Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 64, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 March 1910 — Page 2
PELOGOPUS
“I»®, I Am with Y»« Always.” Not alone through days of pleasure, Not alone' through days of wealth, Not alone when friends surround us, Not alone through days of health; But when days are full of trouble. When otir dearest friend betrays, When the path of life Is roughest. He is with us •‘all the days." ►—Margaret H. Barnett. Moders Estimate of Greatness. Recently there were erected in the Kiorial hall of Yale University two eta In memory of members of the fflaas of 1853, a class distinguished for the number of great names It has given to the world. Both of these tablets, erected by the survivors of that class, commemorate tte lives ofmissionaries—-Dr. Charles Harding, who died a missionary In India, and the Rev. Hiram Bingham, whose more than fifty years of missionary service in the Sandwich Islands and Micronesia are notable in the annals of missionary service. The address of presentation was made by the Hon. Andrew D. White, for years American ambassador to Germany, and before that president of Cornell University. He said: "Among the classmates we have lost were others in church! in state, in lib arature, in scholarship, who held places which the world considered plgher than the places held by either of these men, as things go in this world. And yet, when we wish to leave with our alma mater the names which she must not willingly let die, we have named these two. “We have named them because their Meals were the highest, and because they sacrificed most to make those Meals real.. • • • "Men like these have given the world something better than any material success in making savage races into twentieth century men of labor and business. ; “These two classmates of ours gave to our land, to us, to all our thinking follow citizens, something more precious than this—noble Ideals of selfsacrifioe, of the spirit of St. Paul, something of the spirit, we may say reverently, of Christ himself. » • • These names, therefore, we deliver to our alma mater, for the inspiration of successive generations of students in Yale University during all the coming centuries.” These are notable words, and worthy to have been spoken on such an occasion. They indicate that the Standards by which successful men of the present age judge of success are not wholly commercial or military; but that the real successes are those that inspire lives to lofty Ideals and righteous living. In the same building in which these tablets are erected is writ large a quotation which is still true, as attested by the judgment of men of to-day: “And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and tiiey that turn-many to righteousness, as the stars for ever and ever.” —Yo ith’s Companion.
Biblical Christian Experience. The eccentric but unquestionably sincere and in his way and J field highly useful Christian worker, Billy Sunday, thus gives his Christian experience: “TwenJ.y-two years ago, with the Holy Spirit as my guide, I entered tins wonderful temple we call Christianity. I entered at the portico of Genesis, walked down through the Old Testament art gallery where the pictures of Noah, Abraham, Moses, Joseph, Isaac and Daniel hang on the wall. I passed Into the music room of Psalms, where the Spirit swept the keyboard of nature, and brought forth the dirgelike wail of the weeping prophet Jeremiah to the grand, impassioned strain of Isaiah, until it seemed that every reed SSd pipe in God’s great organ of nature responded to the tuneful harp of David, the sweet' singer of Israel. | the chapel of Ecclesiastes, where the voice of the preacher was heard, and into the conservatory of the Song of Solomon, where the Rose of Sharon and the Lily-of-the-Valley’s iweet-scented-spices filled and perfumed my life. I entered the business office of Proverbs, then into the observatory room of the Prophets, where I saw telescopes of various sizes, some pointing to far off events, some to nearby events; but all concentrated upon the Bright and Morning Star, whieh was to rise above the moonlit hills of Judea for our salvation. “I entered the audience room of the King of kings, and caught a vision of His glory from the standpoint of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John; passed into the Acts of the Apostles, where the Holy Spirit was doing his office work in the formation of the infant church; then into the correspondence room, where sat John, Paul, Peter, James and Jude penning fheir epistles. I stepped into the throne room pf Revelation andi I got a vision of the King sitting upon His throne in all His glory, and I cried: • AH haH the power of Jesus' name. Let 'angels prostrate fall; Bring forth the royal diadem. And crown Him Lord of all. —Pittsburg Christian Advocate. Wolkin* with Christ. In His teachings Christ has marked out for us the way in which we are to walk.. It may at times be difficult to do His will, but it is always safe. He has Himself been over the way in which. He would have us go. His life was in perfect harmony with His words. He lived a real human life.
encountering its temptations, experiencing tts perplexities, enduring its hardships, suffering its sorrows, bearing not only His own burdens, but those of us all. If we follow Him we shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life. But He is more than teacher, more than example, more than guide. He is our companion in our way. He enters into all our experiences, cheers us in all the storms, is with us in all the deep waters, inspires us with courage and imparts His own strength to us as we walk with Him. Believe in God*a Love. When God loves us His heart goes out toward us, and with His heart all that He can bestow. All the resources of His power, all the counsels of His wisdom, all the preciousness of His promises, all the gifts of His Spirit are at our disposal, if only our hearts are open to receive them tn the day of His power. To know and believe the love God hath to us—here, in a single sentence, is the beginning of Christian life, the history of Christian experience, the fullness of Christian joy.—Bishop Thorold. The Note of Authority. In the record it is said that Jehovah spoke to Joshua. That is Joshua’s true claim to distinction. He was on speaking terms with the Almighty. He had learned the accent of the divine Well for him that he had. For there Id no denying the authority of a man to whom Jehovah has spoken and to whom Jehovah has said, “As I was with Moses, so wilk I be with thee.”
A LIBRARIAN’S PUZZLE.
Familiarity with books is to be highly commended, yet the particular kind of intimacy cited by the late Senator George F. Hoar of Massachusetts, la his “Autobiography of Seventy Years,” might not appeal to the book lover The story told by Mr, Hoar Is of a student, a freshman of about 1842. During the first part of his term the boy took from the college library the largest and thickest volume it contained, the works of Bishop Williams, one of the prelates persecuted by James 11. It was an extremely dull treatise of theology, and the freshman, who had no literary tastes of which anyone knew, was the only student who had ever called for it. The boy kept it for the six weeks allowed, and then renewed it, taking it back only when the spring came on. He repeated this in his sophomore, junior and senior years. the was very, curious about the matter, and asked some of the boys in regard to it, but none of them knew any explanation. They used to see the book lying on the boy s table, but they never saw him reading it. At last > during the winter term of the senior year, some of the students broke in unexpectedly on this classmate. It was late in the evening, and he was getting ready for bed. Standing on edge, close to the fire, was Bishop Williams’ book. The mystery was solved. It was the student’s habit to warm the volume thoroughly and put it into his bed before he got in, thus using it as a warming pan. The originator, of this scheme became a famous bishop himself. Doubtless he acquired doctrine by absorption.
GLASS BOTTLES LONG KNOWN.
Those in Days of Pharaoh of Exoda* 'Were of Splendid Workmanship. Although the oldest bottles known were made of skins, glass bottles containing wine are represented on Egyptian monuments which are more than 4,000 years old, while as early as tho Pharaoh ®f the Exodus there were bottles made of bronze, silver, gold, porcelain and alabaster, which from their superior workmanship and elegant design go to prove that even at that period the art of bottle making was by no means in its infancy. The early history of the bottle is somewhat meager, owing, no doubt, to the fact th.it the true bottle has never been a thing of much beauty, expect in a few rare instances, but rather a humble vessel of no intrinsic value. Bottles are rarely mentioned in fiction, but one must not forget the story of the Bottle Sprite in Grimm’s, nor that of the broken bottleneck in the fairy tales of Hans Anderson, which latter is almost more fascinating to older people than to children, owing to the clever way in which the bottleneck endows itself with a personality. The graceful old flagons, the demijohns and the queer-shaped bottles at one time used to contain a certain renowned Dutch brew, all recall the bygone drinking days when it was considered no disgrace to be a “two-bottle man,” and when the custom of “joining the ladies” was more honored in the breach than in the observance, the host and his male guests having more commonly joined each other—under the table!
Wouldn't Get Fine.
Church—l see a Jersey City magistrate permits convicted crap shooters to| pay their fines in weekly installments. Gotham —But, suppose the convicted <. fellow doesn’t happen to win the next week? —Yonkers Statesman.
Just So.
“He gets invited to all the big banquets and yet he isn’t particularly clever.” - “But he’s a docile listener. Somebody has to furnish the laughter and applause.”—Louisville Courier-Inn rnsl Are you sure some of the honors you are striving for are not dishonors?
l BU ImT' / Jrl / (Fac-simile of the genuine package slightly reduced.) ’ Burdens Lifted From Bad Backs h burden F k . idne ’ r , iUs - There’s n ° W peace for the man or It’s to ret o„t 4Ld' uu ( ’ ls ‘ ress ' be K‘ ns “ early morning. You feel lame and not refreshed. 1 ?? atO get ut of k ed - It hurts to stoop to tie your shoes. All dav the ache keen* un A™ n^ht n th? OV T ent Se r ds a Shafp twinge throu^h the back. It is tortured stoopor straiten it achhiVn SSsf toss and twist and groan. Backache is kidney achf—a throbbing dull f
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Six Months of Misery Doan’s Kidney Pills Brought About a Complete Restoration. Ill Cl^v^ L ’Un t ? ASTER « E - Locust St., Watseka, nlln. M 1 tl l? ® ummer o{ 1904 1 was attacked by pains m the small of my back and as the time passed, untU my whole right hip was affected. For six months I could not sit in a chair and s le tO 81eep niarhts - 1 lost forty pounds in rais^nLhln'daL ®° a °J e and T sore that 1 could notraise mj hands to my face. I was languid, had no energy and was bothered by a shortness of breath. PmnlfiS a « U t s ab tl ? e 1 doctOTed and used a great amount of medicine but to no avail. Sometimes there was an almost complete retention of the kidney secreand ther « was muchsedim- • <• in them. My wife ? r n a lly pcrsu aded me to try 1 ..n’s Kidney Pilis. taktno- t hX. m . e such5 uch ? rOT ?, pt rehcf that 1 continued er ad?ally my condition improved. Thetrouble with my kidneys was corrected and my ™£"S P T B TT. eremoved ’ 1 am so grateful forthis tbatl cheerfully recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills to other persons suffering from kidney complaint.”
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PRAISE DUE TO WOMEN.
To Their Efforts Must Be Credited the Fare-Milk Crusade. The pure-milk agitation that is now being carried on by official and semiofficial commissions all over the country began with the diet kitchens founded by New York women to furnish suitable nourishment for expectant and nursing mothers, bottle-fed babies and sick persons requiring a special diet. At first, says Van Norden’S, they paid little attention to the source of milk supply. To-day file diet kitchens not only give out the certified milk that their crusade has secured, but they keep matrons in charge of their stations to show mothers how to modify milk to each baby’s needs and to give systematic instruction in child care. And here we have another movement started by women—instruction for women in the care of children and the business of home-making. The visiting nurse associations—founded, supported and made up of women—oegan it. Then other organizations, such as the Little Mothers’ Association and the League of Home Economics, took it up. Recently the woman physicians of the country formed a public health-educa-tion league to give a popular instruction—particularly to women—in general hygiene. The 498 day nurseries in America, in addition to giving immensely better care to the children of mothers who have to go out to work than the mothers themselves could do, are carrying on an extensive and intensive campaign of education.
CHANGE THE VIBRATION.
It Make* for Health. A man tried leaving off meat, potatoes, coffee, and etc., and adopted a breakfast of fruit, -Grape-Nuts with cream, some crisp toast and a cup of Postum. His health began to improve at once for the reason that a meat eater will reach a place once in a while where his system seems to become clogged and the machinery doesn’t work smoothly A change of this kind puts aside food of low nutritive value and takes up food and drink of the highest value, already partly digested and capable of being quickly changed into good, rich blood and strong tissue. A most valuable feature of GrapeNuts is the natural phosphate of potash grown in the grains from which it is made. This is the element which transforms albumen in the body into thd soft gray substance which fills brain and nerve centres. A few days’ use of Grape-Nuts will give one a degree tof nervous strength well worth the trial. Look in pkgs, for the little book, “The Road to Wellville ” “There’s a Reason.”
DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS Sold by all Price 5o centsX Foster-Milburn CoVßuffalo, N
With a look of horror and indignation on her usually placid features, Miss Cynthia Barker sat back from the window of the elevated train. The train was speeding above a congested tenement district, and looking down from the window she had seen a policeman clubbing a prisoner. There had been a crowd round him, but.the flashing speed of the traif had given her no chance to take in the details of the picture. But she did get a clear view of the policeman’s face. Of one thing she was certain; she would know the brute if she ever saw him. And another thing she had determined; she would write an indignant protest against having such men on the police force and take It to an editor with whom she was personally acquainted. That night she wrote her protest, and about noon of the next day she started down town to take it herself to her friend on the newspaper. Her way led through a public park, and as she looked ahead of her she saw a policeman sitting on one of the benches. He was surrounded by children, to whom he was telling -a story, and the picture increased Miss Cynthia’s indignation toward the policeman of the day before. This, she told herself, was what policemen should be like—big, strong and ten-der-hearted. She drew nearer, and the policeman looked up at her over the head of a curly-haired youngster perching on his knee and playing with his brass buttons. It was the same policeman. Miss Cynthia gasped. Then her step slackened. She hesitated, turned and approached the officer. Her hand was on the letter in her pocket and it gave her courage. “Officer,” she said, “may I ask you a question?” “Certainly,” said the policeman. “Are you the same man who arrested yesterday somebody down in the North End and clubbed him unmercifully?” The policeman nodded. “I don’t know about the ‘unmercifully,’ ma’am. But I did take a chap down there yesterday, and I did use the club a bit on him.” “I saw you,” said Miss Cynthia, “from the elevated. It was terrible! How can - a man who seems to loye little children treat a fellow being in that awful fashion?” . ’ : The policeman thought it over. "Did you get a good look at the rest of the crowd, ma’am?” “fto.” “Well, if you had, maybe you would have noticed that they were just ripe
HOW TO TELL WHEN THE KIDNEYS ARE DISORDERED Painful Symptoms— Backache, sideache, pains when stooping or lifting, sudden sharp twinges, rheumatic pains, neuralgia, painful, scanty or too frequent urination, dizzy spells, dropsy. Urinary Symptoms Discolored or cloudy urine. Urine that contains sediment. Urine that stains the linen. Painful passages. Blood or shreds In the urine. Let a bottleful of ■' the morning . urine stand for 24 hours. If it shows a cloudy or fleecy settling, or a layer of fine grains, like brick-dust, the kidneys are disordered.
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THE OTHER SIDE.
to rescue him. You see, ma’am, I don’t really like to club a fellow being, as you call him, any more than you do. What I like better is to sit here in the park and tell yarns to these youngsters. But the fact is, ma’am if I hadn t used my club yesterday I wouldn’t probably be sitting here today. Hospital or cemetery. If you’d been down there on the street instead of up in the elevated—” Miss Cynthia nodded, and looked again from the man to the children impatiently waiting for him to resume the interrupted story. “I think I see,” she said, presently. —Youth’s Companion.
He Wanted Something Doing.
The late Dr. Edward Everett Hale was a great student of child life. Dr. Hale once dilated on the incorrigibly bad tastes in books that children have. He instanced the case of his own sbn, now a famous architect, whose taste he had a hard time forming. Jack Harkaway and Deadwood Dick seemed to him the very topmost pinnacle of literary excellence. He yawned over the splendid historical works his father read to him. One day, however, Dr. Hale had a gleam of hope. The little boy brought him a volume of English history, and said, “Will you read me some more out of this, please?” “Why, certainly, my boy,” the father answered, cordially.” ‘What part would you like to have?” “Read me,” said the little boy, “about Mary Queen of Scots getting her head cut off!”
His Best White Waistcoat.
He put green ink in his fountain pen, And now he’s the maddest man in town; He screwed the pen together, and then— Put it in his pocket upside down. —Chicago Tribune.
Children Who Are Sickly.
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A Wonder.
“What a quaint old teapot! And you say it has been in the family since the year 1810? Then it is a century old! It has outlasted an entire 100 years!” “Yes, and probably 300 cooks.”
FILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYN.
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r Twice-Told Testimony A Wonderful Cure Fully Verified By the Test of Time. MRS. J. M. BARNHART, 952 N. Jackson St.. Frankfort, Ind., says: ‘•Several years ago I was running into Bright’s disease. My body bloated a great deal and Iliad such terrible pains in the small of my back that I could scarcely stand. I rested poorly and the kidney secretions contained a sediment, also being distressing in passage. I tried various preparations but steadily grew worse and when Doan’s Kidney Pills were brought to my attention, I procured a supply. The contents of the first box did me so much good that I continued taking the remedy until I was cured. I gave a public statement on July 19, 1906, recommending Doan’s Kidney Pills and now I can add that I have had no need of a kidney remedy in over a year.”
How a Doctor Cared Scalp Disease.
“When I was ten or twelve years old I had a scalp disease, something like scald head, though it wasn’t that. 1 suffered for several months, and most of my hair came out. Finally they had a doctor to see me and he recommend"- 3 the Cuticura Remedfes. They cured me in a few weeks. I nave used the Cuticura Remedies, also, zor a breaking out on my hands and vas benefited a great deal. I haven’t „ad any more trouble with the scalp disease. Miss Jessie F. Buchanan, R. F. D. 3, Hamilton, Ga., Jan. 7, 1909.”
P. T. Barnum, the famous circus man, once wrote: “I have had the Cuticura Remedies among the contents of my medicine chest with my shows for the last three seasons, and 1 can cheerfully certify that they were very ffective in every case which called for their use.”
Mrs. Kawler—The last time I saw you. T think, you - were attending a cooking school to learn how to make vegetable dishes taste like meat. Mrs. Crossway—Yes, but the feeling against the trust is so strong now that we are learning to make vegetable dishes taste utterly unlike meat.
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as- they can-’ not reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and In order to cure It you must take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients Is what pro. duces such wonderful results tn curing Ca, tarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a Sold by Brugglsts, price 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
“Doctor, why, don’t you sometimes denounce wickedness in high places?” “Bless your soul. Brother Hardesty, I do! Have you forgotten that In my sermon two Sundays ago I spoke sharply against the practice of flirting in the elevated railway trains?”—Chicago Tribune.
All Right Otherwise.
z “How do you like your imported London chauffeur?” v : — “He understands his business per fectly, but once In a while he clogs the machinery of the car by dropping ar> ‘h’ into it.”—Chicago Tribune.
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itSfer I If the fain isTherfi" I Its Your
Kept with Barnum's Circas.
Spread of the Movement.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
Not Guilty.
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