Jasper County Democrat, Volume 23, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 May 1920 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

/ fGive your money „ a chance to talk 4A out loud! pl 1 rpHERE are some clothing ' * stores in this county where a SSO bill is almost as silent as an iron deer on a . congressman’s front lawn. WE’VE been talking and advertising the strength of our values and now we’re going to give you a concrete example to think about. For SSO you can pick out a suit here that will be just a little bit nicer than you can find any place else for that money. AND if this sounds too strong—and we hope it does—we’d like to have you ask us to prove it. Hilliard & Hamill SHOES SHIRTS . . • - . - HA T S

NEWS from the COUNTY

REMINGTON (From the Press

REMINGTON R. R. TIME TABLE No. 11l Boat bound I 7:14 a. m. No. »1 Went bound 1 9:11 a- m. No. >49 East bound I 5: IE ». m. No. >l9 Woot bound I s:l> p. m.

Dr. Besser was out at his Blue Grass ranch near Morocco Sunday. Albert Griffin of English Lake spent Monday with Remington relatives. Miss Jennie Turner went to Indianapolis Sunday as a delegate to the grand lodge of Daughters of Rebekah. Jones Bros, report the sale of the E. S. Steele building on south Rail-

■ MSS PLAY Next Monday and Tuesday evenings the Senior Class ,o£ the High School will present Mrtag written by J. Hartley Manners It will be staged in the New Ellis Theater 'Tickets are on sale by students and seats are being reserved at Long’s % Drug Store. '■ «saessses®== ■ Admi—ton 35 and 50 cts.

road street to Chauncey McCulley. Consideration $2,050. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Walker and Mrs. Ella Wilson went to Wabash Wednesday for a week’s visit with the former’s brother. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Geier drove over from Reynolds Tuesday and spent the afternoon with his brother, Will Geier, and family. Jones Bros, report the sale of the V. N. Jones property on north Indiana street to S. G. Hand and Fern Lough. Consideration $1,250. Mrs. Blake and her daughter, Mrs. Phillips, of Wabash came Wednesday evening to visit the former’s sisters, Mrs. Skinner and Mrs. Roush. ' Mrs. Isabel Green and Mrs. Hitchcock visited a couple of days with the Broadie’s at Lafayette last’ week, and attended the club federation meeting. Paul Hyman and family of Logansport and Marion Parks and family of Ft. Wayne drove through from Logansport Sunday and spent the day with Mrs. Ella Parks. Dewey Roades came Sunday evening from Oklahoma where he has been holding down a good Job. Dewey has a two weeks’ lay off and returned for commencement and a visit with” home folks. Mrs. Ada Dobbins, who has been the guest of her brother, H. R. Hartman, and other relatives here the past two months, went to Chicago Tuesday morning, to visit her daughter, Miss Chloe, and son Cassius and wife. Charles Alson came down from Mishawaka Monday for a couple of days. On Wednesday he went over to Pontiac to see the folks and then accompanied his son Merlin and his mother-in-law as far as Chicago on their way to St. Lawrence, S. D„ where his son will remain with his uncle. George Hemphill went to Gary Sunday where on Monday he took a job of tool dressing at one of the factories. George says $1 an hour for eight hours’ work and $2 an hour overtime beats blacksmithing a long way and he intends to grab off some of the easy money while the grabbing is good. Mrs. Pearl Currens of Indianapolis came > Saturday night to visit her father, the venerable Peter Mann. She was called back Sunday evening, however, by a message stating that her daughter Blanche was to undergo an operation Monday for appendicitis with which she had been troubled for some time. John Hardebeck spent Sunday with his wife at the Presbyterian hospital in Chicago. He reports Mrs. Hardebeck as doing extremely well and recovering strength fast, and will soon have an operation for goiter. Expects she will be home in a couple of weeks. Many Rem-

THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT

ington friends will be pleased to hear that she is doing so well. This week brings to a close the school year in Remington. Examinations were held Tuesday and Wednesday and cards are to be handed out on Friday. Thursday night the recital of the music classes, which was postponed from last Wednesday, will be given at Christian church. Friday night the commencement exercises will be held at the Methodist church at which time the following will be graduated: Dora Hicks, Alta Lucas, Marguerite Roades, Marjorie Hascall, Clarence Kelly, Vern Williams, Charles Johnston. The speaker of the evening is Dr. Sherman Davis of Indiana uni-< versity, who will speak on “The High School and Social Service.” There will be an admission charge of 15c.

DELEGATES GO UNINSTRUCTED

(Continued from Page One)

given her from other parts of the district. A new feature for Democratic conventions was the presence of the 12 women delegates on the floor. The women delegates from this district were Mrs. Ura Gwin and Mrs. A. A. Hoover of Rensselaer; Mrs. W. M. Seward of Earl Parks; Miss Laura Darroch of Kentland, and Miss Edna Stembel of Oxford. For the first time in the history of Indiana a woman —Miss Adelaide Steele Baylor of Indianapolis —was given a place on the state ticket of either of the two major parties. Women took an important part throughout the deliberations of the two-day convention. Mrs. Adelbert Flynn of Logansport was a member of the committee which drafted the party platform. She also from the floor of the convention nominated Miss Baylor as the candidate for superintendent of public instruction. Mrs. Alice Foster McCulloch of Ft. Wayne was named a member of. Indiana’s “big four” to San Francisco and three other women were named alternate delegates at large. The platform adopted by the convention is a clean-cut statement of the party’s position on both the national and state issues, and no attempt to side-step or straddle any Question is made. The national administration and the league of nations is fully endorsed the tax law of tire Republicans is condemned

and a pledge made to repeal the measure, if a Democrat legislature is elected, and substitute a fair and equitable law in its stead, restoring to the local taxing units the powers taken from them by the Goodrich law, etc., etc. In a later issue the platform in full will be published. While Marshall is not a candidate for the nomination for president, mention of his name as such brought forth round after round of applause and the Indiana delegation will work for his nomination in the national convention. Mr. Marshall insisted, however, that the delegation go uninstructed, which was done. ••

“YOU’RE ANOTHER” —GOODRICH

(Continued from Page One)

plain truth and it is about time the people of Indiana knew about it.” Governor Goodrich came back and said, according to an interview in the Indianapolis News of Wednesday: “If Judge Andreson is correctly quoted in the News, he is, asusual, ‘playing to the grand stands’ and indulging in a lot of loose talk. To say that he grossly misrepresents the facts is putting it mildly. “He states that ‘when the courts do their duty the governor lets them out.’ The truth is the governor does not let them out except upon the recommendation of the trial courts. “The judge is further reported as saying, ‘I have to have the petty criminal business because the governor, or the parole board, or some one turns them out as soon as they are sentenced.’ This statement so far as the governor is concerned is a plain, unvarnished lie, and not ‘the plain truth’ or even an approach to the truth. “The tendency of Judge Anderson to use his position on the bench to get in the ‘spotlight’ and play to the galleries was never better illustrated than in this instance. / “He knows nothing about the actual fact® or he wouldn’t have made the foolish statement attributed to him, and as usual went off ‘halfcocked.’ “The district court of the United States has a certain well-defined jurisdiction and within the limits of that jurisdiction it has as much authority as any inferior court should seek to exercise. “When the judge of the district court assumes to exercise supervision over the officers of the state of Indiana he temporarily forgets what he is.

“The mere holding of a federal position does not give Mr. Anderson power to trit In judgment upon the action of the state courts or the governor of this commonwealth.”

INDIANA BACKS WILSON

VICE PRESIDENT MARSHALL MAKES KEYNOTE SPEECH. Equal Rights and Exact Justice for All, Jail for the Profiteers, His Platform. * __ Indianapolis, May 21. —“Equal and exact justice to all men” as a remedy for unrest was prescribed by Vice President Marshall in his keynote address before the state Democratic convention. He also urged jail sentences for profiteers and increased production to relieve the high cost of Hying. A boom started for Marshall for the presidential nomination at San Francisco was nipped in the bud by the vice president. He said he did not seek the presidential nomination. “I hold that the Democratic doctrine of equal and exact justice to all men and of special privileges to none will meet all the angry and irreconciled views of today,” said Mr. Marshall. The vice president also expressed the hope that President Wilson and the senate would reconcile their differences over the peace treaty and that it would be ratified; but said no man should be read out of the Democratic party because of his opinion on the League of Nations. “This was, as I understand it,” the vice president said, “an American war. The peace should be an American peace. The war could not have been fought successfully as either a Democratic or Republican war. The peace cannot bring that real peace which the American people want if it is made either as a Democratic or a Republican peace. “I still hope that the president and the senate will reach ait accord upon such terms as will enable the treaty to be ratified and a de jure peace be made with the government of - Germany, but as I grant to no man the right to read me out of the Democratic party not to say to me that I cannot stand upon its platform, advocate the election of its candidates and vote for them, I. myself, will not say to any man that his views upon the League of Nations inevitably place him without the Democratic fold. A lifelong advocate of a resort to courts and not to force, I gave my unqualified Indorsement to the altruistic views of the in the defense of which views he has broken his body.” Resolutions were adopted indorsing the administration of President Wilson, declaring he “fulfilled the pledges of the platform on which he was elected.”

Men in Arnstein Case Plead Guilty.

New York, May 21.—Joseph and Irving Gluck, indicted last February at the same time “Nicky” Arnstein was charged with being the “master mind” in New York’s $5,000,000 bond, theft plot, pleaded guilty in general sessions to criminally receiving stolen property and to grand larceny.

USE THE TELEPHONE

Whenever you are in need of anything in the printing line, call phone 315 and we will be Johnny-on-the-bpot. The Democrat employs firstclass printers and enjoys the distinction of turning out nothing but first-class work. It means to retain this reputation, and if your printing has not been satisfactory elsewhere let The Democrat show you what good printing is. We are here to please and have the help and facilities to do satisfactory work.

LEO 0. WORLAND PAUL WORLAND JOHN WORLAND Worland Bros. \ UNDERTAKING AND AMBULANCE SERVICE f i ■ "—■■■ Our New Pall Bearer’s Car. ■■'■«■■< \ WORLAND BROS. RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA

SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1920.

J I I Quality above all else is what counts in a Monument. We have in our works, men who have spent a lifetime in the monument industry, who are capable of giving you the best there is to be had in this line. We take pride in giving our home people monuments that we, as well as they, can point to with pride in years to come and say there is none better. Try/jur service, you will not regret it. McCormick Monument Works NO AGENTS. RENSSELAER, IND.

NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION Notice Is hereby given that the partnership lately existing between Conrad Kellner and Thomas M. Callahan, and carrying on business as partners at Rensselaer, Ind., under the style or firm of Kellner & Callahan, was, on the sth day of April, 1920, dissolved by mutual consent, and that the business in the future will be carried on by the said Thomas M< Callahan, who will pay and discharge all debts and liabilities, and receive all moneys payable to the said late firm. THOMAS M. CALLAHAN, CONRAD KELLNER. a 2«

TO FRIENDS OF THE DEMOCRAT

Instruct your attorneys to bring | all legal notices in which you are . interested and will have the paying to do, to The Democrat, and thereby save mon3y do us a favor that will be duly appreciated. All notices of appointment —of administrator, executor or guardian; survey, sale of real estate, ditch or road petitions, notices to non-resi-dence, etc., the clients themselves control, and your attorneys will take them to the paper you desire, for publication, if you so direct them; while, if you fail to do so, they will give them where it suits their pleasure most and where you may least expect or desire IL So, please bear this in mind when you have any of these notices to have published.

Get your Job Printing at the Democrat.