Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 May 1893 — Page 4
THE REPUBLICAN. Thursday, May 4, 1893. ’> .7. ■■■ ISBUKSKYXBT THUMBATB? GEO. 33. i Publishes and Pboprintok . ™a s H^.^- s=g y4^«:, OFFICE In RepHblican building, on eorner of Washington aud Weston streets. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Year ‘ $1.50 . ..Six Months.. 75 Three Months 50 Official Paper qf Jasper County.
In addition to the many tin plate works now in operation five large factories are being erected at the following places: Elizabeth port. New Jersey; Philadelphia and New Gasile, Pennsylvania; Niles, Ohio, and Gas City, Indiana. The product of -these mills will be about two-thirds bright tin plate and one-third terne, and the output exceeding twenty thousand boxes a week, or an average of more than four thousand boxes per week each. Estimating the out-put for a year on the basis of fifty working weeks the product of these mills will be one million dollars. This is another practical illustration of the benefits of the McKinley tariff. ' (Jen. Packard: Scratch the man who 4 in this country tries to ape the old world aristocracy and you’ll uncover a Democrat. Scratch the public official who strives to imitate in language the rulers of the effete monarchies of Europe and you will find a Democrat. The Emperor William or the Czar Alexander, even the crazy King' Ludwig says: “My Ambassador.” “My Minister.” These belong to the ruler. They are his. Louis Fourteenth, of France, said: “The State, it is I.” Jeff Davis was accustomed to say, “My People,” and speaking of the Hawaiian affair and Mr. Blount, Grover says “My Minister.” Does he think he is the nation like Louis XIV? Truly it has that appearance. We shall next hear of “My People,” “My Army,” “My Navy,” “My Congress,” “My Judges” and “My V, States.”
Free Trade and Farming.
Ft. D. Blackmore, author of "Lorna Doone,” is a practical fruit grower. He speaks as a fruit grower aud not as an author when he writes from hig home in England to the New York Tribune concerning the harm which free trade has done to the agriqultural interests of Great Britain. In acknowledging the receipt of a “Farmers’ Almanac” Mr. Blackmore writes as follows: Alas that our poor farmers no longer require o,r could afford one, so wholly does their money pass to your less demented. ..country, Thousands of acres of good land in England have dropped all out of cultivation, so wretched are the prices of all produce under our system. And yet the poor do not get tho benefit—or very little of it—in prices, for bread is as dear with wheat at 25 shillings per quarter as it was at 40 shillings, which is about the lowest figure at which it can be grown with any profit here. The same rule applies to my produce—fruit. New York City has adopted the system of placing red barrels on the street corners with the injunction “Throw your waste here” painted on them in plain white letters. They are designed as the recptacles for all kinds of waste, such as papers, banana and orange peelings, apple cores and the like, in order to keep this stuff from being thrown into the gutters and on the sidewalks. They are emptied every morning, or sooner if filled. The plan works well as a means of keeping the streets clean, and an ordinance will be passed by the city making it a misdemeanor to throw anything whatever upon the sidewalks or streets. —South Bend Tribune. The Vidette believes the public must at length extend its scavenger provisions to deodorizing excrement and saving it as valuable fertilizing matter for the soil, instead of washing it away in sewers as offensive waste that must pollute the water and the air below. Dry earth is an immediate sue-
cessful neutralizer, cheap as dirt. —Valparaiso Vidette. The Tribune and Vidette are both entirely sound in the above views. A ‘ better and more convenient eubstanee as a deodorizer than dry earth, however, is dry coal ashes. They can be saved perfectly dry, as they come from the stoves aud furnaces, and being perfectly inert, and finely powdered, their action as a deodorizer is is immediate and complete. And in using them in the manner suggested by thd Vidette, they are divorted from a public nuisance into a useful purpose.
THE SCHOOL ENUMERATION.
Trustees Report of Enumeration of children between six and twenty-one years of age; Also table showing gain and loss as compared with 1892: H ■Bw Hj C [V 1 NAME OF £ ;£5 g® &. g CORPORATION © 1 g£ ; ? j. » 1??[ 402; ,’■! 8- : Carpenter ’ 185 1 (To 350 22;.. Gillam ! 128 85 213 ..jo Hanging Grove 67 58 125 .. 38 J0rdan....... 119 104 223 11 .. Kankakakee... 82 67 1491 16.. Keener,...... 142 38 240 ! 4.. Marion 167 139 306 26 .. Milroy 61 48 109 .. 5 Newton. 107 105 212 8.. Union 154 127 2§l .. . 6 Walker ...... 100 86 186 .. 22 Wheatlleld.... lOC 99 205 16.. Rensselaer.... 303 294 597 42.. Remington.... 140 191 331 9.. “T0ta1...... 2086 1843 3929 154 84 Total net gain in County... .70. The real gain in Rensselaer is not 42 as shown above but 57, as last“year 15 children belonging to the O’Meara school, south of town, were counted in Rensselaer, being temporarily attached for school purposes,, but who are not now so attached and counted.
FOR--Sa-BHt-Two liay presses, three horses, two sets of harness, and a wagon. Lyman Zea. Dissolution of Partnership. The partnership heretofore existing between Coen <fc Paxton in the grain, hay and coal business is this day dissolved by mutual consent. Charles W. Coen will contain in the business and all accounts are left with him for settlement. Charles W. Coen. Joseph C. Paxton. April 24th, 1893. For Sale. 1 binder I 40 00 1 good corn planter 18 00 1 good braking plow 10 00 1 cultivator 2 00 1 harr0w........ 1 50 1 set harness.. : . 12 00 2 horse collars - - - ■ 150 1 good wagon 10 00 1 wagon hay ladder and wood rack 5 00 1 mowing machine 5 00 1 wagon jack 2 00 Articles will be found at John Karsner’s. 35-3tp. Mrs. Peter Giver. Lodging l'or the World’s Fair. I am fitting rooms for the accommodation ot visitors to the Worlds fair with lodgings at 1216, near the corner of 61st and May; 2£ miles direct west of World’s fair grounds and within 3 blocks of street car line and \ mifcr west~of—Englewood, take 63rd street car at Fair and run to May and walk 2 blocks north. Can get meals handy, can buy a 21 meal ticket for #4, and I solicit all of my old friends and others to call. -——t~~. W. N. Jones. LOTS OF LOTS. In Leopold’s Addition, the famed “New Oklahoma.” They are larger and wider and better situated than any others. Convenient to schools, churches and the business center. Good side walks, electric lights and splendid drainage. Sold on longer time and better terms than any others. Apply to A. Leopold, Sole Proprietor.
The Englewood Is a new building containing fifty rooms, constructed of stone and brick, having all modern improvements. The rooms are all large and light, each one having outside windows. The location is particularly favorable for World's Fair visitors, being within one block of the Sixty-third Street Electric line, running direct to the Fair entrance, and within two blocks of the Chicago and Western Indiana depot. ‘‘Monon” Chicago & Eastern Illinois, Wabash, Chicago <fe Erie. Also convenient to the C., R. I. & P. and the P., Ft. W. <fe C. R’y. and L. S. <fc M. S. R’y. depots. Ample restaurant accomodation is provided. We are now prepared to make contracts. Correspondence solicited. Baker &, Wells, 320, 6STrd. St-, Englewood, 35-3 m. Chicago.
NO TROUBLE AT ALL.
TO ELECT THE ENTIRE REPUBLICAN TOWN TICKET. The town election Monday was a quiet and unexciting affair, although our Democratic brethren made a strong but quiet effort to elect s#me of their candidates. Their efforts did not succeed a little bit, as the figures below will show- A pretty large vote was polled, namely 322, but even that number lacks from 50 to 75 of being a full vote. Last year" the total vote was 2C5. The vote by precincts is here given. -'■ ~’ / ~~ West East Total. Trustee 3rd Ward. J. J. Eiglesbach, D... —55 66 121 G. Hollingsworth, R. 112 89 201 Hollingsworth’s majority ... 80 Trustee sth Ward. A. F. Long, D 52 69 121 Ancel Woodworth, R. 108 84 192 Woodworth’s majority 71 Town Treasurer. Nelson Randle,D.... 48 65 113 C.C. Starr, R 112 88 200 Starr’s majority 87 Town Clerk. Jesse Grubb, D 52 66 117 C. G. Spitler, R 109 85 194 Spitler’s majorffy 77 Town Marshal. Jas. B. Jordan, D.. .. 53 64 117 Thos. McGowan, R.. 109 88 197 McGowan’s majority 80 The average majority is 79. Last year it was 78, or just 1 less. . People have got pretty well “on to” the Australian voting business and very few vote's were spoiled by mistakes of the voter, In the west precinct there was only one wholly lost. That was stamped on the title “Democratic Ticket” instead of inside the rooster square. Several votes, however, on both sides, were stamped only for the first man on the ticket, and, of course, the vote was lost except for that one candidate. This accounts for the fact that the total vote for the trustees for the third ward is 9 more than the total for any other office.
Carpets sewed at Williams’, 3 cents a yard. . Thirteen-stop, full walnut case or. gan, #35. C. B. Steward. Call on C. B. Steward, agent for lots in Columbia Addition; 140 lots at prices from #25 to #l3O. “Gloria water” cures salt-rheum on the hands rendering them soft and white. For .sale by Mrs. M. J. Winegarden Don’t forget those trimmed hats for ONE DOLLAR, at Mrs. Leekder’s. For Sale: —A bicycle, tricycle and furniture. Call at Room 16, Makeever House. Warner & Shead, at the new grocery store, would like a share of your trade. They will treat you right. Remember Bushey, the butcher, when you want good meat. Hi is here to stay , and sells nothing but Uie best. Everything fresh and new and first class, and at lowest living prices, at Warner & Shead’s the new goocery store. If your teeth need attention, call on Dr. Brown. He employees painless methods, his work is first class in every particular. Teeth without plates and fine gold fillings a specialty. Office over Porter & Wishard’s. Mrs. Lecklider has a full line of spring millinery the cheapest ever brought to Rensselaer, and the trimmer has visited several of the large cities, beginning w;ith Fort Wayne and closing with Chicago. She is yours to please and will do her best. Cheap Money. Austin & Hopkins will loan money on real estate, chattel mortgage, col ateral or personal security. You can pay these loans back at any tim and stop interest. These are desir ble loans. JIMJREECE. Will make the Beason of 1893 at my stables, in Rensselaer. Terms; —#15 to insure; #lO for the season. JAMES MALOY.
iiaiuii. K&37 P£gg 24 YEARS. WUc Tit dical Co., Elkhart, Ini. Rtp.s : For 20 years I was troubled with h-iurt Would lrtquenUy have falling ei*.:w u.J'l smothering Rt night. Llad to 6it up or gut out of bod to breathe. Had pain in my left aide ainVlijck most of the time; at hist I became drop-n uL I was very nervous end nearly worn out. 'ibe least excitement would cause me to THOUSANDS wth aiwreriag,- For the last fifteen years I could not ; It c-i •r. y leftside or back dntil began taking your > rto Heart Cure. I had not taken it very long until 1 felt much better, and I can now sleep on eitner fide or buck without the least discomfort 1 have tin pain, smothering, drojtsy, no wind on stomach or other disagreeable 'symptoms. lam able to do all ray otvti housework without any tro.tblcxwi consider myself cured. Elkhart, Ind.ilSSS. ' Mbs. ElslieA Hatch. It is, no\y four years since I have taken any medicine. Amin better health than I have been in 40-yeaEC tihtm.esßyrbes, a--■ mmik lieve that .Or. 2il ties’ S'ew S~7 51 |W' Sy O Sier.fl Cure saved my life aud made me a well woman. lam now 62 years of ago, and am able to 'do a good day's work, il-y iSth, 1 ioi Mb 3. Rlmica .Hatch. Sold on !i Positive Guarantee. UarAMLES’P! LIS, 50 Doses 25 Cts. Sold by B. F. Fendig, Druggist, DOCTOR SPFfT a T IST OJL iliOljrlljiO 1 OF NATIONAL REPUTATION By special'request of his many patients who have usually gone a long distance to see him, will-visit 'RENSSELAER, —AT THE—MAKEEVER HODSI, Tuesday, May 9. Dr. Rea has been connected with the largest hospitals in the country, and has no superior in diagnosing and treating diseases and deformities. He will give #SO for any case that he cannot tell the disease and where located in five minutes. He will return every four weeks during the year. Treats all Curable Medical and Surgical Diseases, Acute and Chronical Catarrh, f Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat and .Lungs, Dyspepsia, Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Kidneys, Liver, Bladder, Chronic Female and Sexual Diseases. EPILEPSY OR FITS CURED, A Positive Guarantee. All Urinary and Kidney Troubles are speedily cured by treatment that has nover failed. He undertakes no incurable cases, but cures thousands given up to die. Remem bei the date and come early, as his rooms are always crowded wherever he-stops. CONSULTATION FREE. Correspondence solicited and confidential. Book on Diseases, Free. I)R. D. REAWanted—Ladies to assist me in selling the famous “Gloria Water,” for the complexion. Terms libeftl. Address ■, ■—~ Mrs. Mary H. Watson Pleasant Ridge, Ind. Manager branch office. W. L. DOUGLAS S 3 SHOE ccn/iPA.en. fAnd other specialties for GenUemen, Ladles, Boys and Misses are the Best in the World. See descriptive advertisement which will appear In this paper. Take no Substitute, but Insist on having W. L. DOUGLAS' SHOES, with name and price stamped on Bold |jy Ellis & Murray.
ALVA. The well known running horse, Alva, will be at the borne of his owner, M. Caldwell, at Mt. Ayr, for the season of 1893. Colts of his get are proving very satisfactory. :> .. v . . D r ■ A T«Y A -—Oh colt foaled 1884, bred at Woodburn Stud, Kentucky, sired by Warwick. Ist dam—Aurelia by Imp. Glen Athol. 2nd dam—Austria by Australian..* - 3rd dam—Lindora by Lexington. 4tb d«m—Picayune by Medoc. sth dam—Lillie Howe by Sir William, of Frankfort. GtK dam—Lady Robin ~~ by Robin Gray.” by Quicksilver. Bth dam— by Meade’s Celer. WARWICK. (Sire of Alva.) , • bay horse foaled!B72, bredJay_P. Lorillard, Rancocus Stud. Ist dam—Minnie Minor, bay mare by Lexington. 2nd dam—Julia ‘ by Imp. Glencoe. 3rd dam—Lillie Howard. i —* i BILL LEONARD. —, —_ —i- •. . ..«• ,»• • ■■ ■ » ~ Chestnut horse, foaled 1888, bred at Belle Meade Stud, Nashville, Tenn. Will be at Crisler k Coovert’s barn, Morocco, for the season of 1893. —— —- ~~~ " SIRED BY IROQUOIS. v* ■ • -O Ist dam—Beersheba by Imp. Bonnie Scotland. 2nd dam—Suntana by Capt. Elyee. 3rd dam—Angeline by Imp. Albion. 4th dam—Clara Howard by Imp. Barefoot. stli dam—lmp. Alarm by Imp. Thunderbolt. ~ --— , r -_. ... . /■ -Dzg-’-U-. - • D IROQUOIS. Br. colt, foaled 1878; bred at Ashland Stud, Kentucky. Sired by Imp. Leamington. Ist dam—Maggie B. B. by Imp. Australian. 2nd dam —Madeline by Imp. Boston. 3rd dam—Magnolia by Imp. Glencoe. Beersheba is dam of Marie R. and Emporia. Suntana is dam of Georgia Woods, Bolana All and Lialanak. Eor extended program see Bruce’s Stud Book, Vol. 5, page 138. $25.00 for a Life Scholarship in the Corner 4th and Columbia Sts Prepare in a Permanent, Reliable and Progressive School. Lar go Faculty. Superior, Practical methods. Positions for grad uates secured. Individual instructions and jelass drills. For cata logue, Address J. CADDEN, Pres. MILTON CHIPMAN _—7 .7. U DP Does all kinds ofSteam Fitting * * * * * * And Pipe Wobk, Repairs Engines and Boilers, Also Handles the Kalamazoo TTT’IrLd. Ixdlllls, And Water Tanks, The Best on The Market. Prompt attenti on to all orders, and satisfaction guaranteed.
A word to the wise is sufficient We bought our carpets of the manu facturers, paid cash, got discount saved jobbers profits, and 'give our patrons the benefit. Porter & Wishard. Austin <fc Co., composed of W. B. Austin, A. H. Hopkins, Geo. K. Hollingsworth, will loan you money on personal,mortgage,or chattel security, for long or short time at local bank rates. These loans can be paid back at any time, and are more desirable than bank loans, because interest is rebated. We have unlimited capital and can accomodate everybody. • They’ll Deliver Your Groceries. Remember that Warner A Shead, the Van Rensselaer street grooery and hardware firm, are now running a delivery wagon, and will deliver goods free to any part of the city, on short notice.
Just received a large number of somplos of wall paper from Alfred Peats, the wall paper man Chicagotogether with a small pamphlet on economy in homo decoration with ad* vice how to hang paper. These samples are much liner than anything ever seen before for the price, some of the 3ilt papers being as low as 5c a roll, and heavy embossed gold papers as low as 10c per roll, all arranged with wide borders and ceiling papers to match according to the latest style. Thess samples aro sent free to anyone who will write to Alfred Peats, department D. 136, 138 W. Madison St. Chicago, or to 30, 32 W. 18th St. New York, and will enablo anyone desiring to redecorate their house to buy the latest style i papers at about wholesale prices. Ducklen’s Arnica salve The best salve in the wo rid for Chtfs Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Bheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to rive perfect satisfaction, or money refunded Price 26 cents per box. For sale byF B. Meyer.
