Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 187, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 August 1915 — Page 3
Business Opportunities I 1 Do TOO fcnow that one of th* mot profltabl* line* ta a BUIUrd I I Room and Bowling Alley In combination with a Cigar Store, Quick I / Lunch Room or-Barber SbopT We hare a large lint of good location*. \ They .ro yonrn for the asking. Write at onee: stating where youde- •/& / ire to locate. Ask for catalogs of Billiard Tables, Bowling Alleys S and Fixtures. We sell on easy payments.
TAKE PLEASURE IN HAGGLING
Tibetan* Will Not Be Denied the Joy* That Accrue From the; Sense of Bargaining. “Mornin’ time, bargain time!” call* out one of the peddlers by the wayside In Tibet cheerfully as he sees you returning from a glimpse of the snows at sunrise. You bid him come to you, and from one of the innumerable pockets concealed in his voluminous robe he will produce a perfect little Jade cup, or a Tibetan coffee pot, or gold copper and precious stones, or perhaps a huge lump of rough turquoise hewn to look like a couch with a tiny gold Buddha reclining on it. Then comes the bargaining, in which he and all his friends take part against your single self. It can all be done by signs and smiles and patience and in the long run you will get some things well worth having at a very reasonable price. But you must have no false pride about bargaining. It is an elementary part of these people’s nature, and the joy of selling will leave them forever when the day of haggling is done.
She Was Wise.
Patience —And you say he tried to kiss you? Patrice —Yes, and I told him I’d call for mother. “And did you?’” “I certainly did.” What did your mother say?” “Oh, mother never paid a bit of attention. She was a girl once herself, you know.”
Too Late.
Bill —It has been estimated that the heat received in a year by the earth from the sun is sufficient to melt a layer of ice 100 feet in thickness covering the globe. Jill —And yet we have to go hacking at it on the sidewalk with an old hatchet, just the same.
An Alternative.
Caller (at door of apartment house) —What, no elevator! Must I walk up?
Janitor —No; you may run if you like.
No Doubt.
Teacher —Mary, can you tell me how Noah’s ark was lighted? Mary —Yessum, with ark lights.
The Judge Says— Put a package of these real com flakes—these New Post Toasties on trial beside a package of any other com .flakes on the market. The jury will bring in a verdict of “guilty —guilty of being the finest com flakes ever made. The New Post Toasties are crisp and appetizing, with a true com flavour; and they don t mush down when milk or cream is added. But here’s the real test. Take a handful, fresh* from the package, and eat them without cream or milk. Mighty good, aren't they? z Notice the little “puffs" on each flake —a distinguishing characteristic —resulting from the new method of cooking and toasting, which also brings out and enhances the wonderful, true com flavour. Your Grocer has the New Post Toasties. Try them and bring in your verdict — “Delicious”
Women are acting as street cleaner* in Cardiff, Wale*. The man who drinks like a fish doe* not take kindly to water.
Drink Denison's Coffee,
For your health’s sake. >
Professor’s Break.
Professor (to student) —What ar* you laughing at? Not at me? Student —Oh, no, sir. Professor —Then what else is there in the room to laugh at?
Gave Him Pause.
Wise —Henry, you really must have the landlord come and see for himself the damage the rain did to our ceiling. ' Hub —I can’t without letting him see the damage the children have done to the rest of the house.
Well Named.
They were talking bout a promising young man who had failed to make good as a traveling salesman. The first man said to the other man: “It was queer about the boy. He seemed to be a regular whirlwind. His first trip was a rattling success, but all he brought back from his second trip was a bunch of foolish excuses.” “What was it you called him—a whirlwind?” “Yes.” “I see# All ’whirl’ at the beginning, and all ‘wind’ at the finish.’’—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Rocky Roads of China.
We all know the description of the snakes in Ireland: "There are none," and much the same might be said about the roads in China. There are so-called roads, certainly, upon which the people move about, but I have seldom met one that was any better than the surrounding country, and very, very often on this journey I met roads where it was ease and luxury to move off them on.to the neighboring plowed field. The recipe for a road there in the North seems to be: “kTae a piece of the country that is really too bad to plow or to use for any agricultural purposes whatever, that a mountain torrent, in fact, has given up as too much for the water, upset a stone wall over it, a stone wall with good large stones tn it, take care they never for a moment He evenly, and you have your road. —Wide World Magazine.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND,
MILK MUST BE PURE
IMPOSSIBLE TO GIVE TOO MUCH CARE TO BABY’S FOOD. "Artificial” Feeding Mean* Constant Watchfulness if the Health of the Little One I* to Be Properly Preserved. ■"■y (Prepared for This Paper by the Children’s Bureau, U. S. Department of Labor.) When, for any reason, the baby cannot have breast milk, he must be fed on a bottle. This method of feeding is known as "artificial” feeding, because it is an imitation of the natural way. Since it was not nature’s Intention that a baby should be fed on cow’s milk, the baby finds it very hard oftentimes to adapt his digestive organs to the strange food, and consequently many thousands of babies, who would have lived and thrived on breast milk, die every year because they are unable thus to adapt themselves. On the baby’s account, first of all, every mother will do all in her power to secure breast milk, but on her own account, there are many reasons why she should choose to do this. Artificial feeding requires the constant attention of some one person and necessitates daily, painstaking work, which can be left undone only at the risk of the baby’s health. The mother must first of all study her milk supply. Then after clean, fresh milk has been obtained it must have the most careful attention, and bottles, nipples, and all the utensils employed in making up the feedings must be scrubbed and sterilized every day. In addition, the baby must be constantly watched to see how his food is suiting him. His weight, the condition of his skin and of his bowels must be noted, and the strength and quantity of bls food increased or decreased In accordance with these conditions. A simple rule for feeding the average healthy baby after the first month is to give him 1% ounces of milk in 24 hours, for every pound of weight Thus, a ten-pound baby will need 15 ounces of milk in 24 hours, diluted with water and sweetened according to his age. On the first two days of his life the artificially fed baby should have nothing to eat except a little slightly warm water, to which a very little sugar may be added. The following directions for feeding the baby have been prepared by a committee of the American Medical association. "Beginning on the third day, the average baby should be given three ounces of milk dally, diluted with seven ounces of water. To this should be added one tablespoonful of limewater and two level teaspoonfuls of sugar. This should be given in seven feedings. "At one week the average child requires five ounces, of milk daily, which should be diluted with ten ounces of water. To this should be added one and one-half even tablespoonfuls of sugar and one ounce of limewater. This should be given in seven feedings. The milk should be Increased, by one-half ounce about every four days. The water should be increased by one-half ounce every eight days. “At three months the average child requires 16 ounces of milk daily, which should be diluted with 16 ounces of water. To this should be added three tablespoonfuls of sugar and two ounces €>? limewater. This should be given in six feedings. The milk should be increased by one-half ounce every six days. The water should be reduced by one-half ounce about every two weeks.
“At six months the average child requires 24 ounces of milk daily, which should be diluted with 12 ounces of water. To this should be added two ounces of limewater and three even tablespoonfuls of sugar. This should be given in five feedings. This amount of milk should be increased by onehalf ounce every week. The milk should be Increased only if the child is hungry and digesting his food well. “At nine months the average child requires 30 ounces of milk daily, which should be diluted with ten ounces of water. To this should be added two even tablespoonfuls of sugar and two ounces of limewater. This should be given in five feedings. The sugar added may be milk sugar or if this cannot be obtained cane (granulated) sugar or maltose (malt sugar). At first plain water should be used to dilute the milk. “At three months, sometimes earlier, a weak barley water may be used in the place of plain water; it is made of one-half level tablespoonful of barley flour to 16 ounces of water and cooked for 20 minutes. “At six months the barley flour may bq increased to one and one-half even tablespoonfuls cooked in the 12 ounces of water. “At nine months the barley flour may be increased to three level tablespoonfuls cooked in the eight ounces of water.” In the hottest weather the baby’s food should be weakened by pouring out one-quarter of the usual contents of the bottle and adding an equal amount of boiled water. He should be fed with absolute regularity, once in every three hours, for the first five months of his life, and the Interval should be gradually lengthened until ,at six months it is four hours. Give the baby plenty of cool drinking water between meals, especially in hot weather.
Children Cry For NJTst Contents 15 Fluid Drachms! BF I IASTORIA < Im? j| ■ v I a W J-’f j.. M -mm ■ « AWge table Pre para lionforAsp I VF A ■ ■ ■ M ■ jkHi I Promotes What is CASTOR IA •r* riess and Rest. Contains neither Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor OH, Pare* Opium,Morpliine nor roric, Drops and Soothing Syraps. It is pleasant. It Not Narcotic. contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nareotle f • J' substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms •r» and al ] ays Feverishness. Dor more than thirty years it jjJ? L has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, *tK » I Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and •Lq I Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, •& i assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS zyßears the Signature of _ •vjoO Ibc-Simik Signature of ~ «r*Q tf&tyZSEZ j ~ Jr jy / tS* E Centaur coMnuff} % NBW YORKS' _ J Jin Use For Over 30 Years __ J The Kind You Have Always Bought
Might Have Been Worse. Flatbush —Wasn’t that awful for Nero to be playing his fiddle while Rome burned? Bensonhurst —It might have been a good deal worse. “How so?” “Why, the old man might have played the bagpipes.”
HAIR OR NO HAIR? It la Certainly Up to You and Cuticura. Trial Free. Hot shampoos with Cuticura Soap, followed by light dressings of Cuticura Ointment rubbed into that scalp skin tend to clear the scalp of dandruff, soothe Itching and irritation and promote healthy hair-growing conditions. Nothing better, cleaner, purer. Sample each free by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Not In the Money.
•'Does your husband play cards for money?” “No,” replied young Mrs. Torkins, thoughtfully; “I don’t think Charley plays for money. But all the people who play with him do."
Sight Came Too Late.
She —When you married me you said you were well off. He—So I wab, but I didn’t know it
Weather IL Meats ~l U 70 = =■ Veal Loaf, to serve cold: Cooked Corned Beef, select SO- = = t<w •nd appetizing. Chicken Loaf, Ham Loaf and Veal Loaf, jo- == ■ "*• delicately seasoned. Vienna Sausage, Genuine Deviled 40- == - Ham and Wafer Sliced Drier! Beef for sandwiches and 30 ■| | dainty luncheons. 20- = • liuht Libby’a at your groctr’a = = ’ SO | i' to •= = ■ fQfe IGB jo = Libby/ M-Neill & Libby, Chicago w® /
tends to Americans a hearty into settle on her FREE Homeads of 160 acres each or secure the low priced lands in Mamskatchewan and Alberta. wheat Is higher but Canadian land just so the opportunity is more attractive than ada wants you to help to feed the world ome of her soil—land similar to that ing many years has averaged 2® to 45 f wheat to the acre. Think what you »with wheat around $1 a burfiel and I so easy to get Wonderful yields also of s, Barley and Flax. Mixed farming illyas profitable an industry as grain The Government this year is asking farmers to put increased acreage into grain. Military service is not com* pulaory in Canada. There is no conscription and no war tax on lands. The Himato is healthful and agreeable, railway facilities excellent good schools and churches convenient Wnte for literature and particulars as to reduced railway sates to Superintendent Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to C. J. Broughton, Room 412,112 W. Adams Street, Chicago, lIL| N. V. ■aclßses,l7«Jeiicr>MkYS.,Detrsit.Mfch.
Scottish Lodging Houses.
Glasgow has seven municipal lodging houses, six for men and one for women. They are stone buildings, three to five stories in height, and of the most Substantial character. Each lodger has a separate room, with bed and chair. The bed has a wire spring, a hair or fiber mattress, coarse sheets, a blanket, a coverlet, a pillow and a pillowcase. These are aired, cleaned and washed after the lodger has gone in the morning. The total number of bedrooms in the seven houses is 2,235.
An Error In Debate.
“I think I made a mistake in arguing the question of expense with my wife.” “What do you mean?" “She wanted an automobile and I Inadvertently told her that I couldn't afford IL" “Well?" “Now she wants It worse than before.”—Detroit Free Press.
Her Identity.
"Yonder girl’s a daisy.” “She isn’t, for I know her, and she’s a black-eyed Susan.”
Prink Denison's Coffee,
For your health’s sake. And some people make us tired —because we can’t run fast enough to get away from them.
Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You’re of Sorts —Have No Appetite, CARTER’S LIVER PILLS will put you right in a few days. JffgESJ WITTLE They 11 VER their PILLS. Cure Con- fllUlß stipation, Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick HeaaacM SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature
A Ghastly Fear.
Mrs. Strongmind—Henry, I want you to come straight home as soon as you leave the office, every day! You were twenty minutes late yesterday, and it gave me quite a shock. Henry—Yes, Henrietta. But you didn’t think I’d been run over by a car, did you? Mrs. Strongmind—No; but how was I to know that somebody wasn’t holding you for ransom? —Puck.
Good Advice.
“Mother, how had I better dress for my motorboat trip this afternoon?” “Who is going with you, dear?” "Mr. Scatterbrain.” “Then you’d better wear a bathing suit and a life preserver.”
Repartee.
"Did I make myself plain, sir?” “Oh, no, madam. Nature made •' thorough Job of that for you.”
A Soluble Antiseptic Powder to be dissolved in water as needed For Douches In the local treatment of woman’s fllx such as leucorrhoea and inflammation, bos douches of Paxtine are very efficacious. No woman who has ever used medicated douches will fail to appreciate the clean and healthy condition Pax tine produces and the prompt relief from soreness and discomfort which follows its use. This is because Paxtine possesses superior cleansing, disinfect. Ing and healing properties. t-SV For ten years the Lydia E. 6 Pinkham Medicine Co. has recora mended Paxtino in their private correspondence with women, which proves its superi- I ■ ority. ® Women who have been I Jwm relieved say it is “ worth its weight in gold.” At druggists. | 80c. large box or by mail. Sample free. . Ths Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass, THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS that make a horse Wheeze, Roar, have Thick Wind or Choke-down, can be Jg 4,- . | reduced with J rj I also any Bunch or Swelling. No blister, no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Concentrated —only a few drops required at an application. t 2 per bottle delivered. Book 3 K free. ABSORBING, liniment for mankind, reduces Cyst*, Wens, Painful, Knotted Varicose Veins, Ulcers. fl and $2 a bottle a* dealers or delivered. Book “Evidence” free. W.F.YOUM6.P- O.F w »WTe—le»- Wss®eM.»art, DAISY FLY KILLER Eg STBSS »•**. etaaa, ••> B*m«>Wl, con-rmilßßt m ajwffir' jflSjfiwTnttVM '•*• **” Lasts all WIWiISTTTWIjMr.MI season. til metal, e-a'UpUlor UV *lll sot «01l to ■ 1 Bj«r« aaythlßSAnaealorewtwrt ■anew somxbs. see ba Ka» ate., arMUys, a-X. —— :—■ PATENTS S&S Bams rsssonsbiik £UsMm* ref<r<Dcc*» Ssot •MVWMb W. N. U, CHICAGO, Ha
