Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 40, Number 54, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 March 1908 — Page 3
Hotice To Non-Residents." The State of Indiana, ; i Jasper County, ss. i i ■■ In the Jasper Circuit Court, March Term, 1908. Warren J. White , vs. Wm. C. Larrabee, et al. Complaint No. 7281. *r- By order of Court, in said citaa& the following defendants were found to be non-residents of the State of Indiana, towit: Wm. C. Larrabee, Mrs. Larrabee his wife and Mrs. Larrabee, widow of said Wm. C. Larrabee, deceased, William C. Larrabee and Harriet D. Larrabee, his wife; William C. Larrabee, Mrs, Larrabee, his wife and Mrs. Larrabee, widow of said William C. Larrabee, deceased; Harriet D. Larrabee, Mr. Larrabee, her husband, and Mr. Larrabee, widower of said Harriet D. Larrabee, deceased; i William M. C. Blake, Mrs. Blake, his wife, and Mrs. Blake, widow of said William M. C. Blake, deceased; William Finn; Mary Hunt, Mr. Hunt her husband and Mr. Hunt, widower of said Mary Hunt, deceased; Hiram White, Mrs. White, his wife, and Mrs. White, widow of said Hiram White, deceased, Eliza White, widow of said Hiram White, deceased; and all of the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees, executors, administrators and assigns of each and ev-
ery one of the foregoing named defendants and all of the unknown heirs, 'devisees and legatees of the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of each of the foregong named •defendants. Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be and appear on the 20th day of April, 1908, the same being the 7th day of the next term Of the Jasper Circuit Court to be holden 'on the second Monday of April, A. D., 1908, at the court house in the City of Rensselaer, in said county and state, and answer or demur to said complaint to quiet title and cancel mortgages on real estate the same will be heard and determine* in your absence. In witness whereof, I hereSEAL. unto set my hand and affix seal of said Court at Rensselaer, Indiana, this 26th day of February, A. D., 1908, : C. C. WARNER, Clerk. Foltz & Spitler, Attorneys. Feb.2BMch6-13
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THE WORLD’S HAPPENINGS
Paragraphs of Up-to-Date News Culled From the Press Dispatches of Metropolitan Papers. The Little Calumet river at .Hammond has been on the rampage and is higher than It has been since 1564. Trolley cars collided near Xoblesville Monday, injuring 13 people, 3 of whom may die. Samuel A. Ralston, of Lebanon, is being boomed for the democratic nomination for governor. As a result of a long fight the government will increase the pay of the army and navy. The republican state committee is holding a meeting in its headquarters in the Claypool hotel at Indianapolis today. Mayor James Lyons, of Terre Haute, has given notice that he will not prosecute Sunday theatres, base ball players and other Sunday amusements, contending that the majority of the public want these things.
Mayor McKee, of Logansport, has been found guilty of drunkenness, all five members of the city council voting for the finding. It Is probable that the impeachment proceedings will be dropped. . The fleet is now nearing the end of their record breaking trip and the amusement managers are making prep arations to welcome the American jackies. They will visit San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco. At Winamac the Tippecanoe river is the highest It has been since 1833, and the water got so high that the municipal light plant had to shut down and the city was in darkness Sunday night and church services were suspended. Jacob C. Hoover, a prominent farmer residing in Pulaski county, near Winamac, was drowned In Indian Creek which he was trying to ford with a horse and buggy one day last week. The body was not recovered until Monday.
At Shoals, Ind., yesterday, a 2year old child of Henry Bennell, se- , cured a bottle of kerosene during the absence of its parents from the hou3j and poured it over the face of the 7-weeks old baby, causing the death of the Infant. I ■ ■ ' ’ i Four convicts in the Montana penitentiary made a desperate attempt to escape Sunday morning and dan-; gerously wounded the warden and his assistant. Two of the escaping pris-' oners were shot by the wounded warden and are now lying at the point of death in the prison hospital. The effort of the state tax commissioners, talking along the lines followed by Mr. Wingate in Rensselaer, has had the effect of setting many county treasurers in the notion a greater effort than ever before of making delinquents pay up. Delinquents must pay, and the treasurer should let none escape. Mayor C. D. Coffee, of Decatur, Ind., is another mayor under charges of Intoxication. - He is also charged with collecting license fees and appropriating the same to his own use. He is alleged to have, on the occasion of one of his sprees, embraced three women on the streets of Decatur. A privilege that even the mayor had no right to In that city, i ' Governor Hanly Monday caused to be mailed to voters of the state about 10,000 circulars in which he sets forth his views on certain legislation which .he favored or disapproved during the last legislature. If he vetoed a measure he tells why he did It. The opinions of certain lawyers that influence his vetoes are also printed in circular form and accompany his own circular.
{ A farmer tamed Strlckler, at Ladoga, became intoxicated when ha was trying to got up enough nerve to have a tooth pulled. He fixed hia nerve all right though, (or before /he got sobered up be had whipped the •town marshal and his deputy and a citiren who interferred and then he defied the juit'ce of the peace who undertook to fire him. Strlckler is Bald to be a temperance man and to have become intoxicated on a "pain lotion taken on recommendation of his dentist.
NO USE TO DIE.
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THE SCOOP THAT FAILED
By Wm. G. Stiegler
Mark Everett was one of those reporters who are born, not made. From his earliest copy-carrying days he had made the public world his own, sttidying Its characters and exploring its sinister ways until Its atmosphere had become his very breath of life. Its monotonous routine never dulfedrjds enthusiasm; its work, however slavish, never found him conscious of fatigue. When he reported “nothing doing” on a story it meant just that. Then, one summer, Mark went away | for his vacation. "Tt was the first time he had ever dene so—just a twoweeks’ jaunt on the lakes” but when he canie back he was changed. He had seen a new world, and somehow the luster of the old seemed dimmed. Former haunts lost their lure, and he would sit for hours at headquarters, with his feet on the press table, and
: dream —dream —dream. I Those cold, blue northern waters; the fragrant freshness of the winds; the green-ribbed shores that glinted In the mist-strained light—how he had enjoyed them all! Such delightful people, too! And she —ah, she was best of all!' Her eyes—how beautiful—deeper and bluer than the lakes themselves! Sometimes they were veiled as with the moisture of tears; once or twicp he had seen them glow with the sunlight of smiles. She had spoken scarcely a dozen words to him, 1 yet the memory of her had lifted womanhood to loftier heights of reverence, clothing even the commonest police court drab with an Inviolability that transformed her from a jest to an object of pity. It had been all too brief —he might never see her again.
Just such a dream It was that the , city editor Interrupted one afternoon about a month after Mark’s return. “Here’s a tip from Detroit on a big story,” he snapped over the telephone. “Morgan, the defaulting bank cashier, is believed to be hiding here. Detectives have found a letter mailed to his relatives from 314 Denman place. Get out on It right away and play it for a big exclusive!” All of Mark’s news facilities leaped to quick responsiveness, and his blood tinged with the love of excitement as he set out upon his quest. And luck was with him, for the proprietress of the boarding house at 314 Denman place was none other than Maude Wicherly, whom he knew as a maker of past police history. “It won’t get you anything to throw I me down on this,” Mark urged significantly, whers she denied having ar.v guest name ! Morgan. Then she I suddenly remembered that a man on ! the third flodr by the name of Stephens | had received letters from Detrcft —he i might be the person sought.
Mark promptly found the door, which, after an Interval of knocking, was cautiously opened by a small, pale man with Iron gray hair. “How do you do, Mr. Morgan?” began Mark, curtly, pushing his way Into the room. The man started back In speechless fright, his face blanching before the reporter’s accusing gaze. “Who are you?” he finally gasped. “I’m a detective, come to take you back to Detroit, so you’d better make a clean breast of the whole business."
Mark advanced a step—then stopped as it paralyzed. He closed his eyes convulsively, but when he opened them the vision was still there —not as in his dreams and memories—yet unmistakably she. A wild fear burned in her widened eyes, as she halted in the doorway of the adjoining room. “Mr. Everett!” she murmured. Then she dropped quickly on her knees beside the old man, who was now sitting with his face buried in his quivering hands. “What is It, papa?” she asked tremulously. That same sense of guilt and shame which he had pictured In the other man’s heart now overwhelmed Mark. “I—l didot know he was your father," he faltered. "Ton told —you see, I thought your name —” He hesitated. Her object helplessness unnerved him. If he could only spare her the humiliation of knowing that he knew. “I was looking for some one else and—and made a mistake,” he continued, in firmer, strangely tender tones. "But this is no place for you. You and your father must leaVe here at once. Let me help you, won’t you?" And the girl wearily lifted two impotent little hands to him.
Before the three passed out into the twilight, Mark stepped close to the Wlcherly woman. “If you want me to forget some things I know,” he whispered, “just forget that these people were ever here.” “What about that Morgan story?” demanded the city editor, anxiously, as Mark lounged slowly up to the desk. “Nothing doing,” he answered, wearily. His gmse was vacant, bat in his heart was the vision of her eyes, as he seen them last—glowing with the sunlight of smiles.
Unable to Figure it Out.
“You should feel flattered at getting into Mrs. Shsrpley’s rooming house, Sarah,” said Sarah’s chum. “Well, I have been wondering. This Is what Mrs. Sharpley said to me when I went to look at rooms: ‘You know this is a man’s rooming house. I do not take ladles, but I will take yop/ Now, If she did not take ladles, why would she take me? 1 cannot figure It out, can you?”
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