People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 August 1893 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

cated, giving the true assets and liabilities of the same at all times, sworn to by the president and cashier of the bank. the?e statements to be published daily if possible and at least weekly, and the officers certifying falsely to be subject to conviction of a penitentiary offense.—Streator (III.) Free Press.

Judge F. C. Price, better known among us as Clark Price, spent last week with his parents on the old homestead near town. Mr. Price has met with well deserved success since going to Kansas, having served in the legislative body of that state. He is now judge of the thirtyfirst judicial district, which embraces three large and populous counties. That Judge Price wears the erraiue with an eye single to the merits of the*case, all who know him will believe. After a visit with relatives and friends in Hartford City, |nd.. and Sandusky, 0., he will return to this place with his wife and daughter to attend a reunion of the Price family, at the home of his parents, the latter part of this month.—Remington Press. Nicholas Zimmer applied for license to marry his divorced wife, Anna, Tuesday. He only had a dollar and the clerk trusted him for the balance. The license is not apt to be used, however, as his former wife refused point blank to marry him after he obtained the license. He left her sitting in a wagon while he went for the license. After he obtained it he could be seen pleading with her, but she seemed obstinate and he returned to the clerk’s office presumably to return the license and get back his dollar, but the clerk had gone. Zimmer is a worthless drunkard and has wasted the proceeds from the sale of his farm and is now trying to get his former wife to remarry him, iu order to get his paws on what money she has left, but if he is successful it will be through fear on her part. They live in Carpenter township and were divorced in April, 1891.

Arthur E. Linebach, a tailor at Remington, has brought suit for divorce against his erring and erratic wife Augusta. They were married in May, 1888, and lived together as man and wife until June, 1890. In May of that year the trouble began, and Murphy charges his wife with adultery with one Murphy. He also charges her with indiscretion with certain men at a hotel known as the “Golden- Spike” at Lima, Ohio. The defendant was also guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment, so he says, that she used the most obscene and profane language toward him and his sisters. This did not, seem to satisfy her anger ana she threatened to kill him and attacked him with a heavy pair of tailor’s shears and at another time with a butcher knife. Lineback, however, escaped with his life. He prays Judge Wiley to grant him a divorce.