The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 51, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 April 1909 — Page 7
Folds CURED IN ONE DAY Munyon’s Cold Remedy Relieve* the head, throat and lungs almost Immediately. Checks Fevers, stops Discharges of the nose, takes away all aches and pains caused by colds. It cures Grip and obstinate Coughs and prevents Pneumonia. Price 25c. . , J Have you stiff or swollen joints, no matter how chronic? Ask your druggist for V Munyon’s Rheumatism Remedy and see how quickly vou will be cured. If you have" Sny kidney or bladder trouble get Munyon’s Kidney Remedy. Munyon’s Vitallzer makes weak men strong and restores lost powers. CfiP Oil E PACKARD ORGAN good as I rUll uhLl new. 11 stops, knee swells, 1 etc. Walnut case. Original price $90.00. J Clearance sale price cash or payments 5A15.00. The above is a sample bargain from our 1909 Clearance Sale list of exchanged, rebuilt and slightly used Organs. The list contains instruments from the world’s best makers, including Packard, Estey, Mason, & Hamlin, Sterling, Farrand & Vote’y, Kimball and many others. Prices' range from SIO.*OQ. upward and in every case are less than one-half actual value. Don’t buy an organ without consulting this bargain list. You will probably find exactly what you want at legs than half what, you expected to pay. FrOO To everyone sending for our barII Go gain list of Organs we will send absolutely free of charge Book.; of Music containing 50 of the world’s best songs. Write at once to PACKARD MUSIC HOUSE, Fort Wayne, Ind. FASHION HINTS V IL Ol I* ' I Shed' Water Pongee is used in th* costume. It is spot-proof, and a joy forever. The unexpected summer shower 'hat no terrors for the wearet of this silk. Dark blue is the color used here. The ski£ shows .the partial, return of the kilt, but modified by a deep yoke? The trimming .1 is effectively done in a wide soutache, a shade lighter than the silk. Hadn’t Reached That Stage. < She—-So you are an author? , He —Ye-es, “Oh I how delightful it must be to earn orfe’s living by wielding the pen.” “Yes,- I always Imagined it would be.” Noble Heu. The hen will set and the hen will lay, < And .the hen will roost up high: But one good thing we can say of her— The hen will never lie. —Yonkers Statesman. Every Woman Will Be Interested. There has recently been discovered an aromatic, pleasant herb cure for woman’s ills, called Mother Gray’s AUSTRALIAN-LEAF. It is the only certain regulator. Cures female weaknesses and Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mail 50 cts. Sample FREE. Address. The Mother Gray Co., Leßoy. N. Y. Stung! Nan —The trouble- with Billy is that he’s awkward when he’s in company. He doesn’t know what to do with his hands. Fan—Oh, yes, he does; he told me once that you wore too many pins in your —Chicago Tribune. It’s Pettit’s Eye Salve, that gives instant relief to eyes, irritated from dust, beat, sun or wjnd. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Handicapped. Teacher —In. this free country of ours, children, any boy may hope to be President some day. Curly Haired Urchin (raising his hand)—Not me. ma’am.. My name’s William Jennings Bryan Simpson.—Chicage Tribune. ’. ■ ,~* Re&ned Pessimism. Burton was writing his “Anatomy of Melancholy.” "I suppose.” he sighed, “I’ll accumulate a stack of bones put of this.” However., as he further reflected, this . was not much better than having a family skel don in the closet.
REVIEW OF INDIANA |
Peter Noggle and Harry Cox, of Warsaw, were thrown from their wagon in a runaway accident and despite the fact that Mr. Noggle is past 80 years of age, he escaped injury. Two brothers were recently married to two sisters at the First Methodist church parsonage in Brazil. They were Curtis Ei Jones and Miss Beryl Jones and Roy M. Jones and Miss Gladys Jones. Though similar in name, they were not relaited. All live near Saline City. David Hamilton, manager of the Hamilton theater, North Manchester, has been arrested on two charges. One Is having no incombustible curtain in the theater, and the other having Insufficient exits. Hamilton gave bond and will contest. The State Inspector caused the arrest. An automobile driven by Thomas Stevenson, of' Indianapolis, frightened a horse belonging to Louis Cobbler, of Shelbyville, which was hitched to a buggy, and Mr. and Mrs. Cobbler and two other occupants were thrown from the vehicle. Mr. Cobbler fell into a barbed Wire fence and his face was badly cut, while the others escaped with a few bruises. Mary A., widow of John Reddick, a resident of Knightstown since before' the war, died as the result of injuries received twd weeks ago by falling from a stepladder. She lived alone and after her fall, which broke her left leg between the knee and the hip, lay for nearly twenty-four hours before she was discovered. Mrs. Reddick was seventy-eight years old and leaves no near relatives. Mrs. John Rinard, sixty-eight years old, is dead at her home in Mooreland. Mrs. Rinard went into the barn lot to milk a cow and the animal, becoming suddenly enraged, attacked her. Her aged husband was standing close by, but before he could give her any assistance the animal had injured the woman beyond recovery.'; Mrs. Rinard died in a short time and before medical aid could be obtained. When Representative Charles Stevens, of Gibson county, introduced in the recent legislature a bill calling for a bounty on rats, he won international fame. The proposed law was favorably discussed at the first annual meeting of the International Society for the Extermination of Vermin, held in London a few days ago. A rat bounty bill-will probably be introduced in the English Parliament. . , Five hundred school children searched the city of Auburn at the noon hour one day last week forlittle Dorothy Stroud the two-and-a-half-year-old child of Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Stroud, who was lost for three hours when she wandered a half mile from home. The whole city was. excited over the dis- 1 appearance. She was found playing in the sand, wholly unconscious of what had happened. It was feared that she had been kidnapped. Mr. Stroud is a J traveling man. Mrs. M. G. Stewart, of Westport, was seriously burned about the face by the explosion of a bucket of gravy. The members of the W. R. C. and G. A. R. were preparing for a reception to be j given to (the members and their families and‘some one had brought a bucket of gravy and placed it on the stove to heat. The lid had not been removed to allow the steam to escape and just as Mrs. Stewart started tq lift the bucket from the stove the lid was blown off the bucket and the hot gravy enveloped her whole face. , Before assistance arrived she had been badly burned. Thomas Rankin, of New Albany, deaf for a number of years, has re--gained his - hearing in an unusual manner. While seated in -his home reading a newspaper he was startled by a loud report, followed by another a moment later, and he thought a revolver had been discharged in the room. He was dazed for a moment and then noticed he could hear the ticking of a clock, which he had been unable to do for years. Fearing the recovery of his hearing was only temporary, he did not tell of his good fortune until the following morning, when he found his hearing was still good, ahd informed his family. Whilei attempting to shoot a dog that was supposed to be mad, Patrolman Hevron of Elwood, was attacked by the brute and narrowly escaped being bitten. He saved himself from injury by forcing his “billy” in the dog’s mouth as it plunged at him and, while it was trying to gnaw the leather, shot it in the head, killing it instantly. The dog had been terrorizing the territory on the north side of the city of Elwood and after biting several other dogs, had taken refuge under a house. The family locked the doors and telephoned for the police. It was while pulling the animal from under the house that the’patrolman was attacked. Five other dogs were shot as a result of being bitten by the supposed mad dog, and a close watch is being kept for others that might be affected. While trying to hold his frightened horse, which became scared at an automobile, Lemuel Armstrong, a farmer near Princeton was kicked on the knee by the animal and it is believed will be crippled for life. M. B. Stults, who represented Huntington county in the state legislature in 1905 and 1907, fell down a flight of stairs at his furniture store in Huntington and suffered a fracture of the humerus of the right arm near the shoulder.
Sixteen dogs have been poisoned at Ellettsville within the last sixty days. There is scarcely a dog left. The second victim of gasoline within a week was taken at Fort Wayne when Anna Angst, 24 years old, died two hours after being horribly burned in an explosion after she had poured gasoline into a coal oil stove. Senator Lew V. Ulrey, of Fort Wayne, has returned from an extended visit to a group of gold mines owned by a syndicate of Kort Wayne and Indianapolis capitalists. On the way to Mexico he was attacked by congestive chills and was very sick, but he returns in good health. The official board of the First M. E. church at Richmond has just passed a resolution asking that hereafter women of the congregaation remove their hats after seating themselves. So expansive are some of the spring shapes of hats and so profusely decorated are they that a view of the minister conducting services is almost wholly cut off to many in the audience. Mrs. Louisa May, who for many years was a resident of Madison, Ind,, and who for the last eleven years has lived with her daughter , Mrs. Kate Lindley, in Jeffersonville, recently received a postal shower in honor of her ninety-fourth birthday anniversary. It is only in the last few months that Mrsl'May has used glasses, and she still sews much of her time. She has scores of. quilts she has made, and, is still turning them out. W. L. White, of Owensville, owns a mule that is very much averse to being laughed at, and it can furnish more fun for spectators than a three-ring circus. When its driver, Alvah White, stands in front of Liz and crooks his finger and laughs, the mule punctures the air full of holes with its heels: Alvah is unable to explain why Liz lacks the sense of humor, and he does not dare to wear a smile when Liz is pushing against the collar. James Friel, of Lafayette, came to Delphi and with a party of friends went to the Tippecanoe river to spend the day. They took a dog with them and it “scared up” a groundhog. A vicious fight between the two followed In which the hog succeeded in killing the dog. The groundhog then turned its attention to Friel and inflicted an ugly wound in his leg before it could be driven away. Other members of the party then killed the groundhog with clubs. Terre Haute is to have an cld-fash-ioned celebration of the Fourth of July. The Terre Haute fraternity regiment composed of Uniform Rank companies of various fraternities is -to have ■charge, and the Retail Merchant’s Association has indorsed the project. An .effort will be made to bring to the city the first batallion of the First Regiment, Indiana National Guard, companies from Vincennes, WasEington and Princeton. There will be'a-sham battle at the fair grounds in the afternoon. John Dellinger, who was one of the three victims of a mad dog at Jeffersonville a couple of weeks ago and is ■ now undergoing treatment at the Pasteur Institute at Chicago with seven-year-old Lucile Lentz and Mrs. Charlotte Phillips, will find, when he arrives home that neighbors have been attending to his farm for him. His chief anxiety, he wrote, was over his farm. Eleven neighbors, eight of them brother Masons, plowed up eighteen acres of land for him and gave other assistance on the placeDellinger and the others are expected home soon. Mrs. Matilda Talkington, of near Clifford, Bartholomew county,, has an Easter egg, decorated by her father, the late Jonathan Barb, who died at Clifford about six years ago. Mr. Barb carved with a penknife, dn April 20, 1851, the Initials of his wife and also the figure of a wren on an Easter egg. gave the egg to his wife, who is now dead, and requested that it be kept for 100 years. Os course nothing remains of the egg now but the shell. The carving is as plain as the day it was made, and the promise to keep the egg for 100 years has already been more than half fulfilled. Alexander Hancher, owner of a large fruit orchard west of Columbus, has concocted a “tonic” for fruit trees. All this talk about the blight on trees being the result of fungus is bosh, he says. The trees have skin disease, is his belief, and when he gives them a little tonic and gets their blood in good shape they bear fruit as well as could be expected. Mr. Hancher does not dispute the scientists without having made a study of fruit tree conditions. He figures that the sap of the tree is similar to the blood of a haman being. He 1 believes that trees should have medicine administered internally, and for that reason frowns on the cosmetics and lotions which are recommended for external use. He tried them all at various times, he says, and none of them worked like his new discovery. James Stull, aged 55, a veteran Fort Wayne and Wabash Valely motorman, was -pitched from an interurban car vestibule to the asphalt pavement in Wabash, and died within an hour. His Wife will probably die from the shock. Miss Hattie Kirkpatrick, of Owens ville, has an old pocket bible her father, William Kirkpatrick, carried through the civil war. . On the fly leal is a prayer, hardly discernable, written by Mr. Kirkpatrick while In the army.
Talk Money. I Wilbur Wright, on the broad green plain of his school of aviation at Pan, talked about his early struggles. “We had, in those Dayton days,” ■aid he. “wonderful offers, magnificent promises, but when it came to the actual laying down of money, then gloom descended on the scene. Our friends, i with* their mouths full of millious and j their quite empty hands, reminded me of a Dayton barber. This barber said one day as he shaved me: “ ‘tThat’s a fine pup of Simmons, j I’d grve anything for it.’ “‘Well, it's for sale, isn’t it?’ said I. 1 “The barber burst into sneering laughter. “ ‘Oh, yes,. it’s for sale,’ said he; ’but do you know what Simmons wants for it? Why, s2?’” DON’T DESPAIR. Read the Experience of a Minnesota Woiuah and Take Heart. If your back, aches and you feel sick, languid, weak and miserable day after day — don’t worry. • Doan’s Kidney Pills have cured thousands of women in the same condition. Mrs. A. Helman of Stillwater. Mi n n.. a says: "But for Doan’s Kidney Pills I would not livin S now ’ They cured “e iu 1899 and I’ve been MMMKb well since. I used to have such pain in my back that once I fainted. The kidney secretions were much disordered and I was so far gone that I was thought to be at Death’s door. Since Doan's Kidney Pills cured me I feel as if 1 had been pulled back from the tomb.” - Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo; N. Y. Women the Tougher Sex. Although men, as they run, are perhaps muscularly stronger than women, their inability to withstand the elements and their reliance upon clothes place them, considerably below the socalled weaker sex in the matter of unclothed toughness, says a writer in the Kansas City Journal. Women wear clothes for ornament ; men use them as protective covering. A group of men marooned clotheless on an island in the temperate zone might be expected to die off in a month from draughts and colds and rheumatism. The health of women similarly placed would suffer little from the enforced exposure. The fact appears to be, therefore, that in everything but muscle —in vitality, ruggedness. character, disposition, brain power, etc.—woman is the tougher not the weaker sex. Seware of Ointments for Catarrh . that Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering It through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phvslclans, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.. contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directlv upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying ’Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken Internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials ■free. Sold bv Druggists. Price, 75c. per bottle Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation: How the Trouble Started. Estelle —I don’t suppose you have heard of it, but George and 1 are going to be married some time next June. Maybelle—Glad to know it, dear. Has George heard of it yet? The Only Audience. “Does anybody read real poetry nowadays?” “I presume the publishers glance at It before sending it back.” Don’t Cough, but Dive Dong. If every cough were cured before it got a strong hold, human life would be lengthened by many years. If every cough i»ig sufferer knew that Kemp’s Balsam would stop the cough In a few minutes, be would be glad to escape the serious consequences. If any medicine will cure a cough. Kemp’s Balsam will do it At druggists’ and dealers’, 25c. No Difficulty About That. Teacher (at night school) —Give me *ome illustration of the “survival of ths fittest.” Shaggy Haired Pupil—Any handsome widow. Ask Your Dealer for Allen’s Foot-Ease A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions. Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nalls. 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, Le Roy, N. Y. Get the Ax! “Yes,” said the retired auctioneer, “that boy of mine is a chip off the old bloek. with all the original bark on him; he’s a spieler so» a 5-cent theater.”— Chicago Tribune. Red, Weak, Werry, Watery EyM Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. ’ Compounded by Experienced Physicians. Conforms to Pure Food and Drug Laws. Murine Doesn’t Smart; Soothes Eye Pain. Try Murine in- Your Eyes. Ask Your Druggist. The Duckiest Man. Eben —So Miss Antique is going to get married at last. Who is the lucky man? Flo—The .clergyman. He’s going to get paid for it and assumes no responsibility. It is stated that a chameleon which is blind loses its power oi making itself oi the same hue as its surroundings. Rio de Janeiro is to have a new gov•rnment department devoted to stock raising and agricultural experiments. CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought •Ignat JX
Throat Troubles Weaken the Syetaaa. A serious illness is often brought on by a neglected sore throat All th .-oat troubles Invariably weaken the .system and should not be allowed to go unchecked. A garble made with twelve drops of Sloan's 'Liniment in half a glass of water will break up a sore throat. * Sloan’s Liniment is an excellent remedy for. tonsilitis, croup, asthma and bronchitis. Applied freely to the outside of the throat and chest it draws out the .nflammation, reduces the swelling anditelleves any soreness. Twelve drops o;f this Liniment in half a glass of wat(r makes a splendid antiseptic gargle. Mr. Albert W. Price of Fredonia, Kans., srrites: —“We have used Sloan’s Liniment in the family for about a year, ahd find it an excellent relief for colds and hay fever attacks. Two drops £ f the Liniment in a. teaspoonful of water will stop coughing and sneezing instantly.” Mr.L, T. Hurst of Coatesville, Ind., R. R. No. 1, writes:—“l find your Liniment tjie best remedy I have ever tried for soire throat, either for horse or man. JI once cured a case of sore throat ’on myself the second day and almost 1 the first night, which had continued jfor-over three weeks, under constant treatment of three physicians (I was (raveling) and it was getting worse.” ' i ■ , Isa the Hands of: the Darr. An Impecunious young lawyer recently received the following letter from a tailor to whom he was indebted: “Dear Sir—Kindly advise me by re turn niail when I may expect a remit tance ifrom you in settlement of my ac count.; Yours truly, • ’’T “J. SNIPPEM.” ) The follower of Blackstone immedi ately Replied: “Dear Sir—l have your request for advirt of a recent date, and beg leave to baj that not having received any re tainer. from you I cannot act In the premises. Upon receipt of your check . for $250 I shall be very glad to look the niatter up for you and to acquaint' you with the results of my investigations.! I am. sir. with great respect, -your imost obedient seryant. “BARCLAY B. COKE.” —Success Magazine. Pide Cure Free: Wonderful Pile Remedy sent free to sufferers by addressing Rea Company, Dept. 85, Minneapolis, Minn. In a Different Cln»». “I Shear. Mike, that, your wife has gone ■ into society. Has she become a yet?” “Indade, an’ she has not got into that; class; she still uses a flatiron, Bor.’’- —New York Times. De not force yourself to take offensive (and. harmful) drugs—take Garfield Tea, Nature's Herb laxative ; it corrects constipation, purifies the blood; brings Health ! Dover, England, will have a new harbor. ! which will be completed in 1910, when it will accommodate fifty men-of-war.: In England and Wales, 605,906 women Bre entitled to vote for municipal officials. - i . . Don’t Spoil Your Clothea. U*e Red Cross Ball Blue and keep then, while as snow. All grocers, 5 cents a pack . *ge-i The salamander looks like a lisard, but its .character is that of the frog. The oldl story that the salamander can endure fire is unfounded.
I WmII* 9 J*' M *jEra HH lly I I (SSSsK * / ? ?tOw .. .IMr JBr Jr HVhaT Joy They B r INM I To Every Home ’ I * as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play —when in health —and . I how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they I enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome j diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, I not. by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri- [ Ous or objectionable nature, anduf at any time a remedial agent is required, to assist 3 nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs and. Elixir of Senna, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon < personal knowledge and ' . Syrup of,Figs and Elixir of Senna has also met with the approval of physicians gen- ' erally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform ’ j all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of [ Senna, obtained by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act j most beneficially, and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Cal- J !• I ifornian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret | I ’ remedy, and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do • ® not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. • © Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs • i and Elixir of Senna always has the full name of the Company—California Fig i 1 Syrup Co. —plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in | I bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent 1 fl size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. ffi fl If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family /Il it should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and Ml 'Sk the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required. _
A woman who is sick and suffering, and won’t at least try a medicine which has the record of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, is to blame for her own wretched condition. There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in the United States who have been benefited by this famous old remedy, which was produced frpm roots and herbs over thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman’s suffering. Read what these women say: Camden, N. J. — “ It is with pleasure that I send my testimonial for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, hoping it may induce other suffering women to avail themselves of the benefit of this valuable remedy. M I suffered [from pains in my back and side, sick headaches, no appetite, was tired and nervous all the time, and so weak I could hardly stand. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made me a well woman — and this valuable medicine shall always have my praise.” — Mrs. W. P. Valentine, 902 Lincoln Ave,, Camden, N. J. Erie, Pa. —“ I suffered for five years from female troubles, and at last was almost helpless. I tried three doctors but they did me no good. My sister advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it has made me well and strong. I hope all suffering women will just give Lydia E# Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial, for it is worth its weight in gold.” — Mrs. J. P. Endlich, B. F. D. 7, Erie, Pa. Since we guarantee that all testimonials which ;we publish are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had the virtue to help these women it will help any other woman who is suffering from the same trouble! For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for 7/iy jrflv female ills. No sick woman does justice to [67 y herself who will not try this famous medicine. ]/ Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and I \ I] has thousands of cures to its credit. II Jj* // If the slightest trouble appears which uA A; you do not understand, write to Mrs. Y|\ // Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for her advice—it is free and always helpful.
1° So Different. Wheb Music, heavenly maid, was young, j ( Wheiji simple songs were simply sung, < Therfe were no thrifty artisans j To put the melodies in cans. ■ J Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup tor Chil- < area iteethlng ; softens the gums, reduces in- < t-.mmation. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 < cents a bottle. | < • It! is said that one of the estates of | ( the <fzar covers three times as much area r J as Great Britain.' F. W. N. U. - ' - - No. 17—1909 i When writing to AdvertKers please . nay you saw the Adv. in this paper. 1 < ft.
6 Let us do your Printing > ; using Eagle Li nen? J c==o c=3 i > tor your office stationery. < You can get the paper : and envelopes to match. 5 tt U the r»al thing. Tehe no otno..
