Jasper County Democrat, Volume 5, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 July 1902 — Page 3

VALUE OF OUR FARMS

AGRICULTURAL THRIFT SHOWN BY CENSUS BULLETIN. Total Property Values Exceed $20,000,000,000 Earth Products for 1809 Reach $4,739,118,751—111in0is Leads in Worth of Tilled Lands. The census bureau has issued a bulletin giving the condition of agriculture in the United States for the year 1900. It shows that there were at that time 5,730,657 farms in the entire country, which •were valued at $16,674,694,247. Of this amount $3,560,198,191, or over 21 per cent, represented the value of buildings and 513,114,492,056, or over 78 per cent, represented the value of lands and improvements other than buildings. The value of farm implements and machinery was $761,261,550 and of live stock $3,078,050,041. These values, added to the value of the farms, give a total value of farm property amounting to $20,514,001,838. The total value of farm products for the year 1899 is given at $4,739,118,752, of which amount $1,718,990,221 was for animal products, including live stock, poultry and bee products. The bulletin places the average size of farms in the United States at 146 acres and it is reported that 49 per cent of the farm land is improved. The total acreage for the entire country was 841,201,546. The number of farms in the United States has increased in every decade for the last” fifty years, and so rapidly that in 1900 there were nearly four times as many farms as in 1850 and 25 per cent more than in 1890, The total acreage of farm land also has increased, but up to 1880 Jess rapidly than the number of farms, tSfiis involving a steady decrease in the average size of farms. Since 1880, however, the total acreage has increased more rapidly than the number of farms, so that the average size of farms has increased. The total area of improved land has increased in every decade since 1850. A comparison by States indicates that the most important States in the agriculture of the country are, beginning at the West, Missouri, lowa, Illinois. Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. Together they contribute 44 per cent of the total value of farm property and 38 per cent of the total value of farm products. Texas leads with the greatest number of farms, 352.190. and also with the highest acreage, 125.807,017. But only a little over 15 per cent of the farm land in Texas was improved and the value of the farm land in Texas was less than in Pennsylvania, Ohio. New York, Missouri, lowa or Illinois, being $962,476,273. Missouri ranks second in the number of farms, having 284,886. Other States having more than 200.000 farms are: Alabama. 223,220; Geofgia, 224.691; Illinois, 264.151; Indiana, 221.897; lowa, 228.622; Kentucky, 231.667; Michigan, 203,261; Mississippi, 220,803; New York, 226.720: North Carolina. 224.637; Ohio, 276,719; Pennsylvania, 224,248; Tennessee, 224.623. lowa leads the list in the percentage of improved lands, more than 86 per cent of the farm lands of that State being improved. Illinois follows with more than 84 per cent; Ohio comes next with 78 per cent and is followed by Indiana with more than 77 per cent. Illinois occupies the first position in the matter of the total value of farm lands, the figures for that State being $2,004,316,897. Other State values are as follows: lowa. $1,834,345,546; California, •$796,527,955; Indiana. $978.616,471: Kansas, $864,100,286; Kentucky. $471,045,856; Michigan, $690,355,734; Minnesota, $788,684,642; Missouri, $1,033,121,897; Nebraska. $747,950,057; New York, $1,069,723,895; Ohio, $1,198,923,946; Pennsylvania, $1,051,629,173; Tennessee $341,202,025: Texas, $962,476,273; Virginia, $323,515,977; Wisconsin, sßll,712,319. The live stock farm lands of the country are put down at a value of $7,505,284.273, or more than 36 per cent of the whole; the hay and grain lands at $6,379,548.543, or 31 per cent of the whole; dairy produce, over 8 per cent; cotton, over 5 per cent. There are 512 coffee farms in the country, valued at SI 93°015. ’

GAYNOR AND GREENE.

Fraudulent Contractors Grunted Two Weeks’ Respite. Colonel Gaynor and Captain Greene, the two American contractors who are wanted in Savannah, Ga., for alleged frauds in government harbor work, were given another respite of two weeks by Judge Caron in the Superior Court at Quebec. Judge Caron heard arguments by counsel for the United States government and for the prisoners on z writs of habeas corpus issued at the request of the prisoners’ legal advisers. When the lawyers had presented their cases Judge Caron announced that he would band down a decision in about two weeks and remanded the prisoners back to the care of the sheriff.

DIED OF STARVATION.

After Working: Like an Ox, a Woman Succumb, in Fight for Bread. Death by starvation has finally claimed a woman who had for years led a life of •ervitude, being at one time employed as a work animal and hitched to a wugou with a cow. Kitting upright in bed. the body of Mrs. Martha Kaiser was found dead in her rude little home in the Knobs, a few miles back of Danville. Ky. There was neither food nor clothing In the hut. Ail lier children had left her except one son. who was too young to know of the bitter Borrowings. Death occurred several days before the discovery of the body. The last time the starving woman was •een alive she was standing on the top •f her little cabin calling for her mother and her native German hind. The mind had given way before the body to the pangs of starvation. E. J. Bowden, son of a prominent banker in Eskridge, Kan., was drowned in a pond. He was in the water bathing and was overcome by cramps. Two men were killed by a Rock Island train near LaWton, O. T„ one of them being Thomas Daniel, of Lawtoia

JOHN w. MACKAY DEAD.

Last of the “Bonanza Kings" Passes Away in London. John W. Mackay, the last of the great bonanza kings of America and a multimillionaire, died suddenly Sunday evening at his London residence. Mr. Mackay had been ill onjy four days, and his illness was such that it was not considered a fatal termination was possible. Mr. Mackay was unconscious at intervals Sunday afternoon and grew worse until 6:30 p. m., when he died. Mrs. Mackay, her mother, Mrs. Hungerford, and Countess Trefener were present, at the bedside when the end came. The Princess Colatro Colonna arrived from Paris half an hour after her stepfather's death. Mr. Mackay’s body will b“e brought to the United States and laid beside that of his son, John W. Mackay, Jr. For the son’s last resting place Mr. Mackay constructed in Greenwood cemetery, New York, one of the most beautiful mausoleums in the world. It required two years to complete it and ever since the son's

JOHN W. MACKAY.

body has lain there mass has been celebrated in the building each day. By the death of John William Mackay there has passed away the last of the great quartette of Western miners—that “Big Four" made up of James C. Flood. William S. O’Brien, James G. Fair and John W. Mackay. More than that, Mr. Mackay was the last of that great generation of Californians that included, besides these, such men as Hopkins, Crocker, Huntington. Stanford and Colton. Mr. Mackay was married in 1867 to Mrs. Bryan, widow of J)r. Bryan and a daughter of Colonel Daniel Hungerford, who was a veteran of the Mexican ans Civil Wars. Mrs. Mackay is a woman

WHERE THE LEVEE BROKE IN DES MOINES.

of exceptional culture and brilliancy, and, as has been shown, has for many years been a conspicuous figure in the best society in London and Paris. To Mr. and Mrs. Mackay were born two children—John W. Mackay, Jr., and Clarence Hungerford Mackay. Young John W. was killed by accident while riding on his private race track near Paris a few years ago, the young man’s death being a heart-breaking blow to the parents.

CLAIM BIG LOSSES.

Chicago Bookmakers Report Alleged Theft from Safety Vault The steel-barred vaults of the Masonic Temple safety deposit vaults in the Masonic Temple, Chicago, wre robbed of more than $35,000 between 7 o’clock Friday night and 9:30 Saturday morning, according to the complaints of depositors. The disappearance of the money is one of the most mysterious in recent years. The system of securing deposit? provides that there shall be three keys to each box. One of these, held by the watchman, fits the outer boxes. The other two are held by the depositor, one fitting the outer box and the other the inner receptacle. The charge of loss of deposits was made Saturday by the bookmakers, who locked up their cash after returning from the Washington Park race track Friday evening. lu addition to the $13,369 in cash whicU George Rose declares was in his box, there were two certificates of deposit for SB,OOO and these were gone The bookmakers have been in the habit of depositing their money at the vaults every evening during the racing Beason shortly after the close of the day’s sport. These deposits were usually made by the cashiers of the different “bookies,” some of their employers not even haring access to the boxes which are held in their names. of the deposit vault company said Saturday afternoon that they did not believe that any money had bee»> stolen. They exrdained that there is no possible way by which the money could be taken from the vault by others tbau those who hold the keys for the boxes. The police, after investigation, seemed satisfied that the safety deposit boxes were really robbed, a* alleged by the bookmakers, nnd they advanced the theory that tlie careless use of the “master” key to the vaults made the theft possible. Kansas has fared exceedingly well at the hands of Andrew Carnegie. Up to date he hnw bestowed $283,500 upon her. The money all goes or is to go into libraries In Kansas City, Lawrence, Leavenworth. Newton, Ottawa, Balina. Winfield, Emporia, Fort Scott and Blue Rapidr,

THE KING AND HIS TRAPEZE.

This picture, drawn from cabled descriptions and from descriptions furnished by a physician, shows the apparatus by which King Edward, after undergoing one of the severest operations known to medical science, and with a wound in his abdomen four inclrs long and still unhealed, moved himself around in his bed by the strength of his own arms. He changed his position many times within a few hours after the trapeze had been erected above his bed, and even raised himself to a sitting posture. The first time the King moved himself, Queen Alexandra herself adjusted the pillows at his back and, relieved by this change in position, the King exclaimed, "Ah, that is better.’’ The trapeze consists of two ropes suspended from the ceiling above the King’s bed. with rings at the end within easy reach of the recumbent patient. Sometimes a bar is fitted between the two rings. The trapeze is especially useful in such a case as that of King Edward, as it enables the patient to change his position with the least possible movement to abdominal and back muscles.

DEATH RIDES THE WIND.

Thirteen Are Killed by Destructive Tornado at Baltimore. Thirteen persons perished and millions of dollars' worth of property was destroyed by a hurricane which swept through Baltimore Sunday afternoon. The storm broke shortly after noon and came almost without warning. The wind swept all before it. Roofs were sent whirling like so many cards, trees were stripped and uprooted, buildings were wrecked, fences blown down, and big windows in the business houses smashed. St. Mary’s Star of the Sea Church was demolished, entailing a great loss, while the roof on the Merchants and Miners’ steamboat pier was blown off, permitting the water to leak in and causing the goods there to be damaged to the extent of $400,000,

In North Baltimore, where a camp meeting was in progress, a tree blew over on the tent, causing it to fall. The worshipers were buried under the canvas, and one man was killed and many Burt. It was along the water that the greatest loss of life occurred. Being an extremely warm day, the shore resorts were liberally patronized by pleasure seekers. All of the fishing boats along Middle and Black River were taken, while Spring Gardens and adjacent Patapsco streams were alive with pleasure craft of every description. When the storm came up, almost without warning .boats were tossed a lout and cries for help could be heard coming from every direction. Tugs and steamboats put out to the rescue, but so thick was the weather and so choppy the seas that the efforts of the life savers proved futile for a time. The vessels picked up dozens of survivors from capsized Iwata. The hurricane exhausted its fury in less than fifteen minutes. It was in the residence portion of the city, along the river front, and in the harbor, where the wind spent its violence. The weather bureau reports that the storm was more in the nature of a whirlwind than a tornado. The wind blew at the rate of sixty-four miles an hour, and the rainfall was fifty-six one-hundredths of an inch.

Brief News Items.

The custom receipts for Cuba for the month of June amounted to $1,232,252. A wildcat was killed on the back porch of a residence in Hutchinson, Kan. The twenty-fourth anniversary of the coronation of the Pope was celebrated at the Vatican. Lightning northwest of Hutchinson, Kan., struck and killed thirteen cows belonging to J. W. Grittiu. Grant Williams has been arrested in Arkansas, charged with the murder at South McAlester, I. T., last October, of Edwnrd Nolan. Mrs. George Thomas tried to kill horself and baby by burning nt Fort Cobb, 0. T., but was prevented by an elder daughter. The Socialist-Labor party held its convention in Denver and nominated a State ticket heatled by T. A. Knight, of Pueblo, for Governor. The total of Germany’s exports to the United States for the year ended June 30 is $101,714,064, an increase of $1,827,050 over the amount for the year ended June 30, 1901. George Schallack, son of Dr. E. H. Schallack, a druggist, was drowned in Spring river, near Lowell, Kan. lie was in swimming and became exhausted. Schallacki was 25 years of age and un» married.

REED ON CASTORIA

Tice Chancellor Reed Sustains Charles H. Fletcher in His Suit. Vic® Chancellor Reed, sitting In th® Court of Chancery at Trenton, N. J., has just rendered a decision of vital Importance in the case of The Centaur Company against a party calling themselves the C. W. Link Drug Company. It seems for the past year or mor® Mr. Charles H. Fletcher, president of The Centaur Company, the manufacturers of Castoria, has been fighting, through the courts, counterfeiters and Imitators of their goods. All of the fake goods are put up In a manner to lead the purchaser to think they are getting the same Castoria they have always bought, and the Chancellor dwells at length on this point, showing how easy It would be to Inform tb® public of the difference between th® packages If It were not their object to mislead the consumer. He says In part: "Every one of the packages put In evidence by the defendant show a persistent adoption of the size of the bottle and the label of the complainant. All these manufacturers knew, just as the defendant knew, that if th® remedy was put up In round bottles or In bottles distinctively larger or smaller. or If the bottles were so differently wrapped, as to at once arrest the attention of the casual purchaser, the sale of the remedy In such packages would at once become substantially reduced.’’ Citing numerous cases In line with this opinion, he gave Mr. Charles H. Fletcher the Injunction asked for and the C. W. Link Drug Company must seek new fields.—Philadelphia Inquirer.

Uncle Sam's Slot Machine.

A business man who wanted a bookkeeper stated bls need In an advertisement. The notice was seen by a young woman who was out of work, and who had searched for employment day after day without success. She had just one cent left. This she spent for a postal card, on which she wrote a reply to the advertisement, and dropped the card In a street letter box. Her application Impressed the bust ness man favorably, and he wrote to her, asking her to call at his office. She did so and secured the position. Her modesty and worth, no less than her capability, so won upon her employer that before many months had passed he offered her his heart and hand, and she accepted and became his wife. “Awl to think," he said one day during the honeymoon, “that It all came from your spending your last cent for a postal card and mailing it at a street corner!’’ “Yes,” She replied, with a smile and a blush. “I dropped a penny In the slot and got a husband.”

What Might Have Been.

Sonoma, Mich., July 21.—Mr. Delos Hutchins of this place says: "If I could have had Dodd’s Kidney Pills 25 years ago I would not now be crippled as I am.” Mr. Hutchins spent from 1861 to 1864 In the swamps of Louisiana as a northern soldier and with the result that be contracted Rheumatism, which gave him much pain till Mr. Fred Parker, the local druggist, advised him to try Dodd’s Kidney Pills. The first two boxes did not seem to help him very much, but Mr. Parker, knowing that Dodd’s Kidney Pills would eventually cure him, pressed Mr. Hutchins to continue, and by the time four boxes were used the short, sharp, shooting pains which had tortured his back, hip and legs were entirely gone. Mr. Hutchins >ays: “I cannot tell you how much better I am feeling’. If It were not for the way my hands, feet and knees are drawn out of shape I would be about an good as ever.

A Weed in the Mouth.

Mr. Bixby—There, I’ve let my cigar go •nt. Do you know it spoils a cigar, no matter how good it Is, if you allow it to go out? Mrs. Bixby—Yes. a cigar is a good deal like a man in that respect.

Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?

Shake into your shoes Allen’s FootEase, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns. Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet. At all Druggists nnd Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y. According to a census taken there are 17,180 Hebrews in India. Scarcely onethird of them are European. The rest are descendants of those who claim to have emigrated to India during the reign of Solomon.

GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS

Vm the beet. That's why they buy Red Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers. 5 cents. You can’t be both light hearted and dark purposed. . Mrs Winslow's Soomiso Sracr tor Children leethinss soften* the soma, red oom inflammation, ahlara pain, coma wind 00110. » coats a boule

, *— l ■>'" ”<L The University of»Notre Dame, NOTRE DAME. INDIANA. FULL COURSES In Claatke, Letton, Boowoaifcs and tUttory. Journalltm. Art, Science, narmacy, Law, Civil. Mechanical and Bloctrkal Bnrlneerlnr, ArchUociure. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Cournot. Rooms Proo to all student, who have oomJleted the studio, required for admlmdon Into the unlor or Senior Year of any of the Col leg Ute Courses. Rooms to Rent Moderate charge to atudenU •ver seventeen preparing for Collegiate Courses. A limited number of candtdste, for the Keele•Uktlcal state will be received at special rates. St EdwanTe Hall, for Boya under 13 years, is wnluue In the completeness of Its equipment. “ho Jl9tb Year will open September 9, 1902. Caialoruet Proo. Addreet REV. A. MORRISSEY. CSC., Pmaldoat Chronic Constipation Cured. The most important discovery of recent years is the positive remedy for constipation. Cascarcts Candy Cathartic. Cure guaranteed. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never •old in bulk. Druggists, io«K

Used to the Cold.

“Every ticket ha® Its story,” said a man acquainted with the pawn shops, and ene of the sad Httle tales which he told Is repeated by the Philadelphia Telegraph. It was a bitterly cold day, and a mite of a boy, not over 9 years old, had come in, wrapped In bis overcoat. This he peeled off, and deposited It upon the pawnbroker’s counter. “Give me a dollar ’n’ quarter?” he asked, In pleading tones. “Dollar,” said the money lender. “Oh, please give me a dollar ’n’ a quarter 1” “Can’t do it. Dollar.” The boy was almost crying, and h® begged earnestly for the sum he asked. “I want to get my sister’s coat out,” he said, as he laid down eight cents as interest money. This proposition the pawnbroker accepted, and the boy went shivering into the cold, with his sister’s coat. “Is your sister going to a dance tonight?” a bystander asked him. “No, Sir, mom’s been sick, an’ Maggie had to hock her coat for feed. She’s got a job now, an’ she’s got to have a coat to go to work in. I don’t mind the cold; I’m used to IL”

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME.

Notre Dame, Indiana. We call the attention of our reader! to the advertisement of Notre Dame University, one of the great educational institutions of the West, which appears lu another column of tills paper. Those of our readers who may have occasion to look up a college for their sons during the coming year would do well to correspond with the President, who will send them a catalogue free of charge, as well as all particulars regarding terms, courses of studies, etc. There Is a thorough preparatory school In connection with the University, in which students of all grades will have every opportunity of preparing themselves for higher studies. The Commercial Course intended for young men preparing for business may be finished in one or two years according to the ability of the student. St. Edward’s Hall, for boys under thirteen, is an unique department of the Institution. The higher courses are thorough In every respect, and students will find every opportunity of perfecting themselves In any line of work they may choose to select. Thoroughness In classwork, exactness in the care of students, and devotion to the best interests of all, are the distinguishing characteristics of Notre Dame University. Fifty-eight years of active work In the cause of education have made this Institution famous all over the country.

Stunted Trees.

Hitherto the stunted trees and shrubs of the Japanese have been the wonder and envy of gardeners the world over. But a German chemist now comes along and does something which even the Japanese could hardly be expected to do. He has prepared a fluid that has the power, when injected Into the tissues of a plant near its roots, of anaesthetising the plant. As a result of this Injection, the plant does not die, but stops growing, maintaining Its fresh, green appearance, though its vitality Is apparently suspended. Changes In temperature seem in nowise to affect the foliage, for the plant blooms In the open as well as in the most carefully constructed hothouse. As might be expected, the composition of the fluid is shrouded in the greatest mystery.

SPECIAL LOW RATE EXCURSIONS

To New York City and Atlantic Cityslß.oo for the Round Trip VL the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway on July 17th and 31st; also August 7th and 14th. Return limit twelve days. Tickets good by boat between Cleveland and Buffalo, and Albany and New York, If desired. Stop at Niagara Falls and Chautauqua. Full Information on application at City Ticket Office, 180 Clark St, or to 0. F. Daly, Chief A. G. P. A., Chicago.

Literary Notes.

The publication in book form la announced of the first sentence of Henry James’ latest novel. The sentence has" been running serially tn a magazine, and has made a profound Impression with thoughtful people. It is said to lose none of its piquant mystery in book form. J. M. Barrie is reported to have discovered, by accident, while rummaging among some old documents in his attic, what he meant in “Tommy and Grixel.” The paper manufacturers are urging him to publish, quoting him a very low jobbing figure as an inducement. —Puck.

The Sure Way.

“How dare you send a collector to my house “To. the truth, sir, we were somewhat doflbtful about you.” ‘Then why not have looked me up? You would then have known that I never pay my bills."—Life.

Hall’s Catarrh Cure.

la a oonctltutlonal cure. Price 75 cents.

Good Advice.

“Help!" “Help!" came the cry of distress through the midnight stillness. The policeman in the neighbor ag doorway stirred uneasily. “Advertise is the want column," he muttered, and resumed his nap.—Philadelphia Press. Piso's Cure for Consumption cured me of a tenacious and persistent cough.— Wm. H. Harrison, 227 W. 121st street. New York, March 25, 1001.

Two Different Things.

“Well, madam, you've got your wish —you’ve married a rich huaband.”, "No, dear; I’ve married a rich man, but a poor husband.”—Stray Stories.

DON’T SPOIL YOUR CLOTHKS.

Um Red Croaa Ball Bine and keep them white an enow. All grocera. 6c a pack a felt La not mere endurance, bat right endurance of affliction that brings blessing,—J. H. Evans. RTt

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