Democratic Sentinel, Volume 17, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 September 1893 — Page 1

VOLUME XVII.

We have a largo surplus cf evergreens, maple, ash, catalpas, apple, pear, peach and a full line of small fruits. We will close out cneap. Pai ties wanting to set out. anything in the above line will do well to give my agent a call. t. A. Woodin, Nurseryman, Goodland, Ind. John Schan-laub, Agent, Rensselaer, Ind. IND. NAPOLIS SENTINEL. THE Dailv, Weekly and Sunday Issues. The Sentinel in its several editions reaches more readers in Indiana than any other newspaper published within or without the state. It is read in every city, town and hamlet.

The Daily is an eight to twelvepage paper of 56 to 84 columns and contains the very latest market reports, in addition to all the important news of the day. It has a special news service from New fork, Washington a. d Chicago. The Weekly is a mammoth issue of 12 pages and 84 columns, and in addition to the cream of the news of the week includes an invaluable farm and home department, with a variety of speci. 1 features for all classes of readers.

The Sunday issue contains regularly 20 pages of 140 columns of reading matter, and frequently 24 pages or 168 columns This issue is much like the Daily, but political topics except as items of news are allowed but little space and the additional columns are .used to meet the tastes of those who desire clean, wholesome and entertaining miscellany. ] By Mail—Postage Prepaid. Daily edition, 1 year, $6 00 Parts of a year, per month, 50 Daily and Sunday, I yea >r, 800 Sunday, by mail, 1 year, 2 00 Weekly Edition. One Copy, one year, 1 00 Specimen copies sent free.

INDIANAPOLIS SENT NEL, Indianapolis, Ind.

A copy of the Indiana Almanao for 1893 has just been received by us. It is without question the most complete and best work of its kind that has been issued in the State. The main features of the work are deserving of extended notice. The World’s Fair, which is to be held this year, will no doubt be visited by almost every citizen of Indiana. This important subject is fully outlined in twenty-eight pages of printed matter, showing cuts of the buildings and descriptions of all the interesting features and exhibits, Complete tables and Tariff Duties and increases are noticed. A reliable table of the Indiana Post-offices, with their salaries. This constitutes reference volume for those interested in the new appointments expected after March 4th. The United States Government, with the names and salaries of every official thereii , from President down, are given. A full list of United States Senators and Representatives are furnished. Tables of population of States, cities, etc., and other matters of paramount importance are also set fully forth. A concise collection of general iniormation on the recent political revolution is perhaps the most interesting feature of this work. The veto of Indiana by counties on both State and National tickets is scheduled, and separate tables are. given on legislative districts. The great result by popular vote an ) electoral votes is also shown. For the benefit of handy reference the platforms of the four leading parties in 1892 are appended.

"WILLIAM HUMES Died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Jas. C. Thrawls, in Rensselaer, Thursday afternoon, Sept. 28, 1893, aged 87 years and 1 week. Father Humes was a ch listian gentleman, an affectionate father, good and true friend nt-d kind ne’ghbor. The life of our aged friend extended beyond the allotted time. He was an - urswerving Democrat,commencing his citizenship by voting tor Andrew Jackt son, and dosed it iu support of Grover Cleveland. Ally he rest in peace.

Mrs .Etta May Carpenter.daughterjof Willis J. lu.es, of ihis place, died at her home in Cincinnati, 0., Wednesday, September 20th. aged 25 years, 6 months and 8 days. The remains were brought to Rensselaer for interment. Rev. E. Baech conducted funeral services at M. E. church last Friday afternoon. The infant son of John C. Hods shire died Monday last, after a lingering illness, aged a little over ji months. Rey. B. F. Ferguson conducted the funeral services Tuesday.

The Democratic Sentinel.

Austin&co.,SH G. K. Hollingsworth, will loan you money on peisonal mortgage, 'r ohattel seen, rity, for long or short time at local hank rates. These loans can be paid back at any time, and are more desirale than bank loans, beoause interest is rebated.— We have unlimited capital and can accommodate everybody.

A nationaljbank at New Castle has just placed an advertisement to the effect ihat they have five hundred thousand dollars to loan at 4 per cent, interest, which is evidence of returning better times. The at. tempt of the national banks to bluff the administration into the issuance of $300.000,000 of bonds having proved abortive they are prepared to resume the even tenor of their ways. In a recent letter President Cleveland says: “I am a friend of silver, but I believe its proper p'ace in our currency oan only be fixed by a readjustment of our currency legislation and the inauguration of a consistent and comprehensive financial scheme. I think suoh a thing oan only be entered upon profitably and hopefully after the repeal of the law which is oharged with all our financial woes. In the present state of the public mind this law cannot be built upon nor patcfin d in suoh a wsy as to relieve the stagnation.” " ♦ m « -

The Tariff Object Lessons from the old manufacturing est .blishment for that olass of goods, the New York Press, are again going the rounds of the Republican organs. They are part of a systematic. effort adopted by the opposition to bluff congress and provent tariff reform. Tariff for revenue only, ie no experiment, it was in operation for years before the war, and even James G. Blaine has admitted that the country never witnessed more prosperous times. Congress will proceed to reform the tariff, and the bluff game might as well oease.

Governor Neal, for such we hope to oall him, in ans ver to the oharge made by McKinley that the ways and means committee was made up of men who represented, farming communities, said: It should be borne in mind however, that the manufacturing and commercial communities are not the only ones in this country. There is a vast army of people not connected direotly or inJirectly with manufacturing, and sharing none of the benefits of protection. It would not be strange, therefore, to find on the ways and means committee men who are as muoh interested in representing the consumers and other masses of as they are in representing the manufacturing and commercial communities who appear to be the only ones entitled to representation according to the clase and sectional views of Maj. McKinley. It is upon the theory of representing the whole people, the consumers as well as the producers, that the presont ways and means committee is proceeding.

Hon. Lawrence T. Neal in his opening speech at Newark disoussed the wage question from a correct standpoint.— “Whateveradvantage,” he said, “iu wages the American wage-earner has over his English and other foreign competitors he ha* acquired for himself, in spite of ti is pretended protection, by his superior intelligence industry and skill, and bis longer hours of unremitting toil. This sham Republican protection has been to him a hindrance and a drawback. This is us true of the labor in unprotected occupations, which constitute at least 85 per cent ol all the laboi of the country and receives no possible benefit from protection. -is it is of the 15 percent.|in protected industries for which alone shadow of a pretext for the claim of a benefit ly protection can be made. We must remember in considering the welfa:e of the laborer, another tbiug, and that is that steady employment is not second in importance to high wages. Good wages and continuous emj lovmeut are each es - sentirl to the prosperity of labor. But we look in vain for such employment to labor even in the protected industries under the McKinley system of taxation. “ The independence of labor Is destroyed by such legislation. The tyrannical will of capital beoomea supreme and it restricts andlimits the employment of labor both as to terms ana time. Reduction in wages, strikes and lookouts become the order of the day. Enforced idleness results, and you know the rest. The object lessons of the unfortunate conflicts between protected capital, relentless and cruel, ana honest labor, begging only for the opportunity to sell itself for a livii.g price, are indeliibly stamped upon your memories, and I need not recall them. “Governor McKinley may call this Americanism and patriotism if he will, but I say to you, no darkerjrage in American history will be written than those which record these irrepressible conflicts between capital, protected, proud, arrogant and all-powerful upon the one side, and labor, wronged, fretful, impatient, contending for its just rewards, upou the other. ' “We must have a higher order of Americanism than this; our patriotism nustbe bronaer than this, and we must, und, r the guidance of a wiser statesmanship, break the restraining shackles of this Republican protection, and give to labor, and capital as well, a freer and larger market for the limitless productions of our mines, our factories and our fields.”

A BANKER’S MISTAKE.

“I recently he ,rd,” said Mr. Gage, “of a banker in Wisconsin, a msnof iion firmness, who, hearing of bank troubles in many localities, determined that he wo’.a not lend a dollar, bnt would collect every Maim due. He enjoyed the entire confidence of the coffin Unity, being a man’of. undoubted Responsibility. So n after the banker had determined upon thi policy a man of substance applied to him for a loan of $ 100. The banker ref need rough.

RENSSELAER lAS EH COUNTY. INDIANA FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 29 1893

ly on the ground that he could not spare the money. The would-be borrower, from whose mind the illusion had not yet been dissipated that aibank was a fountain from which wealth flowed, was shocked and pained. He we .t about amongother members of the community expressing his grief that this banker was in suoh a distressing situation. Certain depositors put their own constrnotion upon the meaning of all this. Within a week the banker hims If was a humble borrower in Chicago, having paid in hard cash 25 per cent, of hie liabilities to the community whioh haa lost faith in him,- Ch oago Journal.

A TRIBUTE TO A WIFE.

The following comprehensive inscription reoordihg the virtues of i n ancient countess of Westmoreland and written by her husband was formerly to be seen in a large room at Buds'one place in the oounty of Kent, once a seat Delonging to that noble family. It ie a Portrait more beautiful than any of the elegant|productione of Kneller orJßeynolds and would ornament with a peculiar grace a lady's dressing room, thns inspiring tbe owner to emulate so exquisite a model. Says the memorial, in the quaint etyte of another century: “Bhee feared God and kuewe how to serve him: Shee assvned tymes for her devotions and kept them: Sheewas aperfeot Wife anu trewe Frende: Shee joyed moste to oblidge those neerest and deerest to her: Shee wae still the same ever kynde and never troublesome: Often preventyng my desires: Disputing none: Proventille monaging all thatjwae myme* Ly vines in Appear noe above myne estate while shee advanced it: Shee was a grete spiriit; sweettie tempered; of a sharp wit without offence; of excellent speeohe blest with silence; of a brave Fashion to winne respect and to daunt Boldness; plee ynge to all of her sex, entyre withFewe, delytinge in the best; ever avoyding all persons and places In their honor blemyshed, and was as free from doing ille as giving the ocoasion: Shee dyed as she lyved—well."

THE SKIN LOTION OF A FAMOUS BEAUTY.

All the way from Paris comes this reoipe for lait virginal, the matchless tonic and lotion for the skin, to the use of whioh Ninon de l’Encloe attributed the preservation of her complexion, whioh was to have had when its happy possessor .was seventy years old the velvety freshness of that of a girl of sixteen. Here it is: Half an ounoe tincture of benzoin, sixteen ounces best rosewater, ten drops attai rc see.— Sponge the wet skin with this preparation after the bath. An equal weight of refined linseed oil added to tni mixture and robbed well into the arms an t neck twice daily is said to be an excellent remedy for attenuation. The yonng woman who sends the formula declares that its use has transformed her scrawney neok and bony arms into a gratifying plumpness of outline.

Thomas Jefferson invented the modern plow. There were plows, of course, thousands of years before the time c! ti e Sage of Monticello, but he first laid down the mathematical principles that underlie the construction of the plow and so enabled any t lacksmith to make one. A p’ow oonsists of two wedges, a outting and a lifting wedge, and Jefferson discovered and and enunciated the proportions of 1 each and the rel tion each bore to the o,ner. Before his day no two smiths made plows alike; now they are all made in accordance with a mathematical formula.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The fighting lawyer of Maine lives at Lewiston and is appropriately named Renter. At the Ellsworth Fair he distinguished hin self by w estling with and throwing a nine-hundred*pound bull. — The next day he oleared a seven-foot fence at a bound, stopped a runaway horse with one hand, and rescued two ladles from danger. He_ is five feet nine inches in bight and weighs 180 pounds, and has won the >espect of all the lawyers in the State.

Great heat often causes melancnolia.

“Mr. SDenser” is the South Carolina slang for the official liquor dispenser. There is never an od 1 number of rows on an ear of corn. Five men can easily hold down a lion but nine are required to hold a tiger. The English census shows that 26,226 Americans reside in England and Wales. There were no “j” and “w” in the original English alphabet.

Aiesidentof Chicopee, Mass., glories m the name of Guaddeusenebetonconrt. Two-thirds of the gold now in use in the world was discovered during the last fifty years. Walter Besant thinks that Chicago will some time 1 e to Amerioa what Babylon was to Asia. A new Gatling gun oanfire 3.129 shots a minute, and, work-d by a small electric motor, 5,000 shots. A railroad station at Point Pine, Me., has been broken into and robbed every summer for the past ten years.

A whale’s throat is so small that you oould choke him with your fist, anil he feeds on the smallest things in the sea, Tfce Pennsylvania railroad uses four locomotives to pull each of its 1 envy World s Fair trains over the mountains at Alto .rna. In northern New York the popular name for a span of black horses is a “team crows.” A five-cent cigar is oalled a “nickel torch.” A bosom shirt, which is open in front, and made to button like a coat, Is arecent invention. It was exhibited in a Broad way (N, Y.) windowjthe other day and attracted muoh attention. Orthodox Turks shave the head with the ; exception of a tuft on the crown, which is i left to insure a tight grip to tne angel of the resurrection when he comes to pull them out of the grave on the day of judgment.

G. C. Keen dy, of Lancaster, Pa , has a curiosity in the shape of a signboard I painted by Benjamin West, America’s first I great painter, in 1771. It is still in a good : state of preservation, after swinging in | front of a tavern all these year?. •' The New York Sun has been investigate ! ing McAllister's four hundred, and print's a number of receipted bills of tbb last 1 centurv sowing that a Stuyyesant sold handkerchiefs, qDePeyster jeans, a Rhinlander hats, a Bra an# newter spoons, a B ekman molasses, and-a Roosevelt lampblack. | Please remember that Clarke does i watch, olook and jewelry repairing.

•‘A FIRM &.D ENGE TO CORRECT PRINOI LBS.”

EVERYBODY HEAR HIM!

Next Sabbath evening, at Presbyterian church, Evangelist Kee* ley will give a lecture on “Atne* ism; or the Fool’s Creed.”

THE FOREIGNER PAYS THE DUTY

Indianapolis News - Certain pros tectionists rever tire of telling us that the foreigner pays the duty. Mr. McKinley declared in his speech tlnothei day at Akron that our tariff is a tax on the foreign producer. To be sure, the consumer of tariffotaxed foreign goods finds the price ne has to pay equal to the price the foreigner charged, plus the tariff, plus freight, insure ance and oo.r missions, and he do j s not seem to be conscious of the fact that the foreigner is paving the duoy. But of course he is, Mr McKinley says ao and he knows. It is worth remarking that this system makes great demands on the generosity of certain foreigners, who are just determined to get their goods used by us. Why they should insist on sending their goods here at a prodigious sacri* fice we do not profess to under, stand. Perhaps they are inspired, nos by generosity, but by pure ma levolence. Perhaps they are in-, sanely jealous of our Amenoan manufacturers, and are, therefore, willing to go all lengths to do them despite. Now, there are the makers of polished plate-glass. The duty on such glass in sizes larger than 2x5 feet, is 124 per cent. There was imported in 1892 glass of the sizes affected bv tnis rate of duty valued at $122,239, upon which duties to the amount of $151,777 were paid. According to the orthodox view these duties tvere paid by the for*eign manufacturer That is to say the extraordinary foreigners trom whom the glass was bought paid $151,777 for the privilege of sell ing goods worth $122,239, thus not only g'ving away the glass, but also losing $29,538. We confess we do not see ivby they shou d do such things; And we confess we do not see why if they pay the duty the cost to American consumers sho’d be increased over the oost to foreig i consumers by the amount of the tariff. But there are lots of mysteries about the whole high tariff business that no one who has not been admitted to full fallows ship in the protectionist faith can ever make out. There is no use in trying to understand them. We must just take them on faith—on Mr. McKinley’s assurance- and be thankful they are true. Mr. McKinley says the for. igntr pays the dnty. Bother the f aot«!

Grind Their Own Wheat—A numberof Pennsylvania farmers who went'to the World’s Fair found improved milling machinery ther l that will enable them to grind their own wheat in the old fashioned water mills and male 3, flour equal to the best made in Mim eapolis. They at once purchased this machinery, put it in an old abandoned mill,"and are now surprising Western Pennsylvania with what is called the revival of a lost art.

Here is something for the ladies to try their skill on: Take a leaf ot a tree or shrub, place it in a small piece of white linen snaked in spirits of nitre, and insert between the leaves of a heavy book with a sheet of paper to receive the imoression. Lay the book aside for a few days then examine. The leaf will be found devoid of color, which will hava been transformed to the paper in all the original beauty of tint and outline of leaf. So says one who tried the experiment. On Sunday morning last the old Halloran building, one ot the old landmarks of the town, was discovered to be on fire. The flames had made such headway that any attempt to save the building would have been labor 10. t, therefore evrey effort was concentrated to save adjoining j ropertv. The firemen, aided by many citizens worked with a will and with success. The loss was fu'.ly covs ered by insurance. Probable incendiarism.

Owners of property endanged by the burning of the Halloran building gave a big banquet to the firemen and citizens who took part in sighing the flames and prevented further ravages. It came off at the Makeever House, Wednesday evening, and over two hundred sat down at tables fairly groaning under the weight of good things. - The management are highly commended for the efforts pu to secure the ease comfort andenjoj ment of those in atie idaneg.

Louis H Hamilton* of Renpseland, Miss’ Mary, daughter of George R. Robinson, were married at the residence of the bride's father, in Hangmg Grove town - ship, mst Sunday evening. Rev. B. F. Ferguson officiated. Be sure and see the s' ock of watches, clocks and jewelry at Eiglesbarb s old stem! before purchasing elsewhere.

fl, rco'iccrsMiiKj Is pro; red to make five year loans on farms at tea positively as low, and on as favorable irme as oan be obtained in town, giving the privilege of partial payments at any time, and stopping the interest on the amount paid.' We are also prepare * to make loans in personal security on shorter time .easonable rates. If yon are in need o* . loan, give ne a call. 13—4 t.

At the Presbyterian ohuroh, Sunday n’gh\ October Ist. Come out! Everybody invited 1 Rev. H. C. Keeley will deliver his celebrated lecture on “Atheism; or the Fo l’s Creed,” nex i Sunday night, at the Presbyterian church. Everybody cordially in vited.

The meetings conducted bv Evangelist Keeley have been largely attended, and we hove no doubt will eventually bring forth good fruit. Horace Henkle will teach school at Garrison, Color ado, this winte* Miss Mary Meyer is in the city this week studying styles and copying patterns. R. W. Marshall, Esq., visited Elwood, Ind., on legal business, Tuesday. For fresh bread and and cake 8 :ry the new Bakery, in the room 8 ’ormerly occupied by Minikus & Troy. MILLIRON & M abtindale.

Chdrlie Hammond and famil/ ;ook their departure for Kansbs, Wednesday evening. SEND twelve cents in postage stamps to 39 Corcoran Building, Washington, D. G., and you will reoelve four oopies of Kate Field’s Washington, containing matter of speoial interest. Give name and address, and say where you taw this adveitieement. Rev. J. L- Brady, new pastor of he Christian church, will occupy us pulpit next Sunday morning.

Boarding by the meal, day or week at tbe World’s Fair restaurant, C. H. Vick, proprietor. Rev. James T. Abbett, of Albany, Oregon, is visiting relatives n nd friends in Jasper countv. He occupied the M. E. pulpit Sunday. Advertised .Letters — Persons calling forh ters inthe above list will please iy they are advertised. Ed. Uhoades. Charlie Yeoman has returned from Hammond, and will teaoh Bchool in Barkley township this winter.

Ur. I. B. Washburn, handles the celebrated Tolley’s Kochinoor eye glasses, the best made. We invite attention to the ‘ad’ “see Agatn as in Youth/’ in another column. D. B. Nowels will have charge of tho Wheatfield school this win> ter. I have made arrangements with Eastern capitalists whereby I can loan $30,000 00 in amounts from SSOO 00 and upwards, borrower to oay commission 5 per cent.— Ke;p money 5 years or more. M. F. Chilcote.

M iss True Alter is visiting relatives and friends in Chicago) and St Louis. Co to th 3 New York Millinery store for your stylish hats and dress making. M. & A. Meyr. Mackey & Barcus have erected a fine granite monument to the memory of “Aunt Bell” Barkley, in Barkley cemetery. The new rates on the Monon affects ail towns north of Kenssel» aer. Round trip rates from Burs rey, $2 35; from Fair Oaks, $2.15.

Wm. Warren has bought the old W. B. Austin house and is moving it or to his lots south end of Weston street. Step into Clarke’s and see those solid gold watches and chains. The sheriff of I aPorte county with a number of deputies have been hunting for a horse thief m the swamps of north I township, this county.

Alf Collins fyts bpUjgkt out ths stock of agricultural implements Hammond. Bros. Alf takes to the business as naturally as a duck h> vyater. Giye him a call, Monday last the number of lie kets sold at this station, for the fa r, was IT3. Val Seib stopped over Su. day with his family here. He is assistant superintendent for the firm which has the contract for res ceiving and delivering the mails to and from the steamboats and railroads in New York oity.

FOR MEN— Sabbath evening, October Ist, at tht Presbyterian Church, a second lecture will be delivered by Rev. H. C.Keeley. Subject: “Atheism; or a Fool’s Creed.” Everybody cordially invited.

A sooial reunion and dinner was held at the residence of John C. MoColly, Union township, Friday of last week, in honor of the three surviving members of the original Braddock family, well known in Jasper county, Mrs. Hannah Smith, of Newton county, aged 75 years, Mrs. .Nancy Alter, of Elk Falls, Kansas, aged 73 years (mother of Dr. M. B. and /ohn Q. Alter, of this place) and John Braddock, of Walker township, aged 71 years. About sixty rela tives ana friends were present and participated in the pleasures of the occasion,

Rev. Merton V.Brown and Miss Daisy 0., daughter of David H. Yeoman, were married at the residence of the bride’s parents, a few miles north of this place, last Friday evening. Eldei A. E. Pit rson officiated. Omar 0. Ritchey, of Anderson (formerly of Rensselaer) and Miss Ida Perry were married at Indianapolis, Sept. 20th. At the Makeever House,* Satur dav afternoon, September 23d, by Rev. B. F. Ferguson, Nelson Anderson, of W oloott, and Miss M ar-* tha J. Beaver, of Milroy townshi{.

You will not mako a mistake if you examine Clarke’s line of line watches, clocks acd jewelry before buying. The state board of tax commissioners has finished its labors. The assessment on railroads of the state ' his year as made by the board is 11159,248,873 and on telegraph, tel« ephone, express and sleeping oar companies $4,761,873, making a total of $164,010,746, an increase of $3,414,944 over last year.

Tbe talk of the town—Gierke's line of watohes and jewelry. The Monon route has discontinued the sale of Thayer commutation tickets, and in their s*ead have ilaced on sale excursion tickets good for five days from date of sale, Itenss.daer to Chicago ai.d return at the rate of $2 50. W. H. Beam, Agent.

“MOT DIM SIMCr NOTICE is hereby given that the matter of confirming the classification roll of said Gifford Drainage District will have a farther hearing before the Board of Commissioners of Jasper county, as follows: All nmtters pertaining to lands in Barkley Township, on Monday, October 9th. And all matters pertaining to lands in Gillam and Walker Townships, on Tuesday, October 10th, 1893. By order of the Board, Henry B. Mubbay, Aud.tor Jasper County, lnd. September 29, 1893. WM. H. CHURCHILL, Justice or the Peace. Offloe second door north of the Depot.

4 Scientific American BWoeVATieTe, COPYRIGHTS, atoJ Oldest bureau for securing patent* In America. Krery patent taken out by us 1* brought before the public by a notice siren free of charge in tbe Scientific Jtmewau Largest circulation of any iolentific paper In the world. Splendidly Illustrated. No intelligent man should be without it. Weekly 53.00 a year! *1.50 six month*. Addree* MuNsTA CO, Pu blub kits, 361 Broadway, New Tort City.

WE WANT YOU to act as our agent. We furnish an axpenslvi outfit and all you need tree- It ooste nothing tc try the business. We will treat yon well, and help yon to earn ten times ordinary wage*. Both sexes of aU ages can lire at home and work ii spare time, or all the time. Any one any when can earn a great deal of money. Many bare mad. , Two Hundred Hollars a Month. No clan- o people In tbe world are making so mnch mouc; without capital as those at work for ns. Basinetpleasant, strictly honorable, and pays better that any other offered to agentß. Yon hare a clea Held, with no competition. We equip you witl everything, and supply printed alrecuona to; beginners which, if obeyed faithfully, will briuj more money than will any other business. Im prove your prospects 1 Why not? Yon can do si easily and surely at work for ns. Beasonabb industry only necessary (or absolute taooes Pamphlet circular giving every particular is sen free to all. Delay not In sending for lk. GEORGE STINSON A CO., Box No. *BB. Portland. Me

NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. State of Indiana, I County of Jasper, f „ In Jasper Circuit Court. To Octobf r Term, 1893. James T. Randle, v. Samuel Gay et al. NOTICE is hereby given to Samuel Gay, and Mrs. Gay wife or widow of aaid Samuel Gay; Georse Haddix, and Mrs. Haddix wife or widow of said George Haddix; Lyman Blair, and Mrs. Blair wife or widow of saM Lyman Blair; John H. Shields, and Mrs. Shields wife or widow of said John H. Shields; and the unkuown heirs, devisees and legatees, and the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of the unknown heirß, devisees and legatees of the above named parties, that the pla'ntiff above named filed hie oom.daint in the Clerk’s office of the shove named Court and an affidavit of a competent person that all the above named persons are non-residents of the State of Indiana, and that this aotion is brought to quiet title to real estate in said oonnty: Wherefore the said defendants are notified that tha said aotion will oome up for hearing at the Ootober Term, 1393, of the said Court, on the 16th day of Ootober, 1893, being the first jndioial day of said Term, whloh will be held at tbe Court House, in the Town of Bens* selaer, Indiana. , —■ — . Witness my hand and offlSeal, j oil seal this the 3d day of ' —-- I August, 1893. WM. H. COOVER, Clerk ol the Jasper Circuit Court* Thompson & Bro. Att’ys for Pl’ff. August 4, 1893—59.

D!Ft IREIA., SPECIALIST OP

National Reputation, BY SPECIAL REQUEST of hia many patients who hare uenally gone a long diatauoe to geo him will visit RENSSELAER, —AT THE—r akeever House, Saturday, Sep.3o ,’93. Dr. Rea has bee* mnneeted with th* largest hospitals in ti country, and baa no superior in diago dng nnd treating diseases and deformit. ’• He will giv* *SO for any case that h e oann it tell th* disease and where located in five minute*. He will return every four weeks daring the year. Treats all Curable Medioal and Surgical MDiseates, Acute and Chronlo Catarrh. of the Eye, Ear, Nose. Throat Cand Lungs, Dyspepsia, Bright's Di«ease, Diabetes. Kidneys, Liver, BladSder, Chronic, Female and Sexual Diseases. □ EPILEPSY OR FITS CURED. A Positive Guabantbh. 9 BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. Sore throat falling of hair, pain in the bones, eruptions, eto., are perfectly eradiarioMdrngs* U * in * “ eronr y °* other toHe undertakes no unourable oases, bat « Biss thousands given up to die. v6iu6Qib<Ur tbe d&to end ooxne early as h rooms are always crowded wherever h tops. Consultation Free. Correspondence solicited and confidential! Book on Disease* Free, DR. D. REA.

A. C, BUSHET, Pbopbietob Located opposite the public square. Ever> thlag fresh and clean. Freeh and salt meats game, poultry, etc., constantly on hand. Please 'give us a call and we will guarantee to give voa satisfaction. Remember the place. TlfTnlß_ SEE AGAIN AS IN YOUTH Are the result of years of scientific experimenting, and are now placed, owing to their superiority, preeminently above every thing heretofore produoed in this Hue, They are acknowledged by experts to be the finest and most perfectly constructed Lenses KNOWN, and are peculiarly adapted are StSMT nTWmIW DR. I. B. WASHBURN. Agutt, t Rtn«Tffl**r. la*

NUMBER 37