The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 May 1908 — Page 3
(MATURE AND A WOMAN’S WORK S' LYDIA K- WIMKHAIYI Mature and a woman’s workj combined have produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills the world has ever known. In .the good old-fashioned days of . our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and or the,-field to cure disease and mittgate suffering. The Indians oy/ohr .WestSm Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and c ire di?ease's that baffle skilled physicians who have spent years in the study of drugs. i : From the roots and hetbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women ■ of the world a reijiedy for their peculiar ills, more potent and efficacious than any combination of dri igs. Lydia E. Pinkham’s iVegetable ’ Compound is now recognized as the ' standard remedy for woman’s il s. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515N.C.’ St., Louisiana, Mo., writfes: i “Complete restoration 1 to heilth means so much to me that for the.(ake of other suffering- women I am willingto make my troubles) p.ublic. “ For twelve years I had) been. su fferitg with the worst forms of female ills. During that time I had eleven diffe rept ' physicians without help. No tongue can tell what I buffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two .years ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham'for advice. I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkhamf’s advice restored health <and I strength. -'lt-'.-i's; worth mountains of gold; to suffering women,” What Lydia E. Pinkham’s V egotable Compound did fur Mrs.. Muff, it will do for other sutfejring women. — --
JIFAIWISFRi
What a Settler Can Secure in . WESTERN CANADA 160 Acres Grain-Growing Land FREE. 20 to 40 Bushels Wheat to the Acre; 40 to 90 Bushels Oats to the [Acre* | 35 to 50 Bushels Barley to the Acre. Timber for -Fencing and Buildings FRE2. Good Laws with Low Taxation. Splendid Railroad Facilities And Low Raltea. Schools and Churches C<jnve{nient. ? ° Satisfactory Markets for all productions. . Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chances for Profitable Investments. • Some of thelchdicest grain-producingr lands In Saskatchewan and Alberta riiiy now'be acquired in these most healthful and sections tinder the / Revised taeslead Regulations ■ by which entry may be ma’dstjy proxy (or, certain conditions), by the father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of intendinglhomesteader. Entry fee in each cage is JIOtCO. ' Forpainphlet. "Last West,” particulars aS to rates't c-ies. best time to go and where to locate, • W. D.' Scott, SlipsrinUndent of Immigration, Ottawa, CStiada, or W. H. Rogers, yd- Floo?' Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis,; Ind., ! and H. M. Williams,-Room 20, Law Building, Ohio, Authorized-Government Agents, rieafie say. where you saw this advertisement. TOILETANTBEPTIC Keeps the breath, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations /. alone cannot do. A __ germicidal, dis/fft- ■ > fecting and deodorizing toilet requisite 1 oiMaaeptional ex0 and econ- §I y oRT Invaluable \ f> Wamod eyes, 1 tfeiccffindjiasal and ;[] ilerine catarrh. At i ■ asfSjbi ■ L fee tfrug and toilet ILf aB fed) stores, 50 cents, or ,1 ijctf by mail postpaid. r (arge Trial Sample ®illgg|gZ w)th "health and BEAUTY” book bent free THE PAXTON TOILET CO, Boston, Mass. Insure your health SIOMFORT, >tormy days f wearing a ■ z «flsw# S) SUCKER Clean - Light Durable Guaranteed Waterproof *302 Everywhere x BO ST art. V 3 A irW womvo cm GARFIELD DIGESTIVE TABLETS From your druggist, or the GARFIELD TEA CO., Brooklyn, N. Y.. 25c per bottle.
FAMILY'S SKIN TROUBLES. Eczema, Heat Rash, and Scalp Affection* Afflict Different Member*, ■l. but Cnticura Cnrei Them. “My wife had eczema for five or six ; years. It was on her face, aud would come and go. We thought we would . give the Cuticura Remedies a trial. We, ' did jso and. she has never had a sign of eczema for four years. I myself used. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oiptim'nt ' some time ago for falling hair. I now have a very heavy head of hair, , We used Cuticura Remedies for our baby, ; who was nearly bald when young. She , yery nice hair now. She Is very fleshy,® and we ha’d so lunch trouble with heat that we would bathe her With'Cuticura Soap and then apply Cuticura' Ointment, it would dry the beat tip'so much quiclierThan*ai).vthing else. .Mr. 11. B. Springniire. 823 So. - ; Capitol Street, lowa City, la., July 16, 1005, and Sept. 46, 1906.” Quick Reflex Action. Sho’.-kcd and Grieved Parent—Tommy, where clilf you get those beautiful little spotted r eggs?[ You have been robbing some bird's''nest, you wicked boy! Tommy—l’m goih' to # set the old hen on V' 'mamma, and raise some pretty little fiirds, so you can put, some more of ’em on your hat.—Chicago Tribune. In n Plnth, Use Allen’s Foot-Eane. A powder to shake into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures' Corns. Bunions, Swollen,. Sore, 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 S. Olmsted, lx; Rcy. N. Y. Survival of the Unfltteat. Science at' last had evolved the boneless shad., “Just what I’ve been waiting .for,” said the German carp; Subsequent i events showed that there wasn’t room for both, and the boneless shad passed 'into history. Don’t Try Fncertnin Recipes. It is entirely, unnecessary to experiment .with this, t-bajt and the other recipe, Get 1 . froth .your. grbeeY. for 10 cents, a package Os i ‘Oil Nl’ lE’' T’l'Ci’? rat ion—Lemon, Chocolate or I'ustard-lfor. ihltking pies that are sure ■„o be good.-' I’uy up by.. D-Zerta Food Co,. Iseil a..Counter Irritant. •'Baldwin, you've been drinking !” \ “1 don't show'->it. half as'much as you do. Rambo.” - f ' .“That's because you sobered yourself by getting your safe opbn. It took you half an hour to work ’ the cotribimi'ion. I've been watching you, you glaring old fraud!” j |, ' ■* Good Hqpsekeepers 1 Use the Best. ' ' : T :i i's'why i they use Red Cross Ball Blue. At leading grcieers, 5 cents. Oldest Weather Alan. Dennis Horigan, who' is connected ’witl the United States naval observatory. is perhaps the oldest welither man in the United. States, says a Washirfgtbn dispatch to the New York Sun. He has been keepiiig tab on the weather '. for fifty-two years. , Long before the weather bureau,was established Mr Horigan was making observatfeft at the observatory nigh* and day every three, hours, noting the tenipcrature, yhe barometric 'pressure, J the nature of the cloudsr and the direction of the wind. Appointed Under the tldministratiou of President Buchanan, in 1857, he'has been 1 in the service ever slnce.- i ' / ' , lie is now old. yet in fjiir health, considering his longjjervice aqd the fact that- it inejudefliiight work. He came from the old-country in .Jtlio ’sos, and settled in Ge<#rgeM»wn, then the most important part of the,.District of. Columbia. ■ . ’le was 1 at tjie old observatory in when ('apt. M. F. Murry left to the south in tile civil war. Ib- • has served with many, naval officers’ ■and scientists, among them Commander .Maury. Capt, Gifi’3. Admirals Davis, Sa nils. lirKßferS, Rowan, Shtf' ’ It. Franklin, Belknap. Pythian. -McNair,. C. «11. Davis and Chester, and Prof. Hall. Newpoint). Markhess, - Eastman, .Prlsby and Skinner. Foreign and Domestic. His Wife (reading)—l see they had a bread riot in Spaiij recently. Iler Husband—Yes; and we’ll have one at honyo soon,if there isn’t jan improvement in your biscuits. FRIENDS HELP ■ St. Paul Payk Incident, “After drinking coffee for breakfast I always felt languid and dull, haying no ambition to get to my morning- duties. 'i'heir in about an hour or so a weak, nervous derangement of the heart and Stomach-would, come over me with such force I frequently have to lie down. » . “At other times I had sewre headaches; stpmach finally became affected- • an 1 so impaired that I had serious chronic dyspepsia and constipa-. ■ticn. A lady, for many years State President ,of the W. C. T. U., told me she Jiad been greatly benefited by quitting coffee, and using Postu'm Food Coffee; she .was troubled for years with asthma. She said it wms-fflo cross -io qfiit coffee when she foun|l she could have as delicious an article as Postum. “Anotlier lady, who had* been troubled with chronic dyspepsb't for years, 1 found immediate relief on ceasing coffee and beginning Postum twice a day. She was wholly cured. Still another friend told me that Postum Food Coffee was a Godsend to her, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking on Postum. “So many such cases came to my u* tice that I concluded coffee hvas the cause of my trouble and I quit and took up Postum. I am more than pleased to say that my days of trouble hav s e disappeared. I am well hnd happy.” “There's a Reason.” Read "The Road to VVellvfilp,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, aud full of 1 human interest. * f
REVIEW OF INDIANA I i ----- —5l
Dick Aiken shot and killed Wesley Wallace near New Harmony several days ago. Wallace had offended Aiken’ wife. Mrs. William Meglemer, of Bedford, attempted, to throw a strange black cat from her home recently. Her right shoulder was dislocated, .... ‘ Conrad Haase, aged 81 years, furniture and mattress manufacturer at Evansville for fifty jyears, is dead: He was formerly a resident of Cincinnati. ■ Fire in the Holliday flouring-mill at Greentown resulted in a loss of §15,000 with $7,500 insurance. The fire ib believed to have been causey hithOr by tramps sleeping in the a spark from,a Clover Leaf locomotive. . Ozro Reynolds, charged wj/h receiving stolen ..goods when- IjZ. accepted money from Grovbr Blake, after Blake had murdered hih mother,' was found guilty by-the. jury in the Circuit Court at Ahdersoi*> The jury was out all night. 1 * | The bpdy .of Thbmas Huckelberry. of Hawes,vflle. Ky., w-howas drowned at Evansville last January when he fell front ‘a wharf boat, has just been found In the river several miles below; the city. The body was identifieo. by means of his watch. Lawrence Happe, the 9-year-old son of William Happe, of Fort Wayne, is dead of lockjaw. On Good Friday he lost both legs- under a Nickel Plate freight train, white-playing along the tracks. He seemed to be recofering until a change came for the worse. • Priding idtself on its reputation for> patriotism and hospitality, and bent on maintaining that reputatioj), Kokomo is Sparing neither time nor mofley in the preparations it is making- for tlu“ twenty-ninth annual, .encampment of the Department of Indiana, Gfjaud Army of the Republic, which is to be held ihCre .May 19, 20 and 21. ; ' j Henry.'Crofoot,. one of the 4’eulthiest. farmers in the State, died at his home near Mishawaka. He was 70 yeafcs old. I [is death is largely^ attributed to mental Suffenng growing out ! incident b. which he was swin-) died out of SIO,OOO in gold fiy two 1 sharpers, and the severe cross-examin-) ation to' which he was, subjected when I the case reached the courts. ) Harry Dalton,'l9 year sold. ”-as ar- ■ rested at Princeton several da. 3 ago 1 on a charge of making a falsO appli-,) cation for whisky at a local drug store. ! He signed an application for |i. quart; of-whisky, saying that he desired it | for medicinal purposes, and then took ) it, and, with several other b®’s, got l drunk on it. Daltop pleaded guilty,) and Maior Cushman’ withheld sentence i until .after the trial of'|he druggist’s I clerk. The minimum fine for) the offense is $25. j ) State Food Inspector Oweiis who. with Dr? the inspector at Terre Haute,’ Uas been “Visiting dairies i for two weeks', reports an alariming in- j stance of sickness of a nujuber of ) children,r whose milk,- from the. sdme dairy, ; contained a. considerable per cent., of pus bacteria. A hypodermic? injectidn of- the milk was administered) to. a rat,-and within forty-elgbt hours I the animal had an abscess, from the j effects of wfiich it. died. Wha)t the result to, the children would) have been htrfc they continued, using itlie- milk is <i. she dealer who supplied the milk tiAS been put out of business for all time to comeJ ?Th<;,d‘ i-..'tidaur of M Lo.vry Noel Thbiaas, Posey County’s oldest citizen, who recently; died in Mt. Vergon. pre probably as widely scattered through Indiana as.the descendants of any bthei)- woman of her ag^riiinety-■ two years, She was of ten children. , four of whom! survive. Therel are nineteen living grandchildren tod twenty’ great-grandchildren. One qf the children is Mrs. A. M. De.Soucnet, ’of Indianapolis. M|.-s. Thomas saw, this country' develop Trom a wilderness, and was able unjtil within a short time of her .death ft. talk entertainingly of the early pioneer days. Her children and'grandchildl-en relate manY interesting incidents) of her career. . , An ° autopsy on the body pf Robert Alexander Adamson, of Elwood, who died of stomach trouble, revealed peculiar conditions. For two years Adamson had complained,of hi|> stomach, but always insisted that the pain was in the region of the intestines. The autopsy disclosed that the stomach had Slipped out of place and was ten inches below its normal position, covering the small intestines. While th)e average man's stomach holds but three pints, it was found that Adamson’s was four times .as large, holding a gallon and a half. During his life Adamson was unaple to satisfy his appetjfte ; eating more than two ordinary men did at a meal, ’ yet he was of spare) build, JMs food apparently doing him little good. Herbert H. Edwards, prominent Masonjillepublican politician a)hd relative of Senator John H. Edwards, fell from a sCconu-story window at his home in Bedford, dying shortly after the accident. ■■■ . ■ . ''■")) Coke is being made frejim Indiana coal two miles from Lintdn, in coke ovens of the latest and improved beehive type. It sounds strange to heai’ this statement made after it has been argued for all these ihany years that Indiana coal would not make coke. I ’ N : a.:. -i*. .
Mrs. August Pieleimier was seriously ■ injured in a runaway accident at Bicknell. The corner stone of Richmond’s new SIOO,OOO Y. M. C- A. building will be laid early in May. -.JThe home of Wade, near Columbus, was burned; loss about $2,500; partly insured. - Charles Davis, of Milton,’ caught a black bass in Whitewater that was 19% inches long, 6 inches wide and weighed four pounds. , John Lanning,' an employe of the Portland Tile and Hollow Block Works in Portland, was seriously injured by falling ten feet on a pile of tile. Miami County is to have a fair the ) coming summer: A stock company I has been organized at Converse, with I T. Hatfield as president of the organization. 3 While playing wiht a loaded revol-' ver, George Doolittle, a boy of 16, liv- : ing in Muncie, accidentally shot his brother Floyd, 17, in the right ankle, causing an ugly wound. . Jess Smith was fatally injured during the horse show at Cynthiana. He attempted to cross the street in front of a number »f horses, > and was knocked down, and run over. Mrs. John Burris,, of Mooresville, wife of a motorman bn the Indianapolis & .Martinsville electric line, committed suicide by hanging. She was ' the mother of seven children. Mrs. Mary Johnson, 69 years'old, , died at the home of* her son, Frank. Johnson, 'in Jasonville last week of strangulation, caused by enlargement of the. muscles of the throat. Mrs. Johnson was in apparent good health otherwise, and she was rocking her little grandchild when death seized her. She was a pioneer of Greene County. - Ozro Mason, of Urbana, has filed s'uit at Wabasly against the F.t. Wayne & Wabash Valley Traction -Company ..for $20,000. damages, the result of an accident several months ago, at which. ,j time a car struck a buggy in which -1 the. plaintiff and Miss Catherine Frush- ! our were seated, killing the young | woman. Mason hovered between life 1 and death for several weeks, ) Miss Margaret Vanati, . <if Milton, I after the death of her parents thirty-' I six years agba stored her household.. : gbods. Recently she determined- to go ' to housekeeping, and upon opening the 1 boxes for the first time ih the years I named, the bed clothing was found ; in excellent condition,- save that one quilt had been slightlw nibbled by mice 1 and one blanket had-been disturbed by ) moth. i Indiana made a record in divorce sta- ) tistics in 1907, as shown by informaj tion gathered by the Indiana Bureau ) of Statistics, while cupid was not so I biisy as during the previous year. The ) number of divorces granted in 1907 was 3,980. The number granted in 11906 was 3,669; in 1905, -3,885 and in" 1904, 3,44.9. On the other hand there, I were only 28,702 marriages in 1907, .this being 86 .less than- the number, for 1906. Although a gale was blowing, a bucket brigade at Yorktown saved that, place from destruction by fire last : week. Every able-bodied man in. town ..) was 1 pressed into service. The mis- ! chief started in Henry Bitser’s restaurant. The restaurant building and ■ contents were destroyed, ! causing a - Joss of $1,500. Nich.olas Donoman's ■ home caught fire several time/, -and I SO did other buildings, but. the /bucket brigade was eqfial to the emergency. ' Perry C. Farmer, 71 years old, near Middletown, while driving to Newcastle to pay taxes) was thrown from his buggy in a runaway accident, his . horse becoming frightened at an auto- ; mobile, and he was severely bruised. 1 Repairs were made and he continued I his journey. Two hours later' while in I the city, Mr. Farmer was struck by ) another runaway horse attached to A I buggy, the vehicle passing over his ) body. He was again badly cut and bruised, but no bones were broken. After paying his taxes he started homeward, convinced that he had had a strenuous day. 4- . ' ’ The neighborhood. known as Stony Quarry Mills, eight miles south of Newcastle, enjoys the distinction of what ' is now a novelty, a flowing gas well, j Despite the fact that' gas wells by tlie score all over the cqunty have either died entirely or else diminished : their’ flow to almost nothing, the gas v/ell as the Stony Quarry Mills continues to work. t It is among the earliest wells drilled in Henry County, having been put. down in 1889. It is still satisfactory service, furnishing fuel for a dozen families in the neighborhood. There is not another well in the. county, drilled two-thirds that jnany years, still doing business. All Have petered out. 1 Daisy Mdrtin, 13 yeats Id, was disfigured for life-at her hon j near Shelbyville. A horse kicked her in the face. Her nose was almc t torn from the face and both lips w« e cut and a tooth knocked, out. The smallest child evei born in. the vicinity'of Jasper edme re ently to Mr. and Mrs. Chris Frank, of reland. The little one weighed only two pounds with clothing on. It is a: ;althy child. The father and mother re mediumsized people.
gyrupjfigs duenna I Cleanses the System EffectDispels Colds and Headaches due to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts truly as L». <7 _ J/ axaiive. ~ Best and Chud-reji-younhand Old. *lc» get its Beneficial Ejects Always huy the Genuine uhich has' ihe •full name qf the Com‘"''CALIFORNIA Rg Syrup Co. ’ ! by vvnom it is manufactured, printed on the ; front of eve™ package. SOLD BYALL LEADING DRUGGISTS. , one size only, regular price 50<per bottle. Ever*? tiling; Was Work. On a warm Tuesday afternoon in , February—these are such in New 11 York—after “Polly of the qircus” had ) ( been at the Liberty Theater nearly two ) ( .months, Frederick Thompson, detecting some carelessness .'in the work of two , of his called a rehearsal. The | company, frightened into unwonted) alertness and activity, had reached the ], end of the second act when Mabel ,Tal- ', laferro, the star, declared that slw had '■ been -working too hard, and was/going ) ( to rest for a while. ‘ “Working hard!” exclaimed her hus- , band and manager. “Mrs. Thompson, , do'you know what work is?” ri r “I certainly do,” replied th» wee act-', ress icily, “everything is work.” . “Don’t jest,” said the manager. “Re- ) member that you are Miss Taliaferro in the theater, and not Mrs. Thonip- ■ -son.” ■ ' ■ ■"'■-■■ ■ . • j “Everything is work,” said the little ■ lady. ■ I “Is This work?” exclaimed Mr. j Thompson, pounding the chair on I which he was seated, “Yes. it’s wood work,”.said his wife. She rested; —Siicce.-’s.. Magazine. STATfi OF Onio, CitY of Toleoo, | Lucas County. . > f Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the tirm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business, in the City of Toledo, County and State-aforesaid, and -that saidfirm Will pay the sum of ONE IICNIDRED 'DOLLARS, for each and every ease of .Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use 'of Hall’s. Catarrh Cdre. FRANK J. QJIENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence,' this 6th day of December, A. 1). ( 18S6. k (Seal.) A."w. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall’s'Catarrh Cure is taken internally,' and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for. testimo-' nials free. ' ‘ ; F. J. CHENEY.& CO.,- Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. He Wa» Done—But Did Not Stop. A longwiudejl member of the Massachusetts legislature was delivering an address in the ta/wn hall of a village near Boston. An old ScotchWian, after listening for sometime, aro.y and left . ' the hall. One of his countrymen, who was waiting at the door with a hack to drive the speaker to the station, asked: “Is he done yet, Sandy?” “Aye,” Sandy replied, “he’s ilon@ lang ago, but he will ’|.nostdp.” One of the great faults of Americans ■ is that they talk too much and think too littlft. v Many people fear that if they do not talk they will be thought foolish or ill-mannered, sp they.kcAp jabbering away whether they say anything or not.-—Success Magazine. - / Zoological Post Cards—Second Sepses. If you are .a collector dr dealer of postal cards,, you will be interested-in an attractive set of eight cardszjnst publishedi showing the most valuable wild animals in the Ringling Bros.’ Menagerie, a set will Tie mafied you for 16<y. ..Special prices in lojs-rio dealers. There is a greht oppppttmity to make money in selling to collectors, or the general public. Address The Evening Wisconsin Co., Post Card JJep’t., Milwaukee. Wis. Uncle Henry. “Uncle Henry, what is a sociologist? “A’ sociologist, my boy, is a person who can inspect a garbage can and find enough material'in it for a long lecture on the, needs of society. If You Have Common Sore Eyes, if lines blur or run together, ‘ you need S PETTIT’S EYE SALVE, 25c. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Father to the Man. The ri an who sighs for the bygone day Whe- a barefoot boy he ran 'ls the saV’e old boy who used to say: “Gee, I wish I was a man. Don’t spoil- Your Clothes. Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white as snow. 2’l grocers, o cents a package- - L——-— A Perverted Bromidlum. “Oh, girls,” exdi'imed the gushing maiden on the crP'vded street car, “I’ve just washed; my ,hair and I can’t do a thing with Tt!” Just theri the car gave a lurch hnd sp“- shrieked as ; the man in front of her stepped on her ; fbot. .1 “Beg pardon,” muttered tE e straphanger who had done t>ie step- j ping. “You see,/I’ve just washed jpy feet and I can’t do a thing with file. ll -” ■—Judge. CASTOR IA z For Infants and Children. The Kind Yau Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of
PUTNAM FADBrLE8■ S DYES _. ...J. roiors than any ether dye. One lOcPeckage colors tl fibers. They dye In cold waler betterthan any olher dye. Too can dye Write JoX. t" Dye.Meech and Mix C ors. MOJ'i'ROE CO., Quincy. Illinois
THE. j They Are Not E;*nily ■ Disturbed! While Saying Their i*raypr?. When sayfng bls prayers tie true Mussulman is not easily disturbed. Ilans Doering.. in ‘his .account/ of his travels in Chip.ese Turkestlln, writes: “It is an interesting sight tc - see a Mussulman perform his devotions. . Through the piece of glass in my paper window, I saw the interpreter spread his carpet in' front of his house just opposite the ptte in which-I was living. His wife ahdrthild sat quite ■ close to him talking loudly wi h some visitors, bfit this' did not in tae least' disturb the old-ma nat his devo idps. “In spite of the noise the melodious chanting of -the Koran was cm - audible. The Worshiper kotowed several times-and cried. ‘Allah.,-AllahV Allah!’ then for awhile .stood 1 reverentially' clasping hjs hands : !crosswise -tippa, his breast, after which he joiiiet’J in the conversation. “ifis wife then ivent through thte same performance, doing exuptly the same as her husbdnd.. This they do every hiorning anti evening ' whether there are friends with them of not.”King; Maunel a Sailoi*. Manuel 11.. the young kins* of Portugal, has been educated glpiost entirely under the direction o.f'tis mother, Queen Amaliaj During -the first ten years of his life he had absolutely no instructor except, the qucteiip Says the New York Sun; ■When the lad was ten the Marquis Lietao was ap]x»inted to teach him mathematics, the qtieen cohtiliulng his training in languages ami I terature. Three years ago Jie was appointed a cadet in the Portuguese navi and divided his tiine bejtjveen service afloat, and attendance at .the Polytechnic high school in Lisbon, ifhere he was still an undergraduate wh'-en his sudden accession to the thn n.e put an end to his studies and his dream of a J maritime ’ . . -i ,:■ I career. . ,! It is 400 years).now c s.inee ;th'e reign 1 of Manuel (. of Portugal—-14!L to 1521. Ho was calk'd M|anuel the filn-at, It was ip ins reiAn [that Vasco )|da Gama , grounded the . .Ope lIopA j Americus Vespri-pis OXplorril under the Portuguese ijap the Goihjts .of South ■ America -and Gaspar, Uortoteal those i of North Anieri'?al The Portuguese people are inclined j to superstition, and in the accession of ; a second sovereign” of trie name ! through, Wholly ) unforeseen): cireum- ; stances they see omens of a icnewal ..of the old. glories of the kingdom. The Society fi)>r the Desi ruction bl I Vermin is an English organization, with < the object .of .Warring on the t’ats in that country. ; The water of the Nprwegifn fjord's Is so clear that it is possible.to dfseern small objects at a. depth of twenty [fathoms. .
How to Exercise the Bowels
Your Intestines are lineC. inside with millions, of litjtle dickers, (hat draw the Nutrition out jof food as it-passes them. But, if the food passes tjo sloWljr, it j decays before [lt gets h. Then the ? little suckers draw Faison from it instead ' lof Nutrition; i ' . ■ i • This Poison makes a Ga)s that injures your system jmore.fhan th.e.food should [ have nourished it. [ ' ■ e ' - Yoy. [see, the food is Nourishment or Poison, just according to he w long it stays tri transit. j[ A \li The usual [remedy for ! this, delayed passage | .' (called Constipation) is to e take a big dose of Castor. Qil.. This merely makes slippfiry the passage for unloading,.the current l&argo.yx. It does not) help the Calise of delay a trifle. . T”* 1 _ - It does slacken the Bowe-Musclesmcre than ever, and thiis weakens them for their next takk. J Another remedy is to!take a strong Cathartic, like Salts, Calomel, Jalap, Phospate, of )Sodium, Ape[ lent Water, or , any of these mixed-. ’[ . ■> What de e$ the Cathartic: do? It mere fldshes-out ihe Bowels with a waste.of Digestive Juice, set flowing ipto the Intestings through the[tiny suckers. i.'. * ■ * < ' But, the Digestive Jui6e we waste in doing this yday is needed, for. tomorrow’s natural Digestion. We c[mnot afford to lose it. . F; f . • That’s why Cascarets ai e the only safe medicine for the bowels.); •
K b—m jieauu ja .1. i wwy | 2 OSJTSiiESOiX ~ SHOEfS AT ALL V®®L_JE?3r g O »• FOR EVERY Q 1 3 "“ hT£MBER < FTHE FAMILY, K \ I V AJEN. BOT®, WOMEN, I UStiEfS AND CHILDREN. 5* 4 &' ' f L. ma. Iras and selfs more v. \. ' * /J®-. 8 ■ tndKM2-&O,s3AlOands3.soshoes ■ QtA *. WW /&l\S • __ m anufacturer in the ..? . W Jg@ a> they hold their fast shape, fH otter wear longer, and are of greatc.' silue than any otfter \gi\W &&• shoeitht the W. L Douglas; $4 and $5 G’ 1 Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price ta-<’UJTIOIV. W. t* I|h •name and price is stamped ch bottom. TrekeNo SiihetltMte. W iiere - Sboe,i f «<&£ y s , p
BABY’S Favourite WfS Skin Soap ■ Warm baths with Cuticura , Soap followed, when necessary, by gentle anointings • with Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, preserve, purify and beautify the skin, scalp, ■ hair . and. hands of infants and children, relieve eczemas, rashes, itchings, ikrita- ) tions and chafings, permit i rest and sleep and .point to a • ' speedy removal of torturing, - disfiguring humours when : all else fails. . ' Sold throughmit the world: .Depots: London- V7, Charterh->u-\'So-; Harts. Rue <(■ ,a Part: Australia U. Towns A-St ni v I ndia, B. K. i'aut. I Cah utta: China, tl.-irt - Hnar. Co.: Japan. • Marnva. Ltd.. Toknc JLs-.a i'-rr<-:n. MOSCOW! 1 So tin- :1. I.ennoti, Ltd.. Cat-o re., t .'■-.A., Potter I>rue A- du'ia. Corp . S. . - Props.. Boston. Free.. Cutifura Booklet on ll.e Skin. ! ■ [ ' ' ■ " ' , " j The-JdiHfici-oiitput of Maim; last_ winter was !)<MM hh i.t <u 1 jeer and the indications a arc that thf'se figures will be about equal[ed this year. The scarcity of labor pre- ! vented operations to a large degree. . • . I' r 7 ' new LAW-ohtained D' JOHN W.- MORRIS. ' ■ PEKSIOISS Wastiingtcu, D. <X | •_ — — ■ ■ ''.. F. W. N. U. - - - No. 19—1808! When writing to Advertiser? nlease s«v voa s»u the Advertisement in this tiar'jf ‘
They do not any precious fluid of the Bowels, as Cathartics do. ■ They do-not rgkx the Intestines -by greasing like Castor Oil or Glycerine. 4 « They simply stimulate, the Bowel « Muscles to 'do their work naturally, comfortably, and nutritiously. And,. ; the Exerc|se’tlwse Bowel Muscles are thfts forced to take, makes them stronger for the future,, just as- Exercise makes-your arm stronger. RYa ,< LfCJ Cascarets are as safe ]/ V to use constantly as they . • .are pleasant to takj?4 They are purposely put up like candy, so you must eat them slowly and let them go down gradually with the saliva, which, is in itself, a fine, natural Digestive. They are put'up-purposely in thin,, flat, round-cornered Enamel.; boxes, so they can be carried inaman's vest pocket, or in a woman’s purse, all the time, without bulk or trouble. -v--Price 10c a box at all druggists. Be very careful to get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Company and never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped “CCC.” - * 7i2n • * • . fTFREETO OUR. FRIENDS! We want to send to our friends a beautiful French-designed GOLD-PLATED BONBON BOX . hard-enameled ini colors. It is a beauty for th* dressing table. Ten centsin stamps is asked as a measure of faith and to cover cost of CascaretswithwhicE'tfusdaintytriokttisldabed;-' Send to-day, mentioning this-paper. Address • Sterling K’■niedy Company, Chicago or New York.
