Evening Republican, Volume 59, Number 108, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 May 1917 — Page 3

W. L. DOUGLAS “ THE SHOE THAT HOLOS ITS SHAPE ” $3 $3.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & $8 ÜB*wBBL Save Money by JVearing W. L. Douglas : - shoes. For sale by over 9000 shoe dealers. The Best Known Shoes in the World. VV7. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the hot- *’ tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and tffl the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San Lfl Francisco than they do in New York They axe always worth the M price paid for them. SHU r I ’he quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more •*■ than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart V Y’wT’JS styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America. 7 They are made in a well-eouipped factory at Brockton, Mass., ly "WaTy by die highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and I J aot.' supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest determination to make the best shoes for the price that money jl can buy. Ask year shoe dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. If ho can- [ D /~ZTTIy 1 no* supply you with the kind you want, take no other lo|*±-substitutes St f make. Write for interesting booklet explaining how to LW w get shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price, 7J7 by return mail, postage free. two ™ - T President <7 W. L. Douglas Shoo Co., •tamped on the bottom. 186 Spar k Brockton, Mam.

Noncommittal.

“What do you think of Wallace being preferred to Washington as a national hero?” “Great Scot!”

FRECKLES New Is the Time to Get Bid of These Ugly Spots. There’s no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othlne double strength is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply gey an ounce ot othlne—double Strength—from your druggist, and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than one ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othtne. as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it falls to remove freckles. — Adv.

The Chicken Only.

Homely Aunt —Do you suppose those young mep are following us? Pretty Niece —One of us, auntie.

THE 3 D’S IN DODD’S J Mr. Robert W. Ferguson, Hingham, Mass,, writes: I suffered from kidney disorder for years. Had incessant backache and trouble. Nearly died tfrom It at one time while In Vancouver, but overcame it by a persistent use of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Finally I was completely cured. I occaslonally use the remedy now in order to keep the kidneys regulated. I have the highest praise for Dodd’s. Be sure to get “DODD’S,” the name with the three D’s for deranged, disordered, diseased kidneys, just as Mr. Ferguson did. No similar named article will do. —Adv. Falling in love is an event with some people ami a habit with others. Experience teaches us that the first robin is usually too optimistic.

1 ‘ * I 1 |»| >< I*l | The Purchase of a Saxon IJ * Insures Riding Satisfaction I I Saxon cars are today generally recognized as g»| ’ the best cars in their price classes. - I g 1 Their greater value has been definitely and . decisively established by their performance ’ records in the hands of thousands of owners in all parts of the country. • ’ .p i n I The Saxon Motor Car Corporation has earned I*l1 *1 one of the biggest successes in the automobile \ | g industry. It owes its success to the policy of g building good cars and building them in quan- j| | 11 tities. Its cars have won the respect of the | I motor buying public. Such absolute satisfaction as is represented in I 11 the following testimonial is the big reason back *1 | ! of Saxon success-: "I want to say that Saxon ‘Six’ is an automobile that will do all the Saxon Motor Car Cor- : a | | * | poration claims it will do—and more. i ’g driven our car many thousand milea and can honestly aay it is the easiest riding car we ever rode in.” .-/■ |f JOHN A. DIXON, Seneca, S. D. |f Saxon Motor Car Corporation IBL I Detroit, Michigan ’ 0 Ilg There is still some good territory open for |y| Saxon dealers. For information you should |||§|| |n|| apply to ’.l. - .r—.. jg.—— —*-——<•»-. hHi.IIh |M| Saxon Automobiie Company of 111. gn| Chicago, HL _ MCTwHy |HR9}n

Electric Outboard Motor.

An outboard motor which can be attached in five minutes to a canoe or rowboat that is driven by an electric motor has just been put on the market in Chicago. The motor is on top of tin* ma in driving- shaft, and this is in a vertical telescopic tube. The propeller is driven through a modified worm gear. It is operated on two storage batteries of six volts, 120 ampere hours each.

| YES! MAGICALLY! | | CORNS LIFT OUT I j WITH FINGERS | You say to the drug store man, “Give me a small bottle of freezone.” This will cost very little but will positively remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one’s feet. A few drops of this new ether compound applied directly upon a tender, aching corn relieves the soreness instantly, and soon the entire corn or callus, root and all, dries up and can be lifted off with the fingers. This new way to rid one’s feet of corns was introduced by a Cincinnati man, who says that freezone dries in a moment, and simply shrivels up the corn or callus without irritating the surrounding skin. -——— If your druggist hasn’t any freezone tell him io order a small bottle from his wholesale drug house for you.—adv.

Aniline Dye’ Industry.

A laboratory for research work In the possibilities of coal tar products Is to be established at Johns Hopkins university, with the co-operation of gas companies of Philadelphia and Baltimore. The purpose Is to develop the aniline dye industry.

A man of words and not of deeds, is like a garden full of weeds.

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

PREPARE MORE LAND -GROW MORE FOOD -“Seed and Feed” the Slogan of the Year. The papers are filled with the appeal for soldiers, sailors and farmers, and all are timely, all are necessary. The sailor is needed to man the, ships that protect the shores, police the seas and clear the ocean of tormenting and meddlesome masked buccaneers, to give help to the allies, to make more efficient the present fighting units that are keeping free ,the sea lanes and ocean routes. The soldier is required to keep alive and intact the unity of the nation and the freedom of the world, to protect the lives of its citizens from incursions without and raids within, to guard the honor and preserve the dignity of the great United State* to render not only sentimental but practical assistance to those who for two and a half years on the battlefields of Flanders and the steppes of the East have been fighting for the freedom of the world against a dominant autocratic and militarist Prussianlsm, which, were It to become successful, would mean autocratism, militarism and Prussianism, and a “get-off-the-sldewalkism” over the entire world. The allies are proud to welcome these new accessions to the fighting forces, which mean an earlier termination of the war and the dawn of an era that will be historic, one that we will all be proud that we lived in. Throughout all Canada, Great Britain, France, and all the allied countries, when the news was received that the United States had entered the war, a thrill went up and down the nation’s sides, and the pulses throbbed with a new life, keenly appreciative of the practical sentiment that had brought to their sides an ally of the strength and virility of the United States. Rut the soldier and the sailor need to be fed, and therefore the cry for agricultural enlistment. The strength of the fighting man must be maintained. In his absence from the field there comes the necessity for provision to take his place. The anneaLforf arm help is well timed, opportune and important. There are vacant lands aplenty in the United States that, given a fair opportunity under competent advisement and reasonable help, will produce abundantly. Western Canada also provides an excellent field for the prosecution of work in growing wheat and other grains, and while it is not the desire of the Canadian Government to draw from the resources of the United States, believing that it is the duty of every patriotic citizen to do all he possibly can to build up the stores of depleted foods and making use of every energy at home, the wish is to lay before the public the fact that Canada has millions of acres of excellent land capable of producing wonderful crops. If for any reason the reader, having patriotism and a love of his country in his heart, and a desire to forward the cause of the allies, cannot avail himself of the opportunities afforded in the United States, Western Canada will be glad to render him any assistance it can in locating him on its vacant areas, where large crops can be grown at minimum of cost. Let us grow the grain,, raise the cattle, produce the food to feed our soldiers, our sailors and provide food for our allies, no matter whether it is done to the North or to the South of the boundary line that in the object Ln view should not be known as a boundary. Let us keep up the spirit of patriotism, whether it be growing grain in the United States or in Canada, but Canada, fully alive to the necessity, joins in the appeal ofTts allies—the United States—for more food and more food.—Advertisement.

Camouflage.

A remarkable interpretation of the British national characteristic reserve, appears lij. the Century, entitled Camouflage. _lt is the story of two young people on the eve of the husband’s going to battle. “For the benefit of those who may not be acquainted with what camouflage means, it might be truthfully described as a thin veil drawn over great events. “There are endless varieties of camouflage, and endless uses to which it may be put. A great white road is concealed from the enemy’s lines by a hedge of thinly plaited twigs —camouflage. An observation point hidden in the heart of a haystack—camouflage. A mighty gun masked by an awning of fishermen’s nets, sprinkled with dead leaves—camouflage. A corpse brought in from no-man's land and replaced by a live man, who watches what Is toward tn the Huntrenches—again camouflage. But, perhaps, the subtlest variety of all is the kind that men and women devise to screen their real emotions from one another and,tho - world."

Helpful Conservation.

As for the food problem now confronting the nation, we favor the elimination from the household economy of all waste, such as boiled cabbage, but at the same time the careful avoldanceofanythlng in the nature of hysteria, which would involve the needless sacrifice, of such food products as strawberries or maple sirup, for instance. —Columbus (O.) Journal.

Culinary Dialogue.

*How do you cook pork and beansF “That Isn’t the question. How do you get’emF „ “ • •

Home Town Helps

LET GARDEN MATCH HOUSE Splendid Effects Can Be Secured If a Flowers Are In Harmony With the Living iind Bed Rooms. '* / If thought and care are given to it a small garden may be made as lovely in its way as a large one. To get the most enjoyment out of a small plot of ground try planting your garden to match your house. Make a careful survey of each room and another of your vaseff. flower bowls, etc.; then with these in your mind sit down and go through the catalogue. If your guest room is pink and white any guest would feel herself welcome if she were greeted by that lovely pink bowl you got last Christmas set on the bureau and filled with long sprays of pink snapdragons. Your-own bedroom may be yellow, the living room may he old gold with touches of old blue and yellow and the dining room may be old.blue and just need a touch of yellow to make it perfect. If so be sure and have a bed of-corntiowers and cal I Innsis • the Him-, bination is wonderful. The squatty brown jug full of stiff, tawny marigolds will look well In the easement window sill and the same flowers in the low black bowl on the dining room table will fie beautiful. And you must surely have a patch of nasturtiums. They look so cool and crisp in a glass bowl on a hot day. especially if the bowl is filled with a carbonated w’ater.

PLANS ARE MOST IMPORTANT

Home Builder Should Begin by Placing House to Leave as Much Space as Possible for Lawn and Gardens. Begin your house with the plan! A good plan makes a good exterior. So place your house on your land that as much as possible it left for lawn and gardens, which are the out-of-doors roomsxjio. not put it in the middle of. the lat. This is the advice of an experienced builder. -Make each of-the rooms self contained ; don’t throw them all together by cutting large openings in the partitions. » Choose some -good and simple exterior as a model for your house and follow it as closely as possible; do not choose a door from one place, a porch or a window from another, a dormer from a third and so on, and then expect to combine these into a unified whole. It can be done but only by an expert. . Wall space is very important in any room; do not cut this up too much with doors and windows. Parts of any house should be proportioned to the whole; do not use large porches or observation windows in a little house.

Hammock Stand Worth While.

Instead of hanging the hammock from house to tree or clothes-line pole or pergola, buy a hammock stand and awning which can be moved about the yard to any location you may desire at any time; under this awning build, a little platform, which will allow you to use the hammock when the ground is damp, without danger of catching cold by wetting your feet; and you may also inclose the whole affair in screening, thereby making a comfortable sleeping room for a hot night. Around the yard plant as many shrubs and flowering plants as space will permit, and then see that the grass is kept as well watered and trimmed as is that on the front lawn. Do these things and you will not only enjoy them yourself, but some day when you want to rent or sell the house, you will find it a much easier task than would be the case if you had nothing back of the house to show except an unsightly back yard.

Harmony With Surroundings.

A house should harmonize with Its surroundings in design, color and materials. A house standing out boldly on the top of a hill and visible for miles should differ essentially in appearance from one nestling in among the trees at the edge of the woods,' from a house on the banks of a lake or from a villa set back from the village street. Every natural advantage from the standpoint of health, view, light and convenience should be utilized, every disadvantage neutralized. The amount of money to be expended Is a factor determining the extent and manner in which other two vital, elements may be best met and mastered.

Importance of Streets.

It seems to urf'tbat it i*the duty of all civil -engineers, and of city engineers in particular, to lose no opportunity to sitread the gospel of clean streets, and therefore of better pavements. It is peculiarly their duty to lead in political movements that will result in changes of city ordinances respecting assessments for street improvements. The antiquated abutting property method of assessment is sufficient in Itself .to. block progress, and there are many other legal obstacles of like nature. But the greatest obstacle of all is public Ignorance of the ?ause and prevention of respiratory diseases.— -Engineering and Contracting,

His Wish.

Th red men went out for a day’s tailing. They togk a bottle with “bait.” They drank too much. A storm came up, and two of them thought they were going to be drowned. The third was asleep in the bottom of the boat. The two talked over what they wished done with their bodies in the event of either beliig saved. One wished to be c.remate<f; the other to be sent home to his wife. Then they asked the one in the bottom of the boat what his wish was, and when he “came to” enough to talk he aaid; “You can just pour me back In the bottle.”

HEAL BABY RASHES That Itch, Burn and Torture With Cutlcura—Trial Free, A hot Cuticura Soap bath is soothing to irritated skins when followed by a gentle application of Cuticura Ointment. Use Cuticura for every-day toilet preparations to prevent such troubles. After this treatment baby sleeps mother rests and healment follows. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept L, Boston. Sold everywhere. —Adv.

Keeping Honey.

Many housekeepers do not know the right place in which to store honey and unthinkingly put it in the cellar or a dark, cool place. On the contmry, hmtey shmrtd-atways be kept in a dry, warm place, even at-100 degrees. If kept in a damp place the “cappings” of the comb become watery and the honey oozes through, but if the comb is kept where the air is warm and dry it will remain In more perfect condition.

Halted.

“Did. you ever think about owning your own home?” asked the agent. "Yes, and I’ve tried it, too,” said the other. Then the talk drifted into politics.

S| CASTQRIA I r ° r Infants and Children. Mothers Know That I Genuine Castoria 70TOHOL-3 PER GEN]- | * I____ B ® ears /zG u QieeffctaessandftatCMW /l\ \P Of 4vv I I IA " I feJ IJr ln (ur r ft \Jr For Over Far-SimMe Si^nawe. rs H JSE- Thirty Years CASTORIA Bxact Copp of Wrapper. —raw oqswv. ms orrv. As Age Advances the Liver Requires CARTER’S S. * little LIVER PILLS JUgF IpYu?. constipation . x V AmM Genuine ~~ bear* zr t ' si* nature r V*" Colorless or Pale Face. a condition which will be greatly helped by V aftCr SMFOIIgTIIS

What Gallon of Gasoline Will Do.

A single gallon of gasoline will do wonders almost anywhere, but nowhere it has been applied to better purpose than on the farm. Here are some of its stunts: It will milk 300 cows, bale four tons of hay, mix 35 yards of cement, move a ton truck 14 miles, plow three-fifths of an acre of land and make enough electricity to keep eight lights going in a farmhouse for 30 hours.

When a man is twenty he expects to get rich, and’ by the time he is forty he hopes to avoid the poorhouse. Women are naturally foolish, because they were made to match tha men. The race is not always to the swift and it is never to the loafer. When Vour Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy

ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE jb gn The Antiseptic ;■ Powder. Shake it in Ueeitin : FOR Your !; | V Foot-Bath Use ft in the Morning: ' And walk ail day in comfort. Atni*ht,snril*-' l ' kleitin the foot-bath, and soak and rub lha > , fiet. It freshen, the feet, takes the Friction , ' from the Shoe, and by protectin* your hose ' ' and stockin** from this friction, save* ten , , time* its cost each yearon your atockinr bill. > For over 25 years baa ; been the STANDARD REMEDY for hot. , I swollen, smartin*, tender, tired, perspirinr. f achinrfeet, corns, bunion*, blisters and calIn"every community men are drillinr for , /National Preparedness. For all these men > <the frequent use of Allen’s Foot—Ease in- [ ' creases their efficiency and insures needed , i physical comfort. If you walk or stand this ,■ i ia what you need. ? Used by British and French troops >■ l , ' Europe and by the troop* on the Mexican;, ' Border. Sold by Dru* and Dept, stores every-,; 'where. 25c. Sample Fit ER bv mail. Address, [ ' LALLEN^OLMSTEDyJLE.RQY._N > Y Siv , Bll rv ft® ft® WHNB w **| tresh. roli.t4e: » . n .B. M men. because they I JM wfl wvteet whore ether mC I 1 — - ■ vbmlsm failjyiTTr rzr ETiEzE 2S* irJJJ " II m w ,eetaafce»andW*aa** b-fl The superiority of Cunee products Is duet* overt* II ye.™ oi ■peciaUda* Is VACCIMS* AxosaaUM* If only, insist ox Curran s. It uaobcaiaabte, II HAIR R B ALS AM a toilet pretmntioa ot merit. ISKMC .B Helps to eradicate dandruff. WfXL Forßastarm* Color and Baauty to Gray or Faded Hair. CmtwlH sod sl.fi at Drurrleta. For Sale W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 20--191 Z.

Kill All Flies! ™ E disease* o find y nr *»— etteym Mm, Mart. dM. ne—tal, amyielint, m< Aas;. Dalav Fhr Kilter W fa mmols scare**. a*n —MMamau a. v KIDNEY TROUBLE “51£‘, IS? you can make no mistake by using Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney medicine. At druggist* in fifty cent aaj| dollar sices. Sample si«e bottle by Parcel Post, also pamphlet telling you about ft. Address Dr. Kilmer A Co.. Binghamton. N. T.. and enclose ten cents, also mention this paper. ■ \ * ♦ *■* SUBURBAN HOME FOR SALE r m oomtM. BUKOO Ryaala er eschseeaieei'l—yropwty, equity A •I7JOO ia tmutgnbelfkiß eMsAeet fiftamwneaa the Ti f t ToT i I*l T mTm***-?