Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 125, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 May 1914 — Page 4

Rensselaer Republican • ■■ MfibT auro KBMx-nmnT —iT.irr fc nr*»T yubUshazs nun numaw nsvn » mgula> WSXXLT BDXTXO* _ —»■<■■*■■■ -■ Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, as second class mall matter, at the postoffioe at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act of March 3, 1879. !■! II II ———■ 111 HI" ■II I 1» —■ —■ ■■ I. II -■■■■■ Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, as second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Ind., under the act of March 3, 1879. stmscamaoM maths Dally, by Carrier, 10 Cents a Week. By Mall, 88.64 a%ear. Semi-Weekly, In advance. Tear, 81.66. Wednesday, May 27,1911

CLASSIFIED COIIIM MATSS FOB ADS. Three lihes or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 36 cents. Additional space pro rata I- ...... —l- r - . ■ FOR SAL®. FOR SALE—One 7 year old mare, weight 1500; one sorrel mare, weight 1200. G. A. Daugherty, R. R No. 4. FOR SALE—One bushel of Reed’s Yellow Dent seed corn. This is left out of the seed I had saved for my own use. Henry Paulus, Phone 40G. FOR SALE—A 3-room house, cement foundation, good roof, double floor, 6 windows, 2 doors; insured for $300; insurance paid up to August, 1914; 2 good flreproof flues; on lots 5,6, 7,8, and 9in block 12, Fair Oaks, Ind. About 60 fruit trees, 350 raspberries, gooseberries, currants, etc., 2,500 square feet of ground, 2 truck patches, fronts on 2 streets, with back alley. Conveniently located. Price S3OO cash. Taxes paid. No incumbrance. Call on Martha Jane Dickinson, Fair Oaks, Ind.

FOR SALE—Good timothy hay; also mixed hay. Inquire of C. H. Porter or Phone 130. FOR SALE—A 5-acre improved tract near the corporation of Rensselaer, suitable for truck and poultry farm; lots of fruit; well shaded, and an ideal place to live. Call Phone 400 or write P. O. Box 142, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR SALE—A 7-room house; 2 lots, corner Main and Elm; city water, electric lights, fruit Inquire of Chas. Bowers, Phone 496. FOR SALE—My residence property. Louis BL Hamilton, Phone 68. FOB SALE—6 acre tract Inside Rensselaer corporation, fine 9-room house, 3-room basement electric lights, city water, bath, good barn, auto fruit and a beautiful home for sale cheap.—Harvey Davisson. FOB SALE—ISO-acre farm, 3 miles of Rensselaer on stone road; 4 fair improvements; adjoining farm sold tor 3160 per acre; farm is fairly well tiled, about all under cultivation. A sacrifice if sold by May Ist; 385 per acre. Harvey Davisson, Phone 246. FOB SALE—An automobile. See Ernest Lamson. FOB SALE—A good brick houses cellar beneath part; city water, electric lights. See Geo. H. Healey. WAN* 2D. WANTED—GirI for general housework. Phone No. 2. WANTED—Two loads of good timothy hay and 150 bushels of oats. W. L. Frye, Phone 369. WANTED—By young man, work in town or country. Address R. E. 0., care Republican. WANTED—Experienced girl for housework; good wages; small family; address box 53L WANTED—To borrow $1,200 to |1,500. Farm land security. Interest 6% per cent. G. F. Meyers. WANTED—To sharpen and adjust your lawn mowers at the heating plant at the jail. Len Griggs, Phone 199. t WANTED—I will do sewing. Please call on me. Mrs. Mabel Spencer, Phone 535-H. WANTED—A 5-room house. Frank Bpiner. Call Phone 339. * FOUND. FOUND—The surest method of making a sale: advertise in The Republican classified column. FOB BENT. FOR RENT—From June let to Sept Ist a furnished house of 6 rooms. Mrs. J. W. Crooks, east side of court house. . FOB RENT—Onefourth acre of good, fertile ground, north side of town, $3; also bam at 31 P« r month. Anna Burgett, R. D. 1. „ LOST. • LOST—A ladies’ yellowish tan eoat, black collar and cuff, band concert night Return to Repubm^TflSden^ k RjSd for

Mrs. Sarah Miner is spending today in Monon. Fresh Indiana Strawberries dally at The Home Grocery. C. J. Barley, of Delphi, was' a business visitor here today. Jersey sWeet potato plants, 25c a hundred, at The Home Grocery. Miss Gladys Lambert has been visiting relatives at Elwood for the past week. Extra standard packed tomotoes, 3 cans for 25c, at The Home Grocery, Mrs. James Peek, of Remington, is spending today in Rensselaer visiting relatives and friends. Hot weather specialities at Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store. Miss Verne Britton, of DeMotte, came today and will remain for some time with Mrs. Addie Casto and family. C. E. Hemphill has had a new floor put in the office of his hitch barn and a foundation put under the office. The Standard Bearers will meet with Miss Bessie Clark this evening at 7:30. Miss Madge Winn went to Irving Park, Chicago, today, to -spend several days with her father, Rev. W. G. Winn. Rubber sole shoes—tan, black or white, for men or women, at Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store.

John Keek, of Gibson City, 111., who clerked for D. A. Kloebhe during the fire sale, is here for a visit with friends. Earl Said la, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Said la, has -been in San Francisco, Cal., since last September, and has a very good job. Oxford season is here We have anticipated your wants at Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store Miss Merle Hiatt returned to Wabash today after a visit of two weeks with the family of George Hopkins, the carpenter. All kinds of slippers for the children, the kind they want for Decoration Day, at Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Stone. ' Clyde Williams has purchased the Ford auto which the Main Garage owned last year and Messrs. Shafer will purchase another for livery purposes. Charles Tyler, of Chicago, is here to visit his mother, Mrs. Anna Tyler, who has been an invalid and confined closely at home for several months. Mrs. J. Ball, of Chicago, came Sunday and will be joined by her son Friday and they will remain for a week to visit Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Walters, on South Cullen street. W. H. Beam has recovered from his severe illness of several weeks ago and will resume his job as the agent for the Monon at this place on next Monday. He has gained 18 pounds in weight during his rest period. The British government, acting contrary to the hopes of Asquinth to a recent deputation, finally decided not to participate in the Panama-Pacific exposition at San Francisco. A new front is being erected in the Forsythe building In which Rowles & Parker will soon re-enter business and the front will be the most modern that can be purchased and will offer a fine opportunity for window dressing and 'be a factor in drawing trade to this city. A building to perpetuate the memory of the late President William McKinley, costing $200,000, is to be erected at his birthplace, Niles, Ohio. This has been decided by the trustees of the National McKinley Birthplace association.

CASTOR IA Hw Infants arid flhfldrwn Tin KW Yutan AhrapßsgM Becca the XTg Fignctonr rr

r LOST—A small black purse containing a $5 bill and some change. Finder; please return Mrs. R. D. Thompson or Phene No. 277. MISCELLANEOUS. PAINTING—I will be ready for work at hoilse painting alter April 24th and will be pleased to arrange now to take care of your work.—C. M. Blue. TO EXCHANGE—BO-acre farm to exchange for Rensselaer residence property, level black land; 40 acres in oats, 15 acres In hay, balance green pasture; good fences.—Harvey Davisson. STRAYED—7 steers from the John J. Lawler Pleasant Ridge ranch. Phone 337 or 24A. James E. Waltera. Mutual Insurance—Fire and lightning. Also state cyclone; Inquire of M. L Adams, Phone 538-L 1 11 y.'iWWW Will send tried recipes for hands, hair and tan. fiend one dollar. RockhoM, 4124 Kenmore Ave Ist Flat, Chicago, HL

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

Mias Lillian Burns, a trained nurse of Chicago, came today to visit the family of John Price and to attend the commencement events. S. C. Irwin has completed plans for a new residence to be erected on a lot he’ purchased last year in Fred Phillips’ addition. The house will consist of basement and seven rooms and will be modern in every respect. Excavating for the basement will start next week. Mrs. Will A. Thompson and little daughter, of Sullivan, Ind., arrived Sunday to see her* mother, Mrs. Austin Hopkins, who recently suffered a fracture of one of her hips. Mrs. Hopkins is doing even better than had been expected and is an exceptional case for one of her advanced years.

THE PROSE TRANSLATION.

Shows Difficulty of Forcing the Door of the Understanding. The difficulty of forcing the door of the understanding Is amusingly illustrated In a story related by Mrs. Roger A. Pryor in her recent book, “My Day: Reminiscences of a Long Life.” Mrs. Pryor’s daughter, Mrs. Rice, once attempted to Introduce William Cullen Bryant to a class of poor white boys she was teaching at a nightschool In her home on a plantation in Virginia. She had taught them to read and write, had given them some arithmetic and geography, even some Latin, and was then minded to awaken the esthetic instincts which she believed must exist in the poor fellows. She read the beautiful poem “To a WaterFowl.” "Now, boys,” she eagerly said, “teHwhow you would feel if you had seen this?" There was dead silence. Appealing to the most hopeful of her pupils, she received an enlightening response: “I wouldn't think nuthin’.” "What would you say?” she persisted. “Wai, I reckon I’d say, “Thar goes a duck!”

A Little Too Hasty.

In the scramble that followed a premature discharge of dynamite in a building-lot, says a writer in the New York Sun, a stout man lost a scarfpin. After he began to search for it he noticed another man poking round in the dust and debris. He immediately grew suspicious, and at last spoke. “I do not wish to give offense,” he ■aid, “but I must ask you to refrain from assisting me in this search. I appreciate your willingness to help, but as a means of self-protection I long ago made It a rule never to allow strangers to assist me In a search for a lost article.” “Oh, very well,” said the stranger. "You have no objection to my looking an, I suppose?” He sat down on the curbstone and watched the stout man sift dust and overturn stones. After twenty minutes of painful stooping the stout man found a scarf-pin. "But it is not my pin,” he said, dejectedly. "No, it's mine,” said the other man. "I heard it strike somewhere hereabouts. That was what I set out to look for, but when I saw how anxious you were for the job I let you go ahead. Your own scarf-pin, if you want to know, is sticking to the flap of your left coat pocket”

A Fan-Travelled Alligator.

A female aligator four and a half feet long, species Alligator mississlpplensis, was recently captured in central Oklahoma, In a bayou of the South Canadian Biver. Mr. H. H. Lane of the University of Oklahoma believes that the animal had travelled up the Arkansas River to the mouth of the Canadian, and thence to the point where it was found, a distance of some 850 or 400 miles west of the Arkansas-Oklahoma state line. The Canadian River la not navigable, and during most of the year is only a small meandering ereek in a wide valley. The alligator had been .in the neighborhood at least three years before its capture. Its skeleton la now in the university museum, where the lone traveller is also commemorated by a life-like model. -

GASOLINE! OJIS! FREE AIR! ALL BEADY MAY IST. Will appreciate a share of your patronage. Orders taken for all kinds of auto accessories. First door oast of Republican office. Accessories will be arriving every day until fully equipped. I have Federal Tires on hand now. W. J. HOLMES Look over our classified column. Don’t you have something to sell that will pay you to advertise? A quarter invested now and then in advertising will bring you ample returns. Nd farmer can afford to overlook the Important feature of advertising. We have many users who are making money year after year by a jud iciou s use of our cSasslfled columns. A 8-llne classified ad in The Republican easts only 25 cents tor a week’s Insertion in the Dally and Semi-Weekly. Try in ad and you wffl be surprised at the results.

MORNING COMEST! AWAKE! ARISE!

Majority of Humans Piss Through Life as If Asleep. Some Asleep In Death—Others Asleep In Ignorance and Superstition—Still Others Asleep In Worldlinasa —Soma Christians Half-aaleep—The Awakening of the Soul—Mental Eyes Opening to Soo Things In a New Light.

PASTOR RUSSELL

The Pastor holds that the majority of humanity pass through life in a dreamy state, thinking about trivialities—what to eat, what to wear, where to go, etc.—rather than about things pertaining to God and the future life. This state of mental inactivity, he declared, has been brought about by Adam's disobedience to the Divine command. Our first parents sinned; and their posterity shared with them the penalty, “Dying, thbu shalt die.” Bht God foreknew the fall of man, and purposed to redeem the human family from death, the speaker declared. In the Divine Program Jesus was the Lamb of God slain from the foundation of the world. Therefore when communicating with those who believe His Word, God always speaks of death as a sleep. The Awakening of the Soul. The Pastor discussed his theme in three divisions: the awakening of the world now, the awakening of the Christian, and the future awakening of humanity during the Messianic Kingdom. There is a time, he claimed, when men begin to think of God and the world to come. Before that time some had been steeped in sin; Others had lived merely for the things of the present. But somehow or other they began to realize that they were sinners under Divine sentence. Perhaps they got the right view—that the sentence was one of death; but usually they got the wrong one—that it was a sentence of eternal torment

The majority of children, the Pastor declared, reach this crisis between the ages of twelve and fifteen years. At that period there is a great change in human nature, and therefore it is a most advantageous time for spiritual growth. The speaker dwelt upon the duties of parents and teachers. While from the very beginning of its existence the child should be trained in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, yet both parent and teacher should be especially alert with children at this most favorable time for opening their mental eyes to look beyond the trivialities of the present life to the higher things pertaining to the life to come.

. “Arise From the Dead.” The Pastor pointed out the fallacy of the belief that the young must “sow wild oats,” and regretted that even Christian parents seemed imbued with this erroneous idea. According to the Scriptures, “Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” The child mind should ever be kept near the Divine standard. Those awake to a sense of responsibility to their Creator should arise from the dead condition as far as possible, the Pastor holds. As when one awakens In the morning there is a mental freshness which is invariably lost if one falls asleep again, so the moment of this soul’s awakening is a favorable time of which to take advantage. If the soul receives no encouragement at that moment, it may drop asleep again. “Christ Shall Give Theo Light." Those who have awakened are approaching righteousness, the Pastor declared. The Scriptures represent the dead as being down. Those who arise from the dead become upright in character, in desire. But merely to awake to a realisation of One’s condition is not to become a Christian. While Christ gave the light which enabled one to see that the wages of sin is death, and that the gift of God is life through the Redeemer, yet the newly awakened must accept Christ as their Ransom-sacrifice and lay hold upon Him before they may be considered Christians. The Pastor explained that we do not become Christians,. members of the Body of Christ, when first we awake or when first we arise from the dead. We are merely awakening to see that harmony with God anjl escape from condemnation for sin are possible. An 8t Paul intimates, from the moment we get into Christ we pass from under the Adamic condemnation. No one can have an individual trial until he is freed from that condemnation. A mere realization of one’s condition does not constitute a trial for life. Only the Church are now on trial. For nearly nineteen. hundred yean the judgment of the Church has progressed. The first to be tried was the Head of the Church—our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ He was found worthy and was glorified. All through y»e Gospel Age the Individual memben have been tried. Soon the trial of the Church will have been finished.

May 24.—Pastor Russell, whose Photo - Drama of Creation is awakening new zeal in Bible study everywhere it is presented, preached today from the text “Awake, thou that sleepest and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee fight”—Eph. 5:14.

Call for Republican Representative Convention.

The Republicans of Jasper and White counties will meet in delegate convention at Monticello, White county, Indiana, on Saturday, June 20th, 1914, at 1 o’clock p. m., lor the purpose of nominating a candidate for State Representative, to be voted for at the November election of 1914. The representation for said convention will be on the 'basis of one delegate and one alternate for each 200 votes cast in 1910 for Otis E. Gulley for secretary of state at the general election held in November, and one delegate and one alternate for each fraction of 200 votes cast for Otis E. Gulley for secretary of state at the general election in November, 1910, which will entitle the said counties to the following vote: Jasper County—B. White County—l 2. Delegates to this convention will be selected at precinct meeting to be held at the regular voting places of the precinct on Saturday, June 6, 1914, and the delegates will cast the vote to which theiy precinct is entitled. G. H. McLAIN, Chairman Jasper County. Wm. HAMMELLE, Chairman White County.

Call For Republican Judicial Convention.

The Republicans of Jasper and Newton counties will meet in delegate convention at Brook, Newton county, Ind., on Tuesday, June 9th, 1914, at 1 o’clock p. m. for the purpose of nominating a candidate for Judge of the Thirtieth’Judicial Circuit and a candidate <OS Prosecutor of the Thirtieth Judicial Circuit. The representation for said convention will be on the basis of one delegate and one alternate for each 200 votes cast for Otis E. Gulley for secretary of state at the general election held in November, 1910, and one delegate and one alternate for each fraction of 200 votes east for Otis E. Gulley for secretary of state at the general election in No, vember, 1910, which will eneitle the said counties to the following vote: Jasper County—B. White County—l 2. Delegates to this convention will be selected at precinct meetings to be held at the regular voting places of the precinct on Saturday, June 6, 1914, and the delegates will cast the vote to which their precinct is entitled. G. H. McLAIN, Chairman Jasper County. R. R. CUMMINGS, Chairman Newton County.

To Select Delegates.

To the republican voters of Jasper county and all who care to cooperate with them: Pursuant to the above calls the republican voters of each precinct in Jasper county will meet at their usual place of meeting in their respective townships op, SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1914, at 2 o’clock p. m., tor the purpose of selecting one delegate and one alternate from each precinct to the judicial and representative conventions above called. The delegates selected at the meetings to attend the judicial and representative conventions shall be entitled to the following fractional votes: Barkley, east .35 Barkley, west .30 Carpenter, east 40 Carpenter, west 35 Carpenter, south .50 Gillam .30 Hanging Grove 30 Jordan .30 Kankakee .30 Keener 60 Marion, No. 1 .... \75 Marion, No. 2 85 Marion, No. 3 .50 Marion, No. 4 .50 Milroy .20 Newton .30 Union, north ...! .30 Union south .35 Walker -30 Wheatfield -55 Total vote 8.00 H. McLAIN, Chairman. A. G. OATT, Secretary.

FOR PROSEOUTING ATTORNEY I desire to have my name announced as a candidate for the office of prosecuting attorney of the thirtieth judicial circuit, subject to the decision of the delegates to the convention to be held at Brook, Ind., June 9th.—C. M. SANDS. FOR JOINT REPRESENTATIVE. The undersigned wishes to announce his candidacy for the nomination for joint representative of White ahd Jasper counlftes, subject to the decision of the delegates to the convention to be held at Monticello on June 20th, 1914.—William L Wood, Parr, Ind.

Notice of Appointment. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed executor of the will of John Tillett, deceased, late of Jasper County, Indiana. The estate is supposed to be solvent. JOSEPH L BEESLEY, Executor. J. L Caldwell, Attorney. Rensselaer, Ind, April 14th, 1914. NORTH UNION CALL Republicans and those who wish

Attention! E. W. Hickman does everything in the plumbing and heating and tinning line. Also cleans and repairs gasoline stoves, sharpens lawn mowers, and repair in general .' Opposite Court House, East. Shop Phone, 2 on 466. Residence Phone, 3 on 466

Commander L. L. Reaney, aged 65, retired, of the navy, died Monday in Washington, D. 0., of neurosis. Dr. A. M. .Finch, of Jamestown, will resume his visits to Rensselaer on next Tuesday and Wednesday, June 2nd and 3rd, and will make regular monthly visits thereafter. Bitten on one toe by a rat while she slept, Mrs. Earl Moser, of Evansville, is suffering from blood poisoning. Physicians say death is probable. Oscar King Davis, who has returned to Washington, D. C., from a conference with Col. Roosevelt, said Monday that Roosevelt will Stump Indiana for Senator Beveridge this year. Mrs. Helen Dungan, recording secretary of the Christian Woman’s Board of Missions, and a well known writer of sacred songs, is dead at her borne in Indianapolis. She was 69 years old. Despondent on account of the plans of his sister to marry, thereby breaking up the home, Melvin Blender, aged 41 years, of Goshen, committed suicide Sunday night by blowing off his head with a shotgun. Bishop Henderson, of the Methodist Episcopal church, ‘has appointed the Rev. *B. D. W. Beck, pastor ! of the Locust Street MSthodist church of Greencastle, to conduct the evangelistic services at Moores Hill college next year. Walter Brubaker, former progressive chairman of Kosciusko county and candidate tor nomination as judge of the circuit court on the progressive ticket, has quit the third party and publicly announced his return to the republican rpnks. Speeding toward Detroit on a fast Pere Marquette train Monday, Charles Dwyer, conductor, saw a farmhouse in flames. He stopped the train, ran to the burning structure and saved an aged man, a paralytic, carrying him out of the house tn his arms. Passengers then formed a bucket brigade, taking water from the locomotive, and put out the fire. The train was delayed an hour.

CkSotSaPOUS & LOUISVILLE RY. OMoago to WorthwMt, xodlaiiapolia, Cincinnati, and the Soutti Jjoxuavilto and Franck Mok Springs. znunun naa tabu. In effect May 3, 1914. NORTHBOUND. No. 36 .......................6:27 gum No. 4 4:59 am No. 40 7:30 am No. 32 10:46 am No. 38 ...8:15 pm No. 6 8:44 pm No. 30 7:06 pm SOUTHBOUND. No. 85 .....12:15 am No. 81 ......7:41 pm Na 37 ..................*.,..11:20am No. 5 . 11:05 am Na 33 ........2:01 pm No. 89 ..6:12 pm No. 3 11:10 pm Nos. 87 and 88 stop on flag at Parr on Saturday.

Auto Bus to Remington. am .pan Lv. Rensselaer 7:45 4:00 Lv. Remington 9:30 5:83 Phone 206 - - C. L. MORRELL. RXNSBXLAXR MARKETS. Com—6sc. ' Oats—36c. . Chickens—l2%c. Eggs—l6%c. Butterfat—2s%c. • "’J Wool—16« to 20c. ■ to vote with them in North Union precinct will meet at Fair Oaks at 7 o’clock p. an., on June 6th, to select delegates to the judicial and representative conventions above called. F, M. GOFF, Chairman.