Jasper County Democrat, Volume 4, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 March 1902 — Page 5
Edward P. Honan, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Law, Abstracts, Real Estate, Loans. Wil) practice in all the courts. Office over Fendig's Fair. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Hanley & Hunt, law. HKllffi, MS ON 8801 ESIOIC. RENSSELAER, IND. Office up-stairs in Leopold block, first stairs west of Van Rensselaer street. Wm. B. Austin, Lawyer and Investment Broker Attorney For The L. N. A. AC. Ry, and Rensselaer W. L. 4 P, Co. tfitoOffice over Chicago Bargain Store. Rensselaer. Indiana. U. M. Baughman. G. A. Williams. Baughman <& Williams, ATTORN EYS-AT-L AW. Law, Notary work. Loans, Real Estate and Insurance. Special attention given to collections of all kinds. Office over "Racket Store.” 'Phone 829. Rensselaer, - Indiana. Moses Leopold, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND INSURANCE, Office over Ellis & Murray's Rensselaer, - - Indiana. J. F. Irwin 8. C. Irwin Irwin & Irwin, Real Estate, Abstracts. Collections, Farm Loans and Fire Insurance. Office in Odd Fellows' Block. RENSSELAER. INDIANA. Ira W. Yeoman, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Remington, - - . Indiana. Law. Real Estate. Collections, Insurance and Farm Loans. Office upstairs in Durand Block, PRANK FOU.TS. C. Q. SPITLBR HARRY R. KURRII Foltz, Spitler & Kurrie, (Successors to Thompson A Bro.) ATTORNEYS AT LAW. - Law. Rea) Estate. Insurance Abs-racts and Loans. Only set of Abstract Books in the County. RENSSELAER. IND. Mordecai F. Chilcote, William H. Parkison Notary Public. Notary Public. Chilcote & Parkison, ATTORNEYS aT LAW. Law, Real Estate. Insurance, Abstracts and Loans. A t’orneys for the Chicago. Indianapolis & Louisville Railway Co. Will practice in all of tin courts. Office over J. Makee ver’s Bank, on Washington street. « RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA. H. O. Harris. E. T. Harris, J C. Harris. President Vice-Pres. Cashier. Rensselaer Bank. Deposits received on call. Interest Bearing Certificates of Deposit issued on time, Exchange Bought and Sold on principal cities, Notes Discounted at current rates. Farm Loans made at 5 per cent. We Solicit ■ Share of Your Business. Drs. I. B.&L M. Washburn, Physicians & Surgeons. Dr. I. B. Washburn will givespecial attention to Diseases of the Eye, Ear. Nose. Throat and Chronic Diseases. He also tests eyes for glasses. Ornes TeLseHOHS No. 48. Ribiosmcs Phohs No. S 7. Rensselaer, - - Indiana. E. C. English, Physician & Surgeon. Office over Imes’Millinery store. Rensselaer. Ornes Phoms. 177. Rssiosmos Phoms, tie. H. L. Brown, DENTIST. Office over Larsh’s drug store. Rain and sweat \ \ \ \ I have no effect on ■ harness trea<ed A AT A- ■ wilh Eureka H.r- g ■ ness OU. Il re- \ slsu the damp, war \ \ , keeps the leath- Aw > F~> A tr'C't'T ■ er soft and pH- //A JT/Vr \ \ ■ able. Stitches J ■ do not break. \ ' \ \ 2'\'W/£,\\ ■■ and cut. The harness not Wi x \ v \ oalvksep, \\ lesUaglike VTK V. \ new, t>u« U-L/\ I J wears twice f, P 'k \ L’r " ’ at longby ths Ihgl 1 \ 1 use of Eureka '-Ji 1 HaruesaOU. £ '\X\ I ■■■■mJ sold $$ ererywhetw \f \ I, / \\\ IX ■'V/ft' in cans— lr\ IJ\ \ sXPIVV/' allslxea. (C \(J \ 1 Made by V \ Standard Oil { \ \VJJ \ \%_ , CwnpMiy ~ \ Read The Democrat for news. Morris’ English Stable Powder r. 1.., «i ~ soia b, a, r. Low
THE 99 CENT | ..Racket Store.. I SOHETHING NEW. J <; We have the finest line of Carpet Samples, Rugs, Linoliums, ; > Oil Cloths, Mattings, Lace and Chenille Curtains, that the ;> :; world produces from the exclusive carpet house of 0. W. Richard- ;: son & Co., Chicago. * For 10 days you will have a chance to make a selection from <[ S a stock of samnles that would do iustice to any city of the I rings. We can and will iler can possibly do. If <, 58 which we have on exe would have to charge ls it is, we do not make hen you figure on your <* is to charge you for, as om, when the house we ree to four rolls, thereby <[ on and have the same stion in every instance. et, rug, lace or chenille money if you will call <[ T 10 DAYS ONLY Wfc shall < [ hen we shall keep only < I 3e of the year. < J ine line of Men’s Pants, <! Wrappers, the finest line < ’ r 99 cents and less. Do <! e and same goods. We '> f they are not the same, *! ’erence on examination. '» HE LADIES! that ever came to this are right. Do not miss <! >u have one: The only <! 99 cent Racket Store, ]L id in Rensselaer. ] ’ FRANK, ii is. ■: BY GEORGE EDWARD GRAHAM. _ 1 e 11 JL The Intrepid Associated Press war correspondent, who T, *£■ -- “~jf - .. r wm aboard the U. S. 8. Brooklyn durfugr the entire five W ’_iJr n:onl^11< *b e ‘-ninpaign. Illustrated with photographs 4 ■■ ’■ J / , a j’ ; taken *o’ ike Author during the fight. p The Most Sensational t 1 Boolr of the Day. r ‘’ l! .!Th* true story of the famous cruise of the Flying L j| I'hrffi®? Squadron under Commodore Winflcld Scott Schlev. in» lu<i- jk ing the blockade and destruction of the Spanish fleet, 3 s *£/ told for the first time. M Contains an autograph endorsement and personal h‘; • Mwjla *cc*>unt of the battle by Rear-Admiral Schley. W H “The »acts of the story of the movementN ■ • ? WiliJlifcmfttL ‘ -■ 'Sir ancl operation# of the Flying Squadron a# the * Ji”author tell# them in thi# book are correct.’* > f -W. S. SCHLEY. F An int* resting narrative of farts. Explains the so- A ‘ called ••Retrograde Movement;” the ‘ Loop,” the "Coaling-- " Problem,” and settles conclusively every adverse ruling KF * he Court of Inquiry. K 3 H H— - - - " * f PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, when Governor W THE NEW YORK HERALD says:—"Mr. f 9 1 ol Ner. Ysrk, said:—“Mr. Graham e storr Is I Graham, in the telling «f tacts, leaves the Ki ■ the best accmint I have heard or read of the ■ reader free to make the deduction that F ■ naval fightlog daring the war. It needed jast ■ several aaval sfficers seed a Cmtrt of la- B Ci a as mu.h cot rage to go aixwt taking photo- fl gßiry to re-establish their reputations, H r 3 No subject has ever been before the public that has Interested everybody as ISJ S the manner in which Admiral Schley has fteen treated, and the American people {■ demand the far// recogn/T/on er th. H.ro Santiago. This book tells Ki everything just us It occurred and as the eyewitnesses saw it. Book is selling Ob MB like wildfire. Liberal commissions. Outfit and books now ready. Send seven hn Scent stamps for canvassing outfit. ACT QUICK. Now Is the lime to MAKE MONEY. t U Price $1.50, $1.75, $2.25, $2.75, according to style of binding desired, iK AGENTS I W. B. DONKEY COMPANY i | Sole Publishers, CHICAGO,
THE LEADING INDIANA NEWSPAPER THE ■HIS »E. (Established 1823.) and weekly Editions. THE INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL, in its several editions, continues to occupy the position it has so long held of The Leading Indiana Newspaper. It is the oldest and most widely read journal published in the State- Itsratesof subscription are the lowest. THE SENTINEL is a member of the Associated Press and its telegraph columns are the fullest and most comprehensive of any Indiana papers. Its press reports are supplemented by Special Washington dispatches, covering very fully all matters of Indiana interest, and by reports from its special correspondents at every county seat in Indiana. Themarket reports of The Indianapolis Sentinel are complete and accurate. THE SENTINEL, pays special attention to Indiana News and covers the ground fully. Indiana readers will find more news of Interest to them in The Sentinel than in any Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Louis or Louisville newspaper. THE SENTINEL, although Democratic in politics, publishes all the news fully and impartially and always treats Its political opponents with fairness. TERIS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally, one year SO.OO Sunday, one year 2.00 Weekly, one Year 60 Subscribe for The Democrat.
Have You Seen? The New Machinery at the Rensselaer Steam Laundry. It is the best and latest improved in the United States. No more pockets in open front shirts. Our New drop board 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 and indirectly working against your own interests? We CLAIM THAT WITH OUR present Equipment and Management our 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 66. Prompt work. Quick Delivery. The Vice of Nagging Cloud* the happiness of thrhome, but a nagging woman often needs help. She may be so nervous and run-down in health that trifles annoy her. If she is melancholy, excitable, troubled with losa of appetite, headache. sleeplessness, constipation or fainting and dixxy spell*, she need* Electric Bitters, the most wonderful remedy for ailing women. Thousands of sufferers from female troubles, nervous troubles, backache and weak kidney* have used it, and become healthy and happy, Try it. Only 60c, A. F. Long guarantees satisfaction.
BUCKWHEAT CAKES.
O. there's nothin’ in culinary art that brought the joy, Ez the buckwheat cakes we used to masticate when but a boy, With a slice o’ ham to start on, an’ the gravy, rich an’ brown, To kind o’ sort o’ lubricate yer throat ez they slipped down. Au' the jug of maple sirup right beside yer plate the while. You wuz jest the most delighted kind o’ genus juvenile, Ez each rnornin’ at the table you would alius undertake To keep yer mother busy turnin' out the buckwheat cake. There s a liiera'ry lingers 'round the buckwheat cake, ez, in your mind. You turn from all your troubles, an’ the everlustiu' grind Of bizness cares, that agitate yer thoughts from day to day, An’ you kind o’ sort o’ linger ’round the scene that's far away; ’Tis a crispy, snappy mornin,’ an' the sun is jest iu sight, Au’ the fallen snowflakes sparkle like a million diamonds bright, Ez a call comes up the stairway: “Say, you. Bill, for massy sakes, Git up an' come to breakfas' if you want some buckw heat cakes I” Au you hustle out o' bed, an’ in your dry goods purty quick. Lest yer dad makes his appearance with a springy, seasoned stick An you scoot down stairs a-flyin,' an’ you sousle off yer face, An' slide down to the table jest ez dad hez finished grace, An'yer sister pours the coffee, an' you help yourself to cream, While you wait iu great impatience, but in ecstacy supreme, Ez yer mother, with a smile upon her face, perceeds to make That appetizin’, stomach-fillin’, crispy buckwheat cake. ' —Boston Globp.
FLORIDA LETTER.
Thelma, Fla., Feb. 25. Editor Democrat: —Another week has come and gone and still no deer or turkey has been slaughtered. We drove, one day last week, to Jug Island Swamp and camped all night. Got there about noon and in the afternoon Mrs.'M. took a stand where a deer had gone into the scrub that morning and Mr. M. went sky-larking out through the piney woods with the pup After sitting as still as is possible for mortal man (or woman) to sit, for about two hours, Mrs. M. was standing up by a large pine, when she heard a rustling in the leaves and palmettos on the ridge of high pine and scrub oak in front of her. Standperfectly still she presently saw an old turkey hen walk out of the palmettos, feeding and scratching along towards her a good long gunshot away. Mrs. M. had been instructed to wait till they were as close as she thought they were ever likely to come before she shot, so she waited but the old hen had her eye on her and after a long searching look and a “put,” “put.” she turned and ran back over the ridge out of sight. Mrs. M. stood perfectly quiet for 10 or 15 minutes more but finally her curiosity got the better of her prudence and she crept slowly up the ridge till just as she reached the top out flew six big turkeys, just out of reach, and after they were nicely started to the swamp an old gobbler made a run for the swamp and all disappeared without a gun being fired. While Mrs M. still stood there hateing herself to death for leaving her stand, Mr. M. and the pup came up from the other side of the bridge with the pup trailing the turkeys, having just struck their tracks. If she had waited another ten minutes Mr. M. would have come in time to have run the turkeys right over her, as she was directly in the run-way of the nearest point of heavy cover for them. Weil, we got up at four o’clock next morning to hear them gobble and Mrs. M. had the satisfaction of hearing.no less than five different gobblers. Mr. M. went in the swamp toward one bnt it saw him before he got close enough to shoot, and he saw it sail off the roost, farther away. But we still hope. We are going in a few days to Mr. Clarke’s own home, about seven miles from here, and camp one night and he is going, too, and call up a turkey. ' Its the old Mercer place, iu the edge of the Devil’s wood yard. We are located now right in a turpentine camp, on Blue Creek, On our side of the creek is the still, a barrel shop, where they make rosin barrels, the comissary, a house where the white men board and bunk, the house we are in and one more empty house, and the mule pen. On the other side of the creek are the negro quarters, about 15 houses full of big and little coons, old and young, black, yellow and white. There is one man as white as anybody, but he is an Ishmael among his colored people, they have no Use for the too white niggers. Mrs. M. sat on a log with a north Carolina nigger abont two hours one afternoon fishing in the same pool. He is an educated nigger, been to a normal school and says 1 he is going to college as soon as I
he gets money enough. Mr. Clarke says he writes a beautiful hand. He seems very intelligent and well posted. Blue Creek is a beautiful little stream and the foliage is very pretty along its banks. The trees are loaded with long grey streamers of Spanish moss and the live oaks and magnolias are beautifully'green, while the soft maples are just starting and are a bright red. We are feasting on cabbage slaw lately. We got a quart of fine scuppernong vinegar and the cabbage grows in the top of a palmetto. There are two species of palmetto, the saw palmetto, the low undergrowth, and the cabbage palmetto, which grows 10 to 12 feet high and with a body 8 to 12 inches in diameter. In the top of these, where the leaves come up out of the body, is a bud, the inner part of which tastes like raw cabbage, only better —rich and nutty flavor. It is fine with salt, pepper, vinegar and sugar on like slaw. The natives cook it like cabbage but we like it better raw. We bought two spring chickens —broilers—for ten cents apiece. We had two dozen eggs given us by Mrs. Clarke. Mrs. S. gave us a ham when she butchered. We have quail, squirrel, fish, sweet potatoes, grits, Florida syrup, corn bread, light bread, uneda biscuit, lemon cookies, cheese, canned tomatoes, tea, coffee, cocoa, onndensed milk, Mutchler butter (brought from home) and other things too numerous to mentijn. Our cooking outfit consists of a frying pan and a Dutch oven, which is a heavy cast spider set up on legs about two inches long and has a heavy cast cover. To bake in it we build a fire under it and on the lid too. To boil or stew a fire under only is needed. We also have a coffee pot, a tomato can for a teapot and a covered crysolite quart pail for cocoa. .One never knows how few things are really necessary unless he spends a winter in Florida. One man said that the only drawback to Florida as an ideal place to live was the fact that palmetto cabbage were not good cooked with fish. The fish were so easy to get and the cabbage only waiting to be cut down, if only they were a good combination people could exist with nothing else. Their motto here is not how much they can grasp but how little they .pan get along on, and the most of them—and the happiest ones—have got that down to a fine point
MYERS & MYERS.
Having a Run on Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. Between the hours of eleven o'clock a. m. and closing time at night on Jan. 25th; 1901, A. F, Clark, druggist, Glade Springs, Va., sold twelve bottles of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He says, "1 never handled a medicine that sold better or gave better satisfaction to my customers," This remedy has been in general use in Virginia for many years, and the people there are well acquainted with its excellent qualities. Many of them have testified to the remarkable cures which it has effected. When you need a good, reliable medicine for a cough or cold, or attack of the grip, use Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and you are certain to be more than pleased with the quick cure which it affords. For sale by A. F. Long. BLACKSHITHING. For Blacksmithing and Repair Work go to Fred Hemphill and Abe Wartena, successors to Danford Bros , opposite the Hemphill livery barn, and the King hitch barn. The best of work in our line guaranteed. Horse-shoeing and plow work a speciality. Cough Settled On Her Lungs. “My daughter had a terrible cough which settled on her lungs,” says N. Jackson, of Danville, 111. "We tried a great many remedies without relief, until we gave her Foley's Honey and Tar which cured her.” Refuse substitutes. Sold by A. F. Long I have private funds to loan on real estate at low rates for any length of time. Funds are always on hands and there is no delayno examination of land, no sending papers east—absolutely no red tape. Why do you wait on insurance companies for 6 months for your money? I 'also loan money for short times at current bank rates. Funds always on hand. W. B. Austin. Lockjaw From Cobweba. Cobwebs put on a cut lately gave a woman lockjaw. Millions know that the best thing to put on a cut is Bucklen's Arnica Salve, the infallible healer of Wound*. Ulcers, Sores, Skin Eruption*. Burns, Scalds and Pile*. It cures or no pay. Only 35c at A. F. Long’s drug store. Irwin & Irwin are making loans on farm or city property at a low rate of interest and commission and on more liberal terms than can be obtained elsewhere in Jasper County. La grippe cough* yield quickly to the wonderful curative qualities of Foley’s Honey and Tar. There is nothing else “just as good." Sold by A. F. Long. Morris* English Worm Powder Fils*. We. ffieaa Sold by A. F. Loag.
Postmaster Palmer of So. Glen Falls, N. Y., describes a condition which thous--8 ands of men and women find identical with theirs. Read what he says, and note the similarity of your own J case. Write to ■ him, enclosing ■ stamped adfl dressed envelLD. Palmer. °P e for re P ] y. and get a personal corroboration of what is here gr en. He says regarding Dr. Miles* Heart Cure: “I suffered agonizing pain in the left breast and between my shoulders from heart trouble. My heart would palpitate, flutter, then skip beats, until I could no longer lie in bed. Nightafter night I walked the floor, for to lie down would have meant sudden death. My condition seemed almost hopeless when I ' -king Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure, but it ':-.'- ed me from the first Later I took Dr. Miles’ Nervine with the Heart Cure ahd the effect was astonishing. I earnestly implore similar sufferers to give these remedies a trial." Sold by all Druggists on guarantee. Dr. Mlles Medioal Co., Elkhart, Ind.
FARMS FOR SALE. BY Dalton Hinchman REAL ESTATE AGENT, Vernon. Ind No. 289. Two hundred and forty-five acres, level, new two-story frame house, seven rooms, well and cistern, two tenant houses, two orchards, fair sized barn. 80 acres timber, good soil. Can be bought for $35 per acre. No. 290. Two hundred and eighty-two acres, two bouses, one and one-half stories each, barn 50x«O. cattle barn with crib 10x50 feet, horse and cattie ba:n combined 50x70, 8 corn cribs 8x24 feet with driveways, granary with capacity of 2,000 bushels, running water, three fire wells; two windmills; large orchard of all kinds of fruit at each house, 77 acres wheat, 135 acres timothy, three and onehalf miles over pike road to town of 7,500 population. Price SII,OOO, $4,000 cash, balance six per cent., five years. No. 201. Three hundred acres. 220 acres cultivated. 40 acres timber. 170 acres bottom, 80 acres tiled, on pike, four wells, cistern and live water, two large barns, corn cribs, granaries, sheds and waeon scales, medium house, evel, yielded from 40 to 70 bushels corn last year per acre. Price S3O per acre. Correspondence Solicited. References: Judge Willard New, Ex-Judge T. C Batchelor, First National Bank. Merchants: S. \V. Storey. N. DeVersy. Jacob Foebel, Thomas A So”. Wagner Bros. & Co., Nelson & Son. J. H. Maguire & Co., AV. M. Naur. Herbert Goff and Wagner's plow factory. Anyone that wishes to look over the county, would be pleased to show them whether they wished to buy or not. A Printer Greatly Surprised. “I never was so much surprised in my life, as 1 was with the results of using Chamberlain's Pain Bain .” says Henry T. Crook, pressman of the Asheville (N. C.) Gazette. “1 contracted a severe case of rheumatism early last winter by getting my feet wet. I tried sever.,' things for it without benefit. One day while looking over the Gazette, I noticed that Pain Ba'in was positively guaranteed to cure rheumatism, so bought a bottle of it and before us’ng 'wo thirds of it my rheumatism had taken its flight and I have not had a rheumatic puiu since." Sold by A. F. Long. FOR SALE CHEAP. New house and seven acres of land, north end of Ohio st. Enquire of Win. B. Creech, Remington, Ind. Raw or Inflamed Lungs Yield rapidly to the wonderful curative and healing qualities of Foley's Honey and Tar. It prevents pneumonia and consumption from a hard cold settled on the lungs. Sold by A. F. Long. Marion I Adams is agent for i the Farmer’s Mutual Insurance Co , of Jasjier, Benton and White counties. Insurance now in force over $1,(XX),000 Farmers desiring policies in this company should call upon or address him at Rensselaer, Ind. ts. A Severe Cold For Three Months. The following letter from A. J Nusbaum, of Batesville, Ind., tells its own story. “I suffered for three months with a severe cold. A druggist prepared me some medicine, and a physician prescribed for me, yet I did not improve. I then tried Foley's Honey and Tar, and eight doses cured me." Refuse substitutes. Sold by A. F. Long. Remember that the price of The Democrat and Indiana State Sentinel is 51.35 per year; Democrat and Cincinnati Enquirer, $1.50; all three, $1.85. Cash in advance. Foley's Kidney Cure makes the kidhey* and bladder right. Contains nothing injurious. Sold by A. F. Long. MONON EXCURSION RATES. One fare plus f 1.07 for the round trip to Charleston, S, C., account Inter-State Exposition. Dec. 1 to May 15. W. H. Bkam, Agt. Craft’s Dtetemper and Cough Cure Sold toy A. F. Long.
