Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 108, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 May 1911 — Page 4
ClassißaJ Colimn. '-'35. wi* MUt ——— r ll - *!**— far B*l* -Indian Runner ducks, $1 "■per head If taken soon. Also eggs at half price, $1 for 22 or *4 per 100. May how Bros., R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer. For Sale—A flue milk cow; fresh. J. F. Mitchell, ft mile north of Egypt school house. Phone 528 D. For Hale or Beal—Second hand No. ♦ Remington typewriter. Leslie Clark," at Republican office. Wanted—Colts on blue grass pas* taro. Will Whittaker, phone 513 G. Far Sale—Residence and one acre es ground in Rensselaer. Plenty" of fruit ▲ bargain if sold within 30 days. Granville Aldrich.
Far Sale—Bees and beekeepers’ supplies. Call or write tor free catalogue. Leslie Clark, Rensselaer, Indiana. Far Sale — Hardwood lumber of ail kinds; also cord wood. Randolph Wright, R, D. No. 2, Rensselaer, or ML Ayr phone No. 20 I. . FOB BENT. For Bent —Good residence, city water, large garden, fruit, small barn; corner Forest and Vine streets. See George A. Williams. For Beat —Pasture lands for horses or cattle in quantities to suit. Inquire of George Marr, Foreman Northern Indiana Ranch, DeMotte, Ind. Far Bent —Hay lands on Northern Indiana Ranch, either on share lease or for cash rental. Inquire of George Marr, Foreman, DeMotte, Ind. Far Bent— A nice, new, roomy boose in the village of Parr. One acre of good garden land. Plenty of employment near by. $5 per month. B. D. Comer. Far Bent— 24o acres of blue grass pasture located one mile north of Kersey, in Jasper Co. Known aB the Ray fans. Will rent tor the entire season. Inquire of Joseph B. Ross, Lafayette, Indiana, Wallace Block.
Far Bent-5 room house; large garden, fruit, etc. Inquire of A. H. Hopkins, phone 155, or at the Far Beat— 2oo acres hay and pasture land, 15 miles northwest of Rensselaer, 3 miles southwest of DeMotte. Address J. A. Stapleton, R. D. 3. Sheldon, Illinois. For Beat —House of four rooms in northeast part of town. Arthur H Hopkins. WANTED. Wanted— Girl to write checks at the Rensselaer Creamery on Saturday afternoons. Must be good penman. - Wanted— At once, the party that 4ms teams and tools to plow, harrow and plant corn and sow fertilizer on 100 acres and cultivate the corn in proper season, work to be done on Springer ranch. Contract will be made with right party or parties by the acre for cash. John O'Connor, Agent, Knim&n, Indiana. Wanted—Girl to do general housework. Good wages. Mrs. Delos Thompson. Wanted —Job as farm hand. Address Ivan Sayler. Phone him at 411. Wasted—Local and traveling salesmen representing our reliable goods. Any man of good appearance who is not afraid of Work can make this a satisfactory and permanent business. Write at once for terms. Outfit free. Territory unlimited. Big money can be made. Apply quick. Allen Nursery Co., Rochester, N. Y.
MISCELLANEOUS. Houseeleanlng— l am now ready to take orders lor houseeleanlng with my vacuum cleaner. Call on or address O. S. Baker, Rensselaer. EGOS FOB HATCHING. For Sale— lndian Runner duck eggs from healthy, vigorous, pure bred stock. 60c per 13. Gangloff Bros. Ease Cenib JL L Red—Eggs for hatching from our carefully mated pens of winners. We won first prises on our oockerels at Rensselaer, Remington, and the great Logans port show. The Pirate defeated the Ring at Rensselaer and Proud Advance defeated them all at Remington and Logansport We have carefully mated up these birds to produce the best advantage, and fanciers of heavy laying "good" R. L Reds will not be disappointed with the results. Eggs from these high scoring winners, $3.00 per 16; $6.00 for 30. We guarantee :t reasonable hatch. Peck A Lock, Rem-
FOB TRADE. Fer Trade — Business rooms located in Hartford City, Indiana, for farming lands. Give particulars In your first letter. John Burns, Hartford ypy, Indiana j' STRAYED QB STOLEN. ~ . *■'»»* I—l. - , Strayed or Stolen Black gelding,
FABXS FOB SALE. - . i a 165 acres, one mile from court house, on stone road, R. R., telephone in house. This farm is all black soil te~- fliilHtfollnii A lortro tiln nrACOLo Cuttivsuvii. targe titt? ciubir.d this farm with many laterals, giving it good drainage. There is a large 11room house, large barn, double cribs, and other outbuildings; all in good condition. There is a good well, windmill, and large bearing orchard. This is a good farm and a desirable home and will be sold at right prices. 86 acres, all cultivated, good house and barn, chicken house, good well, good outlet for drainage, on pike road, R. R., telephone and near schooi. Will sell on easy terms or will take trade as first payment i J6l acres, all good land, 15 aerres timber, remainder cultivated, and In meadow. There is a four-room housg, outbuildings, new fencing, large ditch, and sotoe tile drainage. Mortgage $4,800, which has some time to run. Owner will sell on easy terms or trade his equity. 600 acres, three miles from good business town, near gravel road, 400 acres in cultivation and meadow, 200 acres pasture. There is a large eightroom house, large bank barn, double cribs, windmill and good well. There is a large dredge ditch just built that passes within a few rods of this farm that gives it a fine outlet for drainage. This is a fine grain and stock farm. Price right. Will take up to $15,000 in good trade. 160 acres, in Polk county, Ark., near Oklahoma line, and five miles from railroad. This land lies well and s is productive soil. Will trade clear and pay difference. 80 acres at a bargain, on easy terms, five miles out 25 acres at a bargain, on easy terras. On main road near large ditch; has four-room house. 21 acres, fine black soil, five blocks from court house, cement walks and good well. Sell at a bargain. 160 acre's in the wheat belt of Kansas. Will trade clear for property or land here and pay difference. G. F. MEYES.
The farmers’ free list, proposed by the democratic members of the house as a companion piece to the reciprocity bill, was designed purely for campaign purposes/’ The list was prepared without scientific investigation. The free list is simply political bumcombe, designed to catch the public fancy. If the responsibility of revising the tariff rested with the democratic majority of the house the list would be speedily revised. That the list was prepared without thought of a tariff law’s obligation in raising revenue is proved by a report from the treasury department. The democratic measure, as now offered seriously for the people’s attention, would cost the government about $10,000,000 in revenues. It is obvious that the democratic leaders of the house prepared the farmers free list without the slightest thought to the revenue feature of a tariff law. The free list, now held out as a promise of what the democratic party would do if in power, is impractical and indefensible. That is should be proposed at this time shows conclusively that the democratic party should not be entrusted with tariff legislation. If the democratic leaders of the house are merely joking, that is if they are holding out the promise of an extensive free list w’hen none is intended, they are resorting to demagogy of the most despicable nature. On the other hand if they have proposed the farmers' free list, really believing it to be an intelligent tariff solution, they prove their own incompetency. In either event the democratic party does not gain endorsement as an authority on the tariff question. Making a tAriff law is a serious problem. The people don’t wish to be fooled with demagogy and they can’t have faith in a promise that ignores the revenue of the tariff. The farmers’ free list is either the result of demagogy or incompetency. —Lafayette Journal.
LOCAL MARKETS.
Wheat—B2c. Corn, No. 3—45 c. Oats, No. 3—29 c. Rye—6oc. Eggs—l 3 %c. Butter—loc to 15c. Turkeys—loc. Chickens—loc. Roosters —sc. Ducks—loc. Geese—6c.
Farm Leans. We are furnishing the money. DUNLAP A PARKINSON. about IS hands high, weight 1,050 lbs, few gray hairs In forehead; medium flesh. Disappeared on April 16th from my premises 4 miles west of Fair Oaks. S2O reward will be paid for his return. V. W. Payton, Fair Oaks, Indiana. , AUTOMOBILES. Records that repeat— stability— not using today and . ebbing tomorrow.
For the Children
A Ship Photographed White She Was Sinking.
The Illustrations shown above are roproductions of the remarkable photographs taken of the three masted sailing ship Arden Craig as she was foundering off the Scilly Isles, which are situated twenty-five miles southwest of Land's End. the extreme southwesterly point of England, says Popular Mechanics. The first photograph was taken just after the deck became awash, the second ns she heeled over for the final plunge and the third a moment or two after she went down. Several hundred people watched the sinking from the shore. jf The Particolored Bear. The particolored bear tAelnropns melanoleucusi is so rare an animal that it deserves ntfore than passing notice. This particular specimen was acquired, by W. N. Fergusson, a missionary In Szetbuen. .from a Tibetan hunter. Its habitat is the dwarf bamboo and rhododendron forests which clothe the hills at an altitude of from 9,000 to 11,000 feet In this part of China. It is a vegetable feeder. The soles of the feet are hairy, and, though very bearlike in appearance. It has been named the great panda by Sir Ray Lankester, as the structure of the skull and skeleton shows tt to be closely related to the Himilayan panda or wah. It has never been obtained by a European sportsman and was originally discovered In 18(50 by Pere David In the mountains of east Tibet. The panda, a very handsomely cdlored little beast, is the only old world representative of the raccoon.
On the Cars. Here is something tbatv may amuse you some time when you are in the trolley car or elevated train and are beginning to feel tired. Compare the advertisements in the car with the people who are sitting beneath them. The contrast is often very funny. For instance, you may see an elderly gentleman below an advertisement for babies’ food, or a baby beneath a shaving soap advertisement, or a very bald person sitting unconsciously beneatb a hair tonic sign, or a tramp beneath a soap advertisement. It is fun, too, to read from one advertisement on to the next, as though they belonged together. You may read, for instance, that a certain breakfast food is excellent for the hair or that condensed soup frequently applied will make your garments look like new. A Queer African Town. The town of Abu Hamed is located where caravans quit the river Nile and begin their journey across the desert Merchants leave their merchandise there and load up again with goods that other merchants have left there for them. There is nothing unusual in this, the strange part being that no storehouses or depots are used for the protection of these goods, often of priceless value. The curious story about Abu Hamed is that goods left under the monument dedicated to St. Abu Hamed are safe. Here they remain In the sand beneath the monument for months or years. No one will molest them. They are considered to be under the protection of the saint himself. There has never been known an Instance of loss or theft of any goods. Tree City. X know a little city on a green and tunny hill. Where a hundred tiny families have homes. Its byways are uncrowded.'lts leafy lanea are still. And tbere’no noisy railroad over cornea The homes are high and airy. They hang and rock and sway Whichever way the summer breezes blow. they have no doors or windows, no roof to blow away. But leafy awnings shade the babes below. The fathers and the mothers all earn their daily bread And bring It to the little ones who cry. They do not ride or motor; they do hot walk; instead They choose the very latest mode—they fly. The happy little citizens who live so high and free They sing and sing and sing the whole day long. For the peaceful, quiet city is a green and .*lovely tree. And the dwellers there are birds, whose life Is song. Nichole
2ilj£>r IT’S GOING 7 TO BUY ■VJiDR. KING’S Hi \ new ■■ DISCOVERY [~THE CURE THArS SURE~| FOR COUGHS,COLDS,WHOOPING COUGH AND ALL DISEASES OF THROAT, CHEST AND LUNGS Famous for Forty Years of Cures. Price 50c and SI.OO SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY HHUUUHmmHHH A. F. LONG, Druggist '
TAMED THE MOROS.
A Ceremony That Forced Them to Stop Running Amuck. Moro zealots do not rnn amuck as frequently as they used to do, largely because of a plan conceived by Lieutenant Miler, a volunteer officer from Chicago, described in the New York Tribune. When Datto Oali was killed in running amuck against a group of soldiers his body was buried with a degree of ceremony which greatly pleased the natives and correspondingly depressed the American soldiers. The denouement is thus described: “Two American soldiers with a pig between them approached the open grave of the Moro chief. They stood immediately over it with the pig between them. One drew out a sharp knife and silt the animal’s throat. The blood of it gushed into the grave and upon the remains of the dead chief. His body must'have been covered with this blood. He was made vilely unclean. His ascent into heaven was made a thing unthinkable. There was but one place in the hereafter to which these people could confine one so defiled. He would forever remain in the vilest of hell. “The natives slunk away, sickened and disheartened. The framework of their fanatical self sacrifice had been cut away from beneath them at a single blow. Their old practices would no longer exalt them. To those Who ran amuck and killed there awaited not the seventh heaven, but the uttermost hell. The occasion for the sacrifice was removed. Its rewards were taken away. It ceased to be. “As far as is known the incident of the pig occurred but once in the campaign among the Moros. With that one occurrence the practice of running amuck almost disappeared. There has been an occasional cropping out of the practice. These have mostly been in the outlying provinces, to which the tale of the American method of battling with the practice has not penetrated.”
TALKED IT TO DEATH.
How Tom Carter Killed a Bill and Won a Commissionership. Senator Tom Carter of Montana retired at the last session. He retired once before, but came back after six years, and they say he pnay do that again. Last time Senator Carter retired it was In a blaze of glory. He was about as unpopular with congress the day he left public life as a man could well be. It happened thus: The house had passed a $50,000,000 river and harbor bill, and it had been reported to the senate. McKinley didn’t want to veto it and also didn’t want it to pass. He sent for Carter. Tradition says he spoke in substance like this: “Tom, if you will keep still, engineer that river and harbor bill to the right place and then talk it to death with-K out killing anything else you can be a commissioner to the St Louis exposition.” “Done,” said Senator Tom. It was too. Nobody suspected it It was the best kept secret anybody remembers. The decks cleared some dozen hours before the adjournment time, Carter got the floor and made the speech of his life. For twelve hours he was as funny as only he can be. There wasn’t a dry minute in it The bill was killed, and he got the job. Six years later he came back to senate, having meantime made a fortune.—Washington Times.
BETTER THAN SPANKING Spanking done not cure children of bedwetting. There U a constitutional cause for this trouble. lira. U. Summers, Box W, Notre Dane. I ml., wHI send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with fall Instructions. Send no money, bat write her today if year children trouble yon In this way. JDon't blame the child, the chance* are It can't help it. This treatment also core* adults and aged people troubled with arlna difficulties by day or night. Alter's fine corn meal,»2sc a sack. —Depot Grocery.
/ "" Remln^M^ Models 10 and 11 do this and more—for they represent the greatest single advance which has ever been made in the development of the writing machine. Some of the New ) Column Selector Back Spacer Features: / Built-In Tabulator Single Dog Escapement Remington Typewriter Company JO (fncorporated) ct New York and Everywhere # ,
Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, Louiavllle and french nick Springs. BENSSELAEB THCE TfATtT TV SOUTH BOUND. No. 31 —Fast Man 4:46 a. m No. 6—Louisville Mall .... 11:06 a. m No. 37—Indpls. Ex 11:30 am No. 33 —Indpls. Mall 1:68 p.m No. 39—Milk Accom 6:68 p.m No. 3—Louisville Ex .a... 11:05 p.m NOBTH BOUND. No. 4—Mall 4:59 am No. 40—-Milk Accom 7:36 a. m No. 32—Fast Mail 10:05 a. m No. 38—Indpls-Chgo. Ex. .. 2:63 p.m No. 6—Mail and Ex 3:16 p.m No, 30 —Cln. to Chgo. Mall. 6:68 No. 3 and 38 are new trains running between Chicago and Indianapolis and Cincinnati. Train No. 31 makes connection at Mo non for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayettt at 6:16 a. m. No. 14. leaving Lafayettt at 4:30 p. m„ connects with No. 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:02 p. m. '
fITTE^TIOfI We offer to a live representative for your county a most liberal proposition covering two reliable lines. EASY to HANDLE and QUICK MONEY INVESTIGATE AT ONCE. Pullman Motor Sales Co. '306 Meridian Llfw Building INDIANAPOLIS, IND. AUTOMOBILE LIYERY. g The undersigned is now engaged in the Auto Livery bnsiness. Leave orders at the Willis Supply Co. JAMES CLARK. _ RICHARD BURTON Shoe Shining I Makeever House Stallion owners cannot afford to be without the “Handy Service Record.”" All leading stallion owners In Jasper county have used this record for the past two years. For sale at this oflice or sent postpaid on receipt of sl. What have yon to sell at this tkne of the year? Try a classified ad In the Republican and you can sell 1L Remember, that all classified ads go la all Issues of the evening and SemiWeekly Republican.
Prolßssional Cards DB. E. C. ENGLISH PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Night and day calls given prompt at-, tentlon. Residence phone, 116. Office phone, 177. Sensselaer, EUL DB. L M. WASHBURN. PHYSICIAN AND SUBGBON Makes a specialty of Diseases of tha Eyes. Over Both Brothers. DB. F. A. TCRFLER. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Rooms 1 and 2,- Murray Building. Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings on 300, resllence—3 rings on 300. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. DB. E. N. LOY Successor to Dr. W. W. HartselL HOMEOPATHIST \ Office — Frame building on’ Cullen street, east of court house. OFFICE PHONE 89 / Residence College Avenue, Phone 189. Rensselaer, Indiana. F. U. HEMPHILL, M. D. . Physician and Surgeon Special attention to disaases of wnutsa and low grades of favsr. Office in Williams block. Opposite Court £> House. / Telephone, office and residence, 442. AHTHUB H. HOPKINS DAW. LOANS AND BUB ESTATE Loans on farms and city property, Sarsonal security, and chattel mortgage. uy, sell and' rent farms and city property. Farm and city fire insurance. Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Rensselaer, Indian a. 9. P. Erwin A O. Erwin IRWIN * IB WEN DAW, BEAD ESTATE AND XHSURimUm ‘ *“ Odd FRANK FOLTZ Lawyer Practices In All Courts Telephone He. IB ~T B. F. HOJTAH ATTORNEY AT LAW Law. Loans. Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice In all the court*. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. H. L. BROWN *nd Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. All the latest methods In Dentistry. Gas administered tor painless extraction. Office over Laratrs Drug Store. L O. Q. F. Building. Phone lit. JOHN A. BURLAP, Lawyer. Practice in all courts. Estate* settled. Farm Loans. Collection department. Notary In the offiea.
