Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 188, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 August 1911 — Page 4

In fhn MAKE A LARUE POT OF *Mv*«ta**v When cool pour into bottles and place In your ice box—or the next coolest place. Then you have a supply of the most refreshing drink ready for all day. When the children are tired and thirsty give them all they want and drink all you want yourself. It's only good. p MAKE IT THIS WAT: pf One teaspoonful BONANO to each cup water—boil two minutes. Let cool, serve with : cracked ice, and sweeten to taste —a dash of lemon if you ke. Or, instead of the lemon, try : cream. BONANO to be served iced requires a little longer boil than when served hot, as by adding Ice the strength is reduced. j 75 cup can 25 cents —of your grocer. International Banana Food C*, Chicago, Illinois.

Clmilad Calm. FOE.SALE. For Sale— No. 2 Smith Premier typewriter at a bargain. Leslie Clark, at The Republican office. Fer Bale— Some full blood Duroc ffiale and female ahoats. C. A. Reed, phons 535 A. Fer tale— Seven lots, with residenee, plenty of small fruit If sold by Sept Ist 9700. Box 217, Rensselaer, Indiana. Per tale— Krakauer Bros, piano, now. lira Frank Foltz. Fer ribbons. Repabllcan office. Fer Sale— Residence property in Remington for sale cheap, or will tfhta for good automobile. Address B. S. Aikman, Newport Indiana.* For Sale— Bees and beekeepers* supplies. Call or write for free catalogue Leslie Clark, Rensselaer. Indiana. Fer Sale— Hardwood lumber of ail kinds; also cord wood. Randolph Wright, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, or Mt Ayr phone No. 20 I. FOE RENT. Fer Heat— No. 2 Smith Premier typewriter. Leslie Clark, at the Republican qffice. For Beat— Furnished rooms. Mrs. H. L. Clark. For Bent— Well finished, five-room oottage, good location. F. Thompson. ’ WANTED. Wanted— Girl for general housework. Apply to Mrs. Wm. Lee, 2 equates east of jail, or address box 41. Wanted— To buy a ton or so of clover hay. J. D Allman. Wanted— To buy a good solid second hand spring wagon. Home Grocery. Wnntod Luusl and tmveUno sales■w representing our reliable rood*. Ahy man of good appearance who la not afraid of work can make thia a satlafUctory and permanent bualnaaa. Write ag onoe for term* Outfit free. TerriWk unlimited. Big money can be nm Allen Nursery Co.. TAKEN UP. Taken Up— Sunday, Aug. 6th, a 300pound sandy colored sow. Owner may have same by proving property and paying expenses. J. C. Ireland, southeast corner Hanging Grove township. FOUND. Fannd — Part of auto speedometer, apparently from Ford. Call here, prove property, and pay for this FARM LOANS 'Witbout Commission I PET THE Delay I llul IML Without Office Charges M A 11 H IB Without Charges For 011 ■r I MaklnK Out or HUH II 1 Recording Instruments . ' * W. H. PARKINSON. II 11 " ■ i . ■ AUTOMOBILES, ME Wa have on our floor ready for delivery two of those convenient economical runabouts, completely equipped, for 1600. Call and let us tell Ho matter what you want to sell or what you want to buy, try a elaesi-

BENATOR FRYE.

\ (Continued from Pago One.) *

come to me and of the confidence that has been reposed in me than I do of money.” Senator Cullom now becomes the ranking senator in point of longest service. William P. Frye was born in Lewiston, Me., on Sept 2, 1831. He graduated at Bowdoin College, Me., in 1850, studied and practiced law, was a member of the State Legislature in 1861, 1862 and 1867, was mayor of the city of Lewiston in 1866 and 1867, was attorney general of the state of Maine in 1867, 1868 and 1869, was elected a member of the national republican executive committee in 1872 and reelected in 1876 and 1880. He was a presidential elector in 1864, a delegate to the national republican conventions in 1872, 1876 and 1880; elected chairman of the -republican state committee of Maine in place of Hon. James G. Blaine, resigned, in November, 1881. He was elected president pro tempore of the Senate Feb. 7, 1896, and was a member of the commission which met in Paris in 1898 to adjust terms of peace between the United States and Spain. His term of service would have expired in March, 1913. Senator Frye was appointed one of the American commissioners to negotiate the treaty of peace with Spain, which was signed in Paris Dec. 10, 1898. The commission was composed of William R. Day, Senator Cushman K. Davis, William P. Frye, Whitelaw Reid and Senator George Gray. Mr. Frye was third In rank, and his name appears in that order on the great document Senator Frye was a jingo and was touchy on the subject of American honor and interests. He always was ready for a fight with England, France or any other country which courts a conflict. But he would drop any of these entrancing pursuits for an afternoon’s play spell with one of the youngster’s who claimed him for ancestor. Mr. Frye was the stanch friend of any man he liked. When a prominent democrat- representative one day impunged the fairness of one of Speaker Carlisle's rulings, Frye was out of his seat in an instant, his eyes flashing and his right arm in air. “The - imputation is unworthy he cried. “On this side of the House”— with a sweeping gesture toward his fellow republicans—“we consider the gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Carlisle) the jewel of the democratic party!” The effect was electric. The great body of democrats joined with the republicans in drowning the generous outburst with cheers, and the speaker’s accuser was driven from the floor in discomfiture.

HANGING GROVE.

Mrs. Belle Stultz spend Sunday with Mrs. S. E. Fulk. Mrs. Belle Stultz and son George were in Rensselaer Monday. Chas. A. Lefler is building a fine big cattle barn for Simon Cook. J. A. Whitlow’s baby has cholera infantum and has been quite poorly for several days. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Armstrong, of Barkley, visited with Mr. and Mrs. R. C. McDonald Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. E- Ranton and children from Phoenix, Ariz., are visiting W. C. Rose and family. Jay and John Wood and Bernice Long, of Rensselaer, are visiting the boys’ grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Phillips. Carl McCombs returned to his home near Fairmount Thursday, after a few days visit with his uncle, Reed McCoy and wife. Mrs. George Bond and son Georgie went to Dayton Tuesday evening for a few days visit with her sister, Mrs. Finch Jennings and family. A force of men has been at work this week on the Monon railroad putting in connecting wires on the rails, to be used in operating the automatic block system. Two wires are used at each joint, and are inserted through a hole which is drilled through the thin part of the rail, and then wedged with a plug. This work is done very rapidly and requires scarcely any more time than if they were drilling through, wood.

LOCAL MARKETS. Corn—sßc. Wheat—Boc. Oats—3sc. * Hens—B%c. Springs—llc. Ducks, old—7c. Ducks, Young—9c. Roosters—4c. Turkeys—B%c. Eggs—l2c. Butter—lsc to 20c. Can’t look well, eat well or feel well with impure blood feeding your body. Keep the blood pure with Burdock Blood Bitters. Eat simply, take exercise, keep clean and you will have long life. Want to rent your property T Usn ov classified column.

THE MACHINE ON IKE EARN

Centuries ago men plowed with * crooked stick and reaped with a sickle They are doing the same thing in tb< same way today in some parte ot th< world, but not in America. The development of farm machinery has been very slow. The modert reaper is only about 50 years old. Tlu automatic binder came into use as lat. as 1877. Gasoline engines on the faru were practically unknown ten yean ago and the disc harrow, the inosf useful of farm implements, has beet used only since 1854. The modern grainheader Is a new machine. Our old friend Pliny de

Does many times the work of the horse plow.

scribes a header which was used ir his time. It was “a large, hollow frame armed with teeth for driving through standing grain so that the heads were torn off and fell into the frame.” That is a pretty good de scription of the modern header. In Pliny’s time a slave and an ox could harvest as much as an acre a day ii they worked hard. The first reaper was propelled by horses or oxen and it was death tc animals. It took four horses or two yoke of oxen to drag the heavy wooden machinery through the grain and a man walked along side to drag the bundles off with a rake. The principles of the first reaper are in use today, with Improvements on the details. First was added a seat for a man who raked off the bundles, then the Self-raker. The first harvesting machine me: with great opposition because it was believed that the use of them would put the farm laborer out of business It took a long time to overcome the prejudice against these machines, just as it did to remove the objections to the sewing machine, the cotton gin.

Does the Work of Twenty Men.

the automobile and almost every other labor-saving invention. The first power brought to the aid of man came from the wind and water. The wind was harnessed to sails and the wind-mill was born, but It took 200 years to devise a practical machine driven by gas or coal or wood. The water-wheel has been in use for hundreds of years and is still in use in many parts of this country, doing its work; slowly, it is true, but thoroughly and well. The horse-power sweep is only a little more than a hundred years old. This was considered a wonderful improvement over wind power and the water-wheel, and men thought they had reached the limit of power ana invention. Electricity, as applied to power, is only twenty-five years old. It is now used on thousands of farms where the supply from electric railways or other large plants is available, but the cost of installation and the high price of electricity have so far prevented rapid development for farm work. The gas-engine dates from 1791. but it was not brought into economical use and practice until 1882. During the past thirty years hundreds of patents have been issued for gas engines and they are now used on thousands of farms in nearly every State in the Union. The fuel used in gas engines is gasoline and the cost of running these machines has been eo greatly reduced during the past ten years, and they are made in such a large variety of sixes, that they are available to almost every farmer, no matter what his requirements may be. Tbs' traction engine has been a optent factor in the rapid development of the big farms of the west. Formerly, a man with -a team of horsoa was able to turn over an

The machine that feeds the soil.

average of acres a day, now, a gang of plows hitched to a traction engine, managed by two men, will tarn over from 25 to 30 acres per day. Vent tracts of land in the western statM Mfcfak were considered un-

profitable under the old method o» farming, have, by means of the trao tlon and gang-plow, been brought Into profitable farms. A week*! work with 15 or 20 plows or discs dragged by a traction engine is i quarter section. On the large farms where' the traction engine is in gen oral use it is estimated that the dally cost of operating a gang of plows le about .17.00 while the cost of horses and men to do the same work would be from |17.00 to SIB.OO per day. Traction engines are used to draw harvesting machines, wagon-trains of grain to market, and do every other kind of work on the farm. Wooden plows and harrows, which were formerly used, have been al most entirely discarded for imple meats made of steel. One of thg most important implements in ths cultivation of the soil la the disc harrow. The discs are arranged in gangs and pulverize the ground at a more rapid rate and leave it in bet ter condition than any other imple ment next to the harrow. The corn-harvester and binder has been wonderfully Improved during the past two years. Only a short time ago the corn crop, the heaviest grown on the farm, had to be harvested by hand, a hill at a time, cut by a single blade. Now, a machine drawn by two horses moves along ths rows of standing corn cuts the stalks, binds them into bundles while standing upright, and slides them to the ground "ready to be put up into

For field or road.

shocks. This means better fodder because it Is cleaner and cures better. The modern manure-spreader has yearly added millions to the country’s crops. Instead of hauling out the -accumulation of the barns and stables and distributing It over the fields In chunks or scattering it along the rows of corn, manure is now loaded into a box mounted on wheels and when this is driven Onto the fields a set of rotary fingers rolls the manure out at the tail end of the box, distributing It evenly over every portion of the ground., ' ' The manure-spreader makes it possible to use manure as fast as made, and in this way the highest possible value Is obtained from it. This machine makes manure go very much further than when distributed in the old way. Perhaps it is not saying too much to Assert that it is the most valuable machine in use on the farm today. The scarcity of farm labor during the past few years has been a hard problem, and has caused great loss to thousands of farmers who have been unable to operate their farms to their

Revolutionizing farming methods.

full capacity on thia account. Laborsaving machinery has, to, a great extent, solved thia problem, a farmer with one man may now, if he la supplied with riding plows, cultivators*,' corn planters, hay-racks, mowers, hay-loaders, corn harvesters and other machines necessary to take care of the heavy crops, do as much work, and do it better than he could with the aid of half a dozen men without machinery.

COWS IT US TIME

When the time for parturition draws near remove the cow to a comfortable box stall and provide her with a good bed of straw and feed her about what good ensilage and hay she will eat with a relish and give her an abundance of pure water. This will give her the proper stimulus of distention and prepare her for an easy and safe parturition. When parturition takes place. If the presentation'la natural, the fore feet are seen first, and the head lying on, and partly between the legs, a little below the knees. If the calf makes Its appearance In any other form ft is unnatural and the chances are the cow will require assistance. Ths calf must be brought to its natural position when the cow, if not exhausted, will go through the act without further trouble. As soon as the cow has dropped her calf she may have a pall of warm water and a quart of whole oats soaked In hot water. 1 have made a practice of using whole oats for they have a tendency to help. I do not state this as an assured fact, but many of the best feedsn hare great faith in whole oats as an agent to assist in expelling the placenta If the placenta la not expelled lx from six to eight hours ft should be removed Mr • •hums kmms

BOAT FOUNDERS IN FOG; NINETY-THREE MEET DEATH.

Passenger Steamer in Collision With An (English Vessel, Sinks In Gibraltar Straits. Gibraltar, August 9.—The French steamer Emir floundered today five miles east of Tarifa, Spain, in the Straits of Gibraltar. Ninety-three persons were drowned. The ship sailed from here at 3 o’clock this morning for a, Moroccan port An hour later in a dense fog she collided with the British steamer Silverton, bound from Newport, England, for Taranto, Italy. The crew of the latter rescued twenty-seven of the Emir’s crew and passengers. The Silverton later put in here with her starboard bow stove in and her forepeak full of water. The Emir sank a few minutes after the collision. Sixty-nine passengers and twenty-four of the crew went down with the ship. Twelve of the crew and fifteen passengers were saved. All the passengers were French. The Emir was a vessel of 1,291 tons and was owned by the Compagnie De Navigation Mixte, Meseilles.

FAIR OAKS.

Mrs. Leslie Warren is quite sick again. Mrs. A. M. Bringle went to Chicago last Week. John Staple Sundayed at the Cottingham hotel. Mrs. Nim Littlefield and children visited here Sunday. Mrs. Isaac Kight went to Lafayette the last of the week. Miss Carrie Stowers is assisting Mrs. Cottingham this week. Cal Burroughs is building an addition to his blacksmith shop. Ben Zellar’s cow was killed by the northbound train Tuesday afternoon. Miss Wilda Littlefield, of Rensselaer, is visiting this week at F. R. Erwjp’s. Florence- McKay and Kate Trump visited over at Enos at the gravel road camp last week. Miss Ella Cox, sister of the Cox boys here, was married Wednesday, in Shelby, lowa. > Walter McConnell has quite a force of men and teams putting up hay, baling and shipping it. Frank Cox had the misfortune to break one of the bones in his hand this week by falling from his bicycle. The dry weather does not seem to have attested the pickle and melon crops. The pickles are beginning to come in pretty lively, and Mr. Bozelle has shipped several carloads, besides all that have been sold here, and still there’s more to follow.

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. GKO. F. MEYERS. MUST OBEY AUTO LAW. V ■ ■ , . h ■ . A number of local auto owners are guilty of various infractions of city, and state automobile laws. We wish to have all understand that we will arrest all violators, without favor, persons who exceed the speed limit, who drive at night without lights, or who do not have their machines properly numbered will be arrested. We hope that all will heed this warning GEORGS MUSTARD, Marshal, FRANK CRITBER, Nightwatch Church of God Services. Elder H. V. Reed, of Chicago, will preach Sunday morning and evening. He wljl be glad to meet and greet his many friends. His subjects will be “His Star in the East,” and “The Temporal and Eternal.” A cordial invitation is extended to all. Sister Monica (Mary O’Connor), age 82, is dead at St Mary’s college and academy, South Bend. She was for fifty-seven years a member of the Sisters of the Holy Cross and was well known in Catholic circles through her religious activities. During the last ten years she has attended to her duties only with the greatest difficulty, having been almost totally blind. While William W. Jett, a Columbus grocer, was sittingon a porch at his home, enjoying his after supper cigar, he was held up and robbed by two highwaymen. One of the robbers held a revolver on Jett while the otiier one searched his pockets and relieved him of $6. |l J— I ■■ Before Anderson policemen could arrest Jesse Warner on a charge of larceny. It was necessary to shobt at him three times. He is accused of stealing a horse and light wagon there A ClsesMiil Adv, will find it

Prutmtol Cirte W— .I .■■Ai.m. sis* iiwSimiMmi IF.. I ini I I mm Ills DR. E. 0. ENGLISH pxykoxax amd mnuHMar BensselMr, Xnd. ' DR. F. A. TURFLJML ~ OBTBOPATHIC PHYBICIAB Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building. Rensselaer. Indiana. • Phones. Office—2 rings on 300, mstdeuce—3 rings on 30#. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a A DR. E. N. LOT , SuccessorAto Dr. W. W. Hartsell. tcmeopathxst Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east ox court house. office PHOMS as Residence College' A venue. Phone 133. XnAUuuu F. H. HEMPHILL. M. £ Physician and Surgeon Bpeolal attention to disease* of women and low grades of fever. Office in Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence, 443. ~ DR.LIL WASHBURN. PHYSICIAN AMD SVBGEOM Make* a specialty of Diseases of the Eyes. " Over Doth Brother*. 7 ARTHUR H. HQPKINS LAW, LOADS AMD DEAL MTATD iguana on farms and cUy property, personal security and chattel mortgage. Buy, sell and rent farm* and city property. Farm and city fire insurance Offioe over Chicago Bargain Store. J. I*. Irwin S. C. Xrwiß IRWIN A IRWIN LAW, BBAL ESTATE AMD XMBVB ANOB. ■ 4 per oent farm loan*. Office in Odd Fellows' Block. E. P. HONAN ATTORNEY AT LAW Law, Loan*, Abstract*, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice in all the court* All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. itnsiiliir. Enffiana. H. L. BROWN DMMTXST Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. AH ■ the latest methods in Dentistry. Gag administered for painless extraction. Office over Harsh's Drug Store. JOHN A. DUNLAP Lawyer. (Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice in all court* -S Estates settled. Farm Loan* Collection department. Notary in the office Rensselaer. Yndian* GLASSES PITTED BY Dr. A. G. CATT OPTOMETRIST BiniiilMij XuAismu Office over Long’s Drag Store. Phone No. 333.

Chicago to Northwest, XndlaaapoUa, Olnoinwatl, and the South, atoms* villa and French Xdok Springs. unixuxx TESTS Stif In Effect December >6, j SOUTH BOUND. ’ fl No. 31—Fast Mali 0.4:|5 a.m. I No. 6—Louisville Mall .... 11 :M a. m. fl No. 37—Indpls. Ex. 11:80 a. BL I No. 33—Indpls. Mall 1;68 p. m. fl No. as—Milk Accom ...... fl No. B—Louisville8 —Louisville Ex .a... 11:®# p. m. fl MONTH BOUND. No. 4—Mail 4:88 a.m. 1 No. 40— Milg Accom ....... 7:38 am. ' No. 33—Feat Mail 10:M a.m. No. 38 —Indpls-Chgo. Ex. .. 3:83 p. m. No. B—Mali and Ex 3:l# p-m. No. 10—Cin. to Chgo. Mall. 6:88 p.m. No. 3 and 88 are new trains running between Chicago and Indianapolis ana Cincinnati. Train No. 81 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 8:18 a m. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 1:80 p. m., connbets with No. 18, at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 4‘.03 na

Cbitato Excursion YU Ths e))(uq»hMS»u>f bsmiiifiMgtU ' Sunday, Aug 13 Lew rates and special train as follows: Monon 8:5 fiRLM Lv. Monon B:sfi a. hl fLM Lv. Rensselaer »tls a. hl 76c * Ar. Chicago ...tttfifim. Special Train wttl step at CEDAR LAKE hi both directions. BASE BALL CUBS vs. ST. LOUIS SOX vs. DETROIT Returning, Special Train will leave Chicago at U:Sfi P. K, Bunday, August IS, 1911. “My child was burned terribly about the face, neck and cheat I applied Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil. The pain ceased and the child sank Into a rentful sleep.”—Mrs. Nancy M. Hanson, Hamburg, N. Y., Pheno your Want Adv. to The Ro- ' publican. Call Na IS..