Evening Republican, Volume 59, Number 75, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 April 1917 — Page 4

£ CLASSIHED ADS <£ •F BRING a* STO USERS “

RENSSELAER h REPUBLICAN * JBArtT A3n mn-wuni aujuTii xua&TOi. ntiuiim m ruux nan n uov&ut vau&T nmw Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, ■ second class mall matter, at tbs postofllce at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act qt March t, 1879. JBvc&lnc Republican entered Jap. 1, TSPT, as second class mail matter at tbe postofllce at Rensselaer, Ind., under the act of March S, UTM FOR BISPtAT ADVERTISING Dally, per Inch „ Semi-Weekly, per Inch .1114 c ratbs foiToxjlmzfzsd ass Three lines or less, per week of si* issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Beml-Weeklf Republican. M cents. Additional space pro rata. stjmcrxftxok rates Daily by Carrier, 10 cents wee a. By Mail. <1.50 a year. Semi-Weekly. In advance, year. <».OQ.

Classified Column FOE SALE. -• • FOE SALE—Tb • Bedford farm of 37 acres, adjoining city of Rensselaer; splendid location lor fine home. 3200 psr acre. Tams, one-third down, one-third nine months, onethird eighteen months. CHAR. W. POSTILL, Administrator.

FOE SALE—Good 120 acre farm. —Mrs. Fred Kaich, R. I). 1, Wheatfield, lnd. ' FOR SALE —14 in. walking plow, almost new, and two section harrow. Rhone 947-iA. FOR SALE —Real bargain, improved 80 acre farm, new 5 room nouse, new barn, 3ft miles from Wheatfield, Ind., $35 per acre. Will take live stock first payment, easy terms on balance. —Harvey Davisson, Phone 246 or 499. , ~ FOR SALE —New automobile trailer, substantially made and priced reasonably.—C. A. Battleday, at Central Garage. FOR SALE —Plymouth Rock eggs from good utility stock, 50c per setting.—Henry Paulus. FOR SALE —Two setting hens; small desk; washing machine. —Mrs. E. L. Clark, Phone 258. S 3 i rrr —————— FOR SALE—My residence on McKinley ave., two and one-half lots 50 ft by 175 ft., two barns and my city transfer line. —Wm. L. Frye.

FOB SALE—I team mules 9 and 10 years old; 1 team colts coming 3 years old, broke to work, and 1 5y ear-old horse. Will sell on time. —■ Rhone 955-F, John Lonergan. FOB SAT.E —A well established hotel or hoarding house trade. For further information write P. O. Box 611 or 464. FOR SALE —Hailet and Davis piano, in let class condition. Bargain if taken at once. —H. R. Lange. FOR * SALE —Piano, practically new, or would trade for Fowl i.utomobile.—D. M. Worland. FOR SALE—Good Ford radiator. Does not leak. . Price SB.OO. D. M. Worland. FOR SALE —Good buildinr* lot in west part of town. —George A. Williams. FOR RAT.E —Recleaned timothy seed and ground limestone for fertilizer. —Rensselaer Lumber Co. FOR SAT.E —Buff Orpington eggs 50 cents per setting.—Mrs. Jud Adams, R. D. 1, Rensselaer, Phone 906-K. .FOB SALE —Pure bred Hereford bulls.'—Fred A. Phillips. FOR SALE —Some Billion Dollar grass seed, $1.50 per bushel. —Mark Hoyea, Phone 951-L

FOR SAT.E —AII staple sizes, No. 1, oak lumber, $12.00 to SIB.OO per m. 12JMX) No. 1, white oak posts, 10c each All F. O. B. Tefft, Indiana. See T. H. Hayes, at Tefft, or B. Forsyth*, Rensselaer, Tiuiiiama- - ;;==== , - FOR SALE —A No. 1 sawmg outfit, 8 horse gas engine, friction clutch, well mounted.—Conrad Kellner. FOR SALE—Bargain. Lot, 3 blocks west of Five Points, $l6O. —Harvey Davisson. FOR SALE—Barred Plymouth eggs for hatching, SI.OO per 15. Jesse Snyder, Phone 266 Green. FOR SALE—Pure bred Barred Plymouth Rock eggs for setting, 75c for 16; $3,50 per hundred. Phone 934-J. Am&r Waymire. FOR SALE —Second hand windmill in good condition. A bargain. Inquire of A Leopold. . FOR SALE—One 3 year old red polled bull, a good and sure breeder. Jeff Srnath, owner, 6 miles west of Rensselaer. Call 88-F, Mt. Ayr, R. FOR KALE—Four good second hand lAwnmowers.—Deacon Hollister at Mill. FOR SALE Refrigerator. Mr-. Bert Hopkins, Phone 60. -

FOB SALS—One gasoline 16-horse power engine. k naoanted on iron wheel wagon; will run on silage cutter on small separatoi. Hue enjine is a Fairbanks- Morse hod a good one. $l5O buys it. This .a a bargain for some See John J. Stock ton, or telephono 9168 or 408. FOR SALE —My residence property on Franklin street. All modern conveniences.—Samuel Roth. FOR SALE —Onion seta at the Globe Onion Farm. 3 quarts for 25c. Aif Donnelly, Phone 903-B. FOR SALE—S. C. White Leghorn eggs, 75c per 15, $5.00 per hundred. Fred Wading, Rensselaer, Ind., phone 919-B. FOR SALE —One good recorded Shorthorn bull, eight months cld.— Ed Rantozx, Fhxie 954-D. * FOR SALE—See Jay W. Stockton for some Juries lota in the city of Rensselaer, Indiana. Fine location, all public improvements made and paid far. Also some fine uncultivated land, as well aa some of the best land that’s in Jasper county. There is no indebtedness against any of this property. If you are interested telephone 25 or 916-B.

FOR SALE—Eggs for setting from White Plymouth Rock farm run chickens, 75c for 15 or $4.00 per 100.—John M. Johnson, Phone 929-H. FOR SALE —I have for sale twenty strong hives of Italian bees. Price $8 per hive cash. Each hive, if the season be favorable, will give from two to four swarms. I will sell May and June swarms for $5 per stand. Men who assume to know, claim that a hive of bees should be in every orchard and pickle field to pollenize each bloom and thus produce a large crop. The old saying, “A swarm in May is worth a ton of hay, and in 'June a silver spoon,” may hold good this year.' —Frank Foltz. . FOR SALE —Holstein cow, fresh in few days. A No. 1 milker.—Fred A. Phillips. FOR SALE —Horse, buggy and harness. Horse 10 years old, lady broke to all harness, wt. 900. Inquire of eVs Schwager, Phone 938-H. FOR SALE—A bargain for some one, second hand canopy top carriage, in good shape. Pnc©-0# -K*--C. A. Roberts.

FARM LOANS FARM LOANS—An unlimited supply of 6 per cent money to loan. — Chas. J. Dean & Son, Odd Fellows Building. 1 WANTED. WANTED—At once, reliable married man with a neat housekeeper to /work on farm:—Art Katine, FtKffie 72 after 7 p. m. WANTED —Girl for general housework.—Mrs. Leslie Clark, Phone 114. WANTED—Job on farm bv young man.—Valrie H. Hill, Rensselaer, R. D. No. 4. WANTED —Pasture for 16 cattle and 2 colts.—Henry Paulus, Phone 938-G, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED —Deacon Hollister wants all the lawnmowers he is able to sharpen. WANTE'D—To haul your rubbish. Phone 318 Red. Moses Ohupp. WANTED—Job on farm. —Joe L. Clark, Phone 401 Black. WANTED —To haul rubbish and to plow your garden. Phone 401-Black. Harry Marlatt. WANTED —Auto casings and tube repairing.—Mainer’s Trie Shop, Phone 218. _____ WANTED—Plumbing and heating contracts. —Watson Plumbing Ce., Phone 204.

LOST. LOST —Nickle-plated rim off automobile head light, between Moody and Rensselaer. Return-to John Worland. LOST —In Rensselaer ladies’ spring jacket, probably between home and the north edge of town. —Michael Ringeisen, Phone 358 Black. LOST —Two 2-dollar bills and two 1-dollar bills. The $2 bills were wrapped together and the $1 bills werq wrapped together and they may have been lost in different places. Finder notify Jose L. Clarke, Phone 401 Black. ~~ FOBtBKNT FOR RENT —120 acre farm on stone road, 6 inflee from town; good improvements.—John A. Dunlap. FOR RENT—The Stoner chicken farm west of the Monon depot. Plot for gardening. Modem house.—E. L. Hollingsworth, office west side of public square. FOR RENT —Improved 80 acre farm, 2 miles southwest of Wheatfield.—Harvey Davisson, Rensselaer, Ini FOR RENT—7 room house, all modem conveniences, hot and, cold water, bath and toilet. Extra lot for potatoes. Garage. Phone 605, John Duvall. ~ FOR RENT—S rooms for light housekeeping. Electric lights,' city waiter, garden; Park Ave.—Mary Jane Hopkins. FOR • RENT—Four _ unfurnished rooms. Small family without children.—Mrs. Rebecca Stephenson. FOR RENT—Residence, 8 blocks from court house square.—Dr. F. A. Turfier, ' > - • /

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, INP.

FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnished rooms. Phone 627. MISCELLANEOUS. CLARK’S BICYCLE SHOP located in Milner’s tire shop, enet of court house. New and second-hand bicycles and lawn mowers for sale. Lawn mowers sharpened.—James Clark, Phone 218. - MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans. —John A Dunlnp. I guarantee chick tome to save 90 per cent of your little chicks from white darrhoea and to prevent roop and cholera among your old binds. I refund your money if it fails.—Mrs. John King. On or about May 3 we will hove a fine lot of flower plants of all kinds and ferns and vines for porch boxes and baskets, not at war time prices, but cheaper than ever. Tomato, cabbage, pepper and cauliflower plants, 5c a dozen. —King Floral Co. Rheumatic Pains Relieved. ”1 have used Chamberlain’s Liniuent for pains in the chest and lameness of the shoulders due to rheumatism, and am pleased to say that it has never failed to give me prompt relief,” writes Mrs. S. N. Finch, Batavia, N. Y. C

FAIR OAKS. Dr. Fyfe arid family, of Wheatfield, visited relatives here Sunday. Born, this week, to Ernest Hass and wife, a daughter. Gladys Halleck went to Chicago Wednesday on business. Fish Gilmore shipped a carload of old iron this week. The new house on the Spang farm is going up pretty lively; iSupt. Lam son and Trustee Hammerton visited our schools Friday. Oliver Brouhard and family, of Shelby, were here over Sunday. . Miss Muriel Beaty visited over Sunday at her home in Jennings county. Mrs. N. Littlefield, of Rensselaer, visited F. R. Erwin Tuesday and Wednesday. iFrank Hoover and family, of Virgie, visited Frank Garriott Sunday. Harry Young’s have moved into the Potts house and Fred Call into the Thomas house. Mrs. Fae Petty has been having a lot of trouble with her eyes lately. Mrs. John White, of DeMotte, visited with the Halleck family Sunday. Mrs. Hattie Kesler took dihner with Mrs, Kight Wednesday.

R. A. Parkison is having some repairs made on his residence. Charles Serritella has embarked in the poultry business. Storage batteries 'have advanced in price from 10 jo 20 per cent. You can now .buy a “Vesta” as cheap as an ordinary battery. Edward E. Smith is advertising iq this issue that he would be pleased to do a limited amount of carpenter work. Mr. Smith would be pleased to take large contracts and he will also give the; very best attention to odd jobs which it is very difficult to get a man to take hold of when needed. Mr. Smith is a most excellent carpenter and does his work with skill and dispatch.

Marriage Licenses. April 18. —Fred Hoffman, born Chicago, 111., Nov. 30, 1894, occupation railroader, present residence DeMotte, and Bessie Sekema, bom Chicago, Oct. 28, 1897, occupation housekeeper, present residence DeMotte. First marriage for each. April 18.—William Terpstra, born in Chicago Nov. 7, 1893, present residence Thayer, Ind., occupation farmer, and Bertha Gassoway, bom in Jasper county, March 29, 1897, occupation, none, present residence Virgie, Ind. First marriage for each.

CASTOR IA Fttr Infants and Children h IIM For

The Yellow Bus Rensselaer-Remington Bus line Schedule 2 TRIPS DAILY Lv. Rensselaer 7:45 am Ar. Remington ............8:80 om Lv. Remington 9:10 am Ar. Rensselaer 9:55 am Ar. Remington 4:46 pm Lv. Rensselaer 4:00 pm Lv. Remington 5:15 pm Ar. Rensselaer 6:00 pm FARR 75c EACH WAY. BILLY FRYE Prop

Clilcago and the WeiF”lndUn»poU«, Cincinnati and the South, TKinftTiU* sad French Utk Springe. OKXCAOO, msiUTAFOUB ft &OUXS- . vma »t. SOUTHBOUND. Louisville and French Lick. No. S 11:10 pm Indianapolis and Cincinnati, a — No. 35 1:45 am Louisville and French Lick. No. 5 ....10:65 am Indianapolis and Cincinnati. _ : No. 87 llrlTam Ind’polls, Cincinnati and French Lick. No. U 1:67 pm Lafayette and Michigan City. No. S 9 5:50 pm Indianapolla and Lafayette. No. Si 7:31 pm NORTHBOUND. No. SO Chicago .............. 4:61 ajn No. 4 Chicago, ... 6:01 am No.’ 40 Chicago (aoeom.).. £... 7:80 am No. S 3 Chicago 10:30 am No. SS Chicago 2:51 pm No. f Chicago 3:31 pm No. SO Chicago 0:60 pm For tickets and further information cell on W. H. BEAK, Agent.

MILROY.

Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Lear and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dobbins and family spent Sunday with John Mitchell's. Olyde Clark cam 4 to his farm Monday. Irene McAleer wifi lead the League meeting Sunday evening. Larin, Fern, John and Miss Iva English attended Sunday school and spent Sunday with their sister, Mrs. Earl Foulks Ami family. The Aid met Wednesday with Mrs. Claude 'Spencer. Earl Foulks attended band practice in Monon Tuesday evening. Mrs. Earl Foulks called on Mrs. R. Foulks in Monon Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mis. Fisher, Mrs. Burdette “Porter and Mrs. S. May and Frank May and family spent Sunday with Geo. Foulks. Bom, this week, to Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Beaver, a son. The married daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. Digna, of Kokomo, visited her parents this week, her mother returning home with her for a visit. Mabel Lansing called on Mrs. Geo. Foulks Tuesday. Ddtt Porter, Irene McAleer and Martha Clark spent Sunday with the Misses Fisher. Mrs. W. B. Fisher was a Rensselaer visitor Monday. Glyde and Clarence Fisher spent Sunday with Mr. Spencer, near Idaville. Irene Clark is working near Chalmers. Mrs. Jesse English visited her daughter, Mrs. Mabel Foulks, Wednesday.

New Suit Filed.

Henry O. and E. T. Harris bring suit against Simon Leopold to collect judgment for $520 and costs. Said judgment was rendered in the Jasper circuit court in 1908. Williams & Dean, attorneys for plaintiffs.

DANGER IN HARMLESS THINGS

Americans Suffer Casualties From Accidents Every Year Equal to Those of the Heaviest Battles.

It Is a bloody battle which inflicts death or wounds upon one in every seven soldiers. Casualties of 140,000 in an army of a million are away above battle averages. Americans are so wasteful of the most precious things we have —human life—that they suffer casualties from accidents during every year equal to such a heavy battle, writes Gerard in Philadelphia Ledger. One man in seven is killed or injured. I learn from an insurance company which has paid $10,500,000 in 22 years for 128,000 accidents where and how the accidental blow falls. The wagon hurts more persons than the automobile by 25 per cent. Noisy as It Is, the motorcycle Is fairly harmless, and the bicycle has almost 10 tUpes as mny victims to its credit City folk think of their elevators falling, but they rarely do It, whereas we never reckhb the horse among beasts of prey, and yet Mr. Equine kicks and biteS nine times as many persons as are injured in elevators. More men fall through trapdoors than are drowned, but it seems hard to believe It. Almost as many are hurt by falling from bed as get their fingers caught In electric fans. A gun is a deadly thing, and yet Its army of victims is only one-sixth as great as that of the innocent-look-ing stairway. The rolling stone gathers no moss, but it accumulates a fine assortment of accidents —six times as many as the snorting motorboat. Your true accident bobs up when least expected. I once saw Samuel B. Kirkpatrick, who is now a broker, but was formerly a newspaper man, return from a 5,000mile journey. He had plastered himself with accident insurance, but nothing had happened until he stepped upon a lead pencil In his own office after his return, and then he was in drydock for a fortnight.

His Double Loss.

A story of the battle of Jutland Is told by a chaplain of the grand fleet In a ship which was In the thick of action and was well hammered by the enemy, many poor fellows lost the number of their mess and many more were sadly wounded. Among these latter was a sailor, one of whose legs was so much shattered and lacerated by a splinter of shell that there was nothing else to do but amputate it above the knee. The wounded man was practically unconscious from loss of blood, so .the surgeons were not able to tell him of their intentions qf operating. Some time later he recovered consciousness and found himself comfortably tucked up, with the stump dressed and bandaged. When he learned what had happened he broke into an agonized cry—no, not for the crippling he had undergone; his cry was: my leg? For ’evin’s sake, find my leg, somebody J It’s got all my money In the stocking 1”

The Strategy of Blinkers.

Blinkers was not a beauty, either ip face or figure. All his pals wondered, therefore, what he would appear as at the Funnyboys’ fancy dress ball. The night arrived. Hamlet leaned sadly against the wall, while William the Conqueror threw bitter glances at a crowd at the other end of the room. “What ho, BUI I" cried OUver Cromwell, arriving late; “feeling seedy, old man?" 1 A • “Weall.are,” growled Bill the First “Blinkers has done ns In the eye after all.” • “Blinkers! How?” “He’s come as a bargain marked down’to $4.98,” croaked the conqueror, “and every blessed girl In the place Is fighting to get near him.’’ „ ,

HANGING GROVE.

Sam Cook is nursing a quite badly injured right hand as a result of getting it caught in an oats seeder Monday afternoon. He succeeded m getting the team stopped in time to save his hand and released himself with some difficulty. ( Two other brothers were working in the same field and they assisted him to the house. He was taken to Rensselaer and had the injury dressed.’ No bones were broken but an ugly wound was made in the 'back of the hand whidi will likely leave a scar. At the same time the boys were coming in from the field Jim Cook let his team run away with the wagon, but no damage resulted. Bom, Tuesday, April 17, to Mr. and Mrs. R. C. McDonald, a daughter. George Johnson is helping his son, John M., with his farm work for a few weeks, until the family recovers from the measles. The whole family have had them except John, even the hired man, Chester Miller. Wilson Bussell came home Monday and stayed over night with ‘his famiyl, but had to return to Hammond Tuesday morning. His wife and baby followed on the afternoon train. They will leave their household goods and other personal property here and just rent furnished rooms in Hammond. Wilson is employed in a gas plant as watcher and works from 6 to 6 during the day. Royal Bussell will be custodian of their property here until they return.

True Beam came down from‘Chicago Wednesday evening and spent the night with her mother, Mrs. Lottie George.

Phone 423 White For H. 0. JOHNSON PRACTICAL PAINTER PAPEKHANGER DECORATOR ■ - * . Reasonable prices, good work and best material . LADIES When irregular or delayed use Triumph Pills. Safe and always dependable. Not sold at drug stores. Do not experiment with others, save disappointment. Write for “Relief” and particulars, it’s free. Address National Medical Institute, Milwaukee, Wis. a

M Right Straight Through j M —from the edges of the massive, mile- I W making Vacuum Cups to the rims of the ■ wheels—all the super-quality of materials and M construction that can be put into a casing is ■ Pennsylvania 1 1 VACUUM CUP li Now guaranteed —per warranty tag m JI attached to each casing—for Mmm 6,000 Miles Then, too, there is the guaranteed MM Mi abilityof the Vacuum Cups to prevent MM IMI skidding on wet, slippery pave- MM Jn a ments, else tires returnable /If/i purchase price, after \ CENTRAL GARAGE I Rensselaer, Indiana l\ v Unbeatable Exterminator m or Rats. Mice and Bugs Used the World Over- - Used by U.S. Government The Old Reliable .That Never Felts - IS C^2S c.At arugsis^a, THE RECOGNIZED STANDARD-AVOID SUBSTITUTES

Storage Batteries . RECHARGED AND REPAIRED . .. Electric Starters, Generators, Ignition ~ * Lighting Systems Repaired and RenirfcL > . Rensselaer Garage Official Service Svatioo for Vesta Doa&e life Batteries.

Dr. F. A. Turffer went to Lowell on the early morning train. Father Will Hordeman is visiting relatives here. He is spending today with his brother, Peter Hordeman, who lives near Parr. Father Hordeman has been in charge of the Catholic church at Frankfort for more than twelve years and is greatly loved by hi? people there. In order that the White Sox may win their opening 'me at Chicago today, Lefty Clark, Don Beam and Paul Healy .went up this morning to contribute a large amount of enthusiasm with other Sox fans. A. Wasson Coen, the Chicago arch’— tect, came down Wednesday to look after matters cdnhected with the First National Bank building and the plans for the remodeling of the State Bank building preparatory for the Trust & Savings Bank, the present owners.

: Corner Case I > * < | Ice Cream, Sodas, Sundaes ! Grape Juice, Pop and ! > All Soft Drinks. < > « SK/gwze Floor Finish sD interior varnish w«k— ■ etalra, floora and furniture — Kyanize Floor Finish will pleats yon. hit eatr to apply—dries quickly with a durable, easily cleaned unlace that bring* oat the natural beauty of the wood. Try Kyanize once. Tht Kvonltt Llm •/ Sold and uuuranteedtn LARSH & HOPKINS