Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 251, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 October 1911 — Page 4

- Fer Sate— Good eight room house, •mall barn, large chicken park, good, well Improved street and sidewalk. Call on J. P. Simons, East Elm street Far Sate— Farms for sale in Indiana at a bargain. Near good markets, railroad and interurban lines. Good schools and churchep. Good Class of people. This land is level, well improved and productive. We grow wheat, clover, timothy, corn, alfalfa vegetables and plenty of fruit Good roads, R. F. D., telephone lines and line water. Good fishing. Write at once for price list, information and number of acres wanted.—M. H. Milter. Bristol, Ind. ' / S Vter Sater-Qood boiler-iron wood stove, bottom, top and front doors of cast iron. Also some fine young pullets.—J. R. Wilcox, Phone 394. Far Sate— Good, hand picked pears, old Renicker farm, % mile east of Alx; 40 cents per bushel if sold this week.— Jerry Tullis, Phone 511-D. Far Sate Four 3100 shares in the Parr Creamery Co., at >2O per share.— W. E. Price, R. D. 1, Rensselaer, Ind. For Sate—A good .bunch of pure bred Duroc Jerseys, both males and females. Inquire of John R. Lewis. Phone 512-K, R. F. D. No. 1, 10 miles northeast of Rensselaer. Far Sate— At O. K. Ritchey s, 4 miles south of Renselaer, extra large Poland China males; price |ls each. Fer Sate— ls you want to buy the property I live in, come and see me.— G. O. Pumphrey. Fer Sate— Some Duroc male and female shoats. C. 4. Reed, R. B. 3, phone 535 A. Far Sate—36s for a Birdsell high grade phaeton carriage, wide seat, good as new, cost 3225. Will throw in one set of harness, leather fly net, two collars and one whip. B. Forsythe, at home. ’l*- ' Fer Sale— My property north of the railroad; consists of two lots 150x187 feqL good well, six-room cottage, large double chicken park. E. L. Hammerton* Rensselaer, Ind. For Sate Spring chickens for fries. Phone Wf. For Sale Pure bred Duroc Jerseys. If you want a good spring gilt or boar, cal* write or phone Victor Yeoman, phone 531 G, R. F. D. No. 2, Rensselaer, Indiana Ibr Sate— Bridge and other good oak lumber. Inquire of Wm. Halstead, R. D. No. 3, Box 40, Rensselaer, Indiana ' ■■ 'Av. ■ FOB BUT. For Bent— House of eight rooms bathroom, cellar, basement, cistern, city water and chicken house, on North Van Rensselaer St.—Phone 244, W. E Moore. For Bent— Modern convenient house, centrally located. Inquire at Trust •nd Savings Bank or of Milt Roth. '• WANTIP. Wanted— To exchange a manure spreader, wagon or other machinery for a good horse. —Hamilton & Kellner. Wanted — Girl for general housework. —Mell Abbott, Phone 216. Wanted— Farm hand. Inquire of Reuben Yeoman, R. D. Na 3, Rensselaer, or phone 20 M, Mt Ayr. Wanted— l want to rent a welldrained farm of 140 or 330 acres, for p term of 3 years, the landlord to loan or go my security for |1,500 to be used to purchase stock and Implements to run the farm. Will pay a rental of three-fifths of grain and hay deUyered to the elevator or railroad. Ajfltoes Box 7, Mt Ayr, Ind. LOM. Lest Long brown kid glove, on streets of Rensselaer. Finder please return to May Rowley, or leave at this office. Lost About 2 weeks ago, a gold lockst and chain; locket set with white and red stones. Initials “G. M. G." an back. Finder please return to Gladys Grant or T. W, Griifat MISCELLANEOUS. If you want good bread try “The Best Ever,** Mrs. Green’s HOME MADE. To insure prompt delivery place orders the day before. Phone 477. ' Pasture— l can take in a few more head of cows at my farm 2 miles west •f Rensselaer. T. W. Grant ..... ——— Nsttee — So many people have asked me to clean wall paper for them that I have decided to take a limited amount of work which I will guar•atss to be satisfactory and at small cost provided you are willing to have It done at night. Telephone 437 or iiti , A ClaMlfled Adv. will sell it

-Baby won't suffer five minutes with croup if you apply Dr. Thomas* Eclectic Oil at once. It acts like magic. The annual statement of the condition of the Pullman company shows a loss of net earnings amounting to 32,090,326 for the year ending July 31. Fine scattering snowflakes, the first of the season, were observed at Evansville Saturday night at varying intervals between the hours of nine and midnight... ,; ’ ■ ■ Miss Lulu Stark, postmistress at Hatfield, Ind., near Evansville, has been missing from her home for the last week, and officials have been, unable to find her. Mrs. Ida Lewis, keeper of Lime Rock Light in Narragansett Bay, whose rescues of forty yfears ago startled the world and gained for her the thanks of Congress, is dying in the lighthouse, where she has made her home ever since she was a little girl. Records for submergence of marine boats of the United States navy were broken by the Salmon, which descended in Narragansett Bay to a depth of 144 feet, remaining for ten or fifteen minutes. The previous record was held by the Octopus. ...■ | j ■ The body of an unidentified man, apparantly about 70 years old, is being held at a Goshen morgue. Lake Shore section men discovered the body on the Goshen golf links. The man had been dead a week. He had no effects of any description. , John Zenor of Bowling Green received a letter from a girl in Brooklyn, who found his name and a request for matrimonial correspondence on thd egg which Zenor wrote twelve years ago when working in an egg packing house. He has been married ten years. Miss Virginia Brooks, West Hammond’s Joan of Arc, Saturday brought a 325,000 slander suit against John Hessler, president of the village board of West Hammond. Mr. Hessler two years ago charged at a village board meeting that Miss Brooks had &t°len 310,000 from the village. —’"T Howard Phillips, sentenced in 1909 at Indianapolis to five years in the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth. Kan., for violation of the national banking laws, left the prison on parole Saturday. Phillips was charged with embezzling several thousand dollars from the Terre Haute National bank. Charles Merkle of Gas City, whose son was electrocuted by a broken wire belonging to the municipality, a few months ago, when the lad picked it up from the ground, thinking it was a snake, has been given 3650 damages the town corporation by Judge H. J. Paulus of the Grant circuit court

AWAY GOES PIMPLES, BLACK. HEADS, ECZEMA, DANDRUFF AND OTHER SKIN AFFECTIONS. When Zeno and Zeno Soap ire Used. The A. F. Ix>ng Drug Store says. “We are so confident that ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP used together will rid the skin or scalp of infant or grown person of PIMPLES. BLACKHEAD, ECZEMA. DANDRUFF, INSECT BITES or any form of itching, irritated, disfiguring skin or scalp trouble, that we do not hesitate to recommend these clean refined remedies to every person who desires quick relief and a ; cure from any form of aggravated skin or scalp affection. Oftentimes one bottle and one cake of soap will cure a minor case of skin trouble. ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP produces sure and swift results. You will not suffer another day after you commence to use them. You will feel like a new person. ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP can be obtained from one leading druggist in every city or town in America, and in Rensselaer at Long’s Drug Store. Sleep Well Toaight Don’t let constipation, indignation, or laxy liver rob you of the pleasure of refreshing Bleep. Take 1 W A home with you VELAXO but effectual. Tones and invigorates the entire system. AU druggists, 25 cents. DeKalb Dreg A Chess, Otow OeKalh, ML FOUND. Feud—A sum of money in the business section of Rensselaer. Address P. O. Box 335. Feud—Automobile chain. Inquire here. MONET TO LOAN. The Union Central life Insurance Co. has made a big appropriation of money to be loaned on good farms in Jasper county and offers a liberal contract without commission. John A Dunlap, Agent AUTOMOBILES. Wo have on onr floor ready for delivery two of those convenient economical runabouts, completely equipped, for 1800. Call and let us tail you more about «• TH* tabnamt

Madrigals as They Are Writ By Peet Laureatess tess of Chicago.

Through the kindness of William B- Austin, of Chicago, our attention has been called to a beautiful little booklet called “Monon Madrigals” published by 'Frank J. Reed, general passenger agent of the Monon rail- 1 road. The book is really very handsome, the publisher having displayed much taste in its printing and binding. The subject matter is intentionally sentimental, the contributors for the most part aiming to convey some pastoral instruction about the country through which the splendid “Hoosier Limited” speeds its way. Rensselaer, however, with its many poetic themes, its winding streets, its classic Iroquois, its happy homes, its progressive business men, its brilliant orators, its blue skies and its victorious football conquests, to say nothing of its Wren ball team, falls for scanty mention and then in lines that do it grave injustice and tend to cause great dissappointment to any who accept the “madrigal” composed by Mrs. C. R. McMillan as depicting a literal condition. To enlighten the reader who is doubtless entirely in the dark, so to speak, we have taken the liberty to reprint the rythmic gem in these columns, thus giving it the benefit of our monstrous circulation. Such genius should not be smothered by limitation in a publication di the narrow scope of the “Monon Madrigals.” It should not be concealed to blush unseen on library tables and polished office desks, when thousands of people following the bucolic plow or milking the pastoral heifer so greatly need its inspiration. With all due respect to its authoress, who may have aimed to keep its grandeur restricted to the truly artistic, we are determined after much perturbation to reprint it as Levi Silverburg would say, “Where the whole vorld might see.” So here goes; these are the lines of Mrs. McMillan: “If your friends should be sick They can go down to French Lick, If a rest they would take Send them down to Cedar Lake. If they must have some beer $ Send them down to Rensselaer.” The authoress boldly signs her name. There should be a long pause here, required for the reader to dry his eyes. Such tender lines can not be read without bringing emotions to the heart, priming the eyes to effervescence in recognition of such composite genius. We have found after consulting our dictionary, that a madrigal is an amorous poem, containing some tender and delicate, though simple, thought. A classic on the other hand is a literary gem, chaste, pure and of the noblest inspiration. The lines above must have been wronly classified, or else the editor of “Madrigals” did not possess those fine qualities of distinction essential to modern literary success. The lines of Mrs. McMillan should not have been classified with madrigals but rather withheld for a later edition of classics. Truly, however, it might have some of the madrigal earmarks. It is not especially amorous, but it is tender and delicate. No one would realize in. perusing the first lines which offer succoring advice to the sick or even the second clause which provides rest for the heavy laden that they .were gradually being advised of a place where beer was on draught. But such are the winsome tactics employed by real poets that the unsuspecting reader is ( led through the charms of literature to the very bar of Budweiser. But the poetess has been wronly informed. There is no beer to be had for the asking in Rensselaer. This city has been “dry” for 10, these many years and it is only in an occasional basement that the brew is kept for private consumption. Should the alluring verse of Mrs. McMillan induce some parched tongue owner to leave the train with the expectation of satisfying bis thirst and he should be disappointed, it might result in a damage suit, for Buch dissappointment could not be overcome by even the charms of poetic genius. Poets, however, do not always depict literal conditions, and let us credit Mrs. McMillan with having no thought of actual conditions but for haring written solely for the grace of language and the charm of rythm, for the passion of sublime and lofty thought. Although unaccustomed to the art of muse, we are Impelled by the inspiration of the quoted madrigal to rush into verse, neither classical nor madrigal, but just plain verse, expressing our emotions. And hence this thus; We greatly fear, , Poetess dear, That Rensselaer You wish to queer. ** We stop right here To shed a tear. Don’t taunt and jear. Life hath no cheer. There is no beer In Rensselaer.

Frosh pancake flour at the Depot Grocery.

American Checker Champtea Will Come to Rensselaer.

Newell Banks, who recently won the checker championship, has just started on a tour of the United States, and is scheduled to stop in Rensselaer as the guest of local checker players on the evening of Nov. Ist Mr. Banks is the real American champion, having recently defeated all contestants in matches to determine the real champion. He will make only a few stops in Indiana. Rensselaer being the first one after he leaves Chicago.

Get Money For You Cast Off Articles of Clothing.

Preparatory to placing them on sale a final collection of articles of wearing apparel will be made Wednesday of this week. Quite a number have called The Economy Co., and placed their articles for sale. The articles are all credited to the persons from whom received and when sold a check will be mailed to the original owner. If they are not sold, they are so marked that they can be returned. Don’t put off looking your things over and even if you have only a few articles call Phone 493 and have a representative call for them. THE ECONOMY CO., Phone 493.

In The Old School Days.

I remember, I remember the house where I was born; the voice of dad that bellowed forth to rouse me every morn; the picnic that I always had when whiter breezes blew, to clear the sidewalk of the snpw; the chores I had to do. I remember, I remember, the old time days in school, the lickings that I always got for breaking some darned rule; the moonlight nights I used to go out in the old bob sled and hug and kiss the pretty girls among the robes and hay. I remember, I remember, oh, no, I’ll not forget; I’d like to wander back again to those old days you bet!

TRY THIS OVERNIGHT CURE FOR COLD IN HEAD OR CHEST.

It is Curing Thousands Dally, and Saves Time and Money. Get a bowl three-quarters full of boiling water, and a towel. Pour into the water a scant teaspoonful of HYOMEI (pronuonce it High-o-me. Put your head over the bowl and cover head and bowl with towel. Breathe the vapor that arises for a few minutes, and presto! your head is as clear as a bell, and the tightness in the chest is gone. It’s a pleasant cure. You’ll enjoy breathing HYOMEI. You’ll feel at once its soothing, healing and beneficial effects as it passes over the inflamed and irritated membrane. 50 cents a bottle, at druggists everywhere. Ask B. F. Fendlg for extra bottle HYOMEI Inhalent

LOCAL MARKETS.

Wheat—9o. Corn—s 3. Corn, old —65. Oats 43. Rye—7o. Turkeys—l 2. Hens —L Springs—B. Ducks—B. Roosters —4c. Eggs 20c. Butter—22.

Lecture Conroe Dates.

Nov. 27. —Parlette, lecture. Jan. 23.—John Eberly Co., concert Feb. 26. —Landon, Impersonator. March 22.—Beulah Buck Co., ladles’ quartette. Feb. 5. —H. V. Adams, lecture.

Regulates the bowels, promotes easy t natural movements, cures constipation —Doan’s Regulets. Ask your druggist for them. 25c a box. It is reported from Huntington that Chairman W. J. Wood of the railroad commission of Indiana in all probability will order the Erie station at Bippus, a small town near Huntington, moved into the town from threequarters of a mile east. The Erie officials vigorously oppose the moving of the station and say it would interfere with plans to double track the Line into Chicago. Ladies desiring mfillinery and dressmaking, also ladies* tailoring. call on Mrs. H. A. Cripps, over Trust and Savings Bank. \ J. L. Beattie, 44 years old. died in a hotel at Huntington Saturday night after drinking carbolic acid. He registered from Columbus, Ohio, but left a statement that he lived at 811 High Street, Toledo, Ohio, and directed letters to be mailed to his mother. Mrs. Jennie Beattie, Allen, Mich., and to Fred Gordon, Litchfield. Mich. Impure blood runs you down —makes you an easy victim for organic diseases. Burdock Blood Bitters purifies the blood —cures the cause —builds you up. —, • ▲ Classified Adv. will rent tt. ■

Green Corn

Do not overcook green corn. Ten minutes in boiling water is quite enough; longer toughens it Leftover corn can be used for fritters for the next meal in this way. Cut corn from cob and to three ordinary ears add one large cup of milk, one egg well beaten, salt and pepper to taste, and enough flour to make a thin batter. Sift one teaspoonful of baking powder with the flour. Fry the same as any batter cakes or drop by spoonfuls into boiling lard for corn fritters. In cutting corn from the cob, either tor soup, scalloped corn, or pickle, slant your knife so that the grains will be cut in two. You will find it much more tender. —-—- .... Scalloped Corn. —Cut corn from cob, slanting the knife so as to split as many grains as possible. To five cupfuls of corn take one and one-half cups of bread crumbs, one egg and one-half cup sweet milk, salt and pepper to taste; a pinch of red pepper, adds a fine flavor. Mix the corn, egg, and milk. Put in a baking dish half inch of corn and sprinkle a thin layer of crumbs over it. Continue this way until materials are used up. Pour over all half a cupful of cream and put in a moderate oven till it browns. It cream is not on hand meit two tablespoonfuls of butter and pour over the last layer. In using canned corn omit the last half cup of milk. Too much crumbs spoils the dish and makes it pasty.

Chocolate Eclairs

Shape cream mixture on buttered sheets in oblong pieces about four inches long and one and one-half inches wide, placed four inches apart. As soon as they are done ice with chocolate icing. When icing is cold cut the eclairs on the side and fill either with whipped cream, a custard, tor preserved fruits. Chocolate icing: Two tablespoons melted chocolate, five tablespoons powdered sugar, three tablespoons boiling water; cook over fire until smooth and glossy; dip the tops of eclairs in this as they come from the oven. Cream filling: One and one-half cups scalded milk, twothirds cup sugar, one-fourth cup flour, two eggs, one-fourth teaspoon salt. Beat the sugar, flour, eggs, and salt together and stir into the scalded milk; cook fifteen minutes, stirring often. When cold flavor with vanilla. Cut a small slit in the side of the eclair and fill with a pastry tube.

Economical Dressing

One tablespoonful of butter, one large tablespoonful of flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful ground mustard, or pinch of cayenne pepper. Beat these ingredients together, then add enough hot water to make a. thin custard, cooking until smooth in a bouble boiler, then cool and- place on Ice. Two cupfuls cf olive oil, yolks of two eggs, vinegar or lemon juice to taste. Beat the eggs drop in the oil until it begins to thicken, then add oil and vinegar alternately, until U 1 the oil is used and the mixture is of the consistency of thick cream. Then add the c6fd custard and beat hard, lastly add the beaten white of one egg. Put in mason jar in Ice chest and it will last a week and Is more delicate than the pure mayonnaise.

White Mountain Soup

To one level teacupful of cold cooked rice add one ounce of dry grated cheese, one cupful of vegetable stock (liquor remaining from cooking peas, cabbage, etc.), one and dne-half pints of hot milk, one level teaspoon each of salt and pepper. Put these ingredients into a sauce pan. Stir over the fire until it boils, then remove and pour into soup plates. Beat the white of one egg until stiff, salt lightly; with a teaspoon dispose the egg in little mounds on the surface of the soup. Serve with cone shaped wafers.

Spinach Salad

Take half a peck of fresh spinach wa«sh it thoroughly in several waters, put in steamer, and steam for fifteen minutes; turn into a colander and drain. Chop fine, season with salt, pepper, and two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Mix well and press into small molds or cups. When cold place each form on a lettuce leaf and put a spoonful of mayonnaise dressing on top. Fine.

Vegetable Mulligatawny

Oue quart'of vegetables of all kinds cut into pieces. Cook until tender' in three piuts of boiliug water, rasu through a sieve and return to sauce pan with one tablespoonful of rice nour, one tabiespoonful of curry paste, the same of ground nuts, juice of half a lemon, a teaspoonful of salt and half a teaspoonful of pepper. Cook for twenty minutes, strain, and serve with toasted wafers.

Soup a la Garden

One cupful of white meat of chicken, six chopped mushrooms, one tablespoon minced parsley, one carrot chopped fine, two pints of boiling water. , Cook until water is reduced to a pint. Rub through a sieve. Add one pint of milk, two teaspoons of flour rubbed Into half a cupful of cream, a ealtspoon of salt, and a half teaspoon of pepper. Return .to the fire, reheat, and serve. Good served cold.

Sunday Night Salad

Calf’s brains boiled in salt and water, chilled on ice, cut in small dice, •nd served on* a bed of lettuce with mayonnaise make a delicious hot weather dish for Sunday night.

Tomato Salad

Cover tomatoes with boiling water; let stand five minutes, then peel and •Hee; chill, arrange on lettuce leaves, sprinkle with salt and garnish with dressing.

Russet shoes may be kept clean and bright by nibbing them with a elice of banana and polishing with a doth. .

ProfiissioiiaHlards DR. L M. WASHBURN. nmnrcßur ahb vvbchboh Makes a specialty of of the Over Both Brothers, ARTHUR H. HOPKINd HAW, MATO AMD BBAXi BSIAfI xmmes on ' farms and city property, personal security, and cnattel mortgage. Buy, sell and rent farms- and city property.- Farm and city fire' insurance. Office over Chicago Bargain Store. 9. F. Zrwta B. C. Xrwla~ IRWIN A IRWIN J ■ &AW, BEAD ESTATE JJTO XBSVB AMOB. 4 per eent farm loans, Office in Odd Fellows* Block. E. P. HONAN ATTOBMEY AT lAW LsW, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice "in all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and "dispatch. Benbselaer, Xsdlana. H. L. BROWN DEMTXST Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. All the latest methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Of* flee over Larch’s Drug Store. JOHN A. DUNLAP "7 Lawyer. (Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice in all courts. Estates settled. Farm Txtana Collection department. Notary in the office. Rensselaer. Tndlaos. DR. E. C. ENGLISH PHYSICXAM ASD BUBQEOM Night and day calls given prompt attention. Residence phone, 114. Office phone, 177. SMMMMIMTs TwflDR. F. A. TURFLER. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIST Rooms 1 and 2. Murray Building. Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings oh 300, MMI- - rings on 300. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. DR. E. N. LOY SuccessoiHto Dr. W. W. HartselL HOMEOPATHIST Office —Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. OFFICE FHOHB 80 Residence CoUege Avenue, Phone 149. BttUMBUBCSa SllAlftXUk F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Special attention to diseases of woaesa and low grades of fever. Office in Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence. 443.

Chicago to Xorthweet, XndlananoUs, Cincinnati* and the South* Xeouisville sad French Uck Springs. BENSSELAEB TXMB TAWT.WIn Effect October 14, 1911. sours Botnro No. 31—Fast Mall 4:4* a. m. No. s—Louisville Mall .... 11:20 a.m. No. 37—Indpls. Ex 11:51 a. m. No. 83—Hooslet Limited .. 1:55 p. m. No. 39—Milk Accom 6:02 p.m. No. 3 —Louisville Ex. 11:05 p. m. SOBTH BOtJXD No. 4—Louisville Mall .... 4:53 a.m. No. 40 —Milk Accom. 7:35 a. tn. No. 32—Fast Mall 10:05 a. m. No. 38—Indpls-Chgo. Ex.... 3:03 p.m. No. 6—Louisville Mall &Ex 8:17 p. m. Nb. 30 —Hoosier Limited ... 5:44 p.m. Train No. 81 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 8:15 a m. No. 14. leaving Lafayette at 4:20, connects with No. 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 5:44 p. m. Trains Noa 80 and 83, the "Hoosier Limited," run only between Chicago and Indianapolis, the C. H. A D. service for Cincinnati having been discontinued. W. H. BEAM. Agent.

I Hiram Day|| “ DEALER IN H fetaitj | Lime. Brick | ; RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA J ’ C. W. PLATT CEMENT CONTBACTOB ■ Sidewalks, Foundations, Cement Blocks. AU work guaranteed. Phone SM. Rensselaer, Ind. DOMESTIC jNow*4W AMONTH We Will Take Yowr DOMESTIC ■shsssod to toiyliHirlira r. f*»***f* , < f» ton »*** y* mWBmS. Straw* wy