Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 November 1895 — Page 2
Over Tnirry Years Without Sickness. Mr. II. Wettsteix, a well-known, enterprising citizen of Byron, 111., writes: “Before I paid much attention to regulating the bowels, I hardly knew a well day; hut since I learned the evil resuits of constipation, and the ellicacy of AYER’S Pills, I have not had one day’s sickness ^ for over thirty years — not one attack that did not readily yield to this remedy. My wife had been, previous to our marriage, an invalid for years. She had a prejudice against cathartics, but as soon as she began to use Ayer’s Pills her health was restored.” AYER’S HI Cathartic Pills Medal and Diploma at World’s Fair. To Restore Strength, tzlic Ayer': Sarsaparilla.
ROASTED COFFEE,
The best article in town, Also the fullest stock of
And
Id
ite.
L. WEIK&CO.
v\\ C\ v e ewcwwWe.
G. M. BLACK’S Lirery, ale ai m Slat Franklin St., near northeast corner public square Best Livery Rigs. Farmers’ Teams Fed. Horses Boarded. 1 Call and see. tf 2 It A1L \VA Y TIME-TABLE’ BIC FOUR, EAST. No. 38 Daily 2:30 am “ 4, Ex Sun 9:13 a m “ 8, Daily 4:15 p m “ 8, Daily.. 5:21 p m WEST. No. 35, Daily 12:32 a m “ 9, Daily 8:50 u m “ 11, Daily 12:38 p m “ 5, Ex Sun 5:57 pm No. 36, Night Express, hauls through cars for Cincinnati, New York ami Boston. No. 2 connects with trains for Michigan divisions via Anderson and to Cincinnati. No. 4 con nects for Cincinnati, Springfield, O., and Wabash, Ind. No. 18, Knickerbocker, hauls through sleepers for Washington, D. C., via C. & O., a„d through sleepers for New York via N. Y. C. R. ft.: also dining car. New coaches illuminated with gas on all trains. F. P. HUESTIS, Agt.
VANDAL!A LINE,
In eflect May 19,1895.
tie, It d.,
Trains leave Greencas-
iso. 5, “ 31. “ 7, “ 15, “ 8, “ 75,
Daily.. Daily.. Daily Daily
Ex. Sun.
Ex. Sun
vnp THE WEST.
9.u5 a ui, lor ot. I.uhiS.
.. 1:35 p m, ,.12:26 p m, .. 8:45 a m, .. 5:18 p pi, .. 7:05 a m, 3:55 p m.
Terre Haute.
Peoria
Decatur.
FOK TUB EAST.
1:35 pm, torlndianapolis.
No. 20, Daily..
“ 8, Daily 3:36 p m, “ 2, Daily 6:03 p m, “ 6, Daily 4-30 a m, “ 12, Daily 2:35 a m, “ 4, Et. S'.tn. S 13 a tr.,
For complete Time Card, giving all trains and stations, and for full inlormation as t rates, through cars, etc., address
J S. DOWLING, Agent,
Greencastie, Ind. Or E. A. h our,,
General Passenger Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
NOHTIt MH .NP. No. 4', Chicago Mail 1:12 a m “ *«, Through train 12:09 pm " « . Alan ami AccumoUuUun U..>i p in “ 44t, Local Freiglit 11:25 am SOUTH BOUND. No. 3 5 , Louisville Mail 2:17 am “ sc, Mail and Accomodation 2:33 p m “ 1 , Chicago and Atlanta Flyer.... 3:09 pm “ 43t, Local 11:25 a m Daily. tDaily except Sunday. Pullman sleepers on night trains." Parlor and dining cars on No. 1 and 2. For complete timecards and full information in regard to rates, through cars, etc., address J. A. MICHAEL, Agent. F.|J. Reed, G. P. A..Chicago.
Mow to IM at 5 w coat By ALBERT A. DAGCY. Office at Hub Clothing Store, Greencastle, Ind. . 4t30
Painfully Exact -Observation of Sunday by a Minnesota Canine.
ON MOUNT SHASTA.
H« Is a Fln« flmittn" Dog Dnt TVoorts ami Fields Full of Dame C'auuot Tempt Him to Hreak the Lord’s Day.
George C. Moore, a resident of Detroit, Minn., is the owner of a hunting dog, a pointer, that is something of a wonder in its way, says the Cincinnati Enquirer. Don, as the dog is called, is a brother of a dog owned by 1). J Thompson, of Duluth, which animal recently distinguished itself by finding a pocketbook lost in the street by his master, and remaining by it all night, in spite of the fact that he had to whip a bulldog in order to do so. Both dogs were, when puppies, owned by a clergyman, and many people think it was their early training which makes them so sagacious. Certain it is that they know right from wrong, and their doings are a continual source of wonder to their masters and their friends. Don's latest notion is that he will not hunt on Sunday, and no amount of persuasion can get him to go into the field with his owner if the latter carries a gun. If no gun is in sight Don goes along as nicely as you please, but the moment that a shot is tired anywhere in the neighborhood he is off for home as fast as he can go, and on his master's return he greets him with a reproachful look, as though to protest against having been imposed upon in an}- such way. Last Sunday an attempt was made to make Don hunt. The whole thing si|'iply amounted to an attempt, however, for hunt Don would not, although it was known that there were a number of prairie chickens in the field. Mr. Moore was pulling the dog along, having a rope around his neck, and the way the dog hung back was remarkable. He manifested his displeasure in every way possible, except by biting, and even when a chicken got up almost from under his feet, he never paid ‘.he slightest attention to it, not even looking at the bird, whoso wings brushed his nose. In order to sec If the dog really had objections to hunting on Sunday, he was taken into the same field early Monday morning by the same people. Don needed no urging this time, and never did a dog hunt so well. lie seemed anxious to show how well he could work, and not once did he flush a bird or break his point. It was a pleasure to see him range about the field, and the dog seemed as happy as a little boy with a uew red wagon. Ilis actions said as plainly as could be that he was willing to do his best on week days, but that be could not aud would not work on Sundays. The dog knows as well as do the members of the familj’ when Sunday comes and when it is time to go to church. Not that he makes a practice of attending service, for he does not. When he hears the bells ring he walks slowly into the house if the doors are open. And if they are closed he scratches at one until it is open, and goes to each member of the family iu turn, as much as if to see whether lie or she, as the case may be, is ready to go. Then he takes his place on the front porch, or in the kitchen, if the weather is stormy, and does not leave it until the family has returned. During the entire day Don is as sedate aud dignified as a clergyman of the old school, and would no more think of racing around with other dogs and romping with the children than he would of snapping at his master. The slightest departure from a Sunday action appears to hurt his feelings mightily, and he discountenances all attempts at fun on the Sabbath by arising from Ids place, giving one reproachful glance at the guilty person, and leaving the house, wearing a most dejected look. This Sunday observance trait in Don was well developed when Mr. Moore purchased him, and since then Mrs. Moore lias fostered aud increased it wonderfully, so that at the present time the dog is really a curiosity. LAKE3 DRYING UP.
Nothing Hut :i II«*avy Fall of Snow the 1 oming Winter W i!l llestore Them. Unless considerably more than the usual amount of snow should fall during the coming winter several lakes, which u few years ago were the largest in South .Dakota, will become dry. notably among which L Lake Kampcaka, heretofore a fine body of water nuar the city of Watertown. A sister lake to Kampeska, known as Pelican hike, has become entirely dry, and Kampeska is at a lower stage than ever before. Should this lake be overtaken by the same fate which hfis befallen scores of other lakes in the state, the water supply cf Watertown would be stmt on, and where to find a substitute would be a problem not easily 7 solved. What has been the most beautiful and healthful pleasure resort in the siate would be a thing of the past. Commencing two or three y 7 ears after what is known as the “big snow" of the winter of 1SS0-81 the numerous fine lakes in the state have been gradually drying up. This county had a fine body of water known as Red lake, covering between 4,000 and 5,000 acres of land, but this and scores of others in the state are now entirely dry and the beds are being used for agriculture. A heavy fall of snow the coming winter would restore many of these to their normal stage. Besides snow there is no relief, as rain does not fall in sufficient quantities to be of any benefit. Wife Dies of Grief. After ten minutes of grief over the death of her husband, who was killed by the cars, Mrs. Johnson, of Winchester, Ind., was a corpse, her heart being literally broken. Hahy Orownori In a Jar r»f Water. The 10-months-old child of George Hawkins, of Morristown, Ind., fell into a four-gallon jar of water the other evening and was drowned.
Suggestions as to How They Should Be Denlt Y.'ith.
Need That Government .>fetho«M I»e Simplified — Train Robbing Fnkiiown In Canada, Where They H ive a Mounted Pollre System.
Train robberies have been so frequent and have been carried out with
How Siyirt.mrn In the V llromlurk* IJanr- IVrtioii. Advrntur* of • Pnrty Thmt Tried
ry Their U»me. I for lt , SammIt .
Long lake is one of the best feeding, A party of s i s people, led by Guide grounds for deer in the Adirondack^, J u hu Bruner, undertook to make the growing as it does a kind of spice weed asce nt of Mount Shasta a few days ago. and cranberry, of which the deer is A new and better route than the one very fond. 1 he process involved in usually followed was taken, by which hunting deer, says an eastern ex- i t was thought the party could reach
change, is very curious and interesting: the summit on horseback,
in the guides own words, “one must | All vt'ent well until they were within know the natur of the animal to sue- half a mile of the top, where a patch of ceed. It is the custom of this animal snow some 200 yards iu width was en-
such comparative ease during the last ,0 browse on its way down to the water | countered. It was so bard that the five years that railroad and express, ut n 1 i ^ lt for , ! rink 1 ’ 8 ■ ul | he , sli ^ ht
companies have almost given up ini raa ^ e n comln ? thn igh the bru.di bodespair the long and often futile at- trays them to the gv. le, who, with his tempts to catch the bold land pirates. I co mpan ,on seated in a boat. Is slowly The bold dynamite outrage at Wau- aml noise,essl y P a ‘ ldlin » ulo * e t ’ > paea. Wis.. tnc other day is an ex- and nearer and nearer to the locality ampleof the daring and the extremi-1 fr,,m " hence the sound comes. Allies to which the land pirates will go. I thou ? h there are many other noises A dastardly plan was formed and ear- abroad on the night air none can misried out to wreck the train, and then to [ ^ a ‘F® 1 '' s particular one. The guide
holds his breath or emits it in quick
loot the express ear. The lives of the passengers were not for a moment taken into consideration by the robbers. Only by the prompt action of the engineer were the passenger coaches saved from destruction, the engine, baggage and express cars having been derailed. The robbers were unable to blow open the safe, but their diabolical design placed the lives of the passengers and trainmen in great
peril.
During the last five years there have been 111 train robberies. Some of them have been successful, while others have failed because the trainmen have met force with force aud shot down the land pirates before they 7 could do any damage. Thousands of dollars have been carried off. mail has been rifled, and passengers have been terrified or murdered in resisting the robbers. Notwithstanding stringent laws have been passed by most of the states against train robbers, and the penalties named have been severe, train robbing has increased. The hanging of a bandit, who had shot down the man who tried to protect the property of his employ’ers and their clients, has seemed to have had no deterrent effect on the emulators of Jesse James and “Black Bart.” Several train robbers are now serving long terms in penitentiaries for their crimes, but the fact that they have been caught and punished has not proved terrifying to their successors. The Chicago Times-Herald has asked the governors of the states, railroad men and presidents of express companies for their views as to the best way to prevent train robberies and as to whether they thought the federal authorities should be called upon to protect passengers and mail from the bold and unscrupulous marauders. The answers to these queries are both numerous and varied. Nearly every answer urges the strict and immediate enforcement of the law against the perpetrators of train robberies. President Hill, of the Great Northern railroad, says it is impossible to construct cars which will resist successfully the attacks of the land pirates. He claims that the law and its enforcement would prove a terror to the bandits and prevent crimes of this nature. President Valentine, of Wells, Fargo & Co., is afraid nothing can be done until federal methods are simplified. He thinks the federal authorities should take the matter in hand, but with new and quicker machinery. Another correspondent suggests a state mounted police system to crush the land pirate. This is the plan adopted in Canada, where the train robber is now an unknown criminal quantity. Missouri has a death penalty for robbing a train, yet attempts have been just as numerous as before the law was passed. J. C. Fargo, president of the American Express company, holds that train robbers when caught should be hanged or shot on the spot or transferred to the federal courts for trial. Heavy penalties are suggested by all. The escape of train robbers is nearly always due to the sympathy of the residents of the district in which the crime is committed, and the substitution of a federal jury would insure swifter and heavier punishment. PROMISES TO OBEY HIS WIFE. John If. Cook, of Qainoy, Reverses the l sual .Matrimonial Obligation*. Probably the first practical illustration of the fact that the “new woman” has come to stay took place in Justice Allen's court at Quincy, 111., the other clay. John 11. Cook and Alice Hinson were united In marriage by the genial squire, but that officer, to quote himself, “was much flabbergasted” on being requested to reverse the usual or der of the obligations. He read the service all right, but when John meekly promised to “love, honor and obey” Alice the judicial equipoise bade fair to be destroyed. His honor received one more shock to his Presbyterian education when Alice agreed to “cherish John. I he couple had each worn the chains of conjugal felicity once before. It was evident, however, that the fair John had been persuaded by the gallant Alice to take second place in the new life.
gasps. Absolute silence on the part of the inmates of the boat prevails. The night wind blows softly. The stars are reflected in the still water. The u:r is heavy with the fragrance from woods, flowers and trees. The boat drifts or is propelled so gently that it is calculated to deceive one’s own senses as to whether, after all, it is not all a dream. The occasional sound of the paddle sounds like the ripple of water or the lapping of the waves against the shore, when suddenly another and unmistakable crash is heard close at hand. The cap is off the jack lantern, instantly a search-light is thrown over the lake and adjacent wooded shore. Two bright eyes are seen, a terrified whistling is heard, aud the deer starts to run, but it is too late; a whiz and bang and a tine four-yenr-old buck falls to the ground. The tense straining of every muscle and nerve is relieved and followed by the wildest excitement and commotion as the boat is hastily paddled to shore.
CHECK ON TOBACCO.
In .Some Grriuan Town* the Weed I* Prohibited on the Street*. The consumption of tobacco of all kinds in France, according to recently compiled statistics, is nearly one hundred and twenty-five million pounds per 3'ear, says the Milwaukee Wisconsin. An analysis of the figures shows that the people of northern France use nearly four times as much per capita as those in the southern provinces. Almost every country of Europe, however, consumes more smoking tobacco in proportion to its population than does France. This is especially th 1 case with Germany. In many small German towns smoking iu the streets is forbidden. Less than fifty years ago if a man ventured on the streets off Berlin with a cigar in his mouth he would be liablt* to arrest. The same provision existed until 1848 in Vienna, thougli the law was not observed by the populace. The town of Broeek, in Holland, which is said to be the cleanest city in the world, has long forbidden the people within its walls to smoke after sunset In the streets unless with a covered pipe, “in order that the cinders may not be blown about.” Smoking with an uncovered pipe in German or Austrian forests is an offense that is rigorously punished, and, as a result of this regulation, forest fires are rare in those countries.
A JUMBO LOBSTER.
Monster, Welshlnz 84 1-8 Pound*, Caught Off Connecticut. James P. Clark, of Niantic, caught a lobster the other day which, judging from the size, must be the ancestor of all the lobsters, big and little, in the sound, says the Hartford Courant. It weighed 21'., pounds. The lobster was brought to this city by Fred U. Loydon, and it was an object of much curiosity as it wiggled its immense claws around at Flynn’s market. It measured 3 feet fl Inches from the end of the claw to the tip of the tail. This is undoubtedly the largest lobster ever brought to Hartford, and no one who has seen it recalls ever having seen one so large as this anywhere. The River Rhine. Above Mannheim the Rhine is to be made navigable as far as Strassburg. As a canal will be inadequate, important changes must be made in the river bed.
SUNLIGHT AND COLORS. Kcmarksiblc Change* Produced by Manipulation. Every one knows the danger of mistakes in attempting to select colored articles in artificial light. Only the white light of the sun, containing all the elements of color known to us, can be trusted in such cases to reveal the actual hues possessed by the objects under examination. Some interesting scientific experiments on the effect of light in revealing or concealing color were lately made by Dr. H. \V. Vogel, the distinguished physicist and astronomer in Berlin. Starting with the fact that in a photographic “dark room,” filled with ruby colored light, bright scarlet cloth appears white, it was shown that when uo white light whatever is admitted to a dark room, the power of the eye to distinguish colors is temporarily lost, and all objects appear of various shades of white and black. Bj 7 mingling blue or green with red light, the colors of objects can be made to undergo remarkable changes. The quantity of light alone also affects the appearance of Color, parliculai i/‘certain tints of blue and violet, for which reason, even iu the absence of artificial lights, a person purchasing colored goods In a dark store must carry them to the door or window, where a strong illumination can ho obtained, in order to make certain of the precise shade.
sharp corks on the shoes of the horses, specially provided for the trip, would not hold. However, by careful work, the animals succeeded in getting 25 or 30 yards up the si ip per 3- surface, when one ridden b3 7 Mrs. C. A. Smith,
of Sisson, slipped and fell.
Mr. Bruner, the guide, caught Mrs. Smith as the animal went down, aud thus saved her from a horrible death. The horse and Mr. Smith, who was leading it, slid aud rolled down the mountain together. Mr. Smith managed to check himself before going very far, but the horse went rolling and tumbling down the steep decline, finally falling over a cliff on jagged rocks, which crushed him into a shape-
less mass.
This accident, together with a hard wind and blinding snowstorm, so discouraged the climbers that they turned back down the mountain.
FERRIS WHEEL READY.
Famous World's Fair Attraction Again In 1*0*1(1011 in C hicago. The big 1 Ferris wheel which was #ne of the great features of the Midway is once more iu operation in Chicago on the north side of the cit3*. The grounds around the wheel are in an unfinished state. It is intended to erect a summer opera pavilion just north of the wheel and around the machinery are located restaurants aud promenades. In the southwest corner of the grounds will bo a dining hall and cafe. The grounds will be beautified by 10,000 roses, twent3 7 -eight small trees and other shrubs, and 13,000 electric lights. An orchestra of thirt3 7 pieces will discourse music and the opera pavilion will have an English opera Compaq 7 for an attraction. It is the intention to make the whole a single admission fee, and giving the visitors as much of a ride as they want. After paying at the gate a person can attend the opera, ride an hour, get out of the wheel, diue at the restaurant, and then go back and ride, all for one price of admission, with the exception of the dinner, of course. The grounds will be transformed into a park and efforts will be made to make wheel parties a fad among the fashionable people next year, and elegantly furnished diningrooms will be one of the attractions.
BURIED FOUR TIMES.
Scramble for the Honor of Interring a Gc’orglan’a Corpse. Henry Jenkins, a well-to-do farmer in the northern part of Georgia, died a few days ago and was duly buried. Jenkins was at the time of his death living with his second wife, his first, from whom he was divorced, living a few miles awa3 7 . The first wife was not satisfied with the plac« of interment and had Jenkins’ body taken up and reinterred at another church. About Ibis time a secret order to which Jenkins had belonged decided that he should lie in its grounds, and accordingly raised the remains and had a funeral of its own. Both the wives were indignant at this interference, and for the fourtli time the corpse was lifted. The first wife got it put in a wagon and kept it on the move to elude the second wife and the fraternal society. The whites of the district at this juncture interfered, sat's the Savannah News, and buried the body for sanitary reasons, and announced that it must stay buried.
A MINIATURE WORLD.
Wonderful Ae'.ilevement of Four French Scientists—51 ode 1 of the Earth. Four leading French scientists—Villard, Cotard, Se3 7 rig and Tissandler— have succeeded in making a wonderful model of the earth, says the Baltimore Herald. It is a huge sphere, 42,feet in diameter, and has painted upon its outside all details of the earth’s geography. At Baris, where the pygmy world is being exhibited, an iron and glass dome lias been erected over the globe. The building is eight-sided, and is well provided with elevators and stairways, which make it an easy task for the visitor to examine “all parts of the world.” The globe weighs eighty tons, but is so hi* i -y LahuiCtd Inal it cun easily be rotated by a small hand wheel. The entire surface area is 525 feet, which is sufficient to exhibit all tAe mountains, rivers, islands and cities, evijn to the principal thoroughfares of the latter. ARTERIES TURNED TO CONE.
The old story of Prometheus is a parable, •n allegory. Prometheus was on terms of intimacy with the gods. From them he stole fire, and gave it to men. For this sin he was bound to the rocks of Mount Caucasus, and vultures were set upon him. They only ate his liver. This grew again as fast as it was pecked away. Arc his sufferings to l>e imagined ? Yes, and realizedTake a modern interpretation of the parable There is no cooking without fire. In cooking and eating the mischief lies. The stomach is overtasked, the bowels become clogged, they cannot dispose of the food that is given them. The impurities back up on the liver. Then come the vultures. The sufferings from an outside, visible hurt, are a mere pin-scratch to the torments | of a diseased liver. . '| Rut, modems are ahead of the ancients. There is a sequel to the old story. Dr. Pierce is the author. His "Golden Medical Discovery ’’ is more than equal to the vultures of dyspepsia and its kindred diseases. Every atom of the “ Discovery ” is an active agent against disease. It flies like a ferret, wherever it is sent. It is as sure as the needle of the compass. There is no more need of suffering from dyspepsia than there is of hanging one's self. Mr W Koc.ers, of 507 Grayson St., Louisville, Ky. has this to say for himself aud the "Golden Medical Discovery ”: " I was a dyspeptic. I had not had a comfortable night in six year*. I have taken three liottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. I am now fifty years old. I feel thirty years younger." Yours truly.
Send at cents In one-cent stamps to Dr. R V. Pierce, lluffalo N 7 . Y , and get Dr Pierce's Medical Adviser. It is a book of looS pages, profusely illustrated. It will give you complete knowledge of the human system in plain words. Order a sack of Vandalia Mills ‘Best High Grade Flour,” and give it a trial; none other as good. Sold in cotton sacks. 31tf
GatuhLig la Sydney.
Public attention has latel3 7 been called in S3 7 dne3 7 to the serious increase of gambling in that cit3 7 . The local inspector genprnl of police has ronde a report on the subject, in which he sa3 7 s that the evil is largely on the increase and that a considerable number of the men trafficking in it are making large fortunes at the cost of their victims. In twen‘3 7 months there have been four hundred convictions for gambling, and tines of various amounts have been imposed, but the traffic goes on flourishing in such a way as to uemonstrate that the tines ore uttcr)3 7 futile as deterrents, and that the3 7 bear but a small
proportion to the profits. When the Summerfield, Ala., an infant 0 months
Mystery Touching J. C. Wilson's Sudden
Death I* Cleared I p.
It has been learned that the sudden death of J. C. Wilson, receiver of the Santa Fo. at New York, which m3’stified even his most intimate friends, was caused by ossification of the arteries. This was discovered by- an examination made by physicians while the body was on the way west for burial. It lias also been learned that Mr. Wilson was informed more than two years ago by a physician, while he was in New York, that his arteries ultimately
would ossify and cause death. 8tnn$f to Death by Hornets.
On the Martinville plantation near
last mail left arrangements were being made for calling a public meeting to
consider the subject.
Kafage Spanish Cattle.
Cows held up a railroad train in Estremadura, Spain, a few day’s ago. The engine ran a hull down, cutting him in two, and then could not be started.
While the trainmen and passengers I minutes after the rescue,
were trying to help the engineer, the rest of the herd attacked them; they had to take shelter in the cars, and
old met with a horrible death the other day. Its sister was wheeling it through the woods in a baby buggy, and unwittingly rolled it against a hornets’ nest. The insects covered both children, and the elder ran, leaving the baby 7 to its fate. It was rescued by two men five minutes later. The hornets were still stinging it. Death followed in a few
The man who p:iy as he goes finds it necssary tu stay at home a good deal. J There seems to be enough revolutions to gol round. The average man finds his career ready m tde. It is better to borrow trouble than to buy it The body must be well nourished now, to prevent sickness. If your appetite is poor take Hood's Sarsaparilla, Afier victory strap the helmet tighter.—Japanese. To invigoiate and beautify the hair, use Hall’s Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer. There are just as many Democrats in the country ns there ever were and more than as many, for the majority of the people hold the great cardinal principles of the party, and many Republicans are so in name only. The Democrats have been and still are industriously quarreling amongst themselves over some point upon which they fail to agree, and the result is the absolute destruction of a solid organization. The people can easily understand this, as we have with us at the presnt time the foundation of a petty quarrel ar^/ defeat unless the members of the party each yield something and get together on general principles and eave out the element of persona preferment and position. The eled tions also show that the Populists have made no material gains. They 1 remain a side issue, like the Prohibi- V tionists, and other third party attempts, and the Democrats and Republicans remain to make the great struggle. II the Democrats will get together and work in harmony they can win next year.—Independence Sentinab AMBITIOUS^ WOMEN”"< MAKE HEROES OF MEN". She Will Brave Anything for the Man She Loves*
[SPECIAL TO OUE LAKY READERS.} When an ambitious woman loves a man she will spur him to heroic efforts. She will dare with him the rigors of the frozen North, and encouragehim in daring dangers almost unsurmount-
able.
Women
are by nature ambitious according to
■""phy-
sical and
mental
strength. Hope ami ambition eome with perfect health, but vanish before sickness and despair. American women are, unfortunately, particularly subject to those painful female diseases that are the cause of so much hopelessness and misery. Could all women realize' the undeniable fact that they suffer unnecessarily, how much brighter life would be! Lydia E. Pinkham devoted her life to the study of temaie diseases and their entitle ; and she discovered in the Vegetable Compound an absolute remedy. It succeeds In removing the cause of the
trouble.
Women who rely more upon their own natural common-sense, rather than on the theories of their physicians, write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., and are soon restored to health. Here is a living example: “Four
months ago I was unable to stand on my feet. I had falling of the womb, kidney trouble, and inflammation Of the bladder; the backache and bearing-
M*lsture in a Man'll Makp-Vp*
A British scientist recently made the
were kept there till night, when th* i £**''*"£
herd went off. j ccmp0Sl . d of moisture<
down pains
were dreadful. My physician could give tt.C I*.: *. ,i, [. iin:ini sniff, Viy Lytxux Tinklmm's Vegetable Compound. Well, I did. Oh, if every suffering woman would do the same, they would be cured, cured absolutely and entirely, as I am!” Mrs. Wm. M. Morey, 20 ^ fjeymour at., Pittsfield, Mass.
|
