Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 186, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 August 1917 — Page 3

Was Laid Up In Bed Doan’s, However, Restored Mrs. Vogt to Health and Strength. Hasn’t Suffered Since. ney complaint imaginable,’* says Mrs. Wm. Vogt. 6315 Audrey Ave., Wellston, Mo., "and I wag laid up in bed for days at a time. . .. "My bladder was Inflamed and the kidney secretions caused terrible pain. My back was In Buch bad shape that when I moved the •Wt pains were like a knlfeML —.W thrust. I got so dizzy I V s B couldn’t stoop and my vX A \ p head just throbbed with \lJF'_ / pain. Beads of persplJ ration would stand on my then I vjr would become cold and numb. ’ "My heart action was MRS. VOGT, affected and I felt as if I couldn’t take another breath. I got so nervous and run down, I felt life wasn’t worth living and often wished that I might die so my suffering would be ended. Medicine failed to help me and I was discouraged. "Doan’s Kidney Pills were recommended to me and I could tell I was being helped after the first few dosea I kept getting better every day and continued use cured me. My health Improved in every way and best of all, the cure has been permanent. I feel that Doan a saved my life.” Sworn to before me, HENRY B. SURKAMP. Notary Public. Get Doan's at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.

Kill All Flies! ™ ms EASE AD Placed anywhere,Daley Fly Killer attracts and kills all Acs. Neat, dean, ornamental, convenient, and cheap. Flv Killer JEffIinjWWHBAHMy Sold by d..1.r., or S ml b, ozpmm. pr-p*u. *1.60. HAROLD SOMERS, ISO DS KALB AV*., BROOKLYN, M. V. DATEMTC Watson B. Coleman, f**l I ril I A Patent I.awyer,Washington, ■ *•■■■■■■ W D.C. Advice and books free. Bates reasonable. Highest references. Bestservlces. PARKER'S /’ MAIR BALSAM - A toilet preparation of merit Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair, 60c. and *I.OO at Drursrlits. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 32-1917.

A Toss-Up.

Mrs. —Are you going to plant turnips or cabbage in the yard? Mr. —Heads win.

CARE FOR YOUR SKIN And Keep It Clear by Daily Use of Cuticura —Trial Free. A hot bath with Cuticura Soap followed by a gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointment clears the skin or scalp In most cases of eczemas, rashes and Itching of children and adults. Make Cuticura your every-day toilet preparations and prevent such troubles. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.

A Turkish Love Story.

A Turk knocked at his beloved’s door, and a voice answered from within, “Who is there?’’ Then he answered, “It is I.” \ Then the voice said, “This house will not hold thee and me.” And the door was not opened. Then went the lover into the desert, where there is nothing but Allah, and fasted and prayed in solitude. And after a year he returned and knocked again at the door. And again the voice asked, “Who Is there?” And he said, "It is thyself.” And the door was opened to him. — Exchange.

Couldn’t Blame Him.

Jle —Do you like romantic girls? Jack —No. When you make a hole tn your bank account buying them flowers, they tear them apart, saying: “He loves me; he loves me not.”

Naturally.

Mrs. Kawler —Your daughter, I understand, has spent a great deal of her time in' Italy. Mrs. Blijinderby —Oh, yes, indeed; she’s quite Italicized.

Falsehood is like a nettle, because it actually stings those who venture to meddle with it. Alaska has this year sent out 1,220,016 cases of canned salmon. Principles cannot die.

A Perfect Day should end —as well as begin—with a perfect food, say — Grape-Nuts with cream. A crisp, delicious food, containing the entire nutriment of whole wheat and barley, including the vital mineral so richly provided by Nature in these grains. Every table should have its daily ration of Grape-Nuts. •‘There’s a Reason”

FLARE ABSENT IN FALL SILHOUETTE

Lines Will Fall Straight From Shoulder to Heel in the New Models. SKIRTS TO BE VERY NARROW House and Evening Gowns Will Touch the Floor—High Collar to Replace the Low One Now Worn. ■— '■ V ' ■ “ New York. —What the next few weeks holds for us in the way of fashions, not more than two dozen people in the world know. These are the French designers, who guard their secrets carefully and establish around

This new type of sport coat Is of white Jersey cloth trimmed with bands of black and white plaid jersey. The buttons are black, so is the sleeve lining.

their workrooms a detective force that has much in common with the French police system. Women who wanted to sketch gowns that were to be shown to the public in a few days have been caught and locked up in a dark room in one of the houses as though they were common criminals caught in the act. All the processes of the French law, and they are severe and terrorizing to the stranger, are called into being to punish an offender who tries to get a deelgn of a gown from a French house without permission. - There are leaks, however, from the great French - workrooms, as well as from our departments in Washington. Somehow, somebody knows the truth. Rumors From Paris. The things that we have been able to find out are interesting. They may prove true. The new silhouette, it is sqid, will be slim and tight just below the waistline, around the hips, and there will be no flare from shoulder to instep. Coats are cut to the hipline and are either bound in with fur or embroidered cloth. There Is no attempt to curve garments in at the waistline. There is no attempt to flatten the fabrics against the figure in order to outline the anatomy beneath. The cloth will hang in a straight line from the shoulder to the girdle at the hips, thereby giving a well-known Oriental silhouette that has come • and gone through the fashions in recurring cycles. Skirts will be exceedingly narrow for walking, and for the evening they will be long and in flowing lines that do not flare, but cling to the figure In the fashion of the Orient.

House gowns and evening gowns will touch the floor and cover the toes in front, swirling out into greater length at the back. The high collar, .it is said, will replace the low one. ’Mie decolletage that is expected is the straight, Italian line of the fifteenth century, used in men’s costumery as well as women’s. In opposition to this is the high, straight collar that does not fit under the chin, thereby causing an ugly roll of flesh, but flares upward and outward. It is the collar that Sarah Bernhardt made famous more than a quarter of a century ago. These collars are shown on shirtwaists and one the bodices of formal and informal frocks. The immense handkerchief collar of the Revolution will be put on coats, so rumor says, and the deep, delta decolletage adopted in the American Revolution will be used on dinner and restaurant gowns. Plentiful Use of Fur. No cable from Paris excludes the word fur. If one can judge by these forerunners of what is to happen, such as rumors, personal letters and cables, the animal world will be sacrificed to clothe women. No one can tellwhere all the skins come from, but it is skid that in Paris every designer Is lavishing fur on costumery as though it were as plentiful as grass. The few coat suits that will be shown, so the cables say, will be half fur and half cloth. Entire short coats of fur bound around the hips in the new way will be offered with knifeplaited or box-plaited skirts of cloth or velvet One-piece gowns will have old-fash-ioned dolmans pf fur fitted across the front by broad straps that wrap around the waist Capes of fur lined with velvet or satin will have deep waistcoats in front that hold them securely to the

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER. IND.

figure, and the skirt beneath will be plain or plaited. It is definitely said that the extension at the sides of skirts which goes under the name of umbrella drapery will be abolished. What is known as the melon skirt, or jupe tonneau, will be dismissed a? worthless. The exclusive dressmakers with keen vision, who persuaded their patrons to buy flat, Egyptian skirts, plaited from waist to hem, should now receive a letter of gratitude, because, it is said, these Alexandrian garments will remain at the height of fashion and whatever has a bulge in it will be out of the picture. V. ■ ■- Witt -Brocades Be A fashion reporter who was at the remarkably successful fabric exposition recently held in Lyons, France, gives a bit of most interesting news concerning the introduction of brocade. It is this: That the most exquisite brocade with an unusual design has already been made at Lyons for Mme. Poincaire, the wife of the president of the French republic, to be worn when peace is declared. This brocade is closely guarded and its design is not allowed to be copied. Whatever celebration France expects to have when peace is declared will be the circumstance that will unlock the case where this brocade is kept. Mme. Poincaire will receive it as a gift from Lyons, and some great dressmaker wilL prepar eiL This piece of cloth is not the only evidence of what the manufacturers of Lyons believe to be possibly near. Literally, a half mile or so of gold and silver brocade has been wovea and is now held in reserve for the celebration of peace. This weaving represents the very highest pinnacle of the craftsmanship of the master weavers of Lyons. It Is said in exclusive circles that the purchase of all of this brocade has been arranged for by dressmakers and individuals of power and prestige in Paris. Another new silk which was shown at Lyons and which is said to be very beautiful is called La Solell de la Vic? tolre. It is so eminently French for its workers to reflect their hopes, their sacrifices and their faith in terms of fabrics and women’s clothes! Fashions That Follow the Army. It is no longer considered in good taste to wear anything that resembles the American flag. That unfortunate episode in our national costumery has passed by. It is in gbod taste to wear a dark blue coat and line it with red; a blue and white striped awning skirt may carry a red sweater above it; but the hawking about of the national colors in the very moment when they are to be baptized by the blood of thousands who are fighting for an ideal, and by the willing sacrifices of women who are pushing their men forward on the path of that idealism, is too vulgar to be permissible. —— There are other fashions, however, that follow the army, that have nothing to do with the colors. The coat

Here is a pretty redingote In plaid. It is made of fine voile in gray, with crossbars of cerise and white. It is worn over an accordion plaited skirt of plain gray voile. Revers and chemisette of white voile trimmed with cerise.

suit, for instance, that has a Wesi Point ’Skirt and an Annapolis jacket fastened with brass buttons patterned after those of the English admiralty, is an acceptable and bit of fashion. The white duck tam-o’-shanters patterned after those worn by the men of the navy; the dark blue flannel middy blouses laced with white cord and finished with white and blue pique collars have nothing objectionable about them. (Copyright, 1317, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

To Wash Black Silk.

To wash black silk brush and wipe it thoroughly, lay it on a flat table with the side up which is Intended to show and sponge with hot coffee, strained through muslin. Allow it to become partially dry, then iron.

Safe.

Madge was three years older than her baby brother, and felt herself equal to assuming the responsibilities of big sisterhood. When, therefore, her mother asked her to “keep an eye” on the baby and see that he didn’t fall out of bed, Madge answered: “Yes, mamma, I’ll mind him; an’ if he falls I’ll call you the minute he hits the floor.” —Pearson’s Weekly.

Near a Storm Center.

“Tm sorry I built right here.” “Why?” "Because they do say that sound carries best southeast of a storm center.” “What has that got to do with it?” "Well, I’ve just discovered by hearing your wife’s voice every night when you arrive home late that I live in a southeast dlrectiondtrom your house.”

Rastus Gets the Idea.

Owner—Doyou mean to say, Rastus, that you are going to charge me three dollars for digging that small trench? Rastus —Wah prices, boss; wah prices. You see, dey is using so awful many trinches in dat Yourapln wah, dat de price on trinches is gone sky high.

In Fat Berth.

Towne —No; Grafton doesn’t work at all now. Browne—He doesn’t? Why, when I knew him he seemed to be a young man with considerable push. Towne—All that’s changed now. He’s a young man with considerable pull and doesi’t have to work.—Catholic Standard and Times.

—A mouse is afraid of a man. A man is afraid of a woman, and a woman is afraid of a mouse—sometimes. Temper, not trouble, makes the misery of most men’s and women’s lives.

SAXON SIX A BIG TOURING_ CAR FOR FIVE_ PEOPLE 25.9 Miles Per Gal. of Gas ♦ _ 234 stock model Saxon “Sixes” travel 70,200 miles July 18 and set grand average of 25.9 miles per gaL of gas

To give a national demonstration of the remarkable gasoline economy of Saxon “Six”, 234 Saxon dealers joined in a 300 mile drive July 18. A grand average of 15.9 miles per gallon of gasoline was registered for the 70,200 miles of travel. Consider that this run took place in 234 different parts of the country, under 234 different sets of conditions, over 234 different kinds of roads. Consider, that these 234 cars were stock model Saxon “ Sixes ”, not “ tuned up ” special cars, not cars with “doped” gasoline.

Naturally Grave.

“I have here,” said the party with the unbarbered hair who had ejected his person into the editorial sanctum when the office boy wasn’t looking, “a little poem entitled, *A Pauper’s Grave 1’ ” “Huh!” growled the editor. “Nothing remarkable’about that. Who has a better right to a grave than a pauper? You certainly wouldnt’ expect his mirth to slop over, would you?”

Suspicious.

Molly—Everything went off splendidly and didn’t the bride look beautiful? Dolly—Yes. She told me after, the ceremony there was only one drawback—that she thought her father looked too cheerful when he gave her away.

To be witty at the expense of somebody <£lae is sometimes positive cruelty.

CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the ZJn Jr Signature / - - AV a lA 1 . IM 2e£~ i n ilD* in Bl! 1 n r use. ' 1 IP r-- fiunr facsimile H Thirty Years Igß CASTORIA Bxact Copy of th, etirr.w —w>wv,

Saxon Motor Car Corporation, Detroit

“I’m glad you’re over the draft age.” “Why?” “Think how humiliated I should be to have to admit that I was dependent on your stingy salary every week for my living.”

Gf-een Golfer (to caddip)— What are you looking there for? I must have driven It 50 yards farther than that. Diplomatic Caddie —Yes. sir; but sometimes they hit a stone and bounce back a terrible distance, sir.

“Senor, can you handle any. Villa money?” “That depends. Is it baled?” —Louisville Court er-Journal.

California products will this year bring to the state.

That proves that this 25.9 miles per gallon of gasoline is the ordinary, the average performance of 234 Saxon “Sixes” taken right out of stock. And it proves as nothing else would prove, the gasoline economy your Saxon “Six” will give you. No other car in its class can match this record. Furthermore, these 234 Saxon “Sixes” averaged 175 miles per quart of oil. And not a single instance of mechanical trouble occurred throughout the entire 70,200 miles. There is the proof that Saxon to your kind of a car. Price fc o. b> Detroit* $935.

His Wife’s Little Shot

Wise Caddie.

The Only Way.

Wise Precaution.

Visitor—When writing about China do you refer to it as a republic or a monarchy? Editor —Always the opposite to what it Is at the moment It’s bound to be the other by the time the articles gets Into print

He Read a Book.

First Tramp—What did Exhausted Ernest die of? Second Tramp —Starvation. He read, in a doctor’s book that you mustn’t eat when you're tired. \

Love and war go hand In hand. Even the din of battle has a sort of engagement ring. When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy