Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 255, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 October 1913 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Phone 273 for wood, feed and coal. Sob poetry is all right in its place which Is on a tombstone: ——~ There’s a difference between being useful and being used. The fellow that sohots off his mouth doesn’t always hit the mark. Even the high flyer has to come dowil to earth sooner or later. (Mrs. Frank B. Lyon returned to Delphi this afternoon after a visit since Wednesday with relatives here. Playipg the base drum wouldn’t be so very difficult if it wasn’t for carrying the drum. i.. r More than. oneJlfth of the mfen who served in the army and navy of the United States during the civil war were stiß on the government's pension roll at the beginning of the present fiscal year. Mrs. Fell’s M. E. Sunday School class had a social last Friday evening at the home of Stella Piatt. The evening was spent in guessing contests. Refreshments were served. About twenty young ladies ,were present. Forty thousand locomotive engineers and firemen employed by ninety railroads operating between Chicago and the Pacific coast, hate notified officials of these lines that they will terminate their present labor agreements Nov. 10, and demand a wage increase amounting to many million dollars a year. Hammond, which 'had been defeated by Morocco earlier in the year, played a tie 6 to 6 game at Morocco last Saturday. The Hammond Times states that at the beginning of tfhe second half the unsportsmanlike nature of the Morocco crowd asserted itself and that rude insults that were very disgraceful were heaped upon the Hammond rooters and Subs. The paper says: “Never has a Hammond team been forced to endure what they did Saturday^— The Indianapolis Newt chronicles the dissolution of a dry goods firm at Marion, which for seventeen years had maintained an uti-hill fight against modern business methods. The firm in question had the best site in the town, and 'hosts of friends: and when its field was invaded by other houses that advertised, it refused ‘to throw its money away for newspaper space. Gradually the new stores won the patronage of the old one; new customers failed to appear and take the place of deserters, and the firm that had tried to get along without advertising, has finally relinquished its business, which demonstrates again that advertising is not a luxury, but a necessity.

Dr. O. B. Neebit, director for tfeje tenth district of the Indiana Association for (the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis has called a conference of the officers of the Auxiliary county association and those interested in combating the- ravages of consumption, to meet at the Y. M. C. A. at Gary, at 12 o’clock M„ November 17th. The confereiice is for the purpose of comparing notes about the work being done by the local organizations and to plan a more active educational campaign In teaching the people that consumption is a most dangerous diseased largely contracted from persons suffering from it, and 1s preventable to a large degree.

Chronic Dyspepsia. The following unsolicited testimonial should certainly be sufficient to give hope and courage to persons afflicted with ehronle dyspepsia: T have been a chronic dyspeptic for years, and of all the medicine I have taken, Chamberlain’s Tablets have done me more good than anything else,” says W. Q. Mattlson, No. 7 Sherman St. Hornellsvllle, N. Y. /For sale by A. F. Long. 0 • What have you to sell? Why don’t you adl It? A Republican classified ad will bring you a bfcyer willing to pay wbat 1$ Is worth. Try a Republican classified ad. President Wilgon signed the urgent deficiency bill Wednesday. This carries exemptions from.the civil service of United States deputy marshals and deputy collectors of Internal revenue. It also abolishes the commerce court.