Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 111, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 May 1910 — Page 4

Classified Column. FOB SALE. For Sale— A good, fresh family cow. Phone 533 L. Marion Adams. For Sale— A good, every-day cow. Inquire of Marsh Warner, phone 322. For Sale— l have some lovely pieces of Irish crochet work. Call and see them. Mrs. R. P Benjamin. - • For Sale— As I have purchased a larger machine I will offer for sale a 33x50 inch Russell Separator equipped with Parson self feeder, Peoria weigher and “Uncle Tom” wind stacker in good shape. Belts nearly new. Glenn Baker, phone 5128, R. D. 1, Rensselaer, Ind. For Sale— As I have disposed of my farm I will offer at private sale one small driving mare, one 2 year old colt, one Weber wagon, nearly new, Can be seen on the farm now occupied by Emil Johnson in Newton township. M. R. Halstead, Earl Park, Indiana. For Sale— l6o acres good level land; 10 acres timber; balance in and suitable for cultivation. Good buildings. Located in Walker township, about 14 miles north of Rensselaer. August KetlowslQ, Wheatfield, Indiana. For Sale— s acres, black land, fine for truck or suburban home; has large tile through it for drainage; lies on north Main street, outsit the eorporation. Will sell at right price on favorable terms. G. F. Meyers. For Sale— Or will trade for cattle, 160 acre farm in Jasper county, 60 acres under cultivation; balance timber pasture; 80 acres fenced hog tight. Address D. H. Wesner, Tefft, Ind. FOB BENT. Booms— For everybody at the Nowels House. Mrs. E. Powell. For Bent— 6-room fiat over old Re-* publican office. City and cistern water in kitchen and* all in good repair. Rent reasonable. Inquire of Geo. H. Healey. For Bent— B room house, on a corner lot, one block east of court house, nice yard and fine shade. Inquire of; J. W. Stockton or phone 188. For Bent— Six room cement cottage. Ray D. Thompson. For Rent— s room house with large garden and fruit. Inquire of A. H. Hopkins of Ellen Sayler. For Bent— Two furnished rooms. Mrs. E. L. Clark. WANTED. Wanted— Roomers wanted. Two nice rooms. Phone 106. Wanted— First-class cook at the Model restaurant. Wanted— Good, hustling agents to work on a good paying proposition. Address M. J. Thornton, Lock Box 393. Wanted— Purchasers for two new typewriters. Will be sold at half price. Standard machines. None better made. Republican office. POULTRY AND EGGS. Eggs for Hatching— Barred Rocks; half price from now on or 75 cents for 15; my pens are headed by cockerals that won at the Lowell poultry show. B. D. Comer, R. D. No. 2. 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 15. Utility stock, $1.50 per 15. G. B. Porter. fb.lstf For Sale—Mayhew’s White Wyandottes—those chickens that Von 25 ribbons for me this season at four shows. Eggs for sale at $1 and $2 per 15. Arthur Mayhew, Route 3, Rensselaer, Indiana. For Sale— Rhode Island Red eggs for hatching from prize winning birds. A fine winter laying stradn. $J per setting of 15. G. W. Hopkins. FOUND. Found— Purse and package of goods. Owner can get same by calling_at the Republican, proving property and paying for this notice. - _ mscellanebus. Paperhanging— Clarence Hamilton, Painter and paper-hanger. Phone 289.' MONET TO LOAN. • <i Mewey Lean—lmmnance Co. money on first farm mortgage setmrtty. Inquire of B. P.

CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK U. S. Yards, Chicago, Tit., May 10.— Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 8,000; cattle, 2,000; sheep, 13,000. Hogs 10c to 20c higher, mixed, $9.35 to $9.70, heavy, $9.55 to $9.67, rough, $9.35 to $9.50, light, $9.35 to $9.70. Cattle steady, beeves, $5.85 to $8.55, cows, $2.75 to $7.25, Stockers, $4.25 to $6.65, Texans, $5.60 to $6.65, calves, $6.50 to SB.OO. Sheep steady, $4.85 to $7.75, lambs, $6.75 to $9.00. Estimated tomorrow’: Hogs, 19,000; cattle, 15,000; sheep, 12,000. i ..... CASH GHAXM Wheat No. 2 red, $1.16 to $1.17%. No. 3 red, sl.ll to $1.15%. No. 2 hard, $1.16 to $1.17. No. 3 S, SI.OB to $1.05%. Corn No. 2,62 cto 62%c. No. 2W, 67c to 67 %c. No. 2 Y, 63c to 63%c. No. 3,61 c to 62c. No. 3 W, 65c to 66c, No, 3 Y, 62c to 62 %c. cate No. 2, 41 %c to 42c. No. 3,41 c. No. 4, 39c. No. 2 W, 44%c to 45%c. No. 3 W, 41c to 43%c. No. 4 W, 40c to 42c. Standard, 44c to 44%c. ♦ FUTUBES Wheat May July Sept. Open ... 1.14%15 1.03%% 1.01%% High ... 1.15% 1.04% 1.02% low .... 1.11 1.03 1.00% Close . .. Corn. Open .... 61 62%% 63%% High .... 61% 63 63% Low 61 62% 63% Close .... 61% 65% 63% Oats Open .... 42% 40%39% 38% High .... 42% 40% 39% Low ..... 42 ; 39% 38% Close .... 42% 40% 38% ♦ LOCAL MARKETS. Corn—soc. Oats—36c. Eggs—l6%c. Butter—lß%c to 30c. Hens—l2c. Turkeys—loc to 12c. Ducks—loc. Geese—4c. Roosters—sc. <

INDIGESTION GOES.

B. F. Fendig Sells Best Prescription Ou Earth on the Money Back Plan. Almost everybody knows that sick headache, nervousness and dizziness, are caused by a disordered stomach. Upset stomach and indigestion happen just because the food you eat does not digest—but lies in the "stomach and ferments or turns sour. You can stop fermentation and stomach distress in five minutes by using Mi-o-na stomach tablets, a prescription that has done more to cure indigestion and put the stomach in fine condition than all the specialists on earth. A large 50 cent box of Mi-o-na stomach tablets is all you need to get quick and lasting relief. Mrs Altie Etson, of 93 Dun Road, Battle Creek, Mich., used MI-O-NA and within two months was in as good health as ever, and has a good stomach and eats everything she likes, she attributes her present health to the use of MI-O-NA. If you have heartburn, belching of gas, heaviness or any stomach trouble no matter how chronic, try Mi-o-na stomach tablets on money back plan. Sold by druggists everywhere and by B. F. Fendig, who guarantees them.

PUBLIC SALE. In the street near the public square, beginning at 2 o’clock p. m„ Saturday, May 14, 1910, The following articles: 1 extra good milch cow, gentle, an easy milker and a fine family cow. 1 spring wagon, 1 two-seated canopy top park buggy, practically new, 1 set single, heavy drag harness, 1 set light single harness, hame and collar and breast harness, 1 set double harness, round lines, bridles, choke straps, poll straps, 1 one-horse, adjustable cultivator, 1 single shovel plow, 1 buggy pole complete, 1 set new wagon trees and peck yoke, 2 sweat pads, 1 wagon jack. TERMS— Sums under $5 cash, over $5, a credit of 6 'months without interest if paid when due, otherwise 8 per cent interest from date. 3 per cent discount for cash on sums over $5. JOHN J. KEPNER. FRED PHILLIPS, Auctioneer. —, Woman loves a clear, rosy complexion. Burdock Blood Bitters purifies the blood, clears the skin, restores ruddy, sound health.

PARKER’S PAROLE DID NOT MEET WITH APPROVAL.

Continued from first page.

legal belongings and he leaves them to suffer While he has a rest, a twoyears’ rest as a model prisoner with light and heat and books to read and only sufficient employment to help pass the hours away. He had no punishment. He is a hero of finance, with the brand of perfect citizenship before and model obedience during his retention in the prison. He comes out younger than he entered, but gray hairs of worry have come to the heads of those who trusted him, parents who had saved money to send their sons and daughters to college, have seen their ambition ruined, the new homes that were to be built by victims of the bank have been postponed, and aged men and women who had saved for their declining days were forced back to the struggle over the bucksaw and the washtub. It is a crime that the hearts of men cannot pardon"; it is a crime that a phrdon board should not have the right to control. Suppose the night before the Parker Bank had closed its doors, Mr. Parker had gone to the bank and discovered that burglars were trying to break into his safe. He would have given an alarm and all of Remington and surrounding country would have responded w’ith pistols and shotguns in an effort to protect the bank of Robert Parker, and they would have used them too. Suppose the robbers had •been caught with the money. It would have been taken away from them; they would have been cast in jail and tried and sentenced for long terms, probably for life. They would have paid a dear penalty for having tried to rob Robert Parker. But for years Robert Parker was robbing the people of Remington. He did not appear with dynamite and a dark lantern, nor with a black mask over his eyes, but he wore a mask of righteousness, a smile of deception, a guaze of Christianity, and a poise of. good citizenship that was a lie, for he was a robber, a house breaker, a burglar, a home wrecker, a death hastener, all, as a part of his banking business. The burglar wlib would have robbed him on sudden impulse serves a life sentence in a dungeon at hard labor But he, systematically and premeditatedly a robber for years, serves two years in the prison library, attends the religious services of the institution, bends his knee and clasps his hands tn prayer and a pardon board rewards his devotion by giving him his freedom and a clean bill of health. Such farces of justice breed anarchy and it is a wonder that some one who was robbed did not get a gun and seek the robber just as they would have sought him had he come at night to dynamite the bank. Respect for law all but ceases and one feels that there is no justice. The pardoning of Robfert Parker is an outrage. It makes anarchy excusable; it makes embezzlement a virtue; it makes the law a joke. Freedom was not due to Robert Parker. Fourteen years would ha"e been a light sentence for his crime.

MILROY.

Jack Boon was in Monon Saturday. George Foulks went to Monticello Monday.. ■ . Chas. Beaver was in Rensselaer Saturday. John Brown called on Daniel Chatman Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Parks were in Rensselaer Monday. Branson and Lud Clark were in Rensselaer Saturday. Mrs. Underwood called on Mrs. Bivins Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Underwood called on Mrs. Herman Friday afternoon. Mr and Mrs. Bivins went to Remington to consult Dr. Besser. John Mitchell and Lou Chatman were in Rensselaer Saturday. Mrs. Allen May took dinner Sunday with her son Frank and faiqily. Mrs. G. L. Parks and Mrs. Frank May called on Mrs. Hanna Saturday afternoon. Ear] Foulks, who visited his parents over Sunday, returned to his work r. Wednesday. Mrs. Elmer Clark and children visited I. J. Clark and family Sunday. Mr. McDuffy called on his son-in-law, Jack Born and family Sunday. Branson Clark, * I. J. Clark and Fred Saltwell were in Monticello .Friday. Matthew Yeager, of Kankakee, HL, came Saturday to visit relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Lou Daniels visited Mrs. Ann Chatman and family Sunday.

Correct size and style calling cards at the Republican.

COTTAGE GROVE.

Howard Holmes is working for James Downs. John Zimmer and I). S. Makeever shipped hogs Friday. William Holmes is the first one in this neighborhood to begin planting corn. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lewis called on her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Nowels. Mr. and Mrs. Mell Wood -and children called On Mr. Canada and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Mac Sullivan went visiting Sunday. Mac has a happy face over his new boy. Mrs. Eva Greenlee, Mrs. Katie Albahat and Mr. S. E. James were visitors at St. Joseph’s college Sunday afternoon,__ John Osborne is buying up some calves. He says he can’t get pigs, so he has to have something to feed the milk to. Mrs. Katie Albahat, of Chicago, is visiting Mrs. Eva Greenlee. Mrs. ’Adbahat and Mi sr Greenlee were roommates in the Presbyterian hospital. S. E. James, of Chicago, called on Mrs. Eva Greenlee and Mrs. Katie Albahat Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Alhabat and Mr. James are cousins and their grandfather was a minister in Persia. Mrs. Greenlee says she is milking four* cows. She gets twenty gallons of milk a day and every seven days ten gallons of cream. She says she has discovered how to increase the table supplies and decrease the mortgages on the farm. There’s ''nothing so good for a sore throat as Dr. Thomas’ Electric Oil. Cures it in a few hours. Relieves any pain in any part.

It’s a Foolish Person Who does not try to get full value for his money at all times. You are not getting full value for your money unless you feed your horses with River Queen Mill Feed. River Queen Mills Phone 92.

< <; 'T^'' Z< *[, Wffiiam® w® A Distinctive Drink An/ ! the hot-fruit drink, is a distinctive drink. )riWZwifflK- Hl Though similar in some respects to coffee, tea, chocolate and cocoa, it is, in other respects, quite unlike (O I them. Possessing the good qualities of all these drinks, it has none of their harmful qualities. ’ Iffljxß BONANO served hot —is flavory, appetizing, bracing, j* satisfying and extremely nourishing. A real food drink. BONANO is the only table beverage in which highfood value is combined with harmless stimulation. And BONANO has a delightful, spicy aroma —a rare, good flavor all its own. JF rejwWyrol Don’t be prejudiced against BONANO. It is not a sub- ' stitute for something else. We want you t® serve it at your table for its own delicious goodness —and for no other reason. - Try BONANO a week or two. We know you will like it IW llll 'm BONANO is healthful, strengthening and never harmful. iUu Let the little folks have all the BONANO they want 4 ( yll A 25-cent can of BONANO makes 75 cups of the best / I/// / V|| hot drink you >ever tasted. For sale by I'll' IB iv t■' n Home Grocery. Oi dytA® International Banana Food Co, Corn Kachanaa Bank maj, HUr... yn • ■

Hiram Day DEALER IN Hair, taent Lime, Brick » : 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- «how you what I have for sale and trade. A. S. LaRUE

WORTH WEIGHT __ IN GOLD Lady Learned About Cardui, The woman’s Tonic and is Now Enthusiastic in its Praise. Mount Pleasant, Tenn.—“Cardui is al! you claim for 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 golcL 1 recommend iffor 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: Ladies’ Advisory Dept, Chattanooza Medicine Co.. Chattanooga, Tenn., for Special l n * t ™ ctioni h *' nA M-t>at’e book. ‘Home Treatment lot Women, *sent in plain wrapper, on reQueste

Professional Cards DR. E. C. ENGLISH PKTBICZAH AHD SXTHGHO* . a " d day calls given prompt attention. phone, 11«. Office ' Benaaelaex, Ind. DR. L M. WASHBURN. PHYSICIAN AMD SUBGEOM Makes a specialty of Diseases of the Kengeelaer, Ind. F. A. TURFLER. OSTEOPATHIC PHYHTHTAW Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office— 2 rings on 300, residence—3 rings on 300. Successfully treats both acute and Chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. DR. E. N. LOT Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell homeopathist Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. " . . OFFICE PHONE 89 Residence College Avenue, Phone I*9. ' Bensselaer, Indiana. F. H. iIEMPHILL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Special attention to dlaeasea of woman and low grades of fever. £_• J. . Office in Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence, 442. Rensselaer, Ind. FRANK FOLTZ Lawyer Practices in All Courts Telephone No. 16 J. P. Irwin s. C. Irwin IRWIN & IRWIN LAW, BEAT. ESTATE AMD IMStTBJLNOEa 5 per cent farm loans. Office in Odd Fellows’ Block. Bensselaer, Indiana. E. P. HONAN “ ATTOBNEY AT LAW Law, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice in all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and Bensselaer, Indiana. ARTHUR H. HOPKINS LAW, X.OAMS AMD SEAL ESTATM Loans on farms and city property, personal security and chattel mortgage. Buy, sell and rent farms and city prop*rty- Farm and city Are insurance. Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Henaselaer, Indiana. H. L. BROWN DEMTIST Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. All the latest methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction* Office over Larsh s Drug Store. Y. 07%). F. Building. Phone 159. JOHN A. DUNLAP, Sawyer. Practice in all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. „Collection. department. in the office. Rensselaer, Indiana.

QIPNQ J. W. BROWN UlullU Ear* DuvaTl’s°Store' Alao Gasoline Stoves Cleaned And Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Repaired.

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