Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 256, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 October 1914 — Page 3
Pineapple ts Tropical Hawaii, the home of the finest Pineapple, is too ■ I distant to supply you with the fresh fruit that has ripened ■ ■ on the plant. If you want the delicious ■ Hawaiian Pineapple in all its perfection g n «f te r fully ripening in the field, buy Libby’s. ® Yellow and mellow when harvested and S placed right into the tin the day it is wjSggwE''’ picked. You can buy it sliced or crushed, At Your Grocers Libby, MSNeill & Libby Chicago j/S/r
Need Cheer in the Kltchen.
"Too many women are cheerful In the parlor and are not so in the kitchen," said Dr. Stanley J. Krebs the ofher afternoon to the women—and three .men —that formed the audience for his second series of lectures at the Propyleum. Doctor Krebs is taking the adult for hjs subject. He told how a person may be cheerful under adverse circumstances, and he quoted a friend who was and had been a cripple from rheumatism forty years, and yet she is the cheeriest of women. “Cheerfulness," he said, “is the sunshine of the soul. A person gets joy and life from what is received and this woman preached by her life.” Cultivated people should be cheerful, he said, and added there are three things that cheerfulness will do. It will drive away the gout, it will make one live long and it will make one good looking and attractive. —Indianapolis Hews.
Premonitory.
Blobbe —Why do you call Grouchlelgh the human tadpole? Slobbs —Oh, he always feels that he has a kick coming.—Philadelphia Record. Many a man who tries to make money merely succeeds in making trouble. Cupid could give the fool killer a lot of pointers.
More pork, better pork and a better price. ■ P&' Sleek, fat hogs in the pink of health and ready for market weeks earlier. Less ■ f feed used. Lower feeding costs. Greater r* ’ Zftw profits. Fatten your “mortgage lifters” ■ by using ■ I H in the feeding and fattening ration. Feed it from the start to hogs, ■ cattle, horses and sheep. Keeps them robust and always ready for their ■ feed. r ßuilds up sick and run-down animals. Prevents hog cholera. I Dairy cows produce more milk. Has been used in the daily ration of | ■ millions of farm stock in the past 42 years. More used today than ever before. Try it if you never have. Every package sold as it always has I ■ been—on a guaranty of your perfect satisfaction or money back. Do not I get confused. Ask for Pratts and look for the name on the label. Sold In packages, 25c, 50c, SI.OO 254 b. pails, $3.00 ■ For clean, healthy hogs and cattle, use Pratts Dip and Disinfectant I ■ . freely as a dip or spray. Cures Ticks, Lice, Mange, Sores, Cuts and all ; ■ Sirin Diseases. Only SI.OO a gallon. I I - I 40,000 Dealers Sell Prattt |» PRATT FOOD COMPANY E PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO TORONTO
Happy Evenings ’Round the /Sayft Lamp The circle’round the UM I I.Ufffc center table flooded with «y A\’Wi/ dtfSSß&v soft, mellow, yet bril- -’< ■. liant light that allows ’y V- \ Pflll II ffiU- X the family to read, em- Jj t broider, sew and study Z t J&F all through the long / JfefiwF winter evenings. I- > RAYO LAMPS give a 4ft A I<M» clear, steady, restful ■ ** light, without glare or w y flicker, smoke or odor. W V ■■ For the light that is next best to daylight, that II saves the eyes and pre- eJK -Hr ffij®— -4 I j , vents eye strain, as well R-jLI L / « tuff as to give the family pleasure and comfort, get •» w a RAYO Lamp for the <♦£ FOf Beit reading table. Reantta Use STANDARD OH COMPANY, Onttgo, lB»b Perfection 03 (an nmiAMA oonronanom (SM) WmCHLSTER I Good shooters and sure shooters are Winchester “Nublack” and “New I I Rival ” black powder loaded shells. They are strongly made and loaded I I with only standard brands of powder, shot and wadding. Their even pat. I I tern and deep penetration make them auro game getters. You vriH find I I nothing better. Sold everywhere. Look for the Red Vs an the box. I I They Are Vdiform, Highly Satisfactory Loads. |
SOME FLIES IN OINTMENT
Bride Was Happy Enough, but There Were a Few Things That Might Be Improved On. A maid who had been employed in the Benner home for several years took unto herself a husband and went to a nearby town to live. One day about a month after the wedding she came to call on her former mistress, who said: “Well, Phoebe, I hope that you are happy in your new home. How is your husband?” . t To this the bride of a month made reply: “Well, reckon I’m happy enough, but the chimney in the kitchen don’t draw none too goo(J, an’ the water in the well is so brackish I ain’t never goin.’ to git used to it As for my husband, well, ma’am, it’s with him as it is with your man an’ all the rest of ’em, if the Lord had ’em to make over he. could improve some on the job. Ain’t eggs turrible high?”
Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. The favorite family laxative. Adv.
Not Lost.
“Why, baby, you have lost a tooth.” “No, I haven’t lost it, mother. I swallowed it”
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN. RENSSELAER, IND.
SASH MAKES COSTUME
PRETTY NOVELTY THAT IS JUST NOW MUCH IN VOGUE. Wilf Do Much Toward Brightening a Simple and Unassuming FrockTaffeta or Satin of Brilliant Hue Used. A very pretty Parisian novelty, to be especially noted, since the vogue of the cuirassier bodice has come into its own again, Is the bayadere sash, swathed and draped over the hips in eastern fashion. Often a quite simple and unassuming lingerie frock can be made quite* smart and much more interesting through the use of such a sash in taffeta or satin in some brilliant hue. The continued warm weather brings out many delightfully fashioned frocks at tea time and in the evening, and probably the most notable features in all of them are these new sash effects and the variety of materials used in one design. The different fabrics now Introduced in the same costume when mingled successfully produce a very original and personal toilet. Take, for instance, the delightful frock of the sketch, which was recently seen at a private reception. In it are combined straw-colored chiffon, yellow alencon lace, and amethyst velvet ribbon and taffeta. The long-sleeved blouse cut rather low about the neck made over a white net foundation. It fastens down
Novel Sash Arrangement
the center front and the neck is finished with a finely plaited ruffling of the chiffon. The back is trimmed with a lace plastron, hung in collar effect from the shoulders and partly veiling the amethyst velvet ribbons that cross over the back of the blouse. Similar ribbons are crossed over the front and are tied in small knots with the back ones just over the shoulders. In front another lace plastron Is cut in half and hung from the shoulders with a little (gathering on either side, thus veiling, as in back, a portion of the crossed velvet ribbons. Then comes the bayadere celnture. This is of amethyst taffeta and will re-
HINTS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD
Small Suggestions That Will Prove ’ Valuable t/tha Careful Housewlff in Her Work. When the weather is damp don’t take a shampoo. Your hair will not dry out well because of the moisture In the air. ’ Put rice in the salt shakers, or else mix an equal amount of cornstarch with the salt, or else use little salt dishes and’ have them emptied after every meal and refilled before the next. The salt from them can be put into a dish for cooking. Rub sticking bureau drawers with a bit of soap and apply the saiiw lubricant to squeaky doors. pon’t expect your chamois gloves to dry overnight. In damp weather it sometimes takes 24 hours to dry them thoroughly. Don’t leave any furniture, excepting th,at made of wicker, out of doors. Dampness warps all kinds of wood and therefore is injurious to any sort of wooden furniture.
Colored Damask in Vogue.
Damask cloths in pale colors, with napkins to correspond, are again coming into vogue for the luncheon table and while colored linen is impossible for the dinner table, ft is very attracttive for less formal occasion and pretty sets in pale yellow, green, blue or pink are appearing in the dower chests of brides-to-be. Colored embroideries as well as colored damasks are being exploited* for table use in the most up-to-date outfits and for these Japanese designs are particularly appropriate.
Simple Dress for Fall Wear.
Model by Carere of Paris is of gray corduroy with plaited striped silk.
quire two breadths of 19-inch silk or one of yard-wide variety. It has a vertical gathered heading at the center, back where the dress fastens, and the gathers must be tucked invisibly in place about the figure. This requires care to avoid a too studied appearance of precision. The b6w is large and arranged at the lower edge in back. The lace tunic is long and full and finished with plaited chiffon ruffling. The underskirt is Of chiffon with ruffles of itself. —Washington Star.
KEEPING THE SKIN BEAUTIFUL
Correct Living and Proper Amount of Exercise Are Better Than Any Purchased Cosmetic. Many girls who have bad complexions must blame themselves. However, the are ways to overcome the mistakes they have probably unwittingly made. To gain a clear complexion follow these rules: Take a daily bath, exercise for an hour in the open air every day, drink at least three pints of water daily; secure sufficient sleep; eat a great deal of green vegetables and fresh fruits and rub the face over, just before washing it, with two tablespoonfuls of flower of sulphur mixed in half a pint of new milk. This mixture should stand a little while before it is used on the face. A bad taste in the mouth and an impure breath is an unmistakable sign of some disorder. This can be caused by overeating, highly spiced foods, alcoholic stimulants and decayed teeth. Any of the conditions should be corrected at once.
Long, Tight Sleeves.
Long, close-fitting sleeves of transparent stuff, reaching well Over the wrists and fitting the arm closely are a featured! new afternoon frocks for more formal wear. If such sleeves are built of black or white-, indestructible voile instead of chiffon, they will prove much more satisfactory. Indestructible voile is of cobwebby sheerness, but its weave is remarkably sturdy.
Child’s Embroidered Apron.
This little apron was of plain blue chambray piped with white. It is cut all in one piece and buttoned over the shoulders.A band of embroidery, formed of French knots and featherstitching, in black, blue and white, crosses the front and trims the patch pockets.
New Chemisette.
Some of the new chemisettes are so severe In line that they dosely resemble th«| bosom of the full-dress shirt. . f .v.
CASTORIA For Infants and Children. - ■ tip ; . ■ £ASTBR|i The Kind You Have I Always Bought ft ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT * ’h Preparation for Xs- _ _ g Bearsthe J imtaMMiiitSß Signature /Am up Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- dp jf a |r nessandßest.Contains neither nt ZK AIT Opium .Morphine nor Mineral g 1\ S 3 Not Nah coTic MpffOUDrSAWa/TTCgOt Ki Am-a.Jw/- ayl' JlxSfma - 1 ■ ’ MM 5M ~ % 1A ’ - Jt? flu < I ga s ' (\ tK* in & \L VI .. $0 A perfect Remedy for Constipa- f\F All [i S U W lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, I II If Worms .Convulsions .Feverish; I Ik/ * a ness and Loss OF SLEEP. LQF HUgl* Flac S»nik Signature The Centlur Company,. Thirty Years Sa L- NEW YORK. * under the Food and) | Exact Copy of Wrapper. tm wrr»u« oommnv. »«w omr.
DISTEMPER Sore rare and positive prarntiT., no matter how hor»***t »py«<*»r*lirfoet*< Keep It. show tp your druggist, who wlllget It for you. Free Booklet, DlilaingaM Cause* and Cure*/’ Special Agent* wanted. • SPOHN MEDICAL CO., tfSXXStSS. GOSHEN, IND., 0. S. L
MOTHERS AND DAME FASHION
Women Molds Her Daughter In Foundation of Style and Taste From j" Earliest Years. , Take the average girl, carefully note the manner in which she is dressed and then you have an advertisement —good or bad—for her mother. In some subtle manner a mother molds her daughter from babyhood in the style of her clothing, and it is a very important molding, too. For if clothes do not make the man they do go a long way in giving a true impression of a woman. Every new dress that a mother buys for her little girl is a small stone in the foundation of style and taste that .will guide her daughter in future years. I was taking tea with a well-known public woman recently, and she called my attention to two young business girls who were sitting at another table in the restaurant From the hat of one hung a faded-looking rose, her lownecked blouse was not improved by her soiled coat collar, and above her cheap-looking patent shoes showed tawdry openwork stockings. The other wore a smart, perfectly plain hat neat well-fitting costume, and was tastefully booted. “Different mothers!” said my companion briefly. Rehoboth Sunday Herald.
Sign Causes a Near Riot
A sign in the window of a grocery store at Forty-third and Butler streets that sugar was selling 25 pounds for $1.19 caused a rush of women. Men working at night or going to work in the early morning had read the sign and hastened to tell their wives of the sale. Three hundred women congregated, seeking opportunity to buy. The storekeeper found that a joker had been at work. Wednesday evening he had painted a sign, “Sugar, 25 pounds 11.90.” Some one had erased the loop from the figure nine. —Pittsburgh Gazette-Times.
Got Him Both Ways.
Diner —You charge me more for this steak than you used to. Restaurant'Manager—I have to pay more for it The price of meat has gone up. D. —And the steak is smaller than it used to be. R. M. —That, of course, is on account of the scarcity of beef.
And What Happened Then?
He—l would kiss you if I dared. She—ls I were a man I think I would dare anything. ** *
< 411*1 i w >7 MTU is the canal of life bat it becomes a I ■ewer if dogged up. All Hf e consists of building up and tearing | down and just in the same manner that the blood carries to the I various parts of the body the food that the cells need for building I up, so it is compelled to carry away the waste material that’s ton I down. These waste materials are poisonous and destroy us unless I the liver and kidneys are stimulated into refreshed and vigorous life. I DR. PIERCE’S Golden Medical Discovery I is the balancing power—a vitalizing power. It sets on the stomach I and organs of digestion and nutrition—on the purifying filters which | clean the blood. Thus fresh vitalized blood feeds the nerves, heart I —and brain. This well known alterative reliovee catarrh of the stomach and I headaches accompanying same, and has been successful for more than a Sen- ■ eration as a tonic and body-builder. It builds up the rundown system. You I need it-ifyou are always “catching cold”—or have catarrh of the none and I throat. The active medicinal principles of Amcrican-lfadivo-roots sn > extracted without alcohol and you can obtain thia tonic in liquid or tablet form at any drug store or aonrt :W> r.r.t, in 1t st amp, f. >r t rial k/i. ..f ■ wsvawfaar'fo'Awsn AT fiIAAUUX xvm. Awrees twk *. v. rwrw, oarraww m. <• WM
Self-Government in Prison.
The movement to test the self-gow ernlng capacity of lawbreakers is spreading. A council was elected recently by the inmates of the New Jersey reformatory at Rahway, of which Frank Moore is superintendent Each tier elected two members ol the council, making a body of 28 representatives. The purposes of the council are to try to have each boy “keep perfect order, live strictly up to the rules of the institution, reduce the numbei of reports and when paroled to maks good.” Weekly meetings are held and suggestions from inmates for ths benefit of their fellows are considered.
Equipped for It.
“Your friend. Mr. Hewgag Is quite an adept at light conversation.” “He should be. He’s lantern jawed.” roin own druggist inu mi TCT Try Murine Bye Remedy for Bed. .Week. Wat««> Many a man is so exclusive that he isn’t even on speaking terms with his conscience. ,< ........ After a man has had one drink too many he begins to think he is the real article.
What a Cold Can Do Many a fatal ease of kidney disease atarta from a aimpie cold or ehilL Congestion etege and weakens the kidneys. Uric poisons collect, damage the kidneys and cause backache, rtenBMtfte p*ln> nrlfmty ftVttnSflflL J »• ■ ■- '■< When doctoring a eoM, think of tke kidneys. lion of the kidney*, give up a heavy meat diet 2? ’ffiAlSiy worff bUOI7 «”•» An lowa Case Frank J. Rooney, grocer, 15t Julian Ave., Dubuque. la.. 1 Bays: “I had awful fc/ytW **•*! pains in my left hip. Wv t wk extending up Into /gSEgNmy shoulder. I felt very nervous and had but little am blrlon. I knew that rny kidneys weren't acting right and when I saw Doan'* Kidney PHI* recom ■ / mended, I got some, d j; They proved to be 1[ * just what I needed • and soon gave me -W; relief. Continued use cured the rheumatic pains and toned up W my whole system." w Gat DoagTssS Aay Store, SOe a Bost DOAN FOOTERMIUBURM CO. BUFFALO, N. Y.
W. Ni CHICAGO, NO. 42-1914.
