Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 84, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 April 1920 — Page 4

CAB Keep the old Ford running—it’ll never wear out if you let wi take care of it Bring it in and we’ll make it run like new. These are days that call for saving. There’fi not Reware * bi “"** Dewaru fame and money - n than the Ford O f Poor ear But it mufit _ be kept in runQuahty nlng that’s our business. Ford mechanics. Ford materials, Ford excellence with Ford low prices. Let us look after your car. Central Sales Company ’PHONE THREE-ONE-NINE.

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY ABB «MC-<MILT irraww a wawinMrnw FBkMsbvxx. B«ari-Weekly Republican entered Jan. I, IW7, an second clmb mall matter. at the poetoffice at Rensselaer. Indiana. Eeenlny Republican entered Jan. 1, IMT. an second class mall matter, at the poetoffice at Rensselaer Indiana, undertbe Act of March >■ 1878 RAHM FOB MBTMY ADYMBTIBXMO Semi- Wet kly ..4 Daily, per inch t lac First Pago SUBSCRIPTION RATES Semi-Weekly. year. In advance. 88.00. Dally, by carrier, IC cents a week. Single copies, 3 cents By mall *B.OO a year. BARI YOM O&A88XFXBB ASM / Three Unes or less, per week of six laauee of The Kroning Republican and two of the Semi-Weekly Republican, it seats. Additional space pro rata. Beading Mottoes—Semi-wooklr, Un cents per line first insertion; 0 cents per line each additional insertion. Dally. 6 cents per line first insertion, I cento per lice each additional '“a* r * tion. No reader accepted for lees than 26 cents. „ . , . PubUc Me Areertlaiag—Single column reading matter type. *3-00 for first insertion- |I.OO for each addltloaal insertion. No display ad aeceprsd for teas than 50 cents.

MONON ROUTE Train SchMHe Effective Marek M. 1919.' North south ft* 4:34 a. m. U A»• 4 4:01 a. m ft 19-66 a. m .0 T:so a.’m *7 U:4« a ® ft 14:59 a m 43 L 67 PII *4l p. m I» 6:60 P- » « *4l p. m. »1 P- “• tv 4;M p. m. » 11:10 p. m-

CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOI SALE. FOB wyT-w with twelve pica, Byron Hemphill. 442-B. - -- •- - 1 '- - ■ ' ""> ' FOB ■4T.».Single Comb White Leghorn eggs. Pure bred flock. a hundred. Rueeell Van Hook, phone JJB-A. FOB ■ 4 T.R—Fairly good ntove. Would do for wash room. Phono HI9-A x.--. • - - FOB ■IT.B-h Jersey heifer calf. Will make good milk cow. Phone ML FOB BABB—Pure brad White Plymouth Rock eggs for Prom good strain. |LOO per li ar.li.Wpy IM. Phone 902-J. Orville lambert. FOB ■4T.B--Some good epi* white oak posts, ft sailas smith, 2 west. Riley Tullis, phone MT-K. ~ FOB BBNT—The OddfMlowo stere room at Gilford. Inquire of Charles Britt, secretary, phone 923-B. FOB SAAB—A team of mules. 8 end 4 years old; sound and broke; team 4 and 6 yean old. and a coed rubber tired buggy and set of single harness. Caan or time or will trade for eow or heifers. Phone 9M-F. Loner can Bros. FOB S4TB 70.404 early hmd lettuce plants; ready now. Holden s Greenhouses. . FOB SATiB Two roan buUa, past year old and weigh about 700 Iba. Charles Morrell, phone ML FOB BABB—Pure bred Buff Orpin*S% j® mv sABB—Cut nowon and potted plant* Osbornes Grenbouae. close to°"cfaureb 2SS3T HWi Torme. Floyd Meyers. \ torW ewiux M« WIUUm Fi err. ML Ayr, phone PO-G. r . T * ' । । 1 —' M MASB-Or wHI /nM. .... _ -— a _ FAB Henry Paulus.

FOB BAlS—Dark Cornish eggs. *I.OO for 15 at the houee. J. h: Hoover. Phone 476-Green, 108 Rachel atreet. ■ - —' —- ' ' !>«■ .4 — — FOB SALE —A 16-lnch sulky plow. Would trade for a second hand mower. W. S. Ahern. R. R. 2. Phone 90 4-S. Rensselaer. . FOB BAX>B—Hay, on track; _ this week *35 per ton. Phone MB-G. Henry Paulus. FOB SALE —4 geldings; two mares, 4 years old; 2 cultivators; mower; disc; 10-ft. spader. 8 ft; would trade for wind pump or tractor disc. Joseph Kost a, Fair OMka R. D. 1. phone Mt. Ayr phone 92-D. ' _ FOB BALE —Five city properties in fine locations. big bargains for quick sale. Five farms, all bargains Three good bams that could bo converted into residences. Also automobile oils. You will be interested in these. See mu C. W. Duvall, phono 147. FOB BAUl—Second-hand automobiles —Fords. Over lands, Saxons, Bmpire#. Kuboake A Waiter, 'phono MA ts FOB BALE—I% horsepower International gas engine; good as nevvand used about 10 daya At the White Front garage. Kubosko and Walter. FOB SOY-*—acres White county, Ind., between Chalmers and Wolcott; black prairie; *175 per acre; liberal terms; must sell because of my business in Indian spoils. Write me for engagement to see this farm. S. L,. Schubach, Indianapolis, Ind. 100*. City Trust Bldg.

FOB siTV-iin acre farm, well i allied, most all level; black soil; 6room house, good burn, coni cribs, good noli, line orchard, land all in culma(jon. Can give good terms on thia Price HO per acre Charles J Bean A Bon. WANTED. __ — ■ WANTED —To trade a “7-. foot McCormick binder in excellent condition, for a 6-foot binder. W. S. Ahern, phone 904-S. Rensselaer. —— ' —' — l i —- WANTED—Married man to wot* on farm. Arthur Arnott. R. I. D. 4, Rensselear, Ind. • asi-a John B. Cassidy, Kentland, Ind. WANTED—GirI for general homiework. Apply at once. Phone 46. Mrs. John A Dunlap. WANTED—Waitrea* at Barnas’ restaurant. . _ WANTED—Motormen and conductors tor Indianapolis city Unes. We teach you the work and offer you steadv employment. Wages 40c to 45c an hour. Apply or w r it e Superintendent, Indianapolis Street Railway Company, Room 814 Traction Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. -Have a new truck and am ready to do your hauling, move household goods, live stock and articles, long' or short distances. Beet of services guaranteed. Frank W. Hamer. phone 473. • WANTED—2nd hand flreless cooker. Mrs. Will Hogan. Phone 1 661. 813 N. Weston St. WANTBD—To buy some cows and heifers. Phone 962-F. WANTED —Two or three ro 2™®! furnish ml or unfurnished for light housekeeping. Mrs. Kato Hansson, phone 42k -7— —— —..-x-.-~WANTNIft—Saw gumming and furniture repairing. Have new up-to-date machinery and can make old and circulars ss good ss new. KLMKR GWIN, Phone 418. 617 K. Washington street.

WANTBD—Chickens and turkeys, will call for sama. Phone 447. C. H. Leave!. , FOR RENT. . FOB BBBT—Five room house, barn, 10 lots, outbuildings; all complete with well. Lot of fruit. Northwest part of town. Call phone 951-K. U. w. Markin. - ' FOB BENT—HouseHn west part of the city. Phone 4M or IM. - ’srs. ton bl . _ ' LOTT BOBB—Crank to Cadillac auto, phone 579. K. T. garage. 141BT Dots (ion Goodland and Benssalaer on March M, a George Shephard, Goodland, teA ■ IjOBT Tie pta aet witb amaU brilin Rensselaer. aTßapuMtoan cdtoe and receive M-M MUCKULAIIBOUBk

THE EVENING REPUBLI CAN, RENSSELAER, IND-

11l 1 111 I B /WHO • — <■■ ■- - - NEW ELLIS OPERA HOUSE; ONE NIGHT ONLY THURSDAY, APRIL 8 The Largest and Best Musical Comedy That Ever Visited This City GUS HILL PRESENTS ll 11 ts 1 V ■ 11 A I WITH A CAST OF 30 A Chdrus of Sixteen Not Over Sixteen r" ~ 1 A special baggage car. of scenery and Chorus Effects, all of which will be used in Rensselaer PRICES—SOc, SI.OO and $1.50 Seats now selling at Long’s. ESTBAYBD—SmaII roan mare and bald-faced bay horses. Please notify , ira Caldwell, phone 048-B. MOMMY TO LOAM—I have an unlimited supply or money to loan on good fa Mi kmdr at end usual ' commission or *% without commit- ' elan, as desired. Loans will be made 1 for b yeans, 7 years. 10 years or 20 I years. See mo about these v«dnu« ' plans, lohn A DunlapMOMMY TO LOAM —Charles J. D«au

OBITUARY. Anna King Allison was born in Hancock county, Indiana, May 29, 1842, and passed from this life, April 1, 1920, at the ripe age of 77 years, 10 months, and three days. All of her earlier life was spent in Hancock county and in 1882 she came with her family to Jasper county. On December 19, .1861 she and William H. King were united in marriage. This union was broken by the death of her husband, May 20, 1909. To this union seven children were born, Mrs. Alice Mills, Indianapolis, Ind., William King, Medaryville, and a twin brother, John, who died in infancy?* Benjamine F. King, who died about four years ago, Mrs. Martha Warden, Wabash, Indianar Frank King of this place and Mrs. Emma Wolf, Chalmers, Ind. A little more than two years age, August 30, 1917, she was married to Snowden Allison. She united with the Christian church at. Zionville, Indiana in 1877. She was a faithful wife, a loving mother, and a kind neighbor and friend. She leaves to mourn their loss, a husband, five children, .three brothers and three sisters, twenty-five grandchildren and twenty-three great grandchildren besides, a host of relatives and friends.

ANNOUNCEMENTS. FOB JUDGE OF CIRCUIT OOUBT. ; To The Republican Voters of Newton And Jasper Counties: , I will be a candidate for the nomination for Judge of the iJlrcuit Court, 1 on the Republican ticket, at the pri-1 mary election to be held On May 4,. 1920, and will appreciate your votes and your influence. Sincerely GEORGE A. . WILLIAMS. Rensselaer, Indiana, March 11. 1920. I will be a candidate for the nomination for Judge of the 30th Judicial Circuit, on the Republican ticket, at the primary election, to be held on May 4. 1920. KMMET LARUE. To The People Of Jasper And Newton Counties: > .. —ml Notice is hereby «i v «n tbat I. wUI, be a candidate for the office of Judge of the Thirtieth Judicial district, subject to the preference of the Republican voters to be the Primary to be held May 4, 1920. Thanking you for your support, I am JOHN DUNLAP. To The Republican Voters Of Jasper And Mewton Counties: 1 I will be a candidate for the o® c ® of 1 Judge of the Thirtieth Judicial Court on the Republican ticket, sub-1 ject to the d®clsion of the voters at the primary election to be held May 4. I I ask the support of *b« votors of Jasper and Newton Countles, _at the primary election on sa«.~B? , ss%«s Th.rU.th ‘•gXIXBOL fob coumtt becobdbb. To The RopubUoan Voter Of Jasper County: ... I wish to announce my candidacy for the nomination for Recorder of Jasper county, subject to the decision ofthe Republicanvoters at the mimary election to be held May 4, 1920. WARREN y '«. POOLE. - . -y.SteL. **l desire to announce that I wtU be a candidate for the nomination for. Sheriff of Jasper county ®«Wect to | tte decision of the Republican voters, “ l, “ ’Sir D° WSOCWORTB. for joimt To The Voters of Je^—> Mbwbmi sad ?*dSsire < to°annouince that I a candidate for the Republican noaM-, joint repres«taUve in the Indiana General Assembly district -composed of JW«£ and Benton counties, object to the-j Republican votms of CWs dtabrirt at toe primes, to

FOLLOW THg FOOT PRINTS TO

“DON’T BUY” PLEA OF TRIBUNE SENT FORTH AS NEWS

The United News sent out a dis-! patch to its papers Monday under. a Chicago date as follows; “ ‘Don’t buy a Tribune—borrow one!’”. . yr “That appeal, a heresy to circulation managers, appeared prominently on the front page of the Chicago Tribune today. According to the Tribune’s publishers, the appeal is sincere. It will stand on the front Eage to ward off the battalions of uyers who have not been frightened off by curtailment of news and advertising space and lack of promotional plan*. “It is the latest attempt of The Tribune to save print paper. Circulation, the ancient goaf of every news paper, means consumption of print paper. And The Tribune has been trying fruitlessly, with all the accepted schemes, to .keep consumption. within the producing mark of its mills. Therefore this cry. . “ ‘Perhaps this plan won’t work,’ Col. R. R. McCormick- said today. 'We hope it will. It is based on the idea that all any one wants for a paper is to have it read. That’s all the advertiser wants, all the publisher wants, and it satisfies the writer. “ ‘lf the Tribune could be taken into a rooming house, say, and passed around, instead of having ten copies delivered for the same amount of reading, everyone would be satisfied. “ ‘The Northcliffe papers in England made this same appeal during the war. I can’t say how well it worked, but it appealed to us as worth a trial. “ ‘The fact that circulation leaped ahead in the last year in the face of all its discouragements puzzled Tribune officers. A gain of 50,000 daily and 100,000 Sunday was shown in the year following the end of the war. “ ‘All that came without the pull of war news and with restrictions on news space,* Col. McCormick said. ‘No one knows why. ' | “ ‘To do away with any chance of a possible preversenesfe on the part of the public, the appeal to borrow The Tribune appears in the paper only. It will not be made through other papers or on billboards.’ ”.

ELLIS STAGE BEING CLEARED FOR MUTT AND JEFF”

I The stage at the new Ellis Opera House will be entirely cleared of all the house scenery and Properties, I for the large production of Mutt and Jeff’s Dream,” which comes to j that theatre for one night only,, Thursday, April Bth. । Every one of the seven scenes in the musical comedy will be used

in Rensselaer including the Opium Palace in Chipatown, and Case

Boulcard, Paris, both settings designed by Joseph Unban. The pro- * duction requires a special railway 1 baggage car to move from city to city, Thirty people are used in the production and a chorus of sixteen girls dance and sing during the , i introduction of the twenty musical ’ 1 numbers. - . The company which is playing Heucks Opera House in Cincinnati this week comes directly from Uafayette and goes to Logansport from the Rensselaer engagement. Seats are now being sold at Long’s Drug Store.

NOTICE REDMEN. The meeting night has been changed from Friday to WednesIday evenings. All members are ur--1 gently requested 40 be present next Wednesday evening, April 7, when a class ~of candidates will be given SACHEM. Mrs. Rebecca Porter returned today to her home in South Bena after a visit here with relatives. Mildred Rush went to .Indianapolis today where she ww take ' kindergarten work at Mrs. Blakers school. The weatherman missed his prognostication today by predicting fair and warmer weather. Instead we , have it continued cool with more I snow. Much fear is felt for the » fruit crop. Pay When. Cured 'Vegetable Compound for Liver. Kidne , ‘ Ftomach Trouble, Constipation. Catarrh, ; Rheumatism. <Pay yben mired, miss thia grandest of remedies and wonderful preventaHye for Grip, Flu. Address 621 Main St. Ctn’ti, O. For sa»e at ad Drue Stores. 3U-day treatment i»c.-Adv. \-■ • ■

- ' , ~ < *'Z -■• • * What Oil Husbandry Meaps to You THE price of gasoline is high when to the price # asked five years ago, but the price would be much higher if it - were not for the long list of useful products made from that portion of the crude which is left alter the gasoline and refined oils have been removed. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) makes a wide range of products from this residue —each product rendering a definite* useful service to and each bearing its ~ share of the cost of production, thereby helping to keep down the price you pay for gasoline. - — ■ f ' The petroleum chemists in the laboratories of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) constantly are at work trying to develop new processes whch will enable the Company to utilize every fraction of the crude oil, thus eliminating waste. This means husbanding the country’s resources by taking from the crude oil the maximum number of useful products,z and recovering a maximum yield of each. To do this is the constant aim of the Company. * ‘ ■ . -ft t ‘ Standard Oil Company (Indiana) 910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago —

Walter Lynge went to Schneider this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Johnson returned today to their home near Valparaiso. They will return in a short time and will live with Mjs. Johnson’s sister, Mrs. Benton leley of Newton township. Wm. Childers was in this office this morning and called our attention to the. fact that thirty-three years ago today there was a buzzard with a snowfall exceeding that of Easter day this year. Mis. Henry Zacker, who had been the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Joseph Nesius, Jr., returned today to her home near Surrey, and Mrs. Frances Lytle, who had also visited with Mr. and Mrs. Nesius returned today to her home in Chicago. Gov. Harding of the federal re-1 serve board told the committee of | ways and means that taxation of; Liberty bonds accounts for the fall | of some issues below par. The untaxed issues, he pointed out, have lost no value in the market. 1

Phone 7 Phone 7 POTTER & SAWYER SEASONABLE SEEDS ' — ■ Clover Alsike Soy Beans Alfalfa Cow-peas White Blossom Sweet Clover Millet Blue Grass Timothy A * ' ; ■: / " ■ K OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT WeHave Innoculating Bacteria ’ . Phone 7 Phone 7 • _ _ ' •

One way to keqp your friends is not to give them away.—Savannah News. t The thermometer stood at nine above zero Monday night. This is surely a record mark for April. Mr. and Mrs. Austin Haas returned to Lafayeete today after having spent Easter here with relatives. When a movie is O. K. it is passed by the censors, but when it is not it is-sensed by the pastors. —Dayton News. local market was stronger and dealers were paying: for oats, 95 cents; for corn, £1.55; for rye, $1.70, and for wheat, $2.40. Mrs. Jessie Rardin and two sons of Parr, spent Monday night with the former’s mother, Mrs. Clara Coen of North Cullen street. Mrs. Coen has not been well for some time and her condition remains about the same.