Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 180, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 August 1911 — Page 4
golden plums. Mrs. Austin Hopkins, ph<rift6 2 * - *■—'■ fw Sale—No. 2 Smith Premier typewriter eta bargain Leslie Clark, - Per Sale—Some full blood Duroc male and female shoats. C. A. Reed, p>iy<f (Sg a ’ Per Sale -Seven lot*, with residence. plenty of small fruit. If sold by Sept let |7OO. Box 217, Rensselaer, Indiana. Per Sale—Sotoe full blood PolondChlnn boar pigs; also full blood Jersey ball. B. a Maxwell, R. D. 1, Rensseuoer, ind^'’ * Per Sale—Krakauer Bros, piano,] new. Mrs Frank Felts. Per Sale—Typewriter ribbons. ReFer Sale—Residence property in Remington for sale' cheap, or will trade for good automobile. Address B. 8. Alkmsn. Newport, Indians. Per Sale er Trade—l Rumley separator, in good repair. Write Ray Light, Ranh, Benton county, Indiana. POT gale Bees and beekeepers’ supp Han. Gall or write for free catalogue Unite Clark. Rensselaer. Par Sale—Hardwood lumber of ail Units; also cord wood. Randolph Wright, R. D. No. I, Rensselaer, or ML Ayr phone No. 20 I. FOR BERT. Par Best—No. 2 Smith Premier typewriter. Leslie Clark, at the Republican office. Far Bent Furnished rooms. Mrs. B. L. Clark. Bar Bent —Well finished, five-room aettage, good location. F. Thompson. WASTED. - Wanted—A private family would like to take two gentlemen boarders. Address Box 39, City. Wonted—Twenty lady clerks at the Ronsford bankrupt sale. Apply at once at the store. Wonted—To buy a ton or so of clover hay. J. D Allman. Wanted—Ta buy n good solid second hand spring wagon. Home Grocery. Wsnise liuusl and traveling salesmen rspran— ling our raliabie goods. Any man of good appearance who la not afi*M e t work can make thin a natlnmßterr sad permanent business. Write at un for terms. Outfit free. Territear unlimited. Big money can be ■jmtq- Apply aulek. Allen Nursery Co., we* x • STOLEN. States—From the J. P. Hammond premises Saturday night, a bicycle} back tire red, Thor coaster brake Information leading to recovery will be rewarded. FARM LOANS 'Without Commission I PET THE Delay 1 bill lit Wlthost Office Charges ______ _ J Without Charges For I DUFY Maklng ° ut or lUflu I Recording Instruments W. H. PARKINSON. AUTOMOBILES. Wo have en ear finer ready for delivery two of those convenient sonnet leal runabouts, completely equipped, for $460. Coll and let us tell iXaaarSit Hiram Day I DMALEB Of !? In rs I I I f pBESSELABB, - - INDIANA j j ■ i .i .1 ■ .I M -1 ...11 11n. His desire to place his money in a plaice where it would be safe, caused William Stein camp, a farmer west of Columbus, to lose more than $506 in a fire. The blaze started from a defective flue and burned his house and outbuildings. Following a robbery in the neighborhood a few days ago, Steincamp hid his money in a trunk the attic. _ No matter what yon wont to sell or .ft mnu t» tar. trr . , Typewriter ribbons tor sale at The RmmliUcaa office. ' ■Si?' • *•
NO STATE FAIR PASSES; REAL MONEY THIS YEAR.
Coin In Turnstile Slot Will Be the Only Way—Plan Tried In Other States. Indianapolis News. The state board of agriculture has decided not to issue passes to the state fair, which will be held the week of Sept 4. It also will make sure that the entire, free list of other years is suspended. No passes will be printed: The fair management intends to make a still more sweeping change in its methods of admissions, and will, duriqs; the coming fair, abolish the use of air kinds of gate tickets. Those who attend the coming fair, Instead of crowding about the ticket booths at the street car terminal, will gd directly from the cars to the gates and will use coins instead of tickets to gain admission. Two kinds of coius will be utilised to operate the turnstiles—a 50-cent piece for adults and a quarter for a child. All the turnstiles at the fair gates will be equipped with slot machines and only coins of the two denominations will work the combinations. The slot machines will be utilized at the grand stand of the race course. The only place about the fair where tickets will be used: will be the night horse show in the colisenm, where each spectator will have a reserved seat. A ticket with a coupon will be necessary to distinguish the reservations.
The coin system of admission, which will be used at the Indiana fair, was thoroughly tried at other large state expositions last year. A number of them have abolished passes and attached slot machines to the turnstiles. The results are said to be bighly satisfactory. It is said that abolishing passes has materially Increased paid admissions and the coin system has done away with tbe handling of many thousand adihission tickets at selling booths and at gates, and has done away with ticket clerical forces. Money changers will be stationed at the street car terminal to make the proper change for persons unprovided with coins to work the turnstiles. “State fair passes have been abolished,” said Charles DowningT*secretary of the board. “The board has long appreciated the fact that the pass evil had grown to large proportions. Many attempts to reduce the free admissions to the number of people actually entitled to them have been trieu without the desired results. The board has come to the conclusion that the only way to correct the evil Is io do away with passes entirely.”
What Five Dollars Did.
Ordinarily $5 is only $5. But sometimes it is more than that. The New York Press relates the following occurrence: A owed sls to B. B owed S2O to C. C owed sls to D. D owed S3O to E. E owed $12.50 to P. P owed $lO to A. All of the persons that these initials represent were seated at the same table. A. having a $5 note, handed it to B, remarking that it paid $5 of the sls he owed B. * B passed the note to C. with the remark that it paid $5 of the S2O which he owed. C passed it to D, and paid with it $5 of the sls that he owed D. D handed it to E, in part payment of the S3O owed him. E gave it t 6 P to apply on account of the $12.50 due him. P passed it back to A, saying, “This pays half of the amount I owe you.” A again passed it to B, saying: “1 now owe you. only $5.” A again passed it to B, saying: “1 now owe you only $5.” B passed it again to C, with the remark: "This reduces my indebtedness to you to $10.” C again paid It to D, reducing his indebtedness to $5. D paid it over to E, saying: ~“I now owe you $20.” E handed it to F, saying: “This reduces my indebtedness to you to $2.60. Again P handed the note to A. saying: “Now I owe you nothing.” A passed it immediately to B, thus cancelling the balance of his indebtedness. B handed it to C, reducing his Indebtedness to $6: C canceled the balance of his debt to D by handing the note to him. O paid it again to E, saying: “Now T owe you $15.” Then E remarked to F: “If you will give me $2.50 this will settle my indebtedness to you.” P took $2.50 from his pocket, handed it to E and returned the $5 note to his pocket, and thus the spell was broken, the single $5 note having paid $82.50, and canceled A’s debt to B, C’s debt to D, E*s debt to F and P’s debt to A, and at the same time having reduced B’s debt to C from S2O to $5, and D’s debt to E from S3O to sls. Phone your Want Adv. to The Republican. Cali Ma, lg.
SPENDS HONEY LIRE WATER.
1 1 ; . ■*. 4 , 9 Alleged Jockey Leaves Troll of Coaaforfeit Bills la Indiana Put L-iS.'. ' id' **■'•.'..t' I t'ifv', t ..z.' • 'l-V Hammond, Ind., July 31.—Civil and Federal officers are looking for a jockey giving the name of Jimmy Wilson and saying he is the winner of two English derbies. Wilson came from Chicago last Saturday in a taxicab with six girls and visited a summer resort park between Hammond and Gary. He literally “spent money like water,” and his two hours’ visit to the park enriched the. concessionaries to the extent of about SSOO. He* was the “livest wire” that ever visited the resort, and wherever he went the girls, who said they were his sisters, also went, begging him not to spend so much money. After Wilßon had left the park venders found a number of counterfeit bills In their cash registers and spotted the jockey as the guilty one. He returned to Chicago by way of Hammond. After he left Hammond secret service men started on his trail.
BRAKEMAN CONFESSES THEFT.
Refuses to Implicate Other Employes Who Are Under Suspicion, fr--Goshen, Ind., July 31.—Alvin Griffith 26 years old, a Lake Shore freight brakeman, is in jail here awaiting trial on the charge of stealing from freight shipments between* Toledo and Elkhart Lake Shore detectives who searched his home say they found conceited there enough ‘men** and women’s wearing apparel to last Griffith and his wife several years, When sweated by the officers, Griffith made a confession. He refuses, however, to implicate otherr employes, whom the authorities are confident have been carrying on similar thefts.
LITTLE BLAZE CAUSES PANIC.
Members of Show Company Stampede, Spreading Alarm to Others. Logansport, Ind., July 13.—Just as the curtain rung up on the matinee performance opening the season at the Broadway Theatre this afternoon, actors and actresses rushed across the stage and out into the body of the house shouting “fire.” Many in the audience were panic stricken and stampeded for the entrances. Before the audience had left the building firemen arrived and '* extinguished a small blaze which had started in the flies. The damage was trivial, but the performance was called off.
GET IN HURRY FOR LICENSE.
North State Retail Dealers and Drug Men Avoid Penalty. Fort Wayne, Ind., July 31. —In the counties of the Twelfth congressional district, and the four additional counties of Marshall, St Joseph, Kosciusko and Elkhart, 645 dealers this month obtained licenses to either retail or wholesale liquors during the ensuing year. Today was the last day on which these licenses could be secured without the payment of a penalty. This Is a slight increase from last year. The figures were compiled today by L. P. Sharp, deputy Tevenue collector for the counties named.
CLOTHES CATCH FROM MOTOR.
Goshen Girl Badly Burned While Riding Near Rushville. Rushville, Ind., July 31.—Miss Lucille Starbuck, of Goshen, narrowly escaped being burned to death near here today when her clothes became ignited from the gasoline tank on the motorcycle which she was riding, the flames enveloping her before her companion could stop the machine and help her. The two finally succeeded in putting the fire out, but not before the girl was badly burned. The machine was destroyed.
IT GROWS HAIR.
Here’s Some Important News for Men Who are Growing Bald. People who have taken our word for It that Parisian Sage is the real hair grower, beautifier and dandruff cure have never been disappointed. Here’s the word of a person who took our word. ' “I have been using Parisian Sage about a year. When I began using it I had only a light “fuzz” on my head. Now I have a good thick, growth, and it is growing thicker and longer right along. Many people don’t believe It can be done, but I know from my own experience with Parisian Sage that It can; I can recommend it in the fullest confidence.”—Gainse Brown, 708 North Fillmore St, Maryville, Mo. The above statement was mode to Dr. C. D. Koch of the Koch Pharmacy, Maryville, Mo., April 29, 1911. Large bottle 50 cents at B. F. Fendig’s and druggists everywhere.
Want to sell It? Our Classified Column will find yon a buyer. - Toucan make a trade at moat any-
HUSTLING FACTORY WORK; LOOKS LIKE A BOOK.
Building Sidewalk—Dozen Houses Will Be Erected. i* \ ■ There is a spirit of real hustle at The Republican man visited there Monday and .was shown over the ground by the vice-president, V. R. Meguire. Several men were at work making cement blocks and others were excavating for the east end of the foundation bf the main building. The foundation of the ware room is completed and the base for the foundation for the main building, except the east end, is completed. The ware room is to be 46x110 feet in dimensions and the foundation is about five feet above the level of tbe ground. It will be filled with earth that height, so that the floor will be on a level with the floors in box cars on tbe siding. The ware room will be only a single story in height. It will be divided into compartments and will have a small tramway through tbe center. Each compartment will be large enough for four truck loads of matches and that will be just a car load. Steel doors will be provided .for each compartment so that the building will be fire proof. The ware room will be located between the main building and the track.
The main building will be 187 feet in length and from 76 to 136 feet in width. It will be 39 to 40 feet in height and practically divided into three stories, although the third floor will be In the shape of a balcony extending around the building. The match boxes will be made on that floor and conducted to the floor below by means of chutes. On the second floor the matches will be made and the main floor will be the machine shop. The building will be a very beautiful one In design. It will be constructed entirely of cement and will be painted whits, a cement paint being used. The blocks now being made are of three sizes, 8x10x24 and 8x8x24 and Bxßxl6-. The blocks are proportioned 1 part of cement to 5% parts of sand. The sand is hauled from a pit south of town and several teams are employed hauling it Thq blocks are being turned out at the rate of 750 per day and there are now several thousand on hand. The construction of the building and the installing of the machinery will be pushed as rapidly as possible and the original plan of having the plant ready to begin operation by Jan. Ist will be beaten if possible. The proprietors claim that they are losing money in big figures every day and they will get started just as soon as they can. They will shortly begin the erection of several houses in the factory addition, and expect to build from eight to a dozen before snow flies. The houses will be made with basements and the earth excavated will be used ip filling up the-foundatlon for the ware room. For this purpose about a thousand square yards of earth will be required. The intention is to extend Elm and Cherry streets through from Melville to the east end of the factory addition and to grade the streets and put the addition into fine condition. The houses will be occupied by men employed in the factory and two or three employees are now ready to begin building as soon as the tract can be resurveyed and staked off. Some of the houses will probably be of cement, with stucco finish so popular in the cities. The factory has the appearance of substantiality and it looks like tbe commercial club did a good thing when It landed it for Rensselaer.
J. A. Beane, of Goshen, secretary of the Northern Indiana Editorial association, has made formal annuoncement of the annual midsummer meeting to be held at Mishawaka, August 10 and 11, in a letter sent to every editor and newspaper man in this half of the state. . -
Attorneys for the electrical trust have submitted to Attorney General Wickersham a decree which it is said they are willing to hove entered against the combination in the government’s suit for dissolution. Tbe significance of this move is that the trust is willing to dissolve without a fight
Demuth, of Peru, hfifc resigned as special deputy in charge of the apiary department in the office of B. W. Douglas, state entomologist, to take a place in the United States department of agriculture at Washington, where hq will be assistant "in apiculture under Dr. Phillips. He will assume his new work August 1.
lOTXCX TO MST •■» HI ■!■■■■
Subscribers to The Even lax Republican will confer a favor upon tbe publishers by reportlnx promptly any failure of delivery upon the part of the carrier boys. The Republican Wlea to rive rood service In tbe delivery as the paper, but cannot do so without too cooperation of subscribers. If you fail to receive your paper notify us promptly by phones IS, 114 or IS3 and your complaint will be civea prompt attention. Phone your Want Adv. to The Republican. Call No. 18. Wont to rest your propsty? u “
, f. ' ‘ . ; S \ 1 i •' Intelligent Mothers - Do not give their children coffee and tea; and ice water is not good for them. The intelligent mother of today keeps cold unaiio ready the entire day and gives the children ail they^want. | Make It this way: I One teaspoonful BONANO to each cup water—boil two • minutes. Let cool, serve with cracked ice and sweeten • to taste; add, if you like it, a slice of lemon—or instead > of lemon try cream. > -BONANO to be served iced requires a little longer boil • than when served hot, as by adding ice tbe strength is > reduced. ■ 75-cup-can 25 cents—order of your grocer. [ INTERNATIONAL BONANO FOOD 00. S’ -V-I fci-r*
HANGING GROVE.
James P. Overtoil was up to his farm a couple of days last week. Mrs. Levi Herr has been sick for several dkys with malarial fever. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Parker visited friends south of Rensselaer Sunday. Miss Mary Bond, of Marshall, Minn., is visiting with Geo. Bond and - family. Mrs. Julius Anderson, of Hammond, is visiting with John Akers and family. E3d Cook is driving a fine new buggy. This will no doubt be the last new buggy Ed will buy for a long time. The largest crop of wheat reported threshed thus far, was that of Wm. McKinney, he having 1,240 bushels. Mrs. Sherman Morris was taken sick Sunday and. her condition became such that a doctor was called out to see her. The trustee and advisory board meet at McCoysburg Tuesday for the purpose of receiving bids for school supplies for the coming school year. Grandma Zabel has been very poorly for the past few days. Friday her condition became almost alarming. However she is very aged and her death is not unexpected at any time. Work was begun on the White county stone road Saturday. A crusher will be installed on the farm where J. C. Ireland lives. Having the material so close at hand, the construction work should proceed rapidly. Joseph Stewart, township president of Sunday schools, visited the McCoysburg Sunday school, Sunday, and set the date for the township convention and arranged the program. It will take place Sunday, August 13th, at 2 P. M. The convention has been delayed for some weeks on account of the sickness of the county president’s wife, Mrs. A. L. Way mire. The program will only be about two hours long, and it is hoped every one will come with the desire of making every moment interesting and instructive. Everybody welcome.
No Adhesive Stamps Except Government Issue on Letters.
The postoffice department has made a ruling which is of general interest, as it prohibits the use of Red Crosß stamps and all kinds of stickers on the address side of letters. The order is:
“No adhesive stamps, or imitations of stamps, of any form, or design whatever, other than lawful stamps, shall be affixed to the address side of domestic mail matter, but such adhesive stamps, provided they do not in form and design resemble lawful postage stamps, and do not bear numerals may be affixed to the reverse side of domestic mail matter.
“All domestic mail matter bearing on the address aide, adhesive stamps or imitation of stamps, other than lawful postage stamps, will be returned to the sender, if known; otherwise they will be forwarded to the division of dead letters.”
Imports into the United States for the fiscal year 1911 were less than In 1910 according to statistics made public Friday by the department of commerce and labor. The value of the year’s imports show a decrease of $19,000,000 or about 2 per cent below imports of 1910.
To establish a uniform system of natural history study in the common schools of Indiana and to use as a basis for this study some form of the biennial report of his office is advocated by George W. Miles, state commissioner of fisheries and game. Charles A. Greathouse, state superintendent of public instruction, expressed favor of such a move, should It ba indorsed by the State Board of
Praiissianal Cards DR. E. C. ENGLISH nnraxcnuur us bummv Night add day calls given prompt attention. Residence phone. 111. Office phone, 177. Himiiliir. TwN DR. F. A. TURFLEH. OSTEOPATHIC FXX£ICXAXT Rooms 1 and 2. Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings on 306, «OMldence—4 rings on 300. “ Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. ~ DR. % N. LOY SuccessoiAto Dr. W. W. Hartnell. HOMEOPATHIST Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. OFFICE non 80 V Residence' College Avenue, Phone I|o. Rensselaer, Indiana. F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. ~ Physician and Surgeon Special attention to diseases of women and low grades of fsvsr. Office in Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence, 442. DB. L H. WASHBURN. physician un nruioa Makes a specialty of Diseases of the Eyes. Over Roth Brothers. - ARTHUR H. HOPKINS RAW, ROARS ARB SUIT. RSTAIR Loans on farms and city property, personal security, and chattel mortgage Buy. sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city fire 'lnsurance Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Rensselaer, Indiana. J. P. Irwin 8. C. Irwin ~ IRWIN A IRWIN LAW, BRAT. RBTATB AND INSURANCE. S per oent farm loans. Office la Odd Fellows' Block. E. P. HosO ATTORNEY A* RAW Law, Loans, Abstract#, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice ia ail the courts. All business* attended to with promptness and dispatch. Rensselaer, H. L.,BROWN DENTIST Crown and Bridge Work and Tooth Without Plates a SpecUfity. A}l too ,^.!SJS:, SS§S«iBr St ace over Lareh's Drag Store JOHN A. DUNLA'P Lawyer. /•; . (Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice in all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. Collection department. Notary in the office Rensselaer. TwSi.m
jtiESSSSSSSSSiSKnSRSiSSSSSSSSSSSAi. vlH* and Trench Risk Springs. In Effect December 2 ”*i»10. SOUTHBOUND. No. 31— Fast Mail 4:46 Am. No. s—Louisville Mall .... 11:04 am. No. 37—Indpla. Ex. 11:24 a- *. No. S3 —Indpla. Mall I:3* p. m. No. S»—Milk Accom 4:48 p. m. Now 3—Louisville EM ,q... 11:05 p.m. NORTH BOVfeS. No. 4—Man 4:42 a.m. No. 40—Milk Accom 7:25 a. m. No. IS—Fast Mall 14:45 a.m. No. 38—Indpla-Chgo. Ex. .. 2:52 pwm. No. 4—Mail and Ex...... 2:14 p. m. No. 24—Ctn. to Chgo. Mall. K:4> P-HL No. 2 and 28 are new trains running between Chicago and Indianapolis and Cincinnati.' Train No. 21 makes oennecUon at M»non for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 4:15 a. m. No. 14. leaving Lafayette at 4:30 p. m., connects with No. 24 m. Motion, arriving at Rensselaer at 4:03 P.».
l" 11 ■■■■■'■ 1 O. W. PLATT * CEMENT CONTRACTOR Sidewalks, Foandatfoas, Cement Blocks. a in work guaranteed. Phone MR Renaoelaer, Ind. Phon® your Want Adv. to The Republican. Call No. 11.
