Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 246, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 October 1913 — Page 3

CHILDLESS WOMEN Lydia K ~l l. h an? > Vegetable Oomponnd mad* poaslbie. Here are the names and correct ■ddreMes—write them if yon want to, and learn thowanda** only a tew oat of many fI3BEEiI strong and ■ 'J& wo attribute this re"S*■psj suit to the timely use ■ '' “ I owe my life and Kssit^m. l ■ I> *N Sfb^ kb * H,p | dren took your ■f * baby boy and you can ■sSMy * . W'Ztiim toll every one that he ■l&aS is a ‘Pinkham’ baby.’* —Mrs. Louis Fischrr» Tjpi|B St., CarlB V “We are at last ■ Mrj -&^ wlrf} I blessed with a swoot ■wNjVywiflj little babygirl.”—Mrs. M A- ' La *£° 0 8B * HillfS “ I have one of the Wm/m/A (y Jxßm finest baby girls yon Woisr9~ ffflwM ever saw.’'—Mrs. C. E. ■... i Goodwin, 1012 S. 6th St., Wilmington, N.O. SflMß®#?® a PP' eßt man alive toP^ be ake, 397_JIarilKm*J? “ Now I have a nice baby girl, the joy of ■lltevlil our home.”—Mrs. DomWifflfiS/XMiZtm « YLVA - Cote, No. 117 So. Worcea* baby daughter Wmimfl, "if Mp|fl Mrs. A. A. Giles, Jmm g^ 4^* 116 * N * Y *» A. Balknokh, B.p!d. No.l, Baltimore, Ohio.

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Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You’re Tired-Out of Soria —Have No Appetite. CARTER’S LIVER PILLS will put you right in a few days.SITTLE their I fYuLiL Cure Con W . stipation, w •■'■■■■ l Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headacha SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Earn Big Money—Be a Correspondent A good sale* or mail-order correspondent cen elweys And e position end cen elweys commend e good eelery. I here been Correspondence Mgr. of one of the large** mell-ordsr houses In the eountry. for sererel year*, ■with the Immenee emount of experience I here had. I cen melee e good .correspondent of yo* If yon ere energetic end embltlous end here e felr knowledge of Bnjrlleh. Term*. SI per lemon. Full couree, ten teeeone. •to" This Includes full Instruction end temple letters. One of your letter* corrected with erenr leeeon. Aeelet6usihupokiu(scs, sue w. aosaog bth xxt.chuuuo, ill /I A IT/irn FREE TREATISE I rt PILrK The Leach Sanatorium, IndlanViTllVLill apolls. Ind., has pubUshod a booklet which glras Interesting (acts about the causa ol Cancer, also tells what to do for pain, bleeding, •dor. etc. Writ* for It today, mentioning this paper. TOCORN6ROWEHSANDSTOCKMEN Will tall you as 118.00 land equal to 1300.00 lUlnola land for oora. Beau world on stock proAU. Bond UoanU foroopy. BUAL BBTATH NHWB, Chicago nra |\cnc of this paper dertrREADERS jEsasrr g oolumns should Insist upon haring what they ask for, refusing all substitutes or imitations. INDIAN LANDS—Fine climate. One anil. food water, eelllng from $7 to 330 per acre. rlnclpal crops, corn, wheat, cotton, alfalfa and fruit. L. k. Miller. LocuetOrnre. N.E.Ok. LADIES—I poaseaa French secret formerly coat European court ladles SIOO. Promise aeerecy and send P. O. order sl. fiend return mall. Enclose stamp. Box «s,Oklahoma.Okla. PATENTS ggEFSESH jjl But Cough Syrup. Tula Oood. Oh Kj M la time. Bold by Draggiete.

MOUNTAIN SHEEP IN SOUTHWEST

PATIENCE and perseverance are prime essentials in the makeup of every man who goes out for big game, and he who i would successfully hunt the mountain sheep should possess more than the ordinary endowment of these characteristics. Unlike many other animals, these cannot be hunted by rule o’ thumb. Rules for sheep hunting are usually true only in the exceptions, and the only one really worth bearing in mind is to “always expect the unexpected,’’ writes L. R. Freeman in Los Angeles Times. “Prepare to climb if you go for sheep in the Cocopahs, and don’t expect to find any under 5,000 feet - .’’ Thus said experienced friends in Yuma when I first went off down the Colorado for a hunt in the Delta country, and the only sheep I shot this trip was secured at the edge of a plain and at an elevation, or rather a depression, of 100 feet below sea level. “No us looking for sheep at the lower water holes after last night’s cloudburst In the upper mountains,” said the Mexican guides who had l&ken me down to Mt. San Pedro on another occasion, and an hour later — gunless—l was crowded into one of those very water holes by a big ram whose only line of flight chanced to He by a footwide ledge along which I was gingerly picking my way. Below Sea Level. The spot where I shot my “submarine” sheep, as the fine specimen I have alluded to as having been shot below sea level was dubbed, first appeared to me in a mirage. It was a scorching noonday on that sun-baked stretch of white alkali which leads from the edge of the Imperial irrigation country down to the desolate Cocopahs. The sky was a dome of hammered brass, inverted over a floor of gleaming zinc, the plain. The wheels of the camp wagon moved noiselessly over the yielding alkali and no sound broke the stillness save the monotonous creak of the springs and the occ&sional clank of a trace, chain. >

Gradually out of the steel-gray glow of the air that marked the spot where sky and plain merged In a misty blur, a shimmering lake of crystal water began to form, the wavelets of whose farther side lapped against a beach of black sand lying In the right-angled embrasure of a towering yellow cliff, the latter standing out so clear and distinct as to seem almost to float upon the eyeball. The water and cliff had been tantaUzlngly receding before us for perhaps an hour, when down to one side of the lake came walking three full-grown mountain sheep—one ram and two ewes. Right off Into the water they marched, the (littering surface of the lake gradually closing over them without splash or ripple. After an Interval of a minute or two the big back-curving horns of the ram appeared, bobbed along the surface of the lake for a hundred yardß or more as if detached, to be finally followed by the shoulders and body of their owner. A moment later the ewes wobbled into view, and x all three trotted out on the beach and disappeared in a depression at the apex of the great right-angled cliff. Later, returning from two weeks of fruitless climbing In the parched Cocopahs, we chanced upon the same distinctive cliff observed in the mirage, camped at the waterhole deep back In the angle of its overhang, and the following morning Bhot a fine young ram that was coming down at Bun-up for sn early drink. This instance Is the only one I have knowledge of where a mountain sheep has been shot below ■ea level. The phenomenon of the animals appearing to walk through the water was undoubtedly caused by the sot uncommon combination of a true mirage and a lake effect due only to the agitation of the waves of heated ;air. Once Plentiful. Up to a very few years ago—and probably still —sheep were fairly plentiful in the low desert mountains which here and there hem in the Colorado

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

TYPICAL MOUNTAIN SHEEP

river above Yuma, and It was there that I once had the unusual experience of being presented with a shot, firing and shooting a sheep which I did not get, ultimately getting a sheep which I did not shoot. # Accompanied only by an Indian I had just picked my way up the side of a steep-walled valley to a tableland, upon which, according to report brought to us the night before, fresh sheep tracks had been recently noted. We reached the mesa at a point where, in shadow ourselves, we could watch a great slash of sunlight cutting through a gap in the eastern ridge and descending like a wedge of gold into the semi-dark-ness of the lower valley. As the tip of the wedge' of light touched a jutting point on the mesa’s outermost rim, it revealaed with startling suddenness a well-grown young ram standing sharply ip relief against the blur of blue mißt tliat filled the valley. I shot as I sat, resting my rifle across my knee and, as the distance was under a hundred yards, could hardly have missed by many inches the shoulder at which I aimed. The young ram toppled forward over thd brink of the cliff and, simultaneously! another animal leaped after him from the shadow, while a number of others scampered back out of sight into ( rogfcy gully which cut the mesa ad that point. V We descended to the bridle trail,; 200 feet below the cliff, to find, lying on the outer edge, not the animal 1 had shot, but a much larger ram with a shattered, but still magnificent, pair of horns. The wounded sheep had evidently struck a projection of the cliff in his descent, this deflecting the body sufficiently to clear the trail and bound on into the valley below. Tha unwounded ram, leaping out from tha brow of the cliff, had fallen straight to the bridle trail and been instantly killed. The body of the wounded sheep was carried away in the Bwift mountain torrent which ran at th( base of the cliff.

MANY USES OF THE OCEANS

They Are Here Enumerated, and Yotl May Accept or Reject the Facta as You Prefer. Oceans are found In various parts of the world, where they spend their time In lapping shores, infringing upon tha rights of continents, and swallowing up islands, (hips and people. Oceans are salty to the taste and are used by yachtsmen to get away from their wives, also to cover up cabled newspaper stories about klqgs and queens, and to float navies and other debts. An ocean spends its time in having storms and making surf. It delights In making innocent people sick and in playing with children’s legs. Without oceans there would be no steamships and gambling would decline. Every ocean has a set of fish which do not even pay ground rent, but spend their time like people who live on land, namely, in devouring each other. Besides ordinary fish, oceans have whales, lobsters and mermaids. The mermaids live on rockß just as girls on dry land do. The lobsters also live shellfish lives in lobster palaces. The whales lie around and wait for the happy time when they can perform useful work supplying bones for con sets or to oil the wheels of child labof factories. Some oceans employ professions] sea serpents, which Jthey use durizu the summer for advotlsing purposes. Oceans also have zones, seaweed and sponges. When an ocean has been out all night it likes to take a sponge bath, hence it Always keeps on hand a constant supply of these useful toilet articles.—Life.

"I presume your wife thinks you an a very smart man?" “She does.” "Well, my advice to you ia, don’t stay around home any more than you can help.”

Keeping Up the Deception.

FEMALE MAKES THE TROUBLE

Certainly In the Case of the Mosquito They Are "More Deadly Than'* the Male.” The attention of many of onr citizens who hitherto have taken little interest In entomological. investigation. has been attracted to what they believe is a new variety of mosquito, a mosquito which in the course of evolution has lost Its bark, but not Its bite; that comes upon one unawares, without a musical accompaniment. Whatever may be said against the insect It should be set' down to Its credit that it takes its nourishment without music, declining to .give that additional smart to one’s misery. This ..active, but diminutive specimen of the genns Culex, now at the close of summer, is beginning a work that will continue until the first sharp frost. As a matter of fact these mosquitoes that have had no difficulty in pushing their way through the smallest meshed wire screens are all females, and for that reason we hear no song. The males are larger, perhaps cannot make their way through the screens, and remain outside, where they sing solos or join in numbers and give hallelujah choruses, and encourage the suffragette sisters at their work inside. The sisters have an insatiable thirst for blood, while the mouth of the male mosquito is not equipped for biting and be does not come into our houses. While the sisters are inside drinking blood the more temperate fathers of the family are outside sipping rainwater.

HENPECK HAS LITTLE JOKE

For Once He Turned the Tables on His Wife, and Surely Had a Right to Laugh, Henpeck was In a state of delight all the evening; it was so evident that at last we asked whether some one had left him a fortune. “No, but It is the joke of the age. I have been laughing all day. This morning when I went into the dining room at breakfast time there waß no meal visible. I went Into my wife’s room and there she was still asleep. So unlike Bertha, you know. I called her: ’Say, Bertha, It’s eight o’clock; I want my Not a move-, ment. I shouted; shook the bed; brought In the frying pan and beat the reveille upon it. All to no purpose. What was I to do? Time was passing and I didn’t feel inclined to go to work hungry. Get my own breakfast? Not on your life. What .am I married for? Then a bright thought struck me. I took off my shoei, crept as quie.ly as I could along the passage; a board creaked; in a moment Bertha was awake. “‘James, where have you been?’ “And you should have seen her when she realized the truth. Ha! ha!”

DRY SCALE COVERED HEAD t ~ 2760 Tamm Ave., St. Louis, Mo. — “My little daughter’s head began with a dry harßh scale covering It First it got a white scale over the top and then it got a dirty brown Bcab with pus under it. Her hair came out in less than a week and her head itched and bled. She had no rest. I had her wear a scarf aIV the time, It looked bo badly. She was so sore and had such big brown scabs on her head that the teacher would not let her attend school. “We took and had her treated for three months with no relief. She kept getting worse until I tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I used the Cuticura Soap every third day and the Cuticura Ointment at night. In three weeks her head was well of Bores., Two cakes of dutlcura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment completely curpd her." (Signed) Mrs. Walter Rogers, Nov. 28, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.”—Adv.

Ready for Him.

A conductor stumbled twice over the foot of a small boy. Looking back at the mother, the conductor said: “Some people seem to have very awkward children.” “Yes,” said the mother; "I was just thinking your mother ’ d one.” Nothing equal* Dean’* Mentholated Cough Drop* for Bronchial weakneaa, sore cheat*, and throat trouble* —5c at all Druggists The value of the grindstones and pulpstones produced in the United States last year was the greatest in the history of the industry. Mr*.Window’* Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the guma, reduce* Inflammation,*! lay* pain, cure* windcoilcJAca bottieA* And many a thoughtful toper gets fuller than he thinks. The self-made man never quite gets the job finished.

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter snd faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fiber*. They dye In cold water better any other dyiL You can dye any garment without ripping apart. WRITE FOR FREE booklet, calendar, blotter*, etc. MONgeg DRUG COMPANY, #aincy t liU pS tfl M jjfljßn w

Thinks Cancer Is Contagious.

Authorities contend that cancer la not contagious, but Doctor Odier. head of the can&r institution at Geneva, Switzerland, says he has discovered in one of the principal streets of that city at least a dozen houses In which the disease has recurred, a fact be can only account for on the theory that it Is contagious. He urges that every house in which there has been a cancer patient be disinfected! .

Which Proves It.

"They say that unions raise the price of labor." "Quite right! Two of my clerks got married last week and Btruck me for more salary."

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