Jasper County Democrat, Volume 9, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 August 1906 — Page 3

The Democrat handles Farm Leases, Mortgages, Deeds and other legal blanks. Also prepared to do all kinds of fine job work.' - - . . . a

Head Ache Sometimes? If so, it will interest you to know that it can be stopped ■with Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills; and without any bad aftereffects, and this, without danger of forming a drug habit or having your stomach disarranged. They positively contain no opium, morphine, cocaine, chloral, ether or chloroform in any form. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills relieve pain, and leave only a sense of relief. The reason for this is explained by the fact that headache comes from tired, irritable, turbulent, over-taxed brain nerves. AntiPain Pills soothe and strengthen these nerves, thus removing the cause. They are harmless when taken as directed. “We use Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills for the cure of headache; and we think that there is nothing that will equal them. They will cure the severest spell of nervous or sick headache in a very few minutes. I am of a nervous temperament, and occasionally have spells when my nerves seem to be completely exhausted, and I tremble so I can scarcely contain myself. At these times I always take the Anti-Pain Pills, and they quiet me right away. It is remarkable what a soothing effect they have upon the nerves.” MRS. F. E. KARL, Detroit, Mich. Dr. Mlles* Antl-Paln Pills are sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first package will benefit. If It falls, he will return your money. 25 doses, 25 cents. Never sold In bulk. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind

PATENTS! CASN 0W J OPPOSITE U.S PATENT OFFICE ; WASHINGTON. D.C. PATENTS ■BBHBKZZZZEZjIEUSEjEjBBBHI DSWIFT&&

REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY Will Min THIXW* of Ho.” gfuat R.JEJVIVO ZEVEnMJEDXXK* produces flne results In 30 day*. It acta powerfully and quickly. Cures when others fall. Young men can regain their lost manhood, and old men may recover their youthful vigor by using REVIV'D. It quickly and quietly removes Nervousness. Lost Vitality, Sexual Weakness such as Lost Power. Failing Memory. Wasting Diseases, and effects of self-abuse or excess and indiscretion, which unfits one for study, business or marriage. It not only cures by starting at the seat of disease, but is a great nerve tonic and blood builder, bringing back the pink glow to pale cheeks and restoring the lire of youth. It wards off approaching disease. Insist on having REVIVO, no other. It can be carried in vest pocket. By mail. SI.OO per package, or six for <5.00. We give free advice and counsel to all who wish it, with guarantee. Circulars free. Address ROYAL MEDICINE CO., Marine Bldg.. Chicago. HI. For sale in Rensselaer by J, A. Larsh druggist.

NBTICE OF FILING OF ESWTES FOR 1907 Notice is hereby given that the Estimates of the Board of Commissioners of Jasper County, and the various County and Township Officers • of the expenditures for the year 1907, are now on file In the Auditor’s office of Jasper County, Indiana. The amounts of said estimates being as follows: Total estimate of County Commissioners for the various expenditures of the County 120,523.75 Payment principal and Interest Court House Bonds 15,962.50 Expense Circuit Court 4,908.00 Salary Clerk Circuit Court and expense of office 1,720.85 Insanity Inquests 440.00 Salary County Auditor and expense of office 2,817.00 Salary County Treasurer and expense of office 1,463.80 Salary County Recorder and expense of office 2,318.00 Salary County Sheriff and expense of office * 1,961.65 Salary County Assessor and expense of office 640.00 Per diem County Surveyor and expense of office 2,624.25 Per diem County Superintendent and expense of office 1,671.50 Fees County Coroner and expense of office ■ 259.00 Total expenses County Poor Asylum ipfll •Farm 3,050.00 Per diem County Truant Officer and expense of office 250.00 Supplies Township Assessors 113.80 Per diem and deputy assessing Hanging Grove township ,217.50 Per diem assessing Gillam Township 187.50 Per diem and deputy assessing Walkei Township 267.50 Per diem and deputy assessing Barkley Towrsnip 267.50 Per diem ana deputy assessing Marton Township 577.50 Per diem nnd deputy assessing Jordan Township 262.50 Per diem and deputy assessing Newton Township.' 837.50 Per diem and deputy assessing Keener Township 165.00 Per diem and deputy assessing Kankakee Township 125.00 Per diem and deputy assessing Wheatfield Township 232.50 . Per diem and deputy assessing Carpenter Township 487.50 Per diem and deputy assessing Milroy Township 150.00 Per diem and deputy assessing Union Township 337.50 Total 163,339.10 JAMES N. LEATHERMAN, Auditor Jasper County.

IMP OF INDIGESTION.

How to Get the Better of This {Cause of Misery. A scientific writer upon stomach troubles says: “If you have ever suffered from indigestion,—and who has not?—your imagination has probably pictured a ferocious little imp dancing in the pit of your stomach, causing that organ to neglect all of its duties, with a result that is not Only painful, but fills you with misery from day to day.” This writer had certainly suffered with indigestion, for there is no more disagreeable, nerveracking and sick-all-over disease than indigestion. A great many people who have been treated for years for diseases of the heart, liver or kidneys, when they used Miona stomach tablets found that not only did Miona cure the stomach disorder, but it made them well all over and the other troubles were also cured. If you suffer with nervousness, sleeplessness, indigestion, sick or nervous headache, pains in the back or sides, get a 50c box of Miona from B. F. Fendig and take one of the little tablets before each meal. It will do you a world of you will soon be well and free from indigestion, and its symptoms. B. F. Fendig has so much faith in this medicine that be gives an absolute guarantee with every box. Ask him to show you this guarantee. To be well dressed. This does not mean extremes in style, but simply good taste, good judgment, good clothes in every detail. Examine closely and try on a Duvall & Lundy suit or overcoat, their excellence and worth will be a pleasure to you, you will have to exercise your judgment and personal taste only in the selection of style and pattern. As to the other essentials the Duvall & Lundy guarantee label fully protects you at all times.

NOTICE TO THE PU BLIC.

Notice is hereby given to all parties concerned that I have been employed by the widow and the heirs of Edward L, Bowes, deceased, to settle up his estate. All parties having legitimate claims against said estate will please file with me an itemized statement of their account at as early a day as convenient. B. F. Ferguson, Rensselaer, Ind.

WOOD! 500 CORDS Price, $3.25 Per Gerd, Delivered and corded on your premise*. Give us your order at once. The Rensselaer Feed Store, A. L. BRANCH. Prop.

(8) ffflfflOM n» Rssocloiion. Of Benton, White and Jasper Counties, REPRESENTED BY MARION I. ADAMS, RENSSELAER. IND. Insurance in force Dec. 31. 1904. 31.899,959.32. Increase for year 1904, $199,796.98.

FARM GARDEN

> CANADA THISTLE. Hint* For Kill in* It In Small Patehea or Lar*er Arena. We Have had but one patch of Canada thistle on our land, perhaps a fourth of an acre. We killed this in the dry year of 1894 by hoeing It off every Saturday. The operation will be effective much more quickly If after mowing It off the farmer will pour Into ( the stub from a common oil can a very 'little of a mixture of one part of crude carbolic acid and four parts of water,

CANADA THISTLE, SHOWING LEAF. [1, flower stalk; 2, root stalk; 3, single floweret with seed.]

shaking the can before each application so as to keep the ingredients well mixed. This is perhaps the easiest way to deal with a small patch of thistles. Where a farmer has a Small patch of thistles in a field intended for corn he should under no circumstances cultivate this patch with the corn, especially with any of the common cultivators. In doing so he will inevitably distribute the plant and it will be but a short time until his entire field is infested. A single plant if given enough time and opportunity will spread over a 'ten acre field. Each rootlet that starts out from the plant sends up separate stalks every three or four Inches, and lit is only a question of time when It will occupy the whole field; hence the necessity of locating these patches and at all hazards and at any cost getting rid of them at the earliest opportunity in the way above mentioned. Where there is a larger area we suggest letting the thistles grow until they are well in bloom, then mowing and for security burning. You must attack the plant at the weakest point before it has stored up much starch in the roots. After plowing the ground should be thoroughly harrowed, the ■roots gathered up, dried and burned. This wifi greatly reduce the vitality of the plant It is doubtful, however. If one year’s treatment of this kind will prove effective, particularly so If there should be a season of abundant rainfall.—Wallace’s Farmer.

Transplanting Strswbrrrleii. The accompanying picture shows a transplanter made years ago and in constant use since by a Rural New Yorker writer, who says: The part marked A is a heavy sheet brass welded, B is heavy brass wire, C brass wire

A STRAWBERRY TRANSPLANTER.

hole with the same transplanter and drop your plant in on a dry, hot August day, and you will not find a wilt. , For practical work in a one family garden I have six rows of strawberry plants about seventy-five feet long, renewing two rows each year in August. Plants are set about eighteen inches apart with transplanter; second year "allowed to make a matted row; third 'year after bearing dig up and replant. .Lawn clippings are put between rows, and after bearing it is forked in. My bed migrates east or west, two rows each year, and you wIM see by the tabove plan I always have plants one, two and three years old. Bnear Prodnctton. Messrs. Willett and Gray, the New York sugar statisticians, estimate that the total sowings of sugar beets this year approximate 399,562 acres, which should give a probable yield of 325,000 tons of sugar. This means that for the first time the beet sugar factories’ outturn will exceed that of Louisiana's sugar mills, for It is ndt expected that the cane crop there will quite reach the 800,000 ton mark this year. Yet the 1906 beet outturn was not so far behind the average Louisiana cane sugar production, for then the result was 288,717 tons from 34L--075 acres of beets.—Sugar Planter.

THE AMENDED SLOGAN

Speaker Cannon and the President Agree on Policy. -STAND PAT AND PASS THE HAT’ If Republicans Control Next Congress There Will Be No Attempt at Tariff lieviaion The Political Problem That Those Who Favor Tariff Reform Must Unravel. Now that Speaker Cannon has induced President Roosevelt to join him In making the paramount issue for the campaign for the election of congress what the speaker so euphoniously expresses as “Stand pat and pass the hat,” what are those Republicans who believe the tariff should be revised going to do about It? For instance, the South Dakota Republican convention put itself on record in favor of the abolition of the tariff tax on lumber “for the benefit of the American home builders and the protection of our forests.” But if the voters of that state elect the Republican candidates for congress and there is a Republican majority Speaker Cannon and President Roosevelt, unless the latter again changes his mind, will refuse to allow a bill to abolish the duty on lumber to even be considered. It would be dangerous to disturb the lumber schedule or to relieve the people of the tax on homes, because, you know, or you should know, that the tariff schedules are so scientifically adjusted that to disturb one paragraph of the sacred edifice endangers the whole structure. 8o the Republicans of South Dakota can expect no relief from the tax on homes unless they determine to vote for Democrats to represent them in congress or pledge the Republican candidates to keep out of the Republican caucus for speaker and vote for the Democratic candidate for speaker. In Minnesota and Michigan similar tariff ideas are prevalent, .with even more pronounced ideas on reciprocity with Canada, but the same obstacle of the stand pat programme stares them in the face, with similar necessity for electing Democrats or pledging the Republican candidates to keep out of the caucus, which, once entered, binds them to the protectionists band and foot. In Massachusetts many Republicans think free hides and free coal are necessary to preserve some of the great industries of that state, but a condition confronts them similar to that of their brethren in the northwestern states. Unless, therefore, congressmen like George P. Lawrence, Samuel W. McCall, William C. Lovering and John W. Weeks, who had the courage in the last congress to stand up and be counted for reciprocity, shall show still further Independence of the Republican machine by keeping out of the caucus of the Republican members of the house of representatives and are prepared to vote for a speaker who will not suppress all efforts dor tariff revision, nothing will come from their efforts. In lowa the Republican convention has just escaped a bolt by compromising with the stand patters, so the Republican congressmen from that state, even those that believe in tariff reform, will be compelled to join in the procession that considers it a sacred duty to aHow the protectionist juggernaut to crush them. Those Republican and Independent voters of that state can only aid tariff revision by voting for Democratic candidates for congress. There are signs of alarm In Republican machine centers that show that tariff reform sentiment is so strong even with Republican voters that they fear the result of the election in all the close districts, but promises by Republican candidates for congress that they will vote for tariff revision are felt to be worthless as far as the action of the next congress is concerned, as they have been futile In the past. The Republican voters who believe their Interests require tariff revision have the result in their own hands. They can accomplish it in two ways, either by pledging Republican candidates for congress to keep out of the Republican caucus and vote only for a speaker who Is pledged to tariff revision or by voting directly for Democratic candidates for congress who are also pledged to tariff revision. To vote for a Democrat is the bolder step and more certain to produce the result aimed at.

and D brass wire pounded somewhat fiat about one-half inch wide. Place -A over any plant and with foot at X force into the ground about four inches. Pull it up and force the plant out by pressing on the handle Y. D is made to slip inside of main cylinder A. Take your barrow load to the planting ground and make your

Revolts against Republican ring rule are so numerous nowadays that even In the railroad ruled stafe of New Hampshire there Is an uprising “to put the government back in the hands of the people.” Everywhere the people are rebelling against their corporation owned masters, who under the guise of Republicans are but the creatures of railroads and other corporations, whose sole Interest in political affairs is their own aggrandizement. It Is encouraging to see Democrats and honest Republicans joining hands for their own enfranchisement and for the protection of theipselvea and their fellow citizens from plutocratic monopoly. Let the slogans be “Down with the trusts and corrupt corporations!” and ’Turn the rascals out!”

In view of the fact that Republican congressmen by their action defeated Mr. Taft’s proposition to reduce the, Philippine tariff at the recent session. It would appear that Mr. Taft was insincere either in bls praise of the work of congress or In bis professions regarding the Philippine tariff. His remarks at Greensboro contradict bis representations to congress.

Another Republican Revolt.

Not Sincere.

KITCHEN CIBINETS] S S (0 LU ' Call and see 5 W.uu xx 2 are selling all Ya ■'■ > kinds of Furand iliiiSigMK niture cheap- (0 0) ['! | er than any Yv (• Upwards. 1 °ho!»T* <• I WqP —i •• M'OOUBAM. A •OM*' “* —" -J CALL AJfD J-jE£ THEM AIT g w IMS' funfire M iwt suit i (0 RENSSELAER, INDIANA. g

STATEMENT OP THE CONDITION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF RENSSELAER. IND., APRIL 6, 1906. RESOURCES. LIABILITIES. Loans.. ..1264.688 80 Capital Stock....’s3o 000 00 U.S. and County Bonds... 17,900 00 Surplus and Profits 1 24 Bank Building 8.000 00 Circulating Notes.... .. 7,500 00 Cash and due from banks 94,084 87 Deposits 332.239 43 3384.673 67 $384,673 67 ✓vn/vv/vn/v* D I R ECTORS. A. PARKISON, JOHN M. WASSON. E. L. HOLLINGSWORTH, President. Vice-President. Cashier. JAMES T. RANOLE. GEO. E. HURRAY. | Form Loans o specially I Shore 01 Your poironnoe is solicited, |

•JiiJSiS.JiSiSiiiSiSJJSJii 1 RENSSELAER LUMBER CO. t •) £ NG in the I S (0 Building Material Line 0) •) and at the Lowest Possible (0 Prices. Let us figure on your •) A bill before placing it elsewhere. g North of Depot. Wm No. 4. Rensselaer, Ind. g

City Coal, Wood Feed Yard.

LBV. SpsciaHlOO Top Buggy Jnet a vehicle which givea perfetx eatlafacMon; that'a what we X,NX omld, ualng only llrat-claaa vuuerlala and perfect finlali; every X part warranted to be free from defecta Our year. of experience \ AmuM taught ua how to Iml Id a popular and an I elan I tai vehicle \ UUUUM at the loweat coot. and the pricea that we aak do not carry any XI z profile tor the middlemen. Tide vehicle la trimmed In all wool - - body cloth, green or blue, brown or wine. painted to ault ttu- pur haeer.liaa woolfaivxl | >'™d linlngucralu leather quaitera and l«i.l I \ / A. wlth heavy rubier roof, back curtain. V / /\ aide oiimuna and Morin apron, Ihoiiaand [ X. \ I / / mile aerrwed run 1 tempered Ellptlc aprlngx. eamtary spring [ II 1 cnahlona and back, and l« uwmlly aold lit { Ml ...J the dealer’. market at double ttda price. If \l .s' f X°“ * aubetantial. well flnkW vehi- \ //VvxAW t. / /it \zy W » de don’t overlook thia bargain. Bvery /’K vOf I W/V / \\X buggy fnrnlahed by ua la complete wttfc X/ IVwT’el \ / rlAf- \ ’bafta, atorm apron, reinforced boot and 1 quick shifting abaft couplers; UHOrdy 1 ■' • ' crated, delivered f.o.b. care Middletown, Ohio, w a secure the loweet poeatble trelgM rakee te oar oaetomece. catalosnae sent, and freight retee quoted upon application. Beftraaaeet Flrat NaMeaad Bank. Mldkletewa. Okie. Price.—Tn solid rubber tlrea stain. Teresa.—We will etnp vehicle to anyone who tends SU.on with order, is wide taeak. and 4 feet»lor ties la narrow track. Nmfictind by TIE UH 1 VANSICKLE BOUT CO., NiMMivi, MH.

TELEPHONE, No. 58. Everything in the Fuel and Feed Line at the lowest prices. Corn, Hay and Oats bought at highest market prices. A share of your patronage is solicited J. E. BISLOSKY