People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 January 1895 — Page 5

t ßlacksmith and ■Wood Repair Shop . ■ M. L. HEMPHILL wants your trade. He is preparea ■ to do all kiuds of Blacksmithing and Wood Repairing in I a workmantike manner and at reasonable prices. He ■ keeps two expert horse shoers employed constantly ■ and makes a specialty of this branch of the business ■ 1 ALL WORK GUARANTEED. H /f ~T~ T ~T I*ll Brick shop on Front st„ BzVi Av. Memphill, Si2 oo ' u,Mckui " 1 Kohler Brick and Tile Yard! H JOHN KOH LER Prop’r. H : New machinery of the most improved pattern has been added Hand we are prepared to take contracts for brick and tile in any We make tile in all sizes from 3 to 12 inch, and will in prices with any kiln in the country Call for prices. Yard located one mile west of Rensselaer. ■/i Free delivery any place lu town. ■ JOHN KOHL 1

MOIIDECAIF. CIHLCOTK, I Rensselaer, Ind ■ Attends to all business in the profession with promptness and dispatch. Office in secInd story of the Makeover building. 1. .UeCuy, Pres. T. J. HcOoy, Vice Pres. I K. Hollingsworth, Cashier. I’tj , A. it. Hopkins. Assistant Cashier. PCOY«W.S tat ■Does a general banking business, Money ■st ned for short time at current rates. We lake u specialty of LCXikIbTS ■ long time with privilege of partial payBi. 1.1. Sears. Pres. Vai, Seib. Cashier ■ F. L. Chii.cotk, Asst. Cashier. liie Gitizeas State Bank. ■pital Paid iu *BO,OOO. ■ Undivided Profits *8,500. ■irganized as a State Bank Jan. 1, 1888. ■itgeneral banking business. Interest alBted on special deposits. Thisbankis exBMecl quarterly by the Auditor of State. has never been a failure of a bank orBiued under this law. Money loaned on Bfrtthue. Exchange bought and sold on all Baking points. Collections made and Bia'tly remitted. i J. C. THRAWLS, Ipeyor and Engineer ■Dfiicc with the County Super■eudeut, in Williams & Stock■i\s block, Hssselaeii, Indiana. H-cb 2d. i*M.

H. L. BROWN, D. D.S. id VilUnuK, Crown and Bridge 'lt. Teeth IF it h out Platem a Spec K. Gas or vitillzed air administered tor in less extraction of teeth. Give me a . Office over Porter & Wishard’s. VIES W. DOUTHIT, * lawyer; TSSEL.AER - INDIANA lew Meat Market IRtVISIOX llflOS. Proprietors. p located opposite the public square, rthiug fresh and clean. Fresh ana salt 5, game, poultry, etc. Please give us a md we will guarantee to give you satis•n. Remember the place. ZETOiRTOIs'. a iENTAL SURGEON. | RENSSELAER. IND. Who would preserve tlieir na* oral teeth d give him a call. Special attention kto tilling teeth. Gass or vitalized air linless extraction of teeth. Office over a Bros.

| Cure For filoadaclie. || a remedy for all forms of I ache electric bitters has I*ed to be the very best. It ftjts a permanent cure and the H dreaded habitual sickheudWk yield to its influence. We ■ykll who are afflicted to proII a bottle, and give, this Kdy a fair trial. In cases of ||ual constipation electric Bps cures by giving the needBlne to the bowels, and few I long resist the use of this I cine. Try it once. Large l'3S only fifty cents at P. B. I irs Drug Store. ■ you are going to set trees 1 ‘all, give me a call. I sell jftsest stock at very low prices. *_ 2-year-old grape vines at ft ts each, ready for delivery I October 10th. Nursery ■ alf mile uortheast of P oies- ■ Ind. J. A. Woodjuc.

BUCK UN’S ARNICA SALVE. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hanps, chilblains, corns and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. B Meyer. VMS3v :: : A NARROFeSCAPE! How it Happened. The following remarkable event in a lady'* life will Interestthc reader: "For a long time 1 had a terrible pain at my heart, which liut"eretl almost incessantly. Iliad no appetite and could not sleep. I would be compelled i o sit up iu lied ana belch gas from my stomach until I thought every minute would be my last. There was a feeUng of oppression about my heart, and I was afraid to draw a full breath. >1 couldn’t sweep a room without sitting down and resting; but, thank oixl, by the help of Now Heart Cure all that :,s past and I feel like another womau. Beoro using the New Heart Cure I had taker -afferent so-called remedies and beeil treated iy donors without any benefit until I was oth discouraged and disgusted. My husband ought me a bottle of Dr. Miles’ New Heart • .ire, and am happy to say ! never regretted ''» as 1 now have a splendid appetite and •deep well. I weighed 125 pounds when I be jran taking the remedy, and now I weigh 130)4. Its effect in my case has been truly marvelous. It far surpasses any other medicine I have ever taken or any benefit I ever re cuived from physicians.”—Mrs. Harry Starr, J’ottsvllle, Pa., October 12,1892. Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure is sold on a post tlye guarantee by all druggists, or by the Dr Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind., on receipt of price, slper bottle, six bottles fi>, express pre paid. This great discovery by an eniinem specialist In heart disease, contains neither opiates nor dangerous drugs.

W. L. Douglas $3 SHOEno^:^ Sind other specialties for ■ntlemen, Ladle*, Boy* id Misses are the Best in the World. See descriptive advertise, cnt which appears |a this Take no Scfeetitnte. slst on having W. I„ DOUGLAS' SHOES, with name and price tmrvwl on hotto-i. Sold by ELLIS & MURRAY. AGENTS WANTED. Vital Questions of I'oilicnl lirvniuftne Day. I for 11 road. COVKYIS' I . SiHUo*. iti •1' i uloyed. GREAT LAI'OK of tht 1) reseat and the fill urc*. "larT hens a ion. The Silver Question. W'-ni PROTECTION sloes for tho Anierienn Wnrkiutin. 'that FKEE TKAIIE does for him. A I took i», the hour. Everybody warns ii„ I'riee only :?1.30. Sells ilt SiiMu Most Uhi'ral teniis ♦<> nt'ents, Sen>l for ciretilars or send 2a ei-nts for a rent’s outfit, iitoiK-e. I*. W. ZIKUJ.KIt & CO.. 720 Chestnue St. lMilhnhldtii'i. l’n.

Tlie Discovery Saved Ills l.ife. Mr. G. Caillouet’e. Dimrgist, Beaverviile. 11l , says: “To Dr. King’s Now Discovery I owe my life. Was taken with LaG-rippe and tried a'! t'ie physicians for miles abou!, but of no avail aud was given up and told T could not live. Having Dr. King’s New Discovery in my store I sent for a bott'e and betran its use and from the first dose began to-get better, and after using three bottles was up and about again. It is worth its weight in gold. We won’t keep store or house without it.” Get a free trial at F. B. Meyer’s Drug Store

|MSDCt>9 a* llnlf IgEjflfl jBgEpB ||ißh| IgSgll |SBh| REWARD! F@R ANY SMOBBY FOBNB IN MENBERSON’S. NO. 1.000 SATIN CALF NOT IN . 1,000 Years will you find a shoe that fits, wears and looks so well for so litttle money.

For Sale By PORTER & YEOMAN. Rensselaer, - Indiana;

A FEARFUL COUCH Spctdlly Cured by AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL §“My wife was © suffering from a C fearful cough, ® which the best © medical skill pro- 0 ; curable was una- ® ble to relieve. We © did not expect © that she eould long ® survive; but Mr. <5 R. V. Royal, de;>- © uty surveyor, h-i;v----4 - pened to be stop- o ping with us over night, and having n O bottle of Ayer’s Cherry Pectonl with ® him, induced my wife to try this remedy, o The result was so lieneftclal, that she ® kept on taking It, till she was cured. © Bhe Is now enjoying exeollcnt health, o and weighs 160 pounds.”—R. 8. Humphribs, Sanssy, Ga. 0 Ayer’s Cherry Pectorals Received Highest Awards ° AT THI WORLD’S FAIR ® &00OPQAft.9OQA.OQAOgg.gj>.9..O<>o|

FROM WASHINGTON.

An Interertlng Batch of Kewa From ttieCapllol. From our Regular Correspondent. Washington, Dec. 28. 1894 Sensational statements concerning whaj congress would do with the currency bill when ii resumed business have followed each other thick and fast this week and, although many of them were so that they aTe nos fßJrth mentioning, othttfs had h foundation based upsp truth. Among the last was the statement that the Democrats were so equally divided on the bill that the Republicans of -the house would lave the power of deciding whether the ,bill should be passed or defeated. This sound'd quite improvable when first nade, but when it was publicly . eiterated by J udge Culbertson, •f Texas, a member of the house v ommittee on bankiag and cur- .• mcy, it took on a different aspect. Judge Culbertson said: T believe that the Republicans ’rave it in their power to pass or defeat the bill, and I have no idea that they will help to pass t.” Another statement that is true is that the Democrats op iosed to the bill are tayitigto ;et votes enough pledged to deeat it in the democratic caucus hat is to be held next week, if they succeed there will probably be no caucus. • • • If it becomes necessary in order to prevent the outright defeat of the currency bill, without a vote in the house, to aban lon the proposed house democratic caucus it is believed to be ihe intention of the administration to attempt to duplicate the tactics adopted last year to pass the silver repeal bill through the senate. That is, to seek a combination between the republicans and the administration nen. In order to test the sentiment of the republicans and the administration men. In order to test the sentiment of the republicans in the house some of them have been asked by friends of the administration whether t ley would support the currency bill if the state bank currency section, to which the republic ns are unalterably opposed, were dropped.

Mr. Matthew Griftin, owner of •„a influential New York financial paper, is visiting Washing - im. He doesn’t take a bright new of the business outlook for l <95. He said: “There is absolutely no ground for believing that there will be any great improvement in business for the next six mouths. A great many People pin their faith to achange in the currency laws. I don’t relieve the adoption of anew monetary system would mend matters a particle. Europe is poor; is in want of money and unloads her American securities upon us, so as to draw upon us continuously for gold Our farmers are getting nothing for their products, and our railroads are not earning any money. What congress can do to relieve this state of things is

past my comprehension. * All we can do is to wait and hope. ” That congress could do much is oertain, but that it will do nothing appears to be equally certain to the minds of many of its members. For instance, Representative Walker, of Mass., who claims to have been the first to suggest the idea of extending the currency of national banks, which is a part of the Carlisle currency bill, thinks things are practically in a dead lock. He says: “Financial legislation at this session of congress is impossible under present conditions, the whole question being so strangely muddled by the administration, which does not seem to have any conception of what legislation is necessary to compose the finances of the country and especially to relieve the treasury from the con* stant demands for gold.”

• • • Chairman Springer, who is in charge of the currency bill, has served notice upon Mr. Bland that when he attempts to offer his bill for the issue of coin and coin notes by the government as a substitute for the Carlisle currency bill he intends to raise a point of order against it, on the ground that it is not germane to the question that will be under consideration, and from another source Mr. Bland has learned that the program is all arranged to have that point of order sustained and his bill thrown out. There is likely to be a hard fight on this question, as every democratic membor of the house who oelieves in the free coinage of silver will have to choose between supporting Mr. Bland’s bill and reversing himself. • • • The story of a serious revoluion in Hawaii, which was telegraphed from San Francisco his week, found few believers n Washington, and is thought o have no better foundation • ban the story of the arrest of a Few royal oonspiritors, particulars of which came by a steamer that left everything quiet on the islands a week after those arrests. • • • It is said that several parties i imposed of members of the house who are opposed to the Nicaragua Canal bill are enjoyi ig holiday pleasure trips at the expense of the canal lobby. Of course a little thing like that isn’t likely to change any votes.

Jurors for the January Term.

GRAND JURORS. Andrew Misch, Isaac D Walker, Alfred Donnelly, Jacob Keener, W. A. Brown and James Letter. PETIT JURORS. Wm. H. Meyers, George 0. Stembel, John R. Wilsou, R. B. Porter, Holdridge Clark, Harrison Mitchell, E. L. Holliugsvorth, Felix French, John W. King, W. A. Isley, Francis J. Gant, Berry Paris, A. J. Bellows, Simeon Dowell, George H. Hawkins, and Peter Wasson. Hunters, C. E. Hersbman pays the highest market price for game. Give him a call. For good board aud lodging go to the Comer House. W. N. Jones offers his services to those who have sales ihis f til. W. N. is an old experienced crier. Give him a call. Farmers, haul your grain to Hartley Bros, and receive Romingtc n and Geodland prices. ’ Blessed is the man that liveth iu Rensselaer and hath nothing for he does not have to pay a tax of *8.22 on the SIOO. “Blessed is nothing.

Rensselaer Market. Oats 26-29 cents. Wheat 45 cents. Corn, new 34-35 cents. Hay $5-6.50. Potatoes 50 cents. Butter 15 cents. Eggs 18 cents. ■ W ' rl i Call and see those beautiful stoves at C. E. Hershman’s.