Jasper County Democrat, Volume 23, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 June 1920 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Compare these prices with prices you have been paying Hansen Gloves $1.50 up Straw Hats 50c-75c Dress Shirts $2.00 up Canvas Gloves 20c Boy’s Suits $lO up Rockford Sox 25c Khaki Pants $2.50 Dress Hose 35c up Work Shirts sl-50 Boy’s Waists SI.OO Stockings...... . 50c Overalls $2.50 Underwear $2.00 Shoes. .. $4.50 up Hilliard & Hamill SHOES 7 - • - — ‘ HATS

NEWS from the COUNTY

MT. AYR " (From the Tribune) A gentle shower fell here Monday evening. Archie Blankenbaker returned Saturday from his trip to the west. Mt. Ayr and Parr played ball Sunday, the result being 13 to 12 for Parr. Miss Pearl McMillan of Morocco Is here visiting her aunt, Mrs. Geo. Lambert. Ira Huntington is home from Bloomington, his scnool having been completed. Rev. Horton moved from the Mrs. Donaldson property to the parsonage this week. Mrs. Lou Guthrie went to Knlman Saturday for a few days’, visit with her daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brown of near McCoysburg visited their daughter, Mrs. Gilbert Stucker, Sunday. Sherman Thornton was over from Rensselaer Sunday to attend the Memorial services of the lodges. The Curtis Creek Threshing Co. has traded its threshing outfit in on a new Rumely Oilpull and separator. Orval Fisher and family and Marmon Long and family of Wheatfield and Walter Blankenbaker’s were Sunday dinner guests in the Menno Miller home.

What Our Customers Say: North Judson Creamery Co., ' December 27, 1919. North Judson, Indiana. 4 Gentlemen: — , . . To reply to your last letter asking us why we have not been shipping cream of late is an easy matter to answer. There has been no dissatisfaction in the least. We have cut down on milking considerably of late and have had no cream to ship. We always have appreciated your high prices, good tests and prompt returns, and I am sure that our very next can of cream will bear your shipping tag, as usual. I am, Yours very truly, L. C. BEIER, Momence, 111. WATCH THIS SPACE FOR OTHER LETTERS Judson Creamery & Produce Co. NORTH JUDSON, INDIANA Cash Buyers of CREAM IMiLK POULTRY EGGS

The Geesa family, the Alex Elijah family and the family of Earl Friel of Chicago, together with Miss Mattie Geesa’s friend of Valparaiso and George Francis, report a delightful day Sunday picnicking at Water Valley on the Kankakee river. Rev. and Mrs. Sheets were pleasantly surprised by a visit from Montreal friends Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Cratley are oldtime friends of Mrs. Sheets. Mr. Cratley holds a government appointment as bridge Inspector for the Dominion of Canada, and owing to business in Hamilton they were obliged to leave Mt. Ayr the next day. Rev. and Mrs. Sheets accompanied them to Chicago in their car.

COUNTY EDUCATIONAL NOTES (By Co. Supt Sterrett) The board of education met in regular session last Monday forenoon and transacted the regular business of the day. For the benefit of the many teachers who are readers' of the county educational notes and who are continuously asking for the addresses of the various trustees the same will be given. They are aS follows: i Grant Davisson, Parr, R-l, trustee of Barkley township. Burdette Porter, Remington, trustee of Carpenter township. . B. F. LeFevre, Medaryville, trustee of Gillam township. W. E. Poole, McCoysburg, trustee Hanging Grove township. After July 1 the trustee of Hanging Grove township will be George Parker, McCoysburg. Julius G. Huff, Rensselaer, R-4, Jordan township. Clifford E. Fairchild, Demotte, * Keener township. | Alfred Duggleby, Tefft, Kankakee

THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT

township. Charles W. Postill, Rensselaer, Marion township. Charles Wood, Monon, R-R, Milroy township. John Rush, Rensselaer, R-3, New ton township. Walter Harrington, Rensselaer, R-2, Union township. John Pettit, Fair Oaks, R-2, Walker township. John Bowie, Wheatfield, trustee Wheatfield township. Teachers who have occasion to write these men should preserve their addresses for future reference. All of the above trustees were present at the board meeting except Charles Wood of Milroy township. Dwight Mahorter, Jasper county’s agricultural agent, was unable to attend this meeting since he was spending his first honeymoon in parts unknown. Warren Poole of Hanging Grove tendered hte resignation as trustee to the board of commissioners who appointed George Parker to fill the unexpired term. Mr. Poole’s resignation will take effect on July 1. The trustees arranged for their various commencements. The only definite dates that were set and speakers arranged for were as follows: Hanging Grove-Milroy, June 19, at Milroy church; Barkley, June 26, at Barkley church; Gillam, July 10, at Independence church. Other dates were picked by Jordan and Walker, but the speakers are not engaged to fill the dates picked by Mr. Huff and Mr. Pettit.

BE RID OF THAT ACHE If you are a sufferer with lame back, backache, dizziness, nervousness and kidney disorders, why don’t you try the remedy that your own neighbors recommend? Ask your neighbor! Mrs. R. E. Scott, Van Rensselaer St., Rensselaer, says: “I have used Doan’s Kidney Pills whenever my kidneys have become disordered and I give them credit for the excellent health I now enjoy. By putting my kidneys in good condition, Doan’s have saved me rrom the suffering I used to have from the steady ache across my kidneys, pains In my back and other symptoms of kidney trouble. Doan’s are fine and I advise anyone troubled as I was to use them.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Scott had. Foster-Mil-burn Co., Mlfrs., Buffalo, N. Y— Advt,

Want ads in The Democrat are read by more people in Jasper and surrounding counties than those appearing in any other newspaper in this county,) < ,

1 I Barkley Church Everything is being put in readiness for a big day at Barkley church next Sunday, it being the annual observance of Childrens’ day. A large crowd of children are practicing in preparing an exceptionally good program which will be given Sunday morning. The choir and male quartette are also working hard to add their part to this program. A basket dinner will be served at noon. After dinner there will be one or more good speakers and music by the male quartette. Everybody in the community of this church have an invitation to come and spend this day in the interest of the boys and girls. Bring your basket dinner and put it with the rest and eat a family dinner together. The parsonage will be open all day especially to mothers with their babies and little ones who need the conveniences of home. Come —Bring your dinner —Stay all day. At the time of tlje morning program several children are to be baptized. Parents having children they wish baptized should see or call the pastor of the church, Rev. J. E. Dean. Methodist Rev. E. W. Strecker, pastor. —The Sunday school will meet at 9:30. The interest is good and the attendance fine. Let us push on farther. This is “Education” Sunday in this church. The pastor will preach on Christian Education at the morning service. All who have attended college at some time will be invited to sit in a body. This should be an interesting service. The Epworth League devotional meeting will be held at 6:30. “Common Mistakes in Dally Living” will be the topic of the evening. Isabel Bever will be the leader. A Children’s day program will be rendered at the evening service .at 7:30. This service is. always interesting and draws a large crowd. The public is most cordially invited to attend these meetings. First Christian Church W. T. Barbre, pastor. The Day program will be given next Sunday morning. The school is planning for a very, large attendance and urge everyone to come sharply at 9:30. There will be. no morning preaching service but the service win close early. The annual offering for missions front the

Sunday School will be taken at thia time. The regular evening preaching service will . be held. Christian Endeavor at 6:30 p. m. Presbyterian Rev. J. Budman Fleming, minister. —Children’s day service at 10:45 by the children. Baptism or children at this service. Evening worship at 7:30 and the subject for the sermon will be: “Mending.” Children bring your parents and friends with you. "Live for something, have a purpose, And the purpose keep in view; Drifting like a helpless vessel, Thou can’sl ne’er to life be true. Half the wrecks that strew life’s ocean, It some star had been their guide, Might have now been safely riding, But they drifted with the tide.” Baptist Church 9:30, Sunday school; 10:45, preaching by Rev. J. A. Carter, a man of many experiences. You will not want to mdse hearing him.

G. O. P. DELEGATES FOLLOW LEADERS

(Continued from Pago Ono)

been forgotten in the light or actualities. Just how long the balloting will continue no one knows. It may be four and It may be forty ballots, and whether the delegates are going to continue to do as they are told, as they have done in connection with the formalities and minor questions of the convention, or whether they are going to think and vote as they please, is yet to be determined. There is one thing that is fairly sure at this writing, and that is that the delegates will not be told bow to vote until after several ballots have been taken. If at all.

COMMUNITY SALES REGULARLY At Roselawn (4th Saturday) and Demotte (lit Saturday) of each molith, respectively. Parties having stock, tools or anything else they wish to dispose of are Invited to bring same In and sell It at these sales. Stuff will be sold on reasonable sale terms. —BERT HANAWAY, Auctioneer; H. C. DeKock, Clerk.

BUDAPEST CABINET RESIGNS

Hungarian Government Unable to Cope With the Terrorists. Vienna, Austria, June 11. —The Hungarian cabinet, headed by Alexander Simonyl Semedan, has resigned, according to reports from Budapest The resignation of the ministry, the messages said, was caused by its inability to cope with the situation created by terrorists.

Degree to Indian.

Richmond. June 11.—Among the 71 degrees conferred by the Earlham college faculty, none was of greater Interest than the honorary master of arts degree conferred upon John Bundy, noted landscape artist, and many years ago a member of the faculty. An ovation was given Mr. Bundy when he stepped forward to receive the degree.

Find Body In Ohio River.

Evansville, June 11.—The body of a man found floating in the Ohio river, near the new government dam, several miles below here, was identified as that of Edward Francis Brookins, sev-enty-nine years, old. of New Harmony. Brookins was an inmate of the Little Sisters of the Poor hospital in this city and disappeared last Friday.

Boy Injured by Cartridge.

Knightstown, June 11.—Exploding a 22-callber cartridge with which he and a companion were playing. Carroll Leavell, eight years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Will Leavell, was painfully Injured when the cap struck him in the left cheekbone, Just below the eye.

Police Sergeant Killed.

Anderspn, 11.—Falling from a scaffold on which he, was painting his home, Riley E. Bartlow, fifty-seven years old, night desk sergeant of the Anderson police force for eight years, was Instantly killed when the scaffold gave way.

Bi — . a 7 i r = =r— —*t <1- i ~ ' ~ , —.i a —- - ' * ~ - —* Baby Beds We are showing a complete line of children’s cribs—both single and double, in either white or vernis martin. Worland Bros. Rensselaer; - - - - ’ Indiana

SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1920.

MONEY COULD NOV BUY IT, HE SAYS Pennsylvania R. R. Man Would Not Take Anything For the Good Tanlac Did Him. “No, sir, I wouldn’t be back in the fix I was In before I got Tanlac for all the money in the world,” said Ear! J. Stritmatter,' a popular boiler maker for the Pennsylvania railroad, living on R. F. Dr 11, Fort .Wayne, Ind., recently. “I had always enjoyed good health," he continued, “until one year ago, when my stomach got out of order and I commenced to lose in weight and became run-down generally. I work as boiler maker at night and have to carry my midnight lunch, and every time I ate it I would get so nauseated 'about thirty minutes afterwards that I could not retain a bite I had eaten. Nothing I ate seemed to have a bit of taste to It and I would bloat all up with gas,- feel tight across the chest and have the worst gnawing pains In my stomach. Sometimes when these spells came on I would be in such agony I thought I would die in spite of all I could do. Often I would get so weak and nervous that my legs seemed to give way. and I couldn’t hold myself up, and would have to go to bed and be laid up two or three days. My head ached constantly, in fact, I was troubled in one way or another until I never knew what it was to feel good. “When I commenced taking Tanlac I thought It might give me a little temporary relief, but It never once entered my mind that it would make a clean sweep of my troubles like it has and put me back on my feet in as good health as I ever was. I ■have gained twelve founds In weight and am feeling as fine as I did the best day of my life. My digestion, was never better in my life and I am enjoying everything I eat, be* cause It never bothers me in any way. My nerves are as strong as steel and I don’t have headaches any more. I am strong enough to tackle any kind of work and I don’t, believe any man feels better than. I do. It keeeps me pretty busy working at night and looking after my little farm, too, out on the edge of town, but Tanlac will keep a man on.top.” Tanlac Is sold in Rensselaer by Lt-rsh & Hopkins, and in Remington by Frank L. Peck; in Wheatfield by Simon Fendig.—Advt.

TRANSFERS OF REAL ESTATE

Charles Battleday et ux to Mabel Overton, April 2, It 6, bl 4, Rensselaer, Benjamin & McGee’s $1,500. John L. Makeever et ux to John F. Zimmer, May 11, und 9-10 n% nw, nw ne, sw ne, nw se, s pt se ne, 15-29-7, e% ne, 16-29-7, Newton, $42,000. Arthur C. Hartman et Harvey R. Hartman, May 15, It’ 6, bl 1, Rem-, ington, Schaeffer’s add., SI,OOO.

NOTICE OF BRIDGE LETTING No. 3240 Notice is hereby given that on Monday, the Sth day of July, 1920, theBoard of Commissioners of Jasper county, Indiana, will receive sealed proposals for the construction of a bridge over the Oliver ditch. Section. sl, Township 20 North of Range 6. Said bridge to be built according: to plans and specifications on file in the auditor’s office. All blds to be on file by 2 o’clock p. m. of said date and to be accompanied by bond' and affidavit according to law. The board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By order of the Board of Commissioners ot Jasper county, Indiana. • S. C. ROBINSON, Jl2-18 Auditor.