Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 56, Number 41, Jasper, Dubois County, 31 July 1914 — Page 7

Picture Yourself in Colorado yOU fed the thrill of new life the minute yots get there. There' s a bracing tonic in the very air.

matchless mountain -dashing, sparkling ?re deep canyon aad gorges dizzy heights, c ragged peaks azure bius rkies Some new eachantment gTCUl you with ever turn. You have dreamed Colorado rea. ze your dream this Summer. Lew round trip fares via the Missouri P acme Write f t onr Colorado Rook handsomely illustrated. J. C HOLLENBECK Genera Pass' r Agnat ST. LOUIS i SSM Hnf Tfsaf latest tricks and Jokrs Ä1"4 N nd 10c txsta-e for III.1 ustrated catalogue showing yon how w penorni many now and wonderful trteks. MAKX OF MKMPII I S , liox ßlO, Me tu plila. Tenuessee. I IVF AFNTSL M n r women, imroduee hlghgrade household specialty irvo every nonse, bin profit, brand nw positiv rx-ss - v. Wriu- today. B. a. SM ITH CO.. Boa6, Plinad pbia Woman's World Contestants ' : . : ; V p r IS wUl hc.p jju. Union solution c iut, .Nashville, Tenn. WRITE !'. p vs f(1r cash: spam tinan; will or correspondence .ire un necessary, i sjn free. MsnU bast, II snjManJMris The man who thinks he is marrying an angel in disguise occasionally discovers later that the alleged disguise was permanent. r . rshihd. Ask for Rcvl On Ball lilne. Mikes beautiful white clothes. At all good gr.K.t rs. Adv. Defined. "Pa. what is a theorist?" "A theorist, son, is a person who puts up the talk and tttptcta some body else to put up the Baltimore Sun. money.' Going Him One Better. An English bishop, offering an orange to a little child, remarked, sweetly: "Now, my httle man, I shall give you this orange if you tell me where God is." , "My lord,'' answered the child, son of a clergyman, "I'll give you two oranges if you'll tell me where he is not." Sporting Instinct Aroused. Th itreetftof Utl orator had gathred around him a group of urchins. W hy they listened so attentively he didn't understand ; nor probably did they know themselves. Simply nothing doing. Hut the orator took full advantage of his opportunity and delivered an improving lecture on the value of kindness to dumb animals. At Üto end he sought for some illustration to point the moral and adorn the tab- It was there at hand. Across the way walked a lady, leading two little dogs in leash. The one was black and the other white. Now," exclaimed the tub-thumper, "after what I have said, supposing those two dear little dogs were to start fighting, what would be the firt thing you would do?" No answer came at first; but one little arab turned to look at the

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dogs critically and thoughtfully. "Well, ments of sugar and milk or cream, guv nor," he answered, at last, "I fink ! Tnis combination is varied by omitl'd ave tuppence on the little black ting either the bread or the cereal

tin' Keep Cool and Comfortable Don't spend so much of ycLV time cooking during hot weather; and your family will be healthier without the heavy cooked foods. Give them Post Toasties They're light and easily digested and yet nourishing and satisfying. No bother in preparation just pour from the package and add cream and sugar or they're mighty good with fresh berries or fruit. "The Memory Lingers'

BALANCING THE FOOD

BILL OF FARE SHOULD BE APPETIZING AND VARIED. Very Much More a Case of Judicious Selection and Serving Than of Expense Suitable Combination of Food Material. To say that a family bill of fare must be appetizing and varied does not necessarily mean that it must be costly as well. At first sight, it might seem difficult to secure these qualities without buying rather expensive materials or serving very fancy dishes, but the theory does not hold in the case of food any more than in that of clothing and house furnishings. Just as the test oi a woman's ability in dress is to get suitable and attractive effects with relatively low expense, eo the test of her catering abil ity is to give her family an ample supply of wholesome and pleasantly varied meals with an outlay of money and I ume proportionate to ner income and circumstances. Variety in the diet can be secured both by providing different kinds of food and by preparing staple foods in different ways, and the best results are obtained by combiying both methods, says the United State department of agriculture year book. When the housekeeper studies the list of common foods and the combinations made from them, she will probably find that as regards their place in the menu they fall into general groups those which, like bread, potatoes, milk, eggs, etc., which have little distinctive taste, and those like cheese, soasning vegetables, some sweets, cooked meats, etc., which have marked the individual flavor. She will further find that the mild-flavored materials are the ones which are used in the greatest quantities, meal after meal, while those of pronounced taste appear in smaller amounts, or some of them only occasionally. To put it in another way, she will depend largely on the first group to make up the bulk of her dietary, and on the second to vary it. In cookery, some foods require only simple methods to make them very palatable. Tender steaks, or chops, in cook ng, develop delicious meat flavors and require no highly flavored vegetable seasoning or condiments to make them palatable. In themselves they furnish flavor sufficient to accompany potatoes, rice or other foods of mild flavor. On the other hand, in stews and other dishes made from the cheaper cuts of meat, carrots, onions or other distinctive flavors are usually added to supplement that of the meat flavor. The cheaper cuts are not usually of such a texture that the best results can be secured by such simple methods as broiling or roasting. The housekeeper who makes a dish composed of cheese and macaroni, or of meat and rice or potato, etc., applies the same principle. The great variety of pickles, preserves and elaborate pastry which American housekeepers used to consider necessary represented another instinctive effort to vary, by adding flavor, the monotony which was inevitable, particularly in winter fare, before the days of easy transportation and cold storage brought fresh fruits and vegetables the year round. If the good housekeeper analyzes the make-up of her meals a little further, she will probably find that she arranges them, perhaps unconsciously, according to more or less definite principles. In most American families the chief daily features of breakfast are bread of some sort with butter, very often fruit, and some kind of breakfast cereal, and coffee, tea or cocoa, with their usual accompani(which is logical, it one wishes to do it, since they provide tia same sort of nutrients, though in different form), by changing the kind of bread or cereal, or by combining with them some other materials. If the members of the family are engaged in much muscular work, the meal will be made more hearty by the addition of some hot dish, as eegs. meat hash, creamed ; lish. bacon and possibly honey or sirup. If their work is light, however, less variety or smaller portions will prob- ' ably be preferred. The custom of serving fruit at breakfast is undoubtedly healthful and not I extravagant if low-priced fruit is chosen. Of course, it may be cooked I m : I m ., , or cr.nne.i iriui, ir uns is more con venient, it aoes not increase the housekeeper's work so much if it is served with the other breakfast dishes a? it does if made a separate course, for -ach course means extra tune and s .- ce. This is a commonplace illustration of the principle that the housekeeper who has many demands on her time or who has limited help should select waft of service which are simple and time-saving rather than those suitable for families where other conditions prevail. Well carried out. the result is pleasing in either case. Rhubarb Sponge. Rhubarb sponge is made as for Jelly, but when it begins to thicken the beatSSI white of three eggs are whipped in until the jelly is quite stiff Serve with whipped cream or a thin custard made from the yolks of the eggs. Hint to Mothers. WlM washing soiled diapers, put a tabU'spoonful each of horax and ammonia In the boiling water. Hince well This makes the diapers soft md white and they will not chafe the jaby. 4

DAY OF THE PARASOL

SOME REALLY PRETTY EFFECTS ARE BEING SHOWN. One May Select a Practical Shade and Formation, or, to Be Modest. One That Borders on the Eccentric Each Is Permissible. (By MARY DEAN.) Parasol days are surely here. In fact a few promenaders have even carried them for the past few weeks, possibly because they gave the required color notes to the toilettes. r Chiffon and Taffeta. possibly because of the modish narrow-brimmed or brimless hat, which leaves the eyes exposed to the glare on a sunny day. Many of the new parasols are certainly lovely. Those most practical are of course the plain one-tone effects, in dark or medium colorings, and of these there is ample supply in all the fash'onable colorings. Taffeta is much in evidence among parasols, as it is everywhere, changeable taffetas, plain or shirred, being used for the cover, pinked frills, ruches or cordings and puffings forming the trimming. One taffeta parasol was trimmed with three larger puffs. Another was entirely covered in nar row raffles. In lire with some of the ! quaint taffeta sunshades are the frilled effects in airiest materials. A parasol may have a foundation of the filmiest of white or cream shadowlace with covering of filmy black lace, which reaches almost to the edse of the parasol, leaving the shaped points of the white lace to form a border. The lace covering is so transparent that the ribs of the parasol are visible. Or a shirred foundation Printed Lawn Trimmed With Violecs. of soft silk may be veiled in chiffon caught here and there with little clusters of silken roses. Others have a plain silken foundation covered with shirred chiffon and rose trimmed. One parasol, for instance, has a foundation of soft silk with a deep border of shirred chiffon shaped in deep points at the top. There are large roses of chiffon placed at the lower point of the shirred chif fon border. EMBROIDERY A REAL ART Practically Only Workers of the East Give to It the Required Care and Attention. It is said that embroidery is the mother of all needlecraft. Some enthusiasts claim that it is as great an art as painting or sculpture. There is much in early history that has been handed down to us in embroideries, which have depicted upon them certain events embracing historical persons of olden times. When embroidery was more or less young, the embroid eror was his own designer. As manymen wpre interested some of the embroidei .s. including both men and women, frequently devoted their entire lives to the work which authorities have agreed in calling one of the finest of arts. Now however, in this rapidly twirling tine, embroidery has degenerated Into nothing more than a pastime, and rarely is there an embroiderer who works lovingly and with thought of posterity, except, perhaps, over a baby's layette. Hut for really artistic embroidery, which is made with tho idea of its lasting more than one gen- j eration, there is practicallv nothinftr being made by occidental Angers. Japanese and Chinese embroiderers yet take their work seriously and labor patiently and lovingly, and there may be here and there a piece of oc cidental church embroidery, modern yet worthy of comparison with the wonderful art of medieval times. The Venetian stitch is a medieval tftCfe Nvhich works up beautifully, particularly when combined with puncheork. It is a stitch which was re-

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Another tub shaped parasol haft a deep border of chiffon and trim mings of narrow frills of chiffon. Taffeta is often used in combination with chiffon and maline. One remarkably attractive parasol of taffeta and chiffon had the upper part of gray with a deep shirred border of soft rose chiffon which has a grayish tinge. At each rib, on the joining line of the taffeta and chiffon, there is placed a small flat rose of the rose chiffon. A chiffon frill edges the parasol. Hand-painted motifs are shown on -cine of the handsomest parasols. One parasol of taffeta, for instance, has a wreath of roses in each panel painted in natural colors. There is a deep trill of chiffon finishing the edge of the parasol.

FOODS FOR HOT WEATHER Matter That Is Worthy of the Most Careful Attention That Can Be Given It. Much of the irritability of the human race is caused by overindulgence in unbalanced meals composed of badly cooked foods. The modern, thrifty housewife plans her meals so as to secure the best diet for her family. During the hot months heat-producing foods fats, sugar, starches, heavy puddings and pies and fried things should not be eaten, but rather those which are easily di gested and cooling to the blood. The business in which the breadwinner of the family is engaged must be considered when planning the meals. The man or woman leading a sedentary life requires foods easy of digestion and assimilation. This class of people does not require as much food as that engaged in muscular labor. The latter class needs heavier meals, but these should be less burdensome than in winter. For both classes too much cannot be said about masticating one's food. The teeth were made for this purpose and many ills would disappear if food was not bolted into the stomach, which is too often overtaxed. Salads rich with mayonnaise or boiled dressing should never appear a: dUiner, but be served for luncheon or supper. Green or fresh vegetable salads with a simple oil and vinegar dressing are the proper thing for dinner at all seasons. Potatoes can be eliminated from the menu some days and in their place substitute macaroni, rice, hominy, beans, peas and other starchy vegetables. Woman's World. COTTON GOODS IN THE TUB Colored Materials May Be Washed Without Injury if Simple Precautions Are Taken. Tc wash colored cottons, dissolve one-half a cup of salt in hot water, stirring thoroughly, then add cold water enough to cool it. Put the garment in and let it stay fifteen or twenty minutes, long enough to set the color. Then wring out and rinse in clear, cold water, changing the water often, until it is not discolored. When this has been done, the garment mav be washed in the usual manner, with any pure white soap, and if ordinary care is taken and the garment is hung in a shady place to dry it will look clear and the colors will not fade or run. Black silk may be cleaned by sponging with a tablespoon of vinegar to one of water, with a few drops of ammonia added, this mixture being applied with a sponge. Or you may sponge with one part of beer to two parts of water; also steep an old black glove in vinegar and dilute in water, and clean with this. If you spill coffee on a colored wash dress, dip it quickly in clear, cold water and thoroughly rinse it. Then plact it to dry between two towels. White craquele mesh veils are an important feature. cently revived and finds much favoi with those who can appreciate hand embroidery. It is not difficult. DICTATES OF FASHION Lace sweaters garments. are sneer, all-wool Slip-on blouses are a little like middy blouses. Muttons are this season. peculiarly decorative Normandy-medicl and cowboy collars are worn by all women from sixteen to sixty. Small panama hats are trimmed Wth scarfs of heavy white chiffon or richly colored ribbon. The low, broad crowned derbv is the best hat for riding, though some women wear sailor hats in summer. Pique in the now soft finish is very fashionable again for tennis frocks, and also as facings for waahinJ rUa -wwa-aasa Glazed straws are still smart, especially In the black and colored effects, but the trend is toward the unglazed all-white midsummer hats. An attractive feature of the new waists is that the backs are as pretty at the fronts. All waists have the i.-c Mi. u river and are ntt.d in very slightly under the arms. A tine uualitN of white French voile is the material usually used.

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GROWLERS ARE HAPPY HOW THE BRITISHER GETS HIS GREATEST SATISFACTION. Writer Prober Mysteries of N umerous Complaints Safety Valves for Disgruntled Found in Newspapers, Public Officials, Etc. Just as the proverbial old lady was never happy unless she was miserable, so the average liritisher extracts his greatest satisfaction from a downright honest growl, says a writer in London Answers. No one can justifiably call us a nation of grumblers, and yet on every hand we hear complaints, loud and penetrating.. It is our right and prerogative to growl, and growl we do, as a kind of habit. The baby growls because its clothes are too tight or its bottle not up to schedule time in its appearance. The child growls because bedtime arrives too soon. Schoolboys and schoolgirls are inseparable trom growls, and the adult wades cheerily through a perfect sea of them. Old age, again, is only too frequently typified from beginning to end as one reverberating grumble. In the curious psychology of the human race there is not to equal the joy or a growl well aired. You feel terribly angry because the 5:05 train from the city to your home has run late for nearly a week, and you write a stinging, virulent, scorching, crushing letter to the manager of the particular railway company entangled in your wrath. All the time you know full well that the manager keeps a kind of tame, shellbacked, armor plated assistant who will contentedly post you a cold acknowledgement and drop your complaint into the waste paper basket. You understand ail this quite clearly, and yet you are szisfied, for the writing of that vitriolic letter has put you right with yourself. a & Growls are just safety valves for j over-wrought feelings. Picture the old lady who writes a frantic letter to the local newspaper anent the pau- ! city of policemen in her quaint su burban backwater. Seeing her flam ing words in the majesty of print, she marshals each paragraph as an imaeinary constable euardme nor lifp nnri nrnnprtv Hov off.rt, i u. r r- luuua ua f uiougiu her both joy and security, hut wr

- - - - herself into the belief that her miehtv missive has set in motion the police of the county, while, as a matter of fact, no one takes any notice. Of all the vast army of growlers, the farmer is surely the worst offender. He complains if the sun is not shining in one field, rain falling in another, and gentle, drying breezes are not blowing in a third all simultaneous. And after the farmer, commend me to the amateur gardener. Public officials, were they not thickskinned, would all be made subjects for the lunacy commissioners by the frequency with which growls rain upon them. Editors of all classes of papers come in for many grumblers, and the reverend gentlemen who act as our spiritual advisers get more than their share of circulating complaint. Everybody, from the belated errand boy with the groceries to the most voiuuie politician, earns Opprobrium : , -, . . , - from someone, and the people who growl most are usually those who are happiest, for their pent-up feelings have full play and outlet. Our Statesmen. Ambrose Pierce, the brilliant satirist, gave, at a dinner in Washington, a few political definitions. "A conservative," said Mr. Pierce, "Is a statesman who is enamored of existing evils, while a radical would replace them with others." LADIES CAN WEAR I!OFS One site smaller after using Allen's Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic powder to be shaken into the .sho I makes tl.ht or new shoes feel mr Jn.t th..,i,u- . . . - package, address Allen Olmsted, LeKoy. y. m. - . ..o. .. i wi f iriaa Not Entierly Gone. Church They say horses have all been banished from the street railroads in Herlin. Gotham Yes, but you'll still find era on the menus. TOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL IX Tor Try Murine Kye Remedy f-.r Ked. Weak Waterv Kyes and i ran u luted K ds: No snian.ntf iusi isye iimton. vrr.e f(,r Bok of the Ki oy mau r ree. ÄUnn'' " rtenieay Oo., Cnicago. , Up to Date. He A husband must be obeyed. She Oh. cut out vour must v nhiio ophy! w - - - mw . i Make the lnundre hnppv -that's Red CroHs Hall Blue. Make beitltiful, clear white clothes. All god procer. Adv. Revenge is sweet only to the very small individual. Save the

she to analyze the matter she would dinner disrealize that she has merely flattered tress cure

INFAKT MORTALITY i something frightful. We can hardly realtee thmfr of all the children torn in civilized eoun fries, t went v -two per eent or nearly one-quarter, die before thej r a h one yesir : thirtT-aeveri

percent., or more than one üiird, before they axe flv. and one-half hrfnri they are fifteen t We do not hesitato to say that a timelr use of Castoria would save a majority of these precious lives. iSVither do we hesitate to nay that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned iy the use of narcotic pmarations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrupe sold f..r chihir. n's complaints oontai.i more or less opium or morphine. They are, in comtid. ruble quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity, they stufa-fv. retard circulatioii to oongesUons, sickness, death. Caria opt rates exactly the reverse but

you must see mat it Dears the signature or ('ha. II. Fletcher, causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the

pores oi tne skin ana allays fever.

Genuine Castoria alwajs bears the signature

QQULD NOT

STAND ON FEET Mrs. Baker So Weak Could Not Do Her Work I ound Relief In Novel Way. Adrian, Mich. " I suffered terribly with female weakness and backache and grot so weak that I could hardly do my work. When I washed my dishes I had to sit down and when I would sweep the floor I would get so weak that I would have to get a drink every few minutes, and before I did my dusting I would have to lie down. I got so poorly that my folks thought I was going into consumption. One day I found a piece of paper blowing around the yard and I picked it up and read it. It said 'Saved from the Grave,' and told what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for women. I showed it to my husband and he said, Whv rlnn'r vnn trv it ? 9 r T A'.A anA after l had uken two Utiles j felt better and I said to mv hnnhAnd 'I don't need anv more and he said 4 You had better take it a little loneer anvwav.' So I took it for three months and get well and strong." Mrs. Alonzo E. Baker, 9 Tecumseh St., Adrian, Mich. Not Well Enough to Work In these words is hidden the tragedy of many a woman, housekeeper or wage earner who supports herself and is often helping to support a family, on meagre wages. Whether in house, office, factory, shop, store or kitchen, woman should remember that there is one tried and true remedy for the ills to which all women are prone, and that is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. It promotes that vigor which makes work easy. The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Ljiin, Mass. mm r Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never Purely vegeta- . e ac? surely

Carters ITTLE fllVER g PILLS. I ;

D.ut gently on the liver -,L . uiuu ai ici indigestion,' lmProve the complexion, brighten the eyes. m m -k mm m m. u mm .mm. . SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSL, SMALL PRICE Genuine must bear Signature DAISY FLY KILLER pIced ürt - flies Neat, clewn, ornamental, convenient, cheap. L a t l Miion . Hade of m-tal. can't npi 1 1 or tipover, will n..t aaM or 1 njure anything, (iranteed affectiv. All dealers rCent 'iprt'si itaut for tl.aa. HAROLD S0MER8, 150 DaCalb Ave . Brooklyn, M. T.

B PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Jlelp to erariirate dandruff. For Restorinc Color and Be. uty to Cray or Faded Hair. I 60c and $i oo at Drunrtata,

KODAK OWNERS 2' Vorli P,Iuaklna J"arantm to two yon by rnali. .yonrcel lmtnictt' r i$. mp!'te coarse f 6 l'ss.n. I! .VJ. 1 to. ve brings flrst lesson. Art Col lege. Box K, L,yncbburg.O. MALE OR FFMAI F omatlv wanted mrtLC va LlrUALL in tl), ,. ;,.,ty for anEastern Arm. Send Mamp f.r particulars Hh iabeer Specialty Co.. 162 Loomis Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. - Bull Dog Burglar Proof Sash Lock and Ventilator . sUer. Agent wanted In thi?- connty Special price forsamplo nuw:iuiuiruitlijj, nm. BKJIT, aft n . Sard, 1 Hypnotism, Magnetic Healing. Mind Reading Yon learn In MM dav or mn-y n-ftindrtl. Hend ft Lamp for descriptive atu-r. M;u. aa , frtArUar, Tiat i n A OK NT' Sell Fandom. the eneyeloi relopedta of Baa n i'.u iticif iiaei.cr Kv.-rybody buys ,rea ouirriiMiw noveiiv. i. nera.1 nmnt biete I UM. PLftlKKftUUPM 14 . H Ita. Samp la com hrwdntj, ft. Tr Start oat for yourself Be Independent; aendi for my illustrated literature. It fully exilUS's Aiwftftaatft4J, Ha 1, AtoiW, pialns Mb,uw FMrm. Property 0wn Liste: L7o V "f 'r" rowaer paint, tapaJSta . . . win in. riu'iii unnr i)ii'nn n o rlrenroof mucsu uci iui(f .SAUiiarj.nnar , SAFETY FIRST Ü V . r iv. .-rv.rarry A MtMf a i tu nj I tiir hlf -rMrk.j. lifo preserver. Book..!. MA Broadway, Sow iork HEAL i s I 1 I. High!) Improfed Southern Wisconsin Farm for vale cheap. Will consider part good clear tr tuNMtUlulH LIJ1 ! lijntif aii4i.c. mm Tor va.'e cheap. Will consider part rod clear trnd. EASTERN COLORADO tfuSSSS Invent In cheap land of jr.! uuallty. Write for booklet describing district, w . I). Beklar, B aril u(Vou, Co mx 1 K !.r. T. A JN I.AKI. 1.. &. a cult.. . r. dwelling, barn, outbldgs . it fruit tr .a. tu V. Krutffer. R 2. VaukKan III. MIR SAI.fcll A IN M ANSON . o M I ' 1 1 i ' vnt S a orch . 1 r dwelling- barn, outMp f M Peteraon. R 2. Freesoll. Mich I OR SALB St A. IN MARION CO.. ILI-.J 7" a cult, r. dwelling, barn, outbid granary, etc. E. 8 Bnydea, Mound City. Ill F 'R HAL! OR KXi-H N2B rOK TOWN propwftjr, 40 a. in Mason co Mich . 11 a. In bearing fruit, V r bungalow, tenant house, barn, outb Jga J H Fitch. Luding ton. Mich, W. N. Indianapolis, Mo. 29-1914. Babies. !3r ofCgX

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