Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 175, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 July 1919 — Page 4
MONON ROUTE Train Schedule Effective Mexch >O t J>i». NORTH “SOUTH if .in LA ...TO, 3S -IApJLJBE 4 5:01 a. m. 5 10:56 a. m. 40 7,80 am. 87 U:l? am. 32 10:35 a. to. 33 1.5. p. ni 36 2:51 p. m. - 30 5:50 p. m. 3 3:31 p. m. 31 7:31 p. m. 80 0:60 p. m. 3“ JttW P. «>•
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN XMLXLY A»B 6EMI-WESIIT. C&AJMK * W4«rrr.TO>, FubUahera. Tn fbxdly xbsub xs bbgulab. WSEXLT EDITIOH. Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, 1837, a» second class mall matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1337, as second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1873. BATES FOB DISPLAY ADVERTISING Daily, per inch -••• •• • -15 c Semi-Weekly, per inch 18c SUBSCBIFTIOIT BATES. Dally, by carrier, 10 cents a week. By mail, 55.00 a year. Semi-Weekly, year, in advance, 82.00. BATES FOB CLASSIFIED ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of the Semi-Weekly Republican, 25 cents. Additional space pro rata. CABBIES BOYS. Carl Arnott Hopkins Brothers Raymond Lynge Robert May Thomas Donnelly Morgan Lynge
CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE. FOB SALE—Good milch cow; also buggy 'do fair condition. See Russell or call John Lesh, ’phone 921-K. 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 —Pure bred Spotted Poland China hog, weighing about 100 pounds. Elmer Jacks, 'phone 920-G. FOR SALE—2 $4 acres of early onions, cash or trade. J. C. Benton, Newland, Ind., ’phone 922-G. FOR SALE—Good cow, with calf ait side. Joseph Trulley, phone 945-B. FOR SALE —Overland 90 automobile, in good condition; new tires. 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 —Two fresh cows, wfrth calves by side. Perry Griffith, Parr, Ind. Call Murphy store. FOR SALE—Two tons of millet and five tons of oats straw. Cali R. D. Thompson. FOR SALE —133 acre farm, three miles of Rensselaer, lies next to |3OO land. Will be sold a big bargain. Harvey Davisson.
FOR SALK—A genuine bargain, cash or eaky payments. 1913 fivepiyuwnger Oldsm-obile in good running order. No better engine made that will turn the wheels in deepest mud or sand. ’Phone 287 or see B. F. Forsythe. FOR SALE —Buy Stover gasoline engines at the WataOn Plumbing company. ’Phone 204. FOR SALE —City property. Philip Blue. 'Phone 488. FOR SALK —40 acres. All level black land in grain. Well tiled, on atone road in sight of court house. Price >2OO. George F. Meyers. FOR SALE —Two lots on Milroy avenue, opposite Milroy park; also two lots on College avenue. Katharene Shields. FOR SALE—Sandwich gasoline hay press, in first class condition. ’Phone 947-1. Harry SwartzelL 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 ■ i WANTED—Second cook, good wages, good clean place to work. Charles Bibos, Rensselaer Candy Kitchen. WANTED Blackberries. Mrs. L. EL Hamilton, 'phone 68. WANTED —Girl for general house work. W. R. Nowels, ’phone 269. WANTED —Family washings to do. ’Phone 459 Black, Mrs. 'Dolph DayWANTED —Second cook at Makeever HoteL a WANTED —Married man wants to farm on the share, landlord to furnish farm equipment. See W. L. Wood, room 1, Odd Fellows’ buildWANTED- —Some clover or .alfalfa hay- Leslie Clark. -- 7 4 WANTED —Plain sewing to do. 'Phone 368-Red.
WANTED—A girl for general, housework. J. A. .Dunlap, ’phone| 66. WANTED —To buy modem borne in Rensselaer. Jesse Eldridge, telephone 916-E. ■ i -~t WANTED-—For automobile livery call J. K. Smith. J. K. Smith. Tele phone 90 or 491-Red. WANTED —Property with two or three acres of land. Havrey Davisson. WANTED—A one-story, five or six-room house. Must' be close in. Harvey Davisson. WANTED —Party wants tenant for good farm. Inquire county agricultural agent, Rensselaer. WANTED —We wish to contract for sound milk for delivery to Englewood, Chicago, ill. Ws will be steady buyers and will pay for the coming months $3.00 per b-gahon can, f. o. b., Englewood. Will pay cash if requested. Z. & S. Creamery Co., 6800 Yale Ave., Chicago, 111. FUR RENI TO RENT—24O acres of land, with good improvements. Tenant must sow wheat. Alex Merica, ’phone 176. FOR RENT—Suite of rooms over the postoffice. Can be used for offices or living quarters. E. L. Hollingsworth. ’Phone 320 or 77. LOST LOST —White bail clog with brindle spot on head. Please notify John Gangloff, ’phone 453. EbsY—Grey"" and white • striped kitten. Finder please return tu Blanche White, ’phone I’o4. 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 rewrd. . Notify F. C. Cavindish, Newland, Ind., ’phone 922-B.
MISCELLANEOUS MONEY TO LOAN—o per cent, farm loans. JOHN A DUNLAP. MONEY’ ~TO LOAN—Chas. J. -Dean & Son. MADAM —Before haying your sewing done, get my prices. Plain sewing, children’s school clothes preferred. Mrs. Nada Cuffle, first house north of old tile plant on Jackson Highway. Forest tires are raging in Michigan and Montana. James Lefler, who had been in Lafayette, arrived here this morning. Dr. and Mrs. A. G. Catt are in Rochester, N. Y., attending, the national convention of American optometrists. Mrs. Frank Hoferlin and children went to Hammond Friday for a visit. William Ruggles, who had been visiting with Samuel Lowery and family, returned today to his home in Kentland. Mr. and Mrs. Albeit Miller were passengers on the Monon out of here this morning for Chicago. Dr. A. R. Kresler and family and Harry Kresler and family arrived home Friday evening from a week’s outing at Lake Webster. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hopkins, of Oklahoma, who had been visiting relatives at Lafayette and other Indiana paints, spent the day here with relatives.
Mrs. A. R. Hopkins entertained ait her"home on College avenue Friday afternoon in honor of Miss Edith Thompson, of Lafayette, who is a guest of Mrs. Hopkins. Mrs. Anna O’Donald and son, Joseph, returned today to their home in Rantoul. 111., after a visit here with Mrs. O’Donald’s sister, Mrs. Thomas Callahan, and family. C. M. Dewey, of Wheatfield, was in Rensselaer Friday. Mr. Dewey owns eight hundred acres in Walker ’ township, southwest of Wheatfield. Mr. Dewey bought this land of William Plotter, of Lafayette. CASTO RIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of ' S'CCC&At/Zi
GAS 23c Standard and Indian Main Garage THE BEST IN RENSSELAER Phone 206
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, BENSSEL.AKB, INDIANA-
MEXICAN SITUATION DEMANDS VIRILE AMERICANISM.
Weshi ngto n, July 26.—The Republican Publicity association today gave out the following statement f#om its Washington headquarters through fts president, Hoai. Jonathan Bourne, Jr.: “The Mexican situation grows | daily more threatening. Closely fol-1 lowing the murder of an American ' citizen in the Tampico distract, j comes the report of an attack on a party of American soldiers in uni-, form and occupying a boat flying the American flag. This latest in- j suit took place within three miles: of the town of Tampico, where it. is estimated 1,200 Carranza soldiers i are stationed. Doubtless immediate demands will be made By the United States for an explanation and an apology, which ma(y or may not be forthcoming. But, in any event, these mokt recent manifestations are merely two more incddenits in the long and unbroken record of murders, confiscations, and insults to everything American that has marked Mexico’s relations with this country since the downfall of the Diaz regime and the inauguration of the Wilson policy of watchful waiting. That policy has been interpreted by the Mexicans as a standing invitation to commit any excess they pleased against citizens of the United States, and it will be so treated just so long as it continues to prevent retaliatory measures by this country. “Is it not about time to call a halt, and return to the only honorable course that a self-respecting nation can follow, that of extending protection of the American flag to every citizen wherever he may be? There is no doubt that patriotism is decidedly on the wane in this country. From every side come ihgsdfdTscbhten?? Societies of various sorts, and of differing creeds on some subjects, are united .in attacks upon the existing government and demands for its overthrow. . The mails are fillled with propaganda, and new publications are springing up almost every day for the spread of their doctrines. Members of these organizations see in our federal government merely an institution for the levying of killing taxes; for the commandeering and withholding from private consumption of great quantities of food, cißothing, and other necessities of life; for seeking to guarantee in advance our entrance into all the foreign wars of the future; and for aiding in and making certain the success of huge loans by a combination of American bankers to newly created and irresponsible European states. While 'the government is engaged in these activities the people witness the wanton murder of our citizens at every door, accompanied by the wholesale destruction of American property, and repeated insults to our flag. Is there little wonder that with these facts before them some classes of our people are insistent for a change? “What this country needs above any other one thing is a stimulation to its paitriotism. Let the people see in thedr government an organization whose sole object is the maintenance of the welfare of the citizen and the protection of his life and property 1 , and it will receive ungrudging support from the public. Let those qualities be lacking, and in their Stead appear the interests enumerated above, and the government will surely lose the support of the people, without which it cannot survive. “One of the most positive steps we can take toward the rejuvenation of national pride is the adoption of a Mexican policy that will have for its objects the protection of American life and property and the establishment of law and order in that distracted country. We need but to repeat our record in Cuba, -where we staid only long enough to put the country firmly on its feet, and provide for the continuance of orderly Such an attitude toward Mexico w-iould do more than any other thing to amalgamate the varying schools, of thought in this country, and win the confidence and respect of other nations.”
An eastern contemporary recently printed the heading, “Senate Orders Probe of Leak.” Probing a leak usually makes it bigger.—San Francisco Chronicle.
MiCKIE SAYS / PEOPLE'© JEST STOP A , T* THINK THAT ADVERTISIN’ | is the newspaper nigh's J stock in Trade, Then'd / ) NEVER TRV TO ©IT IT FER. \ NOTHIN' LIKE THEV DO | SOMETIMES, NO bAOVLE. / Than ask thb . I GROCER. FEB A FREE 1 k SACK OF FLOUR. 1 J A. \ 'VM* Jf/ J. / uA A , * > -w j " ii" "*
Sunday Dinner Menu x Roast Chicken with Dressing or Fried Spring Chicken Gravy Mashed Potatoes Fresh String Beans Boston Fruit Salad Hot Parker House Rolls Banana Pie or Ice Cream Coffee Milk Ice Tea 50c and 75c. RENSSELAER CANDY KITCHEN AND RESTAURANT CHARLES BIBOS, Prop.
“Mrs. Fred Castlie and Emelynne Kent came today from Washington, Hl., to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ben Whitmer. Mrs. Margaret Curtshaw returned to her home at Greenfield today after visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Lyman.' ___ Mrs. Charles Goelz returned to her home at Chillicothe, 0., today after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hoover. Mrs. Perry Marlatt and children returned 'home today after a week’s visit art Hammond with Mrs. Moses (’hupp.
GREAT SACRIFICE SALE of CITY PROPERTY < BUSINESS ROOMS, CITY RESIDENCES AND LOTS. I will offer for sale all my property in Rensselaer on easy terms. Most of my property is within a few blocks of the court house. This includes business rooms and residences and town lots. Anyone desiring to buy property should see me at once, as I am offering some extraordinary bargains. lam doing this on account of my advanced age. I also desire to buy Liberty Bonds, or will take them in exchange for property at market quotations. If interested call A. LEOPOLD j; ’PHONE 33.
Miss Vilma Rich returned to her home in Indiana,poHs today after spending the week here with Marie Hamilton. Mliss Rich wffifi start on Mionday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E.cßich, on a trip through ithe east. The trip will be made in a machine - and they expect to be gone a month.
RENSSELAER-REMINGTON BUS LINE TWO ROUND TRIPS DAILY LEAVE Rensselaer 8:00 a. m. Rensselaer . . .3:45 p. m. Remington 9:30 a.m. Remington 5:15 p. m. Fare, $1; war tax, Bc. FRANK G. KRESLER, Proprietor.
J, J. MILLER CEMENT CONTRACTOR TELEPHONE 168 1
The Aeroplane Is Here AND WILL BE HERE SATURDAY-SUNDAY JULY 26thand 27th Making Passenger Carrying Flights Kow is the Tiae tn Fly COME AND SPEND A DAY WITH US THE MAIN GARAGE, The Best in Rensselaer
Mrs. Emmett Hollingsworth came today from Flint, Milch., to visit Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Hollingsworth. Orders now being taken for fall delivery from the Guaranteed Nursery company. Stock failing to live replaced free. Charles Pefley. Henry Wood, of this city, presented the editor with a fine lot of i roasting ears today. Mr. Wood is lone of Rensselaer’s best gardeners. I Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Spitler re- ! turned today from Detroit, Mich. 'Mr. Spitler has received his dishcharge from Camp Cusltier, Milch.
Mrs. Frank Thornton and children returned to /their homie today at Frankfort after a visit with Mrs. 'Mark Reed, of Fair Oaks. | | >C. M. Shottits returned to his home jat Chicago today after a visit here 1 wfi/tih Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rhoades. ■Mrs. Shoitts and Mrs. Eva Morgan i twill remain here for a lionger visit. —— i Miss Edna Robinson went to | Hammond today to visit Mrs. Phillip I Roy. She will go to Chicago ■from there to spend a few days with Mrs. Fred Rhoades. Mrs. I. W. Wells and children returned to Attida today after la visit here with Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Wells and Mr. and Mrs. Wiffiam Potts. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hamilton, of Indianapolis, are here for a visit with Grant and Hale Warner and families. Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton will move soon to Erie, Pa., where Mr Hamilton will be connected with the Erie Dry Goods company. Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Frye and daughter, Dorotthy; Mtrs. Roy Stevenson and Mrs. P. H. Davis, of Hammond; S. H. Cornwell and family and Carl Sommers and family left today by automobile for Culver, Ind., where they will spend a week at Lake Maxinkucfcee.
: Small Cakes and Cookies ► ; Fine for the ‘Kiddies’ : You’ll like them too. ► Just buy ’em and try ; ’em! You will “say ► that you do!” THE HOME ► of the ► i Golden Loaf [ O’RILEY BAKERY
E. G. Sternberg, of Chicago, .was in Renssefflaier today. Mabel Lairson, of Lewiston, was in this city today. Adioflph Krimpin, of Newland, went to Hammond today. Fem Tilton and Ruth Poole (Went to Muncie today for a visit. Florence Iliff returned to her Ihiome in Parr this morning. William Platt, express agent, has purchased a Saxion automobile. Paul Niorgor wdnrt to Indianapolis Friday and will drive a Fiord back today. Mrs. Helen Worland returned Thursday from a week’s visit with friends at Laporte. Joe Reeves and Ray Laßue came today from Chicago to spend the week-end here. Mrs. James Coffel returned to her home at Monon Friday after a visit with Mir. and Mrs. Leo Worffiand. Fairy Pollard and Alima Tayflbr went to Indilanapolis today for an extended visit. Lee Meyers, son of J. E. Meyers, the Knimfen merchant, wafe here today. Mire. Ora T. Ross and Livingston Ross took Kennedy Ross Ito his home (in Chicago today. Daisy Smith returned to Lafayette today after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Phil Henson. A real peril 1 is confronting the Chicago White Sox, ’league leaders, in the shape of the Detroit chib, which is steadily climbing upwards, playing brilliant ball in all departments. The Tigers are receiving a brand of pitching such as they never received before and the natural strength of the teem as a whole makes it a formidable aggregation.
Quality Halfsole Tires J. J. EDDY GATES Half Sole TIRES Authorized Service Station Harrison and Van Rensselaer Streets Rensselaer, Indiana Phone 109 QUALITY TUBES
4 'WUiM Floral designs of all kinds made to order at Holden’s Greenhouse. Phone 426.
