Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 129, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 May 1910 — Page 4

E MMfflr liiSmMil FOB SALE. ’ '■**' " "" »'■ '»"»■*'»» "'i*— For Sale—Automobile. In good condition. James C. Clark. $ For Sale —One team young mules broke, one registered polled Angus Bull; one high grade polled Angus Bull calf; fresh cow and calf. W. L. Hill, Phone 518-C. For Sale—Creamery butter. Better than Elgin. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send in your order from 1 pound to a thousand. Our butter maker is a Norwegian. These people hold the world’s record as butter makers. Parr Creamery Co. For Sale—Nearly new rubber tired Laporto buggy. Inquire of AE. Brand at phone 7 or 332. For Sale— Hungarian and millet seed. Good, No. 1 seed. At my place 1 mil© north of depot. A. Donnelly. Phone 501 L. For Sale—Engine, ice cream freezer, tubs and fixtures, for making ice cream; cheap. F. W. Bedford, Rensselaer, Indiana. For Sale—Three-quarters Jersey bull, 2 years old this spring. Inquire of Chas. Randle, R. D. No. 1 or phone 622 B. • • For Sale—First-class milk delivered to any .part of city, morning and evening, 6%c quart, separated cream 15c Bijit; skimmed milk 10 cents gal. Spencer Bros. F«r Sale—Choice timothy bay In mow at my /arm 4 miles west, of Rensselaer. Jones scales on the farm. A. C. Pancoast.. Phone 510 A For Sale—s acres, black land, fine for truck or suburban home; has large tile through it for drainage; Res on north Main street, outside the corporation. 'Villi sell at right price on fav-orable-terms. - O.F. Moyers. FOB SALE OR TRADE. .■..i.i niwpiOsfa— * 40 acres in Barkley township, clear. Will trade for stock or projlrty. SO acres, all black land in cultivation, well located, no buildings. Will trade for property or stock. G. F. MEYERS.

fob rearr: For Bent—s room cottage. Inquire at the Jasper Savins & Trust Co. For Bent—Two houses, 1 has one lot, the other two; produce planted goes with one house. $6 per month for either; located on West Clark street. Chas. Battleday. 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. For Bent—Six room cement cottage. Ray D. Thompson. For Bent—s room house with large garden and fruit. Inquire of A. H. Hopkins of Ellen Sayler. WASTED. Wanted—Cream. Highest market price or a cent above Elgin. Cash paid on delivery. Test guaranteed. JDonJt be satisfied until you give us a trial. Parr Creamery Co.

Wanted—Girl at Makeever House at once. Wanted—Farm hand at once. Arthur Mayhew. Wanted—Owner of first-class machine to do the threshing for about 800 acres of grain in Jordan township. Address John Grey, R. D., Remington, Indiana. ———— *——■ Wanted—Good, hustling agents to work on a good paying proposition. Address M. J. Thornton, Lock Box 393. LOST. Lost—ss bill, probably at depot. Information to this office. POULTEY AND EGGS. Eggs for setting from S. C. Bull Orpingtons, the largest clean legged chicken in existence and recognized as the heaviest winter layers. Eggs from pifize winners at $3.00 per 15. Utility stock. $1.50 per 15. G. B. Portar, fb.lstf FOUND, Found —Fountain pen. Inquire here. Found — String of beads in leather case; also scarf pin, at college Tuesday. Call here.

CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.

CWZCAOO MT* STOCK U. S. Yards. ChVcago, 111., May 3\.— Receipts of live stock today: oHgs 11;000; cattle, 2,000; sheep, 12,000. Estimated tomorrow: Hogs, 24.000; cattle, 17,000; sheep. 15,000. Hogs steady, mixed, $9.35 to $9.65 heavy, $9.50 to $9.62, rough, $9.35,t0 $9.45, light, $9.35 to $9.65. Cattle strong, beeves, $5.70 to $8.50, cows, $2.50 to $7.00, Stockers, $4.20 to $6.40, Texans, $6.00 to $7.00, calves $6.50 to $8.35. —--• CASS OSAZS Wheat No. 2 red, 99c to $1.02. No. 3 red, 94c to 96c. No. 2 hard, 97c to 99c. No. 3 hard, 90c to 94c. No. 1 N S, 1.03%. No. 2 N S, 97c to SI.OL No. 3 S, 90c to 99c. Corn No. 2, 57i4c to 57%c. No. 2 W, 60c to 60%c. No. 2Y, 58c to 58%c. No. 3, 56c to 57c. No. 3 W, 59c to 60c. No. 3 Y, 57c to 57%c. No. 4. 52%;2 to 55c. No. 4 W, 52%c to 75c. No. 4 Y, 52%c to 56c. oats No. 2,361.4 c to 37c. No. 2 W, 39%c. No. 3 W, 35%c to 37*4c No. 4 W, 34c to 36c. Standard, 37 %c tq 38c. rxmrsns Wheat May July Sept. Open .... 94%95 92%92 90%90 High .... 96 93% 91% Low ..... 93% 91% 90 ‘Close 94% ** 93% 91— Corn Open .... 53%54 57%% 57%% High ..*,, 55% 57% — 58% Low 53% 56% 57% Close .... 55% a 57% 58% Oata Op<sn .... 36 35%36 34% High .... 37 36%' 35% Low 35% 35% 347 s Close .... 36% _ 36% 35% % —■ ■■■■■ nils n.i.i ■ ■ 1 Mrs. W. O. Simonds, of Don »-c.* Colo., who has been visiting her brother, H. J. Dexter and family, in Union township, will go the last of this week to Lafayette to visit her brother George and wife.

Printing that pleases. “.We pr»«*. anything for anybody.”—The Republican.

Ask the man with whom you talk typewriters if he has a machine with a Combination Column Finder and Paragrapher <a>T T - 11 v . .. He may tell you that he has not, but he will not tell you that a typewriter without it is just as good. The Combination Column Finder and Paragrapher is < a feature so essential to successful typewriter operation that it will eventually be incorporated in all typewriters. The typewriter offering this feature today is the The Smith Premier Typewriter, Model 10, has fourteen exclusive features—all of vital importance in producing the be£t work. Let us send you complete descriptions of them. * THE* SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER COMPANY, Ik. —.' ■ - ' : Syracuse, N. Y. Blanche* everywhere. / . t •. . .V- " ■

Little Boy Badly Injured by Being Knocked Down by Cow.

Fritz, 6-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zacker, of near Surrey, was badly .injured .Monday evening at the farm home. He was standing Just outside the barn door when a cow that was inside the barn bolted out pushing the door open suddenly and knocking the little fellow down. A physician was hastily summoned and it was found that he had sustained a bad* fracture of the right leg near the hip and also had n cut on his scrflp that required six stitches to close up. No internal, injuries were sustained and the boy will probably get along all right, although ne will be laid up for some time.

Lyman Zea Suffered Bad Break Of His Left Arm Saturday.

Lyman Zea, who has been working forborne time in the Knapp hitch barn, had the misfortune to fall while ascending a ladder to the hay loft Saturday evening at about 5 o’clock. He fell a distance of aljout 9 feet, alighting on his left drm, breaking the bone just above the elbow, also the radius below the elbow and dislocating the elbow joint. It was a bad break and will keep him laid up for some time and probably leave him a stiff joint for many months and possibly permanently.

Miss Edith Adams returned several days ago from her visit at Belje Fourche, S. Dak., with her sister, Mrs. Bert Goff. Mrs. Goff suffered a severe fracture of her left ankle several weeks ago and at the end of the seventh week still had it In a piaster 'cast, but when Miss Adams left she felt assured that the limb would be strong and not leave her permanently! /rippled. Belle Fourche is now a town of about 2,000 people and a busy place and Miss Adams was well pleased with it. Marion Gwin and Will Woodworth, who went there at the same time Bert Goff did, are still holding on to their claims. Will Woodworth had built another shack since his first one was destroyed by fire and had set June 2d for proving up his claim. Marion has his claim in shape to prove up any time. All the Jasper county boys are doing all right.

NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.

Twenty-one opinions were handed down last Tuesday at the opening of the May term of the Supreme and Appellate courts, the Supreme court handing down fifteen and the Appellate court six.

Leroy Hendricks, 18 years old, son of Mayor A R. Hendricks, of Sterling, 111., left Monday for a tour around die world on a motorcycle. He expects to earn his expenses by painting signs John Gray, reported lost on the steamer Goodyear, has been located a*. Battle Creek, Mich. Gray was registered for a job on anotherwifWorsa, tered for a job on the Goodyear but shipped on another boat, which he left at Ludington. The two-year-old son of Dr. J. W. McFarland, of Bedford, toddled into his father’s office Monday afternoon during the physician’s absence, took a vial of carbolic acid from a table,ana drank it, dying in a short time. .

Minnie Hawkins, 15 years old, living near Bedford, was fatally shot Monday by her sister, Mrs Grace Meadows, who playfully snapped a gun at her, not knowing it was loaded. Nearly half the victim’s thigh was torn away.

Rev. Dean Atkins, pastor of Cathedral Episcopal church in Michigan City, will preach his farewell sermon next Sunday. The vestry has accepted hia resignation and he will become assistant pastor of the largest Episcopal parish in Boston.

Returning from his run as a railway mail clerk, Richard C. Harding, living in Logansport, picked up his two-year-old baby and tossed it into the air. He did this several times and then missed the baby as it was coming down. The child fell to the floor, striking on its head. It went into convulsions and died with a short time. The father became so grief stricken that he had to be controlled. A movement has been started in Washington, D. C., for the appropriate celebration throughout the Country on June 14, 1911, of the one-hundredth anniversary of the birth of Harriet Beecher Stowe. In honoring the memory of the author of the famous “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” the Beecher and Stowe families have heartily concurred The negroes of the United States wili figure prominently in tuo celebration

Excimsraiv TO CHICAGO Sunday, June sth Low rates and special train as follows: Stations Time Fare Leave M0n0n.... 8:50a.m. si.oo Leave Rensselaer 9:15 a.m. .75 Arrive Chicago 12:00 m. Special train will stop at Cedar Lake in both directions. Base Rail—White Sox vs. New York. Returning special train will leave Chicago at 11:80 p. m_ Sunday, June 5, 1910.

Raymond Gingrich, 5-year-oid son H. O. Gingrich, of near Adamsboro, was crushed to death when the rear wheels of a traction engine driven by his father passed over his body. The child climbed to the platform, holding to his father’s trouser leg. When Gingrich suddenly backed the engine the child’s hold was broken and he fell directly beneath the rear wheels.

An attempt was made Tuesday night to kill Guy Dill, a hardware merchant, of Princeton, who was driving his auto. Three miles southwest of town, while driving at a rapid speed, Dill ran into a barbed wire stretched across the highway. Had the wire been a trifle higher he might have been decapitated. Bloodhounds t’.aced footsteps to a house in the neighborhood.

Attorneys for W. T. Carskadden, executor of the will of Mrs. Minerva Good, under the codicil, which last Saturday was declared invalid by a jury at South Bend, will make an effort to collect their fees from the estate. The case will come before the court next Monday. The attorney.? are expecting a spirited fight. Chief Inspector Roth, of the Pennsylvania company, has gone to Carbondale, 111., to attend to the treating of the Pennsylvania ties. These are the first treated ties the company ever purchased and they are a new experiment in steam railroad work.

A MISSISSIPPI ENTHUSIAST Mrs. Lena Gresham, of Clinton, Miss., Has a Few Facts to Tell Our Readers About Cardui. Clinton, Miss.—“ Thanks to Cardui,’* writes Mrs. Lena Gresham, of this place, “I have been greatly relieved.” “I suffered for three years from female inflammation, and had taken medicine from four different physicians without much benefit. . “I have received more benefit from » seven bottles of Cardui, than from all the physicians.” Just try Cardui. Thai’s all we ask. It speaks for itself. It has helped so many thousands, it must be able v to help you. Trying Cardui won’t hurt you. It is safe, harmless, gentle in action, and purely vegetable. k jfjrou are weak, tired, down and out, If you are sick, miserable, and suffer from womanly pains, like headache, backache, dragging feelings: pains in Bide, arms, legs, etc.—try Cardui. It is the medicine for all women. It is the tonic for you. •ft. 8.-WWfete; Ladies’ Advisory Dept.. ChattagsSfK&gS'eapfefeisi M( Wooes, test in plain wrapper, uc reguett.

Grocery Satisfaction If your grocer pleases you In every particular, you have no pause tor changing. Even WE can do no more than that. But if you think some of making a shift, we would be glad to give you the best service of which we are capable. Often and often we have turned now-and-again customers into steady patrons. 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. .aaaa aa a a a A A* "1 ‘‘X * f / i ;* 11

Order Your Bee Supplies Now. — + — I am the Exclusive Agent For Jasper County for ROOT’S BEE HIVES AND SUPPLIES. 0 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 L>3 here and beekeepers should lay In their supplies now before the rush comes. Catalogue Mailed Free on Request. 0 Leslie Glark Republican Office, Rensselaer, Ind.

K Bargain Bferjr tfine you patronize us for feed, fe* we handle duly the best and sell at most reasonable prices. Your horses will thrive under our feed. River Queen Mills Phone 98.