Jasper County Democrat, Volume 7, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 February 1905 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Big Public Sale. Mary A. Huilihan, having decided to quit farming, wi l offer at Public Sale on what is known as the Rabbit Island farm, half mile Southwest if Newland, commencing at 10 o'clock a. m.. On Thursday, March 2, 1905, (I HEAD OK HOUSES AND MARI S, consisting of 1 Sorrel Horse, nine years old, wt. Hoi ‘ l fl |i | - WrLjBS day Mao- ten JMMR’ ~ ' years old. wt Sc Mare ten years old, wt. 1100: 1 Hay Driving Horse seven years old, wt. 1050. 1 MILCH COW 0 years old, fresh. •I HEAD OF HOGS, consisting of 1 Poland China Brood Saw, and 5 Shoats weighing about 50 pounds each. FARM IMPLEMENTS, WAGONS. ETC. Consisting of 1 Peering Hinder, nearly new; 1 John Deere Gat g Plow; 2 Sulky Plows, one a Clark with double attachments, sod and stubble bottom; 1 Deering Mower; 1 O-horne Disk; l three section Harrow; 1 Brown Cultivators, one riding, three walking; 2 Walking Plows. 14 inch; I Kndgate Corn Planter; 1 Farm Aragon, w ide tire; 3 sets Work Harness iit good condition: 1 set Single Harness; 1 Carriage: 2 Single Boggier. 1 a rubber tire, and numerous other articles. A credit of Id months will tie given on sums over $5 with usual cnndiuoiis; 8 per cent off for cash wheie entitled to credit. MARA HUuLIHAN. Bctt.i-h Bros . Auctioneers. K. P. Honan, Clerk Hot Lunch on ground.

PUBLIC SALE. Owing so bad weather my sale advertised for Feb. 14. at my residence at Pleasant Ridge, 4 miles east of Rensselaer, was postponed to WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1,1905, when I will sell 18 head of horses, consisting of 1 gefieral purpose team live and three years old, broke single and double and not afraid of automobiles; 2 heavy mares with foal to Shire horse; 1 three-fourths Shire horse two years old, wt 1,300; 1 team two years old, bay horses, good ones; 1 black coach mare two years old, a beauty; 1 team of general purpose two-year-old horses; 5 one and two-year-old Shire and Percheron colts, good ones; 1 Kentucky saddle mare; 1 saddle bred colt; 1 driving mare; 13 cows, mostly fresh; two good Jersey cows; one O. I. C. male hog; 18 good shoats; 4 fat hogs. Farming tools —2 binders;! gang disk, new; 1 disk; 1 riding cultivator; 1 hay gatherer; 2 wagons, 1 surrey; 1 top buggy; 1 grinder; 5 stands of bees; 5 sets of harness; 15 tons timothy hay; shredded fodder; and many other articles. W H. BERRY. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spitler, Clerk. Hot lunch on grounds. The Antlmnpntatlon Japs. During the present war the Japanese have followed the new rule generally of not amputating shattered limbs on the holds of battle, but of putting a plaster of purls dressing on them. So far out of GUO wounded Russians only one arm has been amputated, and in that ease the arm had to be removed in consequence of trouble supervening. In all eases the hones have healed well. It Is clear that the gunshot wounds from the modern infantry rifle are less dangerous to life than they were in former days. Wounds received in the lungs or stomach heal often without any surgical treatment or operation. All pieces of shot or garments taken from wounded men are sent to Tokyo, where.they are being preserved, as are also all other "preparations" resulting from the surgical treatment of the wounded.—London Globe. Artificial Rain. Sir Oliver Lodge's fog dispelling apparatus might he useful In the semiarid plains east of the Rocky mountains and In all sections of the United States during times of drought. Electricity at the high voltage of 250,000 is sent lightning-like through the air. A succession of these discharges condenses the moisture in the atmosphere, with a clearing effect similar to that produced by lightning. Although the object of the apparatus In England is to dissipate fog, analogous reasoning would point to its value ns a rain producer. The fog Is driven away by being turned Into rain. The same electrical process should produce rain wherever there is a fair amount of moisture in the atmosphere. Bagpipes Again In Favor. That terrible instrument, the bagpipes, Is winning favor In certain circles. It Is even whispered that there Is a fair royal piper, and that the daughters of Scottish nobles are rapidly becoming proficient in the art of skirling the pipes is the hapless experience of many visitors to the north. There are those who find the bagpipes trying at the best of times, but if they are to be placed In the hands of the amateur will life beyond the border be worth living?—London World. FOR TRADE. My dwelling boose in Joliet, 111., for horses, cattle, bogs and implements. Write me at Rensselaer, Ind. Nelson Ducharme.