Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 105, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 May 1918 — Page 4

FORDSON TRACTORS The facts in connection with the °? e jS?rbora d Fordson Tractors in Indiana by Henry Ford & Son, of Dearborn, Michigan, are— • . f The Governor, Janies P. Goodrich, and the State Council of Defense having advised Mr. Ford that the use of tractors in this state is especially necessary this year to secure the maximum quantity of fo^KsTmeasure, and the concurrence in this opinion by the State Food Administrator and the Committee of Food and Conservation, led Mr. Ford to immediately order that one thousand tractors be allotted to Indiana, to be delivered into the State at the rate of one carload of seven each per day. , In order to facilitate the arrangements, the corporation known as the Indiana Tractor Company was organized to handle details from their headquarters, 1327 E. Washington Streep Indianapolis, under the supervision of Professor T. A. Coleman of Purdue University, the State Leader of County Agricultural Agents and to distribute the tractors through the instrumentality of county and loyd dealers and other distributors,direct to the farmers,the whole transaction involving no profit whatsoever to any of the persons contnbut ing their services, nor upon the part of the manufacturer. CENTRAL GARAGE of Rensselaer, Ind. has arrangeed to distribute seven of thfe Fordson Tractors to the farmers in this locality and is hopeful that they will be received the near future. This is a patriotic effort of practical value and will do much towards the winning of the war and the future prosperity of the ' farmers of Indiana.

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN n«n-T abb imu-WMXL? nr-aww » VAimTOI ■ - m fbxday wjuxly edition. Beml-W«akly Republican entered Jan. 1. 18*7. as second class mall matter, at the post office at Rensaelaer, Indiana. Evenins Republican entered Jan. 1, 1887, as second class mall matter, at the postoffice at under the act of March 8. 1878. BATES FOB DXSFDAX ADVEBTISI»G Dally, per inch }•« Semi-Weekly, per inch 18c SVBSGBXFTIOX BATES. DiUy by Carrier, 10 cents a week. By Mail. 88.60 a ysar. Semi-Weekly, in advance, year, |2.00. BATES FOB OUASSXFDBB ADS. Three lines or leas, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 88 centa Additional apace pro rata.

CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALE. FOR SALE —Hatching eggs from heavy laying strain of Silver Campines. They lay in winter when eggs are scarce. SI.OO per 15 or |2.75 per 50. F. J. Putts, one block south of depot. FOR SALE —Pure bred Bourbon tom turkey. Several pure bred White Wyandotte Cockerels. Joe Norman, phone 910-L. > _ FOR SALE —No. 1 baled timothy bay 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 369. FOR SALE —Few settings of White Wyandotte eggs. .Phone 901-G. R. J. Burns. FOR SALF—Single comb white Orpington eggs, $1 per setting. C. W. PostUL Phone S2B. FOR SALE —lffiaa*eaippi 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, coxd winters and high fuel and coal billr. —Harvey’Davisaion.

FOR SALE —Setting eggs from White Plymouth Rock stock, farm range, 75c for 15. J. M. Johnson. Phono 929-H. ■ FOR SALE—Fresh butter and eggs, cottage cheese and cream. Saturday delivery. Henry Paulus. Phone 988-G. FOR SALE —Span of three-year-old mules, $250. Guy Meyers, Kniman, Ind. FOR SALE—A 5-passenger Oyerland automobile, has had but little use. Maude Daugherty, 266FOR RENT OR SALE-yOn easy terms, six room house, light and water. Call 500-Red. FOR SALE—Beautiful potted lowers; also elegant cut flowers. Osborne Floral Co. Phone 489. FOR SALE —Cream delivery each morning. John Du vail. Phone 988-K. FOR SALE —Twin Excelsior motorcycle in excellent condition. A bargain. C. P. Timmons. FOR SALE—Hardy Nursery Sown Salvia only 35c per dozen. slivered at 50c. Catholic Sisters residence. Call phone 40. 1

FOR SALE—Building lot two Hock* from court house. All improvements in. George F. Meyer*. FOR SALE—43 pounds of Hollybrook soy beans. LF. Meader, ftPhone 926-D. FOR SALE—Gas 24 cents. Tires '•old at 50 cents profit Main Garage. FOR SALE—2 months old calf, Hereford stock. Phone 176. , "FOR SALE—Case fertilisertachment for John Deere planter, price $7. James Hall, R. D. 4. FOR SALE —Good general pur-

FOR SALE —Milk, Mrs. Vincent Eisele. Phone 452-Green. "LOST. LOST—Pair brown leather gloves in or near Leeke's hitch barn. Chester Miller. Phone 912-D. WANTED. _ WANTED —Work on farm, boy 18 years of age, can do a man’s work. Earl Gordan. Corner Eliza and Warren St. — I - WANTED —Second hand electric fan. H. F. Parker. WANTED—-200 shotes, from 25 to 100 pounds. C. L. Morrell. Phone 632.

WANTED—Paper hanging, interior and exterior painting of all kinds. F. E. McElheny. Phone 428Black. WANTED — A girl for general house work. Apply to R. W. Burris. WANTED —Girls and woman at the Rensselaer Garment Factory. Good wages to start with and a possibility to increase constantly. We are making much war material. You can be patriotic in a double way. Help make garments for the Red Cross and other activities and you can have money to put in government bonds. Rensselaer Garment Factory. WANTED —Tractor to plow 80 acres pasture land, free of stumps and rocks. Shelby Comer. 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 8 boys to learn furniture upholstering. Good steady job the year round. Columbia Furniture Company.

FOR RENT—6-room house, garage, city water and lights. Cistern water in house. $lO per month. A. Halleck. FOR RENT—6 room modern house, 2 blocks from court house. John A. Dunlap. Phone 16. FOR RENT—A five room house. Lee Ramey. Phone 441-White. FOR RENT—The Protestant Methodist church building north of ight plant. Geo. F. Meyers. FOR RENT—House, out-buildings, and garden on farm. Cheap rent. Possession at once. George F. Meyers. 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 phono 445. » ■ .... ....... ■■ I. I HU—FOR RENT—Two business rooms on North Van Rensselaer Street formerly occupied by Mrs. Purcupile and Col. Hratey. A. Lw»oia.

FOR RENT—B-room house, electric lights, soft water and bath, garden fenced in, 4 acres of ground, pasture for 3 cows, hog tight fence, 2 chickens houses. House including pasture S2O per month. On Milroy avenue. Phone 829-Red or 77. . .FOR RENT—S-room house to small family, two lots, garage, fruit trees and garden; 2 block* from court house. Rent cheap to right party, $8 per month. Inquire at Dunlap boarding house. Phone 852. FOR RENT—At a very reasonable price, the Lucy Clark residence property on Westop street. George A. Williams. FOR RENT—Eight room remodeL ed modern residence on North Cullen St Dr. F. A. Turfler. FOR RENT—Modern 8-room house and sleeping porch. Inquire of J. N. Leatherman, First National Bank. I MISCELLANEOUS. . MONEY TO* LOAN—s~per cwt farm wsus Jeb* A. Bunlap.

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Marjorie Conley c»f Newland went to Newcastle, Ind., to visit. Miss Fairy Elliott of Newland spent the day here. Peter Cooper of Kniman went to Hamond this morning. \ j Mrs. J. Nuss of Gifford was here today. ' Mrs. F. M. Walters of Newland was in Rensselaer shopping. Frank Ham made a business trip to Lafayette today. Miss Marguerite trwin went to Logansport for a short visit. Attorney Frank Davis, of Brook, was in Rensselaer today. John O’Connor was down from Kniman and attended the Judson Michals funeral. Mrs. Dave Pettit and Mrs. Frank Miles of Wolcott took the train here for Chicago. Mesdames Clarence and George Bowman of Newland spent the day here. You say the other fellow won’t listen to reason when what you mean is thrat he won’t listen to you. 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

Mrs. Ora T. Ross returned from Indianapolis this morning, where she had, attended the Child Welfare meeting. Get Rid of Your Rheumatism. Now is the time to get rid of your rheumatism. You will find Chamberlain’s Liniment a great help.. The relief which it affords is alone worth many times its cost C. KO DAKERS—Leave your developing, printing and enlarging with the clerk at the Makeever hotel. Two day sevice, good work guaranteed. Orie Potts. In the article in reference to the doctors of Newton and Jasper county, the name of Dr. Frank Hemphill should have been included among those who had offered their services to the government. Whatever makes trousers bag at the knees, it is hardly ever prayer.

SPEEDING UP PRODUCTION Nothing to Worry About If Right Tools are Used In the matter of producing big crops to meet the present demand, we are, of course, confronted by the inevitable bad farm power and farm help question. Perhaps that is one reason why we have paid so much attention lately to the use of farm tractors and in a way have neglected the investigation of other tools for the farm. It can be seen right In this county that much power and much help on the farms are not being used to the best advantage. Increased Crop* Without Increased Labor Take spreaders for instance. The crop averages of this county could be greatly Increased without the addition of another acre, another horse power, or another man, if only the fanners would utilize properly barnyard waste. Perhaps the increase would amount to 15 or 20 per cent, which' von Id be quite enough in many install ■< > .s to pay for the spreaders on about 15 acres of land. Experiments right along these lines have been conducted with such results. As it is, the fertilizer tho farmer has right at hand, barnyard manure, is in many cases either being entirely wasted or is dumped on the fields in such a way that it might almost as well be left to ferment away its ammonia and other valuable pit. foods in the barnyard or fefed lot. Ihive around through the county and you will see this for yourself. This isn’t a matter of tellln r someone else how to run his business, but at this time when economy along all lines is so necessary, such things must be discussed. Unbelievable Waste of Plant Food Doan Davenport cf the University of Illinois in a re- ent issue of one of the best farm papers shows that the annual loss of plant food equals the value of a tract of 500 square miles, equal to 4,000 80-acre farms, sufficient to support 30,000 people. Then, too, Carl Vrooman, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, recently stated that more than a billion dollars’ worth of barnyard refuse is wasted in the United States annually. What arguments those are for good wide spreading manure spreaders on every farm!

Spreader Pays Big Profits This isn’t a matter merely of helping out in increasing the food supply but it’s a matter Of personal profit, too. A spreader pays for itself by its Increased production over hand spreading on only a few acres—say 10 to 15—in one season. It not only does the work better but encourages frequent spreading by saving labor. This means that the manure is gotten out on the fields where it can dry and stop fermenting or else allow the plant food to be leached into the soil where it belongs. We can speed up production without requiring the use of more land, more power, or more men, by using the. right tools.

..TO EXCHANGE—A house in Brook, Ind, for hones. Guy Meyers, Kniman, Indiana. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas J. Dean OLD FALSE TEETH WANTED DON’T MATTER IF BROKEN We pay up to 15 dollars per set. Also cash for Old Gold, Silver and broken Jewelry. Check sent by return mail Good held 10 days for sender’s apSroval of o» offer. Maser’s Tooth pedalty. Dept A, 2007 S. Sth St, PoUadelphiAp FSe

REMINGTON.

W. D. Rawlings went to Terre Haute Saturday with his daughter, Fern, and Miss Mamie* Reed, "where the two young ladies will enter normal school. The first group of army trucks tied up here for the night Saturday owing to one machine being broken down. There were seventy-three men and three officers. They camped in the town park and a good’crowd welcomed the boys with canned goods, jelly, pies, cakes, etc. They left at 7 o’clock Sunday morning for an Atlantic nort. ’ j Chris Bahler has bought a truck, for heavy hauling. Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Balcom went to Chicago Sunday for a few days’ visit. Ralph Boatman, of the United States navy, came Sunday from an Atlantic port for a furlough. G. I. Thomas and Peter Geib left Tuesday for Rochester, Minn., to enter a sanitarium for treatment. Dr. Besser and Milo Tuttle went to Indianapolis on business Wednesday. C. H. Peck went to South Bend Wednesday to attend a shoot. Vernon Julien went to Chicago Thursday to work. Barney McKnight and wife were called to Scottsburg Monday by the serious illness of his mother. Walter Belcher and family went to Gosport Saturday to attend the funeral of an aunt. Miss Laura Ponton went to Logansport Tuesday for an extended visit with her sister, Mrs. Milt McCollum. Mrs. Fern Harm, of Goodland, is visiting her sisters, Mrs. William Lock and Mrs. Fred Oberlander. Ward Lewis and Thelma Hensler went to Rensselaer Wednesday and were quietly married. They will make their home here where the groom is in business. Russell and Harold Powers, of Wheatfield, are visiting boy friends here this week.

Best Remedy for Whooping Cough. “Last winter when my little boy had the whooping cough I gave him Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy,” writes Mrs. J. B. Roberts,, East St. Louis, 111. “It kept his cough loose and relieved him of those dreadful coughing spells. It is the only cough medicine I keep in the house because I have the most confidence in it.” This remedy is also good for colds and croup. C. Miss Grace Haas will go to Gary this evening and tomorrow will go to Lansing, Mich., to attend the funeral of a friend. Just recevied a car load of stove size har coal. J. C. Gwin Lumber Co. Phone 6. The funeral services of the late W. W. Reeve will be held Sunday afternoon at 2:30, at the Church of God. Rev. Lindsey will conduct the services. LADIES When irregular or delayed use Triumph Pills. Safe and always dependable. Not sold at drug stores. Do not experiment with others, save disappointment. Write for "Relief” and particulars, It's free. Address National Medical Institute, Milwaukee, Win.

W iSSjWW BEST IN THE LON© RUN SSB& t|yThefeld ? i * O I | GGDDRICH « the City of Goodrich, they coldly, calculatingly, puts the seal of multiWhave officially g 9 grand mileage of Goooncrrs slightest defect, no hidden short-coming s nation-wide Test Car work of 1917: could escape the sight of the Goodrich ex- g | 1,044,686 linear miles. P 6 * B - ffl 4178 744 tire miles. SILVERTOWN CORDS* and BLACK i; SAFETY TREADS, under light .and heavy ri c; Those figures indite the Emancipation cars, defied the rough going of roads wher- S ■ Act of motorists, frec'-S them from tire ever the Test Car Fleets rushed them. mishaps and amputated uLlcogo. * BJ - Compressed in them is the story of the The spiral-wrapped cable-cord tire body, g I famous Six Fleets, and how they hurled and Goodrich's tough black tread rubber g Goodrich Tires the hngth arZ breadth of the hard fight and conquered. g h road, p’oti -imr them Sock long rmleagem the I. •1 - ■ir i t'd mud;' proven service of /tmenca s Tested Tires. «« < niau’ !' x - rock Goodrich cutrruxtees you will get it because ■a ‘ 1 " lß *ny „ ' Goodrich tested end got it •3 1 cklQ » Lz c J Self Denial is wi •J i[ the Acid Test IS Mat*'h no £*- Tocted Tires mean 100 per cent, quality. Jj I; of Loyalty. vorite.s. Thr.t l u .tipUcd Demand it Tested Tiiaa mean cupratne F: : sAV n<G R mileage c.'4,17C.74< niilej service Demand it ( | | I R R GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY g & sLa mJ Chicago Branch Michigan Ave., Chicago, DL g - AKUON,

Why spend all these extra hours over your hot stove baking your bread , with uncertain results when you can BUY O’RILEY’S GOLDEN LOAF BREAD fresh every day? O'RILEY

J. H. Wangelin, wife and family, motored up from Indianapolis to spend Sunday with Richard Wangelin and wife. The director of the Rensselaer Building and Loan Association were in Wheatfield Friday and while there arranged to plaice a number of loans. ’ NOTICE POCAHONTAS. The district meeting of the degree of Pocahontas will be held Thursday, May 16, at the Red Men’s hall. All members are urged to be present at both'the afternoon and evening services. By Order of Pocahontas. The Indiana State Council of Defense says that the wise man is he who puts in an early order for coal and keeps after the dealer until the winter supply is in the bin. The pioneers of Indiana got along most of the time without white flour and did not weep or complain. If the United States is your country, you can’t trick the food regulations without cheating yourself. A rainy Sunday isn’t a very pleasant occasion. But a lot of people would rather it would rain on Sunday than not having a good excuse for staying away from church. The old fashioned girl who knew how to put on a thimble and how to fix a bake oven now has a daughter who knows how to put on a spare tire and fix a carbureted.

Richard R. Wangelin, Max Kepner and Harry Miller returned from Indianapolis Friday evening with three new Ford automobiles. Mrs. W. R. Ooverston, of Goshen, mother of Mrs. Wangelin also accompanied Mr. Wangelin. , . Road to Happiness. Be amiable, cheerful and good natured and you are much more likely to be happy. You will find this difficult, if not impossible, however, when you are .constantly troubled with constipation. Take Chamberlain’s Tablets and get rid of that and it will be easy. These tablets not only move the bowels, but' improve the appetite and strengthen the digestion. C- « . Mrs. Kate Watson, who has been in Indianapolis for a short time, has returned to her home here. Her daughter, Mrs. Dr. R. C. Beeler accompanied her and will remain here for an indefinite time. Dr. Beeler has been in France with the Lily Base hospital unit since last Decern- - ber. He is an X-Ray expert. One half the world is mighty glad that the other half doesn’t know how it lives. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of