Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 276, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 November 1910 — Page 4

Classified Column. FOB SALE. Fur Sale—s 2 acre farm, good trucking and poultry farm, two miles from McMinnville, Tenn. W. A. Johnson & Co., McMinnville, Tenn. For Sale—A young mare colt, coming 4 years old next August. Warranted sound. Inquire of Lyman Barce, phone No. 502 B.

Fer*Sale—Three good mares, 1 coming 3; 1 coming 4, and one 12 years old. Alfred Randle, phone 512 G, R. R. 1, Rensselaer, Ind.

For Sale—Second hand phaeton. Price |lO. Mrs. W. S. Coen.

For Sale—Three pure bred Duroc Jersey boars. Pedigrees furnished. Victor Yeoman, R. D. 2.

For Sale—Ten full blood Indian Runner drakes. Chester Halstead, R. D. 3.

For Sale—One No. 15 DeLaval Cream Separator, 700-lbs. capacity, good as new. Chester Halstead, R. D. No, 3.

For Sale—Serviceable second-hand buggy and good single harness, or will trade for corn and oats. A. G. W. Farmer, Rensselaer,. Ind.

For Sale—A pedigreed grey Percheron stallion in perfect condition, 3 years old, weight 1,700. Bred 180 mares season of 1909. Must change horses reason for selling. Address Peter Stanley, Lowell, Ind.

For Sale—Driving mare, auto and lady broke, with buggy and harness. J. C. Passons, Box 147.

For Sale or Rent—New 9-room residence, with 5 acres of ground and new barn, only 3% blocks from court house. .Mrs. A. Gangloff.

For Sale—Full blood brown leghorn cockerels, or will exchange three or four for others of same breed. C. A. Reed, phone 535 A.

For Sale—Small residence of four rooms, on improved street, will sell on monthly payments. Arthur H. Hopkins. JEml. Sale—Fine farm lands in middle Tennessee, $lO to >SO per acre. Produces grains, alfalfa and fruits. Fine opportunity for dairying, truck farming and stock raising. Write for farm list and illustrated book. Johnson & Mitchell, McMinnville, Tenn.

For Sale—Three acres of ( black truck and garden land with good fourroom house, good barn, summer kitchen, chicken house, good well, and young orchard, and lies on public road near station. Price SBOO. Will take part trade or sell on easy terms. G. F. Meyers.

For Sale—A Weber wagon, triple bed, nearly new. M. R. Halstead, R. D. Rensselaer.

For Sale—Farm of 80 acres, on pike road, free mail route, telephone line and one-fourth mile to school. 70 acres in cultivation, lies at head of dredge ditch, has good five-room house, good barn, chicken house, milk house, good well and bearing orchard Price >45. Terms >1,200-down, remainder long timfe. G. F. Meyers.

For Sale—Or will trade for stock, 1908 5-passenger Buick automobile, Model F. George W. Terwilleger, phone 525 E.

For Sale—The Erhardt Wuerthner farm, in Newton township. For particulars apply to J. M. Sauser, on the John Goetz farm.

For Sale—Good seasoned cord wood and fence posts. Emil Johnson, phone 21 B, ML Ayr, lad. 1

FOB BENT.

For Rent—lo acre tract of land, with 6-room house and good barn; opposite Riverside Park. Inquire of Mary Goetz, phone 519 A.

For Rent— Good 7-room house, 2 blocks of court house. Inquire at First, National Bank.

For Rent—Small house in east part of Rensselaer. Inquire of George Hopkins, the carpenter, in east part of town.

For Rent—Farm of 400 acres to man with at least three teams and experience in handling live stock. Also residence of four rooms. Arthur H. Hopkins.

For Rent—Flat over McKay laundry. In fine condition. Inquire at Republican office.

WASTED. Wanted—Woman to do washing at house. Mrs. Roy Blue. Wanted—Corn buskers with teams, at west Monnett farm. Paying 7c bushel delivered at elevator. Dr. H. L. Brown. Wanted—Timothy hay. 3 or 4 tons. Telephone Harrison Wasson, phone 49. Wanted—Two boarders. Mrs. Ada Overlay, Vine street. ~ FINANCIAL. \ Wanted to Borrow—ss,ooo on A No. 1 security. Will repay SI,OOO annually and good rate of interest Inquire at Republican office. / Meney to Loan—lnsurance company money on first fam mortgage security. Inquire of BL P. Honan. lO.tf Calling cards at the Republican.

RAJAH SINGHA’S CROWN JEWEL

By Charles Edward Barnes.

A tale of complications, great surprises, and many a slip between the cup and the Up.

Copyright, The Frank A. Munsey Co. Gazing forward, i saw three or four frightened-looking Arabs yowling and oapcing like mad over the slippery deck, pointing to something on the port side toward which the man with the hose was directing a mercile-;s stream.

Then with a more piercing shriek I saw the men drop their honey-stone and take to the rigging like apes, uttering strange cries which brought half a score of their comrades from below. These latter likewise took to the shrouds with amazing agility. I hurried forward, and there beheld the cause of their confusion—five feet of the maddest, liveliest, deadliest length of serpent that ever human eyes beheld, darting hither and thither over the glistening deck, hissing and striking right and left, jaws extended and eyes flashing tiy? fires of challenge and rage; with but one man standing against him—the man with the hose. Slowly this swarthy antagonist was driving the beast to starboard. My heart leaped. My first impulse was a make a rush upon the cobra, even as I had done before, securing him prispner and chancing the consequences.

But a better sense stayed me. Men fjf sane mind do not hunt cobras barefooted in the open, clad only in pajamas; A score of plans suggested themselves in as many quarter seconds. Then suddenly my heart went aown as suddenly as it had risen on the tidsN wave of hope.. Half drowned and utterly routed by the streamyfrom the hose, the cobra slunk hissingand writhing to trie starboard rail. Instantly he disappeared down the starboard scupper, as neatly as he might have slipped into any huge ant-hill in the sands of his native hill country. I leaned over the vessel’s side and caught a glimpse of the writhing shape just as it struck the glassy sea, and before it sank and'was seen no more. "By all the ministering devils of the Pali scriptures!” I groaned, cursing myself for my blundering obtuseness. “So that infamous beast was aboard ship all this time without my knowing it. "Of all the miracles of the incomprehensible East! And now I have lost him, and through my negligence, the world has lost one of the most glorious gems of all time!” It was maddening. Slowly, ragefully I crossed the deck among the chattering coolie-hands, straight toward that offending port scupper. " Then I saw how the miracle was performed, for that conduit was full of water, that came up from below. Down on my knees I dropped, rolling back my sleeve and thrusting my hand arm’s length, through the narrow tube down to the obstruction. There my finger-tips touched something. I seized it with bounding heart, and snatched it forth to the light of day. I seemed instinctively to realize what it was—nothing less than the Crown sapphire of Rajah Singha! Having found the precious meal most indigestible, the cobra had disgorged it, after the manner of his kind, and there it lay, snatched from the deep, right in tfie palm of my hand, blazing back the raysr of early morning with a million cerulean beams that seemed to warm the very world about me. Lest some one of the deckcoolies perceive my amazement, and inquire too particularly into the cause of it, I hurried away and slipped below to hide myself like a criminal who has stumbled upon the ransom of a kingdom.

Soon, however, that overpowering elation which. I experienced upon making the great discovery gave way to a deep sense of my responsibility and a serious query as to how I was ever to reach England unapprehended and deliver the gem to the one to whom I had sworn to bear it in safety, and who, I believed in my heart, was the only one who should deliver it to His Majesty and receive the reward that was due.

I was beset by many fears, most of all by the dread that the* two baffled Australians, being my enemies, might, in order to harass me, cause my arrest on arrival at the first port, and institute a search which would not only mean the defeat of my enterprise in the woman's behalf, but would also cause my own detention in some accursed limbo of an oriental jail. But all my sleep-killing terrors were groundless. After an otherwise uneventful voyage I reached Egypt in safety; hurried On to Algeria without once being' intercepted, or suspected

AUTOMOBILES. Would you drive a Maxwell 4 cyl. 22 H. P. car if we can prove that it costs less to use than a horse and buggy? Ask the Maxwell Man. ESTRAYED. ~ Strayed or Stolen—A yellow and white spotted pointer dog; brass collar. Reward for information leading to Delos Thompson. rr-rnrn-l'rrH-jj..",' ' 'li' ' '.H'W-' ■' wFOUND. Found-A-Bunch of keys. Inquire here.

of possessing a treasure on my person that could have paid the national debt of a principality; and stoie thence by a circuitous route up through the continent, across the Channel into England, making my way guardedly to the estate of his lordship of Kent. I found the object of my search very much the sort of person I had imaginedvher, and amid the imposing surroundings referred to in the letter. She was a mere slip of a woman, attired in deep black, and as I had announced myself as "a messenger to her from Ceylon,” she was naturally deeply agitated. It was in a little summer-house on the magnificent estate that she received me. Her imperious employer had permitted her to do so. Though a woman born for better things, she was now serving the baron in a very humble capacity.* As I saw that the interview would be more or less agitating to her impressionable mind, I spoke coldly and dispassionately, leading by degrees up to the point where I should place in her hands the Crown gem of t|ie island kingdom, and advise her just' how to proceed in restoring it to the nation's custody through the person of His Majesty alone. Naturally the poor girl was overwhelmed with surprise and delight both because of the discovery of the innocence of any crime on the part of her late beloved, and also because the possession of the gem meant her freedom from a galling dependence for the rest of her days.

After a and tearful feast of the eyes upon the grand jewel, she gave' it back into my care, begging me to be its custodian till such a time as we might together secure the audience with the king. Three days later we entered Buckingham Palace together. Into the sympathetic ears of the gracious sovereign himself we poured the story; showed our strange credentials from the dead; and then put in the hands of that astonished ruler the prize for which the detectives of many lands were searching in vain. Receiving a promise that the reward would be sure and ample, we then took our departure in high spirits. We' parted at Charing Cross, she to return thence to her old home, and I to set sail for America to ponder upon my amazing experiences. Two years later, almost to a day, Lady Alice (must I confess this secret?) became my wife. My little fortune and the twenty thousand pounds sterling with which the King rewarded her (in which ramson 1 felt indeed that I had earned a share) made us easy( in our circumstances, and we settled down on a ranch in Montana, where the carved image of a coiled cobra over the mantelpiece of our new home was not the least precious of our household THE END.

BETTER THAN SPANKING

Spanking does not cure children of bedwetting. There Is a constitutional cause for this trouble. \Mrs. M. Summers, Box W, Notre Dame, Ina., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full Instructions. Send no money, but write her today If your children trouble you in this way. Don’t blame the child, the chances are It can’t help It. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or night,

The Revival at the Christian Church.

Evangelist T. J. Legg did not disappoint the audience that greeted him last night to hear his discussion of the subject of “Faith.” His sermon was a thorough examination of the much discussed theme. He said that faith was absolute confidence in God’s promises. The man, he said, who had faith in God dies what he was asked to do, whether he understood perfectly the reason or not.

His subject tonight is “Repentance, or Turning to God.” The ■ Sunday morning theme is “The New Testament Ch|hrch.” On Sunday’ night “Scriptural Confession of Faith.” The organ recital was given last night by Miss Dollie Shock. Tonight by Mrs. Brady. On Sunday night Prof. W.' Cheney Beckwith and Mrs. Josephine Phipps Shore, who rendered such good service x on a former evening, will assist again. Mr. Beckwith will give the organ recital and Mrs. Shore will sing “The Holy City.”

Mrs. Calvert has developed a good Sunbeam chorus that sang beautifully last night and will be a feature in each evening’s music. Mrs. Calvert’s work as chorus leader is very good and deserves the hearty supporfaef all the singers in the church, as well as those of the town. Those who can assist will be welcomed at the rehersal following this evening’s service.

Nature’s Red Lights.

The red light of warning flames across many a road to trouble. On the road to dropsy, diabetes or Brights disease is the red light of backache—warning of kidney trouble. Beware! Take Dr. King's New Health Tea and see backache fly and your best feelings return. 25c at A F. Long’s.

Church of God Services.

The third Sunday in each month being the regular time for preaching here by Joseph Williams, of Frankford, Ind., whose subject for Sunday morning will be the “Transfiguration on the Mount,” and Sunday evening, “The Crucifixion of Self.” On Saturday night preceding he will give a Bible school lesson—subject, “Salvation.” You are cordially invited to attend these services and thereby grow in the knowledge of God and His Righteousness. 1 . J All kinds of feed for stock for sale by Maines A Hamilton. \

CURES ROUTS OBSTINATE STUBBORN COUGHSCOLDS THE king of DR. KING’S \NEW DISCOVERY S FOR ALL DISEASES OF THROAT I II hl ft C HEALS WHOOPING WEAK, COUGH CURE LUNGS SOLD AND GUARANTEED DY A. F. LONG, Druggist

Wonderful Invention ONE PINT OF MILK MERGED INTO ONE POUND OF BUTTER Never before in the history of the world has a household article been discovered that will be so much benefit to Families that have to work for their living. Just stop and think a little machine has just been invented that will merge one pint of milk into one pound of butter in two minutes. . This wonderful discovery must surely be a godsend to those who have to pay such high prices for food. A pint of milk weighs a pound and costs on an average 4 cents. This wonderful invention merges it into one pound of butter in two minutes, producing a product you cannot tell from the best creamery butter, Ogets just as hard,* tastes sweeter and is used for the same purposes, and only costs 4 cents a pound. No chemicals or drugs are used, it is absolutely pure food. This almost takes your breath away, but it is the truth, just the same. This machine is being manufactured in Indianapolis, Ind., and you must write to the Company there and get their circulars., They will sell you one on trial.* The price is $3 and they want some one to be agent for the sale of it in every town. Now write to the Family Butter Merger Co., Indianapolis, Ind., and they will send you their circulars and pictures of the machine and tell you all about it Don’t fail to do this. Send your name and address to them on a postal card. They will send you the illustrated circulars free. If you are looking for some kind of business, write to this Company at once. They pay Agents $ 18.00 a week to start with or one hundred per cent commission, and will give any honest person credit Every family will buy one of these machines, for it is the greatest money saver on Earth. FAMILY BUTTER MERGER CO., Court and Ogden St., Indianapolis, Ind.

For Sale or Trade. 21 acres, four blocks from court house, on cement walk. 25 acres, five-room house easy terms. 80 acres, on stone road, four miles out, $65. 69 acres, Washington county, improved. Will trade. 1-60 acres in Polk county. Ark., clear, will trade and pay difference. 631 acres, well Improved, in Dickey county, N. D. Will trade. 80 acres on pike, free mail, telephone and one-fourth mile to school; lies at head of large ditch; 70 acres cultivated; has good five-room jiouse, good>barn, milk house, chicken house, good well and orchard. Price $45, easy terms, or will take trade asfir.it payment. 160 acres, 130 cultivated, 30 acres timber, near station, on large dftch, fair improvements. Will sell on easy terms or take trade as first payment. Price $55. 180 acres, all good soil, 110 in cultivation, 70 acres In pasture, fenced hog tight; lots of tile, has good eightroom house, out buildings, wind mill, and tanks, large bearing orchard of all kinds of fruit, and is well located. Price $65. Will sell on easy terms or take trade as first payment. . G. F. MEYERS.

Will Promote Beauty. Women desiring beauty get wonderful help from Bucklen's Arnica Salve It banishes pimples, skin eruptions, sores and boils. It makes the skin soft and velvety. It glorifies the face. Cures sore eyes, cold sores, cracked lips, chapped hands. Best for burns, scalds, fever sores, cut, bruises and piles. 25c at AF. Long's. i. i • iiwira.frii ■■ A Classified Adv. will sell ft.

CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.

CHICAGO ZXTE STOCK U. S. Yards, Chicago, 11., Nov. 19. Receipts of live stock today: Hogs’, 12,000; cattle, 500; sheep, 2,000. Hogs 5c to 10c lower. Mixed, ?7.00 to $7.55. Heavy, $7.30 to 37.55. Rough, 36.95 to 37.20. Light, 36.95 to 37.65. Pigs, 36.75 to 37.15. * Bulk, 37.20 to 37.35. Cattle steady. Beeves, 34.35 to 37.25. Cows and heifers, 32.00 to 36.00. Stockers and feeders, 33.60 to 35.40. Texans, 34.25 to 35.40. Westerners, 34.25 to 36.15. Calves, 37.00 to 39.25. Sheep steady, 32.00 to 33.90. Lambs, 34.00 to 36.10. Estimated Monday: Hogs, 29,000; cattle, 28,000; sheep 45,000. Hogs next week, 135,000. CASH GBAXH Cora No. 2, 51%c. .... No. 2 W, 51 %c to 52c. No. 2 Y, 52c to 52 %c. No. 3, 51%C to 51%c. No. 3 W, 51%c to 51%c. No. 3 Y, 51%c to 52c. No. 4, 50%c to 50%c. No. 4 W, 50%c to 51c. No. 4 Y, 51c to 51 %c. No. 3 new, 47c. No. 3 W, new, 47c. No. 3 Y, new, 47%c to 48c. No. 4 new, 45c to 45%c. No. 4 W, new, 45c to 45%c. No. 4 Y, 45%c to 46c. Oats No. 2 W, 32%c to 33c. No. 3 W, 31%c to 34c. No. 4 W, 30%c to 31c. Standard, 32c to 32%c. iutubss Dec. May. July. Wheat j Open .... 90% 96%% 93 High .... 91 96% 93% Low 90% 96 92% Close . . .t-90% 96% 93% Cora Open .... 44%% 46%%., 47% High .... 44% 46% 47% Low 44% 46% 47% Close .... 44% 46% 47% Oats Open .... 30%% 33% 33% High .... 30% 33% 33% Low 30%% 33% 33% Close .... 30% 33% 33% BEHSSELAEB QUOTATIONS Corn—36c. Oats—2Bc, Wheat—B3c. Rye—6oc. Butter—lßc to 32c. Eggs—2Bc. Chickens—Bc. Turkeys—lsc to 15 %c. Ducks—loc. Old Roosters—sc. Geese—7c. Old Man's Rich Find. "Over 100 doctors tried to cure me of a severe stomach and liver trouble in the past forty years,” writes s. T. Thacker, of Indianfields, Ky. "When all failed. Electric Bitters made me feel like a new man.” Unrlveled for stomach and bowels. Only 50c at A. F. Long’s.

Lecture Dates.

Nov. 30—The Schuberts, a mixed quartette of singers and entertainers. Dec. 9—L. B. Wickersham, popular lecturer. Jan. 19—Booth Lowrey, humorist. March 13—The Bellharz Entertainers. Extra Number—Byron King, last year's favorite, whose date has not been set.

Shall Women Vote! If they did, millions would vote Dr. King's New Life Pills the true remedy for women. For banishing dull, fagged feelings, backache or* headache, constipation, dispelling colls, Imparting appetite and toning up the system, they’re unequaled. Easy, safe, sure. 25c at A F. Long's.

P. W. HORTON | < ► Piano Tuning and Repairing < • < I A Specialty. < > I ’ Rensselaer, . - Indiana. < >

10 Days Free Trial In Your Own Home of the Improved “Simplex” Hand Vacuum Cleaner “The Cleaner That Cleans Clean” We want to supply one lady in every es ’ yMr neighborhood with a Iff “Simplex” Vacuum Cleaner, for adver- II | | 11 tising purposes. Write today for ' z the most liberal of- K MHO' W. fer ever made. jj feptna fEi The “Simplex” jJ' iflmw is guaranteed to do gft Ms as good work as ,•&Hgu lIiR electric machines v ? 1 costing SIOO.OO and // II ’ I over. It is light in aIHsSE weight (only 20 lbs) |l| T BZi I /I I runs extremely easy | I If I lAf I and can be operated K/ I w I I perfectly and easily * NIU I - ’ by one person. I I With ordinary aftf care the “Simplex*' wr| LB! will last a lifetime I Dealers and Agents Wanted to sell both our hand and electric machines! Electric Cleaner* Col 9S Jackson Boul. CHICAGO, ILLI

Electric Bitters Succeed when everything else fa lie, In nervous prostration and female weaknesses they are the supreme remedy, as thousands have testified. FOR KIDNEY.LIVER AND I STOMACH TROUBLE I it is the best medicine ever sold over a druggist’s counter.

Not Sorry For Blunder. “If my friends hadn’t blundered h thinking I was a doomed victim o consumption, I might not be ally now,” writes D. T, Sanders, of Har rodsburg, Ky., “but for years the saw every attempt to cure a lung tacking cough fail. At last I trie Dr. King s New Discovery. The effec was wonderful. It soon stopped th cough and I am now in better healt than I have had for years. This won derful life-saver is an unrivaled rem edy for coughs, colds, hemorrhage* whooping cough or weak lungs. so< SI.OO. Trial bottle free. Guarantee by A F. Long. Don’t Dump Ashes in the Street, Notice is given to all residents thj it is a violation of city ordinance t dump ashes in the streets and alley* This ordinance will be enforce* Ashes should be dumped in a piled the back yards, where they can W gathered up and' removed in tJ spring. I GEORGE MUSTARD, Marshal. I Big Reduction on Millinery. I From this date until December fl J I will sell ready trimmed hats, mad up in the most attractive styles, atm reduction. Headquarters for f anc d work and flosses, pillow tops, centd pieces, etc. MRS. Itch! Itch! Itch!—Scratch! Scratch Scratch! The more you scratch worse the itch. Try Doan’s Qinffi ment. it cures piles, eczema, skin itching. All druggists sell ftjj