Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 233, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 October 1911 — Page 2
Ktnsielnr ReDMblican . ,i..,—,*■■,-.■ -...-■■ ■ TOTVY > XbtUhan w— prxdat xmtox a brddxab wnxxi RDXTIOM. IWMCBXFHOW UTM Daily. by Carrier. 10 Cento a Week. By Mail. 33.75 a Year. Semi-Weekly, in advance Year, >1.50. Taesdny, October t, toll.
810 PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned, having decided to quit farming, will sell at public auction, at their residence 9Mt milea northwest of Rensselaer, 1 mile east and H mile north of Parr, on what is known as the old Dr. Hartsell farm, commencing at 10 a. m., on THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, toll, ‘the following property: 9 bead of Horses—l gray mare, 9 years old, weight 1300, in foal to J. K. Davis* horse; 1 black mare, 5 years old, weight 1200, in foal to the Swim horse; 1 black gelding. 2 years old, weight 1000; 1 bay gelding, 2 years old, weight 1000; 1 black filly, coming 2 years old;.l X-Ray colt, coming 2 years old; 1 black gelding, coming 2 years old; 2 match suckling colts. 5 brood Sows—4 with pigs at side, 1 to have pigs by day of sale; 2 DurocJersey Spring boars, Ohio Chief, No. 9727, and Good-E-Nuff, No. 22437, blood in them, weight 200 each, pedigrees furnished. 42 head of Cattle -1 black cow, coming 5 years old; 1 brindle cow, 5 years old; 1 red cow, 4 years old; 1 red cow, 3 years old. These are all extra good cows, and all will be fresh by February Ist, now giving milk. 1 full-blood Jersey calf, 1 year old; 1 half Jersey, 2 years old, fresh in spring; 20 yearling calves; 16 spring calves. Farm Implements, Etc.—l lowwheel iron-tire wagon; 2 breaking plows, 16-inch; 1 steel-frame harrow'; 1 check-row corn planter, with fertilizer attachment; 1 heating stove; 1 cook stove, and numerous other articles. A credit of 12 months will be given -on sums over |lO, with usual conditions; 8 per cent off for cash. J. N. GUNYON & SON. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C G. Sptiler, Clerk. Hot lunch on ground, served by Ladies' Aid of Rosebud Church.
• PUBLIC SALE. k THURSDAY, OCT. 12, 1911, miles northwest of Boswell, 3*4 miles east of Dunn, on the C. I. & S. R. R., at the well known Parish Grove farm, thp- old -Parnus Boswell, and later ttfe J. M. Blaisdel homestead. We will sell 48 head of standard >bred and high grade road horses, con* listing of the well known show and trotting horse, Red Sprite 37937, and all the brood mares and fillies on the farm. Nearly all of these are mares that 1 have selected for my own use as brood stock. I have never seen 48 head of horses on any farm that would equal these individually for light and heavy harness purposes. 46 of them are bays and browns, nearly perfect heads, legs and disposition. Nearly all of these horses that are old enough are broke single and double. Mr. Benton Washburn has been appointed to sell all the personal and 120 acres of the land to settle the property rights of my wife and myself. By-bids in this sale impossible. J. L. SKEEN, V. S.
Notice. | All ladies who pledged themselves to earn a* dollar for the remodeling of the M. E. church are requested to report next Tuesday afternoon at the social.. October has started in with an awful grouch. Rain came in torrents early Sunday morning and the sky has been draped in dark foreboding clouds. Monday was damp and chilly and October is' not behaving one bit like it usually does. September was aldflk a cloudy month, with an unusual amount of rain, both in the amount of precipitation and the number of days it rained. A good many have started fires in their heating stoves. Saturday afternoon, Bethel Rutherford took a few girls out in her father's wagon and on their trip they gathered nuts, about seven miles southwest of town. The girls were Marion Reed, Esther Harper, Inas Kiplinger, Pauline Pumphrey, Marjorie Vanatta, Ruby Thornton, Madeline Abbott They spent a joyful afternoon in the country. The Ladies’ Industrial Society of the Presbyterian church is giving the Salisbury Family Concert and extend an invitation to all music lovers to attend -the entertainment Thursday evening, October S. Admission 35 cents; children 25 cents ii —, —■ ■ ' - Fifty-four thousand two hundred and ninety Indianaians are now on the jpsawiofi rolls. During the last fiscal year they received |1f1»2f11,77M1.
Joys for the Stay-at-Homes
Those who are obliged to be the itay-at-homes tn summer need not line, for there are. Indeed, many tompensations in the way of short rips to the pleasant nearby places Jmt are too often ignored because of heir easy accessibility. Usually it is the father or the nother, or both, who give way to the rounger members of the household ind become stay-at-homes during the reeks of oppressive weather, when hey are the ones who most need the thange and relaxation. Often, too, it Is the older sister, me past her gayest youth, who indite that the mother and younger laughters shall go away while she days to keep house for the father rho cannot leave his business or, >erhaps, cannot afford to go. These elder daughters are usually is-unselfish as the fathers and moth»rs, and these could be no rhore unlelfish people in the world than Amtrlcan parents. She has helped to rush the sewing through, has trimmed hats, mended laces, worked innumerable buttontales, packed trunks, and done a thousand and one things under presrare in order to get the lucky ones iff; and when the house is emptied if most of its occupants, she feels a ironderful relief and freedom 1 for a lew days. .But after that a reaction if loneliness sets in for her and the lather which, if yielded to apathetically, will make the summer seem They think at the beginning of {heir stay-at-Eofhe experience that '.here is nothing to do but let the lays pass by monotonously and untried; but, seeing the father’s wearness, the daughter begins to think ip diversions for him, and he, noticing the attention given to insure his •very home comfort, comes to the ‘.onclusion that there must be some tort of little outing he might give he faithful daughter. He at last realizes that there are idjacent to the city many beautiful luburban towns and stretches of sountry that may be seen and enjoyed lor the price of a trolley fare —lovely groves, too, and even daisy fields. If the father couia come home in 'Arne to have a 5 o'clock dinner, or lupper, they could start at 6 on a irolley ride out into the country and tee the sun set where there is a wide horizon and a sweep of invlg>rati ng air. Or they can go earlier in the afterwon for a quiet trip on the glorious Ake, returning late in the evening feeling that they have a new lease in life. There are in the near suburbs recreation parks of the better sort, patronized by people of good standing, where trolley parties go seeking coolaess and diversion —and here are lights and laughter, music and icy :old refreshments. It is better to ipend an occasional evening at these aearby summer resorts than to mope forlornly in the dim house in the leserted block, for it is always amusing to watch the people. Let the stay-at-homes also make •p their minds to put in their time in teeing the best civic features which ;heir city and suburbs boast—those buildings, statues, monuments, art galleries, libraries, parks, museums, ind those notable town residences ind adjacent villas which they have sever seen, simply because “one can tee them any time, you know.’’ It is imbarrassing, often, to find that vistors know more about your own city .han you do. Better to see and know lomething of our own local shrines aefore going far away to make pilgrimages to those we have no reason to revere.
It is a good time, too, to frequent ±e cool, quiet libraries and study up some special subject for a paper to i>e read during the winter session of >ne’s club. Before the tired bread-winner :omes home on hot evenings have the pavement and yard thoroughly sprinkled with the hose, the windows jp. and the fresh air coming in. The bathroom should be in perfect jrder and readiness, and when he :omes down from his ablutions he should find a daintily spread table, with fresh flowers on it and appeasing repast consisting of dishes which differ as much as possible from those of the rest of the year, and »nding, always, with a frozen dessert ar iced tea or lemonade. Those who stay at home grinding the money mill should surety avail themselves of the cooling little trips to nearby places that give so much more than a nickel’s worth of mental and physical recreation.
Sweet Watermelon Pickles
Peel off the green skin and cut the white rind in pieces about two inches square. Place in a porcelain kettle a layer of the watermelon, then a layer of grape leaves until the kettle is full. Cover with water and add one tablespoonful of salt and one teaspoonful of alum; cook until the melon is clear; take it out on a planter; remove the grape leaves; make a sirup of three pinta of vinegar, two pounds of granulated sugar, one tablespoon whole cloves, five sticks of cinnamon broken up, one-half teaspoon ground cloves, one tablespoon ground cinnamon; put this sirup over the fire and let it come to » boil; add the watermelon and cook slowly for twenty minutes; can. Thia is excellent, and sweet cucumber and cantaloupe pickle may be made the same way.
Starching and Ironing.
To remove rust from flatirons and prevent them from sticking, poor some kerosene On a plate and let the iron stand la it for 24 hours, then rob the Irons with a rag and polish them with some finely powdered brink. Put powdered borax in the starch while boiling, using awe-half teaspoonful to one gallon of starch, will prevent if from sticking
LACK OF Self CONTROL AS SHOWN BY SUICIDE
Learn to Laugh, Shun Mor» bid Things, You'lt Not Want to Die. FRANTIC with terror, her voice quivering with pain, a woman sailed up police headquarters in one >f the big cities of the east a day >r two ago and cried out that a man was dying from poison at her home ind that she herself had taken the Irug in an effort to follow him through he gates of death, but the agony had *ent the veil of morbid hysteria from ier eyes and she wanted help—help tor him, help for herself, and most of ill, she wanted to live. She is living, though not yet out of langer, but the man is dead, the vic:im of one of the hundred and more tulclde pacta recorded by the police luring the past year. There was no reason for the man md her to seek death —no hindrance :o their wooing or wedding. The whole affair was simply due to overwrought nerves and the condition which so many people today work themselves up into through the belief hat they have a “spiritual call.” Among the many other tragic pacts in record is one where a- man and girl determined to seek death rather than face the future, where separation might, by some turn of fate, come to them. Another man and wife nought death beepuse he was out of work, and they didn’t want to struggle any longer with poverty. Still another couple, hindered in their wooing by opposition from the girl’s parents, shot themselves, and so the records go on, telling always the same story of the lack of self-control of modern men and women, and the lack of the' courage to be bigger than hampering fate, to meet difficulties and overcome them.
Brooding, the discussion of morbid occurrences, the rising to a high emotional pitch and the wooing of the depression which even an ordinary day will bring if you succumb to it, all these things are the first step. Then comes the hysteria due to the dream of death, then the planning, the constant strain and finally the act itself.
And all of It might be prevented if modern folk would learn to laugh, if we would put aside the modern craze and lust of morbid things and look for the happiness and the sweetness that lie all around us along the pathway of life. For there are, after all, very few trials that cannot be borne if we shoulder them bravely; very few sorrows that time does not assuage, and love that cannot prove stronger than circumstances is not worth committing suicide for.
Our Grocery Clerk Says, Ah, Revenge!
Juliet dozed off this morning for a minute, and say, she was some beautiful in her But 1 wanted to get her sore for turning me down, so I called the errand boy over so loud tta>t I woke her up and in a stage whisper that would make a tog horn look sk-k, I chli ruped: “Say, kid, if Juliet feele sleepy why
don't she go home? If she didn’t make »uoh a holler about it, I wouldn’t give three beans; but there she sits, snoring like her heart would break. “There’s a difference between snoring and snoring. Her kind puts all the others out of the running, makes them green with envy. Honest, I’m afraid to take the cotton out of rpy ears. It sounds like a sick pup with a efcen whistle tied to its tall." Say, was the cold cashier mad? Ask her!
A CASE FOR GOWNS
A pillow case tubing la a practical solution for the dress hangers, which with one-piece dresses need to be very long. Sew the tubing at one end with just enough unsewed space in the middle for the hook of the coat hanger to pass through. At the other end cut one side off for about five or six inches, leaving the other side longer by so much than the ciit off on*. Then hem the two ends and use the longer one for a flap to turn back onto the short side, and so enclose the skirt at the bottom.
FROM WAYBACK.
Wife (aa the sugar is passed)—Use the tongs, William. Bill (from Wayback)—Taint ’ot, is it?
WOULDN'T TAKE CHANCES.
She —You will never ask me to da the cooking, will you, dear? He—No, darling. I have • touch of the dyspepsia already.
ONION AND CUCUMBER 3OUPPeel and cut in thin slices crosswise two good sized onions and three cucumber*. Cover with one pint of boiling water and one pint of veal ot chicken stock, and simmer very slowly for one hour; then rub through a Sieve, pressing hard so as to obtain al much of the pulp aa possible. Return to the fire to keep hot In a double boiler scald one pint of milk and stii into it one tablespoonful of butte: and two tableepoonfuls of flour robbed together to a paste. When thick and smooth add the strained soup. Season to taste, simmer five minutes and serve with croutons. „
Attention to the Bees
All the colonies should be carefully examined. If any colonies have died during the winter remove the combs of honey that remain and place them under some other strong colony before robbing begins. If any colonies have become queenless others ean be procured from the south and substituted. a Do not let the colony dwindle away for want of a queen for it may yield you fifty or even a hundred pounds of honey the coming season. The bottom boards should also be scraped and cleaned from the accumulated cappings which always gather there during the winter. On top of the hive you will probably find ants gathered in the packing with thousands of eggs ready to hatch. Clean them out and sweeten up the hives in general. It may be that some need a coat of paint. Get ready for the honey flow and give the bees every chance to build up. Section boxes brood frames should also be gotten in readiness. It is. easy to manage bees when the preparatory work is done. It will do no harm to let the bees get a little cbm meal from the bln. Some beekeepers make a regular prac_.ce in early spring of setting meal in qunny spots protected from the wind fbr the bees to gather as a substitute for pollen to stimulate brood rearing. This is not necessary in locations where natural pollen is abundant. When brooding is heaviest bees require most water. In spring they may be seen about the well in search of this necessary article, which goes to make up their daily bill Of fare. They will fly a great distance for it if not obtainable near by. Many bees are lost and chilled when thus carrying water for their brood. If there is no water accessible near at hand it will pay you to supply some.
Take a barrel and set it a few feet from the ground, fill it with water and cover the top so no bees will drown. Then bore a very small hole near the bottom of the barrel and let the water drip on a board. The board should be slanted slightly to cause the water to flow slowly along. From this source the bees will be able to help themselves. The nearer the water is to the apiary the fewer bees it will require ae water carries, a very important feature at this season when the warmth and energy of every bee is needed in the hive to help build up the colony. When honey begins to come in from the fields, it is no longer necessary to supply them with water for they will get enough of it from the thin nectar which is daily brought into the hive. • The best time to transfer combs and bees is when the combe are light and tree from the honey. Brood-rearing Is but fairly started, consequently the work is quickly accomplished withou' the loss of brood and a dauby mess o. wasting honey, a: is the case when combs become filled with new honey and brood-rearing is in an advance stage. I find that even 'n New Jersey that conditions differ so widely that no set of laws can be laid down for all localities. I would, however, make this suggestion, that wherever early blooming trees are present such as soft maples, or elme, it will not be necessary to feed meal for when it becomes warm enough for the bees to fly freely these trees will be found to yield pollen in abundance.
I would set the combs from which the bees have died during the winter in an empty hive body and place them under a strong co 1 my and close up all the openings except the entrance un dec the lower body, compelling th? bees to pass ov / "’ the unoccupied combs continually when leaving or entering the hive. In this way the combs will be kept free from the wax moth until such a time when they can be used for swarms or other purposes. When the queen gets crowded for space in the upper body she will go down and commence laying 'ggs in the empty combs below, These combs of hatching brood can be used to great advantage in building up weak colonies. The wide-awake farmer does not wait until his bees have swarmed and are clustering on a tree-top before he thinks of preparing a hive for them. All preparatory work, such as making and painting hives, wiring brood frames and getting the section boxes ready for the anticipated honey crop should be done at leisure times during the dull period on the farm before the rush or other work takes place. How easy it will be to manage a dozen or more colonies of bees this sumtqer if everything is set in readiness. For instance. If a swarm issues It will only be the work of a few minutes to take the hive from the barn and hive the swarm into it. If the honey flow bursts forth suddenly what satisfaction it will give you to know that you have on hand a few hundred section boxes ready to set on the hives at once. If this work is put off until summer time it is more than probable It will not be done at all. When feeding the bees be careful not to spill any of the sweets about the apiary, for robbing is often starved that way. English and French gardeners are always in the market for live toads, and not unfrequently as much as |M per hundred is paid for this insect destroyer. It to estimated that every time a boy kills x toad he is destroy lex SIM worth of stock oa s farm
MAN IS EMOTIONAL; HOW HE SHOWS IT
Except in Crying Women Do Not Make So Much Fuss. I? OR a long time, one of the chief V reasons urged against giving women tee right to vote wa« that women were so emotional they could not be safely trusted with the ballot. Now comes along a great nerve socialist who declares men are far more emotional than women, and that it has taken centuries of training and h*rd fighting to give them the power to suppress their emotions, and to resist the desire of a good cry, or go into hysterics. Of course men are more emotional tfhan women, though they -display their “feelings” In a different way. Hen, that is Anglo-Saxon men, don’t burst into tears when they get wrought up; but neither do women, always, unless there is something to be gained by it. Weeping is not a re. Hable barometer of a woman’s emotions. it is the measure of her ability to work people and get what she wants.
Generally speaking, crying is becoming a domestic art. A wife weeps to get a new drees. A business woman doesn’t weep because she’ll get fired if she does, and so the waterline in emotion between the two sexes, is gradually drying up. Barring tears, as the indication of hysteria, in every other matter of temperament man i§ far more emotional than womatn, as> even the most cursory observation will show. Take, as a very common example, the matter of swearing. Suppose, in a crowd, somebody steps on a man’s foot. Isn’t the air immediately rent with .blue blazes? Doesn’t the man sputter and fume, and emit forked lightning and call upon all of his gods to consign the malefactor to places where he won’t need to wear an overcoat even in Winter? But suppose an even worse accident happens to a woman, and some great lumbering lout treads upon her fine new frock, and tears it past all mending. What does the lady do? Does she rip out a few sizzling oaths and tell the man what she thinks of him, and What she hopes will be his ultimate doom? Not at all. She smiles sweetly and, serenely In hia eyes, and says that it doesn’t matter. She may be thinking things that begin with a big, big D, but she doesn’t utter them, this is a triumph of self-control that no man could exhibit under tSe circumstances.
Take note, also, of how men go to pieces over trlfle« that women meet with perfect calmness, as exhibited In the simple act of hooking up a gown. Every married woman will testify that, when her husband fastens her up in the back, he yelps every time he jams (his thumb against a pin, and boils over with rage when he faijs to make a hook and loop-eye connect, and that, during the entire performance, he says pqjfectly. awful things that are shocking to listen to. Observe too, the difference when mother las a headache and when father has one. Who’s loony then? When mother has a headache she goes about her business as usual. She sits at the head- of the table and serves the soup, and sees that father has everything the way he wants it, and all that anybody knows about her suffering is that ®he doesn’t eat anything herself, and looks white and drawn. But, Heaven alive, when father comes home from the -office with a headache there’s something doing! He keeps everybody on the jump for hot water bags. and ice packs and poultices, and special dishes, and takes forty kinds of headache medicines, and sends for a doctor, and a trained nurse, and is scared blue for fear he is going to die. Any surgeon will tell you that a little mite of a woman will walk into an operating room and climb up on the operating table with no more emo-' tion than if she wene going to play bridge, whereas nine-tenths of the men patients are in such a blue funk of fear that they have to be given a ‘little ether in their room 6 and carried, unconscious, into the operating room. Women can get pretty well worked up over a club election, but they never go so far as to yell themselves black in the face and tear off their hats and dance upon them when their candidate goes through; nor do you ever observe - them walking about with a placard around their necks of trudging a wheelbarrow up Broadway, or paying other fool election bets into which their emotional temperaments have led them.
HOMEMADE LINOLEUM
The following is an item of .help that may interest some one who is needing a covering for the kitchen floor —one that will wear well and be neat and attractive. Takes an old rag carpet, darn and patch all holes and stretch tightly on the floor. Then make * good, stiff paste, and with a brash fill the carpet as full of paste as it will take. up. Let dry, then apply a second coat, which glazes the carpet. Now give it two coats of paint and if preferred one can stripe or check it with some other color or by means of a stencil paint any kind of a design. This carpet is inexpensive, looks almost as well as linoleum and will wear as long.
ON FATHER.
Daughter—But I don’t intend t« marry yet; I want to study. Mother—Absurd! The men wfj •■ly think teca of you in the end II you know much. 7 Dnteflßer—Oh. now, mamma! Yoc always expect other men to be Uta pava!
—i _ DU j. w WAsmtintM pmybzcxah amd *vrdboh Makes a specialty of Diseases of tbs Eyes. Ova* Both axothan. ARTHUR R.ROPKEN4 MW, LOAMS AMD REAL ESTATE _ mans on farms and city biobm tr. personal security, and' cnattel tnortaM*. Buy, sen and rent farms and atty prap•rty- tes Jtoferanea Office over Chicago Bargain Store.
9. 9. Xrwta a. a mm Bwnr a iewin . LAW, REAL RDTATE AMD lEBID. ’ AMCH. k FiStows^Btock?" 1 I ® a “’ Offlc * to B» P. HONAN ATTOBMWT AV L4W L*w. Abstracts. Insurance and Real Estate. YIIU practice tn all the courts. -All bustoaM attended to with promptness and "dispatch. Bsasselaar, ptatana H. E. BROWN , DSMBCDT Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. All the latest., methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Office over Larshfe Drue Store. JOHN A. DUNLAP Lawyer. (Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice in all courts. Estates settled. „ Farm Loans. , Collection department. Notary in the office Rensselaer. Tndtana. DR. E. C. ENGLISH PHYSICIAM AMD BMBGEOM L Night and day given prompt attention. Residence phone. 113. Office phone, 177. Rensselaer, Xnd. DR. F. A. TURFLER. OSTEOPATHIC Rooms 1 and- 2. Murray Building. Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones. Office—2 rings on 300, gksllence —3 rings on 300. **■ Successfully treats both acute and ehronto diseases. Spinal curvatures a ipecimty. DR. E. N. LOY SuccessoHto Dr. W. W. Hartsell. HOMEOFA TWIST Office —Frame building on Cullen street, east rt? cnWrt house. , Ornes PHOMS M Residence College Avenue,' Phone IC>. Bensselaer, Indiana. F. H. HERPRILL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon ■pedal attention to diseases of women and low grades of fever. Office In Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence. <43. GLASSES PITTED BY Dr. A. G. CATT 4 OPTOMETRIST ” Rensselaer, Indiana. Office over Long's Drug Store. Phone- No. 383.
Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, LouieviUe and French Lick Springs. BENSSBLABB TXBtB TABU. In Effect August 27, 1211. BOUTK BOUND < Ne. Sir-Fast Mall ..... ..a. 4:44 a. m. No. F—Louisville Mail .... 11:04 a. m. No. 87 —Indpls. Ex. ....... 11:34 a. m. No. 33—Hoosier Limited .. 1:65 p. so. No. 39—Milk Accom. 4:42 p. m. No. 3—Louisville Ex. ll:0| p. m. NORTH BOUND No. 4—Louisville Mail .... 4:63 a. m. No. 40—Milk Accom. 7:35 a. m. No. 32—Fast Mail 14:05 am. No. 38 —Indpls-Chgo. Ex. .. 2:48 p. m. No. 6—Louisville Mall *Ex 8:15 p.m. ■No. 80—Hoosier Limited ... 5:44 p. m. Train l(o. 31 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 8:15 am. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 4:20, connects with No. 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 5:44 p. m. Trains Nos. 30 and 33, ths “Hoosier Limited.’* run only between Chicago and Indianapolis, the C. H. & D. service for Cincinnati having been discontinued. W. H. BEAM. Agent-
KOTXCE OF ADOPTTOM OF KBSPI>UFXOM«r To wholn it may concern: Notice is hereby given by the Common Council of the City of Rensselaer, Indiana, that on the 11th day of September, A. D. 1911, they unanimously adopted Declaratory Resolution No. for the opening of an alley ten feet wide through the center of Block Nine (9), in the original plat of the town of Newton (now city of Rensselaer, Indiana), from Van Rensselaer Street to. Cullen Street in said city. The Council has fixed the 23rd day of October. A. D. 1911, as a date upon which remonstrances may be filed or presented by persons interested in, or affected by, said proposed alley, as above described, and on said day at 8 o’clock P. M., said Common Council will meet in theoouhcll chamber for the purpose, of hearing any remonstrances which may have been filed or presented, and for the purpose of taking final action thereon. Such action shall be final and conclusive upon all persons. CHAS. MtdRDAN, City Clerk. Sept. 26, Oct 3. FAKKS FOR BALt. 65 acres, six miles out, corn good buildings. >75. Terms, >1,500 down. 160 acres, 140 tillable, fair improvements. >45. Terms, >1,500 down. 600 acres good land, good buHdings.Will trade. 160 acres in Kansas, 160 acres in Arkansas, and a >5,000 mortgage note; will trade together dr separate andpay cash difference. 11 acres, four blocks from court house. . sr* M acres Unproved; tersnioasy. . \.. J ./ & emo. Calling Cards at TheßspubUcaa.
