Democratic Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 July 1897 — Page 1
Volume XXI.
Frank Foltz; Charles G. Spitlez. Harfy R. Kurr e. FOLTZ, SPITLEK & KUBKIE, (S accessors to Thompson & Bro.) I w,- hl Esto,!», Akstasis & tans. O’ Only set of Abstract Books in ths County. Rensselaer, - . Indiana. wiuimnraj, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, RENSBILAER, . . - . INDIANA; O' Office second floor of Leopold’s Block, cornei Washington and selaer stteets. Paotice in afi the courts, purchase, sell and lease real estate. Attorneys for Rensselaer 8., L. & S Association and Rensselaer Water, Light and Power Company. C. W. Hanley. J. J. Hunt Hanley Hunt, Law t ßealty ,Insurance, Abstracts and Loans, Rooms 5 and 6 Forsythe Block, Rensselaei, Indiana,
Win. B. Austin, LAWYER AND INVESTMENT BROKER, ATTORNEY FOR THE L N A & C, Ry., and Rensselaer W L &P. Company. O"office over Chicago Bargain Stortx. Rensselaer - . . Indiana James W - Douthit, Attobney-at-Law & Notary Public. SS" Office, front loom up-stairs over Fendig's store, Rensselaer, Indiana. Ralph 'VF. IMEarshall, ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW. Practicees In Jasper, Newton and adjoining counties. Especial attention given to settlement of Decedents' Estates, Collections, Convdyances. Justices’ esses, etc. Office up-staiis west side Farmers’ Bank building, Rensselaer, Indiana. <Dhai*les U. Mills, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Rensselaer, Indiana. Pensions, Collections and Real Estate. Abstracts carefully prepared, Titles examined. US'Farm loans negotiated at lowest rates. Office up stairs in Odd Fellows’ Hall,
Nordecal F. Chllcote, George Ji. Uuun, Notary Public and Notary Public Abstractor of and Titles Collector Ohilcote & Dunn, ATTOBNEYB-AT-liAW, Will practice in all the Courts of Jasper and adjoining counties All business of the profession attended to with prompt ness and dispatch Collections a spe cialty Office in Makeever’s Block, over Farm ers’ Bank v2ln4 fa - ■■ ■ - - - ■■ - - Ira W. Yeoman, Attorney-at Law, Beal Estate and Col looting Agent, Bemington.lnd. I. B. Washbubn. E. C. English. ’ "Washburn & English. “hvsie.iaus & Surgeons Hentselaer, Lu i Dr. Washburn will give special attention to diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat and Chionlc Diseases. Dr. English will give special attention to surgery in all departments, and Gen era! Medicines. Office in Leopold s Corner Block, over Ellis & Murray’s. Telephone 48. W Ilai-tsell,M. D Homoeopathic Physician * Surgeon. Rensselaer, |lnd. liS’Clhronio Diseases a Specialty. *®a Office in Makeever’s New Block. John Makeeveb, Jay Williams, President. Cashier. Farmers’ Bank, Rensselaer, Indiana, Reeceive Deposits, Buy and Sell Exchange, Collections made and promptly emitted.
J. W. Horton, Dentist. All diseases of Tee h and Gums carefully treated. Filling and Crowns a spe cialty. Office over Post Office, Ronssel aei, Ind ana O. I*. KAHLEIt, RENSSELAER, IND., bs-Slfflg, Wagon-Making. Special attention given to repairing Machines, Duplicating Castings in Iron or Brass, etc Shop near the Depot
The Democratic Sentinel.
L A BOSTWICK City Engineer, Maps and Blue Prints OF RmSELAJR id MGM LAND DRAINAGE, Map Work and Platting a Specialty Rensselaer Ind. Office, Room No. 7, Forsythe Building nu. [Successor to T. P. Wright,] IjHOERTAKEft & EMBALMER RiHSKILAZB - INDU 71 Calle promptly responded to day or night. A,. J. KNIGHT, Painrter —AND— Uaper Hanger. l@"“Only the Best work done. SATISFACTION GUARANT’D! Rensselaer. Indiana
Addison Parkison President Gec.K. Hollingsworth, VioePrdsiddent. Emmet I. Hollingsworth, Cashier. THE T 3 OF RENbSKLAER. IND. Directors.; Addisqn Parkison, James T. Randle, John M. Wasson, Geo. K. Hollingsworth and Emmet L. Hollingsworth. This bank is prepared to transact a general Banking Business, Interest allowed on time deposits. Money loaned and good notes bought at current rates of interest. A share of your patronage is solicited, A®" At the old stand of the Citizens’S t ate Hank HFIoCOT, T. J. HtCOY, A. U. HOPKINR. I’rnsident. Cashier. Ass’t Cashier A.McCoy& Co.’s BAM, RENSSE AEB s - IND. OH es i Bank in Jasper Comity ESTABLISHED 1854. Transacts a General Banking Bn iness, Buys Notes and Loans Money on L< ng or Short Time on Personal or Re < Estate Security. Fair and Liberal Treatment is Promised to All. Foreign Exchange Bought and Sol > Interest, YOUR *rPatk<*M Bkv-ing Valuable Papers ; A'FEgraCT CARRIAGE. ] I >; Swth Premieri MADE ! ' [ THAT HAS A u I [ CARRIAGE. I I ABSOLUTELY NO MHCTION. 1 1 ‘‘IMPROVEMENT THE ORDM OF THE AM.” ' ’ sßߣBSk\_ a ' 1 c m e ;; I ** e x i*c c 1 J OH JB [ ln l 1 .l»ajiSiagSjgaa»fc. i i e • t) c n ll|ißM£sg%£sj‘sa| <i a c 1 1 E I. H D ' i BuiM for Uss wq< Wear* ' i 1 Ths Smith Pmiiir Typswrlter 80., I I > SYRACUSE, N. Y., U. S. A.
(jiu. " cill Inf wu Cl 'Q' j OFFICE J 4 Monboe Stbeet, John A. Jihnson, W. H. Gbaves, President. Manager. STAR. CITY MIOHIIIIiE t FOUNDRY COC MANTTFAOTUBEBS OF—m sra -MJDCasting’s Of Every Description. Sgeeial Maehtaerv Designed and Built to Order ssr Comer Third and Brown Streets', | LaFaysvbb, Ind
Rensselaer, Jasper County, Indiana, Friday, July 30. 1897
Local and Miscellaneous Items. Mrs. John W. Paxton is quite [ill. Mrs. Jas F. Irwin is on the sick list. Remington fair Aug. 23d to 28th, inclusive. Morocco fair Sept. 14 to 17th, inclusive. Try Kennel Brothers’ Vienna Bread. None better. Kentland fair Aug. 30th to September 4th, inclusive. Uakes made to order, at Kennel Brothers. The stock farm horses are in the races at Ottawa, 111., this week, The eclipse of the sun, Thursdaj, took place on schedule time. The Fountain Park AsAsmtly a* Remington, August 6th to 18th. Rev. C. D. Jeffries visited relatives in Chicago Monday and Tuesday.
Rob Vanatta contemplates taking up the study law some time this fall Homer Ritchty, of Anderson, is visiting relatives and friends in this citv. Lawdie Martin will return „to Cincinnati to morrow and resume his duties. Sid. Schanlaub, of the Morocco Courier, took i:. the show, in this city, Monday. Rev. 0. W. Postill, of Fontanet, is visiting his mother and friends in this city. City Marshall McGowan is vis iting his old home and friends, in Will county, 111. Ex-marshall Dillon, is marshal protem during the absence of marshal McGowan. Judge Healy’s is the place for shoes—Genes', Ladies’ and Child* ten’s. Don’t forget it. W. H. Ccover anc wife, of Kent*, land, ore visiting their uncle, W. H. Coover, and family in this city. Rev. Mr. Jeffries, of Apple Creek, Ohio, will preadh in the Presbyterian church next-ftabbath—morning and evening. A cordial invitation extended to all Engineer Bostwick will get you up plans and specifications for building. Charges reasonable.— Office up-stairs, in Forsythe building. Airs. Jos. G. Paxton and daugh ter are vie iting the parents of Mrs. P., ’Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Moore, and other relatives and friends in this city and vicinitvWANTED—Bj a large hay shipper, a good reliable man to buy and' load ■ ay at Rensselaer. State experience and give references. Good commission paid. Address Lock Box 117, v21,n22 Bryan, Ohio. Rev. Mr. Jeffries, Apple Creek, Ohio, will occupy the Presbyterian pulpit next Sabbath- morning and evening. You are invited. a Venetian firm is making bonnets of spun glass, which are soft and as pliable as silk.
HOW TO FINO OUT. Fill a oottle or common glass nith urine and let it stand twenty four hours; a sediment or settling indicates a diseased condition of i he kidneys. Whtn urine stains linen it is positive evidence of kidney trouble. Too frequent desire to urinate or pain in the back, is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of ordei. WHAT TO DO There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, the great kidney remedy fulfills every wish in relieving pain in the back’, kidneys, live r, bladderjand every part of the urinery passages. It cir* rects inability lo hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effect following use of liquor wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being coms pel ed to get up many times during the night to urinate. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon rt alized It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. If you need r medicine you should have the best. Sold by'druggists price fifty cents and one dollar. For a sample bottle and pamphlet, both sent free by mai v ,, montion Democratic Sentinel and send your full post-office address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N.Y.’ The proprietor of this paper t uaranter-s the gens uinoness of this offer.
A FIRRE ADHERENCE TO CORRKCT HrIINOPLKS **
We pray the moat ft* whY* we do n«t heed. Sin always sarrtee a knife under it* cloak. A fool never learns anything from a mistake. No man does hie beet who works only for pay. A self-made man always spoils ths Job somewhere. The cheerful giver is always the en« who gives much. Health is another word for temper* ance and exercise. a multitude of ugly sins cut hide behind one doubt The devil won’t let a stingy man have any marcy on himself. That man is a thief whs is honest only becauss he is watched. Ths birds with the brightest feattx ers do not sing the sweetest The sheep that goes astray never finds a green pasture for Itself. We hate our own sins when we see Ahem full grown in somebody else* There is a policeman called Time Ind he says to every lingering son or >aani “Move on.” We will find no bennanent resting pUfee in this life, find to-morrow may Mrs us gons.
STUB ENDS OF THOUGHT.
Money is not the manure of merit Mercy is the melody ot the Master. Love is a natural product ot human Hy. True religion ta th* perfart demo* racy. •” " A woman has no use for a dumb Cupid. Possession is pursuit with the pith punched out ‘ Epigrams are diamonds in ths gravel of conversation. The harder a woman’s heart wwrtes, the less liable it is to go on strike* A woman can do a wrong thing twice as quick as a man can, but it tgkes be» a hundred times as long to forgot it Some people love each other for whgt they think they are, and some people love each other without thinking anything about it
WHAT A HICOOUGH MEANT.
To a Gallant Tonne Man Xt Brought Title and Lands, One of the graadeot houses of tfcs Austrian nobility Is Indebted for its princely dignity to a piece of courtler-llke loyalty, performed by on< of its members during the reign of Eto press Maria Theresa. The august lady, during The midst te some function, had had the misfortune to hiccough in a peculiarly loud and aggressive manner, not altogether in keeping with the laws of polite society, but which in Japan or Oriental countries would, of course, have been regarded as a piece of lofty breeding. Perceiving that her majesty showed traces of embarrassment—for even empresses are human—a young Austrian nobleman stepped forward, and, with a most clever assumption of intense mortification and humility, craved her pardon for his gross breach of manners. The empress received hie apologias, not only graciously, but also gratefully, and from that time forth the young man’s fortune was made, and before the empress died he had been promoted, not only to the rank of oonnt but also to that of prince, besides being genonously endowed by his imperial benefactress with mM&s to siippdrt ms titles.—Boston Hssald.
How Donizetti's Skull Was Stolen.
A French review says that the skull of Donizetti la still carefully preserved Ln the library at Bergamo, the town where the composer was born, lived, and died For several years before bls death Donizetti had shown signs of Insanity, and just before the funeral took place an autopsy was made by the aA tending physicians. It demonstrated the existence of grave lesions In the musician’s brain. The organ weighed 1,534 grammes, which is about a ninth above the average. The convolutions that are supposed to govern the Imaginative and musical faculties showed high development After,the operation had been completed, one of the doctors present secretly took possession at the upper part of the cranial vault placed it upon his own head, and, covering It With his hat managed to carry the strange memento away unobserved. This happened In 1848. The Doctor kept the skull all his life, naturally saying very little about It After his death a nephew had It made Into a paper weight In 1874 the municipality of Bergamo, learning Of these facta instituted an inquiry that established their truth, and finally managed to get possession of the rello.
The champion knife swapper lives In Gainesville, Ohio Ho Is a llttje boy—the son of a preacher-and this is his record, as given by his father: “That boy, not many months glnaa worried me till I bought him a knife. Uke a boy, he left it out one night and it got rusty. Then he lost interest in it and began at once to swap it oft Well, the little rascal has naturally a knack tor trading, and, sir, he took that rusty knife and with a little work oh It and a good deal of talking he succeeded in exchanging it for |wo good taUvet. Those knives lg turn he traded for three knives, worked considerably on them, gid got a cheap watch for the three. e kept trading till be had Completed forty-seven different barrains, motoof them in his favor. At the efid « tht forty-seventh trade ho owned a Shot* gun, a hound puppy, two jaekknlve*. and 85 cents in money, besides other smaller trinkets too nw swops to meo* *toWr < a > -
[?]RAINS OF GOLD.
This Boy Is a D andy.
1 exuoht, iMuomr, Balance of Trade for Uncle Sam, Largest ever known! If the pending tariff bill gets in its work, the balance of trade will cease to be in our favor.
This evening, of malarial fever John, son of Pater and Capitola Giver, aged 15years and 11 days. The smallest humming-birds weighs 20 grains. A'. J^ ew j ß ’ th® °iß ar man has gone to Athcafor bath treatment. Art Hopkins will conduct the buemes of the factory in his absence. A surpriseparty astonished Wi? bchanlaub. Wednesday evening but everything passed off satisfactorily.
Ihe longest time duringwhicha Bank of England note lias remained uncashed is 111 years. The note in question was for £ls, and it is computed that the compound interest gained by the bank owing o its non- prejeqtatioH amounted to no less than £I,OOO.
. I lie supposed Igrave of Eve is visited by over 40,0c0 pilgrime in each year. It is to be seen at Jeddah, in a cemetery outside the citv walls. The tomb is fifty cubits long and twelve Wide. The Arabs entertain a belief that Eve was the tiilest woman that ever lived. Ihe oak tree which stands in the midd e ot the road leading from heamington to Warwick is said to mark the center of England. How long ago it was planted is not known, except by computation from its girth, which is about twelve fee ,nn Dd Bhows the tree to be 800 or 400 years old.
L °w Hates, «- ■■ IKWIHi IjvP iHi Another Cheap Excursion— To Chicago, Sunday,!Augustßth, To cento for the round trip from Rensselaer. Plenty of coaches and seats for all. W, n. Beam, Agent. One fare for the round trip to Rom? City, Ind., July 19th to August let. Account Island Park Atembly. One fare for the round (rip to o Bethany Park. Indiana, July to Aug. 15rh. Account Bethany Park Assembly. Beam, Agunt Tennessee Centennial and International Exposition May Ist to October 31st, 1897, at Nashville, Tennessee. Fars for the round trip from Rensselaer, only $lO. Tickets on sale daily. W.H.Beam, Agent. Through Sleeper ro Washington and Baltimore. The new Monon thiough sleeper between Chicago and Washington and Baltimore has become so popular that it is often n ■‘ceseary to put on an extra. Requisitions for berths should be made at least a day in advance. It is attached to t r ain No. 31 which leaves Monon at 5;12 a m. and arrives at Wash* ington at 6.47 a. m. and Baltimore 7! 55 the following morning. W. H. Beam, Agent.
Morocco Courier: Uncle Henry Smith, of Rensselaer, was a visitor at Morocco ihursday. Uncle Henry came to Rensselaer at a very early day and is one of the best known men in Jasper county. He was a noted fiferlin his day, and thirty years ago no Fourth of July celebration was considered complete without Uncle Henry and his fife. He also taught d number of successful terms of school during his early residence in Jasper county and he takes great pride even now in pointing out certain successful business men in and about Rensselaer wno learned “readin’, writin’ and ’rithmetic” under his watchful care. Hncle Henry is chock full of anecdotes relative to the history of this country and loves to talk of the days when, as he says, the people could take a pound of butter and a quart of sand and have a rattling good Fourth of July.
Prosperity is in sight—for the ' trusts. The revenue produced by the Dingley bill will go into the cos. fers of the trusts. The new tariff is going to com. pel a good many tc dress cool in winter, and don’t you forget it. Gov. Mount proclaims to the people that miners end their families are in terrible want and calls for aid, and that quickly. «■» —..... Under the new tariff the profits of the trust will increase and the wages of labor will buy much less of the necessaries of life.
Just how the government is to derive revenue from imports when imports are shut out by high duties, we would be pleased to have the advocates of Dingleyism explain. Under the tai iff bill which passed last Saturday, th people will be re-accorded tL6 great boon they held und r the McKinley bill,— that of purchasing shoddy goods at all wool and a yard wide prices*
The new tariff increases the tax on coal 27 cents per ton, making n total duty of 67 cants per ton. 1 f the miners suppdbod that labor would reap any of the benefits they should end the strike now on and go to work. When a young man of moderate means attempts to build a home for himself and family, he will be required to pay a tribute of #2 per thousand feet of lumber to the lumber trust. The U. 8. Treusui y will not receive a penny of it. When McKinley s'gned the Dingley bill ht not only cancelled his obligat ons with the trusts that furnished his campaign funds, but hut he also paid off Hanna and others who rescued him from bankruptcy wile Governor of Ohio.
The republican press, old and young, great and small, vocifor ously announce that “the republican party redeems its pledges.”— Yes, it stood pledged to reimburse the trusts which suppliedtbe boo - die for the last president!. 1 campaign, ai d it has done so. Rob’t J. Tracewell, of Indiana has been appointed Comptrollei of the Treasury, it is said to the surprise even of some of the members ot ths Indiana delegation. It is announced that senator Fairbanks has, since the inauguration, urged the president to recognize Tracewell as an immensely p< | u lar m«n, who had consented to make a second race for congresb . d please the leaders, but the president selected him for his legal ability ?
Gov. Pingree, (rep.) of Michi” gan, denounces the tariff bill just passed in bitter terms. He says the duty on hides means an average increase of 25 cents a pair on men’s shoes; that Armour, Swift, Morris and the Libbys control thehide market and will coin millions out of it. As to sugar, he says: “1 wish somebody would tell me how a sugar duty tnat makes people pay more is going to benefit them, or how a higher price for sugar is going to bring prosperity It seems to me the trust is going to reau all the benefits.
“The lumber schedule hits people of moderate means the "hardest. It increases the cost $2 per thousand. Not much lumber is Used these days in business blocks and fine city residences. It is the farmtr and workingmen who have cause to complain, for they cannot afford brick and stone. And it is all for the benefit of the few who control the remaining pine in Michigan and adjoining states. “I don’t recall that the Dingley bill imposes any additional duties on paintings or diamonds. It is the necessary commodities that are made to bear the increased taxes The prorfloiers of this bill ought to be proud of it. I predict a reckoning for them yet with the people.”
N umber 30
Voluablo Votes.
TWre are height* to bo reached In «*. erjr profession, and It Is not to be wondered at If those of his own profession uro considered superior to those of any other by the enthusiastic artist Martin, ®e popular French singer, found food for reflection In an experience which he had with a cab-driver. The incident is related by the author of ‘Souvenirs d’un Chan tour. * Martin had a voice of great oompass and most agreeable sound, of which ho woo decidedly proud. Ho had a weakcess for drawing ent compliments upon it One day, as he was being driven hrough the streets of Paris in a cab, ho •aw some one passing carelessly In front of the cab, and in danger of being rug over. “Whoa!* ho fried In his most sonorous tones. The et ashman turned around excitedly. ‘O. monsieur! * ho cried, ‘what a beautiful 'whoa!' Ah, if J only had a voice like that!* ‘Well, what would you do if you had?* •sked Martin, with a smile, believing that ho had been recognized, and please# st the Idea chat his reputation extended ♦ven to the drivers In the streets. "What would I do, monsieur? Faith, I should become the first ooaohmaa la Ptrial* /
House-Cleaning Wore Him Out.
The man of the house took to ths sofa in the sitting room, with a newspaper, directly after breakfast, while his wife went on with the house-cleaning. She was dismantling the front mar, ♦nd while he pursued the sporting colimn she carried past him, in turn, seven i hairs, three tables, a desk, four foot♦tools, all of the pictures, a piano stood a bookcase and the rest of the furnlturm Thon she lugged in a pair of steps and a big pall of water and began to clean. “Mana, do you want any assistance?* 1 •aid the man just then, rising and fold- i lag bls newspaper 1 Kot just yet, dear," said Maria. “Well, then, I think Til leave yon, 4 '< ♦aid ho, and ho started for the office. > On the way down ho told three men •bat if there was anything that wore'" him to the skin and bons it was that jonfounded house-cleaning. Said he:*' *We are in the midst of It now, and 1 all vou I'm altout used up. "—At Louis , Ispotrtt | j erccrd'ng t«. the Homans itetorhuiH, ba 1 a mouth hm large that 1 it In. plred terror whenever he opened 1 It 1 Constantine IV. is mentioned by con-) temporary historians as having the I meat handsome beard in his domln ,! tarn. \ < Pnntoa Victor, Plon-Plon’s oldest! son, will try to get into the British mi 1-4 itarv twrvica.
BACKACHE make* the young' feel old. and the old feel that life is not worth the living. It's a danger signal of Kidney Disease —the unerring evidence of weak, inactive and sore Kidneys. Any person cured of Kidney weakness will tell you that when the back ceased to ache, all troubles ended. Neither liniments, nor plasters, nor electricity can cure it. The. seat of the trouble is not in the skin, flesh or muscles. It’s In the Kidneys. It can be CURED When a man has any serious trouble with his kidneys, as I have had, and has foi years tried all kinds of kidnev medi-’ oines without netting any benefits from 1 is natural if be tries a new rem- 1 ®v y ’ oUreß his pains and aches, be, should Hav.a word in its favo I have 1 had kiknev troubles and back ache so long* that I don’t know when it commenced.— But I do know that until I bought some of Hobbs Sparagus Kidney Pills, at the drug store of C H Leonard, and used them thoroughly, I nev r bad avy such/, jelief from pains and kidney weakbess ns J I have now Hobbs Spavagus Kidney! Pills are the king bee pills for kidney . trouble, and I know it. If W Moore, Fireman L 8 A M 8 Rv, Elkhart, Ind K HOBBS Sparagus Kidney Pills. ROBBS REMEDY CO.. Pbofristobs, Cmcaea Dr. Hobbs Pilis For Salo hi RENBSALAER, IND . by FRANK H. MF.VER, Druggist. 1 . .i., ;J1 _a. ...jx,, Mice to Wools. The State ol Indiana, ) Jasper County, f 88: In tbe Jaspei Circuit Court. Ootober Term, 1897. William M Miles 1 _ v « ■ Complaint Frederic E i vans et al) No 538? Now comes the plaintiff, by Foltz, Spitler & Kurrie his attorneys, and files his complaint herein togetherwith an aflidavit that t e defendants Frederic E Evans vnd Mrs Evens his wife, and Mrs Evans w'dow of said Frederic E Evans; Thomas Turner and Mrs Turner his wife, and Mrs Turner widow i f said Thomas Turner; Phillip D Reefy and Mrs Reefy his wife, and Mr< Reefy widow of saidPhilli.t D Reefy; George McNeal and Louisa McNeal his wife, and Louis i McNeal widow of the said George McNeal; George McNeal and Lav ira McNeal his wife, and Lamira McNeal widow of the said George McNeal; Phillip D Reefey and Mrs Reefey bis wife, and Mrs Reefey widow of the said Phillip D Reefey and .11 of th.-, unknown heirs, devisees and legatees, and all of the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of the unknown heirs, and legatees of eao i and every es the above named defendants, and each of them are not issidents of the State of Indiana Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless each of them be and appear on the first day of the next term of the Jasper Circuit Court, to be holden on the Third Monday of October, a d 1897, ut the Court House, in tbe City of Rensselaer, in said county and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and deteiminedin your absence. In Witness Whereof, I here- ( j unto set my hand and affix the -[ Seal. £ seal of said Court at the City of ’ —’ Rensselaer this the 28th day of July, 1897. Wm H COOVER, Clerk of Jasper ircuit Court Foltz, Spitler <fc Kurrie, Att's July .0, 1897—910 , --A ' '•"s
