Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 134, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 June 1910 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
WESTERN CANADA >«—tor Dolllver, of lowa, wayai” I a tU United States inis will acoonnt for lemoval of so nur fgojjia™ re placed on ’ot *Uw, ufiktx snss±jr.a are still oominxra contributed largothe 70,000 A merlvho made Canada * durlnc 1000. returns alone Ided to the wealth ry upwards of >0,000.00 's&fZi'&frVs; ible. Free Home- > acres are to be err best districts, smptlons at $3-00 tin certain areas, hurches in ererr lmate unexcelled, Uwood. water and 3rial plentiful, rs as to location, low rjaadHas nd other informsHnp’t of Immltrafollowing Canadian Oor’t Agents: C. J. Broughton. “•O" 4 *l*. Horohants’ Loan and Trust Bldg., CblSM°' Ill .V T .'. Holaws, SIS Jaekeon St.. St. haul, v - Molnnss, 17t Jsffsrson Are.. Detroit. Wlch.; Gao. A. Hull, iso Third St.. Milwaukee. Wle.; W H . Rogers, M Floor, Tractlon-Tennlnal Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. (Useaddress nearest Ton.) Please say where yon saw this adrertlesment. The Natural Laxative acts on the bowels just as some foods act. Cascarets thus aid the bowels just as Nature would. Harsh cathartic! act like pepper In the nostrils. Soon the bowels grow so calloused that one must multiply the dose. as Vest-pocket box, 10 cents—at drug-stores. Bach tablet of the genuine Is marked CCC. igffK PERFECT DUST BEATER No beater can compare with It i? r durability or beating quail* ™ . ties. New idea patented. Send .. C .;°J “mple Beater and Big Catalogue. Unlimited opportunities for Agents. Inland Supply Co. Dept. 1, Rushville, Ind FOR DESSERT TO-DAY. Deliciously Flavored JELLYCON The Perfect Jelly Dessert. FRF Ft beautiful aluminum X REiCii JELLY MOLDS. The offer Is fully explained on lOC. Package. the circular In every ptekege. Sold By All Grocers. Would You Know^rK?^ pera! >\rtte uo. giving same Information as to what you nave and want. North Vernon (lnd«) Realty a ouip’y AR/IDIwAIN <*oo ACRES, five miles from 1 v town. Partly Improved: 860 par acre. ARTHUR J. MAXON , Tripp, bo. Dakota
1 PkfiKME MAILED FREE 01 REQUEST OF MUNYON'S PAW-PAW PILLS The heat Stomacß and Liver Pills know! and a positive an< —sK speedy cure for Con. stipation. Indigestion 'V I Jaundice, Biliousness Sour Stomach, HeadB i rßV*|| ache, and all ailment* BUjWBHm arising from a dlsordered stomach or slugghsh liver. They contain in concentrated form all the virtues and values of Munyon’s Paw-Paw Tonic and are made from the Juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. I unhesitatingly recommend these pills as being the best laxative and cathartic ever compounded. Send us a postal or letter requesting a free package of Munyon’s Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxative Pills, and we will mall same free of charge. MUNYON’S HOMOEOPATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., 53d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. Flowers at Funerals. The custom of having flowers at'funerals is very ancient. The Greeks, centuries before the Christian era, crowned the dead body with flowers and also placed flowers on the tomb. The Romans decked the funeral couch with leaves and flowers and spread flowers, wreaths and fillets on the tomb of friends. Most of our funeral customs are derived from the Romans, such as dressing in black, walking or riding in procession, raising a mound over the graves, etc., and among the rgst is that of using flowers at funerals. SCREAMED WITH PAIN. A Terrible Tale ot Kidney Snffering. Charles Easter, East Locust St., Watseka, HI., says: “I suffered such severe pain in my back that I actually screamed and for six months was un-i---liim M ble t 0 Bit in a cllair - I .lost 40 pounds and Y 'He** ,„/!$) was so lame I could \TE£" not wash my face. The kidney secrotions were of a whitish color and often suppressed. After doctoring and using different remedies, I began with Doan’s Kidney Pills. 1 gained gradually and was soon cured. The cure is permanent.” Remember the name—Doan’s. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Lost and Found. It was somewhere near the Reptile House that the Bensons, spending the afternoon in the Bronx Zoological Park, missed their little Joey. After that, for two anxious hours, they scoured the park—big brothers and sisters, Joey’s Uncle Ned, and Mr. Benson, too, whenever he dared leave the distracted mother. “If he’s not drowned or kidnaped or devoured by animals, the shock will kill him —separated from us all! My Joey, my—” and then Mrs. Benson became incoherent. Indeed, the thought of the agony the four-year-old child must be enduring was harrowing. Of course, everybody not actually in hysterics expected the child would be found; but even Uncle Ned was disturbed at th 6 picture of that tender little fellow, alone in all these acres of park, lost from all bis relatives. Finally, on the strength of a rumor that a “lost kid" had been carried to the station house in the park, Uncle Ned hurried there. He found little Joey—in the most pathetic of all roles, that of the Lost Child. “Where have you been all the time?” asked Joey, when finally he recognized the existence of his uncle. Seated comfortably on the knee of a big policeman, Joey was busy with a plump banana. Two more big, blue-coated men, just recovering from roars of laughter at some remark of the Lost Child, stood ready with more bananas and candy. “What did you get losted for, mamma ’u everybody?” demanded Joey, reaching for Candy and kindly sparing time for one mildly reJ uking glance at his relative. "If you hadn’t got losted ’way f’om me, I’d’a* brought you here wiv me, where all the p’licemans live.”
Municipal Mealneaa. After keeping up a tirade for many years against the billboard nuijance it is very pleasant to note in numerous towns that some drastic measures have been taken looking to the curtailment of this most offensive eyesore. The vacant lot is another problem, with or without the billboard. Ash heaps, piles of tin cans, broken dishes, baling wire, old bed springs, broken carts and perambulators, bottles without number and castoff shoes are a few of the decorations noted in vacant lots of some of our towns. Neatness is indicative of cleanliness just as surely in the case of a municipality as with individuals. While it may cost A little to secure this cleanliness, the cost of maintenance of a high stapdard would be very little, and assurance of such desirable conditions could be brought about by the passage and enforcement of suitable ordinances. Neatness has its own reward, for, aside from Improved appearances, a decided menace to health is removed. The value of cleanliness to the city beautiful movement is simply Incalculable. Beautiful surroundings have a decided effect upon the character of our lives. Clean characters come only from clean conditions and clean surroundings. That town is not a desirable place of residence In which many evidences are ieen of slovenly municipal housekeeping. Uncleanliness is not a valuable asset to a town’s progress. It Is, however, not at all strange that so few fast young men come to the front
Some Sweet Day You may 'be served Blp- with t, Toasties M rag food you have been wj/ missing'. r ”!! Limited p7 ef y serving wins Y a friend—affgrgS “The Memory Lingers” Sold by Grocer*. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.
