Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 254, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 October 1910 — Page 4
HARD COAL BASK BURNERS HAVE ALWAYS BEEN MADE WRONG. * . . ' A Street Demonstration of the Most Wonderful Stove Made to You. Demonstrations will take place Friday Afternoon and Evening. Oct. 28th IN FRONT OF E. D. RHOADES & SON’S HARDWARE STORE, ON THE STREET. egg and B redu^n?it S toLi the Searchlight Utility in front of E. D. Rhoades & Son’s store burning all sizes of hard coal-chestnut, stove size and gomg to t bIS won^ erful . 1 8 1 to v ve to give a steady heat day and night. If the J. fe Howard Combustion Damper (patented) is set before Iwlll deposß d thesumofSs 000' n S tlCed wh fV OU ¥%*& even temperature outdoors from 10 to & degrees below zero, produce a hard-coal base burner Oct H + .? AD - ES &^ ON , of this city, said amount to be paid to any manufacturer or dealer in stoves who will will heat the same amount of snnop tiL that will burn all the ingredients of anthracite coal, such as Carbon Monixide, commonly called poisonous gases, or win neat tne same amount 01 space, at the same cost, the Searchlight Utility does. J. B. HOWARD Inventor Mr. Howard is also the Inventor of the HOT BLAST AIR TIGHT. ELORENCE as well as the SEARCHLIGHT UTILITY,RETURN FLUE FLOOR HEATER.
YOU DIDN’T KNOW THAT BASE BURNERS WERE ALWAYS MADE WRONG, DID YOU I It is a fact, neverless. They are constructed contrary to all rules governing the science of heating and radiation. During the past fifty years only the outward appearance of the Base Burner has been changed. The slight changes to the Interior construction has not increased the' radiating capacity more than two per cent. It will pay you greatly to attend these demonstrations by Mr. Howard, as he will talk upon all points of the stove making industry. The Searchlight Utility is the Only Heating Device on the face of the earth that burns coal and maintains a steady, even heat throughout the night, including stove, base burner, furnace, steam or hot water boilers. The Searchlight UtWlty Will Heat Three Times the Space, has twice the life, and Will take a ton less of hard coal, when the same amount of space and heat is taken into consideration, than any Base Burner made. 7,591 Square Inches of Radiating Surface. The Searchlight has four times more direct radiating surface than the base burner. The Searchlight Bolling Top does away with the swing top, which not only makes a great deal of noise, but covers up a large amount of heating surface. The Searchlight Utility is a Furnace on the Parlor Floor. Ti e J. B. Howard Combustion Is a gas producer in a stove.
$5,000 offer in the above ad includes the HOT BLAST AIR TIGHT FLORENCE and if any stove dealer or any stove manufacturer can produce, or will produce a stove to burn soft coal outside of the HOT BLAST AIR TIGHT FLORENCE construction! Sat will Iburn f ™ m the moment the fire is started, he is at liberty to claim the $5,000 offered above. j. g. HOWARD.
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY. HEALEY & CLARK, Publishers. Thi Tridu Imu Is the Burnltr w—My Edition. , TOBSOBX7TZOV KATES. BaUy * b^°S rr ff r V_ lO Cents a Weak. _ . _ *7 *»Ui $3.75 a year. »—l-W—My, in advance, Tear, $1.50. Tuesday, October 25, 1910. “
Attorney General Wickersham Friday ordered an investigation of the existence of an alleged “multi-million-aire” trust, which is charged with seeking to control the milk supply of large cities and to constitute a monopoly for the manufacture of the pasteurizing machine in violation of the anti-trust law. One of the first steps will be to investigate the Chicago stiuation. Any person who appears on the streets of Anderson on Halloween wearing a mask will be promptly arrested, according to a proclamation issued by Mayor Foster. It has been the custom for many years to allow masking on the streets during the early hours of the evening. Many depradations alleged to have been committed last year under cover of masks is the reason given by the mayor for discontinuing the custom. Mrs. Ruth Farrabee, of Sellersburg, Clark county, has suffered for nineteen years from a dog bite. The wound breaks out afresh at every anniversary of its infliction. The dog was savage, but not rabid, but the wound has never completely healed, and at every anniversary the place becomes highly discolored again, and frequently there is ulceration, incapacitating the victim from york for several days every year. Max M. Ellis and William Tucker, of Osgood, members of the Indiana university faculty, have returned from a 75-day trip into South America, where they procured specimens of rare fish for the scientific department of the university. The expedition was financed by Jacob Gimbel, a Vincennes merchant. Ellis is now resting for a few days at the Nome of his father, Prof. Horace Ellis, president of Vincennes university. wmn QffOTATiow Wheat—B6c. Corn, new—3sc. Oats—26c. Rye—«oc. Butter— lßc to 32c. Roasting chickens, 4% pounds and over, and hens— 9c. Chickens, 4 lbs. and under—Sc. Docks, white —9c. Docks, dark—^Bc. Torkeya, young, good weight—l4c. Torkays, old hens, gobblers—l3c. Geese—6c.
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK U. S. Yards, Chicago, 111., Oct 25. Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 15,000; cattle, 14,000; sheep, 45,000. Estimates tomorrow: Hogs, 21,000; cattle, 18,000; sheep, 40,000. ' Hogs steady. Mixed, $8.30 to $9.35. Heavy, $8.50 to $9.15. Rough, $8.05 to $8.35. Light, $8.70 to $9.40. Pigs, SB.IO to $8.90. Bulk, $8.20 to $8.75. Cattle weak to 10c lower. Beeves, $4.55 to $7.80. Cows and heifers, $2.25 to $6.40. Stockers and feeders, $2.15 to $5.75. Texans, $4.40 to $5.55. Westerners, $4.50 to $7.00. Calves, $7.50 to $9.50. Sheep steady, $2.75 to $4.30. Lambs, $4.50 to $7.00. CASK GHAUT Wheat No. 2 red, 94c to 94%c. No. 3 red, 91c to 93c.No. 2 hard, 94c to 96c. No. 3 hard, 91c to 93c. No. INS, $1.05 to SI.OB. No. 2 N S, $1.02 to $1.04. No. 3 S, 98c to $1.02. Corn No. 2, 48%c to 48%c. No. 2 W, 49c to 49 %c. No. 2 Y, 48%c to 49c. No. 3,4714 c to 48%c. No. 3 W, 48Vic to 4834 c. No. 3 Y, 47%c to 48%c. No. 4,47 cto 47%c. . No. 4 W, 47V4c to 48c. No. 4 Y, 4734 c to 48c. Oats No. 2 W, 32V4c to 33c. No. 3 W, 3114 c to 31%c. No. 4 W, 30%c to 31c. Standard, 32c to 34c. Tvrxnai Wheat Dec. May. July. Open .... 92V492 95%% 95%96 High .... 92% 99%% 96% Low 91% 98% 95% Close .... 92% 99% — 96% Corn Open .... 45%% 48%% 49% High .... 46 49% 50 Low 45%% 48% 49% Close .... b 5% 49 49% Oats Open .... 30% 33%34 33% High .... 31% 34% 33% Low ....: 30%% 33% 33% Close .... 30% " w ‘ 34% 33—% Robert Parker Miles is one of the first lecturers of the country. His word pictures are gems. His lecture abounds in wit, humor and pathos, brilliant flashes of eloquence and inspiring illustrations.—Denver (Colo.) Republican. At M. E. church tonight. Calling cards at the Republican.
Aviator Soars to Enormous Height At New York Today.
J. Armstrong Drexel, an American aviator, rode a biplane to the great height of 7,105 feet from tne ground at New York today. This is the American record. A Hollander named Henry Wynmalen had previously attained an altitude in a foreign contest of 9,186 feet. The height is measured by means of a barograph, which is locked so that the aviator can not alter it. Walter Brookins, the man who recently flew from Chicago to Springfield, had trouble with his engine and when at a height of 4,882 feet the engine stopped and he had to descend without the power supplied by the propeller with which he could steady the descent. By gliding away about a mile and a half he was able to reach the ground without injury to himself but his biplane was damaged.
Hon. Chas. B. Landis, of Delphi, Will Speak Here Next Saturday,
Hon. Chas. B. Landis, of Delphi, an old favorite with Rensselaer audiences and one of the ablest tariff exponents in the United States will speak in Rensselaer Saturday afternoon of this, week at 2 o’clock. If the day is suitable the speech will be made on the court house lawn, but if the weather is bad it will be held in the opera house. Mr. Landis represented the Bth district in cjongress for twelve years and was defeated in the landslide two years ago. This year he declined the nomination for congress an 1 has been on the lecture platform most of the time. Mr. Landis talks to the farmers, with the farmers. He is a farmer himself and interested in all that interests them. He will instruct and interest all who hear him and it will be w’orth coming miles to hear Mr. I-andis.
Notice to Teachers’ Training Class. Our books are here and our lessons fdr Wednesday night is on page 14, lesson number 1, and the teacher is Rev. J. C. Parrett. All prayer meetings begin at 7:15 and close so that we can begin our lesson at the Methodist church at 8:15. Be prompt. L. H. HAMILTON, President. Clem J. Kern, life-long democrat, made a speech at the' corner of Main and Washington streets Saturday night in which he came out squarely for the republican ticket from top to bottom. Among other things he declared he was going to support Crumpacker and Beveridge. He denouced Gov. Marshall, W. J. Bryan and the democrats connected with the county organization.—Valparaiso Messenger (Democratic.) Our Classified Column will sell, buy, flnd, rent, or exchange it. Phone 18.
E. D. RHOADES & SON Rensselaer, Indiana
Lon Healy, the composer, and Roscoe Wilson, the Princess singer, went to Chicago today where they will visit two musical publishing houses to which they had been recommended by George Ade, the playwright, and there submit some of Lon’s recent compositions, which Mr. Wilson will sing. Lon writes with splendid apti-' tude and embodies little plots and sentiments in his songs that will doubtless make them very popular jf he can get them published and it is with the expectation that the visit to Chicago was made. Last August Floyd Meyers and Lon Healy were on a ship on Lake Michigan returning from South Haven when a very severe storm came up and for a time it seemed certain that the ship would be wrecked. All the passengers were made sick and the sickness has had a lasting effect on both the Rensselaer boys who have never fully recovered and the stomach trouble Floyd is now experiencing and which caused him to return from Franklin college, seems to be due to the experience they had on the lake two months ago.
Hear what Congressman Crumpacker has to say about the charge made by his opponent, John B. Peterson, that he paved the way for the steel corporation to fill in the lake front at Gary and thus gain valuable land. You will find that the authority for filling in the lake came from the state and not from the government and that Mr. Peterson was himself a lobbyist for the steel corporation when the bill was up for action at Indianapolis. Inform yourself about the, two men who are running for congress by hearing Mr. Crumpacker speak at the opera house tomorrow night. The specialist who came last evening to see Henry Amsler also examined Jay Wood, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. Van Wood. He was operated on more than four months ago to have a fluid drawn off from the pleural membrane about the lungs and has ever since been compelled to wear a drainage tube to keep the pus drained away. Although the operation was more than four months ago about two tablespoons of the pus is drained away twice daily. The surgeon approved the local physician’s treatment and said he believed the lung was filling out and that the boy will be eventually restored to health, but was unable to tell how much longer it would prove necessary to maintain the tube, drainage. The little fellow is only 5 years of age. Richard Bennigaa, unaware that bis machine had caught fire from a short circuit, and was blazing, drove a taxicab through the business section of Ft. Wayne. When the fire had burned to where he could feel the heat, he escaped from the seat and turned in an alarm.
NO DIRT, NO GAS, NO CINDERS—ASHES FINE AS POWDER. The J. B. Howard Combustion (patented), and used exclusively in the Searchlight Utility for burning anthracite coal, burns the carbon monixide or poisonous gases, which were never consumed or utilized in the history of burning anthracite coal. No Fine Ashes Settling Over the Stove and Furniture When Shaking. The dust flue, leading up from the ash pit, disposes of the fine ashes when the grate is shaken,-through the interior of the stove and up the chimney. As a Fire Keeper it is a Wonder. It will hold fire seven days and seven nights with one filing and will do the same work twenty-five years from now. We guarantee the Fire-Pot to Last Twenty-Five Years. The FirePot is so constructed that the heat is radiated to the floor for a space of five feet around the stove. Remember the base burner heats under the stove and is a cat warmer, not a floor heater in the proper sense. The Most Economical Hard Coal Stove on Earth. Why? Because it burns all the poisonous gases that never were utilized in the history of the burning of anthracite coal. It is not the original cost of a stove, but the cost to operate it that counts. The Searchlight Utility is an investment that will pay for itself in time. The J. B. Howard Combustion has made the Hot Blast Florence famous for burning soft coal and will make the Searchlight Utility Return Flue Floor Heater famous for burning hard coal.
Mr. Howard will not only demonstrate the SEARCHLIGHT UTILITY RETURN FLUE FLOOR HEATER and the HOT BLAST AIR TIGHT FLORENCE, but he will expose the deception that has been practiced upon the public by the stove manufacturers and the stove dealers on this base-burner question, and the smoke and gas consuming question. J. B. HOWARD.
A. A. Fell was over from Carpenter township this morning. Mr. Fell is another republican candidate that the Jasper County Democrat would like to make the people believe is a scalawag and unworthy of trust because he lost township money in the Parker bank. The Republican will have a defense of Mr. Fell that will make his maligner and all who have been deceived by it realize that he is worthy of every trust and will show that he has lost and paid into the civil township of Carpenter SI,BOO out of his own pocket as a result of the failure of the Parker bank, in addition to the $1,400 which the advisory board relieved him of. He stands ready to abide by any decision of the courts as to whether the balance shall be paid in and he is entitled to the same relief that the last legislature and a democratic governor granted to democratic oflicials in Jackson and Washington counties. Mr. Fell is a foremost citizen and has nothing to conceal about the transaction as trustee of Carpenter township. He did all that he was obliged to do and when the Republican prints in his defense the full story of his transactions, it will cause his defamer to feel the blush of shame at his effort to discredit him, if he has sufficient manhood left to feel shame, so freely does he seek to blacken the reputations of all public men.
The Hoffman house, at Broadway and 25th streets, one of New York’s famous hotels, was thrown into bankruptcy by creditors Friday afternoon. Carl Svante Nicanor Hallberg, professor of pharmacy of the University of Illinois, and who served on the commission for revision of the national formulary, 1886, 1895 and 1906, died Saturday, age 64. Robert Kunkle died Friday at Hartford City as the result of infernal injuries received a week ago when he fell from a stepladder. His death occurred on his 74th birthday. He was the father-in-law of the late Sydney W. Cantwell, former speaker of the Indiana house of representatives. Attorneys for Kate Cleveland, fined $5 by the town clerk of Cynthiana, Ind., for throwing wash water on her premises and allowing it to run down an embankment to the street, have filed their brief as appellants in the state supreme court. Mrs. Cleveland asserts she was fined for using a ditch at the foot of the bill dug for her benefit by order of one of the town trustees.
P. W. HORTON Plano Toning and Repairing A Specialty. Rensselaer, . . Indiana.
OVERTAXED. ' ‘ ‘ : •• ... Hundreds of Rensselaer Readers Know What It Means. The kidneys are overtaxed; Have too much to do. They tell about it in many aches and pains— Backache;, sideache, headache. Early symptoms of kidney ills. Urinary troubles/ diabetes, Bright’s disease follow. A Rensselaer citizen tells here the way to keep the kidneys well. Mrs. May Witham, East Elm street, Rensselaer, Ind., says: “I consider Doan’s Kidney Pills a splendid remedy for disordered kidneys. For years I' was bothered by severe attacks of backache. I was nervous, had dizzy spells and felt tired all the time. The least exertion made me miserable and I became so run down that I took but little interest in my work. I could not rest with any comfort and It seemed as if nothing would help me. I finally decided to try Doan’s Kidney Pills and procured a supply. I never before took a remedy that acted so quickly and effectively. . All the syptoms of my troubles were relieved and I felt like a different woman. I am very grateful for the benefit I received from Doan’s Pills.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doans —and take no other. >•(
FOB SALE AND EXCHANGE. 6 acres on cement walk, five blocks from court house. 10 acres, all fine soil, close in. 21 acres, cement walk, well, close in. 26 acres, al} tillable, five room house, $1,200. 80 acres on stone road, four miles out, $66. 69 acres, Washington county, improved. Want farm here. 160 acreß, Polk county, Ark. Will, trade for land or property and pay difference. 631 acres, well Improved, in Dickey county, N. D., to trade for land or property here. 99 acres, all good soil, In cultivation, six room house, stable, orchard, good well, on large ditch, near school and station. Will sell on easy terms at SSO. G. F. MEYERS. Box Social and Ice Cream Supper. A box social and ice cream supper will be given at Union Center school house, ten miles north and west from Rensselaer, on the evening of Friday, October 28th. All are cordially incited. GRACE PEYTON. Those who use the Pulsbury flour never have any trouble in getting good bread. Rhoades Grocery handles this celebrated flour.
