Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 243, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 October 1912 — Page 3
A HIDDEN DANGER It is a duty of wftK, “PV* the kidneys to rid i2?I the blood of uric f \ttorr" add, an irritating \3yf / poison that is conatantly forming When the kidneya fail, uric add ->J MfojgfflC causes rheumatic Y» attacks, headache, pg dizziness, gravel, \ ljHHr; f urinary troubles, l" mgfS weak eyes, dropsy ft or heart disease. wtdMml . fl Doan’s Kidney faMarl V*_ I V Pills help the kid- /Mm \ neys fight off uric JflEff I acid bringing jHjl \ new strength to weak kidneys and * relief from backache and urinary Ola. A Missouri Case Mrs. H. J. Llnnebur, SOS Madison St.. Bt Charles, Mo., says: "1 was miserable from backache, palna In my head, dizziness and a sensitiveness In the small of my back. My ordinary housework was a burden. Doan's Kidney Pills corrected these troubles and removed annoyanos caused by the kidney secretions. I hava much to thank Doan’s Kidney Pills tor.** Get Doan's at Any Dray Store, 50c a Boa DOAN’S K i? L H ..! Y FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. Buffalo. New York
bumcient unto the day is the night that cometh after. YOU CAN CUBE CATARRH By nalnr Cola’s Carbolisslre. It Is a most affective remedy. All druggists. 25 and 60c. Adv.
Bad Practice. Fresh Boarder—Mrs. Simpkins, you would never get employment In a street railway office. - Landlady—Why not? Fresh Boarder —You exhibit too strong a tendency to cut down the fare. What She Said. “How well you look!” "Do you think so?" “Yes, Indeed, I do. I never saw you looking better in my life.” “I’m so glad to hear you say so. I) hope you mean it.” “I really do. Only the other night I was saying to my husband that there are a lot of women I know who aren’t half so old as you that don’t look nearly so young.”—Detroit Fre# Press.
Different.
Albert J. Beveridge said In Chicago of a corrupt boss: “He’s very virtuous —oh, very virtuous. “A millionaire onoe went to him and said: “I want to get to the senate. Will ytm sell me your support?’ ‘“No, sir!’ the boss answered, striking himself upon the chest. “No, sir! I’m a free-born American citizen and I’ll Bell my support to no man.’ “ ‘But,’ said the millionaire, blandly, as he drew out his , checkbook and fountain pen, ‘but, If you won’t sell me your support, perhaps you’ll rent it to me for the term of this campaign T “ ‘Now you’re talking,’ said the bos* in a mollified tone.”
CASH FOR EXPORT.
Mr. Goetz Coyne—Lord De Broke, your new son-in-law, hasn't much of a bead for business. Mr. Dustin Stax—You wouldn’t say that if you knew the bargain he drove with me.
CAREFUL DOCTOR Prescribed Change of Food Instead of Drugs.
It takes considerable courage for a doctor to deliberately prescribe only food for a despairing patient, instead of resorting to the usual list of medicines. There are some truly scientific physicians among the present generation who recognize and treat conditions as they are and should be treated, regardless of the value to their pockets, Here’s an instance: "Four years ago I was taken with severe gastritis'and nothing would stay oil my stomach, so that I was on the verge of starvation. "I beard of a doctor who had a summer cottage near me—a specialist from N. Y.—and as a last hope, sent for him. “Aftek he examined me carefully he advised me to try a small quantity of Grape-Nuts at first, then as my stomach became stronger to eat more. "I kept at It and gradually got so I could eat an 4 digest three teaspoonfuls. Then I began to have color In my face, memory became clear, where before everything seemed a blank. My limbs got stronger and I could walk. 80 I steadily recovered. "Now after a year on Grape-Nuts I weigh 153 lbs. My people were sur> prised at the way I grew fleshy and. strong on this food.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wei \r vllle,” In pkga "There’s a reason.” ' _ Brer reed the above letter? A MW eae appears fram time te time. They ate peaulne, tree, ut Sell es kemaa latereet. At*.
WOLVERTON TO REMAIN WITH HIGHLANDERS
Manager Harry Wolverton of New York Americans.
Within a short time Harry Wolverton, manager of the Hill Top forces, will put his signiature to a contract to manage the club next season. President Farrell is pleased with the measure of success that has greeted the light-haired boss'. Wolverton has had more to contend with than any manager that ever broke Info the big leagues, and through it all he has shown remarkable fortitude and patience. There has been much speculation as to whether Wolverton would be re-
Among the Basebaĺ Players
Tesreau seems the only regular winner on the McGraw staff. In a recent Central league game the battery for Grand Rapids was Smith and Schmidt. j Manager Wolverton says Del Paddock, his Dubuque recruit, will be a fixture at third base. George Stovall, manager of the Browns, is the latest golf recruit from the baseball ranks. Atlanta of the Southern association has had nineteen pitchers on its roster since the • first of the season. The White Sox now have four playi era named Johnson on their pay roll Will it be '-a case of “Too Much Jdhnson?” Any space given to anything except what bears directly on the pennant race is velvet for the recipients these days. Bobby Wallace is playing ball like a youngster and is responsible for many of the victories that the Browns are making. \ Ted Easterly alone is keeping up the batting average of the Sox these days. As a pinch hitter he has few if any equals. Captain Lord is developing into a first-class outfielder. He can go back or come forward on a hard drive as well as any of the stars. Tommy Leach makeß about as pret-‘ ty a sight as the fans want to see when he is racing around the bases trying to beat out a home run. Harry Davis is still undecided about his future plans. The chances are he will be able to get another job as a manager before the start of next season. Topsey Hartsell. who is making a good record as leader of the Toledo team this season, is most likely to be appointed to manage the Naps next year. Umpire O’Brien says the Job of umpiring in the major leagues is easy. That’s the reward an umpire gets when he does good work. Others please take notice. J Manager Griffith of the senators will have Walter Johnson and four other members of his pitching staff operated on for the removal of their tonsils after the season is over. With the release of Choainard and Curtis Des Moines has an entirely new outfield, in Collins, Morris and Wetxel. Curtis has gone to his home In Philadelphia. Choainard may be back next year If his health permits.
tained by President Farrell as leader of the Highlanders in 1913, but he feels satisfied that Harry has done as well as anybody could under the circumstances. Not only did the two promising Infield recruits, Dolan at first find Gardner at second, fall to make good, but the pitching staff failed to show anything until lately, while the star outfielders of the club, Wolter and Cree, had to quit the game for the season on account of injuries received early in the season.
TERRY TURNER “CAME BACK”
Clever Cleveland Infielder Playing Great Game This Beason—Also Batting Quite Hard. Terry Turner, the third baseman of the Cleveland team, is having one of the best years he has experienced since joining the ranks of the major leaguers. Terry has been hitting in fine shape all season and has been fielding like he did in the days when he broke into fast company and was known as the demon shortstop of the Naps. While the Clevelands, under Manager Harry Davis, have been a disappointment this year, the playing of Turner has been one of the bright spots in the work of the club. Terry, once regarded as among the greatest shortstops on the diamond, had com
Terry Turner.
slderable trouble with bis arm, which kept him out of the game for a long time. It was reported at one time that he would never be able to play again, but Terry seems to have come around in good shape of late. He has been batting In the neighborhood of .320 all has regained the place in the hearts of the Cleveland fans he occupied a few years ago;
STORY OF QUEER PLAY
Pitcher Strikes Out Player and Makes Out Himself. Rube Kissinger Recovers Lost Ball From Behind Catcher’s Mask, In Time to Retire Batsman and Win Game for Hla Team. Odd occurrences in baseball are of interest to the fans, especially if they are acquainted with the players who figure in them. * Arthur Irwin used to tell of how he won a game for Boston with a hit that bounced through a knothole in the fence, and of another occasion when he scored from first base on the lm field grounder when the ball got tangled up in the shortstop's sweater coat. A 1 Shaw hit a ball in Macon that bounced into the pocket of a workman’s coat, which was hanging on the fence. A smart outfielder secured the ball in time to hold Shaw on second. But Elmer Steele, Toronto’s pitcher, has a story that puts all these plays in the remote background. It is no less than a pitcher making a strike-out by himself, and thereby winning the game. The pitcher was Rube Kissinger, well known in Toronto and on the International league circuit, and the game in question waß played at Newark, with Providence and Newark the competing clubs. Steele was pitching for the Grays. Newark led by 2 to 1, but Providence had two men on bases in the ninth and two out. A hit would win the game, but Kissinger was equal to the emergency. He cut one across the middle of the plate. “Strike one.” the umpire said. A Bpitter fooled the batter, who missed it a foot, and the count was “strike two.” Then followed two "wasters,” but the batter would not bite. Another spitter right over thq heart of the plate. The batter took a good healthy swing, there was a tick of the bat, ind everybody started to run. Larry Spahr, who was catching for Newark, looked around aimlessly in fain search for the mtsßing ball. “Stand still, Larry,” yelled Kissinger, “don’t move,” and he ran towards the plate. Spahr followed instructions implicitly, and. stood stock still. Kissinger came running up, reached for Spahr’s neck, and pulled out the ball, which was stuck between the mask and the pad. “Foul ball, three strikes, batter out,’' innounced the umpire, and the game was over.” Kissinger was given the putout In the official score, as he made the play, and Steel says he is the only pitcher that ever struck a batter out in this manner.
SHECKARD IS REAL VETERAN
Cub Outfielder Has Been Playing Professional Baseball for Over Seventeen Years. Men who' play with their heads as well as their hands have proved that It is possible to stay a long time in professional baseball. There are several men still very much in the game who may yet break or at least equal Cy Young’s record. They are not, however, pitchers. James Tilden Sheckard is one of the veterans In whom the baseball public is very much interested. Jimmy broke into the game as far back as 1895, when
Jim Sheckard.
he played with the Marietta and Lancaster semi-professional teams. Thence he moved to Portsmouth, Va., going in the following year to Brockton, lu New England. I fa_. Brooklyn corrailed him next, and after one year .with Baltimore he went back across the bridge again. With the rest of his baseball career every small boy is familiar, especially the small boy of Brooklyn, where James was popular. Toward the close of bis term with the Brooklyn team Sheckard’s work fell off, and there were those who said that he was shirking. He spruced up promptly when he went to Chicago. \ - v '
Prospects for the Seventh Annual National Dairy Show, Chicago. While this event has each year given evidence of its usefulness to the dairy world, yet the rounding out of tile seven-year period promises to give to the country one of the most valuable educational shows ever presented. With the thought in mind that the importation of dairy products la growing to a dangerous amount and that present prices and general conditions concerning agriculture in America warrant a tremendous amount of work to stop the terrific drain upon our gold by foreign countries for products we should and must grow at home, "the attention of the management has been given entirely to the rendering of practical demonstrations on lines of the maximum of production at the minimum of cost, of dairy products. While features of Intense moment on sanitary and hygienic methods will be presented, yet the paramount work of this great educational show is for the farmer. Matters of breeding and feeding will be presented by demonstration and. discussion; the better handling and marketing of dairy products will be discussed —in fact, everything that will tend to aid in profitable dairy farming will be here shown and talked over by the highest national authorities. The machinery department will have many active, interesting and instructive exhibits. It Is the intention that every exhibitor shall have an opportunity to display his exhibit, wholly or in part, in active use, thus giving practical demonstrations under expert hands. But the cow and her place upon the farm will be the paramount issue; with $9,000,000 annually being shipped out of this country for dairy products, the cow and how to increase her capacity has the most need of consideration by all patriotic citizens. No farmer in the middle west, be he already engaged in dairying or not, can afford to overlook this ten-day short course In all that is best for the farm. In fact, this show has assumed a relation with farming and dairying that makes it the annual round-up of all affairs of the dairy world, where show-yard battles are settled for the season; where trades are made and where matters affecting the next year’s work are discussed and planned. The show will be held this year, commencing October 24, In the International Amphitheater, Chicago. While the show is National In name, It will be International in character, as by comparison alone are we able to see what is being accomplished the world over. Some new and useful classes are being added to the classification, which will be ready for distribution shortly. Adv.
Forced to Work.
An Edwards county farmer was short a harvest hand. He went to Kinsley, a mile away, in his auto. He found a man there, dumped him into his auto and took him out to the farm. Next morning, when the drunkard had come out of it, he asked how far it was to town. The farmer told him fifteen miles and promised to take him in the following Saturday if he would help harvest that week. The man worked all week without knowing that he was only a mile from town. —Kansas City Journal. Mrs. Winslow'* Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cares wind colic, 25c a bottle. Adr. A woman’s headches are natural; a man’s are usually acquired. CURBS ITCHING SKIN DISEASES. Cole’s Carbolisalve stops Itching sod makes the skin smooth. All druggists. 25 and 50c. Adv. Many a man who loves a woman for her coin doesn’t mention-it.
i ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT A\vt?etable Preparation for As - taw simulating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion,Chee.rful* nessandßest.Contains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral ill Not Narcotic soid DrSAHvamats* It,- ApstwJW- . ilitMUS**Mt •• 1 J Jmut SnJ « I feS-” [ m? '.jg-ggr \ £*o A perfect Remedy forConsflpaws lion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea. £{c Worms .Convulsions .Feverish* ness and Loss OF Sleep Fac Simile Signature of The Centaur Company. Exact Cop, Wrappw.
SUFFERED EVERYTHING For Fourteen Years. Restored To Health by Lydia £. Pink-, ham’s Vegetable ComDound. . .. . _ ____ - . ■ T - v? - ■ -’►icSS Elgin, HI.-“After fourteen yean of ■offering everything from female com--0 plaints, I am at last restored to health. “I employed tha t best doctors and even went to the hospital for treatment and was told there was no help for me. But while taking Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 1 began to improve and. I continued its use until I was made welL** —Mrs. Henry Leisebekg,743 Adams St. Kearneysville, W. Va.—“l feel It my duty to write and say what Lydia & Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound baa done for me. I suffered from female weakness and at times felt so miserable I could hardly endure being on my feet. “After taking Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and following your ■pedal directions, my trouble is gon* Words fail to express my thankfulness. I recommend your medicine to all my friends. “-Mrs. G. B. Whittington. The above are only two of the thousands of grateful letters which are constantly being received by the Pinkhsan Medicine Company of Lynn,Mase.,whfcl» ■how dearly what great things Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound does for those who suffer from woman’s ills. . If you want special advice write t# Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (ent* dential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will ’ be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Resinol clears away pimples BATHE your face for several minutes with hot water and Resinol Soap and very gently apply a little Resinol Ointment In a few moments wadi off again with more Resinol Soap and hot water, finishing with a dash of cold water to doee the pores. Do this once or twice a day, always using Resinol Soap for toilet and bath and see how quickly pimples and blackheads vanish, and your skin becomes dean, clear and velvety. ij Resinol is also most effective for itching skin troubles. Your druggist sells Resinol Soap (tSo) and Ointment (50c), or malted on reeoipS of price. Resinol Chemical Company, Baltimore, Md. , ■ ■
Hew Mis to Bsstoxe Qrsg ISlf - '/-gfl for all wiMTnvarmmzmtm eye pains laaillW RiiwrilHH ■■ -TW. N. U„ CHICAGO, NO. 36-1912.
CASTORIA Forlnfants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the /L, L Signature yjAxf *w ft Jp’ h rt e US6 Ur For Over Thirty Years ■ SB B HHif ■Bs
