Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 184, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 August 1911 — Page 2
sv;-'*-•*•>» D*J Except Sunday * %iS7 <r« |ir A| rw a ai tnu DuKltahaM . . nKnlpK T S> V»“ •»*'l r ---------- Iwighty intensive —for tlostnt. That wind blown summer resort advertising begins to look very catchy. igtrl was never more h she Is this season. i«ver reverses a declasked to do so every minister defended Sun* nd they say he struck lot being able to swim not being able to go i th# wireless telegraph tow have permanently srs' ... - ■ ■ roasts about his old age ound that he has notht about twice as many teleion. But then It has o say. A Pittsburg scientist says there Is a microbe In every kiss. Pittsburg ought to know that by this time. i; : A new counterfeit S2O bill Is In circulation. Watch for It when the conductor hands you your change. gs ; ' Visit any store where they sell straw hats and view the impressive ceremony of putting the Ud on. ** • Redman Wan&maker is insured for $4,500,000. but it is not stated wheth- I or he is an aviator or s canoeist . . Wanner winters are promised. It Is consoling to know that they cannot : bo warmer than the summers. >. - j -•- •• No first class summer resort as you may have observed, ever has any files or mosquitoes for publication. "When you discover two souls with but a single thought the thought concerns the coolest place within reach. A good many of oar householders labor under the impression that Ice la measured by the carat like diamonds. England has Just launched her first war airship. It is called the Mayfly. Probably the Implied doubt Is justifiable. . inf One who will sit out on the bleachers when the temperature is playing around 100 must really want to see the ball game. Po>o Is a great game, and might be even more thrilling and spectacular If the players would ride motorcycles instead of horses. Willie Berri’s Brooklyn playmates can never brag successfully about having had the measles, for Willie stepped in the president’s soup. A New Tork physician says that one can escape typhoid fever by chewing tobacco. The remedy, however, is worse than the disease. Several hundred marriages In Chicago have been declared void, thereby aavlng a good many people the expense of a trip to Reno. A young woman in Brooklyn wants to marry the stepson of her fathcß-ln-law’s first wife. All of whioh Is our notion of considerable mixup. “You’ll not notice the heat If you don’t talk about It," says Doctor Wiley. The trouble is that other people inslat on talking about it * A Bostdn court has been called on to decHle whether baseball playing is labor. It Seems to be when the Detroit team is playing on the other side. ■ y Edison says that the end of the trolley mur Is in sight But tbs boldest inventor has not yet tsckled -Uje problem of the strap-hangerless car." IPI 7 /’ .' .'Mm mm - Esd a lawyer ailed her an i cat If you i old cat tat divorces usband will How does ny mem get gives the
GOWNS FOR DOG DAYS STYLISH MODEL FOR QIRL WHO IS OWN DRESSMAKER. Simple, Cool Afternoon Frock That Launders Wall and Costs Littls Money Is Most Needed During Hot‘Spell. It is astonishing how many girls make their own frocks nowadays and what taste and good sense they put Into the buying of the materials. The primary reason for the industry, of course, is that so many changes are needed for a smart appearance, and where money Is net plentiful there is nothing to do but to acquire the gentle art of the needle. As to the discretion displayed with the purchasing, it must be due to the fact that so many mothers give a dress allowance and wisely stop with the sum agreed upon, no matter how many other things are wanted. In this way the girl learns how to make the dress money cover everything needed and the experience gained thereby is certain to benefit her all her life. The dress most needed at this dog day time la the simple, cool afternoon frock that launders well, that costs little money and yet, somehow, presents an appearance dainty enough for all the little social occasions that come up. This simple and girlish gow r n can be turned out for $2, and if the material Is carefully chosen and the work well Cone, It will have a stamp of real distinction. Ramie linen, In a dull shade' of coronation purple, Is one of the textures much used now for the semi-dress frock the smart girl wears in the afternoon. This material and various muslins of effective pattern—preferably stripes—are made up Into one-piece effects, with the Inevitable collarless neck and elbow sleeves. There Is always a dainty fiat collar in whiter too. Hare cuffs matching, or the collarless neck line will end with a little bias of the gown material, this bit of color showing smartly on the white. In our illustration are given two frocks which may be used for both indoors and out, and be made up most inexpensively. The one at the left is a collarless morning frock for a girl of sixteen, the bodice and attached skirt fastening down the front With the blue and white check a
PRETTY NEW PIQUE FROCK
Long Blouse and Bkirt Are Plaited and Confined by Belt of Same Material. This attractive frock is of pique. The long blouse and skirt are plaited and confined by a belt of the material ornamented with buttons and piped
with blue and white checked linen, or which all the rest of the pipings are •Iso made. The yoke arid sleeves are cut 1* one piece, the fbrmer ornamented with buttons. >'• The collar, cuffs and crqyat are of the blue and white checked linen. . • • hrti
Cords for Belts.
The cordeliers that was brought out on bouse gowns last summer Is now widely taken up tor all manner of frock*. It Is only suitable for those made with the high-waist line. The newest interpretation of It ts a series of heavy cord* covered with silk or satin, placed close together, and finished at the side of the front with irregular ends. These are made ot the cords, or of satin, and they invariably have a heavy tassel on the end.
One of the new evening gowns for a fashionable woman has cords of silver around the white satin gown at an empire waist line, finished with tassels of brilliants.
The Home Department
stripe In the same is employed for making the heat collar and cuff bands and a deep skirt edge. Five yards and a half of wide gingham would turn out this trim and useful gown and the girl would find It Invaluable for outdoor sports, such as tennis, boating or golf. Then it Is fine for the small housekeeping duties the daughter of the family so often takes upon herself and whose cares are lightened by half if she feels herself prettily dressed.
The second dress in this ent Is a one-piece model with side fastening for an older girl. Ramie would be appropriate for this and coronation purple the first choice for color. The pretty braid and buttons used would
be most effective in white, although the same color could be used and the result be even handsomer. Here the dress is of ramie in a soft gray shade, with braid bands in the same color; the dark piece on the turn-over collar is of coral pink linen; the round bone buttons matching the tone.
Either of these dress styles, with some change, Is adapted to handsomer textures, but as this is the season for the simple frock of so-called wash sort I would advise tub textures with the present simplicities of make. Seven yards of 27-inch goods would turn out this frock for a girl of eighteen.
A POPULAR SUMMER SKIRT
Linen and Pique Bid Fair to Retain -v Their Popularity During Hot Beason.
The white linen or pique skirt bids fair to be as popular this season as ever. Nothing looks bo cool and alluring in warm weather as the costume of spotless white. And the dainty blouse could not exist without the accompanying smart tailored skirt. The skirts this year are all cut on straight, simple, narrow lines. The buttons extend down one side all the way to the hem, or the skirt may also be fastenetr down the two Bide gores just far enough to make a comfortable placket. Occasionally, one sees a few plaits inserted, to give greater freedom, but the plain skirt Is far more practical for laundering purposes. Large pearl buttons are still the chief form of decoration, though a six-inch fold of the same material stitched a few inches above the hem of the skirt may give a little variety when one is planning a number of skirts.
Another model that is attractive Is h nine-gore skirt, whose every gore had an inch and a half tuck stitched down to the bottom of the skirt This gave no extra flare, but gave stability to material that is light in weight The girl who has enough skirts and dainty blouses has a fine foundation for her summer wardrobe.
About Pongee.
Pongee silk la the undyed silk of silkworms fed on the leaves of the scrub oak chiefly. The silk is produced almost exclusively In Shantung province. The real pongee cloth, made of this uncolored specially produced silk. Is distinct from the pongees of commerce made in all colors from other silks. Each piece of clpth is made from a particular lot of silk. and. therefore, each piecj varies from all other pieces, in'exact weight and fineness, and In s slight degree In color and other qualities. Women shopping in Chinese pongees find it difficult to match pieces.
Satins for Early Fall.
There Is nd doubt that satins will be employed during the early fall In the form of made-up garments, to be worn over the sheer, semi-sheer and silken materials that have formed so large a part of the spring and summer demands this year, says the Dry Goods Economist It i%. also expected tUR some demand will develop for satins suitable for making Jacket suits, but only in quantities apportioned to novelties.
BRIGHT’S DISEASE.
How m Severe Cass Was Cursd After Dostors Gave Up Hope. J. C. Relmers, Litchfield Bt, SL Paul, Minn., says: "I was so bad I could riot arise from bed. Urine was dark and scant, I was thin and emaci-
a ted, and had intense pain in my back and head. My limbs swelled and stomach bloated. I got so low that I was kept alive by stimulants., The doctor told my family I was In the last stages of Bright’s disease, and could not' last three days.
As a last resort they gave me Doan’s Kidney Pills and slight Improvement was noticeable. I kept getting better and better until at last I was able to leave my bed. From then on I gained rapidly. It was but a short trine before I was as well as ever.*’. Remember the name —Doan’s. For sale by druggists and general storekeepers everywhere. Price 60c. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
HE WAS HUNGRY, TOO.
croace * Mrs. Justwed—There’s nothing in the house fit to eat. I’m going home to my mother. Mr. Justwed Cbroke) —Walt till I get my hat, and I’ll go with you.
Resting Must Be a Business.
Will M. Ross, a well-known writer of Stevens -Point, Wis., who Is himself a cured consumptive, holds that unless resting becomes a business to the tuberculosis patient, he might as well give up his fight for health. “The period of Infection with tuberculosis,” he says, “Is not a vacation. It is a twenty-four-hour-a-day job. True it is a period of idleness, but one of intelligent, directed idleness. The day’s work should consist of rest; rest should be the only business on hand. The light exercise, or hour of reading, Bhould be considered as the reward of a good day’s work, like the evening of slippered ease to the tired business men at the end of the day. This recreation, however, should be considered only as an incidental result of the patient's work, not the main object.”
A Hard-Worked Man.
Perhaps we do not realize It, but the president of the United States is one of the hardest worked men in the republic. The head of a big corporation, E. H. Gary, for instance, can slip away to Europe and the organization will run Itself until he returns, but the president, surrounded as he is by a corps of capable assistants and advisers, must be on the job practically every day in the year. Today William H. Taft Is the busiest official who holds a high elective, position. A governor can get away from official cares —although his pay may be docked If be stays away too long—but the president must get his vacation in driblets. His vacations consist of fifteen-minute intervals in which nobody actually is waiting to see him.
LUCKY MISTAKE.
Grocer Sent Pkg. of Postum and Opened the Eyes of the Family.
A lady writes from Brookline, Mass.: “A package of Postum was sent me one day by mistake. “I notified the grocer, but finding that there was no coffee for breakfast next morning I prepared some of the Postum, following the directions very carefully. “It was an immediate success in my family, apd from that day we have used it constantly,. parents and children, too—for my three rosy youngsters are allowed to drink it freely at breakfast and luncheon. They think it delicious, and I would have a mutiny on my hands should I omit tho beloved beverage. “My husband used to have a very delicate stomach while we were using coffee, bat to our surprise his stomach has grown strong and entirely well since wo quit coffee and have been on Postum. “Noting the good effects in my family I wrote to my sister, who'was a coffee toper, and after much persuaslon got her to try Postum. “She was prejudiced against It at first, but when she presently found that ail the ailments that coffee gave her left and she got well quickly she became and remains a thorough and enthusiastic Postum convert. “Her nerves, which had become shattered by the use of coifed have grown healthy again, and todsy she Is a new woman, thanks to •Postum." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich., and the “cause why” will be found in the great little book, “The Road to Wellvllle,” which comes In pkgs. Em reed the eheve letter* A st* eee appears frees Sitae te ttaMs. Tier are seemsiae, tras* aad tall at bias—littftets
MARCUSE, CALIFORNIA, LAND FOR PROFITABLE FARMING.
Marcose Colony, located in Sutter County, which is In the heart of the Sacramento Valley, Is fast coming to the front as a faming community in which nearly every agricultural product known may be successfully raised without irrigation. * The soil is a dark, sandy loam, sedimentary In character, level and well drained.' It has the advantage over other soils In that it Is loose in character and superior to heavy soils. With this wealth of soil, abundance of water, unexcelled climate and long growing season, Marcuse Colony is the ideal place for the homeseeker with limited means, the worn out professional man, or the young man looking for a small farm in a healthful climate. The proximity of Marcuse Colony to Sacramento, furnishes a ready fharket for vegetables, poultry, eggs and dairy products. Fruits, vegetables, alfalfa, grains and grasses and poultry yield large returns. The rainfall Is certain and drought is unknown. Land is yet moderately, priced, hut crop failures In other sections of the United States will bring new settlers In rapidly. This, together with the holding of the Panama Pacific Exposition in San Francisco during 1915, is bound to raise the price, and whether for a home, or for an investment, now iB the time to purchase. Land may be had in tracts suitable to the means of all and the results obtained are almost beyond belief. Further Information will be gladly furnished by HOMESEEKERS’ INFORMATION BUREAU, 630 Bee Bldg,, Omaha, Neb.
A Clew.
“How did the accident happen?" asked the reporter on the scene of the railway horror, the Cleveland Plain Dealer records. “Somebody stopped the train by pulling the airbrake cord,” answered the conductor. “So the second section ran into us. It will take six hours to clear the track so that we can go ahead.”
“Six hours?” shrieked a passenger. “And I was to be married today!” “Have you any idea who pulled the rope?” continued the * reporter, disregarding the Interruption. “I didn’t have until now,” whispered the conductor. “But what do you think of that fellow that just butted In? 11l sic the detectives on him.”
DISTEMPER
In all its forms among all ages of horses, ss well as dogs, cured and others in same stable prevented from having the disease with SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 600,000 bottles sold last year $.50 and SI.OO. Any good druggist, or send to numufacturerir Agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
Refreshing Sight
“Feeling blue today?” “Yes.” “Let’s go down to the bank and look at some money.”
Cole’s Carbolisalve quickly relieves and cures burning. Itching and torturing skin diseases. It Instantly stops the pain of burns. Cures without scars. 25c and 50c by druggists. For free sample write to J. W. Cole & Co., Black River Falls. Wls.
Dodging bad story tellers fs one way of avoiding poor relations.
A Poor Weak Woman Aa she is termed, Will endure bravely and patiently agonies which a strong man would give way under. SHSSmgkt The fact is women are more patient than they ought to be under such troubles. Every woman ought to know that she may obtain the most experienced medical advice free of charge wß® and in absolute confidence and privacy by writing to the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. > Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce has been chief consulting physician of the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, ot Buffalo, N. Y., tor many years and has had a wider practical experience in the treatment of women’s diseases than any other phyaioian in this country. His medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy. * The most perfect remedy ever devised for weak «ad doß* ©ate women is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. The many and varied symptoms of woman's peculiar ailments are fully sot forth in Plain English in the People’s Medical Adviser (1006 pages), a newly revised and up-to-date Edition of whioh, cloth-bound, will bo mailed free on reoeipt of 31 one-oent stamps to pay ooet of mailing only. Address as above. Berthold l ■ Reservation Is Open 1 I at Mtnol. I I Fort Berthold Indian Reservation it open at, lait to white settle- ■ ment, under the Homestead Laws. Any American arisen who ■ ■ 1 has not used his homestead birthright or who does not own mom ■ than 160 acres of land, may file. Fortunate winners have the ■„ * Hs opportunity of procuring 160 broad acres of North Dakota's farm- ■ | from Uncle Sam, on long time payments; prices £1.50 ■" I 150,000 Acre* jU- ■ art now open and registration can be g»de at Minot, North-Dakota; B 1 on and between August la and September 2, 191!. Writs today for our free Fort Berthold folder which tells you how, when and where to ■ " ■ file and the method ot drawing. 115 Greet Northern BuikUng. Saint Paul, Minnacota. ■ II |£H |
r nr r a u r“ nA Li r* it r r I J I J fV| p W I 1 lyl j rv L L &/V i I f i\ V ! T I I COf Hv A HFADATHF^ v Ll/ . LX 11 L. n ur* vi I sj INDIGESTIONS SOUR STOMACH BI LI PUSH ESS & CONSTiPATiON
tk» of the liter, Stoma* and Bamh, may be obtained most pleasantly md mo* promptly by uring Syrup of R*. and Efcrir of Some. It is Ml • new ' I out Hie wmid to deaeee end sweeten bxatfeM* ■ When buying note in fal nmai of the Company— California Fig Syn* Co.,—printed on every package of Hie Regular price 50* pec bat one dm oofy. For sale by an leedhg Avista.
THE ORIGINAL mnl GENUINE SYRUP °f FIGS - ELIXIRS SENNA IS manufactured by CALIFORNIA FIG S^RUPCO
50,000 Men Wanted in Western Canada 200 Million Bushels Wheat to be Harvested Harvest Help in fireat Demand Reports from the Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta (Western Canada) indicate one of the best crops ever raised on the continent To harvest this crop will require at least 50,000 harvesters. Low Rates Will be Given on All Canadian Roads Excursions are run daily and full particulars will be given on application to the following authorized Canadian Government Agent The rates are made to apply to all who wish to take advantage of them for the purpose of inspecting the grain fields of Western Canada, and the wonderful opportunities there offered for those who wish to invest, and also those who wish to take up actual farm life. Apply at once to C. J. Broughton, 412 Merchant* Loan & Trust Bldg , Chicago, III.: Geo. Aird, 216 Traction Tormina! Bldg., Indianapolis; Geo. A. Hall, 12S Second Street. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. XTEW BRITISH COLUMBIA TOWNSITE, J-’ FORT FRASER, put upon the market In July. Situated In centrebcstaßricultumltractinProTlnce. On main line new Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, almost surrounded by navigable river of greatlength; was Hudson Bay Company % post for years and 1* todaytbenaturalbnbof province. Lots selling now at 8100, 1160. Double corners two principal streets 1350. Investment this stage assures profits before winter. Deed guaranteed by government, who bold quarter of land, and deposited with Dominion Stock * Bond Corporation, Vancouver, capital two millions. References: B rads tree ts, Dun’s, Imperial Bank of Canada. Particulars on roquesk IF YOU WANT Svestmentln t Ark! lands or bay a borne on easy terms, address <1 .K.B UOORK, BOX 687, LITTLE BOCK, ABU. ARVAHSIC I Aif IK 866.000 a. subject to homeRnhßnmma LA I! lid stead. Location of land, description of each county and Information how to secure these lands sent for 8L O JJUtM,UuI* Keek, Aik. PATENTS ySu-grH W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 31-1911.
