Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 236, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 October 1914 — Page 4
Reasseiaer Republican paht mc wnm naxarr i cxam •" puMWun no* nxn&T xmvs xb bbgtixa* WMEbT BPITXOM Semi- Weekly Republican entered Jan. L 18*7, aa second class mall matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act of March 8. 187*. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 18*7, aa second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Ind., under the act of March 8, 187*. ■UBSCTXPTXOW KATXI Dally by Carrier, 10 Cents a Week. By Mall, *3.50 a year. Seml-Weekly, In advance. Year, *1.60. Tuesday, October 6, 1914.
Classified Column MATXS FOB CAASSXFEBO AJDS. Three lines or less, per week of six mum of TUB Evening Republican, and two of Tine Seml-Weekly Republican IS cents. Additional space pro rata FOB BALE. FOR SALE—S. C. W. Orpington, S. C. B. (Minorca and S. C. W. Leghorn pure blood cockerels.—C. W. Postill, Phone 499-B, BOR SALE —Holstein bull; 17 months old, of Sparling stock, splendid milking type; son of cow owned by O. G. Barrett; dam’s milk tested 4.1 per cent; has sister with record of 809% lbs. milk testing 4.2 per cent for 30 days in heifer year. This animal must be seem to be appreciated.—R. L. Budd, Fair Oaks, R. D. No. 2. FOR SALE—A baseburner used •only 3 months; a bargain; No. 1 1 beater.—A. S. Laßue. FOR SALE—Barrels for shipping poultry, 8c each if taken at once. When you need them they will be scarce.—Jarrette’s Variety Store. FOR SALE—A good, fresh Jersey cow and calf. Chas. Summers, R. D. 4, Phone 949-1. FOR SALE—A 6-hole steel range, including water front, also a 16-inch fire box baseburner. Frank Leek, Phone 21. FOR SALE—An extra good ice box; cost $32 last year; good as new. Phone 516. FOR SALE—A good second hand Corn King manure spreader.—Hamilton & Kellner, Phone 273. FOR SALE—Pears.—H. H. Carr, River street, Phone 427. FOR SALE —Wood, cut to stove length.—M. Kanna FOR SALE—One good lounge, one center table and one kitchen cabinet.—Jacob Wilcox, Phone 304. FOR SALE—An up-to-date house and 12 acres of land half mile east of Parr on easy payments. Inquire of Mrs. J. N. Gunyon. Telephone 907-L FOR SALE—Timothy hay, slightly mixed with red top and clover.— W. G. Burgett, R. B. 2. FOR SALE—Nice Rural potatoes. Write John Dale, R D 1, Parr, Ind., or Phone 592-1. FOR SALE—Or trade, an almost new piano player, with 60 music rolls thrown in.—Rice Porter, phone 435. FOR SALE —4-room house on 50foot lot. Price S4OO it solid at once.— E. M. Laßue. A FOR SALE—Or trade for an automobile, a 10-horse Advance Traction Engine. A W. Sawin, Phone 400, P. • O. Box 142. FOR SALE OR TRADE—Having no room for tlie S3OO Strohber upright piano won in The Republican’s voting contest, we will sell this at a bargain for cash or on time, or will trade for live stock LouelJa Golden, R, D. 4. FOR SALE—One three-quarter bed, mattress and springs, one large rug, one small rug, one dining room table, one china closet. Mrs. George Hopkins, Phone 137. FOR SALE—Two soft coal Stoves, also two couches; at the telephone office. FOR SALE—A Michigan farm of 60 acres; a bargain for some one who has from $1,700 to $2,000 to invest For particulars see John Bill. FOR SALE—An outdoor closet Inquire of Geo. H. Healey. FOR SALE— One two-year-old Jersey bull, pure bred, a descendent of the “Duke of Arden” and “Silver Rex” stock. Call and see. The bull will show for himself. P. F. Roberts, R. D. 1, Brook, Ind. . FOR SALE—A 1912 fore-dcor Studebaker Twenty touring car, completely equipped; at a bargain aa usual.—Main Garage. FOR HALE—Hardwood lumber of all kinds, sawed to order. Randolph Wright Rensselaer, Ind, or Phone Mt Ayr, 540. u'_ ~ -FQR SALE—A 5-acre Improved tract Vi ear the corporation of Rensselaer,\<ii table for truck and poultry farnfcUote of fruit; weE shaded, and an SW place tn 11 va’ Call Phone 400 Xt write P. 0. Box 14%
John O’Connor made a trip to Shelby today. Cabbage for sauer kraut. E. S. Rhoads Grocery. Mrs. Albert Witham made a trip to Monticello today. Mrs. W. S. Coen is spending today with her daughter, Mrs. Lee Rardin, at Parr. -Charles Hill returned to Madison today after spending a few days at his farm. Itching, bleeding, protruding or blind piles have yielded to Doan’s Ointment. 50c at all stores. Mrs, A. F. Gjiswold, of Carpenter township, spent Monday with her sister, Mrs* Nettie Hoover. Just in, new sauer kraut and dill pickles. HOME GROCERY.
'Mr. and Mrs. Vern Robinson went to Royal Center this morning to spend a week visiting her relatives. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Alter returned yesterday afternoon from a ten days’ visit with his father and other elatives at Forest, Ind. For regular action of the bowels, easy, natural movements, relief of constipation, try Doan’s Regulets. 25c at 1 all stores. Mr. and Mrs. Joe O’Connor were down from Hammond Sunday to see her aunt, Mrs. Amanda Israel, who has been quite seriously ill. Do not forget the fried chicken dinner at the M. E. church Wednesday, 5:30 to 7:30. 35 cents a plate. The public is invited. Mrs. Anna Stevenson returned to her home in Kersey yesterday after a visit here with her daughter, Mrs. Leslie Shigley., We have lots of nice apples for eating, cooking or canning. JOHN EGER. D. S. Bare, James Snedeker, E. W. Lang and Hiram Crawford are all purchasers of Studebaker automobiles during the past week. Give us your potato order. We have a car of nice, ripe potatoes; 20e a peck, 75c a bushel, or 70c in 5bushel lots. JOHN EGER. E. E. Benson, who established the central delivery system here, came over from Delphi yesterday to look after business matters.
CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Tin Kind Yon Have Always Bought Bears the -//fy jt “ Signature of WANTED. WANTED—Two or more rooms for light housekeeping. Address D. B. D., care of A. F. Long. LOST. LOST—Tn Rensselaer, a check for $7.50, given by Frank Medland to Fred Hartman. Finder return or notify Frank Medland or Fred Hartman. FOR SALE—6O acres of well improved clay loam farm land within 2% miles of a good town in Michigan. This farm has good buildings, plenty of fruit; water in the house and barn; good baesment barn; owner sold S2OO worth of peaches off the farm last year; on good road, near good church and school; price $3,200, and $1,400 cash, balance to run almost five years at 6 per cent interest; just the farm for some one with limited means and a nice home for any one. Inquire of Geo. H. Healey.
• FOR RENT. FOR RENT—The room where E. W. Hickman has had his plumbing business. Inquire of Geo. H. Healey. FOR RENT—Rooms over Rhoads Grocery. Inquice at the store.—E. S. Rhoads. LOST—Or stolen, a Scotch Collie female pup, 4 months old. Return or give i information to Firman Thompson, Rensselaer, Ind. FOUND. — — FOUND—An auto side curtain; inquire here. MISCELLANEOUS. TO EXCHANGE—BO acre farm 3% miles of Medaryville, Ind., good buildings, 50 acres in crops, fairly well tiled, on stone road; want residence In Rensselaer. J. Davisson. Mutual Insurance—Fire and lightning. Also state cyclone. Inquire of M. I. Adams, Phone 533-L. REMEMBER—We’ve carried exchange service for Search Light for four years, the same as for PrestoLight—Main Garage. ART STUDlO—Lessons in oil, water color and china. Drawing a specialty. For sale, hand painted, also undecorated china, gold and art material. Emile M. Wightman, phone 489. ,
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
The election is four weeks from today. Lon Kaiser went to Lafayette last evening and will return today. The Republican wants to print the news. Please inform us when you have visitors at your homes. The Lafayette jahr markt will probably attact a good many Rensselaer people this week and to all appearances it will be quite a show. In the fall as in the spring time An important duty lies; It is to get a swatter And proceed to swat the flies. Now’s the time to sell the things you don’t need. A Republican classified ad will turn the trick. Call us as Phone 18. Ed Duvall, son of John, left this morning for Omaha, Neb., where he expects to get a job as an electrician. Mr. and Mrs. John Mecklenberg went to Lafayette today to visit their son, Charley and to attend the jahr markt. Mrs. J. M. Clifton suffered a slight relapse at the home of Mrs. Powell Sunday* and this again interrupted the plan to remove her to her home in Fair Oaks. Call Rhoads’ Grocery for cabbage for sauer kraut. Can spme one furnish The Republican with a copy of the poem beginning: “Let me dwell in a house by the side of the road and be a friend of man”? Mrs. J. A. Grant went to Chicago today to remain until Thursday, when she will meet Mrs. Hale Grant, who is coming from Spokane, Wash., to see her invalid father, S. R. Nichols. ,
True D. Woodworth has been selling onions on the road for George D. Zea and last week had good success at Battle Ground. Today he went to Lafayette to continue the sale. The drouth has played havoc with fall pasture and is causing wheat a great amount of injury now. There was a large acreage of wheat put out in Jasper county this fall. Mrs. Isaac Kight and Mrs. Walter Hess returned to their homes, the former in Fair Oaks and the latter in Momence, yesterday;■'after a short visit with their niece, Mrs. A. G. Catt. Mrs. Jeff Smith and son-in-lav-Charles Grant, left this morning for Burke, S, Dak., to visit Everel Smith and family. Charley will be gone only about ten days but Mrs. Smith will remain for about six weeks. Tunis Snip was down from Keener township today. He reports that a tourist automobile from Indianapolis went into the ditch near his home last Sunday and a lady suffered a fractured arm. He did not learn the names of the parties. The Lafayette Red Sox closed the season there Sunday by defeating the Riverside team 9 to 2. The Riversides won the Lafayette city championship and the Red Sox, the strong independent team, then gave them a good cleaning.
Don’t let another day pass without putting that advertisement in The Republican. You will find our classified column a great help, a splendid agent at a reasonable price, and once you become a user of it you will always keep it up. It’s money in your pocket. Twelve prisoners in the county jail at Columbus went on strike Wednesday when the prosecuting attorney ruled they could not be given credit for two days for every day they worked at repairing asphalt pavements, as Mayor Volland proposed.
Coonie Kellner, Ray Wood and one or two others spent a day fishing on the Kankakee, north of DeMotte, and caught 10 salmon with a total weight of 42 pounds. One of them weighed 9% pounds. Salmon are regarded the best fish to be caught in that stream and many are going to the river each day. The water is low now and the salmon are found in deep holes and go after the bait greedily. Frank Nicewander, the man who was so severely injured while working on .the Sternberg dredge last Tuesday, returned here today from Monticello, where he had been taken after the accident. He states that he remained unconscious until Saturday. He is getting along well now, but still stands a chance of losing his right eye. He was at the home of his brother, Isaac Nico wander in Monticello. Typewriter ribbons for all makes of machines for sale at The Republican office.
RENSSELAER MARKETS.
Corn—4lc. Oats—4oc. Wheat l •nc: — ——; ——4HvA 7Kc ’ Butterfat—2B%c. Eggs—2lc. Hens—l2c. ’ . Springs—l3c,
CHICKEN AT ITS BEST
FOUR DELICIOUS WAYS OF BERV> ING DELICACY. •- tan Cooked With Strips of Bacon Improves Flavor ,Whon Roasted a La Garcon—Excellent Alaocgn Caaterolo.
By LIDA AMES WILLIS.
Roast Chicken a la Garcon.—Before putting your dressed bird In the oven, put inside of it a spoonful of butter, creamed with a little lemon juice and salt. Truss it up and wrap it in thinly sliced bacon. (The slices may be fastened on with little wooden toothpicks.) It will take about an hour for a young chicken. Remove the bacon and let the chicken brown outside quickly and serve on a bed of cress, with glblet sauce in a separate sauoe bowL If the chicken is dressed as directed and then cooked in a casserole, without adding water or vegetable seasoning, it will be delicious. It will ' require a little longer time and slower cooking, perhaps, depending on size and age of the chicken. The oven must not be too hot. Whole Chicken Cooked En Casserole. —Take a nice plump chicken about a year old, and prepare it as for roasting. Put it into the casserole, breast side up, add a dozen button onions, a bay leaf, a cup of carrot, sliced and cut in fancy shapes, also small white turnips cut same way, half cup celery, diced, and add about a pint of broth or boiling stock, cover and place in a hot oven and cook for one and half hours, basting now and then. Add level teaspoonful salt and eighth of a teaspoonful pepper when the chicken is half done. When done the chicken should ( be a rich brown and the broth evaporated until there is just enough to make a gravy. The giblets may be cooked in a separate stewpan, chopped fine and added to the gravy, or left whole and a few button mushrooms added. Chicken a la Creci. —Chop half a pound of fat bacon and fry it with a dozen button onions, a dozen button mushrooms, two carrots diced, six chestnuts cut in quarters and two ounces of butter. When lightly colored add a full-grown chicken which has been cut up as for fricassee and stewed half an hour in some broth or boiling water. Add a blade of mace, a glass of white wine or sherry, and salt and pepper to taste. Cook about forty minutes or until tender and serve hot. Chicken a la Portugaise. —Clean and joint a fat fowl and fry it in two ounces of lard, oil or butter, with an ounce of ham and an onion chopped fine. Add a quart of good broth or consomme, a pint of stewed or canned tomatoes, a dozen okra sliced,,a cup of washed rice, a green pepper shredded, and seeds removed. Season to taste, cover closely and cook about one and a •half hours. Do not add the okra, if canned vegetables are used, until the stew is nearly done.
Salmon Cutlets.
Flake in small pieces, one-half can salmon which has been freed from oil and bones. Moisten with thick sauce made as follows: Melt one tablespoon of butter (heaping), two tablespoons of flour, and pour on two-thirds cup of milk (hot). Season with salt, pepper, cayenne and lemon juice. Spread on a plate, chiU, shape, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs, and fry in deep fat. The crumbs should be made from stale pieces of bread, dried, rolled and put through a strainer. The egg should be beaten slightly and diluted with two tablespoons water. The cutlets can be prepared early in the day—all but cooking, which must be done when wanted.
How to Improve Pot Roast.
When the meat comes from market there is usually a quantity of seemingly superfluous fat with it Do not cut this off for rendering purposes, but make use of it in the following manner: First cut the fat into strips about one-half by one inch in thickness. Make incisions in the lean portions of the meat about two inches apart Five or six of these in a eevenpound roast will be sufficient. Insert the strips of fat in these holes and trim the protruding portion even with the surface. This method followed before basting will be found to do away with that dryness which is so much in evidence in the pot roast
Chicken Croquettes.
Melt a tablespoonful of butter tn Saucepan, add to ft a tablespoonful of flour and stir till smooth; then pour on gradually a cupful of hot milk. Cook until thick, then add the beaten yolks of two eggs. Rembve from fire and add two cupfuls finely chopped chicken; season with salt pepper and a little onion juice; turn out and cod. Form into pyramids, dip in egg and cracker crumbs, fry until nicely browned. Serve garnished with potato chips and parsley.
Renovating Grease Spots.
Benzine or naphtha is the best thing for removing grease spots from woolens, while ether or chloroform should be used on silks and other delicate fabrics. Whatever solvent is used should be applied with a thick piece of sateen to avoid the danger of dust
Dried-Fruit Confection.
For something delicious and dainty spread the buttered fudge pan with minced dates before turning the candy into it
Everything for Everybody The advertisers represented here are offering special inducements for yonr trade. If yon do not find today what yon want, look again tomorrow. New offerings daily.
THE RENSSELAER SUPPLY 00. Dealer in Oils, Gasoline and Auto Tires; one block east of public square Phone 2 on 78. tM. J. Schroer, Prop. W. H. DEXTER CREAMERY. It’s right to try all creameries because competition makes business good, but we’ve never been able to see the sentimental side of the question, consequently pay only real money for cream. On this basis we respectfully solicit your patronage. THE WEAR-U-WELL SHOE STORE. When in need of high grade shoes or repairing, don’t overlook J. T. Wiseman. Shoes repaired while you hesitate. You don’t have to wait. SEE - JOHN WERNER, TAILOR For cleaning, pressing and repairing, and a nifty suit of clothes. Workmanhsip and fit guaranteed. Call upon John Werner, the Leading Tailor. ~< BEYER’S CANDY STORE. When wanting choice box candy for father, mother, brother or sister, just remember Dolly Varden Chocolates. To try it is to buy it. C. BEYER. OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING. Cast iron, steel, brass and aluminum eastings perfectly welded at a fractional cost of new. Automobile engines decarbonized by oxygen process Satisfaction guaranteed. HEMPHILL BROS. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES. K. T. RHOADES & CO. When in need of anything pertaining to electrical supplies, don’t overlook the electrical shop. K. T. Rhoades & Co., Electrical Contractors. NEWS STAND, CANDIES, CIGARS. News stand, daily papers and magazines. Subscriptions taken. Bunte Bros. Fine Candies, Cigars, 1 Tobaccos, Laundry called for and delivered. Telephone 351. MONTGOMERY & WARNER. SANITARY BARBER SHOP. When looking for a nifty hair cut or shave just call upon Cain & Denniston. We are also agents for American Laundry. Laundry goes on Monday.
HANGING GROVE.
Frank Lowman is still suffering considerably with his injured knee. Quite a crowd congregated at the church Sunday evning, only to be disappointed, as the minister failed to come. Ernest Cook has returned heme from South Dakota, where he and Ed Peregrine went several weeks ago to work in the harvest. Ed preceded him here about two weeks. Eastman Cottner, of Cass county, came out Saturday noon for 4 visit Over Sunday with C. W. Bussell and family. Wilson Searight returned home with him. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Benson and Mrs. and Mrs. Wade Benson and family, of LaCrosse, came Saturday evening for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. W. S. McDonald for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Parker and daughter, Ethel, went to Herscher, 111., Thursday for a visit with Felix Parker and family. Felix Parker came home with them Friday evening for a visit over Sunday with friends and relatives. The Ladies Aid will meet at the home of Mrs. Geo. Parker Wednesday, Oct. 7th. The postponed Sunday school picnic will also be held next Sunday, Oct. 11th. Since it is how so late, arrangements will be made to have the dinner at the school house and then if the day should be nice and warm the crowd can just as handy go to the woods as had been planned. President Wilson Thursday opened his letter-writing campaign son the election of democratic senators and representatives. He wrote letters indorsing Senator Shively of Indiana and Senator Chamberlain of Oregon. Others will be written in the near future.
Hiram Day DEALER nr Hair, Cement Liinejrick RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA
FUEL, FEED AND FARM IMPLEMENTS. Order genuine Jackson Hill coal •for the range, of us. We handle only a high grade, but all sizes of •hard coal. Phone 273. HAMILTON & KELLNER. WARNER BROTHERS ' Sell Cole’s Hot Blast Stoves and Ranges. They are the highest grade and most economical stoves made. Also Builders’ Hardwarearid Farm 'lmplements. THE WATSON PLUMBING CO. When in need of plumbing, don’t overlook the Watson Plumbing Co., the leading plumbers in the city. tAll work guaranteed. Give us a trial ! LUMBER AND COAL ~ » For full weight coal, don’t overlook The Rensselaer Lumber Co. Our hard coal is all elevated and runs over a screen in your wagon. Macklenberg & Overton Creamery. • Cream received daily, Elgin prices paid and correct weight. Test guaranteed. At The Fancy Produce Market. Phone 39. McFARLAND’S GROCERY. • Handles a full line of the highest grade of Groceries. The Femdell Line of Teas and Coffees a specialty. A. F. LONG, THE DRUGGIST. i EXPERIENCE—Our years of practical experience is your guarantee that in our store your drug wants are cared for in the most proficient manner. # ! IROQUOIS ROLLER MILLS. Manufacturers of Hard and Soft BWheat Flour. Feed of all kinds. If Sour flour don’t please you, it don’t Iplease us. Call and get your money fiback. R. SPRAGUE. GOLDEN LOAF BAKERY. h When eating, eat O’Riley’s Golden Loaf Bread, delivered through the <Benson Delivery System. Phone 616. RALPH O’RILEY. THE PADGETT LIVERY. Funeral carriages for city or country. Light rubber tired livery. Calls answered day or night. A. L. PADGITT.
MILROY.
• Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hamilton, Oct. 2, a son. Rev. Wright went to his home in Rensselaer Monday to register ' Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Hamilton visi(ted their new grandson Sunday. Mrs. Scipio and children visited her sister in Lafayette last week. • Rev. Houghton attended the funeral of Mr. Stamp in Monon Monday, . I Mrs. Nelson Anderson, of Michigan, is visiting relatives and friends here. Mrs. Louisa Foulks was able to I visit her son, George and family this week. \ John Southard, George Castor* and Mike Digman were in Lafayette Thursday. ! I Mrs. Albert Delfin returned home Thursday from a visit with their daughters in. Lafayette. Mrs. Elsie Clark and children and Mr. and Mrs. Clell Clark and family spent Sunday with Lud Clark’s. Mrs. MeAlear and daughter, Irene, ■sang a duct Sunday at the evening service, which was such appreciated. Charles Harwell and Miss Mabel Clark were married Monday in Rensselaer. We wish them a pleasant voyage through life. Grandfather Stevens visited his daughter, Mrs. W. E. Culp and family this week He also attended Sunday school and church here Sunday. Impure blood runs you downmakes you an /easy victim for disease. For more blood and sound digestion—Burdock Blood Bitters. At all drug stores. Price SI.OO.
to lorthWHt, Indianapolis OiMdnnatL ana the South, XrtiSa_CHic ago, ’StodSSp’oEk \ LOUISVILLE RY. unuian men tabul In effect May 3, 1914. „ _ NORTHBOUND. No. 36 ....t....... ...5:27 am No. 4 4:59 am No. 40 7:30 am No. 82 10:46 am No. 38 3:15 pm No. 6 3:44 pm No. 30 .’ 7:06 pm „ SOUTHBOUND. No. 85 12:15 am No. 81 7:41 pm No. 87 11:20 am No. 5 H:GS am No. 88 2:01 pm No. 89 6:12 Pm No. 8 ~ 11:10 pm Nos. 87 and 88 stop on flag at . Parr on Saturday. - - ■ a. .
