Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 180, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 July 1915 — Page 4
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Classified Column Bans bob i —«■■»■■■" abb Throe line* or leee, per week of elx i—noa of The Evening Republican and rtroof The Semi- Weekly Republican, If oeata. Additional eoace oro rata. rox uu> FOR SALE —Splendid brood tow. Phono 448. FOR SALE—Some young Duroc boars.—Nick Schmitter, Phone 944-C. FOR SALE—Shetland pony, gentle and well broke. Good pony buggy and harness at SIOO.OO if taken soon. Inquire of E. L. Detamore at Blue Front Drug Store, Francesville, Ind. FOR SALE —Gravel, brick sand and picturing sand. Delivered in the city. Phone 933-L, M. L Adams. FOR SALE—A Ford touring car. J. C. Clark. FOR SALE —A rubber tired top buggy in good condition. Inquire of Mis. R. P. Benjamin, phone 640. FOR SALE—About 100,000 feet of white oak and red oak lumber, all ■i«»H anrf lengths. Inquire of E.U. Baker, in tent on Mrs. York’s land on McCoy avenue. FOR SALE—I4xI7 tent, in A 1 condition, cheap for cash. —D. M. Worland. FOR 541.1C —Indian gasoline, the world's best quality, now retailing at 18 cents. —Schroer’s Garage, Central Garage, Main Garage. WASTED. WANTED —All the men and boys I can get at the Globe Onion Farm; top set onions at 20'cents a crate; each one bring old bucket. —A. Donnelly, phone 955-B. WANTED—Sewing to do at my home. Mrs. Oro Robinson, 2 doors north of Church of God. — WANTED —If your gasoline stove needs cleaning or repairing oall Lem Huston, Phone 8L Work guaranteed. WANTED —Men who desire to earn over $125.00 per month write us today for position as salesman; every opportunity for advancement. —Central Petroleum Co., Cleveland, Ohio. WANTED—To rent for cash, about 80-acre good farm, close contract this summer; possession next spring. Prefer 5 year lease with option to buy A. T. Eastes, 22 S. Morgan Ct., Chicago, 111. WANTED—A girl for general housework. Must be neat, good natured and willing. Four in family. Wages $5 per weeM Address Mrs. F. J. Brown, 1416 Chase Ave., Chicago, BL WANTED—I will pay 8 cents for 40 to 126 pound hogs until further notice. Watch this space.—A. W. Sawin. WANTED—Auto livery, experienced driver, will appreciate a share of yoax patronage. New auto. —Schroer Garage, Phone No. 78. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. IX>R SALE —Desirable lot in Phillips addition. Inquire of Mrs. Geo. W. Hopkins, phone 137. FOR SALE—Or trade, two 58 foot lots, with seven room house, good well of water and lots of fruit. Phone 299. FOR SALE—One of the best building lots in Rensselaer, near business section, schools, library and churches. Good sewer with perfect drainage for cellar. Ideal location for a fine residence. —Leslie Clark. FOR S4T.TS —One of the best lots at Dunn’s Pleasure Resort, on the Kankakee river.— Healey & Clark, Rensselaer, Ind. ~FOR SALE—I2O acres good farm land in Barkley township, can be sold in 40 acre tract and 80 acre tract or all together. George A. Williams, over First National Bank. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. 240 acres of first class land, 80 acres of which lies two miles north of Wabash, Wabash county, Indiana, on the North Manchester pike; has good two-story farm house, large barn, windmill, wood and tank house, good cross fences, well ditched. Also 160 acres, one-half mile north and quarter of mile west of this 80; with cottage house, new barn, good well, well cross-fenced and well drained. All deep black soil, about 20 acres This land to be sold in 80-aere tracts, or any way to suit buyer. To be sold by order of court from day to day, at the office of Todd & Plum-
mer, Bradley block, Wabash. Terms: One-third (1-8) cash, onethird (1-3) in one year, and one-third (1-3) in two years. See the undersigned or Todd & Plummer for particulars. JOHN C. SUMMERLAND, Commissioner, Wabash, Ind. L ° yt - " LOST—An English setter dog, black and white, big rangy dog, one years old. Liberal reward will be paid for any information by C. D. Spencer, DeMotte, Ind. _ LOST—A pink cameo brooch, last Sunday. Finder please return to owner and receive reward. Mrs. Roy Stephenson. LOST—A plain gold cuff button with initial G engraved on it. Finder please return to this office. LOST —Monday afternoon between Albert Wolf’s west of town and the postoffice, a brown Norfolk coat. Prayer book and memorandum book in pocket. Finder please leave at city bakery.—Albert Wolf. rOB FOR RENT—WiII rent my new 9room house and will rent of the renter one or two rooms for storage of my theatrical trunks. —Earle Reynolds. FOR RENT—4-room house and barn. —Mrs. L. V. Martin, phone 636. found. FOUND—Bunch of keys. Inquire at this office. FOUND —Long gold bar pin. Owner can get same at Charles P. Serritella’s tailor shop. PRINTING AND DEVELOPING. Let me do your printing and developing. Films developed 10c all sizes. Prints 2)4x314 3c; 214x4)4 and 314x4)4 4c. 4x5 and postcards 5c each. Work guaranteed. All orders receive promt attention. Leave orders at Rex Theatre or mail to Arthur H. Fletcher, Rensselaer, Ind. Mail orders cash.
J. J. Montgomery was in Chicago yesterday and while there took advantage of a police permit to visit the Eastland. He says the stench from the decaying bodies in the boat and the river is something terrible and is proving quite a problem to the workers on the boat. The boat is being hermatically sealed and when this is accomplished the boat will be pumped free of water, when it is thought it can be righted. Your Cough Can Be Stopped. Using care to avoid drafts, exposure, sudden changes, and taking a treatment of Dr. Kang’s New Discovery, will positively relieve, and in time will surely rid you of your cough. The first dose soothes the irritation, checks your cough, which stops in a short time. Dr. King’s New Discovery has been used successfully for 46 years and is guaranteed to cure you. Money back if it fails. Get a bottle from your druggist; it costs only a little and will help you so much. 3 Although the year 1915, in the automobile sense, has been the most wonderful in the history of the industry, next year promises to eclipse it entirely. The manufacturing plans of all the large companies have been completed, orders for parts and accessories have been placed and a fair estimate, based on these figures, of the number of new cars to be turned out next season, set the number at more than 1,000,000.
CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Ihi Kind Yoa Han Always Bouglt RENSSELAER MARKETS. Corn—73c. New Oats—32c. Wheat—92c to 97c. Rye—Boc. Butterfat —24c. Chickens —11c. Springs—l7c. Roosters —6c. Turkeys—loc. Ducks —10c. Hens —1114 c. Eggs—l7c.
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THB EVENING BEPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
Mrs. F. M. Abbott left this afternoon for a week’s visit with relatives in Monticello. 1-‘ , , Mr. and Mrs. Ira Osborne and daughter, of Newcastle, are visiting relatives here. Misses* and childrens’ strap pumps, in velvet, white canvas and leathers, specially priced to close out, at the Columbia. Mrs. Philip McElfresh returned yesterday from a visit with relatives at Logansport Nineteen sixteen Model Maxwell touring car $656; self-starter and all modern; at the Main Garage. Call and see it. Mrs. Ellen Oram and Mrs. Claude Oram, of Logansport, are visiting relatives here. Remember the monthly chanty market at Warner’s store each Saturday. Many good things will be on sale this week. Mrs. J. E. Carson, baby and son, Ellsworth, of Lafayette, came yesterday for a vis>t with her mother, Mrs. E. L. Clark. A window full of ladies* oxfords and pumps, for your inspection, and only $2.00 for your choice, at the Columbia. A pretty safe little rule to follow is to watdh out for the man who always agrees with everything you say! Your side of the question is so plain that you always wonder why the fellow on the other side won’t admit he is wrong. A woman whose family consists of a canary and two gold fish can’t see why other women make so much fuss over a baby. Better Than Life Insurance. Twenty-five cents invested in a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy will enable you to protect your family from any serious consequences resulting from an attack of colic or diarrhoea during the summer months. Is that not better thn.n life insurance? Buy it now. It may save life. For sale by all dealers. ________ C A soft answer may save a trip in an ambulance. Some men believe that one good turn deserves ten others. Civilization is what keeps us from acting as natural as other animals. The reason there is so little profit in sin is, that competition is simply fierce. Every woman can tell when the other woman has too much powder, on her face. All things come to him who waits, except the money he loaned his friends. Some girls make their modesty so conspicuous that they make men suspicious. Every man has a little yellow streak in his make-up, but some of them can’t hide it. You can get a guarantee with almost everything but patent leather shoes and a wife. The number of one and two-family dwellings in Brooklyn are 62,080 and 49,505, respectively. Marriage is always interesting, because everyone is, has been, or is thinking about it. If you ever break when you are trying to make both ends meet you are going to stay broke. If all of us really did reap as we sowed, the crop reports would have more to say about thistles. It would be a waste of material to give some men horns. They would only wear them off butting in. What has become of the old fashioned man who had to raise his vest to get his hands into his pants pockets? A highly successful man informs us that once he sat down and “waited for an opening”—nearly twenty minutes.
DOING THEIR DUTY.
Scores of Rensselaer Readers Are Learning the Duty of the Kidneys. To filter the blood is the kidney’s duty. When they fail to do this the kidneys are weak. Backache and other kidney ills may follow. Help the kidneys do their work. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills—the tested kidney remedy. Rensselaer people endorse their worth. Nelson Randle, N. Main St., Rensselaer, says: “I have used Doan’s Kidney Pills at different times when suffering from a lame and aching back and other symptoms of disordered kidneys. I got this medicine at Fendig’s drug store. Relief soon followed its use and the backache and other kidney ailments were removed. I do not know of a case where Doan’s Kidney Pills have failed to prove of benefit.” * # Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Randle had. Foster-Mflbuxn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
A Telephone Telltale
The good old evening entertainment of listening on the telephone nne on rural party telephone is soon to be a thing of the past , How does this indicator tell who is hutting in? Why, by means of musical notes. Every telephone is to be equipped with an indicator. Every indicator is equipped with a disc with teeth. This is set in motion the moment the receiver is taken oft the hook. The teeth of the disc pick up musical notes from keynote tongues in the instrument. The high and low notes correspond to the short and low notes peculiar to the telephone that is being tampered with. Thus, if Bill Jones’ ring is a short and two longs, and you are talking business, and suddenly hear a high and two low notes over the wire, you will know that Bill Jones is rubbering in your business. “Bill Jones, you get off that lin&,*’ you can shout to him. It is then optional with Bill whether he will get off the line or fight you a duel the next time you meet him. But you have the dope on him. But the indicator does even more wonderful things than this. In the first place, when you call Sam Smith, with Smith’s two short and two long rings, Smith takes down the receiver, and immediately you hear two high and two low musical notes in your receiver. You know at once it is Smith and not that Buttinsky Jones who is at the other end. You go ahead to talk business. Then the indicator gives the length of the conversation, so that one may comply with the rules of the company. When the receiver comes off the hook it sets the indicator into operation. At the end of four minutes it runs down. Then it automatically disconnects you. That’s a hint that you have talked long enough for a mere visit. If it is business, however, and you want to prolong the conversation, all you have to do is to press down the lever and the spring is wound up for another four minutes. Again, by this means one call tell just how long he is using the long distance phone and does not need to watch the clock or ask central to call him down when he talks too long. The indicator will also register the number of hours in the day, the month or year the phone is used in a given home. The time when the receiver is removed and replaced is registered SO that It is possible to tell approximately how lon£ the average conversation on a given phone has been. This is of immense advantage to the trouble man when the patrons deny they ever did anything but obey the rules scrupulously. He looks at the indicator and reads the entire history of the use and abuse of that phone. Then he talks from knowledge to the persons complaining of trouble. —Philadelphia Record.
The Greedy Birds
Birdß are busy creatures, for all they find so much time to sing, and they pay a great deal more attention to their stomachs than the poets ever mention. You will come closer to the facts in those government bulletins which report the finding of two thousand mosquitos in the stomach of a single marten, and similar interesting discoveries, than in the poet’s pages. I don’t know that I have ever seen it computed how many raspberries a catbird can eat, but I know it is more than I care to spare from the vines in my own garden, where a pair of catbirds who nest each year in red-osier dogwood beneath my study window love to feed. Out in our abandoned clearing, however, I do not begrudge them the berries, which grow in a comer where the farmer made his last cutting of timber. Many a time I have lain on the ground on the slope in fruiting season and watched a catbird darting back and forth to these vines, as If his appetite was Insatiable, his trim gun-metal body taking the sun on head or wing-tip. Presently I would get up and stroll over to gather some berries for myself. You would have thought a band of human pickers had been there, to see all the whitish, thimble-shaped hulls hanging denuded from their stems. Even as I would put out my hand for a red fruit there would come from the thicket close by a mew of protest and an angry flutter of wings. Though, ip my own experience, the catbirds are most addicted to raspberries, the thrushes, orioles, robins, flickers and cedar waxwings also eat them, and doubtless other birds besides.— Harper’s Magaxine.
Naming the Redwood Tree
The giant redwood tree, which now grows only In California, Is called the sequoia—and this Is the reason why: In the very long ago there once lived a Cherokee Indian named Seqno Yah, who invented an Indian alphabet. He 'not only Invented it, but he taught it to the other Cherokeea by writing It out on leaves, and this peculiar form of literature was In general use In that tribe long before the white man knew of it. In 1828 the missionaries adopted it, and utilized it in a magazine which they published for the red men. Seqno Yah was banished from Alabama with the other members of his tribe, and settled In New Mexico, where he died In 1843. In 1848, when Endlicher was preparing his synopsis of the cone-bearing trees, he heard of the Indian literary prniim, Seqno Yah, and decided to dedicats to his memory the great redwood tree of California. Thus he called It sequoia. A pecularity about this tree Is that In former years it was found all over the world, but now grows only in California. —The Popular Magazine. White pine and yellow pine are the woods most used tor bores.
At the present time there are more Jews in New York City than were ever congregated in one city in the hictory of the world. Never express your opinion about fools in public. There are so many fools in the world you are certain to injure some one’s feelings. The latest British admiralty list included 13,226 lighthouses, 290 light vessels and 1,586 fog signals throughout the world for the guidance of seagoing craft. When a woman hasn’t anything else to do she will dress up and go down town for an hour because it feels so good to get home again and get the corset off. During the first month of married life the bride always sits around quietly and lets the mutt do all the talking while she does the listening. This is the way she learns all the things that she throws up to him later on. N Headache and Nervousness Cured. “Chamberlain’s Tablets are entitled to all the praise I can give them,” writes Mrs. Richard Olp, Spencerport, N. Y. “They have cured me of beadache and nervousness and restored me to my normal health.” For sale by all dealers. • C 'Mrs. Anna Vondersmith will celebrate her 88th birthday tomorrow at the home of her daughter, Mrs. C. P. Wright. The ocasion will be observed by a dinner and receiving friends. A Medicine Chest For 25c. Jn this chest you have an excellent remedy for toothache, bruises, sprains stiff necks, backache, neuralgia, rheumatism and for most emergencies. One 25c bottle of Sloan’s Liniment does it all—this because these ailments are symptoms, not diseases, and are caused by congestion and inflammation. If you doubt, ask those who use Sloan’s Liniment, or better still, buy a 25c bottle and prove it. All druggists. 3 A newly-invented electrical device measures off the ten-millionth part of a second with accuracy, When a homely woman meets another woman who is homlier than she is, she begans to primp up and notice that the sun is shining.
Tuesday, August 3 ELLIS THEATRE ABOARD OUR BATTLESHIPS WffIITIME JH g IS * > *1 Hrl Prices 25, 35, 50c. ‘ Phone 98
HUL (US DR. E, C. ENGLISH Phones: 17?—* ringe tm .fflee; S rtnjge or^rertde^e. Opposite *Trust and Savinas Bank. C. E. JOHNSON, M. D. Office in Jessen Building. Office Houiu—9 to 11 «. m. 1 to # and 7 to 8 p. m. Specialty: Surgery Phone 211. ...4 : DR. I. M. WASHBURN Physician and Snrgeon Phone 48. SCHUYLER C. IRWIN Law,* Real Estate, Insurance 8 per oent farm loans Office In Odd Tellows’ Block. H. L. BROWN Dentist Crown and Brides Work and Test* without Plates a Specialty. AU the atest methods In Dentistry. Qaa nlnlstered for painless extraction. Office over Larsh’s Bruy Store. Rensselaer, Indiana. JOHN A. DUNLAP Lawyer (Successor to Frank Folta.) Practice In all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. Co llection department. Notary in the office, teneaelaer, > JOE JEFFRIES Chiropractor Successor to J. C. Shupert Office Over Rowles & Parker’s Phone 576 Lady Attendant H. LOY Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartnell. Homeopathist Wee—Frame building on Cullen street east of court house. omn non «. Residence College Avenue, Phone Ilk Be ns seiner, Indiana. DR. F. A. TURFLER Osteopathic Physician Rooms 1 and S, Hurray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Off**—B rings on *OO, read lence —8 rings on 800. Successfully treats both acute and ihronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a •pedal ty. GEORGE A. WILLIAMS Lawyer Special attention given to preparation of wills, settlement of estates, making and examination of abstract of title, and farm loans. Office over First National Bank. F. H. HEMPHILL Physician and Surgeon tssolal attention to dle>se— at w— m and low grades es fever. Office over Fendig’s Drug Sion. Telephene, office and residence, 445. ‘S ./ I
In Day DA?ALES IK lair, Cement jejriol RENSSELAER - • DDUXi
Lyerly, Ga., July 27.—Walker county has a curiosity in the shape of § kitten. According to the Cattlet correspondent in the Walker County Messenger, it is owned by J. N. Stephenson, of Cattlet, and has two well developed heads, three eyes and four ears. In every other respecft it appears normal. Best Diarrhoea Remedy. If you have ever used Chamberlam’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy you know that it Is a soccers. Sam F. Guin, Whatley, Ala., writes: “I had measles had got caught out in the rain, and it settled in my stomach and bowels. I had an awful time, and had it not been for Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy I could not possibly have lived but a few hours longer, hut thanks to this remedy, I am now well and strong." For sale by all dealers. G And some people are mighty careful when it is too late.
