Jasper County Democrat, Volume 14, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 May 1911 — Page 7

Edward P. Honan, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Law. Abstract*, Real Estate, Loana Will practice in all the courta. Office over Fendigr’s Fair. RENSSELAER. INDIANA. ; ; . Zjit ■ ; / ’■ 'ii , J. F. Irwin. A C. Irwin Irwin & Irwin, Law. Rea) Estate and Insurance 6 Per Cent Farm Loana. Office >n Odd Fellows Block. RENSSELAER. IND. 2 O. OF. Bldg. Phone 15$ John A. Dunlap, LAWYER. Practice In all courta Estates settled. Farm Loans. Collection department Notary in the office. Rensselaer, Indiana.

Arthur H. Hopkins, Law, Loans and Real Estate Loan? on farm and City property, personal security and chattel mortgage Buy, sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city fire insurance Attorneys for AMERICAN BUILDING LOAN AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Ofiice over Chicago Department Store RBNSSEjuAER. IND. F. H. Hemphill, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Special attention given to diseases of Women and low grades of fever. Ofiice in Williams block, opposite Court House. Formerly occupied by Dr. Hartsell. Phone, Office and Residence, 442. S. Herbert Moore, H. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Ail calls will receive prompt attention night or day from my office over the Model Clothing store. Telephone No. 251. Rensselaer - • Indiana. E. C. English, Physician & Surgeon. Opposite the Jasper Savings A Trust (Company Bank. office Phone 177. Residence Phone, 11®. w. W. Merrill, M. D. Eclectic Physician and Surgeon. RENSSELAER. - - INDIANA Chronic Diseases a Specialty. H. L. Brown, dentist. Office over Larsh’s drug store. Dr. F. A. Turffer OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Graduate American Sobool of Osteopathy. Post Graduate American School of Osteopathy under the founder, Dr. A. T. Still. Office Hours—9-12 a. m.. 1-5 p. m Tuesdays and Fridays at Monticello. Ind. 1-2 Murray Building - Rensselaer, Ind.

Dr. J. H. Hansson VETERNARY SURGEON —Now at Rensselaer. Calls promptly answered. Office In Harris Bank Building. Phone 443. Millions to Loan! | j Wa are prepared to taka care f f or all tha Farm Loan business In thl. and adjoining counties at J Lowest Rates and Best Terms, 3 I regardless of the “financial strin- g gency." If you have a loan co*- 2 Ing due or desire a new loan It wIN S not be necessary to pay the ex- J cesslve rates demanded by our 8 competitors. FIVE PER CENT. Ml commission - M sennce | Irwin & Irwin | Odd Fellows Bldg. Rensselaer. 5 I Mt. Ayr Mills ! Manufacturers and Dealers in Choice Corn Meal, Pure Buck* 12 wheat Flour, Feeds, Etc. Do Custom and Merchant work. ’ [ Sawmill in connection. , ° i! Oijr products are for sale and guaranteed by— The G. E. Murray Co. Renssel’r 1! T. J. Mallatt, Fajr Oaks ; [ Perry Brown, Foresman ' A. F. Perrigo, Sigler Bros, and U at Mill, Mt. Ayr "Our goods the kind that make ’ • the cakes just like our moth- i ers used to bake.” ’ Your money back if not sat- ’ i isfactory. i‘ Yours for business, ’ Huffy & Yeoman . MT. AYR, IND.

Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the South, Louisville and French Lick Spring*. RENSSELAER TIME TABLE. In Effect December, 1910. x SOUTH BOUND. No.3l—Fast Mall (daily).... 4:45 a. m. No- s—Louisville Mail (daily). 11:06 a. m. N 0.37 —Chicago to Cincinnati.ll:3o a. m. No.33—lnd’polls Mail (daily;. 1:58 p. m. No.39—Milk, Accom (daily).. 5:58 p. m. No. 3 —Chicago to Louisville. .11:05 p. m. NORTH BOUND. No. 4—Mail (daily).. 4:59 a. m. N 0.40 —Mi.k Accom (daily).. 7:35 a. m. No.32—Fast Mail (daily)..... 10:0o a, m. N 0.38 —Cincinnati to Chicago. 2:53 p. n». No. 6—Mail and Ex. (daily).. 3:15 p. m. No. 30—Cin. to Chi. Ves. Mall. 5:58 p. m. No. 4- will stop at Rensselaer to let off passengers from points south of Monon, and take passengers for Lowell. Hammond and Chicago. Nqs. 31 and 33 make direct connections at Monon for Lafayette. W. H. BEAM. Agent, Rensselaer.

OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. CITY OFFICERS. Mayor -G. F. Meyer* Marshal George Mustard jlerk Chas. Mor«ai. Treasurer R- D. Thompson Attorney ..Mose Leopold Civil Engineer L. C. Klosterman fire Chief J- J- Montgomery Fire Warden...... . ..£. ®- Stewart Councilmen. Ist Ward ...George Hopkin* ’nd Ward Elsie Grow Ird Ward Frank Kresler At Large..........C. J. Dean, A. G. Catt JUDICIAL. Circuit Judge Charles W. Haniej prosecuting Attorney Fred Ixmgwei Terms of Court —Second Monday ir February, April, September and Novero oer. Four week terms. COUNTY OFFICERS. Clerk Charle* C. Warner Sheriff W. I. Hoover Auditor James N. Leathermat. Treasurer. .--J- D. Allman dec0rder...„............. -J- W. TUtoe Surveyor. ..W. F. Osborn* Coroner . ...W. J. Wright dupL Public Schools Ernest Lamsor County Assessor ....John Q. Lewis Health Officer E- N. Ix» COMMISSIONERS. Ist District John Pettei 2nd District....... Charles F. Stackhouse ird District Charles T. Denham Commissioners' Court—First Monday if each month. COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. Trustees Township, Wm. Folgar Barkisj Charles May Carpenter J. W. Selmer Gillam George Parker Hanging Grove W. H. Wortley .<. Jordan Tunis Snip Keener John Shirer nankaket Edward Parkison Marlon George L. Parks . Milroy E. J. Lane Newton Isaac Kight Union 3. D. Clark Wheatfield Fred Karch.. Walker Ernest Lamson, Co. Supt Rensselaer E. C. English. Rensselaer James H. Green Remington Geo. O. Stembel Wheatfield 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 and Third Wednesday of each month. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffice address, Rensselaer, Ind., R-R-4. W. H. WORTLEY, Trustee. NEWTON TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Newtos township attends to official business at bls residence on the First and Third Thursdays of each month. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffice ad dr* ss, Rensselaer, Ind., R-R-3. E. P. LAKE, Trustee. UNION TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of UnLoa township attends to official business at bls store in Fair Oaks on Fridays of each week. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffice address. Fair Oaks. Indiana. ISAAC KIGHT.

iiiin». ........ DEALER IN Lime hit M oim Mai RENSSELAER, IND. HMMF44MMMMF************** >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ lIWBS M AT REASONABLE RATES Your property in City, Town, Village or Farm, against fire, lightning or wind; your livestock against death or theft, and YOUR AUTOMOBILE against fire from any cause, theft or collision. Written on the cash, single note or installment plan. All Losses Paid Promptly. Call ’Phone 208 or write for a good policy in a good company. RAY D. THOnPSON i Rensselaer, Ind.

Correspondence

| LEE. | —I Mrs. Ida Lewis has been very sick with measles. z Charles Jones has bought a new cream Separator of Clark & Son. Some of our young people attended league Sunday evening at Monon Chapel. S. M. Jacks and family visited Sunday afternoon ’ with Thomas Spencer and family. Alvin Clark, the hardware man, has completed himself a new barn on his property at this place. We have had a very fine rain of which we were greatly in need and everything is growing nicely. Uncle David jCulp improves very slowly and his sons-Will and James are piftting in his corn for him. TheXMonon tp. commencement will be held on ’Wednesday evening, May 31 at the Baptist church at Monon. The young people practiced singing for Children’s day at Alvin Clark's Sunday afternoon. The exercises will be held all day June 4. Mrs. Wm. Lee of Rensselaer, formerly Miss Jennie Bailey, died at her home there and was buried here in the Osborne cemetery Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stiers were called to St. Joe, Mich., last week on account of their son Paul, who has a very severe case of lung fever in a hospital at that place.

Saved Child from Death. “After our child had suffered from severe bronchial trouble for a year,” wrote G. T. Richardson, of Richardson’s Mills, Ala., ”we feared it had consumption. It had a bad cough all the time. We tried many remedies without avail, and doctor’s medicine seemed as useless. Finally we tried Dr. King’s New Discovery, and are pleased to say that one bottle effected a complete cure, and our child is again strong and healthy.” For coughs, colds, hoarseness, lagrippe, asthma, croup and sore lungs, its the most infallible remedy that’s made. Price 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by A. F. Long.

I PARR. | Hurrah for the welcome rain! Everybody has got the fishing fever. Sunday school was well attended Sunday. All the corn is planted in this vicinity., Miss Marie King was a Rensselaer goer Saturday. Harry Thomas and brother Fred were in Parr Sunday. Miss Martha Schreeg was a guest of Marie King Sunday afternoon. •Harvey Meyer has been laid up this week by stepping on a rusty nail. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Warren and children were Rensselaer goers Saturday. Mr. and. Mrs. Ed Stahl of Mt. Ayr and children were guests of Louis Schreeg’s Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schreeg vissited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zacher one day this week. Misses Luvie and Goldie Gunyon, Ocie Wood and Virgil Gunyon were Rensselaer goers Saturday. The supper given by the ladies of the U. B. church Saturday night was well enjoyed by both young and old. Ocie Wood, Mary Johnson of Mt. Ayr and Ed Lane and Otto Schreeg were guests of the Gunyon family Sunday. Miss Olga Schreeg land brother Otto went to Hammond this week where they and friends took a trip in an auto to Chicago.

Do Ghosts Haunt Swamps? No, never. Its foolish to fear a fancied evil, when there are real and deadly perils to guard against in swamps and marshes, bayous and lowlands. These are the malaria germs that cause ague, chills and fever, weakness, aches in the bones and muscles and may induce deadly typhoid. But Electric Bitters destroys and casts out these vicious | germs from the blood. "Three bottles drove all the malaria from my system,” wrote Wm, Fret well, of Lucama, N. C., "and I’ve had fine health ever since.” Use this safe, sure remedy only 50c at A. F. Long’s.

PALESTINE. | Florence Dawson has the measles. Miss Fae McKillip is on the sick list. Miss Floe Gallagher spent Monday afternoon at home. Mrs. Jones spent Saturday afternoon. with Mrs. Conley. Mrs. Anderson called on Mrs. Jones Sunday afternoon. Nelson Anderson called on Mr. Marchand Sunday evening. OBITUARY. Rebecca Jane Kinney, daughter of Wjlliam .and Lucinda Kinney, was born April 27, 1853, in Princeton tp!, White county, Ind., and departed this life May 18, 1911, aged 58 years, 21 days. The whole of her life had been spent in this, place. At the x, age of 15 years she* united with the Christian church at Seafield. Later placing her membership with the Wolcott congregation. When the’ church building and records were destroyed by fire she then united with the Palestine congrgation of which she was a member at the time of her death. On Feb. 21, 1877 she was united in marriage to Moses G. Dobbins. ’To them five children were born, Lena, Maude, Minta, Fred and Mabel. Besides her children she leaves

her husband, nine grandchildren, one brother, John Kinney of Wolcott, and two sisters, Ellen Herron of Wabash and Mary Pugh of Bluffton, Ind., and a host of friends to mourn her loss. All through her life she tried to live consistently with the profession she had made, none called on her for help in vain, appeal came to her and was headed, and it can truly be said “She hath done what she could,” "Servant of Good, well done. Rest from thy loved employ The battle fought, the victory won. Enter thy Master’s joy. . The pains of death are past. Labor and sorrow cease, And life’s long warfare closed at last Her soul is found in peace. The funeral services were conducted May 20 by Mrs. H. Goodacre and the remains laid to rest in the Dobbins cemetery.

WARNING TO RAILROAD MEN E. S. Bacon, 11 Bast St., Beth, Me., sends out this warning to railroaders: “A conductor on the railroad, my work caused a chronic inflammation of the kidneys, and I was miserable and all played out. A friend advised Foley Kidney Pills and from the day I commenced taking them, 1 began to regain my strength The inflammation cleared and I am far better than I have been for 20 years. The weakness and dizzy spells are a thing of the past and I highly recommend Feley Kidney Pills.—A. F. Long.

Not interested.

“Jack spends an awful lot of money on Polly.” “I suppose she scolds him good for it” “Not at all.” “Oh, well, then she doesn’t mean to marry him!”

Hard on Him.

“Do yon think Blifklns will reach success in his travels?” “Bllfkins?” “Yes.” “Not until he learns to leave himself at home.”

Explained.

“Doesn’t he bore you?” “No. He always talks about me.” “That’s why I don’t like him.”

The New Century.,

Wake up. owl! Pub your eyes! “How time„flies!” . You say, , And well yod may. For here we are Without a jar And going steady. With a big hole Eaten into the century already. Ten years, a brief decade, Already in the shade And the score Hurrying to one more! • See the difference as the years unfold Between the young and the old? We have advanced some. Have come On different ways. In those days We handed wealth a bouquet. Let it have its way ; Looked on the millionaire in awe As one above the law, • But how about it now? Do we allow The bloated trust to bluff us Without making a fuss? Not that any one can notice. We make faces At those in high places. And, though they may frown, We call them down Good and proper and hard. With no regard i For their feelings. , There’s a new deal. Can’t you feel The thrill? The common people Are coming into their own. , x They want to be shown, i And predatory wealth That so long made hay Has found a reckoning day.

FARMS FOR SALE. 165 acres, one mile from court house, on stone road, k. R., telephone in house. This farm is all black soil in cultivation. A large tile crosses this farm with many laterals, giving it good drainage. There is a large 11-room house; large barn, double cribs, and other outbuildings-; all in good condition. There is a good well, windmill, and large bearing orchard. This is a good farm and a desirable hom* 1 and will be sold at right prices. 80 acres, all cultivated, good house and barn, chicken house, good well, good outlet for drainage, on pike road, R. R., telephone and near school. Will sell on easy terms or will take trade as first payment. 161 acres, all good land, 15 acres timber, remainder cultivated, and in meadow. There is a four-room house, outbuildings, new fancing, large ditch; and some tile drainage. Mortgage $4,800, which has some, time to run. Owner will sell on easy terms dr trade his equity. 600 acres, three miles from good business town, near gravel road, 400 acres in cultivation and meadow, 200 acres pasture. There is a large eight-room house, large bank barn, double cribs, windmill and good well. There is a large dredge ditch just built that passes within a few*, rods of this farm that gives it a fine outlet for drainage. This is a fine grain and stock farm. Price right. Will take up to $15,000 in good trade. 160 acres, in Polk county, Ark., near Oklahoma line, and five miles from railroad. This land lies well and is productive soil. Will trade clear and pay difference. , 80 acres at a bargain, on easy terms, five miles out. 25 acres at a bargain on easy terms. On main road near large ditch; has four-room house. 21 acres, fine black Soil, five blocks from court house, cement walks and good well, sell at a bargain. - 160 acres in the wheat belt of Kansas. Will trade clear for property or land here and pay difference. G. F. MEYERS.

twftß >4f 'jgj^f' ■'^^hktw*'^ — T ZsX 1 •' *r S 4 Tr * - -<*» ■ ■ \ <\y X B B w.- fl ■'.■■ *&/.■:■;•■•;;:•*,•:• ? /.<■>< \.?v < &MBV&W I® •^•;-:: v ' *.?WB| L I i. * i' - ’ ROSE STA’HL in “MAGGIE PEPPER" at the ILLINOIS THEATRE, CHICAGO \ Vjljr/ The car that lasts longest—and costs least while it lasts 4 cyl., 22% h. p., 5 passenger touring car, 100 in. wheel base, S7BO, includes magneto, top, wind-shield, gas lamps, generator, speedometer, 3 oil lamps, horn, and kit oi tools. Ford repairs always on hand. Ford Auto Agency Jno. M. Knapp, Local Agt., Phone 186, Rensselaer, Ind.

100,000 Acres Far m and Ti m ber Lands FOR SALE ON EASY PAYMENTS Special Discount is Allowed on ('ash Sales A little money will buy a farm. Quit working for others who grow rich from your toil and start to work for yourself and your family. Terms; SIO.OO Cash Down, SIO.OO Per Month No Taxes. No Interest. Buys 40 Acres in Menominee County, Michigan. 5 per cent Discount is allowed on payments paid in advance. Should you die no more payments whatever are required and the land will be deeded free to your next of kin. Buy a farm, be independent. Men of small means can buy from us. Own your home on which you can become independent. Raise what you eat,, sell what you don’t need. Your crops grow while you sleep. Now is the time to buy. When you stop working for others your income stops When you stop for a day on the farm it still accumulates and you don’t have to pay a dollar out every time you turn around. Fortunes are waiting those who buy lands in Menominee County, Michigan. Why pay rent when rental elsewhere for a year will buy a farm here. We offer for sale the very best land in Michigan’s rich sugar beet belt. We have bargains to offer to the Investor whereby be can double his money. A few hours ride will take you to this land at a small cost. It is good producing land and will raise all kinds of grain, the finest potatoes and fruits, besides being a natural grazing country. The price of land is advancing and will go much higher. Buy land now. Buy good land. Buy close to railroads and markets. Buy where there is a good climate and good water. Buy wh§re there are schools, churches and good roads. Buy land suitable for grain farming and stock raising. Homes for thousands in the garden spot of Michigan. Send for free booklet telling all about it Writs GEO. W. CASEY, RENSSELAER, IND., Locating Representative

Trees Sprayed! Now is the time to get your order in for Spraying Trees, with an Automatic Sprayer. W. J. Holmes Box 515. - Renssfelaer, Ind,

ATTENTION We offer to a live representative for your county a most liberal ♦proposition covering two reliable lines. EASY to HANDLE and k QUICK MONEY INVESTIGATE AT ONCE. Pullman Motor Sales Co. 305 M«ridlan Life Building INDIANAPOLIS, IND.