Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 142, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 June 1914 — Page 3

IS. WlB the yield of WHEAT l|fe liirprFK! 1313. fame yield, VI H ’’KiA being reported as ff VN IWKiARG biahasSObmbeb IIA N/Utt pw acra. As high I->-"8 as 100 bushels were /,s fl recorded in some fajflMl R3fi?ti.rex!& , £j fSB ftom 10. U2O bw. fa fax. |>£j| B-£Sg§ji J. Keys arrived in the BCsASb uggifej country 5 years ago from ffM] Denmark with very little Wr 3 *n3| means. He homesteaded. fisLJal worked hard, is now the ®TF| owner of 320 acres of land, fra! “ 1913 bad a crop of 200 ILa'Wjfc acres, which will realize him WKSwll IwkSdSfe about $4,000. His wheat S|saSy| !LiJg=gJ! we»«hed6Blba.tothebu»hei If WW and averaged over 35 bushels K" Til IUjMjSW to the acre. ySFr* 11 Thousands of similar in- Bfcsa j atances might be related of the ■/ 1! jfiSglffi homesteaders in Manitoba. Sas- ILLJJI IgSiM katchewan and Alberta. llgSMj VKfg The crop of 1913 was an abun- rajjsj IK IR riant one everywhere in Western WPMff Canada A if - r. wS3la fa fa-faa^w ~~ fa a Mwy nSK. xor uescnptive literature ana w/ • W reduced railway rates. Apply to fIW gi Superintendent of Immigration, j™ Ottawa. Canada, or \V* iS( Q.lNedta.<l2lffiMiLlT.Mi4Mci|> M M.».BclMss,l76J»lfsreosA»»..Dstrolt IW Canadian Government Agent * 6—«/ RUST MORTGAGE SSOO SERIAL BONOS FjJ authorised and supervised by th* *<7") WISCONSIN RAILROAD COMMISSION. / *■' CONTINENTAL A COMMERCIAL TRUST IB; AND SAVINGS BANK OFCHICAGQJrustee Theas bonds are an obligation of agoing public utility plant earning three times the interesviegulraments. They insure the Investor perfect security and a high rate of interest. Write for descriptive circular. m trnnmr tmuanoH a., w aiswt euuwNti. nutm ■■ggSSH PARKER’S hair balsam RSL JM A toilet preparation ot merit Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and R9B<sauty toGrny or Fttdod Ffaifo V& s°4 sl.ooat Druggists, WT the new corn State wants ■North Dakota morodl versifiedlarmers Bnd Tuwner County can use a few of these. Write ns for a beautiful descriptive booklet and prices on a few choice farms which we have for sale. MSmaTsmwCseatytoak, l*ertk,K.». 75 Farms South Central Minnesota Rich soil. KO to SIOO per acre. Write for information. BTOCKJEB * BEJSKE CO., Hector, Minn.

COITniCTPMPRP b® handled very easily. The sick are enrod, and all others in tongue, or in feed. Acta on the blodd and expole germs of all forme of distemper. Best remedy ever known for mares in foot , One bottle guaranteed to cure one cane. 60c and Bl a bottle; (Band I no doran of druggists and harness dealers, or sent express paid L, / manufacturers. Cut shows how to poultice throats. Our free I Booklet gives everything. Ixxial agents wanted. Largest selling wBKSx. horse remedy in existence—twelve years. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. OissdstowdßssWeisgisto, Qoshen, Inch, U. 8. A.

Constipation . Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never \ fail. Purely vegetable act surely DTFD’C n:« Uy 0,1 wittie Stop after dffiKr Il VER dinner dis- fl PILLStress—cure ■■■" indigestion, improve the complexion, brighten the eyesSMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature SPECIAL TO WOMEN The most economical, cleansing and. germicidal of all antiseptics is A soluble Antiseptic Powder to be dissolved in water as needed. As a medicinal antiseptic for douches In‘treating catarrh, Inflammation or ulceration of nose, throat, and that caused by feminine ills it has no equal. For ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtine In their private correspondence with women, which proves its superiority. Women who have been cured say it Is “worth its weight in gold." At druggists. 50c. large box, or by mail. The Paxton Toilet Co,, Boston, Mass. NOWOPEN The Latest | Addition to -•/ I Chicago’s Ji £ Good J®®®®* Hotels HOTEL LOMBARD Fiftk Ara. uJOahar St- (Nrar Jackwa Bcukrari) This magnificent hotel contains 200 moms, each with private tnb bath and toilet. BoautifuUx tnrnlibed, llaht, airy abd spacious. 81.80,85.00 and per day Try Hotel Ixtmbart on yotir next trip.to the city, located right in the heart of the banking and bnslneea districts, and nearest to Onion. Northwestern, LaSalle and Grand Central Depots. Come once and you’ll come again. Inspection invited. c.c.C«iUu,rr*i*. DAISY FLY KILLER 2X d 41,1 Ne *L elean, oryTtsSl. ■■ n * m ental, convenient, K cheep, haste all season. Made of metal . can'tspillortlp °' w i will not soli or injure anything. Guaranteed ertwtlve. Ail dealers orsernt expraw paid for tieft. IIIOLD WMEU, ISO DeXalb Ave.. Brooklyn, M. X. r - - ~ • ~ tersloo "BABT Bad* PST.WftSS ally. They are the present popular form of investment tor careful,lnvestors. Thousands of men and women all over the United States are buying Baby Bonds. IWdownand ttOa month for# months. Bond W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. M-lit*. |

MRS. LYON’S ACHESWAINS Have AH Gone Since Taking Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Terre Hill, Pa.— “ Kindly permit me to give you my testimonial in favor of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. When I first |l began taking it I was suffering from female troubles for 881 80me time had ?p*sa almost all kinds of aches—pains in lowI 1?“* back and B^e8 ’ and pressI d° wn pains. I LJ. .LI 11 could not sleep and had no appetite. Since I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound the aches and pains are all gone and I feel like a new woman. I cannot praise your medicine too highly. ’’—Mrs. Augustus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa. It is true that nature and a woman’s work has produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the world has ever known. From the roots and herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gave to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which has proved more efficacious than any other combination of drugs ever compounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is recognized from coast to coast as the standard remedy for woman’s ills. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seeking health—many of them openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound; and in some cases that it has saved them from surgical operations.

AND THEN THEY UNDERSTOOD

Locomotive Engineer Made Quite Plain What Had Caused Argument Between Travelers.

Two commercial travelers while in a train got into an argument over the action of the vacuum brake. “It’s the inflation of the tube that stops the train,’* declared the first traveler. .■.

“Wrong, wrong!” shouted the second. “It’s the output of the exhaustion.” I Then when the train arrived at the station they agreed to submit the mat? ter for settlement to the engineer That gentleman, leaning condescendingly from his cab, listened with an attentive frown to the two travelers statements of their argument., Then he smiled, shook his head and said: “Well, gents, ye’re both wrong about the workin’ of the vacuum brakes. Yet it’s very simple ana easy to understand. When we want to stop the train we just turn this valve, and then we fill the pipe with vacuum!"

Practical Ones.

“What are the best fruits of ro mance?" “Wedding dates and bridal pairs.’

To be born lucky is really merely being born with • a little common sense.

HER MOTHER-IN-LAW Proved a Wise, Good Friend.

A young woman out in la. found 8 wise, good friend in her mother-in-law, jokes notwithstanding. She writes:

“I was greatly troubled/ with my stomach, complexion was blotchy and yellow. After meals I often suffered sharp pains and would have to He down/ My mother often told me it was the coffee I drank at meals. But when I’d quit coffee I’d have a severe headache.

“While visiting my mother-in-law I remarked that she always made v sucb good coffee, and asked her to tell me how. She laughed and told me it was easy to make good ‘coffee’ when you use Postum.

*T began to use Postum as soon as 1 got home, and now have the same good ‘coffee’ (Postum) every day, and I have no more trouble. Indigestion /s a thing of the past, and my complexion has cleared up beautifully. "My grandmother suffered a great deal with her stomach. Her doctor told her to leave off coffee. She then took tea but that was just as bad. "She finally was induced to try Postum which she has used for over a year. She traveled during the winter over the greater part of lowa, visiting, something she had not been able to do for years. She says she owes her present good health to Postum ” Name given by Postum Coi, Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well ville,” in pkgs. ' Postum'now comes In two forms: Regular Postum—must be well boiled. 15c and 25c packages. Instant Postum—ls a soluble powder. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c and 50c tins. The cost per cup of both kinds is about the same. > "There’s a Reason” for Postum. —•old by Grocers,

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

The ONLOOKED

by HENRY HOWLAND

MODERN CATECHISM

suitors over seas? What makes wisdom look like cottage cheeee? “Money." Give a ready synonym for goal—- " Money." What la more Important than the soul? "Money;" What removes the ugliness from vice? What in lieu of beauty will suffice? What is proudly gained at any price? "Money."

CANDID OPINION.

If there is a heaven the angels who do the work there probably never have to fret because the ones who sit around get the credit

It may be that a barking dog nevef bites, but we refuse to take any dog’s word for it.

It is generally weir before you leap to see whether you can jump back again, if necessary.

Some men are such confirmed grumblers that they frequently grumble merely, because they have nothing to grumble at.

Some people are so careful that they even Fletcherize the advice they get.

John’s Occupation.

“Yes, the old town has grown a lot during the past fifteen years. The skyscrapers, the new Union station, the Carnegie library and the big hotel make it look like a real metropolis. And so Billy Westcott is prosecuting attorney. Well, well! I’m glad to hear that he’s getting on. I suppose he’ll be running for mayor next What ever became pf his brother John?” “John’s still living here. He’s down at the new Center street bridge watching. the tugs go up and down the river.” “Why is he doing that?” “Because he can afford to. His wife has a job in the county recorder’s office.”

A SILLY WISH.

plied his wife, “why should you have such a silly wish as that? If we lived in such a country we could never afford anything that the people next door wouldn’t be able to get”

Her Own Opinion.

She rouged her cheeks and blacked her brows. She put some whitewash on her She daubed some red stuff on her Ups And pinned on braids in'ample rows; She fastened on a hat bedecked With artificial sprigs and fruit. And felt as natural as Use, And fancied that she was "a beaut"

Just a Theory.

"Why does Bonsell dress in such a shabby way lately? He certainly hasn’t been meeting with any financial reverses, if one may judge from the way his wife and daughters continue to make money fly.” ‘T don’t know what his purpose is. Maybe he's trying to make people who. don’t know him believe he’s some edu-j' cated chap who is trying to get along by doing brain work."

Paw Knows Everything.

Willie—Paw, what is a sunny, disposition? l ' . •

Paw—That is something possessed by a man who points out the silver lining tn the cloud and then borrows your umbrella before it starts to rain, my son. '

Not Worthy of Notice.

"No, we have decided not to have anything more to do with her. She really isn't in our set When she started for Europe last fall she never received a single steamer letter?

A Wonder.

"You seemed to regard that man with a good deal of awe.” "Yes. He excites my wonder. He’s married to one of my former wives and getting along w|th her."

■ Give a definition of I success— J; __ “Money;” ■jive a synonym for I happiness—- " Money;” I What attaches honor to a name? ' I What produces J. privilege and I fame? ■ What relieves the I slnnet of ail I blame? l| "Money." Give a definition of I respect - I "Money." What enables people to "connect?" “Money.” What brings haughty monarchs to their knees? What brings titled

“I wish,” said Sihithson, “I could live in some country where there were no poor people—where wealth could be distrib uted equally.” “Goodness!” re-

Dr. Eliot on Education.

Dr. Eliot says: “The practise of England and America is literally centuries behind the precepts of the best thinkers upon education." Is it not humiliating that an American is forced to make such an admission concerning our most vital American Institution?

What can be done? How can this wasteful school system be speedily remedied so that it fills its real function and sends, out into the world boys and girls developed according to their individual talents as far as those talents permit? It is a big question, but in my next article I propose to outline a rational, practical system of public education which will serve those ends. —Pictorial Review.

SCALP ITCHED AND BURNED

«33 South Scioto St, Circleville. Ohio. —“My little girl’s trouble first started on her head in a bunch .of little pimples full of yellow-looking matter and they would spread in large places. In a short time they would open. Her scalp was awfully red and inflamed and the burning and itching were 4bo intense that she would scratch and rub till it would leave ugly sores. Tfie, sores also appeared on her body, and her clothing Irritated them so that I had to put real soft cloth next to her body. She would lie awake of nights and was very worrisome.. At times rhe was tortured with itching and burning. "I tried different remedies with fid benefit for months. I had given up all hope of her ever getting rid of it, then I concluded to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. The second application gave relief. In a short time she was entirely cured.” (Signed) Mrs. Alice Kirlln, Nov. 4, 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.

Literary Talk.

“My dear, there’s the candlestick on top of (he clock. Don’t you think that sort of thing is really' a little too previous?” ( “What on; earth do you mean, William Henry?” “I mean it’s ahead of time.”

Let’s ll Have a Porch || Party with r n K to Kiv guests or family, especially I 'f*~ JW/? /MW/ after dinner.® LA. O' VII )\ & A It’s the hospitality gum— X \A- — so P erfect, y 1 I\. 'a s \ packed that it K V / stays perfectly // P| T freshandclean. 1 h costs alI m °st noth- // in £ but Peopto ! ,ike >t better ! I than much 7/ more costly things. It relieves all“overeaten” feelings—refreshes the mouth—cleanses the teeth beautifully. I7VFDV ChewitaftO IS VEK I every meat PACKAGE TIGHTLY a\ SEALED! Remember— the new seal is airtight and dust-proof! It’s the NoX/^<■* best gum in the best package. Be SURE it’s WRIGLEY’S. IV Look for the spear. yj C Vt

IWWZ—fa JllT{ans'Dnnk~ JI (Romans DrinkfarybodysDrink fXSHStVfStfrU --**-* • - - - —— , ”•••’• ******* e -Vto—- - \ 7igorously good —and keenly B P delicious. Thirst-quenching I ■ and refreshing. I I The national beverage fi| I • —and yours. ffl > Demand the genuine by foil nine ~ Nicknames encourage substkution« THE COCA-COLA COMPA NY Whenercr M r> . you see an Anow think of Coca-Cola. fa— —fa—.—.—

Natural Consequence. "The wind is rising." “That’s because it is from the East.”

When a man puts both his money and confidence in the wrong-? bant he subsequently withdraws his dence.