Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 3, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 April 1912 — Page 2

(Copyright, 1910, by the New York I b raid Company.) (Copyright. 1919, by the MacMillan Company

CHAPTER VI. It was held by the thousands of Imre-worshipping chechaquos that Daylight was a than absolutely without fear. But Bettles and Dan MacDonald and other sourdoughs shook their heads and laughed as they mentioned women, And they Were right,. He. had ■always been afraid of them from the time, himself a lad of seventeen, when Queen . Anne; or Juneau.. made open and i'blieu'qus ~*e to him. I'or that matter. La never had known -women.’ Bern in a mininc-camp where .they were rare and mystt t Jous. having no sis-ig A.-.', bis mother dying while he was .anyinfenT.-. he had never been in contart v;-h them.•. ' B-t it let: to the Virgin to give him rina'i irjzht. S:.- ‘ -1 tme ..:r...- .dead in her cat-in: A Shot through the- head had done it,•and she had left no.message no explanation. Then came the talk. Some '■vjt. vo- ng -. •’ :.ic < m m.. < llt a Vase of tqp much Daytig; ■. ' She had killed herself I ■■ ause of him. Everybody kt, • this, and said so. The cor.respondents wrote it up, and Once mote Burning Daylight. King of the Klondike, was sensationally featured in the Sunday supplements of the Lpited States. The Virgin hat btraigntened up. so the feature-stories ran, and Correctly so. Never had she ‘entered a Dawson City dance-hall. M hen she first arrived from Circle City, she had earned her living by Washing clothes.... Next, she. had bought, a sewing-machine and made men’s drill parkas, fur caps, and moosehide mittens. Then she had gone as a clerk into the First Yukon Bank. All this, and more, was known and fold, though one and all were agreed that Daylight, while a the cause, had been the innocent causd of her untimely end. And the worst of it was that Daylight knew it was true. Always would he remember that last night he had seen her. He had thought nothing of it at the time: but, looking hack, he was haunted I'y every little thing that had happened. In the light of the tragic event, he could understand everything-—her qUe'-mss, that calm

• °rtih;de as ii al? wxi/g mj<- ticns of L-irg hid be-.n s cotb.i o’" were gone, and th it certain < he real •vs< r-e~- a'..-nt ail : H;?» <?<,! aml dor- that had been a! - , e—t n ;i?e~na!'. H-* fen •gr her- d the wry ,-he had looX-t hi' !v-”' ?•:■. i■ - Ir-h d Jivhti: be narrated Mickey Dolan’s mistake in staking the fraction on Sk< ckurn Gub-h. Her ij.-'ghtet had been lightly joyous, while at the came time it had lacked its t^Lo-iin •• ro' mae-'-. Not that she h? ’:b«”* Xi—n-,-, . r.r > c-’tk. slued. On the contrary. she had been so patently content, so filled with peace. Sb» had fooled him, fool that he was. He had even thought th"’ night that her foeifng for him had passed;, and he bad . taken delight in the thought, and caught visions of the satisfying future friendship that would be theirs with this perturbing love out of the way

And then, when he stood at the door, cap in hand, and said good night. It had struck him at the time as a funny and embarrassing thing, her bending over his hand and kissing it. He had felt like a fool, but he shivered how, when he looked back on it and felt again the touch of her lips on hihand. She was saying good-by. ar eternal good-by, and he had never guessed At that very moment, am for all the moments of the evening, coolly and deliberately. as he well knew her way, «?he had been resolved to die. If he had only known it! Untouched by the contagious malady himself, nevertheless he would have married her if he had had tbe slightest ink.ing of what she contemplated! And yet he knew, furthermore, that hers was a stiff-kneed pride that would hot have permitted tret to accept marriage as an act of phi’anthropy. There had really been no saving her, after all. The love-disease had fastened upon her, ami she had been doomed from the first to perish of it.

six thousand spent the winter of lk?7.in Dawsen, work on the creeks went on apace, whi'e beyond the passes it was rbyorted that one hundred thousahd more were v-aiii>>g for the spring. Late one brief irfte Davlight, on the benches betwm i French Hi!l| and fehookum Hill. cave'-’ a wider vision of things, Apnea th him lay the richest part of Eldorado Creek, while up and down pQnrnwi he comd see for miles, it was- a •scene of a vast devastation. The hills, to t,hoir tops, had been shorn of trees, and their naked sides showed signs of goring and perforating that even the mantle of snow could not hide. Beneath him, in every, direction, w-er’e the cabin? of men. not many men were visible. A blanket of smoke filled the valleys and turned the gray da> to melancholy twilight. Smoke arose from a thousand holes, in the snow, where, dteep down on bed-rock, in the frozen muck and gravel, men crept and scratched and dug, and ever built more fires to brehk the grip of the frofct. Organization was what was needed.

BURNING DAYLIGHT

by JACK LONDON

Authod Or The Call Or Tee MldL "Mete Lang* 'LLaw/nEdeh frc Illustrations By Dearborn Melvill

he decided; and his quick imagination sketched Eldorado Creek, from mouth to source, and from mountain top to >"oii;:t;.jn top. in the hands of one capable management. Even steam-thaw-’ ing, a yet untried, hut bound to come, he saw would be a makeshift; What should be done was to hydraulic the yalley sides and benches, and then, on the cre- k htetom, to use gold-dredges. re was the very chance for another big kF;-a. He had wondered just « :• '’. as precisely .the; rea.cn for the Gmmenhammvrs. and the .big English seeding in their high-salaried e q rts. That was their scheme. That it;. they had. approached him for the.sale of v.orkhd-out.claims and tail-ii-.-.s. They were Content to Igt the small mine-owfiers gopher out what : - • 1 ' ! for. there would be mii- >’ . • And, gazing down on the smoky in- ■ n of crude effort, Dayhght outlined .game he would play, a game iii, which the Guggenhammers and the TF’. v.. ~ fl have to reckon with him.' But ate: g with the delight in the new concep-i >n ca:..'- a weariness. He was tired of the long Arctic years, and he was curious about the Outside —the great World of which he had heard Other men talk and of which he was as ignorant as a child. There were games out there to play. It was a larger table, and there was nd reason why he with his millions should not sit in and take a hand So it was, •hat afternoon on Skookum Hill, that he resolved to play this last best Klondike hand and pull tor the Outside. It < pok time, however. He put trusted :gents to work on .the heels of great ' Aperts, and on the creeks where they began to- buy he likewise bought. • ryvcr they tried to corner a work'Cd-out creek, they found him ’ -tiding in the ’.yay., owning blocks of ci ims.or artfully scattered claims that put ?.’! ’heir p’ans to naught. Followed wars, truces, compromises, vi ‘ ri s. and defeats By 1898, sixty - and men were on the Klondike, 1 ail their fortunes and affairs / 1 back and forth and w ere as- ’ th< t att! ~ Daylight -fought. .nd r "e tnd more the taste for the

" 'i ' - T * : " i ; > Daylight’s mouth. ! . ci_> v, • j. !’. lock 'd in grap- ’>’• wstn :!>. ;i Gugg< nhammers, ■■ stb'y t‘ •: eV rc- ■: .-.i ry.-:- was waged oa Ophir, the i. -veriest of moose-pas-tures. whose low-grade dirt was valuable m 1 >*<- of its vastness. The owner hi.n of a l.'ock of seven claims in the 1: ,t’ of it Daylight his grip, and f • ■ -.could not come to terms. Ihe G ignv’.mi mmer experts ccnclud- ' - : ' ig him to handle, and when they g vo hi fir an ui imaturn to that effect he accepted and bought them out The plan was his own, but he sent down to the Sates for .competent cngirccrs to carry it out. In the RinkaciUy watershed, eighty miles away, he built his rr-erveir. and for eighty p iles the huge woe den conduit carried the water across country to Ophir. Estimated at thrift millions, the reservoir ar d conduit cost nearer four. Ncr did he stop with this. Electric power plants were Installed, and his workings were lighted as well as run by elie’ri -i y. Other sourdoughs, who had struck it rich in excess of all their dreams, shook their heads gloomily, warned him that he would go broke, and declined to invest in so ex-

Through It Ail Moved, Daylight, Hell. Roaning, Burning Daylight.

travagant venture, But Daylight ■ u i.edj and scid out the remainder oi his town-.--j. holdings. He sold at the ; li" height of the placer boom. V. h- r. h e prophesied to cionies, i'. the yioc.-jehorii Saloon, that within five years town lots in Dawson co dd rst be given away, w hile the cabins Would be chopped up for firewoc't, he was laughed at roundly, and assured that the mother-lode would be louud ere that time- But he weht ahead, when his need for lumber was finwhed, selling out his sawmills as well. Likewise, he began to get rid

of his scattered holdings on the various creeks, and without thanks to any One he finished his conduit, built his dredges, imported his machinery, and made l the gold of Ophir immediately accessible. And he, who five years before., had crossed over the divide from Indian River and threaded the silent wilderness*! his dogs packing Indian lashion, himself living Indian fashion on straight moose meat, now heard the hoarse whistles calling his hundreds of laborers to work, and watched them toil under the white glare of the arc-lamps. But having done the' thing! he was ready to depart. And when fie let the word go out, the Guggenhammers vied with the English concerns and with a new French company in bidding for Ophir and all its plant. The Guggenhammers hid highest, and the price they paid netted Daylight a clean million. It was current rumor that he was worth anywhere from twenty to thirty . millions. But lie alone knew just how he stood, and, that, with his last claim: sold and the table swept clean of his winnings, he had ridden his hunch to the tune of just a trifle over eleven millions. Jlis departure was a thing that passed into the history of the Yukon along With his other deeds. All the Yukon was his guest, Dawson the seat of the festivity. On that one It.: t night tip man’s dust save his own was good Drinks were not to be pur- < based. Every Saloon ran open, with extra relays of, exhausted bartenders, aii/1; thy. drinks were given away. A man who refused this' hospitality, and persisted in paying, found a dozen fights on his hands. The veriest, chechaquos rose up to defend the name of Daylight from such insult. And through it all, on moccasined feet, moved Daylight, hell-roaring Burning Daylight, OverspiHing with goqd nature and cahiaraderie, howling his fiewolf howl and claiming the night as his, bending men’s arms down on the bars, performing, feats of strength, his bronzed face flushed with drink, his black eyes flashing, clad in overalls and blanket coat, his ear-flaps dangling and his gaunt leied mittens swinging from the cord across the shoulders. But this time it was neither an ante nor a stake that he threw away, but a mere marker in the game that he-who held so many markers would not miss* <_■ (To be Continued.)

Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury

As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system w-hen entering it through the mucous, surfaces. Such articles should' never be used except on ; rescriptions from reputabb- physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you an possibly derive from them. Hail’s Catarrh Cine, manufactured by F. J.; ( honey & Co., Toledo, 0., cont . ns no n.- rt ury, and is taken injerhitlly. anting qiri r|ly on the ntnvts surrmes ut the system. In l uy- ■ r Halt’s Catarrh ( Ui ■ i o : u;e ytys ’he.y tiuine. It is taken intern- ■ i.y and made in Toledo, (duo, by >••’. '■ 1 heh.ey & Co,. .Tc stimpnijls tree. : ; j I by Druggists. Price 75c per bottle; . / ■■■'■.., 'mho Hall's Family Fills lor coni’.ation. . ‘

THINGS ALL OUGHT TO KNOW

As Christian Bible Ctudcr.ts- Ths Satisfactory i-i-.ol'ci “Why God Permits Evi!/' One of the quesfions which comes to nearly every thi-irklri" mind today is, ■ ‘•Why. does God permit evil?" ,\s we look about us in the world wo observe that it is filled '.vlth sorrow an 1 trouble, sickness ar. 1 j .in au<] every trial we could enurn ra'?. and we cannot help wondering V.’HY GOD ALLOWS If. We realize that He is almighty and <Hhat He could prevent it if He wished We read in His Word that He is more willing to do for Ilis chih'.r-. n than nre earthly parents for theirs, and we know how mu. h that mean ;; yet of tentimes, it seems that those who try to do and live right have the moo trouble. This qtn stion Is i.utd? v. ry clear in a book entitle ’, "The Divine Plan of the Ages," Every si. ieuieat is ba '.red by Srripturo, .-Ind r'ur •: t!. while God dors not sr it: i <. ! H/i HAS ALLOWED SI.X AL’.) in ATI! TO DEIGN FOB THESE SIX’ THOUSAND YE.V’.S. This end m-tny other subj acts of deep iiifclrVst' to 1 • of God's people are discussed fullyin language easy of co: r r.-').>ii;; >n. In English, Gernan, f,,.c<T h, Dan > Norwegian, itirli.ai, French, Greek. Hungarian,' Spanish, Folisp. 11,. land i ish. I Syriac ;>nd Ttirko-Armeuian in lireppration.] / 355 pages, cloth bound,’3s cents postpaid. Addres;; Bible ilnd Tra t Sowie ty, 17 Hicks Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

When Your Feet Ache

From Ccrns, Bunions, Sore or Callous Spots, Blisters, New t or ’Hght Fitting 1 Shoes, Alien’s Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes, will give instant relief. Sold everywhere, 25b. Don't accept any substitute. For FREE sample address. Alien S. Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. tnyl

itoscbutl Farm and Mill, two miles east of Parr Phone 507t» (Jasper Co.) Pensselacr !•/„•- • hange, P. O. Parr, Ind. Get your Graham flour and Corn Me.il at Geo. W. Markin & Son’s General Store. .Pleasant Grove; W. L. Wood, Farmer’s Supply House; Chas. Greenlee's Geenral .Store, Parr, and Warren Zellers' General Store, Aiy, Ind. Satisfaction guaranteed. —AMOS H. ALTER & SON. ■U_ _ _ J

THE SAVIOR'S TEACHINGS BROOKLYN TABERNACLE BIBLE STUDES

WHICH DAY IS SABBATH? Mark ii, 23—iii, 6—April <l4. Text: ••The Sabbath teas made for man, and cot me.i for the Sabbath.”—Hark ii,-27. C«IAT the Bible teaches some imjMirtant lesson t respecting the Sabbath is undisputed, but what that lesson, is is much ntvl. The fourth ccmmambnent c i the Decalogue refers to the seventh Cay and requires its observance' as a of rest,, and no more. The Tea <' ; inland; rents as a whole were the i . J; <f ;!?.• Law Covenant, compal- •. .y vq.-ii every Je w. The Jew kbep--1 . ■. r d of those commandmehts was ;; : . :-o'l everl;-.-. iiig life. Fabure to ■ h-iu ait condemn.';! him :if.\ h. :r; b- no cwin oil this point, if-'■'■<■■■ in our Lord’s time; Jewi.-h , ! •<; ha 1 5 f :■<>' re to a considerI’wliialL?an! greater' ’ laid uuon s the literal com-

’.! ‘-i; - ih 1 -L.'.i./ ?■ .■■.;.■¥ e.i ti» 4 on s ‘veral ?i i• •». ♦- j it. :: 1 i<l- - ••••; c’ive:i .-• < • the .f , ; to the l 1 V V't big ■ ‘S.;’ 1, uh day. i h'.- < .ii’iy < h:;:vli e ; <1 d s<- • the. ~ewish day it

i.i. i-’ •- --. and in some places the l -■: ■. y of, : tie week, the Anniversary <■/ <-ar L->:■<!'< resurrection; and ior.;etib ■ they observed both of these days; I’,nt their observance was not - . a ■ f lav? or cominand, for the Aposti • vvi-te. "Ye are not under Law, but uhde.r grace.” S ■ with us today. Aye are glad that bile day in the week is so generally <>l .<-. v< 1 as a day of rest, a Sabbath JF-i’-.- nth day signifies mt day). We :■ ■ ■ T'.ad that the day so generally set : ; ■ ? is the first day of the week, be- ■- ■ .? it to beautifully commemorates tho (Jiristian’s hopes, attested by our Lord's resurrection from the dead.

To 'he Christian, every day is Sabbat), every day should be used as holy oj 'be. Lord. and nothin? should at any time be done contrary to the Divine wi? < r th ' principles of ; the Divine »■'<>< rn:>'<- ,t. Jesus' declaration that He. was L‘ id of the Sabbath reminds slLcf St. Dani s declaration that <•»! the F:uber rested from His own work on th ■ ‘event’) Day'. He left the work c'):: ' f< r Jesus to do. The !Tv< u.h :•■-.■ of Jehovah’s rest was eii » ts ; t : Davs of the Creative Weak. errh even thousand years Ipng. Six <f th -w wait Day-; b. <1 passed mil man’sciv-.ion was in the end of tire mxth. Ilavi ig osi >'ii;s'. ( t His human son in Ed?n as god or ru’or of the o’rth, Jehovah rwled or ceased from it’s v.-.'.rx ii? fhr- f'-eventh Ih;y, or s< yt'iith period of seven thousand years. Six thouu>nd years of this seventh period have already pissed and Jehovah G- -1 has rested, ceased from riis work-.He Ims not interfered to assist man or lift him out of sin and r 'gradation. Another thousand years of the seven remains, but Cod will not actively enrage in man’s rescue-even then. V. h.v not? Because it is a part <>f the Divir-' T’: grain to leave fallen min am! ■ .is rescue entirely in the hands < f J< sus. He is Lord of this ' Great Seventh Day.

Mf-.n’s Seventh Day. This entire period of seven thou-s-iud years which constitutes the great Seventh Day or Sabbath with God is divided with man into seven gr?;lt Days of a thousand years each, in ? !': of which he lias been under a rci ’i i f sin aipl death, toil and suffix but the Seventh, or Sabbath, cf thousand years, has been appointed f< r his rescue and uplifting and blessing. In that glorious Sevenththousand year period Jesus isyto be Lord. It will bo the great Antitypical Sabbath, and the great Amitypieal Jubilee for mankind. The Church’s Sabbath Day. St. Paul clearly intimates that to the Church, the New Creation, every day

"Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath day?"

Here have a perpetual Sabbatli. Seven days in the week, and fifty-two weeks in the year o’ir hearts rest in the Lord and fake comfort in the glorious proin isep of Ills Word .through faith. Thus aye rest from feelings of responsibility an 4 Worry acVcimt of the world’s, jrilyation in exactly the same way that rhe Heavenly Father rests. i We. like’the Heavenly have rhe fullest, canfideii.e that the Redeeuier will vet a; compl; h the blessini' of ail the families of the earth, and hrfing all the willing’ and obedient into >l:e "reat Rest Time of the future—'he fho -: av l years of the Messianic Kingdom, in which the world will bq released from the slavery of Satan, sin and death. , , '

"The Sabbathwas mas made for man"

is a Sabbath day, in the sense that God's conse rated people rest as Gcd rests, in faith, in hope, in trust that Jeshs will eventually deliver them, and bring ' them into a glorious Sabbath Rest, Yet even now.< as St. Paul sAys, ,‘We h ho' believe do enter into rest.” Liter; ■ll v .we who I) :* -

Edward P. Honan, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Abstracts, Heal Estate Loans. Will practice in all the courts. Office - »er r a 1 dll. HENasSLAER, INDIANA J- F. b Win. S. C. Irwin. Irwin & Irwin, .aw, Rea) Estate ana insuraac* 5 Per Cent Farm Loane jiTef in Odd Feltoipi Bic-ck. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Over State Bank Phone 16 John A. Duniap, LAWYER. (Successor to Frank Foltz) 'Practice in all eeurta. Estates settled. ' r a;m Loans Collection ueparlujent Notary in the cfiice. . } t;ms.'.'!;:er, Indiana 17—r— - ■ .■ ■ ■ Arthur H. Hopkins, Law, Leans and Rea! Estate. vi. . L-,'.:u and Lit} pr:'ps-r<r eisuuuj sr-vur.-.v and ehatte. rr.urtgtg,. ■J;-',' : - : ;l L.. 511- rt.-irt pt a p »ty. . rerm aha city m* itisumncc uwnr.o. 1..1, aiIEI.WAA .‘JAN AND SA ASFOCI VHON Office over Chicago Department Stora RENSSELAER. INDIANA. ~ ; —v— A -■ ■ .. A w F. H. Hemphill, M. D. PAYS’CI AN .AND SURGEON. Special attention given to diseases ol Women and low grades of fever. Cffipe in Williams block, vpfiosiie Court iiotise. f ormerly occupied by Dr. Hart sell. Phone, Office and Residence, 440.

S. Herbert iYloore, fl. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. AU calls will receive prompt attentloi. night ir day from my office over tli* Model Clothing store. v ■ ■ Telephone No. 251. - RENSSELAER. INDIANA. sci. C. English, Physician & Surgeon opposite the Jasper Savings t Trus Compar; Bank. Office Phone 177. Residence Phone. ÜB. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. H. L. Brown, DENTIST. Office over Larsh's drug store. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Dr. F. A. Tuifler OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Graduate Arju-riyari of Osteo pathy, Dost Graduate American Schoo at Osteopathy ’iudi-r ths- founder [<• A T. Still. , Office Hours—-y-12 a ai 5-t> p. tn Tuesdays and Fridays' at MontlceHo Ind. 1-2 Murrav Bulldlnn - Psnsseiaer. inc RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Dr. J. H Harfsson vETEvNARf SURGEON—Now a» Teubselaer. ('ails promptly aas -owed. Office Ju Harrs B»n., building. I'houe it;-

"NNXSXXXVXXXXXXXXXVSX’XXX.X | Millions to Loaifl j F £ g We are prepared to take care J 5 or all the Farm Loan business In J g thl* and adjoining counties at 5 5 Lowest Rates and Best Terms. J S regardless of the “financial strinOency.” lr you have a loan con - 4 Ing due or desire a new loan It win £ y tot be necessary to pay the ax- / J cesslve rates demanded by our J| competitors. / ; FIVE PER CENT. J t SIHII CMMisw • PivW Senia 5 ; —r— .. i \ Irwin & Irwin ; J Odd Fellow?. Bldg. Rensselaer S RHEUMATISM < Dr. Whitehall’s "S RHEUMATIC REMEDY For 15 years a Standard Remedy for all forms of Rheumatism, lumbago, £out, eore muscles, stiff or swollen joints. It quickly relieves the severe pains; reduces the fever, and eliminates the poison from the system. 50 cents ft box at druggists. Mfrffo ftry a t.-fal Bax Dr. Whl'.ehall R3agr’rr?’?ts Co. 183 8. La’-i-ctto St. South n-" 1. Ini’ ! ■i■- ■i i —• . | ' .. , ■ fi A Book on Patents y r X-V--- H Sent on request FKtentS RICHARDSON & WOODWORTH J enifer Building Washington. D. C. DRUMBNNISS The steady or periodical <spree) drinker X J can be saved in S-etwys vstlli Lj f knowledge. Or secretly, ily muedv i« ' z -<f c-mt-inieed. Gentla. p!=nsnnt, !•’’■- Z -Mi rectiy haruiieo*. U 4«s mi iiadH L.v xi'xJsfc. HJ any Tf!18 * s t,:e genuine homo .TfcXe’iLYßt* Treatment, medically eieiorred and Tl proved by a legton of testimonials. Book and particulars, free, postpaid. Addrros: EDW. J. WOODS, 634 Sixth Av, 206 B NewYwfcJt.T.

Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Clb. cmnati and the South. Louisville and French Lick Springs. * RENSSELAER TIME TABLE. Effective December, 1911. SOUTH BOUND. * * r tdailyj..... i-j- , _ —'-tticago to i: q puos n’-sT w—LouisviUe ilau S' »0.33—1nd polls Can tdabvi *• m ' No.3> MLk Aecum fdaiiyj.J 6 w n’ Xu. 4—wiueagu to Louisv.U;uJ p.’ NORTH BOUND. I— Mail tuaiiy) a - -a AU.dJ —Ai4\2 kJ ax'. la* t , - . *A_ HL Au. ami "■■■* ''“ a - “* No.3ir—inu puus , o *7 “• x'usseiiKtis iu- C rt io iV ®- mac Uau. AO. 1-vm Here as maiaZ--jLijuu, S.I.U UIS.C i.-asseiigiis for u»*. y-. u.-u -au ukaae direct -umiec.;oi.s at lor cauayeue. i _ ■LT 1 ’ *'«-“L itcr.sstiaex. - ■ * ■ ■ . ■ ■ ~~

~ -u* a itlal, J'irii-C 4 O*ix . -‘TV OFF b lCEfta. I*'*' 4 -’-* .G. F. Ucyara 1 e . leasurer . . p " T*T ai r-»s. ; Civil Eroneen.,.,.. F . mm 1 , . Copr.cllmen. « -.d ' ■ Georg t. 3rd Ward....’ J.’.’'.'.’.’ J. ’ Harry VSer i , J - Lean, A. G. Cat! JUDICIAL. ~ ~ -.Jtcuit Judge. ......ctarles W. Hanlev I . osetut ing Attorney...... r'red LoTiaweß 1 erms of court—Second Monday tr. r bruarj. April, Scptemoer and Novemer. Four week terms COUNTY OFFICERS. | h| erSt - ......... .Charles C. 'A&ruet- : T I. Hewer Auditor ...r..j. P . Hammond ireasurer......... A . A l.e-AWOer ...J. , v lUkoa l suiveyur . ...w y usourue ' oroner. W. J. Wrtahl bupL I'ubiic Schools Ernest Lamaoe toviity Assessor lotiu O Health Officerß N LoJ COMMISSIONERS; Ist District... ..Mm. H. Hershrnan n District.......cnai i<-s r. Stackhouse ird District... Charles T. Denham Commissioners’ Court meets the First Monday of each month. , COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. Trustees Townsnip vVm. buigar Charles May Carpenter ■» - »» hq ?a’'nc!..... Hanging Grwe ’’ • -**.jurdAix 1 Lilslys ... ..... . . . fcLfeettet -oLu tniicx. xaAiiMaMes fcxiward Marisa *' eor ® fe -L Paras.... Mlinjy E P Lane Newton uaae Kignt.. Unton Alpert Keene. Wheatfieid creu Karen Waiker Ernest Lamsoii. Co. Suptltensselasr t. C. E1ig115t1,.......... 1; e usse %ry H c» <Jr ?*?' ’ Emington ■ i V;i.cer..C. B. bt- waii. Keusselaer

IiiLSIEES CAillJtL JORDAN TOWNSriIP. The undersigned trustee of i own-hip attend.- to official business at lus :-s;«len<-e on Mondays of each week. Persons haying business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Po-tpffice address; Rensselaer. Ind., It- 3. iV- H. Vl. irustee. hCiVVTON TOWNSHIP. 1 undersigned trustee -of Newtoa !■« ns. ; ;p attends to official business at his residence on the First and Tnlrd : liursdays of each month. Persons living business with me Will please govern themselves accordingly. Pestoffica adui«ss, Renssela-r. lrid.. R-R-J. E P. LAKE, Trustee. UNION TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Untoa township attends to official business at his store In Fair Oaks on Fridays at each week. Persons ha.iug businesa t»-t!i me will please govern themselvea ?£ i 2’ r<i, ? g li Postofflce address. Fate Oaks. Indiana. ISAAC KIGHT.

!■« ■ PMS jj < > AT REASONABLE RATES O < > Your property in City, Town, * [ village or Farm, against fire, < > lightning or wind; your < * stock against death or theft, J ? and * ’ > YOUR AUTOMOBILE ’ » < ► against fire from any cause, J ! • heft or collision. ’ < > Written on the cash, single »< ‘ note or installment plan. All ! . Losses I’aid Promptly. o Call 'Phone 208 or write for < > a good txilicy in a good com- < » ftany. ■ < ► < t RAY D. THOfIPSON H Rensselaer, Ind. ’ * rttfi tlitltfrWtitttiß r- -- - * fiW ...DEALER in... | UK Ml Mi H. ■; •* . imuih, no. r ;