Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 February 1917 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
WANTED—Pasture for 15 head of cattle and 2 colts. Henry Paulus, Phone 938-G. WANTED—Heavy Motor Truck Hauling. Any Distance, Any time. Motor Truck Co., Remington, Ind. WANTED —Immediately, a cook at the Jasper County Hospital. WANTED—Laundress and scrub woman. Apply to Jasper County Hospital. Phone 32. ’WANTED—VeaI and->poultry of all kinds. For good, market, call 477, H. A. Qpinn. WANTED —To rent, modern five or six-room house. Sam Karnowsky. Phone 577.. LOST. LOST—Tuesday morning, Chevrolet auto crank between High School and County Farm. Finder return to Charles Marlin at Main Garage. LOST—Between my residence and Fair Oaks, Saturday, Feb. 17, package containing white apron, center piece and two doilies. If found return to our store. Mrs. C. L. Eggleston. LOST.—Yale key, No. 23717. Reward SI.OO for return. Leave at Republican office.LOST —Small pocketbook containing sum of money. Reward. —J. W. Fay lor, Rensselaer, R. 2, Phone 926-F.
FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS—An unlimited supply of 5 per cent money to loan.— Chas. J. Dean & Son, Odd Fellows Building. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Rooms; inquire of Phone 262. "FARM FOR RENT—I6O acre farm, well located and in good condition. Arthur H. Hopkins. FOR RENT—IOO acre farm 114 mile north of Gifford. Enquire of J. E. McClanahan, Gifford, Ind.
MISCELLANEOUS. "expert CAR REPAIRING at the Main Garage. Phone, 206. Night or day service. ' Bert ~ ' FOUND —Auto crank, inquire here. MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans. —John A Dunlap. AUTO RADIATOR TROUBLES remedied. For full particulars address the Monticello Auto Radiator Co., 224 North Main St., Monticello, Found.—A sum of money. Owner may have same by calling at my office. Charles M. Sands, City Treas. The cause for the defeat of the Monticello checker team has been learned. Col. Ed Thacker says that they were forced to play on strange checker boards. Wm. N. Forbis, a former resident of Monticello was included among those arrested at Gary for vote irregularities, by a Federal officer. Mrs. M. E. Park returned to her home at Hammond today after a visit with her sister Mrs. Benjamin Harris. Harry Newman returned from Indianapolis Wednesday evening, where he had been attending a tractor school “forseveraldays; ' Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Wells, who live in the northeast part of this city are both confined to their bed with bad cases of grippe. Lee Myers, the new proprietor of the Opera House pool room, has moved in to the F. E. Babcock residence on Park avenue. Mrs. Marion Pierson, who has been visiting her father-in-law, Henry Pierson, at the hospital here, left for Foresman this morning. Saturday evening they will attend the wedding of Leona->Fofesman and Lee Clark at Brook, after which she will go to her home at Crawfordsville. The expenses of the lobby to assist in obtaining the passage by the legislature of a prohibition measure, are shown by a report of the Indiana Dry Federation, filed with the secretary of the state, Wednesday. The total expense up to February 14, was $1,260.18, while the total contributions were $1,179.02. A balance of $918.84 remains in the treasury of the federation.
Nation Celebrates Birth Of Washington, Today “To be prepared for War is the Most Effectual Means of Preserving Peace.”—George Washington in address to Congress on January 8, 1790. Wherever an American heart beats, the memory of George Washington is honored today. The crisis in the. nation’s affairs has led Amerisan statesmen to ask: “What would Washington have done in similar circumstances?” So violently have conditions changed since his day, that some hold the advice he gave the struggling young republic, cannot be safely followed in every instance today.
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