Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 April 1896 — Page 3
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Bhoakl Watch the Physical Development of Their Daughters. (■formation They Should Ptnldi at *h» Proper Time—Knowledge hy Which Suffering May Bo Avoided. 'v Every mother possesses information of vital value to her . young daughter. When the girl’s thoughts become
desire . children: when she^^''' - '*-'
a mystery.to herself andfriends, then, her mother should come to her aid. Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will, at this time, prepare the system for the coming change. See that she has it, and Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., will cheerfully answer any letters where information is desired. Thousands of women owe their health to her and the Vegetable Compound, and mothers are constantly applying to her for advice "regarding their daughters.
Gladness Comes ■\Xnth a better understanding 1 of the W transient nature of the,many physical ills 'which vanish before proper efforts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts—rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge that so many forms of Bickness are not due to any actual disease, but simply to a constipated condition of tho system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs, promptly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organa on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its beneficial effects, to note when you purchase, that you have the genuine article, which is mamffactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all reputable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, then laxatives or other remedies are not needed. If afflicted with axfy actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely used and gives most general satisfaction. Wm ■i OUKIS AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Soro Throat, Influenza. Bronchitis, Pneumonia. Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, Frostbites, Chilblains, Toothache, Headache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURBS THE WORST PAINS In from one to twenty mlnntes. NOT ONE HOUR after rending thte advertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. A halt to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will In a few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Ntfvousness. Sleeplessness, Slok Headache, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colio, flatulency, and all Internal pains. i nere Is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other malarlons, bilious and. other fever*, aided by RA I>WAY’S PILLS, so quickly as Raduray's Ready Relief. Vtfty cents per bottle. Sold by l)ni|fUta, w F UAUP MO AGENTS. fca Ilia w w but selld ttetto the coneumt r a wiioieaale prices. wVPH Milp anywhere lor riamt _ \ lO<l Wm . nation before ante. EveryhaiL, ’ ‘•'JfßWr' thing warranted. tiflOO Mu ArfZWUrT-*. styles of < nrrla res, DO styles Harnce*. 41 Style* Rldiiiit saddles. Write W. B. Pratt. Bsct blkksrt. I*4.
“I am sixty years of age sed from 111 !n P.n.nnl! girlhood have been familiar with t jf\ |[| oBBSOD the name of Ayer..... Five years > Y v -v ago, I become nervous, sleepiest, "-—5 J lost flesh, i took a variety of acts* > Tho season is Spring,— cines without benefit. At last I be- I gan a course of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, I. J Spring when you Call On became stronger, gained fleth, and* , yoUT body for all its ener***.*.*t.*.***..v**vv*» gy, and tax it to the limit of effort. Does it answer you when you call? Does It creep unwillingly to work? It’s the natural effeot of tho waste of winter. So much for the season. Now for the word. If you would eat heartily, sleep soundly, work easily, and feel like a new being, take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. - * ThU tettltatmlal jdll fee. tVund hr full Ja Ayer** “Casebook." w*tfc§ hundred others. Free. Address J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. .
THE COTTON BOLL WEEVIL
This Pest Has but Recently Appeared in the United states. The agricultural department of the United States government considers the «)tton boll weevil, a picture of which is here shown, to be one of the most dangerous pests that has eve* made its appearance in the United States. It has so far confined its operations to Northern Mexico and a limited areji i& Texas, It has in some localities shown a tendency to spread rapidly, while in others it is said to have been at work for years in Very small areas, and shown little signs of ex-
COTTON BOLL WEEVIL, HIGHLY MAGNIFIED.
tending operations. Department experts have been at wort investigating his bugslilp for some months past In the neighborhood of Brownsville on the Rio Grande. So far lio cure has been discovered, and many acres of eotton have been abandoned in consequences - An extraordinary tiling about this creature is that it will-live in a cotton boll and nowhere else, and ohee secret; ed inside of these shells it is safe from enemies and snug and comfortable in a bed of softest down. The appearance of this insect is dreaded tyter in the year.
Curreut Condensations.
There must be some mistake about orange juice being good for you; it is so pleasant to take. There is one old-fashioned thing that is quite common: the house that Is as cold as a barn in winter. The man who hasn’t sand enough to refuse a Leap Year proposal deserves the kind of a wife he will get. The woman who goes around soliciting aid for the poor is sometimes a great bore, but she is not a bore to the poor. A girl should bear In mind that her lover will overlook her faults, but she is lucky if her husband does not find them. A tanning concern in Seattle has received in one consignment 115 bales of deer skins, weighing eighteen tons, and representing, probably, several thousand dead deer. The ljerring have turned their noses in the direction of the Eastport, Me., sardine factories and business is rushing among the packers.. The price, however, is very low. An association has been formed in Paris of men who left that city in balloons during the siege. The number of these daring aeronauts was 168, but the association consists of only twentyfive. It has been discovered that the new election law in California, which denies registration to those who cannot read or write their names or read the constitution, will disfranchise many illiterate Portuguese and Italians, despite the fact that they are naturalized citizens. The youngest daughter of a revolutionary soldier, so far as known, was discovered at Lebanon, Conn., recently, and added to the membership of the Wjlllmantic chapter of the Daughters of the Revolution. She is Mrs. Augustus Avery, and is only 56 years old. Her father' was 74 years oUTWmtime of her birth. He was doubtless one of the youngest soldiers in the war. There are only eight other daughters of revoluntlonary soldiers belongs ing to the order. Vice President TV. Seward Webb, of the New York Central, has decided to build a new marble palace on his property at Scarborough-on-the-lludson. He intends to spend about $1,500,000 on the house. The style of architecture will be a modification of the chateau renaissance. The house, Including verandas, will be nearly 800 feet long and 130 feet wide. It Is to be situated on an elevation, surrounded by Italian flower gardens and winding roads, and will command an extended view of the Hudson River.
GOOD ROADS
Expensive Defective Highway. Mrs. E. Olmstead, of Matteson, Wau* paca County, is suing ,the town of Maine. Outagamie County, for damages on account of injuries sustained by plaintiff last October. Mrs. Olmstead was severely hurt by being thrown from a wagon while riding over a defective highway. The town board offered f 1,200 in settlement, but this was hot accepted.—Appleton (Wis.) Crescent. —® Friends of the Road, The spirit of unfriendliness that for a time threatened to produce strained relations between the horse and the bicycle is being softened by the flight of time and a clearer realization of the mutual interests and purposes of the two types of steeds. ' Tile horsenoTbiiger shles aTthe wEeeT and, the wheel no longer presumes to crowd the horse quite off the earth. They have mutually agreed that there will be room and use for both, though the former’s sphere promises to continue the shrinking process it has for some time been undergoing. But while the sphere of the horse may grow smaller, it will surely grow smoother and better, and the horse himself will improve to the extent that his surroundings are improved. ■ __ Bicycles will bring good roads. Good roads wjli.bring horses. , The Chief Road-Maker. The bicycle, which at first was seen only in the important cities and centers of population, soon wandered beyond the smoothly paved streets out into the highways and byways of the world. The wheel, which is the most nearly natural of all artificial means of locomotion, inspires in the breast of its rider a deeper and broader love of nature. It moves.too fast and too far to be hedged within the confines of a city’s Avails. Its mission is to “go,” and it has gone to the uttermost ends of the world. At some time or another the bicycle has threaded its way through every hidden lane and by-path, in every nook and corner of the land, and wherever it has gone it has sown amid the rough clods and muddy wastes of the highways the seeds of discontent with existing conditions. Those who watched it patiently feeling its way, for the first time in their lives realized that the roads were rough. And from that seed of thought has grown the now general movement to mend the public highways. Road, improvement has followed in the track of the bicycle. Wherever il has gone it has served as a forerunner of progress, and' to its presence the many and lasting joys of good roads may be very largely ascribed. The bicycle is the good road maker of the Avorld.
Suing for Half a Mustache.
A singular story is reported from St. Calais. A few days ago several persons were sitting at a table in a local hotel when the splendid mustache of a horse-dealer became the subject of conversation. One of the members of the party complimented the horsedealer, and asked him for what prico he would sell Ills mustache. “Ten francs,’ replied the latter, laughingly. “I will buy half of them,” said the would-be purchaser, placing 5 francs on the table. The horse-dealer put the money in his pocket and later in the evening left the hotel. Not quite appreciating the joke, the man who wag minus the 5 francs sought the aid oj the County Court process-server, and, having laid the information in regular form, brought action against the horsedealer for 50 francs damages for nor.execution of his contract.—Galignani Messenger.
Capture of Rare Birds.
Two rather interesting birds hard arrived at the London Zoological Gardens. These are two young specimens of the king penguin, which may grow,, should fortune favor them, to a height rather more than three feet. These penguins come from the Antarctic regions, and when the large species was first discovered the discoverers thought that the land was inhabited by a lot of nice children, neatly attired in pdnafores, for the white breast of the bird, tied round the neck, as It were, by a white line, gives this impression.
An Electric Hen.
An electric hen has recently been Inwhich is claimed to be superior to the natural article of flesh, feathers and blood, except that It cannot lay eggs. When the electric Incubator has produced the chickens an electric foster mother takes them in charge. The upper part Is devoted to the freshly hatched, while the lower part is so arranged that the young can run around on the ground and at the same time find heat and protection when they require It.
Brltiah Cousisteucy.
“Can’t arbitrate,” Bays Jobu Bull to Venezuela. "I’ve got possession and that's enough. “Yon must arbitrate rrf»Ulad T ” bc sayata had possession long enough.”—Cleveland World.’
An Idle Scavenger.
The bowels act the part of a scavenger, Inasmuch as they remove much-of the debris, the waste effete matter of the system.' When they grow Idle, neglectful of duty, It IS of the utmost Importance that they should be Impelled to activity. HOstetter’s Stomach Bitters effects this desirable object without griping them like a drastic purgative. The Bitters la also efficacious for malaria, • bilious, dyspeptic and kldbey trouble.
Horses Cheaper than Bicycles.
At a recent sale of the assets of a riding academy in New *York city the saddle horses brought-’on an average Jess than S3O apiece. This in said.to be the lowest price on record for horses of tills description, and the fact was generally noted that in dtew York the market.value of a horse is lower than .that of a bicycle.
A Whole Library for a Dollar.
Take advantage of the wonderful offer of the American NewspapeV Syndicate, 841 Dearborn street, Chicago. One dollar secures the most magnificent reference library ever published. See advertisement in this paper. It is easy to see that the number of “new” women is not regulated by the law of supply und demand. If it was there would be uone. can the sale of an Interior article Constantly Increase years? Dobbins’ Electric Soap has been on tne “ ve , r fc , lnCß .lßos. Is t°-day as ever, the bent wiU faimly soap made. Try It. Your grocer . FITS,—AII FI ts stopped tree by Dn Kline’s Grbat Nerve Kestoi er. NoFitß after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 981 Arch St.. Phils. Pit. Mr*. Winslow's Soothing SybuP for Children teething; aottena the gums, reduces inflammation, Allays pain, cures wind oolic. Scents a bottle.
What One Dollar Will Do! Hah n ¥ itnif aH TlftlA You can secure that Crowning *■ I—<lllll tWU 1 lillW Masterpiece of Modern Scholarship, *TTTinn i ■»- < - NEARLY $1,000,000.' Standard Authority. SEE HOW EASY IT IS send this order blank. To Secure This American News; pa per | American Newspaper Syndicate, Magnificent Work. streeUhic^go.Md meen- 34l Dearborn Street, Chicago, 111. . . .7*.... . tire set of four superb volumes _ =—■■■■;—rry - lo cloth binding will be forwarded. The balance is to be pari at the Inclosed find One Dollar, for which please aend rate of $1.25 monthly for twelve months. The work will be sup- to mv address, as iriven below, one comnlcte a -t of piled In half morocco for $1.50 monthly, and In full sheep for “• given oe ow, one complete set ot $2.00 monthly for twelve mouths. The first payment in the Am erican Encyclopaedic Dictionary, bound in every case is only sl. At the time of sending your first pay- binding. (We recommend the Half !H e » t ,. plea ?, d ?v S . lKna f e the styl ? of p L n<u ß* >' ou J )re i e s, and Indicate Morocco Binding.) I agree to pay the balance in 112 how you wish the volumes sent, as the charges for delivery must be paid by the purchaser, ltemember, the entire set Is sent you when e<|n ® l moutniy payments, the first payment of $1 Is received, and you therefore have the use NAME and benefit of tlio \ uluines during the whole year you are paying for *' • them. The absolute confidence of The American Newspa- OCCUPATION per Syndicate that the work will bo thoroughly appreciated, highly valued and cheerfully paid for Is clearly shown Dy sending RESIDENCE such a valuable set of books, tire subscription price of which la $42, on an advance payment of only sl. Anyone desiring to pay cash State here whether by express or freight, may send *l4 40 lor c oth, $17.10 for half morocco, and *22.50 for 3 v K full sheep binding. Address The American Newspaper Syndicate. Snip by . 841 Dearborn street, Chicago. »
if- POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC , Gives relief in FI VIS minutes R**nd a FKKK trial package. Sold i.y DruiTKistß- One Box cent postpaid receipt of SI.OO. Six boxes sj.oo. Address ¥UO9. I OPIUM, rillLA , FA. The long Winter days are nearly over* A succession of Colds, Coughs or Pneumonia has weakened the system and strength doesn't seem to come back again* You remain pale and weak* You have a slight cough in the morning and perhaps a little fever in the afternoon* You need A Food as a Spring medicine, not a mere tonic. Such a food is Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypophosphites which will heal inflamed membranes, make good blood and supply food for sound fiesL
European Debts.
According to the;latest statistics, the public, debts of the European nations aggregate $23,320,000,000, or about $64 per capita for the whole population. The* heaviest per capita Indebtedness, $l6O, ,1$ In Portugal. France comes next with $135. England’s rate Is about $lO6. Switzerland Is the smallest, $5.
Such ills as”-7” - - ■wiin*WS'i TI SORENESS, ST. JACOBS OIL ' STIFFNESS, %MW, J 1 , PrainpHrandEffectßaftf.j 1 Premium No. 1 Chocolate 1 Made by Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., 1$ •fe Dorchester, Mass., has been cele- :: $ brated for more than a century as £1 X a nutritious, delicious, and flesh- :: X forming beverage. Sold by gro- :: 3: cers everywhere. ;;
Mft fifl STEEL T-T rj I j-T CABLED -4-4 WEB “EEr: FIELD , |j j jlif{■}}}{ FENCE. 1-444 1-1 Ff FENCE. Also CABLED POULTRY, GARDEN AND RABBIT FENCE. Wemanufactum llneoj Smooth WAreFei>ciqflr and .guaranty to to as represented. Ask your 1 dealer to show you this Fence. FREE. YOU WILL REALIZE THAT “THEY LIVE WELL WHO LIVE CLEANLY,” IF YOU USE SAPOLIO
W«nll lk.kfrfVtMl.illl.lmri Kirwnmc .a.. 1 «oo .u.r ««f.i DlUYulcsS^j^^«'rJ^2 T-w, JL, Orf*.s VrfikM, iuk.Dr.Nm. tMUr Etc. •wthrlprf,. CMICAUO SCALE CD. CkIM(W MCUCiniIJOHN W.HOBHI*. ntNolUll Washington, J».C. ■ 3yr» in last war. IS adjudicating claims, aity since. PATENTS. TRADEMARKS^ Examination and advice as to I'aiiuisMUij of inventions. send for inventobs’ Grins. os How to Get a Patent. Pstrlck o’Farrell. Washington, I».C. KIOOIRB C. N. U. No. 14-00 UTHKN WRITING TO AJDVgRTIBKRH ssgr yon saw tbs EflwrHimi
All About Western Farm Lands.
The “Dorn name of an illu* trated monthly newspaper published bf the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy R. R, It aims to give information in an interesting way abbut the farm lands of the West, Send 25c in postage Stamps tp the Oore Belt, 209 Adams street, Chicago, and the paper will be your address {proas year.,-. "• ■ • __ n
T Sam Rivers, of Keyser, N. C., is an old colored man who is very influential with his class, aud the colored people are numerous In that section. In an interview with Fred W. Saunders, a local reporter, on the 10th of June, 1895, the old gentleman said: “For a long time I haye been annoyed with , dyspepsia itnd Indigestion (man's two worst evils). Tubules * having been tested (after many others had failed) gave me perfect relief. I recommend them to all my friends who are afflicted with a these or kindred diseases. (Signed) SAM RIVBRB, D. D." “J 5 I*"**"? aregjgA-yfr mmv
