Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 172, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 July 1913 — Page 4

' w mm yuan IATM YOB CXAtMKFIBD ADS. Three lines or lens, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 26 cents. Additional space pro rata. ~FOB SALK FOR SALE—The Mrs. Wm. Washburn property on Matheson Ave. House has nine rooms, bath, electric lights and city water, furnace heat, 3*4 acres of ground, barn and good chicken house. See W. 0. Rowles, at Bowles & Parker’s. t: ISSgMSII I lIP .1 1.1 I ■ ■■ FOR SALE OR TRADE—SmaII stock staple dry goods and shoes. Will take town property—W. R. FOR SALE**Blackberries, Mrs. Elmer Jacks, phone 525-G. FOR SALE—Carriage, good value ait $25, will sell for sls at quick sale. —J. F. Bruner, Phone 339. FOR SALE—Home grown blackberries.—J. F. Bruner, Phone 339. FOR SALE—My seven-room house with three lots, three blocks from court house. Everything in good condition; .good well; city and cistern water in house; plenty of bearing fruit trees and grape arbor; all walks and curbing in. Will sell all or part if sold by September 1. Sacrifice lor cash. Will make terms to suit purchaser. Inquire or write Geo. E. Ulm, Box 433, Rensselaer, Ind. , - .... , FOR SALE—Four or five of the old fashioned spotted Poland China male pigs, thoroughbred.— Wm. Bennett, phone 567-J. R. D. 3. FOR SALE—Choice white clover honey. Put away a case now for your winter use. $3.00 per case of 20 sections, or 15 cents per single section.—Leslie Clark. FOR SALE—Four choice building iota, all near the court bouse but in different locations; all choice building lota on stone streets. Leslie dark, at The Republican office. FOR BALE—Young and old chickens. Phone 448. FOR SALE—A bargain. A nearly complete newspaper and job outfit, including type, stands, and cases, printing press, staples, chases, furniture; cabinets, chairs, etc., complete and in good condition. This is an unusual opportunity to start a newspaper or job office. Will be sold at one-fourth of its value to a quick buyer. Write or call Printing Outfit, care Daily Journal, Coffeyville, Kan. FOR SALE—I have decided to retin from the bee business, and In order to do so quickly will dispose of my bees at $6 per colony, which includes a. patent hive (no super). This is a rare chance to get started in the bee business for , a small amount. These are all good Italian stock and a colon? purchased now should pay .for itself yet this year from the honey they will produce;— Leslie Clark. WANTED. WANTED —Housework to do. Have boy 4 years old. Inquire of Mrs. James Dunlap, on Cullen st., opposite court house, first door south of Dr. Loy’s. WANTED—To buy a farm of a quarter or half section. Must be high class and stand closest inspection. Don’t want to get too far away from Rensselaer. Inquire at this office. WANTED—To rent by August 7th, house of 5 rooms, with electric lights. Phono 445. LOST. LOST—A baby’s gold band ring. Return to Republican office.—Gilbert Albin. FOB BENT. FOR BENT—S-room house, one block southeast of new depot—Jas. C. Passons. ' FOUND. ~ FOUND—Near Gilman, 111, a man’s coat having C. E. Duvall’s stamp inside pocket. Owner can learn how to recover same by calling at this office. FOUND—Pocketbook, containing money. If owner will prove property he can have it Information ean be secured at this office. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS-I make farm loans at lowest rates of interest Bee me about ten year loan without commission. John A. Dunlap. MISCELLANEOUS. PIANO TUNING-See Otto Braun, who will guarantee satlsfac tion in all of his work. BENSSELAER MARKETS Corn—ssc. '>./ Oats—34e. Chickens—l2c. Eggs—l6e. ; Old Roosters—fie. NMUoa wo emr wmcmmm Subscribers to Th* Bveetag RepubllwUl to gtven prompt attention

Jimmy’s @ Wife

By T. JENKINS HAINS

We were about 50 miles south of Cape Hora, hove-to in a high, roiling, northwest sea which made the main deck uninhabitable. In the dog-watch the carpenter tookmercy on Gantllne and myself and allowed us to share his room in the forward house for an aftersupper smoke. We had started forward when the man on lookout hailed. Through the gloom of the flying drift and twilight a shadow, bore down upon the ship, grey-white above black. Then there suddenly loomed out the shape of a great ship tearing along under t’gallant sails dead before the gale. Then in an instant she was gone. The drift had closed upon her as she swept astern before any one could read her .name. She had vanished as quickly as she had appeared, passing on into the dismal sea behind us like a salt-streakeu mystery. We stood gazing at the whirling drift in the gloom astern for some minutes, and then we followed Chips into bis room. Gantllne could not recall the vessel by her shape or rig, and asked the carpenter about her. ly. “Would I be apt to forget herT” And he thrust out an arm, pulling up his sleeve until a long livid scar showed clear to his elbow. “It isn’t likely anyone would forget the Morning Light if they ever sailed in her. Man! I’d know her in the depths o* perdition, the deepest hole in devildom, where she’ll sail in the hereafter—“No, I didn’t intend to ship in her. Jimmy Turner an’ I got into her after we left tile navy. When we went broke a fellow wanted hands for the Morning Light Cap’n Sam Smith, master, so on we signed with shaking hands an’ dry throats, willing to go anywhere or do anything for enough frog to keep alive. “Jimmy had gone in the navy, because he couldn’t live ashore. He’d married and was sorry for it —made a mistake. But he’d never said anything to me about his wife or faultily, and I neve, asked. Nobody asks questions of anybody aboard men-o*-war. “When we dropped down the bay ■a tug came alongside and Cap’n Smith went to the rail to greet ft little hatch-et-faced fellow who jumped aboard. He was with a woman. “'Sammy Smith an' niece,* said an old shellback standing on the forecastle head, 'I tho ight so.’ . "‘What’s the matter?* we asked. “'Matter! Don’t you know felfow T That’s Morrell the worst thing in man’s image that ever trod a deck plank. Come it on us as Sammy Smith! Man if ye can get ashore, swim fer it afore it’s too late. I’m too old.* But Morrell didn't ship men to have them do the pier-head jump. We were in for a Western ocean cruise in one of the packet ships, which will leave her memory a black and bloody track in the minds of sailor men. "Before we’d crossed the stream, Morrell had begun on us. But—well, never mind. It would make the tales of old-time of what took place in a week. Save ye, Gantllne. I could sit here and tell you things till morning —and each one would make you shiver. We had five mon “missing” before the voyage was half over. Jimmy and I came in for some of it but even that tiger-sharp aft knew when he had reached the limit—and we were men-o’-war’s men.

"One night there was a row aft and there were cries of a woman. Jimmy heard them and started out on deck with his sheath knife but we held him and four of us got the marks of the knife to remember how we saved him. "After that Jimmy was quiet and ugly. He never spoke/to anyone. There were no more ‘men’ in the crew, only square-heads and Dutchmen, and they never go aft. "I wouldn’t consent to go alone when Jimmy gave me a look that told his came. Boon I noticed he wouldn’t tarn In at night, and then I knew It was coming. I stole aft to see the end. *1 found him standing close under the break of the poop, talking in a whisper to some one. Then I caught the glint of a skirt, and recognised the voice of the woman. “'ft's no use, Jim, let mo live It out,’ she said. *lt won’t last long.’ Her voice was like that of the dying. "Thon Jimmy answered her slowly and quietly. His words came deep and low like the smothered roar of the surf on the short. Man, it was life the groat sea rolling over an outlying roof, bursting, gathering again, and then rushing with that mighty power to the end. When he stopped toe was choking, gasping for breath. Man, It seemed like her heart would break. I couldn’t help listening, hearing her pay tor what she’d done. But Jimmy never blamed her, no, not he. •Jimmy stood there waitinng tor his answer. " Go-go! Go and forget' She was choking, but it came plain and dis ttnct There was a long silence, and I looked hard into the gloom. She Jmd gone. Jimmy was standing there swaying In the night like an unstayed mast and I led him torrads, his head banging down and sagging like ho Wes asleep. "The next day it came on heavy from the northwest Jimmy was sent aloft to put an extra gasket around fro bunt of the cro* Jack where it had been blown out by the gale, tome-

looked like of cutting, for it was all right whteh we furled the sail a few hours before. “Jimmy fell with the dull wallop that generally means death, and he landed right across the cabin, skylight It was a long fall and he was stilt Morrell was watching his ship and saw him fall. He started for Jimmy. Just then the woman below rushed'on deck and flung herself upon the poor fellow. I reached his head and started to raise him. The woman was sobbing and calling for him to speak just once more to her; and, man, it was terrible to hear her what she said. “Morrell stood looking on, and then burst into a laugh. “ ‘So that’s him, is it? Ho! ho! ho! So that’s the fellow?* And he went to the dying man. “She was upon him before he knew it, striking him a blow that sent him reeling. Then he went mad and had his pistol out firing and cursing like a maniac. It was all over in a minute.” Here Chips stopped awhile and cut some fresh plug for his pipe. “Before the morning watch I had talked Heligoland over, and be talked to a Dutchman named Langter. Anderson finally joined, but Jacques was afraid to go without his watch behind him. There were just four of uS started aft out of that crew of twenty men. ' “Heligoland took the starboard side and I took the both ffStting hfifo the mizzen channels when the watch war called. The rest were to rush when they heard firing; '“The second mate bawled for his watch to Clew up the mizzen lower topsail as it was now snoring away worse than ever and the short seas were coming aboard us. This was our signal. “We crawled along the deck strake outside the rail, holding on like death with our finger tips. Morrell was nearest to me. When we were near enough to get behind our men, Heligoland gave a cry and jumped over. I followed. The next second I had broken my knife short off in tie black-est-hearted captain that ever cursed a ship’s deck. He jumped backj and ran forward, I after him, trying to close before he could get out his pistol. He dodged about the mizzen and fired as he swung. The shot hit me there on the arm and split it to the elbow. Then something flung out of the darkness to leeward, and there was a dull smash. That was all. Heligoland stood leaning upon his handspike while I picked up the pistol. “The day dawned upon a stormtorn ocean, all grey-white, and a hove to ship staggering oft to the southward with her lower topsails streaming in ribbons trom her packstays. As the blow wore down toward evening we could hear the piteous cries of a dying woman calling for her husband—" Chips waited for a few minutes and puffed hard at his pipe. Then he went on in a low voice I could hardly hear: - “We buried Jimmy and his wife the next day. Uld Jacobs sewed them up together and weighed them. All hands uncovereu as they went to leeward. I didn’t know any service, and there wasn’t any such thing as a Bible aboard. “Good-by Jimmy,* I said—and lot him go." There was a long silence. Gantllne stood up and then sat down again. Ho seemed to want to ask a question, but would not Chips watched him. "Yea," ho went on. “we go,t five years apiece for that Five long years behind the bars, where the memory of the blue water and th hope I would get out again kept me from going mad. Is it likely I’d forget the Morning Light?"

Snow Gathered.

Snow is gathered In tha mountains near Alexandretta, Syria, and is packed in a conical pit, stamped in tightly, and covered with straw and leaves. At the bottom of the pit a well is dug, with a drain connected at the bottom to cany off this water formed from melted snow. As the cost of collecting and storing is very small, the only labor is in delivering to the consumers, which is accomplished by pack horses. The selling price is IS to M cents per hundred pounds and often cheaper.

Napoleon’s Tooth Sold.

A tooth alleged to have boon drawn from Napoleon's head at BL Helena was sold for srr.sO. For Kant’s wig only s4t could bo obtained, but Sterne’s wig was valued at SLMS. Two hundred dollars Is said to have been given for Descartes's skull, whereas SS,4M was given for one of Sir Isaac Newton** tooth, and $20,000 was offered for cue of the tooth of Helolso at the time when her body was exhumed. The waistcoat worn by Rousseau has been priced at SIOO, his watch at SISS.

Care of Forests.

While the Chinese have been creating havoc among their forests for centuries, the Japanese have taken good care of theire, and today more than a third of the arsa of Japan is still under forest There are only twentrsaw-mms in the whole country. The Japanese forests include four sones—the tropical (bamboo and banana), the subtroptaal (camphor), the temperate (oak, maple, poplars, otoj. mad the northern (pine).

Black Sheep.

"I belong to a family as good as any in this court house" said a man up for sentence in the Superior Criminal Court Hie statement was true, and It was only a repetition of statements mads almost every day ta court; many prisoners do be lon* to

WOE TO YOU RICH BLESSED YE POOR

The Philosophy of These, the Master’s Words, Is Shown by Pastor RusseH.

Are the Woes and the Blessings Present or Future?—God la Very Rich. Many of God’s Servants In the Past Were Rich—Why Classify st. All? Why Contrast Rich and Pear? What Blessings Have the Poor? Riches of Wealth, Riches of -Honor, Riches of "Education, Do' These All Bring Woes?—Poverty of Education and Earthly Goods and Earthly Fame, Do These Insure Blessings?

that are rich! for ye have received your consolation. ♦ • • And He lifted up His eyes on His disciples, and said, Blessed be ye poor: for yours is the Kingdom of God.”r-Luke 6:20, 24. The Pastor began by declaring that his address was not intended to arouse class animosity. Although not rich, he could sympathize with the rich in their position, as well as with the poor in theirs. God, who is very rich, is able to sympathize with both classes. The Savior is also able, who being rich, for our sakes became poor, that through His poverty we might become rich in the truest sense. Some of God’s faithful in the past were very rich—Abraham, for instance. Nevertheless, during this Gospel Age, not many great, rich or learned have been called to the blessing now offered. Its recipients have been chiefly the poor of this world, rich in faith.

The Master evidently included riches of wealth, honor, education, etc., in His statement. He implies that all now possessing any of these blessings will be more or less hindered from obtaining God’s highest blessing, and more or less subject to woes. We are not to suppose that He meant that at death the rich would be thrown into everlasting torture. These woes appertain to thie present life. At the close of the Jewish Age, this class experienced severe trials; and our Lord intimates that at the close of this Age the same class will have similar experiences. Wrath to the Uttermost Upon Jews. Wrath came upon the Jewish people to the uttermost, in the End of their Age. (1 Thessalonians 2:16.) Those woes did not belong to a future life. That tribulations come to all in the present life is undebatable. But the most terrible forebodings are associated with Imaginary woes of the future life—quite contrary to Scripture. We are glad to set aside this nightmare of the Dark Ages.

The Jews, whom our Lord addressed, did not realize that they were living in the End of their Age, and that a great settlement was about to come. Similarly, we are living in the End of this Gospel Age, and a settlement is now due. Jesus foretold the crisis of the Jewish nation. His message gathered out from that nation all the Israelites indeed, and then the nation was given over to itself. The Divide Hand which had guided them loosed its hold; and human passions accomplished their overthrow in anarchy, which caused their downfall, A. D. 70. So we understand that the End of this Age has come, and God is gather' ing His Elect. As soon as this is accomplished, God will permit mankind to wreck their present civilization. As the rich of Jesus’ day suffered most keenly, so the rich will suffer most in the coming time of trouble.

Compensations In Nature. The Pastor then showed that both rich and poor have compensations. The rich have trials and perplexities that the poor know not of., They also have many more temptations to make them lees likely to seek the priceless things of God’s Kingdom. But we are not to understand that God is partial to the poor. He is choosing a special class, and the conditions surrounding the rich and great make them less susceptible to His message and to the cultivation of humility. The experiences of the poor are most favorable, apparently, to the cultivation of meekness, gentleness, patience and love—qualities God estimates greatly.

Some poor, however, instead of being drawn to God by poverty, cultivate a spirit of hatred, malice and strife. Such turn away from Him. The class described by Jesus as “ye poor” are those hungering and thirsting after righteousness, who have become God's children. These may be rich or poor In the things of this world; but all that they have Is consecrated to God, In order that they may become joint-heirs with Christ Thenceforth, the esteem of men. while not Ignored, must be secondary to the Lord and His Truth. All that this class may possess will be used to His glory, regardless of the fact that It will all be consumed In His eervtro The world knows not the followers of Jesus, even as It knew Him Mt ■. */ ■ "..I . .. •IL’?', d '.<?

Asheville, N C., July 20—A large Convention of the International Bible Students Association is being held here students of all ages giving every evidence of knowledge of the Scriptures. Pastor Russell spoke today. from the text, “Woe unto you

Children Cry for Fletcher’s - The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of - and has been made under his per* /////■%+-/• sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good ” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of .. Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It ~ contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years It has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, , Flatulency, Wind Cone, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural Sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS' The Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THE CtNT.UR OOMPAHV, TV MUHRAY ■THCCT, NEW YORK CITY.

Get the habit of going to the Gayety. The vaudeville attractions are of a high order. Night Officer Frank Critser is taking his vacation and Constable W. S. Parks Js substituting on the night force. You can get Salome, the* great wash day labor saver, at- the Home Grocery. One 10c cake will convince you that it is a marvel. Mrs. G. H. Chappell returned to her home at Grant Park, 111., today, after a visit here with her father, Sylvester Hatton, who is in very poor health. , Chas. Potter, whose family moved to Pevely,.Mo., a week ago, expects to join them there next week. He will have charge of the S. M. Scudder dairy farm near Pevely. C. M. Sands and Earl Duvall took a vacation last week, spending it at Bass Lake and oh the Kankakee river, at Dunn’s bridge, the prettiest spot along the river. John Davis, the 14-year-old son of John Davis, sheriff of Vanderburg county, was drowned in the Ohio river near Evansville Thursday while swimming. George W. Reed took Rev. Parrett, W. C. Babcock, Dr. F. H. Hemphill and Bert Abbott to the InterState automobile factory at Muncie last Thursday, the trip being made in George’s big Inter-State car. Charles Kiser, of San Francisco, Cai., is visiting James Ennis and family, and his mother, Mrs. Fannie Kiser, and Mrs. Emma McKinley, of Goodland, are also visiting at the Ennis, home. Tom Jensen and H. R. Langdon, of Wheatfield, were in Rensselaer between trains today, enroute to Spencer, Ind., which was Mr. Langdon’s former home, and where they will spend a week’s vacation. You can see a good show in Rensselaer for 10 cents. The Gayety makes it possible and this season the booking agent is sending only first-class shows. Tonight and Tuesday night Davis’ Imperial Trio. More than $70,000,000 worth of merchandise is stored in the bonded warehouses of the city of New York awaiting the impending tariff changes under consideration by congress. The duties on these goods under the present law aggregate $35,000,000. . Peter ScalTon and wife and son and Father Hordeman came from Frankfort by auto yesterday to visit the Hordeman families. Mr. Scallon returned to Frankfort by train this morning, but’ the others will remain for a visit of about a week. 1 \ Miss Nina Martindale has been entertaining at a house party the following young ladies, who were former college classmates: Miss Margaretta Bass, of Greenwood; Miss Nelle Naftager, of Wabash, and Miss Mary Mitchell, pf Salem. Miss Naftager will go to her home tomorrow, while the others will remain tor a longer visit. CASTOR IA Ite Infanta and Children. Hit KM Ym Haw Always Bought toe

Chicago to Worthweat, XadlananoMa Cincinnati, and tha South. JKWvino and French Xdek Ipringd. BENSSEIuiM TIME TiBLl. In effect June 28, 1913. NORTHBOUND No. 36 4:44 am No. 4 4:58 am No. 40 7:33 am No. 32 10:12 am No. 38 ........3:29 am No. 6 3:39 pm No. 30 ..6:02 pm No. 16 ........... 6:22 pm SOUTHBOUND No. 35 12:13 am No. 31 4:51 am No. 15 ..4 10:54 am No. 37 11:82 am No. 5 12:16 pm No. 33 .....2:00 pm No. 39 .’ 6:22 pm No. 3 11:05 pm

Agency For Root’s Bee Hives and Supplies 4 ' GOODS SOLD AT , CATALOGUE PRICES Saving Ton the Freight / 1 “ 'LIMITED SUPPLY CARRIED < IN STOCK i Aak tor Free Catalogue {Leslie Clark Republican Office. Took Jas. W. McEwen to The Asylum in Automobile. James W. McEwen, the aged newspaper man, was taken to the asylum at Longcliffe, near Logansport, this Monday morfiing, the trip being made in Dr. Washburn’s auto, and Sheriff Hoover and Dr. Washburn taking him over. The family reluctantly gave him up biit It is generally considered the proper course to have pursued and it Is hoped that his mental trouble will be cured by the treatment he receives. Manager Fred MoGlinn has arranged for his Bex-All ball team to play Morocco at Riverside Athletic Park next Sunday, while the Athletics are at Remington. The U. S. treasury handled In actual cash during the fiscal year ended June 30, the stupendous sum of breaking all previous records and stamping the federal treasury, officials as the greatest Banking Institution in, the world. Order your Call! nr Cards at The Republican nffles,