Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 October 1908 — Page 6
&,■' ■■ ... If You I Are Sick It is because some of the organs of the body are not doing their work ;well. There is a lack of that nervous energy that gives them motion. Consequently you are weak, __ • _ * i able, cannot sleep; have headache, indigestion, etc. because there is not sufficient nerve force to keep the organs active and allow them to perform their natural functions. Dr. Miles’ Nervine restores health because it restores this nervous energy, *'l have been sick for a year, '‘and «d not know what was the matter with me. X tried many remedies and none of them proved of any value. I heard of Dr. Miles’ Nervine. I procured a bottle, and beforo I had takes naif of it I was better. I would have had nervous prostration if I had not got this medicine when I did. I continued to take it until I was entirely Well. I have since recommended It to five of ray lady friends, and they nave all thanked me for doing so, for ■ft. benefited-them all,” - MRS. ROSE OTTO. I*9 S. 3d St..'"” Columbus, Ohio. Dr. Miles* Nervine Is sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first bottle will benefit. If it falls, ho gajpaHß refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, InA r .'- j. .. . '"V . - Sour Stomach , No appetite, loss of strength, nerves* ftees. headache, constipation, bad breath general debility, sour risings, and catanfe fir the stomach are all due to Indigestion Redo! relieves indigestion. This new dlsosw **y represents the natural Juices of dig** ■on as they ecist in a healthy stomach. Combined with the greatest known took. g reconstructive properties. Kodol fo* pepsia does not only relieve lndigeatioa dyspepsia, but this famous remedy » all stomach troubles by cleansing Minifying, sweetening and strengthening Dbe mucous membranes lining the stomach. _ Mr. S. S. Bail, of Ravenswood, W, Va., say*' r I was troubls* with sour stomach for twenty years ißodo'. cured me sad we are now uslne it In naill VMT baby," Kodol Digests What You Eat. Matties only. Relieves Indigestion, sour storaate belching of fas, etc. Mtweared by E. O. DeWITT ft CO., OHIOAOO •old by ft. r. Fendig. ———— i 11 11 The Cough Syrup that rid* the system el • call I j acting u a cathartic ea the Mwela Jg LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP Bees is die original laxative cough syrup, Kains no opiates, gently mores tie els, carrying the cold off through the natural channels, Guaranteed to give Satisfaction or money refunded. Sold by B. F. FENDIG. KILL the COUCH os CURE the LUNGS w| t" Dr. King’s New Discovery FOR CBS!gs HB JSSk. AHD ALL THROAT AND LONG TROUBLES. GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY Oft MONEY REFUNDED. gSflfMeat Market (Sa) ROTH BROS. R sees wiser, lad. Shop first door east of Odd Fellows* building. Everythin* fresh and pleas Fresh and salt msftts, Mo*ft ate. Pleas# give on ft call and wa will guarantee to give you satisfaction. Nona but good cattle killed. Remember the place. Highest market price paid for hides ahd tallow. PIONEER Meat - Market J. BIGKLBBACH, Proprietor. v .j $■ y? 11 *> 4 *■ i* Beef, Pork and Veal » . D( , # HUliUll, aoUSflgO, OUIUgUd At Lowest Prloes. Th. Highest Marked Mae FUd for s ■ TLmlliLM MMmm mm m wm* -
THE VANISHING FLEETS
By ROY NORTON
ILLUSTRATED BY A. WEIL
IWI , hjr The TerereJ Auit SutiUjr Slg-Aiuea.
And each day brought him nearer to those round him, each night brought him better rest, and every hour added to the broadening of his serenity. He was now merely a man among men, playing his part in his Own way, enjoying it. and finding the worries of empire dropping away In this spot where all his crown of rulership availed Him nothing. What was the need to fret when his hands were tied? Why not dismiss it all from his mind? The great federation would pass on and on long after his bones had gone to dust. Here in these Canadian woods, which he had never dared hope to invade, was life such as he had dreamed of, freedom such as he had never known, and absence of all formality. Here were men who were learning to love him for himself, and for whom he was forming an affection that would last him to the end. Strange as It seemed, the cloud which had disturbed him on the night of the accident had taken another form. Then it had been because he was to be detained for an indefinite time. Now it was because the detention was to be so Bhort, and he saw with regret that the time for his departure was nearly at hand. He foresaw the reluctance with which he would enter that craft of the air and hear its metal door close him In for homeward flight, but as a prison door shutting him out forever from the forests and hills, the pools and brooks, which he had learned to love. Only now and then, as he tramped beside some stream or followed some game trail cut through the fallen leaves by countless caribou, he would smile Ironically at the amazement and alarm which must have been caused by his absence, not only in his own empire, but in the United States where were those who had caused his disappearance.
And In both surmises he was correct; but the distress in the American republic was perhaps the most keen. Not since the beginning of hostilities had the president and his associates •uffered such grave apprehensions as when it became known to a certainty that Brockton’s endeavor had met with accident or disaster. On the first day when the expedition failed to return from its voyage of conciliation no undue alarm was occasioned, ft being considered entirely possible that It had been compelled to return directly to the key to avoid observation. Another 24 hours of silence caused comment; but again It was regarded as tenable that a barrier In the first quest had required .a second trip. The third day passed with anxious expectations but no news. The fourth, however, was a memorable one; for then It became known to the entire civilized world that the heads of a nation had been abducted, and the situation in Washington grew almost unbearable. In response to an urgent message to the plant, “Old Bill” Roberts, Norma, and Bevins appeared on the fifth night, utilizing the new radioplane for their visit. The gravity of the consultation which followed was intense; but the faith of the* inventor in his work afforded some measure of relief. “It would be almost impossible,” he asserted, “for anything worse to befall them than delay. They may have been cast away In the air or on the land by an accident to their steering gear, which would require flight in straight lines. Nothing but a blow such as was sustained by Seventeen in battle could even temporarily stop both dynamos; hence it is Improbable that they lost their lives.” Step by step he reasoned out the course which would be pursued, and at last gave It as his opinion that the Norma had come to ground in Canadian woods. He suggested searching expeditions, even though it entailed the exposure of the secret, the abandonment of the Oriental campaign, and the opportunity to establish permanent peace. The president alone stood steadfast for the latter hope, and was quick to offer a new plan. It was that the people of Great Britain themselves should have a conclusive and final demonstration, and, yielding to his arguments, it was agreed upon. The project was no lass daring than those which had been executed before. The Dreadnought waa to be deposited In the Thames under oover of darkness, and in an apparently Impossible position, where tha people of London might look upon It as an object lesson. Immediately afterwards the king and his most powerful officials were to be shown tha working of tha radioplane, that they might be la a position to advance measures for peace and disarmament, fortifying their aig* men is by their own observations. The utmost secrecy was to be maintained, because In the meantime the Chinese armada might have sailed. In case it had not, the secret would b* given oat sod search began actively for the missing Norma and her dtstlr
passenger*; but In any avast - support would have been assure. Bevins, foreseeing the difficulty his task, asked and obtained. permission to invite the British admiral to accompany him, the wisdom of which Was evidenced. Favored by the difference In time, the speedy Roberts on that very night crossed the Atlantic and deposited letters to secret service agents in London, instructing them to obtain positive knowledge of where the king might be found the following evening. On her return she conveyed Fields and the Dreadnought to the key, preparatory to the momentous Journey. turb the thrones of Europe was accomplished without incident, but not without difficult?. The Roberta swooped down from the heights of air, untenanted save by her, to find spread between the earth and sky a blanket of fog; thick and impenetrable. Into It she slowly dropped, groping this way and that over the unsuspecting city, whose sounds came up to her but gave no hint as to locality. Aimlessly she wandered here and there in the murk, taking desperate chances in her quest. Suddenly something'loomed directly below the open port, from which Bevins was leaning and peering down, and only a quick change of course avoided a collision. Fields joined him, and Identified the dome of Saint Paul’3. It was a narrow escape, but enabled them to set their course and gain the deserted greens of Saint James’ Park, where Bevins was lowered by ropes to the earth. He stood for a moment while the bulk of the radioplane and the Dreadnought which she-was carrying rose into the air and disappeared from view. He felt alone in an unfriendly city, but set his teeth and stumbled out to a street, where he enlisted the services of a constable and a hansom, and was conveyed to the Cecil, whose lighted doors stared out upon the fog washed courtyard leading from the Strand. His message of the previous night had met with instaqt response, and no one would have suspected that the two men who lounged in the hotel entrance in seeming idle conversation, smoking and watching passersby, were important agents in the hands of fate. As nonchalantly as they had met they parted, one returning within doors, and the other sauntering back to the waiting hansom which was to convey daring audience with the king. (To be continued.)
Kennedy's Laxative Ceugh Syrup is used nearly everywhere, because It not only heals irritation of the throat and stops the cough, but it drives the cold out of the system through Its laxative principle by assuring a free and gentle action of the bowels, and that Is the only way to cure a cold. You can’t cure it as long as you are constipated. Insist upon Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup. Sold by B. F. Fendlg. There is so blamed much preaching in this world that nobdoy s:ems to have any time for practicing what is preached. Racing against death, A, C. Franklin, lineman, of Kankakee, who, rifting on a gasoline speeder, was overtaken by an east-bound Michigan CenI tral train near Hammond Sunday evening and fatally, injured. His machine was totally wrecked and he himself suffered a fractured skull. There seemed little hope for hig recovery at first, but later reports indicate that Ms condition is somewhat improved.
Kodol is a combination of the natural digestive juices and it digests all classes of food and every kind of food, so you see ft will do the work that the stomach Itself does. The only difference between It and the stomach is the stomach can get out of order and Kodol cannot, but Kodol can put the stomach into good order. Buy Kodol today. It is guaranteed. Sold by B. F. Fendig. John Glasco, of Anderson, he’d with ont bail at the Madißon county jail for the murder of his wife, has contracted a deep cold and violent coughing threatens his life. Long gashes in his neck inflicted by Glasco in an attempt at suicide after killing his wife were broken open by a paroxysm of coughing, and Glasco breathed through the gaping wounds in his throat. To those afflicted with kidney and nladder trouble, backache, rheumatism Pineules for the Kidneys brings relief in the first dose. Hundreds of HKiple today testify to their remarkible healing and tonic properties. 8D days’ trial SI.OO. They purity the >!ood. Sold by B. F. Fendig. nv Martin Gleason, the Lake Erie section foreman who killed Cbas. Woods, one of his crew, at Kempton, Tipton county, the evening of Sepi ember 3 by repeatedly striking him on the head with a heavy spade, was taken into court at Tipton and upon pleading guilty to the charge was given a life sentence by Judge Elliott Wood’s Liver Medicine in liquid form tor malaria, chills and fever, regulates the liver, kidneys and bladder, brings quick relief to biHoo»ness, nick-headache, constipation. Pleasant to taka The SI.OO bottle contains 2)4 times quantity of tbe fiOc alse. First dose brings relief. Sold by B. F, Feddig. nv
REMINGTON NOTES
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Napolean Marcott, Oct. 6, a daughter. „ Rev. Dooley, of Rockville, vieitsd Mr. York and family over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jones and children spent Sunday visiting friends in Chicago. Robt. Dye, of Oskaloosa, lowa, visited hls nephew, C. T. Dye, and family, several days last week. The Misses Flora and Belle Snoddy, of Delphi, visited C. T. Denham and family several days last weak. Mrs. John Wilson and daughter, Mi-3. Edward Bellows, have been visiting friends in Chicago the past week; Mesdames G. I. Thomas, .Tame-: Zea, and James Parks visited the latter’s brother, John Zea, and family at La Hogue, 111., over Sunday. Cards are out announciug the wedding of Mr. Chas. Bonner t > Miss Emma Parks, of Sandwich, Illinois, which will occur October 21s!. Mrs. Edwin Lucas and little daughter, of Fowler, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Brooks, several days last week and over Sunday. Lewis Hunt left Saturday for a two weeks’ trip through South Dakota, with the view of going (heir to Uve if the climate and country suits him. Mr. and Mrs. James Grennard, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Weir, and Misses Mollie Shearer, Blan’eh Pierce and Tammie Roush spent Saturday visiting relatives and shopping in Lafayette. Chas. Bonner, Sr., returned home from Pierpoint, S. Dak., Friday of last week, where he has been spending the summer with his daughter, Mrs. Flint, who, with her little son, accompanied him home for an extend- ! ed visit here with relatives.
WHERE BULLETS FLEW.
David Parker, of Fayette, N. Y., a veteran of the civil war, who lost a foot at Gettysburg, says; “The good Electric Bitters have done is worth more than five hundred dollars to me. I spent much money doctoring for a bad case of stomach trouble, to little purpose. I then tried Electric Bitters, and they cured me. I now take them as a tonic, and they keep me strong and well.” 50c at A. F. Long’s drug store. Among the prisoners who left the Marion county jail yesterday to begin penitentiary sentences was Henry F. McDonald, the man who shot and killed Chief of jDetectives Dwyer in a court room at Terre Haute McDonald was found guilty of manslaughter.
Tired mothers, worn out by the peevish, cross baby have found Cascasweet a boon and a blessing. Cascasweet Is for babies and children, and Is especially good for the ills se> common In hot weather. Look tor the ingredients printed on the bottle. Contains no harmful drugs. Sold by B. F. Fendig. Samuel A. Keiser, one of the most widely known traveling men in Indiana, died at his home in,« Noblesville of diabetes, after a year's illness. He was fifty-eight years old, and is survived by a widow and two daughters, Bessie and Hazel. WOULD MORTGAGE THE FARM. A farmer on Rural Route 2, Empire, Ga., W. A. Floyd by name, says: “Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured tbe two worst sores I ever saw; one on my hand and one on my leg. It In worth more than its weight in gold. I would not be without it if I had to mortgage the farm to get It” Only 25c at A. F. Long's drag store.
ITCHING SKIN DISEASES READILY CURED BY A SIMPLE REMEDY.
Any sufferer can be convinced by sending for n free trial package of Zemo to E. W. Rose Medicine Co., St Louis, Mo. Zemo Is a clean liquid tor external use. It Is of vegetable origin, pleasant and agreeable to use. The first application will stop the itching and burning, and if used according to directions, will draw all the germs and their poisons to the surface and destroy them, leaving a nice, clear, healthy akin. Zemo has made some remarkable cures of chronic cases of akin disease that had been pronounced tn--nrahU hv the leading skin specialists of this country. Among these cures ia Mr. Jacob Frank, proprietor Frank Mercantile Co., 821 N. 6th BL. 3L Loui*. Mo., R. W. Emerson, President Anchor Steam Laundry, St Louis Mo.. W. P. Taylor. 108 Shlnkle St, Findlay, Ohio; Mrs. Harvey Burks. Harrisburg, 111. These persons were cured by Zemo after they had given up all hope of ever being cured. They will gladly answer all inquiries. Zemo la for sale everywhere. B. F. Fendig, the druggist, has secured the agency for Zemo in Ronssel&er. He indorsee and recommandi Zemo and will be dad to show vou photos “d Jotters and other^pnS!
The Real Temperance Situation.
Two-thirds of the republicans in Jasper county are in favor of advanced temperance. ig - ; Two-thirds of the democrats in Jasper county are in favor of advanced temperance. The state conventions of both parties were enthusiastic for legislation that would lead to the elimination of the saloon from the state. The democratic convention met first and declared for a plan of voting on the saloon question in the townships and city wards.- The. repuhUcaus, .saon after, adopted a plan for voting by counties on the saloon question. It is difficult to tell just when the brewers and saloon interests first took a hand in the affair. They did not care whether they cast their lot with the democrats or with the republicans. They proposed to uee>mine wh re they were hit the worst find then line up with the other fellows. They figured from the experience at other places that the adoption of a county option law meant the closing of vastly many more saloons than did the township and ward proposition, and they had the working example of i other places to justify their belief. | Then tlib brewers got busy to prevent the passage of county local option. With them it was a question of “two plans to defeat the saloons, let us choose the one that will be the least injurious to our business.” * Ahd the anti-saloon league and the civic organizations andl the minis ers and other temperance forces got busy also. With them it was a question of ‘two plans to defeat the saloons, let us choose the one that is most effective.” The brewers, for business sake, went democratic. The temperance interests, for temperance results, went republican. The democrats of Jasper county were not\o blame. They abhor the brewers as heartily as do the republicans-. The republicans of Jasper coun y deserve no ciedit for having secured the county option piank, more than the fact that the delegates to the sta e fifty«««4- 1 U rtl tvEEfl «<Edri. nr»A«> (1* wuYCiiuuu liciycti w ytioo ttyuii H. But both interests got busy. The democratic party did not go to the brewers; the brewers went to the democratic party. The republican party did not turn itself over to the anti-saloon league; the league and its co-sympathizers lined up for the county option plan because they realized that it meant the destruction of hundreds of saloons.
j Governor Hanly called a special 6*B- - sion of the legislature and the coun y option bill was the chief mat er of consideration. The lines on which it were fought were plainly distlngu.shr able. The breweries did not so much line up with the democrats as they did against the passage of the county option bill. The anti-saloon league and the ministers did not so much line up with the republicans as they did for the passage of the county option bill. Its passage was secured. And to accomplish it six democrats in the hous voted for it. It is a law. Not a republican law; 1 not a democratic law. But a law of all the people of Indiana. ; No legislature will repeal it. It means the destruction of saloons in many counties, and it will have the s. p port of democrats as heartily as of republicans. | It means that almost every county in Indiana will within the next year vote on. the proposition. For the saloon. Against the saloon. And it means that tbe temperance people of every county, without regard to politics, will vote “against the saloon.” The Jasper County Democrat sayß that republican orators and republican newspapers have called the demo erats ”breweryites”, “saloon bums”, “drunkards', etc. We have not seen it, nor heard it, nor been guilty of it The republican orators and newspapers have ardently purposed to set thinking democrats right upon the subject. And we believe that many of them are now able to see that county option is a progressive step in temperance, and that they Fill feel it their duty Just once to vote for James B. Watson and a leglslautre that will support' the county option proposition. It is 'a matter for each individual to decide, and is the greatest Usue before the people of Indiana. In Ohio within the past -two weeks, a county option law has been tested. Up to date 33 counties have voted upofi it And 31 have voted the saloons out. It being thus seen that county option Is successful, there Is every reason to expect that sincere temperance people will vote for It
You cannot estimate a man’s income by the kind of automobiles hls wife drives. A New York woman recently traded her wedding ring, her bull pups for a choo-choo car. Is that there Is nobody near to pro-
■ 'A® __ Advice “When a person cannot eat ordinary food without discomfort afterward, when he has heartburn, sick headache, gas on the stomach, water brash, belches up sour food, and this condition has continued for a week or more, it certainly is time to do something and do it quickly.” That’s what a popular physician recently said to the writer. “First thing you know you’ll have dyspepsia if you don't,” safid -he. - .1:.: >.2-.-vCy, . £ The quickest and best way to regain your normal condition is to step into the ' drug store and buy a 50c bottle of Dr, Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It gives natural, daily movements to the bowels, and that is usually where more than half the trouble lies. Then It aids digestion, sweetens the stomach, acts on the liver and is a general system tonic. ; Postmaster Rldgiil, of Eruceville, Tex., had such a severe attack of dyspepsia that his stomach, liver and bowels seemed almost paralyzed, but a few doses of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin relieved him and today he is well as ever. Maude Hall, Alpena, Mich., says that cine bottle cured her of a Very severe case of indigestion. A. h, Esgtch, Chief of Police, New Philadelphia. Ohio, says: “I find Dr. Cald.well's Syrup Pepsin the best remedy for indigestion I ever used. I would not be without it.” Rev. A. J. Fletcher, Ruther- - ford, Tenn., is now SO, and yet it cured him of stomaoh trouble of 60 years’ -standing. Mrs. Mattie Crouch, Tlptonvllle, Tenn , cured her five months’ old baby of indigestion with it, m yon sec that while It Is so. effective it will cure cases of long standing of dyspepsia and constipation in o'.d people, it is perfectly safe for babies, and it is pleasant to take, and does not pain or gripe. < ' AH druggists .sell it at 50c and fI.OO per bottle, Pepsin Syrup Co., 307 Caldwell Bldg., Montlcello, Til., are glad to send a free sample/to any one who has not used it and will gtve it a fair trial. Sold by A. F. LONGl'■ • ■ THE STANDARD I rhlumatlsm I I LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, I I cSaRRMSTHMA and I KINDRED DISEASES I I GIVESQUICK RELIEF I ■ Applied externally it affords almost In- H I ■ it internally, purifying the blood, dls- ■ ■ solving the poisonous substance and ■ ■ removing It from the system. ■ DR. C. L. GATES . ■ iluoooek, Mian., write*i M ■ “A little girl here had «uah » Weak back ■ H ORosedby Rheumatism and Kidney TrooU# I ■ ™o l nr^^ P w»h paw'l h'er'wah ■ I »d D K’S^°be?‘i b^n^., s£wu>reS ■ ■ for mjPpXtteatn Rad ueubrny practice.” H If you are suffering with Rheumatism, I ■ Lumbago, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Kidney ■ ■ Trouble or any kindred disease, write ■ I I ■ opium, cocaine,morphine, aloohol.laud- ■ . ■ sum in and other similar ingredients. ■ I I ■ SWANSON RHEtmATIO CURE COMPANY ■ ■ P«pt. 90. I? 4 Lake Stmt. Chic**o SAVE YOUr"HORSES 1 Morris 1 English I Stable Liniment I ft pMUivFty tlw mmit pewetratwf iir.h*ent readk It dr.es W not slay on tlm ouUair, goat to Ike seat «f tire trouble at U an<«. It «Hajr» fever, reHeve. to. «»«**, re-luce* (welling, fl f t s P* e,4 r •*** Po*** I®* (1,. 1 Slfainad Tendon*, fcnnot, CoU, • &woti,e, SUM Joint*, Copped y( ■ JW»o« Boil*. Com*. Rhore lut.la, St.mgK.tU *o4 Lament** of *H Wind*. Y*m ir '-•’-v back .< it fail, to gre | In Use for 20 Years. S«nd Us u*.™. ...I, ...a (.*. M. Horu, Mil Citrate* and SwnlflMl Traalmadl." Uifini Inakt, ‘M‘ U.u, ,rn. USD, Wanted Will pajr Blgia prioaa and remit prosaptiy. Wlqr aand yomr amaae tn Chicago when yoa eaa aall M la yea Hr a*lgh boring town ui get a fair, boa* •at Inst Mack’s Creamery, Monon, Indiana. on* having bust nous with mm mm
