Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 December 1896 — Page 8
omocrmk gsnfua PMOIT DECEMBIB 4 189«. jjnoco* at the poauJße at Rensselaer. Ind ae see*n4-ci»e««iattar.)
gililllilllllilii fa)UlllSVlLlLHEWtlßi>infßCNMf^ M ONON'BOUTE. Rensselaer Tune-Table In effect Sept. 11th, 1896. SOUTH BOUND. No 31—Feet Mail (don't stop) 448 a m No s—Louisville Mail, Daily 10 55 am No 33 -IndianapolielMail, 1 53 p m No 39—Milk ac om 2., Daily, 6 03 p m No B—Louisville Express Daily 11 20 No 46—Local freight, 240 * NORTH BOUND. No 4 Mail, 4 30 am No 40- Milk accom., Daily, 731 ” \o32—Fasi Mail, 965 “ No 30—Cin. to Chicago Vestibnl«,6 19 pm No B—Mail and Express, Daily, 330 * N } 46—Local freignt, 9 30 a m No 74—Freight, 7 40 p m No. 74 oarries p issengers between sionon and Lowell. No 30 makes no stop between Rensselaer and Englewood. No. 32 makes no stop between Rensselaer and Hammond. Train No. 5 h-s a through coach for Indianapolis and Cincinnati via Roaohdale arrives at Indianapolis 2:40 p. m. Cincinnati 6 o’olook p. m. No 6 has through coach; return, leaves Cincinnati 8:30 a. m.,l,aves Indianapolis ll:5u a. m. arrives at Rensselaer 3:30 p. m. daily. W. H. BEAM, Agent.
EVERY TRAVELING MAN 8H ULD HAVE ONE. ißtechaag'abls IJM Tickets. They Cost But $20.00 Each, and Can Ba Purchased of Any Agont oi The M»R|olulf|gl They sre good for one year from date of sale and good for passage e the follow mg lines: Baltimore A Ohioßß. (Lines west of Pittsburg & Ben wood, including Wheel ing A Ptttsburg Division.) Baltimore A Ohio Southwestern R’y.— (I’oim L 38.) All Divisions. Buffalo, Rochester A Pittsburg B’y. Cincinnati, Hamilton A Dayton RR.— (Form ID 2 1 All Divisions. Cincinnati, Portsmouth & Virginia RR (Between Cincinnati and Portsmouth only) Cleveland Terminal and Valley R’y. Columbus, Hocking Valley A Toledo R’y Columbus, Sandusky A Hooking RR.— (Form T) Findlay, Fort Wayne A Westorn R’y Indiana, Deoatnr & Western R'y Indiana. Illinois A iow* AR. Louisville, Evansvil.e & At Louis RR. - (Form B) Good oniy for continuous passage between Louisville and Evans ville, Evansville and St Louie, undLou isville an i St Louis) Louisville, New Albany A Chicago R’y Tew York, Chicago A St Louis RR Pittsburg, Shenango A Lake Erie RR Toledo, St Louis A Eahsas City RR—(Form L 8) Wheeling A Lake Erie Ry (Form H) The above lines afford the commercial traveler acoees to the principal cities and towns in Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and Een tacky, with through lines to St Louis. Ths train servioe of the Mon n Route ino.ndes all the conveniences devised to make traveling a pleasure. Vestibnled trains, with parlor and dining cars n all day trains; Pullman buffet and oowpart ment sleeping cars on ah night trains.Special features: „Steam Heat, Pintsoh Light. Sidney B. Jones, City Pass Ag’t, 232 Clark St, Chicago. Aeo. W. Hayler, Dis, Pass. Ag’t, 2 W. Washington St.,lndianapolis. E. H. Bacon, Dist. Pass. Ag’t, 4 h and Market Sts, Louisville. W. H. McDOEL, Receiver and Gen’l Mgr. FRANK J. REED, Gen. Pass. Ag’t. Oeneral Offices: 189 Custom House Place, Chioago.
Olvixrcli Oireetory. PBESBYTEBIAN. Bey. M. B. Pabadis, Pastor. 8 abbatb Sohool, 9-30 a. mPublio Worship, 1U:45 a. m Junior Endeavor, 3:00 p.m* I. P. 8. 0. fi., 8:30 p. m Public Worship, 7:30 p. m - Player Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.mMETHODIST EPISCOPAL. Bey. B. D. Utxeb, Pastor. Sabbath Bohool, 9:30 a. m. Public Worship, 10:45 a. m. Olaas Meeting, 11:45 a. m. n,pworth League, Junior, 2:30 p. m. Epworth League, Senior, 6:30 p. m. Publie Worship, 7:30 p. m. Epworth League, Tuesday, 7:80 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. CHBIBTIAN. Bible Sohool, 9:30 al m. Publio Worship, 11:45 a, m. Junior Endeavor, 2:30 p.m. r, P. S. C. E., 6.30 p. m. Publio Worship, 7,30 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. WANTED— FAITHFUL MEN OB women to travel for responsible established house in Indiana. Salary S"3O and expenses. Position permanent. Deference. Enclose self-addressedstamped envolope. The National, Star Insurance Bldg., Chicago. Tuesday last Mrs. J . W. Williams gave a surprise party in honor of tbe 77th birth-day of her father, Uncle John Makeeve. A goodly number of old-time ac • quaintances were present to greet him and extend congratulations.— May he li ve to enjoy the return of many more such occasions. wm* roiwoston airoraea to the earth J* mow Is shown by Ebermayor in tbe •Inflame# of Frosts.” In one observation, the temperature of the air above the mow was 6 degrees below sero; yadarthesaow thermometer stood at 38 *’ ——
THE ANNUAL BAZAAR! Tae ladies of the Presbyterian Ghurch will pen their annual Bazaai in the Nowelsblock, WecL nesday, December lJt'i. Mrs. E. Rhoades, Sec’y. Cobs for sale, 50 cts. a load, de« hvered. Phone 151. W. fl. Churchill. Advertised Letters—Mrs MoL l«e Fults Mrs. L. J. Beedy, Mr. Joseph Warner, Weslry Hamilton. Woik's rapidly progressing on the new court house. Read the aunonceme t of the Monou concerning their inters changeable 1000-mile tickets. Wheat 70 @ 75; rye 25; old corn 21; new corn 17 (f/, 18; hay $5. Ex Sheriff Hanley has entereu the profession of raw. Office upstairs in Forsythe’s new building. Purchase and sale of real estate, collections and insurance.
A Home Industry. Make yous city grow by patronizing home industry. Smoke cigars that a.e manufactured in Rensselaer, ai dget the best value for your money. The brands are “Coleridge,” 69,” “New Court House” and “Horde L.” A. Lewis, Cigar Manufacturer. Swaney Makeever received a telegram Tuesday announcing the death of his brother David, at Carrington, North Dakota. The remains will be brought here for interment.
December term, commissioners’ will begin next Monday Sheriff Reed will occupy the L. F. Bartco property, across the river Aua tn Hopkins, a former resident of this placo, will occupy the property just vacated by Yal. Soib. Val Seib has concluded to become a residsnt of New York city. The General Van-Rensselaer Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.
The paper of the occasion will be presented by Mrs. Longhridge and Mrs. Honan.
Beauty is your Duty Abundant, gloaay hair, is beauty’s crowning glory. To wear this crown, use AYER’sTuiR vigor. ‘Judge’ Healy visited Chicago this week and purchased an additional supply for his stock of boots and shoes. The judge’s judgm j nt of a good article, will soon make his establishment a DODular resort for that line of goods. Farm Loans. Wi are prepared to make farm loans at a lower rate of interest than any other firm in Jasper county. The expenses will be as low as the lowest. Call and see us. Office in Odd Fellows’ Temple, near the Court House. WARREN & IRWIN.
W..U SALESMEN. nlfuiiw want one or two man in each Oounty to taka ordars tor Nursery Stock, and are willing to pay wall for good work. Wa agree to REPLACE FBEE anything that diaa from natural oauaea. Wa alao havo a choice line of SEED POTATOES. GIVE US A TBIAL. THE HAWKS NUBSEBY COMPAN3, v20n33 Milwaukee, Wis. •Judge’ JEfealy will hereaft r keep on hand a select stock of ready made boots and shoes, and will also continue to manufacture to order work entrusted to him.— The judge’s well known good judg ment of quality, workmanship and prices in his line will be a drawing card for patronage. HOLLISTER & HOPKINS. The new partners but old millers, are now in full charge of the owels mill, and prepared to do custom grinding promptly, in the best manner, and all other business in their line. Give them a call. Judge Healy’s is the place for Bhoes—Genes', Ladies’ and Child* ren’s. Don’t forget it. * Bob Johnson will furnish you the Daily lndianapolie Sentinel at 60 cents per month. Suitler “Come in boys We can laundry for yoa all as well as one “boys.” Increasing trade acquires more shelving in Judge Healy’s Btore.
Dissolution of Partnership. The firm of Thompson & Bro. is mutually dissolved. The debts and credits of the firm will be paid by and to David J. Thompson. Simon P. Thompson. Mabion L. Spitleb. David J. Thompson.
Simon P. Thompson, a mambtr of the firm of Thompson <k Bro., of Rensselaer, Indiana, having been elected to the office of Circuit Judge, said firm has been dissolved by mutual consent, after an existence of over twenty-six years, and had come to be regarded as among the leading legal firms in the State.
Frank Foltz and Harry R. Kurne, who have been in the law department of the office for some years will continue in the law business under the firm name of Foltz & Kurrie. They are young gent emeu of recognized ability, studious, ambitious, of good habits, and are fortunate in stepping into a well established businesv, which they will eideavor to retain and increase by close application and strict attention devoted to the interests of their clientage. Marion L. Spitler, a member of the old firm, and Charles G. Spitler will conduct the abstract and loau business under the firm name of M. L. Spitler A Son. ")f these gentlemen anything .ve might say would be superfluous They have long been engaged in the depart > ment which they will oontinue, and have extorsive acquaintance and experience. David J. Thompson will settle the accounts of the old firm. Since the ab ve aanounoement M. L. Spitler has withdrawn, and the new firm, name will be Foltz, Spitler (C. G.) & Kurrie.
Monon Chronicle: Sigler and Sayler, of Rensselaer have been lere this week <.nd assure the citizens that they will put in stone crushers that will employ about forty people. If a few minor details are settled to the satisiaction' of these gentlenr n they will also place in operation a strictly first class electric light plant. The annual grand masquerade ball of the Rensselaer Fire De partment will come off the evening of December 31s-. The Rensselaer Lecture Club has the following popular list en* gaged for the dates named: Jan 19, Rev. Frank Bristol. Feb- 18, The Tennesseeans, March 25, Dr. Willetts. April 9, Col. Copeland. John Kohler has finished the brick for the new court house and is delivering them as fast as needed.
AoENiib ha libO isotiiing uo. iu* i. «. i 4r»uu vi lik# h: tloua ‘.i ueuer,ii iVols.u a. Recollacueuerui o. &. a., ujw r utta Mile», Major ot i eibouui AUveuiure*, y. Naratives Xnuiaiitxc uuoai Wandtrful E«rmu..u anos«, Dasperata tiers. Braves, Scalping of Helpless Bst. mg In all the realms ot flehon, nothin more wierd anil faaoanaring oan ha und than the story of the Famous Indian fcuupaigns of Gen. Miles. A massive volume, Bxlo inches, 600 panes near y 200 Illustrations. Sold only thro’ our authorized agents; exalusive territory granted. Book agents for two years past hive been ooking for a fast selling book and in this book you will ffnd It. It offers a rare opportunity for the agent to m ke money. Agents who desire choice of territory must not pro ptly. Complete outfit onlv $1 00 postpaid. For terms and territory, aiaress FORSHE & McMAKIN, Corner sth & Elm streets, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Shade and Fruit Treess for Bale We have a large variety of Maple, Ash and CatapaTrees for fall delivery. Will deliver No. 1 trees in Rensselaer at 25 cents each. Also a fine assortment of fruit trees, giapes, etc., ot low figures. F. A. WOODiN, Foresman, Ind. Call on Berget Penn for Drain Tile. Office over Ellis & Murray’s store.
Mb it Son-Mills, State of Indiana, / County of Jaaper, j 88: In the Circuit C'urt, . January Term, 1897, Louis F. Hopkins vs. John T. Wampler, and Mrs Wampler wife of said John T Wampler. John T Wamplei, and Mrs Wampler wife of said John T Wampler, are hereby notified that Louis F Hopkins has filed his complaint to foreclose a mortg,ge upjn certain real estate in said county, in which said defendants appear to have an interest, and that said cause will come np lor hearing on the seoond day of the next term of the Jasper Circuit Court, to be held at the Court House, in the Town pf Bensselaer, in ■aid County and State, commencing Monday, January 4th, 1897. Witness my hand and the ( —• i seal of the Jaspei Cir■n Seal. - cnit Court, this Novem--1 -—’ bor 4th, 1896. Wm. H. COOVEK, lei* Jasper Circuit Court. Wm. B. Austin. Att’y for Plaintiff. Nov. 6, 1896-$6.
the fading or falling the hair. Luxuriant Strcaaea am far mere to the matron than te the mail wkeee eaebat of charm* i* yet anriflafl by tea. Beautiful wonsen will bn glad to bo reminded that felling ar fedfeg fca% ia unknown to tbooo who tuo Ayer’s {ggfr VJftr.
When you boy Sarsaparilla Ask for the best and you’ll Get Ayer’s. Ask for Ayer’s and you’ll get The Best.
Woman used to sweep everything before her, but this season she sweeps everything behind her.—Elmira sette. Ths busy men of the world are the beet men, provided they are busy with their own business. —Richmond Recorder. Tirana are times when forbearance abases to be a virtue, but never when you are bothering somebody else. —Bomervllle Journal. It is easy to tell when a man is flattering your neighbor, but It isn’t so easy to decide when he is flattering you. —Somerville Journal. Some people make home the dearest plaoe on earth, while others are never satisfied unless it Is the very cheapest. —Richmond Recorder.
JAPANESE PROVER 3& Proof is better than theory. Unless blind and deaf, one cannot be impartial. The ignorant are never defeated in any argument. A woman with a three-inch tongue ean slay a giant. Doubting minds will ever bring t •warm of demons. When the sense of sbame is lost, adranee meat ceases. IN trying to straighten her horns, •he cow was killed. The dog chases out the quail, but the eagle claims it. With a mote in the eye, one can no* ice the Himalayas. Before trying how back, one should 'tarn to ride ou oxen. atlinci: is tho r;.po of advanceBent, in ail lines of life. A thousand-foot embankment will be broken by the hole of an ant. It is easy to got a thousand soldiers, but difficult to find one general. The escaping warrior, after defeat, (ears the trembling of the grass. A GENTLEMAN will be careful not to Jtop to retie his shoe-lace beside another's watermelon field. Even the devil is Interesting a) wventoen years, os peasants tea is fragrant at the first drawing. If water becomes too pure, fish cannot live in it; If people be too exacting fellow-beings cannot stand beikii them. OUT OF THE ORDINARY. Tobacco grows wild in somo parts c: I.'oxaa A swallow will eat 6,000 flies in a iay and then hunt for more. Mrs. Lucinda P&rry. of Tldlod. vlo., has married a widower wttn tun* 'ec» child fw*
Fifty Years Ago. No theory of germs to chill Affection's budding blisses; When ardent lovers took their fill, No microbes on their kisses. How happy they were not to know The germ-fad— so years ago. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is the standard family remedy of the world for colds, coughs and lung diseases. It is not a palliative, and is not therefore put up in small cheap bottles. It is put up in large bottles for the household. They cost more but cure more. Pads come and go but no theory or fad can overthrow the fact, that the greatest cure for all colds, coughs and throat and lung diseases, is Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. 50 Years of Cures.
lies fa Ws of Ceiiuo Streets AND ALL El S IN TO WN OF VIEGIE. State of Indiana,) County of Jasper. ) 88 ‘ Notice is hereby siven that a petition will be presented to the Board of Commissioners of the Oounty of Jasper, State of Indiana, at the December session, 1896, ol said Board, praying for the vaoation of certain streets and alloys in the Town of Virgie, in said County and State, whioh streets and alleys are as follows: Florence Avenue, Drexel Avenue, Madison Boulevard, Washington Avenue, Englewood Place, Belleview Court, ana Lincoln Avenue. Also all of the following streets lying west of Arlington Avenue, to-wit; Oxford Street, St. Charles Boulevard, Broadway, and Woodlawn Street, also al'of Commonwealth Street. Also said petitioner prays for the vacation of the lollowing alleys runningnorth and south through the centers of the following blooks:—3 to 9 inolusive, 10 to 16 inclusive, 21 to 27 inclusive, 28 *0 34 inolusive, and 39 to 46 inolusiTe. That all the real estate bordering on and lying along said streets and all ys is owned by Willi mB. Austin. Dated this 13th day of October, 1896. WILLIAM B. AUSTIN. Ootob«r 23 1896
A QUEER PERSONAGE. Oea, Ton Hm«lw, tki Moltke •( the rro ent, end Hle Eccentrteftle*. One of the most extraordinary and at the same time important personages of the German army Is Gen. Count von Beseler. who commands In chief the troops in Alsace-Lorraine, and than whom no one stands higher in the esteem and regard of his Emperor. Yet there is no man whom one would imagine at first sight less likely to excite such sentiments on the part of a monarch like Raiser Wilhelm. The General has nothing of the trim, wellgroomed and natty appearance of the German officer about him. There is no man that dresses worse: his uniforms, hanging about him like old rags, are greasy and worn, and give him an aspect of an antiquated umorella. He disdains all the artifices of the toilet, lives on the coarsest kind of food and seems to grudge every moment that he wastes either at the table or in bed. He drinks nothing but water, has a heart that is utterly Insensible to the charms of the fair sex and is all twisted and warped in figure. This is owing to the face that he was dangerously wounded in the war of 1870 at the battle of Saint Private, where he lost two ribs. He has been obliged to wear ever since a sort of silver braoe, or oorset He has no ear for music, and has been heard to make the remark that it was only calculated to please imbeciles—-a remark which was naturally at once conveyed to the Kmperor, who had just been expressing the utmost enthusiasm about Wagner. But the Emperor puts up with everything from Heseler, whom he regards as the only man capable of succeeding Moltke. and who in his maneuvers a couple ot years ago, when his majesty assumed charge of one of the rival armies, had the temerity to surround and capture his sovereign. At the same time it is not agreeable to serve under the General as either officer or soldier. It is a frequent sight to see him stop a soldier in the most crowded thoroughfare of Meta and to make him remove his boots and stockings to see if his feet are as immaculate as demanded by military regulations.
DEATH AFTER ALL HOT SO GRIM. The Final Hour Usually Brings Neither Fear nnr Pain. Familiarity with death is apt to alter one’s earlier conceptions of it. Two ideas are very generally accepted which experience shows to be false. One is that the dying usually fear death; and the other, that the act of dying Is accompanied by pain. It is well known to all physicians that when death is near its terrors do not seem to bo felt by the patient. Unless the imagination is stimulated by the frightful portrayal of the “pangs of death,” or of the sufferings which some believe the soul must endure after dissolution, it is rare, indeed, that the last days or hours of life are passed in dread. Oliver Wendell Holmes has recorded his protest against the custom of telliug a person who does not actually ask to know that he cannot recover. As that loving observer of mankind asserts, so must everyone who knows whereof ho speaks assert that people almost always come to understand that recovery is impossible it is rarely needful to tell myone that this is khf, case. When nature gives the warning death appears to be as little feared as sleep. Most sick persons are very, very tired: sleep—long, quiet sleep is what they want. I have seen many people die. 1 have never seen one who seemed to fear death except when it was or seemed to be rather far away. Even those who are con tantly haunted while strong and well with a dread of the end of life forget their fear when that end is at hand. As for the act of dying—the final passage from life to death—it is al> solutely without evidence that the oftrepeated assertions of its painfulness are made. Most people are unconscious for some hours before they die and in the rare fuses where consciousness is retained unimpai ed until a few minutes before the end the last sensation must be of perfect calm and rest. It is worse than cruel to add to the natural dread of death which oppresses the majority of us while in good health the dread of dying.—Dr. J. W. Roosevelt, in Scribner.
PERSONAL. PARAGRAPHS. Mrs. Thomas Hardy has always been a most able second in her busband’s literary work. There’s a hospital in Soo Chow, China, in charge of Dr. Anne Walter, a Mississippi woman. Mrs. J. a B. Stewart, widow of the famous Confederate raider, is 'now the principal of a girls’ school in Missouri Gen. William Booth, of the Salvation Afmy, is about 66 years of age, and is as active and vigorous as many men of SO. Count Tolstoi laid the foundation of his literary reputation by writing news letters irom Sebastopol during the Crimean war. Miss Elizabeth Fleming has been appointed orier of the United States Circuit and District Court* at Portland. Miss Fleming was previously the court stenographer. A Western bishop of the Episoopal Churoh says that the suocess of the churoh’s missionary operations in the far West is largely due to the munificenoe of Cornelius Vanderbilt. Mrs. Louibe Chandler Moulton has £ London home at W T eymouth 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 be permitted to : nd a resting place In Westminster Abcev.
Mice to Muitt. The State of Indiana, ) Jasper Comity f In the Jasper Circuit Court, January Term, 1897. William P Irwin 1 vs v Complaint No 5163 Lois Penwright, ) Now oomes the Plaintiff, by Arthur H Hopkins, his attorney, and files his complaint neruin, together with an affidi vit that the defendant Lois Penwright is not a resident of the State of Indiana Notice is therefore hereby given said Defendant, that unless she be and appear on the first day of the next Torm of the Jasper Circuit Court, to be holden on the first JMonday of January, a d 1897, at the Court House in Rensselaer, in’said County and State and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in her absence In Witness Whereof I hereunto set my t —-1 hand and affix the Seal • f ] Seal [■ said Court, at Rensselaer, ' —i— J Indiana, this 28th day of Ootobar, A d 1896 Wm H COOVER, Clerk A H Hopkins, Att’y for’pl’ff October 30, 1896—f6
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