Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 39, Number 76, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 May 1907 — Page 4

..>i ~ : r i i i .1 | s ? cm[ ‘fjj| jsim I. ' ! .... .. ~..__ .. ■ I"'-. T- ■ ) ' ■> • ifev’jr* —^— ‘‘Queen Quality’* Shoes are preferred above all others by women of nination and taste. To ordinary shoes they are as a Worth gown is to an ordinary dress. Only a shoemaking genius can impart their “chic" and Style and marvelous fit. Such shoes could be produced in small quantities only at an extravagant price. “Queen Quality” methods bring them to you at prices no higher than you pay lor ordinary shoes. FENDIG’S FAIR

t\ Amm I \ ■. a* 1 / 'a gJ We haw the celebrated Staler buddies, jj also Say, fiemtcy and other IWa. S< Come and See Us. | NOBODY CAN SfRVE YOD BETTER. p Harness, Collars, Bridles, Whips, Harness Dressing, 53 »w Harness Soap, Harness Oil, Harness Rivets, Horse Si %( Blankets, Lap Dusters, Sweat Pads, Collar Pads, •< > Leather Halters, Rope Halters, Rings and Rosettes, ij fygt Fly Nets, Buggy Washers, Bits of All Kinds, Harness !jj J*| Snaps, Storm Fronts, Quick Shaft Couplings, Axle Jj Grease, Horse Covers, Horse Boots, Horse Clippers, (JJ Wood and Iron Hames, Hame Straps, Metal Polish, ;£ Riveting Machines, Gall Cures, Curry Combs, Tall •« Ties, Blanket Pins. Check Hooks. Hitch Reins, Trace #5 |JJ| Holders, Line Holders, Harness Chains, Neck Yokes, '5Jj! Neck Yoke Straps, Neck Ycke Chains, Wax Ends JJ & and Needles, Buggy Tops, Buggy Cushions, Binder {jjj 1»3 Twine, Storm Aprons. Rain Coats and scores of other things you need. •#' J I® Zl you heliew la fair Play, so also do we £« and we are here to prow It here, where (J£ »•; you can return the doods if not at represented s*f | Scott Bros, I rmwTiYmnmtn .* * - turn «uuvmm*mtutuiui immmtwut*

4* vS*M+ *■*■*■• f FURNITURE £ At Home Cheaper than Mail-Order flooses ! j I 1 Folding Go- gm «| /fe Rockers jfcam' /% »»*>>* hT ■> 3 I BtlW BJpia ;sfl7- I am The Celebrated Cotton at| ' * Elastic Felt Mattress, -H | | | 2 Hr " Sold at $t 5, our price. *r*ni. . *;■ Headquarters for all kinds of Furniture, Carpets and Rugs. 2 I Ja * W^LUbanw PliTißilißUfti Bi.t.M a M ' ' ll UTBTiTBT ■tbt ■titltli'l 1 ■*i*S*r* itßtlTb VB Hit

Death Following Long Sickness.

Harry Swartzell baa received word that Chester Aldrich, of nu cnieon, asds., wnose sicKness has been occasionally mentioned in these columns, died there Tuesday May 21st. His disease is thought to have been consumption. Mr. and Mrs. Emerald Aldrich of this place bad been at his bedside for several weeks. Deceased lormerly lived in Rem ington and moved to a farm near Hutchinson, Kans., some eight or ten years ago. He leaves a widow and nine children varying in ages from two to twenty-one years. BurraiwasmadeThere. Deceased was a brother of Emerald and Granville Aldrich and of Mrs. Lyman Zea, all of Rensselaer.

Keep Your Hands On Your Umbrella

Dr. Chas. H. Vick reports that his umbrella was taken from the postoffice while he stopped only momentarily to read a letter. He had leaned it up in a corner and was astonished a moment later to find it not there. The public con science does not seem to be very high in the matter of umbrellas and some people seem to regard the stealing of one as lightly as others do the defrauding of a railroad company out of its pay for a ride. Both are, however, distinctly dis - honest, and the Dr. is righteously indignant because his Was stolen, virtually from right under his nose.

Umbrella Mystery Unraveled.

All is not wicked that seems to be in this world. Every circum-i stance looked malicious to Dr. Charles Yick when his umbrella was missing from the post office Friday, and he imagined that some demon of iniquity had beeh hounding his foot steps for hours, awaiting the moment that he loosed his grip on the family rain stick. Now the mystery is solved, glory to the tact that the Republican is so generally read. An honest man has been found, the doctor has recovered -his mental equilibrium, the public credit is somewhat restored, and the doctor has come onto his own.

N. W. Beeves, the express agent, started out to make a few collections that day* carrying his wife’s umbrella, with the details of which he was not very familiar. After a time it began to rain and he reached under his arm for the umbrella and it was gone. He began to revisit the places he hadrecently been, among them the post-office. There, euie enough, right where he had stood, was an umbrella. He made no doubt it was his and feeling that he could meet his wife with a clear conscience, he went homeward. It was some time afterward when he made a closer examination of the umbrella and found that instead of being his wife’s silk umbrella, it was of less expensive texture. Then he decided that some scalawag had traded with him while his umbrella was in the postoffice. He was giving the un known rascal many a silent malediction when be decided to make a further scearoh for his own umbrella. Sorely enough he found it at Bosenbaum’s restaurant. Then it was too late to return the post-office umbrella to its place with any expectation of its owner being the party to pick it up, and Mr. Beeves was feeling mighty guilty. At this juncture the Be publican came to his rescue, and the dilemna was mastered. A low bow and many boquets for .The Republican.

Sore Nipples. Any mother who has had experience with this distressing ailment will he plea ted to know that a core may be effected by applying Cham berlain’e Salve as sx>n as the child is done nursing. Wipe it off with, a soft doth before allowing the babe o nurse. Many trained nurses use this salve wit i beet results. For ■ale by B. F. Fendig. Notice. ( All pa »er bills at Cox’s News stand ar; doe on the Ist of each month, and most be paid by the TOth, or paper will be stopped, we will collect only on business streets. J. H. Gax. daw

Rensselaer Northwestern Students Engaged.

The Chicago' Tribune announces the engagement of several Northwestern university students, among them being Miss Alice Shedd, of Rensselaer, to Mr. J. Fred Rom mell, of the Delta Tan Delta fraternity. ' Three yohng ladies pictures are published, one of them being a Miss Lena May Linn, of Shawnee, Osla., who has listened to the eloqnent pleadings of the winner of the Northern oratorial league contest viz. Glenn Porter Wishard. Glen is a Rensselaer boy and a senior in Northwestern. He has been engaged in numerous oratoriq* alxsontestsduringhiseqlegeeaFeer, and was almost always victorious. Now he has succumbed to the elo quent pleadings of a woman’s eyes. When the wedding is to occur is not statedj but Glen will probably include Rensselaer on his wedding itinerary.

Veracity By Wire.

A bright young man was engaged in a desultory conversation With, a prominent fiuancier pf a most economical disposition Whgo tbg great man suddenly invited* attention to the suit ot clothes he was then wearing. ■' l T have.never believed,” said he "in paying fancy prices for cut-to-imm mmm *<>%, here’s a suit ior which t paid 18.60. Appearances are very deceptive. If I told you I purchased it for S3O you’d piobably believe that to be the truth.” “I would if you told me by telephone,” replied the young man.— Success Magazine.

License to Sell Spectacles.

Tbe traveling spectacle seller will have to have a license to do business in Indiana hereafter, according to a rating adopted by the new State Optometry Board, which met in the governor’s office Wednesday. The board decided that those opticians who had practiced in this state for three years continuously previous to March 9, 1907, would not have to take the examination for license to practice optometry.

Wanting for Indulgent Hubbies.

We desire to offer timely advice to husbands who annually beat the carpets and rugs for their wives. Over in Huntington yesterday a man came near losing his life from the effects of Inhaling arsenic while beating carpets for his wife. The deadly drug had been placed on the carpets to keep the moth out. Don’t take any chances.

Many ills come from impure blood C m’t have pure blood with faulty digestion, lazy liver and 11 -sluggish bowels. Burdock blood Bitters strengthens stomach, JBpwels and liver, and purifies the blood. For Sale—No. 1 Hungarian seed, at the Globe Onion Farm 1J miles north of town.

Relief From Rheumatism Pains. “I suffered with rheumatism for over two years,” says Mr. Holland odj|ry, a patrolman, of Key West Fla. “Sometimes it settled in my knees and, lamed- me so 1 could hardly walk, at other times it would be in my feet and hands so I was incapacitated for duty. One night when I was in severe pain and lame from it my wile went to the drug store here and came back with a bottle of Chamberlain'S Pain Balm. I was rubbed with it and. lound the pain had nearly gone daring the night, 1< kept on using it for* a little more than'two weeks and lound that it drbve the rheumatism away. I have not had . any trouble from that disease for over three month.” For sale by B. F! Fendig. “ ' Cemenußlocks. « .... r - r -- for FooLdatwos or ttoase Complete. * •.< •. . ■■ V I I have just received the latest cement block machinery, constructon the basis of the ever-increasing demand for thiß material for foundation and bnildiug purposes, many patterns. ’ ‘ New being ; able to save materially in labor, the price of blocks is cheaper than before,- notwithstanding the higher price of cement. Let me furnish yon figures befote yoh buy. “Put a cement foundation under "your old house—yon can do it yourself. L&e JaagOfY Contractor.

Experience Counts.

fn no business does experience connt for more to bott HU(I tll6 * n the illlplement business. Experience eu ables the dealer to know the value of goods, he edn see at a glance whether they are artistie and will please a discriminating customer fy a word whether they will satisfy Layers by giving first class service. This same experience enables him to buy right. Iheu he can SELL right It is his large experience coupled with his thorough knowledge of the business that has made Chas. A. Roberts the Front street buggy man so deservidly popular with the discriminating buyers of sightly vehicles. He served his time in a carriage shop way back in the 60s when an apprentice had to know his business' before he could begin work for himseld. HA put in seventeen years of his life building and repairing wagons and carriage and cap make every piece ih thtim. He begah to sell implements in 1882 and every customer gets the benefit of his long experience every time he shows a vehicle. That’is worth Something isn’t it? He sells Studebaker ana Page Bros, carriages and bu gies and there are no better, and be has some other - makes and styles. Studebaker larm wagon he claims There are: poue so gpqd. Success return apron or Litchfield Endless Aprop Manure Spreaders. Th<y ARE BOTH ALL RIGHT. Me Cortnick Binders and Mowers, yon all know What they are, and Grain King Shoveling Boards and there are‘more of them Soli here than of any other make. You are going to need some of. 1 these articles this year aud you will always regret it i{ 80 W BoJ * rtß and see his goods before yon buy. PasteHns’in your EalTso you wdtft f#rgetl» go. He! wifl do the whop.you land. Don’t forget ue ,place on F/ont Street and the name Chas. A. Roberts, The Bitggy il&n. ‘ e Take tpe fresh air cure in a Roberts Rig of your own. If you want the best for the least money buy of C. A. Roberts. The Baggy Man.

O. B. 3G. Page 492. Cause 7112. SHERIFF’S SALE. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk’s office of the Jasper Circuit Court, in a cause wherein Byron S. Randall is plaintiff and The Douglas Oil Company a corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the 1 aof the Teritory of Arizona, Byron S. Randall and W. S. Peck, Secretary and Treasurer, are defend* ants, requiring me to make the sum of Eight Hundred and Thirty ($830) Dollars and no Cents, with interest on said decree and cost, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on. ' Saturday, tbe Bth Day of Jttoe, 1997, between the hours of 10 o’clock, A. M, and 4 o’clock, P. M. of said day, at the door of the Court Bouse of said Jasper County , Indiana, the rents an£ profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described Real Estate, to-wit: Lots three, 3, four 4, five, 5, six, 6, seven, 7, eight, 8, nine, 9, ten, IQ. eleven, 11, twelve, 12, thirteen, 13 and fourteen, 14, in block one, 1, and lots one, 1, two, 2, five, 5, six, 6, seven, TS, eight, 8, nine, 9, ten, 10, eleven, 11, and twelve, 12, in block, two, 2, and lots one, 1, two 2, three, 3, four, 4, five!, 5, and six, 6, eight, 8, and nine, 9, in block three, 3, all in the town di. Aspbaltum as shown by the. plftt of, said town recorded deed record sev'-enty-three on page sixty-nine of the records of Jasper County, Indiana, and all in Jasper County, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not' sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose at puhlip sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as msy be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. JOHN O’CONNOR, Sheriff of Jasper County, A. Halleck, Atty. may 14-21-28.

Farm Bargains. 80 acres, two miles of two stations, on main road, five room house, gran cry, crib, stable, 'two wells, fruit,r&> acres cultivated, 20 acres young timber, 160 rods of tile with fine outlet. Price 126 per acre. Terms 1300 down and good time On balance at site per cent im terest"v < •* f a 130 acres, three miles of good town, free mail, school on farm, five room house, good barn, hen bOuse, good well, lots of fruit, half, cultivated, half timber pasture. Price 125 per, acre. Terms 11,000 and long time on remainder at five per cent interest. 65 acres, nOar school, on main road, free mail line, three miles from good town, good lour room house, good baru and other out buildings some fruit arylgood well. Price only 23.60 per acre, Terms •600 down and long' time on dif> ference at five per ednt interest. *1 The above farms are in Jteper county and are all rented. ? If, you are looking for a bargain do not miss inspecting tfooeejjyyea • Rensselaerjlnd

r~' BARKIS & HARIWI 'S’--*'-:- .=- Real Estate, Loan and Insurance. Office Odd Fellows Buildingßoom—No. 4 . Rensselaer, lad. We will write your insurance at the right price for good protection against fire, lightning, tornado hnd. windstorm on city, village and farm property, plate glass, accident and lire insurance. All sound and liberal companies. When desiring to sell or trade your farm or city property you will make no mistake by listing it with us. Commissions always reasonable. See us about the Homeseekers excursions to South Dakota, every Tuesday, the great farming country of the northwest. k Home grown Nursery stock 40,00.0. 2 and 3 year old apple trees grown from Root Grafts. 37 varieties nice thrifty trees 6 to & feet high, 15 cents each or $lO per 100. No letter trees can be bought at any price. We also have a general line of Nursery stock and prices right, certificate of Nursery Inspection by state inspector with every order. Hallock Nursery, C has. Hal leek, Manager Fair Oa ITlnd.

Notice To load Holders Notice is hereby given to the owners of the Bonds issued by the City of RepsjeJaer, Indiana, on January 13th, 1902 for the.' Improvement of ftariison'Strefcf frotti'Van Rensselaer to Cullen Strfeets 1 . ini said City, thatthere has been paid Intp the Treasury of said City the sum of four hundred and twenty-five $425.00 dollars, applicable to the payment of all the Bonds not due (being five in number and for the sum of $117.70 each.) Notice is therefore hereby given that said sum of loi£. hundred and twenty-five $425.99,d011ar5, wi(l be paidon Julylst, 1907 on aU Bonds not due. on presentation of said bonds at tlje office, of said Treasurer on said date, and that no interest will be allowed or pai4 after July Ist, 1907 on said bonds not due and upon which the said sum of $425.00 is desired to be paid as provided by; Section Six (6) of an Act of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, approved March nth, 1991: Apt* 1991, pages 537, S 3» and 529. MOSES LEOPOLD, City Treasurer.

Sheriff's Sals Cause 7142. ‘ By virtue of a certified copy of » Decree to me directed, from tl e Clerk’s office of the Jasper Circuit Court In a cause wherein John Makeever is plaintiff and Charles Miller and Charles H. Bower's Are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of two-hundred and eighty-five, s2§f>,7B, dollars and seven-ty-eight cents, With interest on said decree and cost, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, Saturday Jane Bth, 1907, the hours of 10 o’clock a.m. and between 4 O’clock p. m. of said day, atthedoor of the Court House of said Jasper. County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described Beal Estate, towit: Lots nine (9) ten (10) eleven (11) twelve (12) and thirteen (i§) in block five (5) In Sunnyside addition to the city of Rensselaer, Jasper County, Indiana all in Jasper County, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose at public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. .. JOHN O’CONNOR, Sheriff of Jasper County. James H. Chapman, Attorney. May 14-21-28

O. B. 36. Page 564. SBfiBIFF’S SALE, By virtue of a certified copy of a Decree to me directed, from the Clerk’s office of the Jasper Circuit Court, in a cause wherein David D. Gleason is plaintiff and James Wicklzer, Annette Wickixer, Ella Fisher and Isiah Fisher are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of five hundred and ; eight ($508.09) dollars and nine ceptf, with interest on said decree and cost, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on ■, i,, • , Saturday, the Bth Day of June, 1907, between the hours of 10. o’clock a. m., and 4 o’clock p. ro. of said day, at. the door Of the CcraVt Bouse of said Jasper County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate to wit: ~j Lot eight (8) in block two (2)in the original plat of the town of. Hogan, Jasper County, Indiana. ' If such rents and profits will not sell for a Sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and Costs, I will at the same time and plape expose at public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much, thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said.decree, intere*t ( and costa: ‘ . - ... SkTd sals will be made without any relief whatever from, valuation or appraisement laws. JQHN O’CONNOR, Sheriff of Jasper County. Mpses Leodold, A tty. maylt-21-28