Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 204, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 August 1913 — Page 4
CLISSIFIEB COLDI* Th>ee line* or less, per week of six imues of The Evening Republican end two of Tho Semi-Weekly Republican, IS cents. Additional apace pro rata. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Cheap, 3-burner gasoline stove; used only 4 months.— Mis. Ella Woodcox. FOR SALE—Asters, all colors, only 40 cents this week. King Floral Co., Phone 132. FOR SALE—Home grown melons from Fair Oaks; best on earth; telephone orders delivered any place in the city; satisfaction guaranteed. A. W. Saw in, Phone 400. FOR SALE—4O acres near station and school, on stone road, 30 acres in corn, 5-room house, fruit,* well, and all good land. Price $55. Terms SSOO down; might take live stock G. F. Meyers. FOR SALE—Pure comb honey in 12 and 24 section cases at SI.BO and $3.60 per case Single sections 15 cents each.—Leslie Clark, at Republican office. FOR SALE—Holdiidge Clark property, 6 rooms, 2 lots, plenty of fruit; inquire of T. W. Grant. FOB SALE—At a bargain if taken at once and paid for in cash or negotiable paper; two good 5-room bouses, located in the west part of town. Well rented; good wells; fruit; one has barn. John Schanlaub, Phone 535-B. FOR SALE—Four choice building iota, all near the court house laut in different locations; all choice buildin* lots on stone streets. Leslie] Clark, at The Republican office. WANTED. WANTED—Work for a first year high school country boy near the school, where he can earn board, with or without room. J. W. Crooks, Roselawn, Ind. WANTED—GirI for general housework. W. L. Frye, phone 369. WANTED—Home for 12-year-old orphan boy. Is a bright young lad, with no bad habits. # Only those who are prepared to give the boy a good home and who will treat him as their own child and give him an education need apply: Particulars can be obtained fat The Republican office. WANTED—Roomers; bath and all modern improvements In the house., Mrs. Mattie Grant. WANTED—Two girls, steady work. McKay’s Model Laundry, Phone 346. WANTED—MiIk customers, 6% cents permit, if delivered; 5c if you come after it—Mrs. Frank Shide. /.'WANTED—Two first class mechanics, at once.' No others need apply. Main Garage. FOB RENT. FOB BENT—Furnished room for light housekeeping.—Mrs. H. A. Cripps, east of Catholic church. FOUND. FOUND—A Presto-Lite tank off automobile. Inquire here. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS —I make farm loans at lowest rates of Interest. See me about ten year loan without commission. John A. Dunlap. MISCELLANEOUS. PIANO TUNING -See Otto Braun, who will guarantee satisfaction In all of his work. W. H. DEXTER. W. H. Dexter will pay 27V*c for Butterfat this week. Node* to Non-Resident Pupils. All pupils must present their transfers to their respective teachers the first day they are in attendance in the Rensselaer public schools. Such transfers majf be obtained from their township trustee. C. R. DEAN, Superintendent. D. H. Shultz, stenographer, 28 years old, formerly of Rolling Prairie, Laporte county, shot Francis Riley at Washington, D. C., Saturday following a quarrel. Riley will probably die. Shultz was a stenographer in the offices of the progressive party during the last campaign. He left Bolling Prairie seven or eight years ago. Methodist Church. Subject Sunday morning at Trinity M. E. church: “A Higher Estimate.” Evening subject: “Principles for Holy Living.” The last quarterly conference for tne year Monday night, Sept, Ist, at 7:30. CASTOR IA Ito Infants and Tki KM Ym Hm Always Bought Try mi iQIuiUImI Column.
ONE OF BIG BUILDINGS OF NATIONAL CONSERVATION EXPOSITION, KNOXVILLE
Liberal Arts Building at the South’s Great National Exposition.
AT the National Conservation Exposition that is being held this this Fall in Knoxville, Tenn., the great new South that has made such tremendous progress along all
REUNION AND EXPOSITION CALL VISITORS INTO THE SUNNY SOUTH
Encampment of G. A. R. at Chattanooga and National Conservation Exposition in Knoxville are Twin Events in Two Southern Cities Bnt Short Distance Apart
Held simultaneously in the South this year are two great events that mean much to the people of that section of the country and that mean much to the people of the North. These two events are: ' The encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic In Chattanooga, Tenn., from September 15 to 20. The National Conservation Exposition that is being held in Knoxville, Tenn., just a short distance away from Chattanooga, from September 1 to November 1. • . After a lapse of fifty years, years that have whitened the hair and bent the forms of the gallant Boys in Blue who fought so well for the preservation of the Union, they are going south of Mason’s and Dixon’s line for their reunion. The Grand Army of the Republic is going South for its reunion on the fiftieth anniversary of the sanguinary battles that were fought on the heights around'Chattanooga. The Grand Army Is going South to partake of Southern hospitality, to see the marvelous changes that a half century has wrought in the South. ' Nowhere in the country will* these veterans, who still wear the Blue, be accorded a more hearty and a more genuine welcome than in the South. No matter where they go they will be welcomed by men as white and as bent as they are and these men will wear the gray. There will be no animosity felt. Instead, there will be cordial handclasps and a recounting of wartime stories when they meet—not as foes upon a field of battle, but as brothers and citlzeSa of a reunited oountry. * Chattanooga la Proud. Chattanooga is proud of the honor of being allowed to entertain the Grand Army of the Republic, to show the veterans of the North the old battle grounds on which are still visible war’s scars inflicted fifty years ago, to do everything in its power to make the reunion of these veterans —growing fewer and fewer In 'number as the years roll by—happy and memorable in every way. In connection with the reunion of the G. A. R., In Chattanooga, it is fortunate that at the same lime the National Conservation Exposition will Ute In progress in Knoxville, distant from Chattanooga just 111 miles by rail. Therefore it la that Knoxville, the exposition city of the South, is extending a cordial invitation to Northern men and women to visit that city during the two months that the gates of the National Conservation Exposition will be open. Fifty years ago the South was bleeding and torn. Half a century ago the South was prostrate. When peace, after the long struggle, was declared, the South was desolated. To-day the South is progressive and patriotic to a degree. The South of to-day is the New South, proud of herself, proud of the country of which she Is a part And so it is, that when the tide of Northern travel is turned toward the South, in September when the veterans and others who are taking advantage of the very low r&teß of rail-' road fare offered for this trip, it is fortunate that the reunion and the National Conservation Exposition, In Knoxville, should dovetail in as they do. The exposition will be the means of showing to these visitors from the North in concrete form and better than any written words could do just what the South has accomplished in the way of self-rejuvenation in fifty years. 1,000,000 Visitors To Knoxville. Knoxville, of Eastern Tennessee, is preparing to entertain thousands and thousands of visitors from the North before and after the
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND
lines In the last few years is on display as never before in her history. To visitors from the North this exposition affords a most excellent opportunity, of seeing the New South as ajpe is to-day.
Chattanooga reunion Elaborate plans for tie entertainment of these visitors have been made in Knoxville. It is thought that a great majority of the visitors from the North will want to avail themselves of the opportunity of seeing the New South on display at the National Conservation Exposition, and they will be enabled to do this in most cases without additional cost of railroad fares and in other cases at a very small additional cost. There are many reasons why, when the trip to Chattanooga for the G. A. R. encampment is taken* that every traveler should avail himself or herself of the opportunity of visiting Knoxville and the National Conservation Exposition, and conversely there are many reasons why visitors coming South primarily to visit the exposition should go to Chattanooga for the reonion. Exposition Big Attraction. First of all, there is the exposition Itself to be considered. At the National Conservation Exposition the progress of the New South in the last few years will be graphically and strikingly shown. The exposition will be the big event of the year in the South; it is the greatest exposition ever held Bouth of the Ohio. It has been designed for a purpose, and that purpose has for its aim and object the betterment of the condition of every man, woman and child in the United States. To the visitors from the North the railroad rates that are offered in connection with the G. A. R. encampment and the Conservation Exposition are very attractive. The exposition management has secured very low rates for the entire period of the national show; the men financing the encampment in Chattanooga likewise have secured low rates for that Mg event It takes less than four hours to make the run from Chattanooga to Knoxville, or vice versa. Travelers from the North coming South by way of the Southern railroad out of Washington will find Knoxville on the direct route to Chattanooga. It has been arranged that stopover privileges at Knoxville may be secured for the asking, and this will entail no additional expense. Travelers coming South by way of Cincinnati in many instances will be routed to Chattanooga with a return by way of Knoxville, and travelers by other routes can make the return trip to Knoxville and the exposition at a very small additional cost. So it will be seen that insofar as cost or expense is concerned there is no reason why every ’Northern visitor to the South this fall should not avail himself or hersejf of the great opportunity thus afforded of visiting, not alone ChattaI nooga, but also Knoxville, where the I New South will be on display as never before in its history. Was a Union Stronghold. Chattanooga is rich in Its historical associations; so is Knoxville. Knoxville was the scene of a,siege and of a battle between the troops of Longstreet and the troops of Burnside just fifty, years ago. It is in the very heart of the region that was intensely and unselfishly union in its sentiment during the war, and this in the face of the fact that an espousal of the cause of the onion at that time always was beset with great danger. There are hundreds and hundreds of old soldiers still living who fought In the Eastern Tennessee campaign. Every one of these men will want tb revisit this section of the South. But the great run of visitors will want to visit Knoxville also, not because of its historical 1 associations alone, bnt because of the fact that in that city while the encampment of the old Boys ’.a Blue is on just a few miles away the Watea of the only national exposition in the country this year will.be open and there Is to be Man the triumphant South on display.
Scene from “The Third Degree.”
Ellis Opera House, Thursday, Aug. 28. \ '
REPUBLICAN REPORTER , VISITS RACE TRACK
(Continued from Page Onfe.)
pie were always butting in over here in America. Just then a bell rang, tbe officer Called out “Race train,” unlocked a door from the stfifcion to the track and about one hundred people, including a band which furnished music at the track, rushed aboard the train, which made a fast run, not stopping between Gary, and the track. Returning the first train does not make the Gary stop, going directly from the track to Englewood without a stop. One new stable is being erected at the track, making about forty in all, and a shed is being erected ovtjr a part of the broad and long cement walk that leads from the railroad to the amphitheatre. This is to furnish shelter for the track visitors when it rains, th 4 railroad having built no sheds. The race track situation has resolved itself into one of two things. It should either he shut down permanently as an institution ' that exists in violation of law, or it should be allowed to proceed uninterrupted. The *policy of Governor Ralston has been very wishywashy so far. The July track meet continued with occasional threats, but.the gambling went right along, and now the governor is putting up with the falsehoods of a “pale” prosecuing attorney who has either deliberately, lied about the situation at the track or who has neither ability, nor initiative to ascertain what the conditions are. There were probably 2,000 people at the races Tuesday. They were largely Chicago and Gary sports who were there to gamble on the horses they easily accomplished what they were there for. The gambling might a| well he right out in the open as veiled with the simple subterfuges adopted at the track, for any ten* year old hoy could get next to the system if he didn’t get crushed by the mad rush of bettors that surrounded the bookmakers—The expense *of sending the militia to the track seems very foolish, for a half dozen mep with authority from the governor, or, jn fact, a positive statement from the governor as to his intention, would causfe a permanent suspension of the race track gambling, which is as certain to follow running racing as night is to follow day. Based on the experience at the race track Tuesday a story was supplied by the writer to the Indianapolis News and this will probably have the effect of causing Gov 1 ernor Ralston to come “out of the woods,” unless there is enough pressure' “brought to bear on him by the politicians of the state, many of whom seem to he Interested in either the Mineral Springs, racing or the open gambling at French Lick Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Prior In Town With Harry Thaw.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Prior, who are enjoying a honeymoon in Canada, were at Ooaticook,' the town where Harry Thaw, who escaped from Matteawan Insane hospital, was placed In jajl after his ariWt Mr. Prior tyrote a card to The Republican, saying: “Thaw was placed in jail the first night only about two blocks from where we stay: <sonve excitement here at bhtf time. Weather is fine and we have had only tWo hot'days.”
SCHOOL NOTICE. There will be a general meeting of the Rensselaer school teachers at .Room No. 3, high school building, at 2:30 o’clock Saturday afternoon. C. R. DEAN. Supt. Phone 18, and let your wants be known through onr classified col limn. .
GARLAND FOURTH IN NATIONAL INDIVIDUAL
Sergeait of Local Militia Company Gets Gold Medal and $45 in Military Classic. Sergeant Jerry B. Garland, of the local militia company,, who is attending' the national inilitary at Camp Perry, Ohio, won fourth place in the national individual championship, which is the real classic of the big match. There were 891 entries in this match,* so Garland’s performance is a very remarkable one, and as he was only 4 points behind the winner of the match he is certainly one of the greatest military riflemen in the United States and the .world: Sergeant Garland will receive a gold mraal and. s4s'in cash so this match. His scores for the match were: Skirmish, 96; 600 yards, 48; surprise fire, 48; and 1000 yards, 42. Only 16 points off the possible score of 250. The conditions, under which he fired at 1000 yards were very bad. He can usually make more than 42 atrthat range. In a brief note Sergeant Garland says: “I wish Indiana and Oompguy M could, have won this match:” Sergeant Goodwin and Sergeant Snyder were also in the money, getting respectively 30th and 33rd places. y , •
THE WEARY WAY
Daily Becoming Less Wearisome to Many in Rensselaer. With a back that aches all day, With rest disturbed fit night, Annoying urinary disorders, ’Tis a weary way,' indeed. Doan’s Kidney Pills are especially for kidney trouble. Are endorsed by Rensselaer citizens, , Mrs. Larkin Potts, Clark & Washington Sts., Rensselaer, ilnd., says: “I was weak and nervous and bac but little strength or ambition} I rested poorly and was subject to severe headaches and pains across my loins. I could hardly do my housework at times and I always felt tired and worn-out. Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured from Fendig’s Drug Store, gave me relief at once and before I had used them long the aches and pains left. I am grateful to Doan’s Kidney Pills for what they have done for me.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburri. Co., Buffalo, New York, * sole agents for the United States. . \ Remember the' name—Doans—and take no other.
St. Augustine’s Church Notes.
Next Sunday being the Sunday within thfs octave of the feast of St. Augustine, the patron saint of this church and parish, special services will be held. Low mass with sermon on the Gospel at 7 o’clock. At 9 o’clock solemn high mass will be chanted by the Rev. Isldire Collins, C. PP. S., who also will speak on education. • Devotional exercises will he conducted at 7:3b in the evenin'!. Every morning during the week beginning Sept. Ist, the holy sacrifice of the mass will he celebrated at 8 o’clock. On Monday, September Ist, the paroehial will open with high mass at 8 o’clock. Three sisters of the order of the most Precious Blood will he in charge of the school. The parish also acknowledges the receipt of a most beautiful statue of Saint Anthony, donated by an unknown friend and benefactor. If this announcement should chance to reach the donor, the parish takes this means to express its appreciation and gratitude for the gift. Last Sunday the baptism of the infant daughter of George Moelhman and wife took place. The name of Dorothy Marie was given her. Mr. and Mrs. John Halseipa, of Peru, Ind,, were sponsors.
‘ SCHOOL NOTICE. If persons who can use hoys or girls to work for their board will see me, and if those who care to work for their hoard will let me know, I will try to make arrangements satisfactory to all. C. R. DEAN, Supt.
Scene from "The Third Degree.”
Ellis Opera House, Thursday, Aug: 28.
.. .1., Oblc»ro to IMkmt, Xadiaaipon* Cincinnati, and th» Bonth, Xrfn£Uvlllo and Fnaok Uak Spring*. M^effeet*Juiie 1 28, ;18I& ‘ "V' : - NORTHBOUND No, 36 ......................4:44 Am No. 4 —..................4;§8 am No. 40 .....7:33 am No. 32 10:12 am No. 38 ..3:29 pm No. 6 ..3:39 pm No. 30 ...,6:02 pm No. 16 ...i .6:22 ;m SOUTHBOUND No. 35 . *-*-*"• •• • • *•_«!«.• »• *• • 12:13 am No. 31 . 4:44 am No. 15 .10:54 am No. 37 ...11:32 am No. 5 12:46 pm No. 33 2:00 pm No. 39 6:22 pm’ No. 3 11:05 pm
SPECIAL TRAIN p to LAFAYETTE on account of Tippecanoe County Fair Thursday Aug. 28 The regular rates will apply from all stations. The following is the schedule: Leave AM Rensselaer .7:45 Pleasant Ridge .7:56 McCoysburg 8:04 Lee 8:11 Monon ....8:25 Reynolds .....8:39 Chalmers 8:52 Brookston ...... 9:01 Ash Grove .. 9:10 Battle Ground 9:15 Arrive Lafayette ...„j):29 Returning, the special J;rain will leave Lafayette at 9 o’clock p ,m, W. H. BEAM, Agent.
WEATHER FORECAST. Fair tonight; warmer northeast portion; Thursday fair.
VISITORS WILL PLAY IN BAND THURSDAY
Arthur L. Schacha, of Cleveland, Will Assist at Regular Concert This Week. Arthur L. Schacha and wife, of Cleveland, Ohio, who are visiting at the home of the Lane families, he being a grandson' of John Lane, whojp death occurred last week, have* hlade several previous trips to Jasper county./Mr. Schacha is a mechanical draftsman by profession, but is also a talented musician and plays a cornet in a band he manages himself and which bears his name, at Cleveland. He plays a violin in an orchestra of his own. Last year Mr. Schacha while liere played with the Boys’ Band and he will do the same this year, _ assisting at the band concert Thursday evening.
Royal L. Bussell Now a Notary Public at McOoysburg.
Royal L. Bussell, of McCoysburg, has been commissioned a Jfotary Public, at McCoysburg, and is receiving considerable business in the way of acknowledging deeds, mortgages, etc. Mr. Bussell is the correspondent for. The Republican and has so far failed to mention the fact that he is a Notary Public, evidently being too modest to mention it himself. There will probably be conisderable business in that line at McCoysburg and Mr. Bussell will give it intelligent attention if entrusted to him.*
Errir in Type Made Show Price Read 53 Instead of 35.
An error of the type made an advertisement for “Tlie Third Degree" read “General admission 53 cents." It should have said 35 cents. This splendid show will be presented Thursday- night, and the performers have been Imre since a week ago rehearsing for the initial performance. The prices range from $1 for the best seiats to 35 cents for the general admissions. It is to be a dollar show thspughout the year and Rensselaer people will have the first performance Thursday night of this week, August 28th.
Don’t put off ordering a rubber stamp. 'The Republican will get you anything you want In that line. J 1 ■■ i i —■ ■. - women *o baht nm^omnna Subscriber* to Tho Evening Republleui wilt confer a favoK upon tho publishers by reporting promptly any faittfre of delivery upon the part of tba carrier boya The Republican trfoa to give food service In the delivery of the paper. but cannot do ao without the cooperation of aubacribers. If you fall to receive your paper notify ua promptly by phone* 18, 114 or 188 and your oom* plaint will be given nromot attention. A Classified Adv. will rant It - -"4“ -rr*r+
