Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 May 1907 — Page 7

Kenton’s Stables SURREY, INDIANA ■

Marcus Belgian Stallion. Dkscbiption AMD PMDieBM.-M*rctM is • dark brown Balffian Stallion, i* 4 yean, old and weigh* 1800 pounds, has large bone and good muscle, la a strong mover and a good individual throughout. He was sired by Americus No. 292; he by Champion No. 188; he by Bruyant No. 129; he by Mouton No. 330. The dam of Marcus was sired by Markins No. 108; second dam Heroine A. No. 838. V. 3432; third dam, Bello, by Bismark. Terms: 812.00 to insure colt to stand and suck. (Marcus is owned Jointly by C. V. Stackhouse and O. J. Kenton.) Henry Clay. s Hamby Clay is a black jet with white points, aired by Kentucky John, a 16 hand jack; dam, a UH hand jennet. Terms: 810.00 to insure colt to stand and suck.

O- J. KENTON, Owner, RENSSELAER, INDIANA.

Goliath No. 7639. Goliath is a dark bay horse, bred by Simon HegneK at Koko- amo, Ind., is registered in the books of the National Association Fre n ch l> r a 11 Horses, under No. 7639, sired by - I.nmoresux No. 3391 he bj Eavori. aKRHMKIH '. No. 401. Out of ■ No. 459. Dam Rodes No. 1922. He weighs in good flesh, 1800 pounds; has good style and action. Will make the season at my barn, on what is known as the Wm. Haley farm, 5 miles southeast of Rensselaer. The best reference given as to colts. Tbbms: 910.00 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 383-J. B. T. LANHAM. KING No. 6433. SHIRE STALLION. Kisa is a dark dappie bay stallion. 16 bands and weighs 1,S(K) pounds at time. He was foaled igg ; May 21, 1900; bred by C. M. Moots. Normal, nMAAHAiffIiM Hl. Sire. Allerton No. 3008(8682): Dam, Lula by Conqurer IX, 2783 (7051). Stand. Txbms and Conditions: King will make the season of 1907 at my farm, 10 miles North of Rensselaer, 3% miles Bast of Fair Oaks and 3 miles South of Virgie, at 216.00 to insure colt to stand and suck. Service money becomes due and payable at once on owner parting with mare: product of horse held good for service. Not responsible for acciPAUL SCHULTZ, Owner. TOM, Norman Stallion TOM is a sorrel horse with sorrel mane and tail, stands 16 hands high aud now weighs 1350 pounds. Sire Vasistas ,27799, out of a 15-16 Norman mare. He has good style and and compactly built and is an ideal type of farm horse; is coming three ><■:.< old, Stand andTxbmb ? om *F. Bnd th ® season of MOT at my farm 10% miles north of Rensselaer and SH south and U west of Kniman, at 88 to insure oolt to stand and suck. Product held good for service; parting with mare or leaving county or state, service fee becomes due aid PM’able at once. Care taken to prevent acJoe Patch Will make the stud season at the Morlan farm. Hi miles west of Rensselaer, at a fee SI

Richwood Squirrel, Roadster Richwood Sqmnai> is a dark brown horse, no marks, weight 1200 pounds, and is MH hands; foaled May 8,1901: bred by J. 8. 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, Belle. Terms: 810 to inauto colt to stand and suck. James Madison No. 287. Jambs madisom was foaled July 21,1896 color black with white points, 14% hands’ weight 900 pounds; sire. Imported Gladstone; dam, a noted IS hands jennet Terms: 810.00 to Insure oolt to stand and suck. The above horses and jacks will stand the season of 1907 at Simon Kenton’s farm, half mile Bast 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 wilt not be responsible should any occur.

of 810 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. R-R-3, Rensselaer, Ind. PRINCE. ENGLISH SHIRE STALLION. Prince is a dapple bay horse, aged five years and weighs 1800 pounds. He will make the season of 1907 at my farm 9 miles southwest of Rensselaer, near the Bullis school house, in Jordan township, all week except Thursdays, when he will stand at the farm of Joe Nessius, in the east part of Jordan tp. Will be taken to parties desiring to breed to him who will write or telephone. Terms;Blo to insure living colt. Produce held good for service. Not responsible for accidents, JBSSE PURDEM, Owner and Manager. VASISTAS 37799 Imported P*rch*ron Stallion VASISTAS is an Imported Percheron Stallion of the famous Brilliant strain; he is 8 years old and weighs ■' :4 eH’2L £7, 185 °- Heisasureand splendid breeder. We invite an inspection .. of his colts throughout the country. Stand will be at the ■> ... farm of Charley Pullins. 5 miles north and % mile east of Rensselaer, Mondays, Tuetoay. mid Wednesdays; at Hemphill s stallion barn in Rensselaer, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays. Tkhms, Regulations, Eto.-«15.00 to insure eplt to stand and suck; «12 to insure payable when known to ba in 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 becomes due and collectible at once. Produce held lor service. DlCKisaPer- A eheron Belgian and action, an BriSnSSr tinuouslv >itth< C. Pullins farm. ZSffIBjIWWRPRPfc-- -. Tkhms—slo to "*£08!? insure colt to stand and suck; 88 to insure mare to be in SYLveerxß Gbay. Mgr. MONEY TO LOAN We have money to loan at any time, and in any amounts to suit borrowers. ; . Our specialty is loans on farms and city real estate for one, two, three, four or five years, with interest payable semi-annually, to suit borrower, and with the most liberal terms as to payments on part of principal. We *l5O loan on personal security and chattel mortgage. tap*Dsn’t tail to sec us bstors borrowing I eiMWhers. I AUSTIN & HOPKINS

WASHINGTON LETTER.

Political and General Gossip of the National Capital. Special Correspondence to The Democrat. Last week was a lively week for Washington from a social and spectacular standpoint. The visiting naval officers at Jamestown have been entertained at the White House and at the several embassies, and there has been a constant succession of liberty parties of foreign sailors in Washington from the various foreign warships visiting the exposition. The officers nave been always in citizens clothes on the street so they were not conepicious. But the sailors have been in the uniforms of the navies to which they belonged. One has run across them in the hotel lobbies, on the street oars and at the theaters constantly, There is not so much difference between the uniforms of sailors the world over, only minor points, such as buttons and pipings. But it would seem there had never been so many sailors in the city before, and the cap ribbons show them to be from Great Britain, Austria, Germany, Italy and France and possibly some other countries. They have all been models of deportment and have added to the gaiety of the street scenes. Receptions and dinners have been given the officers at the German, British and Austrian embassies, and there are more entertainments in prospect.

There is every prospect that the Dominican Treaty against which such a fight was made in the last session of congress will be ratified by Santo Domingo in the course of a few days. The event is awaited with a good deal of interest at the State Department and it will mean several years more of work for this government in straightening out the finances of the little republic and putting it on its feet again among the nations of the world, One of the changes that will follow the ratification of the treaty is that Minister Dawson of Santo Domingo, who has engineered the negotiations all through and who has visited this country three times in the interest of the treaty, will be transferred to Columbia as minister in succession to |John Barrett, now the director of the Bureau of American Republics. This will be a decided promotion, and is given in recognition of Minister Dawson’s work.

Of decided interest to the traveling public is the decision of the Interstate Commerce Commission that the Railroads cannot grant special rates to theatrical troupes as has been the custom in the past. The decision may or may not affect all of the traveling public. That is as the railroads take it. The present law provides that there shall be no discrimination in passenger rates, and it is held that there is discrimination if the railroads allow a special rate to theatrical organizations and not to other associations of people. If the theatrical rate is kept in force, then an association of ten or more other persons of any calling can demand and receive the same treatment. This will be nice for the traveling public, and will be apt to make co-operative traveling the fashion. *

There is quite a crowding at the counter for the position of Commissioner of Patents that will be left vacant by the resignation of the present Commissioner Frederick I. Allen. Many of the candidates are patent lawyers from various parts of the country, and while naturally a patent lawyer would be of some advantage in the place, being familiar with the details of the business, it would give a decided advantage to his firm to have the prestige of one of its members as Patent Commissioner at Washington. It is rather a delicate situation. Patent lawyers have been appointed to the place before, and while they have of course nominally severed their connection with their firms, they have sometimes continued unofficially connected with them. There is on record the case of one commissioner who used to go every evening to his office near the Patent Office and prepare cases that he would have to pass on in hie capacity of commissioner the next day. •It is likely that a selection will be made from inside the Patent Office, and it is thought that Secretary Garfield who now has the Interior Portfolio, will appoint the present Assistant Commissioner Edward B. Moore to the vacancy. . ttt 7 ■ 3 Postmaster General Cortelyou has just appointed a commission pursuant of an order from the last Congress, which will have the

job of weighing every piece of mail matter and keeping track of the expense involved in haijßling it for. the next six months. It has been contended for years that the railroads were getting too much for the service of transporting the mails. But at the same time there was no accurate data on which to base a calculation. There was always a slight deficit in the postal revenues, but it was hard to locate it and say whether the railroads were getting too much for their work or whether some class of mail matter was paying less than its fair share of the expense. Of course there are many different sorts of mail matter, letters, papers and periodicals, newspapers sent out by the publishers and paid for by the pound, government books and documents that pay nothing at all. and a great mass of franked Congressional congressional correspondence. All these various classes of matter will be weighed and an account kept of the cost of transporting them, and as the result of this exhaustive inquiry, a general readjustment will be made of postage rates and railway mail pay.

The Bureau of Corporations is hard at work on the investigation of the so called Lumber Trust. Little can be learned of the progress of the investigation, but it is said that some remarkable facts are likely to be brought out. One of the most striking things in the whole inquiry is the fact that no one knows for certain that there is a lumber trust or who its moving spirit is. There is no doubt about the identity of the men behind the Standard Oil Company, the Sugar Trust, the Beef Trust and the Coal Trust. But though it is almost certain that there is a lumber trust, and that prices are fixed and penalties for violation of these rules imposed, its management has so far managed to escape identification. This element of mystery lends zest to the chase and there certainly will be some interesting revelations when the report of the Bureau of Corporations is made public, which it will be in the course of the next few months.

CATARRH CAN BE CURED.

Kill the Germs by Breathing Hy-o-mei. Gives Quick Relief. Many people who have suffered with catarrh for years naturally feel that the disease cannot be cured, and become discouraged. Their failure to get relief is due to the fact that they have not used the right remedy. Catarrh is an affection of the head, throat and lungs, and cannot be cured by stomach dosing. The only scientific and natural treatment for this disease is Hy-o-mei, which is breathed through a neat pocket inhaler, so that its healing medicated air reaches the most remote air-cells, kills all catarrh germs, and restores the mucous membrane of the nose, throat and lungs to a healthy condition. Hy-o-mei is the only cure for catarrh that has ever been sold with the understanding that it was to cost absolutely nothing unless it cured, B. F. Fendig sells Hy-o -mei in this way and is always ready to refund the money if it does not relieve and cure 'catarrh. The healing and antiseptic balsams of Hy-o-mei perform their purpose to perfection and by using this remedy for a few times each day, you can soon cure yourself if any catarrhal troubles. A complete Hy-o-mei outfit consisting of a bottle of Hy-o-mei and an inhaler costs but SI.OO.

Come and see me for Osborne mowers and binders and get my prices on a general line of implements. Vance Collins,

MONUMENTS.

Are you considering the erection of a monument? Probably inexperienced, of course, and fear your jmdgment may err. Just consider quality of material first, and size and design second. The price must be right, too, not too high or too low; just right, and it Will be right if you get my prices. So will the material and workmanship be right, from the top of the monument to the x bottom of the foundation. My many years of practical experience in every feature of the monument trade and my determination to satisfy you in every particular reduces the possibilities of disappointment to the minimum. Will you not kindly write or call for prices before buying elsewhere, or wait for the “Rensselaer man’’ who will surely call when the proper time arrives. IT, The old reliable Rensselaer Granite and Marble Works, ? • Will Mackey, Prop.

"II! In MIW It V Says “we are not in it” I fertilizer! I W. S. DeARMOND, I Tefft, Ind. Don’t trust a Police Call and get our prices from "Ml MU 111 IIW." J 1 11 111 111 1niiinVtli |1 ,4, I | Ill? Starr Pianos i In the Starr room next door to Postoffice. I (• :; i ,000 copies of the McKinley Co’s. Music, io I; (• •) !; cents per copy. All the Latest Popular Songs and I; •) (• ! Music, 25c. ![ (• |FRED a. PHILLIPS.! I Want DIFFICULT Eye Cases. All 1 Ask isjThat 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 to meet with, or hear from every man, woman or child afflicted with diwans 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 ABSOLUTBLY FREE that my painless treatment will do more for them than any other method known to the profession. By this 1 do not mean there are not some isolated oases that cannot be cured, but I do mean to say emphatically that many and many difficult cases which _ have been termed incurable by others have been permanently cured by my Absorption treatment. One of the things that lam proud of is in the uninterrupted "*<<- successful career coverinc many years. I have eliminated the necessity of using the dangerous and \ w/////// painful knife on the delicate eye, (■■7/*'**«[| Vs////// and th ere is hardly a day passes ZSJHB/ZSkWXk Ktok I /////// hut what I make cures where othyfMff//// i I V////// era have advised that only an oper'HSa//n// Zi. k rTTZ// / , ation would bring relief. My sucWW//VZ/' iAaL J IzZZyy ///ft cew has not been brought about yiW/,'[//, ftz/z /f///i hy a cure to-day and a failure toWc/7'7 T////f ///// morrow, but it has been a uniform Bf !I ////J success. Take for instance my x '////My treatment for Cataract, which is xl///////////// on® of the most dreadful and most /////, obstinate troubles to deal with, lz2£aK%Sk xwSSSf W ''/////// other oculists tell you, it can only / \ / '''/////. he treated successfully by means '///// of • dangerous operation. To-day vZ// my treatment is prononnced the 1 ) MkW/ only SURE knifeless treatment 'iKl/ndinvr/J//\ I I WZ//fhZvNX known. And why? Because the I X \ I W4W//b’/A 1 cures have been so uniform. Had !■>l/IK X ’ 1 IMll I only cured a few cases now and ~ 'uJll \ \»1 TUffllllnVk then, it would be said, “You might ll IJ V W//,\ Xi V//Z///%flll be cured by Dr. Madison’s treatW///J..IL/// t/ZZ/ \ »l ment," but it is the uniformity of if//// Iwl K'/Z/ \ 11 W'llhV cures in the most difficult cases 11///lIW IX7//. \ \\ W/ If' that causes people to, say. “You 'lf I I link IW'lli \ 11 Wl V °®n positively be cured by the • 111 |J|l\ |\\\'/ , \ ’ w ' Madison Absorption Method." H 'Jill ’ \\\ x’ll. \ V Take for Instance, these few tos- “ » I •' L timonials taken at random : 1— AMBRIOA’* MASTBR OCULIST. St., Jackson, Mich., under date of (oopybightbd) October 18. 1906, writes: “After t , having been repeatedly told that there was no cure for my cataracts except an operation, to-day my eyecare perfect by your knifeless home treatment. I have, regained my vision in six months." Mr. C. W. Johnson, of Grand Detour, Hl , in a recent letter said, in part: “1 deem tt a pleasure, as well as a duty to mankind, to certify to the benefits received from using your home curb'd HER“ tnient tor oataraeU ’ Mr ’’ J °hnson|waa treated by many physicians. 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 details. No matter what Sou are suffering from-whether from Cataract. Inflammation. Pannus, Ptosis, Optie erve Trouble, or in fact ahy affliction of the vision—l can successfully treat you. I guarantee a perfect, permanent cure for Cross Byes, 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. f VISION IN LIFE—BLINDNESS INJOBLTVION. 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 I claim for it, to S.“ U t ° o s ® nd “?.“ e and address, no matter where you live, and I will send you FREE an 80-pwc booklet, illustrated in colors, which is a classic on diseases of the eye. I will tell yon who I am, what I have accomplished, and will teU you in detail of the more common troubles, their causes, their effects and their cure. Also other things of value to you. This is all for the mere aakiq*. Can yon afford m daisy ? Write me today and relieve your mind. My office hours ate from 10 jOO a. m. until 3:00 p. m: Sundays, from 9tf» a. m. to U« a. m. only. Special appointment, however, can be made.by letter or wire. P. C. MADISON, M. 0.