Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 278, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 November 1920 — Page 3
Cheeks &oatinßkin Because of her rosy cheeks and ■atia akin a woman attracts the admiration .fall Men. When the 4g ' young woman peers in her s^c m *y see pirn p les and blotches and she nngoes to the drag store for paint, powders and beauty creams, when she should go there for a blood medicine and stomach alterative known as •‘Golden Medical Discovery.” This vegetable tonic and blood alterative dears the skin, beautifies it, increases the blood supply and die circulation, while pimples, boils and eruptions vanish quickly. Ask your nearest druggist for Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in tablet or liquid form or send 10c. for trial package of tablets to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y.
tyaselinej Vaseline PETROLEUM JELLY For sores, broken blisters, burns, cuts and all skin irritations. —m-f Also innumerable toilet uses. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES CHESEBgO«BHMrc.C<X fiats Street New Yor!
THE BEGINNING OF A NEW LIFE
Buigarta and Oriental Europe Produce Sturdiest People. Do you want to feel from 10 to 80 years younger? Do you want to know the joy of Perfect Health? Ton can get back the spirit of youth, your eyes will sparkle with new life and the rich glow of health wUI replace the faded yellow skin. Bulgarian Blood Tea, used for centuries in Oriental Europe, is the most remarkable medicinal family preparation known in the world today. Composed at choice and rare herbs, just brewed by yourself_and taken once or twice a week, will be the beginning of a new life for you. Tour blood will become rich and pure; the flame of life will be rekindled—no more headaches, biliousness, constipation, indigestion or bone-racking aches or pains. Bulgarian Blood Tea is guaranteed to contain just pure herbs of marrwlons medicinal and curative power gathered from fields, mountains and valleys of Europe, Asia and Africa. AB drug stores now keep. Bulgarian Blood Tea in stock, but owing to the enormous demand immediate application to your druggist Is urged on account of the limited source of supply. Distributors of Bulgarian Blood Tea are authorized to return the full purchase price If it does not materially Improve your health in three weeks’ time. This evidence of faith In the power of Bulgarian Blood Tea is the guarantee of the Marvel Products Co- Marvel Building, Pittsburgh, who authorise this public announcement.
Ladies Keep Y our Skin Clear, Sweet, Healthy With Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Talcum IF MOTHERS OILY KNEW ~ Dorins Oms Ssys how MWr children emwfSSiRHS at Moroc> Uelr faSflT* tt—■ gold by draCTlxu erarywhora. .HenaMltehins-Pieotlas AttaciMßM*, work* on al! makas of oowlns machine*. Price »». i Noodle Threaded. 25c on. Checks l#e extra. •'Mrtf.KO Homa. Bax IW. Btrtn‘ham.Ala. For Irritated Throats P I S O'S ;• v ■ ' •
IS FAVORED LAND Western Canada Country of Great Possibilities. f i» Soil, Climate, and Weather Condition* All Factors in the Production of , Unrivaled Fruit, Vegetable* V and Flower* as WeH a* Grain. As recently as last mon tit—to be correct, it was the 18th of October, a time of year when one naturally looks for the “frost upon the punkin," and la inclined to wander through the woods In search of the ripened nuts, and admire the beautiful coloring* that the autumn atmosphere has bestowed upon the leaves; when one goes to his eioset, or maybe his pawnbroker, to And bls heavy clothing l —it was that I found myself the guest of a Western Canada housewife in her beautiful home on the outskirts of the pretty little town of Moosotnln, Saskatchewan. The dinner! That’s what Mrs. Wilde called It I should have termed It a banquet There were mallard duck, cooked to a turn, baked potatoes—and such big, mealy fellows they were, too —cauliflower—and say, did you ever taste one of those Western Canada cauliflower*—then dessert What waa the dessert ? I can see it now. Strawberries, strawberries that bad been picked that morning. Help yourself to the cream —and It was cream that Is cream. But what 1 wanted to write about was the strawberries picked on the 18th of October. As >1 ate, and turned my back while a second heli> Ing was placed in front of me, I could not but think bow this goes to refute the once accepted Idea that the climate of Western Canada Is such that the ripening of Vtrnwherries at any season is one at the things that might be looked upon' as next to impossible. Fortunately It is rapidly giving place to one which acknowledges that our sister nation to the north possesses a climate that makes It quite possible to develop and ripen strawberries even In October.
But there Is more to add. On October 14, just a few days previous, Mr. A. B. Smith, near the same town, plucked a splendid mess of green corn from his garden. Near Rocauvllle, Saskatchewan, wild raspberries were picked during the same week. The fact of ripening fruit at this date may seem of little moment, but when-you are told that corn did not suffer from any vagaries of weather, more attention may be paid to It The question of Western Canada’s climate is no longer the bugaboo it once was. and not so very long ago, either, when it caused thinking people to think, ano unquestionably prevented many from going to Canada who under other conditions would have gone. In various parts of this country, at different state and county fairs, the government of the Dominion of Canada, during the past few weeks, installed exhibits of the grains and grasses grown in Western Canada, and at the same time showed fruits and vegetables that were grown, there. None of these was placed In competition with the home-grown, article. But to judges and others there came the full understanding of what it would mean to the local exhibitor If they were. The Western Canadian—and many of the exhibits were grown by former Americans —does not lay claim to any special dispensation of intelligence In the matter of (he culture of the articles placed on exhibition, but willingly gives credit to the soil, the climate, and such other indigenous conditions as the country as a whole possesses, as being factors that bring about the largest yield- of the best of wheat, oats, barley, flax and rye, as well as vegetables. As Is pointed but by the gentlemen in charge of these exhibits, and quite evident to all, the possibilities of growing vegetables and grain such as are shown can only exist where conditions such as have been mentioned exist In speaking of eating fresh strawberries and green corn In the middle Of October I should not fall to refer to the beautiful bouquets that adorned the table, the sideboard, the window Mils, and almost every other available vacant place in the room. Flowers’—there were asters, phlox, gladioli, peonies, poppies, and I can’t reinember the names of them all, but they were there. Taken right from the garden, having a fragrance, that gave the room tropical colors, and tilled It with marvelously delightful perfumes. It was a very pretty sight Then I went out into the garden and took a photo of It It was dimply wonderful. I asked the good lady how she managed it She said she bad always been fond of flowers. In her old home. In ’one of the central states, she carried on- garden horticulture, gnd had been acknowl-1 edged successful. “But my!” she said, “I never got such bloom, and such a variety as I do here." She admitted It was a lot of work, the watering the weeding, the hoeing, but such work was a pleasure. Well, such Is some of the life In Western Canada, and as I left the farm home I concluded that much of our surrodndlngs are as we ourselves make them.—Advertisement
Date and Score Mixed.
Bed—That’s an old golf course Bf yours. Isn’t it? ' Greene—Why, no. It's comparatively new. “When was it laid oufF “About 1M7.” / ... “Are you surer “Oh. yes; positive." “Why, I heard a man say the other day that he went around it I* ’BB."— lookers Statesman.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
Help That Adring Back! Back giviiig out? Tortured with dull. MgiM backache. and .tabbing pain.? Does tM least exertion leave you “all played out!" Likely your kidney* are to blare*. Ovsrwedt eolda, ia.ufficient rest and the harry and worry of pre*-ent-day living tend to weaken th* kidneya. Backache ia often the first warning. Headaches and dirrinaas mar come. to A. and Derhans annoy ins kidHelp the overworked kianay* with Dom’« Odney Pdf. Doairt have helped thouaanos. They abould help you. Ask your nrighbori An Iffinob Case _ _ _ I* W. Buell, Front Bt, DaltiiiZTd! <fb* City, Dll. . » JU I says: “A eo 1 d (Tv>ldSL Tnl settled on my kidneys and brought on kidW «®r c o m p I a int aSHM WHw My kidneys didn’t / Jj IL //n act freely enough K n and the eecretlons were paln- ’ t f«l ,n passage. IM My back ached and the pain was so severe it would wake me up. I beard about Doan's Kidney Pills and got some. One box ended the trouble." Ga« Dean’, at Any Store, Me a Beu DOAN’S WIT? TOSTOMMIOi CO, BUFFALO, N. T.
16799 DIED in New York City alone from kidney trouble last year. Don’t allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against this trouble by taking COLD MEDAL The world’* standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles. Holland’s national remedy since 1696. AD druggists, three sixes. Guaranteed, lock far the mm Gold Medal on war hen and ascsat no AU Run Down Now Feels Fine Eat onio Ended His Troubles "Eatonic Is the only thing I have found to stop my heartburn and I think it has been a great help in nervous spells,’’ writes G. O. Johnson. An upset stomach may cause lots of suffering all over the body. Eatonic helps in such cases by removing the cause of the misery, because it takes up and carries out the excess add and gases and keeps the digestive organs in natural working order. A tablet after meals is all you need. Big box costs only a trifle with druggist’s guarantee.
ipAkKER’s ■fflglgroS HAIR Raatorea Color end ATTENTION! respectfully invite you to mail us ypurchecfc w»r wM. far hr MACK MANVrACTVBING CO. IM. Hou. ton, Toxa* , HOXSIE’S CROUP REMEDY Cure, quick. Pl«Mant to tuU. Aiwolut.ly •afo. Should bo lc.pt in •▼•ry bourn, to ct*.
What Johnny Meant.
"Next boy!” exclaimed the teacher. "Can you give a simile to the word ‘maiden’?” . "Yes, miss," responded Johnny Summers. "A maiden is like cider." “Very good. Johnny. You see, boys,” explained the teacher, who was of uncertain age and irascible “Johnny means that a maiden is sweet." ~ “Yea” broke in Johnny, "and grows sew with old age.”*
BOSCHEE’S SYRUP AHays Irritation, Soothes and Heal* Throat and Lung Inflammation. The constant Irritation of a cough keeps the delicate membrane of the throat and lungs in a congested condition. Boschee’s Syrup has been a favorite household remedy for colds, coughs, bronchitis and especially for lung troubles, in thousands of homes all over the world, for the last fiftyfour years, giving the patient a good night’s rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration In the morning. For ■ale everywhere.—Adv.
Cause for Transfer.
Mincepin received the information that be was being transferred to another government department with rather bad grace. “What’s the causer be blustered. “Is it because I occasionally fail off to sleepr “It's because you snore, and that awakens the minister," .came the reply.—La Balonette (Paris). ' Some men try to do others they are dunned by. , • .... ■
often/ Kafreshea. Safe, fat
LIVES WITH BIRDS
Caretaker Has Absolutely No Other Companions. Job About a* Lonesome as Ono Could Imagine Io Eagerly Sought by Hundred* of WANTED—A man to live atone on aa island (inland lake) eisht miles from shore; transportation, food, clothing, shelter, boat, etc., furnished; no work; no compensation. Summertime, <OO Tribune Building, New York. * Every Easter Sunday for the last fifteen years this advertisement has appeared in "Help Wanted” column*. Every year hundreds of men, and occasionally a woman, have made application for the job. Many of those who have answered and received no reply have formed the opinion that the whole thing Is a practical joke, played by an Individual who is collecting data of the different kinds of people, who react to the same impulse—or something like that. Investigation, however, has proved that there is in truth a man who offers precisely the sort of position described and that it yas been filled satisfactorily each summer for 15 years. The man is the director of a large well-known dry goods house in New York. He has a home in the Adirondacks near a lake with four little islands in the center. Every year a colony of arctic or burgomaster seagulls alights on these islands and stays there throughout the summer. In order to protect the eggs and the young, a man Is hired to live on one of the islands.
He has no duty other than the patrolling of the shore and the bird haunts. He goes early in May when the birds begin to arrive and leaves after they .do. <n no case Is it necessary for him to stay longer than October 1. There is a humorous angle to the situation, an angle that gives truth to the trite saying that distance lends enchantment When the advisability of getting a man to look after these birds first formulated Itself in the mind of the man who has made himself their friend, he decided he could hire one of the men in the neighboring community for the task. He broached the subject to some of them and offered to pay S3O a month with food and shelter as described in the advertisement. Thirty dollars a month at that time meant a good deal more than it does today. Nevertheless, he could find nobody to whom the Idea of living a solitary life on a lake island made any appeal. Knowing human nature Intimately—he employs hundreds of men and women —he decided to insert an advertisement in city papers, tell briefly, what was expected and make no offer of compensation other than food, clothing, and shelter. The response was stupendous. Immediately letters began pouring in by the score from men In every walk of life asking that they be allowed to go off into the solitudes. The Bowery bum applied and said that he wanted nothing but the woods and the waters; the youth whose love had been unrequited made a similar request; the man whose alm was to arrive at the topmost rung of the ladder of literary success was certain that the advertisement had been inserted as a godsend from heaven. Out of the hundreds that applied, one was finally chosen. Among the fifteen who have worked there are a well-known naturalist, cn attorney general of a neighboring state, and a man named Daniel Boone, who Is a direct descendant of the pioneer who, bore that name. Tn almost every case the men asked to be allowed to return the following year, but the rules laid down by the man who has interested himself in this work are against this. He does not want the keeper of the birds to grow acquainted with the people in the neighboring community, as he might if he returned to the same place year after year. It Is not the men that interest him; It Is the preservation of this species of seagulls, whlsh are, he states, the largest of their kind, having a spread at wings of . five feet. Their contribution to humanity is the scavenger duty they perform. It is estimated that they eat two pounds at offal a day.
Start After the Rats.
' Rats, which cause considerable loss to farmers, should be fought consistently, says the biological department of the United States Department of Agriculture. Rats reproduce so rapidly that a spasmodic raid on them is not lasting. They begin to bear young when three. months old and ha vb six to ten litters per year with an average of ten young per litter. The best method of control Is to make rat-proof buildings so the pests cannot get Inside and eat. All waste food should be disposed of so the rats cannot get it. ; ? 7 X ' 1 Where It Is possible, poison should be given them, and barium carbonate is a satisfactory kilter. Traps shduM also be kept going as In the past. Bait then with fresh meat, nuts or vegetables and they will get the rats.
Way to Get Rid of paintings.
“I’m sick and tired of looking at that old painting. I never did like It anyhow, and I only hung It up beMt p>r« «*•« tom, dbocs wltli miwftiitcd yicinrsSs ;r . ■-
DYEJRIGHT Buy only ‘'Diamond Dyes** Each package of “Dlameed Dyes" contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye worn, shabby skirts, waists, dresses, costs, cloves, stockings sweaters, draperies everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, new, rich fadeless colors. Hsve druggist show yon “Diamond Dyes Color Card."—Adv.
Sparing Their Feeling.
“Why do you call this fire s ‘conflagration?*’ asked the crusty city editor. “According to your story the damage done didn’t amount to $1,000.” “There were fully 10.000 people present to watch it,” said the facetious reporter.' “Well?” “I didn’t want to make it appear that they were wasting their valuable time.” —Birmingham Age-Herald.
Important to Mothers
Framing carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy lor infanta and children, and see that It Bears the Signature [n Use for Over 80 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Cutting Down Expenses.
“Blmley has given up bachelor life ind gone and got married.” “What 1 With beef a dollar a pound?” “Well, that’s better than paying the dollar a bite he’s been paying in the restaurants. Isn’t it?” —Boston Transcript.
Catarrh
Catarrh is a local disease greatly influenced by constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a 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. All Druggists. Circulars tree. F. J. Cheney * Co., Toledo, Ohio.
GREETINGS THAT TELL MUCH
All Have a Character and to the Initiated Are Like an Open Book.
“Chawmed” —One dance with this type. They always talk about the thatness of the that or G. B. Pahaw’s latest. - '
“How do you do?” —Not a question -ra statement. Probably accompanied by a smile. This class works slowly, but is sure to get you in the end. "Deellghted”—With giggle, and Invitation from / baby-blue eyes. Must never be trusted. “Vej7 glad to know you. rm suah”— She is not sure, but it seems best to say so. Last season’s deb. Expects to be bored and it is best to live up to expectations. “Oh, Mr. Stover, Pm so glad to know you. I’ve beard,” etc.—Football hero stuff. Must use skill and Ingenuity to escape this type. <. Mere nod—Possibilities, but; oh, man, you’ll have to work.— Record. ’ •
Its style.
“It certainly is a funny tale Ned tells about the time they bad using signal guns In the fog.” < “I should think they would have threaded their way better with a needle gun.”
The Fitting Way.
“How do the Irish meet the 'black-and-tans’?” "I guess it is With dogged determination.”
‘jTze Full-bodied Flavor | POSTUM Cereal wins first place among table drinks with those who value health, and. comfort. Boil Postum Cereal Rill fifteen minutes after boiling bedins and the taste I is aelightful. < ■) Costs Less than coktee . ■ . ' - lladely Battle Creek, Mich. ■ ■ - ■ - - j ft
I ftTU/ You can’ll Px fed 80 good bat what NF k \lk * I will make you Wx h> ' 1 feel better. ■ I 1 ‘Tell your Mother KEMP’S BALSAM win stop that cough, BilL My mother gives it tome when I get - a cough and you don't hear me coughing all the timet* £ E-Z Dustless-Ebony Stove Polish ■ | E-Z 1808 IBAMII 808 THB Pits W E-Z Mbtal Polish mb m M»hl nr M Shob Polish Bavbb Show - - All DealsfU-Monoy Bask Guaseutoe D* Make Year Non-AleohoM* Thirst Quanrtriag Appetislug Beverage. pfgeanjuakrs It gallons. Can only IlliAX AW Brtraot Co-. 1011 Mllweukwe Ave , Agta wanted. Phonographs Prom Factory to Hosae. Writ* tor FKBB trial and easy payment plan. Schmidt Mfg. Co.. Stt W: ttth St. Chicago-
BEADS PREFERRED TO BREAD
People of the Levant Bet Great Stock on Colored Glass of Every Description. Beads are more necessary than bread to the Levant Men, women and children wear and carry beads to ward' off UI luck. Sven the horses, and donkeys have strands of beads, about their necks “to baffle the evil eye," and the long horns of the work oxen are decorated with blue-and-whlte beads to keep them from felling prey to diseases. In Athens, Constantinople, Tiflis,. Smyrna and other cities of the Levant men of all classes carry short strands of fidget beads, which they play with* while walking in the street, riding to street cars and trains just as nervous men in the West finger their watchchains. Bead shops abound everywhere in the larger cities and general stores and market stalls sell them tn. the smaller places. Peddlers hawk them In the streets everywhere. Light-colored amber beads of large, size are the latest thing In beads for women. Meerschaum beads are als® popular, and for the moment plain; beads of all sorts have displaced highly ornate carved beads oftbe type, which Syrians produce in great quantities for exportation.—Washington Post
Matter of Geography.
A Minnesota man who had been introduced to a fallow dtlsen by hie congressman, asked the latter with reference to his acquaintance: “Is he rich r “Well,” replied the congressman, “that depends on geography. Out here we consider him very rich; he’s worth about a million dollars. If he lived In New Jersey, I suppose be would be be dropping dollars in his hat.”-Bos-ton Transcript * -
Not Alike.
Lawyer—So yon want a divorce from your wife. Aren’t your relations pleasant? Client—Mine are, but hers, are the most unpleasant lot I ever met—Boston Transcript *
