Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 59, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 March 1914 — Page 3
Seek, Ifcrm&n 9foad& %bM Reliable evidence Is abundant that women are constantly being restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound The many testimonial letters that we are continually publishing in the of them —are all genuine, true and unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude for the freedom from suffering that has come to these women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Money could not buy nor any kind of influence obtain such recommendations; you may depend upon it that any testimonial we publish is honest and true —if you have any doubt of this write to the women whose true names and addresses are always given, and learn for yourself. Read this one from Mrs. Waters: Camden, N.J. — “1 was sick for two years with nervous spells, and my kidneys were affected. I had a doctor all the time and used a galvanic battery, but nothing did me any good. I was rrot able to go to bed, but spent my time on a couch or in a sleeping-chair, and soon became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went away for his health, and my husband heard of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and got me some. In two months I got relief and now I am like a new woman and am at my usual weight. I recommend vcur medicine to every one and so does my husband.’* —Mrs. Txmia Waters, 1135 Knight St., Camden, N.J. And thisvone from Mrs. Haddock: _ Utioa, Okla. —“I was weak and nervous, not able to do my work and scarcely able to be on my feet. I had backache, headache, palpitation of the heart, trouble with my bowels, and inflammation. Since taking the Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I am better than I have been for twenty years. I think it is a wonderful medicine and I have recommended it to others.”—Mrs. Mast Ann Haddock, Utica, Oklahoma. Now answer this question if you can. Why should a woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that it has saved many others—why should it fail ip your case? For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedyforfe- K nvy male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments (Of does justice to herself if she does not try this fa- S / SL \ J mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it 17 yf 11 has restored so many suffering women to health. (I Iv* y I y—gfc Write to LYDIA E.PINKH AM MEDICINE CO. fA Ik SPF (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. sff COLT DISTEMPER be handled Terr easily. The sick are cared, and all other. In same stable, no matter how “exposed,” kept from haring the dUby using KPOHN’S LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE. Give on tongue or In feed. Acts on the blood and expels germs of : all forms of distemper. Best remedy ever known for nmrea In foaL IWBKmn One bottle guaranteed to cure one case. Wo and 11 a bottle: (6 and (10 dozen of drusK'sts anil harness dealers, or sent express paid by manufacturers. Cut shows how to poultice throats. Our free 1 Booklet gives everything. Local agents wanted. Largeet selling horse remedy In existence—twelve years. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. CMAntiatiikbiiik, Ooshen, Ind., U. 8. A.
And He Did. „ _ When Shimmerpate arrived home an hour later than usual he was nibbling a clove. “I stopped In a concert hall for a few moments,— he observed. “The music was intoxicating." “That’s right!” exclaimed his better half.“ Blame It on the music.” Man j School Children Are Sickly. Children who are delicate, feverish and cross ■will get immediate relief from Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children. They cleanse the stomach, act on the liver, and are recommended for complaining children. A pleasant remedy for worms. Used by Mothers for 24 years. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address. A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. 11. Adv. Bacilli and Relations. Mrs. Baye—“She is simply mad on the subject of germs, and sterilizes or filters everything in the house." Visitor —“How does Bhe get along with her family?" Mrs. Baye—“Ob, even her relations are strained.” Dr. Perry’s Vermifuge “Dead Shot” kills and expels Worms In a very few hours. Adv. Give a woman plenty of rope and ■he’ll use it for a clothesline. SettiecSjaßjigP a.'Yea.r Immigration figures show that the £¥» population of Canada increased dur- uMi fag 1913, by the addition of 400,000JJgt new settlers from the United States and Europe. Most of these have gone m on farms in provinces of Manitoba, U Saskatchewan and Alberta. SO Lord William Percy, an English Nobleman, jBB "The possibilities and opportunities offered (ffl by the Canadian West are so infinitely ttsj greater than those which exist in England, Mp that it seems absurd to think that peopleAJu should be impeded from coming to thsVAJ country where they can most easily certainly improve their position. Ag New districts ale being opened up, eJK Jr which will make accessabie a great amSMftio number of homesteads in districts xnnnk especially adapted to mixed farm- fMFßgffjff ing and grain raising. AraMfflnMi For Illustrated literature and I reduced railway rates, apply to I immigration. Ottawa, I . I L. ST. Bid,. .Cklngs, IVJlata! jVi JAnwiia.SMnK iCufl'lll Osaadiaa a««nr»al l|»l wwdBB443JU Writ* botioh PICTURE PLATA IB to 2150 weekly. Information. Demand unlimited. Experience unnecessary. ketioMl UMwatofvsfk Ce., 2(06 taken, CMaaaM, O. CRIDDE RBMBDT Mote. Sample free. Safest, nnirrs surest, most convenient. Also 11 other remedies. tekteU SwSm Ce„ lu 1832, tans (Ms. '“Best Eczema and Itch Cure” Agents and suOerers.nrite. Box W.W. Middletown,!). JhiJM'M UTI I wdi til Eg] Be«< Cough Syrnp. Tmlw Good. Cm Ed Ed to time.»Bold by Pragglita.
Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver b right the stomach and bowels are right; CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently butfirmly com-^ — pel a lazy liver to do its duty. [-■** Cutes Con- jjjgffi&SaKr V * XHf Stipation, In-I IVER digestion, Headache, and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature 200 Farms Absolutely. Free We will give away FREJ2 of charge and without restrictions as to improvement or settlement 200 farm tracts of from 5 to 40 acres in Palm Beach County. Si,ooo an acre is often made on similar lahd from winter vegetables alone and fortunes in grape fruit and oranges. This is the land of three crops a year, below the frost line; 365 growing days. The last day for registration is April 30, 1914. Low excursion xates March 3rd, 17th, April 7th and April 21st. Write for full particulars to Secretary, Chamber of Commerce, Lake Worth, Florida LANDOUIGYiig FREE W4S £r x PALMA PEARLS NECKLACE OF PEARLS of grot rich new, VI P \ •xqalitt. Oriental lustra, preotloall; tndeN \ I ,Uuotll,ls. Cl«v svld Blhd. Ltsdls, f\l I Jeweler* eeklng flv* dollars. __ I j <OOB PRIOR 90.00 V/ nut in. ca. «iito w». *«kv i.{, ♦ BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. _ For Restoring Color and Beauty to Cray or Faded Hair. *oc. andlEtoatPrugglsto. Alfalfa Caret* With live stock yield greatest, Uliana rarms snrastproflta Pump irrigated. Soft, pure water Inexhaustible. Ideal eflmate. 218 days sunshine 1912. IQ acres mean living and tl AW yearly. Alfalfa Kama Co., 188 Fisher Blag., Chicago MY SECRET wia£,°»SSl Smad tanfcSb imiKlllPEffllV QUICK RELIEF W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 9-1914
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN. RENSSELAER. IND.
Life Among the Eskimo
ON the roof of the world is the Eskimo country. Few are its flowers. Of trees there are none. Illimitable are its summer muskegs and its eightmonth winter snows. Yet the Eskimo is as jovial a soul as any thpt ever came from southern lands where life is a joy. He Is a humorist, although he feeds on blubber and rotten fish; a sportsman, although he knows not soap and water, and a good fellow, although the shiftless Cree despises him and calls him in insult ‘‘husky.** Scattered over a wide area of the north, living in tribes distinguishable to the traveler by slight linguistic difference and local habits and customs, the Eskimo from Greenland to the west coast of Hudson bay, are one and the same people. They have the same physical characteristics, live In much the same way and think much the same thoughts on hunting and life as their visitors, the white men. Even the fierce Nechilliks and Igluliks of the far, far north (with whom the various trading companies deal as a rule through other tribes acting as middlemen), have the same taboos and angekoks (or witch doctors) and quaint legends. People of Dirt. Stunted, squat men seldom averaging over five feet and a half, they are muscular and strongly built, but slow of limb and mind. With their curious Chinese slanted eyes and inflated nostrils, they are a people of dirt and laughter. Their heavy black hair is worn by the males over the shoulders to protect their large ears. Across their thick lips comes the flash, as a rule, of perfect but discolored teeth. Such is the Eskimo gentleman —the real lord of the north. As for the Eskimo belles, they, too, have their virtues, Beauty is a question of taste and probably the Eskimo would not exchange his flat-faced, strong and sturdy mate with dark brown eyes and natural bust, for the fairest chorus girl. Very often, too, when these girls have European blood in them their looks are -far from uncomely. But to arrive at a real understanding of the Eskimo you must spend a year at least among them. Thus only can you arrive at a complete picture of their strange life wherein trains and banks and offices and telephones have no part.. For they, like all primitive faces, are a nomadic people living under the bright stars. So we may see an Eskimo’s health, wealth and content. So, too, you may face starvation and hardship with him. And again you may watch the wages of the civilization that leave him robbed of furs, pillaged of livelihood and branded with disease. The Eskimo lives by the chase for he neither ploughs nor farms. By means of the chase come his food and raiment and the fuel that is to warm him through the long northern winter. His winter mansion is the igloo or snow house, his summer home a tupik or tent of seal and deer skins. When the days of the north begin to spread out in January comes the Eskimo’s hard times. For two months or more life Is a burden, intolerable and bitter, yet fiercely clutched at for all Its uncertainty. The Ice is storm seized and the seal on which the Eskimo depends keep out in the open water. And it is in this season the southern Eskimo strikes his annual trail for the trade post, where he will barter a winter’s pelts for ammunition, tobacco and white men’s baubles. First provisions for the way must be found and at no other time are they so hard to obtain. So It comes to pass that with a little deer meat reserved over from the fall and with a scant stock of seal, the company sets forth. The long narrow komatiks are lashed, the dogs harnessed to them and the trail goes on in stages. Generally two or three families make them together. An old woman leads the way. Then come the dogs and the sleds while scouting on each side wander the men in search of seal holes on the ice. The short day wanes and a small snowhouse has to be built from a convenient hummock. Building a House. First a veteran tests the snow of the neighborhood with‘his knife. The
GROUP of ESKIMO on STEAMER
drift must be a single storm’s work for then the snow is more compact. An oblong hole about five feet long, two or three feet wide, some two feet deep is next cut. Blocks are then taken from its clean face. Each block is about half a foot thick, a foot and a half deep and two and a half feet long. One man wedges the blocks and another builds them round In a circle the size of the intended house. The first layer completed, the blocks cut downward diagonally so that the next layer will take a spiral form and continue to curve up until the dome is closed by a key-block. Women mortise the block chinks with soft snow, The door Is cut and inside opposite It is piled the snow-bed, while outside a wind shield of blocks protects the door from a drift. It Is now the women’s task to make the place home within while the husky bucks feed their dogs. On the bed pile go mats of closely woven willow branches, then deer skins and deer skin’ sleeping bags. The soapstone lamp is lighted and placed on a snow shelf between the door and bed. In it a wick of dry, pulverized moss Is fed with deer fat or seal blubber. The kettle Is now slung over it. The sleds outside are now denuded and the dogs bedded. The most valuable of the sleds are ivory shod, otherwise they have whalebone runners. During the cold months they are sheeted with muck and frozen so there is least friction and for this the ice coating is renewed dally. —The Eskimo now set their traps and go in for the night. So the trail goes on day after day, night after night until they come, in two months or so; to the lonely traders of the north. Furs are given in and counters or a graded scale received —a white fox counting as one skin and some silver 1 foxes as much as forty.v The Eskimo then hand over the counters, their tokens for white man’s plug tobacco, his killing powder and shot and his needles and fish hooks and whatever the trader can attract him with.
OLD-FASHIONED LITTLE GIRLS
They Still Exist, It Is Asserted, Although Hidden From the Worldly-Minded. Where are the little girls of yesteis year? Where are the little girls who sewed “doll rags;” who hung on the front gate, who romped and climbed fences with their brothers? Gone, all gone—that is, in the large cities where houses have crowded out the fields, and where busy days have swallowed the hours of leisure. It was most interesting for one of the elders, the other day, to visit in a little town near Columbus, and there to find the same little girl that used to play 40 years ago in Columbus. There was the visiting of several small maidens with bags of “pieces,” and with china and wax “children” to be clothed. “The thpring ith cornin’ “ lisped one, “and Hethter haint got anything to wear, an’ I’m jutht worried to death for fear I won’t get her thingth dona in time for Eathter.” “Just the same with my Marian,” quoth another. “I feel terribly about the Paris styles. They don’t suit Marian at all, and —” “My Bertha is really very sensible.” s&id the third. “I told her this morning that I could not possibly afford—” Dear me, dear me! The old days over again, when we used to foregather In the dining room after the table was cleared, and in front of the coal fire in the grate and after mother’s admonition: “Now, children, don’t poke the fire, or you’ll get burned,” we sewed, and sewed, and'sewed for the family of dolls. Where is the little girl of yes ter, year? , You sometimes find her, but she la hidden from sight of the worldlyminded. —Columbus (O.) Dispatch.
Maybe So.
Farmer —Your cow bells are no ao« count They don’t ring loud enough. Merchant That’s an advantage. When you do hear the bells you don’t have to go far to find the cows.
U' ' " ' | MIJiUJA jj^ $1 - ALCOHOL-3 per cent !{» /Vegetable Preparation for AsHsj similating the Food and Regula;J:t§ ting the Stomachs and Bowels of ft! Sr Promotes Digestion,Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither l l| Opium. Morphine nor Mineral ft: Not Narcotic Apt* ou DrSAMVEimara hi ftmjJtin iW* »! AtZ&mmm - V L, AW MItSm/b jninStitJ » I «j > Krm S"d - I >tL <QWW JVyy nmkrfrti* /favor / $ A perfect Remedy forConstlpa- J bin (ion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions. Fever ish* ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature at The C ENTAUR COMPANY,\ I under the Foodaij ; Exact Copy of Wrapper.
HAD OLD LADY’S GRATITUDE
Btorlea Boy Had Absorbed May Have Been Inventions, but Bhe Was Satisfied. It was on a Wade Park car, on the line of 40 angleß, and It happened but a day or two ago. A boy of perhaps fourteen suddenly arose from his seat and gave it to a stout lady. The stout lady looked up at him. “You’re a polite lad,” she said. “Few boys nowadays would do the like.” “I guess you didn’t read yesterday’s paper,” said the boy. “There’s a story about a boy who gave up his seat Jn a street car to a lady, and when she died last week she left him $7,000.” “I didn’t see it,” said the lady. “Maybe you saw the one about the boy who carried the old woman’s basket and she gave him a brick house and a moving picture theater?" "No,” said the lady; “I didn’t see that one either." "There was another one,” the lad went on, "about the boy who had a lower berth in th’ steepin’ car an’ gave it to a sick lady an’ she left him all her fortune. 1 don’t know how much it was, but It must have been an awful lot. You see how It is—you can’t afford to risk any chances." The lady solemnly nodded her head. “Blessings on the man who invents those stories," she solemnly said.— Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Poor Fellow.
Lydia found her father in the library. “Father,” she asked, "did Robert call on you this morning?” “Yes, he did,” replied the father; “but I couldn’t make out much of what he said.” ■ “What do you mean?” asked Lydia. “Well,” explained the old gentleman, “I understood him to say that he wanted to marry me, and that you had enough to support him, so I told him to go home and write It out"— Llppincott’s Magazine.
What Displeased Her.
"So your servant girl left you again?” said the woman at the sales. “Yes,” replied her neighbor. “What was the matter?” “She didn’t like the way I did the work.”
IF YOU’RE GROUCHY it Is likely that your liver needs stirring up. Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills will set you right quickly. Adv. A Provision. “Do you think there will be a shortage of Ice this winter?” "Well, not If we have any winter.” Putnam Fadeless Dyes guarantee satisfaction. Adv. A vivid imagination is as dangerous as a little learning.
Qvq Strength “d Beauty M Com* With Dr. Pion'! _ r/*Y This is a blood (Imdmt and altarstiv* (# V that start* the liver and stomach Into JH fIR Jy\ vigorous action. It thus assists the ■ff§§ W%«\ body to manufacture rich red blood ' ShT li which feeds the heart—nerves—brain vLjCB JwßSy 7*4 and organs of the body. The organs pHBMJY /x/ work smoothly like machinery running ktiKni a X in oil You feel clean, strong and KxMrfi J H strenuous instead of tired, weak and 7 , V ll /«K T faint. Nowadays you can obtain Dr. 111 l J Vis / 1 Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery I I \|4 w Tablets, as well as the liquid form I I\W V*r/ Isl from all medicine dealers, or trial box I \ | \X//jk SIMCs. ©f tablets, by mail, on receipt of 60c. 1 | 1 |Wsfl| Addrees l&V. Pierce,M.D., Buffalo,N.Y. I I 1 lEj || Dr- PWmTs Creek lOOtPase DWrmted ’ ‘ - f , .Mfc. mfLii si ranm M mils- a 1 FREE, doth Bead foe 11 Onweeat Stamps. \\
CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the A/JL Signature yjAxr w a Jjv In (V SB va For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA nn •awTAuit to.MNV, mmm YOftK MTV.
Enjoyment. “Do you get much enjoyment oat of the new dances?" they asked the •tout man of mellow years. “Enjoyment!"' he echoed. "Watch me.” Seizing his partner In a grip of iron, he ambled to the right, kicked to tho left, doubled his knees, kicked all around, lunged ahead, Tipped to tho rear, kicked some more, took 1 short run, beat a retreat, kicked a passing couple and sank down heavily. "Doesn’t that 1-1-look like enjoyment?'' he stammered.
FACE BROKE OUT IN PIMPLES
Falls City, Neb.—“My trouble began when I was about sixteen. My taco broke out in little pimples at first They were red and sore and then bo* came like little boils. I picked at my face continually and it made my face red and sor§ looking and then I would wake up at night and scratch it It was a source of continual annoyance to me, as my face was always red and splotched and burned all tho time. "I tried —, and other*, but I could find nothing to cure It 1 had been troubled about two years before I found Cuticura Soap and Ointment 1 sent for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and tried them and I then bought some. 1 washed my face good with the Cuticura Soap and hbt water at night and then applied the Cuticura Ointment In the morning I washed It off with the Cuticura Soap and hot water. In two daya I noticed a decided Improvement while In three weeks the eure was complete.” (Signed) Judd Knowles, Jan. 10, 191 S. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston." —Adv, -- -• '
Casus Belli.
"Why do they hate each other soT “They are rivals." “Oh, both trying to marry the same girl, eh? That sort of thing certainly does arouse man’s primal passions." * “In this case it is worse than that They are both trying to marry the same fortune.”— Houston Post ——————— Drive that cough from your system. Dean’s Mentholated Cough Drops will surely .help you—sc at all Drug Stores. No Fair Exchange. "She has such a rich husband." “And he such a poor wife.” —Baltimore American. The self-made man credits himself with the boosts that have been given him by others. Sore Byes, Granulated Byellda and Sties promptly healed with Roman Bye Balaam. Adv. Every woman is a good housekeeper —or, at least, it Is wisdom to tell her aa
