The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 18, Vernon, Jennings County, 7 November 1919 — Page 2

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t jW life fe ''Jtf n. rs m v-f-ft If V,ir ' ri, "I ra.terc I f;rrtra M -..1 u ;. - r Irf :n r. rvi 5, tr. 1 v, l t i. .1 I cr-. l res rest rt nirht w. u! i 1. s.-.v a tr. 1 f t fo r.:rvcua I wcu! 5 L.ivsi t.) r,up f ni walk aro';n J cr. i i n the rmir wild L"5 all tirej cut. I rad clout VTTPtsbla Ccn-rou-J f.r.i thought I xfc-S.Z try it. My r.'rvc -f:i3 Boon 1 'ft r: j. I ft! sen well end f e 1 f.r.a in t!:a rrcrr.;- and t,bis to do my work. I gladly reconsmenj Lye! I a il Ii':kLara"a Veetabl ConitXar.'J to mtka tre&k nerret fxcr.s." Mrs. ALBERT ErjLTSn, 0:3 Olr-stes,'! St., Winona, Mi' a. How often da we hear the expression KncEfjwomea, "1 am b-3 cenrous, I caxsDot sleep," cr "it seems as though I thouki fly." Such women should profit tjr Mrs. Bu' tie's ezperiesee and gira this famous root asd herb remedj, Lydia il Pinkhssi'a Vegetal! Cornpit: nd, a triil. For forty years it has beea overcoming each eenoua conditions as displacementa, i,af5amrnstioa, ulceration. irresu!aritic3, periodic pains, backache, di ziaeia, and nervous prostration cf women, and is now considered the 6taadard remedy for such aiiraenta. 1MB ? W r- 9 " J 1 1 ili f. I ' 1 lit W Costs next to nothing, yet keepi bowels in fine order and ends ccr.st'tpatlon. The head of everj- fam!!y that values tig health PhouSd always havo In the hour. a package of Dr. Carter's K. and Ii. Tea. Tr.cn nvhc-n any member of the family r.mls Pomrth!nr for a eluffglah liver, nick lipadar h, cr to promptly regulate the howf-is, simply brew a cup and drink it Just before bedtime. It's (in oi l remedy. In Dr. Carter's K. nod I. Tea, and has been used for years by thousands of families, who ret such Kood results from Its use that they have no desire to take anything else. Give It to the children freely they like It and it will do them pood. II.TLUEi.'ZA nil 1 V'C .i Kill tha Co! ci. At ti.a Hrst $ne;,a tftko C'sf'aru cold rtrntdy for 29 yerg .-i taV.et fortri sale, -re. ne or'iates breaks vp a cold in 24 hm-ri relieves cria in 3 dsv. Money back ii it it.'.t. The cenuine bor h a Red top with Mr. HiH' picture. cc::r cutoutP , Ce FN f1'- " llllLlitWW kiUlil VU toll ' J: He ircltl V it. 4 ... FOR "11 rr ' :re t! cni an J 'rn e rto blemishes. Ttv-fj !,.irfr( prorrr t'y Does cot blister or remove the hair, and horse can be worned. 52. 50 a bottle delivered. C::kS Rfns. A B SO R PINE. JR.. for ra.nkind. tbe tBtUeric aa!ant for B-i!. tru;e. Sore. Swelhr.e. Vr:eoteVe:ak A:;jt tnJ J.iijmiiioa. Price tl.Zi a !.on!r t dregt'.r.j or (Jrlivercl. Will it;! yott Bsore ( Jrott write. iV. F.V0UJ8. P.D. F.,310l!T:jISt..SsrlBa3ai.Ktt. r ' 1 ninn !G SOP. if" A uu h I ' I i ,iL0 'd f ( 1 it my duty to write you a letter of thanks for your wonderful Peterson's Ott:tm-nt. 1 had a running sore on my lest K'K for one year. 1 began to use 1 , w--o i t t i r.t tl ree wet-KS airo ant tv.w ii is l'-:iied." A. C. GUbrath. 03 - 1 : : . Vi i 2 i"i-r iirs 1 h.ie teen selllre through ,r.i.- -.,r tt Iats t3t of F KTEBSON 'S tflN i :ii:N r for :,. tents. The healing i-.-sw.ir n ti.w r,i:.t .lent is marvelous, i" r v in f- diys. Old sores el o- i o. i it's th.u otlser reme- ,! ,'. not p"rrn to even relieve are nv 1 1 eonquere 1 Pimple. and nasty t ' -sii , t r In a weok and the -. s ( f () - 'X uoe in a few minutes. " j, itI-- t ,.'.l Veunon Ointment Co., V - -. l'i:o. N. Y. E e ry room tt an outside room, wish hot 1 i and coU water. i , 7?, Riiht Uoitl mt She Right Prk$. BATES: !.C-0 aJ $13 w.tii att 1 4 $1.50 n4 J2.C0 j vmj iiciiasoYomuj -wJX Jtlilj Otis iViFilT C tLili j ;. -f Itcliina villi C 7 QiilaiiaOIntmei 'I f ?'.: - . f V." 4 Wt i tj, f f l " 1, (, r, t i i I : I i j t ' c j .. ..r -,.. ; . S

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1 ,'! Ko Pinion I'i IrnlhisuipoiLs polict uin fr firrrmen will he permitted under j rules adopted by the board at public j mfety. The tax levy for the civil city f i Indianapolis, as finally approved by the state board of tax commissioners, will be 73 cents and Z mills on each $100 of taxables. Ib.t h lfjrs of Mrs. VA Jordon and Mrs. Ollie Vangarden of Jackson township. Shrlby countj-, her daughter, were broken in an accident when a horse they were drivirf became frightened and ran nwny. Col. W. J. Itohie. seventj--fonr. one t.f the oldest residents of Itlchmond. is dead from heart failure. Colonel Itohie was a member of many fraternr.l ornrdzntions, bein? a thirty-third depree Mason for 30 years. Maurice ('. Shelton, secretary of the state purchasing committee, has arranged for sugar distribution among the state benevolent and correctional institutions so that each of them soon will have a :'.0 or -10 days supply. Samuel Chamberlain, age nineteen: liennie Creen, age twenty-seven, ami Earl McDowell, itre seventeen, were arresteil by I.razil police and returned to the Indiana state farm, from which they had escaped. Thirteen cents a pound is the price i for beet sugar in Fort Wayne set by the food administrator. Retailors selling sugar beyond that mark will be deiarel profiteers and their names will be turned over to the department of justice for investigation. Because of a breakdown of the pow er plant at Edwardsport, which furnishes power to Petersburg, the latter piace was without electric power for 4S hours and mines and other Industries using electric power were closed clown. William L. Jordan, age thirty-eight, whose home is at Worthington. wished to Join the United States army because his two sons are in the service, lie enlisted and was sent to Jefferson barracks. St. Eouis, Mo. His sons are in the coast survey service. Paul Leonard, n teacher at the New Salem school, was found not guilty of assault and battery by a jury in the Wabash circuit court. The charge against Leonard had been brought following a whipping he had given Edith Rechtol, a pupil in the school. John Wesley Phelps, seventy-four years old. of Bates county. Missouri, went to Anderson recently for a visit with his son. John O. Phelps, whom he had never seen before. The father was separated from his tirst wife 50 years ago, and after the wife came to Indiana a son was born, the son being John O. Phelps. The father remained in Missouri. Mrs. .Tcwoph Green of Burrows has authori.ed the state conservation commission to make an examination of a number of mounds on her Carroll county farm near Burrows. The mounds are said to be five to ten feet hijzh and are believed to be the work of mound builders. The examination will be made by Richard Holman of Wabash college, one of the commissioners. A revolver or any other kind of weapon in the pocket or under the seat of an automobile is in violation of the law. according to Judge James A. Collins of the Marion county criminal court. He ruled that the owner of a machine was guilty of carrying coni coal oil weapons ii ne im u ivmo or any et nor weapon in ujs i.,.o woo-. An effort is being made in Indiaanpolis to round up all persons carrying concealed weapons. Notice has been sent out by Capt. Thomas E. Halls of the United States secret service, warning postmasters to be on the lookout for counterfeit war savings stamps. The stamps, Mr. Halls says, are of the 1019 issue and are pasted on genuine certificates. They are photographic reproductions of good blue colors, but the tine lines behind the portrait are in solid colors. The perforations of the genuine stamps are photographed in the counterfeit stamps. High water caused by recent heavy rains in various parts of Dearborn county, as in many other sections of the state, has caused much damage to farmers. The Great Miami river. Tanners. Megan. Wilson and Lnughery creeks and many smaller streams, inundated the lowlands and hundred of bushels of corn in the shock and in the field carried away by the swift current. Fences were washed away and the small streams were filled witli floating drift, corn and pumpkins. In some sections live stock was drowned. The city of Lagrange petitioned the pub'U ierviec. commission for an inof rates for Its municipal wa- .., ,..,,, -rh, cit- tvtshoc n nrimary rate 'of ?.0 cents a 1.000 gal!m, f..l,i n si to .1.,'0 nuarterlv mini - mum Mil. i tie present primary rate i is IS cents. IVlepttes to the annual patheving of the order of Pocahontas, the woraan's Rttx:iiary to the Improved Order of Red Men, closed their session at rndlar.aptdi after electing Mrs. Laura cKeivey of that n ha. and Mrs. Ci iour, creat trustee. city great Minnes:na A'bri Scy-

r.Ll-t:.- im;. I '"i:.r rs :.' t t ill if J.cM !n SouJh P.eiid Saturday. Novep.'-er Tb- -f;.ro t::x bo.:rd bus au' i'orlzed the city of Fort Wayiio , issue S175,worth of refunding bonds. Practically the entire business district of Somerset was destroyed by tire, with a loss of approximately 510,Warren S. Bibler of Wabash has accepted tise position of trustee for the Indiana Institution for the Education. of the Deaf at Indianapolis. . Au'u-t Bowser, age seventy-one, prominent inventor and manufacturer of the visible vacuum oil tank, died of :!p"IWy at the Lutheran hospital in Fort Wayne. The German-Austrian Relief society formed at Evansville recently probably will disband, owing to the fact that members of the American Legion of Honor are opposing it. A crew on a Monon north-bound freight train deserted the train at Lafayette because they had worked 1G hours and could go no farther under the operation" of the railroad 10-hour law. The state board of tax commissioners approved the petition of the Indianapolis city school board for authority to issue $,"00,000 of bonds to finance additions and improvements to manual training high school. John C. Bennett, age forty-five, a farmer, and Kenneth Bennett, age nineteen, his son, were killed when their automobile was struck by a Union Traction company interurban car one mile south of Keystone. Fire destroyed the Blacklidge block, in Creentown, wiping out the post office, the Mast-I'etro hardware store and the Osborn barber shop. The loss, which included all the contents of the buildings, is S.'JO.OOO and is said to be partly covered by insurance. Elihu Cam mack, a farmer near Noblesville, thrashed 41 bushels of seed from a ten-acre field of alsike, which be soid at $25 a bushel. He had eight tons of chaff or hay which he sold at 20 a ton. He pastured the field early in the spring and is also pasturing it now. Jay Smith, Vincennes bee raiser, who has .sent bee colonies to every state in the country and to foreign countries, Inducing Togoland, Canada and Panama zone, has received a request from China. Smith, who produces queen bees with remarkable rapidity, will fill the order by sending the bees parcel post. Soldiers on strike duty in the steel mill section of Gary aided in the rescue of a score or more women when the Union hotel there was partially destroyed by fire. Reports that the fare was of incendiary origin resulted in three investigations being ordered, one by the military authorities, one by the police and the third by the state tire marshal's office'. Robert Gibson, age forty-six, is dead at Logansport as the result of two amputations in the last few weeks. He had scratched the small toe on his left foot while at work and the injury failed to heal. Aftfr a time the toe was amputated. The wound caused by this failed to heal and it became necessary to amputate his leg just below the knee. This, too, failed to heal and caused his death. On returning from the funeral of a relative at West Lebanon Mrs. Grace Whisman and Mrs. Martha Holtz were arrested, charged with the murder of Walter J. Whitman, husband of Mrs. Whisman. The murder occurred on the morning of August 0, when Whisman was shot while in his room. Charles Holtz, the hu&band of the other wom an under arrest, also was shot and seriously wounded, but recovered. Indianapolis nurses have received word of the death in Chenlung, China, of Miss Beatrice Murdock, a former Indianapolis nurse. She was superin tendent of nurses at the Deaconess hospital in 1911 and 1012 and went to the Mission hospital in Chentung, where she was to remain seven years. She had been there three years at the time of her death, which took place September 25, following an operation. Raymond C. Whitney of Bedford, former Chicago newspaper man. has been appointed vice consul to Roumania, under Consul Edwin C. Kemp, with headquarters at Bucharest. The appointment was cabled to him from t the state department with orders to report for duty November 10. Whitney served with the French army at the outbreak of the war, and later joined the American army, when war was declared by the United States. The Louisville & Nashville railroad is accused, in a suit fded in the Posey county circuit court at Mount Vernon by Henry B. Knight, a farmer, against Walker D. Ilines, director general of the United States railroad administration, of having in its possession an "attractive nuisance." Damages in the sum of -? 10.000 are asked. Mr. Knight's son was killed when a platform need by the railroad in loading cattle from a stock pen fell on him. Kniidit asserts that the platform was fascinating to children in the neigh- , borhood who continually played on it, and that it should be classed under "attra c live nuisa n c e s .' A campaign for a public hospital in Adams county was started at a meetintc at Berne by the Adams County 5 M. ilu-a! s-uleiv. whica decided to ctrcuiate petitions among the voters of I the county. Ten yearling Angus calves raised ny the Boys and Girls' Angus Calf club of Pendleton were sold at auction for prices ranging from $155 to S-TOO at Pendleton and ten prizes were t routed among the club members. Two calves, were raised by Ivan Pnither. winner of the firs rd second l r! and titey sold for S20.1 and ?C00 r -T c tiveiy.

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1 !1L "The anxiety of some people to make new frWnds is so intense that they never have time to have old ones." HOT SOUPS FOR COOL EVENINGS. The expert soup-maker will obtain delicious flavors by using leftover meats and vegetables. After cooking the soup should be strained and thickened as usual I w5h a binding of f '-.- i I . j butter and Hour cooKeu togemer. Corn Chowder.Take about four teaspoonfuls of fat salt pork cubes and try them out ; add one sliced onion and cook five minutes, stirring often to keep the onion from burning. Parboil four cupfuls of potato slices in water to cover, drain ary:l add the potatoes to the fat and onion, with two cupfuhs of boiling water; cook until the potatoes are soft, acid a can of corn, a quart of milk, salt, pepper and buttered crackers. Serve with the buttered crackers on top. Tnis recipe will serve sis. Cream Soup. Put thin slices of bread as thin as shavings with a small amount of butter in a saucepan and brown ; pour over enough boiling water to make the soup needed, add salt to taste and let the mixture boil up; then remove the saucepan and stie in a large cupful of cream, the thicker the better. Be sure to have it well salted or the soup will taste Hat. Cream of Peanut Soup. Put a cupful of peanut butter into a quart of milk, add salt, cayenne, a tablespoonful of grated onion, a bay leaf, celery salt, and cook ten minutes in a double boiler. Moisten a tablespoonful of cornstarch with Cold milk and stir until smooth, add to the soup and cook ten minutes. Strain and serve with cubes of toasted bread. Quick Egg Soup. Stir a teaspoonful of beef extract into a quart of boiling water, add a grated onion, celery salt, salt and pepper to taste. Pour boiling hot Into a tureen with four tablespoonfuls of boiled rice and two well beaten eggs. Split Pea Soup. Tick over, wash and put to soak in plenty of cold water one cupful of split peas. In the morning cook In two quarts of water, add a two-inch cube of salt pork and one sliced onion. Cook and stir often until the peas are soft, rub through a sieve, thicken wilh two tablespoonfuls of flour and butter, add milk to thin the puree to the desired consistency. Season well and serve very hot. Ordinarily we find in people the -qualities we are mostly looking for or the qualities that our prevailing characteristics call forth. The larger the nature the less critical and cynical it is, the more it is .given to looking . for the best in others. Trine. CHEESE DISHES. Cheese naturally suggests itself as a substitute for meat, since it is rich in the same kind of nutrients which meat supplies; it is also a food which is staple and may ",-4 : t j W;?-i v..,, H Stuffed Potatoes With C h e e sc. Split hot baked potatoes lengthwise, remove contents without injuring the skin of the potato. Mash the potato, add seasoning and enough hot milk and butter to season well : beat until light, then refill the skin, piling it up lightly; do not smooth the top. Sprinkle with g ated cheese and reheat in oven until cheese is melted and a delicate brown. Rice Baked With Cheese. Cook a cupful of rice in a large amount of boiling water, at least three quarts, adding a teaspoonful of salt. When tender drain and cover the bottom of a buttered baking dish with a layer of the rice; sprinkle with grated cheese, a dasli of cayenne pepper and add milk to half fill the dish; cover "with crumbs and bake until the milk is absorbed and crumbs brown. Pittsburgh Potatoes. Cook one quart of diced potato cubes with a small minced onion until the potatoes are nearly tender; add a teaspoonful of salt and half a can of minced red peppers and cook until the potatoes are done. Drain and put into a baking dish. Make a sauce of two tablespoonfuls of butter and flour, one teaspoonful of salt and a pint of milk, then add one-half pound of grated cheese. Pour this over the potatoes and bake until a golden brown. Baked Fish with Piquant Stuffing, Bass or any firm-fleshed fish of moderate size may be used for baking. If the fish lacks fat insert strips cf pork in gashes along each side of the fish. Esked Eogs With Checso. Break four eggs into a buttered baking dish and cook in a hot oven until thev 1gin to turn wmte around the edgo. Cover the eggs with a white sauCe and over this a cupful of checsr? nnd bread crumbs well mixed. Season and brown .the crumbs in r. hot oven. Egg shell i shonld bo carefully scraped out with a t-r:v--p;n ; someone who has tried it snys that the bulk of one egg is saved in th serspsns of a dozen she'.!.-, and with ergs worth four or five cents apiece, it is worth while.

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They ra pleaaant to taka and a certain relief. They act en tha Stomaeli, Lirer and Boweia and tend to correct intestinal disorders. 10.COO testimonial! from mothers and friends cf little ones telling of relief. Ko mother should ba withoiit a box of Ilctiier Gray's Sweet Powders for use when needed. Aik At Druggists. The need of then oftea comes at mconvenieat Loci's. seif by HJothetm fat ovem tMriy fears

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Forty per cent of the heat value cf coal is in the gases generated. The ordinary warm air furnace sends most of these gases tip the flue, not only unconsumed but with resultant loss cf heat because cf lack of radiatins surface. The

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properly fired utilizes 70 per cent of the heat generated, and ?uts that heat in your rooms and not out doors through the flue. ru means economy of operation, and a comfortable home at all time. It is to your interest to kr.aw the relation of fire bowl and hearing surfaces to a satisfactory heating plant, if your dealer doesn't handle the FROl RANK, write for illustrated literature.

Haynes-Langenberg

Fill Ozst TMs Coupon atssl f.lailit Todsyf Hayne-Laagnter8 Mis. Co.. 43S2 Forast Park BlvtL. St. LeuU Plea.se eend me, at once, your latest catalogue asd literature.

Kims Street Ko... a. r. d. Ko Texas Crescent Oil Co. Joining the 'Waggoner tract, for which Mr. Wassoner refused fifty million dollars, recently, wants live salesmen In every town. Write for booklet & particulars. Texas Crescent Oil Co., 716 7th St.. Wichita Falls. Tex. "110 TRESPASSGIG" NOTICES Weatherproof oilboard signs, 8sl0 in. large, plain letters, X doz. 30c postpaid. Address O. II. Thomas, Monescen, Penna. FilYOGA HAD DONE ITS WORK Ample Proof of its Potency, Though There Was No Occasion for Many - Congratulations. A Japanese, Mr. Aisku Waseda. discusses Japanese humor in the Tourist, and offers the following selection : Said an innkeeper's wife to her husband : "The guest who came this evening carries a package that seems to contain things of great value. I wish he would leave it behind." "I have a good idea," said the husband. "I will give him a great deal of myoga." The innkeeper carried out his plan and gave myoga, a spicy vegetable supposed to produce forgetfulness, in abundance to the guest with soup and with vegetables, and soon after the guest had departed he hopefully inspected the room. There was no trace of the coveted baggage1. The landlady began to scoff at the inefficacy of myoga as an oblivion producer, but her husband admonished her not to lose faith so easily. "The myoga has had its effect," he declared. "What do you mean?-' demanded the woman. "Why, he forgot to pay his bill," replied the husband. Lots of men would be good husbands if they had better wives. fj I y f'? a2l? -fi I. ! 11 Ii f i II f i i i

If coiree does hurt ycur. nerves and q. era! health, try a change to

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- - " W sr59 -Jt U U. " -J pi 1I3TZT2 2XV 7HT rCS S1 -"saniis 'f- f P-i(l9FiS!i Mfg. Co, csTf Forett Park Blvd. Now-a-days, housekeepers who are particular, keep tha living room and kitchen t loves well polished without Lard, dirty work by usieff Pc!i:!i fleaJj Afixl Rttuij to SJm If your dealer den't sell E-2, try ethers and send his dame to Martin & Martin, Mfrs., Chicago. INVEST IN OIL -The Richest company of its age. Drilintf Just started. Nuw iO'i above par. Funiculars free. Write Central Gas and OH Co.. lloran. Texas, WEARY OF "FOOLlfiG 'ROtiriD" Common-Sense Maid Decided It Was High Time Bashful Swain "Pepped the Question." A speaker declared that the "ihl style bashful swain has ceased to exist since the war. "Proposals have no terrors for the boys now. In a young friend of mine, however, I must note an exception. "He had been going with the girl before war broke out, but even in the stress of going away had not mustered up courage enough to put the question. "When he came back he went to her, and though he had faced the terrors of the trenches and even the horrors of the Hun, yet he still hesitated. " 'Dearest,' said the girl finally, 'didn't you once say that you would do anything for me? Didn't you once ask me to put your devotion 10 the testr " 'Indeed I did.' he responded warmly; 'there is nothing in the world I would not do, no sacrifice I would not make to prove to yon how much I think of you.' "'Well, then,' said the maid, 'ask me to marry you. We've fooled round long enough.' " Tip to Inventors. An inventor has invented a noiseless gas engine. What humanity really needs, however, i.? a noiseless tomcat. Thrift Magazine. t 9 f I t Ii f cereal drink of deli t JhW . ia

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