Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 255, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 October 1910 — Page 4
- —r— —— l -imm ■■■■a. ■i« *■■■■ m HARO COAL BABC BORNERB HAVE ALWAYB BEEN MADE. WRONG. A Street Demonstration ot the Most Wonderful Stove Made For Burning Hard Coal, by Mr. J. B. Howard, the Inventor, who will Prove the Above Statement to You. Demonstrations will take place Friday Afternoon arid Evening, Oct. 28th IN FRONT OF E. D. RHOADES & SON’S HARDWARE STORE, ON THE STREET. -e«t the Searchlight Htility in front of E. D. Rhoades & Son’s store, burning all sizes of hard coal-chestnut, stove size and ™nff to bed i won . derfl to give a steady heat day and night. If the J. fe. Howard Combustion Damper (patented) is set before going to bed, jj?* °“e vimatioir in temperature will be noticed when you get up in morning, even with temperature outdoors from 10 to 20 degrees below zero. produce a hard-coal base burner Oof 2ft*.? 5 E ? AD . ES & SON of this city, said amount to be paid to any manufacturer or dealer in stoves who will SdHWtKm! ilt .1. J Tf, 1910 ’ that wiR burn all the ingredients of anthracite coal, such as Carbon'Monixide, commonly called poisonous gases, or will neat the same amount of space, at the same cost, the Searchlight Utility does. J. B. HOWARD Inventor Mr. Howard is also the Inventor of the HOT BLAST AIK TIGHT FLORENCE as well as the SEARCHLIGHT UTILITY RETURN FLUE FLOOR HEATER.
YbU 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 Utility Will Heat Three Times the Spaee, 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. 7,6#1 Square Inches of Radiating Surface. The Searchlight lias four times more direct radiating surface than the base burner. • The SearchUght Rolling Top does atoay 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.
The $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, that will burn the smoke from the moment the fire is started, he is at liberty to claim the $5,000 offered above. J. B. HOWARD
Classified Column. FOB SALE. For Sale—Six-room cottage, electric lights, good drilled well, double chicken park; two 75x187% foot lots. Address or call on E. L, Hammerton. For Sale—A good wagon for corn husking. Phone No. 22. 7 For Sale or Bent—One fine residence property in south part of Rensselaer; modern in every respect; 5 acres of ground. Mrs. A. Gangloff. For Sale—A range and a baseburner. C. Earl Duvall. For Sale—-A first-class base burnei: only used two years. Inquire of B. F. Fendig, at Drug Store. For Sale—soo hedge posts. I also do all kind of hedge and stump pulling and clearing and grubbing. Inquire of Arlie Rowen, phone 318. For Sale—One Champion Stewart soft coal burner; condition good as new. Inquire of Chas. Shaw. For Sale—Model F Buick touring car, or will trade for stock. Address Geo. W. Terwilleger, phone 525 E, or address R. D. No. 4. For Sale—The Erhardt Wuerthner farm, in Newton township. For particulars apply to J. M. Sanser, on the John Goetz farm. For Sale—Good seasoned cord wood aad fence posts. Emil Johnson, phone XI B, Mt Ayr, Ind. FOB BENI. For Bent—Flat over McKay laundry. In fine condition. Inquire at Republican office. WASTED. Wanted—At once, a good stenographer. Dnnlap & Parkinson, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Wanted—Family washings. Mrs. Chas. Elder, one block east of C. Kellner's. LOST. Lost—l. O. O. F. ring with encampment emblem. Reward for return "to Frank Crltaer, night watch, Rensselaer. AUTOMOBILES. One after another the “cut-price” automobiles are reducing their prices to compete with Maxwell prices. But their real 1 competition is Maxwell perfectlon.—MAXWELL. ’ MOSEY TO LOAS. Money to Loan—lnsurance company money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of E. P. Honan. lO.tf
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK Lost—Long black astrich plume. Return to Republican office. U. S. Yards, Chicago, 111., Oct. 26. Receipts of live stock,today: Hogs, 23,000; cattle, 23,000; sheep, 42,000. Hogs weak. Mixed, $B.l-5 t0»59.15. • Heavy, SB.IO to $8.95. Rough, $7.90 to $8.20. Light, $8.55 to. $9.20. Pigs. SB.OO to $8.75. Bulk, SB.IO to $8.65. Cattle 10c lower. Beeves, $4.75 to $7.75. Cows and heirers, $2.25 to $6.40. Stockers and feeders, $3.15 to $5.75. Texans, $4.40 to $5.50. Westerneys, $4.50 to SB.OO. Calves, $7.30 to SIO.OO. Sheep steady, $2.75 to $4.25. Lambs, $4.50 to $7.00. Estimated tomorrow: Hogs, 16,000; cattle, 9,000; sneep, 35,000. CASK GBAXN Wheat No. 2 red, 94%c to 95%c. No. 3 red, 92c to 94c. No. 2 hard, 94 %c to 97c. No. 3 hard, 92c to 94c. No. INS, $1.05 to $1.06. , No. 2 N S, $1.03 to $1.04. No. 3 S, 95c to $1.02. Corn No. 2,49 cto 49%c. No. 2 W, 49%CJto 50c. No. 2 Y, 49c to 49%c. No. 3,48 cto 48%c. No. 3 W, 49c to 49 %c. No. 3 Y, 48%c to 49%c. No. 4, 47Xc to 48%c. No. 4 W, 48c to 48 %c. No. 4 Y, 48c to 48%c. Oats No. 2 W, 32%c to 33%c. No. 3 W, 31 %c to 32c. No. 4 W, 30%c to 31%c. Standard, 32c to 33c. TV TUBES Wheat Dec. May. July. Open .... 92%93 99%% 96% High .... 93%% 99% 96% Low 92%% 99 96% Close .... 93% 99% 96% ■ Corn __ Open X ... 45%46 48%49% 49% High .... 47 49% 50% Low 45% 48% 49%% Close .... 46% 49%% 50% Oats Open .... 30% 34% 33% High .... 31% 34% 34 Low 30% 34%% 33% Close .... 31%% 34%% 34 Dyspepsia is our national ailment. Burdock Blood Bitters is the national cure for it. It strengthens stomach membranes, promotes flow of digestive jnices, purifies the blood, builds you up. v Calling cards at the Republican.
BUBLIC SALE OF DAIRY STOCK. As 1 am intending to quit the dairy business, I will sell at public sale at my residence in Hanging Grove township, 9 miles east of Rensselaer and 2 miles north of Lee, beginning at 10:00 o’clock a. m., on WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1910, the following property: 25 Head of Cattle —Consisting of 15 dairy cows, some fresh, with calves by side; some Springers, others giving good flow of milk; 1 black Polled-An-gus bull. These cows are all first-class dairy stock. 15 Head of Hogs—lo head of shoats. weighing about 100 lbs.; 5 brood sows, will pig about day of sale. 5 tons of good clover hay in stack. TERMS —A credit of 12 months will be given on all sums over slo.oorwitH approved security, without interest if paid when due; if not paid when due, S per cent interest will be charged from date of sale. A discount of 6 per cent will be given on sums over SIO.OO for cash. Sums of SIO.OO and under, cash. No property to be removed until settled for. Hot lunch served. ISAAC PARCELS. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. E. L. Hollingsworth, Clerk.
FOR SALE AND EXCHANGE. 5 acres on cement walk, five blocks from court house. 10 acres, all fine soil, close in. 21 acres, cement walk, well, close in. 25 acres, all tillable, five room house, $1,200. 80 acres on stone road, four miles out, $65. | , 69 acres, Washington county, improved. Want farm here. 160 acres, 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.
BSKBSET.AKB QUOTATIONS Wheat—B6c. Corn, new—3sc. Oats—26c. Rye—6oc. Butter—lßc to 32c. Roasting chickens, 4% lbs. and over, and hens—3c. Chickens, 4 lbs. and under—Bc. Old Roosters—sc. Ducks, white—9c. Ducks, dark—Bc. Turkeys, young, good weight—l4c. Ttirkeys, old hens, gobblers—l3c. Geese —6a A specific for pain—Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil, strongest, cheapest liniment ever devised. A household remedy in America for 25 years.
E.D. RHOADES & SON Rensselaer, Indiana
MILROY.
Mrs. Ed Johnson was in Monon Monday. 1 Ed Herman was in Wolcott Wednesday. Link Parks went to Rensselaer Thursday. Mrs. Mary McCashen and Miss Ettie visited Jos. Clark’s Friday, Leon Parks visited his grandmother, Mrs. Ravenscroft, Wednesday. Miss Lural Anderson visited Mr. and Mrs. Bivins Sunday night. Miss Della Knapp spent Sunday with Misses Jessie and Belle Southard. Our teachers and trustee attended institute at McCoysburg Saturday. Chas. Brand and family, of Remington, spent Sunday with J. L. Parks. Mrs. Peet, of Monticello, visited her daughter, Mrg. Thos. Spencer, and family last week. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bonner, of Remington, and Miss Meta Parks, of Sandwich, 111., spent Sunday evening with G. L. Parks and family. Ed Herman went to Rensselaer Thursday to have his sale bills printed, as they will soon move to Dakota. We wish them success in their new home. Mrs. Geo. Foulks visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Z. Clark, Thursday. Mrs. Clark was worse and Dr. Stuart was called. She is some better at present. Rev. Kuonon preached Sunday evening to an attentive audience and delivered a very instructive and helpful sermon. We hope to have him come again soon. , Wm. Culp went to Minnesota to visit his sister, Mrs. George Conway, and family, and also his niece, Miss Ethel Conway, who was very sick and underwent an operation Friday which was thought to be successfully performed.
iIftUKIHvBHHHIri pi— ■ 111 paswui R{Ca Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, Loui*▼yje and Trench Lick Springe. SSXSSELAEB TIMS TABUS In Effect January 16, 1910. SOUTH BOTTIiD. No. 6 —Louisville Mall 10:66 a.m. No. 33—Indianapolis Mall ... 1:68 P.m. No. 38,—Milk Accom ........ 6:08 p.m. No. 3—Louisville Ex 11:06 p.m. No. 31 —Fast Mall 4:46 Am. NORTHBOUND. No. 4—Mail 4:49 am No. 40—Milk Accom. ........ 7:81 Am Na 32—Fast Mall 10:06 Am. No. 6—Mall and Ex. 3:13 p.m. No. 30 —Cin. to Chi. Mail ... 6:08 p.m. Na 6, south bound, makes connection at Monon for Indianapolis, arriving In that city at 8:20 p. m. Also train No. 38, north bound, leaves Indianapolis at 11:46 K. m., and connects at Monon with No. 6, arriving at Rensselaer at 8:18 p. m. Train No. 81 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 6:16 am. No. 14, leavidk Lafayette at 4:30 p. m., connects with Na SO at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:03 p. m. Effective April 16th and until further notice, Cedar Lake will be a flag stop for trains Na 3, 4. SO and 83.
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 tlia 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 a short 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 be 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.
PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will sell at q?ublic sale at his residence, 10 miles southeast of Rensselaer, 3% miles south of McCoysburg, 5 miles southwest of Lee, 8 miles west of Monon, 8 miles north of Wolcott, known as the Carey Huston place, beginning at 10:30 o’clock a. m., on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1910, the folowing property: Three Good Heavy Work Horses. Six Head of Sheep —Consisting of five ewes and one buck. Seven Head of Cattle —Consisting of two Jersey cows, giving milk; one white-faced cow, 5 years old, giving milk; one cow will be fresh in April. 2 yearling heifers, fresh in April; 2 good Spring male calves. 8 Hogs—l brood sow, 7 shoats. Implements— 1 Deering binder, good as new; 1 disc; 1 riding plow, new, plowed only 20 acres; one Oliver walking plow; 1 spring-tooth Harrow; one flexible spike-tooth harrow; one 1horse wheat drill, fertilizer attachments; 1 corn cutter. Vehicles, etc. —l carriage, 1 buggy; 35 acres of corn, some in shock. Hay in stack. Shredded fodder in mow. Some fencing. Some household goods. An English bull dog and some poultry. TERMS—A credit of 11 months will be given on all sums over SIO.OO, with approved security, if paid when due; if not paid when due, 8 per cent interest will be charged from date of sale. A discount of 6 per cent will be given on sums over SIO.OO for cash. Sums of SIO.OO and under, cash. No proper-, ty to be removed until settled for. Hot lunch served. EDWARD HERMAN. Dyer & Wright, Auctioneers. W. 0. Kinney, Clerk.
Food Fermenting in Stomach Causes A Rank Condition. When you have indigestion your food sours; many times it actually rots and forms gases that poison the blood. Take MI-O-NA stomach tablets if you want to change your bad stomach into a healthy, - clean one. Ask B. F. Fendig. MI-O-NA is the best preparation for upset stomach and indigestion ever written. No matter how miserable your stomach feels, MI-O-NA stomach, tablets give immediate relief. Take MI-O-NA stomach tablets, which are guaranteed to cure indigestion, and rid yourself of dizziness, biliousness, nervous or sick headache, or money back. Take MI-O-NA tablets if you want to make your stomach so strong that it will digest the heartiest meal without distress, and furnish good, clean, nutrlous blood making elements to the body. Take MI-O-NA tablets, gne or two
FILTHY STOMACH.
with or after each meal, if you want to get rid of that drowsy, tlredout feeling. Fifty cents is all B. F. Fendig or leading druggists everywhere ask for a large box of MI-O-NA tablets. You can get a free trial treatment by writing Booth’s Mi-o-na Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
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 congress for twelvi years and was defeated in the landslide two years ago. This year he declined the nomination for congress an 1 lias 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 worth coming miles to hear Mr. I^andis.
NOTICE OE DECLARATORY RESOLUTION. ' r *'° Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given by the Common Council of the City of Rensselaer, Indiana, that it is desired and deemed necessary to make the following descrlbed public improvement in the City Re i l ??elaer, Indiana, as authorized by the following numbered Improvement resolution, adopted by said Common Council on the 24th day of October, A. tc ISIO, for the construction of a local sewer beginning at a point on the northerly side of Angelica Street, in said city, in the center of the public alley running 17. in the original plat of the Town (now City) of Rensselaer, Indiana, and running thence in a northwesterly direction down the center of said alley, thence in the same direction across Susan Street, thence in the same ri re JE ion , on a Une dividing outlots 58, p®. ®1 and 60, 62 and 63, in said city, to the Make-em-Self Sewer, a total distance of 684 feet. i A, l. work done in the making of said described public improvement shall be •n accordance with the terms and conditions of the improvement resolution, as numbered, adopted by the Common Council of said city on the above named t * a y. and the detailed drawings, plans, profiles and specifications which are on file and may be seen in the office pf the Clerk of said city. .The Common Council has fixed the 14th day of November, A. D. 1910, as a date upon which remonstrances may be filed or heard, by persons interested in or affected by said public improvement, and on said day at 7:30 o’clock P. M., the Common Council will meet in the council chamber in Baid city, for the purpose of hearing and considering any remonstrances which may have been "led, or which may be presented, and will hear all persons interested, or' whose property is affected by said proposed improvement, and will decide whether the benefit that will accrue to the property, abutting and adjacent to the proposed improvement, and to said city, will be equal to or exceed the estimated cost of the proposed improvement. as estimated by the city civil engineer. i CHAS. MORLAN City Clerk. MOSES LEOPOLD, City Attorney. * Oct. 26-Nov. 2. ,
