Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 58, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 March 1917 — Page 3
A Little Stick of . . m WRIGLEYS Makes the Whole World Kin! The No climate affects it for Flavor the package protects it. Lasts WRIGLEY’S goes to all parts of the world —in all seasons, to all classes. SOLDIERS IH EUROPEFresh, clean, wholesome and delicious always. * |gg|!agr It aids appetite and digestion, quenches thirst, £S||gii|gs keeps the teeth clean and breath sweet. JT^ Vine 6 l tier !■ teAW?L wrappko
Man’s Prerogative.
“Do you think women ought to tmoke?- 1 ”=f “I should say not. It’s hard enough as it is to tell who’s the man of the house.”—Detroit Free Press.
FRECKLES Now la the Time to Get Kid of These There’s no longer the slightest need of fee ting ashamed of your freckles,' sis the prescription othlne double strength -is guaranteed to remove these homely spots*, Simply get an ounce of othlne —double strength—from your druggist, and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom that more than one ounce la needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. V ... Be sure to ask for the doubJe _*trength othlne, as th'ls la Bold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. — Adv. Low-priced American pianos should find a market in Portuguese Eust Africa. It is easy to be popular if you don’t care what you Way, - , . In the middle ages fans were used In certain church ceremonies.
Glover-Land Farmers Reap Big Profits By Huge Potato Crops . ' - _ . aj j,. - , • ' Juat on* of the mJtnjTpotato acenu in Clooar-Land Clover-Land is the Upper Peninsula of Michigan CLOVER-LAND ha* many acres of land as fertile as can be found in the Middle West. It has plenty of rainfall, sunshine, markets and offers fine lands for prices that make rent paying and high rates of interest look foolish. • CLOVER-LAND is all that the name suggests. It grows every crop of the Middle West and grows them abundantly. THIS YEAR farmers have made KG PROM IS witE POTATOES, Other cfbpa paid almost as well. For honest treatment, fine terms, good soils and a bright future SEE CLOVER-LAND FIRST! Write to The Upper Peninsula Development Bureau 100 Bacon Block _ Marquette. Clover-Land, Michigan
Had Him There.
‘‘Now. madam,” said the crochety Judge who had been annoyed by the digressions of previous witnesses, ‘‘we want no hearsay evidence. Tell us only what you positively know. Your name, pleasfe.” “Margaret Jones,y replied the witness. “Your age?” “Well-er-I have Only hearsay evidence on that point, so I .won’t aoswer.”—Botbu Evening Transcript.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of C&utS^f, In Use for Over 80 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Heard on the Train.
“What kind of coal do you use?” “Egg.” “Egg? How do you get it, by the dozen?” —Boston Transcript.
Everything happens for-the best, with the possible exception of a toothache.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IffDl
DUCK, nr MR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Beautify Your , Hair! Make It Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant-—Try the Moist Cloth. Try as you will, after an application of Danderine, you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch,' but'what will please you most, will, be after a few. weeks’ .use, when yon see - new hair, fine and downy at first —yes —but really new hair —growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately doubles the beauty of your hair. No difference how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a tlma»Js3Bhtf°%iitect is immediate and amazing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incomparable luster, softness and luxuriance, the beauty and shimmer 1 of true hair health. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any store and prove that your hair is as pretty and soft as any—that it has been neglected or Injured by careless treatment —that’s all. Adv.
A Good Sign.
“Is the world really getting better?” ‘. , nf wnii-sp it-ts J ’'>cnHed the cheeiV fnl individual. “It’s true that there is a terrible war waging in Europe, which we may soon lie drawn into, and Mexico is still unsettled and Cuba is trving to have a revolution, but the su\e of comic valentines this year was, smaller than ever kimwn UeforeC”
PAIN? NOT A BIT I LIFT YOUR CORNS I OR CALLUSES OFF j No humbug! Apply few drops j then Just lift them away with fingers. $ A This new drug is an ether compound discovered by a Cincinnati chemist. It is called freezone, and can now be obtained in tiny bottles as here shown at very little cost from any twf drug store. Just ask for rjyj freezone. Apply a drop or two directly upon a tender VI corn or callus and instant- || *ly the soreness disappears. Shortly you will find the U corn or callus so loose that A you can lift It off, root and all, with the fingers. Not a twinge of pain, soreness or irritation; not M \\ML even the slightest sraart'ft\wMing, either when-applying freezone or afterwards. This drug doesn’t eat up the corn or callus, but ’. shrivels them so they loos- || en and come right out. It |l is no humbug! It works * like a charm. For a few cents you can get rid of every hard com, soft corn or corn between the toes, as well as painful calluses on bottom of your feet. It never disappoints and burns, bites or inflames. If your druggist hasn’t any freezone yet, tell him to get a little bottle for you from hi* wholesale house. —adv.
Eloquence Appreciated.
“Are you in favor of prohibition?” “Weii,” Hronclio Bob, “I’ve g’ot only ope objection to it. Old Crimson Gulch is goin’ to be kind o‘ dull with all the inducements to the temperance orators shut off.” —Washington Star.
THE BEST KIDNEY MEDICINE HE EVER SOLD I have been selling Dr. Kilmer’B SwampRoot ever since it was placed on the market. It is considered a. great liver remedy and has been found very beneficial in the treatment of rheumatism and eatarrh or inflammation of the bladder. My wife used it for kidney trouble; she is a patent medicine hater, but stands firm for, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root at all times. I have also used it myself with beneficial resillts. I regard Swamp-Root as a remedy without a superior and with very few equals as a kidney medicine. With an experience of forty years behind tlm counter, handling all the kidney remedies sold in the territory, I have recommended SwampRoot as the best remedy I ever soldi I have always sold on the plan, money baek if not’satisfied and have never been called on to refund a penny. It i» an equal to' the best diuretics on the market. Yours very truly, ‘ T. E. BRADSHAW, Druggist, April 20, 1916. Bippus, Ind. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yoo Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., fqr a sample site bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet oi valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and onedoll&r size bottles for sal* at all drug stores—Adv.
All out of Proportion.
Hnnnte —¥he Judge didn’t treat me square. .. ~ Guard—How’s that? . Inmate —I’m only twenty, and he gave me the same sentence as that old man over there. Guard —What was that? Inmate —Life.—From the Star of Hope, Sing Sing Penitentiary. : 4dU
Don’t gouge other people while carving out your own fortune.
K $5,000 • OUTJF HOGS On His Western Canadian Farm. It is getting to be a long drawn out story, the way that Western Canadian farmers have made money. Many of., them a few years ago, cuine to the _country with little more t)mn their few household effects, probably a team of horses and a cow or two, and sufficient money to do them for a few months, until they got a start. Hundreds of such can be pointed out, who today have splendid homes, well equipped farms, the latest machinery and an automobile. Here is the case of A. E. Merriam, formerly of Devil’s • T-piro n r> He didn’t leave there because therland was poor, or farming not a success, for all who know that country are aware that it Is an excellent country. He wanted to expand, advantage of the cheap land that Western Canada offers. And that same story has appealed to hundreds of others who have had like success with Mr. Merriam. But his story, and he signs it, too, is: “I came to Alberta In the Spring of 1909 from Devil’s Lake, North Dakota, locating on my farm near Dalroy. “I arrived with six head of horses and two head of cattle and about $1,500. Since then, I have increased my live stock to seven head of horses, four head of cattle, and about one hun-. dred head of hogs, a four-roomed house, good barn with all modern improvements, a feed - grinder, elevator, chopper, fanning mill, etc. I have in- - creased my original capital at least four times more since coming here. - “From the feeding of hogs during -the last year, I had a gross return of $5,000. “I first- started grain farming, but during the past four years I have made hogs my specialty, and you may see by the foregoing statement for 1916 that I have not done so badly. “Land has increased at least twenty per cent in value during the past few years, now selling for from $25 to $35 per acre, with nominal taxes of about $27 a quarter section yearly. “The climate here is better than Dakota in that we do not have so much dry wind; the winters are similar to Dakota. “As for farming in general, the growing and feeding of live stock is more sure than the grain farming, if continued year after year, and if every farmer follows this he will be ahead of the grain growers in the long run. Taking everything Into consideration, T fppl snt i sfeCgitli -mv success In Alberta.” (Sgd.) A. E. MERRIAM. Dalroy, Alberta, Jari. 12th, 1917. There will be the greatest demand for farm labor in Western Canada during the early spring, and, in fact, all season until November, and the highest wages wIITbe paid. There is an absolute guarantee by the Canadian Government that those who go so Canada for this purpose need have no fear of conscription. —Advertisement.
WRITERS OF BOOKS ARE MANY
But Few Earn Mere Money Than Does the Carpenter or the Bricklayer. So It seems that "Dick” Davis was not worth a quarter of a million dollars after all, hut only half of that. Here you get a fair notion of how little year In and year_gut .even.-tfafi most popular authors earn with their pen, (lirard writes in the Philadelphia Ledger. For a quarter of a century Davis was certainly one of the ten best-known fiction writers in America. Some of his books had a wide circulation. Besides that, he had written plays and received large salaries at various times for newspaper work. Richard Harding, to be sure, was a good spender, and dived rather handsomely during those'2s'years of literary activity. Nevertheless, his estate of $45,000 stands like a grim finger board directing all youthful aspirants to seek fortune in another direction. There are in the United States a thousand publishers who last year printed 10,000 different books. So fa/ as the authors are (Concerned, at least 9,700 were financial failures. Indeed, not 300 new books; paid their writers even a fair wage. One large publisher tells me that the average writer of books does not earn as much as a Philadelphia carpenter or bricklayer. ' 7" A very well-known Pennsylvanian who recently wrote a capital biography told me Just the other day that a weekly newspaper article .which he writes earns more for him in a year- than does his book.
Family Secrets.
Mrs. Youngwed—There is one queer thing I can’t Understand about Charley when he knows how anxious I am to meet all his relations. Mrs. Qiawife—What la that, mt dear? 1 . Mrs. Youngwed—-He always puts me off when I want to meet the nice uncle he Is continually getting money from. —Exchange.
Two of the Exalted.
"My face is my fortune,” said the stage beauty. "Permit me,” replied the soap king, “to extend the compliments of a selfmade man to a self-made woman 1” — London Answers.
W. L. DOUGLAS “THE 9HOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE” < $3 $3.50 $4 $4.50, $5 $6 $7 & $8 aZSWS&h Save Money by Wearing W. L Douglas shoes. For sale by over9ooo shoe dealers. » The Best Known Shoes in the World. ; «A W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the hottom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and MnjiMlgT the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The BeWk, retail prices are the same everywhere. They-cost no more in San J«j Francisco than they do m New York. They are alway. worth the j^ggl The quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more . than 40 years experience «v making fine shoes. The smart jijy \ - styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America. e-wc, They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass., i-W by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and | supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest determination tD make the best shoes for the price that money Ask your shoe dealer for W. T» Douglas shoes. If he can- ft —' JjßpsrwAßE Of not supply you with the kind you want, take no other j TrjSS/k SUBSTITUTES WV make. VVrlte for interesting booklet explaining how to w-, get shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price, Bovt’ Shoes by return mall, postage free. BMf is the World LOOK FOR .W. L name and the retail pnee IV. ll DougU* Shoe Co.,* •tamped on the bottom. 185 Kpar k st., Brockton, Mass.
Decline of Divorce in Japan.
Half of the papulation of Japan te from twenty to sixty-five years of age, and. one-third of the entire population is married. The ratio of divorces for every 1,000 population lias decreased 3 to 11-4; but even at present it is a source of deep anxiety on the part of unmarried statisticians.’ J — Maynard Owen Williams, In The Christian Herald.
HIGHJJOST OF LIVING This is a serious matter with house* keepers as food prices are constantly going up. To overcome this, cut out the high priced meat dishes and serve your famiiy more Bkinner*s Macaroni and Spaghetti, tha cheapest, most-de-licious and most nutritious of all foods. Write the Skinner Mfg. Co., Omaha, for beautiful cook-book, telling how to prepare it in a hundred different ways. It’s free to every woman. — Adv.
Seen in a Better Light.
“You don’t hear much nowndays about malefactors of great wealth.” “And for a very good reason.” “Yes?” “It would be in poor taste to call a millionaire a malefactor of great wealth after he had offered his services free of charge to the government.”
Reversible weather is usually doe to slippery sidewalks. Diet, Exercise or Death! , 'An eminent medical authority writes that most of our city folks die of a thickening of the arteries or of kidney disease. The kidneys become clogged and do not filter the poisons from the blood, blood pressure damages the heart, arteries and kidneys. Usually its danger signals are backache, pain here or there, swollen feet or ankles, rheumatic twinges or spots appearing before the eyes. “The veiy best remedy is this: E&t meat but once a day, or not at aU. Plenty of outdoor exercise, and drink pure water frequently. Before meals take a little Anuric, the great uric acid neutralizer that is easily obtained at the drug store. When you.have dizziness, chilis or sweating, worry, or dragging pains in back, try this wonderful enemy to uric acid, which Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y., named Anuric. Anuric, more potent than lithia, dissolves uric acid as hot water does sugar.”
The Quinine Thai Does Mot Cause Nervousness or Ringing in Head Because of its Tonic and Laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO -7QUININE can t>e takefrtjnffigj®" nervousness or ringing in the head. It removes the cause of Colds, Grip and Headache. Used whenever Quinine is needed. —but remember there fa Only One “Bromo Quinine” That fa the Original Laxative Bromo Quinine Thla Signature on Every BoxUmmd ffcsMWKoeftMlW *• (O' Farm Hands Wanted 0 A Western Canada Farmers require 50,000 American farm labourers at once. Urgent demand sent out for farm help by the Government of Canada. Good Wages Steady Employment Low Railway Fares Pleasant Surroundings Comfortable Homes No Compulsory Military Service , ' • •' r - . •» Farm hands from the United States are absolutely guaranteed against conscription. This advertisement is to secure farm help to replace Canadian fanners who have enlisted for the war. A splendid opportunity for the young man to inyestiCanada’s agricultural offerings, and to do so at but little expense, y W Only Those Accustomed to Farming Mend Apply : For particulars as to railway rates and districts requiring labour, or any other information regarding \yestem Canada apply to C.J.lWil—4U, ITS hfcw Aw-.
A Delicate Situation.
“Well, how do yon like your new..--cook?” - “We are highly pleased with her, but a temporary quietus Jias been put on our family arguments.” “How is that?” “You see, we haven’t found out yet whether she sympathizes with the entente or the central powers and wo don’t dare to express an opinion that might cause her to leave.”
p.ii 11-hen ring rollers for furniture aro in demand in Switzerland. Montana 640-Acre Homesteads Hew law just passed. New towns, bnglness opportunities. Map showing prop* sod railroads. Send 25 cents for mips and infermotion. Address |). S. Commissioner, Outlook, Most. TVPUnin dianSmaTTpoxf^SSr J experience baa demonxtratm ■ ■ ■ ■ the almost miraculous efficacy, uid harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vacclaitlw. Be vaccinated MOW Uy yoor physician, yeo sod your family. It h more vital than house insifraac*. AsV your physician, druggist, or send fox Tin* yon had Typhoid?” telling of Typhoid Vaccine, -3 results from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers. Producing Vaccines and Sernas under U. S. tleeaaa The Cutter Laboratory. Berkeley, Cal.. Chicago. lIL PATENTS £*£• t?w w%isffis2: ■ ■ "■■■ ■ v# jf q. Advice and booksTruet. Bates reasonable. Highest references. Beatservleea W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 10, 1917. HEALTHY CHILDREN come from healthy mothers. Ana M mothers will certainly be healthy SrWßk ggw they’ll take Dr. B im mSKsB 1 ■ Pierce’s Favor- “ w ite Prescription. # SjuallthAolS M. mm M ing up a worn* an"s strength, in regulating and assisting all her natural functions, and in putting in perfect order every part of the female system. It - lessens the pains and burdens, supports and strengthens-, weak, nursing mothers. _ ... I It’s an invigorating, restorative tonic, a soothing and bracing- nervine. ~ Castor oil is good for children or adnlta, and .especially good for aged people. A pleasant form of a vegetable laxative that is to bo had at any drug store, was invented by Dr. Pierce, Who pat together May-appie (podophyllin), aloes, 3 a Ask at any drug store for "Pleasant Pel--1618,” and they can be had for little money. They contain no calomel and are of vegeW able constituents, therefore harmless.
