Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 265, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 November 1917 — Page 3
“Bine” and Worried! "Blvs.” worried, balf-eick people should find out the cause of their troubles. Often it is merely faulty kidney action, which allows the blood to get loaded up with poisons that irritate the nerves. Backache, headaches, dizziness and annoying bladder troubles are added proofs that the kidneys need help. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Thousands thank them for relief from just sueh troubles. An Illinois Case Mrs. Gust Michel, -t—_ ftt-, Trtfci SR«" 672 Marlon St.. Waukegan, 111., says: "I was laid up for a month at a time, un- ss wLaM able to do any work BW’TM at all. I couldn't lift fl the least weight, because of the sharp £2 lfl(. Sains that went IJvUmW irough my back JWMfcr and limbs. My kidneys, I knew, were L'lMr In terrible shape be- gP IS cause of the way they sated. I was Ugfl MvgjjMl often dl.Mcy and could see spots before my f eyes. It was no time before Doan’s Kidney Pills rid me of the trouble and I was up doing my work again.” Gat Doan’s al Any Store, 6Oc a Be* DOAN’S FOSTER-MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. N. Y. I RWM™ E 1 ORIGINAL Z'W CHEMICAL! Lfwlndoor Closer IvL - SO,OOO SOLD—FIFTH TUI Comfortable, ■rW||' , '']rjr Healthful, Convenient 71 Eliminate, the out-house, ■Lfl Pi 30 B open vault and oew pool, ■ ml fl n ,y<*| which are breeding places ■JI Dll I DAi-'B for germs. Have a warm. ■Hn mH '■ sanitary, odorless toilet right ” B 1 TOISLB in your house. Nogotngout f in cold weather. A boon to invalids. Endorsed by State Boards of Health. ABSOLUTELY ODORLESS Put It Anvwhere In The House The germs are killed by a chemical process in water In the container. Bmpty once a month. No more trouble to empty than ashes. Closet absolutely guaranteed. Ask for catalog and price. ROWE SANITARY MFG. CO., 12R11 6th St.. DETROIT, RUCH. Ask about the Ro-San Washstand Hot and Cold Rnnnlng Water Without Plumbing.
FEA PARTY IN A HOSPITAL
Laughter and Music Featured a Social Event Attended by American and English Officers. - ■■ iAs one of the contrasts of war I shall not soon forget the American tea party in one of the hospital tents, writes a New York correspondent. Not far away was a military cemetery which grows and grows with Its forest of crosses, and in the tents near by American surgeons and American nurses were dealing with wounded men Just down from the Tront But In the other tent to which I went as a guest there was merry music played by English bandsmen, and all the tent was filled with color from the intertwined flags of America and England among great bouquets of summer flowers of France. Above the music rose laughter and the voices of American and English officers and nurses. It was a tea party given by the nurses of the American medical unit which had been working over here for a year to the newcomers of the United States Medical corps and to British officers from the neighboring tents. There were greetings between college girls who had come together as comrades again in this great adventure on French soil. Young doctors from the Southern states held out a glad hand to friends from New York and Chicago. Here were breezy salutations between Georgians and Virginians, between men of Cincinnati and girls of Boston and Atlantic City.
Better Still.
“My ancestors came over in the Mayflower, sir.” “Indeed? My two sons have Just gone over In a transport.”
Everybody’s Luck.
The bargain hunter is just as apt to And a gold brick as anyone else.
Marriage Is a poor eyeopener for those who are blinded by Jealousy. It takes a woman with sound Judgment to generate silence. Honest men are almost as scarce as silent women. v
Save In the Use of Wheat By eating Grape-Nuts All the food value of the grain is used m making this delicious food; and its blend of malted barley not only adds to its nourishing qualities but produces a flavor of unusual —nesSi-------AU Food— . No Waste!
ORIGINAL MODELS HARD TO OBTAIN
Women Have Little Chance for Individual Dressing at Present CARE IN BUYING NECESSARY New Form of Oriental Skirt Now Popular Has Two Openings for the Feet and la CloseiUlLthe Center. New York. —The merry-go-round of fashion continues. Each of the great centers where women’s apparel is sold reports an extremity of business that has caused the work people a loss of sleep and threatened the heads of the departments with a nervous collapse. Naturally, women object to having their gowns copied, and there Is a hubbub in the apparel world concern Ing the well established fact that th gown which is imported at a cost <>. S6OO can be bought for S6O as a copy at one of the ready-to-wear shops. There is no remedy for this condition. The woman who insists upon wearing models that are exhibited in the early part of the season must face the fact that she is apt to be repeated through the streets or at parties as . though shq were gazing irko a maze of mirrors. There are experts who say that the remedy for this condition lies in the hands of the American designers. They say that if the latter will create hundreds of gowns which are as agreeable and satisfying to women as the French models, there will be a chance for individual dressing. This sounds well, but there are great difficulties in the way of establishing' it as a reliable theory. An American designer who has ma de a remarkable reputation for her clothes insists that she does not design more than a dozen models during a season and that she hopes to feell a thousand gowns from these models. There you are. Knowledge of Gowns Valuable. The knowledge of gowns —their silhouettes, their fabrics, their various movements —will be first aid to those who are seeking not to be Injured by buying what they don’t want. It is not necessary to purchase a gown merely because It strikes your fancy; it is a very good thing to see everything than can be arranged for your Inspection and then, out of all of them, choose the one which you like the best and which you think Is the least apt to be worn by all your neighbors. If you don’t mind this duplication on every side, then buy the gown which suits you, regardless of how often It will appear. But the main thing to remember is that you must not be disappointed If
This gown is made of peach-colored de chine, and the girdle-bodice is held in place with a necklace of dark green beads, which is repeated in a girdle. The slightly full skirt falls to the ankles, where part of the hem is turned Into a Turkish trouser effect for one foot to pass through.
you’re not individual. There are certain gowns that stand out as symbols of popularity. The first one that comes to mind is a Bulloz creation of a one-piece frock made in deep brown velours with a slight cascade effect down the side of, a moderately narrow skirt. The distinguishing feature is a wide chain made from gold mesh, which from around the neek drops to the waist and seems to support an immense square of this gold mesh which looks for all the world like a woman’s shopping bag spread out across the abdomen and attached to the belt. Another is a medieval gown of deep purple velvet, with long, angel sleeves and a sweeping skirt that goes to the floor.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER. IND. *
Another is a edat suit in which th® Jacket has a deep' point in front and a rippling bustle at the back. There are a dozen more, but these come to mind more quickly than any of the others. The Oriental Skirt It is extraordinary hdw the Oriental skirt has held its own. Here it la with us again, and if one wanted to be historical, it would be necessary to go back to the early days of Paul Polret, then Mme. Cheruit and then Callot and write of their efforts to make this tucked-in, Oriental garment the fashion. Jenny has clung to it with a tenacity worthy of a better fashion. She
This is the Colonial type of hat worn in the street, it is made of cardinal velvet, with « frill and cockade of white grosgrain ribbon.
has not varied the rather ugly line of the skirt movement which she adopted. She gathers the skirt to the waistline, turns the fullness at the bottom up to a tight, narrow lining the legs as the wearer walks. This season she has produced a novelty in the form of a skirt that is more truly Oriental than the other, and in tine she Is side by side with half a dozen of the great French designers who have shown this skirt without any apology for its decided Orientalism. ——" The distinctive feature in which this new skirt differs from the old one, both being taken from the Orient, is that it has two openings for the feet and Is closed in the center. Such a trick being adopted by smart society gives the eccentric designers a chance to do daring and remarkable things. There is one gown which has an opening for the left foot, but not for the right one. There is another that has two pear-shaped openings for the feet directly in front, with the outer edges of the hem sewed together, alTowing the fullness to cling to the outside of the ankles. The only eccentric trick that remains for some French designer to do is to put the opening for the right foot at the back and the opening for the left foot at the front. Considering what has been created, one expects such a development of this particular fashion at any moment. There is no use arguing against this new type of Oriental skirt for evening wear. It will prevail without douht among those who like what is new and what Is graceful, and is no denying the exquisite grace of this type of Oriental cklrt, and the good setting it gives to a slim ankle and well-shaped foot. If there only could be a law against women with broad, thick, ankles and broad feet wearing this type of evening skirt, we would be a better dressed nation, but as yet no censor of fashions has arisen. Callot’s Gowns for America. This development of a new skirt is not the only interesting feature of fashions in this particular garment. A certain set of designers is endeavoring, despite the cry for economy in material, to establish a skirt that touches the ankles for the street and the toes for the evening. A few of the best American designers are back of this movement in an alliance with the French. There are such leaders as Callot, however, who make no compromise, but cut the hems of their skirts to the shoetops for the street and an inch lower for the evening. Another piece of bravado is the way Callot gives sleeves to her gowns. They are long sleeves, or, yes, quite covering the arms as well as the back, but they’re made of a single piece of tulle and are attached to nothing more or less than a moderately high girdle which does not reach the arms at the sides or back by several Inches. She has one gown with oyster white sleeves and back of floating tulle made from a piece of tulle drapery that is banded for twelve inches with apple green tulle, and across the front of the wrapped satin bodice is a bias band of brilliant green crystal such as th® queens wear In court costume. Opposed to these evening gowns, she produces the robe of the stainedglass saints. It is of swinging velvet. In cathedral colors, and cover® up th® entire body from neck Jo heels with the exception of a -few inches at th® neck in front. (Copyright, 1917. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
Royal Baking Powder saves eggs in baking In many recipes only half as many eggs are required, in some none at all, if an additional quantity of Royal Baking Powder is used, about a teaspoon, in place of each egg omitted. Try the following recipes which also conserve white flour as urged by the government.
Com Meal Griddle Cakes IJ4 cup* corn meal 1 % cups boiling water ' 1 tafleapoon shortening ' 1 tablespoon molasses - „ M cup Hour I teaspoon salt _ * teaspoons Royal Baking Powder NO EGGS Benld corn meal in bowl with boiling water; add milk, melted shortening and molasses; add flour, salt and baking powder which have been sifted together; mix «eIL Bake on hot greased griddle until brown. (The Old Method called for 2 eggs)
Senator our new booklet "5S to Save Address Royal Baking Powder Co., Dept. W„ 135 William Street, Neio York
The Point of View.
The kind-hearted woman stopped to reprove the youngster who had chased a cat up a tree. “You bad boy, suppose you were a cat would you like to have anyone Chase you in that fashion?’’ “Gee! wouldn’t I, though, if I could climb like that!” said the youngster, grltmlng.
RELIABLE REMEDY RESTORES KIDNEYS For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy. It is a physician’s prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening mediprivate practice. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it will help you. No other remedy can successfully take its place. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N.T., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv.
Ridiculed His Wife.
Mental cruelty was the ground upon which a woman obtained a divorce in Reno, Nev. The woman said her husband constantly ridiculed her, refused to be seen alone with her at public gatherings and frequently showed his friends a little book entitled “Foolish Things My Wife Has Said.”
SIOO Reward, SIOO Catarrh is a local disease greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treatment. HALVB CATARRH MEDICINE fe taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by improving the general health and assists nature in doing its work. SIOO.OO for any case of Catarrh that HALL S CATARRH MEDICINE fails to cure. Druggists 75c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohl*.
Makes Up for Lost Time.
It takes a kitten nine days to get Its eyes open, but then It has nine Ilves to live to make up for it. John Constanzo of Pittsburgh Jias been arrested, accused of biting off his wife’s ears.
Middle Aged Women. MW-SZ Are Here Told the Best Remedy for Their Troubles. / # Freemont, O.—“I was passing through the critical i / fm/fAff/// '// period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all Mi. fwM !>. the symptoms incident to that change —heat flashes, Hi >SK^TfC****- ~ xSKj«K|;y nervousness, and was in a general run down condition, *1 Z yJuL y BO it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pink- \\ 1 Z,/ ham’s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as v Z/ / the best remedy for my troubles, which it surely proved r y ( \\!/ to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since .s x taking it, and the annoying symptoms have disap- Zl peared.”—Mrs. M. Godden, 925 Napoleon St, Fremont, /; if Ohio. 4 ' / B North Haven, Conn.—“ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- Z ble Compound restored my health after everything else had failed when passing through change of life. 1 here oWHn|aF<« MOM w is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms. w .... Mrs. Florence Isei.i.a, Box 197, North Haven, Conn. InSuch Cases EVDIAE. PINKHAM’S'’ VEGETABLE COMPOUND ’ ' - ' L > '''- ! ! T ’ ■ ■yS &os the greatest record far the greatest good ----- —\ : DfWA B.PINKHAM MtDICIMK CO. LYWM.MAS*.
Supplying the Names.
“So you have twins at your house?” said Mrs. Nabof to little Jack. “Yessura,” he said soberly, “two .ofthem.” “What are they going to call them, lay dear?*' > - “Well, I don’t know for sure, but I think their names is Thunder and Lightnln’, 'causeThat’s the names papa called them when the doctor came in and told him about them,”—New Puck.
Never Heard of It.
“Have fishermen a patron saint?" ~"Duhna Never heard of Ananias being canonized.”— Browning’s Magazine,
Every man is sure that his wife doesn’t realize how hard he has to work for his money. if people could go on Sunday excursions.
Raise High Priced Wheat on Fertile Canadian Soil Canada extends to you a hearty invite* I on to settle on her FREE Homestead I mds of 160 acres each or secure some I f the low priced lands in Manitoba, m and Alberta. Thia year wheat i* higher but L nd just a* cheap, so the opportunity is more at- B i ever. Canada wants you to help feed the world ■ ne of her fertile soil— land similar to that which ■ ' years ha* averaged 20 to 45 bushel* of wheat ■ Think of the money you can make with wheat I a bushel and land so easy to get. Wonderful ■ l also of Out*, Barley ami rlax. wlixed farming ■ estem Canada is as profitable an indurfry as growing. The Government thi* year is raking farmer* to put ta- ■ created acreage into grain. There is a great demand far ■ farm labor to replace the many young men who have ■ volunteered for rarvice. healthful and ■ churches convenient. Write far literature as to reduced ■ railwayrate9toSupt.oflmmigration.Ott*wa.C*a,octo ■ C. J. Broughton. Room 412, 112 W. Adame Street. Chicago, DI.; M. V. Maclnnea, 17S Jeff araoe Avenue. Detroit. Mich. gj Canadian Government Agent* K Fall Run of Distemper MAY BE WHOLLY AVOIDED BY USING taCDfIHMC** A small outlay of money bring* very 3r <lOll3 great results. It 1* a sure cure and a preventive if you use it as per directions. Simple, safe and sure. The $1 size is twice the quantity and an ounce more than the 50c size. Get your horses in best condition for late fall and winter. All druggists, harness dealers or manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO„ Msnnfactnrers, Geahea, InA,
Eggless, Milkless, Butteries* 1 rap brown sugar % 1% cup* water 1 teaspoon nutmeg 1 cup seeded raisin* 1 toaapoon cinnamon 1 ounces citron, rat An* 1 W Ji cup shortening 1 • teaspoon* Royal Baking Powder Boil ragar, water, fruit, shortening, salt and *pio** together in saucepan 3 minute*. lour and baking powder which have bran sifted torethe? MU weft; bake fa loaf pan in moderate oven about 45 minute*. (The Old Method [Fnst CakeJ called for 2 eggs)
The way wife shows her shoulder blades at the opera isn’t any sign she means to cut expense.
A husband has grounds for divorce if his wife refuses to help him with the housework. A woman Is never more beautlful to a man than when he sees her passing out of his life. The fickleness of some women in what makes them Interesting. Even the prude isn’t averse to sit* v ,
W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 45-1917.
Not a Sure Sign.
Contrary Adjustment
“I want a square deal In this fight" “All right; try another round.” — Baltimore American.
