Rensselaer Union, Volume 6, Number 49, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 August 1874 — Prince & Co.’s Organs. [ARTICLE]

Prince & Co.’s Organs.

Five octaves, two full sets of reeds. Solid walnut cases, elegant bronze finish. Price, with six stops, $125; eight stops, $ 180. Address Reed’s Temple of Music, Chicago. —The venerable Dr. Tyng rebukes a habit in which he says some clergymen indulge, viz.: He lias seen one take his quid of tobacco from his mouth before prayer in a highly-finished pulpit and lay it on the marble slab, and after praying put it in his mouth again. The Herald and Presbyter says: “If the doctor is simply for preserving the slab from defilement, w r e can suggest a remedy in the habit of a minister we once knew. ‘ Before going into church he put his quid into a crevice in the brick Avail, and after service took to chewing it again.” Winning Golden Opinions. —Perhaps no man living has won more golden opinions than Dr. Walker, as the enormous and widely-increasing sale of his Calinever iook into one of our exchanges but there is a panegyric of the Bitters staring us in the face. Our readers will say that there must be a reason for all this praise. They are right. The efficacy of this celebrated medicine is established by evidence which it is impossible to doubt. Among the thousands who have borne testimony to its excellence there is not one dissentient voice. In very --many phases of inorganic disease it seems to be unfailing. All diseases arising from a vitiated state of the blood are surely eradicated by it. It is an effectual remedy for pulmonary complaints, bilious, remittent and intermittent fevers, rheumatism and dyspepsia. It purges the body of all unhealthy humors, gives tone to the system, and, where the vital powers are enfeebled, restores their functions to vigorous and healthy action. All this it does the more effectually because its operation is not interfered with by the presence of alcohol. The Vineoak Bittf.us is perfectly free from any such hurtful ingredient. We have always believed that plants contain the true remedies for disease, and all the remedies necessary. Dr. Walker is on the line of real progress, and we hope that he will not rest on his present discoveries.