Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 187, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 August 1914 — Page 4

Retsselatr Republican OAXX.Y AMD SHMI-WSIIXT VBAXUBY * W.*»T Publisher* HD nUMT ISSUE IS MOULO WSEXXT EDITIOI Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. I, 1897, as second class mail tnatter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act of March 8. 1879. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, as second class mall matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Ind., under the act of March 3, 1879. SDBSCnUPTIOIt BATES Daily by Carrier, 10 Cents a Week. By Mail, |3.60 a year. Semi-Weekly, in advance. Year, >1.60. Monday, August 10, 1914. *.

Classified Column BATES FOB CLASSIFIED ADS. Three lln«v or less, per week of six •sues of Tile Evening Republican and wo of The Semi-Weekly Republican. 16 centa Additional space pro rata. forsale. ” FOR SALE—6O acres of well improved clay loam farm land within 2% miles of a good town in Michigan. This (farm has good /buildings, plenty of fruit; water in the house and barn; good baesment barn; owner sold S2OO worth of peachps off the farm last year; on good road, near good church and school; price $3,200, and $1,400 cash, balance to run almost five years at 6 per cent interest; just the farm for some one with limited means and a nice home for any one. Inquire of Geo. H. Healey. FOR SALE—Auto has, in good repair. C. L. Morrell, or the Main Garage. FOR SALE—Maxwell special touring car, in good condition, Will sell on time.—G. F. Meyers. FOR SALE—S room house, lot 75x100. 2 blocks from court house. Inquire of E. M. Thomas. FOR SALE—Spring chickens. Phone 448. , FOR SALE—A 1912 fore-door Studebaker Twenty touring car, completely equipped; at a bargain as usual.—Main Garage. FOR SALE—My cottage and two lots; city water and cistern—Mrs. Maggie Karsten. FOR SALE—Hardwood lumber of all kinds, sawed to order. Randolph Wright, Rensselaer, Ind., ’or Phone Mt. Ayr, 54-C. FOR SALE—A 7-room house; 2 lots, corner Main and Elm; city water, electric lights, fruit; a bargain. Inquire of Chas. Bowers, Phone 496. FOR SALE—A team of good work horses, wt. about 1400 lbs. Inquire of Harold Shepley, 2% miles northeast of MeCoysburg. FOR SALE—A 5-acre Improved tract near the corporation of Rensselaer, suitable for truck and poultry fiarm; lots of fruit; well shaded, and an ideal place to live. Call Phone 400 or write P. O. Box 142, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR SALE—6 acre tract inside Rensselaer corporation, fine 9-room house, 3-room basement, electric lights, city water, bath, good barn, auto garage, fruit and a beautiful home for sale cheap.—Harvey Davisson. FOR SALE—ISO-acre farm, 3 miles of Rensselaer on stone road; fair Improvements; adjoining farm sold for $l6O per acre; farm is fairly well tiled, about all under cultivation. SIOO per acre. Harvey Davisson, Phone 246. FOR SALE—One brass bed, mattress and springs; one golden oak center stand; one kitchen cabinet; one Wilton Bxlo rug; two Wilton hall rugs 3x12; five fluff rugs; lot of electric light fixtures; three fire place mantles. Inquire of Chas. Shaw, Phone 561.

WANTED WANTED—Work of any kind, preferably on a farm. J. T. Karsner, Box 54 or Phone 288. WANTED—About 300 bushels o? oats; will pay 3c above market to allow for shoveling.—W. L. Frye. lost' ———- LOST—A gold bead necklace for little girl; reward if returned to B. K. Zimmerman or this office. Blue serge coat for little girrS years old. Finder please phone E. Thompson, Phone 37 or leave at this office. LOST—The tail light and number from my auto; No. 46413, > Finder please notify S. S. Shedd or leave at Republican office. LOST—WiII the person who borrowed the umbrella from McKay’s laundry please return same and grealy oblige. Mre. O. H. McKay. MISCELLANEOUS. ESTRAY—2 steers about 3 years old, strayed from Lawler Ranch, near Fair Oaks, Ind.; finder please phone any Information to 5420, Fair Oaks, Ind. Maurice Oorman, Foreman. TAKEN UP—A red steer weighing about 800. C. F. Mansfield. A Classified Adv. wfD

Mrs .Elizaibeth Van Nice returned to Monon today after a visit of, several days with her daughter, 'Mrs. James Payne. Our*stock is arriving daily. Our door is now open. Come in and see us. ROWLES & PARKER. Mrs. Elmer Hershman, of Kankakee, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. John E. McClanahan, and today they are visiting Mr. and Mrs. T; F. Warne, at Parr. Our stocks are now arriving. While they are not yet complete, we will be glad to show you anything we have open. f ROWLES & PARKER. D. S. Alter left this morning on a trip to Chicago and Chicago Heights. | His little grandson, who has been visiting him, left for the home of its parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Worn, at Vincennes. We may have just the very thing you are looking for. Our stock is ■arriving daily. The next time you are in town come in and see our new store. ROWLES & PARKER. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hines, of Delphi, spent yesterday with Tul Malone and Bob Smith and families. Dave is quite a baseball fan and usually sees the Delphi games. Yesterday he came to Rensselaer to see his old home town clean up on Ockley. While our stock is not yet complete, we are pleased to show you any goods that are opened. Come in and see our new store. ROWLES & PARKER. Frank E. Cox, Virgil Denniston, Boyd Porter, Paul (Munally, Artie Clouse and their crowd of campers at Edgewater, near MontieeQlo, lb rough t thei r\outing to a close Sunday, the contingent returning home that evening and reporting a most enjoyable time. Mr. and Mrs. Thorsten Otterberg are being visited by C. H. Lilja and son, of Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs.’ John Scott, of Byininghain, AlaMrs. Scott being the daughter of Mrs. Alex. Johnson. Today all are having an outing at the Kankakee river. Ray and Roy Anderson accompanied them. Our aim, as it always has been, will be to have just the article that you are looking for. We hope to meet all our old and to gain many new ones. Give us a look in our new store. ROWLES & PARKER. The reunion at Shelby Grant’s tomorrow promises to he one of the most pleasant events the old soldiers have had tor a long time. There are several of the members of tne old 87th and they have invited all other soldiers to attend the annual reunion. Also, a number of the ladies and a big basket picnic is to be held. It will be the 52nd anniversary of the departure of Company A, of the 87th for the front. Chas. G. Hammond, who came down from Big Rapids, Mich., last wedk, left this morning for his home, taking his aged father, Steward Hammond, with him. Charley has been living in Michigan for some time now and owns a farm of 160 acres adjoining the city of Big Rapids. He is engaged in the dairying business. His son, Roe, is a printer on a paper at Big Rapids and Ralph, who was forced by ill health to give up his course at Purdue last year, will re-enter that school again next month. A letter from Mrs. S. W. Richardson, at Geraldine, Mont., orders The Republican for the ensuing year. She says: “All are well except my daughter, Lucille, and rayself. The altitude is so high here that we have been having nose bleed five or six times a day. We have landed us a fine home out here, nice, level, black soil, and we will start the building of our house in a couple of weeks. Saw many beautiful sights on our long journey out here. We are 11 miles from the railroad, one mile from postoffice, school and church, and we have fine neighbors. It is an Indiana and Illinois settlement. After we get out on our place I will notify you where to send the paper. Until then send it to Geraldine. Best regards to our friends.”

Try a Republican Classified ad. OILS & TIRES—OiIs for farm machinery, autos, motorcycles, bicycles and sewing machines; gasoline and batteries; tires for bicycles and motorcycles; baby carriages re-tired. At the Bicycle Shop, corner east of Republican office James C. Clark. MONEY TO LOAN—Loans on farm and city property at current rates. Also a few choice small properties to sell on easy monthly payments.—Emmet L. Hollingswirth: office in First Natl. Bank building. FOUND—At ball park, an umbrella; inquire at this office.

CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. HwKW YMHmAhnpßNKtt Bears the XV S/TXs Bignatare of

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

NOT ALWAYS PERFECT

By CORA WEEMS.

“As for that,** said the girl with the box of chocolates, “there are simply lots of things about myself that I’d like to change if I had the chance. Now, I’ve never liked my nose. As a mere child I hated It and since I’ve grown up my feeling in regard to It is desperately unchristian. It’s such a mean nose —it’s too long and it is fat at the end, and there’s no way of disguising it. It’s a ruinobs nose!” “Oh, mercy!" said the girl who was helping the other girl dispose of the candy/ “I wouldn’t feel that way about It! Why, after one gets used to it one never notices it, really! Constance, if you are careful to keep your head turned so that people don’t get a profile view—” * "Yes, that’ll help a lot,” broke in the girl in blue serge. "Looking straight at you one can’t see how fat the tip of your nose really is, dear. And I’ve seen noses so much worse—all over a person’s face! Of course, your head is small, and that makes your nose more prominent. But I shouldn’t feel so bad about it—if we forget our afflictions so much easier— f ’ “Well, I think you have a lot of nerve to call my nose an affliction!” cried the girl with the chocolate. “You talk as though I were a sideshow freak, at the very least! Of course, it has its faults, but it Isn’t such an impossible nose, I’d have you know! I suppose I notice it more than any one else does, and I must say, Kitty Phipps, that if I were you I wouldn’t talk!” “I suppose you are insituating something about my complexion!” said the girl in blue serge. “You’ve heard me mourn over it often enough and say I’d give my head if I could change it. I’m not claiming to be a beauty and I know there are sometimes a few tiny spots on my face—" “Tiny! ’’ cried the girl with the chocolates. "My goodness! I never saw any one with more things the matter with her face! If it Isn’t broken out it is yellow-spotty or just a graybrown color —” “Yes, I’ve noticed that," eagerly broke in the girl in brown. “How funny Kitty’s complexion acts sometimes! Did z you ever notice that It gets just the color of her hair, so she looks all alike? I think it is most curious!” “The hard part is,” said the girl who was helping dispose of the candy, “that you can’t get away from a bad complexion. There isn’t a thing you can do to distract attention from it, because it is the most prominent thing—’’ Tm certainly much obliged to you!” Interrupted the owner of the complexion that was under discussion. "I’m glad to find out that you regard me as a human monstrosity! My complexion may not be the finest on earth, but I guess I’d pass In a crowd! It isn’t necessary to be an Insipid pink and white to be good looking! Artists have been known to rave over the color symphony of a girl like meall a faint golden-brown, they call It! They—” "Anyhow," said the girl who was helping to dispose of the candy, “I’m glad I’m sensible enough to realize my weak points and not so foolish as to think I’m a regular Venus! What I’d like to change Is my figure. I suppose you’ve noticed —” x “Oh, Indeed, we have!" Interrupted the girl In brown. “But I wouldn’t worry over it so much. Of course, the fashions are bound to change some day and I suppose when It’s no longer the style to look like a lath it’ll be bad for you, but just now you’re all right. You’re just the thing! Why, .everybody is simply trying to look shapeless and lank." “I should think you would be glad,’ 1 said the girl with the chocolate, “to know that you have absolutely no hips nor any shape at all.” “Thank you so much!’’ tartly said the young woman under discussion. “If you can’t appreciate a figure that is svelte and willowy I suppose that’s your misfortune! It takes a connoisseur to admire some types of beauty—types out of the ordinary! Since you are beefy and billowy 1 suppose in self-defense you have to run down everybody else! Thank goodness, I am what I am!” "Well, anyhow,” sighed the girl in brown, “barring my hair and eyes, my complexion and teeth and figure and ears and nose, I think I’m rather good looking! I’m really sorry for you unfortunates!”

Long Trip for Submarines.

When Jules Verne wrote “Forty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea” few of his readers imagined that his weird idea would be accomplished within : their lifetime, yet two submarines :have started from Portsmouth, England, for Australia, a distance of 13,000 miles, which they will accomplish iunder their own power, created by oil- ; driven engines. They are scheduled ito reach Australia about May 18, which fallows for no loss of time from start ito finish. Each boat has oil engines of 1,600-horsepower, calculated to develop 360 revolutions per minute, and will carry 11,000 gallons of paraffin as fuel and 1,600 gallons of lubricating oil. They have as armaments four torpedo tubes, and on arrival win be fitted with wireless telegraphy. They are to be known as AEI and AE2, being of the E class. They will be escorted as tar as Singapore by his majesty’s ship Eclipse.

LACKING KNOWLEDGE GOD’S PEOPLE PERISH

“My People Are Destroyed For Lack of Knowledge?’ Jesus* Teaching* Harmonized the Law and the Prophet*—Jewish Doctors Had Failed to Teach the Deep Things of the Law—Opposition to Bible Study—Jews Typical of Spiritual Israel—Jewish Age and Harvest Typi* cal of Gospel Age artel Harvest

PASTOR. RUSSELL

Pastor Russell preached today from the text, “Woe unto you, lawyers! "Tor ye have taken away the Key of Knqw|-< edge: ye entered not in yourselves, and them that were entering in ye hindered.”—Luke 11:52. The word lawyer in New Testament usage, the Pastor began, has a very different meaning from our usage. It applied to those religious teachers of the Jews who made special professions of sanctity of heart and earnest desire to know God’s will and to teach it Today the corresponding class are designated Doctors of Divinity. •’> It was customary amongst the Jews, the speaker continued, that lessons from the Law and the Prophets should be read daily in the synagogues. The people were thus familiar with the letter of the Scriptures. The majority of them were Illiterate; for educational facilities then were not what they are now. Consequently only a few claimed to have knowledge of the spiritual part of the Law and Prophets. These were chiefly of the literary and wealthy classes. To these the common people looked for guidance. The people were hungry for the Message which Jesus brought The nation would have gone over promptly to Jesud if th'e Doctors of the Law had given the word. Moreover, Jesus’ teachings harmonized the Law and the Prophets, over which the Scribes and Pharisees and the Sadducees long had disputed. Had these Doctors of the Law been as hungry for Truth as were the people, undoubtedly their differences of interpretation of Scripture would have speedily disappeared in the light then shining upon the Bible through the Holy Spirit, Jesus and His Apostles being Jehovah’s mouthpieces. The Pastor then drew a parallel between the Jewish Age and its Harvest and the Gospel Age and its Harvest Now, as then, God’s people are perishing for lack of knowledge. Now, as then, the Doctors of Divinity will hot use the Key of Knowledge themselves; and have buried it from the people under a mass of forms and ceremonies.

But Is Knowledge Necessary? It was then shown that In our Lord’s day the Jewish Doctors of Divinity contented themselves with telling the people what to do and what not to do, but did not help them to understand the deep meaning of the Law and the Prophets. So it is today, the speaker declared; a minister stands as a representative and mouthpiece of the Church creed, which in roundabout terms declares that whoever does not live a saintly life will suffer an eternity of torment Is not this a grievous burden to put upon any conscientious soul ?he asked. Has it not caused untenable"anguish to many of God’s true people?’ Has it not driven from God and the Bible thousands of the most intelligent minds in the world? As the Jewish Doctors of Divinity carried no such burdens, neither do Christendom’s Doctors of Divinity. In private they acknowledge that they carry no such burdens. In public they give the inference that they do—not so much by positive terms as by implication, tone, inflection of the voice and by the fact that they represent creeds which so teach. These, influential teachers are not to be excused because of the claim that in their official capacity they lose their personal responsibility and shift it upon those who made the creeds and those who adopted them. The people no longer trust the creeds. They realize that a greater light shines today than when those creeds were formulated. The people trust the Bible, the Pastor declared. They understand our modern Scribes and Pharisees to give assurance that the creeds of Christendom properly represent the teachings of Scripture. The creedal chains would become ropes of sand if the prominent Doctors of Divinity would publicly renounce the creeds, as nearly all of them do in private conversation. Systematic Kay-Hiding. Next it was pointed out that our modern Scribes and Pharisees are proving themselves to be the antitypes of those addressed by Jesus. Taking away the Key of Knowledge, they urge the people not to bother their heads about doctrines, but to leave these subjects to the clergy. Bible study has degenerated into a study of geography, customs, etc., rather than an effort to understand the phophedes or the interpretation of them given by Jesu&and His Appstles.

August 9. —The Photo-Drama o f Creation continues to awaken deep interest in Bible study. Its orderly presentation of the world’s masterpieces of art illustrative of sacred hi&tory i s very impressive. Every subject dear to the Christian is depicted.

- Children Cry for Fletcher’s _ _ _ / MWT raS 111 *■* * 1 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--Bonal supervision since its infancy. /■OZCAttf 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 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 You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THZ CENTAUR OOH P ARY. TT MURRAY RTRCCT, NEW YORK CITY.

REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET ; For United States Senator HUGH Th. MILLER Columbus For Secretary of State JUDGE ED JACKSON Newcastle For Auditor of State L NEWT BROWN Franklin For Treasurer JOB FREEMAN Terre Haute For Attorney General ELE STANSBURY Williamsport For Supt of Instructiea HORACE ELLIS Vincennes FWr Supreme Court Judge QUINCY A. MYERS Logansport For Appellate Court Judge* First District LUCIUS a EMBREN Princeton IRA C. BATMAN Bloomington , Second District M. A. CHIPMAN Anderson U. S. LEBH / Huntington SHEPHERD J. CRUMPACKER South Bend For Clerk of Supreme Court WILL H. ADAMS Wabash For State Geologist BARRY R. CAMPBELL Indianapolis REPUBUCAIT COUSTY TICKET. For County Clerk, JUDSON H. PERKINS. For Auditor, JOSEPH P. HAMMOND. For Treasurer, CHARLES V. MAY. For Sheriff, B. D. McCOLLY. - For Assessor, GREENLEAF L. THORNTON. For Surveyor, CLIFTON J. HOBBS. For Coroner, DR. C. E. JOHNSON. For Commissioner First District, HENRY WARD MARBLE. For Commissioner Third District CHARLES A. WELCH. For County Council, C. E. KERSEY, S. T. COMER, WASHINGTON COOK, CHARLES MEADLE, H. W. JACKSON, E. E. PULLIN, GEORGE MAY. JUDICIAL TICKET. 30th circuit, composed of Jasper and Newton Counties: For Judge, W. Hanley, of Jasper. For Prosecuting Attorney, Reuben Hess, of Newton. REPRESENTATIVE TICKET. Jasper and White Counties: John T. Riggs, of Jasper. CONGRESSIONAL TICKET. 10th. District. Will R. Wood, of Lafayette. MARION TOWNSHIP TICKET. For Trustee, Harvey W. Wood, Jr. For Assessor, True D. Woodworth. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Brown and hesister, Miss Mildred Dunn, of Newland, went to Henry, IM, today, to visit relatives. Mr. Brown put out 12 acres of onions on a farm he had purchased and 'he sold the onions In the field to Ed Oliver, realizing a good profit on them. This dhows Mr. Olivers faith in the onion business and Mr. Brown was well pleased, also, with bis transaction. FOUND—The surest method of making a sale; advertise in The Republican elauified eolttmn.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Laraway, of Kankakee, Z III, were guests over Sunday otMr. and Mrs. C. H. Mills. Mrs. Mills and Mrs. Laraway were college acquaintances prior to their marriage. Al Rishling came home this morning from a trip to Rossville. His daughter, Miss Emma, who is a milliner, went to Indianapolis to spend a week in the millinery shops preparatory to the fall season. Clip out the nominating coupon in today’s paper and fill it out for your favorite candidate, and also clip out the voting coupon and cast it for your favorite. It is valuable. Do it now. Leonard Elder, who had been at Franklin for the past week, went to Milwaukee on a business today. He says there was a fine rain at Franklin and all oyer that part of the state Sunday and that there was also p good rain there last Friday. Harry Green -will play “The Town Fool,” here, Thursday, Aug. 13th. Band concert night. This will be the last time Harry will be here with the play. Next year ‘The Hoosier Fair.” Don’t forget the date, Aug. 13th, and it’s on band concert night. Clerks’ Union EXCURSION TO . LOUISVILLE SUNDAY. AUG. 16 Low rates and special train as follows: Dv. Rensselaer 5:00 am' $2.00 Lv. Pleasant Ridge ..5:19 asm 2.00 Lv’ McCoysburg 5:24 am 2.00 Lv. Lee 5:29 am 2.00 Lv. Monon ..s:39inm 2.00 At. Louisville 12:30 am Returning, special train leaves Louisville at 9:15 p. m. Sunday, Aug. 16, 1914.

CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS A LOUISVILLE RT. Chicago to Worthwest, XndlanapoUa Cincinnati, ana the South, KouisvUls and Wrench Uck Springs. wwwwrsrr.aira TXMn TiiT.i In efleet May 3, 1314. NORTHBOUND. No. 36 . 5:27 am No. 4 4:59 am No. 40 7:3oam. No. 32 10:46 am No. 38 3:15 pm No. 6 ......3:44 pm No. 30 7:06 pm SOUTHBOUND. No. 35 12:15 am No. 31 7:41 pm No. 37 ". 11:20 am No. 5 11:05 am No. 33 2:01 pm No. 39 6:12 pm No. 3 11:10 pm Nos. 37 and 38 stop on flag »t Parr on Saturday. Auto Bus to Remington. am P™ Lv. Rensselaer 7:46 3:30 Lv. Remington .9:30 5:38 Phone 206 - C. L MORRELL