Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 April 1886 — Page 5

DIRECTORY. ~ JUDICIAL. IMrcnit Judge, • - Peter H. Ward. Prosecutor. * - - M. H. Walker.*,. Tenns ot Court—First lion4*)' in January; Third Monday in March; First Monday in Jane; Third Monday in October *> COUNTY OFFICERS. Clerk. ... James 7. Irwin. Aor rtf, ... Samuel B. Yeoman. Auditor, - - Geo. M. Robinson. Jasag'irer, ... Wm. M- Hoover. Recorder, ... Thomas Antrim. Mirveyor. - - - James C Thrawls. Coroner, - - Philip Bine. School Superintendent - D. M. Nelson. 11st Dist. Asa C. Prevo. Commissionerst 2d Dist. S. R. Nichol^. (3d Dist. John Wavmlre. Comm’rs Court.—First Mondays in March, June, September aHd December. CORPORATION OFFICERS. Marshal, - - John Q. Alter Clerk, .... Val. Seib. Treasurer. * - - - T. J. Farden. fist Ward, - - Jnofi.Vanatta. 2d Ward, - B. F. Ferguson. Trustees, j3d Ward, - - M. D. Rhoades. | 4th Ward, - A. W. Cleveland 15th Ward. - - Jos. H. Willey. SOCIETIES. A F. and A. M. Prairie Lodge No. 1.. meets First and Third Mondays of each mouth. M. L. Spitler, Sec’y. Wm. H. Eger, W. M. O. E. S. Evening Star Chapter, meets First lud Third Wednesdays of each month. Miss May Miller, Mrs. Lyd'a A. Moss, Secretary. Wortl y M itron. I. O. O. F Iroquois Lodge, No. 143. meets every Tuesday evening. J. K. Vanatta, .• . F. Antrim. Secretary. N G. K. of P. Rensselaer Lodge, No. 82, meets every Thursday eveniug. J.' W. Roberts, K. of R. & S. C. C. A. O. U. W. Rensselaer Dodge. No. 100, meets very Monday evening. Noble j.Yobk, A. Leopold Recorder. M. W. G. A. R. Rensselaer Post, No. 84, meets e>'£*n Friday evening. C. P. Hopkins, h. E. James Adjutant. P. C. K & L. of H. Jasper Lodge, No. 85(3, meets every Saturday evening. Mrs. Carrie Clark, Jas. A. Burn r am, Secretaiv. Protestor.

yWP——I—M Ygij touiswiuE jEwjifrAiiv* Chicago Rt.((9m V » Condensed Time Table of P isseng-er Train, in effect December 27. 1885. SOUTH-BOUND. gtatlens. ; I j JHICAG j Lvj 730amj 781 pm! 5.55 am Hammond “ ■ 835 “ i 835 “ • 720 “ Shelby “ ! 1001 “i 949 “ ill 17 Rose Lawn “ iloil-p* i “ : H 50 " Fair Oaks “ 11025 “ ilO 10f“ il2sopm Surrey “ :1038f“ ; “1 ]o « Benseeiaei “ ;10 48 •* 110 85+“ : ]4O “ Pleasant Ridge “ :2057+“ i >» : 910 “ Marlboro “ i 11 03 f“ j « : 231 “ Monon “ ill 40 “ ill 15 , : 330 « Lafayette “ ; 1235 pm! 12 25am i 530 “ Greeneastle “ ; 250 “ • 220 ‘ : LOUISVILLE Ari 8 10“ I 730 j INDIANAPOLIS “ I 340 “!310 “ : CINCINNATI “ - 745 “ j 755 “ j north-bound! gtatleM. i ; gff„ CINCINNATI Lv : 7 35am- 845 pm j INDIANAPOLIS “ :12 lOpmll 15“ 1 LOUISVILLE “ ! 710 am: 740 “ • Given cast! e “ il22opmi lo2ami Lafayette “ : 245 “ ! 3 10 “ i 4 50am Monon “ : 402 “ : 410 “ I 800 “ Marlboro “ : 4 22-;-“ i i 8‘45 “ Pleasant Ridge “ i 4 2S-p“ ! “ :0 “ Eensselaer “ i 438 '• i 442 “ i'945 “ Surrey “ [ 45u+“ ! “j 10 38 “I lair Oaks “ : 505 “ i 5 05 “ -1115 “ Rose Lawn “ i 5 20 f“ : “ qiso l * Shelby *♦ j 530 - i 5 28 “ :1219pm Hammond “ i G 55 “ • (5 30 “ i 400 “ CFTTC AGO \r: son • 7 s*; “ : r, dn“ Trains marked with a + stop ouly when ilajrged. 0 Trains are run on Central (Standa- d) Time. Solid Trains, with Putiinau Sleepiag Cars on night train and Parlor Cars on day trains, are run between Chicago and Loui3ville. Through Coaches and Pullman Sleeping Cars between Chicago Indianapolis and Cincinnati. Jgar** 1 lekets sold and Baggage Checked to ail E=oin.ts, For tickets ana further information, apply to C. F. "Wren., Agent, Rensselaer. S. BALDWIN. Gen’l Passenger Agt

§jlemoc7iiiic^mtinel FRIDAY APRIL 2. 1886, BJ i—L JiJJi'J i . F. Priest, at the Chicago Gro eery, wants a chance at your Butter, Eggs, and country produce generally. Farmers, give him a call. A new son in the household of Dr. I. C. Kelley last evening. Ralph Fendigis busily engag.d in opening out and piling up new goods, jiist received, for the spring trade. Call in see them. Doc. Quivey is happy over the a ' out of a 12- round boy last Frith . ■ or extensive variety, quality of goods, and low p rices, Balph Fend » ; d fies competition. - T o,.y to Rent, at the Loan : isarauce Bureau, next door 1 Dost Office. •~>tiy the best of Fruit Trees, and in dvbig so leave your orders with “J u-b'y -b*e’k Satisfaction j?uar-aulo'-.h

“What’s the matter with Hanner?” After having for veers received from a Democratic Clerk, on the demand of partisan attorneys, nine-tenths of the legal printing connected with his office, does our neighbor find fault i itfi sheriff Yeoman for yielding to the request of interested parties who pay the fees, and once in a while advertises a sale in the Sentinel? If so, our neighbor is engaged in very small business. Our obsertion of the action of Democratic officials of other counties in this matter, leads us to a’different conclusion from that of our neighbor. We turn him over to the tender considerations of Sheriff Yeoman for the slap given him for yielding to the wishes of those who employ him. Fendig has just received a superb lot of Boots and Shoes which he offers at prices to suit the times. The Dickens! Entertainment was a grand success. Tne tota receipts were $175.31. • About $125 to be levoted to the foundation of a library for the use of t ie scho Is. A Wondenul Discovery. Consumptives and ail, who sutler I'rotn any at! ction of the Throat and Lungs, can find a certain cure in Dr. King’s New Discovery ior Consumption. Thousands of permanent cares verity die truth of t-h* ateinent. No medicine can show such a record of wonder* fu! cures. Thousands of once hopeless sufferers now gratefully proclaim they owe their, lives to this New Discovery. It will cost you nothing to give it a trial. Free Trial Bottles at F* B. Meyer’s Drug Store. Large size Si.oo Aug. 29 -a

Notice to the Public. TT6 firm of Hem ; hill & Honan has dissolved by mutual consent, Mrs. S. A. Hemphill withdrawing from the firm. The name of the firm will continue the same, Mr. James F. Hemphill becoming the senior member. We respectfully solicit your patronage in the old lines. We have added a stock of Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, &c., and will be greatly pleased to boot the people of the county in good shape. Please give us a, call, we will treat you square. Hemphill & Honan. Ed. Smith has gone into the general wood repair bnsiness. Shop at the lumber yard, near the depot. Notice of Dissolution of Partnership.—The partnership heretofore existing between the undersigned, in the banking business, expired by limitation, March 31st, 1886, Thomas Thompson retiring. The business will be continued at the old stand by A. McCoy & Co., who assume all the liabilities of the old firm. Alfred McCoy. Thomas Thompson. April 2, 1886 —3t. Squire Purcupile has moved his grocery and restaurant two doors east from his former location, into Geo. Hollingsworth’s buildin just vacated 1 y Mrs. E. W ilson’s millinery store. Ed. Parcels as established a general wood repair shop, in the old school building.

Thousands Say So. Mr. T. W. Atkins, Girard, Kansaswrites; “I never hesitate to recom** meud your Electri'* Bitters to my customers, they give entire satisfaction and are rapid setters.” Ehetric Bitten are the purest and best medieine known anp will posit'vely cure Kidney and Liver complaints. Purify the Dlood and regulate the bowels ; No family oan afford to be without them. They will save hundreds’of dollarsni doctor’s bills every your. Sddlat Pity cents a bottle by F. B Meyer, f The Chicago Grocery, R. F. Priest, proprietor, is now in full blast, in the Williams-Stockton block. Extensive stock, new, fresh v nd at prices that defy competition Everybody respectfully invited to roll and see for themselves. The store and restaurant of ’ .<■> Sparling has been moved inloyts new brick, near the dep

ADVERTISED LETTERS Letters addressed as below remain uncalled for in the Post Office at ReiissaUer, Jasper County. Indiana, ot Sb« 27tb jay of March 1886. Those not claimed within four weeks from the date below given will be sent to the Dead Letter Office. Wash* mrton. D. C James Griggs Mary Hornington, William Petit, Mamie Pillars, W. G. Porter, Mrs. Malissa Parels, M. M. Yeakle reasons caring ior any or tne letters In this list will please say they are advertised. HORACE E. JAMES, P. M. Rensselaer. Ind . April 2 1886

TIIE TOY-MAKERS. Life Among the Ingenious Artisans of the Thuringian Forest—The Way They Work and Live. A Heidelsberg correspondent of the Philadelphia Times writes: A half-day’s journey from Heidelberg brings the traveler into a region as full of quaint interest and strange sights as any in Germany, the land of toys, the Sonneberg district of the Thuringian forest. This world apart, in the universe of industry is known very well, indeed, to a •ertain class of Americans, the toy-im-porters, better than to the importers qf any other nation. The American purchasers are the only ones who come to the Thuringian forest to give orders on the spot, “compose” new dolls out of half a dozen different sorts, order tovs by the hundred gross, and vanish to return like the swallows at the end of a year. As long ago as 1876 we Americans bought in this small forest nest toys to the value of nearly half a million dollars, and in 1880 our purchases had increased to nearly a million dollars, and yet how few of us, when we buy a crying doll for a Christmas present, a wooly dog, a noddling donkey, a “farm yard,” or any of ihe thousand toys made of wood, papier macho, or wax, think of the strange, little world among the Thuringian hills whence our familiar objects come. Back at the beginning of the fourteenth century the little town of Sonneberg had won for itself municipal l-ights and sent large quantities of wooden wares to the Nurnberg jahrmarket, had a guild of its own before the close of the cehtury, and continued for more than four hundred years the gradual development of the toy-making branch which has made its productions known in all the civilized countries of the world from Russia, whither Sonneberg sends Easter emblems by the thousand gross, to California, where Sonneberg is represented upon every Christmas tree. With the opening of our own century came a new era for Sonneberg when a workingman adapted papier mache to the use of the toy trade. Until then it had been used in Paris for ornaments and in the monasteries for figures of the saints. Henceforward it was to take up its abode in the nursery and play-room. This invention revolutionized the trade of Sonneberg. Anyone could do the work required by the new material, whereas the use of the materials before employed had required skill, and, therefore an apprenticeship. By degrees the whole population, from the decrepit greatgrandfather to the tiny primary school child was pressed into the service, and to-day the only skilled workmen are those who turn or carve legs for toy animals or the heads of jump-ing-jacks, and the carpenters who build tiny wooden stables, theaters, kitchens, shops, etc., such as the children of our wealthier American families delight in. As years went by the factory system began to creep into Sonneberg as everywhere else. The first factory was met with a popular demonstration of so vigorous a character in the revolutionary year 1848 that the proprietor was obliged to abandon his enterprise, but presently the crying doll was introduced, and from that moment the battle against the factory system was lost. The crying doll became the staple production of Sonneberg, and its production employs almost as many workers as that of all other toys taken together. The toy business does not continue unbrokenly throughout the year. From the end of November to the beginning of March almost complete want of work prevails. These winter months are terrible. The poor little savings are gone soon after Christmas, and the family must starve along upon the potatoes that have been hoarded or fall into the clutches of the usurer. The first orders that have come in are from the American dealers, who send soon after Christmas, because the staple articles which they order, doll heads or little dolls and other such things, are cheapest then, and at the time of the Leipsic Easter fair the Yankee purchasers appear themselves. The season of wholesale export is from July 1 to Oct. 1,

At a paper mill in Lewiston, Me., the following letter, dated Brunswick, Nov. 11, 1866, recently was found: “Hiram, your actions at the husking bee last evening left me no longer doubtful as to what course I shall take, I thought I cared for you, but I was a fool, ana now am punished for my folly. Inclosed are the lock of hair, the picture and the ring you gave me. Perhaps the ring will iit somebody else’s finger just as well Jane.” Those who remember the manly form of E. E. Pillsbury, the handsome democratic lawyer and editor, says the Somersi ‘ (Mo.) Bepork.r, would be surprised i > see him to-day. ID’ once civet V;,nu and line carnage is now bent c.ad his iaeo is the picture of tlI-*; He is troubled with a comdiseases and his best friends t,v .. ... c. Inin to live long.

Rensselaer Marble House HENRY MACKEY. Proprietor —Dealer In. — American and Italian Marble, MONUMENTS, TABLETS. SLATE AND MARBLE MANTLES UMx M -N ■.IJV.D VASES. Front Street, Eensselaer, Indiana. J. W. DUVALL'S &ivwy & Vsed KiUn Livery Teams, with or without Drivers

Rumor hath it that Charle, son of M. L. Spitler, Esq., and Miss Belle, daughter of ex-Sheriff Powell, were married last evening. Notice to Township Trustees. Notice is hereby given to the Township Trustees of the several civil Townships of Jasper County, Indiana, that they are required to meet at the Auditor’s Office, on Friday, the 16th day of April, 1886, for the purpose of making a complete settlement with the Board of Commissioners of said county, of all the funds in their hands. . ' . Witness my hand SEAL - and seal of office this -—r— ’ Bth (lay of March, a. d., 1886. GEO. M. ROBINSON, March 12, 1886. Auditor. An Answer Wanted. Cart any ons tiring us a case of Kidney or Liver Complaint that Electric Bitters will not speedily cure? We sav they can not, as thousands of cases already permanently cured and who sre daily recommending Electric Bitters, will proye Bright’s disease, Diabetes, Weak Back, or any urinary complaint quickly cured- They purify the blood, regulate the oowels, and act directly on the diseased parts, Every bottle guaranteed For saleatcOc. a bottle by F. B. Meyer- l—3o Charles F. Shroyer, stone-mason offers his services to all needing work in his line. Workmanship guaranteed. Charges reasonable. Orders addressed to him at either Rensselaer or Blackford will receive prompt attention. A Remakable Escape. Mrs. Mary A. Daily, ofTunkhannock Pa., was afflicted for six years with As. thma and Bronchitis, during which time the best physiciahs could give no relief. Her life was despaired of, until in last October she procured a Bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery, when immediate relief was felt, and by continuing its use for a short time she was completely cured, gaining in flesh 50 lbs* in a tew months. Free Trial bottle of this certain cure ot aM Throat aDd Lung Diewe* at i : « Movers D’-ov wort

Send Money by American Express Co. Money Orders.— Receipts given Money refunded if Orders are lost.— Sold at all offloes of the Co. Paya* ble at 6,800 places, Rates: Toss*sc,: Slo-Bc.: $20.-10c.: |3O-12c.: $4(M5c.: *SO-200. An End to Bone Scraping. Edward Shepherd,of Hrrisburg,TH* says: ‘Having received sc much bene* fit from Electric Bitters, I feel it my duty to let suflering humanity know it. Have had a running sore on my leg i> r eight years; my doctors told me l w eld have to have the bone scraped or .eg amputated. I used, instead, thne bottles ot Electric Bitters and sex cl boxes Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, a; i,l my leg is now sound and well,” F/ecfic. Bitter are sold at flftv cents a bottle, and Bueklrn’s Arnica Salve at tsc. per box by t‘. !». Mcy.ra- 34»5

Goods delivered at all point* in Rensselaer, from the Chicago Grocery. l»IO]S EEB rSEAfr MARKET! j Rensselaer, - Ind., J. J. Eiglesbach, Proprietor BEEF, Pork, Vea. Mutton, Saue age, Bologna, etc., sold in quanti ties to suit purchasers at the lowest %rices. None but the best stock slaughtered. Everydody is invited to call. The Highest Pbww Paid for Goo« . -a Cattle. :kt igtt BLACKSMITH SHOP [South of McCov & Thompson's Bank , tßensselaer, Ind. &RANT, Proo’r. rpH"E proprietor having fitted ip a new shop X are now fnMv prepared to do aU kinds ei Blacksmithmg, at me loweat price, and te tb* most wortamaimka manner. Farmers, al am others needing awathpig In our line, are wm give ns a cm, wepoepoee srnUag HORSE-SHOEING A Specially! And||jlve this branch etthebuMxes partlsob All w«ertt irwrantii y TUTTS PILLS SYMPTOMS OP A TORPID LIVER, Loan of Appetite, Bowels costive, Fain 1q the Head, With a dull aenantibn in thfi baek pert, Fein under the Bhonldei blade, fullness after eating, with a dials* clination to exertion of body or mindj Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglected some duty, Weariness, Dizziness, Fluttering at the Heart, Dote before the eyes, Yellow Skin, Headache generally over the right eye, Bestlessneee, with fltftal dreams, highly ooloredUrine, and CONSTIPATION. TUTFB FILLS are especially adapted t neh eases, one dese effects such a chant of feeling as to aatenish the sufferer. They Inrrrese the Appe«cta, and cause th body to Take ra Flesh, thus the system h nourished. and by their Tonic Action on tbr Digestive Organ'*. BtcaUr Stool* are pry daced. Price 28 cents. *5 Hurray sc, W. ▼

TUTTS HAIR DYE, Quay Hair or Witiskkrb changed to « Giossy Black by a single applieatjAi of this P\j:. lUmparta a natural color, acts Instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of tL OFFICE, 85 niUKAY ST., HEW YOU. (Or. TC~r MAJirAL of YolufiU. lafomutlna u<\ •• - « t.0«4 Iw oa aa*"**"'—-* JB- FREE! Suable self-cure A. f-v.-.ii.- ■ irflrriptkin nf fOtgfJht snostnowd aoU sikcobsiul sneciaimsanas 'now retired’ to-^•••''itr-of Loot afr.-rj?>.»/)<'?. I' sn»ey.l|p upiatrtv-ujis-iYoo. ilfJtrr*** wfcSMtta