Brown County Democrat, Volume 36, Number 20, Nashville, Brown County, 19 September 1918 — Page 3
Wife's Newest Argument. “Aren’t \yomen independent creatures these wartime days?” remarked a married man to another, as both pawed for the rail and wrapped their fists around a tall glass in a Broadway oasis. “When my wife scraps with me nowadays she doesn’t look around for something to shy at my Ibean; neither does she end the quarrel with ‘I’m going right home to mother.! Her favorite last word now is: ‘I’ll walk right out and get a job in a munition factory.’ Yes, sir, if this war continues much longer I expect to see the women throw off the shackles and insist upon being the family meal ticket.” Grove's chill Tonic Tablets and Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic Ycra can now get Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic in Tablet form as well as in Syrup, the kind you have always bought. The tablets are intended for those who prefer, to swallow a tablet rather than a syrup, and as a convenience for those who travel. “GBOVB’S chill TONIC TABLETS” contain exactly the same medicinal properties and produce the same results as Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic which is put up in bottles. The price of either is 60c. The Talkative Pest. IfrvRus —Here comes Talkalot. Pokus—Do you know him to speak to? Hokus —No, merely to listen to. — Town Topics. Where strong men have wills the weak ones have wishes. The man of science lives after his death.
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LONG SKIRT IS IN LIMELIGHT New York. —War necessity everywhere I Ingenuity expressed, therefore, in a thousand ways. Turning and twisting to find out how good results can be obtained through uncharted channels is the effort of each individual, the mass of shops, and the host of designers. This is the summing up, writes a fashion authority, of the entire spirit as expressed in women’s apparel. It it not a continental spirit ; it is a world spirit. It pervades lands where fighting is unknown; it rules in homes from which no fighters have gone and in which there has always been a serene confidence in the ability to arrive at a comfortable conclusion. The old, easy method of dressing has vanished. Perhaps it is gone forever. It is a temptation to dip back into the past and recount the episodic adventures and experiences through which women have gone when great wars devastated a country and used up its raw materials. It is not only the constitution that follows the flag; it is women’s apparel that follows it for years after the flag has ceased to be a symbol of battle and remains only a symbol of patriotism. All the great wars have deli-
braid, embroidery or other ornamentation for gowns. Onp finds that manufactured articles are becoming more and more limited. Once upon a time this world, which dearly loves a phrase, twisted and turned the words “irreducible minimum” in fantastic ways to suit a variety of meanings. This phrase was a sister in popularity to President Cleveland’s famous “innocuous desuetude.” Today the expression that has superseded all others is “the elimination of nonessentials,” and there are thousands of women who will tell you that that means both “irreducible minimum” and “innocuous desuetude.” - It is well for an extravagant continent that the irreducible minimum can be arrived at through compulsion. Trimmed With Bits of Themselves. A report of what women have done in devising ornamentation for their clothes would read as an interesting bit of war history. Out from the depths have come some of the ornamentations. The designers, however, have found that the best way to trim a gown is with itself. There is very little danger then of its becoming a patchwork quilt. Tucks have returned, therefore. They have been launched on the new auutmn gowns as something of a novelty. They are not permitted in woolen clothes, because the government asks us to omit every inch of superfluous worsted material, but we are omitting it by the yardage instead of the inch, and are finding ourselves quite content with composition gowns' that have only a dash of wool In them, and often none at all. A woman depends on furs, capes and top coats for warmth. As for the materials which are available today, they may last through the winter. There is much talk of wearing satin, taffeta, pongee and various heavy Chinese silks throughout the cold weather, making them comfortable for the open or for heatless houses by the addition of warm underwear and top coverings. The designers have banked heavily on the usage of thin materials for next winter and therefore they have brought about this resurrected fashion of trimming a gown with itself, which is quite easily done when the material is soft and pliable. When tucks are used they are arranged horizontally. They do not confuse themselves with pleats, which are vertical. A few of the new skirts are tucked from the bone of the hips to the hem, the tucks touching each other and made from an inch to two inches wide. Sometimes this constitutes the entire trimming of a gown. But when the skirt is extra narrow at the hem the barrel effect is more striking than it has been for two years. Affecting the Waistline. There is no possibility of reducing our waists to a small measurement. The planked-shad type which has prevailed for eight sears can wear its sashes where it pleases, but what about the thousands of other women, thin and stout, who have allowed their waists to broaden out into sculptural measurements? These waists have muscles that are strong and unpliable, and they will not be squeezed in by corsets. Therefore, only the willow type—the slim, little, boneless youngster—can pull in her waist and tie a sash around it with impunity. One thing is practically certain: If the tight, draped skirt brings back the normal waist, women will allow the straight line of their figures to continue, and they will merely drape the* waist in its new, large measurements, without an attempt to make themselves uncomfortable. (Copyright, 1918, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
up white swiss curtains at the upstairs windows, rearranged heavy old pieces of furniture and added a hundred and one touches to the place that were to transform it to an Adamless Eden from a place that had surely been Eveless but not surely an Eden. And the cook was pottering over kettles and pans in the old-fashioned kitchen, crooning to herself the satisfaction she felt in doing this, her share, in bringing comfort to the eight girls now in the orchard. Mrs. Van Deusen did not forget her responsibility and, though she did not forget that Miss Ferris was all of thirty-five and did not miss an opportunity to tell her associates that she was a “plain little motherly body who would be safe anywhere,” still she hovered around the farm with what seemed to Mr. Rogers to be unnecessary frequency. He could see quite clearly that she -was going to take full personal credit for the bumper crop of peaches his orchard was yielding, and she did seem to forget entirely that by the arrangements he was making he w r as paying very full value for the amount of labor he received. She apparently forgot that the rent of his house had been a gift since he paid the girls wages that did not take into consideration their shelter. Apparently Mrs. Van Deusen wanted to make perfectly sure that Mr. Rogers kept entirely at the far end of the farm. She even stipulated to Miss Ferris that he should never take a meal in the house, “and I want to be sure,” she told her, “that he shows no signs of attention to any of the girls. It is your responsibility and mine,” she said condescendingly. “So please make a point to be with the girls as much as possible when he is with them. You would have a restraining influence, I am sure.” Miss Ferris did not take the trouble to remind Mrs. Van Deusen that as Mr. Rogers was staid and studious and forty and the girls were for the most part uneducated young Polack girls on their vacations from factories it was not likely that he would find much to interest him in their presence. Instead she looked very grave and assured Mrs. Van Deusen that she would keep a motherly eye on everything. And Mrs. Van Deusen made it quite clear to Mr. Rogers himself that he was not even to cross the threshold of his own house; hence arose within Mr. Rogers’ breast an insatiable desire to do just that thing. The fact was, from glimpses he had secured from outside, a marvelous transformation had been wrought in the interior of that house. The swiss curtains in the windows swaying back and forth in the breeze, the glimpses of bouquets of flowers on the tables, the airiness and spaciousness of the house as contrasted with the stuffiness and formality of it as it had been handed down to him by his old aunt and uncle five years before fairly staggered him. Apparently it had become the house he vaguely dreamed that it might become, yet Miss Ferris had brought only a few hampers of “fixings” and had made no definite change that he knew about save to move some of the furniture into the attic “to make more room.” She had asked his permission to do that.
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GIRLS! USE LEMONS FOR SUNBURN, TAN 1 ..V ___ i 11 I ; Try It! Make this lemon lotion f to whiten your tanned or f frecked skin. J .Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion, and complexion whitener, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands and see how quickly the freckles, sunburn, windburn and tan disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless. —Adv. Surgical Operation by Telegraph. The life of a man was saved in Australia by means of an operation without proper instruments under the direction of a surgeon 1,800 miles away. The subject fell from his horse at Halls Creek, in northern Australia, and suffered serious injuries. An operation was urgently necessary, and there was no doctor within 1,000 miles. The condition of the patient was described by telegraph to a doctor in Perth, and he sent back, by the same means, instructions under which the postmaster at Halls Creek, with such surgical instruments as he could get, the chief of which was a razor, carried out the operation successfully. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Milling Corn Flour. It has been found possible to use much of the wheat-milling machinery of the United States for milling corn. In this way the output of cornmeal was almost doubled within five months. Instead of using 8,000,000 barrels of wheat flour each month, America can now depend upon corn products for all breadstuff demahds. Soft, Clear Skins. Night and morning bathe the face with Cuticura Soap and hot water. If there are pimples first Smear them with Cuticura Ointment. For free samples address, “Cuticura, Dept. X, Boston.” Sold by druggists and by mail. Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50. —Adv. A church bell has an empty head and a long tongue, yet it is discreet enough not to speak until it is tolled. Summer Diarrhoeas can be controlled more quickly with GEOVB’S BABY BOWBL MEDICINE! and it is absolutely harmless. Just as effective for Adults as for Children. Amusement circles —circus rings.
Why 66 Flunk" Students “CAESAR”—first 8 books-“CICHIKO” or “VIRGIL” and others, translated word for word Into Bngilsh. Complete, cloth bound, SI.00 each, postpaid. Monongahela Novelty Co., Box 626, Monongahela, Pa. TOBACCO —Rich, Mellow, Ripe Tennessee leaf Try it at our expense, 40c lb. prepaid. Send for *1.00 package; use part, if not pleased back comes your *1.00. Bank refs. Francis-Qualls, .Dukedom, Tenn. Good Northern Ohio Farms Have^any bargains. Write for large list. II. H. Webber, Atwater, O. 1 ft R,j„. a homesite; perfect title. A. V. OUyS Reynolds, Box 224, Beaumont, Tex. W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 38-1918.
I Keeping the |i Chaperon By OSBORN JONES >} (Copyright, 1S18, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) William Rogers had been promised a “land army” of eight girls to help pick his peach crop, and he was considerably disgruntled when the pompous Mrs. Van Deusen arrived before his farmhouse in her spotless dovegray limousine with its spotless grayliveried chauffeur and spotless grayliveried footman to tell him that the supply of labor was not forthcoming. “Well, I can’t say that I was especially stuck on the idea of having a bunch of girls working in the orchards from the first,” he commented, “but you ladies who are boosting this idea talked us farmers into the idea —and besides the peach crop is bully this year and there just isn’t a man to be had now.” He cast a look all but contemptuous at the two spotless grayliveried ones and would have suggested to Mrs. Van Deusen that by way of showing her much-vaunted patriotism she might dispense with at least one of these able-bodied retainers, but Mrs. Van Deusen was not interested enough in any one’s point of view but her own to be at all likely to suspect his sentiments. 1 She explained patiently for the second time just 'wherein lay the hitch. The army of eight girls had been secured. They came from the other end of the state —they were “good, strong, willing girls,” Mrs. Van Deusen was sure—and the chaperon had been secured and the cook on the horizon and an order for the first week’s supplies made out by the chaperon had already been delivered to Mrs. Van Deusen’s provision dealers. The trouble all lay with the absence of an available house in which to shelter the girls. Mrs. Van Deusen had really worn herself quite out, and had used gallons of gasoline scouring the neighboring country for some sort of empty house in which to lodge the girls. She had thought even of setting up cots and other temporary furnishings in one of the nearby school houses but one was positively falling to pieces and the other w r as already occupied by a gang of Polack’s who were keeping the roads in condition for the army trucks. It must have been quite apparent to Mr. Rogers that Mrs. Van Deusen had done her best and that if his peach crop went to waste and the country was thereby deprived of that Contribution to the general food supply, it would not be in the least her fault.
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SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY CLEANSES YOUR KIDNEYS For centuries GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has been a standard household remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and stomach trouble, and all diseases connected with the urinary organs. The kidneys and bladder are the most important organs of the body. They are the filters, the purifiers of your blood. If the poisons which enter your system through the blood and stomach are not entirely thrown out by the kidneys and bladder, you are doomed. Weariness, sleeplessness, nervousness, despondency, backache, stomach trouble, headache, pain in loins and lower abdomen, gall stones, gravel, difficulty when urinating, cloudy and bloody urine, rheumatism, sciatica and lumbago, all warn you to look after your kidneys and bladder. All these indicate some weakness of the kidneys or other organs or that the enemy microbes which are always present in your system have attacked your weak spots. HOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are what you need. They are not a “patent medicine,” nor a “new discovery.” For 200 years they
have been a standard household remedy. They are the pure, original imported Haarlem Oil your great-grandmother used, and are perfectly harmless. The healing, soothing oil soaks into the cells and lining of the kidneys and through the bladder, driving out the poisonous germs. New life, fresh strength and health will come as you continue the treatment. When completely restored to your usual vigor, continue taking a capsule or two each day; they will keep you in condition and prevent a return of the disease. Do not delay a minute. Delays are especially dangerous in kidney and bladder trouble. All druggists sell GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. They will refund the money if not as represented. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsule are imported direct from the laboratories -fe Holland. They are prepared in correct quantity and convenient form, are easy to take and are positively guaranteed to give prompt relief. In three sizes, sealed packages,. Ask for the original imported GOLD MEDAL, Accept no substitutes.— Adv.
“Worst of it is, I counted on those girls,” commented the persistent agriculturist leveling his brown eyes on Mrs. Van Deusen’s flabby face. “I had a chance to get some Polacks that I could have housed in the sheds, but you’d asked me to save the work for the girls, so I let the chance slip.” “Well, you can't in the least blame me,” Mrs. Van Deusen drawled. “I wasn’t blaming you—I was just wondering whether you had thought of putting up the girls yourself. You are a little down on the folks around here because they won’t move out and let young girls take their houses — well, there are no more than three in your family and I guess there are twenty rooms in your house.” “Twenty-eight,” corrected Mrs. Van Deusen automatically. “I'd fetch the girls every morning and carry them back at night—” Mrs. Van Deusen began to grow crimson at the suggestion. Perhaps it had troubled her before but she assured Mr. Rogers that it was “obviously out of the question.” “I’ll let them have my own house,” declared Rogers, more in defiance than as a result of a calm decision. “Quite impossible—we are responsible for the girls and obviously we can’t board them around promiscuously among the farmers.” But Mr. Rogers explained that he would set up a portable shack for himself quite at the remote end of his large farm and would surrender his entire large old farmhouse to the girls and their chaperon. So Mrs. Van Deusen went away feeling that she had scored a triumph, and took great pleasure in telling her associates in the patriotic work how she had argued Farmer Rogers into taking the step he had taken. By the next day at nine the portable shack was on its way from the nearest city. The gixfls were learning their task in 'the orchard under the guidance of Mr. Rogers’ one and only “hired man,” and the chaperon, Miss Phoebe Ferris, by profession if not by natural inclination a public school teacher, was working miracles in the old farm house. Incidentally she was making mental comments on the domestic arrangements of bachelors, but the | these thoughts were not unkind you could tell from the amused smile that played around her mouth as she put
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The sketch shows a gown of heavy black satin, with a barrel effect obtained in the skirt through width at the hips and narrowness at the hem, and the whole surface laid with flat tucks. The tight bodice finishes at the normal waistline with a narrow cravat belt. There is a fence collar of white organdie. The fluted hat is of black satin with a crown of ermine. nitely changed the course of women’s clothes, although they may not have left upon them the lasting impressions that wars have left upon men’s clothes. The male portion of the world rarely thinks of this fact —that every garment he wears is almost directly responsible to some explosion of mankind. Reverting to Pioneer Days. It is no simple thing to saunter down Main street today, drop into a shop and buy any kind of galloon,
No doubt Mr. Rogers was sorely tempted ; at any rate, he fell and, forgetting his promise to Mrs. Van Deusen, sneaked into that transformed house of his, one day when Miss Ferris was in the orchard with the girls, and looked around. What had been done he could not say, but that the house had been transformed into a home, he knew, and it was only by dint of firm resolve—and fear of being caught by Miss Ferris, or worse still, by Mrs. Van Deusen —that he tore himself from the charming rooms. The experience left an impress that seemed really out of proportion to the importance of it. It seemed to William Rogers as if seeing that modified interior left him transformed as if he had gone through a great experience. It left him more with a desire to seek out the woman who had wrought the change than with a desire to revisit it again as it would be after the eight girls had returned from their day’s work. So it was that a message was carried by the solitary hired man through the cook to Miss Ferris that Mr. Rogers had important business to discuss in the orchard after the girls had retired. In a week more the girls had gone and the peaches had all been sold, and thereby contributed to the national food supply, and Mrs. Van Deusen was telling guests at dinner parties in her spacious house bow successful had been her work. “And you didn’t know I was a matchmaker, did you?” she would say. “There was a lonely old bachelor farmer and I just made up my mind to find a wife for him. So I worked my little plan to get her in there to transform his house and show him how" much he needed a wife, and I threw them together as much as I decently could and —well, I have actually made the match. They were married yesterday and they have settled down there in the old house with the proceeds of the peach crop that I got for him.”
STYLES IN OUR HEADGEAR Both Large and Small Hats, Loaded or Unloaded With Trimming, Fashionable This Season. This is a season of wide diversity of ideas in millinery. As a very successful and well-known milliner remarked the other day, “Any style that is becoming is fashionable this season.” You may wear big hats or little hats or hats of medium size, and they may be of any fabric practical for millinery; and as for trimming there are models rather elaborately trimmed, simply trimmed models and hats ah most entirely devoid of trimming. This is indeed welcome news, and woe to the woman who does not have a becoming hat. She cannot blame it on the modes of the moment, but upon her own lack of judgment or care in the selection of this most important detail of her wardrobe. Use Furniture Fringe. They are trimming hats with furniture fringe.
SKIRTS SHORT AND TIGHTER Latest Mandate From Goddess of Styles, According to Report Reaching New York. Skirts are to be at least three inches shorter and much tighter this winter, writes a New York correspondent This is the latest mandate of the goddess of style, and the news was brought to ■ American women here by Miss Margaret Dreaker, foreign buyer for a prominent American firm, who arrived from France. “You can tell American women that styles for fall and winter calf for skirts at least three inches shorter and much tighter,” said Miss Dreaker. “Jackets are to be shorter, and tighter, too. All designs look toward the conservation of cloth. Prevailing colors will be brown, green, navy blue and taupe.” Effective Neckwear. There are some very smart new waistcoats of pongee embroidered with black or dark brown floss in coin dots —big polka dots. These new bits of neckwear are very effective.
The Branch House Man This is one of the Swift & Company Branch House Men. They are all pretty much alike in the way they feel toward their work—and that is what this ad is about. They know that most people couldn't get such good meat promptly and in good condition if it weren’t for the branch houses of which they are in charge. They know that the branch house is one of the most important links in the chain of preparing and distributing meat for a nation. They know that Swift & Company must have its branch houses run at the highest notch of usefulness; that even a Swift &
Company branch house won't run itself, and that it is up to the branch house man to run it properly. Any branch house man who doesn’t see his work in this light is transferred to some other place with Swift & Company to which he is better adapted. They are picked men, these branch house men. Every time you sit down to a steak or chop, or cut of roast, you can give a grateful thought to the whole crew of them. And remember, in a general way, that everything that makes life smoother and more convenient for you, is the result of the thoughtfulness and effort of a lot of people of whom you have never heard. Swift & Company, U. S.
Japs Erect War Museum. To commemorate the services of officers and men who have been serving abroad in the Japanese-German w T ar, a building has been erected at Fukiyama garden, Tokyo, where all war trophies will be assembled, under the care of the naval and military departments. The collection will include soldiers’ uniforms, pictures of sea craft, 'photographs of engagements in which Japanese vessels have taken part, and (various weapons used by the enemy. |The museum was named the Junmei-fu by the emperor on June 16th, at the reiquest of the minister of the imperial (household. Rockweed Soup. Rockweed soup, rockweed omelet and rockweed pie may soon be found on the table of the housewife who is alert to obtain nutritious and inexpensive food, says Popular Science Monthly. A considerable variety of edible seaweeds, of which rockweed iis one, can be found along both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of this country. In Maine rockweed is being gathered and prepared for market.
Opaque Skirts in Demand. In spite of the revived interest in calico frocks and the swinging away from transparentness in summer frocks there is still a demand for the contrivance that will render the petticoat not transparent when the frqck skirt is of diaphanous texture. Last year pique skirts finished only with a neatly scalloped ruffle were worn with transparent frocks, sometimes beneath the beruffled, lace-trimmed underskirt. Now what is called a “dimmer” has been put on the market. It consists of two panels arranged on light elastics so that it will stay in place at waist and hips and extend down to the ankles just far enough to give the desired opaqueness without adding to the bulk of the lingerie. Hot Water on Skin. It is far preferable to remove the dust and dirt from the pores of the skin by a good cold cream massage than by washing the face in hot water. As a matter of fact it is better never to use extremely hot water on the face. If, however, it is found necesary to employ it, as in the treatment of
Passing Through Suez. The Suez canal is worked and controlled by an elaborate array of signals. At Port Said, on the Mediterranean entrance, at Suez, on the Red sea, at Ismailla, about halfway between, are the chief offices and controls of the canal. At all these places you see a simple yet clever contrivance at work, which plays an important part in controlling the traffic of the canal. In a quiet room upstairs on a long, low table running the* whole length of one wall is a narrow metal trough. On a shelf above are a number of model ships. The trough, of course, represents the canal, and it has marked on it all the stations and sidings. The big lakes in the canal are also shown. Opposing Positions. Wife —My dear, I am going to run for office. Husbands —I won’t stand for it. Paradoxical, “Why don’t you inform yourself about this arrigation problem?” “Oh, it is such dry reading.”
blackheads, its use should always be followed by an application of much cold water and an ice rub whenever convenient. Never under any conditions use hot water upon the complexion before going into the outdoor air. Interlined Silk Coats. Some very good-looking new fall coats have not a thread of wool in their outer fabric. They are made of heavy satin and are lined with bright-colored soft satin of equally substantial quality. Between the outer and inner satin surfaces is a warm' interlining, sometimes of flannel, sometimes of cotton batting. The lines of these coats are loose and graceful and sometimes a full collar adds to the comfort and smartness. Tams of Straw and Velvet. Tam o’ shanters in one form or another are much shown in the millinery shops. Some of them are still of straw, but there are others of panne velvet combined with ribbon, and of other fabrics, not excluding georgette. Felt tarns, too, are shown in many colors, for country and seaside wear*
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