Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 227, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 September 1919 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

’ FOB SALE — The Col. George H. Healey residence on South Cullen street. This is one of the beet residences of the city. It is modern in all respects. J. P. Hammond, secretarytreasurer of the Jasper County Mortgage & Realty Co. —— WANTED. WANTED — I have a party who wants to rent a good farm. See me. Leslie Clark. , * WANTED — To buy a wood heating stove. 'Phone 518. WANTED — Have a few nice rooms, nicely furnished, to rent for the coming winter season. Everything modern. Call and see Mrs. S. R. Nichols, 80c Milroy -.venue WANTED — Bicycle repairing. Aaron Coffel, east Side public square In Wiseman’s shoe shop. WANTED — To do plain and fancy, sewing. Prices reasonable. Mrs. Kate l Aj£er,phone.463.? WANTED — Six or eight men for factory work. Steady employment and good wages. Report at Schuyler C. Irwin’s office, Odd Fellows’ building. WANTED— To rent a 160 or 200ecre farm. Call or write E. E. Baughj man, McOoysburg, Ind. ’Phone 917-B. WANTED —WMhlngu. Can at the house south of the old tile mill. Washing* deiivsrsA Mrs. Paul Booth. WANTED — Girl for house work. Elderly lady preferred. Grover Mackey, ’phone 105. - ■■ - LOST. LOST — Phi Delta Theta pin two weeks ago. Reward. Return to this office. LOST— Blue serge coat between William Reese’s and the Moody store. Overseas pin in coat, A. E. F. Reward. Frank Cavindish, 'phone 922-B. 622-B.

MISCELLANEOUS. MONEY TO LOAN — 5 per cent farm loans. John A. Dunlap. MONEY TO LOAN— Charles J. Dean & Son. Mrs. M. D. Gwin was in Chicago Thursday. Edward Lane underwent an operation in the Presbyterian hospital in Chicago. His wife and sister, Mary Lane, wfent to Chicago Thursday, 'but neither of them have returned at this writing and no word has thus far been received as to Mr. Lane’s condition. Mrs. T. F. Warne, of Parr, suffered a stroke of paralysis about two weeks ago. Her entire left side is affected, but she seems to be improving slowly.

ANOTHER WAR TRAGEDY JUST REVEALED.

One of the grim tragedies of the war is revealed in the dispatch from Paris stating that Marshal Foch has . asked the Belgian government to as- , sist him in searching sos the body • of his son, who was killed in August, ' 1914, in the Belgian Ardennes. The marshal had refrained from referring to his loss and the news that ! his son had fallen before the great struggle was hardly under way has come as a surprise to most of the world. The date indicates that the boy was a member of tjje first force the French sent into Belgium to assist King Albert’s brave troops in stemming the German invasion through the land they had outraged by their shameless disregard of international law. With Spartan fortitude the general concealed his sorrow and devoted his life to heating hack the invader, this ability finally gaining recognition in the call to command the greatest army in the history of the world. His brilliant strategy routed the enemy and he returned to Paris the most famous general of strain of war is over and his accounting has been made, the marshal turns to that sad mission which Not as a conqueror, acclaimed by all the right-thinking nations of the world, but as a sorrowing father he seeks a trace of his boy, one of the first victims of Prussian greed. It must not be supposed that Marshal Foch’s loss has occasioned any deeper suffering than that which has come to every American parent whose boy fell on the battlefield. The only difference lies in the contrast of position. As the great general calmly maneuvered his huge armies through those terrible days of the last German drive and the counter attacks of the British, French and American forces, who can say that his mind was not turning to a desolate region in Belgium where his boy lay among the nameless dead? He has had his triumph, but how quickly he would relinquish all .that glory if that would bring bacF his son.—lndianapolis Star. Dr. Rose M. Remmeck, optometrist, has returned from a month’s vacation and will be in her office every day. Eyes examined according to most modern methods. Glasses fitted. ’Phone 403.

■I I O Floral designs of all kinds made to order at Holden’s Greenhouse. Phone 426.