Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 287, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 December 1911 — Page 4
POM & A - Far gale-2, 000 fence post*. J. H. - ‘r,~ ' ■£. •■•-■ /I ’ / Ch *F ß «“- / For Mio—3 cows and 2 belfese. •«. «■Bum. K. D. 1, Rsnsselaer Ind. 4 ...4. ; -. —~ 9 lot*, Hint chicken house and park, good outbuildings, fruit of all kinds, food Well of water, electric lights. Will give possession at once. See “Billy’* Fry, the bus driver. «!■''' ’■ CimmfoE* A3«* krt B katta srrawnrt rtf •wT OBTv Svwv pitJCCU QI fancy work suitable for Obrlstmas presents— ■doiMes. end towels. Would be glad to bate you call at my residence and see them before you buy. Mrs. R. P. Benjatpin. F»r Hal» 'At the Rosebud farm 2 miles east of Parr, well br<d O. 1. C and Duroc Jersey swine, either sex. extra good boars of last spring farrow, either red or white. Prices right Phone 5078, or address Amos H. Alter A Son, R. D. 1, Pan*, Indiana. iWni mini i i ■ » Foe Salo or Trade— Fine feed and sates barn located in county seat Will consider good farm. I. N. Per stager, Brownstown, lad, ' For Balo— About M head of Poland China shoals, averaging about 125 pounds. Inquire of Michael Jungles R. D. No. 2. or at his residence 11 JteßaO north Qt Rjmasqlaer and mileseast of the Gant school Mouse For Sale— Old newspapers, big bundle for a nlckle at The Republican For Salo- A Crystal base burner, No. 122; cost W 5. will sell for >25; good as new. Phono 153. II I ... WANTED. Whaled— House of four or five rooms. W. S. Richards, the painter and paperhanger. Phone 331. Wanted— Second hand clothing foi RoNnUfa’S Second Hand Store. - - LDBT. a lISII ■fsteMßwiMl-11110l ■ ■!. <1 ■ Loot A Scotch Collie, white about B*kuul face; answers to name of ‘Laddie.” Strayed from my farm neat Newland. Belonged to Danville, HI., party. Notify Ed Oliver, Newland, who will pay >25.00 for information leadfog to recovery. MIBCKIXAIKOUB. Prepare Yourself to earn a good salary by taking a. practical course in automobile driving and repairing. Tuition If enrolled before Jan. Ist, >25.00. day or evening. Adams Automobile School, 1420 Michigan Ave., Chicago Watches, clocks and jewelry for sate All kinds of fopair work done . Call and see my now shop.—C. B. Mandeville, Fair Oaks, Ind.
lOJET TO LOAM. The Dnfon Central Life Insurance Co. baa isade a big appropriation of money to ba loaned on good farms in Jasper county and offers a liberal con tract without commission. John A Dunlap. Agent * agßWgaßgsaeMWKbaßßßggsmßßrggMß , W. B. DEXTER W. H. Dexter will pay 37c lor but* ter fat this week. FOUND. , - —_ Found—Big door key. Call at liftpubUoaa office. '■Mf 1 ESTRATEB. Strayed— A Scotch Collie pup. about 2-3 grown; white about neck; has leather collar with doable ring; bobtailed. Answers to name of “Bobbie.” Reward for Information telephoned to Jesae A. Snyder. No. 239. AUTOMOBILES. The Very Latest, a real 1312 car. on our door for delivery now. The Maxwell Maxcotte Touring car. THE GLIDDEM TOUR WINNER. * ii 1 THlgaans Any Number For Wasson’s Baa, Day or Night. wwaUbtewuw' ' ''' All calls for bus service, either to th* trains, down town, or from one part at the city to another, promptly answered. Call any of the' following IgpiStoever Hotel, Phone 107. H. Waasona residence. No. 49. W. >. Frye’s resUteoee, Na 368. Tbo patronage of all the public Ir noltetfed. HARRISON WASSON Aabml ChiMaaMi Bnaaar. Wu* A-r' »■ --> -- - . »*• *a*uee w me rreeoyierian far ChMr annual Christmas bazaar 22V'«£ tbo psbtie TtaHffay and Friday as-
NATURE TELLS YOU
As Many a Rensselaer Bonder Knows Toe Well. When the kidneys are sick, Nature tolls you all about it. The urine is nature’s calendar. Infrequent or too frequent action; - Anr urinary wflilf Jafli K tfifegL Tni'iin—tiiiirnii .1-iilu.jjijwia. i BUJ.. ,um „ i Doan’s Kidney Pills are for kidney ills. Rensselaer people testify to this. William Clift. 528 College street, Rensselaer, Ind., says: "I. bad kidney and bladder trouble and my back ached severely. 1 did not sleep well and was anoyed by a too frequent desire to void the kidney secretions. I took doctor s medicine and remedies of various kinds, but found no relief until 1 procured Doan’s Kidney Pills. Since using them my back has not troubled me and I have felt better In every way. It gives me great pleasure W endorse Doan’s Kidney Pills.” For sale by al! dealers. Price 50 emits. Foster-Milbum Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other.
Obituary of Mrs. Sarah M. PetteL
Sarah M., daughter of Jonathan and Martha Sheets, was born in Delaware county, Ohio, March 2, 1838, and died at the home of her son, John TV PdttetTin Walker township, JaspeFcounty, Indiana, Dec. 3, 1911, at the age of 73 years, 9 months and one day. She was united In marriage to Jacob F. Pettet November 29, 1859. To this union Were born five children, namely: John F. Pettet, of Walker township; Mijb. Joseph Salrin, of Tefft, Charles Pettet, of Kersey, and Mrs. S. A Brusnahan, of Parr. She united with the M. E. church in the year 1875. She leaves to mourn their loss four children,j thirty-three grandchildrenr-«'great-grandson, a sister and a host of friends. Her membe tanr*——* ~ friends and she will be greatly missed in the neighborhood where she . has spent so many years. “Mother, we would not recall thee Back to earth with all its gloom; For we trust that thou art happy, In that blessed eternal home. ** Death has closed thy days of suffering, Christ has opened wide his door, And find rest for evermore.” The funeral services were held at the home Tuesday, conducted by Rev. C. E. Downey, of Roselawn. Burial services in charge of Undertaker A. 8. Keen. Interment at Hershman cemetery.
DIED SUDDENLY
“Acute Indigestion the Cause.” How Often do We Read This Heading in Our Daily Paper. Dear reader, if your food does not digest properly, but stays in your stomach, causing much misery, shortness of breath and fermentation, you are the one that should constantly have with you a box of MI-O-NA stomach tablets. Two little MI-O-NA tablets taken at the first sign of distress would have kept many a death notice out of the papers. If you have stomach trouble of any kind, start to get rid of it today. One 50 cent box of MI-O-NA stomach tablets will make you feel like a new man. Two weeks’ treatment will make any abused, out of order stomach strong and vigorous. Guaranteed, mind you, for indigestion, dizziness, biliousness, bad dreams. They clear the skin and brighten the eyes. A box for only 50 cents at B. F. Fendig’s and druggists everywhere.
Notice to Stock-Holders. Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Rensoelaer Commercial Club will be held on Wednesday evening at & o’clock p. m. December 13, 1911, at the office of Charles G. Spitler in Rensselaer, Indiana, for the purpose of electing nine directors to serve for the ensuing year and such other business as may regularly come before said meeting. / CHARLES G. SPITLER, Secretary-Treasurer.
Lecture Couse Dates.
Jan. 33.—John Eberly Co., concert Feb. 26.—Landon. Impersonator. ■ March 22 —Beulah Buck Co., ladles* qoartette. Feb. 5.—H. V. Adams, lecture.
Havo your ptamo toned by Otto Brann. Leave your order with any of the band boys --■■ ■ _ ♦ What have you to aellt 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. Throe lines one week in all Issues of The Daily and Semi-Weekly RepubllButter wrappers, any quantity, plain or printed, aay be had at ths RepubHran office. ■„ _7 .> VX k 7-- - - ■ -X- ■■ - " I etij- *— ; - ....
Heinous Crime of McNamaras Brought Long Prison Sentences.
- - 4 James B. McNamara was sentenced at Loa Angeles, Cal., Tuesday, to life imprisonment, for having blown up the Los Angeles Times, causing the death of twenty-one men. His brother, John D. McNamara, was sentenced Iron works. Both had confessed several days previously after having protested their innocence since their arrests last April. Judge Waiter Bockwell, who sentenced them, denounced James B. McNamara was a murderer at least, and declared that there was no extenuating circumstances in. his case. . • The state had built up a stone wall of evidence against the men and their confessions had the effect of securing clemency for them. The confession of James B. McNamara reads: “I, James B. McNamara, defendant In the case of the people, having heretofore plead guilty to the crime of murder, desire to make this statement of facts: “And this is the truth: On the night of September 30, 1910, at 5:45 p. m., I placed in Ink Alley, a portion of the Times building, a suit case containing sixteen sticks of 80 per cent dynamite, set to explode at 1 o'clock the next morning. It was my intention to injure the building and scare jhe owners. I did not intend to take the life of any one. I sincerely regret that these unfortunate men lost their lives. If the giving of my life would bring them back I would gladly give it In fact in pleading guilty to murder in the first degree, I have placed my life in the hands of the state. JAMES B. MCNAMARA/’
Jackson Claims Subsequent Contract Made With Kresler.
Joe Jackson and Harrison Wasson, parties to the bus suit, which will be tried before Judge Hanley Friday, wrdFtfteTr' attbraeys, met in the of Court Reporter McFarland Tuesday evening, where a conditional examination was held. Judge Hanley had previously overruled the demurrer of Jackson’s attorneys to the complaint, which virtually holds that the contract between Jackson and Kresler is enforcable by Wasson. In Jackson’s conditional examination he testified that the first contract made Nov. 13, 1907, in which he agreed not to enter into the bus business again in Rensselaer, was followed the same day by a second contract that provided that he would not re-engage in business again as long as Kresler was in the business. Jackson claimed that the second contract had been lost or destroyed. If the court finds that the first contract was the one on which the sale was made, it seems probable that Wasson will-be able to enforce it, but if the contract was displaced by another and later one and this is proven, then the second contract, if the terms were as Jackson states them, would permit him to remain in the business. Frank G. Kresler was not a party to the conditional examination and his testimony as to the making of a subsequent contract should determine whether there ever was such a contract. The case is attracting quite a great deal of attention and will probably attract a number of people when |t comes up for trial Friday.
Boy Gets Bad Bump in Fall While Playing on Box Car.
Glenn, the 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs Albert Timmons, fell while playing on box cars in the freight yards of the Monon railroad Tuesday evening shortly before 5 o’clock. He was jumping from the Donnelly coal shed to a box car when he slipped and fell to the ground, alighting on his head. He was picked up unconscious and carried to his home, and Dr. English summoned. The boy remained unconscious all night and at first a fracture of the skull was, feared. He came to himself after about fourteen hours, however, and will probably suffer no serious injury. A careful examination this morning developed that only a concussion and not a fracture had occurred.
Hemphill Horae Stocks Shipped To Coneern In London, England.
The fame of the Hemphill horse stocks continues to grow and the number of orders to Increase. Mr. Hemphill today started a set to the Geo. P. Harris, Scarfe A Co., a big wholesale firm in Londan. England.
Mrs. Lida G. Monnett Receives News of the Death of Brother.
Mrs. Lida G. Monnett is In receipt of the sad information of the death in Lon Angeles, Cal., of her brother. W. L. Frame. It was on account of his serious sickness that Mrs. Ruth Dewey left a little over a week ago for Loo Angeles, but ho passed away before her arrival there. Mrs, Monnett will not be able to attend his funeral, owing to the long trip.
CALADIUMS USED AS BEAUTIFIERS
If you have an unsightly spot in way should never exist—you may hide it from the casual visitor by a border of (he beautiful, broad-leaved caladium. Arrange to separate the kitcucn garden from the lawu by planting a border of uaJadiums. And against a background of sweet peas or savin it produces a beautiful effect. The best way to cultivate caladium is to plant the tuoem as early In the spring as the ground will permit.
Border of Caladiums.
The soil should be very rich with leaf-mold and well rotted cow or sheep-manure and should be worked up with a little sand into a loose loam. The addition of bone meal, well worked into the soil, will help the growth of the plants and add to their beauty. Of the fancy-leaved caladiums those best suited to out-door planting are those having a predominance of green in the foliage, as the highly colored kind do not do quite so well.
HOW ID RELIEVE CROP CONGESTION
Very frequently when chickens first roam in the spring and gather food for themselves they are likely to swallow a large amount of dry, indigestible grass. This remains in the chicken’s crop a hard, undigested mass that is likely to cause death. Pour a small quantity of sweet oil into the mouth and cause the bird to swallow it, then manipulate that portion of the crop nearest the throat by careful - pressure and squeezing between the thumb and fore finger in such a manner as to break up the contents of the crop and force it toward the mouth in small portions. Suspend the bird, head downwards from time to time and press the loosened particles of food toward the head so they will escape from the mouth. With care and patience the crop may bo entirely emptied in this way, If oil is administered as often as required to soften the contents. ' * After this is accomplished give two grains of baking soda in water, keeping without food for a day, then feed sparingly on soft diet until recovery is complete.
SCOURS IN CALVES
Infectious diarrhoea is quite difficult to eliminate from a place. Newly born calves should be removed shortly after birth to a lot dr pen as far ag possible from all infected calves. Feed boiled fresh milk. Immediately after blrtth tie the naval cord three Inches below the abdomen with a strong cord that has boon boiled; then cut off the corn below the knot one-half inch and sprinkle over the remaining cord and belly some of this. Tannic acid, one ounce; boric Lavender and rose perfumes are said to be fatal to microbes. add, one ounce; iodlfonn, two drams —mix well For the calves already Infected, keep them away from all others, change their pen* often and clean out all the old pens frequently. Keep the calves hwdesn, dry place. Give only fresh, boiled milk—-whole or skimmed —and a little shelled com after the milk given- Give the calves a little good alfalfa bay. Do not depend upon drugs, but rely upon cleanliness, freshly cooked milk and frequent changing of the calf . '' -• It is weß to encourage the eating of grain and hay as much as possible fte the calf does not begin to ruminate until it has solid food tn its stomadh.
Planting Fruit Seeds
Apple trees are usually grafted durlaw ths winter months. whaa _ both odons and seedlings are dormant; the grafts are than peeked away and allowed to callous before being planted out the following spring. Peach seeds are usually planted in fall. Apple seeds are usually planted la spring. Grape seeds are not planted, to propagate nursery stock. Cuttings are used Instead. Honey la the purest And the least harmful of sweets. The honey atop la mostly gain, for no flowers need necessarily bo raised to pasters tile boon They aid in the fertiltaatioa Of fruit trees and the smaller dowses. gome one must prove to ua that the second hundred dollars cocaae any etetar than the test. * •
The SLAVE of the Steel God
THE rows of slender chimneys, piercing the blackened roofs ol the stupendous shacks known as “the work,” vomited their dense masses ol poisoned atmosphere, and steam pipes spurted' vfcioiisly here and there below; half , a dozen cupolas flared with red and violet against the darker drift or faded in a pale glow as a reckless wind puffed the settling clouds away. "-?-y Inside the works a thousand o> more pairs of hands gripped lever, bar, shovel handle, hammer, rammer OI cable as the mighty muscles behind them strained and relaxed unceasingly to a multitudinous clangor of metal *bn metal and the creak and scream and whirr of wheels and pulleys. In one of a thousand and more shacks that were no! stupendous eave In their griine and bare ugliness, the .blinds were down in that room facing the main avenue of cinders. It was Late Spinney’s shack. “Lafe’ Is, of course, the familiar abbreviation of Lafayette, who, ft will be remembered, risked bls life and spent his money, in the cause of American freedom. Somebody in the Spinney family must have admired him at th% time the christening took placet-it there was a christening. A few hours before, Lase Spinney had been one of the thousand or more toilers iu the works. He bad started in at one end of a line of naked to the waist, raking, seining and feeding tlreir searing fires until he reached the other end, and then back again. Twelve hours of it at a shift, and if you don’t like the job} why this is a free country and you know what , you can do. The blinds were down, but Mr. Spinney was not dead. Far from it. He was only 36 years old and, bar accidents, good for another 10 years of it. His eyp was closed and his mouth was open and from that mouth proceeded a rhythmic snore, broken at regular intervals by a choke and a, gasp.
In the adjoining kitchen, Mrs. Spinney busied herself at the stove, tried to restrain the activity of four children in semi-clean dresses and ribbons and looked a good deal at the clock. As the noon whistle blew Mrs. Spinney pushed the coffee pot to the back of the stove, took an odorous herring from the oven, looked at the clock again and sighed. “I hate to wake him,” she said. ”1 don’t think we ought to wake him at that.” ’ ■ c _ Four shrill voices were raised in protest. “Welk then, hush your racket,” said the mother. She put brehd on the table wjtb- the herring and surveyed the food disparagingly. “Hunkies’ grub it is,” she grumbled. /“But it. might be worse easy enough. Now, if I can turn my back for a minute without you mixing up your duds, I’ll go wake him up.” It was no easy matter to wake him. He muttered and swore, half arose and rolled back again, and would have slept but for his wife’s persistence. At last he lurched half his bulk from the bed, sat up, and nodded drowsily at his shoes. ‘ Come,” said his wife sharply, but with a- pitying look. “The lunch is all put up, and your brlkfus is ready and the children is crazy to be a-goin’.’’ - * “Going?” repeated Late; . “A-going where?”
“To the park/’ snapped the woman “Don’t you know? Wake up jow!" Presently he came clumping into the kitchen, a tall, ungainly figure, with a scarred face and an empty eye socket, his shoulders bowed and his hair grizzled by the stress of his 36 years. Without a word, he seated himself at the table and devoured the food wolfisbly. Then he turned his one eye on bls family in a not unkindly regard. “Well, you all ready?” be asked. There was a chorus of assent anu he smiled horribly, for, owing to the exigencies of the steel business,' he couldn’t Agile any other way. “We're all a-wa:ting on you,” said his wife. “Hurry, now, and get ready." He hurried and soon he was at the head of a small procession that straggled along the cinder path tdward 'the car line. A neat patch was over the empty eye-socket and he was in his black best, with a celluloid collar torturing his sinewy neck. It would take too long -to tell the events of the street car ride that took the Spinneys from the gloom and oppression of “the works” into the sunlight and air of the park. There were events, an when the conductor tried to charge full fare for hjrelyn, and when Lase Junior nearly fell out of the window in his eagerness to observe an asphalt gang. In fact, the trlpjtself was an event, and a big event. But the point is that they got to the park, that it was possible for a man to work a 12-hour night-shift and yet have time to take his family on a little excursion, before returning to work. We have seen that Lase Spinney slept, and that he ate. No* M was passing spare time loafing around on the grass with his pipe in his mouth and the debris of a lunch scattered about him. He might, if he had yhoaen. havo spent the same time studying, improving hia stupid mind and qualifying himself for a higher poMtiMk * ■ ,
* ■ wIwwwIWIIIII wWIIIW ‘T 1 ' ; ' r A te WABUBUKS. ranxciaw an Btmomaw Bnecfait t-ni UV, MAVk AMR BBAA MWAHI Btrrißon and rent aim! fdW SfSpa rjhkiaAFrb & tn ■ ■ RsMsaiaeK, Xndiaaa. ' 1.. .. ii il <>!>,,ji J , 4;-i »■», : ‘ 9. r. xtwfo «. a xrwm nwnr a irwim >■<.! RAW, *IU MTAra AMX> MUtm _ AnOBWBT AV RAW . .T ; Law. Loans. Abstracts Inauranas and Real Estate, WIU practice in an toe courts. AU bugles* attended W with promptness anff'dlspatch. 7 N.L. BROWN DEWMV « Crown and Bridge Work and Testa Without Plates a Specialty. All ths mteWt methods in Dentistry. Gte administered for painlean extraction. «- doe over Larah's Drug Store. JOHN A. DDIUT . xaMryar. . (Successor to Frank Felts) Practice in aU courts. Estates settled. Fann- Loads. 7-. Collection department. Notary in the office Keneeelaer.tableau. DR. R. C. ENGLfoH rnucux aM» evmseow phone, 177. Ttrnreelatr. Ind. DR. F. A. TURFLER. OBTEOPaTEIC MtettcfAW Rooms 1 and 2. Murrav Bulldirt's, Rensselaer. Indiana. Fhon««, Office—2 jtagw on 3M, lence—B rings on 309. Successfully treats both acute and Spinal curvatures a DR. B. N. LOF Succesaerrto Dr. W. W. Hartsell. * XOMEOPXTHISi Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court bouse. OFFICE PRONE Av<mue, Phone 199. F. H. HEMPHILL, M. so Pbysiciah au< Burgeon Special attention to dleeaMe of woxsos. and low grades of tever. Office in Williams block. Opposite Conrtt House. .. : •- ■- Telephone, office and residence. 443. OLAH3B FITTED BY hr. A. U. C ATT OFTOMWMMT Khhsmlmtb Office over Long’s Drug Store. Phone No. 333.
s——W— ——■a———sß—Q—OßaeA, 111 >8 i 1111 HI 11 "fl■ ■ ■ MorttiWOlt, XndiAlMbpollih Cincinnati, and the South, fioetovine and branch iMofc BpMagfr bbemexabb ran vit.v _ loUTKiomrn No. 31 —Fast Mail ........ 4:40 •>ax No. s—Louisville Mall .... 11:30 ala No. 87—Indpls. Ex 11:51 a. as. No. 89—Hoosier United .. 1:66 p.na. No. 89—Milk Aceom. 8:03 P-m. No. 3—Louisville Ex. >.... 11:05 p. m. xoxnsovn. No. 4—Louisville Mall .... 4:58 a.m. No. <o—Milk Aceom. ...... 7:85 *..mk No. 32—Fast Midi ........ 10:06 a. na. No. 38—IndpiR-Chgo. Ex.... 31M p.ax No. 6—Louisville Mall AEx 3:17 p. ax No. 30—Hoosier Limited ... 5:44 p.ax. Train No. 81 maxes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 9:15 a m. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at_4£?®' coowte with No. 80 at Mourn, arriving at Rensselaer at M 4 p. na. Trains Nos. 30 and 88, tho “Hoosier Umited,” run only between Chicago and Indianapolis, the C. IL A D. service for Cincinnati having been discontinued. W- H. BEAM. Agent
"•“T DOMESTIC a month Aa Sr.vyrßjß JJt’RB We WIU Take Your aM<_ w| swjp Maehl n* gs— v** DOMESTIC The perfect M*facmartia« that h» «!**n W «S MW ■akee aig to tod»r>»Her tby eeerT tjy yyyMsy StariM ffittTT ChtelW. C. B. STEWARD, Agent < Beasselaag. Indiana LOCAL lAEim . Wheat-88. Corn—sl. < Oats—43. Chickens 7. Turkeys—l 4. ■ ■ £ Ducks—B. Geese— l. ’ Old Boosters—4. Rabbits—s. Vaals—<4o. "I?"* Eggs—36 Butter-35. ' •■»■ ■■ 4 Let your wants be known through rtlanirifl flirt MAinnw
