Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 283, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 November 1915 — Page 4

i<fc CLASSIFIED AD <£ | BRING $ $ TO USERS

RENSSEUER REPUBLICAN pally axd skmi-'wkkkl.y HKAX.KY * CLARK - Publlvhvrs THE FRIDAY ISSUE 18 REGULAR ■ WEEKLY KJDITION Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, ISM, m second cla»» mall matter, at til# pntoince at Indiana, undar tbe act of March », 187>. Kvenlna Republican entered Jan. l. IMI, aa aeoond claaa mall matter at the postolUce at Renaaetaer, Ind., under the act of Maroh S. I»7*. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily by Carrier. 10 Cents Week * liy Mall. s*.6o a year. Semi-Weekly, In advance. Year »l.to. Classified Column RATES FOR CLASSIFIED ADS Three lines or lea*. P«r week of ala laauea Of The Evening Republican and two of The Seml-Woekly Republican. M cants. Additional apace pro rata. for sale. FOR SALE—Two roan Shorthorn bull calves; recorded; 5 and 8 months old.—Jaa. E. Reed, Phone 955-D. FOR SALE—37 acres, K mile of Rensselaer. One of finest locations in this section. See C. W. Postill, administrator. FOR SALE —Three good building lots, one on River street and two on Kannal Ave. —Frank Haskell. FOR SALE—32O acres of nice, level lead; every foot can be plowed; in Juneau County, Wisconsin, 3V4 miles east of Sprague, for $25 per acre. Terms to suit. Address Owner, John Wheeler, MayviUe, Wis. FOR SALE—Team of 8-year-old mules, wt 2600; also team of 4-year-old horses, wt 2800.—Ralph Lowraan, Phone 914-A. FOR Sa I .K—Three Maxwell Wonder Cars. Carload just unloaded. Come and take your choice —then, “pay as you ride.’’—-Main Garage. ~ FOR SALE —A good Oliver typewriter, recently reconstructed and works good as new. Bargain if taken soon.—Geo. H. Healey. FOR SALE—Four spring calves; also full blood Bourbon Red tom and jkan tukeys.—Joe Norman, IV4 miles east of Fair Oaks. Address R. D. 2, Fair Oaks, Phone 910-L. ~FOR” SALE—Barred Plymouth Rock cockerels.—Mrs. David Zeigler, Phone 906-G. "FOR SALE—Sawed oak lumber of all kinds, white, red or burr oak. Sawed in any dimensions desired. 4 piilw west of Rensselaer. Phone 87-G, Mr. Ayr, or 935-D, Rensselaer, Route 3. —A M. Yeoman, J. V. Collins. FOR SALK—F. P. lighting system, phone 411. —C. Earl Duvall. ~FOR S4LK—SIO,OOO down and balance on long time takes a farm of acres near Rensselaer. Owing to age* of the owner and his removal to another county the farm is offered at a low price, sllO per acre. There is a good 8-room house, bam for 25 head of horses, large com crib, farm thoroughly tiled and all fenced with heavy hedge posts. A good buy and sure to advance in price. —lnquire of Healey ft Clark. FOR SALE—2O pedigreed Duroc gilts, not bred. —Arthur Mayhew, R. D. 3, Phone ML Ayr 97-H. FOR S*..K—Three good work mart*; see Earl Clouse, who driv i the bus for Billy Frye. FOR SALE—4 or 5 highly improved farms in Walker township; also 100 acres in S. E. Marion; partially improved; also a small business house in for sale or renL Anyone ijAiiig business with me will avoid paging a commission.—Robert Michal, Ind. ~FOR PAT.K —One of the best farms in Wheatfield township, 148 acres well improved, good 7-roc m house, horse bam, 64x60, with com crib alongside 60 feet long, cow bam, 33x28, with capacity for 20 cows. 80 ton silo ani yv«ryihmg to make I complete, up-to-date farm. Fenced hog tight. A bargain. Price $15,000 cash. Inquire FOB SALE —My residence property on Franklin street Can srive nossession Nov. 20th.—C. W. Eger. FOR SALE—Pure bred Buff Rock cockerels, fine color and large, heavy bones. Price SI.OO and up. Emmett Doyle, Fowier, Route 8; phone Boswell, 1146. FOR SALE —120 acres good fam land in Barkley townanip. can be soli fa 40 r'"* tract 80 acre tract or all together. George A. Williams, «eer First National Bank. ■ • ; i- ~; _. r . -- - I FOR gAT -K—rioo*« and lot 75x180 feet, located on Scett street for sale hr A. Halleck, offlee *vtr Duvall’s clothing store. I — ” WANTED. hand roll top desk.—Phone 939-F, W. L. Wood. , WANTED—At once, man and wife withont children to keep house all' winter; everything famished. Apply to Belle Sayler, Rensselaer, Ind.

WANTED—Anyone wishing finttr class sewing done, call on Mrs. B. G. Oglesby, opposite Gayety Airdome. WANTED —Place to work on farm by month by married man, employed now by W. C. Rose. —Ernest Koss, McCoyaburg, Ind. WANTED —Good fanner who understands stock to buy one-half interest in my herd of 250 cows, 25 head horses and machinery. To manage 2720 acre well improved farm. Good proposition for live man. Write John Sigmund, 736 West Randolph St, Chicago, 111. WANTED —Long time loan of $15,000. Security 2720 acres well improved farm valued at SBO,OOO. Interest payable monthly or quarterly. Write John SigmuHd, 736 W. Randolph St, Chicago, 111. WANTED —Housekeeper, capable of taking full charge. Must be neat, steady and good cook. Middle aged lady preferred. Cottage, pleasant home, good ivages. Father and two sons. Full particulars first letter. — Box 335, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED —Position on a farm by the year by experienced marrieu roar.'. —Harry F. Plunkett, Chalmers, Ind. FOR RENT. FOR RENT —A 6-room house, 4 blocks southeast of court house. —Jas. Passons. FOR RENT —9 room house on Cullen St, 2% blocks of court house.— Dr. F. A Turfler. 1 "■» — FOR RENT —Two furnished rooms. Phone 268. LOST. FOR RENT —A good 5-room house, with coal ant'd, bam, electric lights, good drilled well.—Jacob Wagner. LOST —Overcoat, between depot and court house square. Please leave at this office. FOUND. FOUND—Suitase containing men’s clothes.—Mrs. J. W. Dunlap. FOUND—A fur topped kid mit for lady. Call here. MISCELLANEOUS. If you are intending to go to the land of sunshine, West Pafni Beach, Florida, this winter. Write for booklet to M. J. Hoenig, Hotel Palms, West Palm Beach, Florida. “THAT REAL CIGAR.” 4 7-8 inches long. Box of 60 cigars for SI.OO. Charges prepaid. A mild, sweet, satisfying smoke.—J. O. Myers, 7419 Idle wild St Pittsburg, Pa. LOANS—I can make 7 per cent loans on good city property. —P. R* Blue. TAKEN UP —A heifer about 2 years old awaits the owner at St Joseph’s College. 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.--Cbas. J. Dean 6 Son.

NOTICE TO INVESTORS. FOR SALE—SB,OOO non-taxable secu reties, drawing 5 per cent interest, absolutely safe. For information write or call John B. Lyons, Jr., Brook, lncL HOGSL OLD-FASHIONED SPOTTED POL-AND-CHIN A HOGS. The Hog of the Hour. Boars ready for service. Fall pigs, both sexes. Order spring pigs sired by Paul Number 20, biggest-boned boar of the breed. JENNIE M. CONRAD, President American Spotted PolandChina Record Association, CONRAD, NEWTON COUNTY, IND. OAKLAWN STOCK FARM FOR SALE—A choice lot of pure bred Hampshire boars, sired by State Fair winners. My herd is cholera immune by use of tbs simultaneous method. Pedigrees furnished with each hog. John R- Lewis & Son, Rensselaei, Ind., R. D. 1, or Phone 912-J. The Junior Aid Society of the Christian church will meet Thursday evening of «this week with Mrs. Frank Foltz. COAL For the range Jackson Hill and Rex Egg. For the furnace. Egg Anthracite, Sovereign Lump and Pocahontas. For the baseburner Scranton Anthracite, Nut and Stove. King Bee, Kentucky Block. Grant-Warner Lumber Ce. Phone 458

MAMMOTH MACHINE , CUTS CAR’S PRICE Moving i’lalform For Entire Amenably Operation On Maxwell Cara. BARE FRAME STARTS In Lees Than Four Hours, Finished Car Rolls Off the Other End. One machine tool, nearly 1,000 feet long, plays an important part in the manufacture of each Max wed 1 automobile. This machine, costing many thousands to install, 'has neverthleas (helped make it possible for the Maxwell Motor Co., Inc., to chop nearly SIOO off the list price of its oar for the 1910 season, through the increased production capacity which it affords, and the simplification of the labor schedule in the assembly operation. When “Pay As You Ride” Shafer, of the Main Garage, local Maxwell distributors, was in Detroit, Walter E. Flanders, president and general manager of the Maxwell 00., showed him this machine —a moving platfoim with tributary machinery, on which the Marwell cars are assembled, on what Mr. Flanders terms the progressive plan. This progressive assembly, Mr. Shafer declares, is a wonderful climax of manufacturing science. If occupies a strip along one side of the Detroit Maxwell factories. The room ife 1,000 feet by 150—one-story and flooded with sunshine. The platform progresses 23 inches a minute. At one end men roW on this platform a string of low-wheeled trucks, each bearing a bare, unpainted frame. This frame journeys steadily from, one end «f the platform to the other, nearly 1,000 feet away. It’s progrlfes is flanked with stock rooms from which emerge, men with steady Streams of automobile parts and units. Alongside the platform stand seventy gangs of men—the most skilled in the thousands who work for Maxwell. Drawing on the stockroom at their immediate rear, these men install, on this moving frame, part by part, the components of a complete automobile. Always the work is moving, slowly, steadily. At one point the platform meets ah overhead railway which supplies at exactly the correct rate/an automobile body for each - chassis. It takes nearly four hours for the frame to become the complete automobile, which rolls off the platform and into the hands of the tester for final adjustment, under actual running conditions. Under manufacturing conditions in vogue Still in many plants, this assamoly process would have required as many days. Installations of scientific manufacturing like this, and of a similarly intensived order, are the elements that are bringing down down automobile prices, declares Mr. Shafer. At present, he believes, it looks as if the production sharps have brought efficiency and standardization to very near the perfection point. Whether or not future years will witness similar progress is now generally deemed a ‘highly doubtful matter.—Adv.

Two bums occupied warm beds at the jail last night, Merite—That’s the name of our little Paris of jewelry. It’s the best). ROWLES & PARKER. The ladies of the W. R. C. took their dinner baskets and spent the dav with Mrs. Geo. Meyers yesterday, it being a sort of farewell function in her honor. Mr. and Mrs. Meyers intend starting next Monday for Phoenix, Ariz., to spend the winter.

ECHOES FROM MONTICELLO.

Monticelk) Happenings Always Interest Our Readers. After reading of so many people in our town who have been cured by Doan’s Kidney Pills, the question naturally arises: “Is this medicine equally successful in our neighboring towns?” The generous statement of this MonrtScello resident leaves no room for doubt on this point. Mrs. GeoTge Howell, N. Main 9t., Montiello, Ind., says: “I suffered off and on for two or three years from attacks of kidney and bladder complaint. Sharp twinges often darted through my kidneys and sides and were followed by a dull, nagging ache in the small of my back. The kidney secretions ■were unnatural and I had headaches. I finally got Doan’s Kidney Pills and they suickly relieved me, toning up my system. I have since then enjoyed •good health.* Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Howell bad. Foster-Mi Ibum Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.

Frozen Radiators We make a specialty of repairing all kinds. We have a supply of second hand Ford radiators and can replace yours while it is being mended, thereby giving you the continued use of your car. The Rensselaer Garage J. W. MARLATT, Prop.

Negro Trusty Convieted Of Murdering Warden's Wife.

,In Joliet Monday the jury that tried Joe Campbell, a negro trus|y, for the murder of the wife of Warden Allen, was convicted and sentenced to be hung. Warden Allen waa at French Lick Springs when his wife was murdered. Her apartment* had been Bet on fire in an effort to conceal the crime, but the fire was discovered and the murder disclosed. Campbell was arrested, he was already serving a sentence for manslaughter, but had been made a trusty. Following the murder Warden Allen resigned. The law requires a warden _to reside inside the prison and he said that he could not do this because of the horror attached to his wife's murder. Mrs. Allen had been a comical opera musical star before her marriage.

Taking Scottish Rite And Mystic Shrine Work.

Dr. W. L. Myer and Dr. A. G. Catt went to Indianapolis Monday night to spend three or four days taking Ma r sonic degree work. They will be in a class that on Thursday night will take the Scottish Rite and Mystic Shrine work, being the 32nd degree in Masonry. This is the same work that E. L. Hollingsworth and H. W. Marble took last spring.

LYCEUM COURSE DATES

January 19—Ralph Bingham. January 28—Tahan. February 16—William Rainey Bqp nett. March 29—Columbian Entertainers. A stillborn child to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Branson was buried Sunday morning in Weston cemetery. Mrs. H. J. Kannal and daughter, Miss Gertrude, have gone to Nevada, Mo., to spend the winter months. The Red Men and the Pocahontas held a joint spread last evening at the Red Men’s hall and had a merry time.

Purdue football players are to banquet at the Fowler hotel Wednesday evening at 7 o’clock. Lafayette businessmen are hosts. Henry W. Marshall, editor of The Lafayette Journal, will be toastmaster. George Ade has promised to be present. No’Purdue function is complete without George Ade. President Stone and members of the faculty will be present, a’so Coach Smith and his assistant, Eddie Hart, will be there.

The directors of the Rensselaer Building, Loan & Savings Association met last evening at the office of the secretary, Delos Dean, and discussed matters affecting the plans for starting and it was arranged to go Thursday evening to Goodland and look over the plans of the association there, Mr. Kilgore having generously offered to show them through the books of that very successful concern. The by-laws committee will make its report soon after that trip and a general meeting of stockholders will be called. It is planned to start business the first of January.

Start Tomorrow and Keep It Up Every Morning

Get In the habit of drinking a glace of hot water before breakfast

We’re not here long, so let’s make our stay agreeable. Let us live well, eat well, digest welO sleep well, and look well. What a glorious condition to attain and yet, how very easy it is if one will only adopt the morning l inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy each morning- and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonous stagnant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver and bowels the previous day’s indigestible waste, sour bi'e and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetenng and purifyng the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water end limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. While you are enjoying your breakfast the water and phosphate is quietly extracting a large volume of water from the Wood and getting ready for a" thorough flushing of all the inside organs. ■ >. The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quareer pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store. This will cost very little, but is sufficient to make anyone a pronounced crank on the subject of inside-bathing before breakfast.

The Style Note In © Stetson Fall Hats AND now again the approaching Autumn hints crisply—“ Felt Hat!” • „ ■ „ Come see the new Fall Hats— Stetsons —Soft Hats, regular Derbies, Self-conforming Derbies. Men in the know show a decided liking for Derbies and the more formal effects in Soft Hats, such as the Pearl Gray with Black band. In the matter of block, crowns are rather more tapering i than heretofore—there is considerable emphasis on the curl of the brim, and a dip both front and back, or fror*- ■nly. C. EARL DUVALL

The sew club will meet Thursday of this week with Mrs. B. F. f’endig. William Goff and wife and baby, of Darien, Wis., who have been visiting Mrs. Nancy Burgett and others in this county, left ths morning for ville, to visit Perry Hurley and others. Miss Ada Vandegarde, of Chicago, Otto Schreeg, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Gunyon, of Parr, and Joe Thomas and family, of Surrey, were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thomas, south of Rensselaer. F. M. Parker and daughter, Mrs. Clara Andrus, have moved to Mr. Parker’s fine new house on McCoy and College avenues. Mr. Parker’s fine property at the north part of town, which has been for has not been rented. Ties, gloves, sox, handkerchiefs, ruff • buttons, shirts, traveling bags, collars and amny other Xmas presents for men at Rowles & Parker’s. Football stars are makng cash in post-season athletic games. Jimmie Thorpe, the Indian, played with Canton, Ohio, Sunday against a team from Massilon. Canton' won 6 to 2. Frank Blocker, Purdue captain this year, played with Massilon. It is probable that the stars get about SIOO for each game. - , « Notice to Pocahontas. * There will be a special meeting of the Pocahontas tonight at 7:30, asking for dispensations. By order of Pocahontas.

Speciaiding in Igniting, S tart Lug and Lighting Systems. M. J. SCHROER 9- A. KIRK S. P. CARROLL MOTOR SERVICE CO. Phone 78 A new firm with a new standard of efficiency. In one month we have outgrown our quarters, which is the beat proof of our expert service. Satisfied customers have done our advertising.

If it’s Elecfrical let Leo Mecklenburg doit. Phone 012 Phone Hamilton & Kellner when in need of coal, wood or feed.

Where others fail, we please. See our line of Xmas presents and pick out some and have them saved for you at Rowles & Parker’s. Any article you pick out will be saved for you until Xmas. Shop early and get first choice. A large stock to choose from at Rowles & Parker’s. Congressman A. M. Adair, of Portland, Ind., who is serving his fourth term as representative of the eighth district, has announced his candidacy for governor. , • Samuel White, 22 years old, is under arrest in New York charged with sending insulting notes to Mrs. Edith B. Galt, the presdent’s fiancee, and her mother, Mrs. Bolling. White admitted writing the notes. He needs an operation or a term in the asylum. Mrs. Erret Graham went to Chicago today where she will join her sister, Miss Mary Washburn, the artist and sculptress, and together they will attend a banquet at the Congress hotel of the ladies branch of the Indiana Society of Chicago. Governor and Mrs. Ralston will be present, Mrs. Ralston being the guest of honor. A nice suit or overcoat makes a very acceptable Xmas present for a man. A long line to choese from at Rowles & Parker’s. Sheriff McColly’s Attention was called last Saturday to a small crate containing a half dozen hens and a rooster that was in the Amsler pasture across the fence from the Monon railroad near the, match factory and a considerable distance from the road. Apparently some thief had abandoned them after being frightened. Sheriff McColly laid out that night expecting the thief to show up, but he was disappointed. The chickens look mighty tempting and the sheriff is apt to invite a few friends in for a roast most any time now. , CASTOR IA for and Children* ltn Rrid run Hate Always Bougiri

Cars Washed and Polished Charles Rhoades, Jr., will do the work right at K. T. R oadea Garage. ============= We have a nice, dean bumtog hasp coal at $4 per ton.—D. E. Crow..