The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 September 1908 — Page 7
Habitual Constipation May te permanently °*cvcome Improper personal efforts vatkllie assistance bf the one truly beneficial laxative remedy, Syrup of hgs and ElixirofSenna, which enables onetofortn regular nabits daily So that assistance to nature may be gradually dispensed with when no longer needed a$ the best of remedies, slum required, are to assist nature and not to supplant the natural functions, which must depend ultimately upon proper nourishment, proper efforts, and right living generally. To get its beneficial effects, alw<yS buy the genuine Syrup^ngS°^Elixir o fSoun(i ' . manufactured ty the California Fig Sykup Co . only SOLD BYALL LEADING! DRUGGISTS one sire only, regular pnte per Bottle
A Wonderful urummer. Probably the most remarkable drummer who ever lived was jean Henri, the famous tambour, major of the Emperor Napoleon. One of his:feats was to play on fifteen different toned drums at the same timje in so soft and harmonious a manner that, instead of the deafening uproar that might have been expected, the effect was that of a novel and complete' instrument. In playing he passed from one drum to the other with such wonderful .quickness that the eyes of the spectators could hardly follow the movements of his hands and body. In Mohammedan countries women are not admitted beyond the doorways of mosques.
DYSPEPSIA “Having taken yonr wonderful “Cmcarets” for three months and oeiug entirely cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia, I think a word of praise is sue to “C as carets for the i r wonderful composition. have taken numerous other 80-calle‘d remedies but without avail and I find that Case a rets relieve , more in a, day than all the others 1 have taken Would in a year. ’’ James.McGuna 108 Mercer St., Jersey City, N-/J. Best For A# The Bowels > tamwioto CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, Xever Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never •old in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CCQ, Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 591 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Get your Letter Paper and Envelopes printed at this office. «» »: can give you the EAGLE LINEN PAPER and ENVELOPES w It la fine and will suit you. Try it. PAn at 1 r finest lands in the FOR SALE w°est. 4o,ooo ACRES of choice Hnd in the celebrated CLOVER BELT OF WISCONSIN, all ■within a few miles of three railroads; srood roads and schools; terms and . price on tracts of 40 acres and up reasonable? Write for information. SETTLERS ESPECIALLY DESIRED. John S. Owen Lumber Co., Owen, Wis.
Shortest Line to Rosebud Reservation The opening pf the Rosebud Reservation, October 5 to 17, next, will give over 5000 people each a choice farm in Tripp County, South Dakota," for a sn all sum per acre. 838,00.‘ acres will be opened. People drawing one of these farms must pay $6.00 an acre; one-fifth down, balance in 5 years. Chamberlain and Presho, South Dakota, are places of registration. Both are • located on the shortest line to the reservation from Chicago—the cuifAf n MILWAUKEE ST. PAUL RAILWAY The best of these lands are located in the Northern part of Tripp County ea. ily reached from both Chamberlain and Pres'io. All persons, excep certain soldiers,, must be present in one of these towns for registration. Presence at the drawing is not required. Those who draw one of these farms will be notified by mail. Rosebud folder, containing map, and giving full particulars free on request. F. A. MILLER, General Passenger Agent. Chicago.
EYESIGHT WAS Di DANGEB From Terrible Kcaema—Bnby’a Head a Maaa of I tell log Kaxh and Sore. —Disease Cored by Cwticara. “Our little girl was two. months oil when she got a rash on her face and within five days her face and head were all one sore. We used different remedies but it got worse instead of better and we thought she would turn bliud and that her ears would fall off. She suffered terribly, and would scratch until the "blood came. This went on until she w-as five months old, then I had her under our family doctor’s care, but she continued to grow worse. He said it was eczema. When she was seven months old I started to use the Cuticura Remedies and in two rnonita our baby was a different girl. You could not see a sign of a sore and she was as fair as a new-born baby. She has not had a sign of the eczema since. Mrs. H. F. Budke. LeSueur, Minn., Apr. 15 and May 2, ’07.” WILL TEACH THEM TO FISH. Denmark’s Latest Plan to Help the Eskimo of Greenland. A Danish expedition has gone to Greenland to put the, 10,000 Eskimo who live on the southwest .coast in the way of earning a better living. It is hoped to open new branches of industry for them, says the New York Sun. For some years they have been depending more upon hunting the hair seal than anything else to pay for the supplies that Denmark sends to them. But the quantity of seal oil the natives have to sell is declining every year. The herds of reindeer in Alaska are thriving so well that the Danes hoped to. make the introduction of these animals into Danish Greenland a source of profit to the Eskimo. The experiment, however, has failed. The animals did not thrive and no further effort will be made’to introduce them. This summer’s work will be given chiefly To a study of the fishing possibilities. The methods are primitive. They depend, for example, upon thair harpoons to capture herrings. If they were skilled in the use of nets they would increase the. amount of their catch a hundredfold. The Danish visitors Intend to collect facts about the coast fisheries and to study the problem of making them more valuable to the natives. Experienced fishermen are in the expedition and the ship is equipped with every appliance for study of the fishing grounds. When all the facts have been collected the‘Danish government proposes to train the natives in the best modern fishing methods and to provide them with the latest appliances used in European fisheries, including motor boats to replace the native skin boats. The expedition will also inquire into ■che question whether it is worth while to establish a whaling station on the (Greenland coajt. The Danes are inclined to think it will pay to re-estab-lish a whalery in south Greenland, especially as -the Scotch are finding it very profitable to hunt for whales on that coast a little north of the Danisn colony. Literal. 4 house painter in a New Hampshire village was proceeding down “the main street" one day when he was accosted by a fellow-townsman. “Hello, Tom!” called the ,latter. “Why, I thought you were working ou old Spinner’S house to-day.” "I was about to commence the job,’’ said the painter, “when the old man picked a quarrel with me. He said he’d put the paint on himself.” “Do you think he’ll do it?” “Well,” said the painter, with a smile, “when I passed just now that Is where he bad out a great deal of it.” Yellow Clothes Are Uusisrhtly. Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell large 2oz. package, 5 cents. St. Peter’s in Rome. From the beginning of the foundation to the time when the great church of St. Peter’s in Rome could-be said to be complete three and a half centuries had elapsed, eighteen architects had been employed and forty-three popes had reigned. The cost of the great church can never be known with exactness. At the end of the seventeenth century it had cost $50,000,000, without including the. sacristy bell, towers, etc. The last important work on the edifice waS done by Pope Pius IX., on the four hundredth anniversary of the birth of Michelangelo.—New York American. pI T G St, Vitui’ Dante and Nervous Disease, ,„r- --“ ’ “ ~ manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Itestoror Send for FREE 45.00 trial buttle and treatise Dal. B; H. KLINE, 14., 931 Arch (Street, Fhiladalphia. Pa
REVIEW OF INDIANA
Samuel Stevens, of Stinesville, a painter, was killed by a falling tree. Within the last year his wife died and his residence burned. The development of the oil field, southeast of Oakland City, will probably rehabitate Übedam, a little village near Fan tod. A Well is being drilled nearby. The largest pickerel caught in the Kankakee river lately—-that did not get away—was landed' by a party of fishermen from the Tolan ranch, in Colfax Township. It weighed 16% pounds. W. Burton, proprietor of the Burton tavern, on the Kankakee, a retreat for fishermen, reported the most successful fishing season within the last twenty years. • State wide search is being nip.de to locate relatives of Mrs. Anne Burge, who, physicians declare, became demented through the opium habit, induced by patent medicines. The woman, fashionably dressed and well supplied with money, was arrested at Logansport, but cannot remember where she lives or give any clew to hes indentification, except that she came from the northern part of the State. Mistaken for a burglar, Lou Lofland, a young farmer living four miles north of Crawfordsville, was accidentlly shot by his brother Alfred. The latter was just coining home, and as he started to enter the door met.his brother coming out. He called to him, but receiving no reply, thought him a thief, and fired a revolver. The bullet passed through the breasT of the young man within an inch of hisjheart. It is believed the wounded mkn will recover should no complications arise. Some weeks ago Mrs. Frank Bridwell, of Bedford, lost a valuable ring, and all efforts to find it about the house failed. Johnnie Trueblood, 7 years old, a son of a neighbor, with his motheir was yisitieg at Campbellsburg, and while there dreamed that the ring was hidden under the grass in the yard. On their return here a search was made and the ring found. Although the spot had been raked over and aver in looking for the jewel, it had -escaped the notice of Mrs. Bridwell. The Independence party has caused Petersburg to he a record-breaker in furnishing national and State candidates.’ Thomas Hisgen, presidential nominee, was born and raised there, as was his brother Fritz, of Evansville, nominated for State Auditor. Harley Snyder and George Frank, for State Treasurer and presidential elector, are vice president and assistant cashier, respectively, of the First National Bank there. Virgil Green, for Congressman from the First District, is a Petersburg attorney. All Princeton is laughing over the predipament, of two young women from Mt. Carmel, a neighboring town, who drove- up to the public watering trough in Princeton, but evidently knew more of autos than they did of horses. Its check-rein holding its head back, the horse was unable to reach the water. The girls were evidently stumped, but after an examination of the harness and a brief discussion, one of the young women unbuckled—the crupper. Whether or not that would have met the emergencj- Was not demonstrated, for just then Ip, J. Baldwin, a gallant Princeton citizen, stepped up and quietly helped the young woman out of their dilemma. Eighteen children in one family is the record thus far in Indianapolis, as far as is shown by the records of the City Board of Health. Dr. E. W. Burris called at the office of the board and reported the birth of a son to Joseph Roesner and wife, 3102 West Tenth street. The report shows that this is the eighteenth child born to Mrs. Roesner. Fifteen of the eighteen children are living and three are dead. Mrs. Roesner is only 44 years of age. Her husband is 53 years old. His name is Joseph and her name is They are Germans. The largest number of children born to one father and .mother in Indianapolis up to this time, according to the Board of Health records, was sixteen. From an eight weeks’ sojourn in Switzerland and Italy, Louis Lauby, courthouse custodian, returned to Washington, having in his possession a little, fortune, an inheritance, left by a brother, who was a banker in Gavenstorf, Switzerland, and who died several months ago, naming Louis Lauby as his sole heir. Mr. Lauby was apprised of his good fortune as soon after as his brother’s death as he could be found. It bad been more than twenty-five years since Mr. Lauby had heard from Switzerland, and difficulty was experienced in finding him. The inheritance amounted to nearly $25,000. During his stay abroad Mr. Lauby visited Rome, jand in company with his son was presented to the Pope. Judge Gray, of Jirookville, was called to the funeral of his uncl>, Robert P. Gray, at Garrison Creek. The decedent was 87 years old. In his early manhood he employed Whitelaw Reid to manage a newspaper at Xenia, Ohio. While making an excavation in the rear of Fred Brockmeyer’s house at Terje Haute, a mineral which had the appearance of flakes of gold was found. Jewelers it is gold, and samples have been left at Rose Polytechnic for analysis.
Mrs. Mary Bartiemay, aged 71 years, of Goshen! fell down a flight of twentyseven steps,, in the dark, and escapea injury. ■ , Badgley & Nickles, of . Cleveland, Ohio, were awarded a contract to prepare plans for a new Methodist church at Bloomington. The building will be one of stone and will cost 270,000. Pumpkins are being harvesiea in Bartholomew County and the crop is said to be larger than usual, notwithstanding the dry weather. The first of the season were brought in by Philip Hiatt, of Hawcreek Township. He sold eighty pumpkins at prices ranging from 5 to 15 cents each. Robert Cravens, aged 61, a member of one of the wealthiest families in Madison, died as the result of accidentally drawing a hazel nut into his throat two weeks ago. He was an unmarried lawyer. Joseph Cravens, leader of the Democrats in the Legislature, his brother, is now on his way home from Europe. The west-bound car on the traction line struck a buggy containing Oscar Latham, 19 years old, of near Asheville, and Charles Cunningham, a boy from Knightsville. The young men were blinded by the headlight and attempted to cross in front of the car. The buggy was demolished and both men were fatally injured. John Mclntyre, an employe of the Columbus Canning Company, is now convinced that the use of tobacco is dangerous to life and property. He cut a gash on his right thumb and bound up the wound with turpentine. In a short time he filled his pipe with tobacco and lighted a match. The match set fire to the turpentine and it bhrned away the bandage, making a severe and painful burn where the cut had been. The pearl fishing industry along the Wabash river is thriving and many valuable gems are being found. William Lambert found a ten-grain pearl which he sold io Dr. Pepper, of Mt. Carmel. Ernest Nations found another valjtable pearl, for which a fancy price has been offered. George Buchanan found three small pearls in one mussel. Miss Ida Leathers, a bookkeeper, of Carmi, 111., found a big pearl which she sold for SSOO. Tn search of a "want ad baby,’’ John Cox, a well-to-do farmer living near Yorktown, went to Anderson. Mr. Cox read a small advertisement of an Anderson mother who asked some good family to adopt her baby because she was unable to support it. The advertisement touched the hearts of Mr. and Mrs. Cox and they are now looking for the baby, but whether for the purpose of adopting the child or assisting the unfortunate mother, is unknown. William Fox worthy, of Hillsboro, celebrated his jseventy-sixth birthday by raising a sb embark hickory flagpole at his home. The pole was seventy-six feet high and was to the Democratic party, to which ’‘Uncle Bill” swears allegiance. E. W. Felt, of Greenfield, candidate for Appellate Judge on the Democratic ticket, was present and made a rousing speech. Mr. Foxworthy has not failed to raise a pole on his birthday every campaign year since 1896.) Leila Hutchins, 4-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Hutchins, of Kendallville, was attacked by a large snake while the girl, was in the cellar at her homo. snake wrapped its coils about one of the child and bit her on the othar foot. Her screams attracted her mother, who rushed to her assistance, just in time to see the snake slink away into a dark corner of the cellar. Applications of turpentine were used on the child’s wounds and no serious results are anticipated. Ten thousand dollars for the loss of a man’s appetite. That is what Attorneys Huran, Seaton & Renolt, of Hammond, jare asking for their client, Crist Vasil, in the suit which they hate filed against the Indiana Steel Company, of Gary. It -seems that Vasil was an employe of the company, and was working in the town Os Gary on an excavating job, when the walls of the excavation fell in and he was engulfed in the sand. He asserts that he was injured internally,’ and as a result suffered a loss in appetite for which he demands SIO,OOO. John de Guelph, who says he id a prince of the house of Hanover, with his wife, formerly Miss Jennie Carpenter, of South Bend, is visiting in South Bend. De Guelph says that he is a son of King Edivard by a morganatic marriage. He i$ in the State, accord-j ing to his story; .making p. study of the ■ methods used here for the cure of tu-1 berculosis. He claims to have studied the methods followed in both Europe and Asia, in regard to cancer and leprosy. Mrs. de Guelph is the daughter of Dr. George wL Carpenter, who once lived in South Bend. . j A peach contest has been on at Columbus for several days at a local ■ newspaper officii. The largest exhib-, ited so far was grown by George Le- [ wellen, of that city. It measures ' inches in circumference. Mrs. Susan J. Warren has arrived in Columbus frofn Madison to visit her daughter, Mrs. Joseph Poulten. She is 60 yeart oid, but her trip from Madison was the first time she ever rode on a train. She had never seen an interurban ca?- until she came to Columbus.
What is Castoria. ■ - . is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and-allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colia It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. •. f p The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one tQ deceive you in this.l All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children —Experience against Experiment,
Uhi “—■ -MW bl Mi . Eg ■ _- ? = ; ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. RH AVpgelable simi!aiin§iteFoodandßegulal < n iSsswi I Digeslionfliterfiil|ilE| nessandßest.Coffiamsneitter, iaSgiJOij Opiuiu.Morphiae nor Mineral ml : Not Narcotic, i F’Sai'' 'I i; 11 ;• ! ' . i I* , ‘ • PunfJtin Sad- . 1 MM/eSdts- / MPMI:-: jbiiseSttd ♦ I Aperfertßenjedy forCcmsflpation, Sour Stomach.Dlarrte I ; Worms,Convulsions.FevCTish- ! w 11883 ‘HuII'OSS °F SLEEPis* 1 ” . Facsimile Signature of i fe*’ NEW Exact Copy of Wrapper. JLIEL I RLWJJL, 4
O venealous. If you have eVer been annoyed by a too enterprising barber, you will appreciate the little incident that left one of them rueful and crestfallen the other day. Having shaved the customer, he ran his hand over the man’s head and said insinuatingly: "Have a hair trim to-day. sir?” “Do you think I need it?” “Yes; it looks pretty long.” “Well, how is the boss barber on hair trimming? Is he pretty good?” “Yes; he’s pretty good, all right. But why ?” “•Well, he trimmed my hair yesterday.”—Phil adelphia Ledger. TEN YEARS OF BACKACHE. Thousands of Women Suffer in the Same Way. Mrs. Thos. Dunn, 153 Vine St., Columbus, Ohio, savs: “For more than n ten years 1 was in misery with backache. The iimp le s t housework W completely exhausted J|£ / me. I had no strength or was fisrvous and suffered headache and dizzy spells. After these years of pain I was despairing Os ever being cured when* Doan’s Kidney Pills came to my notice and their use brought quick relief and a permanent cure. I am very grateful.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Adding to His Sufferings. The Doctor —I expected to go out of town next Saturday, as usual, to spend Sunday with my family in the country, but professional duties forbid. The fates are against me. The Professor—-The fates-are to blame, are they? Well, it’s natural for a week ender to come to a lame conclusion. Quick as Wink. If your eyes ache with smarting, burning sensation and dizziness use PETTIT’S EYE SALVE. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. , Powerful Explosives. “What are the most powerful explosives known?” queried the young man. “Two prima donnas ’in one opera company,” replied the ex-theatrical manager.—Chicago News. If you use ball blue, get Red Cross Ball Blue, the best ball blue. Large 2oz. package, 5 cents. The Purely Personal Interest, “Ought we not to do something for the preservation of our forests?” “Oh. what's the use?” answered Senator Sorghum, impatiently. “Trees can’t vote.” —Washington Star.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. F. Gerald Elattner, of Buffalo, N. Bays: “Your Castoria is good Tor children and I frequently prescribe it, always obtaining the desired results.” Dr. Gustava IA. Eisengraeber, of St. Paul, Minn., says: “I have used your Castoria repeatedly in my practice with, good results, and can reconi' mend it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children.” Dr. E. J. Dennis, of St. Louis, Mo., says: “I have used and prescribed your Castoria in my sanitarium and outside practice for a number of years * and find it to be an excellent remedy for children.” Dr. S. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “I have used your Castoria in the case of my own baby and find it pleasant to take, and have obtained excellent results from its use.” Dr. J. E. Simpson, cf Chicago, 111., saysi' “I have used your Castoria in cases of colic in children, and have found it the best medicine of its kind on the market.” Dr. R. E. Eskildson, Os Omaha, Neb., says: “I find your Castoria to be a standard family remedy. It is the best thing for infants and children I have ever known and I recommend it” * i Dr. L. R. Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Your Castoria certainly'' has merit. Is not its age, its continued use by mothers through all these years, and the many attempts to imitate it, sufficient recommendation? What can a physician add? Leave it to the mothers.” Dr. Edwin F. Pardee, of New York City, says: “For several years I have* recommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do so, as it ha* Invariably produced beneficial results,” Dr. N. B. Sizer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I object to what are called patent medicines, where maker alone knows what ingi-edients are put in them, but I know the formula of your Castoria and advise its use.” GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS oars Signature of ‘ ' The Kind Ton Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY.
ROSEBUD e GOVERNMENT LANDS BEST REACHED FROM DALLAS Dallas and Gregory, S. D., are reached only □ by the Chicago £SI» North Western Railway. | They are the only towns on the reservation border. t > Dallas and Gregory are the main registering points. President Roosevelt has designated Dallas for the final drawing October 19, 1908. x ' I DKkWTf l a«*^’ r nsL~!Yl | Cm. DAKOTA MIN N. 77 T X | ROSEBUD I <7? I A ®> . | M I>)V sr 2ONCMILLIO<« ‘-M'S ’ r ACRES ' ,«*' *> a „, W I S c 0 N S 'A*.'7 . J. JXL7S ■ %(1 *. • ''V'c <><> _ V %. < [ I [__ 10 - w *. </' i -The Chicago & fiorth Western Ry. is the only alUrail route to the reservation. f * A million acres of fertile agricultural and grazing ’ • land in the great Missouri Valley Corn Belt is to be . . opened to Homesteaders October^—s" ; to 17 ’ 1908 - Uil For information about how to get a I homestead with details regarding rates, train A i | schedules, address ” ff|7|!lllASSfsw W. B. KNISKERN 11 Pass’r Traffic Mgr., C. & N. W. Ry. f NWJBI Chicago, 111. I , s The Country’s Best Dressed Man. i p The best dressed man in the United LOW fCcLieS tO vaurornia » . States, according to the best of an- Oregon,Washington. £ thority, is C. S. Eddy, a banker's clerk ,daho ’ Uuh - Colorado. Montana, Wyoming of Providence, It. IJ Eddy possesses * , W ' BS , tates ' P > ME! Sr'-.. •i.Tec, ttq cnvc thnt i« OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND sonio fifty-odd suits- lie tn at ruifDAMT mai/adi rc ajj approximately the number, but really EMIGRANT MOVABLES. Address ' , x f . + . „ IRE AMERICAN F9RWARBIN6 CO.. (Sb Madisss SU - it s too much trouble to count them. Chi£aßo HU or j SS E iiic»it s, uarei uuiials. N.Y p you know. There is a suit for each ■ , . . ■- day in a month, suits for social func i tions, for driving,, walking, for almost - every special thing a human being can jy 4/ Myw . do. Moreover, it is said he is con- MP' XFa / t stantly adding to his collection. F J f (J gs * 1x L f How It Happened. «K <| “True,, the night was-dark, but he f appeared to jump deliberately in front of the automobile.” “Force of habit. The poor fellow ■ ~ ' was an actor and naturally dived for foupd in India measure the spot light.”—Kansas City Journal. si 5 feet acroSj theif outspread wings. • Mrs. Winslow’s Suotblng Syrup tor F. W. N. U. - - - - No. 38—1903 Children teething;, softens the gums. : —i ———t — VTS ; reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures When writing to Advertisers plenss wind colic. 2b cents a bottle. say you saw the Adv. in this paper.
