Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 96, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 April 1910 — Page 2

lEHSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY AND SEMI.WEEKLY. **• Friday Ist tie la th« Regrnlar W—My Edition. . SUBSCRIPTION SATES. Sslljr. tar Canter, 10 Canta a Week. _ »T tail, $3.75 a year. ■—O-W—My, In advanoa, Taar fljg MEALEY A CLARK, Publishers. Frida}-, April 22, 1910.

REPUBLICAN TICKETS.

CONGRESSIONAL TICKET. For Representative, Tenth Congressional District— EE OAR J>. CRUXPACKEB. STATE TICKET. Secretary of State— OTIS E. GULLET. Auditor of State — JO HR REED. Clerk of Supreme Court—“““ EDWARD T. FITZPATRICK. State Geologist— W. S. BLATCHLEY. State Statistician— J. L. FEET*. Judge of Supreme Court—2nd district— OSCAR MONTGOMERY. Judge of Supreme Court —3rd district— ROBERT X. KELLER. Judges Appellate Court-—lst district— WARD H. WATSON, CASSIUS C. HADLEY. Judges Appellate Court—2nd district — DANIEL W. COMSTOCK, JOSEPH X. RABB, XARBT B. TUTKXLL. Treasurer of State— JONCE MONYHAN. Attorney-General— FINLET P. MOUNT. Superintendent of Public Instruction— SAMUEL C. FERRELL. $ COUNTY 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 —Ist district— JOHN F. PETTET. For County Commissioner —2nd district— ROERT S. DRAKE. For County Councilman—lst district— S. T. COMER. For County Councilman—2nd district — . NATHAN ELDRXDGE. For County Councilman—3rd district— FRANK BABCOCK. For County Council men-at-Large— JOHN HUDSON, W. ▼. PORTER, F. E. LEWIS.

FAIR OAKS.

Mrs, Allen is still very sick. Roy Gundy visited at home over Sunday. Bud Loftus has returned from Lafayette. Frank Cox spent Sunday here with his parents. Margaret Norris, of Rensselaer, visited Ruth Gundy a few days last week. Mrs. Mary Miller, of Independence, visited a week with Mrs. Cottingham. Two of Ad Moores children are attending school in Lowell this spring. The Cottingham hotel has been treated to a new coat of paint. Mr. Brown, of Lowell, is giving Miss Eliza Thompson music lessons. Enos Meffit has rented his house and talks of going west soon. A. D. Washburn was here to see Walter McConnell Thursday. Mrs. McCain and Miss McCain, of Akron, Ohio, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Felix Irwin a few’ days last week. Mr. Collins, superintendent of the National Pickle company’s factories is in Fair Oaks this week. Beulah and Robert Shehan, of Lafayette, visited their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. I. Right over Sunday. Mrs. Felix Irwin spent one day in Rensselaer last week with Mrs. Keen Littlefield. Postmaster Thompson is still quite lame from an injury received from a fall in the winter. He uses two canes. Three of the • eighth grade pupils passed the township examination, being Flossie Gundy, Ross Wood and Gladys Halleck.

Fred Williams finished his work on the Cottingham hotel last week and is now painting the Rosebud church. Lester Warren is helping him. Mrs. N. A. McKay and son Frank, also Mrs. Mort Carr were called to Chicago as witnesses in the Ed Lakin law suit with a street car company, he having sued the company for damages for injuries his wife received some 8 years ago.

Tour tongue is coated. Your breath is foul. Headaches come and go. These symptoms show that your stomach is the trouble. To remove the cause is the first thing, and Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets will do that. Easy to take and most effective. Sold by all dealers. c Charles Reville confessed to the Richmond pclice that he killed Mrs. Frank Allison and set fire to her ho <&e after she had surprised him in thd act of burglarizing the house. Revelle, who is 19 years of age and lives near Milton, talked so much about the tragedy that he was arrested Wednesday night. The murder occurred at Cambridge City two weeks ago.

BAUMGARDNER MADE CONFESSION TO DEPUTY.

While Enroute to Jeffersonville Baumgardner Implicates Others In the Robbery Near Conrad. Glenn Baumgardner, the young fellow who languished in the Rensselaer Jail while awaiting trial in Newton county, and who seemed on the verge of confessing the part he had and who his accomplices were in the assault and robbery committed on old man Friedl, of near Conrad, did confess to Deputy Sheriff Dowling, of Newton county, while on his way to the reformatory at Jeffersonville to serve a term of from 5 to 14 years. The Kentland Enterprise publishes the following confession: “This man Walter Doty came to me about a week before the crime was committed and wanted me to go with him and help rob the man. I told him I would not do it, and then Walter Doty sent Art Darby out for me. Darby had with him a quart of w-hiskey. I drank the whiskey and got too much of it and then I agreed to help rob the man. We then went down to Friedle’s house, who we were to rob. We met Doty in the woods right near the house and us fellows got inside to do this. It was about six o’clock in the evening. The people were at home at the time. I did not take anything. Doty wanted to get the check. Darby did not take anything that I know of. There was nothing stolen that I know of. When we went in there we were masked, and I think Doty had a mask on too. I was drunk. When we got in there we ran into Mr. Friedle and then we got into a fight. We then ran out of the house. Darby had a gun and shot once at the floor, he said. Darby and I ran away and got on the train and went to Morocco. No one else was with us. I do not know where Doty went. I saw Doty about a week before I was arrested and he told me to leave the country again and I told him I would not do it. After Darby and I went to Morocco, we went to Danville on the midnight train. We stayed all night in a railroad tower and the next morning I went to see my brother who was in the Soldiers’ Home hospital sick. Then Darby and I went to Champaign, 111. Four or five times Darby came to me and wanted me to rob this man. The night before the robbery was committed Doty came to me and wanted me to help him and Darby rob Friedle in the woods as he came from Momence, but I refused. Doty told me a week before the old gentleman came down that he was going to pay him and wanted me and Darby to get; it away from him. Darby came and told me the night it was done that we were to rob Friedle. I was at George Bingham’s and Doty was at home. Doty told Darby to come to me, and Darby said that Doty gave him the whiskey and to come and get me. Then I got drunk and lost my head.” The above confession was made before Mr. Dowling and sworn to before John S. Hathaway, a notary public of Jeffersonville. It is somewhat disjointed, but was made largely in reply to questions propounded by Mr. Dowling. The young man also told Mr. Dowling on the way to Jeffersonville that much of the evidence given At the trial in Kentland was a lie from start to finish.

Doty is the son-in-law of the old man who was beaten and robbed. He was arrested after Baumgardner’s confession and is now in jail here in Rensselaer.

Christian Church Services.

The subject of the Sunday morning sermon at the Christian church is “The Christianization of America is Imperative,” In the evening, “The Great Physician ” All are welcome.

Diarrhoea should be cured without loss of time and by a medicine which like Chamberlin’s Colic, Cholera ani Diarrhoea Remedy net only cures promptly, but produces no unpleasant after effects. It never fails and is pleasant and safe to take. Sold by all dealers. c W. A. Swihart, a merchant of Silver Lake, tells the first snake story of the season there. He was out fishing and when he started home, he says, a large blacksnake attacked him and put up a stiff fight. He finally succeeded in killing the reptile, which was, he says, about ten feet long. .' . v Latest style type faces and the best paper stock used in printing .t The Republican office. Try the Classified Column.

Good Times and Tariff.

Peru Journal. “Why ail this furor about the tariff anyway? Is the country in the midst of a great depression that tariff is suspected of having brought about? Is there a panic on? A hundred times “no.” The fact is if we are to judge new law by the times which have ensued since its passage we must enthusiastically accord it the honor of being the best tariff we ever had. It is true that the prices of living, the prices of things we have to eat, are not made by the tariff in any sense, unless it has so stimulated manufacturing that the city mouths the farmer has to feed have been fairly doubled. Food products were reduced in the last tariff enactment. Even the more scholarly of the tariff reformers do not pretend that the present times condemn the tariff, Their strong argument is that it is ‘.‘morally wrong” to shut out the foreinger from our market. They contended that he should be allowed an equal if not a better chance with his pauper made goods than the sovereign American with his. The tariff man, on the other hapd, claims that it is “morally wrong” for the American government to allow the cheap labor of Germany. France and China and Japan to prey on the American people.”

In the hold-up of a mail train on the Southern Pacific near Benicia, Cal., Saturday night, in which 94 packages of registered mail were taken by the bandits, the name of the postal clerk in charge of the mail car is given as Herbert B. Black. The fact that our Herbert Black, brother of Oliver C., is in the postal service has led to the belief here that he may be the one concerned. Under threats of dynamiting the car he and his assistant were compelled to hand out ’ the registered pouches, though Black at first tried to satisfy the robbers with newspaper sacks.—Monticello Herald. The famous “four-cornered” race track at Terre Haute, on which so many -world records for the harness horses were made, is to be destroyed, and, as If by the irony of fate, an automobile man is at the head of a syndicate which will plat the laud in town lots. Mabel Thralls, of Shelbyville, has been granted a divorce from Stewart Thralls after five weeks of married life. The evidence showed that her husband deserted her last September. In five weeks the only purchase that he made for her was two pairs of cheap hose, Theodore Roosevelt will delivef several speeches in Indiana for Senator BdVeridge in September, according to a fYasliington dispatch in the Louisville Courier-Journal yesterday. The first will be in Indianapolis following Roosevelt’s appearance before the conservation congress in Kansas City.

Saved From The Grave.

“I had about given up hope, after nearly four years of suffering from a severe lung trouble,” w’rites Mrs. M. L. Dix, of Clarksville, Tenn. “Often the pain in my chest would be almost unbearable and I could not do any work, but Dr. King’s New Discovery has made me feel like a new person. It’s the best medicine made for the throat and lungs.” Obstinate coughs, stubborn colds, hay fever, lagrippe, asthma, croup, bronchitis and hemorrhages, hoarseness and whooping cough, i eld quickly to this wonderful medicine. Try it. 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottles free. Guaranteed by A. F. Long

Notice to Heirs, Creditors And Legatees. In the matter of the estate of Isaac Blake, deceased, in the Jasper Circuit Court, April Term, 1910. Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Isaac Blake, deceased, and all persons interested in said estate, to appear in the Jasper Circuit Court, on the sth day of May, 1910, being the day fixed and endorsed on the final settlement account of Evred H. Blake, administrator of said decedent, and show cause if any, why such final account should not be approved; and the heirs of said decedent and all others interested, are also hereby notified to appear in said Court, on said day and make proof of their heirship, or claim to any part of said estate. EVRED H. BLAKE, Administrator. Schuyler. C. Irwin, Atty.-for Estate. Ap1.15-22-29. Latest style type faces anJ the b*est paper stock used in printing at The Republican office.

Here is where they fool the old folks.

A Current of Thought.

Sam—Don’t you think she has a queenly figure? Jack—l never saw a queen, but if they weigh 200 pounds and have double chins, then I guess she’s it.

A Social Problem.

De Auber—Adore art, do you? I suppose you paint yourself a little? Miss Gushen (Indignantly) Sir!

Teacher: —What are you crying for, my boy? Boy:—You told me to stand here for the present and I never got the present.

In Bugville.

Mr. Spider—Gracious! I wonder what kind of a spider lives on that web?

Between the Lines.

Soulful Maid— What was the subject of your last poem? Magazine Poet-**-It didn’t have any. S. M. —Well, wlfat was your central thought when writing it? M. P. —Wondering how much the editor would pay for it.—American Spectator.

LEE.

John Mellender, of Lee, went to Rensselaer Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Stlers papered for Mrs. liable Rishling Saturday. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Axel Johnson, April 20th, an 11% pound boy. Mrs. Anna Johnson and Mrs. Minerva Wood were in Lee Tuesday. Mrs. Lamport and son Ross were in town Tuesday. Dr. Elsworth, of Lafayette, was in Lee Tuesday. Billy McGee, of Marion, was here Wednesday. Thornton Spencer went to Rensselaer Wednesday. Robert Johns went' to Monon Wednesday. L. M. Jacks and daughter Lona went to Monon Wednesday. Wm. Jacks, from near Rensselaer, was in Lee Tuesday. Mr. Kimes took the train for Illinois Tuesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Aca Holman tcok dinner with Mr. and Mrs. 110/ Rislrling Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Machen and baby took dinner Sunday with Mrs. Machen’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Clark. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Jacks and son Oscar, took dinner Sunday with Mrs. Jennie Rishling, of Monon. Mrs. Beck had company from Chicago Saturday evening. They returned Monday morning. Miss Flossie Viers, of Monon, came to Lee Saturday morning and visited Miss Martha Clark. Will Overton, of Monon, visited his brother, Frank Overton and family Sunday. Mrs. Ireland and three chidren went to Hammond Wednesday morning to visit her son. Mrs. Westphall and two children came home Tuesday from where she has been visiting her father. Mrs. L. M. Jacks went to Monon Monday to stay a few days with their son Charles and family, who have a new baby boy.

NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA.

If You Have It, Read this Letter, Ml-o-na Is Guaranteed. “I was taken last August with a severe stomach disorder. The doctor said it was nervous dyspepsia. I took his treatment for four weeks, but did not feel any better. I took everything I heard of. The first day of December, 1908, I got a box of Mi-o-na. I took them that afternoon and the next day and haven’t had one bit of pain in my stomach since to 2nd of December. I took five boxes. Feel well now, and sleep good.”—Mrs. M. E. Mnxfleld, R. F. D. 2, Avoca, N. Y. MI-O-NA is surely the best prescription for indigestion ever written. It relieves after dinner distress, belching of gas, foul breath, heartburn, etc., in five minutes. It is guaranteed to permanently cure indigestion, acute or chronic, or any disease of the stomach or money back. MI-O-NA stomach tablets are sold by B. F. Fen dig and leading druggists everywhere at 50 bents a large box.

An Expert’s Opinion of Skin Diseases. A prominent, national expert on skin diseases whose name you are familiar with says that in all his scientific experience he has never found so hard a disease to conquer as Eczema. Yet he does not hesitate to recommend ZEMO as a most successful remedy for the treatment of Eczema, itching skin diseases, dandruff pimples, blackheads and all other diseases of the skin and scalp. He says that not only do its curative qualities make it popular but also the fact that it is a clean, liquid remedy for external use. A great improvement over the old style greasy salves and lotions which are not only unpleasant to use but do not destroy the germ life that causes the disease. ZEMO draws the germs to the • surface and destroys them, leaying the skin clear and healthy. Can be used freely on infants. Mr. A. F. Long will gladly supply those who call with a free sample bottle of ZEMO and a booklet which explains in simple language all about skin diseases and how to cure yourself at home with ZEMO. 1 Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets assist nature In driving all impurities out of the system, insuring a free and regular condition and restoring the organs of the body to health and strength. Sold by all dealers. ’ c Wedding announcements —engraved or printed—furnished by The Republican. ' , Try the Classified Column.

~ _ * Grocery Satisfaction; If your grocer pleases you in < every particular, you have no \ cause for changing. < Even WE can do no more than ' that. \ * But if you think some of mak- ! ing a shift, we would be glad to ! give you the best service of ] which we are capable. J < Often and often we have turned ‘ < now-and-agaln customers into ‘ » < steady patrons. i And we lose a surprising few of the really particular grocery ! buyers, who once become our ' ' customers. | Try us on anything you like. : McFarland & Son Reliable Grocers.

Order Your Bee Supplies Now. —s —i I am tke Exclusive Agent For Jasper County for ROOT’S BEE HITES AND SUPPLIES. $ I sell at factory prices and pay the freight to Rensselaer. I have a large stock of Hives and Supers on hand and at this time can fill orders promptly. Swarming season will soon b 3 here and beekeepers should lay In their supplies now before the rush comes. $ Catalogue Mailed Free on Request. $ Leslie Clark Republican Office, Rensselaer, Ind.

Tt’s Shocking To see the many poor horses of this city trying to work. It is not neces sary for anyone to have a poor horse when they can secure the best feed for them by coming to the River Queen Mills. Ton will find it is no more expensive than the feed yon are now nslng. River Queen Mills Phone M.

Ms— Chicago to Xorthwrat, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, Z,ouls▼llla and French Lick Springs. RENSSELAER TIME TABUS In Effect January 16, 1910. SOUTH BOUND. No. 6—Louisville Mail ......10:56 am. No. 33—Indianapolis Mall ... 1:68 p.m No. 39—Milk Accom 6:02 p.m! No. 3—Louisville Ex 11:06 pm No. 31—Fast Mail 4:46 a.m. NOBTHBOUNS. No. 4 —Mall 4:49 a.m. No. 40—Milk Accom 7:31 a.m. No. 32 —Fast Mall 10:06 a.m. No. 6—Mall and Ex 3:13 pm. No. 30—Cln. to Chi. Mall ... 6:02 p.m. No. 6, 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 3:13 p. m. Train No. 31 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 6:16 a. m. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 4:30 p. m., connects with No. 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:02 p. m. Effective April 16th and until further notice. Cedar Lake will be a Sag stop for trains No. 3,4, 30 and 33.

Printing that pleases. “We print anything for anybody.”—Thu Republican, Our Classified Column does the work