Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 February 1909 — Page 3
-fpso* pE saasmat How to Cura Indigestion WeU Known Family Physician Gives Good Advice •*Wh«t a person cannot eat ordinary food without discomfort afterward, when he has heartburn, sick headache, gas on the stomach, water brash, belches op pour 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,” said he. The quickest and best way to regain your normal condition la to step into the drag store and buy a 50c bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It gives natural, dally 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 Rldglll, of Brucevill*. Tex., bad 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 one bottle cured her of a very severe case of indigestion. A. It. Espich, Chief of PoUce, Mew Philadelphia, Ohio, says: "I find Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin the beat remedy for Indigestion I jnrer used. I would not be without It" Rev. A. J. Fletcher, Ruther. ford, Tenn., is now 80, and yet It cured him of stomach trouble of 60 years’ standing. Mrs. Mattie Crouch, Tlptonville, Tenn-, cured her five months' old baby of Indigestion with it, so you see that while It Is so effective it will cure cases Of long standing of dyspepsia and constipation in old people. It is perfectly safe for babies, and it Is pleasant to take, and does not pain or gripe. All druggists sell it at 600 and fl.oo per bottle. Pepsin Syrup Co., 807 Caldwell. Bldg., Montloello, 111., are glad to send a free sample to any one who haa not used it and will give It a fair trial. SOLD BY A. P. LONG.
. —’ 1 I ■ 1 ■ HEW CD Y FOR ALL FORMS OF ■ I RHEUMATISM I I LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, 'NEURALGIA, I KIDNEY TROUBLES, I I CATARRH, ASTHMA and I KINDRED DISEASES I I GIVES QUICK RELIEF I ■ Applied externally it affords almost In- ■ 9 stant relief from pain, while perman- ■ ■ ent results are being effected by taking ■ ■ it Internally, purifying the blood, dls- ■ ■ solving the poisonous substance and B gl removing It from the system. ■ DR. C. L. GATES ■ ■ Hancock, Mina., writ mi j£ ■ “ A little girl here had each a weak back f 9 oauaed by Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble K ■ that ehe could not atand on her feet. The ■ 9 moment they put her down on the floor she IS UN would ecream with pains. I treated her wtth ■ “S-PRO PS" and today she rune around as well ■ 9 and happy ae can be. I prescribe "B-PROPS” E 9 for my padenta and uae It In my practice." H ItEST"S-DROPS"I FREE R If you are suffering wtth Rheumatism, E 9 Lumbago. Sciatioa, Neuralgia. Kidney B 9 Trouble or any kindred disease, write ■ ■ to us for a trial bottle of “6-DROPS.” B ■ “ 5-DROPS ” is entirely free from K 9 opium.oocalne.morphine,alcohol.laud- ■ 9 anum and other similar Ingredients. B 39 Large Slza Bottle "B-DROPS" (300 Deeaa) ■ S *I.OO. Par Bala by Orugglata. . 9 II SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY ■ 9,. D«Pt AO. “ IT4 Laka Btraat Chicago
If You Are Sick It is because some of jthe 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, worn-out, nervous, irritable, cannot slee]p; 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 restore* health because it restore* this nervous energy. *T have bean Blok for a year. nA Sid not know what vu the matttf With me. T tried many remedies and SS.’V’S?' tad uervtNsr prostration if I had aid j&awstnt sav™. .5^ t>r. Miles' Marvin. I. .old by your Miles Medical Co, Elkhart. la*
SOAP BUBBLE PARTIIES.
Lay in a supply of new clay plpoa and be liberal In your estimate, for accidents are common. There are regular bubble blowers, If you prefer, but the pipes are cheaper and last as good. Before handling these -to the guests tie half of the pipes, with red ribbons and the other half with blue or gfCen. Have ready also a generous quantity of soap bubble water, made in this way:— Castile soap cut in nne shavings and placed in a clean bottle with 40 parts rain, or distilled water. Let Btand for a day, shaking frequently. •When the soap is efiti/ely dissolved, filter through flannel, then mix In a bottle, shaking violently and persistently and adding, a little at a time, two parts glycerine to three parts of the soap solution. Cover and let stand several days. After one or two days a white precipitate will rise to the top of the liquid, leaving the rest clear. Prom this draw off the clear portion with a syphon or pour off carefully and bottle ready for use. This mixture is called ‘ ‘glycerine liquid,” and bubbles made from it are so strong and durable that they may he blown to extraordinary size and will last for hours. When ready for the party put little bhwls of the liquid at regular Intervals about the dining table, which should be extended its full length; or Bhould you wish to make the game progressive, have small tables arranged in a circle. Pretty paper caps of scarlet for the boys and blue for the girls may he provided for the contestants if desired, and two -couples sent to each table. Among she contests which may he planned for the different tables (an umpire being appointed to Judge) are:—The most beautiful bubble, the largest bubble at one breath, the bubble that lasts longest, etc. If partners play In these competitions a prize can be given for the finest hubbies made by the two pipes forming the same bubbles.
This game makes plenty of fun.. To play it provide each contestant with a Japanese fan or one made from stiff paper, for with these the bubbles are propelled to a goal. At a given signal the bubbles are hlown from a starting point and fanned toward the goal. If a bubble bursts before a player reaches the goal, the player may return to blow a second one. Very similar to this sport is a soap bubble battle, for it consists in dividing the room by a string or screen, organizing the players into parties, the reds and the blues, giving one company places on the right of the line and the others on the left, three feet from the line Itself. Then, all being In readiness, armed with fans to drive the bubbles, the signal Is given and the game begins. The sides blow in turn, the enemy fanning or blowing the bubbles back. The point of the contest is to see on which side of the rope the Grabbles burst, the side that sends over the greatest number of hubbies being the winner. Among the appropriate prizes for the winners of this game are pieces of iridescent glass, glass paper weights, or, indeed, any pretty article of sparkling crystal. Of course, each contestant carries home the pipe with which he or she Has done valiant servica As to ornamentation for the room, jpretty table decorations would be opened milk weed pods, fluffy thistles or clusters of ths wild clematis now bo abundant along country roadsides.
Pay In Kindergarten Work
Why la it that this line of work is so unreraunerative? It is something that calls for as much patience, If not more, than is expected of teachers in higher school grades, yet the salary is meagre and one must serve an apprenticeship to get even one of the worst paying positions. No one knows but those who have had children in their charge just what it takes to entertain them, and this first year in preliminary training, even though mere play days, is something that calls for love, patience, tact and a large percentage of education. It is a position deserving of a salary commensurate with duties performed. No difference where I have lived, I have always had a coterie of little friends, and through ttyeso little ones who have come my way I have studied the very depths of child nature, their likes and dislikes. until I never hesitate to speak of them or for them, and while I dearly love the little folks of my acquaintance whom I have gathered around me to amuse them with paper dolls, stories or make play houses, yet I have found it a task at times, therefore my appreciation of the teachers who take up the work for a living. One must dearly love children to understand them; a grown person must be a child at heart, sometimes, to bs one of them, and the fact that a kindergarten teacher is this. And even more. Is one strong reason why she should he paid a larger salary. It Is not an easy task to learn the rudiments of the work, and it is not everyone who ean perform the duties even then; and to those who can, give them more power and more money,
A thin coating made of three parts lard melted with one part reetn. sad applied to stovsi sad grate* will prevent their rusting when not in use.
NOTICE—VAUGHN CHURCH PROPERTY SALE. We will offer for sale, on the day of February at the office of the Fanners’ Loan & Abstract Co., Rensselaer, Ind., at IQ o’clock a. m., all of the following property, formerly belonging to the said Vaughn church and now owned by the Trustees of the White County Quarterly Meeting, a corporation, -in White and Jasper Counties, tpwit: One half of an acre of land In the southwest corner of the southeast quarter of section two In township twnetyhine north, range seven wdbt, in Jasper county, Indiana; Also the building situated there on; Also the seats in said building; Also the church organ belonging to said property and the pulpit desk, lamps and hell attached to said building; All of said property will he sold together or seperately as purchaser may desire. Sealed bids or all bids will be received. Specify in your bids just what you aie bidding on and state price on each article hid on All bids will he made known on the day of sale, at the place above mentioned. Trustees reserve the right to reject any or all bids. Marlon 0. Gant, B. F. Ferguson, Albert Gosma. febs-12-19 Trustees,W .C.Q. M.
REASON ENTHRONED. Because meats are so tasty they are consumed in great excess. This leads to stomach troubles, biliousness and constipation. Revise your diet, let reason and not a pampered appetite control, then take a few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets and you will soon be well again. Try It. For sale at B. F. Fendig’s drug store. Samples free. A Maine man has written 11,730 words on a single postal card. But a certain eminent statesman we could •name can write e!eventy-seven thousand. words on a single subject—and then- some. SEARED WITH A HOT IRON, or scalded by overturned kettle —cut with a knife —bruised by slammed door —injured by gun or in any other way—the thing needed at once is Bucklen’s Arnica Salve to subdue Inflammation and kill the pain. It’s earth’s supreme healer, infallible for Bolls, Ulcers, Fever Sores, Eczema and Piles. 25c at A. F. Long’s. The census seems to be about the. last slice of patronage pie the Congressman have left
*TWAS A GLORIOUS VICTORY. There’s rejoicing in Fedora, Tenn. A man’s life has been saved, and now Dr. King’s New Discovery is the talk of the town for curing C. V. Pepper of deadly lung hemorrhages. “I could not work nor get about,” he writes, “and the doctor did me no good, but, after using Dr. King’s' New Discovery three weeks, I feel like a new man, and can do good work again.” For weak, sore or diseased lungs, coughs and colds, ashma or a bronchial affection It stands unrivaled. Price 60 cts. and SI.OO. Trial bottle free. Sold and guaranteed by A. F. Long. Been a big decline in the issuance of marriage certificates in New York since Lillian Russell quit marrying. FOR THAT TERRIBLE ITCHING. Eczema, tetter and salt rheum keep their victims in pertetual torment. The application of Chamberlain’S Salve will instantly allay this itching, and many cases have been cured by its üße. For sale by B. F. Fendig. Congress feels it has done a big thing in tabling parts of the President’s message. This is no more, however, than it did last year when it pigeonholed the majority of his important recommendations. HOW TO CURE SKIN DISEASES. The germs that cause skin diseases must be drawn to the surface of the skin and destroyed. ZEMO, a clean liquid for external use, will do this and will permanenly cure every form of itching skin disease. For sale everywhere. Write for sample, E. W. Rose Medicine Co., St Louis. Sold by B. F. Fendig. JI Harvard astronomers think there may be another planet outside of Neptune. The builders of those new sky-scrapers In New York Bhould have its course properly marked by buoys and fog whistles. ■ —. ■ ✓ This is Just the time of year when you are most likely to have kidney or bladder trouble, with rheumatism and rheumatic pains caused by weak kidneys. Delays are dangerous. Get DeWltt's Kidney and Bladder Pills, and be sore yon get what you ask for. They are the best pills made for backache, weak back, urinary disorders, inflammation of the bladder, etc. They are antiseptic and act promptly. We sell and recommend them. Bold by all druggists. « _ Philadelphia is oonvlned that Salome is no lady. • to.il 1 The Republican for yow sals
MODEL TOWN OF DANSALAN.
New Filipino Village Organized and ’ , Run in Yankee Fashion. Within earshot of the bugles of Uncle Sam and on the opposite aide of the Ague River from the military post of Camp Kelthley, district of Lanao, Moro Province, P. 1., has sprung Up the town of Dansalan, which Gen. Tasker H. Bliss, U. S. A., in his annual report says 1b probably "the first and only Instance In the Philippine Islands of the establishment of an orderly and well regulated community after the manner followed by the Anglo-Saxon settlers of the United States.” His description of its beginning throws an instructive sidelight upon the strange land ‘‘laws’’ of the country, and shows how things often have, to he done there outside the pale of the law to obtain results that are demanded by the needs of the people. The new town grew out of the necessity of removing the settlement of squatters at Marahui on the military reservation of Camp Kelthley. After much deliberation they decided to transfer themselves from the northern to the eastern shore of Lake 'Lanao. They then raised by voluntary subscription the sum of 3,000 pesos, which they placed in the hands of a committee of three Americans of their number, who negotiated with the Moros for an eligible site near enough to the military reservation to be assured of some protection, and purchased it. The site was then carefully laid out, and in accordance with a previous agreement lots were sold at public auction to an amount sufficient to reimburse the subscribers of the original purchase price of the site. The remaining lots were then deeded to the town to be sold to new settlers.
"This well considered, orderly and sensible procedure is, strange to Bay, in its entirety without sanction of law,” the report admits. ‘‘Neither the datto, with whom' the settlers negotiated, nor any of his followers had proved nor could prove title under existing laws. Neither the individual settlers nor the town could acquire title through the datto. But the datto and all his followers believed that the land belonged to him under Moro law or customs and that he could dispose of It as he did. If the settlers had not recognized these believed rights of his, if they had camped upon the site as being waste, unoccupied, uncultivated public land and should have proceeded to acquire title under the provisions of the land law whenever the latter should be made to apply, without compensation to the Miros, they would have brought on a war. There can be no doubt that their recognition of the fact that the Moro was there with his gun and his spear and that his gun and spear (in the absence of a greater number of opposition guns) gave him a valid title for which they had to negotiate, was the only sensible, civilized and Just thing for them to do. No doubt the rights they have thus acquired will in due time be confirmed.” A narrow minded stickler for equity might in this instance, as probably in many others, have brought on hostilities which the tact of an army officer was able to avoid. A novel feature in this case is that the mass of the settlers are not Anglo-Saxon with a long inheritance of the principles of independent and self-govern-ing village life, but are Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos and Moros who without hesitation submitted themselves to the domination afid guidance of a few Americans. “It is an illustration of what would happen could a sufficient number of American settlers of the old sturdy stock—Just such as those who are already here—be induced to settle in the province." . In the country occupied by the Tirurayes south of Cotabato, Gen. Bliss finds a territory especially inviting to the investor. The people are teachable and with kind and just treatment would become reliable laborers. No white man, however, should invest either his own labor or his capital without assurance of this native labor. The people are kindly disposed toward the white man, which cannot he said of the Moros, who, paradoxically, “like the white man’s government, which la just and firm but have no liking for the white man himself.”—Army and Navy Journal.
Groundhog Fights Snakes.
A groundhog on the McGrow farm, near Irwin, fought five Immense black snakes at the same time, killing two of them, and was In a fair way to slay the other two when McGrew and a farmhand went to the rescue of the little rodent. The groundhog bad burrowed beneath the barn, and the snakes endeavored to claim the hole. When McGrew and the farmhand appeared the groundhog was on his haunches nipping at the two remaining snakes. McGrew killed the two snakes and captured the groundhog.—Philadelphia Record. Prof. George P. Merrill, head of the department of geology of the United States national museum, has gone to Uutte. Mout, to bp present at a number of deep borings to be made in Canyon Dlabolo crater, the cause of which has been a puzile to geologists ever since It was brought to their, attention. some men of science believe'the depression to be an extinct volcano and others to lbs the record of the Impact Of s hags meteor which struck the earth centuries ago.
CASTORIA
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has beat In use for oyer 30 years, has home the signature at and has been made under his per* sonal supervision since its Infhneg, j Wpf Allow no one to deceive yon in this. * All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good'* are bnfr Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health sff Infante and Children—Experience against Experiment, t What is CASTOftIA Oastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor OH, Pam goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant* It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotfa substance. Its age Is its guarantee* It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cores Diarrhoea and. What Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. . 0t GENUINE CASTOmA ALWAti, The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. * •-*•/ . . ... . j j r • oiU TNI OKNTAUH OOMMMV. TT MUMUV ITMR, new YORK OTTV. I Apology to the Editors |M We would like to advertise in every number of this paper, but we are wm so small that we can’t wait on such a vast number of customers that it Ha||m would bring—we would like to tell I^9vf in every paper that we have the m9H91l best Country Horse Market in the Wm world, and that for Twenty-Five % 1 years we have done more for cashand time buyers to start people with means on their way to succss than any other 'man on earth, so far as we know. 15,000 customers —over 200 head of horses in stock—we make buggies, wagons and harness —everything the farmer, teamster and road man uses. We don’t take a note that we won’t give the maker a chance to pay, carrying him through life past failure of crops, .past misfortune, sickness and death, and then carry his heirs if they try — we flatter ourself that we know how to get you out of debt. Sale days for twenty-five years every Wednesday and Friday at Judyville, Indiana. feb.26frl.4t Write JUDY. ——- - -■ • •••.,••_ v l - J J I II iCI lin i* Jwii*'l I Or make Ms Repairs I About tbe Place? I If you are, then remember this: we can save you some * money on any amount of any kind of Lumber or Building I Material. We have a most assortment of the I best Lumber, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Moldings, Interior I and Exterior Finish, Porch Columns, in short, everything ■ that your likely to need to build with. Q Our stock is dry and well kept, and our prices are— £ well, an estimate will convince you that we [can save[you . ■ ■ money. > $ J. C. GWIN & CO. I fjjLjil i-l tfiyi .viji&oq « ) iJdi s eo/e oil' '<s<x iuis uoiaaeH
DISTEMPER .?%• , Hi .)**«*' e/e JUfit 1 COUGHS Horsts, Sloop ui Dtp flfflßUlltWWtW.trtitm.M--'the'TPtepubnaui for your sale bill*.
i, 11 7 nn.t,a o * Tsvma OTMMMnppM kill™, oooqh »o CURS ™ LUWOe WTH Pr. psi New Discovery for csnsr **ss*. d»stLma#grM»hUi»rt»e<eiWi oi KomiuSSSiiit 1
