Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 136, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 June 1910 — Page 3

WESTERN CANADA S—lor Dolllvor* off lowa, sayot— SXCrIM sdmUiot£*y ire S , iffSsS* sMl lowa contributed largely to the 70,000 Amcrleri who mad© Canada ome during 1000. rop returns alone tar added to the wealth untry upwards of 1,000,000.00 ind churches In every at. climate unexcelled, chest,wood, water and material plentiful. lonian as to location, low RnSCS > to Bnp’t of Immixra- . . _ Won. Ottawa. Canada, or to the followlnf Canadian Oov’t Agent: 0. J. Broughton. Room 41S, Merchant*' Loan and Trust Building. Chicago, IIL Pl«aas *ay when you saw this advertisement.

The Natural Laxative acts on the bowels just as some foods act. Caacareta thus aid the bowels just as Nature would. Harsh cathartics act like pepper in the nostrils. Soon the bowels grow so calloused that one must multiply the dose. sts , Vest-pocket box, 10 cents—at drug-stores. Bach tablet of the genuine Is marked CCC. V For Drunkenness, Opmjn, Kficfafeasg ® tad Neurasthenia. s=- lure ?"* V UI V INSTITUTE, SealUsatial. Dwight. Ilk FOR DESSERT TO-DAY. Deliciously Flavored JELLYCON The Perlect Jelly Dessert. FRF Ft beautiful aluminum W Emm JELLY MOLDS. The offer Is fully explained on IOC. Package. the circular In every package. Sold By All GrOCert. I Ar*l ET O c*n make 12.00 to $5.00 a day selling I— M UICO BORDEAUX POCKET MOISTENER tor all summed surfaces. 2bc for sample, Write today. JOLIET OFFICE SUPPLY 00., iollet, lllluoli _ A _ __ FREE—and New Lot Prop nil I VVIfIITAC osltlon. A. W. NEWSON, 4/V JT UUIUIJ HUNTSVILLE. ALABAMA 8. N. U. No. 21—1910 lOH Assorted Post Cards 1 Or Avv Chaa. Bovreu, Gallipoli*, Ohio 1 UL

SOME INTERESTING STATISTICS.

What Combination In Doing; for the Independent Merchant. Shall we take restaurant keeping? The Standard Oil interests control one “chain” of restaurants and the American Tobacco interests control another. Or printing? One house in itfew York Issues and prints twenty periodicals, and the small independent printer, lib the small independent is disappearing. _< ■" ~ Milk? The Standard Oil interests own the Milk Trust. Foundries or iron works? The Steel Trust looks after them. Tobacco? The United Cfgar Stores Company owns about six hundred retail stores and will own many more when the present chances of litigation are removed. Machinery? Largely controlled by institutions like the American Shoe Manufacturing Trust, a particularly vicious form of these combinations. Men’s clothing? Passing into the “chain” system. One company owns thirty-seven clothing stores in the West. Banks? Owned or controlled chiefly by the Standard Oil, Morgan or Beef Trust “chains.” Butcher shops? Under process of absorption through the absorbed grocery stores, or becoming practically the agencies for the Beef Trust. The department stores constantly increase in number and in size.

Some Sweet Day You may be served STul with jj Toasties Ever y servin £ wins £¥/ a friend—- “ The Memory Ungers” Sold by Grocer* '■XT' -"V • • --- —rr-y • ..... _. . ‘ u / '"* "♦.y'~ 1 "" ‘ ~ Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.

k PACKAGE MAILED FREE 01 REQUEST OF NUNYON’S PAW-PAW PILLS STtae best Stomach and Liver Pills known and a positive and speedy cure for Constipation, Indigestion,, Jaundice, Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Headache, and all ailments arising from a disordered stomach or sluggish 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 tne 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., 63d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. A I i| APR All external varietiessno.nifl.rK treated by the Unlllf Lit Saxonite method. No knife or caustic plasters. Saxonite is as natural mineral, harmless to healthy tissue. Indorsed by prominent physicians. Investigation solicited Address CHICAGO SAXONITE HOSPITAL M. L. Nevins, Supt. *3O Asklasd Bssievsri COICABO. ILLINOIS PERFECT DUST SEATED No beater can compare with It NBflramfiflr tor durability or beating qualities. New idea patented. Send 4Sc for sample Beater and Big Catalogue. Unlimited opportunities for Agents. Inland Supply Co., Dept. 1, Rushville, Ind A 2240-Acre Improved Farm For Sale The very best of black loam, clay subsoil, rolling prairie, best of water. Eastern North Dakota, within 3 miles of a thriving village on main line of Northern Pacific Ry. EABY TERMS, low rate of Interest: no mortgage to assume. Write to M. felmonlUch, owner. Moorhead, Miss. WDIMKI PCs Ladles, don’t look old before ”, ■ . your time. Send 10c for sample guaranteed Wrinkle Remover. 8 colored views of California free. Also Beauty booklet. Address Mme. Koet* telll, Beauty Specialist. 843 Be a eon at., Loa Angeles, Calif ACEIITC mHIITCfI for the best-paying seller In fItIC.IV I a If AH ICU America today. Needed In every office, store and home. Once tried, always used. Liberal commission. 10c brings full-sized sample package and agent’s terms. United Mercantile Co. ,Tnnkhannock,P« CAf PCMFN Sell "THEBEBTEVER”-Lady L A-^*”■ LWashington Hulled Beans with Chicken. G alehouse Packing Co., Seattle, Wash fIPPriRTIINfTIFSs Louisiana Plantations 315 to 135 an UrrUVIIUIVI I ICO acre; Hardwood Timber Lands 88 to sl4 an acre. K. J. HAMLKY * BOS, Lake Providence, La HE MISSISSIPPI “ acr ® b °7® 'W® acres good .C. miOOlOdirri hill Un*.Ten payments. Fin« Stock or Fruit Lands. IKE CHASE, Moscow, Tens WANTS?IV LIVE AGENTS to sell clean, light, quick* Choice lowa Farm bent aoII. Write for particulars U. F. lit.., C.dar lUpldsll n a A WaUon E. Coleman, WubHI I a M I lngton.D. C. Books free. Hlghlftll.ll I West reference.. BEST RESULTS I'" i . V" _ ' ' "

What does that mean? It means that the men that in a past generation would have been independent merchants are now the employes of these stores, and never can be anything else; employes on wages with time checks, lines, and their daily work dependent upon a manager’s caprice. That is their prospect in life. It is hard (in some of its aspects), and we dislike to admit it, but it is the tnith. The gigantic department stores and mail order houses are built of the ruins of independent stores, just as the Christian churches of Rome were built of the fragments of the old temples, and each independent store destroyed is an independent merchant turned into a salaried employe.— Charles Edward Russell in Success Magazine.

Nothing New to Him.

His Host —I have some curiosities upstairs I should like to show you. Did you ever see a real, genuine, old time Toledo blade? Mr. Pneurltch —Gosh, yes; many, a time! I’ve seen the Memphis Scimitar, too. In the days when I was a cub printer I worked a while for both of ’em. —Chicago Tribune. Giving It Up. ‘‘Paw, what do you mean when you talk about the ‘insurgents’?” ‘‘Tommy, do you know the meaning of the word ‘mugwump’?" "No.” "Then there’s no use in my trying to tell you what an Insurgent Is.”

“DECLINED WITH THANKS.

Pamon* Book* That Had a Bard Times, Getting Into Print. Zangwill once offered a poem to an American magazine ''which the editor spurned. Years passed and brought changes. Then the editor wrote and asked the poet to favor him with a poem and name his own price. Zangwill lahghed, product* the despised poem and received a substantial check very substantial check. ' “Robinson Crusoe” begged at nearly every publisher’s door, only to be turned away. When at last it was “Printed for W. Taylor, at the Sign of the Ship, in Paternoster row,” it netted the lucky publisher £IOO,OOO profit. Jane Austen ranked toward the top of English women novelists, sold “Northanger Abbey” to a publisher at Bath for £lO. The publisher then feared failure and kept the manuscript a long time before he mustered courage to launch It; it at once jumped Into enormous popularity. Thackeray tried “Vanity Fair” with so many publishers only to meet with rebuffs that he at length ran It as o serial in Colburn’s Magazine'; it was the best he could do with it. Every publisher in Copenhagen rejected the manuscript of the first volume of Hans Apdersen’s “Fairy Tales.” When eventually he was compelled to bring out the volume at his own expense it jumped into immediate popularity, and the publishers, paying nothing for it, are still making money out of it as a classic. Parker, the Oxford publisher, declined to give £2O to Keble for hlu “Christian Year.” During the forty years which followed Its eventual publication 400,000 copies were sold and Keble made £14,000, one-fourth of the retail price. No publisher was found to accept “The Professor,” the first novel of Charlotte Bronte, the highly successful novelist. John Murray, the publisher, returned the manuscript of “Sartor Resartus” to Carlyle with a courteous note stating that he had not time to read It. Fraser ofTered to print It If Carlyle would pay him £l6O. Bentley and Colburn would have none of It Finally Fraser let it run serially in his magazine, paying in all for It £B2 Is. Since he could not find a publisher In London that would give him £6O for the manuscript of his “Tristram Shandy,” Lawrence Sterne issued it himself, so that publishers are. still profiting from it after the centuries. After “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” had run through Its magazine form a publisher’s reader pronounced It of .Insufficient Interest to print as a book. However, the publisher’s wife advocated its publication, and in four years it had sold 313,000 copies In America alone.

They Named Patagonia.

When barbarous lands are discover* ed they are named without consulting the wishes of the inhabitants. As an illustration, the land we call Patagonia is not known by that name to the natives. Their true name Is Tsonecas, and hy It all the tribes call themselves, says the Boston Herald. 1 The word “Pata-gones,” meaning “duckfooted men,” refers to their peculiar footgear. The lower limbs are encased in boots without soles, op rather long gaiters, made of guasaco skins, with the beautiful yellowish fur turned outward. The leg 1b covered all around from below the knee, the fur passing over the top of the foot around the heel, leaving the toeß sticking out. This trifling circumstance furnished the name by which a vast territory and all the people who inhabit it are known to the civilized world. The flaps or “uppers” of the gaiters, extending loosely across the top of their feet, exaggerated In breadth by the long hairs on the edges, give the wearer the appearance of having paws. When Magellan’s men first saw these Indians they were unable to account for the peculiar appearance of their feet and the bright yellow fur upon their legs and called them “duckfooted.”

A Test of Sociability.

“Miss Eliza Beemis is just as nice as she can be,” declared her neighbor, Mrs. Elderly, “but there’s one out about her that I don’t like. She isn’t sociable.” friend expressed surprise at this accusation, and began to defend Miss Eliza. “I know, I know,” said Mrs. Elderly, breaking In; “that’s all very well, but tell me this: did you ever see her going around to the funerals? No, of course not, and so I don’t see how you can call her sociable —real sociable, that is.”

His Inspiration.

“I see,” said the cheerful idiot, with solne abruptness, “that the price of raw rubber in London has finally boomed to 12 shillings and 4 pence.” “And may I ask what suggested this sudden remark?” inquired the oldest' boarder. The cheerful idiot thoughtfully surveyed his plate. “Maybe it was the steak,” he replied. —Cleveland Plain Dealer,

Unexpected.

“That’s a fine umbrella you are carrying." “Th-thank you.” a. “For what?” “For n-not claiming it.’’—Cleveland Plain Dealer. =z=

A Tip He Wanted.

Artist (to burglar, who iq making away with paintings)—Er— by the way, if you should manage to dispose of them would you mind sending me your customer’s address?—Life. There oomee a time in every man’s life when he acts giddy.

ANOTHER WOMAN CURED By Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Black Duck, Minn. —“About a year &go I wyptg you that I was sick and ■ ... could not do any of ’jSHS my housework. My IgffiSMi sickness was called Retroflcxion When felt as if I could not Tydia Pinkham’s cured, andPhave a Mrs. Anna Anderson, Box 18, illack Duck, Minn. Consider This Advice. No woman should submit to a surgical operation, which may mean death, until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made exclusively from roots and herbs, a fair trial. This famous medicine for women has for thirty years proved to be the most valuable topic and invigorator of the female organism. Women residing in almost every city and town in the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It cures female ills, and creates radiant, buoyant female health. If you are ill, for your own sake as well as those you love, give it a trial. Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice is free* and always helpful. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that is hy constitutional remedies. Deafness isl caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you hare a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It is entirety closed. Deafness is the result, and unless the- inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will he destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused hv Catarrh, which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. ' Take Hall’s Family Fills for constipation. And if some men didn’t boast they would be unable to keep up faith in themselves. Children Who Are Sickly. Mothers should never be without a box Of Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children. They break up colds in 24 hours, cure Feverishness, Constipation, Headache, Teething Disorders and Stomach Troubles. Over 10,000 testimonials. At all Druggists, 25c. Ask to-day. Sample mailed FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. A woman likes to have .her husband think she Is jealous when sffie isn’t Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes Relieved By Murine Eye Remedy, Try Murine For Your Eye Troubles. You Will Like Murine. It Soothes. 50c at Your Druggists. Write For Eye Books. Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago. Compensation. Nervous Passenger (on lake steam-er)—-It must be terrible to think of an accident happening to the boat while you are away down there in that hole. Stoker—lt’s jist the other way, ma’am. If the boat sinks I won’t have to go through more’n about half as much warter as you will ’fore I git to the bottom o’ the lake. No Competition. Squire Durnitt (of Lonelyville)— Our town’s got the four biggest liars in the State. Uncle Welby Gosh (of Drearyhurst. —I guess that’s right. You’re three of ’em. Who’s the fourth?

A Skin of Beauty la a Joy Forever. Da* T. Folia Oouroud’o Oriental Oream or Magioal Beeutlfler, Pd Tan, PtmplM, « . Treaties, Motk P.tch£ o Bash, and Skin Dliraaea, 3 and every blemUh ► 011 beauty, and tiejP WafiW ff&j] detection. It •13.5x1 Ks -Jr Upv baeetood the teet B—dS afl 'Wj ly of as years, and St?.B J - / KT >• so harmless we j I <S| taelelt to be sure It fj I la properly made. X'J O Lyl & I Accept no counter \ felt eUnllai I \ Sayre eald to a \JynKy ill • 1 lady of the haut- ( / 1 ''ll \ J “°Aa < *ym!* l >nd | e» .e®"* ILK arlli uee them „ _eW X, I recommtnd •Qearwnd’a Ctissi’ at Use leaet harmful of all tha HM.T.MffBAyHp» 17 Bust Jus Btmt,lssTofk. THOMPSON’S EYE WHIER

I ■ ~ • ’ ll^ 4 l ,r S HT^^J LE IPi

Baby Wasted to a Skeleton.

“My little son, when about a year and a half old, began to have sores come out on his face. I had a physician treat him, but the sores grew worse. Then they began to come out on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. Then I called another physician. Still he grew worse. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering he grew so bad that I had to tie his hands in cloths at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. “My aunt advised me to try Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. I sent to a drug store and got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of the Ointment and followed directions. At the end of two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sores of any kind since. I can sincerely say that only for Cuticura my child would have died. I used only one cake of Cuticura Soap and about three boxes of Ointment. “I am a nurse and my profession brings me into many different families and it is always a -pleasure for •me to tell my story and recommend Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. Egbert Sheldon, R. F. D. 1, Litchfield, Conn.. Oct. 23, 1909.”

DRINK HABIT INJURIOUS, CAN EASILY BE STOPPED.

Drunkenness Is unworthy when you can have it removed without anybody’s knowledge. Acme simple home-treatment will do the work. Write E. Fortin, 316 Dickey Bldg., Chicago, 111., for free trial. Good for Sore Eyes, for over 100 years PETTIT’S EYE SALVE has positively cured eye diseases everywhere. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Lend a man money once and he will not refuse to let you do it again. PERRY DAVIS’ PAINKILLER draws the pain and inflammation from bee-stinn and Insect bites. Soothes and allays the awful Itching of mosquito rotes. 25c, 85c and 60c bottles. People seem to have a mania for touching a man on his sore spots. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothiso Braun for Children teething: softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays bain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle.

Remedies are Needed #. Were we perfect, which we are not, medicines would not often be needed. But since our systems have be- TB come weakened, impaired and broken down through indiscretions which have gone on from the early ages, through countless generations, remedies are needed to aid Nature in correcting our inherited and otherwise acquired weaknesses. To reach the seat of stomach JIIF weakness and consequent digestive troubles, there is -M\ nothing so gsod as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discor- » I ery, a glyceric compound, extracted from native medio* Weak^to^h 1 R?r °7 er ye *7? ***;*•* "tisfaetion to all users. For IWtbumTWl nillST’S!,’ t- ,ver Complaint, Pam in the Stomach after eating. weartham, Bad Breath, Belching of food, Chronic Diarrhea and other Derangements, the “Discovery” is a time-proven and most efficient remedy?^ bnR7 U^; t H 5° r<l to *°°* pt ■ • eoret nostrum as a substitute for this non-aloe- * ?.^ 1 KN ° WN composition, not even though the urgent dealer may “*be a little bigger profit. q o^. B P,ea **° t , Pel > eU regulate and invigorate stomach, fiver and bonds. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to takeVcnidy.

A Storekeeper Says: M A lady came Into my store lately and said: ** *1 have been using a New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove all winter in my apartment I want one now for my summer home. I think these oil stoves are wonderful. If only women knew what a comfort they are, they would all have one. 1 spoke about my stove to a lot of my friends, and they were astonished. They thought that there was and smoke from an oil stove, and that it heated a room just like any other 'QJ stove. 1 told them ot my experience, and one after another they got one, and JfmH| S now, not one of them would give hers 'll up for five times M The lady who said this had thought Pjj ■ an oil stove was all right for quickly heating milk for a baby, or boiling a kettle of water, or to make coffee I / Jll quickly in the morning, but she never 1/Hnf dreamed of using it for difficult or heavy cooking. Now—she knows. Do you really appreciate what a New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove means to you ? No more coal to carry, no more coming to tha ■ ■ dinner table so tired out that you can’t eat. ■ M Tl ■ fuat light a Perfection fltove and immediately V ■ II I the beat from an intense blue flame shoots M Caattsaw Sate* Ba urn If m. UP to the bottom of pot, kettle or oven. But U you (ot «t»i« stove —see ■ <tbo room isn t heated. There is no smoke, no that tha name-plate ■ W to Mda Msw Perfection." \ Utcbeo where eae of these staves ie need. ■ Oil Cook-stove It has • Cabinet Top with a shelf for keeping plates and food hot. Tha nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the stove ornamental and attractive. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners: the 3 and 3-burner stoves can be had with or without Cabinet. ■vary daalar everywhere; if not at youre, write far Deecriptiva Circular to the nearest agency of the Standard Oil Company

We Pav Self) Oft wwk| f mailing poetale V“y -nyoursparetlme.Send ? c ®. nt *l?.?iJr. er for working o u tflt and luatruc-tlone to A- L. KEEP. Box *S4, CHICAGO, ILLUOII UfAMTCn felrwea er Retired Farmers toteeure SSS I Cw buyer, for 911.00 to 019.00 per acre lands CHAMPION EGG SEPARATOR SSf jolk. Sample and catalog of over 100 household necesxl* tleefor 10c. MATTE MFV. CO.* Oil E. SS4lh st., Hew York The L. and D. CORN CURE Guaranteed to cure In Jdar.or money refunded. At your druggist or by mall. ». J. Lew rey Ce., Bethel, Ceaa TWO RITQ ToWeat Texas and Return. Roam ■.V ■ . feekere. ®® nil »c for this Information. MKKJU LAND COMPART, Brady,Tcs A BARGAIN 100I 00 ACRES. Sts miles from v town. Partly Improved* |M Peracre. AKTHI U J. MAXON , Tripp, L. Dakota

A Pleasing Sense of Health and Strength Renewed and of Ease and Comfort follows the use of Syrup of Fig# *nfl Elixir of Senna, as it acts gently «a the kidneys, liver and bowels, clean** ing the system effectually, when constipated, or bilious, and dispels colda and headaches. To get its beneficial effects, alwaya buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES 45, *4, *3.50, 43, 42.50 & 42 THE STANDARD / \ FOR 30 YEARS. # _. L fc Million* of men wear 4-- 9K W. L. Dougla* shoes be- KJk cause they ore the low- ■■Mk'Mfcph, B§3 e*t price*, quality con- VK* V( sidered, in the world. Wr* H Mod# upon honor,of tho . MM beat leather*, by the mo*t skilled workmen, mr in all the latest fashions. J W. L Douglas #5.00 and $4.00 shoe* equal A Custom Bench Work / fjh costing $6.00 to SB.OO. 1/jH^ Boys’Shoes. t3,52.50Jt52 JjClr Ttjß W. L. Douglas guarantee* their value by stamping hi* name and price on the bottom. Look for Take N” Substitute. fast Color Eyelet*. . A.k your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. I; net for sole in your town write for Mai 1 OrderCatalogahew* lug bow to order by mall. Shoes ordered direct from factory delivered free. W.LDougin*. HrocktonTlSE Do you know “ SECRO-SOI/VO-TONE” will an GALLSTONES APPENDICITIS. LIVER TROUBLES, DYSPEPSIA < Just give It a chance. Tell your friends. Write tedar to oaW.ktone remedy compantTbSTJ b; 885 Dearborn st., Chicago, 111., Bole t. AAgte

Bey and Girl Afleofs UR *tnMsia amnia %jtpYbV I*rpot s, MS Baaphla street, M.hlle, Alabama OorSELF-SHARPEIiRG SHEARS are NEVER DOLL The more you use them the sharper they get. Outlast • ordinary Pairs and cost lees. Full stse. by maU. S6cpair. Dept. 8. WILLABT IN.CO.,SSS Ri. Howard -• ftMlTssn.lj AGENTS &&gifa££BiE nampa. K. S. Jehaaea, inoculation a a« a, n«. 11-ms rW THINS TO ABVUIISCSS, a lease da nal ladfe ■Milan yaa taw the Advertise neat In this HIT