Democratic Sentinel, Volume 22, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 April 1898 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

The fu eral of Thornes R. Barke Wl oh was held at North Star church TJ ursday afternoon, wa* largely attended At. «lc fron. the piopleof that locality, th ie w re numbers from Reiißselaer, K mla d, Brook, Morocco, «nd other tr' n-», who were piesent to pay theirlapt tti mte of respect to n old and honored tli ud.—Morocco Courier. OBITUARY. „

homas B BAIiKF.u, one of Norton t: inty’s oldeßt, best known and most h hly respected citizens, breathed his 1 tat the home of his son Gallagher, in C 'fax township, \V< dnesday morning, J ril 13th, 1808, nt 4:35 o’clock, after an i less of svv. ral months duration. FaX cal services were held at North Star. 0 T orsday afternoon, April 14tb, 1898, • 2:00 o’clock, conducted by Rev. RipI o. Interment in the cemetery at the c-t arch. . I HOMAS Rodgers Barker VtSßbom in I ncolnshire, England, l'eb'uary 4, 181.4. 1 r parents were John and Ann Barker, t - o natives of Engl n 1, whore they lived » d died, leaving a family of five children • Joseph, Thomas K-, John, Harriet and Ain. The subject of this sketch, Thomas 1* . emigrated to America in August, 1831, g: a lauded at New York in September 1 om that city ho went to White county, 1 d., ana in 1832 to Fount, in couHty, ' ere he engaged in butchering. Thence J i went to New Orle ns, then to T» x is, i d several Western btstes. In 1840 be • ime to this county, and later returned to ountain county, where, May 15, 1841, lie v arried Miss Mary J., daughter of Jebi yers, and, in 1842, again removed to i 11 is county, and settled where he h s sin -e j sided. Mrs. Barker died in 1866. Mr arker was one of the first settlers < f .. ickson township, here he improved a « nantity of wild land, i.nd engaged ex t. naively in stock raising. He was one of -i e three first Trustees of the township • r.d was also County Commissioner from 1 oO to 1864, beside? having held other i ,wnship offices He was the father o’ i ght children Jo n (deceased), William . nn (deceased), Samuel, Melinda, Thoma ] (deceased), E Lanier and Gallagher Deceaeed w»s 85 years, 2 months a_d 5 i ayt old Morocco Courier

NO TEACHER ! hould miss the N. E. A, meeting at Washington in July next. A visit to ’Washington under ordinary circumstan . a is an educati n in its If, but on this i cession teach rs will have special oportuuities to visit the National Library. 11. e Smillisonian Institute, National Mn ■;eum, tne departments, Mount Vercou ind various other places of interest Th navy yard, it is not unlikely, will otfei rights worth a journey across t e coni ~eut to see. • The Monon Route will sell round trip :)ckets at a special low rate, good for a • efficient lengtu of time to see all tin ■ights of the national capita] and vicinity, particulars of which will-be furnished by any Monon ticket agent. Haley is still soiling atoo'st. For Sale— x have several hundred maple and ash trees, 8 to 12 feat high, suitable for street and- lawn Pi nting, nursery - rowu I will delive t min • ieusrelaer at 25 an 35 cent set oh. Also a full li» e of nurseiy stock at low prices Orders by mail will receive prompt attention. F A WO ODIN, Foresman, Ind

3peoial Sale of Nursery Stock! Owing 1o the closeness of monoy imong the farmers and planters we have determined to placi- this stock witr. n the.ici of till. The sock is young, thrifty nd v, ell grown, and every tree will tie ’ouu abeled true to the name All whe cant t plant trees will do well to look i; or sto k over. S o:-k can be seen at White’s very barn, Renssel er, Ind. Renicker Bros All M onon trains now stop i 17th street Chicago, where ticket ire sold and baggage is checked t< -ill stations. Electr c cars froi.n his point reach t be stock yards in •-ve minutes, and communicale with all parts of the city.

We are prepared to do all kinds nf plain and ornamental fresco i ainting in oil or water. We will fake your old paper off an \ make '.our room clea and healthy (yon I now paper is not healthy) as . heap as you can put on good pai er. If you want your furniture enewed, floor painted, or colors . ompounded, hard 01 soft wax fim sh, call on W. J. Miller, House. *' ign and Decorative Fainter. — studio in old band hall over post office. ts.

Scrofula * snake-Uhe in its subtlety. It lies hidden for years in the ambush of the blood, and when it strikes it voids its venom alike on strength and beauty, disfiguring the one and undermining the other. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is a specific for scrofula in its worst and most malignant forms. Scrofula is a blood disease. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is a blood purifying medicine. Mineral medicines only drive scrofula below the surface. Dr. J. C. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is a vegetable remedy and it eradicates the disease. There is no remedy for scrofula equal to Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. “I was cured of a long-standing case of ■orofula by Dr. J. C. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. The disease -first manifested itself when I was a child, by breaking out in red blotches all over my body. I was not free from the trouble until I took several bottles of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. That effected a permanent cure.’ —Mrs. E. H. Snyder, Lehighton, Pa. * I The particular advantages the Menicus ■es possess are that they give much 3tm oorrect secondary axes and when uited to the eye yield more perfeot >ion through the periphery of the lens, a daring the field of vision muoh larger d more distinct. ihe abovj is a scientific fact. If yon rt a want a pair of these lenses of the t material in the world, correotly adled to y*ur vision, notify, or call on . Ohs l- H 8 Vick, she Optician, Rsns- . >« r, ini.