Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Brazil Daily Times from Brazil, Indiana • Page 2

Location:
Brazil, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TABLE DELICACIES The BRAZIL TIMES IE TFLLS WHY Weals Women frequently suffer great pain, and misery during tha change of life. It is at this time that the beneficial effect of taking Cardui is most appreciated, those who find "that it relieves their distress. Are You Sick? Much sickness is due fa weak nervous system, tZours may be. If it is, OU cannot get well until rjou restore nerve strength uour nervous system is Dature's power house; the organs of your body get ftheir power from it. If Che power is not there, the cation of the organs is creak, and disease (sickness) follows.

Dr. Miles' tlervine cures the sick because it soothes the faitated and tired nerves cad gives the system a chance to recuperate, Erj it, and see if you da cot quickly feel its bene-Cdal effect. "1 was cItcti tip to dl by a lead fr etor. Got om of Dr. MUM i Jkm and found that Ir.

UUfs' Mer-i jm lit my case. From the very first Lam took I rot better. I am better r-Mr than bar been for years, ana sS my own work on the farm. )mr what Ir. Miles Nervine has It Will Mrs.

Lucinda C. Hill, of Freeland, "writes: "Before I began to take Cardui, I suffered so badly I was afraid to lie down at night. After I began to take it I felt better in a week. Now my pains have gone. I can sleep like a girl of 16 and the change of life has nearly left me." Try Cardui.

AT ALL DRUG STORES "Tiger Brand" of Cement- Guaranteed. REMEMBER Masttiic An Independent Newspaper HENKEL A ADAMS, Proprietors PERSONALS. Mrs. Con Biller, Mrs. Sarah Ward- law of Staunton were In the city to day.

Miss Laura Johns went to St. Louis this morning to visit her sis ter, Mrs. J. Y. Taylor.

Mrs. Charles Shaffer of Cincin nati, who has been visiting Mrs. Jno. Miller, returned home today. Misses Lana Smith, Anna Comp- ton, Louise Wilkins, Mrs.

I. S. Eas ter, accompanied by Miss Genevieve Trenary, of Salem, 111., and Miss Lenna Gordon of Terre Haute, went to Greencastle this morning to at tend a dinner given by Mrs. Theodore Farris for her son, Fred. Mrs.

B. J. Boyles and daughter, Reda, went to Terre Haute this morning. Miss Ethel Brand left this morn- inf for a visit in Seelyville and Terre Haute. Spearmint tooth powder (Nyles) so much nicer than others, and a change.

Mendenhall's, 25c. tf Robert Trenary of Salem, 111., is visiting James Adams. Trade at Todd's; he gives S. H. Trading stamps.

tf Weak people, especially convales cents, benefited by Beef, Wine and Iron. Mendenhall's Pharmacy. tf A thoroughbred Jersey bull is standing this season at McGregor's farm, south of the city. 6 tf HANDSOME BOAT. F.

M. Murphey and wife went to Terre Haute this morning to be present at the launching of the magnificent new motor boat recently built for Dr. Stunkard of Terre Haute. The boat is the largest and handsomest in the Prairie City and is al most as complete as a residence. In fact, it cost more than the average modern home.

The doctor and a party of friends expect to leave soon for a long water trip, making the famous Green river trip in Ken tucky. 1 HOW'S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY Toledo, Ohio.

We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tions made by him firm. WALDING, KANNAN MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system Testimonials sent free.

Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. MARRIED. Harvey Mullens, a Vandalia rail road employe, and Miss Elizabeth White, were married at 4 o'clock last evening at Esquire Law's parlors, Justice Mershon performing the ceremony. The bride and groom went to housekeeping on West Shat tuck street.

SEE NIP At the Brunswick for a good smoke Danbys, San Felice, Corona, Trojan, K. Owl, Henry George, Stan ton, Pathfinder; Smoking and chew ing Tobacco, Pipes and Candy, also Billiards and pool. C. L. GALLOWAY, 9 6d Proprietor.

NOTICE STOCKHOLDERS. Notice is hereby given to the stock holders of the Citizens Building Loan Association, that the annual meeting will be held at the office of the secretary, I. Jarboe, at 7:30 p. m. on Monday, July 20, for the purpose of electing directors for the ensuing year.

till 20 th GOOD THINGS TO 8ET BEFORE THE FAMILY. Present Fancy Is for Jellies Some of the Best Filling for Pies Prune Pudding an Appetizing Dessert. Everything seems to be Jellied of late that was never so used before, such as cucumbers, mint, etc. Now it is sweet pickle. This is to be served with roast meats.

Take good, sweet-pickled peaches, pears, mangoes or melons. Gelatine is dissolved and hot pickle sirup added. When cooled the cut-up pickle is put in, with some cut-up fresh orange and a few tea-spoonfuls of maraschino cherries, both fruit and sirup. Cool like any gelatine and serve with lamb or beef or poultry. Filling for Pies.

Canned blueberries, flavored with wine, may now be used for pies or tartlets. Pineapple makes nice filling, also, and a chocolate cream filling with meringue In flaky pastry is another change. Peaches and pears canned, but not sweetened, make excellent salad with lettuce. Serve mayonnaise whitened with considerable whipped cream. A little orange and apricot may be used with the other two fruits, or a very firm not over-ripe banana.

This is suitable for a last course at luncheon Instead of the customary dessert of pastry or sweets. Prune Pudding. A prune pudding, which is a favorite when once known, may be made from a cupful of prunes fctewed soft, the beaten whites of six eggs, a half cupful of sugar and some vanilla. Stone and mash the cooked prunes and stir them into the white of egg. Sift a half teaspoonful of cream of tartar into the half cupful of sugar; add one teaspoonful of vanilla.

Bake In a round earthen dish until firm. Serve at once with whipped cream. Do not jar this souffle while baking, as it Is likely to fall. It should be of a pale brown color. Oried Peaches.

Dried peaches may be in a sirup of sugar and water, and wine or brandy added, for a compote without cooking. That Is one expedient of light housekeeping. Of course, they must be devoid ol skins. Dried peach pie should be made with care, else It is tough and bitter. Soak the peaches and stew gently.

Throw away the water first used if it seem? bitter, for both peaches and apricots are improved and made more delicate by this seeming waste. Add the liquid to the vinegar keg, if you have one. After the peaches are boiled and sifted add sugar and either a little fresh butter or some cream, about a half cupful for two medium-sized pies. A little lemon rind or sherry are not amiss In dried peach pie. Canned apricots and peaches combined make sice pies, and plain canned apricots make a delicious dessert.

They may be used also for tartlets or for shortcake In winter. On these use whipped cream and garnish with crystallized cherries if desired more fanciful. If at all unripe stew the apricots as If they were fresh fruit. Serve with fancy crackers or cake. Springerle.

One pound of flour, one pound sugar, four eggs, a lump of butter the size of a walnut, one level teaspoonful of baking potash dissolved in a tablespoonful of milk. Mix sugar and butter, then add the eggs and beat for 15 minutes, stir in the flour, the potash and the milk and knead well. Reserve one-half cup of the flour for use on the pastry board and mold. Roll out a quarter of an inch thick, press well Into the figures of a springerle mold (be sure the mold is well floured, but do not have the crevices filled), cut apart and place on a table, upon which is a light sprinkling of anise seed; leave there over night and in the morning bake in a moderate oven on waxed or oiled tins. A Novel Ham Dish.

Thicken a quart of rich milk by letting it stand in a warm, but not hot, place over night. Then put Into a cheese-cloth bag and let it drain thoroughly. When it will drip no longer beat the drained milk for a few minutes or until it is smooth and creamy; add half a teacupful of sweet cream, with pepper and salt to taste, and, at the last moment, cold boiled ham from which all the fat has been removed. Stir together thbroughly, and serve on crisp lettuce leaves garnished with sliced olives. Delineator.

Bird's Nest Pudding. Pare six apples and take out the cores without breaking them. Put the apples In an earthen dish, fill the holes with sugar. Make a batter of one pint of milk, two teaspoonfuls of flour and three eggs. Pour this over the apples and bake till fruit is soft.

8erve with sauce. Cream Sauce One-half cup butter beaten till real light, one cup sugar, one-half cup milk, two teaspoons flour. Set dish in cup of hot water and stir till creamy. To Product Glott on Linen. To give a gloss to linen, pour one pint of boiling water on two ounces of gum arable.

Cover until next day, then strain carefully and put into a clean bottle. A tablespoonful of this liquid stirred into a pint of ordinary starch will give collars and cuffs an appearance of newness. Rotxttss. n.c- tre ta til torcbs '7 liii-r 2 MAJOR W. R.

DUNN GIVES LEC TURE ON HANDLING EXPLOSIVES AT TERRE HAUTE. STRICTER REGULATIONS Army Officer Addresses 1 tail road Men, and Recalls Some of the Explosions of This Section. Terre Haute, July 14. Ma jor B. W.

Dunn of the regular army and the war department's bureau of explosives, lectured before several hundred railroad men of the operat ing departments of several railroads of Terre Haute, last night to make them familiar with the regulations of the American Railway association in regard to handling explosive freight. The lecture was illustrated with stereopticon views. The American Railway association has had what might have been considered very comprehensive and strict regulations, but under the advice of the bureau represented by Major Dunn new and more detailed requirements are being put into effect. At the time the Indiana rail way commission investigated the powder car explosion on the Big Four at Sandford a copy of tlie American Railway association rules was produced. They would make two columns in a newspaper.

Inquiry at the time among railway men disclosed the fact that few if any of them had ever heard of the pamphlet. Major Dunn showed pictures of kegs loaded in a car as if they con tained powder, at the DuPont factory at Wilmington, Del. The cars had been switched and bumped about as much as a car would be in making up a freight train. The keg3 were not filled with explosives, but with something of like weight, and the picture showed how the kegs were bettered and rendered leaky enough to have covered the car floor with powder, ready for the spark from the engine's firebox or from a brake shoe pressed on a car wheel, to -explode the conterfts of the car. Major Dunn said that, despite patents and improvements, the tin receptacle called a keg, was not vs safe in the respect of keeping inclosed the explosives as the old wooden keg with wooden hoops.

Another car, loaded with boxes, as if packed with dynamite, was switched back and forth and the boxes were broken. The speaker said that while the factories were taking more pains than ever before in shipping explosives there was still ground for complaint. In Europe, for instance, factories were required to inclose powder in a sack and put the filled sack in the keg, which was a double precaution against leakage, but the American manufacturers, up to this time, had been able to prevent this requirement, because it would add to the expense cost of the product. ECZEMA IS NOW CURABLE. A St.

Louis chemist, after many years of careful experimenting and Investigation, has discovered a simple reniedy that has cured hundreds of cases of eczema that had been pronounced incurable. This chemist believed that eczema and all itching skin diseases were of local origin and were caused by germs which attacked and fed on the skin. He began to search for a remedy that would destroy these germs, and found that by combining the active principles of certain well known vegetable drugs, and applying, them locally, the first application stopped the itching and burning, and if used persistently would drive all germs and their poisons to the surface of the skin and destroy them, leaving a nice, clear, healthy skin. He gave this remarkable remedy the suggestive name of Zemo, and since its Introduction to the public Zemo has proved a very popular remedy and is today recognized the most successful and meritorious remedy ever produced for the relief and cure of eczema and all diseases of the skin and Bcalp. Mr.

Roach, the druggist, endorse and recommends Zemo and says that he believes Zemo to be an honest medicine and will do all that is claimed for it. For sale at Roach's Pharmacy, lm CARD OF THANKS. The family and other relatives of Milo C. Phillips, late of Perry township, desire to extend to the neighbors, friends and the lod9 of Red rica fct Ccry, their heartfelt ttxnkJ c.J f-r ttir klzl 3 dur is and old and tried product, it is no experiment. REMEMBER you save is cost of labor in putting it on over cost of putting on shingles two-thirds.

REMEMBER you can lay it on top of old shingles. REMEMBER we buy it in car lots and give you the benefit: LEWIS McNUTT, BRAZIL. IND. Wholesale. Cement.

Roofing. Elc. Ju Help You 99 New Phone 931, Old Phone 190-K Look. a4 IMsX Sity acres Hear lIooKlerville, fair Improvement, Ave-room house, barn, etc. Price Will take chap residence In exchange on thia and can give good terms on balance.

Two lots, good 4 -room house and summer kitchen, all in good repair, located in Harmony, near car line; a neat and up-to-date home. Price 1 ,200. ood 4-room cottage located on Oak street; priced to sell, or will trade for a good farm and pay difference. A fjne home, one mile went of clly, on street car line, with one acre of ground; will sell at a bargain, or trade for city property. This will bear Investigating If you are Intcrij ested.

120 acres near Harmony, 70 acres raltivatable, balance pasture laud; Cod 5-room house, bam, etc. Price per acre. Give us your Abstract and Notary work. We can please you. L-j i 4 jmm tor me, and I am cud to reoom- it to AMISS.

BJverton, Nebr. wr druggist ells Dr. Miles' errand we authorize him to return emca of first bonis (only) If It fails benefit you. Lhss Medical Co Elkhart. Ind TRADE with CASH Why Trade on Credit When You Can Buy Cheaper for Cash We will sell for the following week.

Magic flour 50c Hall's best patent flour per sack 60c O. K. and Wizard flours Two packages seeded raisins 15c Two lbs. large loose raisins. 15c Two lbs Lima beans 15c Red kidney beans, lb.

5c White kidney beans lb 5c U. S. Mail soap, 5 bars 10c Kingam's smoked bacon, lb Sugar cured bacon, lb 15c Two lbs best rice 15c Our 15c coffee for 11c Helping Hand Smoking tobacco, package 5c C. Bolinger Son Cor. Nat.

Ave. and Depot St. Stained Dresses 5 bfj cleaning are horrid tilings to wear; in fact. many ladies won't wear them, but there is no necessity to cast them aside because they have been dirtied by contact with paint, grease, oil, or ther things. We will take that garment no matter how fine the fabric or delicate the make, and dye it any desired shade, making it look jnst as good as new, or better; and we guarantee perfect work in a short time for very moderate charges.

Johnson's Cleaning-Dye House Citizens phone 835. Opposite Davia Hotel. WHAT SHALL. WE HAVE FOR. DESSERT? Try JELL.O, the dainty, appetizing, economical dessert.

Can be prepared Instantly simply add boiling Jnst right; sweetened Jnst right; perfect in every way. A 10c pack makes enough dessert for a large family. All grocers sell it. Dont tccept substitutes. JELIX) complies water and serre when cool.

Flavor Lemon, Orange, Raspberry, Ctraw-terry. Chocolate. Cherry, Peach. srltSi all Pure Food Itws. Eavora: 1 IS 3 fe Order Your Ice From Us! CONSUMERS ICE Let us furnish you with Pure Artlflcal Ice this summer-- Prompt delivery and you'll find the prices right.

Cor. Sherman and Knight St. $400 in 10 Days If yon bay a new 5-room house, pantry, two porches, corner lot and pavement paid at 001 North Forest avenue. Owner leaving city and wiU sacrifice iOO on the price. Fine home, rooms, cellar, two porches, corner Washington and Hendrix streets.

A bargain. Three goods houses, well located, renting for $15. The price now Is $1,100 for all. New 4-room house in northwest part of the city, only 9723. Two 4-room houses In good repair.

near Main street, for (300 each, i Thirty acres of good land, well improved, near car line, to trade for city property. Ten acre 3 miles west of city. good house, barn and orchard, cheap. Eighty-five acres most all tillable land, miles east of city, nVar the car line; only $1,700. Will trade for city property.

Good milch cow at a baria. Vie can sell or trade your property. Give cs a chaace. PIneules for the Kidneys, 30 days trial $1.00, Guaranteed. Plneulta act directly on the Kidneys and trizs relief in the first dese to tzzZ'J weak tack, lane trcX rLt- 2 riles, kidney tlilrr Vtcy purify tta 1 r- 1 err--'- Folyi Oriao LaV live, the new I retire, does tsot Ir-xl-t3.

It 13 tls fe tlTe. cr yocr t-c-. I..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Brazil Daily Times Archive

Pages Available:
83,123
Years Available:
1907-1964