Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 76, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 March 1913 — Page 2

*TT_ r\ *1 D Ll* The Daily Republican HEALEY A CLARK, Publisher*. INDIANA. :

Lime Is recommended as a diet to cure flat feet Quickens up a body, so doubt. , ■■ —————— This eight hour a day law Is all light for women, but where does mothor come in? , An Ohio man was Injured by an explosion of a hot doughnut. Lucky he hadn’t eaten it New York has 750 hotels, and can accommodate 850,000 people. She also keeps enough waiters to trim them all. They say that a hare can run 50 feet a second, but where is there a fat man who would like to be a - hare? Now comes a genealogist with the announcement that the rightful king of Ireland Is a German. Och, wurre. wurral Nothing better displays the bold* ness of the Chinese republic than Its effort to Interfere in the matter of woman's dress. A Toronto minister named Shearer refused to turkey trot for a judge. It is said he made some cutting remarks as welL \ . , If we were /; ,all baseball clubs we could all go south, too. But of course somebody has. to stay at home and abuse the weather. There are twenty-seven forms of Insanity, but there Is no scientific support for the notion that a man may have several of them. Poor girl in a paper mill fdund sllO In rags, and then they proved to be confederate bills. She’s been chewing the rag about It ever since. A Pennsylvania burglar upset a hive of bees, with the result - that he was captured. A case of the busy little j bee improving each Bhinlng hour. Professor Yammer remarks that everybody emits a ray. But the loudest ones are those emitted by the college youth at a football game. In Switzerland it is held lawful to call a man an ass. Perhaps because the majority of men in Switzerland risk their necks mountain climbin*. 4 * Chicago pastor advises girls not to wed until they are twenty-three. So they will have something to lay It on if it proves an unhappy marriage. A baby girl in Boston is being trained up to become a perfect woman. It’s a cinch she’ll be a snob with all that self-consciousness of her mission. Heatless light iB said to have been discovered by “a “Parisian scientist, which Indicates that science is only about a couple of aeons behind the modest firefly. Philadelphia is manufacturing a motor truck along lines of a locomotive. Should be equipped with a cowcatcher aßd run under rules governing a railroad train. A New Jersey pastor played a cornet at a dance, and his congregation demanded his resignation. If he's as bad a musician as some we’ve heard we don't blame them. In Berlin persons are not allowed to keep their windows open while playing on musical instruments. In America the fellow who lives next door is forced to put his down. There are whole parishes in England that have not a single bathtub. So it seems that some Englishmen do get along without a morning “bawth.” A St. Louis man is possessed of a leg that has been asleep for eight months and refuses to awake. Still, it’s not so bad as if he were left without a leg to stand on. A British specialist diagnoses the disease from which Napoleon died as cancer. Post-mortems have their übo. but one almost a century after the event is rather more curious than important: In Brooklyn, one jury awarded a woman $3,000 for a loss of her husband, and another jury gave a man $3,500 for the loss of a leg. The Jury must have known the deceased. West Virginia legislator wants to pass a low'making it illegal for women to wear hats in theaters. Why not Include punishment for sticking hatr pins through the back of the seat ahead, too ? Government reports 1 show that horses are increasing in spite of the spreading use of automobiles. It will reassure those who fear that the inarch of progress is causing neglect of man’s best friend, ft • A German who paid a $1 poll tax In Jersey City last year chopped down the only pole he had on the premises and made his wile hang her clothes on tbs root Now h* is studying English In a night school to find out whether the collector is spoofing hi™

DESIGNED IN AMERICA

COSTUME GOOD AS ANY FASHIONED BY FAMOUB PARISIANS. « That Home Tflent Can Produce Results to Rival. Those of the Socalled Arbiter of Woman’s Attire Is Hereby Proved. That American talent can create fashions to outdo those imported from any foreign nation, is the contention of the Society of American Fashions for American Women. As an argu-

ment against the use of fake labels bearing the Parisian imprint, this evening gown Is shown. It is of silver head embroidery over silver brocade trimmed with blue and rose chiffon and Is but one of fourteen handsomest gowns of American make.

IMITATION MADE A FINE ART

Writer Can Bee Excuses for the Copying of Btyles Belonging to the Past Ages. We have had the renaissance period, the directoire period, the imperial period—why. not the “imitation” period as well? The colonial houses are imitated; so is old furniture. As for dress, imitation is the dominating note of the whole fashionable world. Beauty Is not even skin deep nowadays; it is copied with the same facility and ease with which a mediocre artist can reproduce the likeness of a famous picture. Why, the painting of a portrait pales into insignificance beside the work of thj> geniuses who create the styles. It may not be possible to make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear—but who wants a silk purse, at any rate, with such splendid silver imitations on the market, all glittering with imitation Jewels? Give Dame Fashion Kipling’s foundation of “a rag, a bone and a hank

Children’s Colored Dresses.

Gingham, percale, linen, chambray and many fancy cotton tissues are being employed for colored dresses for children, says the Dry Goods Economist. Combinations of plaids and stripes with plain colors are also deBlrable. For example, a dreßS of plaid gingham will have the collar, revere, belt and cuffs in a plain color, while a dress of percale will have trimmings of plaid. The vogue of colored ratine has extended to the children’s wear field. Manufacturers of high-class goods are beginning to use them to a considerable extent, both in solid colors and In stripes and checks. Colored crepes and eponges are also considered smart and make up into very attractive garments.

Youthful Effect in Veils.

The veil with the fine mesh is a godsend to the woman who has forgotten her birthdays. It has a delightfully softening effect, which succeeds In subtracting some of the dreaded years oP blurring the telltalb lines of time. A veil. If wisely chosen, will act as a good friend, revealing only that which the world may know and concealing much that the wearer depires to hide.

Leather Pin Boxes.

Leather pin boxes, which ought to help bring neatness to dressing table or bureau, are sold for all sorts of pins. The boxes are about five by seven Inches and contain a dozen compartments, shaped to hold various kinds and sizes of pins. Safety pins, big and little, occupy two compartments, and others hold hairpins, ordinary pins and pins with various colored heads.

of hair” to wore upon, and she wilt transform a snub-nosed, pasty-faced bit pf femininity into an alluring, fascinating siren, so admirably' exact s replica of natural beauty that only some unpleasant expert can detect the subterfuge.—New York Press. . ;

METAL FLOWERS AND FANCIES

Return of Idea That Was the Extrema of Fashion Only a Few Seasons Past. One migbt hire imagined that there was nothing less likely to happen than the rdturn of metallic effects, for It is not so very long sinew they were sufficiently in the forefront of fashion to make their return a most unlikely forecast. Yet here We are glittering as much as ever with cloth of gold for our evening attire, and brocades richly shot with gold making some of the smartest toquea and draped hats that are worn on the street. • Gold lace is also a millinery feature that seems worth mentioning, apd one thing in favor of metallic effects remaining among the more exclusive of the season’s details is that they are chiefly confined to the more expensive ornaments. Sliver as well as gold is to be seen, especially In the form of large plain buckles or of the full blown roses that are so soft and graceful in silver and gold cloth. Motifs of metal or of metallic embroidery are much used for feather mounts, and even without a feather such a motif is a sufficient finish for a smart tailored hat. Jet ornaments are used in the same way, and a par adise plume cannot be set on more effectively than as the fringe of a large double bow of handsomely cut jet.

REALLY HANDSOME HANDBAGS

Elaborate Ornamentation, With CapaFeature Just tyowi Cut brocaded velvet and heavy silk plush with silver filigree fastenings make handsome bags for the middleaged woman. They are capacious enough to hold handkerchief, eyeglasses or lorgnette, coin purse and other small articles. Pocketbooks of the same materials with a half a dozen different compartments, the middle one clasped shut, are also made now and can be carried in the larger handbags. Silk and plush purses, something like the reticules carried by women a generation or two ago, purses about ten inches long and three Inches with a clasp at each end and a steel ring In the center to slip over the finger, are especially convenient to carry In the muff. Handles on the new hand bags do not reach the absurd length ÜBual last year. They are still long, some of them two or three feet. Leather bags frequently have handles of silk cords, and velvet and chenille cord, A new handle is made of black taffeta silk shirred over heavy cord.

Fringed and Embroidered Sashes.

Girdles and Bashes become more and more epatantes, which is the Parisian’s way of saying rather more than we mean by "stunning.” Many of the sashes are fringed and embroidered They may be of almost any width, but perhaps the most popular is from four to six inches. A sash of dark blue satin is embroidered at the ends In bright colored flowers. A French model in black velvet has a sash of wide Scotch plaid ribbon tied In a double bow directly in front, the fringed ends falling below the knees. With a black charmeuse gown is a black sash with bias ends ornamented with long silver fringe.

Rug for Sewing Machine.

A small rug for the sewing maphine, made to fit the treadles, will keep the feet of the worker warm in cold weather.—Christian Science Monitor.

Fashion's Fancies

Bulgarian colors are Been in the peplum jackets of satin, worn with cloth skirts. To preserve the gooa lines of the soft, clinging gowns wear a low ctaset and brassiere. A tailored bow of a vivid color is seen under a piece of lace or net that fills in the slashed skirt. Marie Stuart effects In collars are much used in Paris. They are carried out in velvet, satin, fur and plaited lace. Jet girdles are encircling many evening gowns. These are made of large flat jet beads arranged on a net foundation. Plaited peplums are noticeable on party frocks for young girls. They look prettiest when made of chiffon, tulle or net. Belts are high In favor on coat dresses and skirts. Usually the belt is placed just across the back to hold in a little fulness. Mantelets of taffeta made up In colors contrasting to that used In the gown are very chic. Very often these are draped to give the pannier effect The Watteau effects are very popular and graceful on some figures. They should be avoided by the persons whose figure does not have. straight lines.

Bell Sleeves.

Sleeves made of soft flowing material show decided change. The bell sleeve Is popular, but It Is much modified and not nearly so baggy as for marly.

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SUITED HIM.

*Tve Just been reading In this his tory of France all about Charlotte Corday. She sure was a great dame, all right” "What did she do?" "Killed a guy what was taking a bath."

Universal Hero.

For America, at le&Bt, there is the one universal hero. No one questions his greatness. None names him but to praise. Who is this universal hero? Is It Napoleon? Many condemn him, as Ingersoll did, as the "Imperial personification of force and murder." No, it is not Napoleon. Washington, then? Wendell Phillips said: “But the great Virginian held slaves." So, even Washington hsd his detractors. Lincoln? Perhaps later on; but not yet. Well, who is this universal hero of America? John Hampden, of course. He objected to paying taxes. —Kansas City Times.

Anyhow, Boy Had the Right Idea.

An overgrown schoolboy who found English grammar entirely beyond him was given the sentence “The girl purchased a hat” to diagram. “Now, of what word is ‘hat* the object?” asked the teacher, encouragingly. "Hat is the object of girl,” stammered the youth. "Perhaps you’re right,” replied the teacher.

IN A SHADOW. Inveterate Tea Drinker Feared Paralysis.

Steady use of either tea or coffee often produces alarming symptoms as the poison (caffeine) contained in these beverages acts with\ more potency in some persons than in others. “1 was never a coffee drinker,” writes an 111. woman, "but a tea drinker. I was very nervous, had frequent spells of sick headache and heart trouble, and waß subject at times to severe attacks of bilious colic. “No end of sleepless nights—would have spells at night when my right side would get numb and tingle like a thousand needles were pricking my flesh. At times I jcould hardly put my tongue out of my mouth and my right eye and ear were affected. • “The doctors told me I was liable to become paralyzed at any time, so I was in constant dread. I took no end of medicine —all to no good. “The doctors told me to quit using tea, but I thought I could not live without it—that it was my only stay. I had been a tea drinker for twentyfive years; was under the doctor's care for fifteen. “About six months ago, I finally quit td’a and commenced to drink Postum. “I have never had one spell of sick headache since and only one light attack of bilious colio. Have quit having those numb spells at night, sleep well and my heart Is getting stronger all the time." Name given upon request Postum now comes in concentrated, powder form, called Instant Postum. It is prepared by stirring a level teaspoonful in a cup of hot water, adding sugar to taste, and enough cream to bring the color to golden brown. Instant Postum is convenient! there’s no waste; and the flavor Is always uniform. Sold by grocers every where. A fr-cup trial tin mailed for grocer's name and 2-cent stamp for postage. Postum Cereal Co., Lt(L, Battle Creek, Mich.

SOME DAINTY OMELETS

DELICIOUS VARIATIONS THAT ARE WORTH TRYING. . 'f' 1 ' 1 f ■ ■*' ’ ' ‘S* Housewives Who Are Perplexed to Add Variety to Table at This Season Will Find Relief in Those Suggestions. Many delicious variations can be made with the plain omelet as a point of departure. Sardines broken up and mixed with lemon juice and melted butter, anchovy paste, a teaspoonful mixed smooth with two tablespoonfuls of melted butter; grated cheese of any kind, cupful of cooked oysters finely minced, chopped parsley, as well as any bits of minced meat, ham, kidney, chicken, liver, sausage, cooked bacon, all these additions are worth while. * A delicate change from the iplain kind is the omelet a la creme. For it make a cream sauce and mix half a cupful with the six-egg omelet before cooking. Spread the same amount of cream sauce on half of the omelet before folding it. This sauce should be moderately thick, made with a cupful of milk and two tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour. Blazing omelet is a plain omelet over which a little rum or brandy is poured. The alcohol is lighted as the omelet is sent to the table and as soon as it has burned oft the omelet should be eaten. A well-made and well seasoned Spanish omelet is a lunch in itself. Melt a tablespoonful of butter in a saucepan, add an onion chopped fine, six mushrooms and one red and one green sweet cut in small pieces. Cover und cook slowly for twenty minutes. Make a plain omelet from six eggs, turn it on a hot platter, pour the Spanish sauce around it and send at'once to the table. Spanish omelet is sometimes made by American cooks from stiffly beaten eggs, the yolks hardly mixed with the whites even after t£ey are cooked. Quaker omelet is a good one for a beginner, for it is hardly an omelet at all. To mako it beat four eggs until they are well mixed. Soak half a pint, a cupful, of bread crumbs in half a pint of milk until'the crumbs are soft and then add the eggs and beat with an eggbeater until the bread is blended with the milk. Season with salt and pepper and pour into greased pie plates. Bake in a quick oven and serve from the dish in which it was cooked. A delicious and nourishing omelet is made in Denmark, where the nutritive value of dairy products is realized and where, too, eggs never reach the price of train fares. A Danish omelet has a cream sauce of three tablespoonfuls of butter, three of flour and two cups of milk. In the meantime break macaroni into one inch lengths and boil it in salted'water until it is tender; then drain it. When the cream sauce is cool add six' egg yolks, two at a time, beating the mixture five minutes after each ydlk addition. Beat six egg whites stiff, fold them into the yolk mixture, sprinkle with pepper and salt and pour the omelet over the macaroni, which has been arranged on the bottom of a buttered baking dish. Bake the omelet in a steady hot oven for 30 minutes and serve at once. Beatefa butter is used in Denmark with this omelet, which is simply butter creamed with a fork or spoon* and blended with a taste of sugar. Sweet omelets are made by adding a teaspoonful of powdered sugar to a six-egg omelet before cooking and spreading the omelet with fruit, jam, jelly or preserves before turning. The sweet should not be thickly spread on, as It should furnish simply a suggestive flavor, pot make the omelet a rich dessert.

Cold Tongue In Jelly.

A canned or fresh tongue, one pint good, clear stock; one onion (stuffed with cloves), one-half ounce gelatin, seasonings. A canned tongue makes a good dish, but a fresh one is better. Put on the stock with seasoning and the onion, to cook gently. Meanwhile soak the' gelatin. Strain the stock, add the gelatin, let all dissolve and color a nice brown. Cut the tongue into thin slices and arrange in a plain mold or pan, seasoning and scattering chopped parsley over it all. When the stock is nearly cold pour it on the tongue. Set a plate over with weight on it. When set, turn out and serve.

Chocolate Bavaroise.

Heat two cups of milk in a double boiler and add two cups of sugar. Melt four squares of chocolate in a small saucepan set in another of hot water, then mix with the milk and sugar. Soak one-third box of gelatin in onethird cup of cold water and stir into the hot mixture, then strain and add one teaspoon of vanilla. When the mixture begins to thicken beat it well until cold and a fine froth is formed, then fold in two cups of cream beaten light. Turn into a serving dish or into small moldß and set away to become cold and firm —Alice E. Whitaker.

Veal Croquettes.

Put two cupfuls of finely shopped veal in a saucepan, add two tablespoonfuls of fine bread crumbs, one teaspoonful of butter, the beaten yolks of two eggs, one teaspoonful of onion juice, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one saltspoonful of paprika and speck of mace. Stir the mixture over the fire until thoroughly heated, then set - asideJ to cool. Shape into croquettes, dip in beaten egg, roll in fine crumbs, let stand one or jmore hours and fry until well browned. Serve with tomato sauce.

FREE ADVICE TO SICK WOMEN Thousands Have Been Helped * By Common Sen*e r Suggestions. - L ' *■'' Women suffering from any form at female ilia are invited to communicate S promptly with the woman’s private correspondence department of the Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. A woman can freely talk of herprivate illness to a woman • thus has been established a confidential _ correspondence which has extended over many years and which has never been broken. Never have they published a testimonial or used a letter without the written consent of the writer, and never has the Company allowed these confidential letters to get out of their possession, as the hUndreds of thousands of them in their files will attes^ Out of the vast volume of experience which they have to draw from, it is more than possible that they possess the very knowledge needed in your case. Nothing is asked in return except your good will, and their advice has helped thousands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, should be glad to take advantage of thia generous offer of assistance. Address Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Every woman ought to hlave Lydia E. Pinkham’s 80-page Text Book. It la not a book for general distribution, as it is too expensive. It is free and only obtainable by mall. Write for it today.

BABY’S FACE ONE SORE WITH ECZEMA Cried for Hours, Could Not Sloop. Retinol Brought Real and Cure. Beading, Pa. —“My baby girl had eczema for over six months. It was painful and Itching, she could not sleep day or night, ■he would scratch till blood and water would rim down her neck. Then it burned her bo she cried for hours at a time. The right tide of her face wa* one sore and ■cab. “I got the samples of Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment on a Saturday morning, and put them on, and put them on again in the afternoon and in the evening before I put her to bed, and she went to sleep and slept till next morning. I thought I was in heaven the first night, and by Monday the eczema was dried up so that all the scabs fell qff. Resinol Soap and Ointment cured my baby.”—Mrs. Wm. M. Fletcher, 644 So. 17% St., Aug. 21, 1912. If you or any of your little ones are suffering from eczema, rash, tetter, ringworm, or other itching, burning skin eruption, there is only one better proof of the value of Resinol. That is, try it yourself and see. You can get samples free by writing to Dept. 4-K, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Resinol stops itching instantly. Prescribed by careful doctors for eighteen years, sold by every druggist, or sent by parcel post on receipt of price, Resinol Ointment, 60c and sl, Resinol Soap, 25c.

You Meed NO “SPRING MEDICINE** if yea keep year liver active, year bewele regular aad year digestion geed Regulate the Bowels Stimulate the Liver Improve Digestion and Riti-Ify the Blood A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. IB this age of research and experiment, all nature Is ransacked by the scientific Jortbecomfort and hap* pines soi man. Science has Indeed made giant stride# In the past century, and among the—by no mesne least Important—discoveries In medlclnels that of Tberaplon. which has been used with great snooess 1a French Hospitals and that it (swarthy the attentloa of those who suffer from kidney, bladder, Derr one. diseases, chronic weaknesses, ulcers.skin eruptions, piles, Ac., there Is no doubt. In faotitseemseTldeni from the big stir created amongst specialists, that THKRAPION Is destined to cast Intoobllvlonall those questionable remedies that were formerly this sole reliance of medical men. It Is of course Impossible to tell sufferer* all we should like to tell them In this short article, hub those who would like to know more about this remedy that has effected to many—we might almost say, miraculous cures, should send addressed earelope for FBBH book t 3 Dr. LeOlero Med. 00., Heverstock Road, Hampstead. or No. I Is what they require and bare been seeking In vain daring a life of misery, suffering, 111 health mmsassm V I Remove# Bursal Enlargements, I I' Curbe,*E'*Ued H ’)Tendons,^goreneei ■ W from any Bruise or Strain | Cures ffehnfiwr SottTe, de?lvereS. Book 1 B rreel ABSORB INK, JR., liniment for mankind, foi BynortUs. Strains, Gouty or Rheumatic Deposits, Swollen, Painful Varloose Veins. Allays Palm Will tell you more If yon write. 11 and U per bottle at dealers or delivered. Manufactured only by W.F.YOUNtI.P.D.F.,BIO Temple IL,Spriiiglekl,MMO. ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE, Thfc Antiseptic powder shaken lute the shoes—The Standard ■«»- ady tar the feet for a quarter century 30.000 testimonials. Sola Trade Mark, everywhere, 25c. Sample FREE. The Mae wise patthe < E'ffe <l |a* y°jfc g catalog of different os no*. Enclose 10a id Sha -i*—f - » *-o*. -—, ii bim PATENTS ■■■2KXSEII3I2EHHI