Democratic Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 April 1897 — Page 4
g miner at*FRIDAY APRIL 9. 1897. gafero'l at tse pontcffic at Keassctaer, iDd as second-c»*%*matter.)
ii T ni;ni;in'ni!» »XiuisWULKnrtißA«Yil>iC)£cßrfff) M O NON' RO UTE . Rensselaer Time-Table In effect Feb. let, 1897. SOUTH BOUND. No 31—Feet Mail (don't stop) 148 am No 5— LonisyilleMail, Daily 10 55 am No 33 -IndianapolisiM ail, 1 53 p m No 39—Milk ac om ~ Daily, 603 p m No B—Louisville Express Daily 11 20 “ No 45—Local freight, 240 * NORTH BOUND No 4 Mail, 4 30 a m Mo 40- Milk accom., Daily, 7 31 N032-Fasi Mail, 955 * No 30—Cin. to Chicago Vestibnl«,<> 10 pm No B—Muil and Express, Daily, 330 N j 46—Local freight, 9 30 a m N«>74—Freight, 7 40 p m No. 74 carries jr ssengers between Motion and Lowell. No 30 mnkes no stop between lie»*seiaer and Engle wool. No. 32 makes no stop between Renssel aer and Hammond. Train No. 5 h .s a coach for Indianapolis and Cinomnati Tia Roaebdale arrives at Indianapolis 2:40 p. m. Cincin nati 6 o'o ook p. m. No 6 histhroiiiih coach: return, e iveCincinnati 8:30 m.,1 pves ludiau polls ll:sva. m. arrives at Ren aer 0.3 j p. m. daily. W. H. BEAM. Agent.
EVERY TRAVELING Ml . HH ULD HAVE ONE. Mmimf’life 1,011-1 Met:. They Cost Bat $20.00 Each, and Car. Bo Parohased of Any Agont of Th«»
They are good for one year from date o f sale and good for passage e. the follow ing lines: Baltimore & Ohioßß. (Lines west oi Pittsburg & Benwood, including Wheel ing A, Ptttaburg Division.) Baltimore A Ohio Southwestern R’y. - (Foim L 38.) All Divisions. Buffalo, Roohester & Pittsburg R’y. Ginoinnsti, Hamilton & Dayton ltß. (Form 1D2.) All Divisions. Cincinnati, Portsmouth & Virginia RR (Between Cincinnati and Portsmouth only) Cleveland Terminal and Valley R’y. Coiambus, Hooking Valley & Toledo R’y Celnmkns, Sandnsky & Hooking Klt.(Form I) Findlay, Fort Wayne & Westorn R’y Indiana, Decatur & Western R’y , Indiana, Illinois & jowa AR. Louisville, Evansvil.e & St Louis RR. - (Form B) Good oniy for continuous passage between Louisville andEvauL villa, Evansville and St Louis, and Lou isville an < St Loots) Louisville, New Alnany & Chicago R’y Tew York, Chicago & St Louis RR Ptttaburg, Bhenango A Lake Erie RR Toledo, St Louie A Kahsas City RR—(Form L 8) Wheeling A Lake Erie By (Form H)
The above lines afford the commercial traveler access to the pr nci,, al cities and town, in Indiana, Ohio, Illinois a .d Keu tacky, with through lines to St Loais. The train service of the Mon n Route ino.ndes all the conveniences devised to make traveling a pleasure. Ve tibuled trains, with parlor and dining cars n all day train.; Pullman buffet and compart n.ent sleeping cars on al. night trains.Special 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. Baoon, Diet. Pass. I g’t, 4 h and Market Sts, Louisville. W. H. MoDOEL, Receiver and Gen’l Mgr. FRANK J. REED, Gen. Pass. Ag’t. General Offices: 189 Custom House Plaoe, Chicago.
Church Uireetory. PBEBBYTEBIAN. Sabbath School, 9'30 a. m. Public Wonhip, 10:46 a. m Junior Endeavor, 8:00 p.m. Y. P. S. O. E., 6:30 p. m Public Worship, 7:30 p. in Praysr Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Bbt. E. D. Uttbb, Pastor. Sabbath School, 0:30 a. m. Publio Worship, 10:45 a. ui. Class Meeting, 11:45 a. m. Lpworth League, Junior. 2:30 p. m. Epworth League, Senior, 6:30 p. m. Publio Worship, 7:30 p. iu. Epworth League, Tuesday, 7:60 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thursdav, 7:30 p. ui. CHEISTIAN, Bible School, 0:30 a. m. Publio Worship, 11:45 a, m. Junior Endeavor, 2:30 p. m. Y P. 8. C. E., 6.30 p.m. Publio Worship, 7,30 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 pm.
WANTED— FAITHFUL MEN Cl; women to travel for respom 0 la estaWiahed house in Indiana. Salary s‘«o and expenses. Position permanent, lie! - orenoe. Enolose self addressed stamped envolope. The National, Star Insuiaix < Bldg., Chicago.
Tl* Perfect PHI Ayer's Cathartic Pills iLieet prandial P n Porfeot
THE INDIANAPOLIS HEWS
4 Short History of Isilurt Oroatast Newspaper. Whatever excels mttreate. The loftiest mountain, the longest river, the largest city. Yet keener interest attaches to the greatest achievements of men—in oratory, statesmanship or war. The sharpest contest these days is between newspapers. demanding the j greatest diversity of gift*, of knowledge | and sagacity. In other fields the decision is doubtful, hut in journalism the popular verdict is practically registered each day in the subscription list —a sort of Australian Ballot System. This teat shows The Indianapolis News to have more bona fide readers than any other four Indiana Dailies combined. This makes good the above title head. The whole State may indulge pride in another point scored by The New*: it is conceded to have mort circulation proportioned to population than any other American Daily. Whether this aignifies greater enterprise in The News or a more intelligent reading people, or both is a question. No phenomenon exists without its adequate cause. Th« News itself gives two main reasons as follows: (1) When The New* Began, twenty- | eight years ago, every other paper had Its political alliance slavishly espousing one party with It* principles and candidates against others, looking to that narty In tu«i for support and patronire; the Jrfgheat ambition was the organ>:lp of its party In State, district, eoun>y o’- neighborhood. The Neww believed that such relationship not only biased '.heed!foral mind, but unconsciously, U rot consciously, tinted and colored the ws columns, leading to the magnifying < f what tended to help, and minimizing or suppressing whwt hurt the party. The News, therefore, swung loose from all entanglements and blazed a new way absolute Independence, not neutrality, which means the opposite; criticised men or measures of either party: always took sides, with a choice »ven between evils; distinguished between the freedom and slavery of lnde-p-ndence; not hesitating to ally ";elf with either party In turn i • bring In reforms or braak '■'jwn abuses. While this course meant no political patronage and usually the anger of both parties at the same time. It found marvelous response In the universal American instinct of independent thought. It compelled respect and opened the door for readers In the ranks of all parties. This meant preponderance of circulation, which, In turn, means preponderance of advertising. (2) The News was the first 2-cent paper In the West, all others 5 cents. Against universal prophecy that It could not Hve at such a price, It is now 26 per cent, larger, taking the six week day Issues together, than any other Indiana dally, and sells at 10 cents a week delivered anywhere by carrier or mail, postpaid, against 16 cents a week, which is charged for the neat beet Indiana dally. No other paper in the State, at whatever price, now pretends to furnish equal quantity and scope of Intelligence—a volume of telegraphic news and correspondence from all quarters of the globe; a harvest of State happenings: market quotations for the farmer and business man, averaging from seventeen to twenty-four hours ahead of all morning papers; abstracts of Supreme Court decMont for the legal profession; something for everybody—in amount to stagger credulity. It is estimated that not lest than iso,000 people read The News every day.. It maintains for the people cheap rate "Wanted” columns for advertising, by which millions of property changes hands annually without the owners ever seeing each other. Almost all have something to sell, buy, trade, or rent: a horse, cow. wagon, farm, mill or store, etc., etc. Express it in as few words as possible, then count every word and send at many cents as there are words to The News and see the result. Or if preferred write out what you want and they will phrase the advertisement for you and return with the price. Address THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, todianaoolia. lad.
so rew women are great geniuses be cause so many women are so nearly that. There la not a wide maxgln between saying a mean thing and doing a mean thing. Something more than finite power Is needed to prepare mankind for an infinite condition. A man will follow a word with u Mow, while a woman will follow a blow V’lth a great many words. A woman sets her mind to do a thing without thinking whether other peo pie’s mjnds are set that way or not It Isn’t always the man who ha* money who has a smiling countenance; it’s the man who wants to borrow It
FINEST PALACE IN THE WORLD.
A Pive-MllHon-Dollar Mansion in Qreat Britain. Mount Stuart, Lord Bute’s palace ,t>.eax Rothesay, Scotland, is the mos# aagnlficent mansion In Great Britain, rha base of the building covers a fraodon more ’ "i an acre Mt is built in the - ’ n of the chlrte is, tur[•eta an-. ...s arc .. .. of beautiful variegated granite and sandstones, :he floors and arches being of clouded Italian marbles. The main hall Is constructed entirely >f alabaster, the supports being colimns of oxidized brass and bronze. The gallery and grand staircase are of marble brought from Sicily and Ca»ranu The drawing-rooms are paneled with alternate strips of cherry, walmt and ebony, all from America. The main dining-room, which was built so as to accommodate 280 guests, is finished after the style of the draw-ing-rooms, with the exception of relief igttres and mosaics of fish, game and inUnals. There are three immense libraries ind a billiard room, all with stone fireplaces of antique design. In one wing there are Turkish and swimming baths, large conservatories, aviaries and aflUOriuma. The whale place is heated throughout with steam and hot-water pipes, and ighted both by gas and electricity. The pictures In the galleries are worth tver SBOO,OOO, and the books in the >rarleg as much more. The building, iecoratlng and furnishing of this palce, which is said to bo without doubt ho (finest , private residence <M. the lobe, entailed an outlay s' ss^oo<MDoft
K..:, pieces of glass formerly wasted are now put to use for decorative pur go*cs by a firm of manufacturers la Parts Fragments of various colors art placed lo a Use-resisting mold and raised to a high temperature, when a ooherent ma sis produced, which an be drssasd ana ejt into blocks These are, of course, irregularly colored. They mar be used M marble, and, one lurfaoeaf *»eh blosk being usually tough, they an scared to walls of mortsz Ja dgns in relief may be pressed m tfe ewtace vhrie mt - ,
\ THE TOTTERING STEP AGE Beqalrti a itlmalaat as L goaa -lj*a * Zha Sunset Slop, j -f* •» ( Try the R. W .. . WHISKEY • Madefy th. ••Old Process Han d-made, sour iiash, Kentucky Bon-bon, absolutely par. and Mid only by druggists. A. KIEFER DRUO CO. A.U Controllers and Distributer*.
the lading or falling tresses are far more to the matron than to the maid whoa* casket of charm* is yet unriffed by time. Beautiful women will be glad to be reminded that falling or fading heir is unknown to these who use Ayer’s Hair Vigor.
Engineer Bostwick will get you up plans and specifications fur building. Charges reasonable. - Office up-stairs, in Forsythe building. That which seemeth most casual and tubject to fortune, la yet disposed by the ordinance of Heaven. There are people who seem to think that God only expects them to keep the Ten Commandments on Sunday, It Is bad reasoning which builds up a theory of life on the narrow ledge of a passing human mood, aDd falls to lake tn the whole rou*l •< life. Farm Loans. Ws are prepared to make farm loans at a lower rate of interes than any other firm in Jasper county. The expenses will be as low as the lowest. Call and see üb. Office Odd Fellows’ Temple, near the Court blouse. WARREN & IRWIN.
Curious Cases of [?]
▲ gnat deal of work has been q 0... this year by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Nearly 6,000 cases of cruelty have been Investigated by lta agents. Although many were settled without prosecution, and many were found to have been misrepresented, 297 wen prosecuted, and In anme rams a tilts heaw nonultles wen necessary. Ons man, who drove his horse to death, was sent to Jail for six months. For overdriving two other men wen sentenced to three and four months, respectively. As usual, there were a number of convictions for beating and kicking animals, one man being so gratuitously brutal as to beat a gray squirrel Another man, while drunk, bit three inches off the! tall of a cat It cost him $5 an Inch. Two Frenchmen wen lined $6 each for exhibiting a bear. The animal was confiscated and killed, so that then will be no more cruelties practiced on that bear at any rate. A butcher was fined $lO for hanging up a steer befon slaughtering him. Two men, while drunk, attempted to kill a hog with an ax. They mangled him terribly, and wen each given tea months In the House of Correction- Two cases of docking horses’t tails cost the offend •n SIOO each.—Boston Transcript. Judge Healy’s is the place for shoes - Genes', Ladies’ and Child ren’s. Don’t forget it.
WAIT' AND SEE OUR NURSERY STOCK! BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE, We have the following surplus which must be sold tnis spring, that we will give great bargains on. Owing to tne hard times we will give-a credit of one year on app wed notes: 1000 Apple,3 years, No . 1, 6 and 7 feel. 500 Peach, 1 year, “ “ 5 “ 6“ 1 500 Cherries two years, five and seven fee . 300 standard Pear, six and seven feet. 200 standard “ four and five feet. 200 dwarf “ three and four feet. 300 Plum, three and four feet. 200 “ five and six feet, 100 Quince, three and four feet. 500 Fay Currant, two years No. 1. 500 Downing Gooseberries* two years N>. 1 2000 Grapes, two years. No. 1. 5000 Strawberries, No. 1000 Black Clap Blackberries, two years. . All the above stock is warranted lo 1, and prime. Prompt attention given to early ordei ?. C o me and see us on above dates, and save n aney f. a. mm. FOB ESMAM, IIHD.
AN ODD COLLECTION.
fhm Is only one sudden deatk Isng women to eight among men. There are 12,000,000 silk hats mads annually in the United Kingdom worth $20,000,000. The wan of the last seventy **it have cost Russia $1,778,000,000 aid th. lives of 664,000 men. It is stated that nearly 1000,000 pounds of fur for hatters’ lurposes are produced in the United Sates. To be perfectly preportloted It If claimed that a man shoal* weight twenty-eight pounds to ever foot of his height The most densely settled State Is Rhode Island, and the seond Hassai chusetts. The former has 118.44 Inhabitants to the square mile and the latter 278.48. The letters in the vatous alphabets Z, me world vary fron twelve to 202 n number. The Sandvlch Islanders' alphabet bus twelve, the Tartarian, 102. The sun, If hollow, would hold 800,#OO earth globes, and an eye capable sf hourly viewing 19,000 square miles would require 86,000 years to see all Its surface. Prof. Booteasy says: Cats die at an elevation of 13,000 feet, even though they are reputed to have “nine lives," when on a level with the ocean. Dogs and men can climb the greatest known •Isvatlons. Astronomers calculate that the surface of the earth contains 81.625.62 Q ■qttare miles, of which 23,814,121 are water and 7,811,604 are land, the water thin covering about seven-tenths el the earth’s surface.
WANTED— FAITHFUL MEN OR women to travel for res onsible . tablisbed house in indi ma. Salary S7BO and expi uses. Position permanent. Ref erence. Enclose sel -addressed stamped envelope. T 1 e National, Star Insurance Bldg., Chicago. We are pleased to n tr that Jno Kimble lms opened a general mer“'landizin store in Llnckf' rd T' e i that locality w:l fipd John the nglit man in the lig; t glace, and should give him a gen srous support.
Wt, Have Room fbr Many More,” Have you any idea of the number of persons that: the united Elates would sustain without overcrowding the population or even going beyond the limit of density now shown by the State of Ehode Island? The last census of the pigmy State Just gives it a population of 397,NX). The area of the State in square miles is only 1,250, thus we find that there is an average of 318 persons on every square mile of he territory. Scatter people all over th* whole land from the Atlantic to tlio Pacific, and from the Gulf to the British possessions as thickly as they aie now In Ehode Island, and we would have 945,766,300 inhabitants, Instead of an insignificant 62,000,000. Ip other words, if the United States could be peopled to their utmost sustaining capacity, we could take care of nearly two-thirds of the piesent population of the globe. WANTED— FAITHFUL MEN OE women to travd fer responsible established houses in Indians. Salary s7bo and expenses. Position permanent. Bes. orence. Enclose So.f -addressed ..tamped envelope. The National, Stur Insurance Bldg., Chioago.
lb laJl»MicHs Dai'y and 'Week 1 Bauf luilci:< c Lticn ta- .fettled lacunae p(o>.(itui< ’} tr tLcroegh service in reonving !■ the latn-t ntas all over the State and tom i'-s dispatches from foreign counties Every reader in Indiana i should t ke a State ri per, and-that Tbe ! Sentine |,\H4> •ll < LIATM'N (if up. v Ktuspuper i* 1 ; \ >■ 11 • I 1;/ S', l ■* i % ? » IF; Ol '.SIJIiHMI Tl' N D(ily one 1 tar/ * - W.O Weekly < ne yeai L<* The weekiv EditioyHas 12 PAGES! SUBSCRIBE NOW / And make all rein Uiaces to S^EJHO]AN«POLjs) SENTINEL GOa Indianapolis, Ind. lhk» paper will be furnished with the woekly edition of The Indiana State ■Sentinel for $2 00.
ytwXimXiAMn^i CREVISTON BROS. PBor :.ktoi:s Located opposite the public square. Everything fresh v d clean. Fresh and salt meats, game, p< nltry, etc., constantly on hi nd. Please gveus a call and we "will guarantee togiva you satisfaction. Remember the place. de014,’94 PiOKEIR WEftT BfIRKiT I^l BEEF, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Sausage, nlogna, etc , sold in quantities to suit uroliaeers at the LOWEST PRICES.— done bnt the best stock slaughteied. Ever ybody is invited to call. THi HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR Good Cattle, I. Pioprietor.
The Same... Old Sarsaparilla. That’s Ayer’s. The same old san parilla as it was made and sold by Dr. J. C. Ayer SO years ago. In the laboratory . is different. There modern appliances lend speed to skill and experience. But the sarsaparilla is the same old sarsaparilla that made the record — BO years of cures. Why don’t we better it? Well, we’re much in the condition of the Bishop and the raspberry : “ Doubtless, ”he said, “ God might have made a better berry. But doubtless, also, He never did.”- Why don’t we better the sarsaparilla? We can’t. We are using the same old plant that cured the Indians and the Spaniards. It has not been bettered. And since we make sarsaparilla compound out of sarsaparilla plant, we see no way of improvement. Of course, if we were making some secret chemical compound we might.. . But we’re not. We’re making the same old sarsaparilla to cure the same old diseases. You can tell it’s the same old sarsaparilla because it works the same old cures. It’s the sovereign blood purifier, and— it’s Ayers.
We Make Wheels Quality fluarantsad tha BEST. owi LINES. WEIGHTS and PRICES am RIGHT I ELDREDGE«BELVIDERE IN TWENTY-FIVE STYLE!. WAIT! FOR DESCRIPTIVE CATALOOUB. National Sewino Machine Go. ■ELVIDERC. ILL.
vive css VtV* to pronounced as Five would be with V substituted lor tbe F. THE SMALLEST CAMERA AND THE LARGEST PICTURE. SIZE 4 7-ox6 X 7 Itß. Takes is glass plates or 36 cut films 41-4x4 >-4 ar a 16 square Inch picture without re- loading. The No. 3 Vive holds >4 glass plates or 73 cot films of the same size for only >3.50 more.
F. j\ WOODM & G.O, FReal-E]fc3t.a,te Agents Foresman, Indiana No. 76: 280 acres, finely imn oved, 5 miles southwest of Kensselaer; a very desirable f will be sold on favorable terms at st4s per acre. 78: 160 acres, well improved, 2miles from town; longtime. . 84: 3*o act es, unimproved, one mile from rr. town; 60 mih-s southeast of Chicago; price $lO per acre; will take 1600 in good trade. 86: 160 acres, all fenced, town site on the farm, large hay barn, store building, hay scales, etc.; on 3-1 ry., a bargain at *2O per acre 89: 80 acres, unimproved, two and one-half miles from town; price $12.60 pet acre; long time at 6 per cent, interest. 96: 40 acres, unimproved, twe miles from town; $lO per acre on good terms. 98: 400 acres, unimproved, 4 miles from two railways; a bargain at tlO per acre.
Rensselaer Mamie House MAOK^Y" BARCIIS. Deal r* In— American and Italian Mai MONUMENTS, f’A B LE‘i S. biamtohe , s&abs, SLATE AND MARBLE MANTELS V-Jt** r ,#.vi» f*ASJES m Front Street. Rensselaer Indiana.
MAMMOTH FURNITURE WARE-ROOMS i§f AY W. WILLIAMS^ —DEALER IN—FT)R KT \ CT REx TV ILLIAM S-STOCKTON BLOCK 1 l.HiRp Lh,.v " vkt or Makeeveb Hopbe I{enrsklaer lau Bicycles “BETTER THAN EVER,” TOUR ELEGANT MOOOLA. •85.00 and 8100,00. * its C*,. _l/k3T7e Free. CENTRAL CV'U3 MRa CO., ftaiw " Sh ‘ “ lndlan«poii., bML
L. A. Bowtwick, Agent, Call at Office of city EnginecTHE CAMERA AND SAMPLES OF WORK.
