Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 265, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 November 1910 — Page 4

Classified Column. KNOWN VALUES nmUBBSHS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATION PAPERS Imn la all parts of tha Statea and Canada. Your wants supplied —anywhere any than by tha best msdianu In the country. Get oar membership Rata—Check papers ro* want. We do the peat. rabUahere CliaN6i4 OSfertlsinr Aasocla* ttea. Baffslo, S. Y. FOE SALE. For Sale—A Twentieth Century soft coal burner; good as new. GeoQ. Pumphrey. F«r Sale—Farm of 100 acres, 5 miles from Rensselaer. Inquire of T. W. Grant For Sale—Art Garland hard coal burner; In good condition; cheap. Inquire of Dr. Rose Remmek, Harris block. For Sale—Three acres of black truck and garden land with good fourroom house, good barn, summer kitchen, chicken house, good well, and young orchard, and lies on public road near station. Price 1800. Will take part trade or sell on easy terms. G. F. Meyers. Per Sale—Good soft coal heater. George Hopkins, east part of town. For Sale—l have for sale a 1909 Premier automobile, with 6-passenger body, just rebuilt by the Premier Co. Fully equipped with top, glass front, Warner speedometer, Prestollte gas tank, gas and oil lamps, extra tire and tubes. Will be guaranteed same as new by the Premier company. Price 91J500 if taken at once. George K. Hollingsworth, 140 Dearborn street, CHtgago, 111. Per Sale—A Weber wagon, triple bed, near** new. M. R. Halstead, R. D. S, Rensselaer. Per Sale—Farm of 80 acres, on pike road, free mail route, telephone line and one-fourth mile to school. 70 acres in cultivation, lies at head of dredge ditch, has good five-room house, good barn, chicken house, milk house, good well and hearing orchard. Price $46. Terms $1,200 down, remainder long time. Q. F. Meyers. Per Sale—Or will trade tor stock, 1908 6-passenger Buick automobile, Model F. George W. Terwilleger, phone 626 B. Pgr Sale—Good Jersey cow, fresh soon. Geo. W. Terwilleger, phone IK B. Per Sale—loo acres pasture land, all tillable, well fenced, good well, 6 miles southwest of Rensselaer, cheap. AMreaa Joe. A. Lucre, R. D. No. 4, or phono 629 D. For Sale—A first-class base burner: only used two years. Inquire of B. F. Fendl*. at Drug Store. For Sale—The Brhardt Wuerthner term. In Newton township. For particulars »PPly to J. M. Sauser, on the John Goetz farm. For Sale—Good seasoned cord wood and fence posts. Emil Johnson, phone HB,Ht Ayr, Ind. ' WASTED. Wanted—Position as bookkeeper; have also had typewriting course and some shorthand work. Will be out of business college in a short time and prefer work at home. Adress William H. Platt, Care Lafayette Business College, Lafayette, Ind. Wanted—Poultry pickers all the coming week. Inquire at once. B. S. Fendig. ■»■ FOUND. Found —ln bus, a black overcoat. Owner apply to W. F. Fry. Found—Pin, at Union Center school house. Miss Grace Peyton. , FOB HINT. For Rent—6-rdom house, centrally located, city water. Inquire of T. W. Grant. Fer Bent—Flat over McKay laundry. I* tee condition. Inquire at Republl- — FOB TttADB. Fer Trade—Two almost new 9x12 rugs for two Bxlo rugs. In moving find tbe 9x12 rugs too large for floors. Inquire of W. A. Davenport. 1 ■■■ --L ■ ■ - ' ■.!! AUTOMOBILES. Cnt the big Maxwell ad out of this issue for future reference. Ask for a demonstration in the Maxwell “Q" this week onip—MAXWELL. money to loan, Meney te Lean—lnsurance company BMBey on first term mortgage security. Inquire of B. P. Honan. lQ.tf :: P. W. HORTON i: I| < > ' Flue Tuning and Repairing < I I A Specialty. " • \ : —- , ► Rensselaer, - . Indiana. JI : What have yon to sell at this time of tbe year?, Try a classified ad in the Republican and yon can sell it. Remember, that all classified ads go in all issues of the Evening and SemiWeekly Republican. Ptompt service In furnishing sa>e MU*, at The Republican office.

CHICAGO LITE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.

CXXCAOO un STOCK U. S. Yards, Chicago, 111., Nov. 7. — RecieptS hf live stock today: Hogs, 30,000; Hogs weak, 5c to 10c lower. Mixed, $7.70 to $8.40. Heavy, $7.90 to $8.35. Rough, $7.20 to $7.26. Light, SB.OO to $8.40. Pigs, $7.60 to $8.30. Bulk, $7.60 to $8.35. Cattle steady to 10c lower. Beeves, $4.60 to $7.60. Cows and heifers, $2.35 to $6.50. Stockers and feeders, $3.25 to $5.80. Texans, $4..40 to $5.50. Westerners, $4.50 to $6.75. Calves, SB.OO to SIO.OO. Shhep weak, $2.75 to $4.15. Lambs, $4.00 to $6.65. Estimated tomorrow: Hogs, 18,000; cattle, 8,000; sheep, 30,000. CASK CAAXV Wheat No. 2 red, 91%c to 9214 c. No. 3 red, 89c to 91c. No. 2 hard, 91 %c to 93c. . No. 3 hard, 89c to 91c. No. 1 N S, $1.03 to $1.04. No. 2 N S, SI.OO to $1.02. No. 3 S, 95c to SI,OO. Corn No. 2,50 cto 5014 c. No. 2 W, 50c to 5014 c. No. 2 Y, 50%c to 50%c. No. 3,49 cto 50c. No. 3 W, 50c. No. 3 Y, 50%c to 50%c. No. 4, 49%c to 4914 c. No. 4 W, 4914 c to 4914 c. No. 4 W, 4914 c to 4914c.’ Oats No. 2 W, 3314 c to 34c. No. 3 W, 3214 c to 33c. No. 4 W, 3114 c to 3214 c. Standard, 33c to 3314 c. runrxßß Dec. May. July. Wheat Open .... 89%% 96%% 94—% High .... 89% 96% 94% Low 88% 95% — 93% Close .... 89—% 95%% 93% Corn Open ...~r 46%47 49%49 49% High .... 47 49% 49% Low 46% 48% — 49% Close .... 46% 48% — 49% Oats Open .... 31% 34%% 34% High .... 31% 34% <\4% — Low 31%% 34%% 34—% Close .... 3144% 34% 34% HBWSSEXA.BB QUOTATIONS Corn—42c. New Corn—36c. * Oats—27 c. Wheat—B3c. Rye—6oc. Butter—lßc to 32c. Hens—Bc. Springs, under 4% pounds—B%c. Old Roosters—sc. Ducks, white—9c. Turkeys, young, good weight—lsc. Turkeys, old hens, gobblers—l3c. Geese—6c.

HANGING GROVE.

Miss Dora Phillips was in Rensselaer Saturday. George H. Thomas was up from Lafayette last week to look after his farms. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Miller visited with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Williamson, Sunday. Miss Anne Zabel went to work for Mrs. Harvey Phillips, who recently went through an operation. Reed McCoy is recovering very slowly from his injury of sevens* days ago and is still unable to go 'to the store. A box social wili be given Saturday night, Nov. 12th. at the Osborne school house. A nice program has been arranged to entertain you for an hour. All are cordially invited and the ladies are requested to bring boxes. Oscar Williamson has been quite sick for the past few days with appendicitis, but is better at this writing and it is not thought an operation will be necessary. Oscar is about 13 years old and seems to be a very unfortunate boy. either sick or got a leg broke.

For Sale or Trade. 21 acres, four blocks from court house, on cement walk. 25 acres, five-room house easy terms. on stone road, four miles out, |65. proved. Will trade. 160 acres in Polk county, Ark., clear, will trade and pay difference. 631 acres, well improved, in Dickey county, N. D. Will trade. 80 acres on pike, free mail, telephone and one-fourth mile to school; lies at head of large ditch; 70 acres cultivated; has good five-room house, good barn, milk house, chicken house, good well and orchard. Price |45, easy terms, or will take trade as first payment. 160 acres, 130 cultivated, 30 acres timber, near station, on large ditch, fair improvements. Will sell on easy terms or take trade as first payment Price £55. ® ' 180 acres, all good soil, ilO in cultivation, 70 acres in pasture, fenced hog tight; lots of tile, has good eightroom house, out buildings, wind mill, and tanks, large bearing orchard of all kinds of fruit, and is well located. Price 565. Will sell on easy terms or take trade as first payment G. F. MEYERS. Our Classified Column win sell, boy, And, rent, or exchange it Phone ,Is.

SIDE TALKS ON PUBLIC AFFAIRS

By Old John Henry.

To the Editor: . I read In my daily paper wheru Senator Beveridge nays, In Davieas county: '‘You might an well underatand that I prefer to go out of public life rather than to get a quiet whisper from some little boas aa to what I shall do for the American people." That Is pretty, plain talk. To my notion, It Is Juat about the right stuff. Them’s my sentiments, too. I glory In Beveridge’s spunk. He sums up the whole Indiana campaign; he tells his whole story in that declaration. It Is 1776 all over. It Is Lincoln's Cooper Institute speech, echoing down from the heights of Immolation to the listening millions. . I read today what Lincoln said In that great speech in 1860. He closed with these words: "Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations against us, nor frightened from It by' menaces of destruction to the government, nor of dungeons to ourselves. Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us to the end dare to do our duty as we understand it." Courage? Sublime. Sincerity? Absolute.- Righteousness? Full and complete. "Right makes might" today as It did in Lincoln’s time. Lincoln had faith in the people. The people justified that faith. The people In tha mass did not fail Lincoln nor abandon the Union. The masses stood fast for the right as God gave them to see the right. The voters in the mass persisted not only In voting right, hut In fighting with all their might in the cause of right. And the people conquered. Government of the people, for the people, did not perish from the earth.——— —■ “Let us to the end dare to do our duty.” “I prefer to go out of public life rather than to get a whisper from some little boss as to what I shall do for the American people." “Neither let us be slandered from our duty nor frightened by menaces of destruction.” Think over these words of Lincoln and of Beveridge. And then look at the other side where Taggartism rules. “I will meet you at room No. 370, Denison hotel, Sunday afternoon,” is the message sent forth by Thomas Taggart last week to Democratic candidates and workers. John W. Kern, candidate for United States senator, was favored with one of the summonses. What did Kern do when he got Taggart’s order? Kern dropped everything and hustled to room 370, Denison hotel to see Tom Taggart. The boss had word for Kem, and Kern hurried to give ear to the oracle. And who Is Taggart, and what Is Taggartism?. Taggart Is the Casino man of French Lick Infamy. He Is the political agent of every crooked speolal Interest from the book trust to Standard OH, and back to the asphalt trust, the railroads, the public service coalitions and the liquor interests. Taggart defies all laws, violates all decencies, shames the vicious, betrays all, slanders where he cannot control and fattens wherever political dominance can he coined into persona! profit. Taggartism today is a hold and brasen effort on Taggart's part to seize the state government, the legislature, and the supreme court, the congres.slonal delegation in house and senate, for the ends of the big interests whloh, from Wall street, fund him and enoourage him In his campaign. Taggart today has such control of his party organization and ticket that he Is prepared to reward his henchmen out of the public purse the mlnutw he succeeds In plaoing his followers in the offices. Never has Taggart been so open in his display of power. Never has he gone so far aB he has gone this year to prove to the people that he Is the big boss. Never has the anti-Tag-gart resentment among good people keen so deep-seated as it Is this year. We are going to the polls with our eyes wide-open. We are going to vote for progressive Republicanism, or we are going to vote for Taggartism triumphant. We are going to stand by the protective principle and the tariff commission, or wa are going to Invite Kern and chaos, with an attack on the doctrine of protection, and ihe uncertainty that comes with Democratic cross purposes. They ask us to vote for men who propose Champ Clark for speaker of the house, —Clark, who Bwears he would burn all the customs houses. Will we do it? They ask us to punish Beveridge for the good he has done, and reward Democrats for the failures they have made. Will we do It? Whatever your answer to these questions, vote, brother, vote , with care, and vote in the presence of your conscience. Above all, get out and vote, and see that your neighbor geta out and votes. The right to vote is the duty to vote. OLD JOHN HENRY

To vote for A. J. Beveridge tor United States senator, vote ’for the Republican candidates for the legislature. Senator Beveridge's does »ot appear on the ticket 1 “ ‘ r - ■. - y ’

The First Real Cost-Test Ever Made Automobile vs. Horse A per passenger mile—lre cts. Horse and Buggy, passenger mile—2 rets. PUBLIC test of the Maxwell Car and a horse and buggy oi& the streets of New York and its suburbs, under actual conditions ot traffic, has just been completed.

Automobile, l% cent » Expenses stop when not in use. Based on 10-Mile Trip Gasoline - yy) - - .014 Grease •. - - - i .003 Tires and Car S3 .369 Cost per mile—two persons - ]036 Cost per mile—per person - !oiß * operate an automobile the cost is based on gasoline ’J„r 0c a cation; oil. 50c a gallon; grease. 12c a pound; depreciation andtires, ,023amile: average cost of gasoline per mile, .0122 (figuring 16 % miles to the gallon)and "ot ineiudlng storage. The average of 16% miles to the gallon of gasoline is based on tests of the Maxwell used the economy test and Is extremely low.

That the automobile is undoubtedly an economy. That its low cost of operation surprises even its advocates. That the extravagance of the motor car is voluntary and unnecessary. That its pleasures are within the reach of men of moderate means. That it is an indispensable factor in transportation and a utility. That it is an implement which, if properly employed, will increase the earning power of man,

Test Officially Sanctioned by the American Automobile Ass’n

We invited the Contest Board of the American Automobile Association to conduct this test in order that it might be in absolutely disinterested control. The board appointed judges to attest its results. The two vehicles ran each day over a predetermined route. Each ran continuously for six hours, regarded as a normal day’s work. Account was kept of every item of expense entailed. The

The automobile cost ®/ioo of a cent per passenger piile to Operate The horse and buggy cost of a cent per passenger mile. The car covered 2 1/2 times the distance traveled by the horse. The car averaged 76 3 / w miles a day at a cost of $1.03. The_horse averaged 32 9 /io miles a day at a cost of 95 cents.

This 13 our answer to the charge made that the automobile is an extravagance This Droves that Ihe ho re e e°a n n7b„ig C “ r W ° U ' d miUiO " S “ thC WCre everywhere substituted for We have always been unable to fill orders promptly in the spring and summer. In order to stimulate early season business all these cars sold during the next 30 days will be GUARANTEED FOR LIFE.

guarantee for life ®he Maxwell-Briscoe Motor Co. guarantees this car to be made In a good and workmanlike manner and free from defects in material, and will replace free of charge during the life of the car any material (except tiros and added accessories) adjudged defective when returned to its factory for inspection, transportation prepaid. by President MAXWELL-BRISCOE MOTOR CO. Date.

Perfectly Simple. Simply Perfect.

With a 22-caliber rifle, Melvin Grubbs, a 12-year-old Warsaw boy, Friday shot and killed a golden eagle 1 measuring eight feet between the tips of th‘e wings. The bird, which resembles the one whch last week attacked a small child in Huntington county, has been purchased by Chas. Rigdon, of Warsaw, state secretary of the Order of Eagles, and will be placed in the Warsaw hall. Twenty aeroplanes at least are needed for the United States government service, Gen. Allen, chief signal officer of the amy says, in his annual report Just made public. Mrs. N. L. Otis, of South Bend, and Miss Mabel Hess, of Goshen, were injured in a collision with an auto driven by four Joy riders, and Miss Hess is in Epworth hospital, South with several broken bones.

It Proves Beyond Dispute

The Results Attested by Its Judges

iftCaxir&ll

Lecture Dates. Nov. 30—The Schuberts, a mixed quartette of singers and entertainers. Dec. 9 L. B. Wickersham, popular lecturer. Jan. 19—Booth Lowrey, humorist. March 13—The Beilharz Entertainers. Extra Number—Byron King, Jast year’s favorite, whose date has not been set. ’*

It’s best to clip gay Folly’s wings And take this little hint: Don’t be a fool and do the things That don’t look well in print.

You get your sale bills when TOU want them when ordered at T' e Republican office. 1

Horse and Buggy, 2Y 2 cent* Expenses continue when not in uses. Based on 10-Mile Trip 10 lbs. hay .095 12 quarts oats .... .228 100 lbs. straw per month, daily pro rata .... .05 .Horseshoeing—daily pro rata .083 Grease—daily pro rata ... .0002 Depreciation .... .062 .5182 Cost per mile—two persons - .05 Cost per mile—per person - .025 a horse and buggy the cost is based on hay at $21.00 a ton; oats at 60c a bushel; straw at $1.50 cwt.; horseshoeing, $2.50 per month; grease. 12c a month; depreciation harness and buggy, .005 a telle; horse, buggy arK L,,^ arness cos tlng $275.00 and lasting ten years, stabling not included.

conserve his time, extend his field and support his hands. That the automobile industry, practically unknown ten years ago and now the fourth greatest industry in the United States, is fully vindicated and proven economically sound: That the Maxwell car is the standard of that industry; the efficient, economical, reliable, utility automobile, as near perfection as human intelligence and human handiwork can make it under modern conditions.

needs of each vehicle were supplied at roadside stores at current market prices. Each day a different route was laid out, in order to cover all conditions of city and suburban traffic and all sorts of roads. One day they covered the densely congested districts of the city; another day they ran in infrequently traveled suburban roads. Everything was done to make the test normal, actual, eminently fair and conclusive.

The car required 5 x /2 gallons of gasoline and a pint of lubricant daily. The horse needed 12 quarts of oats and 20 pounds of hay per day. The other expenses—tire cost, up-keep and depreciation or similar charges brought the total cost of the car up to 18/iol 8 /io cents .per passenger mile, as shown in the table above. The other incident expenses of maintaining a horse and buggy brought its total cost up to 2 /2 cents per passenger mile as shown in the table above.

Maxwell-Briscoe Motor Co. Tarrytown, N. Y. Special Demonstration the Latter Part of This Week Only. Majcbuett Auto Co. NNNOSBLAKN, INDIANA

A Warning.

—Puck.

;:F= R EE EE iji < > A regular full size J| i: 10c FACE CHAMOIS : < > To all Ladies who purchase a \ ! box of the celebrated j j O LA DELICA ; | Complexion Powder:: {! Gives to the ugliest skin a<» «. beautiful, natural glow, J | JI without that powdered «* ' • look. ! I ; \ Rensselaer, Ind. A. F. LONG. ;; *******^*w»»eeoe»»e»»»»! We can save you money on your suit or overcoat. Let us show you, and we'll leave the decision with you. ROWLBS & PARKER.

The Great Economy Cars.