The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 18, Vernon, Jennings County, 23 October 1919 — Page 2
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THIS WOMAN SAVED FROM AN OPERATION Vc'Tclalilb Cemnouncl. Oils C 5 i sblOlSS 3212 o SucH CI&X63 Clark River Falls, Y,iJ.-"A Ljdla D. Pinkhum" Vegetable Compound r-, , eaved ma from an f 1 operation, I cannot ! eay enough in rraisa ciiu isuixereairom organic troubles and my tide hurt rr.e so I could hardly be up from my bed, and I was unable to do my housework. I had the best doctors in Eau Claire and they wanted rne to have an operation, but Lvdia E. Finkham'a Vegetable Compound cured me so I did cot need the operation, and I am tellinjj all my friends about it" Mrs. A. Vi. Binzep, Black River F&SIa, Wis. It Is just such experiences as that cf firs. Ihnzer that has made this famous root and herb remedy a household word from orpan to ocean. w Any woman who fullers from ird'.arnrr.e.tion, ulceration, displacement, backache, nervousness, irregularities cr " the blues" eh cull not rest until she has gifen it a trial, and for special advice write Lydia il. I'inkham Medicine Co., Lynn, liasa, TRACTOR WO.TT JUMP FENCES Some cf the Arguments in Favor of Its More Genera) Use WiM Not Bite, Balk, cr Run Away. i-ioroo f th ninny arguments !n favor, of thf tractor nrc given us follows In Farm I.Ife: It will nt bite, balk or rim away. It will not shy at a loose scrap of paper in the road. It will not kirk the stri nt night and keep the tired farmer nn1 his wife awake. It will not crib tin? manner. ft wHi not break out of the barn at night. Jump the fence and eat your neighbor's cabbages. It will not lie down in u particularly moist spot in the barnyard. ro!! over en Its bark ami elevntc its four ft Info the air. . It. bes not have to bo curried, sponged off or treated with horse liniment. ' It in nt addicted to folic, cough, heaves,- spavin or wind lmII. It will rmt snort In jour ear or whisk Its tail in your face. It will not "haw" when you tell It to "i-r-,-" or vice-versa. You do not have to pull on the lines i-.r, 1 holler your head off when you wr.ii! it to ?;. It do-s not, "up and die" just as the spring work i- eomintr on. BREAKS YOUR COLD i.'J . JUST A FEW HOURS "Pspt'a Cold Compound" instantly relieves stuffiness and distress Don't stay stuff ed-up ! Quit blowing and rnuS!ingl A dose of "Tape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses p. re taken usually break3 up a severe cold and ends all grippe misery. The very first dese opens your clog-gcd-up nostrils and the air passages of the head; stops nose running; relieves the headache, dullness, fevcrIshneps, sneczinp. soreness and stiffness. "rape's Cold Compound" is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at druj stores. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, contains no quinine Insist upon Tape's ! Adv. Britain Had 8,654,467 Men in War. The r-riiish empire put S,."f,4G7 nun in the war. according io figures aiUHMinced by the war cabinet. O Jheo. r.nul;uid recruited 4.(X0.irS. Other white iilistinents in the dominions and colonies brought the total white enlistment up t T.b'O.'jsO. KnlKtnunts of race-; other than white, if.clmlinp: 1 ,:.! iv.n i fv.an India, were Important to I." others Kxan-ine carefully every bottle of OASTOKIA. that fa,mous old rem cry for infants and children, and see that it Bears tin- f ,,-,. , la U50 for Over '-'0 Years. Children Cry for Fletchers Casioria VViSI Raise Foxes in Japan. The increasing demand for furs in Japan lias indsieeil a .croup of promin nt Jap;uiese business men to orLrnyie a coii'pany with a capital of $2."0,iMni to vxc:co in tlm raising of foxes. It. is proposal to import the first stock from Alaska. "Xh Sttwnr WlthiiJI lh Ilat of Summwn Oil rPi wtl are afl jcunfor netn i 't';.3 ar vea. will V rr,sth-ned inj natic 4 ta co through the .iopresstne hrt.t ,.f nu;nmr fcy iitn tiro--e' tatlet chiU toio. It purth? an5 enriches the blood Vusi.U op the wboU; yslem. Yoj can n feel l:s S:rethrsic, iBvfgorsttB.-l.-tfcL Sic Home of the mountains on the moon :. re "stirn.tted to be ." t.i ftet h;ii. r . ... " " f ' " ' r ' ;T 5 r. .1 TI n .r t ,t . , : ill' 4 -U -... rc -. .:... y .'.rs. lit " Tl", ; -'.-rt s r I :.rr if 1 ere, i cr j i r
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INDIANA State Happenings Corydon voted in favor of constructing a sewer system in town. Sullivan city council has voted to buy the site opposite the county hospital for a municipal park. Mrs. Walter Steinbeck, twenty-one, is dead at South Bend and her infant son was badly inured of burns received when kerosene used to start a fire exploded. The Evansvllle Doll Manufacturing company, with a capital of $5,000, has filed articles of incorporation with the county recorder. The company will engage in the manufacture of dolls. Sixty-five counties of the state will send delegates to the first annual convention of the Indiana Federation of Formers" associations at Indianapolis November 1. eificlahs of the state organization predict. At a Poland China pi sale, held near Michigantown a few days ngo. rl f,.-;:,i of hogs brought $7.01.". Some of the spring gilts sold for more than $2 a pound. One hog v.. hi for Not', while the it vernse for tin- CO head was lo 1.01. Tho flraf Lens company at South lb rid. through Receiver Clarence Sedgwick, was sold at auction for $10,7.V to h R. Sommers. a former state senator. The company is reported as having lost more than $.j0,00o in the last nine months. In its efforts to ghe South Bend the best street railway service' possible, announcement is made by the Chicago, South Bend & Northern Indiana Railway company of the installation of one-man cars in the city during the coming month. Five city firemen at Muncie filed suits in the Delaware circuit court asking aggregate damages of $32,000 from the Union Traction company of Indiana for injuries suffered in March, IMS, when a fire truck was hit by a street ear. Delegates in attendance at the annual meeting of the Indiana State Baptist association at Fort Wayne approved the recommendation of the executive board that the endowment of Franklin college and state Bapist institutions be increased to ?1 ,200.000. A new automobile company to be known as the Lafayette Motors company, with the backing of the leading financial interests of the country, is tn process of organization. The company will be capitalized at $0,000,000. it is announced, and its plant will he at Indianapolis'. James Kidwell of Madison is probably the oldest tobacco raiser in the state. For the last 04 years he has raised a crop of tobacco each season. He is eighty-five years old, and Is a retired farmer. Although living in that city he attends to Ids crop at Wirt, six miles northwest of there. Raymond J. Whitney, son of Mr. nnd Mrs. W. W. Whitney of Bedford, has entered the diplomatic service of the United States. October 10 he assumed the post of vice consul at Bucharest, ltoumania, acting under Consul Edwin C. Kantp. He received his appointment by cable from the state department. James I. Howe of Shelhyville and Samuel D. Rowe of Baton, his brother, each eighty-three, are the oldest living veterans of the CP. il war, according to an announcement by the United States pension bureau. The men are also believed to be the oldest set of twins In the state. They were horn November 11. lsp3. in Franklin county. The state board of health appointed Ivy Miller as acting superintendent of the food nnd drug division of the board. Mr. Miller, for the present, will fill the place to be vacant November 1, when II. E. Barnard, for many years state food and drug commissioner, will leave the state. Mr. Miller is drug chemist in the division. Shower baths will soon be placed in the city building of Columbus. The matter was placed before members of the city count il by basket ball coaches of the city, who say their teams, which practice and play in the building, will be in need of such baths at the end of every game. Coimcilmen say. too, tint baths are needed for cleansing tramps who are. picked up in the city. Through the Nohlesville Ministerial association the city council is considering a new plan to lienor every young man from that city who served during the world war. The pastors have suggested to the council a plan to plant a shade tree as a monument to each sor ice man on the theory that a tree wonhl be a more lasting monument than one of granite, marble or stone. Dr. '.Tool T. Barker. 71 years old. is dead at lis home at Danville of spinal meningitis, following a complication of diseases of more than a year's standing. He was one of the oldest and best known practitioners in Hendricks county. An attempt to dis-cvunigo future autonio He thieves front operating in Wabash county. Judge Hunter sentenced Floyd Rothcrmel of Marlon to two years in the Indiana state prison, and Walter Newport of .Marion and Charles- Holmes of Gas City were each sentenced to crve one year at the Indiiua reformatory.
Sullivan county former service men have formed a branch of the American Legion. Robert K. Maggort has been appointed postmaster at Cromwell, Noblecounty, in place ..f Grace M. Kicagor. resigned. The arrival of nine additional carloads of sugar in Indianapolis the past week brought the total received in the city since October 0 to ol carloads. Thieves draw no line in Indianapolis. The Infest is theft of ten Bibles from the Oak Hill tabernacle. Entrance had been gained through a rear door. Wearing apparel also was stolen. Athletic Director Nelson A. Kellogg and Ward Lambert, coach of the Purduo basket ball team, at- pianning a barnstorming trip for the Boitermaker tosser during the Christmas holiday season. George G. Kessler was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Minnie Mayo Wilkins in Indianaapolis on the night of May 2S. The jury found Kessler guilty of murder in the second degree. The girl tended a gasoline filling station. Robbery was the motive. The general store of Dunkirk & Galther at Qttincy was destroyed byfire believed to have been of incendiary origin. The company had just completed the work of remodeling the store and had received a new stock of Christina goods. There is a run on locks, especially combination locks, among the bicycleowning population of Jeffersonville, as the result ot the numerous thefts of bicycles. Two bicycle thieves have boon arrested and convicted during the last few weeks. Indianapolis has !.') troops of boy scouts, with a total membership of 1,845, one of the largest memberships of any city in the United States, it was shown in the report of F. O. Belzer, scout executive, read at the semi-annual meeting of the Indianapolis council, Boy Scouts of: America. A strike of the bituminous miners November 1 will affect more than o,o00 coal miners of Clay county. The miners are working on an average of four days -a week. This city is enjoying a period of prosperity, and the merchants have ordered large stocks in anticipation of an unusual Christmas trade. Announcement was made that the Jackson club of Lafayette, one of the leading Democratic organizations of Indiana, would give its annual Jackson day banquet on January S. The banquet has been an annual ntTair for 23 years and serves the purpose of giving Democratic orators an opportunity to sound the keynote of an approaching ca mpa i gn. Alva Banks, who killed his father, Andy Banks, by hitting him in the head with an ax and then attempting to do away with he body f by sinkiag it in a quarry lake at Sanders last spring, and Frank Hall, a young man from Bedford, who is facing a forgery charge, recently escaped from the Monroe county jail. They dug their way out and from all indications Im'1 several hours' - start before their absence was discovered. Paul Ritter, alias Joseph Young, age twenty-two, of Marion county, and Roscoe Monroe, age twenty-three, of Knox county, who escaped from the Indiana reformatory early on the morning of September 25, 1919, by walking away from two outside pumping stations at which they were on all night duty, escaped again from A. Frank Miles, assistant superintendent of the institution, by jumping from a moving train at Bowling Green, Ky. The old, Chris Conrad mansion on Elkhart prairie, south of Goshen, at one time said to he the finest farm residence in northern Indiana, but v Inch for IS years has been abandoned, is to be made a hog house and feed storage barn by Mrs. Sharaba Rice and her children, who moved there from near Danville, 111., three years ago and bought the farm of 240 acres, now said to be worth $."0,000. The mansion was built o0 years ago, uad has more than twenty rooms. A divorce was denied to George S. Tenney. s railroad engineer, from his wife, Ida M. Tenney, in the superior court at Indianapolis by the first woman judge who has presided at the trial of a case in the Marion country courts or in any other court of the state, lawyers say. Miss Ella Groninger of the law firm of Groninger. Groninger & Groninger, acted as judge in the case. She said she denied thedivorco to Tenney because he had introduced no evidence to show his wife had been guilty of any wrongdoing. "Carelessness." is the reason given by Inspector John W. Stokes of the state food and drug department for the failure of many Indiana druggists to observe the sections of the statutes relative to tlie adulteration and misbranding of drugs and food products. Mr. Stokes reported the prosecution and conviction of L. Speckbattgh. George W. Bower and James I.. Mood, all of Tipton, for adulteration and misbranding. Bach was fined $10 and costs in each of three eases, making a total of tine and costs paid by each. Blaine Parker, n prominent farmer of Hendricks township. Shelby county, was arrested on grntul jury indictments, charging him with tapng his crops to one elevator and delivering them t- another after maturity. lie was- released from jail on $r00 bond. One hundred Keiffer pear trees owned by II- J. PlafCn at Indianapolis have recently been In bloom for the second time this season. The treesbore fruit in the summer, says Mr. Pla.T'ia, but a spring frost which killed many of the ' buds made a short crop The trees are a part of an orchard o G,000.
DAIRY FACTS
LOVE FOR GOOD LIVE STOCK Coys and Girls' Clubs Teach Members That Cattle Raising Is Most Profitable. The two most valuable assets for the amateur stockman to possess in order to become a successful live stock breeder are: First, an interest and incentive for raising good stock, and second, practical experience supplemented with a thorough technical knowledge of selecting, feeding, judging, and breeding, according to J. T. Tingle, of the Colorado Agricultural College, who says: "Most of our greatest like stock breeders of today entered their profession on account of their love for good stock and their practical experience enabled them to make a success of the business. "Both theoretical training and practical experience are necessary for the best success. Especially is this true at present a time when feed, labor, and stock are high. There has never been a time when the live stock industry demanded a more thorough knowledge of proper feeding, breeding, handling, and selecting than at present. "The objects sought through the boys' and girls' clubs include the above essentials for success, and In addition they endeavor to teach the members that the work is enjoyable, profitable, instructive and offers an incentive for securing an agricultural education. Boys, as well as men are looking for practical training and there is no better way for them to secure it than through the clubs. "Every farmer and stockman should be more than anxious for his son to get Into some kind of live stock club. He should not only advise his boy to il "5- , . -1 Farmer "Bill" Harlow of Mikana, Wis., and His Pet Calves. enter a club but should encourage and urge others to join by offering prizes and stock at reasonable prices in order to promote the work and further the 'belter livestock' movement. Purebred breeders can well afford to sell club members stock at reduced prices in order to build up an interest in these young stockmen for raising registered stock. Increased interest means greater demand for purebreds and the better the demand the better will be the future sales." FEED FOR MILK PRODUCTION Many Old Cows Will Increase Capacity If Fed on Properly Balanced Ration. There are a large number of old cows that will increase their capacity for milk-giving if fed on a properly balanced ration and with a large amount of succulent food the year round. This is what develops the capacity of the cow. A great many cows are never fed with the idea of getting out of them the greatest amount of milk possible each year, with due regard to the health of the cows. If, however, the old cows were fed with this idea in mind, they would continue to give a large mess of rich milk. SUMMER MONTHS ARE TRYING Cows Giving Milk Should Have Plenty of Feed, Pasture With Water and Good Shade. Take good care of the cows. The summer months are always trying on cows giving milk. They will need plenty of feed, pasture with water and shade. Unless special care is taken of them they are likely to fail and not be in condition to produce in winter when prices of dairy products are high. Give the cows all the protection possible from flies. DAIRY NOTES Keep the dairy cow out of all drafts of stable windows. The milk cow on the general farm ought to be a money-maker. A satisfied cow is probably a satisfactory cow. A summer silo for the dairyman will pay even better than a winter silo. The average dairy cow makes dairying unprofitable; it's the better-than-the-average cow that pays. A good cow is worth more than most people believe. A dairy cow that yields an abundance of milk is indeed a valuable animal.
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