Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 63, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1912 — Page 3
OFFICIAL, VOTE OF JASPER COUNTY d 7* of Q ■ , - " '■ ' ' ’ " ;•&•I/ ' fe . . • ’ ®* Q Q fc ® 2 © o Qi ° 2 • Q *?■ I ® • X 1 / - PRECINCTS I°pj £ I . §lg o * 1 « |-Q *1 *IA S 3 I - *. . . Q* £ Q * ' « Q‘ « -g g *-P £ g § ®si2fe 11 |E 1 § 'gg*s> fl 2£ | I «£ 1 Q rt Si fc SIS S' lit —J ®°l®S §* - b ii Ilhllbllil II1!M II I h*lP'fi 0«1il i h § 8 i 1| g | < | f6«p qM o H 3-ja g g |jg Sg y tip § |a s ,j| || 3J I BurLy, W&: 56 "i 5544218534511 57 39 11 "*} g g g*»“«"««» «» « 88 52 49 61 !«„ 31 717 „7 j Cawite,; W«M 65 45 46 65 39 4S 73 60 22 79 59 22 69 62 22 63 64 59 79 11 69 63 19 83 52 IS 5} 21 90 M ’* 97 19 86 ' 651 21‘ Carpenter, South 60 46 47 69 41 49 61 64 27 60 64 25 58 66 24 62 90 S3si 20 69 11 ”«J$ ’J $ 78 «* 78 88 } 8 58 80 18 G4llam 64' 63 23 50 49 24 58 59 16 56 56 16 65 66 16 56 58 , 57 57 13 62 52 13 65 SO 13 62 56 67 67 60 5" 14 61l' 15 Hansing Grove 29 58 6 27 55 6 28 58 6 27 65 6 27 55 . 5 27 55 24 59 4 30 54 4' 32 61 5 2. 59 35 58 26 57 6 ' J J<>rdan ” 532773482478881372 68 18 74 88 > 8 ««1 88 88 8 78 57 3 100 34 574 59 73 60 74 54 Jl J,, J K “““ e 26 90 71 24 89 94 37 37 88 84 35 17 54 40 17 66 39 54 39 17 63 33 17 63 33 16 56 40 65 41 56 «J 65 41 J Keen<!r 28 " 71 24 " 94 37 ■ 68 43 39 89 43 39 83 41 48 84 38, 65 37 49 60 37 49 60 34 36 73 38 70 33 OS 35 36 1 661 351* Marion, No. 1. 92 96 62 92 88 63 103 108 40 92 110 39 98 139 32 127 100 109 118 15 98 135 17 lag <jr ir 11K IAC , o/ . | Marion, No. 2. 121 127 46 118 120 46 125 129 29 118 132 31 110 140 27 140 136 128 142 14 104 167 15 k! 12f !U fl! J2* J!! 100 130 18 94 125 1 23* Marion, No. 3. 86 79 40 84 75 1 36 88 90 20 78 84 18 82 100 15 99 87 99 90 5 72 115 9 Jl2 J Ins J’s 120 148 17 138 20 Marlon, No. 4. 112 67 39 111 59 44 91 96 22 72 116 22 193 86 18 121 79 131 li 13 88 IM li }» M,? }?1 94 , 89 } 9B 8 ? 8 J? 3 , 8 8 88 J MIITW 39 24 20 29 23 19 32 89 18 29 88 18 39 38 7 31 28 33 29 7 29 32 8 51 14 7 27 34 32 30 33 29 8 54 28 1 N9Wt °“ 84 88 I’ 62 56 IS 57 62 455 62 458 60 463 67 58 69 154 69 272 60 366 57 64 65 52 73 11 58 64 2/ Union, North .. 40 65 261 40 64 25 36 70 15 38 68 14 39 73 12 40 74 41 72 11 37 76 10 S 3 «n io n. os ’ I I Union, South ..66 59 24| 64 55 24 73 54 19 71 48 22 71 5,1 19 74 48 73 Walker 88 74 13 88 74 13 79 78 3 88 7 > 8 84 71 8 74 63 64 73 8 74 68 6 79 62 5 63 72 65 71 65 74 « 63 72 Wheatfield .... 99 10033 9497 33[ 107 105 17 102 96 17 100 105 17 108 101 103 104 11 134 79 11 120 89 12 95 114 97 111 100 107 13 102 102 13) T ° talS 1292 1238 694 1252 1161 676 1357 1368 402 1272|1358 399 1300 1419 36! !445>1348 135! U 54 27:) 1348 1453 294 1716 1119 ~2 76 1431 1402 1383 1443 13 28 Im ~2IG 1340 1404 ~307| Pluralties... |54 91 31 |B6 119 IQl| ! | 103 | ~fOsl ~ ‘ 1 1— I The total Prohibition vote in the county was 59—3 in Barkley East, 4in Barkley West, sin Carpenter West. 3in Carpenter South 7 in Gillam o in rionoino r< r , v j ———■ ner, 7in Marion No. 1,2 in Marion No. 2,2 in Marion No. 3,3 in Marion No. 4, lin Milroy, lin Newton, 3in Union North, 3in Union South, 2in Walker ° J ° ldan * Iln Rankak ee, lin KeeThere were 14 Socialist votes 2in Barkley East, 3 Carpenter West, lin Hanging Grove, lin Keener, lin Marlon No. 1,2 in Marion No 2 lin Marion No 21 in N«wtnn it tt « XT \ - Groandyke, independent candidate for state senator, received 22 votes—l in Barkley West, 2in Carpenter West, 6in Kankakee, lin Marion No. 3. sin Uirion North, lin Walker, 6 eld Wheatflel<L
Public Sale of 160 Acre Farm and Personal Property. The undersigned will sell at public sale at his residence, 4 miles south and % miles west of McCoysburg, 7 miles north and % mile east of Wolcott, 7 miles west of Monon, on the Fred Saltwell farm, commencing at 10:00 a. m., on Wednesday, November 20th, 1912 8 Head of Horses— consisting of Gray (horse, 5 years old, sound, wt. 1,600; 1 gray mare 2 years old, sound, wt 1,100; 1 spring colt, gray, mare; 1 Bay Driving Mare, 6 years old, wt. 1,000. 1 Bay driving mare, 7 years old, weight 900. Well broken to harness and saddle; 1 brown driving mare, 7 years old, wit.; about 1,100, well bred and a great roadster, supposed to be in foal by a standard bred trotting horse; 1 suckling colt, 6 months old by side of the brown mare and out of sta/ndard bred sire, black and a fine colt ; 1 bay roadster coming 2, well bred and a fine worker. 19 head of Cattle — Consisting of 7 good Milk cows ranging in age from 3 to 8 years; 5 yearling heifers; 7 spring calves. 26 head of Hogs— Consisting of 25 shoats, wt. from 100 tO’ ITo lbs., and one Duroc male hog. Implements, Binders, Mowers, Etc —Consisting of 1 Deering binder; 1 Deering mower; 1 walking breaking plow, 14-inch; 1 sulky plow, 16inch; 1 disc; I Janesville riding cultivator; 1 Edison graphophone and numerous other articles. Terms— slo and under cash in hand; 12 months credit without interest on sums over $lO with the usual conditions; 6 per cent off for cash where entitled to credit. LUDD CLARK. 160-Acre Farm— At the same time and place, the Saltwell farm of 160 acres will be sold. Farm is all under cultivation except 40 acres of grass and timber pasture; 300 rods tile, good outlet for drainage. Good sixroom house, cellar; good drilled well, wind pump; good barn will hold 25 head of stock; double corn crib, granary, orchard, well fenced. Any prospective purchaser will be shown over the place, transportation free, by the auctioneer, Fred Phillips, of Rensselaer. “Terms On Farm— ssoo cash day of sale, balance 1-3 including this SSOO on Jan. 1, 1913. Remainder in five equal payments at 5 per cent interest; 2 per cent off on all itaoney paid Jan. 1, 1913, orver and above the amount due on that date. Farm will be sold clear and abstract furnished wlith 1912 taxes due in 1913 paid. FRED SALTWELL. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spitler, Clerk. Hot Lunch on ground.
Do You Need sss $ ? We Guarantee Positions for Our Graduates Where they can earn sss $ $ Write us about it Huntington Business Uuiversity Huntington, Indiana F. C. WILLIAMS, Mgr.
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Under the postal rules we are given but a limited time to secure renewals of subscription, and unless renewals are made within the specified time we must cut the name of the subscriber from our list. We want to re> tain all our old subscribers, and to this end we ask you to examine the date on the label of yojjn ß paper and, if in arrears, W&II and renew or send in your renewal by mail. Unless you do this we have no alternative in the matter but must drop your name from our list at the expire ation of the time limit given us by the postal rules to secure renewal.
Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue of a certified copy of a Deree to me directed from the Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court, in a cause wherein The Prudential Insurance Company of America, a corporation, is Plaintiff, and Isaac Kight is Defendant, requiring me to make the sum of Six Thousand, Eight Hundred Fifty-two dollares and Sixty-two cents, with interest on said decree and costs, I will expose to 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 Rensselaer, Jasper County, Indiana, the rents and for a term not exceeding seven years, of the Real Estate, to-wit: The North one-half of the northeast quarter and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, and the north sixty acres of the southwest quarter, all in section eleven (11) , in Township thirty (30) North, Range six (6) West, in Jasper County, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said Decree, interests and costs, I will at the same time and place expose to Public Sale 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. George A. Williams Attorney for Plaintiff. October 24, A. D., 1912. Try a box of our Wild Rose or Homespun linen finish note paper for your correspondence. Only 35c and 40c per box, 102 sheets. Envelopes to match at 10c per package. Buy your box stationery and envelopes at The Democrat office.
FATHER’S SCALES AN AID TO LITTLE COPID
How the Housekeeper Successfully Engineered Love Affair.
By J. T. GREENLEAF.
“Did you get any satisfaction about our marriage out of father this morning. Paul?” Brownie Weston asked her lover as they were pacing the broad piazza of the Weston home in the April dusk. ■‘jfes and no,” answered the young man. ‘‘He said: ‘When I'm in danger of going to jail on account of my sharp practices or some woman ropes me into marrying her, you may have Brownie.’ ” “That’s father all over,” she laughed. “How he does enjoy a war of wits, especially with you! Let’s think about it, for I don’t believe it’s a wholly idle speech. Tell me something else that has happened today with you.” “Absolutely a gray blank in every espect. We’ve been hauling potatoes to the car for him to ship—but yes, there was one little thing that was interesting. Widow Aikins brought two bushels of the tubers, and when I weighed the outfit again it fell short 60 pounds, showing one bushel only.” “That’s queer,” the girl flashed. ‘What did you do?” “Registered it for two bushels and gave her a credit slip accordingly.” “Then his scales are wrong,” Brownie cried. “If they are, he doesn’t know it. He’s the most obstinate, cantankerour, old —” “Sh—sh—■” the girl ordered, layng a slim, brown hand over the farmer’s mouth, “you mustn’t speak n that derogatory way of your future father-in-law! ” ‘‘A—a—mighty long way in the future,” sputtered Paul, getting the obstruction to free sueech in his hand as he went on; “but even then he’s honest and square.” “I’m glad you think so, but I know him better than you do, and there’s more in it than shows,” she pursued. “Tomorrow, every load you bring to him, you weigh at home and then
"Your—Your Scales, Mr. Weston"
weigh back the crates on your own. scales and tell me about it when you Come over In the evening.” “That’s silly, darling,” Paul declared. “If there’s an inaccuracy he doesn’t know It, and if it should turn out that he does, you and I couldn’t
tHst- «... . catch him. i Know were isn't. He's honest.” "You mind me, Paulsie,” the daughter of Hiram Weston ordered, “for there’s something doing, I know.” This reminder of Weston’s own spirit was enforced by something < that topped the young man’s mouth. The following morning a solid bit of humanity, Hannah Arbuthnot, queenly, even in her dark blue calico drejs said to Brownie: “What’s the matter with my baby?” “Nothing new, dearie,” replied the girl. “Just the old story—father won’t let me marry Paul. He keps jollying us along. You know what a dear, trying mischievous old angel he is!” “What's he done now?” asked the housekeper, hitching her portly self up on the broad kitchen table and gathering Brownie in her strong arms. A few words told the latest developments and then Hannah soliloquized: i “He said that, did he? You leave him to me. We’ll see what your oldmaid foster-mother can do for her baby. He wanted to marry me once, you know.” “When Weston drove In, tired, wet and muddy, that evening, Hannah caught a lantern and slipped out to the barn, saying as she closed the door: “You give him his supper, little girt” Toward the end of the satisfying meal, Weston remarked with his eyes taking in the beauty of the girl: “You remind me so much of your mother. Brownie I ” “That’s a great coifipliment, father, for they say she was a handsome woman.” “She certainly was,” he agreed; “but what’s Hannah up to, taking core of old Kitty for me and all? She hasn’t heard of my proposition to that riow, good boy lover of yours, has she?” "What would she try to do if she had?” “She might think I'd ask her to marry me, especially if you two got your heads together to beat an old man," he chuckled. “But Hl never do that twice to the same woman!” A light step on the porch took the girl to the door, and Paul was usherd into the parlor. “Well, what about the weights?" asked the little lady at once. “Each load was about 60 pounds short; but he don’t know it, Pm sure,” was the report. * “All right,” she responded, with her eyes dancing with mischief. “I’ll call him in and you tell him.” “I? I? Tell your father! I’d rather i face a locomotive!” he exclaimed. “But don’t you think he ought to know It?” “Why—yes. He certainly—” he ’ stammered, as she called out through the open door into the dining room: “Father, Paul and I don’t agree about a matter and we want your advice. Hannah, you better come, too!” . . “What Is it all about?” Weston asked, going directly to Paul, who was as white as marble, lijs and hands in a tremor. As the reply was slow in coming, there was a second demand: “Out with it!” “Ycur —your—scales, • Mr. Weston, are wrong, but I don’t —” . “My scales wrong?” the older man burst out “Why you young—you young—and right in my own house "I—l thought you ought to know it, sir,” Paul babbled. Then he told his story.” “But I’m sure you didn’t know it,” he added. "And you and Brownie aren’t lntandlne to tt in response to my
proposition ardayl" “Oh, no, be fair unless you knew it. You’re honest, sir.”
“Well, sir, I did know it,” said Weston, handing Brownie the round, iron disk that represents 300 pounds as a weigWt. “Turn it over, Kitten. See that little wad of lead. That made the overweight that Paul found. I used it on his own outfit and the widow’s, to see how far he was watching his own Interest.” “Then may I have Brownie?” gasped Paul
“Not much,” cried Weston, “I'm in no danger of going to jail for sharp practices, am I?” “May I say a word or two?” demurely asked Hannah.
“Sure,” assented Weston, "I’m in the hands of the Philistines, but I’m too much for the whole of you.” “Please read that,” said Hannah passing an old letter to Brownie. After a minute of scanning the missive the girl said: “This is a proposal of marriage from Hiram Weston to Hannah Arbuthnot, dated six years ago. Its concluding sentence provides that the offer holds good for ten years, as an evidence of good faith.” ( Looking Weston squarely in his eyes, Hannah declared: “And now I accept!”' ■'• Gathering the regal figure In his arms and looking at Paul and Brownie over the shapely shoulder, Weston cried: “Roped! By thunder!” (Copyright, 1912, by Associated Literary Press.)
NOT HIS TIME FOR REVENGE
Circumstances Seemed Favorable for the Moment, but the Luok Would Not Hold.
Aboard the great ship the silence of 'despair reigned. She had struck on 'an uncharted reef, and, owing to the [heavy sea, the boats had either been ! stove in against the ship’s side or swamped In the attempt to lower. A stalwart passenger stole up to the captain’s side. “Do you think, sir,” he aSked, “that there Is the slightest chance of our being saved?” “Look here,” said the skipper, in tones of disgust, “that’s the sixth time you’ve asked me that question. Why, you great lubberly brute, I believe you’re the biggest coward aboard!" “8 —sh! No, I’m not,” protested the burly one. "But, look here. You see that old duffer standing by the rail? Well, he’s my rich uncle, and all my life I’ve had to put up with his cussed cantankerousness. But If the ship’s going down, and there’s no hope, I’d like time to give him one good, sound kick to square the little account I owe him!”
Just then a rescue ship appeared on the scene and above the joyful shout the raucous voice of the old man by the rail was heard, commanding his dutiful nephew to fetch his hot water bottle from his water-logged stateroom. V
Do you read ’’’he Democrat? I « 1 HI! H-h-b+M I ill | |. 3.We are paying for Butter fat this week 32c WILLIAM H. DEXTER Rensselaer, Wwvia
Carnegie Institute.
The Carnegie Institute, Washington,, was founded by Mr. Andrew Carnegie' January 28, 1902, when he gave the board of trustees the sum of $10,000,000 in registered bonds, yielding 5 per l cent, annual interest. He stated, in general terms, that his purpose was, to “found In the city of Washington, an institution which, with the cooperation of institutions now or hereafter established, there or elsewhere,, shall in the broadest and most liberal! manner encourage Investigation, research and discovery, show the application of kno>,._- ow uxu improvement of mankind, and provide such buildings, laboratories, books and apparatus as may be needed.” Mr. Carnegle added $2,00(1,000 to his gift In 1907.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ) Lucas County. ) 8H - Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior partner of the flrm of F. J. Cheney & Po., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hull’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. <■. 'Sworn tn me and subscribed in my presence, this Gth day of December, A. D. 1886. (Seal.) A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by an jun uggnsis, i sc. Take Hall’s Family Fills for constipation. The Girl With— Beautiful Hair Attracts Attention Everywhere There is one sure and certain way for every woman to have beautiful hair, and that is to give it intelligent care, which includes the use of Newbros Herpidde. This remarkable preparation kills absolutely the dandruff germ, eradicates dandruff and prevents the hair from falling. The prophylactic action of Herpidde keeps the hair free from disease, and with the scalp sweet and clean a natural hair growth is inevitable. Herpidde hair scintillates with health and vigor, light and luster, produced only by the wellknown scalp and hair dressing, Newbro’s Herpicide. One dollar size bottles sold with a guarantee •f money back if not as represented. B. F. FENDIG Agent, Rensselaer. || < 1 i! wr Is u I X JOHN G. CULP « I ’ I General ’» AUCTIONEER;! .—Phone 517-1 < l P. O. PLEASANT GROVE, IND. j ] I Dates may be arranged Direct or at !» < J The Democrat Office, Rensselaer, Ind. I ' Satisfaction Guaranteed. !;
