Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 192, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 August 1910 — Page 3
The Create*! Boardinc CoDege in Cys Wortd University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME. IND. We guarantee trvo points: Our students study and our students behave themselves 20 Buildings 85 Professors 1000 'Students iV°u *T£® ln Ancient and Modern Language?: Encrllsh, History,Poll tloal Economy,Boclolony.ChemPb *rmaer, Civil, Electrical, Mechan cal. Chemical ana Mining Engineering, Architecture, Law, Shorthand, Book-keeping. Typewriting, Telegraphy TERMS: Board, Tuitio* and Laundry, $400.00 Special Department for Boy, under Thirteen, *2&O.
lowa State Fair and exposition DES MOINES ’ Aug. 25th-Sept. 2d
Allen ojJ Iceri ne Salr e uu re s C hron lc (j Ice rs,Bon: tJlcera.gerofulonsUlcera.Taricose Clcera,ln> Tt.V leers, Mercurial Ulcers,White SweUinc.i.lllk Lej?,lTeverßores,*lloldior«,. PoiitlTclya* Bydisfe, J,P.ALLBN,Dept. AljltPaul All nil ESTATE. ILLINOIS BARGAINS Choice Macoupin, .. , (Ireen and Jersey County Farm* S!J ® alo > whl ;™ Wheat, Com, Cattle, Clover and logs predominate. Prices and terms to suit, get oui jio’„„_y e a ! io . have Canada Lands; Minnesota, uissourl and Arkansas farms. State vonr want* Liberal tenns. Address William T. Baird Bealtj Do., Plalnvlew, Illinois. Desirable lands In Southwest Geoj> f OP 1 the best country on Bart! Stock^r£f,Ti9Si t ? n ’ Co™- Grain Track and Llv< rL?, C „„ U°untry Is perfectly level—no waste land* * no ' w what site farm yen wont.. Smith D oeoigia® O<>mS 1012-1* Bmplre Life Building, Atlanta POR CAI KT Highly Improved SlO sort farm, Indiana corn belt thoroughly drained, 4 sets large buildings, etc., bumper crops, macadam roads, etc., 1160 per acre, adjoins Ing land 1200. Charles C. Spencer, Montlcello, TnA FOR QAI F Improved 4 acres, irrigated, fenced, WHtL well, four room frame house, larg* bora, ont buildings. Fine Ashing, hunting, grand Icenery.great summer resort, consumptives paradise Dandy business location. Writ* B. N.doeh, Stonew»U, Cot CAD CAI C Artesian land, no need of rain rUfl wHI.C to (trow crops, other farms and r, . ranches on application. Writ* Smith lor wlulrou want. 110 ltliclioSU, San Amtonls,!**,
DIDN’T LIKE DARK COLORS.
Johns—l heard you tell that man to never darken your door again. Try ing to marry your daughter? Thomas-r-No; he’s a painter and he painted my front door ebony instead of oak.
It Wouldn’t Stretch.
The assessor was doing the very best he could, but the farmer was shrewd and wary. “How many acres of farming land have you?” he inquired warily. " ’Bout 20, I guess,” said Reub On. "Twenty! -Why, it looks to me like nearer 120. Come, now, can’t you Increase that a little? There are surely more than 20 acres in that tract. Suppose you stretch that a little." “Say, feller,” said* the farmer, “this ain’t no rubber plantation.”—Harper’s Monthly.
The Motive Power.
“A western editor says nobody was ever hurt while taking a ‘joy ride* on the handles of a plow.” “That’s where he’s mistaken. Many a good man has been kicked by a mule.” —Birmingham Age-Herald.
A COOL PROPOSITION And a Sure One. The Body Does Not Feel Meat Unpleasafttly If It has Proper Food— Grape=Nuts People can l*ve in. a temperature which feels from ten to twenty degrees cooler than their neighbors enjoy, by regulating the diet The plan is to avoid meat entirely for breakfast; use a goodly allowance of fruit, either fresh or cooked. Then follow with a saucer containing about four heaping teaspoonfuls of Qrape-Nuta, treated with a little rich cream. Add to' this about two slices of crisp toast with a meager amount of , butter, and one cup of well-made Postum. By this selection of food the bodily energy is preserved, while the hot, carbonaceous foods have been left out The result is a very marked difference In the temperature of the body, and to this comfortable condition Is added the certainty of ease and perfect digestion, for the food being partially predigested is quickly assimilated by the digestive machinery. Experience and experiment,in food, and its application to the human body has brought out these facts. They can be made use of and add materially to the comfort of the user. Read the little “The Road to WVlville,” in pkgs. “There’s a Reason. 1 ' . i
WORLD'S GREATEST WATERING PLACES
I*L the shores of all the oceans are bathing places, but there are certain beaches which have been chosen, some by the favored few and more by the merry multitudes, for sporting in the surf
These resorts have been dedicated to the bath and they have attained a fame which makes them places of interest the world around. There are the v
great French resorts, where in summer you may [I see the peo- V.l pie whom in win- ■ ter you note dri- I ving in Bois or gl A drinking in the II• cases. Theirs seems almost a 1 burlesque of bath- • H t Ing, for they ap- IT- J pear in as vivid | a blaze of color II - . and in as elabo- 1 . ■? rately construct- H *. * ed costumes, and 1 gip|p| they are as much B • ’ swayed by the rules of fashion here as in the V»a boxes of the opera /I SBI* •.**.'**- 7 in Paris. The \1 »„..'rT, > ~..s**y, - ~ French women make the ocean > a stage and a theater, where they dress and decorate themselves for purposes of exhibition. In England there Is no carnival of costume. The Briton takes his dip in the surf seriously, as he takes all his pastimes and sports. He Is still afflicted with the old-fashioned fourwheeled bathing coach, and men and women bathe ln separate groups, except that the prejudice against mixed bathing has been forgotten somewhat at such places as "merry Margate,” “rollicking Ramsgate” and “breezy Broadstairs." But in general, the man who might try to spy upon the woman’s beach would find himself as much taboo as was the peeper who tried to spy upon Lady Godiva. The Mediterranean coast is a long succession of bathing beaches, and for centuries sirens have left the imprints of their sandals upon Its sands. The most perfect motor road ln all England runs from London fb the famous sea resort, Brighton, and that road, though 52 miles of Surrey and Sussex, Is at least one real achievement which must be credited to George IV. It was tne prince hailed as the most perfect gentleman ln Europe who made fashionable Brighton. Once upon a time he made the first visit to his uncle, the duke of Cumberland, at his Brighton residence, and there he caught a glimpse of a pretty young actress sunning herself on the sands. Straightway he became enamored <?f the place, and llteghlly commanded a city to spring Up by the sea. It Is over the road that he huilt that motor meets run from the capital to the famous old Ship tavern on the wide sea front esplanade. He built, as his plaything palace, at frightful recklessness of cost, the pavilion, which is the most interesting structure in the city, and it is in the beautiful dome of the building that concerts, heard by 3,000 at a time, are still held. Hailed as "the queen of the north,” and as the "English Riviera,” with all the usual attractions of a fashionable resort, Scarborough has also a delightful blending of history, romance and legend. Many of the stately homes of England are In the neighborhood whose owners have played a prominent part ln the history of the nation. The ancient castle is a prominent landmark far up and down the coast and the town has two handsome bays. Most carnival-like of all the bathing places in the world are the French and the Belgian resorts. There are villages, huge clusters of huts and tents and strange-looking straw hives on the sands. From these three troop the daintily dressed women and the grotesquely attired men. They bathe together In water that more often than not barely wets their knees. ■’Eor the women are here to be admired and the men have come to flirt and to ogle. Yes, it is like a carnival. It is a whirlpool of froth and fashion, a kaleidoscope of life and gaiety. This place where the* people go Into the sea tethered with ropes to dabble placidly ln water of saucer-llke shallowness is a carnival of. uproar and extravagance. It would seem that Trouville was discovered about 1830 by two marine painters. Rambling along the Norman coast in search of subjects, they chanced one day upon an humble fishing village at the mouth of the Toucques, where the rugged faces and the quaint costumes of the inhabitants made excellent spoil for the brush. Forthwith they sought shelter at the sole inn and Bpread their canvases for prey. In the salon for 1834 some Parisians noticed the new name, Trouville. They also met it in an article by Dumas. When hot weather came they sought it out Under the empire, 20 years later, fashion set its seal upon the place. Dieppe had besn started by the duchess de Berry and was absorbed by the ■sets of the Faubourg St Germain and the faubourg St Honor*. Its A
shore was trod by the feet of the Forty Immortals, who then only belonged to the Orleans party, and by deposed statesmen. The imperial court had abandoned Dieppe and gone to Biarritz, but that was too far from Paris for the lesser officials and the busy men of the party to follow. And Trouville offered a bathing place within six hours of Paris. So it came about that villas were built and a square foot of sand soon cost as much), as a square foot of building ground® in Paris itself. Very soon It was the favorite resort of the monde and the demi-monde. The real life of Trouville, of course, is closed to the merely passing visitor, just as is the case at Cowes and at Newport. The passing caller has not the entree to the salons and the villas. But he may see that the people change their toilets every hour, he may walk the 'promenade and the beach, firm and smooth, which slopes so slowly into the sea that the bather must wade far to get Into water to his neck, even at hign tide, .and he may visit the Casino, so close to the sea that the great tide c£ 1876 almost swept it away. Dieppe shows a seascape that is called “inexpressibly grand.” The visitor seats himself upon the terrace and looks seaward over a glorious and far-stretching expanse. Sometimes it is as calm as a mirror. But the tide never creeps in. It brings waves and foam with it. Often it is turbulent. Sometimes it comes in as a raging plain that lifts itself at last mountain high and thunderously dashes itself upon the shore and flings its salt showers over the spectators. It is splendid for the eye and it gives vigor to the body. Napoleon played with Josephine, pushing her into the water, and hiding her bathing slippers, to the amusement of the boatmen and the onlooking staff, in their bathing expeditions in 1808 from Bayonne to Biarritz, that bright little corner of France, nestling at the foot of the Pyrenees, overlooking the Bay of Biscay and adjoining the Basque provinces of Spain. There are fnemories here of the Empress Eugenie also. On the slope and overhanging the great rocks at the head of the bay are the ruins of the bathing villa, where she and Louis Napoleon spent many happy hours. It was sold, then enlarged and burned in 1903. There are many historical memories here. Gladstone spent weeks here each year. Many battles were fought in the vicinity in the Wellington campaigns and the Spanish provinces adjacent are full of reminiscences of Loyola and Xavier. Ostend—to the Initiated that meanß the most beautiful strand to be conceived, as .smooth as a billiard table and stretching away many a league. It means also in the summer months a most diverting spectacle, where dandies mince and flirt even with the waves, where bathing, dancing, gaming and music occupy the fashionable world, and where the vast throngs present a gay and cheerful miscellany of faces and costumes. This most important seaside town on the continent of Europe has its palatial villas, including the summer residence of the king; its sports, polo, golf, tennis, racing, its great annual “bataille de fleurs,” its promenades, and around all Its beach, a paradise lor children, and its bath houses, so great a novelty for Americans. Above all. It has its kursatl, the center of all the gaieties of the season, which gives the visitor who sees it for' the first time a most confused impression of marbles and brass, qppper and gilding, rich hangings, palms and mirrors. 1 The dike or “digue” which is built along the beach Is a three-mile promenade, and at night the spectacle deen upon It Justifies the saying that Ostend is “the maddest, merriest” city in Europe. Every country has its seashore resorts, some of them as famous as Biarritz and Brighton. Bray, in County Wicklow, is the Brighton of
A TUMISIAN WATERING PLACE ARAB LADIES IN BATHING
VIEW OF SANDOWN BEACH ISLE OF WIGHT
Ireland. Perhaps Portrush in thfl Emerald isle is even more popular. England has Yarmouth and a score of big beaches, aside from those which have been named. There are good beaches in Wales ana aiong the Clyde in Scotland. Spain has San Sebastain across the border from Biarritz. On the Bay of Biscay, also/ in Arcachon, nestling among the pines,- 40 miles from Bordeaux. Other and not so “advanced” countries have also their summer exodus to the shore. Tunis, for instance, has a number of popular resorts. What Brighton is to the Englishman, and what Dieppe is to the Frenchman, that Rades is to the Tunisfan. La Marsa is said to resemble Trouville. Bathing is an indulgence that is proper at any hour of the day. Those who bathe don no special dress, but enter the water exactly as they were at the moment they decided to bathe. Then they stretch out on the sands to dry. At these Tunisian watering places such amusements as tennis, shrimping and case concerts, as well as sand castle building by the children, are well known. Finally America, not forgetting the Philippines. The list is a very long . one. Palm Beach, where in February the "water’s fine,” and, indeed, the whole Florida coast. The resorts in California, the gulf coast beaches, the almost endless succession of bathing places on the Atlantic coast. What a list there is of them. Narragansett Pier, which has become the polo headquarters of the nation; Asbury Park, with its Founder Bradley and its annual baby parade reviewed by Titania and her court, and Atlantic City, with its board walk, its famous piers, and a bathing hour that begins one might think at dawn and lasts till dark. Miles of firm white sand, shelving to the boundless ocean and washed by the eternal surf —no wonder that those who com® from the interior to see the sea for the first time have no trouble understanding its fascinations.
WHEN BEARS BREAK IN
They Swipe the Butter and Coffee and Bmash Things Just for Fun. "Bear fur has been so low ln price the last few years that I have not tried to catch them if they would let my camps along and keep out of mischief,” writes a New Brunswick trapper in Fur News. “But they quite often break into the camps and then I have to kill them whether the fur is good or not. “If they do get in a camp butter and coffee seem to be their first choice, but they generally smash everything that will break and what they don’t eat they will destroy, and If they once learn to break into a camp the only way to stop them is the trap or gun.”
Tile Is Most Sanitary.
Of all the materials used in bath rooms and kitchens for walls, floors and even for ceilings, the only perfect one is the tile. The rest are merely makeshifts made necessary on account of expense usually. The tile is absolutely smooth and non-absorbent; in consequence it is very easily cleaned with soap and water. A core or sanitary base should be used where the walls and floor Join to prevent the accumulation of dust which may become a breeding ground for germs. Door and window trims of tile may also be used. While tile may be obtained in practically all colors, there is no color that glveß the idea of cleanliness as pure white does. As people realize the advantages of tiling in both the kitchen and bathroom it is coming into more and more general use, and the economizing is done on something else. One of the great advantages of in the kitchen is that- being vitrified, even hot grease cannot be absorbed, but Is wiped off as ear'.'y a; off of a plat*.
A BAD THING TO NEGLECT.
Don t neglect the kidneys when you notice lack of control over the secre-
tlons. Passages become too frequent or scanty; urine is discolored and sediment , appears. No medicine for such troubles like Doan’s Kidney Pills. They <julckly remove kidney disorders. A. D'ashem, 241 N. Grant St, Wooster, 0., says: "The doctors diagnosed my
case as gravel, but my agony increased under their treatment, and I Boon became too weak to stand alone. I had given up all hope of living more than a few weeks at the best I was strongly urged to try Doan’s Kidney Pills, and after twelve days’ use, I passed two gravel stones. After that, I improved rapidly until cured.” Remember the name—Doan’s. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N» Y*
A BLUFFER ALWAYS.
®lla—A man is as olti as he feels. Stella—How about woman? . Ella —She Is as young as she can bluff people Into thinking she is.
THE BEST OF ITS KIND
Is always advertised. In fact it only pays to advertise good things. When yo.u see ar “ c^e advertised in this paper year after year you can be absolutely certain that there is merit to it because the continued sale of any article depends upon merit and to keep on advertising one must keep on selling. All good things have Imitators, but imitations are not advertised. tThey have no reputation to sustain, they never expect to have any permanent sale and your dealer would never sell them if he studied your interests. Sixteen years ago Allen’s Foot-Ease, the antiseptic Powder for the feet, was first * o| d, and through newspaper advertising and through people telling each other wl ?at a good thing It was for tired and aching feet it has now a permanent sale, and nearly 200 so-called foot powders nave been put <Sn the market with the hope of profiting by the reputation which has been built up for Allen’s Foot-Ease. .When you ask for an article advertised In these papers see that you get it Avoid substitutes.
His Busy Season.
“How’s business?” “Brisk,” answered the druggist. "I've bought tickets for two picnics and four excursions this morning, and donated goods for several indoor affairs."
DR. MARTEL’S FEMALE PILLS.
i \ Seventeen Years the Standard. Prescribed and recommended for Women’s Ailments.* A scientifically prepared remedy,of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent For sale at all Drug Stores. Life is two-thirds bluff, law is threetourths tyranny, piety is nine-tenths pretense. Be genuine and poor if you would die respected.
For Red, Itching Eyelids, Cysts, Styes
Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need Care Try Murine Eye Salve. Asepdc Tubes—Trial Size—26c. Ask Your Druggist or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. When a girl marries for a home she seldom boasts of what she gets.
The Tenderfoot Farmer > Y wa * ® ne these experimental farmers, who put greem spectacles on his cow and fed her shavings. His theoryWr~ wa * ‘ hat it didn't matter what the cow ate so long as ah» aßMifflßfflW was fed - The questions of digestion and nourishment I —f not entered into his calculations. • “tenderfoot" farmer that would try nek „ ~ ,„ an experiment with a cow. But many a farmer feeda Um~ ulf regardless ol digestion and nutrition. He might almost as well eat sharings for all the good he gets out of his food. The result is that the stomaefa We * k 2 10 action of the organs of digestion and nutrition are impeira4 and the man suffers the miseries of dyspepsia and the agonies of nervousness. To strength*!/ the stomach, restore Me activity of the or* sens of digestion and nutrition and hrace up the nerves* f 1 ® Piercer a Golden Medical Discovery, it Is an am* •ailing remedy, mad has the confidence of physicians an> well as the praise of thousands healed by Its use, atnetest sense “Golden Medical Discovery" is a temperance mexfi- « c ? nt * uu ne . lther intoxicants nor narcotics, and fa as free from aloohel as from opium, cocaine and other dangerous drags. All ingredients printed on itt outside wrapper. Don’t let a dealer delude you for his own profit. There is no medicine far stomach, liver and blood “just as good" as “Golden Medical Discover*. '*
IBs?i BECiiiAi run I iIIKEoINULIUj used In time will cure nearly every form of skin disease. It is a wonder worker A recognized specific for itching and inflamed piles. RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD. Reslnol Ointment, Resinol Toilet Soap, Restnol Medicated Shaving Stick are sold at Drug Stores.
IIIA A AXLE GREASE Hal ■ H MM Keeps the spindle bright an* IVRI ■ m M {ree grit. Try a bo*. BHf ■ ■ Wk magEi Sold by dealers everywhere. I V I ■ %# MU standard oil CO. ™ ™ (IsMipoisM)
WILLY WAS TOO LIBERAL
Oversupply of Alcoholic Stimulant* Disturbed Schedule of Funeral Arrangements. Dean Ramsay’s memoirs contain ms anecdote of an old woman of Stratl»pey. Just before her death she solemnly Instructed her grandnephew—- “ Willy, I’m deein’, and as ye’ll hae th» charge o’ a’ I have, mind now that aa much whisky is to be used at my forneral as there was at my baptism." Willy, having no record of the quantity consumed at the baptism, decided to give every mourner as much as be wished, with the result that the f»neral procession, having to travexa* ten miles to the chruchyard on * short November day, arrived only ah nightfall. Then It was discovered that sh» mourners, halting at a wayside inm. had rested the coffin on a dyke and left it there when they resumed thefar journey. The corpse was a day lat* In arriving at the grave.
His Soft Answer.
And this is the sort of excuse yon put up for coming home two houm late for dinner and in such a condition—that you and that disreputable Augustus Jones were out buntlns mushrooms, you wretch? And pray, are the mushrooms?” “Eere zay are, m’ dear, in m’ y««r pocket; and w’ile zay ain’ so many off ’em, m' dear, we had lots of fun—Gus an’ I—huntin’ ’em.”
Four Pellflsol MUNYONS DYSPEPSIA euryluw.* f^IDC Mil! IlCrilxMlI!!(’ fj £ dfifl ilivN|4ir\i{f* >v;n :i oui . s tniii(U h>.find ivlk’vv (jjslrrs. •
A Bkln of Beauty la a Joy Forcwr. n m - r - rwCLIX aoumjkUO'B Oriental Oraam ama Magical Baautmam, 3 ® SIJ ifrFY. Removes Tan, Hnplaa gifs /ggs?» £S?iS,& 4 £sS| sj£| £gg% ass-S oßd|0 Bd | [{PM tlon‘u < tas^S ta 38 • 'WJ i A+J thet.atofV'^if fc7o| ” ■ V 'Cf and la ao taM«sß >1 R| lf»wetaj»«tt»a 1)1 be snrettlapsag !{ 3o lT* n<1 ’ t Cream* as the lean hamS?s3 the skin preparations.” For sale by all --lrmllsaa* Fancy-Goods Dealers In the US., Canada andKußpaT Fard.T. Hopkliu, Prop,, 37 Sr»at Jones SUKnftafc Oh! "“’.J" Did you hear It? How embank rassing. These stomach noisesmake -you wish you could sink through the floor. You imagine everyomi hears them. Keep a box of CASCARETS in your purse or pocket and take a part of one after It will relieve the stomach of gas. CASCARKTS 10c a box for a wsetV treatment. AUdrnsrgrtsts. BtgrgestseUaac In the world—million boxes a mosth^STOCKERS & FEEDERS Choice quality; reds and roans* white faces op angns bought on orders. Tens of Thousands to select from. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Correspondence Invite*. Come and see for yourself. National Live Stock Com. Cat _ At either Kansas City, Mo„ St. Jos.ph, Ho, S. Omaha. Ifcfe. PATENT th<in>usc>.iul.waiisa!a^A
