Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 January 1917 — Page 4

CLASSIFIED ADS BRING TO USERS *l*

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN AMDBEMI-yWKXT CXAMK M~MAMaCEiTOM, miltUn nx r*n)AT xssux ib begui.ab WXBKX.Y XDXTXOM Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897. s second class mall matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act of March 3, 1879. Evening Republican entered Jdn. 1. 1897. as second class mail matter at the poatoffice at Rensselaer, Ind., under the act of March 3, 1879. MATES FOB DISPLAY ADVEBTIBIWG Daily, per inch 10c Semi-Weekly, per inch 12%c ' BATES (FOB CLABSXFXED ADS Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Setai-Weekly Republican. 26 cents. Additional space pro rata. bdbbobxftxom mates Dally by Carrier, 10 vents wee*. By Mail, |3.50 a yaar. Semi-Weekly, in advance, year, |3.00.

Classified Cota FOR SALK. FOR SALE—Th Bedford farm of 87 acres, adjoining city of Rensselaer; splendid location tor fine heme. >2OO per acre. Terns, one-third down, one-third nine inoeiths, one- 7 third eighteen months. CHAS. W. POSTILL, Administrator.

FOR SALE —Good Jersey milk at 25c a gallon.—Mrs. Andrew Gangloff. FOR SALE—Bargain, good 7 room house, electric lights, good well and other outbuildings, 3 lots, plenty of fruit. Apply to Charles Rfl Rishhng, Phone 124. : ■■ - FORSALE OR RENT—Good 9-room-house with barn and other excellent 'buildings. Five acres of best truck land.—L. H. Hamilton. FOR SALE—(First class timothy hay in stack, close to town. Phone 561, Charles Shaw. • - FOR SALE—BO acre farm with a new 5-room cottage, also new barn; 10 acres in rye, 2 wells on place; half mite'of school; & miles of Wheatfield, R. F. W. at door. If bought before Feb. 20th will take $2,400 cash.—J. WT Hanwnerton, R, D. 1, Tefft, Ind. FOR SALE—BO acre farm 3 miles of Medaryville, on stone road, good improvements, 50 acres in cultivation, balance hog-tight fenced; some tile; easy terms at bargain for quick sale.—J. Davisson.

FOR SALE—Bargain for guide sale, a two year old pure bred Hoistain bull and 7 months old male calf. Write C. F. Mansfield, Jr., Rensselaer, Ind. _____ FOR SALE—Some good timothy hay in barn, in good condition.—Harvey Messman, telephone 903-C. FOR SALE —Lot in Factory Addition. Well located. Quick sale price SSO. Call pbone 78-B. FOR SALE—IOO shocks of corn, 4 tons of hay in barn.—David Stoner, Phone 913-1). ~-FQR SA T -E—Cord wxd, 4 foot, de livened to any part of city. Phone 837. J. E. Walter.

FOR SALE—Two bay mares, one broken and one unbroken. Will sell the te«m for $l5O if taken by January Ist—John Garland, Phom 930-1. FOR SALE—Fire wood, |f per load. Phone Lewis Hooker. ~FOR SALE—I6O 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 SALE —Sawed oak lumber <;f all kinds, red or burr oak. Sawed in any dimensions desired. 4 miles west of Rensselaer. All building material SIB.OO a thousand; also some 12, 14 and 16 foot bridge in burr and white oak. Phone 87-G, Mt. Ayr.

FOR SALE—Two desirable building lots not far from business section*—Harvey Davisson, Phone 499 or 246. . . - --- --- ■ '■ —— ■ " ■■ ■ ■ FOR SALE—Slabs, SI.OO per load, six loads for ss.oo.—Arthur Mayhew, Phone 919-H, Rensselaer. , FOR SALE—BO,OOO feet oL oak lumber, all sizes, sl2 to $22 per thousand feet. Two miles from Tefft. See T. Hayes at lumber yard or B. Forsythe, Rensselaer, Ind. WAJfrKP - WANTED —Carpet and rug weaving at residence one block north of cement tile factory. Phone 267.—T. W. Bissenden. , WANTED —Rags, iron, rubber, metal and old automobiles. Wheft you have any to sell Phone 577, Sam Karnowsky, Rensselaer, Ind, „ Z WANTED—Giri for kitchen 'imMilton Roth. ' WANTED —Man to cut cord wood. James Walter, Phone 887. FOR RENT—I6O acres of land with buildings. Phone 176.—Alex. Meries.

WANTED—To buy good second hand wagon and* gv sot of team harness. Phone 273 or 204, Harry Watson. WANTED —Messenger boy.—Western Union office. ' ■ FOR RENT-—Stock farm with two or three good teams, farm equipped. A. H. Hopkins. ~ LOST. LOST—GoId cuff button. Finder return to this office. “ s FARM - LOANS. FARM LOANS—An unlimited supply of 6 per cent money to loan.— Chas. J. Dean & Son, Odd Fellows Building. WANTED farm hand to help hog herdsman and care for recorded hogs. Cannot smoke or drink. Steady job, good wages. No attention to any but personal applicants. Must come before February 6th.—Jennie M. Conrad, Conrad, Ind. FOR RENT—Farm of 200 acres; fairly well tiled; good house, good barn; grain rent. —John" Herr, McCoyaburg, Ind. ~FOB RENT.

FOR RENT —Furnished rooms with oath. Phone 258. FOR RENT-—Farm for rent west of college grounds.—S. J. Ash, R. D. 4. Use our classy classified column. It will do the business. MISCELLANEOUS. MONEY TO LOAN--5 per cent farm loans.—John A. Dunlap. STRAYED—White Collie, brown ears, female. Reward. Phone 934-H. AUCTION *SALE—WiII "sell at the Duggins sale, Saturday, 1 Feb. 3, at Hemphill’s hitch barn and on the terms of this sale, one of the best brood mares in the county. 7-8 Belgian, sired by Nelson. Foaled June, 1910. Weight in working condition 1850. Presumably now in foal and service paid. Sold sound.—Russell Van Hook.

LEE.

' Uncle David Culp is very low with pneumonia. ■ -■ ■ ~ ; Will Culp and wife spent the day Friday with her brother, JameS’Culp. Mrs. Chas. Lefler is on the sick list. Miss Vernice Grey is teaching again after missing a week on account of sickness. The scholars are all glad to have her back. Mrs. Ida Lewis is staying with her daugther, Mrs. Ethel Stiers. Mrs. Fulk is reported very low with pneumonia and the doctor gives very slight hopes,, as one lung is filled entirely up. Mrs. Kate Holman took dinner Sunday with her son, Orval and family. Little Katherine Holman was sick Sunday with a bad cold. J. F. Eldridge and family spent Sunday with Korah Eldridge and family. Mr .and Mrs. Clarence Cochran, of MidCoysburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Wolfe, of Barkley, were also there. Jas. Culp and wife and sons took dinner Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gilmore. Ray Holman and J. F. Eldridge were Mbnon goers Monday.

Attorney Ray D. Thompson is spending the day at Parr as the guest of Mrs. Logan Wood. Alexander Hurley went to Decatur, 111., today to visit his daughter, Mrs. Jennie Davis. We have in stock a very large supply of chestnut and stove anthracite. Better let us fill your bin now, before the thaw. Call us at phone No. 7. Harrington Brothers Company. The school building at Medaryville has been condemned, and the state board of health has sent out a notice to the effect, which has been posted on the building. The residents of the town have been considering the proposition of erecting a new building there for some time and the order issued now makes it a necessity. A site has already been agreed upon and the work of providing for funds for the erection will be started.

Some days ago Governor Goodrich, through the public service commission, issued an order to coal bearing roads in Indiana, intended to relieve the coal shortage that was working such a hardship in iriidana. The governor did not wait until an “investigation” could be held; he moyed-with characteristic vigor and his move already is bearing beneficial returns to the-people of the state. “Oapv for the House Journal will be ready for the printer within 24 hours after the session ends,” remarked Speaker Eschbach the other day. In years gone by, it often took several months to complete the House Journal after the legislature adjourned and the state of Indiana - paid handsomely for this work. It is different now, however. Under republican direction, the work will be properly done and promptly, and there will be no digs into the state treasury to finish this work as has always been the case in the past.

CASTOR IA For Infant* and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the J nfrnnnre of

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN. RENSSELAER. INB.

Don Beam is sidk with grip this afternoon. Mrs. Sam Hoshaw returned from Crown Point this afternoon. The February term of the Jasper circuit court will convene on the 12th. Solomon Fendig went to Chicago. Tuesday afternoon. Born, Jan. 30, to Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Williams, of near Aix, a son. Lewis’ Whicker, of Mt. Ayr, went to Chicago Tuesday afternoon. . Mrs. Carrie Short returned to her home at Milford, 111., this afternoon. The three months’ child of John Jinkinson of pneumonia last

Mrs. Harvey Wood, Sr., is reported to be not quite so well today. She has an attack of pneumonia. Lillie Casto went to Kniman Tues-, day afternoon to visit her sister, M r ’- Owen Williams, who is sick. Ted Egeriwent to Chicago Tuesday afternoon to look over the automobiles at the automobile show’. Let us fill your bins with genuine Pocahontas coal. Our phone number is 458 and we can give you prompt service.—-Grant-Warner Lbr. Co. Myrt B. Price is reported to be doing fairly well. There is not much change in his condition. Charles Rishling returned this afternoon from a business trip to Chicago. _______ We have in stock a large supply of that famous Kentucky lump coal. Would be pleased to have your orders. —Grant-Warner Lbr. Co.

Marie Hamilton returned to Indianapolis today to begin the second semester work at Butler college. Just received a car of nice big lump Kentucky coal' This is as good coal as you can buy.—J. C. Gwin Lbr. Co., Phone 6. Edward Honan has decided not to return to school but will look after his father’s farm in Barkley township. Mrs. Dr. Gordon, of Blountsville, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Sarah Miller, came Tuesday afternoon to visit relatives here.

Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Johnson, of Remington, and the latter's sister, Maude Cline, of Aurora, 111., went to Chicago Tuesday afternoon to visit the automobile . show. At the meeting of the K. of P. lodge last night the wives of three Knights were reported on the sick list. They were Mrs. George H. Healey, Mrs. Dr. W. L. Myer and Mrs. B. J. Moore. After February 1, 1917, we will be compelled to make a decided raise on grain ‘binders. Will you save this by placing your order with us before that date? —Kellner & Callahan. Mrs. George Zea and children went to Parr this morning to visit with her sister, Mrs. Zack Stanley, and Thursday morning they will go to their new home about eight miles out of Chicago Heights on one of the Lawler ranches. George left this afternoon for lsyer, which is two miles from the farm he is to occupy. Rev. E. W. Strecker and wife went to Indianapolis today to be on hands for the fight of the dry measure, which will possibly come up in the senate tomorrow. Dr. Strecker was at one time pastor of the St. Paul’s methodist church in north Indianapolis. •

Hagerman, lecturer, Feb. 8. Rob Roys, quartet, March 5. The Home Economics Club will hold their annual banquet at the Methodist church Saturday, February 3, at 12 o’clock. Each member is asked to bring food and is allowed to invite one guest.

Dr. Fyfe went to Chicago Saturday to attend the funeral of his brother, which occurred Sunday. It is predicted that a large number of* public sales will be held in February and March. Remember, that with every order of sale bills you get a complete notice of your sale in the Review of Rosela/wn and. the Review of Wheatfield, reaching the readers in all the towns and on all teh rural routes in the Kankakee valley. The Januarv thaw came Sunday and Monday and made the roads almost impassable. ’ < Attorney Roy Blue was a business visitor at the county seat this week. G. H. Morrow and Ernest Gosch were given their first ride on the Masonic goat at the stated meeting of Wheatfield lodge Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ed F. Ingram, of Porter '-canty, spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Boyle and family. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Boyle entertained F. E. Lewis and family at sup-: per Monday evening?- ~rMr. and r Mrs. Otto Schwancke and Mrs. Chas. Kramer, of DeMotte, visited Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Boyle. Dan Wolf, of Keener township, was a business visitor here Tuesday. , ' Homer Fisher, of Lake county, came Saturday for a visit with home folks. John I. and Nubbins was up to Chicago last Thursday, if you want to put that in your paper. Harry Remley has finally consented to get his name on the fiiver list. Harley Brown, of LaCrosse, was here Tuesday and sold his bottling works to Erwin Francis. * Frances Miller went to Kankakee Tuesday for a visit’ with relatives. Mr. Weiss, of near Rensselaer, was here Saturday looking after his 89 acres'which he lately purchased from Joseph Hickam. > ,

Lyceum Dates.

WHEATFIELD.

MORE ABOUT THE RYAN DITCH

Kokomo* Ind-, Jan. 2*6, 1917. To ..the Landowners of the Pinka- >’ mink Valley: ,1 have read with much Interest the article by Mr. Lewis S. Alter, engineer, published in The Rensselaer Republican on. .January 10, 1917, and also the public statement by a number of interested land owners in the same Issue, and I entirely agree with Mr. Alter in his conclusions as to the best and cheapest method of draining the area in question. I am interested in the project and as I am owner of land by contract in the Gifford marsh this article is not influenced by any outside interest. I might make reference to the fact which wai brought out in the article published by C. S. Head, R. C. Yeoman and Devere Yeoman, that I am one of the engineers who surveyed the Ryan ditch last year and have been over the entire route of the proposed Ryan ditch lateral No. 77 and the Gifford ditch from beginning to end.

I would like to call the attention of the public and especially the interested land owners to a few of the facts brought out by our survey and not mentioned in our previous article, and also to some calculations made by me at that time in regard to the cost of this work by draining the marsh area and all the territory north of it, Stump slough and Cypress creek, down the Gifford ditch and also cutting a channel through the rock ledge on the south to care for the territory not affected by the Gifford ditch and comparing this cost with the cost of the proposed Ryan ditch. The figures on the cost for the Plnkamink route or Ryan ditch will be taken from the old report which was later -set aside by the court on motion of the petitioners, although no longer an issue the figures given therein will serve as a comparison of cost for the two routes in question.

Beginning at the same point as reported by the drainage commissioner for the Ryan ditch we found that measuring along the Gifford route from station 0 to where the same enters the Iroquois river to be the same distance as measuring along the Pinkamink route from station 0 to -where same crosses, the C. & W. V. railroad, south of Pleasant Grove. The distance being 1,046 stations, or 19.8 miles. The total length of the proposed Ryan ditch down the Pinkamink route was 1,362 stations, or 25.8 miles, the Gifford route being the shorter by 7.7 miles, besides the digging would be in sand, clay and muck, while the Pinkamink route would have to be blasted through five or six miles df solid rock, which everyone who is familiar with the country knows to be there only a few feet under the surface and in many places the water in the Pinkamink is flowing over outcropings of this rock. The outlet of the Gifford ditch in the Iroquois river Is eighteen feet lower than the present bed’ of the Pinkamink at the C. & W. V. railroad bridge south of Pleasant Grove. As stated in our previous article a ditch can be constructed on the Gifford route on a grade of two feet to the mile and get into the marsh at the C. & W V. railroad bridge north of Newland with a ditch twelve feet deep. Now from the fact that the marsh is practically level as was shown by our survey, the muck at Tailholt bridge is just six inches lower than the muck just south of William Hershman’s on the north side of the marsh, and from the fact that lateral No. 77 enters the Gifford ditch only a few hundred feet above the railroad bridge and it being on the north and west edge of the marsh it does not require an engineer to make this startling discovery, but anyone with common horse-sense and sound judgment can see that it is more prac■THSrT6rTa^B — TEsTwatsrTi sols f olfi — Nsr 7*7 out of the marsh almost as soon as it enters it with a grade of two feet to the mile than to try and carry it across this level ground a distance of about five miles before there is any fall whatever in the ground. . In Jhe same way the water from Stump slough on the north could be taken across one corner of the marsh and down the same ditch with a fall of two feet per mile Instead of across this long level stretch of ground with no fair. In this way the water from the marsh area,-lateral No. 77 and that coming down Stump slough from the north can all be taken down the Gifford ditch, the route it has been following for more than twenty years, as stated by Mr. Alter, then a ditch could be constructed on the south side through the rock of sufficient size to take care of this territory and all done at a much lower cost than was reported for the construction of the Ryan ditch, as I will now show.

The figures for cost of construction will be based only on the main line ditches as thfi cost of-“laterals would be practically the same in either case. From the -old report of the commissioners this cost of constructing the main line of the Ryan ditch was as follows: 705,920 cubic yards of dirt excavation at 8 cents per cubic yard equals $56,4.73.66; 145,138 cubic yards of rock excavation at x $1 per cubic yard equals $145,138, making a total cost of $201,611.60. The rock yardage was about one-fifth of the dirt yardage, but cost more than two and one-half times as much as the dirt. . ' / ■ , • '

The proposed Ryan ditch had a twelve and fifteen-foot bottom through the marsh and was only about six feet deep at a point dir rectly east of Newland. Now let us suppose that we make the bottom of the Giftord ditch thir> feet wide and twelve feet deep at the railroad and grade of two feet per inile, all of which are possible. The carrying capacity of the Gifford ditch would then be about five times the capacity of the Ryan ditch as was proposed.) In choosing these figures I am not attempting to state what will be the sis© of the Gif-

lord ditch under the new proposed clean out by the property, owners, but these figures were chosen as a basis for figuring cost; and th show what could be done. A very liberal estimate of the yardage for the Gifford ditch beginning at station 0 on the old Ryan ditch to its outlet in the Iroquois and deducting the yardage of the present ditch will be 937, 500 cubic yards ,at 8 cents per cubic yakd equals $75,000. Now begin at a point on the Ryan ditch at the outlet of the Baker lateral about halfway between Tailholt and Satiilo bridges and construct a ditch ten feet wide on the bottom and average eight feet deep. This would be sufficient ' for the territory on the south side and is just one-half as large as the proposed Ryan ditch at the same place. A very liberal estimate for the construction of this ditch would be 187,000 cubic yards of dirt at 8 cents per ouibic yard equals $14,900. 70,000 cubic yards of rock at $1 per cubic yard equals $70,000, making a total of $84,900 for this ditch. Now add to this the cost of $75,060 for the Gifford 'ditch arid we have a total cost for the two ditches of _5159,900, saving $41,711.60 or 21 per cent of the cost of the Ryan ,ditch. The feasability of the whole’ proposition hinges on the question of which is the cheaper —to dig dirt at 8 cents a cubic yard or blast rock at $1 a cubic yard? •’ I wish to say further that 1 heartily endorse the action taken by the property owners and I am convinced that if they succeed in cutting the ditch as proposed in their scheme that it will afford the relief desired in the marsh. The whole trouble lies in the filling up of the Gifford ditch where it passes through the cut on John Eger’s farm just west of the marsh. I lived for two seasons on what is locally known as Rattle Snake island on the banks of the Rich Grove lateral ditch and have watched the flow of water in this ditch, which was the proposed route for No. 77 across the marsh.. In time of low water or formal flow the water in this lateral flows west and down the Gifford ditch. In time of flood or high water it flows east to the Pinkamink, but not one drop of Water from tSump slough or No. 77 ever reaches the Pinkamink 'until these two ditches discharge more water on the west side of the marsh than the Gifford ditch can carry away. The water piles up at this point and then begins to seek its level by flowing east in the Rich Grove lateral and spreading out over the big marsh until it finally enters the Pinkamink and then begins its long and torturous journey to the Iroquois river This condition exists with every large freshet, overflowing hundreds of acres of valuable land and, destroying thousands of dollars worth of crops. The quickest, cheapest and best way to relieve these conditions is to has been suggested by the Gifford Drainage and Improvement company, near the center of the marsh and deepen and widen the Gifford ditch. Then all the water from Stump slough and No. 77 instead of overflowing the marsh will pass quietly and peacefully out of it and no one need be made to suffer.

I am not opposed to the Ryan ditch if properly constructed, but I believe both ditches should be cut and I have shown that both ditches can be constructed and Rive five times better drainage to the land affected and save 21 per cent of the money which it was proposed t> spend on the main line of the Ryan ditch. Now, in conclusion, let me ask this question: If it cost $201,611.60 to construct the Ryan ditch and this amount is 21 per cent more than two ditches would cost' which would give five times more benefit to the land affected, what in the name of the “Great Jehova’’ would it cost to construct the Ryan ditch large enough- ta_*giye-the.aama: benefit to the land as the* two ditches? G. S. HEAD, Civil Engineer. Legislative observers of long experience are authority for the statement that the present legislature is farther advanced in its work than his usually been the case at the end of the first month of the session. Acting on the speed suggestion made by Governor Goodrich in his first message to the legislature, Speaker Eschbach and Lieutenant Governor Bush have both been admonishing the members almost daily to hurry up with their work to the end that there will not be the confusion during the closing days that, has marked the final days of other sessions, ' - •

The bans of marriage of Thomas Lonergan, of Surrey, and Miss Edith Paxton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Paxton, of this city, were published at the St. Augustine’s Catholic church last Sunday. The date set for the marriage is February 14, Mrs. Levi Clouse went to Francesvil]etoday to attend the funeral of her unclie, Peyton Davisson. The Grip Skeleton! ' r -- , ... _ ■ . • The grip skeleton may be retained in the body in various forms. If the grip affected you in the form of tonsllitls, bronchitis or ( pneumonla and left you with a cough, you should act quickly before the cough weakens 4he lungs and bronchial tubes.. After the lungs have been affected for some tide by continuous coughing the process of decay begins, then you are beyond medical - aid. Statistics tell, us’ that pne person dies every three minutes from tubercu losis. , A chronic cough requires continuous treatment until it subsides Get threq ounces of Glanda Pine aud make your own cough medicine, You can make one pint oi Vxcellcnt cough syrup. Fuji wit) bottle - For sr.!e : y.’ , < - ; - '< - --- -if t . • , B. F. Fendig.

O. B. Lahm an went to Reynolds this morning. • S. E. Cook, the McCoy.dburg merchant, was in Rensselaer today. August Moore went to Chicago today to attend the automobile show. The bi-monthly dance of the Van Rensselaer be held this evening. , , ' iMiss Marie Hamilton returned to Butler University at, Indianapolis today, after a few days’ visit with her parents. " A large number of public sales-are listed for February and the present indications are that it will be the heaviest sale month of the season. Simon Fendig, the Wheatfield druggist, is in Rensselaer today. His sister, Miss Rebecca is much improved in health. N. M. Bott, son of W. L. Bott, came yesterday for a short visit with his parents here. He will return to his home at Star City, Ipd., this evening.

Many from here are attending the automobile show which is being held in Chicago this week. This is the seventeenth annual show and is said to be the best ever held. Walter and Grover Jutzi, of Chicago, returned home Sunday after spending the week with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thomas, of Surrey. . , Mrs. Rufus Foulks, of Hanging Grove township, is quite sick with pneumonia. Her sister, Dora Githens, of Indianapolis, came today to be with her. Mrs. Githens was met at the train here by Ed Cook. Today Is the last day of the present month, which has been filled with a variety of weather. Some unusually cold weather has been recorded, a small amount of snowfall, quite a little rain and a number of unusual pleasant days. .

~ Dr. Paul C. Curnick. formerly pastor of the Methodist church at this place but now field secretary of the Methodist hospital at Indianapolis, is succeeding nicely in his new work. Among some of his recent successes is the gift of William N. Bowers, of Cutler, Ind., who gives to the hospital the magnificent sum of SI,OOO, in memory of his beloved wife.

DON'T BE DISCOURAGED ■ ~ ♦ ' Let Glando Help You. Grip, colds and tonsilitis are diseases that are prevalent or become epidemic during certain weather conditions. Each year the grip claims a number of< victims who never recover from its terrible effect. The glands of the body (especially the liver and kidneys) are the blood purifiers or germ destroyers. GLANDO the great gland tonic acts directly upon the whole glandular system. The best time to doctor is when you begin to feel tired, achy or languid. These conditions indicate glandular inactivity, which is very often the forenfbher of serious illness, but if you have been negligent about safe-guarding your health, and are down and out from the effects of a cold, the grip or tonsilitis, don’t give up in despair until you have tried GLANDO. Your sluggish glands will take on new life and activity. The accumulated poisons will be eliminated and yourwhole glandular system built up. A 50 cent package of GLANDO contains three separate treatments, each treatment having a specific part to play in effecting a cure. Try it. For sale by, . B. F. Fendig.

CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS & LOUISVILLE RY. < Chicago and the west, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the Sc"th,Louisville and French Lick Springs. SOUTHBOUND* Louisville and French .Lick. No. 3 11:10 pm Indianapolis and Cincinnati. No. 35 ................... 1:45 am Louisville and French Lick. No. & -.. v • • .40t55=amIndian apolis and Cincinnati. No. 37 ......11.18 am Ind’plis, Cincinnati and French Lick. No. 33 .... ....1:57 pm . Lafayette and Michigan City. No. 39 .5:50 pm ~ Indianapolis and Lafayette. No. 31 7:3lpm ? NORTHBOUND. No. 36 Chicago 4:51 am No. 4 Chicago 5:01 am Mo. 40 Chicago (accom.).. .7:30 am No. 32 Chicago ..10:36 am No. 88 Chicago 2:51 pm No. 6 Chicago .........., .8:31 pm No. 30 Chicago ............6:50 pm For ticke and further information call on W. H. BEAM. Agent. The Yellow Bus Rensselaer-Remington Bus Line Schedule 'T'" 2 TRIPS DAILY Lv. xcensselaer . ...7:45 am Ar. Remington ..« 8:80 am Lv. Remington 9:10 am Ar. Rensselaer .. 9:55 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. BILLY FRYE. Prep.