Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 February 1919 — Page 3

iHI THE UNIVERSAL CAR • , Reliable service for Ford owners can only be had where experienced Ford workmen using genu- * ine Ford parts, or materials, have charge of the I work. This is why we UT^e you to bring your . ■ UC Ford car to us when it ScrviCC needs “going over” and I * fixing up. Careful attenI . That Pays tion given to your car I will lengthen the period of its usefulness—prove to be money well invested. I ;; We have every facility to meet your wants and we I i give you the benefit of standard Ford prices., I CENTRAL GARAGE CO. I Phone 319. Rensselaer, Ind. 11l

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RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAXX.Y AND SBMI-WISXIY. PXAJBK Bt KAMWTON - - Publishers XKB FMOAT JSSufi XS BBGUKAB WBXKX.Y S9XTXON. Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, as eecorid class mail matter, at the poet office at Rensselaer, Inddana. Evenlng Republican entered Jan. 1, 18'97, as second class mail matter, at the post office at Rensselaer, Indiana, pinder the Act of March 3, 1879. BATHS JPOB DlSFldtf ADVERTISING Daily, per . Inch 16c Bewi-Weekly, per inch .18c BUBBOBXPTXON KATES. (Dally, by carrier’ 10 cents a week. Ry mail, $6.00 a year. Semi-Weekly, year, in advance, 12.00. BATES FOB CXASSXFX3U) ADS. Three lines or less, per week of six issues of The Evening Republican and ’two of the Semi-Weekly Republican, 25 cents. Additional space pro rata. CAMW 99*nL Carl Arnott Hopkins Brothers Raymond Lypge 1 Harold Bowen Thomas Donnelly . ■ William Campbell

CLASSIFIEDCOLUMN FOB SALE—Pair of good road ponies, splendid workers and serviceably sound. Would trade for good Russell Van Hook- Phone 938-A, ______ FOR SALE—Upto date 200 acre farm. Modem buildings. Near Dowagiac, Mich. Write Hale E. Ryther, Three Oaks, Mich. FOR SALE —Nice 2-weeks old Jersey heifer calf. Russell Van Hook. Phone 938-A. FOR SALE —At a reasonable price, a Belle City incubator and brooder, capacity 138, zinc coop and 2 water founts Mrs. E. P. Honan. FOR SALE —Eighty acre farm, 40 acres in pasture, 40 under cultivation; 5 room house, big cattle bam and silo. Would make A-l dairy farm. A bargain. Can give possession March 1. One mile of DeMotte. Call or address C. L. Fritts, DeMotte, Indiana. FOR SALE —1917 model 490 Chevrolet automobile in good condition. O. G. Baker. Phone 912-B. FOR SALE—I6O acres well improved farm in Gillam township, 5 Vi males from town, 4 miles from station on unproved gravel road. All level black land, good fences and hnfldinga- Price right, terms reasonable. Possession March first. 200 acre farm with fair improvements, level Nack land, 110 acres in cultivation, balance pasture, six miles from town. Price $65.00 per acre. Terms to suit. PoMsssiou Feb. Ist 120 acre farm, good improvements, locate don stone road. 100 acres in cultivation, 20 acres pasture. Price and terms right WiH trade any one or al lof the above farms. JOHN A. DUNLAP. FOR RALE—Two pure bred red male Duroc hogs, weights 175 and 250. Phone 948-K. Boy Sbocksick. FOR SALE—Shorthorn bulls, past yearfogs, good breeding, well grown, from extra good milkers. W. d. Leonard, R. F. D. 5, FranceevMe. FOR SALE—Timothy hay U sell in ricks or half ricks Throe mileo out/ Joseph Halligan. Phone 12. _______ FOR SALE —Good solid 16 inch block wood. Shelby Comet. Phone 904-L.

-OR SALE.

FOR SALE —Reed baby carriage, brand new, only been used once; also a whits fur robe, Phene 410. F. G. Deschand. FOR SALE- — A. pair of horses, harness, wagon and dump boards. Have no further use for Above named, having resigned road work. A. worthFOR SALE—Buff Orpington eggs at 15 for SI.OO. From a fine brood. Mrs, Abraham Wartena. Phone 459Green. FOR SALE —Pure bred Buff Orpington cockerels, R. L. Budd strain. Pfive $2.00. W. B. Hough. Phone 936-D. FOR SALE —Two hard coal burner stoves, and wood heating stove, all in good condition. Also small cottage house to be removed from present location. Also good building lot. House could be moved on lot and make good residence. Very reasonable terms on house and lot together or separately. George A. Williams. FOR SALE —Spring wheat. Call 606 or 456. George ReedFOR SALE A Ford roadster A-l condition. Waiter King. Phone 283 or 112. *>-Ul - I - - , . . - - .. . , I FOR SALE— Overland Touring Car. 10 Ton« Good Timothy Hay. Butterfly Cream Separator. Maieatic Range, and Other Household Articles. ELIAS ARNOLD, R, F. D. 1, Rensselaer, Ind. Phono 913-F.

WANTED.' WANTED —To buy small building to be used as a garage. One that can be moved or wrecked. Also a ight carriage. Charles W. Paxton, Phone 642-White. i== WANTED —Carpenter work, large or small jobs will be given the best of attention. James Noland. Address Box 241, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED —50 to 100 cattle on gta.l'ks and straw. Also have two Duroc Jersey male hogs, wt 120 each, for sale. William Guinrick. Phone 212-G. Francesville, Ind. WANTED —Medium size load of corn. Will P%y 2 cents above market price. Leslie Clark. WANTED—I have the Clyde Williams wood sawing outfit and will saw your wood for $1.50 an hour. Cord wood $1.25 per cord. Harlow Peek. Phone 947-F. •»

WANTED—A man for farm work. S. A. Arnold. Phone 913-0. WANTED—At Barnes’ Restaurant, dining room girl and dish washer. WANTED Government bonds bought and sold; also dwelling houses sold on easy terms. A. Leopold, South Front street. Phone 33. r WANTED—GirIs and women to do pressing at the A. Roth Co. Pay by time at start. Apply in person Monday morning. A. Roth Co. SALESMEN WANTED—Lubricating pal, grease, specialties, paint. Part or whole time. Commission basis. Men with car or rig preferred. Riverside Refining Company, Cleveland, Ohio. _____ WANTED —An experienced farm hand. Can go to work at once. Also girl for general house work. Jerry Branson. Phone 916-A. WANTED—Hides. Wfll pay 17s per pound. Roth Bros. FOR RENT. Foil RENT—Furnished room in modern house, three blocks from court house. Lady preferred. Phone 532-Black. , J ""'. ■ '■ . FOR office. Dr. F. A-Tartar.

THS IVWBfG BWUBULOAM. RBNSBKABB. HOB.

Harry Moore went to Indianapolis today. Henry Paulus and son went to Lafayette today. Mr, and Mrs. Van Grant went to Chicago today f f dr a few day’s visit.Such weather as this indicates that March is not far in the offing. Frank Cavendish, the Newland merchant, went to Chicago today. Mrs. John Sanders, of Frankfort, came today for a visit with her son, Virgil, and family. Rev. C. E. Downey, the Methodist minister at Fair Oaks, was in Rensselaer today. One nice thing about, the army, you donthaveto worry about paying an income tax. iMrs. Sadie Galbraith returned today from Logansport, where she had been for sometimle with her father. , - Try some of our good old sour kraut. It is a good spring tonic and liver regulator. Eger’s Grocery. Purdue' was defeated in a western conference basketball game Monday night by the Minnesota five 26 to 21. Indiana lost to Wisconsin while Ohio was upsetting Illinois. Chicago and Minnesota remain undefeated in the conference scramble. For this week you can buy a large can of fancy pumpkin or a large can of lye hominy for 10c, or 4 small cans of condensed milk for 25c at Eger s Grocery. Merritt Strain and daughter, Mrs. Lena Whitted, went to Lafayette today to consult a specialist. Mrs. Whitted has not recovered satisfactorily from the effects of the influenza. With pecan and walnut kernels at $1.20 a pound, why not use shelled almonds at 75c or shelled filberts at 60c? You will get just as good results in your fruit salads. We also lhave some fancy California white cherries in No. l’tins at 25c. Eger s Grocery. Lots of night oil being burned in Rensselaer these days. Just some of our best citizens poring over their income return blanks trying to figure out their losses during the year just past. This is the season for dried and evaporated fruits. We have a big line of evaporated peaches, both peeled and unpealed, apricots, pears, apples, raisins and prunes. We will save you money on same. Eger’s Grocery.

There is an old saying that trouble comes in bunches, and it came to the Republican today in the forms of Dr. J. Hansson and O. K. Rainier. The former came in to sell us an automobile and the latter to talk politics and exploit the quality of his White county land. We saw them first, however, hung up the Busy Day” sign and ignored them entirely, leaving them to squabble among themselves —which they did.FOR RENT —New bungalow, nicely situated, 5 rooms, bath, toilet, city water and lights. Can give possesion at once. David Haste. Phone 567. _ FOR RENT —The Nellie Donegan Reynolds modern 9 room house and garage on Washington Ave. Inquire of J. N. Leatherman at First National Bank. FOR RENT—After the first of March a 4-room house, well water and electric lights. Charles Cam. Phone 502-B. -

LOST. LOST — Log chain between Aix and the Omar Waymire farm, February 26. Will finder please notify Arthur Waymire. Phone 953-D. LOST—Stake out of truck rack. Please notify F. E. Warne, Drayman. Phone 877. LOST —$50 Government bond of the Third issue, 6,424,486. Please return to Charles Stultz, flagman at McKinley Ave. railroad crossing.

LOST—2 year old red heifer with white face. Has been gone about four weeks. Please notify Alva Potts, R. F. D. 2, Rensselaer, Ind. FOUNP - the Gayety airdome after the Lewis sale, a watch fob .with monogrammed locket attached. Call at this office. FOUND—Pair gold-rimmed glasses at the Monon depot. Call at this office. | MISCELLANEOUS. j STOLEN—Ifi the spring or summer of 1917, the black six-year-old; mare bought of Walter Lynge, also the black six-year-old mare bought of A. B. Tolin, mate to the Tolin mare stolen and returned to me. Will pay $50.00 cash for return of these mares, or information that wild lead to return of these horses, or any oth- ( er horses stolen from me, or sny horse collars, blankets, tools, or other property belonging to me. Jennie M. Conrad, Conrad, Newton County, Indiana. - . MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans.- JOHN A DUNLAP. MONEY TO LOAN—Chas. J. Dean A Son. ' ~~ 7 Now is the time to buy tires before the war tax goes on. We have a large stock of standard and blemished tires at SI.OO profit. Gas at 24c. MAIN GA. RAGE. Best in Rensselaer.

Now is the time for to C A FF/*I IA nf\the comfort and dA I Lilli A Iclz heal th ofyour family I EffIRJHS®I _ B 1 ® Wk I I4m uHiilnl. C° ntract Now 'BLdmAj I Save $lO to S3O \L_ _5KsSr W Bave 5% on the selling cost of Round % Oak Moistair Heating Systems by securing the season’s contracts in alO day period, March 19th %VEW *’ ' ' ' to 29th—YOU GET IT! %OI | aKEO Solve your heating problem for the next generAlXjO- ation —at a very material money saving. % A b Fl* sf €®IHHI S Remember, there is only one ® tt{ p I Round Oak I |O£ s sb * | |x Moistair Heating System (S«v.. »n. ton In ooory n!no) m M i|| Bums all fuels economically. Let us 1 S to y° u more hi detail the of ffH 0 its advanta K es > this immediate saving. x P E. D. RHOADES & SON I I i ni s ~.__ ~ ByAf Jihr S |]_ D I

■ I 1 I ll■"■*•■ here's what a Round Oak Pipeless Furnace nK\2® can do for you h@a7l L_ It will heat your home year after year fire over night without re-chargmg, even with a generous volume of pure, warm, m zero weather. . .x- * moist, ever-changing air, free from dust, The System costs only gas and smoke. v one-third the price ofsteam J®t water. It wiH burn any and all fuels success- yet it responds more quickly. fully and economically. It will hold the are positive.

IlHii w X'--10 Star Points of Round Oak Pipeless Supremacy (Tibs baa# pip«/«»» furnace on tha market) w 1 Built Absolutely Fire Proof. *• (See Catalogue.) ~ Tight " •• Bolted Conttruction. W"1 Bums AH Fuels Successfully—- ” Economically. W a Strongest—Lasts the Longest " *• Heavier too. Xg Humidifiea and Circulatea Pure w Air. *6. Holds the Fire 24 Hours. ★ w Cool Basement —Delivers Alt *• the Heat to the Home. WA Responds more Promptly than w a Stove. - .. ... s . . * 9 ® per * te< * * Quickly °“ d

Easily Installed It may be easily and quickly installed and ready for service in less than twenty-four hours from the time it is delivered to your home. ’ Funace tl\e The exclusive, improved, bolted and deepjointed construction and its heavy castings, mean no dust or dirt in your home. • We are positive it is the best built, most efficient, durable and satisfactory Pipeless Heating System on the market It is worth every cent you invest in its purchase; its saving infuel alone pays a liberal interest on the investment

Valuable Book Free You should secure one of these free Round Oak Pipeless Books, 9 x 12, profusely illus- &jS trated, which proves all of these ti&| claims and describes the other distinctive advantages.

E. D. RHOADES & SON 'f _