Jasper County Democrat, Volume 4, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1901 — Page 3
JAY W. WILLIAMS Rensselaer, Indiana
Bales Lumber Company Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Doors, Windows, Sewer Pipe f Vlue Linings, Vitrified Brick, Hard and Soft Coal, Etc. isms Cteiii fiM. gr;.,": We want your order for one piece or a cargo. “Tell It to the Neighbors.” Rensselaer, » Ind. < Hlice and Yards Opposite Motion Depot.
CALL FOR THE PACKACE THAT LOOKS LIKE THIS BECAUSE IT IS BEST lllbjoncurel ■■ A TONIC RLMEDY H HB| ro« gß| ■ H ALL BRONCHIAL Hf ■ M irritation ■ WBHB ««o mm MWB inflammation. ■ SYMPTOMS: H ■ ■ COUGH I NO. lag 3 ■ ■ CONGtSTION. IBIS ■ ■ HO*«SENtSS. ■ fuwNESS H Stmlam in t»i chest. ■! ■1 HEAVINESS. ■ ■B OPPHESSION ■ ■Bu ACHE' A P A NS I N TH E ■! im&m boot a bones. USE! PSflUi PDF F ING A EILOVMNO himb .•>•." ng whooping cough. pifisi IllfiS Hi.m *» . F«I<|«"'I H ■BHH in COEDS. M PNEUMONIA n ■BHH *~o |B|| ■ H LA GRIPPE, HI mm »i»uio onit »t tm n^i llli» national hfMf; If o CO. mi MNimu*. inoiana. Mm AND BEST IS CHEAPEST Price, 800. - - 12 For SB.OO. SOLD AND OUARANTICD BY ALL ENTERPRISING DRUGGISTS A whole armload of old papers for a nickel at The Democrat office. Morris' English Worm Powder Warraatsd to ear* any cat# of Worm* In Horwa, Cattlo, Btop or Doas, «lko I’ln Worm In Oolta, rrir*. B*n. par ku. Sold by A. K. Long.
WANTED salesmen To sell a Choice line of Nursery Stock. Steady work, and EXTRA INDUCEMENTS to the right persons. All stock guaranteed. WRITE NOW FOR TERfIS and secure a good situation for the fall and winter. Address, THE HAWKS NURSERY COMPANY, Rochester. N. Y. Real Estate Transfers. Millard W. Fross to George R. Masters, Oct. 31, eLj tdi sw nw 9-30-6. 10 acres, Barkley, *3OO. Charles G. Spitler, corn, for Jasper circuit court to Grant Conrad. Nov. 15. se 81-82-0. sw 32-33-6, Wheattield, *4,100. Commissioner's deed. Ray D. Thompson to George W. Davisson, fJov. 10, ne ne 8-30-6. nw uw 0-30-6,80 acres. Barkley. *I.OOO. Dora Zarcl to Mary E, Winters, Nov. 13. und 5-0 ne ne 36-30-5. 40 acres, Gillain. *4OO. Edward K. Heath to Addison Parkinson. Nov. 16, pt It 6, bl X, Thompson's add Rensselaer, *3,500. Abraham Leopold to John W. Burns. Nov. 18, It 4, bl 18, Leopold's add Rensselaer, *135. Abraham C. Abbett to Greenlp 1. Thomas, Oct. 38, It 7. bl 3. Fair Oaks, *3OO. John C Mettler to G. F. Meyers, Oct. 38, ne ne 33-31-6, Walker, *I,OOO. First National Bank of Martinsville to G. F. Meyers. Oct. 9, nw se 18-31-6, ne sw 18-31-5. 80 seres. Walker, tftoo. KHie M. Fairchild to K. L. Hollingsworth. Nov.l4.pt e'S nw 37-83-7. Keener, $4lO. Guardian s deed. Jacob D. Rich to Clarence E. ((shorn. Kept. 7. It 10, SH Its 11-13.13. 14, 15, bl 81, Weston's add Rensselaer. *2,000. Orlando A. Yoeman to Samuel K. Yoemnu,. Nov. 10, It 9. hi 18. Virgie, *6. Michael Lawler to John Lawler. Nov. 14, •H Sf-38-9, sw 33 30-0. Marion, *5. <| c.d. Victor Johnson to Sarah K Johnson. Nov. 15. ft wM ne 34-81-6, Walker, (1,000. William Johnson to Victor Juhnson, same date, pt wt 4 ne 34 81-6, Walker, (1.000. John Kohler to James F. Irwin, Sept. 4, pt nw ae 35-39-7. 3 acres, Marion, *75. Henry Fisher to Charles K. Fiaher. Nov. 16, •H ne 10-38-6, 80 acres. Mllroy. (8,300. Warren Robinson to Marshall P. Warner. Nov. 21,' pt nw 39-29-6. 3H acres, Marion 12.500. Nancy B. Dunn to Charles R. Peregrine,
Rain and sweat \ \ , \ 1 have no effect on fdlnrt'/l 3 harness rre.Ued FMlif F U A jL with Eureka Har- jf yJIJLr/fl/R H ness Oil. It re* \ sists the damp, VW \ \ keeps theleath- Hi 'OkltC’C'C M dos not break. \ ' \ V No rou t h rur- \\\ \ /Iff , ■ ct xii:.v** W*\ \ s | harness not V\ \ \ \ only keeps /j Ini \ A \ ' looking like \ new, but \I / i wears twice X, Cj 'k \ L'y* as longby the CAV/ ' v/ A 11 use of Eureka \ Harness Oik j VBHBI i , 1 \ Sold Standard Oil \
Noy. 11, It 7, bl 8, Dunn ville. S3O. Alonzo A. Grace tu Charles R. Pcrr grine, Nov. 12, It 8, bl 8. DunnviUe, 1.00. Subscribe for The Demixt.at FARMS FOR SALE. BY Dalton Hinchman REAL ESTATE AU EXT, Vernon, Inti No. 73. Farm of 187 acres, large, new frame house of 0 rooms, barn 80x56 feet, tine orchard. I*4 acres of a vineyard of tine wine grapes. Farm mostly level with 13 acres in timber and well watered. This is a good grain or stock farm 1!4 miles from R. R. Station, half mile of pike road that ruts to Seymour and Columbus. Price *s,txto, onehalf cash. balance to suit purchaser at o per cent. No. 301. Farm of 108 acres, frame house of 5 rooms, two small barns. 80 acres in timber balance in nice shape for (Flowing.* Fruit of all kinds and farm well watered. \ of a mile from school, storr. post-ofliee and R. R. station, a church on corner of farm. 2*4 miles of Vernon, on pike road. Price *I,BOO. *l,ooo cash, balance on short tune at d percent, se cured by mortgage. No 370. P'arm of 153 acres; S-story frame house of 7 rooms; large frame hart 55x60;. 3 wells of good water and tine stuck water by springs: part level and part rolling; three orchards of all kinds of fruit; 33 or 40 acres 111 timber, some good saw timber; l' a miles ol railroad town. Price *4.000, No. 370. Farm of 300 acres; frame house of 5 rooms, large frame barn, Ice house and other out buildings; farm is well watered, lays nice, well fenced; 3 miles east or west to railroad towns on J. M. & 1., B. & O. S. W. or Big Four, Price *3o (>er acre. No. 380. Farm of 162 acres. 8 miles from Vernon with large two story luick house of 6 rooii a, one large and o«e small barn; other small outbuildings and 30 acres of timber, balnrce cleared and plow land. The Muacntatuck creek runs through this farm. This Isa splendid stock or wheat farm, Price *3.000. Correspondence Solicited. Kkkkkknckn: Judge Willard New, Kx-JudgeT. C Batchelor. First National Bank. Meichants: S. W. Storey. N. DeVersy. Jacob roet>el, I homas A Son, Wagner Bros. A Co.. Nelson A Son. J. 11. Mugnire A Co., W. m! Naur. Herbert Goff and Wagner's plow factory. Anyone that wishes lo look ovsr the county, would be pleased lo ebow them whether they, wished to buy or not. Morris' English Stable Liniment Ourse Lmm—m, Cuts, Hruleee. Scratch#* •ialla, Swccaay. Spann# Splint, Curb, ate. **• «»>. per kellla Sold by A. K. Long.
PERSONAL and local
Next Thuf&day is turkey day. J. A. McDonald is on the sick list. The White circuit court convenes Monday. The city'schools will close next Wednesday for the week. >(David Sheedy, general merchant, of Goodland, has failed. The Benton county postoffice will become presidential Jan. Ist. Rev. Brady will oocupy the Christian church pulpit at Kentland to-morrow. John Gaffey and son Hugh, of Barkley tp,, expect to move to Oklahoma in the spring. >JJ. T. Penn has leased a hotel at TlTorntown, Ind., and will move to that place next week. E. V. Hansford was in Chicago several days this week, buying new goods for “The Racket Store.” 'lJLsnae Saldlai was called to Montgomery county last Friday by the death of his aged mother. Ernest Middleton has received his discharge from the regular army, having purchased the same. A new list of Jennings county farms appears in Dalton Hinchman’s ad this week. Look them over. Rev. T. A. Hall of Oxford, will preach in the Christian church to-morrow (Sunday) morning and evening. Good farmers say that the average yield of corn in Grant township is about.3o bushels.—Goodland Herald. A. Fisher moved to town this week, from his farm near Aix, and occupies property in the south part of town,
The town of Boswell has granted a tanchise for the construction of a system of water works, electric light, heat and power. ~jjt is reported that George L. Sawyer was offered sllO per acre for his 200 acre farm south of Foresman a few days ago. Twenty-four varieties of fancy No. 1 stock of apples, from the. tops of the Alleghany mountains, Pa., at the Chicago Bargain Store. Spitler moved* from his own residence into the old Spitler homestead last week. Mrs. Spitler and daughter Maud, have moved into rooms over Tuteur’s store d Addison Parkinson has bought trie Ed Heath residence property, near his own residence, paying $2,500 therefor* W. A. Huff, who occupies the property, has leased it for five years. The Kentland Democrat says that Simon Leopold has leased a store room at the new town of Freeland, Benton county, and will move his stock of goods from Keutland to that place. The U. S. grand jury did not find an indictment against Harry D. Bimiey. recently arrested near Mt. Ayr, charged with sending an obscene letter through the mails, and he was discharged.
lias organized a commercial club and is trying to raise $15,000 to secure the novelty factory from Cnicago, that recently proposed to come here for SIO,OOO and a few acres of ground. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Carpenter of Cincinnati, wort* guest of Mr, end Mrs. J. W. lines Monday and Tuesday. Mr. Carpenter is a member of tbe Rahn, Mayer, Carpenter Co., Manufacturers of iron lathes. % 320-Acbe Farm for Rent—The Butler farm, lying £ mile east of Parr, on the gravel, for rent at $2 per acre, cash. 120 acres of plow land, well tiled, balance pasture. Kar.m has good improvements. Call on or address. E. P. Honan, Rensselaer, Ind. SvJohn Kohler wbh down from Chicago Heights on business a few days this week. He haH sold out his meat and grocery business there to his son and expects "f?> move back here next week and occupy his property south of the court house, lately vacat'd by the Misses Comer.
> f4sf’oodin <fc Agate, the Foresman real estate dealers, on Wednesday closed up a couple of ■ land deals in this county the J. .1, Reed 220 acre farm southwest of town, to John Haag of Cullom, 111., at $14,0(1) cash, and 79 acres of the estate of the late Andrew Arnold eHtat© in Barkley tp., to John Hchroer of Barkley, at $28.50 per acre.
T. M. CAUahan was down from Newland Thursday. Cloaks in all colors, lengths and styles, at the Chicago Bargain Store. George E. Nichols'of Jennings county, was visiting Jasper county friends this week. Renew your subscription to The Democrat and get the State Sentinel free for a year. Born, last Sunday, to Mr. and Mrs.'Thomas Knox of South Division street, a daughter. was visited by an SBO,000 fire Wednesday night, in the business portion of the city. C. C. Jones of Tefft, visited his dnugbter, Mrs. L. E. Glazehrook, northwest of town, Thursday. Nelson Ducharme, Kniman, Ind., will cry saleA in all parts of the country; terms reasonable. Hoehstettler and Miss Mary Miller, both of near Mt. Ayr. were married this week. A shirt factory wants to locate at Monon, providing a little matter of $3,000 bonus is given them. The Woman’s meeting will not convene again until the first Thursday in January, in the afternoon. Several of the children of L. H. Myers, who reside in Illinois, were guests of their father here tliis week. Don’t forget the special cloak sale, Friday, Saturday and Monday, November 22,23 and 25, at the Chicago Bargain Store. is again rumored that B. J. Gifford is negotating, for the purchase of Neison Morris real estate holdings in Northern Jasper, some 20,000 acres.
jCThe father of Miss Stella Shields, teacher in the city schools, who has been lying sick for several weeks at his home in Monon. died Tuesday morning
A full line of the genuine E. Stout's patent snag proof rubbers and Mishawaka knit boots, that outwear two pairs of any other make, at the Chicago Bargain Store. Francesville Tribune: The railroad election in Salem tp., for the appropriation of SO,OOO, last Tuesday, was carried by a small majority. There were 311 votes cast, 3l» majority for the appropriation. <W. 11. Nowels has traded bis residence property here to his father. 1 nele David Nowels, for a dwelling house and five acres of ground in Flora, Carroll county, and will shortly remove to that place. V. \ ern, the 10-year-old son of George Hopkins, ran away from home Sunday. Mr. Hopkins suspicioned that he had gone to Chicago, and went to that city the next day and found him and brought him hack home. Our suggestion of a few weeks ago regarding improvements of the Rensselaer mail service, has already borne good fruit. The office lobby will hereafter b« kept open until 8 p. m, and a. night mail sent out at that time. The office will close for the sale of stamps as usual at 7:30. A. Padgett and Homer Hardy came home from a several months’ horse-buying trip to Oregon last Saturday. They brought about 325 horses to Chicago, where they disposed of a few and brought the rest down here to dispose of. The horses did not take very well at Chicago, we are informed, and only a few were sold there. A gentleman who has advertised in The Democrat columns continuously for the past year and a half Haiti to us the other day: “I am well pleased with your paper to advertise my business in; it has done me lots of good.” The reason for this is the fact that The Democrat is read by more people in Jasjwr county than all other papers combined.
Smith of Milroy tp., was in town Monday looking for a teacher for No. 4. Miss Bertha •fames of near Wolcott, the teacher employed to teach the school, having taken sick last week with what proved to be typhoid fever, and had to give it up. He secured Miss Sadie Cody, who will begin teaching next Monday and will probably finish the term.
It is said that a family that recently moved from Rensselaer to Illinois, left the house which they here in a beastly condition. Parties who saw the rooms say, that in tho bedroom, the lord and master had apparently lay in bed and squirted vast quantities of tobacco juice all over the walls of the room, and the effect can bettor tie imagined than described.
Don’t forget Lee handles paints and oils at McCoyaburg. The Chicago Bargain Store have increased their force to twenty-one clerks, and yet hunbreda are turned away on Saturdays without being waited on. Fowler had a $3,000 fire Tuesday morning. McAdam’s photograph gallery and Hathoway’s meat market, located in the Rund building, were destroyed. The attorney for tbe Chicago & Alton railroad was in Goodland Friday of last week aDd effected a settlement with N. C. Wickwire for damages received by Dora in the wreck near Kansas City last They gave Dora a check for $5,350, and she is richly entitled to every cent of it. The Co. offered F. D. Gilman $4*500, but he refused it, demanding $5,000, the amount usually granted in the courts where suit is brought. The attorney told Fred that it would cost him SSOO to collect it, and the latter informed him that if it did he would at least have the satisfaction of giving it to his own attorney instead of the railroad.— Goodland Herald. £p. F. Stackhouse closed up a deal Monday for the J. F. Warren farm of 100 acres, miles north of town, consideration SB,OOO, or SBO per acre. This is the highest price paid thus far for land, in the immediate vicinity of Rensselaer, although several, it is said, have refused SBS per acre.'f-'The Warren farm is well tiled we understand, lies near town, on a gravel road, and has not an acre of waste land upon it. The improvements, however, are not very good, and a thousand dollars could easily be expended in bringing the improvements up to what they ought to be, which would bring the cost up to $1)0 per acre. The sale was made through Irwin & Irwin.
A flood Thing to Steer Clear From.
The \ alparaiso Messenger says that “Honest Abe” has established a toll station in that city, and will ask for a franchise to put in a telephone exchange there. Securing franchises seems to be one of Abe’s weak points, but if he does nothing more in Yalpo. than he has done here and at other points, after getting a franchise, the Valparaisons will wish they had kept him out. He made great promises here, but has failed utterly to carry out the terms upon which the franchise was granted, and the city council could if they chose, declare the same forfeited. The fact is, Al>e seems to be using more wind than electricity in Tuning his telephone business, and one of the cedar companies from which he purchased poles—presumably those wireless poles which have ornameuted our streets and alleysfor the past eighteen months —sued the “Halleok Telephone Co.” in our court some months ago to collect pay for the same. It takes money to establish telephone exchanges as well as other lines of business, and apparently this is something the “Halleck” company's chief mogul is not very well supplied with, judging from a brief perusal of the judgement docket of our circuit court. The city council of Yalpaiaiso will do well to give the scheme the marble heart. VVe are able to make you Farm Loans at a very low rate of interest. Bruner & Randle. Forsythe Block, Room 7.
Jumped on a Ten Penny Nail.
The little daughter of Mr. J. N. Powell jumped on an inverted rake made of ten penny rn-ils, and thrust one nail entirely through her foot and a second one hall way through. Chamberlain's Pain Halm was promptly applied and five minutes later the pain had disappeared and no more suffering was experienced. In three days the child was wearing her shoe as usual and with absolutely no discomfort. Mr. Powell is a well known merchant of Forkland, Va. Pain Balm is an antiseptic and heals such injuries without maturation and in one-third the the time required by the usual treatmeut. For sale by Long.
Have You Seen? Tbe New Machinery at the Rensselner Steam Laundry. It is the best nnd latest improved in the United States. No more pockets in open front shirts. Our New drop hoard Shirt-Ironer matches every button hole perfectly and holds the neck band in perfect position while ironing. Do you realize you are working against your own city when you bend to out of town Laundries 11 and indirectly working agniust your own interests? We claim that with our present Equipment and Management otR work is Equal to any Laundry in America. Our Motto: Perfect Satisfaction or no charges. We make a specialty of Lace Curtains. Send us your rag carpets, 5c a yard. Rates given on family washings. Office at G. W. Goff’s. Phone 06. Prompt work. (^Mtdj^)elivery.
In a Glass of Water. MZXj Put a handful oi glazed coffee in a glass of water, \ 1 wash off the coating, look at it; smell it! Is it fit to drink? Give LION COFFEEI the same test. It Leaves the water I bright and clear, because it’s just ■ pure coffee. 1 TheMaled package lnHurea uniform I quality and (realmtwe. ■
“The Price of Peace” at McVicker’s.
Jacob Litt’s wonderful production of the Drury Lane spectacular melodrama, “The Price of Peace,” is now being presented at McVicker’s Theatre. The play tells a powerful story of English life, political and social, and it is so gorgeously set, costumed and acted that it has been a revelation to theatre-goers in Chicago. Nothing so magnificent has been seen there in the line of melodrama. The play is in thirteen scenes; there are more than forty actors with speaking parts; three hundred supernumeraries dressed in the most fashionable garments fill the big scenes, and more than a hundred stage hands are required to shift the scenery and look after the electric lights. One of the sensational incidents of the play occnrß in the last act. The villian, Marcus Benton, has inveigled the Baroness Blanco and her maid. Mary Vine, on board his steam yacht, the “Marigold.” There Benton tells the Baroness that he means to keep the little girl as she knows too much of his past. The Baroness declares she will save the child and just as Benton is threatening her a big steamer crashes into the yacht and the boat begins to sink. The scene is so arranged the upper deck and the cabin are both seen and in the cabin Benton has a fearful struggle with his Chinese servant, a man whom he had wronged, the Chinaman finally pinuing his master down on a couch as the boiler of the yacht explodes and the two men disappear in the waves. The Baroness and Mary climb into the rigging of the yacht and are rescued by a small boat in which there are friends who have seen the collision from the shore. The scene is positively thrilling and every night gets half a dozen curtain calls.
“Last winter an infant child of mine had croop in a violent form," says Elder John W. Rogers, a Christian Evangelist, of Filley, Mo. “I gave her a few doses of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and in a short time all danger was past and the child recovered.” This remedy not only cures croup, but when given as so-on as the first symptons appear, will prevent the attack. It contains no opium or other harmful substance and may be given as confidently to a baby as to an adult. For sale by Long.
MONON EXCURSION RATES.
Thanksgiving day rates: One and one third fare for the round trip to all points not exceeding 150 miles, November 27th and 28th, good returnrng November 29. Thanksgiving Excursions via Monon Route. One fare and a third, Nov. 27-28. Good to Dec. 4 for students.
FARHS FOR SALE. Plymouth, Marshal County, Indiana. Farm of 176 acres. All under cultivation, line 10 room brick house, bank barn 90x66. granary, corn cribs, hog house, wood house and other out-buildings; all in good condition, good fences, tine 5 acre orchard, 3 good wells, school across road from farm, good pike from farm ta city, 4 miles to Plymouth. *55 per acre. Farm of 80 acres. 75 acres in cultivation, 5 acres good timber. 3 good frame bouses, one good bank barn 46x60, corn cribs, wagon shed, hay bam. 3 good wells, schoolhouse on farm, fct mile from BJR. station, 5 miles from city, pike roads, *55 yer acre. Farm of 800 acres (Uock farm). 100 acres in pasture, 200 unc Ir cultivation, 3 good houses and barn, ail reccssary out-buildings, good orchard, 1 mile R. R. town of Burr Oak. U 4 of miles of Plymouth, *45 per acre. 6 80 acre farm. 00 ac ? i under cultivation, 17 acres tine timber. 3 a< ln ) in fine orchards and Une fruits, good 2-thoV house, barn, wind pump, tine water, wood house, carriage house, granary v . house, smoke house and other buildings. ' ", little farm for price, *4.000. 11 * 1 45 acre farm. Ail _lr eultivation. good six room house. «,><><.. ■ 30x40, good well, young orchard. H mi "* lsohool, S mile to K. R. station. 5H I have several othek ß t » lor sale, cheaper ones and higher priiy it-Mrger and sniailer. Most of this laud is hjauKtlWvl land, tine for wheat and clover be beat fur fruit, but will raise any that can be grown in Indians. I! I *IXA.Mh to kind of land, enquire of Jas. Don! behwensselaer, Ind. Any one wishing to I flnni or wishing particulars.call on or ylt J. V. *= K Plymouth, In*. F. R.D. No. 3. ■ WANTED BKVK .fIhtKONS OF character and good r In each stale (one m this county r« und advertise old estuhlf business house of solid tinaiiC' H ilary *lB weekly with expense Hi. all payable in casli each Wedn from head offices. Horse unde. when necessary. Kefrrenc' ed stamped envelope Caxton ilulkllng, Chicago. .
