Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 225, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 September 1911 — Page 4
-Vs I JKi jMk dNh twS BV SMI Mfel MB WB FOB SALE. F*r Sale—We have some extra show cases, scale* and other fixtures to sell cheap. Home Grocery, Rensselaer, Indiana. i —■—■■■ White Wyandotte hena and 20 pullets; will sell cheap if taken at ones. ApplytoW.ADavenFor Sale or Trade—A 100-acre farm; also city property for an 80-acre farm. Inquire of Bob Michal. For Sale—Good, almost new, base burner. Id inch pot, cost |55; will sell for |U if taken at once; also coal stove, practically new, cost |35; will sell for S2O. RV. Ransford. Far Sale—Fresh cow. J. F. Mitchell, K mH® north of Egypt school house, Jordan township. An extra fine butter cow. For Sale—Seven lots with residence; plenty of fruit. Will sell or trade; will take team and wagon as part payment Granville Aldrich. r For Salo—6oo bushels of extra good Rudy seed wheat, guaranteed free from rye. F. Thompson, Parr, Ind. For Sale—Hardwood lumber of ail kind*; also cord wood. Randolph Wright, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, or Mt Ayr phone No. 20 1. FOB BENT. JP* Bent—lo-room house, 1 block from court house, corner Harrison and Front streets. Possession given October Ist A. Leopold. For Bent—Six-room flat over McKay laundry; a first class apartment that can be rented reasonably. Inquire of Geo. H. Healey or H. R. Karris. WANTED. Wanted—Companion and nurse for elderly invalid lady. G. F. Meyers. Wanted—Family washings. Laura Wiseman, north of railroad. Wanted—To buy a second-hand set of harness. Inquire of Chas. Leavel or phone 506 J. Wanted—Timothy hay. George F. Meyer*. ' . AUTOMOBILES. Wo have on our floor ready for dettvory two of those convenient economical runabouts, completely equipped, for Call and let u* tell you more about it The
MISCELLANEOUS. Valuable advice for consumptives. Think: health, not disease; stop experimenting, follow nature; look up, not down; above all, resolve “I will get well.” Our little “Sunshine” booklet brightens the way. Postal addressed “Nature’s Creation,” Columbus, Ohio, brings it free of charge. M*g Chelera Positively Cured—l will cure your hog* or get no pay tor the treatment Wire me or write me, and I will come and if I treat your hog* and tail to effect a cure, it costs you nothing. Ben B. Miller, Mt Ayr, Indiana. FARM LOANS 'Without Commission I fTT TUD Without Delay I utl lit Without Office Charge* __ _ __ _ _ J Without Charge* For Mil P Y Making Out or U(J n U I Recording Instrument* W. IL PARKINSON. No Need to Stop Work. “ When your doctor orders you to •top work, it staggers you. "I can’t" you say. You know you are weak, ron-down and failing in health, day by day, but you must Work as long as you can stand. What you need is Electric Bitters to give tone, Strength, and vigor to your system, to prevent breakdown and build you up. Don’t be weak, sickly or ailing when Electric Bitters will benefit you from the first do**. Thousands bless them for their gjerlous health and strength. Try them. Every bottle is guaranteed to satisfy. Only 50c at A. F. Long’s. fK LOCAL MARKETS. Corn—die. Ryn—7oc. - RggS—l«c. > Ur M Don’t let the baby suffer from eczema, sores or any itching of the skin. Doans Ointment give* instant relief, cure* quickly. Perfectly safe for children. All druggists sell IL What have you to sell at tills time of the year? Try a classified ad in -« w _
ADDITIONAL TODAY’S LOCALS. Mrs. Herman Churchill, of Bethany, Mo., is visiting her grandmother, Mr*. Frances Ham, and her many old friends. Mrs. Churchill was formerly Miss Dollie Schock. One of the features at the Remington horse show yesterday was a ball game between Wadena and Oxford. The first named team was successful, winning by a score of 8 to 0. I, Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Brenner and son, Andrew Max, of Winchester, came this morning to visit Rensselaer relatives and friends. They are getting along nicely in the hotel business at Winchester. J Mrs. Mollie Ward Butler, formerly of Monticello, and now at the head of a hospital at Newcastle, was the guest over night of Mrs. Fred Phillips. She came from Newcastle to attend the funeral of Dr. Medaris, of Brookston. Will Knox is down from Chicago visiting his father, T. C. Knox and family. He has been in business for himself for some time, running a drug store and getting along fine. Business is good, his trade growing, and Will has a smile that is as broad as Taft’s. Mrs. A. Collins returned this morning from Indianapolis, being accompanied by her son’s wife, Mrs. Ray Collins and her two children. Mrs. Ray Collins is recovering from a severe case of typhoid fever and came here to spend the convalescent period. Charles A. Greathouse, state superintendent of public instruction, has written answers to several questions concerning the legality of paying teachers for holidays, particularly Thanksgiving day. Many teachers wish to attend the teachers’ association meeting Friday and Saturday following Thanksgiving. Mr. Greathouse held that the teachers could be paid for Thanksgiving day and the following Friday, but not for Saturday, as the latter day is not a school day.
The new depot will hardly be done in two weeks and it will not be surprising if it is not ready for occupancy much before Nov. Ist, although the foreman of the construction force says that he will have it ready in two weeks easy, if his material arrives. The tile flooring, the toilets, the roof, the windows and doors are yet to be finished, as also is the construction of the brick platform. The heating plant is now being installed. The depot will be a very fine one and a great credit to Rensselaer, .and Agent Beam is asking the officials to equip his office with some moderm furniture in keeping with the new station. Quite a large number went to Remington and vicinity Friday, to attend the horse show. The crowd was not large that day, but the show was excellent Twenty-one single driving horses were exhibited. Rensselaer came in for a liberal share of premiums. D., T. Halstead won with his sorrel saddle horse, and Miss Nellie Kennedy, of Morocco, won first premium driving Mr. Halstead’s team of dun mares, and the same team won as the best matched team when shown by Boyd Porter. June Henkle won first with his stallion, Cora Onward. Chauncey Wood’s colt won first in the 2-year-old harness class and 2nd in the general purpose class. Lewis Tolbert, of Wabash, is the judge. Judge Hanley sustained the demurrer of Attorney Moses Leopold in the case of the State vs. John Weast, holding that Weast was not bonded by the verbal acknowledgment and that the attachment against his property shall be released. This does not affect the confiscated goods, which will remain in the custody of Sheriff Hoover. As Weast is said to owe to George McCarthy most of the purchase price for the pool tables and fixtures and as most of the bottling establishments took back the unsold goods, claiming that it had not been paid for, there would have been little if anything to have taken to satisfy the bond, had it been held. good. If Weast stays away, which seems quite probable, the officials will be satisfied and« lot of costs saved.
Another Benefit From Drainage Not Taken Into Consideration.
Crown Point Star. It was necessary a few years ago to keep men working full time in the corn fields on the Kankakee shooting .black birds or they would practically ruin the crop when it was in milk, but the drying of the great swamps which were their nesting places has nearly put an end to the little redwinged pests which hatched by the millions. They are growing less each year, and while a large flock can be seen now and then the draining of the marshes and ponds in Lake county is fast doing away with them. They ruined a small per cent of the crop each year, but the damage they are doing now is of hardly any consequence. That can also be credited to Want to rant your property? Um our classified column.
~~~~~~~~— ' ' ftitt m 1 -Ll-Cj BANDBOX A NEW NOVEL By LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE. begins in the October Munsey. It is by the author of “The Black Bag” and “The Brass Bowl,” two of perhaps' the most notable mystery stories ever written. “The Bandbox ”is such an impelling tale. It opens in London, where a mysterious bandbox is left upon the hands of a puzzled jtoung man. The action quickly moves to New York, where it plunges into a whirl of surprising incidents that set a new pace for story-writing. There is a scene on a lonely island that would do credit to the pen of a Stevenson together with other strange and fascinating situations. The first instalment appears in MUNSEYS OCTOBER Other notable features of the October Munsey are “World’s Debt to the Radical,” by Robert L. Gray, which deals with ideas that were at first deemed revolutionary, eventually becoming mainsprings of human progress; “The New Era in Our Relations with Latin America,” by Judson C. Welliver; “Woodrow Wilson, Presidential Possibility,” by Isaac F. Marcosson, and “The Rockefeller Institute,” by Walter Prichard Eaton. Ten short stories, the Financial Department, Editorials, and Stage Comment by Matthew White, Jr. The FRANK A. MUNSEY COMPANY 175 Fifth Ave., New York ON YOUR NEWS - STAND, TEN CENTS
PILES CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METHOD. If you suffer from bleeding, itching, .blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure yourself at home by the new absorption treatment; and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with references from your own locality if requested. Immediate relief and permanent cure assured. Send no money, but telr others of this offer. Write today to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P, Notre Dime, Ind.
“Had dyspepsia or. indigestion for years. No appetite, and what I did bat distressed me terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me.”—J. H. Walker, Sunbury, Ohio.
Forty-one thousand blank forms for hunters’ license have been prepared in the office of the state fish and game commissioner to be sent’to the clerks of the various counties in preparation for the fall and winter hunting season. Last year the clerks ran out of forms about the noddle of the fall shooting, and considerable trouble resulted. The shipment this fall will be made large enough to Jnsure every clerk a sufficient supply to last through the season. /
Some good sized white corn is being eyhibited in Warner Bros.’ window. One ear, 14% inches long, comes from the Gifford land and other good sized ears are from the same land. The tip of the long ear is very poor and Frank Ham says it is poor because the ear grew too fast for the husk and it was unprotected. Willis Lutz is at work on a fertilizer composition that will make the husk grow as fast and as long as the ear. Other good corn on display there is from the farm of Firman Thompson, in Union township. Nothing has attracted so much attention, however, as the tall stock displayed at The Republican office, which was broupht in by Millard Fross. Illinois farmers stand and gaze at it as though they were being deceived by their eyes. One man insisted that it was spliced and looked it over carefully to find the seam. It is all one stalk, however, and Millard’s challenge has not been accepted by any other tall corn grower. This stalk has a big ear, which come* out from th* the thirteenth point, 9 feet and 7 inches from the ground.
A Dreadful Sight
To H. J Barnum, of Freeville, N. Y., was the fever sore that had plagued his life for year*, in spite of many remedies he tried. At last he used Biicklen's Arnica Salve and wrote: “It has entirely healed with scarcely a scar left." Heals burns, boils, eczema, cuts, bruise*, swelling*, corns and piles like magic. Only 25c at A. F. Long's.
Proper Certification of Pupils From Eighth Grade Essential.
Charles A. Grdathouse, state superintendent of public instruction, has answered an inquiring county superintendent, saying that where a commissioned high school admits to the school pupils who have not been properly certified out of the eighth grade in. the country schools by the county superintendent, the admission is illegal, and that the state board of education, when such cases are reported, will investigate the matter with a view to revoking the commission of the offending school. He also said that any township trustee who pays transfer charges under such conditions is doing so illegally. Mr. Greathouse is preparing to issue a circular letter to all the schools of the state calling on them to give at least thirty minutes on October 9 to observance of “Fire Prevention Day,” set apart by proclamation by the Governor. An outline of excercises, and instructions is being prepared to be sent the schools.
Released Monticello School Teacher for Moral Deficiency.
Francesville Tribune. B. H. Emory, who was principal of the local high school last year, was uncerimoniously fired at Monticello after teaching one week. According to the Monticello papers he needs a “thorough course in morals before undertaking to teach in a civilized community.” Before the close of his school term here it became generally known that he was mighty short on several things and it eventually turned out that he was not only a pious fraud but also a professional “dead beat/’ and his creditors are still waiting for him to pay back various sums of borrowed money. His credentials from Indiana University are said to be forgeries and judging from these reports it will not be very long until the young man will be on the “inside looking out.”
Not a Word of Scandal
Marred yie call of a neighbor on Mrs. W. P. qf Manville, Wyo., who said: "She told me Dr. King’s New Life Pill* had cured her of obstinate kidney trouble, and made her feel like a new woman.” Easy, but sure remedy for stomach, liver and kidney troubles. Only 25c at A. F. Long’s. Typewriter ribbons for sale at Th* Republican office.
A Qasaifisd Adv. wfll rant It
Land Auction! 142’/2-ACRE FARM Rensselaer, Indiana MONDAY, Oct. 2-1 p.m. « / • To close out partnership. The 142-acre improved farm, known as the Bert 0. Gardner Farm, and located on stone road tkree miles east of Rensselaer, Ind. (county seat), and one-quarter mile west of Pleasant Ridge, a shipping point on the Monon Railroad. ' This is one of the best located farms in Indiana and will be a genuine bargain for the purchaser. The farm is black loam with clay sub-soil, is thoroughly tiled, has sufficient improvements, and will be sold to the highest bidder, on liberal terms. SALE WILL BE CONDUCTED ON FARM. For terms and other information, address J. B. Ackerman, 74 West Washington st., Chicago. Carey M. Jones, Chicago Auctioneers: « Fred Phillips, Rensselaer John Culp, Rensselaer Free eonveyance to farm from Phillipa’ Plano House, Rensselaer, for parti** coming from a distance.
Characterizes Party-Wreckers As Self-Seeking Patriots.
Starke County Republican. A coterie of republican housewreckers have established headquarters at Washington and are filling the country with literature opposing President Taft’s re-nomination on the ground that he cannot be re-elected. This is characteristic politics on the part of the mis-named self-styled progressives. They are party-wreckers, that’s all, and a self-seeking lot of gum-shoe patriots.
Beer.
John G. Woolley once said: “When life and death clinch, beer stabs life in the back. When health and disease have the tug of war, beer takes the graveyard end of the rope.” Never can tell when you’ll mash a finger or suffer a cut, bruise or scald. Be prepared. Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic QU instantly relieves the pain—quickly cure* the wound.
Forced to Leave Home. 4 Every year a large number of poor sufferers, whose lungs are sore and racked with coughs, are urged to go to another climate. ButXhls is costly and not- always sure. There’s a better way. Let Dr. King's New Discovery cure you at home. "It cured me of lung trouble,’* writes W. R. Nelson, of Calamine, Ark., "when all else failed, and I gained 47 pounds in weight It's surely the king of all cough and lung cures.” Thousands owe their lives and health to It It's positively guaranteed for coughs, colds, lagrippe, asthma, croup—all throat and lung troubles. 50c and 11.00. Trial bottle free at A. F. Long’s. * Lecture Course Dates. Nov. 27.—Parlette, lecture. Jan. 23.—John Eberly Co., concert Feb. 5.—H. V. Adams, lecture. Feb. 26.—Landon, impersonator. March 22.— Beulah Buck Co., ladies* quartette. »> ' '■ > . .U . „.T. '•
