Jasper County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 April 1910 — Page 3
Home Course In Domestic Science
XlV.—Principles of Home Decoration.
By EDITH G. CHARLTON,
In Charge of Domestic Economy, lowa State College.
Copyright. 1910. by American Press Association.
THE subject of/ home decoration and furnishing is so large and comes so closely to the individual life of the family that an outsider hesitates to make even the simplest suggestions. And yet just because the subject is large and important and because it is, on the whole, bo little understood by the average person is one very good reason why instruction is needed along certain lines. All that I shall attempt, however, in these articles on house furnishing will be some of the very first principles, just a few hints for the women who are not sure of their own opinions on such matters, whose experience has been limited and whose opportunities for getting really good things are very few. ok There was a time in the history of our country when the family was content with the home which simply afforded shelter. That was the primitive object of the home, an instinct devel-
COMFORTABLE LIVING ROOM.
oped from early ages, when caves, rocks and later mounds of earth and wood furnished the dwelling place for ‘ the family. Undeveloped were the instincts which prompted primeval man
Copyright 1909 by C- S. Zimmerman Ov-No. 20 The Boys Room HID YOU ever think how important it is that it be properly furnished. Did you ever know how a boy likes to show his companions his bedroom? Is your boy ashamed of his? May-be you have never given much attention to this, figuring it was just the boy’s room, but if you want to make your boy truly love and cherish his home fit it up so that he will be proud of it. Our ljne of bedroom furnishings are cheap enough when you come to think of it, so that the boy's room can easily be a room that both you and he will be proud of. D. M. WORLAND’S RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE
to seek a place of shelter for bis own little circle of human beihgs. They were, however, the beginning of the highest and strongest social institution in the world, that of family life and the private home. Now conditions have changed, people have developed, and the borne must be something more than a place of shelter. It is still the keystone of the nation, the place where those qualities which make for good citizenship are developed, and therefore it is worthy of all the thought all the Intelligent planning and the noblest feelings that can be brought to it. The true home should reflect the character of the people who inhabit it, and above all else it should be of such a nature as to bring out the best there is in each individual beneath its roof. And a home in the true sense of the word can and does do this. Things Not to Do. Some of the most glaring faults in home furnishing are the commonest, those committed thoughtlessly or perhaps, to be more exact, those prompt-, ed by the dictates of fashion. It is so much easier very often to put into our homes and wear on our persons, even to put into our manner, those things which fashion says are right rather than to adopt those things which suit our own individuality, environment and needs. Just because fashion states that a certain kind of wall paper, a certain color in carpets or certain styles in furniture are the “latest” and “newest” is no reason in the world why they should be put into your homes unless they will be suitable there. Yet very many times the decree goes forth and is followed blindly, with the result that beauty, harmony and repose are qualities totally ignored in many homes. Some one has said: “The world is full of beautiful things if one has money to buy them. The world is also full of ugly things—things false in art. in truth and beauty. They are things made to sell wjtb only this idea behind them.” So do not be tempted by the too common expression, “It is the very latest style,” when buying furnishings for your home or wearing apparel for yourself unless the “very latest thing” has beauty and suitability to recommend it. To have something like every one else is also another fault made in house furnishing. That is one reason why so many country houses try to reproduce on a cheaper scale the city home and why there are so many unattractive homes in smaller towns and country places. Ignorance of or indifference to color and color harmony is another cause for lack of beauty in furnishing. Again, pictures, furniture, ornaments and everything else are brought into our home without a thought of articles already there. The new and the very tones ot gray. Rooms in which little sunlight Is admitted must be brightened and be given the effect of sunlight. This may be imparted by using warm colors in its decorations. These are yellow, red brown, reds, yellow with a hint of red, olive and gold green.
It is well to bear in (hind that almost every color has a cold and a warm tone. The first Is produced by combining blue or green with the original color, while the warm tone Is made by combining red or yellow with It. Thus browu with a bint of blue Is cold, while brown with a hint of red is.warm, and the effect of the two is entirely different, . The number, size and placing of the windows also greatly affect the Intensity of the color. It must always be remembered that any Interior;is dark compared with dut of doors, and In the lightest room there will be dark corners or spaces where the color will seem much darker than It really is. This explains why wall paper wbicb appeared perfectly satisfactory in the dealer’s store is often a disappointment on the wall of the room for which it was bought The sample in the store was displayed In a different light from that In the room. Three principles will always govern the proper use of color In house decoration—first, that of color in relation to light; second, color in gradation, and. third, color in masses. These principles are not difficult to master, but they are important and as impossible to escape as climate. The shades of color used on walls or ceiling govern everything else. The color of the walls prescribes the color that must be used in floor coverings, curtains and draperies. After the relation of color to light has been established and personal preferences have been taken into account the nexf principle is that of gradation. The strongest and purest tones of the color are naturally and almost by instinct put at the base—that Is, the floor covering sbpuld carry the darkest coir or or its strongest tone. It is not often advisable to use what Is Ipiown as a one color decoration—that is, confining the entire decoration to a single color. Such a plan Is much like trying to make a melody on one note of the scale. The best effects in both sounds and color are produced by the skillful variation of tones. The gradation and combination of even opposing tints give the greatest satisfaction to the eye. But, whatever the color or colors used, they must be darkest on the floor. The walls will give the second grade In color and the celling the last. These gradations, too, should be distinct and separate enough in tone to be perfectly apparent. The connecting grades may appear in furniture covering and draperies. Then the third principle, using color in masses, means that whatever color is used should be given space enough to establish Itself freely. In other words, it should not be broken into patches and neutralized by divisions. Nature does not put a single red leaf on a tree and then change the color to yellow or green. Rather the whole forest will have its various colors so arranged that one is perfectly conscious of every one of them. The brilliant red is in quantity sufficient to make itself felt, yet it does not interfere with the glow of the yellow or the restfulness of tj>e green. T*he general tone of the room may be what you will—green or blue or a division of each—but to be perfect every detail in the room must be related to one or both of these colors. If this rule is disregarded every piece of furniture unrelated to the whole becomes a spot which has no real connection with and puts the entire room out of harmony. Where to Use Different Colors. Some colors are much better suited to one room than another. If one’s favorite color is pink it should not be used in the dining room or hall. Light blues, pinks, lavender and other dainty shades are more suitable for sleeping rooms occupied by . young people, though for th£ average person there is no better color than a soft, unobtrusive green for a bedroom: Red has for years been the favorite color for dining room, and yet there are certain reasons why it is entirely out of place there. For one reason, the color soon becomes monotonous and has an irritating effect upon nervous or highly strung persons. Although a warm color, it is inclined to absorb light. It is very rich,: and warm in sunlight or artificial light, but in ordinary daylight it makes a room seem dark and gloomy. If red is to be used at all in wall covering It should be confined to a hall or den, some room which is not in constant use. When yellow happens to be a~ favorite color it is a good one to use in the dining room, particularly when, as is often the case, that room has a northern exposure. Golden browns and tans are satisfactory in living rooms when conditions are right for them—that is, when there is not too much sunlight in the room.) Living rooms .should be decorated not .only with restful colors, but those whileh suggest cheeriness as well. Sleeping rooms should be soothing, and the colors which produce this effect are supposed to be quiet greens, soft grays and dull blues. The paneled wall and beamed ceiling of dark wood with color showing between make a splendid finish for living and dining rooms and hall, especially in a country house. One particularly attractive country home had the dining room ceiled with birch legs on which the white bark had been retained to gleam in the firelight. A tinting of soft green on rough plaster gave the room a delightful woodsy effect quite in keeping with the rural surroundings. How much more appropriate a decoration like that in a country house than some artificial arrangement copied from a city bouse! t Whether the investigators find that the “recent” advance of prices is doe to the tariff or not, one thing is certain —viz,,that not only recently, but always. the cost of lining has been 1 higher because we nave a tariff than If we had no tariff-
CHOICE FARM FOR SALE. I will sell my fa m of 320 acres, with or without slock and machinery. It is located In the very heart and choicest part of the Red RiVer Valley of North Dakota. Every foot of this land Is guaranteed to be of the very best, and in a high state of cultivation, nice grove around good ti buildings l , plenty of good water, rural mal* and telephone, close to first-class market and good business town, splendid neighborhood of excellent farmers, fine graded roads, perfect title, no incumberance, but I must sell. Will take $44.75 per acre, $3,000, $4,000 or $5,000 down, the balance on terms to suit purchaser at 5 per cent interest. I am offering you the kind of land that every farmer wants, but few get when they buy land in any country that they are nqt acquainted with. Look over all the land you wish, (but don’t buy anywhere until you see mine. Big crops of wheat, flax, barley and oats, and corn and clover crops grown In this vicinity superior to any in the northwest. Crop failure unknown. Cnoice farm lands here are sure to double in value within the next few years. Address, M. W. HOSTETTER, Grarton, Nq. Dak.
CLOW & HENDRICKS.
A partial list of our lands that we are offering for sale In .Ransom county. We only give a few of the many bargains we have in first class lands, and with our wide experience and acquaintance throughout the county we can always help you find a snap. Come and see us. No. 1. 320 acres, 3% miles from good town; 70 acres under plow, balance prairie. A fine hay tract and very good soil. If broke up and sown to flax would half pay for the farm first year above expense. Price S3O per acre. No. 2. 160 acres. All under .cultivation, very best of soil. 7% miles from town. No buildings ( (except granary.) Price S3B per acre. No. 3. 160 acres 6 miles from town. Lays gently rolling; black loam with clay sub-soil. Priqe S4O per acre. No. 4. 160 acres all under plow. 4 miles from Elliott. Very best of soil. No buildings. Price $41.60 per acre. "'f No. 5. 320 acres. Lays very fine and the very best of soil. 140 acres under plow; balance prairie. 4 miles from "town. Price $37.50 per acre. No. 0. 3”0 acres well improved; good set'ouildings; nice grove and lays gently rolling. Very best of soil with clay sub-soil. 6 miles from town. Pried $47.50 per acre. No. 7. 320 acres well Improved. Good buildings and practically all under plow. 4 miles from good town. Price $37.50 per acre. No. 8. 320 acres 5% miles from town. Lays very fine. 135 acres under plow; 160 acres fenced. No buildings. Here is a snap. S3O per acre. No. 9. 800 acres well improved. Fine set of buildings, good soil. 450 acres under plow; balance can be broke; one-half section fenced with 3 wires and cedar posts. 6% miles from town. This Is a snap. $32.50 per acre. No. 10. 480 acres. This is one of the finest farms in the county. 6 miles from town, good 10-room house with furnace heat; fine large barn, granary and other out buildings. Nice grove. All under cultivation. Price for quick sale $47.60 per acre. No. 11. 160 acres. All prairie; lays fine and good soil. Price s3l per acre. No. 12. 320 acres, 4 miles from Lisbon; lays gently rolling. All prairie and it’s a snap. S4O per acre. No. 13. 160 acre, all prairie. 8 miles from Lisbon. Very best of soil; lays gently rolling. Price $32.50 per acre. No. 14. 160 acres, all under plow; lays gently rolling; very best of soil. This is a snap. $37.50 per acre. No. 15. 320 acres 5 miles from Lisbon, improved; lays gently rolling. Very best of soil. Good buildings. Price for quick sale $36.50 per acre. No. 16. 160 acres Improved; all fenced; good buildings and fine grove. 7 miles from town. Price $45 per acre. V—: All the above lands are subject to sale, withdrawal, or change in price without notice. We ..have cheaper land where the soil is not quite so heavy that has always raised good crops. Nearly all the ahove list have possible connection with R. F. D. and Telephone. School houses and churches are many Ohroughtout the county, as the map will show. If interested, do not to writers for particulars. CLOW & HENDRICKS, ° . , Lisbon, No. Dak.
Rheumatic poisons are quickly and surely driven out of the blood with Dr. Shoop’s Rheumatic Remedy or tablet form. Dr. Shoop’s booklet on Rheumatism plainly and interestingly tells just how this is done. Tell some sufferer of this bo6k, or better, still, tyrite Dr. Shoop Racine, Wis., for the book and free test Send no money. Just join with Dr. Shoop and give sonde sufferer a pleasant surprise.— A. F, Long.
: I HW i -l 'H mil l‘*H • I ■ 4* Let Us Figure •* • • On Your HEATING and PLUMBING * • • • • • . m m 1 Eger Bros, f RENSSELAER, IND. :: ii • * •• • • ..
Wabash Portland Cement * Great Strength, Durability, Fine Color. Best for Sidewalks, Foundations, Floors, Walls, Concrete Blocks, Bridges, Etc. WABASH PORTLAND CEMENT CO. ° eM wLSS, c Uh^ Mlch Sold by HIRAM DAT, and O. B. JOHNSON, ‘ Rensselaer, Indiana. Remington, Indiana,
miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiniiiyj [Farm Insurance I The Home Insurance Go., | of New York mm B S Surplus to Policy Holders S 5 . . . . . .' . .$13,082,821.51 S s s S Losses paid over One Hundred Million Dollars S INSURES AGAINST LOSS BY S FIRE, LIGHTNING, 5. WIND-STORMS, = ■ AND TORNADOES. SS On the Installment, Cash or • ~ Single Note Plan, and refers “ to any of the many thou- 5 sands who have been prompt- S E ly paid for loss by Fire, E Lightning, Wind-storm or ! Tornado, or to any Banker * £ or Business Man In America. ■ S THE BEST IS CHEAPEST INSURE IN THE HOME. | | R. D. THOMPSON, Agent | RENSSELAER, IND. TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifliiiimiiiiiiiiT
DORNBLASER, No. 4664. BLACK PERCHERON STALLION, f Pedigree:—Foaled August 21, 1903, bred by J. D. Dornblasser, Hume, Ill.; owned by John A. Witt, Hillsboro, Ind.; got by Rabelais 50545, he by Theudls 2503 5 (40871), ho by Beslgue (19602)*, he by Brilliant 111 11116 (2919), he by Ferielon 2682 (38) he by Bnlllanf-'J'?7l (766), he by • Brilliant 1899 (756), he fay Coco II (714), 'he by Vleux Chaslin (713), he by e- Coco (712), he by Mignon (716), he by Jean-Le-Blahc Dam, Queen 4.4 03. got by Ferdl- & '-1W na nd 17630. lie by out of) Mary 8267, B papiwon 3669 (.379) by Brilliant 4710), !VMXJJjL j/* he by Brilliant • 1899 iis6), he by Coco II (714), he by Vleux Chaslin (713), he by Coco (712), he by Mjgnon (715), he by Jean-le-Blanc (739). • 2d Dam, La Rosa 3874; got by Confident 3647 (397), he by Brilliant 1271 (755) out of Rose ’ by Coco II (714). Brilliant 1271 (755), he by Brilliant 1899 (756), ho by Coco II (714), he by Vieux Chaslin (713), he by Coco (712) he by Mignon (715), he by 3d Dam, Rose 3317, got by Cathellneau 8173 (9729), he by Monarque 5149 (2428), out of Paule (9728), Monarque 6149 (2428), , fey Brilliant 1899 (756), he by Coco II ‘"(714), he by Vleux Chaslin (713) he by Coco (712), he by Mignon (715 K he by Jean-le-Blanc (739). 4th Dam, Geneve, got by Condroy 5311, he by Charmont. Will make the season of 1910 as follows: Mondays and Tuesdays in Morocco, at the south feed barn. Phone 108. Wednesday and till Thursday noon at home. Friday and Saturday at Hemphill -Stud barn In Rensselaer. Phone 384. Terms: sls to Insure colt to stand and suck, sl2 to insure mare to be
In foal. Money becomes due when owner parts with maro or moveß her from the county. Colts held good for service; Care willbe taken t<f prevent accidents but I will not be responsible should any ocour. BEN B. MILLER. Owner and Manager. KING,JNo. 6433 SHIRE STALLION. KINO Is a bay stallion 16Stand, Terms and Conditions-- KINQ will make the season of 1910- at my farm, 10 miles north of Rensselaer, 3% miles east at Fair Oaks and 3 miles South of Virgle, at $lO to insure colt to stand and suck. Service- money becomcs due and payable at once on owner parting with mare; product of horse held good for service. Not responsible for accidents. PAUL SCHULTZ, Owner. TOM, Norman Stallion TOM, Is a sorrel horse with silver mano and tall, stands 16 hands high and now weighs 1600 pounds. Sire VasIstas 27799, out of a Norman mare, wt. 1600. He has good style, and action, Is well and compactly built and Is an Ideal type of farm horse; Is coming six years old. • STAND AND TERMS: * Tom will stand the season of 1910 at my farm 10% miles north of Rensselaer and 3% south and % west Of Knlman, .dt $lO to Insure colt to stand and suck. Product held good for service;. Parting with mare or leaving county or state, service fee becomes due and payable at once. Care . taken to prevent accL dents but not responsible, should any occur. HERMAN SCHULTZ, Owner. NOTICE OF DITCH SALE. .• Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as superintendent of construction will let the work by contract to the lowest and best bidder the construction of the large tile drain in Cause No 9804 pending In the Commissioners Court of Jasper County, • Indiana, and known as the Mathias Zimmer, et al. ditch' In Gillam Township, Jasper County, Indiana. Specifications for said Improvement will be found at' my residence in Gillam Township, said County, where the said sale will take place on Saturday, April 30, 1910, at Two O’clock In the afternoon. Tha tile for said 4 improvement are as follows: 8 4nch, 10 Inch, 12 Inch, 14 Inch, and 15 inch tile. There are 65 stations; fall of 6.24 feet. I reserve the right to reject any and all bids. The successful bidder shall enter Into a contract and bond as required by law. Dated this the 6th dav of April. 1910. » 1 PARIS t. ROBINSON. ‘ P. O. McCoysburg, R. F. D. Frank Foltx. Atty. Jasper Co., Ind.
