Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 196, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 August 1913 — Page 4
CLUSSIFIED (Dim MATHS TOM CXASBXFXBB AM. Three lines or less, per week of six iseuea of The Evening Republican and two of The Bernd-Weekly Republican, St cents. Additional space pro rata. FOR SAUL FOR SALE—Great Western manure spreader; practically good as new.—Ed Goetz, Phone 519-E. FOR SALE—Fine lot of Home Grown Asters. All colors. Only 50 cents. King Floral Co. FOR SALE—Holdiidge Clark property, 6 rooms, 2 lots, plenty of fruit; inquire of T. W. Grant. FOR SALE—Household articles, including base burner, wood stove, cook stove, mattresses; springs, chairs, table, etc. T. W. Grant. FOR SALE—A 5-year old cow, three-fourths Jersey, giving good flow of milk. J. W. Tilton. FOR SALE—At a bargain if taken at once and paid for in cash or negotiable paper; two good 5-room houses, located in the west part of town. Well rented; good wells; fruit; one has barn. John Schanlaub, Phone 535-B. FOR SALE—I have about 9,000 acres of good farm land, improved and unimproved, lor sale at private sale For particulars call at the office of the late Benj. J. Gifford, In the Odd Fellows building, Rensselaer, Ind.—George H. Gifford, Executor. 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 house Vut in different locations; all choice building lots on stone streets. Leslie Clark, at The Republican office.
■ _ WAyTKD< WANTED—Girlfor general housework. Mrs. G.F. Meyers. WANTED—You to list with me your farms for sale. I have a call now for 80 acre and 160 acre tract* Harvey Davisson, office in Leopold building. WANTED—Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. R. A Overmore, Western Union office. WANTED—BO acre farm, preferably near Rensselaer. Must be in good surroundings and free from sand and priced right See Geo. H. Healey. „ WONDERFUL, AMAZING INVENTION—Just out. Agents coining money. Lights the home brilliantly for one cent per night. AllenSparks Gas Light Co., Lansing, Mich. LOST. LOST—A Phi Alpha Phi frat pin, diamond shaped and set with 16 pearls. Reward for return to Leonard Elder or Republican office. FOB RENT. FOR RENT—Two furnished or unfurnished rooms with lights and bath. Good large rooms. Want to rent right away. Only one block from street. Inquire of Mr*. ■ B. G. Oglesby. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for school girls—Mrs. Mary Peyton. phone 487. STRAYED. STRAYED—Yearling white face Hereford bull. Amos A. Davisson, Phone 521-L STRAYED—A black dog, with some yellow spots, partly shepherd; had several feet of chain on when he left. Please inform Henry Doan, Phone 510-B. FARM LOANS.
FARM LOANS —I make farm loans at lowest rates of interest. Bee me about ten year loan without commission. John A. Dunlap. MISOKLLANKOUB. PIANO TUNING —Bae Otto Braun, who will guarantee satisfaction in all of his work. A. Barton Hepburn, chairman of the currency commission of the American Bankers’ association, has issued a call for a conference of bankers of the country to discuss the pending currency bill, to be held at the Hotel LaSalle, Chicago, August 22. After undergoing more than 200 operations during two years for the removal of a growth in the throat that interfered with his breathing, Gebrge McDowell, 31 years old, formerly of Spartansburg, S. C., died at a hospital In Baltimore while the surgeons were making a last attempt to save his life. For the last eighteen months McDowell has done his breathing through a silver tube inserted in his throat. CASTOR IA Vhr Infanta and Children, IWKMYMHinAI»nBMckt r
EMPEROR CONSTANTINE THE TRINITY MAKER
The Heavenly Father, His Son, and His Holy Spirit Made One In Person. Trinity Not tn the Bible—Paetor Russell Says Roman Emperor Put It Into the Nicoan Creed, A. D. 325. Confusion Followed Some Claim Three Gode In Ono Person—Others Claim One in Three Persons—All Say Incomprehensible Mystery—Constantine's Trinity Fiat Enforced by Cruel Persecutions—Back to the Bible and Away From Creeds Urged.
dared that the confusion which has rent the Christian Church into hundreds of sects has come through neglect of the Bible—a cause not generally recognized. ciashings are the direct result of the serious errors contained In all creeds. No heathen idol is so horrible as that which the most Intelligent Christian people have portrayed with the .pen, purporting to represent the Almighty and His attitude toward men. We have misrepresented our Creator as worse in His purposes than the vilest of humanity. If Jehovah be God, let us worship Him. Why delay? If the horrible Baal of the Dark Ages be no longer our God, let us destroy his creed Images and forget them. Emperor Constantine's Nicean Creed. After the Church had forgotten the Master's declaration that His Twelve Apostles would constitute the foundation stones of the New Jerusalem, they began to recognize their bishops as apostolic. They overlooked the fact that God’s statement that Judas* place would be filled by another intimated particularly that there would be no successors to The Twelve. Judas’ real successor was St. Paul. Bible Students now see that the eleven Apostles, before being confirmed in Apostleship at Pentecost, erred in choosing Matthias, whom God merely ignored. Gradually the bishops rose to power as God’s Inspired oracles. Proportionately, The Twelve lost their influence. It was easier to take the word of the bishops than to search the Scriptures. In; their anxiety to overwhelm the Greek skeptics, these Christian teachers unwittingly Involved themselves in absurdities. Gradually the trinitarian mystery was advanced; and the mystification of saying that God was His own Son, the Lord Jesus His own Father, and the Holy Spirit another person and yet'the same person, appealed to people who delight to reverence most what they do not understand. Thus today, when questions are asked respecting the trinity—how one could be three, and three one, the answer given which satisfies the ignorant is, Mystery!
But the Bible makes no mystery of the matter. . It never mentions the trinity. The one text (1 John 5:7) seeming faintly to support the thought is now admitted by all scholars to be an interpolation, dating from about the seventh century. The Revised Version shows quite distinctly the reading of earlier manuscripts. “To Us Thoro Is One God.” The Pastor then explained fully every text in both Old and New Testaments used as a proof-text supporting the trinitarian mystery, and convinced his hearers that these texts are misapplied. He quoted the explicit statement from the Old Testament, “Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is one God,” and that from the New Testament, used as text for this discourse. Pastor Russell then showed that, according to our Lord’s own teaching, the oneness, or harmony, between the Father and Himself resulted from our Lord’s Ignoring His own will, to do the Father’s will. Our Lord exhorted His disciples to have the same will, spirit—the Holy Spirit—the disposition to do the Father’s will. Our Redeemer, formerly kqown as the Logos, was the Beginning and the End of the Divine direct creation. (Revelation 1:8; 3:14.) Through Him Jehovah operated in all the stupendous work of creation. So the Greek reads, “In the beginning was the Logos, and the Logos was with ths God, and the Logos was a God. Ths same was in the beginning with the God. By Him were ail things made that were made, and without Him was not one thing made.”—John 1:1-8. The Pastor then related the history of the Council of Nice. Constantine called a council of all the bishops—about one thousand —to settle certain doctrinal differences, of which our subject of discussion was one. Only 384 bishops came. i* After discussing the subject for months, they submitted it to the Emperor, who decided that the Nicean Creed was the Christian fait* Thus the trinitarian mystery was » shrined by a heathen emperor, unbaptlsed—not even sprinkled.
London, August 17. Pastor Russell addressed the London Tabernacle congregation twice today. We report one of his discourses, from the text, “To us there is one God, the Father, • • ♦ and one Lord Jesus Chris t.”—l Corinthians 8:6. The Pastor de-
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
Indiana Women at the State Fair
The women of Indiana, whether from town or farm, will find the state fair rich in attractions for them during the week. of September 8. While the whole exposition, including band concerts, live stock, horse shows, races, vaudeville, machinery and general sight seeing will teem with interest for these visitors, there are numerous departments which every year especially appeal to them. The chief center of the women’s interest is the art building. It will contain one of the greatest displays of hand painted china ever made by Indiana artists, for each year the large show eases in this building are
HANGING GROVE.
Mrs. Van Wood and children, of Rensselaer, eame Sunday noon to spend the day with J. R. Phillips and family. J. F. Cochran has a 5-passenger Cadillac touring car. It is the Wm. Washburn car and is a fine running car, and Mr. Cochran knd family are sure to get lots of good from their investment. Lawrence Blunk, who works for Frank Ringeisen, has a Maxwell runabout, which he purchased at Monon. He will use this in preference to his horse and buggy. J. M. Ray is able to be about with the aid of crutches. It has been almost two weeks since hi received his injury by falling from a horse. Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Ray and two children, of Elwood, are visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Ray. They will remain here probably until the first of September. The family of Walter Jordan are all down sick with the typhoid fever, except one child, which is staying with its grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Jordan. Mrs. Jordan and the oldest boy are considerably better but Mr. Jordan remains quite poorly. It is thought they contracted the disease from a sack of rotten potatoes, which was overlooked in a corner of the milk house. Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Stewart, of Shadeland, came up Friday evening for a visit over Sunday with relatives here. Some of the thrashing rings were thrashing Saturday afternoon. One machine thrashed all day. The oats are quite damp, but generally those that were shocked up well are still in a very marketable condition. The recent rains have practically completed the corn crop in this community and if nothing unforseen overtakes this year’s crop, there will be more corn in Jasper county this fall than in any single year for twenty years, on a safe guess. The band concert at McCoysburg Saturday night was excellent. Two slide trombones, one clarionette, and one cornet from the Rensselaer band, besides the professor, came out to play with our boys. The music was thoroughly enjoyed by all and surely the boys are deserving of great credit for the program rendered and the progress they are making. Mr. and Mrs. Hague and family spent Sunday with relatives and
Boys' Judging Contest at Indiana Fair
A feature of especial interest to farm boys of Indiana which will be held during the state fair, week of September Bth, is the judging contest, open to fanfi youth 16 to 20 years, the prizes to be four free scholarships to,.Purdue University. Twenty or more boys are in this contest every yw* passing on the merits of live stoea and grains, and it is a very valuable experience to them whether
filled to capacity with this highly decorated ware, making it plain that the Indiana artists are in the forefront® as producers of these artistic creations. Needlework in great variety, paintings, drawings, photographs, examples of brass, leather and other craftsmanship, most of it done by Indiana .worsen, will be shown in profusion. ~ Throughout these departments the Indiana women find the fair fruitful in new ideas for better home making —ideas which are both educational and inspirational which Hoosieo women can apply to their own homes and families.—Adv.
friends at Battle Ground. Mr. and Mrs. Wash Cook and children, James and Charley, and Mr. and Mrs. George Parker, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray McDonald near Monticello. Mrs. Walter Hayes and childreb, of Muncie, are visiting at the home of W. E. Poole. Florence and Ella Bussell spqnt Sunday afternoon with the Misses Poole. Charles Bussell has his elevator all thoroughly overhauled and in readiness for taking in grain. The wind blew the elevator down a few weeks ago and completely demolished the wood work, and this part had to be built new. A. O. Moore has just completed a very fine new double crib It is a large building and will be equipped with an elevator. There is also a fine big crib being constructed on the H. Coonrod farm on the Francesville road. It has a crib on either side and a large crib directly over the driveway. This one is also equipped with an elevator.
Thomas H. Birch, of BurlingtofiL N. J., personal aid to Woodrow W!y son when the pres’dent was governor of New Jersey, has been selected for minister to Portugal. Work on the Atlantic and Pacific defenses of the Panama Canal fortifications is nearing completion. Most of the fourteen-inch guns have been received at the Canal Zone. Several twelve-inch mortars have been set up.
The production of coal in 1912 reached the great total of 534,466,580 short tons, valued at the mines at $695,606,071,’ according to a statement by Edward W. Parker, coal statistician, just issued by the U. S. geological survey.'
A man giving the names of Washington Garfield and John King, arrested for bathing in a public fountain at Washington, D. C., declared Friday to the police that he was Pat Crowe, who figured in the Cudahy kidnaping a few years ago. Two physicians from the government hospital, where the man is confined, Inspected photographs of Crowe at the rogues’ gallery and declared they were pictures of their prisoner. The man is serving a 60day sentence for vagrancy. The Washington police believe his story.
they win a prise or not The contest will be under the direction of experts from Purdue. The State Board of Agriculture and Purdue University held the first of these contests at the Indiana fair in 1909, and up to this year the prizes have been won by nineteen boys from thirteen different counties, and they have through the scholarships become educated in modern scientific farming.
Children Cry for Fletcher's
CASTORIA
The Kind Ton Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of —- and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. v 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 OH, 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 Colic, 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 CENTAUR OOMFANV. TV MURRAY STREET. NEW TORR CITY.
Spiced Grapes
Pulp grapes and save skins. Put pulp on to boil until seeds separate. Put through colander and add skins to pulp. Put Into kettle one-half pound sugar to one pint pulp and skins, one-half pint vinegar to four quarts fruit. Bpice with cloves and cinnamon to taste. 801 l slowly one hour. Stir often.
Lettuce and Peas
Parboil four heads of lettuce in one quart of stock; remove the center and fill with green peas, a little chopped onion and a little flour; tie these neatly, cover with a cupful of white stock and simmer for one hour; untie, arrange on toast, pour the sauce over them, adding a little salt and pepper.
Lettuce Garnish
Roll five or six lettuce leaves lengthwise tightly, then crosswise onoe, and cut into narrow strips with a sharp knife and you have long narrow fibers that make a meet novel and pretty garnish.
Meat Sauce
Simmer Dameon plumbs till tender, so stones will slip out. To each pound of pulp add a half cup of sugar. Put half ounce each of cinnamon, cloves, and mace In bag and drop/this in. Cook all till thick as jam.
Corn Relish
Kernels of one dozen ears of corn, one head of cabbage chopped fine, six or eight red mangols, two tablespoons ground mustard, two tablespoons salt, one cup granulated sugar, one quart cider vinegar. 801 l one hour. Can while hot.
Tea Lemonade
Make some weak lemonade and weak tea; Combine them and sweeten to taste. This can be made and kept on ice for several days by making strong, tea and a strong lemonade and diluting to taste as they are used
Mint Tea
Steep tea, same as for iced tea, and while hot drop in four or five stalks of mint and let remain about fifteen minutes; strain and dilute. To one pitcher of tea add juice of two lemons. Serve with cracked ice. Sugar to taste.
Ruurisee yeast, for bubbles—or e« you want bread. Christ does not eave men from any thing. He te a way, not an asytam. K you casuDDt ahoUsh a yos can brand it as it passes, and Mdi your time. He who preaches to God in hft prayers is quite likely te pray to mm in his preaching. Men seek their own spiritual partj level as certainly as rivulets see* theta rivers, and rtvem seek the sea Reforms have their seasons <4 spring and tan, like the tree, but th* tough wood grown by storms.
God’s Peace.
The deepest want at man to not a desire Awr hawtaeaa, bat a aastaa for peace; not a wtah for the gmOA caAtan at every desire, bat a eravtag for the repose at acastasoaaoo fa ths wfli of and, and it te this wMnk rn - am M a f Wlrirtdaf wi rt > T y pOQffniHQIL UmußUlld doss not prantoe happiness, but M 4mb pan miss peace, r. W. Robest People am almm MMng of pas aassranmt «O«e*«e and torttdrie; but pMttowe ia the finest and worthhaat of fcritari, and the raauat, |m _ .. ..
Chicago to Borthwoat, XndianapoUa Cincinnati, and the South,. Louisville and French Xdok Spring*. BBVBBBLABB TIMM TABUS. i 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 mu No. 38 3:2ft pm No. 6 3:39 pm No. 30 6:02 pm No. 16 6:22 pm SOUTHBOUND No. 35 12:13 am No. 31 4:44 am No. 15 10:54 am No. 37 ,f. 11:32 am No. 5 12:16 pm No. 33 . 2:00 pm No. 39 6:22 pm No. 3- 11:05 pm
EXCURSION TO Louisville SUNDAY, Aumt24 VIA THE MONOLROUTE Stations Time Rate Rensselaer 5:30 $1.75 * Pleasant Grove 5:39 1.75 McCoysburg 5:45 1.75 Lee 5:51 1.75 Returning Special Train leaves Louisville at 11:00 p. m., Sunday, August 24, 1913. DAILY BUS TO REMINGTON. Beginning Saturday, August 16, I will run an automobile bus daily to Remington on the following schedule: Leave Rensslaer at 6:30 a. m., from north side of court house square, returning to Rensselaer 10:00 a. m. Leave Rensselaer at 3:45 p. i ~ *> turning 1 to Rensselaer 6:00 p. m. Fare each way, 75 cents. During the meeting at Fountain Park, special trips will be made at the rate of SI.OO for round trip. Q L. MORRELL. A bet that he could swim across Cedar Lake and back cost John Vachle, of Hammond, an expert swimmer, his life Friday morning. He had made the outward trip, a distance of a mile and a half, and was on his return when he disappeared. He refused to allow a boat to accompany him. A strike on the interurban .roads in Indiana is a possibility. ,Demands for better wages and working conditions, whch have been presented to all roads-entering Indianapolis, are said to nave been coldly received by the officials, except in the case of the Indianapolis, Columbus and Southern line.
