Jasper County Democrat, Volume 23, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 June 1920 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

The threshermen of Jasper county are requested to be at the meeting to be held on Tuesday Evening June 29 . at 8 p. m. as the court house. The compensation of the thresherman will be taken up. The farmers will ask you about your compensation for if you do not have compensation the farmers and yourself are liable for the injuries of the employes. Secretary. 1 x

Important News Events of the World Summarized

Washington Philadelphia’s population was announced by the census bureau at Washington as 1,823,158, showing the country’s third most populous city to have a numerical increase for the ten years of 274,150. • • • President Wilson at Washington sent a message to the railroad labor board at Chicago urging that It make an immediate award in the wage controversy. • * ♦ The president at Washington, in a telegram to Gov. A. N. Roberts of Tennessee, urges that a special session of the state legislature be called to vote on the Susan B. Anthony amendment. Thirty-five states already have ratified the amendment; and only one more is needed to make it possible for the women of the country t'o vote at the coming presidential election. ♦ * ♦ With a view to restoring confidence In the wool industry, the federal reserve board at Washington lias offered to finance wool growers during the present market emergency. * • * Exports for May increased $55,000,000, while imports fell otT $04,000,000, as compared with the trade figures for April, it was announced at the department of commerce at Washington. * * » Edward Capps of New Jersey was hamed by President Wilson at Washington as minister to Greece, ft recess appointment. • » » Ludwig C. A. K. Martens, who far more than 15 months has been in the United States as the Russian soviet “ambassador” lias been recalled by the soviet authorities, it is learned in official, circles at Washington. Estimated strength of the army on

ROYAL PLAYERS Under Canvas One Week commencing Monday 90 June OPENING PLAY “THE BURGLAR” Ladies Free .First Night

June 17, was 213,135 officers and enlisted men, of which 15,089 held commissioned grades, according to figures made public by the war department at Washington. * * * President Wilson at Washington has received the first “victory medal,” an emblem which will he issued to all those entitled to It who served in the world war between April 6, 1917, and Armistice day. • • * • Domestic Preliminaries to establishment of trade relations between soviet Russia and Canada have been completed, according to announcement at New York by Ludwig C. A. K. Martens, soviet “ambassador.” • • • A nonstop flight to New York will be undertaken on the return trip of the all-metal airplane which arrived at Omaha, Neb.. John M. Larson, the owner said. Mr. and Mrs. Larson came to attend a wedding. * * * A St. Paul dispatch says A. J. Volstead, representative from the Seventh district, and sponsor of the prohibition enforcement law which bears his name, has been defeated in the primary election for renomination. • • * Beloit college, at Beloit, Wls., will receive $300,000 from the Rockefeller Foundation, it was announced at the seventy-t hi rd annua l commencement, if the college increases its endowment by $1,000,000. ♦ ♦ ♦ Seventeen thousand dollars’ worth of liquor and groceries was stolen from the warehouse of A. Rusno & Co. at Cldcago. The theft was discovered when the warehouse was opened. ♦ ♦ » Phillip Gaithers was lynched near Rincon, Ga., after he had confessed to the murder of Miss Anza .Tandon, seventeen years old, last week. Gaithers was’ arrested near Stilson, Ga. * * * President Wilson’s nomination for a third term was declared to be an Impossibility, because of the condition of hfs health, in an interview given out at Kansas City. Mo., by Jouett Shouse. * * * A call for a convention of railroad workers to be held in Chicago June 29 “one big union” of rail-

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THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT

road workers has published In the Butte Dally Bulletin. Albert Russell van Dussen of Wilton, la., was instantly killed and Burklman. a Moscow farmer, was seriously Injured when the car In which they were riding was struck by a train. » • * Two white men charged with being members of the mob that “tried" six negroes in the eounty jail before the lynching of three of them arc held in the county jail at Duluth, Minn. _ * ♦ * Foiirtc -n persons awaiting deportation as alien radicals were ordered released by Judge George W. Anderson In the federal court at Boston. * * • Bern a slave in 1813, Alec Taylor negro. died at Ardmore, Okla., at tli< age of 107 years. A gift of $500,000 by August Heckedier of New York city was ahnoiinced at Itha<a, N. Y„ by President Schurman ut the university’s fifty-second commencement. The university conferred 685 first degrees. • * * Gimbal Brothers oT New York, operators of a large department' store there and controlled by Interests which own similar establishments in other cities, were indicted <m 207 counts for profiteering in clothing. * * • Partisan politics must be kept out of the General Federation of Women s Clubs, Mrs. Josiah Evans Cowles, president of the federation, said in her address at the biennial convention at Des Moines, la. • • • A sailor and a civilian were killed and many other persons, including a city patrolman, were injured in a riot Sunday night between whites and negroes on Chicago’s South side.

• • • Politics Nomination of Frederick 11. Parkhurst of Bangor for governor on the Republican ticket was assured with the completion of a tabulation of revised returns of Monday's, primary at Portland, Me. The Democratic party organization is to be reconstructed so as to give women an equal voice with men in the direction of all party affairs, Cliairman Homer Cummings announced at San Francisco. Senator Harding will be notified at his home at Marion. 0., at 2 p. m. on July 22, and Governor Coolidge at his home at Northampton, Mass., at 2 p. m. on July 27, of their nominations for president and vice president. » * * * William Gibbs McAdoo at New York wired Burris A. Jenkins. Kansas City clergyman and newspaper publisher, requesting flint his name not be sug- | gested for the Democratic presidential j nomination. j Personal 1 Tiie thirteenth meeting of the northI ern Baptist convention opened at Buf- । tf.lo, D. C. Shull of Sioux City presid- : Ing. ♦ ♦ ♦ « Mrs. T. G. Winter of Minneapolis was chosen president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, it tVas I announced oflieialy at the Des Moines (la.) biennial convention. Mrs. Winter received vote<. ♦ M * Foreign-. A dispatch to the London Times I from Belfast says iroops are pouring ! into Belfast and that'some of them already have started for Londonderry. ♦ ♦ * I A call for mitm-ml elections issued | bv' the secretary of the interior at

Mexico Citi- the <iare iur the congressional elections tor Sunday, August 1, and a now president is to he chosen on Sunday, April 5. • • • Street car service at Toronto, Ont., except in the outlying district, was completely snsjwnded when the longheralded strike of trolley i ien went Into effect to enforce demands for 66 Instead of 35 cents an hour. * * * One hundred persons wQ/e killed or wounded in the fighting in Londonderry Wednesday acconling to semi-offi-cial Information received at London. I . . Louise Favler. a well-known French aviator, broke the world's altitude record for women al Paris by reaching a height of 6,500 meters (21,325 feet). » ♦ * Great danwige wns caused at Naples, Italy, by a violent cloudburst; The children’s hospital at Posllipo was damaged, a wall collapsing before the flood. Several villas were demolished. • * * Germany will pay a minimum annual Indemnity of three billion gold marks, over a period of 30 years, according to an agreement reached by the allied council of premiers and made public at Boulogne. • ♦ • The London Express prints a dispatch from Prague in which it Is said that the police of Geneva had frustrated a plot of Hungarian communists to kill Archdukes Eugene and Frederick. * * * The bolsjieviki in a communication received at London claim to have flung the Poles across the Dnieper river to the east of Rezhitse,'and to be driving them back toward Korosten and Ovrutch. A Warsaw dispatch says the bolshevik! are reported to have assembled 50 divisions for the midsummer drive against Poland. The reds are attacking along a 1,200-kllometer front. i ♦ ♦ ♦ Three persons were killed and 40 wounded in a riot at Milan, Italy, during a socialist demonstration over the railway situation. The marching socialists refused to disperse and promiscuous shooting followed. Numerous arrests were made. • * • Serious fighting between Albanian Insurgents and Italian arditi and Alpini occurred near Drasciovitza, when the Italian troops attempted to make a reconnaissance in force with motdrcars, according to an Avlona dispatch.

TURKS AND SOVIETS AGREE

Djemal Pasha Arrives at an Understanding With the Soviet Government at Moscow. Moscow June 18. —Djemal Pasha, a member of the Young Turk party, who is in Moscow-, has arrived at an understanding with the soviet government over points of mutual interest to Russia and Turkey, it is announced. Djemal Pasha declared himself convinced soviet Russia was the only power to which the East could look “for upholding the principles of selfdetermination, liberty for oppressed nationalities and protection against western capitalism and Imperialism.” He thought Armenia and Syria both would, sooner or later, reach the conviction that the entente could do nothing for them.

TO FRIENDS OF THE DEMOCRAT

Instruct your attorneys to bring all legal notices in which you are interested and will have the paying to do, to The Democrat, "and thereby save money and do us a favor that will be duly appreciated. All notices of appointment—of administrator, executor or guardian; survey, sale of real estate, ditch or road petitions, notices to non-resi-dence, etc., the clients themselves control, and your attorneys will take them to the paper you desire, for publication, if you so direct them; while, if you fall to do so, they will give them where it suits their pleasure most and where you may least expect or desire It. So, please bear this In mind when you have any of these notices to have published.

IS YOUR AUTOMOBILE INSURED against fire, theft, tornado, collision and indemnity for damage done to others, even to accidental killing? It. costs but little, when you take Into consideration the protection given. The undersigned is agent for the Lincoln Mutual Casualty Co. of Springfield, 111., and all rates are guaranteed. You insure your buildings, household goods, farm tools, stock, etc., and you cannot afford to omit your automobile. The expense of one accident might pay many years cost of insurance. Call at The Democrat office and let us explain rates to you.—G. M. BABCOCK, Rensselaer. ts The Democrat’s job department is unexcelled for its ability to handle at all times the class of work that will please the most discriminating. That we may prove this assertion, let us have your future orders for job printing. Best job work at Democrat office.

Strawberries are high priced and very to get. Why not compromise on a few cans of high grade Peaches, Apricots’, etc. We have a limited supply of the very best grade of canned fruits and vegetables which we offer for the next few days at most reasonable prices. “Sun Kist” Peaches or Apricots, sliced or halves.. . . 53c “Blossom” Brand Peaches or Aprieots 45c “Verdugo” Y. C. Peaches 35c Hillcrest Apricots 35C “Pct” Brand Tomatoes 22c “Red Plume” Sugar Corn 22c “Pet” Brand Sugar Corn 16c “Heron” No. 2 Sifted E. J. Peas 15C Potted Tuna, for sandwiches, 3 for. 25c Salmon, pink ✓ 20c Pilchards 20c Phone 71 C.L. MURPHY Phone7l

TOLEDO WINS MOOSE MEET

1921 Convention of Fraternity to Be Held in Ohio City—Deficient Child Discussed. Aurora, Hl., June 25. —The Loyal Order of Moose in annual meeting at Mooseheart, 81., awarded the 1921 convention to Toledo, O. In all probability, it was stated, this will be the last Moose convention to be held away from Mooseheart. The conferees discussed the problem of the moron and the deficient child, and whether they should be received at Mooseheart, or placed in other institutions by the Moose.

THE MARKETS

Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago, June 24. Open- High- Low- ClosCorn— Ing. est. est Ing. July ...1.80%-% 1.80% I.7TH 1.77% Sept ~1.70%-70 1.70% 1.68% 1.68% Dec. ...1.50% 1.50% 1.50 1.50 OatsJune ..1.18 ... ••• 1-18 July ...1.04 ' 1.04% 1.08% 1.03% Sept 85%-% .85% .84% .85%-% Dec 82% .82% .81% .81% Rye— ' . July ...2.17-% 2.18% 2.16% 2.16% Sept. ..1.87% 1.87% 1.86 1.86 FLOUR—Car lots, per brl, 98 lb sack basis: Rye, white, in jute, $11.50@1175; dark rye, [email protected]; spring wheat, special brands, [email protected]; to retail trade, $15.50@ 15.75; hard spring, $14.75®15.00; first clears, [email protected]; second clears, [email protected]; hard winter, [email protected]; soft winter, $12.75© 13.00. HAY—Choice and No. 1 timothy, $40.00@ 42.00; standard and No. 1 clover mixed. $37.00®39.00; No. 1 and No. 2, [email protected]; No. 3 timothy, [email protected]. BUTTER— Creamery, extras, 92 score, 56c; higher scoring commands a premium; firsts. 91 score, 54c; 88-90 score, 49@53%c; seconds, 83-87 score. 43@48c; centralized, 54c; ladles, 45@46c; renovated, 49c; packing stock, 34©40c. Prices to retail trade: Extra tubs, 59c; prints, 61c. EGGS—Fresh firsts, 36@39%c; ordinary firsts, 34@36c; miscellaneous lots, cases included, 37@38c; cases returned, 36@37c; extras, packed in whitewood cases, 45%@ 46%c; extras, 41%c. LIVE POULTRY—FowIs, 31%c; broilers, 52@55c; roosters, 19c; ducks, 30c; spring ducks, 40c; geese, 20c; spring geese, 30c. ICED POULTRY — Turkeys, 48@50c: fowls, 31@33c; roosters, 20@21c; ducks, 28© 30c; geese, 20@22c. OLD POTATOES—Per 100 lbs, northern, round, [email protected]. NEW POTATOES —Per brl, [email protected]; sacked, 100 lbs, [email protected]. CATTLE—Choice to prime steers, $16.00 @17.00; good to choice steers, [email protected]; fair to good steers, [email protected]; stockers and feeders. [email protected]; yearlings, fair to choice, [email protected]; jrood to prime cows, [email protected]; fair to good heifers, slo.oo@ 14 00' fair to good cows, [email protected]; canners’ [email protected]; cutters, [email protected]; veal calves, [email protected]; boldgna bulls, $7.00@ 8.50. HOGS—Choice light butchers. $15.50@ 16.00- medium wt. butchers, [email protected]; heavy butchers, 270-350 lbs, [email protected]; fair to fancy light, »[email protected]; mixed packing, [email protected]; heavy packing, $13.00 @14.25; rough packing, [email protected]; pigs, [email protected]; stags, [email protected]. SHEEP —Native lambs, [email protected]; western lambs, [email protected]; yearlings, $9.00© 14.75; wethers, [email protected]; ewes, [email protected].

Buffalo, N. Y., June 24. CATTLE— Receipts, 400; steady. CALVES— Receipts, 200 ; 50c higher; $6.00 @16.00; few, $16.50. HOGS— Receipts. 1,600; 25c lower; pigs. $16.50@16T5; mixed, [email protected]; yorkers, [email protected]; few, $17.25; light yorkers, $16.00 @17.00; pigs, $15.50; roughs, [email protected]; stags, [email protected]. SHEEP AND LAMBS—Receipts, 200; steady; lambs, [email protected]; yearlings, SB.OO @14.50; wethers. [email protected]; ewes, [email protected]; mixed sheep, [email protected].

y A. a for sale For Sale—2o heavy shoats, wt. 123 and better each. —W. L. CRISWELL, Fair Oaks, R-2. j 3 For Sale—Pedigreed Airedale pups for sale.—C. P. MOODY, Moody, Ind. Phone 920-A. ju-3 For Sale—43 lots all In one body. —GEORGE F. MEYERS. ts For Sale—Shetland pony, 5 years old, saddle and bridle, cart and harness.—WlLL COOPER, Brook, Ind. 3-26 For Sale—Oak lumber, large quantity. —JOHN NESIUS, Remington, Ind., R-4. jll Typewriters and Cish Registers—,

SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1920.

Both second-hand and rebuilt, bought and sold. —THE DEMOCRAT. For Sale at Bargains—All kinds of second-hand automobiles. Come in and look them over, in Ue white-front garage.—KUBOSKE 4 WALTER. ts For Sale—Pure-bred Duroc male hog, 2 roan Shorthorn bulls. Would exchange roan herd bull for equal merit. No faults.—GUSS YEOMAN, Rensselaer, Ind., R-3 phone 78 0, Mt. Ayr. .126 For Sale—lOO-acre farm, well drained, most all level, black soil; 5-room house, good barn, corn cribe, good well, fine orchard land all in cultivation. Can give good terms on this. Price SBO per acre.—CHAS. J. DEAN & SON. ts For Sale—Some real bargains in well Improved farms located within three miles of Rensselaer. 120 a., 133 a., 212 a., 162 a., 80 a. I also have some exceptional bargains in Improved farms of all sizes farther out from Rensselaer. For further particulars see me or call phone 246, office, or 499, home-— HARVEY DAVISSON. ts Typewriters—Rebuilt and secondhand at very attractive prices Do not pay 5100 or more for a new machine when we can sell you a rebuilt one that Is to ail intents and purposes every bit as good as a new machine for from 1-3 to % the cost of a new one. We now have on hand the following: 1 Oliver No. 5, back-space, tabulator, etc., a fine machine, $45. 2 Oliver No. 3, dandy condition, each S3O. > 1 Remington No. 10, a No. 1 good machine, SSO. 1 Smith Premier No. 10, tabulator, back-spacer, 2-color ribbon, etc., a fine machine in every way, SSO. 1 Smith Premier No. 5, 2-color ribbon, fine conditidh, S3O. All the above machines have new rubber tympans, new ribbons, and are in first-class condition. Will be sold on payments if desired to responsible parties at a slight advance over above cash prices.—THE DEMOCRAT. FOR RENT For Rent —Blue grass pasture for stock, by the month. —FLOYD AMSLER, phone 955-G. j3O LOST Lost—Auto license plate No. 32085., Finder please leave at Democrat office or notify—J. E. DUNN, phone 90-1, Remington. j-26 FOUND Found—On the street, a child’s white satin bonnet. Owner may have same by calling at The Democrat office and paying for this ad. j 26 Found-—A package of dry goods purchased at Rowles & Parker’es was put in wrong carriage by mistake on Saturday evening, June 12. Own-, er may have same by applying at The Democrat office and paying for this ad.

WANTED Wanted—Place to work his way through high school this coming' winter by a boy 15 years old: reference given if desired. Apply at The Democrat office for name and address. , j 29 Wanted—Position as general housekeeper in small family; $6 per week wanted. —EDNA HOOPER, Fair Oaks, Ind., Box 45. j 26 List your farms with us before our new spring booklet goes out to other agents with whom we are working.—GEO. F. MEYERS. ts Trucking Wanted —I have a new ton truck and solicit business in this line. If you have moving or any other trucking to do, call 473. —FRANK HAMER. Ts FINANCIAL ' Farm Loans—Money to loan on farm property in any sums up to SIO,OOO. —E. P. HONAN. ts Money to Loan—CHAS. J. DEAN & SON, Odd Fellows’ Building, Rensselaer. Money to Loan—l have an unlimited supply of money to loan on good farm lands at 5%% and usual commission or 6 % without commission, as desired. Loans will be made for 5 years, 7 years, 10 years or 20 years. See mo about these various plans.—JOHN * A. DUNLAP, ; . . _ fl