Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 128, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 May 1915 — Page 4
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Classified Column BATBB FOR GIUkMXraDB AM. Three lines or lean. per week of six •sues of The Eveulu< Republican and wo of The Semi-Weekly Republican, it cents. Additional anace pro rata. TOK SAUL FOR SALE —A fine residence property in Fair Oaks, 10 lots and improvements. Call on or addess John Casey, Fair Oaks, Ind., Box 56. FOR SALE—A yearling steer and a good 5-year-old draft horse. Also two cows. —E. S. Thornton, Phone 902-F. FOR SALE—3O,OOO feet of good oak lumber, inch pieces all widths and lengths. Also 2x6 and 2xß, all lengths. Prices right.—J. Beiler, R. D. No. 2, Fair Oaks, Ind. FOR SALE—A Bowser gasoline tank, new and second hand bicycles, tires and bicycle repairs.—J mes Clark. FOR SALE—Unless called for in 30 days, we will sell 1 Yale twin motorcycle for charges. Ownership lies between Hugh Nelson and Lawrence Blacker. —Main Garage.
FOR SALE—Two 1914 Ford roadsters, A-l condition. Frank Hill, Jr., Phone 494. FOR SALE —A fine lot of recleaned Hungarian seed, free from weed seed, $1 per bushel.—J. M. Yeoman, Phone 915-D. * FOR SALE —120 acres good farm land in Barkley township, can be sold in 40 acre tract and 80 acre tract or all together. George A. Williams, over First National Bank. FOR SALE—lndian gasoline, the world’s best quality, now retailing at 13 cents.—Schroer’s Garage, Central Garage, Main Garage. FOR SALE—A good Jersey cow, 4 years old, giving good flow of milk. Will be fresh again next Feb.—Sam Lowery, Phone 951-G.
FOR SALK—22O acres improved Newton county land, lour miles from market. 160 acres under cultivation and best tiled quarter in veetern Indiana, balance meadow and timber pasture. Fair improvements. Price |75 per aero for quick sale. Reasonable terms to right party. Il interested write or wire J. A Wells. Aledo. ELL FOB SALE—Pair of draft colts. —Philip Heuaon. WANTED. WANTED—B or 19 calves and two or three cows that will be fresh soon. Inquire at Makeever house, Phone 197. WANTED—FamiIy washing to do at home. Mrs. M. Ward, 2 houses e-st of W. H. Beam’s on Elm street. WANTED—Man to work on farm. W. H. Pullins, Phone 934-H.
WANTED—A job of clearing off underbrush and dynamiting stumps, etc. —Wm. Bowsher. WANTED—Fat bogs for market. Phone 400.—A. W. Sawin. WANTED—FamiIy washings, will call for and deliver.—Mrs. John Albertson. WANTED —Auto livery, experienced driver, will appreciate a share of your patronage. New auto.—Schroer Garage, Phone No. 78. MISCELLANEOUS. Gall phone No. 577 when you have any old rags, magazines, rubber, copper and brass to sell Highest price paid and right weig-c. Rensselaer Junk Buyers, Sam Karnofsky. FOB BENT. FOB BENT—FIat over McKay’s laundry.' Inquire of Geo. H. Healey. E. C. Maxwell and son will begin their garbage collection next Monday, having received sufficient encouragement to start. All should join in and help this splendid means of sanitation and disease prevention. We are, this week unloading a car of nice Michigan, round, white, rural potatoes, for late seed or table stock at 60c a bushel. John Eger.
Prof. C. A. Tindall was a Chicago visitor Saturday. Miss Lulu Rowen, of Parr, visited relatives here over Sunday. W. R. Shesler was down from Chicago Heights over Saturday and Sunday. Miss Verne Britton went to DeMotte today to attend the Memorial service. Parker Overton was down from Hammond to spend Sunday and Memorial day with relatives. Ora Lambert, of Elwood, came yesterday to visit his brother, Orville Lambert and family for a few days. Fred Daniels, of Sioux City, lowa, came several days ago to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Korah Daniels. William R. Burch, of lowa, is visiting William Burch and old Indiana comrades for a few days.
Homer Hopkins, of Monticello, was here yesterday to visit his aged mother and attend the Memorial service. Mrs. J. M. Wasson went to Berwyn, 111., today to spend several days with her daughter, Mrs. Albert E. Coen. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Newman and little son, of Tolono, 111., visited his son, Harry, last week, returning home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Cooper, of Monticello, were Rensselaer visitors yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Tuteur, of Chicago, came Saturday and wiM remain until this evening visiting Mrs. Anna Tuteur and family. Joe O’Connor came down from Hammond and remained over Sunday, Mrs. O’Connor accompanying him home this morning. Will Price, of Otterbein, visited his parents here yesterday and this morning accompanied his father to Parr to spend the day. x Mr. and Mrs. Hurley Beam came down from Chicago yesterday to spend two days with her mother, Mrs. C. George, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Beam.
Mrs. Wm. Porter came down from Hammond Saturday evening to visit with her new granddaughter, Dorothy Gertrude, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harve J. Robinson. John Bissenden was down from Chicago over Sunday, visiting his brothers, Albert and Tom. He is working for the Illinois Central railroad, having a job in the waiter department. • * « IJMI Mrs. B.*F~Edwards and three little daughters and her mother, Mrs. Kathryn Rowen, of Pontiac, 111., are visiting her sister, Mrs. J. H. Long. They came to attend the Memorial exercises and the commencement.
Fred Hartman, who was injured last November at the college and who suffered a slight stroke of paralysis last December, has been failing considerably of late and is able to be out only a part of the time. CASTOR IA Mr Infanta and ChUdron. » Um KM Yu Hm Ahuj»Bought Da— ths Btgnfrs of i Try The Republican's Classified Column if you want results.
Have Been The luFIVIbV Postponed And Our CLEARANCE Sale Has Been Continued on Account of the Weather. Only 5 More Days Ending Next Saturday.
Don’t miss the great opportunity to get some of our rare bargains in dishes. Remember that this will positively be the last general discount on these this year.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
Dr. John Ellis and wife, of Chicago, are spending a few days with his father, J. H. S. Ellis and old friends. Misses Ethel and May Clark are home from Illinois Womans College at Jacksonville. Miss Jane Parkison, who also attends the same college, went for a.visit of ten days or two weeks with girl friends at Muihpreysboro, 111. Mrs. Eleanor Adams has rented her property, the former residence of Dr. Horton, to Ralph O’Riley and Walter Hopkins. The former will occupy the upstairs and the latter the lower part. E. L. Hammerton and family expect to either buy or rent a cartage. ** - Quite a number from here are attending the races at Indianapolis today. Mrs. H. F. Parker and her friend drove down in Mr. Parker’s Pope-Hartford roadster, Hugh Kirk going as driver. G. H. McLain, C. E. Garver, Max Kepner 'and Frenchy Deschand also made the trip by tar. Mrs. Nancy Payne, who spent the winter with Willis Pierson and family in Oklahoma City, came home about a week ago and visited her brother, Sheriff McColly and family until today, when she went to the home of her sister, Mrs. J. E. Alter, in Union township.
James Passons suffered a very light stroke of paralysis last Tuesday morning, his left leg and left arm being affected. He is able to be about town with the aid of a cane and it is probable will entirely* recover from the stroke. Mr. Passons is past 70 years of age and served during the war as i member of the 46th Indiana Infantry. Among the old soldiers who attended the state encampment at Marion last week were Commander D. H. Yeoman, John Kresler, Whitsell Lewis and A. Simpson. J. W. Childers was there as the representative of the Sons of Veterans and Mrs. Childers as the delegate from the Relief Corps. Mrs. John Kresler and Mrs. J. Q. Alter attended as the representatives of the Ladies of the G. A. R. Mrs. Simon Leopold, who has been in Peoria, 111., for several weeks, returned here Saturday to remain for a week or two. She will then go to Crystal Falls, Mich., to remain with her daughter, Miss Selma, until the latter’s school is out, the last of June. Together they will then go to Woodmen, Colo., where Mr. Leopold is in the sanitarium. Encouraging word comes from Simon and indications are favorable for his complete recovery. Mr. and Mrs. 0. A. Yeoman, of Chicago, drove down Sunday to see John Guss and family, of near Virgie, and will spend the week in this vicinity. Orie has had a busy season in nursery stock, devoting most of his attention to selling trees aiui shrubbery and to landscaping. He is selling fruit trees also but mamly the lines above mentioned. Last week he handled a large job of landscaping at Michigan City.
Attorney C. M. Sands, who was appointed administrator for Qharles Fish, who died the middle of April, found among the effects of Fish an old bank book from the First National Bank of Lisbon, N. Dak., which showed a balance of $53. Charley had sufficient property to pay his funeral expenses and a little left over and Mr. Sands has been trying to locate Fish’s sister, Mary, who left this county some 31 years ago. Her present name is unknown. Another sister, Mrs. Lucy Clingan, lives at Roselawm, but knows nothing of Mary’s whereabouts. Information sent to Mr. Sands will aid in the settlement of the small estate.
All Curtain Goods 8c Up . ''s. Ladies' fine quality crepe de chesne tie with solid silk slide and tassel l ; Burchard's 5 and 10c Store Open Nights of Sale
MASTERFUL ADDRESS ON MEMORIAL DAY
Large Audience Crowded Christian Church Where Attorney Geo. A. Williams Gave Address. . .- ‘-'■l I Owing to the heavy rains which had fallen throughout last week and. the very heavy rain of Saturday it became necessary to hold the Memorial service indoors and the Christian church was chosen as the place. The various orders gathered at their halls and* then assembled at the court house and marched to the church, led by the band. Thirty-four of the old soldiers were in the parade. There were also members of the Sons of Veterans and the women’s auxiliaries and of the Masons, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias and Red Men. There was also quite»a number of Sunday school children in the parade. The service was a very excellent one, the address of Attorney George A. Williams being of deep interest and filled with splendid thoughts and a part of it is here given. The music was furnished by Misses Maud Daugherty and Esther Padgitt and Dr. W. L. Myer and Carl Duvall, with Miss Glen Day at the organ. Russell VanArsdel recited Lincoln’s Gettysburg address in a very able manner and Miss Kathryn Watson gave a splendid reading entitled "Appomattox.” Mr. Williams departed some in his address from the usual and ordinary style of Memorial day orations, and laid particular emphasis on the necessity for a better and broader citizenship in order that the nation might be worth the sacrifices made by, and the victories won by the veterans of the civil war. He emphasized the fact that Memorial day is, and should be, a day of worship, on which bhe citizens reconsecrate themselves to a life of service for their country. He said among other things that in 1860 our nation went down in the valley of decision. That the spirit and feeling which prompted the veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic to volunteer in the service of their country, and to offer their lives as a sacrifice on their country’s altar in order that the nation might live, and remain foreVer as a united nation, that this spirit and feeling was not an accident but was the result and development of long and serious thought and study and consultation at the fireside and in the homes and in the pulpits of the land, and was made possible by reason of the knowledge the citizens of those times had of their nation’s history. That in order fbr the present generation to realize and comprehend the importance of the great conflict it is necessary for them to become familiar with the history of their country. That if we would keep alive and perpetuate the spirit of patriotism which prompted the veterans of the civil war to offer their services for their country, it is necessary for us to read and think and study and contemplate more on the serious and more substantial affairs and things of life. That this spirit and feeling and kindred spirits are not born and cultivated and developed by the reading of light fiction, or by spending the time around card tables, or at other fryrolous social pasttimeg, but that such spirit is born, and developed and cultivated by thoughtful contemplation of the more serious things of life.
The speaker emphasized bhe fact that the battles fought and the victories won by a nation and by our own nation in the times of peace are as important and as influential upon
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the welfare of our nation, as the battles fought and the victories won in time of war. That while in 1860 and 1861 liberty called for defenders and said to the mother, “giwe me your son, the pride of your heart, and the solace of your declining years,” and to the wife, "give me your husband, loved and honored of your soul,” and to the maiden, “give me your lover, upon whom depends all your hope of happiness,” and that while the mother and wife and maiden bowed to these demands, that the nation today is calling for men and women to volunteer as soldiers in the fight for the solution of the great religious, moral, social and economic problems which present themselves continuously for solution. And that today the nation asks of our citizens that they give to the nation the full force, and strength and influence of a broad, clean, brave, Christian life. That our nation now probably faces a great crisis in its history by reason of the conditions and complications brought on by the great European war. And that while in these times the nation needs as its head, a strong, Christian man, that it also is important that the president of the nation have the support of a brave, loyal, Christian citizenship behind him. That the president would be just as powerless and as impotent to solve the great problems of the day properly without the support and aid of a loyal, Christian citizenship, as the great generals of the civil war w’ould have been to achieve victory upon the battlefield without the loyal support of the private in the ranks. In his concluding remarks he pledged to the surviving veterans present that in the future the citizens of our country would continue to celebrate Memorial day, and that in the future when the last of the surviving veterahs has answered the last roll call, and has joined the invisible army, that the citizenship of our country will continue to hold in sacred memory their lives and sacrifices which they made for their country, and will continue to strive to attain to that high plane of citizenship which shall make us worthy of the great benefits and advantages which we enjoy as citizens of a united nation, and that the spirit which prompted their sacrifices for their country may continue to live in their children and in their children’s children, and that mankind shall thereby progress and advance until the universal brotherhood of man shall be a reality.
-- I CHICAGO, DTOIAMArpMS » ▼ZX&B BT. Chicago to northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the lUutt, .Louisville and Breach Udh Springs. BKBBSBKaEB TIMB TAJNML . In effect April 11, 1915. SOUTHBOUND. No. 35 1:38 a m No. 5 10:55 am No. 8 U:10 P m No. 37 U:2O a m No. 33 1:57 P m No. 39 5:50 P m No. 81 .....[ 7:30 p m northbound. Na 36 4:48 a m No. 4 5:01 a m Nou 40 7:80 a m No. 82 10:36 a m No; 88 3:12 p m No. 6 3:81 pm N* 30 3:45 P m
PHOFESSIOMI CARDS DR. E. C. ENGLISH Physician and Surgeon Opposite Trust and Savings Bank. Phones: 17?—2 risgs for office: 3 rings for residet.ee. Bensselaer, Indiana. C. 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 211. DR. I. M. WASHBURN Physician and Surgeon Phone 48. | * -- -( - SCHUYLER C. IRWIN Law, Real Estate, Insaraace 5 per cent farm loans Office in Odd FeUows’ Block.
H. L. BROWN Dentist Crown and Bridge Work and Teett ■Without Plates a Specialty. A” ttu>’ latest methdds In Dentistry. Ges administered for painless extraction Office over , Larch's Bru* Store. Rensselaer, Indiana.
JOHN A. PUNLAP Lawyer < (Successor to Frank Folts.) Practice in all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. Collection department Notary in the office. Bansselaar, Indiaaaa JOE JEFFRIES Chiropractor Successor to J. C. Shupert Office Over Rowles & Parkeria Phone 576 Lady Attendant
E N. LOY Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. Homeopathist Ooce—Frame bulldin* on Cullen street east of court house. p omoi non aa. Residence College ▲venue, Phone !•» Xb4Ua**u
DR. F. A. TURFLER Osteopathic Physician Rooms 1 and 1, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. j Phones, Off-e—3 rings on SOS, rssM> dence—3 rings on Successfully treats both acute and ihronlc diseases. Spinal otirvaturea s ipedalty. {
GEORGE A/J* ILLI AMS Lawyer Special attention given to preparation of wills, settlement of eat ates. making and examination of abs tract of title, and farm loans. Office over First National B» .nk. F. H. HEMPHILL ~ Physician and Surgeon. — - ..... i tpoclal attention to diseases of "* wousm and lout grsiiu as favnxu Office over Fendig’s Drug St x>re._ iFalanhunn offiCß And 44* • . i i n ■! wn , wgai
