Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 250, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 October 1912 — Page 4

» ft fan 1 il *? ll 111 I I /II I \ \ *&* Ir •’ll // in kent , jf yrj <s&- JsSri eut EMPIRE. g&f9 ERAND For that new Overcoat, Suit, Furnishings or Shoes, it will pay you to visit a Big Store like ours, where you can save from 10 to 20 per cent on your Winter Supplies. Our Men’s Section is filled with new Fall Suits, Overcoats, Shoes and everything for Men and Boys, quality and prices always right. You take no chances in trading at a st ore like ours, whose ever increasing business for the past ten years is proof of our dependable merchandise, our prices and our courteous treatment. Perfect fitting all wool Serge Suits at Convertible Collar all wool Overcoats $lO and $12.50. These are regular sls and $12.50, sls, $lB and S2O. $16.50 values. Boys’ Russian Suits, sizes 2 to 6. Boys’ ‘tp n n v Suits and Overcoats all sizes and ages, at Excellent values m men’s Cashmere $ 9 -q Suits at $6, SB, $lO, $12.50, sls, $lB to S2O. Mdn’s all solid leather Shoes $2 a pair. The finest all wool pure worsted Serges Our Ammonia-Proof or Barnyard in browns and greys, very stylish Suits • Shoe, just the thing for hard service. Our and the verv best money can buy for hard price $2.50 a pair, a saving to you of 50c. service. Our prices are from $3 to $5 un- a J* en ’ s g unmetal Mucher new toes $2.50 der their regular value and a comparison a pa j£ en>s tan buttons, $3.50 and $4 a pair, of our values will convince you, priced $lO, Gun me tal buttons in all the very new$12.50, sls and $lB. est shapes, $3, $3.50 and $4 a pair. Fine black Kersey Overcoats $6, SB, School Shoes, the dependable kind, all $lO, $12.50, sls, $lB, S2O and $22.50. solid leather, $1.50, $2 and $2.50. ROWLES & PARKER The Big Corner Department Store.

PUBLIC SALE OF FARMS AND CITY PROPERTY.

As I have invested quite extensively in the Jungles ditch valley of Kniman, 1 will sell all the real estate in the city of Rensselaer an Marion and Milroy townships, at public auction, on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1912. Sale will take place at the properties sold and the hours hereafter stated: 73 acres in Marion township, Jasper county, Indiana, 1 mile east and 1% miles south of Rensselaer. The improvements consist of a new 7-room house, a cement milk house, wood house with cement floor, barn 40x50, henhouse, a 59-foot well, 9 feet in the stone, new windmill, cistern piped in house, cement tanks, cement walks. All the building improvents new in 1911. All thoroughly tiled and all under cultivation, gravel road on two sides of farm. 100 acres of fine land in Marion and Milroy townships, all tiled, all under cultivation but a grove of 4 acres; no buildings on the farm, but a fine building place; miles southeast of Rensselaer and gravel road all the way. The farm sales will take place on the farms at about 10:30 in the morning. . 9- house and bath, 1 block south of court house; a fine house modern in every particular; lot 50x150 feet, northwest corner of Cullen and Rutsen streets. 10- house and bath; also modern, at southwest corner of Rutsen and Cullen streets; good barn, room for 3 head of stock and automobile. Two lots on Cullen street, north of the first house described; fine building lots. City prqperty will be sold at 1:30 in afternoon. • Terns— One-third cash, balance in three equal payments or as may be agreed; deferred payments on farm land to have 5 per cent interest, on city property 6 per cent. Discount of 3 per cent on deferred payments; earnest money of >SOO on either farm or either house, and >250 on each lot will be required at time of sale. ROBERT MICHAEL, Col. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. Col Phillips will show the properties to any who care to investigate.

Order your Calling Cards at The Republican Office. - ','r :i~i - W*--*

FARMS FOR SALE.

$2,500 livery stock for farm. 160 acres, finely improved, near courthouse, at . a bargain. Terms $5,000 down. 225 acres, in Washington county, Ind., nine miles north of Salem. This farm has 150 acres of bottom land, has house, good barn, 4 acres of peach orchard, is on R. F. D., and township high school 80 rods from farm. Will trade for property or farm near here. Large brick mill and elevator in Converse, Miami county, Ind., in firstclass condition, doing a good business. Will trade this plant clear for farm land or good property. 95 acres, large house, mostly cultivated, near head of dredge ditch, half mile to school'and near station. Only $32.50 per acre. Terms SSOO down. 21 acres, five blocks from courthouse, cement walk and all nice smooth, black land. 35 acres on main road, all good soil, has’'food small house, new barn, and in good neighborhood. —Price SSO; terms SSOO ’down. 80 acres, good house and outbuildings, all black land, all cultivated, large ditch through farm, lies near station and school, gravel road, and in good neighborhood. Price $65, terms SSOO down. 40 acres, all cultivated, all black land, near school and station. There is a fair four-room house, outbuildings and prchard. A bargain at SSO. Terms S4OO down. 80 acres on main road, R. F. D„ in good neighborhood, has fair house, good barn and outbuildings, orchard and good well. There are 45 acres in cultivation, 15 acres timber and 20 acres in grass. This is good heavy soil. Price $45. Terms SSOO down. GEORGE F. MEYERS, Rensselaer, Indiana.

If you have young children you have perhaps noticed that disorders of the stomach are their most common ailment To correct this you will find Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets excellent. They are easy and pleasant to take, and mild and gentle in effect For sale by al dealers. c For Sale— Typewriter ribbons of all makes. The Republican. * A Classified Adv. will find it

ZEMO FOR DANDRUFF

You Will Be Surprised to See How Quickly It Disappears. No more dirty coats from dandruff heads. Zemo stops dandruff. Apply it any time with tips of fingers. No smell, no smear. Zemo sinks into the JWtes, makes the scalp healthy, makes the hair fine and glossy. Zemo is prepared by E. W. Rose Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and is regularly sold by all druggists at $1 per bottle. But to enable you to make a test and prove what it will do for you, get a 25;cent bottle fully guaranteed or your money back at A F. Long’s Drug Store.

Elbert and Lewis Dalhke, wealthy brothers who disappeared several years ago, were declared legally dead Wednesday in the LaPorte circuit court by Judge Gallaher and letters were issued for the administration of their estate. Large sums of money have been spent in a futile effort to find trace of them. ~~ When you have a bad cold you want the best medicine obtainable so as to cure it with as little delay as possible. Here is a druggist’s opinion: “I have sold Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for fifteen years," says Enos Lollar, of Saratoga, Ind., “and consider it the best on the market.” For sale by all dealers. c Henry Sherman Boutell, United States minister to Switzerland, trav-; eled 4,000 miles to cast his vote in the coming election. Mr. Boutell was in Chicago Wednesday and declared that he had returned home for the express purpose of voting. Here is a woman who speaks from personal knowledge and long experience, viz., Mrs. P. H. Brogan, of Wilson, Pa., who says, “I know from experience that Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is far superior to any other. For croup there is nothing that excels it” For sale by all dealers. c A Classified Adv. will rent it

SKETCH OF LIFE OF REMARKABLE MAN

Father of Hill Boys Died in NinetyNinth Year at Home at Brooksburg, Near Madison. The Madison Courier gives an extended account of the life of Hon. James Hill, father of Frank and Charles Hill, of Jordan township, who died last Saturday at his home at Brooksburg, near Madison. 'Mr.Hill was bom in Green county, Pa., in 1814. When 19 years <of age he went to Ohio. He later went back to Pennsylvania and then to Virginia. It was in 1837 that he came to Jefferson county, Indiana, and the Courier says “His name has been known and his influence felt ever since.” He was one of the builders and early-day officers of the Madison & Indianapolis railroad, was for many years connected with the banking and insurance companies of Madison, was a successful dealer in real estate and one of the largest land owners in Jefferson county. Some years ago, following the failure of the McCoy bank, he invested largely in lands in Jasper county, buying the McCoy holdings in Jordan township. This investment turned out very valuable. He recently distributed his lands among his children. His son, Rees, lives in Manitoba, Canada; Frank lives here; Charles is single and spends part of his time in Rensselaer and part in Madison, and William lives with his family at Madison. Mr. Hill is said by the Madison paper to have been A man of inodel living, having views oh all public matters and using his influences in the right direction. He gave quietly but liberally to charity. He was-a great reader and thinker and possessed a sense of humor that spiced his life and made him an admirable companion. In 1883 he was elected a state senator from Jefferson county. In speaking nt his experience he said that “some mei get to be members of the legislature by accident, they should have gone to the state’s prison.” Measured both in years and achievement his life extended far past the allotted time. His was a life of industry, good judgment, superior business ability and long consecutive effort. Proof of this was the fact that he accumulated a large amunt of this world’s goods and in the honored position he held among the people who were his neighbors and friends for so many years. In 1859 Mr. Hill was very sick and it was feared he was going into consumption and it was suggested that country life might be good for him. He bought a farm at that time and moved to it, spending more than half a century there, and it was on this farm that he died. The cough that had been persistent for some time soon disappeared after he moved to the country. Mr. Hill was but slightly known in Rensselaer, having visited here once or twice. His last visit here was about four years ago, when he went about town by himself and talked freely and intelligently about current happenings. His was a long life of usefulness and he was spared to see the fruits of his industry and to enjoy in his final days the frugality and the industry of his well spent life.

All Next Week at The Ellis Opera House.

Fr,om the Times-Tribune, Alexandria, Indiana: “When the curtain went up on the first act of “The Whirlpool,” the offering of the Cash E. Tomlinson company at the opera house last night, there was not a single seat to be had. And of all the big crowd there, not one went away dissatisfied, for the show made good in every way. Mr. Tomlinson was seen as Jack Hunter, a breezy westerner, and it was a part that showed Mr. Tomlinson to the best advantage. The comedy element was handled in a capital manner by Guy Beach as the Englishman, and Lawrence Finch as the western doctor, their scene about the dog Friday being very clever. Mr. Fleming as Dr. Minton and Roy Dee as Sam Jones were true to their parts and brought the right atmosphere to the play. Miss Rinaldo as Mildred Baxter, who falls in love with her husband, was sweet and clever in the part, while Miss Sitzer as Peggy and Miss Hall as Polly, were fine and added to the comedy of the play. Taking it throughout it is a clever company at the opera house this week and no doubt the people will show their appreciation by giving then packed houses all week.” —Adv.

HOUSEHOLD CARES

Tax the Women of Rensselaer the Same as Elsewhere. Hard to attend to household duties With a constantly aching back. A woman should not have a bad baek, * And she seldom would if the kidneys were well. Doan’s Kidney Pills are endorsed by thousands. Have been used in Kidney trouble over 50 years. Read what this Rensselaer woman says: Mrs. Larkin Potts, Clark & Washington Sts., Rensselaer, Ind., says: “I was weak and nervous and had but little strength or ambition. I rested poorly and was subject to severe headaches and pains across my loins. I could hardly attend to my housework at times and I always felt tired and worn out. Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured from Fendig’s Drug Store, gave me relief at once and before I had used them long all aches and pains disappeared. I am grateful to Doan’s Kidney Pills for what they have done for me.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other.

About Angelina

The girl who arrived last at th» porch party sewing bee began ex plaining before she had even sa> down. "You needn’t try to act as If yot weren’t noticing that I have on a yeai before last's organdie gown,” she said “or that it is faded and the lace torn or that I have on my hat that I weai when L work in the garden, or that my white shoes need cleaning. 1 know perfectly well that you can’t ' help but observe these things.” “You do look kind of haphazard and poor-relation/,” admitted the girl in the green linen. “You’ve got loads of» clothes —have they burned up or have you given them to the heathen or what is it?” “Not the heathen, but a heathen,’ mournfully said the young woman in the faded attire. “I may appear calm, but in reality I am seething with indignation. It was all my stupidity. I might have known better! Didn’t I go to school three years witn Angelina and room with her part of the time and know her like a book? What was I thinking of?” “Will you kindly explain yourself?” -asked the rest of the girls. “Or are you incapable of such a ratJonal action?” T “When I asked Angelina to visit me on her way east I was awfully pleased at the idea of seeing her again,” said th§ £ ir l who had arrived last “There were lots of things going on and I knew I could give her a good time. She was pretty as a picture when she arrived, and so sweet that all the family fell in love with her .at once. Mother said she didn’t see why I hadn’t asked her before to come to see me and my brother arranged a theatre party on the spot. “Angelina ran into my room the next morning to ask if I had a negligee she could wear while she unpacked. She said to give her an old one, any old thing, but, of course, I handed over my pink accordion plaited one tuat’s next to my very best. You can’t expect company to wear the seventyfive cent dimity ones you buy at sales, Angelina said it was beautiful and that I had good taste and was a dear. “Well, she didn’t return it, butwore it to breakfast every morning and when she took naps and brushed her hair —and I wish you could see the remnants of it! I thought possibly she had none in spite of her big trunk, for her people didn’t have much money when she was at school. Anyway I was billing to contribute the negligee for old times’ sake. ‘‘The evening Tom was to take us to the theatre it was so wretchedly hot I got out two white dresses to decide which was the cooler. Angelina came in just then and exclaimed over them. She said they looked delicious and she hadn’t anything so appropriate herself —and looked so pouting and forlorn that before I knew it I heard myself telling her that she might wear one if she chose.

- “She said, ‘Really?’ just like a child and seemed so rejoiced that I felt sorry for her, though I did think’ she might have taken the swiss instead of leaving it for me and choosing the chiffon lawn with its hand-run tucks and dozens of yards of lace. Still if she was not used to such gowns maybe she thought that the simpler. She looked perfectly lovely in it. Of course, I had to give her the lace trimmed slip to go under it and the white shoes and little things. “She wore the white shoes next day to the golf course and ever after and used up aH my white cleaning stuff on them and borrowed my white silk stockings, incidentally wearing holes in all of them and leaving the white lisle for me. “She borrowed my best tailored suit the day it rained and she went to the west side to luncheon. She ruined my two automobile veils and, by the end St the two weeks she had worn all my extra white linen skirts, my lawn frocks and white silk gloves and everything else I had, including my best lingerie waists. “I can’t tell you how she did it, but somehow she gave me the impression that her own. wardrobe was so limited and shabby she was ashamed to appear among my friends in her own clothes. Then she seemed to take such a pathetic delight in the pretty things that whenever I grew rebellious I was ashamed of myself for begrudging her a little pleasure. Only she was awfully hard on my clothes. She didn’t seem to take even ordinary care of them. “The day she left I happened to go Into her room as she had started to put the trays into her trunk, and I couldn’t believe my eyes. Neatly folded and with sachet bags tucked between the layers were the flimsiest, daintiest frocks, laces, gloves, lingerie, negligees, waists and other things that I ever saw. I hadn’t a thing in my own wardrobe to equal any of them.

“What did that girl do? Just looked at me in the eyes in her most appealing, childlike way, and said I had been a perfect dear to let her wear my things, because she was going right on from visiting me to a fashionable house party in the East, and had wanted all her clothes fresh when she got there, because it was the chance of her life to make an Impression cm a man who was to visit there! "And at the moment I hadn’t a gown that didn't have to go to the laundry or cleaner’s on her account! And Pm wearing these!” “Goodness!" said the other girls ■Talk about the meanest man cm earth —aba's worse.”—Chicago News.

CLASSIFIED COLUMN BATES FOB CLASSIFIED ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 26 cents. Additional space pro rata. FOB SALE. For Sale —A 5-horsepower gasoline engine, cheap. Reason for selling, installing electric power. Hemphill Bros. For Sale —2% H. P. Square Deal engine, in good condition. 0. H. McKay. For Sale— lß bushels of fine popcorn in one bushel lots, $1.75 per bushel. Alsoa good saddle and bridle, 17.50. Phone 294-G, Judson R. Michaels. For Sale—Kiefer pears for canning. Geo. H. Healey, Phone 153. For Sale —Good canning pears. H. H. Carr, River street, Phone 427. For Sale—4 H. P. “Husky HarleyDavidson” motorcycle, in perfect condition and with complete equipment Reason for selling, have ordered twin. Call or write Ray D. Wilson, Rensselaer. For Sale —A full blood Jersey calf, one week old. Lem Huston, Phone 81. For Sale—Cord wood and hedge posts. Mrs. Ida Pierce, Phone 529-H. For Sale—loo cords of 4-foot wood; $1.75 per cord on ground. Inquire of B. D. McColly or at Republican office. For Sale —Upright piano in first- y class condition and at a cheap price; also dining chairs, table, soft coal heating stove, and other things.— Verne Hopkins. Telephone 359. For Sale —Good seven-room house, good well, cistern, cellar, city water connections, drains and walks all in, fruit of all kinds, two lots, centrally located on good paved street. Here is a bargain, $1,250. Inquire of Chas. J. Dean & Son, Heal Estate Agents, Rensselaer, Ind. For Sale—Cheap; a farm of 160 acres, well improved, all tiled, 6-room bouse, new barn and corn cribs; all In cultivation except 26 acres in pasture; good orchard. At Sharon, Milroy township, 7% miles from Rengse- , laer. Inquire of C. J. Dean, Rensselaer, Ind., or T. D. Conaghan, Pekin, 111. j . . .... For 1 Sale —To settle an estate, a good well improved, 150-acre farm, 2% miles from Rensselaer; 120 acres In cultivation, 30 acres pasture; two orchards, 6-room house, fair barn, double cribs and granary. This is a good farm at a reasonable price. For sale by C. J. Dean & Son, Rensselaer, Ind. I, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES. I have a stock of goods located here,’ and my creamery. Must sell one of the other. Might consider some good trade. Don't talk if . you don’t mean business. W. R. Lee. BUTTERFAT. ___ W. R. Lee will pay 30c (1c above Elgin) for butterfat at the Rensselaer Creamery this week. Creamery uptown. WANTED. Wanted —Girl for office work, one capable of using typewriter. Inquire at Republican office. Wanted—Girl for general housework. J. A. McFarland Wanted—Sewing, either at my rooms at the W. S. Coen residence or at home of customer. Alice Parks, Phone 316. Wanted—Horse for its keeping during winter school x months, to drive between Rensselaer and my school in country; good care taken. C. M. Blue. Wanted—Girl for general housework; no washing. Phone 153. Wanted —Men for building wooden freight cars. Those handy with ordinary tools can soon learn. Also common laborers. Car Wcrks, Michigan City, Ind. ■. - , .. Akita,— ... ■ , ■ - Wanted—We want a man in this county to sell Policies That Protect and Pay incomes during disability. Good opportunity for a “Live Wire” to advance. Contract direct with home office. Experience not necessary—just “push.” We teach you the business. White U. S. Health & Accident Company, Dept A, Saginaw, Mich. W. H. DEXTER. W. H. Dexter will pay 30 cents for butterfat this week. PARR CREAMERY. Wilson & Gilmore, at Parr will pay 30 cents for butterfat this week. FOB RENT. r For Bent—Five room furnished: house; electric lights; city water. Phone Geo. H. Healey. FOUND. Found—Brown leather handbag. Inquire here. ■ LOST. Lost—Auto jack, on Mt Ayr road west of Roe Yeoman’s. Finder please leave at Republican office. — Lost— Child’s overcoat between Gangloff bridge and Pleasant Ridge, Friday, Oct 11. Finder please leave at Republican office for Aug. Tigler. J. W. Cope land, of Dayton, Ohio, purchased a bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for his boy who had a \ cold, and before the bottle was all used the boy’s cold was gone. Is that not better than to pay a five dollar doctor’s bill? For sale by all dealers - ' ’ Use our Classified Column.