Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 95, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 April 1913 — Page 3

CONSTIPATION _• Munyon 1 * Paw-Paw Pill* are unlike all othor Ux*?ives or catbar* tic*. They coax the liver into activity by A' 1 kwH gentle method*, they ’ W R - do antseoor; they do not gripe; they do not INL <Ull’nni vreaken; bat they do ■Aiyßyjliß start all die secretion* ■nlluß of the liver and stomach io array that soon/ pats these organs in a healthy condition and Correct* constipation. Mnnyon's Paw-Paw Pills are a tonic to dm stomach, liver aad nerves. They invigorate instead of weaken; they enrich the blood instead of impoverishing it; they enable dm stomach to get all the nourishment from food that is pot into it Price as cents. All Druggist* SPECIAL TO WOMEN Do you realise the foot that thousands of women are now using A Soluble Antiseptic Powder . as a remedy for mucous membrane a# factious, such as sore throat, nasal os pelvic catarrh, inflammation or ulceration, caused by female Ills? Women who have been cured say "it - is worth its weight in gold." Dissolve in water and apply locally. For ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. has recommended Paztlne in their private correspondence with women. For all hygienic and toilet uses it has no equal. Only 50c a large box at Druggists or sent postpaid-on receipt of juice. The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Thirteen Not Unlucky for Him. Dr. Nansen has good reason to regard thirteen as a lucky number. The crew of the Fram, In which he made the most successful of his expeditions, consisted of thirteen meil, who all, after an absence of three years, returned to their homes in perfect safety. Dr. Nansen arrived back in Norway on August 13, 1896, aud on the same day the Fram emerged from her long drift on the Ice into the open sea. Moreover, during the voyage, as the doctor records, “Kirk presented ua with thirteen pups, a curious coincidence —thirteen pups born on December 13, 1893, for thirteen men. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every pottle of CASTORIA, a aafe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Caatoria The Course of Love. | “First, he sued for love." ' “Then what happened?" “She sued for damages." —No One — Need Be Stout If they wear I\T T% ELASTINEW/ K REDUSO TTtiift CORSETS Guaranteed to reduce hips and abdomen on* 1 9 five inches without discomfort No. 7SS low bust, ooatll aad batiste • OS No. 789 med. bait « “ “ -OS Wear-Proof Klaatlno Gores provide comfort, prevent weakening of the fibre, and Insure Sore-dnrabilltr during the life of the oorset. Specially woven materials, guaranteed not to rust, tear or break. W. B .Nuform CORSETS for slender and average figures, low bust, long skirts, coutil or batiste, lace trimmed - - - - - - - sx.oo up it dealer's or direct postpaid. Art Cataloged tree for dealar's name. Wslssutse Bses^ctlsssslS.

Great Texas A farm and urban home in the cream of the fertile highlands of Great Texas for f 10.00 per month. Mild climate. No excessive heat or cold. Abundant rainfall. Markets the best. All conditions most favorable. Community well settled and cultured. Comfort, prosperity and independence await you. Write for full particulars. JNO. T. LOGAN, Texarkana, Tex. HOME FOB YOU! Eono poems WAKITFD CO, Dope 7e7,”Waattantoa, D. C CHOICE FARM LANDS S (nel and wall imlnai food roadsmodschools. *iEandOo, nm Stats But Bloc, Cook, Ml nil MOM. FOR SALE WE gsgasxi raoordsroreablnot(oot> I AAV I Band 10a for uapl, lnklasa Pan. Raw laLUUaI vaßtioa. >o illlii raoalrad i|anta van tad. TM MAM 00., raMHEESBBEIB florins rains. I.aafcj roots, Mon Tfcans. K-L Hoof Paint la four Nood. Mot Dopo But Paint. it raara aatllfUtlaa Ona oontrsot r~a T g|,a{!irsrmi‘ wllTnri^ Lews Beef nut siieDeffan, wimmiu. W. N. U„ CHICAGO, NO. tS-ltlt.

CANADA WINS AGAIN THE COLORADO SILVER TROPHY FOR OATB WON A SECOND TIME BY CANADA. , The most recent achievement of Canada’s West is winning for the seoond time the magnificent $1,500 silver trophy awarded by the State of Colo* rado for the best peck of oats. At Columbus, Ohio, in 1911, J. C. Hill A Sons of Lloydmlnster, Saskatchewan, placed a peck of oats grown on their farm in competition, with oats from every payt of the world. The judges had no difficulty in deciding, and the award was given to the Saskatchewan grown oats. In 1912, the Com Expo* sltion had no exhibition, and, our Canadian friends, although ready for a second contest had no opportunity. In 1913, the exhibition of the Society was held at, Columbus, S. C., and it is said of it that it was one of the best yet held. At this exhibition, which comprised com and all the smaller grains, Hill & Sons of Lloydmlnster had on exhibition for the contest another beck of oats grown on their Saskatchewan farm, in 1912. There was no trouble for the judges, no time necessarily lost in reaching a decision, Hill & Sons won, and for the second tlm? their name will appear on the crest of the cup. The third space will doubtless be occupied by their name, and then this splendid trophy will be theirs. ' . v / -* . During the past few years Western Canada grains—wheat, oats, barley and flax —have been in competition with grains from all other countries, and in every case their superiority has been Shown. l lt is not only in oats, but it Is hi wheat, in barley and in flax, that Canada more than holds its own, when placed side by side with grains from other parts. Mixed* farming is taking a strong hold not only in those parts of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, which up to the present have been devoted solely to grain growing, but also in the districts contiguous, where the conditions of climate, shelter, water, grass and hay make farming of this kind, easy to prosecute and large in profits. It was in the Province of Manitoba that the steer was raised that carried off the Championship of the steer class, at Chicago last December. This beast had been fattened on the grass and hay of the Province and the only finishing grain.lt had was barley; not an ounce of com. Western Canada presents Innumerable opportunities for the big farmer who wants to cultivate his thousands of acres, the medium man satisfied with a few hundred acres, the man who is content to farm his free homestead of one hundred and sixty acres; it has opportunities for the investor, the capitalist, the business man, the manufacturer and the laborer. Agents of the Canadian Government located at different points in the United States will be pleased on application, to give any desired information' free of cost. —Advertisement

MISUNDERSTOOD HER.

“Willie, you musn’t fight any of th« boys In your class.” “Well, If you think I’m going out of my class and go up against some 110 pound guy you’re mistaken.”

A Winner, If—

At an Easter breakfast John D. Rockefeller, Jr., once said: “The road to success is called Perseverance. Perseverance cohquers everything. But—” Mr. Rockefeller, with a smile, took up an Easter egg. “But,” he added, “let us remember that a ben on an egg of porcelain persevere*”

CANADA’S OFFERING TO THE SETTLER THE AMERICAN RUSH TO WESTERN CANADA IS INGREASINB lurlKkN I ,r »* Hom»iU»d» raMm'izTssf-i HffiS aSSSrSS *«»«• of MttlMMDt, and In a ■ JUSM abort time them will not bn a tn| MttlH who n«KHt b# mor* than ten or twelve mile* from a Una TyTSjff. inywl ofrellwev. Rail war Rataa art by OvrantmwDi OomI yoq dmlm to fino v wbv tb# oon* BH flltlow of the Canadian Settler la fIK V proaperooa wrtta and aand for ralaa, ate . u.

BEEF STEW AND DUMPLINGS

Excellent and Substantial Dish That May Be Prepared at Comparatively Small Expense. f use an “altch” bone for this and reserve part for a roast, as the whole bone would make stew enough for T 5 people. However, shinbone can be used If you prefer. Take off enough of the fat to brown the meat and vegetables and let it be trying out while you are preparing the meat. If there is not fat use a little pork fat or drippings. Cut your meat into dice about an inch large each way, dredge them well with salt, pepper and flour, and brown in hot fat Put In yoiy stawpan. Cut ,two onions, one small turnip and half a carrpt into dice and brown; add to the meat, cover with boiling water and cook until the meat Is tender. Remove bone and skim off the fat; add six or eight small potatoes, which have been pared and parboiled. Add salt and pepper to taste. Cook until nearly done and then add dumplings. Dumplings.—One pint of flour, % teaspoon of salt, 2 teaspoons baking powder. Mix thoroughly. Add enough milk to make a soft dough. Shape and cook ten minutes In th*e soft dough. Add salt and baking powder to the flour, and sift all bo as tp mix them thoroughly with enough milk to make a dough you can handle; it will take about a cupful; they can be dropped from the spoon or Bhaped a little with the hands.' The stew should be boiling rapidly when the dumplings are added, and continue to boll rapidly while they are In. Do not have so much water or broth In the stew that the dumplings cannot re6t on the meat or on the potatoes. If they do not they will be heavy. And do not put in so many that they will crowd each other, for that makes them heavy also.—Boston Globe.

Household QUESTIONS

Wood alcohol is excellent to clean a fine gold chain. Hot vinegar will remove paint stains from glass. The drooping fronds of a fern indicate that it is rootbound. The paraffin paper which lines boxes is good to polish flatirons on. Zinc can be polished by rubbing it with a cloth dipped in kerosene. Cold water soothes the pain of any sudden inflammation of the eye. Equal parts of milk and lukewarm water is excellent for sponging palms. A torn umbrella can sometimes be mended by using black adhesive plaster. When soaking mackerel or other salt fish see that the skin is uppermost. Fill halved peaches with whipped cream and cover with grated macaroons. Begin at the root of \an onion, peel* ing it upward. The juice will not fly in your eyes. When watering house plants, a little sweet milk added will often be a benefit to them. Dried lemon peels sprinkled over the coals will destroy any disagreeable odor in the house. When frying oysters, try adding a little baking powder to the crumbs in which they are rolled.

Curried Tripe.

Slice two onions, good sized ones, and drop them into a stewpan with two tablespoonfuls of butter and brown them over a quick fire. Then into this put a piece of tripe that has been cut Into small pieces, pour over enough broth to cover and stew until tender. Into a teacupful of brotband half a teacupful of , cream stir slowly a teaspoonful of flour, with the same amount of curry powder, and when smooth stir the mixture in with the tripe and onions, and boll a little longer, or until it has thickened as much as it will. When this Is cooked turn into a hot dish and garnish with croutons.

Mutton Broth for Invalids.

A quarter of a pint of mutton broth, three tablespoonfuls of milk and the yolk of one egg will be required to make a good broth which will be found most strengthening for an invalid. Strain out all the meat and pieces from the broth, and put it Into a saucepan on the fire. Make it very hot, but do not let It boll and then add to it the beaten yolk of egg and the milk. Stir it over the lire for a minute or two, season it carefully, and serve it in a hot cup or basin.

Lobster Stew.

Put a pint of milk in the doable trailer, two tables poonfuls of butter, add two tablespoons of flour made smooth, and pour over hot milk and return to the boiler. Cook a little and put away to cool. Then add your lobster in small pieces and pour over It and put In the oven and brown. This Is delicious.

German Cabbage Salad.

One-quarter of a head of cabbage cut as for sauerkraut; one small onlonr sliced; one and one-half tablespoonfuls of olive oil or salad oil, salt and pepper to taste. Cover and let stand on back of stove for three hours, stirring or mixing occasionally. When reedy to serve add one-half of • cupful of vinegar.

CHARGE ON THE COMMUNITY

Cars of Those Afflicted With Tuberculosis Plainly a Drag on the General Welfare. Dr. H. L. Barnes, superintendent of the Rhode Island state sanatorium, has recently demonstrated by some Interesting studies of patients discharged as “apparently cured" from that institution, that a sanatorium Is a sound Investment for any state or city. The gross earnings of 170 expa tlent* obtained In 1911 amounted to $102,752, and those of 211 cases in 1912, to $112,021. -By applying the same average earnings to all ex-pa-tlents of the sanatorium living in 1911 and 1912, Dr. Barnes concludes that their income In these two years was $551,000. This sum is more than three times the cost of maintenance of the sanatorium. Including interest at 4 per cent on the original Investment and depredation charges. Dr. Barnes concludes, however, “While Institutions for the cure of tuberculosis are good investments, there is good rear son for thinking that institutions for the Isolation of far advanced cases would be stHl better investments."

BREAKING OUT ON LEG

Hilltop, K&n. —"About two years ago i began to notice a breaking out on my leg. At first It was very small but soon it began to spread until it formed large blotches. The itching was terrible and almost constant Many nights I could not sleep at all. After scratching it to relieve the Itching it would burn so dreadfully that I thought I could not stand It For nearly a year I tried all kinds of salves and ointment hut found no relief. Some salves seemed to make It worse until there were ugly sores, which would break open and run. “One day I saw an advertisement of Cuticura Remedies. I got a sample of the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and began by washing the sore# with' the Cuticura Soap, then applying the Cuticura Ointment twice a day. I noticed a change and got more Cuticura Soap and Ointment and in a few weeks I was cured. It has healed so nicely that no scar remains.” (Signed) Mrs. Anna A. Lew, Dec. 17, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 82-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.” Adv.

VERY LIKELY.

Mrs. Jones —She thinks her husband la perfection, and yet ahe watches him like a hawk. Mrs. Smith—l reckon she thinks he’s too good to be true.

A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY.

The Rev. Edmund Heslop of Wigton, Pa., suffered from Dropsy for a year. His limbs and feet were swollen and puffed. He had heart flutter-

Rev. E. Heslop.

Kidney Pills the swelling disappeared and he felt himself again. He says he has been benefited and blessed by the use of Dodds Kidney Pills. Several months later he wrote: I have not changed my faith In your remedy since the above statement was authorized. Correspond with Rev. E. Heslop about this wonderful remedy. Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and real pea for dainty dlshea. All 8 sent free Adv.

Explained.

He—Look at Blinks able to retire from business, and 1 am still In harness. She —Tes, but Blinks Isn’t a mule. Krw. Wlnelow-e Soothing Byrnp for OhSMrm teething, eoftene the pu, reduces lalune iflniimrrM lrlnA tirllt Ms s trfrtll#.AAi Money Is a mask that makes sons# vices look like virtues.

1 M CHEW f% SMOKF. a Mail Pouch ~i n»n. .% * IT$ worth your while-to give it a trial

ing, was dizzy and exhausted at the least exertion. Hands and feet were cold and he had such a dragging sensation across th* loins that it was difficult to move. After using 5 boxes of Dodds

Bear's Grease and Baldness.

In a recent volume pf reminiscences the wrlffcr states that baldness Is much more common now than in his early days, and ascribes the modern man’s loss of hair to the decrease in the use of “bear's grease/’ This pomade was made principally of lard colored and scented, but "hairdressers, many of whom called themselves ‘professors,’ used to advertise ‘the slaughter of another fine bear," exhibiting a canvas screen depicting In glaring colors a brown animal of elephantine proportions expiring in a sea of gore."

Appropriate. ’fltfhat did the railroad man get for his birthday present?” “Some new ties."

jUH Free Free 111 h Six Genuine Rogers Silver ff// I\\ \ Teaspoons for only 100 t K Ini Wwi G*l van i c Soap Wrap- '{jig Jml \\ jf Ml pers or coupons from ///It J/MU Johnson's Washing Here is the Offer J GaiVaniC For each teaspoon desired send ifMaßtgriSr Qnnn So Iron «• one two-cent stamp and f&Sfl OUUU IS wul - n.y.j, - i.—. K-fVI ~ Known n \Y -** #7 Thesete*r The Famous \\ Special Offer for // spoona are Easy Washer*' Six Teaspoons #// the kind • . - Hra KM 10* Cahmnlc Sea* J£l/S shat you’ll be It’s a white Soap WgR IKS*£\ >o p«T AX gas proud to own. and the cocoanut USvIl JjRESI They art the geooil in it make. * MX the easiest lathering Kttgi fgfgfil plated diver on a Soap on the market. white metal base. The Test it out your Hd YgW iW jlw LaVigne, or Gaps, next wash day and ® TO Mi MJ don’t forget to With ordinary wear save the wrappers. thew «P°° M will last a „ . . YfVtTfiwKOw ' Kt * m - * l,rt a** l ** war Mail them to \‘hc teMvlßramr wrapper* tod. r . or bww *m Premium Department of^S/ kXS Bo J. JOHNSON SOAP C0 n Mflwankee, Wisconsin DOUGLAS tgCpT „^Y|&|foR MENANDWIEn/ A»k ronr denier to (how yon \/ WW JH W. L. Doofta* SS.SO, SiA fl Mias Xgaja* 04.50 shoe*. Jnet so food In style, SLMVLAr GOTHAM flt and wear as other make* coding 55.00 to eroo ■fHeHrak A Uh(& —the only difference U thw price. Shoos In all frf** Wußtek leathers, styles and shapes to snlt everybody. f I* yon could visit W. Z~ Uodglas largo factofc il&’Mfc-. Vtl rise at Brockton, Mass., and see for yourself Ji&PSsFlIk how carefully W. 1.. Douglas shoes are raado, 1 yon would then understand why they are warranted OrMIA to At bettor, look better, hold their shap. and wear WSljki’/WL t^* m r °* her BBak ” the prtoe. W l . I^VoCOI-aa* Stops Backache Sloan’s Liniment b a splendid remedy for backache, Miff joints, rheumatism, neuralgia and sciatica. You don’t need to rub it in—just laid on lightly it gives comfort and ease at once. Beat for Pain and StifToosa Mb. Gzo. Buchanan, of Welch, Okla., writs* >—“l have used voor liniment for the past ten years for pain in back and stiffness and find it the best liniment I ever tried. I recommend it to anyone for pains of any kind.” SLOANS LINIMENT is good for sprains, strains, bruises, cramp or soreness of the muscles, and all affections of die throat and chest «; of MaysviUe, Ky., ML f. Bos severe pains between my ahoolof your liniment and had antirs plication." a* wood, of sooo Warren Are., nites: \, and since last September have h severe pain in both shoulder*, ot raat night or day. One of my application* completely cored and I will never be witnont k.” J Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Man*.

WHY INCUBATOR CHICKS DIE

SUCOESS^g Don't prociTMttnaU. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery lEWlS'single USIS BIMPEH SUNBaPOfitt aukivs beuabui