Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 172, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 July 1919 — Page 4

MONON ROUTE Train Schedule Effective March 80, 1>1»NORTH SOUTH 35 4:34 a. m. 3& t” !2' 4 5:01 a. m. 5 40 7:30 a. m. 37 I J‘Z? *■ 2 1 ' 32 10133 a. xu. 53 P- y -» rtf p. m?— —HTTIFE: £ 3 3:31 p. m. ■ , ti 7:31 pt m. S« ♦-50’p.—tn. * 11M0 p. m-

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN MJDbT AWD rnr-awr ~ja w*>rn.Tor pabMahera. TKB HHD4T XMVB XB IEGULAS WS3KIT EDITIOK-Se’ni-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1 ’BO7, aa second class mail matter, at tie poatofflce at Rensselaer. Indiana. Evening Republican entered Jan. T. 1887. as second class mail matter, at the poatofflce at Rensselaer. Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1878. >ATBS ro* DISPLAY ADVERTISING Daily, per inch J* c Semi-Weekly, per inch lbc ■VMCBXPTXOX MATES. Daily, by carrier, 10 cents a week. By mail, |5.00 a year. Semi-Weekly, year, in advance. |2.o'i. MATES FOB CLASSIFIED ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six issues cf The Evening Republican and two of the Semi-Weekly Republican. 25 cents. Additional space pro rata CABBXBB BOTH. Carl Arnott Hopkins Brothers Raymond Lynge . .. Thomas Donnelly Morgan Dynge

CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE. FOR SALE —Two good building sites; one good lot 68 feet wide with fine (trees; three Other lots, 150 feet by 150 feet. —Williams & Dean. » FOR SALE —A bedroom suite, dining room table, sideboard, wardrobe, stair carpet, iron bed, two springs and two 9x12 rugs. ’Phone 210. FOR SALE —2 Vi acres of early onions, cash or trade. J. C. Benton, Newland, Ind., ’phone 922-G. FOR SALE—Overland 90 automobile, in good condition; new tares. Kuboske & Walter. ‘ _ FOR SALE—Four registered Shorthorn heifers, three have calves by side. Two calves are a week old. John Eck, Goodland, Ind. FOR SALE —133 acre farm, three miles of Rensselaer, lies next to S3OO land. Will be sold a big bargain. Harvey Davisson. FOR SALE—A genuine bargain, cash or easy payments. 1913 fivepassenger Oldsmobile in good running order. No better engine made that will turn the wheels in deepest mud or sand. ’PJrone 287 or see B. F. Forsythe. _ FOR SALE —Buy Stover gasoline engines at the Watson Plumbing company. ’Phone 204. FOR SALE —City property. Philip Blue. ’Phone 438. FOB SALE —40 acres. All level black land in grain. Well tiled, on atone road in sight of court house. Price S2OO. George F. Meyers. FOR SALE—Two lots on Milroy avenue, opposite Milroy park; also two lots on College avenue. Katharene Shields. FOR SALE —Reed baby cab, as good as new; frosted blue. Ralph O'Riley, 'phone 339. ... - - (■■■—,■ ————— FOR SALE —Two sows and pigs. Riley Tullis, 'phone 927-E. FOR SALE—I have for sale several farms, good soil, well located and with good improvements. Anyone of these places can be bought worth the money if bought now. Come and see them. Prices range from SIOO.OO to $150.00. Steady advance in prices. Delay will be at your expense.—P. R. Blue, Wheatfield, Ind. FOR SALE —Lumber and Slab Wood. We have a quantity of oak lumber and slab wood for sale at the saw mill east of town. See us for your wants in this line at once, the quality of both will suit you.— Smith & Bell, by Chas. Craig, Mgr.

WANTED ; WANTED —Second cook, good wages, good clean place to work. Charles Bibos, Rensselaer Candy Kitchen. WANTED Blackberries. Mrs. L. H. Hamilton, ’phone 68. WANTED —Giri for general house work- W. R. Nowels, ’phone 269. WANTED —Family washings to do. 'Phone 459 Black, Mrs. Dolph j Day. J WANTED—A girl for general housework. J. A. Dunlap, ’phone 66. ___ WANTED —Second cook at Makeever Hotel. WANTED—Married man wants to farm on the share, landlord to furnish farm -equipment. See W. .L. Wood, room 1, Odd Fellows’ ingWANTED —A Jasper county atlas. Harvey Davisson. _____ WANTED —Two loads of alfalfa or clover hay. J. D. Martindale, ’phone 178. WANTED — Sdme clover or alfalfa hay. Leslie Clark. t ; WANTED—At; once, two farm hands, to work by the day or month. John Sage, 'phone 258.

WANTED — For automobile livery call J. K Smith. J. K- Smith. Tele phone 90 or 491-Red. I WANTED —Property with two or three acres of land. Havrey Davis;«on. ■ : WANTED—A one-story, five or six-room house. Must be close in. Harvey Davisson. ' '■ WANTED —We wish to contract for sound milk for delivery to Englewood, Chicago, 11l- We will be steady buyers and will pay for the coming nlonths $3.00 per 8-gaLon can, f. o. b., Englewood. Will pay cash if requested. Z. & S. Cream'ery Co., 6800 Yale Ave., Chicago, lIL > FOR RENT FOR RENT—Suite of rooms over the postoffice. Gan be used for offices or living quarters. E. L. Hollingsworth. 'Phone 320 or 77.

LOST LOST OR STOLEN—Girl’s bicycle. Notify R. D. Thompson. ’Phone 277. LOST — Boy’s grey overcoat, between Trust and Savings bank and Lew Robinson’s farm east of Rensselaer. Finder please notify ’phone 946-C. LOST OR STOLEN —Beagle female hound. Liberal reward. Notify F. C. Cavindish, Newland, Ind., 'phone 922-B. LOST—Black Hampshire sow with white belt, in Newland marsh, July 9. Reward SIO.OO. ’Phone 922-1, Adam Fletcher. MISCELLANEOUS MONEY TO LOAN—o per cent, farm loans. JOHN A DLNLAP. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas. J. Beau & Son. MADAM —Before having your sewing done, get my prices. Plain sewing, children's school clothes preferred. Mrs. Nada Cuffle, first house nortih of old tile plant on Jackson Highway.

Jean Tyner went to South Bend this forenoon. Hi Dr. J. Hansson went tb Chicago this morning. Jane Parkison, Marie Hamilton and her friend, Vilma Ridh, of Indianapolis, wenlt to Chicago today. Mrs. Harry Waitson went to Chicago Heights, 111., today for a visit wtith relatives. Edwin Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Robinson, has. returned from overseas and is now at Camp Stuart, Virginia. County Clerk Jesse Nichols has purchased the Ike Tuteur lot on South Weston street for $225. Mrs. A. Gangloff returned today to her home in Chicago after a visit with the family of Charles Guttrick. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Osborne and daughter returned today to their home in Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wood went to Clark’s Hill for a visit with their daughter, Mrs. William Rishling, and family. Elizabeth Putts, who is employed as a stenographer in Indianapolis, is here for a visit with relatives. She spent today with relatives at Monon. Miss E. M. House, of the Monnett school, left this morning for Winona Lake, from which place she expects to continue to her home in Virginia. Mrs. N. A. McKay and daughter, Florence, of Fair Oaks, were in Rensselaer today and this afternoon they continued to Kirklin for a visit with relatives.

Floral designs qf all kinds made to order at Holden’s Greenhouse. Phone 426.

GAS 23c Standard <aad Indian ? Main Garage i IKE BEST IN RENSSELAER * Phone 206 j

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, BENBBELAEK, INDIANA.

adopt rule to govern ■ - STATE CATTLE SALES. Regulations governing the sale of cattle in Indiana for Interstate ship’ment were adopted Tuesday by the Lstate sanitary livestock board, and •the appointments in the state veterlinary department were approvedThe regulations adopted provide that all cattle for interstate shipment, except those accredited tu-berculosis-free herds, must be tuberculin tested by an officially authorized veterinarian within thirty days prior to the sale and complete records of the tests furnished to the state veterinarian’s office within two days after the date of sale and before such cattle axe shipped. The regulations also provide for notification by local officials of the existence of rabies in any city, township or county and for quarantine in such district until officially revoked. When rabies are known to exist in any community all dogs or other exposed animals must be confined or muzzled or will be shot.

FAITHFUL DEMOCRATS HAVE BEEN RETAINED.

The following postmasters have been reappointed: B. H. Knapp, Wheatfield; William L. McMillen, Brook; Peter F. Hein, Crown Point; Theodore Hoss, Fowler; Walter M. Engle, Francesville; Frank Billings, Morocco; Henry B. Snyder, Gary, and John L. Rhode, of Hammond. The present commission of ■the Rensselaer postmaster does not expire for some time, possibly not until after the next election, when he will undoubtedly be succeeded by a republican.

THE WEATHER. Forecast for Indiana: Fair tonight and Thursday. Slightly warmer in northeast and central portions tonight; cooler in north portion Thursday.

Once in a while you see a man who makes you feel that if you had to give him —a Christmas present you would make it a vanity box. Theodore Keiper has sold his 160 acre farm, southeast of this city, to Zinser & Hawkins, of Benton county. The consideration was $175 per acre. Albert , Quinn returned to Gary today after a visit here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Quinn. His wife and daughters, who accompanied him here, will remain for a longer visit. Mrs. Albert Wolfe and daughter returned today to their home. They had made the trip here Tuesday by automobile with Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Schaeffer, who were guests in the Wolfe home.

Mrs. W. R. Brown was called to Tuscola, 111., today to attend the funeral of her ibrother-in-law, I. H. Gregg. Death dame to Mr. Gregg at his home in Woodland, California, and the body was shipped to Tuscola. Charlie Moody has purchased of Fred Burger a 20-acre tract adjoining Mr. Moody’s residence on the west. The price paid was S3OO per acre. Mr. Burger paid $lB5 for the farm of 303 acres. A number of friends of William Traub, who live at Chattsworth, 111., passed through here today enroute to Keewana. They were Stephen Herr, J. J. Herr, Stephen, Herr, Sr., William Hendricks, Peter Kerber and C. Craltz. In writing from Indianapolis, C. Arthur Tuteur, state representative for Bastian Bros., an eastern concern dealing in advertising novelties, states that he is getting along nicely with his work. Mr. Tuteur will spend part of his time traveling, his territory being the entire state .as far north as Lafayette.

Thomas Hilton, Walter Chapman and Ludd Clark went to Rensselaer Tuesday. The Misses Marie, Lillian and Juanita Fisher called on Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wood Wednesday evening. Among those attending the band concert at Monon Thursday evening were: Dessie Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. George Foulks and son Earl and famil yand Mr. and Mrs. Claude Spencer and family. Mrs. Tillie Clark spent Thursday with Mrs. Bessie Chapman. Mrs. George Wood was 'a Lee goer Friday. Albert Wood, who has been visiting in Illinois for a week, returned home Friday. .. - Mrs. Ludd Clark, daughter, Sophia, and Mrs. William Chapman went to Lee Saturday. James Wood is spending a few days with Remington friends. George Foulks went to Wolcott Monday. Everett, Edith and Sophia Clark attended the chautauqua at Monon Monday. Albert Wineland is visiting at the home of his sister, Mrs. Charles Wood.

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MILROY.

BEYOND ALL OTHER DEBTS

Leaning Turret* of Benares Recall to Men Their Deep Obligation to Their Mothers. You can repay all services, all kindnesses, either by money, or service, or love, or devotion, but a mother’s debt you can never repay. Bhupendranath Basu writes in the Journal of the Roynl Society of Arts. Those of you who have heen to India and visited Benares must have noticed the leaning turrets on the banks of the Ganges. Benares Is the holiest city of the Hindus, and temples erected there , were considered as earning great merit > for both those who built them and those in whose memory they were built. Tradition says these turrets are the remnants of a Hindu temple which a dutiful son erected to Jhe memory of mother, believing that he would thereby repay the debt which| he owed to her. When the tempi™ was completed after several years —for you can even now see it was a great temple of stone —ami was about, to be conse.crtited. the son was filled with the pleasure which comes of a duty discharged, ami he cried out: “Now, mother, I have after all been able to repay my debt to you.” and lo! and behold.- the temple began to lean toward the earth, and was about to fall, when the pious builder, remembering his blasphemy, exclaimed : “Oh. mother that art in heaven, truly I am sinful. for how can I think of repaying my debt to thee!” and the fall of the temple was arrested, but leaning turrets still preach a great lesson to devout Hindus who visit. Benares.

MOORS HAVE NOT LOST HOPE

Despite Long Dispossession, They Still Hope to Return to Granada and the Alhambra. • At Granada. I remember, that the guard ianshi pof the Vel a (or Watch) tower at the extreme western point of the Alhambra, directly overlooking the city, has been in the hands of one family for several hundred years—practically since the conquest, in 1492! During a stay of several weeks at Granada'. I cultivated that family, consisting of an aged crone, a middle-aged daughter and a scapegrace grandson ■•ailed Escamillo. Upon the top of that' tower hangs the famous “wishing bell” that is believed to insure a husband to any girl who can knock it with her knuckles sufficiently loud to make it ring. The bell is about seven feet above the nearest perch, and that is where 'Cainitio comes in. tie allows the anxious girl to climb upon his back and then stands erect so sin* can reach the object of her hopes. The gratuity is never less than a peseta (19 cents), and the fees often equal SI,OOO a year. That bell is supposed to be rung hourly throughout the night to apprise the sleeping people in the city below that the Moors have not come back: but across the Strait of Gibraltar. absolutely every night, the coffee houses of Tangier resound with the droning, haunting song of “Yerga,” the Arabic word for “We shall return!”— meaning to Granada and to the repossession of the Alhambra.—Julius Chambers in Brooklyn Eagle.

Swinburne Called War’s Poet.

Nelson Collins, writing in Century, puts forward Swinburne as the poet of the world's war, and to prove his point he quotes liberally from Swinburne’s “Songs Before Sunrise," published in 1871. “It is the greatest single volume of poetry in the last 50 years." Mr. Collins continues. “Swinburne was writing against King Fred-, erick of Naples and Napoleon 111 and Francis Joseph, and for Italy in the birth of a new freedom and a betrayed France and a Europe disturbed, if not always demonstrative, throughout its lengtli ami breadth. Mazzini and Carducci were akin to him in abstract international mood? The poems are nearly 50 years old; but, then, he was a ‘forward looking' man. And, anyway, what’s in a date? The best book on the way the great war stamped the men who fought in it. ‘The Red Laugh.’ was written in 1905."

Workers Go Ahead of Shirkers.

Most'of us are unwilling to give ourselves to our work for ten hours out of the day. much less 20—indeed, five hours of work is as much as most of us reallj’ accomplish, and many of us far less than that. There is no royal road to success any more than there is to learning. It is said that there is no such thing as average man or woman, but if each of us would live up to our possibilities there is no limit to what we might accomplish. In any business office you will find the workers and the shirkers. and very often it may seem that the shirkers get just as far ahead as the workers, but the probability is that, should you go back after a year and a day to any one of these same offices, you will find that those who had labored had forged away ahead of those who £ad idled. %

Never Lose Hope.

Hope is something to be busy with. It is something of which we should accumulate a store. Always have plenty of hopes, and have them so that they will reach out and last away into the years of the future. / There is really something mysterious about a hope. If you will cherish it faithfully and keep it warm in your heart, you, will be almost sure to some time realize it. It is said that we are what we.believe ourselves to be. But. perhaps, we might better say that we are what our hopes are.

Mias Laura Hatton went to Lowell Tuesday. Miss Bessie Hewitt, of Wheatfield, went to Delphi today for Jk visit with relatives. The "Iroquois Roller mill has pur- ( chased about* 1,200 bushels of new wheat of Adam and Joseph Nagel. ■ This wheat graded No. 1 and the price was $2.13 per bushed. Ernest Garriott, son of Mr. and| Mrs. E. E. Garriott, has landed in this country after spending ten months with the American army overseas. — » % iMr. and Mrs. Wilson Schaeffer and Alice Middleton visited William Erwin, who is in the Home hospital in Lafayette, on Tuesday. They found him improving nicely. Attorney Emmett Laßue has rented two office rooms upstairs in the 1 Makeever bank building and will again resume the practice of law ' after several months spent tin the army. ' The east is in the throes of a wet ' era—rain —and for the past ten days the diitizens of the Atlantic coast states have Jiad to contend with J. Pluvius continuously. Rain would be a most welcome thing m this vicinity. Orders now being taken for fall delivery from the Guaranteed Nursery company. Stock failing to live replaced free. Charles Pefley.

Ray Brien, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brien of this city, has gone to Hobart for a visit with relatives. He expects to be a member of a fishing party on the Kankakee while away. Lieutenant Russell Wine, district solicitor for the American Rescue Workers, was in the cffity looking after the interests of that organization. He wishes to thank the citizens for their donations for the support of the work. Their work lis similar to that of the Salvation ! ArmyJ preaching ithe Gospel in the ' streets and helping the poor. Ferman Schultz, son of Mr. and' Mrs. A. R. Schultz of Union township, arrived home today. He had just been discharged from the military service at Camp Mills. He has been in the service since leaving here on May 7, 1918. He went overseas in August, 1918, and landed back in America on July 13. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Barnes and daughter, of Atlanta, Ga., were here today for a few hours’ visit with his palrenlts, Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Rainier. They were enroute from their home in the south to Oshkosh, Wis., and were making the trip by automobile. The visit here was a short one, owing to the fact that Mr. Barnes had a very important matter to look after in Oshkosh. Mrs. Charles Bonner, of Remington, and her sister, Miss Elizabeth Parks, of Sandwich, 111., were passengers out of 'here this miorning for Grand Rapids, Mich. They were accompanied to this city iby Mr. Bonner, his daughter, Elizabeth, and Samuel Flint. Mr. Bonner reports that Mir. and Mrs. E. E. Flint are driving through by automobile from North Dakota.

NEWLAND ITEMS.

Bt has never been publicly announced that Mr. C. V. McKinney came here from a large farm near Bluffton to take up his duties as foreman on the Jasper County Land ■company’s farm near Neiwland. Mr. McKinney .has been operating a big farm in northern Michigan during the past two years. He has taken two courses alt Purdue university and one art Ohio State university. Mr. and Mil. McKinney are making their home at present with Mr. and Mrs. Kuppers on the ranch. John W. Wood, assistant foreman, has commenced his duties on the ranch. Mr. Wood is a graduate of Missouri university and was in the aviation corps during the war. Clarence White is from Greenfield, Ind. He was an officer in the U. S. army during the war. He will graduate next year from Purdue university as a mechanical engineer. Wellington Sicetr, of New Albany; Raymond Robinson, of Indianapolis, and Fay Hardy, of Indianapolis, are working on the ranch. All three are members of the U. S. Workers Reserve. , Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Frazer, of Chicago have taken charge of the ranch store at Newland. Mr. Frazer was formerly a clerk in the union stock yards at Chicago. There is a lot of firing going on at the ranch, hut it is noticeable that all the good hands are still on the job. Pickle picking will soon start on the ranch.

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Small Cakes and Cookies * f ice for the ‘Kiddies’ You’ll like them too. Just buy ’em and try ’em! You will “say that you do!” THE HOME of the . Golden Loaf O’RILEY BAKERY

Ina Alsou, of Remington, underwent an operation for the removal of her tonsils at the hospital today. Mrs. Zero Wright went to Monon this afternoon to attend the funeral of her unde, Daniel Gordan. Mrs. W. D. Bringle left Tuesday for Helena, Montana, for a month’s visit with her sister. Charles J. Dean and Barney Kolhoff returned from Michigan this afternoon, where they had been on a iland prospecting tour. Mr. and Mrs. George Long and children are enjoying a ten days’ outing with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Strawbridge at St Joseph, Mich. Grace Waymire, Who had been vis- ; Jting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Waymire, returned to Crawfordsville today, where she is an instructor in the Wabash Business college. Sam Cosby, who was injured in an automobile accident and who had ibeem confined «t the Jasper county hospital for over a week, was able to return to his home today. Miss Mildred Biggs arrived home Tuesday from Washington, D. C. Nell Biggs, who has just returned from overseas, will not be home for another week.

CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of ’ 7*41 *««*m**

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A straw stack at the Alfred Hoov# er farm was destroyed by fire Tuesday when it was ignited from a spark from the threshing engine owned by Clouse brothers, of Remington, who had just completed a run at ‘the Hoover farm. No grain was lost A similar fire occurred a tithe Albert Tobin farm the previous day where a straw stack was mAho destroyed in addition to damage done the separator. This fire also was caused by the Clouse machine.