Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 71, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 March 1920 — Page 3
* I or Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always J . ' Bears the / 4 Signature j jf ■ Jr of Av ■ K:! IJr ,n nr Use sbi. I ikK . - \jr for Over 9K98E0 f- ■ Sinulc Signal®*® ■ Thirty Year? USMSTORii ■ Exact Copy of Wrapper. th* mht*u« «■»"», new
out wndoit ■ ■ ■ its ■ “Banker” In AU Leather* ■ Good Taste and Common Sense 5 win approve of the Banker and Roamer, the shoes we feature this rhonth in the window. Being Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes, they of course, are extremelycomfortable, and as they are sold by us, you may be sure they are entirely satisfactory. Reasonably Priced B. N. FENDIG . ' J- I c .n , ■ r
HOUSEHOLD GOODS AT AUCTION
Having sold my property and going to Colorado, I will sell at public auction at my residence, 450 N. Cullen street, the following household goods/ commencing at Z p. m., on SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1920 Three-piece bedroom suite, with springs and mattress; 1 bedstead, yith _ springs andt mattress; llron bedstead; 1 dresser; 1 with glass doors; 1 kitchen cabinet;" 1 dining table; 6 dining room chairs; 1 sideboard; 1 bookcase; 1 sewing machine; 6 rocking chairs; 2 stands; 1 work table; 1 couch; washing machine; 1 wringer; copper boiler; tub; -washboard; 60 feet rubber hose; lawn mower; several stone jars;, canned goods; 5 room rugs; 25 yards of three-ply wool
KID WISE
carpet; 1 vacuum cleaner; 1 base-j burner; 1 range; 1 Perfection oil t Stove, with oven; 1 wood heater; 1 ’ oil heater; garden tools, etc. Most' of the ‘.items named above are in. extra good condition. Terms—A credit’of 9 months will be given on all sums over |lO, j approved security to bear 6% in-■ < terest from date if paid at matur- ' ity, it not so paid 8% Interest will be charged from date of sale; 2% discount for cash when entitled to, credit. MRS. LAURA MICHAEL, j W. A. McCurtain, Auct. i C G. Spitler, Clerk. m2O-24-27 Private Harry Cowlts of Camp Grant was the week-end guest of Miss' Mintie Williamson. He, Miss Williamson and Ivan Williamson attended the funeral of the grand-, mother of the latter two Sunday at Westfield. ‘
THE EVKMDfG BBPVBI4OAN, BXROOEUA»*< HID.
announcements. ,A?W w)jbs May 4. > EMMET M , ‘ L - " - m i 111 ■iy|E7,iiii yo»~jw>WW w»oa» court. *o TMe- MaaaSUoaM-Totara or Mewtoa A M< ! JMmxv I will be a candidate tor the nomination for Judge of the Circuit Court, on the Republican ticket, at the primary election to be held on May 4, 1920, and will appreciate your votes and your influence. ‘ * OEQROH C A? WILLIAMS. ‘gft'fir - ± Ta !»< people Of Jasper Ana Mowton Coggitlßa: Notice is hereby given that I will <»e a candidate for the office of Judge the Thirtieth Judicial ?UtrioL eubjeet to the preference of the- Republican voters to be expressed at the Primary to be held .May 4, 1920. Thanking you fop your support, I am Sincerely, JOHN A. DUNLAP. Ton* Republican Totem Of Jasper . Aad Mewton Counties: i .will be a candidate for the office of Judge of ' the Thirtieth Judicial Court on the Republican ticket, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary election to-be held May 4. I ask the support of the voters of Jasper and Newton Counties, at the primary • election, on May A, 1920, for the nomination, on the Republican tlckfet, for the office of judge of the Thirtieth Judicial Circuit. » , ABRAHAM HALLECK. TQM COVMTT MCOMSR To The Republican Toter Of Jasper r fIQCTW ! i wish to announce my candidacy for the nomination for Recorder of jasper county, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election to be held May 4, 1920. Sincerely, WARREN H POOLS. tor swenTvr To Voters of Jasper CourtT _ . . I desire to annfljince that 1 Win be a candidate. for the znomlnatlon lor sheriff of Jasper c ounty aubjecLto bhe decision of the Republican voters at the primaries on Hay 4. TRUE D. WOODWORTH.
BASE BALL BRINGS GRIEF TO PAPA EGER
Papa Cleve Eger is''all put out ' this bright Monday morning—-all ' because he harbors beneath . his roof a young man who is ambitious to emulate the deeds of -the mous Rube Waddell, Rube Marquard and other famous southpaws • of bygone days. . I With the first touch of Spring the younger Eger hies himself to , pater families and touches him for a-new base ball glove. Papa Eger, his heart a-flutter with pride, read- , ily consents to b ein g ransacked for I the price of the necessary article ' and hurries himself to the nearest sporting goods house and purchases A glove. The time and place shifts here. Sunday morning (perhaps we should say Saturday) the junior Eger, his heart filled with joy, with the , new glove, takes himself to Billy Grant’s baseball orchard and announces himself as a candidate for a position, on the letters crab. . The young leader places Mr. Eger ’on the infield—and then the trouble ' begins. , I Papa Eger had committed a mon--1 umental blunder by purchasing for his offspring a glove which flts_ the flapper with which young Mr. Eger throws! / .. . I Utterly oblivious to the fact that his future great was exhibiting the eccentricities belonging to the small colony of lefthanders by throwing his slants from the south side, and taking it for granted that his son was normal in every way, the fond 1 papa lays down four doMarn^ for a glove to be used by rigntnanuers ° n And now there’s troublea-brew-ing. Young Mr # Eger wants to be a regular ball player and have a glove- that conforms to his style of flinging; the elder Eger can's see the Joke of toying down four more dollars to At his son 'and the sporting goods man wont exchange the glove as it has been Someone’s got to dose in tangle, and we’re venturing the prediction that it won’t be young Mr. Eger nor the sporting goods man. 1 Take your choice. . ■■ . ■" * -
i Job printing-at-the Republican
AUTO OWNERS For General Auto Repairing Overhauling TRY US ’MU HAROLD GIFFORD
FEDERATION OF FARMERS' ASSOCIATION
Indianapolis, Ind., March 22.— (Special).—AU the plans have been completed' for a co-operativevlive stock reporting, aeryice, by the Indiana Federation of Farmers’ Associations working in with the United States Department of Agriculture, which, if successful, Wiß be a great aid in the marketing of live stock in this state and tend to steady the market along with a more even supply from (day: to day. The project calls for a, Mating of all cattle, swine and sheep., from each township in the. state , along with data showing the number being used for brood purposes, the approximate date the stock will be ready .for the market and ether infarmation calculated to give-the..re-porting service an exact' line on the available supply. , In .addition to tables which will be, sent to the variQUS. cpunty units of the Indiana Federation of Farmers’ Associations and turned, oyer to the township units ever three months to be filled out, a ten day service is to be tabulated a* the headquarters of the farmers in this city. Lewis Taylor, general secretary, said . that . z the quarterly- . reports will show when the stock will be ready for the slaughter houses and that the farmers will be advised from time to time concerning conditions so that they can keep an even flow of live stock on the market and thereby do much in ithe way of obtaining steady prices. ‘‘A meeting in every township of the state has been called for March 31,” said Ml Taylor, “and at that time «tne farmers will be caUed upon to fill out the blanks we have prepared. The working program of the plan will be explained and we have high hopes that the -system will prove of immense benefit to the producers. Under present conditions we find the market glutted one week and the following week a scarcity. If . we tabulate this supply we will be in a position to , advise the. producers so that a more. steady now will come to the yards. Officers of the federation are optimistic .of the success »of the venture. Many other states will watch the movement in Indiana, the first in । the country to try out the- plan.” The reporting blanks have . three divisions, one .for cattle. one for swine.and one for sheep to be.,made out, quarterly, based on the following number on farm, birth during quarter, bought on farm during quarter, sold off farm during quarter, slaughtered, died, females on hand for breeding, stock being prepared for. rwket,. number on feed at, end of quarter, AUinber tihat will be finished . during .next , ninety days, approximate ...date of (finishing, and approximate average weight per head at time of finishing. Word has been received by Secretary Taylor-from .several'members rot the executive committee of the American Farm Bureau Federation, to which the Indiana organization is getting -well under r w»y. J. Howard, of lews, national „ dent, with a coterie of able MW®®anta will soon start an active campaign in many lines to promote the general welfare of the Vgricultunsts of the nation.
WOLCOTT FIREBUG IS FOUND TO BE SANE
Dr. R. M. Reagan, of this place, last week visited Frank Warner at the Michigan City prison, havtog been appointed by special Judge Ed. Pruitt to pass-upon has mental condition. , JThe. doctor found. Warner rational and coherent in h» replies on various topics Sntrodufced the try-ent.‘“Hk to OiL court was faverable, both the, i meatalr.and'»physical condition ofstWhimei latter, will retU^amer', became .violently ized^e 7 town and torch, threatening the lives of any who came within range of his artillery. He was taken into custody and committed to the insane colony at Michigan ton remain until his condition, should justify release.,-. A«, ?’ OCTI, appeared as his attorneys in the. apphoatiou before Judge Pruitt. News. '
REPUBLICAN MEETING.
meeting p.* mA dor thepuxpoee of selecting* candidates to < fife for'thevaeaneies in county offices to be filled, precipct .jCapMbltteea 'and t delegates o to the State Convention. All Republicans in above dis- - County Judging front what we read in the papers, neither of the aspirants in the recent' Michigan* Senatorial race . was particularly mteiyted in the ngalary involved.—Nashville Southern Lumberman.
STUDY OF FEET INTERESTING
Ne Tw# Pair of Thom Alike, and All Toll a story to the Observant Individual. In the subway and on the surface cars—ln fact. In every sort of public conveyance—l have always found It j Interesting to while away the time spent tn transit by making a study 1 of feet. Large feet, small feet, nar- ] sow feet and broad feet have-charac-teristics all their own, and no two 1 pairs of them are alike.? The long, ' slender, gmceful foot of the womarv! of fashion, she with the rather lavish taste, betokened in the extreme’ heel , and narrow, buckled vamp; the smartly shod foot of the executive business J woman, with mahogany calf and mill- ■ tary heel; the neat but worn black ' leather shoe of the shop worker, and the ultra faddish down-at-the-heel, high-cut kid shoe of the> stenograjUler or factory girl. All of them tell a Story. The girl who cares about getting ahead, and the boy who is ambi«ou», watch out that your feet do not betray ypu. Very often I have seen a well-groomed business, girl whoso appearance was entirely spoiled by a muddy or run-down pair yf shoes, and I-always Judge her accordingly, j An employer, hiring an office boy or l ] a clerk, will invariably base his de- j clsion on the get up of his applicant. Qnshlned shoes and torn stockings ' may cause you to lose that opportu- 1 nity for which you have always been looking.—Brooklyn Eagle.
Tree That Rotates.
t A cross section of a great old spruce free from Alaska tells the story of a tree which executed a spin, like a bal-let-dancer. This cross section shows a-, most peculiar structure, which has caused a great deal of speculation among the various foresters throughout the country, and a very Interesting explanation Is advanced In American Forestry. It is known that a tree grown at a slant forms on the lower side bf the trunk a dense reddish wood known as “rotholz.” This spiral in this ease ls of such sort, and as it Is a continuous formation; winding from the center to within half an inch from the circumference. It Is surmised that It was growing in an inclined position on the edge of a glacier, where by some shifting It was caused to rotate, so that all sides of the tree were successively on the downward side. as the tree grew, and its rotation continued slowly, the ‘‘rotholz”• developed into a spiral.
Seaweed Scenes.
yWlth a needle and human hair plctares have been produced on silk and Ivory which have amazed the art critics. This fact is recalled by a catalogue of -freak pictures which has lately been published. Landscapes, seascapes, portraits, and natural history pictures have been produced with extraordinary skill. .Needlework and beadwork pictures are fairly common, and shell, seaweed, and feather pictures were also very popular at one time. Seaweed pictures date back to 1780, when “an unknown lady” exhibited three landscapes in oil, “the trees and shrubs being made in seaweed —a new invention,” to quote the catalogue. ’Pictures cut in paper were* also freqgently exhibited, while on one occasion a lady exhibited a festoon of flowers cut in cork.
Reduced Rates.
Judge—You are guilty of assaulting a,4uan wearing glasses. I fine you $lO Defendant—But, your honor, the plaintiff wore only a monocle. . Judge--Then your fine will be but $5. 1
Crawfordsville, Wingate and Stivers (O.) high schools are the three surviving teams' in the basket ball tournament which opened in Chicago last Friday .for the national title. Wingate and Stivers will meet in the semi-finals and the winner will meet Crawfordsville for the championship in a curtain-raiser to the Chicago-Pennsylvania game. Crawfordsville and Wingate were suspended by the Indiana H. S. A. A., and for that reason were not permitted to participate in the state tournament held recently.
Having been last to get in the War, the Senate seems to be determined also to be last in peace in the hearts of its countrymen.— Nashville Southern Lumberman. Germany is . reported preparations for the trial of criminals, which may the medals will soon be Brooklyn Eagle. -
NOW on DISPLAY at
EASTER NOVELTIES 2 for Sc to 40c CURTAIN SCRIMS 25c and 30c per yard LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S HOSIERY 25c and 35c per pair LADIES’ LINGERIE WAISTS $2.50 up. LADIES* AND MISSES’ MIDDY BLOUSES $1.50 to, $3.25. PLAIN AND . FAJICY ■ RIBBONS • 5c yard. , and up w WE HANDLE LEONARD’S BULK GARDEN SEEDS.
TiMM' vT' A We are proud of \ - the patented CaloriC Pipeless Furnace. I have seen it accomplish remarkable results for our customers. We have installed it in homes where winter comfort was unknown until the CaloriC came around. Wte know that the CaloriC makes good and we are glad to add our personal endorsement to the Ironclad Guarantee that is given by the manufacturer. Save* % to % the The CaloriC heats all types of homes—bungalow to three-story house — distributes all MKf / its heat $ f - | through only » one register; no heat-wait- RBi ing pipes, no ~ trouble to in- ttISM stall. We oftenl complete the II I entire job in ■ ■ one day with- |j IM out any interference® jgl with your R O present heat- J Let us give you t h names of some of the nearby users, so that you can investigate the CaloriC in actual use. We will gladly give you full information. al WORLAND BROS. Rensselaer, Ind. Maaafsctw** by T— Mounce Srova Ccsoamt. CM.O. fl
NOTICE. I AU the suits contesting Ao wIH of the late Benjamin J. Gifford, an now disposed of ano I am in a pomtion to soU land. I have yet unsold several hundred acres of good land located in Jasper and Lake counties, which I will sell as executor on reasonable terms, but cannot take any trade. diani, for .particulars. * v H. GIFFOBD, " F"*—
• SOME COMEBACK-
