSOc 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.
Photographing: Flying Insects. The French artists appear to have gotten the art of photography down to a much finer basis than those of America and England. They were first to photograph flying bullets, race horses in motion and other rapidly moving objects. The latest triumph reported from Paris is a photograph of a flying dragon fly by M. Marey, iu which the exposure was but the 1-25,000 part of a second. By the aid of a small electric lamp inside of the mouth of an assis"taut, Marey also claims to If&ve photographed the moving globules of blood circulating in the veins, and to have detected a difference in the motion of the colored and colorless corpuscles.
PRETTY AND ATTRACTIVE WOMEN. Their Good Looks Not a Secret. [SPECIAL TO OCU LAUY URAOKQS ] No matter to what country she belongs, tt whether she be black or white, as a woman she desires to look well. Women know the influence of beauty ©n men; men rarely admire a beautiful invalid, but they do admire a woman in whom is blended good features and perfect health. There is no secret about a woman’s beauty; it all lies in the caro she devotes to herself, to removing from her system all poisonous impurities, and keeping at bay those fearful female diseases. ; The flashing eye, elastic step, and brilliant complexion aro never companions of a womb trouble; only the distressed expression and aches, pains, blues, faintness, dizziness, bearing-down feeling, etc., keep it company. Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound removes female troubles promptly, and cleanses, Invigorates, and consequently beautifies, the form of woman. Women, the world over, pay homage to it, and praise its discoverer. Your druggist sells more of it than all other female medicines. ' •JONES HE PATS THE FREIGHT.” wjjjT Farm and Wagon «Hnrr ~ni r~ UnitaSSutw Standard. All Size* and All Kindt. Not made by a trust or controlled by a combination. For Free Book and Price LUt, address JONES OF BINGHAMTON, N. Y„ U. S. A.
The remedy DR. J. C. AYER’S *°p ctfoghs Highest Awards and colds ' '*’ I t Its record: Cherry Pectoral fifty years At the World’s Fair. o£ CUMB '
SAVED BY A FRIEND.
From the Evening Pott, Chicago, Fit “ •William H. Theel, who is employed by the Title, Guaranty and Trust Company, in the Stock Exchange, Chicago, was seen one evening last week at the residence of his parents, 258 East Blaekhawk street. His experience is an interesting one in; deed, which will prove more iuteresi t in allowing him to tell it in his own woru' He says: “Sometime ago I had an attack of typhoid fever which kept me in bed for several weeks. Having from childhood always been in very delicate health, my physician and also my parents feared that I must surely succumb to the disease. But I gradually passed the danger point and softer some time becauieconralesccut, and in due course of time became strong enough to go down town and attend to my clerical duties. ~ But for some reason I cojijjd not get back my strength and I found that the .effects of the 'malady were still present in my system. I had no api petite, and the most tempting dishes which my anxious mother could prepare had no attractions for me. I became pale, languid, gained no strength, and, in fact, became weaker day after day. I became morose and peevish; and added to this state of my nervous system there was every evidence of quick consumption—such as short breathing, a deathly pallor, relieved only by hectic flushes and, in fact, a general breaking down of my.,whole system. My condition was such that my parents became very much alarmed, although of course they did not communicate their fears to me. The fact is that while I saw their alarm and felt myself surely and slowly losing my hold on this life I really did not care, for life had become a burden to me the way that I felt. “It was \vhile I was in this desperate frame of mind that one day my fellow clerk handed me a pamphlet and two boxes of Dr. Williams’ .Vink Pills which he brought toe from the drug store across the street. I took both the boxes and the pamphlet home and showed them to my mother. _ She was of the opinion that if(he medicine would do as it was claimed, it might save my life, and she advised by all means to give it a fair trial. I did so, and the result exceeded my fondest hopes. Although I have so far only used three boxes of the pills, the improvement of my general condition is almost marvelous. The severe headaches from which I suffered untold torments have wholly disappeared, my appetite is again good, I eat hearty meals now three times a day and digest the food splendidly, and my strength is returning. My complexion, as you can see for yourself, is quite clear. My lungs are sound and, in fact, I am now a healthy and strong man.” condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female, and all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or wilj be sent post paid on receipt of price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50), by addressing Dr. 'Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
Atlanta and the South.
The Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad will, during the time of the expo-sition-aC Atlanta, Sept. IS to Dec. 31, 1895, offer exceptionally fine service between Chicago and the South. A low rate ticket vv-ill be sold, and through cars run to all Southern points. This is fiftyfive miles the shortest route to Atlanta, Chattanooga and the South. For guide to Atlanta and the exposilion address C. W. Humphrey, Northwestern Passenger Agent, St. Paul, Minn., or city ticket office, No. 230 Clara street, Chicago. Charles L. Stone, General Passenger Agent, Chicago.
She Was Chasing the Cow.
Among the women who would scoru being called “the new woman,” there are fine specimens of most advanced and energetic ability. A family not ten miles from the Louisville postoffice owus a very valuable and highly* cherished cow. She spends her days in a choice country pasture lot provided by the friends who love her, and her nights in a luxurious barn attached to the city residence. The other evening the news was brought that Beauty was missing; she had escaped from her bluegrass boudoir aud had gone for a stroll. The family was perturbed, scouts were sent in all directlons*to fiud the stray pet Beauty, but with no results. The next night came, and still no cow had been found. After the family had retired the lady of the house was aroused from troubled slumbers by the mooing of Beauty echoing on the mooulit, midnight, summer air. She feared by the time she awakened her husband the cow would have flown again, so she jumped iuto her slippers, threw a petticoat over her nightdresp, aud scampered noiselessly down to the barn, just in time to see the discouraged animal turning out of the alley to go down the street. There was no time for delicate reluctance to be felt. The lady lu white flew out the back gate, sped a square after the flying cow, caught her and led her back to the barn in triumphant joy. As the dame once more climbed Into her bed, the husband awoke to exclaim: “Mary, where on earth have you been V” , And Mary blithely replied: “Chasing the cow down on Blank street.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. One of the cleverest Inventions ever passed by the patent office is the machine for sticking cdtumon plus in the papers In which they are sold. The contrivance brings up the pins in rows, draws the paper in position, crimps it In two lines, then at a single push passes the pins through the paper and sets them in position.
MAHONE IS NO MORE.
FAMOUS SOLDIER AND STATESMAN DEAD AT WASHINGTON. Was a Favorite in the Southern Army and Saved Petersburg When Apparently Defenableaa After the Great Mine Explosion. Picturesque Figure Gone. General William Mah one died at his home in Washington Tuesday afternoon. Flu had been failing steadily since he was stricken with paralysis nearly a week ago, and it was known that death was only a question of time. The veteran, however, showed remarkable vitality and made a strong fight against the grim angel. The country will loDg remember Gen. William Mahone as due of the most picturesque characters in public life during the last thirty years. Exceptionally slight in stature and frame, he has been a marked man in great assemblages. His peculiar Style of dress, and especially his pat, attracted attention to him. This broad-brimmed, soft felt headgear seemed out of proportion to ifce tiny form beleath it. But beneath this shade sparkled a pair of the keenest eyes ever possessed by man. Gen. Mahone marks an epoch in the nistory of the United States since the late war. He has been during the last
GEN. MAHONE.
quarter of a century the central figure’ic Virginia politics, and at one time he was in the center of one of the most violent political storms ever waged in Congress. He was in his G9th year. His favorite sobriquet was “Hero of the Crater,” won by his wonderful courage in .the attack on Petersburg, when the Federal forces sprung a mine beneath the Confederate defense. He fought like a* tiger, and later historians give to him almost alone the credit of keeping Petersburg from the Union hands by”repairing before sunset the shattered Confederate lines. He had joined the Confederate army at once after the secession, participated in the capture of the Norfolk navy yard in 1861, and raised and commanded the Sixth Regiment of Virginia. -He was commissioned a brigadier general in March, 1804, and six months later became a major general. At the close of: the war he returned to his original work of engineering, and became president of the Norfolk and Tennessee Railroad. Ho was elected to the United States Senate in 1879. He was like a firebrand cast into a mass of dry tinder, and from the peculiar attitude that he at once assumed he caused one of the most bitter controversies and stubborn deadlocks ever known i$ the history of that body. / Mahone at last acted with the Republicans and gave them the organization of the Senate. His course brought down upon his head the wrath of the Democrats, but the Republicans received him with open arms, and the Federal patronage in Virginia was turned over to him. Since that time he has been the Republican Jeader in Virginia. He. served in the Senate until ISB7, when he was defeated.
The Comic Side OF The News
Holmes has just finished his life—one of them; will justice finish the other? Holmes says that the suspense; is killing him. He probably will be killed that way. It strikes us that the bidding on the Duke of Marlborough is altogether too slow. Look him over, girls. Yachting costs Willie K. Vanderbilt $160,000 a year, and it is said that the yacht isn't his most‘'expensive plaything, either. A Pennsylvania man scared his wife into speaking' for the first time in seven years the other night. No cause is assigned for the rash act. A current news note says that “Donna Cousinp of Ohili, who is worth $200,000,000, is now well on in years." We should say she is also pretty well off. If this bloomer wedding business continues, some of these days n near-sighted parson will probably hitch two bicycle men or two new women together. New York has decided that the new woman may ride horseback “man fashion” if she chooses to do so. This certainly is astride in the right direction. In June Campos issued a proclamation said “the war is now ended;” in August he said, “Cuba cannot be conquered” Somebody must have told him. The Princess Colonna, nee Mackay, has got rid of her titled husband by paying him SI,OOO a month for life. That’s a pretty stiff price, but it's worth every cent of it.. “The movement toward the cities has made less farmers,” remarks the Boston Globe. We haven’t noticed ifr; there are fewer farmers, but they seem to be fully ss large as ever. * "As we are a gallanf nation it Is not permissible to overlook the ladies," says the Han Francisco Argonaut Bosh! Gallantry or no gallantry, we think ths theater hat should go. An Ohio woman who has been speechleas for six years wav cured the other -sight by hjvaotiMn. There can be -no dbubt About it; hypnotism certainly is a vary dangti power to fool with
“Old Put’s” Plow.
When the news came into Connecticut that the British soldiers had fired the shot heard "around the world,” Israel Putnam was plowing In a stony field In his farm in Pomfret. The plow vanished from the unfinished furrow and from history, then and there, when “Old Put” took up arms for his country. It was rescued from a Windham County barn loft,a short time ago and bought for a song by E. A. Brooks, an enthusiastic relic hunter of Hartford. It now occupies an honored position among his collection of curiosities. The Putnam plow is a pretty tough-looking reiic, but it is intact in all its parts. It Is interesting and valuable aside -from its associations, in that it is a capital type of the plow used in New England during the colonial period. Mr. Brooks has also secured a wrinkled old image of Bacchus, the eldest in the country, under whose benign countenance travelers found entertainment in the Sanford tavern, in Windham town, in the seventeenth century. The figure was carved from a log of pine by British prisoners in Windham jail In 1786.- -New York Herald.
A Silent Appeal for Help.
When your kidneys and bladder are inactive they are making a silent appeal for h«3p. Don’t disregard it, but with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters safely impel them to activity. They are in immediate danger, and it Is foolhardiness to shut one’s eyes to the fact. Be wise in time, too, if you experience manifestations of dyspepsia, malaria, rheumatism, constipation or nerve trouble. The Bitters before a meal adds zest to It;
A Scriptural Inn.
The landlord of the Jerusalem hotel at Jaffa is uamed Hardegg. He is a German, who tinges everything connected with his establishment with a sacred hue. The two wings of his hotel are respectively designated the Old Testament and the New Testament;, while the twelve rooms In each correspondingly bear the names of the twelve tribes of Israel and the twelve apostles. Before leaving Mr. Hardegg presents each tourist with a little book of his own composing, styled “Bible Pills,” and carrying on its covers the injunction, “One to be taken every. bight and morning to assist your spiritual digestion.” A gentleman from Boston writes: “Five brothers and -sisters all brought up on Ridge’s Food, one unde saved from the grave, and now lhy own children are of course introduced to it. One 18 months old, as fat and hearty as any in the land, the other, five weeks old, has gained 2*4 pounds since birth. There is uo substitute for Ridge’s Food.”
Each According to His Needs.
For swearing in members iu tlie English House of Commons the revised version of the Bible is used for Protestants, the Douai version for Catholics and a copy in Hebrew for Jews. Dandruff forms when the glands of the skin are weakened, and if neglected, baldness is sure to follow. Hall's Hair ltenewer is the best preventive.
An Insinuation.
"Last flight I dreamed that I died. What do you suppose waked me up/” “Was it the heat?” I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved mv boy’s life last summer.— Mbs. Alljk Douglass, Leltoy, Mich., Oct. £O, 1894. The age for the admission of cadets to the military aendemy at West Point is between 17 and 22 years.
Fall Medicine Is fully as import.nl and as beneficial as Spring Medicine, for at this season there is great danger to health in the varying temperature, < old storms, malarial gt rms, prevalence of fevers and ctlier diseases. All these may Le avoide I if the blco 1 is kept pure, the digestion good, an 1 bodily health vigorous by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. Hnnrl’c Pillc cure all liver Ills, blllous--IIUUU 5 » Ills ness, headaches. 15c.
SAPOLIO IS LIKE A GOOD TEMPER, “IT SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE.” germ-life The doctors tell us, that disease germs are everywhere; in the air, in the water, in Oar food, clothes, money; that they get into our bodies, live there, thrive and grow, if they find anythingtothriveon. Consumption is* the destruction of lung-tissue by germs where the. lung is too weak to conquer them. The remedy is strength—vital force. Scott’s Emulsion, with hypophospliitesjroeaa* the adjustment of lung strength to overcome germ-life. It is fighting the germ with the odds in our favor. These tiny little drops of fat-food make their way into the system and re-fresh and re-invigorate it. Whether you succeed with it or not depends on how good a start the germs had, and how carefully you can five. The shortest way to health is the patient one. The gain is often slow. SO oants and si. 00 SCOTT & BOWNE. ClwlsSs. Wear At.
Highest of iH «a 1 fifing Bower.—Latest U.S. Gov’t Report Royal ABSOLUTELY PURE
More Machinery a nd Better Pay.
Since the extensive tatradoetim of the sewing machinea we do met tow of the distressed needle wanes at ooe time so prevalent Typewriter* get double the wages they wwttd' get as I pen writers, and they de Me flaw as much work with comparative pleasure and great leisure. Steamships costing millions, equipped with evety knows invention for safe and cdktest service, In six days at a nominal cost with every comfort, take weekly with alas oat unfailing regularity thousands «f people across the Atlantic, where if 1790 It took Samuel Slater, tlr honnrnl fnnuT er of the cotton trade, ufxty-rfx days to cross, and no doubt with great discomfort and danger. Small newspapers cost, at one time, Oe, Se, and 12c, and were loaded with a government revenue stamp. Now a bettor paper can be got for a cent, bat the compositors and printers get much higher pay and have, like the newspapers, btcrcased many thousandfold. So It runs ail .through, and the world gets benefited.—Fibre and Fabric.
Hall's Catarrh Care.
.s a constitutional cuts. Price a crate. —r—vjtT" The servants in a school for girls in Connecticut, while cleaning ap the rooms after the school dosed, discovered 3,678 wads of chewing gma shack about in various places. N velons cures. Treatise sad CM trial battle tem to lit cases, 4- g llrri fin tws >t nits l~«
K "“ K «=«bruise3 < SPOTS »-ST. MBS Oil the soreness disappear. £ out. rr is Isacical. % Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of '‘’iLJthe house of Wetter Baker & Co. (established & In 17809 has ted to the placing on the market Kylmaiiy misleading anJPVnscrupulous imitations gMT of their name, labels, and wrappers. Waiter if JH&k Baker A Co. aro the oldest and largest manuI| Wii, facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and M Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are ifgy used in their manufactures. B|g| Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the 4g*n«MJe Walter Baker & Co.'s goods. WALTER RAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS.
ooeseoeoie eeeisseeye—ooooneoeoeoeoeeieiea Served fPf* Right h left » ' <^ou can ta^e that soap ; if P right back and change ! I t for Santa Claus Soap. 1 B f JjU FI * would not use any ; *^rrWim ol' 4 HimLi Every womgn who has I SANTA CLAUS SOAP knows it is without am. equal. Sold everywhere Mad«fonly by ! The N. K. Fairbank Company, - Chicago. j
Kate Field in Denver.
Denver, Sept. 10. —My journey froaa Chicago was over the Chicago, Barling! ton and Quincy Railroad, one of the beef managed systems in the country, I should •ay, judging by the civility of the cm* ployes, the comfort I experienced, tfcej excellence of its roadbed, and the pnnwj taality of arrival. -I actually reached! Denver ahead of time. The Barliagtoa Route is also the best to St Paul, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City. riy in all haste from the friend whe win suffer yo.i to teach him nothing. Jfra Winslow’s Sootbino Svstrr tor children! methlnf: softens the pirns, nances -f‘TB.I allays pain, cures wind colic. a cents s bottle. |
m CUBES AND PEEVE STS CtUt, Caught, Sore Throat, Influenza. Breschttba Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joists, , Lumbago, Inflammations, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, Frostbites, Chilblains, Toothache, Headache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAIN’S In from oust# twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after read* tag thta advertisement need any one HUFFER WITH PAIN. A half to a teaspoonful In half a tomhlt sdl water will In a few minutes core Oram ml , Spurns. Sour Stomach, Heartburn. N •von*, aesa. Bieeples-neea, fiiclc Headache. Diarrhea*! Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all Internal There Is not a remedial agent In tbe world that 1 will cure Fever and Arne and all other msierlo-w. bilious and other fevers, aided by RAtnVAV’sf PILLS, so quickie as iiadway’s Ready KelleZ Fifty cents per bottle. Hold by Dragglsta
Her. Dr. Edward L. Clark, pastor of the Central Congregational Church of Boston, says: “I have used Rlpans Tabu lea with so mock satisfaction that I now keep them always at band. They are the only ' remedy I use except by a physician’s prescription. They are all they claim to be.” ( 4 . Mpana Tabaka am *oM hj drucaUta. or tis atatt IC tSr utaa (fiO emu a box) la mat to Tbe Ktpaur i hmmtr rairwasaHjr Nn 111 tljimn 'iirnrt NmrYirt SHOfIS WtlDoala mr»s»c bamjohs w.nosma ■JVOIUII Waalilnglon, p.<£ ■ ijralalaot war. UadJnSlcaUncflialma, attj Sm bum pwnutßHS ! ?i!^& DITCITC Thomas r. aimpaoa. WasMa«tasc pITrBTS I> C. No «tt'» feo nntil PatentoOsms mm ■ SS mined. Writ* for lunmorilMla C. M. BL No. 4S—OB * WHEN WBITINO TO ADVERTISUM jjm*» aay you sow the odvarUasmas* !W
