Jasper County Democrat, Volume 23, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 June 1920 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

This is the Tire It is Not Possible to Build a Better Tire > No Better Materials No Better Workmanship No More Scientific Construction can enter into the manufacture of a tire than you get when you put GOODYEARS on your car. The cost is no more than you pay \ for many inferior tires. KXWMM OUR SERVICE IS HELPFUL yyQCi MIbI —there is no Extra Charge. I The Main Garage pQyi I I The Best in Rensselaer I I Phone 206 Day or Night We Have Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes Too

News of the Week Cut Down for Busy Readers

Personal > Rear Admiral Albert G. Winterhalter, U. S. N., died at the Naval hospital at Washington of pneumonia. Ue was born in Detroit, Mich., October 5. 1856, and was formerly in command of the Asiatic fleet. * * ♦ Vai Winkler, minister of agriculture for Manitoba, died' suddenly at Morden, Manitoba. • • • A gift of SI2S,(MX) from the Rockefeller Foundation to Milliken university was announced at Decatur, 111. This leaves but $310,000 to be raised in the $2,000,000 endowment campaign. • * ♦ Senator Robert M. I«i Follette of Wisconsin was operated upon at St. Mary’s hospital at Rochester, Minn., sos removal of the gall sac. The operation was successful, according tJ announcement made by surgeons. *. * ♦ Politics Senator Lodge was chosen as permanent chairman for the Republican convention at Chicago by Jhe committee on permanent organization. * * • Senator Watson of Indiana won h’s fight for chairman of the resolutions committee of the Republican convention at Chicago. ♦ ♦ * Des Moines, la., June 10.—Estimates based on unofficial returns gave Sena-

Power Now Established by Extensive Owner Service The ever increasing preference for the Nash Six with its Nash Perfected Valve-in-Head motor Is the logical result of unusually fine perform- , ance. It has earned the unqualified endorsement of thousands of owners and has established for the Nash Motors Company a great good will that is nation-wide. THE NASH SIX Perfected Valve-In-Head Motor 6-pass. Touring Car $1,695 2-pass. Roadster — 1,695 4-pass. Sport Model 1,850 7-pass. Touring Car 1,875 4-pass. Coupe — — 2,650 7-pass. Sedan 2,895 d W. QI Ln AN GOODLAND, INDIANA

tor Albert B. Cummins a plurality of 25,000 votes for renomination for the United States senate. * • • Domestic Eleven persons were killed and 21 injured when a train* of express cars crashed into the rear of a passenger train which had stopped about two miles from Schenectady, N. Y. ♦ ♦ ♦ Alex Miller, deaf-mute, was found guilty of first-degree murder at Greeley, Colo,, In connection with the killing of Adam Shank, his wife and four children on the Shank farm near Gllbrest, last December. • • • A The torpedo-boat destroyer Satter-. lee broke all/ American records for speed in her standardization trials off Rockland, Me., when she made a mile at the rate of 38.257 knots an hour. ♦ • • Masked bandits entered the Hayes National bank at Hayes, Pa., ten miles from and after locking the cashier in the vault looted the bank and escaped* • • • The country home of Enrico Caruso, the tenor, at East Hampton, N. Y., was entered by burglars and jewels valued at $500,000 were stolen, the police report. • ♦ * Four men were killed, one Injured and nine arrested at Atlanta, Ga., as the result of a police raid on a house in the negro section of the city, where It is alleged gambling was in progress. * • • Fire followed by an explosion did damage estimated at $300,000 to the Perry G. Mason mail-order house and adjoining buildings at Cincinnati. The cause of the fire is unknown. • * * A bill has been introduced in the Louisiana legislature at Baton Rouge to make every man in the state marry at twenty-five or go to jail for five to ten years. * * ♦ — Reductions of from 25 cents to $2 a pair in the wholesale prices of various styles of shoes were announced by officials of three of the largest shoe manufacturing establishments at St Louis. ' * * * Masked bandits boldly entered the Hayes National bank at Hayes, Pa., ten miles from Pittsburgh, and after locking the cashier in the vault looted the bank and escaped. ♦ ♦ • Congressman Flood of Virginia and half a dozen lawyers and witnesses in the famous Portner will case engaged in a free-for-all fight in the Prince William county circuit court at Manassas, Va. * ♦ • The resolution providing for ratification of the federal suffrage amendment was defeated in the senate ol the general assembly of Louisiana at Baton Rouge, La., by a vote of 22 to 19. K * » * Gaining 256,282 inhabitants in ten years, Los Angeles, with a pppulatiorZ of 575,480, has stepped ahead of San Francisco, according to 1920 census figures made public at Washington. The population of San Francisco is announced as 508,410, a gain of 99,498. • • • Eight persons killed, more than 100 injured and property losses that will aggregate hundreds of thousands of dollars was the toll taken by the terrific wind and electrical storm that ■wept northwestern Minnesota and eastern North Tuesday night

THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT

Three are known to be dead and forty-five Injured, many seriously If not fatally, as the result of an explosion of a 15,000-gallon tank of benzoin at the plant of the Mason Tire and Rubber company, near Akron, O. • • • Five people were instantly killed 17 miles south of Grand Rapids, Mich., when a touring car was wtruck by a Michigan railway interurban train. The automobile was completely demolished. 1 • * • Aviation Cadets Roy W. Ellington of McCroy, Ark., and Harold Crowley of Mildred, Mont., were instantly killed at Kelley field, near San Antonio, Tex., when their airplane went into a tail spin and fell 2,000 feet. • * * Henry B. Osterman of Detroit Mich., secretary of tlie Lincoln Highway association, was killed Instantly when his automobile skidded near Tama, la. He was known from coast to coast. • * ,* Two members of the crew of a freight train were killed at Gardener Cass county, when several cars were swept from the track by a tornado, telephone reports received from Fargo, N. D., said. • • • Foreign The Polish counter-offensive against the bolshWlki between the Dvina and Upper Beresina, under General Pilsudski, president of the republic, is developing favorably, according to an official statement issued by the general staff at Warsaw. • * * Irish sympathizers in the annual convention of the American Federation of Labor at Montreal, Que., declared war on the League of Nations ratification program recommended by the executive council. * * * Three Spanish airplanes have»bombarded strongholds of rebellious tribesmen at Adouares and Sagara, dropping more than 100 bombs and causing great damage, according to advices received at Madrid. * * * Premier Nittl announced in the chamber of deputies at Rome that the cabinet had resigned. Former President Vittorio Orlando also resigned as president of the chamber. * « * The government tendered its resignation to President Ebert at Berlin, who requested it to remain in office provisionally. • * • According to information received at the foreign office anti-Semitic outbreaks occurred in Budapest around June 4, on which date, the advices stated, one man saw 12 Jews killed. • * * Three persons were killed and six wounded in a clash in the southeastern neutral zone when an attempt was made to disarm a company of RelchsSvehr, according to Information received at Berlin. * * * Russian bolshevist forces have been driven back in a panic along the front between the Duna and Beresina rivers, according to an official statement issued at Polish army headquarters at Warsaw. • • • The share of the United States in the first 20,000.000,000 marks gold of reparation bonds Germany is required to issue under the Versailles treaty will be about $500,000,000, : it was stated at Paris. * ♦ * Vandals invaded the grand ducal vault in the cemetery at Weimar in which lie the bodies of Schiller and Goethe, the famous German poets, and did considerable damage. ♦ ♦ * Gregory Krassln, emissary to London of the Russian soviet government, definitely succeeded in putting over an agreement for the resumption of trade between England and Russia. • ♦ ♦ Washington o Breckenridge Long, third assistant secretary of state at Washington, has resigned and his resignation has been accepted by President 'Wilson. * • * A drive on delinquent tax payers all over the country is being planned by Internal revenue officers, it was announced at Washington. * * * Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby

INSURE IN [■IS Koi IMF once MilM ' • I Of Benton, Jasper and Newton Counties. Insurance in force January 1, 1920 $4,215,161 The average yearly rate for the 24 years this Company has been in existence has been but 24 cents on the SIOO Insurance, or $2.40 per SI,OOO. State Mutual Windstorm Insurance written in connection. MARION I. ADAMS Rensselaer; S. A. Brusnahan, Parr, and J. P. Ryan (Gilliam tp.) Medaryville, R. F. D.; Wm. B. Meyers, Wheatfield; V. M. Peer, Kniman, are agents of this Company and will be pleased to give you any further information. Stephen Kohley, Rensselaer, is the adjuster for Jasper county.

V' ?JS 7 > 3q\?»v^ r ■ wqu Big Reasons Why You Should / Prefer an Ideal 1 Large Capacity—The Rumely Ideal can’t help but be a big capacity machine: it isbuilt on the common sense principle of keeping the straw moving. There’s absolutely no chance for slugging, winding, choking, bunching or any other hindrance to large capacity, when the straw is \kept on the move as it ia in the Ideal. 2 Saving the Grain— Saving all the grata is just as important as producing course. t The Rumely earned the name “Save-all-the-grafa-IdeaF’-— by saving it. In any kind of straw —headed, bundled or loose takings—dry, wet or frozen the Ideal handles all jobs the — nw—without waste. — 3 Clean Work—This is accounted for by the extra large chaffer area, the adjustable sieve in the shoe, and the Ideal system of wind control a guarantee of a perfect job of cleaning without waste, under every condition. The Ideal does the kind of cleaning that gets you no “dockage” at the elevator. 4 Strongly Built— One-piece timber can’t pull apart, sag or rot, as spliced or bolted members will The Ideal is a one-piece job—sills, posts, deck rails, straw rack sides. Then, there are the heavy, substantial trucks, and all shaker hanger bearings running in adjustable boxes. That’s the kind of construction that insures long life. SNo Vibration— Vibration makes a young machine old before it has served its time—-it wears out the bearings and pulls the shafts out of alignment. Counter balancing of all moving parts in the Ideal —perfect balancing of the cylinder—make the Rumely so steady running that when comparted to other separators vibration simply does not exist. 6 Easy to Operate —You don’t have to crawl inside the Ideal to get at the workfag parts. AU bearings, concave adjustments and regulation of the blast are on the outside of ths machine, also all oil and grease cups, where you can take care of them whUe the Ideal is pinning- I The Ideal is built in five sixes—22x36, 28x44, 28x48, 32x52 and 36x68. KUBOSKE & WALTER WHITE FRONT GARAGE JSSgL Rensselaer, Indiana /I

will probably ne the official spokesman for President Wilson on the floor of the San Francisco it was learned at Washington. * * ♦ Increases of 24 per cent in freight rates between points east of the Mississippi and points west of the Mississippi were asked by representatives of the carriers at the hearing of the Interstate commerce commission at Washington. • * • Total wheat production this year will be about 781,000,000 bushels, according to the United States department of agriculture at Washington. s » ♦ Pending a full report of the burning of the British flag in front of the treasury building last week by Irish women sympathizers, Secretary of State Colby has informally expressed regret for the Incident to Sir Auckland Geddes, the British ambassador at Washington. ♦ * * Both the federal prohibition amendment and the enforcement act passed by congress were held constitutional by the Supreme court at Washington. Permission to file a motion asking for a rehearing was granted by the court.

WATER FOWL OFF TO NORTH

Migration From Susquehanna Flats in Maryland Takes All Night. Port Deposit, Md. —The spring migration of water fowl from the Susquehanna flats began a few nights ago and continued for several hours, more than half a million wild geese, swans and ducks getting away for their summer quarters and breeding places in the far North. The exodus for the Arctic regions began at 9 p. m. —night always being chosen for departure—and.lasted until almost daylight the next morning, when probably every migratory fowl quit its winter quarters, in the Susquehanna and the Chesapeake. It was Interesting to npte the orderly precedence of the wild birds. As if on a signal the geese were the first to rise out of the water, nearly all at the same moment, from all sections of the upper bay reaches here —and after wheeling In circles two or three times at a height of 60 or more feet, made a spiral-like climb, and on reaching an altitude of 600 feet, broke into little groups and, spreading out In V shape, followed their leaders and were soon lost to view.

Two-thirds of all the farmers in America own their homes. Twothlrds of the city dwellers do not own their homes.

DR. ALBERT EINSTEIN

A recent photo of Dr. Albert Einstein, the eminent scientist, whose theory of relativity has been discussed the world over, who, it is reported, will accept a place on the faculty of the new University of Jerusalem, being built as part of the “Back to Palestine” movement now being fostered by the Zionists the world over.

SHRUNKEN WHEAT GOOD FEED

Hogs in South Dakota Experiments Made. Almost as Large Gains as With Good Wheat. “With the prtqe on hogs, shrunken wheat, as q pig feed is worth about hs much as the government’s guarantee/' says J. W. Wiison, professor of animal husbandry at South Dakota State college. Professor Wilson bases this statement upon the results of experiments conducted at the college some years ago in feeding 44-pound wheat in comparison with 57-pound wheat. Pigs receiving ground shrunken wheat made an average daily gain per head of twc pounds, the good wheat producing only three-tenths of a pound more per day per head.

The Danish Technological Institute has opened a special course to teach practical methods of burning different fuels in various kinds of stores with the greatest economy.

SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1820.

When Queen Elizabeth of England died, her wardrobe was found to contain more than 3,000 gowns. It is said that the amethyst used to be worn to promote temperance and sobriety, the chrysolite to ward off fevers, the onyx worn around the neck to prevent epilepsy, the opal to cure weak eyes, and the topaz to cure inflammation and keep the wearer from sleep walking.

NOTICE OF ; BRIDGE LETTING No. 3240 Notice is hereby given that on Monday, the sth day of July, 1920, the Board of Commissioners of Jasper county, Indiana, will receive sealed proposals for the construction of a bridge over the Oliver ditch, Section 21, Township 30 North of Range 6. Said bridge to be built according to plans and specifications on file In the auditor’s office. All bids 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 blds. By order of the Board of Commissioners of Jasper county, Indiana. S. C. ROBINSON, Jl3-18 Auditor.

CERTIFICATE OF ENROLLMENT BONILLIANT Sound PURE BRED Stallion No. 12361 A (Laws of Indiana, 1913, Chapter 28> The pedigree of the Stallion Bonnllllant. No. 27158 American, owned by I. L. Jones, P. O. Rensselaer, Ind., County of Jasper, described as follows: Color and marks, red roan; breed, French Draft; foaled in the year 1907; has been examined in the office of the . Secretary of the Indiana Stallion Enrollment Board 1 and It Is hereby (Not exact likeness) certified that the said stallion is of PURE BREEDING and Is registered Id a pedigree register association, society or company recognized as standard Iw accordance with Section 4 of the Indiana Stallion Enrollment Law. The Stallion has been examined by Dr. H. J. Kannal, a duly qualified' licensed veternarian, and Is certified by affdavit to be free from the transmissible unsoundnesses specified as such in the Indiana Stallion Enrollment Law. (Seal) C. H. ANTHONY, Pres. C. M. McCONNELL, Vice-Prea. Not good unless coutnerslgned by h. e. McCartney, secy. Dated at Lafayette, Indiana, this 4 thday of April, 1918. Renewed March 15, 1919. H. e. McCartney, secy. Renewed February 7, 1920. W. B. KRUECK, Secy. * Renewed In 1920 within the tim* specified In Section 8 of the Indiana Stallion Enrollment Law. Void after January L 1921. BONILLIANT win stand during the season of 1920. at my place, 8-4 mile west and 8-4 mile north of Alx. Terma . 815 to Insure colt to stand and sucK?w Disposing of mares or moving from ' county, the fee becomes due and payable at once. Not responsible for accldents. Breeding hours, morning and evening. L L. JONES.