Jasper County Democrat, Volume 17, Number 67, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 November 1914 — Page 8
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1 FAIR OAKS. Health is generally good in these parts. f Corn has begun to come into market this week. | Cottage prayer meeting was held at Sam Potts’ Wednesday evening. I Up to the present writing the weather has moderated considerably and is fine. Mr. Miles of Newton county, is hauling and filling up Abe Bringle’s corn crib this week. Will Blair has a job of craneman on Hamilton s & Templeton s dredge, out on the Tobin ranch. W. S. McConnell went to Rensselaer Wednesday and invested in a new automobile. Guess this one has a namber on. ftev, Jones and another gentleman from Wgtseka, came up Wednesday evening to assist in a Thanksgiving service at Will Warne’s. Mr. Gouriy and sons look the train here Wednesday morning for Champaign, 111., to visit relatives and eat Thanksgiving turkey "Mrs, Ike Kignt- who has been visiting ufir son, John, at Indianthe past couple of months, returned home the latter part of the | week. Will Warne has a cow that got a leg broken some way a few days' ago. He prepared to swing her off the ground to experiment in healing I the bone. William Lane’s moved a few days ago out of the Stewart property in the north part of town, to the Thompson house, and Mr. King, who lived out on the Yeader farm, moved into the Stewart house. Charles Vondersmith. who has been at his home in Brook for a con- j pie of Weeks, returned the first of; the week. He shipped a carload of • tile here which he is going to put! in on his farm, west of town. The good people of our town got! together Wednesday evening and! made Aunt Hannah Culp a miscellaneous shower, while she was at prayer meeting, enjoying herself in her most favorite way. When she came home and gazed upon the bountious supply of everything she could say nothing but give thanks to her Lord. We are sorry to report the sad news of the condition of Miss Faun Casey, whose mind has been failing fast the past week or so. Drs. Hemphill, Loy and Washburn came up and held an inquest and pronounced her insane and proceeded to have arrangements made to send her to the asylum, where she will probably be taken in a few days. It is reported that she will have to have an operation to restore her mind. She and her folks have the heartfelt sympathy of the community.
Try This for Your Cough Thousands of people Keep cougning because unable to get the right remedy. Coughs are caused by inflammation of throat and bronchial tubes. What you need is to soothe thig inflamation. Take Dr. King's New Discovery, it Penetrates the delicate raucous lining, raises the phlegm and quickly relieves the congested membranes, (let a 50c bottle from your druggist. "Dr. King’s New Discovery quickly and completely stopped my cough, ’’ writes J. R. Watts, Floydale, Texas. Money back if not satisfied, but it nearly always lie';--. —Advertisement.
Mrs. Ida Lewis was on the sick list this week. Raymond Robertson is very sick With typhoid fever. Our school dismissed for Thanksgiving and will take up again Monday. G. A. Jacks and wife spent Sunday afternoon with relatives in Rensselaer. . J. H. Culp’s had corn shredders from Monday till Wednesdav eve aing. B. A. Lewis and family of Remington. spent Sunday here with relatives. The Ladies’ Aid sewed for Mrs. Elmer Gilmore, at her mother’s last Friday. Crank Overton and family spent 'Sunday in Rensselaer. with his mother. Clyde Clark and family or near Morocco, spend Thanksgiving here with her parents, Ephriam imore’s. J. W. Mellender and family and Asa Holeinan and family went from church Sunday to J. H. Culp’s for dinner. Some, o' ihe relative* took dinner and spent Thanksgiving with Mr.
For Sale at Rosebud Farm K-R-l. Pan, Ind., Phone !M>7-B 17 Duroc Jersey and O. I. C. male hogs, 10 Durcjcs. 7 O. I. C.’s of spring arrow; large growthy fellows weighing from 200 to 250 pounds. Now ready for service. Sired by Red Chief Col.. Jr., 39007, Indiana Banker 51815, B. B. 'Snowball 31913, aad from well bred dams. Also have 10 gilts, same breeding. Our swine all have been carefully imuned. Pedigrees furnished.—AMOS H. ALTER & SON..
LEE
and Mrs. Leroy Noland. The latter still continues very poorly.
It Really Does Relieve Rheumatism. Everybody who is afflcted with rheumatism in any form should by all means keep a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment on hand. The minute you feel pain or soreness in a joint or muscle, bathe it with Sloan’s Liniment. Do not rub it. Sloan’s penetrates almost immediately right to the seat of pain, relieving the hot, tender, swoolen feeling and making the part easy and comfortable. Get a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment for 25 cents at any druggist and have it in the house—against colds, sore and . w ollen joints, rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica and like ailments. Your rponey back if not satisfied, but it does give almost instant rejjef.-—A<]vt
MILROY S.ipi, Lamson visited our sefimtlb Tuesday, - * 1 . and Mrs. Chas. Beaver were in Rensselaer Tuesday. Earl Foulks took dinner Sunday with Geo. Castor and family. Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Parks were in Rensselaer Saturday afternoon. Louis Hyman spent Friday ana Saturday nights with Earl Foulks. Russel Parks is home this week there being no school at Wolcott. I. A. Tune of Forrest, 111., called on friends here the first of the week. Mrs. Isaac Hamilton and Mrs. E. Marchand went to Monon, Saturday. Miss Marie Fisher attended the football game at Purdue, Saturday. Mrs. Elsie Clark and Mrs. Lud Clark did shopping in Rensselaer Tuesday. Lorene and Alden Klein spent Thursday night with their teacher, Earl Foulks. .1. R. Clark and Sam Jacks bought turkeys here last Friday and Saturday morning. Mr. Pitzer, the McNess agent, spent Monday night with Ban and Lon Chapman. Louis Hyman, Earl Foulks and Martha Clark attended institute at McCoysburg Saturday.
Foley's Honey and Tar Coni|»ound for Croup. Croup scares you. The loud croupy cough, choking and gasping for breath, labored breathing, call for immediate relief. The very first doses of Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound, will master the croup. It cuts the thick mucous, clears away the phlegm and opens up and eases the air passages.—A. F. LONG.
one of the must dramatic develop ments of a material kind In the last twenty-five or thirty years has been the rise of the cotton seed Industry, the value of Its wide products increasing since 1880 from .something more than 57.00u.000 to $150,000,000. Sir Joseph Swan, inventor of the first incandescent lamp, died recently In London. He was eighty-six years old. Sir Joseph was also well known for his photographic appliances. He perfected the carbon process and the dry plate, which revolutionized photography. H W. Thornton, the American gen eral manager of the Great Eastern railway of England, has added two Sunday newspaper trains to the schedule of his company. These trains enable towns in the east of England to get their Sunday newspapers at breakfast, time instead of at noon, as heretofore. Within tile next four years it is expected that tlie United States government will dispose of all its reindeer in Alaska, having decided to quit the business The government now owns 3.853 reindeer, and officials of the Alaska division, bureau of education. are planning to give them up as fast as they ran train natives for individual ownership
Adaptability. ‘That man Is very adaptable.” "Yes. When lie has a picture taken he can even look as if he were used to sitting in the elegantly carved furniture they use in photograph galleries.” - Washington Star. Huh! Bacon -Some one is suggesting* that the figures of our soldiers be put on our l»ostage stamps. Egliert—Well, they’d be hard to "lick.” you know.—Yonkers Statesman. Finishing Him. •"Marry me.” he said. “Marry you?” exclaimed the maid. "I wouldn't marry you If you drove the only six cylinder car in existence.” Detroit Free Press.
Foley Cathartic Tablets. Are wholesome, thoroughly cleansing, and have a stimulating effect on the stomach, liver and bowels. Regulate you with no griping and no unpleasant after effects. Stout people find they give immense relief and comfort. Anti-bilious.'—A. F. LONG. e “ The Democrat still has a few copes of Rev. Father Krull’s book, "A History of Religious Denominations,” left, and until the supply is exhausted a copy will be given free with aJI paid-ln-advance subscriptions, new or old.. Sale bills printed while you wait at The Democrat office.
HOOSIER NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD
Patoka. Nov. 24.—J. W. Bruner and his daughter Louise, were killed and three other members of the family are suffering from serious injuries as the result of an auto driven by Bruner being struck here by a passenger train Logansport-—Fire on Fourth street between Market and Broadway, destroyed .a quarter of a block in the heart of the business section with a loss estimated at from seventy-five to one hundred thousand dollars. Huntington. H E Steele, age twenty-eight, a former Erie conductor, attempted suicide by shooting himself. He pointed a revolver at his left breast and fired. He fell to the floor at his home and the family called the coroner, believing him dead. When the coroner arrived Steele was sitting up. Greensburg—The Garland Milling company of this city started a car load Of flour to Christiania, Norway, the second shipment to that place within the last few weeks. Th* klgnmant v of 700 sacks of 140 pounds each, a total of 98,000 pounds. This is the largest shipment the local company has ever made abroad. Laporte.—The body of a woman, apparently about fifty-five years old, well dressed,, with evidence of having been in Lake Michigan for several days, was buried in the pauper field at New Buffalo. The body was found on the beach a mile west of the town, having evidently been washed up. The coroner ordered Immediate. burial. Greensburg—Mrs William Smith, seventy-nine years old, died of asphyxiation at Clarksburg, near this city, and her husband, seventy-five years old, is in a critical condition. Neighbors found the couple in bed after forcing a door. Mr. Smith, who was unconscious, lay beside the body of his wife. A gas stove near the bed was red hot and deadly fumes were pouring from a rent in the stovepipe. New Albany.—Harry Mukes, age eighteen, recently released from the boys’ reformatory at Plainfield, was arrested when cracking a safe In the office of the flour store of Louis Hartman & Sons. He had knocked off the handle and combination knob of the safe with a hatchet when arrested. A drawer In a desk had been broken open and a small amount of money taken. North Vernon —The farm of Lase Davidson, in Spencer township, has been quarantined by order of Dr. W. E. Hopkins, county veterinarian, resulting from hog cholera found to have affected 16 hogs. The report was circulated that the foot-and-mouth disease had appeared. Doctor Hepklns, who was appointed by the governor to inspect the stock in Jennings county, was summoned and found that the hogs were affected with cholera
Laporte.—-The body of a woman, apparently about fifty-five years of age, well-dressed, with hair turning gray and with bones of arms broken, was found on the beach one mile west of New Buffalo, Mich. The village undertaker, without holding the body for identification, buried it in the pauper field. The body gave evidence of having been in the water for several days. The town authorities advance the theory that the body is that of a suicide, though unable to explain why her arms should have been broken. Orleans.—Fire that started in a garage here quickly spread to the buildings of the Orleans Hardware company and a two-story brick block belonging to J. A. Clouds, and all were soon burned. As the town is witbout fire protection. excepL=a chemical extinguisher, and as a high wind was blowing, it seemed, for a time that the flames would reacly across the street, threatening to burn a way clear through to the outskirts. The Knights of Pythias hall was somewhat damaged. Men on the toofs kept the fire back. The store building of Bennett Cdhen, adjoining the hardware store, escaped, but he suffered loss in the removal of his merchandise. Insurance was carried on the hardware stock. A conservative estimate of the total loss is $35,000. Kokomo. —With her long curls shorn and dressed Ui boy’s clothes, fouryearold Grace Howard, who was kidnaped from her home in this city September 14. has been restored to her mother, the parent and child returning to Kokomo from Urich. Mo., where the girl was found. Charles C. Howard, defendant in divorce proceedings, drove ua to his wife’s home here in an automobile September 14, and took his daughter away. Mrs. Howard had a court order granting her custody of the child, and a w ide search was made for Howard Relatives of Howard in Alton, 111. wrote Mrs. Howard, saying that the man had taken the child to Missouri. The Kansas City detective department located Howard Marlon.—William Nelson, father of Roy Nelson, nine years old, run down and killed by Bernard Johnson, local contractor, driving an automobile, has sueef Mr. Johnson for $5,000. The boy was driving in a buggy at the time he met death. Logansport.—Mrs Anna Logan of Oakland, Cal., saw her first snowfall In 40 years, when she came here this week to visit her sister, Mrs. Harriet Lamboume. Mrs. Logan left Cass county 40 years ago, and has never been back until this week. She is familiar with earthquakes, however.
The Joyrider.
Accidents naturally flourish with the additional number of- ears, for we presume that for every ten automobiles .-old ifee.e is at least one buyer who is going to show the rest <1 tne fellows how to drive like the devil. And he usually does. You can see his ilk every day in the year (wiiten tire roads are good t going through the country like a doublewinged bolt out of Hades. There is no more thought of danger in the head of such men than there i in a mushroom. He couldn’t conceive the possibility of an accident with himself at the steering wheel it the word was written in t lounUih-high letters right across the Hp ot his nose, and if he did see it he'd think it a joke of some kind. He sees a Ream ahead of him but the thought that the horse might shy and step into him as he goes tearing by doesn’t come within fifteen miles of the place where he is supposed to harbor his common sense. He sees a bunch of cattle, a colony of pigs, a society of chickens, a squad Of ducks, and he slows up— Jbu thunder. No, he goes right on, and it is only fool luck that keeps the brindle heifer from stepping in front of the) car and spilling the driver along with his gasoline. The pigs do not concern him simply because they aren't his. They couldn’t stop the machine, anyway, and if half a dozen of them were killed—he "should worry." He meets another car, but instead of slowing up he throws on more speed. It never occurs to him that the fellows in the other car might be coming home from a spree and with about as much control of the steering wheel as a four-year-old kid would have with a wheelbarrow. Again fool luck comes to the rescue and he "gets by.” When in town, such a fellow will 'urn street corners like a blind sow. A team or another car may be coming around the corner, but this possibility never succeeds in percolating through the London-like fog of his thinking apparatus—never! What to do with reckless auto drivers is a serious problem. They have a way of their own that is a menace to the public, and an ordinary mortal isn’t safe in an iron-clad barn with then! around performing their stunts. You can’t tell when they might break out, break in, or break your neck. Life with them is just one spurt after another. The spectacular auto driver is all right on the speedway, but on the public thoroughfare he is a nuisance. —Automobile Topics.
Declare War on Rheumatism. Rheumatism is an awful thing—nothing more painful. Don’t lei it get a hold, but at the first twinges take Foley Kidney Pills. They work directly on your weakened kidneys, build them up, make them strong —rid your blood and keep it clear of uric acid. Keep Foley Kidney Pills on hand ready for use at the first sign of rheumatism, —A. F. LONG.
To Friends of The Democrat. Whenever you have a legal notic* to be published Instruct your attorneys to bring same to The Democrat office. Our prices for such publications are as a rule less than oui competitors, and we will greatly appreciate the favor of your ordering it in this paper. There are many legals that the party having the work done or that has to pay for It, controls, and if you will Instruct your attorney in such cases to bring the notice to The Democrat he will do so. Please do not forget this the next time you have a notice of appointment, notice of sale, final settlement of estate, ditch notice, non-resideit notice, etc., to be published, and have it brought to the paper of your choice. See our Napier bond typewriter paper. It has stood the test in Rensselaer for the past ten years and is used by many of the leading attorneys and abstracters. If you are not using it, try a box and see how much superior it is to the kind you have been using. This brand Is kept in stock by us at all times and in different weights.
When there is nothing to say, what’s the use of saying it?
Hack! Hack! Hack! With raw tickling throat, tight chest, sore lunge, you need Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound, and quickly. The first dose helps, it leaves a soothing, healing coating as it glides down your throat, you feel better at once. Every user is a friend. —A. F. LONG.
AitentionDairyman! I have secured the local agency for the Kimball’s Dairy Farmer the noted national dairy magazine, and for a limited time will offer two years subscription for the price of one year’s subscription, SI.OO, paid in advance. W. E. HARRIS Dexter’s Creamery. Rensselaer, Ind.
Old Reliable PETER SCHUTTLER ~1 - Saves Money Time and Trouble It will pay you *° * r ‘ Vfcs -S ate before tnyiifg’ Come in trj A/ /1 a 7/NaCJ \inspect the \y/ j SCHVFTUER Cheapest in the Long Kars *• The cheapest priced wagon is ti e one which will save v O u the most money—and there is far than the first cost to be taken imcem-vd ratie., with most wagons. But with* The Oki Reliable Peter Scbuttler”it’s different. With it, the first cost is practically the only co:t. It’s built right and nta* ; right. It saves repair bills; it avoids break-downs; it reduces the afte purchase expense—and it wears longer than any other wagon built. And with all its cost-reducing, time and trouble-saving features, the flrr cost of the “Peter Schuttler Wagon” is only slightly more than the first cost of the inferior makes. And every cent of the extra cost goes into exti a quality. There’s no more profiton a “Peter Schuttler Wagon” than on the so-called other standard makes. The difference in price is due entirely to the difference in material and the difference in the way this material is put together. It is this difference which makes the “Peter Schuttler” by far the cheapest priced of all wagons in the long run. > SCOTT BROS. Dealers in Harness, Wagons and Buggies.
Coal Time!, <► ’ o All indications point to a long hard <► winter; which means a long big <► coal bill. Are you prepared? If g not, come down and inspect our bins and let us talk the situation 3 over with you. ; I . < ► Harrington Bros h Phone 7 OUR GREAT MONEY-SAVING COMBINATION BARGAIN All Standard Publications of he Highest Merit, Which will be Appreciated by Every Member of Your Family THIS BIG OFFER CONSISTS OF THE TWICE-A-WEEK JASPER COUNTY DEMOCRAT THE CINCINNATI WKSKLY ENQUIRER HOUSEHOLD JOURNAL AND FLORAL LIFE, MONTHLY THE FARM AND FIRESIDE, SEMI-MONTHLY TO DAY’S MAGAZINE, MONTHLY - BOYS’ MAGAZINE, MONTHLY OUR SPECIAL BARGAIN A —■ PRICE FOR ALL SIX, EACH ONE YEAR, ONLY Never before has such a remarkable group of leadings publication been offered in combination with The Democrat. Each one is a leader in its chosen field and goes into the homes of millions ofsatifled readers. Why not make home life really attractive by providing good literature that can be enjoyed by all the family? We have especially prepared this combination to meet these requirements, and all at a price within reach of every one desiring the very best. This offer is open to all, both old and new subscribers. If you are at present a subscriber to any of the above send us your order, and your subscription will be extended from the date it expires. Please remember our agreement w ith these publishers is limited, and we reserve the right to withdraw this offer without further notice. Therefore, OUR MOTTO IS, take advantage now while the opportunity is afforded you. - We can conscientiously recommend this offer to all our readers and feel satisfied you will be n ore than delighted with the investment. It is impossible to send sample copies, but we advise, however, that they may be seen on display at our office. Call or mail all orders to - ■ The Jasper County Democrat Rensselaer, Indiana
N Mr M in ft DemcriH Geis Hall
