Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 December 1891 — Page 1
VOLUME XV
demccratic nkwspapkk. PUBLISHED EVERY FiJDaY, BY Jas. W. McEwen, hatesof SUBSCRIPTION. o One Year v Six Months Three months Laws of Newspapers. person who te haB S ordered P it P oir frem a P o * l ;®®®.®’.?ft name or another s, i e inFawWasubscriber andU re.pon.iblc move sen ar. held respond W SStU payment is made in luD- ——R
THE NEW 1,1 HENSSELAER. IND. OS. DALE. Propriety SnrcAJ r. lisbiana wisjW® 6 Stteet. opposite Court House navtD J. THOMPSON SIMON P. TH o ***ON. HotftJ , y p u blie. BROTHER, THOMPSON ® B Indiana uuon i~ sktlw. .V , H. H. GRAHAM, ’’ * ATTOkNEY-AT-L/W, REESDKLA™, INDIAN AMoney to loan on long q.’M,” J T. AW 2S»«’ 4M r ' ,BUC ’ RENSBELAEB - - - IK A w. YEOMAN?” Attorney at Lav NOTARY fur vic tol Estate aiiCffleW U®' bbminotou, inu'A’AWill practice in all the Courts of New Jaeper counties. VICTOR B. LOVOHBIDGB ' j“ H’loiraKMDOT * «>«• Plivnicia® 8 an< * seco- d floor *® Ce second Hght-hand aide of hall: * ♦ wriii bfi added to ftll J e C runnlng er uusettled lonian (Jree months. _ —. ——
nR I. B. WASHBURN Phy.ici a u& Surgeon Renuelaer, Ind. wThartselu. m d Spathic physwun & sukgeos Diseases a Specialty..® July H. 188« ■ ““ WS’t. F vfeX”ient VAU JITIZENS’STATEBANK RENSSELAER £Jan. 8.88. John Makeeveb Jay Williams, President. v " FARMERS’ bank, B.P..UJ ®? M J ing Business. Zngust 7, 1883. 1 . J. W- bobtot. dkntist . All diseases of teeth and gums carefully treated. * . ~ Filling and Crowns a specialty. Over Ellis & Muraay s Rensselaer, Ind. DR. J. G, HOG • N, DENTIST. RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA Office in Leopold’s Corner Block. PHOTOGRAPHS. Having purchased the Gallery formerly Owned by J. A. Sharp. I am prepared to do first class work in every particular.— All work that leaves mv rooms will carry with it a guarantee. I solicit a share of
THE DEMOCRATIC SENTINEL
IN A DUTCH TAVERN.
The Fare Laid Before a Stranger In That Land of Good Appetites. A stranger dining for the first time in a Dutch tavern sees a few novelties. First of all he is struck by the great size and thickness of the plates, proportionate to the national appetite; and in many places he will find a napkin of fine white paper, folded in a three-cornered shape and stamped with border flowers, a little landscape in the corner, and the name of the hotel or case. The stranger to be sure of his facts, will order roast beef, and they will bring him half a dozen slices as large as cabbage leaves; or beefsteak, and he is presented with a sort of cushion of raw meat, enough to satisfy a family; or a fish, and there appears a marine animal nearly as long as the table; and with each of these come a mountain of boiled potatoes and a pot of vigorous mustard. Of bread, a little thin slice about as big as a dollar, most displeasing to us Latins, whose habit it is to devour bread in quantities, so that in a Dutch tavern one must be constantly asking for more, to the great amusement of the waiters. A ith any one of these three dishes, and a glass of Bavarian or Amsterdam beer, an honest man may be said to have dined. As for wine, whoever has the cramp in his purse will not talk of wine in Holland, since it is extremely dear; but, as purses are pretty generally robust, almost all middle-class Dutchmen and their betters drink it; and there are certainly few countries where so great a variety and abundance of foreign wines are found as in Holland, French and Rhine wines especially.
Weather Forecasts.
It is only of recent date that the condition, past, present and future, of the weather has become an important factor of news, and the custom Is purely American. Up to twenty years ago the newspapers never paid any attention to weather predictions or atmospherical conditions, except when a big storm occurr d or when there was some remarkable event on hand. The average citizen was in as much ignorance of the range of the thermometer, barometer and possible changes as hr- was about the finer technicalities of astronomy. Only sea-faring men could have told you anything further than was possible to find in the old-style almanac, which was a guide to the weather as much as a book of recipes. The condition of the weather was not considered important until an American newspaper tried it Th benefits of these advices were apparent at once, and soon other newspapers took it up, and finally the Government inaugurated the system in vogue to-day. Now the weather is considered as important a news feature as any that goes into a paper, bo thorough has been the development of it that a newspaper would not be complete without it Every daily paper in the United states has a weather department, and it is usually the first feature the average citizen looks for when he picks up his morning journal. The editor of the Scientific American sugge -ts the following remedy for diphtheria, and expresses the wish that it might have a sufficient trial to prove its usefulness. It is simply that raw onions be placed in a bandage and beaten into a pulp; tue cloths containing onions, juice and all should then be bound about the throat and well up over the ears. Renewals maybe made as often as the mass becomes dry. In most cases noticed the result was almost magical, deadly pain yielding jin a short time to sleepy comfort.
JUST OUT.
A New and Handsome “Popular History of Indiana.” A very attractive, handsome, well written und thoroughly interesting and instructive work is “The Popular History of Indiana,” just given to t e public by Mrs. Thomas A..Henaricks. The book contains nearly three hundred pages, is well bound, and is embellished by over one hundred and ten illustrations. These illustrations include excellent portraits of all tne persons who have figured prominently n 'he history of the state from its firs settlement to the present moment; iso views of historical spots, public buildings, scenery, land matks, etc. “The Popular History es Indiana” retails for $2. The publishers of The Indiana State Sentinel, having secured the entire sale of the book, have concluded to offer the history with a year’s subscription to The Indiana State Sentinel; for three mom hs’ subscription to The Daily and Sunday Sentinel, or four months’ subscription to The Daily Sentinel for $3. At this rate tne history costs the purchaser only sl, and it should find its way into every household in the state.— The book is especially adapted to young people. The Sentinel is offering thirty special prizes, aggregating in value several thousand dollars, for the thirty largest clubs sent in between now and May 1, 1892. Write to The Indianapolis Sentinel company for circular containing full particulars. “The Popular History of Indiana" can be ordered through any agent of The Sentinel at the above prices. The best and surest dye to coloi the beard brown or black, as may be desired, is Buckingham’s Dye for the Whisgers. It never fails.
jJEWHOMEry •*’3**. kwtf** rnBLSAij gr •**»*«*• J. W. WILLIAMS, Ag’t Rensselaer, Ind.
RENSSELAER JASPER COUNTY. INDIANA FRIDAY . ECEmBER 41.891
Our neighbor continues to give his readers each week the explanation of some intere.-ted party “Why I. am a Protectionist.” In every instance it turns out that the “Protectionist" is connected with the monopolistic rings th’ot are benefited by taxing the many to increase the wealth of the few. In a recent issue of the Republican we fit d copied the following: THE GOOD OLD TIMES. American Farther. The Hon. J. R. Dodge, statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture. while spending his vacation in his native state of New H mpshire, came across an old day book at Boscaweu, dated 1817, the year after the enactment of the low tariff bill, of 1816, from which he extracts the f ollowing charges to custmers as given in the September statistical bulletin: One-half bushel herds-grass, 63 cts.; one pound coffee, 25 cents; | pound loaf s gar. 27 cents; | pound tea, 25 cents; J found powder, 17 cents; 15 eggs, 15 cents; dozen plates, 29 cents; 3 pounds cotton yarn. No. 9, $2 25; one nutmeg, 13 cents; three hoes, $2; 28 pounds fish. $1 25; } yard cotton lining, 8 cents; one yard flannel, ;62 cents; twelve pearl buttons, 17 cts.; J yard cambric, 34 cents; one skein silk, 8 < ents; 1J yards, calico, 75 cents; i yard muslin, 42 cents; 4| yards fulled cloth, $7 92; one gill New England rum, 10 cts.; eight yards black silk, S 8; four yards calico, $1; five yards cambric, $3 05; A yard shirting, 34 cents; one gallon West India rum, $1 40; one pound sugar, 20 cents; one felt hat, $1 50; two spelling books, 50 cts.; two pounds veal, 6 cents; o ieounce indigo, 23 cents; A pound Hyson tea, 42 cents; five yards calico, $2 50. It will seem that everything the farmer had to buy, excepting New England or West India rum, was much higher than now, while eggs were 12 cents a dozen, and veal three cents a pound. There was also credit for “one half day’s work. 50 cents.” He had to work a day for two yards of calico, a day for a yard and a half of shirting, or five pounds of sugar, or one pound of ten. And a day’s work then was from “sun to sun." If “Hon. J. R. Dodge, statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture,* seeks to make the point that to a low tariff is to be attributed the high prices he cites, he is not inharmonv with his “protection” friends who claim that protective duties have been established with a view to i-crease prices, thereby build up and foster industries, increase demand for labor and the wages for wageworkers. "According to the protective theory- it was well for the people of those days that they lived under decreased tariff tax. The country in 1817 did not have the improved machinery for manufactniing purposes nor the facilities for transportation which exist to-day, that go far to lessen the cost of the necessaries of life. Then, too, the recent close of the war with Great Britiain, the disbandment of the army over-supplied for the time being the market for labor and reduced wages. Had “Hon J. R. Dodge, statistician of the Department of Agriculture,” been honest and fair in his researches he would have discovered the condition described;below|operating to increase prices:
THEN AND NOW.
A magazine published in Philad Iphia in 1818 gave the following as an item of news: “In the course of’ the twelve months of 1817, 12,000 wagons passed the Allegheny Mountains from Philadelphia and Baltimore, each with from f«ur to six herses, carrying from thirty-five to forty hundred weight. The cost of carriage was about $7 per hundred-weight, in some cases as high as $lO to Philadelphia. The aggr gate sum paid for the conveyance of goo s exceeded $1,500,000.“ To move a ton of reight between Pittsburg and Philadelphia, therefore, cost not less than $l4O, and took probably two weeks’ time. In 1886, the average nm’t received by the Pennsylvania road for the carriage of freight was three-quar ers of one cent per ton par mile. The distance from Philadelphia to Pittsburg is 385 miles, so that the ton which cost $l4O in 1817 was carried in 1886 for $2 87. At the former the workingman in Philadelphia had to p>y sl4 for moving a bar el of flour from Pittsbvrgh, agaiest twentyeight cents now. The Pittsburgh consumer paid $7 freight upon every 100 pounds of drv goods bro ght from Philadelphia, while 100 pounds is now hauled in two days at a cost of fourteen cents.— Scientific American. The facilities and cheapness of transportation at this time, compared with those of the early days might alone tend to explain the great difference in the cost of goods, but wlrn wt add to this the increasd production, at far less cost, bro’t about by the employment of labor saving machinerv the whole matter is clear. It is within the recollection of most of our citizens w en they had to pay from $3 to $4 more per ton for th« single item of coal than was paid by the peopk of Remington—the extra cost of wagon transportation from that point to this. If ‘Hon J. R. Dodge, statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture,” is v<.ry desirous of truthfully presenting the operations of the tariff to the people, let him take the period of the operations of the tariff of ’46, and include localities where means of transportation were equal to those of to-day and compare notes. We suppose, however, that Mr. Dodge prefers, at the publicexpense, to mislead the people.
“I use Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral freely in my practice, and recommend it in cases of Whooping Cough among childien, having found it more certain to cure tliat troublesome dise se than any oth er medicine 1 know of.” —So says Dr. Bartlett, of Concord, Mass. The only house that buys rubber boots and shoes in 50 case lots, d.rect from factory, and will save yen 10 to 20 per cent. Chicago Bargain Store. Ex senator Edmunds Is a “damphooL"
•‘A FIRM ADHERENCE TO CORRECT PRINCIPLES.”
EVERYDAY INFORMATION.
Use sulphur for mildew on roses. Sow primrose seed for winter flowering. Seeds of perennials should be sown as soon as ripe. Water plants at sundown during- the summer season. Oleander cuttings will strike root if put in a bottle filled with water. Select some shad corner for ferns and give them leaf mold to grow In. A Swedish cure for insomnia is a napkin wet in ice water and slightly wrung, laid over the eyes If troubled with headache try the simultaneous application of hot water to the feet and back of the neck. When the hands are stained use salt and lemon juice: this will remove stains and render the hands soft and white If a constant supply of bloom is desired, the flower buds must bo cut off as soon as faded: never permit them to go to seed. . Sufferers from neuralgia are warned by a medical writer not to drink tea. but to drink freely of coffee into which the juice of a lemon has boon squeezed. Asthma may bo greatly relieved by soaking blotting or tissue paper in strong saltpeter water, drying It, and then burning it at night In the sleeping room. Hanging baskets and vases in exposed places should bo kept moist and not allowed to dry out, A thorough soaking occasionally is better than frequent sprinkling. It is not too early to prepare soil for potting, which will bo needed in the fall Cut a few sods from some old pasture and let them bo rotting during summer l.i a compost heap, with fresh stable manure. Thoroughly dry salt intended for table use, and mix it with a small proportion of corn starch, if you would overcome the tendency it has. in damp weather, to pack solidly in the salt-cel-lars or shakers. For severe hemorrhage from the nose try holding the arms of the patient up over the head for five minutes at a time. A small piece of Ice wrapped in muslin and laid directly over the top of the nose will usually give relief. A simple remedy for neuralgia is to apply grated horse-radish to the temple, when the face or head is affected, or to the wrist when the pain Is in the arm or shoulder. Prepare the horse-radish in the same manner as for table use. Rex-begonias will root rapidly during the warm weather. Set the leaves edgewise in sand, or lay them flat on the sand, staked down with bent toothpicks, being careful to keep the soil moist and partly shaded, and they will soon show life. The most simple way to clean the inside of" wash-bowls, baths, and the stationary marble basins, on which a sort of scum or deposit forms, if not very carefully cared - or. is to rub them with dry salt, it takes off all the dirt and loaves them bright and shining. If a child chokes In trying to swallow a button, penny, or any article o the kind, tuin him head downward, holding him by the neck and heels. If the offending article does not roll out of hit mouth, administer a dose of castor oil to aid the passage through the stomach and intestines A simple remedy for round shoulders is to stand facing a corner of the room, and with hands extended on the wall In either direction, and the feet firmly placed, to move the body slowly toward the corner. This exercise faithfully repeated every morning will make the lorm beautifully erect
PEOPLE AND EVENTS.
The poet Whittier has three pet dogs. A Philadelphia Chinaman has thirty gods. William O’Brien, M. P., is writing & novel. Pbince . Bismarck now weighs 210 pounds. Patti was born Feb. 18, 1847, says her family Bible. The copulation of the earth has doubled itself in 260 years. Senator Voorhees attributes his illhealth to the night sessions of the Senate last winter. The Duke of Cambridge, Commander, in-chief of her majesty’s army, is known as “Umbrella George.” There is only one real failure in life possible; and that is, not to be true to the best one knows. —Canon Farrar. As. an evidence of the Independence of American girls it is reported that within the last six months 150 young women have taken up timber claims in the State of Washington. The corner-stone of the New York Mail and Express Building was laid recently. The new home of the paper is to be a handsome ten-story building at the corner of Broadway and Fulton street. Secretary Bayard’s daughter, the Countess Lewenhaupt, Intends to pass the fall and possibly the winter in Sweden. It is not improbable that she will make her permanent home in King Os car’s kingdom. Miss Rachel Gurney, the protegee of the Duchess of Bedford, who is to marry the young Earl of Dudley, is, besides being very handsome, extremely accomplished, and one of the best amateur singers in England. A Brahmin bull has been presented to the Washington Zoological Gardens by the Hon. John IL Starin, of New York City. Mr. Starin was much interested, while in Congress, in promoting the “Zoo” and other local improvements.
FOLLY AS IT FLIES.
The brightest girl tries to make light of everything—Dallas News. W’ages always appeal to man’s hire nature. —Pittsburg Dispatch. Unlike most vegetables the tin-plate plant will leave in November. —Chicago 'limes. The despised cigarette is not unlike some of our public men. They get many a puff and end in smoke.—Washington Star. Munkaczy is to get 220,000 gulden for the colossal picture he is to paint for the Hungarian Parliament assembly room This is gulden fine gold.—Philadelphia Ledger. The Arkansas rejected lover who is suspected of having burned a bride’s trousseau may have wished to be regarded as her old flame.—Louisville Courier- Journal. The new Dunlap shape in stiff hats, al Ellis <t Murray’s.',
/loalDßaking Used in Millions of Homes— 40 Years the Standard.
English Spavin Liniment removes al 1 Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Blem ishes from horses. Blood Spavin Curbs Splints, Sweeney, Ring-Bone, Stifles Sprains, all Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc Save SSO t>y use of one botile. Warranted the most complete Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by Long A Eger, Druggists, ~ Rensselues, Ind. Itch on human and horses and oil animals cured in 30 minutes by Woolford e Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Sold by Long & Eger, Druggists, Rensselaer, Ind.
THE NEW PARTY AND ITS TENETS. [lndianapolis Sentinel.} The virtual determination of the agricultural politicians on a fusion of soci. eties and independent action in polities is one that will be a source of relief to politicians generally, not so much from any effect that it will be expected to have in the next election as from a desire to know what the managers of the party intended to do. This information is of considerable importance in drawing the lines of battle and in anticipating who and what you have to meet, ft is something like the man who lost a cent, and after spending several hours in search for it, was remonstrated with by a friend for wasting so much time on a thing of so little value. With offended dignity he replied: 71 don’t care anything for the cent; I just want to know where the d- d thing is.g It is difficult to imagine how the third party element of these organizations can be much wore formidable when acting as a third party than they are when controlling confessedly non-parti-san societies. Whether they are or not it certainly is much more satisfactory to have them out in the open, where other parties can combat them without the apprehension that every shot is as liable to kill n friend as a foe. The action will also, we imagine, have the effect of opening the eyes of many members of the organizations to fbo political designs of the leaders. The organization of a new party does not necessarily mean that the ideas which its members advocate cannot be attained in any other way. It is very frequently due to the fact that its leaders think they have nursed their infant to an rge wnen it may be made of profit profit politically. The latter theory will ptobibly explain the present action, and whether it does or not very ma, y persons will believe that it docs. There are doubtless many members of these organizations who under stand and appreciate their advantages as agencies of education, that will not be ready to follow their leaders into a movement for political aggrandizement. We believe that the mass of the members are in fact opposed to third party scheme.— They have been held by reiterated professions of non-partisanship up to this point, but when confronted by the certainty that allegiance to the new party means disloyalty to the old, they will not be carried beyond their present position. So long as a man could remain a demo crat or a republican and still hold membership in tne alliance, 1 o could havd some hope of bringing bis «arty around to alliance ideas. Now this hope is dispelled. Neither mountain will come*to Mahomet, nnd therefore he proposes to tear them down nnd make a mountain of his own. It is a pretty large contract, but go in Mahomet! We will do what we can to help you get dirt off the other mountain.
The situation is further simplified by the attitude ot the supreme council toward the nnti-sub-treasury people. The new party will swallow the sub-treasury scheme, land-loan scheme, ano probably numerous other phases of communistic paternalism. This wdl form the distinguishing difference between the new party and the democratic party. Of course, 'the new' party will probably land on the wrong side of the woman suffrage, pro bibition and other minor questions, but that will be of no great importance. The important distinction will be the financial schemes. The anti-sub-treasury people will probably find their way to the democratic camp. Certainly if they follow the thoughtful argument of the protest of Thursday they will not be far from dem ocratic principles. There are verv few democrats who will not accord heartily with the political tenets laid down by Col Yeaman in the concluding paragraph of his protest. With the co-operation of farms) s in business matters we have, of course, no concern. They look after that for themselves, and other people will do likewise with their affairs. We may here coi.siderpiofitably what Is meant by the financial projects of the alliance. In 1880 the total assessed value of all properly in the United States was ?1 <1,1’02,993,543, and it was estimated by the census bureau that the true value wss $43,<>42,000,000. Of the latter amount $ 1.0,107,000,000 was the estimated value of farms, not including improvements. The estimated value of all property by Mr. Porter’s ten-million dollar census is $24,749,589,804, and if the same properties exist now as in 1880 the probable true value is $02,010,000,000, of which $15,000,000,000 is farms. Under pr> sent assessments land loans to the i mount of one-half the assessed value of farms would make an increase of $3,000,000,000 in the currency in circulation, or about onejand one-half times the total amount now in the country. But tho present assessments are all below the true value and utterly destitute of uniformity. They varied in 1880 all the way from 25 per cent, of true value in Illinois to <lB per cent, ot true value in Wyoming. Under the assessments of the past five years an Indiana farmer could get twice as Urge aland loan as an Illinois farmer on a f«rm of the same selling value, and as our assessments this year has increased from about 18.5 per cent, of true value to about 70 per cent, of true value the disproportion will continue to increase every year. The obvious tendency of the land loan system would be to raise assessments to the true cash value, and when this is done the increase in circulation may reach $7,000,000,000. When to this is added the increase from the sub-treasury Joans, the pension issue, etc., the proposed inflation of the currency will reach between ten and fifteen billions. The merest tyro in finance ought to be be able to foresee the ruin this would produce, but supposing, for argument, it did not produce ruin, bow would it help
the farmer? The alliance is committed io the doctrine that contraction of the currency increases the value of money, or cheapens commodities, which is the same thing. If this te true, and by general consent it is, inflation will cheapen money and increase the price of commodities.— Very good, says the alliance, that is what we want. But if a farmer borrows money he borrows it for use. If ho wants to buy stock or building material or farm machinery or labor he must pay the increased price, and the money he borrows at 2 per cent, will not go one-third as far a the money ho now borrows at 6per cont.jHe would, in fact, have much less capital to work on than he now has, and the interest on the real value of his capital would noth decreased. In the end the heaviest losses from this monstrous policy would fall more heavily on the farmers than any other class of persons. In financial matters the only safe course is to stick to the golden mean. There is disaster in either extreme. Happy and content isa home with "The Ro< Chester;" a lamp with the light of the morning. For catalogue, write Rochester Lams Co. New York ■ . A number of Wood Choppers wanted, A i ply to or address Thomas A. Crockett, Rensselaer, Ind.
Sir Henry Thompson, the noted London physician, says that more than one-half of the diseases of modern life ate caused by easily avoidable errors in diet. It is well known that the drunkard brings his ruin upon himself; but it is startling to be told in effect by so able a physician that, but for our ignorance, it is as much a sin to be ill as to be drunk. , The proprietors of Garfield Tea have been doing missionary work in this field. They include with each of the millions of free samples they yearly distribute, valuable medical essays on the use of hot water as a remedy, and of diet in disease; and with each package of Tea a booklet worth its weight in gold, written by a well-known hyfienic physician, residing in New York find .ondon, and a graduate of the New York University Medical College, pointing out a few simple rules whereby all persons of ordinary intelligence are able to conduct an attack of illness without calling a doctor; showing how to get well and keep well, and how so to li\e that no one need long use Garfield Tea or any other medicine. Until then, Garfield Tea helps overcome the evils of bad diet and over-eating This booklet also gives the Dr. Salisbury treatment of chopped meat and hot water; also the secret of tne success of themilkcure and the grape cure in Europe. And also, why the great success attending treatment at Carlsbad and other famous health springs , and shows how anyone may substantially get all the good results that come from such health resorts at home, by following the rules plainly set out in the little book. Why arc physicians so much opposed to proprietary medicines? Is it because such meritorious articles as Pond's Extract or Garfield Tea become household necessities and enable people to do their own doctoring and so keep money out of the pockets of physicians.
B i ven awaY PIANO, ORGAO, CASH, And Many Uheful Articles. Also THE Will Be Sent to Evehy Person in the Stat a of Indiana FREE OF CHARGE Until Jan. I, 1892, who will, on reading this advertisement, renuest us to send terms of subscription, list of presents, etc. As this offer is good for 10 days only, it will be necessary to write at once to the STATE SENTINEL, Mention this Paper Indianapolis, Ind. NOTICE OF ATTACHMENT. Before John Maguire, a Justice of the Peace in an for Kankakee township, Jasper county, State of Indiana. John Batzke vs. Schuyler Sigler. Whereas, John Batzke on the 10th day of November, 1891, filed a complaint against Schuyler Sigler for fourteen dollars, together with an affidavit and the necessary bond for »n orde«‘ of attachment, and the order was issued together with a summons for defendant. Summot.s returnable the 23d day of November, 1891, at ten o’clock in the forenoon. Summons returned endorsed “not found." Orderof attachment leturned endorsed as follows: "Served upon the personal property of the said Scnnyler Sigler,” ana it appearing in said affidavit that defendant is a non-residept of this State— Therefore notice is hereby given to said Schuyler Sigler of the pendency of said suit to be tried before me at my sffice in Kankakee township, Ja°per county,’lndiana. on the 21st day of December, 1891, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, and that unless the said Schusler Sigler shall be end appear at that time to defend the same, the matter will be heard and determined in his absence. JOHM MAGUIRE, Justide of the Peace. [Seal] Dated this 23dday of Noyember, 1891. Jpf. t6.i
The great Dr. Boerhaave left three directions for preserving the health— keep the feet warm, the head cool, and the bowels open. Had he practiced in our day, he might have added: and purify the blood with Ayer’s Sarsaparilla; for he certainly would consider it the best. CHEATING Z- HORSE Blankets Nearly every pattern of fa Horse Blanket is imitated in color and style. In most cases the imitation looks just as gdod as the genuine, but it hasn't the warp threads, and so lacks strength, and while it sells for only a little less than the genuine it isn’t worth one-half as much: The fact that 5 A Horse Blankets are copied is strong evidence that they are THE STANDARD, and every buyer should see that the Sk trade mark is sewed on the inside of the Blanket. IjpMF t ~ Five Mlle Eleotrlo HORSE BLANKETS ARE THE STRONGEST. 100 6/A STYLES at prices to suit everybody. If you can’t get them from your dealer, write us. Ask for the Va Book. You can get it without charge. WM. AYRES & SONS. Philadelphia. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. The State of Indiana, Jasper County, as* In Circuit Court, to January Term, a. d., 1892. Paulina Kirk vs. James V. W. Kirk, Julia B. Erwin, John E. Erwin, Mattie P. Miller, Daniel B. Miller, Albert E. Kirk, Anna L. Kirk, Eliza J Miller, John 0. Miller. Viola J. Kirk, William 0. Kirk, Jennie B. Kirk, Lucy Jackson, Frederick Jackson, William E, Peok. Bo it Remembered, That on this (ith day of November, a. d., 1891, the above named plaintiff by James W. Douthlt, her Attorney, filed in the office of the Clerk of Raid Court her complaint against said defendants, and also the affidavit of a competent person, that said defendants J miles V. W. Kirk, Mattia P. Miller, Daniel 11. Miller, Albert E, Kirk, Anna L. Kirk, Eliza J. Miller, John 0. Miller, and Viola J. Kirk are non-residents of the State of Indiana, said non-resident defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said suit, and that said cause will stand for trial at the January term of smd Court, 1892, to-wit, on the 4th day of J anuary, 1892. ( > Witness, My hand and the ■j Seal. !- seal of said Court, affixed ’ —-r ’ at office in Rensselaer, 7th day of November, A. D. 1891. JAMES F. IRWIN, Clerk. James W. Douthlt, Att’y for Pl’ff.
Notice of ADDlication for License. NOTICE In hereby given to all tho citizens ot the Town of Rensselaer, and District num. bar one in mild Town, and Murton Township, tn tho County of Jasper, and 8 tutu of Indiana, that I, thoundersigned lioury Hildebrand, amnio inhabitant of the Statu of lin Jana, and a man ot Sood moral character, ana not In tho habitot ecomlng Intoxicated, and u tit person In ovory respect to be intrusted with i lio solo of Intoxicating Liquors, will make application for a Liconao to sell and barter In loss quantities than a quart at a time, Splntous, Vinous, Malt and all other Intoxicating liquors which muv be usodas a beverage, with the privUeiio of permitting the same to bo drank in and upon tho premises where sold and birtored.at the regular December sseslou of the Board of Commissioners of Jasper county,lndiana, to boheldinthoTownofßensselaur. commencing on the 7ih day of December, a o. 1891 The precise location and description of the premises where said liquors are to be sold and bartered Is as follows, to-wlt; Trw front part ot a one-story frame building situate on land des ci I beiLb, mete - a d bounds as foil >w», to-wit: Commencing at the southwesterly coi uer of block four (4] attho Intersection ot Wash'ngton and b rontfstreets.ln the original platof tko Town ot Rensselaer, Jasper county, Indiana, u id running Ibeuce in a southerly direction alongtlie easterly line of Front street In said Town >i distance of one hundred and seventy-two 1172) feet and throe [3| Inches, and from thence westerly on a line parallel with Washington street in said Town fifty (501 feet to a point on the westerly line ot Front •‘treat, iu said Town, to the southea terly corner of the premises whereon said liquors are to bo sold. Thence westerly on a line parallel with Washington street, In said Town, twentynine (29) feet, thence northerly on a line parallel w th Front street, m said Town, nineteen (19) feet and eight (81 inches, thence easterly on a line rarallel with Washington st-eet, in said Town, wenty-niue (29) leet, thence southerly on tho westerlyllue ot Front street, in said Town, nineteen (19) .'eet and eight (8) inches to the place ol beginning. Slid License will be asked for the period of oi.e year. - HENRY HILDEBRAND. E‘.xsse;aet .Ind.. Nov. 18, Ir9l--x:2.
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given to *ll the citizens of the Town of VV heatfield and Wheatfield Township, of Jasper county, and State of Indiana, that the undersigned George W. Tilton, a white male inhabitant of said Town and Township, and over the age of twenty-ono years, and who is not in the habit of becoming intoxicated. and a man of good moral character, and a fit person in every respect to be entrusted with the sale of intoxicating liquors, will make application to the Board of Commissioners of said Jasper county at the next regular session and meeting of said Board, to be held ih the Town of Rensselaer, in said County and State aforesaid, commencing on the first Monday in December, 1891, the same being the 7th day of December, 1891, nnd called the December session of said Board, for a License to sell and barter spiritous liquors, vinous liquors, and malt liquors, and all intoxicating liquors which may be used as a beverage, in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing and permitting said liquors to be drank on the premises where sold and bartered, said premises being precisely located and, described as follows, to-wit: In a onestory frame building situated on the following described land to-wit: Commencing at a point six (6) feet north, and forty (40) feet and ten (10) inches east of the southwest comer of lot five (5), in Block one (1), in Bent Ay’s Addition to the Town of Wheatfield, in Jaspercounty, Indiana; thence north thirty (SO) feet; thence east eighteen (18) feet, thence south thirty (30) feet, thencewest eighteen (18) feet, to the point of commencement. Said License will be asked for the period of one year. GEORGE W. TILTON. James W. Douthit. Att y for Petitioner November 13, 1891,
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