Rensselaer Republican, Volume 12, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 December 1879 — Page 2
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN. ’ M. BITTERS, Editor. Thursday Morning, Dec. JI, J 879.
• The currency questio want* to be let alone. 1/ any congressman attempt* further lesislation on the finances, “slioot him on the spot.'* Tho census of 1880 will unearth meny heretofore unheard of election frauds in the Southern States, and give as th* number of persons murdered for their political opinions. The work of reclaiming Indiana should commence immediately.— What we need most Represent is thorough local organization and a vigorous canvass. The days of brass bands, big processions and longspeeches are gone by. Good Re publicaiL newspapers, personal efforts and a united action will best accomplish the end desired. Gen. Mirton C. Hunter, Gen. John Coburn and Cui. Billy Williams are favorably mentioned as Republican candidates for Governor at our coining State convention. Col. Wolff, of Rushville, wants to be Auditor of Slate. D. P. Baldwin, of Logansport, and Edgar Haymond, of Warsaw, aspire-to the position of Supreme Judge.
•The Greenbackers in Congress being nearly out of soap are putting forth every effort to keep the wheels of their parly in motion. A Mr. Weaver, of lowa, has introduced a bill recommending the paying of soldiers an J sailors of the late war the amount they would have received if they had been paid in gold instead of greenbacks. That would be a “salary grab” on a big scale. _ The Republican State Central Committee have not yet issued a ca|j for tho holding of the State convention for the nomination of State officers on the 25th of February? There is now milch opposition to making the nominations at that time and possibly this part of the programme will be delayed until in Junepr July. They will not decide on this matter, however, until after the time and place have been fixed for the holding of the National convention. - - » We.take pleasure in announcing the name of our fellow townsman, Mr. Horace E. James, as- a candidate for the office of Secretary of State. He is a fimrpatriot, a sound Republican, a faithful worker and an upright citizen, and if position ■can be merited in the Republican ranks he richly deserves the place he seeks. He served bis country faithfully and well during the late “unpleasantness”and has since won fur himself a name among the leading men of the State. He has been
favorably menliorted by a large number of our exchanges, and if we mistake not he will receive the unanimous support of this congres. sional district We find the name of Stilion P. Thompson, of this place, frequently mentioned in our exchanges as a gentleman most worthy to become the Republican nominee for Con- ’ gross in this congressional district. If he could be induced to run for the nomination he w'ould in all probability be successful. Jasper, Benton and Newton counties would go lor him solid, and he would get a very respectable, following from Lake, Porter, Pulaski, and White. He is a good speaker and every way qualified for the position. A Republican in whom there is no guile, never faltering, never doubting the wisdom of his party and the final triumph of its principles. His extreme modesty alone prevents him from making the .race against those who have a greater desire for the position, but as a rule those most capable and deserving .of office make the least effort to secure it. 7 The chief interest in the President's message is the opportunity of which he takes advantage, to applaud the brilliant success of the Republicans in tile great national measures undertaken against Democratic predictions of failure and active Democratic opposition. The suggestions made by the President arc very wise-and appropriate, but there is an absence of any topic of thrilling interestthat has not already . been thoroughly discussed. If the President had told the Democrats what to. do with their majority in Congress so as to avoid disgusting the country by acts of blind folly, he would have told them a good deal more than they know now. It is one thing to have power and another thing to know how to use it wisely. About the latter the Democrats have shown they know very -little, but they have gone so far that to go back would be a surrender, to go ahead' dangerous. We shall see how they get oat of their dilemma.
There is no need that this regular session of Congress just opened should be a dull or profitless one. The political preparations of the Democrats for 1880 having been attended to at the special session with more or less effect on the country, favorable or otherwise, the president in bis mewMgo has
furnished one partlcalar subject for earnest discussion and wise legislation. He has met the sentiment of the country in the remark that there is now no reason why the lawn against polygamy as practiced by the Mormons shall jjot be carried out. All respectable people agree with him. and Congress, by taking such action as will secure the punishment of any man who cohabits with more than one wife, will effect the stamping ost of a crying evil, now reproach of the republic. Here ia ani opportunity for the Democratic majority to brush away from its record some of the odium of incompetency and folly in which its- acts thus far have enshrouded it. It can be said that the whole people of the United States feel keenly a sense of humiliation that for so many years all our best statesmanship has been defeated in its attempts to suppress the openly-indulged crime of a small class of citizens. Mormonism hat been too great a problem for the wisdom of successive administration to cope with. One great excuse for the Republicans that they have not accomplished the needed reform and imposed effectual restraints on the offenders, is that their time had been too much occupied during the years- of their ascendency with civil war and efforts to save the country from ruin by rebellion and repudiation. When the salvation of the union against these two great dangers had been made permanent the Democrats got the control of congress, and have thus far wasted the time and energies of that body in measures looking towards a political victory for their party next year. But now they have exhauMed the patience of the nation in that kind of useless legislation; they have got very little chance of benefiting themselves ip that way, and they have an open and fair field in which to grapple with and subdue the Mormon iniquities. We should think they would jump eagerly at the opportunity.) It is a clear path of progress in which they can earn the good will of the country. But a Democratic majority in congress is a queer institution and is not to be judged by the usual standards; and there is no telling what it will or what it will not do.
Of the Spirtualists, if they are to be regarded as a sect, it is to be said that they are quietly persistent and have settled down to the conduct of their affairs on a basis of practical methods, surrounding which there is an air of common sense. We suppose Spiritualists still believe in various extraordinary manifestations, but latterly we do not find them supporting the knavery of such men as Bliss and others whose repeated impostures have made the associations of Spiritualism so unpleasantly redic ulous. 'Spiritualism asahigh gifted taaghetism is a genuine force and produces beyond doubt some wonderful phenomena proven by the evidence of honest and respectable men and women; but it is to be said that those who have exhibited the most remarkable intuitions would be affronted to be told that they are Spiritualists. The marketablequality of Spiritualism for sale by clairvoyants and fortune-tellers of different, grades is a counterfeit and worthless commodity. Those connected wfth its sale to the public at large will always be enveloped in a cloud of very merited obloquy. However, there is an honest place in this acceptance of supernatural interference in worldly affairs where a sincere believer may retain the purity of his speculations for a time while he turns a penny to keep soul aud body together. This is done by a few publishers-of journals devoted to inquiry and study, in this mysterious direction. Our attention has been called to the subject by receiving the prospectuses of several Spiritualistic journals along with others, at this season when publishers generally are announcing their attractions for the new year. We qbserve that one or two of this class of journals must have a welltodo constituency, because their subscription price range from S 3 to $4 .per year, they are published weekly, and good material and workmanship are employed in their make up. They have run for several years, have an Appearance* of prosperity, and force the conclusion that there are enough people anxious to read literature relating to Spiritualism to make it pay tn supply {he want. There is a present quiet in Spiritualistic affairs, but does not by any means prove that they are notoccupying a large share of attention.
The Indian question has its bright side too. Secretary Schurz says that most of the Indians now in charge of the department have settled down into steady habits, go no more on the war-path and are rapidly learning to make their living. The incorrigibles who will aot work and persist in living in their old savage way are growing less numerous, and will in a short time yield to the same influences that are now producing excellent results among their raoe. Such massacrees as that of agent Meeker and his cm-
ployees in Colorado are but spasms of a dying barbarism, and in a little time henee will be Impossible. Any thing like a sufficient foree of soldiers to guard the frontier would repress all the dangerous tendencies of the Indians and aseur opener. But where there are wild Indians filled with false notions of their rights and believing themselves to be systematically swindled, and where there are no soldiers to make refractory spirits realize the consequences of rebellion and murder, it is folly to expect that all the troubles and calamities oi the Indian question will immediately disappear. Nobody does expect this, and we believe the general opinion of the people is that so long as the Indiana are controlled under the present system, which is patriarchal rather than business-like, the system has the best management of which it is capable. Some of the Indians are most excellent people. They have been under the instruction and influence of missionaries for over a hundred years. They have learned to read, write, clothe themselves in conventional raiment and to pursue lite art* of industry and peace. The majority of The Indians can truthfully be said to give no trouble and to be well-behaved, prosperous, happy and steadily acquiring propel ty. Of these we seldom hear anything, because the bad characters who are a minority do all the war making, the killing and the burning, and make all the noise. While the government has been doing all it could for the Indians against rascally agents and* swindling contractors, the missionaries have done a most effective work in their quiet way. ,■
Malignant diseases that carry off generally more than one of the family info which the malady may enter are reported from different parts of the country, and afford reasonable occasion for alarm on tho part of parents. Several towns in Canada are suffering a heavy mortality from ■a violent type of diphtheria; private advices from Ohio state that in some of the smaller towns a disease is prevailing with fatal effect, the character and cure of which has not yet been discovered by the phy sicians, although they know it to embrace all the woist elements of black measles and diphtheria. The doctors, the newspapers report from other localities, have also a genuine diphtheria to contend with in the rural districts. We incline, from all the reports of the epidemics we have seen, to the belief that they are all diphtheria and not much else. One peouliarity of these visitations this winter is that they are not epidemic in large cities, nor yet in large towns; nor do they spring suddenly into a general prevalence. The rule thus far has been that they begin and progress slowly toward their full development in a neighborhood and run their full career in defiance of the skill of the most eminent physicians. In some towns it has been so unmistakably diphtheria that we can safely ascribe the calamities in the other parts of the country where so many children are dying to the same virulent cause. One of-our exchanges goes so far as to say that in its quiet way diphtheria has shown itself to be, during the sum. mer, fall and early winter of 1879, a more truculent aud incurable malady than cholera. The result of this year’s experience with diphtheria has been to prove that it prevails with about the same symtoms and severity in warm and cold weather, and medical science has been put to the necessity of ‘either furnishing some effective specific remedy or acknowledging that their influence over, as ovei yellow fever and cholera, is exceedingly limited. In this connection we have a fresh and pointed illustration of how big and great this country has become. Ten years ago the number of deaths that have occurred in 1879 from yellow fever and diphtheria would have impressed the general public with a sense of extraordinary peril in the presence of pestilence. Now we calmly bear of the mortality being unusual in various localities, and wonder with a rather lanquid curiosity why the situation is as it is, and how soon it is likely that the maladies will spend their force or be mastered by the doctors. We realize that it requires a vast amount of disease and .sickness to bring us" anywhere near the sense of being plague striken.
Inter Ocean: It wasn’t much of an election held in Louisiana on Tuesday, only local officials being balloted for. But, as appears from the New Orleans dispatches, it was enough of an election to lead, in Delta Parish, to the hanging of two Republicans, one of whom was lately a postmaster, the whipping of another who was guilty of being an ex-sberiff, and the running of yet twenty-five others out of the parish. The result was a tremendous Democratic victory at the polls. The Republicans did not vote, is the mild form in which the situation is indicated in the dispatches. The facts bear their own commentary, to- which no words could give additional emphasis. They disclose how much remains to be done to establish Republican institutions in that State.
Educational Department.
Edited by D. >• Nowmia. Ota. fcpiy taw it rnt. Qu**ucn* for the Krawi—tion oi TeeehereWhat rpecial preparation have you ever made to tea*h the subject of writing? What is meant by a space In height and a space in width? By a scale of thirds? f ■> • Write the following capitals, con- , nesting each with a abort word, B, E, S, 11. Analyze p, r, b and h. • orthography. What is the difference between a mute and a liquid? Give an example of each. What is accent? How many and what sounds has the letter g? Give an example of each sound. What sounds compose the spoken words Fayette, liege, neighbor, leisure and heifer f Write phonically the words Fayette, liege, neighbor, leisure and heifer, and mark each vowel with the proper diacritical sign. Spell ten words pronounced by the Superintendent. READING. Bat the wnnd of the church-going-bell Those valleys and rocks never beard, Never sighed at the sound of knell, Nor smiled when a Sahbath appeared. What is the subject of this sentence? How would you indicate it in reading? The recurrence of what sound gives a peculiar effect in the reading of the last two lines? (Can you name the rhetorical figure?) Mark the emphatic words of the sentence. What is the moral feeling expressed in these lines. What should be the prevailing tone of voice in reading them? What are the chief characteristics of a good reader? ARITHMETIC. Give a rule for subtraction that can be applied with equal propriety to simple, decimal, and compound numbers. A man dug a cellar 24 ft; long, 18 ft. wide and 8 ft. deep at $.66| per cubic yard. What did he receive for his work? What is a decimal fraction?— What number is that to which if you add 3-7 of itself, the feum will be 40? If a passenger train of cars gains on a freight train at the rate of 8 miles in 3 hours, how many hours will it take to gain 60 miles. By Proportion. What per cent, of’ income do TJ. S. 4j per cent, bonds, at 108, yield in currency when gold is 103? I boirowed S6OO for 2 yrs., and paid S4B interest. What per cent, did I pay? Define amount. A note for $240, dated April 20, 1870, payable in six months from date, was discounted Aug. 25, 1870, at bank at 10per cent. What were the proceeds? What is the hour when 2-3 of the time past noon equals 2-9 of the time to mid-night? Give a full analysis. < What will it cost at 40c. a yard to fence a triangular plot, one side of which, 60 ft. long, forms a right angle with another side, 45 ft. long? What is the entire surface of a pyramid, whose slant height is 20 ft, and whose base is 25 ft. square? What is its perpendicular height? GRAMMAR. When do common nouns com ineuce with capital letters? What are Parts of Speech? Name the Parts of Speech. Give the plurals of the following words: ox, child,stratum, die, penny, footman, cargo, staff, radius, axis. Define each class of pronouns. Correct: The Rine is more beautiful than the Rhone ; but the latter is the longest. What is the difference in form between the active and passive voice? difference in use? Give the past-perfect, indicative, of the verb ring. Correct: ‘He was reproved in a manner suitably to his offense,’ and parse the word which takes the place of the one used erroneously above. Analyze: There is an odious spirit in many persons, who are better pleased to detect a fault than to commend a virtue. Parse in the above who and there. GEOGRAPHY. What is Geography? What is the derivation and meaning of the word? What two seas are north of Germany? 4 <- To what race of men do the highest social classes generally belong? What are the three great water routes, natural and artificial, in the V. S., leading to the ocean? Name the capital of the States furmed from the “North West Territory.” In what ocean do we find the most oceanic islands? In what one the most continental islands? Name five chief exports of the U. States. For what are the following places noted: London, Paris, Belfast, Venice, Rome? What country of S. America has no capital? Whst State in the U. S. has two capitals. Why is Ireland called the Emerald Isle? What are the causes of this ifcnditioti?
HISTORY. Who were members of Washing* 1 ton’s first cabinet? Who w/Bcithren Genet? What was the Embargo act, 1807? Give ah account of den. VV. H. Harrisonli early dnreer. Wha>was the doctrine of Nullification, 1832? What was the Ashburton-Web-ster treaty of 1842? What was the “Omnibus bill,” or compromise measure of Henry Clay ki 1852? What were the aims and results of the Peace conference, Washing* ton, 1881? For what is the 19th of April memorable? PHYSIOLOGY. Locate the humerus, termor, tibula, scapula, and patilln. What is u tendon, and what is its use? What is the function of the liver? What is chyme, and where is it formed? Where is oxygen taken into the blood, and for what purpose? What is the larynx? Why does an injury to the spinal cord produce a paralysis of the lower limbs? What is the difference between veins and arteries? Give the names and uses of the three humors the eye. How is the sensation of sound produced? THEORY AND PRACTICE. Why should a recitation test the pupil’s understanding more than his memory? When may a teacher use a textbook in conducting a recitation? Why? Why should practical composition receive earlier and more attention than technical grammar? Under what circumstances (if any) may a teacher resort to ridicule in correcting a pupil? Why? What moral qualities should the teacher strive to cultivate in bis pupils? Why?
November Report of the Rensselaer Graded Schools.
Whole number enrolled for the month, 221 Average daily attendance 200 Percent of attendance 9* •• “ conduct 97 “ “punctuality.. .... ...998 “ “ study .... 100 Number of excuses received by teachers.... .65 “ “ “ “ “ principal....ll Total ....77 Names of pupils whose record for the month is 8. PRIMARY A. Cora Catt. Mabel Hopkins, Alice Webber, Nellie Halloran, Annie Webber, Silly Piatt, Tillie Warner, Linnie Keelly. Mary T.Chilcote, Maud Bavlor, Hattie Clark, Lucy Nowels, Ella Davisson, Alpha Hopkins, Samuel Fendig, Willie Hammond, Jay Zimmerman, Charles Rhoades, Warren Washburn and Gussie Phillips.—2o. PRIMARY B. Cora Adams, Mary Adams, Amzie Beck, Lee Catt. Gertie Clark, Eddie Duvall, Rebecca Fendig, Eva Harding. Crillv Hutson, Burdie Hammond. Louie Hopkins, Nellie Keelly, Blanche Lough ridge, George Moss, Charly Rhoades, Hattie Rhoades, Birdie Spitler, Dallas Warren, Mattie Warden, Bion Zimmerman, Nellie Hopkins, Mary Spitler.—22. INTERMEDIATM DEPARTMENT. Hattie Blankenbaker. Gnylard Chilcote.’ Ida Clark, Katie Green. Hora* Hopkins, George Hollingsworth, Lucy Heoly, Mary Halloran, Alliert Hopkins. Frank Koejner, Simou lajopold. Frankie McEwen, Alliertie Morris, Minnie Norris, Lorena Peacock. Charley Spitler. Sarah Tuteur, Harry Zimmerman. Quez Hutson, Mary Dunn, ' Lottie Peacock, Eugene Saylor.—23. GRAMMAR SCHOOL. Tillie Fendig; Myrta Hinkle, Hattie Hopkins. Loucsa Platt, Eugene Spitler. Mary Washburn, Mary Healy, Bertie Duvall, Anna Schweitzer. -9. HIGH SCHOOL. Belle Alter, Arilla,Cotton, Elmer Dwiggins, Louis Hollingsworth, Ora Thompson, Delos Thompson, Victor Loughridgc, Hattie B. Coen, Celia Childers, James Erwin, Alice Rhoades. Clara Reeves. Nellie Spitler, Nettie Everson. Edith A. Miller, Henry Smith, Frank Weather*, Emma Washburn?—l3.
INDIANAPOLIS, DELPHI & CHICAGO RAILROAD. SOUTHWARD: Leave Rensselaer 5:00 a m I 12:20 p m Arrrive at Bradford 6:00 ain 1:2.1 p m Leave Bradford 6:30 a ni | 2:00 p m Arrive at Monticello.... 7:10 a tn i 2:40 p m Leave Monticello 7:30 ain I 3:00 pin Arrive at Delphi 8:30 a m | 8:50 p m NORTHWARD: Leave Delphi 9:83 a in 5:15 p m Arrive nt Monticello.... 10:23 a m 6:05 p m Leave Monticello -.. 10:25 am 0:15 p m Arrive at Bradford. 11:00 a m fl:50 p m Leave Bradford 11:00 a m 7:10 p in Arrive at Rensselaer ... 12:00 a in 8:10 p m S. N. YROMAN, Gen’l Manager. “WE RISE TO EXPLAIN” That the finest and best selected stock of Watches, Clocks AND JEWELRY, ' Also Silverware, Spectacles, Musical Instruments. &c., Ever exhibited in Rensselaer ean now be had at Orwin's old stand. Mr. Hardman, the Jeweler, will still attend to the Watch-repairing and Jobbing department. All work warranted. 10dec79 HAMAR.
South Side Washington St., RENSSELAER, IND. “Carry the to Mary 1” Harness, Saddles, Collars, Whips, Trunks, Valises, Blankets, Robes, Carriage Trimming, Harness Oil, Domestic and NewYerk Singer Sewing Machines, &C., &C., AT W. H. & O. RHOADES’ HARNESS SHOP. 12:7
THE LATEST AND BEST NEWS IN RENSSELAER, IS THAT LEOPOLD AT HIS BROAD GAUGE CASH STORE CAN NOT BE UNDERSOLD! Verily he has Just Received The largest and best stock of Dry Goods and Dress Goods. The largest, cheapest and best stock of Clothing. The largest and best selected stock ot Boots and Shoes, The greatest variety of Notions. /’ The finest stock of ladies’ and gents’ Fusnishing Goods, The largest and best stock of Fancy Goods, Laces, Trimmings, Inserting, Edging, Hosiery, etc., etc., ever displayed in Rensselaer. For the Fall and Winter Trade! These Goods were bought for Cash, at a liberal discount, and will be sold cheaper than, any other house can afford to sell them. Call and examine . . ! . .1, ■ this Superb Stock and learn prices before making purchases. It costs nothing to look at Goods, and is no trouble to show them. A. LEOPOLD, - Stone Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. GRAND OPEMNftSALE ?>i ' , x AT DELPHI, INDIANA, FalH W inter Stock * -■£*- k nzr-sr iaxmettvse: stocil arrived. DON’T FAIL TO CALL AND S3E IT BEFORE FUF.OHA.SINe TOUR. READY - CLOTHIMGr. I WILL SELL YOU SUITS, OK PARTS OF SUITS, OVERCOATS OR ANYTHING LN THE CLOTHING LINE CHEAPER THAN ANY HOUSE IN THE CITYM MT W® Good Suits for $3 to $7.50- Overcoats, $4 to S2O. Cheap Suits, $2.50 to $5. Pants, 90c to $4. Coats, $1.50 to $lO. Vests 50c. to sl. All other goods in proportion, I have the most complete stock of Gents’ Furnishing Goods in the city. My stock of Clothing of my own manufacture is superior to any in the city. These I will guarantee, and will sell very low. In my Tailoring Department I have the most complete stock of Cloths in the city, which. I will sell at prices that defy competition. In Fancy Suitings I can not be excelled. lam prepared to make them up on short notice, and at prices that cannot be undersold. I guarantee satisfaction. No trouble to show goods, whether you wish to buy or not. Buffing’s Block, Delphi, Ind. EDWARD BROWN.
ISTE’W HARDWARE STORE JUST OPENED! Be it known that Ezra L. Clark has iuft opened a Hardware Store in towels’ Building, Rensselaer, Indiana, and will keep constantly in stock a full line of HABDWABZ, TINWARE, WOODENWABE, Carpenters’ Tools, Table and Pocket Cutlery, Silverware, Revolvers, Ammunition of all kinds, STOVES, OILS, FAHM AND OARDSIT SUDDS and every thing else usually found in a first-class Hardware Store. All goods sold at LOWEST CASH PRICES. Parties wishing anything in my line will do well to call, examine goods and learn prices. E. V CLARK. Bologna Sausage, LARD, Fresh Meat Bologna Sausage SJ cts pe rib. Pork “ 6 •* •* Coice Leaf Lard ® “ “ Pork Steak 4 to ft *• “ Best »*eer Steak 7 “ “ Fore Quarter “ 6 “ *• Choice Roasts 6 *• “ Boiling Pieces 3, 4 L** •• BEDFORD & SHARP’S New Meat Store.
FITZ W. BEDFORD dealer xxo* AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Threshers, Reapers, Mowers, Rakes, Eagle Cultivators and Harrows. The celebrated Furst & Bradley, Jones and Oliver Chilled Plows, NEWTON WAGONS AND BUGGIES. Riding and Walking Cultivators. Brown Corn Planters. AM kinds of Field, Garden, Barn and Stable Implements. Farm Hardware vector scaxiNs For Hay, Cattle and Railroad Tracks, Also Building paper, Lime, Plastering Hair, Cement, Pumps, Ac. Field and Carden Seeds In bulk or by the small package. Farm and Garden Products sold at etall. One door above ‘‘Shanghai.” F. L. Cotton. A. McCoy. T.J. McCot. COTTON, McOOY & SON, a Dealers in GRAIN, LUMBER, GOAL -AJN*X> LIVE SOGH9, (Office near depot,) Rensselaer, ... Indiana. HIGHEST market price, in cash, paid for grain, and hogs. We have extra facilities for handling with despatch and accuracy the articles named, and give personal attention to the business. Persons desiring anything in our line are kindly invited to give us a callbelore dealing elsewhere. IS-7.
FALLEY & HOES’ BOOTS AND SHOES Solid Inoles. Solid Counters. Hand Made. Every Pain Warranted None are genuine without Our Diamond Shaped **' i _ Green Paper Stamp bearing our firm name, on the Bottom of Every Pair. We cut into our goods only the ELEBRATED West Virginia Tanned Stock. Our goods, for Style, Fit and Wear, have no equals. Ask for them. FALLEY A HOES, I LaFayette, Indiana Gen nine Falley & Hoes Boots an. Shoes are sold by A. Leopold, Rensse luer, Indiana, at Bass’ stand. 11-49-Gp GEORGE GRAVEL, Manufacturer of and Dealer in HARNESS, SADDLES, Bridles, Collars, Whips, HORSE CLOTHING, &c., &c. Strict attention paid to repairing. Shop north side Washington st., Rensselaer, Ind.'
