Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 80, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 April 1916 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

LOST—Auto number 42116.* Finder return to Roy Lewis or this office. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms. Phone 268. ' AGENTS WANTED You can make big money selling our guaranteed trees, fruits, roses. We pay highest commissions every week. Free outfit and part expenses. The Hawks Nursery Co., Wauwatosa, Wis. PERSONAL. MARRY—We have many members wishing to marry soon. Marry rich. All ages. Send 10 cents for list and membership plan.—American Correspondence League, South Bend, Ind. Mrs. Sarah Miner went to Monon today for a week's visit. W. F. Smith and wife, of Laporte, are here for a short visit with friends. Mrs. Hattie Henkle went to Lafayette this morning for a two days’ visit. Frank Parcels, well known here, will (be the Monticello band leader this year. Mr. and Mrs. Hurley Beam were down from Chicago over Sunday to visit relatives.

Rev. F. H. Beard went to Logansport today to attend the Baptist ministers’ quarterly conference. Mrs. E. C. English went to Glencoe, 111., today for a visit with ‘her sister, Mrs. L. F. Hopkins. Don’t forget that Tuesday evening is the regular meeting nigth for the Eastern Star. J. J. Totten, of Fairland, was in Rensselaer Saturday on his /way to his 1,200 acre farm in Newton county. The Junior Aid Society of the Christian church will meet Thursday even : ing with Miss Mildred Harris. Mrs. Alta-Ensminger Pruitt, of Indianapolis, was the guest Saturday and Sunday of Miss Elizabeth Spaulding. John Harrison, a young man of Somerset, Ky., came to Rensselaer this morning to look for a job as a farm hand. Mrs. S. P* Speece and daughter returned to Ft. Wayne today after a short visit here with her sister, Mrs. Chas. W. Rhoades. Mrs. A. W. Sawin and two little sons went to Franklin today, where they will visit her mother who is 85 years of age and in very feeble health. T. A. Coleman, of Purdue, is here to meet the county board of education, and discuss the proposition of hiring a county agricultural agent. _ i Mrs. Harry Newman and niece, Miss Ruth Murphy, who is attending school here, went to Surrey today, where Mrs. Newman will spend a fbw days with her. parents, and where Miss Murphy lives. See the new four-wheel planter at Hamilton & Kellner's. F. M. Parker and daughter, Mrs. Clara Andrus, were visited Saturday and Sunday by Attorney Norman Pritchard, of Chicago, and his sister, Mrs. Paul Van Riper, of Franklin. George W. O’Dell went to Greencastle today to again take u phis residence there. His sister, Miss Helen, a teacher in the Remington schools accompanied him. Miss Jeanette will remain here for a short time. The funeral as Mrs. Moloney, aged mother of Mrs. Mary E. Drake and Maurice Moloney, took place this morning and was attended by a large number from this city* and surrounding country and by a large number of relatives from other places. The body was taken to Englewood for burial. Miss Ethel Hermansen today returned to Chicago, where she is a nurse at the Presbyterian hospital, after having been away for some time. She had gone to New York with her sister, Miss Anna, on a pleasure trip -and they were called horrte by the sickness of their brother, Hecmian, whose death resulted from pneumonia. The past few days Miss Hermansen had been visiting her sister, Mrs. Lou Robinson.

RENSSELAER MARKETS. •Com—6oc. Oats—37c. i Wheat—Bsc to 90c. Rye—7oc. . Geese—l2c. Duclcs—l2-14c. > Butterfat—36c. Old roosters—6c. - Eggs—lsc. • •«* Chickens—l3-14c. Now is the time of year for poultrymen to advertise stock and eggs for hatching. Our classified column is the cheapest and best means of doing this. Our ads . always get results. We have headed a department of our classified columns, “Poultry and Supplies,” under which we will run incubator ads, eggs for sale, stock for sale, etc. An ad costs you but a few cents a day. The sale' of one common fang, henwiLLpay for an ad runningthree weeks or a month. Try it once and you will come back every time you have anything to dispose of. Some breeders run an ad every year about this time and say that, it pays them in the increased number of eggs and chickens sold. 4 .