Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 249, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 October 1913 — Page 4
CLftSSIFIEI CDLUIH Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, IS cents. Additional space pro rata. for SALS. FOR SALE—A fine herd of cows, fcs follows: 2 thoroughbred Jersey milch cows; 2 2-year-old grade Jersey heifers; one Jersey bull.—Mrs. E. E. Bundy, R. D. 2, Rensselaer. 10 miles north and Vi east of Rensselaer. FOR SALE—Fine set of brassmounted coach harness, used only a few times; also set of light double driving harness, and good top buggy. Cash or good note. William Rowels. FOR SALE—At a bargain if taken soon, a farm of 160 acres near Rensselaer; finely improved; known as the Marion 1. Adams farm. Inquire of the tenant, Ernest Maxwell, Phone 529-A, or the owner, J. H. Newman, Cissna Park, 111. FOR SALE—A Jersey bull calf, week old. J. F. Hardman. FOR SALE—A full blooded Jersey bulk Dr. H. L. Brown, Phone 144. FOR SALE—If you expect to buy potatoes before next summer you had better buy now while they are cheap. I have nice Rural New Yorkers for sale at my farm, 2% miles west of Newland and V* mile south of Harry Gifford’s. George S. Akers, Phone 523-1. FOR SALE—Boxes and barrels at Jarrette’s Variety Store. FOR SALE—A medium size Blue Bell cream separator; used only 5 weeks; bargain. J. D. Miller, 1 mile north of Lee. FOR SALE —7-room house; plenty of fruit, small barn, city water and lights, good location.—M. E. Griffin. Phone 445. - m ■ FOR SALE—Pure comb honey in 12 and 24 section cases at SI.BO and $3.60 per case Single sections 15 eents each.—Leslie Clark, at Republican offica •
WANTED. WANTED—GirI at the Makeever House. WANTED—Good second hand furniture and stoves. Have opened a second hand store in the Eger building just north of my furniture store. Am now prepared to buy your second hand goods and pay cash for it. Phone 23 when you have anything to sell or trade. All goods delivered.—l>. M. Worland. LOST. LOST—Ladies’ gold watch, Hampton movement, name engraved in back. Return to Miss Glennie Davisson or to Republican office. Phone 499. " -i_
FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Furnished house. Call on Emmet L. Hollingsworth, over First National Bank, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR RENT—Good living apart ments over McKay’s Laundry. See Geo. H. Healey. FOR RENT—My farm of 230 acres, 6 miles east of Rensselaer. J, P. Overton, Lee, Ind. MISCELLANEOUS. PAINTING and VARNISHING— Having purchased the business of Clarence Hamilton I am prepared to dp all kinds of work in this line. See me or call me by Phone No. '72. Edward Booth. When in need of painting or paper hanging see the Old Reliable, W. 8. Richards, phone 331. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS I make farm loans at lowest rates of interest See me about ten year loan without commission. John A Dunlap. W. H. DEXTER. W. H. Dexter will pay 29Vic for Butterfat this week.
“r[| * I * lAlia / i OUMft «• ioittw«i msiaaapoHa MIW—T.IWI mitn In effect June 28. 1913. NORTHBOUND No. 86 4:44 am No. 4 4:58 am No. 40 7:83 am No. 82 10:12 am No. ,88 ... 3:29 pm No. • 3:89 pm No. 80 6:02 pm No. 16 6:22 pm SOUTHBOUND No. 85 12:13 am No. 81 4:44 am No. 15 10:84 am No. 87 /. 11:32 am No. 5 12:16 pan No. 88 2:00 pm '|Pk W 6:22 pm No. • 11:66 pm »
See Wm. Babcock, Jr., for all kinds of electrical work. k Miss Lillie Sommers went to Surrey today to visit her sister over Sunday. Tungston and Mazda lamps and Hotpoint heating devices. \ WM. BABCOCK, Jr. Misses Clara and Maud Elder went to Morocco today to spend Sunday with friends. Mrs. C. M. Stanley went to Lafayette 'today for an over Sunday visit with her daughter. Miss Julia Leopold returned this morning from a Week’s visit at Hammond and Chicago. Mrs. Alex. Leech and little granddaughter went to Hammond this morning to visit her daughter, Mrs. A. O. Garriott. We sell and erect Perkins, Butler and Star windmills, anywhere in Indiana. Phone 204, The Watson Plumbing Co. Frank Kresler, Dr. C. E. Johnson, Ross Benjamin and C. P. Fate went to Lafayette this morning in Kreslor’s Regal to see the Purdue-Wis-consin football game. - Impure blood runs you down—, makes you an easy victim for disease. For pure blood and sound digestion—Burdock Blood Bitters. At all drug stores.' Price SI.OO. Misses Ola Umphress and Julia Bozell, of Fair Oaks, came today to spend Sunday with Miss Madeline Warren. Have you seen our beautiful new woolens in new weaves and new shades? They are beauties. Don’t fail to see them and get our prices. They talk for themselves. E. _ VANARSDEL & CO. Mrs. Harriett Rowen and grandson, Dean Sayler, went to Parr this morning to visit Charles Rowen and family over, Sunday.. Go to VanArsdcl’s for your wool and cotton Blankets, Underwear, Shoes and Hosiery. Always reductions on broken sizes? Try us before you buy. Mrs. C. B. Steward and Mrs. R. B. Wright returned yesterday from Logansport, where they attended the state convention of the Baptist church. When baby suffers with jroup, apply and give Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil at once. Safe for children. A little goes a long way. 25c and 50c. At all drug stores.
F" | n " ' 1 » 1 J.W. SMITH Jrl COAL CO; I I W' ten/ J / J \ /J* | tt( *4* MUM? o? e - half of y°« r “ al ~ an , d \l\ _JU \ it did you no good. Hard luck 1W 1 1 -J that But there is a way to fix it Here’s how: {That stove of yours has seen its best days. You need a new one. You know it—but you have let things drift along. Meanwhile, you have been losing Half of every hod of coal you have put in it. Of course, you knew it, but you did not think of it that way. You know that half of every lump is gas. Fail to burn that gas and it is like throwing into the ditch half of every dollar you spend in coal. Rather extravagant? Yes? The ordinary stove made of a lot of separate castings leaks air. They leak air at the wrong place. Places you can not control. RESULT—the best part of your coal—the 14,000 cubic feet of common illuminating gas that is in the average ton of $3.00 soft coal— goes up the flue unburned. You have lost it. It has gone up in smoke. tSave that gas—mix it properly with air and you have the hottest kind of a blue flame. But there is only one way to do this — Buy the only heater that is made tight—holds tight—stays tight. Cole's Original Hot Blast Heater It leaks no air. \ This is the heater that mixes the gas and air and gives you all the heat in the coal. This is the heater that burns any kind of coal and makes a ton of $3.00 soft coal do the work of SB.OO hard coal in a high priced base burner. This is the heater that is a joy and comfort to the housewife. It makes no dirt.or imoke in the house. This is the heater that saves labor — fix it in the morning and at night and Forget It the Rest of the Time. This is the heater that gives a stead}, constant heat from soft coal or lignite. This is the heater that will hold its fire untouched for a day and a half. This is the heater we sell you under a guarantee that is as “good as old wheat at the mill.” Burns soft coal, lignite, slack, hard coal or wood. It is just the kind of a heater you want. Come in and see it. ' T A7' arixer Bors. SEN t tho name "Cole't” on the feed door of each etove. None genuine without it‘ i * t ■ i . • |
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
Mrs. Lona Miller spent yesterday in Monon. Mrs. J. L. Mcßride, of Chicago, came today to visit her father, Ed Barkley and family, nprth of Rensselaer. For regular action of the bowels; easy,, natural movements, relief of constipation, try Dotin’s Regulets. 25c at all stores. Harry Wade left on the early train this morning for Lebanon after spending the week here visiting his .mother, Mrs. J. T. Culp. F. Mundy and Henry Lodei, “trusties” at the state reformatory, Pontiac, 111., escaped Thursday afternoon. Both were employed on the prison taTm. » Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Otto, of Rantoul, 111., returned to their home today after a visit of _ several days with his sister, Mrs. N. A. Hendrix and husband. Mrs. P. J. Walker and Mrs. J. C. Collins, of Hammond, came this morning to spend the day with Jerome Collins, a student at St. Joseph’s college. • { The Watseka high school football team came over by autos this morning for their gridiron contest this afternoon with the local high school and the game is now in progress. Mrs. Benton Forsythe was hostess Friday afternoon to about fifty ladies, for her sister, Miss Ida Randle. Six-handed euchre was played, the afternoon being very pleasantly spent. Agent W. H. Beam today received a letter appointing him on the “safety and efficiency committee” of fcfr'e Monon railroad and informing him that the next meeting of the board will be held at the Y. M. C. A. at the Lafayette shops on Oct. 29th. He is of the opinion that to do the place justice he would have to spend considerable time at the work and has about decided not to accept the added responsibilities to his already busy job. Mrs. Rachel Scott went to Medaryville yesterday to visit her aged uncle, R. L. P. Massey, whose health has 'been quite poor lately. She was accompanied there by her cousin, J. H. Taylor, of Wellington, Kans., who has been visiting her the past week. "Mr. Taylor left Indiana at the close of the war and prior to six years ago lived at Bethany, to southwestern for the health of his wife *
To Give Deeper Meaning To Our Thanksgiving Day.
There has originated at Springfield an interesting movement to give a broader'' significance to Thanksgiving day by making its celebration, for this year at least, coincident with the fiftieth anniversary of the delivery of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg speech. To that end Govern of Dunne is to call a conference of prominent citizens from &11 over the state to frame a memorial to President Wilson, requesting him to proclaim Wednesday, Nov. 19, as Thanksgiving day this yesr, instead of the customary Thursday. The reasons for this movement are well given by Senator Magill: “Nothing could be more appropriate than that the fiftieth anniversary of the delivery of this address should be observed by the entire nation as a day of special thanksgiving and dedication. If would be well for us, as a people, to renew our vows of allegiance to the principles of free government and highly to resolve that all who have died in support of these principles shall not haVe died in vain, ‘that government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth.’ ” While Thanksgiving day has become established as a great national festival, many have noted with regret that of late years its celebration has tended to become more one of entertainment than of sober reflection and thankfulness. It is not precisely associated with any great and outstanding event in our national history. The proposal to link it with Lincoln’s noble thought and Yirayer on the battlefield of Gettysburg fifty years ago would give it such an association. Such a linking should give the day more than an athletic and eating interest to the rising generation. It is not fitting that tlfb day should be thought of chiefly as the date of a big dinner and a‘ football game. For too many that is about all it ha! come to mean. As an effort to give to this national festival a truly national aspect, a broader significance and a deeper meaning, the movement from Springfield must be regarded as al-‘ together commendable. Harry Watson returned this morning from a business trip to Chicago.
More than $4,000,000 worth of new 7 .roads, representing about 1,400 miles of highways, will he built in Wisconsin in 1914, according to ithe state highway commission. This is an increase of 500 miles over this year. The state will distribute among the counties about $1,200,000.
APRICOT POSSIBILITIES
iHli POSSIBILITIES OF plea, tartlets and preserves of most excellent flavor become realities when the apricot comes into season. Apricots ripen early in the summer, July bringing many to perfection, and August seeing the rest of them rounding themselves into perfect ripeness and delicious fullnees on the fruiting twigs. * The fruit flesh is far lees acid than any of the plume to which the apricot is, of course, akin, since it ie one of the drupeaceous branches of the great rose tribe to which all plume, peaches and apricots belong. Stewed Dried Apricots. Wash the apricots well in tepid water, pulling well into then just cover with clean water and soak over night. % This soaking softens the fruit and restores water lost by evaporation, but as some of the flavor and fruit Juices necessarily escaped Into this water, it must be used when oooklng apricots. The apricots may then be stewed very gently, jwith sugar added, till tender, then removed, and, If liked, a little more sugar can be added to the syrup, boiled till thick and poured over the fruit. Another and easier way is by steaming. Put the fruit in a jar; half a pound' of apricots will nearly fill a two-pound jelly jar; sprinkle with sugar and cover with water, or boll sugar and water to a syrup and with this cover the fruit; cover with a paper and steam until tender.
Apricot and Rice Pudding. Half fill a buttered pudding dish with stewed apricots, which may be hot or cold. Cook till very tender two tablespoonfuls of well-washed rice in one pint of .milk, then add one heaping tablespoonful of sugar. Remove from the fire, then add one well-beaten egg and a little almond extract; pour over the apricots and bake in a moderate oven till nicely browned on the top. Apricot Cream. Put sufficient apricots, either canned or fresih fruit, through a sieve to obtain half a pint of pulp. Beat up two yolks of eggs, add four heaping tablespoonfuls of sugar, pour over them one pint of boiling milk, return to the saucepan, stir till they thicken; do not boil; then strain In one tablespoon'ful of gelatin dissolved In four tablespoonfuls of boiling water; mix thoroughly, then add the apricot puree and a little almond extract Pour Into a wet mold; when Arm turn out and serve with whipped, sweetened cream. a. Apricot Pie. Break twenty apricots in halves, take out the stones and put them into a pie plate, sprinkle over with sugar, but add no water. Cover wlth/ihort crust made with half a pound of flour sifted Into a basin; rub into it three tablespoonfuls of butter very fine!"- add a pinch of salt, one tea f nful of sugar and one aspoonful of baking powder, then gradually add just enough cold water to form a stiff paste; roll out and cover apricots with this, brush over with beat® en egg and bake in a hot oven for thirty minutes.
A variation of this is to pour a custard over the apricots, then put on the cover of paste and bake. Apricot Glace. Either halve the fruit and remove the stones or remove the stones without halving the fruit. It may be done thus: Take a fine knife and put it in at the stalk and slip it round and round the stone to loosen it; then gently press the fruit and the stone will slip out. Boil one pound of sugar with one pint of water, removing any scum that may rise. Put the fruit in to boil for fifteen minutes very slowly; pour the whole into a basin and let it stand twentyfour hours. Then pour the syrup oil and boll it up and pour it boiling over the apricots, to stand twentyfour hours longer; repeat this for other four days; then at the last boil up the syrup; put the fruit in to boll ten minutes. Lift the aprioots out on a sieve to dry and dust fine sugar over. More sugar and water may require to be added at last if it is too much taken up by the fruit.
SUBURBAN NERVE.
“We lent that man some grass seed last month. I suppose he e&me ovei Juat now to return It” “No; to borrow oar lawn mower.”
APPLE PUDDING.—Fhre large apples chopped fine, one cupful of raisins, ground In meat grinder, one cupful of sugar, one-half of a cupful of butter, one cupful of sweet milk, two eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately one cupful of flour, salt and vanilla to season. Bake slowly one hour and serve with whipped or—m.
Uncertain.
The New Girl—"An’ may me intended Tlelt me every Sunday afternoon, ma'am ?" Mistress—" Who is your Intended, DellaT** The New Girl—**l dent know yet, ma'am. 7 I'm a stranger la N A
Little Gundy Boy Left at Hospital—Uncertainty About Leg.
Little Charley Gundy, the lad whose leg vvas crushed by an automobile Thursday afternoon, was taken to St. Luke’s,- hospital in Chicago Friday afternoon and the local physician returned to Rensselaer today. The specialist who examined the leg is of the opinion that infectioTf has not set in, arid a discharge of healthy hlood is favorable, but lie will be kept there until all doubt is removed. An x-ray was to have been made of the injured leg this morning and upon the result of that would largely depend the outcome of the injury. It is believed at this time, however, that the leg can be saved.
U. S. Experts Tell Housewives How to Handle Milk.
No matter how carefully milk is handled between the dairy and the home, it can become very quickly undesirable (food if carelessly handled in the home. Milk when left only for a short time in summer heat or when exposed to the air or unclean vessels may become unfit for use according to the specialists. Though some bacteria always exist in milk, they are generally .harmless, provided their numbers are small and axe not of the disease producing type, but milk must be kept cool to prevent the bacteria already in it from multiplying and thus making the milk dangerous. In the handling of milk in homes, the specialists make an urgent appeal to those in whose home a sick person may he, to use every precaution in washing the milk bottles, so that they will not be sent out contaminated with disease-laden bacteria to infect other hordes. Whenever possible milk bottles should not be taken into a sick room or even into a hoifie where sickness is prevalent, but the milk should he emptied into a vessel. As soon as the milk is left at the home, if it is in bottles, it should he placed in the ice box and before using, the bottle and the cardboard stopper should he carefully washed. Milk is easily contaminated and the mere transferring of it from one vessel to another may often cause it to become laden with disease bacteria. Even in cool places milk should be kept tightly closed and free from strong odors. Onions should be kept out of the refrigerator. It is dangerous to give milk obtained at a store to invalids and children. Cleanliness in the handling of milk is as necegpary in the home as in the production of milk on t>he farm. Milk must be kept at low temperature at all times to prevent growth of bacteria and subsequent souring. It should he kept in closed vessels as far as possible. If ice is not available the bottle can he wrapped in cool damp cloths. This will keep the milk at a slightly lower temperature than the air about it.
.Avoid Sedative Cough Medicines. If jou want to contribute directly to the occurrence of capillary bronchitis and pneumonia, use cough medicines that contain codine, morphine, heroin and other sedatives when you have a cough or cold. An expectorant like Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is what is needed. That cleans out the culture beds or breeding places for the germs of prreumonia and other germ diseases. That is why pneumonia never results from a cold when Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy Is used. It has a world wide reputation for its cures. It contains no morphine or other sedative. For sale by A. F. Long. C THERE IS ALWAYS A TIME and time will demonstrate facts, also quality. It’s a guarantee, and it takes good judgment to get the quality, and time decides the quality or guarantee. Now the Farmer who wants a farm wagon that has all of the above will have to buy a STUDEBAKER farm wagon of C. A. Roberts. Now this is true of STUDEBAKER quality—that their wheels will out-do any wagon on the market today, holding the tires. I can show wagons that have been in use for from 12 to 16 years without the tires having to be reset, and with a load of three tohs no wagon can run easier than a STUDEBAKER The best Ironed wagon on earthy is a STUDEBAKER. Could give twenty-five other reasons, but these are enough. C. A. Roberts, Agent, Rensselaer, Ind., the capital of the finest county in the state. Doan’s Ointment cured me of eczema thait had annoyed me for a long time. The result was lasting.” —Hon. S. W. Matthews, Commissioner, Labor Statistics, Augusta, Me. A 3-line classified ad in The Republican costs only 25 cents for a week’s insertion in the Daily and Semi-Weekly. Try an ad and you will be surprised at the results. CASTOR IA Ifcr Infants and Children. Hu Kind Y«o Bin Ahnp Bosgtt
