Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 March 1913 — Page 4
= CLftssiFiEQ coim BITSt FOR ClAMgnm AM. Three Unee or teas, per week of six t««ue»of The Evening Republic** and 36 cents. AMttioa*! ap*oe pro rata. FCS BALK ' FOR SALE—Good work horses. Inquire «t Knapp’s livery barn or King’s blacksmith shop. FQR SALE—Eggs for hatching from S. C. Buff Orpingtons; heavy birds and good winter laying strain; $1 for 15 eggs. Chas. R. Rishllng, Phone 124. FOR SALE—Clover seed. Call on or telephone George McElfresh, Phone 457-F. STOCK FOOD—A fresh supply of Lion’s Stock Food, dip and tanks on hand at King's blacksmlth shop, nothing better for hogs, sheep, cattle, horses, chickens. Guaranteed no cholera where used. Peter McDaniels, Agent, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR SALE—Orders now being taken for Buff. Orpington eggs for hatching, $1.50 and 75c per setting. R. L. Budd, R. R. No. 2. FOR SALE—Good timothy hay in stack and mow. Gangloff Bros. FOR SALE—Frame house of five rooms, lot 75x180 feet, small barn, .fruit, garden spot, chicken park. Part cash, time on balance. Inquire at Republican office. FOR SALE—Timothy hay in bam; $lO at my farm, 3 miles south of Kniman. Michael Jungles, phone 524-F. FOR SALE—Four bronze turkey hens. Inquire ..of Mrs. Ed Ames, Phone 518-J. FOR SALE—BO acres black walnuc land, 10 acres timber and balance in best of cultivation; tiled, good fences, 7-room house, full size cellar, good bam 42x72, 2 new silos, granary, windmill, tanks; 5 acres alfalfa, 20 acres red clover, balance was in com this year; good roads, 3 and 5 miles to 2 good markets, 30 miles north of Logansport. This is an ideal home. Price SIOO per acre. Easy terms. No trade. John Osborn, Owner, Culver, Indiana. IOR SALE OR TRADE—4OO acres about 13 miles north of Rensselaer; 3% miles from town; good rich black soil; over six miles wovenwire fence; most buildings new; small encumbrance; must dispose of to divide interests; must receive cash in deal; deal with owners. R. W. Pollard, 72 West Adams St, Chicago, HL FOR SALE—Cow feed for sale from elevator. Call Phone 400. A W. Sawin. FOR SALE—Several counters, at the Model Store. Simon Leopold. FOR SALE—Good 8-room house, 8% lots, northeast part of town. J. P. Simons. ■ ■ -> W. H. DEXTER. J- J- - ■ - * ■ W. H. Dexter will pay 35%c for butterfat this week. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Farm of 519 acres, with three sets of buildings; rent together or separate. Geo. F. Meyers. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS—I make farm loans at lowest rates of interest See me about ten year loan without commission. John A Dunlap. WANTED. WANTED—7S shoats, weighing Lorn 60 to 75 pounds; will pay good price for good stock. Peter McDaniels, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED—To purchase a small, well located property in Rensselaer; must be a very reasonable price: party will pay all cash; another party wants to buy property on rent basis and will pay $lO a month Geo. H. Healey. WANTED—By a married man, a job on a farm by the year. Address Box 54, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED—MiddIe aged woman as housekeeper on farm. Everett Brown, Phone 503-A WANTED—To borrow $250 on first mortgage Rensselaer property. See Geo. H. Healey. FOUND. FOUND—Locket with letter “B’ on it Inquire here. _____ UPHOLSTERING. Reupholstering and furniture repairing. Satisfaction guaranteed. J. P. Green. Phone 477. FERTILIZERS. Fertilizers that will Increase your yields for the least money and last the longest is fine ground rock phosphate. Our agricultural line will sweeten your sour soil and put it in a healthy condition to respond to fertilizers and cultivation. Write todav for prices on either, delivered to your railway station, car lots, di consumer. Also free literarT.xtural Phosphate DistribuBox x Mfc Indianapolis, Ind. Everybody’s friend- Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic OIL the great household remedy for toothache, earache, sore throat, cuts, bruisf*. scalds. Sold | at all drug storage and 50c. \
i See Lee’s new $5 serge dresses. J. K. Davis, of Greencastle, is here on business. Nifty styles in the new spring coats at L<eeSr. ■. ■j-.fcuK*’''' ■* -- - ;; The girls’ card chib met last evening with Mrs. Firman Thompson. See George F. Meyers’ list of Farms toy Bale in another column. There were 48 marriage licenses granted from Dec. Ist to Feb. 28th, in Jasper county. Just received, a car of genuine Jackson Hill coal at Hamilton & Kellner’s. Mrs. E. E. Flint is considerably improved today and seems to be on the road to recovery. Have you seen the John Deere low-down spreader at Hamilton & Kellner’s. W- H. Barkley’s baby is very much better today and is apparently out of danger now.
Feed grinding a specialty. We will be at the mill to wait on you When you come. Phone 456. Miss Mary Johnson, of Mt Ayr, returned home yesterday after a short visit here with Miss Florence Moore. Something new to see in the spreader line is the Emerson. Low Down, at Warner Bros. , A. S. Laßue has purchased of Charles Mullaney a farm of 40 acres a mile and a half south of Virgie in Union township. A full quart jar of mixed pickles or chow-chow for 10c. JOHN EGER. John M. Knapp and H. F. King have shipped to Rensselaer a carload of work horses, which they purchased in lowa. I have just received a car of pure bran and middlings at the mill Phone 456. Ralph Sprague. Attorney Daniel Fraser, of Fowler, came here yesterday and remained over today to look after some matters in the circuit court. Saturday morning W. R. Lee received by parcels post a shipment of nearly S2OO worth of ladies’ new spring coats. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Hayden, of Momence, 111., are here today looking over the city. They expect to move here about June Ist if they can buy or rent property. I have recently purchased the River Queen Mill and will pay the highest market price for grain. R. Sprague, Phone No. 456. Miss Jessica Green, who has been singing all week at the Princess, will sing again tonight. Her singing has greatly pleased the audiences and on several occasions many of the audience have joined in singing the choruses of her songs.
Good things are seldom cheap: cheap things are never good. You get the best farm machinery when you trade with Hamilton & Kellner. C. Arthur Tuteur, chief journal clerk of the state senate, is home for a Sunday’s visit. He had a severe sick spell since going to Indianapolis and for several days was under the care of two physicians at the Denison hotel. He is now greatly improved but shows the result of his sickness. What is worth doing at all is worth doing well—if you want ginghams worth making up, buy the Red Seal guaranteed line at Lee’s: they are the best money can buy. Rev. C. W. Postill came from Attica yesterday to look after some busi ness affairs and before he reached this city there was a long distance telephone call asking that he re turn there and preach the funeral of a child. This funeral will make the 107th he has conducted since he went to Attica. You can lower the cost on your butter and lard bill by using our pure high-grade butterine for your table, at 20c, and compound for cooking and baking at 10c a pound. JOHN EGER. C. A. Armstrong was in town today and called at The Republican office to renew his subscription and have his address changed from the star route to McCoysburg. He will move Monday from Will Barkley’s farm to Frank Fislyer’s farm, the old David Culp farm, east of McCoysburg. Mr. Fisher has erected some good buildings on the farm and in other ways improved it
MOW TO OOWQVMB MMMUMATXSM AT TOVB OWM MOMS. If you or any of your friends suffer from rheumatism, kidney disorders or excess of uric add. causing lameness, backache, muscular pains, stiff or swollen joints, pain in the limbs and feet; dimness of light itching skin or frequent neuralgic pains, I invite you to send for a generous Tree Trial Treatment of my well-known, reliable Chronicura, with references and full particulars by mail. (This is no C. O. D. scheme.) No matter how many may have failed in your case, let me prove to you, free of cost, that rheumatism can be conquered. Chronioure succeeds Where all else fails. Chronlcure cleans** the blood and removes the cause. Also for a weakened, run-down condition of the system, you will find Chronlcure a moot satisfactory general tonic that makes you feel that life is worth living. Please tell your friends of this liberal offer, and send today for large free package, to MM M. tVMMBIB, 131 S. Washington Avenue, South Send, Indiana. Use our dafidfled Column.
CALEB CONOVER, RAILROADER
BY ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE
AaMcf "Syri. fan ihe SkMk" StanMe** Ets. CwiiWa. IW.
CHAPTER XV. Anice Intervenes. Ixr wrote them? You wrote i 1 them?” muttered Standish, 3h over and over, stupid, dazed, refusing to believe, or understand. "Yes,” she said, ”1 wrote them. And I Wrote one to Mr. Ansel. He was wiser than you. He tried to profit by what I—’’ “And I —l, thought it might be Gerald Conover.” “Gerald? He never knew any of the more secret details of the campaign. His father couldn’t trust him.” “And he did trupt you.”
"And he did trust you.”
Clive had not meant to say it He was sorry before the words had passed his lips. Yet it was the first lucid thought that came to him as his mind cleared from the first shock of Anice’s revelation. He knew how fully Conover believed in this pretty secretary of his; how wholly the Railroader had, in her case, departed from his life rule of universal suspicion. That she should thus, coldbloodedly, calculating!/, have betrayed the trust of even such an employer as Caleb was monstrous. He could not reconcile it with anything in his own long knowledge of her. The revelation turned him sick.
“You despise me, don’t you?” she asked. There was no shame, no faltaring in her clear young voice. "I have no right to —to judge anyone,” he stammered. "I —” "You despise me.” And now it waa a statement, not a query. "No,” he said, slowly, trying to gauge his own tangled emotions, “I don’t I don’t know why I don’t, but I don’t I should think anyone else that did such a thing was lower than the beasts. But you—why, you are yourself. And the queen can do no wrong. I’ve known you nearly all your life. If it had been possible foi you to harbor a mean or dishonest Impulse I’d have been the first person on earth to guess it Because no one else would have cared as I did. As I do. I don’t understand it at all And just at first it bowled me over, and a whole rush of disloyal thoughts and doubts came over me. But 1 know now it’s all right somehow, for it’s you." # "You moan,” exclaimed the girl, wonderingly, "that after what I’ve told you, you trust me?” "Why, bf course.” "And you don’t even ask me to explain?" "If there was anything I had a right to know—that yoq, wanted me to know —you’d have explained of your own accord."
She looked at him long, searchingly. Her face was as inscrutable as the Sphinx’s, yet when she spoke it waa of a totally different theme. "What are you going to do?” she Inquired. "Do?” he repeated, perplexed. "Yes, about the campaign.”
"There’s nothing to do. I am beaten. When the convention meets, tn half an hour, Conover will be nominated. Only my two blocks of dele gates will be left to oppose him, against all that whole—" "Yes; yes, I know that,” she interposed, "but what then?" "That is the end, I suppose. Per haps by the next gubernatorial campaign—"
"The next? This campaign hasn’t fairly begun yet Do you mean to say you are going to sit by with folded hands and accept defeat?" "What else is left?”
"Everything is left You have tried to fight an all-powerful machine, ta fight it on its own ground, along its own Ums, yet refusing to um its own waqpoM 9r to guard
Ing of further defeat What Conover has already done in muzzling the press am* using other crooked tactics, he will continue to do. My speeches r wdn’t be allowed to circulate. My meetings be broken up. More Conover men will register than can be found on the census list. And on Election Day there will be the usual ballot frauds. All the voting machinery is in Conover’s hands. Even if I won I would be counted out at the polbs. No—” "Wait! If I can clear the way for you. if I can insure you a fair chance, if I can prevent any frauds and force Mr. Conover to leave the issue honestly to the people of the Mountain State —if I can do all this, then will you declare yourself an independent candidate. and —?” “But how can you—a girl—do all this?”
—‘•l'H -eaEplalh that -to you afterward. But it won’t be in any unfair or underhand yay. You said Just now you trusted me. Can’t you trust me in this, too?” * “You know I can.” “And you’ll do as I ask?” “Yes."
“Good!” “It’s worth trial. I’ll do ft" “Then I shall be the first to congratulate the future Governor.” “Anice!” —the old-time boyish impetuosity 1 ’ she so well remembered flashing into one of its rare occurrences -“if I win this fight— if I am elected Governor—l shall have something worth while at last to offer you. If I come to you the day I am elected^—”
“I shall congratulate you only as I would any other friend." 2 His lips tightened as at a blow. For a moment neither spoke. It was Clive Who broke the silence. “I have said it awkwardly,” he began. “If it had been less to me I might have found more eloquence, I love you. I think I have always loved you. You know that A woman always knows. I love you, I loved you in the old days, when I was too poor to have the right to speak. What little I am—what little I may have achieved —is for you. I have not made much of myself. But that I’ve made anything at all is due to you. In everything I have done, your eyes and your smile have been before me. Ag heart, I’ve laid every success at your feet. At heart I’ve asked your faith and your pardon for each of my failures. And, whether you or not, it will always be the same. That one dear ambition will spur me on to make the very best of myself. My victories shall be your victories whether you wish it or not Perhaps that seems to you presumptuous or foolish?" “No.” There was no perceptible emotion <n the half-whispered word. From it Clive could glean nothing. Presently he went on: “I think whenever you see a man trying to make the most of all that is in him, and wearing out his very soul in this breakneck American race for livelihood, you’ll find there is some woman behind it all. It is for her, not for his own selfish ambition, that ne is fighting. Sometimes she crowns his victory. Sometimes-fee-wins only the thorn-crown. But the glory of the work and the warning are hers. Not nls. Now you know why I entered this Governorship fight, and why I am willing to keep it up. Oh, sweetheart, I love you so. You must understand, now, why I longed to come to you in my hour of triumph and —” “You would have come too late,” she said in that same enigmatic undertone. "Anice.” * There was a world of pain in his appeal, yet she disregarded it; and, with face averted, hurried on: “Would you care for—for the love as a girl who made you wait until you could buy her with fame and an income? Do I care for the love of a man who holds that love so cheaply he must accompany its gift with a Governorship title —?” “Atfd now,” she observed, some minates later, as she strove to rearrange her tumbled crown of rust-colored hair before the tiny patch of office mirror, "and now, if you can be sensible for Just a little while, we’ll go back to the convention. And •I’ll explain to you about those letters. The anonymous ones.” "It’s all right I don’t have to be told. I—’’ “But I have to tell you. That’s the worst of being a girt” And* You have failed. The real fight begins now.” “What do you mean?” "I mean you must call on the people at large to hep you. You have aroused them. Already there is sc much discontent against Boss rule that Mr. Conover is troubled. You have no right to abandon the Cause now that you’ve interested others in it. Put yourself in the people’s hands.” “You mean to —?” "To declare yourself an independent candidate.” "‘Bolt* the Democratic ticket? "It is against custom, but good men have done it In this battle, as I understand it. there is no question of party issues. It is the people against the Machine. Can’t you see?” “Yes,” he replied, after a moment of hesitation. "1 see. And you are right. But it means only the court(To Be Continued.)
CASTOR IA Bor Infanta and Children. Us ted Yu Han Alwap Bugkt Bears the BUpatore of
Home Prepared Remedy For Whooping Cough.
Johnstown, N. Dak., ; Feb. 25, 1913. ANXIOUS MOTHER—A remedy for whooping cough never known to fail. Beat together in a bowl the juice of one lemon, one tsiblespoonfui of olive or sweet oiL 2 ounces of loaf sugar, white of one egg and one teaspoonful as paregoric. Give teaspoonful after coughing; never prepare more at a time tjiat the .quantity specified, as it will nor keep long at a time.—Mrs. L. H. Markley. . - % ?
Dear Editor—ln reading our last Republican I could not resist the pleasure of sending a recipe I have for whooping cough, a sure one, harmless and nice and pleasant to take. Four years ago when one of our children went to Miss Laura Bruce, whooping cough was very bad and our daughter had it. I feel safe in saying that persons who use this home remedy will not whoop while it is used. I' feel so sure and my interest at my home town is so hearty that I want you to print this recipe even if I have to pay for it. We have done very well since coming to North Dakota three years ago this spring. Have had good luck and can’t complain. Every country has its drawbacks if you try to find them. Things have been good for we Hoosiers, however. We have had a nice winter, no severely cold weather and very little snow, and we expect another good crop this year. Wfe are all well and have had no colds this winter. Wishing you an early spring and good fortune during the ensuing year, I remain, an old Indiana lover, L. H. MARKLEY. The Republican gives the recipe sent by Mrs. Markley without any knowledge of its virtue. Some times these old remedies are very effective. Persons who care to try this might consult their family physician, however, before doing so.
FARMS FOR SALE AND EXCHANGE 22 acres, improved, near good town, $l,lOO. 21 acres, four blocks from court house, $4,200. 90 acres, six-room house, barn, on dredge ditch, $45; terms, $1,50(1 down. 160 acres, good improvements, well tilled and a bargain at S9O $1,500 down. Only four miles out 97 acres, near station, on dredga ditch, black land, good buildings, only $55. SI,OOO down. 99 acres, all cultivated, good land five-room house, barn, orchard, near station and school. Only $55. Terms, $1,500 down. 75 acres, all black land, all cultivated, pike road, near school and station, seven-room house, outbuild Ings, windmill, tanks and fruit $75. Terms, S6OO down. Take live stock. 225 acres, Washington county, improved, price $35. Will trade clear for land or property here and pay difference or assume. 160 acres, Barkley township, good improvements, well located, at a bargain. Terms $1,500 down. 120 acres, seven miles out Good house, fair barn, all tillable land. Only $65. Terms easy. 160 acres, six-room house, good barn, near school and station. 145 acres blacky land in cultivation. Only $45. Terms, SI,OOO down. 550 acres, good buildings, dredge ditch, near school and station, 500 acres black prairie land. Only S4O. 320 acres, 300 acres black prairie land, no buildings, at the low price of $37.50. - 83 acres, good soU, near three stations on main road. A great bargain at S3O. Terms, S6OO down. Will trade for Ifve stock. Onion land, as good as the best from 20 to 160 acres, at $35 to $45. 120 acres, three miles out Large house and barn, $l2O. 160 acres, in Polk county, Ark. Will trade clean and pay differenoe. An eight-room, two-flat building on improved street in Hammond, Ind. Will trade for farm or property here. GEORGE F. MEYERS.
RENSSELAER MARKETS. Corn—4lc. Oats—27c. Chickens—l2%c. Old Roosters—sc. Ducks—loc to 12c. Geese—9c. Turkeys—l6c. PUBLIC SALE CALENDAR. March 6.—F. C. Kullas, 12 miles northwest of Rensselaer. March 10.—Verlie Spencer, 3 miles west of Rensselaer on Bumkum road. March 12.—H. W. Marble, at the Marble ranch, near Wheatfield. ■T -i Christian Church. Services will be held in this church Sunday as follows: Bible School 9:30 a. m. Preaching 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Christian Endeavor 6 p. m. t)r. George Switzer, of Lafayette, will preach in the evening. In addition to special music by our choir, Miss Jessica. B. Green will sing at both services. Everybody welcome. After a hearty meat take Doan’s Regulets and assist your stomach, liver and bowels. Regulets are a mild laxative. 25c at all stores.
AiMl*lkl*l k m I* * I * j g CMoago to wirwOi—t zndianapollah Cincinnati, and the South, Maiavqie and rteach Idafc Spring* aKsssnuuEß vzbeb tabijl In Effect November 34, 1913. SOUTHBOUND. No. Jl-Fut Mail 4:49 a.m. No. 6—Louisville Mall .... 11:08 a. m. No. >7—lndpte. Ex 11:11 a. m. No. S3—Hoosier Limited .. 3:04 p. m. No. 33—Milk Accom. 4:30 p. m. Na B—Louisville Ex .... 11:03 p. m. NORTH BOUND. No. 4—Louisville Man ... 4:68 X m. No. 40—Milk Accom. 7:88 a. m. Na 83 —Fast Matt 10:18 a. m, No. 38—Indpls-Chgo. J3x. . ’ 8:39 p. m, Na 6—Louieville Mall AEx 3:88 p. m. Na 80—Hooaler Limited .. . ScO? p. m. Train No. 31 make* connections at Monon tor Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 4:16 a. m. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 4:30, connects with No. 80 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:03 p. m. Trains Nos. 30 and 83, the “Hoosier Limited,” run only between Chicago and Indianapolis, the C. H. & D. Service for Cincinnati having been discontinued. W. H. BEAM. Agent
PUBLIC SAUB. Having sold his farm, the undersigped will sell at public sale at his farm, 13 miles northwest of Rensselaer, 1 mile north and 3 miles east of Fair Oaks, 1 mile east and 4 miles north of Parr, 3 miles southwest of Virgie, 1 mile south of the did Mofflt place, commencing at 10 a. m., on THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1913, the following property: - 7 Head of Horses—l dark bay mare, 1 light brown horse, 2 bay horses, 1 bay mare, 1 good bay mare colt, coming 2 years old In May, 1 yearling colt, coming 1 year old in May. These two colts are full sisters. 16 Head of Cattle—All young cattle, from 1 to 6 years old; 8 milking now, 1 fresh 8 weeks ago. l fresh 3 weeks ago, 1 fresh 2 weeks ago, 1 will be fresh In a few days, 2 will be fresh by Ist of March, 1 heifer, will be fresh in March. The rest will be fresh later on. 2 heifers, 1 coming 2 years old, the other coming a year old. Hogs—3 brood sows, will farrow about March 16th. 16 shoats. Implements—l Deering 8-ft. binder, tongue truck, good as new; 1 standard mowing machine; 1 John Deere cornplanter, with fertilizer attachment and 96 rods check Wire; 1 Deering disc; 1 Oliver riding plow; 3 walking plows, 16-lnch, good as new; 1 good as new sweep rake; 1 sulky rake; 1 woodenframe. 2-sectlon harrow; 1 steel-frame, 2-section harrow; 8 cultivators; 1 Malta cultivator; 2 Dutch Uncle cultivators, one with gopher attachment; 8 rolls of heavy asphalt roofing and some steel sheet roofing; 1 Thomas wheat drill, good as new; 1 endgate seeder; 1 large scales; 1-horse Diamond plow; 1 potatoe hlller and digger; grind stone; hand com sheller; hay ladders; 30 gallon kettle; 2 sets double harness; 2 sets ->f anigle harness; 1 sled; double painting ladders; 2 wagons, 1 narrow-tire Turnbull wagon, 1 wide-tire triple bed Birdsell; 1 carriage, 1 single seat buggy, 20 bushels of Early Rose and Early Ohio potatoes: 10 or 12 bushels of good seed com; 100 or more chickens; 6 tur-keys—-6 hens and 1 gobbler; 2 stacks of timothy hay, containing 10 tons. Good, supply household goods. Cream separator, good as new. 1 Sure Hatch 100egg Incubator and several other articles not here mentioned. Terms—A. credit of 9 months will be given on sums of over 810, without ininterest if paid when due; if not paid when due, 8 per cent from date of sate, purchaser to give approved security. All sums of $lO and under, cash in hand. A discount of 6 per cent for cash on sums over >lO. No property to be removed until settled for. F. G KULLAS. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. T!. G. Spltlar, Clerk. Hot lunch on ground.
M. E. Church. Rev. E. S. Shumaker, head of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League, will speak at Trinity M. E. church in Rensselaer Sunday morning, his subject being “A Militant Church.” All are cordially invited to come out and hear his address Itching, torturing skin eruptions disfigure, annoy, drive one wild. Doan’s Ointment is praised for its good work. 50c at all drug stores. A pension of SIOO a month was authorized Thursday for Mrs. MacArthur, widow of Lieutenant MacArthur, a civil war union leader. The bill had passed the house. Congressional distribution of seeds was Thursday ended by the senate, which eliminated from the agriculture appropriation bill a provision appropriating $256,100 for that purpose. Mrs. E. L. Clark accompanied her son, Ernest, to Delphi today, for an afternoon visit with Ernest’s wife and baby. Mr. and Mrs. Clark will start for their home at Helper, Utah, next Monday. What are regarded as trustworthy reports of the United States Steel corporation’s business indicate that there are on hand orders sufficient to keep the mills going at nearly capacity until early in next spring. Many prosecutions in the federal court are expected to follow the, recent seizures by revenue agents of more than 250,000 pounds of butter in Chicago cold storage houses. Unlawful Adulteration was charged. A tea party by the federal government on the Hudson river is scheduled for March 3. The customs authorities in New York havd been authorized to dump into the river 20 - 000 packages of tea which did not come up to the standards Uncle Sam has set for that beverage Extension of the special delivery system to apply to all parcel post mail was qrdered Wednesday by Postmaster General Hitchcock, effective Saturday. The regular fee of 10 cents in special delivery or regular postage stamps will be charged. Big “Gypsy" Jim Hand, one of the veteran turfmen of the United States, and one of the few horsemen who remained at the Mineral Springs race track at Porter for the winter, was found dead in bed in * hotel in Chicago Saturday. Hand has several horses at the Mineral Springs track. Calling Cards, printed or engraved, eorrwt size and letter, at this office.
