Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 282, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 November 1916 — Page 3
CASTORIA E-xSI For Jnfanta and Children. r Mothers Know That Iu A“ u *3 Genuine Castoria E Always /, \ I Bears the ZW A* Thereby Signature / if. jr jj Cheerfulness and RestContaitf I ■ Of Kip*' I IA ■ W» gg- ft ,ft» In fepi A ‘^^ C S X nffioea /m /J* USB |l □§£=■» \Jr for Over H JSE. Thirty Years hfg-jf rl nttW - «3 CASTORIA Exact Copy of Wrapper. tw« o«wt»uw —mwv. wew vo»« »rrr.
W. L. DOUCLAS “THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE" $3.00 s3*so $4.00 $4.50 & $5.00 andwomln Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. For sale by over9ooo shoe dealers. fgh The Best Known Shoes in the World. . W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the hottom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and l&Sg&l . VW the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San .■§§§BB Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the price paid for them. '"T’he quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more A than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America. / They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass., by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction ahd supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest 1 determination to make the best shoes for the price that money X. can buy. _ jl Ask your shoe dealer for W. I. Douglas shoe.. If he can- • Asii-Af’ir not .apply you with the kind you want, take no other /t make.. Write for interesting booklet explaining how to BTWAREorJt, J get ehde.of the highest standard of quality for the price, I Vff Ms SUBSTITUTES By return mail, postage free. » MgjH B oyg > Shoe, LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas Best In the World name and the retail price $3.00 $2.50 & $2.00 Stamped the bottom. yy, Douglas Shoe Co., Brockton, Mass.
Only Hinted It.
George was an Imp, his sister said, and she thought her mother ought to raise her children better, which made mother laugh. “What has poor George done now?” asked mother. “Well, If you want to know,” said Grace, aged sixteen, “he came Into the parlor and asked Charlie to give him some money. The very idea of begging,” she exclaimed, as George himself came into the room. “I did not ask him for money,” George indignantly denied. “I said that Grace’s beaus gave me a quarter every time they saw me, except one, and he was a tightwad."
COST OF LIVING
This Is a serious matter with housekeepers as food prices are constantly going up. To overcome this, out the high priced meat dishes and serve your family more Skinner’s Macaroni and Spaghetti, the cheapest, most delicious and most nutritious of all Write the Skinner Mfg. Co., Omaha, Nebr., for beautiful cook book, telling how to prepare it in a hundred different ways. • It’s free to every woman. —Adv.
Valuable By-Products.
The value of tar, ammonia Jhjd benzol products recovered in the manufacture of artificial gas in municipal plants and at by-product coke ovens in this country in 1915 was nearly $25,000,000.
Pimples, boils, carbuncles, dry up and disappear with Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. In tablets or liquid. —Adv. r Chesterfield of, the Fields. "Father, what do they mean by gentlemen farmers?” . . “Gentlemen farmers, my son, are farmers who seldom raise anything except their hats." While some of us have more ups and downs in this (world than others, we’ll all be on the dead level sooner or later. It takes a divorce lawyer to-see the silver lining to a domestic-cloud.
Buy materials that last Certain-teed D O Ofj n( | responsibility at reasonable pncM General Roofing Manufacturing Company Wortd't larvest manufacturers of Roojtatf and BMUng Papert ■nrY«rkaw <*>««• KUo ■«««■. _«**■*» IreOrtwii ImAflw >»—»City S—ttk trfmplli mua UUm*
Not the Simple Life.
Little Dorothy had acquired a fixed habit of eating Sunday dinner with her two old and beloved friends, the Browns, who lived just across the street. Coming home she found her own' family seated at their table enjoying a substantial but plain dinner. A slight Wave of contempt crossed her face. “Why, what did you have for dinner?” her mother asked. “Baked chicken, rice, hot biscuits, mashed potatoes, candied sweet potatoes, cranberries, plum jelly and other delinquencies,” loftily asserted the little maid. —The Christian Herald.
A Long Wait.
Policeman (giving evidence) —After being ejected from the cinema, he was discovered on the doorstep of the back entrance to the picture-palace. Magistrate—Did he give any reason for his extraordinary behavior? Policeman —His speech was very Indistinct, yer worship, but from what I could gather, ’e was waiting to see Mary Pickford ’ome. —Passing Show.
Quite a Different Thing.
The beautiful girl’s smiles changed to a dark frown. “You deceiver!” she hissed. “I hate you!” The young man dropped his hat In astonishment. “Hate me?” he gasped; “why it was only yesterday you/said you loved every hair on my head.” “Yes, villain; but not every hair on your shoulder!” ns she held aloft a long golden one.—Stray Stories.
Many School Children are Sickly. Children who are delicate, feverlah and crose will get immediate relief from Mother Gray'• Sweet Powders for Children. They cleanse the stomach, act on the liver, and are recommended for complaining cbUdren. A pleasant remedy for worms. Used by mothers for 29 years. All druggists, 95c. Sample FREE. Address, Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y.—Adv. Proof of Her Economy. “Is your wife economical?” “Very. Look at the clothes that she makes me wear.” With the exception of the stage villain every man has soipe good points.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
WITH STALE BREAD
MANY DISHES MAY BE PREPARED FROM REMNANTS. Can Be Put to Excellent Uae for Stuffing and Meat Frying—Bread Custard Pudding Is Good— Jelly for Invalids. Of all the left-over remnants of food from the kitchen bread is the most common, perhaps, and many pieces are daily thrown away which a little thought would turn to excellent use. If the left-over pieces are not utilized the same day, an excellent plan Is to wrap them in pieces of waxed paper and store them in a stone jar. They will keep well for a week In this way. Dried Crumbs for Stuffing and Meat Frying.—Put the crusts and small pieces in a baking pan and dry in the oven without burning. They may then be put through the food chopper and stored In clean Mason jars until wanted. They may be used as a basis for meat croquettes, poultry stuffing and other things. French toast may be made from the whole slices of left-over bread. It is an excellent luncheon pick-up dish. Beat an egg and add a little milk. Dip the slices of bread in this and fry a nice brown In hot drippings. Serve with butter, jelly or marmalade. Bread Custard Pudding.—Cut the bread in dainty shapes and butter liberally. Make a plqln custard of eggs, milk and sugar. Put in baking dish and float Jlje buttered bread on top.' Sprinkle with' grated nutmeg and bake in a quick oven until brown. This is excellent. To make croutons for the various soups so much relished in season, cut the bread in cubes and fry in butter or dripping just before serving with the soup. Add five or six to each plate of soup. These are delicious with almost any soup. Bread Jelly for Invalids.—Scald the stale bread freed from crusts. Mash to a paste until of mushlike consistency. Add a little sugar and flavoring, mold, chill and serve with cream. Sterilized bread crumbs are epecially valuable for the young children in thq household. A jar should be kept filled with these. They may be heated when wanted and sprinkled in soft eggs, soups, milk, fruit juices and, indeed, anything eaten by very young children where fresh bread is often positively dangerous. Dried bread is also valuable for mixing with various other foods for feeding the household pets.
Peach Dumplings.
Mix and sift two cupfuls of flour, one teaspoonful of baking powder, onehalf teaspoonful of salt and one-half teaspoonful of sugar. Work Into this two teaspoonfuls of lard. Mix with three-quarters cupful of ice water. Have all of the ingredients very cold, mix quickly, handling as little as possible, and roll out thin. Cut the dough into pieces just large enough to cover one-half of a preserved peach, roll them up and bake in a quick oven. Serve with hard sauce and the sirup from the preserved peaches.
Apple Chutney.
Twelve sour apples, one mild onion, three peppers, one red, one cupful of chopped raisins, one-half cupful currant jelly, two cupfuls of sugar, juice of four lemons, one tablespoonful of ground ginger, one-quarter teaspoon--ful of cayenne, one tablespoonful of salt and one pint of cider vinegar. Chop the apples, onions and peppers very fine, add the vinegar and jelly and let simmer one hour, stirring constantly. Store as canned fruit.
Stewed Kidneys.
Remove the fat and center from six I kidneys and soak in cold water. Slice, season with salt and pepper, roll in flour and saute'in butter. Add to the fat in the pan one tablespoonful of butter and two tablespoonfuls of flour; brown, and add three-quarters cupful of stock. Season with salt, pepper, onion juice and table sauce and pour over the kidneys.
American Cream.
Half box gelatin, one quart milk. Set on back of stove to heat gradually. Boil a minute or two. Take off stove and stir in yolks of four eggs well beaten with three tablespoonfuls sugar. Then add whites, well beaten with three tablespoonfuls sugar and two tablespoonfuls vanilla. Put in dish ready for table. Serve next day with cream.
For Bamboo Articles.
A soft rag saturated with qplution of equal parts of spirits of camphor and linseed oil is a handy thing to keep around the house. It is the best thing you can get to rub down bamboo furniture with, for it loosens the fiber and makes the wood more elastic. For this reason it will not crack when exposed to changes of temperature.
Combination Cake.
One-third cupful of butter, one cupful granulated sugar, three small eggs, one-eighth cupful coffee, one and onehalf cupfuls flour, two level teaspoonfuls salt, one cupful of dates, cut small, one cupful of chopped English walnuta. Marshmallow frosting Is nice if you like it.
To Pick Up Broken Glass.
Even the smallest pieces of broken glass can be easily picked up with a bit jof wet absorbent cotton, which ran then be trestroyed by burning.
TWO WAYS OF SAVING MONEY
English Method of Handling Bread at the Table la Worth Consideration —Home Baking. ( In most English homes it is the custom to put the loaf of bread on the table to be cut as needed, and every family has its more or less handsomely carved bread board, matching the handle of the good English steel bread knife. Where this usage prevails, few if any odd bits of bread find their way back into the bread box or jar to be overlooked, perchance, until they are moldy themselves and have contaminated the rest of the contents. Is not this a practice worth considering, and perhaps adopting, j,n many-A-homa to flay, when the outcry at the rise in the bakers’ prices is so general and so loud? An even more effective economy is wrought whenever the housewife undertakes to- bake her own bread instead of buying the product at the great bakeries. Not only will each loaf she makes cost distinctly less than she has paid for the same weight, but if she uses a good flour, and especially entire wheat flour, the amount of nutrition will be incomparably greater than they have enjoyed before. Home baking need have no terrors for any woman of average intelligence, especially if she can afford one of the patent bread kneaders which reduce both time and effort to a very moderate amount *-
FOR COMFORT IN KITCHEN
Cabinet That Can Be Moved Should Be Made During the Winter for Use in Summer. How many times during the summer we would like to move our work into the breeze when the wind changes. But the cabinet can’t be moved easily, so we work on in the same old place. Then why not a “cabinette on castors”? It can be moved to any placa desired. This one is easily constructed and has only one drawer and two sliding shelves —or kneedlng boards. The
Useful Cabinet
boards when pulled out make a handy table at each elbow, and when not in use can be pushed back out of the way. The top is zinc-covered. The drawer is used for paring knives, mixing spoons and such. With a stool tall enough to allow one’s elbows to come above the table the cablnettd is ready. Oh, no! Be sure to put on the foot rest. That is one of the main features of this little work table. Here one can “drop down” to pare potatoes, apples, etc., and have plenty of room for apple peelers and food choppers.—Mrs. R. L. Standiford in Farm Progress.
New Apple Salad.
Beat one-half cupful of double cream, a of lemon juice and one-quarter spoonful of salt until fiqp throughout. Cook two apples, cored and pared, in a sirup, (two or three cloves or an inch of cinnamon bark may be added) and set them aside to become thoroughly chilled. Chop fine four maraschino or candied cherries and eight or ten pecan nuts or blanched almonds. Carefully wash three small heads of tender lettuce, first removing the ragged outer leaves and cutting the stalks that the heads may stand. Dispose the heads on individualplates with an apple in the center of each. Mix the cherries and put through the prepared cream and turn it over the apples.
Creamed Ham.
Do you wish something for luncheon, a dessert or something more hearty? This is Very nice: Melt one and a half tablespoonfuls butter and stir in one and a half tablespoonfuls flour and blend together, then a<id slowly one and a half cupfuls of sweet milk and stir until smooth. Season with a little pepper and add one cupful of ham chopped fine and four tablespoonfuls grated cheese. Stir until the cheese is melted and serve it spread on slices of toasted bread.
Baked Peas and Eggs.
Take one can of peas, three hardboiled eggs (sliced). Arrange in alternate layers with the peas in a moderately deep baking dish. Cover with a thin white sauce, made with two tablespqonfuls butter, one and a half tabjespoonfuls of flour, one cupful scalded milk, a little salt and a dash of pepper, spread with fine cracker crumbs and dpts of butter; brown in a quick "oven. Excellent as a supper or luncheon dish, served with cold meat and baked potatoes.
Peach Compote.
Three pounds of peaches freed from skin and stones, three pounds of sugar, two chopped oranges and one pound of raisins. Put all on the stove and cook until of the thickness desired. When ready to put in the jars add one pound of English walnuts chopped rather fine.
To Clean Windows.
Wash the glass with water to which a little amtnonia has been added, and polish with a chamois which has been dipped in water and wrung as dry as possible.
health for sek XOcmen For Forty Years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has Been Woman’s Most Reliable Medicine —Here is More Proof. X. To women who are suffering from some form of woman’s special ills, and have a constant fear of breaking down, the three following letters ought to bring hope:— B North Crandon, Wis.—“ When I was 16 years old I got married and at 18 years I gave birth to twins and it left me with very poor health. I could not walk across the floor without having to sit down to rest and it was hard for me to keep about and do my work. I went to a doctor and ne told me I had a displacement and ulcers, and would have to have an operation. This frightened me so < much that I did not know what to do. Having heard of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I thought I would give it a trial and it made me as Pinkham remedies.”—Mrs. Mayme Asbach, North Crandon, Wis. Testimony from Oklahoma. Lawton, Okla. —“When I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I seemed to be good for nothing. I tired easily and had headaches much of the time and was irregular. I took it again before my little child was born and it did me a wonderful amount of good at that time. I never fail to recommend Lvdia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound to ailing women because it has done so much for me.” —Mrs. A. L. McCaslakd, 509 Have St, Lawton, Okla. From a Grateful Massachusetts Woman. I Roxbury, Mass. — u I was suffering from inflam- i mation and was examined by a physician who found that my trouble was caused by a displacement My symptoms were bearing down pains, backache, and sluggish liver. I tried several kinds of medi- : cine; then I was asked to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It has cured me and lam pleased to be in my usual good health by using it and highly recommend it.” Mrs. B. M. Osgood, 1 Haynes Park, Roxbury, Mass. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidence. L
Y. M. C. A. EXTENDS ITS WORK
War Has Enabled Organization to Gain a Foothold In Both Austria and Russia. The Y. M. C. A. is one of the biggest and most efficient religious under- | takings in the world. So practical is the nature of its work, and so carefully are its finances administered by competent business men that it is easier to raise money for Y. M. C. A. than for any- other religious work. Plans for its world-wide activities next year call for the expenditure of $4,500,000. The war has enlarged Its European field, and $2,000,000 of the budget will be spent there. From Switzerland to central Russia the association is now maintaining 250 graded schools and colleges of which instructors as well as students are prisoners of war. The total enrollment approximates 3,250,000 men. For the first time in Its history the Y. M. C. A. has gained a foothold in Austria and Russia. TherA is no other religious organization that could have so promptly and so efficiently taken up the opportunities for service offered by the European war, ministering to Jews, Catholics and Protestants, all on equal footing. Along the Texas border where American troops have been stationed, the Y. M. C. A. has founded stations, and nearly 40 schools in which Spanish is the most popular course. Half a million dollars has been laid out for the work in Texas, and a million for the Industrial department in various railroad centers throughout the coun-try.—-Leslie’s.
One Way to Do It
“Father, how do you fill a fountain pen?” asked Johnny. “Well,” asked his father, “is it your pen that you want to fill?” “Yes, sir.” “Well, then my boy,” thoughtfully answered father, “I would fill the bathtub with ink, and then get in and till the pen.”—Rochester Times.
Anyway, a spite fence la never too high for neighbors to think it over. Anger manages everything badly.
To Live Long!
A recipe given by a famous physician for long life was: "Keep the kidneys in good order! Try to eliminate through the skin and Intestines the poisons that otherwise clog the kidneys. Avoid eating meat as much as possible; avoid too much salt, alcohol, tea. Drink plenty of water.” , For those past middle life, for those easily recognized symptoms of inflammation, as backache, scalding “water," or if uric acid in the blood has caused rheumatism, "rusty” joints, stiffness, get Anuric at the drug store. This is a wonderful eliminator of uric acid and ,vas discovered by Dr. Pierce of Inalids’ Hotel, Buffalo. N; Y. If your Iruggist does not keep it send 10' cents o Dr. Pierce for trial package and you vill know that it is many times ■note potent than lithia and that it dlsmlves uric add as hot water does sugar.
Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver to right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS 1 gently butfirmly 1.1 sick -SBSSjL—,, and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMAIL PRICK, Genuine must bear Signature « ■ J STOPS ~ 11 from a Bone Spavin, Ring Bone, O Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or similar |1 trouble and gets horse going sound. II It acts mildly but quickly and good re- / 1 suits are lasting. Does not blister or remove the hair and horse can V* be worked. Page 17 in pamphlet with O each bottle tells how. >2.00 a bottle delivered. Horse Book 9 M free. . ABSORBINE, JR-, the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Painful Swellings, Enlarged Glands, Wens, Bruises, Varicose Veins, heals' Sores. Allays Pam. Will tell you more if you write, fl and $2 a bottle at dealest or delivered. Liberal trial bottle lor lOe **>av* W.F.YOUM6.P D.F.,lWTse»to«.,Bprin<leM.llaae.
What He Would Do.
It was his first night on guard, and, of course, Mike Flaherty was on the watch against officers and such-like questioning him on his duties. As it happened, he was at a station guarding a magazine of powder that had arrived during the day. Suddenly the orderly officer came around and. after the usual formalities, commenced to question Mike. Officer—What would you do If the magazine blew up? Mike —Gs up with the report, sir.
When a woman knows her husband like a book, it is usuailly.hls pocketbook." No man ever gets discouraged tn trying to live without labor.
NEWS OF CHICAGO Chicago, Ill.—"I suffered for four years with pain in my back. I tried everything there was out, but all failed to help me. I tWa even went to a i'.Jb doctor. A friend i'! m^Be advised ‘ : p •m.fiii: me to try Anuric, iip i■; and 80 1 It’l used two boxes \ and the pains were gone. lam not telling any my back was something terrible. As soon as I would bend over I thought my whole back would burst “I wou’d advise. sufferers to try Anuric ano they will find results; they need not take my word for it" —MR. WALTER CARLSON, 1147 N. FrankUn st —Adv. ,
