Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 107, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 May 1912 — Page 4
FOB SALE. — t Far Sate— Good cabbage and tomato plants. Tom Moore, Phone 78. ~ Far Sate Modern 7-room house, with bath and pantry; well located. Inquire of Mrs. James Matheson, North Cullen street Far Sale— Finest pansy and vegetable plants now ready for planting. Call at C. W. Rhoades’ residence or phone 148. W. H. Townsend. Far Sale er Brat —Some lots well located near railroad, suitable for residence or garden plats. Apply First National. Bank. Far Salh— A general purpose mare, 4 years old, weight about 1100; a good single driver. Dave Alter, Phone 607-E, R. D. No. 2, Rensselaer. Far Sale—A few excellent secondhand sewing machines at the Singe*’ office. Will sell cheap for cash or on time. Call any Saturday. It P. Benjamin, Agent Far Sale— A few head of horses and mares. Ed Oliver, Newlattd, or Phone 622-A. ' Far Sale—Good recleaned millet seed. Inquire of C. H. Porter or phone ISO. Fer Sale er Trade —Studebaker automobile, 1912 model, never been used. For sale or trade on easy terms. F. W. Bedford. Far Sate— Superior concrete and read gravel. Builders of concrete silos, barns, tanks, foundations, culverts and floors. Write for prices. Lafayette Qravel and Concrete Co., Lafayette, Ind. . —^
For Sale—A McCray refrigerator, 9 feet vide, 7 feet high, 6 feet deep, for a hotel or restaurant. Inquire at the Indian School. Phone No. 83. Far Sale— 3 conveniently located five-room cottages, at right prices and on. easy payments. Firman Thompson. i i ' ' '■ —s" ~ For Sale—6-rnom cottage in north part of town, lot 150x187, good well, large chlckenpark. E. L. Hammerton, Plume 375. Far Sale— Small property south of Christian church known as Harrison property. See George A. Williams. Far Sale—s acres 40 rods from city limits, on stone road, R. F. D. A good small house, good well and fenced with woven wire. Will sell at a bargain if sold soon. Will also sell in five or ten-acre lots any part of the Monnett 80 acres lying on the west aide of gravel road, half mile south of city limits. Price 3165 and up. G. F. Meyers. For Sale—Typewriter ribbons of all makes. The Republican.
WASTED. Wanted— Single driving general purpose mare. Dr. H. L. Brown, Phone 471-D. Wanted— Work as plasterer. 25 years experience. E. Stephens, phone 456. Wanted— A few milk customers. C. A. Reed. Wanted— l will pay $2 per bushel for good rice popcorn shelled. J. A. McFarland. -■= Wanted— Board and room with private family, inquire at Republican
Wasted —Pair mare mules, virell matched, color, sizes and gait; must -weigh 1300 pounds or more; between S and 6 years old; must be absolutely sound and gentle. Give lowest cash price and be quick. Francis T. Hilton, Medaryville, Ind. i ~ Wanted—Men for building wooden freight cars. Those handy with ordinary tools can soon learn. Also common laborers. Haskell A Barker Car Company, Michigan City, Ind. Wanted—Teams to plow by the acre for corn. Call or write as soon as possible. John O’Connor, Kalman. Ind.
foil BINT. For Bent—Two front rooms; unfurnished; to lady or man and wife; call evenings or Sunday. Mrs. {Janie Gant, near Babcock A Hopkins elevator. Fer Bent— Cottage vacated by Chas. Sands. Bath and hot water. Frank Foltz. ' - ——l— '« I LUBT. v Lest Express package from Minneapolis, Mina., Addressed to Mrs. W, L. Frye. Finder please give to ‘’Billy’' or leave at Makeever hotel. Xwflt-A white leather stud brldlT, either in ReattMaor or north of town. FHjdtt please return to Will H. BarkJttlsf cycles— l have the agency for the Indian Motorcycle. Bee one on display st my shop/Let me sharpen yonr lawn mowers. Jam. C. Clark. ~ Cullen street; rear of McFarland’s. ' r
7 A BUTTEBFAT. W. H. Dexter will pay 32c for butter fat this week. ■■ . POULTRY AND BOOS. For Sale —Pure Rose Comb Rhode Island Red eggs during the hatching season. C. H. Mills, Phone 100. For Sale —Mayhew’s White Wyandotte eggß, $1 for 15, or $5 per 100. Arthur Mayhew, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, or Phone 29-H, Mt. Ayr. For Safe— Rose Comb Rhode Island Red eggs. From flock, 75 cents per setting of 15; from selected pen, $1.50. I. F. Meader, phone 626-D. R. D. 2, Rensselaer. ;
For Sale —Pen of Single Comb and White Leghorns, as good as the best Eggs for sale at 4 cents each. A. G. W. Farmer, Phone 425.
MONEY 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. AUTOMOBILES. The Yery Latest, a real 1912 car, on our floor tor delivery now. The Maxwell Mascotte Touring car. THE OLDDEN TOUR WINNER. tfLaXtf&Cl'
ZEMO FOR YOUR SKIN.
Eczema, Pimples, Rash and All Skin Afflictions Quickly Healed. No matter what the trouhle, eczema, chafing, pimples, salt rheum, Zemo4a--stantly stops irritation. The cure comes quick, sinks right in, leaving no trace. Zemo is a vanishing liquid. Your skin fairly revels with delight the moment Zemo is applied. Greatest thing on earth for dandruff. Zemo is prepared by E. W. Rose Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and is sold by all druggists at $1 a bottle. But to prove to you its wonderful value it is now put up In liberal size trial hot ' ties at only 25 cents and is guaranteed to do the work or your money back. Sold at A. F. Long’s Drug Store.
GILLAM.
Ed Harper finished sowing oats this week. Carl Remm went to Medaryville Monday. N. F. Kupke hauled posts Monday and Tuesday. Joseph Eiehelberger was a Newland visitor Wednesday. Mrs. Frank Walters, of Newland, is very ill at this writing. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Himes, Monday morning, a 12-pound boy. Bert Duggins and Orange Brewer took dinner with John Bowen Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hess and Mrs. Vess Britton were Rensselaer goers Saturday. George and Clara Walters spent Saturday night with Frank Walters and family at Newland.
Notice to Dog Owners.
Notice is hereby given to the dog owners of Jasper county that they must positively keep their dogs muzzled or on their own premises. Any unmuzzled dog found running at large will be killed or their owner prose cuted. All officers of the law and all citizens are requested to co-operate with the Health Officer in this matter in order to effectually stamp out hydrophobia, which has been found this spring in different parts of the county. Stray dogs especially should be killed. - , ■ , The State Board of Health is very positive in regard to this matter.
E. N. LOY, M. D.,
County Health Commissioner.
Plano Tuning.
Now is the time to have your piano tuned, cleaned and polished. Call on Otto Braun, the band teacher.
We have taken the agency for Remington typewriter supplies and if you want the best typewriter ribbon made call at The Republican office or phone your wants. Ribbons for all makes of machines. There never was a time whep people appreciate the real merits of Chamberlain’s Couglk Remedy more then now. This is shown by the increase in sales and voluntary testimonials from persons who have been cured by it If you or your children are troubled with a cough or cold give It a trial and become acquainted with its good qualiaites. For sale by all dealers. - - '■ -n. All of the national, state and private banks and trust companies in Indiana will be asked to aid to the exteat of their ability In the congressional Investigation of the money trust Formal letters are being sent to all of them, asking for specific information covering several points, including the amount due to and from other banks. \ u ;
STRANGE FEATS OF FAMOUS GLUTTONS
“BEASTS FEED, JiAN "SflaTTßr wise man alone knows how to eat.” But not always. It would scarcely be incorrect to describe Balzac, Voltaire and Victor Hugo, tot instance, as wise men in their own -way; and yet they were human gluttons, whose gastronomic feats would strike the average readier as somewhat amazing, to say the least. Balzac has told us himself that at the end of a hard writing he went to a certain famous eating house in Paris and there ordered, and ate, a little dinner carefully composed of twelve dozen Osternd oysters, twelve mutton cutlets, a duck, two roast partridges, a Normandy sole, fruit, coffee and liqueurs. Victor Hugo, whose iron teeth could crush a cutlet hone as if it were an almond, sometimes amused his grandchildren, after eating through a dinner of six courses, by collecting the remnants of souP. entree, flsh, roast, vegetables, —and sweet dishes, mixing them, and eating this horrible “salad” there and then with obvious pleasure. Voltaire who almost lived on strong coffee, bragged of drinking sixty cups a day, which reminds one of Dr. Johnson, who could almost equal this record in the matter of tea. Judging, however, from the information contained in a book lately published in France, on eating, It would appear that not even Balzac, Hugo, or the more modern eating-champions we occasionally read about, whose feats for wagers—such as disposing of a trifle like twenty pounds of plum duff, fifty or sixty eggs, or a score of pigeons—would not have Mood much chance if matched against one or two of the French kings. Take Louis XTV., for instance, who was a gourmand, and a gourmet, too. He had as many as 1,500 men to cook for him pnd to wait at his banquets. Here is the menu ofone of his ordinary dinners: One broth made of two fowls and one of four partridges and cabbages; one additional soup, made of six pigeons and one of cocks’ combs; two further soups, one of fowl and one of partridge; a twenty-pound side of veal and twelve pigeons; a fricassee of six chickens and two hashed partridges, three roast partridges, six braised partridges, two roast turkeys, three truffled hens, two fat capons, nine chickens, nine pigeons, two young chickens, six partridges - and “four pigeons. The dessert Consisted of two china bowls of raw fruit, two of jam and two of compote.
DOES YOURS?
“I wish you wouldn’t contradict me, my dear.” VI don’t.” .
Poetry and Prose
The poultry editor of a country paper received this letter from a poetical Summer cottager: “Dear Editor —What shall I do? Each mom when I visit my hen-house I find two or three fowls on- their backs, their feet sticking straight up, and their souls wandering through fields Elysian. What is the matter?” The prosaic editor replied by return of post: “Dear Friend —The principal trouble with your hens seems to be that they are dead. There isn’t much that you can do, as they will probably be that way for some time. Yours respectfully.**
NOT GOOD FUEL.
When a young couple tried to start their automobile for an evening drive they were greatly puzzled when the machine refused to make any signs of action. “What’e the matter with the thing? cried the husband, **l Just filled It with gasoline last night.” “That’s odd,” replied the wife, “1 notice the can untouched In the cellar a few minutes ago.” “In the cellar,” retorted the husband, “why I got this In the kitchen.” “No wonder the machine will not ran hysterically laughed the young woman, “you have filled the car with maple syrup.—Youngstown Telegram.
BANK PROTECTS CUBTOMERS.
A curious incident la reported from Paris throwing light upon the policy of the Rothschild bank in that city. No new accounts are allowed to be open with the Rothschilds nowadays, but any old customer or any descendant of an old customer while he keeps a balance in the bank is never reminded how small the balance Is or even that it has been overdrawn. — American Hebrew.
PROBLEM FOR FUTURE.
It is estimated that within 50 years we shaU have to supply the wants ol over 200,000,000 people. While the hundreds of thousands of these folks will on the land, the vast majority will congregate in the cities and wffl have.to be fed and clothed by the products of the same number of acres of land as were available when Columbus discovered America. Tommie [to auntie, an ardent saf> fragette]—“When you women gat your rights, do you Intend to tax os
Prompt Bus Service.
For prompt service to and from the depot and for all city and college trips, call Kanne Bros., phone 80 or 214. Livery stable in connection.
KANNE BROS.
Now is the time to get rid of your rheumatism. You can do it by applying Chamberlain’s Liniment and massaging the parts freely at each application. For sale by all dealers, c A broad anti-injunction bill, such a measure as has long been advocated by labor unions throughout the country, was favorably reported to the house Monday by Chairman Clayton, of the judiciary committee. The bill provides that injunctions in labor disputes only be issued after the defendants have had opportunity to make answer to the complaint against them. A mighty big rain occurred yesterday morning and it Is reported to have been much heavier here than it was north of town and still heavier to the southward. No official records are kept of precipitation in Rensselaer but at St. Joseph’s college a measurement taken following the rain showed a fall of 1.48 inches. Persons who came in from the south said the storm wasblinding and that there was a veritable sea of water south of town. The Iroquois ditch raised a foot inside of an hour. The report that former Vice-Presi-dent Fairbanks will not serve as a Taft delegate at large from Indiana at the Chicago convention was denounced Monday night at Taft Headquarters in Washington as “a campaign canard made out of whole cloth.” It was also added that Mr. Fairbanks had authorized Harry New to declare the report without foundation. Poor appetite is a sure sign of impaired digestion. A few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets will strengthen your digestion and improve your appetite. Thousands have been benefited by taking these Tablets. For sale by all dealers. c Fifteen-year-old Vera Cole, of Saginaw, Mich., whose father was killed by a train when he pushed a young woman from beneath Its wheels, has been granted $25 a month pension for life, and a bronze medal by the Carnegie hero fund commission. Because her mother was dead she was handed about among relatives and denied schooling. She will use the money to educate herself.
_ SEASON 1912 Barkley Bros, wish to call the attention of Breeders fj P to their two Imported Draft Stallions NELSON AND GABON No. 2274 No. 73285 and Grade Stallion BATTLING NELSON Which are making the Season of 1912 at the following plaees: MONDAYS AND TUESDAYS: At the Barkley Farm, in Barkley-Twp. BALANCE OF WEEK: At the Hemphill Stud Barn, in Rensselaer. i i i.'i.-.r-" .it*i . if—i ■■ ■—-—■■■— 1 - 8 . ' - : ~ > ' •- - ' • * ” \. —— fl “I 7 ~ ' ■ Descriptions and Terms
NELSON No. 2274. Is a black Belgian, weighing nearly 2£Oo pounds. He was Imported by Crouch k Son, of Lafayette, in 1908, and this Is his fourth season In Jasper county. Nelson and Ms colts won first In every class shown in, at the Rensselaer 1910 show. Many of his colts as suckers and geldings have sold fer upwards of S2OO. The horse is pronounced by many good judges to he the best all aronnd draft stallion In America. TERMB—I2S to gaarautee colt to stand and suck.
Service fee becomes due and payable at once if owner parts with mare or removes her from the county. Twenty per cent discount if service is paid when mare is known to be in foal. BARKLEY BROS., OWNERS PUSHES : Fua 50SC; B«m MO. Wm. Brwin, Manager.
M. E. CHURCH, TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 7.
8:15 P. M. Admission 85 Cents. The Lecture Course did not pay out this year but the Lyceum Bureau have agreed, to send this man at a reduced rate in the hope of making up the deficit Those holding season tickets will not be admitted on the tickets, but pay the regular price.
Monday is the Last Day For Payment of Spring Installment
Next Monday, May 6th, Is the laßt day for paying the spring installment of taxes without the penalty being attached. Owing to the rush on the last day It-is sometimes impossible to wait on all who are on hand and it is better to come in some day this week and avoid the rush. ' ,r,j :_.i
A. A. FELL,
I Want to Retain Your Business.
Having bought the Wasson bus line, I hope to retain all the customers of the line, whose patronage I earnestly solicit. I worked hard for Mr. Wasson and would not have entered into portunity to get into business for myself and I have paid a big price for the business, which I hope by prompt and courteous treatment to conduct to the satisfaction of all my customers. The patronage of the public is solicited. Calls may he left at the Makeever' House, No. 107 or at my house and barn, phone, No. “ask.” Respectfully,
LOCAL MARKETS.
Wheat—sl.os. Oats —53. Corn—73. Eggs—l 6. Ducks —10. Roosters —6. Geese —6. Chickens —10. Turkeys—lo.
It would surprise you to know of the great good that is being done by Chamberlain’s Tablets. Darius Downey, of Newberg Junction, N. 8., writes: “My wife has been using Chamberlain’s Tablets and finds them very effectual and doing her lots of good.” If you have any trouble with your stomach or bowels give them a trial. For sale by all dealers. c
Ballline Nelson Sired by Nelson, black, 2 years old, weight 1,900 pounds, lots of style and action; one of the greatest draft cqlts ever In this country. TERMS—SI2 to guarantee colt to stand and sack.
County Treasurer
“BILLY” FRYE.
FACTS AND FICTION.
Experiences of Rensselaer Citizens Are Easily Proven It Be Facts. The most superficial Investigation will prove that the following statement from a resident of Rensselaer is true. Read it and compare evidence from Rensselaer people with testimony of strangers living so far away you cannot investigate the facts of the case. Many more citizens of Rensselaer endorse Doan’s Kidney Pills. Nelson Randle, N. Main St., Rensselaer, Ind., says: “1 have used Doan’s Kidney Pills at different times When suffering from a lame and aching back and other symptoms of disordered kidneys. I was led to procure this remedy at Fendig’s Drug Store by reading about its good work in similar cases. Relief Boon* followed its use and the backache and kidney difficulties were finally disposed of. Whenever 1 have taken Doan’s Kidney Pills since then they have lived up to representations. I do not know of a case where this remedy has failed to prove of benefit.” For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s —and take no other. - ——,_3_—^—
Methodist Church.
Baptisms and reception of . members at the mornihg sqyvice. Evening serv- ■ ices will he In charge of the American Volunteers of the Salvation Army. You are welcome to these services.
CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The KM Ym Hm Always Bought Bears the Signature of ELECTRICAL Wiring ; Fans Motors Fixtures j DUVALL * CO. : PHONE 185.
GABON No. 78286. Is a black Pereheroa, weighing 2,240 pounds. He was also Imported by Crouch k Sou, of Lafayette, and was shown la six of the largest horse shows in 1009 and won three firsts, two seconds, and one third preariiun. This Is Ms second season in Jasper county and Ms colts are just beginning to come out sad are proving his false as a draft sire. Aside from Noises, there Is no other stallion Ms equal tat this section of Indians, as an individual or breeder. TERMS—92O, to guarantee eett to stand and suck.
