Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 68, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 November 1919 — Page 4
4
PRINCESS THEATRE Rensselaer, Ind. = TWO DAYS = St, November 26-27
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Mayflower Photoplay'Corporation Presents - George Loane Tucker’s PRODUCTION “THE MIRACLE MAN" From the play by GEORGE M. COHAN Baaed on the story by FRANK L. PACKARD “Such a simple old boob!” He with his child's heart and his boundless faith in men. What rich pickings for this “sweet young chicken” and her crew of crooks from Chinatown! So the crooks thought—until he believed in -them\ And when at last he left them with the tears running down their cheeks — See the sup of the human soul's adventures in a crowded hour of unalloyed delight. A PARAMOUNT-ARTCRAFT PICTURE Matinee 2:30 Night 7 & 9 Children 25c-3c>2Bc Adults 50c-sc-55c
I As indicative of the strong sentiment over the country in favor ot Ithe league of nations we note the refusal of the American. Legion—an organization of former world ■war soldiers—to let former Congressman Lundeen speak against the measure at Ortonville, Wis., a few evenings ago. Lundeen- —as are many of the opponents of the league—was strongly' pro-German during the war. When he came out on the stage Ito speak he was taken in hand by the county sheriff and an escort of the American Legion and walked to the railroad station where a freight train was just pulling out. A box car was
I MMHB MI MIE ■ > I Youll find a lot of interesting bargains advertised for | this sale and remember they are all government in- | spected products that will satisfy and please Vou. | Better get your order on the way today and enjoy these important savings. PHONE 92 I SALE FOR SATURDAY ONLY Chuck Steak. 22c Breakfast Bacon, whole I Hamburger 7 Steak... .22c piece 34c | Prime Native Potßoast 15c Breakfast Bacon, half Beef Chuck Roasts ...21c piece 35c Standing Rib Roasts. .23c Country Cure Bacon. .30c I Pork Shoulder Roasts 25c No. 1 Regular Hams.. 30c Pork Steak 27c Cottage Hams 40c | Ideal Pork Links 26c Picnic Hams 23c Bulk Sausage. x » 25c Leg Lamb 32C Fore Quarter Veal Lamb Stew 17c I Roasts 22c Fresh Side Pork 28c ■ I Fresh Oysters for Saturday and a large shipment for I I jrour Thanksgiving dinner. |
opened, Lundeen chucked in and the door closed and hooked pn the outside. The station agent at the next stop, 30 miles away, was notified by telegraph to release the agitator when the itrain reached there. Too bad . that the pro-Ger-man opponents of the treaty in the U. S. senate did not profit from the overwhelming senltiment throughout the country. Perhaps they will learn something when they return home.
And we are still at war—technically—with Germany, notwithstanding the armistice was signed over a year ago.
thA TWICE-A-WEEK democrat
Important News Events of the World Summarized
Washington The treaty of peace with Germanj was rejected by the senate at Wash' Ington. On the final vote taken on the Lodge resolution ratification wat refused by the vote of 43 to 51. Th« senate then adjourned sine die and. the house having taken similar action earlier in the day, the extra session called by President Wilson to consider the treaty came to an end. • * President Wilson at Washington, vetoed the BUI restoring to the interstate commerce commission its prewar ratemaking power. • • • On virtually a party vote of 203 to 159, the house at Washington passed and sent to the senate the Esch railroad reorganization bill. Final action came after six days of continuous debate. • * • President Wilson was downstairs in a wheel chair and rolled out on the White House lawn at Washington, where he basked In the sunshine for a short time. ' , • • • While arguments on the validity of the war-time prohibition act will be heard by the Supreme court at Washington, a decision Is not expected before December 8. '• • • The railroad administration at Washington offered the railroad brotherhood chieftains representing enginemen and trainmen a compromise increase of wages for their men aggregating $36,000,000 a year. The brotherhoods, it was announced, have taken the matter under advisement • * * William S. Broughton of Illinois has been appointed commissioner of the public debt, Secretary of the Treasury Carter Glass announced at Washington. This is a new position.
Domestic Sixteen teachers in New York city public and private schools who are suspected of radical tendencies were summoned to appear before the legislative committee which is investigating communist activities. • * * ■Governor Harding of lowa was advised by Attorney General Havner at Des Moines, that the governor had power to declare martial law in an effort to relieve the coal shortage in the state. * * * A crowd that sang “Good-by Forever,” “Farewell, Booze,” “How Dry I Am,” and other laments saw internal revenue agents move away $200,000 worth es whisky confiscated at v ßucyrus, O. Two men and a woman were taken into custody under the narcotic law by federal authorities following a raid on two downtown hotels at Detroit, Mich., In which drugs said to be valued at $60,000 were seized. One of the navy’s big destroyers, under construction at the Philadelphia yard, will be named the Edsall, for N. E. Edsall, native of Columbus, Ky., a seaman killed by hostile natives near Apla, Samoa. ♦ ♦ ♦ Reports on the first year’s operation of the state hall Insurance, made public at Bismarck, N. D., show that losses totaling $3,418,770 were adjusted, according to T. J. Sheehan, deputy hall Insurance commissioner. The special grand jury at Omaha, Neb., investigating the riot of September 28, reporting after returning 120 indictments, said the cause of the riot was crimes against women and undue criticisms of public officials. • * * The theft of SIO,OOO worth of jewelry—platinum and diamonds—from the show window of Marshall Field & Co., at Chicago, in what detectives term the most mysterious robbery of the year, was reported to the police. • ♦ * Every industrial plant in Cleveland, Ohio, with the exception of those coming under the head of “public utilities,” was cut off from its coal supply by the Cleveland coal commission in an effort to relieve the acute fuel situation. ♦• * , Forty more Chicago passenger trains were cut from schedules of the Chicago Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad, bringing total reductions of Chicago roads because of the coal shqrtage to 146. * * * Suspension of 40 Chicago passenger trains by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad Is a forerunner of heavy reductions in service due to the coal strike. * • * A bale of long staple cotton was sold by Capt. W. A. Swift of Swifton, Miss., At $1 a pound, believed to be a record price for spot cotton this season. Mrs. Marla Warren, divorced wife of an actor and formerly a resident of Indianapolis, confessed that she killed Mrs. Clara Branch at Lynbrook, If. Y.
Eddie Mitchell, noted throughout the world as a driver and horse trainer, died while motoring from Toledo to his farm near the Ohio-Michigan boundary line. •• • / Discovery of a “red” plot to elay officials with explosive Christmas packages was announced by James Robinson, superintendent of police at Philadelphia. The best grade of fresh eggs in the market at New York cost $1.16 a dozen at retail. By January 1 dealers predict a price of $1.50. Housewives, dealers say, the best. • • • Six Hog Island shipyard workmen were killed and nine Injured when a motortruck on which they were riding to work was struck by a train at a grade crossing near the yards. • • • More than 34,000 gallons of real beer, held by a Minneapolis (Minn.) brewery for some time with the hope that the prohibition bars would temporarily be lifted, was emptied into the Mississippi river. * • • Two men are reported to have been killed and several injured in an explosion in the finishing mill of the E. I. du Pont de Nemours plant at Wayne, N. J. * • • Federal Judge George A. Carpenter at Chicago upheld the constitutionality of the war-time prohibition law and the Volstead enforcement act In the case brought by Hannah & Hogg. * • * Orders were Issued at Boise, Idaho, by Robert O. Jones, state commissioner of law enforcement, for immediate arrest of all members of “that outlaw organization," the L W. W., found in Idaho. • * * Three flags of the so-called “Irish republic” were torn from automobiles in which Eamonn de Valera and members of his reception committee were riding at Portland, Ore., by members of the American Legion. » » * A farmers’ posse captured the three safe-blowers who tried to crack the safe in the Palmyra (Ill.) State bank. They gave their names as William Carter, George William and William Gray. Mrs. Jessie Vea, aged thirty-six, was killed Instantly when struck by an automobile as she was wheeling her two and one-half year old baby across Main street at Davenport, lowa. The child was not injured. • * * Seven occupants of an automobile, including six nurses, returning from a social affair, were killed when the car was struck by a train at a grade crossing at Buffalo, N. Y. * * * S. J. Lowell of New York was elected national master of the National Grange nt the annual election at Grand Rapids, Mich. John O. Ketcham of Hastings, Mich., was re-elected national treasurer. * * • The United States transport America has been placed at the disposal of the American delegation to the peace conference at Paris for Its voyage home. They probably will leave Brest early in December. • * • Richard J. Reynolds, tobacco manufacturer, left an estate valued at $17,119,439, according to an Inventory completed at Winston Salem, N. C. The state will receive an inheritance tax of over $500,000. • • *
Foreign Mme. Therese Jacquemaire, daughter of Premier Clemenceau, arrived at New York from France on the steamship La France to begin a lecture tour in the United States. The revolution at Vladivostok has been quelled, dispatches to the state department at Washington said. demonstrators cojllded with tnepollce at Cairo. The officers used their revolvers, wounding two of the manifestants. The crowd later set the police station on fire. • * * The bolshevik! claim the capture of ten generals and more than 100 other officers at Omsk, according to an official statement Issued by the soviet government at Moscow. * * • War material valued at $1,000,000, consigned to the Chilean government, has been destroyed by fire aboard the wooden ship Alpan In the port of Singawa, Japan. • * * The Belgian cabinet has tendered Ita resignation. King Albert asked the ministry to continue in office until the results of Sunday’s elections are definitely known, * * * Thirty-two thousand guineas (slßl,000) was pd'id at an auction sale in London for a picture of St. Eustace by Vittore Carpaccio, the famous fifteenth century Venetian painter. • * * The prize court at Antwerp, has decided that 53 German boats, aggregating 150,000 tons, seized by the Belgian authorities in 1914 in the port of Antwerp, are lawful prizes. * • • A Paris dispatch says the French and Belgians have established their customs barriers on the Franco-Ger-man and the Belgo-German frontiers. • * *. The grand jury at Winnipeg, Man., returned true bills against eight alleged leaders of the general strike which tied up Winnipeg this spring.
COURT NEWS
(Continued from page One)
Third Tuesday— | State vS. Francis B. Goff. Michael J. Kuboske vs. Fred A. Phillips. Third Wednesday— Arthur B. Cavlndlsh vs. T. F. Ransford & Co. ' Frank B. Lewis vs. estate of B. J. Gifford. Third Friday— Mary Moran vs. New York Central R. R. Co. George L. Weis et al. vs. James Blankenship et al. Harry Sellers vs. Vernon Hagen. Fourth Monday— J State vs. Herman J. Kuppers and Ed Oliver. < Samael M. Laßue vs. Vergal Linton. Samuel M. Laßue vs. Vergal Linton et al. J. B. Ashby vs. Jennie M. Linton. Fourth Tuesday—»John Marlatt vs. August Bennema. Central Community Chautauqua vs. G. H. Van Kirk et al. Fourth Wednesday— Gordon A. Ramsey, adm. of estate of Mike Leoni, deceased, vs. Frank Howard. State vs. John Visak. Set for trial on fourth Wednesday. Fourth Thursday— State Bank of Rensselaer v& Andrew J. Granger. H. C. Fidler vs. Hugh P. Callender. Fourth Friday— Roper Whitby vs. Mike Duffy.
A BOX SOCIAL AND PROGRAM
Will be given at the Rosebud school, house, Union township, Friday, Nov. 28, 1919. Married ladies bring pies, young ladies boxes and the gentlemen their pockets full of money.—MARIE WEGING, Teacher.
BOX SOCIAL ' At Banner school In Milroy township Saturday evening, Nov. 22. A program will be given. Everyone came—FRIEDA WOOD, Teacher. n 22 A new supply of that popular Thistle Linen correspondence paper in ruled, unruled and pound boxes, Just received In The Democrat’s fancy stationery department. Also Thistle Linen correspondence cards.
(Under this head notices will be published for 1-cent-a-word for the first Insertion, U-cent-a-word for each additional Insertion. To save book-keep-ing cash should be sent with notices. No notice accepted for less than 26 cents, but short notices coming within the above rate, will be published two or more times—as the case may be—for 26 cents. Where replies are sent In The Democrat’s care, postage will bo charged for forwarding such replies to the advertiser.) FOR SALE For Sale—Large size Art Garland baseburner, good as new. Enquire at this office or call No. 929-A. n2< For Sale—A lot of second-hand lumber, consisting of sheeting, 2x6, 2xß, etc. —KUBOSKE & WALTER, phone 294. ts For Sale—One soft coal heating stove and one wood heater, -in good condition. —B. T. LANIHA.M, phone 943-B. n 27 For Sale at Bargains—All kinds of sfecond-hand automobiles. Come in and look them over, in tne white-front garage.—KUBOSKE & WALTER. ts For Sale—Fine navy beans, 10c per ipound.—E. P. HONAN, phone 334- ts For Male—Seven-room house, near churches and schools and on improved street. Easy terms. —G. F. MEYERS. -ts For Sale—Pure-bred Barred Plyw mouth Rock roosters. — MRS. NICK SQHMITTER, phone 922D. n 29 For Sale dr Rent —Big 40x80 threepole tent, 10-foot wall; Just the thing for public sales. We are through with it, as we are now in our new White-front garage.—KUBOSKE & WALTER. . ts For Sale —A nice lot of wax floral designs—pillows, wreathes, anchors, stars, etc. They are the only floral designs that will retain their beauty for a month in cold, wet and freezing weather. See
Announcement — ' I— \ THE Rensselaer Steam Laundry Is now open for business. WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED CALL PHONE 72 JAMES McCALLUM W. R. LEE, Manager.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1010
them at KINGS, telephone No. 216Green. n 27 For Sole-Good two-etory, 7-roota house, with batu, electrio light*, drilled well, large cistern, lot* of fruit, splendid shade fee*; on corner lot—really two lot* each 7$X 150 feet, each fronting Improved street and Improved atreet on side.' Splendidly located on beet residence street in Rensselaer. Lot* alone worth more than entire property can be bought for.—F. E. BABCOCK. tl For Sale—Pure-bred poultry, some Mammoth Bronze Turkeys—toms, $9 and up, owing,to markings; hens, $7 and up. Pekin ducks, $2-60 and $3 apiece, good enough for show room. Will guarantee them to win. Don’t forget the Barred Rock cockerels. Order now. $3 apiece.—A. D. HERSHMAN, Medaryville, Ind., R-L RIO For Sale—My 5 acres Just north of city limits of Rensselaer; 7-room house 28x28 feet, basement size of house; cistern, with pump and sink in kitchen; well water on back porch; large garage; hen house; small crib and granary; eow and horse barn.—MßS. O. M. PEEK, phone 949-B. ts - - i. ' .j For Sale—46o-acre farm, well drained, most all level, black soil; 5-room house, good barn, corn cribs, good well, fine orchard land all in cultivation. Can give good terms on this. Price S9O per acre.—CHAS. J. DEAN & SON. ts 1 ? - -I For Sale—ln The Democrat's Fancy Stationery and Office Supply department—steel die numbering machines, rubber stamp d.-ter*, rut>ber stamp pads, typewriter ribbon* for all practically makes of typewriters, spun glass ink eraser*, aocount flies, filing eabinets, typewriter papers, legal blanks, etc.
For Sale Home real bargain* in well Improved farm* located within three miles of Rensselaer, 120 a., 133 a., 212 A, 152 a., 80 a. I also have some exceptional bargain* in improved farms of all else* farther out from Rensselaer. For further particulars see me or call phone 246, office, or 499, home.— HARVEY DAVISSON. tl ■ ■ i For Sale—s-room cottage, with three desirable lots, No. 408 Oak St., Rensselaer; city lights; city water outside by door; good well; fruit trees. Also 6-room cottage with three desirable lots, corner Franklin and Oak Sts., Rensselaer; good well on porch; good ’ cistern; outside cellar in good condition; smoke house with cement floor; good barn, one-half of floor cemented; well tiled; fruit. Owners desire to remove to Illinois, and will make close price for quick sale. Both of said properties are very desirable for residence away from the business district. Gall on A. HALLECK, Attorney, office over Duvall’s clothing store, for prices and terms. ts
Typewriters—One brand-new Oliver ’ No. 9, latest machine made by the Oliver Typewriter Co., price $57 —monthly payments if desired; 2 Smith Premiers, No. 10, rebuilt 1 and in first-class condition, price S4O and $45, respectively. These are splendid machines, visible, tabulator, back spacer, 2-color ribbon, etc. We also have other makes of second-hand and rebuilt machines on hand from time to time, and carry at all times a full line of best make ribbons for all standard typewriters.—THE DEMOCRAT, ts New and Rebuilt Typewriter* are carried in stock in The Democrat's Fancy Stationery and Office Supply Department. We handle .the Oliver, brand-new and various other makes in rebuilt and second-hand, typewriter we can save you some If you are in the market for a money.—THE DEMOCRAT. , ts FOR RENT For Rent —Rooms in modern home, with board, suitable for man and wife. Inquire at The Democrat bfflce. n 27 / WANTED Men Wanted —To put in 500 rods of tile on the Lawler ranch at Pleasant Ridge. — E R N E S T BEAVER, Foreman, phone 937A. ts FINANCIAL Farm Loans Money to loan «* farm property in any sum* up to SIO,OW.—B. P. HONAN. « Money to Loan—CHAS. J. DEAN & SON, Odd Fellows’ Building, Rensselaer. ts Money to Loan—l have an unlimited supply of money to loan on good farm lands at 5%% and usual commission or 6% without commission, as desired. Loans will be made for 5 years, 7 years, 10 years or 20 years. See me about these various plans.—JOHN A. DUNLAP. ts ,■. ■ i
