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-.Mia ilirrb bdnimalmrtll dis We. Caterrb of the throat and •will alnoat c«rUiiitjr work in roan. S«rnMCialUtMtat«tb»t irths of all eatos of dMfaeM kdaatoeatarrh. Doa'tnglecttbls «M«aven if yon Imw it but alight', Catch the alaMUM riflit wbarait driw it away by tM'aaa of imrsTtEiniEiT lit woadarfut m« Method not iy ralievca thm irritatioa and drits |tho mucona sac rations, butltactu destroys tha garma which causa, Maaaaa. A aimpla, harmless dia- $3$ cting and heuisg powder that Jinga quick aad permanent relief. •Catarm causaa headactaes and "1 •ironic incurable iadigeation if neg^gM lac tad. Now, for the ftrsttima in his-' ry.both the causa and remedy have a discovered. 8«nd for our book- s£ oa tha eauaa aad remedy tor aad Bay Perer. It's Free. mith's Treatment ia told by all good druggists on a positive guaran tee to refund your money if aot aatia fwtory. Try one package. Recom jinded by doctors everywhere. Ask tory. Try one package. aded by doctors everywt druggist for^A package today.' •/. 1 (i) „rKJArfU ib wr #T"' BLACK and WHITE an-the newest effects in We have them in ul kit 'MARY JANES' IfS —Also Pumps without Straps XhiMrens' Sandals That Wear..... r^v* Men's White and **.m 'aim Beach Oxfprds Bug where a Dollar Goes $e Farthest TH^ ONLY J)S $2 $2.50 $3 SHOE PARLOR if®? THEY NEVER .WEAR OUT" t• t]il remark often lieard from a per son jfho flnda ith&rd work to break in pair of ahoea—why not add a life to the old ones by having •olaa^ind heels put on them. Let Frank do it'la he is the man that has the ahop, with jthe moat modern machinery and the most competent workmen. 5*HLL..« J1 1* 3T ,»*• if ^)PEN IN THE EVENINGS), vW MfW Your Oxfords .for Repair on the Way to tha Theater. Frank's Shoe Repair Shop Aercae From Orphaum Theater PtoptoAsk U« tiMbert laxathrsf ia •riling aafWL flmik atad moat SaldcplybgMi^lOoflotk V* jll FORMER LOCAL PHYSICIAN HAS PICKED OUT ANOTHER SOUL"* •HE GETS DIVORCE, AND WILL HAVE TO WAIT YEAR Or. Claflin Saya He Has "Put Aaide" Mra. Laura Whitbaek, of Syracuse, N. Y., Whom Gay Doctor. Clairned Few Months Ago-jH# Would Lasd to Altar Soon. 4-"* As Tie furnished something for 3. C. "McKariand to write about when he peeded copy- an the Tiruas- Rcpublican back in the '808. Or.- 11. Ciaflin, fqrnjer physician of this city, and a resident hero up to twenty-live years ago, is again making /'good stuff" for Chicago newspaper writers. A few months ago Dr. C&flin was heralded as announcing nta engagt raent to Mrs. Laura Kaufman Whit beck, aged 43, of Syracuse, N. Y. Then the "spirits" intervened, and a 17-year old girl out in California was sld to be the real soul-mate for tlie "7 -ycar «ld wooer. Now "Rev. Dr." Jackmin, of Chicago, is to become "Princess" Ciaflin, after she waits a year'for the law to give her permission to wfd. "Dr." Jackman has Just obtained a di vorce from Jackman, and gave ihe "gossipy neighbors" the first intimation that thefe ever had been a Jackman. Chicago Story of Plans. The matrimonial plans of Dr. Ciaflin and "Dr." Jackman are told In '.he Chi cago Tribune of Wednesday. Dr. Ciaflin says that since be has found, h's 'new love" he is no longer 80, but young again. He points out that he lias lived in Chicago for nearly sixty j'iars, and that he is a "gay bird" when he gets started. The Tribune says of his lat est would-be matrlmonal eacapade: "Developments came swiftly yester day—as they, are in the habit of com ing when Chicago's oldest practicing physician and youngest octogenarian puts on bis courting clothes—in Dr. Hebron Claflin's current affair of the heart. "First of all, the 'Rev.' Mabel A. Jackman cleared the matrimonial track by going into the circuit court and getting a divorce from Edward E. Jackman. She had been desQrteJ by him in 1911, she testified, after almost twenty years of married life. "Judge Maddox had been reading the papers, and in granting the decree he took occasion to call Mrs. Jackman's attention to the. provision prohibiting remarriage within a year. 'I understand that,' was all ihe festive doctor's newest 'intended' iad to say. "The. divorce waa'th^ firs- InUma^ tion to tl.* public that there had been a Mr. Jackson, that person having kept himself in admirable obscurity j^iiile^his bride,, as 'shepherdess of the jKoulists.'-was1 having^heV ~trduble with {he health authorities a few years ago. 8equet to Whitheck Wooing. "A few months ago Dr. Ciaflin was blithely pressing plans- to make Mrs. Laura K. Whitbeck of Syracuse, N. Y., his wife, swearing eternal devotion to -her.' "Mrs. Jackman and Dr. Ciaflin were reached by telephone in the evening at 5242 Miohigan avenue,'' the old man- sion leased by the shepherdess and known to neighbors as the House of the Seven Bathrooms. 'I'm not going to .break any laws, so we'll have to wait, that's all,' said 'the Rev,' Mrs. Jackman. 'As soon as we can, we'll be married.' 'Then it's all oft with Mrs. Whit beck?' 'All off? I should say -so The doctor has put her aside. They broke months ago, and all the letters she has written to him since the doctor has let me see. She was more anxious than he was, anyway.' 'Is Dr. Claflin's sister. Lady Cook, satisfied with the match?' Tes, indeed. You should see the sweet letters Tennessee has written to us. She may be here for the tved ding.' "'You'll live in Chicago?" "'Oh, no. The doctor's an English lord, you know, and a member of the house of lords. And when we're mar rier I'll have the title of princess.' 'How'll you get the title!' 'That's simple. She said the doc tor's first wife was a princess—the Princess of Wales. Se he got the title of prince when he married her, al though he never has used it. That Snakes me a princess, doesn't it! Any how, the doctor says so.' ''The future Princess Ciaflin became a bit confused as the reporter sought further enlightenment in the matter of the title. She put Dr. Ciaflin on the line to do the explaining. v3Sr His Lerdihip Speaks. 'What's this! What's this!* de manded the doctor, testily. 'Can't you understand? You can't—Or dear! Simple enough. First wife princess, second princess, too.' 'Then your first wife, I understand, was a princess?* 'More—prince!' •?.' •And you're a member of the house of lords?* 'Who said such a .thing? Well, what if I am. My own business, isn't It? O, dear.,c "'Won't you find it'hard to wait a he's year before your 'Guess so. My business, anyway. O dear. How you people bother me. Mrs. Jackfcnan's the loveliest lady in the world. Walt Ave years if necessary. Mrs. Whitbeck! Pouf!• Never* gave' her second thought!' Dr. Ciaflin and Mrs. Jackman de nied the new match was' shaped by any guiding Influence of 'spirits, -v JJ.# 5,1 SBw&'-'r-. Marietta News. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lander visited- at the home of the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lars Johnson, at Lamoille Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Waldo and children, of Albion, visited at the R. F. Waldo home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harper visited their daughter, Mra. Jay Ston ell, in ^Taylor township Sunday. Miss Kathryn Dtckkut, of-, Albion, wllo has $e«ii £peadljUr aevetja} weeks I with her 4istW Mrs. Chris Wa^dman, returnea horift the^ftrit of the wtifek. The school pi district 2|ia. viil cloae SS-A AMUSEMENTS. tha Lyrio. Entertainment as well as instruction was given the good-stsed audience at the Lyric, Wednesday night, by the Williamson submarine pictures, really remarkable photographs of undersea wonders. The spectators were taken thru submarine gardens with marvel lous growths of sea weed, thru waving forests of beautiful coral, and thru schools of strange and curiously mark ed fish disporting themselves in every conceivable way. Detailed pictures of how the pictures are taken were shown, as well as close-to-the-camera views of the mechanism employed in this dangerous occupation. The views of the floor of the sea were fully up to the descriptions that had been given, while the innumerable kinds of fish shown, both in and out of their native element, all proved extremely inter esting. Besides the submarine pictures a full account of the sponge Industry was Riven, together with methods employed in catching several varieties of flsli. Scenes In the West Indies and several views of a diver at work under the water, with his full apparatus, were also given. The concluding reel, the fight with a "man-eating shark" was not quite as realistic as advertised. A11 in all, the pictures were really well worth while, offering something de cidedly new and different. CO-OPERATION THE THING Farmers Who Stand Together From Farm to Consumer Conserve the Profits Which Individual Producers Lose. Co-operative elevator and creamery companies are established successes in Iowa. Likewise co-operative associa tions of grape growers in the grape country, apple growers in the apple country and orange growers in the or ange country. Why not a co-operative packing company for the hog growers in the hog country The' Brittain Co-operative Packing company are going to take over a well established and successful packing house in Marshalltown which is run ning every day and can kill as many as 500 hogs per day. It should make a profit of one-fourth of 1 per cent per pound or 50 cents per hog, $63,000.00 per annum and it can kill 1,500 to 2,000 cattle besides. Why not let the farmers who raise the hogs* have this profit on the hogs they raise? All It needs is 2,000 far mer stockholders who will invest $200 apiece and employ the same manage ment the plant now has or a better one This is no experiment but a going concern. It has killed 157,000 hogs in one year and it has made big profits during a period of many years. It has never closed down In thirty-three years and co-operation that pays grain far rriers, and fruit farmers can pay hog farmers as well. Are you in on the hog dividends? The company plans after paying 7 per cent out of the net profits upon the capital invested to split the remaining net profits according to the amount of livestock and produce turned over by each stockholder to the corporation.— Brittain Co-operative Packing Com Pariy. 'v BIG VIENN^ FARM SOLO R. E. Narber Sells 240-Acre Tract For $210 Par Acre. One of the largest transactions in farm lands in the county since early -spring is the. sale of the Robert E. Narber farm in Vienna township to D. -B. Sinims, of Beamaii. The farm, which is of 240 acres, and lie*| in the central part of the tojrns^iip about four miles south of Conj^dJtawaS sold for $210 an acre,-or & total 4i«$50,4OO. The farm is in two pieces, the quarter that has the buildings on it being separated a quarter of a mile from. the other eighty. It is said that. Narber has leased the farm to tenants for twenty one years, and during that time his rent from $52,000. the land has amounted to FERGUSON ELECTION JUNE 26. Consolidated School District to Vote on Bond Issue For Building. An election to vote on the proposal to bond the Independent Consolidated school district of Ferguson for $22,000 with which to build a school building at Ferguson, will be held at Ferguson June 26. The voting place will be open from 1 until 6 in the afternoon. Ac cording to the formal notice of the election that has been issued by the school board, the proceeds of the bonds will be used not only to build a build ing, but to purchase a site and for equipment. It is probable that a four room building will be built. MAY ARRANGE REUNION. Effort Being Made in Gilman to Havs County Veterans Meet There. A movement has been started in Gil man to arrange an annual meeting of the Marshall County Veterans' Asso ciation at that place some day this summer. The plan was proposed by some of the veterans of the town and out of the proposal grew arrangements for holding a meeting at the G. A. R. hall in Gilman Friday night, when plans will be discussed. The Friday night meeting has been called by Mayor J. Allen Stansberry. Local Weather Record. The extremes Wednesday were 5# and 41, compared with 81 and 58, the maximum and minimum Tuesday, and 94 and 72, the extremes a year ago Wednesday. At 7 o'clock this morning the temperature was 41. eighteen de grees colder than at the same hour Wednesday morning. The rainfall up to 7 o'clock thiB morning was .06 of an inch. Washington Township Notes. Leo Pothast is quite ill cf tonsilitis and measles. Miss Grace Wadell, who has been a student at Cedar Falls for a year, is visiting this week at the J. A. Trumbull home, near Vancleve, and at the Gra ham Smith home. Mrs. Dan Yordy entertained the Helping Hand Society Thursday aft ernoon. On account of the rainy day only nine members and a few visitors were present. J. E. Smith is having a large amount of tiling done on bis farm. }Irs. Graham Smith was in Iowa City last week as .a delegate to the biennial ^on'vMition of women's clubs. v, Ifrs. W. X. Pothast will entertain the regular meeting of the Helping Hand Society June 2. TIMES-REFUBUCAN. BtASSHALLTOWN, IOWA: MAT 27.1915. -fit-'f •?!T,r -tii ""I I ifl" this week, and the teacher, Misa Amy Maddock, will return to her hpmo In. a a $ 3 IV :x. so1 a it tibSL 191} ONMCIMSaMUS "PV 100 Skirts Your' Choice ti. Mowers We are placing our entire line of Lawn Mowers on sale to be closed out at once. If you are going to buy a mower within the next month or two, it will pay you to inspect these values now on display at this store. One $7 "Illinoy" self-adjusting ball mower with 10 inch drive wheel, now $5.75 "Cruso" ball bearing mower, width and 9 inch drive wheel, $4.50 "Glencoe" mower, .width 14 in., ffQ OC 4 blades and 9 in. drive wheel, now... •)uZ.u $3.50 "Drummer" mower, 14 inch #0 iQ width, and self sharpening, now Jl.1U I®#®®®®®®®# TRY T.-R. WANT ADS FOR GREATER RESULTS TIT, 1 134-136 East Main Street bearing $5.75 18 inch M25 Lot No. 1 Your Choice Formerly sold up to $15 $ v.«, li SIMON STYLE SHOP 'U A FINAL CLEARANCE OF THE BALANCE OF OUR This Means Every Coat in the Store None reserved, and no old goods to show. "Why?" Because this is our first spring season, and we never carry goods to another. You will find among them every popular weave and shade, hand some Silk Bengal ine Silk lined Coats, also Silk lined Gabardine and Poplin Coats, and others too numerous to mention. SILK DRESSES The balance of all our $ilk Dresses, values up to $20.00, choice 5 to a.-: W. rdfer H&fc More and more people are de manding thevery best ice obtainable. That is why our YELLOW WAGONS are delivering larger and larger loads./ People are want* ing our ARTIFICIAL ICE. They like it. When we say that this ice is ab solutely pure, we state a fact that we can prove. We know it is tree of germs, microbes and dirt. It is frozen water that was firstj boiled, distilled and then filtered in a plant that is clean. The same cleanliness found in our wagons. The YELLOW WAGONS are the ones that deliver ARTIFI CIAL ICE. Get a YELLOW CARD. Hang it in your window, stop the yellow wagon, or telephone usand learnabout our splendid service. Marshall Ice Company Marshalltown, Iowa 1 Just sixty coats left and they will be sold in just two lots, as follows: Lot No. 2 Your Choice Formerly sold up to |30 regular I'V, 7' •*, \4$ fti •R'.w 1 A I (bnde 4.'