Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 163, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 July 1910 — Page 4

Classified Column. - 4~... ... ~. -n... _■ _■, - FOB SALE. For store. Must be •old at once. Address W., care Journal. Lafayette, Iflfl. . F#f Sale— A Fouts & Hunter buggy, sliding doors and glass front. Will •ell cheap. Dr. F. H. Hemphill. For Sale— Good seasoned posts and cord wood. Apply to Emil Johnson, on the Rankin Halstead place, 7 miles northwest of Rensselaer, or phone Mt. Ayr, 21 D. * FOB BEST. Fer Bent— One barn and two residence properties in Rensselaer. Frank Foltz, administrator. Fer Bent— 6 room cottage. Inquire at the Jasper Savings & Trust Co. Fer Bent— Six room cement cottage. Ray D. Thompson. Fer Bent— s room house with large garden and fruit Inquire of A. H. Hopkins or Ellen Sayler. WANTED. Wanted— To correspond with good looking gentleman, not less than 45 years of age, must be a Protestant and able provide a home for a wife. Object matrimony. Best of references. Address K. J. S., care Republican, Rensselaer, Ind. LOST. Lest—A male rat terrier, white witii black and tan spots. Return to Thos. F. Murphy, Surrey, Ind., or phone 521 K. Lest—A solid heart-shaped locket, with link chain, letter M on locket. Return to Republican office or the the Home Grocery. Lest— Brooch, set with five topaz. Finder please return to this office. Lost— Small folding round pocket book, containing between $35 and S4O, in Rensselaer or on Pleasant Ridge road. Reward for return to F. W. Rutherford. ' Lest— Sult case containing wearing apparel and valuable papers. Supposed to have been taken from Monon depot platform by mistake. Reward for return to Republican office. Mrs. Elizabeth Sayler.

FOUND. Found— Boy’s hat. Inquire here. Found— Man’s coat, brown, with black stripe. Inquire here. MONET TO LOAN. Money to Loan— lnsurance company money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of E. P. Honan. lo.tf ; »«$$«»» »♦♦♦•»»»«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ > Order Your Bee Supplies Now. : : ; : I am the Exclusive Agent for ! ► Jasper County for « ROOT’S : BEE HIVES :: 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 J J ’ time can fill orders promptly. J ’ ’ Swarming season will soon b? •' ’ « ► > here and beekeepers should lay < > > in their supplies now before the < > > 4 ► > rush comes. < > : —♦— :: ; Catalogue Mailed Free on ’ J Request -——w-• —«►- >♦ < > Leslie Clark ; Republican Office, ’ J ’ Rensselaer, Ind. * ’

Farmers, rhechanics, railroaders, laborers rely on Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil. Takes the sting out of cuts, burns or bruises at once. Pain cannot stay where it is used. The National Catholic Educational association convention, in- progress in Detroit since Monday, ended Thursday night with a public mass meeting. The election of officers was concluded Thursday. His eminence. Cardinal Gibbons, of Baltimore, Jid., was elected honorary president, and the Rt. Rev. Mgr. T. J. Shahan, of Washington, D. C.» was chosen president-general.

LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.

CHICAGO UVS STOCK U.S. Yards, Chicago, 111., July 11. — Receipts of live stock today; Hogs, 30,000; cattle, 24,000; sheep, 4,000. Hogs 10c to 15c lower. Mixed, J 8.85 to 19.25. Heavy, SB.BO to $9.05. v Rough, $8.45 to $8.75. Light, $8.90 to $9.25. Cattle 10c to 15c lower. Beeves, $5.25 to $8.40. Cows, $2.50 to $6.75. Stockers, $3.50 to $5775. • Texans, $4.50 to $7.80. Calves, $6.00 to $9.00. Sheep, 10c to 20c low’er. Lambs, $4.25 to $7.55. Estimated tomorrow: Hogs, 18,000; cattle, 5,000; sheep, 15,000. CASK GBAIN Wheat No. 2 red, $1.04% to $1.06%. No. 3 red, $1.03% to $1.05%.' No. 2 hard, $1.04% to $1.06%. No. 3 hard, $1.04 to $1.05%. No. 1 N S, $1.19 to $1.20%. No. 2 hard, $1.12 to sl.lß. No. 3 S, SI.OB to $1.15. ©ora '~~~T No. 2,60 cto 60 %c. No. 2 W, 64c to 64%c. No. 2 Y, 61 %c to 62c. No. 3,59 cto 59%c. No. 3 W, 62c to 62%c? No. 3 Y, 60 %c to 60%c. No. 4, 57 %c to 58c. Nq. 4 W, 57 %c to 60 %c. No. 4 Y, 57%c to 59%c. ©ata

No. 2, 38%c^ — - No. 2 W, 43 %c to 44c. No. ITw, 41%c to 43c. No. 4 W, 40c to 41 %c. Standard, 43c to 43%c. rUTtTBEI July Sept. Dec. Wheat Open .... 1.05—% 103—% 1.03%04 High ... 1.05% 1.03% 1.04 Low .... 1.03% 1.02 1.03% Close ... 1.03% 1.01% 1.03% Corn * * Open .... 58% 60%% 58%% High .... 58% 60% 58% Low 57% 59% 57% Close .... 57% 59% 57%Oats Open .... 41 39%39 40%40 High .... 41 39% 40% Low 40% 38% 39% . Close 40% 38% 39% LOCAL MARKETS. Corn, 53c. Oats, 33c. Eggs, 15c. Butter—lß%c to 30c. Hens, 11c. Turkeys, 9c. Ducks, Bc. Roosters, sc. Geese, 4c. Spring ducks, 10c. Spring chickens, 18c.

BARGAINS IN LAND.

5 acres, on stone road, just outside the corporation. 20 acres, all black land, in corn, cement walks, good well; four blocks from town. 25 acres, all cultivated, fair house and outbuildings. 120 acres, near station, school, and three churches; 50 acres cultivated, and remainder pasture. Good fiveroom house, outbuildings, and fruit. Only S2B. Terms, SBOO down. 160 acres, near station, all black prairie land in pasture; lies along large ditch, has good fence, well,, and windmill. Only $35. . 88 acres, Barkley township, all black land, in cultivation, lies along large ditch, has some tile and good sixroom house, good barn, double cribs, and deep well. Price $55. Terms, SI,OOO down. 105 acres, all cultivated or meadow, lies level and nice, has good outlet for drainage, and has good five-room house, fair outbuildings; is oh gravel road. Price S6O. Terms, $1,500 down. 80 acres, good buildings, orchard, well, all good land, and all in cultivation and well located. Price $55. < Also have several farms from 80 to 160 acres which can be bought right, on favorable terms.

Therefore Nellie.

While George was playing with his cat the other day his mother asked him: ■"George, what isyour pussy's name?” ‘‘l used to call it Tommy, but I changed it to Nellie, because I want it to have kittens."

A "Classified Adv." will sell it.

G. F. MEYERS.

HANGING GROVE.

G. W. Infield was in McQoysburg Wednesday night. Mrs. Smith Hughes and daughter Eva were in Rensselaer Friday. Alf McCoy is here his parents near Lee, and hie brotner at McCoysburg. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Miller spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Porter. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ireland went to Lafayette Thursday to be present at the funeral of Mrs. Ireland’s sister-in-law, who was killed in a runaway at Lafayette the Fourth. J. R. Phillips and daughter lx>ra went to Rensselaer Friday. The latter will join the picnic party, composed of the Chicago Bargain Store clerks and proprietors, in an automobile trip to Parr, to spend the day. Each one will carry a banner, bearing the words, “We quit forever,” and this is the closing chapter of the J>ig store.

Arthur Stewart has killed out a small patch of Canadian thistles on his farm by placing a handful of salt on each plant. These thistles have become, .a terrible .nuisance in many localities, and farming the ground every year tends very little toward destroying the weed, but if the salt course is pursued, it will have the desired effect.

Friends and relatives worked a complete birthday surprise on C. W. Bussell Sunday. About thirty people came in to remind him of his fiftysecond birthday. A long table was spread under the shade trees in the yard and a bountiful dinner was served, together with eight gallons of ice cream that was eaten during the day. Those present were, Wm. Jacks and family, Mrs. Mary- E. Lowe, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Markin, Mr. and Mrs. I. N McCurtain, Mr and Mrs. R. L. Bussell, Mr. and Mrs.* George Parker qnd daughter Ethel, Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Parker, and Harry E. Pass.

REFLECTORETTES.

Reflection today saves repentance tomorrow. Don’t look for roses where you have sown weeds. The actions of a good man reach into the undying ages. A man who is true to himself, must be true to others. A man’s ideals are dead unless he works toward thbm. The more a man praises himself, the smaller he becomes. Indecision is an enemy that is often mistaken for a friend. A man cannot have faith in God unless he has faith in himself. Your life cannot be a blessing to yourself if it is a curse to others. Let your reformationbegin with yourself; but don’t let it end there. There is no creature more to .be pitied than one who lives for himself alone. It is natural for a man to exagerate his troubles and minimize his blessings. ~ Somehow we often hate to do ourselves what we would like to see others do. Before you are sure you are right, let the other man tell his side of the case. • „ * Better to work for your $2.00 a day and be contented, than be a banker Walsh in prison. It is a hard thing to demonstrate to a lazy man that every hill is not necessarily a mountain.

The man who looks to the ‘almighty’ dollar for his best friend, must have a poor opinion of himself. Perhaps :ie thinks "Something is better than nothing. An old Spanish proverb translated is. "The sweetest grapes hang highest.” That which is most worthy of having is hardest to obtain; but once obtained, you will be more than rewarded for the efforts you have made.

A Horse Lover.

James R. Keane, who is noted no less as a horseman than as a financier, said pt a luncheon at his Cedarhurst residence: “My love for horses has been a comfort to me all my- life. I have always kept my horses in their place, though. I haven’t allowed them to interfere with my business. Some men carry their love of horses altogether too far. Such a one wan a young father who stood, with his fair wife before the crib of their first born. ‘lsn’t he wonderful? the young mother cried. ‘Did you ever see anything like his at twenty-six months?” ‘Maternal love is all very well,’ the father retorted, impatiently, but. please don’t try to compute it with a two year old thoroughbred.* **

B. F. Coen Suggests A Summer Vacation Trip.

Fort Collins, Colo., June 29, 1910. To the Editor of The Republican: Many of the good people of Rensselaer and vicinity take a few weeks’ vacation each year. Many more of them should forget work and worry and do so. Many are saying, “1 can’t afford a trip. I can’t even afford to stay at home for two weeks. I must be at my place of business. I must look after my Stock. I must attend to my farm work. I must do this, or

this, or this.” The real fact in the case, and we all know it, is, that we cannot afford not to take a rest, a vacation, once in a while. People in the West realize the necessity for rest more than the people of the Middle States. It may be due in part to the fact that there are so many places near by to which one may go.

Let me suggest to you, a new place to spend a vacation. The only bad thing about it is, that if you go once, you will be determined to go again. You may think I’m paid for my talk but I’m not. I have no financial interest, whatever. I like to see people enjoy themselves, and I like to enjoy myself. If I can get a few people from Rensselaer to take my suggestion, I shall not need to say anything more about it. Those who go will see that others go. lam certain of that. I suggest to you, Estes Park, Colorado. I’ll tell you why. Estes Park is about 75 miles northwest of Denver, on the Burlington, and the Colorado and Southern Tailroads, or rather it is on no railroad at all. After Loveland is reached, there is a 32-mile automobile ride, and such a ride! A number of people have told me that it is the finest ride ttyey have ever taken. I have taken it ten different times, but I should like to take it again today. Twenty-two miles is up

a canon, so narrow in many places that there is scarcely room for the river and the road, And the road is so crooked that many, many times it looks as- if the automobile would dash against the mountain, when 10, a sudden turn, a bridge, and on we go, only to come face to face with another mountain wall, perhaps 1,200 feet in height. For miles and miles there is just a single track, with here and there places for passing, cut out of the granite walls. In the twenty-two miles, there is* a rise of 2,500 feet. You would naturally expect a swift flowing stream. You are not disappointed. Sometimes the spray from the liver gives gs m wetting as we speed along. The walls of the canon are from a few feet to 1,200 feet almost straight up. The road bed, itself, is one of the best*in the state. - Daily steamer automobile service is carried on. The view is ever changing. Th? drivers tell me that though they make the trip every day, there is always something new. It’s the same trip, yet ever new. ‘‘ln fact, all Colorado reminds the traveler of Italian scenery. It has been called the Switzerland of America, but it is far more than Italy. It has the Italian sky, the Italian coloring, and the mysterious and indefinable enchantment of that land of romance and dream.”

The Rocky Mountains in Colorado, alone, cover five times the area of the Alps of all Europe. There are nine Alpine peaks over 14,000 feet in height. In Colorado, alone, there are 43 peaks higher than the Jungfrau. There are 30 towns in Colorado, higher than the pass of St. Bernard. Estes Park is destined to be one of the greatest resorts in America. It is right in the heart of the Rockies. To the top of Long’s Peak is but a day’s journey. Two days will take one to a glacier. There are such journeys by the dozen.

The elevation of the Park is 7,500 feet. From this elevation, rise a great number of peaks 10,000 to 14,000 feet in height. The air is pure and dry. How good it seems to take in *a full breath of it. The nights are almost always cool. Sleep? There never was a finer place to sleep. I like to sleep right out under the stars. There is nothing like it. I tried it in Estes Park, only about three weeks ago. It took all the covers that could be found, though it was the second week of June. ■Almost every morning there was ice in the water-bucket. How would you like to have the coyotes snooping around your bunk and have them wake you up with their howls? T came back from the Park ten years younger in action, and five years younger in appearance, so my friends say. Don’t you want to try such an experiment? If you are Interested in getting out of a hot, murky climate for a few days,

and getting into a high and dry spot, a place where it Is pool as 4 pleasant in the shade, evep during the day, and where it is always cool and quite often cold at night, then Estes Park is the place. You can be idle there if you wish. You can just read and sleep and eat and rest, or you can be on the go all the time, or a part of the time, just as you please.

For scenery, there is probably nothing finer in America. In fact, “Every* journey in Colorado has its vista of surprise.” There are snowcapped mountains galore; there are storms of alrhost daily occurrence on certain of them; there are rocky mountains in the real sense of the term; there are precipices 2,800 feet on the perpendicular; there are boulders of solid granite, big as Indiana hills; there are pine forests so thick that a person could scarcely make his way through; there are forests mature, in which Uncle Sam is harvesting timber in which the forestry service is working out experiment; there are areas over which great forest fires have swept, such desolate places; there are patches of this sort in which Uncle Sam is sowing pine seed, that the people of the coming generations may have timber for their homes and snow for irrigation; there are trails or drives through all these forests; there are large mountain streams, with flow sufficient, and fall enough for power purposes; there are water-falls of great beauty; there are streams that roar like the forest in a wind; there are trout streams that make sport for the anglers; (a private fish hatchery in the Park supplies the streams with trout). There are meadows as level as any you ever saw; there are slopes so steep they cannot be scaled; there are deep canons and the highest peaks of the continent; there are glaciers of ice and snow, and springs of water the temperature of which is never above 28 degrees.

You can live in a cottage and do your own housekeeping, or you can live in a tent or a wagon. You can live in a rustic hotel or you can live in a hotel equal to the best in Chicago or New York.

You can live the easy, comfortable way, not “dressed up.” You need never wear a white shirt if you do not wish. You can live at another place where society and fashion hold sway. You can play golf, tennis, or croquet; you can hunt, fish or swim. You can drive to dozens of places frqm 4 to 20 miles distant. There are automobiles for hire in the Park. You can go horseback over trails where carriages and automobiles can not go. You can follow trails afoot, to mountain tops and glaciers; to sources of mountain streams. You can climb to places no one has ever been. Or you can sit on the mountain side and paint, or look and dream. The possibilities are limited only -by your time and inclination.

A stay in the Park need not be expensive. The trip from the railroad and back will cost $7.00, but it means 70 miles of wonderful scenery. Board and room with modern conveniences, may be had for from SIO.OO a week to SIO.OO a day. Teams, automobiles and horses cost per day about the same as elsewhere. Going with a party of five, it need not cost more than a dollar a day per person. Guides may be secured for five dollars a day. So why not try Estes Park, this summer? I am sure that you will not be sorry if you do. I should be pleased to give any one interested further information. Bulletins of information may be secured of the Burlington Route, Chicago, or of the Colorado & Southern, Denver; and of the Stead and Stanley hotels of Estes Park. Very truly yours,

A Handy Man.

Two young ladies boarded a crowded street car and were obliged to stand, says the Washington Post. One of them, to steady herself, took hold of what she supposed was her friends hand. They had stood thus for some time, when, on looking down, she discovered that she was holding a man’s hand. Greatly embarrassed, the young lady exclaimed: “Oh, I’ve got the wrong hand!” Whereupon the man, with a smile, stretched forth his other hand, saying: “Here is the other one, madam.’’—New Orleans States.

John Eads, a paroled convict from Jeffersonville, charged with being an accomplice of Mrs. John Poland in stealing a horse from Sanford Hamblen, of Clayton, pleaded guilty in the Hendricks circuit court and was given from two to fourteen years in the Michigan City prison.

Professional Cards •- • • ‘ T —■ ■■ DR. E. C. ENGLISH PHYSICIAN AMD SVBGBONs Night and day calls given prompt attention. Residence phone, lie. Office phone, 177. , 7’ —' - Bensselaer, Ind. DR.LM. WASHBURN. PHYSICIAN AMD SUBGEQN Makes a Diseases of the Over Both Brothers. Bensselaer, Ind. DR. F. A. TUBFLEB. OSTIOPATHIO PHYSICIAN 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 aspecialty. DB. E. N. LOY Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. HOMEOPATHIST Office—Frame building on Cullen street;, east of court house. OPPICE PHONS 89 Residence College Avenue, Phone HP Bensselaer, Indiana. ~F. H. HEMPHILL, M.~IL Physician and Surgeon Special attention to diseases of women and low grades of fever. Office in Williams block. Opposite Court House. .Telephone, office and residence, 442. Bensselaer Ind. ARTHUR H. HOPKINS DAW, DOANS ABD BEAD ESTATE Loans on farms and city propertypersonal security and chattel mortgage. Buy, sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city fire insurances Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Bensselaer, xndiawa.

JT. T. Irwin s. C. Irwin IRWIN A IRWIN DAW, BEAD ESTATE AMD INSURANCE. 5 per oent farm loans. Office In Oddi Fellows’ Block. Bensselaer, Tndlaee FBANK FOTTZ ~ Lawyer Practices In All Courts Telephone No. 16 E. P. HONAN ATTOBNET AT DAW Law, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice In all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. Bensselaer, Indiana. H. L. BROWN DENTIST ’ 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. I. O. O. F. Building. Phone 152. JOHN A. DUNLAP, Lawyer. Practice In all courts. \ Estates settled. \ Farm Loans. N. Collection department. \ Notary In the office. Rensselaer, Indiana.

Chicago to northwest, Indianapolis?. Cincinnati, and tba South, LouisVille and French Lick Springs. BEKSSELAEB TIME TABLE —ln Eftect January 16, 1910. SOUTH BOUITD. No. s—Louisville Mail 10:56 ami. No. 3 37-In<Man apolls Mall ... 1:68 P.nu. No. 39r-Mine Accom 6:02 p.nu. No. S—OJoulsvllle Ex 11:06 p.nu. No. 31—Fast Mall 4:46 am.. HOBTHBOUUD. St Na 4—Mall 4:49 ami. Na 40 —Milk Accom 7:31 am.. Na 32—Fast Mail 10:06 anu. No. 6—Mall and Ex 3:13 p.nu. No. 30—Cln. io Chi. Mall ... 6:03 p.nu. No. 6, south bound, makes connection) at Monon for Indianapolis, arriving in. that city at 3:20 p. m. Also train No. 38, north bound, leaves Indianapolis at 11:45 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 La- - fayette at 6:16 &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 flag stop, for trains No. 8. 4. 80 and 33.

ASK FOR Clark’s Brand Pure White Clover Honey Put up in Clean, Neat Cartons. Sold by All Grocers.

B. F. COEN.

SPECIAL EXCURSION TO CHICAGO Sunday, July 17 Via Monon Route Lv. Monon 8:50 a.m. J 1.00 Lv. Rensselaer 9:15 a.m. .75Arr. Chicago.. 12:00 M. Special train stops at Cedar Lake in both directions. Returning, Special Train will leave Chicago at 11:80 p. nu, Sunday, July 17, 1910. Tell the people of Rensselaer and Jasper county what you have—what you want—what you are offering tar sale, rent or exchange. Get quick action by telling them through the* Republican Classified column.