Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 172, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 July 1911 — Page 4
nxx Til YfflL—llY prM *° ¥ou arwl c **nr sister s«f riKC 111 IUUMI dlOlCtl ering from Woman's Ailments. 1 “a • »om*a. X HBk - "aHmente. I want to tell Mwomwi about Ir ' I WBk mR / *» HS»*MI Milter to our aex. WIMP ' 'WSF JF 1 wantVo send you . tMstoto Im Aft InateMl wttotoeiaMMto iftwta «to yoaoalyatoal UMataaweak or Ims than twooentaaday. it wffi*M i*t*rfMe with yeur werk or occupation. tot Mat m js* ssm sat atom, toll ma to* you ywoSA. **dl wfll saad yay the treatment for ywoMe.yttMlrfryJnpltlnwry RtWriteiHiJMn. l wiU also sendyva*Mleast my book—"WMUUri Mt KMCM MraST* with sapsaatosy WlTatouua showing why **m*n suffer, and to* theyc»n eeslly cure ttosnselTM jft>osae. Sosry *osasashould tore ft, and learn to Sitet I* tsmdt Thea *ton the doctor say*— ***" ■■ wwvsiaßL, you can aeaiav ior yourwix. Tnousanaji or women nare trarea thasealrMotlhiay tomeremedy.. It cutm aS «M ijasag, foJMtos as taaebton, I *Ol explain a gmSMtoase treatment *htsh speedily and effectually cures Leuoorrtoea, Orean fMckneasand gfiMer IrrsralMMeaetruadaatayoung LadleeJßumpnam and health always results from jrouro** toeatttyvrto too* sad*fll gladly Mtt*ay wffsrsr Ito* this Sam Tasiaal really earn all women's diseases, and makra women well, tot seal as tearaMam, and the free tan day's treatment layouts, also ttotosK. Wrtte today, Myo* may not see thte offer again. Addrweo mrs.m.summers, rmh • • Notre Dame, Ind., U.S.A.
Classiflad Coluinii. FOB SALE. Fer Sale—Some full blood PolandChina boar pigs; also full blood Jersey ball. EL C. Maxveil, R. D. 1, Rensseusar, Ind. UMpaeii Hl ~ puan.. MM, .ydf Far Sale—A full blood Poland-China male hog. Isaac W. Wells, phone 528 G. Far Bale—Krakauer Bros, piano, new. Mrs Frank Foltz. Far Sale—Typewriter ribbons. Republican office. Far Sale—Residence property in Remington for sale cheap, or will trade for good automobile. Address B. & Aikman, Newport, Indiana. Far Sale-Four good milch cows, trash now. Riley Tullis, phone 527 E. Bar Salt'- w Trade—i Rumley separator, In good repair. Write Ray Light. Raub, Benton county, Indiana. Far Sale—Bees and beekeepers’ suppliaa. Call or write for free catalogue. Labile Clark. Rensselaer, Indiana. Far Sale—Hardwood lumber of ail kinds; also ebrd wood. Randolph Wright, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, or ML Ayr phone No. 20 I. FOB REXT. Far Rent—Two good typewriters. Leslie Clark, at the Republican office For Rent—Well finished, five-room aattage, good location. F. Thompson WANTED. Wanted—Men wanted for building wooden freight cars. Also handy men to learn. Common laborers also wanted. Car Works, Michigan City, Ind. Wanted To buy a ton or so of clover hay. J. D Allman. Wanted—A load of clover hay. Geo. Healey, phone IS3. Wanted—To buy a good solid second hand spring wagon. Home Grocery. Vtestea Local and traveling salesmen representing our reliable goods Any .man of good appearance who is not apsaid of work can make this a satlatoCtory and permanent business. Write atenoo for tarasa. Outfit free. Territory unlimited. Bl* money can be JgegkApply quick. Allen Nursery Co., AUTOMOBILES. Watch the South Chicage Motor, cycles arrive and depart on the reliability run next Sunday morning, at °™n. iXiargff
and - tUto turn Trench Uek Springs. B«»lwr,al|n W BtBT.B Dooember 26. 1»1>. sown nouns. No. «I—Fast MMI 4:44 a. m Mb. 4—Unfertile Mall .... 11:44 am No. IT—lndpla Ex. ....... 11 :*• atn No. St —Indpla. Mall 1:64 p. m No. n-MUkAowm 6:64 p. tn. Na 3 js. ■_■ 11:46 p.m. Na 4—Maff'T” 1:63 am Na 44—Milk Aecom T:36 a tn Na 44—Suit Maa 16:45 am Na ti IndSleChgo. Ex. .. 3:53 p.m Na 4—Main and Ex 4:16 p.m. Na 44—Om to Chgo. Mall. 6:64 p. nW Na 4 and 44 are new trains running bslweuu Chicago and Indianapolis and Train Na 41 makes connection at Ma non for Lafayette. arriving at Lafayette at 4:16 a tn. Na 14. leaving Lafayette at 4:44 p. m_ connects with Na 36 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 4:41
Solved S Deep Mystery. "I want to thank yon from the bottom of my heart,” wrote C. B. Rader, of Lewisburg, W. Va. “for the wonderful double benefit I got from Electric Bitters, in curing me of both a severe case of stomach trouble and of rheumatism, from which I bad been an almost helpless sufferer for ten years. I It suited my case as though made just for me." For dyspepsia, indigestion, jaundice and to rid the system of kidney poisons that cause rheumatism, Woctric Bitters has no equal. Try aem. Every bottle is guaranteed to
NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.
Mrs. Johanna Meisenberger, 62, was burned to death Wednesday at Evansville by the explosion of a gasoline stove. . Arch Snow, a farmer, who lives four miles from Bedford, was found lying paralysed in a field. He was bitten by a. large black spider. His condition is serious. Referee Harry C. Sheridan, in the United States district court, has found the Planett Lumber Manufacturing company, of Laporte, an involuntary bankrupt The wheat crop at the Indiana Village for Epileptics, north of Newcastle, is one of thtobest' in Henry county. The average is a little over 27 bushels to the acre and the total of the crop, as weighed at the elevator, is 3,107 bushels. In announcing the designation of fifty additional second - clffss postbfflces in twenty-six separate states as postal savings banks. Postmaster General Hitchcock Wednesday declared the system was growing in favor with the public. This, he said, was especially true in the western states. Dr. George L. Andrew, 89, who was chief inspector of sanitary commission in the Army of the Potomac and of the Army of the West, died Wednesday at Laporte. He was a member of the Sons of the American Revolution and was active for many years in the leading medical associations of the country. John A- .Jones, living two miles north bf Fairmont, is believed to have established a new record for wheat production in the state, a twenty-acre field averaging a little more than fiftyfive bushels to the acre. A second field of eight acres on the same farm averaged forty bushels to the acre. There will be no passes to the Indiana state fair, which will be held during the week of Sept 4, and there will be no tickets. The state board of agriculture has decided to instal! slot machine turnstiles, which will be worked by 50 cent pieces when adults wish to go through and 25 cent pieces for children.
Death in Roaring Fire
May not result from the work of firebugs, but often severe burns are caused that make a quick need for Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, the quickest, surest cure for burns, wounds, bruises bolls, sores. It subdues inflammation. It kills pain. It soothes and heals. Drives off skin eruptions, ulcers or piles. Only 25c at A. F. Long’s.
FARMS FOB SALE.
65 acres, six miles out, corn land, good buildings. $75. Terms, $1,500 down. 160 acres, 140 tillable, fair improvements. $45. Terms, $1,500 down. 600 acres good land, good buildings. Will trade. 160 acres in Kansas, 160 acres in Arkansas, and a $5,000 mortgage note; will trade together or separate and pay cash difference. 21 acres, four blocks from court house. 25 acres improved; terms easy.
Saves Two Lives.
"Neither my sister nor myself might be living today, if it had not been for Dr. King's New Discovery,” writes A. D. McDonald, of Fayetteville, N. C., R. F. D. No. 8, ’“for we both had frightful coughs that no other remedy could help. We were told my sister had consumption. She was very weak and had night sweats, but your wonderful medicine completely cured us both. It's the best I ever used or heard of.” For sore lungs, coughs, colds, hemorrhage, lagrippe, asthma, hay fever, croup, whooping cough—all bronchial troubles—its supreme. Trial bottle free. 50c and SI.OO. Guaranteed by A. F. Long.
"Generally debilitated for years. Had sick headaches, lacked ambition, was worn-out and all run-down. Burdock Blood Bitters made me a well woman.”—Mrs. Chas. Freltoy, Moosup, Conn.
GEO. F. MEYERS.
NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.
Lewis Strang, the famous automobile driver, was killed Thursday near Blue River. Wis., when his car turned turtle. Slipping on a wet brick. Miss Mlnnetta Taylor, prominent club woman and author, of Greencastle, fell heavily on the sidewalk and was seriously injured Wednesday evening. Roberts, a small place southwest of Lafayette, reports an epidemic of infantile paralysis. One child is dead, and three others are in a critical conditions from the disease. For the first time since Mt. Clemens, Mich., became a .combined health resort and a “Monte Carlo,” the city is actually without gambling. It is a result of Governor Osborn’s ultimatum. As a result of a public market in South Bend, it is expected that the high cost of farm products and poultry will be greatly reduced. The market will be in the heart of the city. Henry. King, of Huntington, has sued seven saloonkeepers of that town for |21,500 judgments. He alleges they sold his son liquor, and that while the boy was intoxicated he was struck by a train and killed. Fred Couch, of South Bend, was supposedly drowned at Kalamazoo, Mich., but when the police went to notify his family they found the man himself at work driving an'ice wagon. He nearly fainted on hearing the report of his death.
Major David C. Peyton, general superintendent of the Indiana reformatory at Jeffersonville, has announced the appointment of Dr. Halstead Murat, of Bethlehem, Clark county, as physician at the institute, to succeed Dr. H. H. Smith, who has accepted a position as physician at an iron works in Youngstown, Ohio. After a search of several weeks Peter P. Atkins, 33, was arrested at Richmond, this state, charged with being a bigamist, forger and robber. His operations, according .to Superintendent Gorman of the Richmond police department, have extended over the eastern and middle western sections of the United States. The board of regents of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor has accepted the resignations of Professor Gardner S. Williams and J. M. Griffith, both important men in the civil engineering department. The trouble arose over establishing a new chair in engineering mechanics. A fellowship of SI,OOO was established for a new course in railway transportation.
Weather Bureau Reports Summer Driest in Sixteen Years.
Weather Bureau officials, following an investigation of statistics on precipitation, announce that the present summer is the driest in sixteen years. The aggregate rainfall since Jan. 1 has been 8.83 inches less than the average. The total rainfall from Jan. 1 to July 20 was 15.52 Inches, while the normal amount of precipitation for the time is 24.5 inches. This deficiency is the largest since the summer of 1895, when the total deficiency was 14.49 inches. In 1899 and 1901 there was much dry weather and a corresponding deficiency in precipitation, but in neither of these years was the departure from normal so marked as this year.
Irrigation Instead of Drainage May Eventually Be Needed.
The drouth on the Kankakee marsh still continues, and the land owners there who have labored long and spent great amounts of money ditching the water away, will soon commence figuring on a way to irrigate from wells, says the Crown Point Star. It doesn’t seem plausible that they have overdone the matter of shutting the water out, but nevertheless it is gradually drying and it will not be surprising that time will necessitate irrigating ditches.
From a|l indications the honey crop will be an almost entire failure this year. In Jasper and surrounding counties, -where last year the crop was so large that the bee keepers could hardly take care of it, this year there bas tardly been a pound of surplus. B. F. Cavanaugh, a large bee keeper living near Hebron, who keeps over 600 colonies' of bees, has not yet taken off a pound of honey. X. Geesa, of near Virgie, another large bee keeper, report&the same conditions, as do the other large bee kedVers in the county. Jasper county can generally depend on a good fall flow of honey, but this year indications do not point that way. Only a few points in the whole United States report a good crop of honey this year.
Cheapest accident insurance—Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil. Stops the pain and heals the wound. All druggists sell It x. ♦ ■
NOTICE TO BAHT SUBSCNXBNRS. Subscribers to The Evening Republics* will confer a favor upon the publishers by reporting promptly any failure of delivery upon the part of the carrier boys. The Republican tries to give good service in the delivery of the paper, but cannot do so without the cooperation es subscribers. If you fall to receive your paper notify ua promptly by phones 14, 114 or 164 and your complaint will bo given prompt attonttao.
«888 bBBBBBMBBI MB V MBMK b fig *bl B MB BK B B BL. B *isl w t* B B IB >■ M I B™ ■ ■ HJI W MB r Iwlß ■ I iBl KMI W iWr ■ ■ I i wl stni f w s — « .■/■?,<- « :•:/' ’ ■ - ' . .' ■ . '- /v ~ “ The Onward Sweep of City Government by Commission By JUDSON C. WELLIVER. Ts you were asked today to vote on this question, “Should or should not my own city adopt the commission plan of government,” could you honestly cast an intelligent ballot? Do you thoroughly understand how this new plan of civic management actually works, what it means and how it gets results Then read this informative article —the . first complete analysis of the new system of city government ever published. Mr. Welliver has made a national research for facts and figures. He offers a fund of timely and helpful advice. Ybu must know this subject thoroughly if you are to discharge the full duty of citizenship. Stubbs, Master of Traffic By ISAAC F. MARCOSSON Stubbs was Harriman’s right hand man. Stubbs succeeded to his high post because he was original as well as able. He followed no precedents. One of his fancies is that no man should work after he reaches sixty-five. He resigned at this age. To read why Stubbs did this and many other unusual things is more interesting than most fiction. It is a virile story of a virile man. How Oug h t to Spci 1 By BRANDER MATTHEWS. Why should you puzzle over the simplest words? Why should the opinions of two or three men set a standard? Why should common sense give way ‘to tradition and obsolete forms? Prof. Matthews says simplicity in spelling must ultimately prevail. He makes several very good suggestions that you will do well to adopt Forceful Editorials & on the current topics of the day, of particular interest to busy men and women, who are keen for fresh viewpoints on the important questions before the world. There is a particularly illuminating one this month on the average American .politician. It '£ cannot be called complimentary. ■ - ■.-Ss NEW SERIAL 10 SHORT STORIES . / “Counsel for the Defense” is the title of a new serial by Leroy Scott. The short stories are from the pens of the best writers of this class of literature and each is selected, • like all Munsey stories, for its dash of adventure, its note of sentiment or its quaint turn of humor. Of interest to investors—hundreds of readers are pinning their faith to the authoritative discussions in The Financial Department. * » . . • , ' '. The Stage / Prospects for Next Season Storiettes 10 Cents a Copy On All News-Stands Or Direct From the Publishers The Frank A, Munsey Company* 175 Fifth Avenue, New York I FOR AUGUST
Blind Tiger Pleasure Resort Raided in Carroll County.
Delphi Journal. The premises of M. N. Sibert, the custodian of the Patrick farms in Adams township, were searched last Saturday evening by Sheriff Blue, Marshal Metz and .Deputy Prosecutor JSmes Obear, in response to a warrant chaging him with conducting a “blind tiger.” For some time Sibert has conducted what might be termed a “pleasure garden” at his home among the hills, a mile east of Carrollton bridge. Benches and tables were placed about on the lawn and ice cream and other refreshments (non-alcoholic) were served. He had built quite a reputation and business for himself. . Lately he began serving booze, taking no pains to keep it a secret, 1h fact even advertising It by word df mouth. Then the hand of the law caught him by the slack of the jeans and presented
him to the tender mercies of Squire Collins, who upon his pleading not guilty, bound him over to the' circuit court under S2OO bond. Sibert is about thirty-five years of age. He has pale, sharp features, wears a spiritual expression, sternly Puritanic dress and a broad rimmed, Quaker hat, which, until recently, covered a shock of shoulder length hair. He first attracted public notice when he printed at his little printshop in the hills, a circular carrying his picture, a Dowie-like pose, long hair, etc... with glaring type underneath announcing to whom it might concern, that he was the Christ Later, realizing how unremuherative the job of “Savior” was, he undertook private detective work, and finally ended with the alleged illicit beer garden—quite a come down. It seems that religious fanaticism is a trait of the Sibert family. Manson’s father attempted to demonstrate, before a large audience at one time.
his Heaven sent gift of walking on the water. He had built a wooden platform under the surface of theWabash river near his home, and was progressilg marvelously with hie exhibition, when he stepped off the edge of the structure and plunged over his head in the muddy water. I The Sibert family furnished Man- 1 son’s bond and he is at home in the hills, awaiting the trial. Bilious? Feel heavy after dinner Tongue coated? Bitter taste? Complexion sallow? Liver needs waking up. Doan’s Reguleta care bilious attacks 25 cents at any drug store. A number of the wives of Columbus men who become* intoxicated have sent written notices to saloon keepers of the city warning them against selling their husbands liquor. “Do not sell my husband any more liquor or I will have you prosecuted,” is the way most of the notices read.
