Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 63, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1912 — Page 2
W HsW? En -□> B- fa 111BTIB: i-.s ufWIIM p ra'ij ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. £>■3 & |Jqg similatingtheFoodamfßcgula KOS gK<y.MIpfitnil ~ —— ; Promotes Digestion,Cheerfut ness and Rest. Contains neither kc~? Opiuni.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. - — ■■ fc ‘ JbapcofOld. DcSAM.'UJ’nwnt ; F* - a ■ ' Primpkin Seed~ p. - n jilx.Senna.e- 1 X JbMle&dts- I F'-- t v -Arose Seed * « ’ oZ . ffytermnt- 7 r "zjja Ii: Cartonale Seda e ( r’-,C-,7 him Seed- I ■ Clarified Sugar - 1 FVs&q fti’riryeenTlanr. I 1 ® Aperfeci Remedy for Conslipa < t ion, Sour Stomach. Diarrte 1 Worms .Convulsions. Feverish nessandLOSSOFSLEEP. ; ?q°2(£ ~ _ I rjj’O’ Facsimile Signature of = *<£<* "‘.ce NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper.
THE JOT COUNTY DEMOCRAT fJ B4BCOCK,EDIIOR«HDPIjBLISHeB. OFFICIAL democratic paper of JASPER COUNTY. Advertising rates made known on application. Lona Distance Telephones □ff'ce 315. - Residence 311. Entered as Second-Class Matter June 8. 1908. at the post office at Rensselaer. Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published Wednesday and Saturday. Wednesday Issue 4' Pages; Saturday Issue 8 Pages. SATURDAY, NOV. 9, 1912.
To Friends of The Democrat.
Instruct your attorneys to bring all legal notices in which you are interested or have the paying for, to The Democrat, and thereby save money and do us a favor that will be greatly appreciated. All notices of appointment—administrator, executor or guardian—survey, sale of real estate, non-resident notices, etc.; the clients themselves control, and attorneys will taKe them to the paper you desire for publication, if you mention the matter to them; otherwise they will take them to their own political organs. Please do not forget this when having any legal notices to publish. 100 printed envelopes for 50 cents at this office. Leave or telephon your order here.
The Democrat and Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer or the St. Louis Twice-a-week Republic, only $2.00 per year. This applies to both old and new subscribers.
Many Dangers From Handling Filthy Lucre
By C. B. RICHARDS
i tiohs to retire the notes as they come in. These no.ct> should he sent to Washington and there redeemed for new ones. I understand that in England a dirty bank nbte is never seen, as they pre retired as fast as they become soiled. All the bank notes there are crisp and clean. The same condition could prevail everywhere if the dirty bank notes were retired soon enough.
The True Meaning of Term “Luck” in Business
By R. H. BARNES
.meaning of the word should be con* #Ukia its proper limits and nut applied to incidents controlled * 4M way or another by the actions of the persons so effected.
CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the V Signature /yLu o f XXjj ft S in ny ® se O' For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THt CKNTAUR COMPANY. NCW YORK CITY.
United States Is After Turkey For Thanksgiving. See us before you sell your turkeys. Those who wish to dress their turkeys should get our prices before selling elsewhere. We buy both turkeys and feathers.— Rensselaer Producing Co., Opposite Postoffice. Phone 307. Pie Social. „ There will be a pie social held at Rosebud school house next Saturday evening, November 9th. Ladies are requested to bring pies.—Floy Williams, Teacher. Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue of a certified copy of a Defee to me directed from tlie Clerk of tf >e J: ‘ s P ,r Circuit Court, in a cause wherein M.ilirida Long is Plaintiff and Joseph S. Maddox. Caroline Maddox.. Marv .1. Byers and Mathew Byers’ are Defendants, requiring me to make the sum of n-t’?;" Hundred Eighteen dollars and Thirty cents, with interest on said Decree an<D costs, I will expose at Public Sale, to the highest bidder, on Monday, the 25th Day of November, A. D., 1912, between the hours of 10 o’clock a m and 4 o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door of the Court House in Rensselaf'. JaSpei County, Indiana, the rents an*, profits for a term not exceeding sever, years, of the Real Estate, to-wit - - The northeast quarter (1-4) of the northeast quarter (1-4) of Sec Don one (L in Township thirty (30) North. Range E" lve T West, situated in Jasper County, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a. sufficient sum to satisfy said Decree, interest and costs, I will at the e and P ,ace expose to Public bale the fee simple of said Real Estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said Decree, interest' and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. WILLIAM I. HOOVER, _ Sheriff Jasper County, tiff 001 Se A ‘ Williams Attorney for PlainOctober 24, A. D., 1912.
The treasurer of a Massachusetts bank is reported to have died of infection from handling bank notes. Death was caused by complications following blood poisoning. This incident calls attention: in a tragic manner to the necessity for improving the condition of the bank notes in general circulation. Some of the bills are so filthy that they are D.°.t handle. The remedy for this condition is very simple. All that is necessary is for the Isanks, trust companies and other financial institu-
The application of the term “luck” has been extended to such a great degree that in many cases it is incorrectly used. W bile it is true that many instances of, good or bad fortune can Only be ascribed to luck such as the finding of a purse or the loss of an arm by accident—the term cannot be used in cases where some one has had financial circumstances or position changed by application, education, ability as well as other factors. It cannot be doubted that some persons are affected more than others by luck, but
NATIONAL CAPS
Camel Hump and Giraffe Sway at the Capital
WASHINGTON.— In a furtive sort of way people have taken note of the “camel hump walk.” It’s here. It came to Pennsylvania avenue rather gradually, but by much quicker process than that by which the aboriginal man stopped walking on all fours; for it traces its ancestry back to the hobble skirt and no farther. Just as we used to have the “kangaroo walk,” we now have the “camelhump walk.” The camel-hump walk is nature’s way of adapting itself to the sheath skirt. It is nature’s law and probably the very best nature could do under the circumstances.
It will be seen by careful attention to the pictures that the genuine cam-el-hump is nothing more nor less than an attempt on the part of the hobbled female to get away from what is coming behind her, a direct application of the theory that self-preserva-tion is one of the primal instincts of humanity. The peculiar effect is due to the tendency of the upper portion of the torso to advance a little faster than the hobbled extremities. The hobble skirt, being true to its
Famous Stockbridge Indians Are to Go West
DECIDING to abandon their tribal form of government and adopt the w’hite man’s way of doing things, the remnant of the Stockbridge tribe of Indians, numbering GOO men, women and children, will shortly become citizens of Wisconsin and cease to be under the supervision and guardianship of the federal government. The Stockbridge Indians will halve a whole township to themselves, east of Lake Winnebago, and other land that the government intends giving them. Already they are planning the organization of a town government, and they have written to various federal and state officials about the state for information respecting civil government, parliamentary practice and whatever else may be useful to them in solving the problems before them. Originally the Stockbridge Indians were a part of the Mohican confederacy and were known under the name of Housatonic. When the pilgrim fathers landed at Plymouth Rock, the Stockbridges occupied part of the Housatonic valley at Berkshire Hills, Mass. Soon after the famous missionary, Sergeant, went to work among them they were collected on a tract reserved by the English government. The French and Indian war, which
Uncle Sam Opens Another National Playground
THREE years ago congress passed a law setting aside a tract of 1,575 square miles in northwestern Montana of the wildest country on this continent to be kept as a national park and playground and game preserve. The park has now just been opened for the season, and it will remain open for visitors until October 15. For eight months of the year it is practically inaccessible, as 1 snow blocks the mountain passes. There are as yet but few roads, and tourists have to do most of their traveling on horseback over rude trails. Glacier National park Is so named from the fact that within its borders there are upwards of sixty living glaciers. These glaciers feed numer-
Chinese Are Happy Over the New Issue of Bills
WASHINGTON'S Chinatown eagerly awaits the appearance of the new paper money of the Chinese republic. Chop suey restauranteurs, dealers in celestial teas and spices and bric-a-brac and the venders who line, lower Pennsylvania 1 avenue are all on the qui vive of anticipation. Bankers, particularly those who have accounts with Chinamen and with Americans now traveling or living in China, are also interested in the new money, which is now being manufactured in New York and Which is expected to make an appearance shortly in Chinese circles in this country. 4 Local Chinamen say that a great compliment has been paid to the United States by the celestial republic in that the standard of value of the new money is the American dollar. One side of the notes will be printed In Chinese, the other In English. It will be extremely easy to exchange American money for Chinese and vice versa. The money is the first issue of paper fry the hew Chinese republic, and
name, deters the legs in their desire for freedom. The right leg says to its colleague, “May I pass?” Not to be outdone in politeness, the left leg answers, “Why, my dear, of course; but I warn you that you will not be able to go far. Your career necessarily will be somewhat limited.” “Cat!” exclaims the right leg, and fares forth confidently, only to come up against that hobble like a colt at the end of its tether. Meanwhile, the shoulders and spine, having the utmost confidence in the right leg to do its full duty and making no allowance for the confounded hobble, forge ahead just as they used to in the days before the tube skirt was ever dreamed of. >
Now, it is that very tendency of the upper portion of the torso to continue the old movements of a natural gait that produces that peculiar phenomenon -the camel-hump. There is also the “giraffe sway,’’ which is a variation of the camelhump employed by slender girls only. The complement of these two actions is the “wideawake sit.” , The. name originates with the tendency of the ankles and feet to come right out and greet you in broad davjigbt. The toes no longer peep from'out of the folds of a tailored gown; there are no folds.
Needless to say the wideawake is particularly popular with occupants of the opposite seat in the car and with the manufacturers of silk hose.
broke out in 1754, marked the beginning of the decline of the Stockbridges. They sided with the French and thus aroused the ire of many other Indian tribes. At the close of the war they were forced to move, partly because the war had reduced their numbers and partly because the New Englanders desired they should leave that community. Their number reduced to a beggarly band of 200 and their villages pillaged and burned by their enemies, it was with joy that they accepted- the invitation in 1785 to join the Oneidas in Oneida and Madison counties, New York.
The Interior Department has given its approval of the plan, and the Stockbridges are planning to lay aside soon the blanket, tepee and other marks of “the only real American* and take up the white man’s duties.
ou streams which go plunging through gorges of the wildest grandeur. There are nearly 300 lakes, the largest of which is Lake McDonald, covering over ten square miles and being over 3,000 feet above sea level. Mount Cleveland is the highest mountain — 10,435 feet —but there are scores of other peaks of huge size, many of which are very grotesque in shape. One of the most curious is a great cliff which has been dubbed “Hpaven’s Fold.” Here the strata of rock formation have been doubled and crushed in a very striking way, and the height from the valley is over 200 feet. White goats are numerous in the region. They have worn trails around cliffs which rise vertically from the valleys, and they tread these precarious paths with apparently no idea of fear. Travelers who like to try their mountain-climbing abilities will have plenty of work before them here. It will take years to explore the whole region, and every party that goes through reports Interesting new discoveries.
is made primarily to retire the inoney of the old empire, which also was printed In the United States and bore the portrait of the Chinese diplomat, Li Hung Chang. Upon the new bills will be found the portrait, not of Li Hung Chang, but of the Philosopher Menizes, who is held second only to Confucius in the estimation of the Chinese. The bills are in denominations of sl, $5, SSO and SIOO. China, of all nations, was the first to use paper money. As early as the second century paper money was used by the Chinese, but In the fifteenth century the Chinese minister of finance abolished It, and not until the latter part of the nineteenth century was it resumed.
Edward P. Honan, ATTORNEY AT LAW Law, abstracts. Real Estate Loans, Will practice in all the courts. Office over Fendig’s Fair. RENSSELAER, INDIANA.
S. C. Irwin, Law, Real Estate and Insurance 5 Per Cent Farm Loans Office in Odd Fellows’ Block RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Over State Bank Phone 16 John A. Dunlap, LAWYER (Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice in all courts Estates settled Farm Loans -■ Collection department Notary in the office RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Arthur H. Hopkins, Law, Loans and Real Estate Loams on farm and City nrooertv personal security and chattel mortgage I* and ren l * arma and city prop- . arm and city fire insurance Attorneys for AMERICAN BUILDING I.UAN AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Office over Rowles & Parker Store RENSSELAER, INDIANA. F. H. Hemphill, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Special attention given to diseases of Women and low grades of fever. Office In Williams block, opposite Court -louse. Formerly occupied by Dr. Hartj tell. Phone, Office and Residence, 440. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. S. Herbert Moore, H. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON All calls will receive prompt attention . or day from my office over the Model Clothing store. Telephone No. 251. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. E. C. English, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Opposite the Trust & Savings Bank Office Phone 177 - Residence 116 RENSSELAER, INDIANA. H. L. Brown, DENTIST. Office over Larsh’s drug »tore RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Dr. F. A. Turfler OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Graduate American Sofcool of Osteopathy, Post Graduate American School A T Bt StH? thy und,r the founder, Dr. Office Hours—B-12 a. m., 1-5 D m Tuesdays and Fridays at MenticeH©; 1-2 Murray Building - Rensselaer, Ind. RENSSELAER, INDIANA.
Millions to Loan !’ We are prepared to take care or all the Farm Loan business In this and adjoining counties at Lowest Rates and Best Terms, regardless of the “financial stringency." If you have a loan costing duo or desire a new lean It wIN lot be necessary to pay the excessive rates demanded by our competitors. FIVE PER CENT. simii commission - Promni service S. C. Irwin Odd Fellows Bld<. Rensselaer.
Rosebud Farm and Mill, two miles east of Parr Phone 507B (Jasper Co.) Rensselaer Exchange, P. O. Parr, Ind. ••• '' ■' '* • • ■' .• ■ ■ '■ For Sale— 3oo bushels Mediterranean Seed Wheat, last year crop recleaned, $1.25 per bushel.—AMOS H. ALTER & SON.
WANTED IDEAS Our Four Books sent FFee with list of Inventions wanted by manufacturers and promoters, also Prizes offered for Inventions. Patents secured or Fee RETURNED. VICTOR J. EVAHS & CO. w ™ h ?„?gg. e , 1 Book on Patents w—blLJagafci <-» Sent on sanest PAWfS RICHARDSON & WOODWORTH J enifer Building Washington, D. C. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM ClMßfet and beautifies the hair, ftomotes a luxuriant growth. Never YalU to Beatore Gray Hair to tt« Youthful Color. Prevents hair falling. ___6oc.,an4 St.oo at Oruggiata,
■All? 111 *lL■k< *jl j | Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis Cta. cinnatl and the South. Louisville”* and French Lick Springs. RENSSELAER TIME TABLE. Effective July, 1912. „ ~ SOUTH BOUND. Fast Man (daily. 4 „ Noit:^ Uisville Mail (daily) IVMaTS* N0.37—-Chcgo to Indnls y a ’ m - N°.33—Hoosier Limited (daily) l ) -ks No.39—Milk Accom (daily) No. 3—Chicago to Louteviife. hilof £; NORTH BOUND. i *k Ue Ac?om hC fdail^ lyl) 7 iff m - No. 6—Mail and Exp (<®? 3 q?, 2 , p ‘ “• No 30—Hoosier Limited (daily)" Passengers for C. HT& I) Ifc.? 1 ’ X “. 3 , Si % SJf; 33S?*£.S te i Hammon a d nd and k Ch?S ngerS tions JwWSyetto* Connee * H ~ BEAM. Agent. Rensselaer.
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Mayor C,TY ONCERS. Clerk F - Meyers Treasurer .. • • .Chas. Morlan Attorney .. ~Thompson Marshal .... -Moses Leopold Civil Engineer'.'.*.".’.".".”.'" tar4 Fire Chief T t •»< P sborn « Fire Warden ..777± Montgomery lot vo- Councilmen. 2nd Warn.' -*- Geo, 'K I HopMM 5? J™? e■ • J C. J. Dean, A. G. Catt JUDICIAL. Terms of Court'—Second Monday in ber brUa F r^rA^ r e l ekS a mber NoVem ' COUNTY OFFICERS. Sheriff " "777". "■■■" • • Juds °n H Perkins Auditor ........" j"V/ w» Hoove f Treasurer ...77777" ' A Ua ? m S Recordpr •••••••• .A. A. Fell Surveyor 7.7/77”77 ” ’ p W b s T±“ Coroner ’ w J 3rd District Charles T. Denahm Commissioners’ Court meets the First Monday of each month. TnusteZ7 BOARD OF EDUCATION. Wnf USt^ e ? Township Wm. Folgar Barklev j. w es s^ y er.7.7.7.7.7.7.7.7.7 Car s& r W W0X."77~ 7 TunVsffio 777khnkake? lunis Snip Keener H. E. Parkison... Marlon George L. Parks.... Milroy • -Lycine. «■••••• ••••••... zv ttv tAn Isaac Kight 777777" UnioE w b J rt tr K n ne • •• - Wh7atfieM Fred Karch Walker w Su P l ßensselaer L Eng JL lsh Rensselaer c^ eS rf 9 a/* re i? n i Remington 277 Wheatfield Truant Officer, C. B. Steward, Rensselaer TRUSTEES’ CARDS. JORDAN TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Jerrtea Township attends to official business his residence on Mondays of each week. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffice address, Rensselaer, Ind.. R-t w. H. WORTLEY, Trustee. NEWTON TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Newtoi township attends to official business at his residence on the First and Third ihursdays of each month. Persons havIng business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffice address, Rensselaer. Ind., R-R-S. E- P. LANE, Trustee, UNION TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Uniea township attends to official business at his store in Fair Oaks on Friday* of s*£h we<k ".„ Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffice address, Fair Oaks, Indiana. TRA i(! KIGHT,
limb ■ Prolecis 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. AH Losses Paid Promptly. Call ’Phone 208 or write for a good policy In a good company. RAY D. THOMPSON Rensselaer, Ind.
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