Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 207, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 September 1917 — Page 4
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN bum Mro wxuucuy iDino* Beml-W*«kly RopubUcai. aßtered Jam. i UST, a second clbbb mail th. postofllo. In4l,na ' under th. act of March t> 117®* Kvanln* Republican entered Jan. L <ss7 aa second class man matter at thTpo“offlS « Rjnw.la.r. !“<*•• “ nder the act of March I, lilt. BITMTOIMWLATA»TI>™»9 Sroi-w'eekly; par'inch ...1314s o » The Evening Republican ana JT? of The sSi-Weekly R.pubhcsr, It cento. Additional snace pro rata. IUMCZUTIOI & ssruw **#. ?. ni Baml-Weeltly. in advenra, year. 13.00.
CLASSIFIED COLUMN for sale. FOR SALE— Thoroughbred pointer puppies, all papers furnished for registration. —L. E. Barber, Phone 538-White. FOR SALE —Turkey Red seed wheat, recleaned timothy se ® 8-16 Mogul tractor complete with 3 bottom plow, good as new; 2 young geldings, one school wagon, cornhusker. Would buy 29x40 inch separator. Phone Mt. Ayr 92-D. Joseph Kosta. ~~ FOR SALE —Scotch Collie male dog, 4 months old; pure bred. —Geo. Putts, Phone 954-C. FOR SALE —Six-foot oak candy case, barrels and boxes. —Bert Jarrette. FOR SALE —Six hot air furnaces at old price, either pipe or pipeless. Watson Plumbing Co., Phone 204. FOR SALE—Six fine ponies.— Walter Lynge, Phone 455, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR SALE —Six acres on pike just outside the corporation. Price $1,500. Geo. F. Meyers.. FOR~ SALE —Three Shropshire bucks. —Arthur Waymire, R. D. 2, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR SALE—Typewriter, Smith Premier just overhauled and cleaned by typewriter Co. Has new roller, shift, etc. S2O. —W. C. Babcock, Jr. FOR SALE—One pure bred Hereford bull, 4 pure bred Hampshire boars, 1 grey gelding 6 years old, brown mare 4 years old, both sound and good workers. Fred Phillips. FOR SALE—Threshing machine, 20 horse power, 36-60 separator, good as new. Cheap if sold at once, inquire at this office. FOR SALE—as I expect to locate in another state in the near future, 1 am offering for immediate sale 75 S. C. W. Leghorn yearling hens, pullets and cockerels at bargain prices. A Inn 2 Old Trusty incubators. Inquire of H. A. Callander, Barkley township. FOR SALE —The William Daniels farm, 200 acres, in Barkley township.—Koroh Daniels, Phone 299. FOR SALE —A snap, 160 acres pasture land, $20.00 per acre; located 2Vi miles from station in Jasper county.—Harvey Davisson. WANTED —hxperiencea man to build cement bridge immediately. Experienced man with references, to run Aultman-Taylor threshing separator. Experienced man to take Charge of cattle and be generally useful Apply personally.—J. M. Conrad, Conrad, Newton County, Ind. FOR SALE —Maxwell 1915 model. Or will trade for young live stock. Inquire of Philip Heuson. FOR SALE—Two stoves, one a base burner and the other a Round Oak wood stove, both in good condition. Call J. A. Dunlap. FOR SALE—Now is the best time to get your bee supplies and have everything ready for the swarming season. Get your new hives, supers, and all other supplies of Clark & Robinson, at this office. Call Phone 18 or 516 so. prices. A line of Root’s supv plies on hand at all times FOR SALE —12 cents each, 1 car load of white oak fence posts, 5 inch lip by 7 ft., iust received at Rensselaer. See B. Forsythe or Phone 287. FOR SALE —Beal bargain, improved 80 acre farm, new 5 room house, new barn, 3V4 miles from Wheatfield, Ind., $35 per acre. Will take live stock first payment, easy t«rm* on ha to nr <».—Harvey Davisson, Phone 246 or 499. FOR SALE—Ah staple sizes, No. 1 oak lumber, $12.00 to SIB.OO per m. 12,000 No. 1, white oak posts, 10c each All F. O. B. Tefft, Indiana. See T. H. Hayes, at Tefft, or B. Forsythe, Rensselaer, Indiana. WANTED. WANTED—Work by the day in city or on farm.—T. J. Monahan. Phone 160-Black. WANTED —Single man by month, permanent position. Phone 934-H. W. H. Pullin. WANTED —To rent four or five rooms at once. Phone 905-R. Werner Hough. v WANTED —Work on farm by young man, by month.—Glenn Mauck, R. D. IWANTED —To buy carload shipments of cordwood and stovewood. Write to Covey Durham Coal Co., 431 So. Dearborn St., Chicago. , ANTED—-Men and teams, silo work.—James Walter, manager J. J. Lawler Ranches, Phone 337. . ■ ■— ’
WANTED —Board, with or without room. Have changed my location toTyler property' on Weston St. Your patronage desired.—Mrs. J. A. Dunlap. FOR RENT. " for RENT—Oct. 1, My 8 room house on Scott street.—J. C. Gwin. FOR RENT—B room house in east part of town. See A. S. Laßue. FOR RENT—Good 8 room house, modern, % block from court hoyse. See Miss Grace Thompson or A. Leopold. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. Phone 258. FOR RENT —Business room, the whole second floor of my building on Washington street over Pallas Confectionery shop. Phone or write E. L. Hollingsworth. FOR RENT—Residence, 3 blocks from court house square.—Dr. F. A Turfler. —— FARM LOANS - FARM LOANS—An unlimited supply of 5 per cent money to loan. — Chas. J. Dean & Son, Odd Fellows Building. MONEY TO LOAN —5 per cent farm loans.—John A. Dunlap.
LOST. LOST—In Rensselaer, ’OB gold star. Will finder please leave at Republican office. —Leila Lilves. LOST—Between Frank Morrow’s and Rensselaer, leather vest. Return to M. V. Brown. MISCELLANEOUS. FOUND—Necklace. Inquire here. ESTRAY—Six ponies. Please notify Walter Lynge, Phone 455. E STRAY —Male hog weighing about 175 lbs. Please notify Arthur Waymire, Phone 953-D. FOR EXCHANGE—24O acres, fine improvements, located 1 % miles from station; to exchange for improved 80 acres.—Harvey Davisson. SMALL INVESTMENT SNAP!— Resident owner of about 20 acre farm home, V 4 mile from corporate limits of Rensselaer, desires to immediately borrow $2,000, Ist mortgage note, bearing 7 per cent interest per annum, maturing 3 to 5 years. This property is not for sale and is conservatively estimated to be worth better than 3 times the amount of this prospective loan. Address Owner, Postoffice Box 764, Rensseladr, Ind.
Dr. C. A. Fidler returned to his home in Milwaukee today after spending Sunday here with relatives. Misses Vera Healey and Lucille Luers went to Bloomington, Ind., today, where they will enter the university. Elven Duggins and daughter, Edna, returned to their home at Weston, W. Va., today after a visit of a week with Mrs. Thomas Florence and Jack Reeder. -
WRIGiEYS wvl\ lLsk I xr\<r* ! \ kWm Airmen in the great war are using WRIGLEYS regularly. Kt steadies stomach and nerves. It is pleasantly lasting in taste. Teeth set firmly in WRIGLEYS make sure of achievement. Our land and water forces are strong for it. And the home-guard finds refreshment and benefit in this economical, long-lasting aid to . . --i teeth, breath, appetite, digestion. , 754 . «• • —7— —. _J *• I L » THE f|lr IUI i p 5" AFTER FLAVOR LASTS EVER? MEAL*
THB EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND. ;
Peoria, 111., was dry Sunday, the first time in forty years. ( A twenty ounce loaf of Mother Hubbard bread for 19c at the HOME GROCERY. J. D. Bissenden returned to his home in Chicago today after a short visit with his brothers, Thomas and A. J. Bissenden, of this, city. Mather Hubbard bread, a large and better loaf of bread for 10c. HOME GROCERY. Harry English, son of Dr. and Mrs. E- C. English, has re-entered Indiana University at Bloomington, Ind.__He. is a member of the Junior class. Every sack of Matchmaker flour guaranteed satisfactory, $3.25 a sack. HOME GROCERY. L. J. Cummons, of Remington, who hai been with his wife and other relatives, returned Sunday evening to Rockford, 111., where he is employed as a painter on the government cantonments.
Anyone wishing to see me will find me in the Trust & Savings Bank on Saturday afternoons. —H. O. Harris, phone 134. Henry Baker Brown, president and founder of Valparaiso University, died Sunday evening at the age of 69 years, after several years in declining health. ■ - Watermelons for sale, 1 % miles north and 1 mile west of Parr.—Wm. Roudebush. Lieutenant Jay Nowels and Private Floyd Hemphill were home from Ft. Harrison to spend Sunday. It is their belief that the Indiana troops will be ordered to leave for Hattiesburg some time the latter part of the present week.
See Chas. Pefley for trees, vines and shrubs of all kinds. Guarahtee stock to grow or replace free of charge. For fall delivery. S. S. Shedd and J. J. Montgomery, in the latter’s car, drove to Oneida, 111., Sunday, where they will visit with relatives ,at that place. They will return by the way of Peoria, 111., where they will also stop for a short visit. They expect to be gone about four days. I am in business for myself opposite D. M. Worland’s furniture store and am ready to meet all/cars and all kinds of work. Batteries looked after, generators and starters fixed, radiators soldered and vulcanizing. We do expert work for the same price.—M. J. Kuboske, Prop. Rev. W. N. Sherrill preached to the people at the Aix church Sunday night. He was formerly pastor of this congregation. For the past two years he has been pastor of a church at Frankfort, Ind. He and his wife were in Rensselaer today. They will move from Frankfort to Dayton, Ohio, where he will take a three years’—course at the Bonebrake Seminary. Rev. Sherrill has already done six years of college work.
LISZT SPOILED BY ADULATION
Great Plano Virtuoso Never Employed ■ to Best Advantage the Great Gift That He Possessed. It Is only when we remember Liszts profession that we 6an read the riddle he presents. From childhood up, he was the idolized piano virtuoso. He was petted and adored all his life. He was smothered all his life under the adulation showered upon him in every capital of Europe, Showered upon him in every tangible form by women of the highest society. His was not a character profound or fine enough to right itself. He never managed to develop out of that' stage, to contact with truly nourishing things. On the •contrary, he became completely uprooted, came to exist entirely in thia modern Capua, came to love It and to crave the rose leaves and the clouds of perfume. His music is largely an inspiration toward it, an attempt to perpetuate about him the admiration and adulation, the glowing eyes and half parted lips, the heaving bosoms, It is a mechanism for procuring for himself the Pascha power he desired. Indeed, beside Liszt, Chopin seems a veritable anchorite. True, Liszt Interested himself In music for another reason. If it served to procure him the particular “place in the sun” that he craved, it furnished him also with a most engaging pastime. He interested himself In music as one might Interest oneself in a sport as one becomes more proficient in It. He studied Its rules, its teachings, Its tricks. With what keenness he mastered them his compositions show. But that interest was only minor. The other was the major.—Paul Rosenfleld, In Seven Arts Magazine.
FEW BIRDS SING IN AUGUST
Midseason Month Noticeable for the Absence of Music From Nature’s Feathered Creatures. < ■ Once upon a time when we had something to say about August we spoke on It as nature’s silent month, remarks the Terre Haute Star. Almost instantly we were reproved by readers who said that in August the locusts and some dozens of their kin made the month noisy, if not musical. Confessedly, when we wrote of August as the silent month, we were thinking of birds, not bugs. The song sparrow, the red-eyed vlreo and sometimes the ovenbird try to take from August Its value as a synonym for silence, hut of what account is the music of three when their thousand fellows refuse to sing? August Is the molting month and molting is a painful process. The birds do not feel like singing, and, mostly, they do not sing, but It is highly probable that they would not, even if nature were not insisting on a change of feathers. The reason Is that the season Is late. Housekeeping was nushed forward because roofs were xlkely to leak. August, however, for its main part, will hold its silent record. It Is the midseason and It shows forth together some of the beauties of summer and of fall. The. belated rose blossoms with the early aster and the goldenrod stands between. August has neither the full glory of burning July nor of cool September, but it shares in some small part of the glories of each.
Poets and Coffee.
Poets have neglected coffee; partly because poets are greatly under the Influence of tradition, partly because coffee Is a hard word to find a rhyme for; one had hoped that vers Libres would give scope to coffee lovers. But the vers-llbrettlstl and vers-llbrettlstae (those gentlemen and ladles who write poetry for the eye and the ear rather than for the intelligence) have been equally negligent. Philosophers do not care for breakfast. Kant took a pipe and a stroll for his morning meal, and If we were to Inquire Into the hamts of the extremely modern poets we should be likely to find that they are equally reckless of breakfast. I suspect them of gruel—or mutton broth. To return, as I have said, no poet has celebrated coffee. Shakespeare came too soon. Pope has a mere reference : Coffee, which makes the politician wise. And see through all things with his hairshut eyes. But in Pope’s day coffee was an affair of afternoon and company did not appeal to romantic sentiments as breakfast coffee does. —Henry Dwight Sedgwick in the Tale Review.
Why We
We should not, supposing each of them to render life as he saw it, quarrel with "Fielding, whose idea of cause and effect Is that: drinking ranges a man a fine, genial fellow, any more than with Zola, who wrote a book called “JL’Assommoir.” Actually “Tom Jones," since It Is a more filtered work —since It Is a product of the author’s experience of life, whereas Zola’s book Is a product, not of experience, but pf tabulations —“Tom Jones” will probably have a more persistent vitality. Jt Is a rendering of life as it is,such as it Is, a picture of manners. It interests because It excites our curiosity. After all, we most of us read because we want to know —because we want to know so many things.
Corrected Description.
* “Your boy tells me his father Is saying such queer things, Susan. Is he out of his head?” “De doctah, mum, says as how he Is delecterlous wlv de fevah, niUb*
Children Cry for Fletcher’s mW r a 1 d Lt z| wWff ■ ■ I ft w t * W The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne, the signature of and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. 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 CastoFia 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. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTO RIA ALWAYS In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Hava Always Bought
Miss Clara Jessen went to Chicago today. Rev. D. C. Hill went to Hanover, Ind., today. Mrs. Andy Overhalt went to Monon today. Miss Mary Thayer, of Brook, went to Bloomington, Ind., today. Mrs. John Herr returned today from a visit at Paulding, Ohio. Miss Jane Makeever went to Valparaiso today to attend school. Mrs. H. R. Kurrie will entertain her sew club Thursday afternoon. • ——————————— Mr. and Mrs. Noble York are spending the week in Chicago and Gary. Attorney William H. Parkinson and Earl Adams drove to South Bend Sunday nigh tin Mr. Adams’ automobile.
IF MOTHERS ONLY KNEW From 12 to 20 out of every 100 babies die the first year of life and most of these deaths take place during warm weather. Children’s diseases are usually caused by germs which enter the body through the mouth or nose. This is especially true of infantile paralysis. It’s easier and cheaper to prevent disease than to cure it. If mothers knew the value and importance of a good antiseptic used in the mouth and nasal passages of children they would never neglect its use. One so the bets antiseptics and Germ destroyers known is Glando Gargle. It contains the much known and highly recommended Eucalyptus which combined with other ingredients makes it of unestimable value in the home. Germs cannot breed where it is used reguarly. Glando Gargle is fine for teething babies. It relieves the feverish, swollen gums and makes teething easier. It is excellent for a cold in the head, hay fever, sore throat, sore mouth and catarrh. It is also a preventative of adenoids. Use it and you will have no regrets. Sold by druggists' or can be secured from the Gland-Aid Co., Fort Wayne, Ind. Price 50 cents.
Local Grain Market. September 17th— Corn—sl.7s. Wheat—s2.oo. Rye—sl.6s. Oats—ssc. . Today’s Produce Market. Eggs—3 sc. ————— ——— Springs—l7c. Hens—lßc. Butterfat —45c. Roosters —10c. CASTOR IA For infante aind CMMrai In Use For Over 30 Years Always bean toe aflitoiini nf
Storage Batteries ■ t RECHARGED AND Electric Starters Generators, lg“™“ Lighting Systems Eepaired and Rewired Rensselaer Garage Official Service Station for Vesta Doable Life Batteries.
Abe Moore went to Chicago today, where he will enter Morgan Park military school. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dart and Mr. and Mrs. Hague, of Sheldon, 111., are here today for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Levi Clouse. Donald Beam, who is a member of the naval band at Grant Park, spent Sunday here with his wife. Lee Adams is in Detroit, Mich., today and will drive through from that city in a fine new car he has sold. John Williams and family have moved on the Newton Hendrix farm just east of Rensselaer. Bert Nees is the latest purchaser of a Maxwall automobile, which he sceured through the Shafer agency. Dan Morrissey is spending a week’s vacation in New York. William Wells, of Chicago, is filling his place at the Monon depot. .
Under the direction of Captain Moses Leopold and Martin Sauser, about forty men received instruction in military drill at Milroy park Sunday afternoon. Considering the fact that the members of the home organization have had practically no previous military training, they are making very good progress and expect before the coming winter is over to be able to take the place of the former state militia. These home guards, which are being formed, are for the purpose of protecting the people during strikes, riots, etc., during the time the regular soldiers are away. Robert Loy Honored. Robert Loy, son of Dr. and Mrs. E. N. Loy, who is attending a military school at Marion, Alabama, has been made corporal of his company. He also made the band and glee club. This is a mighty fine start for Bob, a id we all congratulate him and feel sure that he will continue the good work. The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Clouse is reported to be quite sick. She is with her mother, who is in Gary visiting relatives, and is reported to have gotten hold of a box of tablets and have eaten a great number of them. - Born, Sept. 16, to Mr. and Mbs. Orange Criswell, of north *of town, a girl.
THE YELLOW BUS Rensselaer-Remington Bus Line .. 2 TRIPS DAILY Lv. Rensselaer 7*5 •“ Ar. Remington » a— Lv. Remington Ar. Rensselaer ®-55 •“ Lv. Rensselaer P" 1 Ar. Remington ....4:45 pm Lv. Remington 5:15 Pto Kr. Rensselaer Li’.w 100 P ”* >ARE 75c EACH WAT. BILLY FRYE- Prop
