Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 34, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 January 1902 — Page 7
lydfa Em Pankham's Vegetable Compound . It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling ana Displacement es the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. It has cured more cases of Backache and Leucorrhoea than any other remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such oases. It dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early stage <of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of tho •Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility quickly yields to it. Womb troubles, causing pain, weight, and backache, instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water. It quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassitude, “don’t care” and “want-to-be-left-alone” feeling, excitability, irritability, nervousness, Dizziness, Faintness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy or tho “ blues,” and backache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, or some derangement of the Uterus, which this medicine always cures. ’ Kidney Complaints *rrd Backache of either sere the Vegetabla Compound always cures. No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine lias such a record of cures-of female troubles. Those women who to accept unything else are rewarded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want —a cure. Sold by Druggists everywhere. {Refuse all substitutes.
Larger School Ruildings Required.
Owing to tlie recent targe .influx of population into Western Canada .it has become absolutely necessary in .many parts Of Manitoba, Assiailbriia, Saskatchewan and Alberta to increase the school accommodation. Im many places buildings have been erected that are only half occupied. This is perhaps .ns good evidence as will be fcmmfl .not oUly of their satisfaction with their present school system and their con Aden e e that it will remain as it is, but also of their firm belief in the future expansion of .the country, in increased immigration, and it further indicates that tlvey have .little fear that the well-established rate of births in civilize 1 communities will not be maintained there. The free homestead laws and the cheap railway lands offer great indue®ments, which are opening up the new settlements. Agents of the governmentj of Canada are actively at work in different portions of the States for the purpose of giving information to possible settlers, and advertisements are now appearing in a large number of papers, giving the names and locations <of these agents.
Wisdom.
As the heathen smote us we did not forget that we were Christians. That is to say, we turned the other cheek. “Aber nit!” said the heathen. “One cheek is all that we can afford to pay indemnity for swatting!” Now that was an exhibition of worldly wisdom which we found quite us discom certing as it was unexpected. Indeed, it necessitated entirely new plans upon our part. —Detroit Journal.
Only Eight.
Willie—Oh, maw, 1 have sich a pain in my stummick. Fond Mother—Willie, have you been eating something? Willie —No, maw, I didn't eat a thing but eight green apples.—Ohio State Journal.
At the Common Frog Pond.
First Boston Boy—lt was all your fault that your yacht ran into mine. Second Boston Boy—lt was not; I do--in and an investigation!—Boston Fost. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are fast to sunlight, washing and! rubbing. The buildiug with the largest stones In the world is not in Egypt, but at Baalbec, in Syria. The stones are sixty feet long and twenty feet square. Do you use Mrs. Austin's Famous Pan Cnke Flour? The Kuss Company, makers, South Bend, Ind. The longest macadamized road in this country is the National, (150 miles.
CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. the Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the /p Z/Srf Signature of TcHcJCiAt Sick Headache Is always caused by torpid liver or Imper feet digestion, and Is generally aceompanlei with constipation. The cause Is quickly re moved by a dose of Dadway’s it Pills Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Causi Perfect Digestion, complete absorption ant healthful regularity. For the cure of a! disorders of the Stomach. Bowels, Kidneys Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Plies, Sick Head ache. Aid All Disorders of the Uver. Price 20 eta. per box. Sold by all drug gists, or sent by mall oa receipt of price. BADWAY 4c CO., » Kim SL,'Xew Yotk. Be sure to get "Radway’a." £'
Signs in Japan.
The peegfle of Japan have a mania, for English signs and they flood the rooms at hotels with English cards. They have no Inspirative mood, and they generally express an idea negatively which w,e-express positively. One day a traveler said to a waiter: “Kishi, the rolls are cold.” “Yes,” he said, ‘‘a good deal of hot .cooling the cakes is good.” A conspicuous notice at a leading hotel reads: “On the dining time nobody shall he .enter the dining and drawing room -without the guests allow.” One of the articles in the municipal laws of Kioto reads: v “Any dealer shall be honestly by his trade. Of course, the sold one shall prepare to make up the safe package.” A Tokio dentist’s circular reads: “Our tooth is an important organ for human life and countenance, as you know; therefore, when It is attacked by injury artificial tooth Is useful. I am engaged in the dentistry, and I will make for your purpose.”
A Wonderful Cure.
Wright City, Mo.. Dec. 30.—Medical men are still wondering over the Symes case which has aroused such a widespread interest in this neighborhood. Mr. Joseph G. Symes had suffered very severely with Inflammatory Rheumatism, enduring pains which were something terrible and which made it altogether impossible for him to work by day or rest or sleep at night. In spite of all treatments he grew worse and his case seemed to defy all the usual remedies. He began a treatment of Dodd’s Kidney Pills and very soon noticed a marked improvement which increased as he kept on till six boxes were used when lie found himself without a trace of pain or ache. He is now able to work all day and sleep all night and his rapid and complete recovery Is regarded by the doctors as little short of a miracle. _
The Only Way.
“Yon seem to have a lot of relations. How do you keep track of them?” “I read the obituary column in the papers every day.”—Judge.
, The Handsomest Calendar of the season (in ten colors) sijX beautiful heads (on six sheets, 10x12 inches), reproductions of paintings by Moran, issued by General Passenger Department. Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, will be sent on receipt of twenty-five cents. Address F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago.
Why He Did It.
“Merciful heavens!” she exclaimed on her first visit to the dairy. “Why do you crowd the cows so close together in tli*s ta 11s?” • “Them’s th’ condensed milk <o,ws, mum,” replied the accommodating chambermaid. —Denver Times.
There Is more catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was sup|>oseil to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by K. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It act* directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of -the system. They offer oue hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo, O. LVSold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Fills are the he t
The import of American boots into Britain hus during the past year infused in value by about £IOO,OOO, I cannot praise Piso’s Cure enough for the wonders it has worked in curing me. —R. H. Seidel, 2200 Olive atreet, St. Louis, Mo, April 15, 1001. Mrs. Austin's Famous Psn Cake Flour will S lease yon. Made by the Russ Company, ooth Bend. Ind. Mrs. Winslow's SoorwiKS hist far Oblidraa && j&s wr 5 *
The Irony of Pate. She goes out to the races, And the man he rnaketh fun When she tries to air her knowledge Of the way the horses run. She knows but very little Of forms or handicaps; And she hates to trust her money With those reckless betting chaps. And tlic man he loseth money And is covered o'er with shame, And the girl she picked the winner ’Cause she liked the horse’s name. —Washington Star.
The Beet Sugar Industry.
A most important article, giving Messrs. Oxnard’s and Cutting’s views on the beet sugar industry iu this country, appeared oil the editorial page of the New York Evening Post of Dec. 12, and as every household in the land is interested in sugar the article will be of universal interest: “The Evening Post bids the heartiest welcome to every American industry that can stand on its own bottom and make its way without leaning on the poor rates. Among these self-support-ing industries, we are glad to know, is the production of beet sugar. At all events, it was such two years ago. We publish elsewhere a letter written in 1899, an;l signed by Mr. Oxnard and Mr. Cutting, the chiefs of this industry on the eastern sid,e of the Rocky Mountains, showing that this was the happy condition of the trade at that time. If parties masquerading as beet sugar producers are besieging the President and Congress at this moment, and pretending that they will he ruined if Caban sugar is admitted for six months at half the present rates of duty, their false pretenses ought to be exposed. “The letter of Messrs. Oxnard and 'Cutting was probably written for the purpose of inducing the farmers of the Mississippi valley to go more largely into the cultivation of beets for the sugar factories. This was a laudable motive for telling the truth and showing the large profits which awaited both the beet grower and the manufacturer if the industry were perseveringly and intelligently prosecuted. To this end it was pointed out that farmers could clear SGS per acre by cultivating beets, and might even make SIOO. But in order to assure the cultivator that he would not be exposed to reverses by possible changes in the tariff, they proceeded to show that the industry st;>(.<! in no need of protection. “The beet sugar industry, these gentlemen say, ‘stands on as firm a basis as any business in the country.’ They point out the fact—a very important one—that their product comes out as a finished article, refined and granulated. It Is not, like cane-sugar grown in the West India islands, a black and offensive paste, which must be carried in wagons to the seaboard and thence by ships to the United States, where, after another handling, it is put through a costly refinery, and then shipped by rail to tile consumer, who may possibly be in Nebraska, alongside a beet sugar factory which turns out the refined and granulated article at one fell swoop. Indeed, the advantages of the producer of beet sugar for supplying the domestic consumption are very great. We have no doubt that Messrs. Oxnard and Cutting are within bounds when they say that ‘sugar can be produced here cheaper than it can be in Europe.’ The reasons for this are that—
“ ‘The sugar industry is, after all, merely an agricultural one. We can undersell Europe in all other crops, and sugar is no exception.’ “It follows as naturally as the making of flour from wheat. If we can produce wheat cheaper than Europe, then naturally we can produce flour cheaper, as we do. “But the writers of the letter do not depend upon a-priorl reasoning to prove that they can make sugar at a protit without tariff protection. They point to the fact that under the McKinley tariff of 1890, when sugar was free of duty, the price of the article was 4 cepts per pound. Yet a net profit of $3 per ton was made by the beet sugar factories under those conditions, not counting any bounty on the home production of sugar. They boast that they made this pto fit while working under absolute free trade, and they have a right to be proud of this result of their skill ami industry. Many beet sugar factories had been started iu bygoue years, back in the sixties and seventies of the nine teentli century, and had failed, because the projectors did not understand the business. Since then great progress lias been made, both here and abroad, in the cultivation and manipulation of the beet. What was impossible thirty years ago is now entirely feasible. The industry is already on a solid and enduring basis. There are factories In the United States, these gentlemen tell us in their letter, capable of using 350,000 tons of beets per annum at a profit of $3 per ton, and this would make a profit of $1,050,000 as the income to lie earned under absolute free trade. “It must be plain to readers of this letter, signed by the captains of the beet sugar Industry, tbnt the people In Washington who are declaiming against the temporary measure which the President of the United States urges for the relief of the Cuban people, are either grossly Ignorant of the subject, or are practicing gross decep tion. The tenable ground for them is to say: ‘Other people are having protection that they do not need, and therefore we ought to have more than we need.’ This would be consistent with the letter of Messrs. Oxnard and Cutting, but nothing else Is so.”
Dead Silence.
"Nothing from my poor husband?' said the widow to the medium. “No, ma'am,” Was the reply; “not even a message stating that the fire if ' out!”—Atlanta Constitution- *»
WASHINGTON GOSSIP
Senator Wellington of Maryland Is having an uncomfortable time of it. His bolt from tho Republican party last year
G. L. WELLINGTON.
said, as reported," that the assassination of the President was “a matter of indifference"’ to him. vile declined to deny or affirm it and Maryland Republicans proceeded to punish him by expelling him from their clubs. Wellington has become a pessimist, and he has pride enough neither to try to justify himself nor to regain the favor he has so completely *lost. On the other hand, the Democrats are giving Senator McUaurin the cold shoulder since he began trying to organize a semi-Republican party in South Carolina. The collection of animals, wild, domestic and foreign, nt-tht--White House, w being enlarged almost daily : new a rivals t ruin distant places. Ibe ;■ r..„, the parrot ha-e now boon joiim a game rooster. It is a bantam, arc., . though d’vninutive In size, looks capable of winning a championship in the featherweight class if pitted against an adversary of its kind. It is the property of Kennil Roosevelt, to whom it was sent, as was the President’s possum, by Some admirer in the South. The Roosevelt boys would like to see the rooster fight, but of course the president will not permit an exhibition of* this kind in or near the White House. He yielded to KSfmit’s appeal, however, so far as to have a small coop erected at the south side of the mansion. The possum and the parrot are doing well. The bird is a Brazilian of gorgeus plumage, brought from South America by Charles Page Bryan, the United States minister, and speaks Spanish with fluency.
One of the cloak room stories told in connection with one of President Roosevelt’s stag dinners to Congressmen is to this effect: It appears that either intentionally or otherwise the guests invited to the dinner included a dozen or more Senators wb > a e noted for their long speeches who,.ever they indulge in general debate. During the dinner President Roosevelt led the conversation on to congressional topics and commented freely upon the beauty and effectiveness of short speeches and limited debate. In the middle of one of President Roosevelt’s sharpest and most direct pleas for short speeches he was interrupted by the venerable Senator Pettus of known in senatorial circles as “Old Confucius,” who remarked in his droll way: “Mr. Pres-i-dent, I don’t think you set us long-winded follows a very good example in your first message to Congress.” Everyone at the table gathered the point, and for a few moments the laugh was on the President.
Food adulteration and food frauds in the United States, says a chemist connected with the Agricultural Department, are a national scandal. Some of the States have done what they can to correct the abuses of which everybody has a right to complain, but the strong hand of the national government must be laid on the offenders. It is difficult to get butter that is butter, lard that is lard, coffee that is coffee, vinegar that is vinegar, etc. A man stands a slim chance of getting maple syrup or honey when he buys goods labeled with those alluring names. If a man buys a bottle of horseradish he does not get it, and when he wants to buy a pot of mustard all that he gets is an acid paste compounded of flour or fuller's earth. I might run over the list of foodstuffs. I would not be sure that the market Is not stocked with fake steaks and spurious chops. President Roosevelt has under way an almost complete reorganization of the Treasury Department. Secretary Gage is to retire. His resignation will mean the retirement of the three assistant secretaries, Milton E. Ailes, O. L. Spalding and H. A. Taylor. George It. Bidwell, collector of the port of New York, has been notified that his place will become vacant in the spring and his successor, in the person of N. N. Stranahan of Oswego, has been named. Wilbur F. Wakeman, appraiser at New York, has already been removed and his place taken by George It. Whitehead. Thomas F. Fitchie, commissioner of immigration at New York and an appointee of Assistant Secretary Taylor, will retire as soon as his successor can he found. Ellis 11. Roberts, Treasurer of the United States and former editor and proprietor of the Utica Morning Ilvrald, is expected to retire within a few months. The reports of the cabinet officers and the heads of bureuus made in conformity with the Senate resolution of Feb. 25, 1901, on the age and compensation of employes of their respective departments, show that there are a considerable number of elderly men in the employ of the government. In the government printing office there is one who has been there twenty-seven years and who is 82 years of age, but who earns $4 a day. Another, 68 years of age, has been employed in the office for forty years. The Fifty-seventh Congress has not a single negro member, and the prospects of any negro being elected to Congress in the near future seem darker than they have been at any time in the last third of a century. With the exception of a brief period, from 1887 to 1889, this is the first session of Congress in 82 years without one or more colored men as members. The First National Bank of Cordell, O. T., has been authorised to begin bualness with a capital of $25,000.
and the powwow kicked up by the heartless remark attributed to wh.n President McKinley was shot have combined to isolate him froih his colleagues in the Senate, and he cuts avlonely figure. It has been definitely established that Wellington
SISTERS OF CHARITY Use Pe-ru-na for Coughs, Colds, Grip and Catarrh—a Congressman’s Letter. _.... H - : :--- ji :• |B :: ic-J; :gjj !;; j |H Dr. Hartman receives many letters from Catholic Sisters all over the United States. A recommend recently received from a Catholic institution in De-» trolt, 1 Mich., reads as follows:
Detroit, Mich., Oct. 8, 1901. Dr. S. B. Hartrrai, Columbus, Ohio: Dear Sir—“ The young girl who used the Peruna was suffering from laryngitis, and loss of voice. The result of the treatment was most satisfactory. She found great relief, and after farther use of the medicine we hope to be able to say she Is entirely cured.” SISTERS OF CHARITY. This young girl was under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used Peruna for catarrh of the throat, with good results as the above letter testifies.
SISTERS OF CHARITY All Over United States Use Pe ru-na for Catarrh. From a Catholic institution in Ohio coirc* the following recommend from the Sister Superior: “Some years ago a friend of our Institution recommended to us Dr. Hartman’s Peruna ss an excellent remedy for the influenza of which we then had several cases which threatened to be of a serious character. “We began to use Hand experienced such wonderful results that sines then Peruna has become our favorite medicine for influenza, catarrh, cold, cough and bronchitis. ” SISTER SUPERIOR. Dr. Hartman, one of the best known physicians and surgeons in the United States, was the first to formulate Peruna. It was through his genius and perseverance that it was introduced to the medical profession of this country.
DO YOU SHOOT? If you do you should send your name and address on a postal card for a WINCHESTER GUN CATALOGUE. IT’S FREE. It illustrates and describes all the different Winchester Rifles, Shotguns and Ammunition, and contains much valuable information. Send at once to the Winchester Repeating Amts Co., New Hewn, Conn.
inenau oj tale t in table beleno : But! ness More Than Doubled In Four Years. W. L/Douglas makes an<l sells more men’s $3.00 and #3.50 shoes than any other two manufacturers in the world. W. 1,. Douglas #3.00 and $3.50 shoes placed side by ilde with SSCO and $(.00 shoes of other makes, are found to bo Just as good. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary 53.00 BUil S 3 80 ihoff. / Made of the beet leathers. Including Patent Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and Motional Kangaroo, tea Color KroMa me 4 Alw.y. Blare Hooka toM. W. U Doudas #4.00 “Oilt Zd«e Unocannot be equalled at any price. Chronic Constipation Cured. The most important discovery o t recent years is the positive remedy for constipation. Cascarets Candy Cathartic. Cure guaranteed. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. Druggists, ioc. cm Nh II I nowapapers—lOOAPOcirculation par week uIU safes!! &snri»ss£
The following letter is from Congressman Meekison, of Napoleon, Ohio: , The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O. Gentlemen “I have used sev-.. • eral bottles of]| \ * reruns and feel > xma-&\ greatly benefited” J- I thereby from my]' J head,and feel en-]’ | lieve that its con-' ’ turned use wlllj J fully eradicate a ♦«♦ ♦♦ 4 »,»■»»» » disease of thirty years’ standing* DAVID MEEKISON. j if you do not receive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to D.r. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr Hartman. President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Ohio.
Capsicum Vaseline Put Up in Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or any other plast:r,aud will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain Allaying and curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest ani stomach and aU rheumatic, neuralgic and gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we claim for it, and I* will be found to be invaluable in the household. Many people say "It is the best of all your preparations." Price ig cents, at all druggists, or other dealers, or by sending this amount to us in postage stamps we will send yon a tube by mail. No article should be accepted by the public unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it ks Dot genuine. CHEESEBROUQh MANUFACTURING CO, 17 State Street. Stw Vsrk City. OUT they CO TO NORTH DAKOTA. H e bare acTcnil mtm fmr sale la carter* Morten art ether eeentlee la Nerth Dak eta. fttrh native gniitw. Where Cera arena. I ’are water Inoprlncn, es reaaM a*4 well*. Price M-hO te *?.*• per acre. B i«h hlaek cell. FREE homesteads adjoining. Sillre t'Mltl.M Mr ton. Write at wire, WM. 11. BROW V Jk CO.. Devil. Lake. X. Dak-IM La Salle St., CHICACA. WHY NPf USE THE BEST fk PAUL OPPER MANN’S household ” eUttt DYES are the best for Home If \ Dyeing- Their use guarantees rm least labor and best satisfaction. irSJte Ask Yon* Deals*. t-rtyv Tax* No Own. R he u matism discovert, cure, theomat eat permaaaat'y. kill, tha germ. Mad Map. Ssariaa Impart la* OoClaela.aU.W C. N. D. No. i-ibon U/BEN WWTINO TO ABYHtTISHtS PLEAS! SAT ” yen saw the sdvwttsraial In (Ms papa* *~ T ~ ' M
