Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 264, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1918 — Page 2

jpg’?. ;■ v 7- . /JSe& IA lllr uKa /PA&fflrZr IM Bp-'■/ ;A,^/ - KUIUf Wi " ' ' '■'?' -■■■ ■• ''' '' “Spokes”— and the Swift “Wheel” ' 4 What would you consumers think a of a wheel without spokes ? What would you think of a man who would take any or all of the spokes out of a wheel to make it run better? Swift & Company’s business of getting fresh meat to you is a wheel, of which the packing plant is only the hub. Retail dealers are the rim—and Swift & Company Branch Houses are . the spokes. The hub wouldn’t do the wheel much good and you wouldn’t have much use for hub or rim if it weren’t for the spokes that fit them all together to make a wheel of it. Swift & Company Branch Houses are placed, after thorough investigation, in centers where they, can be successfully operated and do the most • good for the most people at the least 4 possible cost. Each “spoke” is in charge of a man who knows that he is there to keep you supplied at all times with meat, sweet and fresh; and who knows that if he doesn’t do it, his competitor will. How much good would the hub and the rim of the Swift “wheel” do you if the spokes were done away with? ® Keep Your Pledge Make Good for Our Fighting Men BUY WAR-SAVINGS STAMPS . r ( Swift & Company, U. S. A. % . -/

Yanks Will Reforest England.

One of the great tasks of reconstruction in Great Britain will be forestry, according to American foresters who have been at work in lumber camps in England and Scotland for the past year. The Americans are assisted by young women, who use heavy twohanded saws and who clear away all the underbrush.

WOMEN SUFFERERS MAY NEED SWAMP-ROOT

Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney and bladder and never suspect it. Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased; Pain in the back, headache, loss of ambition, nervousness, are often times symptoms of kidney trouble. Don’t delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a physician’s prescription, obtained at any drug store, may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Get a medium or large size bottle immediately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper,-Adv.

She Took the Job Herself.

“We’ve let the maid go.” “That so?” “Yes. She , finally insisted on wages that were so high that I simply couldn’t resist taking the job myself, and collecting the money.”

An Altruist.

“Did your garden help things along?” "Yes,” answered the patient matt "It helped the neighbors to raise some of the finest chickens I ever saw.” - , —— The feathers of the bird are said to give the greatest degree of warmth with the least weight.

y When Your Eras Need Care Comfort. fl) cents at pnuZSuTor snatL Write for Free Bye Book.

Course It Is.

“Well, it’s a low trick, anyhow,” sail bubble. “What, my dear?” asked his wife anxiously. “The way they are raising prices."

LIFT OFF CORNS!

With fingers! Corns and calluses lift off. No pain!

Magic! Just drop a little Freezone On that touchy corn, instantly it stops aching, then you lift the com off with the fingers. Truly! No humbug!

Try Freezone! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard com, soft com, or com between the toes, and calluses, without one particle of pain, soreness or irritation. Freezone is the discovery of a noted Cincinnati genius. —Adv.

Used Bleached Wood Pulp.

In. 1872 Professor Mitscherllch, a Swede, first “produced paper from bleached wood pulp on a commercial scale. ..... Switzerland ’will supply 1,000,000 watches for the American army. Miners in Indiana averaged .almost HJXM) in wages for the y ear 1917 -

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER. IND.

FALL AND WINTER WEARING APPAREL

New Yorfc —French and American gowns have both appeared in force since the first of October, notes a leading fashion correspondent. They were in existence since the first of September, but the public usually permits the people in the trade to use September for their own selection and purchasing, while it wears what it has on hand pud looks at clothes with interest, but not always with the Intention to buy. The demand for conservation has struck to the heart of the public, and the month /of September was their best chance to use their ingenuity in old costumes and see what could be done In the way of alteration and renovation. « It must be truthfully said that not much was done. It is difficult to tell of the process of re-establishing old clothes that goes on in small centers, but in the great cities the people who sell clothes report an extraordinarily good season beginning the first of September. Behind this fact is a significant reason, and it has to do with the position of women In labor. It is a tremendous situation, and it has not been done full

This coat-dress by Jenny Is of black satin and gray cloth, with.gray wool embroidery; notice the bottom of the collar and the neck of the frock art: finished with bands of embroidery, leaving ah open space between showing the neck. Drecoll designed the one-piece frock of beige-colored glove-skin cloth, with'barrel-shaped cape to match. The cape and skirt are trimmed with bands of the material, and there’s, a collar of mana* bout trimmed with brass buttons.

justice by those who reason out the processes of cause and effect. The majority of women are too active today to feel that they have time to superintend the seamstress. Their advent into the business world has given them somewhat the point of view of a man concerning the alteration of clothes. They feel that time, vitality and money spent, with the result debatable, is not efficiency. As an offset to this viewpoint there is the necessity for alteration in thousands of households, where the income has not been enlarged and where the clothes must be worn as they are, in and out of fashion, or altered with caution and care. Need for French Gowns. Then, if these conditions are true, asks the public, why the expensive French gowns? To serve as inspiration for the dressmakers, is the answer. « - X | Since the day after Labor day those of us who are going through the semiannual process of absorbing or buying the new fashions for purposes of trade, have seen French and American gowns paraded before the eyes in numbers that soon lost their significance. The vision has become weary; the brain has refused to record impressions. The buyers brought home from France whatever they thought was available for inspiration or might serve as a copy outright, and the American dressmakers and designers, even those who have no idea of abandoning Paris for inspiration, turned out thousands of gowns in which there was no French label and no dishonest trick or unworthy lying about the origin. In truth, some of the importers who have the most powerful trade say that their best clientele were delighted to get and wear American gowns. French and American gowns show two types of clothes—the slim straight line, and the slim draped line. America and France show the instep or toe-length skirt for house and evening, and America lengthens her tailored costumes for the street, while Paris shortens them. Trim Coats With Fur. America believes in the reinstating of the coat and skirt for everyday usage, and Taris, while agreeing to ...

this idea, continued to create' one'piece frocks of soft thin materials to be worn under heavy coats. America makes her coat suits of heavy materials and trims them with fur. Both use a quantity of soft velvet for evening gowns, and Paris uses more metallic fabrics for new Idndstof cuirass bodices to join up with heavy street skirts. America relies more on the separate bodice, to be bought at the shops, made of georgette, fifie muslin, ehtffon orlace> France uses more black, elaborately trimmed with metal and colors, for evening and afternoon,' and America uses more soft>brlght blue and flame color for evening gowns. France does not show as much gray as we expected. It might be said that the only strong, essential point of difference is the draped skirt for evening instead of the straight former American and the latter French; and also the shortness of the tailored suit as the French make it and its lengthened hem as the Americans make it. Substitute for Tailored Suit. 1 - As a compromise between the coat suit and the slim frock which many

women choose for autumn street wear there is a costume which may soon be overridden by popularity. It consists of a narrow skirt and* a tunic blouse that falls below the hips and is-loosely girdled with a monastic corii. The blouse has no visible fastening. It apparently does not open. In truth some of them do not open. They slip over the head and adjust themselves with the carelessness of a peasant’s smock. If they were tightly banded at the waistline with yards of brilliant material they would be definitely -Arabian and quite brilliant ip effect. They do not permit a girdle to touch them. They have a monk’s cord carelessly twisted below the waistline, knotted, and dropped in tasseled ends at front ST side. Position of One-Piece Frock. It is like discussing the war to touch upon the subject of the chances of the tailored suit as against the one-piece frock. The conservative people say that both types of street costume will be worn by the majority of - women. Those, however, Who feel that conservation in purchasing as well as in materials is needed, lean toward the one-piece frock if there is to be only one costume for the., street in autumn. They fee What it can be worn now with a large neckpiece of fur, and all winter under a top coat of fur or velours. There is not a good chance for last year’s tailored suits to be worn thia year, unless a woman was sufficiently fortunate then to buy an advance model. The changes, while they do not appear significant at first, are very much so when one gets into the swing of the season. The one-piece frock is undoubtedly in fashion,, and If you purchase one you can take your choice of these three materials—velours,, tricolette, and serge. AH the new designs seem (o be based on ttyise three foundation Stones. ; (Copyright, 1918, by McClurt Newspaper Syndicate.)

Muffs Will Be Larger.

Advance* fashions seem to indicate that muffs, both in doth, fur fabric and genuine fur will be somewliH larger than they have been for th« past few seasons.

■ • ■ ■■ z . :r ■ .1 lOOK AT CHILD’S ’ TONtOE IF SICK, CROSS, FEVERISH HURRY, MOTHER! REMOVE POISONS FROM LITTLE STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS. Give CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS AT ONCE IF BILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED. BULook at the tongue, mother! If coated, it is a sure sign that your‘little one’s Stomach, liver and bowels needs a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, doesn’t eat or act naturally, or is feverish, stomach sour, breath bad; nas -stomach-ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” and in a f§w hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of the little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. You needn’t cohx glck children-to take this .harmless “fruit laxative;” they Idvb its delicious taste,, and it always makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a bottle of “California Syrup iof Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for growh-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. To be sure you get the genuine, ask to see that it Is made by the “California Fig Syrup Company.” Refuse any other kind with contempt.—-Adv.

A Proof. “They say his intelligence and men-. tai grasp are something wonderful.” “I should say so. Why, he filled out bls questionnaire all by himself.” Keep clean Inside as well as outside by taking 'a gentle laxative at feast once a week, such as Doctor Pieroe’s Pleasant Pellets. Adv. ’’ Shoes Are Stamped. In Great Britain shoe manufacturers are required to stamp on each'peir of shoes its approved retail price. Stop the Pain. The hurt of a burn or a cut etops when Cole’s Carbolisalve is applied. It heals quickly without scars. 25c and 50c by all druggists. For free sample write The J. W. Cole Co., Rockford, 111.-Adv. Chinese are said to be taking to the alcohol habit. ( « Washington will blacklist profiteers in food supplies. v

HAARLEM OIL CAPSULES IF YOUR BACK ACHES

Do you feel tired and “worn-out?” Are you nervous and-irritable? Don’t sleep well at night? Have a “dragged out,” unrested feeling when you get up In the morning? Dizzy spells? Bilious? Bad taste in the mouth, backache, pain or soreness in. the loins, and abdomen? Severe distress when urinating, bloody, cloudy urine or sediment? All these indicate gravel or stone in the bladder, or that the poisonous microbes, which are always In your system, have attacked your kidneys. You should use GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capgules Immediately. The oil soaks gently Into the walls and lining of the kldpeys, and the little poisonous animal germs, which are causing the Inflammation, are Immediately, attacked and chased our of .your system without Inconvenience or pain. *

It’s Acid-Stomach That Makes Millions Sick and Suffer

Life fa dart—-not worth much to the man oc woman with an aeld-stemach. Acid-stomach kills Hope. Ambition, Energy, Courage. It saps the strength of the a&ongret blood—causes untold snfft ring—makes millions weak, unfit and brings on pro mature old age. , _ . You know what acid-mouth iota to teeth and gums—bow the add HterjHy eats through the bard enamel, causing the teeth to decay. Just imagine, then, what havoc an add stomach must do to the delicate organlxatlon of the stomach. Millions of people are weak and unfit, sawisskfjwagx 1 Going 1 through lifeweak, listless. dragging one foot after «“°ther. They're nervous and irritable; lack power and punch, frequently have severe attacks P of blinding, apUttfog subject to fits of melancholia and depression. And nearly alwnys thott stomachs are out of order, even‘though many experience no actual stomach »wna —digestion Poor—never getting anywhere near the fulietrCTgth fromi their So, you see, it’s just this—acid-stem tbrir a?ay their Vigor and vitality—leaving them weak and inefflelent.

iNDlutulluNi uASi Ur SET STOMACH HURRY! JUBT EATJH<E TABLET? OF PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN FOR INSTANT RELIEF. No waiting! When meals don’t flt and you belch gas, adds and undigested food. When you feel indigestion pain, lumps of distress In stolnach, heartbum or headache. Here is Instant relief. /K Just’as soon as you eat a tablet of Pape’s Dlapepsln all the dyspepsia. Indigestion and stomach distress ends. These pleasfent, harmless tablets of Pape’s Dlapepsln always make sick, upset stomachs feel fine at once and they cost so little at drug stores.—Adv. British Columbia Lumber. British Columbia’s lumber mills ean produce about 2,000,000,000 feet of lumber each yean During the latter months of the siege of Ladysmith tobacco was sold in the town, at S3O a pound. - J - The first people to bury their dead in cemeteries and make use of ornamental headstones were the Turks. Investigators recently found extensive undeveloped coal fields in Serbia.

" " "ar ANTEED - TO INSTANTLY RELIEVE ASTHMA OR MONEY REFUNDED —ASK ANY DRUGGIST Stop Losing Calves You can Stamp Abortion Ont of YOUR HERD and Keep It Ont iBy 'the nse of DR. DAVID ROBERTS' “Anti-Abortion” Small Expense Easily Applied. Sure Results. Used successfully for 30 years. Consult D». DAVID ROBERTS about all animal ailments. In< formation free. Bend for FREB copy of "The Cattie Spec iaHst’’ with full in formation on Abortion is Cows. DR. DAVID ROBERTS VETERINARY OT.. W 0 Grand Ave.. Waukesha. Wise. pEvery WomanWantg | FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved in water foe douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflammation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co. for ten yean. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, aore throat and sore eyes. EconomicaL

W. N. Uw CHICAGO, NO. 44--1918.

Don’t ignore the “little pains and aches,” especially backaches. They may be little now but there is no telling how soon a dangerous or fatal disease of which they are the forerunners may show itself. Go after the cause of that backache at once, or you may find yourself in the grip of an incurable disease. Do not delay a minute. Go to your druggist and insist on his supplying you with a box of GOLD MEDAL Haarleua Oil Capsules. In 24 hours you will feel renewed health and vigor* After you have-'cured yourself, continue to take one or two Capsules each day so as to ..keep ,in first-class condition, and ward off the danger of future attacks. Money refunded If they do not help you. Ask for the original Imported GOLD MEDAL brant}, and thus be sure of . getting the genuine.—Adv. * ’

Get rid of the excess acid. Thats the secret of good health and is the only way to obtain good digestion and asshn. Hatton. It is the right way to be well and keep strong. Ordinary tonics won’t do any lasting good. The beat theycando la to spur up your appetite. When the stimulating effects wear off, you are Worse off than ever. A modem remedy makes It possible to remove excess acid without the alight•st discomfort. It is called EATONIC, in the form of pleasant tasting tablets. Their action in the stomach is a good deal like a piece of blotting paper taking a drop of ink—they literally absorb e injurious excess acid and carry it •way through the intestines. Begin using EATONIC right now—today—and get on the road to bounding, vigorous, vibrant health. Thousands upon thousands of people Who have used EATONIC are enthusiastic in its praise. They say they never dreamed that any- • thing could bring ttem such quick relief. EATONIC is absolutely guaranteed so r: a big 50c box from your druggist., If does not help yim your money will i;e refunded. If your druggist does net keep EATONIC. send your name and address to the Eatonlc Remedy Company. ioi« 8. Wabash Ave., Chicago, HL, and they will at once mall you a SOe .box and yon can send them the money for it after you receive it. ( .