Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 134, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 June 1920 — Page 2

MINTING AND DIZZY SPELLS ■ Um Canoe of «uch Symptoms ; -A. ■ - sMaMaMMBMaaaMaaHNtoMb » Syracuse, N. Y.-’’Wh«n I com* menced the Change of Life I was poorly, milllimilinil'imilll ffll “° *PPetitean<s had fainting spells. llUiEhßa9ui 1 suffered for two or y ears s AM fore I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s T& Sr Vegetable Com~yAJWl pound and the Liver ■ml Pills which I saw adU 1 vertised in the ■U papers and in y .:r ■ little books. 1 took ■ about tw. s ■of your Vegetable Compound and found it a wonderful remedy. I commenced to pick up at once and my suffering was relieved. I have told others about your medicine and know of some who have taken it. lam glad to help others all I can.”— Mrs. El Dxming,4B7 W. Lafayette A AB NT ar Ave., oyIACUBe, Fi. *• While Change of Life is a moot critical period of a woman’s existence, the annoying symptoms which accompany it may bo controlled, and nornml health restored by the timely use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Moreover this reliable remedy contains no narcotics or harmful drugs and owes its efficiency to the medicinal extractives of the native roots and horte which it contains.

His Prominent Characteristic.

"Yon must have seen some trait in me to admire,” said Mr. Meekton, “or you wouldn't have married me." “I did," replied his wife; “your sublime nerve in wanting to be my husband."—Pearson’s Weekly.

ASPIRIN INTRODUCED BY “BAYER” IN 1900

Look for name “Bayer” on the tablets, then you need never worry. If you want the true, world-famous Aspirin, as prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years, you must ask for “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." The “Bayer Cross" Is stamped on each tablet and appears on each package for your protection against imitations. In each package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” are safe and proper directions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia. Toothache, Earache. Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for Pain In general. Handy tin boxes containing 12 tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of SalicyUcadd. —Adv.

Now when a man tells you he Is dry as fish what are you going to tell him to vake?

BRACE UP I The man or woman with weak kidneys is half erippled. A lame, stiff back, with its eonatapt, dull ache and sharp, shooting twinges, makes the simplest task a burden. Headaches, dixxy spells, urinary disorders and an “all worn out feeling are daily sources of distress. Don’t neglect kidney weakness and risk gravel, dropsy or Bright's disease. Get a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills. They have helped other people the world over. Ask your neighbor! An Illinois Cate S- -r Mrs John Hicks, 321 S. Thirteenth . Mt. Vernon, lU-. says: “I had AW? a severe case of , kidney trouble. I used to be so disTri «y 1 would often DWoTj . aft \ topple over. My back ached and Pa: ne d al! the WF-65 time and there wae a heavy, dragging feeling through my hips 1 and loins. Headaches were a lot of trouble and my kidneys acted too often. I used two boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills and they cured me.” GotOsabhat AayStwretdOeaßcu DOAN’S POSTER.MILBURN CO. BUFFALO. N. Y.

After you eat —always use FATONIC EMI I ~| rOMAfr-ShSKD one or two tablets—eat like candy. InstantlyrelievesH eartburn. Bloated Iba many miaenea caused by Acid-Stomach EATONIC is the beetremedy.it takes the harmful adds and gases right out of the body and, of course, you get weH. Tons of thousands wonderfully benefited. Guaranteed to safasfyor money refunded by your gist Coat a trifle. Please try Itl HtM9 Wmsssss Oaess. CSS. s >ii -rr rj n —~ r gygW^ginjyjß l ß«w- < 167 Acres Dark Loam Soil 1>« under cultivation: balance See pasture: . miles from good village, high school and .Ji level; some fruit; St acres —uL, M .ares meadow; good >-room house, 'gambrel roof bam MxTS; plenty of other hXIMf equipped with all kind* of stock if desired. Price IIt.SOS. with a

GREAT POSSIBILITIES AT PRINCETON

After final experiments and “shake ups" Doctor Spaeth, Princeton’s rowing director has brought together an eight that shows-great possibilities. They are: Stroke, Bob Campbell, No. 7 Brigham, No. 6 Creswell, No. 5 Milne, No. 4 Cooke, No. 3 Page, No. 2 Acting Capt. Terry, Bow McAlpin. Our photograph shows the new Princeton Varsity crew on the lake.

BALK ASSISTED SUM SALLEE IN HOT GAME

Pitcher’s Accident Actually Helped Him to Win. When Runner Moved From Second to /Third Centerflelder Roush Moved Back and Wae Nicely Placed — ” to Get Felsch'a Fly. Commenting on the Incident of Harry Sallee’s balk in the second world’s series game one of the commentators makes some interesting conclusions, as —— “Sallee started to pitch and his foot hung In some manner, which caused him to lose his balance. He stumbled forward with the motion of pitching, but did not deliver the ball, which made a plain balk, and Umpire Billy Evans behind the plate ordered Weaver to stroll to third from his seat on second base. “On the face of the returns Sallee had gotten himself Into a tight corner, but the balk probably saved the day for him. When Weaver went to third Roush played 30 or 40 feet deeper in center for Felach than he played when

Slim Sallee.

Weaver was on second. The reason was that he knew he could not throw out Weaver at the plate on a single to center when Weaver was on third, but he had a chance to do so whep Weaver was on second. “Frisch hit a terrific line fly smack over Roush’s head. Roush ran like a deer for the center field fence, and when about ten feet from there he turned, threw up his hands and grabbed the ball out of the air as it was sailing past his dome. He did not have an inch to spare in speed or distance, and if he had not been playing deeper with Weaver on third than he would have played with Weaver on second, he would never have made the catch. Weaver would have scored and Frisch would have had a two or three-base hit A more interesting point never arose in a world’s series game."

PLAYERS DIP IN OIL

Ed Klepfer, former Cleveland pitcher, is added to the list of former players who have dipped Into oil He has joined the forces of a Pennsylvania concern which has sent him to Shreveport to look after its interests in the Louisiana field. Other ball players in oil who make their headquarters in Shreveport are Poll Perritt, Bob Harmon, Ira Thomas, Cyril Slapnicka, Mike Massey, John Gansel and Ennis Oakes. Mike Malloy, the former scoot for the Chicago Cubs, also has embarked in the oil game and pi*"* to soon join the Shreveport colony. .. . ’

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

IN TERESTING SPORT PRRAGRAPHS

Pehn has lost Elmer Smith, its fast quarter-miler. He has left college. * * • A complete American rifle and pistol team wlUcOmpeteinthe Olympic games. • a • Judge Ira W. Jayne has been made chairman of the Olympic committee of Michigan. • • • America’s hockey team which is to compete in the Olympic games has arrived in Antwerp. • • • The Horse Review futurity for foals of 1920, closed with 917 entries, a gain of 13 over last year. • • • Heglar, raced lajt season with little success by Pop Geers, Is to be out this season as a member of Tommy Berry’s outfit • • • Even a good old sportsman like Sir Thomas Lipton may grow weary of finding his yachting challenges so frequently becalmed. • • • Pete Herman, the bantam champlpn, offers to meet Jimmy Wilde at 118 pounds ringside, or-Johnny Kllbane at 124 pounds ringside. • • • Carpentier’s press agent Is not very good at that. He hasn’t said that Georges licked the town bully at the tender at of thirteen. • • • Lee Tide, by Lee Axworthy out of Emily Ellen, is touted as one of the great two-year-olds of the season. Lee Tide is the property of David Look. • • • The first contests -for the Wightman tennis cup for women have been postponed to 1921 because of the Inability of European clubs to send teams this year. • • • Olympia fields is out with a bld of $2,000 for a match between the /British players and James Barnes of St Louis, western open champion, and Walter Hagen of Detroit, national open titleholder. The club would stage the event as an aftermatch of the western open tournament in August

TWO ODD ONE-BALL RECORDS

First Ball Ed Walsh Pitched tn Game Crawford Knocked Over Fence for Home Run. Here are two records recalled by a baseball statistician some time ago: In a game between Chicago and Detroit years ago, with the bases filled and Sam Crawford at bat, Ed Walsh was sent to the mound. He pitched one ball and “Wahoo Sam” slammed

Sam Crawford.

It over the fence for a home run. Four rims scored off a pitcher on one pitched ball is hard to beat. In 1910, at Portsmouth, a relief pitcher was put in with two men on bases. He pitched one ball, and the batsman hit into a,triple play. Thus the twirier secured credit for pitching an entire inning when he only delivered B solitary bsavt ' 1

SCRIBES PICK ATLANTA

A symposium published by Will Hamilton of the New Orleans Item shows the majority of Southern league sporting edl- . tors pick Atlanta to finish first in the race this year and Little Rock second. There Is a wide difference of opinion as to the third place team, with advocates of New Orleans, Nashville, Memphis and Mobile all getting votes. Birmingham and Chattanooga are counted among the also rans.

DIAMOND NOTES

1 Babe Ruth is a picturesque perform* er even when he is striking out Now everybody knows Eddie Eayrs can pitch as well as field and hit Coveleskle, the noted pitcher of the Cleveland Indians, grows better with age. . . -- • • * The Braves come and go, but color and pep they appear to have with them always. — • • • Six players have been released to minor leagues by the New York Yankees, e, • • The Pirate traveling uniforms are nowhere near as attractive as the tsgs of last season. — —"7 Ferdie Schupp blds fair to bear out Branch Rickey’s assertion he will come back this year. Dode Criss, one-time famous hitter. Is making his headquarters In Shreveport these days. • • • The Milwaukee club has transferred Pitcher McWhorter to Richmond of the Virginia league. • • • The Braves have an outfielder named John L. Sullivan. He ought to be popular in Boston. • * • R. Miller, the Philadelphia rookie third baseman, looks like a member of the baseball Millers. * • * • Dave Davenport, the skyscraper of baseball, has a world of speed, but he Isn’t so long on control. • • • One New York expert is playing safe. He picks one of three teams In each league to cop the flag. ♦ • • The Oklahoma City club has signed Billy Kelly of East St Louis, old battery mate of Marty . O’Toole. ♦ * •

Stockholders of the Cincinnati National league club have demanded free passes and extra dividends. • • • Griffith Is very sweet for Ericson as a pitcher and the Old Fox is a fairly good judge of a thrower. • • ♦ The Browns are sure to finish In the first division, acordlng to the way they have it doped in St. Louis, • • • The Joplin dub ( has released Outfielder Vic Ruedy to the Chickasha club of the Western association. • • • Ivan . Olson has done the most conslstent hitting of any player of the Greater New York clubs to date. • • • Bob Munsell, the new third baseman of the Yankees, is said to be able to drive a ball as far as Babe Ruth. • • • With the Braves and the Red Sox out of the race, Boston can take an interest in Harvard’s football practice, • • ♦ ' JoeO’Rouke, veteran minor leaguer, has been made manager of the Greenville team of the South Atlantic league. They are calling the Houston Buffalos the “Glories” this season. Whether of morning or evening variety is not clear. • ♦ • Andy Stark, sent to Minneapolis by the Griffmen, has balked. He will play with an industrial league team in New York state. • • • Pitcher Pat Murray and Infielder George Petty, formerly of Notre Dame, were unconditionally released by the Philadelphia Nationals. * * • Pitcher Mario DeVitalis, the college tryout, has been sent by Manager Miller Huggins of the New York Yankees , to the Vernon Coast league dub. The veteran Butch Kerns, catcher, quit the Dallas dub before the sear son opened and- will play ball with an independent team in the on belt Art Phelan, who has been coaching a college team in Florida and for that reason was delayed, joined the Fort Worth team just as the season opened. H r <?■ Barney Dreyfuss rises to jtoto* l * that there was no friction between Manager Gibson and himself to regard to the case of Catcher Waiter Schmidt. • J - • • • The .Boston Red Sox released Pitcher Cuddy Murphy, the former Partmouth college star, and Pitcher Harry Holborrow to Toronto of tba International league.

offers you have seen so many times. We don’t offer to give you something for nothing—but we do guarantee that you can try this wonderful treatment, entirely at our risk, and this M guarantee is backed by your local druggist. This makes the offer one which you can abaolutely depend upon, because the druggist with 1 whom you have been trading would not stand | behind the guarantee if he did not know it to be an honest and legitimate one. Hunt’s Salve, formerly called Hunt's Cure, has been sold under absolute money back guarantee for more than thirty years. It Is especially compounded for the treatment of Eczema, Itch, Ring Worm, Tetter, and other itching akin diaeases. Thousands of letters testify to Its curative properties. M. TlmerUn, it reputable dry goods dealer in Durant. Oklahoma, says: “I suffered with Eczema for ten years, and spent $1,000.00 for doctors’ treatments, without result One box of Hunt's Cure entirely cured me.” Don’t fail to give Hunt’s Salve a trial—price 75 cents, from your local druggist or direct by mail If he does not handle it A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman. Texu

Too Short.

“How did you enjoy the sermon F “Too short” “That so? I never heard anyone complain that a sermon was too brief before." “Well, you see. it was this way: Td hardly dropped asleep before the thing was over.”

Important to all Women Readers of this Paper Thousands upon thousands of women hive kidney or bladder trouble and never nispect it. ~= Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result at kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. You may suffer pain in the back, headache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irritable and may be despondent; it makes any one so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, by restoring health to the kidneys, proved to be just the remedy needed to overcome such sonditions. Many send for a sample bottle to see what Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medicine, will do for them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., you may receive sample size bottle by Parcel Post. You can purchase medium and large size bottles at all drug stores. —Adv. Scant Comfort. One possible service performed by visiting wife’s relatives is eating so much that! there aren’t- so many leftovers for next day.—Ohio State Journal. SHAKE INtO YOUR SHOES Alien’s Foot=Ease, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes and sprinkled in the foot-bath. The Plattsburg Camp Man? ual advises men In training to use Ease in their shoes each morning. It Prevents blisters and sore spots and relieves painful, swollen, smarting feet and takes the sting out of corns and bunions. use Allen’s Foot=Ease to break in new ■hoes. —Adv.

BUILT MANY CENTURIES AGO

Florida's Shell Mounds Believed to Date Back to Before Beginning of Christian Era. Florida’s shell mounds, which are found In different portions of the state, are unquestionably of human construction, and were probably built ay some race of people who inhabited rhe country about the beginning of the Christian era. These mounds were found overgrown with ‘herbage and forest as long ago as when the first red man set foot in Florida, and the fact that the deposit of earth above 'them was sufficient to give place to the root of trees proved their great ige. There have been found in all these nounds pieces of pottery imbedded in the shell conglomerate, as well as articles made oi shell and bone, rude stone Implements and many bones of Bsh and animals,* such as deer, terrajin, rabbits, alligators and others. There are In the entire state about forty mounds, ■ the most Important of which are those of King Phillip’s town, tear the outlet of Lake Harney, which are 450 feet long, from 100 to 150 feet broad, and with an average might of eight feet Louisiana has 19 registered women statisticians, which exceeds the record >f any other state. A guest may be hs glad to go as the lost is to have him.

Tor your breakfast: Grape-Nuts I A ready-to-eat ftodthat costs I luit Wte arid is full of* the I sound nourishment of wheat P| "-- I and Parley. h I A*verywhere.

Indefinite.

“These poets are so indefinite.” “How now?” “Why, the poet tells us that Lars Porsena of Clusium sat in his ivory car. Stilled somewhere, of course. But we never learn whether he was bung up on account of tire trouble or lack of gasoline.” —Louisville CourierJournal.

Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, ana that is by a constitutional remedy. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE acta through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces es the System. Catarrhal Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed. Deafness is the result. Unless the Inflammation can be reduced and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing may be destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which Is an Inflamed condition Of the Mucous Surfaces ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any casd of catarrhal deafness that cannot be cured by HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE. , , All druggists 75. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.

Lady Pygmalion.

The Instructor —That bust is fairly well modeled, but the expression io all wrong. It should be sad and thoughtful. 7 The Pretty Art Studebt—l know it and I had expression just right several times, but ’whenever I’d try to fix his hair or just touch his cheeks with my fingers the face would break into a smile. y

Important to Mothers

Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature 1 In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria,

GOT CHARACTERS MIXED UP

According to English Actor, History I* Not a Strong Point With Theatergoers. The late H. B. Irving once told in Philadelphia a story about his father’s performance of Sardou’s “Robespierre.” He said; “Two dear old ladies sat in their stalls at the Lyceum, waiting for ’Robespierre’ to begin. “ ‘By the way, who was Bobespierre?’ said the first old lady. “’Why, don’t you know?’ said the second old lady. ’He’s the man who was' murdered in his bath by Marie Corelli.’ *”Oh, no, my dear!’ said the first old lady. *That can’t be right, for Marie CoreUi is still alive. I remember who it was, now. It was Charlotte Bronte.’ ” A Then, at the end of the story Mr. Irving added: “I once told this anecdote to . a duchess. When I finished the duchess 'gave a kind of puzzled laugh and said: “’Poor Shakespeare I’”

The Bulge That Counts.

Our observation is that folks forSve a man’s trousers for bagging at e knees if they bulge at the pockets. —Dallas News. ■ a — —r— ■ A native of Ashanti bears one of seven names, corresponding to the day on which be was born. " It’s all right to try, try again, but if* is better to make good the first time.