Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 December 1896 — Page 8

fenwrraiti FRIDAY DECEMBER 25 1896. Ritered at the pontoffic-*t Reneeelaer. Ind m »econd-Ciß*e matter.)

(iHiVliTl'lilhiW ' • *• - - b MONON ROUTE. Rensselaer Time-Table Tn effect Sept. 11th. 1896. SOUTH BOUND. No 31—Fast Mail (don't stop) 448 a m No s—Louisville Mail, Dai'y 10 55 am No 33 —lndianapolisMail. 1 53 p m No 39—Milk ac om Daily, 6 03 p m No B—Louisville Express Daily 11 20 “ No 45—Local freight, 240 “ NORTH BOUND. No 4 Mui’. ‘ 4 30 a m No 40 Mik iccom.. Daily, 731 ■" NO 32—F isi Mail, 955 No 30—Cin. to Chicago Vestibule,6 19pm No B—Mail and Express, Daily, 330 N J 46 Local freignl, 9 30am No 74—Freight, 7 40 j n No. 74 carries p >sseugers Tietween Monon 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 tnrongh coach for In-dian-polis and Cincinnati via Roachdale arrives at Indian ipolis 2:40 p. m. Cincinnati 6 o'c ock p. in. No 6 h>s through coach; retu n, leaves Cincinnati 8:30 a. m.,1 aves Indian polls ll;5v a. m. arrives at Rensselaer 3:30 p, m. daily. W. H. BEAM, Agent.

EVERY TRAVELING MA 7 8H ULD HAVE ONE. I,IMs lite. They Cost But $20.00 Each, and Car Be Purchased of Any Agent of Th« They ere good for om year from date of sale and good for passage e the follow ing lines: • Baltimore & Ohio RR (Lines west of Pittsburg &. Benwood, including Wheel ing & Pittsburg Division.) Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern R’y.(Foim L 38.) AU Divisions. Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg R’y. Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton RR.— (Form ID 2 ) All Divisions. Cincinnati, Portsmouth & Virginia RR (Between Cincinnati and Portsmouth only) Cleveland Terminal and Valley R’y. Columbus, Hocking Valley &, Toledo R’y Columbus, Sandu.ky <V Broking RR (Form T) Findlay, Fort Wayne & Westorn R’y Indiana, Decatur & Western R’y Indiana, Hlinois & iowa AR. Louisville, Evansvil.e & St Louin RR. ■(Form B) Good oniy for continuous passage between Louisville and Evant ville, Evansville and St Louis, and Lou isville an St Louis) Louisville, New Albany & Chicago R’y ?’ew lork, Chicago & St Louis RR Pittsburg, Shenango & Lake Erie RR Toledo, St Louis & Kahsas City RR(Form L 8) Wheeling & Lake Erie Ry (Form H) The above line* afford the commercial traveler access to the prncipal cities and towns in Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and Ken tucky, with through lines to St Louis. The train service of the Mon n Route ino udes all the conveniences devised to make traveling a pleasure. Vestibuled trains, with parlor and dining cars n all day trains; Pullman buffet and compart meet sleeping cars on aL night trains.Spacial features: Steam Heat,Pintsoh Light. Sidney B. Jones, City Pass Ag’t, 232 Clark St., Chicago. Geo. 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’lMgr. FRANK J. REED, Gen. Pass. Ag’t. General Offices: 189 Custom House Place. Chicago.

diurcli Directory. PRESBYTERIAN. Rev. M. B. Paradis, Pastor. Sabbath School, 9*30 a. m. Public Worship, 10:45 a. mJunior Endeavor, 3:00 p.m. Y. P. 8. 0. E., 6:30 p. m Public Worship, 7:30 p. m Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. mj METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Bev. R. D. Utter, Pastor. Sabbath School, 9:30 a. m. Public Worship, 10:45 a. m. Claes Meeting. 11:45 a. m. worth League. Junior, 2:30 p. m. Epworth League, Senior, 6:30 p. m. Public Worship, 7:30 p. m. Epworth League, Tuesday, 7:80 p.m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. • CHRISTIAN. Bible School, 9:30 a. m. Public Worship, 11:45 a, m Junior Endeavor,- 2:30 p. m. Y . P. S. C. E., 6.30 p. m. Public Worship, 7,30 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.

TTTANTED— FAITHFUL MEN OR women to travel for responsible established house in Indiana. Salary i*BU and expenses. Position permanent. Reference. Enclose self addressed stamped envelope. The National, Star Insurance Bldg., Chicago. o|ury OF CURES THE RECORD OP Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.

Wheat 70 (g 75; rye 30; old corn 17; new corn 16@17; hay $5. A -little daughter to Gay.iord Nowels and wife, Monday. • r ’ C. W. Duvall js now the mail carriet'to and fromlhe depot. Miss Ella Ritchey is visiting the family of Rev. E.,Peach at Indianapolis. . Miss Blanche Hoyes in prepars io enter the Lnion Business College, Lafavette, the beginning of the year A Home Industry. Make yous city grow by patronizing home industry. Smoke cigars that a. o manufactured in Rensselaer, at d get the best value tor your money.- The brands are “Coleridge,” 69.” “New Court House” and “Jlor de L.”. A. Lewis, ' Cigar Mauufacturtr. Will Shanla b, of the Morocco Courier, is spending the holidays v.ih his paints and fnenJsin Rensselaer. Miss I'mma M cjtey received as a Christinas gift fiom her parents a handsome Kraukauer piano The 10-year old son of William Warren was kickeu on the leg by a horse, last Saturday, and altho’ painful, no bones were broken. Lee Catt has bought a lot in Austin Paxton’s Addition, and will erect a reeiden ,e thereon.

Beauty is your Duty Abundant, glossy hair, is beauty's crowning glory. To wear this crown, use AYER’S HAIR VIGOR. Wallace Shedd returned here last Friday, from Colorado, bringing with h m from Shedd Bros.’ Colorado ranch, a car load of fine cattle and two large drught h uses. Recorder R. 8.. Porter now occupies the late residence of Ad. Parkison, on Front street, and the latter has moved into his new Lome, on adjoining lot. Ike Wiltshire has moved to Alabam Isaac Pa<mer and John KnoulT with their families, of Newton township, accompanied <iim. The Rensseiaer Lecture Club haiihe following popular list engaged for the dates named: Jan LI), Rev. Frank Bristol. * Feb. 18, Ihe Tennesseeans. March 25, Dr. Willetts. April 9, Col. Copeland. Married— December 21, 1896, at the hsme of the officiating minister, Rev. R. D. Utter, of Trinity M. E. Church, Randolph Wright and Miss Ma tie A., daught-r of Henry Sayler. Christmas festivities in the several churches, Thursday evening, were largely attended and those participat ng made hapoy by tokens of good will. Advertised Letters.. Mr. Chas. F. Hahn, Mr. David Jenkins, A. J. Kook.

ROYAL PECULIARITIES.

Shah Ashref of Persia was lefthanded, and had a special saber made to suit this peculiarity. Edward 111. was 6 feet 3 inches in height, and had a rough, shaggy* beard that reached to his girdle. Claudius was an idiot. His eye:, stared in a meaningless gaze, and saliva dropped from his lips. Augustus was afraid of thunder and whenever a storm came on went to the darkest room in his palace. Charles I. wore a small, pointed beard, and thus set the fashion so often seen in Vandyck's portraits. Henry VIII. was enormously fat and easily overheated. At the slightest exertion his face became purple. Philippe I. of France was said to lie the most amorous King that ever ruled over that amorous nation. Henry 111. of Germany had a complexion so dark that he might easily have been mistaken for a negro. The Czar Nicholas was said by the court physicians to have suffered for many years from Ingrowing nails. Vitellius, the Glutton, who for a short time ruled the Roman Empire, bad a waist measure of 62 inches. Tamerlane, the Tartar conqueror, had a club foot. His real name was Timour Lenk, or Timour the Lame. Edward I. d*as 6 feet 2 inches high and it is said that the tips of his middle fingers extended below his knees. Genseric, according to the Roman historians, had a mouth so large that it inspired terror whenever he opened it Constantine IV. is mentioned by contemporary historians as having the most handsome beard in his dominions.

SO YEARS* EXPERIENCE f W . | 11 | f /. ■ ■ R L ’ ■ IRm * ■ ■ g| k ■ M 11 M i B A m FtRAOE MARKS, 'FfRIIIRW' DESIGNS, rTT ’ COPYRIGHTS Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether an Invention Is probably patentable. Communications, strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in America. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice In the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, largest circulation of any scientific journal, weekly, terms *3.00 a year; fl.aOslx months. Specimen copies and Hand Book on Patents sent free. Address MUNN & CO.. 361 Broadway, New York.

AIRY THINGS ABOUT THE HEIR.

Jay bank—My son has become quite a bicycle expert; rides J.W<f wheels at once. (Maypool—Thax’s nothing. My .baby rides four jut onee^Washington Ttajeee. • , , . “Well,” said the Site to the small boy, “I guess I will have to admit-that .you have me on the string. And that,” Con'tinued the kite, “is what makes me soar.”—lndianapolis Journal. ' Teacher—Tommy, 'parse discretion. Tommy (feeling his way)—Discretion—a noun—feminine. Teacher—How do you make it feminine? Tommy—lt’s the better part of valor.—Pittsburg News.. e Mother—Yes, doctor, Jamesey is that tongue-tied he can’t speak a word. What trade would you advise him to learn? Doctor—Make an artist of him, by all means. He can make signs.—Buffalo ■Times. Mr. Figg—l see that a priest in St. Ixitils made the members of his congregation deposit all their motto buttons on the altar before he would go on with the service. Tommy—l guess he was makin’ a .collection.—lndianapolis Journal. Judd—A baby grows more the first month of its life than at any other similar period of Its existence. Sometimes it gains an inch in length during this time. Spudfl—l can easily believe that, for later in life It will often find itself getting short.—Washington Times. ‘There,” said the fond father, as the political procession passed by. “Does not that fill your young soul with high aspirations "I” “You bet It does, pa,” answered the little boy. "I’m goln’ to git a broomstick and begin practicin’ for a drum major soon's I git home.”— Cincinnati Enquirer. /Tommy had been suffering from a Bine back for a day or two, and Ills mother bought a porous plaster for the same and prepared to adjust it. As the eyes of little Mabel fell upon the punctured square she exclaimed: “Oh, mamma! What are all the holes for?” “I know,” interjected Tommy; “they’re for lettln’ the pain out.”—Richmond Dispatch.

SOME POINTED PARAGRAPHS.

The Ignorance that Is bliss is the ignorance of the man who thinks he knows it all.—Puck. People who make a boast of saying what they mean generally have mean tilings to say.—Boston Transcript. One reason a man hates to be bald is that all his fool friends are continually patting the bare spot.—Buffalo Tinies. Never argue the point with the man who tells you that he is one in a thou-’ sand—lie may be one of the ciphers.—, Louisville Times. Always do as the sun does —look at the bright side of everything; it is just as cheap and three times as good for the digestion.—The Doctor. After a man has made a pleasant allusion to the days when he courted his wife there Isn’t anything she will refuse to do for him.—Atchison Globe. A man out in Western Massachusetts is busily trying to discover the secret of perpetual motion, and Mr. Moo- ! dy is busily trying to convert New York.—Boston Globe. Before a girl gets man-led she never thinks a man has such a thing as a stomach. After she’s been married a while she wonders if he’s got anything else.—New York Press. Nothing flatters a man more than to tell him that the receipt be gave you cured your cold, whether, as a matter of fact, you really tried the dose or not.—Somerville Journal. It is beginning to be recognized that the ralibit’s foot is an ageut of good luck only while it remains on the rabbit ainl helps him to escape from the hunter.—Philadelphia Ledger.

POPULAR SCIENCE.

There is no water on the moon’s surface. Our sun is but one of thousands of others of equal or greater magnitude. The light of the moou is only about one-six hundred-thousandth that of the sun. Wind power is derived from the uneq:...l i. . r.ug of various portions of the earth by the sun’s rays. —J Astronomers say that there is every reason to believe that human life on Mars is much like it is on this earth! The greatest depth, writes Prof. Seeley in his "Story of the Earth,” at which earthquakes are known to originate is about thirty miles. It has also been calculated that a heat sufficient to melt granite might occur at about the same depth. A Hamburg young man has just had bis sanity proved by the Roentgen rays. He declared ten years ago that he had a bullet in his bead, which he had tired into it in trying to commit suicide. He complained of the pain, and, as he attacked his keepers, and the doctors could find no trace of a wound, was locked up as i dangerous lunatic. The Roentgen rajs have now shown the exact place of the bullet. A novel disposition of sewage is made at Exeter, England,,according to London Machinery. The method consists of four tanks, a fourth of the sewage passing into each. Light and air are excluded from the tanks; putrefaction and decomposition are rapidly set up; the microbes multiply and’the solid portions of the sewage are consumed and the outflow from the tanks through ■ filters loses all color and taste. No chemical is-used and no attention to the tanks of any sort is needed. Each filter bed automatically cleanses itself bj* being out of use for a short time.

American Feet Are Growing.

It is a fact that the feet of American women are growing larger! Devotion to athletic exercise is the cause, and some one is daring enough to say that the dainty, delicate, little Cinderella feet that find ample room in No. 1 and No. 2 slippers will be unknown twenty years from now. Any exercise that keeps oue on the feet for any great length of time will surely broaden and flatten the foot, and a year’s steady course in a gymnasium will show a remarkable increase in the size of the feet

Bane Beauty. Beauty’s )>ane is* vZ? the sassing- or falling of the hair. Luxuriant . tresses z are* far more tc the matron than to the maid whose casket of charms is yet unriffed by time. Beautiful women will be glad to be reminded that falling or* fading hair is unknown to those who use Ayer's Hair Vigor,

Shade and Fruit Treess for Sale —We have a large variety of Maple, Ash and CatapaTre“s for fail delivery.' Will deliver No. 1 trees in Rensselaer at 25 cents oach. Also a fine assortment of fruit trees, gaapes, etc., ot low figures. F. A. WOODIN, Foresman, Ind. Call on BergetA Penn for Drain Tile. Office over Ellis & Murray’s store. The annual grand masquerade ball of the Rensselaer Eire De partmeut will come off the evening of December 315.. Bob Johnson will furnish you the Daily Indianapolis Sentinel at 50 cents per month. Suiter AKi c ht: ‘Come in boys We can laundry for you all as well as one ,‘‘bovs.” Increasing trace -cquiies more shelving in Judge Healy’s stole. Dissolution of Partnership. the film of 1 bompson A Bro. is mutually dissolved. The debts and credits of die firm will be paid by and to David J. Thompson. Simon P. Thompson. Makion L. Spitler. .David J. Thompson. •Judge’ Healy will hereaft r keep on hand a eelect stock of ready mftde bouts and shoes, and will also continue to manufacture to order work entrusted to him.— The judge’s well known good judg mentof quality, workmanship and prices in his line will be a drawing ca r d for patronage. HOLLISTER A 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 mauner, and all other business in their line. Give then, a call. Judge Healy’s is the, place for shoes —Gen f s', Ladies’ and Children’s. Don’t forget it. ‘Judge’ Healy Chicago this week and Dufchafeed an additional supply for his stock of boots and shoes. The judge’s judgm of a good article, will soon make his establishment a Dooular resort for that line of Uax’m Roans. Wa 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. (Jail and see us. Office i*i Odd Fellows’ Temple, near the Court House. WARREN A IR WIN. W SALESMEN. Wo want one or two men in each County to take orders for Nursery Stock, and are willing to pay well for good work. We agree to REPLACE FREE anything that dies from natural causes. We also have a choice line of SEED P /TATOES. GIVE US A TRIAL. THE HAWKS NURSERY COMPANY, v20n33 Milwaukee, Wis.

/ Fifty Years Ago. brandfather’s hat I And within it you see, Grandfather’s favorite cough remedy. Whether ’twas Asthma, Bronchitis or Croup, Or baby at night waked the house with a whoop, With Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Gran’ther was sure That no cold or cough would e’er fail of a cure. In hats the styles change, but the records will show Coughs are cured as they were SO yearsago. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral has no equal as a remedy for coughs, colds, and lung diseases. Where other soothing elixirs palliate, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral heals. It is not a cheap cough syrup, which soothes but does not strengthen ; it is a physician's cough refnedy, and it cures. It is put up in large bottles, only, for household use. It was awarded the medal at the World's Fair of ninety-three. It has a record of 50 Years of Cures.

| Cobs for sale, 50 cts. a load, den livered. Phone 151. W. H. Churchill. Engineer Bjgtwick will get you up plans and specifications for building. Cnarges reasonable.— Office up-stairs, in Forsythe building. Judge tloaly, from long, practii cal experience in the manufacture of boots and shoes, is undoubtedly the best judge of the make, up, the quality of *ruaterial, and the nroper ' price for such goods, in the business in this sectfon- • • AGENTS Wa TED Nothing like'it: nothing equal t it. Personal Reco lections of General Nelsen A. Miles. Major | General U. S. A., now r-ady. Naratives of Personal Adventures. Wonderful Escapes, Fantastic Ghost D ances, Desperate j Indi, n Braves, Sca'pitg of Helpless SetI tiers. In all the realms of Action, noth- ' ing more wierd and fascenating can he | loundthan the story of the Famous Indian Campaigns of Gen. Miles. A massive volume, Bxlo inches, 600 near y 200 Illustrations Sold only thro’ our authorized agents; exclusive territory granted. Book agents for two years past have been coking for a fast selling book and ia this book you will And it. It offers a rar. opportunity for the agent to in ke money. Agents who desire choice of territory must act pro ptly. Complete outfit only fl 00 postpaid. For I terms and territory, aduress FORSHE & McMAKIN, Corner sth & Elm itreets, Cincinnati, Ohio.

ra io un. State of Indiana, ) County of Jasper, j 8B: In the Jasper Circuit Court. To January Term. 1897, John Albin vs Charlotte H Van Allen, Mr V nAllen husband of said Charlotte H. Van Allen, >nd all the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of Charlotte H Van Allen! deceased; No. 5206. Ann Cadwallader, Mr. Cadwallader, usbind • of said An Cadwal lader, and all the unkni wn heirs, devisees and legatees of Ann Cadwallader, deceased, Are hereby notified that John Albin has filed his conplaint in the Circuit Court of Jasper County, Indiana, to quiet title to certain real estate in said J asj er County, in which said defendants claim an interest, and that s»id cause will come up for hearing on the first day of the March Term of t e Jasper Circuit Court, to be held at the Court House, in Rensse’aer, in said County, commencing Monday, March 15th, 1897. ( ) Witness the hand of the ) Seal. - Clerk, an the Seal of '—• — said Circuit Court, at Rensselaer this .17th day of December, 1’896. Wji. H COOVER, Clerk. Wm. B Austin, Atty for Pl'ff. December 18, 1896—510. --■» " tes li WlsMj. State of Indiana, i County of Jasper, j 88 ' In the Circuit C'urt, January Term, 1897. Lo-is 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 r Wampler, are hereby notified that Louis F Hopkins has filed his complaint to foreclose a mortg ge up m certain real estate in said county, in which said defendants appear to have an interest, and that said cause will come up lor hearing on tho Second day of the next term of the Jasper Circuit Court, to be held at the Court House, in the Town of Rensselaer, in said County and State, commencing Monday, January 4th, 1897. Witness my hand and the < > seal of the Jaspei Cirj Seal, r cuit Court, this Novem- ( ’ bcr 4th, 1896. Wm. H. COOVER, lerk Jasper Circuit Court. Wm B. Austin. Att’y for Plaintiff Nov. 6, 1896—§6.

.AND ALLEYS IN TOWN OF VIRGIE, State of Indiana,l County of Jasper, j SB: Notice is hereby eiven that a petition will be presented to the Boaro of ('nmmissionere of the County of Jasper, State of Indiana, nt the December session, 1896, ol said .Board, praying for the vacation of certain streets and alloys in the Town of Virgie, in said County and State, which streets and alleys are as follows: Florence Avenue, Drexel Avenue, Madison Boulevard, Washington Avenue, Englewood Place, Belleview Court, and Lincoln Avenne. 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 following alleys runningnorth and south throu.h the'centers of the following blocks:- 3to 9 inolnsi-e, 10 to 16 inclusive, 21 to 27 mclusi\e, 28 034 inclusive, and 39 to 45 inclusive. That all the’ real estate bordering on and lying along said streets and all ys is owned by Willi mB. Austin. Dated this )3thdavof Octoter, 1896. WILLIAM B. AUSTIN. October 23 1896

Mte is MM The tate of Indiana, ) Jasper County J In the Jasper Circuit Court, January Ferm, 1897. William P Irwin 1 vs Complaint No 5163 Lois Penwright, ) Now comes the Plaintiff, by Arthur H Hopkins, his attorney, and files his complaint heroin, together with an affid: vit that the defendant Lois Penwright is not a resident of the State of Indiana N tree is therefore hereby given said Defendant, that unless she be and appt ar on the fiist d>y of the next Term of the Jasper Circuit Court, td be holden on the first of January, a j> 1897, at the Court House in Rensselaer, in said County and State and answer or demur to s»id compla nt, the same wi 1 be heard and determined in her absence In Witness Whereof I hereunto c e‘ my . hand and affix the S°al f -I Seal : said Court, nt Rensst-Ler ’ —> — ' Indiana, this 2sth day of October, a » 1896 Wm H COOVER, Cle-k I A H Hopkins, Att’y forpl’ff . October 30, 1896—56

F A WOODIN & GO, ________ • Agents Foresman, Rensselaer Marble Hou MACKEY & BAUCUS. Dealers In American and Italian Maa MONUMENTS, TABLETS. OADSTOKE , SIiABS, SLATE AND MARBLE MANTELS r «•» * ./.»•» vases. Front Street. Rensselaer Indiana.

HlKMOfh fUBNIfUfiE WrtliE ROOMS "-DEALEE IN—furmture WILLIAMS-STOCKTON BLOCK’ ta» Door w w House. Rkmfii „

Im *■ \ WmaSilßMMiw / V gF “BETTER THAN EVER,” FOUR ELEGANT MODELS. $85.00 and SIOO.OO. Am Catalogue Fees. CENTRAL CYCLE MPG. CO., Ata. 72 Garden street Indianapolis, Ind;