Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 171, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 July 1910 — Page 3
LJEST ATE. W K OFFER FOR SALE a limited number of _ : -,l?“- a «re trecte In onr Jacksonville Heights Subdivision, the original colony of Florida, near Jacksonville, Florida, thirty dollars per acre, 15.00 cash and EDO per month, no Interest, no taxes till paid for. Splendid paved road and telephone to property. About two hundred families on property Bow; new ones coming every day. Land fast Increasing in value. Splendid health. Good water ana schools. Send in your application at once as the number of tracts Is limited and allotments are “First come, flrst served.” Jacksonville Heights Improvement Co. Jacksonville JTla. A ? 3 fL’°2?..^ EARTNO ORCHARD FREE w Jne first 35 purchasers of our newly planted J w s “! reaU l * * luo ° interest in a B, 1 . 1 ! 11 !/ profitable business for absolutely no cost. The first payment on the 10-acre tracts is only (750, f? J! 111 eee that your Income on the 11000 Interest t“, e bl k paying (35.000 orchard commences the instant you contract to take one of the 10-acre tracts, ?hi. < can - bny now below their actual value. 18 he Ba * est - most profitable, and at the same «J?!L unl 3 n 0 Investment ever offered. Write today ooatplete details. Reference, Boise City National <£. Bol£te? W. b. Hill A 200 A C ,F E , OZARK FARM FOR SALE f miles from R. R. 1 mile to school, fine climate, altitude 1700 feet, good marketing facilities, a J?°l anip ™ Slx room frame house with ™ r ?.' 600 a BP le trees. 60 peach trees, (20 Per acre. Write to Harry Hallauer, Seymour, Mo. S A pS^ TC^E^ AN WHEAT farms - Jr FJhlrle, black loam, two feet on clay subsoil. Good water fifteen to thirty feet, good town, four elevators, large German settlement. Twelve to eighteen dollars an acre. Write to 8. B. Blehn. Guernsey, Saskatchewan. FARM WANTED BASIS' terms, will deal with owner only. Enclose stamp ... E - G - JORDON 8634 Southport Aye. Cbloaco, Illinois
Unflattering Truth.
A Chicago physician gleefully telle H child story at his own expense. Ths five children of some faithful patients had measles, and during their rathei long stay in the. improvised home hospital they never failed to greet hia daily visit with pleased acclamation. The good doctor felt duly flattered, hut rashly pressed the children, in the days of convalescense, for the reason of this sudden affection. At last the youngest and most indiscreet let slip the better truth. “We felt so sick that we wanted awfully to do something naughty, but we were afraid to be bad for fear you and the nurse would give us more horrid medicine. So we were awfully glad to see you, always, ’cause you Xnade us stick out our tongues. We stuck ’em out awful far! ”
Why Look Old?
When wrinkles and discoloration of the face can be removed and th® complexion you had in youth restored. To prove this statement, I will gladly remove all such blemishes from on® •ide of the face, free of charge. I have made thousands of women End men happy by my process,- of which I am the originator, and only Ono In the world capable of doing this. There are many imitators—do not be deceived. Acne, the bane of all phyaicians, I guarantee to cure, and to remove Pockmarks. References to people cured. For further particulars, Write to Dr. J. Elizabeth Tompkimi, *213 Grovgland avenue, Chicago, 111.
Looked Like a Pattern.
“My dear,” asks the thoughtful husband, “did you notice a large sheet of paper with a lot of diagrams on it about my desk?" “You mean that big piece with dots and curves and diagonals and things tell over It?” i “Yes. It was my map of the path Of Halley’s comet. I wanted to —’’ “My goodness! I thought it was that pattern I asked you to get, and the dressmaker is cutting out my* new by it!” —Chicago Evening Post
Statistics Go Lame.
1 “ ’Pears t’ me thar’s somethin’ Wrong with stertistlcks,” remarked the oldest inhabitant as he dropped into his usual place on the loafers’ bench. “What’s wrong with ’em?” queried the village grocer. "Wall, ercordin’ tew ’em,” continued the o. i., “we orter hev had a death in teown ev’ry six weeks fer th’ past tew years.” “Is that so?” said the grocer. “Yaas,” answered the other, “an’ by ginger, we ain’t had ’em!”
The Inevitable.
Briggs—l don’t think much of Underblossom. He’s a scoundrel. He lies In his teeth. Griggs—Why shouldn’t he? His teeth are false. —Life. We are told that true love will conquer a great many obstacles, but poverty and the toothache are two exceptions.
Compound Interest comes to life when the body feels the delicious glow of health, vigor and energy. That Certain Sense of vigor in the brain and easy poise of the nerves comes when the improper foods are cut out and predigested t Grape=Nuts take their place. If it has taken you years to run down don’t expect one mouthful of this great food to bring you back (for it is not a stimulant but a rebuilder.) Ten days trial shows * such big results that one sticks to M. “There’s a Reason” Get the little book, “The t v Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. ■. I \ gOSTUM CEBBAI. CO., IZTD, ' k BatUa CNak, Mleh.
GOOD FOR DESSERT
SOME TRIFLES WITH WHICH TO FINISH DINNER. Sweets That Will Be Appreciated by Both Old and Young—Strawberry Souffle Recommended as a Delicious Confection. Strawberry Souffle. — Rich and heavy sweets, always out of place for children, are especially harmful in summer. But there is no reason why simple sweets may not be indulged in. Strawberry souffle, if made of fresh, ripe fruit and served in sherbet glasses, is a treat for the warm summer afternoon tea party which any child should welcome. Let two cups of strawberry juice and a cup and a half of sugar stand together until they form a syrup. Cdver half a box of gelatin with half a cup of cold water, and when the gelatin has softened add a cup of boiling water. Beat the yolks of six eggs until they are creamy, add them to the syrup and then add the gelatin water, strained. Freeze, turning the crank constantly until the mixture is stiff. Add a quart of cream, whipped to a froth. Pack the freezer with i«»e and salt and set aside for two hours. Raisin Cake.—This cake might be called “children’s fruit cake,’’ for although it is not rich enough to cause indigestion, it is given the appearance of festiveness by the addition of nuts, molasses and raisins. Besides that, it keeps well and may be on hand for the afternoon spread for a couple of weeks. To make it, beat a quarter of a pound of butter and half a cup of brown sugar to a cream, add two tablespoonfuls of molasses and then two eggs, one at a time, unbeaten. Mix a cupful and a half of flour, ( half a nutmeg grated, an eighth of a pound of blanched almonds and the same amount of shredded lemon or orange peel and add to the cream. Lastly add a teaspoonful of cream of tartar and half a teaspoonful of baking soda, dissolved In not more than a quarter of a cupful of milk. Pour it into a paper lined tin, well buttered, and bake for two or three hours in a slow, steady oven. This cake is especially suitable for serving with lemonade or grape juice. Orange Granite.—Six oranges, a pint of orange juice, a pound of sugar and a' quart of water—-these are the materials needed to make a delicious ice. Ices are more cooling than creams in the summer, because the water- and sugar and fruit juices digest far more easily and quickly than cream and milk. To make the granite boll the water and sugar together for five minutes. Peel the oranges, separate the sections, remove seeds, white skin and every bit of fruit connecting tissue. Throw the •.pieces of fruit into the hot syrup, stand aside for an hour to cool and then drain the syrup into the ice cream freezer, add the orange juice and freeze. When frozen stiff mix in the pieces of orange and serve in glasses. Curly Peters.—Where these drop cakes got their name is hard to tell, but they are a prime favorite with most Children and make a good accompaniment for similar creams and ices. To make them cream together 1% cups of sugar and one cup of butter. Add yolks of two eggs, one cup of sour milk in which one teaspoonful of soda has been dissolved, three cups of flour, nutmeg, salt, allspice, one cup of currants, and lastly the whites of two eggs beaten to a froth. Drop the Matter in spoonfuls on a buttered tin, plant a raisin firmly in the center of each cake and bake in a moderately warm oven until the cakes are golden brown and crisp at the edges.
Raspberry Crown.
Place one cup of sweetened raspberry juice where it will boil, then stir into it two rounding tablespoons cornstarch (or sifted flour) wet in two tablespoons cold water. Add one cup sugar and stir until it looks transparent; then add oqe level tablespoon butter and juice of one-half lemon. Fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. Turn mixture into fancy molds and set in a place where if will become cold. When serving place on a cold dish with whole berries in center. Serve with either whipped or plain sweetened cream.
Berries and Toast.
Cut some slices of stale bread very thin and toast them a light brown, butter quite thick, and line the bottom and sides of a pudding dish with them. Fill the dish with strawberries as full as it will hold and sift plenty of sugar through and over them. Set this in the oven for about half an how. Serve Very'cold with rich cream/ •
Cherry Cups.
Make a simple dessert of Irish moss or sea moss farina with milk, following directions given on package of the latter. Set away to harden In cold place. Serve In individual molds with sauce same as given for strawberry pudding—using cherries or serve with whipped cream.
Puff Cake.
One cup sugar, one-half cup butter, two eggs, one-half cup sweet milk, one teaspoon baking powder, one and onehalf eups flour; flavoring.
Graham Gems.
One egg, one scant cupful of sou> milk, one cupful of graham flour, onv even teaspoonful of soda, salt. Thia makes eight gems.
A BAD THING TO NEGLECT.
Don’t neglect the kidneys when you notice lack of control over the secretions. Passages become too frequent or scanty; urine is discolored and sediment appears. No medicine for such
troubles like Doan’s Kidney Pills. They quickly remove kid. ney disorders. Mrs. A. E. Fulton, 311 Skidmore St, Portland, Ore., says; My limbs swelled terribly and I was bloated over the stomach and had puffy spots beneath the eyes. My kidneys
were very unhealthy and the secretions much disordered. The dropsical swellings began to abate after I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills and soon 1 was cured." £ Remember the name—Doan’s. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. T.
HE’D HAD SOME HARD KNOCKS.
"Fortilne at evfery man’s door." “Fortune is a knocker, all right" Foxy Hiram, “Well, now, if that ain’t surprising!” ejaculated Mrs. Ryetop, as she shaded her eyes with her hand. “There goes old Hiram Skinflint, and rather than step on a poor black ant he picked it up, and I bet he is going to drop it somewhere out of the reach of danger." Her husband laughed knowingly. • ’ Not Hiram Skinflint, Mandy. He’ll go down to Jed Weatherby’s general store and order a pound of granulated sugar. Then while Jed is looking another way he’ll drop the ant among the grains and tell Jed as long "as hia sugar has ants in it he ought to sell it at half price. Like as not he’ll try to get Jed to throw in two or three raisins and a yeast cake. You don’t know Hiram Skinflint." #
The Miser of Sag Harbor.
“Economy,” said Daniel W. Field, the millionaire shoe manufacturer of Boston, who at the age of forty-five has entered Harvard, “economy is essential to wealth, but by economy I don’t mean niggardliness. “Too many men fall to attain to wealth because they practise / a cheeseparing and mean economy that gets everybody down on them. “They practise, in fact, an economy like that of old William Brewster of Sag Harbor. William, you know, would never buy oysters because he couldn’t eat shells and all."
TAKE A FOOT-BATH TO-NIGHT After dissolving one or two Alien’s Footcabs (Antiseptic tablets for the foot-bath) In the water. It will take out all soreness, smarting and tenderness, remove foot odors and freshen the feet. Allen’s FootTabs Instantly relieve weariness and sweating or inflamed feet and hot nervousness of the feet at night. Then for comfort throughout the day shake Allen’s Foot-Ease the antiseptic powder Into your shoes. Sold everywhere 25c. Avoid substitutes. Samples of Allen’s Foot-Tabs mailed FREE or our regular size sent by mail for 25c. Address Allen S. Olmsted. Leßoy, N. Y. “Foot-Tabs for Foot-Tubs.*
Tactful.
A woman with a pronounced squint went to a fashionable photographer. He looked at her and she looked at him and both were embarrassed. He spoke first "Won’t you permit me,” be said, "to take your portrait in profile? There Is a certain shyness about one cf your eyes which is as difficult in art as it Is fascinating in nature.” Beacon. Annie Telford, "Queen's Nurse," of Ballyantral, Ayrshire, England, Writes as Follows: I have great pleasure in testifying what a valuable remedy in various Skin Troubles I have found Resinol Ointment to be. I have used it in extremely bad cases of Eczema and in poisoned wounds, and always with most satisfactory results. I have the highest opinion of its curative value.
Midas.
Midas had come to that point in his career where everything he touched turned to gold. "What shall you ever do with the stuff?’* asked his entourage in visible alarm. Midas affected not to be uneasy. "Just wait till the boys begin to touch me!” quoth he, displaying an 1 acquaintance with economic tendencies tar in advance of his age.—Puck.
Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CABTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 80 ’Years'. The Kind You Have Always Bought, Whether the church shall stay in the world depends not on whether the world will support ft but on whether It will serve the world and save it
Controlled Newspaper.
1
What’s the Answer?
We’re ready to quit! After sending two perfectly rhymed, carefully scanned, pleasurably sentimental pieces of poetic junk to seventeen magazines and having them returned seventeen times, we turn to the current issue of a new monthy and find a “pome” modeled after Kipling’s “Vampire,” and in which home is supposed to rhyme with alone, run on page eleven with all the swell curlycues ordinarily surrounding a piece of real art. If poetizing is a gift we are convinced that this poet’s must have been. As for us, we are on our way to the woodshed to study the psychology of the ax or any other old thing that hasn’t to do with selling poetry to magazines.
A Protection Against the Heat.
When you begin to think it’s a personal matter between you and the sun to see which is the hotter, buy yourself a glass or a bottle of CocarCola. It is cooling—relieves fatigue and quenches the thirst. Wholesome as the purest water and lots nicer to drink. At soda fountains and carbonated in bottles —5c everywhere. Send 2c stamp for booklet “The Truth About Coca-Cola” and the Coca-Cola Baseball Record Book for 1910. The latter contains the famous poem “Casey At The Bat," records, schedules for both leagues, and other valuable baseball Information compiled by authorities. Address The Coca-Cola Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Household Consternation.
“Charley, dear!” exclaimed young Mrs. Torkins, “the baby has swallowed a gold dollar!” “Great heavens! Something must be done. There will be no end to the cost of living if he gets habits like that!”
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellet* regulate and Invlg. orate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take a* candy. Rich relatives have a mania for living to a ripe old age. ■-
A c p.iri^pßWM'j!ffig^szifc s W/aiJOL
OLD SORES CURED
Balve cnresCturonic U leers, Bone naolent yicere.Mercurtal Ulcer®, White Swellfajr vidqMt r- 10 **—
ROOSEVELT RETURNS AND IS GIVEN AN OVATION SELDOM EQUALED
The Mighty Traveler Goes Buoyantly Through 9 Long and Trying Reception-Parade, Showing Lively Interest in Everything American The White Company Receives Unique Compliment for the Sturdy Reliability of Its Steam Car From Mr. Roosevelt and Family
Theodore Roosevelt and Party in White Steamer.)
After fifteen months’ absence, exactly as scheduled, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt disembarked from the Kaiserin Auguste Victoria, Saturday morning, June 18, at 11 a. m. To the keen disappointment of a large group of newspaper correspondents, Mr. Roosevelt absolutely refused, as heretofore, to be interviewed or to talk on political subjects, but his rapid fire of questions showed the same virile Interest in public affairs as before. If the welcome tendered by the vast throng may be considered a criterion upon which to base a “return from Elba,” surely there was no discordant note in the immense recep-tion-parade, nor in the wildly clamorous crowd which cheered at every glimpse and hung on his very. word. The incidents of the day in New York were many, but perhaps none better illustrated the nervous energy and vitality of the man, the near-mania to be up-and-doing, which he has brought back to us, than the discarding of horses and carriages for the swifter and more reliable automobiles. The moment the Roosevelt family and
Try a Chew ® of Tiger Fine Cut ft I you a £ rcc y° u never M fl* tasted any other half as I /SW gooA ' B ■ Tiger tastes good—be- ■ cause it is good. Pure, full-flavored, clean and H sweet. I TIGER I I FINE CUT ■ I CHEWING TOBACCO I H * 3 P ut up in air-tight, dust-proof packages which are ■ || sold to you from a tin canister in which they are » ■ originally packed. » ■ Always in proper condition. Always a clean, delicious K chew. ■ I 5 C ents I ® Wtiyht guaranteed by United Stat—Gov't. T SOID EVERYWHERE ML*
raw. r. mix aautAuo’a onaatai ** Crcaat HI Magical Bcautlflcr. ajj- Removes Tan Pimple,, freckles, Moth Patches, Ha 0-0 JSeshOl Hash and Bkln Diseases, S , an<l every btemic AAm-L Tu l*h on beauty, H .JO Wc WfiH ffCj anddeflesdetee643— S OV -.rfr gray tlon. It has stood * a W • W / I tbe 1081 of 83 yra a,= i --y er t* 4 *• *° *»'<“- k-=x >1 eSI less we taste ft to r B ft I besureitlsprop- < a w/ erl f made. Acr’n 1 cf P > n ° connter- , | iV "r' fj \ felt of similar rwT (/ J V name. Dr. b. A. /✓- x Wr>V'7 If > I 1 Sayre said to a /•< XWk'tzlßw 1 )a4 ’f of UN" hautX 1 St V vSw. / u,n patient): I 11 L w— “As you ladles JhS'x Will use them, I recommend •Gonrand s Cream* as the least harmful of all th® '■reparations" For sale by all drmrsistsand Fancy-Goods Dealers In the U3.,CanadaaLd Europe. FmLT. Hopllm, Prop., 37 Brest Jones St, New York
Immediate party landed, they wer» whisked away th White Steamers tothe home of Mrs. Douglas Robinson at. 433 Fifth avenue. A. little later, wheat the procession reached the corner «C Fifty-ninth street and Fifth aveniMt Colonel Roosevelt again showed kte preference for the motor car in gatera! and the White cars- in particular, when he, Cornelius Vanderbilt and Cablector Loeb transferred from their cm*rlage to White Steamers, which was* in waiting for them. After luncheon at Mr. Roblnsooftahousie, the entire party, includtagg Colonel Roosevelt, again entered WMtr cars and were driven to Long T-l—nß City, where they were to take a special'train to the ex-President's hcaate at Oyster Bay. The supremacy of the White cam with the Roosevelt party was agate demonstrated on Sunday, when tta party was driven to church In tke White Steamers, and a group of aosMP forty prominent Rough Riders warn taken in a White Gasoline Truck t» » clambake at the Travers Island statehouse of the New York Athletic date
Up-Set Sick Feeling that follows taking a dose of casta/ oil, salts or calomel, is about th® worst you can endure —Ugh—it gives one the creeps. You don’t have to have it—CASCARETS* move the bowels—tone up the? liver —without these bad feeling*. Try them. «* CASCARBTS roc a box for a weekW treatment, all drawists. Bluest seller tn the world. Millian toxas a manlK YOU OUGHT TO KNOW ABOUT IT. n*»wbrick basinet® bouaea. People Deeded to ■*»
