Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 182, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 July 1920 — Page 2

THE UNIVERSAL CAR The Ford Runabout is a Runabout in reality—a regular business messenger, solving the of economical and quick transportation. The Contractor, Builder, Traveling Salesman, Collector, Solicitor, all find the Ford , Runabout the ntiost convenient as well as the most economical among motor cars. Durable in service, and useful every day in the year. We solicit your order for one or more. We ask your patronage in the repair of your car, assuring you of genuine Ford Parts, skilled workmen, reasonable prices. CENTRAL SALES COMPANY Phone Threa-eaa-aiaa.

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN baibt w> Mon-wnm. CUM♦ MAMIXTOM. BuMinßer* Seml-WMkly Rapubltoan entered Jan. L 1887, at second class mail matter, at the noßtoffio* al Rensselßar. Kvening Republican entered Jan. L 1887. aa second class mail matter, at tha nostoflico at Rensselaer. Indiana, under the Act of March 3. 187 A UTIS H»lun>« iJ»TiaTIIDKI Semi-Weekly Me Dally, per tach 18c First Page, Dally ....lie SUBBCBII’TXOM MATUS Semi-Weekly. year, in advance, M.M. Dally, by carrier. 1* cents a week. Single copies, 3 cents. By mail. 85.00 a year. _ r BL-— MTU FOB CLAggXFXBD ABB. Three lines or loss, per week of six issues of The Bvenhng Republican and two of the Semi-Weekly Republican. M cental Additional spacepro rata. Beading Mottoes—Semi-Weekly, ten cents per line it ret insertion; 5 cents per line each additional insertion. Daily, & cents per line first Insertion. 8 cents per line each additional insertion. No reader, accepted for less than 25 cents, rnbllc Bale Advertising—Single column reading matter type, 88-00 for first insertion. |I.OO for each additional insertion. No display ad accepted for less , than 50 cents.

MONON ROUTE. BSMBBBBAMB TXMB XABUI Xn ettect July 11, im iostdouxd No. 38 Cincinnati to Chicago 4*4 a.m. No. 4 Doulsville to Chicago 5:01 ajn. No. 40 Dafayette to Chicago 7:24 a.m. No. M Indianan’s to Chicago 10:38 aun. Na 38 Indianap’s to Chicago 1:51 pan. No. 8 Indianan s to Chicago 1:35 p.m. Na 30 Cincinnati to Chicago 8:50 p.m. No. 18 Cincinnati to Chicago 5:17 a.m. bovxxbovbd No. 35 Chicago to CtacdnnaXi Na 5 Chicago to Doulsville 10:55 aan. Na 37 Chicago to Indlanws 11:18 aan. Na 38 ‘i**?’™* No. 31 Chicago to Indianan** 7:81 pja Na 3 Chicago to Louisville Mi™**No. 15 i Chicago to Cincinnati IHI am. Train Na IS stops to discharge passengers off of the C. L A W. Train 15 stops to take on passengers for points on the C. L * W.

CARRIER BOYS. Z rhomas Donnelly Phone 258 Morgan Lynge—, Phone 455 Seoige Wood-- Phone 150-Red Leonard Littlefield Phone 270 Bud Myers Phone 484 Ward Sanda Phone 484 If you mist your paper and cannot reach your carrier boy, call Phone 878. « ( CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE. TO* SAXE — Cable-Nelson piano. Good is new. Frieda Karsten, 42S East Washington street. TO* OSTW a good secondhand lawn mower. D. E Hollister, Phone 444. TO* BtTS—Qty property and town lota. Philip Blue. Phone 428. TO* BdTi* 1— neg* flne frMt Cann. IS acres apploa. »0 acres jioacb; es, 2t acres wheat, amne octa. id nmud t>irch and maple timber. ed house with thctric light* Mtn, md all modern oonyoaienoea also tanMsr..»iat‘sL‘» ! .sS: s rtaA-MSLsr* firing and wUI aafl at a bargato one third down ,and imlanee to Bhaser. Thia farm must no oom in Srty days. For information call toone tit or 4M. Harvey XMTisooa A ion, Benwolaor. Ind. *«» rain for quick-Mie. Wul JHfiwOMn. ■ f*xQOv. DUMMua MM* 1A y.W—P mrt mHI is* tATI yrnsor til mml' ©oiiaitwn* wnn*u»

FOB SAXJB—Dear Sir and Friend; I have the best land for the. money in the states ?f Nebraska and Colorado. Real farms and unimproved. Prices range from 850 to 8125 per acre, according to improvements and location and distance from railroad town. My lands are located in Kimball, Cheyenne, Deuel, Keith and Perkins bounties, Nebraska. In Kit Carson, Cheyenne. Washington, Dincoin. Yuma. Phillipa and Sedgwick counties, Colorado. । These are the rainfall lands wumw you are sure of a crop one year with another. No hot winds at all. Prices tor Colorado lands range from |3O to 890 per acre, according to location and improvements What thia Land Wil Do. If you wUI break the land five inches deep and in the fall due it and put in the wheat by the middle of August you will get from 30 to 45 bushels per acre. Thia has been proven. Two crops from this Nebraska land made a former owner 8»0 tJ Py acre. This statement can be verified. The first crop he sold for >1.60 per bushel; the second crop for >2.00 per bushel. A Colorado farmer did the same thing. 2a 1 have good irrigation land, improved and unimproved in Sedgwick county, Colorado. A can deliver this land from >2OO to 400 per acre. The alfalfa will almost pay for the land —over half the nrst year. This land will bring youfrom >6,000 to >B,OOO per Quarter rent M yeN F1 have 83,000 acres of land southwest of Denver, Colorado. 88,000 acres can be irrigated by stream and pumps. 1 will sell this all in a body to a big bunch of men for 860 per acre, 880 per acre cash, balance on crop payment pian. After two years from date of sale you give one-half of the crop for the two years* interest at 6 per cent on 840 per acre. This will give the young man a chance. . 4500 acres near Chappell, Neb., in Duel and Perkins counties. Excellent wheat land. Can sell from 160 acres up—Bso to 8125 an acre, according to location and improvements. Terms, third cash, balance to suit at 8 per cent. . , ■ 8,000 acres improved and unimproved in Cheyenne county, Colo. Price 840 to 850 an acre. Half cash. 50 per cent of this price will be carried back on land at 6 per cent. ~ 40,000 acres in the Arlckaree valley in Washington, Kit Carson and Yuma counties, Colo. A new railroad from St. Francia to Brush, Colo., will pass through this land. This land ranges in price from 830 to 840 an acre. Half cash, balance at 6 per cent. SPECIAD BARGAIN —2,540 acres in Kit Carson and Washington counties, Colo., 14 miles from Flagler. 1,000 acres bottom land, 300 under plow. F air improvements. Fenced and- cross fenced. Well and mill, only 10 to 20 teet to water. Price for deeded land of 2,540 acres, 830 an acre. In thia we will sign jl lease on 1120 acres. This is also under fence except 480 acres. This is a real snap. Most all tractor land. The entire tract at 830 an acre. Half cash, balance 3 annual payments at 6 per cent. 1 understand you know the value of land when you- see it. so I am thanking you in advance for an answer by return mail. Sincerely your* HUMMEDS, Investment Banker, 1070 North 27th St., Dincoin. Neb,

TO* SAXE— Paper bailer, in good condition, phone 261. Gilbert Albin. «i7w it lots all in one body. Geo. F. Meyera TO* SAX*— l2O acre farm, within 30 miles of Indianapolis. All improvements. For information call Miss Grace Haas, phone 121. FOE BAX*—Huber steam engine to first class condition, ready for work and 8 ft. grain binder. Charles Morrell. Phone 622. —TO* SAXE —Body off of Yellow bun. Would make good school hack body. Wallace Miller, phone 170 or call at Ernest Morlan blacksmith shop. TO* SALE—Forty acres of Improved land. This tract is well drained and suitable for either truck or general farming. For particulars address D. V. Comer, Rensselaer, Ind. r- • .. — — 1 ‘ H"TO* BIT.*-100 acre .fam. -Well drained, most all level; black.aoUlt; Hon. Can give good terms MB tht* Prine 885 per acre Charles J. Doan A Son. ■ - TO* BAM O* **ST—Four root* house to oast partjof ths city. Forsessten July 1. C. W. Piatt, pboao Odd. LOST XOST— Shell cameo, Sunday, between depot and my iwme on South Front street. Finder Please call Mias Grace Haas, phone 122. “xost—Bunch of keys ooatatatog one Yale, mid. tow and several ot*era. Lost about June if. H. A. La* phone XOST—Palm Beach coaj_> statements to pocket. blownCharles Osborne, pilous ><7- ■ ‘ MiT—Two H. ft X>. Shock Aft* 1 roa asm. rr~ T t I—■» ' T-S'-Wot rooms obtest Boor, aSo » funfflisd rooms for light house-dteeping. Itous

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

GENUINE TASTELESS CASTOR OR. ALWAYS LABELLED KELLOGG S EVERY BOTTLE OF KELLOGG’S TASTELESS CASTOR OIL IS ' LABORATORY BOTTLED AND r LABELLED KELLOGG’S. ■ ■ When you ask for Kellogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil, see to it that the bottle is labelled with Kellogg’s name. Kellogg's Tasteless Castor Oil is sold only in bottles fitted at the laboratories of Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc. Take no other if you want a 100 par cent pure castor oil with all nauseating taste removed. It is the same old-fash-ioned castor oil that your doctor prescribes, with the disagreeable taste eliminated. In the opinion of physicians and druggists who are already familiar . with Kellogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil, this valuable new form of the good old family remedy is a boon to children and even to grown-ups. Sold by all good druggists. * If you want a castor oil absolutely without nauseating taste, insist on genuine laboratory filled bottles, plainly labelled Kellogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil. Three sizes, 15c, 35c and 65c. (adv)

MT. AYR PUTS ON CITY AIRS.

The town of Mt. Ayr is expecting to soon start furnishing its people with electric service. We are informed that they expect to have the plant in operation not later than September Ist. The building, which is built of cement blocks, located in the northeast corner of the park, has been completed and accepted from the contractor and the batteries are already* installed in it as is the switchboard. All line material with the exception of some minor parts is on tha. ground and erection of the lines will start in the next few days. As there will at this time be but 75 poles to set and about three miles of wire to put up it will not take long to put that part of tile plant iin readiness. The engine, which is a FairbanksMorse, heavy oil burning type internal combustion was shipped from the factory about two weeks ago and is expected to arrive in a short time. The electrical machinery is the product of the Western Electric Co. of Chicago and the board has tried, with the best information to be gotten, to get it large enough to serve the town for some years to cqme but they are begining to think that probably what looked a large machine a few months ago is going to be only a medium sized one. The street lighting at this time will consist of plain hoods fitted with 100 c. p. nitrogen bulbs aL intervals of about three hundred feet on each side of the streets in the town. The street lights will probably be in service each night until eleven o’clock with an extension until midnight on Thursday and Saturday nights. The service given patrons will be continuous day and night for lighting and the plant will be run during the day, of such days as are decided upon by the board, to give service for those who wish ।to use washing machines, irons and similar appliances. The storage bat<»ry purchased will have eapacitv enough for some service other than lights but will be protected from an overioad. The people of Mr. Ayr are aware of the fact, that this arrangement will not give them all that might be desired in the way of electrical service but it will be so far in advance of what it has been possible for them to have in the past that it will be a great step in ment and hape that in time the business will be large enough that a line will come that way that will give them unlimited electrical service. The new plant will start off with fully fifty per cent of the business and residences wired and it looks now like seventy five per cent would be a much closer figure.

The band concert Wednesday evening drew one of the largest crowds of the evening and the program was the best that has been given this year. We pay high mill prices for good summer milling wheat. Iroquois Roller Mills. Phone 456. - WANTED. WASTES— Torrent. a five or Sixroom residence. Mrs. James McCallum, Phone. 72. _______ ■ WASTES—By 15-y ear-old boy. work on farm. Phone. ilLßleck. _ WASTES—Teams to work oa gravel road. Steady work as.we haul from both car and pit. Lonergan Brea Phones 902-K or »65-F. WASTES—To rent residence by September 1. Glenn W. Burns. WASTS*—A married man to work on farm one mile fro* town. , Joo Halligan, phone IK <. 5 c-. MISCELLANEOUS. TO* say.W SmnH Ford truck In good condition. Michael Kann e, phone TA* Bj>T.*-Qjm and potted planta. Osborne’s Granhonao —————T—3 TO EXCEAEBS Good tUßuroved did or 4W. - machlneu aud tobmlne imploaeeatu; aiao Wiptara PtiMty one *■"» KSE Front and SHBUm Harvey Davigoon. Plume Mt er WE MOSST TO EGAS—I have an mewit&rt ICThKRa WV -“"XvßWruq w«

BIGGEST OF EARTH’S VALLEYS

Giant Crack In Surface Extends Over . One-Sixth of the Circumference < I of the World. The Orest Rift valley, aa It Is called l by ‘ Prof. J. W. Gregory, extends over one-sixth of the circumference of the . earth, remarks the London Times. j It begins la Lebanon, follows the j canyon of the Jordan and the Dead sea and crosses a high “divide” to become the deep fjord of the Gulf ot Akaba between ths highland of Edom j and SlnaL' The R& sea, a great trough 11,000 feet deep, measured from the summit of its rocky wall to the sea bottom, continues it between the high deserts of Nubia and Arabia tn the narrow neck of Bab-el-Mandeb. It strikes across Abyssinia to Lake Rudolph, runs almost due south through British East Africa and traverses a range 7,000 feet high to 'Lake Natron, in what was German East Africa. Where it crosses the Uganda railway its walls are so steep that the trains used to be hauled up or lowered by cables, ft Is continue* by the rift which holds Lake Nyasa, an inland ocean, whose surface is 1,000 । feet above sea level, with a depth of 700 feet below sea level. From Nyasa it runs down the Shir valley, crosses the Zambesi and ends in the Indian ocean at the Sabi in Gazaland. A minor branch forms the lower end and a gigantic arm stretches from the upper end of Nyasa through Tanganyika, the second deepest lake in the world, its bottom 1,000 feet be-’ low sea levri, to the upper Nile. We are accustomed to think of valleys as having been formed by erosion, but the Rift valley is clearly the result of some mere catastrophic agency. There have been differences of opinion as to the mode of its formatton within the historical period. But the discov- i ety of fossil mammals, of types long extinct, makes it impossible to regard the foundering of the Dead sea as coincident with the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. . , J

ARABS SKILLED IN AVIATION

Their Mechanicians Said to Have Been Pioneers In the Art In the "Second Century. The Arie Arabe has some interesting sidelights op the early history of kHatton, so far as it concerns the Arab race. According to this paper, it was at the end of the second century, and the beginning of the third, that the Arab race began to be influenced by the Greeks and Indians. It was in Bagdad that the mathematical and mechanical arts first began to make their appearance. With the coming of these different studies the horizon of the Arabs became enlarged, ft was about this period that the grand Caliph Haroun al-Raschid sent his famous clock to Charlemagne, emperor of the Franks. Amongst the various ' crafts from which the Arabs drew their culture was, strange as it may seem today, that of aviation. At the head of this sectton was the celebrated Arab mechanician Abbas Ben Farnas, the first known pioneer of the art which Bleriot, Farman and Guynemer have since made famous, unless one should Include in such the young Icarus of Greek legend. ' . , \ •

Insect Life In Winter.

In the dead wood of the old snags are many insects that live through the winter regardless of how cold it gets; creatures whose weak bodies seem to defy the frigid temperature. Pull oft a bit of old bark from a snag and note that thereis life beneath it; Uttle people that try to scurry for cover when their home is wrecked. ‘ They are not so agile as when the weather is warm, blit they ar* not in a state of torpor. The fish do hot hibernate during the winter. Some species find homes in holes or beneath rocks and roots and get along very well without food during the cold weather, but they are not torpid like the beats and groundhogs ♦hut hibernate: Most of the fish swim about in the cold water and gather a living in winter just as they do in summer, but none of them require so much food when the water Is cold.

In Praise of Violate.

There are about a hundred different queries of violets, of which there are five species in England, and a few subspecies. One of these is the viola tricolor, tram which, is descended the jordan pansy, or Love-In-Idleness. But in all the passages In which ghakmipeare names the violet, he alludes to the purple sweet-scented vP etot, of which he was evidently very fond, and which is said to be very abundant In the neighborhood of Stratford-on-Avon. For all the eighteen’ passages toll of some point of beauty or sweetness that attracted him. And so it ls with ail the poets ftßam Chaucer . downward the violet is noticed by all, and by aU with affection.—Christian Science Monitor. ■' ' \ ' ■ • h

History.

Bow far history is to bo trusted is a Wletor Hugo/says all history is an epic. Epics always are emStelly calls Hsrbdatus’ erehcllißh Hvinm ImAgcC which his verse breathe, and history breathe, too, we ..soppoee Mod- __ --1 — Hw an a *"" *•* - -- •

DESCHANEL HAS STAGE FRIGHT

President of France Suffers Tortures on Platform. ALWAYS IMPRESSES HEARERS Ono of Franco’s Greatest Orators Declares That He Is Almost In Panic When He Arises to Addrsss an Audience—Composes His Speeches While Taking Long Walks Loss of Debater Than Poincare.President Paul Deschanel is one of the greatest orators of the day France, but he Is always suffering from a kind of “stage fright" when he rises to make a public speech. In A, letter to M. Ajacft deputy from the Sarthe, he describes his sensations as follows: i “The waiting is awful. I always feel UI before I go to the tribune. But once there I feel a relief. All the aama every minute Is perilous. In the chamber, just as on the battlefield, it needs only a minute to win or lose. It is victory or the guUlotine. w “ ' Must Think Deeply. Endowed with all the gifts of the orator, >Anej«tic presence, sonorous and extraordinarily clear voice. Impeccable delivery and diction, M. Deschanel has never faUed to Impress his listeners. He is less of a debater than his predecessor, M.- Poincare, which is probably due to the fact that his function as prerident of the chamber, which position he held for many years before his elevation to the chief magistracy, forbade him from taking part in the debates of parliament. Moreover, he has confided to Ajam that he lacks the

gift of certain orators with whom “the gesture precedes the word and the word the thought” For M. Deschanel it is absolutely necessary to think deeply before speaking. “For me,” wrote M. Deschanel to his friend Ajam, “there is no such thing as improvisation, ft is not that T am obliged to write my speeches beforehand, but I must undergo a certain mental operation. I must arrange my thoughts in logical sequence. Without a fixed plan it is impossible for me to speak. I do not actually decide what words or expressions I ahull employ, I arrange merely the plan. The rest comes as I am speaking, according to the actual circumstances in which the speechisdelivered or the time I have for my, discourse.

- Notes Curious Fact. “I have noticed a curious fact Very often the clearness of my pronuncla- , tion gives the illusion of absolute correctness of language. I say illusion because It has happened that I have had to correct faults of syntax when I have revised my speeches for the Journal Offlciel. Friends have remarked to me: ‘Oh, you have nothing to correct in that speech.’ But I have found several times not only slight imperfections of syntax, but a faulty choice of words or expressions. And always the clearness of my pronunciation covered up the mistakes. r - “Once I have my plan in mind I take long walks. The movement of walking aids that of thought The best speeches—l am speaking of prepared speeches, not parliamentary outbursts—are those which one has turned over in his mind during a walk in the country, without the aid of pencil or paper. The words live and walk with you.”

WHISKY ON ROAD

Police Cannot Explain Why It Was Abandoned. The discovery of a burled treasure would not have caused as much excitement as the finding by residents In the neighborhood of West Eighteenth avenue and Hooker street Den- ( yer, Colo., of two cases of whisky strewn about the street corner. Investigation proved that the whisky was of the "moonshine” variety, so they notified the police. Detective George Schneider of the city bootleg squad responded to the call and confiscated 24 quart bottles of the Jlquor. „ He is at a loss to account for the abandonment of the booze upon the street He holds to the theory, that two booze cars were about to make a transfer at some time during the night, and that one becaine frightened at a possible threat of highjacking and fled, throwing the liquor overboard. ■ •— —

Foch’s Famous Motor Car Sold.

Marshal Foch’s famous blue and black motor car with the Marshal's baton painted on the panels, which he used during the war, has been sold at auction for 74,007 francs. The purchaser received a written guarantee that the car is actually the baa used by Marshal Foch on bls dally round of duty. - ——, . \

They Still Need the Walters.

Bobbers' broke into the linen eoanmlssary of the Missouri, Kansas 1 Texas railroad company at Kansas I Olty and stole 8,000 napkins, nine Mt I CUW!S> waivcro ,• - jMwpj th K * McCulloch,

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Speech Should Be Worth While.

And when you have something to say it’s worth saying well. It’s not just that you say words. You must say them so they attract and convince. We all use pretty much the same words but they sound so from the mouths of different people. There are books galore that are musty with unuse because what they say is poorly said. If the thought had been matured, into small compass and told in telling diction they should be popular works. And it's the same with speech. Some /nen have good ideas, but they take so long to tell them that people get tired. Sometimes they even get weary before the man begins to speak. The world wants what you know, but it Isn’t willing to waste time listening to mere words.

A bachelor who is given a baby W hold looks as helpless as a lost dog. The more money you save the respect your heirs will have for you. Methodists attending Northern In,i gram with a puzzled air. Then deciding Be kind to the candidate. He Is worried even when prospects are bright People love political idealism if it doesn’t make them lose too much money. When jour hatred is violent It slnH us even beneath those we hate.—La Rochefoucauld. - And the mau who breaks off a matrimonial engagement should be fined for contempt of court White shoes ought to cost little be*' cause It costs more than they’re worth to keep them white. Nothing makes a man so sore as having to pay his wife’s board when , she visits her friends. , Job printing at the Republican -<Yira. ‘ f i ’ r..... I . i . ■■ 1 / £ ■

DANCE at Kniman SAT., JULY 31 Fine Floor, Horton’s Orchestra LEE MYERS, Mgr.

EAT FISH FRIDAY We Have A Fine Supply es FRESH FISH Only the .of Fish — ■ w H T * r > AM 1' A* i Phone ’ 92