Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 98, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 May 1918 — Page 4

m&M WmfmMwm l mmwmmm "’m WM. ' - ' * - j ' *-a /, m \ |||§||f ,'•• ' Y.’ -('/: • ’’’V’ ‘ .■s'?.. . ••••". Y %%. Vsf|w.:::|s ’•!:.'••-?• ;/•■••/ V ■&$&!& *' *- ' ’■' ~ '' W * ' VV " * j .-. fg§ut I | How can you save wool?- ' 1 V* : j&i;:i£ffJx : %. y&feiifltitffi. **Economy in the consumption of nil the tijfl things needed by the nation for the winning Kof the war —the releasing of labor and materials i|jjj from the pursuits of peace to the business of war —these fundamental necessities of our war Jlgjlf program must be understood by all our people jiltl go/? are to put our whole strength behind our men in France.” ' W§§ ..I*;.-; £f||||i§§ '* (From a statement by the Secretary of the llpljlll •. Treasury > published in the Chicago Tribune.) __i *1 •*« ;’.y j; •; .'y‘;; SAVING wool is one of the things the country | J needs, and it’s one of the things you can do f§jj§ The best way to save wool is to stop, wasting it; fabrics that don’t give long wear are not econ- | m&tem* * f-Vl***v/:'ViJ***.*;.*.*' l J|jj omy; they’re waste . jjjj The economy is in the service that all-wool ,• fabrics give; such clothes wear so much longer, Ml and look so much better, that even at the higher : < : :VVV/.*:. ; .**VVV;V.v » t ; §j|| price they cost less, and wasteless _ Jjjj iMM : ' ' " i®l|! 111 # ■ • That ’ s why we sell all-wool clothes $ jlffllfl jjjj ‘ that’s why Hart Schaffner & Marx jjjj UUft - make them; such clothes save in service |§Bfßl THE G. E. MURRAY CO. A P Rpfr •’ |||§ ; i Ijp % : |g|\V IfX 1/ V: & & /:>;'*•! WM - a : • if K ; / : f •-..:■■■ •;•••■ ••.. . ••• >. : . •■•■■•••. . • . . V;..- * •••'.•'■ '-.i ■■ ■ .KK;:r - • ’. •• •.•.;•••••;. •~r : $$ ' Cpjpyrig}»( f fr'.vVV: *'*' fj ~ f ————^

SAVE WHEAT—USE VEGETABLES We always have the freshest and best in fruits and vegetables. FOR SATURDAY New potatoes Head and leaf lettuce Neiw tomatoes Paismips New cabbage P ie plant Green beans Oranges Radishes Bannas Green onions Lemons Ausparagus Eating apples Extra large grapefruit, 3 for • • • 25c We carry a full line tof flour substitutes. Phone 41. HOME GROCERY

So* Chat. Pefiey tor trees, vines dumbs of all kinds. Guarantee stock to grow or renlace free of nbsiTfr For spring delivery.

Anyone wishing to see me will find me in the Trust ft Savings bank on Saturday afternoons. H. O. Harris, phone IS4. A--Advertise in The Bsyubheeo

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RIMMKLAEE 1H1>«

Frank Hoover jwent to Chicgao on the early morning train. W. H. Gordon went to Gary today to look after employment. Henry Luers and son, Bernard, went to Lafayette on business today. D. E. Warren went to South Bend this morning, where he may accept employment in a harness shop. ■■ V " Vote for No. 29 for sheriff. True D. Woodworth will appreciate your support. (Adv.) Dr. Peter S. Clark returned to Chicago this morning, after attending to some professional matters h s ere. I will appreciate the loyal support of every Republican voter at the primary next Tuesday, May 7. My number is 29. (Adv.) True Woodsworth. Miss Minnie Thomas, Of Peru, came Thursday evening for a visit with- relatives.

Mrs. H. J. Kannal, of Rensselaer, was in Remington Monday and Tuesday giving instruction in surgical dressing. There is a class of thirty a-t present and more coming in later. There is ujiusual interest'and enthusiasm manifested by the four hundred dressings turned out during the twodays and one evening that the instructor was present. The class wil) -meet every evening and every afternoon except Monday and Thursday, which are Red Cross days. There is a great call at present for these dressings and since this last drive, the supply cannot begin to meet the demand. When we realize that sometimes three-hundred dressings are used for one wounded soldier, we can begin to see the extreme need for a large supply aiked for at once. —Remington Press. The Rensselaer Creamery and Produce Company have a thoroughly modern creamery plant, located in the Fendig building across from the postoffice on Front street, and are in a position to give Jasper county farmers highest prices and best service.

WRITE CHEERFUL LETTERS.

Mothers, write more cheerful letters to your sons in uniform! They need messages of encouragement, not doleful forebodings, nor constant reminders of the awfulness of the “great disaster to humanity.” This is the pleading message sent out —not by government officials, but by the boys themselves —-boys that are “over there!” “Don’t help the kaiser by hanging weights on the spirits of your boys who are fighting,” writes Joseph Teter, of the .... Regimeht, United States 1 Marine Corps, now in France. “The boys are all ready to go through with the thing, taking things as they come, but it is the folks back home who seem to be quitters. All of us are getting letters of this sort from our mothers—and I tell you, its mighty disheartening.” Take a tip from this,lad’s earnest plea, Mothers, don’t wail!

For quick results advertise in The Republican. '

REMINGTON.

T. N. Bcicoi’.rt loft Saturday for Shreeveport, La., on a business trip. Charles Farabee and family, of \ Lafayette, were Sunday visitors here. Warner Elmore was in Rensselaer on business Monday. Vernon Julien weijt -to Sheldon Monday for a visit wftlr“relatives. Guy Parsons, of Wolcott, was here Tuesday. Corporal Joe Cullen will speak at the M. E. church next Monday night on his “Three Years in the Trenches,” for the benefit bf the Red Cross. W. E. Johnston and family are visiting friends in Indianapolis this week. The Dorcas club met Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Myers. j Aaron Blake, of Wolcott, was here .Wednesday on business. I Several of the graduating class | will leave Sunday for Terre Haute : to take the normal course. Miss Ruth Stoudt is home from Chicago, where she has been study-' ing music the past six months. . Marion Sutherland went to Lafayette Wednesday to attend the 'Purdue-Illinois ball game. Dr. Besser is furnishing his npw house in the north part of town and has it rented to a young couple that are to be married soon. Maurice Peck has been on the sick list the past week with shingles. The Central Union Telephone crew have ' finished their work here and are n6w working on the lines between here and Goodland. Stewart Huges, of Wolcott, was here Thursday. C. H. Peck and Dr. Robinson went to Oxford Thursday to attend a shoot. Miss Zella Timmons, of Wolcott, spent Sunday here with Winifred Rawlings. G. I. Thomas expects to leave Monday for Rochester, Minn., to take treatment at Mayo Brothers hospital. Wade Fleming, of West Lebanon, • was here on business Thursday. oLwhether they are members of the Dvoell, of Wolcott, were business visitors here Thursday.

A CALL FOR DOCTORS.

In response to a call from the government for the services of .more doctors, we print below a letter issued to the profession by Dr. 0. E. Glick, secretary of the Newton-Jas-per Medical society, which is self explanatory and reads: Kentland, Ind., April 30, 1918. The Surgeon General has*»made a special appeal to Indiana doctors to enlist in the Medical Reserve Corps. To meet the government’s request the Indiana Committee of the Medical Section of the National Council of Defense has planned meetings of every County Society in the State on May 7, the anniversary bf the sinking of the Lusitania. Our meeting will be with Dr. T. E. Collier at Brook on above named date at 8:00 p. m. The state association has assured us they will send us a speaker, if possible a member of the Medical Corps. This call is to every doctor in Jasper and Newton counties, regardless whether they are members of the state and county societies. It is a call from your country to help make this meeting a success, as there are a number of problems that must be worked out by the medical profession as the war goes on and the increased demand for physicians is supplied. Thus it is a patriotic duty to be at this meeting, and to do your bit. No doctor has a right to subordinate his country’s call to his private business. Can we expect you at Brook, May 7th?

STOCK SALE BETWEEN 400 AND 500 HEAD OF CATTLE AND HOGS. 1 will sell at auction on the Ambler Pleasant Grove stock farm, 7 miles southwest of Winamac, on FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1918. . 100 extra good milk cows, 50 with calved at side and the others to be fresh by JuTre--4 < 14 pure bred Holstein cows, all heavy springers. 2 pure bred Holstein males. 1 pure bred Hereford male, 3years old. 15 extra fine Jersey cows, all with calves at side. 25 extra good fat steers averaging 1,000 pounds—on full feed. 75 two-year old and yearling steers—good quality. 30 fat two-year old heifers—on full feed. 70 good stock two-year old and yearling heifers. » 50 to 150 head of hogs. Don’t miss this sale of as fine a bunch of stock as you have seen in many a day. Terms made known on day of sale. J. H. Hepp and others, auctioneers. J. M. BAKER.

Cough MoJlcine Made at Homs 400 Per Cent. Saved Why Pay 92 Par Pint for SyrupT Ask your druggist for three ounces of Glando Pine and add enough syrup to make one pint, and you will have a cough medicine excelled by none. It is easy to prepare, costs but little, and Is pleasant to take. It is splendid for coughs, colds, bronchial affections, and highly recommended for croup. It will relieve the spasmodic coughing in whooping cough. Glando Pine contains the pure form of white pine to which other valuable ingredients have been added. Directions for preparing accompany each bottle. Manufactured.by The Gland-Aid Co., Ft. Wayne,