Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 236, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 October 1911 — Page 3

Classified Column. FOB SALE. Fer Sale—4-room house and 2 lots; -well located, 4 blocks from courthouse; Improved street and sidewalk; <7OO. Phone No. 121 or address P. O. Box No. 55. ; Fer Sale—Spring chickens for fries. Phone 448. For Sale—Or will trade for cow, a gentle family herse. Inquire of Mrs. X. G. Monnett R. D. No. 3. For Sale—Pure bred Duroc Jerseys. If you want a good or boar, call, write or phone Victor Yeoman, phone 521 G, R. F. D. No. 2, Rensselaer, Indiana. For Sale—Bridge and other good oak lumber. Inquire of Wm. Halstead, R. D. No. 3, Box 40, Rensselaer, Indiana. For Sale—Deering corn busker, in good repair. Will sell for cash or on time or trade for live stock. W. L. Wood, Parr, Ind.

For Sale—Hardwood lumber of all kinds; also cord wood. Randolph Wright, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, or Mt Ayr phone No. 20 I. FOB BENT. For Bent—Modern convenient house, centrally located. Inquire at Trust and Savings Bank or of Milt Roth. > ■-’ • 1 . 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 Knrrle. WANTED. Wanted—Property consisting of an acre up to 10 acres near Rensselaer; improved preferred. Inquire at this office. No agents, want to deal direct with owner. - Wanted—l want to rent a welldrained farm of 160 or 320 acres, for a term of 3 years, the landlord to loan or go my security for $1,500 to be used to purchase' stock and implements to run the farm. Will pay a rental of three-fifths of grain and hay delivered to the elevator or railroad. Address Box 7, Mt. Ayr, Ind. Wanted—Companion and nurse for elderly invalid lady. G. F. Meyers.

Wanted—Timothy hay. George F. Meyers. LOST. Lost—Tuesday, a gold locket and Chain. Locket set with white and red stones. Initials “G. M. G.” on back. Finder please return to Gladys Grant. FOUND. — u Found—Sum of money. Ed Rhoads, the groceryman. Found—Ladies’ black kid glove and baby’s bootee. Call here. Found—Baby’s shoe on Franklin street. Call at Republican office. AUTOMOBILES. We have on our floor ready for delivery two of those convenient economical runabouts, completely equipped, for 8600. Call and let us tell you more about —rx The wtexMGlr MISCELLANEOUS. Everybody—Send for free sample of Success Magazine & The National Post—the healthy, vigorous and sensible American home magazine containing the thrilling Oppenheim story, “The Girl of the Thirty Thousand,’* and receive also our money-making agent's proposition. Permanent winter employment for right persons. Address Circulation Department, Success Magazine, New York. Pasture —I can take in a few more head of cattle at my farm 2 miles west of Roselawn. Inquire of T. W. Grant.

Presbyterian Church Services.

The subject of the sermon for next Sabbath morning will be “The Value of a Soul.” In the evening the pastor will speak on the subject, “Small Beginnings.*' Everyone invited to these services. Apropros the discovery at Centralia, Wash., of a Bible 309 years old, Dr. D. Zwigtman, of Niles, Mich., has one still older and a finely preserved copy, at that This Bible is a Latin one, printed in 1590 at Geneva by Claude Marnus and John Aubri. It contains numerous marginal notes and is valued by competent librarians at 81,000.

■roTxoa to baxkt stmscaxaxM. \ Subscribers to The Evening Republics! *lll confer a favor upon the pub» Ushers by reporting promptly any fail* ure of delivery upon the part of the ear-' Her bqys. The Republican tries to give apod service in the delivery of the pabut cannot do so without the cooperation of subscribers. If you fall to receive your paper notify us promptly 11, 114 or ill and your cotaplaiat will be given prompt attention.

FOUR BITES OF A CHERRY.

By George Folsom.

Hew a Henins Collected WMOO At the Bate es UM* • Clip —and Kept It.

Copyright, The Frank A. Munsey Co. o— — “If you are not the painter," spoke up Creel, “and you are looking for a man who, you say, came in here, who are you?” “I am Mr. Dempster, of the Detective Bureau,” said the detective. By this time he was in the room. There was no man in sight, no place where a man could hide. He looked at the bookcase. It reached to within six inches of the top of the door. No man could crawl through that narrow opening. The flat-top desks were open underneath. The marble wash-basin afforded no means of concealment. The detective, without asking permission, started to pull the bookcase away from the door.

“You can’t move that,” said Creel quietly. “It is fastened with a top clamp.” The detective climbed on a Chair and examined the clamp. As he did so he looked into the next room through the half-opened door. It seemed to be empty, and he could hear no sound.

“And there are two clamps on the other side,” went on Creel, “so you can see how difficult it would be to move it.” Dempster examined the sideclamps. He was at last convinced that no man could have moved tne case aside. Perhaps you are mistaken in the room,” said Creel. “The next room is ours, and empty as yet. Maybe the door is unlocked.” “We will see,” said Dempster grimly. “If he went in there he is there yet. I have a man watching that door.” Creel smiled faintly. “We will see about it.” Creel locked the door as they went out, and led the way to the second door. He fumbled his key in the lock, but at last opened the door. The room was perfectly empty of everything except a stationary washbasin. Dempster walked to the halfopen inner door and pulled it back, disclosing the polished back of the bookcase. “I ought to have a key for that door,” purred Creel. ’ “There are two,” he went on, raising his voice, “but,” and here his voice sank again, “they don’t always seem able to find them for tenants when wanted.” The detective now gave Creel a searching look. “We will go back to the little room,” he said, “if you don’t object.” They went out and Creel locked ‘.he door of the room after them. Then, before opening the door of the aiual: before opening the door of the small room, he said: “You are the man me a letter to a dealer in certain stocks?” “Yes,” said Dempster, “and you are Mr. Creel, and you gave a false address the night of the first Cossett robbery.” “That’s true,” said Creel calmly. “Now Mr. Dempsey, you haven’t as yet told me what the man you are looking for has done. Is it murder or robbery?” “I didn’t tell you, did I?” said the detective. “Well, then, he robbed Mr. Cossett. I saw him rush out with a package of bills in his hand, and as we have been told to watch Mr. Cossett’s visitors, I naturally came on after him when he ran away.” “But,” said Creel, “there doesn’t seem to be any commotion up Mr. Cossett’s way. Call your man to watch, and then see if Cossett has really been robbed. He may be chloroformed and in need of your help." “I’ll do it,” said Dempster. “McGill can watch this end, and you seem to be acting fair.” “Officer,” said Creel, impressively, “you must know that we have for some time been aware that your men were shadowing us. We have never complained about it, and you shall be able to say that I never put any obstacle in your way today. Find out about Mr. Cossett. Your man, if left here, will get the same consideration I gave you." “Thank you, Mr. Creel,” said the officer, a little bit overcome by the politeness of the dapper young man beside him. He called McGill to his side, and started up the corridor. When he had gone a short distance, Creel said to McGill, “Run after him, but don’t shout. Tell him that if anything is wrong to signal you quietly. We don’t want the whole building trooping around.” As McGill swung around the corner, Creel opened the door of the little room. Linden, all in gray, sat at his desk. He nodded, and Creel ran to the corner. “Come back a moment,” he cried to the men, who were only a

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Jew feet apart; McGill on his way back, and Dempster moving toward Cossett’s. 7-4-“Mr. Linden has come in and he wants to know if he can help you?” Dempster rushed back with a muttered curse. He knew that a trick had been played, but he couldn’t see through it yet Linden had walked in from somewhere while McGill was in the side corridor, and they would never be able to say where he came from. Dempster walked into the room, glowering. “What’s up?” said Linden. “Enough!” cried Dempster, as he glanced at jthe gray-clad figure, and passed, uninvited, through the open gate. Then his eye caught a black coat where the gray one had been. He walked up to it. “Mr. Creel,” he said, “there was a gray coat there when I was here before.” “I have it on,” said Linden. “I have been out of the building in that black coat.”

Dempster had taken hold of the coat. As he did so he felt something in the pocket. He didn’t hesitate to pull it out. It was .the green eyeshade. “That does it,” murmured Creel under his breath. “There, at last, is the one fatal mistake.” He glanced at Linden. “I wear that shade,” said Linden calmly, “my eye is inflamed. You can see that for yourself.” “Plucky, but no use,” murmured Creel. “Mr. Linden,” cried the goaded detective, “I place you under arrest charged with three robberies.” “Three robberies,” said Linden. “I heard of one, but three —” “The second was not made public,” said Dempster, “and the third was committed twenty-five minutes ago by a man,in a dark coat, with a green shade over his left eye.” “The coat is not important,” murmured Creel to himself,, “but that green shade— Oh! my.” “And now, if you don’t object, you will come quietly with me to Mr. Cossett’s. And you, McGill, take care of Mr. Creel. We want him, too,” went on Dempster. “We give you our words not to run,” said Linden easily. “And I will wear the green shade,” taking it from the hand of the detective and putting it on. “Is my face clean. Creel?” Creel looked at his friend’s face closely. “Clean, indeed, and you have quite a color.” All traces of the grease paint had vanished. The little party walked along the hall and entered Mr. Cossett’s office. The detained men were ushered in first. How it happened Dempster never knew, but before they faced Mr. Cossett Linden had removed and hidden the green shade. Mr. Cossett,” said the detective, “I have brought Mr. Linden. Twentyfive minutes ago a man with a green shade rushed out of your office with a package of bills in his hand. I traced him to Mr. Linden’s office, but lost track of him. But I found the green shade in Mr. Linden’s coat —” “Mr. Dempster,” interrupted Mr. Cossett, “I thank jtau for your zeal. Twenty-five minutes ago Mr. Linden came in here, and I gave him a package of bills. It was the final payment of an account between my niece and myself. And, by tbe way, Mr. Linden, you did not give me a receipt. Will you do so now ” He pushed a writing pad toward the young man. Linden was a bit befuddled, but he wrote a- suitable receipt in his best hand. “Now, Mr. Dempster,” said Mr. Cossett, as he took up the receipt, “I have thought all along that Captain Chesley was confining his efforts and yours to a very narrow line of inquiry I asked you to find the man who wrote the Delaine address. This writing does not resemble it at all, does it ” r* “But Mr. Creel’s does,” blurted out the detective, turning to Creel. “So this is Mr. Creel,” said Cossett, “and his writing resembles that on the card. Now, Mr. Creel, would you mind writing ‘Louis Delaine’ on this paper?” “I guess we win out,” said Creel to himself, “but I am in a deep fog.” Then he wrote as requested, and Dempster produced the torn card. “Very, very similar," said Mr. Cossett, “but I saw that first one written, and -by a man nothing like Mr. Creel. I never- saw Mr. Creel but once before, and then he had a wheel —and some crackers. . <r “But, to get down to facts, Mr. Dempster, you bring one man who looks somewhat like my second robber, but who doesn’t write like him, and you bring me another man who writes like the robber, but doesn’t look like him. We want the man'who wrote that card, not a man who writes like the man who wrote that card!”

“W|bll, all I can say Is this," cried the detective, losing his temper,, "you three gentlemen ought to be ashamed of yourselves. There’s certainly something back ofdll this, but you've tied my hands.” And he dashed out with McGill at his heels. “You are cousins, I believe,” said Mr. Cossett suavely. At this moment Sneed returned. “Please come down to my office on the next corridor,” whispered Linden. “We will have it out there." Mr. Cossett made no comment, but walked down to the small room with them. They entered aifd locked the door. Then Mr. Cossett said, “How did you escape him after running in here?” Linden pushed the spring and turned the bookcase. "Ah!" said the financier, "very ingenious. Into that next room and back into this. And now," he went on, “let me talk—l suspected you from the first, because I found Nellie’s picture on my door step” (both Linden and Creel opened their eyes at this) “when I ran out after—well, we will pass that.” “Then came the second affair, and the Delaine card, which was the other half of Nellie’s picture. Your letter followed, and then, in anger, I gave the police the card, given me in the restaurant. I am still giving my despoiler a long chance, because I gave no names. “When Nellie came down, and in her innocence told me that you had a ‘beautiful scheme for righting uncle’s wrongs’ I began to see through the matter. I then gave Nellie her legal share of the estate to make things more easy for the collector who was running me down. “I am, perhaps, to blame for the wholes thing. Old Cossett goaded me. and I got a better brand of legal advice than he did and beat him. Nellie would, before long, have got enough to satisfy them all. But I am glad it is all over. Marry Nellie, but don’t for mercy’s sake, fail to see me if you need money. You went into a most Quixotic enterprise, and your Sancho Panza here followed you faithfully, but —well suppose we lunch together?” (The End.)

ZEMO MAKES ASTONISHING ECZEMA CURES.

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“All the Comforts of Home” Next Bill by Our Stock Co.

Our Stock Co. will again be in Rensselaer Friday night, Oct. 6th, presenting the late Clyde Fitch’s famous farce comedy, “All the Comforts of Home.” Mr. Fitch was the author of such great successes as “Barbara Frietchie,” “Girls,” “Nathan Hale,” “The Blue Mouse,” “The City,” etc., and sustained his reputation in “All the Comforts of Home,” which had long runs in all the large ci ties, of the United States and Canada. This is the first season that it has been released for stock and Mr. Gano was fortunate in securing it for so early a date. “All the Comforts of Home," shows how a man who has been out all night with the boys forgets to come home until the morning, and when questioned by his wife as to where he was, he tells her the truth and is not believed, and in trying to square things tells her a lie, which results in all kinds of trouble for himself and two hours and a half of solid laughs for the audience, until he convinces her that he was telling the truth in the first place. Mr. Chris Nielsen is now at work on a new set of scenery ahd promises that it will surpass anything yet shown In Rensselaer. The company are all busy rehearsing the new bill and a finished performance is assured all who attend. Reservations can now be made at the usual prices. Do you want to rent your property? A classified adv. in The Republican will find you a tenant

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PUBLIC SALE. THURSDAY, OCT. 12, 1911, 4% miles northwest of Boswell, 3% miles east of Dunn, on the C; I. & 13. R. R., at the well known Parish Grove farm, the old Parnus Boswell, and later the J. M. Blgisdel homestead. We will sell 48 head of standard bred and high grade road horses, consisting 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 I 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 har•ness 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.

PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will sell at public auction at his residence four and onehalf miles east of Thayer, Ind., and one and one-half miles south and two and one-quarter miles west of DeMotte, Ind., on the place known as the Viezens ranch, sale to commence at 10 o’clock, on TUESD AY, OCTOBER 17,1»11, the following personal property: 33 Head of Cattle —Milch cows, heifers and calves; some with calves by side and others coming fresh; 1 full blood pedigreed Swiss bull; 3 full blood pedigreed heifers coming fresh; 12 graded Swiss heifers. 13 Head of Horses and Mares— Aged 5 to 15 years; some of the mares in foal. Farm Implements—4 farm wagons; 1 spring wagon; 1 milk wagon; 1 top buggy; 1 corn binder; 1 grain binder; 1 mowing machine; 1 ten-horsepower gasoline engine, will develop 12 horsepower; 1 six-roller corn busker and shredder; 1 silage cutter; 1 fourhorse seeder; 1 corn planter; 3 cultivators; 2 gang plows; 1 walking plow; 1 4-horse harrow with sulky; 2 sets single buggy harness; several sets double harness; 1 onion planter; 1 hand corn planter; 3 ditch scrapers; 40 rods! American Standard 48-inch wire fence; 2 hay racks; 1 cream separator; 1 grindstone; 1 workman’s vice; 1 wheelbarrow; 4 jackscrews; 4 horseblankets; 3 crosscut saws; 1 barrel churn, and many small farm tools not here montioned. 125 acres of Carn In field. 40 tens es Hay. Household Goods—Consisting of parlor and sitting room furniture, beds, springs, mattresses, beddingtables, chairs of all kinds, heating ana cook stoves, dressers, commodes, carpets and hundreds of other household articles, enough to furnish two homes. TERMS—A credit of 12 months will be given on all sums over >5.00, with approved security, without interest, if paid when due; if not paid when due, 8 per, cent interest will be charged from date of sale. A discount of 6 per cent will be given on all sums of over |5.00 for cash. Sums of >5.00 and under, cash in hand. No property to be removed until settled for. Hot lunch served. PAUL YIEZEYS. Freeman k Kingman, Auctioneers. H. W. Marble, Clerk. Sick headache is caused by a disordered stomacU Take Chamberlain's Tablets and correct that and the headaches will disappear. For sale by all dealers. __ ' C

Excursion TO CHICAGO VIA - -,W Sunday, Oct, 8 Special Train leaves Bensselaer at 9:15 a. hl; arrives Chicago at 12 hl Bound Trip Fare ... 75c Special train will stop at Cedar Lake in both directions. BASEBALL—Sox vs. Cleveland; Cnbs ys. Pittsburg. Returning, train will leave Chicago at 11:80 p. hl, Sunday, Oct 8,191 L

DEMTTE.

Kankakee Valley Review. Sherman Cooper went to South last week. S. DeHaan transacted business at Rensselaer Wednesday. J. Hamstra transacted business at the county seat this week. Neal Blown, of Shelby, was a business visitor here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. George Marr were Wheatfield visitors Saturday. Mrs. Ted White and baby visited friends at Shelby last Friday. Mallie Clark and Lute Wiseman, of Wheatfield, were business visitors here Wednesday. Sam McGinnis, C. O. Spencer and Trustee Snip were business visitors at the county seat Monday. Mr. and Mrs. F. Schuester, Mrs. Pauline Town and son Ernest went to Chicago Wednesday for a few days* visit with relatives. J. H. A. Ross, of Indianapolis, spent three days at his farm north of town this week looking after improvements and watching the great crop of cabbage. , . Mrs. James Dear, of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Henry Burton, of Kentland, returned home Monday from a visit here with their mother, Mrs. Pauline Town and family. Jdhn Vanßeek has a force of men excavating and getting in readiness to build a twenty-four foot addition to his store building, which will give him necessary room to carry on his increasing business.

J. W. Copeland., of Dayton, Ohio, purchased a bottle of Chamberlain** Cough Remedy for his boy who had « cold, and before the bottle was all used the boy's cold was gone. Is that not better than to pay a five dollar doctor's bill? For sale by all dealers. c Gives Aid to Strikers. Some times liver, kidneys and bowels seem to go on a strike and refuse to work right Then you need those pleasant little strike-breakers—« Dr. King’s New Life Pills—to give them natural aid and gently compel proper action. Excellent health soon follows. Try them. 25c at A. F. Long’s. What have you tq sell? Why don’t you sell it? A republican classified ad will bring you a buyer willing to pay what it is worth. Don’t put it off. Three lines one week in all issues of The Daily and Semi-Weekly Republican for 25 cents.