i:; ia iiiifii MUENBY FLAINDEALER, HTHENRY, ILL* mdm •y-h'-iy - mz' ' \ - •'- •' Q0sm§ ^ •• I? k,t" ^ ^ timM }.ii », --/,• ' r; ,$', ' "fi jffcvSllpM feltt'SiS KIT INSPECTION OF BRITISH NAVAL VOLUNTEERS te^: Is&V'•" ?#*•»!> . '-»JV:' W - J / §m t*:U> iyj. ' :Pl feT'.: ,*r./ •S'iSS MILUNEfiY FOR fALL ... ' . •' \ ' . 3 ADVANCE MODEL8 ARE ALREADY BEING 0I8PLAYED. Last inspection at the headquarters of tin Royal Nival Tolrnitwr iMMetjuence of the king's proclamation. the dm? they wst* mobilised tn ?*v s? «i.:'. :•* ^ ^ '• Country women giving apples to British soldiers who are marching to the Croat. At the right a British btni jacket kissing his child good-by at Waterloo station. KIEL HARBOR LIGHTHOUSE 1 AUSTRIANS SHELLING THE SERVIANS The extinguishing of this light might enable the German fleet to slip by, the British fleet, which is supposed to have been waiting to engage the enemy outside of Kiel harbor. SERVIAN RED CROSS NURSE ENGLISH NURSES LEAVE FOR BELGIUM Servian women from all walks of Ufa have Joined the Red Cross CHILE FURNISHES WORLD'S HIGH EXPLOSIVES. £#i A curious fact bearing on the,pres ent European war, says the Kansas City Star, is that the source of prac tically all of the gunpowder and other explosives used in the military opera tions is found to be in one of the most peaceable countries In the world- Chile, whose wealth of nitrate of soda furnishes an element of explosive to every other country In the world. In times of peace Chile prepares war- far other ooantriea. And more than that, when the other countries are at peace, Chile goes on furnishing this same nitrate for a peaceful purpose; the substance is just as good as a soil fertilizer %» it is for explosives. The Chilean government is said to have n practical monopoly on the nitrate business for the entire world. Extensive lands in the province of Tar&paca. Chile, have never been opened up to nitrate prod action, bat the provlnoe Is known to contain t fljnpply equal to that in other flelda. The nitrate of soda produces nitric acid by an easy process, and the acid is necessary to the manufacture of ni troglycerin, dynamite, smokeless pow der, and so far no efficient, quick ex plosive has been found practicable that does not contain that product. The revenue derived from export duty of the nitrate product of Chile would give $10 annually to each Inhabitant if divided and the demand for the Eu ropean war lt> expected io raisu it to almost double that flgnr* *• -'*• v'"*^ ""^*V^T- v ' " 4'* • • /. yi' .•'"rhy- t . . . , . _ x , In ftlaok Velvet. Austrian fleldpiece firing at the Servians during the battle near Semlln. HIGHLAND REGIMENT MOVING TO THE FRONT Sjjsok ' V#tvet and Satin, White Satin, or Black and White in Combine tion 8eem Deetined to Be ' Popular Materials. -'•'.•ilf1 By MART DEAN. As a rule, the first showing of an- tnmn millinery Is neither attractive nor illuminating. It does not tempt one to bu£ nor does it indicate clear ly what will be pre-eminently modish later in the season, and it consists chiefly of non-committal models, made up to supply the demand for first hats that will replace the battered and faded summer straws without being radical enough to have an Important place in the new season's outfit However, the advance displays, both ot Spring and fall fashions are much earlier than they •were even a very few years ago, and now we get a view of some hhlc French hats long before the strict ly smart folk come back to the c i t y ' s h a u n t s . Buyers send over at least a few models well in %dvance of their own return, and though the wom an who does not absolutely need a hat will do well to wait a few weekB before making her choice, there have been attractive models on view ever since the first of August, and the number of these models has increased day by day. Black velvet, black satin, white sat in, or black and white satin are the materials most often used for the fashioning of the first fall millinery. These models are, of course, built up on the lines of those made of straw and are trimmed with flowers or feathers. Flowers and feathers also trim the hats #Bhown as advance fall models. The hats in the fall are prone to 8mallness--comfortable, practical lit tle shapes, not too pretentious--and, as usual, a goodly supply of small hats is In evidence; but from the first, there have been shown, side by side with the small shapes, an unusual number of large hats and medium- sized hats such as have been worn during the late summer season. And it is predicted that the larger hat Will not lose its prestige. *' ™ • A majority of the large models are made of velvet, though %eryr fre quently the velvet ends a few Inches from the edge of the brim, and the border is of maline or lace. Some very stunning black and white hats are also on the sailor lines. A model built upon the sailor line was of black and white satin. White satin formed the crows and brim while t^e facing was of black Batin. There Was a trimming directly at the back of delicate i clusters of white paradise, one * spray upstanding | while another fell over the brim at the left side. Shown in the same shop with the two above de- s c r i b e d w e r e s o m e s m a l l e r s h a p e s . S o m e were extremely e c c e n t r i c w h i l e others were lik able little hats. One model was a close fitting turban of black velvet with a long point shooting out and up at the back. The model was trimmed with sprays of grayish-colored feathers. Another waB a Napoleon shape of black velvet and maline. Shirred ma line formed the crown and brim, while the facing was of black velvet. The bat was trimmed with a single scarlet rose at the left side front on the up turned brim. One remarkably attractive small model of black also shown In large drawing was trimmed with two large white feather ornaments. Is very harmful to her hair and scaly, forming a hard crust on the head aa tt dries. To protect the complexion from the salt water, It is a good Idea to rub plenty of cold cream into the face be fore going in. The girl may dust It over with powder, if she does not care to pass out before the other bathers with her face all shiny from the cream. The grease will keep out the salt water in eome degree and will serve as a pro tectlon against the sun. OirlB cannot be too strongly urged to do everything in their power to care for their skin and hair. They should try to avoid a tan as they would poison ivy. It may seem desirable at the mo ment, but when they wear low-necked frocks the tan on their throats, shapbd like the necks of their bathing suits, will look so ugly that they will sin cerely regret ever having acquired it Then they will be even more sorry when the tan begins to fade and they look like victims of the jaundice, to say nothing of having skin like leather. Simple Model. DANGER IN BATHING SEASON Fpr Msny Reasons Girls Make a Mis take In Seeking to Acquire a Coat of Tan. The girl who wishes to keep her skin and hair beautiful wfll exert the great est care of it during the salt water bathing season. Sh4 should not linger on the beach after she comes out of the water, but should wash off ail salt from her skin before exposing herself to the sunshine again. If the Bait wa ter reaches her hair at all, it should be washed off at once. $he should not neglect this at any cost, for the brine EASY TO CLEAN PANAMA HAT No Need to Pay High Price to Have the Work D<ftie by a Profes sional Renovator. A panama hat Is a delightful acces sory to one's wardrobe. It may be cleaned or bleached repeatedly. A tea- spoonful of oxalic acid to a pint of lukewarm water will safely clean a panama, leghorn, milan and other light straw hats. Apply to the hat with a soft brush or sponge. Clean only a small portion at a time, and then rub off as much moisture as possible with a clean white cloth, as in this way there will be less tendency of the hat losing its shape. Go over the entire hat carefully, and when partly dry press with a moderately hot Iron over a muslin cloth. Lemon Juice may be used instead of the oxalic acid with good results. To renew a Mack straw hat sponge w'th alcohol and then brush it over with a thin solution of gum arable, which gives a varnish finiBh as well as a slight stiffness. If the straw la very dingy, use a good black ink or - - - COMFORT ON WASHING DAY Simple Device Does Away With the Constant Stooping That Is Pali* . ful and Injurious. The busy housewife often complains of backache after washing day; this Is, as a rule, not due to the washing of the clothes, but to the continual stooping down to the clothes-basket when putting out or gathering In the clothes. This disagreeable pain could be saved by simply tying the basket to an old small table with four legs, the basket could be nailed down, but if tied it could then be used without the legs by simply untying the string at both Bides. The strings will easily thread through the wicker of the basket, and ft pr>n'<1 ho cfppirod side * t Ji of the table and the string attached; it can be carried about quite easily, and no stooping whatever need t-e done. If no small table is available, the handy man can make supports on the basket itself; this is done as fol lows: On the bottom fix two pieces of wood, one at each Bids; at e»ch end of the wood fix bamboo rods, all of equal size, of course. This will make four legs, and answers exactly the same purpose as jtbe table. Bamboo rods may be bought at most hardware stores for very lit tle; one rod would make two legs, so that the cost is very trivial; the rods are very strong and firm. -- - - - THANKFUL FOR THE BLOUSE Women Would Find It Hard to Get Along Without This Very Serv iceable Garment What did unfortunate woman do b*» fore the blouse, pure and simple, ex isted? One f^rgetsr--lf we ever knew. Life sef@ms always to have been full of blouBes, and though we may scoff at them occasionally, and Insist on the one-piece gown, all women know we want them in our wardrobe. Their price Is above rubles--sometimes. The success of the Parisian fashion of blouses of vivid colors to be worn with white pftiue and duck or putty and maize-colored linen skirt is in doubt A pretty muslin blouse has a fichu edged with the frills we love so dear ly this season--those of the plcot edged variety--and the turn-over cuffs of the elbow sleeves show the same dainty frilllngs. You can get a cool frock In black and white for summer wear and know you are absolutely In the approved fashion. The magpie blouse can be In black and white handkerchief linens or in the chiffons. One is of snowy chiffon, with a pinafore bodice effect of black moire charmeuse tied at the waist with a lai*ge bow. Perfume Bottle With Long Stopper. The latest in perfume bottles 1b one whose stopper fits to the bottom of the bottle.' With this stopper the French women, it is eald, touch the eyebrows, the lobes of the ears, the lips, brush the hair lightly, ahd finish with a pat or two on the throat. Tiny Handkerchiefs. The smartest handkerchiefs are very small and of fine batiste or linen, and edged with a tiny tulle frill. Sometimes the initials are embroid ered on the tulle and sometimes on the batiste. a liquid shoe dressing before apply ing the gum arable. Il 'And feel font thirst slip ^ away. You'll finish refreshed, cooled, satisfied* by Ml tm •«« u iv tblak WCMt-Ctk. Not to Blame. "What shall we do, John," said the farmer's wife, who had retained much of her sentiment through 25 years of married life, "what shall we do to cel ebrate our silver weddipg?" "Reckon up where all the silver's gone to in bringing up bur family/' grumbled he. "Oh, no, John, It must be something real good and out of the ordinary^ 1 tell you what. Let. us kill the fattest pig and give a banquet." "Maria," said the husband solemnly, "I don't see how the unfortunate ani mal is to blame for what happened 25 years ago." ORIGINAL AND PLEASING IDEA Dainty Method of Announcing, Card, the Arrival of a Uttle 8tranger. by In their mail the other day the friends of one young couple found a dainty card. "Miss Adelaide Comp- ton." it announced in small, attrac tive lettering. 8ome of the recipients were puzzled at first, recalling all the Compton ladles except Miss Adelaide. Then in the low A lett-ha^nd they read la tiny type*, " y At Homl Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,, Satu Sunday, turdjay. when it dawned upon them that they were being told, in original and pleas ing fashion, of the coming of a new little Miss Compton, who for obvious reasons would be "at fcoase" every day in the week. FACE FULL OF PIMPLES 4240 So. California Ave., fchicaco, 111. --"About a year ago my face was full of pimples and red spots. To Bleep one night without Itching was almost Impossible. Some of the pimples would get big and red and if I touched them they would pain, while others would get white heads on them and when they broke open some matter came out. They would burn and itch and I scratched them so that some times they would break and bleed. That always caused them to be worse. "I bought all kinds of salves and creams and I found out that they did me no good. I noticed the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment advertisement and I sent for a free sample. I went to the drug store and bought a cake of Cutlcura Soap and some Cuticura Ointment and I found the pimples were drying out In two months X was well." (Signed) Chas. J. Peck, May 7, 1914. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post? eard "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."--Adt. A Good 8hot A San Franciscan, who has been hunting in the vicinity of Lake Tahoe without bagging any game, came upon a mountaineer who was feeding a caged wildcat he had caught the day before. "How much win you take for that beast?" he asked. The captor said $8 sad the money was paid over. "Now," said the Nlmrod, "tie one end of a strong cord to that tree and another to the cat's neck, and then open the door of the cage." This was finally accomplished sad the fierce animal stood straining at Its tether. The sportsman, who was watching the exercises from the Interior of the cabin, leveled his rifle across the win dow sill, took careful aim and blazed away. The wildcat gave a Joyful1 yell and disappeared in the forest The bullet had cut the rope. Ths Pumps. .V; . Lord Mersey, head of the Empress of Ireland-Storstad investigation board, said to a New York reporter the other day: "Much is still left to be desired, but ships are safer than they used to be." With a smile the veteran jurist add ed: "We no longer hear of skippers of fering such excuses for slow passages as the oue offered by the skipper of the collier, who said: " 'Well, gentlemen, no wonder we're late. We pumped the whole Atlantic three times through that s^ip coming across.'" EARTH'S MOST LONELY SPOTS Islands Where Communication With the Great World Is at Rare In tervals--Tristan da Cunha. - Though scientific progress has mads' ; ̂ it possible to do double journey be tween England and America in a fort- -|| night, there remain many islands with1 which it takes years to communicate. Off the Scottish coast are ths groups of islands known as the He brides, Orkneys and Shetlands. Of - these the most isolated island is St ' Kllda, some three miles long and two miles broad. The Inhabitants lead lives of great loneliness, for it takes a month to get to the next island, and the sea often makes any com- > munlcation with St Kilda impossible, j for months. The group of eight Phoenix islands- in the Pacific has a total population of|^ only 158, while another little bit of» the British empire is Fanning island.M;' This is a landing place for the Pacifie^ submarine cable, and usually thereof are about one hundred people in they.; place. £ The loneliest of all parts of British:V territory is the Island of Tristan Ds||'. Cunha in the South Atlantic, whlehj^-^ is also the smallest Inhabited island^; in the empire. It Is 1,800 miles froraS . ^ land, has a population of 74 Scottish^ ~ * ^|- : Americans, and the inhabitants getffFt ~ * <Mv news of the outer world usually oncs||> | every'two years. The 8tomach's Function. & ' The tehcher was examining the dasslr! * ^ ' in physiology. " ||/ ̂ "Mary, you tell us," she asked, **whrtL ^ v1 Jh is the function of the stomach?" M -U? "The funt^ion 4>f the stomach," th%?; „ vi little girl answered, "is to bold up tifcakf :~ petticoatr yN . . , ^ V :>V; -' - fey &W - Its Kind. "The fate of war seems to hang a hair." "Yes, a Bel plan hare, so to speak." Don't Wear A Truss! liter TWrty Tears Experience I Made A New Discovery For Ml Women or Children That Cures Rupture* ..a,.. CwtsTwiSotUacToTiylk, If yon bare tried most everything else, MM ' $ me. Where others fall Is where I have my (MMMSU?.' .J-i lucce&t. Send attached eoupou toJuy and I vUlmS^/ u ^ you free my book on Rupture and its cure, .X 'i my new discovery and giving yon prices and ; M ' of many poople who have tried it and men eon*. ^ is instaftt relief when all others falL BnhmMh' I use no salves, DO harness, no lies. I send on trial to prove what 1 say Is trot. Y<Mi ; a r e t h e J u d g e a n d o n c e h a v i n g s e e n m y b o o k a a r i l : read it you will be ua enthusiastic as my hunS*adt«C. patients whose letters you can also read. Fill osi » fN* coupon below and mail today. Its ••Ifc « yoar time whether you try my discovery or aoC V# One Too Many. Ths 'bus was rolling up Fifth ave nue in a heavy groundswell, on a murky night. Perhaps it was only that the chauffeur and conductor were both sleepy, or maybe it was only the mugginess that deceived them. On the corner at Thirty-fifth street stood, waiting to cross, a belated de livery boy, holding erect by the waist a dressmaker's dress form. The chauf feur thought he detected a fare, and slowed his craft in to the curb. The conductor looked out through the fog, shook his head, and rang the bell to go ahead. "Room for one only," he said, and the "bus rolled on.--New York Even ing Post FREE INFORMATION COUPON C. K. Bhooks. 1851 State Street. MmMl. MMl Please send me by unitl in plain vrs|lpM fsn our. n-. LAW Evening Classes! Lack of in onoy or Jack of time Derd Dotjrtaa* tai £: »ur way if you want to stody JUw, CometaQl--y »rk duriuif »li-< d;iy and Btudy inCBie^jo Ktat IPws«i««| v^uraes A regular - -- - Wet evanh\g Law ivrliucl, Uej for t«ir examinat'on* in allfftit! iboruufib roetliod* of Send for Catalog •idtbem to bi^pp^rt wtiilo I+Msxunm. WiMMfa>|Nk Chicago KENT Colieg®_of Law Lslwvisw HOLSTEIN CATTLE Important to NlotVters Examine carefully every bottlo of CASTORIA, a 6afe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature In Use Por Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria uu ciiiiuren, tuiu eev tuai n ? i- •m ̂ ;; .'•tt- •' Sap: In With the Trusts. -Did I understand you to say that Senator Plubb came up from the people?" "Yes, and he's going back on them now." **' T* Many a man who thinks be knows it all don't even know why a hen lays an egg instead of standing It on end. Granulated Eyelids, sxpo- sure to S»Bi Onsl and WW In tlio nert30 days I will oSer torsaJeJOD head df Msfc* (raJe lloUu'iu hot for* running In aye rnuu 1 toSyMN old, a iHiiulj-r of tlu in spni;,.rbag U• t ryslwn aow. well murkiHl and in yv<.>d tvLu.:!ton. They will M T-SttiiJ 15 16 Holit.-jn ard arol redton ^i^toreShsitta. W i l l a l s o o d o r l o o h o i J o t f i : l ! y d e » , , , mllWhiK cows, part of tb"m fre*h and do* W - freshi U soon. Al*<> lute J6 tie-id of *n» hlah-nradebulle of no tvlalion u> llio j!m>o «<>»»«£ •*, hellers. 1 will have a tew rlK'ic* heifer and haS : t; calves to offer in the nfar ftuun* that aiv lfr-JStBl. H-aiUolsteln.all.5 J0t -.ch. drmlttakMWMa. ; Write me jour nants. JAMES DORSEY, DEPT. W. GILBERTS. KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS k k rM mfeKKW HAIR BALSAM . 1-rt !• installs* •< Mrtfc .•ipa f «r**tcaf Hiai» •>. For R«*a»fac C«W mS uty boGrnyor 50c. aad $l.M I* • $ S compositors; Eyes inflamed by ex sure to Snnt Ons! and W BCf _ _ yuickly relieved by Marias B cyeBoscdy. No Smarting. ar just E\e C omfort. At , tjou; t»rci»- S»io; a. orehard. I ml. "/I Vour Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Mnrlse tys ; JOHN P. CURkan. riTTHijCiw.l SalveiaTubes2Sc.ForBesksllbeEjfefreeask I = ^ rV'tr'**" °r HsrtBSCjsissMSyCe.tCMBS|i| U«» HQ*. -2% IfiV ' d«r rtwHaw; 1 |tl»(N[ t«R«d. A. *. *«»• tw • II. MODERN DAIRY, fruit far»u: 100 a.: etP«*a«l|| " 'ii; >;< iJ* tf • M - - tyf