The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 11, Vernon, Jennings County, 28 August 1919 — Page 2

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5T7if Miiiif tVi!i ri(! O.f T r if rf ' ; vts.rr ?; -r Iroin Ih Vt e--lr ;!fl !'.--.-. in ;, o tr? l"hle jTlTSer T..r.-; .-.' sr re?.., v; i : 5 i e je nr 1 1 i-d and i-rsi to rt tor ueh ihm ritireawiiMT f . ' "i .' ty ! i '.' r (jnil tt,rt Krl tome, it j-urt i and eimr.bw the b !,-,'! ft r 1 : t Tj nr f (i-, ntP1r- i r r 2. r "" f - i i;s Hrecffttienir., invijif or&tis.s ": :"M-"t... ::"-. Newfoundland's Memorial Day. Newfoundland cob-!. rated July 1 this ,';;! I. lit ted :: Canada dees. It VSli r.-! th !; , .,i;f tl." Island as Meir.orial !;) . in honor of those who laid : wn f L i r lives during the war. Next :sr i! . proposed t hold the commemoration ;. : 1 ; .-r i:i i ;. season.

Important to toothers Em mine can-fully every bottle of OAS'Tt f JA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it I.ears the jt? mature otCjjH&$rtfr In for Ov. r .' Years'. ChiJilren Cry for Fletcher's Catoria Went Too Far. ' '!'! V- ! : :!; !.. r of a certain castle in 1 1 : i : : : . ! was prostrated the ! ,-r day." "How did that happen?" "A fae-t i'in vNiinr, just for a joke, asked to J.f shown a room once occupied ly the kiii-rr." Birmingham Age- ! i. raid. Cuticura Seethes Baby Rashes. That itch and hum with hot baths of Cuticora Soap followed by penile anointing of Cuticura Ointment. .n!).;r:;' he! t'-r. pur r, sweeter, especially if a little of the fra errant Cuticura Talcum Is ducted on at the u-i'-h. 2.V each everywhere. Adv. Japan to Start Colony in Peru. A Japanese; syndicate has. bought Soo.OOO acres of hind near lluanuco, Peru, on the Amazon watershed, according to a report. Three hundred thousand more acres are in negotiation. The land is suitable for raising i:.::ir, cot fort, coffee, cocoa and similar products. COULD HOT SLEEP Ifr. Schleusr.cr in Ilissry Frca Kidney Complaint. Coin's Gave Complete Relief. ''Ile;ivy work brought on my kidney onipianit," -ay Win. Schiou-ucr, iVS i-nburhun Ave., Wcilstoa, 31". "One morning when shoeing ;i horse 1 was taken with a Midden pain in my back and fell liat en the tioor. If " I had been, hit v--h a trip hammer, 1 couldn't h.ive suffered more. I stayed in the liou-i? i'vr live weeks and the pain was wearing -' the life out of rae. At time I ceuMn't pet a wmk of sleep because of " the misery add I had to i X L;'y' pet im every few moments mt 1 to pass the secretions that Vj. i,msmr v,re hhjy colored, of foul odor, filled with mihIv sediment and terrihly scalding. My bladder felt as tlioush it were aiire. Tlie pain brought stupor and a reeling; rensation i .j my head; 1'ie torture of it cannot be (letenbed. If I pot onto my feet I couldn't walk: but felt dizzy and all in a t'utter and everything would turn Mack. My head ached so it seemed as . hough my eyes were being dragged out. I started usinft Doon's Kidney l'il't and I was soon rid of all the t rouble." tSuhscriled and .morn to before V'"' C. II. COCflESIIALL. Notary Public. Get Dta' at An Store, 3c Cox 2. mt, X J PILLS rosTir. -r,::uiuN co., buffalo, n. y. 1 I ! 1 1 f Every room u n oiitide room, with hot r.i cold water. Tt't litght Hottl at th Right Prices. RATES: 1 CO mn4 H2i With !Elk Si. 50 mr.S S2.00 4 P I "2 k. .3 ': U U U L Li V. O cs is s o cl t y i -at w an iu 1..- i .:aTO I C. hc wtiniicrf ut inoifa ttonui ii t',e.,1. K-ve you (jusck relief (row di.-suwt inci blchir.ff. fooi.t-repeatir.S', indiifst. n. In if. I, pr.Fjy stomach, dyspepIn xr.uiii ar.it t.ttier stonuch ruisries. Thy are alt CAUset ly Aeit-SS-Ji-h from whiri ttl'eut r.irio re p out of ten I'Jtef in e.n vr;iv rr at. other. One writes as follow: "l.i'fin- I v-f- i KATO'iC, I could not rat t-Ste without bclchmic It right v. p. sour anil bitter. I l i v. not had a bit ct troutle i-i! the fjfft tablet." MilUoR are vtetiin of AciX-StomacU without knowlnif it. They are weak and aiiirc. have poor uicostion, bottles improperly r.'iurlehed aithoaj h they may eat heartily, it rave disorders are likely to follow it an aei.l-stotrsach neglected. Cirrhosis of the liver, tnttstinal cor.sfst Ion. raMritU, catarrh of the stomach these are orJy a few of tii r.iany aiiinents often caused by Aciii-Moiiiiictl. A u:f-rer from Catarrh of the Stomach of 1 1 ye;r' tanAtriK writes: "1 had catarrh of C.ie !-to:ii.o-h for 11 I -r.- years an.l 1 never found anythtr to da me any pood just temporary retivf until I u I CATC.IC. It i a v rm : e i i v t f ti-.ey end 1 do not wnt to be witl-.out It." If fa are r..t feei!n.i e.uite richt lack erserjry an 1 fs! hu?iss;i an-I !on't krsow ju.t w here to locate the trouble- try K ATONIC and ee fcjif much tetter you w ill feel la ery way. At all !ru atorex a Id box for 5c aa4 J far : I i v i yej ro rot ol.Jlf J. r - C - ' i ,. -I - ( . t 5 ; t o - ; -a i I c, 3 : re-. Oar -.1 ; u " I . in r ;f i . i s vfi'L-d'i f . . U . il t ; . Ac. L i sitr: -t .- r.j i ) S' .11 ' t t' ; M - .. 1 . i o sii'.T r i i-j-.' ; :i f ' r c. ; ' !,-y tc.L "c if tct . L I i - it H t . t..,

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o o i t i -"Hi. m (j" M a 'w 1 f "I Of I Every striking employee of the Standard Steel Car company plant In Hammond awoke on Friday to tlnd an Indiana militiaman at his door. While the military guards held the 1,700 strikers in their homes, the gates cf J tlie shops were thrown open and imported strikebreakers walked in unmolested. The strikers were to be prevented from sathering in the streets. A double guard was placed about the homes of several particu larly violent I. "W. W. agitators. if the men were to meet it would be un der police surveillance In a hall outside the city limits or out among the sand dunes. The car company forces, it was stated, had been fully remanned, and production, beginning Friday morning, assumed a normal basis. Officials of the company declare the strike will be broken if the guards have to be kept in Hammond till Christmas. The strikers rejected the company's offer of compromise and the determination to till the ranks with strikebreakers resulted. "We will have fought to little purpose to destroy the autocracy of the kaiser if we are to submit in our own land to the autocracy of the mob," declared Gov. James P. Goodrich, addressing state troops mobilized hi Indianapolis for duty at Hammond in connection with strike disorders there. The governor charged the miliiiainen to use "most vigorous exorcise of force" should the occasion demand. "More than 1 I'i.immi of the voting men of Indiana were recently called to tiefend the honor and integrity - of the nation in a foreign war," lie said. "You are now called upon a less glorious but no less important mission. Ours is a government of laws and not of men. If men are to be permitted to substitute tlie inclination of their own wills and their own selfish tiesires for obedience to the law, then orderly government is at an end and we must soon reach the unhappy condition which now obtains in ltussia. I trust that It will not be necessary to resort to extreme measures, but thosee who have arrayed themselves against society should be taught that they cannot do so with inipuity." A. IL Ileiser, seventy, member of the Indianapolis live stock linn of Clark. Wysong & Co., was crushed to death when Ids automobile, said to have been driving at terrific speed, went wild on a road near Martinsville, f.kidded into a bank and turned over. Two men and two women in the car were only slightly hurt and. are said to have disappeared Immediately after the accident. Heiser's back was broken. Superintendent E. E. Ramsey has announced the appointment of Prof. Horace C. Wysong. a graduate of Indiana university, to be principal of the Bloomlngton high school, to succeed Prof. C. It. Clayton, who has accepted a position in the Indianapolis manual training high school. Professor Wysong's home Is at Lebanon, but for two years he has been principal at Rawlins. Wyo. The engagement of Prof. Itoscoe Abbett of Frankfort to Miss Pearl Stutsman of Goshen has been an nounced. Tlie wedding will take place at Goshen August 2S. Professor Abbett is Instructor of physical education In the Goshen high school, and Miss Stutsman has been connected with the schools of Nappanee for four years. David Alexander, eighty-five years old, was killed at Goshen when struck by a New York Central mail train as he was en route to the home of his daughter, Mrs. Beech Martin. After having waited for a freight to pass he stepped directly In front of the approaching mail train. Two daughters and one son survive. Stanley Hathaway was killed recently In Denver. Colo., when an automobile struck the bicycle he was riding. He formerly lived in Muncle. Lee C. McCauley of Tipton is the new director of music in the Crawfordsvllle high school, succeeding Mrs. Margaret Kennon. Judge Warren N. Ilauck died at Lawrenceburg following a stroke of apoplexy. He was serving his sixth year as .lu'ltre of the circuit court, composed of Dearborn and Ohio counties. Judge Ilauck was fifty-nine years old and unmarried. The annual reunion of the Vand!vior family was held at the Johnson county fair grounds. The Vandivier family is by far the largest in the county, the avt race attendance at the annual reunions being more than 500. Lewis Taylor of Indianapolis, secretary of the Indiana Farmers' Protective association, will address a picnic of fanners in the city park of Goshen. James It. lisggs of Sullivan wired Vice President Thomas R. Marshall his acceptance of the apindntment as assistant secretary of tlie department of agriculture of the United States. Three persons were seriously injured in a mysterious explosion at the Victor Photo company at Griffith. The injured are Henry Plogh. superintendent; Alvin Light foot, .workman, and Mis Vera Wray, stenographer. A municipal market will be opened in Evansv:h" by Mayor Bosse in an eiTort to led ice the high cost of living. This announcement was made by the mayor follow-In? word from Cliieaeo MKtlnc that the government foodstuffs for which he lias been negotiating would be sent immediately. The food win bo sold frora the new Kunfciva! market place.

A.. Mitchell Palmer, attorney general of the United States, has recommended that congress extend federal control to clothing and other necessities through a new law, 'similar to the act which gave the government supervision over the production and distribution of food during the war, Dr. Harry E. Barnard, federal food adndnistrator for Indiana, announced on his return to Indianapolis from New Y'ork, where he was in conference with the attorney general and food administrators of several states. That profiteering in sugar, which was widespread and flagrant, according to reports, is abating in Indiana and that the movement for making public other cases where unfair prices are charged for commodities has already had an influence in the state, was the opinion of Doctor Barnard on the Indiana situation. Mrs. Julia B. Tutewiler was elected second vice president and a constitution and by-laws were adopted at a meeting of the Housewives' league held at the public library in Indianapolis. A large number attended the meeting, the second of housewives of Indianapolis to perfect an organization to combat the high cost of living. In stating the policy of the organization. Mrs. W. H. Hart, president, said: "I feel at th'm time it would be well for the cha.r to state the policy of our organization. It will be used for constructive work, not destructive. We wish to live and let live. Every producer and dealer should be allowed to make a fair living profit and the consumer must also be aide to buy at a reasonable price. We have no desire to add to the unrest already existing. In emergencies women can always be depended upon, and I am sure we will not fail now." Twenty business and professional men were made defedants in a suit of $25,000 damages filed in the circuit court at Washington by Walter C. Forester, proprietor of the Atlas hotel. The litigation is tlie outgrowth of a sensational incident- in the Liberty loan campaign in September, 101S, when Rev. J. W. Darby, pastor of the First Christian church, and another canvasser called at the hotel to solicit Forester to purchase bonds. An argiment ensued. It is said, and ended, Reverend Darby says, by Forester threatening him with a butcher knife. Decatur county turned out in force for a big Welcome Home day celebration in honor of her service men. Ideal weather marked the occasion. The crowd was estimated at 15.000. A free barbecue staged by N. D. Lawrence of Lexington, Ky., the original "Burgoo" man, was one of the features. The barbecue was held In the VonPuhl grove, north of town. It is estimated that 10.000 persons were fed. The celebration came to a close with a street dance, two bands providing music, and dances in the Eagles and Moose halls. Thousands of American citizens fighting the high cost of living by the purchase of army foods distributed through post offices are

told by Prof. Robert Lee Green, dean of the college of pharmacy at the University of Notre Dame, that this method of marketing may be adopted on a wider scale. Professor Green claims that the government Is acting upon his suggestion of postal markets in this present distribution, and is confident that the rest of his plan finally will be adopted. Rev. E. T. Howe of Frankfort was elected president of the Indiana Meth odist Protestant conference, which held its session at Greenfield. Rev. C. J. Kerlin of Indianapolis was elected secretary and J. W. Albright of Jonesboro, conference steward. The state conference of Indiana Wesleyan Methodists, at the annual session at Fairmount, elected Rev. Walter L. Thompson of Muncie, president ; Rev. Francis R. Eddy of Plymouth, vice president, and Rev. E. J. Little of Larwill, secretary. After suspension of traffic on the eastern division at 11 o'clock Saturday morning, when 14 men employed at the Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction company's power house, at Philadelphia, threw on the brakes and left the power house, cars were again started at S o'clock Saturday night. The places of the strikers were filled by 2-1 men brought here from Mooresvllle, Crawfordsville and Indiananolis. Rev. J. W. Settle of Washington was re-elected superintendent of the Indiana conference at the annual session at Plainville, near here. He was unopposed. Reports of the financial committees showed that the conference experienced a prosperous year. Collections for benevolences during the year reached $10,000. The story of five years enslavement by a man of sixty-five, recited by eigbt-eeu-year-old Anna Hill, will result in a demand for the life imprisonment of John Johnson, whose arrest was caused by the girl. State's Attorney r Kunke announced at La port e. Shelby county crops were benefited greatly by .."5-inch of rain which fell In the county during the last 2-i hours. Telephone patrons at Klwood are protesting against another contemplated increase in rates. Harold Baker was saved from drowning in the Blue river, north of Shell-yville, by Victor Kemp, when they were in camp with the boy scout drum corp of Indianapolis to play for ( :he Modern Woodmen log rolling. I fffovit Executive Bowser said he will recommend Kemp to the national headquarters for a bravery medal. Surplus army foodstuffs were placed on sale Monday at the Indiananolis post office. Indications were that although the sale is scheduled to last two days, the supply of many of the commodities allotted to Indianapolis few hours be exhausted

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The men who are not satisfied Are they who get the pace The men who do not meet defeat "With calm, contented face. The men who labor on and on With minds and fingers skilled They are the great unsatisfied Whet plan and fig-tit and build. MANY MARMALADES. Marmalades may be prepared from various kinds of fruit. The apple is perhaps the best known. A conserve which is a marmalade of mixtures of fruit is always an ad dition to any menu. Here are a few worth keeping and handing down : Orange Marmalade. Take one dozen oranges, half a dozen lemons. peel very thin and remove the white inner rind. Chop the rind very fine, or put through the meat grinder; also grind the pulp. To a pint of pulp and rind add one and one-quarter pints of water: boil twenty minutes. Remove from the heat and let stand twenty-four hours, then measure and add one and one-quarter quarts of sugar to one. quart of pulp. Boil an hour and a half, or until the fruit is thick. Amber Marmalade. Take one each of large grapefruit, orange and lemon, wash and wipe and cut fine, shred the peeling in thin strips, discarding the seeds. Add three and a half quarts of cold water and let stand over night. The next day cook until the peel is very tender and again yet aside over night. The next day add five pounds of sugar and cook unfit the sirup is thick. Store as jelly. Golden Marmalade. This is a marmalade which takes the place of the more expensive orange marmalade and is very tasty and wholesome. Scrape and put through a meat chopper one and one-half pounds of carrots, two lemons and the same measure of sugar. Cook the carrots in as little water as possible, add the lemons, also ground (removing the seeds). When well cooked, add the sugar and cook until thick, stirring carefully to keep the mixture from burning. Put in glasses as any other marmalade. Tomato Conserve. Take four quarts of ripe, fine tomatoes; add four pounds of sugar, six latge lemons and one cupful of raisins. Prepare as usual and cook until thick. Seal in glasses. Four seeds I drop in every hill; One for the worm to harm. Cine for the frost to kill. And two for the barn. SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS. A delicious way of serving beets, the tender young ones, is to cook them un"j tii rentier ; men cnop ana return to the fire, pomover a well-seasoned French dressing and serve as a vegetable. Creamed Eggs With Sardines. Melt four tablespoonfuls of butter, add one-fourth of a cup ful of bread crumbs and a cupful of thin cream, bring to the boiling point, then add two hard-cooked eggs finely chopped, a half a box of sardines freed from the skin and bones, and salt, pepper and paprika to taste. Bring again to the boiling point and serve at once. Drop Cookies. Cream one-fourth of a cupful of shortening, add one-third of a cupful of ginger sirup and half a cupful of strained honey with one egg slightly beaten. Mix and sift two and three-fourths cupfuls of flour with two teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, one teaspoonful of soda and half a teaspoonful of salt. Add to the first mixture, beat well, drop from the tip of a teaspoon onto a buttered sheet and bake in a moderate oven. Spanish Ragout. In a deep casserole put some fat or oil, slice a few onions and add a clove or two of garlic, a little mace, salt and pepper, brown well then lay on top of these vegetables a pig's liver with very little water, just enough to keep from burning. Cover and cook two hours. The liver will shrink and absorb most of the contents of the pan. When cold it slices nicely. Newport Pound Cake. Cream seven-eights of a cupful of butter, add one and a half cupfuls of 'dour gradually, and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Beat the yolks of five eggs until thick and lemon-colored and add one and a half cupfuls of powdered sugar gradually. Combine the mixtures, add the whites of the eggs beaten stiff and sift oer one teaspoonful of baking powder. Beat thoroughly, turn into a deep buttered cake pan and bake one hour in a moderate oven. Mustard Pickles. To a gallon of vinegar add one-half cupful of mustard, one cupful of salt and two cupfuls of brown sugar. Drop in the pirkles as they are gathered; cover with horseradish leaves. Be sure to put in store for winter a few quarts of cherries prepared as follows: Wash the cherries inistemnied and place in a fruit jar; half fill the jar with good vinegar and fill with cold water, add a teaspoonful of salt to a quart and seal uiuah They make dsueious j'lrMo to forre la the place of olives.

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Choice bits of veal, creamery butter and fresh eggs combine with other tempting; ingredients to give Libby's Veal Loaf its delicate, appetizin; flavor. Order a package from your grocer today. Libby, McNeiI! & Libby, Chicago

DUEL INDEFINITELY PUT OFF I How Wisconsin Congressman Turned Challenge to Deadly Combat Into Matter of Ridicule. Tlie story of the Potter-Pryor duel, the famous challenge of Civil war times whereby a Wisconsin congressman by ridicule, put dueling in disrepute, recalled by the death of one of the participants, is told in interesting style in the June number of the Wisconsin Magazine of History, quarterly publication of the State Historical society. Roger A. Pryor. the Virginia congressman who figured in the episode, died a few months ago in New York city. It was ho upon whom John Fox Potter of East Troy, Walworth county, then representative of the First congressional district of Wisconsin, during April, 1S00, brought nation-wide ridicule in answer to a challenge to a duel. Congressman Potter offered to fight with bowie knives at a distance of four feet, but Pryor refused because they were "so demnition vulgsir." Most of Mr. I'otter's bowie knives, including the one he purchased for the duel and others sent to him after the affair, are now on exhibit in the State Historical museum, Madison. Exit Dishtowels. - No more sticky plates and no more dishes dried on dishtowels. These are two of the tilings for which the 1 M. C. A. training schools for home assistants is standing. The school was started in answer to the demand for home assistants on the new domestic service plan which have come into the central branch employment bureau. Within the last six months 500 calls for home assistants have come in, and 170 have been suefully filled. "There should never be a sticky plate after the home assistant has finished the course," Miss Grace II. White, placement secretary, says. "The girls are taught how to make their owm soda preparation for cleansing the icebox, the kitchen elc.;efs, etc., and how to clean a sink and a kitchen range so that it shines. "Dishes are never dried with a dishtowel, but always scalded and allowed to dry without a streak." It Has Happened Before. As his relatives and friends are aware, George Wharton Pepper Is ai nonsmoker. Not long ago Mr. Pepper was about to entertain some distinguished g iests whom he delighted to honor. His first move in the direction of their entertainment w;:s to procure and send to the house some particularly choice Havana cigars, which "set him back" to the tune of 50 cents each. But it seems the cigars arrived before it was made known at home that the guests were expected. That evening Mrs. Pepper said to her husband: "Some cigars came for you today evidently a gift from some one. Knowing you didn't smoke, I gave them to men who were working in the house."- Philadelphia Ledger. Retort Courteous. Nell "I wouldn't marry the bst man in the world." Belie "Of course not. He wouldn't ask you." f :' , !

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' A Young Girl is an attractive sight. Red Cross Ball Blue if used in the laundry will give that - clean, dainty appearance that everyone admires. All good grocers sell it; 5 cents a package. Birds Have Right of Way. Fowl have the right of way in air, warns the director of military aeronautics. This is justice indeed, since birds flew first. But this Is not all. Recently many towns along the Atlantic coast have been visited with dead bird showers. Aviators flying by a town would see a flock of wild fowl coming their way. They would set their machine guns" and let the bullets fly. Presently a prominent citizen walking below would be hit with a large bloody bird. He complained to the department of agriculture. Then the federal migratory bird law between the United States and Great Britain was referred to, and it was found that shooting birds from airplanes is unlawful. Agreed With the Doctor. Mr. Griffin had spent an anxious afternoon at the office and hurried home at an unusually early hour. "How do you feel, dear? What did the doctor say?" be asked his wife. - "Oh, he asked me to put out my tongue." she murmured. "Yes?" "And after looking at It he said: 'Overworked !' " Mr. Griffin heaved an audible sigh of relief. "I have perfect faith in that doctor," he said firmly. "You will have to give it a rest." Verdict Against House Cat. The department of agriculture has pronounced the house cat an enemy to mankind and has recommended its extermination. It expresses the opinion that the cat destroys more wild birds and young poultry than all their natural enemies combined, that it does not even keep the rats away, that it spreads disease, that it does much harm and little good. - The worst of It for others means the best of it for the undertakers. Brains and hands working together bring results. 4 t r ,-J"l.

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