Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 113, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 May 1914 — Page 3
Throw away your washboard—it ruins your clothes—it gives you a backache to look at it Usfe RUB-NO-MORE CARBO NAPTHA SOAP. No rubbing required. Clothes on the line quickly—fresh, sweet and clean. imst RUB-NO-MORE CARBO NAPTHA jggffißawr* SOAP should be used freely for i' washing the finest a * >ric * does no fIW-w® y&SfTSI harm to It and "If needs no hot water Carbo Disinfects Naptha Cleans RUB-NO-MORE RUB-NO-MORE Carbo Naptha Soap Washing Powder Five Cents—AU Grocers The Rub-No-More Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
i ' fS • ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT |* /vegetable Preparation for AsiMj similat ing the Food andßegulating the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion,Cheerful* pj ness and Rest. Con tains neither k l> Opium. Morphine nor Mineral « Not Narcotic R"ip,</OUDrSAffV£LZfTarm 111 Aunfktn (W- . i\ MxSnnm - \ R AeAeUeSm/t, 1 i|J jniu SttJ « I Ul AwtmM - \ Jvt £iC«ri*utUSf<t»~ I •*: w»rms.u- I ||'o fegffiw I A perfect Remedy forConstipalion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, h{!q Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of’ g[ The Centaur Com raw,\ StflliilSS! N under the Foodanj) Exact Copy of Wrapper.
After Dinner.
Once there were twin brothers who were as like each other as two peas. They sailed away to the South Beaß and went ashore upon a certain island. Cannibals caught one of them and ate him. The other managed to hide in thdsbreadfruit fields till nightfall. Then he, too, was discovered and dragged into the middle of the village, where the men of the tribe sat around a large pot still making after-dinner speeches. The cannibals stared at the newcomer in blank amazement- Then the chief rose and said: “Gentlemen, let him go. He is absolutely indigestible.”
Your Liver 1 Is Clogged Up That’s Why Yoo’ra Tired—Qot of Sorts ■—Have No Appetite, CARTER’S LIVER PILLS will put you right JMSraf CARTERS in a few days. KITTLE their I pYu4. CureCon-Qr \\ Saadi stipation, W " Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature DT ICM LOKES SURELY PREVENTED oLAIh fegjßXMiiSUrc Western stockmen, becausa they a aroteet where other raoeleet (alt. M, m • Write for booklet end testlmonUle. LLu ass sk siais ess 'is Uee any Injector, tat Cutter's beet The eupertorltr of Cotter products la due to owr U pan of epeclellrln* in raeeleee and eeruaie eely. laeletae Cuttar'i. If unobtainable, order direct. The Getter Laberatary, Serfcalw, Cal., er Chleaao, 111
LINES IN THE FACE Hake Women Look Old Bad they show the effect of unnatural sufferings—off headaches, hod* palm la lower limb* peine is grain* Thera armptom* Indicate that Nature nrada h*lp. Overwork, wrong dmrabs.hd jf raerde* and other cause* have been too much for nature lid eoteid* aid most be called upon to netora health and stroagth. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrlntlon ■WWW" wewuwew* wmtmmmmmmmmmmmmm aswßWHS*Bwa**eae Tb* Vegetable Brandy for Woman’* lib that ralieves nervous exhetwtion ,3rmptom * to dl * turbodCoßd4 - Por over forty y*ar* tt has boon used with more than aattofaetkm by **ud Dr. B.V. Pierce, Buffalo,
Tactful French Prince.
One hundred years ago the Count D* Artois, youngest brother of the unfortunate Louis XVI, arrived in Paris to make the necessary preparations for the return of the Bourbons and their restoration to the throne. The choice of Count D’Artois as an emissary on this occasion was a prudent one, for he was perhaps the most generally liked of all the members of the- exiled royal family of Prance. Upon his arrival in the capital of his ancestors, the crowds in the streets greeted him with demonstrations of good will. The count was. visibly touched by the warmth of his greeting. Though worn and tired by his long Journey, he declared to the deputation that came out to welcome him, “This is the first happy day I have known in 30 years.”
On Her Tootsies.
Customer —I wish to get a cure tor corns. Drug Clerk —Hard or soft, madam? Customer—Medium, please. Truly, Cordelia, age Is no infallible sign of wisdom. J
CUSTOM For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Ay A, Signature /Ajl tv Jrv in (w Use \XL For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TM. O.MTAU. OOMAANT, am VO.IC MT. '
Knowledge for the Poor.
For the well man,' or woman, diet etic knowledge 1b primarily a question of dollars and cents, but for the poor man, particularly with a family of growing children, this aspect of the case may have a very powerful effect upon health. As Dr. Graham Lusk has very well said, the laboring man’s efficiency depends upon his stoking, and every man, or his wife, should be a competent fireman alt this sort of stoking. No one, for example, having trouble to make both ends, meet should spend money for a can of tomatoes, or any one of dozens of other so-called foods which have, comparatively speaking, no food value whatever. It is ordinarily estimated that a hard-working man requires about 3,000 calories per day, an office man about 2,500.
His Four Witnesses.
A man had borrowed some money from a friend and refused to give it up. There had been no witnesses to the transaction. When the lender sued, the borrower took advantage of bis constitutional rights of not testifying against himself, with the result that the lender could not recover. When they met on the street some time later the lender ran up to the borrower and shouted: “I’ve got four witnesses anyhow who know that I loaned you the money. God and I know It and the devil and you know it.”
Putnam Fadeless -Dyes color more goods than others. Adv. Just Once. Teacher —“Willie, what is your greatest ambition?” Willie —‘To wash mother’s ears.”—Stanford Chaparral.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
CLOAKS FOR EVENING
PRETTY GARMENTB NEED NOT BE UNDtILY EXPENSIVE. Naturally Less Costly Than Thdse of the Winter—With a Good Pattern They May Be Made at Home —Pretty Cape-Coats. (By MARY DEAN.) Evening coats have grown more and more picturesque in the last ten years, and since plcturesqueness in this province of dress has been achieved at comparatively slight expense, the attractive evening coat is no longer the luxurious possession of the few, and almost any woman with even the slightest pretentions to being well dressed possesses at least one such garment. There afe coats and coats, and for many of them the price runs up to excessive figures. Some of the gold and silver embroidered: chiffons of which shunning models are made, will run an apparently simple model up to a monumental sum. But it is not necessary to go into such extravagance to have an effective cloak for evening wear. The summer models, too, on the average, are less costly than those of the winter, because they do not demand warm interlining and other lining. Marw of them, indeed, are unlined; others have merely plain linings of self-colored or contrasting silk. Possibly the very beat Bf the less expensive cloaks for warm weather wear are the new ample capes, plain or
PARISIAN MODEL
A very attractive hat of manlla hemp trimmed with a large quill and feathered fancies.
BEADS HAVING GREAT VOGUE
Seemingly They Can Not Be Out of Place on Any Outer Garment of the Present Fashions. Beads have a most tenacious hold on the modern Imagination. Is it that they hold out imagination enthralled? Is it because beads are suggestive of luxury, of splendor, that we like them? Perhaps It is a relic of our Indian'predecessors—but that cannot be the explanation, for Paris seems to like beads as well as we do. However, nobody seems to know whether the Indians would barter their more, prized possessions for beads because they liked the beads themselves, for their brightness and color, or because to them, too, beads suggested splendor and luxury. The Indians, be it remembered, were and are a people of imagination. Whatever the reason, we do cling to our fondness for beads long after we have forgotten Borne of the things that interested us at the time the present erase Ar beads came in. Beaded tunics are shown on many of the new evening frocks. Sometimes tile beads are sewed on net and sometimes they are simply strung on silk and formed into long tunics. Beads are worn about the neck. And beads are embroidered on the neck line of chiffon and net evening frocks. A new mode is made of black taffeta and chiffon. Tdb sleeves are long and floating, like the old angel sleeves; they are made of chiffon, and bright red beads are fastened along the edge.
/M'S!*, 1 .•• .-f- j. . , .. trimmed, with bands of shirring and ruffles. With a good patterrusnch *» is easily obtained, even an ordinary seamstress can make the cape successfully, and if the material is beautiful in texture and color there Is no
Changeable Green Taffeta and Net.
reason why such a wrap should not be graceful and picturesque. The double width crepes, Batins and fine lightweight cloth are all admirably adapted for the circular or draped cape and this season the new chiffon taffetas, which are as Bupple and as easily draped as the crepes, make Ideal cape and evening coat materials. Among the best of the models is a striking cape-coat of changeable green taffeta trimmed with ruchings and net and lined with gold chiffon. There is a high standard wired frill of the net at the neck.
TRUTH ABOUT THE FASHIONS
Writer of Authority Points Out That They Are Both Sensible and . / Beautiful. The editor of the Woman’s Home Companion makes the following general comment on fashions apropos of the new fashions: “When you see a woman with a skirt so tight she can hardly walk, with a hat trimmed with a long spike feather, with heels three inches high, with a layer of cosmetics on her face, you do not see a victim of fashion, but a victim of her own poor taste and ill-considered vanity. The fashions were never more beautiful —nor more sensible. The narrow skirt —but not too narrow—that clears the floor 1b Infinitely more sensible than the long, full skirt of the past; the high, tight collar with its attendant headaches has gone; the small bat, set well down on the head, is a real blessing; the very high heel is very bad style; cosmetics are not worn by women of good taste; fashion even frowns on false hair —a restful change after the heavy berated pompadour; and, best qf all, woman’s figure is no longer compressed into a series of ugly bulges, and the steel-stiffened corset of days past has become a flexible piece of webbing that supports but does not bind. When these sensible present-day fashions are exaggerated and distorted they become ugly and ridiculous, it is true.
A double line of beads outlines the V-shaped neck, and round designs worked in beads are used on the bodice and the peplum.
SET OFF DARK SILK GOWN
Dainty Set of Lingerie Collar and , Cuffs Makes an Always Attractive • Addition to Garment. , A fine, dainty set of lingerie collar and cuffs for the dark summer silk gown is always an attractive addition. The gown may have no other ornamentation but a few tucks or rows of shirring besides the lingerie set; but if the set is beautifully made it will add richness to the frock that a more elaborate ornamentation could not give. Either white, ■ cream, or ecru batiste should be used for the set. Ecru is less trying to most complexions, does not soil so easily and blends more harmoniously with dark silks; but, of course, one may select that which pleases one most. The set will be daintier if worked in eyelets rather than solid stitching. Eyelets are quickiy worked and decidedly effective. The edge of both the cuffs and collar may be straight or scalloped, and in either even worked In buttonhole stitching. If preferred, there may b« a narrow hemstitched edge, but the buttonholed edge is more suitable when the eyelet work is used. Introduce some of the characters tics of the Btyle of ancient Greeo* and your evening gowns will be up to date, says the New York Press, besides being a trifle in Advance of the fashion
fl [UI ji Where Safety Is First Consideration Haynes Is First Choice The foremost feature on the Haynes car is the Vulcan Electric Gear Shift, withont doubt, the greatest safety device ever applied to the automobile. It has so many advantages that you will never go back to the old-fashioned, hand-lever method of changing gears, once you have driven the electrically controlled The electric gear shift permits you to retain your hands on the steering wheel while changing gears. You can keep your eyes on the road ahead , at all times. Yon can change speeds silently and simply, without physical effort and without danger of stripping a gear. You can shift gears with the speed of lightning, and worm your way through congested city traffic with perfect safety. You can anticipate your speed changes, so that shifting gears on the Haynes merely resolves itself into touching a button on the steering wheel for the desired speed, then, when you want the gears actually shifted mere pressure , on the clutch pedal does it. If you are looking for safety in an automobile, as well as comfort, convenience and service—you will find it in the Haynes, America’s First Car. The Hayne« “Four,” 48 dynamometer horsepower—118inch wheelbase. —...51785 and $1985 The Haynes “Six,” <5 dynamometer horsepower—--130 inch wheelbase .$2500 and $2700 The Haynes “Six,” 65 dynamometer horsepower—--136 inch wheelbase.s2sßs and. $2785 “The Complete Motorist" by Elwood Haynes, Father of . the American Automobile Industry, fully describing the Vulcan Electric Gear Shift, will be mailed upon receipt of ten cents In stamps. Write to THE HAYNES AUTOMOBILE COMPANY 26 Main Street, Kokomo, Indiana Adders of America '• First Car The Heynee ear Is handled by direct Factory Branch nt 17M Michigan Are., Chicago, 111., and by dealers throughout TlUnots, Indiana, Michigan and Wleconeln. The Haynes sells readily because of its mechanical VCBins, features. You may be in open territory—send for catalog and four pages of detailed specifications, giving over 800 Items which comprise the Haynes, write us right now! THE HAYNES AUTOMOBILE CO.. 26 Main St., Kokomo, ind. Enclosed find 10 cents In stamps. Please send me Elwood Hsynss* Book. “The Complete Motorist” Name........... .................................... Addreas. 1 expect to buy s car ab0ut......... «*.«......... ............................ .m*«m - I II I HI IN 1:1 _ : ... v ' , J* Vb
HOOSIER BINDER TWINE Direct from Factory Ql/C Treated for Insect* gtk MB. Fully Guaranteed Tested & Weighed fl |T| Orders for 500 lbs. or more, 2 per cent off; or good note due Sep. 9 r-«®\lst, 1914, without interest. Car lot prices on application. Price* MM I’V’-'/ft o. b. factory. Remit by any form of e*chan*e. Order by letter, ■ gor send for blanks. Careful attention to club orders. - - - - rag Fogarty, Bapt. Hooeier Turin* Mills, Michigan City, lad.
It All Depends. “Everything depends on the point of view—even the weather.” “How do you make that out?” “All weather is fare weather, to a street car conductor, or fowl weather to a poultry man.” 9 ■ • Constipation causes and seriously aggravates many diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. Tiny sugar-coated granules. Adv. A man’s love for a woman’s money it the seed of much evil. W.L.DOUGLAS SHOES WHiliSargg/r . _ Woman’* Hm 8/ Iff* « Misses,Boys,Children! fed .v pjj Si **?*».«? nourUhs<SDding*tta jpj TAKITNO BUBBTITUTK. V.-7fA Cf tbs teiw St all prim. pntasi *m. lkjMii Wilts hr Uiwitawl malt* *mh< bsw IsirlirbyMil. V.LMNUI, NAVARRE HOTEL NEW YORK CENThE OP EVERYTHING 890 HOOMB BATHE 200 A roan with hath - - - .81 AO Other rooms with bath $240, $240 Room* for two persons $2.50, $340 OUISINB (a I* Ossrte) MUSIC BIND FORCOLORBD MAPOFNKWVOBK EDGAR T. SMITH, Managing Director. jyuKrggl
ffcrn of the Province* of« Kurmn Albert*, have produced woo. jpjfiSlwi} derful yield* of Wksst, Oat*. W ordairypurpo*ea? In 1912. and W |V 1913. at Chicago. MsdUiks » ■ — s W mfl r**- Tiniiinafiin fnw L**f at /Suwl M MU I ■ «'BB*P»*rll»I»p lm DSN BtVfTs VIOOQ I^B ffi F ark Sch >nV StodM'! il^ CeX: " J K portunity of any place on R Apply for descriptive literature and ■ reduced railway rates to H Superintendent of mH Immigration, ■ Government Agent uwjjJ Don’t Cut Out mB A SHOE BOIL, CAPPED! ROCK OR BURSITIS will remove them and leave no blemishes. Reduce* any pul! or swelling. Does ad blister, or remove the hair, and horse can be ' worked. $2 a bottle delivered, Book 6 K free. ABSORBING JR.. Ac aadssgtk DtisolMsts Usd. Per Boils. States. Ott Seen. SweUUts. Vatsosss Tstss~ tW.F.YOUIM. r. D. F.. *l* Urnuk R. Ssrins* *M.Raas. | PATENTSSSEg^H K‘ia 5 1 rniprovedUnd*. terms and right price* TODD—COUNTY OF CSKUOKIXk COIF AND CXOVRB, writ* for booklet and «W*. 11*1. VmnDyk* « V«*Dyk*. LongFrsJike, Mtea. -.. Wanted «MUIIU9jV(SKR]H99Q| MAKES SORE W. n' U.. CHICAGO. NO. 18- im
