Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 36, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 January 1904 — Page 7
MEPICAL EXAMIN ER Of the United States Treasury Recommends Pe=ru=na.
Other Prominent Physicians Use and Endorse Pe-ru-na. DR. LLEWELLYN Jordan, Medical Examiner of the U. S. Treasury Department, graduate of Columbia College. and who served three years at West Point, has the following to say of Penina: ••Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived from your wonderful remedyOne short month has brought forth a vast change and I now consider myself a well man after months of suffering- Fellow suf- . ferers, Penina will cure you. ” , A constantly increasing number of physicians prescribe Peruna in their practice. It has proven its merits so thoroughly that even the doctors have overcome their prejudice against so-call-ed patent medicines and recommend it to their patients. Peruna occupies a_ unique .position-in-medical science. It is the only internal 't systemic ea ‘medical profession to-day. Catarrh, as everyone will admit, is the cause’ of onehalf the disease which afflicts mankind. Catarrh and catarrhal diseases nillict one-half of the people of United States. »»»♦»»>♦ »-» + ♦»■»♦ »♦» f Robert R. Roberts, M. D.,Wash- 1 I in D. C., writes: ♦ I “Through my own experience y t* as well as that of many of my 1 friends and acquaintances who I ♦ have been cured or relieved of ca- I * tarrh by the use of Hartman’s t ♦ Peruna, I can confidently recom- I j mend it to those suffering from j 4 such disorders, and have no hesita- I 4 tion in prescribing it to my pa- i. 4 Uents.”—-Robert R. Roberts. | o »•«>♦»»■♦» » »♦ ♦ Dr. R. Robbins, Muskogee, I. T., writes: __ "Peruna is the best medicine I know of for coughs and to strengthen a weak stomach and to give appetite. Besides prescribing it for catarrh, 1 have ordered It for weak and debilitated people, and have not had a patient but said it helped him. It is an excellent medicine and it fits so many cases. “I have a large practice, and have a ' change to prescribe your Peruna. _I hope you may live long to do good to the sick and tiie suffering.” Dr. M. C. Gee writes from 513 Jones 6t., San Francisco, Cal.: /‘Peruna has performed so many wonderful cures in San Francisco that I am convinced that it is a valuable remedy. I “have frequently advised its use for
WAftMfESTER ‘NEW RIVAL” BLACK POWDER SHELLS. .£> It’s the thoroughly modern and scientific system of loadand the use °f only the best materials which make JiWinchester Factory Loaded “New Rival” Shells give better pattern, penetration and more uniform results generic I {jffl ’•-■£/ - ailv than any other shells. The special paper and the Win- —-' Chester patent corrugated head used in making “New Rival” shells give them strength to withstand reloading. ■4l PE SURE TO GET WINCHESTER MAKE OF SHELLS. *7 ~~l - - mnu. li- ij. 1 ; .r • .'T - ——l~—- n —1 — I—mi1 — mi T~~T*~*^Wr" l *** l, ‘ ■T Sale TeniMillion Boxes a Year, g THE FAMILY'S FAVORITE MEDICINE ■I CAND Y CATHARTIC |L BEST FOR THE BOWELS JR
... fl 1 ■ It Cures Colds, Concha. Sors Throat, Croup, Inflnanz.v, Whooping Congo, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relhtf in advanced stages. Tse at once. Yon will see iho excellent effect after taking tbs Srst dose. Sold by dea'ers everywhere. Large uttlcs its cents and so cents. - * MEXICAN Mustang Liniment cures Sprains and Strains. RRR Rad way's XtouJy fUllaf Qnres Headache, Toolhach*, Feuralgla. Rhaumatiaiu, Lu tn bn paina and weak* Eieoa la the back, anlna or kidney a, inina around the Ivar, pleurisy, viral ling of the joints end pninsof all 4nd«, the application of Redway's Reedy Relief will afford immedial a ease and Its continued uew for a few days effect* a permanent cure. Bold by DrnMiata. KADWaV A CO.. NEtv YORK. Capsicum Vaseline Put Up In Collapsible Tubes. A Bubatltnta tor and Bopariar to Mnatard or an 7 •Uiar plaaler. sod will not bl I .tar th. most dallcata Skin. Th. pain allarincaud curative nuallUaa of thia •rticl.arawond.rful. It will .too th. looihaoh. at •nca, and rallava haadaahaand Miatica. , Wo raeommand it a. Iho baal and aafeat axlernal rountar-irritaiit known, also aa an olarual r.tnwlr for pain. In tha cheat and atomuh and all rhanmalia, **“&»lie It. and It win b. wood to ha InrnlnaMa in tha bmaaaholtl. Maur paopla ••7 "It it tha ba.t of all roor preparation..*’ a. Print IS can la. at all d ru.aUi., or other dealers, or nr aaodinc thia amount to ua in po.ta«a auunpa, W. will wnaaaptad by the pabl ions Ims th. aama carriaaonr label, aa otherwiae it la not cannina. > CRESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO 17 Staw Street, New YerK City. _
4- ‘f’ 1 mHi 4. Dr. Llewellyn Jordan, •{• ❖ Medical Examiner United States Treasury *j‘ *> *r •F4**5 M s**s*4**J**s*4 w 5-*l**J*4**5 w 5"5 M s**s*4*4*-J**2**2*4**s**i* women, as I find it insures regular and paildess menstruation, cures- leucorrhoea and ovarian troubles, and builds up the entire system. I also consider it one of the finest catarrh remedies I know of.” —M. C. Gee, M. D. Catarrh is a systemic disease curable only by systemic treatment. A remedy that cures catarrh must aim directly at the depressed nerve centers. This is what Periina does. Peruna immediately invigorates the nerve-centers which give vitality to the mucous membranes. Then catarrh disappears. Then catarrh is permanently cured. If you do not derive' prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. 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, Columbus, Ohio.
Millions in Cats.
Salzer's New National Oats .yielded in 1903 in Michigan 240 bn., in Missouri 255 bul, in North. Dakota 310 bu., and in 30 other States from 150 to 300 bu. per acre. Now this Oat if generally grown in 1904, will add millions of bushels to the yield and millions of dollars to the farmer’s purse. Try it for 1904. Largest Seed Potato growers in America. Salzer's Spelts, Beardless Barley, Home Builder Corn, Macaroni Wheat, Pea Oat, Billion Dollar Grass and Earliest Canes are money makers for you, Mr. Farmer. JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND 10c in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co., Ln Crosse, Wls., and receive in return their big catalogue and lots of farm seed samples. (C. N. U.) The vast retinue of servants employed by the late Queen Victoria are being carefully reduced in numbers by King Edward VII. .Piso's Cure for Consumption always gives immediate relief in all throat troubles.—F. E. Bierman, Leipsic, Ohio, Aus. 31,1901. We say n man Is “mulish" instead of likening him to a camel when he gets Lia back tip. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are fast to light and washing. Mrs. Winslow's Rootbixo Srsur for Children iMlhingi aoftou« Ilia (rima, rodncea inflammsuoa, st l«r« rain, cures wind 00110. 25 oanta a bottls.
COLD CURE Do you knew that a cold oannot exist If the bowels are thoroughly cleansed and active? Dr. Caldwell’s (LAXATIVE) Syrup Pepsin Is the best medicine for a oold. It will cure the youngest child or oldest Mil* serer. Try It. 600 and SI,OO at your druggists. PEPSIN SIRUP CO., ■•fiUMlto, HL
COMMEPCIAL AND FINANCIAL
Special telegrams from correspondent! of the International Mercantile Agency throughout the United States and Canada regarding the state of trade are summarized as follows. The event of the business week has been the discovery of a greatly improved demand for pig iron and wire nails, and for sonic forms of steel, notfibly sheets, bars and scrap. Increased demand for steel products Ims started some of the largest plants, and prices for varieties mentioned are $1 a ton higher. Wire nails have advanced still further. Ten or fifteen thousand more industrial employes have gone back to work within n week, hut in most instances at a lower rate of wages. The drag in the steel rail market results from unwillingness of railroad companies to pay $5 a ton more /than leading interests arc offering rails ...aliroad-:: ~ In New England it is still problematical how much the output of the cotton goods will be curtailed by the high price of cotton. Spring trade outlook in staple lines Is unexpectedly favorable. Some Boston merchants say they expect sales to exceed those of a year ago. At Chicago orders compare favorably with last year's, and at St. Louis they exceed those of the like period in 1003. At both Pittsburg and Philadelphia business men report a good effect from the improved "situation in iron and steel, orders have increased, factories and foundries have started up. Textile stocks at Philadelphia are light and increased outputs are predicted.
The volume of railway traffic,, at Chicago is 2 per cent larger than a year ngo, with slightly increased earnings. At Pittsburg the roads are carrying 15 per cent less than in January last year. 'Duluth merchants look confidently ahead to a large spring business. Minneapolis and St. Paul report jobbing satisfactory for the season. Louisville traders are discounting bills freely. Canada reports an active demand for seasonable goods, and wholesalers at Toronto and Quebec have large orders for spring delivery. Railroads report a decrease in earnings from 1903 for the first week in the year.
Dun's weekly review trade for the week says: Distribution of commodities, as indicated by railroad returns, makes favorable comparison with a year ago, and there is heavier marketing of farm,, products. Manufacturing, particularly in iron, proceeds with renewed confidence and the employment of larger forces, the reduced cost of labor being now an important factor in the situation. Dealings in staple merchandise at wholesale are of fair volume, and increase appears in spring orders. Road salesmen are now well distributed throughout the interior, and the demand has opened satisfactorily in several branches, dry goods, men’s furnishings, and footwear showing best. Country merchants are for the present cautious in the extent of their selections, and disposed to defer their principal commitments in textile goods, with the prospect of a heavier business being negotiated in seasonable time, Retail trade has been somewhat retarded owing to broken weather, but the consumption of necessities is of fair proportions. Failures in the Chicago district are mostly among small traders, the total being forty-seven, ■ against twenty-eight a year ago.
Grain shipments, 2,436,483 bushels, including 1,144,920 bushels corn, are 14.09 per cent under the corresponding week of 1903. Demand has been best in the coarse cereals, but the aggregate of all transactions was disappointing. The market continues controlled by speculative features, and the range of prices established hinders cash business. Compared with closing prices a week ago, advances are in oats 1% cents, corn cents and wheat one-eighth. Flour shows increased output, and sales were larger both On domestic and export account.
THE MARKETS
Chicago—Cattle, common to prime, $3.00 to $5.25; hogs, shipping grades,, $4.00 to $5.20; sheep, fair to choice, $2.25 to $4.25; wheat, No. 2 red, 87c to 92c; corn, No. 2,44 cto 45c; oats, standard, 38c to 39c; rye, No. 2,52 cto 54c; hay, timothy, $8.50 to $12.50; prairie, $6.00 to $11.00; butter, choice creamery, 19c to 21c; eggs, fresh, 23c to 26c; potatoes, 70c to 83c. Indianapolis—Cattle, shipping, $3.00 to $5.25; hogs, choice light, $4.00 to $4.90; sheep, common to prime, $2.50 to $3.75; wheat. No. 2,91 cto 93c; corn, No. 2 white, 43c to 45c; oats, No. 2 white, 89c to 41c. St. Louiß—Cattle, $4.50 to $5.00; hogs, $4.00 to $5.00; sheep, $3.00 to $4.50; wheat, No. 2,89 cto 90c; corn, No. 2, 42c to ,43c; oats, No. 2,37 cto 39c; rye, No. 2,48 cto 49c. Cincinnati —Cattle, $4.00 to $4.85; hogk, $4.00 to $5.05; sheep, $2.00 to $3.75; wheat, No. 2,90 cto 97c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 46c ’.to 47c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 41,c to 42c;/ye. No. 2,02 cto 03c. Detroit —Cnttle, $3.50 to $4.50; bogs, $4.00 to $4.40; sheep, 12.50 to $4.25; wheat, No. 2,04 cto 05c; corn. No. 3 yelldw, 45c to 46c; oats. No. 3 white, 41c to 42c; rye, No. 2, 01 cto G2c. Milwaukee —Wheat, No. 2 northern, 86c to 87c; corn, No. 3,41 eto 42c; oats, No. 2 white, 40e to 41c; rye. No. 1,59 c to 01c; barley; No. 2, Gsc to 60c; pork, mess, $12.50. Toledo —Wheat, No. 2 mixed, 90c to 92c; com, No. 2 niiXßil, 45c toi4tlc; oats, No. 2 mixed, 39c to 41c; rye, No. 2,58 c to 00c; clover seed, prime, ?G.90. Buffalo —Cattle, cboics shipping steers, $4.50 to $5.25; hogs, fair to prime, $4.00 to $5.10; sheep, fair to choice, $3.25 to $4.25; lambs, common to choice, $4.75 to $6.15. New York —Cattle, $3.50 to $5.40; hogs. $4.00 to $5.00; sheep, $3.00 to $4.50; wheat, No. 2 red, 93c to 94c; corn. No. 2,55 cto 50c: oats. No. 2 white, 46c to 47e; batter, creamery, 20c to 22c; tags, western, 29c io 31c.
Too Metropolitan.
Daniel Boone, Who blazed the way for civilization in Kentucky, loved always to be a little In advance of the tide of emigration, where he need not be annoyed by the presence of other human beings. He went on to Missouri when Kentucky became “too crowded,” and a gentleman who met him out there in 1803 records that he was about to go still farther. “I saw and conversed with Daniel Boone,” he wrote to his friends, “who was residing at the upper settlement on the Missouri. Although he was then sixty-eight years old, he was remarkably active, walked erect with much ease and agility, but observed that he could not Shoot quite so well as formerly on a dark day. “ ‘l'm going to leave here right soon,’ said. Boone. ‘lt’s getting too crowded. X never did like city Ilf a There’s as many aa ten families settled. rounti here now, and I’m tired of them* And there’s more coming. I’m going to take out and move away up-river, where I can live alone in comfort’ ”
LASTING RELIEF.
y J. W. Walls, Sujßperlntendent of 3 Streets of Lebanon, J Ky., says: J “My nightly rest
was broken, owing to irregularities of the kidneys, suffering intensely from severe pains in the small of my back and through the kidneys and I was annoyed by painful passages of abnormal secretions. No amount of doctoring relieved this condition. I began taking Doan’s Kidney Pilis and I experienced quick and lasting relief. Doan’s Kidney Pills will prove a blessing to all sufferers from Sidney disorders who will give them a fair trial.” Foster-Miiburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., proprietors. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box.
The Usual Way.
“Time is precious,” said the moralizer. “It is,” rejoined the demoralizer, “and I’ve wasted lots of it.”
“By indulging in foolish pleasures, eh?” queried the party of the preface. “No,” replied the other, “by being punctual in keeping my appointments with others.”
There Is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed 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 F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, Is the only constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It fails to cure. Send for circularsand testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Fills are the beat
As Explained.
Brownovitch —Old Blowitz never attends church, docs he? Smithinsky—No It isn’t necessary. Brownovitch—Because why ? Smithinsky—Oh, he’s one of those self-made men who are always praising their maker.
Mother Gray’a Sweet Powders for Children.
Successfully used by Mother .Gray, nurse in the Children's Home in New York, cure Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
Books ain’t fit’n’ tor nothing but to give to little children goin’ to school, for to keep ’em ont’n mischief. If a man’s got mother wit he don’t need ’em; es he ain’t got it they'll do him no good, nohow.—Simon Suggs’ philosophy, quoted In Henry Watterson’s “The Compromises of Life.”
' ■ 1 *4- ■; I 111 i'iliA 111> 1.111,1 ■■ .UI.H * •t’iilfld yilWfmilMibiM.Bgwnw-atftiUntinlt. A\cgetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food andßeg alating the Stomachs and Bowels of asZ4*J aitelAin SaJ IX , ’“ * j Promotes Digestion.Cheerful- | ness and Rest. Contains neither I Opium,Morphine nor Mineral I 1 Not ‘Narcotic. ofOUDrSAItVELmOOR Sent' , AU-Sruui • 1 I • I Aiy< e * 1 I * A perfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverishness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY Off WRAPPER.
- ______ „ , fIJSpWSHHwM fijsE&Sar F. 1 ■ Miss Rose Hennessy, well known asl a poetess and elocutionist, of Lexington, Ky., tells how she was cured of uterine inflammation and ovaritis by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. - “ Deab Mrs. Pinkham :—I have been so blessedly helped through the see ©f Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound that I feel it but just t© acknowledge it, hoping that it may help some other woman suffering as l did. “ For years I enjoyed the best of health and thought that I would alwayc do so. I attended parties and receptions thinly clad, and would be suddeujf chilled, but I did not think of the results. I caught a bad cold eighteen months ago while menstruating, and this caused inflammation of the womk and congested ovaries. I suffered excruciating pains and kept getting worm. My attention was called to your Vegetable Compound and the wondcrft£ cures it had performed, and I made up my mind to try it for two months aa# see what it would do for me. Within one month I felt much better, aaA at the close of the second I was entirely well. “ I have advised a number of my lady friends to use it, and all express themselves as well satisfied with the results as I was.”—Miss Ross Noaa, Hennessy, 410 S. Broadway, Lexington. Ky. The experience and testimony of some of the most note€ IT? 1 ?? 11 °C America go to prove beyond a question that Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound will correct all such trouble aud at once, by removing the cause, and restoring the organs ta * normal and healthy condition. “Deab Mrs. Pinkham: About two years ago I consulted a physician about my health which had become so wretched that I was n* longer able to be about. I had severe backache, bearing-down pains, pains across the abdomen, was very nervous and irritable, ana fchfcp trouble grew worse each month. The physician prescribed lor me, but I soon discovered that he was unable to help me, and I then decided to try Lydia IS. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and soon found that it was doing me good. My appetite was returning, the pains disappearing, and the general benefits were well marked. “You cannot realize how pleased I was, and after taking the medU cine for only three months, I found that I was completely cured of my trouble, and have been well and hearty ever since, and no more fear th* monthly period, as it now passes without pain to me. Yours very traljk Miss Pearl Ackers, 327 North Summer St., Nashville, Tenn ” When a medicine has been successful In restoring to health more than a million women, you cannot well say without trying w ‘‘l do not believe it will help me.” If you are ill, do not hesitat* to get_a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and write Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for special advice. Her advice is free and helpful. Write to-day. Delay may be fatal. ornnn forfeit if cannot forthwith produce the original letters and V *)|||||| above teatimouiaU, which will prove- their absolute genuineness. IrVUUU Lydia hi. Pinkham Med. Co.,
MAKE YOUR FEET WELL ■■• HAPPY MULTIKURA POWDER Good For All Aliment*. Box 25 c**nt*. IRI if. Lanjfhoff A Boddeker, 203*206 Monroe SL, Chicago LI CRT Blrthetone Free: 12c. Birthday Li e Horn •f pa mailed. Martinas, 236 I e gen 8 .. Brooklyn,N.Y.
ICfISTORIA For Infants and Children. | The Kind You Have I Always Bought Bears the % © 1 Xrls I Signature / Am I of A tz\l* L kJr ln IhaK ® se ■Ur For Over I Thirty Years (ASTORIA W iwuiwiin litrr~" mw wm umr.
50,000 AMERICANS Were Welcomed to _ 1 They aie settled and eettilnc ou tow Z Grain and Grazint* I Anda, and are |N» - ( T “-jQ parous ffhd Ratified. xa-? IS Sir Wilfred Laurier recently satti •< new star haw rfwen upon the hoctaML, and U toward It that every Imartf-vaA * who leave* the land of his aneeateoutß < VL.- rr come and trek a home f<tr hlmaetf ex turn* his ga2e”~<’nnndi*. Thereto i ROOM FOR MILLIONS < 'yZ+‘ l ■• * Ilomv-.tenda BlvoaL *0 \ »« »y. Mrhool., Y'hnrrhea. >•»£■ lbli>« U» be de.lreii. ~ Fora descriptive A tie. ead otter lb. -X formation, epplj to bcreinsraKDente A- x aiaiuTiox, Ottawa, Canada, w rlz.'l Canadian Government tyMX fl. J. Bronehton, AJO Qulner BM«.. Chleaaei K. X. Holme., 315 .Tackvon Street, fit. I’anl, Minn., M. < Mclnnm, No « Av.nn. Theater Block. Imtroit, T. O. Corrie. Room 12. Callahan Build Ing. Milewtetb Wl« , and .1. C*. Duncan, Room A, L'l< Fear MmE Indianapolis, Ind. ■ A Ripnn. Tabti'M ara tba Maß <l)S|w psi» mrvliclna ever ooeda /'■ A hundred tnllhnnt of tbe« teas bcfo *° ,d In *b® United HUM Ma * kinglo y«ar. ContUyattea, b-artburn, tick hradache, 4tate nets, bad Ifaih. seca throat aaf every other Illness arising from a Olustee ttomapb are relieved or <-urol by KI pans Tatadte Ono* WHF natally give taller al thin twente minutes. The Bvex<nt pmkage H for ordinary occasloi.s. All arn-giV.s sell ttete_ ;?,"“''«Tlionipson'sE)ieWata' C. N. U. No. 5-IWM VV nFN WIOTINO TO ADVEKYISEKS PLEASe MF vv yaa aav Om adwrtteMMl la tMa
