Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 220, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 September 1913 — Page 4

CLASSIFIED CBLUIN Bins ypß CakASSIfXM* ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six Issues es The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, >t cents. Additional space pro rata. FOB SALK. FOR SALE—Peaches, 50c bushel and up. Mrs. A. Gangloff. VOR SALE—Thoroughbred Du roc bull, 1 year old. R. J. Lefler, Kalman, Ind., Telephone 524-A. ■ , ... . I■- ■ ■■•— FOR SALE—Extra fine bull call, 7 months old, Polled-Durham; also black bull, 18 months old, a good one. J. F. Mitchell, Jordan township, Phone 528-D. FOR SALE—Great Western man- . ure spreader; practically as good as new. Ed Goetz, Phone 519-E. FOR SALE—Concord grapes. Alf Donnelly, Phone 548-B. FOR SALE—4-room house and barn; 1 acre of ground; located at Parr. Inquire of A. Gangloff, Phone 453. FOR SALE—Peaches, fine flavor; very cheap. J. F. Bruner, Phone 339. FOR SALE—7-room house, plenty of fruit, small barn, city water and lights, good location.—M. E. Griffin. Phone 445. FOR SALE—B-row Success shredder, run two seasons, in good shape. Wjll sell cheap. Glenn Baker, phone 512-A. FOR SALE—4O acres near station and school, on stone road, 30 acres In corn, 5-room house, fruit, well, and' all good land. Price $55. Terms SSOO down; might take live stock.— G. F. Meyers. FOR SALE—Pure comb honey in 12 and 24 section cases at SI.BO and $3.60 per case. Single sections 15 cents each.—Leslie Clark, at Republican office. FOR SALE— Four choice building iota, all near the court house b‘ut in different locations; all choice building lots on stone streets. Leslie Oarlu at The Republican office. WANTED. WANTED—Orders for home-made mayonnaise and angelfood cake. Phone 444. WANTED—GirI for general housework. Telephone 466. WANTED-XSirl to assist in the kitchen at Makeever Hotel. FOUND. FOUND—A Masonic pin; inquire here FOUND—The surest method of making a sale; advertise in The Republican classified column. FARM LOANS. __l FARM -LOANS —I make farm loans at lowest rates of interest See me about ten year loan without eommiiwlon. John A. Dunlap. MISCELLANEOUS. TO LOAN—SSSO on first mortgage security. Inquire here. Lesson<2|n oil, water-color and china painting; .hand-painted china for sale. Phone 489. Emilie M. Wightman. . PIANO TUNING-Bee Otto Braun, who will guarantee satisfaction in all of his work.

Dressmaking. For plain and fancy.dressmaking done at home of customer, phone 316, Miss Alice Parks. The dead body of Mrs. Lucy Lane, aged thirty-three, was found at her home in- Evanston Friday. The coroner says the woman committed suicide by taking some kind of poison. It was her third attempt at suicide. She was recently divorced from her husband. Alleging that her husband has been guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment toward her, Mrs. Mabel G. Green has brought suit for divorce and alimony in the sum of 110,000 in the circuit court against . Jerome J. Green, a professor and wireless expert at Notre Dame university. We have been so busy arranging stocks and taking care of New Fall Goods that we have had little time to tell you about them. The most comprehensive display of New Fall Goods in this city now awaits your Inspection. Come in and let us show you. BOWLES & PARKER. The Northern Indiana Poster association of Ft Wayne, has filed articles of incorporation with the secretary of state with a capital stock of $5,000. The concern will operate billboards in Northern Indiana. The directors are Henry HII- - Max Innscher, W. H. Shambaugh and others. castoria Tki KM Ym Kin Always tagtt

New sweet * and dill pickles at John Eger’s. ' v i TRAUB & SELIG’S Anniversary Sept 18, 19, 20. Souvenirs. The Sew Club will meet Wednesday afternoon of this week with Miss Julia Leopold: Mort Crockett left this morning on a business trip to Chicago and Detroit. .<• The Girls Card Club will meet Tuesday evening wljth Misses Georgia and Muriel Harris. Mrs. John Remley and son, Gaylord, returned Friday from their visit with Mr. Remley, Opal and Estel at Nichwall, Mont. Make yourself at home at our store during our Anniversary and the Red Men’s Pow-wow. TRAUG & SELIG. Sweet potatoes, cheaper than Irish potatoes. Fancy, large Jersey sweet potatoes, only 3c a pound at John Eger’s. Mrs. Irene R. Baech, of South Bend, came Saturday evening for a visit of several days with Mrs. Kate R. Watson and other relatives. TRAUB & SELIG are showing the largest and best sdock of new Fall and Winter wear for men, boys and little fellows, rightly priced. County Agent Barrett will be at the Bank of Remington this week Wednesday afternoon., -Drop in and tallrmatters over with him. John Macy came from Indianapolis Saturday and yesterday took his aged mother, Mrs. John Kakeever, home with him for a month’s visit. I am not going to have a millinery opening, but am ready for business. While visiting the openings you are cordially invited to come in and see my line.—Mrs. Purcupile. Isaac Thompson and daughter, Mrs. Crawford, of Bluffton, Ohio, came Saturday for a visit of three or four weeks with relatives here. Mr. Thompson is in his 86th year and is enjoying splendid health. John Ramp returned this morning from a Sunday trip to Flora. Nothing serious, we don’t think, and yet John is a ihighty desirable eligible that any Carroll county girl might do well In picking eyes to. During the Red-Men’s Pow-Wow, Sept. 18, 19, 20, pay us a visit and learn what’s correct for Fall and Winter in Clothing, Furnishings and Hats. TRAUG & SELIG. Delphi entertained the Williamsport ball team Sunday and. won a decided victory by the score of 9 to 2. Eight hundred fans paid admission to the game, about twenty going from Monon and a number from other near-by towns. It is easy for you to buy your Fall and Winter outfit here because our stock is the largest to choose from. Correct in style and priced the lowest. It pays to trade here. TRAUG & SELIG.

Miss Edith Adams returned Friday evening from Chicago, where she was with hermother, Mrs. Marlon I. Adams, at the hospital. Mrs. Adams is recovering in a very satisfactory manner from her recent -operation. Dr. W. L. Myer went to Flora Sunday morning to attend a reunion of the Myer family and reports having had a fine time. Mrs. Myer, who had been visiting at Frankfort, joined him at Flora, returning to Frankfort that evening and will come home tonight. Roy Scott writes back encouraging word from Indianapolis, where he is taking treatment for a cancer on his lower lip. The specialist says that it is a skin cancer and can be cured. Roy will have to stay in Indianapolis for three or four weeks, however. We are showing every new style and fabric in the line of Men’s and Young Fellow’s Sults and Overcoats. Prices the lowest. TRAUG & SELIG. Misses Jane Parkison, Ruth Harper and Edna Babcock left this morning for Jacksonville, Hl., the former to enter the academy and the other two to enter Illinois Woman’s College. Miss Harper last year attended college at Hinsdale, Mich.

Kuppenheimer Sults always acknowledged as the best. A large line in stock to"'select from and if not your fit we take your pleasure and have you a Kuppenheimer Suit made without any additional cost. ROWLES & PARKER. Mrs. S. Jacobs, of Tampa, Fla., who has been here for the past six weeks, visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. Fendig, was joined last week by her husband, who will be here for several days. Mr. Jacobs is engaged In the real estate business at Tampa. Twelve school girls had a slumber Hess) party at the home of Miss Lueile Luers Friday night, walking out there after the band concert. They cooked their own breakfast of bacon and eggs the next morning and then “hiked” Into town. The party proved a very pleasing diversion for the girls.

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER; IND

The base ball game ended at ten innings Sunday, 8 to 6 in favor of Danville colored team. Features of this game were good fielding by Danville’s first baseman and a lucky three-base hit in the last" inning which brought in one man. Wednesday’s game at Sheldon was I to 2 in of the two Sheldon players and the seven Chicago men.—Morocco Courier. The new Fall Hats and. Caps, Sweaters, for all ages, are here in abundance, ready for your early choosing. Prices right. TRAUG & SELIG. Miss Nettie Jordan visited her mother, Mrs. SrL Jordan, and family, of Barkley township, over Sunday. She is the superintendent of the city hospital at Aurora, 111., and had just returned from a trip to Boston, Mass., to attend the national convention of hospital nurses. She also went to New York City and Washington, D. C., where she visited the leading hospitals. Bottled sunlight sold and installed in suburban homes by the Watson Plumbing Co., Phone 204. F. M. Donnelly made a trip to Newland Sunday and saw the onion wealth in that Section. It is certainly marvelous. Mr. Donnelly says that many onion fields were turning out from 400 to 750 bushels to the acre. The price is pp, he stated, from that reported last week, and John Wilson, a well known citizen, was loading out two car loads, which he had sold for 84 cents a bushel. Never before have we shown such a large line of popular priced Millinery as this season. Come to our opening Thursday. Friday and Saturday, September 18, 19 and 20, and see the largest array of new Fall Hats ever in this city.—ROWLES & PARKER. Millinery Dept. 2d floor. George Crockett and Paul Wood, sons of veterans, left Sunday morning for Chattanooga, Tenn., taking advantage of the reduced rates to visit the battlefield, the national cemetery and attend the reunion. So far as we have learned they are the only two who went from this community, not an old soldier going. It is the first time for a. number of years, we believe, that Rensselaer has not been represented by an old soldier at the national encampment of the G. A. R. Get your new Fall Suit made from the Kuppenheimer sample line. They cost no more than ready to wear garments.' See this line at Rowles & Parker's. Hon. John Ade, who was here this week, and who is always a most welcome guest,, said while chatting with the editor that although he will be eighty-five years old Sept. 18, he does not have an ache or pain and feels as well as in his younger days. He looks very well, walks with a spryness that many men half his age might wish to eniulate and still has an accurate meiriory of events three-quarters of a century ag»\ He was a resident of Morocco from 1853 to IB6o.—Morocco Courier. Pharon F. Corpe, of Bristol, was instantly killed when he was struck by a Lake Shore train at a grade crossing in Elkhart. The Indiana Federation of Labor has Invited Senator Kern to speak at a banquet which it will give in Terre Haute, Sept. 23. The senator intends to be present if possible. Albert H. Putney, of Chicago, has been appointed chief of the near eastern division of the state department, succeeding John Van A. McMurray, appointed secretary of legation at Peking. Walter Hull, a young boy, was caught under a heavy clod roller, when working on a farm near Evansville. His back was broken and he was fatally injured internally. In response to an urgent demand from the state department, the house Friday night passed a joint resolution making an emergency appropriation of SIOO,OOO to be used for the relief of destitute Americans in Mexico and for their transportation back to the United States.

DON’T BE MISLED,

Rensselaer Citizens Should Read and Heed This Advice. Kidney trouble is dangerous and often fatal. Don’t experiment with something new and untried. Use a tested kidney remedy. Begin with Doan’s Kidney Pills, Used in kidney troubles 50 years. Recommended here and everywhere. The following statement forms convincing proof. Mrs. George W. Snyder, W. Marion St, Monticello, Ind., says: “We found Doan’s Kidney Pills to be a good remedy for kidney complaint. They were taken by others of my family for backache and weak kidneys and positive relief was had. We are never without a supply of, Doan’s Kidney Pills In the house which should show how highly we value them.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sqle agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other.

Heap Big Welcome At VanArsdel’s. ============================================================ ====^ I ■ : 9JL W, SB to come to our store while attending the LlQfl T ■ Red Men’s Pow Wow, This will be a ? ■■ . • ■ ■ ■ Welcome Wigwam where the Red Men with their Squaws will meet the Pale Face and their wives on friendly grounds. Bring your wraps, bundles, umbrellas, lunches, etc. They will be checked and taken care of free. [Pappooses under two years of age not accepted].. ri, 1 1 '.'iL.-i.'.u ' , -■■z.j-.z,,'! ALSO COME PREPARED TO COMBINE PLEASURE WITH PROFIT. WE ARE SHOWING MANY SPECIAL BARGAINS THIS WEEK AND THE HANDSOMEST LINE OF DRESS GOODS. WE HAVE EVER SHOWN. DONI FAIL TO SEE OUR MANY BARGAINS IN ALL LINES BEFORE BUYING. OUR SHOE LINE ALONE IS WORTH A SPECIAL VISIT TO OUR STORE. EVER WELCOME. ■l■ • ■ . E. VanArsdel Co.

HANGING GROVE.

Farmers have begun filling silos and the work will continue for several weeks. W. C. Ross is preparing to build a new silo at the farm he now lives on. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cook spent Sunday with the Robert Drake family near Shadeland. M. E. Griffin is painting Simon Cook’s house. A small blaze occurred in McCoysburg about 1 o’clock Wednesday morning. The small tenant house near the Wash Lowman property was destroyed by fire and some household goods. The house had been occupied for some time by John Burris and family but just a few weeks ago they took a load of their belongings ‘tp the Gifford onion fields, where they are at present camping out. Just what their loss will be no one seems to know, but the house was owned by G. W. Infield and was probably covered by insurance. The Art was discovered by Mrs. R. V. Johns, who aroused her husband and the people of the slumbering village were soon awakened and assisted in the fire fighting. No effort was made to save the burning building nor its contents, as it was too far gone when help arrived, but all attention was directed to the adjoining houses. This is the first fire we have had here since October, 1908, when J. P. Gwin’s hardware store burned. The origin of the fire is unknown and seems to be quite a mystery, as there has been no one in the .house for a long time. Mrs. George Johnson is assisting Mrs. Sarah Fulk with her fruit canning. The John Holden 80 acres has again changed hands. This time it falls into the hands of Geo. Lowman, of Amboy, who expects to move up here and make his home. Mrs. W. S. Lowman and children went to Goodland Wednesday to join her husband in the hotel, in which business he just recently engaged. They left their home here just as it was, taking only a few personal belongings. Wash Cook took Ed Peregrine and three children to Tefft Wednesday for a few days’ visit with C. R. Peregrine and family and from there they will go to Valparaiso to visit Frank Peregrine and family. Chas. Bussell went to Logansport Wednesday night to attend the funeral of a cousin on Thursday. Miss Blanche Ott, of Barkley township,'spent a few days visiting the McDonald sisters this week. Mr. and Mrs, O. W. Bussell and family and Mrs. James Lefler and Albert and Milford Polsel took dinner with R. L. Bussell and family Sunday. J. M. Ray and son, Vernle, are spending a couple of weeks at Elwood, visiting relatives and looking after some business matters. Mr. and Mrs. John Holden and Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Lowman went over to Goodland Sunday to spend the day with W. S. Lowman and family. The schools got well started last week. Only one school vacant this year, the Moore school pupils being transferred to Parker, making about twenty pupils at this point. The McCoysburg school is the largest in the township, having fortythree scholars. The teacher, Miss Ethel Miller, will be Icept quite busy this winter. C. W. Bussell went to togaifsport Thursday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Maggie Grlbbens. She Was a cousin of Mr. Bussell. The baby of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Willits which has been qutte sick at the home of Its grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Rlngelsen In Rensselaer, Is rejected as getting alopg nicely now.

Children Cry for Fletcher's n ■ J,— —— f AF.VXh b! V. w 1 111 If W The Kind Ton Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive yon in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ** Just-as-good ** are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil. Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years

THERE IS ALWAYS A TIME

and time will demonstrate facts, also quality. It’s a guarantee, and it takes good judgment to get the quality, and time decides the quality or guarantee. Now the Farmer who wants a farm wagon that has all of the above will have to buy a STUDEBAKER farm wagon of O. A. Roberts. Now this is true of STUDEBAKER quality--that their wheels will out-do any wagon on the market today, holding the tires. I can show wagons that have been In use for from 12 to 16 years without the tires having to be reset, and with a load of three tons no wagon can run easier than a STUDEBAKER. The best ironed wagon on earth Is a STUDEBAKER Could give twenty-five other reasons, but these are enough. C. A Roberts, Agent, Rensselaer, Ind., the capital of the finest county In the state. •

NOTICE. All those who want stand privileges for the Red Men’s Pow-Wow and Celebration should apply to A. E. Wallace without delay. a T. W. Barhydt, Jr., Tor man/ years lessee of the Grand Opera house at Terre Haute, has inherited and received $300,000 from an uncle, who died a millionaire, and who had lived at Burlington, lowa. What have you to sell? Why don’t you qpll it? A Republican classified ad will bring you a buyer wining to w "hot tt lo worth To find a buyer ior your property, use a classified adv. In this paper.

*»tiiiit.ai> TXXB TABU. In effect June 28, 1913. NORTHBOUND No. 36 4:44 am No. 4 4:68 am No. 40 . .......7:83 am No. 82 • •................... .10:12 am No. 88 ....s>29 pm No. 6 . 8:89 pm No. 30 ~.. 6:02 pm No. 16 6:22 pm SOUTHBOUND No. 35 12:18 am No. 81 4:44 am No. 15 10:54 am No. 87 11:82 am No. 5 12:16 pm No. 88 .....2:00 pm No. 39 6:22 pm No. 8 11:05 pm

Trap Shoot to Be Held Here Tuesday, Sept 23rd.

Everrett Brown, secretary of the Rensselaer Gun Club, is advertising a blue rock shoot to take place at Rensselaer next Tuesday. Sept. 23. Shooting is to begin at 10:80. Programs of the event are being sent out to trap-shooters In many neighboring cities. The program is a big one, with eleven events and specials if desired. «■ . » The department of justice has begun an investigation to determine whether the decree dissolving the tobacco trust has heen violated.