Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 68, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 March 1915 — Page 3

Uric Add in Your Food Even dogs can eat too much meat Certainly, many people "dig their graves with their teeth.” Few get enough exercise to Justify a meat diet, for meat brings uric acid. The kidneys try hard to get rid of that poison, bat often a backache, or some other slight symptom will show that the kidneys, need help. The time tried remedy then, is Doan’s Kidney Pills A Michigan Case P Ambrose Hatfield. Brook St., Baton Rapids, Mich., says: "I was weak, run down and discouraged with kidney trouble. I had rheumatic pains all through me and my kidneys were in awful shape. For one year I had to be helped from the chatr to my bed; I couldn’t get around alone. After being treated unsuccessfully by specialists. Doan’s Kidney Pills restored me to the heat of health.” Get Doan's at Any Stars, 50c s Bex D OAN’S fTJIV FOSTER-MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. N. Y.

Even the people who stand up for their own rights might prefer to sit in the lap of luxury. gome fellows are as Quick as lightning, and Just as flashy. Safe Pills are purely vegetable, sugar* coated and absolutely free from injurious substances. A Perfect Laxative. For indigestion, biliousness, torpid liver and constipation, they do not gripe or leave any bad aftereffects. 25ca . T _ box. If your druggist cannot supply | fflpwEl Warner’* Safe | Rochester, N. Y. Removes Bursal Enlargements, II Thickened, Swollen Tissues, |J Curbs, Filled Tendons, Sore* W ness from any Bruise or Strain; li Stops Spavin Lament**. Allay* pain. Jjrm Does not Blister, remove the hair or wjP lay up the horse. $2.00 a bottle, delivered. Book 1 K free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind. For Synovitis, Strains, Gouty or Rheumatic deposits, Swollen, Painful Varicose Veins. Will tell you more if you write. $1 and $2 per bottle at iealers or delivered. Manufactured only by W.F. YOUNG. P. D. F.. 310 T*mp!sSI.,Springfield Mass.

Sprains,Bruises Stiff Muscles Sloan’s Liniment will save hours of suffering. For bruise or sprain it gives instant relief. It arrests inflammation and thus srevents5 revents more serious troubles eveloping. No need to rub it in—it acts at once, instantly relieving the pain, however severe it may be. Hare's Proof Charles Johnson, P. O. Box 106, Lawton’s Station, N. ¥., writes: “I sprained my ankle and dislocated my left hip by falling out of a third etory window six months ago. I went on crutches for four months, then I started to use some of your Liniment, according to your directions, and I must say that it is helping me wonderfully. I threw my crutches away. Only used two bottles of your Liniment and now I am walking quite well with one cane. I never will be without Sloan’s Liniment." All Dealers, 2Sc. Send four cent* in stamps for a TRIAL BOTTLE Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. Dept. B. Philadelphia, Pa. SLOANS LINIMENT mSSSSmmStSSSSm

DT i m LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED BLACK V mjn GSfr LLu Dm aw Injector, but Cutter's best. Tbe superiority as Cutter product* U due to onr U /!SS MOTHER HUT’S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILOREI F Relieve Feverishness, * Constipa- ' IE; f tion,Cold* and correct diaoedersof aLA. the stomach and bowels. Used by Mothers for 26 rears At all Drug--1 w R a*

WORTH WHILE RECIPES

SAVORY METHODB OF PREPARING VARIOUS VIANDS. Tlt-Blts to Serve With Game or Cold Meat—New Ideaa for Vegetable*— Combinations of Cheese and Sweets. Here are some worth while recipes and ways of preparing food that will give a different savor to the viands: Take a small Quantity of boiled cod, flake fine, add enough mayonnaise to make spreading paste, spread on lettuce leaf between rye slices. Salmon and tunny fish may toe fixed in the same way, or instead of the mayonnaise add enough catchup and sea* soning to make the paste. Cold boiled lobster, cold boiled shrimp may be shredded or cat fine and prepared In the same way. Many will like them with the French dressing, however, rather than the mayonnaise. Game. —Minced chicken, guinea fowl or turkey are good mixed with a tiny bit of chowchow, sweet pickle, current Jelly or orange marmalade, as well as with good mayonnaise made with mustard. Meats.—All cold meats, thinly sliced or minced, are acceptable with any of Ihe dressings, or lightly spreading the bread with apple sauce before laying on the sliced meat. Vegetables.—French peas that have been stewed, mashed to a paste, seasoned to taste, lighted with a little whipped cream and a teaspoonful of chopped ham or tongue make an excellent filling. The macedoine of vegetables, drained and finely chopped, mixed with mayonnaise, Is good. Grated with onion with a little finely minced cold roast beef, pepper and salt and a few drops of mustard dressing it is quite appetizing if one likes onion. Cheese and Sweets. —Combinations with cream cheese which has been softened with whipped cream are numerous. Little finely chopped preserved ginger and a tablespoonful of the sirup mixed to a spreading paste; puree of chestnuts mixed with the cheese, orange marmalade, bar-le-duc, a little of any of the preserved fruits, or finely chopped fresh fruit may be blended with the cheese. If needed, a little mayonnaise or whipped cream may be used to bind the paste. A little grated cheese sprinkled on triscuits, then placed in an oven for a minute or two to melt, with another triscuit placed on it, are frail to carry out, but very nice sandwiches. Pumpkin Pudding.—lnto a pint of stewed pumpkin beat the whipped yolks of five eggs, two pints of milk, three-fourths of a cupful of sugar and half a teaspoonful each of powdered mace, nutmeg and cinnamon. Last of all stir in lightly the stiffly beaten whites of five eggs, turn the mixture into a buttered pudding dish and bake until set. Serve hot with a hard sauce.

What Any Cook Knows.

Never throw away cake, no matter how dry—but the next time you bake a custard slice it on top before putting into the oven. This makes a delicious caramel crust. To remove fruit stains from tablecloths and serviettes apply powdered starch to the stained parts, and leave for several hourß till all the discoloration has been absorbed by the starch. Always put scrubbing brushes to dry with bristles face downward. This lengthens their lives considerably, as If dried the other way the moisture naturally soaks into the wood and rots the bristles.

Bread Pancakes.

Cut the crusts from stale bread and break in bits, cover 'with sour milk and set aside over night. In the morning add one level teaspoonful of soda to each pint of the bread and milk mixture; beat until it is smooth and foamy. You may need to add some sweet milk to make the batter thin enough. Season with salt and fry on griddle. If eggs are added to the above the cakes are much like omelets and are very flpa with jelly between them.

Potatoes a la Milanese.

Take as many potatoes as are re* quired. Choose large ones, bake them till soft, then cut off the tops and scoop but the insides. Rub the potato through a sieve and add a tablespoonful of grated cheese, pepper and salt Mety one ounce of butter in a stewpan. stir in the potatoes and make it hot, then fill the cases with it and put them in the oven fpr a few minutes. Serve very hot. W-

Crullers.

Mix a cupful of sugar, three tablespoonfuls of butter, a cupful of cream, three cupfuls of flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of salt. If more flour is needed for a soft dough add it Roll the dough out and cut in two-inch squares. Slash with a jagging iton or a knife, fry, drain and roll In sugar.

Cheese Soup.

Roast three large, green peppers, then throw them in cold water, and remove the skin. Shred them, then fry in a spoonful of butter. Add two cupfuls of hot water and a little salt. Just before serving, add a few rolled crackers and a cupful of grated cheese.

Removing Egg Stains from Silver.

_A pinch of table salt taken between the thumb and finger and robbed on the spot with the end of the flngei will usually remove the darkest ect stain from silver

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

Children Love II Don’t Deny Them Dentists affirm its helpful* ness to teeth and gums. rjjjlßW Doctors attest its aid to AilillliliPi»4 appetite and digestion. I|jj^ Give the kiddies all they want. Use it yourself—regularly. Keep it always , Cultivate the saving instinct with the United Profit » Chew It Sharing Coupons around after every each package, good toward “““ • \ high-grade merchandise. meal JDI EbSkj Have you seen “Wrigley’s Mother Goose” —newest jingle book —2B v There was an old Spear-woman lived in a shoe — ~ For her many young hopefuls she knew what to do! - She made them most happy with WRIGLEY’S for all It .toil ib tr//i It a

Business Proposals.

“I hinted to Miss Gladys that I was In the matrimonial market.” “Did she take the hint?” “In a way. She said I would have to go to par before she would take any stock in my declaration.”

t A POTATO KING "If I were a farmer boy, or a boy without capital, and wanted an early competency. I’d start right out growing Potatoes,” said Henry Schroeder, the Potato king of the Red River Valley, whose story in the John A. Salzer Seed Co.’s Catalogue reads stranger than a romance. That advice of Mr. Schroeder’s, the selfmade Potato king, comes from a warm heart, a level head, a potato king! - Price Schroeder’s Famous Ohio, bushel, $1.75; ten bushels, $15.00. Here’s another advice of the Red River Potato king. He says: “Plant a plenty when potatoes are plenty,” or cheap, like they were last Fall —That’s sound doctrine. Follow his advice this year and coming July and August and alf Fall look out for 70e and 00c and SI.OO Potatoes! CORN. among them’ the earliest, heaviest eared, biggest yielders known. -For 10c In Postage M Jfcj| We gladly mail our Catalog and sample package of Ten Famo us Farm Seeds, including Speltz, “The Cereal Wonder; ’ Rejuvenated White Bonanza Oats, “The Prize Winner;” Billion Dollar Grass; Teosinte, *T_T: the Silo Filler, etc., etc. Aflß Or Send 120 And we will mail you our big Catalog and six generous gggggj packages of Early Cabbage, Carrot, Cucumber, Lettuce, - Radish, Onion— furnishing lots m* and lots of juicy delicious Vegetables during the eerly Spring and Summer. . Or send to John d. Salzer Seed Co., Box 700. La Crosse. Wla., twenty cents M and receive both above collec- HuV tions end their big catalog. *• ~ Its Clan. “That rich soap manufacturer hag just bought a handsome automobile.” “Ah —a soap ’bubble.’ " ~

Presence of Mind.

“What you learn at the school?” the boss asked the fair young applicant for the stenographer’s job: “I learned,” she replied, “that pelling is essential to a stenographer.” The boss chuckled. “Good. Now let me hear you spell essential.” The fair girl hesitated for the fraction of a second. “There are three ways," she replied. "Which do you prefer?” And she got the job.

FRUIT LAXATIVE FOR IK GRILD "California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm tender stomach, liver and bowels. > jr - Every mother realizes, after giving her children “California Syrup of Figs” that this is their ideal laxative, because they love its pleasant taste and it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels without griping. Whep cross, irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, mother! If coated, give a teaspoonful of this harmless “fruit laxative,” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. When its little system is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, .indigestion, colic —remember, a good "inside cleaning” should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep “California Syrup if Figs” handy; they know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 50cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of ail ages and grown-ups printed on the bottle. Adv.

Skeptical.

"What have we here?” “A series of sketches from • the front headed, ‘The Humane Side of War.’ ” "Stuff and nonsense 1 There’s no more .a humane side to war than there is a fifth side to a parallelogram." Do not expect to live forever on the fruits of one victory. ■ '

B Reform in Tobacco, No Mysterious Compounds to Cbew Nail Pouch Tor**) I Is manufactured of a combination of Highest grades of Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Ken* | tucky tobaccos, and prepared by our own original and exclusive process, neutralizing tea ■ nicotine without chemicals, which guarantees to the consumer a standard of unequal*** ■ excellence, and the only anti-nervous, anti-dyspeptic tobacco iathe market. I ton or is free from'grit, noxious flavorings, and adulterations, making I A Clean, Lasting Chew A Cool, Bweet Smoke

The man who leaves footprints on the sands of time isn’t always the fellow who carries the heaviest load.

OVERWORK and KIDNEY TROUBLE Mr. James McDaniel, Oakley, Ky., writes: "I overworked and strained myself, which brought on Kidney and Bladder Disease. My symptoms were t Backache and burning in the stem of the Bladder, which was sore and had a constant hurting all the time — broken sleep, tired feeling, nervousness, puffed and swollen eyes, shortness of breath and J. McDaniel. Rheumatic pains. I suffered ten months. I was treated by a physician, but found no relief until I started to use Dodd’s Kidney Pills, I now feel that I am permanently cured by the use of Dodd's Kidney Pills.” Dodd’s Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at your dealer or Dodd’s, Medicine Co, Buffalo, N, Y. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and recipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free. —Adv When a policbman uses his club he generally raps for order.

that must * can’t tell by looking at a roll of roofing it will last on the roof, but when yot^^ v*,?- r»«nto. of a T he only company, you know jguj. - | , roofina most T€CU test Or roofing quality is on the roof. Buy that last Certain-teed Ask roar dealer for prod- m JoyaLlißa Papwi S?S b,U^h,f KOOfing j^LCwa. ‘SSsS&riw l-pbgaaraatoed 5 years ghjffiShg ££££'sl 2-ply guaranteed 10 years , 3-ply guaranteed 15 years General Roofing Manufacturing Company World 1 * I mrvmt mmn&wtmrtr* of Bmyhf oral Building Spin

Scissors. “How do you spell scissors?” V'With four s’s." ‘Thanks. I never was any good at grunmar.”

NO MORE GRAY HAIRS Restore Youthful Color. No One WIH Know You’re Using Anything. Physicians advise against b armful hair stains and dyes. But why use them when yon eaa bring back the natural, youthful color with Bay’s Hair Health? This ia accomplished by the action of air, due to an element contained in this famous preparation. Absolutely harmless; so positive in reunite that druggists will refund money if It fails. Keep* new gray hairs from showing. Bouts dandruff; tones scalp; makes the hair stronsr.vigorous and beau tlful. XSc, 50c and SI.OO at drug stores or direct on receipt ofprice and dealer’s name. Philo Bag Specialties Co., Newark, N. J. Adv.

A Mean Man.

"Does your husband anticipate your every wish?” “Yes, and then he says I can’t havs It."

All Boys and Girls should write to Wm. Wrigiey Jr. Co., 1304 Keener Bldg., Chicago, 111., for beautiful “Mother Goose Jingle Book" in colors sent free to all readers of this paper.—Adv. Just Llks Him. "My husband is Just like our furnace,” sighed Mrs. Blinks. “All day he smokes, and at night he goes out." - - ■■■■-- '■ ■ ———w