Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 April 1890 — Page 8

Itotrings and Irritations of tbo Skin and Scalp, FTLjIBF?, Esther Itching or Bleeding. Ylckrattoks.Cuts.Wocxbs, Bruises, PoreoNS, Bits of I msects. Catarrh, Iniumd Sore Eras, Chilbl aiys,Chaps andCHAFKS. RtMtanßyreUax* the pain as Burns and Scalds , flmiearßßOwworstcaseirttftoatasear. Small boxes %c. Largo boxes 60c. Kid its absolute purity and delicate perfume makes it a positive luxury for the bath and nursery. Caution:- The labels on the genuine are Sold hy Druggists and Dealers in Medicine. Sold by F. B. Meier. Sfet 11 f® jwrtmßiiahf Sgg n»J.tinging;mo>ni yffCHIHG P!LES.§|S™g HWomlns verv BWAI APB ■ I MENT .top* t«i c- ltciiln* mkl Mcedta*. k«*l« ■ aftmatlen. rail hi Bm S.im'iOivtiisnt 11 •oldby i sms.a sSkrS!^?^ CVIII diseases Mini swarew absolutely ctjkesl OINTMENT m simple anpHeatlon of “Bwinufr Onmnw’' wilhcß h, internal medicine, vill cure anr eaae at Tetter, Sait ■e matter bow obstinate or long atandiac. SeU tylivnim, 5 mnt by mail fcr 50 eta. 3 BoxeaTJl.rS Aitnm. Ob g,,...A Ro». rkUadelDtla. fa. Art j«r dreohtlwik

SOLO BY DRUGGISTS AMD GENERAL. STOREKEEPERS. PREPARED ON«-y BY RoosMP fTU t F Uic ALC °' C]NCifMs!ATI,OHIO. Sold by F. B. Meyer. Rnbhor Shoes unlpss worn uncomfortably tight, generally slip off the feet, —■ •• , THE “COLCHESTER ’’ RUBBER CO. matte all their sltot s with Inside of heel lined with rubber. This eliiuts to |j;e shoe and prevents the rubber frum slipping off. CuH for the “ Colchester ” “ADHESIVE COUNTERS.’ McEEE k 00.. wholesale Amts, I2STIDI^.2.Tu2IJPO3IaIS. ASJsa^rdssJSffifawsif^

FOUTZ’S HORSE A4D CATTLE POWDERS Ho Hobs* will <ll« of Colic. Bots or Lena Fb tbii, if Koutt’s Ponders srr Head is time. Font** Fowdemv i'l cure ami prevent I 100 Cholera. fontz's Powders will prevent Gapes re Fowls. Fontz's Powders will Increase the qnantiry of milk and cream twenty per cent., and make the butter firm and sweet. Fontz’s Powders will core or present almost evict rrsFASR to wldcli HorrcA and < sttleare subject. ’tPTZ’s Pownraa will a it* tu-mrAVno*. •old everywhere. DAVID *. TO-TSS. Proprietor. Hi _TIMOHK, *LD. I CURE FITS! JSSItSSSiMSSSS&S Enmlß. I MXAft A B APICAL COBB. 1 have made Uie disoaae of falling sickness, * not t coats jott noUitegtora ire yml

That Gravel Road Again.

BY A CIVIL ENGINEER. As tlie subject of grayel roads seems to be assuming a tangible shape m this county I wish to say my little piece in regard to this subject, having had considerable to do with gravcl roads in locating, constructing aud using. In the first place I am in favor of free gravel roads when practicable. But when not practicable there are other methods that would greatly improve the present condition of our roads, Now the all important question is whether it is practical to gravel the Range Line road ? 1 believe at the present time it is not, although it is very desirable to connect the towns of Remington and Rensselaer by a good road. Now the question of cost is the all important one and let us see if some other expedient can not be used instead of gravel ? To secure a good road by any process a fair grade with side ditches and necessary culverts and bridges will be required, the cost of which will be about the same in all cases. But suppose gravel can be found near Rensselaer and suppose the R. R. will furnish gravel at Remington for cost of loading and unloading. The graveling of a road 14 feet wide and 10 inches deep woald cost nearly $2,500 per mile, which will cost in round numbers when paid off in 8 annual payments $3,000 per mile, the interest of which would be $240 a year. While the cost of maintainance would be as great or greater than almost any other road. Now it is a well known fact that by a proper mixture of black soil and sand a composition that will not get very muddy in wet weather and will not cut up in dry weather is obtained, and us there are alternate sand ridges and flats along the whole line of the road in question it would be a matter of comparative light cost to furnish a grade 10 or 12 inches deep with such a mixture. After this is done all that is necessary to always have a good road is to keep the water away, especially from the subsoil. This can be thoroughly accomplished by one or two lines of tile under the road. Then we would have a road that would always be passable, and and for at least 11 months out of the year would admit of heavy hauling. Now let us compare the cost. Sanding grade additional to making suitable grade for gravel $240 per mile. Two lines of tile at 50 cents per rod, $320 per mile, total $560 per mile, or the entire cost amounting to as much as the interest on the cost of the gravel alone for two and one fourth years. If, our road makers would use a little sand on the clay roads and clay 7 on the sand roads and plenty of tile drainage it would make a revolution in roads that would surprise the oldest settlers. L. A.

NOTICE. The annual meeting of the stockholders of the Rochester, Rensselaer and St. Louis Railway Company will be held at Winamae, Indiana, at 12 o’clock M., on Wednesday, the 16th day of April, 1800, at the office of the company, for the transaction of important business relative to the construction and equipment of the road, and for the election of the directors for the ensuing fiscal year. John. T. Hoi.sixc.eu, Secy. R. R. & St. L. Ry. Co. Approved, J. K. Lee, President. March 26, 1800. . ' . . Notice of Farmers’ Alliance Meetings. I will address the public at Rensselaer on Saturday, April 5, at 2 o’clock r. si., for the good of the farmers. Come out farmers; come with your wife and daughters. Brother Ben Terrell will lecture at Rensselaer, May 3rd, at 1 o’clock i\ 3i. Come out to hear him. Brother L. L. Polk will also be with him. Come one, come all. R. F. Peek. State Organizer for Indiana N, F. A.

The New Discovery. You have heard your friends talking about it. You may yourself be one of the many who know’ fromjpersonal experience just how good a thing it is. If you have ever tried it you are one of its.staunch friends, because the wonderful thing about it is that when once tried Dr- King’s New Discovery ever after holds a place in the house. If you have never Used it and should be athcted with a cough, cold or any throaE, lung or chest trouble secure a bottle at once and give it a fair trial It is guaranteed every time or money refunded. Trial bottles free at F. B. Meyer’s drug store.

Croup, whooping cough and Bronchitis uauaciiatiy relieved by Shiloh's euro. Sleepless nights, made miserable by that terrible cough. Shiloh's cure is the remedy lor you. Sold by Long & SgerCatarrh cured, health and swee breath secured, by Shiloh’s catarrh remedy, •Price-ftO-cerrts: Nanai injector free. Sold by Long & Egor. "' ’***’’ ‘ r ■ 1 \ For lame back, side or chest, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, price 25 cts, at Long & Eger’s. .. r— 1 . ii »•» m* Will j J o« suffer with dyspepsia and liver eomplaintP Shiloh’s Vitalizer is guaranteed to cure you. For sale by Long A Eger xx-39-ly.

Notice to Breeders, i * - —• .- j J be imported Norman Horse black, weight 1,700, well built, will make the season of 1890 at my place, one-fourth mile north of the Rensselaer depot (the Hollingsworth farm). Also the standard-bred trotter, MANITOU 6578. Please call and examine horses. For terms and pedigrees see cards. W. H. OWENS, Owner.

TO WEAK MEN MHMMi mmmmmmmmmmmmam. wmmmmmmmm—mmm Suffering from the effects of youthful errors, early decay, wasting weakness, lost manhood, etc., I will oend A valuable treatise f sealed) containing full particulars for home cure, FREE of charge. A splendid medical work; should do read by every man who i* nervous and debilitated. Address,! Prof. F. C. FOWLER, Moodus, Conn, MEN WANTED! To represent onr well-known Nursery in this county, lor town and country trade. Good pay weekly A steady position with a nursery of over thirty years Standing, pd a known re - sponsibility. WowantVood, lively workers, and will pay well. Good references required. Apply quick, stating age. ; - 31-80. CHASE BROTHERS COMPANY, Chicago, 111. J. M. HELMIGK, Notary Public and Real Estate Agent Lands of all descriptions for sale or lease. WHEATFIELD, IND. JOHN GRAVES, WHEATFIELD, INDIANA. AUCTIONEER. Sales attended in any part of Jasper and adjoining counties, also Real Estate Agent and .Justice of the Peace, Collect! ons promptly attended t<i.' Lar?e amounts of farms and town property for sale. Address - - Wheatfield, Ind. XXI 12.

SALESMEN TXTAITTED Ato sell our 600 hardy varieties of choice Nursery Stock. Best Specialties. No experience necessary. Special advantages to beginners. Extra inducements. Pay weokly. Situation permanent. Best terms. Best outfit free. We guarantee what we advertise. Address at once. GLENN BROS., Nurserymen, Rochester, X. Y. (This house is reliable.) 262 mp. Jay W. Williams has two rooms, 20 x 70, filled with the finest assortment of Furniture ever brought to Rensselaer, consisting of beds,bureaus, lounges, tables, chairs, and every thing to be found in a firstclass furniture store; and he is selling at Bed Rock Prices, tor cash. If you are in need of any thing in his line, it will pay you to call and see him. Don’t forget the place, opposite the Public Square, in Rensselaer, Ind.

Thrift is a. *— ■ good revenue” ja£SMpAPeLiS It'tsa.solid ri nj£ so&p Try ih in your nexV housC'CleAning ojnd beh&ppy. Looking out over the many homee of this country, we see thousands of women wearing away their lives in household drudgery that might be materially lessened by the use of a few cake* of SAPOXJO. If an hour is saved each time a oafc a i* used, if one less wrinkle gathers upon the face because the toil is lightened, she must be a foolish woman who would hesitate to make the experiment, and he a churlish husband who would grudge the few cents which it ooets.

Hemphill Bros. BlacksmitH -ANDWood Repair Shops. (Successors to Yeoman & Hemphill.) All Work done Promptly and Cheaply, and Warranted First Class Quality. Front Street, South of Washington, (The old Erwin Shop,) Rensselaer, - Indiana. IRWIN, Notary Pale and Insurance Agent. Companies represented: Aetna,of Hartford. Hartford, of Hartford; Spriqgfleld F. & M. of Springfield; German American, of N. Y.; Franklin, of Indianapolis; (nsuranie Co., of North America! and Travelers Life & Accident with accident tickets from one to thirty days Office with Hammond & Austin. 22-5.

PIONEER MEAT MARKET Renselaer, - Indiana J. J. EIGLESBACH, PROP R. BEEF, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Sansauge, Bologna, etc., sold in quantities to suit put*chasers at the lowest prices.. Nonebutthe bes stock slaughtered. Everybody is invited to call. jBSY”The highest price paid for good a cattle. J .J. EIGLESBACH. T W. HOKTON, DENTIST. Fillings inserted that will not come out. LOCAL ANESTHETICS used in-Teethextraetion. Artificial teeth inserted from one to full sets. Office over Ellis & Murray’s, Reneselaer, Indiana . TRUSTEES? NOTICE. MARION TOWNSHIP. I will be in my office, upstairs in Makeever’s Bank Building everv Saturday to attend to Township business. WILLIAM GREENFIELD, Trustee Marion tp. JORDAN TOWNSHIP. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Township Trustee of Jordan township, will be at his office, at his residence in Jordan township, on the second Saturday of each mouth lor the transaction of township business. A J. MCFARLAND,

“SHADELAND,” The most Extensive Pure Bred m Wk II I STOCK establishment New importations con St a II tl> arriving . 1 ' > iini'unaled it.y: choicest ing opportunity, of comparing different breeds.; BREEDERS AND IMPORTERS OF Clydesdales, Standard Bred Trotters, Percherons, Carriage Horses, French Drafts. Saddle Horses, English Shires, Welsh Ponies, Belgian Drafts, Iceland Ponies, Suffolks, Shetland Ponies, French Coaches, Holstein-;Friesian Cleveland Bays, Cattle, Hackneys, Devon Cattle, Also, Dealers iq Real Estate. No other Establishment in the World offers snch Advantages to the Pnrchsser. Prices low. Terms easy. Visitors welcome. Correspondence Solicited. Circulars free. Please mention The Rkvihmcak when writing. POWELL BROTHERS, 27-3 m, Springboro, Crawford Co., Pa. DWIGGINS BROS., "••ABSTRACTERS,:--. Rensselaer, Ind. Sheriff’s Sale. BY VIRTUE of a certified copy ot a decree and execution to me directed from the Clerk of the Jasper OircHit Court, in a cause No, 4028 wherein James H. Schooner was plaintiff ami Claus H. Harder and Maria Harder were defendants, requiring me to make the sum of six hundred and fourteen dollars (*614) together with interests and costs I will expose at pub'ic sale on Saturday, the 12th day of April, __ _ A. D.. 1890, between the hours of 10 o’clock a. in., and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House in the town ol Rensselaer, Jasper Countv, Indiana, the rents and profits, fora term not exceeding seven (7) years, bv the year, of the following described real estate, towit: The south half (V 4 of the southwest quarter (H) of section one (1) in township thir-ty-two (32) north, range six (H) west, in Jasper county Indiana. And should such rents aDd profits not sell fora sum sufficient to discharge said;decree and execution interests and costs, I will, at the same time and place, and in the manner aforesaid, expose at public gale the fee simple right of said defendants in and to said real estate or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to discharge said decree, and execution with interest and costs. Said -sale will he made without any relief from valuation and appraisement laws and in accordance with the order of said Court in said decree and execution. PHILIP BLUE, Sheriff Jasper Count v, Ind: Mordecai F. ChilcotcAttv for Plaintiff.

Spring* - Costumes! —OF—•NSPRINGI* Dress Goods. INCLUDING THE UStfili (SmmmsT Effects f Ladies desiring to see A - IST - ELEGANT - JISSOpM can now find them on our counters, embracing - Henriettas, Blk. and Colored Mohairs, Stripes and Plaids of all Grades, —also complete lines of W 00l __ Choi lies, Henriettas,Finished Satins, Novelty Dress Gin ghams, Austral - Suitings, Match Patterns in Embroideries, White Goods; all New. New good in all Deprtmt’s. ELLIS S~MU RRfIY. Rensselaer Stock Farm STALLIONS FOR SEASON OF 1890.

PLUTO, 1950. Sire of BLUE WlNG—Record 2:26. LEO—Record 2:29±. CLARENCE—Record 2:30. No other horse in Indiana, ten years t>Tclt, is (fire of as many 15 the ~2 :30 list. by WEDGEWOOD, 629. Record 2:19. Dam PRIMROSE (the dam of Princeps, the sire of 23 in the 2;30 list) by Abdallah 15. Season of 1890 at SSO.

We have a competent trainer and as good a half mile track as there is in the state. A few promising horses taken on reasonable terms to be handled for speed. Send for Catalogue of Standard Bred Stock for Sale. Address RENSSELAER STOCK FARM, Rensselaer, Indiana.

MAJOR C. 1 in M DA! STALL 1, will make the season of 1890 at J. Q. Alter & Co’S. Brick Livery Barn in Rensselaer, Ind. Breeders desiring to use a general purpose or coach stallion will find AJOR C> a perfect specimen of his class. TERMS $lO AND sls. G. K. HOLLINGSWORTH, Owner. JOHN Q. ALTER & CO, Keepers.

Royal Cossack? 2452. Four-year-old trial 2:38|. by DON COSSACK, 950. Record 2:28 and sire of three in 2:30. Ist Dam— May Queen, by Am. Clay, 34. 2nd Dam—by Eriessoh, 130. 3rd Dam—by Davy Crockett. 4th Dam, by Kentucky Whip. Royal Cossack is 16 hands high, a rich bay and has won many premiums in the show ring. His colts are all bays and of good size. Season of 1890 at $25.