Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 February 1920 — Page 3

Ford THE UNIVERSAL CAR Authorized Sales and Service That’s All THE CENTRAL SALES CO. ’PHONE THREE-ONE-NINE.

MONON ROUTE Train Sched»le Effective March 80, _1919. NORTH SOUTH >• 4:84 am. 85 «:J7 am. 4 5:01 am. 5 10:55 *• m. 4t 7:80 am. 37 11:18 a.m. si 10:88 am. 33 1-57 p. m ki 2:51 P- m - 89 S: ?° p * m - P W 8:81 p. m. 81 80 4:50 p. m. 3 11:10'p. m.

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY. CLARK & HAMILTON, Publishers. Semi-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, as second class mall matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana Evening Republican entered Jan. 1, 1897, as second class mail matter, at the postoffice at Rensselaer, Indiana under the Act of March 8, 1879. aim VthB MSMdIT ADTBBansxss Semi-Weekly • M« Dally, per tach 15c Firat Pigo HO SUBSCRIPTION RATES Semi-Weekly, year, in advance, 83.00. l j Dally, by carrier, 15 cents a week. Bingio coplea 8 cent a / , By mall. >5.00 a year. VOB OBABBinSD ADS. ( Throe Unes or lose, per week of six 5 issues of The Evening Republican and ( two of Ue Sami-Weekly Republican, 1 >5 cents. Additional space pro rata Boeding VoMeoo—Semi-weekly, tea cents per line first insertion; 5 cents per line each additional Insertion. /Daily, 5 cents par line first insertion, ' 3 cents per Uno each additional inwr- I tion. No reader accepted for less than 25 cents. / Public Sale Advertising—Single c»I- ---/ umn reading matter typo, 83.00 for first insertion, *I.OB for each additional insertion. r No display ad accepted for less than 'WB cents.

COLUMN FOR SALE. FOR SALE — Seven room house, in good condition, with city lights and Water. 11900, good terms. Floyd Meyers, phono 623. FOR SALE— Hen house, 10x12, and 3 hog troughs. Mrs. E. R. Hopkins, phone 145. 808 SAAB— IOIB Ford touring car. in good condition. John A. Switzer, phone 011-F. FOB SALE — Cut flowers end potted plants. Osborne’s Grenhouse. FOB BMW— Thrie large unfurnished rooms, firs* floor and three rooms furnished for light housekeeping. Mrs. *g, H. Shields. Phone ♦>€ S6XS ■•■ Good 8 room house, \hath, pantry, well, cistern, city water, (Htectric -lights, barn, chicken house, other out-buildings and fruit. North part of dty, with 6 lots, 180x175, well fenced. Mrs. J. R- WUcox, phone 804f Bed, j FOB SAAB OB BB**— Big 40x80 \ threeigQlo tent. 10-foot walls. Just the / things for publid spies. Wean through .wMhllt We are ta ojw a white front c -wMik Kuboslte B Walter. —... FOB BABB— Registered Hereford bull, thirteen mouths old. Three White Holland turkey bens. Thomas Cain, Phone 929-G. FOB ■OXB—IOO nor* farm, well MMjk OsS-gire good terms on, this. tyßCe- tMkMdr sera Charles jpiDOMF SS 8 sate of concrete moulds to make corner gJJ 1- -rOMn< \ i yar<t PaUl Swaln ’ ———————• FOB ti'ftf e W miles e< Rensselaer, lias next to |BOO ST ■ gold at a big bargain. FOB BAJgBOdM horsepower lonal xaaMskiao: roodu new and used about 10 days. At the White Front garage. Kuboske and Walter. aJU———— ——-■ 808 SORE 110 acrea White oounty, Ind- between Chateaers and Wolcott; m ter 'SSgement to seo thia farm. S. I* ; v I

FOB SO TiM Modern residence, new 7-room house, 28x86;, garage 12x16, corner lot, 55x132. BOX 72. Phone 3 4 6-Green, Rensselaer, Ind. VOB VSTiB ■ Nine room house, nearly new, electric lights, good w»IL cistern and wash house with cement fl»or and drain. Inquire of J. N. Leatnerman at the First National Bank. VOB B4M .Pure bred Duroe male hog, coming two years old. W. S. Ahrn. R. F. D. 1. RenaSelaer. VOB BAU—New modern brick bungalow. Price |4,000. Harvey Davisson. VOB ISABE—We have for sale some good young Shorthorn bulls ready for service. Call on or write Fisher Bros., Hebron, Ind. Phone Hebron 149-M. VOB BAU—At public auction, the Osborne buildings in Remington, Saturday, February 21 at three p. m. Terms, cash. Alice M. Parka VOB BAU OB XBASE—Registered stallion and Jack. On easy terms or would take good team or cattle for part. L L. Jonos, phone 908-B. VOB BABB—Second-hand automobiles —‘Fords, Overlands, Saxons, Empires. Kuboske dr Walter, ’phone 394. \ ts VOB BAU—Five city properties in fine locations, big bargains for quick eala Five farms, all bargains. Three good barns that could bo converted Into residences. Also automobile oils. You will be Interested in these See m» C. W. Duvall, phone 147. VOB Xfi Tißtk Nearly new Cable-Nel-son piano. 3260. Mrs. John I. Gwin, Phone 414.

FOR SALE— House, two lots, garage. James Donnelly. FOB Bfi TiX- " Jersey cowl 4 years old and giving good flow of milk; a good one. Pbone 456 or 810. FOR SALE—Fine navy beans. 10c a pound. ’Phone 334 E. P. Honan. FOR SALE - Bronze and white turkey gobblers. Mrs. Jesse Foster, phone 914-H. FOR SALE— 80 acres good black loam land, all in cultivation. W. S. McConnell, Fair Oaks, Ind. FOB BABB—Ford truck, tor particulars address Postotfice box 95, Rensselaer. FOB BABB—Some good brood sows, bred for lutreh litter. R. D. Thompson. FOB SABS—Of will trade for town Sroperty, eighty acres of land. Charles Lorrell. Wm 832. * FOB BOTiB City property and tows totq. PMMp Blue. 488. FOB SABS—Two black 5-year-old horses, one a mare, the other a gelding;. also pure bred registered Shorthorn bull calf, 14 months 'Old. Charles Hrb, Phone 207-L. Monon. Ind. — i.■ —... . -1 ■- FOB wer-w 101 b Oakland, 34-B; driven 7,200 miles, good tires and new battery. A real bargain at 3875. WilHam Swart, DeMotte, Ind. Ask Hugh ; — I ।।gß 1* “ ■ - Jy wanted. man to ' work on farm. Good wages for good man. Ernest Lamßon, Phone 988-H. - - WA3TTS32 —Single man to work by month on farm; will' pay top price for good man. Write or call telephone 941-J. TEdward Rose.

WASTED—GirI or middleaged woman to assist at the Depot Beetaurypt, Mrs. Frank TOblas. Phone 587. WAintED —Job on farm, am willing *■ WAXTBD—-Good reliable uwn who can furnish references, r ‘tb represent old established company as salesmen and collectors. Men with oars prefpreeK? : ®Ss’ territory te>spen^*£Art quickly. Address Sales Manager, 150 N. Schuyler Kankakee, 111. tafai" •< • ‘ ~~ WASTED— Music pupils sor ~ piano. Phone 239, Lumie Bird Rains. To' rent a modem 6 to 7 room bouse, with garage. Address to .uu» ogwf. 3 a ■ *»>■■ r > . . - ——' WASrXBD—At the Jasper County Farm, a man for farm work and woman ’fovgtaeral tanlse Work. Will pa* w^L >^UTy rO Martatt 0, W7 street. .' wtsrsn - man on term, one mile from town. Joseph Halligan, Z’-'

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, KKNBBELAER, IND.

«- -WAMXM»BTb dd an kinds of bicycle repairing. Call at J.' T. Wiseman Shoe Shop, oast side of court house square. Jack Grant, phone 830. WAlTlD—Motormen and conducttefra for Indianapolis City Lines. We teach you the work and offer steady employment. Wages 37c to 42c an hour. Apply or write Superintendent, Indianapolis Street Railway Co.. Room 814 Traction Building, Indianapolis. WABTB3>-—Wheel chair. Louis N. Burna First house south of Alex Hurley. T ■ ■ V., Z,„ , WAETMD—Man on farm. Will pay 850 per month and use the year around. Can use middle aged man. J. F. Nagel. Phone »0t L WAMTED—WiII pay 87.00 per week to thoroughly competent woman for general housework. Mrs. Will Hogan, 312 N. Weston St., Phone 551. . WABTBD—GirI for general housework. Mrs. A. Quinn, phone 925-J. WAlTEßD—Wiaahings to do. First class work. Call phone 459-black. WAMTED—To exchange a Ford tourtag car for a teamof horsea John A. Dunlap, pbone lA —>■- ~ ' WAMVBB—To buy largo coal boater. Must be in good condition. Phono 188- < White. . , ' WAifinB —Chickens and turkeya will call for sama ’Phone 847. <1 H. LeaveL FOR REN T. FOB BENT—Furnished rooms, two blocks from court house. 203 N. Weston St. LORT DOST—By mistake I put a pair of shoes in someone's automobile Saturday. Will you please advise me if you have theip. M.' Tudor, 934-D. LOST—Saturday afternoon, package containing red middy tie ana two epools black thread, please notify Bernice Cornwell, phone 532-Black.

BOST—GoId lead pencil. Reward. Notify W. B. Kirgan, Phone 147. MISCELLANEOUS. MOWET TO BOAST—I have an unlimited supply of money. Un loan on good farm lands at 5%% and usual commission or 8% without commission. as desired. Loans wHI be made tor b yearn. 7 years, 18 years or 20 7earn See mo about these various plans. John A. Dunlap. MOTXCB TO gPABNSDBS—We 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. MOMET TO BOAB—Charles J. Dean

CLIMATE OF SALT LAKE CITY.

The following extracts are taken from the annual meteorological summary for 1919 for Salt Lake' City, Utah. The pamphlet was prepared by J. Cecil Alter, Meteorologist. Mr. Alter is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Alter, of Union township, and 'his folk and the people of Jasper county are proud of the success that has come to Mr. J. Cecil in this important government work. J ’The four climatic seasons of the temperate zone are rather distinctly? marked at Salt Lake City, each season enduring approximately three months in an ’ overage 'yearly cycle. There have been, springs and autumns ag- short as two months and guimtaß-and Winters nearly as long SB four months within the forty-six years of official records/ though monotonous conditions of either heat or cold, fair .weather or storm, seldom occur. The city’s situation, at an altitude Of 4300 feet above'* the sea, in the northeast corner of a valley fifteen by twenty-five miles in' size ,open to the northwest on Great Salt Lake, but closed on the southwest ‘by the Oquirrii mcrun‘ tains and on the east by A high section of the Wasatch mountains with a sheltering arm to the north of the city, - not only affords a degree of immunity from sevbrd wind, precipitation and temperature conditions attending the passage * * of general atmospheric disturbances, but provides convenient access thru the warm portion of sumfilef Lb spring and autumn conditions within twenty miles- distance ’ln the mountains. The topographical environment exerts a definite and generally favoraWe influence on the winds-, which blow through most of the a. m. hours at light velocities from southeasterly i directions and during most of the p. m. hours, with considerably increased velocities, from northwesterly directions. These latter windaAre to a certain extent tempered in ’ winter and modified in summer 'by their passage over Great Salt Lake. The winds prevail during the hours of great-est-fuel conaumption in Wint4tf; thus a varying amount of-nmbke is collected agaia*; the mountains, over thef dty. However/ this is dissi-pated‘toward-midday by the change, of the wind direction and velocity, as a tule. An increased precipitation occurs over the city and on the adjacent Wasatch slope compared with the State as a whole, because of the easterly trend of the average Storm track* across the Mountains. The water* supply comes from streams ( rising .• in the adjacent mountains, dependent mostly on the increased precipitation, especially snowfall, at the higher altitudes. There have -been fifteen periods ranging from 65 to to 113 days in length with 0.25 inch or less precipitation, since March, 1874. The driest ’’ season usually comes near * the ’ harvest time and is thus of reduced 7 importance, though occasion-1 al extended drought reduces the irrigatimi supply and curtail* security of the moisture Supply,' kn& of the very favorabl« normal temperature conditions for' tRe growing season are indfc catCd in the intense agricultural and horticultural P”™”* the valley, vHuch Iha pSSJ sugar heeto, alfalfa, grain and alvast collection, of minor crops. xiaiimilv

is grown near the-city without irrigation. Winter usually extends through December, 1 January and February, and snowstorms , and settled weather, cold snaps and mild periods alternate as in most characteristic but mild winter seasons at this latitude. However, the weather fluctuations are seldom severe, and there is as a rule no general and prolonged suspension of outdoor activity appropriate to the season. Storms occur about every-six days on the average, each one covering a part of two days. One-fourth of the storms faring the equivalent of two and onehalf inches or more of snow, the others being nisufficient to interrupt pedestrian or commercial traffic seriously. Spring comes rather rapidly, the daily mean temperatures mounting eight or nine degrees a month, and the precipitation totaling about forty per cent of the annual amount. Thus it brings the year’s greatest changes in the appearance of the landscape and in the development of crops and native vegetation, and sees a resumption of those general outdoor activities common to agricultural regions at this latitude. Summer begins with an abrupt change to dry warm weather, usually about the first of June. The number of stormy days, (with 0.01 inch or more of precipitation), falls to about four or five a month, and/ these are usually of comparatively small importance. Only one storm a month amounts to (1.25 inch or more. However, a trace or more falls on from ten to twelve days in each summer month, and as these minor showers are usually attended by, more or less atmospheric disturbance, they are somewhat refreshing and provide an agreeable ventilation. July is the driest month of the year as a rule. Of the eighteen thunderstorms in an average year, ten occur in three summer months. Autumn in Salt Lake City is very much the same royal era of reach cpldrS in nature, of the ripening and harvest changes due to climatic condrtions, that appears generally from New England to the Mississippi river. The gradual but definite change to cooler days and crisper nights, and the flavors of maturing crops and native vegetation, make the autumn especially enjoyable.

NOTICE OF REMOVAL. I have moved my real estate office to rooms over the Co-operative meat market, north side of public square. GEORGE F. MEYERS. I will offer for sale at the Robert Overton sale on Tuesday, February 24, several head of young ewes, bred to registered Shropshire buck, J. W. Humes.

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RUGS ALL SIZES AT Worland Brothers

Saturday Specials Macaroni, 3 packages .... 25c Corn, very best quality, per can..... 20c Crystal White Soap, 3 bars 20c Star Laundry Soap, bar.. 7c Pet Milk, tall can . . .15c Sweet Mixed Pickles, per lb 20c Peas, Early June, per can ........15c Dried Peaches, 11 oz. pkg 15c Can Peaches, in syrup 30c Pork & Beans, large can 15c Pillsbury Best Flour, per bag ... $3.80 C. L. Murphy Telephone 71