The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 19, Vernon, Jennings County, 4 December 1919 — Page 2
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"I .t ,;-'i r : J m? much r :'I"r:-7, p.-id two tioetora decided t:.r,t I .culi cave n i . , era . . 'yicotr.cr, wr.i I.. I) nh?:-'ll7 J.;,v. ill. I 4r.r.' tttj'j VcitsM1 Cr r - -. i, r. i-; -vi r:fl t - try i t L J r j s-L-mittir to an opration. Itrelieved irse from my troubles 2 work without an-? f o I rr.n do my 1. 7, It. f:y ww-:i who il t: t: civft . i . . . i -j i i:. rt Ti'tnLIe Cotrt1 a t -1 n i it v. 11 ( 1 ci rr." ch for ::. i:., ctrb-n, c.'x ' :- ' i th r pro f!:? con'i v ! ro f j I ; .t 1 fTnlii.ii the i !t rr ativo, r .t cn ti-rt oth t? hrnd '.-yw ,:.,fn ha'.il'nr;:rf 1 by this r '.f rr II trS r-.T.l Lydia E. r ,.--! t tit,'. .' rr;" -r :, after t; cr 'vf r f, - I'ir : ,1 . , 11 .. I!, an ori rauun was 'i-v eve - -.1 J -fJrj y x,f n '.n . 'wants ati'-rj f!--u!J n've it a euLniittirt tb such a t r.v f..!r t tr": If . r "".-r-rx. t, writ 3 to Ljula i .":;:;:. Co., L m, Ma?3., 1Y t r 'u'.t. i r.ar.y years i? .it voji f rvjee. J T lii stf d Mustarins -Subdues" the Inflammation and' liases thef Soreness Quicker Than Anything Elss..on Carth. VI v r"sf'i nti.l Rot ji l.ij? hfll Of rn wltK'li Im tin' (ir;j..;inal .1.1 i "-itiptitutjps are 1 i." 1 r p lit t i H tl u Im , nurc? niMf l-f.t-! .i In 'i, tiu'l I roi'O . ' ' ml i t til' St 1' til-' t I. f ( I . . , ' v4 1 1 J ( ' : 1 ; ; . 1 1 i ' ' i 1 - 1 IVI 1 , A ' 1 . -he . U I all li It' 1. M - i It M'.ll! I I 1.. C .11.1 .-v Is. 'OJN . 1 t I i III-Um urn 1 ', , Exbioiticn of Bad Taste "'i'lr in store nViVvf rater o the fash-' lonable trade." "W'Jiy vh yn - think - so V" . - -:I lieti.rf all' tin shop ladies V.ilTU-it'-ir ii'ist" i a the air."'-- ' ' "Sktlhey do, aijd yt't'br surmise "m i nrto,', but if,',-y,yj waul., to in'-bon-btcetl Just o!Ttr t s?:iy;is!i for something and obs.e-rve.tlto, supercilious MiaiUHT in ; , c i tod." wlirb you.r..r,oncy will be -r.insilnghnm Age-llerabl. GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER. Step a meitrm ' tonimite niu) tishik what it shy .that "Green's Aucust. Flower bus been a 'iiousehold remedy nil over the. civilized world for mo-re than half a century." No higher pralt'O. is possible and no better ntm ,' can ! . fiitiiui for constipation, "intestinal tr sillies, torphl liver, find the deprCssel ferllng that accompanies; stlch Vlis. orders. . i! i fbotion or Hvrr t roub.le. ;,.tiieh , valuable for in-neryt-ms dyspepsln and , couslnc: i:: of f-d, patp'tatien f S JUptoills. l""Ii-iv rr will heart, A few and many' other doses of A :..: 't relieve you.' It is a centla laviHvt ..'! i L Ask ymir " drnrfst. Sold In d -ountrles. iHv ' " Subtle Scheme; "I b.:ie often ttv;ht.. Mrs.. Welfareuoriver. tint it wouH bt an admirable hh a ., t get it oiyato'k.,i:ev.. arrest el,. and tints !'"' able,, to wrjte up wttat happens to -(he- members of the v.o; IdVtutortunateV ' "W 11 V" said the rich Indy, "C'vM jofi Mipplr tiif necessary lii,i lor?"-; -l.o!!Nvjo Courier-Journal. 5;if-lIIIFLSL;:2A KILL THE COLD AT C:-rCD VITH M 1 v ""- -is 1,4 w x s If "I ! r 4 . Ji L )t kJ 1 1 r- o . -f ( i'.I tw .ir 'f jt I! yera ' 1ift i . -; ", ure, ro f ite brra.it tn a coi.i in 24 r- t i , - n 3 ;,'rrn' bjicx 'is it fiis. 1 he f . e t" - V KWI tew vith Mr. liar. v ' Mom ; "i- ' -- , w - & . m, . v i! V 1 1 j 1 w -4-
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1 i! mm im W i 'hutii s Wt-i.i ci- Vinct-nnrs wq.s hliot j.r : 'intaiit!y k.Jlod by-John SfiST, ;ige t"" '.ty-two, ,mn lrotlw-T-Ia,-lavr. Tl.e r-m CannsVi .;,mpsny will f:inn 3,".'0 acres next year, bavin? n-f-r-nlly 'paineil o-riib'.l of several la r;:: farms. "'" An tnnne'i.4ie siirvey for tL. eon-J-tructJon of the Patnkd-Wjibash levee. nr.U's tniz, has ti orlered by tbe Gibson county cireuit. eourt. James Jones, farmer,, livins northeast of X?v Itoss,, Mootomery etjunty. bas 0 acres of epm that yieldetl K) biifhels to tin:' arte. Jones tbinks tbis Is tbe best" Q-ld in "the county. TIia corn all prnl.7f Al. E. J. Jcrnian Mtpi'dftrerKlent of the ("Jreepsbur? schools; was elected cbairtn:yi ,of the xecitive eomrnltteo of tl! Indiana . SlattO Teaehi-rs' association nt n nicetinjx of the committee at Indianapolis. - - - Laro, a smalt tovkn live jnlles cast of Waba.-li, Is ii io'l into, two hostile factions as a rcsiift of a dance fdvon there, following fnnnal Vledieation ccrcifi'Miifs nt" tbl" Simi'ilex Trailer -otnjiany plantv ' I 'iTty-eigiit head Z' li. were sold nt the Cass C'onntv .Cy-operativ? I-i-roc-Jerst, Rroe(1efsK: :i'ssociaticn at l.oKai;jVrt for $:VlS.r).: The highest .!-i,?!Tora hotr paid by J. fO. Trlnjcle of '-JridiAnpoiis. .. ntur !iuu.,!Vi .itnesvuie, owne-.i iy Ross i;rothers,..vjjs sojd at conunis-siu?n-rs sale Isbayi Hss, me of the owners, bought lliei'roierty for .$2,1C.. Tiio mill, Avlifcfi has "not been operated for serernMyeafs, will be reopened,. " - Not a death "has occurred "for more than ten yea vv in, the llftrtholoniew County Orphan "W 1 4 c.i iImmI 1 Home The last' death "'ai h t foyer. During tbS time the nur'r.er of children in t! f, .home lias a;. -1 d between -10 ;iU. .4' Sv ' E. !1 1'i.in I jvt-3!eube4t in great to toyn i'-' -il " vk"'k in llartholo T. ' ." u'W county. Many if the ears rottet ml lo.Moi will rn. !nm- . ... ... t . i , . ' ' espei l;Ui u tlie lowlands, l--rx( water for Wheo kit --'O'v'.n 1, srantit:ii.. . .' E.- liMe i.i .rvjwiit mini; the, most i i( , m : icxt3 4. iv: H-history. Jo'lti n;..,rt no s, ir en hand '-ami onfv a "few of the ret ail' grocers Tnive nV;Hiy' These who hav'e"n sup.pl y are ij-oUihg Ht at .1(5 cents a poutwl.-. HroWn sugar, as well as pranuhtb'cT, Is scarce. (bo'ge. il. .Fears, city clerk, and a emididate for nomination fogr, eonnty sh'eri.t, was arnt J in tlie Terre Hfu'iie city- court "on, a warrant sworn out by 'the truant .feicer, accusing him of, failure.:to semi bis ftften-year-old boy to si li'vol. The largest, still ever found In Lake county 'was 'taken by. Unltctl States revenue officers on the second floor of a Inane in East Chicago. Louis Paris was arrested as the owner, and Louis MLklos.jDf. Detroit. Mich., said to have 'shown rails how , to. operate the still: also was hcM. . ' Ten ' names are on the oflleial gqjd star list of Wells county" men who died while in the service during the world war, which .. lias.- betm subint tied to 'J. O. Oliver, director of the Indiana bistorical conimisslon, by Charles E. Sturils' of liluilton, chairman of. the county' war history committee. Contracts amounting to' more than jjCOO;) haVe been awarded by the Aetna Iron and Steel corporation for C.i.e ro.nstfuction of buildings, fvur'aces and other equipment, which will I be set "yp iu the cosnpoiiy.s new dant two miles east .of Broadway, tn caiy. The" eonfracts C.ifi Tor 'the erect icn of four iaiTo steel, glass ami brick buildiag,! t-'overing three and one-half acres and for four traveling cranes. Or. TUden T. Martin, veterinarianami bret-ler f liooded stock, in a. ptiWW sale of. registered Hosteln cattle and r.lg, T.-pe rolam China 'hogs at -his stock 'fartn at Aurora, sold To li-jjd - of.vouiig -eatt'fe, averaging , !?2tX) a head. Tte ,h i ,vri-el animal was a yotin;' tf v'?hich" brought 7o ; two heifers brouJuV $"! and-' -a yearling bull ,:i7r: Thirty-two bead of young hogs av raged $"0. ' A. l 3HiJv .ngsi-isaiU . superintenant at the Iiuliami reformatory at Jcffevs .nville, itt irned irobf Newcastle, baiog in custody I'aul Hitter, alias Joseph Young, . nn d -lto-scoo Monroe, eavli aged twenty-three, who escaped twice' in the last, two months. The secop.d,.tiir-r-. tliey 'Sii-aped from the custody of Captain Miles by leaping. hamictftiN-! .tvgeihen" front a moving train at Lebanon Junction, Ky., October 1 t; 'whih--being" bn i:-!u back froyi .NashviUe, Tenn.," yvher.tv the-y bad been ec.nturedk' . . The U: woman to make application i i . : :;'; M.ad!son :.;..- E'l'.-ab-th Grlrara of Si.e has i;:.i i nppiicacr th.at sh.e may becoirn? a ofe she vi-it- hir mother iinty n in th . ; ' t ! t'err.tu it t!.i in ci : I I . VT. . , 4 W , uth Ih th - '.nty Mi I at
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D.n't let tlt bad buck rrale yoj r j-c-rablo. I'. ad r.t wLit is vtt-, If yen su.Ter with a cr.-t ir.t I ackrc"., fif larr.f, weak aril all; ".aye i::t: hnvf tLzzv r.vrvcis Fr"'.!11, 3'ou
i r . iy ufli fa-7 p t yo-jr ki l:;eyz. If ki i!ney i; r ' r .'-.rrif d,trp-.? you too, you Lave additional proof. Don't wait! Use Doan's Kidney Pills, .the remedy (people everywhere are recoraraending. Aek Tour Neighbor! An Indiana Cars TC3 Jefferson St.. r'--Gary, Ind., says: "I . was in an awful con -1 dition with my kid-. neys. 3.1y kidneys were weak and irregv i ular in action. Sharo pains would shoot fi all throusrh my body Doan's Kidney Pills Ills!0;'ri my I fi ev- --,-"0 ironsrnt back my health ana cured ev ery symptom of kldr.ey complaint." Gat Dota't at Any Store, GO a Box OAK'S PILLS FOSTE&MXEURN CO BUFFALO. N.Y. only one man. tiv even a boy, with the improved Ottawa Engine Log Saw can easily cut twenty-five to forty cords a day, and at a cost of less than 2c per cord. This machine, which outdoes all others, has a heavy, cross cut saw driven by a powerful especially designed 4-cycle gasoline engine. It's a fast money-maker for those using It, and does more than ten men could do, either cutting down trees, sawing logs, or buzzing brandies while you rest. When not sawing, the engine can be used for other work requiring power. '-" Beware of loiitaticiak Thp entire machine is mottnte'd on truck wheels to make it easy to move to the trees or logs, and from cut to cut on a log without stopping the engine. For moving--on the road, the truck wheels are placed parallel with the skids and the rig hauled straight rahead. The wheels turn on a twoway spindle. You do not have to take them off, but can change direction of wheel travel by merely taking out a pin. ; The Ottawa can be" fitted for sawing down trees. It cuts level with surface of ground, thereby getting all the timber and leaving no stumps sticking up. An automatic friction clutch stops the saw in case of undue resistance. Two men can fall forty to fifty trees a day In ordinary timber. The whole outfit is compact, simple, durable against a . llfetipe of 1 .rd wear. .It. sells for a low price '-ai ... is fully guaranteed for reliable operation in the hands'of every one who has trees to cut down and logs to work up. Full information and low factory price to you. can be had simply by addressing the Ottawa Mfg. Company, 2721 Wood St., Ottawa. Kansas. ,r" n i i 1 !! f3 i L-J si ; t ? rfT kuj a sj y When constipation bothers you and you pet feverish and out of sorts remember that old reliable vegetable f Is sold In every drug store In the land. It's fine for Indigestion too and for fevers and colds. Same old remedy that thousands swear by. Not Real Fur. In the display window of an Indianapolis department store a few days ago, were two fur coats, one marked $475 and the other $39o. Two young girls passed the display, and, rjrdte naturally, cast admiring glances Bt the coats. "Three dollars and ninety-five cents for that coat." said one. "Well, it looks like a pretty good coat for that money, but you know it's not genuine fur." The girls did not go into the store to investigate. D 'A r J lONlGHI Toraorrow Alright KR. Tablets stop sick headaches, ic!lev3 I. !;us all-.tks, to;v2 and ref ulata fJie eliminaiive organs, make you feel f.r.e. "Sct: wia ri rr lut Cet I ax. otcp vcur W w 4 i i 4 i Mo rt-red to let that cocr.H pemst. Etc? tbe Ire..- ion, t.iJ rc trove t i klinx borwkh by wothwig the ir..Amcii throat w.xii
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P.rice n;M:i whatever happens to us ut.-sij& of our own train,, tlifi supreme importance of being able to control what goes on in tli&t mysterious brain is patent. Arnold Eennet. MORE GOOD THINGS. On a chilly night a dish of hot soup is one of the most appetizing of all foods with .hich to start the evening meal. If the dinner to fol lowis a substantial and filling meal the soup may be light and stimn(b... lnfinT with hilt ...v...-, ...... - little nourishment, but if the food which is provided be lisrht a -cream soup, bisque or chowder should be tbe first dish. Soup a la Clermont. Take the upper crust of a 'small French loaf, cut in small pieces, remove the crumb and put into a bowl with two cupfuls of well seasoned stock. Place in a noderate oven for half an hour. Slice four large onio(ns, fryjirown in butter," drain, and boil; for twenty minutes in beef stock to cover. Aald the onions and the bread to two quarts of hot beef stock; pour into a soup lun-en and serve with grated cheese, passed on a separate plate. Mushroom Soup. Cut into dice one and one-half cupfuls of fresh mushrooms. Stew until tender in a cupful of beef stock. To this add one quart. of stock. Thicken with a tablespoonful of flour rubbed smooth with a tablespoonful of butter. Season with salt and .pepper and minced parsley. Combination Soups. Put into a soup kettle a nambone, a beefbone arid a pod of red pepper and two cupfuls of split peas. Cover with cold water and simmer until.the peas are soft. Take out the bones and pepper, season to taste aad serve. Bean Soup. Put into a soup kettle two cupfuls of baked beans, two cup fuls of canned tomatoes, an onion fine ly chopped, - and six cupfuls of cold water. Simmer until the beans are soft, rub through a sieve, reheat, sea son and serve. ' t Turkey Soup. Cover the bones and trimmings of cold roast turkey with cold water. Add a stalk of celery, chopped fine, a pinch of powdered sweet herbs, sinfmer for several hours, .strain, season to taste and thicken with a tablespoonful each of .flour and butter blended with, a .little f the SOtip. ; - Within the somber realm- of leafless trees. - . The russet " year inhaled the dreamy air; Like some tanned reaper' in his hour of ease. When all the fields are lying brown and bare. Thos. Read. ' BREAKFAST DISHES. Of all breakfast cakes the griddle cake is the one most favored ; the edi- . ' ble varieties are easily distinguish ed from the dark, soggy, leaden varieties found in eating houses and even In pri vate kitchens. Batter for griddle cakes should be thoroughly beaten, and an egg o two will be found quite an addition to the texture of the cakes. Use a cake turner and never turn a cake but once, as a soggy cake is sure to result. A perfect pancake batter will be smooth elastic and will keep it? shape when spread on the griddle. Buckwheat Griddle Cakes. For the colder months these cakes are more common than the wheat and are used quite freely. Be sure to get a good brand of buckwheat flour. Make a batter of cold water and buckwheat Hour with a softened yeast cake, or if Iwne-made yeast ls used, a half-cupful, then set away In a warm place to rise overnight. In tbe morning, take out a cupful of the batter to use for the next day's cakes. Add water and more buckwheat flour to make a thick batter, and set away. To the batter which is? to be used for the morning's cakes add sour or sweet milk,, salt and a bit of soda ; beat and thin to a good batter, then cook as usual. A thin batter makes a more tender cake. This -original batter will be good for several weeks If the breakfast batter is never added to that to be. used the next day. Rice Pancakes. Mix two cupfuls of boiled rice with two cupfuls of milk and let stand in a cool place overnight. In the morning add three cupfuls of sifted flour, one teaspoonful of salt, one tablespoonful of melted butter and one tablespoonful of sugar. -Beat until thoroughly mixed with two cupfuls of milk, a tablespoonful of baking powder and three eggs, the stiflly-beaten whites added last. Perfection MuT.ns. Mix together three cupfuls of flour, one cupful of commeal. two tea spoonfuls of baking powder, one . tablespoonful of .sugar and one tea spoonful of salt. Work In two tablespoonfula of butter or lard; add three beaten eggs-and two ctspfuls of milk. Beat well " nral bake la buttered nmSn tins.
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Gf r-i ri 1 i l j ! . I - A" !h fit C Sr. 1 f GOLD-COIN SCALES A RELIC Missouri Man Has Device That Was in Daily Use in .That State Many Years Ago. A gold-coin scales of the type so useful to merchants in the middle of the nineteenth century is one of the relics kept by Jeff Davis of Boonvllle. Modern methods of exchange have rendered the scales useless, but it is in as good condition as it was when his grandfather used it at Cole Neck sixty years ago. At the time B. B. Brereton set no his little store at Cole Neck, just a half mile north of what is now Clif ton City, the pioneers were crossing tlie plains in search of gold. Gold 'sweating" was common. Particles of .vriu U t licit I ...iu n u liuiil lut' 0 1 11 so that its value rather than its ap pearance suffered. The merchant had to be constantly on the lookout for underweight "tfolns when dealing withsuch a class of trade. A pair of scales was bought by Mr. Brereton for this purpose. A brass weight was used in balancing the scales to get the exact weight of the coin. But the weight test was Dot the only one applied. A slot of varying size is in each receptacle on the scales. The slots were for the $1, $2.50, $.3, $5, $10 and 20 coins. Coins failing to fit exactly in their respective slots were rejected". Boonville (Mo.) Republican. Fair Warning. "What party do you belong to?" asked Judge Soggersby of the new arrival in Chiggersville. "I'm a Republican, sir," replied the stranger, "and proud of it." "Thats all right," said tlie judge. "I'm a peaceable man myself an' don't believe in meddiin' with another person's political or religious beliefs, but this is a Democratic stronghold an' there are a lot of. other people about here who ain't so easy goin' in their habits and dispositions. If you want to do any crow in' I'd advise you to get in the middle of a 40-acre field an make it a sort of soliloquy." Birmingham Ace-Herald.
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f -v "J r ) (- "- t f s' a w '-' i .lli i -70 I 17 Perfects Radio Device. According to a leading Norwegian newspaper, Engineer Hermod Peterson has patented a device for the production of electrical current, for radio telegraphy. The electricity is received by an accumulator, which releases it at certain intervals. The system is sparkless, and the sounds are clearer than in the older inventions, says the Scientific American. The clearness of sound depends upon the regularity of the current, and with this system the current is released with a mathematical exactness. The device has further advantages in that it is cheaper, simpler and more durable than those now in use. If the claims for this invention prove well founded, it is thought that It will mark a distinct step in advance of what has so far been accomplished In this line, and hence its possibilities are creating considerable interest In 'the radio world. Tea Obliging. Marie Dressier, the head of the Chorus Girls' union, said, during the chorus girls' strike In New York: "We are rtriking, too, for a clean life. Too many of the men in the theatrical profession expect the chorus girl to be er well, to e be obligieg. Like the French maid, you know. " 'That new French maid of the Smith-Petersons is an obliging creature,' said a clubman. "'Yes?' said another clubman. "Yes? How so?' '"This morning,' said the first clubman, T saw her out with Mrs. SmithPeterson's baby, this afternoon with Mrs. Smith-Peterson's dog, and this evening with Mrs. Smith-Peterson's husband." Detroit Free Press. Disproportion. "How often the innocent have to suffer with the guilty !" "But they suffer moron' their share, protested Mr. Growcher. "The boy that rlays the trombone in the next fiat makes all the innocent people In the building suffer -while he seems to (be having a perfectly corgeous time." . S. n L ' ' '' 1 i " T-y
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