Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 76, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 April 1918 — Page 4
THE VNIVERSAL CAR There will only be one half the usual amount of new Fords offered for sale this season—the wise ones are baying now. We will deliver a new car to you for less than S2O0 —and allow you to pay the balance in EASY PAYMENTS to suit your convenience. ASK US CENTRAL GARAGE CO. Phone 319. Rensselaer, Ind. i Buy a bond and save a boy.
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN iiatt.T JJKS BBU-WEEUT nr-amg ft HAXUiIOH - - Publishers the rmxsAT issue is beotlab WEEKLY EOIZIOV. Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1 1887, as second class mall matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1887, as second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana, hinder the act of March 3, 1879. maxsb yob display advertising Daily, per inch Ijjc Semi-Weekly, per inch ..18c SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Daily by Carrier, 10 cents a week. By Mail, 83.50 a year. Semi-Weekly, in advance, year, 32.00. RATES POR CEASSHIED ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 25 cents. Additional apace pro rata.
CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Reasonable, 5-pas-senger Overland automobile; has had but little use. Maude Daugherty. Phone 266-White. 1 * FOR SALE—Pure bred Bourbon tom turkey. Several pure bred White Wyandotte Cockerels. Joe Norman, phone 910-L. FOR SALE—No. 1 baled timothy hay sold i nany amount at Rowles and Parker’s farm, $25 per ton. Arthur Mayhew. ~FOR~SALE—I9I7 model Ford with winter top. Nearly new. City Transfer Co. Phone 107 or 869. FOR SALE—Forty tons es tame hay. James Halligan, 914-H. FOR SALE —Good timothy hay $25 per ton in barn. G. M. Wilcox, Supt. Jasper Cottnty Farm. FOR SALE —Seven pure bred white leghorn pullets. G. B. Porter. Phone 568 or 95. . FOR SALE—Two iron bedsteads, spring and matresses, davenport, good as new, library table, good as new, green plush lounge, 2 tables, cot, wardrobe and other articles. George Green. Phone 458-Red. FOR SALE—New Oliver No. 6 typewriter. A. E. Wallace, phone 568.
FOB SALES —Five room house and 4ft. lots in Fair Oaks; or will trade for small farm. Address box 263, Rensselaer, Ind. FOB SALES—Good ' recleaned timothy seed, phone 934. —J. Omar Waymire. - FOB SALES —5-year old gelding, weight 1200. ESlias Arnold. Phone 91S-F. , . . FOB SALTS—Good second hand Ford automobile. W. O. Gourley. Phone 651. FOB SALES—Nice strawberry plants delivered at 50c per 100. Mrs. Peek. Phone 947-F. FOB SALES —Good brood mare. L. E. TrusselL _ FOB SALES —Bed yearling Durham bull; eligible to register. William Murfitfc. Brook, phone 138-Q. FOB Bend Malleable range No. 'BIB, in first class condition. A bargain if taken at once. Phone 254. Rev. Asa McDaniels. FOB SALES—Few settings of White Wyandotte eggs. Phone 901-G. R. J. Barns. FOR SALE—Good general purpose mare. Arthur Williamson. Phone 304-Black. FOB SALE —Setting eggs from White Plymouth Bock stock, farm range, 75c for 15. J. M. Johnson. Phone 929-H.
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 Davicaion. FOR SALE—Bed room suite, oil stove, range, cupboard, rugs and other household effects. D. H. Hollister. Phone 444. FpR SALE—Single comb white Orpington' eggs, $1 per setting. C. W. Postill. Phone 328. FOR SALE—The Mrs. E. L. Clark residence on Van Rensselaer street. One of the best locations in the city, near schools and churches, improved streets, good sewer, city water, lights and bath. A bargain. Leslie Clark. FOR SALE—Second hand Oakland automobile at a bargain price. M. 1. Adams. Phone 933-L. FOR SALE—Or will trade for small property in town, 160 acres of land. Farm lies 3 miles from town, on stone road. Will rent for $5 an acre, cash rent. SIOO an acre. Walter Lynge. Phone 465. FOR SALE—New home-grown timothy seed. James Walter, phone 337.
FOR SALE—Beautiful potted flowers; also elegant cut flowers. Osborne Floral Co. Phone 439. WANTED. WANTED—At once, pressers at the A. Roth garment factory. Apply in person. WANTED—Lawn mowers to sharpen. Leave orders at the Wallace & Herath poultry house, opposite McKay’s laundry. D. E. Hallister. WANTED—Good sober man with car to represent an old reliable company in Jasper and Newton counties. Good proposition to right man. For information write E. E. Harris, 150 N. Schyler Ave., Kankakee, IIL Wanted —Girl for general house work. Thomas Callahan, phone 210. WANTED —6 young men and 3 boys to learn furniture upholstering. Good steady job the .year round. Columbia Furniture Company. WANTED—To do your hauling. Have a large motor truck. Harry E. Gifford. WANTED —Man to cut brush. Phone 955-C. Thomas Lang.
WANTED—To buy veals, live or dressed. Phone 160-Black. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—4 acres of ground on edge of town. Cash rent. Chas. A. Battleday. ! Phone 343. FOR RENT—Fine thoroughly modern, eight room residence with garage. Now occupied by O. S. Penrod. Ready May Ist. A. Leopold. FOR RENT—Six room house, lights and water. $lO per month. Call phone 445. FORWENT OR SALE—4 room cottage with large garden plot. Call phone 366 or Chas. W. Platt. FOR RENT—Two business rooms on North Van Rensselaer Street, formerly occupied by Mrs. Purcupile and Col. Healey. A. Leopold. FOR RENT—Eight room house, electric light, hard and soft water in house, garden, chicken park, wood house and barn. Mrs. A. J. Abbott, 90&J. MISCELLANEOUS. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas J. Dean £ Son. MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm tqans.—John A Dunlap. FOUND—3 miles north of Rensselaer, some window casings. Call at this office.
THI EVKNIHG REPUBLICAN. RNNBBKLAER, IKD.
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 pou are paying your landlord pay for your home. Call at our office and talk this over with our Secretary, D. Delos Dean, Odd Fellows Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. . .TO EXCHANGE —A house in Brook, Ind., for horses. Guy Meyers, Kniman, Indiana. FOUND—lnitial link bracelet. Inquire here. FOUND —1918 license plate No. 29868. Inquire here. LOST—Between Rensselaer and James Tyler farm on Hanging Grove road, tail light and license No. 60693. A. H. Hopkins. LOST —Gold monogramed watch fob, attached to leather strap. Call this office or phone 17. TO EXCHANGE—A boose in Brook, Ind., for horses. Guy Meyers, Kniman, bad. Eggs for hatching, from full blood Plymouth Rock chickens. Mrs. Lem Huston. Phone 81.
WOMEN WORKERS GET TOGETHER
All parts of Jasper county were represented Saturday afternoon at the Red Cross* room in the meeting of the county committees and township chairmen of the women’s activities. Every chair was taken and the wide-awake, earnest body of women made plans and outlined work for the next two ’or three months that will keep Jasper county well to the front in the line of women’s war activities. This week i» given to the Liberty Loan drive and Mrs. J. J. Hunt put the women’s opportunity to help by buying bonds in a crisp and telling way that brought immediate response. Reports showed that work has been going forward steadily in the effort to produce and save food and every woman in the county will find it worth her while to co-operate with Miss Geyer, the food demonstrator, who is here to help us solve the food problems. Jasper county, thanks to the home economics club, is one of the twenty counties in the state fortunate enough to have a food demonstrator. Details will be given later of some very interesting plans in child welfare wofk, which are being rapidly developed. Our children should be more carefully guarded now than ever before in order to counter-act the ill-effects of war-time emotionalism.
The second half of the session was given to a practical demonstration of the correct way to fill out the new registration cards for women’s service. This second registration of women, which begins May 19th, will be much more thorough and satisfactory than the first one and a tremendous effort will be made to enroll every woman and giri over sixteen in Jasper county. This registration gives every woman, no matter where she lives, a chance to help Uncle Sam in this war and it gives Uncle Sam an idea of what he can expect from the American women. REMENBER THIS, WOMEN— You are not compelled to register. You will not be asked to leave your home if you register nor be compelled to do any work which you do not want to do, and any stories to the contrary are lies told to hinder you from showing your loyalty and willingness to serve!
LEE.
School closed Saturday with the usual good programme and dinner, which was well attended. Gladys Mann spent Sunday with Hazel Eldridge. A quiet wedding was held Sunday being that of Miss Delma Lefler and Mr. Lonnie Noland at the home of the brides parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Lefler. Buffer Lewis and wife, of Remington, called on Mrs. Ann Rishling Sunday. Elmer Gilmore and family spent Easter with his brother, Walter and family. Ezra Eldridge spent Easter at home. Miss Laurel Anderson is home from her school in Jasper county. Miss Hoover, who teaches the Osborn school, spent Tuesday night at the H. C. Anderson home. Edith Overton called on Velda Heltzel Tuesday afternoon. Frank Overton, wife and son, Mrs. Kate Holman and Mrs. Della Culp autoed to Monticello Wednesday to see Geo. Holman, who is no better. Misses Cloah and Edith Overton Etha Noland, Velda Heltzel, Cora Noland and Mrs. Delma Noland attended the last day of school at the Johnson school Wednesday, Miss Nettie Hess teacher. Mr. Ephrim Gilmore returned Friday afternoon from lowa, where he was called on account of the death of a brother. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Eldridge, of Monon, spent Saturday with their son, J. F. Eldridge.
Mrs. J. E. Harrod and son, Clifford, left for their home at Philadelphia Sunday. The annual banquet under the auspices of Monnett school for Girls will not be given this year, owing to war conditions, instead Dr. W. R. Wedderspoon, of Chicago, will lecture on Friday evening at 8 o’clock at the Methodist church on the subject “Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush.” This will be a worth while lecture to which the public is most cordially invited. No admission, and no appeal for money whatever. Read inside pages. All home print j today.
PARTIAL LIST OF CANDIDATES
NAMES OF PERSONS FILING FOR THE PRINCIPAL OFFICES. V *S State Delegate*—Republican*. J. P. Hammond, Rensselaer, J.-D. Allman, Rensselaer, J. C. Gwm, Rensselaer, H. W. Marble, Wheatfield, George Hascall, Remington, S. G. Hand, Remingtort, Harvey Toben, Remipgton, C. P. Moody, Moody, M. J. Gundy, Fair Oaks, John O’Conner, Kniman. Democrats. E. P. Lane, Rensselaer, John Kohloff, Rensselaer, Cary L. Carr, Rensselaer, J. A. McFarland, Rensselaer, John W. Selmer, Medaryville, Frank W. Fisher, Tefft, A. P. Rainier, Remington. Joint Senator. Dwight M. Kinder. Joint Representative. W. L. Wood, R, Jasper county, H. Van Kirk, R, Newton county, Burke Walker, R, Benton county. For County Office. Republican. S. C. Robinson, auditor. John Biggs, treasurer, G. L. Thornton, assessor. Jesse Nichols, clerk. R. L. Budd, clerk. John E. Robinson, sheriff. True Woodworth, sheriff. L. A. Harmon, sheriff. Gail Michal, sheriff. E. D. Nesbitt, surveyor. W. J. Wright, coronor. Bert Amsler, 2nd dist. com. Will F. Fisher, 3rd dist. com. Charles A. Welch, 3rd dist. com. H. W. Jackson, councilman. Frank M. Hart, councilman. T. J. Prouty, councilman. Wash Cook, councilman. George M. May, councilman. Wester Browdy, councilman. Elmer E. Pullin, councilman. Democrat. B. Frank Alter, auditor. A. D. Hershman, clerk. Vera T. Jacks, sheriff. Wm. I. Hoover, sheriff. W. D. Bringle, treasurer. Leo Worland^:coronor. George W. Casey, assessor. O. K. Rainier, 2nd dist. com. William Wortley, 3rd dist. com. Robert Zick, councilman. C. W. Paxton,, councilman. Samuel Scott, councilman. Percey Hauter, councilman. John Farrell, councilman. Township Trustee. Republican. Barkley, Ralph Johnson. Carpenter, Burdett Porter. Gillam, Benj F. LeFever. Jordan, Julius G. Huff. Hanging Grove, W. E. Poole. Kankakee, Alfred Dugglesby and R. E. Davis. Keener, C. E. Fairchild, Tunis Snip, Henry Swartz and Abe DeKoker, Jr. Marion, C. W. Postill, Dan W. Waymire and J. W. Coen.. Milroy, William VanNatta, Geo. W. Foulks, G. L. Parks and “John Johnson. Newton, John Rush. Union, Geo. H. Hammerton and H. J. Dexter. Walker, John F. Pettet. Wheatfield, Geo. W. Ferguson and Robert A. Mannan. Democrats. Barkley, Grant Davisson. Gillam, John W. Selmer. Hanging Grove, S. B. Snedeker. ■ Jordan, John Kolhoff. Kankakee, Lee E. Glazebrbok. Marion, C. F. Stockhouse. Milroy, Rojr Culp and Chas. Wood. Newton, R. J. Yeoman and John Lonergan. Union, Walter Harrington. Walker, Wm. Stalbaum and V. M. Peer. Wheatfield, John Bowie. , Township Assessors. Republican. Barkley, O. G. Baker and Harry E. Reed. Carpenter, Robert Shearer. Hangin Grove, John L. Osborne. Jordan, James Bullis. Marion, L. P.J3hirer. Milroy, Charles Lytle. Keener, John Greve, W. C. Hanaway and William Hazelcamp. Kankakee, W. F. Neier. Newton, Charles C. Parks. Walker, Charles Scott. Wheatfield, W. E. Boyle. Marion, Louis P. Sbirer. Gillam, J. Wesley Marion. Union, J. W. Humes and Frank Goff. Democrat. Barkley, John E. Cooper. Carpenter, Joseph Graham and E. F. Baxter. Gillman, Jake Johnson. Jordan, A. J. Fleming and Frank Nesius. Hanging Grove, Virgil W. Hobson. Kankakee, Gilbert D. Seegrist. Marion, C. W. Duvall. Milroy, Charles E. Clark and N. E. Digman. Union, W. H. Myers. Walker, Mark Ott. Newton, John W. Pharis. For Prosecuting Attorney. James C. Murphy, R.
Richard R. Wangelin went to Indianapolis today. The Van Rensselaer club will hold their annual election of officers this evening. Francis Walters, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Walters, is very sick at his home on Franklin street. It is feared that he has pneumonia. CASTOR ia For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years ST
vmmw ■i ■ iiiiii i srs IPIaCASTSBIii | For Infants and Children. ISfepßM Mothers Know That ■MpM Genuine Oastoria I Always. / % feMf -(Jl© / ]\vr Signatin^jjj^jr USB Vjr For Over m Thirty Years lißllis C ASTORIA Exact Copy of Wrapper. thc ocmtaur oommnv. nrw York city.
John Eger went to Indianapolis today. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Mecklenburg, of Gary, came Saturday night for an over Sunday visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John' Mecklenburg, and other relatives. Mr. Mecklenburg has a fine position as electrician with the Steel Mills at Gary. Mrs. J. A. Sheedy, who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. Harrod at the Makeever house, left today for Indianapolis, where she will visit with relatives and friends before re-turning-to her home in Pittsburg, Pa. Marguerite Norris returned to Greencastle today, where she will continue her studies in DePauw university. She has spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and MTs. James Norris of this city. For quick results advertise in The Republican
LITTLE GIRLS TRIMMED HATS Come in and look these wonderful values over. A big line to choose from Age 3 to 12 years. $1.48 and $1.98 LITTLE BOYS HATS NOBBY LITTLE STYLES ’ Age 2to 10 years. 29c, 50c, 63c, 75c and SI.OO. Bert Jarrette’s Variety Stores Rensselaer Monon
I HAVE TAKEN OVER THE DODGE AUTOMOBILE AGENCY Will continue to handle these cars in the name of Lynge & Christensen until the expiration of their contract July I* after which date I will handle them in my own name. . „ Have had many other agencies offered me but consider the Dodge the very best proposition offered in the Automobile Line. ~ You will find me at my old stand on South Van Rensselaer Street. William I. Hoover The Old Reliable Auto Salesman. .
Rev. J. Budman Fleming went to Mishawaka today to attend a meeting of . the Presbytery. Joe Fate returned to his home in Crown Piont, after a short visit with friends and relatives here. Mrs. Charles G. Spitler went to South Bend today for a visit with the family of Delos Coen. Mrs. Harry Hartley left this morning for Jackson, Mich., for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Dr. Strong. Mrs. W. H. Grimm returned to her home in LaPorte today, after a visit with the family of Joseph Moore in Barkley township. See Chas. Pefley for trees, vines and of all -kinds. Guarantee stock to grow or replace free of charge. For spring delivery. Try our Classified Column.
