Jasper County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 86, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 February 1911 — Page 2

B— DON’T TKADE' YOUR EGG S For cheep spices and flavoring extracts. Bettei exchange them for tea, coffee.sugar and other groceries. It will pay you. big to wait for the Rawleigh Man. Get your flavoring extracts and spices freA >' from our laboratory and cheapo than you can « obtain them elsewhere. Rawleigh’s Flavoring Rawleigh’s Ground Extracts. Spices. and to comply with the Pure Food Laws. The. leighsi al oratory. Put up in sralfrf, air are manufactured in enormous quantities tn h! packages and shipped. >«»< aad and sold direct to consumers all over the /-«A, direct to the Rawleigh »a». , • United States. A’o MicW/cwew'r profits G.t:?r>nieedabsolutelypurr and fresh; Mr.«.tnnar » o chance for « duiteratioif, no middleror yens io paj. nJcB , Profits for you to pay Larva bottle-small price brands, all icnrw/rsrd to t>r of ■ A few drops produce a delicious flavor. the k.gkest quality and of strength. HOUSEWIVES—YOUR DAILY FOOD SHOULD 3E PURE Wait for me. Get my valuable c x,k 1 ck which is free, this trip. I am the Rawleigh Man. I sell Rav.lc.g flavoring extracts and spices. They are of the highest quality and the es are no higher then you pay for inferior brands. U’b.: . ■ . I know they will suit you and tn ' -c ie all I claim, you may bake with them once, —give them a triid at my e; :x: uoe< You want the teStcn the market, s i rat’• your butter and eggs for something else ard lr'. P : - . . . . - xiiacts ant. spices, just as I receive B them, fresh from the 1. ’ ;ry weUi. v 0. N. Hile, Local Agt., Rensselaer, Ind.

5 /I The car that lasts longest—and costs least while it lasts 4 cyl., 22X h- P-, 5 passenger touring car, 100 in. . wheel base, S7BO, includes magneto, top, wind-shield, gas lamps, generator, speedometer, 3 oil lamps, horn, and kit ot tools. Ford repairs always on hand. Ford Auto Agency Jno. M. Knapp, Local Agt., Phone 186, Rensselaer, Ind.

Guaranteed for Life. The biggest little car in the world A 4-passenger Touring car at. . . $ 900.00 A 2-passenger Runabout at 750.00 A 2-passenger Torpedo at 850.00 A 3-passenger Coupe at 1100.00 The only car made in this country with a life guarantee Call at Garage and look them over L. B. Elmore, Remington, Indiana

Phone 204 Residence Phone 418 A Gwin & Watson Plumbers Steamfilters and Well Drillers K Dealers in Starr and Butler Wind Mills, Gasoline Engines, v Galxranized Tanks, Tank Heatk!CRwAH| ers, Pumps, Cylinders, Pipe and Aaßl hFJ»V Fittings ’ Plumbin S and Heating Nfl 9 ’•WK Goods. We also Repair Pumps, jfiHgK / Gasoline and Steam Engines, fIA Patch and Test Steam Boilers, II and Drill Wells any size and IRmR Al from 1 to 1,000 feet in Depth. ■ V Rensselaer, Indiana

This paper and The Weekly Inter Ocean and Fanner—S2 for one year’s subscription to both. Take advantage of our specially low irate of $2 for this paper and The Weekly Inter Ocean and Farmer for one year. ?' i ■. ■ . - ■..

• LA GRIPPE COUGHS Stain and weaken the system and i( not checked may develop into pneumonia. No danger of this when Foley’s Honey and Tar is takei promptly. It is a Reliable family medicine- for all coughs and colds, and acts quickly and effectively in cases of croup. Refuse substitutes A. Fl Long.

SOIL FERTILITY.

Principles by Means of Which It Is Restored or Maintained. Soil fertility can be restored and maintained in any agricultural region by. the persistent practice of simple systems of farming. The growing of leguminous crops, the turning under of green manures to make humus and the systematic rotation of crops are absolutely essential. In most attempts to rebuild soils the use of the element phosphorus is equally.important With the exception of swamp or peaty types, all soils are adequately provided with potassium. Nitrogen can be secured through clover, alfalfa, cowpeas, soy beans, vetch and the like. No farmer should buy commercial nitrogen for ordinary field use. Truck farmers and gardeners require it in this form for quick action* in small areas, but farmers can obtain an abundance of the element practically without cost by growing legumes. In order to make these restorative crops attain proper growth most soils east and many tyres west of the Mississippi river must be limed. Failures with the Clovers are due almost altogether to an excess of acid in the soil. Ground limestone applied at the rate of from LOOO to IO.OOfI pounds per acre neutralizes the acid and increases the supply of available calcium, thus rendering the soil more hospitable to legumes, Inoculation to insure the presence of bacteria also is sometimes necessary, Legumes that do not form tubercles on their roots do not fix nitrogen Each legume has its own special bacteria. Soil taken from a spot in which sweet clover is established can be used in inoculating for alfalfa, these legumes having a common organism to serve them in deriving nitrogen from the air. About WO pounds of soil per acre is sufficient. * It should be obtained from a successful field or plot of the particular legume which it is desired to grow.—Breeder’s Gazette.

Busmens methods n buying and selling receive too little attectioi among farmers. The way and man net of using the income from the farm is quite as impor a t as a large yield and a good profit.

Homemade Land Roller. A friend of mine writes that he has lived sixty years, but has just found out how to make a land roller that actually does the business, says a correspondent of the lowa Homestead. He gets a section of round galvanized iron culvert material. jHe prefers to have it at least two feet in diameter and corrugated; The section* is as long as you wish to make the roller. It is turned on end. and an iron axle or rod of axle size is placed exactly in thecenter. The inside is then ready to be filled - with cement mortar. Let It cure for two weeks before using, wetting occasionally during that time. A frame is bolted to the axle, of course.

Potato Fertilizer Formula. One that is used by man." large potato growers in the vicinity of New York <*lty is made up as follows: Nitrate of soda, 127 pounds; high grade dried blood. 440 pounds; acid phospha pounds. The greatest profit resulted when these fertilizers were mixed and applied at the rate bf 1.000 pounds per acre in some tests at the New York experiment station.

Cooking Feed Does Not Pay. To learn the value of cooking feed for live stock extensive trials were made at the North Dakota experiment station in feeding hogs and cattle raw feed apd cooked feed. It was found that more pounds of grain were made from a given amount of feed when fed raw Potatoes were an exception, as they gave the best returns when cooked.

Let every farmer give h s farm Ire degree of LL D. —lime, legumes and dra ns. Rural New Yorker. - ~ •;

Dairy Doings. / It takes two-thirds of all the good cor eats to keep her alive and without less of flesh and the other third of ordinary good rations to enable her to give milk. The expense of tw>-thirds of the money earning rations has to be incurred when the cow is earning nothing. 1 1 Timothy hay is better than nothing as a feed for dairy cows, but it is worth more to sell on the market. A good supply of alfalfa will cut down the bran bills. If the cow’s teats are made sore from exposure to cold or wet weather an application of carbolized vaseline after each milking wilj remedy the trouble if used when it first appears The best hay feeds for dairy cows are clover, alfalfa, cowpeas and soy beans. They contain a large percentage of protein, which is a great milk producing element. The “world's champion milk cow produced nearly nine tons of milk last year, and advocates of dairying in preference to beef production call at tention to the fact that this cow is prepared to repeat such performances for many years, while the beef animal must go to the block to produce cash for its owner. . / v

The secret of daily success in Holland is easily understood and may be stated in a few words—efficient cows, excellent co-operation and superior quality of butter and cheese.

FOR THE MATRON.

Here’s a Winner In Evening Gowns of High Degree.

WHITE CHARMEUSEAND CHANTILLY LACE.

Yes, at first glance this gown has all the earmarks of extravagance: but, madam, just look a little closer and use your "gumption” a little bit, and it will suddenly dawn upon-you that you have a black chantilly lace shawl that will make up beautifully into a model fashioned after the costume illustrated. It is a delightful mingling of black and white laces arranged over white charmeuse. The embroidery banding used as “bridge work" on skirt and bodice is a very new treatment. So is the coiffure ornamentation—pearl cabochons Connected with jet chains. A jet and pearl buckle fastens the wide black velvet neck ribbon.

A Remarkable Chapeau.

A new hat designed especially for the woman who has retained all the instincts of her savage ancestors is a helmet shape covered with tailless ermine and bordered with royal blue velvet. The decorations consist of two rosettes, each of which is made of twelve humming birds laid flat, with their bills meeting in the center.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.

George L Hascall to Edward E Sutherland, Oct 18, Its 7,' 8, bl 4, Remington, sl. q c d. Edward E Sutherland to George L Hascall, Oct 18, Its 1,2, 3, bl 4, Remington, sl. q cd. Benj J Gifford to John Eger, Oct 29, sw ne, 23-30-6, 40 acres, Barkley, SI,OOO. Same to same. Oct 29, pt stz sw, 13-30-6, 48.16 acres, Barkley, $1,444.80. Martha Thomas to Albert S Keen, Oct 29, sw nw, 3.3-32-6, 40 acres, Wheatfield, SBOO. Edward Ritter, et al to August Schujtz, Oct 22, s% sw, 4-30-6. 80 acres, Barkley, $2,800. William F Schultz to Edward Ritter, Oct 22, n% sw, 4-30-6, 80 acres, Barkley. $2,800, Charley Snyder to George F Meyers Nov 1, pt n% ne, 34-31-6, Walker, SBOO. George F Meyers to Charles Snyder. Nov 1, It -7, bl 5, Austin & Paxton’s add, Rensselaer, $l5O. Sterry G Hand, et al to Remington Farmers’ Elevator Co, Oct 1, Its 1,2, 3,4, pt 5, blks 9, 18 and 19, Western add, Remington, $22,500/ V . William B Austin to Francis M Cooper, Oct 19, n% Its 12, 13, 14, 15, bl 30, Weston’s add, Rensselaer, $l5O. Sumner Moreland Samson to O H Bardwell, Oct 31, w%,5 9-31-6, 313 acres, Walker, sl. Elmer E Pullins to George W Faris, Sr, Sept 10, nw se, 14-30-5, 40 acres, Gillam, $2,500. Minnie Kirkpatrick to Charles W Moore, Aug 24, It 17, Shaffer’s: add, Remington, SI,OOO. John F Bruner to Henry Cornelius DeKoch, et ux, Oct 26, it 7, bl 2, McDonald’s add, Demotte, $25. Roy Willey to William E Moote, Sept 24, e% w% x ne, 15-29-6, 40 acres, Barkley, $1,550. Jacob Keener to Francina Align, Nov 25, H 905, pt n%, 30-30-7, 40 acres, .Union, sl. Same to William J Piatt, et at, Nov 25, 11905, pt n%, 30--30-7, 40 acres/Union, sl. , Alonzo WTieeler to Nehemiah Littlefield, Nov 2, se ne, 17-31-6, 40 r acres, Walker,

Same, etux to same, Nov 2, Its 19, 10, bl 27, Weston’s add, Rensselaer, $1,900. / : Amanda W Warren to Firman Thompson, et ux, June 21, pt It 3, bl 2, Benjamin’s add, Rensselaer, $1,400. ? Nancy A Lewis, et al to Maude Galbraith, Nov 5, w 3-5 n% ne ne, 34-30-6; 12 acres, Barkley, SSOO. George K Hollingsworth to James T Randle, Oct 31, Its 1,2, bl 6, Austin’s & Paxton’s add, Rensselaer, sl. q cdElizabeth H Shields, et al to John Eger Aug 1, w*4 nw, 12-30-6, 80 acres, Barkley, $lO. q c d. > John L Goben to Ed Moss, Nov 4, wW se, 35-32-5, Kankakee; $3,m. 7 Sarah E Kesler to Walter S McConnell, Oct 26, Its 5,6, bl 2, Fair Oaks, $l5O. Warren E Boyle to William G Caldwell, Nov 9, pt se, 13-31-7, pt nw, 19-31-6, 151.66 acres, Keener, $14,500.

Emma M York to Alfredda Phillips, Sept 10, It 7, bl 17, Weston’s add, Rensselaer, $750. ALfredda Phillips to Arthur G Catt, et ux, Oct 7, It 7, bl 17, Weston’s add, Rensselaer, S7OO. Harry E Ruger to John Burk, May 17, pt Its 6,3, bl 15, Leopold’s add, Rensselaer, S6OO. John Burk to James N Hayworth. Nov 8, pt Its 3; 6, bl 15, Leopold’s add, Rensselaer, S6OO. Jesse J Crawford to Jeremiah K Beetz, Oct 31, sig se, s% nw fee. e%' sw, e% w% sw, 11-31-6, ne, eig nw, 14-31-6, 460 acres, Walker. $27,000. Frank G Kresler to G Boyd Porter, Nov 11, pt Its 1,2, bl 19, original plat, Rensseiaer, $3,000. George Boyd Porter, et al to Almira E Porter, Meh 3. Its 6,7, “bl 1, Its 2,3, bl 2, Riverside Park add. Rensselaer, $1,500. q c d. Almira E Porter, et al to Glenn Brenner. Meh 3, pt se sw, 30-29-6. Marion, $1,200. Frederic E Legris to Frank E Cones. Aug 2, e% nw. 17-31-5, Barkley, $2,100. Isaac Kight to Judson J Hunt. Oct 19, n% ne. sw ne, pt sw, 11-30-6. w% ne, w% se, 2-30-6, 341.25 acres, Barkley, $22,000.

Elvira E Bull to William E Moore, Oct 25, w% w% ne, 15-29-6, Barkley, $2,600. Nettie M Welsh, et al to William L Rich. Nov 14, s% ne, 30-28-6. 80 acres, Jordan, $6,000. William Popejoy to Everet Brown, et ux, Nov 2, se sw, sw se, 23-32-7, Keener. $3,200. Thos J Mallatt to James W Noland, Nov 3. Its 13, 14, 15, 16, bl 13, Fair Oaks. $l9O. Myron L Bickford to Ellen Coughlin. Nov 11, s% se, 2-31-6, Walker. $4,750. > Mathew Moran to Isaac Smart, Nov 16. e% sw, 31-27-7, 80 acres, Walker. $2,100. - M L Contant to John W Turner, Oct 19. ne sw', nw se, 22-31-5, 80 acres. Walker, sl. Alice C Meyer to John C Beckman. Nov 17, Its 1,8, bl 2, original plat, Rensselaer, $1,500. Alice E Brittin to H L Langdon, Aug 8. Its 1,2, 3,4, bl 6, Graham’s add, Wheatfield, $2,250. E C Boswell Co to The Connecticut Life Insurance Co, July 6, ne ne. 17-31-6, se,e%ne, ne nw, 8-31-6. Walker, $19,500. Richard Evers to Edward Gerrad, et ux, Oct 24. se se, s% n% se, 2-31-7, 60 acres, Union, sl. Murlie McKinney to Orpheus C. Halstead, Nov 17, pt Its 5,8, 9, bl 43, Weston’s add, Rensselaer, S9OO. Mary E Spitler to Edna T Kurrie, Nov 9, und % s% se sw, 29-33-6, 10 acres, Wheatfield, $2. Francina Allen to Orlando F Mace, Nov 4, pt ne, 8-30-7, 40 acres, Union. SI,OOO. Wm J Piatt, et al to Olando F Mace, Nov 4, pt ne, 8-30-7, 40 acres, Union, SI,OOO. George Winter to Joseph Eichelberger. Nov 9, n%’ sw ne, n% se nw. 22-30-5, 40 acres. Gillam, $3,000. Conrad Shafer, Jr, to Barbara Shafer, Nov 18, pt se, 19-28-6, Jordan, SIOO. John E Bislosky, et al to Henry Frank King, Nov 2, pt w% w% se. 26-29-7, 3 acres. NeWton, S6OO. Ora P Turner to Vincent Eisle, Nov 22, pt sw, 19-29-6, Marion, S2OO. William L Rich to William C Brown, et ux, Oct 27,' n% se, se ne. 25-28-7, 120 acres, Jordan, $9,-j[ ■OOO. ■ .1 Maude E Spitler to William H Spurgeon, Nov 18, se ne, pt e% se, 1-30-6. 98 acres, Barkley, $5,500. t

Benj J Gifford to Frederick K Kraneis, et ux, Nov 24, It 14, bl 1, Gifford, $65. Warren Robinson to George P Daugherty, et al, Nov 15, pt nw sw, 29-29-6. 11 acres, Marion. $2. q c d. George W Leedley to, Caleb A Prichard, Aug 9, Its 5,6, bl 28 v Weston’s 2d add, Rensselaer, S2OO Walter White, et ux to John Greve. Nov 12, It 6. bl 4, Wheatfield. §SOO. John R Knight to John Greve, Nov 15, It 6, bl 4, Wheatfield, sl. q c d. George Nannenga to. John Greve, Nov 10, It 17, bl -1, McDonald’s add. Demotte, S4OO. Dora May Clark, et al to Warren H Galbraith, Nov 23, pt It 3, bl 2, Thompson’s add, Joseph C Ficklin to Carl Egerter, Nov, 9, h% nw, 2-30-7, 101 acres, Newton, sl. q c d. Anna J Robinson to Joseph W Coen, Nov 22, outlot 26, Owen’s subdiv nw, 19-29-6, 5 acres, Marion, SI,OOO. Edward Herman to Lewis T Hammond, Nov 7, ne ne, 19-28-5, nw nw. 20-28-5. 80 acres, Milroy, $7,000.

Mt. Ayr Mills Manufacturers and Dealers J in. . Choice Corn Meal, Pure Buckwheat Flour, Feeds, Etc. 4 Do Custom and Merchant work. Sawmill in connection. —o--—, Our products are for sale and guaranteed Dy— The G. E. Murray Co. Renssel’r T. J. Mallatt, Fair Oaks : • Perry Brown, Foresman A. F. Perrigb, Sigler Bros, and at Mill, Mt. Ayr “Our goods the kind that make the cakes just like our mothers used to bake.’.' Your money back if not satisfactory. Yours for business, Huffy & Yeoman MT. AYR, IND.

I 1 , >i y 1 ifi w JOHN Q. CULP Live Stock and General Auctioneer, RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Phone 262. Sales made anywhere in the United States. Satisfaction guaranteed on my part or no pay. Terms reasonable for first-class work and made known on application. Alb correspondence answered promptly. Best of refer ences furnished from bankers, business men and stockmen. If you need my services address me; I can make money for all who employ me.

J. M. Dyer E. L. Wright Dyer & Wright Live Stock & General Auctioneers Well Posted in All Breeds Satisfaction Guaranteed Terms Reasonable You Get Two Men’s Service for Price of One WOLCOTT, INDIANA Phone No. 517 A Phone at Our Expense

TRAINED MINDS are in demand by business men. The Spencerian course in Bookkeeping, Shorthand and Accounting has been the means by which 12,000 graduates are holding responsible positions. Hundreds are earning over $5,000 a year. We will send full details regarding rates and course to young men and women who will . write us. SPENCERIAN COMMERCIAL SCHOOL Union National. Bank Building 6th and Main Sts., Louisville, Ky. \ Millions toloan! | ; We are prepared to take care S J of all the Farm Loan business In r I thia and adjoining counties at a f Lowest Rates and Best Terms, 2 5 regardless of the “financial strin- j J gency.” If you have a loan cos - S a Ing due or desire a new loan It wIN 2 S not be necessary to pay the ex- y j cesslve rates demanded by our 4 p competitors. ! g FIVE PER CENT. | Smail commission • Prompt service S'' • J i Irwin & Irwin I E Odd Fellows Bldg. Rensselaer. !

Sale bills printed while you wait at The Democrat office.