Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 February 1918 — Page 4

gaaStLAER MPIBUCAN wy SJB* kuu-wxsxx>y . . WMbton uSdoftnTaot of March I, 187 »■ Pv.nlrr 'Republican entered Jw. > IMI, aa second class mail *' IMpoWito at KensselaM, Indiana, uador U*e act of March *. 1.7». UWN> J»M»AX LMtfto, par inch *S® jajirf-WT-HrW. per inch ~...l>Vfcc BA.2SS FOM GXASMFXM AJ>» Iheee lines or leas, per week of six laanea of The Kveolntf Republican ana W of The Semi-Weekly Republican, <# pgr** Additional apace pro rata ■UBSCBXFTXOM MATES Daily by Carrier, 18 cents a week. Bv Mail. 18.60 a year. Semi- Weekly, in advance, year. |2.00.

CUSSiFi£DmUMN FOB SALE —Some young horses apd good mils cows. Comeearly and get your choice. Emel Johnson, Phone yJd-F. FOB SALE—Ten tons good timothy hay, tour tons timothy and clover hay, some shock corn with extra good corn. Three brood sows and several good hog houses. Martin L. •Ford. Phone,UodL, Bensselaer, Ind. FOB SALE —Hand power elevator. B. S. Fendig. FOB SALE — A 12-inch gang plvw. Fred Backman. Phone 947 L. FOB SALE —A 2-seated surrey and a 5-passenger Overland, have been used but .little. Phone 26b white. Maude Daugherty. FOB SALE —Latest style, visible Smith Larmier type writer. Two colored ribbon, in excellent condition. Price $85.00 cash or $40.00 on $5.00 monthly payments. Louis H. Hamilton.

FOE SALE —I ord touring car and Twin Excelsior motorcycle. John Switzer. Phono 911-F. FOR SALE —My residence property and two lots on Sullen street, within one block ; from public square., also J. 20 acre farm, well improved and tiled, 2 miles north of Brook, on stone road. John O’Conner, xxnunan, Ind.. FOR SA LE—Good residence lot 50x225 feet, in good location. W. E. Daniels. ~FOR SALE —Ney Oliver typewriter, $37. Leslie Clark. FOR SALE —Best located barber shop in Rensselaer. Two chairs and bath. Doing good business. F. M. HaskelL FOR SALE —Cheap if taken at once, coal and wood heater, oil stove with oven, also one Reed gocart, baby bed, good as new. Mrs. Frank Turner.

FOR SALE—2OO shocks, corn and fodder. H. P. Callender, R. F. D. No. 1. FOR SALE —Mississippi plantations. • A few hundred dollars will buy you a farm where you can raise three crops a year and where you do not have to worry over long, cold winters and high fuel and coal bills. -—Harvey Davission. FOR SALE —Or will trade for small property in town, 160 acres of land. Farm lies 3 miles for a town, on stone road. Will rent for $5 an acre, cash rent. SIOO an acre.— Waiter Lynge, phone 455. FOR SALE — A. few Shetland ponies. See Walter Lynge, Phone 455.

r WANTED. WANTED—Salesman to solicit orders for lubricating oils, greases and paints. Salary or commission. Address The-Harvey Oil Co., Cleveland, Ohio. WANTED —Foreman for onion patch. Steady work and good pay. B. Forsythe. RANTED —More wood choppers. Another price advance in wages. Tents, shacks, stoves and wood provided. 2 miles from Tefft. B. Forsythe, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED TO BUY Carload shipments of wood We pay cash and aro always in the market for: 4-foot Cordwood, green or dry. 16 in. and 24 in. Block wood. 16 in. and 24 in. Stove wood size. 12 in. and 24 in. Slab wood. Send good description of your wood, stating amount on hand ready for shipment, and we will quote or •end our buyer. COVEY DURHAM COAL CO. 481 S. Dearborn Street Chicago, llliaois.

WANTED —To rent March Ist, fair size house at edge of town, with •hough ground for garden and chickens, one with barn preferred. N. Budren. Ph me 914 D. , 7 WANTED —To rent a farm of 80 to 100 acres. Write L. W. Smith, Newland, Ind., giving description, size and location. " WANTED —To buy veals, live or ‘ dressed. Phone 160-Black.

FOR KENT. | FOB BENT —Splendid residence on College avenue. Six rooms, modern. Nicely located and with large garden. Mrs. K. T. Bhoades. Phone 227. FOB BENT —Six room house, lights and water. $lO per month. Call Phone 445. FOR RENT—9 room house, electric lights and city water, 3 blocks from sq rare.—Dr. F. A. Turfler. FOR RENT—The Harve Robinson property on Weston street. Apply to C. J. Dean & Son. J

FOR RENT —Rooms up-stairs over Wood & Kresler’s barber shop, suitable for offices or residence. E. iu. Hollingsworth. FOR RENT —1,400 acres of farm land in tracts to suit tenants, with good buildings. Grain rent. Harvey Moore, Rensselaer, Ind. Tel. 298. FOR RENT—On half share plan, 10 acres muck onion land. 2% miles from Rensselaer. Everything furnished, including storage. Bargain for right man. B. Forysthe. FOR RENT —6 room house, good barn, chicken house, fruit trees, large lot, Ist house east of Nelson Randle’s residence. E. L. Hollingsworth. FOR RENT —Good, warm six room house. Well, coal and wood houses. Good orchard. O. K. Ritchey, Phone 618.

LOST., LOST—Pump handle, inside corporation. Return to this office. LOST —Pair shell frame, round lens glasses, between Aix and my residence. Phone 851-M or leave at Republican office. E. Ray Williams. LOST —Crank for base burner. L. H. Hamilton. MISCELLANEOUS. TAKEN UP—Feb. 1, a hog weighing, about 175 lbs. Owner may have same by paying for this ad. and feed. James Barber. FOUND —Gold rim glasses in case, containing two postoffice order receipts issued at Fair Oaks. Pay for this ad and get same here. Republican. > MONEY TO LOAN—Chas. J. Dean & Son. j MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans.—John A. Dunlap. TO EXCHANGE —A house in Brook, Ind., for horses. Guy Meyers, Kniman, Ind. OWN YOUR OWN HOME—The Rensselaer Building, Loan and Savings Association makes loans to those desiring to buy, build or improve homes, on EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS. Pay off that mortgage on your property by our plan, or build a home and let the monthly rental you are paying your landlord pay for your home. Call at our office and talk this over with our Secreary, D. Delos Dean, Odd Fellows Building, Rensselaer, Indiana.

NEED OF JOINT COMMITTEE EMPHASIZED

Out of the disclosures of imcompetency in the prosecution of war there has grown a demand for a “war agency which shall be a little lower than the presidency and a little -higher than the peace-time cabinet.” That is easily accomplished. Congress is a co-ordinate branch of the Government. While it is mentioned in the constitution ahead of the presidency, it is intended to be on an equality with the Executive and Judical branches, though its powers are someyhat greater than either of the others. A joint committee of Congress would be a little lower than Congress • itself, and therefore, it would be a little lower than the presidency. It would be a little higher than the cabinet, because it would report directly to Congress whereas the cabinet members are responsible to the President and, through him, to Congress The war agency this country needs is a joint, bi-partisan Congressional committee of specially selected men with broad business experiences and force of character —men who will put some speed in our war preparations.

If you have the misfortune to have some of your stock die, notify A. L. Padgitt, phone 65. Benjamin F. Carr, of Monticello, has announced his candidacy for Judge of the 'Thirty-ninth Judicial Circuit, composed of the counties of Carroll and White. Mr. Carr is at the present time the mayor of Monticello.

CASTOR IA Fbc Infsots &nd Children. In Use For Over 30 Years

Tfflß BTBNING BBPUBLICAX. RZNASELAER, IND.

Miss Anna Leonard went to Chicago this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Jacks, of Lee, were in Rensselaer today, We are paying the highest market price for good milling rye; also good buckwheat at IROQUOIS ROLLER MILLS. Phone 45t. Mrs. J. P. Warner is recovering from a severe attack of pneumonia. If you want to please your boy, buy a Shorthorn heifer at the Faylor sale Friday, February 15. If you have lost any stock, call A. L. Padgitt, Phone 65. Charles Pefley, F. A. Turfler, Gerald Hollingsworth and Cleveland W. Eger went to Chicago this morhng. Lester Warren and family left this morning for Lake Charles, Louisana, where they will be located permanently. H. B. Tobin and Ethel Fleming accompanied D. Boundy and Sebo Elmer to their homes at Kankakee, 111., today. THE COMMUNITY AUTOMOBILE SUPPLY COMPANY of Rensselaer, Ind., will sell you a guaranteed tire for SI.OO profit, each. Any size. Also gasoline at 1 cent per gallon profit. Portland Oregonian—Everyman in the state will be card-indexed for the next liberty loan, so he might as well begin putting by a few dollars. You will find everything at the Faylor sale that you need on a farm, as it is a disbursement sale, on Friday, February 15. Al-Co-Nut butter is delicious served on bread, hot biscuits, hot cakes or in fact it replaces butter entirely. Sold only and guaranteed by ROWLES & PARKER. Mrs. Frederick A. Phillip and daughter, Grace Augusta, left today drumright, Okla., where thjey will visit with Dr. Dale Warner and wife. Mrs. Warner is Mrs. Phillips’ sister. See Chas. Pefley for trees, vines and shrubs of all kinds. Guarantee stock to grow or replace free of charge. For spring delivery. John Eger and son, Trevor returned from Chicago Wednesday. They were very much encouraged, over the reports made by Mrs. Eger’s physician. A Hint To The Aged. If people past sixty years of age could be persuaded to go to bed as soon as they take co!4 and remain in bed for one or two days, they would recover much more quickly, especially if they take Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. There would also be less danger of the cold being followed by any of the more serious diseases. C Charles E. Nowels, in writing from Longmont, Colo., to renew his subscription, says; “I am enclosing $4 for two year’s subscription to keep the home news coming. We have had a very fine winter here so far until about three weeks ago it turned very cold and remained, that way. But now we are having the same good old Colorado weather again. No coal shortage here so far.”

THURSDAY LOCAL MARKET

Corn 75c to $1.00.. Oats 80c. Wheat $2.00. .... Rye $1.90. * Eggs 50c. Chickens 22c. Old roosters 12c. Ducks 17c. Geese 17c. Turkeys 18c to 23c. Butterfat 50c.

THE WEARY WAY.

Daily Becoming Less Wearisome to Many in Rensselaer. With a back that aches all day, With rest disturbed at night, Annoying urinary disorders, 'Tis a weary way, indeed. Doan's Kidney Pills are especially for kidney trouble. Are endorsed by Rensselaer citizens. _ _

Mrs. C. Morlan, Harrison & Jefferson Sts., Rensselaer, says: “I had a heavy, nagging ache in my back day and night. I could get only snatches of sleep and I got up feeling so tired and worn out that I could hardly do my work. Every time I leaned over, sat down or got up from a chair, a sharp pain shot through my back and I almost had to cry out. I felt nervous and unstrung. My head ached and I was often so dizzy I came near falling. Spots seemed to come before my eyes and my kidneys acted too often. I used two boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills and they gave me wonderful relief from all these kidney ills. Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Morlan had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.

CHARGES HURLED AT ROADS BY BROTHERHOOD OFFICIALS

Washington, Feb.r > s—Railroad5 —Railroad owners are trying to hamper and discredit government ownership in the hope of forestalling retention of the lines under government management after the war, railroad brotherhood heads charged today, in their hearing before the federal trades commission. Experienced railroad men are not permitted to operate as their taining dictates. Freight crews have been held on sidetracks 16 hours to show increased overtime costs. More overtime has been piled up than ever before. Employes have been encouraged to countenance delays which would have previously meant immediate dismissal

Railroad owners are doing this because they realize the people will never permit the roads to return to private ownership unless government management fails. President Lee of the trainmen and President Garretson of the conductors hurled these charges against their former employes today, when it was discovered unknown to the brotherhood representatives the railroads had posted their own men in the room in which the hearing was in progress. Garretson refused to continue testimony until the railroad “pickets” were removed from the room. “We have come to lay our cards oh the table,” he said, “and railroads block government ownership. Wedo not propose to discuss these matters before our former employes.” Lee then broke in with the charge that railroad owners do not want government ownership to succeed anyway.

BUREAUS TO AID FARMERS IN SECURING HELP

P. L. Prentis, acting director of employment of the U. S. department of labor, with headquarters in Chicago,is calling attention of the farmers of the country to the U. S. employment service and its function for supplying farmers with the help they will surely need this year on account of the great scarcity of farm labor. In a recent letter to the farmers, Mr. Prentis says: “At the present time we are- receiving applications for employment from experienced farm hands, also from men who have had some experience in farm work. If you can do so, we believe it would be to your advantage to employ the needed help as early in the season as possible. Among these applicants are a number of married men who left for the farm or city, but now express a desire to return to farm work. Many of these should prove excellent farm hands. In some instances they have children old enough to be of considerable help while others have no children at all.” Farmers who desire information concerning the method to be pursued in obtaining farm help can address P. L. Prentis, acting director of employment, U. S. department of labor, Chicago, 111.

RULES MUST BE OBSERVED BY PUBLIC SALE CATERERS

Where lunches or meals are served at public sales dated on “meatless” and “wheatless” days, the same regulations govern as apply ’to restaurants and hotels, according to notices received from Dr. Barnard, State Food Administrator. The notice as mailed by Dr. Barnard to county food administrators follows: “Instruct farm sales lunch service that they must obey the “wheatless’.’ and “meatless” days or close up business.” 1 This is taken to mean that no meat or wheat products are permitted to be used on days they are prohibited, either by stand men or organizations that cater to the crowds at public sales.

LADIES_ When Irregular er delayed use Triumph Pills. Safe and always dependable. Not cold at drug stores. Do not experiment with others, eave disappointment Write for “Relief and particulars, -It's free. Address National Medical Inetltuta Milwaukee. Wla Our long looked for car of salt has arrived at last. 70 lb. bags, 85c. Barrels, $2.25. EGER GROCERY. WOOD CHOPPERS WANTED We are paying $2 per cord for cutting 4-foot wood. Phone James E. Walter. Phone 837. CITY BUSS AND TRANSFER LINE Makes all trains, St Joseph College and city service. Trips to and from trains, 15c each, except early morning trains which are 25c each. AH city service 25c per trip. Prompt and courteous service Rendered. W. L. Frye, proprietor Phones 107 and 369.

A Safe Place —______ •—i-v ““ ~ To deposit your Liberty Bonds or any other valuable papers is in the Safety Deposit boxes at the First National Bank The public is invited to avail themselves of the conveniences of the conference rooms. ? —— Also - The Bank tenders the use of its large and coinmodions, Directors ’ and Stockholders ’ room, to the business men of the city and surrounding country.

THURSDAY HOSPITAL NOTES

Winfred Stephenson, a young man from near Kersey, was brought to the hospital Wednesday evening for medical attention. Mrs. Daniel Boardwell is reported to be in quite a serious condition. Mrs. Charles Paxton’s condition remains about the same. .. Other patients are reported to be doing very nicely. The board of trustees will meet Friday instead of Thursday night of this week.

NOTICE TO BUTTER USERS We have made arrangements with the central delivery to deliver our butter and will, make 2 deliveries a day, at 7:30 a. m. and 1:00 p. m.Get your orders in for the forenoon deliveries the evening before and for afternoon, by 12 noon. Beginning tomorrow morning, Feb. 7. Price this week 51c delivered. f J. C. HARRIS & SON. Rumor has it that one of our soldier boys who has lately enlisted and is now with the aviation corps at Ft. Leavenworth, is to be married in a few days to a young lady of this vicinity. Fred Popp, the road superintendent of the eastern district of the county, was in Rensselaer today. It is reported by those who have been over the roads that Mr. Popp’s district is in the best shape of any in the county. He has been busy with eight horses hitched to a road grader and his roads are quite passable. Wednesday was a wonderful day. So in constrast to the weather that has so long prevailed. • During the day it was bright and warm and much of the snow and ice was melted away. While not quite so warm today, yet the weather man deserves great praise for the new brand of weather, he is giving us.

Baptist Church Notice. > 9:30 a, pj., Sunday school. 10:45 a. m., Morning worship and preaching. “Religious Philosophy.” Prayer meeting on Thursday evenings at 7:30.

When You Have A Cold. It is when yob have a severe cold that you appreciate the good qualities of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. Mrs. Frank Crocker, 'Pana, 111., writes: “Our five-year old son Paul caught a severe cold last winter that settled on his lungs and he had terrible, coughing spells. We were greatly worried about him as the medicine we gave him did not help him in the least. A neighbor spoke so highly of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy that I got a bottle of it. The first dose benefited him so much that I continued giving it to him until he was cured.” C Al-Co-Nut butter is the most delicious and nutritious nut butter made. Guaranteed to take the place of the choicest creamery butter or your, money back. ROWLES & PARKER. If anyone who has had the mis fortunate to lose stock during the cold spell will notify us, we will be glad to call and get it A. L. PADGITT, Phone 65.

A Shinn In Every Drop 9 ’ Get a can today from RW your hardware or gro- UIH eery dealer.

FORMER STUDENT CALLS UPON EDITOR.

The editor of The Republican had a delightful visit with a young man who was formerly a student of his in the McCoysburg school. The young man has made good and is now a food inspector for the state of Indiana. In 1897 when the editor was teaching his last school he had as one of his eighth grade pupils, Frank Catherwood. Frank was a bright lad and passed successfully the eighth grade diploma examination. After his graduation from the common schools he moved with his brothers and sisters, to Tippecanoe county. He attended Purdue University and Marion Normal school and until this year had either attended or taught school. His last school work was done as the princpal of a consolidated school in that county. Frank had the reputation of being one of the very best teachers in Tippecanoe county and was urged at the last election to make the race for county school superintendent. He felt however, that all things considered, the position he had was better than the county superintendency and therefore declined to make the race. During his work with this community school last year, Mr. Gather-. wood started a movement that should spread to other like communities. Instead of having a lecture course as had Jbeen the habit for many years Mr. Catherwood felt that a great deal of good could be done for the school pupils and the citizens of that locality by procuring a moving picture machine. With the assistance of the teachers this one done'. The movement was very popular with his people and during the winter they put on many of the very best pictures to be obtained. He found that these pictures had a great effect upon the community and all pronounced the movement to be a splendid one.

Chamberlain’s Tablets. These Tablets are intended especially for disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels. Ifyou are troubled with heartburn/indigestion or constipation they will do you good. y C Mrs. William Traub isxquite sick with a threatened attack of pneumonia. . One of the Sisters at St. Joseph College fell early in the week and injured her arm badly. Mrs. Harry Newman and Mrs. R. W. Strecker will entertain the Dorcas club at home of the latter, Friday evening, February Bth. Entertainment starts at 7:30. Prompt. Come early.

ST. AUGUSTINE'S ANNUAL BAZAAR for benefit NEW CHURCH FUND Fancy Articles for Sale Also Cafeteria Lunch Wednesd’y and Thursd’y Evenings February 6 and 7 MENU BOTH EVENINGS CREAM CHICKEN - BAKED BEANS POTATO SALAD VICTORY BREAD or GINGER BREAD PICKLES BUTTER OAT MEAL COOKIES pOFFEE Wood heated hall, in Parochial school building. Comfort guaranteed. Everybody cordially invited. COMMITTEE.