Jasper County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 July 1916 — TRAIN HITS BUGGY; TWO DEAD [ARTICLE]

TRAIN HITS BUGGY; TWO DEAD

Man and Wife Killed on Vandalia Railroad at Bicknell, near Vincennes, Ind. Vincennes. Ind., July 28.—-Mr. and Mrs. Lee Small, prominent residents of Knox county, were killed when a Vandalia passenger train struck their buggy in BicknelL I Seat Im, the Thermometer. It dsn': the weather that is hot so much as it-is the way you live that is hot. There are hot livers and cool livers pretty much the year around. If you know the art of hot weather housekeeping you can get along very comfortably. Do you realize, |for instance, the difference it makes when things Just look cool? Take the cloth off the dining table and see if it doesn't look cooler. Take the roast off and put a green salad in its place and See if it doesn’t look cooler yet There is coolness in summer furniture, too. Put away the heavy library table and sjbstitute something in light wicker and see how the temperature of the room drops. Upholstered chairs should go, too, and light, hard surfaced ones be put in their place. Roll up the heavy rugs. You can have straw cr grass matting if you lilfe, hut a bare polished floor is the coolest. Window draperies and all hangings should come down, and even pictures that are heavily framed should be removed. Everything suggestive of heaviness or stuffness should be banished. This includes all manner of cushions and the cats that usually may be found sleeping on them. And if you are so unfortunate as to have anything like a plush piano stool in the room or a plush album, fire them first of all. If you do these things right you can make the living room look as cocl as the lounging deck of a ship Of course, the room must be dark ened during the day. Keep the sue out. Keep even the sun-heated aix out. You can do that by closing the windows and lowering the curtains and the awnings, too, if you have them. Don't be afraid that you wil: make the room hot by Hosing, the windows. The cool air is inside dur ing the day.—Kansas City Times.