Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 194, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 August 1914 — Page 4
PICTURE OF FORMER PROGRESSIVE LEADERS OF INDIANA WHO MET JULY 30, 1914, TO FORMULATE PLANS TO ADVANCE INTERESTS OF REPUBLICAN PARTY.
©N July 30, 1914, at the Hotel Severin in Indianapolis, a large number of representative citizens from all over Indiana, who were Progressive leaders in 1912, met in conference with Will H. Hays, Chairman of the Republican State Central Committee. As a result of this conference a “ COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED ” was formed to take a vigorous part in aiding the Republican campaign. This “ COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED ” issued the following open letter, signed by them, which is most earnestly recommended for the careful consideration of the suffrage of the state: . THE VOTERS OF INDIANA: In 1912, for reasons which we deemed sufficient, thousands of Republicans voted other tickets. W Thpsp reasons no longer exist The organized protest against methods and men, but not against principles, was effectual. The purpose of the third party is accomplished. The present duty nr i, r ;i o „p tWp who fins nrotest is now apparent, and thousands upon thousands have joined again the Republican forces for sure and permanent progress, and of th has again demonstrated its 1 utter incapacity to conduct the governmental affairs of this country. The Democratic administration at Washington is a signal failure—a cataclvsin of Derverted purposes and broken promises. The Democratic state administration in Indiana is a tragedy of extravagancies—its tax levying and ;debt-making activities measured only ? s Tn its ypjil to snend the neonle’s monev, laws are signed, published and enforced which never were enacted — a state s^disgrace. b U To change these conditions in state and nation is the absolute duty of every good citizen. To the Republican party now as in the past we turn for deliverance. On the practice of its princinles denends the preservation of our institutions; on its success depends the country’s welfare. The Republican party is the only one effectual instrument in this country to apply to wrong !w£.!m£r.ernnditimis the wisdom of exDerience and the efficacy of honest, zealous service. There neither is nor can be any other possible agency. we appeal to men of all political parties and to those others, who with us, in 1912, for any reason, voted the Progressive ticket, now to join with us as Republicans, in the great reunited effort to bring again to the country the prosperity to which it is entitled and to Indiana again the efficient government which we deserve., The solution of the situation is a matter of patriotism. Let us aid. not obstruct—all “that no harm shall come to the Republic.” , . ’ . . - ;
Rensselaer Republican DAILY AHD SEMI-WEEKLY ■ MI I T ft CLAKX PuTjU«her* fEB riXSAT ISSUE 18 BBOULAE WEEKLY EDITION Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1. 1897, aa second class mall matter, at the postofflce at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act of March 3, 1879. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, as second class mall matter, at the postofflce at Rensselaer, Ind., under the act of March 3, 1879. BVBBCumon bates Dally by Carrier, 10 Cents a Week. By Mall, 53.60 a year. Semi-Weekly, In advance, Tear, $1.50. Tuesday, August 18, 1914.
Classified Column BATES FOB CLASSIFIED ADS. Three Unas or less, per week of six issues of THe Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, !6 centa Additional space pro rata. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Two sows and 10 pigs. Henry Platt, Phone 419. FOR SALE—IO tons of clover hay. 7 miles southwest of Rensselaer. A. | W. Pruette, Remington, Ind. FOR SALE—Plums. —Phone 380. FOR SALE—Buffet, hall tree, small heating stove, kitchen' cabinet, folding go-cart, baby bed, springs and mattress.—Dr. W. L. Myer. FOR SALE—IO acres of land and improvements, mile north of town. James Hunt, Phone 142-A FOR SALE—Spring chickens.— Mrs. N. J. York, Plhone 160. FOR SALE—Auto has, in good repair. C. L. Morrell, or the Main Garage. FOR SALE—Maxwell special touring caT, 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.—Ma/in 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, 5441!. FOR SALE—A 5-acre improved tmct near the corporation of Rensselaer, suitable for truck and poultry Harm; lote of fruit; well shaded, and an ideal place to live. Of 11 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 tor sale cheap.—Harvey Davisson. FOR SALE—lSOacre 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, ... FOIT SAL? OR TRADE—6-yeab old mare wRh colt by side,—Elmer Daniels, Rensselaer, Ind,,
STATEMENT OF THE “COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED”
FOR SALE—IOO acre farm, 5 miles east of Medary ville, in Pulaski county, Indiana, on public road, R. F. D.; 80 acres black sandy land; 25 acres in cultivation; dredge ditch crosses one corner, furnishing splendid outlet; fair barn, small house. Price $4,500; $1,500 cash, balance long time. C. E. Whicker, owner, 206 Peoples Trust Bldg., Ft. Wayne, Ind. FOR SALE—I plush davenport, 6 or 8 heavy oak dining chairs, 1 new kitchen cupboard, glass doors, 2 stands, 2 commodes, 2 wooden bed steads, 1 pair springs and 2 mattresses, 1 rocker; all cheap if taken at once. (Mrs. H. A. Cripps, opposite Catholic church.
WANT HD. WANTED—SchooI girls to board. Mrs. Mark Reed, Phone 539. WANTED—dip out all voting coupons, sign Mrs. Luella Golden, and take or send to Republican office.—(Mrs. Luella Golden, WANTED—One room to store household goods. Mrs. Sarah Miller. WANTED—Ppslition by trained nurse. Cleo Martin, near cement tile factory. WANTED—Work of any kind, preferably on a farm. J. T. Karsner, Box 54 or Phone 288. - LOST. LOST—An Irish crocheted baby hood, between Dr. English and Harry Kurrie’s. Return to Republican office. Mrs. Walter English. LOST—GoId watch, open face, near Makeever House. Short chain with Masonic charm attached. Return to Ed Oliver. LOST—Child’s blue sweater coat, between Catholic church and Catholic cemetery. Please return to Walter Feldhaus and receive reward. Phone 501-H. MISCELLANEOUS. ESTRAY—2 steers about 3 years old, strayed from Lawler Ranch, near Fair Oaks, Ind.; finder please phone any information to 542-G, Fair Oaks, Ind. Maurice Gorman, Foreman. STRAYED—From the .Halligan farm northeast of town, a bay mare 12 years old, weight about 1100. Finder please call 514-D or notify thi9 office. 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. Hollingsworth; office in First Natl. Bank building. FOUND—Two boy’s new work shirts. Inquire here. FOUND—At ball park, an umbrella; inquire at this office. TO EXCHANGE—BO acre farm 3y 2 miles of Medaryville, Ind., good buildings, 50 acres in crops, fairly well tiled, on stone jwffd; -want residence in Rensselaer. J. Davisson. 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. Just received, a fresh supply of typewriter ribbdns, at The Republican office. * Y 1 . FOR RENT—Rooms for high school girls. Mrs. Rachel E. Scott:
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, INP.
Dessie and Bethel Rutherford are visiting in Monticello. A. F. Long is a business visitor in Chicago today. (Mrs. Eckstrom is spending the day in Monon. Mrs-. James Yeoman left today for a visit with her daughter at Lebanon. Little Wanda Mead went to Lafayette today to visit her aunt, Mrs. Robert Johnson. Mrs. M. J. Burr went to Monticello today to visit her brother for a few days. Phone 273 youi feed orders. We can take care of you.—Hamilton & Kellner. The girls’ card club will meet on Wednesday evening with Miss Charlotte Kanne. Charles Sternberg, who has been looking after his dredging interests here, returned to Chicago today. See us for wagons, Iron, wood trucks, and extra wagon beds.— Hamilton & Kellner. Mr. and Mrs. Van Grant and Billy and Martha went to Chicago today for a visit with friends. . iThe Loyal Daughters will serve ice cream and cake on the court house lawn Thursday evening. Miss Marie Heckaman, home now is at Bremen, is visiting Cora Bruner and other friends. (Miss Margaret Halligan has gone to Mudlavia to nurse her sister, Mrs. A. E. Delouest, who is taking treatment at the springs. For any itehiness of the skin, for skin rashes, chap, pimples, etc., try Doan’s Ointment. 50c at all drug stores. The city has received lumber for the new floor of the Washington street bridge and the work of relaying the floor will begin at once Cheapest accident insurance—Ur. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil. For bums, scalds, cuts and emergencies. All druggists sell it. 25c and 50c. Theodore George went to Chicago this morning with a party of prospective purchasers of Canadian land. Mr. George accompanying the party to Canada, but will remain in Chicago the remainder of the week. Coffee and teas have advanced from 2c to 5c a pound. We have a good stock on hand and have made no advance, and are selling at old prices. JOHN EGER. Hi The Rensselaer Chapter Eastern Star are to be the guests of the Roselawn chapter Wednesday. The ladies will leave here on the milk train and Ibe met at Roselawn by the chapter there, and will be taken to the Kankakee river in automobiles, where a picnic will be held on the banks of that historic stream. They will return home on the evening milk train. A glorious time is anticipated. - Dr. Rose Remmek, whose office is • over Jessen’s jewelry store,’calls attention to the fact that all glasses procured from her are not only properly fitted tor defects of eyesight but are examples of what perfection in optical grinding means, and are always made in exact conformity to correct the defect as found by examination. Ask her for a- further explanation.—Adv.
INDIANA HORSE SHOW GROWING IN QUALITY
State Fair Night Feature Includes Natiello’s Great Baud. With the richest prizes it has ever offered, amounting to $5,984, and with a national reputation among owners of the fanciest stock, the Indiana State Fair night horse shows during the week of Sept. 7, will be on a more spectacular and dazzling scale than at any time in their history. Among light harness and saddle horse owners the Indiana Fair has -won first rank not only because of the generous prizes, but because of a superior coliseum and barn facilities for showing their stock, and there is further incentive to exhibit at the Indiana Fair because of the publi<? appreciation bestowed on these night shows. While this department of the Fair has been increasing in its wealth of horses, the attendance has been annually growing until the night shows now are better than at any time in their history and are annually expanding in quality and in public attention. The best show stables of the country will be represented in the State Fair arena, musical programs of high order will be given, and the parade of horses and cattle, a lavish featutre which rivals the greatest live stock shows of the continent, will combine in making the coming night shows of unusual splendor. Contests of roadsters, runabouts, carriage pairs of high steppers, tandem, four-in-hand and business teams, the prizes for which amount to $2,605; events for five- and three-gait-ed saddle horses, high school and other fancy steppers, with prizes amounting to $1,925; more than SI,OOO in prizes for ponies; contests for men and women equestrians, assure a horse show program each evening of wide variety. One of the choicest pleasures of these evening displays will be the concerts by Natiello’s band of forty-five men, with a number of famous instrumental soloists, and a feature of the band concerts will be the singing ly the Natiello quartet. * The Indiana State Fair will be prolific in amusements of many kinds during the week of Sept. 7, chief among these attractions being the vaudeville bill Jhat will each afternoon be given before the grandstand during the races, the variety being greater than heretofore offered. One of these stellar attractions will be the Royal Namba Japanese troupe of acrobats in contortions, perch balancing, equilibristics, head-walking and foot-juggling. The Mengean troupe of society acrobats will perform wonderful feats of ground tumbling. The Flying Devals will give a comedy casting act, including double hack somersaults, twißtjng double somersaults from catcher to catcher, and a series of comical acrobatics on a bounding trampoline. Differing greatly from all of these will be the Forbes-Cameron troupe of Scotch bagpipers and dancers, who in Highland costume will give flings, reels, jigs and Irish dances. The State Fair “midway” will again overflow with entertainment in the form of carnival shows of many kinds. The official management of the fair -will be in the hands of the following: President of the Indiana state board *bf agriculture, Clem Craves, of Bunker Hill; vice-president, Warren T. McCray, Kentland; secretary and treasurer, ' Charles Downing, Greenfield; department superintendents, admissions. Charles W. Hickman. La-
fayette; grandstand, comenus tJ-urieu, i Lawrenceburg; speed, Charles H. An- | thony, Muncle; horses, Warren T. McCray; cattle, Oscar Hadley, Indianapolis; sheep, John L. Thompson, Gas City; swine, Mason J. Niblack, Vincennes; poultry, John Isenbarger, North Manchester; art, Samuel F. Spohn, Goshen; horticulture, John C. Haines, Rockport; agriculture, L. B. Clore, Franklin; mechanical, Ed S. Tuell, Corydon; concessions, S. O. Dungan, Indianapolis; coliseum, Dan C. Reed, Attica; amusements, Knode Porter, Newcastle. California’s walnut growers will this fall ship a total of 10,529 tons of the finest and largest walnuts ever grown in the state. The crop is the greatest in history, according to the report of the California Walnut Growers’ association.
THE MILLS OF MINNEAPOLIS.
In Thirty Years They Have Made 1$ the World’s Chief Flour City. Budapeet Wfti at one time known in the world as the Flour City, but ale&g In 1678 a young town on the headwaters of the Mississippi then famous for Us prairie dogs and buffaloes had a lawyer for a cltleen who made use of the natural waterfall in the Mississippi to operate a flour mill. This small beginning pew to such vast proportions, says the Bakers Weakly, that it soon beoame necessary to build a mors modern Byßtem, and the Budapest system was adopts ed. Such other millets as Plllsbury, Crosby, Christian and Dunwoody had by this time come to this young city, and in a few years It became the flour city of the world. This city was Minneapolis. To-day 120,000,000 bushels of wheat are ground in one year into flour In Minneapolis. In the age of Pericles the swiftest flour mill In Athens produced two barrels of flour in one day. There Is one mill in Minneapolis which fills 17,000 or 18,000 barrels In one day. What the Greeks did In one day Minneapolis does in ten seconds.
The Coming Countries.
Southern America and Africa are the coming countries. A half century ago or more the great geographer, Arnold Guyot, predicted that within two or three generations the reaction of the east upon -thje west would produce an equilibrium, and that then the reaction of the north upon the sonth would begin in earnest, and the grjeat streams of population and traffic would flow at right angles to those which they have followed during historical times. With the increase of population and a control of mankind over the forces of nature, of which Prof. Guyot could have had no conception, the Increase of exchanges beitween north and south seems likely tb begin sooner than he could have anticipated.
To Inter-Ocean Readers.
The Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican and Chicago Weekly In-ter-Ocean and Farmer may still be obtained in combination at $2.00 a year. This rate will be In effect until October 1, 1914. The Weekly Inter-Ocean and Farmer is not affected, except beneficially, by the purchase and consolidation of the Chicago Record- 1 .Herald and the Inter Ocean by James Keely. The familiar features will remain unchanged and under the same editorship. Improvements will be made. In short, the Weekly Inter-Ocean and Farmer will be better than ever.
TIPPECANOE COUNTY FAIR LAFAYETTE Thursday, Aug. 27 Special train will run as follows; Lv. Rensselaer 7:45 a m $1.90 Lv. Pleasant Ridge 7:56 1.70, Lv. MeCoysburg ....8:04 1.60 Lv. Lee 8:11 1.50 Lv. Monon ....8:25 1.30 Ar. Lafayette 9:29 Returning, special train will leave Lafayette at 9 p. in., Thursday, Aug. 27, 1914. lr,ni:nij;iuinii CHICAGO. INDIANAPOLIS & LOUISVILLE RT. Chicago to Borthwest, Indianapolis Cincinnati, and the Sonth, LoulpvlUe and P ran oh Dick Springe. KGXSSELAEB TIME TABLE. In effect May 3, 1914. NORTHBOUND. No. 36 5:27 am No. 4 4:59 am No. 40 7:30 am No. 32 10:4$'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 1 11:10 pm Nos. 37 and 38 stop on flag at Parr on Saturday. Auto Bus to Remington. am pm Lv. Rensselaer ............7:45 3:30 Lv. Remington 9:30 5:33 Phone 206 - - C. L. MORRELL
CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. Tin Kind You Han JUwap Sought
v Agency For Root’s Bee Hives and Supplies GOODS SOLD AT CATALOGUE PRICES Saving Tou the Freight LIMITED SUPPLY CARRIED IN BTOOK Ask for Free Catalogue 4 ‘"A ... + Leslie Clark ■ Republican Office.
