Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 142, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 July 1917 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

WANTED —Cherry pickers. Phone 258. - . WANTED —Well improved, 80 to 120 acre farm. Give description and lowest cash price.—Scott Stretch, Lexington, 111. WANTED —Two good milk customers, delivered at 7c per quart; from good fresh Jersey cow. We also have two Belgian hares. „ Will sell cheap. Call 476-Green. FORRENT FOR RENT —5 room cottage on Front street. Phone 512 or 268Green. t ■■ FOR RENT —Modern house, nine rooms and bath; sleeping porch; furnace heat; garage: 3 blocks from postoffice, on Washington Ave., the best part of the city. Every detail modern. See J. N. Leatherman, First National Bank, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR RENT—B room house two blocks from court house, on Weston street. —Fred Tyler. FOR RENT —Residence, 8 blocks from court house square.—Dr. F. A. Turflet. ' FOR RENT—My house on Milroy Avenue. City water, electric lights, barn, garage and 3 acres of ground. Possession at once.—Emma M. York FARM LOANS MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans.—John A. Dunlap. FARM LOANS—An unlimited ply of 5 per cent money to loan. — Chas. J. Dean & Sen, Oc I Fellows Building.

The Republican now has more of those paper flags at 5c each. Secure one for your window or windshield. LOST. LOST —A small red chocheted robe. Phone 920-B.—Mrs. Kenton Parkison. LOST—On road south of Fair Oaks, a purse containing registration card No. 45, and money belonging to Henry Engan. Finder please notify Clyde Garriott, Phone 910-C. Liberal reward. Fair Oaks, R. D. 2. Henry Engan. LOST—Rubber legging in west part of town. Return to H. E. White, the ice man. LOSf—Auto plate No. 48384-Ind. Return to Republican office. ' FOUND FOUND —Pair of nose glasses. Inquire here. FOUND —Pocketbook containing sum of money and also receipt of ball of sale of goods bought of Peck at Remington. Owner can have by proving property and paying for this ad. FOUNDS —Automobile crank. Owner may have same by enquiring of Lep Griggs at jail and paying for this notice. * MISCELLANEOUS. Will furnish room to a man or boy who will exchange his services in mowing lawn and taking care of garden.—Mrs. E. L. Clark, Phone 258.

FARM BARGAIN—24O acres. This farm is in this county, on public road, mile from pike. It is leve land and all in cultivation and blue grass pasture except 30 acres of timber. It is good grain land and has good outlet for drainage. There is good seven room house, good barn, double cribs, two large cattle sheds and ten other outbuildings in gooc condition. There are three wells and two windmills with tanks. Large bearing orchard. Fencing all good. Owner lives on this farm. It would be cheap at >75. For quick sale will sell for >45, on terms of >3,000 down.—George F. Meyers. cow, wt about 1000. One bad teat.—Louis Wricker, R. D. 1, Fair Oaks. Phone 89, Mt. Ayr. — —— - —— " ■■ K Mrs. Alda Parkison entertained at a lawn picnic at her home Saturday evening to a few friends. • Miss Ethel Perkins is again at her post of duty at the county treasurer’s office, after a vacation spent at Harbert, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spain and two children, of Wabash, Ind., are visiting relatives here and at Monticello. They will return to their home after the Fourth. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Anderson, the newlyweds, are moving into the Charles Battleday residence on College avenue today.

Samuel O. Duvall and Vern Davisson went to Chicago today. Mr. Davisson will get his passport to France, preparat?ry to entering the ambulance service with Mr. Duvall. MrszWilliam McKelvey and granddaughter, Etta Musseri, returned to their home at Oxford, Ind., after a visit with the family of George McCarthy. ~7— Mrs. J. N. Timmons fell Friday while working about her home and suffered a fracture of the fibula bone of her limb. The injury is quite painful and she will be unable to be about much for a few days. The Catholic sisters who have charge of the parochial school here, left today for Mariastine, Ohio, the location of the Mother Home. While there they will attend an institute' for teachers. Mrs. Laura Lutz left this morning for Adrian, Minn., where she will visit with her son, Walter, who is now a county agricultural agent in that state. Mrs. Lutz was accompanied as far as Chicago by her daughter-fa-law, Mrs. Willis Lutz,