The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 November 1911 — Page 3
I Most Fickle Man. When Col. Willaim M. Howard, now i a member of the tariff board, was elec- | #tioneering for congress one autumn ■ in bygone days, he struck a back- | ■woods county in Georgia, and got very j busy talking softly to the voters. He , was much concerned about a man named John, who was now for him. then against, him, and always changeable. I “What’s the matter with John?” the : colonel asked one of his constituents. “Aw, you can’t tell nothin’ about , John, colonel,” was the assurance. “He I is the most/ fickle man you ever see. I Why, he has had religion so many ; times, and been baptized in the creek | down here so often that the bullfrogs know him every time he’s ’mersed. Subjective. “I see somebody has invented a ■noiseless’ soup spoon. In what way is it noiseless?” “Why, madam, it’s constructed in such a manner that—er —you don’t make a noise when you're using it.” SHE SUFFERED ITIYE YEARS - I Finally Cured by Lydia E. Pink- • ham’s Vegetable Compound. Erie, Fa. — “I suffered for five years from female troubles and at last was
'.almost helpless. I i .■went to three doc- ; Jtdrs and they did mo no good, so my | sister advised me to ! try Lydia E. Pink- : ham’s Vegetable Compound, and ; when I had taken only two bottles I could see a big change, so I topi six bottles and I am now strong and well
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attain. I don’t know how to express mv thanks for the good it has done me end I hope all suffering women will give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetabla > Compound a trial. It was worth its weight in gold.”—Mrs. J. P. Endlicu, j It. F. D. No. 7, Erie, Pa. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- 1 pound, made from-native roots and ' herbs, contains no narcotic or harm- j ful drugs, and tb-day holds the record | for the largest number of actual cures ( of female diseases we know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials I are on file in the Pinkham laboratory ' at Lynn, Mass., from women who have • been cured from almost every form of i female complaints, such as infiamma- ' tion, ulceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, ' backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. Every suffering woman owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial. If you want special advice write Mrs.Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for it. It is free and always helpful. Hr | New Method Bread Raiser With this cabinet you have no failures, have no hard crusts on bread, no dry, stale bread; can raise your ' bread out on your porch as well as ' in the kitchen; will save the price of itself every year in fuel alone, f This cabinet free on 30 days’ trial, freight f prepaid to your station, if, after a fair trial, ’ it is not satisfactory return it at our expense — Write sot Particulars ft-EW METHOD MANUFACTURING COMPANY Zanesville, Ohio Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right ! CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gentlybutfirmly B pel a lazy liver to a DTrn’c do its duty. XiaWiyjilw-'"KI ut\O Cures Con- ® •tipation, In- H I VER digestion, M PILLS. Sick MIFiiIaM : Headachy, i= ' and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature II TT\ 1 of this paper de- II I Readers I anything aaver- |l ■I tised in its columns should insist upon II | having what they ask for, refusing all II li substitutes or imitations. «spoarsMiK’S Honest Goods. Bottom Prices Square Deal GiiaranteeC Bond 3c. stamp for latalog POWELL&CLEMEMT CO. 410 Maia St., Cincinnati. quick RELIEF SORE EYES
jl (Copjright, 1911. by Associated Literary lres»j I The railroad station at Sunrise, 1 Ariz., was a low wooden building, sun- ' blistered and weather-warped. The j shining tracks skirted the battered 1 platform and darted out into the des- , ert again, throwing back glittering i sparks of light from their polished steel. It was a scorching day, with a deep mauve tint close to the broken ranges in the distance, and Bill Ranslow argued that, it denoted a storm. “Maybe wind —maybe sand 4 —maybe rain,” he said didactically to the station agent, who was sweeping the platform in anticipation of the possible stopping of the daily train from the east. Lan Dowd whacked his broom against a post and then leaned heavily on it. “Rain!” he sneered. . ‘ Tell me when we’ve had any rain! Not more n once or twice since 1 came to Sunrise.” "When was that?" Bill asked the question, notrfrom idleness, but because he really wanted to know. There were many things he had forI gotten since he had drifted into Sun- ! rise one morning three years agcr, and, overcome by the somnolence of ! the desert town, had succumbed to its ; influence, and now had become one j of her shiftless, idle population. “I’ve been here seven months,” said Lan in an injured tone, "and in all that time not a drop of rain. "What do you expect in- this gods forsaken hole?” demanded. Bill aggressively. "I don't know,” said the other slowly. "What do you expect, Bill Ranslow?” “Don’t ask me,” returned the other with a reckless laugh. "1 don't want to. remember, and so I try to forget. Nothing the matter with Sunrise!” The agent resumed his sweeping. "N. king the matter with Sunrise ex- ! cept there's eight saloons and only j one church!" he said bitterly. “Here she comes,” remarked Bill I Ranslow. and he slouched off, to lean 1 against the wall of the building, his j broad-brimmed hat pulled well over ■ his eyes. A whistle sounded from the. high-1 ; way crossing a mile away, and in a ! few minutes' there* was a drift of • black smoke in .the air. the thunder : of the approaching train, the thump I of a slender mail bag as it .-struck ! the platform, and then, wonder of i wonders, the express snorted to a standstill at Sunrise. The station agent ran excitedly looking for his seldom used baggag® truck, for a trunk had been hurtled from the baggage car and a passenger had alighted from the train. There was a creaking of wheels, the con- : ductor flapped a hand and the express ! thundered away into the west, leaving a small, slender little woman on the platform. She was dressed all in gray, a soft, dusty-looking gray, with a little gray hat with a perky pink wing stuck on one side of the crown. A soft gray veil was half draped over the hat and partly concealed a pale, delicate face, which would have been pretty if it i Lad not worn a scared, sorrowful look. The newcomer was about thirty-five years old, though under happier conditions she might have appeared younger. She looked helplessly from the station master to Bill Ranslow, and to his sudden terror—a terror that glued his feet to the platform and prevented his fleeing from her gentle presence as his heart prompted him to do —she came forward and paused ; in front of him. “Excuse me,” she said timidly, “I am a stranger here —I came expecting to see a—a —friend of mine. Perhaps you know Mr. William Poole Ranslow?” She waited for Bill’s answer. The station master, who had drawn near, darted a quick glance at Bill and made as if to speak, but the movement of Bill’s hand toward his hip pocket frustrated his intention. “Who did you say, ma’am?” asked Bill hoarsely. “Mr. William Poole Ranslow— I doesn’t he live in Sunrise? You see, his friends ijave been anxious to hear from him and —so I’ve come out to look for him.” Her voice faltered. Bill shook himself vigorously and shot a defiant glance at the gaping station master. “Mr. Ranslow’s all . right,” he reassured her, “only he’s j been pretty busy lately—ain’t he, Lan?” Lan Dowd glanced apprehensively at Bill Ranslow’s untidy figure, at his unkempt beard, his bloodshot eyes peering from under his hat brim, and he answered hastily: “Oh, yes, ma’am. Bill —I mean Mr. Ranslow’s real well —only as Bill here says, he’s been awfully busy!” “Thank you—l’m so glad,” breathed the little woman. “Now it you’ll direct me to the best hotel I will be more grateful.” There was an instant’s hesitation before Bill Ranslow answered her. “Now, ma’am, there’s not much choice of hotels,” he said earnestly, “and I’m thinking if you was to sit here with Lan for awhile I’d go on down street and send Mr. Ranslow up after you and let him judge what you’d better do.” “You are more than kind,” smiled the little woman, gratefully. “I suppose you’re a friend of Mr. Ranslow’s?” she added graciously.
“No, ma’am,” he said sharply. Tn his worst enemy!” and he went away. Bill Ranslow dashed into the barroom of the Mesa hotel and confronted a dozen men—leading citizens ot Sunrise —his friends. “Boys,” he said abruptly, “I got something to say; I came here three years ago to look into the old Sunrise mine with a view to buying it I bad plenty of money in my pocket, and I’ve got a good lot of it yet—but I got into your slouching, lazy, easy going ways and I’ve fallen step by step until lam what I am! What am I?” he suddenly deufended of the biggest and roughest of his interested listeners. “You’re a loafer, Bill —you're the ; only one that ain't in business of j some kind here in Sunrise.” “That’s right. I’m a loafer, and : more, too! I was engaged to a pretty ' little schoolma’am btgck in the east there, and I just stopped writing and let everything, go sc's I could loaf and drink and gamble out here. Boys,’ his voice dropped earnestly, “she just came in on the express and she didn’t know me, and she asked me where Mr. William Poole Ranslow was —you wouldn’t hardly believe it, but that used to be me! "I told her I’d go after him and bring- him to her—boys. She’s wearing a dove gray dross and a hat with a pink wing in that she picked out lor a wedding dress before I came west.” His voice broke for an instant, and then he recovered- -himselt by a strong effort, and he threw out ' his hands appealingly. “Boys, she’s I waiting up there for Mr. William! < — i >ll L-' I , SD “Excuse Me,” She Said. Poole Ranslow and he’s going up! there as fast as the barber and the I clotjhesman can fix him up. He’s got I the price boys; all you got to do is husltle. He’s got to be dressed iike j a bridegroom, and when he goes up to that there station after his bride you’ll all remember that a shiftless, drunken fellow named Bill Ranslow. died this afternoon?” “That’s right!” “We will!” "I'll go rout out the sky pilot!” Willing hands and feet volunteered i in his service, and presently there I emerged from the Mesa hotel a fine j looking middle-aged man of manly j bearing, . garbed in cool gray gar- 1 mente, with proper accessories so fai as the Sunrise emporium could contribute, his face clean-shaven and hopefully turned toward the little figure at the station, which was tc him the good angel who would lead him back to his eastern home and the old familiar, quiet ways. "Hurray for Mr. William Poole Ranslow!” yelled the barber, excited ' ly waving his hat after the departing : bridegroom. Mr. Ranslow turned and saluted i them joyously. "Them as wants to mourn for old Bill Ranslow can do so,” remarkec Big Stephen as he led the way back to the hotel. “As for me, I ain’t gol no time —I’ve got to slick up for this here wedding.” Boss of the House. “But, madam,” says the surgeon after the woman has recovered consciousness in the hospital, "why didn’t you stop when the crossing police man held up his hand? Then you wouldn’t have been struck by the au tomobile.” "What! Me stop when Jim Megin nis holds up his hand? I’d let you know I’m his wife, an’ he never saw the day when he could me!”— Judge. Usually. Friend —What became of that mag zine that you organized to warn peo pie against worthless stocks on the market? Promoter —Well, we sold the public nearly half a million worth of its stock before we failed. —Puck. Didn’t Have to Be. New Suburbanite —I suppose this is Pasteurized milk, my friend? Village Milkman (witheringly—Not so’s ye kin taste it, I reckon, mister. In fact, I’ll hand ye a $5 note if y< kin prove any uv my cows wuz eve> bit by a mad dog!—Puck. Wanted It All. Owner (feebly)—What happened to us? Chauffeur—A telegram pole ran in to us, sir. 1 never see such road hogs! —Puck. Sure Sign. Mistress —Has Master Willie come in yet? Servant—l think so, ’m. I haven’t seen him, but the cat is hidin’!—Lon dem Opinion.
WADE CONVERT OF OLD SILAS Member of School Board May Have Had Deep Thoughts, but Anyway He Was Satisfied. The athletic young woman who taught the district school was on trial for soundly thrashing seven unruly boys. “You—you think you can control the rituation, do—do you ?” Inquired the president of the school board, who stuttered. “I can,” replied the young woman 1 with considerable decision. “Well, I don’t know about this,” grinned Silas Weatherwax. “ T s my ' boy a lickin’ I can give it to him I myself. I don’t believe in miscellaneous lickin’s.” The teacher smiled. “Neither do I,” she said. “If thrash Ings are to be administered I think it much better for one person to administer them. And after I have cleaned up the school I may decide to go out and clean up the township.” A moment later when a vote of confidence in the teacher -was called for, the “aye” of Silas Weatherwax was the loudest of all. < Curative Treatment. In his reading lesson Bobby had come to the word “punishment,” and It was too long and hard for him. After puzzling a while he asked the teacher-what the word was. “You ought not to let that puzzle you, Bobby,” she answered. “What I does your mother give you when you i have been an unusually naughty boy?” “Castor oil!” he exclaimed, sure | that he had guessed it. —Youth’s Companion. Distemper : In all its forms among all ages of horses ; and dogs, cured and others in the same i stable prevented from having the disease I with Spohn’s Distemper Cure. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 750,000 bottles sold last year. 8.50 ana. 81-00. Good drug- | gists, or send to "manufacturers. Agents | wanted. Write for free book. -Spohn lied. Co.. Spec. Contagious Diseases, , loshen, Ind. Natural Ending. “Our cook’s dead.” “Indeed? Did she die a natural death?” “Yes, the natural death of a person who tries to light a fire with kerosene!” —Stray Stories. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of ; CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Tn Use For Over 30 Years. 1 Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Right Place. “Henry may be a bad student, but at least he is consistent.” “In what way?" “I caught him sv earing over his profane history.” Blood Poisoning is often caused by ! flight cuts or wounds. Death may result. ! Hamlins Wizard Oil will draw out the 1 poison, heal the wound and prevent se- , rious trouble. A town that pays the preacher and j supports the editor is mighty close to I heaven. —Atlanta Constitution. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate *nd invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take ts candy. A woman may not be able to make a fool of every man she meets, but she can make something just as good. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation* allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottie. There are many who recite their i writings in the middle of the forum. In order to become a nuisance you have only to hunt up a grievance.
Cement Talk No. 11 There are countless uses for UNIVERSAL Portland Cement xbout the place. For the cellar, concrete is water-proof, ratproof and everlasting. Concrete is the best material for sidewalks, steps, foundations, well curbs, posts, troughs, water tanks, barn floors ind cisterns. It will pay rou to build of concrete, . It lasts forever. It is fireproof, janitary and cheap in the long wn. Use UNIVERSAL Portland Cement —it makes he best concrete, UNIVERSAL PORTLAND CEMENT CO. CffICAGO-PITTSBURG ANNUAL OUTPUT 10.000.000 BARRELS
STJTUEOO™ Memorial to- Boid Raider Unveiled in Lexington. « z I Splendid Equestrian Statue of Noted j Confederate General Who Was a Prominent Figure During Civil War Period. Lexington, Ky.—Kentucky recentlj I celebrated the memory and deeds o! ! one of the confederacy’s greatest cav airy raiders, Gen. John H. Morgan, j whose name, with that of Gen. Mosby of Virginia, fills the hnnals of daring i in the civil war. Morgan’s name was a terror in the ! border states of the Ohio river until ' l the union forces dominated Kentucky. I j and his brilliant service in many of ■ i the most important battles, including ; i Shiloh, Pittsburg Landing and others, ' i stamped him as one of the great lead- ; ers of the south. His career was cut short Sept. 4, : 1864, when he was trapped by federal | forces at Greenville, Tenn., and was ! shot dead in attempting to escape, ; ! with his staff, from a house in that ' : city which had been surrounded in i the Union surprise. I The entire south has taken an interest in the erection of this monument. The Kentucky legislature appropriated $7,500 toward its cost and ’ the Daughters of the Confederacy a I like sum. Other contributions came ; ! from private sources. Pompee Coppini. the sculptor, of ! Los Angeles, Cal., executed the monu- I ! ment. Coppini, the sculptor, of IjOS | ) Angeles, Cai., executed the monuI ment. Coppini is an Italian. Morgan’s first notable exploit was his invasion of Kentucky from Tennessee in 1861. Twelve hundred men marched under his standard, and aft- j STwivV, Wl I N*. The Morgan Statue. i er he had dispersed a small Union j force at Tompkinsville he issued a proclamation to the people of Kentucky.’ He was preparing the way for Gen. Bragg’s invasion of the state. He routed the Union forces at Lebanon, and captured several prisoners in a rapidly-executed raid. He pressed on to the Ohio, destroying a long railroad bridge between Cynthia and Paris. He dispersed the Home guards at Cynthia and was advancing on Cincinnati when a cavalry force under Green Clay Smith drove him to Rich mond. In 1863 he crossed the Ohio river ! into Indiana, capturing a small num- ■ | ber of prisoners. Later, with 3,500 men and six guns, he crossed the Cum--1 berland river at Burkesville. At Coi lumbia he met a party of Union cavalry, fought them three hours, and ’ partly sacked the town. His capture of Corydon, Ind., and :lre stern measures used in replenish- ' ing his supplies caused him to be de- i nounced as a brigand and aroused the I entire north. He was forced to retreat and his raid ended at Buffington j Ford, Ind., where 800 of his troopers . were captured. Morgan escaped. Indiana breathed more freely and Cincinnati, which he’ had threatened to capture, halted in its hasty plans of | defense. | Gen. Morgan’s methods brought j forth severe criticism in the north, but | the south regarded him as a great cav- j alryman. and the state of his birth, j although it did not join the confed- | eracy, now honors his memory. LOVE NOTE COMES TOO LATE — Grocer’s Clerk Finds Girl Who Wrvie I It Is Married and Has Family. Boston, Mass.—The Society of Canned Flirts, in Boston, received another recruit the other day, when a Rockland grocer’s clerk sent an ardent note to a young woman who had written her name on the label of a can of squash. At a favorable mon ent he indited a missive to the squash canner, mentioning himself favorably and offering to correspond further. Now he is wondering how long ago that squash ripened under the autumn sun. The letter he received in answer to his note read: ' “My Dear Boy: Times have changed since I packed that can of squash and wrote my name on the label. I have married since then and have a family of my cwn. You should have written sooner.” Eighty-Nine and Weds Girl of Thirteen Sergent, Ky.—Uncle Jim Norland, aged eighty-nine years, was married in Sergent recently to Miss Sallie Brown, a schoolgirl, aged th!"teen l«ars.
Womans Ills Manv women suffer needlessly from girlhood to womanhood and from motherhood to old age—with backache, dizziness or headache. She becomes broken-down, sleepless, nervous, irritable and feels tired from morning to night. When pains and aches rack the womanly system at frequent intervals, ask your ncigi.ljor about ■Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription This Prescription has, for overdo years, been "c ‘ ‘ carina delicate, weak, pain-wracked women, by the hundreds of thousands and this too in the privacy of their homes without their having to submit to indelicate questionings and offensively repugnant examinations.
Sick women are invited to consult in confidence by letter free. Address I "World’s Dispensary Medical Ass?n,'R.V. Pierce. M. D., Pres’t, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce’s Great Family Doctor Book, The People’s Common Sens* Medical Adviser, newly revised up-to-date edition—looo pages, answers ;» Plain English hosts of delicate questions which every.woman, single ©r married, ought to know about. Sent free to any address on receipt of 31 OBe-cnsl stamps to cover cost of wrapping and mailing ohly, in French cloth binding. ■ — ————— — i (tep PERFECTION CMLhStER I Always ready for use. Safest and most reliable. ■ The Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater is just " ! i like a portable fireplace. It gives quick, glowing heat wherever, whenever, you want it -Z A necessity in fall and spring, when it is not cold enough for vy) | the furnace. Invaluable as an auxiliary heater in midwinter. Drums of blue enamel or plain steel, with nickel trimmings, fi-. ‘ Ask your dealer to show you a Perfection Smokeless Oil Heato, ol write to any agency of \ f Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) ‘ 4.. ■- ■ t
POSSIBLE EXPLANATION. i I ' I Miss Screecher —Hie must be very tender-hearted. Whjl, every time i sing he cries. Collier Downs —Maybe he doesn’t j iike to see anything murdered. Silly Game, A city cousin had been staying at I the farm for two weeks, resting up for i the winter's round of pleasure. One i evening after supper she. suggested to I her country cousin that they get up a : bridge party some evening. “My sakes, Arabella,’’ was the horrified reply. “They ain’t no bridge nearer than four mile, and that one’s ; awful rickety. This time of the year. ■ you’d all have penumonia. For crazy , new-fangled idees, give me you city folks!” After a man has been married about a year he begins to wonder why his. friends didn’t get busy and have him locked up before he did it Sometimes a man who flatters gets *ven with a girl who flirts. 1
WHAT’S THE MATTER WITH YOUR BABY?
The young mother-»and many an oM »ne. too—is often puzzled to know the oause of her ill nature. The loudness of its crying does not neces- ! sarily indicate the seriousness of its i trouble. It mav have nothing more the i matter with it than a headache or a feelI ing of general dullness. It cannot, of i course, describe its feelings, but as a : preliminary measure you are safe m i trying a mild laxative. : Nine times out of ten, you will find it is all the child needs, for its -restlessness j and peevishness are perhaps due to obi struction of the bowels, and once that i has been remedied the headache, the I sluggishness and the many other eviI dences of constipation and indigestion will quickly disappear. Don’t give the little one salts, cathartic pills or nasty waters, for these will act as purgatives, and they are too Strong for a child. In the families of
W. L. *2.50, *3.00, *3.50 & °4.00 SHOES Jg. M Men and Women wear WX-Douglas shoes because they are the best shoes produced in ~~——* this country for the price, ihsist upon having them. Take no other make. siRV' ' '' THE STANDARD OF QUALITY SP** WXg. FOR OVER 30 YEARS " W ■■■■l I - ■ — i II The assurance that goes with an estab- F" / fished reputation is your assurance in buying tS W. L. Douglas shoes. > ■ ••q If I could take you into my large factories ' i at Brockton, Mass., and show you how a carefully W.L.Douglas shoes are made, you / hx would then understand why they are warranted to hold their shape, fit better and wear longer than any other make for the price CAUTION Tlle K euuin ® have W. L. Douglas V ’y unu l lull nai n e a ud price stamped on bottom ESwraSSav If you cannot obtain W. I. Douglas shoes in ONE PAIR of my BOYS’ S‘4,Sa.sO»r your town, write for catalog. Shoes sent direct 53.00 SHOES will positively outwear from factory to wearer, all charges prepaid. W.L. TWO PAIRS of ordinary boys’shoe. DOUGLAS. 145 Spark St., Brockton. Mast Fast Color Euelsts Used Exclusively —— ,—* -- ■”— n J^AV& Lan, P sand z-x U lanterns f >. Scientifically constructed to give YdFT&J I j most light for the oil they burn. 1 busy to light, clean and rewick. It &75a in numerous finishes and styles, each the || best of its kind. hIS TVi » Ask your dealer to show you his line of Rayo Lamps and I j , Lanterns, or write for illustrated booklets direct to any agency of the nSs£®K— Standard Oil Company JEjlk **s2Sii-'tS* -I (Incorporated) -—
i -1 Ipp
$4 Bu. to the Acre is a heavy yield, bnt that’s what John Kennedy of Edmonton, Alberta. Western Canada, not from acres oi Spring Wheat in I'JIU Retxin.t from other districts in that prosg; JsSHryy intie s bowed other excellent results—such as 4.t!vu ’’'isb' ls of wi-c.t Lvijw' | from 120 acres, or .WL-J I I liu - per acre. H I drsl*lll -1 b'usholyieW.-.weiatPUW-•IS 9 PV* I erous. As high as 11® ■ A 1 bushels of exits to theJt acre were threshed fteaas s* tfi? V A Alberta tseldsin IVO. The Silver Cop r a * ebc* recent Snotarw* fair was av. anted to —*A < I Tttrjwew Alberta (lovernuieatt-JC r \l Itsezhlbitdf grains, grasses ant V _ f vegetables. K- portsolexeelh-ul ' yields for I'.dU come also front Saskatchewan and Manitoba la n Western Canada. .IT Free liuim-steaas of 160 ySacres, and adjoining prewSMVfl etnpt lons of 160 acres (at j 2*3 per ill-ret are to be luul Ml',3 ip the choicest districts. “.j 1 Schools convenient, cllb.l* mate excellent, soil the verv best, ntiiivavs close at hand, building: lumber I '? t chenp.f ueleasy toßet an«! "J A UsSK’ reasonable la price, water VaA easily procured, mixed ■vAVt' . v farming a success. , HgJ fc\Vt* tlAnent, settlers’ low railway rates, descrit.nro illustrated -Last Best West" (sent freo oa -Tt-Yt 'stEiV aindu-ationiaudotlu-rinforni:*. tion, tn Fup't of Immigration. <-); ta wn. Va n - • or to t he Canudhrn • Uovvrnuiieut C&* era. AfltD, 21S Tr.Kfien Ttrttai EeWtat, or H - M - ; wttar BuildiKi, loiedo, Ohio. YOU CAN OWN A FARM, IN FLORIDA v„i-Prt-cs. EasrTerms. No Interest. soTaxes Score., of rtiin are making Slow per acre ralsmer flail and vew-tabiesin wihuer lime. So can KJ Garden-trncg for quick returns: oranges, gTai-efrast, tigs and pecans for big protits with little labor. <lur 1 ind is tieautifully located along the Gulf of Mex>w in Pasco county, well eievatidand veiy tsrtila. IT* Pries lest and highest-priced oranges ana grapefruit i shipped out of Florida-SSW tosl<X» worth yet ProducesS'J72 celery-JOSOlettuce: S-Eoustrawberrset; ?W0 cucumbers, etc. Three crops raised eaeh i Pish, oysters and game in iibuuda-u-e. bend for ra-l* information on this proposition so unportaut. to j-ca. PORT KlClir.-K COMPANY. MainOfflces. 217 Franklin St.. - - Tampa, FJ*. Mew England Offices, 73 Tremont St., Boston, Min. OEFIINGE STIRCH “iESS.’S! Thompson's Eye Water , W. N. u., FT. WAYNE, NO. 45-19JL
Mrs. A. Greelv, SOS 10th St.. Indianapolis, Ind., and Mrs. Edyth Faith Corey. Alton, Ind., the only laxative given t* Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup. Pepsin. It bam been found to answer most perfectly a3t the purposes of a laxative, and its very mildness and freedom from gripi.tg recommend it especially for the use «£ children, -women, and old folks generally—people who need a gentle bowel stimulant. Thousands of America* families have been enthusiastic about it for more than a quarter of a century. Anyone wishing to makea trial of thfis remedv before buying it in the regular way of a druggist at fifty cents or enw dollar a large bottle (family st»e» cmi have a sample bottle sent to the home free of charge by simply addressing De, W B. Caldwell, 201 Washington St. Monticello, 111. Your name aud addresson a postal card will do.
