The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 3, Vernon, Jennings County, 3 July 1919 — Page 3
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The tenderness and flavor of Libby's Dried Beef are frequently commented upon. Libby,McNeiiI & Libby Chicago
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I own. frc nn.i !.-ir. F-'rveral it ..'.sand ar-res which I am now offerinc at before 1 "' pri.-.-H. v,-H lo..'ate.l fai in land in the FRUIT AND CLOVER BELT -f st..-rn -Michi-ar,, , j.-e t. ftood towr.o n main line railroads, affordir.gr steady t-'t V.x"y" niark-t.. I furnish full Warranty Deeds r.iui Abstracts showing 'i..:in till. iroui United Stated government ownersiiip down to you. I will sell you from ton to forty or more Teres ot thi3 land at the ovt flsrure oZ $20 to $30 PER ACRE ON VERY EASY TERMS Ztlf-nthly paytii.-i.l.H f $:) if dr.sired. I will frlve you sixty 6.- days from date of ';ir f.ntriwt uf i.'.ircha in uU-h to inspect the lands and. it vuu approve of them, wsil ni.ply your round trip railroad fare on the purchase price." Subject to your iaH'wtioit within sixty nk days I will exchange your land for any other location you rn:::.- prefer in the entire tract you set your personal choice out of tho'is-mds of. new in tl.is vav cr if you want none of the land ail moneys you have then paid m Will lie returned to you. You make your payments to a responsible bank to be h'-id in trust for you and returned to you if. after vour inspection, vou desire refund liiu; means YOU (.'AN.VUT LOSE.- YOUR MONEY BACK IF YOU WAIiT IT. THIS IS TOUR OPPORTUNITY TO ACQUIRE A GOOD PIECE OP LAND CHEAPLY AND ON EASY TERMS. Extensions of payments if sick, out of work or any other jroo.l reason. I've been' selling farm lands for more than 15 years, durinr which I me T have neven .foreclosed a mortgage nor dispossessed a tenant. For further accurate information write for free illustrated booklet, map showing location of lands. Agricultural Department Report and testimony of those who have already bought. Rememh r: You deal with owner direct no middle profits. SAMUEL S. THORPE, Owner, 45 E. 42nd St., New York City
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Hie average, ordinary warm air furnace sends 40 per cent of the usable heat units in the coal burned, op the flue, in unburned gases, and wastes about 1 0 per cent more. The
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properly handled, yields an average of 70 per cent of the total usable heat units in the fuel. This is due to its better draft arrangement and larger radiating surface. Ask your dealer to explain this, or if he doesn't handle the liUSS. write for illustrated literature.
Haynes-Langenbsrg Mfg. Co.
4052 Forest Park Blvd. ST. LOUIS, MO.
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fill Out This Camion and! rnl! It Ta&avl
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riease sent! cie, at once, your latest catalogue and literature. J i" j V .
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V(.-?tcrri Citings c vt is the rreatest ai'vatiM-s t-- ho-"e ircV-pr
Lai s;e p::.Ls are ooturcd. 'ieu can buy on easy payment terras, rf?riilQ Land r.t HIG tf fSH iir?ra
; land simaar n tnat wnicn uirousrr many years aas averaged Irota 20 to 43
C,u..u,a a single crop has paid the cost of land and production. The Govern- v"S
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me tarrcer to prosper, ana extend every po
i nou?n.n est era c-anaaa oi:ers tara atsucn low r. cures, tne tugj rice ot gratn, cattle, efaeep and hogs will remain.
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ri.ia. irar, t:)ssrrated literature.
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tains Kucalyj tel. pi from itel.'.nu. i:.rtanu pre1! n:.! i n g r ;U . Its arreete-.l prrts, re.:e lr.ti.uv.matton. S-'h! ! write United I' iiar Kr-cx. Ind., i..'T free ;
y i n Tt i e ti t , v' ! ;i i 1 1 i o n -nes :t:-t-.v .:. relief ievi. t.'.ir.d, b'.eedir.g or seoth'-? ar.J heals the .-.s j .iin. and reduces v all drucgists. or
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FAlMOUS OLD FANCUIL HALL.
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Sines the Year 1731 Old Dutch Church's Legacy Has Rung Call.
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Reliable man to act as our local purchasing agent. This proposition can he filled without interference
j with present occupation. General
l u'Lndua "'"-1 owner or energetic farmer
r : preferred. Full particulars by ad-
ssing
BUFFALO BURLAP CO.
Buffalo. N. Y.
llll Liberty hell in Independence hull, Philadelphia, is i"a-
pious thrnushout the workl. Its riiiirinic pruciaiined liberty July -1, 1770. and ever since it lias been sacred to nil Americans. Everybody knows all about that bell, but the New York Herald tells of another which played a part in the stirring scenes of the republic's founding. The Herald says: Here in New York city is another liberty bell, a bell, whose history is as remnrkal.de as that of the Liberty bell in Philadelphia, but winch is practically unknown except to a few persons who have delved into ancient records and documents concerning: it. New York city's liberty bell hangs concealed in the belfry of" the Dutch church at Fifth avenue and Fortyeighth street. It has ben in New York city since 17T51. c It proclaimed liberty to the citizens July 1), 177u when (Jen. George Washington read the adopted Declaration of Independence to the American troops and asked for its acceptance ami ratification. Had the army not acclaimed liberty at that time and agreed to tight to death for freedom the Declaration of Independence would have become a worthless scrap of papm-. lint the army did acclaim liberty, and the bell rang out the tidings here just as the other bell in Philadelphia had done five days before. Legacy to Old Dutch Church. New York city's Liberty bell was given as a legacy to the Dutch church by one of the oldest inhabitants of this city, Abraham de Peyster, who .served its mayor, treasurer and councilor and as governor in 1701, and whose statue now stands in the place of that of (Jeorge III in the Rowling Green. The bell was east in Amsterdam and bears an inscription in Dutch, which, translated, reads: "I was made by Le Gravae ami N. Midler, Amsterdam. 1731. Abraham de Peyster, born July 8, Ko7; died Aug. S. 17l'S:. A legacy to the Dutch church. New York." Almost the first public service of the be!! was tolling for the death of George I, the German king of Great Britain, and announcing the succession of his son George IT. It welcomed seven foreign governors, from Admiral (Jeorge Clinton to Sir Yiiliam Tyron. and in after years called the citizens to defend their rights or warned them of calamities. Ami it hangs today, almost unknown, in a dusty belfry in a most prumiiu-r.t position in New York. Before the Derlarat im of Independence it rang again and again for liberty, and it rang for liberty again and again afterward, and for the triumph of American arms. It rang wbou news came .f the American lar .ry at tlii battle of lake Erie under OHver
! Hazard Perry, September 10, P-m. It
rang again at the triumphant ending of that war of 1ST-'. It ram: when
j the armies umL-r General frant final- ) ly won ihe war for the preservation of
me iio'ii. ami ii toiieu saciy tor tne death of Abraham Lincoln. Its Voice Still Resonant. Tins Liberty bell is not cracked: it tone is as line and sweet and resonant a.s on the day it rang at General Washington's command. Following are the more important occasions upon which New York's Liberty bell was rung in the eighteenth century, from the time it arrived in New York city in 1731 until it proclaimed liberty iii 1770. The list has been compiled from colonial records and the history of New York and is authentic In every particular : 17.". Announcing the liberty of the press. 1741 Warning the citizens to protect themselves against the negroes, who threatened to rise and murder the whites. They burned Governor Clarke's residence within the fort and the homes of Admiral Sir Peter Warren, Winant Van Zandt, Colonel Phillipse and others. 17'm Announced the defeat of General Braddeick. 1758 Announced the burning of Fort William Henry and the disaster at Ticonderoga. 17,1') Rang for the capture of Que
bec. 17i;0II and ( Jeorge 170-1-proteet
-T'.lled for the death of George later for the accession of HI. -Citizens called by the bell to the fishermen who had been
impressed by a British man-of-war. The same day the Sons of Liberty were organized and summoned to meet by strokes of the bell. 170." When the stamp act was to go into effect the bell was muffled and tidied.
1700 The Liberty bell rang with
news of the repeal of the stamp act. 1770 The British Sixteenth regiment attacked the Sons of Liberty, who had been summoned by the bell, and then occurred the battle of Golden Hill, when the first blood was shed in the American revolution, for it was five years befpre the battle of Lexington. 177." News of the battle of Lexington reached New York city, and the citizens were summoned by the bell to seize a vessel in the harbor loaded with stores for the British army at Boston. 177."t News of ihe battle of Ticonderoga. and later of the battle of Bunker II ill, announced by the ringing of the br 11. 177C General Washington proclaimed the Declaration of Independence to the American army, and the Liberty bel! and other bells In the city rang for several hours. - 13 Further Independence. Our independence- of King Georjre
has been
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-i ior generation-
and
now it is our unalterable purpose to win our independence of King Injustice. King Corruption, King Greed. Blind indeed is be who does me see the handwriting on the vail raid who does not krenv that our declaration -of indepomh n e against everything un-Amerf.'-nn mvl tmdemo.-ratle is soon to be prve';- ;v.: d in t.o unci rutin way. Itev. T. I.. Greg..-. -y.
SCRAPS
The color called "magenta" is named after the battle of Magenta, which
was fought in the year vt the discov- j erv of the color. '
The greatest smokers are the people of Holland, where seven pounds of tobacco a head cf the population is consumed annually. Liberty bonds are backed by the taxing power of the government, and therefore are n prior lien on every bit of wealth in the country.
Compared with the work hours of the same trades in the United States, the hours of German mechanics are from 10 to 34 per cent longer. In many parts of England there is a superstition that boys born on Christmas day should Le brought up to enter the church and girls should become nurses. Guzman Blanco, one-time president of Venezuela, had his portrait painted about 2O0 times, and erected about a dozen statues of himself, equestrian and other.
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DOri'T CUTOUT AShc3BciI,C:i::.:i Hock or Bursitis
FOR PERSON AL HYG1ENS Dlssolrect la water for douches strpa peine catarrh,. ulceration and inflammation. Hecomrnended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for tea years. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, ore throat and sore eyes. Economical. 1 ' extraordinary cleansing and cemiicicial prrr. SaBiple Free. 50c. aii dnjKsrifi. postpaid ty
STILL FAITHFUL TO STUARTS?
Pretender of that Line to Britain's Throne Is Now Prince Rupert of Bavaria.
There was once to be found in Britain a little group of romantic sentimentalists who remained faithful to the Stuart line, and celebrated on January 30 a kind of Jacobite feast day. A writer in Living Age remembers seeing postage stamps bearing the likeness of the '"pretender," who happened to be a princess of Bavaria. These were attached to the envelope by the side of the ot!:oial postage stamp, thus constituting a source of annoyance to the serious minded Victoria. Since the death cf hi-? mother, Maria Theresa of Bavaria, 11 few weeks ago. ex-Prinee liupert of Bavaria is now the oeleial Stuart pretender to the throne of Great Britain. The muse of history has ever had a leaning toward Irony.
Did He Hug Her? "Would you embrace an opportunity'.'" asked the girl with the trim waist.
"Sure." said th
will reJjce them ir.J have r.o blemishes, Stops lameness promptly. Does cot blister or remove the bair, and horse can be worked. $2. SO a bottle delivered. Ec:X 6 R frea. AESORBINE, JR., for t&aoki&4. the mt-M-pti liniment (or B-il, Bruiaea. Sore. SareliiBra, Varireac Veiss, Aiir F'ainand In'ammtiion. Price 1 1. 25 a bottir at crsj. gUti or delivered. Will teii yew more if you wnte. W. F.YC'JSG, P.O. F.,S"3 Tn?rs'Si.,S0rinsf.eld. Kits. He Is Ignorant of English. Seeing a peculiar headline in a Boston paper, the telegraph editor turnel
it upside down and read it backwards. He could get no meaning out of it "Four-Ply Slam by McNally Kavo Blow" So he set out after enlightenment. "Cinch." said the sporting editor, with a withering glance. "It means McNally slammed out a round trip and put the game on ice." "Why McNally made the circuit and broke their hearts," chipped iu the police court man. "Yep. He hit her on the nose for four sacks; good night" the society reporter. "I'll tell you, old man," at last spoke up the city editor patronizingly. "You have to have it in kindergarten style. Four-ply f-lani equals 'homer. 'Kayo equal.-: K. O., which equals "knockout. Get me?" "G-r-r-rl" growled the tel. e L "Mebho. Met. be. But it's probably an 'ad' for a new breakfast food." Brockton Enterprise.
Caught the Craze. First Grassiioppi.-r -What become cf
young man with a i your brother?
good right arm. "Is this Louisville Courier-Journal.
on.
Man of Letters. "A man of letters, isn't he?" "Sure! Buns a thriving mad-order business. Buffalo Express.
Second Grashi p;.--r Th low was drowned trying to hopper.
poor f elbe a sea-
A shark's teeth are movable at will, and become erect at the moment the animal is seizing its prey.
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