Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 284, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 December 1918 — Page 3
• * e—lifllii ■ ■'•-I Canton, Ohio.—“l Buffered from • female trouble which caused me much _ •suffering,•nd two I IlfllliUllllllllil doetorfoeeided I llwwmllll that I would have I PW fl "F- could get well, ffl “My mother, who I had **«* hel P ed b 7 J I! 111 LydiaE. Pinkham'll 9 Vegetable Comfl lllraF' -<wl ; oound. advised me I OvZ' - to try it before subw jtof I mittingtoan opera* tion. It relieved me wlyr ■ from my troubles •bl can do my house work vdthout any •difficulty. I advise any woman who U afflicted with female troubles to give Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetable Com- ’ mound a trial and it will do an much for Marie Boyd, 1421 Sth «t, N. E., Canton, Ohio. Sometimes there are serious conditions where a hospital operation is the only alternative, but on the other band «o many women have been cured by this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. < Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, after doctors have said that an operation was mecessary—every woman who wants to avoid an operation should give it a fair trial before submitting to such a exist, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice. The result of many years •experience is at your service. ~
Bous and Girls Clear the Skin With Cuticura
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Airplane equipment. There are several kinds of airplanes osed in the military service and their ■equipment varies according to whether "they are intended chiefly for scouting, •for bomb dropping or for gun fighting. On most of the machines of the test named or battleship type, a machine gun is so fitted as to point along the exls of the machine. The pilot, who is alone, directs the nose of his airplane at the enemy and. fires across the propeller. Two plans were tried for preventing the propeller from being broken by the bullets. The first consisted of stopping the machine gun whenever the propeller ,came within the field of fire, but experience showed that frequent stopping of the gun with the propellers making 1,200 revolutions a minute ends in.-putting the gun out of order. Designers then placed steel plates on those parts of the propellers likely to be struck and these plates turn the bullets that strike the propeller. It is mathematically calculated that- only one bullet la 18 Is wasted! in ■ that way. T <
His Limits
“I understand Mr. the aauve stranger, “that yotFonce (voted tor the Hon. * “Yes," admitted Rasp.. “I voted for him a good Also I once applied/my youthful tbngue to an Ice cold sleoge hainmer-7 Llkewha? I once paid tuition to eJ cutresplhdence school of growing /tall -by mall and thereby becoming irresistible to the ladles. But it won’t do yqu any .good to produce thaU flat package which I observed outlined through your coat and which I suspect Is a simple volume of ’Great Flights of Oratory by American Blatherskites,’ for while I own up to having been a fool in my time it' Infuriates me tobe called, even by implication, a hopeless durn fool.” —Kansas City Star. There are three sets of twins, two oil boys and the bther of girls in the first grade of the Gonic (N. H.) school.
Thousands of undernourished people have •found that a sciervbrfic ! blend of nourishing cereals K ?^ s wonder-rully happiness. Needs no
AMERICAN THOROUGHBREDS ARE MENACED BY UNRESTRAINGE RACING AND TRAINING
ft seems too bad that the great racer- Roamer is to be retired in the zenith of his glory. His mile record, made at Saratoga, will probably stand for many years. Sun Briar’a private trial at Saratoga is not officially'accepted as a record. Roamer’s time was 1:84 4-5. The New York World, in speaking of Roamer’s retirement, editorially says: ■ Set New Speed ‘Mark. “Almost two months ago tiie great running horse Roamer set at Saratoga a new speed record for the slngle mile, paralng the mark put up bjf Salvator In 1890. Today Roamer is an ex-king of the turf. But he Is a monarch retired, not overthrown. At seven .years, five of them given to racing, he begins to show the effects of the pace. *The old fellow,’ says his jockey, ‘lsn’t there any more.’ . / Some have said, and -failed to prove their point, that geniuses pass xrith their own youth. To demonstrate the precocity of champions seems an easier matter—of champions, that is, who hold title by virtue of most strenuous endeavor. As years add themselves
WINNING FAME AS REFEREE
Manager Clarence Rowland of Chicago White Sox Acting as Third Man ;> - a£ Boxing Shows. Clarence Rowland, manager of the Chicago White Sox, is now winning ipUch fame as a referee ot boxing
Clarence Rowland.
boats in the West. His first engagement was at Camp Grant, and his work was so satisfactory there that the commander of the Great Lakes naval station had him officiate in the boats that were contested at the station. In all the bouts that he refereed his decisions gave general satisfaction.
CAPTAIN LOST TO WILLIAMS
Francis Stewart Enters Officers’ Tralning School for Infantry at Camp Lee, Va. Another Williams captain has dpparted to join the colors, Francis B. Stewart of Ossining, N. Y., having entered the officers’ training school for Infantry at Camp Lee, Va. He served as leader of the Purple track team last spring. Stewart was a middle-distance runner and had represented the Purple In cross-country and relay* as well as track, for three years. x '
Willie Jackson as Instructor.
Willie Jackson? Philadelphia boxer, who jumped into fame by knocking out Johnny Dundee, has been appointed boxing instructor nt the Pelham bay naval training station. ?
GREAT RUNNING HORBE ROAMER.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN. RENSSELAER. IND.
the pugilist goes a fatal once more to the ring, the baseball player to the hat, -the prize racer to the track. The better part of glory to the champion Is in the discretion that dictates withdrawal without loss of laurels. Horses Are Menaced. “Of American thoroughbreds it has fOr years been urged that they are menaced and too frequently put out of the game by excessive racing. They start running earlier than foreign horses. They are kept too constantly lu training. Great careers have .so been spoiled, as in thp cases of Her* hais, Irish Lad, Waterbury and other fine runners. Parole, winning 12 races In his eighth year, Is a shining exception to a general rule of retirement at five, six or seven years. •‘There is said to be no doubt that Roamer could win more races. He could win no greaterjame. And there Is no need that he should carry away more purses. He has earned the right to kingly leisure, and to consideration rather as good horse and good friend than as a gifted fhovider of golden ■ “Z J
YALE STAR PLEASED AT WAR
Jack Kedzle, Old-Time Yale Baseball Player, Finally Gets Excitement He Craved. Jack Kedzle, who caught for Yale’s baseball team in 1893, and could have broken into .the big leagues if he had desired to, is at last'getting the excitement his restless spirit always asked—he is at the head of a Y. M. C. A* unit in France, and Was been given credit for his rescue of many French* children from a burning, shell-swept village. Kedzie’s life would make quite a romance. He was, as already remarked, a great ball player at Yale, and had to turn down major league offers on account of his large business Interests at home —Evanston, Hl. For more than 20 years he went along in a business track, always sighing for adventure, never having the least show to get any till the chance “fiver there” was offered. Then the wealthy Mr. Kedzle shut up shop, hastened to France and at the age of forty-seven is having a glorious time.
ARMY CHAPLAIN IS SOME FAN
Father Munster Rides Sixty Mlles In France to Secure Equipment for Bail Game. To obtain baseball supplies for the soldiers in his brigade, the Rev.Fafher William Munster of Pittsburgh, Pa., chaplain and athletic director of an artillery regiment, rode 00 miles On a motorcycle at night recently. A divisional baseball championship was stated to be settled when Father Munster discovered that the truck containing the balls, bats and other, equipment was on the missing list division was going to a sector where it would be too busy for any baseball games for a while, Father Munster was determined that the championship should be settled. Without saying a word to any of the soldiers he jumped on the motorcycle and rode to a Knights of Columbus club 60 miles away, where he secured the equipment for the game. Before the war Father Munster war at St Mary’s of the Mount church, FittSDurgn.
Ell In the West
Within the middle West football area five former Yale players qre coaching—Fred Murphy at Northwestern, Alonzo Stagg aft Chicago, Doctor WHliams at Minnesota, Herman Olcott nt Great Lakes and Howard Jones at lowa. /
Cuba Race Season.
Horse racing at Havana will begin onThanksgiving day.
niiinnnrr niAi/rp Ma- ‘ < } M FALL OUT A small bottle of “Danderine” keeps hair thick, strong, beautiful. Giris! Try this! Doubles beauty of your hair in a few moments.* ■M Within ten minutes after an application of Danderine you can not 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 you 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 time. The effect is amazing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incomparable lustre, softness and luxuriance! > Get a small botfle of Knowlton’s Danderine for a few cepts at any drug store or toilet counter, and provg that your hairis as pretty and soft 4b any —that It has been neglected or injured by careless treatment—that’s all —you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of It if you win just-try a little Danferine.—Adv.
Conceit She —“Are you sure I am the first girl you ever loved?*’ He —“Why, of course. I’m still single, am I not?” Experiment has proved that every ton of coal burn.ed makes unfit for breathing 300,000 cubic-feet of air. He who thinks be never was a fool is a fool now. China is increasing telephone service. ’ •
You Are Dying By Acid When you have Heartburn, Gas, Bloat, and that Full Feeling after eating. TAKE ONE FATONIC > YOUR STOMACH S SAKE) Rids you of the Excess Acid and Overload and you will fairly feel the GAS driven out of your body—THE BLOAT GOES WITH IT. IT GIVES YOU REAL STOMACH COMFORT SfUe fiOc after you get it. Addreeo Eatonic Remedy Co., 1018 8. Wabash Are., Chicago, m.
Not Quite as Expected.
“Was I rude this afternoon?” a lit□e girl asked her mother. "I hope not my dear,” said the mother. Little Girl —Well, our teacher was examining us in poetry —“Casablanca,” and she asked why did the boy stand on the burning deck,.and T said because it was too hot for him to sit down; and she made me stand in the Corner.— Stray Stories, ft
Have a Clear Skin.
Make Cuticura Soap your every-day toilet soap and assist It now and then by touches of Cuticura Ointment to soften, soothe and heal. For free samples address “Cuticura, Dept X, Boston.” At druggists and by malt Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50.—Adv. Rice is the easiest of all foods to digest and roast veal the hardest Don’t believe all the good things you hear about yourself.
Grißnlated Eyelids, I iafemed by expoYour Druggist! or by mvfl For leek es the Eye free write h» Murtoe Eye Remedy Cel, Chicago.
■ ~ ■ ■ "" __ ■ •XT- ■. , . x iHlsllsair l I What Determines Meat and Live-Stock Prices? Some stock men still think that Swift & Company—and other big packers—can pay as little for live-stock as they wish. Some consumers are still led to believe that the packers can charge as much for dressed meat as they wish. This is not true. These prices are fixed by a'law of human nature as old as human nature itself—the law of supply and demand. When more people want meat than there is meat to be had, the scramble along the line to get it for them sends prices up. When there is more meat than there are people who want it, the scrgftnble-all along the line to get rid of it within a few days, while it is still fresh, sends prices down. When prices of meat go up, Swift & Company not only can pay the producer more, but has to pay him more, or some other packer will. Similarly, when prices recede all down the line Swift & Company cannot continue to pay the producer the same prices as before, and * still remain in the packing business. All the packer can do is to keep the expense * of turning stock into meat at a minimum, so that the consumer can get as much as possible for his money, and the producer as much as possible for his live-stock. Thanks to its splendid plants, modern methods, branch houses, car routes, fleet of refrigerator cars, experience and organization, 'Swift & Company is able to pay for live cattle 90 per cent of what it receives for beef and by-products, and to cover expense of production and distribution, as well as its profit (a small fraction of a cent per pound), out of the other 10 per cent > a Swift & Company, U. S. A. _—A—
It Worked.
“What I don’t understand is this,” said Mr. Jagsby, as he reached home in the wee sma’ hours. “I told Sam at the poker club to tell you I was not there and he said, "Boss, dey ain’t no use tryln’ to fool de missus, ’cause she done got de goods on you.’” “Oh. that’s easily explained,” answered Mrs. Jagsby. “When he started to say you were not there I told him you were sitting right in front of the telephone and I could see you.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castons
Very Little Change.
“It don’t ’pear to make much difference at our house whether the clock is turned back and the time made an hour later or not,” said Gap Johnson of Bumpus Ridge Ark. “There haint no perversfoii in nature or law for turning the stomachs of my fourteen children back an hour, and they begin yelling for their breakfast at the app*lnted time, regardless of the dock.” —Kansas City Star.
fßwery Woman •are —— : • ■" .. ■■■ ■ ■ r^t PI msi»” Cor. State *»a AJmm strata. CHJCACXMIt -— _.—- Stop Your Coughing wi ■■ W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 4S-1918. ■
