Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 304, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 December 1910 — Page 4

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY. ■ - —'M ■ . —■ L» , i HEALEY & CLARK, Publishers. Th« Friday Inna is the Regular Weakly Edition. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Daily, by Carrier, 10 Cants a Week. . Mail, 93.75 a year. Eaml-Wakkly, In advance, Tear, t 1.50. FrMay, December 23, 1910.

NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.

Miss Ordell Davis, of Rushville, found the famiiy cow had lifted the latch on the back door and gone all through the house. In the pantry it devoured two pounds of butter and a large Quantity of buftermilk. The rivers and harbors bill, .carrying 321,894,861, was passed by the house Saturday. The passage -of the bill establishes a record for this class of legislation, as the only changes in the measure were in two incorrectly spelled words. s The Putnam county grand jury Saturday indicted Miss Minetta Taylor, a prominent Indiana club woman and author, who is charged with practicing medicine without license. Miss Taylor was formerly president of the Indiana Federation of Clubs. The report of the secretary of state for November, the first to be reviewed by Auditor O'Brien, shows domestic corporation fees to amoutto $19,756.40; foreign corporations, $2,463; motor vehicle and automobile registrations, $9.18; court report sales, $503.50, and miscellaneous, Argentine leads the nations of the world in the exportation of beef. The census bureau announced Tuesday that the population of Spencer, Ind., by the census taken this year is 2,150, as against 2,026 ten years ago. The population of Washington townahip, Owen county, is 3,413, as compared with 3,398 a decade ago. A safe blowing was reported Wednesday from Cambridge City, making the third in western Wayne county in a week. The thieves used a noiseless explosive at the drug store of W. A. Johnson. Fire followed, endangering the town and causing a loss of $2,000. A Lake Erie passenger train ran down a buggy containing a man and .woman near Kokomo Saturday afternoon, killing the man and injuring the Woman. Fire destroyed the principal business district of Camden, five miles north of Flora, Saturday night. The loss is $125,000, with small insurance. Running forty miles an hour a pas senger train on the C. & O. road, running two hours late, struck a township school wagon containing five persons at a crossing four miles east of Muncie. The horses were'killed and the wagon demolished, but none of the occupants were injured. In attempting to rescue a horse which had hanged itself in a stall with the halter, James Gray, a farmer, living near Princeton, was kicked in the face and sustained dangerous injuries. His nose was broken, a severe gash was cut in his forehead ai*d his face was badly bruised. Physicians believe he will recover. A plan for establishing a muncipal —commission —for —the —arbitration—oflabor troubles is proposed In New York city by the congestion of population commission. This commission estimates that S9OO a year is the minimum wage in which a working man and wife and three children can live on an American standard in that city. John Riggles, aged 101, is dead at his home in Peru. He was a resident of that city more than seventy years. Joseph Hester, a Shelbyville cerpenter, has kept account of the distance he has walked in seven yearsi to milk his cows and finds that he covered s,lift miles. The offieg and mechanical department of the Tippecanoe County Democrat, at Lafayette, was gutted by fire early Monday. The loss will be about $3,000. Reno M. Isherwood is editor and owner. John Rhoades, 18, and Ralph Williams, 20, of Ogilville, Ind., broke corn husking' records at Odebolt, La. Rhoades husked sixty bushels in 2 hours and 45 minutes. Williams husked fifty-eight bushels in 3 hours flat. Walking unobserved to a fourthstory window of the Ytndoine hotel in Evansville, Miss Marion Mitchell, 34 years old, bookkeeper in a box factory, jumped to the pavement Monday. She will probably die. “The 61 western railroads must come to an agreement with the engineers for an increase in wages or there will surely be a strike,” This is the statement made in Chicago Monday by Warren F. Stone, grand chief of the organization. The traveling public will save more than $1,500,000 annually as a result of an order issued Monday by the Interstate commerce commission, reducing the charge for upper Pullman berths to 80 per cent of the charge for lower berths. John S. Willetts, the first Farmers’ Alliance candidate for governor of Kansas, who made a close but unsuccessful race against Governor Lyman TJ. Humphreys in 1890, died suddenly at his home in McLouth, Kas., Sunday afternoon. Death, was due to heart disease. The populist party, which grew out of the alliance movement, always held the Willetts was counted out in 1890. Every family has need of a good, reliable liniment. For sprains, bruises, soreness of the muscles and rheumatic pains there is none better than Chamberlain's. Sold by all dealers, c

* vtvvvvv Rate of Taxation for the Year 1910, __ _ —- 11 . State, County, and Township Taxes for Jasper County, Indiana. NOTICE IS HEREBY the Tax Duplicate for thelenr 1910 Is now in my hands and that I am ready to receive at the County Treasurer’s office in Rensselaer, ; noiana, the taxes charged thereon. The following table shows the RATES OF TAXATION on each SIOO TAXABLE PROPERTY, and on each TAXABLE POLL. > ' r ~~i ; 7 |j - "•-.]/ . ' ..."' v‘ i,; ".'■'■■r*- : p«u. TAX . !i :■ - ~~T 71 j —* j [SAXE OF TOWXSHIP U' | 1 . | . I 4j , i 1 .4 „ „ g H tows ob mr. hr 1 TT^T =T =1 I! , f ? T U, 2 « ! ~ f . S!« S t!•1« sI" I sl 1 " i*al" B laa, |i<ie a S« I g 5 S S I; |!!I! iiit i 1 tl! 11 Ml iliiui I ”IZsJ It _ iso I i3 ' m 5 a ' ,s II a °- is l =!»! »»“ 3. .ft im i i'i itt~ : „ „ “ 100 0 1.00 10. M.O 000 . 30.10 0, 10 00 10 30 13 00 0 _ ... - 3 3.,0 30.10 3 1. A .0 30 13 3. 1. 3 “ “ ’"*“ v M * >•« »■“ 0 3.,0 30.10 3 ,0 3 30 40 10 10 10 ” ™ “ - - --»-. *£ - 1.00- O 1.00 13.00 1 0 2.70 6 30,10 0 | 10, (^J-00-HW--^-*^,—| 1.00 W : 100 9 150 13-60 5 2.75 30.15 8j 10 33 7 8 14 20 5 5 99 73 172 I Vi '*° 7 M M 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 | 5 2.75 j 30.15 810 40 40 25 25 10 2 1 . 29 93 222 I HeWton - 50 60 100 • 1-60 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 20 25 20 30 10 , 13 7a . ‘ .Remington, Town 0f... 50 50 1.00 95 2.50 9 1.50 13.60 j 5 4.75 30.15 810 57 . 3 40 20 10 10 40 50 50 1.80 1.80 sleo . Rensselaer, City of.. 50 50 100 9 150 la ea i * <7*. ii mit 1 o ' I TTnlon „ „ ■ * 60 I s | 275 30 15 I 8 10 33 j: 10 40 38 16 10 40 40 3 > 1-00 9 150 13-60 | 5 2.75 II 30.15 181 10 10 35 25 30 10 2 116 76 192 > Walker --- 60 60 1,00 9 1.50 13.60 I 5 2.75 30.15 JB| 10 20 38 30 30 5 xl9 84 a O3 : Wheatfleld 50 60 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 ) 30.15 8| 10 22 25 30 30 10 |5 126 86 - Town wrr:. so 50 25 25 25 50 2.25 9 1.50 13.60 5 275 30 is s 10 ’ | o JU.IS j 8) 10 30 ao 50 50 25 1.27*4 1.27*4 2.55 9 OXE TIAT "I*, T j X NE-HALF of all other taxes make the FIRST INSTALLMENT and must be paid on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN MAY, 1911. : Tn nnWW F. f t ,1 ’ \ f constitl,te the SECO?m INSTALLMENT, and must be paid on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEMBER, 1911 Failnre ; 1 p yth F,rst Ins tollment when due makes both installments delinquent and attaches a penalty of 10 per cent to the full amount The Treasurer Can Not Make and Hold Receipts for Anyone. Please Do Not Ask It. :- -- ' PROVISIONS OF-LAW RELATING TO TAXATION. —^ | owner onttatTy!" ° f Pr ° Perty °" thC ° f ' MarCh ° f “ ny ,Car ShaU be liaWe for the taxes of that r - T,ie Purchaser on the first day of March shall he considered the I “COrNTToRDFRS S wt L n PR ? PERTT : V(J ' a^. Real E f lte shon,d remember that “TAXES FOLLOW PROPERTY when the taxes thereon remain unpaid.” X lULaVJY ORDERS In favor of persons owing delinquent taxes can not be paid without settlement of taxes.” I THE *l'*' * desires to my taes, In wM5e name assessed, nnd ln ffint tonnatp or Kwn WSsTßiessed. £ im iKr,A»LKER VVIEL Mil RE RESPONSIBLE for the penalties and charges resulting from taxpayer’s omission to so state. k a The . , ax » u P Ucate for ““J year is made with reference to property on the first day of March of that year and remains unchanged for the year as to the showine of | property, and in whose name assessed and taxed. Transfers after the first day of March of any year will never appear upon the Duplicate of that taxes | ns It r, a K e Ume°KSISS ”* S "' h » en„„ ?1 , to «.ld th. r.,h .. ,h. Ins. dn„, | R° a< * Receipts are Noi Negotiable, and Must be Presented in Payment of | First installment, and then only by the Owner of the Lands. The Annual Sale of Delinquent Lnnds and Lots will take place on the SECOND MONDAY OF FEBRUARY, 1911. | JESSE D. ALLMAN, Treasurer of Jasper County.

Washington

Some of the Things That Are Going On at the National Law Making Shop on the Potomac. Congressman Crumpacker finds that there is a great amount of opposition from all over the country against the adoption of any basis for representation that will cut down the present number of congressmen from any state. Since some states have not increased at all in population during the past ten years while other states have made large gains, the effect would be that there would be a large general increase and that the number of congressmen would be increased to 450 or 58 more than there are at the present time. This might mean that Indiana would gain instead of lose a member. Champ Clark, the acknowledged democratic leader, is very insistent that Missouri shall not lose a membes, and what goes in Missouri goes all over the country. The house is unwieldy now, too many and the expense too great. The people would probably approve a reduction of the number by increasing the replesentation. But congressmen are not apt to pass a measure calculated to cut off their own political topknots. ** President JTaft will play Santa Claus as unsual this year in giving away Christmas turkeys to all the married employes about the White House and executive offices, including the policemen on duty in the White House grounds. It will require 102 of the holiday birds to fill all the baskets and the money outlay will be in the neighborhood of $350. It is a timehonored custom of Presidents to distribute turkeys at Christmas time. Poor old man "Walsh, the guilty, but unintentional and harmless violator of the national banking laws, and by whom no man lost a dollar, is still in prison. A petition for his release is again~ being considered by AttorneyGeneral Wickersham. A boom has been started in Washington for Crumpacker for governor of Indiana, and it is believed that he would be able to unite factions in his home state. He Is not a factionalism but a republican all of the time and the worst thing said about him by democrats during the election just past was that he refused to participate in the party contentions, and said, “As a republican I believe in republicans cleaning their own door-

step and not letting the democrats do it.” Congressman Crumpacker has much to recommend him for the -gubernatorial position,—Business ability, legal understanding, wide expert—ence, straight-out republicanism that is unquestioned, and a clean record. If Stokes 'Jackson gets the sergeant-at-arms plum at the tr. S. capital,"he will have at his disposal about 40 fat jobs and some ambitious Jasper county democrat who wants to spend a season in Washington, can stand a chance if he gets busy and gets properly endorsed. These jobs, of course, will not all go to Hoosiers, for if Stokes lands the job he will have to make some good promises for a division of the t spoils with congressmen from other states.

LEE.

Frank Schultz, of Lafayette, was in town Wednesday. Wm. Stiller shipped poultry Wednesday morning. Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Clark called on Doro Jacks Monday. Will Rishling was in Monon Satuiday. Uncle Eli Wood attended the meetings at Lee Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Jacobs was in town Wednesday morning. Mrs. Minerva Wood and Mrs. Anna Johnson were in town Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Parcels and little Goldie Turner were in town Tuesday. Mr. and TMrs. Fred Stiers returned last week from an extended visit a s Kankakee and St. Joe, Mich. Rev. Dunlavy, of Monbn, preached a fine sermon at the church Tuesday evening and stayed with Mr. and Mrs. All. Jacks Tuesday night. Mrs. Doro Jacks and Mrs. Harriett-? Jacks took dinner Monday with Mrs. A; B. Lewis, and Mrs. Etta Lefler and Mrs. May Jacks called there in tue afternoon. Rev. Kuonan went home Saturday and brought his wife and children to attend the services. They stayed till Monday, when they returned to their home in Barkley township. Rev. Harper preached a fine sermon at the church Monday evening. His text was. “Here Am I; Send Me.” There was a good crowd out, in spite of the cold night. The State Bank of Royal Center is offering a premium of five ce'hts on February pension checks when they come in. . This is done to get New /York exchange, and is an unusual state, of affairs in smaller towns.

Drink It Because It’s So Good npHERE is nothing strange about taking the meat of A choicest Tropic-ripened bananas, roasting it, granu- f jfjyfyi (li ft nT I lating it, and making from it a hot table beverage. f £{ ■s' Not so unusual, when you come to think of it, as % ' : taking the bitter coffee berry —poisonous in its natural « * state—roasting and grinding it and serving it as a hot drink. Or brewing a beverage from the dried I and hand-rolled tea leaves of India and Japan. ls f II We of America have our coffee, tea, cocoa, I" chocolate, and now our BONANO. Is there any reason to presume that BONANO —made from the most delicious fruit that grows —may not be **7 - fjp the best hot drink, better than those you have been accustomed to ? It is, and we want you to know it. We want you to enjoy its tempting aroma, its spicy, appetizing flavor. We want you to see how it strengthens, nourishes and refreshes. jtAfisAr Drink BONANO for its own delicious goodness. That’s enough reason. And you will feel jj better for drinking it, too. Let the children have I all the BONANO they want. There’s nothing in it J 111 ml j| that can harm them —much that will do them good. 1 IJf Jfflftfflrfl 111 IJli lfl |{fjf BONANO—pure and clean —handled in a I fillfiWJinll Pill F'l III 1 sanitary way from the time the luscious, naturally | Jli m[j | | l|f ripened fruit is picked until you open the sealed J|i 11 uflll j|j| | J/l| J] ]j ||f package in your own home —is sold by your IlflUn 111 Tml HttAMl ill i * (Hp grocer. A 25-cent can of BONANO makes ’Hfjii j[l||| (HII HII 75 cups of the best hot drink you ever tasted. jjl Jfljj ||||ip' Home Grocery I Wj|!!!r i International Banana Food Co, Corn Exchange Bank Bide. Chicago, m. ' I Il ’-*«s* r

Have-y&u thought of silver knives, forks, spoons, cut glass dishes, bowls, creamer and sugar, and bottles. We have them at prices which you can affor d. P. W. CLARKE.

When you have a cold get abottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It will soon fix you op all right and will ward off any tendency toward pneumonia. This remedy, contains no

opium or other narcotic and may be given as confidently to a baby as to an adult Sold by all dealers. c *•* .** * " “ 1 Calling cards at the Republican.