Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 February 1910 — Page 4
Classified Column. FOB SAIE. Far Sale—2s pounds sewed carpet rags. Inquire of Phone 625 G. F*r Sale—A good young team of horses, a coming 4, other coming 6; also a nearly new rubber tire buggy. Karah Daniels, phone &01C. For Sale—Root’s bee supplies of all kinds. Free catalogue. Leslie Clark, care Republican, Rensselaer, Ind. For Sale —About 20 tons of No. 1 timothy hay for sale in stack or will deliver to Rensselaer. Ed Ranton, phone 608 A, Rensselaer. F. 21 For Sale —1 grey horse, coming 4 years old; 1 pair black.mules, coming 4 years old; 1 nine-year-old sorrel mare. 2 Shorthorn bull calves and 1 2-year-old. Guss Yeoman, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, Ihd. 6 miles west of Rensselaer. F. 15 For Sale —l have a few pieces of embroidered linen for sale. I do stamping, embroidery, braiding and all kinds of fine needlework. Call at my house on Austin Avenue. Mrs. R. P. Benjamin. F. 16 For Sale — 4 room house, summer kitchen, 3 lots, good well, small barn, fruit, 1 % blocks north of depot. Inquire of Ed Hopkins. For Sale —l2o acre farm, near station, school and church, in good Has five room house, food barn and other buildings, all in food condition. There is bearing orchard and a large amount of grapes and smaller fruit Owner will sell at a bargain and will make terms to suit Will take live-stock or property as first payment Can give possession this spring. G. F. Meyers. F.2tf For Sale—A good well built six-room house, finely finished with cellar, sewer, cistern, city water, electric lights, on improved street, with curb, parking, walks inside and Out. This property is in first-class conllition and as good as new, and lied in good neighborhood, close to school, churches and business part of town. Can sell this property at a bargain on terms. G. F. Meyers. J.2stf For Sale or Trade—l6o acres all smooth black prairie land, has large ditch running full length along one side of place, giving fine outlet for drainage. Lies on main road one mile from station and gravel road. Will take property as part payment. G. F. Meyers. J.l3tf For Sale— The heirs of John Bisloskey. deceased, desire to sell the 380 acre farm in Newton township, and the 3 acre tract in Marion township, Jasper county, Ind. See or write the heirs or Foltz St Spitler, Rensselaer, ind., for prices. N.6tf For Sale or Trade—Four good sec-nd-hand cabinet organs. Fred Phillips.
FOB BENT. For Bent — Two furnished rooms. Mrs. E. L. Clark. For Bent —l4o acres blue and wild grass pasture, nev* wind mill and tank. One mile south of Harvey Wood farm. Frank Foltz. d29tf For Bent —Nice 4-room flat in Republican building. Inquire here. LOST. Lost —A package of goods wrapped in Racket Store paper, containing pair of shoes and other articles. Return to this office or to the owner, S. L. Karr, McCoysburg. F.lB Lost —A pocket book stitched around edges with black thread, containing a S2O bill, a- $5 gold piece, a $2 bill, some small change, and an old-fashioned copper cent. Finder please return to Alfred Fletcher, or this office. Good reward. F. 17 ‘ , .a, Lost —A $5 bill at the Michael Nagle sale. Return here. Lost— Tuesday evening, between Princess Theatre and Catholic church, a brown fur neck piece. Finder please return to this office. POULTRY AND EGGS. Eggs for setting from S. C. Buff Orpingtons, the largest clean legged -chicken in existence and recognized as the heaviest winter layers. Eggs from prize winners at $3.00 per IS. Utility stock, $1.50 per 15. G. B. Porter. " , / v fb.lStf FOUND. Foaad — Man’s overcoat. Inquire here. F.lB MONET TO LOAN. r Money to Loralnsurance Co. okhmy on first farm mortgage seearttgr. Inquire of K. P. Honan loAf
CHICAGO LITE STOCK AHD GRAIN MARKET. > CKXCAOO un STOCK Chicago, Feb. 16.—Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 28,000; cattle, 11,000; sheep, 18,000. Kansas City, hogs, 14,000;- cattle, 14,000; sheep, 10,000. Omaha, hogs, 14,000; cattle, 6,200. Hogs open steady. Mixed, $8.70 to $9.20. Heavy, $8.90 to $9.25. Rough, $8.70 to $8.85. Light, $8.65 to $9.10. Beeves, $4.40 to SB.OO. Cows and heifers, $2.25 to $6.15. Stockers and feeders, $3.40 to $5.50. Texans, $5.00 to $6.40. Calves, $6.50 to $9.00. Sheep, steady, $6.55. Lambs, $5.90 to $9.00. ' Estimates tomorrow: Hogs, 36,000; cattle, 17,000; sheep, 15,000. • ciis^unr Wheat No. 2 red, $1.24 to $1.26. No. 3 red, $1.20 to $1.24. No. 2 hard wheat, ( sl.l3% to $1.15. No. 3 hard wheat, $1.12 to $1.14. No. 1 northern spring, $1.17. No. 2 northern spring, $1.15 to $1.17. No. 3 northern spring, $1.12 to $1.15. Corn No. 2. 65c. No. 2 white, 65c. No. 2 yellow, 65c. No. 3, 63 %c to 63%c. N0.»3 white, to 64%c. No. 3 yellow, 63%c to 64c. No. 4,581,4 c to 59%c. No. 4 white, 60c to 61c. No. 4 yellow, 59%c to 61c. Sample mixed, 64c to 57c. Sample yellow, 56c to 58c. Oats No. 2, 47%c. No. 2 white, 49%c to 49%c. No. 3,48 c. No. 3 white, 47 %c to 49c. No. 4 white, 46c to 48c. Standard, 49c to 49%c. —» * FUTURES Wheat May July Sept. Open ... L 12%% 1.03%% 98%99 High .... 1.13% 1.03% 99% Low .... 1.12% Close ... 1.12% 1.03% 98% Oats Open ... 67-% 67-% 67%% High .... 67% 68 67% Low .... 66% 67 67% Close ... 67% — 67% 67% Corn Open ... 47%% 44 40% High : 47% 44% 41% Low .... 47% 43% — 40% —*■ Close ... 47% — 44% 41% - # _____ BXNSSELAEB QUOTATIONS Corn—s7c. Oats—42c. Rye—6sc. Butter —26c. Eggs—2sc. Turkeys—l6c. Chickens—l2c. Geese —7c. Ducks—loc. Roosters—sc.
Evangelist Herbert Yeuell Will Lecture at the Christian Chureh. The people of Rensselaer and vicinity are to have the pleasure of hearing another one of Rev. Yeuell’s famous lectures on the evening of February 17th, at the Christian church. The subject of the lecture will be “A Day and a Night in Paris,” and will be illustrated with 200 of his excelcelt pictures. Since Rev. Yeuell was here last winter he has visited in the old country many historic places. He also attended Oxford university for a term. Those' who heard Rev. Yeuell a year ago will want to hear him again. In order that all may attend the price of admission has been put at 25 cents. Remember the time is Thursday evening, Feb. 17th, and the place is the Christian church.. WANTED. Wanted—Until further notice I will sell milk for 7 cents per quart. Customers wanted. M. J. Thornton, dairyman. Telephone 510 K. Wanted—Situation as housekeeper for batchelor or widower. State Wages. O. E. Chalmers, Hebron, Ind., Box 57. F. 19 Wanted —Bee keepers to send for catalogue of Root’s supplies. Write or call for free catalogue. Leslie Clark, care. Republican, Rensselaer/ IndL”"’" '■' . ■ - . Wanted— Man by year on farm. Married man preferred. Must come well recommended. W. B. Leonard, Francesville, Ind. . , F. 17 Wanted —At once, a dining room girl. Makeever House.
CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS. Some of the moon’s mountains are 36,000 feet high. —■. ■ t Berlin is said to have more trees in the streets than any other city. J ~ The train which the Kaiser uses on his travels three years building. The United States is the world's largest consumer of cofTee and cocoa. Electric heating devices are successfully employed for branding cigar boxes. | The pigmy mouse of Siberia is said to be the smallest quadruped in the world. During the present year the entire railway system of Buda-Pesth will be electrified. There are at present in the moo ice schools of France 7,320 . rrench ant 819 foreign students. It is estimated that there are 2,n00, 000 horse power in unusued waters In the state of Wisconsin. It is figured that a successful physi cian mu.-t have a clientele of 150 ilies, or about 750 persons. Electric signs are to„be extensively used on the stations of the loop of the Chicago elevated railways. One of the latest forms of feminine commercial enterprises in Paris is a school where smiting is taught. By a vote of 31 to 21 the Oregon Legislature has refused to abolish the whipping post for wife-beaters. It is said that silicide and boride of titanium, products of the e’.ectric fur nace, are as hard as the diamond.
More than one-quarter of the tobacco consumed >y the Spanish Na tion comes from the United States. German women are taking up box mg and there are \ number of schools where the art of self-defense is taught. John J. Boobar, librarian of the House oi Representatives, is preparing ing a card index of the Congressional Record. It is said officially thai locomotives do not set 90 or even 75 per cent oi the forest fires, but they do sot about 60 per cent of them. The Women’s Medical School ai Shanghai recently awarded diplomas to six graduates. This school was founded three years ago.. The Mayoralty chair of Cambridge has come to be called “the hoofloc chair” by those who have followed Cambridge politics for many years. —— The Danish government proposes land and sea fortifications-, the con struct ton of 20 torpedo bo; ts and si? submarines, improvement in mine 3, etc. New York state now has 47 cities. The latest addition to the list is Lack a wanna, up in Erie county, near iiuf falo, whose first charter Govcrno: Hughes signed a few days ago. Eugene Henard, who attained fame with bis palace of illusions at the Paris Exposition in 1900, has just com pleted a similar, but larger piece of eccentric architecture for exhibition in that city. The state of Washington has abol ished the tip in hotels, dining cars ant other public places. -The new law makes both the giving and receiving of a tip a misdemeanor, and imposes a heavy line. Rochester, N. Y., has maintained what are called “social Centers” for over a year. A number of school buildings are utilized as meeting places for the people, without distinction, to gather and discuss subjects of interest to all. There is just one way for the peop’e of the city find it possible to tr y eggs, chickens, meat and flour for It's money—that is for some of them tc leave the city and go back to raising more hens, more Cattle, and growing more wheat. The largest apartment-house in tire world is being built on a site covering the entire block bounded by Eightysixth and Eighty seventh stree s, Broadway and Amsterdam avenue, Manhattan. It will be twelve stories high, with a court In the center, and .will cost $3,000,000. New York has raised $1,075,000 for the Hudson-Fulton celebration, which begin September 25 next, and $15,000 of the amount will be devoted to aeronautc features. The reproduction of Fulton’s little steamboat will have a rich setting with fast motorboats ard airships skimming around as it moves upstream. The Maryland Prisoners’ Aid Association, w-hich maintains a house of industry in Baltimore for ex-eon victe, has completed another year of good service to the state and its charges. In the year 229 men have been parol? ed in care of the association, and. of this number only four have been returned to the criminal-court and sen,teac«d to prison.
The Sunshine of the South is MERE’S a hot, flavorful, bracing beverage that you can * f drink morning, noon and night, and,’tween times * Jpplf||l| —and enjoy only good effects. ’ Myjgllg BONA NO is the pure meat of choicest fiwi H bananas the delicate, sugary, juicy varieties [jf^ we never see up North —ripened in the sun- Sh rll ill shine of the Tropics. Then dried, roasted * \jjl Jjt| fi brown and granulated by modem machinery. jmf BONANO brings'you the golden sun- — 'iJx yl gB f 1 shine of the South in its spicy, tempting aroma, its delicious flavor, its rich, satisfying - You will like BONANO —all your family, 11 little folks and • grown folks will like BONANO. Like it better than other hot A 25-cent can of BONANO makes 75 cups of the best hot drink you ever tasted. Ask your grocer for BONANO. For sale by HOME GROCERY Mil International Banana Food Co., Corn Exchange Bank Bldg., Chicago, lU.
Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, Z.oolsville and Prench Lick Springs. BSHSSELAEB TIMS TABLB In Effect March 7. 1909. SOUTH BOUND. No. 6—Louisville Mail ...*..10:55 a.m. No. 33—Indianapolis Mail .... 1:59 p.m. No. 39—Milk Accom ......... 6:02 p.m. No. 3—Louisville Ex. .......11:05 p.m. No. 31—Fast Mail 4:45 a.m. NORTH BOUND. No. 4 —Mail 4:69 a.m. No. 40—Milk Accom. ......... 7:31 a.m. No. 32—Fast Mail .....10:05 a.m. No. 6—Mail and Ex. ........ 3:17 p.m. No. 30 —Cin. to Chi. Mall 6:02 p.m. No. 5, south bound, makes connection at Monon for Indianapolis, arriving In that city at 2:20 p. m. Also train No. 38, north bound, leaves Indianapolis at 11:46 a. m., and connects at Monon with No. 6, arriving at Rensselaer at 3:17 p. m. Train No. 31 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 6 a. m. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 4:37 p. m., connects with No. 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:02 p. m.
Food Fermenting Causes Indigestion.
“I got a box of Mi-o-na tablets for a distress in my stomach, and the first dose relieved me. and after I took the fourth I have not felt any more of it. I think it is a wonderful medicine.” — Hiram Shultz, Watseka.Tll., July 27, 1909. If your stomach is out of order or distressed, no matter from what cause, Mi-o-na stomach tablets will give instant relief, and if taken regularly, will cure indigestion, acute or chronic, or money t^ack. Every sufferer from stomach trouble, gas, belching, sour Stomach, nervousness, dizziness, and biliousness, should get a fifty cent box of Mi-o-na stomach tablets today and start a treatment. In three days’ time the stomach and bowels will be thoroughly purified, and sour stomach and distress will vanish. Continue the treatment for two weeks and the stomach will become so strong that it will be able to digest the heartiest meal without distress. Sold by druggists everywhere and by B, F. Fendig. Booth’s Pills best for constipation. 25 cents. * ____________________ IF You want a Position: You want a Maid: You want to buy a House: • You want to sell a lot: You have anything to Trade: Whatever your wants may be: Use the classified columns of The Republican tor quick results. According to rumors current in South Bend, the Murdock interests, of Lafayette, are planning to merge the interurban and street railway lines of Indiana into one gigantic system. In the event the deal is consummated, through electric service will be maintained between Chicago, Indianapolis, Dayton, Michigan City, South Bend, Warsaw, Goshen and Cincinnati. It is understood that if through service can be established, case and sleeping cars will be made part of the equipment.
H 1 ■ j 1 Evangelist Yeuell is coming to Lecture at the Christian Church, Thursday evening, Feb. 17. Subject: “A Day and a Night in Paris,” illustrated by two hundred of his famous pictures. Price of Admission, Twenty-Five Cents.
fan Day DEALER IN lair, Cement Jme, Duel RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA
Real Estate I have opened up an office in Room 5 of the Odd Fellows’ block, where I will conduct a general real estate, loan and Insurance business, handling farm and town property and stocks of goods, local and foreign. Will be glad to list your property or t show you what I have for sale and trade. A. S. LaRUE ------
Try the Classified column. ; 1 / »
WORTH WEIGHT _IN GOLD Lady Learned About Cardui, The Woman’s Tonic and is Now Enthusiastic in its Praise. Mount Pleasant, Tenn.—“Cardui is all you claimjor it, and more,” writes Mrs. M. E. Rail, of this place. “I was a great sufferer for 2 years and was very weak, but I learned about Cardui, and decided to try it Now lam in perfect health. “My daughter, when changing into womanhood, got in very bad health. I gave her Cardui and now she enjoys good health. “Cardui is worth its weight in gold. I recommend it for young and old.” Being composed exclusively of harmless vegetable ingredients, with a mild and gentle medicinal action, Cardui is the best medicine for weak, sick girls and women. It has no harsh, powerful, near-pois-onous action, like some of the strong minerals and drugs, but helps nature to perform a cure in a natural easy way. Try Cardui. N. B.— Write to: fcadles* Advisory Dept. Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., lor Special Instructions, ind 64-page book, ’Home Treatment. lor Women,' -sent in plain wrapper, on request. Lecture Course Dotes. Feb. ‘ 15—The Columbian Concert ,Co., which has been one of the most -popular companies on the road, and which the lecture course committee considers themselves very fortunate to have secured. March 26—Georg® P. Bible, humorous lecturer :, and entertainer.
