Jasper County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 July 1915 — Page 4

FIRE DESTROYS MADISON FACTORY

Plant of Thomas Graham Company for Third Time BLAZE CAUSES $25,000 LOSS Stock of Finished Goods and Raw Material Consumed in Flames — Inadequate Water Main Handicaps Firemen. Madison. —Fire destroyed the plant of the Thomas Graham company, spoke manufacturers, with a loss of approximately $25,000. An inadequate water main handicapped the firemen. An immense stock of finished goods and raw material was consumed. The company carried little insurance. This was the third time the plant has burned. Two Boys Disappear. Martinsville. —Kenneth, the thir-teen-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William Suddith, and Francis L. Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Moore of this city, also thirteen years old, left their homes in this city and nothing has been heard from them since. Their parents are almost distracted. It is reported they left here on an lnterurban ear and that they were seen in Indianapolis Inquiring the way to the union station. The Suddith boy wore striped, overalls, striped waist and a cap and was barefooted and was undersized for his age; the Moore boy was better dressed, as he wore a blue serge suit, knee pants and black hat, and was large for his age. J. C. Suddith, grandfather of the Suddith boy. Is seeking information as to the whereabouts of the boys. Suicides to Avoid Capture. Bloomington.—Surrounded by a posse with bloodhounds, Parle Massan, a Turk, who killed William Fender, seventy-four-year-old veteran of the Civil war, committed: suicide to avoid capture. Fender and Massan were neighbors. A hive of bees be- , longing to the former swarmed on the fence dividing the properties, and Massan claimed them. When Fender attempted to hive the bees Massan fired, using both shotgun and revolver. The tragedy occurred at Guthrie, a small town near here, and a 24-hour man limit followed. Massan was located near Maumee, Jackson county. To Meet at Lafayette in 1916. Lafayette.—The Phi Delta Kappa, a fraternity composed of college, high school and preparatory students, will hold' its 1916 convention in Lafayette. This year’s convention was held at Dayton, O Four states are represented in the society—lndiana, Ohio, Washington and Oregon. Lafayette sent a large delegation to the Dayton convention. Next year's meeting will be held here the last week of June. Barn and Touring Car Burqed. Goshen. Tramps are held responsible for the destruction by fire of a $2,500 barn on the farm of Wise -W. Showalter, county commissioner, near the New York Central railroad tracks, near this city. Mr. Showalter's touring car was burned. All live stock was saved. Insurance was sl,600. The net loss is estimated at $2,600. Killed by lnterurban Car. Coatsville. —Lorenzo H. O'Neal, sixty years old, a farmer and brother of former County Treasurer J. E. O’Neal, was killed by an interurban car on the Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern tracks while driving to his home from this city. He Is survived by his widow. Youth Killed in Fall. Hammond. —Frank Buse, aged twenty-two, a well-known and popular Black Oak young man employed at the Grasselli Chemical plant, went on the roof of the plant to play a practical joke on fellow workmen. He did not know the roof was asbestos, and he fell through to the floor, being instantly killed. Elevator at Howe Burned. Lagrange.— A car of gasoline on ,the Grand Rapids and Indiana track at Howe was set on fire when a freight engine ran into it. A grain elevator belonging to Sweitzer & Wolfe and a number of freight cars were burned. The whole town was: threatened The loss is estimated at $40,000. Train Kills Farmer. Fort Wayne.—Charles Beahrman, fifty years old, a farmer living five miles east of Fort Wayne, wds instantly killed when he stepped in front of a Pennsylvania train. Attempts to Murder Two. Lafayette. —W. s. Ressel, formerly of this city, shot and killed himself In Milwaukee, after attempting to murder his brother August and his brother’s wife. The brothers quarreled over a flve-dollar debt of several years’ standing.. The suicide, who was a street car-conductor, left Lafayette about ten years ago. The brother, August, lived here until five years ago. The shooting took place at the home of August Ressel. Ressel has two brothers living here—Charles and Joseph.

BOMB MISSES HUERTA

ATTEMPT MADE TO KILL FORMER DICTATOR OF MEXICO. Missile Thrown as Former President and Gen. Orozco Were Leaving Lawyer’s Office. El Paso, July 2.—lt became known here that partisans of the Villa faction made an attempt to assassinate Generals Huerta and Orozco when they left the Federal building this morning after their trial. 'While leaving their lawyer’s office near the Federal building a two-pound bomb was dropped on them nearly hitting Huerta on the head. The bomb failed to explode. It contained a mixture of powerful explosives. United States officials are making an investigation. On motion of the United States government the cases of General Yictoriano Huerta, former dictator of Mexico; Generals Pascual Orozco and Marcele Zaravo, Ike and Frank Alderate, charged with Conspiracy to violate the neutrality law, were postponed until July 12 by United States Commissioner Oliver and the government desired a thorough investigation and will cafi witnesses from New York, New Orleans, San Antonio, Los Angeles and other cities. The defense objected to the delay. “The United States soldiers who accompany you will go wherever you go,” said Commissioner Oliver to Huerta. “You are not under arrest, but they will follow you like Vary’s little lamb followed Mary." Huerta was later introduced to a number of El Paso women, among them Miss Mary Nations, who won his particular admiration. “New Y’ork has nothing like this,” he said seriously. "My what a beautiful girl you are."

THE MARKETS

Grain, Provisions. Etc. Chicago. July 1. Open- High- Low- ClosTVhent— ins. est. est. ing. July ...... 1,68% 1,06% 1:07% Sept. .....1,02%-% 1.03% 101% 1,02*4 Dec. 1,06%-% .106% 1.05 1.(6% Corn— July 73%-% .74% .73%-% .74% Sept. •..,.,,..72%-% .73% 72 .72%-% Dec. 64 ,64% : .63%-% .64% Oats— July 44%-% .45 .44% .45% Sept. ........37%-% .37% .37% V .37%-%' Dec 33 89%".' .39 .39% FLOUR—Spring wheat patents. Minneapolis, wood or cotton, 16.90...t0 retail trade: Minnesota and Dakota' patents, I $5.30<7f 5;60:.:' jute, straight; $5.00<<75.10; first ] clears. $4.60'r<4.50; second clears, jute, s!.(►■ j 174.10; low grade, jute, $3.'4<*‘5t : 3.50: soft wheat patents, $5.301!5.60: rye flour, white, ’ patent. $5.701i0.90; dark, $4,501(4.75.: ! lIAY Market steady: choice timothy, | No. 1 timothy. SU.ah'u UFO: No. ‘ 2 and. No.-1 mixed, s'■'.•l7.oft; light clov- J er, SIC.OMt 17,"(t; hi a / clover, i.W-% 15.00; j clover, $12.505ii13vr7():. . red top and grassy mixed timothy, sl4. 15.00; threshed tim- 1 othy, $9 Of‘.(t 12. etc no grade timothy, $7.(*V79 9;00r alfalfa, choice, : $18.00.1719.00; alfalfa, | No 7, $F.e..<>.17.01; n ifaifa. No. 2. $15,000 16.< o. ■ , TIMOTHY SKl'D—Market easy; Sep- j tember closed $7.5" hid and s7.?' asked; cash lots sold at 35.ef:'<iG.7S. % j CLOVER SEED—Market unchanged, j with country lots. s%Dftg 13.25 nominal. j ' ——: | Chicago July 1. RUTTER—Creamery, extras, 2?c: extra firsts, 2.0 c; firsts, 245725 c: Seconds. 225723%e; I dairies, extras. 26c; firsts. 234J24C; seconds. ! 2<“77210; packing stock, 20@20%c; ladles. 21 @2l%c. EGGS—Miscellaneous lots, cases included, 165i16%e; cases returned.' 15%fi16c: ordinay firsts. 135Tir>%c; firsts. is@ 16**c? extras. 21c. j LIVE POULTRY—Turkeys, 11c per lb,; chickens,-fowls, 13fii3%c; springs, 2tV523c; roosters, 9%c; ducks. 13c; geese, B@9c; young ducks, 151716 c; spring geese, 144715 c. ICED POULTRY—FowIs. 13%f14c: roosters, lie; ducks, 124714 c; turkeys. 13514 c; geese, 9@loe. OLD POTATOES—Wisconsin, whito stock, 181723 c per bu.; Michigan, white stock, 18@23e per bu. NEW POTATOES—Arkansas and Oklahoma Triumphs, 00i760c per bu.; Carolina cobblers, $1.40171.60 per bbl. ; Virginia cobblers. $1,[email protected] per bbl. f > New York. July 1. WHEAT—Stronger, a fair inquiry for new; No, 1 northern. $1.47%; No. 2 red, $1.33171.3."%; No. 2 hard, $1.41%; No. 1 Manitoba, $1.40%; July. $1.14%; September, $1.09%. CORN—Higher, trade checked; export, S3%c; No. 2 yellow. S6%c. OATS—Firmer, demand fair; No. . 3 white, 55%c; standard. Sc; No. 3 white, 54%c; No. 4 white. 540,. Live Stock. Chicago. July 1. CATTLE—Steers, good to choice. $7,450 9.95; yearlings, good to choice, $7.5009,75; inferior heifers. $5.0006.25; good to choice heifers, $6.50'?!5.00; good to choice cows, $6.00177.40: cutters. $3.75174.75; canners, $3.00 (774.00; butcher bulls, [email protected]; bolognas, [email protected]; good to choice veal calves, $9.00 @10.50; heavy calves, [email protected]. HOGS—Prime light butchers, [email protected]; fair to fancy light, $7.7507.90: prime medium weight butchers, 540@270 lbs.. $7,700 7.85: prime heavy butchers, 2700340 lbs., $7.6507.75; heavy and mixed packing, $7.40 @7.65; heavy packirig, [email protected]; pigs, fair to good, $6.3007.40. East Buffalo, N. Y.. July L CATTLE—Market fairly active and steady; prime steers, [email protected]; butcher grades. $6.5009.05. '. CALVES—Market steady; cull to choice, $4.50011.50. SHEEP AND LAMBS—Market active and steady; choice lambs, $10.50011.00; cull tv fair, $7.001710.23; yearlings, SB,OOO 9.25; sheep, $3.0007.25. HOGS—Market active and steady; Yorkers, $8.25; pigs. $5.25; mixed, $8,150 8.25; heavy, [email protected]; roughs, $6.2506.65; stags, [email protected].' Omaha, July L HOGS—Market higher; heavy, [email protected]; mixed, [email protected]; light $7.4507.65; pigs, $6.7507.50; bulk of sales, [email protected]. CATTLE—Market higher; native steers, [email protected]; cows and heifers, S6.OO@SJ6; western steers, [email protected]; Texas steers, $6.0007.65: cows and, heifers. $5.8507.38; calves, $8.00010.00. . SHEEP—Market lower; yearlings, $6,000 1.60; wethers, $5.8006.50; lambs, $9.0009.86,

WORLD’S EVENTS

TERSELY and BRIEFLY TOLD

European War News The British-owned steamship Armenian of the Dominion line was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-38 20 miles west of Trevose head, Cornwall, England, and 19 Americans were lost. The official count says that 29 men were lost and ten injured. » * • After fighting' for days to break down the stubborn resistance of the Turks in the Dardanelles districts, the allied forces are again advancing and the success of the expedition seems nearer than at any time since it was launched. This information Is given in official reports issued in London. Six thousand Turks were killed. • Premier Asquith made reply in the house of commons at London to the question asked as to whether the government would state terms upon which peace would be possible. The premier said: “It would not be in the public interest to add anything to what I have already publicly stated on this subject.” ■ • * Tomaszow, in Russian Poland, has been captured by the Austro-German forces, according to announcement made by the Austrian war office at Vienna. North of Kamionka the Austrians repulsed a Russian attack which was made in great force. • • • Montenegrin troops have occupied Scutari, the largest city of Albania • • • Unofficial dispatches received at Petrograd indirectly from the Russian front place the number of Teutonic casualties in the Galician campaign at 750,000, divided equally between the Germans and Austrians. * • * Announcement was made at the French ministry of war at Paris that, according to the Italian press, Italy has broken diplomatic relations with Turkey. Italy, it is added.-will stud, troops to the Dardanelles. •m ♦ ♦ Two members of the lunacy commission appointed by the federal courts of New Hampshire in December. 1913.1 testified at New York that Harry K. I Thaw was not now suffering from I paranoia or any other form of insanity, as alleged in his second trial for the murder of Stanford White Domestic Enraged dver the story told by his wife that Stanley Hague, a young post office clerk, had hugged and kissed her against her will, Amos E. Roberts of Chicago shot and killed Hague. * The United States submarine H-3 was pulled off the rocks at Point Sur, 20 miles from Monterey, Cal., by the United States submarine tender Cheyenne. • • * Laden with a cargo of 4,000 old-style j Springfield rifles and 1,000,000 dumdum bullets, according to the captain, the three-masted schooner Annie Larsen arrived at Hoquiam, Wash., short of provisions, and was seized by Deputy Customs Collector R. L. Sebastian. * • • The grand jury returned indictments charging riot against the 26 men arrested by state guards in the vicinity of former Governor Slaton’s home at Atlanta, Ga. • • • After a shutdown of 18 months the rolling of steel at the Carnegie Steel company’s Sharon (Pa.) plant has resumed, giving employment to 500 men. * * * Artillery, cavalry and infantry of the state militia stood guard all day at the home of John M. Slaton at Atlanta, Ga., who retired as governor of the state, surrendering the office to Nat E Harris. Twenty-six men were arrested by the militia near the Slaton home. • • # President Wilson will not visit the San Francisco exposition, making political speeches en route. An intimation to this effect was given by White House officials. The president will return from Cornish, N. H., about July 1, when he probahly will receive the German note. * • • That Harry K. Thaw never was Insane, at the r time he killed Stanford White, or before or after that act, was the declaration at Thaw’s hearing In New York or Dr. Charles P. Bancroft, superintendent of the New Hampshire State Hospital for the Insane. • * • Mrs. Ida Purcell died from the effects of taking poison at Mattoon, IIL Mrs. Purcell attracted widespread attention when the mysterious death of Mrs. Alice Ronalds, wife of a physician, occurred New Year’s day. • • • The building material dealers oit Chicago closed their plants in a campaign to force all unions having strikes to arbitrate. Ten thousand persons directly employed by the dealers were laid off.

The Missouri supreme court sustained the demurrer of the Chicago & Alton railroad, against the suit of the state to recover $2,000,000 In alleged excess fares. • • • Porter Nelson, a Montgomery county, Arkansas, farmer, saw his wife, eighteen-month-old baby and his niece, Miss Wilson, drown. • • • Rev. Frank W. Westcott, fifty-six years old, an Episcopal clergyman, fwormerlv of Skaneateles, N. Y., strangled himself in his room in Columbus hospital at Milwaukee, Wis. * • • Sporting Dario Resta is the speed king of the world. He drove an automobile for 300 miles at a pace faster than it was ever driven before. He shattered world records, won prizes aggregating $-3,000 and crossed the tape an easy winner of Chicago's first auto derby, held at Speedway park. Resta traveled the 500 miles in five hours, seven minutes and twenty-seven seconds. His average was 07.60 miles an hour. Once he circled the course at 107 miles an hour. Porporato, driving a Sunbeam, was second, and Rickenbacher third. Grant finished fourth. He never stopped once. • • • Personal Judge John Clinton Gray, suffering from paralysis and pneumonia, is in a precarious condition at Newport, R. L • • • Mexican Revolt Desperate conditions in Mexico City, with unchecked mobs and looting, are described in dispatches cabled to the United States government at Washington from Vera Cruz by a courier who left the Mexican capital last Friday. June 25. Chihuahua reports that a temporary armistice has been declared near Encarnacion. south of Aguascalientes, between Villa and Carranza. • • • Col. Jesus Aguilar and Maj. I. A. Garcia arrived in Cornish, N. H., to arrange a conference between President Wilson and General Angeles. The president told Dr. Carey T. Grayson to explain to the Mexicans that he is On a vacation and is seeing no visitors. # * . * Mexico’s revolutionary pot is again boiling oven A reign of terror affecting the 24,000 foreigners in Mexico City is imminent in the capital, according to official advices received at Washington The Carranza forces under Gen. Pablo Gonzales have been driven back from Mexico City by the soldiers of General Zapata, numbering 25.000. • • • Gen. Victoriap© Huerta, former dictator of Mexico, and Gen. Pascual Orozco, the famous Mexican leader, were arrested at Fort Bliss, Tex,, On a federal warrant charging them with violation of neutrality. The arrest was made on orders of the United States district attorney at San Antonio, presumably acting under instructions from Washington. He was proceeding to El Paso to attend the big junta of Cientificos to be held in that" city. * * * Foreign lhe Holland American line steamship Nieuwe Amsterdam, having 1,500 persons on board, bound from New York for Rotterdam, was run down in a fog by an unidentified steamer while anchored in the Downs. • * • Dr, Anton Meyer-Gerhard, special envoy of Count Bemstorff to the kaiser, in an article published in Der Tag at Berlin, says the United States is not hostile to Germany and that America and Germany misunderstand each other. He urges that both nations be friends. • • • The British government announced at London its intention to pay SIOO,000 as the first installment in settlement of the claims of the owners of the American steamship Wilhelmina, seized by the British while carrying foodstuffs from New York to Germany. • • * Great crowds of students and citizens gathered in Potsdam, Germany, and tendered an ovation to Queen Victoria of Sweden, en route to Stockholm, following a visit with her mother, the grand duchess of Baden. • • • Washington The United States is seriously considering taking over the wireless station at Sayville, L. 1., one of the two great plants by which direct communication between the United States and Germany is maintained. The other station —at Tuckerton, N. Y.—already Is under government control. Evidence of alleged violations of neutrality at Sayville has been gathered by the department of commerce at Washington. • • • Evidence accumulated at the state department at Washington that concrete plans are in process of formation between the United States and Germany to reduce to a minimum the dangers to American life and property in the German war zone. • • * ... * Dispatches to the state department at Washington from Ambassador Gerard indicate that good feeling is prevailing in Germany as to the character of the reply which should be made to the United States on America’s last -note on the submarine warfare.

INDIANA BREVITIES

Fort Wayne.—Dr. Lydia Allen De- ; Vilviss of this city departed for | Topeka, Kan., where she will take charge of the division of child hygiene of the Kansas state department of health. She is the first woman to be placed in charge of this division of the Kansas health department’s work. Princeton.—Henry Barnes, age j eight, was found in the Herriott Car- ! rithers hardware store. He was taken to the city hall for arraignment and many persons gathered about. A doctor observed Henry had a welldeveloped case of smallpox, and the boy was sent home. Several officers are quarantined and the hardware store and city hall are undergoing fumigation. Indianapolis. After a desperate battle with a policeman and two other men, George Roche, twenty-eight, alias George Thomas, of Kankakee, 111., was arrested and charged with having robbed Miss Olga Weilasher in the office of the C. & A. Potts mill machinery plant of six dollars and ! some jewelry in her handbag. At poi lice headquarters Roche said he was out of work and had to attempt robbery, Logansport.—The Epworth league of the Logansport district in its convention at the Anoka M. E. church elected the following officers: President, Rev. Leroy Meyers, Goldsmith; vice-president, D. O. Miner, Amboy; Bertha Richerick, Windfall; Esther Kenedy, Macy; Mabel Miller, Peru; i secretary, Marion Trittschdh, Tipton; treasurer, Lloyd Stough, Kokomo; superintendent Junior league, Marie Powlen, Logansport The 1916 convention was voted to Tipton. Hammond.—When a bolt on the steering gear of a maclrine driven by I George M. Bendell, 7943 Constance ; avenue, South Chicago, stripped its | threads as Bendell was turning out to I let another car pass near Cedar lake, , the car skidded over an embankment. Mr. and Mrs. Bendell and his father and mother were hurled over the wind shield and hood 20 feet away. Fred i Bendell, a son, was thrown through the wind shield. None of the victims will die though all were badly hurt and taken to their homes by train. Gary.—William Wirth has been re- | elected superintendent of the Gary schools for two years at a salary of ; $6,000 with the privilege of giving part j of his time to the New York schools. The Rockefeller foundation educational department will conduct a survey of the public schools and the city of Gary in the fall. Abraham Flexner, i secretary of the foundation, recently ! visited the city. The survey will be | made at the instance of the school j board. { Lafayette.—An inquest to determine the mental condition of Mrs. John Parent, known in the circus world as “Mammoth Amelia,” was held here and the finding of the physicians was that she was a person of unsound mind. The papers asked for admis- ! sion to the Central Hospital for the Insane at Indianapolis. She weighs 490 pounds, She arrived at her home here Wednesday from lowa (in a dazed condition, being unable to answer questions asked her in regard to her destination She was sent home by the manager of a circus, bearing a tag directing train conductors to take her to Lafayette. South Bend. —Unable to obtain work, and unwilling to return to a career of crime, John Meri, a former convict, who a short time ago completed a sentence of three years for robbery, is going back to Michigan City prison. He walked into the office of Capt. G. L. Bunker of the police department and asked to be taken back to Warden Fogarty. “I can’t get work,” he said, “and I must eat. Take me back to Warden Fogarty. If you don’t I’ll have to return to the bad.” Assured that the police could not return him to prison because he had served his time, Meri admitted a robbery at Whiting several years ago. He was locked up and will be turned over to the Whiting authorities. Laporte.—That the recluse so long known in Elkhart as John Gordon was in fact Jonathan Dustman of Mahoning county, Ohio, developed when Attorney C. Raymer was appointed administrator of his estate, the latter being principally represented by a library of more than 2,000 very valuable volumes. Facts as to the man’s real name had fiever been known, Gordon living In Elkhart where he was a devoted churchman with his lips sealed as to his past. He lived alone, sought no companions, giving all his time to reading. It has developed that Dustman became a recluse leaving Youngstown nearly twenty-five years ago when he was Jilted by a young woman to whom he was engaged. He then vowed he would only live for self and going to Elkhart he changed his name and buried his idenity. Chrisney.—Orval Masters, nineteen years old, gave his life to save John White, a boy, from drowning while they were bathing in a large pond near here. Masters took the boy to shore and then fell back into the water exhausted. Evansville. Webster Cline, age twenty, was found unconscious in the dark room of "Wallace’s studio where he was employed. When physicians arrived he was dead. The young man locked himself in the dark room and near his side was a half emptied bottle of ammonia. Coroner Neal Kerney thinks Cline committed suicide.

Baby Teeth! Take care of the baby’s teeth. They need it as much as the adult. Don’t hold your child back but see Dr. J. W. Horton and have him give those teeth professional care at once. Imperfect teeth impairs the child’s health quickly. Did your parents neglect yours

Buy envelopes at The Democrat office. A large number of sizes, styles and colors, both bond and plain finish, to select from, at 5c per bunch of 25. Call in and see them.

(pssifieaftd fpeperlflptfi [Under this head notices will be published for 1-cent-a-word for the first insertion, 1-2-cent-per-word for each additional insertion. To save book-keeping cash should be sent with notice. No notice accepted for less than twenty-five cents, but short notices coming within the above rate, will be published two or 1 more times—as the case may be —for 25 cents. Where replies are sent In The Democrat’s care, postage will be charged for forwarding such replies to the advertiser.] FOR SALE For Sale—Two grade Shorthorn cows, now giving milk and one with calf by side, and 1 pure bred Shorthorn bull caIf.—GRANT SUTTON, Fair Oaks, Ind. R-2. For Sale—An armload of clean old newspapers for a nickel at The Democrat office. Just the thing for putting under carpets, on pantry shelves, etc. ts * Fbr Sale—lo 7 acre farm in Otsego county, N. Y.; 8 acres maple, beach and hemlock timber, including sugar grove, balance in good state of cultivation; good living springs in pasture lots, good well of water at house, land is gently rolling but not hilly and is easy to work. House recently remodeled, and practically good as new; 2 large barns in fair condition, and other outbuildings; farm well fenced, wire fencing; on R. F. D., and telephone. New evaporator and sap buckets goes with - farm, all for $2,100. Reason for selling, poor health and too bid to farm.—-Address L. J. SHELLAND, Worcester, Otsego county, N. Y.

FOR RENT For Rent—-My house on River street.—MßS. MARY JANE HOPKINS. - / WANTED . Wanted—A good solicitor to travel, over Jasper county. Previous experience not necessary, but is preferred.—THE DEMOCRAT. Wanted—soo stock hogs from 125 Ids. down to any size. Will buy 200 sows and pigs.—A. W. SAWIN, phone 400. ts Wanted—To borrow $4,000 on good real estate security on 5-year loan; will pay 6 per cent interest, semi-annually if desired.—Enquire at The Democrat office. LOST. Lost—Auto tail light and No. plate No. 5800, between Fair Oaks and Rensselaer. Call 950-F or write ALLEN HOTEL, Fair Oaks, Ind. MISCELLANEOUS Storage—Can furnish storage for a number of automobiles or other vehicles at reasonable rates.—C. W. DUVALL, phone 147. Storage Room—Storage room for household goods, etc., on third floor of The Democrat building. Prices reasonable.—F. E. BABCOCK. Typewriter Ribbons—For all the standard makes of machines, the celebrated Neidich brand, also cat-, bon papers of the same make, oa sale at The Democrat office. * FINANCIAL To Loan-—slso on first mortgage or good note.—Phone 13. Mutual Insurance —Fire and lights ning. Also state cyclone. Inquire of M. I. Adams, phone 533-L. Farm Loans — 11 can procure you a five-year loan on your farm at a low rate of interest. See me before placing your loan. Office, west side public square.—P. R. BLUE. Farm Loans—Money to loan on farm property in any sums up to SIO,OOO.—E. P. HONAN. Farm Loans—l am making farm loans at the lowest rates of interest. Ten year loans without commission and without delay.—JOHN A. DUNLAP. , Aft Hal Without Delay, ill ll Without Commission UU lU Without Charges for H” Making or Recording Instruments. W. H. PARKINSON