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The Jasper news. [volume] (Jasper, Missouri) 1898-1924, February 26, 1920, Image 5

Image and text provided by State Historical Society of Missouri; Columbia, MO

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90061052/1920-02-26/ed-1/seq-5/

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Ladies
Ladies
Ladies
Advertising Public Sales
Many public sales of farm equip
ment ami produce for the fall and
winter are being announced in Cal
houn county Indications arc that
there will be more in the county
this year than during any previous
season Auctioneers report that
they are listing an unprecedented
number of farm sales
In this connection it is worth
while tdmtethe interesting change
that has taken place during recent
years in the advertising of farm
saleSf It was not many years ago
that the farmer placed most reli
ance in the sale bill or poster
These were the days before the
automobile came into general use
At that time a bill posted in a
conspicuous place along the road
generally received a geneous pe
rusal from passers by- They need
ed onlyto pull up on the reins
read the advertisement and co
slowly on their way again
The advent of the automobile
did not do away with horses but
it certainly eliminated the value
of sale bills as far as posting them
in the country is concerned Ev
eryone drives automobiles now and
no one wastes the time or effort to
stop a car to read sale bills posted
along the road
Sale billshave their place they
are read in banks store and other
places of public- gathering -But
considering their cost and the
number of people reached the
newspaper advertisement is by far
cheaper and the most effective
A new note
j
THE JASPER NEWS
New ST A B DeutsGh
Complete Lino Blade Cat Hosiery
Pure Thread Silk Hose 285
Pure Thread Silk Hose 200
Mercerized Lisle Hose 125
Shown in the new Solid Colors
Local Talent Benefit Concett
Following Is the program to be Riven
nt the M E Church Friday evening
February 27 The proceeds arc to be
used to pay or the new 8tinday School
hymnals Admission 15 nnd 25 cents
The concert will begin promptly at 8
oclock Come early and hear It nil
Saxophone Solo Woodland Ech
oes A Mendel Drake - Accompanist
Miss Llda Drake
Ladles Quartette How Much Wood
Would a Wood chuck Chuck Mrs
Allen Peterson Mrs OUle Roberts
Miss Esther Vinson Miss Llda Drake
Vocal Solo Lires Lullaby Mrs
1 C Houser Accompanist Mrs L
T McCune
Headings The Methods of his Dad
The Quitter Mrs Stella Magers
Violin 8olo The Voice of the Heart
Miss Ora Wfseman Accompanist
MIssMurl Straw n
Mens Quartette The Wayside
Cross Omet Webb E L Brown L
T McCune Roy Wells Charley Teeter
W O Thomas J It Dowers Will
Dowers Accompanist Mrs L T Mc
Cune
Vocal Solo My Mammy Mrs
Allen Peterson Accompanist Miss
Llda Drake
Reading Curly Head Miss Lena
Wiseman
Ladles Quartette Black Virginia
Boy
Violin Solo Southern Lullaby
Miss Ora Wiseman
Vocal Solo Miss Agnes Fier Ac
companist Miss Llda Drake
Mens Quartette Onward and Up
ward
Half Mast High
Everyone knows when ho sees n flag
flown at half mast tlmtlfcs aislpnot
mourning but few havo any iden how
the custom originated It arises from
the old naval rule that the sign of sub
mission was the lowering of the flag
by the vanquished
Clothfng Co
Lee Halliburton
R C Grissom Orie Snyder
North Side Square Carthage Mo
Ordinarily the man conducting
a sale has frompo to 300 sale bills
printed They cost him several
dollars Afetvof thm get good
posting and arc read Many of the
bills are not seen by people who
might attend a sale and do some
buying
For a little more than the sale
bills cost a pehjon holding a sale
can have inserted in a newspaper
of general circulation an ad that
will be read inmany hundreds of
homes The newspaper nd will be
read by the farmer when he is at
leisure and will be re id more thor
oughly The newspaper ad reach
es out farther and brings to a sale
the extra buyers who make the
event a real success
Farmers who watched their sale
advertising are strong in the en
dorsement of newpaper sale ads
LThey declare it to be the most re
liable method of gathering buyers
Advocate Rockwell City Iowa
Never Drink Water
A large number of the smaller kinds
of desert mammals never drink water
They live and thrive on dry seeds and
scraps of vegetation In places where
the heat ami nrldlty are excessive
without even touching their lips to
water and It hns been found impossi
ble to teach some of tlicni to take wa
ter In captivity Apparently they never
know thirst or the delight of quench
ing ltv
A Kind Provision
Apparentiythe iiicn who talk all
tho time never grow dumb but those
who are compelled to listen nil the
time have a tendency to deafness
Nature protects lier children ulti
mately Houston Post
aH KBflrK A
lB
weve struck it
Chesterfield
NO sharps no flats but my
how Chesterfields Satisfy
A delightful selection of fine Turk
ish and Domestic tobaccos harmo
niously blended in an entirely new
and exclusive way t
The blend is based on our private
formula the outcome of many years
of experiment And the final result
has justified the time and money-
spent For certainly cnesteruelds
0 satisfy
But dont take our word for it
Smoke a Chesterfield today and find
out for yourself
The special moisture proof package
keeps Chesterfields firm and fresh
always
JffJCt6fyUfo42e
yr MB m L KSM
V
A v
a1ytrt1yMifWil49tfi ffgfiiftiHJ itfmnf r iwiwiJ
New Spring Arrivals
Mens Wool Golf Hose guaranteed at 500
Boys Black Cat Stockings guaranteed at 75c
Boys Black Cat Stockings guaranteed at 50c
Golf Hose in Fancy Colors only
Boys Stockings in Black only
DEWEY
Mbs May Matthews
Sunday school at Salem February 20
The Salem Aid Society will furnish
dinner at Loudenslagcrs sale
Dewey and Carytown Schools opened
Monday All well
Valentine day was observed Tuesday
at Dewey
Sam McReynolds and family spent
Sunday at Benton Taylors who are
going to move to Reeds
The census taker Las been over town
and found out the age of every woman
and how much money every man has
A nice young man has been canvas
sing the town for orders for portraits
done in water color
The farmers who planted oats had
swarms of crows cover the fields It
looked like tens of thousands of them
at once In a field One field had wheat
planted and was winter killed and then
the laud sowed In oats and It was de
stroyed by crows and now corn will be
planted on the same ground hoping
the chinch bugs will let It alone
Several men have been looking over
Mr Ogles farm with the intention of
buying it
Mrs Lum Carters family and Mrs
Jim Bulls family spent Friday with
Mrs Ara Law In Barton County
Sunday Mrs Matthews entertained
Jim Balls family and Ralph Berry
and wife
Clarence Ferguson and Lum Carter
have each bought a house in Carter
vllle took them to pieces and moved
them to their farms
Jack Carver has moved into Grand
pa Hoovers house since Mr Queen
had his sale
Kings school will be closed this week
instead of last week
Miss Helen Stith has returned to
school after two weeks sickness
caused by colds but not the flu
Kenny and Newt Miller and Walter
Carter visited Courtneys Sunday after
noon
Kenneth Stanford Riggs is the name
of the new baby at Mr and Mrs Riggs
01 Rogers and wife spent Sunday
visiting at Mr Riggs
A company is prospecting for mln
eral on Mr Riggs place
Mr and Mrs Hubbard of Jasper
spent Sunday with Mrs Follraer
V
DIAMOND
S R Denniston
Mr Berryhill and wife and son
Orval and Mrs Hane and her son
John and daughter Nellie went to
Carthage Thursday
Chas Nett and Ralph Cline at
tended Benners sale near Oakton
Thursday Ralph Cline bought a
fine mare and Chas Nett bought a
a pony for his boys
Mrs J A Boyd spent Friday
with Mrs Denniston and Grandma
Ryan
Ballard Lilly spent Sundav at
Bob Popes
Mrs Frank Cline and her son
Fred and daughter Blanche of
Jasper and Ralph Cline and wife
spent Sunday at Wesley Clines
near Oakton
Mrs Berryhill spent Sunday
afternoon with Mrs Denniston and
Grandma Ryan
Mrs W E Pfander spent Mon
day with her son John and wife
Mrs Crabtree is visiting her
daughter Rena near Jasper
Lawrence and Grace and Overal
Berryhill spent Sunday at Mrs J
A Boyds
Chas Nett bought some sheep
of Chas Elting Thursday
Grandma Ryan is still on the
sick list but is improving some
Some of the farmers in this
neighborhood are sowing oats It
is the early bird that catches the
worm
W E Pfander and wife and
Warren Pfander made a business
trip to Alba and Webb City
Monday
Team For Sale
Good heavy team of sound
horses coming 4 and 5 years old
Fred I Earl 27 3t
Prevents Dampness
Tho best way of preventing n bed
from becoming damp If left for a few
weeks Is to make It and then put a
blanket all over the top Take It off
before using the bed and youll find ft
quite dry
Wont Sweeten Coffee
Sweet nre the uses of adversity
but we have no use for It Boston
Transcript
J F Loudenslagers Public Sale
Having concluded to quit farming my 120 acre farm is fcr sale see owner
for particulars I will sell at public auction at my farm on the Jefferson High
way 2 miles south of Jasper and 0 miles north of Carthage the following
described property beginning at 10 a m
Wednesday March 3
12 Horses and Mules
One G-year-old brown mare weight 1200
One 12-year-old brown mare weight 1150
One bay mare weight 1050
One 8-year-old bay marc
One 5-year-old horse mule 10 hands
One G-year-old marenule 1C1 hands
One span coming 3 and horse
mules broke
One span coming 2-year-old black marc
mules
One coming 1-year-old black mare mule
One coming 1-year-old bay horse mule
13 Head Hogs
Two brood sows
One shoat weight 125 pounds
Ten 50 pound shoals
Farm Machinery
Acme binder McCormick mower
McCorralck hay rake Case disc Black
Hawk corn planter 2 harrows 4 shovel
OIIer riding cultivator 14 inch Oliver
walking plow B lnch wagonM2 rfling
cultivators Case sulky plow American
drill Hay rack dump boards manure
spreader set work harness set single
harness fanning mill grass seeder
spring wagon 2 old buggies
Miscellaneous
Set blacksmith tools Iron kettle
garden plow lawn mower swill cart
Yi inch log chain scalding tank two
il run tackle blocks incubator barrels
hedge posts bee hives post hole digger
some household goods and other arti
cles too numerous to list
11 Head Cattle
One 5-year-old red cow due fresh sale
day
One 5-year-old red cow giving 3 gallons
milk
One 4-year-old red poll cow giving 21
gallons milk
One 15-months-old heifer bred
One coming yearling red heifer
One 2-year-old red bull
One 8-year-old Jersey cow gllng 3
gallons fresh in January
One 4-year-old Shorthorn cow fresh
sale day
One 8-year-old Shorthorn cow due
fresh sale day
One 2-year-old Jersey heifer
Some Chickens
TERMS OP SALE
Cash or 0 months time at 8 per cent Interest from date No property removed
until terms nre compiled with
A W RADFORD Auctioneer IS H PATTERSON Clerk
J F LOUDENSLAGER
I
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