Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 96, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 April 1912 — Page 3
WHY PEOPLE GO TO GANADA
Those who are wondering why the number of Americans going to Canada Tear by year Increases in the rates that it does, would not be so surprised were they to accompany one of the ntunerous excursions that are being run under the auspices of the Governmeat from several qf the states, and remain with,the settler unsl he gets' onto the ffee homesteads, which, as stated by Speaker Champ Clark, In the U. S. senate the other day, comprises 160 acres of the most fertile soil and With remarkably easy settlement conditions. Then watch the results, Whether ft be on this free homestead of 160 acres or on land which he may purchase at from |l6. to S2O. per acre, fully as good as the SIOO. and $l6O. per acre land of his native state, and jfrhich his means grill not permit his. purchasing. On the part of the mem-' bers of the TJ. S. Senate and Congress there is nothing but praise for Canada. Canadian laws and Canadian lands although the reasonable desire is shown tn their remarks, that they pass legislation, (which Is very praiseworthy) Oiat will make the land laws of the united States much easier. It is the success of the American settler in Canada that attracts others, and when experiences such as the following are related to the friend “back home” Is it any wonder that increased Interest is aroused find a determination arrived at, to participate in the new-found way up In Canada that" means wealth and health and all that accompanies it. - ""’William Johnston, who formerly lived at Alexandria, Minn., settled in the Alberg District near Battle River and in writing to one of the Canadian Government agents, located in the XTnited States says: “We have had no failures of crops during our nine years in Canada. I threshed 1208 bushels of - Wheat and 1083 bushels of oats in 1911, off my 160 acres. This is a beautiful country. I keep six good work horses and milk seven cows, getting good prices for butter and .eggs. We get our coal for $2.00 per ton at the mine, about one mile from the farm. Am about one and a half miles from a fine school. As for the cold weather It Is much milder here than iu Minnesota, where I lived for 21 years. Our well Is 85 feet deep and we have fine water. Wild land is selling' for $lB. to $25. per acre. Improved farms are much hlghet lam well satisfied with the country, and would not sell unless I got a big price, as we have all done iwell here.” - i Good reasons to account for the number going to Canada.
The woman' who suffer* In silence usually manages to make a lot Ql noise about It. As we grow more sensible we refuse drug cathartics and take instead Nature’s herb sure, Garfield Tea. The more a man expects the more he will be surprised if he gets it.
• MBS b 08l ne>«f orj // |W\ W AT Mtilßl* j It nlw a // |6r*ent direct for flTsd IhUtl 7 <Wure». W.OO BIRDBEY-SOMEBS CO. 2>i nr™ «vunii, .nM vott
REAL, ESTATE vobcsb uu nufiinoi faxm—lS2o acres, 3 miles «t»tlon, rich, level. (13.60 (adjoining lands 126 sum Duality,) Irrigation Wat., Beet factor/ located nearKy. oiab n£ooo, baL time. Hunt, Hereford, Tex. MEXICO S^WLSSISS!RSfiSSS‘KK ! handleall Oklaliomaj>roj^rt^Bankr«fe^ ran qai c iiUti MU s&iia,?Sgig WESTERN CANADA FARM LANDS fSjgfi itbe finest mixed fanning district In Canadian West. 'Close to Prince Albert, Bask., splendid market point, Free Government homesteads a Iso within 25 miles of ,Cltr.oropsexoeUent,seulementeomlnglnfast. For aree literature and maps, write Jo Mas 8. Woodward, Sec. Board of Trade, Dent. U Prince Albert, Saak. Why Rent a Farm find be compelled to pay to roar landlord most es your hard-earned profits? Own your own ana- Secure a Free Homestead in Saskatchewan or Alberta - or purchase land in one of these •rkwlrafl districts and bank a ifflllCKtfHß R»*«[•« SIO.OO or •- inulyPPs J sl2-00 an acts ■JMSmTI fidfl J Land purchased 3 years ago at (10.00 an InlaNKdnS acre has recently changed hands at I *2540 an acre. The ■MB crops grown on these lands warrant the advance. Too can Become Rich l||a I Ottawa, tke L_ T .jwl *
Convenient Code.
Cobbused to^a^reportw gan, who was renowned, among other things, for his ability as a free-hand ■we. re-. ■-* One night Cobb was dining with the ex-governor and him family. A messenger came in to tell the host that one of his pet political schemes had Just been defeated through the bungling of a lieutenant. The old man ripped out a string of dark blue ones. "Now, pa,” said his wife, “you promised me you would quit cursing.” "Marie,” said the ex-governor, Tm not cussing—-this is just the way I talk!”—Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post i
RASH ALL OVER BABY’S BODY Itched So He Could Not Sleep
“On July 27,1909, we left Boston for a trip to England and Ireland, taking baby with us. After being in Ireland a few days a nasty rash came out all over hia body. We took him to a doctor who gave, us medicine for him. The trouble started ln~ the form of a rash and was all over baby’s body, head and. face, at different times. irritated, and he would scratch it with all his might The consequence was it developed into sores, and we were afraid it would leave nasty scars on his face. “When we reached England we took baby to another doctor, who said his condition was due to change of food and climate, and gave more medicine; The rash got no better, and it used to Itch and burn at night so bad that the child could hot sleep. He was completely covered with It at different times. It was at this time that my mother advised us to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After using Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment for about nine mtajtha the places disappeared. There are not any scars, or other kind of disfigurement, and baby is completely cured by the Cuticura Soap and Ointment We have no further trouble with baby’s skin. Nothing stopped the Itching, and allowed baby to sleep but Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment” (Signed) Mrs. Margaret Gunn, 29 Burrell St, Roxbury. Mass., March 12, 1911. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere, a sample of each, with 82-page book, will be mailed free on application to Cuticura,” Dept L, Boston.
Poor Fellow!
“He has no control over his limbs.” “You wouldn’t if you had had your leg pulled as often as be has.” TO CURB A COED IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVB BROMO Quinine Tablets. Druggist*refund money if it falls to care. B.W. GROVE’S signature Is on eacb box. 26c. The more, a trust magnate wants the less the other fellow gets. •
BACKACHE IS DISCOURAGING Until You Get After The Cause Nothing more dls- dfr-'f oonraging than ft constant backache. jCr\t V Lame when you l awake. Pains pierce ) you when you bend or lift It’s hard to _ \ T work, or to rest \ You sleep poorly ty and next day lstheii||Mf same old story. Mff fe3 That backafhe In- SBlf I dicates bad kidneys Hffll/f ml and calls for V| good kidney remedy. H| ’A M None so well reo- ■ 2 U ommended asDoan's ft Kidney Pills. if m 1 fnl testimony IsBW fi j convincing proof. fmßl f flare's AllOfilff u Svet , yPtet«re Typical Case- 2 * w ***** ? Mrs. O. W. Erwin, 808 Third St, Little Falls, Minn., says: “My body became so bloated I bad to gasp for breath. Kidney secretions were In terrible condition and to bend my back was agony. Life was one constant round of suffering and I thought death would be a relief. I began using Doan’s Kiidney Pills and am today a well, happy woman." AT ALL DEALERS 50c. a Box # DOAN’S K ‘?f,y
The Wretchedness of .Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE • JO*. LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable jglflilP* —act surely and gently on the MBSEIm .Otlc liver. Cure ■ ! ~Ln Biliousness, 4W?W |LY££ Head- |wtf--ache, fir- \ MBBB Dizzi- J^^*==== i > ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRK3L Genome most Twer Signature
SCOUTING HARD TASK
' Bay» Arthur Irwin. ... in the minors and little jerkwater towns for future diamond stars isn’t what it 1b cracked up to be,” said Arthur Irwin, the New York Yankees’ veteran scout who is soon -to start on another scouting tour. According to the man frhom the Yankees depend upon for their star players, real good baseball players are at a premium these days.. “Scouting," continued Arthurr"isn’t like it used to be. There was a time when a man could go through the bushes and 1 pick up all kinds of men; but times have changed since then. The scout who Is lucky to pick up one really good ball player in a season can congratulate himself and feel satisfied that he has earned his salary.” Scout Irwin declares there never was such a slim market for ball players as at the present time. “Big league clubs,” said Irwin, “are not In the market to sell star players, naturally, and that’s why it is so hard for any one club to gather a galaxy of stars. Every club owner wants to hold on to his best men, for they are -the ones who bring success to hla club. Money cannot buy them. Thq club owner must rely on the scout, for he is the one man behind the gun, so to speak. He is the man who unearths the stars. “I remember the days when money could buy big men; but now cluba must develop them. Few of the leading batters today were purchased for large amounts, but of course ther& are exceptions. Take Detroit’s case with Ty TJobb, for instance. The Tigers got hijp from a small bush league, but they had to develop him first before he was anything. Most every headliner on the diamond today, after being brought to the majors, had to be sent back to the minors for . seasoning.”
BALL PLAYERS FROM LINDEN
Little Town In Tennessee Is Home of Five Professionals, Including Clyde Milan of Washington. - The average city of 100,000 people feels fairly proud when it can boast of having a half dozen professional ball playbrs among its sons, but toe record is undoubtedly held by Linden, Tenn., the home of Clyde Milan. Linden is a little hamlet in the center of the state, with a population of 850,
Clyde Milan.
and yet there are exactly five professional ball players who register from there. Milan is the only one in the major leagues. He has a brother who is with Nashville. Then there are two boys named Morlbld and another named Paskell, who are playing hall In some of the smaller leagues.
abound XBASES Baseball’s In the air for fair. It’s everywhere. Bridgeport has traded Pitcher Ivor Swanson to Troy for Pitcher Cunningham. Mobile 1b to get Outfielder Cruise, last year with Hattiesburg, and drafted by Detroit. Silver Groh, the veteran infielder with Worcester last year, will be with Lynn this yea?. - >*- Pitcher Rufus Gilbert has purchased his release from the Terre Haute Central League club. Manager Isbell at Dea Moines may play Eddie Cofllgan at second base this year in place of George Graham. Hie Milwaukee club has purchased Outfielder Cbappelle from the Eau , Claire club of the Mlnnesota-Wisoon-sln league. --k' . If Montgomery does not get a first baseman from the St. Louis Browns ft hopes to get'Doc Johnstone- from New Orleans. - • ’ j / Mart/ O'Toole, who separated B. Oreyfuas from *22,500, says that his arm is all to the merry, and if that be so the Pirate expense bin ought to prove a valiant worker for Fred darks. : v ‘~ r 7/ : ~ " ~„V T ■-
It’s difficult for a man who Is broke to break into society. ; r\ - l lu overcame cob supraon pan wbihdii .IDs, take Garfield Tea, a pure herb laxative. Better a strong prejudice than a weak conviction. -V*.,. ••Pink Kye” la Epldeml* In the Spring. Try ttartae Bye Remedy tor Reliable Relief. • It takes a man of originality to pose as a successful Bar. ■WSBgsSftggfas Bleeding or Protruding Hies In 6to todays, too. A man Isn’t Necessarily worthless because bis neighbor Is worth more. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrap for Children teething, softens the gnats, reduces Inflammottoo, *Uaye pain, cures wind coUe,aSce bottle. Beginning a proper name with a small letter Is a capital offense. Cole’s Carbollsalve quickly relieves and cures bunting, itching and torturing akin diseases. It Instantly stops the pah> of burns. Cures without scars. S6c and 60c by druggists. For free sample wrtto to J. W. Cole A Co.. Black River Fails, Wls.
Accounted For.
“The boy has the aviation fever." “That accounts for the rise in his temperature.” ~ A splendid and highly recommended remedy for tired, weak, inflamed eyes, and granulated eyelids, is Pax tine Antiseptic, at druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass.
Rats.
Jim—-Do you think Mamie is taller than Susie? Tim—l should say that she is just about one rat taller.
A Quarter Century
Before the public. Over Five Million Free Samples given away each year. The constant ana increasing sales from samples proves the genuine merit of Allen’s FootEase, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes for Tired, Aching, Swollen Tender feet. Sample free. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
To Take a Different Route.
“Slstern and brethren,” exhorted Uncle Abraham, a recent promotion from the plow to the pulpit, “on de one side er dis here meetin’ house Is a road leading to destruction, on de ndder is a road gwine to hell and damnation. Which you gwine. pursoo? Dar is the mternal question: Which is you gwine pursee?” “Law, Brer Abraham,” spoke Sister Eliza from the back pey, “I speck I’m er gwine home too de woods!”— Llppincott’s. There are men wno see that dignity may be disgraced, and who feel that disgrace may be dignified.—Bolingbroke.
Two Smiles.
Ezra Pound, the poet was talking at the -Authors’ club, in New York, about Shelley’s cremation. “Cremation, although beautiful,’’ he. said, “lends itself to ribald Jest in a way that sepulture doesn’t. “Who can forbear a smile at the thought of that devoted young matron, who, her front steps being covered with sleet, sprinkled her first husband’s ashes over them in order that her second -husband might descend. in safatyt? t : ——— Smiling himself, Mr. Pound resumed: "And who could forbear another smile at the thought of the young widow on the blustery March morning who entered her drawing room to-find that the wind had overturned the vase which contained her husband’s remains? '-V- ■ ----- 4~ - - . ... “ ‘Pshaw,’ she said, ’now Isn’t it Just like George to throw his ashes all over my new Klrmanshah rug I'"
Why Should a Chicken Lay a Soft-Shelled Egg? ‘T.’Xv _V4 ' y. •''■ . '* ’ r I Because, Willie, the chicken don’t know how to create « hard-sbefled egg unless it has some food with Kme in it So chicken-raisera often provide limestone gravel, broken oyster shells or some other form of Kme. . .. w ' j ' j; Let the chicken wander free and it finds its own food and behaves samUy. ./§ Smt it up and feed stuff lacking Kme and the eggs are soft-shelled. Let’s step from chickens to human beings. Why is a child “backward” and why does a man or woman have nervous prostration or brain-fag? There may be a variety of reasons but one tfang is certain. If die food is deficient in Phosphate of Potash the gray matter in die nerve centres and brain cannot be rebuilt each day to make good die cells broken down by the activities of yesterday. * Phosphate of Potash is the most important dement Nature demands to mate albumin and water to make gray matter. * Grape-Nuts food is heavy in Phosphate of Potash a digestible form. A chicken can’t always, select its own food, hut a thoughtful man can select suitable food for his chakbea, wife and himsdf. “There’s a Reason” for W* -j-..,. p ■ I ■■■>■!ari Rnttlr Prrrlf Mirhimm fWUBI cereal company, umitea, dshw Lreea, iwicnigsa
. ' i. i ALCOHOL-3 per cent }» AwtfctaMe Preparation for Asm similating »he Food and Regulaijc| ting »he Stomachs and Bowels of Sr Promotes Diges tion,Cheerfull j ness and Rest .Contains neither i> Opium .Morphine nor Mineral ii Wot Narcotic. V Rn^»fOUDrSAftVamvm tl Aaplu iW* § MxS~*m - \ JUMbSmM,; Bi(nt4«naU Snln I «! iSra M - I ‘il« > iVo Aperfect Remedy forConsttpa* MU lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea. K*o Worms .Convulsions .Feverish* P ness and Loss OF Sleep. S 5 Facsimile Signature of’ I . d&tfZSSZ The Centaur CohumW.', X Guaranteed und Exact Copy of Wrapper.
€K’- distemper - spohimbncil co., esssg&s& sosheh, in., u. s. a.
THEIR TROUBLED.
- Smith—My wife can cook, but she Insists on playing the piano. Jones—Well, my wife can play the piano, bat sbe insists on cooking.
Some Are So by Nature.
A certain young man, who prided himself on a brusqueness that be mistook for wit, met an eminent, but touchy, sculptor at a studio supper. "So you're the chap,” be said, on being Introduced, "that makes mud heads?" “Not all of them," the sculptor replied, quietly.—Youth's Companion. . The man who argues with Us wife Is one kind of an idiot.
The Kind You Have ' . "jjj U 111 r _ If v i ■# B 1 Thirty Years GASTORIA
FOR HUBBY TO PONDER OVER
Innocent Answer of Quiet Little Wise 1 Got Him Started on Train ■ gg of Thought - -.-JIM The husband and wife were on tbetrj way to the theater, when the huabaaj|§ began kicking because his wife tod||g such a long time dressing. "What delayed you this timer fc* ; growled. "Seeing the children to bed,” sbe re- | sponded, quietly. "What’s the nurse forT’ aoappeAS the man. "The nurse is for our convenience—yours and mine, especially mine,” shft*< answered. "But tfte boy certainly tafceftp after you. He asked the same kind of| & fool question Just as I was him good night" M "Fool question, eh? Weil, wbat wa jfm it?” J| "I ashed him if he bad said his pray 4 ers. And be said no. And I amfl blm if be didn’t want God to take earig| of him during the night Her aixaftftilll ed: ‘Wbat’a the nurse for?'” For the remainder of the way thftfl man pondered on this answer. J 1 r-- -
In a Hurry.
Magistrate—Wbat Is the charge! against the old man? -M Officer—Stealing some MostdillH your honor. He waa caught In thaactdl Magistrate (to prisoner)—My aged! friend, couldn’t you have waited afav|| years longer? .
