Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 237, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 October 1918 — Page 4
__ • * CAB IFordson Tractors A carload of Fordson tractors just received. Anyone needing onbof these wonderful little machines., to make a short job of their fall work, phone CENTRAL GARAGE CO. Phone 319. Rensselaer, Ind. I
HAXXJtOAJB TIME SOUTH BOUND NORTH BOUND No. 15... 5:11a.m. No. M... 4:53a.m. No 5.. .10:51 a.m. No. 4... 6:01a.m. No. «... 1:57p.m. No. 40... 7:3« a.m. No. 3»... 5-SOp.m No. «5...10.Ma.m. No. 5...11:10p.m Na. 50... 0:50p.m.
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DA.XX.Y ajtx> Mm-wsim. clabx aTgA.Mn.TOir • - mminnri THI FBXX2AT TSBVB XS BEGV&AB WXBKX.T SPTTXOM. Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. C 1X97. as second class mail matter, at the post office at Rensselaer, Indiana Evening Republican entered Jan. i. 1x97. as second class mail matter, at the post office at Rensselaer, Indiana Under the Act of March X, 1878. BATES FOB DIBPIUT BBVEBTISIEG Daily, per Inch 15c Semi- Weekly, per Inch 18c SVBSCBXPTXOV BATES. Dally, by carrier, 10 cents a week. Ry mall, 85.00 a year. Seml-Weckly, In advance, year, 82.00. BATES FOB APS. Three lines or less, per week of six iasnea of The Evening Republican and two of the 8 eml-Weekly Republican. 25 cents. Additional space pro rata.
CI 4SSIFIFD COLUMN FOR SALE FOR SALE—Good solid block wood. Shelby Comer. FOR SALE—A number of pigs. Leslie Clark. Phone 48 or 114. FOR SALE—An automobile trailer in good condition. Mrs. L M. Washburn. Phone 48. FOR SALE—Large residence and about five acres of land. Nicely located, and house is modern. Unable to care for so large a property. Mrs. A. Gangloff. FOR SALE—Gray horse, 9 years old. sound, work in all harness, weight 1500. Will trade for Cow. H. E. White, the ice mr.n. FOR SALE—My Maxwell ear with winter body is for sale. The ear ic in good condition and will be sold at a reasonable figure. I. M. Washburn. FOR SALE—Oak side board. Mrs. Leslie Clark. FOR SALE=-60 bu*hel» sw»et corn, for next ten days. Hugh Gaffey, 1 % miles north of Gifford. FOR SALE—Medium size fire proof safe, in good conditon. Cleve Fger. FOR SALE—One 2-year-old registered Shropshire ram from the Jess Andrews flock. Also some spring ram lambs. Phone 954-D. Ed. Ranton.
FOR SALE—2O acres, all Hack land in cultivation except half acre in erove. This little farm Eos on Jaekson highway, has good drainage, six-room bouse, basement, good barn and well. Price $3,000. Part time. G. F. Meyers. FOR SALE—I am offering my residence in east part of Rensselaer for sale. It will make a beautiful home for someone wishing to move to town. Nine rooms. 4 closets and pantry and basement, electric lights, good barn, lot* 110x165, cement walks.—Vera Hopkins, Kouts, Ind. FOR SALE—Having installed a furnace, have for sale a Favorite base burner, large size, in perfect condition. Leslie Clark. Phone 18 or 114. / | FOR SALE —Ford touring car, I 1917 model. Can be seeu at Central Garage. FOR SALE—Navy beans, machine run $7.50 per bushel. W. H. Pullins. Phone 934-H. FOR SALE—Cabbage at 8c per pound. Jack Carmen. Phone 818. FOR SALE—I9I7 Ford roadster in A-l condition, $450. Phone or address Eck Marsoy, Medaryville, Ind. FOR SALE—Large leather upholstered golden rocker and parlor oil lamp. E. J. Gamester. Phone 108. FOR SALE—Sow and eight pigs. John Law. Phone 988-G. |
FOR SALE —3 automobiles. 1918 Ford touring car, run 2,000 miles, as good as new. 1917 Ford touring car with winter top, in first-class condition. International 3-4 ton truck, as good as new. William L. Frye, the Buss Man. Phone 107 or 369. FOR SALE—I have decided to sell 10 acres of my residence property facing on Melville street at end of Washington street, just, outside of corporation. Mrs. M. P. Warner. Phone 322. 1 -' - " 4 256 STEERS FOR SALE —1, 2 and 3 years old, Hereford*, Angus and Shorthorns. Weight 600 to 1,250 pounds. Choice quality. Also 2 carloads vaccinated shotes. Harry I. Ball, Fairfield, lowa. FOR SALE—Second hand Rock Island «ulky plow, in good condition. E. Wuerthaer, phono 902-L FOR SALE —1917 Ford roadster, A-l conJL'ion. Going to war and must tell Central Garage. Phone i’9.
FOR SALE —Maxwell roadster, in good running condition, for $125. John Stockton. Phone 915-B. FOR SALE —.Splendid Poland i China sow and three fine shotes. Shotes weigh about 70 lbs. O. K. Ritchey. FOR SALE—Seven room house, barn, good cave, three lots, one in fruit. Price reasonable. Frank Webber. Phone 944-E. I 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. I Harvey Davisson.
FOR SALE —Ten acres, splendid land, good buildings, in this city, price right. Sixty-five acres, fair buildings, on pike, R. F. D., telephone and school. • Price $4,500. Easy terms. Might take some trade. Geo. F. Meyers. 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 station. Price $65.00. 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. GeO. F. Meyers. FOR SALE—S-passenger Buick, or will trade for Ford; top buggy, top carriage, double driving harness, wheat drill, Perkins windmill and steel tower, 8-16 Mogul tractor and three-bottom plow, all in fine condition; turkey red seed wheat, timothy seed, 1 gelding and 3 brood and work mares. Joseph Koata, Fair Oaks, Ind. Phone Mt. Ayr 92-D. WANTED WANTED —At once, presser. Time work. Rensselaer Garment Factory. WANTED—To rent a farm of from 120 to 160 acres. Have full equipment for farming. George Gowland. Phone 902-A.
WANTED—Farm hand, steady job all winter. Phone 955-G. Floyd Amsler. WANTED —At Princess lunch room boy 18 'or over and girl, to assist with eboking and washing dishes. WANTED—Dishwasher.; Makoever Hotel. , WANTED—Dishwasher and waitress. Barnes Restaurant WANTED—Man with engine to crush stone: also met who understand | blasting, to get out stone in Rensselaer for road work. Address Albert S. Keene, Wheatfield, Ind. ; WANTED—Man to work at night: Main Garage. 1
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, INDIANA*
WANTED —To buy second hand: child’s sulkey. Call 423-Black. | WANTED —Party who took things from my home to bring them back at once or they will be prosecuted. John M. Burris. WANTED —A fireman and two laborers. A. Bennema. Phone 674- ! Red. - ' FOR RENT FOR RENT OR SALE—Two fiveroom cottages. Mrs. E. M. Thomas. FOR RENT —Six-room house and half acre ground. Henry Amsler. FOR' RENT —Or will sell, a fiveroom house. D. H. Yeoman. Phone 500-Red FOR RENT—Residence and fiveacre tract at northeast edge of the city. Possession at once. Mrs. Wm. Daniels. Phone 525. FOR RENT—Farm. Inquire at office. DrJ F. A. Turfler FOR RENT —Suite of room* for light housekeeping over Wood A Kresler’s barber shop. E. L. Hollingsworth. Pheno H2O
MISCELLANEOUS LOST —Small red memoramium book, containing milk accounts. John Duvall. Phone 938-K, or leave at Republican office. MONEY TO LOAN —On farm* at lowest rite* and best ten**. Emmet L Hollingsworth, we*t aide public 'quart. "MONEY TO LOAN—6 per cent farm loam John A. Dunlap. FOUND—A large stool wrench. Now at this < ffice. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas J Dean A Ror Ed Oliver went to Chicago Tuesday evening. W. C. Sutton, of Roselawn, was in Rensselaer today. A. Bennema, the contractor, went to Lafayette today. Grant Lutes returned this forenoon from a business trip to Lafayette. If your stock dies call me at my expense and I will call for it promptly. A. L. Padgett. Phone 65.
turned today from a visit with her daughter, Mirs. Ray Casey, at Kirklin. Our car of potatoes are now on the track and ready to be delivered at $1.60 a bushel. Eger’s Grocery. Mrs. Frances Tharpe, who had been here to attend the funeral of her brother-in-law, John A. Randle, returned today to her home in Chicago. We will unload a car of potatoes this week. $1.60 a bushel. Leave your order§ now. Eger’s Grocery. J. L. Hays, who had been here to look at some Jasper county land, left today for his home in Moundville, Missouri. Charles Pefiey will furnish you trees for fan planting direct from Rochester, N. Y. Every tree guaranteed to grow or replaced free of ■harge. Phono 475. ■ > - ■ •• Mrs. J. F. Adams, who had been visiting her brother, J. R. Sigler, at Mt. Ayr, returned today to her home in Chicago.
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. Mrs. Elizabeth Gwin left here this morning for Lewiston, Mont., where she will visit her son, Marion Gwin. Elmer Gwin accompanied her to Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. George Houser, Mr. and Mrs. Orie Houser and Edward Houser, of Harvey, HL, were here Tuesday to attend the John A. Randle funeral. Mrs. Albert Helsel, of Virgie, reMrs. Vernon Nowels, Harold Nowels, Venus Crisler, Sam Karnowsky and C. P. Wright went to Chicago this forenoon.
Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Livengood anc son Harlan, of Covington, and Mrs. Harry Redding, of South Bend, are guests of Rev. and Mrs. Strecker.. Get your winter potatoes before cold weather. This week we will unload a car of South Dakota ripe Early Ohio potatoes at $1.60 a bushel. Eger’s Grocery. Elizabeth Hemphill and Jane Parkison returned to their homes here Tuesday evening from Anderson. ,The two ladies are teachers in the Anderson schools, which have been closed op account of the “Flu.” Mr. and Mrs. John Hurley returned from Camp Taylor Saturday, where they had been to see their son, Ira, who had been quite seriously sick with penumonia. He was much better when they left and a letter received later says he is just about recovered. CASTO RIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years AlwajrMwrs
TAKE IT ON FAITH.
Nothing could be more unreasonable or less profitable than -to seek for objections to the form or substance of the President’s reply to Germany; for the simple reason that no one outside .his immediate confidence can possibly have requisite knowledge upon which to base an opinion. • If we incline to impatience because the answer is not a categorical NO in the shortest space that diplomatic dignity can tolerate, it must be borne in mind that we are not fighting this war alone and that the desires of our allies rest upon us with heavy obligationthat this tender is a definite offer from the imperial German government, instead of a mere ministerial camouflage, and above all that inasmuch as our reply will be spread before the people of Germany and Austria, it would be the worst possible mistake to neglect the opportunity to plant in the German general mind the real purposes and aspirations of the civilized world, as distinguished from the false attitude with which we are charged by the military masters of Germany. It g->es without saying that the reply is not what we have all expected and hoped for. Neither in matter nor in manner does it reflect and interpret the universal moodof angry impatience with which the American people and, to judge from the press cables, the allied peoples generally view this proposal. Most of us would wish to see the sincerity of Germany frankly indicted and our minimum demands set out in naked simplicity and severity. It is the part of wisdom, however, as well as of justice, to conclude that the President is right, knowing more than we can know, and at least to suspend judgment till the effects of his course of action begin to appear. On the side of strategy, the President’s move must appear to all as exceedingly shrewd; for it not only exacts from Berlin a definition of the sense in which it offers to accept our previous proposals, such as ■withdrawal of invaded regions, but also deftly interposes the wedge of discerning and illuminative inquiry as to the extent to which the imperial government represents the German people as distinguished from the Prussian war machine. It is hard to see any alternatives here except unequivocal submission to the allied requirements or else complete discovery of Prussian duplicity. At least there is no armistice; and so long as our allied armies keep the field with such effective results as now characterizes their activities, the best and perhaps the only answer to German peace offensives goes on apace.—lndianapolis Star.
John Zimmer, William I. Hoover, Donald Hoover, Henry Haag and Elmer Gwin went to Chicago this morning. Public Stock Sale. The undersigned will sell At public auction at his place, 4ft miles east and ft mile north of Rensselaer, on the former C. H. Tryon farm, on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1918, commencing at 1 o’clock p m., the following ..property: 3 Head of Herssu. and Mules—l bay horse, 8 years old, wt 1200; team black mules, 2 years old. 18 Head of Cattie—l Jersey cow, 5 years old; 1 brindle cow, 8 yean old; 1 red cow, 8 years old; 1 red cow, 9 years old, all giving good flow of milk; 1 White Face heifer, 2 yean old, in good flesh; 3 red steen, coming 2 years old; 1 Holstein cow, 2 years old, with calf by side; 1 red cow, 2 years old; 1 2-year-old red heifer, with calf by side; 1 red heifer, 2 years old, be fresh by Ist of December; 4 spring calves, 2 heifers and 2 steers. 18 Head of Shoats, weight about 90 lbs. each; 6 head of hogs, weight 175 lbs. each. Terms—Eleven months credit on sums over $lO, bankable note bearing 6 per cent interest from date if paid when due, if not paid when due 8 per cent from date; 2 per cent off for cash where entitled to credit FRED LINBACK, E. E. BAUGHMAN.
NOTICE. Alljthe suits contesting the will of the late Benjamin J. Gifford, are now disposed of, and I am in position to sell land. I have yet unsold several hundred acres of good land located in Jasper and Lake counties, which I will sell as Executor on reasonable terms, but cannot take any trade. Call at my office or at the office of T. M. Callahan, at Rensselaer, Indiana, for partieulors. GEO. H. GIFFORD, > Executor. BUCKWHEAT. We pay the highest market p. for good, clean, dry buckwheat Gvt our price before you sell. Iroquois Roller Mills. Phone 466.
BILLY FRYE For all traia and city calls. Alao Auto Livery Pboaas 107 and CITY TRANSFER CO. RENSSELAERREMINGTON BUS LINE SCHEDULE 8 Tripe Daily . » .ear* Rensselaer 7:48 a. aa \nrive Remington BJO a. m. - .eave Remington 8:18 a. m \rrive Rensselaer ...... 8:55 a. m.! .eave Rensselaer 4:00 p. m krrive Remington 4:45 p. m. i .eave Remington ...... 8:18 P- m. j Irrive Rensselaer ...... BJO p. m~| 2 are SI.OO Each Way FRANK G. KRESLER. Phone 111-W. Rmeoelaer, lad.
k . . ' a- ' htlnJUrt 1 If g. IltaqCwSall' .■T’M* S i;i': -i & JII ’ G'' P lls 3 j S Htoßkl ' ' I* I if '■ 1 IwW 11 i■ 7■ , -Ml ' r'<s7 * V jBI//H I iff Copyright l9lß Hart Schaffner & Man Clothes for “over here’’ Business men; the men who keep the country “going strong” behind the men who are keeping it safe; these men want and need the kind of clothes we sell. They want quality, in materials and workmanship; they know that these are the essence of economy; they want somebody to do for them in clothes what they’re doing for the country in their own work. We’re doing it; the Hirt Schaffner & Narx label in a gaiment is thesignof it. The G. E. MURRAY CO. The home of Hart Schaffner A Marx clothe*
Dry Cleaning And Dyeing Will guarantee to return your clothing looking like new and free from the odor of gasolene. Orders left up to Tuesday noon returned the same week. John Werner
William Hershman, of Walker township, was in Rensselaer today. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hart, of DeMotte, were in Rensselaer today. G. C. Brown returned this afternoon to his home in Monon. William Holmes went to Delphi this afternoon. - Harvey Snow went to Chicago Heights this jnorning for a visit with his brother. Mrs. Thomas Pierce returned to her home -in Lowell after a visit with the family of Lowell Bowman, of Remington.
Miss Ada Deathe, chief operator of the Lowell, telephone exchange, was .the guest of the, central girls of this ‘ city-Tuesday. Mrs. W. H. Grimm returned today 1 to her home in LaPorte, after a visit here with the family of her daughter, ■ Mrs. Joseph Moore. , Willis Lutz, our hustling traveler for the American Agricultural Fertilizer Co., went to Detroit, Mich., today. .
Mr. and Mrs. James Norris r turned Tuesday evening from a vie with relatives in Ohio. Mr. and Mirs. Rodger Smith retur ed this morning to their home in Ros lawn. Mr. Smith continues to ir prove from his recent illness. CoughMediclneMade at Hom i , 400 Per Cent Saved • Why Pay 92 Par Pint for Syrup Ask your druggist for three ounce pf Glando Pine and add enough syru to make one pint, and you will hav a cough medicine excelled by none It is easy to prepare, costs but little and is pleasant to take. It is spier
did for coughs, colds, bronchial affec tions, and highly recommended so croup. It will relieve the spasmodl coughing in whooping cough. Gland Pine contains the pure fam of whit flpine to which other valuable ingred fonts have been added. Directions so preparing each bottle Manufactured by The Gland-Aid Co. kt. Wayne, Ind. d— ,
