Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 118, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 May 1913 — Page 2
- . The Daily Republican »ygy B>y Kir.pt fondsy HEALEY A CLARK, Publishers. iLeNSSELAER. INDIANA. Spoil the rod and spare the child to the modern way. After all, how appropriate that epitaph! are usually graven. A steel famine to predicted. This will call for iron endurance. Perhaps the millennium awaits the discovery of a serum against old age. The great trouble with the European status quo to that it won't stay put Don't count your chickens until you're sure the Incubator lamp doesn’t leak. Cipriano Castro says he is going to remain permanently in Teneriffa Thanks.
In New York an ordinary taxi drivel - was arrested on supposition that he was a robber. ' Another blow at the American workingman with a tax contemplated on all Incomes over $3,000. St. Louis policemen demand an eight-hour day. He who runs may read the time by the stars. According to the census, there.are 125,000 idiots in the country. But only one kind were counted. Two German officers flew 372 miles tn six hours. This may be called both literally and figuratively going soma People live longer in cities than in villages, say German savants. Maybe city people are more afraid to die. Women’s smoking gowns are on exhibition in New York stores. And very likely they hook up in the back, too. Automobiles would never be driven fifty’ miles an hqur if none were made capable of going more than twentyfive. In Constantinople, a deposed high official dies of apoplexy. In Mexico City he to taken on an automobile dda Farmers in Pennsylvania flocked to a bargain sale of coffins. A bargain sale will excite a live interest in anything. With onions selling at 15 cents a bushel there’s no perceptible increase in the, practice of smothering things in them. Now that St Louis police are to have an eight hour day, the night force will be provided with more time to sleep. A clergyman finds that many plays teach their morals hurriedly in the last act—or during chair-slamming in the first _ General Sung of China was killed by assassins who were really looking for General Sing. Chinese tenses are terribly fatal. The use of cosmetlcb to said to be very old. Apparently that to also what some of those using them think of themselves. An eastern physician says that womanhood will supply the drunkards of the next century. Rather, lack of womanhood.
Ten months is said to be the life of the average $lO bill. But the experience of most of ua is that it Ungers only a few days. Hundreds of New York teachers are •aid to hold their jobs by keeping their marriages secret But have they no fool friends? ▲ dentist is asked to pay SI,OOO for pulling the. wrong tooth. Some dentists have to wait a year for filling the right ones.
Men, hen, 1b a harbor of refuge. ▲ leading Chicago milliner says the niftiest kind of spring hat can be “built” for 59 cents. A domestic theorist advises mistresses to allow their servants to use the family piano. But why add to the horrors of civilization f In all candor It must be admitted that It must be exceedingly annoying to a thirsty man to get hold of the syrup bottle by mistake. Fifty thousand dollars is a neat sum, useful In old age. But it’s long odds that an aviator so reckless as to be willing to fly across the Atlantic to get the money would never live to a ripe old age anyway. Did you ever observe that the people who are always clamoring to “muzzle the press” are the ones who need the most watching? People who were annoyed by the beautified nickel will ~ suffer paroxysms st the attempt of the reformers to take the **«” out of money. This season’s hobble skirts are to be even tighter than ever before. Although requiring less cloth, the price,ft Is assured, win not shrink in pro-
HERE IS SMALL MODEL
REMARKABLY PRETTY HAT FOR THE LITTLE MAIO. Fashioned In the Braids and Pressed , Hats, and In , Panamas—Trimmings May Be Entirely a Matter of Preference. Just an all-around, good little hat wlfich may be worn any where, is the pretty little moddl shown here. This shape Is found (or others very like it) in all the braids and pressed hats and in Panamas. It Is to be found trimmed with flowers, or with feathers in the straight stick-up effects; it is a favorite decorated with stiff ribbon bows wired to stand up in front or protrude at the back. Trimmed in these ways, made in all colors it is a favorite and a smart street style. When it must do duty for all round wear, including automobillng, it is trimmed to accommodate the veil to be worn with it The broad, folded
sash of ribbon and the large millinermade rose of velvet, which appear in the illustration show a development which fits the hat for all sorts of wear. The shape fits well and provides some protection for the eyes. The small face veil for the street and traveling, or the big chiffon veil for driving add to its protection of the eyes and face.
JULIA BOTTOM LEY.
DICTATES OF FASHION.
Colored embroidered trimming will be used on the new cottons. Many beautiful evening gowns are composed of rich gold brocadbd tissues. Green in many tones is also a favorite color, especially dark Venetian green. Many afternoon dresses appear in crepon soie, crepe de chine and crepon gauffee. , < Charming silk and lace trimmed dresses or mousseline draped satin toilets are used, <■■■ - The lingerie dresses now being shown have the fullness of their skirts taken up in hand run tucks. Fine lace flounced satin draped skirtfl will be worn with short, brightcolored satin mantelets. In motor wraps the form continues loose and commodious, with large pockets and a general air of comfort. A young girl’s middy blouse fa of white English drill, with the collar and cuffs of striped or plain color. It has a wide belt and pearl buttons.
Lights on Table.
Candles in colors to match the color scheme are used for decoration and light on the dinner table. If one candelabrum is used, it is placed in the center of the table; if two or more they are placed at the ends. Single candlesticks are set at intervals along the sides and on the corners of the table.
MAY BE MADE IN TWO WAYS
Useful and Pretty Pincushion the Design for Which May Be Made Either Circular or Oval.
New ideas for pincushions are always welcome, and our sketch shows a cushion of a particularly useful and practical type, which can be made on the same lines either circular or oval in shape. In both cases a cushion
must be made of the required size and shape first, and trimmed afterwards, and for a round cushion two circular pieces of material must be cut out and sewn on to a band, and diagram B Illustrates this. Then the upper surface of the cushion is covered with pale pink silk, on which the floral design consisting of four white daisies and green leaves, shown in diagram A, has been embroidered. The sides of the cushion are loosely draped with soft pale pink silk, and the edges are
CHOOSING THE VISITING CARD
Many Kinds to Select From, and It Really Becomes Simply a Matter of One’a Own Choice. <. You drop into a stationer’s and ask casual tone for new visiting cards. The* salesman inquires: “What kind, madam?** Hundreds of cards are whirled at you. You are informed that Mrs. Murray-Lothrop never uses old English lettering; you are assured that Mrs. Rutledge-Harmon prefers her cards to read with three names; those of her husband and herself and of her daughter. Your husband does not wish to use his middle name in full, but the man across the counter lifts his eyebrows and tells you that initials may have been in style when George Washington wa§ the first gentleman of America, blit they are not used now by anyone who pretends to know social conventions. When you have decided on the entirely correct thing, which is a thin square bit of white pasteboard with your name in full, engraved in block letters, shaded with the address beneath in the corner, then you will instantly wonder .if it would not have been wiser to have ordered shaded old English lettering, which has now taken the place of plain old English. The public will answer that question by saying thdt block letters are neater, cleaner and easier to read. What about your husband’s cards? asks the man across the counter. Your first impulse Is to wonder why your husband cannot attend to his own cards, but when you are reminded that it is in better taste for the cards of the family to correspond in size and lettering you turn to the task with more You choose an oblong bit of pasteboard with his name in full preceded by Mr. and followed in the lower corner with his address. You sigh. This task is done for the year, you think. At the moment of relief the man across tbe counter asks whether all of your husband’s cards shall bear the name of his club. Now this is the one question for him to decide. There is also the question of the bill—it is a wise plan to let him decide on paying that, too—as his share of the bargain. k
NEW MODE IN MOUCHOIRS
Smartest Marking for the Handkerchief is Undoubtedly the Undeoorated Initials. Undecorated initials, either script or blocked, are the smart marking for handkerchiefs. Among the daintiest of these are the fine white linens finished with a tiny edge of Armenian lace. The Longfellow type of initial surrounded by an elaborate decoration also is used, but chiefly on the a-jour hemmed handkerchiefs among which are found many carrying Oriental initial designs. One corner designs, showing a pattern starting close to the decorated edge and running toward the handkerchiefs center, are liked and women who go in for variety in small accessories are taking to the one-side embroidered mouchoir. With the morning shirt waist frock for the house but one type of handkerchief is carried —the square of lawn and solid color with narrow border in ing tone.
New Trimmings.
Many of the afternoon gowns appear in crepon soie, crepe de chine and crepongauffree. Costly models of fine linens made upon Empire lines are often trimmed with cluny and hand embroidered.
Cluny insertion in medallion shape is used jas the joining between some of the smart bodices and skirts. Ribbon drawn through lace and tied in a flat bow at the left side makes an effective trimming. Cluny laces are used in touches of trimming at the neck and sleeves on many of the more expensive gowns.
finished off with a fine pink and white silk cord.
For an oval cushion, four inches in length, two and a half inches in width, and an inch and a half in height is a useful little size in which to make it, and-Tor the Circular cushion three and a half Inches in diameter and an inch and a half in height
Charming Crepe de Chine Blouse.
Yoke effects are much the vogue now, and some of the new shirtwaists and costume blouses for spring show shallow yokes in effective combination with very open collars. A blouse of this sort was made of crepe de chine in a new rich shade of blue. The shallow yoke over the shoulders was attached to the gathered blouse under corded piping, the yoke extending down to form a long shoulder line. A broad, very low collar of the crepe de chine | opened In front of the point of intersection of yoke and waist, and qver this broad collar turned back an equally low but narrow white moire silk collar. The long sleeves had deep, fitted cuffs of the crepe, and narrower turn back cuffs of white moire. This smart and artistic little blouse accompanied a spring traveling costume of blue silk and wool lansdowne in the same shade.
Baby’s Bath Gowns.
Bath gowns for babies are made by crippled children and sold for three dollars.' They are well made, of durable material, and are both sensible and attractive. They are made of Turkish toweling with embroidered collars and cuffs of fine pique. The toweling and pique are all white, and the embroidery is done in blue.
Big Timber in Arizona
THE forests of Arizona, as yet practically untouched, are among the most important in the west. Approximately 15,000,000 acres, one fifth of the state, is timberland, most of which lies in the highly elevated sections north and east of a line extending across the state diagonally bisecting the opposite northwestern and southeastern boundary corners. Conifers or conebearing trees are the predominant growths, the broadleafed species being few in number and of minor importance. The yellow pine, the Arizona white pine, the limber or Rocky mountain white pine, the bristle cone pine, the Englemann spruce, the Douglas fir, the red fir, the white or silver fir, the pinyon, the red cedar or juniper, the oak and the ispen are the principal tree families represented. -
The übiquitous‘yellow pine is by far ffie most-iiumerons and important ecoaomically, forming 95 per cent, of the merchantable timber supply. It is by nature a cliff dweller, flourishing best >n the high mountain slopes between 1,500 and 8,500 feet above sea level. Of Arizona’s forest trees it is the noblest. Hewed at full maturity in its native Haunts it is good to look upen; its lawless cylindrical trunk, towering 150 feet into the crystal blue, its outspreading top tossing, dancing, sighing gleefully in the amber sunlight like a thing intoxicated with the nectar of heaven. Indigenous to about the same soil conditions and altitudinal limitations us the yellow pine, and ranking next in importance for thelf timber in the order named, are the Douglas fir, Englemann spruce and white fir. Their scarcity, however, makes them unappreciable factors in the trade in Arizona. By reason of the softness of their fiber or their desert or Alpine characteristics the other trees named, excepting the limber or Rocky mountain white pine and the oak, which are utilized in some instances, are relatively unimportant from the lumberman’s standpoint Billions of Feet
An accurate estimate of the standing timber in Arizona is a very difficult matter to determine further than the fact that it reaches formidable proportions, running into billions of feet, board measure, worth in the various manners in which it may be turned to account hundreds of millions of dollars and constituting, in the aggregate, a resource that in the fullness of time will contribute to the welfare of the state beyond the roseate dreams of the times.
Title to this sylvan Golconda is vested in the United States government, which through the forest service is proving a wise landlord in that its varied resources are being administered in a manner that will benefit the largest number of users along all lines where no serious or Irreparable Injury is liable to result. Where there is no danger of extermination, or where no damage to streams or vegetation may follow, the ripe timber is offered for sale to the highestreputable bidder, under conditions designed to prevent monopoly of the lumber supply and to maintain the continuity of the forests. Gn account of the lack of adequate transportation facilities adjacent to the best timbered sections sales have not been practical to any great extent. Mills at Flagstaff and Williams, and two or three other places near at hand, have been in operation for a number of years and have, except possibly in one or two Instances, depended largely on the national forests for their timber supply. There being no navigable streams of any consequence in the forests of Arizona where the logs can be floated down to the mills at comparatively small expense, the lumber concerns must needs construct lines of rail and operate trains of their own into the sections to be logged, the daily capacities of the mills being such that less substantial means’ of transportation are inadequate. As a rule these roads
extend several miles into the forest tapping the primeval sections. When these are sufficiently cut over the track is taken up and put down elsewhere. At certain desirable locations along the route and at the outer terminus of the yoad, the lumber camps are situated where the loggers are domiciled. Primitive Occupation. No part of the lumberman’s occupation is more interesting and primitive perhaps than that of getting out the logs in the woods. A trip to one of the camps where this part of the business may be witnessed is a novel spectacle, ’especially so when one makes the trip on a logging train. The felling of the trees, the cutting of the trunks into logs, the clearing away of the brush is done with the same tools, the ax and saw, the same expenditure of physical strength, expended by the pioneer home builder in stripping away the magnificent hardwoods that fell beneath his sturdy stroke in the group of states carved out of the territory between the Alleghenies and the Mississippi river. The roads upon which the unsawed timber is transported from the forests to the mills are railways, though differing from others of their kind in that they were built for no purposes other than freighting logs. One must perforce ride on the framework of the cars or on the tender of the engine, which is scarcely a hardship to him who feels the lure of the outdoors. Before all else permission for the ride must be obtained from ths mill owners or manager. Out into the clearings one is borne over hills and valleys once instinct with arborescent life, now denuded and overstrewn with the littering of the slaughtered trees that fell to the mailed hand of the lord of creation. Finally a shrill blast of the engine announces the arrival at the camp, which consists of four or five large ungainly structures and a number of smaller ones, al] built of rough pine lumber, more substantial buildings being impracticable as the place at best will be occupied but temporarily while the sections contiguous thereto are being cut over. It Is in settlements of this character that the “lumber-jacks,” the men employed in the camps, live and have their being month in and month out. Overshadowing always by day and by night is the solemn grandeur of the forest. Each morning the loggers go forth to their work of destruction; each setting sun looks down on a larger treeless waste. Now and then the more convivial of the number repair to the neighboring towns to pass away the time, looking t not disdainfully, the while, on the flowing bowl.
Out of the Dictograph.
"My son,” said Dug Watson to his oldest boy, "don’t pose and assume to be a superior being while you are courting Sallie Hankins. Persuading a girl that you are her ideal is almost eure to invite her just resentment later On.’’ People get over enjoying highly romantic novels the same as they get over liking nursery rhymes. You can come pretty near guessing a woman’s age if she will tell you honestly who her favorite author is. There are things that even conscientious effort cannot accomplish. The harder some men try to sing the worse U sounds. Grandpa Mintlicker, who ie eighty years old, says he can’t see why'there should be any fuss about women smokin’ cigarettes. He has known a number of perfect ladies who dipped snnff. "Does your daughter play by note?” "No,” answered Si Smiling, “she plays by ear. We are buying the piano by note.”
Queer,
"Some of these printed receipts,** said Mrs. Lapsling, "are very puzzling. What can you make of this one, for Instance, as a wash for the hands? ‘Glycerin, forty parts; car bolic acid, one part; vinegar, quantum suffragist***
WOMAN SUFFERED TEN FEARS Fran Nervousness Caused by Female Ills—Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- - / He Compound. Auburn, N. Y.—“l suffered from nervousness for ten years, and had such organic pains that sometimes I would lie in bed four days biijV at a could not eat or slee P did , t not wan * anyone to \ jflhy talk to me or bother ' ®e at all. Sometimes I would suffer or Beven hours at a time. D iff erent docI tors did the best " ‘they could for me until four months ago I began giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial and now I am in good health.”—Mrs. William H. Gill, 15 Pleasant Street, Auburn, New York * Doctor’s Daughter Took It.” SL Cloud, Minn.—“l was so run down by overwork and worry that I could not stand it to have my children talk aloud or walk heavy on the floor. One of my friends said, ‘Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, for I know a doctor’s daughter here in town who takes it and she would not take it if it were not good.’ “ I sent for the Compound at once and kept on taking it until I was all right” —Mrs Bertha M. Quickstadt, 727 6th Avenue, S., St Cloud, Minn.' * Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound may be relied upon as the most efficient remedy fer female ilia. Why don’t you try it?
We feel sorry for the hero who is out of a job. Many have smoked LEWIS’ Single Binder cigar for the past sixteen years. Always found in reliable quality. Adv. And many a homely woman presides over a happy home. FACE ALMOST COVERED WITH PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS Atchison, Kan. —“For a number of years I suffered very greatly from skin eruption. My face was very red and irritated, being almost covered with pimples and blackheads. The pimples were scattered over my face. They were a fine rash with the exception of a few large pimples on my forehead and chin. My face burned and looked red as if exposed to either heat o» cold. It was not only unsightly but very uncomfortable.* I tried several remedies but couldn’t get any relief. I was recommended to use Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment. *T applied the Cutlcura Ointment Id the evening, leaving it for about five minutes, 3 then washing It off. with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. I wash* ed with the Cutlcura Soap and hot w* ter also several times during the day. After about four months of this appU* cation, my face was cleared of the pimples. I still use the Cutlcura Soap.” (Signed) Miss Elsie Nielson. Dec. 29, 1911. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 82-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cutlcura, Dept L, Boston.’* Adv. No, Alonzo, you cannot always tel) a belle by her rings.
_ Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bean the " /r Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria "It’s no trouble at all,* 'says a bill collector "to find people out” BACKACHE IS DISCOURAGING Backache makes life a JR 3 a 1 burden. HeadI T aches, dissy spells and dietressing urinary disorders I/» 1V rI! are a constant 11 trlaL T * ke b warning! Sus1/ It] ft pect kidney /y/f// f trouble. Look about for a v/ 14 good kidney remedy. Learn from OU6 who has I found relief from the same suffering. Get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Harris had. Ass Ohio Ca*a Fred W. Harris, Jaffanon, Ohio, aaysi “For tan yaare I auffarad from kidney trouble. I bad eon•tan* backache, .bowed aymptom. of dropey, and became ao bad.l vaa laid op In bod. Attar dooton had tailed I be<an taking Doan*e Kidney Hile. They ou(od me oomploteiy? l Got Doan’a at Any Stere, sOc a Ben DOAN’S VRILV FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N.Y. FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. If you leal 'out or tom" run DOWM'm'OOT tmb BLUM* auryßa from midmiy. bladdbb, nbbvovb dibbamb, OHMokic wßAMJtwa.uuaras.wim BkurrtoMs.rtLßa, write for my PRIM book. TUB MOOT maTaiiCTivi MBDICAL 8008 BVBB WBImB.IT TILL. ALL about tboaa CD A DlrllU •> you can decide t I nUnMI IVlv bob vovmblb IH’a th.ramjArfocTOuaowwallmant. Dout aeadaoont. AbeolutelyFßSa. NoVoOewnp-oiroaJatw. Da LICUW fiMGtaMAVBaSBMKaa,IUIOSCBAB,UMUMMjtae.
