Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 January 1920 — Page 4
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RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN . BAMUT ABB MBMS-VBBBBT. -■- • • BMUMB • BABBMBBB, RWI*W — "WBbS'SAJJ—"’ •mbMVMMf BepaMleaa eaterod Jan. catered Jan. L -jim -—— AJ»T»» Dally, per taate ...............•••ide SUS: Ma DaUr. ly £22* W •“*■ * w * k> SJPwtafcft, advanoa IkSk ~~BI—I »•• ge tetg.BisM-yeeMy Republican, Mrtlrrir r tea contapar Maa MM_ taaartlaa; 1 eaaw MF tUM MDh a4di tSOBAI IBMrtMNL Killy. i eaata per Maa inaertiea. 1 cents par Maa aaob aPPttkiaal Hen. No readar aaaapMP tor lees Maa M cant*. ■■Mia Mala AdvasSlatag—Single cal* uai reaPlaf matter typy. fAM far drat MaarMoau P.M Mr each additional taNo PWlar aS oeaapted for leas than St MBtik
CLASSIFIED COLUMN .. ~ ' 'WB UU- ‘ TOH >4** V«ny desiroMa •mall rotetebca «« toot Mntagw ; .-- Mealy situated. JCnquira Ku—ll 'an Hock. rirnno 935-A. FOB wwe -* 3-octave Deacon Xjlpbone. WUI sell for *39. Jobs Morton. -;; ■ _■ ;/' ■, „ . ■ VO* O~n organ. dark walnut *33. Mm U* Myron. .£ —l— — WB largo unteromb•d rooaM, first floor and tores roaw Curatebod ter tight heuaokesutn* Mrs. M H. KMtete, p£— 434. WB IHM Iwa room r—M—w well lassted oa Iwrowt streak WU ■oil at a bsrgataif takas at ones Ptegd Moyocs. jbqm| MOflsrn Wib* gatow. Price H*M. Harvey Davte . WB MBB-m sore Am, woU MM All lBWto blMk MU* S* Mod hftHL OQHI CrtlNL SOOd S 3? BwTowKSl tasuMkur Sb Om give Price »• *m •** Chartes J. Baas *—■ ja; < - ' isL*wß at tbo First Motional Hank. — "'' ——
W- :? f ‘M’ • * i K *&''■ ■.‘ ./M . r>fc. -' i'" 'X . ■- ■ ■:’'■ -f " ‘ r THE UNIVERSAL CAR . -.. M r PiWri<f Buy Now While Del Ivories Are Possible - *#- - 3 Bar your Ford car now while deliveries are possible. Thore is only a limited specific number of Ford can allotted to this territory. You will be wise to buy one now while we can get cars to deliver. A signed order with us is your protection. Even our small allotment of Ford can is not shipped us until we have bonafide orden for them. This is because the demand for Ford can all over the country is greater than the supply or production. So, don’t depend on spring delivery. Only so many Ford can will be shipped in to this temtory; bnly so many will be able to get Ford can. K you would be forehanded and plan ahead, you will have us deliver you a Ford car as soon as possible. Then you will have it to use whenever you want it The Ford is an all year utility—in your home or businem. Its serviceability, its case of opention, Its low «o»t Ims made, it such It win serve you the year around. Spring and summer, autumn and winter, it is your servant; always ready to do your bidding. Central Garage Co. Phone Three-Qne-Nine I naiet ea Gemhse Feed Farts
■OB S9T.B—Ford truck, for particulars address Postoffice box 96, mMMB BASB —A bls: barn in line condition and city tot. A bargain if taken within ten days. Be sure and call on C. W. Duvall for eame. ■OB PSTiM Huron automobile. Will take cow in on trade. Wm. Platt. Express spent ~ITOB e*TW Spotted Poland China boar. William Eisele, Jhone 926-A. _________ ■OB UAXda—49 Shotea wt. from 80 to 40 lbs.; 8 ebotes, wta. about 126. Rex Ott, R. F. D. 1, Rensselaer. ■OB BASH—-Household furniture. Dining table and chairs, kitchen table, 2 rockers. 2 sanitary couches, red Slush couch, walnut stand and maogany stand. H. C. ZOLL, 414 Cherry 8U Phone 614. TOI IMXB— Some good brood sows, bred for March Utter. R. D. Thompson. , ■OB PST.B-Tbe Col. Oaorgo B. Healey rosidaooe oa ■•“‘h ©“JJ* 1 •treat. Tnu M oas •« ] uencM Of the city. It r—nuntT A P. Hammond, oeuimarySXdw of the JaaporTcounty Mortgago A Realty Co ■OB BABB— Or wUI trade for town ■OB Benoni haM automobiles —Fords, Ovortands, Baxona, Ea*lrc& Kuboeke A Walter, •pboao MA « MBB BSXB row, ate x years old, sa xsi st
■OB BABB— nree fresh MWS. Fred PhllUpa, ‘phono ttk iWiHSI
KM ■L™ • gaaad. Theue 884 k. P- uaeaa --- TBB giITT tr* <o—dS that will dam. Phene 348. WB UAW-Ctey SwO-e— tews Ma, PM*p Ma* Warn 483. W* sav-w -vnd band goods: 1914 Ford, cheap and in good running order: soft coal stove; long davenport; sideboard; kitchen cabinet; genuine Victrola; sanitary couch with mattresses, cheap; 3-piece parlor set, cheap; small table; good organ; 2 beds and <m rings; commode; chiffonier; small witting desk, cheap; comb book case Zd Siting desk, cheap; rocking chair; Wlhite sewing machine, in fine shape; washing machine; invalid • chair and folding go-cart. Worland Brothers, phone M. __________ WANTED. - VMJR**— Work on farm. A B. Clifton, ndr Oaks, Ind. WdJgfW Driver for express wagon. to begin work next Monday, February 2 See William Piatt, Express Agent. WAimtb— Maa to »«*. on farm, to comnMniroMarch piy 345 permonth? R. L. Cochran. gone MB-U WAJTTWn Girl tor gm«Ml_ bouaework. Phone 411. Mrs. B. Frank Alter. very tittle earn. CaU Monon WmUmo No. Ifi-c; at our axohange. TEAMS WANTED — ABOUT STATE BANK OF and tmm wm tott tor —s* Wane 343. <& M ' *y : . . — \ WAW Wsn_gktemlng and Made tare repairing. Ham newj* to-dEfe otacipnory aiM eaia make old (nmeu street. ■ ? ’■ - - — .r.
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trAinßß—Married man to work on FloydLiStonwalter. Booetewn. Indiana LOTT. XOBT—Dog. Collie, about a year old With white ring around nedk. Reward. O. G. Baker, 912-R. , XOST—Gray lined hood for Ford automobile on R. F. D. No. 2. Harry B. Murray. Phone 74. mrWLATBD—White collie dog, yellow spot on head; leather collar. Notify Henry Putt, phone 104-0, Goodland. XOST—Large driving glove for right hand. ..Leave at this bffice or notify E. S. Thornton, phone 902-F. 808T —Black kid glove with fur cuff —new. Finder notify Vern else Harris, Phone 647. XOST— Auto chain ea way—between BsnnHaar sad Stigler's comer. Notify Oren & Bell, phoae PM-C. . 8088 "A. O. Fl sorority pin Christmas eve. propably at Van club dance. Reward for its return. Mkrgarct Babcock. *pkene Ilk tPOtnn>—Large mitten. Phone 482-Whita Jake GSmora '■ -1 MUCBLLAMBOUS. yem -Bee me_ about them vartoue plmm,. Jeba A. Pmte SB IBISW-Thertm J. Date
Leap Year Missed.
The rale used to teU If a year 1a er wad, a leap year la to divide it by Be figare < Kft may be done wfthoat a remainder it is generally guppeaed to prove that fee year to h leap yeaur. Thia la correct in respect <rf all yean eave la the caae of the 100 years, that is, the beginning of a century, as ITOO. 1800. 1900. In thoae years the teat ia to divide by 400. If these testa are applied to the last 100 years we shall fed the. year 1900 is not divisible by 400 and neither was the year 1800. Leap year occurred every four years after the year 1800 until 1898, but there was no leap year between 1796 and 1804 (a space of eight yearn). Neither was there a leap year between 18M and 1904.
The Ring-Ouzel.
The migrant rteroasei builds year after year tn a granite quarry, and I have often heard him there. It is a solitary, forgotten place and he knows it better than most people. ... His song differs from the intimate music of his kinfolk, the blackbird and thrush. It Is thinner, colder, sabre else —the pare tinkle of a mountain brook. With some birds you Ml Bat they you to listen to them; not eo the shy ring-ousel. Oue pajA something in time and patience* for his song, and values it the more.— M* Philpotts.
Bunched Them A ll
I asked Billy if he loved see and he ■aid “les." Then I asked if he liked Aent Nell better than me add his reply was; “I like both." I continued asking similar questions in regard to other mambon of the family yinaUy the child grow hngattsut and saM: -Oh. gee whist I like the whole bench st you Exchange.
Me Mere Birthdays
«rwwwk" I - • r . -r" ■. ■
120,000 STAND IN BREAD LINE
More Than 1,000,000 Faw Death Ie Message Brought hy ’ Mitt Dakesian. Imagine a bread line of 120,000 fam people waiting for twenty-four boon a day for the dole of food that to the sole barrier between them and death from starvation. That is the situation in AJexandropol, a city In Busston Armenia, according to Miss Hermine Dakesian, a pretty Armenian girl, one of the survivors of four yean
MISS HERMINE DAKESIAN.
of tike horrors of Turkish massacres and deportations. Saved by an American woman, sho has come to thia country and entered Oberlin College. . With her came fourteen other Armenian girls In change of Mias Adelaide & Dwight, a Near Hast Belief worker, who has been instrumental In helping to save hundreds of thousands of their people from death by starvation. Miss Dwight, who is not given to exaggeration and has seen conditions at first hand, says more than a million people are facing death by starvation In Armenia and win perish unless America aids. Herself an eyewitness to the slaughter of hundreds of helpless women and children by the Turks and a victim of the deportations. Miss Dakeelan, an unusually pretty girl, says there is untold suffering In Armenia and Syria. She praises the efforts of the Near Hast BeU< formerly the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Belief, to save as many of these people as possible. At Erl van*. I the capital of the Armenian republic, one hot meal is given out dally, and by this relief alone the city's death rate has been cut from a thousand dally to an average of twenty. At Alexandrupol, where the refugees from Turkish Armenia wore driven by thousands, the situation to appalling, Miss Dakesian says. It to to avert these wholesale deaths that Near Bast Belief la making a nation-wide appeal for funds.
OY SCOUTS IN YOUNG ARMENIA
Strangest Troop of All In Constantinople Being Made Into Bood, Citizens. American Boy Scout training la alO inc nromlnently in the rehabiUtatieb of hundreds of little Armenian bey refugees from the Turkish massacre* Who have been organised Into a scowl troop la’Constantlnople as the solution of one of the most troublesome problems that confronted tin Near Best BA Uef workers is that city.' Hounded and driven for four years, having seen their parents and relatives slaughtered or worse by Turks and Kurds and themselves forced to beg, steal or do almost anything to eke out Oto barest existence, these boys had completely lost their moral sense when they Anally found refuge In the Near East Relief orphangea. The boys had been dad in rags for so long that they had forgotten bow to take care of clothes. This was a tragedy when tim Near Bast Relief had need of •swy pair of shoes and of every suit es doth* for new boys constantly earntag la. Then the beys were organised as Buy Scouts and given their unifonM. They Mm th he cm**” l school detibes as woU ee of thdr unifggUSS. , They had boon so often hpagry they had emus to steal without compunction. When they dMt entered the or tbsy — a Boyßecatacw.** ■
H ■ ■ II Au I Ullin ■ For Intotetol Chilton.. Know That Genuine Castoria the Xyn Jr Signature//Jr of Tjr * !■ — ■<- < ,A- In TV S' Use for Over ■ Thirty Years B»Ct Copy of Wrapper. tnk centaur company. new yorm cm. HHHHHHHHiIHHMHHIIHMHiHHBBHIMHHHHHHi
- — - ' ~, —■ — —— Corpbination A shoe that represents the best in shoe making. A combination of measurements for “hard to fit” feet. A combination of style and comfort,'and warmth and wear, at a reasonable price. Nothing like them for winter weather. Men and women who are particular about their footwear, will appreciate these Combinations, one of the most popular Dr. A. Reed ~ Cushion Shoe Models. B.N. FENDIG eafured in - wtndiM O Hr ■ “Combination” to AU Usthcr. I
J. D. Campbell went to Shelby today. M. GosneM went to Dwight, Hl., today. I. H. Riley and Bob Loy went to Chicago this morning. Marvin Morrell went to Hammond this morning. David Leichty, who had been in Ft Wayne, returned today to his home in Fair Oaks today. - Mrs.' Albert Wolfe of Chalmers, was called here today on account of the illness of her mother. Purdue university defeated Depauw in a great game of basket ball at Greencastle Saturday night 32 to 31. Read the Fred W. Schultz sale advertised in this issue of the Republican. Do ndt forget the date, Wednesday, January 28. —- Mrs. S. C. Irwin is spending two days in Chicago with Mr, and Mrs. G. C. Sherman, of Minneapolis. The Shermans will continue from Ctoca- —— | CITY BUS UNE | I I ♦ ki* TRAINS AMP CITY ♦ * T | S' v __ Al dRBPBBI ; . gs |
Mrs. Charles Bowers returned from Phoenix, Aris., Sunday, to which place she was called two weeks ago by the serious illness of her brother, Terrence Thompson, who contracted tuberculosis while in the army. His condition, while somewhat improved when Mrs. Bowers left, is still very serious and it is feared that he cannot survive. He is being cared for by the govjrnment. i CASTOR IA Fer Infants and Children In Um For<hror3OYW* the Slgnatdfo ■HUM MB ■ SJx - URt Mir' I v&ar ' \C diat never *iabw 1 - hAasw TON Electric Vac—always
