The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 September 1910 — Page 3
AFTER DOCTORS FAILED . LydiaE.Pinkham’sVegeta 3 | ble Compound Cured Her ■ Knoxville, lowa. —“I suffered with I pains low down in my right side for a F year or more and was so weak and nervous that I could not do my work. I
wrote to M rs. Pinkham and took Lydia E.Pinkham’s vegetable Compound and Liver Pills, and am glad to say that your medicines and kind letters of directions have done more fdr me than anything else and I had the nest physicians here. I can do my work and rest
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well at night. I believe there is nothing like the Pinkham remedies.” — Mrs. Claka Franks, B. F. D., Ng. 8, Knoxville, lowa. w The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness, or nervous prostration. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills, and Buffering women owe it to themselves to at least give this medicine a trial Proof is abundant that it has cured thousands of others, and why should it not euro you? If you want special advice write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for tt is free and always helpful. A Business Transaction. “So Mr. Penniwise married his typist!’' said Miss Cayenne. “Yes.” "I wonder whether she gains an at lowance or he merely saves a salary?" -—Washington Star. s ; Important to Mothors Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Signature In ijse For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought SURE. . The Maiden —Dolls are made foi girls to play with. The Bachelor —And a good many men marry “The Wish Is Father to the Thought* Dr. Robert L. Waggoner, the presi dent of Baldwin university, said, in the course of an address on pedagogy at Berea, O.: . “And one of the most remarkable changes in the last 30 years of teach ing is the abolition of corporal pun ishment. A boy of this generation is never whipped. But a boy of the last generation—well!” Doctor Waggoner smiled; “THe boys oi the last generation,” he said, “must have* believed that their instructors all had for motto: “ ‘The swish is father to the taught.’ ” The gentleman exists to help; he has no other vocation. —T. T. Munger
Brings Cheer to the breakfast table — [. Post ; Toasties with ‘cream. Crisp, golden-brown bits, made from white corn, A most appetizing, con;venient, pleasurable breakfast. "The Memory Lingers” , Jtostrun Cereal Co., Ltd. Battle Creek, Mich. ,
Zelda Dameron—P * By MEREDITH NICHOLSON Copyright, 1904. by Th. BoMw-MMTffl Co. I —■—■———l
CHAPTER XX. The room was very still after she hi.d spoken. Her father did not start oi look directly at her, but. after an interval of silence, he lifted his eyes, •I>wly until they met hers. i “You have lied to me,” Zelda repeat-; e< in the same passionless voice,' sjeaking as though she were saying: seme commonplace thing. “I understand perfectly well why you wish to continue this trusteeship. I shall be’ very glad to do what you ask; orfly we must understand each other frankly; Yau must tell me the truth.” He shrank down slowly Into. his chair, but his eyes did not leave heif ft ce. Hls hands had ceased trembling! and he was quite himself. He waited an though he expected some word of contrition; but she still stood with heij eyes .fastened on him, and there was nc| ! kndness in them. ‘*l have sought your own good. I I have supposed you would be gratifieef t< continue —the trust —reposed in ms —by your mother.” ! “If you speak, to me of my mother again I shall find some way of punishing you,” she said, and there was still. ; n > passion in heF-voice. “I suppose that when you are ready i y>u will tell me What this means—+ I why you have turned against me in ' tl its way,” he began, with a simulation o ’ anger. A.nd then changing to i c mciliatory tone: “Tell me what it ii that troubles you, Zee. I had hoped ■ that you were very happy here. I had flattered myself through the summer tl lat ours was a happy home. But if t.iere is any way in which I have erred I am heartily sorry.” He bowed his head as though frorh the weight of his penitence, but he was glad to escape her eyes. When hja looked up again, he found her gazp still bent upon him. He picked up the fallen pen and placed it on the table beside the paper which he had asked her to sign. “You are a tremendous fraud,” sh,e said, with a smile in which there was ro mirth or pity. “You are Immensd--17 clever, and I suppose that because JI lave some of your evil blood in me, I sm a little bit clever, t,00.” “Zee! You forget yourself; you must le mad!” “I am growing sane,” she answered. ‘I have been mad for a year, but iriy leason has come back to me. I do nit forget myself or that you are my father; but I remember, too, that you aro t.n evil man and that you drove my mother into her grave. You killed he|r, with your pettiness and your hypocrisy; you are just as much her murderer as though you had slain her with I. knife. But I beg of you, do not think that you can play the same tactics with me. I don’t ask for the mon4y that you have squandered. It isn’t your being a thief that I hate; it’s your failure to be a man! It’s the : bought that you would betray the : rust of the dead—of my dead mother ■—that’s what I hate you for!” ; He took a step toward her menaeIngly. ■ “You are either a fool or mad. You shall not talk to me so! You have been listening to lies—infamous lies. Rodney Merriam has been poisoning pour mind against me. I shall hold him responsible; I shall make him suffer. He has gone too far, too far. I shall have the law upon him.” “You had better sit down,” she said, without flinching. “I suppose you used ito talk to my mother this way and that you succeeded in frightening her. But I am not afraid of you, Ezra Dameron. If you think you can browbeat me Into signing your deed, you have mistaken me. I was never less scared in my life.” f When she spoke his name it slipped from her tongue lingeringly, and fell upon him like a lash. In addressing him so, she cast off the idea of kinship utterly; there was no tie of blood between them; and he was simply a mean old man, despicable and contemptible, standing on the brink of a pit that he had dug for himself, and feeling the earth crumbling beneath hls feet. She went on, with no break in the Impersonal tone to which her words had been pitched in the beginning. “You have so little sense of honor — you are so utterly devoid of anything that approaches honor and decency—the hypocrisy in you is so deep, that you can’t imagine that a man like my uncle would never seek to prejudice me against you—my own father. Neither my uncle nor my aunt has ever said a single unkind word to me of you.' My aunt asked me to go to live with her when We came home; but I refused to do it. And I’m glad I did. This closer acquaintance has given me an opportunity that was—in one of your hypocritical phrases—quite providential, of learning you as though you were a child’s primer. You have been a very bitter lesson, Ezra Dameron! My mother never rebelled, never lifted her voice against you, and you supposed I should prove quite as ehsy; but you see how mistaken you are!” “This is a game—a plot to trap me. But it shall fail. My own child shall not mock me.” “I have something more to say to you. I have gone over it in my hfeart a thousand times in this year of deceit.. I believe I have grown a good deal like you. It has been a positive pleasure for me to act a part—shielding you from the eyes of people who were anxious for a breach between us. I know as I walk the streets and people say, ‘There is Ezra Dameron’s laughter,’ they all pity me. They have expected me to leave you. They have wondered that I should go on living with you when every child In the community sneers at the sight of you or .he mention of your name.” “Shame on you! Shame on you!" “I suppose It is a shameless thing :o be saying to you; but I haven’t finshed yet. And you had better sit lown. You aro an old man and I respect your years even though you are
Ezra Dameron. There was some one that told me—that warned me against you. I had hoped that it would never be necessary to tell you; but it gives me a keener happiness than I dare try to express to tell you now.” “Yes, yes; some liar —an Infamous liar,” he muttered, and he looked at her with a sudden hope in his face. When he should learn who had come between him and this girl he would exhaust the possibilities of revenge. Zelda read the meaning of his look and she smiled a little, and stepped to the table and turned up the lamp, and put his glasses within reach of his hand. “I shall not trust myself to tell you I shall let you read for yourself a fev words, written by one who was not a liar.” He watched her as she drew out the little red book, her talisman and her guide. He turned it over curiously and then read, at the place where she had opened: “They have told me to-day that I am going to die; but I fiave known it for a long time. • • • Do for her what you would havq done for me. Do not let him kill the sweetness and gentleness in her. Keep her away from him if you can; but do not let her know what I have suffered from him. I have arranged for him to care for the property I have to leave her, so that she may never feel that I did not trust him. He will surely guard what belongs to her safely. * * * Perhaps I was unjust to him; it may have been my fault; but if she can respect or love him I wish it to be so.” “You see there is no question of lying here. I found this—in a trunk of mother’s, in the garret—quite accidentally, a few days after I came home. It was intended for Uncle Rodney or Aunt Julia and not for me.” He was silent for a moment, staring at the page before him and refusing to meet her eyes. She sat down and watched him across the table. Suddenly he laughed shrilly, and slapped his hands together in glee, “I might have known it; I might have known it! This Is delightful; this is rich beyond anything!” His mirth Increased, and he rocked back and forth, chuckling and beating his knees with his hands. “Zee, Zee, my child,” he began, amiably, “I am glad this has happened. I am glod that there is an opportunity for me to right myself in your eyes. I' could not have asked anything bettef.” He began to nod his head as was his way when pleased by the thought of something he was about to say. “Zee, the animus of this is clear. Your mother hated me ” “You needn’t tell me that! Her own testimony is enough, pitiful enough.” “But the reason, the reason! I should never have told you. I have hoped to keep it in my own boson—my lifelong shame and grief. But your mother, your mother played me a base trick, the basest a woman can play. She married me, loving another man. And I suffered, how I suffered for it'” He lifted his head and raised his hands to heaven. A sob leaped in her throat and tears spring in her eyes as she rose and bent toward him over the table. “If you mention h»r again I shall punish you, Ezra Dameron.” He did not heed her, but began speaking with a haste hls tongue had rarely known. The smile that forever haunted his lips vanished. “She loved another man when she married me. I knew it well enough; but I was glad to marry her on any terms. She was a beautiful woman—a very beautiful woman;” and the anger died suddenly from his eyes and voice. Zelda wondered whether he was really touched by the thought of her mother or whether the little flame of passion had merely burned out. As he continued speaking she listened, as though he had been an actor impersonating a part, and doing it ill, so that he presented no Illusion to her eyes. She was thinking, too, of her own future; of the morrow in which she must plan her life anew. She thought of Morris Leighton now, and with an Intenseness that made her start when her father spoke hls name. “You have been a better daughter to me than I could have asked. An Inscrutable Providence has ordered things strangely, but—” and he chuckled and wagged his head, “but—very wisely and satisfactorily. I suppose your Uncle Rodney thought a marriage between you and his young freind Leighton would be an admirable arrangement; but you have done as I would have you do in rejecting him. Ah, I understood —I was watching you—l knew th#t you were leading him on to destroy him.” “I should like to know what right you have to speak to me of such a matter in such a tone. He is a gentleman.” w “He Is; he is, Indeed;” and Dameron laughed harshdly. “He is a gentleman beyond any but you SBfused hhn, just as I knew you would. The force of heredity is very strong. You are a dutiful daughter; you even anticipated my wishes. Your conduct is exemplary. I am delighted.” “I think you are mad,” said Zelda, looking at him wonderingly. She had begun to feel the strain of events of the few hours since she had gone to her uncle’s house; she was utterly weary and her father’s strange manner had awakened a fear in her. Perhaps he was really mad. She walked toward the door; but he was timing his climax with a shrewd cunning. "When your mother was engaged to Morris Leighton, the elder” —and he paused, knowing that she had turned quickly and was staring at him with wonder and dread in her eyes—“when your mother was engaged to this young man’s father,” he repeated, “your uncle was greatly pleased. But she was not so easily caught!” “You ought to know that X believe
nothing you say—not a word!" But in her heart she felt a foreboding that this might be true. “You should ask your unclS; or your Aunt Julia. Possibly we three are the only people that remember. I should ’'ke to have you quite sure about it, now that you have decided not to marry the son”—and he laughed with ugly glee. The frent door-bell rang out harshly, and the old man sprang up: “You are not at homq; you must see no one.” ’oily’s step was heard in the back hall. '“Never mind, Polly. I’ll answer the ’ jr,” said Zelda. The sight of any ..her face than that of her father would be a relief; but it was 9 o’clock, an hour at which no one ever called. Ehe expected nothing more than a brief parley with a messenger boy. “Pardon me, Miss Dameron •" Leighton stood on the step with his hat In his hand. He had been wandering about the streets. He had passed the Dameron house a dozen times, held to the neighborhood by a feeling that Zelda might need his protection; and he finally stopped and rang in a tumult of hope that he might see her again and reassure himself of her safety. As he stepped into the hall, he saw Ezra Dameron peering at him from the living-room door. “Good evening, Mr. Dameron," said Leighton. The old man turned back to the table and his papers without reply; but he listened intently. “I was passing,” said Leighton, truthfully, “and I remembered a message that Ulrs. Copeland gave me for you this afternoon, and I’m sorry to say I forgot about it until now.” He looked at her, smiling; she understood well enough why he had come. “Please put oft your coat and come ir. We are alone, father and I, having a quiet evening at home!” “Thank you; I can’t stop; but Mrs. Copeland wished me to ask you to come in to-morrow afternoon. She has an unexpected guest—a friend from Boston—and you know she likes everybody to appreciate her friends!" “Thank you, very much. I shall come if I possibly can.” (To be continued.) Knife and Fork in One. Probably the Indiana man who invented the combined table knife and fork was alarmed by the recklessness
with which his rural acquaintances handled their cutlery and wanted to save them from cutting their throats. Maybe he had labored desperately trying to cut a amount of salad on a small plate without putting his foot on the salad. Maybe he was a one-armed man. However that may
be, he devised an implement which has many advantages. It is a fork with a slot in the shank. In this slot is a wheel with a knifelike edge which acts as a rotary cutter, cutting tha food when rolled over it. The uses of such an implement are manifold, It is handy, in cheap restaurants, as it reduces the necessary stock of table utensils and saves time in washing, and if it ever comes into general use among that class of people who attempt to eat peas with a knife, it will doubtless mark an era in the advance of table deportment. Why He Hurried Away. A quiet, bashful sort of a young fellow was making a call on a girl one evening when her father came into the parlor with his watch in hls hand. It was about 9:30 o’clock. At the moment the young man was standing on a chair, straightening a picture over the piano. The girl had asked him to fix it. As he turned the old gentleman, a gruff, stout fellow, said: “Young man, do you know what time it is?” The bashful youth got off the chair nervously. "Yes, sir,” he replied. "I was just going.” He went into the hall without any delay and took his hat and coat The girl’s father followed him. As the caller reached for the doorknob the old gentleman again asked him if he knew what time it was. “Yes, sir,” was the youth’s reply. “Good-night.” And he left without waiting to put hls coat on. After the door had closed the old gentleman turned to the girl. “What’s the matter with that fellow?” he asked. “My watch ran down this afternoon and I wanted him to tell me the time so that I could set it.”—Denver Post. “Plague” Bother* Engineers. The “red water plague” is a matter which is receiving attention from engineers in different parts of the country, and while they have shed considerable light on the matter, there is much yet to learn about it The trouble consists of a discoloration of the hot water with a rusty sediment, the cold water at the same time being much less affected, although not entirely unaffected. Under the hot water faucets marble bowls become reddened and the first rush of hot water from the faucet after it has been shut off for a few hours has a distinct rusty appearance. Copper flush tanks and metal ballcocks are affected seriously where the discoloration of the water is more marked. The Way Tkey Mate. “It hardly ever fails.” “What are you talking about now?” “When a woman is called a bundle of energy nine times out of ten she has a husband who isn’t”—Birmingham Age-Herald. Within the last two centuries about fifty metals have been discovered by chemist explorers, but use has been found for only a few of them. It’s easier to become a hero than it Is to hold the job.
A STUNNER. 11l I Secke —Mrs. Swellington is a stunning woman, isn’t she? Weeks —I should think so. She hit me with her automobile the other day, and it was two hours before I woke up. TINY BABY’S PITIFUL CASE “Our baby when two months old was suffering with terrible eczema from head to foot, all over her body. The baby looked just like a skinned rabbit We were unable to put clothes on her. At first it seemed to be a few mattered pimples. They would break the skin and peel off leaving the underneath skin red as though it were scalds. Then a few more pimples would appear and spread all over the body, leaving the baby all raw without skin from head to foot On top of her head there appeared a heavy scab a quarter of an inch thick. It was awful to see so small a baby look as she did. Imagine! The doctor was afraid to put his hands to the child. We tried several doctors’remedies but all failed. “Then we decided to try Cuticura. By using the Cuticura Ointment we softened the scab and it came off. Under this, where the real matter was, by washing with the Cuticura Soap and applying the Cuticura Ointment, a new skin soon appeared. We also gave baby four drops of the Cuticura Resolvent three times daily. After three days you could see the baby gaining a little skin which would peel off and heal underneath. Now the baby is four months old. She is & fine picture of a fat little baby and all Is well. We only used one cake of Cutieura Soap, two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and one bottle of Cuticura Resolvent. If people would know what Cuticura is there would be few suffering with eczema. Mrs. Joseph Kosstnann, 7 St. John’s Place, Ridgewood Heights, N. Y., Apr. 30 and May 4, ’09.” Not Impregnable. Horace Avory, K. C., just appointed a judge, is one of the mordant wits of the British bar. One day, cross-ex-imining a recalcitrant witness, he asked: t “What are you?” “A retired gentleman,” proudly asserted the ex-cheesemonger. “Well,” snarled Avery, “when you achieved the position of gentleman, why did you retire from it?” DR. MARTEL’S FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Years the Standard. Prescribed and recommended for Women’s Ailments. A scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent. For sale at all Drag Stores. Misdirected Energy. “How did the street car company come to fire that old conductor? I thought he had a pull?” “He did; but he didn’t use it on the cash register.”—Christian Advocate. Good for Sore Eyes, for 100 years PETTIT’S EYE SALVE has positively cured eye diseases everywhere: All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N.Y. There is genius and power in persistence. —Orison ‘ Swett Marden. IF YOU USE BALL BLUE, Get "Red Cross Ball Blue, the best Ball Blue. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents. I would say to all: Use your gent- . lest voice at home. —Elihu Burritt. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing’ Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces ln-tUnirna.tioii-alhi.ys nain. cures wind co lic. 2&c a bottle. Write me as one that loves his fellow men.—Leigh Hunt.
■■ ■■ Send postal for P n I® W® Free Package | |a Ina !■ of Paxtine. Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOB ALL TOILET RISES. m 1' a «MH Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white, germ-free teeth—antineptically clean ; mouth and throat—purifies the breath after smoking—disp els all disagreeable perspiration and body odors—much appreciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. 8 A little Paxtine powder dissolved in a glass of hot water make* a delightful antiseptic solution, possessing extraordinary j cleansing, germicidal and healing power, and absolutely harmless. Try a Sample. 50c. a large >ox at druggists or by mail I 1 THE PAXTON TOILKT 00., Boston, Mass. Vi ■■■' > i
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter end farter coign than any other dye. One 10c package colore all Obers. They dye In cold water better than any other dye. Tovpandye any garment without ripping apart. Write for tree booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mis Cotora. AKNWtOC DRUG DO., Quimtjf, UUtnßft
BUSY THEN. The Private Citizen—A general nas an easy time after the war is over. The General —Not for very long, though. You soon have applications for your autograph and invitations to banquets. A Happy Husband. “Our house used to smell soapy and steamy wash day,” says a well-known man, “but since my wife began buying Easy Task laundry soap, there is no more of that. I’ve investigated that soap and find it is made of purest cocoanut oil, cleanest tallow, borax and naphtha, and that it not only cleans, but antisepticises clothes, cooking vessels and everything else washed with it W T e tried it first by buying two cakes for ten cents, with the understanding that our money would be refunded if it didn’t make good. Os course, it made good.” Outlining Treatment. “I want you to take care of my practise while I’m away.” “But, doctor, I have just graduated. Have had little experience.” i “You don’t need it with my fashionable patients. Find out what they have been eating and stop it. Find out where they have been summering and send ’em somewhere else.” Hardly Worth While. , “Scientists state that the sun will continue to give out the present amount of heat for 30,000,000 years.” “That makes a two weeks’ vacation 1 look piffling, eh?" YELLOW CLOTHES A«le UNSIGHTLY. Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue, j All grocers sell large 2 oz. package, 5 cents. The more worthy any soul is, the larger its compassion —John Bright. Try hirme eye remedy For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eye* and ■ GRANULATED EYELIDS I Murine Doesn’t Smart-Soothes Eye Pain Druggist. Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid. 25c, 50c, SI.OO . Murine Eye Salve, in Aseptic Tubes* 25c, SI.OO EYE BOOKS AND ADVICE FREE BY MAIL Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago n fll YFBIVA WatsonE.Coleman,Wast> S® «i I B Xinetoo.D.C. Books free Higi» I M I Imlw I W est references. Best results. Rnn Cavtila improved York State farms, 110 vUU ■CI til© to S&0 per acre. Write for descriptive booklet. Valley Farm Agency, Vwego, N* Y. Water
The Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low pried. There are lamps that cost more, but there Is no better lamp made at any Wgr price. Constructed of solid brass; nickel plated—easily kept clean: an MW ornament to any room in any house. There is nothing known to the art Tnc of lamp-making that can add to the value of the KAYO Lamp as a llghtSTEADY it Jto giving device. Every dealer everywhere. If not at yours, write tor descriptive circular to the nearest agency of the STANDARD OIL COMPANY (faconoorated) WESTERN CANADA S 1910 CROPS Wheat Yield in Many Districts Will I C&sasMH Be From 25 to 35 Bushels Per Sere Land sales and homestead entries increasing. No cessation In numbers going from United States. Wonderful opportunities remain for those who intend making Canada their home. ] New districts being opened up for settlement. Many farmers will net, this year, $lO to sls per I acre from their wheat crop. All the advantages of old settled countries are there. Good schools, churches, splendid markets, excellent railway facilities. See the grain exhibit at the different State and some of the County fairs. Letters similar to the following are received every day, testifying to satisfactoryconditions; other districts are as favorably spoken of:
THBY SENT FOB THEIB SON. Maidstone, Sask., Canada, Aug. sth, 1910. “My parents came here from Cedar Falls, lowa, four years ago, and were so well pleased with this country they sent to Coeur d’Alene for me. I have taken up a homestead near them, and am perfectly satisfied to stop here. ” Leonard Douglas. WANTS SETTLER’S RATE FOR HIS STOCK. Stettler, Alberta, July 31st, 1910. “Well I got up here from Forest City, lowa, last I Spring in good shape with the stock and everything. Now, I have got two boys back in lowa yet, and I am going back there now soon to get them and another car up here this fall. What I would like to know Is, if there is any chance to get a cheap rate back again, and when we return to Canada I will call at your office for our certificates.” Yours truly, H. A. VFik. WILL MAKE HIS HOME IN CANADA. Brainerd, Minn.. Aug. Ist, 1910. I “I am going to Canada a week from today and ' intend to make my home there. My husband has been there six weeks and is well pleased with the ' country; so he wants me to come.as soon as possible. He filed on a claim near Landis, Sask., and by hls description of it it must be a pretty place.
Send for literature and ask the local Canadian Government Agents for Excursion Rates, best districts in which to locate, and when io go. ! W. H. ROGERS, 3d Floor, Traction Terminal Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. H. M. WILLIAMS, Law Building, Toledo, Ohio
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Makes the skin soft as Velvet. Improves any complexion. Best shampoo made. Cures moot skin eruptions. Mnnyon's Hair Invlgorator cures dandruff, stops hair from falling out, makes hair grow. If yon have Dyspepsia, or any liver trouble, use Mnnyon’s Pav-Paw Piils. They cure Biliousness, Constipation and drive all impurities from the blood. — MUNYONS HOMEOPATHIC HOME REMEDY CO.. Philadelohla. Fa. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver la right the Stomach and bowels are tight. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently but firmly Carters i C.^Con-ffITTLE •tipation, Indigestion, \\ *MMfI Sick ' y Headache, and Distress after Eating. Small Pill, Small Dee. Smail Price Genuine mmtbeu Signature W. L. DOUGLAS HAND-SEWED PROCESS OlTIW&O MEN’S $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00, $5.00 WOMEN 8 $2.50, $3,53.50. $4 > — BOYS’S2.OO, $2.50 &, $3.00 / THE STANDARD > FOR 30 YEARS They are absolutely the ply most popularand bestshoes | JET for the price in America. l/ They are the leaders every- £ where because they hold their shape, fit better, ‘ '/K look better and wear lon- \ "/l/Wk ger than other»makes. f They are positively the most economical shoes for you to buy. W. L. Douglas name and the retail price are stamped on the bottom — value guaranteed. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE! If your dealer Cannot supply you write for Mail Order Catalog. W. L DOUGLAS, Brockton. Maaa. Salts and Castor never cure, only makes bowels move because it irritates and sweats them, ; Eke poking finger in your eye. The best Bowel Medicine is Cascarets. Every Salts and Castor Oil user should get a box of CASCARETS and try them just once. You’ll see. 884 Cascarets—loc box—week’s treatment. AU druggists. Biggest seller in the world -million boxes a mostb. FEEDERS Choice quality; reds and roans, white faces or angus bought on orders. Tena of Thousands to select from. Satisfaction Guar anteed. Correspondence Invited. Come and see for yourself. National Live Stock Com. Co. At either Kansas City• Mo. St. Joseph, Mo. S. Omaha. NeA W. N. U., FT. WAYNE, NO. 38-1910.
My-orother-ln-law, Mr. Frank J. Zimmer, lives there and it was through him that we decided to locate in Canada.” Yours truly, Mrs. Richard Henry Ebinger. TAKES HIS BROTHER-IN-LAW’S WORD FOR IT. Taylors Falls, Minn., Aug. 1. 1911 k “I shall go to Camrose this Fall with my cattle and household goods. I got a poor crop here this year and rnybroUter-in-law, Axel Nordstrom in Camrose, wants me to come there. He formerly lived in Wilton, North Dakota. lam going to buy or take homestead when I get there, but I do not want to travel two times there, for 1 take my brother-1 n-lawt word about the country, and want to get your low rate.” Yours truly Peter A. Nelson. WANTS TO RETURN TO CANADA. Vesta, Minn.. July 24th. '.910 “I went to Canada nine years ago and took upa quarter section of railroad land and a homestead, but my boys have never taken up any land yet I still hold the railroad land. I had to come back to the states on account of my health. Please let mo know at once if 1 can get the cheap rates to Ponoka, Alberta. ” Yours trn 1 y, Geo. Paskewits. Vesta, Minn.
AXLE GREASE Keeps the spindle bright and free from grit. Try a box. Sold by dealers everywhere. STANDARD OIL CO. 1 (Incorporated)
