Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 262, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 November 1913 — Page 3

1 11 111 Sprains, Bruises Stiff Muscles I t ' - ~!"k' , • ' sere quickly relieved by Sloan’s Liniment. Lay it on—no rob- | Wng. Try it. \ Aside Sprain and DUoeated Hip. *" I sprained my ankle and dislocated my hip by falling out of a third story window. Went on crutches for four months. Then I started to use your Liniment, according to directions. I must ray it is helping me wonderfully. We will never be without Sloan's Liniment anymore.’’—Ckau Johnson. Lane— SLOANS LINIMENT Kills Pain Splendid for Sprains. " I fell and sprained my arm a week ago and was in terrible pain. I could not Use my hand or arm until I applied your Liniment. I shall never be without a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment.”—JO* B. B. Springtr, Elizabeth, N. J. Fine ter Stiffness. i "Sloan’s Liniment has done more good than anything I have ever tried tor stiff joints. I got my hand hurt so badly that I had to stop work right In the busiest time of the year. I thought at first that I would have to have my hand taken off, but I got a bottle ol Sloan’s Liniment and cured my hand.” —Wilton WhmzUr, Morris, Ala. At all Dealers. CSa 50c. and 51.00 U|l Send for Sloan’s T WrO. free, instructive book on horses, f cattle, hogs and poultry. Address wHIA ■ iWm m Dr.EARLS.SLOAN,Inc BOSTON, MASS. | J

Quite Another Thing. Heck—Do you ever get the last word when arguing with your wife? Peck —I get it invariaMy--but I don’t say it.—Boston Evening Transcript Still Something Lacking. "Dobbs says he is 9 man of action." "And so he is. Dobbs can use more gestures and less common sense in an argument than any other man J ever saw." ' J. Sore Eyes, Granulated Eyelids and Stlea promptly healed with Roman Eye Balaam. A4v< Bachelor maids are spinsters who haven’t given up hope. Foley Kidney Pills Relieve promptly the suffering due to weak, inactive kidneys and painful bladder action. They offer a powerful help to in building up the true excreting kidney tissue, in restoring normal action and in regulating bladder irregularities Try them.

W.B. # Elastine 'S Reduso MR EHEEMHT haggttgf, 1 GIVE Wfl) STOUT FIGURES Wk \ SLENDER LINES flSll/ discomfort U lam $322 UP |EJv Guaranteed to reduce 1 hips and abdomen 1 to ft | y tnclien. Elantlne gore* provide comfort and W. B. Nuform Corsets • Low hunt— extreme length over hips: string lon* figure lines. Selected materials, daintily trimmed. Guaranteed not to ru.L I'rlce, 11.00 up At yonr dealer's or direct, postpaid. Art catalogue free for dealer's name. WEINCARTEN BROTHERS. Chlcaso. BL Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER'S LITTLE liver pills gentlybutfirmly com-dgBWB —^ pel a lazy liver to ADTFD^ do its duty. Cures Con-W TZkf stipntion, In-■ IV t H digestion, J PI I^s. Headache, and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. U you (mi 'out or son is' sun oown'or'ooT tuk bluss’ •urns (root XIDNKY. BLADDER, NSSVOUB DISEASES. •CHRONIC WKAKNKSSES.ULCBRS.SKIN ERUPTIONS.FILES, write for my FR<( hook. THE HOST INSTRUCTIVE MEUICAL BOOK EVER WHITTEN,IT TELLE ALlA!bout the,# DISEASES and the REMARKABLE CURES KrPRCTED by THI NEW FRENCH REMEDY. N.t. N.l. NjC THERAPION trSJSS dfit'a the remedy for VOUR OWN ailment. Don't eend a cent. AbaolutalyFßEE. No'followup'circulara. DR LsCLBRO Mail. CO. WAV ERSTOCE RD, HAMPSTEAD. LONDON.RH*. tYoa can't make anythin, but PORE. CLEAR AWO DEUi cioos coma: when this perforated aluminum Percolator Is used. Pits any coffee pot. Pays for Itself In short time by savin, on quantity of coffee required. Send 35c in etampe at once. Sent postpaid to any address. Attractive proposition to agents. Beni. L Dad, 321 So. Elmwood Ate., Oak Park, 111. BUY A SOUTHWEST TEXAS FARM AND RANCH 3800 acres Improved, rich, black soli; fronts flowing river; 86% acrrlcullural; 90 miles San Antonio; near railroad; flue, healthy climate. CIO per acre, Vs cash. Large list Southwest Texas farm and ranch laud. 1000 acres up. Tell me what you want. A. W. CUNNINGHAM.Gunter Bldg.,Ban Antonio,lex.

CUTTING OF $140,000,000 IS UP TO HIM

Wi Averill Harriman, just twenty-one years old, has set the speculators of War! street guessing an to how he will cast his deciding vote in the cutting up and distribution of the juiciest melon that Wall.street has heard of In years. The Union 'Pacific railroad, which was the pet road of E. H. Harrtman, the boy’s father, has accumulated the tremendous surplus of $59,000,000. To this has been added the $81,000,000 which came into the cofTers of the railroad with the sale, by court orders, of the Southern Pacific railroad. Now, young Harriman, Yale 1913, holds the deciding vote ih the distribution of 'this vast “sum of money, j

ODD CITY TRADES

Sawdust Wholesaler Who Handles Refuse of Mills. Men Make a Specialty of Putting New Faces on Old Stores and Dwelling Houses—Role of Chimney Expert New York.—Among the occupation* of New* York city are many of an unusual nature, which could not exist elsewhere than In a center of vast population. Specialized occupations these are, which demand a huge population from which to draw their patronage. New York la the city of specialized trades. Innumerable articles which in smaller citieß could be but a by product of some more general business find here a sufficient market to make their separate existence possible. There is the sawdust man, for instance, who in New York is a very important business man. The wholesale sawdust dealer advertises ail kinds of sawdust and requests that you will telephone your needs so that there may be an early delivery. It used to be that anyone who want* ed sawdust went to the sawmill and asked for as much as he wanted. There was only one kind of sawdust in the good old days and that was an unimportant product which auybody could have for the asking. Now the sawdust wholesaler will tell you that sawdust is a very valuable product and that,the sawdust business Is offering greater opportunities every day. There are about sixty kinds of sawdust on the market, so says the sawdust expert, and all of them have their stated uses in the realm of trade. Mahogany sawdust Is just as aristocratic and elegant a product as mahogany furniture. .It is useful for smoking—not as tobacco. Mahogany sawdust is employed because of the good, clear kind of work that it does in smoking hams, fish, etc. All the way from the preparation of food to the polishing of precious metrfs, ranges the usefulness of sawdust The hardwood dusts are used for polishing in some Jewelers’ shops and cheaper sawdusts are used for perishing less valuable metal work. In packing and making cushions, for the covering of floors and in the fur business sawdust is useful There are sever A firms in New York who have no other care in this world than to discover, the dark secrets of why chimneys smoke. They don’t bother to attend to the big buildings, either. T hmj are almost entirely devoted to solving the secrete of the domestic hearth. Business is plentiful, too, for nowadays everybody who builds a new house in the country or tbe suburbs of New York wants at least one open Are In it, and. etrange to say, there are more new chimneys that smoke than there are new chlm neys that don’t smoke. So there yon are with an excellent opportunity for the smoking c*imney doctor—and all directly in the New York zone. In less closely populated regions tbe new householder with a smoking chimney Is obliged to consult an architect, a mason or an oldest inhabitant—usual

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

ly with results much more doubtful than when the chimney specialist is called in. In line with the chimney expert is the man who devotes his life to defective hot water pipes. He calls himself a domestic engineer, but hastily asserts, on being interviewed, that he isn’t intending any interference with the domestic relations court and that his domestic engineering ceases when the hot water pipes are in perfect order and there are no general heating repairs to be made in tbe flat He is a specialist in these two kinds of work and he is on tap for emergency service all the time: Useful in the world of bnslnesfl as well as that of the home Is the firm which takes care of floors. Making over store fronts is an industry which has found so many patrons in New York that a number of firms have found it profitable to set aside all other forms of building and devote themselves wholly to helping* New York merchants improve the appearance of their establishments by putting a new face on the matter. All classes of merchants, from the small dealer In the suburb to the great dry goods firms which do millions of dollars' worth of business in a year, indulge in the luxury of a new kind of front to their business homes every once in so often. The new store front builder is also an architect and his art demands all the taste, discretion and sense of appropriateness which are required for the erection of an entire new building, with perhaps a greater degree of ingenuity. In line with the new stoi*e front enterprises there are certain firms of architects which have made a reputation for their ability in the making over of bouse fronts In city houses, so that, while the remodeled residences fit perfectly Hi to their ’place in the city block, they at the same time are greatly Improved In'appearance and are given an originality of aspect which enables the occupants of the mansion and the friends of the family to recognize a residence without referring to the .number on the transom.

DOES STONE HIDE FORTUNE?

British Savant Makes Archaeological Find In West Donegal—Great Interest Is Aroused. Belfast. —Great Interest has been aroused in archaeological circles by the discovery made by Prof. Edward Spencer Dodgson of Jeans college, Oxford. The peculiar markings on the stone found by the savant at Klllult. Falcarragh, West Donegal, are believed to provide a clue to the whereabouts of an extensive treasure belongjng to an ancient Irish chieftain! and repposed to be hidden in the Immediate neighborhood. Several rare gold ornaments were found near by during the digging of a mound sixty years ago. « Professor Dodgson found the stone, which is over a yard in length, partially exposed in a field less than a hundred yards from ths local Protestant church. The position of the stone

RATTLERS ARE LOVING PETS

So Say* "Lonesome Jack** Allman* Who Has Caught 18,000 In California. • . ] • Loa Angeles —Ever since Lonesome Jack, Allman was seven years old ho has been “foolin’ ’round” snakes. Ho has captured his 1 8,000 th snake. “The rattlesnake is the most intelligent of all reptiles and the most affectionate,” Jack declared. “After they have been fanged they are the most desirable of snake pets. They can be made to come to you Just like a pet dog or cat.” Jack and his brother Sherley made a journey through the mountains the past week in quest of snakes and brought back several large rattlers. . “I found out that rattlers were thick- • er in the mountains this summer than they have been for years,” he said. “The season seems to have been just right to bring them out. A forest ranger told me that be had killed more this Summer than in the last five years put together. “I have been bitten by rattlers seven times in my life, but always had permanganate of potash with me and saved myself from serious harm. I promptly split the wound with my knife and apply the antidote before the poison has' had time to get into my system.” When Jack returned with the reptiles he entertained his friends with an exhibition of snake dentistry, in which he extracted the fangs from several rattlers. “It isn’t generally known that a rattlesnake has seven spts of fangs.” Jack continues. “There is ope pair of main fangs, one pair of reserve fangs and five pairs of fangs which float in the poison sac. If the main fangs are removed and one of the other pairs left in the mouth they will very shortly grow into position to be used. When I am traveling in the mountains and see a snake track in the dust I can examine it and tell what kind of a snake made it, which way it was traveling and about how long it has been since it passed by. I have a call that will attract rattlesnakes to me if they are near. I discovered the sound accidentally and keep it a secret.”

Finds $300 Diamond in Oysters.

Wakefield, Mass. —While eating dinner, Mrs. Margaret Barret found in a plate of oysters a diamond, finely cut and polished.

TO WEAR BYZANTINE CROWN

King Constantine of Greece Will Be Hailed at "Augustus" at the Coronation. Vienna. —An invitation has reached Emperor Francis Joseph to participate as an honored guest at the splendid and unique coronation ceremonies in Athens next May. when King Constantine of Greece and his royal spouse will be crowned. The feature of the ceremony will lie in the fact that the Byzantine imperial diadem of old will be placed on the brow of the ruler of a small but ambitious kingdom, and that with the crowning will go the assumption of the ancient title of "Augustus.” - The very crown of tbe old Byzantine empire,' kept hitherto in the monaa-

King Constantine.

tery of Mount Athos, will be used on this occasion, with the purple lobe of old. Simultaneous with the coronation festivities there will be a fortnight’s athletic games in the stadium at Athens and historical plays will be given In the Acropolis. Austrians are wondering how Rus sia will like thiß assumption of sue cessorship of Byzantium.

ar\d ita peculiarities attracted the at vant’a attention, and he obtained pet mission to have It removed to Gortahork Gaelic college, where it attracted the attention of many teachers and students. Some of the markings have been deciphered, one group beIng Interpreted aa signifying soul oi spirit. Lut no further light on the message can be obtained pending tbe arrival of experts. The markings resemble Ogham, a peculiar alphabet of straight lines used by tbe anclen' Irish. Some parts of the surface of the stone bear resemblance to the body of a petrified fish.

Dreamt He Sees Robber; Shoots Self.

Frederick, Md. —Dreaming that a robber seized a bag containing SIOO. Harry 8. Devilblss, a local merchant, grabbed his revolver in his sleep and fired at the "thief." The bullet pierced his c«sa leg.

B CUSTOM For Inffcnta and Children, The Kind Yon Have Always Bought *1 ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT # % {» Awfctable Preparation for A«- _ # | Bears the A, v. I Signature / /t.ll Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- Jr J l j ness and Rest Con tains neither (Yf /ft /V IP Opium .Morphine nor Mineral fl\ Ir it Not Narcotic |Li|ir jf» A ryt SOU BrSAffVUATeMK 4/L lj* h| RtmfJnn S—d - t V » MxS-n. . \ If 1 | 1 JMrUzSnMt •». f IA J* , Aw SmA • f Ml | 1 (v iiTv in |iis jl T ' 11 _ A perfect Remedy forConsftpa- /TT j|| II C D JSH lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, f II W w M '{c Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- I 11/ _ ness and Loss OF Sleep Y m LAP llypr Facsimile Signature of || Thirty Ypstq SO Thx Ccntaur Company, . llll| If IuQIO K> NEW YORK. * ■■■CASTORIA Exact Copy Of Wrappar th, Mimn, nw vom iitt.

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Beat OH(k TmMOmC Cm kj ta Uu SoU hf Draavtata.

mm A pr-par«il„n of