Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 56, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 March 1912 — Page 4
CDSSIFIEP COLUIN FOB SALE. ' -■ :-7^T F»r Sale—Brindle and white Pit Bull Terrier, female. Will make good house and watch dog, also companion for women or children. Pedigreed. AddreasLock Box 315, Renßselaer, Ind. ; <r. „■*—:—: Fer Sale —I have divided the Monnett land facing the gravel road inte 10-acre lots, and will offer these fcr sale. This land is within one mile of town and will make ideal homes. For prices and particulars call on George - -• --t-. • r •: ' v k - - Fer Sale—Twelve good thrifty pigs. O. C. Halstead, R. R. No. 3. Fer Sale—A good small house, well located on five lots, to be sold at a bargain on favorable terms. Sam Stevens. Fer Sale —Oliver or Jewett typewriter In good condition and price reasonable. Arthur H. Hopkins. Fer Sale—Small property south of Christian church known os Harrison property. See George A. Williams. Fer Sale —A house and lot. Inquire of EL A. Aldrich: Fer Sale—Two standard high grade sewing machines, new, just from the factory. Will be sold at a bargain. •Republican. FOB RENT. • ’ Fer Rent—Good 6-room house, 4 blocks from court house. J. C. Passons. Fer Rent—Half acre of grohnd, good bouse and barn. Mrs. 8. W. Williams, R. D. 3, Phone 519-G. WANTED. Wanted —Men wanted at once to chop cord wood and make posts. See Rowles and Parker. Waatoft—Salesmen, people who will plant trees and shrubbery this spring are ordering now. Write for outfit and weekly payment plan. Perry Nurseries, Rochester, N. Y. LOST. Lest—Somewhere on Main street, a string of coral beadß. Finder please return to Republican office. FOUND. Found—A sewing bag. Inquire at Wood ft Kresler’s barbershop. «... .. ■ ■■ill I ■! I I ■ II , . ~.l '■■ ■ ' ■ I.—— Found—Lady's black hat with green cord about crown. Call at residence of M. P. Warren for it. Feaad—A child’s neck fur. Call here. BCTTERFAk W. H. Dexter will pay 31c for butter fat this week. i ELECTRICAL REPAIRS. < . For electrical repairs and wiring, Ray Delmer, Phone 161. POULTRY AND EGOS. Eggs foe Hatching—R. C. R. I. Reds, Sibley strain. Every bird in pen a prize winner, scoring from 90 to 95%. Eggs $3.00 for 15. F. L. Griffin, Monti.polio, InstMONEY TO LOAN. The Union Central Life Insurance Co. has made a big appropriation of money to be loaned on good farms in Jasper county and offers a liberal contract without commission. John A. Dunlap, Agent. f MISCELLANEOUS. Bicycle and Motorcycle Repair Shop —Three doors south of Rensselaer Oarage. James C. Clark, proprietor. Fralt Spraying—Trim your fruit trees now and get ready for spraying. I have an automatic sprayer and will do your work right and at reasonable prices. Leave your prder now. W. J. Holmes, phone 322. AUTOMOBILES. The Very Latest, a real 1912 car, on our floor for delivery now. The Maxwell Mascotte Touring car. THE GLDDEN . TOUR WINNER. &]\QX'ffSlt Cut Flower Orders Filled. We have moved to the first house south of the depot on Forest street We will have cut flowers always on hand and will promptly fill all wedding and funeral orders. When possible on special orders pleaße give two or three days* time. KINO FLORAL CO. Phone 132. The Indiana railroad commission Friday ordered the four railroads entering Vincennes to submit plans for a modern union station by April 2. The commission upheld the citizens In rejecting a proposition to remodel -■jjJiS.ii Ilinf.i 1-1 I . H ...'ll ■ Let the people of Ronsselaer and Jasper county know what you have to sell; use The Republican Classified ——-iA Classified Adv. will sell it
ADDITIONAL TODAY’S LOCALS. The suit brought by Anson Cox against Mrs. Lida G. Monnett has occupied the attention of the court since yesterday morning. Moses Leopold is acting as special judge. Cox’s attorney is Geo. A. Williams and Mrs. Monnett faas tor 'her counsel J. A. Dunlap and Frank Davis. i.H —.. . . ■——■ • - Itching, bleeding, protuding or blind piles yield to Doan’s Ointment. Chronic cases soon relieved, finally cured. All druggists sell it Judge Hanley has addressed a communication to Sheriff Hoover informing him that he has set Thursday, March 7th, as the day fdr determining what shall be done with the liquors now kept at the county jail and which were confiscated following the raid on-A. J. Weast’s joint last fall. Doan’s Regulets cure constipation without griping, ' nausea, nor any weakening effect. Ask your druggist for them. 25 cents per box. Allen Swim has taken a contract for laying about three cars of tile for Dave Halstead in Newton township and during the time he is working on the job he will live in a house on the Halstead land, moving only enough things out to get along with and retaining his residence in Rensselaer. * W. A. Davenport has been unable to find a suitable house into which to move and he has temporarily secured the, furnished house of John Gwifi on South Cullen street, where Earl Barkley was living. He will be able to retain this only about a month /when Mr. Gwin an<j wife will again occupy it. Earl Barkley has moved to the country. “T" ~777~“~ Mrs. Alice Howe i <jturned from DeMotte this morning for a short stay at home. She has been nursing Mrs. Terpinger, an aged lady at DeMotfe for the past several weeks. Mrs. Terpinger has creeping paralysis and there seems no prospect of her Improvement antT Mrs. Howe will return there to care for her after spending a few days fit home. Mrs. J. R. Wynant, whose home has been near San Pierre, and who has been visiting her relatives, the Glazebrooks, left this morning for Cloverdale, Ind., to visit relatives. She will soon leave for her future home at Heafer, Ark., where her husband and their two sons, Wilbur and Howard, have preceded her. They have purchased a farm and some town property there pnd are erecting a new residence. T. F. Dunlap, of. Surrey, returned yesterday , evening from Elwood, where he had visited his son, who is engaged in the jewelry business. Mr. Dunlap reportß that Elwood is hustling now and that the big tinplate factory is working about five-sixths of Its full capacity. "When all thirty of the mills of which the plant consists are working, which will be soon, there will be about 3,000 employed in the plant Michael Swartz, giving his address as 416 Washington Ave., Indianapolis, was found at the corner of Leek’s hitch barn, in a very sick condition about three o’clock this afternoon. He was taken to the jail by Sheriff Hoover and Marshal Mustard. Dr. E. N. Ley was called to attend him. His body was frightfully bloated and he was in very serious pain. The outcome at this time is very uncertain and his condition is serious. Cecil Clouse, who has been working as a telephone lineman for two or three years and who went to Rockfield, Ili.. several weeks ago to accept a position, took sick upon his arrival there and Returned here, where he has since been confined at* ■.he home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs Levi Clouse. Rheumatism seems 10 be the trouble and it has gradually been getting worse until now Cecil has been compelled to take to his bed. He is greatly reduced In flesh, and strength and ris having a severe time of it L. A. Hopkins came over yesterday from-. Markle, Ind., to spend a few days with his father, D- C. Hopkins, who will be 91 years of age tomorrow, March 6th. "Uncle” Clint has been staying very close at home during the winter months but has got through very well and when warm weather comes again he will probably be able to get down town. He is the oldest man in Marion township. L. A. Informs us that his son, Eld Hopkins, who moved to Spokane, Wash., some time ago, has been busy all the time and still likes hfs home there very well]
CASTOR IA lor Infanta and Children. 11l KM Ym Han Always Bought Try the Classified Column.
Man Arrested at Lafayette Will Be Returned to Reformatory.
. . —r .... • f , - Fred Hlx, 26 years of age, who was arrested at Lafayette Sunday and who Is believed to be the man who robbed several Monon railroad stations near Lafayette, Is believed to have figured extensively as a kid glove burglar. His arrest was caused Sunday by the presence of mind of a boy named James Cowgill, of Battle Ground. Cowgill is only 12 years of age. He saw Hix in a cigar store and recognized him as the fellow who ran when the marshal at Battle ground tried to place him under arrest some three months ago. The boy went at once to the jail and informed Sheriff John Fisher, who, by the way, was a member of the old Battle Ground football team and who frequently came to Rensselaer. Fisher did not belittle the boy’s claim, but accompanied him to the cigar store. Hix bad left hut he was soon found and taken into custody. He denied that he had even been in Battle Ground but he was held until other people from that town could be called and they all identified him. He then confessed that he was the man who had run away from the marshal. He also admitted that he was,a paroled convict, having been sentenced only a little more than three years ago from Crawfordsville for a term of 2 to 14 years. He maintained that he had never robbed the stations at Battle Ground, Brookston or Chalmers. A druggist named Jennings at Brookston later identified him as a man who had bought cigars in his . store the day the Brookston depot was burglarized. Hix had been living at the Y. M. C. A. and had been considered an exemplary young m an and had broken into good society. He was a stylish dresser and the officers found his room In the Y. M. C. A. building to be 'si model of neatness. He had several suits of clothes, all hung on metal hangers; he had two new cravanettes, eight pairs of shoes and other articles of wearing apparel In proportion. He had a desk filled with correspondence with girls and evidently he was stringing a big lot of susceptible damsels. The only tools that he might have used in the business he is supposed to have followed found in his room were a combination pry-bar and a tack hammer. Lafayette detectives and policemen have been working on his case and have decided that' he is the person guilty of several residence burglaries in the society districts. He seems to be a modern Raffles and save for the shrewd action of the boy that recognized him, he might have gone ahead unmolested for a long time. He will now be returned to Jeffersonville to serve out his unexpired time, eleven His arrest caused a big sensation about the Y. M. C. A. and cigar stores where he loafed and at places he had passed as a high-class young man.
This County, Now and Then.
The sale of the old Sparling farm brings back to the memory of the old settlers visions of long ago. The development of this county’in the last lift-time is almost marvelous. In J 346 John Alter and sons moved out on the prairie in what is now Carpenter township. They were the first persons that ventured to settle miles away fronrnny timber. Not a bush or shrub was in sight from lower ground and a dim blue along the horizon showed timber on the higher ground. Now Lewis S. ter has a sew mill on this same farm and is sawing up walnut logs 3 feet in diameter, with sycamore, wild cherry and willow almost as large, while the neighbors who settled there many years later are bringing in nice ash and maple logs. It is hard on the imagination to see what this country looked like when Grandfather Sparlipg, Uncle David Nowels, Mays, Jordens, Alters and a few more old pioneers pame to Jasper county.-—L. S. Alter. In answer to a superintendent, who asked if a school corporation must accept transfers of children, though a building is over-crowded, State Superintendent Greathouse replied that the courts of the state have held that when a pupil is transferred, the corporation must receive him. William Bayard Cutting, wealthy lawyer and civic reformer of New York, died last night near Rock Island, 111., on a special train which, since Thursday had been racing eastward from El Paso, Tex., in an effort to reach New York before the end came. The car works at Jeffersonville, Ind., have been completed and are ready to ship the last cut of passenger coaches constructed for tbe Frisco system. Work has also been started on the construction of twenty-five stePb coaches for tbe Chicago & Northwestern railway. ' i ' ~ ' "\ • Advertising is an Investment, not an expense. Advertising placed in Tbe Republican becomes a profltab’.o investment, whether large or small Try a classified advertisement and be convinced.
Easy Money.
State’s Attorney—Will you charge the Jury, your honor?* Judge Knox (absently)—No, I won’t charge ’em anything. Let ’em have all they can make.
Well Watered.
Johnnie—What makes water come in a watermelon, uncle? Uncle—Because they are planted In the spring.
Familiar Sayings newly presented.
“Collecting bis scattered thoughts. ’* —lllustrated Bits.
Not There.
Lawyer—You say you left home on, the 10th? Witness —Yes, sir. Lawyer—And came back on the *5? Witness —Yes, sir. Lawyer (severely)—What were you doing in the Interim? Witness —Never was in such a place.
Jungle Vaudeville.
"When a fireygoes out, where does It go? The monkey asked the ape, “Can’t say,”* said the ape, “yet many's the time I’ve seen a flare escape.”
X II— A Fair Show.
Friend —I hear that your show had a long run In Mew York. Dramatist—Yee. The populace •based It out of the (city. v ; > . « \ ■'
VAPOR TREATMENT
For Catarrh, foftls. Coughs, Sore Throats and Bronchitis. ■’f . ; l Everybody knows that breathing HYOMEI a few times a day through the little hard rubber pocket inhaler will in a short time drive put catarrh. Many people use the vapor treatment at night in conjunction with the inhaler, claiming that it hastens results. ■ This is the vapor treatment: Into a bowl three-quarters full of boiling water pour a scant teasyoonful of HYOMEI, cover head and bowl with towel and breathe for five minutes the soothing, healing, antiseptic HYOMEI vapor, Try it w hen using 11VOMEI for any nose or throat ailment. HYOMEI Is guaranteed by H. F. Fendig to put an end to catarrh, or money back. A bottle of HYOMEI costs 50 cents; a Complete outlit, which includes inhaler, SI.OO.
St. Joseph’s Basketball Team Will Flay Rensselaer H. S..
The St. Joseph’s' basketball team will play the Rensselaer high school basketball team Wednesday afternoon at the armory, game being called at 4 o'clock. The teams have not met before this year and the game promises to be very interesting. The high school team will conclude the season with this game.
Telephone Any Number For Wasson’s Bus, Day or Night.
All calls for bus service, either to ■the trains, down town, or from < it part of the city to another, promptly answered. Call any of the following phones: Makeever Hotel, Phone 107. 11. Wasson’s residence, No. 49. W. F. Frye’s residence. No. 369. The patronage of all the public ts solicited. HARRISON WASSON.
Rendy For Business.
Pending the rebuilding of my old shop 1 will continue my blacksmith - ing business- in a shop that we have rigged up at. the rear end of the old shop. 1 am now ready for business and hope so meet qll of my old customers. Respect full/, H. F. KING.
LOCAL MARKETS.
Wheat—9s. Corrt—6o. Oats—so. Eggs—lS. Chickens—TO. 4 Turkeys—lo to 12. Ducks—lo. Roosters—s. Geese 7. ' I Veals -7-10. For any pain, from top to toe, from any cause, apply Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil. Pain can’t stay where it is used. Let the people of Rensselaer arid Jasper county know what you haYfe to sell; use The Republican Classified Column. - Republican Office.
D,:4LEB IK Hair,few; Lime, Brick : RENSSELAER, , - INDIANA
WHY NOT MAKE s2oo.°° A MONTH - - That’s SSO. 00 a Week, almost $lO. 00 a Day Bl Selling Victor Safes and tire-proof boxes ■ to men-luuus. doctors, lawyers, tl.-mists «mi , I <> a r-afe, bill .to lint know li w ocv i‘ is tiiotvn H' •* Olio S iieraittn Clare our proj.o-ituHfione of ■ > -j,] ‘ H ■ 1.,---cv.-r ix-ccived. W ithout previous experletic, YOU can duplicate too success of others. - -o'trat 1 adr catalog | will enable you to present the sub/ect to custurners in as interesting a manner as though you were piloting them through our factory. Men appointed as V salesmen receive advice and instructions for selling safes, giving ~ «* convincing talking points which it Is impossible for a prospective customer to deny. Why don’t YOU be the first to apply from your yleinity before someone else gets the territory t We' can favor only one salesman out of each locality. ■ ■ company-was celebrated by v "- JSsgES'' - 'fT JkiagMß erecting the most modern safe |H factory in the world. WideI - special selling inducement, J. . HBBifejBsgSBSHH rendered it necessary to double TT~~, i 111 **2*s3-- T lill TIM ouroutput. We are spending "4 •- -tt! many thousands of dollars en • rilarging our sales organization, '■ 4W-- but to learn all particulars, it llt ~~ '"’L, HB I>ll ii Tfßiiii iPlsSgfiaHMß will cost you only the price of a postal card. Ask for caiaiogu * 11 tißgis^gco.
Prafsasioßal Girds DR. L M. WASHBURN. FXYSXCXAV AMO STTROBOX Makes a specialty of diseases of ths Lyes. Over loth Brothers. ARTHUR H. HOFKINd law, LOANS AID BXAL smn wacs on farms and city property, personal security and chattel mortgage. Buy. sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city firs Insurance. Office oyer Chicago Bargain Store. Rcnaaelaag, Indiana. J. r. Irwin «. C. Irwin IRWIN ft IRWIN MW, REAL ESTATE AXE insubance. & ■ ■ per cent farm loans. Office In Odd Fellows' Block. E. I*. HONAN attorney at law Law Loans. Abstracts, Insurance uni Heal Estate. Will practice In all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. Rensselaer, Indiana. H. L. BROWN ’ DENTIST Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. All the latest methods in Dentistry. Gaa administered for painless extraction. Office over Larshs Drug Store. TOHN A. DUNLAP Dawyer. !( Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice in all courts. Estates settled.. Farm Leans. Collection departmenL Notary In the office .. Rensselaer. Indiana. DR. E. cTeNGLISH PHYSICIAN AXE SURGEON Night and day calls given prompt attention. Residence phone. 110. Office phone, 177. . Rensselaer, 2nd. DR. F. A. TURFLER. OSTEOPATHIC FXYBXCXAX Rooms l and Z. Murray L>uuuil'ig Rensselaer. Indiana. Phones. Office—2 rings on 300, t*aitence—3 rings on 300. Successfully- treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a ffpclftity. , s DR. E. N. LOT Successor to Dr. W. W. HartselL HOMEOPATHIST. Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. OFFICE FXOXE 8» Residence College Avenue, Phone Ift Rensselaer, Indiana. F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. Fbysiclnii and Surgeon •peolal attention to diseases of women and low grades of fever. Office In Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence. 441. Dr. A. G. CATT OPTOMETRIST * Rensselaer, Indiana. Office over Long’s Drug Store. Phone No. 232.
Chicago to Northwest. Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, Louis* villa and French Lick Bpring's. BENSSELAEB TXXB TABI& In Effect October 14, 1011. SOUTH BOUND No. 31—Fast Mali 4:40 fc.au ~ No. s—Louisville Mall .... 11:20 a. m. No. 37— linlpls. Ex 11|:61 a. m. No. 33 — Hoosier Limited .. 1:66 p. m. No. 39— Milk Accom 6:02 p.m. No. 3 — Louisville Ex. ..... 11:05 p.m. NORTH BOUND No. 4—Louisville Mali •••• 4:62 a. m. No. 40— Milk Accom 7:86 a. m. No. 32—Fast Mall 10:06 a. m. No. 33— liulpls-Chgo. Ex.... 3:03 p.m. No. o—Louisville Mail AEx 3:17 p.m. No. 30— Hoosier Limited ... 6:44 p.m. Train No. 31 maxes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 6:15 a m. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 4:20, connects with No. 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:44 p. m. Trains Nos. 30 and 33, the “Hoosier Limited," run only between Chicago and Indianapolis, the C. 1£ 4b D. service for Cincinnati having been discontinued. W. H. BEAM. Agent.
lecture Course Dates. a March 22. —Beulah Buck Co., ladies quartette. Let the people of Rensselaer and Jasper county know what you have to sell; pse'The Republican Classified Column.
