Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 165, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 July 1912 — Page 3

When Bake Day Comes ' ' "4 *-- J V -■' ■ :ii. >, -f ~ ' \ { ; Ut\ .* that home-made _ v home-baked food r ; is now the vogue in the best, * most carefully conducted J homes, city and country. Bread —Cake —Pastry More Economical More Tasty More Healthful Remember that with DR. PRICE’S Cream Baking powder -A Strictly Pure, Cream of Tartar Powderall quickly-reused food is made without trouble and of finest quality, REMEMBER Great Success, Delicious foods, are yours with Home Baking and DR. PRICE S CREAM BAKING POWDER when Bake Day Comes

The Shorter Route.

Lady Duff-Gordon, at a luncheon at Sherry's in New York, told an anecdoTe apropos or the cQvdrweviT. 7 “Two girls,” she said, “were chatting over a cocktail and a cigarette. “ 'Marriages are made In heaven,' said the first girl, and she blew a cloud of smoke Into the air and regarded It with dreamy eyes. “The second girl with a light laugh replied: “‘Yes, that is true; but, thank goodness, to unmake them we have to go only as far as Reno.’ "

Makes a Difference.

"What la this?” “As you see, it is a badge demanding votes for -women.” “Yqu wearing such a badge 7” “Yes, I.” ‘‘But you always told me you could never see any reason for women’s suffrage.” “Yes; but I didn’t know It was going to become a rather stylish fad.” YesTt ago Garfield Tea was Introduced aad since its appearance has won hearty approval because it does what is oi aimed for it. , If you would discover a N woman’s weakness, keep quiet and listen Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, curs* wind colic, ssc a bottle. When you are expecting an opportunity It is sure to miss the boat

[T Satisfiesf V There never was a i l k-Rk dint that Coca-Cola couldn’t | I f//s satisfy. It goes, straight M ah I SvV » ' arrow » to the dry spot. 8 rl(/s And besides this, ' mi wtisfies to a T the call for something : ‘ * aRJnk purely delicious and deliciously pure —and 1 1 NtSmnsKm f\ w b°lesome. ill f/.\ j Fr©© r tSToSSSSSTSk cISSi UJ #5 PR *w ATLANTA, GA. afcSJcHa jju^ Dfr , ■=£&£ • -**-*Vn

Willing to Dye.

Ella—Are you afraid to die? Stiella—Not if I feel that the color ir becoming to me. - The finger of destiny is undoubtedly on the hand of fate. i Talk la so cheap that barbers are now giving it free with each shave.

BIAI, BSTATB 18,000 ACRES—Red River Valley and North Dakota farms for sale; Imp. and unimp, and sise; S2O to $«l a. 8. K. Bergh, Halstad. Minn. LISTEN value# In N. B. lowa aad a E. Minnesota, farms with same facilities enjoyed on the higher priced INDIANA FARM AT SHERIFF'S SALE At Plymouth, Indiana, July A 19U. 400 acres as O whole, or in 40 acr* tracts. One mils tram Culver, BUY THIS FARM AND YOUR FORTUNE IS MADE 800 acres level corn and alfalfa land. TwomUes from town, wall Improved, five houses. This is the greatest bargain in Oklahoma at SB&00 per acre. W. 3. THOMPSON, Paula Valley, Okla. SOUTH GEORGIA I would like to tell you something about the best section of the country and the be«t town In South Georgia. Many Northern and Western people live here. If yod want a factory location, a farm or Just a home write me fully, I have nothing to sell but want good citizens to come here to five and be happy. A. B. COOK, Mayor of FitageraM, Ga.. Prsst. Id Nafl Bank

GET VARIETY IN SOUP

FAMILY WILL NOT THEN TIRE OF IT 80, 800 N. • Little Care and Thought Will Produce Many Tarty and Satisfying Dishes —Don’t Use Any Pronounced Flavor Too Often. From the humblest of leftovers to the more elaborately prepared and expensive soups there is an almost limitless vista of chauges which can, by a little of real and Independent initiative, produce most appetising as well as really economical results. Many families fall In the habit of making only a very few kinds of soups until everybody is tired of soup. In clear coups the stock is, In principle, usually the same. But much variety may be made with a little care and thought ' < | * Varied Boup Flavors. —A dear soup flavored with cloves Is liked by many; or a. soup slightly thickened with grated potato and flavored with thyme, or thickened with a mixture of grated potato and grated earrots In equal ports; or a soup otherwise clear with the very tiniest dumplings made of egg, salt and flour and just a suggestion of allspice in the flavor. Barley, rice, vermicelli, macaroni, tomatoes, onions, are all old stories, but a little experimenting with different flavors, not too conspicuously used, almost makes a new dish of an old one. Then; In their seasons, what varieties of vegetable soups may be concocted! Always have bay leaves in the house for use in soups and stews, but don’t make the mistake of using any pronounced flavors, like hay, thyme, sage, or any one spice, too frequently, else the family will tire of it Potato Soup.—Six potatoes, peeled and boiled with one onion. Warm one quart of milk and water, add potatoes, mashed, season with salt, pepper, butter and a tablespoon of chopped parsley. Tomato Boup.—One quart can tomatoes, half tablespoon salt, one pint hot water, quarter teaspoon pepper, one tablespoon sugar, six cloveh, one small onion, one tablespoon butter, two tablespoons cornstarch, one stalk celery, one tablespoon extract of beef. Put tomator, water, sugar, salt, pepper Mid cloves to boll 16 minutes. Put butter Into frying pan, when hot, add sliced onion, fry five minutes (do not brown), add cornstarch, cook two minutes, add to tomato; etc., simmer five, more minutes; strain thoroughly, add extract of beef, return to fire, and boil up once. , .

Mulligatawny Soup.—Cut the breast of a young chicken (after it has cooked in soup stock) in small pieces. Put in a kettle the carcass and bones of the chicken, and enough soup to cover it, simmer for one hour and strain; fry two small onions in an ounce es butter, add three-fourths of an ounce of flour, stir well, pour the broth in the butter and onions, boil up, add one-half' tablespoonful of eurry powder, half a cup of milk, pepper and salt; simmer for ten minutes; put the chicken meat In the soup tureen, two tablespoonfuls of boiled rice, pour over the soup and serve. Half a teaspoonful of beef will help strengthen the chicken ctnolr Tomato Bisque.—Stew a can of tomatoes with a pinch of saleratus in it, about ten minutes. Boil three pints of milk, thicken with one tablespoon of flour, butter size of an egg, salt and pepper to Then strain the tomatoes into the hot milk and serve Immediately. Balmon Soup*—Heat a quart of milk, In a double boiler with a slice of onion and thicken with a tablespoon of flour creamed Into one of hotter. Remove the on!qn- Add a teaspoon of salt, a speck of cayenne and half a can of salmon which has been chopped very fine. Serve when thoroughly hot :■'* a ' rmmmmrntmmmmmmmmm— '.l. *

Chocolate Ice Cream Cookies.

One-half cup brown sugar, one-half cup white sugar, one-half cup butter. Cream together and add one beaten egg, two squares melted chocolate, two-thirds cup sour milk with one even teaspoon soda beaten In flour to make stiff enough to roll thin. Cut with small round cutter, and hake. Make filling of five teaspoons hot water, teaspoonful vanilla, one teaspoon butter and confectioner’s sugar enough to beat smooth enough to spread. But a little on the bottom of a cookie and press another to It like a sandwich.

Ideal Gruel.

To make gruel successfully, great care must be exercised. * - , To make patent groats gruel, the required quantity should be mixed very: smoothly and carefully with cold water; milk Is apt to make it lumpy. When mixed, it should be added to equal quantities of boiling milk and water; boil all gently for fifteen or twenty minutes. When dime, three parts fill a cup, and serve with cold milk or cream and castor sugar.

Milk Lemonade.

Dissolve four ouncea of loaf sugar In one-half gill of boiling water, then add a gill of sherry and juice of two lemons. Stir well together, then add three-quarters of a pint of new milk. Stir all well, strain through a jelly bag till clear. The cost is aad the drink really delicious:

Egg Cordial.

Beat the-white of an egg to froth, add a tablespoon of cream and a tat&spoonful of good old brandy, and, if liked, a little sugar.

■■■*% -*■«- —- mv 1 fnnnli! 11. mam I upiuiujiorpmrie nornmcraL Not Narcotic* . 1 . tHWHfr Awf ef(M Hg'i ! A perfect Remedy forJfoßfe* H! § Hon,SourStomaciuDlarttoa Hili i Worms.Convulskmslevensb jgPg ; ness and Loss OF SLEEPBwt Copy of Wnppa*

DURING THE DISCUSSION.

Mr. Spat—Now, if you’ll just listen to me— Mrs. Spat—Oh, you can’t convince me. Mr. Spat—Probably not, hut If we’re going to spend the rest of the night in argument I want my share fit the time.- * "•

Needed No Mere Help.

An American gentleman got acquainted with a Frenchman who was very anxious to acquire the English language. The American in order to help Mm sald that if he wouli sand his exercises to him he would willingly correct them. Nothing was heard from the Frenchman for some time, but finally a letter came couched in the following choice English: - - 77- — “In small time I can learn so many English from his text-book and her dictionary as I think I will come at the America and to go on the scaffold to lecture.”

DOCTOR’S SHIFT. New Gets Along Without It.

. A physician says: “Until last fall I nsed to eat meat for my breakfast and suffered with indigestion until the meat had pasted from the stomach. “Last fall I began the use of GrapeNuts for breakfast and very soon found I could do without meat, for my body got all the nourishment necessary from the Grape-Nuts and sinoe then I have not had any indigestion and am feeling better and have increased in weight. “Since finding the benefit I derived from Grape-Nuts I have prescribed the food for all my patients suffering from indigestion or over-feeding and also for those recovering from disease where I want a food easy to take and certain to digest and which will not overtax the stomach. “I always find the results I look for when I prescribe * Grape-Nuts. For ethical reasons please omit my name.” Name given by mail by Poetum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. The reason for the wonderful amount of nutriment, and the easy digestion of Grape-Nuts is not hard to find. In the first place, the starchy part of the wheat and barley goes through various processes of cooking, to perfectly change the starch into dextrose or grape-sugar, in which state ft Is ready to be easily absorbed by the blood. The parts in the wheat aad barley which Nature can make use of for rebuilding brain and nerve centers are retained hr this remarkable food, and thus the human body is supplied with the powerful strength producers, so easily noticed after one has eaten Grape-Nuts each day for a week or ten days. "t* *- ’ “There’s a reason,” and it is explained in the little book, “The Road to WeHvffle.” in pto. ®v*r >«■« ttc rtm Mterf Asm

' ■' 1 "" " 1 ■ " Children Cry for Fletcher's IJf II i.i ly The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which luw been in use for over 80 yeare, has born© Hie signature of and been ®«de under htopoAllow no one to deeetveyeain this. AH Counterfeits# Imitations and “Jnit-rt-good” ace hot Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What la CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless snbstltot© for Castor OH# Fate* gorle, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Other JTareofle substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cores Diarrhoea and Wind Colic, It relieves Teething Troubles, cares ConrtJpatlon and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food# regulates Hie Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Th« faiiMtwn*. Piuiy^—Wiq THAtfiitw** Vrlwid. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years TNI OtNTAUN MNMNV, NSW YMK OITT, f

KEEPING BABIES IN HEALTH

Bueeeee of Tent Scheme Last Summer 8o Pronounced That It Will Be Repeated. Mothers of little babies that suffered much from the Intense heat in the early part of July last summer will be interested in the success of the “baby tent” scheme adopted in some of the big cities. The tents are placed on flat roofs of tAll buildings and in open lots, with eight little cradles or cots in each tent When all was ready mothers of babies under two years were Invited to leave them at the nearest available tent over night, so that the youngsters, in addition to enjoying the privilege of sleeping out of doors, could also receive the attention of trained nurses and doctors free. Some of the tents have a perforated iron pipe extending along the ridge pole and connected with the city water supply. On very hot nights the water was turned on and allowed to stream down over the canvas. By evaporation it greatly reduced the temperature inside the tents. Some of the tents were also kept cool by the use of large blocks of ice in tubs before the entrance. Electric fans blew the cold air from the loe into the tents sufficiently to keep the babies comfortably cooL This is the way some of the poor babies are being caredfor.but the ideas could be utilized by any one who had the welfare of the baby at heart

The First Consideration.

At St Andrews some years ago an old farmer and his plowman were carting sand from the seashore. They were behind the target on the riflerange, but hidden by a bank of sand from a party of volunteers, who were ♦hen on foot, at practice. A stray bidlet struck the plowman on the leg, and he Immediately dropped, exclaiming: Tm shot!” Without more ado the farmer scrambled up the bank and, waving his hands to the volunteers, shouted: “Hey, lads, stop that, will ye? You’Ve shot a man, and It micht hae been the horse!” —London Tit-Bits.

Uneasy.

“Why do you avoid Mrs. Wombat?" “1 think she’s been talking about me." “Nonsense. I'm with her constantly, and I’ve never beard her say a word.” “Well, there's no telling when shell begin. She moved Into the house we movd out of." The Paxton Toilet Co. of Boston, Mass., will send a large trial box of Paxtine Antiseptic, a delightful cleansing and germicidal toilet preparation, to any woman, free, upon request

Long Service.

"You say you were In one place for ten years. Why did you leave?” ‘1 was pardoned by the gov*nor, mum.”—Judge.

His Choice.

“This enterprise Is s promising one." "Is It? But what I’m looking for Is a paying proposition.” _

Cole's Carbolfsafve

Relieves sad cures Itching, torturing diseases of the skin nod mucous iiiminf m A superior Pile Core. » sod 80 smtts, by druggists. For tree sample write to i. W. Cole A Co., Black Hirer Falls, Wts. Make your failure tragical by the earnestness of your endeavor, and then it will not differ much from success. —Thoreau. It’s difficult for the average man to understand why some women are jealous of their husbands. j A postal card to Garfield Tea Co., Braokrumple willgtgajjrgß. Nothing succeeds like the efforts of uttimi pgij]# 10 fig

Above the Lews.

Some men think money can do anything. A certain rich man sent for the doctor,, who looked him over and then pronounced judgment “You have been living too high.” “Maybe I have. There are many good things in the markets.” “No levity. You have violated nature’s laws and you must pay the penalty.” “Pay the penalty? Oh, come now, Doc. Can’t you get me off on a technicality or something?” — Every time the wrong young man calls on a girl she always says to some other girl the next day: “I thought he never would go home.”

■ 3u rootbeer it a I Jit allays pain and take* out soreness and inflammation promptly. Healing and soothing —causes a better circulation of the blood through the part* assisting nature in building new, healthy tissue and eliminating the old. Alex Abl, Tobinsport, Ind., writes Nov. 15, 1905. r ‘No doubt you remember ray getting two bottles of you* ABSORBING JR., fora bunion on my foot. My foot is well.’* Also valuable for any swelling or painful affliction. Goitre, Enlarged Veins, Cuts, Bruises, Lacerations. Price SI.OO and fx.oo at all druggists or delivered. Book 4 G Free. Your Liver kCkgged Up^ SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL FMOL Genuine must bear Signature