Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 July 1907 — Page 6

Is Your Hair Sick? Tljat's too bad! We had noticed it was looking pretty thin and rough of late, but naturally did not like to speak of it. By the way, Ayer’s Hair Vigor is a regular hair grower, a perfect hair tonic. The hair stops coming out, grows faster, keeps soft and smooth. Ayer’s Hair Vigor cures sick hair, makes it strong and healthy. The best kind of a testimonial—- “ Bold for over slaty years.** A Made by J.O.AysrOo., Dow.ll, Mass. JU Also mtnufSotursr* of JLm 9 SARSAPARILLA. JL XljCrS CHEWY PECTORAL.

JASPER COUNTY DEMOCRAT. f i. BIBCOCK, tDHOR lIP PBBUSHtR. *I.OO PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Advertising rate* made known on application Offlalal Damooratlo Papar of Jaapar County. Bnterad at the Pott-office at Rensselaer, Ind as second class matter. Offlaa an Van Ranaaaiaar Street, te.e D T..MT { S«‘V.«o.* an. SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1907.

Mr. Fairbanks wants the people of Indiana to underotand that his candidacy is not a joke, as most of them seem to think.

As Senator Knox of Pennsylvania has declared that the states still retain some of their powers under the constitution he may expect to receive a visit from Senatorßeveridge and his “Calhoun States’ Rights” rog baby bugaboo.

a bath house at Indianapolis the other day and the Hon. Charles \Warren Fairbanks made a speech on the occasion approving the project in his usual bold and fearless manner. As it is not recorded that he became a patron of the institution it is inferred that he had negleoted to take along his thermometer.

The question is, will.the Republican party follow the high tariff lead of Cannon, the centralization idea of Taft, the negro policy of Foraker, the states’ rights doctrine of Knox or the “any-old-thing-so-it-get-the-nomination” theory of the redoubtable Fairbanks? This is what is putting new wrinkles about the sad eyes of the weary elephant.

In a Pittsburg interview Governor Hanley says that he has “no desire to go after a seat in the senate.” Perhaps he wants a Beat in the senate to come around and hunt him up. And perhaps again he knows that the Fairbanks machine has reserved it for the Hon. Dan Reid, railroad and trust magnate —provided, of course, the people are willing. B. F. Yoakum, one of the big railroad men of the country, says that he has never believed that the people desire to injure the railroads. He is right. The people do not want to do the railroads any injustice. All that they have ever asked is fair treatment and in return for that they will give fair treatment and be glad to do it. But they insist that discriminations in favor of the Standard Oi monoply, the beef trust, the stee trust and other bloated money absorbers shall cease. Wherever a state has passed a retaliatory law (so-called) it has been merely the expression of the determination of the people to recover from the railroads a part of the money that the railroads have collected from them and turned over to Rockefeller and others in the form of rebates and similar favors.

If yon are looking for reliable shoes and clothing at lowest prices go to the Chicago Bargain Store.

WASHINGTON LETTER.

Political and Oeneral aoaaip of the National Capital. Special Correspondence to The Democrat. With the presentation of the instructions of the various countries at the Hague, it begins to be seen that the principal work of the present session of the conference is likely to be arbitration. The proposals of the American delegates have not yet been all submitted, but it is known that they left the State Department with this policy strongly impressed upon them. This government knew as well as the others that there was not anything practical to bo accomplished this year in the reduction of armaments, and it decided that next to reducing armaments the best thing was to get the nations to agree to refrain from using them so far bb possible. Thus arbitration is likely to assume the chief place in the deliberations of of the conference with this country taking the lead. It is thought that something more practical than the old arbitration treaty can be framed and if it is there is little doubt that the countries represented will all sign it. This is certainly a step in the right direction. A man may insist on his liberty to carry a gun, but if he can be trained not to pull it, the public peace is just as well conserved. And eventually, he may get in the habit of leaving bis gun at home. t t t Formal complaint was filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission last week against the socalled shipping trust. This trust consists of the Hamburg American, the North German Lloyd, the Wilson Line, and the Scandanav-ian-American line. The complaint grew originally out of the arrangement that these companies were alleged to have made with the American railroads for pooling their immigrant traffic. It was charged that the steamship companies, that is to say the Hamburg American Line (for that was the dominant factor in the trust) ranted the immigrants as it chose from the point of embarkation to the point of destination and that the traffic was divided up between the railroads without regard to competition in this country and with little regard even to the wishes of the immigrants. This was rathdr bad, but though the immigrant was many in the aggregate, he had few friends individually. Beside that there was no law in the United States against pooling passenger traffic. But there is a very stringent law against freight pooling, and it iB now charged that the Hamburg American Line extended its jurisdiction to the freight of this country both going and coming. A manufacturer here if he wanted to reach a foreign market, had to route his freight as the pool dictated or he was crushed immediately. It is pointed out in the oomplaint that it is rather hard for a company owned and controlled abroad to have the entire say as to how freight shall be carried even in the land lines in the United States. It will make a long toilsome inquiry to look into the matter, but it is assuredly coming.

The young emperor of China has been graciously pleased to send a personal message to the President thanking him for remitting the portion of the Chinese indemnity that is owed to the United States over and above the actual expense of the United States in-helping to put down the Boxer uprising. This message was delivered to the President this weok by Sir Chentung Liang Cheng, the retiring Chinese Minister who was a guest at luncheon at Sagamore Hill prior to his sailing for China. It will be remembered that the Chinese indemnity pledged to the United States amounted to about $55,000,000 with interest. This China was paying off in instalments as she was doing with the sums awarded the other powers. The President felt that the payment, of the indemnity was rather a piece of international robbery for it much more than covered the expenses of the United Stafes due to the Boxer uprising and left a substantial sum for damages to the families of missionaries and merchants killed there without then coming within 140,000,000 of the full amount. It had been the intention of the President for some time to secure the remission of this indemnity if he could and he bo told the Chinese Minister about a fortnight ago. It will take an act of Congress to make the remission legal, but the Emperor of China evidently does not know much about the American system of government, for he took it that so long as the President was agreeable there wee nothing more to be said. 60 he sent hiß

thanks by bis minister. It is to be hoped that these thanks will not prove embarrasing, for the President does not always get his way with Congress and it is jaet possible that Congress may not agree to cancelling the debt. Of course the chances are that Congress will, but tbo opposite course would certainly leaves lot of very delicate explaining to be done for the benefit of the Emperor of China, t t t Almost everything is put up to the Interstate Commerce Commission these days, aud the latest complaint that has been made is by the banks against the express companies. There are less than a dozen express companies and 7*500 banks represented in the oomplaint. Their grievance is about the express companies doing p money transfer business. Almost everyone has bad occaeion to buy at some time or other au express money order, cashable as the advertisement reads “in any one ot its 30,000 offices in the world.” It is a convenient and not very expensive service and is appreciated by the public, especially by travelers abroad, whatever they may have to say of the practices of express companies as a rule. But the banks say that the express companies are taking the business that legitimately belongs to them and they ask that the companies be enjoined from carrying on the money transfer business any longer. One of the sore points where it is said the express companies add insult to injury, is that they do not even take the trouble to keep a sufficient amount of cash on band in their offices in small towns to cash the ordinary ran of orders, but instead they direot the holder of the order to the bank which has to cash the order as a matter of policy with its easterners, knowing that the order is perfectly good but that it will lose money by the transaction.

ALL KNOW WHAT THEY ARE.

In no business does experience count lor more to both the dealer and the customer than in the implement business. Experience enables the dealer to know the value of goods. He can see at a glanoe whether they are artistic and will please a discriminating customer; in a word, whether they will satisfy buyers by giving first-class service. The same experience enables him to BUY RIGHT. Then he can SELL RIGHT. It is his larger experience, coupled with his thorough knowledge of the business, that has made C. A. Roberts, the Front street buggy man, so deservedly popular with the discriminating buyers of sightly vehicles. He served his time in a carriage shop way back in the 60s, when an apprentice had to know his business before he could begin work for himself. He put in seventeen years of his life building and repairing wagons and carriages, and can make every piece in them. He began to sell implements in 1882, and every customer gets the benefit of this long experience every time he shows an article. That is worth something, isn’t it? He sells Studebaker '•''and Page Bros’. Carriages and Buggies, and there are no better, and he has some other makes and styles. Studebaker Wagons, he claims, there are none so good. SUCCESS Return Apron or Litchfield Endless Apron MANURE SPREADERS. They are both all right. McCormick Binders and Mowers. YOU ALL KNOW WHAT THEY ARE, and Grain King Shoveling Boards, and there are more of them sold than any other make. You are going to need some of these articles this year, and you will always regret it if you do not go and see Roberts and see his goods before you buy. Paste this in your hat so you won’t forget to go. He will do the rest when you land. Don’t forget the place on Front street and the name. C. A. Roberts, the Buggy Man.

A“Bilious Attack.’* Symptoms. Sour stomach, nasty taste in mouth, sick headache, sallow complex, ion, the world your enemy. CaUS6. Constipation, inact*. ive liver, overflow of bile into the system. Relief. Treatment for two nights before retiring with AMD TONIC PELLETS One a night, don’t worry, sleep well and Nature'll do the rest, tntir* Treatment 25 Cts. Butter wrappers printed while you wait at TheDemocratoffice.

PEOPLE or THE DAY

A Royal Explorer. The Duke of the Abruzzl, who Is In this country in command of the war vessels sent by Italy to the Jamestown exposition, is. a member of the Italian royal family. As a relative of the king he holda high yank in both the army and navy, but it Is as an explorer that he Is best known. Although but thirty-four years old, the Duke of the Abruzzl has scaled Mount St. Elias, and in the arctic regions he has accomplished great results. In one season he managed to

DUKE OF THE ABRUZZI.

beat the record of Nansen, and it was only the hard luck of an accident which prevented him from accompanying the sledges which pushed farthest north. Only our own Commander Peary has reached farther north. Last year Prince Louis of Savoy, for that title also belongs to Abruzzl, made extensive explorations in Africa. The prince’s expedition added greatly to the geographical knowledge of the dark continent, and he has the proud distinction of a first ascent of Mount Ruwenzori, in the Mountains of the Moon. He has climbed thirteen other mountains which range in height from 14,000 to 17,000 feet In the Planting Season. S. F. Hood of the department of agriculture—with good prospects of success—is trying to beat the Japanese camphor trust by raising camphor groves in Florida. At a dinner in Huntington that celebrated an unusually fine distillation of camphor leaves Mr. Hood, the guest of honor, told a seasonable agricultural story, a story that should appeal to all suburbanites. “One beautiful spring morning,” he began, “a suburbanite looked suspiciously over his hedge and said to his neighbor: “ ‘Hey, what the deuce are you burying In that hole there?’ “The neighbor laughed—a harsh, bitter laugh. ( *“Oh,’ he said, ‘l’m Just replanting some of my nasturtium seeds, that’s all!* “‘Nasturtium seeds?’ shouted the first man angrily. ‘lt looks more like one of my Buff Leghorn bens.' “ ‘Oh, that’s all right!* the other retorted. *The seeds are inside.* ”

NOON IN RENSSELAER.

What Is doing on In Town When the Clock Strikes la. Noon, the dinner hour, the hour of comfort, of pleasure and relaxation —the one hour in the twentyfour which comes to men and women of every station with greater similarity than, the hour of any other function in life. Promptly as the clock strikes 12 in Rensselaer the shadows on anxious faces tnrn to lines of good will, and if villainous hot bread, pie, spices and other indigestible were excluded there would bo no such words as dyspepsia or indigestion in the dictionary. But the contrary is true, and medical science has to step in and aid the man or woman who has been too busy to pay proper attention to health. JJJThe greatest step forward in medical discovery is Mi-o-na, that cures all stomach and digestive troubles. In hundreds of the best homes in Rensselaer and adjoining towns the handy little tablets, so pleasant to take, yet so effective, have given quiok and lasting relief in indigestion and that disagreeable full feeling after eating. Mi-o-na acts very gently. Much of its wonderful power over indigestion comes from its uniform but sustaining action. The required stimulating and strengthening is given to the important organs of digestion without producing the slightest weakness or reaction. A 50-cent box lasts for a couple of weeks and will ward off a dozen attacks of indigestion. B. F. fendig gives a guarantee, absolute and unqualified, with every box of Mi-o-na to refund the money if it does not give satisfaction.

EL & E Granulated sugar, 21 lbs for SI.OO, Monsoon flour at $1.25 and Gold Medal at $1.40 is less than we could buy it now, Chicago Babgain Stork. Bead The Democrat for news. .

fThe effect of malaria lasts a long tune. X - You catch cold easily or become run- 2 down because of the alter effects of malaria, 2 Strengthen yourself with Scott's. J ? Emulsion, 9 oil X It builds new blood and tones up your nervous X X system. s Y 2 ALL DRUGOIBTBt SOo. AND SI.OO. X CLARA A. PETERS Doctor or Optics Baohklor or Opthalmoloot __ Master of Opthai.moi.ogy EVES TESTED THEE. ° v#r Chicago Bargain Store

{ Fins Sill Mil! ▼ \\/desire to thank the people of }asper and sur- 9 ▼ rounding counties for patronage' in the past 9 * and kindly ask a continuation of the same. Remem* ♦ ♦ ber we carry Groceries, Dry Goods, Buggies, ♦ W agons. Harness, and handle Horses and Milk ♦ * Cows. We try to sell what the people want to buy w * and buy they have to sell. Experience has 9 * taught us that people buy where they sell, and where 9 * they get value received. Remember you get here 9 9 what you buy : 1 : 9 J We have just purchased a carload of new Bug* 9 X gies to sell at bed rock prices. We are always ▼ Y anxious for more business and always ready to do as ▼ we agree | L. WOOD - Parr, Ind. |

We have never before been so entirely prepared to handle all de- p* l® partments of the building trade as we are this year. The prospect of §) increased building this year has caused us to lay in a larger line than at #) fa any previous period and we have the largest stock in the country. More than 25 cars received before April Ist. 2 CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, BRICK g (• SEWER PIPE, RUBBER ROOFING, W g LADDERS. § Beleivmg that we can sell you your bill for either new or repair work, fa Y. we confidently ask that you call in and get prices. § ESTIMATES ON ALL BILLS LARGE OR § fa SMALL CHEERFULLY FURNISHED. S | THE RENSSELAER LUMBER Go.| Across from Depot Telephone No. 4.

Anti-Pain P.U, iM| Cure .Headache ■fUjffil Almost Instantly, and leave no bad effects. r (They also relieve every other pain, Neural* im ! Rheumatic Pain, Sciatica, j Stomach ache, Ague Pains, Pains from iai|s||||| J Jury, Bearing-down Pains, Indigestion, Dfa rin ess, Nervousness and Sleeplessness. AH-Aches pßm By talcing one or two Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain K§§§|jS Pills when yon feel an attack edming on. f||g|| You not only avoid suffering, but the jfteak* ||§|S ening influence of pain upon the system. || nervous, irritable and cannot sleep, take 2 • tablet on retiring or when you awaken. This soothing influence upon the nerve* •HHHI brings refreshing sleep. * *5 doses, a$ cents.* Never sold in Bull, «