Jasper County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 May 1916 — Page 4

MOST IMPORTANT NEWS OF WORLD

BIQ HAPPENINGS OF THE WEEK CUT TO LAST ANALYSIS. DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN ITEMS .. _ •• Kernels Culled From Events of Moment in All Parts of the World— Of Interest to All the People Everywhere. European War News It was officially announced at Queenstown that Thomas Kent, another of the Irish rebel leaders, had been shot, *■* * ‘ With the official announcement at London that the torpedoed White Star steamer Cymric had gone down at three o'clock in the morning came the news that five of the crew of 107 men •were killed by the explosion of the torpedo that sank the ship. The others were saved. * * * Lloyd's Shipping Agency announced at London that the steamship Cymric of the White Star line is sinking. The steamer was torpedoed ’by a German submarine in the Atlantic, There were no passengers on board. * * * French troops have recaptured a large part of the ground lost on both banks of the Meuse in a most violent German attack, according to a dispatch from Paris. Four more of the leaders in the Irish revolt have been sentenced to death by the Dublin court-martial and executed, according to an official statement issued at London. They were Cornelius Colbert, Edmund Kent, Michael Malloli and .1. .1. Houston. i * * * ' v — Countess Georgina Markievicz, one of the prominent figures in the Irish revolt, was sentenced to death at Dublin after her trial by court-martial, but" the sentence has been commuted to penal servitude for life. * * * The sinking of an allied transport in the Mediterranean by a mine with the loss of nearly all the 600 Russian troops who were oil board is reported at Berlin in advices from Corfu, the Overseas News agency announces.

Domestic For president, Theodore Roosevelt j of New York, for vice-president, Charles Warren Fairbanks v>f Indiana. This is the ticket the Bull Moose party will ask the Republican and Progressive national conventions to unite upon at Chicago on June 7. "All of this was decided upon by the Pro- , gressive national committee at New York. * * * Twenty lives were lost when the steamer S. R. Kirby of Detroit foundered off Eagle Harbor, Mich: Only the second mate, Joseph Mudra, and Otto S. Lindquist, fireman, were saved. * * * Robert Fay, former lieutenant in the ! German army; Walter Scholz and Paul j Daeche, German reservists, convicted 1 in the federal court for conspiracy to 1 destroy ships carrying munitions to 1 ■the allies, were sentenced to the At- j lanta penitentiary by Judge Howe at j New York. j' Theodore Roosevelt was indorsed for the Progressive presidential nom- I ination at the state convention of that party at Jackson, Mich. Fifty-six del-1 egStes to the Chicago convention were • instructed to support his candidacy. ' Resolutions adopted called Roosevelt “the greatest American.” j ** * j The will of Charles W. Darkness, ! former Standard Oil attorney. Pled at New York, divides his $106,000,000 estate between his widow arid his broth- j er, Edward S. Darkness.

♦ * * Four persons were burned to death and five others seriously injured when the home, of D. A. Inman, near Warroad, Minn., was destroyed by fire. * * * The Navy League of the United States filed suit in the district supreme court at Washington against Henry Ford for SIOO,OOO damages. The league charges Ford with having published in advertisements in a local newspaper statements of a ‘‘libelous and defamatory character.” \ * * . The fight against tuberculosis is gradually being won, Dr. Charles J. Hatfield, executive secretary of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, told the delegates to the annual meeting of the .association at Washington. * * * As a result of a clash between guards at the plant of the Webster Manufacturing company at Tiffin, 0., where a strike has been in progress, Albert Latona, a union mojder, was shot and instantly killed. Two men were wounded * • « Five workmen were killed in an explosion in the plant of the Atlas Powder company at the end of Lake Hopatcong, according to a statement issued at New York by President W. J. Webster. _ "

Fire in the hold of the Italian steamship San Giovanni destroyed 7,000 bags of refined sugar which had been loaded at New Ytork for transportation to Palermo and Naples. * * * William L. Carlisle was declared guilty of train robbery by a jury at Cheyenne, Wyo. The jury recommended life imprisonment. Carlisle robbed a Union Pacific passenger train at Corfett J unction, Wyo. /•* * * Washington ; Germany notified the United States she would accept full responsibility for the torpedoing of the Sussex and that the submarine commander already had been punished for failing to exercise proper judgment. Germany offers to pay indemnity for all American injuries. - * * * The house in committee of the whole at Washington, by a vote of 65 to; 64, adopted Representative Lenroot’s amendment to the Pood control bill, which provides that the appropriation for tin> Mississippi river shall not be expended for the construction or repair of any levee until the Mississippi river commission has assurances that local interests will contribute one-half , the sum allotted for the work. » * * The senate at Washington passed ! the good roads bill, carrying $85,000,- 1 000 of which $75,000,000 will be available for federal aid to the states dur- 1 ing the next live years and $10,000,000 for the construction of roads in the national forests. * * * Minority members of the senate commerce committee at Washington denounced the $45,000,000 rivers and harbors appropriation bill as "utterly indefensible" when the country is to be so heavily taxed for the purpose of the preparedness program. * • • Despite ,the fact that there was before them a letter from President Wil- : son practically demanding the con- \ firmation Of Louis D. Brandeis of Bos- • ton to be an associate justice of the Sppreme court, the members of the senate judiciary committee at Washington failed to set a date for a vote on the question. ■ - ; * \ *. ~*■■■■ President Wilson in a formal note dispatched from Washington to Her- ■ lin lias accepted as meeting his de- j maud the announced change in Germany's submarine policy. Übupled with this acceptance is a veiled threat that diplomatic relations will be severed unless the hew orders issued by ' tile German admiralty are scrupulously observed. j * * * The house of representatives -at 1 Washington Went on record as opposed to increasing the regular army to 250,00 b, By a vote of 221 to 1.42 the house instructed its conferees on the army reorganization bill not to agree to the senate proposal lor aft army of a quarter of a million. ■ * • Wilson lias decided to accept Germany's reply as a compliance with liis demand that illegal methods of submarine warfare be abandoned. The danger oi' an imminent diplomatic break is authoritatively described at Washington as past. ; ;v. - * * * President Wilson received an important message at Washington from Pope Benedict hearing on the establishment of peace in Europe. The exact nature of the message was riot disclosed,. but it is understood the pope urged President Wilson to suggest negotiations at .once. * * * Mexican Revolt ' i Gov. James K. Ferguson of Texas, at Austin, Tex., issued a signed statement in which he declared that now was the proper time for United States intervention in Mexico, to restore order in that country, "if it takes ten or fifty years.’’ * * * ( apfain Fox of the Texas Rangers reported to Colonel Sibley at Marathbri, Tex., that seven American soldiers and-p.os.se men had engaged a small band of Villa bandits across the Rio Grande and killed several of them There were no American losses, ‘ * * * President Wilson issued an order at Washington calling into active service “for drity as a border guard’’ the National Guards of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, Secretary of War .Baker stated that the outbreak in the Big Bend district of the Rio Grande and the danger of other outbreaks made it imperative that more troops be called into service. • • * The Columbus raid was repeated by raiding Mexicans under the leadership of Colonel Cervantes, a Villa subcommander. Three members of Troop A, Fourteenth cavalry, and one civilian boy are known to have been killed. Six cavalrymen were wounded. Boquillas, Tex., was also invaded and several stores were looted. * * * In an official statement issued at Mexico City, Minister of Foreign Relations Aguilar charges that the bandits who raided Glen Springs and Boquillas, Tex., last Friday night were organized in the United States, and that the raid was “staged” by enemies of both countries. * * • All Americans north of Chihuahua have been ordered by American Consul Thomas D. Edwards of Juarez to leave Mexico at once. He acted, he said, upon instructions of the state department.

HOOSIER NOTES

Happenings Over Indiana That Are of General Interest.

Warrick county will celebrate the : state centennial August 28 to September 2. , John Stuzhes, age eighty-three, was killed instantly when he fell down a flight of steps at Gary. ' The city park at Tipton is to have several native animals in a small zoo this summer, including a brown owl. Pioneer Mothers’ day will be-ce’e-brated at El wood June 6 under the auspices of the Ehvood Council of Women. Charles Beckman, age thirty-five, coal miner, of Fontanet, was killed instantly when he fell from a Big Four train in the Duane yards. Henry Goodans was leading a fine stallion at Osgood when the horse fell dead of a ruptured blood vessel. ©Mr. Goodans recently paid SI,OOO for the horse. Fire, which is believed to have of incendiary origin, destroyed a bam on the farm of Owen Smith, near Evansville. The bam contained 9,000 bushels of corn. Carl Querizer was carried forty feet down the Lake Erie tracks in Connersville when a train truck his au.o truck, but escaped uninjured from the wreckage of the machine. Curtis W. Jones, age eighty-two, the oldest member of the Whitley county bar, is dead at his home at Columbia City. He had lived in Columbia City seventy years. For the first time in years, Sullivan county will have practically no corn planted by the middle of May. . The continued vain- have retarded work and breaking of corn ground has just started.

The village of Silverwood was almost destroyed by fire when a hotel, general Store, drug store, livery stable, the post office arid two homes burned. The fire started in the basement of the hotel. Martin H. Luecke, of Ft. Wayne, was unanimously elected district chairman for the Twelfth district by Democrats at Fort Wayne, succeeding Edward G. Hoffman, v. ho has been made national committeeman for Indiana. Willard Simmons and Vera Hanson were severely scalded at Kokbmo when the boiler of a well-drilling outfit they Were operating blew up. The boiler was thrown fifty into ‘r e air ami a -hundred feet from its original position. A .twp-gallon can of coal oil, with which she was 1 ighting a fire, exploded in the hands Of Mrs. Willard ' Thompson at . Xev. burg, setting fire to her clothing and to the house. The woman ran into the yard, where she fell unconscious front the burns, and it is believed she will die. The house was destroyed. A special train carrying eighty senior agricultural students and several members of the faculty of Purdue university was derailed near Lexington, Ky., when crossing a high trestle. The locomotive struck an obstruction in the track and several cars were derailed, but all passengers escaped injury. The students are on their annual inspection trip of the big stock farms in the Blue Grass state. Mrs. J. H. Taggart, of Orleans, was re-elected district chairman of the Third District Fe leration of Clubs at the annual convention at Orleans, and Miss Anna Wright, of Orleans, was re-elected secretary-treasure ■•. The convention met in the new Carnegie library, which was built through the efforts of the Independent Village Club. Mrs. Craigie Gunn Mitchell; of 1 Bedford, former general federation secretary of Indiana, presided. The second, annual state rural church conference was held at Purdue university with several hundred ministers and laymen in attendance. The object of the conference was to disj cuss ways and means of co-oporatiori j between the rural church and the 1 other agencies that are to work to | make country life all that it should be. Purdue university’s agricultural | extension department is in co-opera--1 tion with the Indiana Church Federation in the movement. I William H. I eedy, grand secretary of the Independent Ordef of Odd FelI lows in Indiana, has announced that Oliver Joseph Oliver, former mayor of Toronto, will be the guest of honor at the eightieth semi-annual communication of the Indiana grand lodge, I. O. O. F., May 17 and 18, in Indianapolis. Oliver was mayor of Toronto for many years. He is a past grand representative and a member of the sovereign grand lodge of the order. Four of the highest officers of the lodge in Illinois will also be present. The two-year-old daughter of Solomon Miller, of Syracuse, is in a hospital for an operation to remove a hairpin she swallowed. Russell Hodson, age nineteen, was killed instantly Sunday when his motorcycle skidded at a sharp turn in a road seven miles south of Huntington, and he was thrown against a telephone pole. His neck was broken. Dodson bought a new machine Saturday and went for his. first ride Sunlay morning. He approached the •urve in the road at too high speed * to turn.

Mrs. Matilda Rader, age eightyone, a pioneer of Delaware county, is dead at Muncie. Mrs. Anna North, age eighty-six, a Randolph county pioneer, is dead at her home near Ridgeville. Charles Tressell, eighty-eight years old, retired abstracter and pioneer citizen of Ft. Wayne, is dead. Don Hunter, age sixty, one of the best-known racehorse men in Indiana, committed suicide at Muncie by shooting himself in the head. Mrs. Elizabeth Worly, age ninetytwo. is dead at Elkhart, leaving six children, thirty grandchildren, fortysix great grandchildren and nine great great grandchildren. Rev. Perry Case, pastor of th? Christian church, has tendered his resignation to take effect September 1. He will go to Wilson, S. C., to fill a chair at Atlantic Christian college. William Bray, of Converse, found a small gold piece while removing a window from the home of Asa Bray. On one side was the date 1854 and on the other the words “California gold.”

Muncie is in the midst of an epidemic of measles, and the city board of health believes several hundred cases, will develop before the end of the. month. There were 109 cases in April. Farmers around Boonville are four weeks late with their work. Conservative estimates on the wheat crop are that there will be about one-third of a crop. Thousands of acres have beer, plowed up and planted in something else. Seventy of the Fort Wayne men, lea »rs in a campaign to raise $300,f ' for a local Y. M. C. A., went to. Muncie in two special cars to inspect the Y. M. C. A. in that city for the purpose of obtaining pointers for the local building. Ralph B. Dormer, a deputy state chemist at the Purdue university, experiment station, received word from the war department at Washington the. his father. Jesse Deemer, who was taken prisoner by Mexican bandits oh a raid into Teras, had not been killed. Directors of the Hodapp Hominy Company of .-Seymour,-:' operating one of the largest grain mills in southern Indiana, voted to throw' the business of the corporation into voluntary receivership. Fred Steinker, the heavies: stockholder, was named as trustee. Two sons of George Williams, age twelve and fourteen, were shot at tneir home at Evansville when handling an old army pistol, which is said to have been loaded since the civil war. One of the hevs was shot Through tire hand and the other in the shoulder. ‘ tleb A. Kimball, eighty-seven yea s old, is dead at South Bend. Mr. Kimball was president of the First National Bank, of South Bend, and the six remaining directors of the concern acted as pallbearers. Mr. Kimball hac; been in the banking business here since 1864.

Joseph Decker of Valparaiso, active in chamber of commerce work, superintended the digging of his own grave which will be entirely lined witia concrete. He has given his order for a $-190 monument and declares he will leave only SSOO at his death, and that will go to his undertaker. Andrew Harness, when cleani up the ruins of the home of "Mrs. Elisabeth Smith, at Laporte, found a skull which physicians say is that of a human being. The name, Phil Bongerz, now deputy state factory inspector, but for many _years marshal of Laporte, was scrawled on the bones. The marriage of Et’neP Snell, age twenty-two, to her brother, Charles Snell, age twenty-six, in Anderson four years ago, was annulled in the Madison circuit court. The plaintiff testified she was separated from her brother in infancy and that she was not aware of their relations when she married Snell, who at that time assumed the name of Zinn. Henry ..Stroud, superintendent of the Kankakee Construction Company, and Frank Sims of Kouts were injured when an automobile driven by Stroud skidded in the road at Ti inkle’s Crossing, near Kouts, and turned over twice. Miles Pierce, who was following, was unable to stop his car in time and it ran over both men as they lay in the road. Several hundred Knights of Columbus, representing six councils in the various districts of the state and a membership of 9,300, met at Lafayette for the fifteenth Indiana convention of the order. An important question before the convention was the establishment of a Knights of Coluihbus home for delinquent Catholic boys. It is proposed to establish such a home by levying an assessment on the individual members of the order and to make arrangements later for its maintenance. Both laymen and clergymen in and out of the order urged the movement.

Prof, Arthur Green, who for 27 years prior to 1912, had been dean of the school of pharmacy at Purdue university, died at the Robert Long Hospital, Indianapolis, after a lingering illness due to anemia. Robert W. Furnas, age sixty-eight, president the Furnas Ice Cream Company anfl a pioneer the ice cream manufacturing business in Indianapolis, is dead, due to a complication of ailments with which he was stricken more than a week ago, following his return from Florida, where be passed the winter.

Neighbors Discover Kin of Former Envoy Asleep in Woodshed in Cleveland. Cleveland, May 12. —Clay Herrick, Jr., four-year-old son of Clay Herrick, cousin of former Ambassador Myron T. Herrick, who was lost and thought kidnaped, was found asleep in a woodshed on the grounds of a neighbor in Cleveland Heights village, a fashionable suburb. The child had wandered away from home.

Car Shortage Is Jumping.

Chicago, .May 12. —The American Railway association’s idle car report May 1 shows a surplus of 59,657 cars and a shortage of 29,050. These figures compare with surplus of 292,269 and a shortage of 966 a year ago.

Southern Presbyterian Assembly.

Orlando, Fla., .May 12—The General Assembly of the Southern Presbyterian church began its fifty-fifth annual meeting here today. Three thousand five hundred churches were represented. The retiring moderator is Rev. W. McF. Alexander. The meeting will continue ten days.

Adviser of Czar Assassinated?

Berlin, Germany (by wireless to Sayville, L. I.), May 12.—Gregory Rasputin, the Russian monk who is reputed *to have exercised great influence over Emperor Nicholas, has been assassinated, according to reports from Petrograd received in Bukharest, says the Overseas News agency.

THE MARKETS

Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago, May 1L Open- High- Low- ClosWheat— ing. esc. est. ing. May ...—1.15%-% '• }.16%- • 1.15 1.15% July .....116%-17% 1.17% 1.16 116% Sept 1.16y 2 -17 1.17 1.15% 1.16% CornMay .........74% .74% .73% .74% July 4-,4% -74% .73% .74% Sept. ........ i3-i 5: B ,731 j .72% .73 DaisMay ........ .47 7 g-L .43 .47%.% .43 Sept. 40%-% .40% ,39%-40 .40% FLOUR—Spring wheat, patents, Minneapolis, . wood 01' cotton, $6.,0 to retail trade; -Minneapolis and Dakota patents,' ss.' /T/LSO; jute, straight, $5.3005.40; first clears, $4.5004.75; second Clears, jute, $3.50 (§3.70; low grade, »ute, $3.1003.20; soft wheat, patents, $5.2005.40; rye flour, white, patents, $5.0005.20; dirk, $4,[email protected]. BAY—Market firm; choice • timothy $21.000;22.00; No, 1 timothy, $19.004720.00; No. 2. timothy, $1,.00(11 18.0(); light clover, mixed, $17.00018.00; heavy clover, mixed, $12,000 14. No. 3 red top and grassy mixed timothy, sl4.Out* 16.00: threshed timothy, $7,500 10.00; clover. S 1 13.(0; heated and damaged, $0.w§10.00; alfalfa, choice, 'sl7:oo® 15. alfalfa, No 1, Jl4 [email protected]; alfalfa, j No. 2, SI2.COT? 14.C0; alfalfa, No. 3, sß.oo® I 10.00. BUTTER—Creamery, extras, 2S%c; extra firsts, 27%@28c; firsts, 27@27%c; seconds, 26 ©26%c; dairies, extras, 2S%c; firsts, 270 27%e; seconds, 2t;@24%c; packing stock, 24 @24%e; ladles, 25%@26e. EGGS— Firsts, 20%021c: ordinary firsts, 19§ !9%c; miscellaneous lots, cases included, 194/2'}%e; eases returned,; 18%@20%c; extra. 534/24<‘; clic ks, 16017 c; dirties. 17%0 H%c; storaged packed, firsts. 21%@22c; extra, 224/ _.r. ' POULTRY—Turkeys, 274728 c per 'lb.; fowls. lS@lS%c; roosters. 13%@14c: ducks, 16-5;Sc; geese; 12013 c, POTATOES—MUtusota. liakota, white, fv4.c'3c per bu.; Wisconsin, Michigan, .white, 5.3 c,; Minnesota . and . Dakota, Oliios, 535/ xsc. _ N'FW POTATOES—FIorida, bbls., No. 1, ss.i;>@4>.oo;. No. 2, $4,7"475.C0; hampers. No. 1, sl. *>(§2 00; No. 2, $1.50. New York, May 11. WHEAT Weaker, trade inactive; No. 1 northern. $1.35%; No. 2 red. $1.28%; No. 2 hard. :$1.26" 4 ; May, $1.22%; July, $1.25. OATS—Steady, inquiry quiet: standard, 52%(553c; No. 3 white, 5!4i61%c; No. 4 white, ,V'4#so%c;ungraded, :5d;%@54e. CORN—Weaker, inactive inquiry'. No. 2 yellow. S3 : V§B7%c; No, 3, S3 l ie. Live Stock. . Chicago, May 11 CATTLE—Good to choice steers, $9,004?) 10125; yearlings, good to choice, $7.50010.00; inferior steers, $7.50579,00; stodArs and feeders. 57.354i5.35; good to choice heifers, $7.0041 5.50; good to choice cows, $5.504/5.35; '■utters, $4.> 005.25: tanners, $3.50471,60; butcher bulls, $6,504/7.25; bologna bulls, s7o*)@fi.Ss: good to prime veal cdlyeS, SS.OO ,4/10.00; heavy calves, $6.50477.75. HOGS—Prime light butchers, $9,7509.95; fair to fancy light, $9.65479.90; prime medium weight butchers, 24047270 lbs,, $9,750 10.00: prime heavy butchers, 2704/310 lbs;, $9.8009.95; heavy mixed packing, $9.5509.80; rough heavy packing. $9.4009.65; pigs, fair to good. $7.5005.55; stags. $8,[email protected], HOGS—Shorn yearlings, $.8.3009.25; fair to choice dipped ewes, $7.5008.50; shorn wethers, fair to choice, $7.7508.75; feeding lambs, $9.50011.00; fed western lambs, $10.50 @12.00; Colorado wool lambs. $10.50012.15; spring $9.25010.15. East BufTalo. N. Y., May 11. CATTLE—Market active and firm; prime steers. $9.2509.50: butcher grades, $7.0009.00. CALVES—Market active and steady; cull to choice. $4.50011.00. SHEEP AND LAMBS—Market active; choice lambs, $10.50; cull to fair, $6.50@ 10.00; yearlings, $7.0008.50; sheep, $4,000 8.35. HOGS—Market active, 10015 c higher; Yorkers, pigs, $9.2609.50; mixed, $10.35010.40; heavy, $10.35010.40; rough*, $8.0009.25; Stags, $6.5007.50.

FINANCIAL Money to Loan—s per cent farm loans.—JOHN A. DUNLAP. ts Mutual Insurance—Fire and lightning. Also state cyclone. Inquire of M. I. Adams, phone 533-L. Farm Loans—We can procure you a five-year loan on your farm at 6 per cent. Can loan as high as 50 per cent of the value of any good farm. No delay In getting the money after title is approved.—CHAS. J. DEAN & SON. Farm Loans— Money to loan on farm property in any sums up to SIO.OOO. —E. P. HONAN. I flnt Ihnl Wlthout Del& 7Mil 111 l Commission I UUI lIIU Without Charges for « Making or Recording Instruments. W. H. PARKINSON

„ Our^p (gsssifieal *■ ——f———'

[Under this head notices will be pV, lished for 1-cent-a-word for the fLH insertion, 1-2-cent-per-word for each additional insertion. To save book-keeping cash should be sent with rvatice. No notice; accepted for less than* twenty-fiva cents, but slT&rt notices coming within the above rate, will be published two or 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.]

s FOR SALE For Sale—From now on I will offer Barred Rock eggs for $1.50 per setting. Don’t let this chance slip.—A. D. HERSH.MAX, Medaryville, Ind. in-15 ’ For Sale—Good four-year-old cow, giving good flow of milk. —E. S. RHOADS, Rensselaer, Ind. ts For Sale—Recleaned timothy seed, $4.50 per bushel.—ED HERATH, phone 461. ts Tame Hay—Good timothy hay in mow at farm, 8 mi lea north of Rensselaer. Phone 904-D ’ ts For Sale—Six-room house, walks, deep well, electric lights, nice lot. Price $1,000; S4OO down;take live stock.—G. F. .MEYERS. ts For Sale—-Some good onion seed for sale.—D. L. HALSTEAD, Rensselaer, R-3, phone 8 7-H, Mt. Ayr exchange. m -30 For Sale or Rent—Four-room house and 3 lots at Virgie. Enquire of JAMES WISEMAN, Fair Oaks, Hid,, R-2. For Sale—Red Cross windmills, t also do well drilling, having two machines in operation, and can do pronipt work.—ELMER GWIN, Rensselaer, Ind. Phone 418 j-12 For Sale—Our fine pansy plants will be here May 10. Other plants ar.d vines May 12, come and see them whether you buy or not KING FLORAL CO. For Sale—A brand-new Q. D. 33x4 Firestone “Non-Skid” automobile tire with brand-new inner tube. Will sell at a bargain.—Enquire at Demoevat office. For Sale—One 4-year-old gelding, wt. 1100 pounds, sound; one 12-year-old gelding, wt. 1400; also some timothy hay.—JOSEPH TRULLY, Rensselaer, R-l. Phone 916-C. ■hi-11' For Sale—-As, T am going to move to Chicago I offer my 8-room, modern house built less than two years ago. ail conveniences, lights, water, hath room, hot air heat; lot 50x125. Terms reasonable, —MIKE KUBOSKI, Rensselaer. Ind. j-13 For Sale—To settle an estate I will sell a 100-aere farm in Newton tp„ close to school and elevator, good location, 80 acres in cultivation, 20 acres pasture. Fair improvements.—W. B. YEOMAN, Surrey, Ind. 3-2 For Sale—The building and ground on which the Methodist Protestant church is located in Rensselaer on corner of Clark and Van Rensselaer streets. Want to reserve seats, selling only building and ground. For particulars call on or phone JOHN BILL, Rensselaer, R-4, phone 949-C. ts For Sale—Red, white or bur oak lumber, sawed to any dimension desired, $lB per thousand for all building material; 4 miles west es Rensselaer, oti county farm road.— A. M. YEOMAN, Rensselaer, R-3, phone 87-G, Mt. Ayr; or see John Zellers, sawyer. ts

WANTED, Wanted—A girl for general housework. Good wages.—MßS. DELOS THOMPSON, phone 93. Wanted—Have buyers for farms in .Marion, Union, Barkley, Jordan and Newton tps. See us.—GEO. F. MEYERS. ts Wanted—Salesman to sell oils, greases and paints in this territory. Salary or side line. : Party with automobile preferred; extra allowance for machine. $1 00.00 per month to the right party.—BALSO OIL COMPANY, 238 Erie St., Toledo, Ohio. j 4 LOST Lost—On the Dixie Airline Monday afternoon, two auto tires, 36x4% inches, with iron rims, between Rensselaer and Demotte. Claim liberal reward when expressing tires.— C. BORNS, Gary, Ind. Lost—Sunday, May 7, near Demotte Dutch Reformed church, a No. 2 Brownie kodak. Finder please notify E. J. STEINKE, Thayer, Ind. m-14 Estrayed—About April 2h, from my farm in Newton tp., a red yearling heifer. Please telephone any information to A. M. YEOMAN, 87-G, Mt. Ayr exchange. Estray Taken Up—Came to my place Friday, April 21, a roan Jersey cow. Owner may have same by paying charges.—HOMEß A\ TIMMONS, Parr, R-l. Phone 952-A. al3 MISCELLANEOUS Storage Room—For household goods and other light weight personal effects. Large, dry quarters, and will take goods for storage by month or year.—THE DEMOCRAT. Yes, The Democrat’s offer of a year’s subscription tb both The Democrat and Orange Judd Farmer (weekly) for $1.65 still holds good; either new subscriptions or renewals. The' Democrat, Orange Judd Farmer and Woman’s World, (the latter monthly), only $1.75.