Jasper County Democrat, Volume 23, Number 56, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 October 1920 — Page 3

SATURDAY, OCTOBER », 1920.

Wallis Tractors AT BARGAIN PRICES _ _ —,,,1« As we are going out of the Tractor Business, we are going to sell what machines we now have on hand AT COST. You know yhatthe Wallis Tractor Is—it needs no introduction. Don’t delay if you need a tractor outfit this fall or early spring. We can make deliveries the day we get your order. Call Ray E. Atkinson REMINGTON, IND. REMINGTON PHONE 125-R.

NEWS from the COUNTY

LEE S. M. Jacks was on the sick list during the past week. Glenn and Gall Culp were entertained for Sunday dinner at Frank Eldridge’s. ■ J. H. Culp and wife returned Tuesday from a few days’ visit with relatives in Dekalb county. The ice cream social last Saturday bight was not much of a success on account of the cool evening. C. A Lefler and wife, daughter Francis and James Lefler left Sunday evening for Springfield, Mo., to visit relatives.

ROSELAWN Mr. and Mrs. J. Cunnlgnham called on Elvy Call’s Saturday night. .Quite a hard shower came Sunday night, which was what we needed. OV Mrs. Rose Goff took dinner with H her son, Elvy Call, and wife Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. G. F» Smith spent Sunday afternoon with his folks at Wheatfield. Wayne Call and wife and bane of Steger, 111., spent Sunday with his brother Fred. James Cox and wife moved Friday to near Kersey, where they have bought out Robert Jones. Little Jimmie Cox, son of John

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S. Cox, died Sunday morning, He was about five years old. Thomas Parks and wife autoed to Minnesota last Friday a' week ago for an indefinite visit with relatives. Mrs. Clara Stevenson and little daughter are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Harsha, a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sheldon took Supper with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. DeArmond, at Baum’s Bridge, Sunday. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McDonald, Sept. 28, a 10-pound daughter. Mother and babe are doing well.

FAIR OAKS James Erwin of Demotte visited his cousin, F. R. Erwin, of this place Tuesday. C. B. Spang of Georgetown, 111., was here last week-end looking after his farmiing interests. Mr. Campbell and family autoed over to James Campbell’s at Newland Sunday for a short visit. Mr. Downing, who lives on the Spang ranch, will move back to Georgetown, 111., the last of the week. There were several in this precinct that failed to register, so they will not be permitted to vote this fall. Mrs. Jake Spitzer is the proud owner of one of those labor-saving gasplftie washing machines since the first of the week. F. R. Erwin went down near Wolcott Monday to dismantle his dredge, preparatory to -moving it to his contract on the Lawler ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Spry and son and Mr. and Mrs. Kight went to Indianapolis last; week-end to visit the latter’s son John. They returned Tuesday evening.

THE TWICE-4-WEEK DEMOCRAT

The Ross tent meetings, which had been going on for the past two weeks, camq to a close Sunday eventing. They moved to their next place Tuesday. ( Abe Bringle and wife and Arvel Bringle and wife of Remington autoed to -Hanna Sa’nfday and visited until Sunday evening with the Frank Yeoman family. —-. We were visited last week with a prettyWstiff, frost, whiqh has put a different look on all vegetation. Owing to the very dry weather there haa not been much wheat and rye sown yet, but some have recently begun to sow. It is reported that William Geary, who has been taking care of the coal shoveling and pumping, for the C. & E. I. railroad at this place for about 20 years, will take a 90-day leave of absence. He expects to move to town and will occupy his property in the west part of town. MT. AYR (From the Tribune) Mr. and Mrs. Cochran of McCoysburg visited their daughter, Mrs. F. Ringeisen, Monday. Charlee Armold and family, except Harry, motored to Indianapolis Friday, returning home Sunday. Ed Huntington went to Madison, Wis., Saturday. Earl Brunton accompanied him as far as Chicago. Will Vanatta and wife and Main Dunn and wife of Milroy were Sunday visitors in this neighborhood. Mrs. Fred Standish returned Sunday from a several days visit with her daughter, Mrs. Kennedy, in Chicago. Frank Bucks, who spent some time here this fall at Frank Burns’s, wae parried at Logansport Sunday, Sept * Will Hanson and wife and Miss Belle Robinson of Frankfort, 111., I came Saturday and spent Sunday • with Dr. Martin and wife. Mrs. Iva Edmlnister and three daughters returned to their home In the eastern part of the state Thursday after a few days’ visit with Richard Potts and family. The town board at their regular meeting Monday decided to run the street lights until 10 o’clock on all nights except Saturday, when they will be turned off at 11 o’clock. Mrs. Alfred Stakley and three children left Wednesday for Chicago where Mr. Stakley has a good job in the railroad yards and where they expect to make their future home. Nels Hough, who has been employed on a farm east of Rensselaer all summer, came here a week ago and is sick at the home of his son-in-law, Ed Schanlaub, with kidney and bladder trouble. Mrs. Ella Huntington was in town Saturday morning for the first time since her accident in the auto turnover near Remington last July. She has about recovered now, but is still unable to do any kind of work. | Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Med worth 'and little son Charles, who have lived for a number of years at Foresman and who have been con- | ducting a store there for the past 1 three years, have disposed of their ; interests there and this week are moving to Mt. Ayr. - | Elmer Stucker and little son Billy I arrived home from Ballston, Pa., Thursday and will make their home here. While en route home they stopped a week with Bove Makeever at Oswego, N. Y. -Elmer reports Mrs. Makeever as having been sick for several weeks but is now on the mend.

Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, aa they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the ear. There is only one way to cure catarrhal deafness, and that is by a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness is caused by an ir earned condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result Unless the inflammation can be reduced and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Many cases of deafness are caused by catarrh, which is an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Medicine acts through the blood on the mucous surfaces of Cho system® We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Medicine. Circulars free. All druggists, 75c. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.

The Neighborhood Corner

Department of Farm Welfare Conducted by County Agent

Farmers’ Meeting The county secretary, Chas. W. Postill, has Issued the following call: There will be a very Important meeting of the township and county officers of the Jasper County Farmers’ Federation at the office of County Agent Mawhorter Saturday, Oct. 9, at 1 p. m. This early hour is selected to accommodate some of the officers and will be called on time. Please be sure and come at this time. Live Stock Show In Rensselaer Arrangements are fast being made for the largest stock show ever held in Rensselaer. The date set for the show are Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 21, 22 and 23. Amusements and shows will occupy your time while you are lln attendance. There will be many fine animals on exhibition and it will surprise you to learn what high-class stock Jasper county has. Tour of States Indiana farmers and county agents are planning to make a tour of middle western states during the week of Nov. 7. The farm bureau offices, the experimental work, the agricultural universities, and typical farms and farming sections will be visited. The trip will be made by special train and will include Champaign, nt; Madison, Wis.; St. Paul, Minn.; Ames, la.; Chicago and Lafayette. I The trip will cost about SIOO. Only

HER HEART FULL OF GRATITUDE

Mr*. • Bsttle Wilts of Evansville Says Tanlac Was Overcame Her 39 Years Of Suffering. “After suffering with rheumatism for 39 years, I am now a well and happy woman, and I owe my recovery •to Tanlac,” said Mrs. Bettie White, 183 Cutler Ave., R. F. D. No. 8, Evansville, • Ind. "My rheumatism had been rapidly getting worse for the past six years until I couldn’t get in or out of bed without help. I couldn’t raise my hand to my head to comb my hair, and couldn’t hold anything in my bond. My toes were cramped and my knee joints were so stiff I had to have help to get my shoes on and off and sometimes my feet were so swollen I couldn’t get my shoes on. at all. For two weeks I had to sit day and night in a thalr with my head propped on a pillow. My nerves were badly shattered and I suffered so from pain and worry that it looked # like there was no hope for me. "I tried all kinds of medicines but nothing did me any good until a friend' suggested Tanlac. I have now taken three bottles. I can lie down in bed now and sleep like a baby. I can walk down town, comb my hair or dp most anything else I want to do and never have any pains from rheumatism. My knee joints have quit hurting me, my toes have straightened out and I can hold a pen in my finger* to write. My neryes have quieted down and my mind is at rest, for I feel such a wonderful ease' of relief from being well again.” Tanlac is sold in Rensselaer by Larsh & Hopkins, and in Remington by Frank L. Peck; in Wheatfield by Simon Fendlg.—Advt

150 reservations will be sold, and the first 150 making requests to go will be accommodated. If you desire to make this trip report same to County Agent Mawhorter at your earliest convenience. 48 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Forty-eight per cent available acid phosphate Is being manufactured at Butte, Mont., and is selling at S4B per ton. At the same price per unit of plant food 16 per cent available acid phosphate should sell for sl6 per ton, but the wholesale list price on this fertilizer is $34.25 per ton. Fifteen hundred pounds of the 48 per cent acid phosphate has been elflpbed tb each of 30 Indiana counties, where it will be tried out to determine its value in comparison with 16 per cent goods. Jasper county received a shipment of 1,500 pounds of this fertilizer and the following will experiment with It on their wheat this fall: Charles Parks, E. Wuerthner, E. P. Lane, William | Jeffers, Fred Iliff and Firman Thompson. . Seed Corn for Corn Show Why not begin to prepare for our on-coming corn ehow by selecting out your best seed corn and putting it up to dry, so that it will be in I excellent show condition? Many farmers are picking their seed corn now. One experience of poor seed corn is sufficient for them. Boost the corn show by selecting your best ears now.

LETTERS FROM OUR READERS

And a Little Child Shall Lead Them “Politics makes strange bedfellows,” someone has said, and the hombre who relieved his system of that remark sure uttered a mouthful. For example, permit us to call your attention to those Republican newspapers in Chicago, which so persistently howled for the political scalps of Bill Thompson,, mayor of Chicago, and his followers, during the recent primary campaign in Illinois. They called Bill about every mean name to be found in the Billingsgate dialect, besides- coining a few new and original epithets ot their own for the occasion. Well, in spite of the opposition of the decent Republicans in Illinois, Bill Thompson, Bill Hearst and the narrow-eyed, retreating chinned element that make up the following of these two worthies, have, it would seem, won out. Now/ kindly keep tab on these Same newspapers which so valiantly opposed the two Bills —Bill* Thompson, the pro-German, the man recently denounced by the American Legion—and Bill Hearst, representative of about everything that a .recent American citizen naturally would object to; Bill Hearst whose vicious utterances, through his yellow newspapers, nerved the assassin’s arm in the slaying of President McKinley, many still believe; Bill Hearst, whose dirty pro-German publlqations are now supporting the Republican presidential candidate — watch these papers that opposed the two Bills, we say, and treat yourself to an exhibition of political flip-flopping unparalleled in the annals of t history. Upon the pages of these periodicals, which stood for God and home and the flag, Bill Thoihpson, whose disloyalty made it unsafe for Governor Lowden to leave the state of Illinois long enough to go to Washington during* the war, according to the governor's own statement, will appear shriven of every political sin, clothed in the habilaments of truth and patriotism.

Hte oft-used term "crook" end similar epithets, which he applied to Governor Lowden during the primary campaign, will be regarded merely as little pleasantries—Just Bill’s way of being funny—while his pro-German proclivities will be looked upon as nothing more than a good Joke on the Democrats. And Hearst, upon whom for years the Republican press has heaped contumely, Bill Hearst, the political rat, and the g. o. p. elephant will eat from the same tfough and lie down together; Hi Johnson, the foe of the league of nations, and ex-Preaident Taft, the repository of all wisdom and friend of the league, will march at the head of the procession', their respective coat-tails concealing a political dagger a foot long, and sing "He’s a Jolly good fellow”—meaning Harding—and everything will be perfectly lovely and harmonious. 8. 8.

When m need or first-class stationery of any or all kinds, printed or plain, send your order to The Democrat office.

EXECUTORS’ SALE OF REAL ESTATE \ Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, executors of the last will of George A. Yerion, deceased, by order of the Jasper Circuit Court, Indiana, will, on November 8, 1920. at the door of the court house In the city of Rensselaer, Indiana, offer for sale at. auction, the undivided one-half of the following described real estate in Jasper county, Indiana, to-wlt: ' v . The east half of the west half and the west half of the oast half of section twenty-seven (27), In township thirty (30) north, range five (5) west , , . Sale to begin at 11 o'clock a. m. Terms: One-third cash, one-third In six months, and one-third in nine months from the day of sale, the deferred payments to draw interest at six per cent, to be evidenced by notes, waiving valuation and appraisement laws, with attorney’s fees and secured by a mortgage on said land, or the purchaser may*pay all cash on the day of sale. GEORGE H. YERION, ALMON W. YERION, Executors of the Last Will of George A. Yerlqn, Deceased. Dated October 7, 1920. , 09-16-23-30-n6

Perili _ RANDALL i A ACSfCLLHaG JI. I A REAL WESTERN STORY and an • Unusual Love Story. If you know Randall Parrish’s novels you know they are never disappointing — strong men, brave, lovable women; virility of action, smashing adventures and the charm of the great outdoors. They keep the reader close to their pages, and this one is no exception. ? Soon to appear serially In these columns. You will want to read it! ./ ■■

Buy tow lead pencils at Th* Dem. ocrat office. We handle good goal* Ity pencils at lowest prices.

INSURE IN Fobs Molli» once Kssociqlioi Of Benton, Jasper and Newton Counties. Insurance In force January 1, 1920 94,215, 1 t The average yearly rate for the 24 years this Company has been tn existence has been but *4 cents on the 3100 Insurance, or 39.40 per SI,OOO. State Mutual Windstorm Insurance written tn connection. MARION I. ADAMS Rensselaer; 8. A. Brusnahan. Parr, and J. P. Ryan (Gilliam tp.) Medaryville, R. F. D.f Wm. B. Meyers, Wheatfield; V. M. Peer, Kniman, are agents of thia Company and will be pleased to give you any further Information. Stephen. Kohley, Rensselaer, is the adjuster for Jasper county.

him in DBALBB IB uni ETm m Z M IflMUfl, IN.

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