Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 224, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 September 1910 — Page 3
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- show you what I have for sale and trade. A. S. LaRUE
linn Day DEALER IN lair, fan; ime, Bril RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA
t 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. That’s all we ask. It speaks for itself. It has helped so many thousands, it must be able to •help you. Trying Cardui won’t hurt you. It is Wife, harmless, gentle in action, and purely vegetable. If you are weak, tired; down and out, try Cardui. If you are sick, miserable, and suffer from womanly pains, like headache, backache, dragging feelings; pains in Side, arms, legs, etc.—try Cardui. It is the medicine for all women. It is the tonic for you. N. B.— Write to: Ladies’ Advisory Dept., Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tenn., lor Special instructions, and 64-page book. Home Treatment for Women, sent in plain wrapper, on request.
The Sunshine of the South is TTERE’S a hot, flavorful, bracing beverage that you can «|gg|g./ drink morning, noon and night, and ’tween times BONANO is the pure meat of choicest bananas —the delicate, sugary, juicy varieties we never see up North —ripened in the sun- If; shine of the Tropics. Then dried, roasted JLijfew Ml iJj m brown and granulated by modem machinery. - fflUli BONANO brings you the golden sun- Mil shine of the South in its spicy, tempting f| \ aroma, its delicious flavor, its rich, satisfying J You will like BONANO —all your family, ij little folks and grown folks will like BONANO. Like it better than other hot 7 , A 25-cent can of BONANO makes 75 cups of the best hot drink you ever tasted. Ask your grocer for BONANO. For sale by HOME (IROffltRY Wpl
Professional Cards DR. E. C. ENGLISH vsnaoui Mrs cnoiov Night and day calls given prompt attention. Residence phone, 118. Office phone, 177. Rensselaer. Xnd. DR. L M. WASHBURN. PHYSICIAN AW3> SUBGEON Makes a specialty of Diseases .of. th< ’ Dyes. Over Roth Brothers. DR. F. A. TCRFLER. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building, - Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings on 300, real dence—3 rings on 300. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures • 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 188. Rensselaer, 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. ARTHUR H. HOPKINS LAW, LOANS AND REST. ESTATE Loans on farms And city property personal security and chattel mortgage Buy, sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city fire Insurance Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Rensselaer, Indiana. 7. P. Irwin 8. O. Irwin IBWIN & IRWIN LAW, REAL ESTATE AND XNSTT* ANCE. 5 per oent farm loans. Office in Odd Fellows' Block.
FRANK Ff T TZ Lawyer Practices in All Courts Telephone No. 16 E. P. HONAN ATTORNEY AS LAW Law, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice In all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. Rensselaer, Indiana. ________ 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 r s Drug Store. I. O. O. P. Building. Phone 15#. JOHN A. DUNLAP, Lawyer. Practice In all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. Collection "department. Notary In the office. Rensselaer, Indiana jj ASK FOR :: :: Clark's Brand j; < ’ Pure White Clover «> ;; <► Honey s «> i Put up in Clean, Neat Cartons. J J Sold by All Grocers. ! |
CATARRH GERMS
Move Out When Hyomel Moves In. No stomach dosing. HYOMBI (pronounce it Hlgh-o-me) is made from the highest grade of eucalyptus, taken from the eucalyptus forests of inland Australia, and combined with the excellent antiseptics employed in the Listerian system. In inland Australia the atmosphere is so impregnated with balsam thrown out by the eucalyptus trees that germs cannot live, and in consequence catarrh and consumption are unknown. Breathe HYOMEI and get the very same, pleasant; healing, germ-killing air as you would get in the eucalyptus forests and kill the germs. HYOMBI is sold by B. F. Fendig and druggists everywhere, at SI.OO a complete outfit. An outfit consists of a bottle of HYOMEI, a hard rubber pocket inhaler and simple instructions for use. -The inhaler will last a lifetime, but bear in mind if you need another bottle of HYOMEI you can get it at druggists for only 50c at any time. Guaranteed to cure catarrh, croup and throat troubles, or money back. Trial sample of Hyomei free to readers of the Republican. Address Hyomei Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
J- W. Tilton to Susan O. Paulson, Apr. 15. s}4 It 2, bl 5, Chambers & Morgan’s add, Remington, 225. q. c. d. Emmet L. Hollingsworth to Susan O. Paulson et al Apr 13, It 2, bl 5, Chambers & Morgan’s add, Remington', 375. John W. Sauser to Mary Goetz, Apl. 29 pt sw se, 30-29-6, Rensselaer, 32,800. Benj. J. Gifford to John Eger, Apr. nw, 158.66 acres, w% ne, 10-amPu,.We 29, n% ne, se ne, 23-30-6, 120 acres, n% se, ne, pt se nw, 14-30-6, 270 acres, pt nw, 158.66 acres, w% ne, 10.79 acres, pt jw 12 -30-6, 3.53 acres, Barkley, 315,389.40. J Ray D. Thompson to Charles G. Spitler, Aug. 29, pt outlot 57, nw, 30-29-6, Rensselaer, 3275. Harry E. Reed, et al to Charles W. Reed, Aug. 26. und 3-8 se sw, 20-30-6, Barkley, 01,875. Richard E. Foulks to John G. Brown, Aug. 31, s% nw, 21-28-5, 80 acres, Milroy, sl. Frank King to John Reed, et ux, Sept. 1, Its 1,2, 3,4, 5. 6, bl 33, Weston's add., Rensselaer, $1,400. John W. Selmer to Lewis H. Selmer, Aug. 31, und % n% ne, se, und % n % nw und % ne se, 13-30-5, Gillam, sl. Lewis H. Selmer to John W. Selmer, Aug. 31, und. % s%, nw se. und % s ne sw, und % se se, 13-30-5, Gilliam William L. Wood, et ux, to Perry Marlatt, Sept. 2. Its 18, 19, bl 31, Weston’s add, Rensselaer, SI,OOO. Cressie Potts to Walter Harrington, Aug. 27. und 1-6, outlots 31, 32, 33, Parr, SIOO. , Helena Bernioken to Andrew Misch, et ux, Sept. 6, Its 15, 16, bl 2, Graham’s add, Rensselaer, $750. Benj. J. Gifford to John Holladay, Sept 7. Its 3, 4. 5,6, bl 1. Kersey, $760.
1 Peter Van Lear i: • Phone 198. ;; • Plastering ;; Contractor i; Estimates Cheerfully Furnished. * J | Phone your “Want” adV. to The Republican.
PEOPLE AROUSED TO THEIR NEEDS
Browing Demand (or Competent Moo In Office. OURS IS UNO OF FREEMEN People Have Power to Regulate Own Affairs—Do Not Dodge Responsibility—Problems to Be Solved by Best Intelligence of All People—Men in Office to Be Scrutinized With Better Care. An article in the North American Review on “A Plea for Conservation of Common Sense,’* written by Editor George Harvey, is attracting a great deal of attention because of its optism In respect to the country at large, and its expressed confidence in the certainty that the people will apply correctives wherever they are needed. Probably the most striking discussion in the article .relates to the questions of oppression of the poor by the rich, to the tariff and the trusts. On these Mr. Harvey says in part: “There is qo direct oppression of the poor by the rich. For the first time in the progress of civilization this can bo said with truth. History from the beginning of governments to the beginning of the republic is a seamy record of tyranny of the strong, the rich, the powerful. To this day, in nearly all lands except our own, real dominance is exercised openly by a class. “Here the individual is still his own master at the, polls and in his home. Personal service is not synonymous with political servitude. Ours Is still the land of the free; and whatever differences exist respecting the powers of governance relate chiefly, on the one hand, to restriction of suffrage and on the other, to the elimination of sex qualification. Neither project involves revolution. “Qould the Fathers have been assured of so happy a condition among ninety millions of people, can we doubt that they would have felt far more confident than they did feel that the foundations they were laying,.with such care and foresight as were within their power to exercise would prove indeed everlasting? “But we are told that a privileged class has grown up under the rose, that mere wealth wields undue influence in legislation, that the few fatten upon the many, that monopoly safeguarded by law. holds individualism in check, that excessive tariffs no longer tend to develop industries, hut are become no more or less than evasive taxes, that. obnoxious and detrimental trusts thrive upon advantages thereby obtained.
“Undoubtedly, to a great extent, these assertions are true. But, in the light of history, was It not Inevitable that a period of amazing development should be dappled by such accompaniments? All great forward movements have been attended by corresponding Ills. But because a child has the measles the parent does not kill the child. He seeks to eradicate the disease by the use of remedies suggested by others more experienced than himself, in whose fidelity and judgment he reposes faith. But in hits, the parent 7 lies the authority and responsibility of discriminating between the physician and the quack. “So it is with the American people today. As we have seen, they still have the power. Theirs also is the responsibility. Are signs visible that they are evading It? Rather the reverse. “That great problems cannot be resolved in a day, a month or a year, is a patent truth that demands recognition. But vastly more important is the certainty that, in this country, they cannot be resolved at all except through the application of the best intelligence of all the people. “Hence the hopefulness in the obvi-' ous awakening of minds throughout the land. Already we perceive a growing demand for more competent representation in congress, for higher standards of fitness in all public officers ter closer attention to public duties, for greater efficiency in every direction. This can only mean that acts of those in temporary authority will be more sharply scrutinized and that the people themselves, in order to pass discerning criticism, will attain better understanding.”
ROOKER’S PROPHECY
Democrat Predicta' Big Republican Plurality In Indiana This Year. Will V. Rooker, candidate for a supreme court Judgeship at the last Democratic state convention, is out with a prediction that the Democrats of Indiana are booked for a beating to the tune of 40,000 to 80,000 plurality next November. Mr. Rooker la able to tell why he confidently looks forward to Democratic disaster. His interview ought to be read and studied by voters of all parties. Mr. Rooker blames the bosses. But he also blames the Democratic governor for permitting the bosses to con trol the Democratic Also, ho calls In clarion tones for action by the Democratic governor to faoe Democrats about and rescue the Democratic party from tmpatuiing destruction.
TRUTH ABOUT WAGES
The Democratic publicity bureau made a bold play for free trade op the argument that wages in England, under free trade, have Increased more than ftO per cent In the last thirty years. Grant that English labor draws even double the wages of thirty years ago, what are present facts as to English labor? Here are some of the facts: One in three of the population of England is in poverty today. One in ten of the population of*England is on the verge of actual starvation today. What of wages in England, with all the vaunted increase shown in the last thirty years? One instance can be cited to Indicate the difference between wages in England and wages in America. Where the American carpenter drew. $1 in wages in 1907, the English carpenter, at Bristol, drew 41 cents and one mill. At London the carpenter in 1907 drew $0,491, where the American carpenter received a full dollar. The difference between $1 and $0.491 —a little more than 50 per cent —may be regarded, fairly, as the difference between the English workingman’s standard of.living and his opportunity, and the living standard and chance of the American workingman. If free trade means that the American workingman must be satisfied with 49 cents where where he now draws down a dollar, then assuredly the American wage-earner wants no free trade, and the Democrats who renew advocacy of that played-out doctrine might as well shut up shop and cut out their publicity of fallacies.
DEBT NOT YET PAID.
Taggart-Blocked- in. Effort to Square Political Pledge With Patronage. One of Thomas Taggart’s political debts remains yet to be paid. It was planned to square it by handing out the clerkship to the state election board. M. M. Bachelder, chosen by the Taggart men to be election commissioner for the Democrats, proposed Thomas Wright for clerk of the board. He failed to put the little deal across for Taggart. Governor Marshall suggested the name of Everett Maginnis, and succeeded in having his man appointed. Bachelder, of the Taggart machine, refused, flatly, to vote for Marshall’s man. Governor Marshall, just as flatly, refused to vote for Bachelder’s Choice, Jhqs it stood at the first Boston of the board of election commissioners. ' Charles O. Roemler, Republican commissioner, to avoid Democratic strife, and In order to get business started, withdrew his Republican aspirant for the clerkship and voted with Governor Marshall for Maginnis. This minor detail of politics Is given to show how well Taggart and Marshall get along together, and how they agree, even down to the smallest details of plum-pudding distribution among the faithful.
REAPING BENEFIT.
From the Experience of Rensselaer People. We are fortunate indeed to be able to profit by the experience of our neighbors. The public utterances of Rensselaer residents on the following subject will interest and benefit thousands of our readers. Read this statement. No better proof can be had. L. (?. Anderson, E. Vine street, Rensselaer, Ind., says: “Last November I strained my back while lifting and I suffered so intensely that I thought I would be obliged to lay off from work. The pain across the smai; of my back was almost unbearable at times. I happened to read a statement in the local papers regarding Doan’s Kidney Pills and I lost no time in getting a supply. I took this remedy strictly according to directions and in three or four days I noticed a marked improvement. By the time I had finished the contents of one box, I was free from the trouble. Doan’s Kidney Pills deserve the highest praise. 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.
FOUND. Found—An Odd Fellows’ watch charm. Inquire 'here. MONEY TO LOAN. Money to Loan —lnsurance company money on first term mortgage security. Inquire of E. P. Honan. lO.tf If you want to buy,''sell, rent, or exchange anything, The Republican "Classified Column” will find your “affinity.”
Classified Column. FOB SALE. For Sale or Rent—The Jasper Kenton property, weßt of town, for sale or rent. Possession given at once. Lock box 405, Rensselaer, Ind. For Sale—A” good, 5-room dwelling, 60 foot lot, well located, $700.00. Also 40 acres land, SI,OOO. Will take stock as part payment on land. James H. Chapman. For Sale—About 250 feet of 10-Inch tile. J. H. Chapman. For Sale—s,ooo bushels of potatoes. $1 per bushel; also 3,500 bushels of onions, 65 cents per bushel. This is the time to lay in your winter supply. Get them at the farm. Ed Oliver, Newland, Ind. For sale —At the Rose Bud farm, 2 miles east of Parr, Ind., two young mules. O. I. C. and Duroc Jersey swine, either sex. Duroc's sire, Good E. Nuff No. 22,437; dam. Lady Pall 111 No. 65,306. O. I. C.’s headed by B. C. Sampson No. 23,517. Amos H. Alter & Son, Parr, Indiana. For Sale—A good, level, 160 acre farm for sale; only three miles from Chalmers. Price $135 per acre. Worth $l5O. Box 803, Monticello, Ind. For Sale—The store and residence combined at Dunn’s pleasure resort ou the Kankakee river, owned by the late Jno. H. Coffin, whose death makes it impossible for me to continue the business. For particulars address Mrs. Jno. H. Coffin, Tefft, Indiana, For Sale—A fine Thompson Bros, piano. For quick sale will let go for $175.00. W. R. Lee. For Sale—lndian Runner ducks. Ernest Mayhew, Mt. Ayr phone 29 A, or address Rensselaer, Ind. For Sale—4s head of 3-year-old cattle, feeders. May be seen at my farm, or telephone 294 A. Gail Michaels. For Sale—Good seasoned cord wood and fence posts. Emil Johnson, phone 21 B, Mt. Ayr, Ind.
FOB RENT. For Rent—Four room cottage in Rensselaer. Address G. A. Jacks, Lee, Indiana. f’or Bent—Pasture, We have room for 30 head of cattle or horses on good blue grass pasture. Inquire of , Jay W. Stockton, or phone 186; Rensselaer, Indiana. J / For Rent—Seven room house, 5 blocks from court house. Phone No. 219. For Rent—Suit of rooms for rent in business district; south and west and east exposure; fronting court house square. luquire at First National Bank. For Rent—Furnished or unfurnished rooms. Mrs. E. L. Clark. - ■ For Rent—B room cottage. Trust and Savings Bank. For Rent —s furnished rooms with bathroom and pantry. Will give possession middle of October. Enquire at Republican office. For Rent—A nice business room In the Republican building. Inquire of Healey & Clark. For Rent —Six room cement cottage. Ray D. Thompson. . Wanted. ~ »-■ _ - » Wanted —Situation by first class housekeeper in a small family or hotel. Best of references. Address Housekeeper, care Remington Hotel, Remington, Ind. Wanted —Dining room girl immediately at the Makeever House. Wanted —Tile diggers at once. Good prices paid. B. B. Curtis, Monon, Ind. Wanted —To rent good farm, would prefer 240 acres or more; hare had experience and well equipped for farming. Will furnish Jasper county reference if required. Address C. F. Lowman, Gobelsville, Mich. ; LOST.. Lost—Monday evening at depot, or between depot and Catholic church, engraved-cross and chain. Chain tied in knots. Finder please return Grace Haas, at this office. Lost —Child's Shephards plaid coat, withr velvet collar. Return to Republican office. Mrs. Mabel Reed. Lest —Umbrella, between. Rensselaep and the D. H. Yeoman term. Finder please return to W. N. Jones, or leave at the Republican office.
