Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 234, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 September 1916 — Page 3
GIRL GOULD NOT WORK
How She Was Relieved from Pain by Lydia L Pinkh>m , » Vegetable Compound.
Taunton, Mass. —" I had pains in both aides and when my periods came I had
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound?' My mother bought it and the next month I was bo well that I worked all the month without staying at home a day. lam in good health now and have told lots of girls about it.”—Miss Clarice Morin, 22 Russell Street, Taunton, Mass. Thousands of girls suffer in silence every month rather than consult a physician. If girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, baekache, headache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spellß or indigestion would take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a safe and pure remedy made from roots and herbs, much suffering might be avoided. Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass, (confidential) for free advice which will prove helpful
Prompted Miss Ellen Terry.
Miss Ellen Terry a few weeks ago wns giving a Shakespearean recitation of an entertainment in aid of a war fund, nnd a lnrge part of her audience were the girls from a widely known Chelsea school. Knowing every line by heart, they were following the recital with breathless attention. Suddenly Miss Terry faltered and, as often happens on the stage, the actress’ mind for one moment became a blank. Then, Just as the pause threatened to become awkward, the small, ringing voice of a twelve-year-old schoolgirl gave the necessary words. —London Mirror.
Appropriate Features.
“This Is a hot-weather show.” “Then that’s the reason of so many •broilers’ In the chorus.”
OH! NY BACK A stubborn backache is cause to suspect kidney trouble. When the kidneys are inflamed and swollen, stooping brings a sharp twinge in the small of the back, that almost takes the breath away. Soon there may be other symptoms; scanty, painful or too frequent urination, headaches, dizziness, or rheumatic pains. Don’t wait for these troubles to become serious—use Doan’s Kidney Pills at once. You’ll find no better-recommended remedy. An Illinois Case Mrs. T. Laughlin. Pittsfield. 111., *to„” CJiB says: “I suffered /3j® terribly from back- . ache and rheumatic I pains. I went to (E\ / the hospital, but even there I didn't A , wCm I *' "** 4 get permanent re- NSAw®! lief. My whole £ > I f system becam e Ap, -Mil , ns, run down. In short time after used Doan’s ney Pills, the pains PM I iff a v * were relieved and ffT - ! —1 J I was no longer" l ; I*V “ troubled by rehumatism. I can't be tPO~ grateful for-this cure. 1 * ' Get Do»n’» at Any Store. 80c a Boa doan’s "saxy FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
The Army of Constipation It Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER’S LITTLE A LIVER PILLS are^^T\ responsible they nently cure Con■ v/ro itipation. Br»iii<; lions them for ladifettioa. Sick Headache, Sallow Skm. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Diaaolved In water for douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflamnation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for ten years. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, sore throat and sore eyes. Economical. Hu extraonfinaiy dcunfaa and senniddal power. TYPUnin tUs£Xo?"!!3 IlillUlUgtSSjSrSi! mev. and hannlenne**, of Antityphoid Vaccination. Be Taocinated NOW by Torn phyeiclan, yon and PraSnlns Varete* as* hf*« aa*w U. i. U*tMS Tbe Cutter Liberated. Berkeley, Cal., Chleafa, 111,
—rannnFff—i HAIR BALSAM A MM pr*|»rmMo« of M«rtfc ■piTfisas^a ■tgjgfetgftMg*' w. N. U., CHICAGOTnO. 39-1816.
to stay at home from work and suffer • long time. One day a woman came to our bouse and asked my mother why I was suffering. Mother told her that I suffered every month and she said, * Why don't you buy a bottle of Lydia E.
Showing Dainty Bridal Garments
Shops Make Lavish Display of Pretty Things That Once Were Made at Home. FINERY THAT IS EXQUISITE t ~V a Artistry, Frivolity and Originality Have Been Combined With Wonderful Results—Gorgeous Colors Rule in Most Cases—Empire Styles Have Popularity.
While acknowledging that the young bride of today is justified in selecting for her trousseau only those bits of lingerie that are suitable for the fashions of the hour, still, one has pleasant memories of the preparation of a dozen of each, that was the sum and substance of a wedding chest of other days. One thinks of the patience, eagerness and joy which went Into the work of making those dozens of garments and the long hours spent by the family together, cutting, basting, stitching and putting on the handwork. It was always a task of love, this preparation of the underlinen for a girl in the family, and all her Intimate friends added their share. But this affectionate task, like many other things that were once cdnslderedr necessary In the family life, has gone by the board.
The shops do our work for us, and it is all a part of the substitution of the radiator for the open fire, the electric stove for the charcoal and wood, the readymade gowns and suits for the home sewing room and the machine stitching for the threaded needle. Women Have More Leisure. In every way women are finding that drudgery is loosening its hold on their lives, and soon all they will have to do is give their time to social service, reading and the lighter forms of pleasure. x In the last few months the smart shops have made a strong effort to in-
ALLURING PART OF BRIDAL TROUSSEAU
The negligee is of white chiffon lined with pink and edged with white marabou, with belt of pink roses. The cap Is of lace, wired to points and half covered with a floating tulle veil.
troduee original house robes. They have gone to Venice and to Moscow for their inspiration. There are negligees that look as though they had been filched from the stage of the Russian ballet, and there are others that could easily be worn in a more formal manner. That which is known as the wrapper Is dead. The calico Mother Hubbard of practical life has absolutely no place in the modern finery. Even with her simplest combing sack, the bride-elect sees to it that it is touched with artistry, frivolity and originality. Displays Draw Customers. The outpourings of the shops today In matinee, sleeping sacks and breakfast gowns, allure the most economical and conservative women to their windows. . .. One of the attractive negligees made for an October bride is of white chiffon lined with flesh pink chiffon and edged with wide bands of white marabou. It is girdled above the waist with large pink roses, from which fall at one side loops and ends of nattier blue velvet ribbon. There are no sleeves to this negligee, but the long kimono armholes cover the top part of the arm. This is an example of what is considered fashionable today for one’s own room. Invented to go with it Is a piece of headgear which is neither cap ftor crown, but which borrows a suggestion from each. It is made of a fine pattern of white lace, with broad points running upward and wired to stand. Lightly brushing the tips of these points and floating away to the shoulders and back, is > veil of white tulle. • Hie mules are of flesh pink colored
IVENING REPUBLICAN. RENSSELAER, IND.
THE
silk, with satin heels, and are touched at the Instep and toe with pink rose buds. Gorgeous Colon for thrf House. For the same tronsseau there is another negligee made of white Lierre, draped over American beauty satin. •In this the arms and neck are also bare, but there is a comfortable shoulder cape which keeps one from catching pneumonia. This cape Is caught at the bust with an American beauty rose, and the lace which falls away .from the high waistline has two long points at the back which are weighted with crystal tassels. ~ Along with this negligee go silk stockings of American beauty pink and cloth of silver bedroom slippers. One of the fanciful caps which are supposed to be worn by the bride-elect in the morning when she has breakfast,- is a curious cross between a nurse’s cap and a Brunhilda helmet. It fits well over the forehead, but leaves the back of the head in full view. “This,” as one bride-elect explained, “is to cover the multitude of combs which every girl sticks in the hair in the morning to obtain the water wave which we are all quite "keen about.” Of Really Novel Design. The cap in question shoots upward from the forehead in broad panels of embroidered satin, and there Is a wired MU of white tulle that aspires “to the heavens. It Is tied on the head by a band of silver ribbon which begins with a pink rose between the eyes and finishes in a flaring bow at the nape of the neck. No one who goes out t<xbuy the underlinen for a trousseau can be guided, by what has been worn before or by what tradition once laid down as the proper equipmentAr a lady. It is best to go through a &wGT the shops which make a specialty of original underclothes, and if it is not possible to pay the price, to duplicate the garments elsewhere. One happy solution of this problem is that the department shops get out,
at small prices, an amazing assortment of dainty and fashionable lingerie. Colors Most Favored. What is the tendency .today? Well, it is toward flesh pink as a color, hemstitching and picot edging as trimming, blue ribbon against a pink supface and a flash of roses wherever it can be placed. Whether or not the first empire styles will come Into our afternoon and evening gowns, they are certainly here in fashionable lingerie. One might think that Josephine’s famous white satin robe had been taken as a model for the new nightgowns. Some of. these have the puffed sleeves, although the tendency is Grecian. ''There is often a surplice bodice, back and front, and draped armholes finished with hemstitching or picot. There are crepe de chine gowns that are cut out in the form 6f a mandarin jacket, with a long, round decolletaga edged with picot. Nightgowns With Trains. There are pale pink dimity gowns caught under the bust with two-inch blue satin ribbons, run through picotedged buttonholes. There are white crepe de chine gowns cut entirely like a Greek robe caught withHi cameo in front and resting in folds on the floor. There are exquisitely fine handkerchief litoen nightgowns cut with a deep V front and back, tied across the waist with rose pink satin ribbons and cut with a long, pointed train at the back, the hem edged with a three-inch ruffle of linen and lace. ~~ The majority of women prefer the Italian sflk knickers, although there is a revival of the square-legged, whits muslin ones trimmed with deep ruffle* pf Irish and val lace put together.
CHICKEN WITH CHEESE SAUCE
Wew Way of Preparing Alwaya Popular Dinner or Luncheon Dleh It Well Worth Trying. When you wish to serve chicken In a novel way, try boiled chicken with cheese cream sauce. Take a chicken trussed for boiling; rub It over with lemon Juice; place u piece of sittted fat bacon on the breast, tie It on;' wrap the chicken in a wellbuttered cloth, put it into with sufficient boiling water to cover, with three or four sliced onions, h bnnch of herbs, about 12 black and white peppercorns, and enough salt to season It; bring to the boil, and simmer for 40 to 60 minutes, according to the size of the fowl. Then take up, remove the string and paper and dish up on a bed of steamed rice. Garnish with parsley and button mushrooms; serve the chicken for dinner while hot with cheese cream sauce. Cheese Cream Sauce. —Take spur ounces of good Swiss cheese, cut it up into very fine slices, put into a stewpan with half a cupful of cream and one-half a cupful of bechamel sauce aqd a dust of paprika pepper; stir these ingredients over tEe Ire until they melt, then use.
CHEAP TABLE FOR KITCHEN
Homemade Article aa Useful, and Looks as Well, as Any That Can Be Purchased. Not having money to buy just what I want, I have found this homemade kitchen table useful, relates a correspondent of Farm Progress. Take boxing lumber, 12 by 1 inch; make top, shelf and bottom of table and take ceiling lumber for walls and doors. Make the top 4 feet long, 2*4 feet wide and the table 2% feet high. Put
a 6 by 1 around top and bottom. Spools are very nice for knobs on the drawers and doors. Or the knobs can be bought three for 10 cents. Cover the top With oilcloth and you have something very nice. A can of paint helps the looks greatly and only costs 25 cents. Cost $2.25, includes a coat of paint. You may have drawer or curtains.
Scotch Broth.
The following recipe was given me at a famous Dickens’ hotel in England : Take the liquor any muttpn has been boiled in and remove the fat when cold. Wash a cupful of pearl barley and put It on to boll. When done add to the liquor; also a turnip, carrot, onion, and a little celery. Boil until the vegetables are tender and serve. Grated raw carrot on the top of this soup improves the flavor and adds much to the appearance. There was enough of the stock, probably a large kettleful, so that the broth was thin. A single pound of mutton shoulder, the fat and skin removed before It Is cooked in two quarts of water, will flavor a barley liquid sufficiently for a delicate soup, but three pounds are often used. —To preservesome of the strength of the meat, which may be taken out, and used with a gravy or a curry sauce, saute it in hot fat and add boiling water to cook It. Left over barley porridge may be used for thickening a broth.
Hash in Pepper.
Cut the tops off from three green peppers and soak them in cold water while preparing the filling. Mix one cupful of chopped cold meat and onehalf cupful of chopped potatoes, and season with celery salt. Drain the peppers and fill with the hash mixture. Bake in a hot oven about 20 minutes.
Mother Ann’s Sandwich.
A slice of fresh bread; second, a thin slice of boiled ham; third, a hot fried egg; fourth, a hot fried banana, and this sandwich is then covered with potato salad. This dish is not recommended for invalids, but it really taste's good.
String Beans and Bacon.
String one quart of beans, break Into small pieces, boil until tender and drain. Melt one tablespoonful of butter in a frying pan; add the beans, four sHees of bacon cut Into small strips, and cook until the bacon is -crisp.- :— — -
Holds the Dust.
When cleaning upholstered furniture place a damp cloth over tlie piece before beating it The dust will adhere to the cloth and not rise In the room to settle on something else. Rinse tbe doth frequently during the cleaning.
Blanching Bed Linen.
When, you make sheets or pillow cases, after you boil them, pin them on the clothesline and let them stay out in the dew or frost for several nights, and they will be pretty and white. -
Alcohol Cleans.
To dean the small powder puffs carried iii the handbag or vanity case, dip them in alcohol. This cleans them perfectly and the softness of the puff is not destroyed. It also disinfects them.
One Thing Lacking.
. The family was going on an outing in the woods, and mother was packing the lunch basket. "Let me see,” she murmured. "I’ve got lettuce sandwiches, olive sandwiches, peanut butter sandwiches, macaroons, pickles, ginger snaps and chow-chow. I wonder If I’ve forgotten anything." “How about putting In something to eat?” said father sarcastically.
INFANT MORTALITY fa something frightful. We can hardly realize that of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent., or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year; thirty-seven percent., or more than one-third, before they are five,, and one-half before they are fifteen I . _ , ~ We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save a majority of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children 8 <* )ra lfl|U? ta more or less opium or morphine. They are, iu quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Castoria operates exactly the reverse, but you must see that it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Castoria causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the 4* - pores of the skin and allays fever. rS Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of
Missouri Gets 10,000 Quail.
Ten thousand quail that have been brought from Mexico to Missouri, where they will be used to restock depleted covers, will not suffer from the change of climate, because they were caught in the Coahuila mountains, and their former home waa lust nhout a» chilly in winter as their new one.
Literal Apprehension.
She —Let’s make up our minds to tell the folks we’re engaged. He—But, darling, I am afraid your father will kick.
W. L. DOUGLAS “THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE” ‘ $3,00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 & $5.00 Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. For sale by over 9ooo shoe dealers. W. » The Best Known Shoes in the World. A W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot- mat Ipß ' tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the price paid for them. nphe quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more JL than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart styles are the leaders A the Fashion Centres of America. / They are made in a well-eauipped factory at Brockton, Mass., / ._ gSM by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest j determination to make the best shoes for the price that moneyLg^JßHg^^N. can buy. SSIwIll Ask vonr shoe dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. If he can- %Bg4pjis| not supply you with the kind you want, take no other n , gwf by return mail, postage free. Jjp Shoes LOOK FOR W. L. Doughs hrtte «* W«M name and the retail price $3.00 $2.60 ft $240 stamped on the bottom. g. I. Douglas Shoe Co., Brockton. Mass.
ADVICE BY HETTY GREEN
Told Girl Stenographer to “Figure in Pennies and Bave Them.” During one of the periods of her economical living streaks the late Mrs. Hetty Green was staying at a moder-ate-priced boarding house, where a Jobless young stenographer came to konw her. The girl finally landed a position for sl2 a week and told Mrs. Green of It. “You’ve got to leave here." said the old woman emphatically. “You are not earning enough to pay so much for your keep. I’ll tell you where to go. There’s a" hotel for working girls 1 know. T lonffha man the money to 1 build It. There are washrooms there and sewing rooms. Make your own clothes and care for them. Get a roommate. It will cost .you only $4. Save $6 out ow your sl2. Do not go out nights. Watch your company. Dp what I tell you and you’ll get on. Anybody can. The trouble Is, most people don’t know tbe value of five cents. You are advised. Don’t figure In dollars ; figure In pennies, and save them.”
A Real Remedy.
“Do you know of a quick way to reduce fat?” “Yes?* “What is it?” “Thp present co|t of living.”
Theer are 13.600 workmeq employed In and about the mines of Arizona.
Card playing can’t be very wicked, as not one heart in the deck Is black.
Should Find You Equipped With I ‘WINCHBST£ n I Rifles and Cartridges I Such an equipment will insure your success, as it has I thousands of other hunters. Don t take a chance with other I makes, but take along Winchester Rifles and Cartridges— I the always-reliable kind. Made for all kinds erf shotting. I THE W BRAND BRINGS HOME THE GAME
Save the Babies.
Can't Perform a Miracle.
“A Virginia Inventor has brought out a motor-driven plow from the motor can be removed for other work about a farm," wild the city man. "Do you suppose It could he attached to the farmhand and make him move any faster?’
By an electrical refining process a plant In Norway 1" producing 60,00# tons of zinc annually.
Sinners' Own Fault.
Here is a good story going the round* of the press: An old negro preacher was taken to task by a member of bln congregation who Insisted that the pa*tor had "meant” him In one of his si*zllng sermons. “Brudder,” the preacher replied solemnly, "whewl shoots 4aims straight at de debll, and It’s only when somebody else gets lo between me and de target dat he gits hurt.”
Proportionally the Swiss antomoblln Industry has been growing faster than that of the United States.
Russian Line to Australia.
American firms who contemplate an extension of enterprise In this direction may be advised to consider tb* proposed action of tbe Russian government to establish a new line of ship* running between Melbourne and Sydney and Vladivostok. The Russian authorities have suggested that In the event of such a company being formed, with half Russian and half Australian capital, they would purchase the requisite ships, subsidize the company and take repayment in small sums over n long period. These are the proposal* set forth by a special trade envoy who visited the country under direction from the Russian chamber of export. —Commerce Report.—
A Declaration Demanded.
“How is Crimson Gulch going next election?” asked the stranger. “What’s your object?” inquired Bronco Bod. “I don’t quite understand yon.” “Locate yourself. If you’re lookin’ fur bets. It’s a legitimate question an* will be treated respectful. But If you’ro simply tryin’ to start a political argument, you’re In danger.”
His Burden.
Mrs. Flatbush —I see a woman is the Inventor of a suitcase that can be folded flat and carried under one arm when empty. Mr. Flatbush—Good! That leave* hubby’s other arm free to hold tbe other fourteen packages she has accumulated.
“Dr.” is an abbreviation frequently used to express the relation between patients and physicians.
