Jasper County Democrat, Volume 17, Number 75, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 December 1914 — Page 6

Why They Recommend Foley’s Honey and Tar. P. A. Efird, Conejo, Cali., —because “it produces the best results, always cures severe colds, sore chest and lungs and does not contain opiates or harmful drugs.’’ Dr. John \V. Taylor, Lutherville, Ga.—because “I believe ,it to be an honest medicine and it satisfies my patrons.’ W. L. Cook, Neihart, Mont.—because “It gives the best results for coughs and colds of anything I. sell.” Everv user is a friend.—A. F? LONG. I Here is the Answerfin | WEBSTERS I | New International | = The Merriam Webster g Every day in your talk and reading, at s = home, on the street car, in the office, shop s = and school you likely question the mean- = = ing of some new word. A friend asks: = g “What makes mortar harden?” You seek = s thelocationofiocAA'atrineorthcpronun- = = ciation of jujutsu. What is white coal? = = This New Creation answers all kinds of a = questions in Language.History.Biography, = = Fiction, Foreign Words, Trades, Arts and s = Sciences, wifA final authority. f 400,000 Word*. i = 6000 Hluatratlons. = = Cost $400,000. kI = 2700 Pages. § The only dictionary with = s the new divided page. —char- 'Tfl - iA = = acterized as “A Stroke of = Genius.” ArT g India Paper Edition: = On thin,, opaque, strong, = India paper. What a satis- 7;Z/,y if/W / = faction to own the Merriam /w/iw/llffl = Webster in a form so light js® 7/1- irfiWi'l iJ g and so convenient to use!jg®//i/H ill uv//)////. = One half the thickness l/l = weight of Regular Edition. IjASEjA Vl g Regular Edition: = On strong book paper. Wt ff = 1-04 lbs. Sue = flinches. - £ //111 1 I = Write for epedmen pages, 'll, li' At. = lUnetratlom, eto. = Mention thl» I \\ = publication = -and receive <«< ’ * = FREE a set \ B** “= of pocket - ■ I MERRIAM | co., = Springfield, Mass.\*x3 Ap Jr?,

■Z’ \ •' . ’ Jt- - I * 1 JOHN G. CULP General AUCTIONEER —Phone 917-1 P. O. PLEAS. GROVE, INI), .Dates may be arranged Direct or at The Democrat Office, Rensselaer, And. Satisfaction GuVaiifeed

HUB Wei _ it m is Be Honest, Deol foil will] [leijhody, Uwe no Fovoriies onfl sell lo me Himeslßß. It pleases me to please everybody. TERMS:—One per cent. Fair Oaks, R. F. D. No. 2. Rensselaer, Phone 931-H

When I Talk Others Buy See me for your next PUBLIC SALE I get the money. Fred Phillips Phone 505 -B Rensselaer, - Indiana

Keep It Handy for Rheumatism. No use to squirm and wince and try to wear out your rheumatism. It will wear you out instead. Apply some Sloan’s Liniment. Nee.d not rub it in—just let it penetrate all through the affected parts, relieve the soreness and draw the pain. You get ease at once and feel so much better you want to go right out and tell other sufferers about Sloan’s. Get a bottle, of Sloan’s Liniment for 25 cents of any druggist and have it in the house—against colds, sore and swollen joints, lumbago, sciatica and like ailments. Your money back it not satisfied, but it does give almost instant relief. Buy a bottle today.— Advt.

EDWARD P. HONAN ATTORNEY AT LAW Law, Abstracts,- Real Estate Loans. Will practice in all the courts. Office over Fendig’s Fair. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. SCHUYLER C. IRWIN LAW, REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE 5 Per Cent. Farm Loans. Office in Odd Fellows’ Block. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. F. H. HEMPHILL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Special attention given to diseases of women and low grades of fever. Office over Fendig’s drug store. Phones: Office No. 442; Resl , No. 442-B RENSSELAER, INDIANA. E. C. ENGLISH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Opposite the Trust and Savings Bank. Office Phone No. 177. House Phone No. 177-B. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. JOHN A. DUNLAP LAWYER (Successor Frank Foltz) Practice in all Courts. . Estates settled. I’ai m Loans. Collection Department., Notary in the office. Over State Bank. Phone No. 16. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. F. A. TURFLER OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Graduate American School of Osteopathy. Post-Graduate American School of Osteopathy under the Founder, Dr. A. 1. Still. Office Hours—-8.-12 a. m., 1-5 p. m. Tuesdays and Fridays at Monticello. Ind. Office 1-2 Murray Bldg. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. H. L. BROWN DENTIST Office over Larsh & Hopkins’ drug store. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. J. W. HORTON DENTIST Office opposite court house square. RENSSELAER, INDIANA.

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A Splendid Clubbingßargain

WE OFFER » THE JASPER I COUNTY DEMOCRAT | AND ) THE CINCINNATI I WEEKLY ENQUIRER I EC $1.851 Subscriptions may be new or renewal What The Weekly Enquirer isl It is published every Thurs- ’ day, subscription price SI.OO I Per year, and is today one of 1 the biggest and best national ’ newspapers published, it has all the facilities of the great 1 DAILY ENQUIRER for obtain- ! ing the world’s events, and for 1 that reason can give you all ' the leading news accurately and I Impartially, it tarries a great I amount of valuable farm mat- ' ter, crisp edit* nals and reliable I up-to-date market reports., its E numerous departments make it | a necessity to every home, farm" J or business man not having E time to read a daily. > . Tbis grand offer is imited 1 and we auvise you to take ad- ' vantage by Subscribing for the » above combination right now. 1 Call or mail orders to 1 Jasper County Democrat: Rensselaer, Ind.

Christmas Ideas.

Christmas will be worthily hept by us In proportion as our hearts glow with Chrletllhe feelings, estrangements should melt tn the warmth of Christmas gratitude to God. Let It be a sweet, forgiving time—a time for the doing of blessed charities. Because Christmas stands for the child, as the father of the man, and for the cradle, as the one point where futurity Is vulnerable, It will yet usher In the golden age. Co produce an Ideal world wc need only o-' thfr i-a Christmas that lasts all the year. If Christ bad never been born there would bare been no Christmas, and where now Is holy light would abide a great shadow, and where now Is sweet and sacred Joy would be sadness and tears. If Christ bad never been born the world would have bereft Itself of the love and the light of God. Cbe birth of 3esus means the establishment of the reign of Justice and conscience, and you and I cannot realize the benefits of this divine season until we have become like little children In humility and gentleness and received the will and the love of God as they have teen made known to us tn the Master’s gospel Christ must be born tn each heart In order that we may have a true Christmas. Hre we rejoicing In the gifts of human lore ? Shall we be unmindful of Tstm who Is the “unspeakable gift ?” Cum not the Christ ot God away from the heart’s Inn ; banish film not to the manger, Beaven’s gift Is now offered without money and without price. Receive film with glad welcome. Christmas Is every one’s day. Childhood can have no monopoly ot ft. though Bls child life Inspired ft. Christians are not Its sole possessors, while they are Its only true Interpreters. Youth cannot claim the whole of It even while Its exuberance gives ft Its chief natural emphasis. Cbere are currents beneath the surface motion Into which the plummet meditation must plunge to note their existence and determine their direction.

Instead of a Christmas Tree.

One family who were over the stocking hanging age decided last Christmas that they could not have a tree. The children were disappointed and feared a stupid day. An ingenious sister solved the problem of gift giving in a somewhat novel way. She asked all the members of the family to wrap their gifts for each Other into neat packages, direct them plainly and leave them in the library on Christmas eve. No one was told what was to be done with the packages, and each member was sworn to secrecy, so that she did not know that the others’ presents were to go into the library also. The girl divided them Into groups, having "one gift for each member of the family included in a given lot. The separate collections were then taken

Old Folks and Santa Claus.

“An’ little folks can't find him. Cause they’re always last asleep." Old folks must see Santy Claus when stockin’s are to fill, For they-keep the chimney comer, an’ they’re always dreamy still But Santy Claus don’t mind ’em If even a watch they keep, An’ little folks can’t find him, » Cause they’re always fast asleep. I know the old folks see him an like him mighty well, An’ why he doesn’t mind ’em is—he knows they’ll never tel But little folks of him W’en bundled in a heap, An’ they hear him cornin’, cornin’, - Down the chimney in their sleep. —Frank L. Stanton in Atlanta Constitution.

Letters to Santa Claus

into different rooms of the house and hidden In such a way that they could not be found without considerable searching. On Christmas day a small boy of the family dressed In the costume of a Christmas herald of Elizabethan days went through the house every hour during the day blowing a trumpet and proclaiming that • Christmas bunt would be held in a certain room. The family had a merry time until all the gifts were found and opened and enjoyed them in a leisurely way until the next visit of the herald an hour later. As the family was a large one. the excitement was prolonged well into the evening, and all voted it a much more Interesting way of giving presents than to have them all in the morning stockings or hung on the Christmas tree.

——— ' * BUGGIES HARNESS V>sSiiß^^<2^^gj2jT'j |■ p i i -——nßß L —//, rMH / WBBH|BH||® 41 •. Paid £lO5. for a Studebaker 38yeais ago ® IN 1876 Mr. R. F. Dewey of Millersburg, Ind., bought a Studebaker farm wagon for $ 105. Dividing $ 105 by 38 years it I will be seen that Mr. Dewey’s Studebaker cost him—to date—s 2.77 a year. and, as the wagon is still giving good service, every additional year that Mr. Dewey uses his wagon still further reduces the cost per year. You ent beat this for an investment. W e carry a line of Studebaker wagons just as strongly made, just as reliable, as the Studebaker wagon Mr. Dewey bought 38 years ago, I Come in and look them over. We will demonstrate to you that a Studebaker wagon is an investment that pays every time. • C. A. ROBERTS, Rensselaer, Ind.

FARMER? RDM CJUCA.SO

Because it is the only generalweekly farm paper Actually Printed in Chicago, the great live stock market of the middle west. It presents a Weekly Trade Letter, prepared by a market expert, and a most reliable review of the Live Stock and Grain Market is found in The Farmers’ Review each week. Because it is Practical, Useful and Dependable. Its Editorial Policy is Free, Independent and Fearless. It is the paper you want tn know because it is clean, fright and reliable, and because it is Honest. Because it serves No Other Interest save that of the farmer and his family. It is safe for your wife and children to read, and every member of the family will read it with Pleasure and Profit. Because it is Edited by Farmers—for Farmers. It fa down to the earth, .close to the plain people, and tells what you want to know in Language that You Can Understand. Because it has a Larger Farm Corresponding Staff than any other farm paper. More than 250 Men and Women on the Farm write regularly for The Farmers’ Review, giving Reliable and Workable facts. Because it has a Farm Contributor in Every County in which it circulates. Over 500 Farmers regularly report agricultural crop conditions through its columns. Because it publishes only Original Matter, fusing no syndicated or duplicated articles. It fa Weekly Timely— Not containing material two weeks or a month old before reaching the reader. Because it contains only Proved, Reliable Information— not untried suppositions or theories. All its departments are Up-to-Date Sources of valuable and reliable farm information. Because it is Not Afraid to Speak the Truth and Stand Fairly and Squarely for Agriculture. It has gained the Respect and Confidence of its readers by helping them, and always championing their interests. Becailse its Home and Household Department is conducted by a practical farm woman, and it employs the Best Story Writers to prepare special serials for its columns. Because it accepts No Questionable Advertising or Paid Editorial Puffs from anjone. Frauds Hate It and Fear It — It shows them up. Honest Men Like It and Praise It. z Because its Guarantee on Advertisers is a guarantee that means something, and fa not merely talk. The foregoing twelve reasons are only a few of the many that make THE FARMERS’ REVIEW—THE PRACTICAL PAPER FOR THE BUSINESS FARMER.

THIS IS OUR GREAT CLUB OFFER Jasper County Democrat (,?«“'• , \ Each for The Farmers’ Review (Weekly) ) AU {or Swine World (Semi-Monthly) . only Corn Magazine (Monthly) \sl ft R Farm Engineering (Monthly) / I MOTE:—Good for either new or renewals to any one of the 5 publications Send all remittances io THE JASPER COUNTY DEMOCRAT RENSSELAER, IND. PI W M II I OllMl-ll Gill 15

i v/elve Reasons Why THE F armers’ Review IS The Practical Paper FOR The Business Farmer