Rensselaer Republican, Volume 28, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 December 1895 — Page 7
/ . BEST IN THE WOULD. IV— j • and tot W, H % ck\eanness*Xn\s v' fft / %xaX\on \s Vtu\v) @THE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH iu cakes —for general blacking of a stove. THE SUN PASTE POLISH for a Quick after-dinner shine, applied and polished with a cloth Morse Bros., Prop*., Canton, Mass.. U. S- A.
Mr awr F» «»“’ 18\w T z®|Mr/w ' Jf s —»:■ i»«/ lv'" ’" KNOWLEDGE | Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when Tightly 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 truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and 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 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.
7TIE AEKMOTOR CO. does half the world’s Windmill business, becaueo It has reduced tbo cost of Wind power to l.'B what It was. It has many branch _ » houses, and supplies its goods aud repairs /Vavasira at your door, it can aud does furnish a better article for less money than others. It makes Pumping and Geared, Steel, Galvanizort-after-Completion Windmills, Tilting and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Buzz Saw **g y Frames, Steel Feed Gutters and Feed Grinders. On application it will name one '(IB of these articles that it will furnish until January Ist at 1/3 the usual price: Il also makei Tanks and Pumnsof till kinds. Bond ftw catalogue* Factory: IZtb, Rockwell end Fillmore Streets, Chicago fWSWI is? In* Stella M. Godfrey, writing from Hoffman, N. U., under date of June 12, 1895, says: “My sister-has used your medicines. Shejwas a sufferer from dyspepsia and indigestion for y several years, and after having • your Tabules reeoinmencJd and giveh them a trial, she speaks in the highest terms of them, and says that they cannot be excelled in keeping the system well regulated. Her name is (Miss) Katherine Godfrey, Postoffice Hoffman, N. Cs” Rlpans Tabmes are sold by druggists or by mall It the price (50 cents a box) Is sent to The Rlpans t hemieal Company, No. 10 Spruce Street, New York. Sample vial, 10 cents. rtHftPAYS FOR advertiaeW'R I B inent 4 TIMES JL . '%k ■ I R 111 100 high-grade Zfffi ■SU I g 0 papers In Illinois. &|B g H H S E *IJO Illi guaranteed circuvBF ■ W laliou 100.000- Tfe. H R I * or, veenn insert Him Halil It 3 TtMES in 1,450 conn- V try papers f0r...'.. ■ SEED EOR CATALOGUE. Clilcngo Newspaper TTnlon, 93 South Jefferson Street, Ohlcag', 111. asthma! POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC | HAWCcffifrfcww-, Glvfcs relief in FIVE minutes, fiend ■ for a FREE trial package. Sold by H Drugpihts. Ono Box pent postpaid B on receipt of >I.OO. Rix boir» fj.OO. H Address TUGS. POPHABR PHILA., PA. g nENSIONwISSSTO KSRESffiISISSWRItBfi'SJiaS ■ 3 yra la last war. 15 adjudicating claims, atty since. ■MBUSnOHMnB Sure relief a cmwM a KIDDER’S PSSTIUEB.r,STI.™i QBHMBBBUBMBBHFIuhriestcwii, MiM TJf CURES WHEHE ALI ELSE FAILS. 7gj Kj Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ITI in time. Bold by druggists. p»|
the doctors approve of Scott’s Emulsion. For whom ? For men who are-weak, when they should be strong; for babies and children who are thin, when they should be fat; for all who do not get from their food the nourishment they should. Poor bipod is starved blood?’ You eat and are nourished. Consumption and scrofula never come when thesblood gets its proper food. And nothing is better for starved' bloo<| than COD-LIVER OIL. Scott’s Emulsion is COD-LIVER OIL with the taste taken out. It is for all who., feel weak, have lost appetite of are losing flesh. Ko one else breaks up cod-liver oil as it is broken up in Scott's Emulsion. If you nef/l it, get it, Ko substitute will do. * TWO SIZES, SOc. «nd SI.OO. SCOTT 4 BOWNE, Chemists, New York.
CAUSED BY VACCINATION.
- From the journal, Detroit, Mich. Every one ip the vicinity of Meldrum avenue and Champlain street, Detroit, knows Mrs. McDonald, and many a neighbor has reasoii to feel grateful to her for the kind and friendly interest she has manifested in cases of illness. She is a-,kind-hearted friend, a natural nurse, and £tn intelligent and refined lady. To a reporter she recently talked at some length about Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, giving some very interesting ihstari?W in her own immediate knowledge I of miryelous cures, and the universal benefieonce of the remedy to those who had' used it.
‘T : Dcntild, “something of the worth of this medicine, for it has been demonstrated in my_own immediate fai»ily.. My_daugh : ter Kittie is attending high school, and has never been very strong since she began. I suppose she stmfies hard, and she has quite a distance to go eveby day. AVlierir the small-pox broke out all of the feehool children had to be-’vaccinated. I took her over, to Dr. Jamesan and he vaccinated her. 1 never sa w such an arm in inyMife and the'dcrctoT said iie tievFFdiTl: She was broken out on her shoulders and back aud was just as sick as she could J®. To add "to it all neuralgia set in, and the poor child yras in misery. She is naturally of a nervous temperament and she suffered most awfully. Even after she recovered the neuralgia did nst leave her. Stormy days or days that weie damp or preceded a storm, sho could not go out at all. She was pale aud thin, anti had-no appetite. k "I have forgoitjm just who told me about the Pink Pills, but I got some for her and they cured her right up. She has a nice color in her face, eats auj sleeps well, goes to school every day, and is well and strong in every particular. I have dTm^T~lreaTd^of’ftnythi®g-^o = -ba+W- up tlie blood to compare Pills. I shall alwr.ys keep them in the house and recommend them to my neighbors.” Dr. Williams Pink Pijfe for Pale People are considered an unfailing specific for such-diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial ikiralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects qf la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, _tbat_tjre<Lfeeliag-rasliltingfrpm nervpXfs prostration; all diseases resulting frdfn vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They are also a specific for troigbles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. In men they effecta radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, oyerwork l or excesses of whatever nature. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills arg Bold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price (50 cents, a box or six boxes for s2<so— they are nevtr sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
How Fast the Earth Moves.
Most persons are aware that the earth makes a complete resolution on its axis once in tiventy-four hours, but probably many are ignorant as to the high rate of ispeed in accomplishing the feat. The highest velocity ever‘at tallied by a.cannon-ball has been estimated something like 1,600 feet per second; and -the earth-mlist tunrifliiiost equally fast. In short, the rate of spe¥d at the equator has been estiniated at nearly 1,500 feet per second, or a mile every 3.6 seconds, or 17 miles a ws-j-.--•--.-.■nwirr ii'--.- ' — minute.
MO SECRET ' IN THIS WOMAN’S CASE. Mrs. Campbell Wishes Her Letter Pub. lished so that the Truth May Bo Known. [SI’KCIAL TO oui» IADT It It A DEBS .J Of the thousands of jgjters received from women all over Ac world by Mrs. f, not one 1s the nubliC oi r. Thus abmfidence in Wished -beeen Mrs. Pinkham and her army cf patients; and she freely solicits a letter frem any vonian. rich or poor, who is in ill health or ailing. ; In the case of Mary E. Campbell, cf Albion, Noble Co., Ind,, her suffering was so severe, her relief so suddenly realized., and her gratitude so great, that the wishes the circumstances published, in the hope that others may be benefited thereby., She says: “My physician tcld me I had dropsy and falling of the Womb. My Steinach and bowels were so bloated I could rot get a full breath. My face and hands were bloated badly. I had that dreadful bearing-down pain, backache, palpitaticn of the heart, and Jjgrvousn§ss. “ One of my something growing in my stomach; and the medicine that I took gave me relief only for a short time. I thought I must die. I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it worked like a charm. After taking the first bottle I could walk across the street, now I am ■well. I advise all my friends to take it.’’ —Mary E. Campbell, Albion, Noble Co
ETIQUETTE OF A POSTAL CARD.
Uses and Abuses of,This Convenient ~BIt of Pasteboard. ,-1 (- . The ethics of a postal card may be formulated in one rule: “N£ver write anything upon a postal card which you would not think it'prudent or dignified ■to proclaim from the house,top.” . Some people—particular people—never use postal cards at'all. This seems too extreme. They are often very convenient and quite proper if correctly used. . Beyond the address no name, should 4ver be writtep out upon them. They should begin with the customary “Dear —anybody’ ’ and, end without “Yours truly” or “Affectionately,’’’"being sign: ed only with initials. The date and address serve to further identify the sender, who is presumed to be on such Intimate social or business relations ■with' the party addressed as to justify the use of aposfal cacti. For while postals serve for a hasty or formal message,,. or supply the need of cheap communication in simple business arrangements, it is not considered courteous or punctiliously polite to use” them in one, man or woman, to whom you wish to show'respect. If any doubt arises in the mind as to the propriety of sending a postal, It is well to give one’s self the benefit of the doubt and write a note. Postals are useful to mail while on a journey. Posted at different places, they announce the safe arrival of the traveler at points where he has scarca ly-time to. write notes. Used hastily, they are useful to announce a I'ette? or give assent to a previously discussed arrangement. Details of family matters or personal affairs show ignorance and bad breeding. As an example of a way in which a postal card should, not be used may be quoted oiie sefit by fl grief-stricken sister to a cousin In a distant city: _ _ “Dearest Kate —W,q have just returned from laying dear brother Harry iff ■the grave. As the weaklier is so unpleasant, it made us feel more unhappy to come away and leave him with the rain beating down upon him. Your loving cousin, HARRIET SMITH.” Now, Harriet doubtless felt all she expressed. But was a postal card the proper place jo write her sentiments?Harper’s Bazar.
WILD CAT FOR A BOA.
Novel Use to Which a Man Has Put One of the Terrors of the Woods. Those ladies who are fond of wearing fur boas around their throats might learn adesson from F. H. Wood, p. river man, who is now in the city. Mr. Wood has affiandsome neck ..muffler of tawny skin, but he does not keep it in a bandl>ox at night. He locks it in a strong cage, for his boa is a half-grown wild _cat, with TulLgrown' claws and teeth. Wood has attracted considerable attention during the last few days by strolling about the city with a young bay lynx or wild cgt perched on his •'Ol’d'mwtwvalists'el’atarthfst it Is impossible to domesticate, a specimen of the “felis catus,” Which is the Latin name for Mr. Wood’s strange pet. He has refuted that theory, however, by partially taming the savage little beast’ Many scars and scratches on his hands and face bear evidence to the fact that it was no.easy job to get on speaking terms with Mr. Wild Cat, Jr., and it will allow no one but its owner to come near it. If a stranger approaches the kitten will jump straight at his throat. Wood isf'very fond of the animal. He caught it when it was only G days old, after its mother had slain four large and raised it by band. The animal is now about the size of a large tom cat, but is very different In appearance from the common tabby. It has huge feet, long, sharp claws, a head like a tiger's the tufted ears which distinguishes the lynx family and a short tail which moves incessantly.— Paducah News.
Railway Between Russia and Persia.
Persia is about to be provided with a new railroad. The line is being engineered by the Czar’s officials, and constructed by means of Muscovite capital. It is to have its base at the Russian port of Baku, which is connected with the entire Russian railroad system, and is to extend across the plain of Mogan to the frontier station of Dulfa, whence It will proceed southward to.the great Persian city of Tabreez. Fi’dm there, by way of Kazvln, it continues to Teheran, whence branches are to be constructed to the great pilgrim resort oi Meshed, on the northeast frontier, and to the ancient metropolis, Ispahan. In the South. Apart from the political consequences of this line, the practical opening up a great country bo rich and yet so undeveloped as Persia. cannot fail to prove of immense interest to trade and industry in every part of the civilized world.
Very Apropos.
An examination in astronomy had begun in a certain college recently (says the Boston Transcript). A student cAme in, glanced over the list of questions, was appalled at their character, and, hastily scribbling something In hiS book, left tile room. The professor was curious to see what he had written, and went to the desk and looked at the book. This was what he foundbeing a couplet from a well-known hymn,: f Sun, moon, and stars forgot. Upward I fly!
A Terrible Nostrum.
“Since taking three bottles of yoni sarsaparilla I am a new woman,” Is a testimonial published in an advertisement of a patent medicine in the Lewiston, Me., Journal. Can nothing be done to protect the country from so terrible a nostrum?—Louisville Cou-rier-Journal. The amount of capital in the book business is believed to be double what it was twenty years ayo.
AN INVITATION.
It Give* U« Great Pleasure .to Publish the Following Announcement, All womea->siiffeFHig-fFOm-jvny-fomr-of-illness peculiar .to their sex are requested to edmmuhicate promptly with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by woman only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus has been established the eternal confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America. This Confidence has induced more than 100,000 women to write Mrs. Pinkham for advice during the hist few months. Thinly what a volume of experience she has to draw from! No physician living ewr treaH-tl-so iiHiny ca-cs of femnie ills, and from this vast experience surely it is more than possible she has gained the very knowledge that will help your ease. She is glad to have you write or call upon her. You will find her a?,woman full qf sympathy, with a great desire to assist those who are’sick. If her medicine is not what yon need, she will frankly tell you so, and there are nine changes out of ten that she will tell you exactly what to do for relief. She asks nothing. in rctnrn except your good-wilh-aud-her advjce has relieved -thousands, Surely, any ailing woman, rich or poor, is very fooiish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. ’ - / Never in the history of medicine has the demand for one particular remedy for female diseases equalled that attained by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and never in the history of Mrs. Finkfiam's wonderful Compound has the demand for it been so great as it is to-day.
Bankrupt.
This .word is derived from tv,6 ftaliau ones, banco rotto, broken bench; l>ecß.use bankers and morelibn'ts used sfoymerly to Count their njoney and write bills of exchange on benches in the street, and, when a banker or merchant l<sjt his Credit and was unable to pay his debts, his bench was broken.
How’s This!
any case of Catarrh tint cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Toledo, 0. We the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West &TituAX,sVholesale Druggists,Toledo,O. TValding, Ki nnan Si Mabvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0, ■’ ? Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Supply of India Rubber.
The supply of India-rubber is said to be inexhaustible. Each tree can be tapped for twenty. successive .years, and yields on an average three tfilMqj spoonfuls a day; 43J100 of these l\<« have been counted on a tract of, Ijffl thirty miles long by eight wjde.,
How to Make Money.
Mr. Ehitok: Tell others of my teen years fanning and hustling My cousin made $3,000 last year ware, jewelfy. etc. I ordered an outfit rfbin Gray & Co. Plating Works, Dept. IS, UoliiinMis, O. It was complete, all materials, forinulasf trade secrets and instructions; they teateh a&e-its free. Goods easy pin tod, nice as new, guaranteed ten years. Made $32 first week, $47 second, $203 It'MU v»ck,l am.da;. a tai}thej: made z 5 selling outfits, w nte firm for sample. B. F. SHAW.
In China.
In China large pieces of silk, often with sacred sentences written on them,, are offered to tile gods. It js estimated that in the temples of Confucius alone about thirty thousand yards of silk are burnt in this way. Singers anil Artists Generally are users of “Brown's Bronchial Troches" for Hoarseness and Throat Troubles, They afford instant* relief. The growth of wealth between 1880 and 1890 was more steady and uniform than during any of our history; Buckingham’s Dye for' the Whiskers does its work thoroughly, coloring a uniform brown or black, which, when dry, will neither rub, wash off, nor soil linen. Hasten slowly, and ly.ithout losing heart put your work twenty times upon the anvil. Rough, wintry, changeable weather,-pro-duces Catarrhs. Coughs, Disorders of the -Luings, etc., which Jayne’s Expectorant promptly cures if faithfully administered. . The suppression of bull lighting in the south of France has resulted in serious disturbances in several towns. Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is not-,a liquid or a snuff. It quickly relieves Cold in the Head. Headache, /®te., and really cures Catarrh. 50c. 1 Of all the passions, anger is tlie most like dynamite. FITS.— AII Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Grc > t Nene JHe.toier. No Fits after first day's use. Mar-i velous cures. Treatise and fJCOtrial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 981 Area St. Phils, Pa. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sthvp for Children teething: so I tens the gums, reduces inllammhtiou, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle.
DADWAY’S n PILLS, Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause perfect digestion, complete absorption and healthful regularity. For the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Ner. vous Diseases, Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, INDIGESTION, BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, DYSPEPSIA, AND— All Disorders of the Liver. nil printed directions in each box; 35 cents a box. Sold by all druggl.ts. RADWAY 4 CO., NEW YORK. AMIIM Morphine Habit Cured in 1C UrIUM D°r!lStlpHEN^ C. N. V. No. 52-OS e , WHfcN writing to advertisers pleaao any you saw the advortlMmout kathia
Fire! Fire! That Dreadful Cry
Is fraught yrlth Import doubly dire to the unhappy num who beholds his dwelling or bls warehouse feeding the devourtng elemen’tunfnsured.’Happily most’people who ean. Insure—eA-erythhrg but hvatTh. — Xtnvten’hs of us neglect the preservation of this when it is In palpable jeopardy. Incipient indigestion, liver complaint, la grippe,. inaction of the kidneys and bladder and ihajarla are all counteracted by Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters.
Of Many Shapes.
Italian bank notes are of all- sizes, shapes and colors. The smaller Dillsfive and ten-lire notes—are printed on white paper in pink, blue and carmine inks, and ornamented wifli a liiiely-en-graved vignette of King Ilumlicrf.
i BEWARE IN TIME. Thfl first acute twinge of [ / ISCIATICAA! J. Ao CTT I ACOR All DELAY, AND THOSC TWINGXB MAT I gl USE « • UAWWUL7 VFILw. TWIST YOUR LEG'OUT OF SHAPEi R SRL-S'R—H’R—H—VRE—VaS—VR-J “Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest! Work, but Quick Witted People Use SAPOLIO Rattle Ax Plug THE LARGEST PIECE • OF GOOD TOBACCO EVER 501DE0R |Q '' Bl® kv
Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter' Baker & C 6. (established 1780) haS ,ed t 0 tho P ,acin S on the market misleading and unscrupulous imitations their name, labels,, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. aro the oldest and largest manujra Wwt facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and in Chdcolates on this continent. No chemicals are TO lusedI used in their manufactures. Sal fUlfi Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. I^uuuuuuu.uuu . V . J jL. Broken , B|!|| Back Just as y ours be if ! 0 y. ou continue using poor J - soap. ■—l; r. SANTA CLAUS SOAP makes wash-day as easy as any other day. Lessens « the labor, makes the clothes white, and does no dam- ; age. Thousands of women say so—surely they are ; not all mistaken. Sold every where. Made only >by ; The N. K. Fairbank Company, - Chicago. ■
Take Care .pt your physical health. Build up year«y«»em tone your stoffiach and digestive organs, increaai your appetite enrich your blood, drive out ai Impurities aud prevent sickness by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla ”’1” The One true Blood Purifier. $1; 6 for $5. j Hood’s Pills Hood ’’
