Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 November 1908 — Page 6
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN ANDJOURNAL DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY The Friday Issue Is the Regular Weekly Edition. SUBSCRIPTION RATBS DAILY, BY CARRIER, IO CENTS A WEEK BY MAIL, da.YB ▲ YBAR BBMI-WBBKLY, IX Adtaxcb. YEAR $1,140 HEALEY & CLARK, - POBLISHERS Catered at the Poatefllca at R,nnelaer, Indiana aa Seoond-Claaa Matter.
GOOD FAT HORSES WANTED. We will be here the remainder of this week, at Hemphill’s barn, and want to purchase a car load of good fat horses. H.l3d-w D. GLEASON & SON.
'MIND YOUR BUSINESS! ;; you don’t nobody will. It is your business to keep out of all the trouble you can and you can and will keep out of liver and bowel trouble if you take Dr. King's New Life Pills. They keep biliousness, malaria and jaundice out of your system. 25c at A. F. Long’s drug store. A man who cannot talk e'even times a day for every day in six weeks to crowds of from 1.000 to 20,000 in the open air will in the future be considered ineligible for the Presidency. WATCHED FIFTEEN YEARS. "For fifteen years I have watched the working of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve; and it has never failed to cure any sore, boil, ulcer or burn to which it was applied. It has saved us tn any a doctor bill,” says A. F. Hardy of East Wilton, Maine. 25c at A. F. Long's drug store. Some of the big black hats of the season show the wide brims rolled off the face in front and on one side and caught back with two or three ostrich tips. New motoring and steamer capss are exactly like the golf capes of the season except that they are longer. Some of them are full seveneighths length, and are finished with hoods. Dr. Rose M. Remmek, registered optician, who has made regular visits to Clarke’s jewelry store for five years, is now permanently located there. Dr. Remmek is fully qualified to accurately measure errors of refraction. This knowledge of the eye and rays of light enable us to determine the kind of glasses to prescribe. Our glasses are reasonable in price and your sight is priceless and we want your patronage. Fashionable big picture hats are made of velvet to match ti e gown with which they are worn and are trimmed only with long ostrich feathers, all carried out in the same shade.
ITCHING SKIN DISEASES READILY CURED BY A SIMPLE REMEDY. Any sufferer can be convinced by ■ending for a free trial package of Zemo to EL W. Rose Medicine Co., St Louis, Mo. Zemo is a clean liquid for external use. It is of vegetable origin, pleasant and agreeable to use. The flrnt application will stop the itching and burning, and if used according to directions, wiljl draw all the germs and their poisons to the surface and destroy them, leaving a nice, clear, healthy skin. Zemo has made some remarkable cures of chronic cases of skin disease that had been pronounced incurable bv the leading skin specialists of this country. Among these cures is Mr. Jacob Frank, proprietor Frank Mercantile Co., 821 N. sth St, St Louis, Mo., R. W. Emerson, President Anchor Steam Laundry, St Louis Ma, W. P. Taylor, 108 Shinkle St, Findlay, Ohio; Mrs. Harvey Burks, Harrisburg, HL These persons were cured by Zemo after they had given up all hope of ever being cured. They will gladly answer all inquiries. Zemo is for sale everywhere. B. F. Fendig, the druggist, has secured the agency for Zemo in Rensselaer. He indorses and recommends Zemo and will be glad to show you photos and letters and other proofs from prominent persons who have been cured by this remarkable remedy
SEVEN YEARS OF PROOF. ”1 have had eeven years of proof ( that Dr. King’s New Discovery is the best medicine to take for coughs and colds and for every diseased condition of throat, chest or lungs/' says W. V. Henry, of Panama, Mo. The world has had thirty-eight years. of proof that Dr. King’s New Discovery Is the best remedy for coughs and colds, la grippe, asthma, hay fever, bronchitis, hemorrhage of the lungs, and the early stages of consumption. I Its timely use always prevents the ’ development of pneumonia. Sold un- * der guarantee at A. F. Lon’s drug Store. 50c and tl.oo. Trial bottle free.
THE RETIRED LITERARY MAN.
Noise as Related to Literature—Delusions of the Quiet of Home. "Some writers'.” said the retired literary man, “can do their best work in a sawmill, some can produce their best results in a boiler factory; and, again, I have known men whose fancy rose to its finest and fullest fruition when drawn upon in a rushing, roaring railroad train. “But while some men thus could do their best work in the midst of what would commonly be considered as thi noisiest of surroundings, I nave never, yet known any men who could de good 1 work in the socalled quiet of home; and the reason for this is veiy simple.
“You see, in the noisy places suer as I have described the noises are uniform and rhythmic and to some men they may even be tuneful and soothing. There are many men, indeed including some not writefs, to whom the droning hum of the buzz saw is music, as to them tne scent of the freshly sawed lumber might be a fragrant and stimulating perfume. “To some men the continuous banging in a boiler factory may be the very reverse of disturbing it may be. rather, stirring and invigorating; and there are men who love the constant roar of the railroad train. But bear in mind that, as I nave said, all these no ses are uniform and rhythmic, while the sounds of home are likely to be intermittent and uesultory and thaFso even sounds comparatlvely light may here, in an a mospnert normally quiet, seem positively explosive. “And it is those sounds of an explosive character that are likeiy to prove most disturbing; though there may be other home sounds not so loud, that will, nevertheless, almost as effectually disrupt a train of thought. “ Why, I have known a literary man working in his study at home to be quite thrown out of balance by the sudden dropping of a flatiron on the floor of the kitchen below; to be so completely unbalanced, in fact, tha: he couldn’t do any more work lor hah a day. And the sudden or continuee wailing of an infant in tne house might exercise an equally disquieting effect upon his nerves, and so upo. his flow of thought; as might, indeea the boisterous play of elder children with the oversetting of chairs an bureaus and things of that sort; whlc last, however, I suppose might mon property be classed with the explosiv. sounds, though their explosive eft'ec is likely to be merged somewhat wit,, the preceding uproar.
OBJECTS TO AERONAUTS.
Holland Passes Laws Against Visit crs From the Clouds. The increasing frequency wits which balloons have come"to earth of late in-various parts of Holland ha; led to a bill being laid before the Netherlands Second Chamoer with a view to.putting a stop to these u»welcome visits. The bill, says the London Globe, is aimed mainly at balloons belonging to the German Aeronautical Societies in the region oi he Lower Rhine as in mc.;t cases i has been found that when the ba! loons nave landed the occupants ot the car have been officers of the German army,, ’and - in matin; these balloon trips into Du.ch lerri ;ory very naturally is thought to w connected witn spying out the coun ..ry. Henceforth, every aeronaut landing in the Netherlands will have to par a fine of £SO or go to prison for three months.
Women as Lawmakers.
Women not only have had the vote, but have actually sat in England: lawmaking bodies. Abbesses, in virtue of their position as wete.iit - Uygone days, entitled to a seat and•oice in the national council. The. turned up in big force at the council of 694, when the question of nunneries was in delate, and several of then: subscribed to the decrees made on that occasion. Again they sat in a national parley held in 855. And once again iu tne great council of Henry (11. and Edward I. when the abbesses of Shattsburg. Barking, Winchester and Wilton were in attendance, each with her retinue of lay folk.
Beyond the Last.
It has often struck me as a curious thing that in all the countr.es I have nhabited shoemakers should generally have been Socialists, says a writer in the Nineteenth Century. What. I wondered produced this odd phenomenon? It was hardly to be supposed that souls wiui socialistic tendencies incarnate oy preference in shoemakers as they could further their views just as well in other walks of life. It therefore became clear to me that there was something in the fact of shoemaking which favors this form of belief. At one time I thought I was on the right track and it was the handling and the smell of leather that did it. •
The terms “colony” and “colonial” have no place in the lexicon of American political administration. Yet the Mot that we have a little collection of insular possessions, noncontiguous territories, a leasehold in perpetuity in Panama, a right of intervention in Cuba and an object of disinterested benevolence in Santo Domingo, to say nothing of what the fates may yet pitch into qur windows or leave os our doonrteps, makes those terms convenient and they are appearing more and more frequently.
CARDEN FARM
BRACING CORNER POSTS. How It Can Be Effectively Done at Small Cost. This method, while cheaply devised, is used very effectively in bracing corner posts. Use as a brace a pole nine or ten feet long, four or five Inches i in diameter and square at both ends. Fit one end of pole. to the. post half way between its middle and top and place other end of brace on a flat stbne. Secure one end of a wire around bottom of post, then takeit to
Way Bracing Is Done.
outer end of brace and back to post again, fastening securely. With a short stout stick twist wires together until very tight and your brace is complete, gays Farmers’ Review. This brace comes in line with your fence and by fastening your wire or boards to it prevents it from slipping sideways.
APPLICATION OF MANURE.
Get It on the Land as Soon as Possible. In order to reduce the loss in manure to a minimum, and also to economize in handling it, the general aim and practice should be to haul it directly from the stable to the field and spread it at once. On the average farm the following of this practice all through the year would result in less loss than any method that could be pursued. The use of rotted manure rather than fresh manure is desirable in connection with many market garden or vegetable crops, as it gives quicker results and with root crops will give a smoother and nicer product. Manure should be spread as soon as it is hauled to the field. The practice of putting it in piles is objectionable because of the loss that is likely to occur. The placing in piles also involves additional labor. The manner of spreading will depend upon local conditions, but where the distance to haul is relatively short and it is desired to have it evenly spread the manure spreaders will be found serviceable machines. From ten to twenty tons of manure per acre Is usually considered a fair application; but considerably more is frequently applied for market garden crops. Experiments have shown that generally it would be far more profitable to use about one-half the usual quantities and to supplement it with commercial fertilizers.
AGRICULTURAL NOTES.
Protect the meadows when they are soft. Tramping injures them. Manure of all Sinds should be well protected during bad weather. If it has been carefully kept under cover and properly applied, it will show its effect almost immediately; bnt if it has been leached by heavy rains and exposed to drying winds and the sun’s rays, It Trill riot be so valuable. Give the boy two or three acres of ground to farm this year. Allow him to send to the state agricultural college for some seed corn and assist him in preparing the ground and planting this seed. The work will be good for him, the information obtained will be invaluable and the profits will be ample for him to provide his own clothes for the coming year. As a measure of economy, plan to grow plenty of vegetables for the family table throughout the year—potatoes, peas, beans, beets, sugar corn, tomatoes, onions, cabbage, etc. Study out a good truck patch now, and - work it for all it is worth. Buy seed now if need be. Also grow plenty of roots for the cows, horses, sheep, and poultry, and. save buying bran. It is the buying of food things that keeps some fanners poor.
Loss of Fertility by Leaching.
Land kept constantly as a garden loses much of its fertility by leaching A clover rotation Is the best preventive of this. There should be at least two or three garden spots on each farm kept rich enough so that one year’e extra manuring will bring it into the finest possible condition for garden truck. If farmers could always plant gardens on two-year clover sod they would raise better crops and with less stable manure and other fertilizers than they now require. The clover does much more than furnish green manure to ferment in the soil. Its roots reach down infto the subsoil, thus not only saving and bringing to the surface plant food that would otherwise be wasted, but also by enlivening the subsoil, allowing the roots of crops to go deeper. Clover sod to begin with, if well enriched, is best for such crops as cucumbers and melons, that are always most liable to suffer from drought It is quite impossible to make a good garden crop, unless the land has previously been enriched by * series of heavy mannrings. The fertility lost by leaching must be con stoutly renewed.
DIFFICULT CENSUS TAKING
A Delicate Task in Egypt—Discovering of the Harems. The country for the last tew days has been going through a series of questions and answers. It is the period of the decennial census. At home the taking of the census is a comparatively easy matter. Every householder has his or her sheet to All up on a certain night and the collector fetches it on his rounds, and there the matter ends. But in Egypt there are insuperable difficulties in the way of such simple methods. To begin with as the illiterate class is large, it is manifestly impossible to get the forms filled in, writes a Cairo correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette. So the Government has had to nominate an army of inspectors, who have been going from house to house and have powers to penetrate to the inner apartments in order to obtain full details. Of course in a number of cases the natives, not understanding the cause, resent this intrusion, and some of the incidents have been awkward. Moreover, very few of the fellaheen really know their ages, tneir idea or time being fixed by events, ’thus one man’s reply to the questioner was that he was a boy working in his father’s field when Alexandria was bombarded, and another that he remembered seeing the “miuKa fransawiya,” evidently the Empress Eugenie, .at the opening of the Suez Canal. On the other hand the women, unlike their Western sisters, do not consider age a thing to be ashamed of and unblushingly admit, in sone cases, quite ten years more than possibly is their age. The harems have been another obstacle to the completeness of the census, and in many instances the inspectors have had warm quarters of an hour with the surly and unwilling eunuchs who guard those portions of the Easterner’s domicile. Altogether the lot of a census inspector is by no means a happy one arid it cannot be wondered at that • many of them fight shy of the job The task requires no end of tact., patience and persuasive power ana, considering the difficulties in the way and the fact that the inspectors are empowered to hale recalcitrant inhabitants before the nearest magistrate or mainour it speaks volumes for th. able manner in which the inspectors have tackled their delicate task tnat very few cases hav6 been reported.
MEDICAL EDUCATION IN JAPAN.
Xnowledge of the Healing Art Due to a Dutch Book. The first Western knowledge in trocuced into the Japanese Emplrt was through a Dutch textbook of anatomy, which came into the hands ot i Japanese physician about the year 1771. After months of study, this physician and three friends numisiied r good translation of the book, it ' sught them that their former leading had been wrong. Ou looking nrs xt the illustrations in the boo!;, they iissected the body of a criminal in order to find opt who was right—the? >r the teachings of the Dutch book. In 1868, the Imperial Universltj was established, with an excellent medical school, In charge of -Germ a t teachers, and a four years' courwhich admitted just 100 students t< each course. These who prepare foi the medical work also take German is a language, since it is the medicai ;anguage of Japan. Today all the teachers in the Imerial University are Japanese, wit) he exception of two honorary professors, who arg German. After th' itudent receives his degree—at th nd of the four years—he s allowee to practice wnthout a further examination, and so much are physicians ii demand that minor schools of medi ine nave been established, the stud mts of which are allowed to prac ice by obtaining a license after passng an examination.
American Pianos Abroad.
There is no trade in American-made lianos in Scotland because it has been .ound that when pianos are manufactured in the dry climate of the Uniled States and brought to Scotland the wood in the course of a few months is seriously affectci by the dampness, causing Joints to open and frequently buckling” the s' Hiding board. One .American firm does a very large business in that country but it has all it. Instruments made In Hamburg, where the wood has been seasoned in a climate similar to that of Scotland. L has become a saying in the trade that the only "American” pianos sold m Scotland are "made in Germany.”
Devastation by Sand.
On the coasts of Pomerania there are large tracts of sand, heaped up by the wind, hundreds of yards in breadth and from sixty to 120 feet high, and these hills, propelled by the wipd, move steadily in an easterly directioi The speed at which these great hills travel is from thirty nine to fifty six fedt a year. Pine woods, which sometimes come In their line of march, cannot stop them and are completely destroyed. The branches are rotted off by the sand and nothing is left of the trees, but the bare stems, which after a few years wither and die.
Baton works hardest when the churches are closed for Lie lummer vacation. A foul tongue cannot express the desires of a clean heart
NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS AND LEGATEES. In the Matter of the Estate of Ethie Tyler, Deceased. In the Jasper Circuit Court, November Term, 1908. Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Ethie • Tyler, deceased, and all persons interested in said estate, to appe-r 'in the Jasper Circuit Court, on Satmv day, the sth day of December. ISOS;' being the day fixed and endorsed ! on the final settlement account of Joseph L. Tyler, adminis rator cf ; si i i decedent, and show came if any. ■ why such final account should n t he approved; and the heirs of said J decedent and all others int• reste' are also ' hereby notified to appeal T in said Court, on said day and m ke ‘ proof of their heirsh p, cr <1 im (o any part of said estate JOSEPH L. TYLER, ! - a , Administrator. Nov. 6-13-20. NOTICE OF APPO NTMENT. Notice is hereby given that tie undersigned has qualif.ed a? esecutor of the estate of Barbara Meyer late of Jasper county, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. ARTHUR H. HOPJCINS, j Executor: Oct. 31, 1908. n. 6-13-20
Late Chickens Wanted. I want to buy all the small chickens from one to three weeks old in the country. A liberal price will be paid, according to size. J. H. HOLDEN, j At Holden Chicken Farm, Renssel er Ind. nv.2o You can cure dyspepsia, indigestion, sour or weak stomach, or in fact any form of stomach trouble if you will take Kodol occasionally —just at t e times when you need it. Kodol dots not have to be taken all the tiim. Ordinarily you only take Kodol now and then, because it coni pie e’y digests all the food you eat, and after a few days or a week or so, t e st ip ach can digest the food without t e aid of Kodol. Tien you don’t need Kodol any longer. Try it today cti our guarantee. We know what' it will do for you. .Sold by all druggists Wood’s Ive _„aaione *n liquid form for malaria, chills and te-ei regulates the liver, kidneys and bladder, brings quick relief to bilious ness, sick-headache, constipation. ■ Pleasant to take. The $1.1)0 bottle ; contains 2% times quantity of ti e Me I siMr. First dose brings relief. Sold, by B. F. Fendig. nv !
SICK HEADACHE. This distressing disease io ul s. from a disordered condition of the_stpm cu and can be cured by taking uh mberlain’s Stomach and Liver T Diet i. Ge a free sample at B. F. Feadig’s du; store and try it. c "7 DeWitt’s Kidney and Lla der Pill, are unequaled in cases of weak back, back ache, imlamma ton c f tl e bladder, rheumatic pains, and ;1 min ry disorders. They aie an : l ejtlc <nd act promptly. Don’t delay, for delays are dangerous. Get DeWitt’s Ki’n y and Bladder Pills. Sold by all ,d uggists. If you are a sufferer from pilei Man Zan Pile Remedy will bring re lief with the first application. Gua: anteed. Price 50c. Sold by B. > Fendig. nv Quaint accessories rule with the renaissance gowns—such things as fitted bodices, laced in the back, tkin tight sleeves, buttoned the whole length, old brocades, Dig mantles, etc. Kodol contains the same dige five Juices that are found in an ordinary healthy stomach, and there is, therefore, no question but what any form of stomach trouble, Indigestion or Nervous Dyspepsia, will yield readily yet naturally to a short treatment of Kodol. Try it today on our guarantee. Take it for a little while, as that is all you will need to take. Kodol digests what you eat and makes the stomach sweet. It is sold by all druggists.
Rings Little Liver Pills for biliousness, slckheadache. They keep you well. 25c. Try them. Sold by B. F. Fendig. ’ • nv. To those afflicted with kidney and bladder trouble, backache, rheumatism Plneules for the Kidneys brings relief In the first dose. Hundreds of people today testify to their remarkable healing and tonic properties. 80 days’ trial 11.00. They purify the blood. Sold by B. F. Fendig. nv Pleasant, Sure, easy, safe little liver pills, are DeWitt’s Little Early Risers. Sold by all druggists. Bees Laxative Cough Syrup atwayi brings quick relief to coughs, colds hoarseness, whooping-cough and al bronchial and throat trouble. Mother* •specially recommend It for children Pleasant to take, gently laxative. SoM by B. F. Fendig. nv
1 ' J'U--..-' . .■■■■■ ■ Professional Cards n ' . DR. E. C. ENGLISH . PBYFHMAH AND-SURGBOM Jtflglst .old -da; nils >••¥•» pompt *•» nt. offtoe i 17• - - T ipd. . IWASHBURN . b.'-v : i, iridian a. > r A. i URT LER FfimdsrAir » -rky Building • - - ■ ’ infiiaia. tT th A<nte sal DR. E. N. .LOY ■ - to p.-. '.V, W fiattsoM. >■ jhsT.rs < i , in Willln— KtockTHI ST Ob . U.E > IK-NE A .omietfee College Avenue, Phone It*. - Reiisrelaer, Indiana. r. F-- s c Jnrta IHWiN & IRWIN - KKAL tMeA'e’fc AND INSinu Ari-Ow* - - —■ ~ u-tt.f "fetm IuwTJS. Ufflee in OM li Ws ’>:<• ii. KonfAaeiher. Indiana - - ...V-.—.. .’ .. Airnn i? It. iiopkins law, Loans, and Xeal EsUte txiana'on fartitf and > tty property, per* -•■r. i iecur’iy und mortgage. Bap, eAt <uiu i' tit ijniiw and oily property, .. ■n and city lire. insurance. Offtae ■ « r Chn ’.Rd liaiy ln Store. P i ’hdl-'n* E. P. HONAN - AW, if TAW — ' tn:-,y.r nc - aat raettou 4>. the ••>>». oitended to with i'.,'.’.- '■ • .o' • itosiMM :i,>. r, -Indiana CI!AS. M SANDS LAW . .Vfcu’iucn ■- r • . •>. y. >. dw. > ■■ iiu r, Xad. r_. •; - > D . : Mn *1 i..--W ■ '. ■■ /. ! i’_. li.SUg. •. « '.ntag* ~ ~ I.od v .1. , . r g re-te. Itlee T< ? J si iTTJ K .. <m -V Br-X) nl <>f f i-’ i , v- . • v the InuiD-nupt JiisA bonia.v b'o vin ! the •iiurt Offir i >ing.
ILL. BHOWN' “ Us own and Biljg- ork and T*eth : -'•d I - :l. t Cl ■ tv. AH th* - <d--f.-n. Of. •w- tnrsh's Drug Store. J. W. HORTON » , DKN'VIHT Fll GRADUATE OF PROSTHESIS Modern Service, Methode, MalerfaUe, ' Oypoelte Court House Farm Loans. If you have a loan on your FARM, and want to renew it learn our terms. We still have some money • to loan at Five per cent and reasonable commission. With partial payment privileges. No undue delay when title is good. If you desire a loan now or in the near make application at once before rates are advanced Call, telephone orwrite First National Bank North Side Public Square. HD. Subscribe foe th* Republieaa.
