Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 223, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 September 1912 — Page 4

cusmed cnmii BATXS fOB OUSSraBB ASS. Three lines or' less, per worts of sin Issues of The Evening Republican ana two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 16 cents. Additional space pro rata. FOB SALE. For Sale-One 3-year-old black mule, 15% hands, gentle, broken. One 12-year-old small work mule. One grade Jersey cow. One mile west of town, cemetery road, Russell Van Hook. For Sale —Young full blood Durham calf. F. M. Abbott. Phone 216. For Sale— At the Rosebud Farm. XHiroc Jersey and O. I. C. swine, either sex, spring farrow* Boars, boars, boars red, Guaranteed pure bred. Boars, boars, boars white, Boars with breeding guaranteed right AMOS H. ALTER & SON, V Parr, Ind. For Sale —At Rosebud Farm. 300 bushels Mediterranean seed wheat, last year’s crop, recleaned, $1.25 per bushel, Amos H. Alter & Son, Parj, Ind. For Sato—Boxes and barrels. Jarrette’s Variety Store. For Sale —A new ensilage Atter and Johnson corn binder. Marion I. Adams & Son. Phone 533-L. For Sale —Turkey Red seed wheat hard, recleaned, $1.25 per bushel. Marion I. Adams, phone 533-L For Sale —Good large well-built twostory house, all in good repair, good well and cistern, fine shade and fruit trees, grape arbor. Located three blocks from court house, on paved street cement walks and drains all in. For particulars write or call on Chas.>J. Dean & Son, Real Estate Dealers, Rensselaer, Indiana. For Solo— Get a good home where you have enough land for garden, fruit poultry, and place to keep a horse and cow. We have a fine 10-acre tract with good house and barn, good well, all fenced and located within the corporate limits of the city of Rensselaer, for sale at si reasonable price. For particulars write or call on Chas. J. Dean & Son, Rensselaer, Indiana. For Sale —Oak lumber. Select white oak and burr oak for barns, cribß, sheds, eic., also floor joists, studding and rafters for houses. Will saw to any dimensions in any quantities at a very reasonable price. Bridge lumber a specialty. See or write Ben D. McColly or Leslie Alter, phone 521-E, Rensselaer.

WANTED. Wanted—Girl for general housework. Phone 411 or 413. C. Earl Duvall. Wanted—A dining room girl at the Hotel Makeever. Wanted—Girl to work in the kitchen at the Makeever Hotel. Wanted—For the keeping, a good, reliable, gentle horse, to drive a short distance during the school term. C. M. Blue, Lock Box 304. Wanted—3 or 4 high school boys to board. 20 cents a meal, room included. Phone 358; postoffice L. B. 582. , Wanted—Men for building wooden freight cars. Those handy with ordinary tools can soon learn. Also common laborers. Car Works, Michigan City, Ind. ; W. H. DEXTER. W. H. Dexter will pay 29 cents’ for butterfat this week. PARK CREAMERY. Wilson & Gilmore, at Parr will pay 29 cents for butterfat this week. LOST. Lost—On street, ass bill. Finder please return to J. Harve Robinson at the Princess. ■ - i -Lost—Watch fob, with initials G. G. Return to Gus Grant, or to Republican office. Lost—Pair spectacles in case, between my residence and Parr. Finder please return. John E. Alter, Phone 521-E. FOB RENT. For Rest—6-room bouse, 4 blocks southeast of public square. J. C. Passons. furnished rooms. Mrs. Claude Kruzan, South Weston street, next to C. M. g” ■ ' c ■OflOa TO MILT SUBSCRIBERS. Subscribers to The Evening Republican will confer a favor upon the publishers by reporting promptly any failure of delivery upon the part of the carrier boys. The Republican tries to rive geod service to the delivery of the paper, bnt cannot do so without the cooperation of subscribers. If you fail to receive your paper notify us promptly Pjr phones It, 114 or Its and your com plaint will be riven orompt attention A Classified Adv. will sell It

Fine for Sore Eyes, Cuts, Bums and Bruises

For Niles Around People ore Coming to $. F. Fendig’s for Soothing, , Healing, Antiseptic Inflammacine When B. F. Fendig decided to accept the agency for Turner’s INFLAMMACINE for Rensselaer and vicinity, he certainly did a great favor to sufferers in this neighborhood. < } The price is so small —only 25 cents for a generous Porcelain Jar* and the guarantee “Money Back if dissatisfied for any reason” is so honorable that the sales are Increasing by leaps and bounds. Thousands of people the country over have used Turner’s INFLAMMACINE, a clean golden yellow salve, with great success for 20 years. It is better today than it ever was for Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Tonsilitis, Sore Throat, Inflamed Eyes, Piles, Eczema, Neuralgia, Caked Breast, Ivy Poison, Earache, and all aches and pains. It’s the great American all-around household remedy. Something you, need on hand in the home at all times. Get it from B. F. Fendig, 25 cents. Mail orders filled by Mathes Sales Co., Rochester, N. Y.

Walter R. Lee Buys The Merica Creamery,

(Whiter R. , Lee, who was for some time in business at Newman, 111., and who was called home on account of the critical condition of his wife’s health, has closed a deal with Alex. Merica for the purchase of the cream buying station located in one of the Makeever buildings east of The Republican of&ce. Mr. Lee traded an 80-acre farm in Walker township to Mr. Merica. The creamery was purchased by Mr. Merica for 51s son, Dean, of W. H. Morrison, the consideration being $3,000 and that is the amount Mr. Lee pays for it. Dean’s health failed several months ago and he has been compelled to leave the running of the creamery to others much of the time for several months. Mr. Lee takes possession of the business at once and will go after the business, following his well known aggressive style in quest of business. When baby suffers with croup, apply and give Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil at once. Safe for children. A little goes a long way. 25c and 50c. At all drug stores.

Keeps Your Stove “Always Ready for Company” A bright, clean, glossy sttmTis the joy and pride of every housekeeper. But ij is hard to keep a stove nice shiny—• unless Black Silk Stove Polish is used* Here is the reason: Black Silk Stove Polish sticks right to the iron. It doesn’t rub off or dust off. Its shine lasts four times longer than the shine of any pfhfit polish. You only need to polish onefourth as often, yet your stove will be cleaner, brighter and better looking than it has been since you first bought it. Use BUCK SILK STOVE POLISH on your parlor stove, kitchen stove or gras stove, Get a can from your hardware or stove dealer. If you do not find It better than any other stove polish you have ever used before, your dealer Is authorized to relund your money. But we feel sure you will agree with the thousands of other up-to-date women who are now using: Black Silk Stove Polish and who say It is the best stove polish evei^made.” LIQUID OR PASTE ONE QUALITY Be sure to get the genuine. Black Silk Stove Polish costs you no more than the ordinary kind. Keep your grates, registers, fenders and stove pipes bright and free from rusting by using BLACK SILK AIR-DRYING ENAMEL. Brush free with each can of enamel only. ITse BLACK SILK METAL POLISH for silverware. nickel, tinware or brass. It works quickly, easily, and leaves a brilliant surface. It has no equal for use on automobiles. Black Silk Stove Polish Works

LOCAL MARKETS.

Wheat—Boc. Oats—2B&. * Corn —65c. -r. Rye—6oc. Eggs—l 9. _ ; : :' Butter—2o. Ducks—white, 8. Indian runners, 4. -v - Roosters —6. Geese—6. j. Chickens—lL - _ Springs—l3c. Turkeys—9. *

OLD CONVICT SHIP

British Hulk Success Confine Prisoners. £ Crude Old Craft Wat Jail During Mad Rush That Followed the Dlsoovery of Australian Gold Fields —ls on Way to America. Boston/—The liner Laconia on her last arrival at the port of Boston reported exchanging wireless messages With the British convict hulk Success. This Indicates that what , has been termed "the mast remarkable ship that has visited England since the days of the slave trade” is bound for American ports, presumably Boston or New York, on an exhibition cruise similar to that made In British waters during the past sixteen years. The Success sailed from Australia on Its long exhibition cruise in 1895. She has dropped anchor at practically every port of England. The vessel Itself is a rare cariosity, with a strange, fiction-like history, and contains a collection of relics of the bushranging days of Australia. At each port attendants explain the exhibits and descriptive lectures are given on the various phases of convict life. The "history of the Success as a convict ship dates hack to the mad rush in search of wealth that followed the discovery of the Australian goldfields in 1851. Port Wllliamstown, nine miles distant from Melbourne, was filled with every variety of craft bearing immigrants. One day, looming above all otjier ships, came a quaint, old full-rigged vessel, with apple sides, broad bulging bows, standing high out of the water, and the name "Success” displayed the full width of her squarecut stern, over tho windows. And below the taffrall. She proved to be a "country-built” East Indiaman. She dropped anchor midst the army of white wings which ttyen dotted the harbor. In the confusion and excitement that resulted from the sudden Influx of Immigration, murder and crime ran riot. Robbery under arms was reported every few days, and It seemed

Convict Ship Success.

Impossible for the authorities to cope with the number of felons and miscreants who Infested the district. At last the suggestion was made that some of the vessels then lying at anchor in the bay, deserted by captains and crews, who had all joined In the headlong rush for the “diggings," should be utilized as prison hulks. Five full-rigged vessels, among them the Success, were selected. Of these "yellow frigates," as they were called, the Suocess was officially regarded as the flagship of the felon fleet. She was known as the awful "dark cell drill” ship, and between her decks were lodged a company of closecropped villains, the very scum of all the lawless men in that district The Success was a convict ship until 1857, when the terrible cruelties of the system aroused the English people to action. She was removed from Williamstpwn to Sandridge in 1857, and trbhi 1880 to 1868 was used as a “woman’s prison." The following year the ship was used as a sort of reformatory for boys. Late In 1890 the Success first appeared before the public as a ship on show. Her general structure Is well worthy of description. The ship’s external appearance Is particularly strlkingln these days of ocean greyhounds. Her square-cut stem and quarter galleries stamp her at once with the hall-mark of antiquity, and her bluff bow shows that she could never have distinguished herself for a high rate of speed. . Her tonnage may be taken at 580. She Is 135 feet In length, about 29 feet beam, copper fastened, and “trenailed” throughout. Her solid sides are two feet six Inches In thickness at the bilge, so that prisoners from within recoiled from the hopeless task of penetrating her walls.

Bolts Kills Blooded Cows.

York, Pa. —A bolt of lightning during a thunder storm struck a tree under which three cows had sought shelter on the term of Clarence Gilbert, near Yorkana, killing them instantly. The animals were thoroughbreds, highly rained. Cows and Beer Kegs Adorn Chapel. Marietta, O.—Nineteen students of Msrtetta college were suspended this week, as the ontcomo of a prank In which a pow and a calf were led Into the chapel. Beer kegs galore and a t>0 gr floor completed th# plo

Big Crowd At Convention At Kentland Monday.

The republican rally at Kentland Monday was a whizzer, according to Rensselaer people who attended. A big and enthusiasts crowd was on hand and republicans proved that there are a whole lot of them left and that they are interested in republican quccess. James E. Watson spoke for two hours in the afternoon. H!b address was clear cut and convincing* and he did not leave any doubt with his hearers that the present splendid times are the result of constructive republican legislation that deserves the support of all who wish prosperity continued- Congressman Crumpacker was there and spoke for a few minutes. Colonel Durbin, candidate *Jor governor, was unable to reach Kentland, and former Congressman Chaney spoke at night. In the forenoon the county convention was held, Elmer R- Bringham was renominated for auditor and Edward Brandt, of Morocco, for treasurer. C. C. Warner, S. R. Nichols, A. Hall6ek, Mrs. D. G. Warner, Mrs. W. G. Richardson and Henry Nevill were among those who attended from Rensselaer.

Monnett Children Enjoyed Hay Bide and Dinner Saturday.

The daughters of Ed Tanner, 3 miles northeast of town, gave delight to the girls at the Monnett Home Saturday by taking them to their farm home on hay ladders, and givinj them a bountiful dinner. The little ones fairly beamed with pleasure.

The Wizard of Wiseland.”

“The Wizard of Wiseland,” which appears at The Ellis Theatre on Thursday, September 19, is something new in the way of a mythological musical comedy. The book is from the pen of the well known writers Eunice Fitch and Harry Scott and the ■music score was written by the eminent French composer, Livy Lea Lazelle. The first act opens with the commencement exercises at a seaside college for young ladies. The professor of chemistry is invited to demonstrate his latest discovery, a wonderful alkaheat that he claims has. the power to realize the wish of anyone who tastes the solution. One has only to express a wish while drinking the potion and presto f the wish is granted. A young naval lieutenant, Paul Jones Hodson, appears and tells a wonderful story. He has been experimenting with a war balloon along the Pacific coast when a great cyclone blows up and he is driven out to sea. After two nights of the storm the sun rises in the east and he finds himself hovering over a mysterious Island where the trees can talk and flowers sing like birds, where the beach is strewn with pearl* rubies, emeralds and diamonds instead of pebbles. He tells of seeing a beatiful fairy queen with her following of mystic fairies. Of course everyone wishes to go to this fairy island, and the act closes with the Professor brewing his mysterious potion which is to bring about the desired transformation. The second act opens on this mysterious fairy island and they all find themselves experiencing a change of heart and circumstances. Ikey Goldenburg, the professor’s stupid valet, is appointed wizard and ruler of the island and the heiress to millions becomes a poor working girl and so on through a merry tangle of experience. After sundry adventures all unite in wishing to go home • and the fairy queen waves her magic wand and starts them on their homeward journey. During the argument of the play eighteen musical numbers are introduced with a magnificent ballet dance in the second act. The management has spared no expose in costuming and producing this play to make it first-class in every respect ,

Factory Prices to Introduce Goods.

To all those interested In stock and poultry raising, I have on hands 500 pounds of Dr. Lion’s Remedy to Introduce to the people, and 100 gallons Lion’s imported dip and dipping tanks. The food Is guaranteed to rid worms from all stock and poultry and the dip to rid the lice and a y tank to dip them In. The food is 40 cents per pound, in packages of 6% pounds or more; dip $1.30 per gallon; freight .prepaid. .The tank is 312.00 f. o. b. SL Louis, Mo. Please help me introduce this by buying some of it and givings it a thorough trial. Call at Warner Bros, and see the goods, Rensselaer, Ind., or address by mall, Peter McDaniel, Rensselaer, Ind. Cash with order. All mall orders promptly Hied, or your money back. - . \ Send me your name and address and receive a complete catalogue of our goods free. 1 PETER McDANIJSL, Local Agent, Bnnmtnlftfir Indiana

THE ELLIS THEATRE THURSDAY, oQpt. W —— ■■ ■■■■ . ■ ■ - iniThe Harry Scott Company politely offers “Che Wizard of Wand ” Indorsed by the critics of the Chicago Press after a —... two months’ engagement as a Musical Attraction of Real Merit. A Bewitching Chorus illustrating in form and features the idyllic type of American youth and beauty. A mammoth melange of Worth, Music and Mimicry, presented by 40 people. A coterie of Clever Comedians, Piquant Soubrettes, Beautiful Prima Donnas, and Handsoms Tenors, headed by Nat Phillips, Marguerite DeVou, Maria Nilson, Wm. A. Hnngerford. * Prices 35c, 50c, 75c, SI.OO Seats at Jessen’s

NO MORE DANDRUFF FALLING HAIR GRAY HAIR

Men and women—do you -want a splendid head of luxuriant hair free from scalp itch and dandruff? Do you want hair so bewitchingly radiant that it compels the admiration of all who see it? Do you want a scalp as immaculately clean and bright as a newly minted coin? If you do, get a 50 cent bottle of PARISIAN Sage today, at dealers everywhere. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every carton and bottle — ask for PARISIAN Sage and see that you get it B. F. Fendig guarantees it Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Parkison, who came from Kingman, Kans., to be near at hand when Mrs. Kenton Parkison was operated on recently, will start back to Kingman tomorrow. They will be accompanied by their daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Roades, who will remain there only about two weeks, and Miss Edna Babcock, of Parr, who will remain sos an indefinite' time with Miss Ruth Parkison, for whose health the removal was made to Kansas. Ruth made considerable improvement after, arriving there and her many friends here hope that she will continue to Improve and that the Parkison family may be able to return here to remain before many months. While in Colorado the past two weeks Dr. I. M. Washburn called on a number of former Rensselaer people, the Sayler family at Lamar, and Fred Duvall, at Pueblo, Colo. Fred is a son of Daniel Duvall, whose family moved to Kansas many years ago. He is a linotype operator on the Pueblo Chieftan. Frank Sayler is engaged in the seed business at Lamar. Jay, who is a dentist, is located at Twin Buttes, Colo. He not only practices dentistry but is the postmaster, has a drugstore and is the cashier of a bank. That’s going some even for Jay, who was one of the real live wires of a dozen years ago and one of the best athletes that ever wore a hobnailed shoe.

• W. C. Baker returned to Chicago Sunday after spending his vacation here. He was accompanied there by Miss Ina Jackson, who was a guest over Sunday at the Baker home in Barkley township. If you want the best flour from which you can make, good bread try a sack of our White Star, only 31.35. Every sack guaranteed. Rowles & Parker. Mrs. W. I. Yates, who has been in very poor health for several months has been very much worse the past few days and her condition last night was quite alarming. Today she is restingbsome easier. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rich, of Goodland, were guests Monday of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Hartley. Mrs. M. J. Barber and son Elmer, of near Fair Oaks, were Rensselaer shoppers today.

CASTOR IA For Tnfanfai and Children. flu KM Yulian/Umpßought

The HOLPUCHROOFING CO. Composition, Felt, and Gravel Rooters. ! Orders may be left with 6. D. McColly or at the new school building, r Agency For Root's— Bee Hives and T ~- Supplies —-♦ Goods Sold at Catalog Prices Saving You '/he Freight. ♦ Limited Supply Carried in Stock. —-♦ Leslie Clark Republican Office.

Inn Day DEALER IN lair, fain; .ie, Brick RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA

jatrwoirrifnsl Chicago to northwest, India napollk, Cincinnati, and the South, tonia▼lll* and Trenoh Uok Springs. BEWSSEIiABB T2MB TABX& In Effect July 7. 1912. SOUTH Boom. *> " No. 31—Fast Mail 4:40 a. m. No. s—Louisville Mall .... 11:18 am. No. 37—Indpls. Ex. 11:48 a. m. No. 33—Hoosier Limited .. 1:65 p. m. No. 39—Milk Accom 6:08 p. m. No. 3—Louisville Ex. .... 11:08 p. m. HOBTH BOUm>. No. 4—Louisville Mall .. 4:83 am. No. 40—Milk /Accom. v.... 7:32 a. m. No. 32 —Fast (nil 10:19 a. m. No. 38—IndplrChgo. Ex. .. 8:22 p. ra. No. B—Loulsvle Mall AEx 8:87 p. m. No. 30—Hoosier Limited .. 6:46 p. m. Train No. 31 makes connections at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 8:16 a. m. No. 1:, leaving Lafayette at 4:20, connects with No. SO at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:46 p. m. Trains Nob. 30 to S 3, the Limited,’* run only between Chicago and Indianapolis, the C. H. A D. service for Cincinnati having been discontinued. W. H. BEAM. Agent

NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS. The Iroquois special asses&nent has been placed upon the tax duplicate, to be paid with the fall or second installment of taxes. These who paid their taxes In full for the year will call and pay this special assessment ALSON A. FELL, ' , Treas. Jasper County.