Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 November 1912 — Page 3
11 KSHAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1#13.
GREENCASTLE HERALD
PAGE THREE.
Over Hair-Century. Humphreys' Specifics have
b ,. ell u=.ed by the people with
ci-jfaction for moi e than 60; Medical Book seat free, i
Si
yeOl’S
ro» Prlo»
.- rVi . r , c'ooiw'tloiu. InH»«mnalloiu tS v , «i.ri:i l 4 'i vrr.orW<)na l'i,ra.o l i rjihj aul \. .-Bfu'.noM of 'iJarti.SS ;»!i»rrbo».of'‘hiidri'n »uil Adul* vl.) 1 ,.iuli».0,ld*. Broi.cUtls . tS (, ulhschr. Kir.arbo, Si-uralgl. *# II, .d.fhf, Slok Headache, Vertigo SS .peptia. liidlt- itlon, Weak btomach St ,, lloiirad (' >u*h, Larya.-ltli 25 euli tthruin. tr^;i(l,>u8,Ery«lpela« 25 J j IIlieiitiiulhio. or Kbcumatlc Faina--Jt 10 l-cwf autl Anne, Malaria 25 Pi,,., Blind i r r.leedliw. Citerual, Internal 25
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I
7
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13 i i
OUR EYES CANT STANDJE PACE Alarming Amount of Harm Don* to Them by Auto Speeding and Moving Pictures
COMPLAINT IS CAlltO PICTURITI!
I Uiarrli. Inn letua. Colli in Head 25 \\ houidiu Spasmodic C.’ougli ‘55 \ ,tInna. Oppress,^ , ni. tilf Brealhln* 55 Kidney IM,ea,«- S5 | >, r,nu. u. idlilt. Vital Waakneti 1.00 I nnart lucnnllneuce. Wetting Bad.. 25 bore Tkroat. QutBUr S5 77 crip. Hm Iorr and Simmer Colds.. 25 •uld hy druwiUta. or •ent on receipt of price. HVMi’ll KEYS’ HOMBO. MBDIcms CO., cornel
w ,i|,, ai.a dnu btreeU.New York-
House Moving FCUKDATSON AND CONCRETE WORK
Headache and Nervoutneaa Attributed to the Ocular Strain of Watching a Succession of Quickly Changing Scenes.
John T. Crawley PHONE 541
I
tw r usinc«sDcal
Kor rubber tired calm tor al. 'i-itlni or city callb, day or nlghc fnce J£> cents. Hrouii’t service pos, lively gui*'indeed at all uluee (ilv* 'is yout all and we will do tb« Cubs fui inirtlea and funeral* oi thort notice. ’Phobr No. ^ It.tBRl IIILUNS.
Is your husband cross? An irritable, fault (luding disposition is often due to a disordered atonireh. A man w th good (ligestiou is nearly always good nalured. A gri’ai. many have been permanently ctuv 1 ef stoimuh iroiilil!* Iiy taking CliamherInin's Tahlels. For sale hy nil cle.ilcrs. ((Advertisement.)
Iiilei'iirbaa I'inie Table. lirp' Mm ,e. Ind unapolis & Easier Tiaeiien (.'o. Important Chiinge in Time Table !•’•: .'U Div. T. M.. 1. .M- E Co
East Bound.
8: as 9:44 10: :18 114 1
A M
4:00 Local 7:25 Limited 8:11 Local 9:25 Limited 10:11 Local 11:25 Limited
P M
12:11 Local 1:25 Limited 2:11 Local 3:25 Limited 4:11 I .oca I 5:25 Limited 6:11 Local 7 25 Linilied 9:25 Limited 11:02 Local
A M
(0 C. Only.) HU PERT BARTLEY. Aft.
West Bound
A M
5:45 Local 6:40 Local 7:44 Loch!
Limile i
Local
Limited
Local I'. M
12::’,8 i.imiied ■ 1:44 l,o, ai i
Limited • Local 1 Limited ,
Local
Limili’O | Local \ Limi c i
Loca I
2: its 3:41 4 tns 5:44 6:38 7.11 S: 3S
10:37
According to observers there is a new eye complaint developing in New York City, says the Sun. which for want of a better name is called picluritis. It is a result of the popularity of moving picture entertainmenu. Thousands of men women and children now patronize the moving picture shows which offer half an hour's entertainment for a nickel. Some visit two or tbrae different shows in one evening and so spend practically an hour or an hour and a half in a darkened room looking intently at the Jumping, rapidly shifting pictures on the screen. The light on these pictures is uneven, and frequently sharp flashes of light fall on the retina. The effect i»u the eye is the same as watching steadily nearby scenery from the window of a rapidly moving express train or from a flying automobile, which is known to be very trying on the eye because of the rapid changes on muscular accommodation demanded. To many watching these moving pictures causes discomfort. A few mluutes of it gives them a sensation of eye strain and nervous headache. Others feel the effect of the strain afterward and do not attribute their sensations to the entertainment. One physician in speaking of the records of recent physical examinations of men who wished to do gymnastic work said he had observed a number of cases of eye strain and of nervousness which seemed to be due to some eye trouble. •‘In a number of cases,'' said he, "the condition could be traced directly to tlie fact that the subject owned an atuomobile and was fond of driving at a high speed. In many other cases, the majority in fact, the men never used automobiles and their only travel was in tlie elevated or subway trains. Some of them were fond of moving pictures. "On talking with them about it I discovered that the trouble was directly due to this cause. It is certainly tlie only plausible explanation. "I am not in a position to state that moving pictures are harmful in all cases, as 1 have not collected sufll cient data to form definite conclusions. 1 can say. however, that the strain on tlie eye from speeding in an automobile does lead to nervous de raugemeuts and a lowered physical
tone.
"This is due partly to the constant strain aud responsibility people driving at a high speed are tinder. But much of It is due to eye strain coming from watching fences and trees and nearby objects flitting by at a rate of fifty or sixty miles an hour. • The rapid rate at which moving pictures Jiggle before the eyes, coupled with the fact that the light must necessarily be less titan that of daylight and tlie nearness of the pictures to the spectator, produces a condition even worse for the eye than speeding at a seventy mile clip in a car. "Certainly such conditions are not. normal ones for the eye Of course when we come to that the extensive use of artificial illumination, reading al night and using the eyes after dark in intricate processes are not natural. Primitive man did his work oy daylight, and slept at night. And probably to the fact that at. night he had no electric lights and no finely printed newspapers and books to
Tlie boy's appetite is often the f'Mirce of amazement. if you would I tve such an appetite take Chamberlin's Tablets. They not only create
» healthy appetite, hut strengthen the! r™ 41 ' vfls the olh,r fact thal
•<-o.ua, U ami enable it to do its work ! * ee much b f. U,,r in
... ,, . . than the average city man of to-day. . ,,r S!llc ' a dealers, i h la t , le countryman of today can ' ' cement.) around far better without light at
— night than the city man
l.\l | ItSitiVs Id Till mil*TII tSIl ‘ ,Thia ' u ‘ ,vl, 'S P t0 * lire whlch
! t . ‘ objects the eyes to high power illumis ”l •HI'.AM. nation broken into instants of alterround trip excursion fares nating light and shade, certainly can-
t , , not bt* restful or beneficial to tue "••'""a m tin South and Sou.heme | ^ p el . Bona „ y , ftnd auy long view . rf> now ' n effect via the Momri , 0 f (jjpgg pictures very uncomfortable, iiiiuie, Tickets are on sale daily an i : aiul 1 know of many who complain
THE BIG-NAVY FOLLY. Recent experiments by the British AAmlraJgy with internal-combustion •nglnee now promise to render the present Oread noughts obsolete, announce* the New York World. It Is barely six years since ihe first Dreadnought started a world revolution in the building of war vessels. All other battle ships of every great power were outclassed Then came the super-Dreaduought, growing rapidly from 20,000 to 27,0u0 tons, and now the greater-than-super-Dreadnought of 30,000 tons and over is being planned. Before It la begun a new gas engine threatens to make It out of date. Then hundred* of millions' worth of battle-ships constructed within the last few years will be classed as obsolete and naval experts will clamor for more hundreds of millions for more new bat-tle-ships. A madder form of extravagance could not be conceived of than that Into which the leading civilized nations of the world are plunging deeper and deeper each year. The two new battleships which Congress has Just authorized will cost from $12,000.000 to f IS,000,000. They will bring the total number of battleships of the United States to over thirty, and the later ones count for double the strength of the best that served in the war with Spain If they are all to be rendered obsolete any day by the adoption of a gasengine in a foreign navy, where Is to be the end of waste? In the last five years of peace with the world, from 1906 to 1910, the naval establishment, of the United States has cost $573,022,101, 45 per cent, more than the entire naval expenditures of tlie United States during the five years covering the civil war. With this poltey of naval Inflation fastened upon the country, what wonder that the Government at Washington is spending the sum of $3,567,685.66 every working day in the year?
Household
TOUCHED HIS HEART
NOVEL CLOTHES WRINGER.
Ita Roll* Are Turned by an Electric Motor. A new laundry apparatus of ret eut tesigu is driven by electricity and :utnblnee the functions of the wasbei ind wringer The motor is secured to the lower part of the framework which supports the machine and it ran be made to drive either the washir or the wringer, or both. Th* pow
• ■ rood returning tint I .Juno h*. ' ! fhoico of roulos. ^ or information apply :o n: \ m er. Motion Route or addre > th ■ tin
dmigned
' \\ (Jiigig Traveling Passeu^c Motion Route, Bloon’ii. ton
(Adierii.-omeoi.l
that they produce unpleasant ocular
sensations
Aictit
hid
O’utiESrER .1 Pills
‘ l ‘ .IOVO iiUANII. , 1,1 R*-«i 8 ■ I I .••» 1 ••<. will, i.i ,e j,
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V , -.■ y, •;V" Tcn-M ■ ' > .’1-1114. ( .r Si
' 1 •• A!~m I’cIibI • n umpup
,. !v ■' I'icHoiiic to tell you tliat
I ' 11,1 ^ Uottgli iteincdy is tlie fication.
j ' 1 ••-' • have ever used," vvritci work. • i . ! b ( 'ainphell. of Lavonia. tSa. j
Ksed it wiiit all my children
Paper Garmenta.
A manufacturing house makes light, , strong paper garments for hospital ; use buttons and cloth edges. There ' are paper bottles. Paper horseshoes | more durable and lighter than steel, I stuck on with cement, not nailed Thus it is invention, not pity and prayer, that relieves the pain and thraldom of man and beast. Paper I reinforced with wire mesh makes houses, boats, hospitals, etc.: is flre- ! nroof, water-proof, heat and cold proof As for the rest, the police, not thick fortified bouse walls, should protect us. The living dead man builds his house of rock like his ancestor when hedged around and surrounded with enemies to assure fortl-
Make the police do thla
THE HEROIC DOG. Heroism Is not entirely confined to men. Some women are heroic, in size, at any rate, If we say nothing about mice. Then there is the manifesta tion of heroism among dogs. There was a new case of this kind in Bayonne, N. J„ a few days ago. Jacob Wilson, a farmer living thereabout, has a black dog named Jock, which is pretty close to Mr. Wilson's familiar name of Jake. The dog and the man, Jock and Jake, are close friends. Tiie dog has also shown remarkable affection for the fanner’s prize chickens. Never once has Jock chased one of these. He rose from a commonplace sunning of himself last Saturday, into the realm of the heroic, when a white leghorn hen. frightened by an automobile, flew over the bridge rail of the Morris canal, that runs by the Wilson farm Jock saw the hen's dilemma, and, without a moment's hesitation, he also plunged over the bridge rail, dived into the water and dragged her ashore. A good subject, remarks the New York Globe, for a moving picture. FORM IN DRESS. It has been our custom to poohpooh the Briton's thought for "fomi” In respect of clothes, but that Influence is slowly but surely spreading on the playing fields of this country. without making us any less keen to win games afield or afloat. The ordinary man who drives his own motor car does not seem to feel nowadays that part, of the fun is to look like an oiler In shore-going clothes, nor does the power-boat sailor think it all of sport to be as grimy us a tugboat fireman. This reform in the matter of tidiness lias even struck in among the aviators, and the Asbury Park meet lias produced one flying man who goes aloft in clothe* whose neatness would make him a conventional figure on any hotel piaxza along the Atlantic coast. The winning of games and other contests is after all only one of the graces of life, and while we are being graceful we might as well make the picture complete.
»r is transmitted through a flexible cord connection with a lamp sock*' The wringer mechanism is quite heavy, and at the same time easily runuing. for it is fitted with ball bearings arui can be started and stopped by touching a small knob placed In a convenient position — Washington 8 tar.
Washing Handkerchiefs. Delicate bandke-rchiefs can be done ap easily at home, and careful hand Hug causes them to wear much better. Wet them, rub each gently over with good white soap, aud soak in tepid water overnight. Squeeze out (do not wring), put them in a small i enameled pan, cover with cold water ■md half a teaspoonful of powered bo | rax Boil slowly, pour into a basin, I idil cold water and squeeze out all | -toap. Next, immerse them In clear I tepid water, rinse about In this; then ] pi tinge into cold water tinged with ! blue Leave in this for half an hour, j squeeze and dip into a slight stiffen | ing (one teaspoonful of cornflour to j a cupful of boiling water). Squeeze tnd roll carefully each handkerchief In a towel, and Iron with a moderately aot iron.
Juoue Oyer Promised to Send Culprit to Jail If he Came Back. Judge David P. Dyer was holding court in Cape Girardeau Mo., when he was called upon to sentence a postmaster from a small town who had stolen a few dollars from hla office When the prisoner was arraign ed. says the St. Louis Poet Dispatch, the Judge demanded: ''Well, what have you got to say about this case?" The prisoner said the postmastership paid only a few dollars a year not sufficient to meet the expenses of his family. His wife and child needed food, and he look a little money from the poatofibe, thinking he would return it when he harvested his crops. The appeal touched the heart of Judge Dyer and he let the po*tmaater off with six months in Jail. The prisoner was profoundly grateful and f tlie Judge dismissed the case from his j
mind
A few minutes later, as the judge was leaving the court room, he felt a i tug at his sleeve. It was the post* j master-prisoner of a few moments j
before.
"What Is it now?” asked the judge, j "If your honor please," the prisoner | replied, "could you postpone my sent- | enoe a little while? if I can begin serving it next fall that will give me time to get in my crops and my family will have enough to live on while I
am in Jail.”
"That's a little unusual." replied the judge. “But 1 don't care. Go on home now and come back next j November and I'll send you to jail." | The Barber's Profits. The man who had Just been shaved tipped the barber a dime, but after j i leaving the shop be growled to bis i
friend about it.
"Don’t think I’m close,” he said, ' j "but I certainly do hate to feel that 1 | • am obliged to give a barber a fee. ! 1 They get enough stray coins from , their chairs. A barber once confided | to me, after he had had a few drinks, I that it was a good day when be didn t j pick up anywhere from seventy-five I cents to a dollar from the crevices of | his chair. You know a fellow- throws himself down carelessly In a barbel's chair, aud his trouser* pockets Just gaping open in that position to spill any stray coins that may happen to work up. These coins sink down | into the crevices of the upholstery and remain there til! the shop close*. "Did you ever see a barber run a button hook around the crevices of his chair before he leaves the shop. Well. If you ever do, you may know he is fishing for the coins that slip from his customers pockets." New
York Times.
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AM'ti||-»l. 3 PUlt cent' A'.Kvi Me PrcpaniionforAs ; sbnildihii} ihe Food and Reijuia in ^‘u'biomafhsamlUovK'Isj
Ipf !H\j Je, 11M iri
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Pi oi :jlcsDi6p9lionjChrcrft4 di’ss ji«l Ri’9iXoiitamsneiUw Optic i Morphinc nor Mineral. Nov Nabconr.
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l* tcrutdU - ffirknuii SiJj+
CfiSTOMA Fur Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of
r ■ ■ „ ■ su
\nqnr.
i // tiam
AptrlcTi ?.?:uedy forConslte ; | iicu .2. .u Sioniach.DlarrtHx n I Worat.'j,('onvulsious .Fcwn;!:
[ nes’? ' Loss of Suit.
W
Vue u |
fticSbtili Signauirt* uf NEW YORK.
In Use For Over Thirty Years
WE LOAN MONEY On the Building Plan
ON Live* Stock aiul all other ifootl chattel securities. Spec in attention given t<> Fanner*. We
plt*ct--e(l to explain our met hods to you. In office on ilon
would
day, i’ruiav and Saturday of each week re HOME LOAN COMPANY,
Room 4 anc 5 Southard Bu GREENCASTLE INO.
New Cooking Utensil. Time, money and space are saved by the cooking utensil designed by an Ohio man. and all housekeepers will readily understand the merits of this
What May Be Expected. It was in 1920. "Oh pa,” exclaimed the little lad, breathless with excitement, "guess what has happened?" “What my son?" asked pa, as he read a wireless from Europe. "Why. you know our automatic cook -—the one you bought in the hardware
store?"
"Think I should know her I wa< Just about to call and tell her to pre pare my condensed eggs and coffev
capsules."
"Well, you needn't. She's gone.” "Gone? Left without notice?" “Worse than that, pa. The auto-
matic iceman came in and hugged iter so tightly he broke all the steel spring she was composed of aud she fell to pieces. Ma raked her up aud is going to sell her to the junk man."
Pining for the good old days of I
human cooks the business man of i 01 People residing
£ We Have Helped Others, We Can Help You
-t j
jfel By advancing w hat money you may need for tie winter §& season or to square up any little bills that may be ow ing. 2® We have no iron-Louml mle or contract; in fact, you will ho ■ surprised to tind Low easily yon can procure a loan atul your
Hk friends need never know.
Phone ormail. dirt ct all mail to Brazil Loan ( o., Brazil Indiana. Application* reeeive prompt atremion.
.Straight time loan* to farmers. Agent In office every Thursday.
BRAZIL LOAN CO.
Corner of Vine and Wathington Streets GREENCASTLE, INDIANA.
WORDS HtoM HOME.
Statements That Mht lie Investigat-
ed. Testimony of (I'reencastle
( itizens.
When a Greeneastle citizen eotne* to the front, telling hi* friends an<’ neighbors of his experience, you can rely on his sincerity. The statements
in far away places
^mmsm
VlOl'S SCil.P ITCH. DnuUriitt' aud ku\*ry form of acalo Ulaenxr t urt-U quick liy /.<-iuo.
1920 left for his office Chicago News
DESPERATION
AN ACCOMPANYING EVIL. Apparently every new invention brings with it some evil. The British Medical Journal points out that among distinctively modern diseases are the poisoning produced by the fu-mes of calcium carbide of acetylene: the headache, dyspepsia, cardiac failure and sensory disturbances traceable to tlie manufacture and use of aniline dyes; the frothing of the blood, known ae caisson disease, which follows too rapid decompression in worker* at the foundations of bridges; the functional neurosis known as telegraphers’ cramp, resulting front the use of the Morse key, and the numerous affections of the skin, lungs, digestive tract and eyes due to irritation by organic of inorganic dusts of Industrial origin.
Saves Time and Moneyarticle by merely glancing at Ute illustration. This utensil consists of a stewpan with three separate com partments in which three vegetables may be cooked at once over one lid of a stove or one flame of a gas i range. The pan comprises a skeleton frame of bottom aud top hoops and side bars and three receptacles, one ! taking up half of the capacity and the ‘ others being quarters. Each of these receptacles has a clip which fits over the rim of the fraune and by which it may he lifted into place or out again As each of these vessels Is separate It is not necessary that the vegetables to be cooked in them require the same length of time. As one is done the partition can be lifted out. Such a utensil, when used on a gas stove, uses up only one-third as much gas as under ordinary conditions.—Phila deiphia Record.
Billie-Wot s up, Eddie? Eddie—Why, doggone
do not command your confident-. Homo endorsement is tlie kind that backs Doan's Kidney Pills. Such testimony is convincing. Investigation j proves it true. Below a statement o' a Greeneastle resident. No stronger
proof of merit can be had.
William W. Mai kin carpenter, 421 i K. Washnigton St., Greeneastle, Ind.. j says: "A number of years ago 1 was in a railroad wreck and tny back am! | kidneys were injured After ’h'u f | suffered from pains in tny loin- and j the kidney serf.’-ion were too fiv j queut in passage, causing tin annoy- | anon. | tried different remedies and treatments, l-ui was not relieved tm
n is simply woinicrmt /.m.io l=e's alter dandruff. V - run . ,title it it m uiui tl.e tips ut ilto lingers, it ! U-'ts rijflu iiuu-ii into tlie annuls, ,. ups tin - Uiu he.el 11 lino. No, It jsn i stil l, >: . / .emo is .t lino, clear, vanishing liquid, von don't hav-- to even vvaslt jour toads ifter using Xemo. Ancl what a - wonder it Is for eczema, risii, pimples and all skin afflictions A Zocent loo tie at the A. Cook D.-ng store is guaranteed to stop any sit.:
irrlta non.
/.'■mo Is prepared by K U" ft..* Medicine Co. St Louis, .Mo. and * renitl.u-D sold t.y druggists.* at 21 . .nine. Hut to prove vvlmt it will - it trilling expense, Zemo Is now pn <i' in -eont trial bottles.
I began t.s'itK
REAL LUCK. You may not believe in luck, observes the New Haven Times-Leader, but juat the same yon are lucky to be in luck. U*ve must indeed be blind whea it makes two people think as much of each other as they do of themselvee.
Faahlon Pointer*. The sktrt of the moment, while too scanty to be graceful ou any one but a woman without sign of hips, la
O 0 0
Doan's Kidneys jg
Bill* They made tie feel he*‘e|- froir 1 q
. j . i .. i the first and 1 was soon rel'eved 1 ; can t go skatln cause de Ice am t , , . . , . u froze, so all I kin do is ter go ter hav(> no n,v na ” lp 0 school. Jea' Ilk* my measly luck ll8e d th< ‘ lo™' P n P prti : ’C'ldimn I- 0
ing Doan's Kidney Pills." "q For sale by all dealer*. I’rire 5" j cents Foster Mtlburn Co. Buffah ~ New York sole s'.•cuts for Mu Unit- ! j
State*.
Remember th? uame-—P~oii's--an 11 take no other. (Advertisement..!
Another Route.
Owing to bog. a steamer stopped in the mouth of a river. An old lady inquired of the captain the cause of th*
delay.
“Can’t see up the river," replied the
the officer
“But, captain, I can see the stars |
overhead,” she argued
"Yes,” said the captain, gruffly, I
O O O O 0 o If ybd can’t limi what uni wan* go to RIMY’S SECOND RAND STORE l-'ull line ol household good*. Phone 134 No. 719-722 South Main Street O O O O 0 l
MOSOX TIRE TARI.T. In effect July 7th, 1912, at 5:90 am —North Bound-
still not the worst thing that ever | "hut until the boilers burst we ain t
that way.”—Everybody's Maga
id
if.!,
Ille of Doctors.
"- i iiits i,| , j a sanatorium for doctors is in Mah ' ,V0 br ° n l,i « h| y Bat - ' rtenbad Gout, rheumatism fatnea.
and heart disease are the main trou-
biea treated
"■y. F or
'•'-'i I'LaenieuL)
*aI,* hy ill dealers.
struck the sartorial boards. The skirt was worse last season, than it is now. Enough fulness has been given to the knees and hem to allow a free step if I not an actual stride. It Is to he hoped ! that still more width will he allowed. Leaping mud puddles was not one of the exigencies to which consideration I was given when the scanty skirt was
revived.
A man's mind may be like a pleasant home snow-bound: there may be peace in the "tumultuous privacy of the storm.”
The French Senator who has just denounced the American invasion of Europe" did not refer to our heiresses
To Remove Freckles. FYerk'es may be removed by bathing them with lemon juice. A blood tonic has a great effect on the skin, but it is wiser to take a physician'* prescription than to take one which you are not sure that your systiai needs.
u-goiu
zlue
Ups and Downs of Stage Life. Foote I.ighte—So tie's given up acting”' Miss Sue Brette—“Yes.” "But T thought he was going tc elevate the stage?” T thought so. too, hut It seems ho’s d opped it."—Newark Star. Depth. "Some of your thoughts aro very deep.” said Pennum. "Yes," answered lukum “At leasl three feet down in the waste basket.' tYaihthgum Evening Btar.
"There could b>- no better medlcin,) titan Chamberlain's Con-h Remedy My children were ell sick with the whooping conyh. One of them waa In bed had a high fever and was coughing up blood Our doctor gavthem Chamberin'aCouch K-un-d' and the iirst dose eased them and three bottle* cured them " 8 iv* Mr R. A. Donaldson, of Lexincton. ML. For sale by all d.eflkr .dver. sc menu)
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9.48
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—South Bound —
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8:25
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2:32
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5:21
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J. f). ELLIS. Ag- ni
Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S C A S TO R I A
Don’t waste your money buyin; strengthening piasters. Chamberlain’* Liniment is cheaper aud better. ! Dampen a piece of flannel with it j and bind it over the affected parts - and it will relieve the pain and soreness. For sale hy all dealers ( \-l vertisemeat.)
