Jasper County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 August 1898 — Page 8
CORRESPONDENCE.
NEWTON TOWNSHIP. —Plenty of rain. —Mrs. Jos. Kosta spent Sunday at Chicago. ■—Percy Lakin was the guest of Vick Krasney. —Louis Shriver spent Sunday at John Romine’s. —Mrs. H.p. Shields spent Saturday at Rensselaer. —Edward Lane visited at Mrs. Guieldenzoff’s Sunday. —Edward and Vick Shindler visited Harvey and Leslie Miller. Mrs. Guildenzoff and Mrs. Edward Stahl visited at Joseph Lane’s. —Mrs. J. Vasta spent a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Frank Kodatt, at McCoysburg. —Mr. and Mrs. Amiel Heir and family spent Sunday with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Schoultz. —Miss Rosa Lane had quite a runaway last Friday while driving for her music lesson at Tillie Schanlaub’s. The horse became frightened and ran at full speed for two miles, till it reached Mt. Ayr, where it struck a tree, breaking loose from the buggy and throwing the young lady out, hurting her, but not seriously.
BLACKFORD.
—Lester Shriver spent Sunday at Parr. —Newton Jenkins is reported aick with the ague. —George Snow of near Parr, buried an infant child Sunday. The hot days and cool nights lias brought the ague aroifnd again. Mrs. Andrew Arnold is reported very ill at the present writing. Henry Steel’s family who have been sick so long are reported some better. Victor Yeoman and family spent Sunday with Anderson Jenkins and family. —Rainy weather. People in this locality are anxious to get their grain threshed. —Mrs. W. H. Deer and daughter Flossie, of Motion, are visiting friends and relatives near Blackford, —Fred Sliriver was seen going up north last Sunday. Wonder why he travels that road so often, boys? —Several people of near Blackford took advantage of the excursion rates and went to Ohidago last Sunday. —George Jenkins who got his hand broken a couple of weeks ago, reports that it is not getting along very well. —S. B. Jenkins and family, who have been visiting near Blackford some time, have returned to their home at Chicago Heights. —Among the Blackford people who went to Chicago on the excursion Sunday were: Frank Lakin and wife, Theodore Snow, wife and eon, Isaac McCurtain, Ed Sibnll, Alvie Snow, Daniel Lakin, and several others.
NORTH BARKLEY.
—A. L. Bowlus is on the sick list. —Corene Phonic is visiting at Jerry Levereau’s. —Hear the wedding bells! Look out for a wedding. —Miss Ella Callahan is visiting in Rensselaer this week. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lou Caterlau Aug. 12, a girl. —Mr. Kites visited Mr. Burton this week and looked after his farm nte rests. —Miss Elsie Levereau visited at Dan Roadie’s in Rensselaer Sunday and Monday. —Dr. Schwere of Wheatfield, is attending Emery Castor at present. Drs. Moore and Johnson of Rensselaer have no hopes for him. —Mr. B. J. Gifford began surveying his new railroad Monday of this week. We understand it is to ■tart at DeMotte and run to Deadwood, one mile east of West headquarters, a distance of about 18 miles. AIX. —Farmers are all stacking their oats. —The rain has been bad on threshing.
—Look out for another wedding soon. ' —Mis» Annie Clager is home again, j —AI. Keener spent Sunday in Wheatfield. —Ed. Pierson and family spent Saturday in Remington. —Ed Pierson and daughter Myrtie, visite at Casey’s Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Schroyer visited at Mr. John Clager’s Sunday. —Miss Annie Coover visited her sister, Mrs. Maggie Wiseman, Sunday. —Henry Houghbaum and family were the guests of John Clager Monday. —The Holiness peoplev, held meeting at Brushwood Saturday and Sunday. —Mrs. John Belshire is sick at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Brown. —William Houghbaum threshed at C. B. Brown’s Saturday. Mr. Brown has 600 bushels of oats. —Quite a number of our young folks are talking of going to Remington Sunday to hear Rev. Carpenter preach. —Sunday school at Brushwood every Sunday at 9:30 a. m. Preaching every two weeks. Everybody invited. —Sunday school at the Christian church every Sunday at 3:00 p. m. Preaching every two weeks by Rev. J. L. Brady. —Daniel Tolvin, Clyde Saniott, Willie and Bertha Williams, Tillie and Alvie Snow, and Dan Reed, spent Sunday in Chicago. —The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. George Snow died Saturday night and was interred in Mount Tafler cemetery Monday.
REMINGTON.
—Mrs. Ed Maxwell is on the sick list. —Mr. Frank Rich wns seen on our streets Monday. —Mala Garrison wms doing business in Remington Monday. —W. S. Parks of Rensselaer, was a Remington caller Monday. —Fountain Park assembly is in full blast, with a good attendance. —Miss Boyce Lally of Michigan City, was in town Friday of last week. —Mrs. Hattie Thomas and daughter Hazel, are visiting 'in town this week. —Charles Shew, Tabor & Co’s, engineer, is quite sick with what is called “bloody flux.” —We are informed that F. R. Curtis purchased a farm down in Jennings county last week. —Quite a number of G. A. R’s. from here attended the funeral of a comrade at Wolcott Monday. —The moving picture show at Fountain Park Monday night, was highly spoken of by those present. —Ed Anderson is here with a troupe of nine people, rehearsing and organizing for their opening fair week. —Rensselaer and Remington “kids” crossed bats at the fair grounds Tuesday afternoon. Score 10 to 14 in favor of Rensselaer. —C. G. Beal, cashier of Bank of Remington, is holding his head higher than any man in town since Sunday, the 14th. “Yet its only a girl.” —Abe Hardy, sxperintendent of the county farm, was here Wednesday in company with a Cincinnati horse buyer, looking for good horse flesh. —Mrs. J. F. Major and son Wilferd, returned Tuesday from a couple of weeks’ visit with her parents and friends at Warsaw, Ind., accompanied by her sister. —Misses Maggie and Ella Leavel, two of Remington’s best young ladies, returned last week from an extended visit with friends in and near their old home in Garrod county, Ky. —Who gets the proceeds from that crop, of “gypsum” grown in the court house yard?” Couldn’t Mr. Halleck mix it with some of his marsh hay and ship it to market? j Too late, now, tne stuff was spoiled in curing.—Ed.] —A. B. Coleman was in Logansport between trains Tuesday, where he met Mrs. Coleman and daughters who have been on a visit of two months with Mrs. Coleman’s parents at Kouts, Indiana, and accompanied them home. * A fakir was on the street here Tuesday evening, exhibiting a human freak in the shape of a man
without fingers or toes, with double breast bone and two rows of teeth; the hands resembling the foot of a dog, the feet those of a bear, and whose manner of locomotion is like an animal on all fours. —Messrs. Strong and Hershman, democratic candidates for commissioner, were in town one day last week and left a very favorable impression among our people. Remington and the Third district will be heard from next November in a way that will sound the death knell to reckless extravagance in the management of county affairs in old Jasper.
THE AMERICAN NAVY.
Address Delivered at Crown Point, August 6, By Hon. John Boss, Democratic Candidate for Congress. The American Navy.—These words inspire the breast of every American citizen with just pride and patriotism. The Naval History of America is full of surprise and admiration, and for a nation who has devoted so much to commercial development, and to the establishment of a form of Government whose greatest strength is in the intelligence of a patriotic and freedom loving people. When the war with Spain was first agitated, a comparison of the relative strength of the two navies was freely discussed, and grave fears were expressed that Spain, being always ready for war, would certainly have a great advantage. This proposition was scouted by our naval officers, who claimed that all they needed, to substantiate their position, was a chance to give them battle, which was quickly done when the brave Dewey sailed into the Harbor at Manila, attacking the Spanish fleet, under the protection of their batteries, that were both large and formidable, and in the space of a few hours, silenced their batteries and presented to the proud Spaniards the largest submarine fleet in the world, without the loss of a man or a ship. It might be profitable as well as instructive, to make a retrospective view of the cause of the wonderful achievements of our navy. Ist. The Anglo Saxon race for the last two centuries, even from Oliver Cromwell’s time, has been a sea fighting people. Added to their natural ability, the American navy is made and commanded by the most carefully educated class of men in the civilized world. And strange as it may seem the advanced naval construction of the world is but following in the wake of American invention. Take for instance the old American gun frigate Constitution, the mounting of 24 pounders in the broadside of a frigate in 1797 was as much of an inovation as the construction of the Monitor in 1862. Think for a few minutes of a young nation, not half a century old, throwing defiance at England’s great navy and sailing the broad ocean attacking the enemy wherever found, no matter whether there were one or more vessels and always victorious, and was well named Old Iron Sides. For she had no equal on the high seas in her day. Other nations convinced of her superiority, rushed to the front with their naval boards of construction with a specific end in view, and that was to make something better than our grand old ship, and for over 40 years large appropriations were voted and numberless warships, constructed by the leading nations. In 1861 conditions demanded something better than wooden warships and on the 25th of October, 1861, the keel of the Monitor was laid in the Continental Iron Works, Green Point, Long Island, and to show what this nation is capable of accomplishing within 100 days this vessel was launched, and in IS days more this famous experiment went on her trial trip and was handed over to the Government and in a few days more made the famous trip to Hampton Roads in time to save the remnant of our wooden fleet that was being destroyed by the rebel ram Merrimac. The great battle between these Iron Monitors changed the naval architecture of the world. From the close of the war until 1880 the building of a first class navy met with so much opposition that it lay dormant for many years, but the continued insults to our flag and many of our citizens, by little fifth rate nations, aroused American patriotism and the nation demanded a good respectable navy. The foundation which was materially advanced under Secretary Whitney, and every administration since that time has shown thal same patriotic progressive spirit, until today every American citizen is proud of its achievements. We have shown to the world that American admirals, captains and seamen are second to nope in the world. Within the last 90 daye we have given practical illustra-
tion that no second class nation has any business to antagonize or lock horns with either our army or navy. The latter especially has done more to command respect from all the civilized nations of the world than anything that happened in the last century. With our navy today as it stands unparallelled in navy warfare, commands wonder and admiration of the civilized nations in destroying, sinking and burning the proud Spanish navy; bombarding, silencing and destroying their fortified city with the loss of only one man killed on the American ships. Today our navy has made it possible for the United States to enter on a new policy. The old Monrod doctrine has served its time. American interests demand trade with the outside world. We are producing too much to be consumed at home. We must maintain our flag wherever it is planted, either by conquest or annexation, and our markets will be the islands of the sea for all our surplus. Ships loaded with American products and manufacturers manned by American seamen and flying the American flag. The isthmus and construction of the canal connecting the east and west must be controlled by American interests. The isthmus with all that depends upon it, its canal and approaches on either hand will link the eastern side of the American continent to the western, as no network of land communication ever can. In it the United States had asserted a special interest. In the present she can maintain her claim, and in the future can perform her duty only by the creation of that sea power, upon which predominance in the Carribean must ever depend. In short, as the eternal* jealousies of Europe and the purely democratic institution of the levee en masse, the general enforcement of military training have prepared the way for great national armies, whose mission seems yet obscure. So the gradual broadening and tightening hold upon the sentiment of t American Democracy of that conviction loosely characterized as the Monroe Doctrine find its logical and uninevitable outcome in a great sea power. The correlative in connection with that of great Britain let us worship peace. Indeed as the goal at which humanity must hope to arrive, but let us not fancy that peace is to be had as a boy wrenches an unripe fruit from a tree, nor will peace be reached by ignoring the condition that confronts us, or by exaggerating the charms of quiet, of prosperity, of ease and by contracting these exclusively with the alarm and horror of war. Merely utilitarian arguments have never convinced mankind —and they never will—for mankind knows that there is something better. Its homage will never be commanded by peace pretented as the tutelary Deity of the stock market. Nothing is more ominous for the future of our race than the tendency vociferous at present which refuses to recognize in the profession of arms in war that something which inspired Wadsworths’ Happy Warrior, which soothed the dying hours of Henry Lawrence, who framed the ideals of his career on the facts conception and so nobly illustrated in his self sacrifice that something which has made the soldier to all ages the type of heroism and selfdenial.
Let the nation survey our fleet of today, and make the comparison of the fleet commanded by the great admirals of the last two centuries, embracing the gallant names of Blake, Nelson and Drake. That virtually gave the power of Great Britain’s undisputed control of the ocean. Then add/our American admirals Paul Jones, Decatur, Perry, Farragut, and then add the admirals of the present day whose achievements so far surpass all former ones, that Dewey, Sampson, Schley and Watson are the ideals of the American Nation. Commanding a line of battleships and cruisers unsurpassed in the world, and manned by a class of seamen, who, like Hobson and brave crew, arc ever ready to prove themselves heroes, and backed bv a patriotic nation, whose aim will ever be to keep our nation in advance of all others, both in power and intellect and by acting in conjunction with the advanced nations on all questions of personal freedom and religious liberty. The blots on Christian civilization such as Spanish barbarism, and Armenian outrages will be a thing of the past. When the religion of Christ, hicn who was lead as a lamb to the slaughter, seeks to raise before its followers the image of self control and of resistance to evil, it is the soldier it presents, whomitpresentshe himself if by office —King of Peace, is first of all, in the essence of his being King of Rightousness, without which true peace can not be.
il’S HUB HE , Established 1867, Incorporated 1804. C. F. MOORE, P. STOSSfIEISTBR, • rCslOdlE* DltvlllCm (Hdesi&iid Best Business ouieae in laniiem ind.
Address, HALL’S BUSINESS COLLEOE, Cor. Broadway and Sixth St. LOGANSPOfIT, INDIANA.
DESCRIPTION OF LANDS. For Sale and Exchange in SouthEastern Indiana. No. 441—48 acres 2 miles north of North Vernon, dry. rolling llihestone soil all under fine state of cultivation except 4 acres of timber, all well fenced in, good Bouse of six rooms, cellar, log barn, shedded frame corn crib, well, wood house, smoke house, two large fish ponds, well stocked, large apple orchard, also pear, plum and peach orchard, several acres of cultivated small fruits. No. 484*—146 acres 2% miles southeast of Butlerville, Ind., all cleared except 50 acres of good timber, all well fenced in fields., land part rolling and part level, none broken, all grain Rind, Most of the farm in meadow and pasture: 5 room frame house, smoke house, paled garden, fenced yard, two large frame barns, apple orchard with 300 trees, also Cherries, plums and grapes, large arbor, farm well watered, one mile from school. Price $3,000; Yt cash, balance'on good time. No. 423—160 acres 4 miles west of Scipio, a railroad town; 110 acres cleared and balance good timber, all well fenced in fields, high, dry, warm land.fine soil, no waste or wash, none of it too level; fine farming land, frame cot tage of six rooms, porch, large frame barn, fine bearing orchards, springs and stock pond, well and cellar, centrally located on gravel and sand roads, no mud. Price $5,200. No 438—120 acres St£ miles north of &orth Vernon, 00 acres improved, 40 acres of good timber, all well fenced, land good, lies well and in fine state of cultivation, new frame cottage of six rooms, large new barn, tine orchard, beautiful yard set in shade, fruit and ornamental trees, wells and cistern, outbuildings, everything tip-top. Price $2,500; ssoocash and balance in four annual payments. No. 351.—80 acres situated miles southwest of Hayden [see Hardingourgh] 72 acres improved, balance good timber, farm well fenced in small fields, choice land and in high state of cultivation, lies as nice as possibly could be desired, good twp-story frame house of 6 rooms, hall and porch, frame barn 52x38 feet, large orchard and fruit of all kinds, well, cistern and spring, Price $2,000, one-third cash. No, 263.—101 acres 2 l i miles north of North Vernon, 10 acres cleared, new frame house and stable. 80 acres woodland, mostly cut off. black loam soil and easily cleared, good drainage. Price $1,450, on easy terms. JSg'-In answering advertisements, please say you saw same in this paper. Alex. Shepherd & CoNorth Vernon. Ind,
REASONS FOR INSURING Injhe Continental. Ist. Because it is one of the Oldest, Strongest and Best Managed Companies in the United States. 2nd. Because it adjusts its losses fairly and pays them promptly, without any wrangling about it. 3rd. Because it has adjusted aud paid losses to over seventy-five thousand farmers. 4th. Because It insures you for Five Years u{x>n the installment plan, permitting you to pay one-fifth of the premium annually’, without interest, instead of paying the whole in advance; thus giving you the proceeds of each year's crop with which to pay your premiums as they fall due. sth. Because it insures against damage to buildings, and losses of Live Stock by Lightning. Tornadoes. Cyclones and Wind Storms, as well as loss by Fire. J. F. Bruner, Agt. Rensselaer Ind. Office at Makeever House.
THE LEADING INDIANA NEWSPAPER THE ■HIS SENTINEL (Established 1822.) Doily, Sunday and weekly Editions. THE INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL, in its several editions, continues to occupy the position it has so long held of The Leading Indiana Newspaper. It is the oldest and most widely read journal published in the State. Its rates of subscription are the lowest. THE SENTINEL is a member of the ated Press and its telegraph columns are the fullest and most comprehensive of any Indiana papers. Its press reports are supplemented by Special Washington dispatches, covering very fully all matters of Indiana interest, and by reports from its special correspondents at every county seat in Indiana. The market reports of The Indianapolis Sentinel are complete and accurate. THE SENTINEL, pays special attention to Indiana News and covers the ground fully. Indiana readers will find more news of interest to them in The Sentinel than in any Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Louis or Louisville newspaper.’ THE SENTINEL, although Democratic in politics, publishes all the news fully and impartially and always treats its political opponents with fairness. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily, one year ~....56.00 Sunday, one year 2.00 Weekly, one year 1.... 50
Caveats, and Trademarks obtained and all Patant business conducted for Moderate Fees. Our Ornct is opposite U.S. Patent Or vice and we can secure patent in less time than those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with description. We advise, if patentable or not, free of; charge. Our fee not due till patent ie secured. ] O.A.BNOWAOO. Pw> - PRTXRT Oppice, WfaowißßTeß.D. C.
The college building is one of the beet in the city, rooms elegant, equipment unsurpassed, teachers of experience are employed, methods are modern, systematic, practical, in commercial department actual business from the start, in the shorthand department the student has the free use of the typewriter oh entering. As a large attendance is expected during the coming year it will be to your advantage to arrange with ns at once. If you do not intend to enter before Sept. Ist, or even Nov. Ist. write us at once and we will look after your interest. Hundreds of our graduates are holding good positions. ••
Directory. ' COUNTY OFFICERS. Clerk.. Win. H. Coover Sheriff Nate J. Reed Auditor Henry B. Murray Treasurer Jesse C. Gwin Recorder Robert B. Porter Surveyor. John E. Alter Coroner Truitt P. Wright Supt. Public Schools Louis H. Hamilton Assessor John R. Phillips COMMISSIONERS. Ist District Abraham Halieck District John Martindale 3rd District Frederick Way mire Commissioner’s court—First Mondays in March, June, September and December. CITY OFFICERS. Mayor .. Thomas J. McCoy J?« ar ?^ a ® * Thomas McGowan Clerk ....Schuyler C. Irwin Treasurer C. C. Starr Attorney C. E. Mills Civil Engineer H. L. Gramble Fire Chief Edgar M. Parcels COCNCILMEN. Ist ward M. B. Alter, F. B. Meyers 2nd ward.... v , . John Eger, C. G. Spitler 3rd ward.. Wm. H. Beam, J. R. Eight JUDICIAL. Circuit Judge. Simon P. Thompson Prosecuting attorney Albert E. Chizum Terms of Court.—First Monday in January; Third Monday in March; First Moudav in June; Third Monday imOctober. COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. TRUSTEES. TOWNSHIPS. Robert h. Drake Hanging Grove A* W- I*re vo ; Gillam John F. Pettit Walker Samuel R. Nichols Barkley James D. Babcock Marion Marcus W. Reed Jordun Jackson Freeland ‘Newton C. C. Bierma !..." i. ..! Keener J. C. Kaupke. Kankakee Albert S. Keene Wheatfield John A. Lamborn CarD€*ntc?r George W. Caster fiSlroy B. D. Comer Union , „ _ TOWN OB CITY A' Remington M. F. Chiicote Rensselaer Edward T. Biggs ... Wheatfield Louis H. Hamilton, Co. Supt Rensseiaer
CHURCHES.
First Baptist— Preaching every two weeks at 10:45 a. m. and 7 p, m; Sunday school at 9:30: B. VP. U, 6 p. m. Sunday; prayer meeting 7p. in. Rev. V. Fritts, pastor. Free Baptist— One service every Sunday morning and evening, alternately. Prayer meeting Tuesday 7 evening. A. C. F. meets Stfnday, 6:30 P. M. Rev. D. A. Tucker, pastor. Christian —Corner Van Rensselaer and Susan. Preaching. 10:45 and 8:00; Sundayschool 9:30; J. V. P. S. C. E., 2:30: S. Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30; Prayer meeting Thursday 7:30. H. N. Shepherd, pastor. Ladies’ Aid Society meets every Wednesday afternoon by appointment. Presbyerian— Corner Cullen and Angelica. Preaching, 10:45 and 7:30; Sunday school 9:30; VP. S. C. E., 6:30; Prayer meeting, Thursday 7:30; Ladies' Industrial Society meets every Wednesday afternoon. The Missionary 7 Society, monthly. Rev. C. D. Jeffries, Pastor. Methodist E— Preaching at 10:45 and 7: Sunday school 9:30; Epworth League Sunday 0; Tuesday 7; Junior League 2:30 alternate Sunday; Prayer meeting, Thursday at 7. Rev. H. M. Middleton, Pastor. Ladies' Aid Society every Wednesday afternoon by appointment. Church of God— Corner Harrison and Elza. Preaching 10:45 and 7:30; Sunday school 9:30; Prayer meeting. Thursday, 7:30: Ladies’ Society meets every 7 Wednesday afternoon by appointment. Rev. F. L. Austin, pastor. Catholic Church— St. Augustine’s. Corner Division and Susan. Services 7:30 and 10:30 a. m. Sunday school 11:30 p. m. Rev. Edward J acobs, pastor.
LODGES AND SOCIETIES.
MASONic-Prairie Lodge. No. 126, A. F. and A. M., meets first and third Monday s of each month. H. L. Brown, W. M.; W. J. Imes, Sec’v. Evening Star Chapter—No. 141,0. E. S., meets first and third Wednesdays of each month. Mrs. C. W. Hanley, W. M.; Hattie Dowler, Sec’y. Catholic Order Forresters— Willard Court, No. 418, meets every first and third Sunday of the month at 2 p. m. J. M. Healy Sec y; E. P. Honan, Chief Ranger. Odd Fellows—lroquois Lodge, No. 144, I. 0. 0. F., meets every Thursday. Bruce White, N. G.; S. C. Irwin, Sec’y. Rensselaer Encampment—No. 201. I. O. O. F., meets second and fourth Fridays of each month. S. C. Irwin, C. P., John Vannatta, scribe. Rensselaer Rebekah Degree LodgeNo. 346. meets first and third Fridays of each month. Miss Maude Hemphill, N, G.; Mrs. Laura Shields, Sec’y. I. O. of FORESTERS-Court Jasper, No. 1703, Independent Order of Foresters, meets second and fourth Mondays. Geo. Goff, C. D. H. C. R; R. P. Johnson, R. Maccabees —Rensselaer Tent, No. 184. Kr O. T. M. Meets Wednesday evening-. C. E. Tyner, Commander: F. W. Cissel, Record Keeper. Pythian— Rensselaer Lodge No. 82, Knights of Pythias, meets every Tuesday, C. W. Hanley, C. d.: N. W. Reeve, K. of R. & s. Rensselaer Temple, Rathbone Sisters,No. 47, meets 2d and 4th Wednesday, every month, Mrs. G. E. Murray, M. E. C. Mrs. O. A. Yeoman, M. of R. C. Grand Army.— Rensftlaer Post No. 84 G. A. R. meets every Friday night. D. H. Yeoman Post Commander, J. M. Wasson, Adjutant. Rensselaer Women’s Relief Corps—meets every Monday evening. Mrs. J. Q. Alter, President; Mrs. Hattie Reynolds, Sec’y. Holly Council.- No. 7, Daughters of Liberty meets 2d and 4th Mondays. Gertrude Hopkins. Counsellor; Nellie Moss, Recording Secretary.
The Markets.
Wheat.... .eo Corn as Oats, new.... 18 to .20 Rye 35 Hay, (Dealers not buyingjt Hogs 3.50 to 3.60 Potatoes 50 Butter »,... .12« Eggs 08 Hena 05 Young Chickens "■ .07 Duck* \f. .05 Roosters 02 Turkeys.... v ..04@ .OS Hides...... .? 05 @ .06 Tallow., 02 A whole armload of old papers for a nickel at The Democrat office.
