Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 January 1920 — Page 3

NOTICE OF DELINQUENT TAX SALE ' A ~ z '■ V-|/'$ y• Notice of Lands and Lots Returned Delinquent for Non-Pay- — ment of Taxes for the Year 1918 and Former Years, in Jasper County, Indiana ; - ~ ■■■ J . —. ... j, ■■— ' ' '.'-■•-'< l ... "f- 1 ==■ Of .|| a | A j ■ ammt naaarrnm |g| | a | ’ H J - ■ In n pl; wa a 119 M w Bide ne nw 12 30 51 35 27.61 . 21.09| .50 49.30 A Pt «W 5 31 46.851 17.10 .NMcBT' - ■ n* ... 29 740 189.35 ' 163.25 l.« 0 M 4.41. >9l ' , ' Roy ne ne ...... a... .... 18 29 740 36.87 70.34 — ... - _~®l -167.81 262 Dald?* John 3 Parr w % lot 3 blk 1 111.68 .02 55.20 .07 .60 157.57 m> - Fair Oaks lot 8. blk 7 , 9.97 5.43 Wl4M' m '' ’'' 1 --- — 157.33 .23 33.18 .17 l;20 192,11 , 284 » w n ® ••• 640 50 M 1-17 43,48 101 M 27 , n A7h«.t ae 11 31 6 160 61.25 52.36 f .60 114,21 UI »• Ji«« 9 3 7 2 :45 6 513.46 s™ 51 :U mU 84 Daniels, Henry M. .... .Be 7 W BW ' ’; 631 673 31 14950 37.84 47.00 1.20 235.54 25 th la A. . ..e % ne .......15 27 7 80 q ~ 83.90 64.34 .60 148.74 163 Gloeeer, C. Chamber & Morgan’s add to ' 11.29 M 0 32.24 246 1 2527 22 67 1,20 49 04 8 L. ...pt lot 5’••••• -x 14 32 6 13 i 67 I 60 1,88 4 Ames, Edward P. Fitzgerald Oak Grove Park | J f 77 ° r6eg ’ RlChard C W * «•••■•• 35 32 580 31.19 6.28 18.45 4.82 .60 61.34 24 Barry, Emory aw ne »31 740 ? 1. e % SW 931 7 80 nwsw 9 31’ 7 40 ! nw 931 7 160 jar Be .w 931 7 40 223.69 129.59 3.00 356.28 »96%5t01n. Charles ........n « se ...8 31 780 50.11 26.93 ' .60 77.64 368 White, James # 372 White, Ada F. £ 21, ne si ....... .27 32 7 22 20.82 7.19 2.40 30.41 —ymATYXBhD OOMP. 61 Hight Maud Graham’s addition to Town of * * Wheatfield, its 15, 16. blk 2 45.25 47.96 1.20 94.41 67 Height, Edward R. ..... Original plat of town of I Wheatfield It 6 & n pt It 5 • ... blk 5 16.08 7.63 1.20 24.91 92 Knoll, Gerwg« ft, • £t/O D29ne se .25 32 6 111 I‘7l -4.40 - .60 5.71 159 Seely, Edward Graham’s 2nd.add to Town of Wheatfield, Its 16 & 17 blk 5 4.57 6.10 1.20 11.87 STATE OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF JASPER, SS: I, Schuyler C. Robinson. Auditor of said County, hereby certify that the foregoing is. a true and complete, list of all the lands and town lots delinquent toy the Treasurer of said county, for non-payment of taxes due thereon, tor the year 1918, for former years. With penalties thereon, together with the tax of the current year, 1919, ami the coses of -advw'tlslng so far as the same are liable to be sold for taxes as shown by the return of said Treasurer, and notice is hereby given ifiiat as much of said land and towq. loth as may be necessary to discharge and pay the .taxes, penal'ties ahd costs, due thereon, or due from the owners thereof al the .time of sale,-will be sold at public auction at the Oort House Door, in Romselaer. Indiana, on the second Monday in February, being the 9th day of February, A. D. 1920, commencing at 10 a. m. of said day and continuing from day to day thereafter until all are offered. - a CHUYLER C. ROBINSON, Auditor of Jasper County.

DELICIOUS DEUGHTFUL Ws make many dis farant kinds of rolls avory day. They are frarii and fins and swre -.to TRY THEY are made by O’RILEY Maker of GOLDEN LDAF . BREAD

w kWbAt ♦ W •«» • >-" •«■ in Say It Withi’Howers HoldM’a Greenhouse •/

THE NEW WORLD MOVEMENT.

«r. • /„Z-r---44 ■'v*tfy-*' --- BMaMtaMlB --•- .' ... s i,.,.ii._^ v —a: The new woMwovement Of.tiie triS aim of spreading the of JeaSaCh&t, it oßota set of an the spiritual revival the churchy memby It WHiVi thp

t A M y CORSETS J America’s Leading Corset HFr S K I wPwv' accomplish the Waistless-Hipless HHhB Bustless .«&■ W' f figure-outlines; Fashion’a I f Uln I decree* 11 IbIi! ’ A model for every figure, A (each exclusive for its purpose) S' ■ combining Slenderness, Grace and Suppleness, with long-wear, W. B. Nuform Corsets provide “Much Cor* I' •et for Little Money.” WEINGARTEN BROS, Inc. NEW YORK . CHICAGO""

‘ -■*-.'•'•■ ' ' • <. - <■ •> ■.' M 1 .■■■lM J JM ftl Osteal tai&Mto fl M ' ISBWwr «■ - ’? & I I HB ■ I■ i k “MAJOR” / guturcu in out window The Major Commands Attention vcrv comfortables. and a great; favorite amoua young men. > weU and kcepe its shape. You wiU like it. ”■ • B. N. FENDIG * 4Jgg&<fe :;Jifa-ffS®

। and foreign fields in which the) ftb Secure’at

TU BVBNDW BBFUBUCAK, RENMILAKR, Kb,

lutt . twelve jMMntt ioereu. ia -t” 0,1 “■

FROWN ON TOO MUCH LOVE

Fatal ty Airthoritloo In Japm Dlacoun. ags Anything Like a Surplus «* ■ )' i l ' Conjugal Affection. 1' ( **' v aanimemb She general rule of life is that the woman stays when her hatband level her, but there is one little country In the world where the women not to* frequently are sent home by their inlaws because their husbands love them too.much. t That country is Japan, we are told by Amos S. and Susanne Hershey in their book on modern Japan. This paragraph, one of many tntereettt* ooea on the Island kingdom, describes the particular condition which sometimes sends the little Jap wife back to her own people: “In considering the Japanese family one must bear in mind the complete absence of romantic love in marriage and the absence of romantic gallantry in the feudal code of the Samurai. If love develops during wedded life it must not appear in op«i demonstration, and whenever the . demands of duty are pressing affection must be renounced for the higher duty. Indeed, it has not been an uncommon occurrence for a wife to b® Mnt ho me because her husband was. too fond of her, as too much affection for a wife was considered a sign of weakness and demoralization in the husband, which might lead to neglect of other family obligations. Of loyalty and chivalry there was plenty in Bushido or the Way of the Warrior—but it was always between lord and vassal, master and servant, and never Included women, at least not during the last ten centuries,"

HARD TO GET CONDOR EGGS

Only Seven Are Known to BO istence, and the Bird Itself Is Near Extinction. v The Academy of Science in Philadelphia. some years ago, lost an egg. Presumably It was stolen. It was the egg of * California; condor, and-worth a lot of money. ( Only seven eggs of that bird are known to exist In collections. It frequents the most Inaccessible peaks In southern CaMfbrnia, and hatches its young at dizzy heights In caves in the fhCM of clll&' Thus tbe task of procuring an egg is one involving utmost danger. The species, a gigantic vulture, has been almost exterminated. Cattlemen and sheepmen poison earciMes to destroy wolves and bears; the condors eat the bait and- die. That an ostrich egg may be dangerous, If overripe, was discovered a while ago by Doctor Bauer of the Smithsonian institution. While he was boring a hole In one, it exploded, tiie hying fragments cutting him*baA The eggs of some orioles are'marked with grotesque figures, often resembling Chinese characters. Experts in oriental languages ‘ have on occasions been asked ! to : read them, but no satisfactory translation has been obtained.

Famous Egyptian Queen.

I Aames Nefertari was the great ancestress of the New Empire at Thebee tn ancient Egypt, 1700 B. G Thia dynasty, the eigtheenth, was that of the Thothmes’ mighty warriors and bonders, and of the famous HatshepsuPharaoh, woman Pharaoh and discoverer. On the rock-tablets of Massarah opposite Memphis on the Nile, and in the sepulchral chambers of the Theban Necropolis, this great woman is remembered as “the beautiful consort of Aames,” and as “the wife Of the god Amon” (Amon-Ra). On her head she wore not only the crown of Egypt united, but the vulture headdress signifying motherhood, for the “vulture” was the symbol of Mut, the second person in the Egyptian triad of gods at Thebes—Amon, Mut, eu.

Great Names Worthily Berne.

Somebody of an inquiring mentality and a good stock of patience has been examining the personnel of the United States a#my and makes the interesting discovery that whereas there was orty one George Washington In the army of 1776 there were seventy-four George Washingtons in the army of 1917-1918. Two Ulysses 8. Grants Mid five Ulysses Grants took the field against Prussianism r and with them marched seventynine Robert E. Lees, an tribute, by the way, to the enduring quality of tile affection and admiration that the great southern general inspired. '‘-■'C " ..'

Lands in Tezas

The federal government never owned any of the public lands, in Texas. It was a republic for seme years before It entered the union of states. When it came into die Union it ww stipulated by joint resolution of congress, passed March 1, 1845, that Tsxmswasto •Retain all vacant and unapproptteted lands within its Texas," etc The state established Its own land office, made grants t» railroads, etc, and made its awn aotdement laws. ... ; ; •

Study the Ten Commandments.

*“ fo/shlldrm V of* ■ ? -

•»T _____ * ; _ „ f ] X Music Lovers Choose the Brunswick -J I if . * \ S K/JUSIC lovers choose the Brunswick | „ Phonograph to play their favorite I > records, sot it plays all records at their bat. I \ The Brunswick Method of Reproduc- / tion makes this possible. It consists f of two outstanding, exclusive features : — the Brunswick Ultona and the Brunswick Tone Amplifier. Jut y<m bear the Brunswick —come I , M f-- . C-~ - t r/. WORLAND Mt) bros. j ; I >' B .w U -

IF WE KNEW THEN

WHAT WE KNOW NOW

WE WOULDNT HAVE SAID THIS

RETIRES FROM M. E. MINISTRY

THE REV. J. T. ABRETT MAD SPENT FORTY YEARS IN THE SERVICE* ♦ ' • It is a very great satisfaction and pleasure to note the success that some former Jasper teunty person Is attaining* We . are ahswye : delighted to comment upon such circumstances. Possibly there is more value to be able to refer to onet who has gone out from among us and has brought Ws life work to a successful termination. Great Honor 3s due the .man ribo enters the ndnistey. To him ceases the opportunities to be of great service tdhb and Hs But howgreatmust be the life of man, ..who has- spent forty years in that the noblest work at head, heart and hand of .man. Jasper county points with pride to the character at the Rev. J. T. Abbott, who spent his boyhood and who grew to maturity in this county. His ability was early recognized and some forty yearsago i* W sleeted ■ recorder of Jasper county. When Mrtermof office expired he entered the ministry and his first iJiihM iWmi Mmw»n : . The Rev. Abbett has returned here .often and has •< great amny wequaiirtMtees and-a*number of relatives in this city and county, among them are his sisters, Itarß. D. McColley and Mrs. Koren Daniels of Renselaer, Mrs. Bowman Switzer of Barkley township. He has anreference to the Rev. Abtett’s retirement: Rev. .J. T. Abb«tt, weil known member of Oregon Conference, was Sen the retired relation at the sesn of his Conference a few days ago. Bar- Abbott joined the'Northw«t Indiana Conference in 1880, where he labored for ten years. .In transferred tooreg>n tive social* giultijl. th werteouM URitiiy _VC J*A • IS t© ©SV® -JS*' a ytrtod A 'uMlw fils JIOauIOT ©uym *mlCb

three yean, received into the membership of tim Church 78 persons, and -inmie 2 SKB <m*M« Aira mwxc a,upu caws. amj mrirr" collected for dywtyear- .m .11,180,00. Durmrihiß M ,rertlfioau i 192 .remom; wadr zt ire ore TH It MWHI Mt Aun ATI Abkritasww ated «- conference. Dr; Abbett has teen The Univcrsity Park Church has Reived .i great from Dr. Abbett, his One son,. Berris, 'is >a diaehanmd soldftrUho'wit to Fbaneo another, Henry, b in the Nwval rerThese wormy wonan, who fafthfahuMt, Iregretfi owl *wore invited UtSOo AUU see v w to the fourth year of the pastorate, in^which^a^ J™* Vy interest successfully met- The Avbetts will enter their new home at ette University, was six yeaw> s 0; perintandent of the Eugene wStret and was elected a delegate ,to ftp last general conferences® Jha Asst ballot without the aohtitiag of «• single vote on Jto is at School Board.

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Tlhn'-hlggsrt things, irettfe come to those who go after them. Religion is the biggest ttipg in 4he, ltth*qif «iM •Hey can o©w wiuuouw ♦ 4S5Wwd Sunday, January 18, IHO b big Indiana Day for the ian Synod every Pteriretethm in the state should “Head in” cm that day at his own chureh. Rev. F. E. Walton, pretor at tin wwy g_ r)-Wh|J, ml> uAh 11 J'k d^ttiNn 7 <<tfwy aim* church in Rensselaer next January 18,1920. Hear “H able 2 have no excuse for not MM&ig Aim. * - WWI i ■ i 1 y®®* -

50 boiS/five thoMMid Swift’. $«« *»*%* ItMUVSMX.