Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 215, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 September 1911 — Page 4
JKI • , t SIM ■ Jh I " • BrortM CrtißHi. J FOB SALK. F*r Wfr-A good piano, table and chairs; cheap It taken eoon; inquire <4 Mrs. Vern Schock or phone 172. Far Sale—Peaches, leave orders at No. 366, or write to Prank Blcher, Rensselaer, R. R. No. 3. Per Sale— Peaches at the Rosebud lam, at 60c per bushel. Phone 607 B. P. a address, Parr, Indiana. far Sal a—A fresh shorthorn cow. with calf by her aide; an extra good milker. Inquire of Mrs. W. N Jordan, phone 622 F. , Far Sale— Lots 8, 10, li, 12, block 19, in Weston’s addition; 1600 school fend mortgage. Will take |IOO for equity if sold quick. Address W. L. Canary, Terre Haute, Ind. Per Sale —Seven lots with residence; plenty of fruit. Will sell or trade; will take team and wagon as pan payment Granville Aldrich. Far Sale—6oo bushels of extra good Body seed wheat, guaranteed free from rye. F. Thompson, Parr, Ind. ~ ! iar~ Sale —Krakauer Bros, piano, aftw. Mrs Frank Folta. Far Sale —Hardwood lumber of all kinds; also cord wood. Randolph Wright, R. D. No. 3, Rensselaer, or ML Ayr phone No. 26 I. Bar Sale— No. 2 Smith Premier typewriter at a bargain. Leslie Clark, at The Republican office. FOB BIST. Fir Bent —Six-room flat over McKay laundry; a first class apartment cSn be rented reasonably. Inquire of Geo. H. Healey or H. R. Barrie. Far Bent — 4 furnished rooms on ground floor, cistern and well water In kitchen. Inquire of Mrs. Brenner, en South Division street Far Bent— Furnished rooms. Mrs. B. L, Clark. , FOB TBADE.
Fsr Trade— 9-room modern residence and 2-story brick business building at Williamsport, Ind., for farm This property rents for S4O per month. J. J. Weast, Rensselaer, Ind. * WANTED. Wanted —Timothy hay. George F. Meyers. Wanted— At once, a good stenographer. W. H. P&rkison, Attorney. Wanted—Apprentice girl to learn millinery trade. Rowles A Parker. AUTOMOBLLEB. We have en ear fleer ready tor delivery two of those convenient economical runabouts, completely equipped, for S6OO. Call and let us tell yea more about * Tha rfl&ar€i/ LOST. Lest— Saturday night, a purse containing two 5-dollar bills and some small change. A reward for same Return to Earl Galbreath or leave at Tbe Republican office. Lest—Wednesday evening between Alf Donnelly’s corner and depot, a little girl’s gray sweater. Finder please leave at this office or inform Mrs. James Walter, phone 501 H.
ESTKAYED. Strayed — A half-Jersey spring heifer calf; red with white on belly. Information to James Downs, phone 532 I. 4 Estrayed —From pasture near McCoysburg, one yearling Hereford ateer weighing about €OO pounds. Information that will result in recovery of the steer will be rewarded. Inform Sherman Morris, of McCovsburg, ■or leave word at The Republican office. FARM LOANS 'Withost Commission ■ pnj Tnp Wlthont Delay I ULI 1 lit Without Office Charges __ J Wlthont Charges For ■ I) N r VI Making out or nUnLI Recording Instruments W. H. PARKINSON. MISCELLANEOUS. ~ Hog Cholera Positively Cared—l will cure your hogs or get no pay for the treatment Wire me or write me, and I will come and if 1 treat your bogs and fall to effect a cure, it costs yon nothing. Ben B. Miller, ML Ayr. Indiana. WOTXOTI SO DULT WISCTUIIM Subscribers to The Evening Republics! srlll confer a favor upon the pabilsbers by reporting promptly eny failure of delivery upon the part of the carrier boya The Republican tries to rfve good service In the delivery of the paper, but cannot do no without the cooperation of subscribers. If you fall to receive your paper notify us promptly by phones If, 114 or 1M and your complaint will bo si von prompt attention Let-your wants be known through, oar Classified Column- . „
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Hon. 1. D. Dunn was down from Teift today. -- Additional today's locals will, be found on page three. b Max Smith, of Chicago, is plaiting his sister, Mrs. Vern NOweld. „ Order tomatoes to can of E. S. Rhoads, the grocer. Do it today. A. Leopold is able'to be out again after a quite severe attack of his old trouble. ■ ' Herbert Zea is down from Hammond. Work is dull there and he came home to spend horse show week. Dave Warner came down from Gary yesterday for a short visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Warner. A. S. Laßue yesterday concluded.a deal for the purchase of the George W. Marshall farm of 111 acres, near Fair Oaks. Mrs. Ellen Yeoman and daughter-in-law, Mrs. S. A. Yeoman, of Claypool, Ind., came this morning to visit S. E. Yeoman and wife. Mrs. J. W. McConnahay returned today to her home in Pullman, 111., after a visit here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Randle. William Baker left this morning for Mitchell, S. Dak., where he will remain for a couple of weeks during the time his crops are being harvested. The old depot will be torn down as soon as the new one is occupied and the useable lumber will be employed in the building of a depot at Bainbridge. The ladies of the Methodist church will give a market Saturday, Sept 16, at the Home Grocery. All members are requested to bring or send something.
Miss Grace Norris left this morning for Fulton, Ind., to take up her work as assistant principal and instructor in Latin and German in the high school. Mrs. B. G. Oglesby and three little daughters returned to their home in Knox this morning, after a visit of two weeks with her sisters, Miss Grace and Fame Haas. Mr. and Mrs. George Robinson, of Hanging Grove township, started this morning for Mitchell, S. Dak., to visit their son Charley and wife. They will be gone for several weeks. Mrs. Ella Kelley, of Marion, came this morning to visit the families of R. B. Harris and W. V, Porter. She is the daughter of George McCoy, who recently died at his home in McCoys* burg. Clarence Smith, 6on of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Smith, and a member of the 1911 graduating' class of the Rensselaer high school, has entered Purdue university. Ho will take the civil engineering course. Please bear in mind that the ladies of the M. E. church will give a market Saturday, September 16, at the Home Grocery. Cakes, pies, salads, home made breads chickens and everything for a Sunday dinner. S. E. Yeoman had a fine time at the fiftieth anniversary of his regiment, the 51st Indiana, held at Indianapolis last Thursday. Sixty-three members of the regiment were registered. One came from California and another from Alabama.
Miss Ruth Makeever, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Makeever, will enter the Monticello Seminary at Godfrey, 111., this week and take a course in music and art. She would have been a member of the Rensselaer graduating class this year. Miss Elizabeth Spitler left this morning for Oxford, Ohio, where she will enter Western College for Girls. Misses Martha Long and Jane Moody, who attended the same school last year, will go there tomorrow to reenter for the ensuing term. Miss Marceline Roberts will also go to Oxford to re-enter Miami University. D. L. Brookie has purchased another grain elevator. He owned two before he made the purchase of the third one yesterday at Monon. It is a very large one, being used both for transfer and local business. The others are located at Tefft and San Pierre. Mr. Brookie says he can operate the three to much better advantage and at less cost comparatively, than he can one or two.— Frankfort Times. Lawson Meyer, formerly of Rensselaer, and now the superintendent of the Gary Telephone company, bought an air rifle for his little daughter and took it home last Sunday. Mrs. Meyer was afraid it was loaded and cautioned Lawson about it Lawson was sure it was not loaded and to show his wife that it wasn't he put one finger over the muzzle and pulled the trigger. Much to his surprise a BB shot Went almost through his finger and had to be probed out by a doctor. y
Dnuflno 0 Dorlior sh.w%rL H ,™ stytorVoaVe welowße lIUtvIuU Ol lUIHU I w^JiMe. 1 ” “THE GROWING STORE” i Grand Fall Opening Millinery—Cloaks—Suits Sept 14, 15, and 16 L |pfil We respectfully announce the opening of our new Merchandise for Fall, and we invite, you to come to Jr/ 7 our store and see what this Autumn offers. Jr > Know when ypu enter our door that you will see / / authentic styles and shades; know that we place on / Ai sale none but reliable merchandise; know that we Jag shall ask you only a reasonable price. Buy from us wpHKjß§r one season and you will be a customer always. New Modes in Millinery REMEMBER THE FALL OPENING THIS WEEK, Scft 14, 15, 16. ' ■ |«lm| We especially invite you to come in and get acquainted with Miss Bennett, now in charge of this de- L EBBSIw * partment, and survey the new Fall styles. We feel 7 EjjwSjsfi l sure you will be pleased with Miss Bennett; both as reSKyßffi trimmer and saleslady, and the many new and radical _ departures in millinery styles she will have to show you. We have come to be recognized as Millinery v* Headquarters, and you will find here the latest ideas in styles most becoming, a boundless variety of both trimmed and untrimmed bats, imported, flowers, feathers and novelty trimmings. We especially invite you to come in and let us show you. Our prices always the most reasonable. Women’s Coats and Suits —Early Fall Display Autumn modes with the last words of Fashions approval in women’s tailored suits, coats and all lines of women’s apparel are especially prominent among our Fall displays. Women’s all wool suits in solid shades of navy, green, Havana and black, including many manish mixtures. We would like the pleasure of showing you these new Fall styles. Prices range up from $12.50. We direct your attention to our sweater coats, the Bradley line, the Athena underwear, Burlington fast dye hosiery, the latest novelties in piece goods and silks and everything for your Fall and Winter needs. ROWLES & PARKER, “The Big Store,” Rensselaer, Ind.
NET IS TIGHTENING ABOUT GARY OFFICERS.
Prosecutor Signs Affidavits —Thinks Evidence Sufficient to Convict Cduncilmen. Gary, Ind., Sept. 11.-»-“I am certain the evidence against Councilmen Walter Gibson, Dominick Szymanski, John Slemasko and Anthony Baukus, and Bolice Szymanski, son of the councilman, is dead open and shut,” said Prosecutor Charles Greenwald today, after he approved all of his affidavits. ‘‘The money with their signatures is said to be in a safety deposit box in Chicago and the name of every man who received money to be on a slip in the drawer. The records, it is said, show that at the conference in the hotel, Dean wanted to pay the money, but they thought they would not take any chances whatever.” ‘‘l think we had better go to Chicago,” suggested one. "Perfectly satisfactory to me,” Dean is said to have replied, and on Aug. 24, the. day before the franchise was passed in the council, the party is alleged to have gone to Chicago, where Mr. Dean obtained the safety deposit boxes, introducing Councilman Walter Gibson at the bank as his partner in business in Gary. <* The SSOO of each man is said to have been placed in a separate box, with a slip identifying him. The boxes are not to be opened except in the presence of both Dean and the man to whom the box was rented. It is believed, however, that an officer of the law will be in the party that observes the opening.
Another Gary Official Who Wanted Big Pay ior Vote.
Gary, Ind., Sept. 11.—A warrant charging John J. Nyhoff, former commissioner of public works, with soliciting a bribe, was sworn out today in Crown Point, Ind., according to Prosecutor Charles Greenwald, making a total of eight city officials including Mayor Knotts, now facing charged of being municipal grafters. Nyhoff was not arrested during the day. He is charged with having demanded $19,000 for his' aid in pushing through a franchise giving heating and power rights to the Dean Heating and Power company of Louisville. W. D. Hodges, counsel for Dean in Gary, announced that ouster proceedings would be started against tbe eight officials now facing criihinal charges.
Typewriter ribbons for sale at The Republican office.
PENSACOLA SCOUT CAR PASSES THROUGH CITY.
Quartette of Citizens From Florida City Make Brief Step on Route Finding Trip to Chicago. Dr. S. R. Mallory Kennedy, A. M. Avery, Jr., F. C. Brent, Jr., and Col. Frank L. Mayes, who left Pensacola, Florida, on September 3, in a Speedwell auto to scout out a route from Pensacola to the Great Lakes, arrived in Rensselaer at about 8:30 o'clock this Tuesday morning, having come from Lafayette, where they remained over night, in 1 hour and 20 minutes, a distance of 45 miles. The distance from Pensacola td Rensselaer as measured by their odometer was 1,045 miles. Dr. Mallory is a member of the Pensacola Commercial Club, and Mr. Mayes is the editor of the Pensacola Journal, and that paper has attached considerable importance to the trip, as it is presumed to establish a good automobile route between Florida and Chicago. One remarkable thing about the trip was the fact that the tires have held up without an accident and were filled with Pensacola air when the party reached here. They were accompanied here by J. H. Quinlan, of the Chicago Speedwell Agency, and C. N. Gates, of the Chicago Motor Club, who had met them at Lafayette and acted as an escort to Chicago. Mr. Mayes’ wife was a number of years ago a resident of Remington anti later of Monticello. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Kingsbury, of Hartford, S. Dak., where she is now visiting. The Pensacola party will be banqueted by the Chicago Motor Club. Mr. Mayes will remain in Chicago to attend the good roads meeting. He has for years, through his papers and otherwise, been engaged in developing the good roads movement. Both he and Dr. Kennedy are delegates from Florida to the good roads convention. They will return to Pensacola by train, sending their car to Dayton, Ohio, to be overhauled In tbe factory.
Former Remington Girl Becomes Bride of Roy Didlake, of Chicago.
Monticello Journal. A courtship of many years duration was terminated Saturday noon at Chicago in the wedding of Roy Didlake, of this city, and Miss Golda Lam born, formerly of Remington, who now resides in Chicago. The happy couple started east for a bridal tour and after October Ist will be at home to their friends at Bharonville, near Cincinnati, Ohio. -
DOES THIS CONDITION EXIST AT YOUR COLLEGE?
Millionaire Iron Manufacturer Would Provide Better Discipline for University Students. R. T. Crane, millionaire iron manufacturer, made public in Chicago Sunday an arraignment of the big universities of the country. He charges alarming prevalence of drinking and gaming among the students. Columbia he ranks the worst, but conditions at Harvard, Princeton and Cornell he declares are almost as bad. Of the students at Harvard 90 per cent drink in their freshman year, 95 per cent in their senior year and 15 per cent of them go irretrivably to the bad, according to the report of an investigation which Mr. Crane had made. Mr. Crane has spent much time and money putting under scrutiny the results of higher or college education. So bitter is he in consequence that he declares colleges do more hafm than good. Mr. Crane says in his report:
“An outsider can scarcely realize the amount of drinking that goes on in the club rooms of the colleges. Referring particularly to Harvard, I estimate the number of students who combine in a mild degree wine and bad women 65 per cent, who drink heavily, 35 per cent, and who have two or three ‘bats’ a year also, 45 per cent. “I do not doubt that even a worse state of affairs exist at other colleges. At Princeton it is beer, beer, beer. The town is licensed and the body of students in my mind drink even more than Harvard men. On one occasion I believe there must have been more than 300 students dead drunk. “At Yale drinking is recognized in so great a degree that clubs have their tables at the barrooms. I was never so struck in my life as when I found New Haven the dissolute, debauched and whisky town that it ia. Some time ago the statement appeared in a New Haven paper that there were 2,000 fallen women in that city. ‘‘At Cornel] the conditions are somewhat the same, although I believe Cornell students do not carry their excesses so far as do boys at Princeton, Yale and Cambridge. The Cornell boys are great on beer, as are glso the men at Princeton. “At Columbia I believe there exists more debauchery than at any other college, on account of its proximity to the famous resorts of the city. If further proof be necessary let me quote from a letter received from B.
C. Moyer, who i? special secretary of the Association of Colleges of North America and he is following this matter up for the association which chows that it has taken upon itself the work of reforming college men. He is its special agent and is visiting the colleges and delivering a lecture entitled ‘College Men I Have Met in the Slums and Prisons of New York.' He says: i “‘I did say and have written proof to back me up that I have met personally and have heard from the most reliable authorities of some 1,200 cBP” lege bred men in the slums, prison*.' jails and sanitariums who were down and out through fast living. The noted bread line in our city has constantly in it college bred men.’ ” The rest of Mr. Crane’s report is a story of drinking, immorality, brawling and reckless money spending. He gives a large number of examples and says the proof is irrefutable. The report which is printed in the current numbers of the Valve World, owned by Mr. Crane, describes unsparingly student dissipation and is a remorseless indictment of not only the universities but of the municipal government that permits such conditions.
Fantastic Parade Called Off For Lack of General Interest.
The fantastic parade to have taken place Thursday night has been called off. There were not enough maskers in sight to make it a success and it was decided to drop it after Chairman Parker made a last final effort this morning to create enthusiasm. It would be a great event if enough people would go into it to make it ao, but everyone seemed too busy to make the preparation.
Settle Dr. W. W. Merrill Accounts.
All persons knowing themselves indebted to Dr. W. W. Merrill are expected to asttle their accounts as early as possible. The books are at the office of C. J. Dean, where settlement can be made. Please give the matter immediate attention.
What have you to sell? Why don’t you sell it? A Republican classified ad will bring you a buyer willing to pay what U. is worth. Don't put ft off. Three lines one week In si! Issues of the Daily and Semi-Weekly Republican for 26 cents. What have yon to sell at this time of tbe year? Try a classified ad In the Republican and you can sell It. Remember, that alt classified sds go In nil Issues of the livening and SesskWeekly Republican.
