Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 143, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 June 1920 — Page 2
TBB UMtVSWSAB CAS 1 The Ford Sedan, with electric self-starting and lighting system And demountable rims with 3%-mch tires front and rear, is a family car of ■ class and comfort, bot hin summer and in winter. For touring it is a most comfortable car. The large plate glass windows make it an open car when desired, while in case of rain and all inclement weather, it can be made a most delightful —closed car in a few minutes. Rain-proof, dustproof, fine upholstering, broad, roomy seats. Simple in operation. Anybody can safely drive it. While it nas all the distinctive and economical merits of the Ford car in operation and maintenance. Won’t you come in and look it over? CENTRAL SALES COMPANY Phoae Throe-oao-aiao.
MMKSMIHt KEPtIRLiCAN baixy abb mn-irmiT. OBABK * ■MPX.TOI, yOUdar*. Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. L 18S7. at second cleaa mail matter, at the poatoffice at Hanaaelaer. Indiana. Keening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1867, aa second class mall matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the Act oX March 1. W. _ BABBS FOB MWIAT”LBTBBTDUBG Semi-Weekly ...20c Dally, per inch 16c First rage. Daily. ~..20c SUBBCBXFTZOM BATBB Semi-Weekly, year, in advance, >2.00. Daily, by carrier. 16 cents a week, single copies 3 cents. » ay mail, 6*A> a year. BAYBS VOB c£aSBXFXB2> AM. Three lines or less, per week of six issues ot The Evening Republican and two ol the Semi-Weekly Republican, 16 cents. Additional apace pro rata. Beading WHlsao mi- Weekly, ten cents per line first insertion; 6 cents per line each additional Insertion. Daily. 5 centa per line first insertion, 3 cents per line each additional insertion. No reader accepted tor less than 36 cents. FnkUc Bale AdverMstog—Single column reemny matter type, fx.uo tor nrst insertion. >I.OO tor each additional insertion. No display ad accepted for less than 60 cents.
MONON ROUTE. unuuxa toa tmu _ A •*«* MteA 30. MM. MBBTHBOOKD *> No. 3* Cincinnati to Chicago 4:84 am. No. 4jLoulaviUa to Chicago 6:olam. No. 404 Lafayette to Chicago 7:80 a.m. No. 38 Indianap’a to Chicago 10:34 am. Na 38 indianap'a to Chicago 8:81 pm. No. 4 Louiaville to Chicago 3:31 p.m. No. 30 Cincinnati to Chicago 66.0 p.m. [ BOUTBBOUMD Na 35*/Chicago to Cincinnati 8:87 am. Na 6 (Chicago to Louisville 18:55 am. No. 33 i Chgo to IndpiaAFF 1.67 pm. Na 401 Chicago to Lafayette 6:60 pm. yn 31 I to iDdiBOA© • lilljklU. Na 31 Chicago to Louiairille 11:10 pun.
cussitiitt cvim FOR SALE. FOB UM — Modern seven-room home, complete in every detail. C. W. Duvall, phone 147. FOB BSTi* Tea room modern houaa close in. Might trade for farm. George F. Meyara. FOB OUS Or will unde for town property, eignty aerea of land. Charlee Morrill. Phone 438. mm BiT.B-Cut flowers and potted planta Qabocao’o Qrenhouaa mm ■SW-Cabbam and tomato plants in any quantity. Phone *33Black. J. H? Oareon. mm SAUt—City property and town lota Philip Blue. Phone 488. FOB BAT.B -100 am Ano fnrtt farm, 15 acres appiaaM acres peaches. 80 acres wheat, noma oata. 1* acres birch and maple timber, finely improv- 1 ed house with electric llghtalmth. and all madrm conveniences, atop tenant house, g-»od bank barn. AUo, Al buildings in flrat class ootulltiou. located close to two good factory towns in southern Michigan. Owner is rotiring and will sell at a bargain, one third down and balance to salt nurcbaser. Thia farm must ba sola in thirty daya For Information call phone 81* or 483. Harvey Davisson A nn_ AmmNMIaAT* Indo mm BABB—Second-hand automobiles farm or Rensselaer Garage. “■ c FtiiSi ASrS. mm wvvw irn acre farm, wtil drained, most aU level; black sotljSroom house, good barn, corn cribs, good well, fine orchard, lead all la cultivation. Can give good terms on thia Price |BO per acra Charles J. Dean 8 Bwl 1 mm werw tbont two loads of pine and oak wood and kindling. A. Merica. phono 17a . ■ MEdhRRm. . .... tearing ear. ,™i7n-
•OS aar-w—Thrne general purpose work horses. One six other two tan. W. H. Eldridge, phone 637-D. _ FOB BABB OB BBMT—Four room house in east part,of the city. Poosession July J. C. W. Platt, phono 366. IFOB~ BAT.W-.At half my regular price, hatching eggs from my pure bred strain Goldenbutt Orpingtons. G. B. Porter, phone 276 or 666. FOB aor-a—white Wyandotte setting eggs, Keeler strain, at >1 per setting of 16. Mammoth White Pekin eggs at 12 for >I.OO. White African guinea eggs at 61.00 per 16. Thomas C. Caln, ’phone 226-G. FOB SOT.A—IS,OOO short stem Holland cabbage plants at 60c per 100 or >4.00 per 1,000. H. P. Callander, R. F. D. L Rensselaer. WANTED. Wft Tsn ■- p t ova wood, also block and cord wood. Silas J. Toombs, phone 608. * married man to work on farm one mile from town. Joo Halligan, phone 12. WAMTB2>—A good second-hand >M inch wagon, throe seta of dumpboards and a good set of harness at once. Thomas Lonergan. Phono 602-K. WAMTBQb—Washmga, by first class washer. Call phone 468-Black. WABreßßh—“Xou can make big mosey selling our Texas and Now Mexico OU Leases locally. Perfect Utleguarantood. Deep tests being made; wo do the development work. Wonderful proposition. Write or wire Mid-Con-tinent Finance Co.. Victor Bldg.. Kansas City, Ma" WKTW—K iood team of work horses, not too heavy. Address r. O. Pershing. Newland, Ind. WtrtlP Lawn mowers to grind. Cheaper here than hereafter. Leo Griggs, phones 638. 683-Black or 606. At County Heating Plant.
■f *n Ch Inb ana and turkeys, will call for earns ‘Phone *47. 44. l. Leavol WAMTBD—A. man to attend large garden on shares. G. B. Porter. Phone 560 or 37*. LOST a—----——---—*-*---—— LOB*—Between Remington and Rensselaer dark blue dress coat. Finder leave at this office. XABT—.Between Methodist and Christian churches, silver meah-bag containing about four dollars and a cheek. Return to this office. TO* »MT—Home, close in. good garden. A S. Conrad, Main Garage, phone 80*. FOB RBMT—RFuraiabed rooms, two blocks from court house. 303 N. Weston St. , FOB BBMT—4-room house in northeast part of city; small barn and good garden. Phone 881-L Wm. MarFOB BdTiW—73o acrea White county, ind- between Chalmers and Woioott: Matic prairie; *175 per acre; liberal terms; must sell because of my business in Indianapolis. Writs ms for engagement to seo this form. 8. L. Schubach. Indlanapolia. Ind. 1008 City Trust Bldg.
MISCKIJANEOUS. FOTDro—Auto crank. Get horn FOUBD—Pair of spectacles Call here. m»mn>—String of beads, Inquire here. FOB IXOUMBB—MO acrea prairie land, fine improvements, adjoining corporation of good town. Will exchange for garage or stock of merchandise. Harvey Davisson. Phone 8M or AM. fionr TO BOAV—I have an uniiultod supply of money loan on good farm lands at *M« and usual eommissloa or 4% without commission, as desired. Loans will be made for » roars, 7 years, M years or 80 years. See me about these various plana. John A Dunlap us* four rums with us our new gprteg. beekite sees out be other agents with whom we are washing. George T- Mayors. - lOTICI «O FABMBBB—We handle Burnley line Tractors, threshing mAfihlMl And fAItHiBM UIUMBIMDtS; atoo Western Utility one horse-power tractor and Imglmnwete. At the White Front garage. KUboaim and Walter. m SAW-.Fard body_for runabout good body for work ear. Loo A Reeve. BBOBBT S* BOAM—ChariM J. Dem 81* or *BB.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
SENATOR HARDING _. ’ _ NEXT PRESIDENT
(Continued from Pago One.)
He got his first taste of newspaper life and his longing for the editorial game at college, where he was editor of the college paper. Like many > another young man, the senator worked his way through college, part of the time as a section hand on the T. 4 O. C. Railroad and part of the time at various other occupations. Learned From Ground Up. When he took charge of the Marion Star he started to learn the business from the ground up and has kept pace with improvements in the mechanical branches of journalism to this day. It is not unworthy of note, in this time of industrial unrest, that in all of the years which Senator Harding has owned a newspaper he has never had a strike or a threatened strike among his employes. Although he is by preference and profession a newspaper publisher, Senator Harding is identified with a number of other enterprises in Marion and other parts of the state. He is a director in a bank and several large business enterprises and is a trustee of the Trinity Baptist Church. During the last twenty years Senator Harding has been abroad three times, each time to study other systems of government. Gained Fame As Orator. Harding's first political speech was made at a Republican county committee meeting in a little country school house to an audience of about twenty-five persons. So successful was he in holding the ear of his audience that he attracted the notice of older politicians, who immediately utilized his services in making speeches all over the state. It was not long before he was billed for speeches with McKinley,'Foraker and others of equal prominence. In 1898 he was nominated for state senator from the district com-, posed of Hardin, Logan, Marion ■and Union counties and was elected by an overwhelming majority. Served A« Lieut. Governor. At the expiration of his second term as state senator he was nominted for lieutenant governor on the ticket with Myron T. Herrick as the gubernatorial candidate. He. served with Governor Herrick during his first administration, but declined to be a candidate for re-election, .retiring to private life to devote his attention to 'business interests. In 1910 he was nominated for governor of his state, but was defeated. In 1914 he became a candidate for the United States senatorship from Ohio and won the election by more than 102,000 votes. Senator Harding has done important work on the Senate committee on foreign relations, as well as on other committees. He was one of the earlier advocates of preparedness, while others clamored for peace at almost any price, having sponsored the bill for preparedness whieh had the indorsement of the late Goh Roosevelt. Made Taft Nomination. As a public speaker he is cahn, yet at all times forceful. It wiH be remembered that he made the speech nominating William Howard Taft for the presidency at the Republican convention, in Chicago. Harding has been depicted as a “middle of the road” man, a man who is safe, conservative and sane. He is not a radical, nor is he yet a conservative. He sticks to the middle path. . _ On July 8, 1891, he married Florence Kling, daughter of Amos Kling, now deceased, who, during his .Mie, ya a one of the leading business men of the city of Marion.
The following are thirty-third degree Harding men who were the supporters of the phio Senator from the very first: Judge C. W. Hanley, County Recorder George Scott, County Clerk Jesse Nichols, County Assessor G. L. Thornton and Attorney Moses Leopold. There may have been others, but there is no denying the faithfulness of the above men. Of course, the usual “I Told You So” club made itself heard shortly after the success of Mr. Harding had been announced.
The ball game between Wheatfield and Boone grove at the fomff place Sunday ended in the eighth inning with the Boone Grove team leading 5-to 4, rain putting a stop to the pastime. Wheatfield had a runner on third base with one out when the deluge came. The score inverted to the last half of the seventh inning. Several from here witnessed the game.
C ASTORIA For Infants and Children In UccF«rOvw3O¥*M« Always beam the of
i H Sap ft With Floware HmmeAM. P;. ■* ' ’ 'S' -'.S :
NEW OCCUPATION FOR GOAT
Billy and Nanny May Ba Profitably Emptayod in Clearing Away the Impeding Underbrush. , Tha monkey cotton picker was never an entire success. Tbs monkey could pick Hie cotton, but it coot more to provide human direction to guide his efforts thap the negro cotton pickers asked for the whole job, picking, directing and all. But the Angora goat as a clearer of land requires no direction. Just string a few strands of barbed wire around the land to be cleared so that Mr. and Mas. float end the kids shall not ciear the land that 4s not to be cleared and they will do the job without even a casual suggestion from the land owenr. The success which has attended the raising of Angora goats in toe rugged Osark country of southwestern Missoori has suggested to specialists of toe department of agriculture that it might be equally profitable to 'place auto herds> on many other wild tracts, particularly those which have been cut over, because these goats are proving of great help in clearing away nnderbrush. Growth mohair and producing kids, the Angoras in the Ozarks are also trimming down the brush, manuring the hills and preparing the way for grass, cattle and sheep. According to reports secured by a representative <rf the state college of agriculture in Missouri, the Angoras required .to dear an acre of land varies from two to five, depending on the density and size of the brush.
SOUL’S ORDEAL AFTER DEATH
Old Volume, Known as "Judgment of the Dead,* Is a Fancy of the Ancient Egyptians. -Book of the Deed” Is a very old book, known In ancient Egypt as the -Judgment of the Dead," and It contains the funeral of the ®gyptians, describing In mystical language the experiences of the soul after death and the teat it must quote to -escape, the torments and trials of the lower world. In one chapter, the longest In the book, .is a picture showing toe judgment which the defunct, before enterlng into the fields of the blessed, will undeago in the lower world, in the presence of Osiris and 42 judges of monstrous form, who are on hand to devout the. guilty and drink bis blood. Anubis, the god of the dead, and Thoto, the god of wisdom, ekamine the deceased by weighing his heart in the “sacred” balances of Justice. The famous “negative confession” enumerates 42 calptal sins from which the deceased must be free. Should he fall to tM ordeal, he is either banded over to be devoured by the monster, part hippopotamus, part crocodile and part lion, which represents the Haitian Cerebus, or is thrown into, the fiery lake.
Queer Wedding Presents.
The following are « few of the many carious wedding presents that have been received by those about to enter the bonds of matnimonyh A well-known author received on his marriage, from a rival man of let# ten, a scrapbook containing a coHeotfon of all the advWse criticism his works had ever received; a popular artist was en similar occartee presented with a set of elementary works upon self-instruction in drawing and painting. Unusually vexatious was the gift received from his neighbors by an infirm octogenarian, who had a nr women more than fifty yean fate Junior. It took the form of a large brass <age, “intended”—so ran the accompanying note “to restrain the wayward flight of a giddy young wife \So had married a decrepit Old feel for his money.”
Timid Old Soul.
My , aunt was a timid old soul and was quite afraid of holdups. For safe always put her moneyin Lu stal king One day when she was going tn do some Christmas shopping she thought she would play a Joke <m ♦ha boldnp«- She put the money in her pocket -and carried her purse. In the purse she put newspaper crumpled up. Bhe kept her hand in the pocket that had the purae.and walked along menrlly. t Bat .to her surprise when are money, but 4t waamissing. Then, forgetting, Mie reached for her pockefthook and pulled out the paper goTribune.
As to Brevity.
Of course brevity can be carried too may be dwkwd « iWe may be brief and tedious at the same time. Bowe one u ffiigram to two lines. said good, but ft drags to of a dull oaf: “The hravltv ridiculous. We do not want gr tot it NoverthMeaa. Y e should all do well a* practie. brevity an*
Incredulous Lady.
“Why do you Sttat a ouUebaard when yen might bn enjoying intact couvereatJoet Ton eant beltova
I lEffiPTiffSl I For Infant* and Children. iiftfhnre Knnw That nliuW I Hal Genuine Castoria Always / t MQw - i imHhrfari RegaU*l /a/ ~lg Bears the X JR | Signature//,Jr - ■ | I IA ■ ■ ffe I ft Jr n r ® se Ur for Over ■ JSEJ Thirty Years CASTORIA Exact Copy of Wrapper. mktmmi km cm.
YESTERDAY’S RESULTS. National. \ Cincinnati, 1; Brooklyn, 0. St. Louis, 5; New York, 3. American. Chicago, 9; Washington, 3. New York, 14; Claveland, 0. Detroit,. 4; Philadelphia, 3. St. Louis, 11; Boston, 5. temperature The following is toe temperature for toe twowtx-fowr hours ending at 7 a. m. on the date indicated: Max Min. June 11 95 $6 Jnue 12 97 69 June 13 95 66 June 14 96 68
20 per cent reduction on all ladies’ suits, coats and silk dresses. An opportunity to get a swell garment very low in price. Fendig’s Fair. Farm leases for sale at toe Republican office, grain and cash rant.
We are proud of\the, patented CaloriC Pipeless Furnace. have seen it accomplish remarkable results for our customers. We have installed it in homes where winter comfort was unknown until the CaloriC came around. We know that the CaloriC makes good and we are glad' to add our personal endorsement. to the Ironclad Guaran--Itee4hat is given by the manufacturer. Saves % to % tike Fuel. I The CaloriC heats all types of J homes— bungalow to three-etory I house — disI tributes all His / I nits heat. • R ; I through only I one register; JUI “YRT I noheat-wast- .■gggto I ing pipes, no | trouble to in- WTEMrereasaßU I We often Bl I complete the HI ft ' * entire job ml Km one day with- H out any in- SHS terferenceH .2 “<- 'iwith ur H ft Jll Let us give you tn names of some of the nearby imms, U -w names Im Uto ad limTM üßftAJWf* U HO TIME B \ v •/ .. n II £ . HARDWARE - Rmssetoer, lad. ■ I I I ’ AhtoMMito a' II ■ Aewww* CrMffBANV CmL. O II
LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS.
The Marion township division of the League of Women Voters will hold its first monthly meeting in the auditorium of the Public Library on Tuesday, June 15th at 2:30 p. m. Every women .should 1 endeavor to be present and establish an interest in the great vital movement The program, which is uniform throughout all the townships of the county, is as follows: 1. Why do women, more tten men, require special political education at this time? Discussion. • 2. What is the most practical plan for carrying political education to every election district? General discussion. The first unit is the family. Quizzes: (1) What would happen if every woman felt her full obligation concerning citizenship? (2) Is a woman citizen responsible for sanitary conditions in her neighborhood? How about epidemics, general health, etc.? (3) When will you have to register in order to yote in November? where do you go to register? (4) Do you believe in voting for the. “party” or for the “man”? Why? ’ ’ (5) Why are women desiring Citizenship? Is it for office? Money? 'B. Current Political Events. ah. ' * 4. Questions. "'
NOTICE. AU the suits codtestii* the wfll of the late Benjamin J« GiEwd, are now disposed of and I am in a position to sell land. Y hare yet unsold several hundred acres of good land located in Jasper and Lake counties, which I will sell as executor on reasonable terms, but rennet take any trod*. Call at my ofKea or at the oßfce of T. M. Callahan, at Rensselaer, Indiana, for particulars. GEO. H. GIFFORD. j Bxesßtor. R. E. Davis, the piano tuner and player adjuster, is here. your order* at the Rensselaer Hotel, phone 167- Expert on all makes of player pianos. Work guaranteed. 1 g l .. _ /. NOTICE High Grade»low shoes for ladies and children at 20, per cent reduction in price. Come early whße stocks are complete. Fendig’s Fair.
SPECIAL SALE. 4 used motorcycles. Different makes. Bargains for some one as ’ they must be sold —and at'; your price. Ihe Main Garage Best in Rensselaer aessitso»*o*soo»»BQOo»»» : CITY BUS UNE : CALL FOR TRAINS AND CITY SEPVICE. ISUAER ASONS CALL PHONES. 7:00 A. M- A T.SB P. M. ;
