Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 239, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 October 1914 — Page 2

REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET

Far United State* Senator HUGH Th. MILLER Columbus Per Secretary of State JUDGE ED JACKSON Newcastle VW Auditor of State L NEWT BROWN Franklin For Treasurer JOB FREEMAN Terre Haute VW Attorney General KLE STANSBURY Williamsport VW Bupt of Instruction HORACE ELUS Vincennes Mr Supreme Court Judge QUINCY A. MYERS Logansport VW Appellate Court Judgea First District LUCIUS a EMBREN Princeton IKA C. BATMAN Bloomington Second District M. A. CHIPMAN Anderson u. 8. LBSH Huntington SHEPHERD J. CRUMP ACKER South Bend VW Clerk of Supremo Court WILL H. ADAMS —Wabash ~ For State Geologist HARRY R. CAMPBELL Indianapolis

REPUBLICAN COUNTY 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 •nd Newton Counties: For Judge, Charles W. Hauler, of Jasper. For Prosecuting Attorney, Reuben Hess, of Newton. REPRESENTATIVE TICKET. Jasper and White Counties: William L. Wood, 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.

NEWLAND.

The new storage is going up fast. Clifford Spate spent Sunday with Leonard Rees. N. O. Whitton returned from Hammond Saturday. Mr. Oliver is hauling onions to the storage with his oil pull engine. Mrs. Mary Enlow, of Lebanon, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Wm. Rees and family. (Miss Helen Phillips and Miss Philis Jones spent Sunday with (Miss Ermal Brown. ’ The boys’ Sunshine class and the girls’ Sunshine class had a picnic in Mrs. Jordan’s.'woods Thursday. Mr. aiyl Mrs. Luther Tow, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tow, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Walls, of Lee, and Lloyd Tow, of Seafield, spent Sunday - with their parents.

An A.d For Women The social season will soon be with us and you "will be want ing something in the jewelry line. Or perhaps you have something that needs repairing, or cleaning, or polishing up; bring it in and let us tell you what it needs, and how little it will cost. And while in the.store ju|t look over our stock and see if that other piece you are wanting is not waiting here for you. We want you to see our unew goods and prices, for we have arranged some excellent I values. P. W. ClarKe 'Rensselaer. Ind

DEVICE TO DETECT ICEBERGS AT SEA

Canadian Scientist Says Microthermometer Will Always Show Temperature Changes. REVEALS BER6S MILES AWAY Accidents Like That Which Was Cause of Tltantlc Horror May be Aver*, ted In the Future, Never Falling and Accurate. Washington, D. C. —Prof. Howard T. Barnes of McGill University (Montreal) has contributed to the literature of the Smithsonian Institution a paper on “Icebergs and their Location in Navigation.” "I wish to Impress the people the importance of the fact that the actual temperature of the water in the Ice track is no guide to the proximity of even the largest icebergs," says Prof. Barnes. "The experience of North Atlantic sea captains alone testifies to the uselessness of individual observations. It Is to the small variations of the temperturee we must look for the infallible guide, and by means of the character of these varieties we can determine the presence of ice, land or currents. “The exact position of an iceberg ahead of a ship in a fog is of the greatest Importance to determine. In general it may be said that an iceberg will make itself felt in the first place by the rapid rise of temperature as it is approached. In the immediate vicinity of the berg the temperature falls quickly. The first warning will be when the temperature begins to mount up the scale above the surrouning sea temperature. In regiosnns where icebergs are in close proximity, safe navigation will be found possible" (by the use of the microthermomtter) since no isothermal line can lead to an iceberg.

"The Icebergs met with in the North Atlantic each year are almost entirely derived from Western Greenland. Huge ice sheets are forced into the sea, broken off and set adrift as bergs. The ‘calving* of the bergs, as the breaking up is called, may take place in a number of ways. "Only a small percentage of the icebergs ever reach the Grand Bank and the routes of the transatlantic liners, so many delays and mishaps attend their journey. It is well known that many bergs seen in one season may have been produced several seasons before. Taking the Labrador current as ten mile per day, a berg, once formed and drifting freely, would make the journey southward in four to five months. "No part of the oceans of the world is of so much interest to mankind as the cold Arctic current—the Labrador current. It brings down the cold of the North to temper the heat of the tropics, and thus tends to equalize the temperature of the world. It is the home and feeding ground of the world’s greatest supply of fish, and supports more marine life than any other part of the world. It conveys each year southward the greatest menace to the navigator in the form of huge icebergs, and it influences the entire eastern coast of Canada. ,In spite of this, there has been little' study of this current “The result of experiments brings out several points of importance. The iceberg effect was clearly obtained when passing early In the afternoon in the ice track. The sudden change of temperature on passing out of the Arctic current into the Gulf Stream was clearly marked. The tests have shown that large variations of sea temperature are caused only by seme abnormal condition. Thus, land affects it, icebergs produce characteristic disturbances and current boundaries are clearly shown. “The icebergs all produced an effect on the instrument, even those passed at distances ranging from eight to twelve miles. The variation of the temperature as ice is approached is unmistakable, and this the mferethermometer has invariably indicated. Should the ice be found in a locality where variations due to other causes are found the iceberg effect is so characteristic and sharp that it will be superimposed in such a way as to be unmistakable." Mr. Barnes says that the microthermometer is never-failing and accurate; it detects the slighest change and indicates it.

TONS OF HONEY IN MOUNTAIN

Bees Use Giant Boulder for Honey Paradise, Aris. —There are tons of good honey within a short distance of this town, where honey is a luxury, yet it is impossible to procure it For years and perhaps centuries bees have nade their home in a huge rock on the side of the mountain near the Virtue mine. They have been undisturbed as no one has been able to figure out a way of getting at the sweets without blasting the rock and that would ruin the honey.

$10,000 IN TIPS; USHER QUITS

St Louis Union Station Attendant Resigns With Large Savings. St Louis Mo. —John M. Green head usher at the St. Louis Union Station, has saved 910,000 which he received in tips during the last ten years, he' told his fellow ushers, when he announced his resignation.

I -'k- ■ THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

PUBLIC SALE. As I have sold my farm and am closing out I will-sell at public auction at my residence, 3-4 mile south and !4 mile feast of Newland, at what is known as “Sunny Side,” on WEDNESDAY, OCT 14, 1914, the following property: f 4 ' 9 Head Horses— l Percheron stallion, 8 years old, registered in Percheron Society of America, weighing 1,800 lbs (special terms); 1 4-year-old brown gelding, wt. 1550, sound; 1 5-year-old gray gelding, * wt. 1400, sound; 1 4-year-old brown mare, bred, wt. 1350, sound; 1 5-year-old road mare, lady broke, bred; 1 2-year-old gelding, saddle bred; 2 yearling roal colts; 1 suckling colt. 3 Head Cows— l light Jersey cow, 5 years old, fresh; 1 2-year cow, giving milk; 1 spring Jersey heifer calf, bred. 18 Head Hogs—l Duroc sow and 6 pigs; Duroc boar, 1 year old; Duroc boar pig registered; Duroc sow; 1 black so w< farrow soon; 7 shbats, wt. 90 lbs. 60 White Leghorn chickens. ' Implements— Broad tire wagon, 1 single horse Studebaker wagon, 1 buggy, new Janesville disc, new riding cultivator, Moline sulky plow, walking plow, 1 2-leaf steel frame harrow, Deering mower, single horse harrow, new slat bottom hay rack, 16-foot; E. M. F. roadster, 1912 automobile, 3 sets leather work harness, good; 1 set light double harness; 1 set single harness. Hay and Grain—6 tons timothy hay in barn; 8 tons millet hay in stack; 600 shocks corn; forks, shovels, chains, etc. Other articles too numerous to mention Terms— A credit of 12 months without interest will be given on all sums over $lO, purchaser giving* note with approved security; sums of $lO and under cash in hand; 6 per cent discount where entitled to credit; 8 per cent from date if not paid when due. DR. WARNER STDENER. Col. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spitler, Clerk. Hot lunch on ground. GIANT SELLS HIS OWN COFFIN Undertaker Would Avoid Inconveni- ' ence to Friends. " s Birmingham, Ala. —Sam Foley, a Birmingham undertaker, is 6 feet 6 inches tall Several years ago, when he was ill, he had built a special giant coffin for himself. A few days ago a neighbor, an inch or two taller than Foley, was killed Nowhere could a coffin be secured to fit him. And so it came about that Sam Foley had to give up his coffin for the occasion.

i I IVorkman Unemployed. • i [ Idle Factories. ' [ Labor Disturbed. ■ J Sugar Going Up. J i ' Our Industries Ignored. • ’ [ Nobody Satisfied. J I •••••••••••••••••••••••••a

I Jdffj**Xß IA/m1 That’s what every one of our fl ■ IKP Wkl IK I I Iff I I customers that wears a Dr. I v V CJLJLMVU l.V| gA. Reed Cushion Shoe says: fl a B U “It’s like walking on air—my ■ t feet haven’t ached for ages!’’ fl fl ________ fl And we’re mighty sure that you’ll fl fl fl fl fl f fl fl fl fl say the same thing —if you wear fl fl fl fl ■ fl Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes for fl fl just one day. For they’re the easiest fl A fl shoes on earth. Nothing else like fl <». them for folks that walk much. They fl fit easily the first time you try them on. fl Dr. A- Udon And then the soft cushion insole shown in 1 d| (IS*** the illustration spreads into and fills the holJfl lows of your foot supports it with a cushion— TRADE Cho fl and distributes your weight so evenly that you walk * mark ** on t h e w hole sole of your foot instead of just the toes and heels. the secret of its comfort. That’s why people that wear. Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes J. P. Smith Shoe Co. J never sufler , from aching - burning feeu Why not drop in tomorrow and see the line Manu/actur«rs • CHICAGO we have—many new styles and comfort guaranteed in r . every pair. Will . you let us “show you” tomorrow 13,5-CUSHIOK • COMPRESSES UNDER HEELS. BALLS OFF LET ANtt toes f/ ? CUSHION SUPPORTS ARCIF\ CUSHION FILLS HOLLOW PLACES' |B. N. Fendig

BOY ATTACKED BY HAWK; FATHER SAVES HIS LIFE

.. f, 1 Parent Goes to Rescue With Ax After Bird Fastens Talons In Lad's Face. Milford, Del —A hungry hawk near-' ly killed a small eon of L. N. Horsey, a farmer near here. The bird was eating two chickens. Horsey started to get his gun. Meanwhile, his sen,! Kdward, 8 years old, ran into the poultry yard and threw snowballs at the hawk. The bird turned on the boy. It sank its talons into his face and began digging him with his bilk The ' lad fought back as best he could, but' the battle was all in favor of the hawk, j The youngster's screams brought his father with an ax. Horsey slashed ( the hawk and broke its wing. He finally killed it. ’f— ■

Measures His Money As Farmer Would Oats

Bridgeton, N. J. —Benjamin Bonham, a storekeeper of this city, has the 3 unusual hobby of collecting pennies. .Not only does he procure all of them he can, but he often .uses them in returning change to customers. He paid one bill of $44 in pennies, and , the persons who sought to buy postage stamps or small articles for the sake of getting a ten dollar bill cashed were often peeved by receiv- J ing their change in a paper bag —all, pennies. ‘ | Bonham measures his money as a farmer would oats —by the bushel. He declares he has a bushel of one cent coins and says there are exactly 58,042 of them. He counted them himself and enjoyed the experience.

PUBLIC SALE. •• The undersigned will sell at public sale at the Niles farm, 3 miles west and one mile south of Hebron, 8 miles east and one mile north of Lowell, commencing at 9 o’clock a. in., on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1914, the following property: 15 Head Horses and Mules—Consisting of one pair of matched brown horses, wt. 1250 and 1350; one extra good saddle pony; 12 head of mules, well matched and broken, wt. from 2200 to 2700 per span. 91 Head Cattle— Consisting of 46 cows, 36 coming 2-year-old Hereford heifers, 2 Hereford bulls; 1 registered and one good grade; 6 fall calves. 150 Head Hogs— 2s full blood Duroc sows, 2 registered Duroc boars, 100 head of stock hogs, from 100 to 150 pounds. Some good spring gilts and some good fall pigs. Farm Implements— s farm wagons, 1- grain binder, 1 corn -binder, 2 manure spreaders, 1 grain drill, 4 good sulky plows, 2 discs, 5 corn plows, 2 cornplanters, all kinds of hay tools, 8 sets of work harness, set of double driving harness and all machinery needed on a large farm; household furniture, etc. Free transportation from both Hebron and Lowell. All trains will be met. Terms—stfr and under cash in hand. All sums over $lO, a credit of 12 months will be given, purchaser giving note with approved security with six per cent from date if paid when due; if not paid when due 8 per cent interest from date. NILES & MCDONALD. Joe Hepp and Frank Strickland, Auctioneers. M. .1. Brown. Clerk. Hot lunch on ground

Minfature Malleable Given Away Free! On October 15th. See that Handsome Fac Simile of the. Great Mailable Range in Our Show Window , ... Some lady or girl over io years of age who registers at our store during this interesting contest will get this fine little beauty, which is perfect and in working order. All ladies and girls over io are entitled to register. Come in today. E. D. Rhoades & Son. The Home of the Malldable Range”

useful Dairy Notes.

If you haul your milk to the creamery invest $5 in a cover for your wagon. It will save its cost in a week. Dont forget to salt the cows. They need it now as much as tn the winter time. The big, raw-boned crib-like dairy cow is going out of style and the smaller, well-formed animal is asserting her superiority. Oliver Gridley, an lowa dairyman, uses a gasoline engine, a milking machine and lights the barn with electricity. He began with a few cows. A Wisconsin man fed one of his cows S6O worth of feed last year, and her pasture, feeding, milking and stabling cost $11.50 more, making her total cost $71.50, but she produced S9O worth of butter, $17.70 worth of manure, $1 worth of skim milk and a calf worth $5, making her total income sll4. Salting cows regularly has much to do with the ease or difficulty with ‘ which the butter will come. Let them have access to salt at all times.

PHOFESSIONfiI CM 0. E. JOHNSON, M. D. Office in Jessen Building. Office Hours—9 to 11 a. m. 1 to , and 7 to 8 p. m. SPECIALTY: SURGERY. Phone 21L Dr. L M. WASHBURN. PHTSXCXAH AMD BtrXGXOX. Phone 48. SCHUYLER 0. IRWIN ~ JAW, BEAXi ESTATE, XMffIJMZ XCE t per cent farm loans. Office In Odd Fellows* Block. _ H.L. BROWN ... DEXTUT. Crown and Bridge Work and Teotl Without Platea a Specialty. AH th* latest methode In Dentistry. Gas ad ministered for painless extraction. Office over Larch’s Brug Store. Rensselaer, Indiana.

JOHN A. DUNLAP LAWYEI. (Successor to Frank Foltx.) Practice in all courts. Estates settled. < Farm Loans. J 1 Collection department. Notary In the office. Bensselaer, Indian* Dr. E. N. LOY Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. HOMEOPATHIST. Office—Frame bulldin* on Cullen street east of court house. OFFICE FKOMM M. Residence College Avenue, Phone If* Mensselaer, Indiana. F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. FHYSICIAM AMD SUBGMOM. Special attention <o diseases of woman and low grades of fever. Office in Williams block, Opposite Cour* House. Telephone, office and residence, 441. DR. E. C. ENGLISH FHYSICIAM AMS SUKGBOM. Opposite Trust and Savings Bank. Phones: 17?—2 rings foi office; 3 rings for residence. Rensselaer. Indiana. J. W. HORTON Opposite Court House - Beneselaor, Indiana. ~ Dr. F. A. TURFLEB OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAM. r Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Offne—3 rings on 800, resilence—B rings on Successfully treats both acute and ihronlc disease? Spinal curvatures » specialty. JOE JEFFRIES Chiropractor Successor to J. C. Shuport Office over Rowles & Parker’s Phone 676 Lady attendant. If your stock of engraved calling cards is running low bring the plate to The Republican and ihave duplicates made. If you do not have engraved cards order them today.