Jasper County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 May 1916 — Page 6
Farms For Sale 35 acres, on dredge ditch, pike, H. F. D., telephone, school, near station. Six-room house, outbuildings, fruit and well. All black land well tiled. Price $87.50; S6OO. down. Consider live stock, vacant lots or small property. 100 acres, well located, all cultivated except 25 acres timber pasture. Six-room house, outbuildings, fruit and well: soil half black and half sandy. Price $45; SBOO down. Will take live stock or property. SO acres, four miles Troni Remington.' Four-room house, barn and other outbuildings, »<3ood well, some fruit. A good proposition at only $75: $1,500 down. .Might consider v .good trade. 160 acres, all black prairie land joining dredge,ditch i'or outlet. On main road. R. F. D., telephone, halfmile from pike, two miles of two stations and three churches. There is a good six-room house, large barn, cribs, chicken house, fruit, windmill, large silo, improvements ail new. price SBS. Terms, $3,000 down. Will consider good trade. wheat and clover farm. Lies on dredge ditch, has some tile; 80 rods from school and station, and on pike road. There is a good five-room house, fair barn, cribs, deep well and fruit. Price SBS. Terms, $1 ,- TOO down. Might consider good trade. 40 acres, on main road, in pasture. There is no improvements. There is about: 25 acres black prairie land and remainder timber. Price $4 5. Terms, S3OO tfdown. Will consider good trade. 400 acres, of well located, nice blaek prairie land which can be sold in one body or divided into smaller I laces. A bargain at. $75. 160 acres in Canada, well located, fine prairie land. 145 acres improved in Brown county, Ind., and 'll 5 acres improved in Washington county, Ind. All clear and good title, Will trade any or all - for land here and pay difference. Onion land as good as the best in small tracts at a low price. George F. Meyers Rensselaer, Ind.
CHICHESTER S PILLS THE DIAMOND HRANH. a AhW yowr l>rujr*l*tfor /A C4\ CikAjU < hl-ehos-ter » IHainoiul \ I*1II» in K«d arid Hold nimliicVV/ sealed with Blue kihlxm.- Vy iN Take iio other. Huy of your 1/ ~ sis AskforCIII.CIIKH.TEHB K Jf DIA2IOVB KKAM) I'ILLH, for 25 years known as Best, safest, Always K ellable A —r SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE BLACK PRINCE Sound PURE BRED Stallion No. 7386 (Laws of Indiana 1913, chapter 28) : The pedigree of the Stallion BLACK PRINCE, No. 191172 American. Owned t>y Thomas Turner, postoftice Hebron. Ind., R. K. 1 1. 4, County Porter. Transferred to August C. Schultz, Parr, Ind., April 11, 1916, described an follows: Color and marks: Black, star, hind feet and pasterns white. Breed, l’ercheron. Foaled in the year 1913, has been examined in the office of the Secretary of the Indiana Stallion Hurollmeiit Board, and it is hereby certified that the said Stallion is of PURE BREEDING and is registered in the Percheron Society of America Stud Book. The above named Stallion has been examined bv Dr. C. Harvey Smith, a duly qualified licensed veterinarian, and .is certified by affidavit to •><• free from tne transmissibli' unsovmdnesseS specified as such in the Indiana Stallion Enrollment Law. C. M. McCONNELL. President. C. H. ANTHONY, Vice-President. ' (Se^l) Not good unless countersigned by . If. E. MCCARTNEY, Secretary. Dated at Lafayette, Indiana, this 18th day of May, 1915. Renewed March 14. 1916. Void after January 1, 1917. BLACK PRINCE was bred bv Thomas Turner of It**bron, Ind. lie is of good' • X.. 1 exact lik. mi , i west of ' aix 1 1 mil. west of B’fTU Ci.; trier's residence: 3 miles east and 1 mile south of Fair Oaks, at sl2 lb insure colt to stand and suck. Parting with mare or moving from coiinty, fee becomes due and payable at once. Care will !>•• taken to prevent accidents, but will not be responsible should any occur. AUGCST U. SCHtJLTJ?, Owner. ./: Parr. R. R No. 1.
MAGELLAN d’HONDZOCHT. Sound PURE BRED Stallion No. M. •I-aws of Indiana 1913, Chapter 28) The pedigree of the Stallion Magellan d’Homlzoiht. No. r,u36 American, Vol. XVII, P. 543 Foreign. Owned by North *- nion Belgian Horse Co., postofflce, Renseelaer, Ind.. R. F. F. D. 2,, countv Jasper, described as follows: Color and marlts: Bay. star in forehead. Breed. Belgian. Foaled in the year April 7. 1908, has been examined in the office of the Secretary of the Indiana Stallion Enrollment' Board and it is hereby certified that the said stallion is of PURE BREEDING and is registered in the American Association of Imoorters and Breeders of Belgian Draft Horses Stud Book. The above stallion has been examined by Johan Hansson, Rensselaer, Ind. a duly qualified licensed veterinarian, and is certified by affidavit to be free from the transmissible unsoundnesses specified as such in the Indiana Stallion Enrollment Law. CHARLES W. HICKMAN, President. C* V. McCONNELL, Vice-President* D. O. THOMPSON, Secretary. Dated at Lafayette, Ind., this 31st day of March, 1914. Renewed March 7, 1916. Void after January 1, 1917. Magellan was i 'i3. S L foaled April 7, 1908, and was imWgMSgBH9 gian Feb. 6. 1911. VHHn by the Maywood Stock Farm Im’Wj)- porting company of Indianapolis. Ind. I,e has good bone Ftw r and action and (Not’exact likeness) pounds™ 6 * 6 ' 11 19 °° , wi]l make the season of 1916 at the farm of Paul Schultz, 2 miles east and 214 miles north A „ miles east and % mile south of Fair Oaks. 1% miles west and I>4 miles north of Aix, 4 miles south of virgie on main gravel road, at sls to insure colt to stand and suck. Parting with mare or removing from county, fee becomes due and payable at once. Care will be taken to prevent accidents, but wiil not be responsible should any occur. PAUL SCHULTZ, Keeper, i hone 9C3-M. Rensselaer, R-2.
THE 50-50 TEAM FOR INDIANAPOLIS
the birds sang and the ice melted off the Indianapolis Speedway track, you took your hew mount and found that your wildest flights of fancy had come true. That is why Eddie Rickenbacher, manager of the Prest-O-Lite team of two Maxwell cars is happy. With him and his team rpate, Pete Henderson, it is 50-50. The two cars look alike, are built alike, and run alike, and you could fool almost everybody else but Eddie and Pete. They could tell which car was which in their sleep. They expect to do great things in the Sixth International 300-Mile Sweepstakes Race on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway May 30, and the favored few who have see nthese rejuvenated Maxwells in practice believe the foreignbuilt cars, such as the Sunbeam, Peugeot and Fiat, will have all.they can do to compete with these Made in U. S. 4. cars. Many new fangltd contraptions and mechanical features are to be found on these two cars, but in the main their principles are the same as those created by Ray Ha rroun some years ago.
EXPORTS OF FOODSTUFFS
Decline $0:1,000,000 as to Shipments to European Countries, Washington, May. !).—Europe’s foodstuff purchases in the United States, as shown in figures published today by the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, have fallen off sharply within the last few months, compared with the enormous shipments that crossed the Atlantic in the first year of the war. Foodstuff exports’ in the nine months ending with March show a decline in Value of $63,000,000 from the corresponding period of the year before. Shipments of meat and meat products increased, totalling within, the nine months $180,000,000, against $ 1 32,000,000 the year before, but d eel in ing area (Ist tu ff ex ports . red u ced she aggregate value of food shipment.- from $956,000,000 to $893,00 0.0 On
THREE BOVS INJURED
Crashed Into an Auto When Riding a Motorcycle Car. Hammond, Ind., May I o.—Three Crown Point high school hoys on a motorcycle car ran into a Motion train and were tossed aside and only slightly hurt. They resumed their .tourney, later to be tossed 4 0 feet by a touring car, their lights having been smashed in the first accident. IGiney Swanson, son of A. .1. Swansou, president of the American Trust company bank, was injured internally. Harvey Minas’s chest was crushed, and Louis Bjegel’s skull was fractured. Edward Edeer, president of the Lake County Tile company, owner of the auto, took ttie boys to the Crown Point hospital.
Taggart To Be There.
Washington, May 1 2. — Senator Thomas Taggart will go to Indianapolis next week to attend a general organization round-up of the Democratic forces in Indiana. The 92 Democratic county chairmen and the 1 3 members of the Democratic state committee are expected to be present.
The worst extravangance is waste or time; but it is not extravagance TO REAR THIS AD I have three makes of buggies for sale that can not be topped by any firm in four states—-Binkley, Page Bros, and Studebaker. All are guar-* antee. jobs. Just received the- Binkley car, call and inspect same. All three styles have been sold off my floors for years. All these buggies are up-to-date in style and quality and the prices are right, too. No advance at my shop nor loss of quality. On Front Street, Rensselaer, Ind. Yours respectfully, CHAS. A. ROBERTS. Collegian and Frat sflits for the men and young men. They will make the older man look nobby. At Duvall’s Quality Shop.—C. EARL DUVALL. The greatest line of new suits in the city and at prices you can afford. Let us show you.—ROWLES & PARKER.
Avoid Spring Colds. Sudden changes, high winds, shifting seasons cause colds and grippe, and these spring colds are annoying and dangerous and are likely to turn into a chronic summer cough. In such cases take a treatment of Dr. King’s New Discovery, a pleasant laxative tar syrup. It soothes the cough, checks the cold and helps break up an attack of grippe. Its already prepared, no mixing or fussing. Just ask your druggist for a bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery. Tested and tried for over 40 years, —-Advt.
YOITD smile, too, if during the long, weary, dark and gloomy, and all the other adjectived winter days you had been working underlock and key to finish two race cars; then when spring came and
Centennial News Letter.
Centennial pageantry makes its bow in Indiana, in company with blooming flowers, leafing trees and greening meadows, in this lyric, spring time month of May. The initial step is taken by Evansville, .May 10-1 I, in a great pageant which will take two nights for its presentation. It is distinctly a state pageant, as Vanderburg county will next year observe its own centennial. it opens with the Mound Builders who appear with uncertain steps, dim lights suggesting the mystery that bangs over the early history of this country. In brighter light there follows the portrayal of Indiana's authentic history. The second night begins with the story of ille Civi 1 war. The crown:ng and probably tire most original feature will be found in the forge fire of modern industry. The lighting effects will be most striking and effective. Airs. Albion Fellows Bacon and Carl Dreisch, both of Evansville, are writer and director respectively, of the pageant.
I All roads lead to Bloomington, May 16 10 18, When the pageant of i Bloomington and Indiana university will b'e presented in beautiful setting on the picturesque campus of the state university. State Pageant Master W. C. Langdon is the anthor and director, ably supported by Prof. I C. D. Campbell, head of the music j department of the university, who has composed the pageant music. The pageant opens with a burst of music and a blaze of color, introducing the Pioneers led by the spirits of Hope and Determination. The first episode pictures the settling of Bloomington, followed by the opening of the seminary. The episode portraying the founding of the uni- ! versify is striking in conception and will he most impressive. The story follows of the struggle in Indiana for education, led by Caleb Mills, against the forces of ignorance and conversatism. The incidents of the storm period of 1861-65 are brought out, followed by the presentation of the new regime. The city of Bloomington aitcl tile university are emerifig into the spirit of the pageant most enthusiastically, and everything points toward a most success-
f«l presentation. Closely following the Bloomington -pageant comes that of Vincennes, May 18-19, prepared by George S. Cottman of Indianapolis. In a sense this is primary and fundamental. As far as the history of the state is concerned, it is to Vincennes that all roads lead. The history that clusters around the old French fort, and the romance that lingers thereabout, must he reproduced before the real [ state history may be properly shown. I This is the task toward which Mr. Cottman is successfully addressing himself, aided by the co-operation of the people of Vincennes. The pageant will be presented on the banks of the Wabash in a setting of great natural beauty. On May 15 in connection with the National Conference of Charities and j Corrections, the Boys’ Industrial | school of Plainfield will present, the pageant “Indiana,” of which W. O. Conway of Indianapolis is author and director. The peculiar, impelling force which has achieved and made the state what it is, has been personified and made the central figure of the pageant. The production should be a potent inspiration to the hoys, an interesting experiment from the point of view of the conference, and an effective advertisement of the centennial to the country at large. 25c boys’ stockings, two for 25c, when you’re Hamillized.
Is Your Family Without a Car?
' S \ y - *
83-B - $695
Also Model 75, $615
Willys Silent Knight $1,125
Isn’t it time now for them to have one? The rosy cheeks It will bring to the youngsters—the delight that will dance in their eyes—will repay you for the outlay many times over. And it will mean a bigger, broader, healthier, happier life for the whole family. And to serve that end—completely—here is the big, powerful 'family Overland, developed and improved, but reduced in price. Fathers and mothers all over the country are choosing this car to serve their family needs. Never before has any one car been such a universal favorite Since this car was announced last June it has outsold any other car of its size virtually two for one. There are, of course, valid reasons for such pronounced preference. It “handles” so easily that any adult member of the family can drive it. Electrical control buttons are conveniently located on the steering column—an arrange ment exclusive with Overlands and a very few much higher priced cars. Every control for starting, for stopping, for speeding up, for slowing dowm, for lighting, for dimming, for sounding the warning signal—all are within a few inches of the hand or foot when the driver is sitting in a pecfectly natural position. And everything works easily and smoothly. Then there is that wonderful flow of abundant power. No other car is anywhere near as powerful at anywhere near so low a price. You must pay nearly S2OO more for any other car with so much power. Small wonder, therefore, that this is two for one the favorite family car of its size or anywhere near it. And now is the time to buy—delay may be costly. We guarantee that the price of this model will never be less. But $605 for such a car is a remarkably low price. And the cost of materials is rising. So we cannot guarantee that the price will remain so low. LET ME HAVE YOUR ORDER NOW Have at present time a few used cars at a big bargain. You ran always get a good car and good terms of me. Dr. J. Hansson, Agent
