Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 February 1919 — Page 4
THE UNIVERSAL CAR < The Fan! one-ton motor truck which we sell , (without body for >550 t. o. b. Detroit, has proved dunng the peat two years to be a most money-sav-ing utility, both in towns and The on the farm, because like the Ford car it is surely reliable, easy to control and has very Truck low cost for operation. Has the • speed and flexibility to save tame, and the strength and durability to save money. We can supply you with and kind of body deaired. Come in and look it over. CENTRAL GARAGE CO. Phone 319. Rensselaer, Ind.
SOUTH BOUND . NORTH BOUND R ’i- .aitSL fit ’: :: tigs si r:?s sta 11:14 B* N’a 44'7 4:44 p.m.
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN BAXbT AB1» BJMaa-WHBHBT. O&BBK * HBHIE.WH • • BeW>M* *” - ~yz»w* Berni-Weekly RhuMk« •etered J*“J. 144 T. m MOODd class mall matter. at th* poet ottoo at Reneeelaar, ladtana Eveatnc Republican entered Jaa. 1. IM?, ee eocond cUaa mail matter, at th* poet ottce at Reneeelaer. Indiana, under the Act of March A 19T9*AT» FBB BXBFXU4U ABWBBTIMBG Dally, per tach .14c Semi-Weekly. par iach »!** iwcMrnoi aina Dally, by carrier, 14 coate a weak. By mall. 41.44 a year. Beml-Woekly, la advance, year, 14.44. BATBS 808 MAMXKID ABB. Three line* or lean, per weak of aix iaaaeo of Th* Evenin* Republican and two of the Semi-Weekly Republican. H cento. Additional space pro rata.
CLASSIFIED COLUMN OR SALE. FOR SA I .E—A few shoats. Leslie dark. Phone 18 or 114. FOR SALE—Choice alover hay (in barn; four loads, no weeds or waste. H.Paukis, phone 988-G. FOR SALE —Or will trade for straw, two loads of manure. Leslie Clark. Phone 18 or-114. FOR SALE —An excellent work horse. Chas. W. Platt Phone 366. FOR SALE—-Second hand Ford runabout, equipped with truck body attachment. Leslie Phone 18 or 114. FOR - —Six room residence on Frank eet, cheap if taken at once. J Daniels. Phone 314Green.
FOR SALE —A Aild’6 bed and mattress, in fair condition. Mrs. Fred Chapman- Phone 280. FOR SALE—Twenty gallons fresh lard. 'Mrs. Henry Paulus. Phone 938-G. FOR SALE —Hampshire boar, June pig, weight 225 lbs. Boulder Messenger 68283, aired by Boulder Duke 37079; dam Comet 2d 96830. Now time to settle late gilts. This hog is one of my best, and was kept back for my own use. Can release him now. Russell Van Hook. Telephone 938-A. FOR SALEA-One sow and five pigs. Robert FOR SALE—Eight tons of good timothy hay in mow. Will sell any amount. Riiey Tullis. Phone - 927-E. FOR SALE —Timothy hay Will •oil in ricks or half ricks Three miles out Joseph HaVigan. Phone 12. _______ FOR SALE—I6O acres well fan* proved farm in Gillam township, sft miles from town, 4 miles from station on improved gravel road. All level biack land, good fences and buildings. Price right, terms reasonable. Possession March first. 200 acre farm with fair improvements, level black land, 110-acres in cultivation, balance pasture, six miles from town. Price 165.00 per acre. Terms to suit. Possession Feb. Ist 120 acre farm, good improvements, locate don stone road. 100 acres in cultivation, 20 acres pasture. Price and terms right. Will trade any one or al lof the above farms. JOHN A. DUNLAP. r FOR SALE—A few fine R. C. Rhode Island Red cockerels. Well built, big-boned birds. Mrs. Harry Arnold, Rensselaer, Ind. Phone 918-M. ■ -
FOR SALE —Home grown onion seed, good quality, at reasonable rates. Guaranteed A-l. Alfred Donnelly, the Onion King. Phone 903-B. FOR SALE—Two Polled Durham cows, one fresh now, other soon. H. J. Dexter. Phone 926-C. FOR SALE —Single Comb Rhode Island Red eggs from choice pen. Price SI.OO per setting. Phone 236. FOR SALE—Pure bred Buff Orpington cockerels, RF L. Budd strain. Price $2.00. W. B. Hough. Phone 936-D FOR SALE —Shorthorn bulls, past yearlings, good breeding, well grown, from extra good milkers. W. B. Leonard, R. F. D. 5, Francesville.
FOR SALE—Or will trade for farm land, 10 acre tract in north part of town, inside corporation. A good 8 room house, interior as good as new, cellar, cistern and good well, barn and other small building*. Plenty of fruit. For information call or write Mr*. Henry Randle. Phone 873. FOR SALE —Willow pole wood, cut, all you can haul for $1.50, or delivered $3.50; 2% mile out. Wm. Havens. Phone 944-D. FOR S%.LE— -60 acres, black **ndy loam, improvements; compelled to quit farming. Will sell at auction on /Thursday, Feb. 13, 1919, together with stock, implements and feed. For further particulars see W. A. Lake, Kniman, Indiana. FOR SALE —Simon Hichstetled is agent so rthe Perkins* windmill Inquire of Watson Plumbing Co. Phone 204. WANTED. WANTED—Baseburner. Call me a>t Rensselaer Garage, phone 365, from 7a. m. to 6p. m. H. C. McNaghten. WANTED-—Load- of hay and corn. Leslie Clark. Phone 18 or 114. WANTED Second-hand office desk. Hugh Kirk. Phone 404. WANTED. — Jasper county atlas. Louis H. Hamilton. Phone 18 or 68. WANTED Government bond# bought and sold; also dwelling*houses sold on easy terns. A. Leopold, at office of M?oe Leopold.
WANTED —Girl for general housework. Mrs. W. 0. Rowles. Phone 222. WANTED—Work on farm by married man. Can go to work at once. E. A- Cunningham, Fair Oaks, Ind., ~R-1. SALESMEN WANTED —Lubricating oil, grease, specialties, paint. Part or whole time. Commission basis. Men with car or rig preferred. Riverside Refining Company, Cleveland, Ohio. « - ' WANTED TEAMS—We want immediately twenty teams experienced in hauling saw logs, to haul logs a distance of two or three miles. Teams are making $5.00 to SB.OO per day. Apply Elkhart Hardwood Lbr. Co., Kouts, Ind. L. 0. Ely, Superintendent. . . ! WANTED—Men to cut wood near Rensselaer. James Walter, Phone 337, Mgr. J. J. Lawler ranches. WANTED—Hides. Will pay 17c per pound. Roth Bros. WANTED—Tn do your automobile repairing. \ Skilled mechanic and prices are right: O. H. McKay. FOR RENT. f FOR RENT—After March Ist, the depot restaurant. CaH phone 905-G. Or see Harry GaHager. FOR RENT—Faria. Inguise at office. Dr. F. A. Turfler. j / MISCELLANEOUS., ESTRAY—PolandChina male hog, weight about 250. Gone since Jan. 24. Notify Walter Bell, 4# miles north of Pleasant Ridge; *
THB BVBNDfO BEPTTBLIjOAN, BENBBBLABB, INDIANA,
{LOST —$5 bill in Rensselaer store or telegraph office. Reward to find-/ er. Mrs. Lloyd Johnson? Phone 911-S. LOST—Fur overcoat between my home and Remington. Sam Lowery. LOST—Saturday evening between Eigelsbach meat jparket and Weston cemetery, pocketbook contain* 4ng two State Bank certificates and small amount of money. Leave at this office. Reward. Wm. Ervin. LOST —A non-skid auto chain. David Zeigler. Phone 906-G. „ FOUND—Ford exhaust pipe. Get at this office, i • FOUND —Pair of shell frame eyeglasses. Ownfer can get same at this office. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas J. i Son _ _ '■ MONEY* TO LOAN—S per eont farm loam John A. Dunlap. 11l ■ —Il I—■■ I -I
HAS SIX GOLD STRIPES.
The following letter from Clifford' Ogle to his parents, Mr. arid Mrs. H. M. Ogle, formerly of Milroy township, but now of IdaviHe. is one of the most interesting we have published. The letter is quite long and is slightly' abbreviated, and will be published in 'installments: • Beau Desert, France, December 6, 1918. - Dear Parents:— We sailed from Hoboken on the 14th of June (1917). It was so foggy we couldn’t see a thing. Landed at St. Nazaire, at the mouth of the Loire, June 26. Came into the bay the evening of the 25th, but didn’t get ” off the boat to stay until the 27th. . We marched out to a eamp a couple of miles distant. Our battalion (the 2nd being appointed to go to Pari* for the 4th, we left 'by train on the afternoon of July 2. We went via the Paris-Orleans Ry. in third class coaches. Ordinarily, troops are hauled in freight cars. We made a short parade in Nantes, but it was dark when we passed through Tours and Orleans. I told you about our stay in Paris some time ago. Anyway, I will say that no troops ever got a finer reception anywhere. They couldn’t. The evening of the sth we marched from the barracks in the Ruede Reuilly to the Gare de Lest and left by theChemin de Fer de Lest, which is the Eastern Ry. The French Red Cross gave us our breakfast, coffee, cookies an<L cherries, at St. Dizier. Another hour or two took us to Gondreeourt. When we rolled off a platoon of chasseurs, or Blue Devils, were lined up and at “present arms.” The ■streets were decorated with evergreens, bunting, and I remember an arch of flowers over the street with the word “Welcome” worked on it. We, that is, the second battalion, were stationed in Gondreeourt till about Oct. Ist. The other battalions as well as other regiments, were dn neahby towns, and we marched out to the drill grounds six days a week, where the chasseurs went through bayonet exercise and we learned it from them. They were sure fine fellows, too, but not at all like some people imagine. They are men just like anyone else. • \ . I took the mumps Aug. 29th. and went into field hospital 13 at Gondrecourt, the same one George Pattullo of the “Post” was in with the mumps. I came out of there Sept. 19th. That was sure nothing but confinement, contagion, you know, and weren’t allowed out of the ward. ■ . ■ - - ' ■ , ■
From Go ndre court we went to Demange-aux-Eaux, about five miles north of there. We drilled and maneuvered all around there till the last of October, when our battalion left in trucks for the trenches. We rode all day and unloaded that evening near Nancy, . T _saw_the first aviatabnbamp that day. It was near the town we slept in and several of our men walked out there. The ne'xt a. m. we got in the trucks and went to near Luneville, got out and walked to Bathelemout, about two miles. We were there two days. A shell went over the place one day, the first I had heard. Went from there at .night into the trenches, about two miles more. Mud knee deep. About two hours after we relieved the French the Boehe put over a barrage and made a raid on the company next to Co. G. That was the first engagement of any Yanks and Germans. That’s the only bombardment I was ever in where I wasn’t scared. I didn’t know what that was. We were there seven days, during which* the sun shone about two hours. It was the most miserable week I ever spent anywhere. After we hiked out we got trucks again and rode all day. The first town we recognized was old Gondrecourt, and it was like coming home. ' • 1 ■ (To be continued.)
Judge George Gifford, of Tipton. came today to look after some legal matter;. __ r .■ -->■ Mrs. John M. Wasson returned from Hammond this afternoon, where she had been visiting with the family of Jesse Wilson. * ’ ‘ Leslie Clark, whd has been absent in the South since last November, returned home last evening, having finished bis work there. Try our fancy northern grown potatoes, al large, smooth potatoes and "fine cookers. $1.50 a bushel. Eger’s Grocery. - - John Werner returned from Indianapolis Monday evening, where he had been to visit his daughter, Margaret, who is attending the institution for the blintf. ; o "Nellie and William Eek, who . live near Goodland, arrived h«*re this afternoon on way home from Chicago and **ary, whera they had been visiting friends and relatives.
A Galley o' Fun!
TO AN EMPTY POP-BOTTLE. (Thrown away by * madly enthusiastic maid at the ball game.) Most fortunate! How Udo envy thee Thy happy lot; for Fortune ne’er on me Hath soured my life, hot Boft’nin* austere — Hath soured my life, Bor soft-nlng lines Yet thou, insentient thing, bast known ths bliss Of warm lips, in an eager, lingering kiss — A long caress that drew thy life away— Craves one a sweeter, happier death than this? To know the favor of a maiden’s eye; Boftr clinging hands, and lips whose every sigh Draws forth one’s life —Who would not yield his soul Apd with the last faint protest happy die?
DOWN BY THE SEA. Young Sapley—That buxom young Widow looks perfectly ravishing la her bathing suit She reminds me of a poetical Latin quotation, er—er—“ Cynicus—Oh, yes; “multum ia parvo!" ' 7 ’ '' . IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE. Bishop William A. Quayle, of Oklahoma came to New York the other day to speak to thf young persons of the Epworth League. The Bishop is described as having “the evangelical power, the rare humor, and the real western tang that might Identify him as a very Bryan of the pulpit" Well, maybe he has. , It has been long suspected that a great many people, on being offered their choice of going to Heaven or to New York, would choose the latter flace. Perhaps it is because the attractions ot the metropolis have been more and better advertised. Aviation and music are good, but alone they will not densely populate a country, and Heaven undoubtedly suffers from a certain vagueness on the part of its advance-agents. If this comment be thought irreverent, we hasten to Quote the Bishop himself. Surely he could not .be irreverent. "Of course," he says, “I hope to get to Heaven some day by the grace of God and a good deal of his forgetfulness, but in the meantime New York town at night, all lighted up, looks pretty good to me." If the Bishop feels that way about New York and about Heaven, it is no wonder that the feeling finds a response among the residents on Manhattan. The Milky Way unquestionably looms bigger ta the firmament than the Great White Way; bnt very few of our acquaintances dwell in the firmament. The streets of Heaven may be paved with silver and gold, but one cannot know what the buying power of gold and silver would be at that altitude; meanwhile we have a very accurate knowledge of what a <ollat will do in New York.
IN DARKBIT AFRICA. First Chief—That’s a dandy new war dub you have. Second chief—lsn't ft a beaut T It I could soak some white man with that, hie burden wouldn't bother him! AB IT SEEMED TO HER. "A woman In West Virginia has bean cured of consumption by the bite' es a copperhead snake," said Mr. Gas■am to his wife. . .* "Well, I’d almost rather not have oensumption than bo cured by that remedy,” replied Mrs. Gaxxam.
CUT DOWN YduX.. (T\ . POWDER are \ away baking powder . • money wasting baking W Jjrw powder and expensive‘ma- W Qj terials frittering away valu- W B able time —If you are not using i B A # Calumet Baking Powder. B Blf you “doubt” it —Just give Calumet one B W trial. The saving it makes will prove that || I CALUMET! jH is the best baking powder in the world —sold IS ■at the fairest price costs far less than high |3 ■ priced Trust brands costs but little more H than cheap brands—gives much better results O B than either. You use only half the amount O B usually required—it goes twice as far. It £■ B never fails, never causes baking loss. ® B Used in millions ot homes—by leading hotels, B B restaurants and bakeries. A wonderful baking B B powder for all requirements. Made in the B B world’s largest, finest, most sanitary Baking Jr B Powder Factory. Jr X taw / You save when You save materials you buy it— it is used with. You save when pfifr * Highest Qualify you use it— Highest Awards CHiCAGO
PROFESSIONAL CARDS ?R. E. C. ENGLISH ysician ana Surgeon Opposite Trust and Savings Bank. Phones: 177 —2 rings for office; I rings rooMMsoou XBAIAB&b SCHUYLER C. IRWIN Law, Real Estate, Insurance S per cont farm loans. Office in Odd Fellows* Block. F. H. HEMPHILL Special attention to diseases of woman Office over Fendig’s Drag Store. Telephone, office and residence, 442. DR. F A. TURFLER' Osteopathic Physician Telephone, office and residence, 442. Boom 1 and 2, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings on 200; Residence —2 rings oa 200. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. H. L. BROWN Dentist Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth without Platas a Specialty. ' All the latest methods in Dentistry. Gee administered for painless extraction. Office over Barak's Brag Stere. JOHN A. DUNLAP' Lawyer (Successor to Frank Felts) Practice in all courts. JQstataa settled. Farm loans. Collection department. Notary in the office.
DR. E. N. LOY Physician Office in the G. E. Murray Building - - Telephone 88. WILLIAMS A DEAN Lawyers Special attention given to preparation vs villu, settlement of estates, making and ex s miration of abstracts of title, and farms loans. Office in Odd renews BuOdtag. .. ? ..’v W. H. PARKINSON Lawyer Office, Room 4, Odd Fellows Building With G. H. McLain Rensselaer Office DaysFriday and Saturday of each week. TRUSTEES* OFFICE PATS. MARION TOWNSHIP. C. W. PootiH. Trratae Odd Fellows Budding, Rsnmslssr, ' on Saturdays. * Office phone 542. Residence 328. Advertise in the Republican classified oelffiffi*. ■- '' ,
The Sew Club will meet with Mrs. , Rice Porter Thursday afternoon. ■ - - ■ ~7 — —■ Peter Nomenson returned to his home in Dwight, 111., Monday*. Florence Burns went to Lafayette today. Gaylord Long went to Ottawa, 111., Monday for a visit with Lee Adams. Gail Michal, the Kniman merchant, was in Lafayette Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Leichty, of Fair Oaks, went to'Monon today. " John Bissenden, of Kankakee, 111., eame today for a visit with the family of his brother, A. J. Bissenden. James Jeffries, of McCoysburg, was in Rensselaer today and reports ■that his wife i* quite sick. Mrs. Lydia Conger, who had visited friends here for a few days, returned to her 'Mbme. Marguerite Norris came home from Greencastle Monday. Miss Norris is not well and her physician advised her to remain out of school for a few days. <KXBBOTIXZ> CHECK BOOK FREE! s Draw your own check oa Chicago and teak feral teVvXAZtfj No charge whatever. ET ET Your name and ?S—aJLLX* EL EL address please MMRTBMML •SbH.MMbNitU CtaW-UU
CALL CITY BUS LINE FOR TRAINS AND CITY SERVICE. ’ LEE RAMEY Phones 441-White and 107.
RENSSELAER - - REMINGTON BUS LINE TWO ROUND TRIPS DAILY leavrU--Rensselaer ... .»% ... .8:00 a.- m. Rensselaer i . .....4:00 p. m. Remington .0:30 a. m. Remington .8:15 P- “• FRANK G. KRESLER, Proprietor. FARE Wer Tax Bs.
