Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 June 1895 — Page 1

VOLUME XIX

Why Was It *•“* Ayer’* Sarsaparilla, out of the great uamber of similar preparations m»nnf««. taNd throughout the world, was the only medielne of the kind admitted at the World’s 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 notjprersed? BECAUSE Aeeording to Bctls 15-“ Articles § that are in any way dangerous or q offensive, also patent medicines, O nostrums, and empirical prepara- 9 dots, whose ingredients are oon- o coaled, will not be admitted to the o Exposition,” and, therefore— ® Btoautt Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is not a O patent medicine, not a nostrum, and not 2 a secret preparation*! o Btemue its proprietors had nothing to 2 conceal when questioned as to the for- o mala from which it is compounded. O Bteamtt it is all that it is claimed to be o —a Compound Concentrated Extract of O Sarsaparilla, and in every sense, worthy 2 the indorsement of this most important o committee, called together for passing O upon the manufactured products of the 2 entire world. g AyateSarsapariliy Admitted for Exhibition ® AT THE WORLD’S PAIR ®

The Indianapolis Dai'v and Weekly Sentinel circulation has leached immense proportions by its thorough service in receiving all the latest news all over the State and from its dispatches from foreign countries. Every reader in Indiana shonld take a State paper, and that The Sentinel. LARGEST CIRCULATION Of any Newspaper 11 THE sim TEEMS OF SUBBCBIPTIOK. Daily one year - - $6.0 Weekly one year - - 1.0 The Weekly Edition Has 12 PACES! SUBSCRIBE NOW And make all remittances to The ihdunapous) SENTINEL Cfc Indianapolis, Ind. This paper will be furnished with the deekly edition of The Indiana State Sentinel for $2 00.

Our 1895 Spring Catalogue 113 pages, embracing all the newest styles of Men’s and Boys’ proper Spring attire, fully Illustrated and described, quoting also some very phenomenally low prices. Is now ready. Send 1 cents in stamps and we’ll send you one postage paid. A those 1 Head to Foot yjw Boys’ If Outfits are gaining In popularity day by day, everyone admits them the greatest value ever offered for the price. One Complete Suit of Clothes One Eitra Pair of Knee Pants One Handsome Cap to Match And a First Class Pair of Shoes Any size from Sto Qfc J% 16 years, for only Samples of the cloth (all wool too) and fall description of how the outfits are made will be sent to you, postage paid and free of charge. Ask for them. THE HUB AMERICA'S LARGEST CLOTHING STORE CHICAGO.

The Democratic Sentinel.

f"celebrate ~| | Grand Bicycle Parade jjj 9:30 A. n., lead by Rensselaer Cornet Band. Q 111111 "^ eSt (^eut ' ,s costume » on bicycle $5 $ Best Girls costume, under 13 $5 J w TTFTtf Best Lady’s costume, on bicycle $5 | Best boys costume, under 13 $3 j flfKf Best clown to follow parade on foot $5. H || HORNING. i AFTERNOON. i Grand Stand Program begins 10:30 * Exercises will begin at 1:30 iLj MS .. Selection by band { Climbing Greased Pole, $2. gfej H' • • . Invocation. ' 5 Foot race: first:slo: Second iSS. SB gfe - Music bv Onarrpttp S Potato race- first $3, Second $2. || s “ by , Q™ tte - 1 Bicycle Race. §1 gw MUSIC Dy Dana J Free for all, (14 years and over) Ist, S 5; 2ad, 13: 3rd 12 Free for all, (Boys under 14 yra.) Ist, $3; 2nd, 12; 3rd, $1 jjywj uraiion. Free for all, (Girls under 14 yrs.) Ist, $3; 2nd, $2; 3rd, fl gUg ||| hon. robt. q. sears, S =Riding Bucking Hdfse - ||| cfeAj a Not over sto enter. First person riding horse to (Quartette. band* # receives the purse $lO. vfyg 1 Balloon Ascension. | H PARACHUTE DESCENT jg |g By MISS VAN GILDER OF B jjjlj Marshals of the Day—Simon Phillips, Capt. Burnham, Capt. Wasson, C. E. Mills, C. Sigler. j||jt

In Order to Order a mnchin that is always in Order, it is always in Order to Order a McCORMICK.

Real Estate Transfers.

Warrantee Deeds where n>t othrwise designated. Wm. Dye, by heirs, to Ira F. Brainaid, May 7, n end sw 25-33-6, 24 acres, Wheatfteld, 0120. James T. Randle to Robt. Randle, May 16, und. £ nw De, und. 1 renw 9-29-5, Gillam and Hanging Grove, S6OO. Alfred C. Robinson to Vinton W. Shuck, May 25, se 34-31-7, 160 acres. Union, $4,800. Alfred H. Lindley to Benj. J. Gifford, June 3, sw nw 86-31-6, 40 acres, Gillam, $350. Mary M. Vinson to Jacob D. Rich, Apr. 9, w£ nw 8-28-7, Jordan, se cor. sw sw 5-28 7, 89 acres, Newton, $8,520. Edward Sanford to Chas. W. Lowe, Mar. 1, e-£ sw, sw sw 14-29 5, Hanging Grove, $3,338. Lillian E. Troxell to Edwin G. Warren, June 8, It 14, Bruner’s Add. DeMctte, $350. Jacob Haan to John Haan, June 8, 100 acres in 23-26-32-7, Keener, $2.8Q0. M. E. Chandler to Ellen E. Graham, June 4, n$ nw 12 31-7, Keener, S6OO. Ellen E Graham to Thos. Thompson, June 1, same as above, S7OO Marion J. Gibson to Ruth .) Kuster, Mar. 9, pt It 6, Stratton s Add , R. m ’« Jus ■ R H'Tsli nan to B-nj *. , Giffo'd. June 5*4 sw, ae nw 29-31 5 jWalavr, $2,120.

RENSSELAER JASEPR COUISTTf INDIANA FRIDAY. JUNE 21.1895

Wm. J. Allen and J. II Louden, to Benj. J. Gifford, May 31, sw 15 316, 480 acres, Gillam, $4,81)0. Sam’l R. Nebula to Wm. R. Nowels, June 8. Its. 14, 15. hi 19, Weston’s Add., Rensselaer, S9OO. Huns Henry Blues to Henry F. Feldman. Mar. 18, sw ne 24-32-7, Keener, S7OO. Frederick Kroeger to Mordecni F. Cbiloote, June 10. pt Sw ne 18-31-6, acres, Walker, SSO. Henry J. Baumm to W. W. and Abram Jones, Apr. 11, w£ nw 19 825. 35 acres, Kankakee, $1,160 D ivid C. Makeev* r to Mi ah B Hnl-t-ad. June 1, pt » side lie sw 729 7, 29 acres, Newfr n. sl.ooO. David H. Ye< • man to Ela si d Rosa Cu p. bl 4, Weston's 2.rl Ad 1. Rensselaer, $1,790.

Sale of Church Building:. Notice is herehy I given that at 3 o’clock P. M. on Saturday, June 29th, 1895, the trustees of the Presbyterian church will off r at public auction the old Presby t rian 11 hureh building, on the premisis. ! R' serving the bell, pews, pulpit, and ! all personal property connected therewith; the sale to be made to the highest cash bidder. M. F. Chilci.te, F. J. Sears. John Eoer, W. B. Austin, Edward D. Rhoades, Simon Phillips, Trustees. Auctioneer. Buy a McCormick harvesting machine, save your money and stop swearin^.

“A FIRM ADHBEBNCB VO CORRECT PRINCIPLBS."

Grain will soon be ripe. Get a McCormick machine from C. A. Roberts, and cut it to youi satisfaction. Positionn (ruai’anteed. under rtasonable conditions. Do not say it can not be done till yon send for free 120 page Catalogue, of DrAUGHON’B PhACi’TCAL BI7BINESB College* asbville, Tenn. This college is strongly indorsed by bankers and merchants all over the United States as well as Foreign Countries. 4 weeks by Craughon's method of teaching bookkeeping is equal t<> 12 weeks by the old plan.— Special adva. tages in Shortnand, Penmanship, and Telegraphy. Cheap board. Open to both sexes. 36 states ana teri itories now represented . Write for 120 page catalogue which will explain “all.” Ad iress J. F. Draughon, Pres t, Nashville, Tenn. (Mention this paper.) N B.—This College has prepared books for hom? study; book keeping, penmanship and shorthand. Austin, Hollmgsworth & Co. are now the proprietors of the only complete set of Abstract Books i Jasper county, and are prepared to furnish Abstracts of Title on short notice and reasonable terms. a .i i ■ n • o»• ■ i ■■ i C. A. Roberts sells McCormick harvesting machines. * They satisfy. . *

Church jDireetov.y. PRESBYTERIAN. Rev. M. R. Fabadis, Pastor. Sabbath School, 9*30 a. m. Publio Worship, 10:45 a. m. Junior Endeavor, 3:00 p. m. Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30 p. m. Public Worship, 7:30 p. m. Prnyer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Rev. R. D. Utter, Pastor. Sabbath School, 9:30 a. m. Public Worship, 10:45 n. m. Class Meeting, 11:45 a.m. Epworth League, Junior, 2rSO p. m. Epworth League, Senior, 6:30 p. m. Public Worship, 7:30 p.m. Epworth League, Tuesday, 7:60 p. no. Prayer Meeting. Thursday, 7:30 p. m. g&H * CHRISTIAN. Rev. J H. Bbady, Pastor. Bible Sohool, 9:30 a. m. Publio Worship, 11:45 a.m. Junior Endeavor, 2:30 p. m. Y P. S. C, £., 6.30 p. do. Public Worship, 7,30 p. m. Pnyer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.

A genuine first class top buggy only $41.60 at Rob* Randle’s. L- A- BOSTWICK, ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR. Maps and Blue Prints OP mm u* sni. LAND DRAINAGE, Map Work and Platting a Speeialty, Renssblaer, Into.

by / Midi THE LYOIt mtts\ HL Dl r cltiE For Sale by all Druwists.

Mi Is Resuming Work and Erected.

The Missouri furnaoa company of St. Louie, Missouri, ii completing extensive repairs to its furnace*, end will blow in one of its two ateoks the premat month. Foundry and Beseemer pig iron will be made. An application will be nude for e charter for the Shenango furnace company of Greenville, Pennsylvania, with a capital stock of $200,000. The oompsny will ereot a large blast furnace at Gresnvil e. The OonnellsvUle coke maker* are getting closer together, and expeot to have their organisation completed wlthiu e short time. All oontraots will have e labor olanse, providing for an increase of 2 cents e ton for ooko for every advanoe of 1 oent in mining 100 bushels of ooal. Demand fob Fobqe Ibon. The Standard oii company has given otice that hereafter it will not reooive or nee sheet steel in the construction of Its tanks, ours, pipes, eto. This will greatly inore •se the demand for form pig iron for puddling, as the Stenderdis e large consumer or iron for the purpose mentioned. I The starting up of many rolling mills equipped for the manufacture of muok bar. eoms of wbioh have been idle two or three yarn, has naturally oreated a big demand for forgo iron suitable for puddl ng purposes. Inquiries for iron for this purpose received in a single day recantly by a leading soother* company exceeded 20.000 tone. The Illinois steel oompany of C ioego haa leased for two years, with the option of pnrohase, the plant of the Corning steel oompany at Hammond, Indiana. It will run the mills to their fullest capacity fora the production of light sheets. The Westingbousc air-brake works at Wilmerdlng, Pennsylvania, are running with a larger foroe at present than for many months. The Keystone iron works of Bending, Pennsylvania, which have been Idle three years, resum' d operations Jnne 10, giving employment to 126 person', The Borne cotton tie oompany at West Borne, Georgia, i to resume work ut its mill and manufacture cotton ties. The mill has been closed two years. Beyfsrt's rolling mill at Gibrslter, Pa., which has been idle for two years, wilt resume work this month; this firm will employ 300 men. • No. 2, open-hearth furnaoe of the Pennsylvania steel oompany, at Steelton, Pa , having a capacity of fifteen tons, has resumed after an idleness which began in Ootobor, No. 1 furnaoe has also resumed.

Will Employ 200 Men. 'J he American steel easting oompany, which controls the Norristown steel company’s plant, has desidsd to resume work at that place This will give employment to al.out 200 men. The works have been idle over a year The oompany baa deelttied •■lividendof 34 per cent, to ita preferred stockholders; the oompany owns slants wt Jhurlow. Pittsburg, Sharon, ennsvlvauii; Alliance, Ohio; Byraonse, New York, and Norristown, Pa All are in bnt Byraonse and Norristown, and the increase in the volume of business justifies the opening of the latter. The Union steel and iron oompany, of Yonngstewn, Ohio, recently started up its puddling f urnaoes at Girard, that state, after having been idle for a long time The plant is now in operation in all departments. Ground has been broken for a new rod mill at Joliet, 111. The Sheffield coul, iron and steel oompany, with a capital of $750,000, composed of Pennsylvania and Tennessoe capitalists, has been organized at Sheffield, Alabama, and has acquired blast furnaces with a S' paoity of 450 tons a day, 70 000 acres of mineral lands f 300 ooks ovens at Jasper, Alabama, and the Gamble and Carbon valley coal mines, The Hyde Park, Pennsylvania, iron and steel company will soon pnt its mill in operation. A oompany has been formed at New Castle, Pennsylvania, for the manufacture of tubes for bicycles and boiler flues of steel drawn oold without welding. The capacity of the plant will be 4,000,000 feet of tubing yearly, and about 160 men men will be employed. Meobinery for the Valley steelworks at Alexandria, Indiana, has bean reoeived and the plant will be ready for operation soon. Employment will be famished for about 800 men.

At Gbanite City, 111, The immense steel works whioh the St Louis stamping company Is ereoting at Granite City, Illinois, are fast nearing completion. Two twenty-five-ton furnaces are almost completed, whioh, when running full, will have a oapacity of 100 tons per day bix additional furnaces are contemplated. The new tin-plate ylant of the La Belle iron works at Wheeling, W. Ya., was put in operation (last week. The new plant of the Ohio river sheet and tin-plate company at Remington station, Pennsylvania, has been completed. Operations will be begnn about July 15. It is expeoted that the plant of tne Frankfo t steel forge works at Ellwood City, Pennsylvania, will be completed and in operation by July 1. The plant will employ 50 to 100 men. Enoch Stanford, of Middletown, Indi a na. has closed a contract with t e Muskegon chamber oi commeroe of Muskegon, Michigan, to take the Mnakegon rolling mill eompany’s old plant andeoavert it into a tin-plate mill.

The Business Man's Statement. LaFayettb, Ind., May 2, MN. Lyon Medicine Co., JndumapoHe, Ini.: Gentlemen —lt ia with pleasure that I can conscientiously say a good word for LYON’B SEVEN WONDERS. For more than a year I was troubled with indigestion and stomach disorders. Various remedies which I tried gave me no relief, until one day Met summer I was told by a brother drummer of the virtues es LYON’S SEVEN WONDERS. I concluded to try it, and am happy to say one bos, oosting only one dollar entirely cured me. To thoee who auffer M I did I would strongly advise them to «m LYON’S SEVEN WONDERS. Yours truly, Jon B. Sfbnoeb, State Agent Royal Bukins Powder Company.

William Griffin ot Jr*it sharp, Pennsylvania, who *»■ one of the first to enter into the tin-plat* bnaineai, will eoon eommenoe the erection of e new plant at North Weabington, Pennsylvania. It will ooat $160,000 and employ about 300 men. Book in Steel Billets. The ateel billet industry la experiencing a boom. Prioes are at leaat $3.26 higher than they were three months ago, and all the mule have more work on hand than they oaa take oare of. At Pittsburg the «reat Carnogie company, whose mills are the largest steel billet eapaoity of any plant in the country are re using to book any orders for delivery earlier than July, and at many other plants in that elty the same state ot affairs prevails. The Ellwood City, Pennsylvania, tinplate mill has put on a number of extra men. The Atlanta steel and tin-plate company of Atlanta, Indiana, is running two hot mills and three oold mills with a third hot mill under oontraot Every department of the Homestead steel works was running double turn last week, with the sin Je exception of the ermor platepepartment. The Bteelton w rks of the Pennsylvania steel company are orowded with orders The demand for manufactur'd as well as steel bloems and slabs is very good,! an 1 all the departments are working full time. l'ha force of thelrondale tin-plate company of Middletown, Indiana, fa to be increased by about 260 men Two extra mills hart been started. Wages Advanced. Chicago (III.) pipe works, 2,300 men, 10 per oaat.; Lewiston (Me.) cotton mills, 7 peroent.; Allentiwn(Pa.) ironworks, 10 peroent.; Knoxville(Tenn.) ironworks, 10 per cent.; Utica, (N. T.) cotton mills, 10 peroent.; Oswego (N, T.) iron works, 10 per cent.: Bessemer (Ala.) iron mill, 7,500 men, 10 per oent.

Do You Want to Stop Tobacco? YcuCan Be Cubed While Using It. The habit of using tobaooo grows on a man nntll grave diseased conditions are produosd. Tobaooo eausss oan< er of the mouth and stomaoh; dyspepsia; loss of mamory; nsrvon- affeotions; congestion of the retina, and wasting of the optic nerve, resulting in impairment of vision, even to tbs extent of blindness; dizziness, or vertigo; tobacco asthma; nightly snffooation; dull pain in region of vhe heart, followed later by sharp ptins, palpitation and weakened pnlse, resnlting in fatal heart disease. It also oansss loss of vitality. QUIT. BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. To qnit suddenly Is toj severs a shook to the system, as tobacco—to an Inveterate rear, becomes a stimulant that bis system oontinnally craves. “BACO-O'JRO" is a scientific and reliable vegetable remedy, guaranteed to be perfectly harmless, and whioh has been in use forth# last 23 years, bavingoured thousands of habitual tobaooo users—smokers, obewers, and snuff, dippers. You can use all the Tobaooo you want, while taking “Baoo-Cubo," it will notify you when to stop. We give a written guarantee to peimanently oureCany case with three boxes, or refund he money with 10 percent, interest. ü ßaoo-Cubo" is not a substitute, but a reliable and sebntiflo cure—wich absolutely destroys tbs craving for tobacco withont the aid of wil, power, nhi with no inoonvenienoe. It leaves the system as pure ard free from nicotine, as the day you toob your first chew or smoke. Bold by all druggists, at $1 00 per box, three boxes, (thirty davs treatment, and Guabantbed Cube,) $2 50, or sent diroot upon receipt or price. Bend Bix Two. Cent Stamps fob sample Box, Booklet and Pboofs Free. Eureka Chemical A Manufacturing Company, Mannfaotoricg Chemists, La Crosse, Wisconsin. v19u21)

M ► LOST! „ A roll of money, (currency) more than $20.00 and leas than $6000; exact amount not proper to state here. Finder will be liberally rewarded. Call on R. W. Mabshall, Attoruey. We announced last week that several hundred manufacturing firms had voluntarily increased the wages of their employees 10 to 15 per cent. And the work go s bravely on in that direction. Un« der the McKinley bill the reverse of this was the order of the day —decrease in wages, followed by strikes. Republican legislatures are necessarily pernic ous. The Indiana body broke up in"a row, and now the Illinois assembly has ad* journed in delirium tremens, h je to hereby given that I will be a my iiice at John A. Knowltou’s. in Jor u n -owns ip, oi i.• Fourth Saturday o eaon month lor th j transaction of bus! ness connected *Hh tba duties of Trustee. JAMES H. CABS, Trustee Jorda Township*

NUMBER 24