Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 20, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 November 1898 — Page 7
, r .Sf®p _ | loiHjiiin g | Every cough makes . your throat more raw P I and irritable. Every m cough congests the lining menfocane of your lungs. Cease tearing your throat and lungs in this way. Put the parts at rest and Sive them a chance to eal. You will need some help to do this, and-you i will find it in Ager’s l Cheirg [ peetornif \ From the first dose the 1 quiet and rest begin: the I tickling in the throat 1 ceases; the spasm weak- I ens; the cough disap- | 1 pears. Do not wait for I pneumonia and con- I sumption but cut short I your cold without delay. I Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pec- | I toral Plaster should be I over the lungs of every per- I I son troubled with a cough. I Write to the Doctor. I Unusual opportunities and long ex- I perience eminently qualify ua for B giving you medical advice. Write ■ Jj freely all the particulars In your case. ■ H Tell us wliat Tour experience has H fit) been with our Cherry Pectoral. You |g 13 will receive a prompt reply, without ■ M cost p MS Address, DR. J. C. AYER. ■ V Lowell, Mass. E jg Established 1780. Jg, I Baker’s 1 ft ===== g 1 Chocolate, I ft Z « <& ~r g ft ft celebrated for more “j ft than a centur y as a ft delicious, nutritious, 'S' ft and flesh-forming ifi. . JtZk beverage, has our ft well-known g ft m \'lfk Yellow Label <3 ft w|l . !l| on the front of every ft >3 I flu package, and our ft fJS I iNHoH trade-mark,“Laßelle <3l ft Jjjfjjjjfjj Chocolatiere,”onthe . back. ft 4 "3 £> NONE OTHER GENUINE. tgt ft <? MADE ONLY BY g WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., § ft Dorchester, Mass. “COLDS” Rad way’s Ready Relief cares and prevents Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago,lnflammations. Rheumatism /Neuralgia, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, Difficult Breathing. Radway'* Heady Relief is a sure cure for every Pain, Sprain, Bruises, Pains in the Back, Chest or Limbs. It was the first And is the only Pain Remedy that Instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays inflammation and cures congestions, whether of the lungs, stomach,bowels or other glands or organs,by one application. INI# FOR INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL USE. A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will In n few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nervousness, .*• leeplessness. Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Dvsentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all internal pains. There is not a remedial agent in the world that will cure Fever and Ague and ull other malarious, bilious nnd other fevers.aided by RAHWAY’S PI I.LA, to quickly as RAHWAY’S READY RELIEF.. Sold by Druggists. Had way A Co., 55 Elm tit., New V ork. PIMPLES “My wife liad pimples on har face, t>ut she hat been taking CASCAKKTS and they have all disappeared. I hud been troubled with constipation for some time, but after taking the first Cascaret I have had no trouble with this ailment. We cannot speak too highly of Oascarets." FrsdWartman. 6708 Germantown Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. CATHARTIC fauraogfo) THAOS MASH RtOWTXHCO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe 10c. 36c. Me. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Merlins Hewed, (Me.,., Meet reel. Re.. lark. Mi Mm BAP Bold andl guaranteed by all drng- • I U-DAu gists to CIIHE Tobeooo Habli. B asTHMa POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC Gives rallef In DT* minutes. Bend for a rlt KK trial package. Bold liy DrnggUU. One Box aent postpaid on receipt of Sl.se. Sir Syiee sf.eo. Addreee THOg. rormß. rfctq., PA. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W. MORRIS. WASHINGTON.O.a Late Pried pal Itulor O. I. Peaaioa Baraaa. S yea. la laet rear. 16 aojadicarla, claims. aUr alaea Ip UVLrarai't.r aala. B 3 per acre catk.tatflWG J. Malhall. Sieaa^ltJjJ^Jß n ITrUTsecnred or aossy sllrsturssd. Search free. OAI Lit 1 CslltastßW > F St. W u hi ac i«..D.G
Temperature at Manila.
It} the Century there is an article on “Knotty Problems of the Philippines,” by Prof. Dean C. Worcester, of the University of Michigan. Prof. Worcester says: Manila Is the only place where reliable temperature records have been kept; and while no one place can be taken as representative of the whole archipelago, the results obtained at the capital are not without interest. J The average temperature for January is 77 degrees, for February 78 degrees, for March 81 degrees, for April 83 degrees, for May 84 degrees, for June 82 degrees, for July 81 degrees, for August 81 degrees, for September 79 degrees, and for December 77 degrees. The average daily temperature for the year at Manila is 80 degrees. It will be noted that the lowest average temperature occurs in December and January, and is 77 degrees. The “delightful season in the auutrnn, when the atmosphere is clear and dry, and the temperature ranges from about 67 degrees to 75 degrees F.,” has not as yet been discovered by the scientists at the Jesuit observatory. The lowest temperature during the year is 60 degrees, and the highest 100 degrees. There is no month in which the thermometer does not rise as high as 91 degrees. When it is remembered that the air is charged with moisture much of the time, it will be realized that the climate of Manila leaves some things to bo desired.
Immigration at Siberia.
Russia is pushing the Siberian railway across the continent with all the energy her immense resources permit. While the larger purpose is to consummate the policy steadily pursued for more than two centuries of getting access to oceans, the no less important purpose of filling the great interior spaces with products is not lost sight of. Hand in hand with railway extension goes land occupation. To overcome the obstacle raised by the poverty of the peasantry the government has made extraordinarily cheap rates of transport. The migrant is carried 1,200 miles for 1.50, 2,000 miles for $2.10 and 4,000 miles for $3.60. His household goods and implements are carried 1,200, miles for 25 cents a hundred, 2,000 miles for 43 cents and 4,000 miles for 83 cents. In addition land is given and sustenance granted until a crop can be raised. —St. Paul Globe.
A FATHERS STORY.
From the Evening Crescent, Appleton, TCts. A remarkable cure from a disease which liac generally wrecked the lives of children has attracted much attention among the residents of Appleton. The case is that of little Willard Creech, sou of Richard D. Creech, a well known employe of one of the large paper mills in the Fox River Valley. The lad was attacked by spinal disease and his parents had given up all hope of his ever being well again when, as by a miracle, he was healed and is now in school as happy as any of his mates. Mr. Creech, the father of the boy, who resides at 1062 Second street, Appleton, Wisconsin, told the following story:
He Goes to School.
“Our boy was aosoiutely helpless. His lower limbs were paralyzed, and when we used electricity he could not feel it below his hips. Finally we let the .doctor go, as he did not seem to help our son, and we nearly gave up hope. My mother, who lives in Canada, wrote advising the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and I bought some. “This w’as when our boy had been on tlie stretcher for an entire year and helpless for nine months. In six weeks after taking the pills wenoted improvement, and infourmonthshe was able to go to school. “It is two years since he took the first of the pills, and he is at school now just as happy and well as any of tie other children. It was nothing else in the world that saved the boy than Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People.”
Willing to Oblige.
“Sir,” began the seedy-looking individual as he approached the cashier in a downtown office, “I have seen better days and if you will kindly render me a little assistance ” “I’m very sorry,” interrupted the cashier, “but I can do nothing for you to-day. Charity should begin at home, you know.” “Thank you, sir,” replied the mendicant, as he extracted a memorandum book and pencil from a mysterious recess In his apparel. “What is your home address, please, and what time shall I call?” Cold weather is Just as apt to affect the nerves as any other part of the body, and neuralgia sets in. St. Jacobs Oil Is Just ns certain to cure It as It cures the geueral pains and aches of the body.
A Matrimonial Venture.
Blinkers—Hello, Winkers. I hear you married a woman with an independent fortune. Winkers fsadly)—N-o; I married a fortune with an Independent woman. —New York Weekly.
Coughing Leads to Consumption.
Kemp’s Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous.
Unlike Caesar's Wife
Smith—Jones says there is something suspicious about his wife’s actions. Brown—ls that so? Smith—Yes; he says she Insists on getting a whiff of his breath every time he is detained ilow’itoYu late at night
RUIN IN THE CAPITOL
AJ GAS EXPLOSION DOES GREAT DAMAGE. Supreme Court Cliatnber Wrecked and the Valuable Library Injured Beyond Repair—Maria Teresa Lost iu a Gale—Eleven Killed at Detroit. An explosion of gas in the basement of the eapitol building in Washington Sunday afternoon completely wrecked the Supreme Court room and the room adjoining, and many valuable books of the Congressional law library were destroyed. This library contained ■ 75,000 volumes and its value was placed at $1,000,000. The historic Supreme Court room, which was formerly the Senate chamber of the original eapitol building, is a complete wreck. The busts of Chief Justice Marshall and others who have presided over tlie highest court in the land are ruined, and the court will for a time have to be provided with a temporary home. There have been other fires in the eapitol building in the past, but none so destructive as this. The explosion that started the fire was of terrific force. It shook the old north wing and tore asunder the foundation and basement walls until apertures in places are sufficiently large to receive the open hand. The furniture and hangings of the Supreme Court were destroyed and the law library damaged, but mostly by water. It will also require a close examination of the library to place the damage there. Owing to the fact that the walls of the building are of masonry the fire had nothing but the woodwork of furniture and fittings to feed upon, and was soon extinguished in the upper floors. In the basement there was a raring volcano of flame, which seemed to be fed by gas. The office of the marshal of the Supreme Court suffered most. The floor was completely blown out of this room. The law library consisted of 75,000 volumes, of them legal books of rare value, and a large percentage of the volumes Cannot be replaced. The collection is estimated to be of the value of $1,000,000 for such of these as might be obtainable, but the intrinsic value of the library is, beyond estimation. There is another valuable collection of books in the consultation chambers of the Supreme Court, which also suffered great damage. The rooms comprising the consultation chambers are just across a narrow corridor from the Supeme Court room, and here more tlnm 10,000 volumes were stored.
TERESA IS SUNK.
Spanish Cruiser Raised by Hobson *. Lost in a Storm. The sea has swallowed the cruiser Infanta Maria Teresa, sunk at Santiago and raised by Constructor Hobson. The cruiser left Caimanera, Cuba, on the morning of Oct. 30 - for New York. On Nov. 1 she was abandoned in midocean in a sinking condition. She could not weather the gale prevailing. No lives were lost. The cruiser left Cuba in tow of the repair ship Vulcan and accompanied by the ocean tug Merritt and the collier Leonidas. The crew of the cruiser, 136 men, arrived in Charleston, S. C., on the Merritt. The Maria Teresa was steaming through what is known to mariners as the .crooked passage, thirty miles off San Salvador. While her own engines were in use she was not under her own steam, being in the immediate tow of the Vulcan, while the Vulcan in turn was in tow of the wrecking tug Merritt. The weather grew rough and there was indication that a heavy tropical storm was at hand. The cruiser began leaking badly and the situation soon became critical. To take the ofticers and crew off the illfated cruiser was both a dangerous and a difficult task, but it was accomplished, and all wore saved. After the men aboard the Teresa were taken off by the Merritt, the Vulcan, which was towing the disabled cruiser by a fifteen-inch hawser, proceeded for four hours longer to tow her toward Norfolk. Despite the possibility of the Teresa sinking at any minute and pulling her consort down after her, the Vulcan held on manfully to the former Spaniard until it was believed that to tow her longer was to sink with her. It was then that the groat hawser was cut. As the surfboat of Ihe Merritt drew away with her last load of rescued sailors, it was evident the Maria Teresa could remain afloat but a few moments more. He# propellers were showing above the water and she had sunk very low forward. She was evidently going to plunge head first into the sea. That was the last glimpse caught of her.
DEAD AMID DEBRIS.
Ten Men Killed by Collapse of u Tlieuter at Detroit. With a crash, tho noise of which was heard for blocks, the Wonderland Theater in Detroit tumbled into ruins at 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon. The roof had suddenly collapsed. At that time thirty-five men were at work in various parts of the unfinished structure. There was no warning of the calamity, and some of the victims perished instantly. Nearly every workman was swept down into tho theater pit; tho top gallery was crushed upon tho lower gallery, forming a sort of fatal tobogugan, down which slid liroken steel girders, planks, timbers, bricks and a groat quantity of cement This avalanche remorselessly carried with it a struggling mass of men, who were dashed down into the pit below’. Ten were killed outright, another afterwards died, and very few escaped injury. The cause of the catastrophe, while not definitely settled, scums to rest between too much weight in the roof nnd faulty steel beams used iu its construction. The top of the roof was of cement, al>out eight inches thick, and many builders lean to the opinion that this was too weighty for the supporting steel work. Others say the fault lies iu the steel work.
News of Minor Note.
Virginia negroes object to white officer* in colored regiments. Halifax dock yards are very busy in getting British warships ready for service. Repairs on the cruiser Chicago are nearly completed; she lius been practically rebuilt. Many Spanish officers in Havana have applied for positions in the United State* army. The danger of further outbreaks of ths black plague in Vienna has been greatly diminished.
CONSULTING A WOMAN.
lira Pinkham's Advice inspires Confidence and Hope. Examination by a male physician is a hard trial to a delicately organized woman. She puts it off as long as she dare, and is only driven to it by fear of cancer, polypus, or some dreadful ill. Most frequently such a woman leaves
than better. In consulting Mrs. Pinkham no hesitation need be felt, the story is told to a woman and is wholly confidential. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass., she offers sick women her advice without charge] Her intimate knowledge of women's troubles makes her letter of advice a wellspring of hope, and her wide experience and skill point the way to health. “ I suffered with ovarian trouble for seven years, and no doctor knew what was the matter with me. I had spells which would last for two days or more. I thought i would try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I have taken seven bottles of it, and am entirely cured.” — Mrs. John Foreman, 26 N. Woodberry Ave., Baltimore, Md. The above letter from Mrs. Forema'h is only one of thousands.
One Hundred lean Ago
There was not a public library in the United States. Almost all the furniture was imported from England. An old copper-mine in Connecticut was used as a prison. There was only one hat factory, and that made cocked hats. Every gentleman wore a queue, and powdered his hair. Crockery plates were objected to because they dulled the knives. Virginia contained a fifth of the whole population of the country. A man who jeered at the preacher or criticized the sermon was fined. A gentleman bowing to a lady always scraped his foot on the ground. Two stage-coaches bore all the travel between New York and Boston. A day-laborer considered himself well paid with two shillings a day. When a man had enough tea he placed his spoon across his cup to indicate that he wanted no more. The church collection was taken in a bag fastened at the end of a pole, Avith a bell attached to rouse sleepy contributors.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is causer! by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of tho Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tubo restored to its normal condition, hearing will bo destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten aro caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for an*' case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars; free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. ESF“SoId by Druggists, 75c.
Big Families in Berlin.
The Municipal Year Book of Berlin shows that one woman in that city, 41 years old, is the mother of twenty children. In 189 G there were five families with nineteen children, sixteen with eighteen, seventeen with seventeen, thirty-two with sixteen, sixtythree with fifteen, eighty-three with fourteen and 12(5 with thirteen. Two hundred pairs of Berlin parents counted a dozen children each, the mother in one case being only 2G years old. A mother of eighteen offspring was 35 years old, while women of 23 and 20 had borne eight and five children respectively.
Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O!
Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a packageof GBAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the udult. All who try it. like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. V 4 the price of coffee. 15c. and 25 cts. per package. Sold by all grocers.
Cats as Swimmers.
Oats can swim If they only care to exert themselves sufficiently. The ancient Egyptians used to fish with them on the Nile, according to the representations on walls, etc., that have come down to us. A crop of sprains and onuses Is harvested from outdoor sports. The cure Is the crop St. Jacobs Oil delights In us the triumph of the season, the one that beats the record.
Mean Thing.
He—"Do you know when you walk you move just like a poem?” She (blushing)—-"Ah, do you really think so?” He—“ Yes; one foot always right after the other."—Cleveland Ivender.
Lane's Family Medicine
Moves the bowels each day. Iu order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. Let us be Of good cheor, remembering that the misfortunes hardest to bear are those which never come.—Low'd). The more any one speaks of himself the less he likes to hear another talked of.—Lnvater.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothiso Ktsuf mr ChlMrsa teethln*: softsns ths /rums, reancss Inflammation, •allays pain. curs* wind colic, a cants s bottle. WAlfTßD.—Caaaof bad health that R-IP-Alt twill not benefit Send ft cents to Rlnans > 'hemleal Oa. Ssw York, for 10 tamplne Hd IsMl MUwslsk
a physician's office ' where she lias undergone a critical examination with an impression, more or less, of discouragement. This condition of the fflmM mind destroys the effect of m a< ' v > ( c; and VHKH she gro w s V »■» worse rather
GREATEST OF TABLE TALKERS.
Volubility of the Iron Chancellor While at His Meals. When in the course of his tour around the world Gen. Grant went to Berlin and had an interview tvith Prince Bismarck—then at the height of his power—he carried away Avith him the impression that the German Chancellor was the most interesting conversationalist he had ever met. Carl Sehurz, who subsequently came to Berlin and was entertained by the Chancellor, said that the best table talkers he had ever known were Mazzini and Oliver Wendell Holmes, but that Bismarck was better than either. It AA*as a strange anomaly that one of the Avlsest men and best table talkers of modern times should have been born on “All Fools’ Day”—the best of talkers, because the greatest man of action; of modern times. And how infinitely more interesting must ever be the talk of a man who has done great things than that of a man Avho has only thought great thoughts! Bismarck himself never published his autobiography, if he ever wrote one. But when his oAvn memoirs come to see the light it will l>e found that much of their interest lias been discounted by the autofilography which he has already spoken. For, in addition to being the greatest actor of his time in the literal meaning of the Avord—doer, achiever, author of events, maker of history—he has also been one of tlie greatest talkers in the sense employed by Gen. Grant and Carl Sehurz, and much of his talk has been about his OAvn accomplishments. Indeed, there might now be Avritten an ingeniously compiled book entitled “Bismarck. By Himself,” iu Avhich nothing would be used but the Prince's own words.—Review of Reviews.
He Was Hasty.
“Why is it,” he asked, “that bpautiful women are always the most stupid?” “Sir,” she replied, “am I to under-, stand that you desire to cast reflections upon my mental capacity?” “Oh, no,” he hurriedly returned, “I have always said that, you were one of the brightest girls I ever— —” But he didn’t finish. Before ho could do so, he realized that he had said the Avrong thing and could never make it right.—Chicago News. St. Jacobs Oil cures Rheumatism. St, Jacobs Oil “ Neuralgia. St. Jacobs Oil “ Lumbago St. Jacobs Oil “ Sciatica, St. Jacobs till “ Sprains. St. Jacobs Oil “ Bruises St. Jucobs Oil “ Soreness. St. Jacobs Oil “ Stiffness St. Jacobs Oil “ Backache. , St. Jacobs Oil “ Muscular Aches
Put to the Test.
She (rising from the piano)—Do you play, Mr. Stlckett? He—No; but I am thinking of taking lessons. I have a good ear for time, don’t you know. She—lndeed! Was that 11 or 12 o'clock the clock just now struck?
What Do the Children Drink?
Don’t give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called GltAlN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-O is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, ' but costs about (4 as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. Make but few explanations. The character that cannot defend Itself is not worth .vindicating.—F. W. Robertson. Piso’s Cure for Consumption has been a godsend to me.—Wm. B. McClellan, Chester, Fla., Sept. 17, 1895.
# TOO GOOD TO BE FREE! But send 25c and wm ■ will mail you a bottle of “5 Drops-” CORED BT “5 DROPS” TWO TEARS AM FROM RHEUMATISM AND HEART WEAKNESS . After Suffering 49 Years—69 Years Old and Still WetL IT TROVES TO BE A PERMANENT CUBE- READ T i rrrw SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO., 167 Dearborn St.. Chicago: Dear Sir- Your botttertT "5 DROPS” received, It was for an old friend, Mr. Wm. Edwards,of Martinstnwn, Wis*. He 1 — had Neuralgia in his chest, suffering u great deal of pain, no much so that it affected hi* heart, and ho could not sleep on account of a smothered feeling, 110 hud been amior the rare of the most eminent physicians, but obtained no relief until I gave him a dose ol "iiMiOPS." Ho rested well the very llrst night, and has ever since, and is gaining daily. liny eifamcavearaold, and commenced taking "6 DROPS” last April for Rheumatism, which has troubled no terribly for 49 years; also for a weak heart, from which I have suffered sluee I was 18. Since bkin ”5 DROPS" the Hbeumutlsm has all disappeared, tho stiffness has gone from mytomio and my heart never misses a best. In all my life I have never felt so well, und I owe my health to ”6 DROPS.” I only wish I could sound my bugle of praise loud enough to bo heard tho world ovar, and could convince every sufferer that ”5 DROPS” is all you claim it to be and more.— Mis. IX TL Catcer, Winslow, Stephenson Co., 111. Sept. 9, 1896. STILL WELL TWO YE'A.HS LATER. SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO., —Two years ago this present month I sent yon aa nosolicited testimonial of wliat ”5 DROPS” had done for myself mid friend, Mr. Edwards, and uom g want to send you another, saying we have not had a return of Neuralgia or KheaasMatlam aince. I think the cure must ho permanent; but If it should return. I keep “5 DROPS" the house and I know that, would stop It. It is good for so many things no house should he witboufc It. Yours truly, Mrs. D. T. Carver. Sept. 26, 1898. The wonderful success that has attended tho Introduction of ”5 DROPS” is unprecedented tm the history of the world. Think of 111 It has CURED more than One Million and a Quarter suffrim within tho last three years. This must appeal to you. One million and a quarter people eauuMaSaS bo mistaken. If suffering, we trust you may have sufficient confidence to send for three hige batlka* of ”5 DROPS” for lil.BO, which will surely cure you. If not. than send fora *I.OO bottle, wbhHhxnastains enough medicine tq more than prove Its wonderful curative properties. Prepaid by mti <w e* press. This wonderful curaffve gives almost instant relief and is a PERMANENT CUItB tm Hhcupiatlam, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Backache, Asdims, Hay Prnr. Catarrh, Sleeplessness, Nervousness, Nervous and Neuralgic HeudachcaC Heart Weakness, Toothache, Earache, Croup, Lo Grippe, Malaria. Creetaaaua Nutubneaa, Bronchitis und kindred dlseascu. r nDnOQ ,) Is the name and dose. LARCH lIOTTI.U (300 doses). >1 QBL sin Tw \J I O paid by mail or express; THREE MOTTLES, fiiSlh bold oaty by as and our agents. Agcnta Appolnted in New Territory. Write to-day. BWANBON RHEUMATIC CURE CO., 167 Dearborn St., Chicago, lU. S A POLIO IS LIKE A GOOD TEMPER, “IT SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE.”
C. N. U. No 46—Hr* UDHEN WRITINO TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE SAV TT yea saw the advsrtlasaeat la ibis pipsr.
True.
“Don’t misunderstand me,” said M*andering Mike; “I ain’t down on work."* “You don't seem to have mnch affection for it,” replied Plodding Petes. “Yes, I have. Work is a good tlqg. If it wasn’t fur work how Would «ff dese people git money to give usl'*— Exchange.
Activity of Vesuvius.
Much anxiety has been caused ia Napiec by the rehewed activity of Mount V«eavius. There is little likelihood that it *r3fe do any serious damage. On the other thousands die daily from stomach dborders, who might have survived had resorted to Hostetter’s Stomach It is the greatest tonic known for stwaafe and digestive organs.
Poetry vs. Prose.
Enamored swain (after being actqded) —Darling, you look sweet enough -** eat. Practical maid—Well, you can Juafc bet that I do eat. I hope yon (Hda\ think I li\*ed on atmosphere alone.
Are You Going to Florida?
Do you want maps, rates, route*, txnan card or other information? If so, add re— H. W. Sparks, T. P. A., 23F Clark street Chicago. Steamboats are displacing gondola* in Venice.
Catarrh Cured Blood Purified by Hood’s Sarsapa rilla and Health Is Good. “I was a sufferer from catarrh. One my neighbors advised me to take Dood’e Sarsaparilla and I did so. A few bottle* purified my blood and cured me. 1 fcae* remained in good health ever since.” JABL T. ADKINS, Athensville, Illinois, . Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine, ft; aii for 89k Hood’s Pills cure all Liyer Ills, ilana, Mm 3 It Cures Colds. Coughs. Sore Throat. Croup, to* fluenza.WhoopingCough. Bronchitis andAsttMM, A certain cure lor Consumptfon in first stagML and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use aft once. You will see the excellent effect altar taking the first doso Sold by dealers miywhere. Large bottles 26 cents and 60 err*. SHOOT ‘■’Winchester Imped* ,snoT Gun Shells Used byallthe Champion Snots. fiiip. Jem Name on a Postal Caro. ! for 152 page Illustrated Qtalosue. Repeating (tip , 180 Mnchcstck Avt , Niw/1/wh. Cc/tn HOW TO LEARN r MECHANICAL DR ft Will lIUU AT HOME ADDRraa, ACME SCHOOL OF DRAWING. Kalamazoo, filch.
«CURE YOURSELF? Use Hi( M f« r - g llseharges, ■■■• - M irritations or stcmMaS. >f ni uoo n s Paiulasa, and not JS: , cent or polaonoo*. *oM by Dr«da% or sent in gists mw_ Circular aaat os n^a.
