Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 126, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 May 1916 — Page 4
CLASSIFIED ADS BRING $ $ TO USERS
RENSSELAER b REPUBLICAN DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY -i 3 saes WEEKLY EDITION Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1. 18#7, ae second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer Indian, under the act of March 3, 187#. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897 as second class mail mattefr at thepoatoffice at Rensselaer. Ind., under the act of March 3, 1878. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily by Carrier. 10 Cents Week. * fey Mall. 33 60 a year. Semi-Weekly, In advance. Year 31.#0-
Classified Column rates for classifiedm>s Tnree lines or lens, par week of «lx usuutt ol Tao Evening 1 1 V ! l ,u D l ' lk * 1 U n™ n n two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 16 cents. Additional space pro rata. - LfiXzV FOR SALE. FOR SALE —Good building lot on Front street.—Harry Swartzell. FOR SALE —Buiek motor truck, ' 1% tons capacity. Address C. I‘. Spain. Phone 548. FOR SALE—Tomato and cabbage plants.—Mrs. C. W. Rlioades, Phone 148. FOR SALE —Memorial Day Price J jut—Carnations 75c doz. Roses (5c and $1 doz. Easter Lilies $2 doz. Peonas 75c apd $1 doz. Jonquils .75c doz. Out of town orders given prompt attention. Plenty foi everybody.—King Floral Co. FOR SALE—Shrewd farmers willnot overlook the cow sale, Saturday, May 27th, at Hemphill’s barn. Some very tine Holstein cows and heifers, all bred, and some in heavy milk. The Holstein is an ideal dual purpose cow and right now is in big demand and price in the dairy centers. Several tine Jerseys and balance good young female cattle. _ FOR SALE—My residence property on Main St., 2nd door north of Catholic church; built two years ago and all modern, heat, etc. —Mike Kuboski. FOR SALE—A good second-liand piano.—Mrs. C. C. Warner, Phone 344. FOR SALE —We own 200,000 acres $5 to S2O per acre; easy terms. Agents wanted. —Grimmer Land Co., Marinette, Wisconsin. FOR SALE—ICE—White & Lee, Phone 104. We have started our regular rounds; put up your cards and phone us when you are ready to start. We will keep a supply at the residence of Mr. White, west of t..e airdome, which you can get for special occasions. FOR SALE —The Methodist Protestant church and the lot it occupies at the corner of Van Rensselaer and Clark sts. —John Bill, Phone 949-G. FOR SALE—One of the best paying little grocery stores in northern Indiana. Good farmer trade. Expense very low. A money maker. For o particulars address E. Zimmerman, Valparaiso, Ind. FOR SALE- -A fine building lot, feet, adjoining my property on Weston street.—F. Thompson. FOR SALE —Recleaned timothy seed, $3.00 per bushel. —Rensselaer Garage. FOR SALE—Sawed oak lumber of all kinds, red or burr oak. Sawed 'n any dimensions desired. 4 miles west of Rensselaer. All building material SIB.OO a thousand; also some 12, 14 and 16 foot bridge plank in burr and white oak. Phone 87-G, Mt. Ayr. FOR SALE —A 5-passenger Buick in good running order. —T. M. Callahan. FOR SALE —An 8 year old mare, 2 year old mule and 6 year old cow. — Philip Heuson, Phone 940-C. FOR SALE —Timothy hay in barn, 8 miles north of Rensselaer. —Lee Myres, Phone 904-D. FOR SALE—A “Touresto Graflex” camera using a 4x5 plate. Goerz, Series HI, double Anastigmat lens, size 5x7. It is possible to take pictures with this camera at one onethousandth part of a second. Will sell at $50.00. A bargain at this price.—L. C. Rhoades. FOR SALE—At the rate of three lines for 25 cents, for one week, space In The Republican classified columns. There will be money in it 'or you. Start today. FOR SALE—Six room house, walks, deep well, electric ”ghts, nice lot. Price SI,OOO, S4OO down. Take live stock.—George F. Meyers. ■ - z FOR SALE—Baled wheat straw, in 5 bale lots, 30 cents per Laie.—Eirain Day. IFtFK left, at your owm prices to close them out. —King Floral Co. FOR SALE—I have 2 or 3 bushels sis good seed corn left. —Henry Paulus, Phone 938-G.
FOR SALE—Two desirable building lots not far from business sec- j tion. —Harvey Davisson, Phone 499 or ■ 246. WANTED. WANTED—GirI for general housework.—Mrs. W. H. Hogan, Phone 278. ~ WANTED—Agents, quick seller, 100 per cent profit. Sure repeater. Particulars free. Quick action necessary.—lllinois Bales Go., Aurora, 111. WANTED—GirI at Makeever Hote'. WANTED—PupiIs to teach during the summer vacation, commencing work May 29. —Katharine Shields, Phone 624. LADY solicitors wanted to sell our hign grade toilet goods at 100 per cent profit; best article on the market today; write for particulars —R. E. Johnson & Co., 11*48 West Harrison street, Chicago. WANTED—BaII games with fast semi-pro clubs. State terms ;.nd date ‘first letter. Address Lefty Clark, Rensselaer, Ind. "lost. - _ LOST—Thursday p. m., between the residence of Mrs. J. W. Williams and my - home, a pink velvet rose. Finder please return to my home,— Mrs. F. A. Turfler. (LOST. —Coat to light suit, keys, check book and letter in pocket; lost between Fowler and Goodland. —Richard Rice, Rensselaer, Ind. LOST—A bunch of keys. Return to Charles Serritella, the tailor, Makeever Hotel.
FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Six room house near depot. —J. C. Passons. FOR RENT —A 6-room house, with barn; 3 lots, good well of water on the porch; $7 per month.—Marion Cooper, 2 blocks north of concrete tile factory. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. Wkh bath. Phone 258. ... - FOR RENT—By month, some extra fine blue grass pasture land for cattle and horsesj which I will rent reasonably. Address P. F. Naylor, Thayer, Ind., R. D. 1. DeMottc phone. FOR RENT—Pasture for stock, near Kniman. —S. W. Williams, Box 23, Kniman, Ind. MISCELLANEOUS. TELEPHONE 418, Elmer Gwin, for well drilling- and repairing. Two drilling machines, skilled workmen. Red Cross windmills, pumps, tanks, etc. I HAVE B&YERS for farms in Marion, Union, Barkley, Jordan and Newton townships. See me. —Geo. F. Meyers. FARM LOANS—An unlimited «up ply of 5 per cent money to loan.*Chas. J Dean & Son, Odd Fellows Building. MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans. —John A; Dunlap. AGENTS WANTED. EVERY HOME can afford our new Model Kerosene Flatiron. Write for trial-use offer. Schubert Co., 3225 So. Halsted, Chicago. AGENTS —Let us show you how to double your income; sells Particulars free.—THE LANCASTER CO, Bluffton, Ind.
Leave It to Me.” Nelson, the Hatter, says, ‘,Leave it to me to make your old panamas look like new.” Nelson is at McKay’s laundry and makes a specialty on cleaning and blocking panamas. He makes them just as good s new. Tke him any hat, all your hats and save the price of a new hat. The United States department of agriculture will attempt to dometsiI cate the mink, which has been bred 1 sporadically in captivity for fifty 'years or so. The large number of i types of American mink, no less than ten, prove it to be a “plastic” animal, and the governmental purpose is to develop a higher and more valuable type than any of those now known. Free, on Saturday, beginning at 10 a. m., we will give away with each 10c purchase, a Zeppelin airship balloon, regular retail price 15c, only one to a customer. We carry electrical bulbs for household use; also bicycle repairs, soldering and general repair work in addition to auto supplies.—The Main Garage. Fifteen per-cent of the timber cut in the. United" States is wasted every t year, and government experts in Washinsrton are engaged in expeTimentsTo“<lefermine~how much may be saved by utilizing the waste. One experiment is the utilization of Sawdust in the manufacture of alcohol. Another interesting possibility is the utilization of hydrolyzed sawdust as a , carbohydrate cattle food.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.
C. A. Wood, of Kentland, father of Mrs. H. E. Hartley, is spending a few days here. Do you like the Ford car? Get Hamillized. Mrs. Thrasher, who has been visiting Mrs. K. T. Rhoades, returned today to her home in Chicago. . Another Ford party. Got Hamillized. Harvey Wood, Sr., went to Monon today to be with his sister, Mary Wood, and sister-in-law, Mrs. Eli Wood, who are both sick. Gasoline 40c Gallon. You can save enough when you’re Hamillized to keep at Ford in gasoline at 40c. Ed Duvall came yesterday from Indianapolis, where he is attending Indiana Dental School,, to remain for the summer. * Silk and linen shirts. Palm beach suits. New English last oxfords, at Hamill’s. Miss Cornelia Leonard went to her home in Francesville today after having completed the school year here and attending the commencement exercises. $9.75 will buy you a snappy all wool casimere -or blue serge suit that sells everywhere for sl2, when you re Hamillized. The red banana resembles the cooking purpose plantain. Do you like Victrola music? “Get Hamillized?’ The Egyptian vulture was the chief scavenger of the land of Phoroah. Hamill wears Crawford shoes. Why not you? Stop, look, listen. The house centipede is harmless and feeds on small insect vermin. If you want a high grade of chicken feed, phone 273. Priests in the Greek church have their heads shaved quite bald. Jersey sweet potato plants, 25c a hundred, at the Home Grocery. New York is both the largest Jewish and the largest Irish city in the world. Plenty of good country butter at the Home Grocery.
Many of the stores in Petrograd have before the doors pictorial representations of the goods on sale inside. We pay the highest market price for country produce, either cash or trade. —Home Grocery. Swatow, China, has a British chamber of commerce. It is the only foreign chamber of commerce at that place. We have that cultivator you want. —Hamilton & Kellner. Mail between two cities on a river in Columbia 800 miles apart will be carried by a light-draft, hlgh-spee.l boat driven by aerial propellers. We have an elegant line of buggies and carriages. They will please you. See them. —Hamilton & Kellner. Cellulose from wood fiber is being used in Europe as a substitute for absorbent cotton, which has become relatively scarce because of the war demands. 50c shirts 45c. $1 overalls 75c, when you’re Hamillized. The Fushan coal fields of Manchuria, operated by Japanese, are believed to be the richest in the world, containing- more than 800,000,000 tons of bituminous fuel. $3.75 will buy a sturdy casimere suit with two pair trousers worth $4.50, when the boy is Hamillized. Parchment manuscripts nearly 800 years - old, from which the ink has faded from view, have been read by a Berlin scientist who photographed them with ultra violet rays. Winter agriculture and dairy shows or fairs are well patronized in New Zealand and are regarded as verv beneficial. They usually run four days and are largely attended. Seven hundred and fifty thousand acres of land have been opened for homestead purposes in southern California. The government has also opened 1,500,D00 acres in South Dakota. A Mississippi man is experimenting in the hope of developing a neckless species of cattle, a process on which British, French and American governments are said to be keeping close tab. A large quantity of unsalable and supposedly unpawnable root was left on a St. Paul, Minn.y back porch the other day, just three years after it had been stolen from the same house, the greeting on the package reading: “From a kind-hearted yeggman.”
y For .Infanta and thi KM too Han Alwaji Bought Bear* the //ft*?*
Francesville Men in Accident With Ford Car Near Rensselaer. Francesvjlle Tribune. While returning home from Rensselaer last Saturday afternoon in a Ford car, Charles Osbun, Ed Brenneman and Ben Monthei met with an accident which again demonstrates the versatility of the Ford machine. Some distance out of Rensselaer in passing a carriage going in the same direction, there is a deep ditch on each side of the road at this point, and just as the car got along side of the carriage it suddenly left the road, jumped the ditch and rolled clear over and half way over again before it stopped in its mad plung. The three occupants had a wonderful escape from serious injury or death. As it was, Mr. Osbun and Mr. Monthel escaped with only.slight, bruises, and Mr. Brenneman was bruised across the back and received three bad scratches across one side. The car was only slightly damaged, the windshield being broken and one fender bent. NOTICE. Anyone caught riding on the sidewalks with bicycles will be punished to the full extent of the law. VERN ROBINSON, ' City Marshal. Warning to Swimmers. Hereafter swimming within the corporation will not be allowed before sundown. This step is made necessary by the fact that certain boys have made a practice of annoying those living near the river by running along the banks of the river while in a nude state. Those violating this order will be subject to arrest. VERN ROBINSON, City Marshal. Trains to Slop at Parr. Trains Nos. 5 and 30 will stop at Parr, on Memorial Day,* May 30, for the accommodation of those wishing to attend the exercises at Rensselaer during the day. The Stork Special. Born, today, May 26th, to Mr. and Mrs. Max Kepner, a daughter. Born, Thursday, May 25th, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clemens of near Surrey a stillborn female child.
Explains Why Men are Growing Old Thousands of men are growing bale every day and don’t know the reason why. Many of them never expect to save even what hair is left. This is indeed a pity, says a specialist because baldness usually comes from carelessness and anyone who. gives the scalp a little attention should always have an abundance of “good healthy hair. Dust and dirt help to cause baldness by clogging the pores in the scalp and giving the dandruff germs fertile ground for breeding. t The treatment is very simple: Shampoo at least once in ten days and destroy the dandruff germs by applying frequently Parisian Sage, a delightfully efficient preparation that B. F. Fendig is now recommending as the surest treatment to stop falling hair, to remove dandruff and to refresh and invigorate the hair roots The cost of a generous bottle of Parisian Sage is very little and druggists everywhere have been authorized to offer it with guarantee of perfect satisfaction or money returned.
REPUBLICAN TICKET. * For President CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS. For County Commissioner Ist District D. S. MAKEEVER. For County Commissioner 2nd District HENRY W. MARBLE. For Governor JAMES P. GOODRICH. For Representative In Congress WILL R. WOOD. For Joint Representative WILLIAM L. WOOD. For Prosecuting Attorney REUBEN HESS. For County Treasurer CHARLES V. MAY. .1 ' For County Recorder GEORGE W. SCOTT. For County Sheriff BEN D. McCOLLY. For County Surveyor ED NESBITT. For County Coroner Dr. C. E. JOHNSON.
S Telephone No. 6 •nd we will deliver your > Window and r Screens J C. Gwin Lumber Co.
Aged Kentland Citizen Committed Suicide by Drowning Self in Well.
Newton County Enterprise. Mrs. Jacob Alte, one of the oldest residents of Kentland, £ommitted suicide at her home on the west side at some hour during Sunday night. The body was found in an old abandoned well in a field near the house early Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Alte were alone Sunday night, and Mr. Alte says they retired at the usual hour. He did not miss his companion until he awoke Monday morning. A 'search was immediately instituted and the body was found in a well east of the house. The well is probably fifteen or eighteen feet deep and was full of waiter to within five or six feet of the surface. One of the searchers noticed that the boards covering the well had been disturbed and this led to the discovery. The well is in 1 a field that had but recently been planted to corn, and the footprints of the unfortunate woman could be easJy traced. She had on only a pair of stockings and night robe. The body was removed to the home and prepared for burial. Coroner Best was called, and held an inquest, rendering a verdict in accordance with the evidence of the neighbors, the purport of which was that Mrs. Alte was possibly mentally deranged when she committed the act. She liad been in failing health for some tnhe and the condition of her health had been of much concern to her children.
MACHINIST SAYS HE IS WELL MAN
“Tanlac His Worked Wenden for Me,” Charles Miller, of Muncie, Declares Muncie, Ind., May 24.—Charles Miller, a well known Muncie machinist, who lives at 1501 West Tenth street, is one of the thousands of people who have been relieved by Tanlac, the Master Medicine, that is being used so widely in Indiana. He said recently: “For eight years I was in a run down condition. I suffered from intense pains in my stomach, had frequent palpitations of the heart and terrible headaches, and was in a nervous, bloated, constipated condition. “Tanlac has worked wonders for me. I have been taking the medicine only a short time, but already I have been greatly relieved. The palpitations of the heart and the headaches are all gone, and the constipated condition has disappeared. Tanlac has made me a well man.” The words of such a well known man of the community as Mr. Miller’, with the reputation he has for honesty and integrity, added, as they are, to the testimony of thousands of others, should prove the merits of Tanlac. Tanlac is especially beneficial for people suffering from run down conditions and is excellent for stomach, kidney and liver troubles, rheumatism, nervousness and the like. Tanlac is sold exclusively in Rensselaer at Larsh & Hopkins’ drug store.
MEN.
$3.50 for genuine Tndestructo Panama hats worth $5, when you’re Hamillized.
AGENCY FOR "mC* R°°^ s ® ee Supplies Goods Sold at Catalogue Price Saving You the Freight A limited supply carried in stock. Root's Supplies are noted the world over as the best goods made and the prices 11 are but little, if any higher, than ~~ inferior goods. BEES FOR SALE CLARK At Republican Office Rensselaer, Ind. - 7-7-T ;T. ~ ' r : ■ ' \
Presbyterian Church.
Rev. J. Budman Fleming, Minister. 9:30 Sunday school. The aim is a knowledge of the Bible and a desire to practice its precepts. 10:45 Memorial Day. The Ministers Association will have charge of this service, each pastor having a part. Rev. J. Budman Fleming will preach the sermon, subject: “Christian Patriotism.” , 7:30 Evening worship and sermon, subject: “Kept by the Power of God. ’ “Plant here a flag with its stars set in blue, Lay here a garland of sweet flowers of spring, ■ None to that flag were more faithful and true Than they to whose graves our tributes we bring. Lovingly strew, above each green grave Flowers from the woods, from the garden and field; Their lives for the life of the nation they gave, Loved and defended, and with their blood sealed.”
Baptist Church.
No prayer meeting this evening on account of commencement. Sunday school 9:30. Union Memorial service in Presbyterian church at 10:45. Services at James school house at 3. Evening worship and sermon, subject “Regeneration,” 7:30. He hears thy faintly sobbing breath, He marks each quivering limb; He drank a cup for thee alone — Child! Drink it now with Him.” F. H. Beard, Pastor.
RENSSELAER MARKETS.
Corn —65c. Oats—3sc. Wheat —75c to 85c. Rye—76 c. Chickens —14c. Butterfat —29 %c. Eggs—l9c. Ducks —12-14 c.
CHICAGI, INDIANAPOLIS ft LOUISVILLE RY. BWWfWWT, a»» TXMB TABUL In effect October 8,1915. SOUTHBOUND. Louisville and French Lick No. 8 H:10 P m Chicago and the west, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the South, Louisville and French Lick Springs. No. 35 1:88 a m Indianapolis and Cincinnati No. 5 10:55 a m Louisville and French Lick NA 87 11:17 a m Indianapolis and Cincinnati No. 88 1:57 p m Ind’plis, Cincinnati and French Lick No. 89 ." 6:50 pm Lafayette and Michigan City No. 8 J 7:81 F#T Indianapolis and Lafayette NORTHBOUND. No. 88 Chicago 4:51 a m No. 4 Chicago 5:01 a m No. 40 Chic, (accom.) 7:80 a m No. 82 Chicago 10:88 a m No. 88 Chicago 2:51 p m No. 8 Chicago 8:81 p m No. 80 Chicago » 8:50 P m For tickets and further information call on W. H. BEAM, Agent.
