Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 186, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 August 1918 — Page 4

-W—HI . '• - ■ wa' '« THE VNIVBRSAI CAB The Ford Sedan is high-class in appearance and appointments; The seats are restful, and deeply upholstered with cloth of high quality. Large doors give convenient entrance on either side; plate glass windows make it a closetfLcar for inclement weather, and give fresh air when open. With • high quality in appearance and equipment there is the simple and safe control in driving. A woman’s car —a family car for every day in the year. Ford Sedan, $695 f. o. b. Detroit CENTRAL GARAGE CO. Phone 319. Rensselaer, ind.

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN BAELT AM» «MQ-WMBXXT * OUM fc KJJmrBM - - P*bM*h*r» «U TBDJAI XMVB X» WMBX.T MfflOM. B«mi-W«*kly Republic** entered Jan. I, 1887. an second class mall matter, at das poatoffice at Benaaelaer. IndlaiOfc Bvenin* RapubUoan entered Jan. 1, 1897, as second class mail matter, at the postofflce at Rensselaer, Indiana under tbs act ft March 8. 1879. - BAWBB »•* BUUP&A.Y ADVUTMOXG Dally, per meh }s• per Inch 18c arVBBKnurTJOM BA.TM. Dally by Carrier. 10 cents a week. By Mall, 88.00 a year. Bsmt-Weakly, in advance, year. >B.OO. *a.ns »on oxMLaßxnsD ads. Three lines or leas, per week of six issues of The Evenins Republican and two of The Berni-Weekly Republican, la cents Additional space pro rata

CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALEFOR SALE—White enameled refrigerator, ice capacity, 50. pounds. Good as new. Phone 124-B. FOR SALE —A well improved 80 acre farm in Union township, good 3 room house, good barn 32x50, 80 ton tile block silo, poultry houses 20x20 and Bxl4, good fences, spendid orchard of apples, plums,- peaches, pears, cherries, grapes, currants and gooseberries. Situated on school route to consolidated and high school. Is one of the best producing farms in the township, is exceptionally well drained. Come and see for yourself. Price right and terms reasonable. Reason for selling, must seek milder climate for family. R. L. Budd, Fair Oaks, Ind. Phone 926-0. FOR SALE —6-cylinder 5-passen-ger Little automobile; 4-cylinder Grant roadster, wire wheels; also Metz, all in good condition. Phone 509. Harry McColly.

FOR SALE—Several big- bone Poland China male hogs. Pure bred. Wm. J. McKinney. Mt. Ayr. Phone 87-D. FOR SALE Sixteen thrifty shotes weighing from 90 to 100 lbs. Inquire of George Scheetz. Rensselaer, Routed FOR SALE—Some real bargains in well improved farms located within 3 miles of Rensselaer: 120 acres, 133 acres, 152 acres, 80 acres. I also have some exceptional bargains in improved farms of all sizes further out from Rensselaer. For further particulars see me. Phone 246 office or residence 499. Harvey Davisson. 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 Davisson.

FOB SALE—A &-puiufer Oyerland automobile, has had but little use. Maude Daugherty. i'hone 266White. FOR SALE—Small four room residence and two lots on East Vine street at S4OO, cash. Mrs. C. J. Pillars. Inquire of phone 226. FOB SALE—FuII lino of boo supplies, including sections and starters. Leslie Clark, at Republican office. FOB SALE —Ten acres, splendid land, good buildings in this city, price right. Sixty-6 ve . acres, fair buildings, on pike, R. F. D. Tele&no and school. Price $45.00. y terms. Might take some trade. Gee. P. Moyers. ; ; . FOR SALE —Favorite base burner, large size. In good condition. Leslie Clark. . FOR SALE—I6-inch slab wood at $2.50 per cord in 5 and 6 cord lots, delivered. Cash. Phone 60, Mt. Ayr. FOR SALE—A good dwelling house: to be removed from lot. Blanche L. Chapman. Phone 504.

FOB SALE—Several hundred seasoned white oak posts. At Barkley township farm. Dr. A. R. Kresler.

FOR SALE—4O acres, all level land in cultivation except nice grove of 3 acres, new 4-room house, barn, garage, well, nice orchard, on main road near scation. Price $65.0Q. Easy terms. 7-room house all modern except furnace, in splendid condition, on improved street 2 blocks from court house. ' A bargain at |2,500. Can sell for less. Terms Very easy. George F. Mayen. FOR SALE—The north half of section 11, township 32, 2% miles north of Wheatfield, Ind., on stone road. Has 300 acres in fine corn and oats. Improvements are good and quality of soil has no superior in quality in Wheatfield township. Price $65 per acre and no trading, including 160 acres of as good corn as in the county. Address Dr. P. R. James, 3001 R. street, Lincoln, Neb..

WANTED. WANTED —Roomers in modern home for the winter. Board furnished if desired. Phone 455. Mrs. Walter Lynge. WANTED—To rent, 3 or 4 unfurnished rooms for light housekeeping. Call phone 167. WANTED —A good girl at the Rensselaer Hotel. Phone 167. WANTED — A. girl for general house work. Phone 66. WANTED —To rent a good grain and stock farm, grain on partnership with good man. A good farm will only be considered. Can take charge soon. Address A, care Rensselaer Republican. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Good pasture for 50 head of cattle or horses, $1.50 per month. Farm 2 miles from Tefft, Ind. B. Forsythe, Rensselaer, Ind. FOR RENT —Modern 8-room house and sleeping porch. Inquire of J. N. Leatherman, First National Bank.

LOST. LOST—Automobile Jack near the Dr. Hansson farm. ,H. E. Parkison. Phone 488. LOST—In evening, twenty dollars. Leave' at this office. ' * 1 LOST—Saturday evening, on Weston St., two blocks south of Wallace & Herath poultry house, sl2 in paper money; Reward. Phone 450. MISCELLANEOUS. MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent, farm loam. John A. Dunlap. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas J. Dean & Son. MONEY TO LOAN—On farms at lowest rates and best terms. Emmet L Hollingsworth, west side pubHe square. Mrs. William Reed, of Lincoln, Neb., and Etta Dunaway, of Ottawa, 111., who had been visiting here with the family of Mrs. A. J. Bellows, went to Richmond Thursday. Mrs. Charles B. Steward went to Monon today. She reports having received a letter from her friend, Mrs. Hettie Villiers, of Mulgee, Oklahoma, stating that Mr. Villiers had died early this month. Mrs. Villiers was formerly Miss Hettie Blankenbacker and for a number of years a resident of this city. She is an aunt of V. G. Crisler.

CASTO RIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, INDIANA.

OFFICIAL FOOD NEWS

As a temporary arrangement, the Federal Fo d Administration has announced a new wheat flour regulation. V. iien the far.,:c.’ brings to the mill v. n cat "grown ■ fey himself, the miller Is. privileged to deliver to him, on a toll or exchange basis, without any substitutes, eight pounds per month per capita allowance of wheat flour, upon his certifying that the wheat was grown/ by himself, and that the amount of flour to" be delivered to him at that time, with the amount on hand, will not give him a supply more than sufficient to meet the requirements of his household, or establishment, the number thereof being stated, and pledging thdC he will not sell, loan or deliver any of the flour to anyone else, nor permit its use except for such human consumption as indicated. This exchange basis is extended to elevators and mills.

For selling sugar at 11 cents a pound, which the Federal Food Administration regards as profiteering. Henry Shultz, a grocer of Cooley, Indiana, which is near Gary, has been deprived of the privilege of selling sugar until the end of the war. ./-*■ A. R. Powell, who operates two groceries at Linton, was found guilty of having misrepresented the amount of sugar on hand July 1, and was deprived of the privilege of selling sugar until October 1. Powell made an affidavit that he had 1,000 pounds of sugar on hand and an investigation disclosed 5,560. pounds. Any grocer found violating the regulations for Sunday closing, will have his supplies cut off. Grocers can not violate the food regulations and expect to get any of the licensed commodities from the Food Administration. Manifestly, it is unfair to those obeying the regulations to have a certain few disregarding them, and we mean to see that this rule is strictly complied with. No sugar will be permitted for use in the making of vinegar. Throughout the rural districts particularly, various kinds of vinegar are made by householders in which sugar has been

CIRCUS WILL BE HERE TOMORROW

Let joy be unconfined! The Sparks circus will reach here tomorrow in its march about the country, and its proprietors bid patrons come’ to its monumental entertainment with expectations keyed to the highest possible point. Even then, they are sure, the most vivid imagination will be startled and the most sanguine hope outdone. The big amusement institution comes eager to prove once more that it is one of the greatest of its kind, country and era. It comes with the proud realization that all this season its throngs of patrons, limited in number only to its seating capacity—that itself bigger than ever before in its historyhave invariably united in one grand, swelling chorus of vociferous praise and rapt wonder. Soon after tomorrows daybreak it is expected, the long railroad trains which are required to transport the circus will have reached this city. All arrangements have been completed for their undelayed progress into the railroad yards arid for the speedy emptying of the flat, stock and sleeping cars. The boss 'canvasman and his horde of brawny followers will reach the show grounds first and immediately the work of creating the canvas city of a day will begin. The street parade is scheduled to leave the show grounds at ten o’clock in the morning. There is promised a stunningly grand and glorious pageantric prelude to the performance on the show grounds. In bewildering array will be viewed gorgeous military legions; massive, splendidly ornate chariots, floats, vans and tableau wagons; celebrated bands and novel musical equipages; hordes of the world’s most famous clowns and jesters; fierce wild beasts m open dens with their daring trainers; droves of richly decked elephants and camels; wardrobes and trappings that represent a fortune. When the circus opens its gates at one o’clock in the afternoon to receive the human parade of patrons, the crows who stop to comment and observe in the menagerie tent will find dens of rare and curious beasts

By Dr. Harry E.

Federal Food Administrator for Indiana

Barnard,

one of the ingredients, but from this time no such use of sugar be permitted. Threshing and buying of damp wheat is absolutely contrary to the desires and purposes of the Food Administration, and is contrary to the principles of food conservation. Whea; should not be threshed or purchased containing over 14 per cent, moisture. Dealers who purchase damp wheat and permit it to get out of condition will be considered guilty of contributing to the destruction of foodstuffs. It will be considered an unfair practive for buyers of wheat to place, intentionally, a lower grade on wheat than that to which it is entitled under the federal standard. Protests have been received by the Food Administration and by the State Council of Defense, that bßyers In some instances, were endeavoring to buy wheat below its real value through an inferior grading. The U. 8. Grain Corporation says it will not be an unfair practice to pay the basic No. 1 price on wheat even it the wheat grades lower. Conviction tor unfair practice carries a penalty of forfeiture of license, which means elimination from business, and all such ati tempts to deprive the wheat grower of the price to which he is honestly entitled uflder the regulations should be reported at once.

Except that Victory bread may contain 75 pounds of wheat flour, 20 pounds of substitutes and 5 pounds of rye flour, which liatter permission is intended to take care of stocks of rye carried over from last year's harvest and where new rye is coming in, the substitute regulations as applied to the baking industry remain unchanged. Restrictions as to the use of animal fats by bakers, have been eliminated, except that they are to be used economically. Butter held by any food licensee must be sold without regard to existing market or replacement value at not more than a reasonable advance over cost. JThe Food Administration prohibits speculation in butter.

ranged in a great ellipse. • It’s just as impossible to crowd the circus performance into a single story as it is to sit in any of the five thousand odd seats that look down upon the big arena and take in every, feature of the spectacle. The spectator who could watch a ‘ rings at once, see every .feat of skil and daring and dexterity that is simultaneously enacted by gaily dressed troupes of shapely performers, watch the intermediate acts going on the stages between the rings and not miss a single one of the antics among the companies o, clowns capering about on the sawdust as a frolicsome border to the variegated, living mosaic of entertainment in the center of the amphitheatre, would deserve to be crownet the King of Freaks and placed on a pinnacle in the Congress of Curiosities in the side show. There are troupes of elephants that can do. anything from trotting around with each other’s tails ii their trunks to playing a game of base ball and dancing the tango ; soloists, duos, trios, quartettes and companies of “human birds,” acrobats who seem more at home on flying rings and lofty hcahontal bars than on terra firana; equestrians and equestriennes who would make the centaurs themselves look like noviees by the their feats of horsemanship; contortionists who can tie themselves into knots easier than a saleslady can wrap up a package, in a department store; equilibrists who don’t care any more about the laws of gravitation than a taxi chauffeur does about the speed limit; backfiring mules,' boxing kangaroos, horses that can turkey trot as gracefully as any cabaret performer on the circuit; milk white steeds and doys that pose like artists’s models. Sandowp of both sexes, performing ponies, slack-wire dancers that would make Blondin ashamed of himself, who can do a one-step on a slender cable ten feet above the ground as nonchalantly as if it were a ballroom floor, and an army of trapeze performers who are the most . accomplished ever assembled.

II S J II 1 ] B■■ I IR’ k 1 |v I m ■lll it I I—V MAMMOTH INSTITUTION MERIT AND ORIGINALITYSfr fl COMPREHENSIVE ENSEMBLE P'xW er THE WORLD'S BEST PERFORMERS ~ AND ™ E F,NEST TRAINED AN,MALS “! fl MULTITUDE V STRANGE AND curious features from all ENDS V THE EARTH", K mBBOfSS An EXHIBITION THAT IS WORTH WHILE-

Will Exhibit At p “ rf ”™ a ”“ s RENSSELAER Saturday 11 August I f

Mrs. C. C. Warner returned frqm Gary Thursday afternoon. • If any of your stock dies be sure and promptly call A. L. Padgett, Pbone 65. Mrs. Harvey Robinson went to Lafayette Thursday for a visit with her mother, Mrs. F. F. Robinson. Anyone wishing to see me will find me at the Trust & Savings bank on Saturday afternoons. H. O. Harris. Phone 124. Mrs. J. Budman Fleming went to Moline, 111. today for a visit witl her daughter, Mrs. E. J. Hewit, and her new grand-daughter. Nice pickle and dry salt pork,. 25c a lb at EGER’S GROCERY Mrs. William Shaw and son, Cecil, and Mrs. Morris Iverson, went to Indianapolis Thursday. If your stock dies call me at my* expense and I will call for it promptly. A. L. Padgett, Phone 65.

Dollar Round Trip. The Big Days at Fountain Park. FRIDAY, AUG. 16, PAT O’BRIEN DAY. THURSDAY, AUG. 22, BRYAN DAY. Fare for the round trip only Call W. L. FRYE, Phone 107 or 369.

I; I I '/I I li /' JPIEa 1/ I ENTIRELY NEW! The Brunswick Phonograph Discords Old Standards A REVOLUTION has taken place in the phonograph world. Yesterday’s ideas are obsolete. A new leader is chosen. The new Brunswick Method of Reproduction is surprising all. It brings those natural tones hitherto lacking. It does ly with old phonographic crudities. The part of the new Brunswick Methods of Reproduction. Now all records are played according M to their exact requirements. Come WiSfllt in and see this remarkable feature. ItIL ** ’* not an at tachment. wVWw wJwMB You cannot afford to even think of buying a phonograph until you have heard the new Brunswick, made by The Brunswick-Balke-Collender. I Co. w 8 Come in today. , 0. M. WORLAND

Lucille Good, of Delphi, came this morning for a visit with the family of John Adair. Toilet paper at old priced for one week only at Burchard’s. Miss Wilhelminia Maas, of Indianapolis, came today/for a visit with her friend, Sarah O’Neal. Toilet paper 6 for 25 or 3 for 25 at Burchard’s. -- -p erry Gwin is assisting his father, (J. C. Gwin, in the office at the lumber yard during the absence of John I. Gwin . Charles Pefley will furnish you trees for fan planting direct from Rochester,,N. Y. Every tree guaranteed to grow or replaced free of charge. Phone 475. ■ - ~ ’ Forest Osborn, son of Mr. and-Mrs. Frank Osborn, received first prize for citizenship in Boyville at Battle Ground. Seventy-five boys were in competition.