Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 May 1907 — Page 7
Kenton’s Stables SURREY, INDIANA
Marcus Belgian Stallion. <w - ** .’•* "■ K -J***** Ducniption and pndigbkx.—Marcus la a dark brown Belgian Stalltou, 1* 4 years old and weigh* 1800 pounds, has large bone and good muscle, la a strong mover •nd a good individual tbrcughout. He was aired by Atnerleus No. 292; be by Champion No. 168: he by Bruyant No. 129; he by Mouton No. 320. The dam of Marcus was sired by Markina No. 108; second dam Heroine A. No. 338. 7. 2452; third dam, Belle, by Bissnark. Terms: 112.00 to insure colt to stand and euek. (Marcus Is owned Jointly by C. F. Stackhouse and O. J. Kenton.: Henry Clay. JShb Hsnny Clay is a black jet with white points, sired by Kentucky John, a 16 hand jack; dam, a 14% hand jennet. Terms: SIO.OO to Insure colt to stand and suck.
O. J. KENTOIN, Owner, RENSSELAER, INDIANA.
Goliath No. 7639. Goliath is a dark bay horse,bred by Simon Hegner. at Kokomo, Ind., is regiatered in the books of the National Association Fre 11 c h I) r a f t Horses, nu<l e r - No. 7639, sired by Xx Latnoreaux N<> 3394. ha by Favori, No. 401, out <>f r. Pelotte No. 469, Dam Rodes No. 1922. He weigh* in good flesh, 1800 pounds; ha* good style and action. Will make the season at my barn, on what 1s known as the Wm. Haley farm. 5 mile* southeast of Rensselaer. The best reference given as to colts. r Thumb: 110.00 to insure colt to stand and suck. Service money becomes due at once, if mare be parted with; product held good for service. Due care taken to prevent accident, but not responsible should any occur. Telephone 533-J. B. T. LANHAM. KING No. 6433. SHIRE STALLION. King is a dark dappie bay stallion, 16 hands and weighs 1,5(0 liounds time. He was foaled May 21. 1900; bred by C. M Moots, Normal, 111. Sire. Allerton No. 3< 08 (8682): Dam, Lula 5868, by Couqurer IX, 2783 (7051). Stand,Txkms and Conditions: King will make the season of 1907 at my farm, 10 mile* North of Rensselaer, 3% miles Bast of Fair Oak* and 3 miles South of Virgie, at 310.00 to insure colt to staud and suck. Service money become*'due and payable at once on owner parting with mare: product of horse held good for service. Not responsible for accidents. PAUL SCHULTZ, Owner. TOM,Norman Stallion TOM is a sorrel horse with sorrel mane and tail, stauds 16 handshighanduow weighs 1356 pounds. Sire Vasista* 27799, a 15-16 Nor■nan He good accompactly built >B"* ’ b and is au ideal typ» of farm horse: is - Stand and Tbnmb Tom will stand the season of 1907 at my farm 10% miles north of Rensselaer and 8« south and 44 west of Knlmau, at 18 to Insure colt to stand ai»d «i»ck. Product held good for service; parting with mare or leaving couhty or state, service fee itecome* due and payable nt onee. Care taken to prevent accident* but not responsible should any occur. HBRMAN SCHULTZ. Owuer. Th* Roadster Stallion Joe Patch ■ ............. . Will make the stud season at the Morlan farm, IM miles west of Rensselaer, a* a fee
Richwood Squirrel, Roadster Richwood Squibicxl is a dark brown horse, no marks, weight 1200 pounds, and is MM hands: foaled May 8,1001; bred by J. S. Taylor, Richmond, Ky. Sire, Richmond Squirrel, No. 898, sire of Black Squirrel, No. 58, dam, Dutchess, dam of Richwood, No. 10,430, sire of Squire Talmadge, No. 648. and Lady Clay; 2nd dam, Belie. Terms: 610 to insate colt to stand and suck. James Madison No. 287. J AMU uadison was foaled July 21,1896 color black with white pointe, 14% bands, weight 900 pounds; sire. Imported Gladstone; dam, .a noted 15 hands jennet Terms: 210.00 to insure colt to stand and suck. The above horses and jacks will stand the season of 1907 at Simon Kenton’s farm, half mile East of Surrey. Service money becomes due at once if mare is parted with; product held good for service. Due care taken to prevent accidents, but will not be responsible should any occur.
of 610 to insure a living foal. Parties selling mares forfeit insurance. For full description and pedigree, call on or write, E. L. MORLAN, Tel. 527-F. B-R-3, Rensselaer, Ind. VASISTAS 27799 Imported Parcharon Stallion ■„ VASISTAS is an imported Percheron Stallion of the famous Brilliant strain: he is . »»s’„• -if 8 years old and w eighs 1850. He is a sureand splendid breeder. We invite an inspection of his colts tbroughout the country. Stand will be at the farm of Charley Pullins. 5 mile* north and % mile east of Rensselaer, Monday*. Tuesday* and Wednesdays; at Hemphill’s stailioa barn in Rensselaer, Thursdays, Friday* and Saturdays. Tkbms, Bbgulations, Etc.—sls.oo to insure colt to stand and suck; sl2 to insure mare in foal, payable when known to be 4n foal. Care taken to prevent accidents, but will not be responsible should any occur. Parting with mare before known to be in foal or leaving county or state, service fee become* due and collectible at once. Produce held for service. DlCKisaPer- u cheron Belgian cross, 4 years old. bay brown, ■ 1550; and action, au ideal farm type. MBEMEgEOSfiKK He will be con- IHMM tinuoiisly at the SwJWffiQSHBBjR. C. Pullins farm. TIBMS-$lO to insure colt toS stand and suck: 38 to insure mare to be in foal. Regulations, etc., same as Vaslsta*. CHAS. PULLIN & SON, SyljVMStnb Gnat. Mgr. I have some fine eggs from pare bred Langshao chickens for sale at 50c per 15. Wm. Hehshman, R-R-l, Medaryville, Ind. Take , the fresh air care in a Roberts rig of your own. If you want the best for the least money, bay of C. A. Roberts, the buggy mau. a One car load, 7000 rds Pittsburgh perfect wire fence arrived this week. Chicago Bargain Store. WAKB Ul>! GBT BUSY! And find oat what’s in the world besides yourself. At least one half the people in this oonnty do not know what they are losing by not having a cream separator. There is more money, labor, and worry saved by this small machine than any other piece of machinery on the farm. Like every other article of merit, The U. S. Separator has its imitators, but as yet it has no Its simplicity of construction, being easy to clean, easy to ran, and last but not least, the longest lived cream separator made, makes the U. S. separator the very best there is on the market to-day. If you are milking four or five cows the U. S. Separator will soon pay for itself. Come in and see one of these separators whether you want to bay or not, and learn what money makers they are. f Marlatt & Worland, at Worland’s Baggy Store.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
Political and General Gossip of the National Capital. Special Correspondence to The Democrat. Secretary Taft has gone to Ohio to personally take up the fight against the machine wing of the Republican organization. He it up against a hard formation, and the situation has been complicated by the fact that the President has aroused the animosity of the labor union element by bis remarks during the Harriman controversy in lumping Harriman and Eugene Debbs ana Moyer and Hayward, the accused murderers of Gov. Stunnenberg of Idaho, in the same category as "undesirable citizens.” The labor element bolds that as Moyer and Hayward are about to be brought to trial for murder, the President’s remarks will have the effect of prejudicing justice against the accused. Therefore labor unions in various quarters have entered strenuous protests and are preparing to inject themselves into the fight in Ohio and to take an active part in the general campaign as anti-Roosevelt bodies, more with a desire to gratify a personal desire for vengeance than tor the principle involved.
Word has been received at the State Department of the signing at Ampala of a treaty of peace between Nicaragua and Salvador. This marks the end of the present Central American war, and the treaty provides for a general peace conference of the Central American republics in the near future that it is thought will insure the continuance of peace in that region for years to come. The President has received a congratulatory telegram from President Zelaya of Nicaragua thanking him for the part he had personally taken in bringing about the cessation of hostilities. The peace pact containing the provision for a general peace conference is the same in effect as that signed on the Marblehead about a year ago, but which was never put into effect owing to the strained relations between the Central American countries at the time. Now that the pressure has been relieved by a fight, the air is clearer and it is thought that the conference will be held with some chance of success. 6
Patent Commissioner Frederick I. Allen has resigned from the important post he has held under the Interior Department for the past six years, and will follow the example of some of his predecessors in office and return to the practice of law. Commissioner Allen has not had an altogether tranquil time in his long administration. The office tinder his care fell dreadfully into arrears of work, and there were many criticisms of bis administration. A good many influences were at work to oust him from his job, but it took a good deal of time and much effort to pry him loose from such a good official salary. His successor has not yet been named, but quite possibly it will be assistant Commissioner Moore. What is needed in the office above all things now is a prompt and effective business administration to clear up the long list of arrears with which the office has been struggling for some years past and for which Commissioner Allen’s incompetent administration is at fault.
A new record was established in the Dead Letter Office this month in the return of undelivered letters to their writers. This has always been a serious problem, and till a few months ago it looked as though the Dead Letter office had become so congested that it never would be able to catch up and return dead letters with reasonable promptitude. The work has been systematized under the administration of Assistant Postmaster General P. V. DeGraw. He held from the first time be took office that there was no reason why dead letter mail should not go back to its writers immediately. He set the force in the office to cleaning up the arrears and two months ago succeeded in returning 14,488 letters. This record has been badly beaten this month, when 20,308 letters were returned, leaving arrears of only 60,000 to be dealt with. This is a cheerful contrast to the situation a few months ago when there were over 200,000 letters in the division waiting vainly for return - De Graw is himself an old newspaper man and was formerly manager of the United Press in Washington. He is an expert telegraph operator and has the distinction of operating daily the shortest telegraph line in the world. It is a little over 30 feet long and runs from his desk into the next room to that of his private secretary and confidential clerk, both of whom are ex-opera-
tors. Mr. DeGraw uses the telegraph line instead of the telephone in directing bis two assistants. He sometimes uses it also for dictation, and will sit at his desk and dictate letters by wire to his clerk in the next room. It is a very private sort of communication, too, tor there are not many visitors who can “read code” and the line is much less subject to eaves-drop-ping than a telephone line would be.
The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, which has just come under the administration of a new secretary in the person of Chas. D. Walcott, formerly director of the Geological Survey, has made a move that will be of interest to scientists all over the world. It has constituted itself a sort of clearing house for the major scientific societies, chief among them the American association for the Advancement of Science and National Academy of Sciences. These two important institutions will hereafter have their permanent headquarters in the Smith r sonian building, and will transact through it their mass of correspondence with the rest of the scientific world. It is a courtesy that has been accepted with thanks by both bodies, and will tend to make the Smithsonian more than ever the clearinghouse for the scientific work of the whole country.
A new board of food standards has been established in the department of Agriculture, composed of Dr. A. H. Wiley, chief chemist of the department, George McCabe, the solicitor of the Department, and Dr. F. L. Dunlap, who has been brought to Washington from the University of Michigan for the purpose of acting as chief assistant to Dr. Wiley. This board, under the direction of Secretary Wilson, will pass on all questions of law and fact connected with the food standards established under the Pure Food and Drug Act.
ALL KNOW WHAT THEY ARE.
in no business does experience count for more to both the dealer and the customer than in the implement business. Experience enables the dealer to know the value of goods. He can see at a glance whether they are artistic and will please a discriminating customer; in a word, whether they will satisfy buyers by giving first-class service. The same experience enables him to BUY RIGHT. Then he can SELL RIGHT. It is bis larger experience, coupled with his thorough knowledge of the business, that has made C. A. Roberts, the Front street buggy man, so deservedly popular with the discriminating buyers of sightly vehicles. He served his time in a caniage shop way back in the 60s, when an apprentice had to know bis business before he could begin work for himself. He put in seventeen years of bis life building and repairing wagons and carriages, and can make every piece in them. He began to sell implements in 1882, and every customer gets the benefit of this long experience every time he shows an article. That is something, isn’t it? He sells Studebaker and Page Bros’. Carriages and Baggies, and there are no better, and he has some other makes and styles. Studebaker Wagons, he claims, there are none so good. SUCCESS Return Apron or Litchfield Endless Apron MANURE SPREADERS. They are both all right. McCormick Binders and Mowers. YOU ALL KNOW WHAT THEY ARE, and Grain King Shoveling Boards, and there are more of them sold than any other make. You are going to need some of these articles this year, and you will always regret it if you do not go and see Roberts and see his goods before you buy. Paste this in your hat so you won’t forget to go. He will do the rest when you land. Don’t forget the place on Front street and the name. . C. A. Roberts, the Buggy Man.
More goods and better goods for your produce than elsewhere. Chicago Bargain Store. The Democrat and the Chicago Daily Examiner, both a full year, for only $3.00. For Sale—Five-room house, 75x300 foot lot, bearing fruit; situated on Rivet street J. E. Bislosky. Come and see me for Osborne mowers and bidders and get my prices on a general line of implements. Vance Collins. When renewing your farm loan or making a new one, it will pay you to see Baughman & Williams. They are making a specialty of the farm loan business and can make you the best rates. See them, over First National bank, ts
"liiliMfiW I ■ Says “we are not in it” [FERTILIZER'! W. S. DeARMOND, Tefft, Ind. Don’t trust a Police Gazette— Call and get our prices from “nt ■ Min in ————■ I fist /ra i I | The Starr Pianos | In the Starr room next door to Postoffice. 5 (• I; i,ooo copies of the McKinley Co’s. Music, 10/ Q* •) i; cents per copy. All the Latest Popular Songs and!; •) (• Music, 25c. |FRED a. PHILLIPS.! I Want DIFFICULT Eye Cases. All I Ask is That YOU Investigate at My Expense My Knifeless Method Which Has Cured So Many Cases After Others Have Failed. DONT GO BLIND-VISION IS TOO PRECIOUS. I want tn meet with, or hear from every man, woman or child afflicted with disease* of the eye. I don’t care who the person is or what their eye trouble may be, I will be able to convince them ABSOLU FBLY FREE that my painiee* treatment will do more for them than any other method known to the profession. By this 1 do not mean there are not •ome isolated cases that cannot be cured, but I do mean to say emphatically that many and many difficult cases which have been termed b curable by others have been permanently cured by my Absorption treatmeat. One of the things that I ana proud of is in the uninterrupted successful career covering many JBPzj W/ years. I have eliminated the necessity of using the dangerous and MQgkZx \ WzTyzzzz painful knife on the delicate eye, v///Z/7 and there is hardly a passes 1 /////// but what I make cure, where othvfaiff//// 7, I V////// ers have advised that only au oper'VMb/7//// k IzZzz / z ation would bring relief. My sue'mlf////// ifldL J Y///Z ////> ceM ba* not been brought about yUM/df//, .JJMXiu V//7/////> by a oure to-day and a failure to'U// / l/TT/7 ///// morrow, but it has been a uniform V/zVZzZ'/ Jx//////7r treatment for Cataract, which i* Xlll/1.t.. //////////// one the mo »t dreadful and most // /y7/7//, obstinate troubles to deal with, XncSST/ x'f 'ZZ///// other oculists tell you it can only / \ ■'■///// be tr®ated successfully by means '///// ot a dangerous operation. To-day //7 niy treatment is prononneed the /I ' radVilTiix / only SURE knifeles* treatment f UIInJI rfXr///\ \ 1 known. And why? Because the I 111 lfllllaf//l/\ X \ eurM have been so uniform. Had 1 ■/ 11/nJiTift/z/h \ Xl 1 'Ulfill Iflui 1 only cured a few oases now and W N Kf//L\ \»1 Tuf/HH/nn *hen, it would be Mid, “You might fvr/// \ XI V// *»■* cured by Dr. Madison’* treatii/mii// UH/ \ 11 \ulUli///\ meut,” but it is the uniformity of 1111 l nUI N'/// \ H XU'lllt'7 cure* in the most difficult eaaea 111 HU l?Vf// \ 1\ W. that people to lay, “You "111 IIH liN'/li \ H w can positively be cured by the ” llin l\l\ 11, \ ’ W ' Madison Absorption Method.’’ * */H' I\\ \ 11, \ V Take for instance, these few tea''•l\ ’• » I 1 timonials taken at random: Mrs. F.L. Wintermute, 121 Second AM IRIOA-S MASTKR oculist. St., Jackson, Mioh., under date of (copybightsd) October 18, 1906, writes: “After . . ... . having been repeatedly told that there was no cure for my cataracts except an operation, to-day my eyes are perfect by means of your knifeiees home treatment. I have regained my vision in six months.” Mr. C. W. Johnson, of Grand Detour, 111., in a recent letter Mid, in part: “I deem it a pleasure, as well as a duty to mankind, to certify to the benefits received from usins your home CURBd'hER ” atmeUt f ° r oataraets * Mr * - < * obuaon w as treated by many physician*. YOU I personally devote my entire time and study to the Bye, and I assure my patient* prospective patients my personal attention, even to the smallest dstails. No matter what Sou are suffering frpm-whether from Cataract, Inflammation. Pannus, Ptosis, Optic erve Trouble, or in fact any affliction of the visional can successfully treat you. I guarantae a perfect, permanent cure for Cross Eyes, whether it be internal or external strabismus, without the use of the knife, with absolutely no risk, pain or inconvenience, without confining my patient to a dark room for a moment, or without the use of a single bandage. VISION IN LIFE —BLINDNESS IN OBLIVION. If you value your eyesight, no matter what your disease, no matter what your thought, investigate. It is not going to cost you any money to prove to your entire satisfaction that my treatment is all Iclaim for it, for all I ask or you is to send me your name and address, no matter where you live, and I will send you FREE an 80-page booklet iUurtrated in color*, which is aTlavdc on of the eye. I will tell you who I am, what I have accomplished, and Will tell you in detail of the more common troubles, their causes, their effects and their cure. Also < ther things of value to you. This is all for the mere asking. Can you afford to delay ? Write me today and relieve your mind. My office hours are from a. m. until s«op. m; Sundays, from 9:00 a. m. to 11:00*. m. only. Special appointment, however, can be made by letter or wire. P. C. MADISON, M. D.
