Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 188, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 August 1919 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

FOR RENT- * . TOR RRRT —Suite of rooms over the . postoffice. Can be used for offices or living quarters. HU L. Hollingsworth. . 'Phone 330 or 77. LOSTROST —On Tihureday, a lady’s linen duster. Will the finder please notify Mrs. W. C. Babcock? ’Phone 113. ROST —Long gray pocket book, containing four SI.OO bills and about 75 cents in change, between the True Woodworth and Mrs. Alice McKay residences. Notify Mrs. Alice N. McKay. ROST— Red hog with white belt, weight 40 to 50 pounds. Notify John Kalb, Surrey, Ind. ROST- —Automobile crank. Please return to this office. ROST— Phi Delta Theta pin two weeks ago. Reward. Return to this office. - MISCELLANEOUS. MONET TO ROAN — 5 per cent farm loans. John A. Dunlap. 7 yMONET TO ROAN —Charles J. Dean & Son. /

NOTICE. All the suits contesting the will of the late Benjamin J. Gifford, are now disposed of, and I am in a position to sell land. I have yet unsold several hundred acres of good land located in Jaßper 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 particulars. GEO. H. GIFFORD, Executor. A USED CAR CASE. Dam it, lam growing old. Every night my feet get cold. My lungs, (that once were tuned for speed, are choked with cartoon fro mthe weed. Buy an Oakland. Mrs. Miller Redmen returned to Iher home at Lake Plaiin, 111., after visiting her daughter, Mrs. Charles Potts, who is sick at the hospital. My carburetor, once a heart, clogs and sputters, bard to start. I prime with liquor when it’s cold, but that don’t help the valves to hold. Or a Monroe. My body’s ibent, my top is ((blank) I’ve fought and lost with H. C. L. My frame and all might do for lard. This old tub’s been drove too hard. I’ll soon have a Hudson. ' ■ iMy .mind, that throttled down with ease, slows up for nothing but j a wheeze. My lamps once spotted; burlesque acts, tout now they’re dimmed with cataracts. The Essex is incomparable.

Feeding the Millions INCREASING the food supply of the world is the most vital problem which man must solve. The burden of this solution rests heavily upon the shoulders of the farmers of America, The sendee rendered by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) in producing fuel mid lubricants for the economical and efficient operation of farm machinery has made it possible for the farmer to cultivate a greater acreage, produce larger crops, and *get them to market at least expense, > * . By maintaining its comprehensive system of distribution, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) makes it possible for the farmer to get his requirements of products easily, regularly and quickly. • - • w v ’ ~By virtue of this complete service on the part of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), he may, literally, “make hay while tile sun shines.” * He is independent of the health or endurance of horses. He can plow, cultivate or harvest when these tasks should be done. He can have a complete cycle of activity, operating even by shifts, if necessary. He can plan his operations on a definite schedule to produce a steady, constant i ♦ supply of farm products for you and your family. Thus is illustrated how you benefit by the service rendered by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) to the farmer. These are benefits accruing to the world at large which accentuate the usefulness of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) as a public, servant, and emphasize how completely it discharges its obligation as such. Standard Oil Company ( Indiana ) 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago 1778