Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 February 1918 — Page 4
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN baay abb Baaa*wsnasT «B*a>• ■■■n»o« - ■ wmi*w F —, wr-r-»i w n— Wtraw •stared Jan1, im? «• Meend eiaaa mail “V 1 "; * iMMkt at Itmaaalaar, Infflaw SXrtiSaM oC Marab n, 1M». Rapubllean antarad Jan. > i«i¥ m aa«S alaaa mall matter, at tta bmkSm at Henaßjlaen India®* <ha aot of MAroh 1» l?7t» *A«* apt mbwat iDT»Ti»ae ivuoumoi ban* naiiw by Carrier, 10 cents a wee*. ByMall. |I.M a year. fami-Weekly, In advance, year, |XO>. BA*e» TO* ObABBXFXBD ABB *mraa Haas or laaa. per week of six 81 easts. Additional spans pro rata.
CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE —3 yearling bulla—two of the Hereford variety—-and one Shorthorn. Phone 913-M. Harry J. Arnold. , FOR SALE —1 dozen pure blood Buff Orppington pullets, nice ones for breeding purposes only $1.25 a niece. Mra J. R- Kight, Thayer, Indiana.<,' FOR SALE —One 8-16 Mogul factor with plows, in good shape, price SSOO. 9 miles west of town. Victor Borklund. FOR SALE —Pure bred Buff Orpington roosters. Henry Wood. FOR SALE —Pure bred White Holland turkeys; three gobblers and hens. H. J. Dexter. R. D. 2, or phone 926-C. FOR SALE —Several hundred split white-oak posts, on farm in Barkley township. Dr. A. R. Kresler. FOR SALE — A. itv tons, choice timothy hay- Phono 918-A. W. E. Price.
FOR SALE —2 old trusty incubators; 1 old trusty brood stove; 1 Cyphers brooder, all in good condition. H. A. Callander, Route 1. Barkley township. Rensselaer, Ind. FOB SALE—Small residence on South Weston st Cheap if taken at once. Phone 478-Green. FOR SALE —Hand power elevator. B. S. Fendig. FOR BALE—-Latest style, visible Smith Pemier type wnter. Two colored ribbon. In excellent condition. Price $35.00 eash or $40.00 on $5.00 monthly payments. Louis M. Hamilton. FOR SALE —Good residence lot 50x225 feet, in good location. W. E. Daniels. FOR SALE —Beckwith piano, nearly new, or will, trade for livestock. Bargain if taken at once. Oscar Willi* lll aon. Phone 27. FOR SALE —Cheap if taken at once, coal and wood heater, oil stove with oven, aids one Reed gocart, baby bed, good as new. Mrs. Frank Turner. FOR SALE —200 shocks, corn and fodder. HL 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 winter* and high fuel and coal bills. —Harvey Deviation. FOR SALE—Or will trade for mall property in town, 160 acres of land- Fann lies 3 miles for a town, on stone road. Will rent for $5 an acre, cash rent. SIOO an acre.— Walter Lynge, phone 455.
FOR SALE —A few Shetland ponies. See Walter Lynge, Phone 455. WANTED. WANTED—-To bay veals, live ox dress r 4 Phone 160-Black. WANTED — Girl for general housework. Good wages. Call ■tore or house at once. Wm. Traub FOR RENT. FOR RENT—4 or 5 rooms in residence, two blocks of court house. Both coal house, garage, fruit trees and garden. Small family preferred. Lucy Clark. Phone 852.
FOB BENT—9 room house, elee* trie lights and city water, 3 blocks from sqiare.—Dr. F A. Turfler FOB BENT —7 room house on Front st,; cellar, cistern, city water fruit trees and chicken park on place. 1% blocks south of postoffice. Mrs. Mark Hemphill. Phone 242. ■, ' * WANTED —Salesman capable of earning >l5O or more per month. Fine opportunity for man acquianted with Indiana trade to establish per* manent and profitable business. Stetson Oil Company, Cleveland, O. WANTED—Work on farm by married man, beginning March 1. Jaff Bandolph. Phono 919*0.' ~~FOB BENT—Six room house lights and water. $lO per month. Call Phono 444. v
LOST. LOST—In hotel, Friday, between 8 and 9 o'clock a. m., a pocketbook containing $36 in money and a check .for $19.55. Reward. Return to this office. LOST—Cameo pin on Washington street. Finder please- return to Mrs. C. W. Hanley or this office. LOST—Black purse containing several dollars, between Red Cross headquarters and grammar school building. Owner’s name inside. Phone 829-Green or leave at this office. LOSY—Pair shell frame, round lens glmses, between Aix and my residence. Phone 811-M or leave at Republican office. B. Williams. MISCELLANJEOui MONEY **"TO LOAN—Chas. J Dean A Son. MONEY TO LO AN— 5 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 im-» prove 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. JUST OUT —The new Kentuckian war song “I'm Rarin’ To Go." By Lon Healy on sale at Jarrette’s Variety Store. MORE PIANO PUPILS WANTED—I now have more time to devote to teaching music and can handle a few more piano pupils. Rosebelle Daugherty. Phone 11lBlack.
CANDIDATES ANNOUNCEMENTS For Sheriff Gail Michal, of Walker Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Sheriff of Jasper County. Subject to the decision of the Republican votes at the coming primary election. Gail Michal. John E. Robinson, of Marion Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination • for Sheriff of Jasper County. Subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the coming primary election. John E. Robinson. Don’t forget the date of the Thompson-Hollingsworth sale—February 25 th. I will sell at the K. Zillhart sale, to be held Saturday, February 23, six O. I. C. sows. DAVID ZEIGLER. James N. Leatherman went to Keswick, lowa Thursday evening, where he will attend a big pure bred Hampshire hog sale. See Chas. Pefley for trees, vines and shrubs of all kinds. Guarantee stock to grow or replace free of charge. For spring delivery. The last number of the lecture course held at the Christian church last evening was well attended and the church was full. Extra chairs had to procured to take care of the audience.
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. Mr .and Mrs. Walter E. Rich, of Indianapolis, who were the guests Thursday and today of the families of Harry Hartley and L. H. Hamilton, continued to Remington today, where they will be the guest of relatives and friends. Anyone wishing to see me will find me in the Trust A Savings Bank os Saturday afternoons.—H. 0. Harris, phone 134. The passing of the heavy snow means more activity in land sales. This spring- -is sure near is assured by the fact that the Meyers and Son real estate firm have already made several deals, including the sale of the forty acres in Walker township belonging to- Mrs. Ida M. Vore to John Gustafser and D. E. Nelson. CASTOR IA hi Use
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COUSIN JASPER’S TEXAS FRIEND
Little Cousin Jasper he Haint got nothin’ ’tall on me; Cause he lives in* Rensselaer, An* I live ’way in Texas here. Our state’s big as Germany is; An’ he can’t say that ’bout his. W’y Kelly Field is purt nigh near Twice as big as Rensselaer. In Rensselaer they may be lakes An’ wil’ ducks, an’ rattle-snakes, But he can’t hear no airplanes roar Like we can here, ner Signal Corps. I bet if Cousin Jasper went An’ camped here in a army tent, He’d see things here ’at makes his eyes Bulge out purt nigh twice their size. An’ when a norther comes down here An’ they come fifty times a year, You can’t see nothing hardly ’tall, ’Cause the dust prevents it all. W’y you can swim the whole year through ’Cept northers makes it too cold to An’ it haint snowed but wunst this years, Ner. hardly rained sense I been -here. An Kelly Field has got a band ’At’s better’n all in this here land; An they march down th’ road an’ Play Purt nigh nearly every day. An’ we got palm tree here, 1-jings, An’ arm’ dillas an’ lots o’ things; An’ keyots an’ broncs an* Teaxs steers, An’ jack-rabbits an’ some wil’deers. I bet if Cousin Jasper had A chance to live here, he’d be glad; ’Cause he haint got no meskeet there Ner cactus plants in Rensselaer.
Wisk’t I could go to Rensselaer An’ 'nen bring Cousin Jasper here; An’ show him how good our state is Nen he’d wish ’at it was his. The above poem should be of interest to Rensselaer people. It was' written by Lieutenant James H. Shaffer, of Newburg, West Virginia. Mr. Shaffer received his commission in the second officer training camp at Fort Harrison, Indianapolis, Ind., and is now stationed at Kelly Field, South San Antonio, Texas. Mr. Shaffer was an admirer of the writings of James Whitcomb Riley, and wrote these verses as a Texas lad’s answer to Riley’s poem “Little Cousin Jasper.”
Fred Schultz announces that he will hold a public sale on Friday, March 1, 1918. Miss Madeline Abbott went to Delphi today. T. W. Wynegar went to Chalmers on. business today. Mrs. Lewis Hoker went to Lafayette to visit her sister. Mrs. Frank Tobias and father, Wm. Dixie, are spending today, in Chicago. Mrs. Anglela Luers went to Kouts today to visit her son, Joseph Luers and family. Miss Martha Steller and brother returned to' their home after a visit with Mrs. Allan Gwin. - - -- - 0 Rev. Strecker, pastor of the M. E. church, went to Lafayette today to attend a patriotic meeting. Helen Gerard who attends Monnett school, went to her home at Lafayette, to visit over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Milliron returned today after a two weeks’ visit in Mississippi. Mr. Milliron was well pleased with his Mississippi farm and reports the Jasper county colony as getting along nicely. Editor Bartoo was over from Remington today. Brother Bartoo is such an amicable fellow to meet that we cannot understand why now and then some remark gets into the Remington Press that does not seem to reflect the pleasant disposition of our friend. Judging from some of these remarks one would think that some one in Remington really was a little sore at the people at Rensselaer. Possibly this is all a mistake. There should be only the very ’best of feeling between the people of the two towns. FRIDAY LOCAL MARKET. Oats, 85c; wheat, $2; rye, $2; eggs, 45c; spring roosters, 24c; old roosters, 12c; butterfat, 50c.
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WM. L. WOOD WILL AGAIN MAKE RACE
Kentland Enterprise. William L. Wood, of Rensselaer who represented Jasper and Newton counties in the lower house, of the Indiana General Assembly last year, announces that he will be a candidate for re-election. - In reaching this conclusion Mr. Wood states that he believes his experience in making laws is worth something to his constituents, and that he feels himself better able to represent this district by reason of his experience. Mr .Wood voted right on all the big questions before the last legislature, and this fact made him many friends throughout the district. He is an untiring worker and gave all his time in the interest of the district and in attempting to place good laws on the statute books. His renomination would be a credit to the Republican party of Jasper and Newton counties.
TESTING SEED CORN
By G. I. Christie, State Food Director. The sand or sawdust box for testing seed corn is much older than the rag doll tester which was described yesterday and has been used for some years by Indiana firms and farmers who have tested their seed. This is a substantial and convenient method. The box is a wooden tray about two and a half inches deep, two and a half feet long and two feet wide, strung with light wire one and three quarters inches apart each way and an inch and a half above the bottom. The tray is filled up to the wires with moist sand, sawdust or earth. The cross wires permanently mark off the surface of the Sand into squares, each of which serves to hold the kernels to be tested from a single ear. This tester will accommodate about two and a half bushels of seed ears at one time. When making tests extreme care must be taken to mark or in some way arrange the ears in the test so that the ear belonging to a certain square in the tester may be readily located. The test should be made with about five kernels taken from various parts of the ear.
Moisture Essential. After the kernels have been placed, the material in the tester must be kept thoroughly moist. Sand is preferred because it is clean and easily kept in good condition, but course earth or sawdust will answer the purpose. When mostening is necessary after the kernels ’ have been placed, a towel or other cTotlTsfiould be spread on the surface and the water poured gently on top, so as not to displace any of the grains. In removing the cloth, care must be taken not to lift any of the kernels out of place. It is best to use some sort of cgver for the tester so as to keep the surface from drying out, but it should not fit closely, as the germinating kernels require considerable air. Window glass makes the most satisfactory cover. The filled tester should be placed in a room where the temperature ranges about 70 degrees and does not get colder than 50 during the night. It should not be placed near a stove or radiator. All kernels that do mot send out vigorous root and stem-sprouts within four or five days under these conditions are too weak to germinate under ordinary field conditions and the ears from which they came should be discarded.
SHIPBUILDERS WANTED
A very fervent appeal is being made by Mr. Hurley who has in charge the task of providing a way by which to get our men, our munitions and food over to the battle front. He claims we have the soldiers, the munitions of war and the food, but we are handicapped from bottoms in which to transport them to France and Italy. There should be a large number of mechanics, carpenters, blacksmiths and other laborers in Jasper county who would be able to get out in this most vital. They are urged to sacrifice the conveniences of their home and go to the ship yards of the nation and do the work that is sure to bring success to the allied arms.'
Take this matter up with Ray D. Thompson, who is the enrolling Chairman. By doing service in this way you can serve your country as effectively as to enter the army or navy. The wages given in the shipyards are high. You can depend upon being “taken care of by having splendid quarters and the very best of food. <• / , ■ > /7- .. ■■
For you that haven’t teeth —Call i phone 647 for your beef. C. H. I Leave!. I
COME AND SEE US - -r— —in eur - Elegant New Home THE TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK Capital Stock SIOO,OOO Surplus and undivided profits $12,500 Officers: Charles G. Spitler, President. Edd J. Randle, Vice-President. Judson J. Hunt, Secretary-Treasurer. C. H.Mills, Assistant Secretary-Treas. —i— - ‘ I ■ ■■■■- II ■■■ . 111 ■■ - -" Wl -" The Bank on the Corner and on. the Square
Excellent Home-Made Cough Medicine
If You Don’t Find Glando Pine the Best Cough Medicine You Eve” Had in the Home, Your Money will be Cheerfully Refunded If you could buy four sacks of food flour for the price of one would you hesitate? We are making you the same offer on our cough remedy; four times as much for 50 cts. as ls you bought the ready made kind, and guaranteed to give satisfaction. Could you ask more? You might combine all the other pines that are used for coughs and colds then you could not hope to have a cough remedy equal to our Glando Pine. . Glando rtne is recommended for coughs, colds, hoarseness, Bronchial affections, croup, throat irritations or any condition where a good cough remedy is needed. It relieves the spasmodic coughing in wooping cough. The first dose of Glando Pine relieves. It opens up the air cells and makes you breathe deep and easy. Children like to take it. Mr. Shearer, owner of the machine shop of Haveland, Ohio, gives the following testimony: “My son had a cough for several years. We began to think his case was hopeless. He got no relief until he used Glando Pine. Three bottles cured him. I believe Glando Pine saved his life.” Ask your druggists for three ounces of Glando Pine (50 cts. w irth). Thio will make one pint of excellent cough medicine. Directions with each bottle. * Manufactured by the Glando-Ald Co., Fort Wayne, Ind.
METHODIST CHURCH NOTES. 9:30 Sunday school. 10:45 Morning worship and sermon by the pastor. 6:00 Epworth League. Topics; “Our Duty As Americans.” Leader Henry Platt. 7:00 Evening worship and sermon by the pastor. Kindly remember that is means much whether you attend the services of the church or not.
SALE DATES. 23rd, K. Zillhart 25th, Clarence Garriott 25th; Thompson and Hollingsworth. 26th, James Barber. 26th, Napoleon Budreau. 27th, B T. Lanham and J. U. Hiss. 28th, H. W. Marble. 28th, J. W. Phares and N. Selby. March: Ist,Fred W. Schultz. 4th, Fred Bartels. PUBLIC NOTICE. The public library of this city will be opened from 10 a. m. until 6 p. m. on all week days. The building will be closed on Sunday and is not to be opened for any purpose. This order effective until further notice. Rensselaer Public Library Board, Per Judson J. Hunt, Pres. ABUNDANCE OF MONEY I can loan you all the money you want on that farm. My rate is 5 per cent and my limit is SIOO per acre.—p. D. Wells. Morocco, Ind. You can buy some splendid work horses of Fred Schultz at his sale on Monday, March 1, 1918. By that time spring work will be at hand.
COLDS, GRIP, TONSILITIS DON’T SUFFER—USE GLANDO f TONIC, THE RELIABLE Cure your colds, grip and tonsilitis. Don’t let them hang on and wreck your health. Glando Tonic is guaranteed to break up these diseases quicker than any other known remedy. If sore throat“hocompany colds or grip. Glando Gargle should be used in connection with Glando Tonic. Prepared by the Gland-Aid Co., Tort Wayne, Ind., and sold by druggists. Price $0 cents.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Rev. J. Budman Fleming, Minister. 9:30 Sunday school. 10:45 Morning worship and sermon, subject; “Get Down to Brass Tacks.” There will be no evening on account of fuel conservation. BAPTIST CHURCH. Sunday, February 24th. 9:30 a. m. Sunday scholo. 10:45 a. m. Morning worship and preaching. “Spiritual Christianity.” SERVICES AT MILROY. 2:00 p. m. Sunday school. 3:00 p. m. Preaching. SERVICES AT PARR. 10:00 a. m. Sunday school. 6:30 p. m. Christian Endeavor. 7:00 p. m. Installation of the officers of the Christion Endeavor. The Parr Baptist church will hold a revival meeting, beginning Monday, February 25 th. Evangelistic services every evening in the church, preaching by Rev. S. L. Essick, of Young America. Indiana.
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. AU city service 25c per trip. Prompt and courteous service Rendered. W. L. Frye, proprietor Phones 107 and 369.
chloago ana the West, OirHiMnlii Cincinnati u 4 the South, BoutovUlc and Fraanh Zdck Bprtagc. jsxeano, xmaawavoun » nova*. ▼PM by. ~SOUTHBOUND. Louisville and French Uok. \ No. 3 11:13 Indianapolis and Cincinnati. Na » 1:44 »» Louisville and French Uok. Na 3 10:31 am Indianapolis and Cincinnati. No. 37 11:13 am Ind’polia, Cincinnati and French Lick. No. 33 1:17 pm Lafayrite and Michigan City. Na 33 ...T ....... 1:30 pm Indianapolis and Lafayette. No. 31 7:Blpm NORTHBOUND. Na 83 Chicago 4:31 am Na 4 Chicago •:•! am Na 43 CMoago (anemn.) 7:30 am Na St Chicago 13:33 am BW=Bl For tickets and further information call on W. H. Beam, Agmt,
