Jasper County Democrat, Volume 16, Number 102, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 March 1914 — Page 8
COUNTRY NEWS LETTERS
TEFFT. Mrs, Raush has been visiting her con at Kankakee. Mrs. Wills’ sister has been: visiting her for the past week. Miss Anna Rasmussen spent Thursday with friends at San Pierre. Miss I.yda Sands has been called away to nurse a case near French Lick. There has been no Civic League for the past two weeks on account of revival ?-<etings. Margaret Yeager spent Saturday and Sunday at Rensselaer, visiting friends and relatives. George Stalbaum has gone to Evanston, 111. ,to accept a position in the Y. M. C. A. as manager of an office. The many friends of Willie Davis will be glad to know he has been improving rapidly and will be out in a few weeks. Revival meetings began last Sunday morning at Tefft. We are having some very interesting sermons and the singing is enjoyed by all.
Just Right for Backache and Rheumatism. Foley Kidney Pills are so thoroughly effective for backache, rheumatism, swollen, aching joints, kidKeF and bladder ailments that they are recommended everywhere. A. A. Jeffords, McGrew, Neb., says: “My druggist recommended Foley Kidney Pills for pains in my back, and before I finished one bottle, my old trouble entirely disappeared.”—A. F. LONG.
POSSUM RUN. Greeley Comer was a Parr goer Monday. James Davis called on Thomas Parker Sunday morning. Mrs. Greeley Comer called on Mrs. Thomas Parker Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Thomas Parker called on Mrs. James Itavis Wednesday afternoon. Miss Marie Barkley spent from Friday until Sunday with home folks. Mrs. Ed Spurgeon helped Mrs. Greeley Comer cook for wood sawers Friday. Rudolph Ritter and wife took dim ner with Mr. and Mrs. Grant Davisson Sunday. Mr: and Mrs. John Price spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A 1 Caldwell and family. Kenneth Davisson spent Monday night with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed., Barkley. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Myers and son, Elwood, took dinner Friday with Mr. and Mrs Tames Pierson. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Payne and two children called on Mr. and Mrs. James Davis Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Heil and daughter. Fern, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Greeley Comer and family. Mrs. Wm. Pollock and Mrs. James
~ >914. a. *. C*. “IT’S easy tq see 1 that ‘Keep Cool’ will be my motto this Summer.’’ : '# “ This light-weight suit with its quarter lining will be a lot better than a settingup drill with a palm leaf fan.” If you want a cool time this summer, come see our Kirschbaum ClothesJ|l *ls *2O *25 and up “See the Guarantee and Price Ticket on the Sleeve" Every suit in the lot is guaranteed to be allwool, fastcolor, London cold-water shrunk and hand-tailored. Come in 'and see them. Traub & Selig Rensselaer. Indiana
Pierson and son spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. James Myers and family, of Gifford. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pollock and Mr. and Mrs. Andy Myers and two children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Everett Myers and family.
Plain Truth That's Worth Money. I'sing Foley’s Honey and Tar for a cough or cold may save you both sickness and money. F. F. Monahan, Menomonie, Wis., says: “I am exposed to all kinds of weather and I find Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound always fixes me up in good shape when I catch cold or have a had cough. I recommend it gladly.” Refuse substitutes.—A. F. LONG.
McCOYSBURG. Jessie llrown was a Rensselaer goer Thursday. >■ James Wood is continuing about the same, lie is very low. Guy Bebee called on his sister Mps. James Jeffries, and family Tuesday. Mrs. Charles Ferguson called on Mrs. H. E. Lowman Tuesday evening. The “burg” had quite' a little storm Thursday ,and it is still raining. ‘ • « Mrs. T. B. Stevenson called on Mrs. Wm. McDonald Thursday afternoon Mrs. I). W. Johnson spent Thursday night with her daughter, Mrs. Grat Lutz. Mrs. Wm. McDonald and children called on Mrs. Charles Stultz Wednesday afternoon. Georgie Stultz is nursing an abcess of the tooth this w r eek, and is not able to attend school. Charles Stultz went up to Hammond Friday to see his sister, Mrs. Wm. Puntiey, and husband. Mrs. T. B. Stevenson, Mrs. J. R. Phillips and mother called on Mrs. H. E. Lowman Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Charles Ferguson and children went over to Mon'on Saturday noon, returning home in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ferguson and children spent Thursday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stmtlz and family. Bruce Rhine and Clay Lutz, of Monon, spent Thursday with Mr. Lutz’s nephew, Grant Lutz, of McCoysburg. Mrs. O. E. Hitehings and Mrs. Charles Armstrong spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. J. R. Phillips and mother. Pearl Johnsbn and Frank Stephens are all over the mumps, No others have taken them but little Flossie Johnson. ' M rs. New ton Funk, who has been staying with her daughter, Mrs.-Del-Bin Albright, and family, returned to her home Wednesday at Headlee. Harve Lowman and family have moved over in Milrov, and Mr and Mrs. YV ilson Bussell will move in the house vacated by them in a few days. The MCCoysburg section men nearly passed in their checks when train No. 4 caught them and the train had to stop and give the men time to get off the track.
Best Family Laxative. Beware of constipation. Use Dr. King’s New Life Pills and keep well. Mrs; Charles E. Smith, of West Franklin, Me., calls them , “On r family laxative;’’ Nothing better for adults or aged. Get them today, 25c Recommended by A. F. LONG.
THE DEMOCRAT’S CLUB RATES.
Following are a few of the special clubbing rates we have in connection with The Democrat, although we can furnish almost any peiioaical published at a reduction over publisher’s' regular price. The Josper County Democrat is included ii. each combination named below: Twice-a-Week St. Louis Republic . . 2.00 The Commoner 2.16 Hoard’s Dairyman 2.26 Breeders* Gazette 2.60 Indianapolis News (6 days). 4.26 Chicago Examiner (6 days) .. 4.00 Chicago Journal (6 days)... 3.50 Chicago Inter-Ocean (6 days). 4.26 Chicago Inter-Ocean (weekly) 2.00 Chicago Tribune (ddays) ... 4.26 Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer . s2.uu
, Classified advertising in the columns of The Democrat are an investment and not an experiment, as hundreds of satisfied advertisers will gladly acknowledge. Why not try them yourself If you have anything to sell, exchange, tent, lost or found? It will pay you. Buy your correspondence stationery, engraved and printed calling cards at The Democrat office. We carry the largest stock of this class of goods in Jasper county. Call in and se;e for yourself. Five different grades of legal size* typewriter paper kept in stock in The Democrat’s stationery department. Also abstract and legal document backs, printed or blank. Don’t pay fancy prices for your typewriter paper when you can buy it here of as good or better quality for much less money. Our typewriter paper is put up in boxes of 600 sheets, but will be sold In smaller quantities U desired. *
SUMMARY OF THE WORLD’S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS BOILED DOWN TO LAST ANALYSIS, ■'vi ' .* :.;v ■■ —• — ARRANGED FOR BUS^READERS Brief Notes Covering Happenings In This Country and Abroad That Are of Legitimate Interest to All the People. Washington The senate at Washington ratified j the convention signed on January 20 last by the international conference on safety of life at sea at London, to which Senator Lewis was one of the American delegates. * * President Wilson exemplified the i human side of himself which he described in a talk to newspaper men a [ few days ago by motoring to the Washington home of Senator Stone of Missouri, who has been ill, and having a chat about official business. • * • President Wilson sent the senate at Washington the names of eight Illinois postmasters, as follows: W. V. Lambe at Wheaton; Alonzo E. \Verts, Abingdon; Charles C. Westcott, Chillicothe; Anson I. Graves, Dwight; Nelson B. Tyler, Gibson City; Frank A.; Winter, Highland; Carl Montag, Mascoutah, and William H. Ryan, Minonk. Other nominations were: Indiana —George W. Smith, Albion; Frank L. Ferguson, Shelburn. * * ' After a vigorous partisan contest the house at Washington passed a bill to bar foreign convict-made or paupermade geode from competition with the products of American free labor. *' * * Opening of Alaskan coal lands undear a leasing plan was proposed in a bill agreed upon by the senate public lands committee at Washington, which combines several measures that have been under consideration. * * • A nine-year-old boy, dying of heart trouble, was brought to the White House at Washington to have his desire to see and bu smiled upon by the president of the United States granted. He is Harry Winthrop Davis, son of Mrs. A. L Davis of Sewickley, Pa. * • * Preliminary steps were taken by the post office department at Washington to perfect its plan for reducing the cost of living by having the parcel post carry farm products directly to the dpor of the consumer. Ten cities were seletced to begin the work of establishing direct connections between producer and consumer.
* * * Elihu Root’s attitude toward South America combines the idealism of Henry Clay and the utilitarianism of James G. Blaine and has come to be i generally accepted as the foreign policy of the United States in this hemisphere, said Robert S. Bacon, former ambassador to France. * * *. Domestic Judge Sanborn of St. Louis approved the agreement by which the receivers of the St. Louis & San Francisco railroad cancel an indebtedness , ( >f nearly six million six hundred dollars against the road and relinquish ownership of two subsidiaries in- Louisiana to the syndicate that promoted them. * * * For the purpose of bringing about comprehensive work on the roadways of Illinois, Governor Dunne issued a ! proclamation designating Wednesday, ! April 15, as “road day.” '** * A The steam whaler Herman has started from San Francisco for the Arctic ocean in search of the exploration ship Karluk, which has been lost for several inonths. * * * l Richmond, Ind., voted “wet” in the local option election. The total vote in 25 of 30 precincts was 3,218 “wet,” and 2,042 "dry." • • * Members of the Democratic state committee were told in speeches by William Church Osborn and Governor Glynn at Albany, N. Y„ it was their duty to the party to work for a constitutional convention in 1915 at the referendum election on April 7. Charles F. Murphy occupied a front seat at the meeting, but he did not meet the governor. • • • Simultaneously with an agreement that wfll insure industrial peace in the bituminous coal fields of Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and western Pennsylvania came the announcement at Chicago of a strike of brick passers in Cook county. • * * * John Norris, widely known newspaper man, long business manager of the New York Times and leader of the American Newspaper Publishers’ association’s campaign for free paper and wood pulp, died at his home in Brooklyn. * • * The inter-island steamer Maui Is reported to have blown up off Pearl Harbor, Honolulu. The entire crew of 12 lost their lives. Tugs have left port to search the coast The Maui bad a cargo of explosives.
BIG CORN CONTEST
The Bowker Fertilizer Company Has arranged for a mammoth Corn Contest, embracing the states of Ohio. Kentucky and Indiana, in which they, will make 10 Awards of sloo°® each
Write or call on any of the following local agents for particulars and rules of contest: Leo. Kolhoff, Rensselaer Ralph Lewis, Francesville A. J. Fleming, Rensselaer C. R. Hight, Wheatfield E. F. Pullins, Rensselaer Frank Rowe, Medaryville W. M. Wortley, Rensselaer A. E. Zook, Gifford Chas. Rowen, Parr J. C. Bass, Tefft Dennis Marquie, Remington W. S. Bussell, McCoysburg J. W. Farris and Luther Brunton, Mt. Ayr
BOWKER'S FERTILIZING COMPANY CINCINNATI, OHIO.
In reply to reports that he intended to retire, Judge Emory Speer of the United States district court of'Georgia declared that if the oommittee which investigated his judicial Conduct withdrew the charges he might accept retirement on the same terms as on reaching the age limit—seventy. * * * The Missouri Athletic club, whose building was destroyed by fire with a loss of 37 lives, lias reorganized under the name Missouri Athletic association. A new building is to be erected. *• • i Detention of women in police stations and in the various New York city prisons will be done away with by the building of a $45,900 detention home and court for women, plans for which were made public by Katherine B. Davis, commissioner of the department of corrections. * * ■■ * Mexican Revolt The war department at City of Mexico reports that the rebels under Villa were routed at Torreon with great slaughter. The rebel losses in dead and wounded are reported to be 2,000. Eight hundred men under Gen, Joaquin Maas and Gen. Javier de Moure arrived at Torreon opportunely from Saltillo to aid the federals under General Velasco. * * * False reports that seven-year-old Warren McCarrick, who disappeared 13 days ago, had been found caused a large crowd to congregate in froht of the boy’s home In Philadelphia. The reports had it that the boy had been found in gipsy camp near Pemberton, N. J. An investigation proved them groundless. • • * : According to an pfficlal report from Captain Winterburn, commanding United States troopers along the border near Del Rio, Tex., only two of his men bad a part In the battle with a federal force of 300 men at McKee’s crossing, Texas, in which six of the Mexicans were slain and several wbunded. Neither of the American soldiers was hurt. • • • Personal Charles Killman. a professional strike breaker, who confessed that he planted dynamite to incriminate leaders of the teamsters’ strike at Seattle, pleaded guilty of conspiracy and was sentenced to six months In the county stockade. • Manuel Joseph, a former customs guard, testified in the United States district court at San Francisco that he had planned to .purchase a ranch for SII,OOO, which he had accumlated by smuggling opiumi
Chas. Saidla, General Agent.
1 A cable message confirmatory of previous reports that Theodore Roosevelt had met with no mishap in Brazil was received at the American Museum , of Natural history at New York in response to an inquiry sent by the museum to United States Consul Pickerell at Para. • * • Dr. Amos P. Wilder, former United ; States consul at Shanghai, China, says the Chinese republic will not last unless it has foreign supervision of the finances. * • * Emil Seidel, former Socialist mayor of Milwaukee, and Gerhard Bading. ( Present mayor, were renominated in ! the race for the mayoralty nomination. David S. Rose was third. • # • F. L. Brier of the Eighth district of Indiana and R. E. Moss of the Fifth j district were nominated for congress, i Both are Democrats. * * * ■ After a week’s freedom “Mother” j Mary Jones again is a military prisoner in the Colorado strike zone. * # • A gift of $50,000 from John D. Rockefeller to the International Young Men’s Christian Association college at Springfield, Mass., has been announced a|. Boston. • • • Foreign Women from many parts of Canada organized the National Organization of Woman Suffrage societies of Canada at Toronto. Mrs. Gordon Wright of London, Ont., presided. • • • The British government has withdrawn the guarantees of Colonel Seely, secretary of state for war, that military force will not be U6ed to crush political opposition to the policy or principles of the home rule bill. This guarantee was made to Gen. Hubert Gough and the withdrawal of it leaves General Gough and his 59 comrades who sent in their resignations in a state of suspense. Colonel Seely offered his resignation as secretary of war, but it was refused by Premier Asquith. • 1 * • Great Indignation is' 1 expressed by the Unionist press of London at the attack of the Laborites on the king In parliament for his interference In army affairs in Ulster. England has not witnessed in a hundred years such an obviously hostile criticism of the throne, which has traditionally kept out of party controversies. • • • Natives in the north of Malekula island of the New Hebrides group have murdered and eaten six natives, teachers from the Walla island mission station.
Foley Cathartic Tablets are entirely effective, thoroughly cleansing and always pleasant in action. They contain blue flag, are a remedy for constipation and sluggish liver, and a tonic to the bowels, which are improved by their use. Try them. They do not fail to give relief and satisfaction.—A. F. LONG. Capt. C. E- Adams, president of the First National bank of Superior, Neb., Which recently closed its doors, was shot and dangerously wounded by a masked man, who attacked him at the mouth of an alley. If You Are a Trifle Sensitive About the size of your shoes it’s some satisfaction to know that many people can wear shoes a size smaller by shaking Allen’s Foot-Ease into them. Just the thing soy dancing parties, and for breaking in New Shoes. Sold everywhere, 25c. Sample FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
I Are You From Missouri? | We Can Show You! By MOSS. HAT’S the "v useofwastlug inorfwy in newsj Paper advertising; /liciw 1 lb’s too costly, and it doesn’t pay. The I \ people never read f \ bHe ads. nowadays. They throw | tlle Paper away after they have | skimmed through the news.” “My dear sir. pardon me. but you aren’t talking GOOD BUSINESS. \on WOXfl’ waste your j money. You’ll get it back many j times over in DIRECT REJ SULTS. Newspaper advertising 1 isn t like a billboard or a cal- . endar. You dou’t have to wait < for months to see if vou get results Newspaper advertising is NOT COSTLY. It’s CHEAi* for ttie END GAINED. The people DO read tbe ads.—that is, the class, that REALLY BUY doand they are the ones that COUNT. Advertising is NEWS.” It is not often that such a conversation really takes place in this day. Every business man now KNOWS that newspaper advertising is gilt edged. It’s i merely a matter of choosing the best paper. j are ready to give CIRCU- , LATION FIGURES and to ofI fer you GOOD POSITIONS In j our advertising columns at fixed i rates. We can PROVE our medium is tbe BEST.
