Brown County Democrat, Volume 27, Number 9, Nashville, Brown County, 22 April 1909 — Page 4

fr\ -A J W What J oy! as with joyous hearts and smiling faceslhey romp and play—when in health how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they j enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injurious or objectionable nature, and if at any time a remedial agent is required, to insist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of j Senna, obtained by an original method, from certain plants known to them, to act most beneficially, and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy, and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do 1 not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna always has the full name of the Company —California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent ( size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. j If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial f f 0 } the parents and I the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required..

. •- v"'. - • ■ A woman who is sick and suffering, and won’t at least try a medicine which has the record of Lydia E. Pihkham’s Vegetable Compound, is to blame for her own wretched condition. •- vv ■ 1 * There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in the United States who have been benefited by this famous old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over thnty years ago by a woman to relieve woman’s suffering. Read what these women say: bett“of *° aTaU t^emse ' Ivcs ot M I suffered from pains in my back and side, sielr no appetite, was tired and nervous all the time and so weak- f J®«55 * ardly 8t ?? d - dla XinTi? woman —and «ns valuable medicine*.shall A^CamM.T 186 - MrS ‘ W ‘ p * Valentine, «01i JUneoIn „ t m. e ’ Pa - 1 sn-Heredfor five years from female troubles, and j£_ lwas almost helpless. I tried three doctors but they did My sist f r advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s , V 5^ ta ,T e Compound, and it has made me well and strong. I vSKtSiSSS? 11 * OI T ei . 1 fi 11 b ust » ive Cydia E. Pinkham’s r 1 toaL for it is worth its weight in gold.** — Mrs. J. P. Endbch, K. F. IX 7, Erie, Pa. Since we guarantee that all testimonials which we pubhsh are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. Pmkham s Vegetable Compound had the virtue to help these women it will help any other woman who is suffering from the same trouble. For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous nfBdicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit. If the slightest trouble appears which you do not understand, write to Mrs. Finkham at Lynn, Mass., for her advice—it is tree and always helpful. —— — •

Victory or Death. Sir Edward Landseer, the ! animal painter, said that wh yas a boy he once witnessed a - tje . twee;,-o'wo dogs, one of 5 .1 to * • »f ilr'f’ j '■‘W. ."he I' lskmup j badly and the face * j source, of .Jaea...chagrin to t v j He was a^^r'-Jealons of his « M ord, but, aW'Orfly he and ft had seen the fight, he fiAaci t ' in a decidedly & ..*x.. V of the dogs won, ' 'j “Why ,” was the reply,' “your [ won, of course. He was under: r ■ the other dog, but he was chewipipife life out of the cur all the time.” “That’s right,” said' Hie Irishman; “you have saved your loife.” —Cleveland Leader, y Booming. Friend —How’s business geing these days? Promoter —- Flourishing. We’ve just added two more stories to the rubber stamp of our thirty-eight story building.—Puck. „ _____—.— — The reformer who blows a trumpet is more anxious to astonish the naa mivmvicn rmQryrtr

; ■ . .. ' , •• 1 Can’t See That Side, What is an optimist, pa?” VII ° !^^ dv5 V''iMY ho is nearsighted vn«a aidQ * — n 3s kt no'iSti.ujuOid Idlays pain, it Jttle. I re Word rt Lfly.” l iid word lily comes from fa Celtic | word, fix,” signifying whiteness. j ■ iTonr Dealer lor Alien’* Foo(-E««e &*vpo%’der-to shatte Into your shoes. It rests the feet, Cures,, Corns, Bunions. Swollen, St -e. Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, be Roy, X. Y. , sy ' - No man can buy peace by principle. Do not force your-xlf to take offensive (and harmful) drugs—take Garfield Tea, Nature’s Herb laxative ; it corrects constipation, purifies the blood, brings Health! _ The fool has two extremely difficult tasks, to know himself and to keep

Nothing Like then? in the world. CASCARETS the biggest seller— why? Because it's the best medicine for the liver and bowels. Its what they will do for you-j- not what j we say they will do— -that' makes ! CASCARETS famous. Millions use . 1 J CASCARETS and it is all the med* ynfe • i that they ever need to take. r | CASCARETS ioc a box fo* a week’s treatment, atf A>i*grest seller • m the aft1! v ..sees a notth. j I! afflicted with rfjv Sore Eyes, use i u7/h: Oull 0 LiL >»« ’ * I. N. IT., INDIANAvElisTNo, 17. 1909. ’

AN INDIGESTION REMEDY FREE '• .. Many people who are otherwise healthy suffer from indigestion, or dyspepsia. When you consider that the stomach and allied digestive organs are the most important organs of the body, it would seem that a disorder there is to be taken very seriously. Dyspeptics cannot eat the things they like; food sours in the stomach, then Chronic constipation begins, or, as is cfhen the case, you have been constipated all along, and the stools are forced and irregular. But there Is no use letting indigestion go until It becomes chronic and undermines your health. It is good advice to suggest to you that you go to your druggist and get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, the wonderful cure for stomach, liver and bowei troubles. That Is 7/hat C. Fowler, of Carson City, Mich., did and he is well to-day. Others who did the same and are cured are Ida A. Fortune, of Grand Junction, Tenn. ; B. F. Thompson, of Shenandoah, la., who actually considers that it saved his life. You can obtain a 50-cent or $1 bottle of the druggist, and, taken according to dl;f ractions, It will probably he all you need. It Is a liquid, acts gently, never gripes, and besides the laxative effect, contains exceptional tonic properties which tone the stomach, and that is what Is especially - needed in indigestion. All sufferers from indigestion who have never used Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin can obtain a free test bottle by writing the doctor. It will be sent direct to your home without any charge. In this way thousands have proven to their own satisfaction Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the very remedy they needed to cure indigent ion. When once you use this grand remedy you will throw, violent cathartics, tablefsr?:fiajts, etc., away. If there is Anything about your ailment that you don’t understand, or if you want any medical advice, write to the doctor, and he will answer you fully. There is no charge, for this service. I The address, is. Dr. W. B. | Caldwell, '202 Caldwell bldg., i Monticelio. Hi.*' Could This Happen? “What is this commotion at the depot?” “The populace has assembled to greet a college professor.” “Oh! I thought maybe it was to welcome some prizefighter.” Foundation of a Fortune. Late in 1858 the “end of all things” was predicted for February 22, 1859, and in some parts of the country people became panic stricken, and, if one • story is true, the wealth of certain New York . family had its foundation in a piece of property which was sold at a ridiculously small price because of the “end” which was soon coming. In a country town a boy is regarded as hopelessly gone to the devil when he plays pool. And nothing meaner need be said against a girl to injure her reputation than that she winked at the .boys. j JuST DOUBLE 3S0 ACRES instead of l£ w 1ES As further inducement to settlen. tbe Wheat Raising lands of Western Ca ’ the t has increased t a «a J The&e. ! 5 ’5*.r4°. " Wa s oJc a r dS - l T? v also be purchased from Railway pn Ottawa, Canada, or W. Floor’ Tracti on-TermInal Bulldihg^SP® o¥s,Ind!,’ Authored Government Agent&Av ' Ploase aajr where you saw this mmUmnenM ;

PAJAMA TEA PARTIES. California Beauties Responsible for the Latest Sensation. “The pajama tea” is the latest sensat? of Oakland. Eleven young women, members of the Sotowa Club, in silken and satin pajamas, were entertained in this most original way at the home of Miss Effie Thatcher yesterday afternoon. The eleven young women are pretty and popular. News of the affair has been spread broadcast, and there is buzzing among the social elect. Some condemn the pajama tea and others seize it as a child would a new plaything. It is being talked of between the sipping of tea and the playing of five hundred and bridge whist. It all happened when Miss Thatcher invited the ten girls to her home to commemorate the fifth anniversary of their club. Over the telephone Miss Thatcher asked that each one come attired in pajamas. “Oh, that’s jolly,” was the general assent. “Won’t we have a dandy time? I always did hate skirts.” So in pajamas they came. There were tea and cards and dancing and music. “I simply decided to follow out the Japanese idea of entertaining,” explained the hostess to-day. When I told my plan to the girls they were delighted with it. Pajamas are much more comfortable than party gowns.” —San Francisco Cor. New York World. A Horrible Example. “I tell you it’s an outrage,” screamed the woman suffragette. “The man who keeps that saloon across the street can vote, and -I can’t.” “That’s so,” replied her husband, “but that saloon keeper shuts up at 11 o’clock and you never do.” Thus it is a horrible example that won’t work both ways.—Detroit Free

Know Him? “Well, I predicted it.” * “What?” -W “Whatever happened.”—Puck. Don’t Gong'll, bot Live Long. If every cough were cured before it got a strong hold, human life would be lengthened by many years. If every coughing sufferer knew that Kemp’s Balsam would stop the cough in a few minutes, he 'would be glad to escape the serious consequences. If any medicine wall cure a dough, Kemp’s Balsam will do it At druggists’ and dealers’,

THE SUNDAY SCHOOL The Senior Berean Lesson for Sun* day, April 2G, 1S09. THE GOSPEL IN ANTIOCH. Acts 11, 19-30; 12, 25. GOLDEN TEXT. —The disciples were called Christians first in Antioch. —“Acts 11, 26. ,19. Now they which w r ere scattered abroad upon the persecution that arose about Stephen traveled as far as Phenice, and Cyprus and Antioch, preaching the word to none but unto the Jews only. 20. And some of them were men of Cyprus and Gyrene, which, when they,, were come to Antioch, spake im Grecians, preaching the Lord T 21. And the hand of the T with them; and a great relieved and turned unto thr 22. Then tiding of came unto the ears which was in Jerusr" sent, forth Barnabas, that he go as far as Antioch. 23. Who, wlien he came, and had seen the grace of God, was glad, and exhorted them all, that with purpose of heart they would cleave unto the Lord. ■ 24. For he was a good man, and full of the Holy Ghost and of faith; and much people was added unto the Lord. 25. Then departed Barnabas to Tarcus, for to seek Saul; 26. And when he had found him, he brought him unto Antioch. And it came to pass, that a whole year they assembled themselves with the church, and taught much people. And the disciples were called Christians first in Antioch. 27. And in these days came prophets from Jerusalem unto Antioch. 28. And there stood up one of them named Agabus, and signified by the spirit that there should be great dearth throughout all the world; which came to pass in the days of Claudius Cesar. 29. Then the disciples, every mar according to his ability, determin \ to send relief unto the brethren whic>\ dwelt in Judea; 30. Which also they did, and sent it to the elders by the hands of Barnabas and Saul. 25.. And Barnabas and Saul returned from Jerusalem, when they had full filled their ministry, and took with them John, whose surname was Mark. THE LESSON EXPLAINEDYers 19-21: The Men of Cyprus and Gyrene. Now—“Therefore;” that is, because of the persecution (“tribulation”) that arose about Stephen, which had scattered abroad from Jerusalem many of the disciples, but not the apostles (see 8, 1). This persecution is supposed to have lasted about six months; instead of destroying the new religion it spread it, as winds might scatter embers, kindling the fijame anew in every quarter. Traveled as far as Phenice (“Phoenicia”) —The long level strip of country between Lebanon and the sea, having Tyre and Sidon as its chief cities, Cyprus was ' a great island northwest of Phoenicia, and the general highway, of commerce between the East and the West. It was the birthplace of Barnabas, and became one of the important fields of Paul’s labors. The

■*, Not Literary Himself. it, papa,” pleaded the pretty mg.n girl,” can’t you take the lit- ‘ He is "‘To 118 to the sea ' Jie ib so i.wmrj , j t know entertain you.” ."No, tnanks,” replied the old millionaire family, “I don't care to take any literary supplements.”—Chicago News. They Left Nothing. “And what,” asked the bereaved lady, “were my husband’s last words?” “He didn’t say a any lasht wurruds, ma’am,” replied Pat. “Afther the doctors got through wid him on de operatin’ table he hadn’t even a wurrud left in him, poor soul!”— Houston Post. First Lifeboat. The first lifeboat was made by Lionel Lukin, a coach builder of London. I His boat was provided with air tight j compartments, slabs of cork were bolted to the top sides, and there was Hroh ballast on the keel. These feaures are found in lifeboats to this . ay. BABY’S WATERY ECZEMA Itched and Scratched Until Blood Ran $30 Spent on Useless Treatutestti—Disease Seemed Incnrahle —Cured by Cntienra for $1.50. “When my little boy was two and a half months old he broke out on both cheeks with eczema. It was the itchy, watery kind and we had to keep his little hands wrapped up all the time, j and if he would happen to get them j uncovered he would claw his face till the blood streamed down on bis cloth-' i ing. We called in a physician at once, | but he gave an ointment which was so severe that my babe would scream when it was put on. We changed doctors and medicines until we had spent fifty dollars or more and baby was getting worse. I was so worn out watching and caring for him night and day that I almost felt sure the disease was incurable. But finally reading of the good results of the Cntienra Remedies, I determined to try them. I can truthfully say I was more than surprised, for I bought only a dollar and a half’s worth of the Outicura Remedies (Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills), and tors’ medicines I had .tried, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is? perfidy deaf of the least spot or Beat of anything. Mrs. W. M. Comerer, Burnt Cabins, Pa., Sept. 15, 1908.” Potter Drug & Chem. G«rp„ Sole Props, of Outicura Remedies, Boston; ——— Another Thrust. . Eva (reading novel)—“She riveted her eyes.” Dick—You don’t say? Eva —“And then she dropped him.” Dick—My! My! Just lijce a woman. She can never nail or .rivet anything securely.—Minneapolis Journal. Is It True, Girls? “Say, pa, what’s a sheath skirt?” “That’s (be kind that has to be put on with a shoe horn.” —Lippincott’s Magazine,, \, f. , Ji':-■. • • ** 1 ‘ I I i Vo- • .»**. He—'Will you share my lot? She —Yes, when you have a house on it that is paid tor. —Judge. There is some hope for the boy who has to be driven Into the bath-tub, taut there is very little hope for the boy who has to be driven away from the mirror. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Sjjf Signature of The way to kill love is to count on its profits. None come on happiness by hunting It alone.

- » A64U #. Mi- makes weak oes stror lost nowers. ✓ .rse Protectors. By burniig esinous materials to the windward d .neir vineyards at night the Frenc wine growers produce dense clout? of smoke, which protect their vines from frosts In spring and fall. Chinged Conditions. “Say, mar na,” pouted Freddy, “you don’t take ' a to half as many places as you use to.” “You’ve Iscome such a big boy, my dear,” his mother, “you see they make me pay for you now.”— Judge. T ***rT pBSPAia. Read t fy-rience o£ a Minnesota 1; Take Heart. If yo -Ahes and you feel sick, L °’ , " merable day after lS mia, * .cs- don’t worry. ! Kidney Pills -ed thousands 3 omen in the same Nation. Mrs. A. Heiman of Stillwater, M i n n., says: “But for Doan's Kidney Pills I would not be living now. They cured me in 1899 and I’ve been well since. I used to nave ji in my back once I fainted, secretion^-were muclj) disc!ejt™||||ind I was' so far gone Mb at m&t thought to be at Death’s Doan’s Kidney Pill: curcdhe I 'sel as if I had been pulled baelfrotn the tomb.” 3i»ld by h dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mil.fii Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Fa'dt&.- Wedding Day. ' A favori wedding day in Scotland is Decern 1 :!- 31, so that the young couple cp leave their old life with the old begin their married life with ■ L new one. i . <£: . ’ § f Beware * mitments for Catarrh th Contain Mercury, as mercury II surely destroy the sense of smell and c phtely derange the whole system when er;ng it through tliS mucous surfaces • ;b articles -'.ould n D ,er he I

", used e.xGei, -n r./«uio*e' phVsieiaiis, gr. ihw will ,ih ’'-9 ten-fe’.d to possibjy alrlve fcqrn them manufactured by F ft f e 3fT,'.ledo, 0., contains no r ‘-d Ux.fteu internally, acting :V the blood .and mucous £>.,601. In buying Hall’s Gata-k; sure you get the genuine. It IsL areally and. made in Toledo, Ohio- u :y Testimonials thin Vjvj , ,,r iinaftjjy selfish. Don’t i ■-■■■• any act of sacrifice? sometimes , when I tro:a . t . lie club and find / n -nquisitivo mood I sacrifice’th ivi’th a bit;—Philadelphia Joufnhf| -y . J "r$r- ————— • * A'ightly Above It. HyheSj.' a von think young De Swift is-/-.-he, level.? course not. He’s an airf -,_st. Louis Post-Dis- —— ii.’si -Eye Salve, to eyes, irritated | , yi? wind. All drugf Igy; Buffalo, N. Y. 1|| r'assification. P 1 dialect story a best ■ sei ■ ; ifiv... * red the publisher, ‘TiVv.JP 'st speller.”—'Washington Thro?-’ ties Weaken the System, illness is often brought on by a •■.: - [t \ sore throat. tables invariably v -M ml should not be W nm/bekod. ..If made With twelve irops of iment in Half a glass of hreds. up s me throat. Jffiment is a. -xcellent rem- ■ si’ltis, croup, thru a and “ -pitied i ? ."eyjv the outJS 'oat and chest it draws 00 dilation, reduces the swell2% any soreness. Twelve ts Liniment Jn half a glass axes a splehiftd antiseptic ** ' . . t W. Price of Fredonia, s“We have used Sloan’s .h the family for about a nd it an excellent relief for h$y fever attacks. Two liniment in a teaspoon- , r will stop coughing and mntiy.” Burst of Goatesville, Ind., ... writes: —“I find your Liniist remedy I have ever tried iroat, either for horse or ice cured a case of sore myself the second day and first night, Which had conover three weeks, under conIient'of three physicians (I jug) aud it was getting rorse.”** ***■;, — ' p J, Common. 5+ e ordinary people, *c engagements, eat Mils and* all that 'irk Life. ■'*«» Byei dy. tans,.; ■...w I

3 ——. — Morphine WHISKEY JSLh, The Cur- v uaranteef t and 4hbr« are i o 'fcj'a'T aftei^, fleets." * . SflP i i wU k l M 4 N.'.Illinois St., !ndian|polif, ind.

“What is that I see before me?” .Asks.3 thepmr, bewildered man., , ' “It’s a, flowei t inverted . Qr'k’s a ne. aishpan, \ A ’f$ncy market basket Ov a brand new chimney pot?” When Iris wife emphatic answered, 0 '“Indeed, hir, it is not!” “What is. it, then?” he queried. Why decked with such fine rigging? Oh what is it. dear, I pray? I suppose It has some meaning. I suppose jome use it bears. Is it some "barbaric vase, dear 0 y isn’t Teacher (at night school)—Give 4tae some illustration of the “survival of , the fittest.” Shaggy Haired Pupil—Any handhome widow.—Chicago Tribune. . : ■ $ Promptly Applied. . Aggrieved Speaker—My remarks, sir,; do not seem with you to amount to row of pins. Btfred Hearer—To . speak candidly/ they, don’t, for a rew of pins are pointed- —Baltimore American. —— r . , tee D03»£t : * Tales Are fcola. » I was one" of the kind believe that coffee was hurting me,” says a N. Y. woman. “You just couldn’t convince me its use was connected With, the heart and stomach trouble I suffered. from most of the time. ■ | “Mytrouble finally got so bad I had j' w Hve oh milk and toast -almost, entirely for three’or four years. Still I loved the coffee and wouldn’t believe it could do such damage. . “What I needed was to quit coffin) and take nourishment In such form as my stomach could digest “I had read much about Postum but never thought it wo«|d fit my case until one day I decided coffee and give it a'trial and md&k 3ure about it So I got a package and carefully followed the directions. “Soon I began to g-T better and was able to eat car- selected foods, without the v ’ . - ,rkthai* ■ gestantu aid..v apsln o \ . }• | wns*rt add It * sot ' “No a r lv a new woman physically, eat any. r hm healthy and sound, own come* air T and everything that comes alpxijjjjg tills wonder- " "'O 18 SM ' / /» having - - coffee- ana ■. i s all . , ed throuuf - ! ’ “My ' I p'L . .

a- jfcioooo.ji oiwu * ,u.. hanks of the O rentes, jr. We must bo careful not to confuse it in ih the Acts), a place and of iutKnrncs$> importance in the, .Trade wife th$ West.. by way of Seleucia and the sealand with the Bast, North dhd South, %X-' means : of caravans, had made -this greater Antioch populous and wealthy; ' and it was perhaps leas embanked by its awn tradifioiis. than most ancient cities —as we have noted in our Introduction to the Lesson. “When the; gospel entered Antioch,” says PtdSl fessor Bartiet, “it , entered the fnir current of life in the Roman empire.” hand, for the accomplishment of.rennd he seems to be 'using*''l|ie Suited, Stales as a sort of modern Antioch in missionary activity/- fof our'country is rapidly becoming the center of evangelistic power '|sl the world* to-day. Unto the Jews i&yThis is recorded in contrast withTlae preaching-spoken of in Verse 20. And “But.” The men of Cyprus am Gyrene (pronounced jgyreenee) were Jewish Christians, hut having 1 -on bred in Gentile lands, some of their i scruples about (Gentiles hail broke; down. Gyrene, a north African city, was about this time united in oneprovince with the island of Cypr&f Spake unto the Grecia|i.«-^ , /^ : T'^-s, The phrase ' ment usage, stands for ffheign-born Jews who spoke Greek and for prose lytes. But Greeks is the correct rendering here, and by it pagans are meant. The hand of . - ' with them—so in t v v uh is ,sa? power “with a outstretched magician*divine • of Gi Tit 4 or din rathei church wj still the Though it upon its ir tions” It fe> activities of forth Barna,. nabas was i pirns”; he had . olete consecration Chris-; (Acts 4, 36. lltrPugtiput manik-st.-true-Mlartedness: Whin came, :.»nd had seen the g, was glad—When a man ge tvhat he sees depends larg waat he is looking for. A&xm them all- —The apostles had given the ’name of Barnabas because 6. giU exhortation. * Lore lidre means the Lord Jesi t or he was a good man—An intima'on .that under the circumstances a ci aid not well do otherwise. f P - ° 4 - he . Holy Ghost and of V alify any person fo. ’ ■’s and ~ Tarsus, ’ of