Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 223, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 September 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

WANTED—Some good clover or timothy hay. Leslie Clark, at Republican office. WANTED—3OO cattle, calves, yearlings, 2-year-olds, feeding cows.—A. W. Sawin, Rensselaer, Ind. IAM*. LOST—On Remington road, an electric tail light and license bracket, No. 2066 Ind. Finder please leave at Main Garage. LOST—Friday, Sept 9, a long black silk coat between Alex. Hurley’s farm and Pleasant Ridge. Return to Republican office. —Mrs. Luella Golden. LOST —Pair side curtains for gocart, somewhere between town and Dan Chupp’s residence. Finder please notify Dan Chupp or Republican office. LOST —A girl’s rain hat, tan color, between the schoolhouse and Chautauqua grounds. Finder please leave at Makeever House or notify Billy Frye. MISCELLANEOUS. FOR RENT—Four large rooms in good neighborhood, convenient for small family. Phone 280. FARM LOANS—We can procure you a five-year loan on your farm at 5 per cent Can loan as high as 60 per cent of the value of any good farm. No delay in getting the money after title is approved.—Chas. J. Dean 6 Son.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Arnold left Saturday for their home in Pomona, Cal., after visiting his brother, Eli Arnold and family in Barkley township. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Sage and baby and Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Randle were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John I. Gwin at the Makeever hotel Sunday. Mrs. Sage is a talented musician and w>as for some time an instructor in a college and during the summer months for one or two seasons was on the chautauqua circuit. It is probable that she will be on a number of musical programs here during the coming winter.

Every local member of the Columbia Club, of Indianapolis, today received from the booster committee for the burgoo picnic an urgent invitation to attend and some will go from here Tuesday evening. The affair is looming large as the greatest statewide gathering of republicans ever held. The burgoo is in charge of a Louisville chef, who makes a specialty of preparing a stew of beef, chicken and other meats combined with vegetables. There will be some 2,400 gallons of the burgoo and enough republicans to eat it all up. The affair takes place on the state fair grounds. Charles Mansfield, Jr., of Monticello, 111., was here a short time this morning, having come over from the farm southeast of town. He will reenter Illinois University Wednesday for his last year. He is taking the agriculture course. He reports that his father traded off the old motor truck, which had never proved satisfactory, and in its plage got a new 20-36 gas tractor which was shipped to Wolcott last week and taken to the Mansfield farm Saturday. It carries five plows and w r ill be used in the fall plowing on the farm. Jasper county is going tc have an immense com crop notwithstanding the heavy and destructive rains and the cold August. An elevator man who made a trip over the county Sunday for the purpose of investigation reports that there is now a great deal of com practically out of the way of frost and that other com is maturing rapidly. What was lost in the low lands by the floods will be made up by the unusually large crop on the higher lands, while some very high and sandy loam that usually has only a small crop will have a big yield this year. It is probable that 70 per cent of oats threshing has been done and most of the wheat. While the condition of some is bad, the yield on the whole was almost twice as large as the normal in Jasper county and the price is first class, too. Certainly Jasper county should be the most prosperous this year it has ever been.

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