Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 264, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 November 1919 — Page 3
IF YOU WOULD CUT YOUR TABLE EXPENSE—EAT MORE BRDAD BREAD WITH THE MANY USES. TO . WHICH IT IS SPLENDIDLY ADAPTED IS THE CHEAPEST AND BEST FOOD OBTAINABLE. BREAD IS THE MOST IMPORTANT SINGLE FOOD IN OUR DIETARY. GOOD BREAD IS A REAL TREAT. TREAT THE FOLKS TODAY WITH A LOAF OF O’RILEY QUALITY BAKED.
Mrs. Harry Ferrienan returned to her home in South Bend today after a visit here with her cousin, Ross Knickerbocker, and family. Mrs. Florence Knickerbocker is the guest of her son, Ross Knickerbocker, and family. We are anxious to have every woman in Jasper county see the auto boot which we are introducing. This boot will bedisplayed at the free rubber exhibit which will be held, in B. N. FENDIG’S SHOE STORE on Saturday, November 1, by a representative of the Beacon Falls Rubber Co. Might does not make right, but there are few rights established without might.—Greenville (S. C.) Piedmont. —1 “Capital and labor are one!” shouts an economist. But he fails to designate which one.—Savannah News. ■ ■■■ • Seems a pity there isn’t some Chinese poet who can go and capture Shantung.—New Orleans TimesPicayune. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years
Advantages of the | AEOLIAN-VOCALION I s mi besitfyt Tty I A control by mnM I Records without additional attack- I ments or adjustments? Case designs vW and workmanship of unquestioned superiority? convenießt AuaiUary Features such as automatic meord-fUM oqtstpaacm, m. J t * iw* rRR A. F. LONG & SON. Vi
“Sttock at Home in Successful Home Companies GARY NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ThelGary National Life Insurance Co. is a Gary Company It U making a wonderful record. Although little more than one year old, it is making a record equal to companies eight and ten years old. GARY NATIONAL ASSOCIATES COMPANY THE GARY NATIONAL ASSOCIATES COMPANY is a Gary Company. It is a mortgage, loan and investment com- t pany. Wo make loans on first mortgages in the Calumet region and loans on farms in the best farming district in Indiana. No loans over SO per cent of the valuation. -I Wo are selling 6 per cent participating preferred stock n th. GARY NATIONAL ASSOCIATES COMPANY and stock in the GARY NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY for a short time only In Jasper county. Most of our stock we arc selling in now territory. T Us is probably your fast opportunity to acquire stock in those two wonderfully successful companion. MORTGAGE BONDS Wo have a few a gilt-edge 6 per cent farm mortgage bonds and 6 per cent Calumet district improved real estate bonds. These are coupon bonds badkod by gilt-edge mortgages not over 50 per cent of the valuation of the property. For particulars, svrito, caU or’phono * Gary National;Associates Co. Gary Theatre Bldg., Gary, Ind., Phones 3423-4-5 .->■■■ or ' HARVEY DAVISSON - Rensselaer, Ind
LOST NIAGARA DISCOVERED.
A dead and buried Niagara, its thunders stilled for countless ages, once perhaps as great in height and volume of water as the present falls, has been unearthed by excavations made in the course of the new Welland ship canal near Thorold in southern Ontario. No memories of this lost Niagara linger even in aboriginal tradition. When it existed or when it ceased to exist has not even been conjectured. It may have been thundering in primeval solitudes before the age of man. The mastodon and the perodactyl may have pastured upon its brink.. piant-winger lizards may have sailed above its clouds of rainbow vapors. The engineers who partly uncovered it believe that it was the original Niagara marking the course of a paleolithic river that connected Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. Some fighty prehistoric cataclysm, it is supposed, diverted the course of the stream - and buried the falls and the old river bed level with the sur-t rounding country. The grave of this buried Niagara I is half a mile from‘the escapement of the present Canadian falls. A i deep, canyon-like valley through which the ship canal passes where Eight Mile creek once meandered on its way to Lake Ontario, is believed to have been the bed of the prehistoric river which furnished the waters of the giant falls their outlet to the sea. —Manufacturers’ News, Chicago.
STRIKE IS THREATENED BY BLIND MEN IN STATE HOME.
Philadelphia, Oct. 31.—Inmates of the Pennsylvania Working Home for Blind Men have presented demands for higher wages and threatened to strike next week unless they are granted. According to the blind men, who make brooms, whisks, carpets and cane work, their board has been raised with comparatively no increase in wages. They have formed an organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Frederick H. Mills, superintendent of the institution, said: “I can’t see what the men can do, as this is their home and they can do nothing without hurting themselves. The real reason is that they have banded together and like the rest of the »vsrld have got the strike fever.”
CAFETERIA SUPPER. r .
The Young Ladies’ Sodality of the St. Augustine church parish will serve a cafeteria supper in the parochial school hall Saturday evening, November Ist, commencing at 5 o’clock. All are welcome. Fried chicken, beef-loaf, mashed potatoes, gravy, sweet potatoes, baked beans, bean salad, cranberries, pickels, bread, butter, fruit salad, cake and coffee. ’Phone 913-F.
Postal efficiency, says Mr. leson, “borders on the miraculous.”' It borders on the incredible at least. —New York World. Maybe these magazine publishers that are moving from New York to the middle west are looking for a larger English-reading public.—Boston Herald.
Dollar - 'fl® \ >•- * N “ The Greatest jj Mother in the World v . » ... ‘ • Cannot limit her ministrations to the sufferers of war. Communities, like people, have troubles, misfortunes. As the homes make the community, so the communities make the nation. To aid in time of disaster, to prevent unnecessary differing, to apply the great American spirit of service at home as well as abroad —this is the mission to which the Red Cress - ““ y . r ' . is summoned. A <-■ . . 7 ' 'Americanism calls every citizen to respond for duty by enrolling as a member ’of the American Red Cross. Third Red Cross Roll Call November 2nd to 11th, 1919 —— —“ ; —■■- -■/ —— —-—-—■->—Lx 12__ L L_,.l ~~ 1..' 77iis space contributed by Mary Meyers Healy i. j- ...... . ■ - .. . . -
Once there was a town that had ho street railwaytroubles. It had no street railway.—Detroit Journal. There can’t be so much unrest at present among organized workers. So many of them are resting.— Brooklyn Eagle. Nowadays even an inferior grade of pottage costs almost your entire birthright.—Kansas., City Star. Boy, page Mr. Hoover, and show him the sugar bowl. —Wall Street Journal. No anti-Red ordinance will commancT popular in CiriSihriati at this time. —New York Sun. ' Stamps are sticking better, influenced, perhaps, by Mr. Burleson’s example.—Boston Herald. The chief' difference between a conservative and a radical is that the conservative has got his. —Fountain Inn (S. C.) Tribune. “With a rum punch gripped in one hand and a cigaret in the other, and a song on his lips”—that’s the way a story about the ‘ Prince of Wales in Halifax begins. No wonder he intends to limit his stay in the United States to ten days.— Cleveland Plain Dealer.
DELCO-LIGHT The complete Electric Light and Power Plant Electric & City Wiring Earl Gondeman, ° Phoie 294
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN,
PRESIDENTIAL TEAPOT BOIL- = ING; LOWDEN IS BOOMED. - - z Chicago, Oct. 31.—The drive for Lowden-for-president delegates at next June’s republican national convention is now on. Friends of Gov. Lowden, who. have perfected a campaign organization and have opened headquarters here, have already announced that the Illinois delegates will be solid for Lowden, and that lowa will probably follow suit. David E. Shanahan, one of the Lowden boosters, who has just returned froiß a tour of the south, made this statement: *; ‘ indications ' were' pfevalefiV and very marked that Governor Lowden as a presidential possibility is appealing strongly to the representative men of the south. As the owner himself of a southern cotton plantation, the governor could meet on common ground with the men of the south. “Even at this early stage of the campaign it is a fair prediction that Governor Lowden will be the first choice of many of the national convention delegates froth the southern states.” The Lowden boosters do not expect to go to the republican national convention with a large number of instructed delegates. California concededly will instruct its delegates for Senator Johnson. Washington may instruct for Senator Poindexter. Minnesota, in the course of political events, readily would give an instructed delegation to Senator F. B. Kellogg. / Kansas may be found behind Governor Allen, but General Woods’ managers expect that state to set the ball rolling for General Wood. South Dakota, the first direct primary state to act, will be "fairground for all of the starters. The rest of the country, however/ barring a landslide that may set in at any moment for one of the above candidates, would be placed in the ‘Sininstructed” column in any table of states made up df men who have been playing the national political l
'game during the past few months. Gov. Frank O. Lowden was born at Sunrise City, Minn., January 26, 1861. He graduated from the lowa State university in 1885 and from the Union College of Law at Chicago two years later. He began the practice of law in Chicago in the same year and practiced here until 1906. He was a delegate to the republican national conventions of 1900 and 1904, and was a member of the republican national committee from 1904 bo 1912. He was elected to congress in 1906 for the unexpired term of R. H. Hitt, deceased, and was re-elected to the sixtieth and sixty-first congresses. H®fef of Illinois. Governor Lowden served as an officer in the Spanish-American war and when not devoting his time to politics or law runs a farm at Oregon, 111. Perhaps the relatives of the massacred Armenians may find some comfort in the report that an American dentist has been in attendance on the Sultan of Turkey.—New York Morning Telegraph.
I V»U¥m>B«om I I Of I ■ syectiiw nenuMw rot ■ ■ I T" I Volunteer Now Attour I I Chapter Headquarter* I I Third Red Crow Roll Cell I I £ _ November 2-11 - -ait
The |2.75 shirt is worrying more men than the 2.75 beer.—‘Boston Herald. Hiram Johnson says that article X of the league covenant would place the world in a strait-jacket. Judging by what the world has 'been doing these past five years well say that a strait-jacket is highly advisable.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. NOTICE* All the suits contesting the will of the late Benjamin J. Gilford, are now disposed of, and I am in a position te anwwail-t nun area serai M gooa iMMW in Jasper and Lake counties, wtash l will sell as exeeutoran rmlsaMi terms, but cannot take any toads. . Call at my office or at the office of T. M- Callahan, at Bannsclaor, Indiana, for particulars. GBO. H.
k ;• ■■ <■? 4 j Say It With Howers ; i. Woldert’s Greenhouse
