Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 132, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 June 1919 — Page 2

Back Lame and Achy ? There’s little peace when your kid•neye are weak and while at first there may be nothing more serious than dull backache, sharp, subbing pains, headaches, dizzy spells and kidney irregularities, you must act quickly to avoid the more serious trouble, dropsy, gravel, heart disease. Bright’s disease. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills, the remedy that is so warmly recommended everywhere by grateful users.' An Illinois Case E. H. Hal ber t. _ prop, of barber ah op, W. Bridgeport St.. JE, J ’ White Hall. 111., says: "I was down and out from kidney trouble, gr/ tF-Jf My nerves vtere eliMmaU unstrung and I was 1 weak, f had to-- give pg "H. up work and take to X«kMT , my bed 1 remained - there two wd® hardly able to move । Ih/itaf hand or foot. I had Hgnj night sweats and W? rR lost flesh. Nothing sar* II AA helped me until I ~ took Doan's Kidney Pills. It wasn't long before Doan ■ put mv kidneys in good shape and 1 was back at work again, in good health." Gat Doan’s at Any Store, 00c a e J DOAN’S “p’/HV FOSTER-MILBURN CO. BUFFALO. N. Y. Stop Losing Calves You can Stamp Abortion Ont of YOUR HERD and Keep It Out &By the use of DR. DAVID ROBERTS’ “Anti-Abortion” Small Expense Easily Applied. Sure Results. Used successfully for 30 years. I Consult Db. DAVID ROBERTS about all animal ailments. Information free. Send for EREE VETERINARY co. IM Grind Are. Waukesha. Wise.

Her Declaration.

, Harry—l wonder if Kate is really f«nd of me? Dick —I know she is; heard her say eo. Harry—You don’t mean it. Dick —I do. though. Well, she didn’t Say so in so many words, but she intimated as much. She said that she loved even the meanest of God’s creations. Old boy, let me congratulate you—Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph.

If a man is right he doesn’t have to pet mad about it.

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Public Action Must Now Force Right Handling of Private Timberlands

ber communities, and the impoverishment of many regions \v beetion of the cotmtry can afford to have a large part of its land an unproductive waste, with the loss of taxable values, of industries and o population that would be supported if these lands were productive, ro section can afford to be dependent for its supplies of wood products on another section from one to three thousand miles away. The leaders of the southern pine industry say that the original supplies of pine in the South will be exhausted in ten years, and that within five to seven vears more than three thousand mills will go out of existence. Alreadv there is an acute problem of supplies for paper mills and for other industries in the East which use specialized material. Pacific coast timber is entering the eastern markets. This means that the price of homegrown timber has risen to a point making it possible to ship timber 3,000 miles in competition with it, * t - Timber land owners have not recognized an obligation to proven their properties from becoming a source of injury to the community. Even in organized fire protection the chief effort is confined to the stands of merchantable timber. The character of the forest problem is such as to require the participation and direction of the public. W e are not going to meet the situation until the public takes hold of it. There should be compulsory fire protection of cut-over lands as well as standing timber. The public should prohibit destructive methods of cutting that injure the community and the public at large. At the same time there should be recognized a public obligation not to throw the entire burden on private owners through merely restrictive measures, but liberal action to aid owners in introducing forestry should be taken. The public should provide a sane system of taxation; it should co-operate in such problems as overproduction of lumber, land classification, colonization, problems of labor, technical questions relating to methods of practice, and other economic, industrial and technical matters involved in a constructive program of forestry.

Sporting Goods Tax Falls Hardest on the Boy Athletes of the Nation

Last year sporting goods either escaped taxation .entirely or were taxed on certain articles 3 per cent This year all sporting goods are taxed 10 per cent. Other “luxuries” or “semi-luxuries” are taxed 2, ?or 5 per cent—jewelry 3, chewing gum 2, cosmetics 3, and so on. I don’t care how much they tax sporting goods, but I make a big distinction between sporting goods and athletic goods. a v ja The committee which fixed the tax on sporting goods had the idea that they were taxing the major leagues and “rich sportsmen.’ The fact is that all the professional ball clubs, in the United States buy less than one-half of .1 per cent of the sporting goods manufactured (and that almost' at cost for advertising purposes), while over 40 per cent (some sav 70) are bought by boys under eighteen years of age. The tax falls hardest upon the boy athletes. You know how important it is to develop the boy athletes in this country. Congress itself has said it wanted to encourage them, and then by a boneheaded blunder soaks them with a 10 per cent tax meant to hit others. The tax does not hit the manufacturer, as he passes it on. The manufacturer will simply add the tax and collect it when the goods are delivered. I don’t care how much they tax sporting £>ods. Anyone who can afford to buv a SIOO gun or SSO fishing rod or a S4O pair of wading boots ought to be ‘taxed, but the kids can’t afford it. Every article the kids use in baseball, football, tennis, basket ball or any other game is taxed. My idea is that athletic goods ought to be distinguished from sporting goods and exempted from taxation to encourage the development of young athletes.

Japan Insists Upon the Principle of Racial Equality With Her Allies

By KIROKI HAYASHI

There is no doubt that Japan has been discriminated against racially by western nations, and she is still suffering this indignity and injustice. In America and the British colonies the common people of Japan are excluded by law. Those few that are peripitted to live in these countries have to submit to vexing restrictions in regard to’land, and therefore are deprived of full liberty in regard to natural development and prosperity. This is quite contrary .to the idea of the league of nations as well as against the dictates of justice and humanity; The Anglo-Saxons are proud to proclaim that they have been fighting for liberty, and especially for the rights and liberties of the small nations. Japan will hold them to this profession. > t--— — .... Are the leaders in the formation of the league of nations prepared to banish all discrimination against the Japanese race and assure our people the same liberties they thchiselves now enjoy? t .,„ , Unless the league of nations guarantees to every race full freedom for the natural development of its talents and opportunities it becomes no more thaa a trust for the larger hations to guarantee their own superiority and present advantageous position; in other words, it becomes a pretext for the retention of unfair monopoly, if there be any monopoly that can be fair. Japan feels seriously bound to call the attention of the allies to the above point as of vital importance tojber. It is a principle for which Japati must stand up at all hazards." Japan’s right to racial equality is still ignored. Will the league continue this injustice?

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, INT>.

By HENRY S. GRAVES

The time has come for constructive public action that will bring about a right handling of our private timber lands. The practice of forestry on private timber lauds is entirely possible, when coupled with a liberal policy of public co-operation and assistance. Such public help should be provided and forestry be made mandatory. Our country is progressively destroying its forests. ’Pho oonscqiiences are very“far-reaching. exhaustion of the forest is followed by the closing of industries. the steady increase of waste lands, the abandonment of farms that depend for their market on the lum-

By HUGH FULLERTON

U. S Fore«t«r

Kariogijuku University

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

Don’t tell all you know, keep a little for seed. Whatsoever a man reaps someone rhust have planted. —— - M All things come quicker jto the man who- meets them half-way. Fools often rush in where wise men would be afraid of the police. A little masculine remorse often goes a long way with a woman. It’s the income tacks that render the autolst’s repair kit indispensable. The stars on an officer’s coat often cause a girl to become a star-gazer. The man who can refrain from repeating the cute things his first baby says is a wonder. One woman always pays more attention to what another woman has on than to what she says. Diplomacy is the art of making others believe that you really don’t want something that you can’t get. A girl may not be able to hit the side of a barn with a brick, but she can always throw kisses straight. A man will give up $1 for a 50.-cent article he wants, and a womati will give up 4(1 cents for a 50-cent article she doesn’t want. —Chicago Daily News.

REFLECTIONS

Work is the acid test of ambition. Some people mistake indolence for contentment. There is such a thing as hard luck, but it isn’t nearly as common as some people imagine. There’s one good point about the high cost of living—it keeps a -man from worrying about how to invest his surplus cash. The trouble with most gardens is not with the seeds or the rose bushes —it’s with the gardeners who won’t dig hard enough.

COME TO THINK OF IT

Many a fireless cooker ends by being fired. ■ The name of Petticoat lane is doomed to become obsolete. Give the devil his dues, but insist on 10 per cent off for cash. Of some smqkers it can be said that more they fume the less they fret. A man doesn’t always have to take a clean shave to tell a barefaced tale. Some men would talk less in their sleep if they had the chance to talk more while awake. Many a cowpuncher has met his death through too rapid work in western triggeromeiry. ;J* ..#• . .... How can any man make a success InMife when he forgets how many trumps have'been played? What has becbme bf the old-fashion-ed man who used to take a pardonable pride in seeing his red underline. —Cartoons Magazine.

WITH THE SAGES

How soon men and events are forgotten! Each generation Jives in a different world. Let the child’s first lesson be obedience, and the second may be what thou wilt. —Fuller. j ■ Obstinacy and heat in argument are surest proofs of folly. Is there anything so stubborn, obstinate, disdainful, contemplative, grave, or serious, as an ass? —Montaigne. I pity the man who can travel from Dan to Beersheba, and cry, ’tis ail barren —and so it is, and so is all the world to him who will not cultivate the fruits it offers. —Sterne. Some men are bom old, and some never seem old. If we keep well and cheerful we are always young, and at last die in youth, even when years would count us old. —Tryon Edwards. Opinions are stronger than armies —ls they are founded in truth and Justice, they will, in the end, prevail against the bayonets of infantry, the fire of artillery, and charges of cavalry.—Lord Palmerston. x

STARS AND STRIPES.

Fine feathers are frequently found on coarse birds. Pomposity is the signboard of shortweight intellect. Some fellojws seem to be afraid «t outdoing the ancestral pace. The world seldom has any appreciation for the man who butts in.

Fish Day.

Re —By jove, Betty, you look nice enough to eat. She —Well, don’t forget this is Friday.—Boston Transcript

What is Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, C. Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance.-* Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-Good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and DecChildren —Experience against Experiment. Genuine Castoria always bears thesignatureof

Tuition Will Be Free.

“She says she’s going to give singing lessons.” '“She’d have to. Jiobody’d ever pay her for them.”

Authorities differ as to whether a poker room should be classed as an ante room or drawing room. There i,s nothing more Idiotic than the smile of a pretty girl—when directed toward some other fellow.

when buying aspirin _ Al-WS SAY "BAYER” Ask for “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” in a Bayer package—marked with “Bayer Cross.”

Don’t buy Aspirin tablets in a pill box. Insist on getting the Bayer package with the safety “Bayer Cross” on both package and on tablets. No other way! You must say “Bayer.” Never ask for merely Aspirin tablets. The name ’•Bayer” means you are getting the genuine “Bayer Tablets es Aspirin,” proven safe by millions of people. Beware of counterfeits! Only recently a Brooklyn manufacturer was sent to the penitentiary for flooding the country with talcum powder tablets, which he claimed to be Aspirin.

Danger in Abbreviation.

Even the school nurse has her fun. In a talk before the central philanthropic council the other day. Miss Helen R. Stewart of the board of health told of one little boy who, after he had been examined by the nurse, went to the teacher in tears, complaining that the nurse called him names. When the teacher expressed her surprise,. the boy sought to prove his case by handing her the card the nurse had given to him as her record of the examination. “Look at that!” he cried. “Poor nut,” read the card. “Poor nutrition,” explained the teacher, finally sending the child away with a better opinion of the nurse. — Dallas News.

Von Tirpitz a Pauper.

The Tribune de Geneve is informed that Grand Admiral von Tirpitz is staying at Wildegg. Switzerland, as the guest of Lieut.-Colonel Wille, son of the former commander-in-chief of the Swiss army. Tirpitz has lost all his fortune. His son is a clerk in a bank at Zurich, and his daughter is a governess in a Zurich family. ■= To avoid paying the German war tax of 1913 Tirpitz invested his money in Italian securities, with the result that he is now penniless. What a patriot I

Economy in Postum Boil Postum as long as you please, and you will extract only healthful goodness. You’ll get no caffeine — the coffee-drug—for there’s none in Postum. The Original POSTUM CEREAL in fact, should be boiled fully 15 minutes, and if desired the pot can be kept going from meal to meal, adding more Postum and water for the new service. Postum is the favorite of large numbers ©f farmer coffee-drinkers and can be secured from grocers everywhere. - Two Sizes, usually sold at 15c and 25c. JI Delicious, Invigorating and Healthful Drink “There’s a Reason”

Proving It.

Pussyfooting is .a calamity.” "I suppose it is something of a catostrophe.”

Rely On Cuticura For Skin Troubles All druggists; Soap 25, Ot ntment 254 50, Talcum 25. Sample each free Dept. B, Boston. When a man begins to discuss matrimony with a widow the result is usually a tie.

. In the Bayer package are proper directions and the dose for Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal-Colds, Neuritis and pain generally. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” American made and owned, are sold in vest pocket boxes of 12 tablets, which cost only a few cents, also in bottles of 24 and bottles of JOO—also capsules. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacldester of Salicylicacid.

Information Needs Confirmation.

“Old Dorsey Dudgeon prides himself on knowing where the conflagration is as soon as he hears the firebell ring.” related the landlord of the Petunia tavern. “By the time half a dozen whangs have changed he has scrabbled into a garment or two and is out on his front porch, hollering to the people running by just where he knows the fire is.” “He should be of considerable assistance to the volunteer firemen and others in sending them in the proper direction,” commented the interested guest. “Eh-yah! He would be if he didn’t nine times out of ten know it wrong.” Kansas City Star.

Glossing Over the Facts.

"Pa, what is a euphemism?” “I’ll have to explain that by giving you an example, son.” “Yes, pa.? “The dictionary says a euphemism is ‘a figure of speech by which a word or phrase more agreeable or less offensive is substituted for one more accurately expressive of what is meant? as in the case of the society reporter who states that a widow who has been married three or four times is ‘led to the altar’ by a wealthy old codger who never had the slightest notion of getting married until he faced the preacher.” —Birmingham Age-Herald.