Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 190, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 August 1911 — Page 3

A 4- -1* 1 « 1* 't ’ « 9 * « * - . V • way builds up the whole system. Take it. Get it today. In usual liquid form or in chocolate tPt ■ • - •"■•’ -' ■ • '■ ; 'Y'i ■ :■•• c ■ ■ ATlQflFlfl rlAn Vanisnes Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure fait Purely ble act surely 'AuI LUL but gently on tKd the fiver. JEWF W ™.E btop atter dinner dis- fl-PILLS. tress—cure ® |n(iigPstfiQP 1 iwsiiii i. ■■■Hiimi i »■■ i (SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.

The Summer Toast.

In all her business life the bit ot work she is now completing has been most pleasant, says the free lance stenographer. "I have been typewriting toasts on paper nakllns,” she said. “A society 'of club women who have planned to 'do a lot of outdoor entertaining this summer expect to use thousands of paper napkins, and I have had the 'lob of typewriting a toast on each napkin. It is a pretty Idea, and I tried to tneet the charming sentiment of 'the ladies halfway by using A good ■non-copying ink, but in spite of that iprecaution I am afraid that many a 'guest will leave the lunch table with » purple smudge on her face."

Prudential Reasons.

I "So you are going to send your ‘cook off. But Isn’t her name Arabella Gunn?” ’T- “What’s that got to do with our getting rid of her?” “But, my defer boy, Isn’t there an ordinance against discharging A. Gunn within the city limits?” Every time a child shows you its toy bank it’s your ante.

FREE MARK A trial package of Munyon’e Paw Paw Pills will be sent free to anyone on request. Address Professor Munyon, 53d & Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. If you are in need of medical advice, do not fail to write Professor Munyon. Your communication will be treated in strict confidence, and your case will be diagnosed as carefully as though you had a personal interview. Munyon’s Paw Paw Pills are unlike all other laxatives or cathartics. They coax the liver into activity by gentle methods. They do not scour, they do not gripe, they do not weaken, but they <do start all the secretions of the liver and stomach in a way that soon puts these organs in a healthy condition and corrects constipation, In my opinion constipation is responsible for most ailments. There are 26 feet of human bowels, which is really a sewer pipe. .When this pipe becomes clogged the whole system becomes poisoned, causing biliousness, indigestion and Impure blood, which often produce rheumatism and kidney ailments. No woman who suffers with constipation or any liver ailment can expect to have a clear complexion or enjoy good health. If I, had my way I would prohibit the sale of nine-tenths of the cathartics that are now being sold for the reason that they soon destroy the lining of the stomach, setting up serious forms of indigestion, and so paralyse the bowels that they refuse to act unless forced by strong purgatives. Munyon’s Paw Paw Pills are a tonic to the stomach, liver and nerves. They invigorate instead of weaken; they enrich the blood instead of impoverish it; they enable the stomach to get all the nourishment from food that is put .into it. These pills contain no calomel, no dope; they are soothing, healing and stimulating. They school the bowels to act without physic. Regular site bottle, containing 45 pills, 95 cents. Munyon’s Laboratory, *3d <k Jefferson Sts.. Philadelphia.

masti —ratpcrrn

THE BOUDOIR

FIMF Rill

HAND WORK NECESSITY ON UP-TO-DATE UNDERWEAR. -• ■ . Soft Finished Dimities and Batistes Are Textures to L >ek ments Must Accord With i ; C Skimp Lines of Dress. How can womankind resist the piles of airy white goods everywhere seen when fine underwear is de rigueur, and unmade matherials are so cheap, and ready-made lingerie so expensive? The textures to look for at this burning season are the softfinished dimities and batistes, which, checked, striped and figured, turn out most satisfactory garments of the in-

Corset Cover.of Embroidery Flouncing

timate sort. The models for chemises, drawers, princess slips, skirts and combinations must all be of a sort to accord with the skimp lines of outside dress, and good hand sewing is a necessity. Yes, hand sewing, the dainty stltchery of our grandmothers. Is almost ’ compulsory on up-to-date

TRIMMING FOR THE SUIT

Nothing so Effective as Black and White Striped Silk for Tailored Garment ' ' ‘'ir’ l ’ , As a decorative agent in trimming the tailored suit there is nothing so effective as black and white striped silk. It may be as wide as one inch or as narrow as pin stripes, but it has a dash and charm all its own and fully realized by us today. Linen or serge suits have come under its sway. Revers, collars and cuffs are deep or shallow, but they are modish in black and white stripe. This does not mean that no other color need be used. On the contrary, the neutral background on which to add green, peacock blue, citron, coronation red or royal blue. Buttons are sure to be applied accurately on stripes—which is a helpful hint to home dressmakers. Bradd can convert a colored background into checks, if you j»lsh. ai Tbe suit can be decidedly changed by adding the popular striped silk so much exploited by our leading designers.

Valkyrie Plumage.

There is at present a particularly noticeable plan of arranging in trios up one side of a tali crown, probably to call attention to its height. There is a fancy for setting plumage in the Valkyrie manner, one ostrich feather in erratic fashion drooping over the left ear and-the other over the right eye. But among their most wild and weird' surprises the designers show sane models in which they produce charmingly .simple shapes for those who prefer a type of headgear distinguished by its refinement ▲ black Chantilly veil upon a gold and black hat with a picturesque brim is of a dignified and becoming effect, especially for a dowager.

A Soft Collar.

There la a charming soft collar that is sure to prove popular with the woman whose neck is irritated under a high starched coilar and who yet wants to have her throat covered. - It is made of fine pique in two-inch turndown style, in white, ecru or light blue. The front is held In place by a small pearl link, which fastens under the Windsor or other soft tie to be worn with it Other styles of this collar are finished with narrow buttonholing and embroidery and are accordingly more expensive.

lingerie. Only the seams may be stitched, but all , the rest—felling, hems and tucks—must be put In with patient fingers and with much danti- - Trimming? Well, you may be as much or as little trimmed as you like, or can afford, to your lingerie, but the woman with aristocratic tastes chooses a very modest trimming, preferring to put most of her money and Energy in the material and good work. A little edge of' imitation Cluny, run with doll ribbon and whippet} to the rolled goods, is all that is seen 7 on many lovely kimono gowns, chemises and drawers. As tucks take up a lot of room—or add a suggestion ot heat —they are confined to skirts, but even then are put up and down, so that the flouncing in which they are used will fall gracefully. A lovely use can be made of a small quantity of dotted muslin, for this may form the flounce on a petticoat or shape collars for gowns and frills Ibr drawens. Lawn goes well with It, as well as a little edge of’Valenciennes. < _ . In fact, there is scarcely a thin white material on the market that cannot be used for underwear, and as a contrast to material is very smart the home dressmaker .can use up all the x bits left from cutting one garment on another in a different texture. As the more ordinary patterns of Vai have been copied in cheap laces, this admirable dentelle has been set aside for novelty laces of all sorts where the garment’s texture, too, is unusual. But if all the underwear is of American lawn, which is a very useful and dainty material for summer, Vai makes about the cheapest and most effective edge that can be had. > Our illustration drops us back to the commonplace topic of underwear. It gives the separate corset cover, a scant garment made of embroidery and finished at the armholes with a little hand needlework to match Through eyelets at the-top, and the beading of the belt, is drawn a narrow wash -ribbon in pale blue. Many women who regard the separate corset cover as a nuisance sew the belt of this model to the wide drawers now worn and so effect useful little combinations. The drawers are of |he enormously wide skirt variety, with the bias upper part fitting the hips without a wrinkle and with their bouffant legs they quite adequately take the place of short petticoats? ’

DRESS FOR A YOUNG GIRL

Simple Model Makes Up Into Dainty' Garment When Spotted Zephyr Is U sed. Spotted zephyr Is used for our simple model, which would be found most useful for school or seaside wear; it is made withe three wide box-pleats across back and front, these are stitched to waist, where a leather belt is worn. Quaker collar and cuffs of white lawn, with hem-

stitched edges, finish the neck and sleeves. Material required: 4 yards zephyr 27 inches wide.

Eyelet Embroidery.

Eyelet embroidered material may well be called the popular one of the summer season. It is used alone and also In combination with cloth, heavy basket weave linens,. voiles and marquisettes. It Is made up with stunning tub frocks and Into plain shirtwaists with high neck, long sleeves and front plait, finished with a full ruffle.

A GREAT TEMPTATION.

Aunt Dinah—Ephrum, dat ole Cunnel Leigh Is got some of de fines’, mos’ lubly young turkeys I eber sot my blessed eyes om Dat am a fac’l Uncle Ephraim—Yaas, honey, dis chile knows It. An* I on’y got ’llgion two weeks ago! An’ Jes’ two days befo* Thanksglbbin! Dinah, Tse mighty 'fraid i’s goto' to be a backslider, shuah as youah bohn! •

IN AGONY WITH ITCHING

"About four years ago I broke out with sores on my arms like boils. After two months they were all over my body, some coming, and some going away. In about six months, the boils quit, but my arms, neck and body broke out with an itching, burning rash. It would bum and itch, and come out in pimples like grains of wheat I was in a terrible condition; I could not sleep or rest Parts of my flesh were raw, and I could scarcely bear my clothes on. I could not lie to bed in any position and rest In about a year the sores extended down to my feet. Then I suffered agony with the burning, itching sores. Icould hardly walk and for a long time I could not put on socks. “All this time I was trying everything I could hear of, and had the skill of three doctors. They said It was eczema. I,got no benefit from all this. I was nearly worn out and had given up in despair of ever being cured when I was advised byj> friend-to try Cutlcura Remedies. I purchased Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent and used exactly as directed. I used the Cutlcura Remedies constantly for four months, and nothing else, and was perfectly cured. It is now a year, and I have not had the least bit since.’ I am ready to praise the Cutlcura Remedies at any time. (Signed) E. L. Cate, Exile, Ky., Nov. 10, 1910. Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32page book, will be mailed free on application to “Cutlcura,” Dept 21, K, Boston.

Old Map of America.

Claude Vautln, an English mining engineer, who has been prospecting in Peru, returned the other day on the steamship Zacapa. ' Besides looking after mining property, he has been collecting interesting antiquities of the country. -■«5 One of the most Interesting things he brings back with him is a map of South America made by the Jesuits in 1592. It gives an outline of the land as far north as Cuba and is apparently accurate. Its purpose is evidently plain, for every missionary station in the country at that time is indicated on the map, and the line of travel necessary to reach them is marked out. This map was obtained by Mr. Vautln at Puno, Peru. Another interesting collection he brought back is the death masks of the Incas. These were hammered out of metal and placed over the faces of the dead. Three of thqse obtained by Mr. Vautln are of sheet gold.

Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTO RIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the s/tT* '* st Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Liked It Dull.' “How do you find things, my man?” "Very dull, Tm glad to say?” "Glad? Why?” ’ ’ , “I’m a knife grinder.”’ The aluminum of this country from a production of 88 pounds in 1883, its consumption in 1900 amounted to 34,210,000 pounds. Lewis’ Single Binder, extra quality to bacco, costs more than other 5c cigars. It’s the united exports of little things that make big troubles.

Womens Secrets B • There is Me man in the United States who has perhaps heard more women’s secrets than any other man or woman in the country. These secrets are not secrets of guilt or shame, but the secrets of suffering, and they have been confided to Dr. R. V. Pierce in the hope and expectation of advice and help. That few of these women have been disappointed in their ex- ■ pectations is proved by the fact that ninety-eight per cent, of all women treated by Dr. Pieroe have been absolutely and altogether cured. Such a record would be remarkable if the RBR eases t mated were numbered by hundreds only. But when WJ Im that record applies to the treatment of more than half-a- mil- fJr • * lion women, In a practice of over 40 years, it is phenomenal, and entities Dr. Pieroe to the gratitude accorded him by women, as the first ot specialists in the treatment of women’s diseases. * - Every tick woman may consult Dr. Pierce by letter, absolutely without charge. All replies are mailed, sealed in perfectly plain envelopes, without nay printing or advertising whatever, upon them. Write without fear as with®a‘“•> * Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pieroe, Prcst., BufiuOg Ns Yo DR. PIERCE’S PAVORITE PRESCRIPTION WV«N»IS. Women JBtxroxx*, Biola. Women, Well,

fl I || | y fl H A n U ror lour ■ Enjoyment , • Wflfl^ s fl Uli Here’s so individual among drinks—a beverage fl ' ! fla fairly snaps with delicious eoodnese and B I llfl jM v M Wril II Iwl fl Vfl II ii Im B"fl II has more to ** than mere wetness or sweetness—it’s vig- .fl |l RBCBy orous, full of life. You’ll enjoy it from the first sip ■ 1! to the last drop and afterwards. B 111 ttVW DELICIOUS - REFRESHWa MT 111 IN THIRST-QUENCHING COCA-COLA CO., At!snta,j&^^^^ MMI (.fl! 111 IFm Arrcw tHakUl M 4 ■ ' el Cese- bslaKl Cr ":.iZ 1

Grandfathers Fault. Esther—Why, when I was your age I didn’t have as much money to a month as you spend to a day. Son —Well, pa, don’t scold me about it Why don’t you go for grandfather?—Silent Partner. Personal. 'Garrulous Barber —As the _ sayin’ goes, "There’s always room at the top.” Sensitive Customer—How dare you refer to my baldness! Stop the Pain, The hurt of a burn or a cut stops when Cole’s Carbollsalve is applied. It heals quickly and prevents scars. 25c and 50c by druggists. For free sample write to J. W. Cole & Co.. Black River Falls, Wis. A good name being better than riches, it behooves us to take better care of our reputations. Hrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. Ssc a bottle. The man who thinks he knows it all never gets much of a chance to tell it ..Lewis’ Single Binder, straight sc-rmauj smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. It’s the land of the free—for spinsters and bachelors. Chew and smoke untaxed tobacco, cheap and undoped. Meriwether Aad wards, Cla.rksylUe.Tenn. Girl .chums are almost as thick as a fat man.

MILLIONS of FAMILIES—u>ingSYBUPo/FIGS °-n<l

ELIXIRp/SENNA FOR COLDS AND HEADACHES, BtUGESDON AND toUR STOMACH. GAS AND FERMENTATION, CONSTIPATION ,AND BILIOUSNESS. WITH MOST SATISFACTORY RESULTS al -JL U ■< CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUPCOu IN THE CIRCLE ON EVERY PACKAGE OFTHE GENUINE * | THE WONDERFUL POPULARITY OF THE GENUINE SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OP SENNA HAS LED UNSCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS TO OFFER IMITATIONS, IN ORDER TO MAKE A LARGER PROFIT AT THE EXPENSE OF THEIR CUSTOMERS. IF A DEALER ASKS WHICH SIZE YOU WISH, OR WHAT MAKE YOU WISH. WHEN YOU ASK FOR SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA, HE IS PREPARING TO DECEIVE YOU TELL HIM THAT YOU WISH THE GENUINE, MANUFACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA HG SYRUP CO AU RELIABLE DRUGGISTS KNOW THAT THERE IS BUT ONE GENUINE AND THAT IT B MANU FACTORED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP 00 ONLY NOTE THE NAME winiJHWwHPewsiiMn y Iff* 111 111 JI IIF‘ ■ 3 [Cwii 11 (MaaIaIMMBURMBiKMMMMaGF T PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS, NEAR THE BOTTOM. AND M THE CIRCLE.NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE.OF THE GENUINE ONE SIZE ONLY. FOR SALE BY AU LEADING DRUGGISTS REGULAR PRICE 50c PER BOTTLE.

SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELDOR OF SENNA IS ESPEOAUY ADAPTED TO THE NUM OF LADIES AND CHILDREN. AS H B MILD AND PLEASANT GENTLE AND EFFECTIVE. AND ABSOLUTELY FREE FROM OBJECTIONABLE INGREDIENT! IT B EQUALLY BRMBIOAL FOR WOMEN AND FOR MEN. YOUNG AND OLD FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGHT! ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE. California Fig SyrupCo COI T DISTEMPER bo handled very sulk. The sick are cured, and |U! oOmo 1B stable, no matter ho#"exposed,” kept from having BH I>lo barneon sent ~ SPOHN MEDICAL CO~ Ooohon. ImL, U.S.B,

PATENTS W. N. U-, CHICAGO, NO. 29-1911.

Sliced Dried Beef </ Old Hickory Smoked fl! A Highest Quality -Hi 11 Finest Flavor Ask for Libby'S - - -- '■ ** . ———

41 HI 'Sa 1 11 ii’il IgHW-ri B 'lj ’h!. .

RI'lA BSORB!iNF I Bibs.. 'sawressm-■Mfcar'wr , »as/ *--sBB-‘!- i

PoJlMvh. Qu I tor, Fistula er aaur Bifl bandage or remove the hair, m 3 VUHL. von can wort tfrg. byte. B eorhoe. boruVateSZ Wiflif ordeliver*!. WillteUroaMO roe write. Manufactured only W W.F.Y0U1M.P.0.F..310 Tenple tUSerinetslAMssa. ASTHMA OII^ 1 the eost of treatmentand wye ex- ff <MUb TO VBFM Psrwanomtlje vv ri to DOW XOF XTww «.,■ examination and Bulletin LIL A* fiaa t# ismMP.lUrwMHajes, ■ . D., HuffaW, B. Y. STAY hay-fever mma

I OLD SORES CURED B

Alien's ulcerinc Hu Ire eurcaChronieUleera. Hesse n‘, ■ gtM*dvtn| Thfimpstn’s Ejt Wit*