Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 December 1894 — Page 1

yOLUMI IVIIL

Admitted atjthe j Why Was It that Ayer’* Sarsaparilla, out of the great number of similar preparations manufacture! throughout the world, was the only medicine of the kind admitted at the World’p Fair, Chicago? And why was it that, in spite of the united efforts of the manufacturers of other preparations, the decision of the World’s Fair Directors was not reversed? BECAUSE According to Rule 15-“ Articles ® that are in any way dangerous or o offensive, also patent medicines, o nostrums, and empirical prepara- 2 tions, whose ingredients are con- o sealed, will not be admitted to the o Exposition,” and, therefore— ® Became Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is not a o patent medicine, not a nostrum, and not 2 a secret preparation.! o Acause its proprietors had nothing to ® conceal when questioned as to the for- o mula from which it is compounded. O Became it is all that it is claimed to be o —a Compound Concentrated Extract of o Sarsaparilla, and in every sense, worthy q the Indorsement of this most important o committee, called together for passing o upon the manufactured products of the 2 entire world. o Ayer'sXSarsaparilla i Admitted for Exhibition ® AT THE WORLD'S FAIR °

Wo Indianapolis Daily and Weekly lanttaelsironlationhas loaehed immense ytoporiiess by its Htorosgh service in Noolving all the latest news ail over the Made and itoaa its dispatches isom foroiM countries, Every leader in Indiana should take a Mate paper, and that The Scnttael. LARGEST CIRCULATION Of any Newspaper IJ THE STATE. MDHKB OF SUBSCRIPTION. DaDyoaeyear H.O Weekly one year - 1-0 The Weekly Edition Has 12 PABES! SUBSCRIBE NOW And state aM remittances to The ihdiaiiipolis) SENTINEL COZ Indianapolis, Ind, ■ —T—IMs papbr will be fuenished with the VoeMy eflMon of The Indiana State heuHnol fer te W.

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The Democratic sentinel.

A UNIQUE INDUSTRY.

How Lubricating OU Is Obtained in Pennsylvania. The lubricating oil field of French Creek, in Venango County, Pennsylvania, is one of the most curious spots in all oildom. The business had its start in the well of Blacksmith Evans, at Franklin, in the ’6o’s, and since then $12,009,100 worth of oil has been taken from the few miles square of territory where this oil alone is found. Around its prescribed limits wells that yie'd argely of the regular Illuminati g oil have been drilled, but none of that kind of oil has ever been found within the lubricating oil limits. This small but rich oil district extends into the village of Franklin, the county scat of Venango County, and there are wells in many private yards in that place. The production has fallen off greatly, thoigh, and the price also. The monthly yield now is not more than 7,G0 barrels, and the price is below -4 a barrel. The oil is refined at Oil City, and eighty different commercial products result, be-ides the oil itself. Fianklin en oys a monopoly of the heavy oil trade, but th * business is conducted on a much more economical basis than when Blacksmith Evans was getting his .00 barrels a day from his pioneer well and receiving $3 ; a barrel for it. There is little or no gas in the lubricating oil rock, and every well has to be pumped. As many as fifty wells are pumped by one engine. This is accomplished by an ingenious device called the pumping rig. The wells to be pumped are connected with sucker rods screwed together, reaching out in all directions, frequently more than a mile from the engine. In the woods around Franklin these sucker rods may be encountered, working slowly back and forth with the regular motion of a piston, and no engine within sight or hearing. The same thing may be seen in the streets of Franklin, where the long arms reach in to connect with the wells in the village boundaries. 1 he wells are not pumped regularly, but by “heads. ” Twice a day there is sufficient accumulation of oil in the wells to be pumped out, and then the many-armed engines are started apd k.pt going until all the oil of that “head" is pumped out Sometimes a new well will start off with a yie d of ten or fifteen barrels a day. but this Phenomenal yield does not last long. 'aking it all in all*the lubricating oil corner of the petroleum fields is altogether unique.

A WONDERFUL INVENTION

That Originated in the Fertile Brain of a San FrincUco Man. A San Francisco man has invented a machine which will do away with typewriters, both instruments and operators, if he succeeds in perfecting his invention. The new machine combines the phonograph and the typewriter, and in looks nears considerable resemblance to a cash register. On the front of the machine are small alec trio buttons which you press before talking into the mouthpiece projecting from the u >per part. This mouthpiece is connected with a revolving cylinder which receives impressions in a way similar to the Edison phonograph. A traveling needle regulates the position of the impressions on the cylinder according to the size of the paper they are to be reproduced on. The filled cylinder is placed on rollers in the lower part of the machine. Above the rollers is a supply of paper for receiving the written characters. There are several mysteries about the working of the new invention. No ink is used, the written characters being produced in a bold, round hand by chemical action. It spells entirely by sound and is unable as yet to cope wit h the diphthong, the silent letter, the capital, the semicolon or figures, but it will receive the sound of the human voice in any language except Chinese and reproduce them in plain English cuirography.

In Our Dreams.

The Professor qf Psychology was conversing with Mr. Higgins, the grocer, as that worthy man was wrapping up five pounds of coffee for the Professor. “Did you ever notice, Mr. Higgins,” remarked the Professor, “that what occurs to you in dreams never seems to be at all strange or out of the ordinary?” “Come to think of it, Professor,” replied Mr. Higgins, “I have; but 1 never gave it much study. Now that you mention it, I recollect several dreams that I have had that seemed to be right enough until I waked up and got to thinking about them ” “Ah,” beamed the Professor, “that is interesting. Tell me about them. ” “Well,” and Mr. Higgins shoved the wrapped-up coffee across the counter to the Professor, “they didn’t amount to no great deal, I guess. I only dreamed that my wife couldn’t talk."

Hers Is a Good Work.

Miss\Wrede consecrated herself to prison work in Finland twelve years ago. From that time she has patiently, with unostentatious heroism, visited at least once every year all the prisons and every prisoner in Finland. She enters the prison in the early morning and leaves it late in the day, and every day of the year findq her steadily pursuing the same ministry. Many of the most hardened criminals have been brought to repentance through ber.

It Was All Right.

He was on the after-deck of a vessel sm OKing a cigar in violation of posted rules. The Captain approached him and pointed to the sign which read: “No gentleman permitted to smoke on the aiter-deck. ” “It’s all right, Captain,” said he, puffing into his face, a full blast of tobacco smoke, “it’s all right. Bless your soul, I'm nd ‘gentleman.’ but the way I like to smoke is a caution!" And the Captain turned and left the smoker alone In his glory.

Couldn’t Kill This Drummer.

Albert Messerly,a Wheeling (W.Va.) drummer, was thrown off the platform of a Baltimore and Ohio train and over an embankment, and an undertaker, upon a doctor’s certificate that the man died of the shock, was preparing the body for shipment home, when Messerly recovered.

Comfort After Death.

The Egyptians bestowed great la v or on their tombs and little on tneir homes. They regarded the latter as mere temporary abodes, but the former they looked on as eternal habitations.

lENSSELAEI JASfEH COUNT/. INDIANA. HUBAY DECEMBER 14 1894

an—— A Prominent Travel- / salesman. / 'I IrouxAFcm, May 10,1894. s/V / K Medicine Company; K Gextumxn—l began taking LYON’S K. eTLX’Ik SEVEN WONDERS some time since nrl foT a \ I “ d inßomnia > “ d 1 ““ gkd to state i tt l * 4 itis doing for me what all other remedies tried by me failed to do—cure xjSey W 1 me - I have about finished my third Z- n cf |F|C> W , , box and lam more than pleased with / V P"” 1 W MflD’f by its results, and I can cheerfully recom- / Fbrall eH TUP I VAN mend it to all suffering with nervous / klrniriKir dyspepsia as a first-class medicine, and MEDICINE one tilßt h“ merit. You are at liberty to use this letter in any manner you I of the W ihbianap’di it may see fit, as lam anxious indeed to I ,nu *™*™ U * J * have every one know who suffers with \ iqq I ND. this dreadful disease how to get well. Very truly yours, _ r> G . R. Rhoadsa FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. 885 North Mississippi Street, City.

POPULAR SCIENCE.

The greatest altitude in Maine is Katahdfn Mountain,which is 5:200 feet high. Prof. Ball says the actual momentum of some of the tiniest meteors is equivalent to that of a cannon ball. At sea level an object one hundred feet high is visible a little over thirteen miles. If five hundred feet high, it is visible nearly thirty miles. If two tuning forks of the same pitch are placed facing each other, the one sounding, the other silent, in a few seconds the silent one will be giving out a distinctly audible note. Scientists have determined that more than twenty terrestrial elements exist in the sun’s atmosphere. Among these are calcium, manganese, nickel, sodium, magnesium, copper, zinc, cobalt, aluminum, and hydrogen. The protection afforded to the earth by snow is shown by Ebermayer in the “Influence of Frosts.” In one observation, the temperature of the air above the snow was 6 degrees below zero; under the snow the rmometer stood at 33 degrees. According to Mulhall, the average number of days on which snow falls every year in St. Louis is eleven, in Lisbon one, in Paris thirteen, in Vienna thirty-three, in Copenhagen twentythree. in St. Petersburg sixty-two, in Moscow seventy-one, in Greenland eighty. At a late meeting of the Royal Botanic Society, the Secretary raised the question of the vitality of longkept seeds. He said that fifteen xaars was as Idng as he had undoubted evicence of a seed being kept and then germinating. He scouted the idea that seed from the hands of mummies had ever developed. The evidence of such a claim was unscientific and untrustworthy. Sir B. W. Richardson, at the same meeting, said that he had planted many seeds -found with mummies, but none had ever developed.

PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS.

Mrs. Thomas Hardy has always been a most able second in her husband’s literary work. There’s a hospital in Soo Chow, China, in charge of Dr. Anne Walter, a Mississippi woman. Mrs. J. E. B. Stewart, widow of the famous Confederate raider, is Znow the principal of a girls’ school lb Missouri. Gen. William Booth, of the Salvation Army, is about 66 years of age, and is as active and vigorous as many men of 30. Count Tolstoi laid the foundation of his literary reputation by writing news letters from Sebastopol during the Crimean war. Miss Elizabeth Fleming has been appointed crier of the United States Circuit and District Courts at Portland. Miss Fleming was previously the court stenographer. A Western bishop of the Episcopal Church says that the success of the church’s missionary operations in the far West is largely'due to the munificence of Cornelius Vanderbilt Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton has a London home at Weymouth street, Portland place, and she is accredited with being one of the halfdozen women in London able to create and hold a salon. Herbert Gladstone has. undertaken the task of raising money for a statue of Cromwell. If he succeeds in this, there will be no certainty that the statue will bepermitted to find a resting place in Westminster Abbey. Sir Arthur Sullivan at 51 is portrayed as a short-necked, thick-set, beetle-browed man, with curly black hair, mustache, and side whiskers. He is somewhat stilted in manner, and has been composing for thirty-five years.

HISTORICAL.

435, The celebrated Theodosian code made the law of the empire. 468. The principle of trial by jury inaugurated. Every accused person to be tried only by his equals. 476. The Western Empire overthrown by Odoacer; Rome taken and pillaged. 533. The Justinian code made the universal law of the Eastern Empire. 568. The semicircular arch first used; in the building of churches. 644. A school founded at Cambridge; said to be the origin of the university. 716. The art of paper making invented by the Arabs in Spain. 786. Lawyers first allowed to speak in court for their client. 792. The Gregorian chants brought to perfection and established in the ritual of the church. 802. Arabian race horses introduced into Europe by tbe Moors. 828. The famous Cathedral of St, Mark’s, in Venice, built 872. Venetian clocks made and sent to all parts of Europe. 890. Schools founded at Oxford; origin of the present university. 939. Schools of medicine founded at Cordova, in Spain 941. The Arabian numerals brought to Europe and generally adopted in mercantile transaettenx.

A MAX M> BKSME TO OOMKT UML-

1002. Paper first made from cotton rags; invention claimed by Moors and Germans. 1024. Musical scale and notes devised by Guido Aretlno. 1055. Laws passed in England forbidding men to sell their children. 1081. Doomsday book, a census of England, compiled by order of William the Conquror. 1095. The first crusade preached by Peter the Hermit 1120. Abelard’s writings; the scholastic philosophy reached comparative perfection.

Killed the Father of Rattlers.

The largest rattlesnake ever killed possibly in the entire State of Georgia was killed Saturday afternoon In the East Macon district It had twentytwo rattles and a button, making it 23 years old. It measured a fraction over five feet tn length. Nobody can be found to have heard of a rattler 23 years old. A snake that carries fourteen or sixteen rattles and a button is considered a monster In these parts, and Is looked upon with most respectful bearing. The men had quite an exciting time killing the snake. None of them dared go within several lengths of him, and when he shook his mighty bunch of rattles the noise was awful, and struck terror to the hearts of the negri-tos, causing them each time to retreat farther. They finally dispatched him with a Long pole.—St Louis GlobeDemocrat.

To the People of Rensselaer and Vicinity.

GREETING. The election is now as the World’s Fair numbered with things that are past. But say? What of the long weary evenings which are approaching as fast as the car of time can carry them. The question of most importance that comes up in connection with this thought is, “What shall I do thatlmay gain the most benefit; and have them pass the least burdensome.” The desession of past ages, is that reading, or the exercise of our musical talents are the most beneficial because by so doing we gain the golden fruit of intelligence which only the superhuman power can deprive us of. We are prepared to furnish you with any books, magazines or newspapers published in this and foreign countries, in any language, at prices that will entirely please you. • " We also make some very special offers on tea and coffee. Ours is also the exalted privilege of supplying the public with W. W. Thomas’ pure oil complexion soap.

And unto those who are weary and would rest, we have that which will give you rest unto the uttermost, in the form of Laudemen’s Bros, new adjustable bed springs, for which we are the sole agents for this county. Stepping over as it were the 10,000 grand bargains we are enabled to make you; we will close for this time, close with making an earnest appeal unto the kings and queens of the farm, entreating with them to get our prices on poultry, eggs and butter before contracting elsewhere. We extend a most sincere and hearty invitation to the public to investigate our lines and modes of business. Trusting that we may in the future sail happily together in the grand old ship of friendship, upon the deep waters of the sea of business, we would subscribe as yours most truly. For Specialties, Frederic R. Fielder & Co. Rensselaer, Ind. Office first door south of school house. '

The Bazaar, which will be held next week in John Eger's old stand, by the Presbyteiiau ladies, is for the purpose of raising money toward buildings new church. No one will deny the need. We therefore solicit your patronage. Any help you may give us wi 1 be thankfully received.

The Democratic, party in Indiana, says the Washington correspondent of- the Indianapolis Sentinel, is evidently not going to accent the defeat of last month as final. Effortf are being made to put forward a united front from now on until the next election in the hope of again bringing the state back into the Democratic column, where it should be.— Chairman Thomas Tavgart has written the D«l ocratic members of the delegation asking them to meet in Indianapolis on the Bih day of next Ja uary in order that plans may be formulated for an aggressive campaign from this time on in the state. He looks upon the defeat at the polls last month as merely temporary and believes that the party can, at the next election, if it is united and harmonious, secure control of the state. I’he members of the delegation, generally, accept Mr. Taggart’s suggestions and believe that the plan outlined by him is a good one and should be adopted. The members all recognize the fact that party unity and harmony must be the foundation for all campaigns in he future.

Go to the Ladies’ Bazaar to buy Xmas presents. You can find all kinds of fancy work at reasonable prices; also useful articles of many variet.es.

Gov Matthews, on being questioned, Friday, in regard to the report that the grand jury would not be called in Lake“county to investigate the Roby track, said: “I have been in correspondence with Judge Gillette, of Lake county, who thinksffthe grand jury, if called, will make nojindiotments against the Roby managers, and recites th a failure of their eflforts in that direction last year. Tak* ing these facts into consideration I concur in Judge Gillette’s opinion, and think it would be useless. In conjunction with the attorneygeneral, 1 am considering plans upon which to act.” It is stated by reliable authority that the govt ernor has sent on agent to Roby to make an investigation, and when this is completed the executive will spring some king new on the race track gang.

The Ladies’ Bazaar, in John Eger’s old stand, is the place to go to get Christmas presents for your friends. — t I Prof. Latta announces that dur ing the winter a farmers’ institute will be held in each county. For the past year, of the $5,000 appro priated 53,870 were expended for holding institutes, S6OO paid to the superintendent, and the remainder expended on incidentals. Bemember the Chicken Pie Supper, at the Ladies’ Bazaar, Frilay evening. Also that Dinner will be served Saturday, at 12 o’clock. Clyde, son ot N. Reeve, while wrestling with a companion, in the school yard, this forenoon, fell and fractured h ; s collar boce. Dr. Washburn hastne case in charge. Tbos. Davidson, of Fair Oaks, an old soldier, was buried in Wes ton cemetery, Tuesday. Services were conducted by the G, A. R. | The Bazaar will be open from Tuesday, Dec. 18tb, until the fol - lowing Saturday You will have an opportunity to buy all kinds of useful; nd fancy articles; also to get a good Chicken Pie Supper Friday night, and Dinner Saturn day. If the hair has been made to grow a natural color on bald heads in thousjnds of cases, by using Hall’s Hair Renewer, why will it not in your cuse? The Bergman farm of 260 acres has been sHd to A, McCoy. Irt (inn Private Funds to Loan oij,uuu on Real Estate MorU gages at Citizens’ state Bank , I Rensselaer, June 15,’94.

An esteemed correspondent in the interior of the state writes to ask if the plates for the first issue of bonds under the Cleveland administration were not prepared before the Harrison administration expired. The Free Press published the facts in this matter some weeks since, showing that Secretary Foster, before he retired from office* had ordered the plates prepared for a $50,000,000 loan. Whether the same plates were actually used for the issue made after President Cleveland came into office we are not advised; but it is es no practical importance. The fact of importance is that Mr. Harrison’s administration found itself confronted by the same necessity which confronted Mr. Cleveland’s a d proposed to meet it m the same way. Secretary Foster managed to tide the matter over until he was safely out of office; but he left the necessity as pressing as ever. The fact is worthy the attention of the calamity howlers of the Be. publican party who are railing against Mr. Cleveland for doing the same thing that his predecessor was all ready t. do.—Detroit Free Press.

It is often a mystery how a cold has been “caught." The fact is, however, that when the blood is poor and the system depressed, one becomes peculiarly liable to diseases. When the appetite or the strength fails, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla should be taken without delay. To date the reform record of triumphant Republicanism in Indiana is as follows: Supreme Court Clerk Hess guilty of nepotism.

State Geologist Blatchley, ditto. Coroner Castor, of Marion county, guity of overcharging. Attack on the state tax law; school book law; Australian ballot law. Gerrymander in sight. Partisan control of state institutions. Proposed repeal of metrop litan police law. Scramble for a seat at the pie counter. And the legislature of reformers has not yet convened. Fo other remedy is so reliable in cases of sudden colds, or coughs, or for ary and all derangements of the throat and lungs, as Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. This wonderful medicine affords great relief in consumption, even in the advanced stages of that disease. It might not have been quite parliamentary in Champ Clark to intimate, during Saturday’s debate in the House, that Congressman Boutelle was chiofly|JremarkaDle for his largeness of mouth and scarcity of brains, but then bow cou>.d he, in any other language* have con ectlv port rayed the Maine parasite?

The Bazaar to be given by the ladies of the Presbyterian congre gation,will be held m John Eger’s old stand, beginning Tuesday, Dec 18, and continue through the week. Boutelle, of Maine, wants it distinctly understood that the republican party is as much to blame for McKinleyism as the man who gave it his name. He has no patience republican congressional campaign chairman Babcock’s plan of singling out McKinley foi|ienunciation. Boutelle is correct. The republican party gave to the|coun» try the McKinley monstrosity, and it is in wretched taste, not to say rank injustice, to make the Napoleonic- visaged Major the scapegoat of the party. You will regret failure to attend the Ladies’ Bazaar to be held next week.

TOTED Ss of Nursery stoek and seed potatoes.— Highest salary and commission paid weekly, paying and permanent position guaranteed and success assumed to good mtn. Special inducements to beginners, experience not necegs ry. Exclusive territory and your own choice of ssake given. WHUERRBRSERYCO. Growers & I ropagators, Rooh„TWB,N, Y

KUKBKBig

W00D... If those of our subscribers who have promised as wood on subscription will bring it right a ong, ibsy wiU confer a great favor. ’ Theodore Smith is erecting a residence in the east part of town. Conrad Hildebrand has sold his livery stable. A large arc light is being placed at the railroad crossing, near the depot Helen, infant daughter of Robert and Ida Randle, died at their home in Rensselaer, this morning, aged about 9 months.

t novel featuie will be intro duced at the doll booth in the Ladies Bazaar noxt week. A pre mium is offered to the child under 13 who brings the best made dolls clothes, and at the dose of Bazaar will be returned. Also a premium for the oldest doll, the largest doll, the handsomest and homliest dolls. These premiums are on exhibition in Cong s drug store windows, and can be seen at any ime. P. W. Clarke, the Jeweler, altho’ carrying a large and splendid assortment of goods foi the Holiday trade will, next week, heavily increase bis stock. Subjects at the Presbyterian church text Sabbath morning: “An Incident in Zac tier’s Life. Eve ning, “Satan a Liar.” The Ladies' Bazaar will be the place to buy your holiday presents . All kinds of fancy and useful articles will be found ther., and you can also procure a good dinner or supper. A new burglar and fire proof safe, with latest improvements, has been placed in the vault of A. Me Coy & Go’s bank.

A Liberal Offer.

The enterprise of the publishers of The Youth’s Compamiom, Boston, Mass., has steadily advanced the paper year by year keeping it always in the front rank of the best perio li jals. It fills today as no other publication the popular demand for a practical family paper, one that is equally valued and enjayed by old and yonng, and free from all objectionable features. The best writers of all lands are engaged to write for its columns. Among the famous contributors for the volume for 1895 are two daughters of Queen Victoria, Mr. Gladstone, the most eminent living statesman, who has for the third time written an article expressly for The Companion; Sir Edwin Arnold, W. Clark Bussell, Ohi.rles Dickens, Frank R. Stockton, J. T. Trowbridge, Mark Twain, Cy Warman, the famous locomotive engineer, ana more than a hundred other writers who are known the world over. The Companion appeals to all, whether in the home, in professional or business life, to the educator and laborer in every department of work. Its sound, practical editorials deal frankly, fairly and concisely with the questions of the day. Every utterance may be accepted without reserve. Full Prospectus and specimen copies sent free on application. New subscribers will receive The Companion free to 1395 if they subscribe at once, sending SI. 75, the year’s subscnption'price. It comes every week, finely illusl trated. The Youth’s Companion, Boston, Mass.

NOTICE TO NON-BESIDENTB. State of Indiana, 1 County of Jasper, j ”• In Jasper Circuit Court,* ) To January Term, 1895. j Warren Robinson 1 vs. ' Henry B. Murray ot al. ) Cause No. 4792. Be it remembered, That on the 28th day of November, 1894, the above named plaintiff by Thompson & Bro., his attorneys, filed bis complaint with the Olerk of the Jasper Circuit Court, together with an affidavit that the following named defendants, to-wit: John Ivers, and Mrs. Ivers, wife of said John Ivers; Mrs. Ivers, widow of said J«.hn Ivers; Exekial Cox, and Mrs Cox, wifi of said Ezekial Cox; Mrs. Cox, widow of said Ezekiel Cox; and all of the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of the said John Ivers and Ezekial Cox, deceased, are all non-residents of the State of Indiana. Wherefore each of said nonresident defendants are hereby notified to be and appear at the Conrt House, in the Town of Rensselaer, in Jasper county, Indiana; before the Judge of said Court, on the 23d day ot January. 1895, the same being the 15th Judicial day of the regular January Tetm, 1895, which begins on the first Mond y of January, and answer or demur to said complaint, or the same will be heard in your absence. ® Witness my hand and the Seal of fsaid Court this, the“2Bth day of NoWm. H.OOOVER.CIork of the J asper Circuit Court. Thompson 4 Bro., Fl’ffs AtCye. Nov. 30,1894 $lO.