Jasper County Democrat, Volume 21, Number 94, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 February 1919 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

News of the Week Cut Down for Busy Readers

Washington In the first prepared address on the league of nations delivered in the senate at Washington since the constitution of the proposed league was made public, Senator Poindexter (Rep.) ‘of Washington declared the entrance of the United States into the league would mean a surrender of American rights, privileges and sovereignty , the abandonment of the Monroe doctiine and a violation of the constitution. » * * The fortifications appropriation bill carrying SI 1.199,291, was passed by the house at Washington without a record vote, and with but one inconsequential amendment. It now goes to the senate. * • * American exports in January set a new high deconi. During the month goods to the value of $623,000,000 were shipped to foreign was announced at the department of commerce at Washington. * * • The 1920 army appropriation bill passed the house at Washington by a viva voce vote. It now goes to the senate, carrying appropriations aggregating $1,070,000,000. • * • The senate, at Washington passed the rivers and harbors bill to spend $33,000,000, or $0,000,000 more than the house measure. The bill goes to conference. • * • Under anarchism, murder and starvation are exacting a terrible toll in Russia, and in Petrograd alone the population has decreased from 3,000,000 to 1,000,000 in a little more than a year. Theodore Krystofovltch, former member of the Russian department of agriculture, told the senate judiciary committee at Washington!

• * * Short-term notes, maturing in from one to five years, would be offered in the forthcoming Victory Liberty loan campaign, instead of long-term notes, under a tentative agreement reached by the house ways and means committee at Washington to fix the terms of the loan by legislation rather than to give Secretary Glass wide discretionary powers to determine them, as he had asked. • • * The casualty list of the American coal mining army for 1918, reported to Secretary Lane of the department of the interior at Washington by the bureau of mines, includes 2,575 men killed.

• • • An appropriation of $750,000,000 for the operation of railroads under government control was approved by the house appropriations committee at Washington. • • • Allens advocating destruction of property or overthrow of the government by force will be deported under the provisions of the Immigration act of February 5, 1917. This announcement was made by Secretary of Labor Wilson at Washington, in a ‘letter sharply rebuking Micrometer lodge No. 400, International Association of Machinists of Brooklyn, for protesting against the deportation of 58 “alien radicals.” ♦ ♦ ♦ ” An agreement just reached at Washington between the United States and British governments on the amount to be paid for the transportation of American troops to France during the war in British ships is based on cost of transportation, with no margin for profit. Steps toward strengthening the position of American and allied troops in northern Russia as a preliminary to their safe withdrawal in the near future are under way at the direction of the supreme war council. To facilitate the withdrawal, additional forces are being dispatched to the scene. Secretary Baker notified the house military committee at Washington that President Wilson had informed him of the plans.. * * •

Foreign A Warsaw dispatch says Gen. Joseph Pilsudski has announced his intention of resigning as chief of the Polish state. • * * Gas and electric service at Belfast, which had been cut off for three weeks because of strikes, was resumed under military protection, the troops haying? taken posession of the gas works and the electric plants. * .* * Sixteen soldiers were killed and fifty injured when a troop train collided with a freight train near Vienna. • • * Esthonian troops have begun to fall back before the bolshevlkl in the region of Pskov, according to an official statement issued by the Esthonian London headquarters. « ♦ ♦ Geftnan troops on the Lithuanian front surprised the bolshevlkl and captured the town of Murawjevo, near Shavll, according to a report received at BaSle, Switzerland, from Llbau.

An Amsterdam dispatch says Ritter von Mann, German minister of marine, has resigned, according to the General Anzeiger of Dusseldorf. • • e Premier Georges Clemenceau was shot three times as he was on his way to confer with Colonel House in Paris. Emile Cottln, the man who shot the premier, says he planned to kill the French statesman because he "was an enemy to humanity and was preparing to start another war.” The French premier is expected to make an early recovery from the three wotlMs Inflicted on him by the assassin. • • • Addressing the national assembly at Weimar, Philipp Scheideinann, the chancellor, said the first essential of the government’s policy was maintenance of unity in the nation by a strong central authority. Immediate restoration of peace came next, which should be secured by adherence to the program of President Wilson and the "rejection of a peace of violence.” The program, he said, called for the restoration of the,German colonies and the admission of Germany to the League of Nations with equal rights. • • •

The German people generally do not yet understand clearly the financial situation in which the war has left them and they nre too optimistic, declared Doctor Schiffer, the minister of finance, in an address to the German national assembly at Weimar. He apparently astonished the house when he gave the statistics to show that the war had cost 161,000,000,000 marks ($40,250,000,000). • » * An Odessa dispatch says the antibolshevik army of General Denikines has reached the Caspian sea after advancing 350 versts (233 miles), capturing 31,000 prisoners, 95 guns and eight armored trains. In the victorious advance General Denikines’ army scattered a bolshevik force of more than 100,000. • * • Final suppression of the revolutionary movement in Portugal has been proclaimed by the government at Lisbon, according to dispatches received at the state department at Washington. * • * Personal Appointment of Lieut. Col. Robert E. Olds of St. Paul, Minn., as Red Cross commissioner for Europe was announced in a dispatch fffim Paris. • » • Sir Wilfrid Laurier, former premier of Canada, who was stricken. with paralysis, died at Ottawa, Ont., Monday afternoon. » • • Peace Notes

A Paris dispatch says the Italian delegation states in an official note to the peace conference that Italy cannot accept arbitration with the Jugo-Slavs of Italian claims in Dalmatia. * * • Formal rejection of the proposal that they meet with delegates of the bolshevik! and other Russian governments at Princes islands was handed to the peace conference at Paris by representatives of the governments of Siberia, Archangel and southern Russia, according to a dispatch to the Russian embassy nt Washington from Ambassador Bakmetieff at Paris. . » * » Domestic Twenty-fix’® persons were injured, twelve seriously, when an open switch caused a northbound trolley to collide with a southbound car at Frankfort avenue and Arrott street at Philadelphia. ♦ * ♦ A Dallas (Tex.) dispatch says Lieut. M. J. Plum established a new flying record, driving a Curtis plane from Fort Worth to Love field, a distance of 32 miles In ten minutes. » * * Thirty aliens, advocates of open revolt according to federal authorities, and all under indictment for dissemination of revolutionary propaganda throughout northern Ohio, are to be deported from Cleveland by the United States government. * * • A robber, armed with a revolver, lined up the president, vice president, cashier and teller of the First National bank of Herington, Kan., grabbed $2,000 from the teller’s drawer and fled. A posse Is In pursuit. * • •

Six armed bandits entered the East side branch of the First State bank of Detroit, Mich., held up the cashier, clerks and several patrons and escaped with $10,500. * • * A Sacramento (Cal.) special says a supply of California ladybugs will be shipped to France to be used in combating the mealybug, which has been damaging fruit trees there. • • « A Los Angeles dispatch says an earthquake shock lasting almost a minute was felt at 8:45 a. m. at virtually every point in southern California. No damage has been reported from any section, however. Charles F. Sprague, stock breeder of Lima, 0., sold 60 Duroc hogs for $33,195, an average price of $553.25. Buyers from 17 states attended the sale. ♦ ♦ • Arrests on charges of bribery and graft in the personnel of, the Third naval district have been made at New York following an Investigation ordered by Secretary Daniels, nlng Post says.,' Seven naval officers and forty yeomen, including Ensign Paul Beck, of the paymaster’s corps, and an officer of high rank, are under arrest.

THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT

HEAVY TAX ON DOGS IS PLANNED

House of Representatives in Favor of Increase. KENNEL OWNER TO PAY $lO Southard Measure, Which Would Protect Water From Municipal Works by Prohibiting Drains Within Mile, Finally Killed. Indianapolis, Feb. 21.—The house of representatives apparently Is In favor of a heavy tax on dogs. It laid on the table a motion < by Representative Laughllng to strike out the enacting clause of the Ratts senate bill to change the dog tax law to increase annual dog license fees in Indiana, and then voted to put an emergency clause In the bill as it went on to engrossment from second reading. The measure also was amended to provide that an owner of a kennel of dogs should an annual license fee of $lO if his dogs were kept in the kennels. It was expected that today’s session of the house of representatives would see the regular appropriation bill entirely out of way so far as the lower house Is concerned. Leaders of that body intended to devote the entire day to consideration of this measure as a committee of the whole, if the consideration consumed that much time, and It was believed that the bill would be passed under suspension of the rules and go to the senate without longer delay than today’s’sessions. The senate was expected to act on the bill early next week. The house handled many 'bills on second reading at the afternoon session and finally when the speaker began to hand down house bills or. third reading, his desk was clear of both senate and house bills on second reading. Several senate resolutions, among them being proposed constitutional amendments, also were read a second time. On motion of Representative Winfield Miller of Marion county, senate Joint resolution 21, which provided originally for amending the constitution so that It would provide that "the general assembly shall provide by law for a system of taxation,” was amended by the house to read, “The general assembly shall enact laws for taxation.” Representative Miller explained that the general assembly might desire to enact laws that were not particular parts of a system of taxation. When the Harris bill, to provide for amendments to the law governing the licensing of nurses by the state board of examiners for nurses’ licenses, came up for second reading Representative Smith Introduced an amendment to strike out parts of the bill, which provided a three years’ course of instruction for applicants lor licenses and which would have given the state board of nurses’ registration and examination power to- prescribe rules for hospitals, which were to give courses of training for nurses. Several representatives spoke against the amendment, but it finally w’as adopted by the house by a vote of 44 to 37. Then the bill went to engrossment. Among the bills read a second time was the Newman house bill, to provide for the sale of a part of the present site of the Marion county courthouse and the relocation of the building on another part of the site and the paying off of indebtedness that exists on the present courthouse and site.

The Southard bill, to protect water from municipal waterworks by prohibiting drains within one mile of reservoirs or wells, finally was killed by the house, after some argument on it had occurred. Several representatives said such a bill would .work injustices in their own local communities, and finally Representative Craig moved to strike out the enacting clause and this was done by viva voce vote In the house. One of the bills that went to engrossment was that introduced by Representative Miller of Mar<qn to provide for the relocation of the Indiana reformatory at Jeffersonville to some other site and the sale of the present site. Senator Mcßavens of Madison, who represents Dearborn, Jefferson, Ohio and Switzerland counties in the upper house of the legislature, will not be unseated. gThls was decided on when the senate committee on elections reported they had Insufficient evidence to ask the southern Indiana senator to give up his seat. Senator Munton introduced a eugenics bill which would require applicants for marriage licenses to present a physician’s certificate showing they had been examined not more than 86 hours before the application wai filed and that they were free from disease. The senate passed the McConaha bill providing that all road taxes must be contained in the first semiannual report. The house passed the bill in the senate to reimburse Putnam countj- for expenses in apprehending escaped prisoners from the state penal farm. The bill providing for Increase in salary of judges of judicial and superior courts upon petition failed to pass. The senate spent the entire after-* noon in a long fight on the bill to legalize Sunday motion pictures and finally was forced to adjourn with the vote standing at .25 to 23. Neither side could muster enough votes to win The “movie” lobby is working harder than ever before in an effort to obtain the necessary vote to pass the measure.

SEE ANARCHIST PLOT

ATTACK ON CLEMENCKAU LAID TO RUM. X-Ray Examination _ Show* Bullet Pierced Lung of the Aged French Statesman. ♦ Paris, Feb. 21. —Was the, attempt upon Premier Clemenceau’s life of bolshevik origin? is a question insistently asked here. The Matin recalls that a few days ago a Geneva newspaper announced that the bolshevlkl in Lausanne, Switzerland, were plotting against M. Clemenceau's life, and that txyo bolshevik! had crossed the frontier to carry out the plan. The Paris police, says the Petit Parisien, were warned some dine ago that a plot was brewing against the premier’s life.

A wife of a member of the French consular service, formerly stationed in Russia, it says, was in the Russian book store in the Avenue Gobelins a fortnight ago and overheard •» discussion which made her sure that an attempt against the premier was in preparation. This place is frequented by maximalists. The woman informed her husband of what she had heard and he notified the police, who assured him that the persons in question would be closely watched. The bullet which wounded Premier Clemenceau penetrated his lungs, it was revealed by the X-ray examination. This was officially stated. The radio examination is said to have shown that the bullet had lodged on top of the premier’s right rung and that the lung had been touched by it. After the X-ray examination had been completed Premier Clemenceau walked out on the balcony of his house, overlooking the garden.

FLIES 168 MILES AN HOUR

Lieut. Harmon of the Army Planes From New York to Washington' in 85 Minutes. Washington, Feb. 21.—Unofficial announcement was made here that Lieut. Frank H. Harmon of the army flying corps broke all recordsnbetween New York and Washington by making the trip in 85 minutes with one of the new La Pere scout planes, built for American air fighters under the direction of a French officer. The little machine carries a 400horse power Liberty motor. With a fair breeze. Lieutenant Harmon repqrted that he made an average speed of about 168 miles an hour.

LLOYD GEOROE BACK TO PARIS

British Premier Heeds Urgent Call tn Return to France —Confers With Miners. London, Feb. 2L—David LloydGeorge, the prime'minister, received, an urgent summons to return to Paris, and will start for the French capital today after receiving the delegates of the miners’ conference in the morn? Ing;

THE MARKETS

Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago, Feb, 2#. Open- High- bow- ClosCora— ing. estx est. ing. Fab1.31% 1.34- 1.31% 1.34 Mar 1.28% 1-29% 1.27% 1.29% May 1.21%-1.22 1.24% 121% 1.24% Oats— Feb .59% -59% .58% .59% Mar’. 59 .59% .59 .59% May 59%-59% .60% .59% .60% FLOUR—Per bbl.. In jute, 98-lb. sack basis: Barley flour, $6.25; corn flour; $6.50; white rye flour, $8.75; dark rye, $8.00; spring wheat, $10.75.; first clear, in jute, $9.50; second clear, $8.75; special brands, $11.50; hard winter, [email protected]; soft winter, SIO.BO. These prices apply to* car lots except for special brands. HAY—Choice timothy, [email protected]; No. 1, [email protected]; standard, [email protected]; No. 1 light clover mixed, $21.00(022.00; No. 2 timothy, $21.00022.00; No. 3, [email protected]; sample, [email protected]; clover, $14.00022.00. BUTTER—Creamery, extras, 52c; firsts (88 to 95 scores), 45%@51c; seconds (83 to 87. scores), 38@42c; centralized standards, full cars, 47c; packing stock, fresh, 35%c. Prices to retailers—Tubs, 54c; prints, 55%c. EGGS—Fresh firsts, 39c; ordinary firsts, 38@38%c; miscellaneous receipts, cases included, 38@39c; do, cases returned, 37038 c; checks, 29030 c; dirties, 32@34c. Prices to retailers—Fillers, 44c; cartons, 45%c. LIVE POULTRY—Turkeys, 30c; fowls, 81%c; roosters, 21c; spring chickens, 81c; ducks. 32c; geese, 22c. DRESSED POULTRY—Turkeys, 41c; fowls, 20@28c; roosters, 30022 c; springs, 23 @26c; ducks, 32c; geese, 22@24c. POTATOES—BuIk, $1.55(01.65; sacked, [email protected]. CATTLE—Choice to prime steers, $19,000 20.00; good to medium steers, [email protected]; medium to good steers, $15.00(018.50; plain to medium steers, $12.00(016.50; yearlings, fair to choice, $13.00(018.00; Stockers and feeders, $8.50(013.00; good to prime cows, $9.75(012.75; fair to prime heifers, $9.00(0 14.50; fair to good cows, [email protected]; canners, $6.00(06.65; cutters, $6.75(07.50; bologna bulls, $8.25(09.25; butcher bulls, $10.00(012.00; veal calves, $15.25(016.75. HOGS—Fair to choice light hogs, $16.90© 17.50; choice light butchers, $17.40(017.65; medium weight butchers, 225-260 lbs., $17.50 @17.75; heavy weight butchers, 270-350 lbs., $17.60(017.85; mixed packing, $17.00(017.60; heavy packing, $1,6.75017.00; rough packing, $16.50(016.80; pigs, fair to good, [email protected]; stags (subject to 70 lbs. dockage), $15.00© 16.25. SHEEP—Western lambs, [email protected]; native lambs, [email protected]; yearlings, $14.00@ 16.25; wethers, good to choice, $11.00(013.15; ewes, fair to choice, [email protected]; feeding lambs, $14.50016.50. Buffalo, N. Y„ Feb. 20. CATTLE— Receipts, 1,800; slow. CALVES— Receipts, 250; 50c higher; $5.00 @20.50. HOGS- Receipts, 2,600; ' strong to 10c higher; heavy, $17.85018.00; mixed and yorkers, [email protected]; light yorkers, $16.25@ 17.00; pigs, $16.00(016.25; throwouts, $12.00(0 15.50; stage, [email protected]; Canadians, $17.70: SHEEP AND LAMBS—Receipts, 1,400; lambs, 20c higher; lambs, $11.00(018.85; Oth*>r<a nndhanged.

REFUSES TO NAME A DATE

Houatf Won’t Set Time for Return of Roads to Owners. Washlrfgton, Feb. 21. —The house refused to set a dtafe for the return of the railroads so fheir private owners, or to establish a time limit within which the president should not relinquish government control. These proposals came unexpectedly f» amendments offered to the administration bill Increasing the revolving fund of the railroad administration from $600,000,000 to $1,250,000,000.

Mt. Clemens Gets Ford-Tribune Trial.

Detroit, Mich., Feb. 21.—8 y agreement of counsel, the $1,000,000 libel suit brought* by Henry Ford against the Chicago Tribune iu which change of venue was recently granted, was transferred to Mount Clemens, Macomb county, Mich.

A FEW LEGISLATIVE- MEASURES

(Continued from page one)

interest pending in the state legislature, on which any action has been taken during the past few days, are the following: ■HOUSE ACTION H. B. 215—Green, To permit county commissioners to substitute materials and estamiate on road improvements in townships less than 30,000 where no bids have been received on viewers’ report and estimate, an engineer and two viewers to make the substitute report. Passed 71 ayes, 21' noes. S. J. R. 26 —English. To amend section 'll, article 7 of the state constitution, to extend the terms of prosecuting attorneys to four years. Adopted, 88 ayes, 1 no. S. J. R. 16—English. To amend section 1, article 12 of the state constitution by striking out the word “white,” which now prohibits negroes from joining the state militia. Adopted, 81 ayes, no noes.

H. B. 17- —Miller (of Marion). To protect the celebration of Memorial day by prohibiting commercialized games and sports on that day. Passed, 66 ayes, 23 noes. H. B. 4 20—Wood. To provide that persons or corporations making loans on livestock, growing crops or farm' implements at rates not to exceed 1% per cent a month, are exempted from the 1917 loan shark law. (New bill introduced.) SENATE ACTION S. B. 24—English. Increasing salaries of supreme court judges to SB,OOO and of appellate judges to $7,500 a year. Passed, ayes 26, noes 20. S. B. 176;—Grant. To provide for registration of owners oif thrashing machines and clover hullers with county auditors, with monthly reports of amounts of grain handled, etc., to the state commissioner of weights and measures; appropriation for commissioner of weights and measures cut from $4,000 to $2,000. Passed, ayes 32; noes 10. S. B. 2 ± 4—Grant. Providing that gravel or macadam roads may be repaired with material other than the kind with which the roads were originally built, and that county commissioners may have work done by contract if county highway superintendent has not facilities for performing the work. Passed, ayes 41, noes 0.

If Your Feet Ache and Bumand make you tired all over, ask any druggist for Alien’s Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic powder—shake it in your Shoes and walk all day in comfort. It has no equal for Corns, Bunions, Blisters or Callouses. Used by American, British and French soldiers. —Advt. CARD OF THANKS (We desire to. express our sincere and heartlfelt thanks to friends and neighbors far their kindness in the death and? burial of Gladys Shaeffer, daughter of Charles and Laura Shaeffer,:—MßS. CHARLES SHAEFFER AND SISTERS. You can still buy a good rub-ber-tipped lead pencil for a nickel In The Democrat’s fancy stationery and office supply department.

.dLASSUFSk. T jpVERTISIW jLq T - SLI ¥ qjfl [Under tills head nonces wtH be published for 1-eent-a* word for the fink Insertion, l-*-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, win be published twe or more times—as the cnee may bo—for M cents. Where replies are sent in Ths Democrat’s care, postage win be charge*) for forwarding such replies to the sdvertieer.] FOR SALE For Sale—l9l6 Ford in No. J condition.—Kuboske’s Garage, ts For Sale—Some good recleaned elover seed. —C. D. LAKIN, phone 907-J. ts For Sale or Trade —Two good work mares; will take calves or pigs in trade.—PHONE 952-L. £26 For Sale—Good split fence posts 12% each M farm 3 miles south of Virgie.—JOHN EILTS, phone 926-R. f-22 For Sale—Paragon lever paper cutter, 23-inch, recently rebuilt and In A-l condition.—THE DEMOCRAT. For Sale—Three-room house, lot 60x125,-city water; located on Elm street, near Main. Cheap for cash if taken at once.—Call 945-D. For Sale—Some good*Bronze turkey hens, $4 each.—ROY L. JOHNSON, Rensselaer, R-2. Nine and one-half miles north of town. f 22

SATURDAY, FEB. 88, Hit.

For’Hale—A Belle City lnctth<£s and brooder, 130-egg tine coop and -water fount, uned/a^B 1 season. Will sell at very able price.—PHONE 334. • For Sale fHaeh gelding, coming ® years old, »L 14M; sound and Oappy, bait gentle and a goed worker.—GUY MERRIMAN, Ren«selaer, R-4, phone 91$-I>. f 26 For Salo—Three stallions, two jacks, and also barn and lets. Will sell animats separate from barn if desired. Will soli cheap for ffulck sale.-—GEORGE W. KNOOKEL, Remington, Ind. f 26 For Sale—Good white enameled bath tab and fixtures, also a Magallon hot water tank and gasoline heater for same, with all connec*tions and very little used.—F. E. BABCOCK, p*one 315. . ts For Sale—so acres, 5 miles west of Rensselaer; new house and barn (built 3 years), well of water at door. Will sell at a bargain if taken by March f. Could itse some young stock as part pay.-—RAN-DOLPH WRIGHT, Rensselaer, Ind. r R-3. ml For Sale—Self-imported, Mighty cultivated German sweet peaa, best for garden use; in- 5 and! 10c packages. Also whfte seed oats and selected white and red need corn. Both oats and corn are exceptionally high yielding of last fall crop.—JOHN ELLTS, phone 926-R. f-22 Butter Wrappers—Vegetable parcbment butter wrappers In any quantity desired, either plain er printed, at The Democrat Office, ts 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 Typewriter Ribbons—The Democrat carries In stock in lt» fancy stationery department the famous Nedlcth make of ribbons for nearly all the standard makes, of typewriters. Price 75c each. Will be sent by mail prepaid to «xy address on receipt of price. ts One of the Beet Located Residence _ properties In Rensselaer, 75x300 feet, corner lot fronting on two improved streets; good two-story house, with cistern, drilled well, bath, tyirn and other out-pulldlnga etc. Ground alone is worth pries asked for entire property. Terms If' desired. For further particulars eaU or address B. care THE DEMOCRAT.

For Sale—-In The Democrat’s Fancy Stationery and Office Supply department—steel die umbering machines, rubber stamp da+.ers, robber stamp pads, typewriter ribbons for all practically makes of typewriters, spun glass ink erasers, account files, filing cabinets, ,4*p ■ writer papers, legal blanks, etaRT For Sale—Some real bargains in well Improved farms located JFs-h----in three miles of RenseelamJf J 201 a., 133 a., 212 a., 153 a., B(>f£k also have some exceptional bar-RHm In improved farms of all sires ther out from Rensselaer. For fur-J ther particulars see me or call] phone 246, office, or 499, home.—| HARVEY DAVISSON. tfl

Typewriters—Ttvo brand-new Oliveri typewriters, complete with in-I struction book, cover, brush, bettiel of oil, etc. Machines have neve J been used, and are equipped witnl tabulator, back-up, new ribbon, etcj —s4o each, cash or satisfactory® terms. These machines, understand® are in brand-new boxes, never hav-® ing been unpack d. We will shl J express collect to any point a| price given above.—THE DEMOB CRAT. For Sale—lGO acres weM improve! fanmi in Gillam township, 5%® miles from town, 4 miles from stal tion, on improved gravel road. All level black land, good fences ancl buildings. Price right; terms real sonable. Possesion March flrstl 200-acre farm with fair improve! ments; level; black land, 110 acre! in cultivation balance pasture, eil (miles from town. Price $65- pel acre. Terms to suit. Possession February 1. Also 120-acre farm, good’’ iml provememts, located .on stonl road. 100' acres in cultivation, 21 acres pasture. Price and term| right. Will trade any one or mil of the above farms. —JOHN aI DUNLAP. \l

WANTED fl Wanted—Girl for general house*® work.—PHONE 952-L.- 12/1 Wanted—Work on farm by th ■ month by experienced marrleß I man.—CLYDE SCHULTZ, Surrejff Ind. f2|| Wanted—Place on farm by mail I rled man with small family [■ good, hard working man.—PlHONlll 916-M. f2|l Wanted Wood-choppers, to com cordwood near Rensselaer.—! ■JOHN J. LA W LER. Gee J, jjl Walter, Mgr., phone 337. fl Wanted—Small building that cafli be wrecked or moved for a g<® rage, also to buy a light earring® —C. M. PAXTON, Rensselaer, I® diana. MISCELLANEOUS I Standing Timber—We ’ave <fr® wood, standing timber, 2 miles west of Parr. Will sell 1® patches, any quantity desired.*® J. LAWLER, phone J. E. Walt®9 Mgr. 337. H _________.MB FINANCIAL 9 Money to Loan.—CHAI. J. DEAN®! SON, Odd Fellows, BuildlnHi Rensselaer. Mutual Insurance— Fire anti rllF jbJCT nlng. Also state cyclone. InotlwH of M. I. ADAMS. Phone SM-L. Farm Loans—Money to loan sBl farm property In any sums ■n aM® SIO,OOO.—E. P. HONAN. *Wa