Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 May 1889 — REA-ESTATE TRANSFERS. [ARTICLE]
REA-ESTATE TRANSFERS.
When the «li.irncter <>f the Ihstnnifent •- mil specified, it will be. understood that it is a warautce deed. The let+Hs -me srw.nteatr north, south, east, west The letters in co Wm. as ne sw Sc. sfunil for northeast quarter, southwest quarter &c. The Gate given tn e«ch’ite>i| denotes the time rhe instrument was executed When? th is was during the ;ire's, nt yVtir. qnlxthejitoiiilijiitd <l_ay are given, as Dec 1:1. Whon the instrument was made in some Lamer year, the full date, but abbreviated is given, as: Nov. Ist, ’Bl Geo. B. T hornton to Geo. M. Wilcox. Apr. 13, Its 10, 11. I’-’, bl 2, Surrey. _—. .. * ■ ”5 Sheriff Jus- Co- to Addison son. trustee, Apr. 22, wJ sw sw 29-29-6. Marion, , 1227 Ellen E. Graham to Ttbihala J. Bruner. Apr. 20, < J 34 32-7, 320 acres. Keener, .3200 Treat Durand to Thus. J. Terpin, Apr. 8. li 5, bl 14, Remington, 800 AnnMil’tj et al to Mary A. Mitchell, Sept . It). ’BB. SW t-e, 28-31-5, 40 acres. Gillam, 200 - Wa,. Lr-Garlin to John Wt- Elliott-, —~~ April 19. sw sc 28-31-5, Gillam, 250 Milton A. Makeever to Simon Phillips, Apr. IS. li 8. bl 12. Westen's Add. Rensselaer. 100 Edw T. Biggs to J no. T. Biggs, Jan. 1, w.’. uw 3.1-32-5, 86 acres, Kankakee’, 800 Jno W. I'eicr tv Jm> A. Teter. Mar 27. wj so 7 27-6 80 acres. Carpt liter, 2000 Jos. Cndwr.llader to Al. L. Spit’er. Apr. 25. s- 1 15-31-6. S’i acres. Walker. 20.0 Marlin V. Sends to Gr:t> t IL well, Apr. 6. pt, ne o, 1 a A . Kutkalve. - 3tl Jas Wiseman to Matihl . J Hotge Apr. 20, sw n<r 17 30 7,-40 acres. Union, s£-iL E. L. Hollingsworth ci ux t > Marion H. Owens. Apt. 13 nw 19-29-6, 161 acres Marion. 6586
I'h; Growing in I'avori “The popularity of pie,” said the head ■waiter o’s a crack New York restaurant, “is growing wonderfully. People who think it is not fashionable to eat pie are provincial. Some of the most distinguished club num in town who come here frequently eat pie for dessert, along with a small jug of cream and a pot of sugar. It makes a much better dish than apple tart, about which the Englishmen rave so enthusiastically. The love of pie is more or less inherent in the American breast, and the French <ooks have r ealized this, so that at present the grade of pie which is turned out by the chefs of Delmonieo's, the Brunswick, the llo’-iman, the Gilsey, and several ■other first-class hotels is a great, credit to the pastry cook’s art. Not only this, but there are general pie bakeries, which supply all the restaurants of the country with the great national dish, and they make the pie cheaper and better than it can be made by the cooks in the restaurants themselves. That is why the ’longshoreman can get as good a pi mc« of pie on West street as the milllonaii,' ct.n on Broadway.” ~ t ! itt w and Willow Wares. The widow ware industry has been slowly increasing in our Eastern States of late years, but is as yet in its infancy. The ■immense unutilised areas of land along our many rivers, portions of the sea coast, and of t-ome up’hnds and prairies not suitable for any ether agricultural. pursuit, invite capital and energy to invest in the production of osier, chiefly for the manufacture of basket ware. According to the oen ms of 1 v >'o, there wef'e in the country 30-1 wiiiovv ware estab’islunents, with a capital of d1,8.'>2,!H Z, engaging 3,119 hands, paying annually the sum of $657,405 so- wages, and producing #’,992.b51. The value ot materials consumed was W ,041, of which, however, but a., portion was produced here. The importation of l-oth raw ami manufactured material will be greatly rau.u -ed, and the demand for willow ware materially increased, if the profit to b'j derived from a systematic production of Osier becomes oflee better geuer- . ally understood. "Him F.»ver ?Ucr<>bt*. An illustration of a strange fact is found in the experience with the Jainestowif. now the training ship at Baltimore. Ou one of her trips yellow fever appeared on i> nrd, and several deaths follow d Bubsequedtly the ves-el was thoroughly renovated and extensively repaired. Her woodwork was steamed. Then sac reniained in northern harbprs for several winters. She was finally ordered south again, and before she reached the fever district a < use was developed and the man died, Above tiis hammock was found a quantity of fi.th. The woodwork was tern o::t and the filth removed. But she is still a fev.r ship. Then, again, is the case of the Portsmouth. She once had fever on board. Long afterward she was ordered to NoiLak for, repairs. . .Naval f'<nißtructoß JJieh_oHi • had charge of the work A num er of his workmen died, and he himself wis taken dowfl with typhoid fever, and his life was despaired of. It is true, that once a fever ship, always a fever ship. B** The Present and the Pest. Because we travel by roil and not by * a f e . coach, have our messages sent by electricity aril not on horseback, our clothes Stitched by, machinery and not by hand, oleomargarine on our breakfast taeles instead of butter, and instead of sugar gludoee, are we m much wiser and tetter than our fathers? How many Chicago, are the equivalent of one Athens? How many millionaire manufacturers of lard from cottonseed go to the making of one Plato? How maqy glucose factories e pial one Parthenon' Would you swap “Macbeth” or “King Lear” for the largest railroad in the United States? or “Paratine Ijost” for all the pork ever packed or all the lard ever
