Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 274, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 November 1916 — Page 4

CR CLASSIFIED ADS £ BRING $ S TO USERS "K

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN At ... . . , DAILY AND SKMI-WKKKL.Y H irtti.iß PURK ... Publisher TUB FRIDAY I6BUK IS REGULAR WEEKLY EDITION Sami- Weekly Republican entered Jan. t. lift, ar»«end-ttar-tn«H bkUw, at Die Dosiofflce at Rensselaer, indlar a, under tie act of March «. 1878. . ******* n ‘ Evening Kepumictn entered Jan. 1. Hsl as second class mall matter at the Dost office at Rensselaer, tnd.. under the act ot March ». RATES FOR CLASSIFIED ADS Three lines or less, per week of six Issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, tt oseta. Additional space pro rata. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally by Carrier. 10 Cents Week 7 By MAIL kl-SO s year. Semi-Weekly, in advance, yea?, >2.00.

Classified Coluinn FOR SALK. FOR SALE —One thoroughbred Dutch belted bull coming two; one good grade Jersey cow, cheap, if taken at once. —John Sigler, DeMotte, I ml. FOR SALE—A few extra nice full blood Bronze turkeys. Hens at $3.00, gobblers at ss.—Phone 903-C, Harvey Messman, R. D. 1. FOR SALE—The following property of the Rosebud church will be sold by the trustees within the next thirty days by private sale: The old seats and window sash, two doors and some pieces of lumber. —Amos Wm. Florence, Vic Yeoman. for pAT.F.—Several hundred good white oak fence posts. —Fred Schultz, Phone 953-A. FOR SALE —Nursery at Palm Bay Terrace, near Melbourne. 178,000 1 orange, lemon, lime and grape fruit trees; cocoanut, rubber, sabal palms, , sago palms and many other tropical trees and plants on same tract. Also twenty 40-year-old orange trees loaded with fruit. Price for above, together with 200 acres picked citrus fruit and truck land, $61,000. Clear of incumbrance. Terms. Or will trade for clear, first-class Jasper county land (improved) or Chicago improved. For details and photographs address Dr. B. S. Maloy, Melbourne, Fla., the owner. FOR SALE —Sideboard, dresser, commode; cheap if take nat once. Mrs. Wm. Washburn, Phone 215. FOR SALE —The residence of the late Judson H. Perkins. Inquire of Ethel Perkins, at county clerk’s office. FOR SATE —Big cow. Inquire of Hiram Day, or phone 27. FOR SALE—My property in the southwest comer of the city, consisting nf 11-8 acres, new house 28x30, or will trade for smaller place. Bargain if taken at once. Phone 160Red, M. E. Griffin. FOR SALE —9 room house, modern in all respects; electric ligpts, city water, hot water heat and basement; almost 5 acres of ground; fruit.—A. Gangloff, phone 463. FOR SALE —Young collies, good drivers and watch dogs. One nicely broke.—W. B. Leonard, Francesville, Ind. FOR SALE—Three houses of five yiwl hit rooms; in good condition and well located. Can be sold on monthly payment plant. Also small farm, with fair improvements; on stone road and well located; small payment down and balance in annual payments, —Aithur H. Hopkins. FOR SALE—Sawed oak lumber of all kinds, red or burr cak. Sawed >n «ny dimensions desired. 4 miles west of Rensselaer. All building material SIB.OO a thousand; also some 12, 14 tnd 16 foot bridge plank in burr and white oak. Phone 87-G, ML Ayr. FOR SATE —Two desirable build-, mg lots not far from business section. —Harvey Davisson, Phone 499 or 246. FOR J3AIE —Some choice clover honey.—Leslie Clark. FOR SALE—One 4 year old mare, gentle; one spring colt; one black mare, good driver; 20 July pigs; new Deere com planter attachment; one gopher, new; one sulky plow; new wagon bed and wagon; mowing machine and raker work harness; platform scales; cross cut saw, etc., etc. —M. E. Drake, 243-Black. WANTED. ■ —f WANTED —Five or 6 tons of wild or mixed hay.—T. W. Grant. ILAST CALL—Wanted, everybody to know I anrstill here. If your stove don’t oakc smokes, bumes out, has holed any place, I put them in shape, just as good as new; I also carry back walls and grates. Anything that looks like a stove, I will make a stove oat of it. Mo job, no pay. All work guaranteed. Phone 642-B. —E. Neiberger, expert stove repairer. ~WANTED—Experienced cook at Barnes' Restaurant. , -

WANTED—Laundry work at home. Comfortable rooms for roomers or boartlers. Phone 132. WANTED—At once, chicken pickers. We dress corn feu poultry only, all the year. Lots of work. Max Atlass, Decatur, 111. FOR BENT. I’UR RKNT—Two 4-room houses near court house. —A. Leopold. FOR RENT—7 room house and j acres of ground. Rhone 525. Mrs. William Daniels. FOR RENT—Or will sell on monthly payments, a seven room house on corner lot two blocks from court house. Has walks, sewer, cistern, well, city water and bath. All newly papered and painted.—George £~ Meyers. FOR RENT —Six room house in good condition. Phone 606. FOR RENT—Large house, well located, furnished or unfurnished. Furnace heat, sleeping porch, all modem conveniences.—Geo. H. Healey, Phone 153. FOR RENT—An 8-room house In Union township.—Fred Schultz, Phone 953-A. ’ FOR RENT—Furnished rooms with bath. Phone 258. FOR RENT—December Ist, the room now occupied by J. P. Green. Leslie Clark. LOST. LOST—'Big yellow kitten. Telephone 50. LOST—Large black velvet hat, with 2 green quills, last Saturday, between Mrs. J. W. Crooks’ residence and court house. Leave with Mrs. Crooks or Republican office. Phone 419. LOST —An" Overland auto crank; finder please leave at Central Garage. LOST—A $lO bill in Rensselaer, No. 937-A Ernest Sever. MISCELLANEOUS. FARM LOANS—An unlimited supply 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. Pie Social. There will be a pie social at the Aix school house for the benefit of the Young Crusader’s class, Friday, Nov. 17. Everybody invited. Order your calling cards uere.

The Yellow Bus Rensselaer-Remiogton [Bus Line Schedule 2 TRIPS DAILY Lv. Rensselaer ....7:45 am Ar. Remington 8:30 am Lv. Remington ....; 9:10 am Ar. Rensselaer 9:55 am Lv. Rensselaer ....7...77..4:00 pm Ar. Remington 4:45 pm Lv. Remington 5:15 pm Ar. Rensselaer 6:00 pm FARE 75c EACH WAY. BILLY FRYE. Prop.

CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS & LOUISVILLE RY. Chicago and the west, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the Sc'th, Louisville and French Lick Springs. SOUTHBOUND. Louisville and French Lick. No. 3 11:10 pm Indianapolis and Cincinnati. No. 35 1:45 am Louisville and French Lick. No. 5 ••. .10:55 am India.' apolis and Cincinnati. No. 37 11.18 am Ind’plis, Cincinnati and French Lick. No. 33 1:57 pm Lafayette and Michigan City. No. 39 5:50 pm Indianapolis and Lafayette. No. 31 ~,..7:31 pm NORTHBOUND. No. 36 Chicago 4:51 am No. 4 Chicago 5:01 am No. 40 Chicago (accom.).. .7:30 am No. 32 Chicago ..10:36 am No. 38 Chicago 2:51 pm No. 6 Chicago .7 ....3:31 pm No. 30 Chicago 6:50 pm For ticket- and further information call on W. H. BEAM. Agent.

CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years A ”"‘£ b “ re jOfZTT? Slgmitore of l tttfcJUK

TIIE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

MT. AYR ITEMS. W. R. Lee was a business visitor in < fi.iugo Wednesday. , Mrs. ‘Airier and si'rtcr, Mrs. Porter, visited tn Goodland Monday. Pcnwright and Johnson reroofed tbe city poolroom recently. As usual, John Murfit is tlbc first to report having finished com husking. W. R. Lee was a business visitor in Chicago Wednesday and Thursday of last week. - Mrs. Jud Porter, of Rensselaer, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Geo. Sigler, hera this week. Mr. and Mrs. Able Grant, of Rens"selacr, visited in the huiue 11 'of our banker, J. R. Sigler. Mrs. Joliu Heims 73s as her guests her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Watson, from Medaryville. C. D. Miller, the Todd protectograph man, is selling the famous check protecting machine. Walter Adams moved Thursday to a farm north of Morocco, where he will do truck farming. Mrs. F. P. Huntington, who has ln:en visiting at DeMotte and Wheatfield, returned home Saturday. Mrs. Tom linkley went to Lansing, Mich., Thursday to visit a sister. She will probably be gone a couple of weeks. Mrs. W r . J. Little’s mother, Mrs. Bohanan, of near Brook, called on her Fri4ay morning as she was enroute to Monon. Word comes that Arthur Dirst, whose home is at Brook, was taken to the springs at Attica Friday for treatment for rheumatism. M. Johnson and wife, of Brook, were Mt. Ayr visitors Friday. Whale here they bought some potatoes off the car which is being unloaded by the Lee store. C. X. Penwright and Miiss Fawn Casey participated in a musicale at the home of D. L. Halstead Wednesday evening. There were a number of guests present and all report a good social time. Frant Elijah and family spent Sunday in Winamac. Zunice Hood, of Prook, spent Sunday with Dave Book. Dick Ashby, the village hunstman, killed ten fine wild mallards Monday. Mrs. John Murfit’s mother, Mrs. M. r> Walah. of Chicago, is visiting her for a short while. Most of the young folks from here attended the box supper at Miss Benson^asehool -Saturday evening. Miss Florence Snow will leave for Kankakee, 111., this week to be gone several weeks in the home of the Croxtons there. . Mr. and Mrs. Jeris Harlow and Mr and Mrs. Hurl Beasey spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lome Baker, near Remington. - -y Andrew Mast, of Arthur, 111., is visiting friends in this vicinity sines Thursday. He will probably return home tomorrow. Miss Lucy Harris and Gay Makeever are arranging for a combination box supper to be held at Miss Harms’ school, 2 miles west of town, on the eve of Nov. 24. Miss Jessie Elijah, who has been staying in Rensselaer the past summer, stopped off here for a few days’ visit with her Sister, Mrs. Sam Gutherie, after which she will return to her home in Morocco.

Phone 273 for coal, wood and feed. Miss Gladys Harrington, of Virgie, visited friends here yesterday. HIGHEST ~PRICES PAID FOR POULTRY AND VEAL. PHONE 477. No advance in price on CRAWFO RD shoes that we hnve in stock.— Hilliard & Ham ill. Lightning shows a marked preference for chestnut trees, according to the department of forestry.' Mrs. C. W. Eger and Mrs. H. F. Parker will entertain the members of the two sew clubs at the home of the former Thursday. * We can take care of your coal orders now. —Hamilton & Kellner. New York city’s public parks cover 8,500 acres, valued at $641,000. Baled hay and straw for sale by Hamilton & Kellner. The unexplored area in Canada Is estimated to be 901,000 square miles. Pure country sorghum at Home Grocery. An imitation dliamond will scratch glass but not cut it as a genuine one will. Cough Medicine Made at Home 400 per Cent Saved Why Pay $2 Per Pint for Syrup? Ask your druggist for three ounces of Glando Pine (50 cents worth) and add enough syrup to make one pnit, and you will have a cough medicine excelled by none. It is easy to prepare, costs but little, and is pleasant to take. It is splendid for coughs, colds, bronchial affections, and lyghly recommended for croup. It will relieve the spasmodic coughing in whooping cough. Glando Pine contains the pure form of white pine to which other valuable ingredients have been added., directions for preparing accompany each bottle. For sale by B. F. FENDIG, DRUGGIST

ATTEND THE BIG BARBECUE DUVALL'S QUALITY SHOP C. Earl Duvall, Rensselaer, Ind. Oh Thursday MT i of this week we will kill the fat/pNjf ted calf and we ( \ want every- ,f( ; ,27, IvA /fck body to come hf / Al| I/A and have a /)\\\' M b i good time. We { tyv h rV will have on U?( thatdayagreat 7/ Kj vKßy&s/*, )) many specials j I 4 * JV j j n Bu itß, over- 11 f J I coats and every I 1 *Hi I I k thing in the fur- TSjhS'v « TON £££*■* 80 ° d ‘^' ~ \\l| / See our great line of mackV \\\\ - inaws, sheep coats, moleU skin trousers, corduroy trou- ' sers, heavy wool underwear, socks, and everything at the same prices. Come and have a good time, make your headquarters at our store, . ——= Duvall’s Quality Shop Phone 411 Rensselaer, Ind.

Miss Clara Goetz left yesterday for Helena, Mont., where she will spend the winter with her sister, Mrs. E. G. Henry. New crop thin shelled English walnuts 20c a pound.—Home Grocery. Mrl; Frank Lyon, of Delphi, came yesterday for a short visit with her brother, George H. Healey and family, before they start foT Texas. Our competitors are asking 36c for Wilson Bros. Fibre men’s W T e have a Targe stock of Wilson Bros, genuine Fibre hose, all colors, at the old price of Tyingbyinghes It is not an uncommon sight to see people who are dying by inches. The glands of the body are not working properly, poisonous matter accumulates and health declines. The circulation becomes sluggish, the blood impure, and a general nervous or debilitated condition exists. Day by day the liver and kidneys become less active, leaving the poisonous matter within the body. This poisonous accumulation causes the sallow complexion, and a tired, achy or rundown feeling which, if. neglected, may result in jaundice, typhoid fever or serious liver and kidney* trouble. Glando, the great gland toni , is especially prepared to relieve glandular disorders, throw off the poisonous accumulations and build up he system. Glando, the great galnd tonic, is the only treatment of its kind upon the market. Its superior qualities are due to the fact that it contains three separate treatments, each treatment having a special part to perform, in effecting a cure. Tor sale by B. F. FENDIG, DRUGGIST O Wanted Dead Stock We will call at your premtises if within *wenty miles of Renaselaer, and remove all dead or undesirable animals. We disinfect bams otrpens in which animals have been kept, leaving the farm in a samitaiy condition. >We make no charge* for our services. j; B. & L. M’F’G. CO. Call No. 17. ftensr telaer, Ind. We pay for the long distance telephone calls. L

An electric waterproof flashlight to be attached to life preservers has ■been invented. v - —■ One of our customers saw an overcoat in Chicago last week; he liked it. We showed him the exact coat for $3.50 less—he bought from Hilliard & Hamill. Tickets to the Iris Concert Company’s entertainment Thursday evening are only 35c; season tickets for (five numbers SI.OO. Don’t fail to hear all of the numbers this year. The Iris Concert Company in tlye first number of the lyceum course for the season of 1916-17, at the Methodist church Thursday evening. The .materal has arrived for the work of putting in the new bridge over the Howe ditch on the Rensse-iaer-Remington road. Well matured sand grown potatoes dn 2V 2 bushel bags this week at the Home Grocery. 'San Francisco has communicated with Japan, a distance of 5,800 miles, by radio waves. New fall line of goods are now in. Order that suit today and be prepared for falL Also do dry cleaning and pressing.—John Werner. American chewing gum is growing in popularity among the Chinese of Hongkong. Large dill pickles, 15c a dozen, at Home Grocery. Mrs. Harriett Ferguson, formerly & resident of this city, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. John R. Vanatta and friends here, retbmed to her home in Indianapolis yesterday lon account Mgf -the illness of her daughter, ivi?s. E. C. Foskett, who was formerly Ethel Ferguson. President Kurrie, of the Monon, accompanied by Firman Thompson and W. C. Babcock, have been spending the week hunting in Jasper countv. President Kurrie is using his private car and is visiting all of the best hunting grounds n this section. They have been very successful and have I bagged quite a number of fine mal--1 lards.

RENSSELAER MARKETS.

Corn —88c. Oats —51c. Rye : Wheat —$1.65. . < Eggs—34c. Butterfat —36 % c Turkeys—lßc. Ducks—loc. Hens —12c. •Springs—43c. £ Roosters —7c. v

Remember the first number of the lyceum course at the Methodist churcn Thursday evening. / Gerald Jarrettc returned yesterday from Elkhart, Ind., where he has been working since August. Don’t fail to hear the Iris Concert Company at the Methodist church Thursday, evening, November 16th. ' ' ■ ;"" Miss Charlotte Kanne returned today from Conrad, Ind., where she has been at the home of Emerson Coen and wife. The Iris Concert Company comes to Rensselaer with the highest of recommendations and the committee promises a fine treat for you. Mrs. Marie H. Gray, district deputy cf the Maccabee lodge, came today from Crawfordsville for a few days’ visit with friends here. Bert Welsh, of Larimore, N. Dak., was here to attend tlhe funeral of his mother, Mrs. James Welsh. Mr. Welsh will be joined by his wife and three sons and they will spend the winter here with his sister, Carrie, on the home place. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Jamison, of Warsaw, Ind., who have been visiting relatives at Monticello, and Mrs. Sylvester Gray and Mrs. George Mustard and families here, went to Monticello to visit their daughter, Mrs. James Nelson, before returning to their home.. Lady Eglantine, the world’s champion hen, with a record of 314 eggs in 365 days, is dead. The Wheatfield Review is the latest paper to announce an advance in the subscription price. The present rate is SI.OO a yaar. The paper is published once a week. The price will be raised to $1.50 per year January Ist. The Review is: about the only paper now published in this territory at SI.OO per year and is well worth the $1.50 which is to be charged in the future. A Mother’s Mistake A mother can make no greater mistake than to neglect cleansing baby’s mouth and nasal passages elach day. Neglect endangers the child to chronic nose and throat trouble.. Catarrh and adenoids are the result of such neglect. The best way to protect the child is to use GLANDO GARGLE, which cleanses the mucous membrane and kills the germs. Highly recommended for sore mouth, sore throat and will reduce adenoids. It is a splendid teething lotion. For sale by R F. FENDIG, DRUGGIST •• «P . £. ,_ ; .