Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 February 1911 — Page 3
rAi nc : r |Sr Munyon’s Cold Remedy Relieves th« head.Jhroat and lone* almost Immediately. Checks Fevers, stops Discharges of tae nose, takes away all aches and pains caused by colds. It cures Grip ana obstinate Coughs and prevents Pneumonia. Write Prof. Munyon. 53rd and Jefferson Bts.r' Phlla„ Pa., tor medical advice absolutely tree. B pp Kow-Kure Is not a “food”—it Is a medicine, and the only medicine in the world for cows only. Made for the cow end, as Its name Indicates, a cow core. Barrenness, retained afterbirth, abortion, scours.cakedudder, and all similar affections positively and quickly cured. No one who keeps cows, whether many or few, can afford to be without “Kow-Kbt».' It Is made especially to keep cows healthy. Our to Do When Your Cows Are SlaVlsent free. Askyour local dealer for Kow-Kar*. * ’oreendto the manufacturers. Dairy Association Co- LyndonvUlo, Vt. POETDNE TO BE MADE In proposition of highest merit. Big dividends, quick returns. Will bear striotest investigation. It you-mean business, for Information write J. M. Townes. Little Book. Ark. Bokara Diamonds Gems Write for sample offer and catalog, free, to Sf. — AM. —i - . - - - X. I was isnawMldn 49WUJ vO* 1 W 1 aWHIWiWtHI nlsf »e vUtt|d| Ills TAKE A DOSE Or PISO’S *Th£ best medicine IforCOyCHS & COLDS
WISE GIRL.
"I suppose your sister Is busily preparing for her -wedding?” “Yes, she Is up in her room now destroying all her old letters.”
How Pat Proved It.
AIT Irishman was once serving in a regiment in India. Not liking the climate, Pat tried to evolve a trick by which he could get home. Accordingly he went to the doctor and told him his eyesight was bad. The doctor looked at him for a while and then said: 7 “How can you prove to me that your eyesight is bad?” Pat looked about the room and at last said: “Well, doctor, do ye see that nail on the wall?” “Yes,” replied the doctor. "Well,” then replied' Pat, “I can’t.” —Chicago Tribune.
HEREDITY Can Be Overcome In Cases.
The influence of heredity cannot, of course, be successfully disputed, but it can be minimized or entirely overcome in some cases by correct food and drink. A Conn, lady says: "For years while I was a coffee drinker 1 suffered from bilious attacks of great severity, from which I used to emerge as white as a ghost and very weak. Our family physician gave me various prescriptions for improving the digestion and stimulating the liver, which I tried faithfully but without perceptible result. “He was acquainted with my family history for several generations back, and once when I visited him he said: ’lf you have inherited one of torpid livers you may always suffer more or' less from its inaction. We can’t dodge our inheritance, you know.’ "I was not ad strong a believer in heredity as he was, however, and, beginning to think for myself, I concluded to stop drinking coffee, and see what effect that would haye. I feared it would be a severe trial to give it up, but when I took Postum and had it well made, it completely filled my need for a hot beverage and I grew very fond of it "I have used Postum for three years, using no medicine. During all that time I have had* absolutely none of the bilious attacks that 1 used to suffer from, and 1 have been entirely free from the pain andjdebllitatlng effects that used to result from them. “The change is surely very great and I am compelled to give Postum the exclusive credit for it” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. 7- v Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. “There's a Reason.” Bver rctl AM ikm letter* A mw •M ■»«■»» from time They
A WEEK IN BELGIUM
ALONG stretch of great white building® looming at you through the haze is your first Introduction to Ostend. As the steamer approaches nearer and near to the landing stage, the outlines of column and gable, tower and minaret, balcony and arch, and .the sound of distant music come to you; and then, as the buttresses of the pier absorb your view, you are greeted with a babel of French and Flemish, and all the bustle of a foreign port. You begin to realize the delights of having arrived at the most beautiful summer city In the world— Ostend. For the moment you may be bewildered with all that you see. Your dinner Is being served to you in a vast chamber filled with exquisitely gown-
Hotel de Ville, Bruges.
ed women and men, mostly in evening dress. Through the open French windows a great crowd is passing along the Digue, the magnificent roadway which stretches along the sea to the right and left of Ostend, to France on one side, to Holland on the other. You hear every language, and you soon notice every type of nationality, but always the best of that nationality. Ostend is the congress ground of the aristocrat from everywhere. Everybody, laughing and happy, everybody living for the moment, forgetful of the before, and careless of the afterwards. Only Ostend, Reine des Plages, can produce such a scene; nowhere in all the world is it equalled. Then, off to the station, for you are going to see as much of Belgium as you can in your week’s holiday. In half an hour you are in Bruges, the old, old City of Flanders, “The Venice of the North,” as she once proudly called herself, when she could boast of 200,000 inhabitants, of a sovereign’s brilliant court, and of massive walls and a powerful army able to defy, an emperor’s wrath. Now Bruges has nothing but her thrilling romantic past and the inestimable treasures of art which even her' conquerors refrained from taking. In Ghent you must see the cathedral with its world-famous altar-piece “The Adoration of the Lamb,” by the brothers Van Eyck, and the tombs of former bishops, wonders In carved marble. Nor must you fail to pause a few minutes before the town hall, where you will view the stone pulpit from which Jacques Vaa Artevelde, “dear goßslp and ally” of Edward IH, addressed his turbulent fellow-burghers. After dinner you had better catch your train for Brussels, for you will arrive at the capital long before midnight, and you will have ample tithe to see something of night life In “Little Paris” before you go to bed. Brussels is more or less familiar ground to everybody who has been on the continent, even if the rest of Belgium is not so well known. Having breakfasted, you will start early on your sight-seeing, and if you have not been to the Belgian capital before, you will begin with the town hall This remarkable Gothic building dates from the fourteenth century, and wit-’ nessed the execution of Counts Egmont and Horae by Alva. You must do the cathedral and picture galleries. Antwerp is only half an hour's train from Brussels, and you should give It a full day, at any rate; so arrive as early as you can from Brussels, and begin with the cathedral, if only to see the Ruben: masterpieces. There are one or two more churches almost of equal Interest, one of which contains the family mausoleum of Rubens. Then there is the Plantln Museum of
Printing, with the residence of the great Antwerp citizen Just as he used to inhabit it, and several picture galleries crammed with treasures. But Antwerp is the city of pictures, and you must watch your time. You. should walk along the splendid docks —there are raised stone terraces for promenading—and in the midst of the bustle of mighty commerce there is the old Steen Castle to be explored, the former fortress of the port and palace of the Marquesses of Antwerp. Here is a collection of all manner of mediaeval marvels, musical instruments, beds, torture-machines, and a variety of horrible dungeons in the depths below the basement. From Antwerp go to JAege, about an hour and a half’s Journey, but the views from the train will repay you. The old city of the prinee-bishops and the birthplace of Charlemagne is singularly free from smoke and noxious vapors and other outward signs of its commercial activity, thanks to Its situation. It is built in a sort of basin between the hills around it; on the slopes of the hills are the factories, and all the unpleasantness blows over the city. The Palace of the Bishops, the university and the citadbl can be done by you, with lunch between, and In the later afternoon you can catch a train for Spa and arrive at the celebrated city of springs in time to make yourself presentable for dinner. At Spa you axe again In the midst of the best continental society, with the usual sprinkling of American millionaires and English “milord's;” and it is Wednesday evening in your week’s holiday. You will find Spa full of amusement, for it is the sports ‘center of Belgium. You can now take the railway to Coo, where there is a waterfall of wondrous beauty, and you find yourself amid the wild scenery of the Ambleve river, and on the borders of Belgium’s miniature Switzerland, the mountainous paradise of the Ardennes. From Coo you can take a drive to Remouchamps, a little township facing the Ambleve rapids and lying in the midßt of scenery of extraordinary beauty. v < However, your week is coming to a close, and so you had best take a train from Remouchamps to Jemelle, on the main line again of the state railways, and manage to reach Namur, traveling the while through one of the most picturesque districts, not only in
Guild Houses, Antwerp.
Belgium, but in all Europb. Namur is the ancient fortress which has figured in the wars of history for more than six centuries. Namur, indeed, la encompassed with the fairest charms that nature can veal. The lovely valleys and hills of the Meuse, the Lease and the Ourthe rivers, the grqttoes of Han and Rochefort, and many other romantic attractions in the way of feudal ruins, picturesque cascades, fairy glens, and noble forests can be made a menu of daily sight-seeing, to be prolonged or curtailed as your holiday permits. The fortress of Namur, with the ramparts and earthworks, which were so formidable in the days when William of Orange besieged it, are now portion of the public pleasure groiyid. During your week of rapid sight-see-ing you will have discovered that Belgian! is not only the country that seems to have been the center place of the world’s history ever since history began, but that every inch of its territory is romantic and instructive. Its natural beauties and perfect accessibility from end to end make It the most enjoyable tourist and holiday land lxr all Europe.:
UP TO ALFRED.
She—l know, Alfred, I have \my faults. He —Oh, certainly. She (angrily)—lndeed? Perhaps you’ll tell HW vrhnt tbwv -re!
From Pain to Pleasure a Quick Transition.
I suggested Resinol and gave l a neighbor one of your sample boxes for a child of a few months whose lower limbs were broken out with a jrash resembling Eczema. The sample was applied at once and changed the wall of pain into smiles. Two jars were used with complete recovery in the surprisingly short time of two days. That tired mother’s looks and words of gratitude were from the heart. Geo. E. Ames, D. D. S., Boulder, Colo.
Simplicity of Expression.
A story was told on Martin Lomasney at the Cape Cod commercial travelers’ dinner by Representative Pope of Leominster: “Last season Lomasney was seen talking to someone in one of the corridors, and as I passed I heard these words: 'Shall I write him?' 'No,’ said Lomasney; 'never write a thing when you can talk, and never talk when you can nod your head.” —Boston Record. I " Many people have receding gums. Rub Hamlins Wizard Oil on gums and stop the decay; chase the disease germs with a mouth wash of & few drops to a spoonful of water. The man in the church with the roving eyes looking over the bulbous noSe is pretty sure to be Btrong on the doctrines.
Great Home Eye Remedy, for all diseases of the eye, quick relief from using PETTIT’S EYE SALVE. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Perhaps Mohammed went to the mountain because it was cheaper than spending his vacation at the seashore. •V ONIT OHM "BBOMO QUININE- ” That Is LAXATIVE BBOMO QUIJSISa. Look tot the signature«of B. W. GBOvJS. Used the World over to Cure a Cold In One Day. 25c. Happiness grows at our own fireside and is not to be picked in strangers’ gardens.—Douglas Jerrold. Drink Garfield Tea at night! It insures normal action of liver, kidneys and bowels. He —Darling, I would die for you. She —Dearest, do you carry much Insurance? Smokers like Lewis’ Single Binder cigar for its rich mellow quality. Every hear of a pearl being found in a church fair oyster? The very best advice: take Garfield Tea whenever a laxative is needed. Some tombstone-Inscriptions are too good to be true.
K ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT {* Avfegetable Preparation for Asfoil s imitating the Food and Regula§3 Stomachs and Bowels of tis 8" Promotes Digestion,Cheerfulri ness and Re st. Con tains neither tj Opium .Morphine nor Mineral Si Not Narcotic Rrtipr ✓ Old DrSAMUEL/mM&t - li \ | 1 ,(i| ' A perfect Remedy for ConsttpS W lion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, SO Worms .Convulsions .Feverishtfs ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. 2< *•■. to T*c Simile signature of || v 1 The Centaur Cotmurift Ire ML. • 1 . J EfS&B xjWantged und*r the Food a 4 Ract Copy of Wrapper.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES SttlES+Sdlm
Some Do.
v In Brooklyn a*few weeks ago a Sunday school teacher asked his eiasy of hopefuls this rather debatable/ question; “Who will tell me what Is the chief end of man?” From the most Attentive pnpil came forthwith this answer, “To glorify God and annoy him forever.” ' Tell the dealer you want a Lewis’ Bash Binder straight 6c cigar. All the world’s a stage, and life is the greatest on earth.
<4> * from woman’s ailments axe invited to write'to the names and addresses Here given, for positive proof that Lydia E. Flnkham’s Vegetable Compound does cure female Ills.
Tumor Removed. Elmo, Mo.—Mrs. Sarah J.Stuart, R.F.D.K0.2, Bo x IS. , ■ Peoria,Hl.—Mrs.Christina Read, 105Motm<iSt. Natick, Mass.—Mrs. Nathan B. Qreaton, fit North Main St. MilwaukesWls.—Mrs. Emma Imse, 83315 t St. Chicago, Ill.—Mrs. Alvena Sperling, 1468 Clybourne Ave. Galena, Kan.—Mrs. R.R. Huey,7l3MinaralAT« Victoria, Miss.—Mrs. Willio Edwards. Cincinnati, Ohio.—Mrs.W. H. Housh, 7 Eastview At*. „ . Change of Life. Epping, N.H.—Mrs. Celia E. Stevens. Stroator, Ill.—Mrs. J. H. Campbell, 206 North Second St. Brooklyn, N.T.— Mrs. Evens, 826 Halsey St. Noah, Ky.—Mrs. Lizzie Holland. Cathamet,Wash.—Mra.Elvaßarber Edwards. Ciroleville, Ohio.-Mrs. Alice Klrlin, 833 West Huston St. Balem, Ind.—Mrs. Lizzie S. Hinkle, R.R.N0.3. New Orleans, La.—Mrs. Gaston Blondeau,lßl2 Terpsichore St. Mishawaka, lnd.—Mrs. Chas. Bauer, Sr., 623 East Marlon St. Racine,Wis.—Mrs. Katie Knbik, B. 2, Box 61. Bearer Falls,Pa.-Mrs.W.P.Boyd,24loßthAr. Maternity Troubles. Bronaugh, Mo.—Mrs. D. F. Aleshirs. Phsnix, RX—Mrs. Wm. O. King, Box 282. Carlstadt, NX.—Mrs. Louis Fischer, 82 Mon* roe St. South Sanford, Me.—Mrs. Charles A. Austin. Schenectady,N.V.—Mrs. H.Porter,7B2Albany St. Taylorrille, Ill.—Mrs. Joe Grantham, 825 W. Vsndeveer St. Cincinnati, Ohio.—Mrs. Sophia H0ff,615 MoMlcken Ave. Big Bun, Pa.—Mrs. W. E, Pooler. Philadelphia, Pa.-Mrs. M. Johnston, 210 Siegel St. _ . . * Backache. Peoria. 111.-Mrs. Clara L. Ganwitz, 8.8.N0. 4, Box 62. Augusta, Me.—Mrs.Winfield Dana, R.F.L. 2. St. Paul Minn.—Mrs. B. M. Schora, 1068 Woodbrfdgo St. Plttsbuig^PA— Mrs. G. Leiser, 8219 Klnkald f earner, Mo.—Mrs. Thomas Asburry. lue Island, Ill.—Mrs. Anna Schwartz, 828 Qrorags. East Earl, Pa.—Mrs. Augustus Lyon,BFJ>2. Operations Avoided. Sikeston, Mo.—Mrs. Dema Bethune. Gardiner, Me.-Mrs. S. A.WUliams, M 2 Washington Are. Chicago, Ill.—Mrs.Wm. Ahrens,223BW.2lat St. Bellevue, Ohio.-Mrs. Edith Wielsnd, 238 Monroe St, LcForest Wis.—Mrs. Auguste Ves permann. Lexter, Kansas.—Mrs. Lizzie Scott.
These womefn are only a few of thousands of living witnesses of, the power of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to cuiefemale diseases. Not one of these women ever received compensation in afiy form for the use of their names in this advertisement—but are willing that we should refer to them because of the good they may do other suffering women to prove that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a reliable and honest medicine, and that toe statements made in our advertisements regarding its merit are toe truth and nothing but the truth. ,• *.
W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 7-1911.
CASTORIA Jor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the A* A, Signature A/\m hjr list VJr For Owr Thirty Years CUSTOM!
DISTEMPER S^SSttlSFevd .Bata care sad posltix* prerentlTe. bo ntttnlimr lonM»t«Blteg« •i»hIMW or “exposed.’* Ltqald.rlTcn on ths tongue; acts on ths Blood snd Glands: expels the SPOHN MEDICAL CO., GOSHEN, l»„ 0. S.A.
oots Barks Herbs That have great medicinal power, am raised to their highest efficiency, for puttying and enriching tho blood, as they are combined ha Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 40,366 testhnoßtafa received by actual count in two years. Be sore to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla Get ft today la usual liquid form m chocolated tablets called Sarsataba. 1
Organic XMsplaeesneata. . Block Luck, Minn.—Mm. Anna Anderson, Caimlon^NJ.—Mrs. Ella Johnston,2B9Liberty Chicago, Hl.—Mrs. Wm. Tolly, 9052 Ogdea Avenue. Painful Periods. Wis.—Mrs. Ph. Bchottner, RJL 14, Mo.—Mra. C. B. Mason R.R. No. 9. N. Oxford, Mass.—MissAmeliaLuso, Box 14. Baltimore.Ohio.—Mrs.A.A.Baleuger JR.P.D.L Negaunee, Mloh. Mrs.MarySedlock.Box 1273. Orrvtllo, Ohio.—Mrs. E. F. Wagner, Box 520., Atwater, Ohio.—Miss Minnie Muelhaupt. Pralrle<iuChiea,Wta.—Mza Julia Konkheck, 8.N0.L Irregularity. Buffalo, N.T.—Mrs. Clor* Darbrake, WMartomoot St. Winchester, Ind.—Mrs. May LeaLR.R. No. ft St. Begis Falls, N.Y.-Mr*. J. HJBrwer*. , ■ Grayvflle, Ill.—Mrs. Jessie Schaor, Box 23. * i Hudson, Ohio.—Mrs. Geo. Btrieklar, B. No. A Box 82. Ovarian Trombl*. Murrsyville, DL—Mrs. Chas. Moore. R. R. 3.' Philadelphia, Pa-Mrs. Chas. BoeU, 2219 V. Mole St. Minneapolis, Minn.—Mrs. John G. Mohlan, 2116 Second Bt., North, Hudson, Ohio.—Mrs. LenaCermoelno JLFJ)J. Westwood, Md.—Mrs. John F. Richards. 1 Benjamin, Mo.-Mrs. Julia Frantz, JLF.D. I.’ Female Weakness. W. Terre Haute, Ind.— E. Hamilton.' Lawrence. lowa— Mrs. JqUa A. Snow, R-NO.B. Utica, OhlA—Mrs. Mary Earlwiue, ILF. V. A Bellevue, OBic.-Mrs. Charley Chapman, BJf. L. No. 7. Elgin, Ill.—Mrs. Henry Leiseberg, 743 Adame St. , Schaefferstown, Cyra Hetrleh. Creeson, Pa—Mrs. EllaE. Alksy. Fairchnnce^A—Mrs, Idella A. Dunham, Box Nervous Prostration. Knoxrllla lowa— Mra Clara Franks3JTJ>. a Oronogo, Mo.—Mrs. Mae McKnlght. 1 Camden, N.J.—Mrs. W. PTValentine, , coin Avenue. Muddy, Brookvllle, Ohio.—Mrs. R. Kinnlson. Fltshville. Ohlo.=Mrs. O. Cole, PA-Mrs. Frank dark, 2416 K
?¥B AeulDlEg SSaJllssjss BSSL®?JS?Si 0 . f K $ Df a W o*»e} absolutely cared. pKino NO. l-ftr weak and (bad eyes, core# ■*■ oPSCIInO NO. 2—Onree all Inflammations, at tba eye, Oonjonotlrites, acute or ekitmlc, common sore BTfc^O’N*a *—Ouree granulated Uds.xrowtha nets of and disease of the optio nerre. , er lor thirty yean, and these Specifies am the resale ol t bee ey ears of research, experiment and expert - •»oe. Our charge for treatment is only (5.00 per the treatment of the case, with oomplete directions Bailey, Consulting Physician In charge. wIU make PfTOJnal diagnosis, and sand the Specific needed. Medicine sent everywhere st our expense. It cash aoffiSSSSM& l i!S|A£-g’ i riSSf!SS filwis. I **i™A o*oJSC»Dw.»fitt. PlTHlTSSaSgff^'sg I HI Ball I West Mfcrssjjis.hsm rajuM lEFIINOE STAROI ZTXZ
