Jasper County Democrat, Volume 20, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 June 1917 — Page 4

News of the Week Cut Down for Busy Readers

U, S. —Teutonic War News The American schooner Margaret B. Rouss was sunk by a submarine near the French-Italian coast and the crew robbed by the Germans, according to Capt. Fred L. loot, master of the schooner, who arrived at an American port from France. ,\* ♦ ♦ President Wilson, speaking at Memorial exercises in Arlington cemetery, declared the time had borne for action by this nation and that he had no fear of the part America would play in the great world war. “In the providence of God,” ho said, “America once more has an opportunity to show the world that she was born to serve mankind.” ♦ * * Smash France before the United States, goes in. Tl>is_.isGennuny’s chief hope of victory, and it is tire policy on which the Gerhian government is concentrating all its energies. » * * The Westminster Gazette publishes a message from a correspondent who r says the submarine menace is being mastered by a simple method, which the correspondent indicates is the invention of an American. * * • It was announced at Washington that the National Guard must be recruited by draft'to Its war strength of 409,000 men. States are showing a falling off in volunteer enlistments. The prospects also are that men between twenty-one and thirty years, inclusive, will have to be drafted to enable the government to bring the regular army to its full authorized war strength. * • * Four thousand men and women In the Auditorium theater at Chicago demanded that the government set forth in simple language the terms upon which it will make peace with Germany. And 5,000 other persons held a peace meeting at Grant Park, which resulted in a riot and the arrest of eight speakers who had denounced President-Wilson.

» * • A mob of several hundred antiwar advocates, aroused by Socialist orators, rioted at Cleveland, O. A hundred police battled the disturbers before subduing them. Five arrests were made. • * * Henry Reuterdahl, marine artist and writer on naval subjects, Was enrolled in the naval reserves, class 4 at New York. * * * Secretary Daniels announced at Washington that word of the sailing of an American destroyer flotilla for Europe had been wired ahead to Germany, and that German submarines . had succeeded in scattering mines at the entrance of the harbor for .which the American warships were bound. » * * * Three Americans are believed to have lost their lives in the sinking by German U-boats of the Cunard liner Feltria and the British steamer Corfield. * * * More than 5,000 Polish residents of Detroit, Mich., bearing banners denoting allegiance to America’s cause marched with Civil war veterans and other organizations in the Decoration day paraue. About 1(X) -6f the Polish marchers enlisted in the army and navy. • • * Domestic Despite utmost efforts of the government at Washington, a large group of skilled mechanics who cannot be quickly replaced quit work on warships being rushed to completion in the yards of the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock company on Hampton Roads. ♦ * ♦ Fred W. Zimmer, an aviation instructor, died at Buffalo, N. Y., from injuries received when his liydroairplane crashed into a telegraph pole. Seymour H. Knox, Jr., a wealthy young resident of Buffalo, was hurt. v * ♦ *. Seven people were killed and 22 or more injured in a tornado which almost demolished the mining town of Mineral Point, Mo. * ♦ * One hundred'carloads of eggs, said to contain 14,400,000 eggs, were found in storage in Denver by James R. Noland, secretary of state, with three storage plants not yet investigated. * * * After a thrilling escape from death in' a sawmill accident near Jonesville, La., William Lorimer, former United ' States senator and banker, is confined to his home at Chicago, his right arm broken in three places. • • * Almost 350,000 Boy Scouts of the United States have enlisted at President Wilson’s request, to circulate 10,000,000 Liberty loan circulars. Scouts and their recruits have 2,830,000 garden plots under cultivation. * * • A jnob of 3,000 persons, determined, as they shouted, to rid the city of negroes imported to work In factories and munition plants, swept through the streets of East St. Louis, IIL, attaching and beating negroes wherever found. Several negroes were seriously injured.

Foreign An official telegram to Zurich, Switzerland, from Budapest says that Empero'r Charles has appointed Count Julius Andrassy premier of Hungary. The Brazilian chamber passed the first reading of the government measure revoking Brazil’s neutrality in the war between GermanJ’ and the'United States. The vote was 136 to 3. * ♦ * The Industrial crisis in Russia is so Acute that, according to the minister of finance, M. Shingaroff, only a miracle can save the country from economic ruin. The socialist ministers at a ministerial council in Petrograd said that the only possibility they saw of settling the difficulties was to bring the war to a close. * . • '♦ The agrarian disorders, wholesale confiscation of property, incendiarism and other dangerous symptoms of anarchy which followed the overthrow of the old authority in many important Industrial centers and agricultural districts of central and southern Russia are becoming more serious, according to dispatches to- Petrograd from various points. * » » Washington Another fundamental change in the war tax bill was agreed upon unanimously by the senate committee at Washington, which decided to strike out the whole section levying $200,000,OOU by a general tariff increase of 10 per cent on an ad valorem basis. As a substitute the committee proposes direct -excise, or consumption taxes, on sugar, tea, coffee and cocoa. Every federal agency throughout the country has been ordered to attend and report on any anti-registration meeting that may be held. Attorney General Gregory at Washington has determined that vigorous prosecutions shall follow in every instance where such meetings develop disloyalty in speech or action. s * • • The senate at Washington ordered a searching inquiry into the Mongolia accident which caused the death of two Red Cross nurses on their way to Eu-< rope. The investigation will be gonducted by the naval affairs committee. * * * Without a roll call, the Lever bill for a food survey was passed by the house at Washington. The bill allows the secretary of 'agriculture to spend $14,522,000 for a food survey and stimulation of production.

Official announcement was made at Washington of a plot to hinder registration and to resist conscription by an armed uprising against the government. Eleven arrests have been made. Th 6 conspiracy is declared by the department of justice to have had its. origin in Texas, where a society was formed for the ostensible purpose of co-operative buying. • * • * President Wilson issued a proclamation at Washington designating the week ending June 23 as Red Cross week. The proclamation calls upon the people to give generously to the fund for the support of the national relief needs. • * • European War News French troops captured a German post north of Vacherauville in the Verdun region, according to an official announcement issued by the Paris war office. Two German attacks on the Champagne front were repulsed. ♦ * ♦ The London war office communication, says that British troops carried out a successful raid east of Riche-bourg-L’Avoue. Two German airplanes were brought down ami six others were driven down out of control. Five British machines are missing. • * * It was announced officially at London that the British hospital. ship Dover Castle has been torpedoed and sunk. All of the patients were saved. The British armed merchant cruiser Hilary also was torpedoed and sunk, and a British destroyer was sunk after a collision. * ♦ * Petrograd announces that Russian ■sailors of the Russian Black sea,fleet made a landing at Chivi, east of Samsun, on the Anatolian coast, destroyed the Turkish post there and burned a store of grain and two large sailboats. TWO other ves.sels were taken to Treblzond. * ♦ ♦ An official statement .issued at London says that counting the Americans * serving in the British and French ■ armies and the additional units ordered to France? there will seen be 100,000 Americans in France. * * * Forty-eight passengers and 85 of the crew of the Spanish steamer Eizaguirre are believed to have perished as a result of the sinking of the vessel. A dispatch received by Reuter’s at London reports the loss of the Eizaguerre. ♦ ,♦ • The Amsterdam Telegraaf says entente allied airplanes dropped bombs J on Ghent, Belgium, partly demolishing St. Peter station, one of the most imi portant railroad stations in Belgium, i The newspaper adds that many per- ■ sons were killed or wounded. - I* * • | The Italians have ’crossed the Timavo river and occupied the village of Pan Giovanni, northwest of Dulno, near the Gulf of Trieste, the Rome ■ war office announces. They have captured nine six-inch guns. The civil evacuation of Trieste has been ordered.

BIG CUT IN MILLINERY—MARY MEYER-HEALY

CENSORSHIP IS BARRED

PLAN TO MUZZLE U. S. PRESS DEFEATED IN HOUSE. Conference Report Is Sent Back to Committee With Instructions to Kill Section. k Washington, Jbne I.—The president lost his fight for the censorship of the ' press of the United States during the . war. ; j The president’s defeat took place in i the house of representatives. It was , decisive. - ■ • : : • j j After several hours’ debate the house voted upoii a motion made by Representative Graham of Pennsylvania, tn recommit the conference report on the espionage bill to the conference committee with instructions to eliminate the censorship Section. The motion was adopted by a vote of 184 ayes, 144 nays and five members 1 voting > . ' | | The Republicans, in accordance with their conference decision, voted practically solidly for the Graham motion. They were joined by a number of Democrats. Thus, the house reversed its own action. It will lie recalled that wh-n the espionage bill was pending in the house the so-called Gard amendment providing for a limited censorship was adopted. Not that the members .of the house; any more than the newspapers want information primed in reference to movement s of troops or ships or to re- , veal the slightest hint of policy or action which would be helpful to the cne- , my. - But the house as well as the senate has been impressed by England s experience with the censorship, by the ’patriotic supppression of news by American journals and by the general opinions that prevails that scandals will be prevented if the activity of the press lie not curtailed.

MANY LIBERTY BONDS SOLD

Loan Subscriptions Nearing Goal, Wall Street Hears—Now Totals $1,450,000,000. New York, June I.—ln Wall street It was unofficially announced that subscriptions to the Liberty loan- now aggregate $1,450,000,000. i Jesse I. Livermore, who has won and lost several fortunes in the cotton and stock markets, has taken ?!.- 000.000 in bonds. The Bank of New York subscribed for $4,000,000 in bonds. Of this amount sJtOOb-000 is for the Atlantic Mutual Insurance company. Boston, June I.—The First National bank of Boston subscribed for 000 of the Liberty loan.

PREACHER REVILES WILSON

Rev. C. L. Lehnert, German Lutheran Pastor of St. Paul, Arrested for Anti-Conscription Agitation.

St. Paul. June 1. —Rev. C. L. Lehnert, German Lutheran minister, was arrested here for anti-conscription agitation. Rev.’ Lehnert, it is charged, also told the Minneapolis Liberty loan committee to “go to’h— ’ and "to take President Wilson along with you.” in a reply to a letter soliciting a Liberty loan subscription.

THE MARKETS

Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago.,, May 31. Open- High- Low- ClosWheat— ing. est. est. ing. July 1.94-2.60 2.<*' 4.93'- 4 1.94 Sept. 1.81-S3 1-S3 1.79 LBO Corn— July 1.39’4-41 L43’4 Sept 1-26 L2S% L22’-* 1.235-S Oats— , July .........5714-44 -SBs Sept FI-OUR—Spring wheat, special brands, in wood. $14.(0 per bbl.; hard spring wheat patents. 95 per cent grade, in jute. $13.06. straight, in export bags. $125-'; first clears $ll.BO. in jute: second clears. pjTaGl^s s . s^.o*S.xiOz mt. wheat patents, in jute. $!- v '__ standard soft winter wheat patents. sl2.w. tn jute; fancy hard winter wheat patents. in jute: standard hard winter wheat patents. $12.50. in jute: first clears. $-' ••? IT 50 in jute: second clears, ir. jute, S'.'"-? 9.50: pure white rye. $12.8*?; pure dark rye, $11.50. H XY—Choice timothy. s2l.CO<t22<O; No. 1 timothy. s3W*[email protected]: No. 2 timothy, sl3." r ,/fi-wonNo 3 red top and grassy mixed timothy. clover. light clover mixed. sit.<v*s? heavy clover mixed. $17.-Wl?-w: Kansas and Oklahoma choice. No. L $22-'»3 23J50: No. <2BUTTER— Creamery, extras. 42c: extra firsts. 41§4P4c: firsts. seconds. STU-ffSOc; packing stock, ladles, 34%®35c; process. 3>fi3s%c. ■EGGS—First. SifiSc: ordinary firsts. 31%@33c: miscellaneous lots, cases included.” 32’?T34 1 4c: cases returned. 35extra. 37’»'?3S%c: checks, 31®ol~;C' dirties, 31%®32c; storage. 35%®36e. LIVE POULTRY— Turkeys. 18c; fowls. 19c- broilers. 34®35c; roosters. 15%c; ducks, 16@18c; springs, 24§25c; geese, 12@ 14c NEW POTATOES—Texas Triumph, I 3 9C @3.30 bu.; Louisiana, s3.O9@iS> Uh,

Live Stock.

Chicago. May 31CATTLE—Good to choice steers. $12.25@ 13 70- yearlings, good ta choice. [email protected]; fair’to good steers. s9.y@ I 2.«; stockers and feeders. $8.0:<@10-OC«; good to choice cows. $9.25@10-50: good to Choice heifers. $9 [email protected]: fair to good cows. canners. $6.5607.35; cutters. $7.2508.15; bologna bulls. $8.6i*09.65: butcher bulls. $9.50 016.50; heavy calves. s9s'?@ll-50; good to 'pirjme calves, $12.50@13-75. HOGS—Prime light butchers. $15,350 15 70; fair to fancy light. sls.1 J -015.5: medium freight butchers, N>6®225 lbs.. sls-7? @15185; heavy butchers. lbs.. sls-70 @15.90;-tehoice heavy packing. $15.20@15-®: rough heavy packing. sK.‘'- 015»: pigs, fair to gooff, [email protected]; stags, $i5.66@ 15.75. . SHEEP— CHpped wethers. j clipped ewes. $12.66013.60: Colorado lambs. sl7 [email protected]: nativd lambs. sl7.g>@lß <jn; ' shbm lambs. sl4.spring lambs,'

STATE HAPPENINGS RECORDED IN BRIEF

News Items From All Over Indiana. TOWN VOTES DRY AND WET Wheatfield Women Thought They Had Downed “Demen Rum” Until Notified They Had No Right to Vote on the Question, y Wheatfield. June I—Wheatfield was voted wet and dry. Figures showed that the men of the town gave liquor a majority of 29, while if rhe votes of the women were counted the drys had won by 52. Because women misconstrued a telegram from Governor Goodrich and thought the woman .suffrage law had Income effective, they cast ballots in the wet and dry . election separate from the meh. ' Today they learned- their victory v.as an empty • ne. as the laws of the 1917 legislature had not yet been promulgated by rhe g-«vemor. Eighty-six men voted against liquor and 113 votqd f..r Uqnpr, while 22 wom<n v<:—l f.-r liquet and 105 voted-against I 'it, .

Wit! Get to Vote.

Huntington. June 1. —Mrs. I>. C. Anders, n, who, after working as telegraph Operator for the Wabash railroad for almost forty years w ithout an accident, slipi<ed Under a train last winter and lost both feet, was brought home from the Wabash hospital at Peru. One of Mrs, Anderson’s greatest fears when in the hospital was that she would not get to vote.

Acts Now Effective.

Indianapolis, June 1. —Governor Goodrich issued a proclamation declaring rhe acts of the 1917 legislature duly enacted and not vetoed, to be in full force and effect. The laws to become effective include the constitutional convention act. Up? Wright prohibition law providing for prohibition April 2. 1918, the absent voters’ act and the woman suffrage act.

Auto is Stripped.

Alexandria. June 1.-y Fred Spade, an employee of the Lippincott Glass company. was the victim of an automobile theft that resulted in the disappearance of everything about his car with the exception of an extra rim, which was riveted to the car. Five tires, a kit of idols, , two extra tubes and numerous other articles in the machine were stolen.

Sues for $4,200.

Rushville. Jane 1. —William Smith, wh<« is suinz the estate of Isabel Fry for £l2><o for services rendered? testified in the .circuit: court that when he worked for Mrs. Fry. twenty years ago, farm laborers received 75 cents a day. He said on the witness stand he started to work on the Fry farm when he was thirteen years old.

Horse Throws Aged Man.

Fort Wayne, June 1. Although ejrtlty years old. Martin Lord, a farmer*hear Monmouth. south of here; still rides h-Tses. While riding a horse, bareback.' after his cows, he was thrown off. breaking the bones in his ankle and badly tearing the ligaments. The animal became frightened at thunder.

Track Walker Falls Dead.

Valparaiso. June I.—Fritz Arens, fifty-nine, track walker for the Chesapeake A Ohio at Malden, fell dead while on duty. Mrs. Frank O’Brien of Gary and Mrs. Thomas Hannon of Kouts saw Arens fall and they lifted his body from the track. Heart trouble was the cause.

Man and Wife Injured.

Bicknell. June I.—John Irwin and his wife were painfully injured when E<l McKinnon threw a • beer bottle through the windshield of an automobile in which they were riding. Both were cut about the face and body. McKinnon was arrested on a charge of assaultand battery. ’

Farmer Drowns.

Spencer. June I—Fred Ranard, a farmer living nine miles southwest of this city, was drowned in Raccoon creek, in an effort to Save a corn planter from beinz carried away by the hisrh water. His body has not been recovered. He is survived by a widow and five children.

Doctors Organize Council.

Indianapolis. June 1. —A state coun< oil of medical defense was announced by a number of prominent physicians of the state. Dr. Joseph R, Eastman, who recently returned from duty, in a hospital in Austria, is chairman and Dr. Charles N. Coombs of Terre Haute is secretary.

Farmer Kills Himself.

Newcastle. June 1. —John M. Deck, fifty-five, a farmer, committed suicide at his home near Knightstown by shootinz himself with a shotgun. Deck been ill for several months. The widow, two sons and a daughter survive.

Teach Girls to Use Tools.

Brazil, June 1.-—Girls are taught the use of tools in the Brazil public schools, and the annual school exhibition which closed Monday night included many articles of furniture made by the girls.

INDIANA LEADS RECRUITING

Fort Wayne District Has Filled Its Quota, S?ys the War Department at Washington. Washington. .Tune 1. —The great agricultural country of the middle West, of which Chicagd i< the hub. is shown to be the patriotic heart of trie nation in figures on army reclining given out by the War department, Fifteen of the first thirty rei-rmiing stations in number of men enlisted are in the Chicago district. Twenty-six *of the thirty are In tire West, middleand Southwest. The recruititig’figurt's given out were the returns for April. The Fort Wayne (Ind.) district had a long lead, having tilled ,75.2 per Cent of its quota by the end of AprH., Since then the quota has been entirely filled. Tfie Fort Wayne district includes Elkhart, Gary, Hammond, Hartford, Indiana Harbor, Kokomo, Logansport, Michigan City, Portland, Rochester, South Bend and Valparaiso.

P. J. Dwyer, Horseman, III.

New York, June I.—Philip J. Dwyer, noted horseman and principal owner of the Aqueduct and Gravesend race tracks.' is reported critically ill at hotel here.

PROTECT YOUR BUILDINGS FROM LIGHTNING by having them properly rodded. Sixteen years’ experience in the business and never have had a building damaged from lightning that I rodded. Best and heaviest rods used. Call and see me or ’phone 135 or 568. —F. A. BICKNELL, Rensselaer, Indiana. ts

SENSATION IN STARKE COUNTY

(Continued from page one)

were sold at and no accrued interest was ever turned into the county treasurer. The county has been paying interest on these 5y 2 per cent bonds and taking them up as they became due since that time. A few days some of the these old 4 % per cent bonds, which were supposed to have been together with interest coupons thereon, were sent to a bank at Knox for collection, coming from the Citizens’ National bank at Crawfordsville, where it is claimed Ransbottom sold some SIO,OOO of the bonds last fall. The present auditor refused to issue his warrant and proposes to let the courts decide the matter. Whether the county is liable or not, the bonds really having been signed by the county commissioners, is a mooted question. It is very evident,, however, that the county must pay, the purchasers lose or Ransbottom’s bondsmen be held liable. His last official bond was for SIO,OOO and was signed by John L. Moorman, editor of the Starke County. Republican, Herbert R. Coffel, John W. Horner, Oscar B. Smith, Henry C. Rodgers, Abel Rea, Lee Wolfe and John C. Jones. Two sets of the bonds were sold by Ransbottom to the Crawfordsville bank and another set was sold to the Dime Savings bank of Toledo, Ohio. Several of the bonds are past due and it is thought that Ransbottom made no effort to dispose of such. Those which he did negotiate are understood to have been sold last December. His whereabouts are at present unknown, but he is thought to be in Canada. He is said to have been in Ober, Starke county, about six weeks ago. Ransbottom was very much opposed to the public accounting law and a few years ago refused to draw a warrant to pay for the services of accountants in his county. Judge Vurpillat of Starke county, in a suit brought there to test this law, declared the law unconstitutional, but the supreme court held otherwise. Ransbottom is also said to have been very vehement in his denunciation of the public accounting law at the meetings of the state auditor’s association. His brother Walter, who was a former trustee of Washington township, Starke county, was found short in his accounts but made good the shortage, and left the county, locating in, Michigan. It irony that in Starke county where a treasurer, a sheriff, a recorder, an auditor and two township trustees have been defaulters, where certain officials made school fund loans that they did not wish the public to know about, that the most determined effort was made to abolish the public accounting law.

Let The Democrat supply you with typewriter ribbons and carbon papers. We have ribbons for all makes of standard typewriters, and handle fc he best grade_Qf carbon papers, and notice the results you get. “Everybody reads The Democrat,’’ and thus the satisfactory results received from advertising in its columns. Do you use the want ad- columns of The Democrat? If not, try an ad.

FARMERS’ INSURANCE The Farmers’ Mutual Co. placed , almost $85,000 new insurance on its books during the month of March./The Farmers’ State Cyclone placed over $2,000,000 the same month. Average cost of Mutual Fire about 24 cents on the SIOO annually. Average cost of State Cyclone for its ten years’ service, cents for SIOO. Call on Marion I. Adams, who will write you in either or both Companies. Money saved is money made. J-9

[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 more times —as the case may be —for 2b cents. Where replies are sent in The Democrat’s care, postage will be charged for forwarding such replies to the advertiser.)

FOR SALE Some young fox hounds, six weeks old. —L. A. MECKLENBURG. Phone 109. ts Tomato, cabbage, pepper and celery plants.—C. W. RHOADES. Phone 148, ts Spotted Poland China hogs}* March pigs, both boars and gilts, ready for delivery now; all registered; prices reasonable. Come and see them or ’phone WILLIAM JOHNSON, Mt. Ayr. Jl7 Overland 5-passenger auto. Good condition. Payments to suit purchaser. Phone 45.—E. M. LARUE. ts Good Recleaned Timothy Seed, $3 per bushel, at RENSSELAER GARAGE. ts Kentucky bred, registered Jersey bull, No. 130677, A. J. C. C., one of the finest bred bulls in Indiana. See his heifef yearlings. Stands this season for a moderate cash fee at Riveredge Dairy, Lincoln avenue west. —RUSSELL VANHOOK. j 2 Five-passenger Automobile in good running condition, electric horn. Presto-lite lights, top, good tires, two practically new; extra Inner tubes, jack, etc. A bargain if sold soon. Will demonstrate.— F. E. BABCOCK. Remington Typewriter, No. 7, with tabulating attachment. Machine in splendid condition and looks and is practically as good as new; cost $l2O, will sell at a bargain.—THE DEMOCRAT. One of the Best Located Residence properties in Rensselaer, 75x300 feet, corner lot fronting on two improved streets; good two-story house, with cistern, drilled well, bath, barn and other out-buildings, etc. Ground alone is worth price asked for entire property. Terms if desired. For further particulars call or address B. care THE DEMOCRAT.

WANTED Men and teams to work on gravel road at Remington. Call for WM. MAHONEY Camp, at Remington, Indiana. J 6 FOR RENT A Dandy Suite of Office Rooms over The Democrat office.—F. E. BABCOCK. ts The Five-Boom Flat over The Democrat office, city water, bath, electric lights, etc. To small family only.—F. E. BABCOCK. Phone 315 or 311. MISCELLANEOUS Butter Wrappers—Vegetable parchment butter wrappers in any quantity desired, either plain of printed, at The Democrat Office, ts Storage—l have two rooms for storage of light household or other goods In The Democrat building. Terms reasonable. —F. E. BABCOCK. Phone 315 or 311. Typewriter Ribbons—The Democrat carries in stock In its fancy stationery department the famous Nedich <! make of ribbons for nearly all the standard makes of typewriters. Price 65c each. Will be sent by mail prepaid to any address on receipt of price. ts

FINANCIAL Money to Loan —5 per cent farm loans.—JOHN A. DUNLAP. ts Mutual Insurance —Fire and Lightning. Also state cyclone. Inquire of M. I. ADAMS. Phone 533-L. ts Farm Loans —I can procure you a five-year loan on your farm at 5 per cent. Gan 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. , ■. ts Farm Loans—Money to loan on farm property In any sums up to SIO,OOO. —E. P. HONAN. I flnl thnl Without DeUy ’ I LUI lIU Without Commission, I UVI Illi) Without Charges for H [Making or Recording Instruments. W. H. PARKINSON. An armload of old papers for five cents at The Democrat office.