Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 55, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 October 1909 — Page 6

What Shall The Harvest Be? This is the tray we figure it— Most everybody prefers highclass eatables. We handle only that kind—hence onr deduction is natural enough, isn't it? Suppose y6u let us do you up an order some of these days Just for a trial. Get some of our Coffee and some of that Tea that we are all the time talking about. Don’t forget about the Breakfast Bacon. And all the great number of every day needs we take pains to have JUST RIGHT. McFarland & Son Reliable Grocers.

isnin We have a supply of money to loan on farms at Five Per Cent and a reasonable commission, and shall be glad to answer inquiries by mail or by ’phone : : : . tniiiii North Blde Public Square

lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU ! a. ijmrmonl AUCTIONEER 5 s £ RENSSELAER, - - IND. £ My experience In the Auction ; S business has proven that I han- 3 5 die your sales right and treat S g your patrons with courtesy I 3 from start to finish. It al- E £ ways pays to employ an auct- | £ ioneer who is successful in his 3 I business and a judge of what 3 he is selling. If this is the I kind of an auctioneer you want E to sell your sale, see me before £ 3 dating your sale. § Satisfaction guaranteed. 1 TERMS REASONABLE. E 5 iimiimiimimimiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiii

Automobile LIVERY We have just purchased another touring car and will place both cars at the public’s service. We drive our own cars and guarantee satisfaction. When in need of a car we will be glad to serve you. Our prices are right and our cars reliable. Phone 362 - 141 or call at our shop is

PD AIID fK&wssss UlfUUr r , No vomiting, no dietrw. A Mb and pleasing syrup— DOc. Druggists. Subaerib* for Th* Damoomt.

PAID IN FULL

Novelized From Eugene Walter’s Great Play

...By... JOHN W. HARDING

Copyright, 1908, by G. W. DUlingbsm Co.

SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS. CHAPTER I—lntroduces Captain Amos Williams, president of the Latin-Amerl-can Steamship company, in very bad humor over a threatened strike of his dock laborers. Joseph Brooks, underpaid accountant and collector for Williams, expresses his sympathy for the strikers and is ridiculed by his fellow clerks. ll—The president sends for James Smith, superintendent of the company’s docks, and instructs him to spare no expense in crushing the strikers. Smith advises pacific measures, but is overruled and prepares to obey orders. llP—Mrs. Emma Brooks, the handsome young wife of the discontented clerk, tries to encourage him on his return to their bandbox apartment, but he is bitter against his employer and also against his wife’s mother and sister, who dislike him on account of his Inability to gain position. In his desperation he turns on his wife and suggests that she must regret her choice of him when she tftight have had Smith, who had offered himself. CHAPTER IV. THERE was a knock, the unlatched door opened, and James Smith walked in. “Anybody at home?” he demanded briskly. “Not a solitary living soul,” Emma assured him. “Come In.” “Hello, Joe! You a dead one, too?” he said. “Almost” replied Brooks, brightening up a little In spite of himself under the Influence of his friend’s good natured smile and cheeriness that positively emanated from him. “Just come up?” "Yep, and I reckon In about time to help,” he said, glancing at the crockery on the table. “Just in time,” assented TCmmn, whose drooping spirits also began to rise under the diversion caused by his advent. “But first explain what you mean by not coming to dinner.” ' “I couldn’t come, really. I tried my best, but I had to attend to such a lot of business that couldn’t be put off that I was unable to get here in time. I hope you didn’t wait long for me. I’m awfully sorry.” s, “You look It—l don’t think,” she scolded. “Go on; get busy if you’re going to!”

“All right,” he answered, taking up a small pile of cups and saucers very gingerly. “Where do these go? If you left It to me, like as not I’d be putting a soup plate behind the door and slip a broom Into the sideboard.” “They go right In here.” • Jle stopped on the way to the sid» board and turned to Brooks. “Seen the latest extra, Joe?” he inquired. “The Orinoco wasn’t hardly scratched getting out of Rio Janeiro.” “You don’t say!” "Kind o’ scraped over the bar. She’ll only be a day late now.” “Do be careful with those cups, Jimsy,” admonished Emma. “They’re china.” “Don’t you suppose I know that?” “1 mean real china,” she emphasized. “All china and Chinamen look alike to me. Here’s the paper, Joe. You’ll find all about the Orinoco on the inside page.”

He drew it from his pocket, and as he did so one of the cups balanced on the saucers slipped off and smashed to bits on the carpet. “Now. Jirnsy, you certainly are going to get It.” commented Joe, rising and taking the paper extended to him. Smith looked appealingly at his hostess. “Jimsy,” she chided, assuming an expression of mock gravity, “how could you—my very best Sunday go to meeting china! How could you!” “Not how could I—how did I?” he corrected, stooping and picking up the pieces. “You know, Emma, I’ve had butter fingers ever since I was a little shaver, and I guess I always will have—in business and everything else.” “Why, how do you mean?” “I’ve been clumsy all my life, that’s all. Everything I've ever had in my hands that was worth much I’ve gen erally let slip and fall. Out In Colorado when I was a kid around Leadvllle they used to say that I sure would turn out to be a sawed off and hammered down, good for nothing man. So you see the way things havo turned out. I’ve broken about even with that prophecy.” “How broken even?”

“Taking their side for the book, 1 win the first bet and lose the second. There ain’t nothing sawed off and hammered down about me, is there?” “I should say not," she said, with a merry laugh. “You’ve been pulled out like a piece of taffy.” “Then I win. but it was In doubt quite Borne time. Never really did start to grow until I was fifteen, and then I Just eased out into my present altitude. But the second proposition—that good for nothing bet—l guess they win." “Nonsense, Jimsy. How can you say such a thing? You’re good for a whole lot.” “Emma,” be declgred solemnly, “there have been moments of financial stringency when that declaration seemed to be open to doubt” “Jimsy. you’re an Idiot!” she laughed. “Discovered!” he avowed, bowing ceremoniously. Brooks, who had been reading the

paper, threw it a own angrily. . “D —n him!” he growled. “Joe!” exclaimed his wife reproachfully. 4 “D—n who?” Inquired Smith. “Why, Williams,” he replied. “Lots have done that,” said the superintendent. “But what’s the matter now, Joe?” “His luck,” went on Brooks. “The Orinoco Isn’t scratched. If any one else owned a ship and she got Into a muss like that the chances are a hundred to oue that she’d have foundered —been a complete loss.” “That’s right,” assented Smith. “But Williams—he don’t lose her. He couldn’t.” “I should think you’d be glad,” remarked Emma. “She’s a brand new ship. Isn’t she?” “No, I’m not glad,” he declared furiously, rising and walking about the room. “I’m tired of him, of his rotten old steamship line, of all of it—you hear? Of all of it” “Joe, please!” she protested. “You know I” “I know you’ve slaved and bore with me long enough! Here I am—handling all the money of that line, ain’t that so, Jlmsy?” “That’s right” admitted the latter. “But what’s the matter?” “Matter? Isn’t it matter enough that I should do all this for a mean, miserable living? I suffer and work, and work and suffer, for that nasty, niggardly salary and this beast, this wild animal of a Williams, keeps us all starving—yes, starving! Don’t I deserve something a little better? Do you know what I could do? I could steal thousands, and no one would ever know it!” “Joe!” she ejaculated, greatly shocked. “Oh, I’m not going to do it; but, with all this responsibility, when I ask for money I don’t get it—not a dollar. You do, Jlmsy; you’re single and you can quit. And then Williams—what does he do? Comes around here to my wife with my mother-in-law—d—n him —and rubs it In.” Emma looked at him pleadingly. “Joe, you mustn’t. Captain Williams means well, but”— He turned upon her savagely. “That’s it—he means welL He meant well when he was a south Pacific trader. He meant well when he treated his crew like dogs. He meant well when he’d kill a sailor with as much thought as a spider kills a fly. He meant well when he cheated natives, murdered men, smuggled Chinamen Into this country, sank vessels for insurance. He meant well when he came east, bought the Lattn-Amerl-can company and put your father out of business, and now—now that he has his money, his millions maybe, he means well when he refuses to give his men a fair share of what they produce. Means well? Yes, he does—not!” f “Joe, are you crazy?” demanded his wife, alarmed and a little angry at his outburst.

“Well, there’s a whole lot of truth in what Joe says,” put in Smith conciliatingly. “You see, Williams did start out as a captain of a south Pacific trader, but, like most of them fellows. I guess he stole a good deal more than he traded. He had the reputation of being the strongest man on the coast or in the tropics—could break a man’s arm with as much ease as you’d snap a straw. He’s harsh. Williams is—harsh! When he came east he got control of the Latin-American. He loved money, and he got it—most any way he could. Yes, Joe ought to have more, that’s sure. He ought to have more.” “You know I should,” went on Brooks, somewhat mollified by his friend’s acquiescence and support and drawing a bulky pocketbook from the inside pocket of his waistcoat. “I’ve got control of all the money of the company. That’s my Job. Why, here, this alone is the afternoon collections, too late to put in the safe, nearly $3,000, more than twice as much as I get in a year. I could take it all and then not be caught or at least not for months, but”— “Why, Joe, I’m surprised!” his wife broke in. “Of course Joe wouldn’t take a cent that don’t belong to him,” said Smith. “I know that. Williams does too. So I guess he figures him safe and don’t see the least bit of use in paying him more.” “But I won’t stand it!” Brooks declared, waxing wroth again and flinging himself in his chair. “Why do you get raises, Jimsy? You’ve been advanced time and time again.” “Lord, I don’t know,” he replied. “I just tell the old fellow that I calculate I’m worth more money. ‘Come across or we separate,’ I say, and so far he’s always come.”

“I was so glad to hear of your last good luck,” remarked Emma sincerely. A look of regret came over Smith’s face. “I only wish Joe had got it instead of me,” he said. Brooks jumped to his feet. “You don’t need to wish that, Smith,” he cried excitedly. “I’m no object of charity—no, I ain’t And you’re like all the rest of the capitalistic crowd—grind, grind, grind. Well, loojr out, there’s going to be a smashup —you understand? A smashup, and you all go—millionaires, toadies and—well, that’s all I’ve got to say.” He snatched bis hat from a hook in the hall and went out without another word, slamming the front door behind him so heavily that the glasses on the Sideboard rattled. Emma gazed at Smith In blank dismay. “I can’t understand Joe,” she said, shaking her head in worry and perplexity. “He’s growing so morose and discontented.” “It’s funuy. ain’t It,” observed Smith reflectively. “Joe’s Just rushed out.

filled npTb the throat with anarchy, socialism, smashups and all that etntr almost ready to throw a bomb.” “Nonsense!” “He Is. yet if Williams had raised him today $lO a week he would have been a firm believer la capital and the way it works.” She sighed, took a seat opposite to him at the table and with great earnestness started In to question him “Jlmsy,” she began, “tell me honestly—why doesn’t Joe get on?” “I really don’t know,” he averred. “I’m afraid you do,” Emma Insisted. “Honest, I don’t I've been so busy getting along myself that I haven’t paid much attention to any one else.” He paused and gazed up at the ceding. engrossed In thought “You know, Emma,” he went on suddenly, turning toward her, “this getting along business Is a funny game. Such a lot depends on what a man means when he gets along. Some get along when they have got a lot of money, some when they have a wife and a home and a bunch of kids, some when they are able to pick pockets and fool the coppers. Getting along and why you do or why you don’t depends a good deal on where you want to get.” “And you. Jlmsy?* she questioned. “Have you been getting along?” “Oh, yes, I guess so. I ain’t got a whole lot to kick about; perhaps a little less, maybe a little more, than Joe. But the great idea is not to get sore. Joe’s all right. Maybe he’s just being prepared for a better living. When it comes he’ll appreciate it more.” “Somehow I don’t seem to understand him as I used to,” she confessed. “There’s been a change that worries me—that worries me greatly.” Three sharp rings of the bell put an end to further conversation, and she rose, disappointed, and pushed the button. “That’s mother’s ring,” she said. “Please help me to bring some chairs from the parlor. We can’t go there because everything’s covered up and In disorder.- They’re papering the room. I shouldn’t wonder if Captain Williams were with them. He takes mamma and Beth out in his new auto and has brought them around here quite frequently of late.” “Does he ever take you for a ride?” “He asks me to go, but I won’t.” “Why not?” “That’s just what I can’t tell. There Is something about the man thaf~ls repulsive—he looks at me so strangely. And then I know just how he has treated Joe, and”— “And what?" “I don’t like him—that’s all.” “That’s enough, it seems to me. After all, I guess he figures all to the bad with women—decent women.” “Mamma and Beth like him.” “Well, your mother never did shine up to me more’n the law allowed, and as for Beth, she’s a nice enough girl, but her education hurts her, I think.” “Hush! Here they are.” And the little woman hurried in£?> the hall to open the door for them. (To be Continued.)

To quickly check a cold, druggists are dispensing everywhere, a clever Candy Cold Cure Tablet ventics. Preventics-aTe also fine for feverish children. Take Preventics at the sneeze stage, to head off all colds. Box of 48 —25c. All Dealers. FARMS FOR SALE. 56 Acres, eight miles out, 4 acres timber, remainder cultivated; large tile through farm for outlet; near gravel road; all clay subsoil; five room house, fair outbuildings, good orchard and well. Price SSO. 100 Acres, fair buildings, considerable tile with good outlet on farm, good neighborhood, clay loam soil. Price SSO. 140 Acres, good clay loam soil, 8 miles out, gravel road, fair buildings, two good orchards, 60 acres In clover, some wheat sown, fairly well tiled with large tile outlet through farm. Price $55. 100 Acres, nice level land, mostly black loam soil, near gravel road and school, good pasture or corn land. This place has no buildings on it. Ten miles from court house. Price $25. 240 Acres, well located, mostly black loam soil, about one-third timber which is light and affords good pasture, 30 acres cultivated, orchard, well, but uo buildings. Price $25. 870 Acres, 9 miles from court house, on dredge ditch, good house and .barn, cribs, orchard, well, some tile, 40 acres timber, remainder cultivated and in pasture. Owner will sell on easy terms or take half In trade. Price SSO. 00 Acres, 4 miles from court house large house and barn ard other outbuildings, well, windmill, tanks, good orchard, well tiled and a first-class corn, wheat and clover land. Price on application. G. F. MEYERS. WATKINSTry a package of Watkins’ Root and Herb Tea for constipation, costiveness, all diseases of the blood, liver, stomach and kidneys. It makes new, rich blood, imparting a fine complection to the young, and serenity and contentment to me aged. In all cases of indigestion, dyspepsia, sick headache, chronic complaints of females, this Tea is highly valuable, and will positively give s%tlsfactory results. It strengthens and cleanses the stomach, liver and bowels and kidneys, assisting and stimulating the natural action of these organs. Agreeable to the taste, mild in its actions, and does not gripe, nauseate or debilitate. Ask for our free trial plan. I have over sixty different articles which are guaranteed to give satisfaction. Try them and be convinced of their superior quality. These goods may be had from my wagon or home or at Knapps livery office in Rensselaer. Walt for the Watkins man. V. M. PEER.

North Dakota Good Oops and Prosperity mm every side... There never was tint one crop of land and that Is nearly gone, while onr population Is Increasing by thousands every day. ■ ■■ * i •i Yu Want a Him? ir Dniri an Innstmut? ■ We own and control one es , the best propositions in the ' Western World today. NORTH DAKOTA PRAIRIES!! ; I llin Th * B * fest end Best LAnll Investment In the world ! Our Prices are very Attractive ] and Terms very easy. EXCURSION RATES every ' two weeks: let and Srd < Tuesday of each month. Car fare refunded to purchas- < ere. Better buy of one whe ' knows. Call on our agents • or write • H. J. Johnson Land Co., ■ OAKS, NORTH DAKOTA W. P. GAFPIELD, Agent ! Rensselaer, Indiana. !

Edward P. Honan, ATTORNEY AT LAW. L»w, Abstracts, Real Estate, Loans. Will practice in all the courts. Office over Fendig’s Fair. RENSSELAER. INDIANA Arthur H. Hopkins, Law, Loans and Real Estate. Loans on term and City property, personal security and chattel Buy, sell and rent terms and city property. Farm and city fire Insurance Attorneys ter AMERICAN BUILDING LOAN AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION. Office over Chicago Department Store RHNSSEIAER. IND. J. F. Irwin. a C. Irwls Irwin & Irwin, Law, Real Estate and Ineurancs 5 Per Cent Farm Loans. Office in Odd Fellows’ Block. RENSSELAER. IND. Frank Folta C. O. Spltler. Foltz & Spitler (Successors to Thompson A Bro.) ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Law, Real Estate, Insurance, Abstracts and Loans. Only set of Abstract Books in the County. RENSSELAER. IND.

E. C. English, Physician & Surgeon. Opposite the Jasper Savings tt Trust Company Bank. • _•* Office Phone 177. Residence Phone, 116. M. D. Qwin, M. D. Physician & Surgeon. Office opposite Postofflce, in Murray's new building. PHONE 205, day or night. W. W. Merrill, M. D. Eclectic Physician and Surgeon, RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA Chronic Diseases a Specialty. Dr. E« N. Loy HOMEOPATHIST. Office East Side of Court House Square. Phones—Office 89, Residence 169.

TELEPHONES Office, 2 on 209 Residence I en SM Dr. F. A. Turfler OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Graduate American School of Osteopathy. Post Graduate American School of Osteopathy under the founder, Dr. Offlco Hour* —9-12 a. m., 1-5 p. m. Tuesdays and Fridays at Montlcallo, Ind. 1-2 Murray Building • Rensselaer, Ind. H. L. Brown, DENTIST. Office over Larsh’s drug store. DR. J. H. HANSSON VETERNARY SURGEON—Now at Rensselaer. Calls promptly answered. Office in Harris Bank Building. Phone 443. PACKER* HAIR BALSAM Ctaw ud bMutUlss tha hob. Bair to its Youthful Color.

TRY A WANT AD. If you want a situation, want to hire a man or woman; want to boy, •ell, rent or exchance a farm or other property, try The Democrat's Want Column. Only 1-cent-a-word for flm insertion, % cent for each additional Insertion. Subscribe for The Democrat.

Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the South, Louisville •**d French Lick Springs. RENSSELAER TIME TABLE. • In Effect March 7, 1909. to.it—Mlilt accomm (dally).. 8:01 p! ml - .„ „ NORTH round. .* so. 4—Mail (dai1y)......... in . _ No.4o—Milk accomm. (daily) 7-81 a. m* No.32—Fast Mall (daily) to ek « 2' No. 6—Mall and ia£(daite):; ntj No.SO-Cin. to Chi. Vie. Ami « ; oj £2* No. 4 will stop at Rensselaer to St ?? passengers from points south of Monon, and take passengers for Loweti. Hammond and Chicago. ***• Nos. 31 and 33 make direct connection at Monon for Lafayette. FRANK J. REED. G. p. A. W. H. McDOEL, Pres, and Gen’l*' ifsv chab. H. Rockwell! Traffic mS” Chicago. ” W. H. BEAM, Agent. Rensselaer.

OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. CITY OFFICERS. ■ J. H. 8. Sails rvjtl?. 11 * 11 8. Parks s;™*' • ....Chas. Morlan Attorney Qeo. A. Williams Civil Engineer L. Fire Chief. j. j. Montgomery Fire Warden .C. B. Stewart , . _ , CounciVnen. Ward- L. Brown 2nd ’Ward...........,..,,, j p Trwim 3rd Ward .......LEM oSSS At Large. .C. G. Spltler. Geo. F. Meyers. JUDICIAL. Circuit Judge Charles W. Hanley Prosecuting Attorney Fred Longwell Terms of Court—Second Monday In February, April, September and November. Four week terms. COUNTY OFFICERS. rwh w * Charles C. Warner Auditor James N. Le&therman Treasurer j. q AUrnsn Recorder j. W. Tilton Supt. Public Schools Ernest County Assessor John Q. Lewis Health Officer M. D. Gwln i ™ COMMISSIONERS. Ist District John Pettst 2nd District Frederick Waymlrs Srd District Charles T. Denham Commissioners’ Court—First Monday of each month.

COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. ? 6 w“ 5E&".v.v."7.” c "ss£ TH? ,a JL I } ,p ...Keener John Shirer k . Kankakee Edward Parkison Marlon George L. Parks Mllroy E. J. Lane...... Newton Isaac Right Union red Karch Walker Ernest Lamson. Co. Supt Rensselaer »• C. English, .Rensselaer James H. Green Remington Geo. O. Stembel Wheatfleld Truant Officer..C. B. Stewart. Rensselaer TRUSTEES’ CARDS. JORDAN TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Jordan township attends to official business at bis residence on the first Saturday of each month; also at George Wortley’s residence, on the west side, the second Wednesday after the first Saturday of month. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postofflce address, Rensselaer, Ind., R-R-4. Telephone 629-F. W. H. WORTLEY, Trustee. NEWTON TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Newton township attends to official business at his residence on the First and Third Thursdays of each month. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postofflce address, Rensselaer. Ind., R-R-3. E. P. LANE, Trustee. UNION TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Union township attends to official business at his store in Fair Oaks on Friday* of each week. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postofflce address. Fair Oaks, Indiana. ISAAC RIGHT.

Millions to Loan! Ws are prepared to take cars of all tha Farm Loan business In this and adjoining counties at Lowest Ratos and Beat Terms, regardless of the “financial stringency.” If you havo a loan coming duo or desire a naw loan It wIH not be necessary to pay tha oxaasslvs rates demanded by our competitors. FIVE PER CENT. Ml MUon • Prompi service . 1 - Irwin & Irwin Odd Fellows Bldg. Rensselaer.

Cough Caution Never, poeltlvelynever poison your lungs. Byou eough—even from a simple cola only—you should always heal, soothe, and ease the Irritated broo. chlal tubes. Don't blindly suppress It with a stupefying poison. It’s strange how some things finally come about. For twenty years Dr. Shoos has constantly warned people not to takecough mixtures or prescriptions containing Opium. Chloroform, or similar poisons. And now—a llttljs late though-Oongresa says Put ft on the label, If poisons are in your Cough mature." Good! Very good 11 HereafterforlhUvbryreusonmotheri. and others, should insist on having Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. No poison marks on Dr. Bhoop's labels—and none In the medicine, else It must by law be on the label. And It's not only sale, but ft le said to be by thoee that know It best, a truly remarkable cough remedy. Take no chance then, particularly with your children. Insist on haring Dr. Ahoop’s Cough Cure. Compare carefully the Dr. Hhoop package with others and note the difference. No poison marks there! You can fclway* be on sail aide by demanding Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure “ALL DEALERS”