Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 116, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 May 1920 — Page 4
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THE UNIVERSAL CAR The Ford Sedan, with electric self-starting ; and lighting system anddemoun table rims with 3%-inch tires front and rear, is a family car of class and comfort, both in summer and in winter. For touring it is a most comfortable car. The large plate glass windows make it an open car when dr sired, while in case of rain and aJf inclement weather, it can be made a most delightful closed car in a few minutes. Rain-proof, dustproof, fine upholstering, broad, roomy seats, bimp’.e in operation. Anybody can safely drive it. While it has all the distinctive and economical merits of the Ford car in operation and maintenance. Won’t you come in and look it I over? CENTRAL SALES COMPANY jMHKI ilI ArJWM •G| PhoM Thru iw ataa 1 w ■ __ .--7- 7 WV ini
RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN »JXT A** gKHTMILT. (UM A MAMMON. PaMlahtes. Seal- Weekly Republican entered Jsa , m? ** second elans mail matter, at RWMU»r, Indian. ■mblb* itamubucan entered Jon. 1. I*7. a, eeooad clew mail mattor.st th. poetofOoe at Reaoeelasr, Indiana. Bate tW Ast es Marsh A I*7*. Mtns »o» mwaat A»T*»TX»ura Btwol-Weekly . Daily, pte inch ™ First Page —" SUBSCRIPTION RATES Sinaia copies,» cents. By Mil ltW * year. - ~ ba**a x» caamn** ass. ijjs?g M zslu , S Daily. 6 cent* pte Ha* I centi par Uns tech ttonT No Mdar accepted for Ism than —w Advartkdag— Binala colmattteW* for trot »LoTfSF additional tneerUon. No d lap lay ah accaptao for loan than M eaota
MONON ROUTE * 6'61 a tn. i- 10.66 am. J 7 : M Ate ■ M ®“• Ate 33 * m is ri’ Ate f* " r»i aS «i ‘ P- ® •’ sa« p «- » p. te
CLASSIFLLDLCgim FOR SALE. »Oi gALß— Rubber tired buggy and single celluloid harness. William Martin, phone 938-H, R. F. D. _ ' won O» MOT — Tbe Rensselaer laundry. Business can be brought up to >350 P® l- week - Mike Kanna „ w nn etTu room modern houS? closein?Might trade for farm. George F. Mayra. , Ml MU — Or will trade for town property, eighty wrea of land. Charlo a Morrill, Phone 413. mb eeT» pure bred Buff PipingBa Hiltk« FOB gdTi*—Timothy hay in barn. Henry Paulus. 533-G. tqi ■>** -c— flowers and potted plants Osborne's Grenhouss. TOM ,tT > tea acres White county, between Chalmers and Wolcott, prairie; |175 per acre; Überal !L—wwat sell because of my buaiSaaT’in Indlanapolto Writ* m • Trust Bldg. Sto* residences. AJ *° You will be interested in these. Bae maJ C. W. Duvall. phono 1«. nmat naum—raw nropsrty and town PWmUI yob mm-sum * pound. Tb— W p * —- VO* MM—sore to™SE * ~‘“S Sml Cen d o * j" . Prise IM per acre. Cheries J. Dean * Mt- ■ ••■ - . ! Avo* bamp— liew modern rsS*Asiden«. bought property and will July 1. Price is right. John room phone »» . 808 --.■aßr-ud—fr fd.Pt. *• wdiM MS-H. ' 2 & Waiter *nlio®e WM- t*
FOB sau— Good roof, Id-ft. lon*, in two sectiona. Leßoy Kurtz, 218 N Front St., phone 46*. FOB SAXJI— The only lea cream parlor in Roselawn. Address S. A. Smith. FOB SAMS— Hatching eggs from my pure bred strain Goldenbuff Orpingtona G. B. Porter, phone 275 or 569. FOB B6T.E—No. 1 Timothy Hay in barn. Call Chamberlin and Marlatt farm or Rensselaer Garaga
WANTED. WANTED— One night man and two day men at the Main Garage. Phone 206. WANTED— A second hand Reed baby cart. Paul C. Tonner. 203 Franklin street. WANTED— Waiters at Barnes Restaurant. , WANTED— Lawnmowers to grind. Cheaper here than hereafter. Len Griggs, Phones 533-Black or 509. At County Heating Plant. WANTED — Woman for general house work and to care for lady mornings and evenings. Mrs. Joseph Halligan, phone 12. WANTED— GirI for general housework. Mrs. J. W. Williams. Phone 130. ~ WANTED — To grind your lawn mower. Have the latest and beat machine and guarantee all work. John Ward, phone 112. WANTED— Waahln*e, by first class washer. Call phone 459-Black.
WAXnP— “You can make big money selling our Texas and New Mexico Oil Leases locally. Perfect title guaranteed. Deep teats being made; we do the development work. Wonderful proposition. Write or wire Mid-Con-tinent Finance Co., Victor Bldg.. Kansas City, Mo." WAMTOT — Chlpkene ■ and turkeys will call for aame. 'Phone 847. L. *— Leave!. FOR RENT. FOB BSMT— Pasture land for 15 head of cattle, near McCoysburg. Roy Cophran, phone 908-L. FOB BSMT— Furnished rooms. two Blocks from court house. 103 N. Weston St. FOB BBMT— 6-room bouse in northeast part of city; small barn and good garden. Phone S3l-L Wm. Markin. FOB BBMT— Pasture for 30 head of cattle. Chester Halstead. Phone 348Green. LOST
LOST— Two dump cranks for truck some place in city. Return to Toombs & Booth grocery, LOST— Between here and Mt Ayr, brown hand grip. Contents of no value to anyone except owner. >5 reward. Return to this office. LOST—Bunch of keys; one* a Yale key. No. S. B. 70. Return here. LOST— Saturday night near King blacksmith shop, a baby's shoe. Return to this office. LOST—-Tie pin set with small brilliant. somewhere in Rensselaer. Leave at Republican office and receive 15.00 reward. . MISCELLANEOUS. LIST TOVB »ABM* with ua before our new spring booklet goes out to other agents with whom wo are working. George F. Meyers. FOB BXGMAMBM—IM acres prairie land, fine improvements, ad joining corporation of good town. Will arena age for garage or stock of merthandiM Harvey Davisson. Phono *l4 er 4M. FOUMD—String of bee de. Inquire here. ' MOMMY TO LOAM—I have an unlimited ouppty of money to loan on good farm lands at IK* and usual commission or •* without commission. as dashed. Loans will be made Cor b years. 7 years, IS years or 30 years. Bee me about these various plana. John A Dunlan. ■
TO BKWBA—B-Good Improved farm, located on stone road, to QKchange for smaller farm or **** property, or would deal for stock of merchandise. Harvey Davtason. Mme 318 or 4W. MOMMY TO LOA*—Cheries J. Dsaa ABmu mScT eno tractor and tamlammto At ths White Front garage, Kubcoke and Walker. 3FOVBB-Auto license PKJ« 1132 M. Ind. Inquire Toombs A Booth grocery.
TUB EV EWING REPUBLICAN,
CASTOR OIL NOW MADE - TASTELESS KELLOGG’S TASTELESS CASTOR OIL IS SOLD BY ALL GOOD DRUGGISTS. The chemists of Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc., one of the world’s largest manufacturers of castor oil, have perfected a remarkable new f>rocess by which all taste is absoutely removed from this good old family remedy. Nothing is removed except the taste. Strength and purity are absolutely unchanged. You don’t have to shudder when you take Kellogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil. Doctors have always recommended castor oil, but everyone has dreaded taking it. Mothers can now give children castor oil without their even knowing what they are taking. Grown-ups will also appreciate this new form of the good old remedy. KeTlogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil is now sold by all good druggists. Do not accept Bubstitutes if you want a really tasteless castor oil. Two sizes, 35c and 65c. (Advt.)
COME AND SEE ME. Ikave Baldwin pianos and other makes, phonographs, several makes, including the Ampliphone. All makea of records. CHARLES B. STEWARD, South Side Waat Washington St Howard Mills returned Wednesday evening from Lawrenceburg, Tenn., where he had been on business. Mrs. William Childers received a letter from her son, Parker, today, who is attending business college at South Bend, stating that he will undergo an operation for appendicitis Friday. Mrs. Ralph Johnson received word this week from her son, Worth. He and his friend, S. M. Maresca, who spent the winter with him at the Johnson home, have gone back to their work in the merchant marines. They are on the S. S. Corrabes. It loaded with lumber at Pensacola, Fla., for Rosario, Argentine, S. A. It will require several months to complete the voyage. tOST A roll of orchestra music, probablv between Wrig-ht’s restaurant and Joseph Larsh residence. Please leave at Larsh & Hopkins drug store. Doris Larsh.
EAT FISH FRIDAY We Have A Fine Supply of FRESH FISH Only the Highest Quality of Fish Co-Operative Meat Market Phone 92
SKIRTS Special for Thursday, Friday and Saturday One lot of Silk Poplin Skirts, in black, blues and grays, at the exceptionally low price of $4.98 Each This is a wonderful value, but the supply is limited. Call early. Rowles & Parker
LIKE THE KNIGHTS OF OLD
Plans Were Going Forward to Cloth* Our Doughboys, Fighting ths Hun in France. Plans that American war armor artists were perfecting to make the Yankee doughboy in France more uncomfortable, miserable, and safer were nipped In the bud by the sudden armistice, according to the Home Sector, the ex-soldiers’ magazine conducted by the former editorial council, of the Stam and Stripes. The armor'artists of the engineering division of the ordnance department were working on a portable fortress that could stop a machine-gun bullet at 150 yards and a doughboy life-preserver, worn around the body for use in attack, that would have made the combat soldier in France look like a cross between Sir Galahad on parade and Casey of Harvard streaking across the Yale goal Une for a touchdown. The Home Sector says: "The records of A. E. F. hospitals show that seven or eight of every ten wounded soldiers were lacerated by fragments of shell and other missiles which even thin armor plate would have kept out. “We in this country started to work on the theory that It was possible to produce body armor which would not be difficult to carry and which would resist the Impact of a machine-gun bullet at fairly close range. “There was developed by the engineering division of the ordnance departmeht a body defense. Including a light front and body plates, weighing altogether only nine and one-half pounds. The plates were lined with sponge rubber. One lot of 5,000 were manufactured and sent abroad for experiment. There was also developed, manufactured and sent over to France for test a heavy breast plate with thigh guards, weighing twenty-seven pounds, capable of stopping machinegun bullets at 150 yards. The Yank did not take kindly to the idea of body armor. Or it might more aptly be said that the Yank did not take kindly to the Idea of still warfare* “Tell It to the tanks,” he shouted when asked how he liked his proposed winter suit
Dig for Egyptian Temples.
An appeal for funds to carry on the excavation of Egyptian antiquities on a larger scale than ever before contemplated was sent out by the Egyptian Exploration Fund from its American headquarters at Boston, the New York Times states. About SIO,OOO Is needed to reopen the excavation of ancient civilization where many relics were found before the war stopped the work. The appeal says: “Two monumental undertakings are the clearance of the eleventh and eighteenth dynasty temples of Delr el Banari, visited by every tourist at Thebes, and at Abydos, the Osirelon, the temple of the underworld, dedicated by Merenptah, Pharaoh of the Exodus, and richly decorated by him with texts from the ‘Book of the Dead.’ This great excavation, halted by the war, employed 683 fellaheen (native workmen) and awaits completion. It is the one remaining architectural puzzle of Egypt”
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Shafer and Mrs. A. E. Conrad went to LogansSort today to attend the funeral of [rs. Shafer’s uncle. A. L. Donaldson, a state board accountant, is in Rensselaer this week examining the reports of the township trustees. Those who wish potted plants or beds or vases filled at the cemetery phone Scott McCosh, 358-Black. Farm leases for sale at the Ropublican office, grain and cash rent. Job printing at the Republican office. THE EXCELSIOR Recirculating WARM AIR HEATING SYSTEM
for Homes, Stores, Bungalows, Auditoriums and one story buildings of various kinds. Manufactured exclusively by THE EXCELSIOR STEEL furnace co. Chicago, 111. and ■ Sold by
ER, IND.
Saves Energy for Recreation With a Torrington Cleaner you can always keep your home spick and span and you .will not be tired out. z TORRINGTON ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANER BIG BRUSH—POWERFUL SUCTION Rugs that are Torrington-cleaned keep their color and the fluffiness of their nap. The Torrington carpet sweeper brush in the nozzle gets the clinging surface litter while the powerful suction gets OUT the introdden, deep-down dirt. It cleans cleaner with less fatigue. f — k Its simple attachments draw out.the dust in a jiffy from uphostering, radiators, dresser-drawers —from all sorts of had-to-get-at corners. Use one for a few days in you own home. Worland Bros.
Bert Viant of Lowell is a Rensselaer caller today. Floyd Meyers went to Indianapolis today on business. lone Zimmerman and Mrs. Geo. F. Meyers were Lafayette goers today. Mrs. James I. Peck, of Remington, went to Gary today, where she will make her future home. Mrs. Dal • Yeoman returned today from Chicago where she has been a few days. Mrs. Nellie Wilson of Sheridan, Wyo., went to Chicago today to visit relatives after visiting her sister, Mrs. J. W. Crooks and family. Mrs. G. D. Larrison, of Brook, came today to meet her husband, who has been attending the Indiana Medical Society at Indianapolis this week.
James R.‘ Hemphill, of North Platte, Neb., is visiting his aunt, Mrs. E. P. Honan. He is the son of John Hemphill, who at one time lived in Rensselaer, and is now engaged in the job printing business in North Platte. Mirs. Nellie P. Hawxhurst arrived here today for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Delos Thompson. Mrs. Hawxhurst has been in San Diego, Cal., for the past three years and is on her way to her home in Battle Creek, Mich. George M. Meyers was fined $lO and costs in Justice S. C. Irwin’s court last Saturday on a charge of assault and battery brought by W. F. Ihne. The case grew out of some trouble which the parties had last fall. Mr. Ihne was a tenant on the Meyers farm and the latter charged the former with not taking proper care of the stock. A quarrel and fight followed.
CASTO RIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of WK™*
r Thursday Will Fall on the 13th This Week “Nothing unusual about, that,” you’ll say. You’re wrong, James! Something extra is going to 'nappen this Thursday in St. Augustine’s hall! The young ladies are going to serve one of those good cafeteria suppers after 6 o’clock. They’re going to have a fancy booth, music and an evening of fun. Let’s go, will you?
j To of the Safest Washer, THOR & A. B. C. Super Electric As Nearly Trouble ProoT as a Machine can be made and will not harm ’ the Finest Fabric. H. A. LEE Phone 62. —- DO IT ELECTRICALLY.
A car of Armour’s hog and stock feed on track now. Save money by taking off the car. IROQUOIS ROLLER MILLS, Phone 456.
Order* being taken for ent flower* for Memorial Day. We are noW selling vegetable plant*. OSBORNE GREEN HOUSE Phono 439
! BREAD! We could not get along without it. It’s the old “Standby”— Why? Because it is all substance and nourishment. Because it satisfies when other foods do not. Ours has a real flavor and a good substantial slice. Call up your grocer. He has it. _ .Bread is your Best Food bf Bread is your Best Food—Eat more of it.: —==?= EAT GOOD BREAD “The bread that builds.” Ralph O’Riley’s Phono 616. A GOOD BAKERY
