Jasper County Democrat, Volume 20, Number 54, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 October 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
SENATE PASSES ARMY RISK BILL
Vote on Measure Carrying Appropriation of $176,000,000 Was 71 to 0. HIGHER RANK FOR PERSHING Commander of U. S. Force in France Made a General—President to Sign $7,657,434,410 Urgent Deficiency Bill Today. Washington, Oct. s.—With the $lO,000 maximum insurance plan restored, as urged by the administration, and •with an additional provision raising Major General Pershing, commanding the American forces in France, and Major General Bliss, "chief of staff, to the rank of, general, the soldiers and sailors’ insurance bill, carrying an appropriation of $176,000,000, was passed l»v the senate by a vdte of 71 to 0. House Adopts Report. In the house the conference report on the $7.t>57.434,410 urgent deficiency bill wa- unanimously adopted. This is the greatest measure of its kind in the -liistory ■ f .any government. It finishes a pr gram of expenditure such as no other e'tigress or parliament ever has approached. Approximately $20,000,Uoo,b»x» has been Ipent or authorized in expenditures or loans to the allies.
Defeat Insurance Cut. The a . .. ..-•ration won its fight In the senate to keep the maximum of sai;--s i - ■'.di"r<’ insurance up to, xpafter, by a large vote, motions to cut it to were voted down. - Wilson will sign the measure today. The m-nsure.carries $3,255,976,016.93 in direct: appropriations, and various departments of the government are authorized to enter into contracts if completed, will call for $2,410,458,393.30 additional. ■ Some of the larger items are: Siege, : ; and mountain artillery, $695,piy S an authorization of $225,<000,006. ; ‘ . Ar: olevy ammunition, $663,000,000, p’ > >777.18-.7'0 in authorizations, I* :r ai d acquisition of ship- , $2 plus ’ o'Hi.ooo authorized. ■ . . , ' .
MEMORIAL FOR M’KINLEY
Many Attend Dedication of S4OO/100 Monument at Niles, O. Niles, 0.. Oct. 5. —With thousands of persons from northeastern Ohio participating. the McKinley memorial was dedicated here With impressive ceremony. Many notables assisted in the exercises. It was a holiday for Niles. A chorus of several hundred voices jmd a parade at noon were features of the program formally opening up the §400X>0() building commemorating the martyred president who was.born a Fh >rt distance from the site. Political dut - from Cleveland, Canton, Pittsburgh and YoungstoWn participated in th*- parade. The building not only contains a magni ficent statue of McKinley, but in the two wings are an auditorium and the public library. The McKinley statue, the work of J. Massy Luind of New York, is carved Georgia marble. The statue weighs 18 tons.
SUFFRAGISTS RIOT IN JAIL
Seventeen White House Pickets Battle With Negresses. Washington. Oct. 5. Seventeen members of the woman’s party, now in the Occoquan workhouse for picketing the White House, are bruised and scratched as the result of a free-for-all scramble when the authorities removed one of their number to the hospital without giving notice of her destination, and the other pickets formed a flying wedge to rescue their comrade. During the melee, it is said, some CO negro women, also prisoners at the workhouse, went to the rescue of the keepers, and details of the battle as It was waged vary. The mix-up has resulted in new charges being laid by the pickets against the conduct of the workhouse. One account of the melee is that it verged on being a race riot.
WON’T FRATERNIZE WITH FOE
Russians Answer Germans’ Invitation With Bullets. Petrograd, Oct. s,—The Germans on the southwestern front a£ain are attempting to fraternize with the Russians by throwing boxes of tobacco and cigaretes into the Russian trenches and calling to the soldiers to “come out of the trenches.” The Russkaia Volya fjays. in connection with the German attempts that “our soldiers are answering them with guntire. ' ,
BOMB KILLS PERSHING MAN
American Private Intended to Keep Explosive as Souvenir. American Field Headquarters in France, OctA 5. —Despite repeated warnings, an American private picked up an Unexploded bomb for a souvenir. As he mounted his horse and rode away the £>oml> exploded, killing him. The horse was knocked down, but was eot hurt.
ASKS ALL TO AID LOAN
VICE SAYS NOW IS THE TIME TO PROVE FAITH. Marshall Urges Americans to Take Enough Bonds So as to Feel Sacrifice for the Cause. Washington, Oct. 5. —Vice President Marshall, in a statement issued on behatf of the Liberty loan, said he wanted to see “every man, woman and child in America who has been waving the flag, singijig the ‘Star-Spangled Banner’ and bragging about the glories of democracy prove now by their work that they have a genuine faith in the American republic." “That proof,” added the vice president, “demands of us all that we take enough of the war obligations of this government to make us feel some sort of sacrifice for the cause in which each of us professes to believe and does believe.
“We have been running tip the American flag at all the schoolhouses; we have been rising with solemn countenances whenever the ‘StarSpangled Banner’ is played, and we have been proclaiming to the world our never-ending allegiance to those great principles of _ democracy upon which the republic Is founded and is now supposed to rest. v “Now we have reached the point where our faith is being put to the touchstone of bur Works, and we are soon to find out whether this love which we profess for our institutions, our country and our flag is but a sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal or whether It is a great and vital inspiration of individual and national life.”
New York, Oct. s.—Official and tinofficial subscriptions here to.; the second Liberty loan recorded up to eleven o'clock by the Liberty loan committee of the second federal reserve district totaled $107,088,000. Madison. Wjs.. Oft. 5. —W. G. Simmons, Kenosha millionaire, after listening io Secretary McAdoo’s two speeches for the new Liberty loan, subscribed to $250,000 of the bonds. Denver, Colo., Oct. s.—Assurances that- Oklahoma was thoroughly loyal, despite recent antl-National army disorders In that section, and that the country need have no fear the West would not do its part in carrying the second Liberty loan are contained in a telegram to Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo from Franklin K. Lane, secretary of the interior department. made public by him here after he had addressed a luncheon meeting of the local Civic association in behalf of the second Liberty loan. Kansas City, Mo.. Oct. s.—Onefourth of Kansas City’s second allotment of Liberty loan bonds, $19,500,000, has been subscribed for without
Telegraphers Given Raise.
St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 5.--Thirteen hundred Northern Pacific railroad telegraphers were granted a wage increase of 10 per cent and an eight-hour day, it was announced by M, 11. Clapp, superintendent of telegraph.
French Report Heavy Fire.
Paris, Oct. s.—The. official communique issued by the French war office says that the night was calm except on the right bank of the Meuse, where the artillery on both sides was very active.
THE MARKETS
Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago, Oct. 4. Open- High- Low- ClosCorn- ing. est. est. ing. Dec ....1.19%-% 1-20% 1.18%-% 1.18%-% May 1.16%-% 1.16%'. 1.14%-% 1.15%-% Oats — Dee 59%-% -60% .59 .59-59% May .........61%-% .62 .60% .60%-% FLOUR—Spring wheat, special brands, in wood. $11.40 per bbl.; hard spring wheat patents, 95 per cent grade, in jute, $11.00: straight, in export bags, $10.15; first clears, SIO.OO in jute; -second clears, $8.50; low grades [email protected]; fancy soft winter wheat patents in jute, $10.30; standard soft winter wheat, patents, $lO.lO, in jute; fancy hard winter wheat patents, $ll.OO, in jute; standard hard winter patents, $10.75, in jute' first clears, SIO.OO, In jute; second clears, in jute, [email protected]; new’ White rye, $10.00; new dark rye, $9.40. HAY—Choice timothy, old and new. $23.00 @24 00; No. 1. [email protected]; No. 2. $21.00@ 22 90- standard. [email protected]; No. 3 red top and grassv mixed. [email protected]; light clover mixed. [email protected]; heavy clover mixed, $18.00<fi20.00; clover hay, [email protected]; threshed timothy, [email protected]. BUTTER— Creamery, extras, 43%c; extra first* 43c; firsts, 41%@42%c; seconds, 40%@41c; ’ladles, 39@39%c; process. 41%c; packing stock, 37@38c. EGGS— Fjesh firsts. 36@36%c: ordinary firsts 35@35%c; miscellaneous lots, cases included,'3s@36%c; cases returned, 34@36c; checks country candled, 21@28c; city recandled, 29@30c; dirties, country receipts, 22®28c- No 1 recandled. 29@30c; city recandled, 31@32c; extras, 41@42c; refrigerator stock. 34’<i35%c. LIVE POULTRY— Turkeys, 22c; fowls, 21@24c; roosters. 17%c; spring chickens, 21%c; ducks, 20@22c; geese, 17@18c. POTATOES Minnesota Early Ohios, [email protected] per bu.; Wisconsin white, sl.oo@ 1.45; South Dakotas, [email protected]. CATTLE—Good to choice steers, $14.00@ 17 75- yearlings, go<<l to choice, [email protected]; range steers. $9.59®14.35; stockers and feeders $8.00®9.25; good to choice cows, sß.oo@ 10 00; good to choice heifers, [email protected]; fair to good cows, [email protected]; cancers, so.oo @6 25- cutters, [email protected]; bologna bulls, @6 25’ cutters. [email protected]; bologna bulls, $6 00@7 00* butcher bulls. [email protected];, heavy calves,' [email protected]; good to prime calves, 812.00@’16.00. HOGS-Prime light butchers. [email protected]; faV to fancy light, [email protected]; medium weight butchers, 200@250 lbs., $19.10@1g,60: heavy butchers, 250@400 lbs., [email protected]; choice heavy packing. [email protected]; rough heavy packing, [email protected]; pigs, fair to good’ stags, [email protected]. 'BHEEP-Good to choice wethers, slo.oo@ 12 00- good to choice ewes, [email protected]: veariings '[email protected]; western lambs, good to choice, [email protected]: native lambs, flood to choice, [email protected]; feeding lambs, [email protected], _- ' . >
Important News Events of the World Summarized
U. S.—Teutonic War News Proof that German money was furnished in this country by Count von Bernstorff to Holo Pasha, under arrest in Paris as a spy, will be forwarded to the French government, it was announced aj New York by Merton E. Lewis, state attorney general. » * » Drastic action against newspapers printed in either English or German which are charged with having furthered treason or sedition by their utterances on the war was begun when the Milwaukee Leader, edited by exCongressman Victor L. Berger, was barred from the United States mails. • • »
The first casualty among the American troops in France was announced by the war department at Washington. Corporal Ernest F. Hart of Oxford, N. C., was killed when a hand grenade with which he was practicing accidentally exploded. * * * An American destroyer in British waters -recently was in collision with a British naval vessel, which, after taking off the American crew, towed the disabled destroyer to port. * • • W. W. Atterbury, vice president of the Pennsylvania railroad system, now supervising railroad operations for the troops in France, has been nominated by the president a brigadier general in the National army. Andrew Courtney Campbell, Jr., of Kenilworth, 111., a corporal in the Lafayette escadrille, disappeared while on a reconnoitering expedition in France in his aircraft. His fate is not known. * • *
Report that the rank and file of the enemy troops have a great' longing for peace is confirmed by every prisoner captured by the Canadians In France. One of their chief grievances is the failure of their higher officers to take risks. • • • Washington The $2,700,000,000 war revenue bill passed the senate at. Washington with the only announced dissenting vote coming from Senator La. Follette, although the senator did not seek a roll call on the measure and offered no objection to its passage. * * « Government life insurance for soldiers and sailors, with disability allowance, instead of pensions, is provided i,i the administration bill reported in perfected form to the senate at Washington with plans for quick passage. * ♦ ♦
A furtlter credit of $50,000,000 to Great Britain was extended by the government at Washington. This brings the total advanced to Great Britain thus far up to $1,240,000,000. ♦ * ♦ Important orders affecting coal prices were issued at Washington by Fuel Administrator Harry A. Garfield. By their terms the following become effective: Maximum retail prices of anthracite and bituminous coal, based on dealers’ average gross margin of profit in 1915 plus 30 per cent added to the present cost to dealers, as fixed by the government; reduction of 60 cents or 15 per cent in prices at the mines of Pennsylvania anthracite pea coal. * * * One year from today the United States will have achieved President .Wilson’s aim that we have “incomparably the greatest navy in. the world,” so far as destroyers aj'e concerned. This was the statement of a high official of the navy department at Washington. ♦ ♦ * In the presence of only one secretary, President Wilson at Washington signed the-$2.700 ( 000,000 revenue bill. The bill imposes some kind - off a tax upon almost everyone in this country. Witli few exceptions', its provisions go Into effect at once. * * *
Negotiations are under way, it is understood, between Ottawa and Washington, with a view to bringing,Americans of military age, resident in Canada,’ within the scope of the Canadian draft law. Canadian residents in the United States would similarly be affected under the American law. ♦ ♦ * Domestic The Laredo (Tex.) jail Is filled to overflowing with slackers captured while on their way to Mexico by fed-* eral authorities. *' ♦ *. Seven thousand pottery workers in the United States and Canada, members .of the National Brotherhood of Operative Potters, have voted to strike for higher wages. ■■■ ’. • * Under the direct supervision of President Wilson, assisted by the secretaries of war and labor, a special committee of thk council of national defense, headed by Samuel GomperSj is developing a new government policy toward labor questions, founded largely upon the British government’s war-time practices.
THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT
Charged with disloyal and seditious acts, Theodore Woodward, a banker of Lewis county; lowa, was arrested. He was released on bond of $5,000. • * • M. R. Underwood of Washburn, lit, former Kewanee man, shot and killed his divorced wife, Myrtle Suidan, as she stepped from a train with Ira Snow at Wyoming and then killed himself. Jealousy was given as the cause. • • ' • Mrs. William Littauer, wife of Captain Littauer of Camp Devens, Ayer, Mass., 'offered SSOO, with no questions, for the return of SIO,OOO worth of jewels. She discovered the loss after leaving a train at New York.,. * * • Miss Helen Cudahy, daughter of Patrick Cudahy, Milwaukee packer, expects to sail for Europe next month to drive a Red Cross hospital supply automobile in France. Miss Cudahy has thoroughly fitted herself to make good in her new work. An American patrol ship was rammed and sunk off an Atlantic port by an unidentified craft. The accident was reported to Washington. ♦ ♦ ♦ Gov. Keith Neville of Nebraska has accepted, the colonelcy of the Seventh Nebraska National Guard regiment and will resign as governor when the regiment is mustered into government service. * * * European War News “The central powers are prepared to enter peace negotiations as' soon as the enemy accept the standpoint of peace by agreement and accept a universal disarmament, applied to the navies as well as to the land forces.” Should this program be refused the central powers “must revise their program and demand compensation for further cost of the war.” This is the policy laid down by Count Czernin, Austro-Hungarian minister of foreign affairs, described, in dispatches from Budapest; British airmen who bombarded German stations behind the lines destroyed 15 Gotha airplanes at St. Denis and Westrom and Wrecked a troop train, killing many, according to messages received at Amsterdam from Sluis. •
♦ ♦ ♦ The German 'cities of Frankfort-on-the-Main, Stuttgart, Treves and Coblenz were bombarded by French aviators in retaliation for German aerial attacks on French cities. • * • The kaiser’s dream of an empire from the North sea to the Persian gulf received another blow in the announcement of the capture by General Maude, with Ramadie, in Mesopotamia, of 4,000 Turks, in addition to a number of- guns and vast quantities of stores and ammunition". * * ♦ ’Heavy fighting raged over a wide section of the west Flanders front, the Germans directing savage counter-at-tacks at numerous points. All of the assaults were repulsed, the London war office announced. An effort by the Germans to recapture Zonnebeke failed. ♦ * ■ The body of the famous German aviator, Lieutenant Vosse, who was recently reported in a German official communication as missing, has been found within the British lines. Vosse was killed on September 23, while engaged in a spectacular combat with a British airman. * * • A demonstration against the German government at Essen, home of the Krupp works, in consequences of the decision of Chancellor Michaelis no tto state Germany’s peace terms, is reported from Amsterdam. Women formed a majority of the demonstrators. * * *
German airmen made their third attempt in three days to raid London and lost three of the four airplanes that were able to reach the metropolitan district. Eleven persons were killed and 82 wounded by bombs on Saturday. * * * In their offensive operations of the last three days Italian troops have taken 2.019 prisoners, including 63 officers, the Rome war office announced. ■. * * * French aviators dropped half a ton of projectiles on the German city Of Stuttgart in reprisal for the bombardment by the Germans of Bar-le-Duc. * * ♦ In another powerful drive the Italians have captured the high ground to the south of Padlaca and southeast of Madoni, in the Isonzo sector. The official announcement of this success by the Rome war office reports also the capture of 1,409 prisoners. Foreign The Swedish ministry at Stockholm has resigned, but King Gustaf has requested the ministers to retain their portfolios for the present. ♦ • * The London Gazette prints a proclamation prohibiting the exportation to Sweden, Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands of all articles except printed matter of all descriptions and personal effects. o ♦ ♦ ♦ A Shanghai dispatch to Reuter’s in London says that as the result of a typhoon which swept over Tokyo on Monday 100,000 persons are homeless and that 138 are dead and 217 missing.- The number injured is 168. The property; loss is $3,000,000.
MOVING TROOPS BIG PROBLEM
Many Extra Trains and Thousands ” of Cars Required. Coincident with the start of the third division of the new national army ‘ for the training camp Wednesday the railroads’ war board .issued the following statement in connection with the part which the railroads have played in handling the biggest troop movement ever attempted in this country, including the national guard, the regular army and the new national army. The railroads to date have moved approximately 720,000 soldiers from their homes to training camps or embarkation points. The bulk of this army, all of it in fact, except the 32,549 men included in the first per cent, of the national army that moved by regular train on September 5, has required special train service. involving the use of 13,500 passenger cars, including 1,500 Pullman and tourist sleepers, 2,000 baggage cars and 4,500 freight cars.
The troop movement problem has been most difficult to handle as it comprises not only the movement of the men selected for the national army cantonments, but the movement of hundreds of thousands of troops in the national guard and the regular army as well, either to training camps or embarkation ’ points. Some slight conception of ! what this problem means may be ' deduced from the fact that in the national army movement alone the ! railroads have had to prepare spei cial schedules covering the 4,531 I towns and cities designated by the provost marshal general, as points iof local concentration from which , the recruits of the new national army proceed to the cantonments. In addition, the special + rain movements have had to be so directed as to prevent interruption to the
regular passenger seryice. Twenty-five per cent, of the men in the new national army or approximately 172,000 are included in the division that will be entrained for the cantonments from now on’ until October 7. It is expected that the balance of the citizen soldiers will be entrained beginning October 17. The railroads have taken every step possible to safeguard the lives that the government has entrusted to them and to complete the troop movement without . delay and also without interfering with the abnormal amount of commercial traffic that the war has produced. For obvious reasons it would not be wise to divulge in detail the plans which have been followed in moving the men to the various cantonments and embarkation points. Sufficient to say that the movement is progressing smoothly and to the complete satisfaction of the government.
[Under this head notice* wIQ be pub fished for 1-cent-*-word for the firw Insertion. 1-2-cent-per-word for each ad ditlonal insertion. To save book-keeping cash should be sent with notice. No notice accepted for less than twenty-flvs cents, but short notices coming within the above rate, will be published two oi more times —as the case may be—for 21 cents. Where replies are sent in Th« Democrat’s care, postage will be charged for forwarding such replies to the adver User.] FOR SALE For Sale—Six acres on pike, just outside the corporation. Price SI,SOO.—GEORGE F. MEYERS, ts For Sale.— Two male Shorthorn calves, eligible to registery.— JOHN ECK, Goodland, Ind., R-l, phone 161-A. Goodland. o-10 - « —— , For Sale—l 7 acres adjoining city of Rensselaer, all in cultivation; fenced with high woven wire.— HARVEY DAVISSON. ts Butter Wrappers—Vegetable parchment butter wrappers in any quantity desired, either plain or printed, at The Democrat Office, tl For Sale—Haynes automobile, 5passenger touring car, in good condition. Only reason for selling car is too large for my use. — GEORGE A. WILLIAMS. ’ ts For Sale—/The William Daniels farm of 200 acres in Barkley township.—KOßAH DANIELS, Agt.. Rensselaer, phone 299. ts For Sale—A snap, 160 acres pasture land, S2O per acre; located 2% miles from station, in Jasper county.—HARVEY DAVISSON. ts Good Recleaned Timothy Seed, $3 per bushel, at RENSSELAER GARAGE. tl For Sale —The Dexter Jones farm of 200 acres, 3 miles west of Remington. Fine improvements, well tiled and fenced. —Enquire at Democrat Office. 024 For Sale —"7 acres of farm land, 4 , . miles west of Remington. Barn and corn fairly well tiledand fenced. —Enquire at Democrat. Office. 024 i For Sale—A hedge grubbing or ( hedge pulling machine, all in
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1917.
good shape with about 300 feet of cabl4; a good, powerful machine. —W. P. MICHAL, Remington, Ind., R-3. Phone 927-!H.’. 018 For Sale—My residence on McKinley avenue; 2 corner lots with 5-room cottage, electric lights, bath; barn, chicken park, garden and fruit. —W. H. POSTELL, phone 620. ts For Sale—Finely improved 130 acres, all in cultivation, adjoining city of Rensselaer. For sale at a real bargain.—HAßVEY DAVISSON. , ts 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. For Sale—Real bargain, improved 80-acre farm, new 5-room house, new barn, 3% miles from Wheatfield, Ind.; $35 per acre. Will take live stock first payment, easy terms on balance.—HAßVEY DAVISSON, phone 246 or 4 99. ts For Sale —Studebaker 6-cylinder car, model 1916, good as new; extra tire. Will sell at a bargain if taken now. Come in and see it. Have no use for it on account of going to war.—M, J. KUBOSKE, opp. D. M. Worland’s. ts
For Sale—Turkey Red seed wheat; recleaned timothy seed; 8-16 Mogul tractor complete with threebottoms plow, as good as new; 2 young geldings; 1 school wagon; 1 corn busker. Would buy 24x40 inch separator.—JOSEPH KOSTA, Fair Oaks, R-l. Phone Mt. Ayr 92-D. 07 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. For Sale—Bo acres nice black prairie land at low price of $57.50. 80 acres with lots of good buildings for only $65. Terms, SI,OOO down on either piece. 40 acres, 10 cultivated, 30 fine timber, on pike. A bargain. 43 acres, all good land, improved, in Barkley tp. Easy terms.—GEO. F. MEYERS. ts For Sale—B-ply Litho Blanks. We have on hand several hundred sheets 22x28 8-ply litho blanks, coated 2 sides, that we will sell in lots of 5 0 or more at $6 per 100, which is less than cost a year ago. This board was ordered for a special purpose, but customer changed order and it was not used. Is put up in 50-sheet packages and has not been broken. —THE DEMOCRAT. ts For Sale —288-acre farm in Mississippi, 2 miles from railroad station. Price $5,000. Will sell on easy terms or will trade for town or farm property. This farm is improved and is a great bargain and this price is only good to October 2. If you are thinking of locating in the South it will pay you to investigate.—HAßVEY DAVISSON, ts Typewriter Ribbons —The Democrat carries in stock —tn 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 FOR RENT For Rent—9-room house, electric lights, city water, three blocks from court house. —DR. F. A. TURFLER. ts For Rent—My 200-acre farm in Union township.—N. LITTLEFIELD. 012 WANTED Washing and Ironing Done—■ Will iron at my house or yours. I live second house south of tile factory.—MAßY SNYDER. 015 Wanted—Men with teams to clean out open ditches in the vicinity of Fair Oaks.-—J. E. WALTER, manager J. J. Lawler lands. Phone 337. ts MISCELLANEOUS Will Trade—Modern 8-room, good income house, residence district of Hammond, for small farm. Address S. E. Swaim, Hammond, Indiana. 08 Ladies—l am giving away a fine rocker for distributing 4 dozen packages CREAM OF RICE.—K. L. ROBINSON, 340 West Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio. 08 - 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. 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—Money tp loan on farm property in any sums up to SIO,OOO.—E. P. HONAN. Farm Loans—-I can procure you a five-year loan on your farm at 5 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.—CHA®. .J. DEAN & SON. f ts flftl Ihfi'l Without Delay; I Itrl IHr Wlthout Commission, Uul IllU Wit hout Charges fol H’ Making or Recording Instruments. J W. H. PARKINSON
