Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 262, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 November 1912 — Page 4
CLASSIFIED CHI.III i' Mi % _ &A.TES FOB CLASSIFIED ASS. Three lines or lens, per week of six tesues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, » cent*. Additional space -pro rata. FOB SALE. For Sale—-A base burner in good condition, cheap. Inquire of John R. Vanatta, Phone 257. HFor Sale—Running gears of a wagon. Call Phone 310. D. F. Grant For Sale—A Jersey cow, gentle, good flow of milk. D. F. Grant Phone 31st. For Sale—A full blooded Shropshire "Buck; reasonable price. Wm, 0. Gourley, Fair Oaks, Ind. For Sale—A 5-acre tract just north of Rensselaer; fair house, good barn, large orchard. Inquire of Harvey Davisson. For Sale—B room house, 3 lots, each 50x150 ; 2 blocks from court house; $1,500, easy terms. Inquire of Harvey Davisson. For Sale—3o head of yearling pure bred Shropshire ewes and one buck; will sell part or all. Five mile? south and 2 miles west of Rensselaer. Riley Tnllis Phone 527-E. For Sale—Two heating stoves, one an almost new air-tight wood heater including zinc and pipe; the other a small sheetiron heater, with zinc and pipe; also an almost new wood cook stove with reservoir. Inquire of Geo. 5:11. Healey. For Sale—Radiant Estate base burner in first class condition. E. W. Hickman, Phone 466 a For Sale—About 300 heads of fine cabbage for kraut; will sell cheap. Inquire of Mrs. Samuel Price, R. D. 1, Box 67, Rensselaer, Ind. -.3 For Sale—4o acres timber land; about 15 acres under cultivation; balance fine timber; 4 miles west of town. Want to sell immediately. Mrs. R. Wright For Sale—Dark Cornish chickens, a few cockerels and pullets, for want of room, $1 each. John Webber, Phone 323. For Sale —Good canning pears. H. H. Carr, River street Phone 427. For Sale—loo cords of 4-foot wood; $1.75 per cord on ground. Inquire of B. D. McColly or at Republican office. W. H. DEXTER. W. H. Dexter will pay 30 cents for butterfat this week. WASTED. Wanted —At once, 6 brood mares between 3 and 7 years old; weight from 1,300 to 1,600. Dr. J, Hansson, Phone No. 443, Rensselaer, Ind. Wanted—Chicken Rensselaer Producing Co., Opposite postofflce. —■" 1 t - Wanted— Milk dealer wants ten or twelve cans of milk daily to be delivered to the milk train each morning for shipment to Englewood. Will pay market price year round. Stephen Gasperik, 5703 South Halstead street Chicago, 111. * Wanted— Young men to learn ce-, ment tile trade and laborers. Steady work all year round, rain or shine. Good pay while learning trade. Apply at Plant Federal Cement Tile Co., Hammond, Ind. - _ • - -r . * Wanted —More patrons for our classified columns. A quarter will do wonders in selling your surplus stock or anything you have that is not earning you a copper. Wanted—Any lady can make $40.00 or more per month at home in spare time. Booklet telling all about how It may be done sent for ten cents in silver. Bank Depositors’ Protection Association, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. FOB BENT. For Bent—An 8-room house, good barn, outbuildings, big garden, lots of fruit; will lease for year; available after election. J. H. Perkins. For Bent —Space in our classified columns, in which you will find comfort and profit Start an ad today. PABB CREAMERY. Wilson & Gilmore, at Parr will pay 30 cents for butterfat this week. LOST. Lost—ln Eger’s store, a package containing lady’s waist and pair of gloves; name Boyle written on package. Will party who carried it away please leave at Eger’s sto-e for Miss Hannah Popper?
g —I ».l I !■» CMcqfo to lortiiWMt, Indianapolis Cincinnati, and the South, Louiavilla and Trench Lick Spring*. axnSBL&ZB TOCS TABLE. In Effect July 7. 1912. SOUTH BOUND. No. *l—Fast Hall 4:40 a. m. No. 6—Louisville Mail .... 11:18 am. No. 87—Indpls. Ex. 11:48 a. m. No. 33—Hooaier Limited .. 1:66 p. m. No. 89—MUk Accom 8:08 p. m. No. B—Louisville Ex. .... 11:06 p. m. hobth Boun. No. 4—Louievllle Mall .. 4:68 a.m. No. 4ft—Milk Accom. 7:88 a. m. No. 88—Fast Mkll 19:18 a. m. No. 88—Indple-Chgo. Ex. .. 8:88 p. m. No. *—Loulevle Mail AEx 8:87 p. m. No. 89—Hooaier Limited .. 6:46 p. m. Train No. 81 makes connections at Mo* dos for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette ap. sen ixumoi arriving at Rensselaer at ft:4ft p. m. Trains Noa. 89 to 88, the %ooaier Indlausapol 1 s. n the *C. D.^ae Tot Cincinnati having^e^dls^ngnu^^^ A Clsaaifled Mr. Till nut it. {
FARMER'S FRIEND IS PROTECTION
RECORD OF MORE THAN A CENTURY PROVEB THIS BEYOND ALL POSSIBLE DOUBT. A HOME MARKET ASSURED Fallacies of Professor Wilson’s Argil* ment and of Democratic Pros Trad# Exposed by Facta— American Farmers Have Always Benefited by a Protective Tariff.
The Democratic tariff bill, courageously vetoed by President Taft, PLACED CEREALB ON THE FREE LIST. A vote for President Taft and the Republican ticket Is the safeguard of the farmer against the entry Into the United Btates, duty free, of the products of the great fields of Canada and other grain-growing countries.
Professor Wilson is telling the farmers over and over again, that they have never been protected—that they do not need protection. Then in this ‘connection the professor adds: "But everything you use on the farm, everything that you wear, and a great deal of what you eat, but do not produce yourself, including meats, bears a heavy duty, which brings about the interesting result that you are paying for the wealth of the United States and getting nothing, or equivalent to nothing, so far as the tariff is concerned. Now that hasn’t just begun to be true. It has always been true.’’ It is not true. The protective tariff does benefit the farmers. American farmers know this fact, and by their votes have helped to maintain the policy of protection. Without their votes the party of protection could not (have won a single presidential election in the last forty years. Have the farmers been mistaken through all these years? They have not. Has protection been of no value to them? It certainly has. All history and all fact dispute the academic free trade contention that the farmer has no share in the benefits of protection. In every period of industrial depression, resulting from the destruction of the tariff duties below the protective point, the farmers of this country have been heavy losers, because of diminished demand and lower prices for their products. In the most recent period of Democratic free trade legislation—lß94-97— the farmers of the United States lost fully five billion dollars in reduced prices of farm products, and diminished values of farm property. In every period of restored protection the farmers have reapetT the benefits of a greater demand and increased prices. There has been no exception to the rule of prosperity for American S&rs, when American labor is fully oyed. some proofs of that fact. 1 In a recent statement by Senator Smoot printed in the Congressional Record of August 26, 1912, It is shown that in December; 1896, after two years of free trade tariff revision under the Wilson law of 1894, the price of corn was twenty-three cents a bushel, while in December, 1911, after fourteen years of restored protection, the price of corn was sixty-nine cents a bushel; or an advance over 1896 of 200 per cent. Using 1896 as the basis of comparison with December, 1911, it is found that under a protective tariff: Corn advanced 200 per cent. Wheat advanced 67 per cent. Cotton advanced 28 per cent. Oats advanced 166 per cent. Rye advanced 137 per cent. Barley advanced 308 per cent. Hay advanced 138 per cent. Hops advanced 286 per cent. Potatoes advanced 282 per cent. Flaxseed advanced 149 per cent. Fat cattle advanced 62 per cent. Fat hogs advanced 96 per cent. Dairy butter advanced 86 per cent. Eggs advanced 90 per cent. While the price of farm products has increased, the price of articles which the farmer purchases has not increased in proportion. He can buy more today with the products of his farm than he could In 1896. For example: Ten bushels of corn In 1911 paid for 125 pounds of sugar, and only 56 pounds In 1896. Ten bushels corn P a,d for 31 yards of bleached sheeting In 1911, and only 13 yards In 1896. Ten bushels of corn In 1911 paid for two pairs of shoes, and bnTy one pair In 1896. ,
Professor Wilson and other Democratic speakers and writers assert what is absolutely untrue when they say, that the protective tariff robs, and in no way benefits the American farmer. As a matter of fact, there is probably no class of American producers whose share in the benefits of protection in the past fifteen years, thas been so great as the share of the American farmer. If the farmers rightly understand their interests, they will vote against the party of free trade. They will cast six million votes for President Taft and Vice President Sherman and a continuation of the Republican policy of protection. .. V/". • The voters will not .spoil a falriy [good schoolmaster by trying to make Ub a second-class president
PURGATORY “FIRES” NOT YET, BUT SOON.
Word Purgatory Not In Bible, But Teaching Is Thera Saintly of Present Time Few, Yet All Must Become Holy Ere They Will Be Granted "the Gift of God, Eternal Lift), Through Josus Christ.”
PASTOR. RUSSELL
the true beauties of God’s Word, we find that while the gross Error of the past has some foundation In the Truth, the two are very different. Wrong Views of Future Punishment. Wrong views of future punishment have divided Christians into many sects. Our forefathers were not to blame; ability to read was not common until within a centqry. Furthermore. for centuries the Bible was out of the hands of the people and clerical zeal tried to bring the whole world, through fear, into the Church. Now, all thinking people repudiate the torment theories, and many are turning from the creeds, and from the Bible, the supposed foundation. The present trend is toward Highei Criticism, Evolution. In France, it is claimed, ninety-six per cent of the people have lost all faith in religion; in Germany, ninety per cent. How Important that the people should learn that God has made generous provision for all through Christ, and that He will bring all to a knowledge of Christ; that every wilful sin fdust bear its Just penalty. The subject of future punishment Is most Important The people should know respecting the word Hell In tbe original Scriptures—that Sheol of the Old Testament represents tbe Bible teaching of hell for tbe first four thousand years, and that Hades in the New Testament means tbe same; that these words do not stand for torture, but for the state of death. Humanity are redeemed from the grave by tbe death of Christ, and Sheol. Hades, the grave, shall be destroyed during Messiah’s reign.—Hosea xlii. 14; Isaiab xxv, 8; I Corinthians xv, 54, 55. Gehenna fire means the garbage-fur-nace valley outside Jerusalem; It is symbolical of the destruction of the finally Impenitent. Purgatorial Fires of the Bible. These are symbolical. The church is now on trial for everlasting life or everlasting death. The world’s purgatorial period .will be under the supervision of the Church.—l Cor. vl. 2.
St. Peter tells of purgatorial fires which now are purifying the saints: “Think It not strange concerning the fiery trial which shall try yon. as though some strange thing happened unto yon.” Jesus referred to these purgatorial experiences; read 1 John ill. 13; John xv, 18; Matthew xvt, 24. St Paul says that. Christ “learned obedience by the things which He suffered." and that “if we suffer with Him we shall also reign with Him.” The Scribes and Pharisees persecuted Jesus; He forewarned His followers that “a man’s foes shall be they of bis own household.” 0 St Paul points out that in the end of this Age fiery trials will come upon the Church: ’ “The fire of that day shall try every man’s work of what sort It is.” Faith built with the gold, silver and precious stones of Divine Truth will come forth nnscorched. Jesus declared to the Church. “Through much tribulation shall ye enter tbe Kingdom.” These are purgatorial tribulations for Dtbich we may give thanks. The World’s Purgatory Soon to Begin. Thd world's purgatory will begin with a severe ordeal upon all mankind, but will continue In instructive tribulation upon all needing tbe same. The “fires” will be symbolical. Tbe New Age will be ushered in by “a time of trouble such as never was 6ince there was a nation.” (Daniel xll. 1.1 Jesus declares that unless that trouble were checked no flesh could be saved: bnt* because of the Elect, those days shall be shortened. The Messianic Kingdom will end the strife and anarchy.
St Peter used symbolisms In describing these troubles: The “sea” represents the restless peoples; the solid “land”—earth—represents the social structure, whose “mountains’’ are the Kingdoms and whose “heavens” are the ecclesiastical powers. (II Peter ill. 5-7, 10, 12; Psalm xIvU The Apostle graphically pictures the elements of Society In violent agitation, resulting in a great “heat" which will consume these. He theu pictures the New Dis pensation. “The qew heavens” will be the Church In glory. “The new earth"" will be Society reconstructed. Who cannot see the capitalistic element, the' labor element and the social element In great danger of the conflagration Di vtnely foretold? The I.ord pictures mankind anxious to know and obey the Truth. '* "Then will 1 turn nnto the people a pure Message, that they may all call npon the name of the Lord, to serve Him with one consent”—Zepb. ill, 9.
Indianapolis, Oct 27.—The wofld-re-renowned Pastor Russell is here. We report one of his discourses from the text: “Some men’s sins go before to judgment, and some, they follow after.” (1 Timothy v, 24.) He said:— Gradually, as the eyes of our understanding open to
B. , Forsythe made a trip to Chicago today. >. C. E. Prior made a business trip to Lafayette today.
Call Harrington Bros. Co., Phone 7, for B. B. range coal. Dandy Magee has continued to improve and will be able to leave the hospital tomorrow. Our Grain King scoop boards have arrived. HAMILTON & KELLNER. The 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Iliff, south of town, is quite sick with malarial fever. Table meal, buckwheat flour and graham flour for sale by Hamilton & Kellner. Wood Spitler went to Madison, Wis., today, to be present tomorrow at the Wisconsin-Chicago football game. Fancy Michigan eating apples, 25 cents a peck; 90 cents a bushel; $2.50 a barrel at John Eger’s. Delos Thompson went to Ann Arbor, Mich., today, for a short visit with his son,* Alfred, who is attending college there. Wagons, wagon beds, steel trucks and scoop boards for sale by Hamilton & Kellner. Mrs. F. A. Ross, Miss Flora Harris, Misses Georgia and Muriel Harris and Miss Rebecca Eskew were visitors today. Lay in your winter apples now while they are cheap. 25 cents a peck; 90 cents a bushel; $2.50 a barrel at John Eger’s. i Ernest Mansfield, who has been working for Glenn Baker, of Barkley township, went to Lafayette today to visit relatives over Sunday. Marion I. AdamS, John Carmichael and Wilmotte Ritchey went to Monticeilo today to hear Joe Folk, ex-gover-nor of Missouri, expound democracy. Born, this morning, Nov. Ist, to Mr. and Mrs. John Donnelly, a son. And now Alf, the onion king, has a grandson and eventual heir to the throne. Harold Winegard, 2 years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Winegard, of Michigan City, choked to death Tuesday from a piece of apple lodged in his throat. J. N. Shields and wife and children went to Monticello today to remain aver Sunday. On Monday he goes to Logansport to cry a big sale for George Andrews. E. L. Hammerton and Fred Chapman also came in for the meritorious salary increase given to railway mail clerks, so that all the Rensselaer boys got in on it. Judge Albert O. Marsh, 72 years old, for two terms circuit judge of Randolph county and one time pension agent In Indianapolis, died Tuesday night at his home in Winchester. The widow survives. Cecil Rishling and wife, who have been living on Jay Stockton’s farm for the past year, left this morning for Fulton, S. Dak., where he has rented a farm and where they will make their future home. Mrs. Edna Hall, of Charlevoix Mich., who has been visiting Mrs. W. F. Smith and Mrs. C. W. Rhoades foi the past two weeks, left this morning for Indianapolis, where she will visit friends.
The election commissioners of Newton county have ruled that the name of Edward H. Marks, socialist candidate for congress in the tenth district, shall not be placed on the ballot because of irregularity in signing his petition. J. K. Davis, who has been here most of the last three weeks collecting horse fees, expects to go to Greencastle tomorrow to remain until after the election. He made a business trip yesterday to Wolcott and Monticello. P. N. Myer, botanist and explorer of the department of agriculture, has left for a three years’ trip through the wildest and least known regions oi Asia in search of trees and fruits that will stand the dry weather of certain parts of the United States. Mrs. James Matheson, of Winnepeg Canada, arrived this morning Tor a visit until tomorrow with Mrs. F. J. Sears and other friends. She was on her way from Winnipeg to Toronto and came by the way of Chicago ir order to look after some business matters. Pat H. O’Donnell, a native of Carroll county and well known in Rensselaer, has been making some republican speeches- the past few days in Indiana. He is a great orator, filled with Irish good humor and bubbling over with eloquence. At Lafayette last night he spoke to a good sized audience at the Victoria theatre and The Journal says it was the greatest treat the people there have had in years. Mr. O'Donnell is a lawyer in Chicago, where he stands high in the profession. A number of years ago his sister, Miss Nellie O’Donnell, ajk tended school here. Charges of wholesale graft and peculation perpetrated by commissary stewards attached to the Atlantic fleet have followed the arrest of G. T DavisV Chief commissary steward of the battleship Louisiana. The navy department is thoroughly aroused over the matter and many more arrests are expected. Davis is said to have made a statement admitting irregularities in handling provisions and supplies for the ship’s company and implicating five other stewards utacneu to ue fleet.
10 OTIEB STOVE 90ES THIS Cole’s Hot Blast Heater maintains a contlnooos fire; also a steady, even beat. It will hold fire from Saturday night until Monday morning <4B boon). It will bold Are over night wltt less coal than any other stove. Open the drafts In the morning and the rooms are quickly heated wltt the coal pot In the night before. Come In and examine Oole’i Original Hot Blast Heater. Price sl2.<M and up, mceosding to sßs. <»-“> WABNEB BWM3.’HAKDWASE
Public Sale of Farms ——— and City Property
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As I have invested quite extensively in the Jungles ditch valley of Kniman, I will sell all the real estate ih the city of Rensselaer an Marion and Milroy townships, at public aufction, on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1912. . Sale will take place at the properties sold and the hours hereafter stated: 73 acres in Marion township, Jasper county, Indiana, 1 mile east and 1% miles south of Rensselaer. The improvements consist of a new 7-room house, a eement milk house, wood house with cement floor, barn 40x50, henhouse, a 59-foot well, 9 feet in the stone, new windmill, cistern piped in house, cement, tanks, cement w r alks. All the building imprwents new in 1911. All thoroughly tiled and all under cultivation, gravel road on two sides of farm. 100 acres of fine land In Marion and Milroy townships, all tiled, all under cultivation but a grove of 4 acres; no buildings on the farm, but a fine building place; 4% miles southeast of Rensselaer and gravel road all the way. The farm sales will take place on
According to advices from the east an announcement will be made within a short time by the managements of the Pennsylvania and New York Central lines of an extension of the time schedule of their Chicago-New York flyers from eighteen to twenty hours. Twenty-seven inmates of the Indiana reformatory at Jeffersonville were Wednesday transferred to the state prison at Michigan City. They left in a special car. The men were shackled in pairs and regarded the trip as a pleasure variation from the routine of prison life. “It is a pleasure to tell you that Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy Is the best cough medicine I have ever used,*’, writes Mrs. Hugh Campbell, of Lavonia, Ga. “I have used it with all my children and the results have been highly satisfactory.” For sale by all dealers. c •Bishop Herman J. Alerding, of Ft. Wayne, has made request of the Rev. Father Zircher, pastor of St. Joseph’s Catholic church in Laporte, to engage in special missionary work, and the latter now has the matter under advisement, though his congregation will be a unit against his resignation. Mrs. H. J. Bartoo met with a very severe accident Sunday afternoon. While standing at the head of a long stair case she became tdizzy and fell the full length of the stairs. No bones were broken,, but she was terribly bruised all oyer her body, her face, nose, back and one arm getting the worst of the deal. She will be laid up some time while nature does a whole lot of repair work on strained and bruised muscles. —Remington Press. The chicken supper at the M: E. church last evening was a big success. One hundred and sixty-nine ate their suppers there. The ladies were overwhelmed with business at .the supper they gave about a month ago and ran out of everything but they took care that there was plenty this time and the plates were well filled for every order and there was considerable left over, which was sold out after all had eaten. About S4O was cleared. The new train on the C. & E. I. rail road-.was started todayi It was a steam instead of a motor train. It is the first time for many years that a passenger train has run on that railroad. The people along the route have had to travel in a caboose attached to a slow freight whenever they wanted to go any place. Today Harry Brown and a friend were coming down from Kniman. They expected to come to Fair Oaks on the passenger train. They had been used to seeing the freight train pull in, take its time and pull o.ut and they were not expecting the passenger train to break any records. While they were watching the train and sizing it up a bit, it pulled out and left them standing on the platform, shouting wildly for it to wait until they could climb on. The conductor did not hear them however, and they had to talk the freight conductor into letting them ride the caboose to Fair Oaks. The passenger train to to make two round trips a day between Goodland and Lacrosse. ' '
CASTOR IA for Infants and Children. Tbs Kind Yu Han Always Bought
the farms at about 10:30 in the morning. 9- house and bath, 1 block south of court house; a fine house modern in every particular; lot 50x150 feet, northwest corner of Cullen and Rutsen streets. 10- house and bath; also modern, at southwest corner of Rutse6 and Cullen streets; good barn, room for 3 head of stock and autQmobile. Two lots on Cullen street, north of the first house described; fine building lots.City property will be sold at 1:30 in afternoon. Terms—One-third cash, balance in three equal payments or as may be agreed; deferred payments on farm land to have 5 per cent interest, on city property 6 per cent. Discount of 3 per cent on deferred payments; earnest money of SSOO on either farm or either house, and $250 on each lot will be required at time of sale. ' ROBERT MICHAEL, Col. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. Col Phillips will show the properties to any who care to investigate.
FARMS FOB SALE. $2,500 livery stock for farm. 160 acres, finely improved, near courthouse, «at a bargain. Terms $5,000 down. 225 acres, in Washington county, Ind., nine miles north of Salem. This farm has 150 acres of bottom land, has house, good barn, 4 acres of pdach orchard, is on R. F. D., and township high school 80 rods from farm. Will trade for property or f»rm near here. Large brick mill apd elqvator in Converse, Miami county, Ind., in firstclass condition, doing a good business. Will trade this plant clear for farm land or good property. 21 acres, five blocks from courthouse, cement walk and all nice smooth black land. 35 acres on main road, all good soil, has good small bouse, new barn, and in good neighborhood. Price SSO; terms SSOO down. 80 acres, good house and outbuildings, all black land, all cultivated, large ditch through farm, lies near station and school, gravel road, and in good neighborhood. Price SOS, terms SSOO down. 97 acres, near station, school, on main road and lies between two dredge ditches givfng fine outlet for drainage. Ail black land in cultivation. Good sixroom house, large barn. Price $55. Term?. 99 acres, all good com land and all in cultivation. Has large dredge ditoh along one end giving fine outlet for drainage. This farm has five-room house, barn, good well, and orehard. Price S6O. Sell on easy terms or take good property or live stock as first payment. 80 acres at a bargain. This tract of land lies in good neighborhood near school and station and on main road. It is level, a good part prairie and remainder timber, containing considerable saw timber. Will sell at the low price of $27.50 per acre. Terms S6OO town. 190 acres, all black land, tiled, on giavel road, telephone, all buildings as good as new, seven-room house, large barn, cribs and granery, wind mill and tanks, fine shade and lawn, woven wire fences and a model farm. Lies close in. Price only SIOO. A dredge boat for doing all kinds of dredge ditch work, in as good condition as new, % size. Owner will trade for land or * property and assume or pay difference. 160 acres—We have three 160-acre farms all well located on main roads near stations and school, nearly all black land and on dredge ditches, giving good drainage. Each’ farm has good house, good bam and well. Can sell either farm for $47.50 and take SI,OOO as first payment Might take some live stock. Onion land as fine as the best, on dredge ditch adjoining station and on main road. Will sell in tracts of 20 acres or more at $45. GEORGE F. MEYERS. Rensselaer, Indiana. t Boston baked beans, crulls, pumpkin pie and the ‘*6681 Ever” bread at Mrs. Green’s bakery. No Hallowe’en party is complete without mother’s pumpkin pie. It is time to order your Thanksgiving fruit cake. We would like to make it for you. Phone 477. A number of small parties of hallowe’en prankers were out last evening and indulged in the customary pranks. Outbuildings were overturned, vehicles were taken long distances away from the places they belonged and gates were hung upon telephone poles. A large number of the incandescent lights at street corners were turned joss and several of the expensive globes are said to have been broken. It is quite probable that some of the boys who indulged in this act will beasked to pay their respects to the justice'of the peace.
