Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 306, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 December 1919 — Page 7
Was Laid Up In Bed Dean’*, However, Restored Mrs. Vogt to Health and Strength. Hasn't Suffered Since. •‘I had one of the worst caaei of ney complaint Imaginable,” says Mrs. Wm. Vogt, 6315 Audrey Ave., Wellston, Mo., “and I was lald'Up in bed for days at a time. ■ - "My bladder was inflamed and the Sidney secretions caused terrible pain. My back .JsajiiEgjEpSk was in such bad shape that when I moved the Tm pains were like a knlfethrust. ’ got -o dizzy I WfFA “ P couldn't stoop and my / head Just throbbed with \tjE. / pain. Beads of perspi'SP* 7 ration-' would stand on my temples, then I - A«F Je would become cold and " numb. My heart action .___ was affected and I felt as MBS. . OGT. '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’c Kidney Pills were recommended to me and I coaid tell I was belnfc helped after the first few doser 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’s saved my life." Sworn to bs/ore me, HENRI B. SURKAMP. Notary Gad Doan's at Any Store. COcaßoz DOAN’S “JSEF FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.
Iw 1 4 a new carbureter A for Ford Cara that is guaran- * teed to give 50% to 100% more mileage and to start in zero weather RVI’J R* J without heating or priming, is as easy to sell as gold dollars at 90c each. We have it and sell it with legal money-back guarantee that 15 J R cpdays trial will prove our claims. PreWWj price only $23.50. Easy to install | lif J and easy to adjust. Simplest and ■9?W®Hrnost economical carbureter ever ■ devised. Nothingtogetoutoforder. Every Ford owner a customer. Enormous demand. Exclusive terBMBBHP ritory to agents who can carry small H'E-Z Stoye Polish .AUTOMOBILES & Don’t that sound funny? E-Z is & good graphite paint. I Prevents rust. Coat wheel I rims with E-Z and tires will slip off with no trouble. Chrry a can with you, apply with rag. Martin A Martin,Mfrs.,Chicago FRECKLES Positively Removed by Dr. Berry’s Freckle Ointment Your Druggistor by Mail 65c—Send for Free Booklet Dr. G H. Berry Co., 2975 Michigan Ave. Chicago
The New Class.
“Willie, name one of the speculative sciences.” “Geography.” ‘
DEWSJF EVE No More Gentle Than “Cascarets” for the Liver, Bowels
It is just as needless as It is dangerous to take, violent or nasty cathartics. Nature provides no shock absorbers for your.liver and bowels against calomel, harsh pills, sickenijjg oil and salts. CasCarets give quick relief without injury from Constipation, Biliousness, Indigestion, Gases and Sick Headache. CascaretS work while you sleep, removing the toxins, poisons and sour, indigestible waste without griping or inconvenience. Cascarets regulate by strengthening the bowel muscles. They cost so little too. —Adv.
The Mode.
“Sometimes I have traveled miles in my dreams.* “I suppose it ’was on & nightmare.”
Don't Forget Cutlcura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisites. An exquisitely scented face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume, rendering other perfumes superfluous. You may rely on it because one of the Cuticura Trio (Soap, dintment and Talcum). 25c each everywhere.—Adv.
Both Supplied.
"We have an old family knocker on our frhnt door.” t “We have one inside.” .
WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROPI Thousands of women have kidney and bladder trouble and never suspect it. 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 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 mediately from any drug Store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv.-
Britons Educate Millers.
The British milling industry has started a campaign ,of technical education to the efficiency of its workers.
a!* ft’**- H they Tire, Itch, A* Smart or Burn, if Sore, Irritated, Inflamed or YOUR EYI3 Granulated,useMurme often. Soothes, Refreshes. Safe for Infants Adult. At all Druggists, yntefee ftSeEycßook. tartmEpß—«yCk.Ckta»
LATEST STYLES IN GOWNS AND HATS
Pannier Returns and Hoops About Hips May Be Seen— Sleeves at Vanishing Point BLACK AND WHITE POPULAR i Colors Form Favorite Combination at French Resorts—Stripes in Narrow and Wide Arrangements— Skirts Are Very’Short. From all signs this will be a decisive season in Paris Tn so far as fashion creation is concerned. The designers seem to have taken on their old accustomed stride. They have turned their efforts, unreservedly to leadership in the world of style. «• To aid them in this crucial moment there are arriving ‘ froip. the United States, from South America, and from England hosts of buyers and fashion experts to watch the latest; develops me'nts. This is almost a new experience. At least it is a revived experience, for throughthe last five years, only the most favored of buyers have been allowed cross the water and only a few s os the dressmakers have kept up their work with anything like pre-war vigor. —' American women during the, w’ar have developed a style all their own. They are dressing now as suits the climate and their lif& and their, pursuits, which are quire different from the French woman’s. /And one sympathizes with the buyers, who wonder whether their clients‘at home will refuse to accept the wonderful things brought over Trom France. If their eyes are trained only for beatrty-they will be dazzled into letting all their accumulated notions of dress go by
An afternoon hat of unusual merit. The skeleton ostrich feathers make a striking trimming for this exquisite headgear of velvet.
the board and the conservatives at home will not be suited. At this time of the year all of France, as all of the rest of the world, seeks a cool spot; and so it is at Deauville and the other resorts by the seaside that one looks upon the fashionably arrayed crowd of wOmen and is able to gain some idea of the trend of the times as regards dress. Thtey are wearing the very latest things from a French point Of view, and, of course, the majority of the fall fashions will follow in some respects the lines favored just now. Skirts Are Very Short. Well, the tendency Is all in the direction of the skirts that are shorter than anything America has ever worn or even dreamed about. You hear it said that the Parisians are wearing their skirts very long, but when you see them with their skirts actually extending just below their knees, sb that when their arms are raised the skirt pulls above the knee, you know what a short skirt really is. It is easy on material and is extremely good-looking when the figure of the wearer can stand the strain. The skirts are tight, too, but what matters that when their length is what it is? ,No trouble about taking a good, long step in'a dress of this character. Then the coats, wlteh it is a suit, reach almost' to the bottom of the skirts, leaving, in fact, only about two or three inches of the skirt to be seen. The coats are either strictly tailored or they show a little fullness about the hips. That tells a story of forthcoming fullnesses of even greater volume. ■ It is so with the dresses. Always there is a slight gathering of extra material where the hips join the waist. It is the pannier that is greeting us on the broad highway of fashion. As .yet it, is not large enough nor full enough to be alarming, though there are ru-
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
mors of hoops about the hips and even about the bottoms of the shirts. The sleeves now in vogue can hardly I|>e called sleeves. They actually are just a little strip of material over the top of the shoulder. In most instances that is all, and the Parisians wear them fearlessly for morning and afternoon. In the evening there is no sign to be seen of sleeves. j f Even the blouses for 'wear with tailored spits rfte scantily equipped as. to sleeves. They will be quite high at the neck, buttoning up under the chin most uncomfortably on a hot day, and then they will have these little, inadequate sleeves —that is, they are inadequate for anything except setting off a good-looking arm. , . < Indeed, a Frenchwoman’s dress of . the present mode is little more than two strips of material sewed together and cut kimono fashion, though the lines of her frock are not flowing; they follow the outline of her figure. Evening gowns, far from being an exception to this rule, carry things to an exaggerated degree. The economical ’ use of-material there extends to the neckline, which not only opens at back to the waist, but sometimes below that point. These gowns are low in front also. All that is used, for the bodices are two pointed strips of material on either side of the front. In order to keep this on\here are strings of jewels or beads attached to the points strung around the neck, and from the back of the neck strung to the waistline again. It Is the fabric of the evening gown that counts for everything and its draping. Favorite Color Combination. Black is by all odds the favorite , color combination at the French resorts at this time of the year. Black and white stripes, since early spring, have been very good for sepa-
rate silk dresses and for suits, as Well as for topcoats. Now the new woolly fabrics are appearing, and they show these stripes' in wide and narrow, arrangements. Then there is the black gown'with the white hat; that is the most effectlve. This season they are wearing over the white hat, which is sans trimming, a black, lacy veil. This makes the costume even more effective. The veil does wot necessarily cover the sace —in fact, it rarely does —but its lacy pattern is so distributed that the white showing through the black transparent pattern makes a trimming of its own. Hats Without Trimming.’ The hats, as a forecast of fall head gear, are mostly without trimming The style is all in the Hpe, but how that line is obtained 4? a complete mystery. Upon examination the riddle only becomes more complicated. There seems to be nothing there except a band of something stiff to fit about the head. The crown and the brim are entirely without, inner stiffening or frame. The trick does not allow for explanation. It is all in the wizard who causes it to be. Yet, when this seeming mass of velvet dr satin is put on, the head it takes a shape and form .that commend It to any wearer. ;Itseems to have been made to set off at its best alone, and while you cannot say That the hat is round or oval or square or long, still it has shape. The felt blocked hats worn with pitdaeason gowns are round as to crown and as to brim as well. The brim turns up at the same distance all the Way round and the only trimming for the hat is a silk band of the same color. „ Hats of this character in beige and taupe worn with navy blue suits are effective. Then there is .another variation of this hit done in duvetyu
ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name “Bayer” is on Genuine Aspirin-*— say Bayer z \ Zx Insist on “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” in a “Bayer package,” containing proper directions for Headache, Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name “Bayer” means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin toxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of Salicyllcacid.—Adv.
A Poet Scorned.
Poet —There 1$ poetry in everything. Editor —There is too much of it in the mails. “
Ignorant is bliss until it begins to associate with egotism.
I’Too 111 I | to Work I Scores of Women in homes, stores, offices and factories are not fit to be at work. toil on day after day and year after year suffering. with distressing wealmesses and derangements, hoping against hope that they will soon fed better, but how can they hope to do good work or escape permanent invalidism? Such women are in danger of derangement of womens functions. They owe it to themselves to try that good old fashioned root and herb remedy Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which for more than forty years has been restoring American Women to health and strength. ( Here is euNotable Example B|| | Joplin, Missouri. —“I took Lydia E. I|| || a—* Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to II t se? if it really would do as it was adI VOrri la fill vertised and it sure did, and more. I I 1 1111 Il * I 111 ' vas wea k and could not do much nil || I Illi I work, had bearing down pains and had ||| M M to go to bed. I learned about the II I * 111 M Vegetable Compound from my mother n| u 1 1 || ! | z*****-- and my husband told me to get it. I HI 1 * I After taking one bottle I was able to 111 ia be on m y i eet most time and HI ■ do my work again. I have a baby I 11|| u I eleven months old and I have done all I nil 111 ~ my own work, even the washing and I BiJJw ironing since she was three weeks old. *Ui ||F\ > i 1 certainly recommend your great mediVVw cine very one who complains of \ female trouble and I am more than i A \| 1 'V\ \ willing for you to use my testimonial.” IK I II \ \ //S U —Mrs.TIMOTHYGRANEY. I V kill /tA Connor Ave., Joplin, Mo. " And Another v/l / Chicago, Illinois.—“l suffered for four L y I . [ft / P^ 5 ® m y ”des, hips and \y*Xj{/ / «/ legs and a terrible backache. I could E|B|B If by many physicians but they did not V—AL help me. I read in one of your books V"" "* M where other women have been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ' Compound, so I tried it and it helped me very much so that now I can do < • everything in the house. I have told my friends about Vegetable Compound a ’ and you have my permission to use this \ letter.”— Mrs. I. OVENSTEIN, 902 1 vK. S- Marshfield Avenue, Chicago, IIL CKJK Thousands of such Letters | VyK Prove the Curative I TOa! .-.i . Value of I Inlll i/Wn /jnTTTnTi'/HU 1_ gfljyH■B■Bß B MB 1 BV 1 B B ■ HUbnE ' /> P LVDiA E. PINKHAM
THE RIGHT WAY... In all cases of Distemper, Pinkeye, Influenza, Colds, etc. ot all horses, brood mares, colts, ’ stallions. Is to f “SPOHH THEM” On their tongue or In the feed put Spohn’s Liquid Compound. Give the remedy to all of them. It acts on the blood and glands. It routs the disease by expelling the disease germs. It wardsHßT off the trouble no matter how they are s 11 “exposed.” Absolutely free from any-LWf . thing injurious. A child can safely takeWk WJ It. Sold by druggists, harness dealers, tft. » orsent express paid by the manufacturers. Special Agents Wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., GOSHEN, IND., U. S. Al
The Last Ride.
Headline—“Five-Cent Fares Never to Return.” We don’t know any such place—unless it refers to the cemetery. J , ■
Sometimes a man misleads people by being honest with them. The greatest dividend in human life is happiness.
Naturally.
“Weren’t you once a' hand-reader?” “Yes, those were my palmy days’.”— Baltimore American.
Do your work cheerfully, heartily and effectually, and then be prepared for the place farther up. Even the feet of a lazy man can kick up trouble dust
