Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 August 1907 — Page 3
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Remember the Place, the Makeever Bank Building, opposite Jasper Court House, RENSSELAER, INDIANA
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Keal Estate Transfers. Jennie M. Thompson et al to Frank H. Dunn, May 28, se 18-31-5, 163 acres, Walker, *3,CV3. Joseph Kalb to William Hoppe et ux, June 14, nw nw 13-31-7, Keener, 40 acres, 11,703. Benjamin J. Gifford to John N. Baker, Jan. 21, pt ne, 25-30-6,57.75 acres. Barkley, tl-600. Ferguson D. Carson to Brazlllia F. Ferguguson, et al, June 14, Its 5,10, bl 6, Remington Chambers A Morgan's Add., sl. q. e. d. Benjamin J. Gifford to Fredrick R. Way* mire, June 18, ejs ne 26-39-6, se se 23-30-6, 120 acres, Barkley, $4,616. Benjamin J. Gifford to Cary T. Eastburn, June 18, nft sw 25-30-6, nw 25-30-4, sw 24-30-6 4CO aeres, Barkley, $15384. William B. Austin to George W. Markin, June 3, Its 14,15,16, bl 1, Its 2.3,6, bl 2, Its 19,20, 21, 22, bl 2, Rensselaer, Austin A Paxton’s Add. S4O. R.D. Rulison to Edward H. Sanford, June 10, pt nw se 20-28-5,9 acres, Milroy, S3O. q. e. d. Grant Conrad to James Hallagan, Feb. 11, se 31-32-6, 160 acres, sw 32-32-6, 158.50 acres, Walker, 110. Gerty Kopplemau to N. Butler Haynes, Mar. 22, pt ntt ne 4-31-7, Keener, $2,155. Margaret Ransford to J. B. Delmont, June 18, Its 11,14, bl 15, Rensselaer, Leopold’s Add., $3,500. J. E. Delmont to Herod W. O’Neal, June 19, Its 11,14, bl 15, Rensselaer, Leopold’s Add., $3,BC3. '-rf • '' Margaret Ranaford to Herod W. O'Neal, June 17, pt Its 11,12, bl 3. Rensselaer, Original Plat, CI2.CCO. George D. McCarthy to Nell McCarthy, June 20. pt Its 18,19, bl 32, Rensselaer. Weston’s Add., S6OO. Robert Parker to Tlneent Elsie, April 22, pt It 12, bl 12, Remington, pt n}£ sw 30-27-6, Barkley, S4,CCO. James Matheson to Mabel Reed, Apr. 29, ne 24-29-7, ne nw 24-29-7, pt se 24-29-7, Marion, Its 7,10,11,13,14,15,16, Owen’s sub., division, nw 19-29-6, Marion. sl. Francis H, Dunn to James B. Mendenhall A William Fleming, June 12, se 13-31-5, Walker, $4,803. Brazlllia F. Ferguson to Thomas Mullen, et ux, May 3, It 5, bl 6, Remington, Chambers A Morgan’s Add., S6O. William A. Stevenson to Benjamin J. Glford, June 25, It 4, bl 3, Kersey, 175. Geo. J. Hoehn to Albert Hoehn, June 27, pt Its 1,2, 3, bl 4, Wheatfield, Graham's Add., $350. Clarenoe E. Osborn to James M. Snedeker, June 27, Its 10,11,12, pt Its 13,14, ls,bl 81, Rensselaer, Weston’s Add, t'3o. Anna Cassidy to Maggie S. Gill, July 1, pt nw ne 26-31-7, Union, S2,SCO. Harry E. Gifford to William Poisel, Apr. 25, It 6, bl 3, DeMotte, f6C3. U. R. Crabb to W. N. Dicks, March 23, sM nw 10-28-6, w« sw 10-28-6, Milroy $11,2C3. John Kettering to Peter Nelrengarten, July 3, It 12. Remington, Schaeffer's Add., SSOO. David Hilton to George W. Payne, July 8, pt Its 11, 14, bl 88, Rensselaer Weston's Add, S7C3. William E. Moore to Addison Parkison, July 2, »V 4nw tie 18-29-5, 20 acres. Hanging GroveytSCO. Ulysses M. Baughman to Mary L. Allman, July 8, It 8, b 134. Rensselaer, Weston's Add, $3,50.
THE “99” CENT RACKET STORE E. V. RAWSFORP, - - Proprietor The Great ENAMELED-WARE Sale Starts on August 10th and Lasts Just One Week. rU never heard of anyone giving you a sale of this kind; they generally make a sale like this for one hour or a half-day, but you never heard of a sale, where the goods were sold at a loss to the proprietor, to run for a week. We want you all to come to our store; we want you to see the different lines we handle; we want you to ask the prices of our goods, no matter whether you buy a cent’s worth or not. Take a paper and pencil, jot down our prices, look at the quality of our goods, then be your own judge. If we can not sell you the same goods for less money, or more and better goods for the same money, we do not want your trade; all we ask is fair treatment. You will find no fancy cost marks to muddle the brains of our clerks. We do not have to look wise to sell our goods—they are all marked in plain figures—a school child in the first grade can see and tell you the prices oi our goods. We were the originators of the Premium Business in Rensselaer. You never received as much as a kind look until The 99-Cent Racket Store came here. We believe in sharing a part of our profits with our customers. We do not believe in charging you something to trade with us. We give absolutely Free, beautiful Pictures, fine China, Rugs, and hundreds of other articles too numerous to mention, when your purchases amount to $5, $lO, sls, and S2O. We handle almost everything. It will pay you when you want that little something you do not know where to find same, come here, you are sure to get it and save yourself dollars and a great amount of worry. Look at Our Windows. Don’t believe everything you hear about The Racket Store is out of business; we are still in business at the same old stand and liable to be for some time to come. When we do go out we will let you all know; we will not go away without notifying you, giving you plenty of time to bring in all your old tickets for redemption. We have been seven years in business in Rensselaer; you know our past record for business. If you think we deserve any patronage, please stay by the ship that has carried you over safely; if not, let the ship sink. Remember this Great Enameled-Ware Sale Continues One Week.
George B. Marshall to George W. Ott, July 10, Its 11, 14, bl 2, Rensselaer, sub. bk, 3, Thompsons Add., $250. Marietta Luce Bosserman et al to Emmet L. Hollingsworth et al, Juce 5, se 19-32-5, s!4 20-32-5, Kahkakee, sl. q. o. d. Charles T. Otis et al to Edwin M. Ashcraft, July 6, certain lands in Keener tp., $lO, q. c. d. Edwin M. Ashcraft to Charles T. Otis, July 8, same lands, $lO, q. c. d. Benjamin J. Gifford to Thomas M. Callahan, May 21, pt sw 18-30-5, Barkley, 50 acres, $2,500. William O. Williams to Joseph S. W .Itiams, July 12, pt ntt nw 27-30-7, Union, l acre, S6CO. William B. Austin to Benjamin S. Fen Sig, July 6, Its 1,2,3. bl 8, Rensselaer, $1,50. Emma J. Warren to Rosa Kopplemau, June 15, Its 9, 10, bl 7, DeMotte, McDonald’s Add., SI,OCO, Douglas Clark to Albert S. Keene, July 2, It 8, bl 2, Subdivision of Lots 12 and 13, Wheat, field, Bentley's Add., $55. Thomas W, Grant to Joseph H. Long et ux, July 12, pt It 1, bl 2, Rensselaer, Thompson’s Add, S4OO. Augustus U. Lux et al to Lona Danford, July 19, lta 7,8, bl 5, Original Plat, Wheatfield SBCO, Leonard F. Bell to George D. Ritchey, July 20, se ne 35-32-5,40 acres, Kankakee, $2,003. John B. Alter to Martha J. Dickinson, July 23, lta 7,8,9, 10, bl 12, lta 11.12, bl 5, Fair Oaks, S9O.
For Bale: —O. I. 0. piga, full blood; weight about 140. Phone 521-E. John E. Alter. Ton will be wise to lay in yonr fall supply of clothing and shoes at the big sale, Ang. 10 to 24. Chicago Bargain Store. Come and see me for Osborne mowera and binders and get my prices on a general line of implements. Vance Collins. SHROPSHIRBS. December rams for sale, extra large fancy fellows; write your wants, or better, call and inspect herd. Thomas E. Reed, R-F-D-3. ’Phone 2 on 79 Remington, Ind. LOW RATES FROM RENSSELAER. Jamestown Exposition—6o day limit, $25.65; 15 day limit, $21.80. Coach excursion on sa’e each Tuesday, sls 60, 5 PER CENT LOANS. We can positively make you a loan on better terms than you can procure elsewhere. No “red tape.” Commission the lowest. No extras. Funds unlimited. See* us before borrowing or renewing an old loan and we will save you money, IRWIN & IRWIN. I. O. O, F. Build lug;,
Your Choice 29 Cents All You Want
Nervous Women Suffer No More.
Silently ami Alone You Bear with Patience, Burdens That Would Crush Strong /Ten. In this country to-day there are thousands of women whose days are tilled with constant suffering There is the dull headache, the dragging backache, the hot flushes, that awful tired feeling, too sick and faint to work, too well to go to bed. Men have little knowledge of the suffering their women go thrbngh day after day. Many times such illness is attributed to biliousness op the after effect of a cold when it is really a derangement of the nervous system caused by weakness or disease of the genital organs. It seems a shame that women should suffer so when there is a safe, harmless remedy that will restore to them the splendid health thfit makes perfect womanhood. Zoa-Phora dispels nervous disorders of women because it regulates the menses, and relieves them of pain. It is wonderfully effective in the core (4 prolapsus because it strengthens the muscles supporting the parts, and renews the nerve force. It removes and prevents inflammation, congestion and nnnatnral discharge from the genital organs—these diseases that sap the very life, destroy the tisanes and finally shatter the nervous system. It is marvelous in ite tonic effects and women who have been tired, listless, with headaohes and backaches marring their every pleasure have in a single week been ohanged from suffering, morose, irritable beings to bright, happy, cheerful women who find pleasure in their household duties because they have a new and natural strength to perform them without fatigue, simply by use of the wonderful s£oa-Phora. Zoa-Phora has helped hundreds and thousands of women to health, strength and >the joy of living The only way in which you may receive the same benefit is to do as they did. G-o to your druggist and procure a dollar bottle of ZoaPhora. Begin using at once according to plain directions found in the package. If any farther
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information or private advise is desired, the Zoa-Phora Company, Kalamazoo, Mich., will gladly answer all questions if you write them. Just ask the druggist for ZoaPhora—no other explanation need be given—and yon will receive the medicine already prepared, compounded in jnst the right proportions, and put up in sealed sterilized, one dollar bottles. Will you act now while the opportunity is before you?
Many goods 50 cents on the dollar at the big sale, Aug. 10 to 24. Chicago Bargain Store. Mr. R. B. Haligus, agent for the J. R. Watkins Medical Co., has moved his headquarters to the Knapp livery office, where those desiring supplies can be accommodated. 3t A sweeping sacrifice sale, entire stock, Saturday Ba. m., Aug. 10‘ to Saturday evening, Aug. 24. Chicago Bargain Store, An opportunity of a lifetime to buy at one half less than later in the fall. Big sale Aug. 10 to 24. Chicago Bargain Store. The Greening Nnieery Co. Monroe, Mich., one of the largest nursery concerns in the United States, write us that they want a good live agent in this section to solicit orders for their trees, shrubbery, etc. Experience not necessary. They offer good pay weekly, and furnish canvassing outfit free. We advise any man or woman in our community, who has some spare time to take orders to write them for particulars immediately. Mention this paper when writing. 4t FIFTY ACRE FARM FOR SALE Well improved, seven miles from good town; good house, barn 24x82, oribs and other good outbuildings, deep well; telephone and rnral mail route, near gravel road. All nnder cultivation except 5 acre grove of oak and hickory. Owner wants to move to town. Another 40 adjoining with no buildings, can he bought reasonable. and owner will rent purchaser 40 acres more for term of years if wanted. For price and terms address “X,”care Democrat, Rensselaer, lud. Remember The Democrat office for job printing.
99 Cent Racket Store E t V. Ransford, Prop. Great Enameled Ware Sale
Experiment* Show That It Is ■ Valuable Ration For Fowls. A writer in the American Poultry Advocate has the following to say of the value of skim milk as a partial ration for fowls: The West Virginia experiment station has recently made some systematic tests to prove the value of skim milk for laying hens. The first test covered 122 days. The twentytwo hens fed skim milk laid 1,244 eggs as compared with 996 eggs laid by the twenty-two hens fed mash wet with water. In another test sixty hens fed the skim milk ration laid 862 eggs In thirty-seven days as compared with 632 eggs laid by a similar lot fed no skim milk. Other tests gave about the same comparative results. The conductors of these experiments estimate that under the prevailing conditions and with eggs selling for 20 or 25 cents per dozen the skim milk used for moistening the mash had a feeding value of from IV£ to 2 cents per quart That milk Is one of the best general foods for almost all stock and human beings, too. Is recognized by everybody and needs no special proof. That It should have better results In nutrition than Just plain water Is really self evident When I feed skim milk to my fowls, I do expect to get some benefit from it. But it is a satisfaction to know that It Is werth, for feeding purposes, the comparatively high figure of 1% or 2 cents a quart. At the Ontario experimental farm some tests of the value of skim milk, whey, etc., as an addition to grains for fattening poultry have recently been conducted. From a summary of data on the relative value of whey, skim milk and numerous feeds for fattening chickens It appears that gain was most cheaply made on a mixture of equal parts of corn meal, oatmeal and shorts mixed with whey, the cost being 4 cents per pound, and was most expensive (6 cents per pound) on a mixture of equal parts of cornmeal, shorts and oatmeal, with 30 per cent of pork scrap, water being used to wet up the ration. It was found that sour skim milk (milk that is thickened) Is without doubt the best liquid to mix with grain rations where a uniform product is wanted and more so where white fleshed chickens are In demand; also that sweet ,«klm milk has not so high a feeding value for grown chickens as sour milk and that whey is a better food than Is generally considered. It seems to aid digestion.
As a general role, tlie commercial liquid lice killer* are more dependable and satisfactory than homemade kerosene mixtures. However, tlie following combinations will be found reliable If carefully used: .A sat urate solution of crude uapbthalene flakes in kerosene, made by dissolving In kerosene all It _wUl take jjp of crude naphtha-
FEEDING SKIM MILK.
Liquid Lice Killers.
f \ A 29c Each
lene flakes, makes an effective lice paint and Is a good remedy for scaly leg. Two fluid ounces of any coal tar disinfecting liquid mixed with a gallon of kerosene is an effective lice paint for destroying red mites and coop lice. Either of these preparations used as a liquid lice paint about the roosts and dropping boards should be applied In the forenoon or before the middle of the day, so that they will thoroughly dry Into the woodwork before the fowls go to roost.
Preparing Broilers For Market.
. A fat broiler Is quite a rarity. The beßt that can be done In general Is to have them plump, for the natural tendency of the chick is to use all nutriment for growth and development. When the birds are nearly large enough for the market, they should be given all the fattening feed they will eat, and for this purpose corn In various forms should be fed freely. They will digest more feed if fed ground than If whole or cracked. A moistened mash consisting of about two-thirds comigeal and one-third bran by bulk Is good. Cooked potatoes are good, and milk, with a little sugar added, will hasten fattening-
Liver Trouble In Fowls.
When a few hens in a flock show symptoms of advanced stages of liver trouble, It is reasonable to conclude that others in the floqk are In the earlier stages. Give the flock a grass run If possible. If not, give. green food liberally, avoid the excessive use of corn, and try to secure a considerable amount Of exercise for the fowls. This Is best accomplished for fowls in confinement by feeding the grain in Utter and feeding rather sparingly at first. This reduction of diet should not be contlnned too long. If it is, the birds become weakened and reduced in flesh.
The Feather of the Hen.
The shaft of the feather is the stem of the feather, that part which is filled with pith and which bears the barbs. The barbs are the side branches of the feather. Shafting means that the shaft of the plumed portion of the feather Is either lighter or darker than the web of the feather. The web of the feather is the flat or plumed portion of the feather made up of a series of barbs on either side of the shaft.
Fattening Crates.
Fattening crates are made with slat bottoms. The leg weakness of chickens confined lu crates is often <jue to the ration being too one sided. A little bone meal or granulated raw lame added to the mash will usually prevent this trouble, or use cut clover and cut alfalfa freely.
The Valuable Trap Nest.
The Industrious Hen firmly believes 1 that the trap nest is one of the great-' est biesslugs within reach of the poultry man. >
