Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 60, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 March 1910 — Page 3

In Agony with Eczema.

“No tongue can toll how I muttered for five years with itching and bleeding eczema, until.l was cured by the Cuticura Remedies, and I am so grate-ful-1 want thef world to know, for what helped me will help others. My l>ody and face were covered with sores. One day it would seem to be better, and then break out again with the most terrible pain and itching. I have been sick several times, but never in my life did I experience such awful suffering as with this eczema. I had made up my mind that death was near at band, and 1 longed for that time when I would be at rest. I bad tried many different doctors and medicines without, success, and my mother brought me the'Cuticura Remedies, insisting that I try them. I began to feel better after the first bath with Cuticura Soap, and one application of ’Cuticura Ointment. “I continued with the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, and have taken four bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, and consider myself well. This was nine years ago and I have had no return of the trouble since. Any person having any doubt about this wonderful cure by the Cuticura Remedies can write to my address. Mrs. Altie Rtson, 93 Inn Road, Battle Creek. Mich., Oct. 16, 1909."

Modern Romance—Boiled Down.

“Mr. Yapsley,” said the hostess, “will you take Miss Yipsley down to dinner?" “With pleasure, Mrs. Yopsley.” “Miss Yipsley, allow me to present Mr. Yapsley.” "Will you marry me, Miss Yipsley?" “Yes, Mr. Yapsley, as soon as dinner Is over.” N ■tat* or Ohio, Citt or Toledo, » „ Lucas County. ( ■■ Prank J. Cheney makes oath that he la senior partner of the Arm of P. J. Cheney * Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Cataarh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. PRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. U ISB6. (Seal) A. W. GLEASON, _ ... „ Notary Public. Hall a Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testlmoalals free. F. .T. CHENEY Sc CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.

Pay Those Taxes!

And now the man who owns his house Is putting up a roar; The cost of living is greater for him Than ever it was before. —Chicago Tribune.

Only One “BROMO QUININE"

That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Loo* for the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used tba world over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. Although West Australia contain! nearly 1,000,000 Square miles of 'land its population Is less than 300,000. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take as candy. New Zealand fruit growers have imported 100 owls from Germany to com-, bat their pest of small birds.

TRIALS of tha NEEDBMS THAT wMftflM Man yon’s Paw Paw Pllla coax tbs liver into activity by gentle methods. They do not scour, gripe or weaken. They are a tonic to the stomach, liver and nerves; Invigorate instead of weaken. They enrich the blood and enable the stomach to get all the nourishment from food that Is put Into it These pills contain no calomel; they are soothing, healing and stimulating. For sale by all druggists In 10c and 25c sizes. If you need medical advice, write Jtunyon’s Doctora. They will advise to the best of their ability absolutely free of Charge. MONYON’S, BSd and Jefferson Sts.. Philadelphia, Pa. Munyon’s Cold Remedy cures a cold in One day. Price 25c. Munyon’s Rheumatism Remedy relieves in a few hours and cures in a few days. Price 25a Bad/ Breath “For months I had great trouble with my Stomach and used all kinds of medicines. My tongue has been actually as green as grass, my breath having a bad odor. Two weeks ago a friend recommended Cascarets and after using them I can willingly and cheerfully * say that they have entirely cured me. I therefore let you know that I shall recommend them to any one suffering from such troubles.”—Chas. H. Hal* pern, 114 E. 7th St., New York, N. Y. Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. Neve: sold In bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CC C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 923 Pll FC r>Y " cu "*°~ riLL9 BWjava IMI Flltlll Cm. «U 00., DIPT. ID, MIIMEAPOLIS, MIDI. MM Basin. Mori., TFIIC Ms Oeaet Ink (or sale. A ratal j h|y WrlU^tjxUyj PATENTS SrSSB&EiSSt

SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY

The feathers of the wild ostrich are superior to those from farm birds. The cranking of an automobile may now be done from the chauffeur’s seat. Tbe maximum wage of brakemen on English railways has just been fixed at $7.78 a week. Peanut cake seems to be supplanting cotton seed cake as tbe preferred food for Swedish cattle. Vacuum suction combß are now in use in Btables to curry horses. An electrically driven fan produces the necessary vacuum. In Liberia coffee trees attain a height of more than twenty feet. The price of the product is 8 and 9 cents a pound at the plantation. At one Of the most important groceries in Hamburg they think they are doing well to dispose of thirty to forty pounds a month of sweet potatoes to resident Americans. —-~ American cranberries sell at 16 to 20 cents a quart in London. Outside of tbe metropolis there is small demand for the succulent berry in England, largely owing to an imperfect comprehension of the means of making it palatable. About sixty or seventy barrels each season are consumed In Paris, where the retail price is 35 cents a pound. That people will eat elephant meat with a relish has been proved by butcher in Frankfort-on-the-Main, to his own profit and without the knowledge of his customers. This enterjgrlslng tradesman learned that a vicious elephant was to be killed and made a bargain for the carcass. Within a few days that elephant was transformed into 3,800 pounds of sausage meat and every pound was disposed of at a good price. It was a year ago that the London post office directory contained for the first time among the list of trades “aeroplane manufacturers.” There was only one then, but now six are enumerated under that heading. Subsidiary trades are springing up. Two firms announce themselves, as aeroplane engine manufacturers, two are aeroplane fabric makers and there is one propeller maker, as well as a provider of “aeroplane timber and bends.” Whltefleld, one of the founders of Methodism, who died in 1770, was a strenuous preacher. His usual program was forty hours’ solid speaking each week, and this to congregations measured in thousands, but he often spoke sixty hours a week. This was not all. for “after his labors, instead of taking rest, he was engaged in offering up prayers and or in singing hymns, as his manner was; in every house to which he was invited.”

Is a woman ever justified in poisoning hes husband? The question is suggested by a recent incident in Servla. Sara Chumitch seems to have had an undesirable husband, for he was a notorious and implacable usurer. At the moment when he was about to ruin soveral families who were in debt his wife intervened and poisoned him. Next day she received a letter of gratitude, signed by hundreds of cLtizens. She was acquitted by the Jury and left the court amid cheering crowds. Says the Pekin and Tien-Tsin Times: “A novel sort of crime was discovered by the Tien-Tsin police when a portly native was arrested and asked to explain his embonpoint. He had a thieves’ bag around his waist, filled with dead cats to the number of seven, One of them, a very fine'specimen of the tortoise shell, was still quite warm. In a smaller bag was found the lure; it consisted of bits of dried fish treated with some deadly poison. The man utas sent up to the yamen, where he received thirty blows and one month’* Imprisonment.” Ernesto Nathan, Mayor of Rome, who declined on several occasions to accept a decoration from King Victor Emmanuel, was finally forced by a clever ruse on the part of the king to take the grand cross of the crown of Italy. Nathan was making a call at the Qulrlnal, and when about to depart was asked to take from the queen a little parcel to his wife. The box contained the decoration, which the mayor was compelled to accept, and by virtue of which he became a member of the small fraternity oi which his sovereign is the head. Although the use of telephones in miqes is not of recent origin, the advantages are, perhaps, hardly really appreciated until they have once been alried. Probably at no time in the history of mining has there been a greater demonstration of the great need ol telephones in mines than at the Cherry coal mine disaster. How many more lives could have been saved had the mine been fully equipped with telephones is entirely problematical, but it is certain that the number would have been greater had opportunity been afforded for communication between the rescuers and the entombed men.—Philadelphia Record. Employes of the Krupp works pan easily be distinguished, even when at tired In their Sunday best. Every workman, on his enrollment, is presented with a curiously fashioned scarfpin, composed of a miniature artillery shell made of platinum and set in silver. After twenty years’ service he receives a second pin, modeled on the same lines and mounted in gold. The higher grades of employes, including the engineers and those employed in the counting house, wear their shells in the form of sleeve links. The workmen are very proud of the distinction, which they call the Order of the Shell, and wear on every occasion.

A Pepper Duel.

A certain literary and diplomatlo friend of ours once took part in a pepper duel at a foreign restaurant. He was provoked to the contention by the quantity of stimulating condiment that a stranger across the table Indulged In. The stranger sprinkled an unconscionable quantity of red pepper upon his food and proceeded to devour it, to the wouMt*and admiration of onlookers. Thereupon, with studied nonchalance, the American swallowed an immense piece of chili pepper. Then the stranger added more red pepper, then the American another larger slice, covered with cayenne, and so on, till it seemed as if both would explode, while the other diners looked on aghast, the American finally winning out wjth a prodigious dose defying all .emulation.—Century. The humble gOat of foreign lands contributes one-third of the value of the skins imported by the United States each year.

[| K ID N E Y |]

§g .Wc Will Pay Yoii/ijlfl E#SSO« m Gold:® MwfijSi ■ statement by offering you $500.00 in gold to name his wonderful, ibrmnu! ISfB long ' ker neled com, pictured in life size at the left on this page. Wi/fnill/A I A P r °minent Agricultural Expert, on seeing this nTT V T/\lkT Cl TY acv on * I WlllKmimm new corn, exclaimed: ' to ILL lON g* GRASS 17 I yW] EmU I _ “Salzer, you have startled the Agricultural J-l.i-I.IJIJ V World in discovering this most remarkable breed of Positively the greatest I b Indeed j’ ,s tbe mo& t remarkable corn ever seen Sown when the ground is ff But not a bushel °t it is for sale. For there is produce from two to four WMTmH&KgA WrJ&'b, y/mm not one ‘ tent h enough in existence to fill the tremen- iMtlMftwBHP crops of hay the first seaWIk'IMI dous or( i ers that will pour in when this new corn KjQinßffSSn s°n, yielding all the way l~" ww/IWSrTWJj goes on the market. HRMOfOMEDgN from 10 to 15 tons per I m. /|J| year we may have enough to* sell. Right acre - it is prodigiously lICIW | W'Z/mHM. now Hie best anybody can do is to obtain a sample prolific. |jg mmm j°, grow bushei f ° r i9n - oscpops » ****2o ibs. Be ed > Ayii* s 8c Eta p g^t. y lc ' om e i to a sample. Please send per acre. JX wl | The thing that Puzzles us is, WHAT ARE WE $3.00; 2 °lo<) B lbs* lbß * 1111 GOING TO NAME OUR NAMELESS CORN? Salzer’s 20th Century, yV/HM *1 Mr. Salzer will not be content with anything but ■MipDQHHftP! 20 lbs., $2.25; 50 lbs. WMm a slashing > smashing good name. So he offers SSOO * 5 - 00 ; 100 lbs., $8.50. ~ /^VaKS\ViW>^fc3] wXPifti *° * be Bee< l'l )uyer w bo bits upon the most EjjflEprHN|HH|pfLjS We commend our 20th l^^fr I c rn* W& ’t t yOU ? to help us out ’ Nam ® this est, we believe, on earth. ■ the corn-naming coupon below. Fill P it out, °send A¥TPA T¥T A /Hralra^i it and be a candidate for the SSOO cash iTLJ-il. ±\., EnH * TOP ’ll TT\ ininc Largest growers of Clover, Timothy and. Grasses, f lllt&s!) MrvSt 111 A j ol wJ Ll\l1 I !ip and Potatoes in America. We are fortunate in securing three of the most acres sown to Salzer’s 20th Century Aifalfa™ha£ ’a VWi capable and prominent men in Wisconsin to sit as vested within 24 weeks after seeding $2500 worth V WA! EjMA ■ Judges in our big corn-naming contest. They are °f magnificent hay, or at the rate of $83.33 per acre. Jffi ■ Prof. R. A. Moore, Wisconsin State Agricultural J Salzer’s Alfalfa Clover will produce a crop on College; Hon. J. J. Esch, Congressman from Wiscon- an y farm io America where timothy will grow. It is 1 ■!»; Hon. Robt. Calvert, U. S. Customs, La Crosse. f amed for its stubborn hardiness and prodigal vigor. These eminent men will weigh carefully the Price, 20th Century (Pure Seed)—sow 20 lbs. sZxw I name you suggest, and. If it is most suitable, you per A.—2o lbs., $4.90; 100 lbs., $22.00. IMmS Yill get the SSOO prize. No matter who you are or _ rvm _ KsvWl iWoAV MXxIH'iMl where you live, you will be given a fair, square Ms IT* A T , fl¥P V* \ » |EdCT3 opportunity to land the money. j|p kI. Fill out the free corn-naming coupon with pencil 100,000 Bus. Pedigree Seed Potatoes. ;i^~in\^MlP!«l WkMi but 6e ■ ure *• Bive c "“- mm Salzer’s Catalogue r.rLZr" upU “ L Pti “ W'n W I _*> +v * ~ . B No other Seed House has kept In such close touch |M I^ 8 ., the °T lg nal 88ed book published, and with State Agricultural Colleges as me John A. Sal- 115 IbWi£^ ,s glad ]y mailed to intending purchasers free; or zer Seed, Co. This great Seed House specializes in remlt , 100 and get lots of remarkable farm seed the pedigreed varieties of seed that are brought /Pil WmfifzS&l .;::V I samples, including Billion $ Grass, Alfalfa, Speltz, forth by State Colleges of Wisconsin, lowa, Minne- /Mil uA IJ | etc., worth a little farm to get a start with, or send sota, the Dakotas and all other Agricultural r.nii»<r<M /V / I Vlni 9 p ( 18c and we add a package of Nameless Com. in the Middle West. g r t

JOHNA.SALZERSEEDCoIp IHS. 8™ Street Lacrosse. Wis. fm

Here is a joy collection, beating the world, com- Eg W 33|| posed of 10,000 kernels El g A jHalnULi of the richest, juiciest, ™ tenderest seeds. 1500 Each, Lettuce, Turnip, Rutabaga. 1000 Each, Onion, Celery, Carrot. 1000 Rarest Radishes, alone worth 16 cental 100 Each, Parsley, Melon, Tomato. j,' 1H 1200 Brilliant Flower Seeds, 50 Sorts. Wc In all 10,000 kernel*. Including big catalog, all postpaid, 1 W 1 only lflc in stamp*. 1 Above collection of 10,000 kernels of riche*., finest, most de- I If I licious vegetable and brilliantly beautiful flower aeed, will V I 1 I furnish all summer long, BUSHELS and BUSHELS of vegetables till and basket after basket of exquisitely'beautiful flowers, ALL I I I I EOE Ifio POSTPAID and, If Ton send Me POSTAGE, we will add If 11 a package of our corn Prodigy, for which we are seeking a name. You will be greatly surprised at the quantity of vegetables you •Ska grow from this 18 cent eeed collection. if J YIH WHIU.UUH »EED CO., m«s.»U«t, UCreseeWla

Cats Human Food.

The Brussels correspondent of the New York Herald (Paris edition) notes that in Brussels cat is considered a delicious food in some classes. Workmen in breweries fatten cats and turn them into a stew. Edward Topsel, who wrote learnedly about the cat—his "History of Four-footed Beasts,” was published In 1607 —was of the opinion that the flesh of cats can seldom be free from poison, “by reason of their daily food, eating rats and mice, wrens-and other birds which feed on poison, and above all the brain of a cat: is most poisonous, for it being above measure dry, stoppeth the animal spirits, that they cannot pass into the ventricle, by reason whereof memory faileth, and the infected person faileth into a Phrenzie.” But Topsel was prejudiced against the cat. The people of Savu, who lived the natural life when Capt. Cook visited them, preferred cats to sheep and goats. In .Germany many a cat has been sold for hare, and jugged cat has been relished there by foreign sojourners. The handsome daughter of a landlady far up in the Canton Vaud told us as a matter of course that when the snow was deep and communication was cut off, they ail ate cats.

Suppressions of History.

Amphion had just built the city of Thebes by the magical twanging of his harp. “How do you expect to make posterity believe it?” asked the spectators. "I leave all that,” he said, “to tho city archivist.” When it was too late he realized that he had made a fatal mistake by -lot having a phonograph and a motion picture machine on The ground.

Judgment!

Sometimes, in selling mutton, too, As “Regular Reader” sadly notes, The butcher fails—if the tale is true— To separate the sheep from the.goats.

DR. BARTEL’S FEMALE PILLS.

Seventeen Years the Standard. PrMcribed and recommended for women a ailments—a scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent For sale at all drug stores. Wheat exports of this country are declining because the home consumptiin is increasing.

ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE

JI .? y B , W f Pt p i rr * DavU' Painkiller, as nothin* Is as good for rheumatism, neuralfla and similar troubles. 70 ysars In constant use. *0“ S&oandHto The skin of a black fox is worth SI,OOO.

Fads for Weak Women Nine-tenths of all the sickness of women is due to some derangement or dis ease of the organa distinctly feminine. Such sickness can be cured—is cured every day by 1 Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well . It acts directly on the organs affected and is at the same time a general reston* five tonic for the whole system. It cures female complaint right in the privacy of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, examinations **vl local treatment so universally insisted upon by doctors, so abhorrent to every modest woman. _ We shall not particularize here as to the symptoms of those peculiar affections incident to women, but those wanting full information as to their symptoms and means of positive cure are referred to the People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser—looß pages, newly revised and up-to-date Edition, sent free on receipt of 21 onecent stamps to cover cost of mailing only; or, in cloth binding for 31 stamps. _- Address Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo, N.Y. mMttOw

FREE Corn-Namind Coupon JOHN A. SALZEB SEED CO. 160 South Bth St^, 2 1* Crosse, Wls. Gentlemen Please send me your Free 1910 Seed Catalogue. Whose Seeds I Ha vs You Used? J - For your new corn 1 su««««i ihl. n.». . 1 llvH.m. \ Would you be willins J T * —to try SaUer s Seeds? i_ P n ■ Do yoe wish s sample packet of the cars do be sure 10 enolose Sc topsy mailing ehsrse*. * F. D States *“*

gefy SmijearWhen He Takes pisas A CURE Til lUT «UKlll TO* @*CAS*%n ■So pinout that he Eka it—rad costais* no opi- ■ I • •o*f»S filw i» t<* Brood**, I A foe M a century, C. N. V. No. lO—lOlO WREN WRIIINS TO ABVEBTISEB9 PLEASE SAT " »« m* m •AvsrflseaMol li this um.