Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 May 1919 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
MOST IMPORTANT NEWS OF WOULD
BIQ HAPPENINGS OF THE WEEK CUT TO LAST ANALYSIS. DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN ITEMS K*m«l* Culled From Events of Moment In All Parts of the World— Of Interest to All the People Everywhere. Washington Finland was recognized ns an independent de facto government by the United States in a brief announcement made by Acting Secretary of State Polk at Washington. • • • Secretary Baker announced al Washington that by August the last man of the American expe<ntlouary force will have been withdrawn from France. He said this estimate wae based on the movement of 300,000 men a month to the United States. • • • President Wilson in an executive order cabled from Paris has directed the civil service commission at Washington to exempt soldiers, sailors and marines from physical requirement* for any civil service position. • • • President Wilson has Issued a call by cable for a special session of congress to meet Monday, May 19. Secretary Tumulty, in making the announcement on Wednesday, said it would be impossible for the president to be present for the opening of the special session. • • • Orders were Issued by the war department at Washington for the recruiting of 8,000 men to serve as replacement troops for American soldiers now in Siberia. * • •
A Washington dispatch says it requires $2,500 a year to keep the average American family, government investigators have found. Furthermore, the cost of living throughout the United States still is soaring. • • • Sale of eight National Guard and four miscellaneous camps for a total of $548,000 was announced by the war department at Washington. The bidders assumed all damage claim* against the government. • • • There is an acute shortage of men for the United States navy, according to Franklin D. Roosevelt, acting secretary of the navy, who telegraphed to Lieut. Com. D. P. Wickersham, in charge of recruiting at New York, urging a vigorous campaign for enlistments. n « * • Roger C. Treadwell, the American .consul who was captured by the bolshevlki, has reached Stockholm, the state department at Washington announced. Restrictions on the export of silver and standardization of the price at $1.01% per fine ounce were removed by the federal reserve board at Washington, thus in effect establishing a free market for silver in the United States and throughout the world. * » • The situation In northern Mexico is again reflected as serious In advices received at Washington from Mexico City and the border. The state department has been advised that 3,000 employees of an American mining company at Santa Eulalia have been removed to Chihuahua City because o£ threats by Villa, the bandit leader. * * *
Foreign Michael J. Ryan of Philadelphia and former Gov. Edward Dunne of Illinois, participated in a Sinn Fein procession at Belfast. They expressed themselves as being entirely satisfied with the reception they received in the unionist stronghold of North Ireland. A Stockholm dispatch says north Sweden is experiencing the worst floods in many years due, to abnormal rains and snowfalls. The damage is estimated at more than $8,000,000. • ♦ • All Munich celebrated the victors over the soviet government. The streets were crowded with people, who cheered the passing troops oi gave them refreshments. Captured Spartacides were hooted as thej passed. ♦ * * British troops broke up a forbidden meeting at Athlone, Ireland, by charg Ing upon the crowd with bayonets. A number of persons were wounded and armored cars have taken possessior of the place. Defeated along the entire eastern front by the Siberian forces, the bolshevik forces are retiring in disorder, the Russian newspaper Russkavt says. A Vienna dispatch says Bela Kun, Hungarian premier, has accepted th« allied demands for the surrender oi Budapest. ' e w „ General Griffin, military commander' has Withdrawn his proclamation constituting Limerick, Ireland, a specla' military area.
A Brussels dispatch says the Belgian government has decided to ask the allies or the United States for an Immediate loan of $500,000,000. • • • The giant Farman airplane Goliath, which has been flying between Paris and Brussels, Tuesday night ascended to a height of 5,100 meters (approximately 10,732 feet) while carrying 25 passengers. • • • When Polish forces captured Vilna recently they seized and shot Adolph Joffe, the former Russian bolshevik ambassador at Berlin, according to Polish newspapers received at Copenhagen. • • • It is understood that the duke of Devonshire will soon retire as governor general of Canada, and the London Mull says that the office will be offered the earl of Athlone, brother of Queen Mary. • • • A Managua dispatch says the Costa Rican revolutionists Issued a proclamation naming Julio Acosta provisional president and have solicited recognition of the new administration by Central American republics. • • • The bolshevlkl in great strength have begun an attack on Vilna, the capital of Lithuania, which was captured several weeks ago by the Poles, according to a Kovno dispatch received in Berlin. • • •
Peace Notes In opening the congress at Versailles Premier Clemenceau, the presiding officer, speaking to the German plenipotentiaries, said: is unnecessary to express newless words. You have before you the plenipotentiaries of the small and great powers united In this most cruel war, which was Imposed upon them. The hour has arrived for a heavy settlement of the account.” * • • Immediately after the session at which the treaty of peace was handed to the German delegates at VersaillesCount von Brockdorff-Rantzau, chairman of the delegation, gave a copy of the document to a trusted aerial courier, who at once started on the flight to Weimar, where he delivered the treaty to the Ebert cabinet. • • • “We declare that we do not deny the extent of our defeat. We know the power of the German armies is broken.” In these words Count von Brockdorff-Rantzau, head of the German delegation to the peace congress, received the terms of the victorious allies and associated powers in the Hall of Mirrors of the Trianon palace at Versailles. The allies presented a solid front, with the Italian envoys back In the conference. • • •
Domestic Two hundred stationary engineers employed in breweries and large manufacturing plants at Peoria, 111., went on strike foe*lo per cent increase in wages. • • • John Greber, a farmer living near White Deer, Tex., shot and killed his mother and a younger sister, wounded, probably fatally, an elder sister and then shot himself. He is expected to die. ♦ • • Disrespect for the American flag and a show of resentment toward the thousands who participated in a 1 lctory loan pageant at Chicago may cost George Goddard his life. He was shot down by a youth in the uniform of the United States navy when he did not stand and remove his hat while the band was playing the “StarSpangled Banner.” ♦ • • At a Victory loan rally at New York Mme. De Cisneros sang and then exchanged a series of kisses for $1,000,000 subscriptions. * * • Joseph H. Shea, the American ambassador to Chile, will leave Santiago for New York on a four months’ leave of absence. * * * Lieut. H. C. Muckey of Cleveland and Lieut. J. P. Haddock of San Diego, Cal., were killed at Deer park, near Houston, Tex., when their airplane fell. • • • Paul Frederick Volland, president of the P. F. Volland company, art publishers at Chicago, was shot and killed in his office by Mrs. Vera Trepagnier, widow of a wealthy sugar plantation owner of New Orleans. 1 • » • A first contingent, 1,000 men, of the 50,000 troops volunteering to relieve an equal number of doughboys now with the American army of occupation in Germany, sailed from New York for Europe on the transport Agamemnon. * • • Two masked men robbed the Clark County bank at Washougal, Wash., of $7,000 in currency and silver and escaped in an automobile. • • • Two naval aviators, Ensign Adams and Chief Machinist’s Mate Corey, flying a naval scout plane at the Rockaway Beach naval air station, were killed when the machine collided with the top of a hundred-foot high hydrogen tank. . ♦ ♦ * The bodies of Joseph O. Tolbert, sheriff of Lafayette county, and John McDonald, his deputy, were found by a posse seven miles southeast of Lexington, Mo., in a wheat field. The men were the victims of three motorcar bandits.
THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT
U.S. FLYERS START ON OCEAN FLIGHT
Three Hydro-Airplanes on First Leg of Transatlantic Trip. TWO ARRIVE AT HAUFAX N. C.-4 Experienced Motor Trouble Off Maine Coast and Is Missing—Destroyers Are Searching for It— N. C-1 and N. C.-3 Reach Goal. New York, May 9. —The naval communications service announced that the last direct word of the navy seaplane N. C.-4 was received at 2:33 p. m. while it was limping along on three motors off Otter Cliffs, Me., headed for Halifax. Two destroyers are searching along the coast. Two Arrive at Halifax. Halifax, May 9.—Two of the American navy seaplanes, the N. 0.-l and the N. C.-3, arrived here at eight o'clock (seven o’clock New York time), thus finishing successfully the first leg of their transatlantic flight. The two planes were sighted first at 7:44 p. m. The N. C.-3 took the water at Eastern Passage at 7:55 and the N. C.-l ten minutes later. No reports have been received here regarding the N. C.-4, which developed trouble with one of its engines not long after leaving Rockaway Point. (Halifax is 540 miles from Rockaway Beach, the starting point.) One Plane Missing.
Washington, May 9.—The N. C.-4, one of the three navy planes which started on the first leg of the Atlantic flight, was reported missing. Commander Albert C. Read of the N. C.-4 reported to the navy department by radio at two o’clock through the fchantam (Mass.) station, that his plane was experiencing engine trouble and might be forced to land. The message, as transmitted to the navy department, said: “We are running on three motors, oil trouble In one, and may have to land. READ, N. C.-4.” A later message reported the oil pump had been repaired, but at 6:80 o’clock no word had been received to indicate the position of the N. 0.-4, and it was believed It had wandered from the direct course while making repairs. Start at 10.02 A. M. The following official account of the start of the flight was Issued by the navy department: “The three navy seaplanes. Iff C.-l, N. C.-3 and N. C.-4, started from the naval air station aU Rockaway Beach at 10:02 a. m. on their flight to Halifax, the first leg of the transatlantic flight, which will start officially when the planes take the air from Trepassey bay for Lisbon, Portugal, via the Azores. “At 10:02 the N. C.-3 started. A minute later the N. C.-4 was off; and two minutes later the N. C.-l took the air. “Soon after the start ’each destroyer along the first leg of the route and the station ship at Halifax had been notified. A radio dispatch also was sent to Admiral Knapp in London and Admiral Benson in Paris.”
GREAT WINTER WHEAT CROP
All Records Broken and World’s Needs Are Satisfied. Washington, May 9. —A winter wheat crop of 900,000,000 bushels In round numbers is estimated by the department of agriculture in its report for May. The crop thus estimated sets a new record, and Its total yield Is within 1.7,000,000 bushels of the total winter and spring wheat crops of last year. With an estimate of 350,000,000 bushels of spring wheat, part of which has not been seeded, a total wheat crop of 1,250,000,000 bushels is possible for the United States. This Is enough to allow- for 600,000,000 bushels for bread and seed requirements, and 650,000,000 bushels for export, which is within 75,000,000 bushels of the outside estimate of European requirements, and exceeds many of the numerous forecasts as to the amounts that will be needed. Based on $2.26 per bushel, the government guaranteed price, the wheat crop Is valued at $2,034,000,000.
WILSON’S REPLY TO POINT
Action Not Words Count Now—N« Time for Talk. Paris, May 9. —President Wilson, when asked by Premier Clemenceau and Lloyd what effect Count von Brockdorff-Rantzau’s answer had made on him, Is said to have replied: “What Is the use of even thinking about it? Actions, not words, count now. The Germans will either sign or refuse.” Official opinion Is that if the present delegates refuse there will be another revolution and a new government which, for the sake of self-protection, would be compelled to sign.
German Newspapers Protest.
Berlin, May 9. —The entire German press violently condemns the terms of the peace treaty as given in preliminary summaries. All papers from the extreme left (radicals) to the ultraconservative declare Germany cannot accept the terms.
: CLEMENCY FOR FIFTY
WILSON LENIENT WITH MEN CONVICTED AS SPIES. Complete Pardon Given Man Guilty of Issuing Circulars Condemning the War. Washington, May 9. —Fifty more men convicted during the war for violation of the espionage act have been granted clemency hy President Wllaon on recommendation of Attorney General Palmer in pursuance of the recently announced policy of being lenient to those who have already served a year or more In prison, and whose sentences in the stress of war times now appear excessive. Only one complete pardon was given, according to the announcement by the department of justice. It went to C. E. Menke, sentenced In the federal district court of northern Alagama to 15 months* Imprisonment. Perley B. Doe, son of the late Chief Justice Doe of the New Hampshire Supreme court, convicted in Colorado, where he had gone for his health on a charge of Issuing circulars condemnIng the war, was given a commutation of sentence to expire at once. Among others granted clemency, w’fth the district where they were convicted, the original sentence and the commuted sentence, respectively, are: Frank Beal, southern Iowa; three years, 18 months. August Welssenel, northern Illinois; 10 years, one year, one day. David Gerdes, northern Illinois; 10 years, one year, one day. Emil Schiller, western Wisconsin; two years, one year, one day. Christian Seeger, eastern Michigan; five years, two years. William Powell, eastern Michigan; 20 years, two years. Frank Momparler, eastern Michigan ; 18 months, time served. Sam Jacobs, South Dakota; two years, six months; on release from St. Elizabeth’s hospital.
NAB 2,500 DRAFT SLACKERS
Many Foreigners Are to Be Arrested in Brooklyn in a Few Days. New York, May 9. —Arrest of 2,500 draft slackers will begin in Brooklyn within a few days, it was announced by United States District Attorney Bell, after conferences with Federal Judges Garvin and Chatfield, and Federal Marshal Powers. Many of these slackers are foreigners.
Lindsley Heads Legion.
St. Louis, May 9. —Maj. Henry D. Lindsley of Dallas, Tex., was elected chairman of the American legion over Sergt. Jack J. Sullivan of Seattle, Wash.
THE MARKETS
Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago, May 8. < Open- High- Low- ClosCorn— Ing. est. eat. ing. May 1.68 1.69 1.63 1.69 July 1.65-1.65% 1.66 1.59 1.66-1.65% Septl.sß-1.68% 1.59% 1.51% 1.59-1.58% OatsMay 67% .68% .67% .68% July 68%-68% .69% .67% .69% Sept 66-66% .66% .64% .66%-66% Rye— May 1.61% 1.57% 1.58 July 1-64% 1.59 1.61 FLOUR—Per bbl, In jute, 98-lb. sack basis: Barley flour, 89.00; corn flour, 88.20; white rye flour, 89-50; dark rye, 88.90; spring wheat, 812.50; first clear, In jute, 810.00; second clear, 87.00; special brands, 812.70; hard winter, [email protected]; soft winter, 811-70. These prices apply to car lots except for special brands. HAY—Choice timothy and No. 1, 837.000 38.00; standard, 836.00037.00; No. 1 light clover mixed, 836.00037.00; No. 2 timothy, 834.00035.00; No. 3, 829.00 @ 33.00; c10ver,“822.00 @32.00. BUTTER—Creamery, extras, 92 score, 56%c; higher scoring commands a premium; firsts, 91 score, 55%c; 88-90 score, 53%@55c; Seconds, 83-87 score, 50%@53c; centralized, 56@66%c; ladles, 47@48c; reno. vated, 50@51c; packing stock, 40@43c. Prices to retail trade: Extra tubs, 59c; prints, 60%«. EGGS—Fresh firsts, 42@44c; ordinary firsts, 40%@41%c; miscellaneous lots, cases Included, 42 @ 43c! cases returned, 41@42%c; extras, packed In whitewood cases, 48%@ 49%c; checks, 37@38c; dirties, 39@40c; storage packed, firsts, 44%@45c; extras, 45@ 45%c. LIVE POULTRY Turkeys, 32@33c; fowls, 33c; roosters, 19c; broilers, 1%@2lb. average, [email protected] per doz.; ducks, 82@33c; geese, 23c. Prices to retail trade In single coop lots, %@lc higher. POTATOES—Per 100 lbs. bulk, northern, [email protected]; sacked, [email protected]. NEW POTATOES—Per bbl., [email protected]. CATTLE Prime steers, 819.00@ 20.00; good to choice steers, [email protected]; medium to good steers, 815 [email protected]; plain to medium steers, 812 [email protected], yearlings, fair to choice, [email protected]; Stockers and feeders, [email protected]; good to prime cows, [email protected]; fair to prime heifers, [email protected]; fair to good cows, [email protected]; canners, [email protected]; cutters, [email protected]; bologna bulls, 89.25@ 10.00; butcher bulls, [email protected]; veal calves, [email protected]. HOGS—Fair to choice light hogs, 820.650 21.10; choice light butchers, [email protected]; medium weight butchers, 260-270 lbs., 821.00 @21.20; heavy weight butchers, 270-350 lbs., [email protected]; mixed packing, [email protected]; heavy packing, [email protected]; rough packing, [email protected]; pigs, fair to good, [email protected]; stags (subject to 80 lbs dockage), 816.00© 19.06. SHEEP—WooI Colorado lambs, 819.25© 20.00; western lambs, [email protected]; native lambs, 816 [email protected]; shorn lambs, 815.000 15.75; yearlings, [email protected]; ewes, fair to choice, [email protected]; feeding and shearing lambs, [email protected]; clipped wethers, 813.00 @14.00. Buffalo, N. Y., May 8. CATTLE—Receipts, 150; slow. CALVES—Receipts, 600; steady; $6.00@ 16.60. HOGS—Receipts, 2,000 ; 25@50c lower; heavy, [email protected]; mixed, [email protected]; yorkers, $21.50; light yorkers and pigs, $26.56020.75; roughs, [email protected]; stags, [email protected]. SHEEP AND LAMBS—Receipts, 1,600; strong; 25@50c higher; lambs, [email protected]; yearlings, $10.00015.00; wethers, 813.500 14.00; ewes, [email protected]; mixed sheep, 813.00 @13.50.
DAIRY FACTS
TO ELIMINATE SCRUB BULLS
Campaign Started by Wisconsin Farm, ere to Use Only Purebred Sires—Record In One County. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Wisconsin dairymen and farmers, desirous of increasing their profits and adding still greater honors to their already famous dairy state, have joined tn a state-wide campaign to eliminate the scrub bull and use only purebred sires. The record made last year In the Brown County Cow-Testing association typifies the merits of purebred bulls and Illustrates why farmers and
A Sire of Good Quality.
dairymen will not tolerate the scrub. In this association 12 cows qualified for the register of production. All of these cows were daughters of purebred sires, six of them being daughters of one sire. The five best herds in the association are headed by purebred sires, while the five poorest herds are all headed by grade or scrub sires. The herds of those farmers who used purebred sires averaged 85 pounds more fat a cow than those using grades or scrubs. Last year eight of the members purchased purebred sires of known breeding to replace their scrubs.
KEEP DAIRY COWS ON FARM
For Farmer Who Haa Good Market for Products Dairying Is Most Profitable Business. Keeping dairy cows will help the average farmer to overcome three main drawbacks to the one-crop system of farming: A cash Income but once a year, a depleted soil, and unequal distribution of labor, according to C. H. Staples, dairy specialist, extension division, Louisiana State university. "For the farmer who does not have a ready and accessible market for dairy products, a few dairy cows will provide the cheapest and best of human food for the family,” says Mr. Staples. "The cows will consume much of the rough feeds that usually go to waste and the expense of keeping them Is almost negligible. “For the farmer who has a good market for dairy products dairying Is a most profitable business, is always a safe and sound line of farming, is least affected by sudden changes of weather and seasons, gives a steady cash income, builds up the soil, and provides employment for labor at all seasons.”
MAKE BETTER FARM BUTTER
Trouble Incident to Home Production May Be Decreased by Using More Careful Methods. The adoption of more careful methods of handling milk and cream and Imprdved practices In the making of farm butter will reduce rather than Increase the trouble incident to home production of this food, say dairy specialists, and will result in a superior product which can be sold more easily and for a better price than the average farm butter.
(Under this head notices will be published for 1-cent-a-word for the first insertion, %-cent-a-word for each additional insertion. To save book-keep-ing cash should be sent with notices. No notice accepted for less than 25 cents, but short notices coming,, within the above rate, will be published two or more times —as the case may be—for 25 cents. Where replies are sent in The Democrat’s care, postage will be charged for forwarding such replies to the advertiser.) FOR SALE For Sale—Baby chicks. CALL 524. mls For Sale—Dining room table and chairs and bookcase.—«MßS. J. H. CHAPMAN, phone 504. mls For Sale —A Dunham sidecar, in good condition, price $35. — LEWIS HURLEY, Wheatfield, Indiana. tml 0 For Sale —Many kinds of blooming plants, also ferns and vines, and thousands of cabbage and tomato plants ready now.—MRS. J. W. KING, phone 216-Green. m-14 For Sale—Maxwell touring, car tn
SATURDAY, MAY 10,
good condition. with sikrter, lights, Me.—KUBOSKE-S GARAGEFor Sale—Good oak lumber. Am now sawlog and want your specifications for building frames. — LA WHO N BRUCE, phone 925-C. m 25 For Kale—Yearling Hampshire boar; fine individual and sired by Capt. Lookout. Pedigree furnished. — RUSSELL VAN HOOK, phone 938A. n»U For Sale or Rent—Good M-room house, electric lights, city water; 2u blocks of court house.—'MßS. GEORGE STOUDT, phone 65, Remington, Ind. m!4 For Sale—l have a quantity of Ito San soy beans at Washburn Grain Co. Price $4 per bushel. — EDWARD D. BELLOWS, Remington, Ind. ts F<>r Sale or Trade —Black and white shetland pony, buggy and harness; 7 shoats, 1 male bog, 1 sow, all pure-bred Hampshlres; 8 other shoats, wt. about 30 ids. each. —G. W. KLWBERLIN, Rensselaer, R-l. ts For sale—so patent bee hives with Hoffman frames and foundation, and 100 supers for comb honey—cheap. Will sell tn small lots.— JOHN ROORDA, 2 miles east and 1 mile south of Thayer, Ind. m2O For Sale—Gasoline coll water ■heater, for bath room or barber shop. Little used, works perfectly, but tearing out of bath room left no use for It. Will sen very cheap. —Enquire at DEMOCRAT OFFICE. For Sale—Paragon lever paper outter, 23-lnch, recently rebuilt and in A-X condition. —THE DEMOCRAT. For Sale—Good 10-20 tractor and 3 bottom plows, plowed less than 20 acres; will sell cheap.—D. P. LANE, phone 537. ts For Sale —lo l acres, B 5 acres in small grain; house, barn, garage and orchard. Possession at once. Price 375. Terms, 3800 down and long time on remainder. Large list of farms for sale. List your farms and property with us.—GEO. F. MEYERS, Rensselaer, Ind. ts
For Sale—Good two-story, 7-room house, with batn, electric lights, drilled well, large cistern, lots of fruit, splendid shade trees; on corner lot—really two lots each 75x 150 feet, each fronting Improved street and improved street on side. Splendidly located on best residence street in Rensselaer. Lots alone worth more than entire property can be bought for.—F. E. BABOOCK. ts For Sale, cash or payments—Several rebuilt typewriters, 3 Olivers, Nos. 3 and 5, 2 Smith Premier No. 10, etc.; also brand-new Olive- No. 9. Rebuilt machines are in splendid condition and will do just as good work as brandnew machines and you can buy one of these for one-half to less than one-half the price of a new machine. Easy monthly payments, if desired, to responsible parties.— THE DEMOCRAT’S FANCY STATIONERY AND OFFICE SUPPLY DEPT. ts For Sale—Everything in the floral line. Cut flowers, potted plants, floral designs of all kinds. Potted tomato plants and all other kinds of vegetable plants, all greenhouse grown.—OSBORNE GREENHOUSE, 502 Merritt St. Phone 439. t£ Oak Lumber —Will have all kinds of oak lumber for sale. Send in your bills before I commence sawing.—E. P. LANE, phone 537. ts Seed Corn —Are you in a corn club? If you have plenty of muck ground and sandhills, certainly not. But you can beat anybody and raise a bumper crop by taking seed corn from a high-yielding and of poor soil. Per bushel 32.25. — JOHN EILTS, Rensselaer, R-2, phone 926-R. For Sale—ln The Democrat’s Fancy Stationery and Office Supply department—steel He -umbering machines, rubber stamp Raters, rubber stamp pads, typewriter ribbons for all practically makes of typewriters, spun glass ink erasers, account files, filing cabinets, typewriter papers, legal blanks, etc. 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. 1 also have some exceptional bargains In improved farms of all slses farther out from Rensselaer. For further particulars see me or call phone 246, office, or 499, home.— HARVEY DAVISSON. ts
LOST Lost—Some place on street Wednesday a package of papers Including a bank book. —MISS SUSIE MONAGHAN, phone 469Jled. ml 4 Lost—April 25, either in Rensselaer or between Rensselaer and my place of residence, 3 miles northwest of Rensselaer, a good scoop-shovel. Finder please phone 915-G. —GEORGE SPANGLE. mlO Lost—Thursday afternoon, some place between Rensselaer and Brook, an extra wheel off a Maxwell car; wheel had on a Miller tire. Finder please notify WM. COOPER, Brook, Ind., or The Democrat. FOR RENT Pasture—One mile west of Virgie, plenty of blue-grass and good water, $1.50 per month per head, less than yearlings $1.25 per mpnth. —O. W. CEDAR WALL, Fair Oaks J R-2, phone 910-G. m-isl FINANCIAL I Farm Loans—Money to loan on farm property In any gums up to SIO,OOO.—E. P. HONAN. ts Money to Loan —CHAS. J. DEAX & SON, Odd Fellows* Building, Rensselaer. |f
