Jasper County Democrat, Volume 3, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 March 1901 — Page 4
m com mm. (. 1. BIBCOCK, tDITOR HMD WBUSHtR. Offleial Democratic Paper of Jasper County* ■stored st the Poet-ofßee at Rensselaer, Ind. as second class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: ONE YEAR ....SI.OO BIX MONTHS 50c THREE MONTHS 25c. Payable In Advance. Advertising rates made known on application Notice Td Advertisers. All notices »f a business character,including wants, for sale, to rent. lost. etc., will be published in The Democrat at the rate of one cent per word for each insertion. No advertising will be accepted for less than 10 cents. Cards of thanks will be published for *8 cents and resolutions of condolence for SI.OO. . Office on Van Rensaelaer Street, North of Ellla A Murray’s Store.
The Calumet canal bill was killed in the house Thursday by a vote of 55 to 39. The Ship subsidy bill was displaced by the Oleomargarine bill the other day, forcing Senator Hanna to sorrowfully admit that his bread had fallen butter-side down. House bill No. 468, introduced by Mr. Davis of Wayne, prohibiting any man from bolding public office who owes delinquent taxes, has passed the house by a vote of 57 to 9. We would suggest that in the inaugural parade Hanna should drive the presidential carriage. His hold on the presidential reins should not be turned over to a novice even for a day. Governor Durbin vetoed the outrageous Joss railroad consolidation bill,. one of the republican measures forced through the legislature in payment for the political support of the railroad corporations. After all our talk of the good of humanity and the obligation resting on us to abate a nuisance at our doors, the Cubans are a good deal astonished at the high price we are asking for the job. The poor fools actually believed that we meant what we solemnly declared. Mr. Babcock’s proiiosal to take the duty off steel and other articles whose manufacture is controlled by trusts, has been met with horror and reproach by his Republican conferees. Where, they ask, are they to get their next campaign funds if they go back on the trusts? Great Britain isgetting worried the over reluctance of her colonial children to volunteer for service in South Africa and still more over the reluctance of the heads of the colonies to permit recruiting within their borders. Neither Australia nor Canada approves of the war and their chiefs do not hesitate to say so.
Representative Scott’s bill providing that a successful remonstrance against an applicant for license to sell intoxicating liquors shall hold good in the ward or township against all applicants for a period of six months, was placed on its passage in the house Wednesday morning. The bill was kilted by a vote of 117 to 50. Mr. Knox of Pittsburg, chief counsel for Carnegie and creator of the new big steel trust, has been offered the post of Attorney General to succeed Griggs. After all, why should’nt ho accept? If he did, we could simply dismiss all hope of anti-trust work by the Department of Justico and ceaso to worry ourselves over vain hope as we have done with Griggs. Another negro rapist and murderer hanged and burned in Indiana, this time at the classic city of Terre Haute, one of the republican strongholds of the state. Strange as it may appear, the republican press of Indiana is not raising its hands in holy horror over the lynching. Our republican brethren are opi>oßed to negro lynching only in democratic states, it seems. Is it not strange that the eye of that vigilant uewsgatherer, who presides over Jasper county’s Official Apologist failed to observe Senate bill No. 424, introduced by Senator Wolcott which provides for increasing the salary of our county recorder $650 per year? And this was the only bill introduced during the entire session that applied solely to Jasper county, too. Kind reader, do you think The Democrat’s oft-repeated charge that the Official Apologist purposely witheld matters of news from its renders in which the taxpayers of the comity were vitally interested, was false?
The second crowning of William I is scheduled to take place at the national capital next Monday. Isn’t it somewhat curious that Senator Chandler was never anxious about the contributions of big corporations to political campaign lands until tie had been defeated? Can it be that these contributions were always on bis side before? The sugar and steel trusts are now fairly at war over the Russian question. The sugar trust, which stands closest to the administration, has won the first round but the steel trust, which was caught napping, is now hard after it, and ructions are probable. Somebody whose words carry weight alike with church people and gentiles ought to investigate the Chinese missionary scandal. If Christian Missionaries have turned into despoilers, as is asserted on good authority, we ought to know it; if they have not, their skirts ought to be definitely cleared of the charges.
George M. Ray of the Shelbyville Democrat has been tried and found guilty of conspiring to defraud the county in printing contracts. Such an action in a republican county, republicans would groan, put their noses together, solemnly shake their heads and let the matter drop—New Castle Democrat. In this connection The Democrat desires to Bay that it has undisputable evidences in its possession against the Official Apologist editor, but do you suppose.for a moment that a court and jury could be secured in Jasper county that would convict? Not on your life. Now the above statement regarding the Apologist man is libellous, if not true, and we would be much pleased to have him begin action against us for libel, in the event of which a change of venue from Jasper county might result in failure to securing a republican jury and court.
Marshall pays his respects to the prominent editors and printers who testified to the correctness of The Democrat’s measurement of the health rules in controversy in a scurrilous half-column article. In reply we will simply say that if the testimony of the Jim-Crow printers of the defense was true, the Apologist man and the CowPuncher never filed an honest claim for public printing in their lives, aud they well know this statement to be correct. The man who edits the Apologist is not fit to wipe the feet of any of the state’s witnesses, and he could not find a reputable editor in Indiana who would swear materially different from those summoned by the state. For this reason he goes to the out-of-the-way villages of Lowell and Brookston and gets Messrs. O’Ragon and O’Haley, neither of whom, as the record will show, could tell nonpareil type from agate, and wouldn’t know how to measure a table-work legal i f they got one. The Cow-puncher was also unable to tell the difference until he was given a measuring rule and measured several lines together. A nice lot of “blacksmiths” these to prove anything pertaining to printing by.
A Good Cough Medicine for Children.
"1 have no hesitancy in recommending Chameriain’s Cough Remedy," says L. P. Moran, a well known aud popular baker, of Petersburg, Va, "We have given it toourchddren when troubled with bad coughs, also whooping cough, and it has always given perfect satifaction. I t was recommended to me by a druggist as the best cough medicine for children as it contained no opium or other harmful drug." Sold by J. A. Larsh. The Indianapolis Sentinel Almanac and Year Book is an sale at The Democrat office, price 25 cents.
Night Was Her Terror.
"1 would cough nearly all night long" writes Mrs. Chas. Applegate, of Alexandria, Ind., "and could hardly get any sleep. 1 had consumption so bad that if I walked a block 1 would cough frightfully and spit blood, but when all other medicines tai'ed, three JU.oo bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery wholly cured me and 1 gained 58 pounds." It's absolutely guaranteed to cure Coughs, Colds, I.a Grippe, Bronchitis and all Throat and Lung Troubles. Price 50c and SIOO. Trial bottles free at Long's drug store. Two good farms to rent for cash. Call at this office for particulars. Mrs. C. E. VanDeusen, of Kilbourn, Wis , was afflicted with stomach tr tuble and constipation for a long time. She says: "1 have tried many preparations but none have done me the good that Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets have.” These Tablets are for sale it J. A. Larsh's drug store. Price, 25 cents. Samples free.
Subscribe for The Democrat.
“I had been in bed throe weeks with grip when uiy husband brought me Dr. Miles’ Nervine, Pnin Pillh and Nerve and Liver Pills. 1 was cured.”- Mrs. J. Reinier, Franklin, Ind.
MARSHALL GOES FREE.
The case of the State of Indiana against George B. Marshall of the Rensselaer Republican, for libel, was tried in the cirouit court this week, occupying the greater part of two dava, and resulted in a verdict of not guilty on the second ballot. As be has been acquitted by a Jury of bis peers The Democrat will comment but briefly on the case, but if the state ever proved a case this was one of them. Monday morning the defendant filed affidavit for change of venue from Judge Thompson, alleging that owingto the bias and prejudice, etc.. of said fudge of his own politiQ fidth, he could not get a fair trial. The affidavit for change was filed and acted upon in the absence of tbe associate counsel for the state, Judge Thompson appointing Jesse E. Wilson, a young man whom the younger republicans are grooming for the republican candidacy for judge two years hence. Monday afternoon, when it was plainly apparent that tfie Journal editor would stay away until after the date set for trial, the state asked for a continuance to Saturday, March 2, alleging that Raid witness was a most important one and certain facts could be proven by no other person. Judge Wilson refused to grant the continuance. At this point, the attorneys for the state, seeing what they were op against, were about to dismiss the case and re-file it for the next term, but finally decided to go ahead and do the best they could un der the conditions. The court kindly excused from the jury one prohibition ist for the defense and the latter excused three democrats, which left a jury composed almost if not quite wholly of republicans. The state proved by The Democrat editor, A. B. Crampton of the Carroll County Citizen, A. B. Clark of the White County Democrat, John B. Whitehead of the American Press Association and W. H. Robertson, a competent and up-to date printer who has worked in many of the best offl ces in the state and a former foreman in the Rensselaer Republican office, at present editor of the Wheatfleld telephone, that the Democrat’s measurement of the matter was correct and hiß charge was a trifle less than the legal rates. To offset this the defense introduced Qeorge O’Haley of the Brookston Gazette, who could give all the galaxy of ex perienced printers above mentioned pointers they had never dreamed of in the printing business, on direct examination, but fell down with a sick ening thud when cross examined, and admitted that he had never had a notice anything like tne one in ques tion, didn’t know what table work was and couldn’t tell the difference between nonpareil and agate t\ pe; also Mr. O’Ragon of the Lowell Tribune, whose brother was discharged by The Democrat for incompetency, and who knew no more than Mr. O’Haley. The Cow-Puncher of the Barnacle also came in and teariully exhibited the stereotype plates of the health rules which he had ordered and kept in his shop for two weeks before using them in the vain hope that the health officer would ignore the law and give him the publication instead of The Democrat, thus adding to his exchequer the amount paid to the former for publishing them. He also got all muddled up on squares, sizes of type, etc. H. J. Bartoo, a brother-in-law of the Apologist editor, who was so competent a printer and newspaper man that he “petered out’’ here, likewise at Goodland, also ap peared for the defense, and exhibited an obsolete specimen book of types, etc. He admitted on cross examine tion that the book was not the latest issue by several years and that the old, lean, hair-spaced type set matter which he exhibited was not used by the Republican in setting its legals any more; that the type It now used waß a fatter type (exactly the same as that used in the health rules, stand ard nonpareil.) Neither O’Ragon, O’Haley or Bartoo ever worked under a competent foremau in their lives, and as for the Cow-Puncher, his competency (?) iB too well known to require any comment, j The attorneys for tbe defense well j knew that it had failed to prove justification for the charge as intended in the article, and it was noticeable in their argument that they dwelt almost wholly on that part of the alleged libel, “from other printers way of figuring,” and claimed that they had proven this by O’Ragon, O’Haley, the Oow-Puncher and Brother-in-law Bartoo, all “printers.” God save the mark. Both the state and the defense had prepared instructions for the court to give the jury. The state’s instructions the court cut practically all out and submitted aIK the defendant’s instructions. The state excepted to the court’s refusal to grant a continuance, the introduction of alleged incompetent evidence, the instructions to the jury, etc , and will appeal to the supreme court, believing that a reversal of these points will he had, which, while in no wise altering the verdict, would show the court’s errors and would in most courts and before most juries, have carried a different verdict. The state was represedted by John D Sink, E P. Honan and James \V. Douthit, wh.le the defense was represented by Hanley & Hunt, Foltz, Spltl r & Kurrie and Ralph W. Marshall, the latter a brother of de fendant, who returned here last fall after a few years absence in the west. The jury was composed of: Wallace Shedd, Chas. Dean, J. 0 Porter, David A. Collins, Jacob Wilcox. B. Forsythe, James P. Deselms, Edward Dewees, B. D. Elsworth, Joseph Grube, O. H. Eldred, Chas. Battleday. “Grip made me very weak and nervous with tightness of chest and headache. Dr. Miles’ Pain Pills and Nervine gave nio quick relief.”—Mrs. Clarinda Butler, W. Wheeling, O. A whole armload of old papers for a nickel at The Democrat office.
Craft’s Distemper and Cough Cure ,or CotiKbn, Colds, ilcinrss, riu* Kjr«% and all ( atarrhal dlseason of bon**#. Prt***, 50*. 11.00 per botUo. i Sold by A. K. Lour.
BOW HE TIMED THE TUHHEX.
Stmt Mas ani aa latarwtlag Ofaprlag la a Railway Car. When the train had been out of the atation about five minute* the porter passed through the ears with a long stick, with which he poked at the little windows in the ceiling so that they closed. Then he cast suspecting glances at the seat windows, as though he feared some extra muscular passenger had succeeded in forcing the sash a couple of inches. As a matter of fact, says the New York Herald, he didn’t really think anything of the kind, for he was an old porter on the road and had seen a long line of travelers humiliated by the windows, and no traveler triumphant. But he looked aa if he suspected underhand work of some kind. He satisfied himself that the apartment was almost hermetically sealed, and allowed the gas jets to flicker in a feeble, apologetic sort of fashion. Then it grew dark outside. Tbe train was in the tunnel.
It was at this point that the stout man in the aisle seat received his cue. The interesting offspring of the pretty woman in front made the discovery. , You never saw an interesting offspring on a car seated like a civilized being. This i. o. was no exception. He stood on the red plush seat, with his face turned in the direction opposite to-that in which the train ran. His knees were doubled under him in some mysterious way and his head was on a line with the top of the seat. Suddenly his eyes gathered in the full significance of the stout man. The interesting offspring gave an im fan tile howl, clntched the collar of the pretty woman and turned around. “Look, oh, look, mamma!” he cried. Mamma looked. So did the passengers in the next seat. So did all the other people in the car. They saw the stout gentleman with one hand holding a handkerchief pressed firmly against his face and the other hand grasping an open-faced watch, at which he stared with painful solemnity. When the crowd accorded its interest the stout man reddened perceptibly, hut he still regarded the watch with dogged persistence. The passengers began to make pointed aad would-be facetious remarks to one another, but the fat man stuck it out. When the end of the tunnel was reached the perspiration was dripping from his face—and the day was oold. He put the handkerchief in one pocket and the watch in another, and remarked to the man opposite: “Four fifteen. Gee! I got embarrassed with all those folks staring at me. I’d never make an actor. Get stage fright or buck fever or something.” “May I ask what you were doing?” inquired the other. “Timing the train while it was in the tunnel;” “Ah! And how long did it take us to go through?” ( The fat man started violently. “Why why,” he stammered. “Hanged if I didn’t forget to notice what time it was when we went in.”
THE RAILWAY GUARD SCORED.
Lady Lost Her Pet Poodle by Too JeaL oue Attention. In the railway carriage sat a welldressed young lady tenderly holding a very small poodle. “Madam,” said the guard, “I am very sorry, hut you can’t have your dog in this compartment.” “I shall hold him in my lap all the way,” she replied, “and he will disturb no one.” “That makes no difference,” said the guard; “I couldn’t even allow my own dog here. Dogs must ride in the luggage van. I’ll fasten him all right for you.” “Don’t you touch my dog, sir!” said the young lady. “I will trust him to no one!” And with an indignant air she marched to the luggage van, tied up her dog and returned. About 50 miles farther on, when the guard came along again, she asked him: “Will you tell me if my dog is all right?” “I am very sorry,” said the guard, politely, “but you tied him to a portmanteau, and he was put out with it at the last station.”—London TitUiU.
The Term Gardener.
The term gardener implied much more a few generations ago than it does to-day. Young men paid heavy premiums to get in as apprentices under learned gardeners, and when at the end of the term they were invested with the “Blue most of them would compare favorably, in general intelligence, with the graduates of our modern universities.—Mehan’e Monthly.
; dental science... ( ’Ht. i Has reached its highest point in our office. We have conquered pain and anxiety. We have assured our pa--1 dents that our methods and prices are In keeping with i■L MB dental progress. Confidence has been the keynote of I I onr * u *’ ce9 ®- M we work for you once we’re sure of get* INCVWVv'v A Wt ting all your wprk, as well as the of your t Tc relatives and friends. Our dental work co'ts little, wears v office upstair* J well, and is guaranteed to bethe best that money can buy. J IN HORTON Bilk. 1 —_____ C HOUSE. T RT { J. W. HORTON, Dentist. frie Rensselaer Steam Laundry. Telephone 215. PORTER & WHITE, Propr’a. Office at George W. Goff’s. . Good work, prompt service, close attention to details, improved machinery, expert help, are making The Rensselaer Steam Laundry one of the best in Northern Indiana. Our constant aim is to give our patrons work that cannot be excelled. One.. f Linens, Our I Remington, M®: J Quick order work, Aaen- Monon, * | Lace Curtain work, Rose Lawn l Woolens without shrinking, [Mt. Ayr. Fair Oaks.' We have an expert laundry man from Cincinnati' with us^now» I RENSSELAER STEAH LAUNDRY.
FARMS FOR SALE. BY Dalton Hinchman REAL ESTATE AGENT, Vernon, Ind. No. 359. Farm of 300 acres, frame house of 4 or 5 rooms, large frame barn, 160 acres lays nice and 40 some broken, not bad. This is a choice farm. A fine blue limestone quarry on the 40 acres. 1)4 miles of aR. R. town, 10 miles of Vernon the County Seat. Price $35 per acre. Reasons for selling, old age and no children to worry over. Half cash, good time on tbe remainder. No. 367. Farm of 100 acres, frame house of 5 rooms, large frame barn, hog house, hen house and other out buildings. Good water at house, bam and on tbe farm. Some parts rolling. Good grain and stock farm. Said farm adjoining the town of Vernon, the eounty seat. Price $3,000. No. 268. Farm of 40 acres, frame house of 8 rooms, good well with a new force pump in, a large frame barn, good orchard of all kinds of fruit, within 6 miles of Seymour, a railroad city of 13,000 or 15,000'Inhabitants. 8 miles of pike. H mile of a good school and 1 % miles of church. Good neighborhood. 35 acres bottom and 15 acres upland. Price $1,300, half cash, time on balance, secured by first mortgage. No. 269. Farm of 120 acres, 414 miles from Vernon; 90 acres in grass and cultivation, 30 in timber, some good timber; 3 story log house, 6 rooms, bam, new frame 38x44 feet; good orchard; farm well watered, lays ni e, one mile of pike road. Price $3,000. No. 270. Farm of 153 acres; 3-story frame house of 7 rooms; large frame barn 55x60; 8 wells of good water and fine stock water by springs; part level and part rolling; three orchards of ail kinds of fruit; 85 or 40 acres in timber, some good saw timber; 114 miles of railroad town. Price $4,000. No. 271. Farm of 204 acres; frame house 3V6-story. 0 rooms, good well at house; barn 53x54 feet; 65 acres of bottom land. 80 upland tillable, balance in timber. sugar, beech, walnut, chestnut poplar. Price SBB per acre. K cash, balance on time at 6 per cent. Correspondence Solicited. References: Judge Willard New. ix-Judge T. C. Batchelor, First National Bank. Merchants: S. W. Storey. N. DeVersy. Jacob Foebel, Thomas & Son, Wagner Bros. A Co., Nelson & Son. J. H. Maguire A Co., W. M. Naur. Herbert Goff and Wagner's plow factory. Anyone that wishes to look over tbe county, would be pleased to show then whether they wished to buy or not.
Strike* A Rich Find. "I was troubled for several years with chronic indigestion and nervous debility'' writes F. J. Green, of Lancaster. N. H. “No remedy helped me uotil I began using Electric Bitters, which done me mure good than all the medicines I ever used. They have also kept my wife in excellent health for years. She sitys Bitters are just splendid for female troubles; that they are a grand tonic andinvigorator for weak, run down women. No other medicine can take its place in our family." Try them, Only 50c. Satisfaction guaranteed by A. F. Long. “Failing to find relief from old methods, I took Dr. Miles’ Pain Pills, and Nervine and Nerve and Liver Pills aud was permanently cured.”—Gust. Egan, Jackson, Mich. Headache often results from adisorered condition of the stomach and constipation of the bowels. A dose or two of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Table's will correct these disorders and cure the headache. Sold by J. A. Larsh. 5 PER CENT. MONEY. Money to burn. We know you hate to smell the smoke. Stock up your farms while there is money in live stock and save taxes on $700.00 every year. Takes 36 hours at the longest to make the most difficult loans. Don’t have to know the language of your great grandmother. Abstracts always on hand. No red tape. Ohilcote & Parkison. > “I was in bed five weeks with the grip—nerves shattered, stomach and liver badly deranged, j Was cured with Dr. Miles’ Nervine | and Nerve aud Livor Pills.”—D. C. Walker, Hallsville, O.
ll*' Hoosier Poultry Powder Mftkw lira* I,»T, pure* Cholera, Gap** sad Rons, nnd keep* poultry healthy. rrle*. Mr. p*r aatilifW Sold by A. K. Lour.
NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. The State of Indiana.> In the Jasper Circuit Jasper County. j Court, April Term, I#ol. John K. Stoudt ) jY*. [Complaint No. 6070. Edward H. Briggs.) Comes now the plaintiff, by Ira W. Yeoman his attorney, and files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit that tne defendant Edward H. Briggs, is not a resident of the State of Indiana. - Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant, that unless he be and appear on the first day of the next term of the Jasper Circuit Court to be fiolden on the 2nd Monday of April A. D. 1901, at the Court House in the City of Rensselaer, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in his absence. -- (• —> In'witness whereof, I hereunto set 1 SEAL [ my hind and affix the seal of said ; '-"v— ■> Court, I 'at Rensselaer, Indiana,this 13th day of February, A, D„ 1901. John F. Major, Clerk. 'J’ERM TIME NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS The State of Indiana, ) __ Jasper County, f In the Jasper Circuit Court, February Term. 1900. William C. Kirk ) w. [Complaint No. 6009. , Jesse H. Fcrdice et al.) By order of Court, in said cause, the following defendants were found to be nonresidents of the State of Indiana, towit; James V. W. Kltk and the wife of James V. W. Kirk, whose true name is unknown; Mattie P. Miller, Daniel B. Miller, her husband; Eliza J. Miller and John C. Miller, her husband; Viola J. Kirk, and the husband of said Viola J. Kirk, whose true name is unknown; Julia B. Erwin. Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be and appear on the first day of the next term of the Jasper Circuit Court to be holden on the 3nd Monday of April. A. D . 1901, at tbe Court House, in the City of Rensselaer, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said cross-com-plaint. the same will be heard and determined in their absence. , —ln witness whereof, I hereunto set 1 seal f my hand and affix the seal of said ’Court, at Rensselaer, Indiana, this 15th day of February. A. £)., 1901. John F. Major. Clerk. James W. Douthit and E. P. Honan, attorneys for dft. ■■ - v' ' - "
- Application for License. Notice is hereby given to .the citizens of the First Ward of the City of Rensselaer, Jasper County, Indiana, that the undersigned August Rosenbaum who is and has been for more than ninety days last past a male inhabitant and resident of Uie said City, and over the age of twenty-one years; and who is'now and has been of good moral character, not In the habit of becoming intoxicated, and a fit person in all respects to be entrusted with the sale of spirituous, vinous, malt and all other intoxicating liquors, that this applicant is and will be the actual owner and proprietor of said business herein mentioned, and will be forthe entire term of such license, if license be granted. Will apply to the Board of Commission rs of Jasper county, Indiana, at their March Term, 1901. for a license to sell and barter all kinds of spirituous, vinous, malt and all other intoxicating liquors, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on the premises where sold, in any quantity, also in less quantities than Five Gallons at a time, and also in less quantities than a quart at a time, asprovided in the Acta of March Bth, 1897; March 11, 1896 and March 17th, 1875, that the location of the room in which this applicant will ask for a Itcenae to sell and barter liquors as aforesaid is on the lower floor of the two-story frame building situated on a part of the north thirtyfour (84) feet of Lot three (8). in block three (8). of the original plat of the town (now City) of Rensselaer. Indiana, being the only room on the said floor of said building; aaid room in which this applicant desires to sell liquors as aforesaid is more particularly described as follows: Commencing at a point one hundred and twenty-five (12b) feet and (8) inches from the southeasterly corner of block thiee (8), in the original plat of the town (now City) of Rensselaer. Indiana, od the southwesterly boundary of Van Rensselaer street in Lot three (8). in said Block three (8); thence northwesterly along th* southwesterly boundary of Van Rensselaer street a distance of twenty (30) feet and one and three-fourths (I*4) Inches; thence southwesterly parallel with Harrison street a distance of 'forty (40) feet and two and five-eighths (2S) Inches; thence southeasterly parallel with Van Rensselaer, street a distance of twenty (20) feet and one and three-fourths (IV) Inches; thence northeasterly parallel with Harrison street a distance of forty (40) feet and two and fiveeights (3V> inches to the place of beginning. That the said room in which applicant will ask a license to sell liquors as aforesaid is situated on the ground floor.as aforesaid, and fronts on Van Rensselaer street, a public street In said Uty. that the front of said room facing said street is furnished with two large glass windows of four lights each; two large glasa doors and four large additional lights, two on each side of said doors; that the whole of said room may be viewed from aaid street: that there Is one door In the southerly end of said room and one door in the northerly side of said room; that said room is separate and apart from any other business of any kind or character. and there are no devices for amusement or music in or about said room; that the same can tie securely locked and admission thereto at all times prevented, and that there sre no partition or partitions In ssld room. That raid license will be asked for s period of one year from the expiration of the license now held by applicant, and permission to sell tobaccos and cigars will tie asked at the same time. August Rosenbaum, Applicant. “Grip robbed me of my sleep and I was nearly crazy with neuralgia and headaqhe. Dr. Miles’ pain pills and Nervine cured me.” Mrs. Pearl Bush, Holland, Mich.
Ilf I had (irip I would 1 use Dr. Miles’ Pain Pills I and Dr. Miles’ Nervine, j Sold at all Druggists.
