Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 137, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 June 1914 — Page 3

Continuous Problem.

"We sent Glayds Ann to cooking school to get her mind off her piano playing,” said Mr. Cumrox. .“Did the plan succeed?”. “Yes. Now we’re trying to persuade her to study political economy so as to get her mind off the cooking.”— Washington Star.

ERUPTION SPREAD ON FACE

810 East Elm St, Streator, Ill.— “A running sore broke out above my right eye, -which spread over my entire face. It started as a small pimple.- I scratched it open and the con* tents of this small pimple ran down my face. Wherever this ran a new sore appeared. They itched and burned terribly; I couldn’t touch my it burned so. It disfigured my fafce terribly and I couldn’t be seen for everyone was afraid of it. It Joobed like a disease of some kind; it was all red and a heavy white crust on it. Everybody kept out of my way, afraid it would spread. I lost rest at night and I couldn’t bear to have anything touch my face, not even the pillow. I had to lie on the back of the head. I was always glad when morning came so I could get up. It was extremely painful. “At last I thought of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I commenced using them. It took Vhree weeks to complete the cure.” (Signed) Miss Caroline Miller, Apr. 30, 1913. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample Of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.” —Adv.

Cynical.

“What I am, I owe to my wife.” “Well, take my advice and don’t pay the debt. She made a mess of the job.” e. - .. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar-coated, easy to take as candy, regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels and cure constipation. Adv. The man who talks too much has one advantage. No one can remembei exactly what he did say on any proposition. Worms expelled promptly from the human system with Dr. Peery 1 # Vermifuge "Dead Shot.” Adv. The ins and outs of love. consist principally of falling in and having a falling out. ... Putnam Fadeless Dyes color in cold water. Adv. The long distance phone makes the heart throb faster.

REMARKABLE CASE of Mrs. HAM Declares Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Saved Her Life and Sanity. Shamrock, Mo.— "I feel it my duty to tell the public the condition of my BMMBSiiHnSHMIWniISi'I health before using Sjhil| your medicine. I had HjflPOni! falling, inflammaIl§W Mill **° n anc * congestion, fffjf-3-s female weakness, IBS Wl pains in both sides, A «|f|| backaches and bearI ing down pains, was |f,! V—short of memory, I nervous » impatient, YfjFjJ 1/j I passed sleepless I 'JJ < frlQj nights, and had »- ir.y.Xf, ..Ineither strength nor energy. There was always a fear and dread in my mind, I had cold, nervous, weak spells, hot flashes over my body. I had a place in my right side that was so sore that I could hardly bear the weight of my clothes. I tried medicines and doctors, but they did me little good, and I never expected to get out again. I got Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound apd Blood Purifier, and I certainly would have been in grave or in an asylum if your medicines had not saved me. But now I can work all day, sleep well at night, eat anything I want, have no hot flashes or weak, nervous spells. All pains, aches, fears and dreads are gone, my house, children .and husband are no longer neglected, as I am almost entirely free of tee bad symptoms I had before taking your remedies, and all is pleasure and happiness in my home.”— Mrs: Josos Ham, R. F. D. 1, Box 22, J Shamrock, Missouri. If you want special advice write .Lydia E.Pfnkham Medicine Co., (confidential) Lynn. Mass.

Don’t Persecute Your Bowels »& , - CARTELS urru^y^^ WALL PTuTSiALL DOSE. SMALL PRK3L Genuine must bear Signature BLAUk LEG Mgta& ' WsipiwUw»«■**»* « «• ■»«•» v Mm nf »MUlurliMi in wwln aiS >■•■■■ aaly. wtettHitoVldnbTS- llrtft fWClttif lilmtwy. loftilii. Q|| M it fhimt. |>

WILL BASEBALL DIAMOND STARS REPEAT?

Can last year’s diamond luminaries repeat, or will a new constellation' hold the public eye during this season’s pennant race? This is the burning question of the hour. Judging from the early season

Christy Mathewson of Giants.

performances, moßt of the old guard will be right on the job when the. safe lick means the game or the bases are loaded and the count is three and two. The list changes just a little every year. Some veteran who has been the

BASEBALL NOTES

Mike Donlin’s pinch-hitting eye 1b not In proper trim as yet ; Jacinto del Calvo, the Cuban player, Is making good on the coast. ?• * * Hans Wagner continues to be the premier drawing card of the National league. " e * * < v : *;. Griffith says Fritz Maisel will be one of the best third basemen in the big leagues this year. • * • . • • ’ • % . .. The Indianapolis club has sold Prince Gaekill, tile former Troy curver, to the Denver club, of the Western league. - ■ . .... " e e e Detroit critics say the Tigers are no better than a year ago. Jennings’ youngsters are not setting the world on fire. • e • W hen the Chancemen do lose, the other team has to battle hard. Nobody has found the Nyams easy this season. ;?■£? • ’ ■■/?. • • f Charley Herzog has an all-German Infield at Cincinnati with a Cuban, an Englishman and an Irishman in the outfield. ' • . • • Funny thing about Sherwood Magee. Ha Is called a slow thinker; still hp leads the National league sluggers with the wlUow. e e. • Walter Barbara, the New Orleans Substitute shortstop, who got his ehance when ILaaupp was injured, is

Eddie Plank, Veteran Pitcher of Athletics

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

idol of fans falls by the wayside and one of the great army of debutants steps into the vacant niche. Among last year’s number, however, there is none who is in danger of being displaced. Cobb, the kingpin of them all, is tearing around the paths at the same blinding pace, but his batting is not up to standard yet. Matty will have tittle difficulty in making the sluggers swing at his slow one and expects to stand them all on their heads in the next world’s series. Plank, the wonderful portsider of Connie Mack’s White Elephants, was the pitching sensation of last year’s world’B series and bids fair to. repeat this year. Plank has been in the ghme longer than any other southpaw, and will probably be the first of the 1913 list to leave the big show. As for Honus Wagner, he is just a little slower, maybe, on hard-hit ground balls, but the eagle eye and the big mitts are still at the old stand, and it will take a sulphuric smash to penetrate the Pirates’ short field while he is playing his position. If Tris Speaker’s record-breaking salary doesn’t go to his head he should shine as brightly as ever in the Red Sox roster, both at bat and in the field. Joe Jackson, the Big Dipper of the Cleveland Naps, has youth in his favor coupled with a desire to beat Ty Cobb. There is little doubt of his staying among the leaders. Walter Johnson still burns them across the dish with the same old snap and zing. Then, too, there are Eddie Collins apd Frank Baker of the Athletics; Milan and Joe Boehling of the Senators, Reb Russell of the White Sox, Archer of the Cubs, Demaree of the Giants, Daubert of Brooklyn, Evers and Maranville of Boston, and all the other sparkles in the big league diamond. \

balled as one of the Southern league’s biggest fields. • • e Ty Cobb is not stealing many bases this year, but he is scoring runs in almost every game by his daring on the bases. . e e e Manager Joe Birmingham, of the Cleveland Naps, Bays dancing la a great aid in getting ball players into condition. * • * Billy Earle, the veteran catcher, who made the round-the-world tour with Spalding 25 years ago, la living in retirement In Detroit. 'S~ ./• • * • Pitcher Luhrsen, who failed to make good as a Senator, has been sold by the Columbus club to the Omaha club, in the Western league. • • • A Cleveland boy, Harvey Bluhm, better known to baseball fame *4 “Red,” is the one big noise of the New Orleans club, leaders In the race for the Southern league pennant > *;■ • ' '* /One of the greatest stomach-reduc-ing exercises ever observed is portrayed by a plump batter dodging Walter Johnson’s fait ball when It comes along inside and waist high. •• • \ The veteran. Otto Williams, has been purchased by the Nashville club from the Kansas City club. Williams has been acting as one of the instructors In Charley Carr’s baseball school. • • • ■' *' ’■ President Chivington, of the American association, Is in earnest in his antipathy for the Federal league, and has lpsupd orders to all owner* to bar Federal league players from attending gasne is the American associa

CANADA'S PLACE AS A PRODUCER

Canada Is Getting a Great Many Americans. “Three young provinces, Manitoba. Saskatchewan, and Alberta,” says a New York financial Joun&l, “have already made Winnipeg one of the greatest primary wheat markets of the world. In 1904 they, raised 58,000.000 bushels of; wheat. Five years later they produced 150,000,000 bushels. In 1913 the crop approximated 200,000,000 bushels. At the present rate of progress Canada must soon pass France and India, and stand third in the line of wheat- producers. Ultimately it will dispute with Russia and the United States for the first position. Wheat has been the pioneer of our development Undoubtedly it. will prove the same with Canada. In the last calendar year our trade with Canada amounted to 497 million dollars. Only with two countries—the United Kingdom and Germany—ls our trade greater. No vivid imagination is needed to see what, tie future development of Canada means to the people of the United States. The Influx of American settlers to the Canadian prairies is now in full swing. Within the past few days over 80 of those arrived at Bassano carrying with them effects and capital to the value of SIOO,OOO. Fifty settlers from Oregon arrived in Alberta a few days ago; while 15 families of settlers from the state of Colorado arrived at Calgary on their Journey northwards. The goods and personal effects of this party filled 20 box cars. Of live stock alone they had 175 horses, 15 cows and 2,000 head of poultry. Another class of settler has arrived at Peers, 110 miles west of Edmonton, where no fewer than 200 German farmers have taken up land. These are from good fanning families and brought with them a large amount of capital. Then in South Western Saskatchewan, there are large numbers settling, these from the United States predominating, while in, the northern and central portions <4f all these provinces, the settlement of new people ie going on steadily. Early In April, Peter Goertz arrived in Cardiff after a sixday journey from McPherson, Kansas. Mr. Goertz who had purchased land here was in charge-of a party of 38 people from the same part of Kansas and they came through with a special train which included all their stock and implements. The equipment w?ro all Rock Island cars, and was thd first full immigrant train ever sent out by that railroad. The farms purchased by the members of the party are amongst the best in the district. When the Panama exposition opens next year any of the three transcontinental lines in Canada will make convenient means of transport for those going to visit, and in doing so agricultural districts of Western Canada can be seen, and ocular demonstration given those who have heard but not before seen, of that which has attracted so many hundreds of thousands of American settlers.—Advertisement

Prudent Youth.

A yonng society woman was having a chat one evening with a young man whom she had Just met They were in the conservatory. ‘ “Which do you admire the greater,” inquired the young belle, “black eyes or blue?" “Well, really, replied the young fellow, slowly, “the tight is so dim here I can’t'aav Inst now.”—Monthly Magazine.

Results Wanted.

“Who is that young man that calls on you, daughter?” j “A budding poet, father.” “Well, tell him to come around when he has blossomed and is able to show the' fruit of his labors.”

Cigar-Box Heroes.

The Leading Opinion Molder (tearing his hair)—l can’t for the life of me remember the name of that latest Mexican bandit! What In the world is It? The Smart Office Boy—Say, th‘ foreman has got a lot o’ slugs in old cigar b&xes in de composin’ room. I’ll Just run up an’ copy a few names from de boxes for you.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. • '’'/■■■

First Appearance.

“The craze for the stage is what makes all the trouble," said Mr. Growcher. “That’s a rather general statement” “It’s true. The sorrows of the human race started in the Garden of Eden when Eve undertook to give a performance as a snake charmer.”

Plumed.

Neighbor—Tommy, bow Is your little brother? Tommy—He’s been ostracized. Neighbor—Ostracized ? Tommy—Yes. mam, he went td the zoo Sunday and an ostrich pecked him.

Palpable Proof.

“Scientists say that anger .causes sugar in the blood,” remarked his wife. > “I believe it, nu dear. You always seem sweeter whettvwe make up after a fight”

Beginning Young.

Mrs. Grammercy —Do you think she’s bringing up her daughter right? Mrs. Psrk—lndeed she Is. my dear! She gave the little thine a staffed bulldog to play with Instead of a doll. — Judge.

* * and distress are sent by the limbs. Soda feeling may or may not be accompanied by or headache or bearing down. The local disorders and inflammation, if these Is any. should be treated with Dr. Pierce’s Lotion Tablets. Then the nervous system and the entire wnnyfr mi|gup le th the took effect od DR. PIERCES Favorite Prescription Take this In llqulil or tablet form and b#a we//woman!' Njs. Eva Tyler of So. Geneva St. Ithaca, N. Y., **ys, “I have been In a rundown condition fur several years. Suffered from nervocanew and * great deal o< pain at certain v X| periods. Have taken several different medicines but found your Favorite Prescription' has given the most relief o< any- | thing I have ever triedL~Am very much better than 1 have Ijl_ | I J f Dp. Pteroe's Pfoammnt PoNotm I "VomamtOOd f rogvlato stomaoh, ltv or, bowels I Mothorhood I

The Biped. “Can’t you advance roe five thousand niarks, Isaac? My rich old uncle has one foot in the grave, you know.” “Yes, but what is he doing with the other?” —Fliegende Blatter. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that It SMC 5 In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castora Not for Heating. “Does your landlord use hot air?” “Well, you just ought to hear his promises when we ask for repairs.” ARE YOU CONSTIPATED? Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills have proved their worth for 75 years. Test them yourself now. Send for sample to 872 Pearl St., New York. Adv. If you don’t want people to like you criticize what they do.

HOOSIER BINDER TWINE ATTENTION Q}4 C FARMERS Paynomoreforany othertwine. Hooaler is guaranteed at good a# M beat - If you buy ° f your dealer allow him a fair profit; if he B Wfr k-Mjm will not supply it, write here for it. Send for club order blank* (■ H and samples. Send ca.h for less than 500 lbs. Price f.o.b. factory. « . i ' T ll Tln' BEJ. Fogarty, Sup’t., Hooaier Twine Mills, Michigan City, lad.

You never can tell. Many a shallow mind has been concealed behind a deep voice. Use Roman Bye Balsam for scalding senlatlon In eyes and Inflammation of eyes or tyellds. Adv.

Good Reason.

1 She —I prefer dumb animals to men any time. He —Sure; they can’t talk back.

One of the Finest.

Policeman —What’s your name, little girt? Little Girl (who is lost) —Fanny Ellen Towne. Policeman —But what's your name in the country?

Sizing Up Louis.

't here recently .came to a fashionable shoe shop in Chicago a daughter of a man whose wealth has been acquired within very recent years. The young woman was disposed to patronize the clerk, and rejected a number of “classy" slippers he produced for her approval. Finally she said. “I think, perhaps, I shall take these two pairs. But Louis XV heels are too high for me. Give me a size lower or, stay —perhaps Louis XIII will be high enough.’’—Harper’s.

Shakedpeare and Bacon.

It has not been proven that Bacon wrote the plays known as Shakespeare’s. The various attempts at snch task have all turned out to be melancholy failures. It has been shown that there are many difficulties in the way of believing that the historical Shakespeare wrote the immortal dramas, but it has not been shown that anybody else wrote them. The Stratford man is still in possession of the glory of their authorship, and if he is cot entitled to the. honor it is Impossible to say who is.

DID THE WORK Grew Strong on Right Food.

You can’t grow strong by merely exercising. You most have food —the kind you can digest and assimilate. Unless the food yon eat Is digested It adds to the burden the digestive organs have naturally to carry. This often means a nervous breakdown. “About a year ago,” writes a Mass, lady, “I bad quite a serious nervous breakdown caused, as I believed, by overwork and worry. I also suffered untold misery from dyspepsia. “First I gave up my position, then I tried to find a remedy for my troubles, something that would make me well and strong, something to rest my. tired stomach and build up my worn-out nerves and brain. “I tried one kind of medicine after another, but nothing seemed to help me. "Finally a friend suggested change of food and recommended Grape-Nuts. With little or no faith in it. 1 tried a package. That was eight months ago and I have never been without it since. "Grape-Nuts did the work. It helped me grow strong and well. Grape-Nuts put new life into me, built up my whole system and made another woman of me!" / Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. Read .“The Road to Well vine," In pkgs. “Thera’s a Reason.” Ever ml llw.akar* tetter? A at* mw •*>•■«« (rSai ttaa* <a (law. War ar* arrmalae, true, aad fall •< kaaaaa

W. L.DOUGLAS SHOES Mio'sii&a-raa//'. »\ Women's OOT H/ I Misses,Boys,Children! ifel .v W SI.BO $1.78 $2 $2.50 S3| EgjgK.- U OV C«CU< Builnm Ini ii gN 187#; now tn.l “WL/I IvgMt uU, tf\ jisiiWilgeS-V A / A. //: aw MMtt4.SO.ho.AXB. iW? Cl M tv ufp pm 1" <»* «wl#. YCkjaj ’fffflfp/ eßfcv:. .\: m Dtmglas *ham tm im enr ms. VatA'lM Tbia Is tbe reason** give yon the urn values lor <3.00, *3.so, $4.00 ftAwSl and *4.40 notwithstanding tbs A enormous mem## in tbs eost of BBA to you remain# tbe same. wa Ask your dealer to (how yos ImmSoKss tMg that for style, oorafort and eerrlee they are febeotutety ae good as other makes aotd at higher prices. A- 1, Tbe only difference is the price. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. /tSt r.:ul Een# (mala* wttheetW. L. Doeclaa' same K v l >taap#d on tba bsMem. If W.L Dob*im V ® itioo, era not for uU. la your vicinity, ordor vt • NLSfiS uire ci irora iectott. oaves he every of tbo feailT at all prion*, poauan fro*. Writ, far tlfuMntad atnloc *owjne tow

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