Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 February 1920 — Page 2

’'' • ' 5 ... L-.. - THE UNIVERSAL CAB . - ~ • ' ._ . . / k . ■ '! - » t_ YOUR FORD IS RESPONSIVE to the treatment you give it Treat it with care and attention and it will respond with steady, uncomplaining service. Let us give it regular treatment We stock geuuine Ford parts—and have experienced Ford men. We can keep your Ford serviceable. CENTRAL GARAGE CO. ’PHONE THREE-ONE-NINE.

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baxxt in ixkptiixit COhARK > RABBETON. FOltohsrs. Berni-Weekly Republican entered Jan. i, 1»T, •• esoond clean mall matter, at the poatofnee at Bensssisw. Indiana Wllbf Bepnlllnen catered Jan. 1. IMT aa aeooad elans mail matter, at the nealmfnoi at fftlwr, Indiana, ktodertfee Act of Match 3, 1&79. RATBB FOB 33IBFLAX MJTDTIBUIO Berni- Weakly Dally, per tach 15c First Pe«e Do SUBSCRIPTION RATES Semi- Weekly. year. In advance, 83.00. Daily, by earner, 15 centa a week. Single copies. 1 centa By malt <5.00 a year. ~ RATNB FOB OT.fIBBTFXBD DA Three Bane er leea. pec week of six laseeo of The Brenin* Republican and two of the homi-Weekly Republican, M met- Additional apace pro rata Readlay Nutlose Semi-weekly, ten centa per Moe drat insertion; 5 cento per lino each additional insertion. Dedly. 5 cento per Une flrat insertion, 3 «<an tn per line each additional inaerik»; No accepted for lean than 2g Pwbtto Bala Advarttolay—Single column reading matter type, 53.00 for first insertion, <I.BB for each additional insertion. No display ad accepted for leea than M centa.

CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOB SALB. FOB BALE—Three White Holland fcm: Registered Hereford hull. 13 month* old. Thomae Cain. Phone a29-G. FOB BABB—Cut flower* and potted plant*. Osborae's Gr«nhou»e. FOB BBXT—Three large unfurhlahed roeaa, flit floor and three room* turniahed for light housekeeping. Mrs. E. H. Shield*, Phone <H JOB eiTW Good 8 room house, bath, pantry, well, cistern, city water, electric lights, barn, chicken house, other out-buildings and fruit. North part of city, with 5 lots, 180x175, well fenced. Mrs. J. R. Wilcox, phone 304Red. fob ■•w o* bbbt—bi* 4«x80 three-gole tent. 10-foot walla. J« the thia* for pahlie sale*. We are through with it. Wo are la our whit* front garage. Kuboeke A Walter. VOB BALM—Seven room reeldanna well located oa improved street. Will **U at a bargain If taken a* enca Hoyd Meyer*. FOB QBT.B- New modern brick bungatow. Price 84,000. Mtivny D*vtoFOB *STi» it* acre nunn, well trained, moat all level; black aoit; 6room bouse, good barn, oom crib*, good well, line orchard, land all in cultivat*Mb Ona give good term* on thia. Price MO per acre. Charles J. Dean A SonW BOU lim tem resMianh near buatnms Motion, clom to church and school. Prioa 94.000. Tenas. Floyd Mayor*. FOB BABB—IM acre farm, three mile* of Hiaaailnr, lie* next to 9800 land. -, W bo aoM at a Mg bargain. Harvey Davisaaa. FOB BAXB — 1% horsepower International gae engine; good a* new and used about 10 dura. At the White Front gar*** Khboake and Walter. FOB liT-s fw acres White county, Mtween Chalmers and Wolcott; black prairie; >175 per aero; liberal tenns; must sell becauae of my business ha Indianapolis. Write me for engagement to see this farm. 8. L. FOB UST.B—Modern reeMeaee. irow 7-room house. 28x30; garage 12x10, comer lot, 69x188. Box fl. Phone MR Grew*. Benacclacr, Ind. ——————————— — " FOB BALM—Nin* room be«*< a«nrly -. w Mahta. mood well atstora sd*vnShteuNw3h cMsaat ftoer cad drain. Inquire of J. N. Leatherman at th* First Matiaeal Bnak. IMB *STiV Mnßdi residence, except furnace; Ave rooms, four clothes nkwr*- good coal house, 60 foot lot. east front on best street in town. Air 4BMt*wv, price 82,6*9. Inquire Harry Swartzell, phone 947-L

I FOR SALE — Nearly new Cable-Nel-son piano. J-ML Mrs. John 1. Gwin, I FOB SAXE— A leather upholstered . davenport, reasonable. . Charles Rish--1 ling. Phone 255-Black. FOB SAXE—& pure bred Spotted Poland China boar pigs, weight about 135 pounds. These pigs were sired by “Remus,” 1085, my boar that won championship at the Jasper Co. Live Stock show In 1919. and one of my best sows; priced right. Elmer Jacks. R. R. 4, phone 925-G. FOR WST-W .-Pure bred Duroc male hog, coming two years old. W. S. Ahrn. R. F. D. 1. Rensselaer. FOB SAXE—MaI cable range. in good condition. Bert Abbott, phone 141Black. FOB SALE— Steel double oven Majestic range. Cheap If taken at once. Phone 360, Wright Brothers. FOB SAXE—-Cow with calf about two months old. Mrs. C. B. Wells, phone 648. FOB SAXE—We have for sale some good young Shorthorn bulls ready for service. Call on or write Fisher Bros., Hebron, Ind. Phone Hebron 149-M. - - FOB BflXE—An extra good milk cow with week old heifer calf at sl<y Wallace E. Saylor, Phone 936-D. / FOB SBTiB At public auction, the Osborne buildings In Remington, Saturday, February 21 at three p. m. Terms, cash. Alice M. Parks. FOR SAXE OB TRADE— Registered stallion and Jack. On easy terms or would take good team or cattle for part. L L. Jones, phone 908-B. FOB SALE— Second-hand automobile* —Fords, Overlands, Saxons, Empires. Kuboeke A Waiter, ’phone 394. ts

FOB BUB — Five city properties in fine locations, big bargain* for quick •ale. Five farm*, all bargains. Three good barns that could be converted into residence*. Also automobile oil*. Tou will be interested in these. See ma C. W. Duvall, phone 147. FOB SALE— Solid rubber tired twowheeled trailer, factory made. Also 3 sets of concrete moulds to make corner posts around yard. Paul Swain. Phone 269. —FOB WdT.F House, two lots, garage. James Donnelly. FOB SALE— Jersey cow, 4 years old and giving good flow of milk; a good one. Phone 466 or 610, ' FOB BALB— Fine navy beans, 10c a pound. 'Phone 334 E. P- Honan. FOB SALE— Bronze and white turkey gobblers. Mrs. Jesse Foster, phone 914-H. -- ' — FOB SALE— BO acres good black loam land, all in cultivation. W. S. McConnell, Fair Oaks. Ind. FOB SAAB— Ford truck, for particulars address Postoffice box 96, Rensselaer. FOB SALS — Some good brood sows, bred for March Utter. R. D. Thompson. FOB SALE — Or will trade for town property, eighty acres of land. Char leu Morrell, 'phone 638. FOB 2168 GtJ Property and town toga. 488. -

WANTED. WAMTED — To rent house in Rensselaer. Leslie Clark. WAMTED— A gentleman to push invalid in wheel chair two or three afternoons a week.. Louis Burns. Phone 138-Red. 1 —» - - WAMTED— Married man on farm, one mile from town. Joseph Halligan, phone 12. WAMTED— By young married man, to work on" farm by month; experienced. Telephone 362. WAMTED—To do all khlds of bicycle repairing. Call at J. T. Wineman Shoe Shop, east side of court house square Jack Grant, phone 330. WAMTED— To do your scavenger work.* Harry Marlatt. 327 E. Elm street. WAMTED— Motormen and conducttors for IndianapoU* City Lines. We teach you the work and offer steady employment. Wages 27c to 42c an hour. Apply or writ* Superintendent. Indianapolis Street Railway Co., Room 814 Traction Building, Indianapolis. WAMTED—WheeI chair. Louis N. Burns. First bouse south of Alex Hurley. - WABVII Man on fans. Will pay <6O per month and use the year around. Can us* middle aged man. J. F. Na**t Pb<*M M« L. WAMT2GD—WUI pay >7.96 per week to thoroughly competent woman for general housework. Mr*. Will Hogan. 312 N. Weston SU Phone 66L

THE EVKfING REPUBLI CAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

MAKE 0000 BREAD THE BASIS OF EVERY . MEAL. ■- A With butter it is the most complete food in our dietry. It is enjoyed’by aM, there is no waste, and for real food - • value it is your cheapest and best food. Eat More Bread AND FOR QUALITY, GET O’Riley’s QUALITY BAKED.

WANTED — Girl for general housework. Mrs. A. Quinn, phone 925-J. WANTED— Washings to do. First class work. Call phone 459-black. WANTED — To buy or rent an invalid commode chair. Mrs. H. M. Burns, 328 South Weston street. WANTED— Married man for general farm work. - John Lonergan, phone 955-F. W~ 1 ; WANTED — Saw gumming and furniture repairing. Have new up-to-date machinery ai.d can make old cross-cut and circulars as good as new. ELMER GWIN, Phone 418. 517 E. Washington street WANTED— To exchange a Ford touring car for a tekm of horses. John A. Dunlap, phone It. WANTED — To buy large coal heater. Must ba in good condition. Phone 138White. WANTED — Chickens and turkeys, will call for same. ’Phone <47. C. H. Leave).

FOR RENT. FOB BENT— S room house, with fihone and lights, on Madison street, n west part of town. Mrs. Mary Wiseman, phone 491-Black. LOST LOST— Saturday afternoon, package containing red middy tie , two spools black thretffi. jiieaSe Bereioe Cornwell, phone 53 2-Black. * LOST— GoId lead pencil. Reward. Notify W. B. Kirgan, Phone 167. LOST — Crank to Oldsmobile truck. Finder leave here or call J. A. Grant. Phone 10. i ”" LOST — Glass from auto headlight between Rensselaer and two miles north of Slaughter schoolhouse. Return to this office. ESTBAT — Red sow, weight about 200, ruptured tit. Deft February 5. Bought at John Dale Sale. Shelby Comer, phone 904-L. MISCELLANEOUS. MODT TO XOAN—I have aa un--11 ml ted supply of money to loan on good farm lands at and usual commission or without commission, as desired. Loans will be made tor b yearn, 7 years, 10 years or 20 years. See me about these various plan*. John A Dunlap. , / . NOTW handle the Rumley line Tractors, threshing machines and farming implements; also Western Utility one horse-power tractor and implements. At the White Front garage. Kuboske and Walter. KOEST TO DOAN —Charles J. Dean A Bon.

WASHINGTON NEWS.

.Washington, D. C., Feb. 16. The end of the treaty fight in the senate may come this week, if Senator Lodge accedes to the suggestion of Senator Hitchcock that to avoid waste of time the reservation to article 10 of the league covenant be first considered and disposed of. If agreement on this provision can •be reached the treaty can be ratified; if not the question of’ the league of nations will be taken to the people in Hie presidential election campaign. —o—- — McCormick re-opened the treaty debate m the senate “with a speech reiterating his opposition to the treaty and scoring Senator Lodge for entertaining any proposals looking to the modification of his reservations. President Wilson’s return to active work after his illness are causing his friends considerable worry ( and fears are entertained that his ( activity, together with the excitement due to his dramatic dismissal of Secretary Lansing, will result in a serious reaction. —o — Bids submitted for former German passenger vessels were less than offered previously in sealed •bids, most of which were withdrawn. Court action on the injunction proceedings to prevent the sale of the ships was deterred until Friday, hut the senate adopted a resolution asking that no sales be ccmcluded for the present. A. L. Padgitt has received word of the death of his nephew, Eddie Johnson, whose home was near Boswell. The deceased was a well to do Benton county farmer. His death wtiich occurred last Saturday, was caused by influenza folowed by pneumonia. He was about thirty years of age and was married. Sickness in his family prevented Mr. Padgitt from attending the funeral.

COUNTY EDUCATIONAL NOTES.

A very successful as well as novel joint township institute was held in the auditorium of the new high school building at DeMotte last Saturday. The school corporations participating were Keener, Kankakee, Wheatfield and Wheatfield town. Miss Margaret Marshall, principal of the DeMotte schools, presided. AH teachers were present except Mis Rosa Feldman, who is a Keener township teacher. The County Superintendent, Trustee C. E. Fairchild and the local minister were present also. The forenoon work was given over to discussions of paints relative to problems that confront the teachers in their daily work as suggested from the institute outline. The vigorous discussions kept the institute alive from the’ time it opened until the noon hour arrived. The dinner had been previously planned by Miss Addie Harris, domestic science teacher at De Motte, and Miss Marshall. The teachers retired from the auditorium to the dining room where they found a table—superbly decorated. The place cards revealed the fact that St Valentine had not been forgotten. The walls of the room were decorated with portraits wof Washington and Lincoln, both of which were draped with American nags. The entire room decorations were expressions of plain and appropriate recognitions of America’s two greatest patriots. There were also samples of domestic science sewing and agricultural collections thus linking patriotism and industry as twin subjects taughts in the schools. After each teacher had found her place at the two tables announcement was made that all should remain standing to sing the first stanza of America. A chorus of high school boys and girls lead in the singing in an adjoining room. This* furnished an excellent patriotis setting for the many after dinner speeches that followed the superbly prepared and served dinner. Miss Margaret Marshall acted as toastmaster and started the speaking off by announcing that an attempt would be made to do triple honor to St. Valentine, Washington and Lincoln in the after dinner speeches. Ransom Halleck, a junior in the DeMotte high school, was introduced by the toast master and he responded—tby~~readmg Jefferson’s “Character of Washington,” after which he spoke Lincoln’s “Gettysburg Address.” The young man stood under the portrait of the pa-' triot whom he was eulogizing, in 1 each rendering. Miss Marshall called upon a number of the teachers who gave appropriate tales and stories in memory of either Lincoln or Washington. Those who responded were Mrs. Fred W olf, Grace Poole, Margaret Delahanty, Lottie

HH I BHMIiMbwBIBh IS r < : - 1 —gives better bakings that B MATSI ■go further. It strikes straight at the root of extravagance—waste —and re- 1 IrWJ -j® duces living cost in a sane, sensible, worth while way. B, j Calumet Baking Powder never • St—'a \ fails to properly raise all bakings. It never j foils to produce file best of results. It always Makes Most Palatable 1 and Sweetest of Foods il Calumet bakings do go further, IA < , because they are deliciously good, are • F I never thrown away. 9 because Xhey have greatest of keeping qual- ' ity — stay moist, tender B'? 4 "M and oven-fresh for days ■ a 4 an J Jays. ft jl MM Calumet makes BMM /hx your baking pow-. . -V der money and your baking material money Pfo -BiM ‘ a ■/a I further — stretches it to the extreme of economy. ■ Lv A A W . Jr You save when you buy it —moderate 1 i in cost You save when you use it — has k ZJiSkinc more than the ordinary leavening strength— 9„% /y therefore you use less. You save materials it is K used with—there is never a bake-day failure. ® Generations of good cooks have used Calumet — because it positively proves its g A' \ I I superiority and economy. Is unfailingly depend- g < s J able. It comes to you from the largest, finest, most sanitary Baking Powder Factory in the world — absolutely pure and 9k'as perfect in leavening power as the day it left the big y - M I Calumet Plant. B Contains only such ingredients as OM llifc Hi ' have been officially approved by United ■As States Food Authorities. Sold by your grocer ■ r Fl- ||. M iUyr under a definite money-back guarantee, if it doesn’t prove ■ HIIMC nnis” ,<best by test"—in your own kitchen, in any baking. »-/ - Ui ’•nil ■ you buy CaiumeV you g«ta| I full poimd, if you want it. 16-not 12 ounces. |

An Ever' Useful Valentine— The TORRINGTON ELECTRIC VAC. , * * No dust, no apron, no cap < With The Torrington Electric Vac. ’ Many it surpasses . , With all its attractions. < Just a gentle moving Of this perfect blessing .« Presto, change oh, rugs are like new— > ’ I hope The Torrington Company sell not a few. ’ List’ friends, patrons— < You, who one haven't; ; No beating off of nap I > No carrying off of scraps. 1 Buy, buy a Torrington Electric Vac. 2 ' ’ Then your home won’t be black. F > No motor driven brush - _ ’ In sweeping, no rush— '! Buy The Torrington Electric Vac ► In housecleaning you will then nothing lack. X repeat again, men and women, —.—— ——— ► The Torrington Electric Vac, ► Which nigh transforms this earth to Heaven, «’ ’ The Torrington Electric Vac. —A GRATEFUL USER. ► ■ 1 ► J For Sale by i WORLAND BROTHERS.

Porter, Lila Delahanty, Supt. L. J.' Arend, William May, Grace Knapp, Nina Yeager, Paul W. Ashby, Margaret Yeager, Mrs. Huntington. After the eulogies from these teachers were given the toastmaster presented the local minister at De Motte, who paid some excellent tributes to Abraham Lincoln. This’ program was closed <by Opal Hal-1 Teck, another junior in the DeMotte high school, who recited an ode on the life of Washington and Walt Whitman’s “O Captain, My Cap-_ tain.” The patriotic 'thrill that as a stimulus to when -nfime from this program will ’ serve they resume their work so that the. spirits of these two greatest of America’s leaders will be imparted to the children under their supervision, thus serving as a guide towards making our young people in northern Jasper one hundred per cent American.

If congress kicks Berger often enough it may locate his vulnerable spot. 2 —Toledo Blade.

CHURCH NOTICES. Announcement of Sunday services will) appear in the Friday semiweekly Republican a(nd the Saturday Evening Republican. Notices for the Semi-Weekly should be in this office not later than 10:00 a. m. Thursday.

Why not inter the Kaiser in the peace palace atlhe Haglfe?—New York Evening Post. Mrs. John R. Gray went to Lafayete where she is having an ■ eye treated by a specialist. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Foresman of Foresman were in Rensselaer today. They went to Indianapolis from here on the forenoon train. Born Thursday, Fehr 12th, 1920, a 9% pound son to Mr. and Mrs. Wm/H. Minniear. who reside on the Owen Martin* farm three and one-half miles southwest of Morocco. Mother and babe doing nicely. ...