Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 94, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 April 1913 — Page 4
cinssiFiED comm Three lines or lesß, per week of six issued of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 15 cents. Additional space pro rata. FOR SALK. FOR SALE—Timothy seed. See Ross porter or W. V. Porter. FOR SALE— A $3.50 piano. < Will sell for SIOO cash. J. L. Smith. FOR SALE—Yellow Dent seed corn. Chas. Schleman, Phone 501-F. FOR SALE —Five or six tons of millet hay. Phone 395. Mrs. Wm. Daniels. FOR SALE—Several counters, at the Model Store. Simon Leopold. FOR SALE—A new visible SmithPremier typewriter, No. 10; bargain. Call at this office. FOR SALE—One-acre tract, well located, inside corporation of Rensselaer, cement walk along side, will make a cheap price for a quick sale, better eome see this at once. Chas. J. Dean, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR SALE—My residence property in Rensselaer; also 7% acres at east corporation line. I. N. Warren, Phone 21L FOR SALE—Good 8-room house, Sy*. lots, northeast part of town. J. P. Simons. WANTED. WANTED—Work with team, any kind of hauling; also to buy a good second-hand wagon. Phone 81; Lem Huston. ■- - - v WANTED—To clean your rugs with my electrical vacuum cleaner. I do it right. Phone Harry Eger, No. 170. WANTED—By boy of 13, job on farm, to plow and do other work. Inquire of Mrs. George Chambers, first house south of Milroy church, 3 miles south of McCoysburg. WANTED—House cleaning or ironing. Mrs. Alma Retherford, Ist door north of Frank Kresler’s residence. WANTED—To sharpen and put in shape your lawnmowers. Can be found at the jail heating plant. J. L. Griggs. WANTED—To buy a second-hand buggy in good condition. Address Ben Hanson, Pleasant Grove, Ind. WANTED—A medium size letter press. Apply by phone or in person to E. L. Hollingsworth, over the First National Bank. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS I make farm loans at lowest rates of interest. See me about ten year loan without cdminission. John A. Dunlap. W. H. DEXTER. W. Hi Dexter will pay 34 cents for butterfat this week. LOST. LOST—Stickpin, gold with a chipped diamond setting; pinned tp blue and white tie. Finder please bring to Republican office. LOST—Ring, probably in or near Presbyterian church or on the street A gold band ring with C. C. U. on inside. Finder please bring to Republican office. Reward. LOST—Bill book containing SSO, in the following denominations; one S2O, two $lO and two $5 bills. Two accident insurance cards bear my name. Reward. Please leave information at The Republican office. Joseph K. Thomas. EGGS, ETC., FOR SALE. FOR SALE Partridge Cochin eggs for setting. As this is without doubt the very best time of the year for successful egg hatching, I am offering eggs from the very best strain of chickens I can And. My hens are headed by “Major,” son of “Colonel,” Who won Ist prize at 111. State Fair. I choose nothing but the very best eggs. Satisfaction guaranteed to all customers. Price, SLOO per 18; $1.75 per 30; $2.25 per 50. Bhipped any where. Phone 582-B, Parr, Ind.—Jerry Tullls. MISCELLANEOUS. LADIES—Write for particulars how to obtain pair Silk Hose free. W. ,T. Wallace, 606 F Street, Washington, D. C. SEWING—I have rented rooms of Mrs. A Dayton and will do dress making and plain sewing there for the spring and summer.—Mrs. tyinnJe Mace. REPAIR SHOP—Motorcycles, new and second-hand bicycles for sale. In Jack Warner building, south of Rensselaer garage. James C. (Mark. PLANO TUNING -Bee Otto Braun, who will guarantee satlsfao tlon in all of his work. REUPHOLSTERING and furnlture repairing. Satisfaction guaranteed. J. P. Green, Phone 477. LAWN MOWERN-Sharpened and put in repair. Phone Deacon Hollister, No. 163. PAINTING—See me for house painting. Price right and work guaranteed. O. M. Blue. Plain or printed Butter Wrapn#rs, at this office
WORLD IN CHICAGO MAY 3 UNTIL JUNE 7
Great Exposition of Customs of Strange Lands and People to Opcupy Mammoth Enclosures. 20,000 PEOPLE TO PARTICIPATE Both Chicago’* Coliseum and Auditorium Theater Needed to Display Wonders of World-Wide Exposition and the Pageant of Darkness and Light. The World in Chicago, which tor five weeks, from May 3 to June 7, Inclusive, will occupy both the- Auditorium theater, Chicago’s largest playhouse, and the immense Coliseum, will be the greatest exposition of Its kind ever held. „ The object of the exposition is to illußtr&te the advancement of Christian' civilisation, and to that end, at a cost of $200,000, there will be brought to Chicago from the far corners of the world scenes from strange lands together with the customs of their peoples, their forms of worship before the coming of the missionaries, illustrating vividly what has been done and what still remains to be done in foreign lands and at home, both from a humantarian and religious standpoint. ~~ Twenty thousand men and women, gathered from the membership of 600 churches of all denominations, will be
A TEA HOUSE IN JAPAN. If you bottom* woary In touring The World In Chicago, you may ride in th* Japan*** ’ricksha and atop at th* T*a House for a cup of tea.
required to depict the hundreds of scenes and stage “The Pageant of Darkness and Light,” a great masque oratorio, showing In four wonderful episodes the triumph of Light over Darkness. Managed by Bu*ln*e* Men. The World In Chicago is under the management of committees composed of Chicago’s leading business men, who, in order to assure the success of the exposition, have pledged a guarantee fund of SIOO,OOO. The exposition will be divided into two grand divisions, the Pageant being staged at the Auditorium, while the exposition proper will be In the mammoth Coliseum. As the visitor steps from the busy, swarming streets of Chicago through the doors of the Coliseum he will have passed into another land. Charming scenes of the Orient will confront him. He will see the cherry blossom gardens of Japan; the pagodga of the Chinese; the waving palms of the South Sea island, and scenes from a ■core of other lands. Peopling these realistic scenes will be smiling “natives,” eager to tell In the English language the history of their countries, how they have progressed since the eoming of Christianity and the folk
PAGODA IN CHINA SCENE. A Feature of The World In Chleag* *HM be a reproduction of Mm faaMMS Tompls- of Gratitude Pagoda at Nankin, China.
lose of the past. Little children costumed as the boys and girls of these, strange lands will sing native songs and play the games 6t the other hemisphere. U. 8. to Be Bhown Too. But the exposition will not only dsplct foreign countries. There will be scenes from the southland, where the “poor whites” of the mountain fastnesses of the Carolinas are gradually being led to' change their mode of living. Little churches, their spires peeping above the pines, cuddled beside a mountain will be shown, as will the “rough and ready” missions of boom mining towns of the west, when the only law was might The China scene will have its tall central pagoda, Its temple shrines and Its native homes, together with an entire street of a town In inner China In Korea there will be a farmhouse and other buildings with a peculiar wayside shrine and a devil post Then there will be an India village, made up of a Kali temple and a Bengali Zenana, a bazar of shops and a monkey shrine. An African village, with Its thatched roof mud huts peopled by the downtrodden natives of that country, with a native blacksmith shop, a schoolhouse and other scenes. In the section given over to Mohammedan lands, which the visitor will enter through the Damascus gate, there will he a rich man’s bouse, a Bedouin tent. Houses which you would see were you in Arabs and Persia, and the kind of Bhops found In Turkish cities will also be seen. Ellis Island Portrayed. One of the most interesting sections will be that devoted to the work among incoming immigrants at the Ellis island Immigration station, New Tork. The Philippines, Hawaii, Porto Rico and Cuba and the South Sea islands will also he represented. In the section given over to displaying scenes from Palestine there will
be wonderful reproductions of a Jerusalem street. The entire north end of the balcony in the Coliseum will be given over to Bible land. Sintering Palestine through the Damascus gat* you will see a tent such as Abraham lived In, then there will be a realistic reproduction of the tabernacle In the wllderneea, a Bethany house, a Jaffa case, the Pool of Hezekla and dozens of other famed historic places. Following the visitors’ “trip around the world” In the Coliseum he should visit the Auditorium, where “The Pagent of Darkness and Light” will be given twice dally, afternoon %nd night. Here a grand choir will sing the music of four great episodes of missionary history while a thousand participants will dramatically present the story. Think of it Twenty thousand Christian men and women all struggling for one Idea —to make The World In Chicago a success. These twenty thousand men and women are recruited from more than 600 churches. Already rehearsals have progressed so far that It la now an assured fact that when The World In Chicago la thrown open to the public on May 3d, all will be In readiness.
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Chic-starter, and chicken feed, and oyster shells, at John Eger’s. Verne Haas will come down from Chicago this evening to spend Sunday with relatives. For a cigar that is Rich, Fragrant and Delicious in Flavor and Aroma, trip- the COMET (sc). Made in Rensselaer. George Ulm, who has been working on a dredge in Wisconsin, came home today for a visit with his wife and little daughter. The mep, young or old, should see Roberts’ buggy . stock. These buggies are fine lookers as well as good goods. C. A. ROBERTS. Miss Coro Ellis returned to her home at Lagrange „this morning after a visit since Wednesday with Misses Edith and Alice Shedd. What is it that, is so wonderful about a plow a man can pull? Listen, C. A. Roberts has a manure spreader that a man can pull. Mrs. Helen Shumway, who was recently adjudged insane, will probably be taken to the asylum Sunday. Word accepting her was received by County Clerk Perkins today. , Abe Martin Says: “Next t’ a well defined ease o’ hives, ther haint nothin’ as aggravatin’ as a feller that’s noncommittal. There’s no place like home—unless th’ sewin’ woman is there. A new Methodist church at Star City, Pulaski county, will be dedi--cated tomorrow, April 20th. Rev. George B. Jones will conduct a revival following the dedication. Rev. B. S. Hollepeter and Rev. A. T. Briggs will assist at the dedication. Fancy northern grown Early Rose Ohio, Six Weeks, Rurals, and Burbanks. All kinds of bulk garden seeds, or 2 packages new seeds for sc; and red, yellow and white onion sets. JOHN EGER. W. A. Rinehart, of Queen City, Mo., was here a short time this morning, on business. He is still -engaged in stock raising at Queen City, a town of several hundred people near the lowa line. Will reports that Mrs. Rinehart is enjoying excellent health.
Try our mill feed, 16V 2 per cent protein, for the same price as bran. HAMILTON & KELLNER. '‘Billy” Stewart, the erstwhile champion wrestler, was down from Niles, Mich., this week visiting James Harriott and others, and was in Rensselaer today. He has given up the sporting life and is now working for a living, having, a position in a factory at Niles. Miss Ethel Hermansen returned to Chicago this morning, where she will engage at private nursing. She Was recently graduated from one of the hospital training schools in that city. She has since visited her parents in Gillam township and her sister, Mrs. Lou Robinson, east of Rensselaer. C. A. Roberts has had forty-five years of experience in the wagon and buggy business, and worked seventeen years at the blacksmith trade, and has made out of iron most every piece of iron that is put on a buggy. Call in and ask some questions as to the style or kind of iron on a buggy and see if you are not intelligently answered. Earl Woodcox, the Chicago youth who has been in such serious condition at the hospital, Is now very much improved and there is every indication that he will recover enough to leave there shortly. He had rheumatism and this produced inflammation of the lining of the heart and for two or three weeks his death seemed near at hand. He is a brother of Mrs. Thad Stephens and Miss Hazel Woodcox. The condition of the Kresel boy, who was taken to the Wesley hospital in Chicago with a carbuncle on his upper lip, has continued very bad and the lower lip has been somewhat infected and there was danger of septic pneumonia resulting. Last evening word was received from the hospital that he was slightly Improved. It is not improbable that he will lose part of his upper lip and, indeed, It is still uncertain whether he will recover. The Republican is in receipt of another pointed criticism of the fact that there are no hitching post arrangements in Rensselaer, but the article will be held awaiting acknowledgment as to authorship. This paper is perfectly willing to present the arguments of the farmers in this matter, but we shall require to know who writes the articles. If desired the names will not be published unless the articles are unnecessarily severe, but the publishers must know who is doing the writing.
PILES CURED AT HOME BT NEW ABSORPTION METHOO. If you koffer from blwsllnf, Itching, blind or |>ru muling I'llm, mum! iut your aildrna, uid I will tell you bow to euro yourwlf at lionio by tb« now abaorptloa tronlmont; and will alao Wild Hume of tbla borne treatment free fur trial, with r*farei)re« from your own locality If requeated. • Immediate relief and permanent cure a wared. Sen if no money, but fell otbrra of tbla offer. Write today to Mra. M. Suouaera, Box P, Notre Peme, lad.
NORTH NEWTON.
Geneva Bierley spent Sunday at Milt Grimes’. The farmers arc very busy sowing oats in this vicinity. Milt Glumes and family were in Rensselaer Saturday. ~ Miss Dile Grimjes called at Wm. Biprley’s Monday afternoon. Wm, Bierley and son, Winfred, were in Rensselaer Saturday. James Lane and family were shopping in Rensselaer Saturday. Chauncey Huntington called at Ed Lane’s Tuesday morning. Joe Lane and family attended church in Rensselaer Sunday. Miss Elizabeth Luers, of Rensselaer, spent Tuesday night with Rose Lane. Mr. and Mrs. Evert Grimes and son, Gerald, spent Sunday at Milt Grimes’. Miss Amelia Lane is staying with her grandmother this week, the latter being sick.
We have not been in the buggy, business 43 years, but our companies make a line of buggies that have stood the test longer than that. HAMILTON & KELLNER. Buy your Suit from TRAUB & SELIG. / ' Pennsylvania -yvill add 120 men to its state constabulary force. Harsh physics react, weaken the bowels, will lead to chronic constipation. Doan’s Regulets operate easily. 25c a box at all stores. Miss Rosalie Wiley, a student of Northwestern, came today to remain over Sunday with her sister, Miss Bessie Wiley, a teacher in the Rensselaer schools. While his mother was absent in another room Ernest Burdette, of Lowell, this state, fell out of a twostory window and was instantly killed. One of the important functions of the government in Germany is the issuing of permits to hunters. The revenue thus obtained is about $1,500,000 annually. Accidents will happen, but the best regulated families keep Dr. Thomas. Eclectic Oil for such emergencies. Two sizes, 25 and 50 cents at ail stores. • Professional yeggmen blew up the money vault in the Keith theatre in the heart of Indianapolis early Wednesday, but did not reach SI,OOO contained in an inner box.
President Wilson Thursday accepted the honorary presidency of the Boy Scouts of America. He expressed interest in the work and promised his active support. Nearly 500 song birds, imported from England by Henry Ford, a manufacturer, have arrived in Detroit and will be given their liberty on M*t. Ford’s farm near that city. A healthy man is a king in his own right; an unhealthy man an unhappy slave. For impure blood and sluggish liver, use Burdock Blood Bitters. On the market 35 years. SI.OO a bottle. Investigation of the classified civil service was proposed by Representative Pou in a resolution which asserted that 80 per cent of such employes are members of one political party. Articles of incorporation of St. Luke’s Evangelical Lutheran congregation of Michigan City have been filed with the secretary of state. The incorporators are C. Pritz, W. Seedorf and A. Roeper. "Suffered night and day the torment of itching piles. Nothing helped me until I used Doan’s Ointment. The result was lasting.”--Hon. John R. Garrett, Mayor, Girard, Ala. J. 8. Douglas and 8. W. Applewhite, respectively president and secretary of the Cananea Consolidated Copper company, are held for ransom in Mexico, say private advices received at El Paso, Texas, Thursday night. A line of Single Buggy Harness has been sold for several years with Robers’ high class buggies, and the quality of the harness is the same quality as his buggies. On Front Street, Rensselaer, Ind. A million and a quarter quarts of whisky, Btout and ginger ale arrived at’New York Wednesday from Dublin in the steamer Wells City. It was the largest shipment of the kind that ever reached that port. The consignment weighed 1,250 tons. Indiana Harbor is much excited these days over reports that a big steel industry is coming to that place, just across the channel from the Indiana Steel company on the south side of the railroad tracks, and fronting on' the canal for water transportation.
Some of t?he features of the RC-H car are most axle clearance of any car, Warner auto-meter, tally-ho horn, center control, automatic eparker, straight line drive shaft, Bosch magneto, non-skid tires, jiffy curtains, etc. And best of all, the car Is sold for S9OO, fully equipped. This price includes everything. You do not buy the car and then have to spend two or three hundred dollars before yon are ready to take a trip. If Interested ask John Knapp, the local agent, for a free demonstration.
MILROY.
- -j —. Mrs. T. A. Spencer was a Monon visitor Wednesday. - • Mrs. G. Marchand and Miss Louisa were in Monon Tuesday, Edith Clark spent Sunday with Mr. Marchand and family. G. L Parks and family spent Sunday with John Sommers and family. Louise and Irene Marchahd visited Earl Foulks and Martha Clark Tuesday evening. Chas. and James Wood and Earl. Foulks attended church at Pales-* tine Sunday evening. Chas. Marchand, who is working near Kentland, came home over Sunday, returning Monday. Mrs. W. Brock and - daughters, Edna and Edith, and son, Ray, and Pearl Clark visited George Foulks Sunday. «. Mrs. Howard Stewart, Mrs. Frank May, Mrs. L. Parks and Mrs. W. Gaffield spent Monday With Mrs. Klein. The infant son of A. E. Abersol, who moved to near Royal Center recently, died Sunday and was taken to Illinois for burial. Howard Stewart, Frank May and families, Lural Anderson and Katie Guttrieh ate dinner with Thomas McAlear and family Sunday. Last Saturday the Queen City school closed. A large number of patrons and neighbors gathered and brought well filled baskets. After partaking of a bountiful dinner all listened to a splendid program, Miss Anderson has taught a very successful term of school.
SURREY.
Everybody is busy sowing.oafs. John Reed was a Rensselaer goer Wednesday evening. John Murphy was visiting in McCoysburg over Sunday. Prank and Gus Zacher were in Rensselaer on business Friday. Chas. Blue, of Rensselaer, was out to Surrey on business Monday. Sharman Thornton is just recovering fronA severe attack of quinsy. Miss Elizabeth Luers was the guest of Miss Rose Lane Tuesday evening. Joe Halligan, of Rensselaer, has spent part of the week working on his farm here. , Earl Price was the successful one of the eighth grade to pass the first examination. Miss May Niehols, of Oklahoma City, was here visiting her aunt, Mrs. Melvin Thornton. Mrs. G. L. Thornton is spending the week with her son, George, in Kankakee; also with her daughter in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Clint Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hopkins, Jack and Ed Lonergan, Ola and Emma Zacher were all Rensselaer goers Satu 1 / day. Miss Alice Parks, who has spent the winter in Tennessee, and who stopped off for a short visit with her brother at Bainbridge, returned home Tuesday evening.
Better Order Cemetery Work Done Without Delay.
If you want work done at the cemetery now is the time to arrange for it. The work is more easily done in the spring, the grass gets a better start and it is impossible to give the best attention to details, when the orders are rushed in just before Memorial Day. Many wanted flower beds last year after the plants were exhausted. Please let us know in time this year and to be sure to be in time do ft right away. I Weston Cemetery Association, J. H. Holden, Sexton.
Whooping Gough Notice. Any person having or suspected of having whooping cough must remain on their own premises, and any child or found mingling with people and exposing them to the disease will be quarantined after Friday night* April 18th. City Board of Health. Must Not Ride Bicycles and Motorcycles on Sidewalks. To ride bicycles or motor vehicles on the sidewalks is a violation of city ordinance and violators will be a crested and prosecuted. W. R. BHESLER, Marshal. RENSSELAER MARKETS. Corn—4Bc. Oats—3oc. Chickens—l2c. Eggs—lsc. Old Roosters—sc. L ■ Church of God. Sunday subjects; morning, "Charity”—(l Cor. 13). Evening, ‘Two Phases of the Coming of Christ.” CASTOR IA Rnr Infants and Children. T Tli Khd Ya Hm Alwap BeegM HlgMUir, irf Start spring right by having the piano tuned. Prof. Otto Braun will do the work right Orders may be left with any members of the boys* band. Use our Classified Column. -
