Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 83, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 April 1918 — Page 4
• ■ • • 0 . ST'ZfrMsfzJ THE UNIVERSAL CAR \ Used Car Sale We have the following used cars. • 1 Ford Truck. 2 Ford Roadsters. 1 Maxwell Touring car. Make it a point to see us. It will pay you to investigate these bargains. Ask about our easy payment plan on new cars. .... CENTRAL GARAGE CO. Phone 319.. Rensselaer, Ind. Buy a bond and save a boy.
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN ■nanvr AMD BXMI-WESKX.Y nT,*BT * BAMIDTOM - - Publishers txs pbxsat ISSUE SI BEOTOAS WSSXST EDITIOM. Semi*Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1. 1817, as second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana. Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1887, as second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act of March 3, 1878. SATES EOS DISPLAY ADV METIS IMG Daily, per inch .* 15c Semi-Weekly, per inch 18c SUBSCBIPTIOM SATES. Daily by Carrier, 10 cents a week. By Mail, 33.50 a year. Semi-Weekly, in advance, year, $2.00. BATES POB CLASSIFIED ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 25 cerits. Additional space pro rata.
CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Beans, $7.50 per bu. Wm. Jordan. Telephone 922-F. 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 in any 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 —Good timothy hay $25 per ton in barn. G. M. Wilcox, Supt. Jasper County Farm. 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—Few settings of White Wyandotte eggs. Phone 901-G. R. J. Burns. FOR SALE —Single comb white Orpington eggs, $1 per setting. C. W. PostUß Fhoiie 328. FOR SALE—At bargain. One 1 15-10 gas and kerosene tractor and one four bottom John Deere tractor plow. Reason for selling, poor health. B. T. Lanham, R. D. 4, Rensselaer. Phone 943-B. FOR SALE OR RENTr-Small residence on Weston street: large garden and good location. Telephone 314-Green. John Daniels. ■ FOR SALE—One sorrel mare, in foal, and number of shoats and brood sows. J. S. Lakin. Parr store. 952-G.
FOB SALE—SIOO Monarch Malleable range as good as new. Bargain if taken at once. Ed Gaffield. FOB SALE—6-room modern bungalow. Phone 445. FOE SALE—Boan horse, 8-years old, wt. 1400 and colt about one week, both sound. Mrs. Bennie King, Parr, Ind. FOB SALE—New 2-bumer Perfection oil stove. Mr. J. C.. Carmichael Phone 491-White. FOB 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 billr. —Harvey Davission. FOB SALE—The Mrs. E. L. Clark residence on Van Bensselaer street. One of the best locations in the city, near schools and churches, unproved streets, good sewer, city water, lights and bath. A bargain. Leslie Clark. FOB SALE—Onion sets, 4 qts. for 25c; also rural seed potatoes. Alfred Donnelly. Phone 903-D.
FOR SALE—Axminster rug, 11.3 xl2. Phone 490-Red. Mrs. C. B. Smith. FOR SALK —Setting eggs from White Plymouth Rock stock, farm range, 75c for 15. J. M. Johnson. Phone 929-H. 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 455. FOR SALE —New home-grown timothy seed. James Walter, phone 387. potted flowers; also elegant cut flowers. Osborne Floral Co. Phone 439. WANTED. WANTED Upholstering and furniture repairing. Phone 218 or 437. —Men to cut timber, 2 miles east of Mt. Ayr, Six months steady work at good wages. Smith & Bell. Mt. Ayr Telephone 60, call for Charles Craig. WANTED —Woman tor housework. Margaret Halligan. WANTED Girl for general housework. Mrs. Geo. F. Meyers. Phone 522. WANTED—Tractor to plow 80 acres pasture land, free of stumps and rocks. Shelby Comer.
Wanted—Girl for general house work. Thomas Callahan, phone 210. WANTED —To ,do your hauling. Have a large motor truck. Harry E. Gifford. WANTED—Cream. Will pay the highest market price. Also highest market price for produce. J. S. Lakin. Parr store. 932-G. WANTED—6 young men and 3 boys to learn furniture upholstering. Good steady job the year round. Columbia Furniture Company. WANTED—To buy veals, live or dressed. Phone 160-Black. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—The Stocksick residence on Weston street. R. A. Parkison. Phone 227. FOR RENT —Fine thoroughly moaern, eight room residence with garage. occupied by 0. S. Penrod. Ready Ma J* A. Leopold. FOR RENT —Six room house, lights and water. $lO per month. Call phone 445. 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 I house, garden, chicken park, wood house and barn. Mrs. A. J. Abbott, 905-J. . .FOR RENT—S-room house to small family, two lots, garage, fruit trees and garden; 2 blocks from court house. Rent cheap to right party. Inquire at Dunlap boarding house. Phone 352.
FOE' BENT—B-room house; electric lights, hard and soft water, bath room, garden fenced in, 4 acres of ground, pasture for 3 cows with hog tight fence and two chicken houses. Mrs. Emma York. Phone 329-Bed or 77. FOB BENT OB SALE—4 room cottage with large garden plot Call phone 866 or Chas. W. Platt FOB BENT—Eight room remodeled modern residence on North Cullen St Dr. F. A. Turfler. FOE BENT—Furnished room with bath. Phone 540. *- miscellaneous’ farm loans.—John A. Dunlap. . .TO EXCHANGE—A house in Brook, Ind., for horses. Guy Meyers, Kniman, Indiana,
TUB BTBFSIia BUPUBUCAK. MWBMBABB. IBP.
PASTURE— I have some good pasture and can take both cattle and colts. Yearlings up to 600 pounds, $1 per month; above 600, $1.25 a month. Colts, $1.50 per month. Will care for them until middle of November. John Eilta, Rensselaer, R. F. D. LOST—Brant, with one broken. Liberal reward will be given for its return. Mrs. S. R. Nichols. Phone 517. * - , ■ ESTRAY —Black duroc hog, wt. 250. Last seen in Gorman neighborhood. Jamies Walter. Phone 387. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas J. Dean & Son. OWN YOUR OWN HOME—The Rensselaer Building, Loan and Savings Association makes loans .to those desiring Xo 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 FeUows Building, Rensselaer, Indiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Harrington, of Virgie, were in Rensselaer today. The nation has raised its pledges of Liberty loan dollars to $691,611,800. Mrs. Ida J. Coe came down from Chicago this morning for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Jay W. Stockton. Miss Lucy Wood, who had been a teacher in the Mt. Ayr schools, returned to her home in Marion today. E. M. Laßue, C. P. Moody, Firman Thompson, Samuel Fendig and C. P. Wright went to Chicago this morning. Father William Hordeman, of Frankfort, who had been visiting relatives here, went to Parr today to visit his brother, Peter Hordeman. Four American league clubs opened their 1918 campaign Monday. The Red Sox upset the Athletics 7 to I,' and the Yanks trounced Washnigton 6 to 3. C. H. Stucker and Frank Coovert, of Mt. Ayr, were in Rensselaer today. Mr. Stucker’s friends are pushing him for the Republican nomination for trustee Of Jefferson township, Newton county. 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. Gerald Hollingsworth returned from Chicago Monday, where he hac gone to inquire as to what day he was tp report at the Naval Reserve station. His reporting date is April 18th. Harry Hartley, manager of the Farmers’ Grain Co. of this city, Michael Kanne, a director of the same company and E. G. McCollum, of Wolcott, secretary of the Farmers’ Elevator Association of the state, went to Telodo, Ohio, to look after a drier for the elevator here. Frank Leach, of LaPorte, Phillip Leach and sister, Mrs. Cora Martin, of Chicago, were here today to see their sister, Mrs. Ed. Faye, who is very seriously ill at the hospital with pneumonia. Miss Lucy Van Hook was taken to Chicago this morning, where she will undergo an operation at Esley hospital. She has a uncle, who is a doctor at this hospital. Her mother, Mrs. Russell Van Hook accompanied her there. Dennis Shea, former sheriff of Vigo county, serving a five year sentence in the federal penitentiary at Fort Leavenworth in connection with the Terre Haute election frauds has been granted a parole. When Shea obtains his freedom, Don Roberts, mayor of Terre Haute at the time of his conviction, will be the last of the fifteen men remaining at the prison who was connected with the frauds. CASTO RIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years
NOTICE UPHOLSTERING and FURNITURE REPAIRING By experienced men—old furniture made new. • Do your bit—help win the war—get your old furniture repaired. All Work Guaranteed The best of reference Tel. 218 or 437
For Sheriff Michal, •< Walker T.vmship. You will please announce my name „ a candidate for the Republican nomination for Sheriff of Jasper county, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. Gall Michal. John B. BoMnsoa, 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 primary election on May 7, 1818. John El Robinson. True D. Woodworth, es Marlon Twp. 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 primary election on May 7, 1818. True D. Woodworth. Jk A. Mannon, of Marlon Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for sheriff of Jasper county, subset to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. L. A. Harmon. For Auditor Schuyler O. Robinsen, es Gillam Twp. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for office of county auditor, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. Schuyler C. Robinson.
For Assessor O. Thernton, of Mewton Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of county assessor, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. G. L. Thornton. For Surveyor Edgar ». Xesbitt, of Barkley Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of coun.ty surveyor, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. Edgar D. Nesbitt. For Treasurer John Biggs, of Wheatfield Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of county treasurer, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. John Biggs. For Clerk Circuit Court Jesse Michols, of Marlon Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Clerk of Jasper circuit court, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. Jesse Nichols. R. Xi. Budd, of Union Township. Please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of clerk of the circuit court of Jasper county, subject to the decision of the Republican voters of Jasper County at the primary election May 7, 1918. R. L. Budd. For County Commissioner Bart Amsler of Marion Township Please announce tny name as a can didate for the Republican nomination for the office of County Commissioner of the second district of Jasper County, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election on May 7, 1818. Bert Amsler.
Township Trustee Milroy Township O. L. Parks Please announce to the voters of Milroy township that I will be a candidate* for township trustee subject to the decision of the Republican voters of Milroy township. G. L. PARKSL Trustee of Marion Township Charles W. PestlU Obedient to the wishes expressed by the Republican voters in a meeting recently held at the court house, I have decided to be a candidate for the Republican nomination for trustee of Marlon township, subject to the decision of the primary election to be held May 7, 1818. Charles W. PostllL Baa W. Waymire. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of trustee of Marion township, subject to the decision of the Republican voters of that township at the primary to be held May 7, 1818. Dan W. Waymire. For Representative W. L. Wood, of Jasper County. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Joint Representative for Benton, Newton and Jasper counties, subject to the decision of the Republican voters, of these, counties at the primary election May 7, 1918. W. L. Wood.
Burke Walker, of Benton County. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Joint Representative of Benton, Newton and Jasper counties, subject to the decision of the Republican voters of these counties at the primary election. May 7, 1918. Burke Walker. —— Milroy Township For Assessor Please announce our names as candidates for the Republican nomination for the following; offices of Milroy township, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election May 7, 1811: Trustee, William V. VanNatta; Assessor, Charles A. Lytle. Members of Advisory board, W. C. Gil- 1 more; S. E. Johnson and Mason M. * Barlow. Trustee Keener Township Tunis Snip, of Keener Township. You will please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for trustee of Keener township, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election May 7, 1818. Tunis Snip.
Barkley Township O. G. Baker, of Barkley Township. t Having- been appointed by the auditor of Jasper county to fill the vacancy' caused by the resignation of Andi Potts, I desire to announce my name as a candldiate for th? Republican nomination for assessor of Barkley township, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election May 1. 1»1«. O. G. Baker. ( For Trustee Union Township Georye M. v<wwrtna Please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of trustee of Union township, -
“ Your Bread Troubles will vanish if you will use O’Riley’s Golden Loaf Bread. Have you tried our delicious Marshm allow Roll? Nothing Finer. e 1 O’RILEY
OH! MY BACK! The Expression of Many a Kidney Sufferer in Rensselaer. A stubborn backache is cause to suspect kidney trouble. When the kidneys are inflamed and swollen, stooping brings a sharp twinge in tlie small of the back, that almost takes the breath away. Doan’s Kidney Pills revive sluggish kidneys—relieve aching backs. Here’s Rensselaer proof: Mrs. R. W. Burris says :“I was suffering from a steady ache in my back and could hardly move without having knife-like pains through my kidneys. When I went to stoop over to tie my shoes or get up out of a chair, that pain caught me. My head ached and I felt nervous and tired. I was often so dizzy I could hardly stand. My kidneys acted too often and caused me much distress. I used several boxes of Doan’s Kidnew Pills and they nut me in good shape.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Dont simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Burris had. Foster-Milbum Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. W • _ Lieut. J. A. Meyers, who has spent his leave with his family here left today for his station. O. P. Wiley, of Lafayette, came today for a visit with his daughter, M. M. Crowder. Lester Rich came Monday evening from Indianapolis for a snort visit with friends here. subject to the decision of the Republican voters of that township at the primary to be held May 7. 1818. George H. Hammerton. For Prosecutor 30th Judicial District J. O. Murphey, of Mewton County. Please announce my name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of prosecuting attorney of the Thirtieth Judicial District, subject to the decesion of the primary election to be held May 7, 1818. J. C. Murphey.
i The U.S. Food Administration L writes, urging that we help ||] Il them bring to the attention of our customers the im« .1 portance of saving wheat. gl||| Use Calumet k Baking Powder J with Corn and Other Coarse E Flours. And you will have | |l|| satisfactory, wholesome l *||| results. Ji J Calumet Baking Pow- if L der saves three ways: • TH You save when you buy it. J|| J You‘save when you use it. |HI* dill ou **** materials it is used with. True economy lb. |L Cost—in Use —in Time. U Th e Army and Navy Use It 1 ii||| Save All the Wheat You j I Can and Help Our Allies ■ WAR-TIME J J Recipe Book L If Free —send for it today nB *l| Calumet Baking Powder Co. Ji J 4100 Fillmore St Chicago, Illinois
Ed. Oliver returned to Chicago this morning. Thomas Thornton, of Lafayette, came to Rensselaer today. Don’t forget that the Jackies’ band will be in Rensselaer next Friday. A. O. Yeoman, ■ of Kingman, Kansas, come today for a visit with relatives. See Chas. Pefley tor trees, vines and shrubs of all kinds. Guarantee stock to grow or replace free of charge. For spring delivery. Miss Monta Oglesby went to Gary today for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Oglesby, after a two months visit here with her aunts, Missess Grace and Fame Haas. Anyone wishing to see me will find me in the Trust & Savings bank on Saturday afternoons. H. O. Harris, phone J 84. HR x... IZyW WITH EVERY SWALLOW comes a keener appreciation of the superiority of our soda. The real fruity flavor, the icy coldness, the bubbling life of the water itself combine to make a beverage which-. when once tasted, lingers pleasantly in the memory. Don’t miss having a glass today. VERN NOWELS.
