Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 36, Number 127, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 November 1904 — MAN IN THE CABOOSE [ARTICLE]

MAN IN THE CABOOSE

JACK EUMSEY’S SEOEET FOE' SEGUEING SLEEP. A Missouri Pacific Railroad Conductor Tells How Ho Prevents the Wreck of His Nerves. A great deal of fatigue and anxiety is housed up in the little red box that swings at the tail end of every freight train and shares in every jolt of the string qf heavy cars that precedes it on the rails. The men in it are good, hearty fellows who bear cheerfully the hazards connected with the great problem of transportation. They are astir night and day on a vast network of lines and the sympathies of tens of thousands of peaceful little homes go with them, on their runs. The groat public must have its supplies and these are the men who must get them through at the cost even of their lives.

Mr. Jack Ramsey, of Council Grove, Kansas, is au energetic, frank, gooduatured member of this brotherhood and he bears a load of worries that makes it necessary for him to seek help to keep his excited nerves from wearing him out. He says: “ What troubled mo most was my inability to get sleep when the chance came and a most irritating sensitiveness of my whole nervous system, growing out of tho irregularities and anxieties connected with uiydaily work. Throe or four years agoaclerlc iu the superintendent’s office of tho Missouri Pacific, at Osawatoinic, advised me to use Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Palo People. I acted on Lis advice and got help right away. So I keep them on hand all the time and whenever tho strain begins to tell on me 1 take a few doses. They quiet down my excited nerves and make it possible for me to Bleep just like a child. They are mighty good medicine for a railroad man. That is the absolute truth, as far as my experience goes, and I am right glad to reoommend them.” Dr.Williams’Pink Pills for Pale People aro unlike other medicines because they act directly on the blood and nerves. They are a positive cure for all diseases arising frt>m impoverished blood or sluittered nerves. They aro sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price, fifty cents a box, or six boxes for two dollars and fifty ceuts, by addressing Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y