Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 92, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 August 1909 — Page 3
(threshing COAL I I At PARR, INDIANA I I “West Virginia Splint” I I Free from Slate. „ I I THE BEST COAL ON THE MARKET. I I G.M. Wilcox & Son. I 1 Portia I I If you are going to use any Cement this I -I summer or fall, get our prices. We I have to sell >to make reotn for I poai in our storehoiisp. I G. M. WILCOX & SON I Parr, Indiana £ffis theatre, friday, August 4th 11 * 1 j— t .v - /. ■ >. mJii Tajik"/’ '' - # ■■••■> 1 x flßk v^cx< JB ggßpOjjM ■ ;»££ Ks F \ 1 IB wPfjT I TiKpl '■■ w I sjfr rs —• .tr . : : 1 Ed. Anderson’s Powerful Rural Drama' “The Farmer’s Daughter” See the Farm Scene. See the Snow Scene. See the Church Scene. See Hy. and Thankful. Prices 25c, 35c, and 50c. ii You’ll find Photo making 11 1 ' •" ■ " ’’ here very easy, because we’ve got only the kind of photographs / ’J you want, and because our desire to make you the right thing ’J ’ ► rather than to Just sell you something. Yon won’t need urging < [ < ► when you see the values we offer, as the QUALITY just sticks out < * ’ ► all over them. The best photes you ever saw for the price. <> / o ;; H. F. PARKER, o ;; Photographer. Jj J < • < -0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
NATURE’S WARNING. f Rensselaer People Must Recognize and Heed It Kidney ills come quietly—mysteriously, But nature always warns you. Nctlce the kidney secretions. See if the color is unhealthy If there are settlings and sediment, Passages frequent, scanty, painful. It’s time then to use Doan’s Kidney Pills, ’ To ward off Bright's disease or diabetes. Doan’s have done great work in this locality. John Shafer, Illinois St., Monticello, Ind., says: “I suffered from kidney and bladder trouble for some time. My kidneys were much disordered and the passages of the secretions were painful. I had such a lame back and pains across my loins that I could not rest nights. After using Doan’s Kidney Pills I was relieved of all these troubles. They did me more good than anything I ever used and I take great pleasure in recommending them to my friends.” For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. Miss Frances Clinton, of South Bend, who recently -secured a divorce from Ross Miller, manager of the Martin Lumber company, has brought suit against Miller’s aunt, Mrs. Jennie Sharpless; a prominent cbnrch worker, for 10,000 damages, alleging that the latter stole her husband’s love. Try the classified column.
NEWLAND.
T. M. Callahan called on Wm. Rees Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Breese were out driving Sunday. George Gorbet called on Silas Toombs Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Snider spent Sunday with his brother of Gifford. Newt Bowman and Wm. Rees were Rensselaer callers Friday. Mrs. John Bowen spent Friday afternoon with her mother, near Gifford. Ed Oliver and family and Lloyd Tow spent Sunday with E. Kennedy and family. The Francesville telephone company are erecting new telephone poles in these parts. Mrs, Wm. -Kennedy and children spent Monday with E. Kennedy and family. z Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Beedy and children spent Sunday with Harry Gifford and family. Newt Bowman and sons, Claude and Lloyd, took dinner with Wm. Rees and family Saturday. The rain the other day helped to make things look better, especially the late potatoes and late corn. George Daniels .and Samuel Rees were in our neighborhood Saturday. They are of near Independence. Newt Bowman and two sons, Claude and Lloyd, left Newland Saturday for Frankfort to visit friends and relatives. All you can hear now Is the hum of the threshing machines as threshing wheat and oats are the order of the day.
The Republican Is headquarters for fine job printing.
LEE ITEMS.
It is quite rainy here at this writing. Uncle George McCoy is sick at this writing. Mrs. Walls took her baby to the doctor Tuesday. J. P. Overton went to Rensselaer Saturday morning. 4 ‘ A. R. Clark and son went to Brook to work on a threshing machine. J. H. Culp and O. A. Jacks went to see Mr. Moore Thursday. Mrs. Holman’s uncle came Saturday to visit friends and relatives. Mrs. A. R. Clark’s daughter, ‘ Mrs. McCashin, is staying with Mrs. Clark. Mrs. Dora Jacks and Mrs. Della Culp were out collecting preacher money. . Rev. and Mrs. Simonson and son spent Sunday with W. L. Stiers and family. Van Wood and family, who have been visiting his sister, returned home Monday. Mrs. F. J. Stiers and granddaughter, Agnes, went to Kankakee, 111., Saturday.* Grandma and grandpa Zable’s daughter came to visit with them for a few days. Elmer Gilmore and Earl Folks spent Saturday and Sunday with Clyde Clark and family. Tonie Overton came Wednesday night to make a visit with his brother, Frank, and family. Mrs. Ida Lewis and daughter are both on the sick list, and have gone to Rensselaer to see a doctor. Ora Kelley had a smash-up Sunday. His horse became frightened and turned short and broke every spoke out of one wheel and broke the shafs.
Eat Corned Beef, Cabbage, Pork and Onions for Dinner. Do you crave for a good old fashioned New England boiled dinner? Corned beef and cabbage and pork and beets and onions and turnips ? There may be a few readers of the Republican who will turn up their noses and sniff contemptously, but if they do it’s because they have never faced the good old kind like mother used to make. But there are thousands of people in this world who won’t eat a New England boiled dinner because they can’t digest it. And these people ought to know at once that Mi-o-na tablets, the quick acting and guaranteed cure for indigestion, will put the stomach in such a clean and perfectly healthy condition in a few days that they will be able to eat and digest a New England boiled dinner or any other kind of a dinner. B. F. Fendig sells Mi-o-na for 50 cents a large box and he guarantees it to cure indigestion, catarrh of the stomach or any chronic or acute stomach trouble. Mi-o-na is a wonder worker. It instantly stops distress after eating; turns a sour stomach into a sweet one; stops belching and heartburn. Mi-o-na is sold by leading druggists everywhere. ~ Yl2
ffiSMEj Cures catarrh or money back. Just breathe it in. Complete outfit, including inhaler sl. Extra bottles 50c. Druggists. Notice to Non-Residents. The State of Indiana, Jasper County. In the Jasper Circuit Court, September Term, 1909. Complaint No. 7,469. Mollie Goodner vs. Perry Goodner. Now comes the plaintiff, by Foltz & Spitler, her attorneys, and files her' complaint here for divorce and custody of minor children together with an affidavit that the defendant, Perry Goodner, is not a resident of the State of Indiana. ’ Notice Is therefore hereby given said Defendant, that unless he be and appear on the first day of the next Term of the Jasper Circuit Court to be holden on the 2nd Monday of September A. D., 1909, at the Court House In Rensselaer in said County atad State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard a®d determined in his absence. In Witness Whereof, I hereunto set my hand and affix the Seal of (SEAL) said Court, at Rensselaer, thia 19th day of July, A. D. 1909. C. C. WARNER, jy.23-30-aug,6 ' Clerk.
EVENTS OF FIVE DAYS
Program of Indiana Slate Fair Is Brimful of features For Week of September 6. FINE DAY AND NIGHT SHOWS Band Concerts, Parades, Vaudeville and Many Other Conspicuous Features Will Mark the Big Exposition. -—All Entry Lists Close on Aug. 24. —Acres of New Farm Machinery. The Indiana State Fair opens at Indianapolis on Monday (Labor day), Sept. 6, and, under a rigid rule fixed by the state board of agriculture a few years ago, the exposition will be on for five full days. All of the entry lists close on Aug. 24, and the exhibitors may enter the grounds on Sept. 2. That its rule may be enforced, the fair management will start the judges to work tying ribbons early Tuesday morning, and exhibits which are not in readiness at that time stand ajgood Chance of missing the prizes. The program shows that each day of the Fair will be filled to the brim with interesting features. The Fair will be .formally opened at 9 o’clock on ;Monday morning. The first day will be Labor day and practically , all the events of the week wljl be givep, including the concerts by Natlello’s band of the Indianapolis Military and the Indianapolis Newsboys’ bands, which will play every day. The vaudeville features, Including the most sensational open-air Show that -has yet l been given at the iFair, will each afternoon be given before the grandstand. The races will be started at 1:30 every afternoon, those for the first day being: Three-year-old, trot, purse 4600; the pacing division .of the Western Horseman stake No. J for three-year-olds, $2,000; 2:30 trot, |2,000; 2:06 pace, ssl,ooo. Hedgewood Boy, 2:02%, and Lady Maude C., 2:04*4, full brother and sister, will be driven by Dick Wilson to beat the world’s record for pacers to wagon. The night shows will start on Monday evening at 8 o’clock and an elaborate program of horse shows, vaudeville and band concerts will be given each evening. Tuesday will be Old Soldiers’ and Children’s day, and they, with teachers in charge of pupils, will be admitted free. The day horse and cattle shows in the coliseum will be marked by the awards of ribbons. Concerts will be given in the coliseum, grandstand and near the Administration building. The races for Tuesday include the 2:22- pace, purse, $1,000; 2:19.tr0t, $1,000; 2:15 pace, $5,000; 2:11 trot, SI,OOO. Wednesday’s program will be flavored by the show of coach, Hackney, saddle horses and ponies, as well as cattle. An outdoor parade of horses and cattle will be given at 1 p. m. An extra display of flowers will be made In Horticultural hall, the band concerts and vaudeville will be continued, and the races are: 2:25 pace, purse $2,000; 2:20 trot, $5,000; 2:13 pace. $1,000; 2:16 trot, SI,OOO. Thursday will see the Fair at its height. Light harness horses will be among the features of the coliseum program. .The grand champions in all livestock departments will receive ribbons. An extraordinary display of cut flowers will be made in Horticultural hall. The second parade of horses and cattle will be given outdoors, the band Concerts and vaudeville will be given, and the races will be as follows: Three-year-old pace, 2:25 class, purse $600; the trotting division of the Western Horseman stake No. 2 for three-year-olds, $4,000; 2:10 pace, $2,000; 2:07 trot, $1,200. Hedgewood Boy, 2:02%, will attempt to beat the world’s record for stallions. Friday will see the last ribbons tied in all departments. The band concerts will, as on previous days, begin at 9 a. m. and continue.through the afternoon and evening. With the exception of the outdoor livestock parades, Friday’s program will equal that of any other of the five days. The races will be a 2:09 pace, purse, $1,000; 2:24 trot, $1,000; free-for-all pace, $1,200; 2:13 trot, $2,000. Lady Maude C., 2:04%, will be driven to beat the world’s record for pacing mares. The Fair will close with the horse and cattle parades, vaudeville, band concerts and horse show on Friday night. The purses for the week amount to $37,600 and the total premiums $75,350. Year by year the mechanical department of the Fair keeps pace with the growth of other divisions of the exposition, and overshadows some of them. In the amount of ground room occupied, the machinery displays far outrank any other department, being literally measured by the acre. Before the snow was off the Fair grounds last spring the demand for space on the part of manufacturers began. Old exhibitors have asked for larger apace, and many new ones have entered the* lists. About twenty-five acres will be used for the mechanical displays, including every sort of machine which will lighten the work of men and women on the farm, and all will be of the newest designs which the manufacturers are producing. The newest ideas in engines, plows, wagons, windmills and other power pumps, harvesting machinery and dairy appliances will be shown for the enlightenment of the people from the farms, and all machinery pavilions will be crowded.
MILROY.
Ed. Herman was in Lee Sunday evening. ‘ . Wm. Halstead visited G. L. Parks Sunday. Mrs. Geo. Wood was in Lee Monday morning. Jas. Clark cut oats for Wm. Brock this week. \ Mrs. Fred May visited the last of the week with home folks. John Southard and family ate dinner Sunday with Grandma Foulks. Mrs. Spencer and children visited her mother at Monticello last week. Chas. Smith and Jean Marchand aVe prospecting in Kansas this week. Mrs. Lorisa Foulks and Mrs. Roy Williams were Monon visitors Monday. Mrs. Blair and daughter Helen, of Piper City, 111., visited G. L. Parks this week. Mrs. Byran Iliff and children, of Momence, 111., are visiting Geo. Wood andfamily: • . L Mrs. Tillie Clark assisted Mrs. Ed Herman with cooking for threshers Monday. Creighton Clark and family and Thos. Spencer and family called, on George Foulks Sunday. Mrs. Ed Herman and children and Mrs. Thos. Spencer and children spent Tuesday with Mrs. L. Foulks and Mrs. E. Underwood. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McCashen and daughter spent Tuesday with the former’s mother and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stallwell returned home from Francesville Saturday, where they were called by the death of a cousin of uncle Fred at that place. - Don’t forget the basket meeting Sunday, August Bth, in R. Foulks’ grove. Sunday school and other services in the looming and Rev. Northrop, of Monon, will conduct the services in the afternoon. The Lee orchestra will be present to furnish music. All invited. Come and bring your basket.
BURNS TOWN.
Threshing- is the order of the day. Mrs. Samuel Holmes and Bertha were in Rensselaer Saturday. James Stanley visited with Walter and Elmer Brown Sunday. .Johnny Williams visited with his grandmother, Mrs. Price, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Reed called on Mr. and Mrs. John Marlatt Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sulenberger called on Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ropp Sunday evening. * Philip Durant and Emmett Pullins commenced threshing Monday noon on the ring. Miss Laura Beergard, of Chicago, is visiting with Miss Agnes and Maggie Hurley for a week or two. Misses Lucy and Katie Morgenegg and Ethel and Bertha Holmes called on Misses Agnes and Maggie Hurley Sunday. / Mrs. Chris Morgenegg, Jr., and children returned home to Illinois Sunday, after spending a few weeks here with friends and relatives. C. A. Reed is in the lead so far for th 6 largest yield of oats per acre. His averaged 63 bushels, and Emmett Pullins' wheat averaged 37 bushels. Herman Anderson started to Dakota Monday, where ’lje is going to remain until Christmas and go from there to New Mexico, where his mother now lives. Lester Shriner came down from Chicago Thursday where he had beeti at the bedside of his aged father. He had only been here a little while when the sad news came that he had passed away. Mrs. George McElfresh returned with Lester Saturday to attend the funeral. The ball game between Possom Run and Pleasant Ridge resulted in a score of 47 to 6 in favor of Pleasant Ridge. Ye scribe has decided to keep that measley five. The Possom Run boys say it they can’t do better than that next time they are going to* give their ball suits away and come home after night.
How to Cure Skin Disease. Ar ■ The germs and their poisons which cause tbe disease must be drawn to thq surface of the skin and destroyed Zemo, a scientific preparation for external use, will do this and will positively cure Eczema, Pimples, Dandruff and every form of skin or scalp disease. See photos of many remarkable cures and show case or window display at Long’s drug store. Ask tor sample. . Thos. O’Dowd, 13 years old, was drowned while bathing in the Elkhart river. He was the son of Conductor Michael O’Dowd of the Lake Shore railroad. When his mother died recently she insisted that her boy would soon follow her. j Mr. A. F. Long is pleased to announce to bls' customers that he has secured the agency for Zemo, the best known remedy for the positive and permanent cure of Eczema, Pimples, Dandruff, Blackheads, Piles and every form of Skin or Scalp disease. Zemo gives instant relief and cures by destroying the germ that causes the disease, leaving a clean, healthy skin. See display, and photos of cures made by Zemo at Long’s drug store. Representative and Mrs. Richmond Pearson Hobson, of Alabama, are re-z ceiving congratulations on the arrival of a daughter. Their first child was a boy. A NOTIE DAME L|DY?S-APPEAL To all knowing sufferer* of rboumaUam, whether muecular or of the joint*. aaiatlca. lumbago*, backache, pain* In the kidney. or neuralgia palm, to write to her for a home treatment which haa repeatedly cured all of these torture*. She feel* It her duty to aend it to all auffererw FREE. You cure yooraelf at home aa thouaand* will ‘wtlfy—no change of climate being nece*aary. Thia simple dlacovcry banlahea uric acid from the blood, loooena the atUtaoed joint*, pur Idea tbe blood, and brighten* tbe eye*, giving elasticity and tose to the whole »yatem. If the above Intervet* you. for proof addrem Mrs. M. Summer*. Box R, Notre Dame, Ind.
to - P- -•- T , ■ Serve Bonano Three Times a Vay —: fegWlM hot for breakfast — iced for j lunch - . . ’ - hot or iced for dinner. The most delicious, refreshing and nourishing of all table drinks. The whole family will like it and it is far more healthful than tea or coffee. Ask your grocer for a 25-cent can. FOR BALE BY The Home Grocery Rensselaer, Indiane intbrnational banana pood co. Corn Exchance Bank Bldg. ’ Chicago
The Lasting Quality Of a Studebaker carriage or buggy is never in douht. The material that goes into a Studebaker vehicle —plus the way it is made —insures 4 vehicle of high quality, perfectly proportioned and easy running. The ‘ ‘know-how” which can only be derived from ,a very long experience —nearly sixty years of expert skill and planning—goes into every In Studebaker buggies you will find the best that money can buy. The choicest materials. The finest workmanship. The most approved styles. If you appreciate quality and satisfaction come in and let us show you some attractive Studebaker styles. C. A. ROBERTS, Wagons, Buggies, Farm Implements. ‘ , ■t'jf v ', r . That When You Have Your Milling .Done It 1s done by competent people, who thoroughly understand their business. We believe our past record will doubly assure you when you give us a grist to grind, you will get more satisfactory results than you are able to secure elsewhere. We also carry a larger stock of feed and grain. River Queen Mills Phene 92.
JI large Share of Your earnings Go for Eatables— So why not see that this bioiey Is wisely spent There Is freshness to think abont —and cleanliness and economy. This suggests to ns that this store wght be off service to iji, horanse Its idm b to deal i» grocery goojilness. How well It succeeds b • matter for ouch customer to decide personally. We would be glad to have YOUR opinion. McFarland & Son Relbble Growers.
