Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 January 1917 — Page 4
<ft CLASSIFIED ADS <£ "K BRING w$ TO USERS. i . ■: ± 2 s
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY AND *S»fI-WKKKLT ■ —» —' ______ CLARK & HAMILTON, Publishers. TMB FRIDAY fISSUfc IS REGULAR WKHKX.Y EDITION 7 Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. VMM. a* second clan* mall matter, at &.*a j'assrtsk^ 41 *!' ■' •*— r *~» .1 '■■■-■- ■ ~ - ■ Brenlat Repuoucan entered Jan. 1. 1897. aa second class mall matter at tbs poatofflce at Rensselaer, Ind.. under Bi art of March 8, 1879. BATES FOR CLASSIFIED ADS Hires lines orlese, per week of six Issues sf The Bvenlns. Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 88 oenta. AddlUonal apace pro rata. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally by Carrier, 10 Cents Week. By iKkiL Ns.6o a year. Semi-Weekly, in advance, year, ‘2.00.
Classified Column FOR SALE. FOR SALE—The Bedford farm of 37 acres, adjoining city of Rensselaer; splendid location for fine home. S2OO per acre. Terns, one-third down, one-third nine months, onethird eighteen months. ? CHAS. W. POSTILL, Administrator. - 777■. • 1 - 7 " "*■ t I ■ -a - -- ■ : —•— r-r+rrprr- • *;; .4 -*• FOR SALE—Pure bred Shorthorn boil calves, large enough for service. Eligible for record. Duroc pedigreed boar, 200 lbs. —Guss Yeoman, Phone 7SMG, ML Ayr. _ FOR SALE —Choice building -4eca- * tion, first lot north of former J. L. Brady residence, one of the most desirable lots in town. If interested inquire at the Trust & Savings Bank. FOR SALE—IOO shocks of corn, 4 tons of- hay in bam. —David Stoner, Phone 913-0. 7,7 FOR SALE —Good fresh cow.— James Amsler, Plpane 933-B. FOR small sued basebumer in good condition.—Grace Haas, Phone 122. . > ** FOR SALE—I2O acres on stone road 6 miles from town, fair improvements. Can give possession March Ist. Liberal terms. —John A. Dunlap. • FOR SALE —05 acres of good corn stalks and straw stack; windmill for water. Phone 924-A. Kniman, Ind. Judson Michaels. FOR SALE—Cord wood, 4 foot, delivered to any part of city. Phone 537. J. E. Walter. "FOR SALE—Two bay mares, one broken and one unbroken. Will sell the team for $l5O if taken by January Ist.—John Garland, Phom,- 930-1. FOR SALE —Fire wood, $1 per load. Phone Lewis Hooker. FOR SALE—I6© acres pasture land, $25 per acre, SI,OOO cash and easy terms on balance. Any man , with a little nerve should act quickly.Will make you $1,600 in less than one year.—J. Davisson. FOR SATE —My property in the southwest corner of the city, consist1 28x30, ■ ■* --*• _2i Jk MU • FOR SALE—Young collies, good drivers and watch dogs. One nicely broke.—W. B. Leonard, Francesville, Ind. [
FOB SALE—Sawad oak lumber of all kinds, red or burr oak. Sawed in any dimenaions desired. 4 miles west of Benaselaer. All building material SIB.OO a thousand; also some 12, 14 and 16 foot bridge plank in burr and white oak. Phone 87-G, ML Ayr. oaa 1 ' ‘ r ' FOB SALE —Two desirable building kts not far from business section.—Harvey Davisson, Phone 499 or 246. I „ r FOR SALE! —Cottage, within block and a half of court house; 5 rooms and bath, hot and cold water, electric lights; lately remodeled and painted; in. good shape. About SBOO cash required; rest can be paid for less per month than it would rent for. See Harve J. Robinson at Republican office or call Plume 016 at noon or in the evening. WANTED. v WANTED —Blacksmith, one handy with carpenter tools, as handy man on stock ranch. Steady all-year job for sober, experienced man. Prefer married man. Answer quickly.— Jennie M. Conrad, Conrad, Newton County, Ind. __ WANTED —Farm hand with good reference and experience on grain and stock firm. Reply at once, stating full particulars, or come and see me personally. Good place for , good family near church, station and WANTED —To buy good second hand wagon andjood set of team harness. Phone 278 or 204, Harry Watson. 1 ''
WANTED —Man to cut com wood. James Walter, Phone 237. ; school.—Jennie M. Cbnrad, Newton County, Conrad, ind. WANTED—To rent modem house, to occupy about February I, 1917. W. C. Ainc-aad, Phone 107. WANTED—Messenger boy.—Westem Union office. WANTED—Roomer and boarder. — Mrs. Dan Robinson, Phone 401 Red. 1 block east and 2 blocks south of the court house. WANTED—Man with rig or machine to represent us in this county. Address P. O. Box 62, Rich Valley, ind. v 7 FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Stock farm with two or three good teams, farm equipped. A. H. Hopkins. FOR RENT—Good six room house and bam. Inquire of Marion Cooper, two blocks north of Cement Tile Factory. r • FOR RENT'—Furnished rooms with bath. Phojfr 258. - 1 FOUND. FOUND—Pair gloves. Inquire here. LOST. _ LOST—SS bill, probably in State Bank, last Saturday.' Return or notify Mrs. H. Purcupile, milliner. LOST—A wild brant, shot in wing, crippled wing feather clipped. Return to Republican office or phone 524. -■ . . -_ - ■ 7__ LOST—Auto robe, blue with black lining. If found-leave at Republican office. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS—An unlimited supply of 5 per cent money to lean. — Chas. J. Dean & Son, Odd Fellows Building. “ MISCELLANEOUS. ~MONEY r TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans.—John A Dunlap. JUST RECEIVED —The latest patterns tapestry for upholstering. Come in and see them. —H. R. Lange, DECORATOR—Have your automobile painted new.—H. R. Lange. MALE HELP WANTED” ■ ■ ■ —— l n .inj-.i "■■■■ - .The Moler Barber College of Chicago, 111., wants men to learn barber trade. They offer splendid inducements and a short term completes. They mail free a beautiful catalogue and ask all our readers to send for it. Dorothy Frye, who had just recovered from an attack of appendicitis, is now quite sick with tonsilitis. 1 Ford Day is the 18th Hilliard & Hamill. Anna Wood went to McCoysburg last evening for a visit with her mother, Mrs. John R. Phillips. Alda Parkison, Mrs. Harry Newman and Mrs. Dan Morrissey and son Mike, are visiting relatives at Surrey today. Roy Watson, w T ho managed one of J. J. Hunt’s farms near Medaryville, was here yesterday to check up the year’s business.
Washington Cook and George Johnson returned to their homes at McCoysburg after transacting business in Rensselaer yesjftrday. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years
1 MESSAGE FROM HIE FOLKS ■ " W "■ ——. Thn Remarkable Record made b j Glando Rae mekee it the Greatest Cough Remedy ol Modem Timas - ' «. . ' • ’ a . . 7 s " ' *’'' ‘ , % - Ike enderuigned druggists make the folio win* s—orbobls statement concerning the sale and satisfaction es Olando Pine, highly eoasentrated cough compound, whlofc Is sold under an absolute guamntos to give satisfaction or money vffl ho refunded: ? “In all e< ear expert enee in selling GHando Fine, we hare net had a boUfte returned, nor hnvo wo beard of a diseatlsflod customer." . Tbo Myera Bren. On, ft Wayne, lad. Kolinger's Drug Mere, Ft Wayne, Ind. Ploneeer Drug Store, Montpelier, Ind. Havens’ Drug Btese, Van Wert, Ohio. Rod Cross Pharmacy, Logansport, lad. Purvis’ Drug Store, Now Haves, Ind. KondhO’s Drug More, Celina, Ohio. Barber’s Drug More, Payne, Ohio. WeMenburger Bms* Defiance. Ohio. Beck’s Drug Store, Albion, Ind. • DAN. Pharmacy, Ft Wayne, Ind. The Court Pharmacy, Muncle, Ind. ‘ Hardesty's Drug More, real ding, Ohio. Powell Pharmaoy, Belief on talne, Ohio. (Rando Pino is a splendid cough medicine that can he prepared at home at n saving of about ft.oo to the pint It Is pleasant to mat contains no narcotic* or hnbit-formlng drugs. It kseps lndofinMMy. ft son he used sndsMctorily whose any cough remedy Is needed. It chi he aafiely given to Wil e* top days old or adults ninety years es age. Oeft three ounees (M cents worth) of Glando Fla* with full directions Mr preparing. you will hnvo n cough remedy that ia emeeUod hr none. : - Mar Whooping Cough" add an ounce es fluid extract es ehootaut leevee. Mr. A T. Ah war, the owner of a machine shop at Bavflaad, Ohio, says: “Mr am had a severe sough for several years. After doctoring and trying • netotor of oough remedies, we.beg&a to think hie earns a hopeless one. He got no relief unto ho need (Rando Pina, the first hottls relieved him. He oogttiued Its use hewas cured 7 Re la now weft and I hoUhvo (Meade Flat saved bis life.” Per sate by
• %' 1 . . ' 1 - • »:+79< -ITUB EVENING_ REPUBLICAN, BEN fIfIBLABB, INP.
11. ■ - -A -> - - U..LUI/ ■ . iL " Bom, Jan. 10, to Mfs. Clark Allis, a girl. 7.7.. j -.7"'. - '■ ■- B. F. Fendig made a business trip to Chicago today. r Ford Day is the 18th Hilliard & Httfmll. The Sew Club will meet with,Mrs. Ernest ‘Lamson Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Don, Beam went to Chicago todhy to witness “The Follies.” See the Windows at, Hilliard & Hamill’s. Mrs. Emmet of Jordan, township, was taken quite seriously sick with bowel trouble yesterday. Ed Oliver, who has been in the city looking after business matters, returned to Chicago this morning. i--- : • ‘ j, I . - See the Windows at Hilliard & Hamill’s. G. A. Overton went to Chicago today, Where he will enter Wesley hospital and will have a tumor removed from his neck. , Representative W. L Wood, of. Parr, has been placed on the following committees: Chairman drainage and dykes, swamp lands, claims. Harry K. Thaw, whose sensational career has extended over the past eleven years," is again in the limelight. Thaw was arrested this week accused of assault on a boy friend. ■ n ‘Am. ' A number of the poultry show prize winners here were shipped to Lafayette to compete in the Tippecanoe county show which opened Monday. Attorney C. F. Smith, of Salem, Ohio, stored off tJ>day for a visit with his parents, Mir. and Mrs. Joseph Smith. He had been to Chicago on business. On account of his serious condition, Floyd Smith is unable to have visitors call upon him. His condition grows f radually worse and hens failing very ast. , The members of the Modem Woodmen and Royal Neighbor lodges will hold a joint installation this evening at their hall and there will be a supper afterwards for th£ members of both orders.* Dr. C. E. Johnson is now in Indianapolis with the troops who recently returned from the border and will oe mustered out soon and return to Rensselaer, where he will resume his practice. • E. F. Puffins, of Barkley township, went to Chicago Friday to attend the poultry show. He is exhibiting Barred Plymouth Rocks, and Tom Cain is showing his White Holland turkeys. The Tony Jessup vs Interstate Public-Service Company $50,000 suit opened at Kentland Tuesday before Judge Hanley. Attorney Dunlap, of this city, is appearing for the plaintiff. Harry Moore arrived home Tuesday evening from Annapolis, Md., where he went last week to enter the Naval Preparatory Training School, but tailed to pass the physical examination and was rejected. Tvustee George H. Hammerton, of Parr, attended the meeting of the County Sunday School Association officers held at the office_of the county clerk in the court house last night. Mr. Hammerton is president of she association. • Calf 273 for all sizes of hard coal. —Kellner & Callahan. It is understood that Sergt. Grant Wynegar has rented the Thomas Grant farm west of town and will move thereon about (March 1, 1917. In addition to furnishing the farm implements and other necessary farm equipment, Mr. Grant will also provide a housekeeper for Mr. Wynegar. We now have an abundance of hard ooal of all sizes.—Kellner & Callahan. p . ’ Mrs. George H. McLain received a telegram this morning that Mr. McLain’s father died just ope hour after his arrival at the home at Wauseon, Ohio. The funeral will be held there Thuisday at 1 o’clock in the afternoon. Mr. McLain was 81 years okh Mrs. McLain is prevented from a® tending by sickness.
THE RYAN OR G`IFFORD DITCH, WHICH?
(By Lewis S. Alter, Civil Engineer) Long ages ago, so geologists tell ns, Northern Indiana was drained through a valley in the slolid rock, extending across Jasper county from near the northeast corner to the west side, <or from the east end r o£ Walker township, passing two or three miles north of Rensselaer and crossing the Iroquois river near the Lameon farm. Thence running westerly on the south side of the present channel and pasping into Illinois some two miles north oi Kentland. This, old chahßeL w;as from 75 to 150 feet lower than the surrounding country and whethSf it was formed from sesmetic causes or by the wear of the water for long ages is not known. In the course of time the 'glacier age set in and huge (fields of ice plowed their slow but irresistible way from Aorth to south over the surface of the earth, scooping up material in some places and depositing it in others. That action tilled this valley with fine clay and gravel, leveled off the rock surface, and finally , ended up by leaving a lot of debris in ridges composed in the main of? gravel and boulders mixed with clay. At some places this gravel is quite dean and suitable for use in building Yoads hnd mixing concrete. In some places the surface was covered with sand which by the action of the wind was- afterward piled up into Tidges or dunes. This leveling by the glaciers left a large part of the country covered with shallow lakes. As the climate became warmer these grew up in vegetation, wfltiidh by maturing and decaying year after year formed the muck and peat of our marshes. The shallower lakes were thus changed into marshes. The deeper ones became sodded over and formed swamps, and others still deeper continued to be lakes because the wind acting upon the water prevented the growth of vegetation in them. the rainfall and the run off of waiter from higher ground exceeded the amount of evaporation the lakes of necessity had* outlets. These were wide and shallow and no doubt often' changed toy drift material and winds. Thw largest and most important marsh in Jasper county was the Haddock’s marsh, now generally known as the Gifford marsh. This marsh and its arms comprises an area of ffom 15,000 to 20,$ 00 acres, yith its outlet down the line of the Pinkamink rjver and over the surface of the rock ledge from above Saltillo bridge on the Francesville road to near where the Piikamink enters the line of the Iroquois river just above Rensselaer. In 1851 Lewis Davisson constructed a levee across the main outlet of this marsh and built a small mill to be run by water power accumulated by the dam, but he found that the water took a course to the southeast, flowing around the dam to Me-te-mo-nong creek. This required about one-half mile more levee to hold the water and when this was built he found he could not get much head of water because the marsh had another outlet across Barkley township to the west along what Is now the Gifford dredge ditch, and the water overflowed and passed down this line to the Iroquois river near the point where the Burk’s bridge was afterward built. This was alrpost directly in the line of the old %re-glacier channel. • This outlet was over good soil where the vegetation grew rank and the drift lodged so it was easily choked up and obstructed. The channel to the south along the Pinkamfnk had where ithe vegetation could not get hold so readily, so It did not clpse up so easily. In the year 1880 writer ran a line of levels from near the east end of Walker township down to the Squire Moore farm at his own expense. Some two or three years laiter he surveyed the line of the pelvas ditch from the east line of the Helvas marsh to a point in the Iroquois marsh near where the Gifford ditch later emptied into the Iroquois river, wttih a ‘fall of 20 feet from the Helvas marsh to the Gifford outlet in the Iroquois. From the head of the Helvas ditch he ran Levels across to the Big marsh and found that the Big marsh was one foot lower than the Helvas marsh at that time: The ridge or divide between them was fourteen Inches higher than the Helvas marsh on tihe west. Thus a cut of -"twenty-six inches across the “divide” would he on a level with the Big marsh at this point. The south or Plnkamiqjt outlet of the Big marsh was the lowest one and so we call it the “natural channel,” and so far as nature was concerned it answered all require* ments. But there came a time when men wanted to improve upon nature —a .time when 'the marsh would , pay better in stock and grain than fn fish: and game—so an artificial dhannel was necessary. Here we should copy nature by following the line- of least resistance. Mr. .Gifford partially solved this problem, ybhe all important one in drainage, “the best and cheapest route,” and he would have fully solved it if he had used a larger dredging machine at that time. Had he done this tfhat country .would now he well drained’ and at a very .Small cost of what is now contemplated. Mr. Gifford’s ditch follows in the main the old channel where the stone' is far below any artificial ditch work. The Pinkamink line has from five to seven miles of solid rpek. Most of us know ’"hat It ta ditch In clay, sand and dirt, anda few of us' know what It Is to cut through stone. Nowlet us do a little figuring. In dolla ™. cents and see If It does plain to the average person which is the cheapest and best route The actual cost of removing .r I ’
and dirt as compared with the cost of removing rock is about one to twenty. The actual expense of about 100 miltjs of dredge ditch cut by Mr. Gifford was about three cents per yard, for labor and fuel. First cost tor plant, repairs and overhead expense brought the costup ’to som'ething less' than six cents per cubic yarfd. 'He had some rock removed from the line of the Pinkamink and although much of it was loose and could be picked out without blasting the contractor made little profit at sl.lO per cubic yard. I know whereof I speak for I was on the dredge ’and timed them many times and I assisted the contractor with the atone work. Now a channel fifteen feet wide and twelve feet deep will cost in the stone about $lO • per running foot, or nearly $53,000 per mile. A ditch down the Gifford roulte., with a sixteen foot bottom and - an average depth of sixteen feet, with sufficient slope of banks would cost about $175 per running foot, or about $9,250 per mile, and from this cost 'would be deducted the yardage of the ditch already there, perhaps one-third the above • amount —This' woulri give more than double the capacity aJti from one-fifth to one-tenth the cost. Agam, a twelve-foot ditch in the stone would lower the water level in the marsh at the head of the rock cut in ordinary stages of water from five to* eight feet below the surface of tne marsh at ithe heafi of the rock cut, but as you extend the ditch across, the level marsh the water in the ditch will come approximately one foot nearer the" Surface for each mile up stream until when a distance of five or six miles is covered the ditch will be too shallow Jto accomplish anything but surface drainage of. the affected lands. For that reason* the * Pinkamink or Ryttn ditch will, if constructed, toe comparatively worthless so far as the north and west sides of the marsh is concerned. But the land at- the most remote end of the marsh getting but two or three feet of drainage will likely be assessed as much as that getting' eight or ten feet of drainage. The Gifford ditch or the Oliver route, if, constructed as suggested of an average depth of sixteen feet, would lower the water level at the west side of the marsh ten feet below the surface and would carry most of-the water from the marsh area, even if the rock cut is constructed as proposed. The greater depth of drainage on the dirt route would mean a great deal, for as I once heard Mr. Gifford say: “A difference of six inches In the drainage may mean a crop.” Another important item is that from the center of the big marsh near the northwest corner of section Ilf township 30, range 5 to the Iroquois river toy the Ryan or Pinkamink route the distance is about 15% miles and fully twofifths of the distance is in the rock, and all this distance must have a deep ditch if the marsh area if to get any relief. From the same noint to the Price’ bridge below the rapids in the Gifford ditch the *ll®* tance is less than seven miles. If this seven miles is deepened, and as it is all dirt and can he constructed in a short time and at small cost, the main outlet of the marsh will continue to toe on ttof Gifford route wtoere all the waters from the entire area, except the southeast portion, have been draining for more than twenty years, and this will continue, to .he the outlet even though the proposed Ryan ditch is constructed at whatever cost If the ditch on .the Gifford route were to be continued dowr the Iroquois ditch to the outlet o the Pinkamink above Rensselaer the distance ffom the center of thr marsh to the common outlet would be three miles less by the Gifford route than by the Ryan or Pinkamink, thus giving a much better fall and more rapid flow to the water. To sum up, the dirt route is the shortest, cheapest, quickesrt and the most efficient. The—Ryan or rock route is the longer, will have less fall per mile, will -cost from five to ten times as much to build, and will take years to construct after the contract is let before it will furnish any relief to the marsh lands. Probably some drainage is needed •on the Pinkamink but the writer believes that the Gifford outlet, if deepened, would take care of the flood waters. and prevent the march from overflowing, and if this were dom? no large drain would be. needed through the rock and mo«b of the Pinkamink lands would be taken care of by the present river channel By the construction of tne Hoagland ditch in White county one branch of Monon creek har been diverted fro-m the old channel .through the rock and taken 1? a new ditch across the countrj south of Monon to the Tippecanoe river. That ditch is twenty-twc feet deep and has been operating successfully for several years. The Kettnan ditch is now being constructed in Pulaski and White counties to divert the waters from the north branch of Monon creek which now flow through , a rock ledge which was improved twenty feet wide only, a few years age at accost of maty thousands of 'dollars. The new ditch is being constructed to a depth of from twenty four to thirty feet for a distance of four miles, through sandy, caving soil, and they are doing this rather than further Improve the rock cut. Their rock channel Is as good as the preposed Ry»h ditqto will he and after several years trial they are abandoning it and digging an entirely new channel deep and wide, where the watei never ran before in order to get around the rock trouble/'* One hun dred thousand foliar ditches arr pretty costly experiments. Here the water har been running down the Gifford ditch so: more than twenty years and it i' proposed to throv that ditch awe: and undertake tc divert the wate aroynd through the. rock which car not be' clone for much lees that
SHELBY.
Dora Ball is reported on tfce sick list. - •• f V Mrs. James Boyce and daughter, after a week’s visit here with the Dickey family, went to Lafayette Monday for a visit with relatives. Win. Smitlr returned last Thursday • from a visit with relatives in Michigan. * . Aljen Puller will hold a publie sale 'of live stock and farm tools Read the list in this paper. Selden Spieth went north Sunday; where, we don’t know.Mrs. Chas. Larson, of DeMotte, visited here Monday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Davis. Mrs. John Davis .visited over Sunday with her daughter, Mis. Chas. Larson, at DeMotte. David Fisher, M. T. Latta, George Dickey, Herman Baxter, Mrs. Bert'" Flewelling, H. M. Lee, were Lowell visitors Monday. .Sam (Woss, wife and child, of Brook, visited relatives here last Fri- • day and, Saturday. _ . Fraiik Regnier and wife and George Regnier mid wife #isited .relatives at Schneider Sunday. • ,
WALKER TOWNSHIP.
Bom, on Saturday, January 6th, -1917, a girl to Ernest Asher and wife, Dr. Solt attending physician. Hairy Gilbranson and family left here Tuesday for Wisconsin. The two young lads that took the count at Burrows Camp last Sunday certainly have a lesson before them that should not be forgotten for many a day. * Misses Hazel, Alice and Lena Myers visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Gail Michaels. Mr. Eddy, of Chicago, is here visiting a few days on his farm ( in this township. V. J. Webb, of Albia, lowa, returned home after .a. week’s stay with his sister. Mrs. I. W. Knapp arid mother, Mrs. WT WefrK. Mr. and MrsT~Jbhn Ghrlick have moved f?om the Oth. farm to the Harry Gulbranson farm. ; • . Louis Hurley spent Saturday and Sunday with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Henkle, of Aix. There, will be Sunday school every Sunday at 10 at the Walker Center school house. Everyone come and start in the new year- right. Saturday evening, Jan. 13, 1917, is the date DeMotte Camp M. .W. of A. will give another of those popular dances. (Good music and a good, social time, guaranteed to everybody.
J. E. Markin and Marion I. Adams made business trips to Indianapolis today. If you will tell us we will tell your friends. Send in your news items. Our phone number is 18 or you can call No. 68 from 6 p. m. to 7 p. na. ' i ' ■ . . Use our classy classified column. It will do the business. We will sell that article for you if you *lll use a For Sale ad. CURTIS CREEK. Mrs. Mearle Johnson and daughter, Bernice, spent the week end with her sister, Mrs. R. C. Yeoman and family. Chas. Battleday and wife spent Sunday with John Rush and family. * Hamlin Smith and family, of Mt. Ayr, took Sunday dinner with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Smith. Little Elizabeth Downs returned to her home in Rensselaer Saturday. Miss Esther Yeoman spent Saturday night and Sunday with her uncle, A. J. Hufty and family, at Mt. Ayr. R. C. Yeoman and family and Mearle Johnson and daughter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Smith. GREAT REJOICING BY RHEUMATIC CRIPPLES If So Crippled Yon Can’t Cm Arms or Led Rheuma Will Help Yon or Nothing; to Par. If you want relief in two days, swift, certain, gratifying relief, take onehalf teaspoonful of Rheuma once a day. If you want to dissolve every particle of uric acid poison in your body and drive it out through the natural channels sd that you will be free from rheumatism, get a 50-cent bottle of Rheuma from your druggist today. Rheumatism is a powerful disease strongly entrenched *in Joints afed muscles. In order to conquer it a powerful enemy must be Sent against it. Rheuma is the enemy of rheumatism—an enemy that conquers It every tims. Judge John BarhoAt of Ft. Loramle, Ohio, knows it. He was walkljig with crutcnes; today he Is well. It should do as much for your it seldom fails. Rheugia is sold with a guarantee S* B. F. Fendig. The -Yellow Bus Rensseher-Remmgton Bus Line Schedule 2 TRIPS DAILY Lv. Rensselaer .............7:46 am Ar. Remington 8:80 am Lv. Remington 9:10 am Ar. Rensselaer 9:56 am Lv. Rensselaer ............4:00 pm Ar. Remington 4:45 pm Lv. Remington 5:15 pm Ar. Rensselaer 6:00 pm FARE 75c EACH WAY. * BIBLY FRYE. Prop.
a half million dollars and will fall of its object - when 'completed. If the Ryan ditch is right, then the lßoagland ditch and the. Ketman ditch are both Wrong and all three of the ditches are In adjoin ing territory and only a few milet apart, . ’ All three propositions can be In vestigated in one afternoon by An j one Interested in learning the fftttl ohik* matter and the machine Would have to travel only a few m 1169 Now.it the land ownera In. t'hidistrict would consult their own in- * terests they would see the advantage of a clay and dirt route In preference to a stone route.
