Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 228, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 September 1913 — Page 4

CLASSIFIED COLUMh BATBB 808 CIUMMtXriMP ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, M cents. Additional space pro rata. FOR SALS. FOR SALE—A baseburner; in good condition. Inquire of W. R. Howels. FOR SALE—Second 'hand soft coal burner, cheap. Good as new. Inquire of T. M. Callahan. FOR SALE—Nearly new baseburner.—George P. Daugherty, telephone 65. FOR SALE—4S good Shropshire ewes. S. T. Comer & Son, Phone 504-L. FOR SALE—Small cook stove, almost new. Phone 258. FOR SALE—A few more gallons of cider apple butter. Mrs. Eli Ai nold, Phone 513-F. FOR SALE—7-room house, plenty of fruit, small barn, city water and. lights, good location.—M. E. Griffin. Phone 445. FOR SALE—4O acres near station and school, on stone road, 30 acres in corn, 5-room house, fruit, well, and all good land. Price $55. Terms SSOO down; might take live stock.— G. F. Meyers.

** FOR RENT. FOR RENT—3 lower rooms of house. Electric lights; city water. Phone 489. FOUND. FOUND—The surest method of making a sale; advertise in The Republican classified column. LOST. LOST—A bunch of siv keys on a plain ring. Finder please bring to Republican office. LOST—A’ velvet purse containing a door key, a Mason’s button and about $1 in change Will finder please leave at Republican office? ■ ~ '4 - => WANTED. WANTED—GirI to work in a boarding house at South Bend. Wages $5 per week. Phone 501-G for particulars. WANTED—Oom petent girl for general housework. Good home, all modern conveniences. $6.00 per week. Mrs. Leo Wolf, 934 S. Jlohman St., Hammond, Ind. W. H. DEXTER. W. H. Dexter will pay 31 cents for butterfat this week. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS—I make farm loans at lowest rates of interest. See me about ten year loan without commission. John A, Dunlap. WW!. 1 ■ . ■ I ■ ■ i NORTH NEWTON. Cutting corn and canning peaches is the order of the day. Most every one from this vicinity attended the pow wow last week at' Rensselaer. (Mrs. Biggs returned home to her daughter’s, Mrs. Win. Bifcrly, last week from Thayer, where she had been visiting for some time. Mr. and Mrs. Milt Grimes called at Evert Grimes’ Sunday afternoon. Miss Lucy Lane spenl last~week with her sister, Mrs. Messman. Supervisor Ed Shindler is doing quite a bit of work on the roads in this neighborhood.. (Miss Rose Lane went to Chicago a week ago Saturday to be witTr her sister, Amelia, who is in the hospital. Amelia is getting along nicely, and ''Will be able to be moved from the hospital in a few days. Cale Baker was* helping Milt Grimes cut corn a' few days this week. Miss Katherine Lane was in Rensselaer Saturday. Geneva Bierley called at Milt Grimes’ Monday afternoon.

CASTOR IA Jbr Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bean Signature of Secretary Garrison will direct an investigation of charges by Doan Worcester and W. H. Phipps, auditors of the Philippines, that slavery exists in the islands. Tin- investigation will he made '-by the governor general, Francis Burton Harrison. The sufficiency of existing laws for punishment of slavery will be Inquired into also. Snow fell In northern Minnesota and along the shores of Lake Superior early Monday, setting a new record for an early snow fall. The earliest previous snow fall recorded since the establishment of a weather bureau at Duluth was on Sept, 24, 1907. At Grand Marais, Minn., the ground was covered with snow and the temperature dropped to freezing. Order your Calling Cards at The Republican office.

POTATOES AND*CHEESE.

At any meal where no meat is served cheese in some form will usually be relished. One way to serve it la with potatoes. A little grated cheese Is often an improvement to mashed-potatoes. It may be merely sprinkled over the top of the mass just before serving, or the potatoes may be brushed with melted butter, sprinkled thickly with cheese and set in the oven until the cheese melts. Baked potatoes may also be treated with cheese in an appetizing way. When'haked till tender; scoop out the interior, leaving the jackets entire. “Mash the pulp, mix well with butter, warm milk and a little seasoning, then slip back into the jackets and press into the opening a spoonful of grated cheese. Put them back into the oven to let the cheese melt.

WHY LOOK FOR THINGS.

It is a good plan to keep a measuring spoon in coffee and tea canisters and also’in soda and baking powder cafis. It will be found a' big saving of time to the ever busy housewife, for when one has only one measuring spoon it is very likely to get misplaced and has an annoying way of disappearing completely just when one needs it in a hurry. It is like a thimble in this respect, and it is a good plan to pursue a simlliar policy with the latter article. One extremely busy woman who feels she cannot spend a moment in looking for things buys aluminum thimbles by the half dozen. If she accidently misplaces one she simply takes out another from her work box and goes on with her work. 3

MACARONI LOAF.

A macaroni loaf makes a nice supper dish, or maybe be used as a substitute for meat at dinner. Well prepared, this is a most appetizing dish. To make it, the macaroni is boiled till very soft, sprinkled liberally with cheese, seasoned -with salt and pepper, placed in a well buttered baking dish, moistened with a little . milk and baked till thick and brown. A cover should be kept over the top of the dish most of the time to prevent drying. Turn it out of the baking pan and pour a tomato sauce rich with seasoning over it. It will often come out of the pan a nice brown mould that will stand alone, and looks very attractive with its red sauce.

Fish Chowder.

One pound of bacon cut into dice; bacon that is dry is to be preferred. Place bacon in kettle and fry to a nice brown. Sift one pint of flour into bacon grease and brown; stir constantly to prevent burning. Cover with four quarts of boiling water. Add six large potatoes, four onions, and a suggestion of garlic. Chop potatoes, onions, and garlic very fine. Add one quart tomatoes; season with cayenne pepper, black pepper, and salt. Three pound of halibut steak cut very fine shreds. Cook all for two hours. If necessary add more water to fish chowder as it boils to prevent being too thick. Will serve twelve. Serve with cheese straws. Cheese Straws —Butter size of a hen egg, one-half pound of cream cheese (no less than one-half pound will do) grated fine, pinch cayenne pepper, one-half pint of cream or milk; make ingredients into a dough, roll out about as thick as noodle dough, and cut into strips three inche*long; bake in moderate oven until a Btfbt brown.

Character In the Eye.

Beware of the_man wh* does not look you clearly in the eye. He has possibilities of evil in his nature. There are eyes which are luminous, others which seem to be veiled behind a curtain. Men and women of the world are accustomed to judge human nature by the expression of the eye. Many people read character by the eyes, and can thus distinguish the false from the loyal, the frank from the deceitful,, the hard from the tender, the energetic from the indolent, the sympathetic from the Indifferent.

Baby’s Dresses.

It very often happens that baby’s sheer little frocks are creased if put away in a drawer, even if great care be exercised In keeping them smooth; A much better plan is to procure a number of coathangers, children’s size, and on these place the little dresses. Any particular dress Is easily found and may be taken down without danger of crushing the others. It wll be found worth while to have a circular bar put up in the closet, as a great many mofe frocks may be pfit away at the same time.

To Make Buttonholes.

We have all been troubled in making buttonholes in thin materials. Here is a way of overcoming the difficulty. Hold a piece of the material on the under side and cut the hole through this as though it were a part of the waist After you have finished working the buttonhole, cut away the under cloth very carefully, so that it will not show. You will have no difficulty even with chiffon, If you fold the cloth two or three times.

Lobster Cocktails.

One pint fresh lobster meat cut into cubes, /wo tablespoonfuls of lemon Juice, six tablespoons of oil, one-half teaspoonful of salt and one-fourth teaspoonful of paprika, add one cup of cocktail sauoe. Mix the oil, lemon Juice, salt and pepper. rPour this over the prepared lobster and let stand on ice for three hours. When ready to serve, add the cocktail sauce and fill the glasses. Sprinkle with very finely shopped celery.

Avoid Tape Strings.

To avoid the tape strings in boy’s blouses, which are often untidy in appearance, put in the lower hem a mercerized elastic band, about half an inch wide and not quite so long as the boy’s waist measure. Fasten the elastic at each end; sew a button on one side and make a buttonhole on the other. This plan will be found much more satisfactory than the uae sf tape and neater.

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND

NICE OF VARIEGATED COLORS

Interesting Experiment* at Bronx Zoo, Which Have Produced < >'Mice of Many Colors LATEST ADDITION INTERESTING . ■ r Royal Purple in Color and is the Only One of the Kind in This CountryScientist’s Ambition la to Breed Tortoise-shell specimen. New York City.—The color scheme, of several families of mice has become altered in a remarkable manner by a series of experiments that are being conducted by Raymond L. Ditmars, curator at the Bronx Park Zoo, and several of his Japanese friends. By these experiments, in which the Darwinian theory of evolution has had a severe test, Mr. Dltmars and his friends say they have produced mice of ' variegated colors —yellow mice, purple mice, white mice, slatecolored mice, and mice that are partly purple and partly golden in color. In fact the mice that have figured in the experiments of Mr. Dltmars and his friends look as though they might have been dyed like Easter eggs. But no artificial coloring has been used in the reccnstruction of the color scheme in these little rodents, they say. Breeding and interbreeding has done it all. <

The experiments began several years ago in Japan. The mice used were similiar in some respects to the common house mice. The Japanese mice are a trifle larger, are just as prolific, and Quite As inoffensive as thedr American cousins. But in color the Japanese mice differ. Some of them are yellow, some gray, and some white, while the American house mice are uniformly gray, except in the cases of albinos. The three colors of Japanese mice all belong to the same species, zoologists say. Just why differ in color is not clear, althougu one theory advanced is that generations of existence amid surroundings of white, yellow, or gray, as the case may be, has been responsib for the different coloring 01 the mice. At any rate, taking these mice of three colors—yellow, gray, and white —the Japanese nave interbred them and produced offspring in colors rivaling the ccat of many colors. These experiments in the recoloring of mice hal been going on for several months when Mr. Ditmars became Interested. The Japanese experimenters were friends of his. He joined forces with them and the experiments were continued in a room in the reptile house a. the Zoo. This has been going on now for several months, and at the homes of Japanese in this city. Some of the mice bred there have been sent to various parts of the country and place., in collections, both private and public. A few of the highly colored mice have been sent to Japan. - While these experiments have been progressing at me Zoo, Mr. Ditmars’s friends in Japan also have been experimenting. One of the latest results of their investigations arrived at the Zoo a few days ago. It was a purple mouse, the first of that color ever seen here. Mr. Ditmars has produced come mice which are slate color and a number whose color seems to border on a light sky blue, but no purple ones had he ever seen until the one arrived from Japan. “The little animal isroyal purple In color, all except its feet, which are yellowish,” said Mr. Ditmars. "It is the most highly colored specimen I have ever seen. What we are all striving for in these experiments of breeding the mice of different colors Is a tortoise-shell mouse. Tortoiseshell guinea pigs ha.e been produced by interbreeding different colors, but M yet no such mice have ever been seen. It is not at all impossible that such a mouse can be produced, however. When it Is the man who gets It will have a valuable animat “This purple mouse that has just come over from Japan I shall keep until I can get a pure yellow mouse of the oposlte sex. I will then breed the two and see what the result will be. 1 have careiully examined the purple mouse to see if by any chance It has been dyed. I have found no trace of dye and am sure that no joke has been played on me by my Japanese friends.”

WON $1, BUT LOST HIS LIFE.

Negro Eats Drinking Glass to Buy Ring for His "Best Girl." Brooklyn, N. Ya—Samuel Van Dorn, the elgh teen-year-old son of Abraham Van Dorn, a negro, living on Rockaway Road, Jamaica, died recently from peritonitis. The last thlni he said was: "Dad, I bet 'Jim' Smith a month ago ;hat I could eat a drinking glass. He >et a dollar that 1 couldn't I won my jet, and my dollar’s spent, so what do I car* if I do die.” , Van Dorn bought a ring for his •best £‘rl" with the dollar.

Ono Sausage Casing 73 Pest Long.

Carey, Ohio. —Truman C. Keller, a Jenner near this village, when butchering hfs hogs, made a sausage from a tingle casing that Is seventy-three feet and nine Inches long, it was tak|d from a hog that weighed MT IcMk

REMINGTON.

Adrian Foster went to Chicago Tuesday to be one of a house party with Prof. Castle, host, for this week. Miss O’Dell now has rooms with Mrs. Ella Parks. Mrs. Addison Lobdell returned Wednesday from an extended visit in Kansas with relatives. She and her daughter art! guests of her sister, Mrs. Guthrie Morris. Aunt Mat Timmons suffered a stroke of paralysis last Sunday. She is slowly recovering. Miss Nellie Foster has charge as nurse. Her son, W. Timmons, of Kankakee, is with her. Mrs. Clara Phelps came Thursday night to visif relatives and friends. Miss Maud Merritt is. back in the Peck store after a vacation spent in Rensselaer; Mr. Pepin and family are now settled in the Meiers property. Rev. J. B. MqNary left Tuesday to attend conference. Mrs. E. T. Harris and daughters, of Rensselaer, were calling on their friends Friday and Saturday. Miss Irene Balcom spent Friday night with them, (being home on a short vacation from Covington because of fair week.

Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kyle had a house-warming last Sunday, the occasion being in honor of the completion of their handsome new farm home. Many relatives and close friends gathered at the noon hour and enjoyed a bountiful dinner. The afternoon was spent in the exchange of family news. Many from here attended the pow wow at Rensselaer last week. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Brown were tendered a farewell reception last Wednesday evening by the Eastern Stars. A silver cracker jar was presented Mrs. Brown. The Rebekah chapter enjoyed an evening of special ceremonial and feasting Tuesday evening, the celebration beings in honor of the anniversary of the order. The ladies of the Christian church ate serving a chicken dinner in their basement Thursday of this week. 'S The Methodist ladies* are planning a bazaar and supper for the near future. Harold Hamilton is spending the week with relatives in Chicago. The Lyric Theatre expects to open in its new location next Saturday evening. Several of the high school boys and many local fans witnessed the Goodland-Indiana game last “week. The ladies of Sacred Heart church served a chicken fry dinner Tuesi day evening in their basement. Mrs. Cecil McCain, of Indianapolis, has been visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mann, of Albany, N. Y., have been guests of his brother, Mr. Peter Mann. Mr. and Mrs. Hartley CoOver have returned from Weldon, 111., and a?e with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. James Washburn accompanied by Mr, and Mrs. Sam Bowman attended the John Ade birthday party last Thursday at Hazelden, the home of George Ade. Mr. Ade’s children gave the party in honor of his birthday. Miss Mildred Clowry is the guest of relatives, having recently returned from Tacoma. Mrs. May Bliss, of Saginam, Mich., under the auspices of the M. E. Missionary Society, gave an illustrated leetbre on Mormonism last Saturday evening. Later the members of the missionary societies of the other churches were served refreshments by the M. E. society. Ms. Bliss lectured again Sunday evening to an interested audience. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Milligan and two sons left Sunday for their home in Daytona, Fla., after a six weeks’ visit with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Hand.

Clubs.

The Study Club met Monday night at the home of Mrs. Claude Townsend. The texts for 1913-14 are Mahaffy’s Rambles and Studies in Greece; Powers the Message of Greek; Studies in the Poetry of Italy by Miller, Kuhns; Schmecker’s The Meaning of Evolution. The new books were received last week and the members are satrting in with enthusiasm under the leadership of Rev. J. B. McNary, president. The Sew and Sew Club met In their first session for the new season witl> Mrs. Fred Burger on Friday. This club adjourned in middle July because of the excessive heat, so the meeting last week, was like a reunion and each meiriber felt the happiness oPthe occasion. Mrs. Clara Phelps, of Chicago, was present as the guest of -Mrs. Ira Grant. Mrs. Howard .Tones’ health has improved so she is able to attend. Mrs. Charles Murphy, of Chicago, attended with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Edward Bellows. The next meeting will be held in the library room Oet. 3. The Dorcas Club met last Wednesday with Mrs. Homer Lambert. A business session will be held at the home of Mrs. Ross Meyers’ mother on Wednesday, Oct. Ist. The senate.conferees on the tariff bill late Monday won their fight for a heavier tax on big Incomes. The house members of the conference committee agreed to accept the senate amendments Increasing the tax rate to a maximum of 7 per cent on Incomes of more than $500,000.

THE TRAMP’S THANKSGIVING

He was a fairly good representative of the tramp type. He evidently lacked even a passing acquaintance with water and soap, and his clothes were obviously built for other men. The man who had paid for the trousers he wore waa very much shorter and stouter than he, resulting in a chilling discrepancy at the angle and an unpleasantly suggestive looseness at the waist The waistcoat refused terms of intimacy with the trousers, and a not over-clean shirt did its best to fin the gulf between them. His coat was buttonless, a fact which mattered but little as the two edges failed to meet across his chest. A huge safety spanned the open space at his throat, fastening the upturned collar to a protective position and imparting an air of festivity to his entire costume. "Trying to steal a ride!” accused the tail end brakeman, wearily, when he discovered the tramp on the bumpers. "Oh, let us alone,” begged the tramp, “we’re all in—the pup an’ me, and the pup ain’t feeHn’ well!” He. laid open a corner of a dirty piece of calico, showing a little fox terrier puppy. The sick animal pleaded his own cause by a pitious whine and the effort to hide his head against his companion. The brakeman closed his eyes— ■ figuratively. "There’ll be enough to kick him and his pup without my doing it," he muttered leniently, and sought other duties. ‘lf we can only get to Boston, doglums,” purred the tramp, “I’ll put you in the doggies’ home until you get well. There ain’t no use dyin* unless we have to, dogluma” After awhile the motion of th* swaying freight train began to make the puppy sick. He tried to lick the rough hands that held him so tenderly, but the poor little head rolled from side to side and the pain racked little body heaved convulsively. “Cant stand it, doghrms?” queried the tramp, anxiously. "We sure ought to have gone in the Pullman. Never mind, hold still a minute more and we’ll get off." He edged his way out to the end of the brake beam, murmuring words of endearment to the sick puppy. "You’ll* only be a minute alone, doglums,” he said, encouragingly, "and then I’ll walk the rest of the way and carry you.” » , As the train .slowed at the Forest Hills switch, he leaned far down toward the ground and carefully dropped the little creature on a spot of grass.

The sick animalyapparently felt that he was about to /be deserted by the one from whom/he had known only love and tender* care, and he uttered a plaintive yelp of fear. The cry struck to the tramp’s heart “Don’t be afradd, doglums,” he called hastily, “it’s all right I’m coming!” He leaped as he spoke, his foot slipped, caught ,'ln the brake ladder, and he pitched/under the wheels. When they picked him up, the brakeman closed this eyes, objectively. And when the 1 sick terrier staggered to the spot and began licking the tramp’s gray face, the brakeman swore under his breath that it was the last time —the very last time; kicking was better than killing, and they shouldn't carry a man to the boneyard from his train —never again! Three weeks later a tender-eyed nurse at the hospital was urging the tramp to eat his Thanksgiving dinner. —— ! - “Why, you’ve a lot to give thanks for,” she said brightly, "you’ve one arm, you know, and it’s the right one, and you might have lost both. And both of your feet are going to be saved, and the scar on your face won’t be so very bad.” Her patient shook his head mournfully. ■’Just eat this," she coaxed, “it’s the best dinner you ever tasted!” “That’s just it,” the tramp said brokenly, “it’s the best ever and my little doglums may be hungry somewhere —I can’t eat” He turned his head*aside, but the nurse’s eyes were as' keen as they were tender, and she saw the teardrop that glistened as it fell |on the pillow. She rose and softly 'leftkthe room, returning in a few minutes< with the fox terrier in her arms. “Now, will you eat*?” she asked. “And give thanks,” she added‘s gently. i “Doglums—my little doglums!” The one hand was reached out in joyous welcome, and the terrier was held close to the white, tscarred face and quivering lips. The tramp looked up mt the tender eyes that were not free from tears and repeated reverently., “Thank God for all his mercies—and * for my little doglums!”—AGNES BOOTH. *

With Your Eyes Shut

If you have never triad, you- will be surprised how difficult It is to judge distance or the- whereabouts of anything with your eyes -shut. Place a piece of paper on the ffloor before you, and, shutting your teyes, try to tread on it Thon, try to» pick 4t up. Next stick a pin /in the* wall I about four feet up and try. tolpick It out without "groping" for it. Stand about six feat awaytfrom a table, and, shutting.your eyes, try to walk to it yrHbbr-t f kwnking i sgslnst

PROFESSIOMAI. MS 0. E. JOHNSON, M. D. Office in Jessen. Building. ->• Office Hours—9 to 11 a. m. 1 to i and 7 to 8 p. m. SPECIALTY: SURGERY. Phone 21L Dr. L M. WASHBURN. physician - and svbgeon. _ * v Phone 48. Over Both Brothers. SCHUYLER C. IRWIN * LAW, BBAD ESTATB, INSURANCE. 6 per cent farm loan*. Office in Odd Fellows* Block. : E. P. HONAN attobnmy at daw. Law, Loans. Abstracts, Insurance end Real Estate. Will practice in al) the courts. All business attended te with promptness aad dispatch. XndlAiuu K u BBOWN DENTIST. Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. All the .atest methods In Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Office over Larch’s Bru* Store. Rensselaer, Indiana. ~

JOHN A. DUNLAP dawyeb. (Successor to Frank Foltz.) Practice in all courts. ~ • Estates settled. Farm Loans. , Collection department. 1 * x Notary In the office. Bensselaer, Zadlaaa J. 0. SHUPERT Ki-Ro-Practor Scientific Spinal Adjustments. Office rooms 1, 2 and 3, over Roth Bros. '■ Market. Days in Bensselaer: Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and every• evening from 7 to 9. Telephone 576. > Dr. E. C. ENGLISH PHYSICIAN AMD BUBOEON. Opposite Trust and Savings Bank. Phones: 177—2 rings toi office: 3 rings for residence. Bensselaer, Indiana. J. W. HORTON Dentist Opposite Court House XndlftlUk Dr. F. A. TURFLEB OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. ' Phones, Office —3 rings on 800, rest dence —3 rings on 100. Successfully treats both acute and jhronlc diseases. Spinal curvatures • specialty. Dr. E. N. LOX ~ Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartzell HOMEOPATHIST. Office—Frame baildin* on Cullen street, east of court house. option non m. Residence College Avenue, Phone lit, Bensselaer, Indians.

F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. PHYSXCXAJF AMD SUBGMOM. SlMOftAl Attention dIIIAMI of VOMAB and low grades of fever. Office in Williams block, Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence. 441. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. CITY OFFIOXM. Mayor .....G. F. Meyers Marshal ....,W. R. Shesler Clerk Chas. Morlen Treasurer R. D. Thompson Attorney ....Moses Leopold Civil Engineer W. F. Osborne Fire Chief , ...J. J. Montgomery Councilman. -St Ward George W. Hopkins 2nd Ward D. E. Grow •rd Ward ttv-. v. . ;r.... .Harry Kresler At Largea J. Dean, A. G. Catt judicial Circuit Judge...... Charles W. Hanley Rensselaer,lndiana. Prosecuting Attorney.. .Fred Longwall Brook. Indiana. Terms of Court—Second Monday in February, April, September and Novetntier. Four week terms. ’■* coumTi okiunuus. Cler*;Judson H. Perkins Sheriff w. L Hoover AuditorJ. p. Hammond Treasurer A. A. Fell Recorder Geo. W. Scots Surveyor Devore Teaman Coroner W. J. Wright Supt Public Schools.... Ernest Lamaoa County Assessor John Q. Lewis Health Officer E. N. Loy

Early Spring Flowers For Beds in Cemetery.

Now is the time to provide for early spring blossoms for the flower beds In cemetery lots and the undersigned is ready to receive drders. A No. 1 tulips, any color, and hyacinths, daffodils and Jonquils, on the graves, in flower beds or clusters, any way you want them. These flowers are the earliest spring bloomers and will be out of the way in time for the bedded flowers. Also can furnish northern Christ mas green for graves or stone drapery, any* kind of wreath or design for the monument, i made and placed according to your order or if you will trust to my judgment will see that it is done correctly. Please order as soon as possible. Orders by mall given prompt attention. J. H. HOLDEN, Sexton. Five men were rescued by government lifesave re at Michigan City Monday after drifting twenty-eight hours over a tossing lake in a disabled gasoline launch without food and water. Three of the rescued were Chicago fishermen. The other two accompanied the party for pleasure.