Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 254, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 October 1910 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

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.

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.