Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 239, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 October 1911 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
. PUBLIC SALE. ___________ • The undersigned having rented his farm and decided to quit farming, will offer at public sale at his residence, 4% miles north and 2 miles west and % mile north of Rensselaer, % mile east and % mile north of Surrey, commencing at 10 o’clock a. m., on THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1911, the following described property: 6 head of Horses—l sorrel mare, 11 years old, in foal, a good family horse, auto broke; 2 bay percheron geldings, doming 2 and 3 years, well matched, sired by Marengo; 2 spring colts, 1 sired by the Sage horse, 1 by the Price horse; 1 mare mule, coming yearling. 18 head of Cattle —4 good dairy cows, now giving milk, will be fresh in the spring; 8 head of Hereford steprs, yearlings; 6 spring calves, 3 heifers and 3 steers. Implements, Wagons, etc.—l farm wagon with triple box; 1*- spring wagon; 1 road cart; 1 16-inch walking plow; 1 DeLaval cream separator, good as new, and many other articles. TERMS—SIO and under, cash In hand; on sums over $lO a credit St 12 months will be given, purchaser executing note with approved security, without interest if paid when due, but if not paid at maturity, 8 per. cent interest from date; 6 per cent off for cash on sums over $lO. No property to be removed from premises until terms of sale are complied with. Hot lunch served. T. F. MURPHY. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spitler, Clerk.
David Tlex Shcfltis, a machinist helper, fell a few feet and suffered a .fractured skull, while working in the machine shop of the Illinois Steel company’s plant at Gary Saturday. He died soon afterward. Sholtis was the second workman to be-killed in the Gary mills last week. A sensation was sprung at Evansville when Dr. Edward Lithicum, one of the leading physicians of Indiana, and a prominent politician, was sued for divorce by his wife, who, alleges desertion and failure to provide. It is rumored that there are more sensational charges.
The progressive fork oh the free lunch counter says the state boqfliaiyttal th. The state board will wage w ir'Cfegaiust the unclean lunch counters In saMAns. The lunch must be kept covereo mid the forks clean, says'idlfemist H. E. Barnard, in order to .prevent the spread of bacteria. The frgjntlton county authorities ut Noblesvlilo made the discovery Saturday that'Giles Taylor, 66 years of age, who has been in the poorhouse for fifteen years as a pauper, is the owner of an eighty-acre farm and has more than $3,000 in the banlc The farm is situated in another county and Taylor had put it in the hands of k a friend to manage for him. The calling before tbe grand jury of Rev. J. G. Campbell, district superintendent of the Northwest Indiana Methodist conference, because he said Terre Haute’s red light district is protected by civil authorities, proved a boomerang Friday for offlcmls who thought the minister was bluffing. He had definite information, even to names and badge numbers of policemen, who loafed in the disreputable resorts.
