Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 163, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 July 1911 — Page 4

Far Sale — Seven lota, with real- —■ .■■*u u-fi-'- , ‘-~ ~»r' - . a - by August let, 1700. Box 117, Rensselaer, Indiana Far Sale—New rag, 11.3x12; will g Far Saia— Outside water closet Largo and In good condition. Dr. A. __ ir i rk KrMMFo ■ 1 Far Saia—A milch cow, fresh, & years old, half Jersey. Phone 246. W.SLI ora TWR FARM BARGAINS. 24 acres on public highway, black land in cultivation; has house, good well, good young orchard and has fine outlet te» drainage. Price $35. Terms S2OO down. * 70 acres, seven miles out on main road, all heavy corn land, 50 acres in crop and remainder pasture. There are plenty good buildings, consisting of eight-room bouse, good barn, granary, cribs and good chicken home There is a fine deep well and large bearing orchard of all kinds of fruit. Price 375. Termsfavorable. G. F MEYERS. * For Sale— Residence property in Remington for sale cheap, or will trade for good automobile. Address B. S. Aikman, Newport, Indiana. For Sale—Two good second hand typewriters, or will rent them. Leslie Clark, at the Republican office. For Salo— Four good milch cows, troah now. Riley Tullis, phone 527 E. Far Sala or Trade— l Rumley separator, la good repair. Write Ray Light, Raab, Benton county, Indiana. For Salo or Rent— Second hand No. • Remington typewriter. Leslie Clark, at Republican office. Far Sale Bees and beekeepers' supplies. Call or write for free catalogue Leslie Clark, Rensselaer, Indiana. Far Sale ■ Hardwood lumber of ail kinds; also cord wood. Randolph Wright, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, or MR. Ayr phone No. 20 1. FOR RENT. Far Rent—Two good typewriters. Leslie Clark, at the Republican office FOr Rant— Well finished, five-room cottage, good location. F. Thompson. For Rent— Six-room house in fine neighbochood, good well, cistern, electrie lights. All kinds fruit; chicken house and park. Inquire of G L. Thornton, Surrey. WANTED. Wanted— Celery plants. Mrs. El! Arnold, phone 513 F. Wanted— You to tell your friends they can get a good cool room at the Nowels House, the only European house in town. No meals served. Wanted— To buy a good solid second hand spring wagon. Home Grocery. Wanted Local and traveling aaleaaran representing eur reliable goods. Apy.man of good appearance who Is not jfraM of work can make this a satlsasetory and permanent business. Write at once ter terma Outfit free. Territory unlimited. Big money can be Alien Nursery Co., FOUND. Found— Pair silver-rim nose glasses. Inquire bora AUTOMOBILES. We have on our floor ready for delivery two of those convenieut economical runabouts, completely equipped, for MOO. Call and let us tell you more about MMtXMGIr wonaa wo mut nucxxinx Subocrtbere to The Evening Republican win center a favor upon the publishers Uy reporting promptly any failure of delivery upon the part of the carrier bora The Republican tries to give good esr vice in the delivery of the paper, test cannot de ee without the cooperation of eebaeribera. If you fall to roeeivo year paper notify us promptly by phones IS. 114 or IBS and your complaint wUI bo given prompt attention. Farm Loans. Wo are furnishing the money. DUNLAP A PARKINSON. LOCAL MARKETS. Wheat—dOc. Cote-Mc. . Rm—Csc Uggs 10c and lie. Butter— loc to 15c. Springs—l4c A half 'holiday, with band concerts by the Bippus, Urbana and Laketon bauds has been planned for Bippus on Jul/ IS to mark the opening of the new Uppus State bank, the first institution rs the kind the little town has ever

HAL 0' THE HIGHWAY

By George Bronson-Howard.

Copyright, The I Yank X Munsey Co. CHAPTER IX. The Knowledge of Love. The place Into which Hal stumbled, still holding to Anne’s hand, was the rear hall of the bouse leading to the garden and passing the servant's stairway. Anne hurried Hal along it; the highwayman was too dumbfounded to resist.

He was as one rendered powerless by a sudden shoek, the same feeling that a condemned prisoner might have when reprieved just in time to save him from the hangman’s rope. But this was not all. Greater than the fact that he was saved, came the - ■■ f~ ■ V - overwhelming reversion of belief with regard to \nnes affections. Hal had given himself up to die because he saw no other chance of Anne’s happiness with the man she loved.

Now that he had saved Pulvey Littleton, she had saved him—Hal. What did it mean? Was her gratitude for her lover’s sake so great that she was willing to put herself under the ban of the law to save the man who had pulled him out of his trouble? The answer in the affirmative seemed the veriest of sophisms. What would it avail her if her lover were free, and she stood convicted of defying the law of the land? By her action she had placed herself in a predicament which was wellnigh as serious as Hal’s own, for to aid a condemned prisoner to escape his punishment meqnt to share the same punishment with him.

“Anne!” he began, his voice thick and husky. “S-s-s-h!”* she warned, and they reached a door at the end of the hall. She unlocked It and they passed into the cold air of the night and a mist of fine snow that sifted to the ground in slow, steady sheets. Anne shivered. “Wait, there are servants’ cloaks hanging within,” she said, and opened the door again, fetching two garments. They were of coarse linseywoolsey, but they had a comforting warmth. “We must waste no time, Hal!” she said softly, and her little hand closed within his again, and her love-lit eyes looked up at him. In a moment that was full of the keenest emotion, Hal held her hand so tightly that she might have screamed. t’Anne, what does this mean?" he said hoarsely. “I candot let you risk yourself for me.” “Be quiet,” she commanded with a pretty air of authority. “We must hasten—they will soon be upon us.” They hurried through the drifting snow to where the river lay, a stream of black against a background of sky and snow. Beyond the river rose the grim forest, and the lights from half a dozen houses shone in misty, yellow streaks across the broad expanse. “The boat—there is a strong wind,” said Anne. “There is no chance of escape by horse. We must try to make the eastern shore of the bay before they know whither we have gone.”

They had reached the declivity that led down to the place where the Arundel boats were moored. “We?” questioned Hal, his heart leaping high. She turned a queer little look upon him. “Yes,” she said simply. Across the snow came the cries of those engaged in the chase. “They will not know we have come this way,” said Anne. “They will pursue down the road. They are thickwitted, these soldiers and 'Sheriffs.” A little sailing boat confronted them, rocking gently to and fro in the swell of the tide. “Unmoor the boat!” said Anne. “But first, I will go within." He caught her hands. “Anne,” he said, “before God I love you better than anything in this world or the next—than all things—better than my hope of Heaven or the life to come. Anne—Anne —”

Her pretty eyes met his own, and her lips invited him. He crushed her to him in an embrace that held all the longing of the past days. “Anne, Anne!” he exclaimed in a paroxysm of love triumphant, and she only murmured and nestled more closely to him. But she was the first to remember their peril. She broke from his embrace.

“Quick now—the boat!” and she sprang within the little craft, which rocked dangerously to the leq-slde. “Anne," he questioned, “you 'know what risks—” “Risks! Am I to be in agony,knowing naught of what has chanced you? What are bodily risks compared to mental torture? Would you not do as much for me?” Her eyes flashed. “Unmoor the boat! We have wasted precious time now. Be quick, my sweetheart!” Hal, his indecision gone, twisted the rope about and the little craft caught the tide. He leaped aboard. Anne was already at the tiller and -F • ,

bade him attend to the sails. Under I his skillful manipulation the white wing of the craft arose in the silent accompanying whiteness, and. catching the wind in the right quarter, the little boat buried its nose in the black water and sent the spume i flying up before it They were on their way to the sea.

“Dearest one”—Hal held her disengaged hand—“you risked all tonigat for my unworthy love—all! Before God, I shall try to give you a life that will recompense. You shall not suffer.”

“Suffer!” Anne’s little head went up proudly. “If I suffer, sweetheart, then shall I. Think you not that the flirt and coquette I have been will ever chance again. I have found my life in you—and your life is my life, no matter what perils befall or misfortune come.” Then in her woman’s way:

"And you would have made my life an end tonight. Think you that 1 would have you save Pulvey Littleton at the risk of your own neck? What is Pulvey Littleton to me? A nice boy, whom I liked —liked well—but you—ah, how could you have tortured me so?” \ “I had thought,” he said very humbly, “that you loved Mr. Littleton.” His head was bent. With a sudden exclamation, Anne’s hand was again in his. “Hal!” she breathed softly. “Then it was for my sake?” The little boat sped on its way, and while the lovers gave it enough attention for its proper navigation, it was in a purely mechanical manner. Great silences eloquent of the deep love between man and woman ’ come but seldom in the lives of any of us. The silence between Anne and Hal was a silence that spoke more eloquently than any words might have done. For here was the fulfilled happiness of a Iqve that would last so long as did their mortal bodies and mayhap—but further no man knows. And so, in due time, they came to the waters of the Chesapeake, and still the silence endured, and the man looked into those eyes like the depths of an enchanted lake and wondered that God in his bounty might give so much to one man as this beautiful girl who had, beside a great and tender love, a lion’s spirit. While the girl, forgetting what the material things to come might be; thanked her Maker for a man whq would sacrifice all for his great love of her —all that she might be happy with another. It was a very holy silence. (To be continued.)

NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.

There is a shortage of spring chickens in Chicago, due, it is claimed, to the powder explosion at Pleasant Prairie. Dr. J. P. Simonds, superintendent of the pathological laboratory of the state bqard of health, has found rabies germs in the brain of a cat killed in West Terre Haute. The animal was reported to have bitten a child and a number of dogs. ■,. • « Records for the newspaper business in this country were broken in May, when 110,165 tons of print paper were produced and 107,242 tons shipped, according to statistics filed with the commissioner of corporations by the American Paper and Pulp association. George W. Miles, state fish and game commissioner, has announced that the biennial report of the department will be ready for distribution July 15 to August 1. The book will contain five hundred pages, many of them being colored plates of animals, fish and birds native to the state. George R. Dilks, 58 years old, one of the most widely known lumbermen in Indiana is dead at his home north of Richmond. He had been in ill health for several weeks, but his condition was not regarded as serious. Heart disease is given as the cause of his death. Farmers’ wives in northwestern Madison county had a surprise for threshing crews this year. Last year they banded together-and decided to cook no more threshing dinners. This year they have gone a step further and refused to let the men sleep in the farm houses over, night. The high cost of living is no myth. An investigation by the bureau of labor of the prices of the 257 commodities during 1910 shows that wholesale prices in that year were 4 per cent higher than in 1909 and 1.6 per cent above the average of 1907, which was the year of highest prices since 1890. Edward P. Moore, president of the Bank of Mitchell, at Mitchell, Ind., Is a man troubled with a pest His splendid home in that city has become Infested with termites, or white ants, and they have multiplied to such an extent that it is costing him thousands of dollars to exterminate them. He has been compelled to dismantle parts of his house in his search for the nest of the royal family.

CHICAGO TO SEE WAR

Realistic Battle Scenes To Be Deplct.d at Military Tourney. Among the special features to be Introduced at - the National Military Tournament to be held in Chicago July 23 to 30 are reviews of the Chicago police. mounted and unmounted; an oldfashioned company 4 drill executed by vete-ans of the civil war, clothed in the faded blue they wore in the early 60’s and armed with Mlnie rifles; a review of the Veteran corps of the First Infantry. Illinois National guard, in the gray dresa uniforms which used to give that famous organization so distinguished an appearance;-elabor-ate exposition of the skill of cadets from the various military academies, and concerts by the Daily News Boys’ band. At night the opening feature of every performance will be a band concert from 7:15 to 8:15 by one of the various regimental bands. The main evening performance will open regularly at 8:15., The night scheme also con-, templates the reproduction in detail of camp and battle scenes, which will

The Famous Wall Scaling Drill.

bring into simultaneous action in the arena more than 5,000 meh. This event will be carefully staged so that the onlooker will get almost as many thrills as if he were viewing the progress of a real night attack. It is planned for a regiment of infantry, together with detachments of engineers, cavalry, artillery, signal and hospital corps and a wagon train carrying ammunition and supplies, to go into camp along the banks of an imaginary stream. When everything is in readiness and “taps” have been sounded, the camp will be attacked by a strong force which will reach the field by scaling a wall. Seeing the prospect of defeat and the loss of their wagon train, the defenders will vigorously defend their position while the engineers work under the screen fire and throw a trestle bridge across the river. As soon as this structure is completed the wagon train will be driven over in safety, followed by the defending troops, who will then blow up the bridge in the face of the enemy.

5,000 FOR FIRING LINE

Greatest of Sham Battles Scheduled for Chicago Tournament. By means o* numerous scenic adjuncts every spectacle presented at the National Military Tournament, to be held in Chicago, July 23 to 30, will be made thrillingly realistic. That it will be sufficiently impressive is assured by the fact that it comprehends infantry and cavalry fire by more than 5,000 men, supported by twenty field pieces, a number of gatling guns and Colts automatics. Every regiment, every battalion, every company of the National Guard in Chicago is working night and day to perfect drills and maneuvers which are expected to astonish the thousands who attend the tournament. Heretofore, in times of war or riot the citizen soldiery has proved itself more tian efficient and there are very few instances on record where it has not been able to cope with almost any situation. The National Military Tournament, however,will enable the people of Illinois to see for themselves just what the militia means and towhat extent it would prove useful in defending this country in times of war. “The object of the National Military Tournament is patriotic in every

Soldiers in Camp.

sense of the word," said Tournament Manager John R. Young. “The Association of Comerce is back of the tournament because it wants the public to see just what our military means Many who are not conversant witfi the national guard are likely to belittle the citizen soldier. They do not know what he'is doing. The national guard is in reality the defense of the state. To it we look for protection at all times and there is no work too hard for the boys who are ready to leave their offices at a moment’s notice and shoulder a gun for duty.”

Chicago Excursion Sunday, July 16 Low rates and special train ns follows: Station Time Fare Leace Rensstlaer 9:15 a. m. 75c Arrive Chicago 12 noon Special train will stop at Cedar Lake In both directions. BASEBALL—SOX vs. WASHINGTON Returning, Special Train will leave Chicago at 11:K P. IL, Sunday, July Id, 1911.

FARMS FOR SALE.

185 acres, one mile from court house, on stone road, R. R., telephone -In house. This farm is all black soil in cultivation. A large tile crosses 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 desirablejiome and will be sold at right prices. 80 acres, all cultivated, good house, and barn, chicken house, good well, good outlet for drainage, on pike road, R. R., telephone and near school Will sell on easy terms or will take trade as first payment. 161 acres, all good land, 15 acres timber, remainder cultivated, and in meadow. There is a four-room house, outbuildings, new fencing, large ditch, and some tile drainage. Mortgage 84,800, 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 thai 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. 25 acres at a bargain, on easy terms On main road near large ditch; has four-room house. 160 acres, in Polk county, Ark., near Oklahoma line, and five miles from railroad. This land libs well and is productive soil. Will- trade clear and pay difference. 80 acres at a bargain, on easy terms five miles out 21 acres, fine black soil, five blocks from court house, cement walks and good well. Sell at a bargain. 160 acres in the wheat belt of Kansas. Will trade clear for property oi land here and pay difference. G. F. M EVERS.

FAIR OAKS.

Mrs. Geo. Lambert, of near Morocco, was here over Sunday. Mrs. Howell, of west of town, made a business trip to Chicago this week. Mrs. Carr is in Monon this week on account of the sickness and death of a brother. Mrs. Borne was called to Lafayette this week on account of the death of her father. Chalmers Fry, of Michigan City was here on business the first of the week. R. W. Fair, who has been staying at the Cottingham hotel for. several Weeks, has gone to Chicago to work. Mrs. Wm. Cottingham and Miss Fannie Nelson visited Dr. Fyfe and family the first of the week. John Kight and family returned home to Indianapolis the first of the week after a week’s visit here and. at Lafayette. Miss Beulah Shehan, of Lafayette came this week for a visit with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Kight. Born, to Lora Brohard and wife, a son, July 10th. Mrs. Thrasher, of Illinois, mother of Mrs. Brohard, is staying with them. The friends of Mr. and Mrs. F. L. McKay held a miscellaneous shower for them Saturday night They received many useful and beautiful presents. The Ladles* Aid of the M. E. church has had the church painted, and it is quite an improvement to the appearance of the town. Nothing speak) plainer of the religious condition of a community than the way the church is kept up. Clark Black, who was famed as a double for the late President Cleveland, died in the hospital at Lafayette Sunday. He was born in 1848, and in the presidential campaigns of the early nineties was in demand throughout the state at big republican rallies. He appeared on a big float in the attitude of a fisherman, and many thought he was the distinguished democratic _ president

Calling Cards at The Republican.

f| £ • I A J ■ n ■ u p p o ■ ii * wj rno DR. R- (I. ENGLTRH wvwtX ewwi MIIIMIB 7 7 ' Night and day calls given prompt at'.enttoii. Residence phene, 11*. Office jhone, ITT. * DB. F. A. TURFLER. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Rooms 1 and 2. Murray Building. Rensselaer. Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings on 300, sal-ience—-X rings on 300. Successfully treats . both acute and ihronto diseases. Spinal curvatures a . <peclmty. DR. E. N. LOY SuccessorOto Dr. W. W. HartSelL HOMEOPATHIST . ifflce—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. omci PKOn 8* Residence College Avenue, Phone I**. Rensselaer, Indiana ——-—— —■ - ' F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon ipooial attention to diseases of women and low grades of fever. office In Williams block. Opposite' Court House. Telephone, office and residence, 442. DR. LM. WASHBURN. ~ mticu.v Atm surgeon lakes a specialty of Diseases of the Over Both Brothers. ARTHUR H. HOPKINS MW, LOANS AND BEAL ESTATE Loans on farms and city property, personal security and chattel tnortgage. Buy, sell and rent farms and city prop>rty. Farm and city fire insurance, iffioe over Chicago Bargain Store. Rensselaer. Indiana. J. F. Irwin S. C. Irwin IRWIN & IRWIN iAW, BEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. » per oent farm loans. Office in Odd bellows' Block. FRANK FOLTZ Lawyer Practices in All Courts Telephone No. 16 E. P. HONAN ATTORNEY AT LAW Law, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance ind Real Estate. Will practice in All the courts. All business attended to <ith promptness and dispatch. gn bmlb gr, XndUm*. H. L. BROWN DENTIST Crown and Bridge - Work and Teeth without Plates a Specialty, tell the atest methods In Dentistry. Gas adnlnlstered fem painless extraction. Ofice over Larsh s Drug Store. t. O. O. F. Building. Phone IM. JOHN A. DUNLAP, Lawyer. Practice in all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. Collection department. , Notary in the office Rensselaer. Indiana. GLASSES FITTED BY~ Dr. A. G. CATT OPTOMETRIST Rensselaer, Indiana. Office over Long’s Drug Store. Phone No. 232.

Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and ths South, Louisvllle and Trench Mok Springs. bbnsbexabb nra bubix. In Effect December 25. 1910. sotTCK Bomro. Mo. 31 —Fast Mail 4:45 a.nu No. s—Louisville Mall .... 11:08 a. m. No. 87—Indpla. Ex. 11:80 a. m. No. 83—Indpls. Mail 1:58 p.m. No. .39—Milk Accom 5:58 p, m. No. 3 —Louisville Ex .». .. 11:05 p.m. ItOBIS BOWJTB. No. 4—Mail 4:69 a.m. No. 40 —Milk Accom 7:85 a.m. No. 32—Fast Mall 10:05 a. m. No. 38 —Indpls-Chgo. Ex. .. 2:58 p.m. No. 6—Man and Ex...... 8:15 p. m. No. 30 —Cin. to Chgo. Mall. 5:68 p.m.. No. 3 and 88 are new trains running between Chicago and Indianapolis and Cincinnati. • , Train No. 31 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 0:15 a. m. No. 14. leaving Lafayette at 4:80 p. m., connects with No. 10•••„ Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 5:03 o. m.

NOTICE Or COMPLETION 07 ASSESSMENT BOLL. To whom it may concern:. Notice is hereby given by the Common Council of the City of Rensselaer, Indiana, that on the 10th day of July, 1911, it approved an assessment roll showing the prima-facie assessments for the following described public improvement as authorized by the improvement resolution named: Improvement Resolution No. for the construction of a sewer from the alley Tn Block 18 to the Make-em-Self >Se Said Improvement is intersected by Angelica and Susan Streets and lies between Cullen and Weston Streets in said city. Persons Interested in or affected by said described public Improvement are hereby notified that the Common Council of said city has fixed July 24th, 1911, as a date upon which remonstrances will be received, or heard, against the amount assessed against each piece of ProJJSJIi described in said roll and will determine the question as to whether such lots or tracts of land have been or will be benefited in the amounts named on said roll, or in a greater or less sum than that named on said roll. Said, assessment roll showing said prima-facie asseswnents, with the names of owners and descriptions' of property subject to be assessed, is on file and may be seen at .the office of the clerk of said city. CHAS. MORLAN. City Clerk. July 12-19. A call has been isuued by Elliott R. Hooton, chief of the new state bureau of inspection, for - the assembling, July 16, of field deputies recently appointed in the factory and boiler inspection departments. Many calls for Inspections caused the order to be sent out fifteen days before it was Intended to open the field work of the bureau.