Jasper County Democrat, Volume 21, Number 58, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 October 1918 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
News of the Week Cut Down for Busy Readers
European War News Lieut. Roland Garros, the famous French aviator, reported as missing, was shot down and killed, according to b Berlin message. • • • British casualties from January 1, £9lB, to September 30 were over 700,000, Including killed, wounded and missing, it was announced at New York by the British bureau of Information. The figures covered 39 weeks of actual fighting. The lowest week for casualties listed 4,120 killed, ■wounded and missing, and the highest week listed 40,000. • * * Italian troops hitve occupied Duraz--80, the Albanian port at which British nnd Italian naval forces recently raided and destroyed the Important Austrian naval base. * • • The London Times prints the following from The Hague, dated Monday: “Violent antidynastlc manifestations occurred In Berlin Thursday. Great crowds gathered the whole length of Unter den Linden, also In front of the imperial palace, smashed several famous. Hohenzollem statuep and surged around the Bulgarian legation, shouting: ‘We want peace!’ ‘‘Stop the war!’ ‘Down with the Hoihenzollerns!’ ” • • • In a literal transport of joy the 6;000 inhabitants remaining In Laon rushed to the gates of the city to greet General Mangin, who made his entry Into the city. • * * The Portuguese government at Lisbon has declared a state of siege for all Portuguese territory. The president, as commtinder in chief of the military and naval units, has taken direct command of forces. • • * The ministry of finance nt Paris announces that the amount of the national defense bonds subscribed for during the last fortnight of September was 1180,000,000, beating the record of any previous fortnight.
• * * After capturing Nish on Saturday Serbian forces took possession of the enemy’s positions north of the town, according to the'Serblan official statement, French cavalry have occupied the Bela Palanka. • • * “Since September 15, Including the Bulgar-German troops' surrender, according to the armistice,” says a Paris war office statement, ‘‘the allies have captured 90,000 prisoners, Including 1,000 officers. Among the officers are five generals. Two thousand guns and enormous quantities of material also have been taken.” • ■* • Monsignor Chollet, archbishop of Cambral, was carried away by the Germans when they evacuated that c'ty. • * • Domestic There were G. 122 deaths from Spanish influenza in 30 cities the week ended October 12. :ts compared with 19 the week ended September 14, when the disease got its first foothold In New England. In the same period there were 4,400 deaths from pneumonia. These figures, announced by the bureau of the census at Washington, do not Include figures from army camps. » * * Paul L. Marvell of Wareham, Mass., quartermaster, is missing from the V. S. S. Seneca and John T. Mathers of Washington, la., electrician, has been reported lost from the steamship Lake City. • « •
An emergency medical staff from the Great Lakes Naval Training station arrived In Milwaukee to assist In the fight against the Influenza scourge. • * * Arthur Brisbane, editor of thd Hearst newspapers and owner of the Washington Times, has become owner of the Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin. * • * Between $15,000 and $20,000 payroll money was stolen by five armed men, who entered the office of the Mount Olive-Staunton Cool company, two and one-half miles south of Staunton, Hl., at 1.45 In the afternoon. The robbers escaped in -an automobile toward St. Louis. *• • . All theaters In Illinois, Including moving-picture houses, will be closed for an indefinite period. The action was ordered by the executive committee of the emergency commission to combat Influenza. • * • Wilson & Co., Chicago packers, have been cleared of charges alleging sale of bad meat to the army, which have been pending before the federal trade commission since last March. AJI churches were ordered closed at Louisville, Ky., because of the influenza epidemic. The National Bank of Nicaragua has transmitted $35,000 in subscriptions to the fourth Liberty loan. Loan subscriptions will continue to be received until the ens of the month.
The Minneapolis federal reserve district claims the honor of being the first in the United States to oversubscribe its allotment of fourth Liberty loan bonds. The districts allotment was $210,000,000. * * •
PFaj/wngton Immediate consideration was given by the house at Washington to the military deficiency bill carrying $6,345,755,000, reported by the appropriations committee, to provide for the enlarged war program during the coming nine months. It provides $6,152,062,000 for the army, $107,217,000 for the navy and $70,000,000 for family allowances of soldiers and sailors. An army of about 5,000,000 men, 80 divisions in France and 18 in training at home by July 1 next Is what the new program calls for. . To prepare and maintain it the amount now proposed brings the total appropriations and authorizations for the year up to $36,000,000,000. * • • Final returns from all states show that 12,966,594 men registered for military service September 12, This was 187,836 in excess of the estimate of 12,778,758 made by experts in the office «of General Crowder at Washington, based on projections from census figures. ♦ » * American shipbuilders were called upon by Secretary Daniels at Washington to speed up their output of destroyers to nice? the menace of the new and greater submarine effort which Germany is known to be planning; if* • * • President Wilson will let his decision regarding the German peace maneuvers sink into the minds of the Austro-Hungarian people before sending his answer to their government’s appeal. • ♦ • Turkey’s long-delayed note asking, like Germany and Austria, that President Wilson take in hand the restoration of peace, was received at the state department at Washington. The note, differing only slightly In phraseology from those of the greater central powers, was delivered by the Spanish ambassador. * » •
Personal Mrs. Irma Cody Garlow, daughter of Col. W. F. Cody (Buffalo Bill), died at Cody, Wyo., following an attack of influenza. » • * Congressman Jacob E. Meeker died at St. Louis of Spanish influenza, following his marriage at midnight to his private secretary. Dr. Patrick Hues Mell of Atlanta, Ga., .who devised the system of weather signals now used by the United States weather iJureau, died at Fredericksburg, Va. He was slxty-elght years of age. * • • Miss Sadie Gompers, twenty-three years old, daughter of Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, died at her, home at Washington of Spanish Influenza. G. A. Knapp, chairman of the board of directors of the First Fond du Lac National bank, died at Fond du Lac, Wis.. aged seventy. Mr. Knapp was a member of the assembly of 188 G-87. ♦♦ ♦ . U. S.—Teutonic War News Maj. William J. Bland, formerly an attorney of Kansas City, was killed in action in the St. Mihiel salient on the French front September 12, according to a war department telegram. * * * The now Knights of Columbus club for the allied soldiers was opened at Paris by Edward L. Hearn, general commissioner for Europe of the Knights of Columbus, In the presence Of several prominent Americans. * • •
Foreign The duchess of -Marlboro, formerly Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt of New York, was elected a member of the London county council to represent West Southwark, a working-class district of London. ♦ • • The Bulgarian minister of the Interior at Sofia has Issued a decree liberating the Greek and Serbian subjects interned in concentration camps In Bulgaria and allowing them to return to their own country. • • • Petrograd newspapers report that 250 hostages have been shot at Penza, 130 miles northwest of Saratov, as a reprisal for the assassination of M. Jogeroff, a member of the extraordinary commission, and an attack on the prison warders. Belgian authorities have delivered orders to Belgians resident In England, directing them to return to their native land, according to the Sheffield Dally Telegraph • • ? All schools In Rio Janeiro are closed because of the epidemic of Spanish Influenza. • • • The Spanish government at Madrid has decided to put into Immediate service 62 German ships lying in Spanish ports as the equivalent of Spanish ships torpedoed. • • • Two French scientists have succeeded In isolating the Infectious agent which causes Spanish Influenza, according to a Tunis dispatch to the Paris Matin. _
GERMAN ARMY RETREATING TO ANTWERP LINE
Ostend Is Captured and Zeebrugge Given Up by the Huns. BRUGES AND LILLE TAKEN Allies in Great Advance Win U-Boat and Rail Bases—Seventeen Divisions In Flight—King and Queen of Belgium in Ostend. London, Oct. 18.—The allies advanced twelve and a half miles Thursday on a front of more than thirty miles between the North sea and Lys river, Field Marshal Haig’s night report announces. British troops are in the outskirts of Tourcing. Ingelmuster and Mueleboke were captured, the statement' says. Paris, Oct. 18.—King Albert of Belgium and Queen Elizabeth entered Ostend. London, Oct. 18.—Five great strongholds In Belgium and northern France have fallen, and the enemy is in full retreat, apparently far to the east. Belgian Cavalry has entered Bruges, Zeebrugge seems abandoned, the British have occupied Ostend, Lille has been taken, practically undamaged, while the Germans, farther south, have evacuated Douai. , A Paris report says the enemy is abandoning the entire Belgian coast and is seeking refuge behind the fortifications of Antwerp. This conforms to the theory that the Germans do not hope to stand fast short of a line running before Antwerp, Namur, Mezieres, thirty or forty miles away.
Drive on Guise. With his armies in the north in such Vapid flight that heavy field guns are being abandoned, the kaiser was struck another staggering blow farther south. Northeast of Bohain, American and 'British troops, attacking over a ninemil e front, gained nearly three miles at points. These advances were made despite seven German divisions hurled against them. Some 3,000 prisoners were taken. Immediately to the south the French also attacked, and made advances of more than a mile. They now are within less than five miles of Guise. r I hey k 1.200 prisoners. These were the outstanding events n a day of supreme triumph for the allied arms. The British sand Belgians put to flight General Von Arnuin’s army of 17 divisions and tonight that army is in imminent danger of being entrapped and forced to surrender. The allied armies In their advance liberated more than twenty towns and villages. Advance Nine Mlles. Late dispatches from the front said the German second line In Belgium has been broken by the British and Belgians and allied cavalry were reported to have advanced some nine miles through the breach in this line., Meanwhile British aerial and naval forces, the latter under command of Vice Admiral Keyes, who conducted the famous naval raid against the former U-boat base some months ago, landed at Ostend and found the port clear of the enemy. The vice admiral rtmde a personal Inspection of the harbor and city. Later British Infantry, marching from the direction of Lombaertzyde, entered the city. Black Day for German Arms.
British Headquarters in France, Oct. 18. —This was a black day for the German arms. From Lille to the sea a wonderful crop of brilliant successes was garnered, and the British Fourth army struck hard on the Le CateauBohaln front southeast of Cambral, where the enemy was trying to effect his main retreat. Heavy fighting resulted, but the progress of Field Marshal Haig was satisfactory. The British, French and Belgian armies, under command of King Albert of the Belgians, made a most important advance in their offensive in Flanders. General Sixte von Arnim’s army was thrown back with heavy losses and Its position Is precarious. The whole of Von Arnim’s army is in retreat from the North sea to the region of Lille, and the retirement is assuming the proportions of a rout. Military observers believe General Von Arnim will have extreme difficulty in extricating himself, as he remained too long, against all strategies and military laws, vjlien he was outflanked and virtually surrounded.
MORE U-BOATS FOR ALLIES
German Admiralty Orders Submarines Back to Bases. Amsterdam, Oct. 18.—The Handelsblad asserts it has authoritative Information to the effect that the German admiralty has sent out a wireless message to all submarines to return Immediately to their bases. Wilson Signs Fraud Bill. Washington, Oct. 18.—President Wilson signed the bill making fraud In cepgresslonal elections a federal offense. 1 ■
THE TWTCR-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT
IPEK IS CAPTURED
FRENCH TAKE CITY AS MONTENEGRO 18 INVADED. No Soldiers of Allies on Soil Since February, 1916—Serbs Open Way. London, Oct. 18. —Serbian troops engaged in ousting the? Germans and Austrians from' Serbian territory have captured Krushevatz, according to advices received here. This town is 30 miles northwest of Nish. The French eperating to the west have captured Ipek, Montenegro, about t<fa miles west of the Serbian border. Paris, Oct. 18.—Austro-German forces In western Serbia have retired Into Montenegro and have evacuated the town of Diakova, on the SerboMontenegrin frontier, according to an official statement from the French war office. French forces have entered the city of Pirot in Serbia, according to an official statement issued at the war office. Pirot is on the railroad between Nish and Sofia and is 12 miles from the Bulgarian front. London, Oct. 18.—Serbian troops, continuing their energetic campaign for driving out the Austro-German forces remaining on Serbian soil, have captured the town of Alexinatz, on the Morava river, 15 miles northwest of Nish, says a Serbian official statement received here. Thirty-two guns have been taken in the fighting beyond Nish.
MUST RAISE THREE BILLIONS
Loan Quota Far Behind, but Federal District Managers Say It Will Be Raised. Washington, Oct. 18.—One billion dollars a day is the approximate measure of subscriptions required to insure the success of the fourth Liberty Loan in the days that remain Jn which to reach the $0,000,000,000 goal. The American people must decide whether the fourth Liberty Loan shall be a success or a failure,” said a statement by Secretary McAdoo. “It would be fatal to minimize the gravity of the nation’s problem.”* Total subscriptions tabulated Saturday at the close of the campaign must total at least $4,500,000,000, officials said, If the loan is to be fully subscribed. Belated subscriptions and final tabulations on the basis of previous loans may be counted upon to add $1,000,000,000 to the total, but it wa? emphasized that the remaining days are the critical days In the campaign.
NOTABLE RUSS WOMAN DEAD
“Little Grandmother of the Russian Revolution” Succumbs to Malnutrition While in Hiding. Boston, Oct. 18. —Katharin Bresbkovskaya, known throughout world as “The little grandmother of the Russian revolution,” is dead. A German newspaper just received here records the death of the famous woffian nihilist. She died of malnutrition while in hiding, “somewhere in Russia.”
Victor Berger Gives Bond.
Chicago, Oct. 18.—Victor Berber, candidate for congress in Milwaukee, Charged with violation of the espionage act, gave bond for SIO,OOO in federal court here. The bond was signed by William Bross Lloyd, Socialist candidate for senator from Illinois.
THE MARKETS
Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago, Oct. 17. Open- High- Low- ClosCorn— Ing. est. eat. Ing. Oct Nov 1.18-21 1.22% 1.17% 1.19% Dec. ......1.1'7 1.17% 1.14% 1.15% . OatsOct. .........68 V .68% .67 .67% Nov .’66%-% .67% .65% .65%-% Dec 66%-% .66% .64% .65%-%
FLOUR—The United States food administration flour standards are as follows: Per bbl. In Julie, 98 lb. sack basis: Barley flour, $8.00; corn flour, $10.20; white rye flour, »0 .20; dark rye, $9.90; spring wheat, $11.25; Special b»ands, $11.35; hard winter, [email protected]; soft winter, $10.50. HAY—Timothy, [email protected]; standard, [email protected]; No. 1 light clover mixed, $32.00 @33.00; No. 2 timothy and No. 1 clover mixed, [email protected]; No. 3, [email protected]; clover, [email protected]; thrashed, [email protected]. EGGS—Firsts, 48%@49Hc; ordinary firsts, 46@47c. BUTTER—Extras, 55%c; firsts, 53%@65c. POULTRY—Roosters, 22%c; geese, 22c; turkeys, 32c; ducks, 24c; fowls, 23@27c; broilers, 27c. POTATOES— Early Ohios, $1.40@L60; Wisconsin, white, [email protected]. CATTLE—Choice to prime steers, $17.50@ 19.‘40; good to choice steers, [email protected]; plain to good, steers, $8'[email protected]; yearlings, fair to choice, [email protected]; stockess and feeders, [email protected]; good to prime cows, fair to prime heifers, $9.00® 14.75; fair to good cows, [email protected]; canners, [email protected]; cutters, [email protected]; bologna bulls, $7.25(08.00; butcher bulls, $8.00@H,00; heavy calves, [email protected]; veal calves, $15.00 @16.50. - HOGS—Fair to good light, [email protected]; choice to light butchers, $18.30@1&65; medium weight butchers, 225@2f10 lbs., slß.lo@ 18.60; heavy weight butchers, 27t)@350 lbs., ■[email protected]; mixed packers, [email protected]; rough heavy packing, [email protected]; pigs, fair to good, $14.50(015.75; stags, $15.00@16 SHEEP—Western lambs, [email protected]; native lambs, good to choice, [email protected]; yearlings, [email protected]; wethers, good to Choice. •[email protected]; ewes, fair to chplce, [email protected]; feeding lambs, [email protected]. Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. IT. CATTLE—Receipts, 650; weak. CALVES— Receipts, 50; steady; $7,000 19.00. «- HOGS— Receipts, 800; strong; heavy, $18.85019.00; mixed, , $lB. <^@lß.Bs; Yorkers, $18.75(018.80; light Yorkers find pigs. $17.75@ 18.00; roughs, [email protected]; stags, [email protected]. SHEEP AND LAMBS—Receipts, 600; lambs strong; lambs, [email protected];. others uncbcnged.
COSTS ARE REDUCED.
Country and City Merchants See Benefits of Motor Truck Express. The country and city merchant have approved the motor truck as a means of short-haul transportation, giving better service while other carriers are burdened. The Rural Express and Return Loads aids the country merchant in carrying a complete stock of goods; in filling orders promptly and in avoiding temporary shortage of staples due to delayed shipments or embargoes on the railroads. His goods are loaded once instead of three times. The merchant thus aids the government in releasing freight cars for other work and helps to relieve the congestion of traffic. The freight rates, in view of the service, rendered will be reasonable.
AS A WAR MEASURE.
The Return Load Idea, backed by the National and State Councils of Defense, and by all business organizations who have given it thought, is a war-time necessity. It is obvious that full loads both ways is economy of the best sort —that only in full loads both ways will truck hauling costs be reduced to the minimum. The idea is being put forth that it is to wear the road without the load. If you want a pood typewriter at a bargain price, see those at The Democrat office.
NOTICE To all employers or other representatives of labor in all industries, occupations and employments, including agriculture, necessary to the maintenance of the military establishment, the public welfare and the prosecution of the war: j Under section 80 of the selective service law, the undersigned board of industrial advisers to the district board for District No. 1, in the State of Indiana, hereby gives notice that in all cases of employees in your respective employments, who are registered under the selective service law; it is your duty to make careful investigation into the work of such employee, his relation to your business, whether his work is necessary to the reasonable operation of your business, whether and to what extent your" business ■will suffer by the loss of such employee and his induction into the military service, and whether in your unbiased judgment the national interest will he better served, by Ms retention in industry than by his induction into military service. If upon such investigation you -conclude the nation’s interest wpuld be better served by the retention of the employee in industry, you should either, as such employer make claim for deferred classification on behalf of such employee before your local board, or present in writing to the board of industrial advisers, at its office in Laporte, Indiana, such facts and conclusions as your investigations warrant. Board of Industrial Advisers, Finley P. Mount, E. W. Bowen, J. G. Brown. Address all communications to: Georgia H. Line, Clerk, Board of lu ii strial Advisers, LaPorte, Ind. (Under tHa head noocea win ba pub fished for 1-cent-a- word for the find insertion* 1-2-cent-per-word for each addittonal ’naertlon. To eave book-keeping cash should be sent with notice. No notice accepted for lees than twenty-five cents, but short notices coming within the above rata, will be published two or more times —as the case may be—for M cents. Where replies are sent in The Democrat's care, postage will be chargee for forwarding such replies to the advertiser.] FOR SALE For Sale—Navy beans, machine run, $7.50 per bushel.- —W. H. PULLIN, phone 934-H. 0-19 For Sale—A Webster’s New Inter, national Dictionary, almost new and very little soiled, sheep binding and good paper Publisher’s price sl2; will sell for $8 cash.— JASPER COUNTY DEMOCRAT. For Sale—4o pigs, weight about 100 pounds each, six bull calves. JOHN HILL, Gifford, Ind. o-19 For Sale—Recleaned timothy seed at RENSSELAER GARAGE, and farm of Chamberlain & Marlatt ts For Sale—Paragon lever paper cutter, 23-inch, recently rebuilt and -in .A-l .condition.—THE DEMOCRAT. For Sale—About 20 lengths of 6inch stove pipe in first class condition and at a bargain price.— THE DEMOCRAT. For Sale—6o head of good breeding ewes, mostly Shropshlres; will sell part or aII.—GRANVILLE MOODY, phone 920-C. n-7 For Sale—Water motor washing machine, been used about ten months. —MARK SCHROER, Rensselaer, R-l, phone 913-G. n-12 For Sale—Emerson )£ h. p. elec- . trie motor, 104 volts, single phase, 1750 r. p. m. All in A-l condition.—THE DEMOCRAT. Butter Wrappers—Vegetable parch* ment butter wrappers in any quantity desired, either plain er printed, at The Democrat Office, ts
•SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1918
For Sale—Good mare and hohe/' wt. about 1300 each, coming 5-year-old; 1 cow fresh in January.—• H. L. HARSHBERGER, Parr, Ind. 0-3 o: For Sale—Seven room house, barn, good cave, 3 lots, goo'd fruit. Will sell reasonable. FRANK WEBBER, Rensselaer, telephone 944-E. o-23 For Sale—About 10,000 western - Cedar shingles 5-2. All have been dipped in a green preservative.*— RUSSELL VANHOOK, telephone 938-A. o-19. Estray Taken Up—Red male hog, at my place, Oct. 14. Ownqr may have same by paying for keeping and advertisement. —JOHN A. NAGEL, phone 937-D. . o-22 For Sale —A very few finely bred Hampshire male hogs, farrowed May 18, average wt. 160 lbs. See sample at bur Livestock Show thia week.—RUSSELL VAN HOOK, telephone 938-A. 0-19 For Sale —One-half Jersey cow 4 years old, giving 2 gallons of milk a day. Will be fresh first of March. LEONARD KEISTER, first house east of stock-pens on south side of railroad. o-20 • For Sale—A few finely bred • ♦ Jersey heifers, In calf to fine • • registered bull; also 3-year- • .♦ old reg. cow to freshen Decern- • * ber 1; registration papers fur- • • nished for all cattle. See • * sample at our Stock Show.— * ♦ RUSSELL VANHOOK, tele- • ♦ phone 938-A. o-19 • For Sale by reason of installing furnace, a fine base-burner used only two years; all in splendid condition. May be seen at Democrat office—THE DEMOCRAT. ts For Sale —Unable to care for our place any longer, will sell our five acres of ground with good modern nine-room house, just at southeast edge of town. —MRS. A. GANGLOFF, phone 453. O-20.
Typewriter Ribbons—The Democrat carries in stock in its faney stationery department the famous Nedlch make of ribbons for nearly all the standard makes of typewriters. Price 75c each. Will be sent by mail prepaid to any address on receipt of price. ts For Sale—6oo-acre farm 1 mile from Gloster, jiliss., nice city of 2,000 population. Farm is well improved. Located on Prentice highway, a macadam road being built from McComb to Natchei and which Intersects with the Jackses highway. Price |3O per acre.—* HARVEY DAVISSON, phone 246 of 499. if For Sale—Some real bargains in well improved farms located within three miles of Rensselaer. 120 a., 133 a., 212 a., 152 a., 80 a. I also have some exceptional bargaifiS\ in improved farms of all sizes fai> ther out from Rensselaer. For further particulars see me or call phone 246, office, or 499, home.— HARVEY DAVISSON. ts FOR RENT To Rent—-If you want to rent a good farm, come see me. Office 2nd door north, of river bridge. Open evenings until 9 o’clock. Telephone 418. — ELMER GWIN. ts For Rent—My house on Park avenue, electric lights, city water. — MARY JANE HOPKINS. ts For Rent—furnished room in desirable location, 3 blocks from court house. Inqure at DEMOCRAT OFFICE. ts
For Rent—SO acre improved farm 6 miles southeast of Francesville. A. S. LaRUE, Rensselaer, phone 117 or 111-Black. o-26 For Rent—Land in section 6, Union township, Fair Oaks, for farming purposes.—J. J. LAWLER, phone 337, Jas. E. Walter, Mgr. ts For Rent—Good seven room house on corner of Park avenue and Work st., with bath, electric lights, cistern, etc. Large lot, nice shade, fruit, and large barn if desired.—* F. E. BABCOCK, at Democrat office. WANTED ? Wanted—Three more men to join our excursion to the clover lands of Wisconsin; only seven hours ride from' Chicago. Office 2nd door north of river bridge; open till 9 o’clock, telephone 418.—* ELMER GWIN. o-19 MISCELLANEOUS i Wild Hay—Have considerable wild hay on ranch near Fair Oaks that we would like to have someone put up. Call JAMES E. WALTER, Mgr. J. J. Lawler lands, phone 337. ts - r ——————————— r _— Storage—l have two rooms for storage of light household er otheq goods in The Democrat building Terms reasonable.—F. E. BAB COCK. Phone 316 or 111. FINANCIAL Money to Loan.—CHAS. J. MS AN SON, Odd Fellows, Building, Rensselaer. || Money to Loan—s per eent fhrM loans.—JOHN A. DUNLAP* 1 Mutual Insurance—Fire and Light* ulfig. Also state cyclone. luqulrq of M. I. ADAMS. Phone sft-L II Farm Loans—-Money to loan eg farm property in any sums un M 110,000.—E. P. HONAN. I Aal fhA'l wlthout Mr! Illr Wlthout Commlurtea, I UVI lllv Without Charges re uiuo iVIISiIi I instruments. , IfIUIIL I W. H. PARMINSON 1 Advertise in The Democrat, y,
