Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 February 1919 — Page 2
STOMACH UPSET? PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN AT ONCE ENDS SOURNESS, £AS. ACIDITY, - INDIGESTION. ... i ... . - ----• ----- ■ When meals upset yc a and you belch <us, acids and undigested food; When you hnve lumps of indigestion pain or aify distress tn stnrnnch you can jet relief instantly—No waiting! i A* soon as you eat a tablet of Pape’s Diflpepsin all the indigestion yin stop ß . Gases, acidity, -heartburn, flatulence and dyspepsia vanish. Pape’n DUtpepsln tablets cost very little at' drug stores. Adv.
The Spirit of 18.
-Is your father tn. my boy?’’ “No, sir; fathers in France. I'm In command while he's away.”—-Brown-ing’s.
Chronic Constipation is as dangerous as disagreeable. Garfield Tea Cures It Adv. Popple who blot out the past should destroy the blotter. His satanlc majesty will trust any man who Is good at making excuses. Weekly Health Talks The Many Mysteries of Nature BY L. W. BOWER,II DYou can take an onion seed and a pansy teed, and plant them aide by aide in the auhe spot of ground. In one case, you get an onion, with its peculiarly strong odor, and tn the other you get a flower of rare beauty. You can plant a poppy seed and get opium (a dangerous, habit-forming drug), or you can plant a rhubarb seed and get something that helps constipation. No scientist, living or dead, can explain these mysteries of Nature. Behind the invisible life germ in each seed is hidden the deep secret that nobody understands. Everything growing out of the ground seems intended for some use in establishing natural conditions. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. \., long since found out what is naturally best for women’s diseases. He learned it all through treating thousands of cases. The result of his studies was a medicine called Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This medicine is made of vegetable growths that jiatnre surely intended for backache, headache, weakening drains, bearing-down pains, periodical irregularities, pelvic inflammations, and for the niany disorders common to women in all ages of life. Dr. —Pierce's Favorite Prescription is made of lady’s slipper root, black cohosh root, uniBorn root, blue cohosh root and Oregon grape root. Women who take this standard remedy know that in Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription they are getting a safe woman’s tonic so good that druggists everywhere sell it. Favorite Prescription should have the full confidence of every’ woman in America because it contains no alcohol and no narcotic. Dr. -d’ierce knew, when he first made this standard medicine, that whisky and morphine.are injurious. and so he has always kept them out of his remedies. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg. of tablets.
rWIPI I Get Dodd s for kidney ills I * •—prompt relief or money back. ■ ■ on box with 3 D’» in name, B S shown here. All druggists. DON’T KILL YOUR CATTLE BY DRENCHING Salts and oil are DANGEROUS. Few cattle die of Constipation; many of PARALYSIS of the bowels. Give LAXOTONIC AXifeSiw dry on the tongue. Positively prevents and overcomes both. $ ” Kxceiient for loss of appetite. XW AT OUR DEALERS or Postpaid 50 Cents. Send for price i.st of medicines. Consult DR. DAVID ROBERTS reformation free. Get arm copy of ‘lbe Ce«ta foectafis'" " iih full Information on Itertloa la Can. ML MYIO ROBERTS YET. CO, 100 Srairf »«.. Wartesta, W!«. COME TO THE SHORTHORN CONGRESS AT CHICAGO. ILUareß. 18, 10, 20 --W- ■ fy"** .~TT tataraattaul Sto* Pavlljaa SS,OOO in CASH PRIZES 306 Registered Shorthorn* |S*> if ; * n the Show and All Wt.'■ to be Sold in the Auction The .'-b .rihorr. .s the iarmFHsSfSKSSJj <?• 1 er s breed Beef and ui:.a N *<4 the t u.a iu produce IBggSgg?' sis 3 * both. COMH and BRING tlEWffiKja?' yucr ne:.-l>N r Lcxuc over fjSßafceW-MW it a -■a / .• .;.'. . - • ■ a. . :a.urJ ed with the breeders. American onurUJora Breeder*' Association. Chicago ’-' ' ' Why Lose Itchint; I Your Hair Cuticuraj ■
Argument of Who Say, "United States Are,” Instead of “Is"
their enemies, giving them aid and coinfort. No. person shall be convicted pf treason unless on the testimony <if two witnesses to the same overt act. or on confession in open court." lij Article XXVIII of the treaty with Great Britain of November 19, ; I'9l. siffned bv ,Tohn Jav. chief justice of flic I nited States, and approved bv Washington, after a reference to the I nited States, is the folt lowing: -' T ■ .‘ \ ~ , - ■ / ... "With the advice and coii.-ent of their >enate." (I reaties and Conventions, 17 7«‘»-ISS7, p. 393.) Article IX of the treaty of 1814 with Great Britain, signed by John Quincy Adariis, Henry Clay and Albert Gallatin, begins: “The United States of America engage to put an end, immediately after the ratification of tfie present treaty, to hostilities with all the tribes or nations of Indians with whbm they may be at war, etc. (Same- volj ume r p.404,V f ± ———- --• ' . In *tht> treaty with Great Britain of 1862. signed by William. 11. Seward and approved by Abraham Lincoln, is.the. following: “On the pflri of the I nited States and in that court which shall ait within their territories." (Same volume, p. 465.) - ■ - Sm h in-I;in<-c- omld he multiplied without number, hut these are i BitftieienU’ttr show that Piesident W ilson is following precedent. The,nature of our government is to be determined by the i Constitution as amended and expounded and not by tjie use of "it” or “they.” -
How Much Indemnity Can Germany Pay? About Three Billions a Year?
How much indemnity can Germany pay? This- is one important question before the conference that will fix Hie terms of indemnity, because the amount which she owes is so large as to be practically unlimited. ——-L.T ' I’he mere property damage is one of the small items, for as a matter of equitv she should reimburse the world not only for the property destroyed but also for the suspension of industry, the loss of life, the sufferings of the Survivors and the war costs. Probably these items would add up to notdess than $;150.000,000.000. which is 50 per cent in excess of the entire wealth of the German people, personal and real, tangible and As it-is impossible for her within any reasonable time to pay what she owes, the demands of our allies will doubtless be limited merely by her physical ability to |iay. What we wish to learn is the breaking point of her finances. To impose upon her any less than the last dollar she can pay is an injustice to the peaceful civilized peoples whom she has destroyed as far as she could; and on the other hand to require of her too large an annual payment would defeat our own purposes in that it would break down her industries and render her a bankrupt nation from whom we could not collect. , ; - ■ ' ; • ' : - L j ■. In the nature of things we cannot have both reparation and punishment. if bv the latter is meant any form of boycott. We. must choose, the one ami forego the other. Therefore,..as-a meaH.S: of collecting the damages from Gernia’f)'. our allies will iuid it necessary to again adnnb her to the world's commerce. Detailed figuring, which need not be set forth here, warrants the conclusion that an indemnity of about $2,700,000,000 per annum can be collected from the German nation without breaking down its industries; and this amount can be gradually increased within, say, a five-year period to about $3,5<)0.00(>.0i'() per annum. To attempt to collect more would probablv defeat our own purpose, and to collect any less would be an injustice to ourselves and our allies. „
Great War Has Taught Us How to Save More Lives Than It Has Cost
By MAJOR G. A. STEWART,
The war has taught us how to save more lives than the war has cost. The countless improvements of practice, both in medicine and surgery, made in this war have advanced our science half a century in four years. In. the value and technique of “chlorination” —or the use of some combination of chlorine for the destruction of malignant germs ' vh gm- r:.<‘ Lj - been Ivarne4 :is ne\<r longer ahy good excuse for persistence of pus. 8 t The desekqmient of the ’•Carrel-Dakin - ’ method of treatmg all manner of infected wounds by periodic irrigation with Dakin fluid (a nonI caustic hypochlorite) marked' an extraordinary . = Aud Jhthis ! the method is as important as the fluid. ' It is being taught to surgeons, I the world over. , • : - Out of 45. patients in the War ..Demonstration hospital suffering from empvema we returned 35 to front. Empyema is pus’in the chest cavity It often follows pneumonia, and hitherto has been highly fatal. There has been an unusual amount of empyema in New York this year of a very serious type. Hut the death rate has been, lessened by the modern treatment. 1 Other wonderful' advances have been made; for example, in X-ray tfork; in knowledge of the gas bacillus which causes a form of gangrene, in "the -scran} treatment for prevention or cure of such diseases as typhoid fever, lockjaw, pneumonia, meningitis,'etc. ' The«i lessons will save far more 5 lives in the long run than the war has coat. € . d ; _
By J. M. DICKINSON,
President Wilson has been criticized for referring to the UnitecLStates as-ythey,” the idea being that in this country there ,isl an irreconcilable conflict, between people who think of th<‘ United States as "is” and people who think of it as "are.” This criticism of the president puts him in the company of very disi mginshed.-Federalists. g. Svtion 111 of Article 111 of the Constitution of the United States is as follows: “Treason- against the United States shall consist onlv in lowing war against them <>r in adhering to
By PAUL CLAY.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
Former Secretary of War
’, Statistician
Rockefeller Institute
DANDRUFF HIKES HAIR FALL OUT A small bottle of ‘‘Danderine” keeps hair IbtoVsTronST" beautiful,. Girls! Try this! Doubles beauty of your hair in a few .. moments.
1 t - ■MWBSb
Within ten minutes after an appllcation 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 bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine for a few cents at any drug store or toilet counter, and prove that yourhairisas pretty and. soft as -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 will just try a little Danderine.—Adv.
French Sugar Factories Hit.
Prior to the war there were 206 sugar factories in France producing 700,000 to 800,000 tons annually. Of these only about sixty factories, making 150,000 to 200.000 tons of sugar, are outside the invaded regions.
Keep your liver active, your bowels clean by taking Dr, Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets and you’U keep healthy, wealthy and wise. Adv.
She Was Prepared.
A Saco woman steeled herself against tlie time when the order came to set the..clock hack. “They can’t fool me,” she said, “I never set mine ahead.”
Eighty proprietors of soda wilt er Ybuntains in New York were fined recently for serving drinks in dirty glasses.
DOCTOR URGED AN OPERATION Instead I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Was Cured. Baltimore, Md.—“ Nearly four years I suffered from organic troubles, ner- __ ‘ vousness and heaaaches and every P month would have to -LlJv ijWfcS stajf in bed most of ' OIC th® time. Treatments would relieve me for a time but m y doctor wa3 jsS-AXilrl wa Y 3 urging me to an operation. / My sister asked me try Lydia E. Pink- - h a m ’ s Vegetable < \ y Compound before X w/ consenting to sn. (/\ \ ' ff/ /operation. I took W I U / five bottles of it and "S / it has completely 'V 4 cured me and my work is a pleasure. I tell all my friends who have any trouble of this kind what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ComSjund has dope for me.’ —Nellie B. Hitting ham, 609 Calverton Rd., Baltimore, Md. It is only natural for any woman to dread the thought of an operation. So many women have been restored to health by this famous remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, after an operation has been advised that it will pay any woman who suffers from such ailments to consider trying it before submitting to such a trying ordeat For Coughs and Colds take i tried and tested remedy—-oae that acts promptly and effectively and contains BO opiates. You get that remedy by asking for PISO’S
ARKANSAS THOMAS ’SCATS
X x , "A woman doesn't mints showing the white 11 feather if white feathers happen (<> be fashionable. VVe don't know why it is, but a man would rather hear you roast his enemies than hear you praise his friends. *i — 1 ' _7— — j You wouldn’t get many lines ini your if your troubles didn’t worry you any more than your troubles worry your friends. When you get. in bad don’t waste any time trying to explain how It happened. People have already drawn their bwn conclusions. . . If a man takes up physical culture he is worried about his health. But if a woman takes it up, she wants to reduce her circumference or increase it. It may not be of much interest to anybody, but Judge “Fatty” Rawson is willing to back his rheumatism against all the Weather forecasters in the country. A girl can wear a dog collar around her neck and nothing on her chest and get away with It. But if a man tried ft he would get free board in the foolish house. The reason why a woman would rather cook a meal herself and eat at home than dress up and eat at a downtown case is because a small boy would rather stay at home and do the chores than go to a circus.
SHAKESPEARE REVISED
All the world’s a film. Sweet are the uses of advertising. Discretion is the better part of Viila. It is a wise stock that knows its own par. She sat like Pankhurst on a monument. The course of true peace never did run smooth'. EnglandElbound in with the triumphant she. Baseball acquaints a man with strange f'ed. fellows. There was never yet philosopher that could endure watchful waiting patiently. For in my youth I never did apply hot and rebellious grape juice in my blood. —Columbia (S. C.) State.
AROUND THE WORLD
Americans are the greatest water drinkers in the world. The International Fire Fighters’ union, with its 132 locals, has a total membership of over 12,000. * The German socialist program provides for state monopolization of all banks and industries of any importance. The finest variety of asbestos is known as amianthus, and the most beautiful specimens of this come from Tarantasee, in Savoy. For 26 years before the outbreak of the great war the Germans imported vast- <pian ttti es~;brijTack 3valnuFt imber from the United States. Money grants to civilians and former soldiers, also unemployed, owing to peace, are to be provided in Great Britain. These grants will run for 13 weeks for civilians and 26 weeks for discharged soldiers.
STRAY PLANTS
In every contest of life, remember the shell must fit the gun. One may float proudly on the tide of success—only to be thrown on the shore along with 'driftwood, wreckage and rotten fish. , we to find a man with nothing to complain of In this beautiful world, how- 9 * we’d all wonder what was the matter with him. The Boche in front of the Sammies surely demonstrated that the race is not always to the swift, but often to him who has the most urgent need to go.
QUIET THOUGHTS
A rolling gait gathers three men. The curfew tolls the knell of parting payAll tip and no pay makes Jack a good hatboy. It’s a long street that Isn’t being repaired somewhere. t But dear as is thy form to me, still dearer is thy supper. u At the theater, a girl by your Side Mi worth two on-the stage. ___"i
Don’t Go From Bad to Worse! * Are you always weak, miserable. gad half-sick? Then it’s time you found out what is wrong. Kidney weakness causes much suffering from backache, lameness, • stiffness and rheuifiatic pains, and if neglected, brings danger of serious troubles—dropsy, gravel and Blight's disease. Don’t delay. Use Doan's Kidnev Pills. They have helped thousands and should help you. An lowa Case Mrß - J ’ Severine, practical nurse, 1610 Seventh Ave., Council Bluffs, la., says: “I lu have used Doan’s Kid. £ ’ ney Pills for a. lame Sl weak back and / symptoms of disV I ordered kidneys and tJ. I they have given me 0J! I most excellent relief Wi’ m and the benefit has ■H 1 lasted. I advise anyW one suffering from -4LJI I, kidney disorders to use Doan’s Kidney * Pills.” Gat Dean’s at Any Store, 60c a Bos DOAN’S FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
Yes, Why
Customer —“Wilt this bathing suit shrink if it gets wet?” Clerk—“lt might; but why get it wet?”
GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER Has beep used for all ailments that are caused by a disordered stomach and inactive liver, such as sick headache, constipation, sour stomach, nervous indigestion, fermentation of food, palpitation the heart caused by gases in the stomach. August Flower is a gentle laxative, regulates digestion both in stomach and intestines, cleans and sweetens the stomach and alimentary canal, stimulates, the liver to secrete the bile and imparities from the blood. Sold in all civilized, countries, Give it a trial.—Adv. A man’s head is like his pocketbook. It’s not the outside appearance, but what It contains that counts. For Constipation, Biliousness, Liver and Kidney .troubles, take Garfield Tea. Adv. 1 In the dark lexicon of timidity there Is no such word as “succeed.” It is with life as with men;.we make friends by being a friend.
S Start Your Garden Right Send for Maule’s NF Seed Book. 176 f Wiff v pages of most r j&jR ,j\ SfW helpful garden / information. / Sf TBeat the high J/ cost of living ® with a Maule gar- . den. Maule’s ■T’, kJ Seeds started thousands f W I of new gardens last year—big crops M £2 were produced. ■■ H MAULE SEED BOOK M M 176 Pages of Practical p Information a aV fjaZt ■■■ Rjl Learn what, when, and how to plant M M and prepare your ground for best re- E ■■ suits. Paper scarcity has limited our WR M 1919 issue. Send for your copy today. ■■ WM. HENRY MAULE, INC. Bl |U| 2148 Arch Street Philadelphia figl Maule’t Seeds Mean Productive Cardeni
TILTING TABLE FRAME COMPLETE ~ WITH SAW 24 $23 - 90 26 24,90 JKL 28 25 - 90 26.90 SAWS 24 inch $5.40 26 “ 6.40 “ 7 - 40 30 44 8-40 MANDRELS $4.00 AND U». POND ICE SAWS $4.00 AND UP J AMERICAN SAW A TOOL WORKS I4th ST. A WESTERN AVE., CH I CABO A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. 50c. and tl.Wat Druggists. Texa^nds^MOto 40,C00 acres, J 1.05 toll. 40; one-tenth cash, balance 40 years 656. Mexico lands, 1,000 to AGENTS WANTED! Tremendous Sellers—loos6 Profltl Beautifully Illustrated Life of Theodore Roosevelt: Intimate, personal, complete in one volume. Also 600 page Pictorial War History ■2.00. 25c for postage brings both outfits. White House Supply Co., 168 No. Michigan BlvtL. Chicago ft a MYO Watsdn E.Colenian.WashPATENTS - A /'rUFFC 1 to sell HISTORY Alf hlll S and “Life of Roosevelt.” 100* profitrtunniu weekly for yoor spare tlm& FLYNN PUBLISHING CO.. 6 So. Wabash, Chicago Many Big Bargains or without stock, tools and crops on ertey terms. Write tor Perry’s Bargain Sheet. PERRY FARM AGENCY. Canajoharie, N. Y FAQV MfINFY mad® selling War History E.A3I FIUHLI fn a Nutshell: sells on s‘ght Set 25c. North Studios. 603 Fifth Avenue, Nev loth » ■ ■ MY WOODEN TOOTH CXXAMNKS will remove tartar hapeatlJki. Representatives wanted. Ben F. Rich, IUI Liberty tkreel, N. Y.
