Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 67, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 March 1920 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
WANTED. WAirTBD —Girl for general housework. Mrs. E. P. Honan. Phone 334. WANTBD —Lace Curtains to laundry, 500 par. Also four eh oats for sale. Tul Malone, phone 97-White. I MATE ' PABTT TO BUT—S or 6 room cottage or bungalow; must be modern or partly so. Any place south ~f railroad, inquire of fc H. Hamilton I per sonally, Republican office. , WANTED—To lease, grazing sod or 'small brush; no large stumps or rocks wanted. M. D. Karr. Fair Oaks. WANTED —Help at the laundry. Rensselaer. Ind.. Phone 379. WANTUt —To buy large coal heater. Must be in good condition. Phone 619Whlta WANTBD —To do your scavenger work. Harry Marlatt. 327 E. Elm street. WANTBD —Printer. Willing to pay wages commensurate with services rendered. Rensselaer Republican. - WANTED —Place to work on farm by the year. P. O. Box 64, care Harry Wiltshire, or phone 288. WANTBD —Man on farm. Will pay SSO per month and use the year around. Can use middle aged man. J. F. Nagel, Phone 908 L. WANTED —Motormen and conducttors for Indianapolis City Lines. We teach you he work and offer steady employment. Wages 37c to 42c’ an hour. Apply or write Superintendent, Indianapolis Street Railway Co.. Room 814 Traction Building, Indianapolia WANTED —Chickens and turkeys, will call for same. 'Phone <47. C. H. Leavel. WANTED—Saw gumming and furniture repairing. Have new up-to-date machinery and can make old cross-cut and circulars as good as new. ELMER GWIN, Phone 418. 617 E. Washington street. FOR RENT. FOB BENT—Office and storage rooms, over Hilliard and Hamel Store. A. Leopold, phone 33. FOB BENT—Furnished rooms. two blocks from court house. 203 N. Wes- . ton St. ■
FOUND .FOUND—Auto license 175217. LOST LOST—A boy’s thick baseball mitt. Robert Turtier, phone 30Q-D. LOST—Tie pin set witlr small brilliant, somewhere in Rensselaer. Leave at Republican office and receive $5.00 reward. LOST—Between Simon Cook's corner, 8 miles east and Charles Lowman place, a heavy saddle. Reward for return. Call 908-R. Charles Lowman. MISCELLANEOUS. TAKEN UP—A pig, Marc/h 15th. Owner can have- same by paying for this ad. Ross Ramey. STOLEN—Large black hound, with white speckled breast and lege, from farm 6 miles north of city. Disappeared Feb. 20th. $lO reward for information leading to recovery. T. W. Snow. NOTICE TO IFABMEBS—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. TAKEN UP—Black cow with halter. Inquire at this office. MONNT TO LOAN I —l have an unlimited supply of money to loan on good farm lands at. and usual commission or <% without commission. as desired. Loans will be made for o years, 7 years, 10 years or 20 years. See me about these various plans, iohn A. Dunlap. MONNT TO LOAN—Charlee J. Dean Born, March 14th, a son to Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Amsler. One thing about a Wilson cabinet: It never becomes an antique. —New York Globe.
Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar By Edgar Rice is the latest and best of those famous Tarzan stories that have thrilled millions of readers. Tarzan is one of the W most unique characters ever created in fiction. He is a majestic man, a noble beast, an aristocrat in civilization and a King in the Jungle. Tarzan is the dream man most of us would like to be, and when you surrender yourself to the thrill of his exploits in the damp African jungle you are only yielding to the pull of primitive impulses and in imagination are back again in prehistoric times, swinging from tree to tree ingloriousabandonthrough the primeval forest or fighting the great cave bear with rode stone weapons. Once you have started this gripping tale, team of horses couldn’t pull you away from it until the last word / is told. g jk OUR NEW (■k SERIAL J Read It! jf#
