Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 274, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 November 1920 — Page 3

AM I ■ ||| j f I I g g <*<;.■* ~~'w . i ■^ ? '2 — T - and Remedy ToH in ■i. v ■-" $' >.= ■ t _ Syracuse, N. Y.—‘‘When I commenced the Change of Life I was poorly, IWinniTllinillllllllllllll had “O appetite and I I had fainting spells. Buffer « d for twa or three years be■niVegetable ComI lh- I P un d «nd the Liver I I Pills which I saw adKU Ivertised in the iN papers and in your hooks. I took about twelve bottles UHBEmBMH 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 nave taken it Ave., Syracuse, N. Y ’* * • - While Change of Life is a moat crit?d period of a woman's existence, the noying symptoms which. accompany may be controlled, mid normal health -restored by the timely use of Lydia E. Ffekham’s Vegetable Compound. A Moreover this reliable remedy, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs and owes its efficiency to the medicinal ex* tractives of the native roots and herbs which it contains. . . ? - I "DODD’S KIDNEY PILLS H •re a wonderful medicine for kidney trouble. I used them Bl •bout 15 years ago and they | completely relieved ma My | daughter need them recently W and they greatly benefitted her. | I can certainly praise them." THOMAS TOMLIN, | " Knowlton, Ky. Adc your druggirt or order H direct from Dodd’a Medicine Co., U Buffalo, N. X. Only 60q and J GamatML - - h |

Turning the Luck. In Yorkshire, country folk cross their thumbs “to turn the luck” should they meet a single magpie. In Scotland a magpie seen near a dwelling Is bejieved*to portend death to one of the Ipmates. The Best Advice FOR MOTHERS Elgin, —tIlls.—"I I was weak, nervous rZq/ BPSSIA and rundown after mother- gK> hood, and was advised to WK take the JHIUf 'Favorite J73gD Pr e s crip- mFVC/ fW?| tion.’ I took about five bottles i while nurs- J in g m y ... baby and gWjK-4pCn( J he seemed to improve XW I" I ri lyl as much as W< 1 r , Tdid. My * was normal once more and I was able to sleep at night, and became strong and well. I would never hesitate in recommending Doctor Pierce’s" Favorite Prescription to all young mothers who need just , such a tonic for they will be benefited as I have been.”—Mrs. Carrib Hill, 314 Dundee Ave. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a remedy that any ailing woman ran Offaly take, because it is prepared from roots, does not contain -alcohol or narcotics. All druggists. * Send 10 bents for trial package of ”Favorite Prescription Tablets? to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., or write for advice'. Z, ‘••'.fey Don’t Neglect Your Skin Ladies— A few days* treatment with uttle liver pills ments in crea- CARI tRS ation. An im- JMiTTI g perfect com- AB B|\/P R plexion MJugs g caused by a Miliums of pecyte. QWs iwty SB? r ——**o , _ " —— s—^—7— .Rahv '■ — I ■

TREED BY CATTLE

U owa Damn Tranin • “RY® Been iragiu, > t — Ooifs Imprtuoalty Got Mia Little Cem- - ptaiona Into Trouble Which Near-ly-Had Serious Ending. ' "%■ * L~ ' During my early childhood at the old homestead in niinois, writes a contributor, my older sister, Lois, my brother, Marton, and myself, in company with a neighbor girt. Martha Wilson, had many interesting experiences in rambling through the woods not far from our tfouse. ; We were accompanied on one trip by our faithful dog. Old Bull, as we always called him. While we waded through the tangle of. vines, rosebushes and other shrubbery, Old Bull raced through the woods Rn quest of rabbits and other game. Finally, treeing a squirrel, he-made the woods resound with his eager barks. Some cattle grazing on the billside raised their heads and started out to investigate. Others joined them, and when they saw the dog they all made a rush for him, Old Bull bolted for the cemetery that we had entered out of curiosity and, leaping the fence, took refuge with us. My sister. Lots, scolded him and would have quieted him, but Martha kept sicking him at them.He needed very little encouragement, and his constant barking and the bawling of the cattle attracted the attention of qU the other cattle, and they came galloping up to join In the fray. As the fence did not appear very strong, Martha and Lois decided that ’we bad better try to slip out at the opposite side of the cemetery.»This plan might have worked successfully if I had been older, but 1 was only five years old and very badly frightened. Old Bull followed us, barking as he went, and the cattle were close behind. We had gone only a short distance from the cemetery when the whole drove came plunging and bawling after us. Fortunately, there was a fallen tree In which we took refuge, but as it was only a few feet from the ground we were safe only as long as Old Bull could hold them at bay. Martha and Marion topt sicking him at the cattle, while Ldfe tried to quiet me. The noise of the dog and of th 6 cattle threw me into ti paroxysm of terror. The cattle, standing all about us, would bellow and bawl, toss their horns and paw up the ground. Suddenly one .made a lunge for the dog. and he ran back under our fallen tree, and the cattle moved in a little closer. Then the dog redoubled his efforts dashed frantically at the cattle, first in one direction, then tn another. But Old Bull was becoming exhausted, and t£e cattle were gradually closing in. They acted more like wild beasts than domesticated cattle. Even Martha was frightened, although she was too brave to cry. The maddened animals would soon toss us on their horns and trample us underfoot Desperately the dog made, his last rush and then dropped back under our tree exhausted. The cattle were rushing tn upon us with loud bellows when a farmer heard the- deafening-noise and came running toward &s. Be seized a big club and, caiHiSg UP his two dogs, drove the caittji' back to a, safe distance. •- - ' * Marfin and Lois had almost to carry me, for I prostrated from the fright and the noise. ' Old Bull,* after a "good drink of water, crept under the welcome shade of an old apple tree, and our mothers welcomed us with open arms when they saw our disheveled appearance. —Youth’s Companion.

The Useful Volcano.

The scarcity of coal is stimulating the search for other sources of heat and power. Much has been heard of “white coal” or the ingenious use of water power. In Italy they have hit upon another plan which promises to revolutionise the Industry of the country. There are several places In Italy where the internal heat of the earth comes- so near the surface that It may be tapped. In other words, the volcanoes are being harnessed* to supply power. The tests already carried on ard reported to have proved very successful and the work will doubtless be greatly extended. The heat drawn from the earth Is converted into electric energy which is* transmitted for great distances and employed to run railroads and operate mills. There Is practically an inexhaustible supply of heat or power and It Is believed that the pressing coal problem of Italy will eventually be solved. —Boys’Life. '

Red Plows for China.

. Chinese farmers are becoming more and. more Interested in American farm tools, -and as time-goes on a steadily increasing numberof such Implements will undoubtedly be made in the Uffitefi States and sent overseas to do their appointed wors tn thcUboll of China. Very likely, too-for such is the implied advice of Jobh H. Reisner, dean of the college of agriculture and forestry. University of Nanking—such tools will be painted red and lettered with a Chinese name. Tbe college is studying tbe Chinese farmer, bls practical needs and bls customary habits of mind, and It appears that whereas the American farmer’s plow 1s often Mue, the Chinese farmer likes his plow painted red. Also he prefers to work with aptowrinearihg & Chinees rethcr any other name, and - BiR iq

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, JIENSSELAER, IND.

UCHI Y Ow-*FaCHn DoU g“2 ‘ - a— _ • -i . . »y »- lu Are you always weir, nuawwDis anu half-«ick? Thea »*• time you found out wtot is wrong. Kidney weakness causes mneh suffering from backache, lameaeas, stiflboM and riwuintie puma, and if neglected, brings danger of serious troubles—dropsy, gravel and Bright’s disease. Don’t delay. Use Dwm't Kidney Pillt. They have helped thousands and should help yoa. Ask your neighbor! . 'An IHinnfa Mrs. Ben Laßea, Delavan. HL, says: JRKga back was sore fl/ ii 1111 lame. When I Aklj stooped over I I& could hardly ]■ straighten up. My SswißPthß’ f|y kidneys acted IrU regularly. I heard of Doan’s Kidney Pills and after I had taken a few tbe stifTness went W ■ f’’ Brjli out of my back and my kidneys acted R.—MM regularly. I was entirely cured by Doan’a." Get DseuA* at bar Stars, «0e a Bos DOAN'S ’SrJLV FOSTER-MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. N. Y.

Acid Stomach for IO Years NOW A DIFFERENT WOMAN fisfwssdy Frafcss Safonfc “My wife was a great sufferer from add stomach for 10 years,” writes H. D. Urippen, “but is a different woman since taking Eatonic.” / Sufferers from add stomach—let Entente help you also. It quickly takes up and carries out the excess acidity and gases and makes the stomach cool and comfortable. You digest easily, get the full strength from your food, feel well and strong, free from bloating, belching, food repeating, etc. Big box costs costs only a trifle with your druggist’s guarantee.

WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-JCidney-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world’s stand* ard remedy for Jddney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles— COLD MEDAL Thu National Remedy of Holland for centuries and endorsed by Queen Wilhelmina. At all druggists, three sizes. Leek See the Maw GeH Madelia every boa abA accept no imitation

BIG ULCER ALL HEALED “Here is another letter that makes me happy,” says Peterson, of Buffalo. One that I would rather have than a thousand “Money, isn’t everything in this world. There Is many a big hearted, rich man who would give all he has on earth to be able to produce a remedy with each mighty healing power as Peterson’s Ointment, to sell at all druggists for 36 cents a large box.” Dear Sirs:— “I was an untold sufferer from old running sore and ulcers. I had tried most everything without any relief from pain. A friend told me of your wonderful ointment and the first box took away the pain that had not left me before In yewm, and after using just nine dollars worth of the salve I am cured. The ulcer was 9 Inches by inches, la all healed and I can walk. Never, never will Ibe without Peterson’s again. _ “You may use this to recommepd yow ointment, if you wish. I cannot say <MOUgh to praise' it.” Tours truly, Mrs. Albert Mhcott, Medina. N. Y Mail orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. -

Box w I I I Il Just the Place. 5 L~‘ “Many romances occur In business life." “I suppose so. Especially in a match factory ” //

BOLD THIEVES IN “MESPOT"

Householder of Basra Relates Experience Which He Declares la by .No Means Uncommon. The securing of public safety is only one of many improvements tbe British have made tn Mesopotamia but it Seems to be the one that has chiefly Impressed the public mind. The first person who spoke to me of it was an Oriental a teacher of Arabic, Maude Radford Warren writes in the Saturday Evening Post We sat in a bouse in Basra on a cloudy evening, looking ant of the window, watching the shadowy forms of passersby, i “You will notice that the Arab houses have blank walls facing the street” he told me. “If the walls are broken by windows these are barred. If there aje doors these are small or else secured. Do not think this Is done for the sake of keeping the women sheltered or the sun off. z It is to keep thieves out.

“One night I was sitting in this house with my friends when a knock came at the door. First I looked out of the window. I saw a number of people on two sides of the house. I Went to the door and' I said i ‘Who is there?’ The answer was: T am a thief.’

“I suppose in America if anyone was so lunatic as to say that, you would telephone for the police. But here under the 'Turks It was wise to let the thieves In. Why not? There were too many of them, and they would have been angry and would have killed some of us in revenge some day. So we let in the man who knocked, and some of his friends came with him. _ - - “They did not make polite greetings, but they took all the people into separate rooms, the women In one, the children in another, and the men in a third. This was because If they had been left together they might have secretly encouraged one another not to tell’Where money or jewels were bidden?

“All the people In the house were very much afraid, and they told where their hiding places were, but said that they had been robbed only a few weeks previous and they had nothing left “The thieves were very angry. ‘We must have something,’ they said. So they aent for a cart, and they took what furniture and bedding and cooking dishes they wanted, and then went away. They left us our lives, and that was about all. “You see how quiet these streets are evemiow, about nine o’clock? That la not entirely because Arabs-prefer to go to bed early, though they do not keep late hours. But they have the old habit of not taking risks at night”

Odd Japanese Legends.

There are many delightful legends about old statues of the gods In JapanIn the Hase temple at Kamakura, high on the crest of a hill overlooking the bay. Is a great gilded kwannon of camphor wood—an eleved-faced image of the Goddess of Mercy—which for centuries has hearkened 'to the prayers of the fishermen. A long time ago, in the dim past when dragons were abroad in the land and gods condescended to play with men, some fishermen saw a great light shining out at sea, writes Elsie F. Weil in Asla. They sailed in their junk toward the light and found the Image and ever since have worshiped at her shrine. At the same time a similar image -of Kwannon, aWo made of camphor wood, floated In at Yamato and was placed in the Hase-no-Kwannon, a temple that was the favorite resort of courtiers In the Nara period. It is still today a popular temple for pilgrims, who : come the spring, when the cherries are in full blossom and all the lanterns are lighted to transport themeelves back to the days when the gods were young.

The Mango Industry.

; The office of foreign seed and plant introduction of the United States Department of Agriculture has’assembled, through the work of its explorers and through exchange with the British East Indian departments of agriculture, one of the largest collections of selected mango varieties in -tbe world. There are how fruiting at the plant introduction field station. Miami, Fla., about twenty varieties this year, and these represent the selections from more than seventy sorts of this great fruit Some of these have scarcely more fiber than a freestone peach and can be cut open lengthwise and toten as easily with a spoon as a Rocky Ford cantaloupe. They have an indescribably agreeable aroma reminiscent of pineapples. The mango tree, when it is In bearing, Is a gorgeous sight, for It is a large long-lived tree and tha golden-yellow fruits as they hang in great clusters from the dark green foliage make one of the great tropical plant sights of the world.—lndianapolis News. ■>

Wanted Further Information.

The suddenness with which tbe. great war broke out. and the confusion of mind that overtook persons wbo were not in a positloli to follow closely the course of events day by day. Is amusingly shown by this story told to Everybody’s Magazine. ~ i* British administrative official, stationed tn 8 village In the InteHor of Africa, just after the outbreak of war received the following telegram from his bureau chief: “War decfared. Arrest all enemy aliens at once.” Two days later the bureau chief was handed the following reply: “Have arrested two Frenchmen, a Dutchman, three Germans, two Americans, a Pohuader, three Russians and an Italian. Please tell ms whom wn are at war witter

Important to all Women Readers of this Paper V’"'" Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble and never suspect it. ~ . Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the remit of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organa 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; ft makes any one bo. __ 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, conditions. Many send for a sample bottle to see, what Swamp-Root, the front ludney, liver, and bladder medicine, will do for them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., you thay receive sample size bottle by Parcel Post. You can purchase medium and large size bottles at all drug stores.—Adv.

Unwanted.

* “Is that a pedigreed dog?” “I thought he was, but I’m beginning to doubt it. Nobody has tried to steal him as yet”

USE “DIAMOND, DYES”

Dye right I Don’t risk OFt your material in a poor dye. Each package of “Diamond /kXJJvX Dyes” contains directions B^m P^ e woman can diamond-dye a new, OltT rich, fadeless color into old Y|| ill garments, draperies, cover--11 I J/1 whether (///I sUk ’ llnen ’ cotton or A 4/ J mixed goods. W/*' Buy “Diamond Dyes” — /I no other kind—then perfect results are guaranteed. Druggist has “Diamond Dyes Color Card” —16 rich colors. Adv

Even There!

Spirit—Where is my mansion in the sky? St. Peter—Sorry, but the spirit In it refuses to move out

Catarrh

Catarrh is a local disease greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE tea Tonic and Blood Purifier. By cleansing the blood and building up the System, HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allows Nature to do its work. AU Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio.

If a man is Unusually polite a woman is apt to be saspicious.of him.

WARNING Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you art not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 21 years, and proved safe by millions. —Say “Bayer”! /HTx /AX / • • SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an “unbroken package” of genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which, contains proper directions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu-. matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American I Handy tin boxes of 12 tablet* east bat a few cento—Larger padcages. Aspirin is th» trade mark of Bayer Maautaetare es MonoaeeUeacideater of SallcyHcarii Women are curious about every- May we remark that a man who thing; men are curious only about sells parasols is engaged in a shady women. business. ' The postage stamp Is on the tip of Many a man has been bunkoed by many a tongue that doesn’t talk about judging a woman’s disposition by her it - - . smile. When Children are Sickly tare Constipated, Feverish, Cry eat In their sleep, Take cold eerily, Have Headaches, Stomach er Bowel trouWe, Try - MOTHER CRAY’S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN - “* pleasant to take and a certain relief. They act on the Stomach, Liver and Bowels and tend to correct intestinal disorders. 10,000 testimomal* from mothers and friend* of little ones telling of relief. No mothershouldba without a box of Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for use when Deeded. Ato today. At Druggists. The need of them often comes at inconvenient hours. . By Itettero to* over fMHy years. , tot Accept toy Sritedtafo hr OTa CIAYTSWnT PWWM, > y . Kill That Cold With CASCARA L* QUININE for r"? I Cslds, Coughs la $”»»• I Neglected Colds are Dangerous Take no ctamces. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first In 24 boor. Relieves I Breaks up a cola in 34 nears — Keaevea I Grippe #3 days—Excrilent for Heatocto Quinine in this form does not affect the head-Cascara la best Twate I ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT

4 Fint in America JTRINERW America! Elixir Bitter Wine Brought to the American market 30 years ago as the first Bitter Wine. It is still first and second to none. Unsurpassed for poor appetite, headaches, constipation, flatulence and other stomach troubles. At aB drug stores and dealers in medicines. JOSEPH TRINER COMPANY 1333-45 S. Aahlaad Av*, CMca*o, DL Gold Medal Ctaed Prix Sen Francisco ISIS Panama WM

Let Cuticura Be Your Beauty Doctor Soap 25c, (Waft 25 and 50c, Tries* 25c

This Fish a Fighter.

Muskellunge sometimes run up to one hundred pounds In weight, rays the American Forestry Magazine, and to land one with rod and line is a feat not to be forgotten In a lifetime.

Jud Tunkins.

Jud Tunkins says the . old-time statesman who safSown and wrote out his speeches with a pen wouldn’t stand any chances whatever in these days of handshaking.