Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 140, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 June 1919 — Page 4

Tires Tires Tires Firestone Michelin Goodyear Goodrich Brunswick _ ' .... • . • . - Tires and tubes in stock all the time. Prices right. Central Garage Co. Phone 319

MONON ROUTE Train Schedule Effective March 30, 1919. NORTH . 2 27 a ,n 4:34 a. m. 35 2.Z7 a. In - 4.™.. >4x^4—a>- ■— ,6—a- nu 40 7:SO atn *7 11:18 a. m. 32 10:36 a in. 33 1.5< P. nt 38 2:51 P. m 39 5:50 p. m. : 3*31 n m. 31 7.31 p. ro. U Mo pl mi 3 tl:10 p. m.

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY AMD BLMI-WEEKLY. CLABK A HAMILTON * - Publishers THS FBIDAY ISSUE IS BEOUIAB WEEKLY EDITION. Setnl-Weekly Republican entered Jan. t 1897, aa second class mall matter, at the poet office at Rensselaer. Indiana. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1 I £97, as second class mall matter, at in# post office at Rensselaer. Indiana, under the Act of March 3. 1879. MATES FOB DISPLAY ADVEBTISING Dally, per Inch *6c Sewi-Weekly. per Inch • • ...-18c SUBSCBIPTIOM BATES. Dally, by carrier, 10 cents a week. By mall. 15.00 a year. Semi-Weekly, year, in advance. 12 00. BATES FOB CLASSIFIED ADS. Three line* or lesa, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of the Semi-Weekly Republican. 25 cents. Additional space pro rata. CABBIEB BOYS. Carl Arnott Hopkins Brothers ..... ... . Raymond Lynge : Herman Van Lear Thomas Dpnnelly v Morgan Lynge

CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Kitchen cabinet and table and large size sanitary couch. All or any ait a bargain for quick sale this week. Call 423 white at once. FOR SALE—Hay derrick and pull rake. James Amsler. ’Phone 933-D. FOR SALE—City property. Philip Blue. ’Phone 438. ' FOR SALE—A late 1917 Elgin six automobile in A-l condition*'Leonard Rajal. ’Phone 902-C. FOR SALE—New piano, duet bench; dark oak. P. W. Horton’s music store. FOR SALE—Four brood sows, to farrow middle of August or first of September, bred to registered spotted Poland China boar. E. L. Bruce, ’Phone 925-C. FOR SALE —A five passenger touring car, in first-class condition. Must be sold at once, cash or note. See John Braddock at Scott Brothers’ Harness shop. " FOR SALE—Seed and table potatoes, $1 and $1.35 per bushel at my farm. H. P. Callender, route 1. FOR SALE —Team of mules, 7 and 8 years old. Also harness and dray wagon. Hugh Kirk. FOR SALE—Two five-passenger Fords; one roadster, one good trailer. ’Phone 90. J. K. Smith. FOR SALE—Recleaned seed buckwheat. Charles Erb, R. F. D. 1, McCoysburg, Indiana. FOR SALE—Ford touring car, in good condition. ’Phone 107 or 130. FOR SALE —Mechanics, attention! I will sell one and one-half tons of' junk, shaped like a National speedster, but needs some work. Guaranteed to run. Make me an offer “as is.” Hugh Kirk.

FOR QUICK SALE—Ford touring car, electric lights and starter, winter top, Hassler shock absorbers, new tires, other extras. $475. Hugh Kirk. FOE SALE—Have you seen the sample of the portierre in the G. E. Murray Co. window? If not, better call and see it, as it will be there for a short time only. Orders may be given G. E. Murray or Mrs. Anna Wilcox, Parr, Ind., ’phone 907-E. FOR SALE—Read and run. A Mannon *32 roadster. A very serviceable proposition. Hugh Kirk.

WANTED WANTED—District managers for all secbions of Indiana. Old lino stock company. Liberal accident and health policies for all wage-earners. Special policy for women employed, housewives and farmers. Liberal terms to representatives. Write today. National Casualty Co., Detroit, Mich. WANTED- —=A position by thigii school graduate. Lucy Mauck, Rensselaer Garment Factory. WANTED Eight good, husky Hoosiers to shovel gravel and torpedo sand. Wages $4 per day or 15 cents a yard for 20,000 yards. Work to begin at Dyer in about ten days. Pierson Bros., 1622 West End Ave., Chicago Heights, 111. WANTED —Dishwasher at Makeever hotel. Jay Stockton. WANTED —To buy small safe in good condition. ’Phone 296 or 462. FOR SALE—Bee supplies. Order now and be prepared for the spring flow of honey. Ask for free catalog. Leslie Clark, at the Republican office. FOR SALE—WeII improved 80acre farm on improved stone road, eight miles east of Rensselaer, two and one-half miles fffom McCoysburg. New improvements, large, commodious house, barn, double cribs and other buildings. All well fenced, thoroughly tiled and on rural mail routs. Fred Linback, Pleasant Ridge.

WANTED—Hides. Will pay 17c J per pound. Roth Bros. WANTED—To buy 20 acres and up with buildings. Write full particulars, price, terms. Bailey, Hammond, Ind., 151 Fayette street. WANTED—Your specification for your oak lumber. We will be sawing soon and can get out your hard wood lumber in any size and quantity you desire, E. P. Lane, phone 537_ ■ WANTED —Girl to assist in general housework. Call ’phone 425. Mrs. Harriett Overton. WANTED—At the local market at Ed Herath’s place of business, some home canned fruit and meat fryings, 25 pansy plants, 3 dozen celery plants. If anyone will be so kind as to bring these, please bring them to that place by Wednesday or Saturday night. Your payment for same will be insured. If you desire cans returned, put your name on them; if not, add price of cans to fruit lost LOST—Automobile tire, 30x3 G. tread. Return to Herath oil stA* tion. Alex Hurley. LOST—May 31st, between Mt Ayr and Roth Bros.’ farm east of Rensselaer, a little girl’s wine-colored serge coat. Leave ait Republican office or telephone 916-J. Willard Tanner. LOST—Waterman fountain pen, between high school and downtown. Please notify Lucille Vain Hook. Telephone 938-A. MISCELLANEOUS MONEY TO LOAN—Chas. J. Dean & Son. MONEY TO LOAN—6 per cent, farm loans. JOHN A DUNLAP. NOTICE TO WATKINS PATRONS—MaiI orders will be promptly filled. Write for prices. Terms C. O, D. Address Nick Monthaan, Knox, Ind.

GAS 24c ' Standard and Indian j Main’Garage 1 THE BEST IN RENSSELAER i Phone 206 -

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, BENBBELAER, INDIANA.

WAN’S EVER-FAITHFUL FRIEND

Evangeline Booth Eulogizes the Services Which the Horse Hat at All Times Rendered. Evangeline Booth, the gifted comirtniiiler of the Salvation army, in Kilter and Driver, pays a beautiful tribute to the horse. The horseless age which was predicted when the motor calm’, site says, has not arrived, ami never will. She continues: “From the very beginning of all things, through the march of ihe centuries in every sphere of life, the horse has occupied a significant place. In sport. In ail. in literature, in «ur, in peace, in commerce,in romance, in tragedy, sh drudgery, in love, in religion, In life jiml in death, this relit able, courageous, ever-raady-for-com-mand servant of man has proved himself a most potent factor. His fleet hoofs have flashed light from the pebbled path of every his arched neck and tossing mane have taxed the skill of the ablest sculptor’s chisel; his attractive figure has made realistic tlie story of every class of literature — historic, fiction, fact and biblical; the delight of childhood, the willing slave of man. tlie sure trust of old age, this faithful ally'through all time has plowed the fields and hauled the loads and penetrated the wilderness and waded the rivers and with boodstalnefl flanks has carried the warriors in battle, and tossing snowy inane has borne the victor home through triumphal arch and a thousand times ten thousand when worn by toils and lack of food to a mere skeleton, has pressed on with his task with a patience, perseverance and a sweetness of temper that one could almost cal) divine."

HAS SQUIRREL WELL TAMED

Intelligent Little Animal Beguiles Tedium of Voyage for Naval Officer on Active Duty. There Is a certain very companionable little squirrel which belongs to an officer on a warship, somewhere in South African waters. She is a great talker —in her she Is always very careful not to talk when any one else is talking. Her master will call her down from her bedroom, and she appears with cheery little squeaks and gurgles. Then she waits. “Will you have toast this morning or milk?” is the question with which he greets her. ahd her answer is a decided chatter for a moment. When she stops, he goes on with the conversation, and she listens to him, with her little eyes full of Interest, for what he Is tilling her. Then comes her turn, and she talks a bit. She Is a very playful little squirrel, and she has never been known to lose her temper with her master, though sometimes In a romp, when she gets rather flurried, she bites a bit too hard. And, if her master gently raps her. she pretends to feel grieved about it. goes into a corner and sulks and all that he can do is to leave her alone until she wants to play again.—Montreal Herald.

Steady, Not Erratic.

It Is a good thing to have work done well and quickly by one person in an organization. But it 1s a far better thing to have that whole organization work together effectively, each one doing a part carefully and consciously, than to have an expert here and there setting the pace. ♦ It is safe tb say that any busines* that succeeds does so because the head Yif that business never forgets that he is working with human beings and not with machines. He does not expect them to do the impossible any more than he expects impossibilities of himself, but he does require of himself a certain amount of concentrated effort done at the right time every day. and he does require from all his office force the same effort and concentration. The best way to conserve energy is not by speeding up every once in so often, but by keeping engines fired at all time, ready to do the work at the right time and in the right place.— New York Evening Telegram.

Two Queer Strikes.

A one-man . strike occurrtjd in an Australian city. A prisoner in the town Jail, a tailor by trade, refused to work in the tailor’s shop on the plea that It would be contrary to his principles as a trade unionist, “unfair competition with his brother unionists outside." as he put It. He sent a letter to the tailors’ union, but as they took no notice he was condemned to three days’ .solitary confinement, during which he “continues! the strike.’ There was a strike of paupers once In a country poorhouse. They struck for new potatoes! They expected greens for dinner and. as there were none, they refused to eat old spuds’ They eve‘n declined to enter the dining room. The giiardlans prescribed a bread and water diet, with the result that at the end of 24 hours the inmates were ready for potatoes —new or old.

Macaroni Reigns Even In China.

The succulent Italic paste spreads far and wide. We learn from jfie United States commerce reports: The manufacture of vermicelli and macaroni in China is an enormous Industry and is carried on almost entirely by hand. Wheat, beans and rice are the principal flour used. At Chefoo the industry assumes greater propor-tiona-than anywhere else in China, and there the vermicelli is principally a green bean produet. Vermicelli Is eaten throughout all sections of the country. China exports annually about 15.000 tons of vermicelli <rf «U sorts. ~ ,

ORIENTAL LOVE OF BEAUTY

Flower* and Nature Have Always Figured Prominently In Their Paintings and Writings. The Orient was always fond of flowers. In primitive times the Arabs studied the big herbals of Byzantine doctors and scientists and copied flower after flower in their own manner; they loved them, but they were unconscious, of their beauty. When they wanted to adorn they only used the conventionalized form of the lotus and the arabesque flower consecrated by hundreds of years of tradition. Later on Chinese masters taught them the living beauty of flowers. In the Mongo) miniatures they study the blossoming almond tree and the Iris, but in the sixteenth century only they begin to love the flower for itself — to study each leaf, each petal, each line and each line of color. They show tlie same Intimate love for detail which inspired the landscapes of Behzad. Their landscapes are always like the poems of Hafiz —sunny, cheerful arid gay. Nothing more charming than these meetings of kings and princesses in tlie greens under richly embroidered tents with musicians and •lancers. And no difference If tlje artist paints one of the cruel bloody scenes of the antique “Shahnameh”; must It net he a wonderful feeling to bq executed by the order of the king in his illustrious presence, with rata'ners and maidens around, tlie sun shining, a soft wind covering your bead and shoulders with the pink petals of tlie almond tree in flower? The birds sfng sweeter than over in the trees. The touch of tlie cold steel is it f ter all only of passing moment and eternal is the beauty of sun. spring rind flowers. —R. M. Rlefstahl, in Asia Magazine.

SHOW SPIRIT OF FAIRNESS

American Gives English Writers Credit for One Attribute That Is Worthy of Praise. I btive frequently said the writers in England are superior to ours, particularly as to fairness and conservatism. The other day I ran across a review article criticising the general ignorance of the people about old and classical things. After proving- his point cleverly and effectually the writer proceeded to examine himself. He turned to the encyclopedia at random and took the first subject at the top of the page. He confessed he knew nothing about it. He did the same thing with many other subjects of classical antiquity. And this fellow is one of the best-educated men in England. An American writer would not have done that; he would have pretended to he thoroughly familiar with everything in {he encyclopedia, and wltheringly abused the people for lacking his great knowledge. The truth about old classical subjects is that most of them are buried in books and that few people know anything about them, for the reason that they are not of the slightest importance. • An Englishman is mean, but he has a lot of sense; and he will be reasonably fair, even if disagreeable with It. —E. W. Howe's Magazine.

Tints and Autumn Colors.

Everyone has seen and admired the hennHfnl colors of autumn leaves. but "Very few know anything about the why and wherefore. It has been noticed that in two trees of maples, oak or other trees, coloring In 1 autumn, of the same species, one will often take on much brighter color than the other. It should be remembered that, though there must be certain chemical combinations before any color cnfl.be produced, the act of producing is a vital one, and can only operate under vital conditions. If we cut off a branch of any tree in summer time and throw it aside, the leaves turn black or brown, and without any brilliant color; but if the branch be only half broken off or In some way injured the leaves will color, as If the autumn time hail arrived. This shows that coloring is connected with a check to vital power, short of Its total destruction. Hence, in the autumn, the tree with the greater vital power will color less than the other.

The Whippoorwill.

It is almost impossible to see a whippoorwill in the daytime because of the manner in which It sits upon a limb of a tree. It doesn’t sit crosswise. like other birds, but lengthwise of the limb. Its toes are short, but broad-spreading, and It can sit lengthwise on a limb better than it could sit crosswise, where it would have to clasp the limb with its toes like other birds. You may pass right under a tree where a whippoorwill Is sitting on a limb and never notice it —and it knows it will never be noticed, so It doesn’t become alarmed and fly out of the tree.

Why Diamonds Burst.

That diamonds burst is an old idea, which has been variously explained, It has been thought that the stones have been fractured by violent eruptions in the inclosing rocks, by sudden removal of pressure around them, or tn. the smoky specimens by spontaneous breaking up. Dr. J. R. Sutton concludes that the breaking usually results from the minerals inclosed. These may be garnet zircon, Ilmenite or iron pyrites, and such crystals, under ordinary heating at least, have so much greater expansion than the diamond that they would exert great pressure. ‘

Children Cry for Fletcher’s Uni Ul The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his perSjr sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow n 0 one to deceive you in this. AH 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 CASTO RIA Castoria 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 CASTORIA ALWAYS In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought TH« C «MTAUROOM NKW VOW K CITV.

Marine T. A. Caughman returned to his home in Bloomington today. Mr, and Mrs. Lewis Cavindish went ■to Chicago, where he will be employed. Electric supplies. Phone 113. Babcock Electric Co. .Harold Clark went to Chicago Sunday and saw the Cubs trounce Boston. Everything electrical. Phone Tl 3. Babcock Electrical Co. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hoferline re-' turned from Lafayette this morning. Mrs. Mary D. Eger and Mrs. Stella Ketchum and daughter went to Chicago today. Betty Royster, who had been attending DePauw university at Greencastle, returned to ’her home here today. J. W. Smith went to Lowell Saturday to spend Sunday with his daughter, Mrs. Andy Myers, and family. Electric wiring and supplies. Phone 113. Babcock Electric Co. Charles Landis, son of Mr. and Mirs. A. J. Landis, formerly of this county, arrived here today, having just been discharged from the army. Emil Hanley, of Purdue, spent the week-end with bis parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hanley. His school work closes this week. • The following went to Chicago on the early morning train: Mr. and Mirs. Frank King, Mr. and Mrs/John Mauk, Edd J. Randle and Michael Kuboske. This is national Boy Scouts’ week, and an effort will be made to induce thousands of young men to join the [ ranks of the scouts.

Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Eger and son left by automobile Sunday for Salem, (Ohio, where they will spend three weeks with relatives. The wife of Dr. Rr H. Robertson, dentist, of Remington, died Sunday at Rockville. The cause of her demise was tuberculosis. “The First of July is the Last of August,’’ says a sign over a West Hammond saloon. August is .tne proprietor. Mrs. Lowell Carey and little daughter, Dorothy, who had been visiting her parents, Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Kessinger, returned today to their home in Westfield. * W. A. Wellinghoff, who was here to visit his sister-in-law, Miss Elizabeth Spaulding, went to Lafayette today to enjoy the festivities of Fiirdue university this week, he being an alumnus of that institution. The expenditure of $185,000 for newspaper advertising during one monih of June in a campaign to secure recruits for the army, has been approved by Secretary Baker. Mrs. C. C. Newby and Miss Grace Haas went to Gary were joined Sunday by Newby and I* Verne Haas, of Chicago, for an over-Sunday visit with B. u. Oglesby and family. HEMSTITCHING Work done carefully and promptly- , CALL 420 EDITH WEST.

WE HANDLE O’RILEY'S Golden Loaf BREAD Frank Ro wen Rowles & Parker G. E. Murray Co. John Eger Ross Ramey Wright Brothers B. F. Barnes Rensselaer Candy Kitchen Ramey & Murphy

PROHIBITION RAISES RATES OF HOTELS IN THE LOOP.

Chicago, June 7.—Those who view with sorrowful anticipation the dawn of July 1 and national prohibition were given cause for more woe today. Chicago hotel managers today gaive notice that effective July 1, room rates and restaurant prices will be raised. Room rates will go up fifty cents to one dollar per day, and the restaurant prices accordingly. The reason is found in the jiesire of hotel owners to make up the decreased revenue which will result from the closing of the bars. The one cheering note in the lay sung by [ the bonefaces is that after July 1 i they will provide all the necessary ingredients for cocktails except the “kick.” Guests muM bring their own “kick.”

Harvey Davisson and the party of prospectors who went with him to the Rio Grande valley of Texas, have returned. Orville Lambert purchased 40 acres and Harry Hayes 20 acres. Vance Collins, who was with the party, is now in Kansas visiting relatives. Broom corn is now being harvested in the valley and corn is almost ready to husk. Watermelons and cantaloupes are being shipped to the northern markets. Mr. Davisson brought home a few of the cantaloupes and they are delicious. Fred Mecklenberg went to Gary Saturday. Anson Cox, of Chicago, was a Sunday visitor here. Paul Arnott went to Hamftnond this morning. C ASTORIA For Infants and Children , In Use For Over 30 Years Always bean ,j*L J** the Signature of