Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 268, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 November 1915 — Page 1

No. 268.

Tonight AT THE Princess “A LEAP FOR LIFE” in 2 parts A .“FAREWELL TO THEE” Reliance Comedy “JIMMIE ON THE JOB” American Beauty Comedy 5 and 10c

Hunting Deer and Other Big Game in Minnesota.

Emmet Pullins and son, Albert, and Len McCurtain have gone to Minnesota to spend a couple of weeks hunting deer and other big game. The season opened on Nov. 10th and will clos on the 30th. A dispatch from Duluth states that something like 2,500 licenses have been issued. It is expected that all will start at once for the north wood. A note of warning has been issued to hunters and they were advised to wear red caps and red coats. It is hoped that the Jasper county hunters get a deer or a moose each.

Dr. Turfler to Lecture Before Students of Osteopathy.

Dr. F. A. Turfler went to Chicago this Thursday morning and this afternoon will lecture to the students of the Chicago College of Osteopathy. His subject will be “The Far Reacning Effects of a Twisted Vertebrae.”

Here’s New Vigor for Overworked Stomachs

Your money back if you want it is the way in which B. F. Fendig, the popular druggist, is selling Mi-o-na, the great dyspepsia remedy. This is an unusual plan, but Mi-o-na has so much merit and is so almost invariably successful in relieving all forms of indigestion that he runs but little risk in selling under a guarantee of this kind. Do not be miserable or make your friends miserable with your dyspepsia. Mi-o-na will help you. If it doesn’t, tell B. F. Fendig that you want your money back and he will cheerfully refund it. A change for the better will be seen from the first few doses of Mi-o-na and its continued use will soon start you on the road to perfect digestion and enjoyment of food. Mi-o-na has been so uniformly successful that every box is sold under a positive guarantee to refund the money if it does not relieve. What fairer proposition could be made ? >B. F. Fendig gives his personal guarantee of “money back if you want it” with every box of Mi-o-na that he sells. A guarantee like this speaks volumes for the merit of the remedy.

Second shipment of cotton and woolen blankets now in stock. Look them over at Rowles & Parker’s.

If it’s Electrical let Leo Mecklenburg dolt. Phone 621

Cea anil Bee Taxi Service Rensselaer’s new Taxi Service is now in operation. All city drives 10c. To the college 15c. Long distance drives at reasonable rates. Phone 360. Location Nowels’ Restaurant E. M. BAKER, Proprietor

The Evening Republican.

CHICAGO AFTER THE NATIONAL CONVENTION

W. B. Austin Named On Hamilton Club Committee That Will Try to Get G. O. P. Convention. William B. Austin, of Chicago, formerly of this city, a former president of the Hamilton Club, of Chicago, the largest republican club in the United States, has been named a member of the committee that is to try to land the republican national convention in Chicago. The chairman of the committee is Fred W. Upham.- Others on the committee include Mayor William Hale Thompson, George T. Buckingham, Joseph H. DeFrees, Charles S. Deneen, Guy Guernsey, P. J. O’Keeffe, George M. Reynolds, Edwin W. Sims, James W. Stevens and Homer A. Stillwell. The Hamiltonian, a monthly magazine published by the Hamilton Club, publishes a splendid picture of Mr. Austin and gives a page to the reasons he offers as to why Chicago should be chosen for the republican national convention. The reasons assigned are: Chicago is the ideal convention city. It is conveniently located. It has ample hotel accommodations. It is splendidly equipped for the care and entertainment of delegates and friends. Its climate is ideal —it is free from excessive heat. It is the home of the strongest advocates of genuine Republicanism. The Hamilton Club, the most influential and active Republican club in the United States, is located there. Chicago’s best citizens are actively interested in bringing the convention there.

Glass of Hot Water Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit

Open sluices of the system each morning and wash away the poisonous, stagnant matter.

Those of us who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise;'' splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, lame back, nasty breath, acid stomach, lame back, can, instead, both look and feel as fresh as a daisy always by washing the poisons and toxins from the body with phosphated hoi water each morning. We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to flush from the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day’s indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract before putting more food ineo the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate and hot water on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast and it is said to be but a little while until the roses begin to appear in the cheeks. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will cost very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to make anyone who is bothered with biliousness, constipation, stomach trouble or rheumatism a real enthusiast on the subject of internal sanitation. Try it and you are assured that you will look better and feel better in every way shortly.

Annual Christmas Bazaar.

The ladies of the Presbyterian church are busy making preparations Cor their annual Christmas bazaar. The ladies have decided to hold their bazaar in the dining parlors of the church on Wednesday and Thursday, Dec. Bth and Bth. The ladies have been industriously at work and many fancy and useful articles will be for sale. Persons will dp well to visit the bazaar for their Christmas presents. Special for Saturday, Nov. 13, men’s $2.00 wool union suits, all sizes, at $1.69. See them at Rowles & Parker’s.

RENSSELAER, INDIANA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1915.

John Casey Has Taken Up Quarters In Soldiers Home.

John Casey, of Fair Oaks, has taken up his residence at the national sol•diere’ home at Marion. He went there last Friday after transacting some business in Rensselaer. He did not reach the home until 9:30 at night, but was assigned to Barracks 7 in Ward 2 and had a good night’s rest. John Thornton and William Chilcote, two old residents of this city, are both at the home. He says that he is permanently located there but will continue in the “Boditone” business.

He says that A. B. Crampton, the governor of the home, has made a number of changes, cutting out red card pass and permitting the soldiers to come and go as they please so long as they behave themselves. He says the soldiers dine sumptuously three times a day. They dress at five thirty in the morning, eat at six thirty, have dinner at twelve and supper at one table at five thirty and the other at six. He says everything is nice and convenient, the soldiers are sociable and agreeable and generally the men are fine. John says that his birthday will be Nov. 25th, which is Thanksgiving day and that turkey, cranberry sauce and many other good things are to be served. The weather is fine and some of the old soldiers are pitching horse shoes and others walking through the beautiful grounds. There is a mistaken idea with some people who seem to believe that a soldiers’ home is a military prison where soldiers are abused and starved to death and simply come here to die. That is an erroneous idea and John says: “We have every convenience and the very best sanitary conditions, witjs rules for health and cleanliness.” In closing John wishes to be remembered to his friends and old comrades. A letter to the National Military Home, Marion, Ind., Barracks 7, Ward 2, will reach him.

Sufferer from Indigestion Relieved. “Before taking Chamberlain’s Tablets my husband suffered for several years from indigestion, causing him to have pains in the stomach and distress after eating. Chamberlain’s Tablets relieved him of these spells right away,” writes Mrs. Thomas Casey, Geneva, N. Y. Obtainable everywhere. C Bad coal is the ruination of domestic bliss. If you want a happy home life try our range and heating stove coals.—Harrington Bros. Co.

WEATHER. Fair and colder tonight and Friday.

Franklin Is Popular ■ u . . ■■■—. ■ YOUNG MAN MAKES MULTITUDE OF FRIENDS IN EACH CITY. Eccentric Character Says His Remedies Are the Cause of His Popularity and Make His Friends—Thlks of Work Here and Elsewhere. Franklin New Discovery, the medicine which is causing such a furore among Rensselaer people and which is being introduced here at the Larsh & Hopkins drug store and at the Ellis Theatre is practically a new remedy. It was Irst introduced by Mr. Franklin some few years ago, and during that short time has made him a fortune. His method of introducing the remedy is unusual, to say the least. Franklin is noted for his philanthropy and his regard for the poorer class of people and insists on traveling as he does in order to come in closed contact with the people of small means whom he wishes to benefit. Although very busy, Franklin this morning gave gve minutes of his time to a discussion of his work in Rensselaer. He was asked: “Mr. Franklin, how do you account for your extreme popularity in cities you visit and the immense amount of interest you arouse so quickly ” With a smile the young man replied: “Any popularity which I may acquire while traveling is not by any means due to myself personally. All success which has come to me I attribute to my good fortune in having obtained the formula which is used in preparing Franklin Herb Extract. It is not on account of any special liking for me that the people come asyou see them coming now, but it is simply l owing to the fact that this medicine which I am introducing here helps sick people, and the sick man or woman who has been benefited is the most grateful person in the world. “We who are well cannot realize what days and weeks and months of suffering mean. Good health, after all, is worth more than anything else in the world.” The Franklin office is located in the Kurrie block, upstairs over The Republican office; a registered physician is in charge; office hours 10-12 a. n* and 2 to 4 p. m. and 7 to 8 evenings. The Franklin man will have his free entertainment® every evening this week, starting at 8 o’clock. Everybody welcome. Show at the Ellis Theatre.—Adv.

Great Club Stands By Mayor Thompson in Crisis.

Probably no effort ever made in the cause of law enforcement attracted wider attention than is being given at this time to the effort of Mayor William Hale Thompson to compel respect of the laws of Illinois in the Sunday closing of saloons. Great newspapers have failed to give him endorsement and doubtless many of his friends have lacked the courage to stand by him and say by their actions “We are wilftng to help.”

Preachers, to be sure, and many of the good people have applauded the act and fearlessly announced that they will stand by the mayor but counting room cowards have slunk away. It is encouraging to find that a great club like the Hamilton has the respect for law to give endorsement to the mayor and the November issue of The Hamiltonian says:

“Mayor William Hale Thompson is the republican mayor of Chicago. The Hamilton Club is a republican club, and its candidate for mayor last spring was william Hale Thompson. The Hamilton Club stands by Mayor Thompson and supports him in every step for law enforcement, and will always Stand by him in any movement to enforce the law, and to fulfill his obligations as mayor of Chicago.” In the news columns the magazine records that Mayor Thompson and some forty friends were entertained by Col. Charles E. Blayer, a life long friend and that at the dinner the “Sunday Closing Order” was discussed and that the speeches were all in favor of the mayor’s law enforcement plans. Mayor Thompson spoke not in his own defense but as regards his duty and he said: “Sunday closing was a serious step. I realized some of my closest friends would be injured and that it would injure some men who are doing a great work for Chicago. I did it not because I had any puritanical ideas, not because of any particular ideas on the wet or dry fuestion, but when the proposition was put up to me that this was the law and the laW was not obsolete, I had but one course to follow. * * .* It was called to my attention that when foreign-born saloonkeepers went to take out naturalization papers they were asked if they kept open on Sunday. If they said ‘yes’ the court said: ‘Your papers are denied; you are not fit to become a citizen because you are violating the law.’ “We don’t post-mqrtem any questions that come to the city hall on the basis of “Will it get votes for Thompson?’ or ‘ls it a good political move?’ Our basis is: ‘ls it the law and is it to the interest of the city?’ ”

T. M. Callahan Married at Rantoul, Ill., Wednesday.

Hhomas M. Callahan was married to Miss Caroline Louise Sturdyvin, of Rantoul, 111., Wednesday of this week. Cards sent out by the bride’s parents reached this city today. They state that Mr. and Mrs. Callahan will be at home in Rensselaer after Jan. Ist. After their marriage they left on a wedding trip and it is understood will reach here the last of this week or the first of next. Mr. Callahan has recently made extensive improvements to his residence property on Cullen street, erecting a fine new porch and installing a heating plant. The many friends of Mr. Callahan will welcome himself and bride upon their return.

DRUGS EXCITE YOUR KIDNEYS, USE SALTS

If Your Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers, Drink Lots of Waiter. When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don’t get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the -kidneys and irritate the entire urinary tract Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your .bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which removes the body’s urinous waste and stimulates them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of water—you can’t drink too much. Also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts. Take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to dean and stimulate clogged kidneys, also to'neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot injure, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and backache.

Crown Point Is Going to Plan After Rensselaer System.

Several weeks ago Mayor Krost and other officials of Crown Point paid a Sunday visit to Rensselaer to investigate our fire fighting equipment and our system of alarms. Mayor Spitler and other city officials entertained them and they left with a very favorable impression of our system and our hospitality. They have now decided to adopt the same system we have here, including a combination wagon, an iron gray team of horses, the same system of alarms and the plan of having the driver of the fire wagon live over the engine house. They are building a new engine house and a 5-room flat above. Crown Point -is to be commended for adopting our system, which has proven entirely satisfactory here. Rensselaer should begin to think about a city building to replace the very dilapidated one which now serves as engine house and residence for our team driver. Of course, when that is done, a city hall should be combined with it and a building that is a credit to the city erected. The high taxes that have been unavoidable for reason of many other improvements have prevented action along this line, but it is a matter of so much importance that it should not long be delayed.

Mrs. Nelson Sanders Has Left Shoulder Broken Tuesday.

Mrs. Neson Sanders, formerly Mrs. Clemmons, of near Surrey, had her left shoulder broken Tuesday. She was returning from town and had stepped out of the buggy to open the gate and the horse started up and ran against her, knocking her over and breaking her shoulder. Dr. Gwin was called and reduced the fracture.

“HZ" FOR TIRED SORE, ACHING FEET Ah! what relief. No more tired feet; no more burning feet, swollen, bad smelling, sweaty feet. No more pain in corns* callouses or bunions. No matter what ails your feet or what under the sun you’ve tried without getting relief, just use “TIZ.” “TIZ” draws / Angl'd out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet; A r > “TIZ” is magical; “TIZ” is grand; "TIZ” will cure your foot troubles so you’ll never limp or draw up your face in pain. Your shoes won’t seem tight and your feet will never, never hurt or get sore, swollen or tired. Get a 25 cent box at any drug or department store, and get relief 1 Good Irish potatoes 15c a peck. HOME GROCERY. ‘

The one best all-armind gun—for ducks, geese, foxes, for trap shooting and all small game —is the 12-gauge, 6-shot , I marlin === The Safeat Breech-Loading —■—ms— —a Gun Built. Bb CL t4llllllllWIIIIIIIII!llinilllUlli™ For snipe, quail, partridge, woodcock, squirrels, rabbits, etc., the 16 or 20 gauge has the fol game power of the 12-gauge without the weight. getter! It’s a fine, quick gun of beautiful proportions, superbly , balanced, with every up-to-date feature: Hammerless; Send 3c postSolid Steel Breech, inside as well as out; Solid Top; Side age for complete Ejection; Matted Barrel; 6 Quick Shota (Sin 20-gra.); catalog of al! Marlin Press-Button Cartridge Release; Automatic Hang-Fire repeating rifles and shotguns. Safety Device; Double Extractors; Take-Down; Trigger w z , >» and Hammer Safety. It’s Just the gun you want 1 //iff /WZW/r/z/Wffl’Zßf (A, 12-16-20-Ga. Repeaters with Visible Hammer, $21.60 42 Willow St. New Haven, Conn. iuiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiinininmmimmminiiiimiimmmimiiiiinimiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiutmiMiimmtHffliiiHi

Get Ready for Winter | The one best way to get results from your K storage battery this winter is to let us tell you how. Come in any time. m K. T. RHQADES & CO. J Free fhepectibn •/ any battery at any time j O. L. Calking Leo Worland. CALKINS & WORLAND Funeral Directors Parlors in Nowels Block across from the postoffice. New combination auto ambulance and funeral car. Expert services guaranteed in all cases entrusted to our care. Mr. Calkins is licensed as funeral director and embalmer in both Indiana and Illinois. Phones 25 or 307

W. RICHARDSON DIED IN LANSING, MICH.

Aged Former Resident of This County Passed Away Monday at Home Of His Son. Washington Richardson, whose age would have been 90 years on Dec. 18, died Monday night in Lansing, Mich., where he had made his home for the past four and a half years with his son, M. D. Richardson. He was an old resident of Jasper county, having come here fifty-nine years ago and lived in Walker township for eleven years. He then moved to Michigan, but returned to this county at times to visit his children and for some time just prior to going to his son’s he lived in this city. He is survived by four sons, M. D. Richardson, of Lansing, Mich.; George M. Richardson, of Kingman, Kans.; Thomas J. Richardson and L. O. Richardson, of Oradno, Neb., and one daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Kaub, of Watertown, Wis. His funeral will take place at Pioneer, Mich., and burial made beside his wife and little son, Albert. Another son, William, and two little daughters are buried in the Smith cemetery in Barkley township. Mrs. Kaub went from Watertown to Lansing Tuesday and George M., of Kingman, arrived there today, but the other sons at Orafino, Neb., wired that they could not attend the funeral.

Mr. Richardson will be remembered by many in this county and when he left here that he could not be spared for many years all will learn with regret of his death.

Her Son Subject to Croup.

“My son Edwin is subject to croup,” writes Mrs. E. O. Irwin, New Kensington, Pa. “I put in many sleepless hours at night before I learned of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. Mothers need not fear their disease if they keep a bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy in the house and use it as directed. It always gave my boy relief.” Obtainable everywhere.C

MLLE. ZARA NEW YORK’S FAMOUS Mi Palmist and Clairvoyant Has just returned from Europe where she met with remarkable success foretelling coming events. This wonderful woman can tell you all about your business and love affairs; anything you woud like to know. SPECIAL OFFER Bring this ad and 25c and Mlle. Zara will give a $1 reading; or for 50c and this ad a $2 full life reading. You will fin dher at the home of Mrs. E. L. Clark, on Van Rensselaer street, from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., including Sunday.

VOL. XXX.