Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 78, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 March 1920 — Page 4

At Last It’s Here o • ♦ r .. a*. JM - -X A Cash and Carry Grocery -frgr»r>,,-r;; , **■*'•,»<" •■»—■; —5 I—rri—'“ 1 —rri —'“ .. .'■' ' 1 ‘ “■*_ • ' • 1 ~ ♦- ■ .y .•So™A*4w -.-i-rM ;« : - * 1 Department This is the latest addition to this big variety store—the one thing necessary to make this store serve the people of Jasper county to the fullest extent. ON SATURDAY, APRIL 3 #Jb *• * this department will be open to the public, carrying a complete line of package goods of all ‘luahties and spe>i.iis«d on Boulevard and Renroh Brands of high grade goods put out by one of the oldest and best known groeery houses west of New York. Everything So Arranged And Plainly Priced That You Can Serve Yourself * • no delays in service—no heavy overhead expense—no delivery system to add to the cost of your grocery bill. FREE to each purchaser of SI.OO or more groceries on our opening date, a handsome new style shopping bag any advertising matter.

yra udingcw pr^|lß UU^ Ijigl A omM for every figure, <^" |> “*i*f »ui»^«r ■ pEMi I ®^ p ®2p^ IS JUST THE 4KAME j. a. McFarland . Ij 5? »

TU KVKNIIfQ BKPPBLIfIAN, RKNBB«tA«t. Ith/ ; J

HANGING GROVE.

Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Parker visited Sunday with C. A. Parkinson and wife. ■ ! Mr. and Mrs. John Scott spent Sunday with Mr. John Jones and family. - «.. . , Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ringheisen came over from Mt. Ayr Sunday ot visit home folks and get the little boys, Everett and Gerald, who came over Saturday. , _ 7- Mrs. Korah Eldridge went Sunday to help care for her new granddaughter at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Linback. Mrs. Frank Morton and children and Mias Francis Folger took dinner with Simon Cooks Sunday, i Dorothy and Orvil Mannan came Sunday to visit a few days with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Cook. _ . * , 1 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cochran and son, Leslie, Mrs. Chas Ferguson, Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Maua and Mrs. J. R. Phillips were Rensselaer goera Saturday. * ~v Word received from J. M. Bays, says they ere making maple syrup and are getting along fine. Mrs. Ray was sick in bed for five days after they landed there, but was ! feeling real good. Mr. Ray extends ian invitation to his friends in '‘Slinging Grove to come and eat fish. Mrs. 0. E. Hitchings was not quite so well the past week. Mrs. John Jordan, Mrs. R. S. Stewart, Mrs. Edward, Cook and Mrs. Simon Cook assisted Mrs. Sara Fulk with quilting one day last -v Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hague and family visited Frank Cochran s Thursday. ~ . , Mrs. Claud Reeves was quite sick with tonsilitis last week.

CASTOR IA hlhtFiiO^rM^W

CITY BUS LINE ? |t -V jifs. 2 •- St £-£-k « ■. **.' l FOR TRAINS AMD CITY ' " '' r * MILLER’* SONS

WHEN AIRPLANE WAS NOVELTY

•■ —im ~ m ffc IfflO Newspapers Considered Ordinary Flight* at Somsthlpg Worthy •f ‘'Splurge** Head lineal Nine years ago -who.would have dreamed of an NO-4 flying easily from Rock* way to Halifax, from Halifax to Tlrepaaeey. from there to the Azores imd on to Lisbon, and thence to Plymouth? Or of Hawker aad Grieve, the indomitable ones, Jumping oft.at 8L John’s In a land machine, with an ! ocean between them and the Irish I coast, whither they were hound? Or of Alcock and Brown who won after , Hawker and'Grieve bad failed? Or of in fllrigible, large as the ocean liher Adriatic, with five gondolas addin crew of 80 men, sailing swiftly through the fog, most of the ttatte see- • lag nothing else, from England to a landing field In Mlneola? On July 7, 1910, a New York-news paper published flight” news with a three-column head : “Curtiss, in Great Oceatr -Flight, Boars 1300 Feet Above Waves.” “Remains Aloft More Than 12 Minutes, Circling Atlantic City’s Throngs.” The story goes on to describe the flight: “Steady as a sea gull, the great yellow biplane flew over the sea, 1,800 feet above the waves and a *inlle out from the shore, remaining aloft for 12 minutes and 13 seconds.” It tells how Curtiss almorft wrecked the plane at the start In a dash through a breaker. The accident forced him to descend after he had covered 1,300 feet. “Sending for new propeller blades,” the account says, “Mr. Curtiss superintended their adjustment, and after a single test he forgot the accident and daringly macerated. This display of confidence and eourage brought a cheer j from the multitude.” —New York Evening Post.

LAST HOME OF SEMINOLES

Indians to Whom High Tribute Has Been Paid Have Been Removed to Reservation. ______ Now that the state of Florida has gathered the Seminole Indians together and placed them on a definite reservation In one corner of the Everglades, that remarkable tribe attracts passing attention. For many years they have inhabited the Everglades, and been undisputed masters, beyond | the outskirts of that region of swamp and jungle, of some 800 square miles of country which no white traveler has ever penetrated. Few whites have known the at all, and perhaps none better than Mrs. Minnie Moore Wilson, who was recently In- , terviewed for a New York paper. “The Seminole brave,” she said, “Is the most upright man In the world. He Is i altogether moral, and never lies, i cheats, steals or breaks his word, ' while his wonderful squaw holds a j rank in her family and community unrivaled among aR the women of ! earth.” A race could, hardly be more t highly spoken of; and the Seihlnoles themselves, says Mrs. Wilson, dread contact with American civilisation, lest It destroy their own standards of conduct. One cannot kmt sympathize with them when seeing the engineers ' surveying their wilderness. — Christian Science Monitor.

English Hotel in Paris.

}.; As early as 1T92 there existed an English hotel at Paris. It was owned by a mao named White and was situopposite the church of Notre Dame des Vlctoires. Its chief cliebI tele was drawn from the English 11b--1 ends of the day, who were attracted i to Paris by the British enthusiasm for i the French revolution. For, as a j writer in the Anglo-French Review 1 points out, “if George 111 and the Tories watched with anxious eye the progress of democracy, the whole liberal, party, tmbued with the ideas of Rousseau, was amazed at the flashing developments in France.” Among the noted guests there lodged was Toni. Paine, author of the “Age of Reason.” Load Fitagerald wrote home of him: “We breakfast, dine and sup together. The more I see of his inner self tbs more \ love and respect him.” The Hotel Is intimately concerned with the History of the Terror.

Changing Japanese Conditions.

Abe Kobe!, a rtdb Yokohama merchant, bequeathed 1,000,000 yen to be tsed for the public welfare of Kanazawa prefecture, pla<*»g the Tnatter entirely in the hands of the governor, inouye. This to bjr no means a solitary of its kind, as It may be rememthat an Osaka merchant, , not bog ago, donated 1,000,000 yen to contract a public meeting house, which a now complete and In use. However, 4 shows e change in the psychology of •be people, with whom the family has Men the unlty hf sotf Cty. ktttf fa’HflTjr' uroperty and possessions .Imvebeen tept intact from one generation to me ,ext. even by the ng ether peoples cnlMren to keep gp the flamlly,, linkage whenever no M lr is honu Thischange is welcome (Ur it indicates a contribution to tiie Betterment of the social welfare of ~yc< -vii 5 ! • “ —V. „

Given New Lease of Life.

Bt. Dnnstan'a. the school for blinded and soldiers in England, has ware simgasto

BUY HOW Fertilizer and Binder Twine. Most Have Yoar FERTILIZER ORDERS NOW. C»i famish high grade. United anna at of 10 per cfItfOTASI, Will Handle Standard Binder Twine. Shoald have year arder by MARCH 1^:^; We Carry TANKAGE In Stock THE FARMERS GRAIN CO. Phone 7 Phone 7 -w-V-~—-—i-:— ——— —-- i —r — t jjwwfnjrrrrrrr*frr“***— **** ******* sissaaeaeases rtff fffr rrrrrrn ..... E. P- Lana *>• M. Werlaad Lane & Worland Real Estate, Loans, Insurance - “ " I Office will be in the new | FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BANK BUILDING List your property with as.

COUNTY EDUCATIONAL NOTES.

The March teachers’ examination was held at the high school building last Saturday. There were seventy-seven manuscripts prepared durign the day. Thirty-six of these manuscripts were sent to the state department. The first school reporting a contribution for tiie Marne Memorial in France came from the two upper rooms at Parr, taught by C. M. Blue and Martha Fans. The pupils in the upper rooms contributed 99c and those in the intermediate 60c.... Those contributing were: 1 Roy Gunyon, Alva Whited, Leona Kosta, Oliver Mattocks, Frances Stibbe, Howard Sigman, Qllie Henry, Hazel Lowman, Edith Sanders, Bertha Campbell, Marion Whited, and Emma Sheffer, from Mr. Bine’s room. Those from Miss Faros’ room were Helen Gunyon, Goldie Sanders, Hazel Stevenson, Lillie Kosta, Carl Lowman, Doris Lowman, Dorothy Lowman, Hazel Beil, Maxine Bell, and Firman Myers. Many counties Are reporting that the matter is meeting with exceptional enthusiasm in Indiana. Children are not sated to give this for the sake of IX6 money to be gotten so much as the lesson of appreciation that this nation owes France. ‘ , L iiS The Virgie schools closed last Friday. A good reception was granted the two teachers, M. M. Lenon and Marie Harris, from the patrons of that community in the form of a big dinner. It is pleasing to note the appreciations this community has for teachers who labor hard for tiie welfare of the community. The teachers of this school represented two opposite angles orPaxperience. Mi*S Harris taught her first term there while Mr. Lenon taught something near his fortyfirst term. He is with. quite a margin the oldest teaching veteran in Jasper county and seems as young as most of the boys and girls who went to school to him.

COME AND SEE ME.

I have Baldwin pianos and other make* phonographs, several make* including the Ampliphone. All m ® ke * chJlbijes B. STEWARD, Sooth Side West Washington St.

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REDMEN.

The meeting night of the Redmen lodge has been changed from Friday to Wednesday evenings, and all members are asked to govern themselves accordingly. There will be team practice Wednesday evening, March 31, and a full attendance is desired. BY ORDER OF SACHEM.

Job printing st the Republican PROFESSIONAL CARDS MARION TOWNSHIP C. W. PsstiU, Inulo. Odd FtHows* RniMiww. Ransselaer. on Satanlhara. Office phone 642. Residence 328. on Saturday*. NEWTON TOWNSHIP John Rash, Trustee. Office with JB. P. Lane, over Murray's store, in Rensselaer JORDAN TOWNSHIP Julias G. Huff. Trustee. Office day—Thursday, at residence. Address, R. F. D. 4, Rensselasr. Phone 949-A. DR. E. C. ENGLISH Phyrieieu aad Surguoa. Opposite Trust and Savings Bank. Phones: 177—2 rings for office: 3 rings for fssidence. SCHUYLER C. IRWIN Law, 6 per cent farm leans. Office in Odd Fellows' Block. DR. F. A. TURJFLER Osteopathic Phydieiaa. L - Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building, Bcnsstlssr Indiana. Phones, office —2 rings on 200; residence —2 rings on 200. Successfully treats both scute aad chronic diseases. Spinal curvature a specialty. ■ ; - F. H. HEMPHILL - Physitiaa aad ' Sargaaa Special attention to diseases of women. Office over Fendlg’s Drug Store. Telephone, office and' residence, 442.' H- L. BROWN Crown and Bridge Work aad Teeth without Plates a Specialty. AW the latest methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Office over Gash’s Drug Bflfra WILLIAMS A DEAN Special •ttmMm 1 given to preparation wills, aagl^^y^ *“offk£ to r OdJ # Building. w. a PARKINSON «€ sashiwssfc. JOHN A. DUNLAP. L ‘ 1 m■ as w jy«r * ~_jL Office ia the O B. Murray Building TftlGpbOM It. - : l*^&M^aairo4p^waggaMßM^to^itoaaßgißßMamiaßßro^danwharoßN|ksMalh / CHARLES M. SANDS • oivn~&:z.£- s -gox Office In Bulldin* ;