Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 207, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 August 1910 — Page 4
Classified Column. FOB SALK. For Sale— Bo acres good land, four miles from the court house, on stone road. A great bargain at $65. Easy terms. For Sale— Cheap, good 6-room house with barn, cistern, chicken house and park and fruit trees. Inquire of W. C. Babcock. For Sale— A few pieces of furniture very cheap; call at once. Mrs. Jennie L. Wishard. FOB RENT. For Rent— s furnished rooms with bathroom and pantry. Will give possession middle of October. Enquire at Republican office. For Bent— Two unfurnished rooms, suitable for school girls. Write box 155 or phone 288. For Bent— Furnished rooms, One block east of school house. Modern conveniences. Phone 438. For Bent— Seven room house, centrally located, with all modern conveniences and in a desirable neighborhood. Arthur H. Hopkins. For Bent— One 7-room cottage, centrally located. Inquire of B. S. Fendig. For Rent— Down stairs room, comfortably furnished; first block east of school house. Gentleman preferred. Phone 290, P. O. Box 591. For Bent—A nice business room in the Republican building. Inquire of Healey & Clark. Fer Bent— One barn and two residence properties in Rensselaer. Frank Foltz, administrator. For Bent— Six room cement cottage. Ray D. Thompson. For Rent— Modern 5-room cottage; all conveniences, on Front Street Inquire of A. Leopold, at the Model Clothing Store. WANTED. Wanted— To rent o a farm of about 250 or 300 acres; a 10 horse farm Phone 619 J. Wanted— School girl roomers; furnlshed or unfurnished rooms 1 block from the school house. Mrs. J. I. Gwin. Wanted— To rent good farm, would prefer 240 acres or more; have had experience and well equipped for farming. Will furnish Jasper county reference if required. Address C. F. Lowman, Gobelsville, Mich. Wanted— Girl for general housework. Inquire of Firman Thompson, at the S. P. Thompson residence. LOST. Lost— Between Rensselaer and Pleasant Grove, large envelope containing insurance papers. Return to Knapp’s livery barn and receive reward. MOSEY TO LOAN. Money to Loan— lnsurance company money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of E. P. Honan. lO.tf
NASAL CATARRH.
Hesry L. Britton Says It is Easy to Get Rid of. "My head, nose and glands leading to my eyes and nose were stopped up and swollen, I tried several so-called catarrh cures, but Hyomel, used thoroughly did the curing. There is nothing too good to say in favor of Hyomei. it cured my nasal catarrh.”— Henry J. Britton, Frost St, Eaton Rapids, Mich. Hyomei (pronounced High-o-me) cures catarrh, because it gets where the germs are, and destroys them. It is made of Australian eucalyptus, mixed with other healing antiseptics. When breathed over the irritated and inflamed membrane, it gives relief in two minutes. Used, regularly for a few weeks it will build up and heal the germ infested membrane and drive out catarrh. If you own a small Hyomei pocket inhaler, you can get a bottle of Hyom®i at druggists everywhere, or at B. F. Fendig's for only 60 cents. If you do not own a Hyomei inhaler, ask for a complete outfit, the price is SI.OO. It is guaranteed to cure catarrh, coughs, colds, croup or sore throat or money back.
If you want to buy, sell, rent, or exchange anything. The Republican “Classified Column” will find your “affinity."
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.
CHICAGO XdTB. STOCK U. S, Yards, Chicago, 111., Aug. 31 Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 20,000; cattle, 19,000; sheep, 25,000. Hogs steady. Mixed, 88.60 to $9.45. Heavy, $8.70 to $9.25. Rough, $8.45 to $8.65. Light, sß'9o to $9.55. Cattle steady. Beeves, $5.00 to $9.30. Cows and heifers, $2.25 to $7.00. Stockers and feeders, $3.50 to $6.00. Texans, $4.25 to $6.65. Westerners, $4.65 to $7.25. Calves, $7.00 to $9.25. Sheep strong, $2.60 to $6.50. Lambs, $4.50 to $7.50. Estimated tomorrow: Hogs, 16,000; Cattle, 6,000; sheep, 15,000. w q - ■ CASK GBAXK Wheat No. 1 red, 99%c to $1.00%. No. 2 red, to $1.00%. No. 3 red, 97c to 98%c. No. 2 hard, 99%c to $1.04. No. 3 hard, 97%c to 99c. No. INS, $1.16 to $1.17. No. 2 N S, $1.12 to $1.15. No. 3 S, SI.OO to $1.04. Com No. 2, 58%c to 59%c. No. 2 W, 59c to 60c. No. 2 Y, 59c to 59 %c. No. 3,58 cto 59c. No. 3 W, 58%c to 59%c. No. 3 Y, 58 %c to 59 %c. No. 4,56 cto 58%c. No. 4 W, 57%c to 59c. No. 4 Y, 58c to 58%c. Oats No. 2 W, 33c to 33 %c. No. 3 W, 31%c to 32%c. No. 4 W, 31%c to 32c. Standard, 32%c to 33%c. PUTUXEB . Sept. Dec. May Wheat Open .... 98%% 1.03 1.08% High .... 99% 1.03% 1.09% Low ..... 98% 1.02% 1.08% Close .... 99% 1.03% 1.09% Com Open .... 59%% 57%% 59%60 High ..... 59% 57% 60% Low 58% 57% 59% Close .... 59 57% 60% Oats Open .... 33% 36% 39%% High .... 33% 36% 39% Low ..... 32% 35% 39% Close .... 33 36% 39%
FARM BARGAINS.
Five, ten and twenty acre tracts half-mile from court bouse. Prices right 85 acres, all cultivated, joins large ditch, well located, good buildings. Price SSO. 100 acres, all cultivated, black soil with clay subsoil, on large ditch, near station. Price SSO. 133 six-room house, large barn, good well, all black soil with clay subsoil, near station, at $45. 160 acres, good black corn land with < lay subsoil, good house and barn, well located. Price SSO. 90 acres, good six-room house, large barn, good well, double cribs, all tillable, on large ditch, has some tile, and a bargain at S4O. Terms, SI,OOO down. All the above farms are bargains and can be sold on favorable terms. I can show these farms from this place any time. Also have a number of farms for exchange.
SOUTH NEWTON.
Miss Grace Kelly visited Tuesday with Miss Irma Holmes. Miss Florence Jacks visited Sunday with the Holmes family. Messrs. Perkins and Marion are repairing the well at Jeff Smith’s. Mr. Tillison, of Illinois, is visiting his sister, Mrs. Doan and family. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Francis visited their daughter, Mrs. Wuerthner, on Sunday. Grandpa Hufty, of Mt. Ayr, visited Sunday with his daughter, Mrs. R. J. Yeoman. Master Lawson Eldridge and sister Lethia are visiting the Holmes children for a few days. An aunt of the Carr brothers, living at Lafayette, is visiting them and their sister for a few days. _____ Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Holmes attended the funerals of two of their old neighbors last week in White county. Mrs. Allie Francis spent Saturday night and Sunday with his sister, Mrs. Vest, in Barkley township, and also looked after his farm near his sister’s. The monument for Mrs. Holmes’ father and mother* was erected Monday. It is about the most substantial monument in the Osborne cemetery.
When Charley sauntered into the yard and dropped down beside Jane on the old bench under the elm, he had in his mind just W'hat he was going to say—he had been rehearsing it all day—r-but when he was beside the little girl he had loved sipce chilahood, looking into her big, innocent blue eyes, h 3 suddenly became speechless so far kb proposing went. Jane was in her usual mood; quiet and confiding, telling him the happenings of the da\. But Charley had something else on his mind, something that he v. mted to say, and. most of her news fell on eeaf ears. Jane noticed his abstraction and, thinking that he was not interested, became silent. For a long time neither spoke, then: “Did you know that Ned Burley’s cousin Violet, from Chiago, was coming to • spend the summer with them?” she asked. “No." — “Ned says she is a dream.” “Stuck up, I’ll bet.” “He says that she will have all the fellows in town in love with her before she has been here two days ” \“I know one she’ll not have,” Charley declared. That night, after he had gone, she stood before her mirror, critically studying the reflection therein. Jane was not what one would term pretty. Her features were regular, but her face was covered with a mass of tiny freckles. Ned’s boast the' all the boys would be at her heels had not been in vain, and' much to Jane’s discomfiture, Charley was one of the fggempst. To him Vloiet was a revelation, her red lips, bewitching dimples and dancing eyes pla; ed havoc with his heart. He wondered what on earth he could ever have seen in that freckle-faced, red-haired Jane. Charley continued to call on Jane same as ever, but there was a difference in his attitude toward her. He looked upon her now as simply a friend of childhood and she accepted the changed condition of affairs with a fortitude that was pathetic had not Charley’s eyes been blinded by the flashing charms of the frivolous Violet. 1 So passed the summer, and when fall came Violet began talking of ret)trning to the city, and Charley awoke to the fact that for him life would become an empty void after she had gone. Then he asked her to iparry him. She threw him a saucy look, lowered her eyes demurely and said she would consider it. Charley had never made a study of human anture, esrecially people jf Violet’s stamp, and so foolishly went about in a dream of ecstasy. When the day for her departure arrived he had not received his answer, and she promised to write to him as soon as she had spoken to her mother on the subject. During the following week Jane saw nothing of him, as his time was all taken up In dreaming of the future, and in going to and from his house to the post office. Fianlly he was rewarded by receiving a dainty missive postmarked Chicago. He did not open it till he was safe from observation, then he tore it open with a wildly beating heart. A moment later he was staring at the sheet in amazement—lt was not his letter at all. but was written to a girl in New Yo k. Violet had written two letters and had put them in the wrong envelopes. He glanced over the pages until he came to the last paragraph, then his face paled and an angry frown settled on his brow. He read it over twice. “And Minnie,” it read, “you ought to have seen what proposed to me. I use to amuse myself in picking hayseed out of his hair, and he had such lovely hair, too. And just think, it was the only ‘pop’ I got all summer; like the experience we had at. the seashore a year ago Well, I’ve Written him a nice little letter of regret in which I told him that ‘my ma won’t let me, It may wake him up ” It did wake him up. It showed him a type with which he was wholly unfamiliar, am taught him a lesson that he would remember the rest of his life. And hile he was thinking of what he id just read there came intruding into his mind a pair of big innocent lue eyes, an.l he Imagined that he saw a look of sadness in their de; .hs. Then he tore the letter into fr: gments and ground It into the earth with his heel. When he sauntered into the yard Jane was sitting on the old bench under the elm. When he dropped down beside her he had no idea what he was going to say, or how he was going to explain his conduct of the past few weeks; In fact he had expected that she might Ignore him, as he deserved. But she didn’t. And just how It happened he hardly knew, but he suddenly realised that she wjs In hts arms, and he was calling her his little wife and smothering her with kisses. .
G. F. MEYERS.
If merchants would stop long through the advertising columns, there would be fewer failures and more believer* in advertising.
The Awakening of Charley.
By Josephine Wentworth.
Fair Oaks.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Kight visited in Thayer Sunday. These rains are good for the pickle and melon crop. Three of the Moore children are visiting in Monticello this week. Felix Irwin and daughter Anna made a trip to Remington the last of the week. Mrs. Jim Clifton and son Arthur went to DeMotte Monday to visit her daughter. Frank Cox fend Frank Garriott visited relatives and friends in Fair Oaks over Sunday. The gravel road men are looking for a new engine, to be used in the gravel road work here. Joseph Nelson and family visited his sister, Mrs. Fannie Cottingham several .days last week. Courtright, the gravel road man, and Cook, the .pickle man, were among the business visitors here this week. Mrs. M. D. Carr and two little girls went to visit relatives in Indianapolis and Cincinnati for a couple of weeks. Miss Leah Elliott, of Chicago, and several other friends of the family are visiting at Geo. Williams’ this week. Rev. Peterson and Miss Rogers, the deaconess, also several other friends took dinner with Sarah Thompson atnd family Sunday. The militia boys will start Thursday morning for Fort Benjamin Harrison, near Indianapolis, where they will camp with the standing army for 1 bout ten days.
PARR.
Mr. Estal Price is on the sick list this week. Miss Marie KJng spent Sunday with Miss Opal Iliff. Mrs. Agnes Warren spent Monday with Miss Grace Price. Miss Grace Price spent Monday night with Mrs. Bertie Comer. Mrs. Agnes Lakin spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Effie Myers. Miss Ocie Wood entertained nlneteen of her girl friends over Saturday Mrs. George King, of Danville, 111., is spending a few days with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schroer spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Stephenson. Miss Mary Gant, of Rensselaer, is spending a few days with her cousin Mirie Gant. Miss Deva Hurley, who is working, for Mrs. Leslie Alter, spent Sunday 1 ’with home folks. Miss Pearl Caldwell and daughter Ruby spent Tuesday with her mother, Mrs. Newt Price. Mrs. Clyde Davisson and son Kenneth and Mrs. George Davisson spent Sunday with Mrs. Wm. Myers. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Morgan, of Kankakee City, are visiting for a few days with Mr. and Mrs. William Myers. Mr. and Mrs. William Blankenbaker and Mr. Alva Stephenson returned from Colorado last Monday night. All reported it a nice country.
HIDDEN DANGERS.
Nature Gives Timely Warnings That No Rensselaer Citizen Can Afford To Ignore. DANGER SIGNAL NO. 1 comes from the kidney secretions. They will warn you when the kidneys are sick. Well kidneys excrete a clear, amber fluid. Sick kidneys sepd, out a thin, pale and foamy, or a thick, red, illsmelling urine, full of sediment and irregular of passage. DANGER SIGNAL NO. 2 comes from the back. Back pains, dull and heavy, or sharp and acute, tell you of sick kidneys and warn you of the approach of dropsy, diabetes and Bright’s disease. Doan’s Kidney Pills cure sick kidneys and cure them permanently. Here’s Rensselaer proof: William Clift, 528 College street, Rensselaer, Ind., says: “I had kidney and bladder trouble and my bhck ached severely. I did not sleep well and was annoyed by too frequent desire to void the kidney secretions. I took doctors’ medicine and remedies of various kinds, but found no relief until I procured Doan’s Kidney Pills Since using them my back has not troubled me and I have felt better in every way. It gives me great pleasure to endorse Doan’s Kidney Pills.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other.
Want to sell or rent it? If you do, try The Republican Classified Column - Phone 18.
GREAT SHOW OF STOCK
Rich Quality of Beef and Dairy Gattie at State Fair. Both visitors and exhibitors will when they get to the Indiana State Fair the week of Sept 12, find that the exposition has undergone a general improvement and that the quality of the livestock is higher than ever. Tins has been brought about by a thorough revision of the premium list in which some classes were eliminated and the premiums on those retained increased. In the livestock classes the prizes have been marked up to a total of $34,346, divided as follows: Show horses, $14,875; beef cattle, $9,744; dairy cattle, $3,785; sheep, $3,627; swine, $2,315. The sum of $2,465 is offered in the Hereford cattle classes, $2,319 on Shorthorns, $1,534 on Polled Durhams, and $2,534 on Aberdeen Angus. In the beef cattle classes there are many special prizes offered by breeders’ associations, and silver cups are offered by individuals, in addition to the premiums given by the State Board of Agriculture. The beef cattle will compete for prizes each day in the coliseum. The grand championship in the beef classes will be awarded on Thursday, and there is always sharp competition for this, one of the highest honors to be won at the fair. Another that will be as spirited will he for pure-bred heifers, the trophy offered being a handsome silver cup. The show of dairy cattle always has its crowds of admirers. A feature of the dairy division will be a forty-eight-hour dairy test for registered Jersey cows, the contest to be under the supervision of Purdue University. The milking is to be done on the fair grounds, where the milk will also be tested. The prizes have been contributed by the American and Indiana Jersey Cattle Clubs and by Indiana individuals, and the total for the milking test is $450.
CHILDREN’S BIG DAY
Fine Features for Them at Mana State Fair. The school children of Indiana between the ages of seven and twelve years are to receive unusual consideration at the coming State Fair; As in other years, they will, on Tuesday, Sept. 18, be admitted to the big exposition without charge and they will have free run of the grounds and all it contains. The fair management has always held out extra Inducements to the youngsters to attend, and has found that the boys and girls who on yesterday tasted of the exposition's enjoyment, are today and tomorrow the adult patrons of the enterprise. Children find every part of the fair and all of its popular features of entertainment strongly to their liking, •nd it is common on their special day 'for $.0,000 or more of them to see the exposition, and there is little that escapes their eager eyes. The big show for children at the coming fair will be given in the coliseum. It will be a pony show—the richest of its kind the fair has ever offered its juvenile friends. Arrangements for the pony show began months ago. There will be scores of these animals In the arena—every pony bred in the purple. They will be hitched to carts •nd other vehicles, and some wlh be under saddle when they contest for prise ribbons. Also to the liking of the children will be the special programs given by 100 ponies belonging to different breeders who have agreed to send their choicest Shetlands to the fair and will unite their herds for the special program. It will open with a parade and will include all sorts of "wild west” •ad trick riding and Ben Hur chariot races. Children who trained the ponies will put the animals through their tricks and paces at the fair, and broncho busting, high school and other fancy gaits will be particularly Plessis to the children.
Experts as State Fair Judges. fa the earlier years of the Indiana State Fair a common method of obtaining judges was to pick them up as they could be found at the exposition, but at the coming fair a well-organized force of judges will tie the ribbons on the prize winners. The list Is made up of men who are widely known as experts In their special lines. The judge of draft horses will be Prof. W. L*. Carlyle of Moscow, Idaho; coach, M. A. McDonald, West Lebanon, Ind.; heavy harness, Hon. C. W. Barnum, of Connecticut; show horses, T. Bell, Chicago; saddle horses, James L. Gay, Pisgah, Ky.; beef cattle, I. M. Forbes, Henry, 111., and John G. Imboden, Decatur, Ill.; dairy cattle, Prof. C.‘ S. Plumb, Columbus, O.; sheep, George Allen, Lexington, Neb.; Hal’ Woodford Paris, Ky.; U. C. Brouse, Kendallville, and Uriah Privett, Greensburg, Ind.; swine, J. S. Henderson, Kenton, Tenn.; Carl Scott, Salem, Ind.; Hugh Atkinson, Mt. Sterling, Ky,; F. U. Campbell, Tipton, Ind.; Thomas Vtnnedge, Hope, Ind.; poultry, O. L. McCord, Danville, 111., W. W. Zike, Morristown, Ind. L. J. ger, Stewartsville, Ind. The presiding judge of the races will be Frank E. Stone of Burlington, Wls., regarded M one of the most competent starters in the country. The great quantity of exhibits will give the judges a busy wook.
Professional Cards ■ < DB. £ C. ENGLISH PHYSICIAN AMD SVMBON Night and day calls given prompt attention. Residence phone, lie. Office phone, 177. Bensselaer, Ind. DB. L M. WABHBURN. BKYBXOIAM AMD SUBGEOM Makes a Diseases of th* Over Both Brothers. faniMlMr, Znd. DR. r. A. TUBFLEB. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings on 800. residence—3 rings on 300. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. * - DR. E. N. LOY Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. HOMEOPATHIST Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. OPTICS PHOMS 8» Residence College Avenue, Phone IM. Bensselaor, Indiana.
F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. 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. Rensselaer, Ind.
ARTHUR H. HOPKINS , DAW, DOANS AMD READ BSTATB Loans on farms and city property. gersonal security, and chattel mortgage, luy. sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city Are Insurance. Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Bensselaer, Indiana. J. P. Irwin B. C. Irwin IRWIN & IRWIN LAW, BBAD ESTATE AMD IMSVBANCE. 5 per cent farm loans. Office In Odd Fellows' Block. Bensselaer, Indiana. FRANK FC T TZ Lawyer Practices in AU Courts Telephone No. 16 E * F. HONAN ATTORNEY AT DAW Law, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice In all th® courts. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. Bensselaer. Indiana. H. L. BROWN DENTIST 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. I. O. O. F. Building. Phone 162. JOHN A. DVNDAP, Dawysr. Practice in all courts. , Estates settled. Farm Loans. Col lection* department. Notary In the office. Rensselaer, Indiana.
Order Your Bee Supplies Now. —4— I am the Exclusive Agent For Jasper County for ROOT’S BEE HIVES AND SUPPLIES. 4. 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« here and bebkeepers should lay in their supplies now before the rush comes. ♦ Catalogue Mailed Free on z Request Leslie Clark Republican Office, Rensselaer, Ind.
Chicago to Vorthwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, LouisVilla and Prenoh.Mok Springs. BEVSSEXdLBB TIME THIS In Effect January It, 1910. SOUTH BOU3D. No. s—Louisville Mall 10:55 a.m. No. 33-—lndianapolis Mall ... 1:58 P.m. No. 3i—MMk Accom 4:03 p.m. No. Ex 11:05 p.m. No. 31—Fast Mail 4:45 a.m. Itobtbbov:td. No. 4—Mall 4:49 a.m. Ntx 40—MHk Accom 7:81 a.m. No. 82—Fast Mail 10:05 a.m. s—Mail and Ex. 1:18 p.m. No. 30—Cln. to Chi. Mall ... 5:03 p.m. ■■ , No. 6, south bound, makes connection at Monon for Indianapolis, arriving in that city at 3:30 p. m. Also train No. 88. 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. 81 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at S:ls a. m. No. 14, leavlrffc Lafayette at 4:80 p. m., connects with Na •• *t Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at • :03 p. m. Effective April 15th and until further notice. Cedar Lake will be a flag stop for trains Ne. 8. 4. 30 and 88. *
A "Classified Adv." will find It.
