Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 236, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 October 1918 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

CORN VALUED AT $112.50 PER ACRE J. W. Rains has returned from Minnesota, where he had been to look after his farms. He has one farm of 400 acres near Madelia, Minn. He reports that the crops were the best he had ever seen. He was offered $45.00 an acre for his two-fifths interest in an eighty acre field of corn. At this rate the cerajweuldJbe worth $112.50 per acre. Mr. Rains *had been in the West about four weeks. CORN AND OATS ARE LOWER. Oats 62c. Corn 85c. Rye $1.45. Wheat $2.11. - Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hopkins returned Monday evening froth Chicago. E. L. Hollingsworth returned from Chicago this afternoon. J. H. Hibner, of Monticello, representative for Schlosser Bros., of Frankfort, was here today. The small home can frequently be heated with ole stove. Get Coles High Range and both cook and heat. Velma Thompson, who had been visiting the family of Lee Mauck, returned to her home in Hammond Monday evening. R. L. Budd and W. L. Miller will hold a big joint publie sale at the farm of the former on Thursday, October 10th. Live stock and three complete sets of farming implements will be sold. Anyone wishing te see me will find me at the Trust A Savings bank on Saturday afternoons. H. O. Harris. Phone 124. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Robinson, of Gary, but who are spending much of their time here, went to Monticello Monday evening. O. E. Able returned to his homie in Fair Oaks this morning. He was examined by the local conscription board here Monday. Charles Tetley will furnish you trees for fall planting direct from Rochester, N. Y. Every tree guaranteed to grow or replaced froo of charge. Phono 475. C. B. Steward is attending the twenty-seventh annual session of the Indiana State conference of charities and corrections, being held at Evansville, October 5-8. Arnold Stepp, who had been employed by the Rensselaer Cement Products Co., left today for his home in Hendersonville, N. iC., where he expects to enlist in the army. This week we expect to unload a car of South Dakota Early Ohio potatoes. The potatoes will be ripe and can be stored for winter. At unloading time $1.60 a bushel Eger’s Grocery. William Iliff, of Jordan township, was called to Chicago today on account of the serious illness of his son, Hugh, who has the pneumonia. Hugh is stationed at the Great Lakes.

We will unload a car of potatoes this week. $1.60 a bushel. Leave your orders now. Eger’s Grocery. David Law, of Wall Lake, lowa, came today for a visit with the family of his nephew, John Law, who lives just south of this city. Mrs. E. W. Brady returned today to her home in Boswell after a visit here with' the family of John Garland. She is Mirs. Garland’s aunt. A man always laughs at the assortment of rubbish on a junk wagon until he gets a look at his worldly possessions when they are piled on a move wagon. A man can’t fool his wife by being polite and attentive to her. She knows that he has been up to some skullduggery and is merely trying to square himself. If men would brag as much about their wives at home as they do when they are away from home, there wouldn’t be much space devoted to divorces in the newspapers. You are always yelping because the fool killer is loafing on his- job. But maybe that is the only reason why your wife hasn’t been able to cash in on your insurance policy. CASTO RIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Alwaysbean SignJSrecf BILLY FRYE Far all train and city calls. Alee Auto Livery Phones 107 and M*. CITY TRANSFER CO.

RENSSELAERREMINGTON BUS LINK SCHEDULE 8 Tripe Daily nace Rensselaer 7:45 a. m Arrive Remington 8:80 a. m. nave Remington ...... 9:10 a. m. Lrrive Benes els er 9:56 a. m. mve leneeelser 4DO p. m. krrivo Remington 4:45 p. m. joave Remington 5:15 p. m. Lrrivo Rensselaer .. .... 8100 p. m. -are >l.o* Each Way FRANK G. KWUUUL Phono ISI-W. R cameleer, lad. \< —— - - .• ,