Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 113, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 May 1910 — Page 4
Classified Column. ____ FOB SALE. - For Sale— About 400 cement blocks, Bxßxl6, at my Union township farm. Price 12 cents each. John 1. Gwin. For Sale— Giant tomato plants, grow 18 feet high, a wonderful plant and large tomato; also plants that grow in clusters like a bunch of grapes, small tomatoes, for use on trestle work. Also tobacco plants. J. H. Holden. For Sale— Early seed corn. James Donnelly farm, phone 505 I. 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— 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 Kotlowski, 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, outside the corporation. 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. For Bent— 23o acres of good pasture three miles northeast of DeMotte and one mile north of Kersey. Rates, fifty cents a month for cattle and seventyfive cents a month for horses, or will rent entire farm for the season. Inquire of Martin Harrington, Kersey, Indiana. Booms— For everybody at the Nowels House. Mrs. E. Powell. For Bent— 6-room flat over old Republican 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 ofj 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. Hopkina of Ellen Sayler. For Bent— Two furnished rooms. Mrs. E. L. Clark. ' 2 ~ WANTED. Wanted— Roomers wanted. Two nice rooms. Phone 106. Wanted— First-class cook at the Medel 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 Fer Sale— Mayhew’s White Wyandottes—those chickens that won 25 ribbons for me this season at four shows. Eggs for sale at $1 and $2 per 15. Arthur Mayhew, Route 3, Rensselaer, Indiana. ' * —— Try the Claasffled Column.
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET. CXXOAOO MVB STOCK U. S. Yards, Chicago, 111., May 12. Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 17,000; cattle, 4,500; sheep, 12,000, Hogs 5c lower, mixed, $9.30 to $9.65, heavy. $9.50 to $9.65, rough, $9.30 to $9.45, light, $9.30 to $9.65. Cattle steady, beeves, $5.80 to $8.87, cows, $2.75 to $7.40, stockers, $4.25 to $6.65, Texans, $5.60 to $6.65, calves, $6.25 to $7.75. Sheep steady, $4.75 to $7.60, lambs, $6.75 to $8.90. Estimated for tomorrow: Hogs. 15,000; cattle, 2,000; sheep, 6,000. CASH GBAXM Wbaat No. 2 red, $1.14% to $1.15. No. 3 red, sl.lO to $1.13. No. 2 hard, $1.14% to $1.15. No. 3 hard, sl.lO to $1.13%. No. 3 S, sl.Ol to $1.14. Corn No. 2, 65%c to 66c. No. 2 W, 67%c to 68c. No. 2 Y, 63%c to 64%c. No. 3, 62c to 62%c. No. 3 W, 66c to 66%c. No. 3 Y, 62%c to 63c. No. 4, 58%c to 60c. No. 4 W, 62c to 64c. No. 4 Y, 60c to 62c.' oats No. 2,42 c. No. gW, 44%c to 45%c. No. 3 W, 42p to 43 %c. No. 4 W, 40c to 42c. Standard, 44c to 44%c. ♦ FUTUBES WIMSt May July Sept. Open ... 1.12%% 1.03%% 1.01%% High ... 1.13% 1.04 1.01% Low .... 1.12%.. 1.03%% 1.0 l ... 1.13% 1.03% 1.01% Corn Open .... 61%% 62%% 63%% High .... 61% 63% 64 Low 61%% 62% 63% Close .... 61% 63% 63% Oats Open .... 42% 40% 39% High .... 42% 41 39% Low ....... 42% 40% 39%Close .... 42% 40% 39% 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.
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 niilch cow, gentle, an easy milker and a fine family cow. J 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 neck 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. Doan’s Regulates cure congtipation, tone the stomach, stimulate the liver, promote digestion and appetite and. easy passages of the bowels. Ask your druggist for them. 25 cents a box.
:: Peter Van Leq.r | o Plastering X < > Contractor ❖ < > A ; ’ Estimates Cheerfully Furnished, y LOST. on Front or Washington streets, $24 or $25, in bills. Finder please inform this office; suitable reward. FOUND. Found— Purse and package of goods. Owner can get same by calling at the Republican, proving property and paying for this notice.
MISCELLANEOUS. Paperhanging—Clarence Hamilton, painter and paper-hanger. Phone 289.
MONEY TO LOAN. Money to Loan—lnsurance Co. money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of EL P. Honan. inH
DEAR LADIES
It’s Parisian Sage That Makes That Other Woman’s Hair so Bewitchingly Lustrous. When we say that Parisian Sage it the most wonderful hair tonic, dressing and beautifler known to mankind, we are simply stating a fact that you can easily prove. Get a large 50 cent bottle today; use it for two weeks; if it isn’t" the most delightful and refreshing tonic you ever used; if it doesn’t drive out dandruff, stop falling hair or itching scalp you can have your money back, Mrs. Francis Koegi, 41 W. Jessamine St., St. Paul, Minn., on Nov. 16, 1909, wrote: “I have used Several hair tonics, but there is none that can compare with Parisian Sage. It cured my falling hair and dandruff, and it does not only cure those troubles, but is the best hair grower In the world.” Parisian Sage is creating a sensation wherever introduced. It is in great demand by women of superior taste and refinement who desire fascinating and luxuriant hair that never fails to compel admiration. Sold by druggists everywhere and by B. F. Fendig. Mail orders filled, charges prepaid, by American makers, Giroux Mfg. Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
SOUTH NEWTON.
Mrs. Chas. Weiss is on the sick list. Every farmer is busy planting corn. Bart Grant is working for Mr. Wallace. A. C. Pancoast is having some building done. Fred Parker hauled hay to Rensselaer Monday. Uncle Ben Sayler was out to his farm Monday. Arthur Mayhew hauled corn to Rensselaer Monday. Messrs. Waiter and Fred Feldhaus attended church in Rensselaer Sunday. Everett Halstead took a load of corn to the mill at Rensselaer Monday. John Hurley and mother were Rensselaer goers Monday. Ross Reed and sister attended Sunday school and church at Rensselaer Sunday. Mrs. Robert Overton, Mrs. Allie Potts, Virginia and Irma Holmes did shopping in Rensselaer Monday. Wm. Jacks and daughter Florence spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Holmes and family. Marion and Emma Freeland spent Sunday afternoon with Fred and Nellie Parker.
H. T. Feldhaus and daughter Elizabeth were shopping in Rensselaer Monday. Elbert Potts, of Brook, took Sunday .dinner w’ith his sister, Mrs. Fred Waling. Mr. and Mrs. E. Weurthner and son Ray spent Sunday with Mr. Francis and family. Mrs. Nelson Hough spent Wednesday with her daughter, Mrs. Schanlaub, of near Brook. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mayhew and Son Glen spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Holmes and family. Tom Hojes and Earl Bruner, the telephone linemen, were in this vicinity Monday fixing the lines. Several from this vicinity attended the concert at Rensselaer Wednesday evening. All report the concert as being excellent. Guy Gerber, of Rensselaer, but at present representing the Indiana Business college, was in this vicinity Monday. Mrs. Arthur Arnott and son Lawrence, of Spokane, Wash., arrived in Rensselaer Wednesday. ( Mrs. Arnott ■was met in Chicago by father, Caley Carr, whom she will visit during the summer. Mr. Arnott will come later. A Union Sunday school was organized at Curtis Creek school house last Sunday. A good number was in attendance for the first Sunday, but hope to increase. The hour is 2:30 p. m. All are welcome.
Hen Plays Hobo.
Imprisoned in a load of telephone poles from Wisconsin consigned to the Monticello Telephone company and arriving here last week, was found a large Plymouth Rock hen. The car had been on the road twenty-seven days and the. fowl was almost famished from want of food and water. She had proved her good qualities, however, by laying two eggs on the way, and is now being cared for by Miss Elizabeth Hanway.—Monticello Democrat. -—7- ■' --
Printing that pleases. "We print anything for anybody.”—The Republican. ,
HANGING GROVE.
Chas. W. Bussell finished his census district Tuesday. ' 4 Mrs. Robert Jordan has been quite sick for several days. Miss Rae Haniford visited her parents at Gifford few days this week. Mr. and Mrs. Reed McCpy and Mrs. J. R. Phillips were in Rensselaer Monday. > John R. Phillips and Dick Foulks went to Monticello Wednesday on a business 'trip. Miss Marie Molitor, of Amoret, Mo., is here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Molitor. John Jordan has a new gasoline engine which he intends to use for grinding feed and sawing wood. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Armstrong received a new top-buggy Tuesday. It is one of the “split hickory vehicles” manufactured by the Ohio Carriage Mfg. Co., and is a very nice rig. Mrs. Mary E. Lowe and Miss Edith Gangloff, of Rensselaer, took dinner with C. W. Bussell and family Monday. Miss Gangloff will give music lessons to Florence and Ella Bussell and Ola and Ellen Drake. She is well versed in music and should make a first-class teacher.
John Herr is digging tile ditch for Marion Crowder with his new steam digger. It is said to be a good outfit and x by reasonably close attention, a ditch can be leveled within a sixteenth of an inch. Mr. Herr has a full force of boys to run his machine, and all of them are good workers.
NEWLAND.
Ed Oliver is the owner of a new automobile. Ernest Speeks, of Rensselaer, spent Tuesday night with his sister, Mrs. G. M. Beebe. . Rube Snyder and G. M. Beebe yere at the Jacks trial at Winamac Monday and Tuesday. < The stork visited the home of Mr. and-Mrs. Geo. Martin, of Newland and left them a baby girl, May sth. Mr. Snd ]qrs. Clark and family, of near Wolcott, spent Saturday night and Sunday with Ed Oliver and family. James Rees, of Lebanon, spent Sunday night and Monday with his brothers, Wm; and Samuel Rees, ~ot Newland. Mrs. T. M. Callahan and Children ai’fe spending this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ahlers, of near Francesville. Mr. and Mrs. John Snyder and family, of Newland, spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Snyder, of Gifford. Mrs. E. Kennedy returned Friday from Frankfort, where she was at the bedside of her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Foresigh, who is in very poor health.
Purdue Commencement Begins Saturday, the 4th Day of June.
The commencement for 1910 Purdue University will begin with Saturday, June 4th, and continue over the following Wednesday. The first day will be devoted to athletics, Purdue meeting Milliken in a ball game. Sunday address will be delivered ,by Rev. C. S. Patton, of Ann Arbor, Mich., aad at 6 o’clock wijl occur a vesper song .service. * On Monday afternoon there will be a band concert and in the evening the seniors will present “The Romancers.” On Tuesday there will be a meeting at 9:30 of the Sigma Xi society; at 10:30 the annual meeting of the alumni association; at 7:30 the faculty reception and at 8:30 the senior hop. On Wednesday the graduation exes*, cises start at 9:30 with abstracts of theses by members of the graduation class, followed by an address by Robert J. Aley, Ph. D., state superintendent of public instruction. The conferring of the degrees follqws, and the program concludes with the senior banquet that night at 8 o’clock.
Notice of Letting of Contract For Hauling Coal for City.
Notice is hereby given that the Common Council of Rensselaer, Indiana, will on the 23rd day of May. 1910, receive sealed bids for the hauling of the coal used by said city from the railroad to the Light Plant, according to specifications on file in the city clerk’s office and in accordance with the provisions of Ordinance No. 132 adopted on May 9th, 1910. Said ordinance is on file with the City Clerk and may be seen at his office. The Council reserves the right to reject any Ur all bids:
CHAS. MORLAN,
Buy Land in Canada | We are the agents rn this vicinity for the Western J Canadian Colonization Co., of St. Paul, Minn., who own * two large tracts of land in Canada. One tract is in < Saskatchewan; the other in Manitoba. < THE SASKATCHEWAN TRACT. * « The Saskatchewan Tract consists of gently rolling < prairie land in the Redvers district, southwestern Sas- < katchewan. Has some sloughs or ponds similar to West- ‘ ern lowa, also some surface stone (nigger heads). Is a I wonderful fertile, black soil, on a clay sub-soil. This land ’ is covered with a rich growth of native prairie .grass, but ; it responds readily to cultivation and raises immense ; crops. It is about 200 miles west of Winnipeg and from ,< 3to 8 miles from Redvers, a town of 800 to 90Q people, on « the Canadian Pacific railroad. We are offering tfiis land I in tracts from 160 acres up, $12.50 to $lB per acre, one- ! third to one-fourth cash, balance in five equal annual ! installments. THE MANITOBA TRACT. ■ The Manitoba Tract consists of beautiful, level, black ; prairie land, black soil, 3 to 15 feet deep, clay sub-soil, ; free from stumps, stones or sloughs. Covered with a fine • growth of native prairie grass, good roads, rural telephones, and a district where 50 per cent of the farmers ! are from the United States,'mostly from lowa, Illinois : and Indiana. This land is absolutely gilt edge and can ; be recommended to the most epnservative as being better than anything they have ever seen in Indiana. The company agrees to stand back of this statement and refund anyone’s Railroad fare if they cannot convince v him after inspection that this land is better in : his own state. It grows wonderful crops of wheat, oats, barley, tim- : othy hay, clover and vegetables of 11 kinds, potatoes especially, running from 250 to 500 bushels to the acre. Conditions are more nearly perfect in this locality, we believe, than any cheap land district in North America. Last, but not least, this land is only forty miles from Winnipeg, a city of 50,000 people, the metropolis of Western Canada, a great market and a great city in every respect. We are offering this land from $2 Ato S3O per acre, in tracts of from 160 acres up, one-third to one-fourth cash and the balance in five equal annual installments, 6 per' cent interest. Send for free booklets and other advertising matter. .... HEALEY & CLARK, Rensselaer, Indiana.•
City Clerk-
Special Combination Offer. < Indianapolis Star and The Indiana Fanner. REGULAR j The Star, 6 months . . $2.50 RATES ( Indiana Farmer . . .35 Total value . . . $2.85 Send $1.65 to the Indianapolis Star and get them both. OFFER FOR RURAL RESIDENTS ONLY. This offer will be withdrawn soon, therefore enter subscription before it is too late. THE STAR is the only morning newspaper published at Indianapolis, therefore is the only metropolitan newspaper that can reach the rural resident on the same day it is printed. For election news, as well as news of your county, your state and the entire world, read ,0 The Indianapolis Star.
In Bad Fix “I had a mishap at the‘age of 41, which left me in bad fix, writes Mrs. Georgia Usher, of Conyers, Ga. I was unconscious for three days, and after that I would have fainting spells, dizziness, "nervousness, sick headache, heart palpitation and many strange feelings. I suffered greatly with ailments due to the change of life and had 3 doctors, but they did no good, so I concluded to trjr Cardui. * ‘Since taking Cardui, I am so much better and can do all my housework.” WCARDUI J 41 - I The Woman’s Tonic Do not allow yourself to get into a bad fix. You might get in so bad you would find it hard to get out Better take Cardui while there is time, while you are still in moderately good health, just to conserve your strength and keep you in tip top condition. In this way your troubles, whatever they are, will gradually grow smaller instead of larger—you will be on the . up-grade instead of the down —and by and bye you will arrive at the north pole of perfect health. Get a bottle at your druggists' today.
