Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 252, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 October 1920 — Page 2
BARGAINS In Simd Hand Cars We Uve several second hand can which can he bought at very mniiiit prices. * Our List Includes — ■ -4-—-- —-— ■ ■ - - - ford Tourings Ford Speedster Ford Sedan Dort Touring Dodge Tourings Oakland Touring Maxwell Tourings Willys Knight Touring AU of these are good bays. Call or Phone Central Sales Comoany Phone Three-One-Nine
CLASSIFIEDCOLUNN ’ F o * axiJb - 808 gaJWB—DiBPoelAg or our entire stock of Buff Orpington chickens. each. 62.60 and up. Order at onoe. Phone Jl3-F. S. A. Arnold. N>-1* 808 1617 Ford chamte. Cheap U taken at onoe. Frank Brown, Phone »2*-G. _ ’r„V„ pears, TW* Vino and Mathewson street*. 808 8088 .Boy horse. weight.Mß osUTssjar: _ „>* 808 e«TW Rod Oak. White Oak. Burr Oak. No Pina. no Ash. no Willow. Rverett Halstead IW* FOB BABB—Paars. J. W. Coen. 1-uone ** FOB ■*** * Duroc wring boars, weight about 200 lbs. .Will register in buyer’s name. Edward Kose, phone Ml-J. ts FOB UM-1 hare a number of A-i farms for sale, ranging &om HO myf* mu wore. &W. DayaU, pbsas 808 gain Henoad-hand aatemoUMe —Fords. Overianda, Bason& hunpirea. Kuboske B Walter, pbono M 4. « FOB BaAß—Braaawlek ptoaogHOh and Singer sewing . maehfnA Both good aa now. Frank Crtteer. Paone 3*». 4 “
FOF BAM—City **”2 Blue. Phon* ***- « FOB ht* iu sore Cana.. w«l draumd. mwt aU level; ruwtM uuuic <ooa omn, oorn weU. nue ftreaard. land <M uoa. Cm <ive good•• t rux »«• fret acra Ckarlee 4. ‘**•s a aon. _ gro* «t» -Tha Hemphill livery taSbuuSmTor wm ••“ lot. Fine location tor buainoaa Phono m-Greea. “ rut BAM—eut nowop an< fruited frlanta. Qabomo-a Groenhouae. U ~FM~~iir.S -Two pure bred Shorthorn bulla, year oM. r See at tha Uva Stock Show, laar. Oct. 11 to M. Henry Paulus, phone S3B-G. - FOB BlTß—Bedroom Suite, conalatlac of bed, springe, dresser «wMana, davenport; morris chair; attenaion Die; kitchen table; bookcase. Can be seen at A. Gangloff residence. FOB BMB Hand picked Pbara, Tbc a bushel. Orville Lambert, phone »£ I®**® FOB WSTB Thirty-Ova Brunswick boxes, all sixes. Worland Brothers, phone 18.
FOB BAM—2® Poland China PUA 2 months old. Phons 111-Black. 11-K ~~FOB Tic per Mrs. George F. Meyers. FOB BdT.B .Tehinet. ma; tor some one wanting jsooabreemas stock: also six-year-om now, rwh Oct. 11th; aiao TO acres Mad, cated with residence and store toM*; ins. good location tor small < atoro and produce station, would oomMjc Mds on this tract; also, term MW •«} two miles of market on stone *s*?* allevel Mask land. all In with splendid te«rmaMnM; Fto ”g of M acres, one mile markst. goff land and good improvements. P. Blue. Wbeatfield. Ind. ”
FOB BhT.B Good kMton* "W? LOST. Princess JFlndsr plsssc r® | turn to thio office and receive r£ ward. ■ "■hr— —JI hm to»r iWtSn to WB odMn toot mod ramdve toward. ~ 8088 Oteriing silver fever Sharp !- —— I WANTED. MK^, w —Mut' ijt.wry having
MISCELLANEOUS. WAMTBD—Married or single man to husk corn, by bushel or month. Wok Hough, phone M4-D. 808 November, ~it*. building on east aide of court boaee square where Democratic tors is located. Dr. X Q. Catt, 10-l< FOB XXOKAMOB—Six-room .banga* ow within corporation, practically now, with basement under entire housa with 1 1-3 scree of ground. To each an re for Uwn property. Harvey Daviaoon. « ■oan to loam— Ckariee J. Doan A Son. ts aonoa TO Bi BMW—Wo handle the Burnley line Tractors. threshing machines and farming implements, also Western Utility one horse-power tractor and inwlemente. At the White Front garage. Kuboako A Walter. tt
PUBLIC SALE. As we are going to move to Michigan City, we will offer at public sale at our fann just north of the city limits of Rensselaer on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, At 2:30 o’clock, the following personal property: Studebaker wagon; plow; harrow; 14-tooth harrow; one-horse cultivator; mowing machine; hay rake; waiter barrel and can; mud boat; chicken coops: bee hives; two dozen hens; set of harness; 2 extra good milch cows; coming two-year-old heifer; corn and fodder in shock; some oats hay; good 140-egg Belle City incubator; 100 chick brooder; sewing machine; Malleable iron range; 1916 model Ford touring ear in good condition; bedsteads and other articles too numerous to menticn. WILL ALSO DISPOSE OF PROPERTY FOR $4,600 AT* PRIVATE SALE. TERMS—A credit of 11 months will be given on all sums of oyer $lO, notes to draw 6 per cent interest from date if paid when due, if not so paid 8 per cent will be charged from date. 2 per cent off for- cash when entitled to credit. Sums of $lO and under cash in hand. MRS. O. M. A H. M. PEEK. W. A. McCurtain, Auctioneer. C. G. Spitler, Clerk.
PRESBYTERIAN NOTICE. Prayer service Thursday evening at 7:80. There will be a meeting of the Good Cheer class and also of the Session at the dose of the prayer service. WANT TO BUY 12-guage or 16-guage shotgun. Either repeater or double barrel. Le Roy Kurtz, 218 N. Front Street. Phone 464. ® -t The Jasper County Telephone Company will hold an all-day open house on the last day of ths stock show, October 28, and invites every lady and gentleman, young or old, personally to vi®t their offices and inspect their equipment and all ; wOTking conditions. They want to show you all the complications and minute apparatus of a central office. Kindly, President and Manager.
Car of potatoes on track at Parr all day Thursday and until Friday at noon. Nice Dakota white stock, |1.50 per bushel. G. W. ROYSTER. One week sale. Plaid Blankets. |6.00 value, reduced to 14.48. See west window. Fendig’s Fair.
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THE EVENING REPUBLICAN/MNSSELAEB, IND.
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAX&T ABB BBMg-wBMMJiT. ROW M- WCMCT, >«>BHIS Semi-Weekly 1, 18»7. at seeoad class man matter, at the poatoflloc at nyailMr. Indiana. Evening Republican mtyea aaa. i. 1867. aa second class maU matteg, the poetoffice at Baammaar. inaiaaa, under the Act of March A IST* BATM.BOB MMMMKR.AWmMRM Semi-Weekly Single copies. 2 cents. By mall. 86.00 a year. BABBS FOB OT.agOTTtBBABg. . Three lines srlees, per week of six issues of Ths Bvomag. JtepuPMcaa aaa two of the Seml-Woakly Republican. 86 oenta. Additional cents per line fl rat Jpoertloa; » cgnte Kr line each additional insertion. tily, 6 cents per lino .Arg I cents per Hus in* additional maorU<£ for Isos than Advorttelag-Oingl. 00lal insertion. No display ad aocspted for lew chan 60 cents. CARRIER BOYS. Thomas Donnelly Morgan Lynge Phono 466 Bud Myers No Phons Peter Van Lear -No Phono Marion Gwin one 7,2 Orla Moore Phon* 41 • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1920
HARDING SURE OF 30 STATES.
New York, Oct. 20.—At least thirty states will be carried 'by Harding and Coolidge in the November election, Scott C. Bone, director of publicity of the republican national committee, predicted. “There is a possibility that the number will reach thirty-five,” Mr. Bone said. “This means that the republicans win carry aH the north and break into the south.” _ Mr. Bone said he based his prediction upon advices from newspapers and newspaper men all over the country.
TEMFERATURE. The foT.owiM b tfen X»1 for the twentßour bouiß datar at 7 a. bl on flw data indicated: October 20 82 October 21 . 81 58 < ;
at toe Bawra Grocery on ABd ‘ • For this week only. 86-00 Fteid Blanker. rMfoeed to U-A *» WMt window. ™*. Job printing at the liiabHsaa °™% ....
Americanism
By LEONARD WOOD
Wo hold those truths to ho self-evident—that all men are created equal} that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness—The Declaration of Independence. WHILE. the Declaration of Independence says In effect that it is self-evident all men are created equal, the fact of the equality of men is, has been and always will be denied by those who have rot the analytical ability to understand just what was meant by Jefferson when he wrote these words into the Declaration. AU Americans are equal before the law and as children of liberty they are brothers of a family none of whom has exclusive rights. It Is the equality before the law, equality of opportunity and the equality of liberty that was in the mind of Jefferson.
It Is possible, however, that Jefferson did not think on the matter of equal opportunities for all Americans when he set forth these self-evident truths, but that Americans are created to equal opportunities. Is one of the supreme facts.- .-i ’ Americans are not all native born. The instant that a man of foreign birth comes to this country with the determination to become an American citizen he steps upon a plape of equality with every o*er American, native born or naturalised. But he must become an American In something more than name, and by so doing he becomes an inheritor by right of sonship of all that Was promised by the writer of the Declaration of Independence, by the men who signed it and by the great document Itself. Politics, creed, race, whatever they may be, do not enter Into the question, for Americanism Is a thing apart from all 4 three. What America asks of those who coma to her from other lands is only that which she asks of those who claim her as their country by right of birth. It has been held by some persons that there is not opportunity of equality in the United States. The commonest stories tn our school books of American endeavor prove that opportunity comes to the man who asks It to be his guest and that It does not deny Itself entrance into any home. The future America depends upon its people. They “are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights." and among these are “Iff* liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Is there any right Id the world more to be desired than that which gives to the man of proper living, liberty and that opportunity for a happiness which is the reward of his own labor?
JASPER COUNTY GOLD StAR MEM ■ i -' ‘s ‘ .?k.
(Continued from Page I).'
talion. Went overseas in Joly, 1918. ’ Participated in the MeuseArgonne offensive. Died from pneumonia, October 8, 1918, in Evacuation Hospital No. 9. Buried at Vanbacourt, Bar-le-Duc, section M, grave No. *ll7, France. Fritz, George - - - Private Son of John and Thsreaa Fritz; born April 22, 1892, Walter Town,, ship, Jasper County, Ind. Farmer. Entered service September 6, Rensselaer, Ind. Was sent to Camp Tayior, Ky. Assigned to 4Oth Company, 10th Training Battalion, 169th Depot Brigade. Died from pneumonia, October 14, 1918, in Base Hospital, Camp Taylor, Ky. Buried in Catholic Cemetery, Medaryville, Pulhski Ind. Gratner, George Wellington, Private Son of William and Emma Lewis Gratner; horn December 14, 1898, near Rensselaer, Ind. Farmer. Called into service September 6, 1918, Rensselaer, Ind., and was sent to Camp Tayilor, Ky. Assigned to 40th Company, 10th Training Battailion 159th Depot Brigade. Transferred to 28th Company, 7th Training Battalion, 159th Depot Brigade. Died from pneumonia November 20, 1918, Camp" Taylor, Ky. Buried with military honors, Renselaer, Ind. « • * Knox, John McConnell Private Son of Thomas A. and Rachel Pierce Knox; born March 21, I*B9l, Chillicothe, O. Removed to Rensselaer, Indi, in early life. Educated in University of Illinois. Traveling salesman. -Enlisted in U. S. Quartermaster Corps, December . 11, 1917, Chicago, 111. Sent to Camp Joseph E. Johnston, Fla. Assigned to Office Workers Company No. 1. Went overseas in June, 1918, with Supply Company 312.''Located near Grieves, France, where he remained until <his death, December 5, 1918, from, pneumonia. Buried in U. S. A. Cemetery, near Grieves, France. ♦♦♦ । i Lanham, Raymond Private Son of Benjamin and Margaret T-anham, (deceased); bora August 23, 1898, Hamilton County, Ind. Was working on a farm in Jasper County, when he enlisted in Company M. 3rd infantry, Indiana National Guard (Battery C, 137th Field Artillery) May 30, 1917. Was sent to Camp Shelby, Miss. Went overseas, June 1918. Participated in battles of St Mihiel and Argonne Forest. Died from pneumonia, October 8, 1918, France. Buried, place unknown. > ” _ g_a * ....... McGlynn, Dewey Private Son of Domino and Emma Olive McGlynn; born November 8, 1898, Remington, Jasper County, Ind. Carpenter. Enlisted May 10, 1917, Fort Wayne, Ind., and was sent to Ft Thomas, Kjl. Assigned to Company G, 39th Infantry. Went overseas in May, 1918. Transferred to 10th Machine Gun Battalion Headquarters Detachment, Fourth Division. Participated in battles of the Marne, Verdun and the Argonne Forest Killed in action October 16, 1918, Argonne-Meuse. Buried in the American Cemdtery, Bois-de-Fays, Grave No. 2.
Murray, Arthur । Dwight - Private Son of James and Lillian Murray; bom November 18, 1895, in Jasper County, Ind. Farmer. Entered service August 30, 1918, Rensselaer, Ind., and was sent to Camp Sherman, O. Assigned to 31st Company, Bth Training Battalion, 1158th Depot Brigade. Died from influenza, October 9, 1918, Base Hospital, Camp Sherman, O. Buried at Wheatfield, Jasper County, Ind. * ♦ • Maddox, Calvin McKinley, Private Son of Joseph and Caroline Maddox; born April 5, 1896, Medaryville, Pulaski County, Ind. Farmer. Called into service September 1, 1918, Rensselaer, Ind. Assigned to Techinal Schpol, Carpenfay, FtHarrison, Indianapolis. Died from pneumonia, January 4, 1919, Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind., Buried in Medaryville, Pulaski * County, Ind. Myers, Roy Austin U. S. Navy Son of Charles Chester and Molissa Belie Myers (both deceased) ; born March 8, 1896, in Cory, Clay County, Ind. Moved to Jasper County in 1915. Fanner. Enlisted in U. S. Navy, November 21, 1917, South Bend, Ind. Was sent to Great Lakes Naval Station, HL, thence to Brooklyn Navy Yards, N. Y., where he died from pneumonia, March 21, 1918. \ Buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Riley, Vigo County, Ind. # # Small, George Harvey - Corporal Son of John and Etta Sumß; •born June 27, 1888, Ashland, Kan. Moved to Jasper County, Ind., m 1917. Laborer.. Enlisted in U. S. Regular Army, June 30, 1917, Ft. Wayne, Ind. Was sent to Ft. Thomas, Ky., later transferred to Syracuse, N. Y. Overseas, Segtember, 1917. Assigned to Scout Duty, Battalion Headquarters, 9th Infantry, A. E. F. Killed in action October 7, 1918, in Mpnt Blanc-Sec-tor. Buried near the place where k, ML . . .
Stath, William Theodora - Private ton County, Ind. Moved to Jasper
CASTOR IA Mar Infants ChUdrea InateForOmrSOYMr* * h "»» •«—
1 \ W/ hm L j -J-= J S [jS / fco&XoyjX' A 1 Ik bid W W aaaJciL. ' z ; No smoke in your kitchen MNZOLA does not smoke up your kitchen when frying — as do lard and compounds. > Besides its economy, Mazola is more readily digested than any hard fat. It is a pure vegetable fat and absorbs no odors nor flavors from the foods fried in it. It can be used over and over again; even after frying fish. Merely strain, and it is fresh as just bought. Once you try Mazola you will prefer it to lard and compounds. Sailing Rapreaantativa* G.H GAMMAN, Mauser, NATIONAL STaRCH COMPANY 712 Merchants Bank 3H 5 ’ TJIJTTT? Write for handsomely illustrated 64-page \ riVEE products Cook Book. Corn Products Ke- ' fining Company, P. O. Box 161, New York City.
County in 1897. , Farmer. Called into service September 6, 1918, Rensselaer, Ind. Was sent to Camp Taylor, Ky. Assigned to 40th Company, 10th Training Battalion, 159th Depot Brigade. Transferred to Battery D, 69th Field Artillery. Died from pneumonia, October 18, 1918, at Camp Ky. Buried in Weston’s Cemetery, Rensselaer, Ind. Stein, John - - Private Son of Barnard and Katherine Stein; born September 5, 1894, Will County, 81. Moved to Jasper County, Ind., in March, 1896. Fanner. Called into service September 6, 1918, Rensselaer. Was sent to Camp Taylor, Ky. Assigned to Battery E, 69th Field Artillery. Died from pneumonia October 16, 1918, Camp Taylor, Ky. Buried in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, Rensselaer, Ind. Stevenson, Wilfred - Private Son of Samuel and Anna Reefer Stevenson; born November 1, 1895, McGuffey, O. Moved to Jasper County, Ind., 1899. Farmer. Called into service June 23, 1918, and was sent to Camp Sherman, O. Assigned to Headquarters Company, 363rd Infantry, Ninety-first Division. Went overseas September, 1918. Killed in action November 10, 1918, near Waereghem, France. Buried Grave No. 158, Plot D, American. military Cemetery, Waereghem, West Flanders, France. Warfel, Cterir Private Son of John R. and EHa Warfel (mother deceased); iborn May 8, 1891, White County, Ind. Moved to Jasper County in 1911. Laborer. Called into service July 23, 1918, Rensselaer, Ind., and was sent to Camp Taylor, Ky. Assigned to sth Company, 2nd Training Battalion, 159th Depot Brigade. Transferred to Camp McClellan, Ala. Assigned to Battery C. 35th Field Artillery. Died from pneumonia October 19, 1918, Camp McClellan. Buried in Rensselaer. Survived by widow, Lulu Warfel (Green) and two children, Willard and Ruth Warfel.
There are a number of record! that have not been returned to th< ladies who distributed the blanks and we would be glad to have then sent in, so that they may be checker over, and be ready when the state commission calls , them in. , MBS. C. W. HANLEY, Jasper County Chairman
REPUBLICAN SPEAKING DATES. October , 22— Evening — Wheatfield, Johfla Dunlap. „i i .m_ ■ - ■ Big Cut in Price. Plaid Blankets. $6.00 value, reduced to $4.48. See west Window. Fendig’s Fair. Farm leases for sale at the Republican offisa* grain and cash ran*.
CITY BUS UNE ran FOR TRAILS AND CITY •'SERVICE FtnfUl attention given St. . Joseph College Calls. F. t BESLER, Prtp. : moas mt. ’J
ATTENTION MILROY AND MARION TOWNSHIP LADIES
All donations made by the ladies of Milroy and Marion townships for the Jasper County Hospital may be taken directly to the bo-Operative Meat Market up to nqpn of Saturday, October 28. Please place name .of township on your donation so that the gifts may be grouped.
f -~ - - - TAXI SERVICE PHONE 567 Charles Osborns / t
।R H h i : 1 IB II H t Say It With Flowers Phone 4M. The Hoose Plants at HoL [ ; dan’s G usi «• fine *#**»«**»*•»#••••••*•••*•**•*•• ■ BTr»T5i 4rn a lej el Fd^M T l " a TT*,, I ■ I ■ "™*
