Jasper County Democrat, Volume 23, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 June 1920 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Where the saving comes in \ • AMAN who does twice as much work as a ss= a=day man is worth $lO. If you get him for $8 you’re making money. / It's the same with clothes. H & H all=wool clothes wear twice as long as the ordi= nary kind; and they cost but a trifle more. 'Besides you get your money back. if you're not satisfied I Hilliard & Hamill
REMINGTON (From the Press)
REMINGTON R. R. TIME TABLE Ne. «1» But bound I 7:M a. m. Ne. Ml Wert bound J a. “• Ne. >4O Kart bound I 5:15 >• m. No. tit West bound I 5:15 p. m.
Claud May went to Toledo, 0., Tuesday to drive back some cars. Mrs. Trevor Eger and son of Rensselaer are spending the week at the editor’s home. Miss Gladys McGlynn went to Mum cie Saturday for the summer term of school. • Miss Alta Lucas went to Terre Haute Sunday where she will attend summer normal. Mrs. George Howard went to Logansport Monday to visit her daughter until Sunday. Phil Ochs of Indianapolis came Tuesday evening and Is spending a week’s vacation with home folks. . Mel Julien of Mishawaka came down Tuesday to spend a few days with Kb family and sick relatives. Mrs. A. J. Bellows of Rensselaer spent from Sunday until Tuesday here with her son, Ed Bellows, and' &®Uy. ..
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hicks, daughter, Miss Doris, and son Donald went to Chicago this Thursday morning to spend a few days. Ed Sutherland returned home Tuesday evening from Buffalo, N. Y., where he recently went with a couple of carloads of horses. Misses Cecil Culp and Martha Parker went to Terre Haute Sunday where they will be room-mates for a summer course of normal. Mrs. Tim Julien spent part of last week at Watseka helping care for Orval Julien, a brother of Mel Julien, who is very low and has been for some time. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Carpenter drove to Winona this Thursday morning where Mr. Carpenter will
Have You Got a TALKING Machine? Dois It Need Repair? Briat it in or leave orders at Star or Princess Theatre. ALL WORK BUARANJEED E. B. Allen A •. '
THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT
attend a telephone convention held there. They will return Friday. Mrs. C. J. Dexter and little daughter Mildred, who have been guests at the James Green home for a couple of weeks, returned to their home at Chicago Sunday evening. . Mrs. M. I. Gray of Sauneman, 111., and niece, Miss Jeanette Haswell, of Streater, 111., and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gray of Forrest, 111., are guests at the M. A k Gray home this week. Mrs. Anna Gray, who is taking her vacation this week, went to Lafayette to see her sister, Mrs. Ida Dolbaw, and then they both will go to Hobart to see their brother, John A. Gray, who is sick. W. E. Johnston and family left Sunday for a three weeks’ trip to the Pacific coast in company with a train load of Shriners, who will tour the coast and attend a big convention. They met the special train at Rensselaer. < Mrs. Howard Jones returned home Friday evening from Ft. Wayne where she had been for a number of weeks recovering from an operation. She is far from strong yet. Her daughter, Miss Esther, Is now at the same place for treatment. Mrs. Louise Marqule, wife of Adolphus Marqule, living six miles northeast of town, died at her heme Wednesday evening about 10 o’clock, at the age of 62 years, 9 months and 29 days. The cause of her death has not been reported to us, but we understand she had been sick for several weeks. She leaves a husband and a large number of children. The funeral will be held this Friday morning at 9:30 o’clock at Sacred Heart Catholic church. And still another June wedding of Remington young people took place
last week, but too late to mention in our last issue. The partree to this happy event were Miss Hazel Belle Lucas and Robert Arthur Schembs. The ceremony took place at the home of the officiating minister, Rev. C. W. Postill, at Rensselaer. TJie bridal couple were accompanied by Mieses Alta Lucas and Viola Schembs and Harvey Nelson. After the ceremony they returned to Remington and are now stopping with the groom’s parents until they can locate ort a farm to operate themselves. The bride is the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James P. Lucas of Remington and is a most prepossessing and handsome young lady, well known and well liked by a large circle of acquaintances. For some time she has been bookkeeper at the State bank, where she proved herself particularly efficletft. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schembs of near Remipgton and a most worthy young man.
MT. AYR (From the Tribune) W. W. Miller is the first to have his residence wired for electricity. Miss Marie Harris went to Muncie this week where she will attend summer school. Mrs. Jane Jlnkerson returned to her home in Chicago Tuesday after a month’s stay here. Frank Johnson and wife spent the day Sunday with his brother Will and family at Donovan, 111. Mrs. Stella Book and son Robert were over from Rensselaer Friday to attend. Royal Neighbors’ lodge. Mrs. Lora Flanders of Pierceton, a sister of B. F. Roberts, visited in the Roberts home from Thursday till Monday. Mrs. Francis came this week to visit with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Ben Geesa, whose health remains quite bad. Mrs. Francis lives in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burns were called to Royal Center to attend the funeral of the former’s niece, Mrs. Joseph Bucks. They returned home Sunday. v Mildred Rush is spending the fore part of the week with Rosabel Daugherty in Barkley township, and her sister Martha is visiting Opal Sunderland near Rensselaer. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Spangler came here from Oxford Saturday and Sunday took Mrs. Spangler’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Dirst, home with the mfor an indefinite visit. Lisle Elijah came home from Anderson Friday and spent till Tuesday with his folks. Lisle works for a trucking company at Anderson and says he gets plenty of outdoor exercise. Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Yeoman entertained Will Coen, wife and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. John Alter, Mr. and Mrs. Pullins and Fred McColly and family of Rensselaer, also Joe Yeoman and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Newton of Media, Pa., visited B. F. Roberts Sunday and went from here to Mr. Newton’s parents’ at Toulin, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Newton are newlyweds and were on their honeymoon trip. Miss Ruby Standish returned Wednesday from Indianapolis where she had spent the past 10 days visiting friends. She reports that Tom Mitchell was recently married and had the pleasure of meeting his bride while there. Little Elizabeth Downs of Newton tp., while walking backwards Saturday stepped into a hole and fell, breaking her arm. It seems as if the children are rather unlucky as she is the third one with a broken limb in the last two weeks. Bert Dillman, wife and son of Wheatfield came down Thursday and with Mrs. C. C. Shue accompanying, went to Anderson and paid Raymond Stucker a visit. They returned here Sunday evening, reporting a pleasant time. The Dillman’s returned home Tuesday. The new safe for the bank arrived this week and Thursday was unloaded from the car and placed In the bank. It is a massive piece of workmanship, weighing 7,500 pounds and to look at the mechanism it looks as if It was correctly .styled “safe.” Indeed, we were told that in the seven years isl which the new style of safe has been on the market not once has one been opened by burglars.
TIGHT BRITISH TROOPS
TURKS ATTACK ANGLO-INDIANS ON ISMED FRONT. Wound Vhirty Men, Capture Intelligence Officer and Compel Force to Retreat. Constantinople, June 18.—Turkish nationalist troops have attacked a company of British Indian troops on the Ismid front, who withdrew under an agreement The Turks wounded 30 and captured a British Intelligence officer. Re-enforcements have been sent to the assistance of the British forces, while warships keep the Turks off by shelling their position. The trouble started when a British outpost, consisting of a company of Punjabis, was surrounded by a superior force of nationalists. The British officer commanding decided to withdraw. An agreement was reached with the nationalists who promised not to hamper the retirement The British advance guard passed unmolested, but the nationalists fired on tike main body. Although it Is considered certain that Mustapha Kemal Pasha, head of the Turkish nationalist government at Angora, was chagrined by the fact that the British were barring his way to Scutari, opposite Constantinople, there is nothing In the reports to show that he ordered the attack.
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MAN IS TIED TO RAIL BY THUGS
Missourian Robbed by Two Holdup Men and Then Put in Path of Train. ♦ - . LOSES ARM AND ONE EEG Outlaws Bind Victim With Barbed Wire and Leave Him to His Fate — Expected to Get Money From Sale of Two Autos. Excelsion Springs, Mo., June 18. — George Underwood of Carrollton, Mo., was forced by two men to enter a motor car here at night, was taken to a spot near the Wabash tracks half a mile from Excelsior Springs, robbed of S7O and was gagged and bound to the rails with barbed wire. A Wabash passenger train passing half an hour later cut off his left foot and hand. Covered With Revolvers. According to Mr. Underwood, he had been in Kansas City and had stopped at Excelsior Springs en route back to Carrollton. He was waiting at the Wabash station when the two men approached him and With revolvers commanded him to enter* their motor car, he declared. After robbing him, he said, the pair placed him directly in the middle of the railway track and bound him there. In struggling, however, he managed to free his right foot and right hand and to maneuver his body to the outside of the rails, leaving only his left foot and hand across the rails. Underwood was found by a farmer living near by, who took him to his home and notified the authorities. No Trace of Robbers Found. A posse searched the locality where the robbery was said to have taken place, but could find no trace of the perpetrators. According to officers here, Mr. Underwood had sold two motor cars in Kansas' City and it is thought the robbers had knowledge of that fact and had expected him to have the money from the sale with him.
PRINCESS THEATRE Tuesday and- Wednesday June 22 & 23 Joseph Schenck presents Norma Talmadge “THE WOMAN GIVES” Past heavily barred portals and their lynx-eyed custodians— To undergo an experience that has fallen to the lot of but few living women. TRULY —“The Woman Gives,” as you shall Maybe she carried her appreciation to extremek; in any event she carried it as befits a woman of daring. You are down for some high-class entertainment when Norma Talmadge appears as the model in “The Woman Gives.” .The luring quicksand of low associates 1® ever ready to receive, as Inga Sonderson, the model, played by Miss Talmadge, can X affrm. Owen Johnson’s story “The Woman Gives.” Down In the Street of a Thousand Sorrows she met with an experience few living women have undergone. The dramatic intensity of those moments will linger long in. your memory. Norma Talmadge, as the model in “The Woman Gives,” from the story by Owen Johnson. Adult®.. .25c-3c war tax—2Bc AViniOOlVn- children. lOc-lc war tax-llc
SATURDAY, JUNE 19, I*2o.
REGRETS 7 WOOD IS PEEVED
Butler Says Facts as to General’s Campaign Fund Were Known. New York, June 18.—President Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia university “will give such time and energy in support of the HardingCoolidge ticket as he can spare from bls official duties.” This statement was contained in a reply to General Wood, who termed the president of Columbia a “fakir and a liar.” Doctor Butler’s answer continues : “Political post-mortems are futile, but I am sorry General Wood lost his temper. It does not sound well. “The facts as to his campaign funds are not of my making. They were revealed by a newspaper many weeks ago. “Many delegates at Chicago believed these revelations would defeat General Wood if he were nominated.”
JOHNSON STARTS FOR HOME
Senator Leaves Washington Without Seeing Republican Nominee. Washington, June 18. —Senator Hiram Johnson left Washington without breaking his silence on his attl* tude toward the overtures made to him to become a candidate for president on a third party ticket He wtw accompanied by Mrs. Johnson. It was stated at the senator’s office that he had left for his home in California. He did not see Senator Harding, the Republican nominee for president during his three-day stay here. So * far as could be learned. Senator Johnson did not go to his office in the senate office’ building at all, but spent a short while in the room of the Cuban relations committee. In the capltol, Tuesday afternoon. He is chairman of this committee.
JAMES DORSEY’S TERM CUT
President Commutes Sentence From Eight to Four Years. Washington, June 18. —President Wilson commuted from eight to four yearsr the sentence of James Dorsey of Elgin, HL, who was convicted at Chicago In February, 1918, on charges of using the mails to defraud. Dorsey was a dealer in cattle and was reported to be a millionaire.
