Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 February 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
FOR SALE—Oaarke; 157 acres, 60 cultivated; fenced; fruit; mmll house; log barn; spot oaMh. Thomas N. Bush, Doniphan, Mo. FARM# FOR SAL.ES—Great bargain* In Chautauqua and Warren county farms, south of famous Lake Chautauqua. Improved, productive. With ana without -stock and tools. Indiana, Mlchl igan and Ohio fanners who bought in 1913 and 1914 thoroughly satisfied. Come and see. Will meet you with conveyance on day's notice at Erie Railway Depot, Jamestown, N. T. Write for circulars describing other bargains. ■We have no worn-out farms. No. 103 —ISO acres, stock and tools, hay. etc. One or the finest farms In the country. One mile from town. 14V acres cultivated, 40 acres pasture and woods. Bight-room house in good repair, large baaement barn 40*80. 13 cowa. 3 yearling heifers, fine team. 14 acres bearing apple orcahrd. finest In the county. Should have 4,000 bushels this year. No hills. Great bargain, 811,000. 80,000 cash, balance long time. No. 404 —98 acres, 3 miles from Chautauqua Lake. N. Y. 76 acres cultivated, »3 acres timber, 4 acres apple orchard, eight room house, barn 40x60, hog house, hen house. Level farm, Hen, dark loam, no waste land. 23 hogs, 12 year cattle, span horses. All hay and grain on farm. If sold soon price only 86,000. Personal property alone worth more than 82,000. Family affairs compel sale. No. 336 —77 acres, dark clay loam, slight drainage fall. 8 acres sugar bush, balance cultivated and pasture. First class eleven room house. 2 barns, silo. Well watered by running spring. 314 miles from railway station. Buildings alone would coßt more than price, $3,000. Half cash, balance easy.— CODY LAND COMPANY, Sugargrove, Warren Co., Pa. FOR SALE—Two full blood Rhode Island Red roosters. Phone 525. FOR SALE—Twenty empty syrup barrels, 75c each, at Fate’s College Inn. \ FOR SALE—Three fillies, 2 Per eherons and one Belgium; will weigh from 13 to 14 hundred. Ira Brown, Phone 928-F. FOR SALE—One 3-yr-old Shortaorn bull, eligible to registry.—F. P. Ringeisen, McCoysburg, Ind. FOR SALE—IO-acre farm, good Hack land all in cultivation, fair buildings, fruit, etc.; 7Vi miles of Rensselaer; you ca rent onion and nearby; $1,500, will take ssou iown, terms to suit on balance.—J. ?avisson, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR SALE—A tew White Hoi land tom turkeys.—H. J. Gowland, Route 1. Phone 902-G. FOR SALE—Timothy hay and shock corn.—Henry Amsler, Phone 29. FOR SALE—32O acres, Vs mile of ;own; gravel road on two sides; dake-Em-Self ditch running lengthwise through place; nearly all under cultivation; S7O per acre, SIO,OOO nortgage due March L 1917, can be tssumed; balance cash. A snap W. H. Wells, DeMotte, Ind.
WANTED. WAITED —Girl for general housework, Mrs. H. W. Wood, Jr., Phone 415. WANTED—To buy for cash, 160 or more acres of level, good black land. Give full description and location in your first letter. Do not Use postal cards. No agents. Lock Box 475, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED—By married man, job on a farm. Address P. O. Box 171, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED—A refrigerator.— & Robinson, Delicatessen store. WANTED—Housekeeper able to take care of houes and children.— W. C. Criswell, R. D. 4, Rensselaer, Ind. r _ ' WANTED—Eggs for hatching. Inquire of Geo. H. Healey or Harve J. Robinson, care Republican office. WANTED—A few mo sc family washings.—Mrs. Wm. Bow&her, next door to Christian church. WANTED—Large knitting mill invites correspondence from ffomen desirous of earning money; part or full time; good pay; experience unnecessary.—lnternational Knitting Co., West Philadelphia, Pa. WANTED—Fat hogs for market. Phone 400.—A. W. Sawin. tine, la., to bridge the Mississippi. Fifty-five men and three women have been arrested isl Muneie on grand jury indictments alleging the illeglal sale of liquor. In all 336 indictments were returned against 112 alleged dealers.
Calvin Reed, a Wabash tea mister, was held up amd robbed of SSO. Reed was passing through an alley when two men jumped from behind •a building and struck him over the head. Mrs. M. E. Thompson returned last Saturday from Battle Creek, Mich., where -she had been taking treatment for several weeks. Her daughter, Mrs. Ora T. Ross, who had also been in Battle Creek, stopped off in Chicago over Sunday to visit her 9pn, Thompson Ross and family. To <paas or not to pass a primary law is an issue confronting the democrats of the state legislature. Senator Kern had been expected to come from Washington to influence the .passage of the Jbnes direct primary bill, but be was unable to find any senator to “pair” with him oh tthe ship bill and decided to remain -in Washington. The ever-present Tom Taggart favors putting the question ,wp _i»_ the people for a referendu&n vote. bflFpn&®fe*rta fake up consider- J able time remaining before ad- j jourament. • >V r -' '
