Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 138, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 June 1912 — Page 3
CANADA’S PROSPERITY.
The New York Times of March 28, 1912, in an article dealing with Canada's progress, says: “At the present moment eight shiploads of European immigrants are afloat for Canada, while there are signs that the outward movement which is customary with us during labor troubles will be marked this year. There is no such startling record of our loss to Canada. Our citizens quietly slip over the border in groups or trainloads, bus their going is not advertised. "There is no mystery why Canada is the ‘good thing’ the United States used to be. It is because Canada is following in itß neighbor’s footsteps' that it is repeating _the fortunate experience which its neighbor is envying, even while deliberately turning its back on the teachings of tie past A fortnight ago the Dominion budget speech reported the unprecedented surplus of 239,000,000, and on Thursday the Government passed through the Committee on Supply credits of 338,000,000 for railways and canals. With this assistance the railways themselves are both enabled ahd compelled to increase their facilities. Accordingly we find a single road allots ting ten millions for work of its own. Naturally the Canadian newspapers contain announcements calling for tfty thousand men for construction work. This Influx is apart from those Americans who go with money in their pocketß obtained by cashing in their high-priced American lands. "4 St. Paul dispatch says that within a fortnight two thousand carloads of farm animals and machinery have passed toward Canada, the property of men who expect to pay for their farms with the first crop.”
JUST HIS LUCK.
“I never saw such a chronic kick** as Touch is.” “What’s his latest grievance?” “He found a flve-dollar bill this morning and is grumbling because a man to whom be owed $4 saw him pick it up.”
Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and Bure remedy fbf Infants and children, and see that It Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Caatoria Paw Know* Everything. Willie —Paw, what is a family circle? Paw—A wedding ring, my son. Beware of Spring’s sudden changes; keep flarfleld Tea at hand. Drink hot on retiring. Fourteen per cent of the egg la albumen.
WOMEN SHOULD BE PROTECTED
Against So Many Surgical Operations. How Mrs. Bethune and Mrs. Moore Escaped. Sikeiton, Mo. —‘‘For seven years Isuffered everything. I was in bed for four
at those times, ana said that I ought to have an operation. I would not listen to that, and when a friend of my husband told him about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and what it had done for his wife, I was willing to take it Now I look the picture ofhealth and feel like it, too. 4 can do my own housework, hoe my garden, and milk a cow. I can entertain company and enjoy them. I can visit when I choose, and walk as far sp an? ordinary woman, any day in the month. I wish I could talk to every woman and girL”—Mrs. Dema Bethune, Sikeston, Mo. - Murrsyville, UL—“I have taken Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for a very bad case of female trouble and H made hie a well woman. My health was all broken down, the doctors Mid I must have an operation, and I was natty togo to the hospital, hut dreaded It •e that I began taking your Compound. I got along so well thatl gave up the doctors and was saved from the operation.”—Mrs. Charles Moore, B. & No. 8, Ifunayville, UL
or five days at a time every month, and so weak I could hardly walk. I cramped and had backache and headache, and was so nefvousand weak that I dreaded to see anyone or have anyI one move in the room. I The doctors gave me I medicine to ease me
THE photograph shpwa the arrest of the Paris taxicab bandit named Uouzy, after the murder of Assistant Superintendent of Detectives Jouin. Gouzy, in the disguise of an informer, led Jouln Into the trap of the bandits. The latter was shot and killed by the leader of the bandits, Bonnot. The police arrested Gouzy, who was surrounded by an angry crowd and with difficulty was saved from being lynched. Gouzy was Implicated In more than 22 murders.
WIFE IS LUMBERJACK
Mrs, Gregory Is Best Man in Maine Camp. |Mere Female Chops, Splits and Piles More Wohd Than Most of Them, and as Much at Any of Them, According to Employer. Manchester, N. H.—Woodbury Bachelder of this city, engaged in the lumber business at Damariscotta, Me., has jin his employ a most remarkable woman ah regards -strength and endurance. She is Mary Gregory, wife of Frank Gregory. f Mrs. Gregory first entered -the employ of Mr. Bachelder to provide meala for the 14 men in the camp. This she jwas able to do and have half a day left, and she asked permission of Mr. Bachelder to take her place with the chopjpers. Mr. Bachelder gave his consent, and was astonished to see her perform. She wielded an ax as expertly as any man in the crew, and made a record one day of chopping, splitting and piling three cords of wood, a task that most men hardened to the service of the woods are incapable of equaling. “She is the strongest woman I ever saw," Bachelder says. "No sooner does she fell a tree than she is on top of it limbing it out, and in every line of work tire is the equal of the men in camp. She handles a crosscut saw with all the skill of a man, and not a laborer in the camp can surpass her in the amount of work accomplished " Mrs, Gregory is 35 years old, weighs about 175, stands 5 feet 8 inches, and Is as quick as a flash. She is fond of sport and expert aa s'wrestler. Mr. Bachelder says he has yet to see a man In camp who can match her at wrestling. She is not afraid to try conclusions with any of them. She has put every man who has been wilting t 6 wrestle her on his back and yet is modest in speech and manner, the
WIRELESS FOB ARMY FLIERS
Instruments for Aeroplane Use Invented by Officer Weighs Only 25 Pounds. Washington.—Probably the smallest wireless telegraph set ever made has just been perfected by the officers in the army signal corps laboratory hero, land has been sent to New York for the aeronautical show which is to be held there. The receiving and transmitting apparatus weighs only 25ft pounds, and is confined within a box jls inches square and 18 inches deep. iTbe generator from which the apparatus derives its power adds an additional 28 pounds. The machine is the reslut of the efforts of the army signal officers under the direction of Maj. Charles McK. saltxman, to perfect the lightest machine possible for use in the "fifth military arm." or the aeronautifc&l division.
Saws Off Arm, but Lives.
York, Pa. —Falling upon the sliding carriage of the circular saw he was operating near OetchelvtUe, Ola county, Elmer Pentz of Harrisburg had ibis right arm deally severed at the elbow, and barely escaped a horrible idesth. t Pent* was hit by the log upon the .carriage and bis body In some manner •beesme wedged la front of it. He noted !hls peril and in the short time given ;him he managed to shift his body oat of the course of the revolving blade; but to do so be had to sacrtflc# "the arm. c ... V ’ ' Other workmen saved him from .bleeding to death by making a tournl Quet from-a handkerchief.
ARREST OF A PARIS TAXICAB BANDIT
mother of seven children, a native of Nova Scotia, and prior to making her home in the Maine woods lived in Massachusetts. Her husband works in the woqds with her, but is far from being her equal in strength.
PLAN HUGE OFFICE BUILDING
New York Skycraper In Park Row Rises 750 Feet In Air Will Cost $13,500,000. New York. The tallest habitable building ’ln the world is going up on Broadway, between Barclay street and Park row. It will weigh 250,000,000 tons. It rests on sixty-nine pillars of cement, reaching down to solid rock from the street level. This building, the tower light of which, 750 feet in the air, will be seen ninety-six miles out at sea, has in it 20,000 tons of structural steel. Forty-five thousand dollars’ worth of glass has already been ordered for windows and doors and skylights. In the walls and floors are to be more than 30,000 square' feet of hollow tiling and terracotta. The cement order will run into the tens of thousands of bags. Oil the weekly pay roll is a regiment of men from mere lifting and carrying laborers to the circus performing iron workers who play around at 700 feet in the air on slender steel beams like orioles on an elm bough. Their wages run from $1.50 a day for the to $4.50 and upward, and r the pay roll Is $5,000 a day. This has been going on fqr two years. The 30,000 square feet of land on which the building stands cost about $4,500,000. It cost $1,000,000 to dig out the foundations and the basement and sub-basements. The cost of construction will be nearly $9,000,000. making the whole pile an investment of approximately $13,600,000. The mere knowledge that such a building was to be erected on the spot caused.
Girl Tries to Commit Suicide
Geisha Driven to It by Monotony of Lit*. " • r ■ ■ Girl Bays She Doesn't' Want to Die Now, but May Later if She la Beized With Another Melancholy Fit. -* Tokio. —A sensation was created in Toklo by the recent attempt at suicide of one of the most famous of the Shlmbashi geisha, who are in their turn the most famous of all the thousands of geishas in Tokio. The first reports stated that the unfortunate lady had been driven to her attempted death by mountains of debt contracted as the result of a passionate attachment to a certain popular aetor. The Tokio Aaahi, indeed, considered the matter of such Importance that after the recovery of the wouldbe suicide the editor induced her to write the history of tbs incident'bad her own feelings during the attempt for the benefit of its readers. Here it is: “The mere idea of a debt of .1,000 or S.OOO yen could never drive me to suicide. lam subject to fits of melancholy, and when in the grip of one of these I want to get out of the world. Why? Simply and solely because I am tired of life, Its monotony and quietness. A geisha’s life contains no excitement It Is always the same, day in and day out “Publicans sell drink, tats catch mice, dogs watch burglars and men
GOUZY UNDER ARREST
the tax assessments on the property to be raised from $2,250,000 to $3,200,000. There will be a floor space of 23 acres and 2,000 offices, and it is flg J ured that the daily population of the building will be 10.000 and the transient population about as many morej
BOY SAVES CHILD’S LIFE
John Crumllsh, Aged 14, Rescues Unconscious Four-Year-Old From Wilmington, Del. John Crumllsh,. aged 14, of No. 610 West Fourteenth, street, proved himself a hero by saving Clark Vernon, aged four, No. 1229 Tatnall -street, from what seemed certain death by drowning in the south race in Brandywine Park. Vernon, with several Bmall boys and girlsj wandered from home and into the park, and while playing near the waj ter Vernon fell from the retaining wall. The swift current was carrying him away when Crumllsh was at* traded by the cries of the drowning boy’s companions. Crumllsh ran to the wall, saw the drowning boy and plunged Into the watetr. He canght Vernon and had a hard straggle to get back to land. Vernon was unconscious, so Crumllsh carried him home, where a physician re* vived him. „ ’ i.
BABY WEIGHS 180 POUNDS
But it’s an Elephant, Bom In California—Mother Tries to Kill It.
Salinas, Cal. —The heaviest baby ever born In America saw the here in a circus tent. He Is a babjj elephant, two feet tall, three feet kmii and Weighs 180 pounds. His ents say that nothing like him was ever born in captivity on .this continent. Alice, the mother, tried to kill her baby. Her trainer, in saving the was hurled twenty feet and a panic was caused among the other animals. Unless Alice relents, her baby will have to be brought up on the demijohn. He is unhurt, pink and healthy.
have their constant varying, selfish pastimes and occupations. Bat the geisha has nothing to do but continue always in the same tiresome groove, dancing and singing, singing and dancing. I thought If I died that I might one day be reborn in the shape of one of those creatures, men, mice or dogs. Therefore, I resolved to die. : *1 finished the bottle in one wild gulp Then the pain began in m/ chest, and at once the utter stupidity and madness of my wish to die cams upon me. All with of dying vanished. I coughed and coughed, and here 1 am quite well again. If I get another fit of melancholy I may want to die again, and I may commit suicide at any time, but I don’t want to at present; but, In case, I always carry my will about with me In my dress."
BEARD CUT BETRAYS CONVICT
Promoter, In .Seattle Federal Prison Proved to Be an Old Offender. Seattle, Wash.—Clarence Dayton Hillman, millionaire townalte promoter, serving 30 months In the led-» eral prison for using the malls to del fraud, has been revealed by the sbearS es tiie prison barber as No. 11716, San Francisco rogues’ gallery, a produce dealer, sentenced In 1895 for swindling fanners. Special agents of the department of justice, the two years since bis indictment have searched for his identification with a previous crime. His Identity was hiddsa Iff his whiskers. .:„ri '
— TI 1 . i 'n-' ■ i - ,t t. nrrTunji-f - i - - ■■ - - i-ff^ r ( Oaken Bucket i, to the brim with il c^car P ur ‘ty —no such water »T K nowadays. Bring back the old 1 days with a glass of « J I It makes one think of everything that’s pure and whole* jjj some and delightful. Bright, sparkling, teeming with Jl j palate joy—it’s your soda fountain old oaken bucket. Ill jß|§||Jp|\ I) Pmo Our new booklet, teOin* of Coo-Col* mISSSSSw f Whenever * * CC vindication u Chattanooga, tor the aaking. you see an Demand the Genuine M made by | W Arrow think THE COCA-COLA CO, W m&m&k .1 of Coca-Cola. Atlanta, oa. lO> 11
SO LIKE HIM.
Cholly—That photograph Dolly took of me turned out to be a perfect blank —did she tell you about It? Daisy—Yes; she told me it waa a perfect likeness!
BABY’S ECZEMA AND BOILS
"My son was about three weeks old when I noticed a breaking-out on hia cheeks, from which a watery substance oozed. A short time after, his arms, shoulders and breast broke out also; and in a few days became a solid scab. I became alarmed, and called our family physician who at once pronounced the disease eczema. The little fellow was. under treatment for about three months. By the end of that time, he seemed no better. I became discouraged. I dropped the doctor’s treatment, and commenced the use of Cuticura Sk>ap and Ointment, and in a few days noticed a marked change. The eruption on bis cheeks was almost healed, and his shoulders, arms and breast were decidedly better, When he was about sevfen months old, all trace of the eczema was gone. “During his teething period, his head and face were broken out in boils which I cured with Cuticura Soap and Ointment Surely he must have been a great sufferer. During the time of teething and from the time I dropped the doctor’s treatment, I used the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment nothing else, and when two years old he was the picture of health. His complexion was soft and beautiful, and his head a mabs of silky curls. I had been afraid that be would never be well, and I feel that I owe a great deal to the Cutleura Remedies." (Signed) Mrs, Mary W. Ramsey, Z2i E. Jackson St, Colorado Springs, Col., Sept 24, 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cntlcura,” Dept L, Boston. When Caesar Crossed the Rubicon. Julias Caesar wasabout to cross the Rubicon. "In an extreme case like this," he ■aid, blithely, "I wouldn’t mind going through the Hudson River Tube, even if I had to pay seven cents for the privilege.’’ The most stubborn eoetiveness yields, gently and naturally, to the persuasive action of Garfield Tea. London is the healthiest capital of Europe. —.... : 1 — If you cannot afford 10c cigars, smoke LEWIS’ Single Binder straight So—mad* of extra quality tobacco. Physical culture doesn’t necessarily make a woman strongminded. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Chfldtea teething, softens the gnats, reduces Inllaminetiop, alleys pain, cures wind colic, me a bottle. The term reverend was first applied to a clergyman In 1857. Garfield Tea Is admittedly the simplest and best remedy for constipation. Street gas lamps were first used In London in 1807.
pomade Vaseline A choice dressing and preservative for the hair. Highly g refined; delicately perfumed. Checks dandruff and keeps scalp In healthy condition. ■ Pomade Vaseline is put up In attractive bottle* and In collapsible tabes. Insist on Pomade VASELINE. . fillif If your dealer does not carry it. writ* us. iddmCvt* W
I so great a favorite. 1 SKs |§| 61c per foot ISSIiS Direct toVou. Jmmi No Middlemen. Heavy Copper Cable 98 If goods when received are not satisfactory, return them at our expense, when we will refund every dollar you paid us. Let ua know your requlremewta. We win advise just what it will cost yon. IKTERNATIOIUL LIGKTMtIiG ROD C 0„ Dept. U.Ssotlßeod, M. A MEDICAL ACHIEVEMENT..Bsaagafsassagg nervous end aoaculnr eyotewe. without tho evnwbodc of anbaequont prostration, which ell ttmioe. etlmelM. log vinos, eto., had heretofore entailed. That eomethe met notable of the French Faculty) being a dew incumbent upon thedUooverer, he adopted the expo*. lentoflntroduclnflitaeaPatentMediclneuaderthetJUa THE NEW PSINCH REMEDY, THERAPION, jaSgafflEfc ins eo important a dewiderttam, toe salutary M •urpriainaeffecte of which thoeeende have already huT’tho proud satSfaotionof foeanf hleseeß?aa P JhX^m^t O re&TLX& in vogue, and which raodnetaa Seeul.tr heretofore or ceived could not believe the simple andeublUne tt^e triumphingover «3f£nSe.JuuT* INOREDULiTY 18. OVERTHROWN ||i§p the meant of socuTing health, vtnisfth, btppmwttl length of daya are Uija piacSl wUhta thefrTSach,
The Army of Constipation vt la Growing Smaller Every Day. ( CARTER’S LITTLE As. LIVER PILLS are they CARTERS W|y£j| them for j*—^ n^Lrafa^^DoisfaiAfLßxx Genuine must beer Signs turs Sanaar.ak,utimhsail.■lll% PMcncn plbsbhi PBTEITS ESS, W. N-l&w CHICAGO, NO. 22-I*l2.
