Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 63, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 March 1910 — Page 2
RENSSELAER REPBMKAN DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY. Tk» Friday Xaaue is the Kagular Weakly Edition. ■IMfU UOB KATES. Sy Carrier, 10 Cants a Weak. By Math SO.T# a year. ■eml-Weekly, in advance, Tear gI.SO. HEALE? * CLARK, Pnblishert. Tuesday, March IS, 1910,
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
For County Clerk. JUDSON H. PERKINS. For County Auditor. J. P. HAMMOND. For County Treasurer. A. A. FELL. For County Sheriff. L. P. SHIRER. For County Surveyor. W. FRANK OSBORNE. For County Assessor. JOHN Q. LEWIS. ' For County Coroner. W. J. WRIGHT. For County Commissioner. First District. JOHN F. PETTET. Second District ROBERT S. DRAKE. For Qounty Couucllmen. First District S. T. COMER. > Second District NATHAN ELDREDGE. Third District FRANK BABCOCK. At Large. JOHN HUDSON, W. V. PORTER, F. E. LEWIS.
Call for Republic's State Convention.
To the Republicans of Indiana and all those who desire to co-operate with them: Pursuant to an order of the Republican State Committee, you are invited to meet in delegate convention at Tomlinson Hall, in the city of Indianapolis, on Tuesday, April 5, 1910, at 9 a. m., for the purpose of adopting a platform for the coming state campaign and nominating candidates for the following state offices: Secretary of state, treasurer, auditor, attorney-general, clerk of supreme court, superintendent of public instruction, geologist, state statistician, one judge of the supreme court for the second district, one judge of the supreme court for the third district, two judges of the appellate court for the first division, three judges of the appellate court for the second division. _ The convention will be composed of l, delegates, apportioned among the several counties of tne state on a basis of one delegate for every 200 votes, and for each additional fraction of more than 100 votes cast for Winfield T. Durbin for first presidential elector at the November election, 1908. The several counties of the Tenth congressional district being entitled to the following representation: Benton 10 Jasper .. ...10 Lake .47 Laporte .27 Newton 8 Porter 15 Tippecanoe ~..31 Warren i....... 10 White . 12.. The delegates from the 10th district will meet in room J2O on the 3rd floor of the State House on Monday, April 4, 1910, at 8 o’clock p. m. for the purpose of organization. Tickets to the convention will be distributed by the district chairman at these district meetings. The members of the committees thus chosen will meet at the following places at 9 p. m. of the same evening: Committee on rules and permanent organization, Palm Room, ninth floor, Claypool Hotel; committee on credentials, Room 933, Claypool Hotel; committee on resolutions. Room 426, Claypool Hotel. JOHN F. HAYES, E. M. LEE, Secretary. Chairman.
Must Not Speed Automobiles.
Rapid driving of automobiles on the streets of Rensselaer & forbidden by city ordinance and violations of it will be punished. This applies to resident as well as visiting autoists. J. K. DAVIS, City Marshall.
Save Your Quaker Bread Tags.
Until further notice Quaker bread tags will be redeemed at all groceries or at the Model Bakery. 10 tags will be good for one loaf of Quaker bread. Save your tags and get a loaf free. I , ■- Horse Bills at The Republican office. Try the Classified Column.
REPUBLICAN CALL.
For Selection of Delegates and Alter* uate Delegates to the State, Congressional and Judicial Con* vention. Notice is hereby given to the republican voters of Jasper County, Indiana, to meet in mass meeting on Saturday, March 26, 1910 for the purpose of electing delegates and alternate delegates to the State Convention to be held at Indianapolis in Tomlinson Hall on Tuesday April 5, 1910, at 5 o’clock A. M. and to elect delegates and alternate delegates to the Congressional Convention to be held at Lafayette, in the Victoria Theatre, on Monday, March 28, 1910, at 1:30 P. M. Pursuant to the order of the State and District Central Committees, Jasper County will be entitled to ten (lQ) delegates and ten (10) seats in each of said conventions, which will require that the county be divided into 10 districts and that one delegate and one alternate be elected to represent each district in each of said conventions. For the purpose of carrying out this order, the county has been districted as follows and the voters will meet in the places designated: District No. 1, Barkley, East and West, at Cosey Palace school. District No. 2, Carpenter, East and West, at Remington. District No. 3, Carpenter, South and Jordan, at Remington. -- District No. 4, Kankakee, Wheatfield and Walker, at Wheatfield. District No. 5, Keener and Union, North, at DeMotte. District No. 6, Marion 2 and Milroy at Rensselaer, East Court Room. District No. 7, Marion 4 and Newton, at Rensselaer, Circuit Court Room. District No. 8, Marion 3 and Union, South, at Rensselaer, Sheriff’s office. District No. 9, Gillam and Hanging Grove, at McCoysburg. District No. 10, Marion 1, at Rensselaer, Assessor’s office. Th e delegates elected to the State Convention will meet in Room 120, on the 3rd floor of State House on April 4th, at 8 o’clock P. M. for the purpose of selecting a member of the committees on credentials and resolutions and a member of the committee on rules and permanent organization, and to secure tickets to the State .Convention. At the time and places designated, each district will elect two delegates and two alternate delegates to the Judicial Convention to be held at Morocco, Indiana, on Thursday, March 31st at 1:30 P. M., to nominate a candidate for the office of Prosecuting Attorney for the 30th Judicial Circuit of Indiana. H. J. KANNAL, MOSES LEOPOLD, Secretary. Chairman.
Brother Sues Brother in The Jasper Circuit Court
The unusual thing of a brother bringing suit against his brother has happened in Rensselaer. Dr. Silas H. Moore, the oldest doctor in Rensselaer in point of years, in fact, a man nearing 80 years of age, is the plaintiff in a suit asking judgment for medical services against his brother, Squire William E. Moore, who is 83 years of age. The amount asked is $411.25, being for 329 professional visits at. 51.25 per visit, alleged to have been made during the years 1907 and 190 S. A. Halleck is attorney for the plaintiff. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hopkins and son Ernest left this morning for Spokane, Wash., where they expect to make their future home. Richard Crowell also left for Kalispell, near which place he has a claim. Mrs. Crowell had planned to accompany him, but just a short time before they were to start, he received word that he would not have to be on his claim until April 26th and he decided to go on by himself and make arrangements for some conveniences and have his wife and baby follow a little later. Mr. Hopkins is not certain in what he will engage, but expects to find employment readily. Mrs. Hopkins’ relatives are there and until they decide on : home for themselves they will be at the home of her mother. Mr. and Mrs. Hopkins will be greatly missed by many friends here in church, lodge and among all the people who were acquainted with them and they take with them the best wishes of all who knew them. Heavy, impure bldod makes a mud-, dy, pimply complexion, headaches nausea, indigestion. Thin blood makes you weak; pale, sickly. Burdock Blood Bitters makes the blood rich, red, pure —restores perfect health. • Try the Classified Column
NORTHEAST BARKLEY.
C. P. Moody went to Chicago Sunday in his auto. Day Jordan lost a valuable horse Friday night. Miss Alice Bingham called on Letha Rees Friday night. Floyd Tow is slowly improving from his recent sick spell. Wm. Rees worked at Lewiston for B. J. Gifford Monday. Mrs. W. J. Miller, of near Pleasant Grove, is on the sick list. < Miss Mary Rees worked for Mrs. Geo. Johnson last week. T. M. Callahan and Ed Oliver were Pleasant Grove callers Monday. Miss Letha Rees went to work for Mrs. Kenton Parkison again Monday. Mrs. G. M Beebe and daughter Ella called on Mrs. T. M. Callahan Monday. Mrs. Geo. Martin and little son Floyd; called on Mrs. Wm. Rees Sunday evening. The Barkley choir met at C. P. Moody’s Saturday evening, practising some new songs. Miss Alice Bingham spent Saturday night and Sunday with Wm. Hershman’s, near the oil fields. George and Charley Margin, Claude Bowman and Art Kennedy spent Sunday with Wm. Martin and family, of McCoysburg. Mrs. Wm. Rees and two daughters Hazel and Letha, and little son, Charles, called on Mrs. Samuel Rees and family Sunday afternoon. T. G. Brown and John Hellengreen’s furniture and stock left Pleasant Grove Thursday for North Dakota. Their families will go the first of this week. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Akers, of Lewiston, have rented the house where. John Heil recently lived in Pleasant Grove. Jim intends to work in the tile factory when it opens again. Miss Rae Haniford, of Gifford, took Maggie Richmond’s place as clerk kt Reed McCoy’s store at McCoysburg. Maggie and her two sisters and father intend to go to lowa soon. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Johnson and two children, Mary Rees, Edith Saltwell Jim Branberg, Maude DeMoss, and John Newcomb called on S. W. Went: and family Sunday evening. J. P. Merilat, a well known citizen of Ft. Wayne, was fatally injured by the plunge of a freight elevator from the fourth story to the basement of a wholesale drug house yesterday morning and died an hour later at the hospital.
The Uac*Jac “Fireless Cooker.” There is nothing mysterious or weird in Fireless Cooking. The principle involved is as old as civilization. It must be remembered that no Fireless Cooker generates heat, it merely retains the heat generated by the usual methods employed in every day cooking, - thus saving hours of cooking on the stove. The Vac-Jac being made entirely of metal, is perfectly hygienic and sanitary. It should be kept clean and dry, with the same care that is given any kitchen utensil, and when not in use should be left open to the air. Why You Need a Vac-Jac Firelees Cooker. It will reduce your fuel bill about 80 per cent or more. It will give you your afternoons to yourself, instead of keeping you in or near the kitchen. It will keep all odors of cooking out of the house. No more smell from onions, cabbage or cauliflower than from boiled rice. It will never scorch or burn food. Food can never be overcooked in a Vac-Jac Cooker. It will reduce your meat bills. You can make old chicken tender. Tough and cheap cuts of meat as palatable as the more expensive ones. It will keep the flavor of meats and vegetables better than any other method of cooking. In ordinary cooking a great deal of the flavor escapes with the steam. In the Vac-Jac, all the flavor is retained. It will keep the meal hot for several hours after it has been thoroughly cooked, if for any reason the serving of it is delayed. It will not heat up the kitchen in hot weather. Why a Vac-Jac Cooker is the Best Cooker. The Vac-Jac Cooker is made without any cushions of felt, excelsior, asbestos or other substances to become saturated with steam and odors of cooking, which will in time smell offensively and become unsanitary. The Vac-Jac is made entirely of metal, and has no wooden box or cabinet around it .to become warped by heat, and get out of shape and useless. The Vac-Jac is made of heavy rust proof galvanized metal with solid aluminum utensils, and will last for years. Mapy other metal cookers are made of light metal and will rust out in a very short time. The Vac-Jac is the only Cooker which can be scoured and cleaned the same as any kitchen utensil. + -‘r The Vac-Jac is the only Cooker depending on vacuum for insulation. >acuum is the most perfect insulation. Therefore, the Vac-Jac Cooker will cook food quicker and keep it hot longer than any other cooker on the market. GEORGE FATE - Ajeat,
- ~ ■—UU—MI ■ 11. ,1 \ 3• ■ .... //11 II! BWMBKk n\\ aw JI ramS You Serve Good Health With Igß Mnffif ifji T T a ? rees with your household —big folks, baby folks and all. A bracing, pureB||j| 1111 JL food fruit drink; warming, palate-tempting, energy-building. |||Hl || |H Uli 111 It’s the drink to do big things on. Puts you on your mettle—gives you Hill I lllllllrlttlul stamina, and stiak. |jll| I ||lLlju|U|H It supports nobly—a prop that does not palsy; a stimulant that dofeS nbt Sap. : iUk— BONANO is not a ‘'near” coffee, but a wholesome table drink in a class of its own » withits own flavor, its own spicy odor, its own full, satisfying “body.” 1 Try BONANO a week or two. You will like it better and better every day r 1 7 w V/'' as you yOUr health improve, your nerves get firm, your brain grdw dear, your digestion become right—when you learn what it is to work like a giant and sleep. like a baby - jpjH C BONANO can easily be made to suit each individual taste by boiling it more X or less or using a larger or smaller quantity than directions call for. You can easily find the way you like it best BONANO is just the appetizing goodness of fully matured, tropic-ripened bananas —the choicest that grow —dried, roasted, granulated —served as a golden brown, aromatic beverage. No adulteration, no artificial coloring or flavor. ] Your doctor will tell you that bananas are high in food value, that they are easily and quickly digested by the weakest stomach without over-taxing, that they belp * n assimilat i° n and digestion and are mildly corrective, that they contain or develop no poisons; and thus BONANO is pure and wholesome and can be given in perfect safety to an unweaned babe. , J b ' or I nsomn i a: Those who are unable to sleep find that a before-retiring cup of BONANO promptly induces restful, refreshing slumber. BONANO is an economical drink, too. It goes twice as far as coffee. It requires little sugar because of the fruit-sweet it contains. 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 The Home Grocery. Exchange Bank Blctff., Chicago, 111
HANGING GROVE.
J. N. Tyler visited relatives in Rensselaer Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Foulks visited with Mr. and Mrs. Simon Cook Sunday. Mrs. Roy Williams and daughter Iris, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R Phillips Sunday . J Isaac Parcels has rented the Phillips farm and has hired'a young man and his wife to keep house for him. Harvey Saidla was taken quite sick suddenly Sunday. He just recently had the measles, and it is probable he got out too soon. Mrs. Christie Vick and children returned to Rensselaer Friday morning after a short visit with her brother, J N. Tyler and family. C. W. Bussell was called hurriedly to Rensselaer Saturday on account of the serious sickness of his mother. She is some better now. Mrs. Roy Bussell went down to her brother’s, Gaylord Parker’s near Rensselaer, Friday, to help them get things arranged in their new home. S. H. Moore was sick and unable tc go to Newton, 111., as wals also Mr Porter’s youngest son, Fred. Mr. Porter will come back in a few days find take them home with him. Jas. J. Phillips had a real good sale Wednesday. Two of his horses sold for over two hundred dollars. He loaded his goods at Lee, Wednesday and and will locate in Pontiac, 111. The blind musicians of Lee will give another entertainment at McCoysburg Saturday night, March 19th. The Lee Orchestra will assist them with some selected music. The admission will be only ten cents for all, and the entire proceeds will go to the blind people.
Important to Tax Payers.
The State Accounting Board has ruled that Road Receipts must be presented only by the party owning the property. And it must be presented at the time of paying the first installment of taxes. You can not pay your taxes today, and bring your road receipts later and get the cash. The County Treasurer will adhere strictly to this rule, for his own protection. All who can, should pay early, as it takes much more time to wait on the people with the new form receipts, and the books positively must be closed on the evening of the first Monday in May Otherwise the Treasurer will be held responsible for the uncollected penalties by the state. I want to give all ample notice, and please do not ask the Treasurer to disregard these rules.
J. D. ALLMAN,
Treasurer Jasper County.
A DEAD STOMACH OF WHAT USE IS IT?
Thousands? Yes hundreds of thousands of people throughout America -are- taking -the- slow death treatment daily. They are murdering their own stomach, the best friend they have, and an their sublime ignorance they think they are putting aside the laws of nature. This is no sensational statement; it is a startling fact, the truth of which any honorable physician will not deny. Those thousands of people are swallowing daily hugh quantities of pepsin and other, strong digesters, made especially to digest food in the stomach without any aid at all from the digestive membrane of the stomach. Mi-o-na stomach tablets relieve distressed stomach in five minutes; they do more. Taken regularly for a few weeks they build up the run down stomach and make it strong enough to digest its own food. Then indigestion, belching, sour stomach and headache will go. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are sold by druggists everywhere and by B. F. Fendig, who guarantees them. 50 cents a box. Booth’s Pills cure constipation, 25c.
WORTH WEIGHT _IN GOtO Lady Learned About Cardui, The woman’s Tonic and is Now Enthusiastic in its Praise. I Mount Pleasant, Tenn —“Cardui Is all you claim for it, and more/* writes Mrt. 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. 1 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 mineralsand drugs, but helps nature to perform a cure in a natural easy way. Try Cardui. » N. B —WWte for Ladies’ Advisory Dept, Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., for Special ■ tor Women, 'sent in plain wrapper, on requests For a mild, easy action of the bowels, a single dose of Doan’s Regulets is enough. Treatment cures habitual constipation. 25 cents a box. Ask your druggist for them.
Wood & Kresler’s CH®R Barber Shop The Largest and Finest in jasper County. ♦♦•♦$»»»»»♦♦»»»«»»»»»» Go there for a fine smooth shave and fashionable hair cut. Boot Black Stand In Connection.
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 he glad to list your property or t- shoW yoii whit I hate for sale and trade. A. S. LaRUE
i hi- . . i i; villa and French Lick Springs. bbbimbue* tdkb tabu In Effect March 7. 1809. SOUTH BOUND. • No. 6 —Louisville Mall ......10:66 am. No. 33—Indianapolis Mall .... 1:59 p.m. No. 89—Milk Accom 6:02 p.m. No. 3 —Louisville Ex. ..11:06 p.m. Nd. 31—Fast Mall 4:46 am. HOBTH BOUND. No. 4—Mall 4:69 am. No. 40—Milk Accom. 7:31 a.in. No. 82—Fast Mall 10:06 am. No. 6—Mall and Ex. ........ 8:17 p.m. No. 80 —Cln- to Chi. Mall 6:03 p.m No. 6, South hound, makes connection at Monon for Indianapolis, arriving in that city at 3:80 p. m. Also train No. 38, north bound, leaves Indianapolis at 11:46 a. tn., and connects at Monon with No. 6, arriving at Rensselaer at 3*17 p m. Train No. 81 makes ‘ connection at Motion for Lafayette, arriving at L» fayette at 6 a m. No. 14, leaving Lu fayette at 4:37 p. m.. connects with No 80 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:03 p. m. -- • s t£- ’ - ‘ ' - - ’
Horse Bills at The Republican office.
