The Albany News. (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, February 7, 1890 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the The Old Jail Art Center.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Hfej f vn .
I
w
m.
¥m
mm-
if
fJOYS
nd results when
en; it is pleasant
ne taste, and acts
r on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys-
cjiels colds, head-
and cures habitual
riyrup of Figs is the
IA y of its kind ever pro-
easing to the taste and ac-
ct j , Wa to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com-
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known.
Syrup or Figs is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug-
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro-
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N.Y.
|6IGK HEADACHE
p. - i Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress from Dyspepsia,In-
digestion and TooHearty
Eatinp. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness,Nausea
Drowsiness, Bad Taste
in the Mouth, Coated
Tongue,Pain in the Side.
TORPID LIVER. They
regulate the Bowels,
Purely Vegetable.
Price 25 Cents;
CARTES MEDICINE CO., ITEWYOitE.
Small Pill; Small Dose, Small Price.
FILLS.
Children
always
Enjoy It.
SCOTTS
EMULSION
of pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypo-
phosphltea of Lime and Soda Is
almost as palatable as milk.
Children enjoy It rather than
otherwise. A MARVELLOUS FLESH j
PRODUCER It Is Indeed, and the j
little lada and lassies who take cold j
easily, may be fortified against a >
cough that might prove serious, by j
taking Scott's Emulsion after their
meals during the winter season. ;
Beware of substitutions and imitations, i
FRIEND"
MHF
LESSENS PAIN ppp TQ LIFE fit.
diminishes danger
»oa.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR COjUIANTAgi
SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS. <
^"MOTHERS-] ^N9 ILD
To cure Biliousness. 8lck Headache, Constipation,
Malaria, Liver Complaints, take the aafe
and certain remedy, SMITH'S
BILE BEANS
Use the 8MALL SIZE (40 little beans to the hot*
tie). They are the most convenient: suit all ages.
Price of either size, 25 cents per bottle.
KISSING at 7* 17« 70; Pboto-srravure,
IYBOC9IIW« panel size of this picture for 4
cents (coppers or stamps).
. J. F. 8MITH A CO..
Makers of • 'Bile Beans.'• fit. Louis. Mo.
THIS i|
is
TH*
GREAT
tubular well and
prospecting machine
famous for succeeding where
others have failed.
SELF CLEANING
Drill drops 60 to 90tlm<
u minute.
CATALOGUE FREE
IGOMISOYfflAN,
TIFFIN. OHIO.
, Write ni
^wtaat w or If
yon wish t<
do with a well
machine.
AM,ORDERS
KILLED
PBOMPTLT.
Will ioto to take
GROVE'S TASTELESS
CHILL TONIC.
1» as pleanant to tht
taste as Lemon Syrup
Children cry for It.
Never falls to cure.
Chills once broken will
not. return.
Coat you only half the
price of outer Chill
TonloB.
No purgative needed.
Contansno Poison.
Sold by all Druggists. WARRAN I'KU,
IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN.
A Possible Tramp With Possibln
Gratitude.
On Christmas eve two or three years
igo, as we stood in a group in the
depot waiting-room at Elmira, says the
New York Sun. there was a scuffle and
loud words, and we turned to see the
depot policeman shoving a trampish-
looking man out of the place. It was
a scene to make most of the crowd
smile, as the officer was a big man and
his victim a small one, but before he
had him outdoors a well-dressed, fine-
looking man stepped forward and de-
manded:
"Officer, has this man been guilty of
any offense?"
"He's no business in here, sir," was
the reply.
"Why hasn't he?"
"Because he's a tramp. My orders
are to put 'em out."
"Just wait."
He brought out his wallet, handed
the forlong-looking stranger two crisp
$10 bills, and then turned to the officer
with:
"Now, let him alone. A man with
$20 in his pocket is no tramp."
"God bless you, sir!" whispered the
recipient of his bounty as he looked at
the money in the greatest astonish-
ment. "I'm no vagabond; I'm simply
V)wn on my luck. I was wanting to
jfet to Buffalo, where I hope to hit a
job, and I'm willing to work at any-
thing and for any price."
Some one ventured to ask the gen-
tleman for an explanation of his liber-
ality, and he replied:
"Just a year ago to-night, in one of
the towns on the Erie road, a trump
struck me for a quarter and got. it. He
must have gone off on a freight train
righl away, and he got a lift of twen-
ty-odd miles before he was bounced.
Four hours later 1 took a train, and
while passing from one coach to an-
other lost my footing and teas flung
off. I struck on my head and shoul-
ders, and was rendered unconscious,
though not very badly hurt. When I
came to there was a quarrel over my
body. Two men wanted to rob me,
while a third was holding them off,
and when they attacked him he gave
them such a drubbing that they haul-
ed off. Then he ran to a. farm-
house a quarter of a mile away,
routed out ttie people, and helped
carry me there. While I could not
speak I heard all that was said. 1
heard him say that he recognized me
as the one who had befriended him
that evening; and before he went away
he insisted on taking an inventory of
my personal property- I had a watch,
a diamond pin, and over $1,000 in mon-
ey; and everything was kept safe for
me during the two weeks I was in the
house."
' 'But what became of the tramp?"
"I have never seen him sinoe. Af-
ter seeing me safe at the house he
started off, saying lie would send a
iloctor from the nearest town, and I
never even had the chance to thank
him."
"I>« I I.onk I.ike a I,ally!"
About thirty years ago a young girl
in a western city was given charge of
a Sunday school class of rough boys,
usually known as "river rats," who
had never been in any school house
before. When she entered the room
she found them lounging on the desks
and benches, wearing their hats,
puffing Vile cigars, a defiant leer on
jvery face. They greeted her with a
loud laugh, and one of them ex-
claimed:
"Well, sis, you goin' to teach us?"
She stood silent until the laugh
was over, and then said, quietly:
'■Ho I look like a lady?"
An astonished stare was the only re-
ply which they gave.
"Because," she continued gently,
"gentlemen, when a lady enters the
room, take off their hats and throw
away their cigars."
The lowest American secretly be-
lieves himself to be a gentleman, and
in a moment every hat was off and the
lads were rauged in orderly attention.
So remarkable was the success of
this girl in managing and influencing
men of the roughest sort that she made
it the work of her life, says the Youth's
Companion. She established clean
and respectible boarding-houses for
sailors and boatmen, and reading and
coffee-rooms for laborers,' and founded
an Order of Honor, the members of
which strove to live sober christian
lives themselves and to help their fel-
lows to do the same.
WORK SHOPS
EQ^^"tioSfiS'ork6r*wilkl01" Power.
BARNES' PATENT
Foot Power Machin'y
allow lower bids oo JobB, and greatot
profits th.au by any other means for do-
ing work. Sold subject to trial in yoor
•bop. Send fur Price-List Catalogue.
aaa P Jno.* BARNE8 CO.,
Addrew 041 Kuby St., Ko0K*o»». 111.
DATS
. • .iu« aud rally en-
dorse Big G »s the only
specific for the certain cur«
of tbis disease.
G.H.INGBAHAM.M. D.(
A msterdam, N, Y.
We have sold Big G foi
many years. and It baa
Riven the best cf aatl*-
faction.
I>. B. DYCHE A CO.,
Chicago, 111
* OA. • Kv DMii*"rfete.
:hichester's English
PENNYROYAL PilLS,
KeJ Cross Diamond Brand
Ke<l Cross Diumonii Brand.
The only reliable pill fbr tale. Safe and
>. Ladies, aak Draftftai for the Dia-
mond Brand, iu red oitttallloboxct, «eal«d
with blue ribbon. Take no ether. Seed 4c.
^stamps; for particulars and "Relief for
bUcw/r
&ito WAMTPn "Memoirs otJe*.
nio II An I CU ferson I>avis," author-
"iy Mrs. Dn®. A bonanza for book
Complete outfit *1.00. Address A. P.
t&co., Publisher.^ Wallas, Texaa.
;y,i
ThlT Georgia Evangelist.
Sain Jones is a compact, wiry, small-
eyed man, who seems to be happiest
when he is telling- people their sins in
the plainest of plain English. He de-
nounces his hearers to their faces,
shows them how utterly sinful and de-
prived they are, calls them all the
names he can think of—and his vocab-
ulary is not limited—points them out
with his finger, and sometimes calls
ttiem by name. He is as rough as a
frontiersman; but those who know him
best say he is as tender ,as a child.
He says the meanest man in Georgia is
his wife's husband; but his wife does
not agree with him, for she says she
has the best husband in the world.
Sam Jones never hesitates to crack
jokes in the pulpit, and it is proven
that his style of peaching is popular
from the fact that he makes twenty-
live thousand dollars a year. He
spends most of his money in'charity.
So l ime Lost There.
How business does spin in Wall
street, says the N. Y. Press. I watched
the transactions in a broker's office for
a time yesterd.iy. A customer ordered
the purchase of some stock, which I
heard the broker say, as he looked at
the ticker, was selling- at some price
ending with Ijj. While the customer
was making up his mind the tape came
reeling off, and tho broker announced
the same stock as quoted at ■}. With
the giving of the order the tape start-
ed again, ami presently the stock
reached the two figures. Naturally, I
expected that the purchaser, who had
sent in his order only a moment before,
would be obliged to pay that price for
it. Hut when he got his memorandum
it was at | and J. The purchases had
been made so quickly that although
the changes I have noted al I took place
within five minutes, he had the benefit
of the prico to the minute. They do
business in a hurry in Wail street*
Where Kvcrj Woman Smoke*.
Everybody smokes in Japan. The
pipes hold a little wad of tine-cut to
bacco as big as a pea. It is fired, and
the smoker takes one Song whiff, blow-
ing this smoke in a cloud from his
mouth and nose. The ladies have
pipes with longer stems than tho men.
and if one of them wishes to show n
gentlem-iii a specinl mark of favor she
lights her pipe, lake; half a
hands it to him and lets lrm finish out
the whitf.
Norer Tired.
Among the early American settlers there
■was an impression that the Indians had no
intelligence or craft in their relations -with
the white men. Xlie latter soon found,
however, that this was not the case. Some
of the farmers attempted to make farm j
servants of the Indians, but discovered
that they had a propensity to "get tired"
so soon after they began to work that their
services were of little value. One day a
farmer was visited by a stalwart Indian,
who said, "me want work."
"No," said the farmer, "you will get
tired."
"No, no," said the Indian, "me never get
tired!"
The farmer, taking his word for it, set
the Indian to work and went away about
some business. Toward noon he returned
to the place and found the Indian sound
asleep under a tree.
"Look here—look here!" shouted the
farmer, shaking the Indian violently, "you
told mo that you never got tired, and yet
here you are stretched out on the ground."
"Ugh," said the Indian, rubbing his eyes
and slowly clambering to his feet, "if me
not lie down me get tired like the rest.—
Birmingham Post.
The (Scramble for Office.
Uncle Sam pays his 200,000 employes, in-
cluding soldiers and sailors, an average
salary of $825 apiece. The average earn-
ings of the plain, every-day citizen, who
gets pay in proportion to the work he does,
are about half that much, probably. This
state of affairs, explains perhaps, why
about 20,000,000 male American citizens
make a dead set for about 50,000 offices
every four years. A bout 25,950,000 are d i s
appointed every time, it is true, after
wasting a great deal of money and patience,
but they have had a chance at a pretty big
thing.—Macon Telegraph.
JMoney Enough.
Agent—"Here is a book, sir, every gen-
tleman ought to have--'IIints on Architect-
ure' "
Mr. Smallpurse—"I have no use for it."
"But, sir, it teaches you how to build a
beautiful villa, a regular little palace, for
only $5000."
','1 havn't $5000. I havn't over flvo dol-
lars to my name."
"Well, the book is only one dollar."—N.
Y. Weekly.
'HAS AGENTS EVERYWHERE.'
• A Gloomy Day,
Blinks—"Why do all the laweri about
the court room look so glum to-day?"
Jinks—"Why, havn't you heard) Mr.
Eicbman is dead."
"He must have been very popular among
them."
"No; but he died without leaving
will."—N. Y. Weekly.
The Milk In the Nub
Eastern Man (out West)—"I find the
whole West is bent on having the World's
Fair at Chicago."
Western Man (apologetically)—"Well,
ye can't blame us. Now York is too faj
to walk."—N. Y. Weekly.
Anxious to Go.
Little Dot.—"Ma, may I go skating?"
Ma—"The ice isn't thick enough. It's a
mere scum on the surface."
Little Dick—"Ma, may I go swimming?"
-N. Y. Weekly.
A curious man's idea of a nice wife is
one who has all tier correspondents write
ts her on postal cards.
Answer to correspondent; No, it does
not make a young woman treacherous to
swing Indian clubs.
The wolf and shepherd dog are closely
related, yet one is a thief and the other is
honest.
Our summer suits are loking very much
the same as our flannels will look next
summer.
It is easy for a man to promise to be
good when he is too sick to be bad.
Kearney Enterprise: Nellie Bly, in hei
flying trip around the world, has not been
freed from tho grip, as yet.
William Richards, aged 24 years, was
"larking" with sweetheart, when she hap
pened to scratch his thumb. The scratch,
which festered, resulted in blood poisoning
and he died from it.
State of Ohio, Citt or Toledo, )
Ldcas County. j
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of f. j. Cheney
& Co., doing business in the City of Tole-
do, County and State aforesaid, and that
said firm will pay the sum of one hun-
dred dollars for each ana every case
of Catahbh that cannot be cured by the use
of Hall's Catabrh Core.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of ^December, A,
j seal |
D. 1886.
GLEASON.
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally
and acts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the sytem. Send for testimo-
nials, free. F.J. CHENEY &CO.,Toledo,O
JggTSold by Druggists, 75c.
Some men never get their eyes opon.
They are always feeling their way.
Druggists report this fact with reference
to La Grippe, that wherever the epidemic
prevails, the sales of Allen's Lung Balsam
increase. (Of course they do.) Every one
knows that this excellent remedy will quiet
the irritation, causing eAsy expectoration
and cure the Cough attending this most dis-
tressing disease. Be sure you ask the
Druggist for Allen's Lung Balsam. Sold
at 25c., 50c., and $1.00 a bottle.
Binghampton Leader: The whisky
manufacturer gets a great deal of abuse,
but he just takes it all in and keeps still.
Ask your dealer for "Tansill's Punch."
Business and a shot-gun do not go well
together.
How to Buy Buffglc*.
The correct way to bhy goods of any
kind is from the manufacturer when possi-
ble. For sixteen years the Elkhart Car-
riage and Harness Manufacturing com-
pany of Elkhart. Ind., have sold direct to
the consumer at wholesale prices, saving
their customers the middle-man's profit.
As they ship anywhere with privilege of
examination before paying, and pay all
charges if not satisfactory, the buyer runs
no risk. See their advertisement and send
for catalogue.
Polish your shoes and you will fall Into
a mud puddle.
The Wonderful Success of a Great In-
surance Corporation.
The Phenix of Brooklyn is one of the
wonders of fire insurance, and one of the
famous companies of the world. Its rapid
rise in popular favor is without parallel.
The familiar sign "The Phenix of Brook-
lyn Has Agents Everywhere," while ap-
parently exaggerative, is almost literally
true so far as the United States is con-
cerned. Should the reader, no matter who
or where, wonder whether the Company is
represented in his place, he has only to make
an inquiry "down town" to bo convinced.
Its agents are workers. The Phenix mores,
and this in part explains its success. An-
other explanation is that it is as prompt
and active in the settlement of losses as in
the pursuit of premiums.
The headquarters of the Company's West-
ern and Southern Department are located
in its own building at Chicago. In the
West and South it does a business as large
as, if not larger than, that of any other
company. In farm insurance it leads.
Last year its premium receipts) in this ter-
ritory were over $2,400,000. "Nothing suc-
ceeds like success." During 1889 this Com-
pany materially strengthened its assets and
net surplus, its funds now aggregating over
four million seven hundred and eighty
thousand dollars. The company was the
first to pay a loss resulting from tho Chi-
cago fire. It paid $425,000 to sufferers from
that disaster and $450,000 to Boston the year
following.
Since its organization in 1853 the Phenix
has paid losses representing nearly thirty-
eight times its present cash capital, the to-
tal payments being $37,720,621.60. The re-
lief afforded by the redistribution of this
vast amount among the people cannot be
accurately determined. It has supplemented
credit, promoted trade and fostered all in-
dustries. Great numbers of commercial
Establishments have thus been enabled to
substitute the new for the old, while a still
greater number of private homes have
heen restored from their ashes and ruins.
New Orleans Picayune; The streets
need overhauling where they have been
worn out by hauling over them.
The Old, Old Story.
A little cough; a feeling ill:
A headache oft; a daily chill;
A slower walk; a quickened breath;
A frequent, talk of coming death.
No strength to rise from day to day;
From loving eyes he fades away.
Now lifts no more the weary head,
^ The struggle's o'er; the man is dead.
Such is tho fatal progress of consump-
tion. How often is repeated the old, old
story. Yet not half so often as it was be-
fore the knowledge came to mankind that
there was a discovery in medical science by
which the dread disease could be arrested
in its early stages and the patient restored
to health. This wonderful remedy, is Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Remedy. 50 cents.
No woman's tongue is ever too long to
give a man a short reply.
Hackett, Arkansas, Aug. 20, 1887.
Dr. a. T. Shallenberoer,
Rochester, Pa. J)ear Sir:—I wish
iyou to send me a bottle of your Antidote
for Malaria, which I see advertised in the
J{ethodist Advocate, Chattanooga, Tenn.,aud
(which I cannot get here. Fifteen years
|ago my mother had third day chills, and
after trying tho doctors and other medi-
cines without relief, a friend recommended
your Antidote; she tried it, and one dose
effected a permanent cure.
Truly yours,
j. s. Edwards,
Pastor M. e. Church.
Sometimes a man is responsible for his
fool Mends.
A sunken man of war—Boulanger.—Puck.
Karl Wheeler's Good Luck.
[Amsterdam (N. Y.) Democrat, Jan. 17.]
Tioket No. 98,455 drew the capital prize
$600,000 in the December drawing of the
Louisiana State Lottery. One fortieth of
this ticket was held by Earl Wheeler, who
lives at 69 Grove street in this city. Mr.
Wheeler therefore was entitled to, receive
$15,000. A Democrat reporter to-day called
at tho home of the fortunate man and suc-
ceeded in getting from him an admission of
the facts, as follows:
Yes, I held one-fortieth of the winning
ticket. I placed the ticket in the hands of
Banker J. Vedder Morris for collection,
and Agent B. F. Oliver of tho American
Express Company paid Mr. Morris the
amount less $101.55 express charges on the
10th instant. Mr. Mrris deposited the
amount in tho Farmer's National bank in
his own name at the request of Mr.
Wheeler. The latter dislikes notoriety,
hence, this roundabout proceeding. That
the amount has been received and that the
Louisiana State Lottery Company fulfilled
its obligations Mr. Morris verifies and his
word cannot be questioned.
Much corn is emblematic of prosperity;
one corn represents the sum of human mis-
ery.
Buncombe County Alliance (N. C.) is
moving to establish an Alliance implement
factory at Asheville.
A Fascinating; Boot.
One of the most entertaining books ever
published is the new detective story just
out. entitled "Dangerous Ground, or the
Rival Detectives," by the popular author,
Lawrence L. Lynch. Its incidents are
handled with remarkable skill, while its
characters are introduced iu such a man-
ner as to enlist and hold the reader's at-
tention throughout the story. It is full of
startling surprises, with not a line from
the first to the last that is dull. One sur-
prise about it is that it can he sold for 25
cents, but that is the price for which this
book of 426 pages may be obtained by ad-
dressing Alex t. Loyd & Co., Lakeside
Building, Chicago, Illinois. Mention this
paper.
You will Save
Money,
Time.
PalD,
Trouble
4
AND WILL CURS
CATARRH
By Using
ELY'S
BREAM BALM.
Catarrh
mod into eaoh nostril
60 cents at D ' "
00 cts. ELY 1)8
it, New York.
Lawyer—Your uncle makes you sole
heir, but the will stipulates that the sum
of $1000 must be buried with him. Heir
(feelingly)—The old man was eccentric,
but his wishes must be respected of course.
I'll write a oheck for that amount.—Boston
Beacon.
Any man or woman who is afflicted with
nervous or general debility, kidney com-
plaint, vital weakness or any other chronic
or lingering complaint should send to Dr.
J. Z. Dye, Buffalo, N. Y., for a copy of
Health Helper free.
We are all heirs: If you hadn't a fort-
une left you, it was a misfortune.
Influenza.
now so prevalent and known iu Europe as
La Grippe is not a common cold as many
suppose, but in connection with a cold its
ravages are more serious. It is a fact
worthy of note, that Allen's Lung Balsam
will quiet the irritation in the throat and
Bronchial tube, curing the Cough and giv-
ing the patient great relief. All Medicino
Dealers sell the Lung Balsam at 25 c., 50c.,
and $1.00 a bottle.
A man who has common sense is a man
Who avoids as much trouble as possible.
Wb«n Bitoy >u Met, w« gin hsr Outerls,
When (be wii a Child, sbs cried forCMtortfc
Wten she bscamn Miss, she clung to CutorJh,
Whu *h* h%i Cliildrsu, shsgm U»n Outorl*.
New York Sim: Miss Yellowleaf—I
have been trying to get a gold dollar coined
the year I was born. Miss Caustique—I'm
sfraid there must be a very high premium
•.the™.
Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup—the working
man's friend You, who have to be out in
all sorts of weather and can't afford to lay
by, cannot afford to be without Dr. Bull's
Cough Syrup. Consumption follows in the
wake of a neglected cold.
Rochester Union; Many a man who
can't sing a note has a great capacity for
making things hum.
"He jests *1 acars, who never felt a
wound" and lift can afford to laugh at the
horrors of rheumatism, who never had a
touch of its quality. But it seems the time
has como for a universal laugh—since it is
known that Salvation Oil cures pains of al!
possible kinds.
Yonkers Statesman; The opera-glass
trust should be looked into at once.
New South Wales and Queensland have
erected 887 miles of rabbit-proof fences.
The Value of Money.
Men of unlimited means hardly appreciate
the value of just one dollar, but with the poor
every dollar means ho much toil and so
much effort. It is a comfort to know that the (
poverty-stricken invalid can derive so much !
good from so little expenditure, when they in-
vest their dollars in B. B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm).
W. C. McGauhey, Webb City, Ark., writes;
"B. B. B. has done me more good and for less
money than any other blood purifier I ever
used. I owe the comfort of my life to it.1'
A. P. McDonald, Atlanta, Ga., writes: "I
had a runing ulcers on my leg. Several doctors
failed to do It good. Three Bottles of B. B. B.
effected a cure. B. B. B. also cured my brother
of a mm ling sore."
David Thurman, Atlanta, Ga., says: "I was
a constant sufferer for many, many years with
Scrofula and Eczema. A few bottles of B. B. B.
entirely cured me."
John M. Davis, Tyler, Texas, writes: "I was
subject a number of years to spoils of inflama-
tory rheumatism, which six bottles of B. B. B.,
thank heaven, has entirely cured. I have not
felt the slightest pain since."
Scran ton Truth: The supremo court
justice and the blank-book maker are on a
par. Each makes a living by the ruling
passion.
The Most Wonderful Invention.
From the St. Louis Bulletin.
Dll. A. owen's electrical belts.
St. Louis, Mo,, February 20, 1887.--Dr. A.
Owen is the most successful inventor and man-
ufacturer in the country of Electrical Applian-
ces for the cure of acute, chronic and nervous
diseases. They have received the unqualified
Indorsement of physicians of high standing, as
well as thousands of sufferers who have been
cured by them. The following indorsement,
for instance, is absolutely convincing, and the
writer is Professor of the Theory and Practice
of Medicine in the American Medical College
of St. Louis, Clinical Lecturer at the City Hos-
pital, St, Louis; Editor of the American Medi-
cal Journal; Authorof "Electricity in Medicine
and Surgery," and Author of "Direct Medica-
tions'—Therapeutics.
St. Louis, Mo., June 10,18s0.—i take pleas-
ure in stating that I have examined and tested
Dr. Owen's Electro-Galvanic Belt and Appli-
ance, and do not hesitate to say that if is the
most practical and eflicient of all tlie Galvanic
Belts! have used iu niv practice. It is a
very useful device, and whenever electric belts
or shields can be of any benefit, this will more
than take the place of anything of the kind 1
have ever seen. Geokgk c. Pitzek, M. D.
The Belts have a ieversible current, and can
be regulated to any desired power, and the
current is under the control of the patient
There are Suspensory Appliances for the euro
of sexual and genital diseases, and Spinal Ap-
pliances for special diseases, etc. The Belt will
completely cure Nervous and General Debility,
Spermatorrhrea, Lumbago, Paralysis, Neural-
fla, Rheumatism, Kidney and Spinal Diseases,
ndigestion, Dyspepsia, Erysipelas, Catarrh,
Bloou Poisoning, Asthma and all female dis-
eases, snch as Falling of the Womb, Leucor-
rhoea, Hysteria, etc. These Appliances, in-
dorsed (as the best made) by all dealers in elec-
trical and surgical instruments, may be obtain-
ed from them or from Dr. Owen himself. %he
reader should bear In mind that this is no clap-
trap advertisement, but a free notice of a won-
derful invention. Parties living outside the
city should address Dr. Owen for illustrated
circulars, testimonial circulars, price-lists, etc.,
which will give them every possible informa-
tion. Another wonderful invention of Dr.
Owen is his Electrical insoles. Their use will
cure alldiseases due to coldfeet. Ladies' Belts
arc made a little different from the Gent's
Belt. The prices asked for all these Applian-
ces are very low. Try t.hein. Offices: 808 N.
Broadway, St. Louis, Wo.; S3 i Broadway, N. Y.
Boston Herald: Little King Alphonso
is pronounced out of danger. Ho is about
the only monarch of Europe that can bo
said to be in this blissful condition.
Kansas is not
tainly backward
■winters.
modest, but she is cer-
when it comes to early
Young lawyer - You have advertised that
you are going to retire from practice aud
want to sell out. Old lawyer—Yes. Do
you wish to buy a good practice? "Yea.
"How many clients have you?" "Two.
"Is that a practice?" Young man—I've
lived oft those two clients for sixteen
years. One's claimant under a contested
will and the other's fighting for an Ala-
bama claim. They came to terms.—Phila-
delphia Society.
There is no cheerfulness so sincere as
the cheerfulness of old maids and old
bachelors.
Truth pays larger dividends than false-
hoods.
For Coughs and Throat Disorders
Use Brown's Bronchi ai. Troches.—"Have
never changed my mind respecting them,
exespt I think better of that which I began
thinking well of." — Rev. Henry Ward
Beecher. Sold only in boxes.
Tho hardest thing is easy before you
have tried it, and after you know how it is
done.
After 22 Years?
cured a man of chron-
ic pains from sun-
stroke, which took tho
form of chronic
HEADACHE,
tvhich was completely cured as follows:
Paragon, Ind., July 30,1888.
I suffered with pains in my head from sun-
stroke 22 years. Tliey wero cured by St. Jacobs
Oil and have remained so four years.
SAMUEL B. SHIPLOR.
I
At Druggists and Dealers.
THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO.. Baltimore. Md.
LA GRIPPE or INFLUENZA.
ALLEN'S
LUNG BALSAM
has such a magical effect upon Coughs
Colds, Hoarseness, Bronchitis and ah
difficulties of the Throat and Lungs*
that it had been found of great value
in curing the Cough attending this
new epidemic, so rapidly spreading.
It quiets the Bronchial Irritation, caus-
ing Free Expectoration, and Contains no
Opium in any form.
• J
1
ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM
Is Sold by Druggists Generally.
Price 25cts., 50cts., nu<l%i « Bottle.
*
DR. UWIUM H
ELECTRIC BELT
A1VI3 SI7SJPjsnrsoxtY .
Patented Auo. 16, 1887, Improved July 30.1889.
DR. OWEN'S ELECTRO-
GALVANIC BODY BEIT
AND SUSPENSORY will
•car® All Rheumatio Gom-
plaintu. Lumbago. General
land Nervous Debility,
? Coativenesi, Kidney
Diseases, Nervousness,
Trembling, ' Sexual Ex-
haustion, Wasting
eases caused by IndiicretioSs
Married or Finale Life.
RKftPONBWI.E s'AHTIKfTON 80 1)AT8 TBUI».
in
Body,
Youth, Age,
" T*8IC1IT TO
D.R.OWEN'S ELECTRIC INSOLESuraXiR.
Also an Electric Truss and B«lt Combined.
Bend 80. poatage for fjii* lllust'd book, 224 p«ge«, which will be
•ent you In plain sealed envelope. Mention tills paper. Address
OWEN ELECTRIC BELT & APPLIANCE CO.
300 North Broadway ST. LOUIS, MO.
820 Broadway. NEW YORK CITY.
J
W. N. U. DALLAS.
6-90
ST. LOUIS
CORRUGATING COMPANY,
Manufacturers of
Sheet Steel and Iron
BUILDING MATERIAL
INTERIOR and EXTERIOR WORK-
117 to 133 Soulard Street.
St. Louis, Missouri
CATALOGUE
Showing Cuts, Directions for Applying and Prices
on Application. (Mention this Paper).
t
TO MAKE
A —
Delicious Biscuit
»8K YOUR GROCER FOB
oow BRAND
sodamsaleratus.
ABSOLUTELY PURE.
"DISO'S KEMEDY FOR CATAKliU.—Best. Easiest to use. ,
-L cheapest. Kelief is immediate. A cure is certain. For
Cold in the Head it has no equal.
It Is an Ointment, of which a small particlo is applied to the
'sts or sent by mail.
nostrils
Price. 50c. Sold by
Tf a'/tit.ttktp. Warren, Pa.
1
"Oh I where Bhall rest be found ?"
The worn-out mother sig
"Trousers to mend and stockings to i
Dishes to wash and butter to churn.
While my back feels to break, and head and heart burn,
And life is a constant friction."
Tho Summer came and went,
The matron no longer sighs;
Elastic her step aud rounded her cheek,
Work seems but play, life is now sweet.
And the change was made in oifc short week
By Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
As an invigorating tonic, it im-
parts strength to the whole system.
For overworked, "worn-ont," de
unequaled and is invaluable in ;al-
laying and subduing nervous ex-
citability, exhaustion, prostration.
bilitated teachers, milliners, dress- ^hysteria, spasms and other distress-
makers, seamstresses, "shop-girls,"
housekeepers, nursing mothers, aad
feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription is the great-
est earthly boon, being unequaled
as an appetizing cordial and restor-
ative tonic. Contains no alcohol to
inebriate; no sugar or syrup to de-
range digestion; a legitimate medi-
cine, not a beverage.
As a soothing and strengthening
nervine, " Favorite Prescription " is
ing, nervous symptoms, commonly
attendant upon functional and or-
ganic disease. It induces refresh-
ing sleep and relieves mental anxiety
and despondency.
A Book of 160 pages, on "Wo-
man and Her Diseases," sent to any
address, in plain, sealed envelope,
on receipt of ten cents, in stamps.
Address, World's Dispens
Medical Association, 663
Street^ Buffalo, N. Y.
THE
are those put up by
, D.M.FERRY&CO. ,
F Who are the largest Seedsmen in the worId«f
D. M. Fbrry & Go's
Illustrated, Descriptive and Priced
,S£ED ANNUAL
for 1890 will be mailed FREE to all ap- /
1 plicants, and to last season's customers. J
It is better than ever. Every person /
using Garden, Flower or Field
Seeds should send for it. Address
D. M. FERRY & CO.
DETROIT, MICH*
♦
*
STANLEY'S NEW BOOK.
5,000 good active agents wanted at once, either sex to
Introduce this great work. Here in a chance for you-
Any one can sell the book, as tho whole world Is inter-
ested. The book will contain a full account of ail of
Stanley's Explorations in Africa, and especially of h!»
Latest Expedition for the relief 01 Erafn Bey,
About 600 pajjes and 100 entirely new illustrations, maps,
etc. Complete canvassing outfit with all instruction*
will be mailed on receipt of 40 cents. Do not delay In
writing; order outfit and get territory at once. Tb*
only genuine new Stanley book out. Address, IKKSCKNT
I'll BUSH 1SU CO., 407 Dearborn st., Chicago, 111.
FUtforai •ragva, $!
For 16 Yeara
have sold to
eoitaaueri at
PKKSH, Ufingtbto (lie
dtalrrV profit. Ship anywbere for a*,
ummjiiion before baying. Pay freight
rharffM I f not (atUfactory. Warranted
for 8 jaarc. 04-paic* t'ataloyae FIIKK.
Addrt.a F. B. PRATT, Sro-J,
Elkhart. - - Indiana.
i°* Th« Elkhart Carriage
" "Harness Mfg. Co.
Hold four diplomas and two gold msdala
from Dallas and San Antonio Fairs. Best ana
cheapest In the South. Catalogue free. Ad-
dress B. H. 11IL1., J'rest., Waco and Mall*.
Texas.
FIRMFAC J0™' *8 A DAT. Experience not
P Anffltno Necessary. Wages guaranteed for
| winter montlla. No canvassing; simply show book
UkBOrders. 1. tbowlld,ofAfH^L OlrmS
fan:. Send !0 cents for postage and nacklnir
HUSSMAJfft PCBLISHIN& CO.
to 812 Olive St, St. Louia, Mo.
N&I2.DL1KS f for ail Fewing JUchiims.
" ,TlrCJZ£?an"£bu Goods. Only
SHUTTLES, iSh® ?'"•*<"« auppiiad.
. __ ' )Send for nholesai* orlo«
REPAIRS. Bl..ELOOK M'r»'00.,
l309Locuatst.,Bt. Louis,Ma
PATENTS
§P ___ — cure a patent 'write
to H. H. KERR, Solicitor, FORT WORTH, Tex
you want to se
rite
for'
merly an examiner oi applications for patent* in'fJnl-
cd States Patent Offlcet Washington, D. C.
gaps SALESMEN
punence not necessary. Liberal salary paid to sell our
popnlarlme ofKootl., bv samples, at wholesale and re-
tail. TH. IfextccM. 1 "• > 12 and 14 Third ave,, Chicago, 111,
W. A. REDMOND, late «x-
amlner 0.8. Patent office, so.
Ilcitor of patents. 6S1 P St.
X w„ Washington. D.C. Write for terms.
PATENTS I
Dr. Pierce's Pellets regulate and cleanse
stomach and bowels. One a dose. Sold b
HOME
AURht
nitYAJiT'S OOI
4 ^so/d. c
■fho ' °p'
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Streight, T. E. The Albany News. (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, February 7, 1890, newspaper, February 7, 1890; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth416755/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Old Jail Art Center.