Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 June 1907 — Page 7
a, - , 04- I— I SURREY, INDIANA •-4;>r -fA\ ■ •*• •ft •; ' ?v». •.; 1 . 4
Marcus Belgian Stallion. I v . I ■■■ . /. b.j a * I k3dm»*WlM!N( <**" n Vkrsmf I 7-*^:*-sA*-**"‘- , f®»i>lll I Dxsckiftiok and pbdigheb.— Marcus Js a I dark brown Belgian Stallion, la 4 year* I old and weigh* 1800 pounds, baa large I bone aud good muscle, Is a strong mornr I and a good Individual throughout. He was I aired by Amerleus No. 292; he by Champion I No. 108; he by Bruyant No. ISO; he by MouI ton No. 820. The dam of Marcus was aired I by Markins No. 108; second dam Herelue A. I No. 338. F» 2452; third dam, Belle, by BisI mark. pc Terms: 112.00 to Insure colt to stand and I suok. I (Marcus is owned jointly by C. F. Stackj house and O. J . Kenton.', Henry Olay. H ■ 4 Hbsbv Clay is a black jet with white points, sired by Kentucky John, a IB band . jack; dam, a 1414 hand jennet. Terms; 910.00 to insure coit to stand and suck.
O. J. KENTON, Owner, RENSSELAER. INDIANA.
Goliath No. 7639. Goliath It a dark bar taorte, bred by Simon Hegner, at Koko- amo, Ind., it retristered in the books of the National Association Fre uc h r a Horses, under •».*!*■■■.'nJf: "i, ', V;No. 7t39, sired by V'Lamoreaux No. -SfeßßtlKjgHJtA- W i«M, he by Favor i, 1 „ fl| j& .«a 5. No, 401, out of am r Pelotte No. 459, Dam Rode* No. 1822. Ha weight in good flesh, 1800 pounds; hat good style and action. Will make the season at my barn, on what la known at the Wm. Haley farm, 5 miles southeast of Rensselaer. The best reference given as to colts. Trails: 810.00 to insure colt to stand and auok. Service money becomes due at onoe. If mare be parted with; product held good for service. Doe' care taken to prevent accident, but not responsible shouldT any occur. Telephone 538-J. B. T. LANHAM. PRINCE. ENGLISH SHIRE STALLION. Prince is a dapple bay horse, aged five years and weighs 1800 pounds. He will make the season of 1907 at my farm 9 miles southwest of Rensselaer, near the Bullis school bouse. In Jordan township, all week except Thursdays, when he will stand at the farm of Joe Nessius, in the east part of Jordan tp. Will be taken to parties desiring to breed to him w’ho will write or telephone. Terms;Blo to insure living colt. Produce held good for serviee. Not responsible for accidents. J ESSK PI'RDKM, Owner and Manager.
Tha Roddster Stallion Joe Patch . M.: Will make the stud season at the.Morian farm, 144 miles west of Rensselaer, Mondays and Tuesdays, balance of week at Hemphill's Stallion barn in Rensselaer, at a fee of 810 to insure a living foal. Parties sailing mares forfeit Insurance, For full description and’pedigree, call on or write, E. L. MORLAN, Tel. 527-F. R-R-3, Rensselaer, Ind. B'VHk Ml H I « iP» dURNSi ■ V Wy Ibfwl ■ • DuviniAfity 4rA I
Richwood Squirrel, Roadster Richwood Sqdibbbx. is a dark brown horse, no marks, weight 1300 pounds, and is MK hands; foaled May 3,1901; bred by 1. B. Taylor, Slahmond, Ky. Sire, Richmond Squirrel, No. 8B& sire of Black Squirrel, No. 88, dam, Dutchess, dam of Richwood, No. 10,430, sire of Squire Talmadge, No. 648, and Lady Clay; 2nd dam, Belle, Term*: 810 to insnte colt to stead and suok. James Madison No. 287. Jambs madisos was foaled July 21, 1896 color black with white points, 14V4 hands, weight 900 pounds: stone; dam, a noted 13 hands jennet Terms: 810.00 to insure colt to stand and \ suok. The above horses and jacks will stand the season of 1901 qt Simon Kenton’s farm, half mile Bast of Surrey. Service money becomes due at once if mareUparted with; product heißygood for service. Due care taken to prmnt accidents, but will not be responsible should any occur.
HOMINY MEAL The best feed for fattening hogs or cattle known. A carload just received at the Rensselaer Feed Store which we are selling at the very low price §of $22 Per Ton A. L. Branch, Prop.
® Finns'Hi m _ isie Milton, u Of Benton, White and Jasper Counties, A BBPUSUTH) BY MARION I. ADAMS, RENSSELAER. IND. Insurance in force Dec. 81,1806. 12.295.660.00. Increase for year 1806, 5139.448.00.
t noNuriENTS. :: - > .». ;; The Rensselaer Granite ;; •- and Marble Works for Mon- - - " aments, markers, st6ne curb* ;; ing for oemetery lots, clean- ;; ;> ing, repairing and engraving, - - .’■ iron fenoe, vaoes, chairs and « l *; settees. All work neatly ;; ;; executed by men skilled in ;; the oraft of monnmental • ► ;; work. Only such materials !; ;; nsed as oar long experience + 1! has proven to be the very ► X best adaptable for monument- ' > +al purposes. Prices the low- ;; " est consistent with honest «► |; Work and material. ; ► If: Will Mackey, Prop. .’ll TO NON-RBSIDBNTS. The State of Indiana, ) Jasper County. f In the Jasper Circuit Court, September Term, 1907. Lucinda Roe) va. > Complaint Mo, 7171. John Noland.) Now cornea the Plaintiff, by Ira W. Yeoman her attorney, and flies her complaint herein, together with an affidavit that the defendant, John Noland, la not a resident of the State of Indiana. Notice ia therefore hereby given aaid Defendant, that unless he be and appear on the first day of the next Term of the Jasper Circuit Court to be holden on the 3nd Monday of September, A, D, 1907, at the Court House in 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 my hand and affix the Seal of aaid 1 seal > Court, at Rensselaer, Indiana, this i_ An armful of old papers for a nickle.
Jasper County Gleanings NEWS FROM ALL OVER THE COUNTY.
‘Remington. HgMIWOTOII W.W.TtM»TA-t.g. BAM. | TBAIMS. 1 WB9T’. SStS: I SsFs 11:88 • .m. Mall and Passenger 5:12 p/m 8:10e. m. | Passenger (Sun.o'ly) 7:50 p. m - «■ " 1 I —r
Goodland has organized a ball team. Fine corn growing weather at this writing. Grant Culp is hauling lumber for a crib from Rensselaer. , # . ’§ J| Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Grove were Rens* selaer goers Thursday. A daughter was bom last Thursday to Mr. and Mrs. John Haley. Clyde Reeves and family spent Sunday with his parents in Rensselaer. Mrs. Geo. Hargreaves and children are visiting her parent at Clifton, 111., at present writing. Mr. and Mrs. W, L. Rich went to New Waverly last Wednesday to see their son Bert and family. Mrs. W. R. Pierce died at her home in Gilboa last Thursday and was buried Saturday ia Gilboa cemetery. Mrs. Minnie McCoy of near Battle Ground, was the guest of her parelfts, Mr. and Mrs. Ed, Culp, last week. Miss Hattie Bartoo and little nephew of Spokane, Wash., are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A; Bartoo. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hook of Appleton, Neb., were guests os Mr. and Mrs, George Hascall a few days last week. Misses Katherine Green and Katherine Hartman returned last Wednesday from Earlham College, which they have been attending. Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Townsend and Miss Bertha Primmer were Chicago visitors last week, attending commencement of Northwestern University. Mrs, Tones Templeton and little daughter of St. Louis, Mo„ are here for an extended visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Parker.
Goodland, Fovrier, Wolcott and Rensselaer are each bidding for Remington patronage the Fourth, and no doubt it will be divided between all four places. John L. Cook of Goodland, who for the past quarter of a century has been clerking in the Burgess drug store at that place and is .well known hereabouts, has made arrangements to start a drug Stote of his own at Goodlad, and will occupy the building on the corner south from the old Burgess drug store, * James Clowry, who has been superintendent of the Range Line gravel road for many years, has resigned and C. G. Beal has been appointed in his stead. Uncle Jim has made an excellent superintendent, and Charley will have to go some if he keeps up the pace set by his predecessor for the past dozen years.
The burial of Mrs. Charlotte Walters was held here on Monday of last week, the funeral being held at the home of her son Herman, northeasi of town. Deceased was over 81 years of age, and was a native of Germany. She leaves four children, Charles of Francesville, August of Logansport, Mrs. Lang of Goodlaud, and Herman of this county. There are twelve grand children and twenty great-grand-children. She was a life-long member of the Lutheran church, and a number of the members of the Goodland Lutheran church, of which she was a member, attended the funeral.
The Clarion (Iowa) Monitor of last week contained the following mention of a former Remingtonian: "Dr. A. H. Littlefield has sold his dental business to Dr. Frank Dunlap of Nashua, and will give possession June 20th. Dr. Littlefield and family will make an extended visit with relatives in Illinois and Indiana during the summer, and will then spend the winter in San Diego, Cal. The doctor expects to locate in some western city. The removal of this family from Clarion will be a source of regret to all their friends. Dr. Littlefield turns over a good practice to his successor, the result of eight years' hard work in Clarion."
Will Cure Consumption. A. A. Herren. Finch, Ark., writes: “Foley’s Honey and Tar Is the best preparation for coughs, colds and long trouble. I know that it has cored consumption in the first stages. Yon never heard of any one using Foley's Honey and Tar and not being satisfied. A. F. Long, - '
fie tv land Ben Ahlers is visiting relatives at Francesville this week. B. J. Gifford of Kankakee, .111., was here Tuesday on bnsineis. H, C. Dahncke and two daughters were at Rensselaer Monday. Owen Callahan, who has been pressing hay at StouUburgh, returned home Sunday, Fred Arnott, manager of the Pleasant Grove store, was here on business Monday. O. M. and Nellie M. Wallace atiended the play at Rensselaer Monday evening. ■•••." • Geo, Martin, Geo, Beedy and Wm. Marion were at Rensselaer Monday on business. Chas. Walker and T. M. Callahan were at Rensselaer Saturday on business and also attended the ball game between Wheatfield and St. Joseph’s.
If you will make inquiry H will bo a revelation to you how many suocamb to kidney or bladder troubles in one form or another. If the patient ia not beyond medleal aid, Foley’s Kidney Cure will cure. It never diasapoints. A.F. Long.
Vine Gro'Oe, the Kuew ot john . sjsg’to:- T “ to ■; , %'< ;r; ! . ' ’ <-■ 7-i
BY OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENTS.
Mrs. Chgs. Jenkins and children called pn Mrs. Driver Tuesday. Mrs. James Torbet took dinner with Wm. Jordan near Newland Sunday. Bertha Cooper and Chloae Torbet •pent Sunday evening with Verna Shroyer. John Fisher and family were the guests of Mrs. McCleary and family SunGrandpa Root returned to his home in Wheatfield Sunday after a several weeks stay with his daughter Mrs. Chas. Jenkins. Mr. and Mrs. Ves Austin and daughter of Wheatfield spent Saturday night and Sunday with the latter’s sister, Mrs. Charles Jenkins.
Lee Corn planting is still the order of the day. • Mrs, Frank Overton was a Monon goer Friday. Walter Whilton returned to Linden Thursday. Clayton Cadwalder is working for Mahion Lamport. Mrs. Whitlow of Crawfordsville visited with her son Albert last week, Symphia Donaldson of Monon spent Sunday with her parents here. Jesse and Otto Jones of near Monon spent Bunday with Albert Hanna. Mr. and. Mrs. Wm. Lamar and son Paul spent Sunday afternoon with Mahion Lamport’s. Came and Clayton Cadwalder, Harold, Lamar and Rosa Carrotbers attended children’s day al Bedford Sunday,
A Real Wonderland. South Dakota, with its rich silver mines bonanza farms, wide ranges and strange natural formations, is a veritable wonderland. At Mound City, in the home of Mrs. E. D, Clapp, a wonderful case of healing has lately occurred. Her son seemed near death with lung and throat trouble, "Exhausting coughing spells occurred every five minutes,” writes Mrs, Clapp “when I began giving Dr. King's New Discovery, the great medicine that saved his life and completely cured him,” Guaranteed for congns and colds, throat and lung tronbles, by A. F. Long, druggist. 60c and SI.OO. Trial bottles free.
NOTICE Gilmore & Porter, well drillers and repairs. Lowest prices. Give ur r oail, Parr, Ind. For Sale— Five-room bouse, 75x300 foot lot, bearing fruit; situated on River street J. E, Bisloskt.
I’ll stop your pain free. To show yon first, before you spend a penny—what my Pink Pain Tablets can do, I will mail yon free, a Trial Package of them—Dr, Shoop’s Headache Tablets, Neuralgia, Headache, Toothache, Period pains, etc., are dne alone to blood congestion. Dr. Shoop’s Headache Tablets •Imply kill the pain by coaxing away the nnnatural blood pressure. That is ail. Addreas Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Sold by A. F. Long.
ALL KNOW WHAT THEY ARE.
In no business does experience count for more to both the dealer and the customer than in the implement business. Experience enables the dealer to know the value of goods. He can see at a glance whether they are artistic and will please a discriminating customer; in a word, whether they will satisfy buyers by giving first-class service. The same experience enables him to BUY RIGHT. Then he can SELL RIGHT. It is his larger experience, coupled with his thorough knowledge of the business, that has made G. A. Roberts, the Front street buggy man, so deservedly popular with the discriminating buyers of sightly vehicles. He served his time in a carriage shop way back in the 60s, when an apprentice had to know his business before he coaid begin work for himself. He put in seventeen years of his life building and repairing wagons and carriages, and can make every piece in them. He began to sell implements in 1882, and every customer gets the benefit of this long experience every time he shows an article. That is worth something, isn’t it? He sells Studebaker and Page Bros*. Carriages and Buggies, and there are no better, ana he has some other makes and styles. Studebaker Wagons, he claims, there are none so good. SUCCESS Return Apron or Litohfield Endless Apron MANURE SPREADERS. They are both all right. McCormick Binders and Mowers. YOU ALL KNOW WHAT THEY ARE, and Grain King Shoveling Boards, and there are more of them sold than any other make. You are going to need some of these articles this year, and you will always regret it if you do not go and see Roberts and see his goods before you bay. Paste this in your bat so you won’t forget to go. He will.do the rest when you land. Don’t forget the plaoe on Front street and the name. C. A. Roberts, the Baggy Man.
BBBite w m m m m Birdsel \A/agons i)’- . • Have been advertised at the center of <r Fluctuating Markets—imitation is the sincerest flattery—but . W. Si DeARMOND, Tofft, Ind. “Can deliver the goods.” “The Village Blacksmith” employs no traveling salesmen, and quotes the lowest prices on TWINE!
I III? Starr Pianosi • | i,ooo copies of the McKinley Co’s. Music, io!; I |) | cents per copy. All the Latest Popular Songs and.!; < | Music, 25C. * IfRED a. PHILLIPS.! 0 i
I Want DIFFICULT Eye Cases. AH I Ask is That YOU Investigate at My Expense My Which Has Cured So Many . Cases After Others Have Failed. DONT GO BLIND-VISION IS TOO PRECIOUS. I want ter meet with, or hear from every man, woman or child afflicted with diseases of the eye. I don't care who the person is or what their eye trouble may be,-Twill be able to oonvlnee them ABSOLUTELY FREE that my painless treatment will do more for them than any other method known to the profession. By this 1 do not mean there are not some isolated cases that cannot be cured, but I do mean to say emphatically that many and many difficult cases which have been termed incurable by others have been permanently ABSwCcured by my Absorption treatmeat. One of the things that lam . proud of is in the unlnterrnpted -wStrx, successful career covering many W/C years. I have eliminated the neimWUvX. Eoy/Vcessity of using the dangerous and WB/Ky’ \ */////// painful knife on the delicate eye, ae- Vs////// ? Dd there la hardly a day passes I /////// but what I make cures where othWafT////. Z I Y////// ers have advised that only an operYmu/fi/A th V Y///// /,/ ation would bring relief. My sucWK//'///, 1///// ////1 c *ss has not been brought about 'W//a/// V/// /////1 by a cure to-day and a failure to- > ' W////// T////r ///// morrow, but it has been a uniform '//////J#, wlllllmmrmrFffißtf//// ///// auooess. Take for instance my '/'///AWyj JyJllll/fr ' ’ Kf///S/'//A treatment for Cataract, which is y/wvl/wA. ///////////y. one of the most dreadful and moat >fV//// ////////. obstinate troubles to deal with, / / \ n y//y////. other oculists tell you it can oniv _ ////// of a dangerous operation. To-day I'll my treatment is pronounced the T 1 * HrHkUTTaV/ only SURB knifeless treatment 'lm Fn V'\T~9sy///hrVll\ known. And why? Because the lip f/Al liur/JII A \ V af///JJy /l\\ eures have been so uniform. Had < mJlljri!inKy//I/ \ \\ 1 I only cured a few cases now and wJ/m\ n///jj \ \»1 wy///////lA then, it would be said, “You might VmW lnif/// A W///////N b- cured by Dr. Madison’s treat--111/flimt l if///. \ « \ulWlf'/A » meDt ’ , bl, t *t i» the uniformity of V /// IW Willi \ 11 vi 'HIV io the most difficult cases "1 1U W4\ \ \» ~,2ss4rfts4yw“ r « /l l\ l\vv fl \ 1 W y Madison Absorption Method/’ Jim' X\W 11. \ \ ~T “ for Jnstnnce, these few tea- ' v 1 * tlmonials taken at random: AMKNIOA’S MASTta OOULIST. St“7ac F k^n W “undir d^ 3 of (copybightid) October 18, 1906, writes: “After there was no cure for my cataracts except an operation^'to^da'y^m y means of your knifeleas home treatment. I have regained mv vision 3 !,, 6 .!? C. W. Johnson, of Grand Detour, 111., in a recent let*? “1 as well as a duty to mankind, to certify to the benefiUreceHed fiH»m CUBBS , HEB“‘ t,neDt,orCataraCU - JohMO bySS?y ¥oU I personally davoto my entire time and study to tha Bye. and I assure m. prospective patieutsmt personal attention, even tothe smallest you are suffering from-whether from Cataract, Inflammation" PannS* P&Lu o'.hl Nerve Trouble, or ia fact any affliction of the vision-I can successfully vcmT -.P.. ante* a perfect, permanent cure for Cross Byes, whether i t belntarnnl PP.;. L ii bismus, without the use of the knife, with absolutely no risk, pa n with’ “ d “ r °°“ f ° r * ?**»« l *> <* w‘tbou? toe um stog?; VISION IN LIFE-BLINDNESS INIOBLIVION. If you value vonr „ tor what your diseasa. no matter what your thought, invesUgate. It is toVIIS&J you any money to prove to your entire satisfaction that my treatment is ali i for alii ask of you is to send me your name and address, no matter will send you FREE an 80-page booklet, illustrated in oolors, whiSh "uite on of the eye. I will tell you who I am, what I have accomplished, and will My office hours are from 10.4)0 a. m. until 500 p. m: Sunday*, from 9-00 a m toii-nn. «». only. Special appolntmsut, however, can be mada\>y letUr or wlre :UU *• Dl - to U OOa. P. G. MADISON, M. D.
