Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 90, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 July 1909 — Page 7
t I J I . H I - ; .-■ . & . I ■ |ußß ■ a\T? "<2 i« ts «.«! gfl UM ?■ . ,£v 1 | | I riesFandßestContains neither Opniih.Mprplune norNineraL H Not Narcotic. ■ ■ I j»»vt V *—2—SL..——£ A pqfect Remedy for Cons lipa- ■ Honour Storiuch.qjarrWi ■ Worms .Convulsions .Fevefihtb neas andIOSSOF SLEEP. || Facsimile Si, shire Exact copy of wrabber.
That Lame Back Means Kidney Disease And to Relieve the Lame and Aching Back,' You Must First Relieve the Kidneys
There is no question about that at all —for the lame and aching back Is caused by a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder. It Is only common sense, any way —that you must cure a condition by removing the cause of the condition. And lame and aching back are not by any means the only symptoms of derangement of the kidneys and bladder. There are a multitude of well-known and unmistakable Indications of a more or less dangerous condition. Some of these are, for instance: Extreme and unnatural lassitude and weariness, hervous irritability, heart •Irregularity, "herves on edge,” sleeplessness and Inability to secure rest, scalding sensation and sediment tn the urine, inflammation of the bladder and passages, etc. DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder Mis are an -exceptionally meritorious remedy -for -any and all affections or conditions of these organs. These Pills operate directly and promptly—and their beneficial results are at once felt. They regulate, purify, and effectually heal and restore the kidneys, bladder and liver, to perfect and healthy condition—even in some of the most advanced cases.
■ •»'.« I ’ * \' II | I . A little journey on the inland seas is the most pleasant . 5 and economical vacation trip in America. The ever varying scenery ol the shore line and the picturesque Affl beauty of the islands add interest and delight to every mile i of the tnp. All the important ports on the Great Lake, are reached regularly by the excellent service of the D A C Lake Lines. The ten large steamers of this Fleet have all the qualities of speed, safety and comfort. Every boat is of modern steel construction and is propelled by powerful engines. The Clark Wireless Telegraph Service is used aboard. jj|| Tickets reading via any rail line between Detroit and ®HiS MF Buffalo, Detroit and Cleveland, in either direction, are BB HH available for transportation on D 4 C Line Steamers. MH |B The D & C Lake Lines operate daily trips between Buffalo and Detroit. land and Detroit, four trips weekly between Toledo. Detroit, Mackinac and wayports, and two trip* weekly between Detroit, Bay City, Saginaw and wayports. A Cleveland to Mackinac special steamer will be operated from June I »th to September I Oth, leaving Cleveland direct for Mackinac stop- ( ping at Detroit enroute every trip and at Goderich. Ont., every other trip. Special daylight trip between Detroit and Cleveland during July and „ 4 August. Send 2 cent stamp for illustrated parnph- ' let and Great Lakes Map. Address: L. G. Lewis, G. P. A., Detroit, Mich. L—p h McMillan, Prc.idaat F ■ A. A. SCHANTZ. , ■ 1?
Automobile Livery We have Just purchased another Touring Cnr, and will place both Cars at the public’s service. We drive our own Cars and guarantee satisfaction. When in need of a Car, we will be glad to serve yon. Our prices are right and our Cars are reliable. Phone M 2-141. Or call at ear shop. White & Hickman.
| ■ I II H I wk ||M|B ■ ■ Fdrlhfiirt»fcndChilareiL The Kind You Hara Always Bought ! Bears the f * Signature /'nw o f XXy ft dir II n/ ® sb . If For Over r Thirty Years CASTORIA TMO ocntbvr COMPANY* NKW VOfflK OtTVL
x Cu&s'fjn met\oa l ' *\aP z ~ lUIA 30 S EM kAyA > ilk E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, 111., want every man and woman who have the least suspicion that they are afflicted with.kidney and bladder diseases to at once write them, and a trial box of these Pills will be sent free by return mall
FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
TRAINING OF YOUNG MEN
Trade Schools Are Being Organized to Help Young Men Help Themselves to Better Living.
Training the hand to obey the mind, fitting young -men to help do the world’s work in industrial lines where skilled workmen are required, is doubtless receiving more attention than any other phase of the newer education in this country. Andrew Carnegie has with many millions endowed an institute for training young men in the trades, and schools of this character, both large and small, are being founded in many states. The whole effort is to the general end of providing more skilled workmen among the masses of young men, to help them to higher earning power and a better level ofliving, and through this development their employers will have a larger and better output with which to meet the ever growing demand for their products. To insure his future, to place himself beyond the poverty which besets the day laborer is the incentive which induces the young man to enter one of these trade schools. To get better workmen and more of them, without having to do the training in his own shops, is the Incentive which has prompted the employer to help establish these schools. It is doubtful if any of these schools in the United States is exciting the attention of organizations and men most
Corner of Pressroom, Winona Technical Institute.
interested in this sort of training, or is receiving encouragement from young men in the way of enrolled students, that is being bestowed upon one of these Institutions in Indiana—Winona Technical Institute, at Indianapolis. It was not the first technical school founded in this country, it is true, but it is one of the pioneers, and is regarded as a "trail blazer” in this sort of education by embarking in it on a most extensive scale, in the magnitude of its equipment, in the number of students and graduates, in helping young men to help themselves, and in following out numerous lines of industrial training never before attempted. The Winona Institute has the only successful school for training iron moulders in the world, the only school of lithography in North America, and it has one of two schools for tile-setters In the United States. It will before many months have the only school in the world for the training of hotel stewards and chefs. If its other departments are not the newest, they are among the largest and most successful to be found in the United States.
Winona Technical Institute is to large degree a public enterprise, although it does not depend upon the state government for an appropriation. Neither is it an Institution which pays profits to stockholders and individuals, nor fancy salaries to those in immediate charge. The means with which ft began its career in 1904 came in the Corm of public subscriptions amounting to a total of >154,000, which went for the purchase of the splendid tract of ground and buildings now occupied, not far from the heart of Indianapolis. To equal degree, too, it is a national Institution, for since its beginning gifts in the form of money, equipment and general support have poured in upon it from all over the United States. The institute is also international, for its student body has been made up of young men from all over the worMU and every clime of North America and every state in the union have been represented by students in the workshops. Profiting from experiences in the Civil War, the United States government in 1865 began the construction of arsenal, or storage, properties in different sections of the country. One of the most extensive was established at Indianapolis. The site was then on the eastern edge of the city, but now the city has grown entirely around It. A heavily wooded tract of seventy-six acres was chosen for the arsenal, and on it the government built five massive buildings, two large residences and two or three smaller structures, all of stone and brick, with slate roofs, and costing about >750,000. In 1903 the government began abandoning Its ar senate, throwing the real estate on the market. The idea of converting the property at Indianapolis into a great trade school originated with the public spirited men who had promoted the religious assembly and schools at Winona lake. The suggestion was promptly taken up by the moving spirits and newspapers of Indianapolis. Appeals ers were named to place a valuation on the arsenal grounds and buildings, and the low figure of >154,009 was
Winona Technical Institute, a Philanthropic School at Indianapolis, Exciting Interest by Its Methods, wf
nametj. The people of Indidba raised the mdney among individuals who gave from a few pennies to many thousands of dollars. In the fall of 1904, the organizers of Winona Technical Institute began the training of young men in the industries of peace in a place where the government had made and housed its accoutrements and implements of war. With comparatively little changes the buildings are splendidly adapted to trade school uses. Since the-prop-erty came into the hands of the Technical Institute more than $350,000 worth of improvements have been added, all of this money coming from organizations and men of the United Stated who have unbounded faith in the idea that if young men in these strenuous commercial times are to be taught trades it must be done in trade schools, and not under the old apprentfbeshlp methods. Some of the equipment fund has gone into heating and water systems which are buried beneath the. surface of the institute’s grounds, in an electric power and lighting system, the old government powerhouse being outfitted with equipment which makes it one of the most complete stations of its kind in Indianapolis, supplying all of the buildings
on the grounds. The largest building put up by the government was used for storage and the manufacture of soldiers’ clothing and other equipment. It is one of the largest and best made buildings in Indiana. It is now the Graphic Arts building, with three enormous rooms, one on each floor, and each 56x160 feet. The first floor is used by the School of Printing, the second by the School of Lithography, and the third is used as a chapel and library. The old barracks, where the arsenal's forces slept and ate, is now the Institute’s School of Pharmacy, the seventh largest of its kind in the United States in point of numbers. The government’s barn, a fine old building with a picturesque setting of trees and spacious grounds, has been remodeled for the School of Tile-Setters, where young men are taught the laying of tile floors, the building of fireplaces and ornate mantles. The building where in arsenal days grim old cannon was kept is being turned into great Schools for Building Trades and Machinists. Adjoining it is a large building of brick and steel which the National Founders’ Association built at a cost of >IO,OOO, and which houses the School for Iron Moulders. The old commissary is now the paint shop. There is an orchard on the grounds, a vineyard, many flower beds, lines of cement walks and drives which in long, graceful curves connect the buildings, all of them put in by the government, and the property has immense possibilities for future development.
A large portion of the equipment fund has gone Into machinery, implements and raw material for the nse of the boys in the workshops. The School of Printing contains >60,000 worth of equipment. It cost >125,000 to fit up the School for Iron Moulders; >28,000 has gone Into the working plant of the School of Lithography, and other departments are gtted up on a similar scale. It costs about >60,000 a year to operate the institute. All of this money has come from associations and individuals who have become convinced that the skilled workmen of tomorrow must some from such an institution, that such a system of trade schools cannot hope to become self-supporting, for they only serve their purpose by helping young men without means to acquire practical trades. For all that it now has in the way permanent buildings and equipment, which outrank without exception any trade school in the United States, the Institute occupies but little of its grounds. All of the buildings are on the south half of the seventy-six acres, with ample room for as many more. The north half of the tract is undeveloped. and on its broad acres are commanding sites for a score of great buildings. Measured by its development In its first five years, the institute has only made a beginning. Its present workshop capacity is 1,000 students, and its future promises to develop the foremost system of trade schools to be found In the union. It has had over 1,500 students, graduating over 600. Its latest student has Just entered the foundry department from Honolulu, Hawaii.
You’ll find Photo making here very easy, because we’ve got only the kind of photographs yon want, and because our desire to make you the right thing rather than to just sell you something. Ton won’t neef* urging when you see the values we, offer, as the QUALITY just sticks out all over them. The best photes you ever saw for the price. v v H. F. PARKER, Photographer.
wX f H' l ■ W W'l I l ' X CLARENCE POWELL, Comedian With Richards & Pringle’s Famous Minstrels, Ellis Theatre Tuesday, August 3.
PILES CORED AT HOME BY NEW ABSQBPTION METHOD. If you suffer from Heeding, itching, blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure yourself at home by the new absorption treatment; and will also send some of thia home treatment free for trial, with references from your own locaUty If requested. Immediate relief and permanent cure assured. Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write today to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P, Notre Dame, Ind. Too arduous attention of his wife to a salesman is the alleged cause of a double tragedy near Oaklawn, when Andrew Huff killed his wife with a shotgun and himself with a revolver. The bodies, lying across each other in the yard of their home, were discovered by the couples’ 16-year-old son Alfred.
Life 100/100 Years Ago.
Scientists have found in a cave in Switzerland bones of men, who lived 100,000 years ago, when life was in constant danger from wild beasts. Today the danger, as shown by A. W. Brown, of Alexander, Me., is largely .rem deadly disease. "If it had not t»een for Dr King's New Discovery, which cured me, I c uld not have lived," he writes, "suffering as I did from a severe lung trouble and stubborn cough." To cure Sore Lungs, Colds, obstinate Coughs, and prevent Pneumonia, its the best medicine on earth. 50c and >I.OO. Guaranteed by A. F. Long. Trial bottle free. The Rev. F. B. Neel, pastor of the First Baptist church of Columbus, has resigned and has accepted a call to the First Baptist church of Piqua, O.
Tortured On a Horse.
“For ten years I couldn’t ride a horse, without being in torture from piles," writes L. S. Napier, of Rugless, Ky., “When all doctors and other remedies failed, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured me.” Infallible for Piles, Burns, Scalds, Cuts, Boils, Fever Sores, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Corns. 25c. Guaranteed by A. F. Long. “De man dot don’t do nuffln’ but look out for number one," said Uncle Eben, “is purty sure sooner or later to attract attention to hisse'f as about de smallets Agger in de ’rithmetic."
• SOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper win be pleased to learn that there Is at least one. dread disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith In its curative powers that they <rtf«* One Hundred Do 11ors for any case that it falls to cure. Bend for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. OMNKT A CO.. Toledo. O. , Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. ■
Notice to Son-Besldents. The State of Indiana, Jasper County. In the Jasper Circuit Court, September Term, 1909. Complaint No. 7,469. Mollie Goodner vs. Perry Goodner. Now comes the plaintiff, by Foltz * Spitler, her attorneys, and files her* complaint here for divorce and custody of minor children together with an affidavit that the defendant, Perry. Goodner, is not a resident of the State of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given said Defendant, that unless he be and appear on the first day of the next Term of the Jasper Circuit Court to be hoi den on the 2nd Monday of September A. D., 1909, at the Court House in Rensselaer in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in his absence. In Witness Whereof, I hereunto set my hand and affix the Seal of (SEAL) said Court, at Rensselaer, this 19th day of July, A. D. 1909. C. C. WARNER, jy.23-30-aug.6 Clerk.
Notice. Notice Is hereby given that the assessment sheet of the Drainage Commissioners of the W. H. Tyler Ditch No. 86, is on file in the office of the County Treasurer; that assessments may be paid to him on or before October 20, 1900, and lien cancelled; that the Board of Commissioners have ordered bonds Issued for all unpaid assessments after October 20, 1909. By order of the Board of Commissioners of Jasper County. JAMES N. LEATHERMAN, jy.l6-23-30 Auditor Jasper County. How to Cure Skin Disease. The germs and their poisons which cause the disease must be drawn to the surface of the skin and destroyed. Zemo, a scientific preparation for external use, will do this and will positively cure Ecxema, Pimples, Dandruff and every form of skin or scalp disease. See photos of many remarkable cures and show case or window display at Long’s drug store. Ask for sample. The Republican is headquarters for fine Job printing.
