Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 84, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 April 1912 — Page 4
[USSIFIEB CfllllMH FOR SALE. For Salt—A Domo cream separator; capacity 180 pounds; at a bargain. Inquire of C. W. Rhoades, the bather, Phono 148. For Sale—A 7-yoar-old iron 5 gray mare, in foal to Swaim’s horse. Inquire of E. Ray Williams or phone 604-1. For Sale — Typewriter ribbon«>«f all makes. The Republican. For Sale—Good work mare. T. W\ Grant — 1 ’Horses for Sale—One bay mare nine years old, weight about 1150 pounds, and one bay horse five years old, weight about 1100 pounds. Arthur B. Hopkins. . For Sale —Hot house buildings, pipe, etc. Good for hen houses. Cheap. D. W. Waymire, Phone 15. For Sale—3 conveniently located • five-room cottages, at right prices and on easy payments. Firman Thompson.. For Sale—6-room cottage in north part of town, lot 150x187, good well, large chickenpark. E. L. Hammerton, Phone 375. For Sale or Beat—Possession at once; the Hemphill livery barn in Rensselaer; a good paying business. Inquire of Jack Hoyes, R. D. No. 1 or phone 505-D. For Sale—l have divided the Monnett land facing the gravel road into 10-acre lots, and will offer these for ■ale. This land Is within one mile of town and will make ideal homes. For prices and particulars call on George F. Meyers or J ( . J. Hunt For Sale—A house and lot Inquire of E. A. Aldrich. Far Sale—Oliver or Jewett typewriter in good condition and price reasonable Arthur H. Hopkins. Fer Sale—Small property south of Christian church known as Harrison property. See George A. Williams. WAITED. Wanted—Lady agent to sell our TRED-E2JY cloth house slipper direct to the consumer. Pleasant work. Liberal commission. Address Shinn Manufacturing Co., Paducah, Ky. • Wanted—Bus team. Weight about 1250 each. Harrison Wasson. r- • FOB RENT. • •. Fer Bent —About April 4th, an Oliver typewriter, recently remodeled and in perfect running order. Telephone No. 18 or 153. LOST. Lest—Pair of rimless eye glasses, In black case. Finder please bring to Republican office or return to Margaret Hurley, Phone 513-J. Lest—Small mink Bcarf, between the Ae O. Moore and R. A. Parkinson farms; Sunday. Finder please return to Kiss Bessie Moody or leave at this office.
BUTTERFAT. W. H. Dexter will pay 31c for butter tat this week: . y ELECTRICAL REPAIRS. For electrical repairs and wiring, call Ray Delmer, Phone 161. MONEY TO LOAN. The Union Central Life Insurance Co. has made a big appropriation of money to be loaned on good farms in Jasper county and offers a liberal contract without commission. John A. Dunlap, Agent MISCELLANEOUS. Bicycle and Motorcycle Repair Shop —Three doors south of Rensselaer t-Garage. James C. Clark, proprietor. POULTRY ARB EGGS. For Sale —Indian Runner duck eggs; ■white eggs, $1 tor 15; tinted eggs, 76c for 15. Fred Waling, H P. No. 3, or Mt Ayr phone No. 29-G. Eggs—Buff Plymouth Rock eggs from prize-winning pen. Hazelett strain, $1.50 and $3.00 per 16. R. P. Johnston, 2440 Kossuth street, Lafayette, Ind. AUTOMOBILES. \ • The Tory Latest, a real 1912 car, on opr floor for delivery now. The Maxwell Mascotte Touring car. •THE GLDBER ‘ i tOUB WINNER. >m ri THE PELOUZE ELECTRIC IRON. - ■■ M r Mmcsr - tMui ' The most economical iron on the market—“ The Pelouze.” Sold by Ray ® #RBer ' -■ ’ . A Classified Adv. will find it i; -WI- .*> -
Ij9|| ItIKJI Wl\y not the Town Pump ? "XTOU might as well draw your automobile lubricant from it as to use the Wrong Oil , The latter becomes as thin as water under the terrific heat of the gas explosions—does very little more lubricating than water —allows great wear —shortens the life of the motor. As long as you are paying for oil and not water, you might as well get the Right OilAutlubo "HMT GOOD OIL" 1 ■ ... . - - ULMM : ,v; It stands up under heat Gives your car perfect lubrication at all times under jail conditions. It is Right ‘ because it is made according to the specifications of i the foremost lubrication ‘expert in the country, because it is made from the i purest Pennsylvania crude oil, because it is manufactured by the latest methods, because it is filtered many times to remove all free carbon. ( It is to your interest to know something about automobile lubrication. Our booklet T gives the inside facts which the expert men- : tioned above discovered only after years re of experiments and tests. This booklet is w yours for the asking. Write for a copy and well also send you a ■Omeoikm Gauge Free Address The Moore Oil Co. 1312-1302 York St. CINCINNATI P‘•*■ •* ' ' BKANCHES Uiuiport, lad. Cohafau, Ohio
A Republican.
A good republican is a man who thinks more of his country than he does of his party; more of his party than he does of all other parties combined; who will do his best to nominate good men for office, but will abide by the result of the primary; who will work harder to secure the united vote of the republican party than he will to line up for himself a few soreheads from other parties; who will content himself with being a good republican and not attempt to tear the house down that he may rebuild it to bis own peculiar liking; and who will admit that the wisdom of the many is very likely to exceed that of any individual.
PILES CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METHOD. If job goffer from bleeding, Jtebiag, blind or pfotrndlng Piles, send Be year address, sad 1 will tell xm bow to tore yourself at hease by the new absorption treatment; sad will alas aeod some iff this fcoam treatment* .free for trial, with references float your own locality If requested. Immediate relief aad permanent cure assured. Send no money, bet Ml others of this offer. Write today to Mrs. it. Summers, Ban P, Notre Dame, lad. A Classified Adv. will rent it. , w -j
Pointers For the Motorist; The Prevention of Skidding.
Skidding is so frequent a cause of automobile accidents both slight and serious that every motorist must decide on some form of protection qgainst it. It is, howeVfer, difficult to select from the jnany devices offiered the pne which will be most effective and econpmical. Anti-skid devices may be divided into two main classes, the detachable and the non-detadhable. Steel chains, leather straps and removable steelstudded leather treads are perhaps the best known of the first class. All these are widely used, but tire inanu•facturers are agreed that all detach- ! able anti-skid devices are expensive jin the end because of the wear and j tear which they put on tires and machinery. / \ If chains be fastened tightly to the wheels so that they have no freedom to slip back and forth, it will be quickly noticed that the cross pieces are biting away the tread beneath them and when removed will show the tire marked with deeply gouged cross lines. Experience has proven that the best way to use chains is to attach them as loosely as possible. Attachments such as removable studded leather treads, while not likely to cut or gouge the rubber are generally so cumbersome that they destroy resiliency. In other words the tire, instead of absorbing obstructions, rebounds from them and thus transmits the shock to the chassis, defeating the very purpose for which pneumatic tires were designed. These conditions show the necessity for a satisfactory anti-skid. Many of these depend on some form of rubber elevation to check the skidding of the car. The experience of many motorists is that such rubber non-skids if used with care are satisfactory while they last, but that in some cases the studs or other elevations wear away rather quickly. One set of figures recently compiled showed that after traveling one thousand miles the average non-skids tire was worn perfectly smooth. Since most non-skids are considerably more expensive than those with plain treads, manufacturers everywhere are trying to make the anti-skid feature more durable. Finally there is the original type of anti-skid invented by Michelin in which the rubber tread is reinforced by a tread of steel-studded leather. In the Michelin Anti-Skid the leather tread is an integral part of the tire and thus does not affect its resiliency, while the steel studs naturally wear longer than rubber and grip better on wet or icy roads.
Poet Knew Nothing of Feminine Passion For Bonnets.
Unless the weather man recalls his prediction before tomorrow be will be the subject of a torrent of unfavorable comment by the fair ones who are expectantly waiting to sally forth in all the glory of their Easter bonnets. It seems to be the irony of fate that Easter Sunday should be robbed of all Its springtime beauty by rain, hut one might as well be philosophical about it as was James .Whitcomb Riley when he wrote “When God sends rain, why rain’s my choice.”
Springtime is Paint Time.
For painting, paperhanging, varnishing, floor fixing or interior decorations, see W. S. Richards or phone 331. Antomobile insurance at 2 per cent per annum, against loss by fire from any cause, any place in the United States or Canada, by a company that is as good as the best
A number of the friends and relatives of Lyman Barce came from Brook and Morocco Sunday to attend the funeral. They came by way of Shelf. The dispatcher and the superintendent were beseeched to stop the train at Shelf so the parties of ten, three of them being ladies, one woman was very old, but they would not It was necessary to hire automobiles to take the party to Free. It is such harsh acts as these of plutocratic power that breeds the spirit of retaPation. The company claims that it did not get justice in the Benton court. The fault is with the company. It has not learned that it is & public carrier, but it will.; —Fowler Republican-Lead-er. 1 1 ■ We have just unloaded two cars of potatoes. One car of faney early seed varieties and one of fancy sandgrown, white table stock. Get our prices on same before buying. JOHN EGER. Fred Wheeler was arrested Thursday at Rockford, 111., and held to the grand jury without bail for the alleged murder of bis wife. It is charged be poisoned the woman because of an affinity and for $1,500 life insurance. We have taken the agency for Remington typewriter supplies and if you want the best typewriter ribbon made call at The Republican office or phone your wants. Ribbons of all makes of machines. to* ,
R. B. HARRIS.
Onion Growers Become Wealthy From Starke County Muck Lands.
Twelve yearß ago R. D. Wine, of Streator, 111., went to Starke county—thought he saw a future to the land — and bought 240 acres in Jackson township at a price less than S2O an acre. But he tjid not stop at that, for his confidence in the land grew stronger as time went by. Each year be has added to his Starke county possessions until today he owns acres of the fertile mnck soil. He acquired his land at an average cost of $44 per acre, but SIOO,OOO, or $125 per acre, “spot cash,” if offered to him today, would not tempt Mr. Kline in the least. “Marvelous!” one is prone to gasp, “it is unbelievable,” But here is the proof of the pudding, copied from the Knox, Ind., Republican: “During the year of 1911 R. D. Kline and son sold $60,000 worth of produce from 200 acres of their Starke county muck lands. Seventy-four acres of this land produced 27,000 bushels of onions, which w r ere sold for $50,000 Part of these onions were sold direct from the fields last fall and the remainder from the storage house at Toto, five miles southwest of Knox, the price ranging from 70 cents To $2.25 per bushel. On the other 126 acres of the 200 under cultivation; SIO,OOO worth of corn, cabbage and potatoes were grown.- The onion yield was 500 bushels to the acre, all of which was sold on an average of $1.40 per bushel. Each of the 74 acres thu‘ produced $649 worth of onions! On one acre of land Kline & Son grew--900 bushels of onions, which they sold for SI,BOO. This acre was carefully measured and the crop kept to itself and marketed alone.” With a little reflection, however, one finds that there is nothing marvelous about this after all. The success of Mr. Kline is only typical of what the use of a little foresight and the exercise of ceaseless, untiring efforts will do for a man. It is such qualities as these that characterize the men who pioneer in their own field of endeavor and who do big things in this world. One day not long ago after Mr. Kline had made the purchase, Mrs. Kline went to Starke county to take a look at their new possessions. To her, the dismal atmosphere was appalling. As she gazed over the drear swamp lands of this uninviting tract she breathed an ominous sigh, “So this is where our money has gone?” so their money did “go.” All we regret is that we had none to “go” with it, for when it goes to going that money was the best goer that ever went Mr. Kline is not the only man who has prospered with muck lands. Many have made small fortunes in the past few years and scores of small growers are awakening to the dawn of greater things. And the Gifford lands, which Ed Oliver and other progressives are putting in onions, potatoes, etc., will contribute to several fortunes within the next few years Some Rensselaer men have seen it coming and have put their money in* it But there are opportunities yet anc" many of them and when the Newlan' storage plant is built and its owners report the. success attained, there will be a larger demand than ever for the rich muck soil so long regarded as almost valuless.
Buy a J., I. Case corn planter and fertiliser attachment. Put a Case fertilizer attachment on your old planter. They will do the work. HAMILTON! & KELLNER. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Leopold are receiving congratulations over the arrival of a ten pound daughter at their home on Thursday of last week. This is the first addition to their family in eighteen years, and while at first the town seemed too small to hold them, they have taken a new lease on life and decided to remain in Brook. May their fondest hopes for little Miss Pauline be realized. —Brook Cor. to Kentland Enterprise.
In renewing his subscription to The Republican, E. D. Sayler writes from Fargo, N. Dak., as follows: “We are having fine weather. Have had no storms to speak of all winter. You have had more than your share inlndiana. We are looking for a good crop in North Dakota this year. Business is picking up and every one is feeling good. I suppose the east was somewhat surprised at the result of the election in North Dakota. Roosevelt thought he had a sure thing here.” Harry Zimmerman came from Michigan City yesterday evening for a visit of a few days with his mother, Mrs. John Zimmerman and family. Harry is still an operator for the Monon railroad at Michigan City. Several saloon prosecutions took place at Michigan City recently and for a time the saloons were closed outside of legal hours, brit now they are beginning to relax and Harry thinks they will be wide open during the summer. His mother is getting along very well since she returned from the hospital after having her eyes operated on. • insurance on horses against death from any cause at € per cent per annum. t R. 6. HARRIS.
IP; Clk ford 4-Cylinder, Shaft-Driven Touring Car $690 Complete When we say COMPLETE,' we mean magneto top, glass front, speedometer, five lamps, .generator and tools. Over 8156 worth of equipments. John iH. Knapp, Agent Phone 186. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. ASK FOR DEMONSTRATION. FORD REPAIRS IN STOCK.
ELLIS THEATRE Manager QNE inning Monday, Apr, 8 The Highest Salaried Traveling Stock Company Presenting High-Class Royalty Plays Including Three Vaudeville Specialties OKN.NC "P ower of Politics” Prices 10c, 20c, 30c. Saturday Matinee. Ladies Free Monday Night. One Lady Admitted Free with Every 30c Ticket. , - Tickets on sale Friday 9 a.m.
COLORED POST CARDS FREE
Not Cheap Trash, But Ten Beautiful Ones. I want to send to every reader of The Republican 10 assorted, embossed, colored, Friendship, Floral ana Affection highest art post cards, a 3 lovely cafds as you ever laid eyes upon, and without any advertisement whatever. I do'this to show people the highgrade cards I carry manufacturers’ prices. All I ask is that you sent me 4 cents in stamps to cover postage, and show them to a few friends. Address C. T. Johnstone, Pres., Dept. 574, Rochester, New York.
Hoover Stock Company.
Mr. Grover Hoover will present the “Power of Politics,” a drama in tout acts, on Monday, April Bth, at the Ellis theatre. A change of program every night and Saturday matinee. The Hoover Stock Company comes well recommended by the presß and public. This company has been out 35 weeks straight and now on their way to play return dates In the state of Indiana In the large houses. Oh account of having an open date Mr. Ellis has secured this company for your approval. In connection with the play the Hoover Stock Company will put on three vaudeville specialties between acts. The vaudeville actß are worth the price of admission alone. This will be one grand treat for the people of Rensselaer. The iSHces for Monday night will be 10, 20 and 30 cents. One lady admitted free with every 30 cent ticket Secure your tickets in advance if you wish to get good seats. Seats will be on sale Friday morning at 9 o’eloek at Jessen’s.
A Bumper Crop.
For a bet a young seedsman of Leeds Rashly six packets of seeds; In a month —Silly ass! — He was covered with grass, And he couldn't sit down for the weeds.
Marriage License.
William N. McCurry, bom Goodland, Ind., March 11, 1879, residence Goodland, occupation clerk, and Lillian 8. Hamilton, born Goodland, Ind., April 1, 1894, present residence Goodland, occupation housekeeper. First marriage for each.. „ We were again temporarily out of Aristos Flour, but we have just received another car. This makes our fourth car since January Ist. 1911. Thiu shows that the Quality and price of Aristos is making more new friends
all the time.
To find a buyer for your property, try a classified adv. in this paper.
Presbyterian Church. The services for Sabbath, April Bth, 1912. Sabbath school at 9:30 a. m. Morning worship and Easter communion at 10:46 a. m. Evening worship at 7:30. "Easter Joy/5 The choir will give a program of Easter music at the evening service, A. Classified Adv. will rent it [
JOHN EGER.
Burch’s Orchestra ■ • - • •• Will Play at the Rex Theatre * ; j•. /. Tuesd’y Night April 9 —♦ — \ l ...... A . Double Show —♦ — _ Admission 10c
The 1912 CHAOS WILL BE DELIYEEED OK OB ABOUT MAT 17th. All Bensselaer Alumni will want H—should hue iteMid we hope to receive an oiflr from ©rcry member.'' '•'V'. • .♦ - ■ Price, sl*oo o Orders by mall win receive prompt attention. Mail or phone orders to FLOBEHCE UTAH, phone Mt. or JOHN HEMPHILL, phone ltL BEKSSELAEB, IHHIAKA.
