The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 30 March 1911 — Page 7
WEAK BACKS MADE STRONG. Backache in most cases is kidneys ache, and usually accompanied by irregularities of the urine. To remove the pain and weakness, you must cure | the kidneys. Do so | wit h Doan’s Kidney | (Wjf I Pills. Mrs. Rosa Wein- | mann, 1927 Green- i wood Terrace, Chi- * cago, 111., says: “So ~ intense were the ** rheumatic pains in > my back, I felt like screaming. They gradually became more severe until they ran all oveiyjjßy body. I could not sleep and could hardly move. I steadily grew worse until I could scarcely open or close my hands. No > relief was obtained until I began us- ! ing Doan’s Kidney Pills. Soon I felt | better and ere long the pain left.” Remember the name —Doan’s. For sale by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. STRIKING PEOPLE DIFFERENTLY. ) io* ♦ iirw 4L Servant —Heavens I have knocked the big flower pot off the window ledge, and it struck a man on the head. Mistress —What! My beautiful majolica? — i; Rheumatism Advice j Gives Prominent Doctor’s Best < Prescription— ls Easily Mixed. ( “Get one ounce of syrup of Sarsaparilla compound and one ounce of Toris | compound. Then get half a pint of good | whisky and' put the other two Ingredi- i ents into it. Take a tablespoonful of this mixture before each meal and at bed time. Shake the bottle before using.” This is not new in this city as many of tlfe worse cases of rheumatism and back-ache have been cured by it 1 Good results come the first day. Any druggist has these ingredients on hand or will quickly get them from his wholesale house. Any one can mix them. Her Wedding March. A young girl who had never heard of Mendelssohn’s “Wedding March,' but was familiar with the more popular patody on it, was witness to a wedding ceremony in an uptown church recently. As the betrothed pair walked with dignified tread toward the altar to be wed and the organ pealed forth Mendelssohn’s inspiring march, the young girl was; plaihly shocked. When she arrived at her bome she told her mother of the ceremony and Innocently exclaimed: “What do you think, mother, they played ‘Gee Whiz! I’m - glad I’m Free.’ ” Dare to Be Happy. Let us never be afraid of innocent ' joy; God is good and what he does is ; well done; resign yourself to every- j thing, even to happiness; ask for the j spirit of sacrifice, of detachment, of re- ; nunciation, and above all, for the spirit of joy and gratitude, that genuine and religions optimism which sees. in God a Father, and asks no pardon for his benefits. We must dare to be happj and dare to confess it, regarding our selves always as the depositories, not as the authors of our own joy.— Amiel. WOULD LIE AWAKE ALL NIGHT WITH ITCHING ECZEMA — "Ever since I can remember I was a terrible sufferer of eczema and other Irritating skin diseases. I would lie awake all night, and my suffering was intolerable. fc A scaly humor settled on my back, and being but a child, I naturally scratched it. It was a burning, itching sensation, and utterly intolerable, in fact, it was so that I could not possibly forget about it. It did not take long before it spread to my shoulders and arms, and I was almost covered with a mass of | raw flesh on account of my scratchingit. I was in such a condition that my hands were tied. “A number of physicians were called, but it seemed beyond their medical power and knowledge to eyre me. Having tried numerous treatments without deriving any benefit from them, I had given myself up to the mercy of my dreadful malady, but I thought I would take the Cuticura treatment as a last resort. Words i cannot express my gratitude to the ! one who created ‘The Cuticura Mlrar ; cles,’ as I have named them, for now I I feel as if I never suffered from even 1 a pimple. My disease was routed, by Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and I shall never cease praising the wonderful merits they contain. I will never be without them, in fact, I can almost dary any skin diseases to attack me so long as I have Cuticura Remedies in the house. I hope that this letter will give other sufferers an idea of how I Buffered, and also hope that they will not pass the ‘Cuticura Life Saving Station.’ ’’ (Signed) C. Loulb Green, 929 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, Pa., Aug, 29, 1910. Severe Critics. Alice —I like Tom Immensely, and he’s very much the gentleman, but he does like to talk about himself! Grace —Yes, dear, your knight hath a thousand I’s.—Puck. In the Spring cleanse the system and purify the blood by the use of Garfield Tea. A woman’s club sometimes reminds a man of » hammer.
New News a I Os Yestepday
Story of Trio of Celebrities
How William Orton Got Appointment For Tim Campbell’s Father and How Roscoe Conkling Upheld the Action. In the informal political history of ■ the Country the late Timothy D. i Campbell, state senator and congressman from New York’s East Side, gained fame when he naively asked ; President Cleveland, “What’s the Constitution between fripnds?” In the realm of telegraphy the late William Orton has a niche as one of the great presidents of the Western Union Telegraph company. Long after his other deedjs have been forgotten Roscoe Conkling will be remembered as the man whose hatred of James G. Blaine caused the “Plumed Knight” to be defeated for the presidency by Grover I Cleveland. "At the time when Tim Campbell was ' chairman of the committee on civics at Albany,” said Mr. Orton, “a piece of ‘strike’ legislation affecting the telegraph interests was Introduced i In the legislature and had the support ■of a certain lobby. We had opportunities i enough to hire another lobby to defeat the measure, but we would not do it. Instead we appeared before the I oivics committee and made arguments Against the proposed legislation; but the outcome of our efforts seemed i pretjty dubious to us. ; “At last I saw Senator Campbell and asked him if he could give us aid in any way, provided he could do so conscientiously. He told me in reply that be considered the measure an outi rageous one, and that he would do his best;, as chairman of the committee, to kill it;, and he did. “After the legislature had adjourned [ sent for Senator Campbell, and when he had come to me I said: 'Senator, I want to express my thanks for what you have done for my company. You have done us a very great service, and I should like to acknowledge it in some way.’ “‘Mr. Orton,’ Tim replied, ‘there isn’t any way in which you can acknowledge the service except by such thanks as you have just spoken. I did what I thought was my duty as a senator.’ “ ‘But,’ I persisted, ‘wouldn’t you like to take a trip to Europe? Something along that line is the least we can do.’ “■‘Oh, no,’ Tim replied. Then he
Tale of Lincoln and Stanton ; «
I ■ Secretary of War Couldn’t Understand I Great Emancipator’s Enjoyment of i P. V. Nasby While Waiting for Election Returns. Charles A. Dana, who himself had the keenest appreciation of humor, was one of the very few men associated with President Lincoln In his administration who understood perfectly why Lincoln frequently turned to ‘the peculiar humor of Petroleum V. Nasby, or rejoiced in the witticisms of . Artemus Ward—humor that many pel-sons regarded as beneath the dignity of a president of the United States to recognize. Mr. Dana was assistant secretary of war in 1863-4. Mr. Dana used to say that for a man who had such an exquisite appreciation of humor, Lincoln gathered around him about as grim and solemn a cabinet as any president ever had. Secretary of State William H. Seward possessed a certain kind of humor and always viewed things In a ’ sunny light. But Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase, Gideon Welles, secretary of the navy, and pari tlcularly Edwin M. Stanton, secretary of war, had no more sense or appre- ; elation of humor, Mr. Dana used to I say, than a graven image. And Mr. j Dana once told me of a most interesting, and from one point of view, humorous, Incident illustrating both Stanton’s lack of sense of humor and ! appreciation of the true character of ; Lincoln. Whether or not Mr. Dana himself ever printed the story I am unable to say. “It was on the evening of presidential election day, 1864," said Mr. Dana. “The telegraph office in the war department had arranged to receive returns from all parts of the country that could be reached by telegraph. At that time the war department was In the old building some little distance from the White House. “I should say that about 10 o’clock — perhaps ,a little later- —Mr. Lincoln came over from the White House to get such election returns as had been received by the-war department. The returns were not coming in very fast, and Mr. Lincoln, deciding to remain awhile, sat down on the old sofa which stood at the rear end of Secretary Stanton’s office. With him was Whitelaw Reid, who, at that time, was the Washington correspondent of one of the Cincinnati newspapers. “Pretty soon Mr. Lincoln pulled a pamphlet from his pocket and began to read from it to Mr. Reid. Occaatanally, he eave way to laughter and i 4
— hesitated, as though a sudden thought had come to him; and pretty soon he went on: ‘“Mr. Orton, now that I come to think of it, there is something that possibly you can do. My dear old father Is a good man. He goes to church every Sunday; and that is more than I do. He has voted the Republican ticket occasionally; and that is more than I have done. And he has one queer ambition —he would be the happiest man on earth if he could be appointed messenger In the outer office of the postmaster of New York City. That would make him a very proud man. If you can persuade the postmaster to appoint him to that office. I shall be deeply grateful.’ “A few hours later,” continued Mr. Orton, “I took up the matter with the postmaster. I knew that I had no right to ask for the political favor, and the postmaster knew it, but after I had told him of my conversation with Tim Campbell, he declared that it would give him great pleasure to appoint the senator’s father a messenger in his outer office. ‘But,’ he added, it will get me into hot water with the organization.’ Nevertheless, the old man was given the post he had so long coveted, and It was almost pathetic to see the joy with which he accepted that humble appointment.
TVb Dress-Suit For Garland
Arkansas Senator, When Offered Attorney Generalship, Said That He Couldn’t Take Part in Society Affairs in Washington. After President-elect Grover Cleveland had resigned the office of governor or New York and taken part in the ceremony by which he forinally transferred that office to David B. Hill, the lieutenant governor, he began the difficult work of cabinet making. As he had rarely visited Washington and was without intimate acquaintance with any of the leading men of his party outside New, York state, he felt that it was essential that he should have in his cabinet men who had been in close touch with public life, and especially the public life which concentrates at Washington. For that reason Cleveland decided
displayed other genuine evidences of being intensely amused by the humor of the article he was reading. It was as I remember one of a collection of some of the humorous papers of Petroleum V. Nasby, the nom de plume of the editor of the Toledo Blade — humorous sarcasm that had great vogue at that time. “I saw that Stanton was getting annoyed, and at last he took me to one side. ‘Can you understand that?.’ he asked, Indignantly, nodding in the direction of the president. ‘The destiny of this nation is dependent upon this election. We shall know before morning whether the cause of the Union has been triumphant at the polls or not. And there sits the man, around whom this election centers, on that sofa reading that miserable trash, and laughing at it as though he were the most unconcerned man in the United States over the results of the election I can’t stand It!’ “And I said to Stanton: TI tell you why he’s reading Nasby. It Is simply to relieve the terrific strain —mental and temperamental—that is upon him. If he did not get relief in that way. he would die or go crazy.’ And I do believe that until that moment Secretary Stanton had no appreciation whatever of the real reason why Lincoln sought refuge and consolation in humor in what were critical or dark moments of the war and the nation.” (Copyright, 1910. by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) Valuable Woods. Many valuable woods that ,are little known exist in places remote from the centers of consumption. About 400 merchantable kinds exist In the Philippines, and the bureau of forestry at Manila has arranged to distribute small samples at a price just sufficient to cover the cost. The famous hard woods of Australia include the yate, the strongest of all known timbers. The tree reaches a maximum height of 100 feet, and is sometimes two and onehalf or even three feet In diameter. The average tensile strength of the wqod is 24,000 pounds to the square inch, equal to that of good cast iron, and the strength of some specimens reaches 35,000 pounds, about that of wrought iron. The tensile strength of white oak is 20,000 to 24.00 Q pounds; that of ash, 11,000 to 21,000 pounds. What a Waste. “Farms are becoming valuable now,” “Yep,” replied Mr. Corntossel, *Tn bet it won’t be long before these city folks are sorry they covered up all their good land with houses.”
“Then I took it upon myself to call upon Senator .Roscoe Conkling and lay before him all the circumstances connected with the appointment. ‘Tell the postmaster for me,’ said Conkling, when I had finished, ‘that if the organization makes any trouble over the appointment he is to send the leaders to me.’ “A few days later the organization leaders marched into the senator’s room in the Fifth Avenue hotel. He received them in a stately, manner; and as soon as the manner of their reception would permit they declared in almost horror-stricken tones that the postmaster of New York had actu- J ally committed the unforgivable political crime of appointing a Democrat a messenger at his door, and with one voice they Indignantly insisted that the old man be removed. “Senator Conkling heard them through, then drew himself up in his Imperious manner. ‘Gentlemen,’ he said —and his voice was as cold as steel —‘I have listened to the information you.have brought to me. I have to say in reply that, had I been postmaster of New York. I would have felt that I had honored myself in making the appointment. If this Is all that you have to say to me you had better retire to your respective homes.’ “And they retired forthwith,’’ ended Mr. Orton, with a smile. (Copyright, 1910. by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.)
that it was imperative that he should choose a majority of his cabinet from the group of able Democratic senators in congress, and he sent, in the order named, for Thomas F. Bayard of Delaware. John G. Carlisle of Kentucky, L. Q. C. Lamar of Mississippi, Augustus H. Garland of Arkansas, and offered them, respectively, the posts of secretary of state, secretary of the treasury, secretary of the interior and attorney general. Senators Bayard, Carlisle and Lamar gave almost instant acceptance to the Invitations of the president-elect to enter his cabinet. But when the offer of the attorney generalship was made to Senator Garland Mr. Cleveland noticed that it was received hesitatingly and almost as though the former confederate senator from and former governor of Arkansas was going to give a peremptory but courteous declination to enter the cabinet. Now Mr. Cleveland had a very high regard for the ability and the character of Senator Garland. He knew that the Arkansan was esteemed as able a lawyer as any that had sat in the senate chamber since the civil war, ranking in that respect with Senator Allen G. Thurman of Ohio, who had left the senate four years earlier, and with Senator George F. Edmunds of Vermont, who was to leave that body six years later. Therefore, when he noticed that Senator Garland hesitated to accept the cabinet post, Cleveland asked him point blank if he did not think he should be willing to forego his personal preference to remain in the senate in order that he might serve his country and his party to better advantage, perhaps, as attorney general. “To that question,” said the late Daniel Lamont, who told me the anecdote, having had it from Cleveland direct when he was that president’s private secretary, “Senator Garland replied that he should esteem it a great honor to serve as attorney general, but that he ought not to accept the offer without a clear understanding on the part of Mr. Cleveland of one objection which he had to entering the cabinet “ ‘I am a student, absorbed In my duties as senator and In some professional work,’ said Senator Garland. T am utterly unfitted by temperament and experience to take any part In the social life which is one of the characteristics deemed essential If a cabinet officer is to be successful. I do not attend public dinners and I give no dinners. To do that would cause me embarrassment, and it would -be absolutely Impossible for me to wear a ; swallow-tail coat.’ “ ‘Judge Garland,’ said the governor —and he couldn’t help smiling broad- I ly—‘all that need give you no concern ; at all. It will be understood between us that your present manner of life is to be respected. But It won’t prevent your coming over and chatting with me occasionally.’ "When Senator Garland heard this cordial recognition of what he was : afraid would be regarded as a defect ; that would bar him from cabinet assoelation, he assured Mr. Cleveland that nothing would give him greater gratification than to enter the cabinet with that understanding,” continued Mr. Lamont. “And the understanding was faithfully observed on both sides. Nor did Garland’s abstention from the social activities of the administration cause the slightest comment. But I think there was no man of his admin istration with whom Cleveland had more enjoyable chats than those he sometimes had with Garland.” (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards. Rights
OATS—2S9 Bu. Per Acre. That is the sworn to yield of Theodore Harmes, Lewis Co., Wash., had from Salzer’s Rejuvenated White Bonanza oats and won a handsome 80 acre farm. Other big yields are 141 bus., 119 bus., 103 bus., etc., had by farmers scattered throughout the U. S. Salzer’s Pedigree Barley, Flax, Corn, Oats, Wheat, Potatoes, Grasses and Clovers are famous the world over for their purity and tremendous yielding qualities. We are easily the largest growers of farm seeds in the world. Our catalog bristling with seed truths free for the asking, or send 10c in stamps and receive 10 packages of farm seed novelties and rarities, including above marvelous oats, together with big catalog. John A. Salzer Seed Co., 182 South Sth St., La Crosse, Wis. FAMILY PRIDE. -'"N V lt — k . * * v/ * Prof. Stork—And how are we getting on with our studies, Ernestine? Have you been promoted to the flying class yet? Little Miss Quacker —Oh, no, professor. Mother has decided that I shall not take that course. She says anybody can fly—but only the best families take to water naturally. Brought the Tears. An unusual incident marked a recent fire in New York. The fire started in the cellar of a five story tenement and before it was extinguished the 18 families in the building and all the firemen were weeping copiously from inflamed eyes. In the cellar many bags of onions had been stored. The chief fireman allowed the tenants to remain in the building, assuring them that the fire was confined to the cellar. They did not stay, how- ; ever, when the onions had got well afire. Seven Pensioners in One Family. Seven brothers and seven sisters living in Foulsham, England, and the adjacent parishes are receiving old ; age pensions. The oldest of the seven is eignty and the youngest seventyjne. Their united ages total 530 years. Their father was Philip Lambert, a carrier between Foulsham and : Norwich, who had a family of 16, all born in Foulsham and of whom 11 are now alive. SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE will cure any possible case of DISTEMPER, PINK EYE, and the like among horses of all ages, and prevents all others in the »ame stable from having the disease. Also eures chicken cholera, and dog distemper. Any gbod druggist can supply you, or send to mfrs. 50 cents and SI.OO a bottle. Agents wanted. Free book. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases. Goshen, Ind. A Ruling Passion. “Uncle Pinchpenny spent a great deal of time at the home of George Washington.” "Yes. He couldn’t be persuaded to stop looking for that dollar George is said to have thrown across the Potomac.” Important to Motners Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and Bure remedy for infants and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought His Place. “The trouble about my son Is that he never knows where he is at.” "Then why not get him a job with the weather bureau?" WHEN RUBBERS BECOME NECESSARY And your shews pinch, Alien’s Foot-Base, tho Antiseptic powder to bo shaken into the shoes, is just the thing to use. Try it for Breaking in New Shoes. Bold everywhere, 25c. Sample FBBB. Address A. 8. Olmsted, LeBoy.N.Y. Don't accent any tubatitute. It’s an easy matter for a married man to keep posted on what’s going on in his home neighborhood. Garfield Tea corrects constipation, cleanses the system and purifies the blood. ■ Good health is maintained by its use. The more unselfish you are the more selfish you may make others. ONtY ONE “BROMO QUININE.” That is L.4XATIVH BROMO QUININB. Look for the signature of B. W. GBOVTS. Used the World ; over to Cure a Cold In One Bay. 25c. It takes hardships a long time to sail out of sight.
MILD, GENTLE LAXATIVE FOR WOMEN GIVEN FREE
So many of the Ills of women are due •to habitual constipation, probably because of their false modesty on the subject, that their attention cannot bo too atronfly called to the importance of keeping the bowels open. It is always important to do that, regardless of the sex, but it is especially important in women. From the time the girl begins to menstruate until menstruation ceases she has always vastly better prospects of coming through healthy if she watches her bowel movements. If you find yourself constipated, with bad breath, pimply complexion. headaches, belching gas and other symptoms of Indigestion and constipation, take a small dose of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Home and School. Home and school are two different spheßs and have of necessity different duties to perform and different work to accomplish in the training and teaching of the child. But unless the ideals are the same and unless there is a systematic attitude of mind between parents and teachers, the best result cannot be achieved and the child must suffer. —Mrs. E. L. Franklin, Secretary Parents’ National Educational Union, England. A floating debt is anything but a life preserver.
Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 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, it would almost seem, to blame for her own wretchedness. Read what this woman says: RiehmoAd, Mo. — “ When my second daughter was eighteen months old I was pronounced a hopeless invalid by specialists. I had a consultation of doctors and they said I had a severe case of ulceration. I was in bed, for ten weeks, had sinking spells, and was pronounced to be in a dangerous condition. My father insisted that we try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and brought me six bottles. I soon began to improve, and before it had all been taken I was as well and strong as ever,—my friends hardly recognized me so great was the change. — Mrs. Woodson Branstetter, Richmond, Mo. There literally hundreds of thousands of women in the United States who have been benefited by tfeis famous old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman’s suffering. Read what another woman says:— Jonesboro, Texas.—"l have used Lydia E.Pinkham’s ble Compound for myself and daughter, and consider it unequalled for all female diseases. I would not be without it for anytliing. I wish every mother in America could be persuaded to use it as there would be less suffering among our sex then. I am always glad to speak a word of praise for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and you are ar liberty to use tins testimoniaL” —Mrs. James T» Lawrence, Jonesboro, 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 female ills. No sick woman does justice to (67 Cal Vi & herself who will not try this famous medicine. 11 Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and 7/1 has thousands of cures to its credit. U \ s ~' A/ \ If the slightest trouble appears which GA /n) you do not understand, write to Mrs. Finkham at Lynn, Mass., for her advice —it is free and always helpful.
All Over. The Tiger—What’s the matter with the giraffe, He desn’t look well. The Lion —No. he says he feels sick all over. The Tiger—Has a sore throat, I suppose. FILES CURED IN 6 TO 14.DATS, Torn-druggist will reluud money If PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in Gto 14 days. 50c. Probably there is nothing more industrious than an idle rumor. All druggists sell the famous Herb remedy, Garfield Tea. It corrects constipation. No doubt the mind cure is all right —if you have the mind to begin Tcith.
, Backache Is only one of many symptoms which some women endure through weakness or displacement of the womanly organs. Mrs. Lizzie White of Memphis, Tenn., wrote ■Sk K Pul Dr. R. V. Pierce, as follows : ° t * inc9 wa9 hardly able to be on my feet. Er I believe I had every pain and ache a woman f could have. Had a very bad case. Internal / fl, organs were very much diseased and my back / was very weak. I suffered a great deal with / WREv.3I nervous headaches, in fact, I suffered all over. P ~ / This was my condition when I wrote to you for / advice. After taking your ‘Favorite Prescrip* / IsrOSB tion * for about three months can say that my health was never better.” Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is a positive cure for weakness and disease of the feminine organism. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. Tones and buitds up the nerves. Do not permit a dishonest dealer to substitute for this medicine which has a record of 40 years of cures. “ No, thank you, I want what I ask for.” Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets induce mild natural bowel'movement once a day.
Pepsin. It is a woman’s favorite laxative. You will find that you can do away with salts, strong cathartics, etc., which are entirely unsuited to woman's requirements. Mrs. Katherine Haberstroh of McKees Rocks, Pa., and Mrs. A. E. Herrick of Wheeler, Mich., who was almost paralyzed in her stomach and bowels, are now cured by the use of this remedy. A free sample bottle can be obtained by addressing Dr. Caldwell, and after you are convinced of its merits buy it of your druggist at fifty cents and one dollar a bettie. For the free sample address Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 201 Caldwell building, Monticello, 111.
30 ft. Bowels— Biggest organ of the body— the bowels—ar d the most important— It’s got to be looked after —neglect means suffering and years of misery. CASCARETS help nature keep every part of yous bowels clean and strong—then they act right —means health to your whole body. at CASCARETS ioc a box for a week’s treatmerit. All druggists. Biggest seller m the world — Million boxes a montn.
man nhi an■ miiwi iw aw—mana— A Country School for Girls in New York City * Best Features of Country and City Life Out-of-door Sports on School Park of 35 acres near the Hudson River. Full Academic Course from Primary Class to Graduation. Upper Class for Advanced Special Students. Music and Art. Summer Session. Certificate admits to College. t School Coach Meets Day Pupils. Miss Bangs and Miss Whiton, Riverdale Ave., near 252 d St, West DEFIANCE •-other starches only 12 ounces—same price and “DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY. VlUilUnfiAi AN 182 Central Ave., East Oran» MllnUUALvn N. J. wa.nts men and women anxious to earn good commission to write at unoa
YOU CAN BUY OR SELL any Real Estate in Central States thru us, without commission. New way. Write us. OHIO REALTY SERVICE, Lima, Ohle for all EYE Kva diseases DEFIANCE —other starches only 12 ounce*—same price IM “DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY. Thompson’s Eye Watts W. N, U, FT. WAYNE, NO.
