Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 267, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 November 1920 — Page 2
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN boby abb ■bm*»wnbrbt. iots* kuumM tjui DOBtofliC* St ReUBSBIBW’t SUara of March », lit*. - BITM YOB Mm*T OfBBWWBB &mbl> Weekly . *•? »£k ■ :: mscßtmo* baas Semi*Weekly. y««r. *■ advance.,*** 8 Daily, by carrier, IS cento a week. Single copte* ’ cento. By mall. *s** a yw. baots roB ciucssxnx» abb Three line, er lea*. per waak ®f "'J issues of The Evtnlnfßepu^W 8 two of the Homi-Weekly R«P°i, 1 *f an - U cento. Additional apace pro rata. e,«m»r WotlossSemi- Weekly, ten cents per line first * SK!? ner line each additional ineertion oSly. S eonto per Une first lasertion. S cento per line each additional ineortion. No reader accepted for leno than a a 1 nrle coiunmreading matter type. U-OO> for first insertion, II.W for each additional Insertion. No display ad accepted for leas than 50 cents. J CARRIER BOYS. Thoma* Donnelly Q on * ??? Morgan Lynge. Phono 455 Bud Myer* No Phone Peter Van Lear No Phone Marion Gwin Phono II? Orta Moore Phone 415
CLEAN OUT SYSTEM AND FEEL LIKE NEW
The One Day Doctor works wonders in one day, for tired feeling, sluggish liver and bowels. The One Day Doctor regulates the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. It helps carry off the poison waste matter, cleans you out thoroughly and tones you up. It gives nature a chance to resist disease and usually in one day it banishes tired feeling, headache and biliousness. One Day Doctor is a one-day course of treatment. Take it today, notice the prompt relief, and see how lively and well you’ll feel tomorrow. Costs only 25c. Try it. If your druggist does not have it, send 25c and we’ll mail it prepaid. Absolute satisfaction or money refunded. One Day Doctor Co., Bourbon. Ind.
TEMPERATURE. The 1* the temperature for Um twenty-four hour* ending at 7 a. « on the date Indicated: Max. Min. November 5 £2 ’ on November 6 on November 7 63 3y November 8 »- 43
NOTICE. AH the suits contesting the will of rim | a t« Benjamin J. Gifford* are now disposed of and I am in a P 0 ttoa to seU land. I have yat unsold several hundred acres of good land located in Jasper and Lake counties, which I will sell as executor on reasonable terms, but eantst take any trade. Call at my office or at the office of T. M. Callahan, at Benseelaar, Indiana, for particulars. , GRO. H. GIFFORD, Kxoeutor. oeoosooe ooooeooo®**®®^^ H taxi PHONE 567 Osborne |
Warner Bros. ' Rensselaer, Ind, “jS } Hand You | [Mw/ This Bag of Money | R I r—lt Represents the Big I JJr I Saving in Fuel You Can I * MS' 1 Make With Cole’s Hot I Blast in Your Home jk " \ OUR GUARANTEE < O wjp « WeseanuitM a «Bvinr of one third in feel over 1 yytowwdrjm otevo of the aw a size, with soft coal. gWenaraatee Cole’s Hot Biss* to use less bard coal for Beating a given space than any base borner ■mda with taflM siza fire pot. g Wo gnaraatee that the rooms can be heated frotn "Of eno to two hours each morning with the fuel pet in the InSI the stow> will hold fire with Hwl soft coal or bard coal from Saturday evening to Mooa uniform heat day and night with L 9 *A WeguainntX? ewV’store to remain absolutely jnßk guarantee SeUed door to be smoke and dust > SSanuitoa the anti-puffing draft to prerent < | ’nSabove guarantee is made matostend- I A lur that tha stove be operated accoroing to QirecnoiMfc y A P mil lis a until up with a good fiua. W WI J I '©*’• ***"* M
FORMERLY A RENSSELAER PRINTER
J. B. Hemphill’of North Platte, Neb., who is visiting his sister, Mrs. E. P. Honan, left here in 1883. He was for many years a printer in this city and was employed by James & Healey, who were proprietors of ' the Rensselaer Republican. He later helped Jernes McEwan wiJh the work of issuing the Democratic Sentinel. He is now: operating a job office.’ He has two sons who are in charge of this work. Mr. Hemphill’s wife was, before her marriage, Emma J. McElfresh, daughter of the late Philip McElfresh of this city. Mrs. Hemphill Sissed away some five years ago. esides the two sons in charge of the printing office Mr. Hemphill has two others, both of whom are railroaders.
AUTO OWNERS. For a short time I will re-cover your tops at a big discount. Ford tops, touring, |1& . . All other makes accordingly. Auto curtains repaired and made to order. . Best grade material used. R. W. KNICKERBOCKER, Cor. Washington and Weston Sts. Denistry in all its branches practiced here. We make plates of all kinds,* gold, aluminum, rubber, etc. Office opposite court house square. Phone 24-D. " J. W. HORTON, Dentist. J. N. HORTON, Mechanical Dentist » . —.-— ~ ————■ ATTENTION MODERN WOODMEN There will be an important meeting at the Woodman Hall on Monday evening, Nov. 8. All members are urged to be present. C. G. FITCH, District Deputy.
Some electric wethen lift and dip the A toiled fabrics In a tub 'W of Muday water —and it is a good method || Other electric ▼ wnhsr» rock and toss the toiled fabric! to end fro _ . _ in tudty water--and it it a good method ...... R RrM The ABC Electric Laundress doet both Rapidly it alternates these Sood method* —and so it combines their advantaSes... — This Ends Discussion! If you have been look- - ing at electric washers your mind is muddled concerning whether the lifting and dipping method or the rocking and-tossing method if preferable. Li fa< both are good. Why not get an A B 0 Electric Laundress t’ .at uses both methods—and so ends discussic n? <* Ajb C Easy Terms Make :t Easy to Ow:i H. A. LEE Phone 62. Do It Electrically.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
SECRET TREATY CUTS UP TURKEY
France, Britain and Italy Agree to Support Mutual Claims. PAPERS SIGNED AT SEVRES .. V I — .. Three Government* Sign Tripartite Agreement in Which They Agree to Support Each Other in “Spheres - of Influence.’’
Paris, Nov. 8. —France, Great Britain and Italy have signed a tripartite Agreement in which they agree to Support each other in maintaining their ■“spheres of'influence” in Turkey. The limits ti e areas in which the respective special interests 'of France and Italy are recognized are defined by the same document This agreement was signed at Sevres August 10, the day the pilblic ceremonial ,of the signing of the peace treaty with Turkey took place. Although the agreement it is ex-plained.-is not considered a secret one, it nevertheless has never been made public until now, after a lapse of nearly three months since the signing Undpr its own terms the document was to come into force and be published at the time the Turkish peace treaty should go into effect. This date is still an uncertainty. British Spheres Undefined. In connection with examination of the text now available attention is being called here to the fact that while the treaty defines the spheres of influence of France and Italy —recognizing the special interests of France in Cilicia and the western part of Kurdistan bordering on Syria and of Italy in southern Anatolia —the British spheres of influence are not only undefined but are not mentioned. This has raised the question if the agreement is susceptible of the interpretation that the British Interests may be held to extend to any or all the remaining parts of the Turkish empire. It Is noted also, that while the agreement does not take the form of an alliance, it pledges the contracting powers to “render diplomatic support to each other In maintaining their respective positions in the areas in which their special interests are recognized.” Coal Mines to Italy. One section of the document provides for the exploitation of the Bagdad railway by a company in which British, French and Italian capital is equally Interested. It gives the exploitation of the Heraclea coal mines to Italy. Article X of the agreement provides that nothing contained In it shall prejudice the rights of nationals of nonsignatory states to free access to the various areas for commercial and economic purposes.
NO POLITICAL SABOTAGE: COX
“Pemocracy Will Not Attempt It,” Is / Hope of Defeated Candidate for Presidency. Columbus, 0., Nov. 8. —Gov. Cox, Democratic candidate for the presidency, in his first statement since the election sayg: “For the first time in ten years tne Republican-party is in complete control of the legislative and executive branches of the national, government. Therefore policy as to statute and administration is with it. Its task is no longer that of the critic, but the constructor. It is nTy hope and firm belief ‘that the Democracy of the nation will not attempt political sabotage. The country has seen quite enough of that. “We are in the midst of an emergency and the nation’s every resourceshould co-ordinate in behalf of the things that are helpful. So long as government exists, the principles of Thomas Jefferson will be the center about which human hopes will gather. Talk of a new party is absurd. One might as well discuss the destruction of human emotions. “As essential as it had been to the welfare of the country in the past, the creed of Democracy is more needed now than ever because recent events have made it distinctly the American party. In spirit I am as proud as when the fight started. I would not retrace a step nor yield a single jot in principle. It was a privilege to make the contest for the right in the face of overwhelming odds. There is a distinct difference between defeat and surrender. The flag of Democracy still flies as the symbol of things more enduring than the passions »nd resentment that come with the aftermath of war.”
PRESS CASE AGAINST CONSUL
Californians ChaMe Japanese Official With Activity in Recent Campaign. Los Angeles, Oak. Nov. 8. —Officials of the Los Angeles County Anti-Asia-tic association announced that affidavits were being prepared for presentation to the State department at Washington in support of the association’s allegation that U. Oyama, Japanese consul in Los Angers, had participated in an unsuccessful campaign- to defeat the anti-alien kind bill..
D. J. COSTELLO . A fl ; B A AxS ? < OMI Ka W ■ - WBWfwv • D. J. Costello, European representative of the Federated Press Association of America, has arrived tn New York ' from England on the steamship Aquitania. Mr. Costello had arranged to sail for the United States on the Aqui- । tania, and two days before the sailing I date was handed deportation orders ! issued by the British government. No 1 reason for the order was made public. I Mr. Costello spent some time in Germany and Scandinavian countries, where, it is .said, he met and conferred with representatives of the Russian soviet government
PROBE IS EXPLAINED
Judge Anderson Tells Purpose of Palmer Investigation. Says He Wants to Know If Attorney General Can Make Certain ~ Agreement ‘ Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 8. —Federal Judge Anderson declared In the United States district court that the investigation to be made by him next Monday of Attorney General Palmer’s connection with the soft coal conspiracy cases would be for the purpose of ascertaining “whether the attorney general can make an agreement to suppress a portion of the government’s evidence.” Mr. Palmer also has said that an agreement was made, in Judge Anderson’s presence, not to use this evidence if the miners complied with the court’s order in the strike case, and court officials here expected that the investigation next Monday would include inquiry Into this phase, as also reveal what agreement was made with the miners. The attorney general, it walk learned here, has asked District Attorney Van Nuys, Special Prosecutor L. Ert Slack and former Special Prosecutor Simms, to go to Washington immediately for a conference regarding the investigation. Mr. Palmer’s message, sent from Washington, was received, and Mr. Van Nuys and Mr. Slack will leave here for Washington. Mr. Simms, who resigned as special prosecutor in the coal cases with the statement that the attorney general’s order had “cut the heart out of the cases” could not be located here or at his home in Lafayette, Ind/, to learn whether he would meet here with Mr. Van Nuys and Mr. Slack.
PASTOR IS HELD FOR SLAYING
Proprietor of Sandwich (Ont.) Inn Killed by Minister in Raid by Liquor Squad. Windsor, Ont, Nov. B.—The Rev. J. O. L. Spracklin, pastor of the Sandwich Methodist church and a special liquor license inspector, is detained in the Sandwich jail following the shooting to death of Bteverly Trumble, proprietor of an inn known as Chappell house. The shooting occurred during a raid upon the inn. The Rev. Mr. Spracklin and five of his assistants had broken their way into the roadhouse through a rear window, after their way had been barred, they said, T>y locked doors. The shooting occurred as the Rev. Mr. Spracklin encountered Trumble in a hallway on the first floor. According to members of the raiding party, Trumble leveled a revolver at the inspector and the latter fired in self-defense.
MAY CLOSE 3 UNIVERSITIES
Germany Contemplates Action for Reasons of Economy—To Support - Other Colleges. London, B.—Consideration is being given by the German government of the advisability of closing the German universities of Halle, Griefswald and Marburg, according to an Amsterdam dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph company quoting Berlin advices. It is said this step would* be taken for reasons of economy and that it would be possible to support financially the Universities of Cologne, Bonn, Heidelberg and Karlsruhe.
Point Won in Knox College Drive.
Galesburg, HL, Nov. 8. —Excitement reigned here when announcement! that the undergraduate campaign for ?5Qi--000 as a memorial professorship to Prof. Herbert E. Griffith had successfully completed. The drive is the beginning of-a million-dollar endowment campaign for Knox college.
Mrs. Kohler’s Public Sale I will offer at public auction at my farm, half mile*west of Rensselaer, on ’ Friday, November 26, 1920 Commencing at 10:30 a. m., the following described property: ' Live Stock Black hone, 4 years old, weight 1150, sound. ’ . Black cow, 7 yean old; part Jersey cow, 7 years old, both giving good flow of milk. Spring heifer calf. Twelve dozen White Wyandotte chickens. Farm Implements Galloway Manure spreader, in good running order; sulky plow, 16-in.; walking plow, 14-in.; three section harrow; Tower gopher; spike-tooth garden cultivator; garden plow; double shovel plow; five-foot McCormick mower; old hay rake; buggy in first class condition; set single harness; three canvas eolian; leather collar; spring wagon; 16-inch lawn mower, forks, shovels, hoes, rakes, cross-cut saw; 25-feet heavy rope; 30-gallon iron kettle, Economy ‘ King cream separator, water separator, sickle grinder, woven wire stretcher and other articles. 70 shocks corn. Two tons hay in stack. Household Articles 2 settees, corner chair, 2 spring bottom chairs, 3 stands, wash stand,.l2-ft. dining table, kitchen-cupboard, kitchen cabinet, 4 iron beds, 3 springs. 60 heads of cabbage and some canned fruit. USUAL TERMS. MRS. JOHN KOHLER. W. A. McCurtain, Auctioneer. Charles G. Spitler, Clerk.
AIRPLANE TRAVEL DE LUXE
What One'May Expect When the Flyer* Are as Common as Pullman * Cars Today. Doubtless before very long flying machines will furnish all the Luxuries of travel to which we are already accustomed on the rail. The aerial parlor car soon arrive. Here, in fact, it is, or something very like •* Th “ inventor >s Herman
In the Not-Distant Future.
Nordmark of San Pedrt), Cal., and his car is in effect a Pullman sustained in flight by a pair of airplanes. Such a car might carry 80 or more passengers comfortably. Or why not half that number, for real luxuriousness, with a dining compartment, a smoking room, and even a barber shop? —Philadelphia Record.
When Airplane Dived in West Virginia
The airplane diving around in the air over this town Tuesday caused consternation among our gang of guineas. The best we could gather from our understanding of guinea parlance, they thought a big hawk was after them. Frolic, our bulldog, reared his head back and tried to jump over the trees in an effort to catch the monster. The best we could understand dog Latin he thought it was an * angel coming in disguise and he knew he had no business lighting around a printing office. And as for ourself, we really thought when he was flying so low and headed direct for our residence he was fixing to let us down a jug of good old yaller corn just in order to put us next to the system. At any rate, we all enjoyed the exhibition. —Huntington News.
Unfortunate Louvain.
The city of Louvain, Belgium, has been called the “Oxford of the Low Countries.” It has been said that the City’s chief product once was theology, and that it had a tremendous effect upon philosophic and religious thought. The Louvain library once contained some-TO.OOO volumes and about 500 manuscripts, and was attached to the University of Louvain, founded in 1426. Before the world war the university had 2,000 students, but b? enrollment exceeded 6,000 in the sixteenth century, ’’says a bulletin of the National Geographic society.
WANTED A CHANCE.
"You advocate the equal distribution of wealth?” “Yes,” replied the Socialist “If all the wealth were distributed, don’t you know that in a short while it would be back in the hands of a few?” “Sure. But I don’t underestimate my intelligence. I might be one of the few.” —Birmingham Age-Herald.
Gentle Reminder.
“Hiram,” said Mrs. Oorntossel, “there’s one 'thing I want- to remind you of." “What’s that?” “Get out of that rocking chair an* come off the front porch. You’re a farmer; not a politician.”
COME AND SEE ME. 1 ***** SM— and otiw CHARLES B STEWARD. I Swth BUa Want WmMmMm 8t
There will be a meeting of the board of directors and all other township and county officers of the Farmers’ Federation of Jasper County, in Mr. Mawnorter’s office on Saturday, November 13, at 1:30 P. M. RUSSELL VAN HOOK, President. CHAS. W. POSTILL, Sec-Treas. V •
For The|Chiiupper there’s nothing like Bread with milk. - Give the kiddies food that will satisfy their appetites; food that will digest easily; substantial food that will build up their little bodies. Bread is that kind of food. Active days! Dreamless Nights! These are nature’s priceless gifts to children who eat. Bread is your Best Food—Eat more of it. Good Bread —the Bread that Build* Ralph O’Riley’s A Good Bakery
CITY BUS LINE CALL FOR TRAINS AND CITY SERVICE Especial attention given St. Jopeph College Calls. F. t KRESLER, Prop. PHONE 107.
MONON ROUTE. ' / XBMSSBXAn no TAMJ Tn effect July IL 1030. X j v * I jrvßTDOinrt No. S 3 Cincinnati to Chicago I 4:34 a.m. No. 4 Louisville t* Chicago 4:01a.m. No. 40 Lafayette to Chicago 7:34 a.m. No.Jlhndlebap’s to Chicago 10:30 ajn. No. 38 Indianap’e to Chicago 3:41 PA No. « Indianap’e to Chicago 3:34 p.m. No. 30 Cincinnati to Chicago 4:40 p.m. No. 14 Cincinnati to Chicago 3:17 a.m. oovncwun No. 35 Chicago to Cincinnati 3:37 anu No. 5 Chicago to Louisville 10:44 ajn. No. 37 Chicago to 11:11 ajn. No. 33 Chgo to IndplsftFr 1:37 pun. No. 30 Chicago to Lafayette 4:40 pun. No. 31 Chicago to Indianap’e 7:81 pjn. No. 3- Chicago to Louisville 11:10 pan. No.. 13 I Chicago to Cincinnati 1:41 ajn. Train No. it stops to discharge passengers off of the Cl 1 * V. - Train 15 stope to take on upson gers for pointe on the C. L A w.
GET FLOWERS for all occasions at Osborne’s Greenhouse PHONE 439 5t»2 £. Merritt St <
