Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 259, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 October 1920 — Page 4

I THE UNIVERSAL CAR I The Ford Coupe, with electric self starting and lighting system, has a big, broad seat deeply upholstered. Sliding plate glass windows so that I the breeze can sweep right through the open car. Orin case of a storm, tjie Coupe becomes a I ‘ closed car, snug, rain-proof and dust-proof. Has . * all the Ford economies in operation and maintenance. A car that lasts and serves satisfactorily as long as it lasts. Demountable rims with 3%-inch tires all around. For the doctor ' and travelling salesman it is the ideal car. ( CENTRAL SALES COMPANY Phone Three ear uhic ♦ - * ■■ „ ~ » .... ...

CLASSIFIED COLUMN FOR SALA. ______ BALM—But! Orpington and Rhode Island Red cockerels. Phone 918-H. C. A. Reed. ______ lH TO* ■ST-W* -Qned solid oak lumber. 2x4 and 2x6, all lengths. Also sills 6xß sod Bxß, all kinds of inch lumber. O. W. Cedarwall, Phone 910G. TOT irfTih-** 1 * Ford chassis. Cheap if taken at once. Frank Brown. Pheas 922-G. TQB - B*LM mrtr Rod Oak, Whits Oak. Burr Oak. No Pina, no Ash, no WiUow. Kverott Halstead. - U-U TO* SALM—Fears J. W. Cos®; Puoue Xt-CL , ** ~pot BAU*—6 Duroc spring boars, weight about 200 lbs. ta buyer’s name. Edward Rose, phone 941-J. —- ■ - * “ cultivated; house, barn, garage ana orchard. Easy terms. Possession at ° n acres, pike road, joining station, with stores, church and school. Large eight-room house, targe barn. Very easy terms. Prioe, 89 acres; farm house, barn, very easy terms. Possession at once. take property or stock. Prtoe, >76. ISO acres, on Jackson highway; good buildings. Would sell on .easytarms ?r accept property, live stock or threap ing ount. G. F. Meyers. “ —sw ww ro LOAM—J have an un““SES o S yearn! yearn, 19 years or 20 years. Sei me about these various plans. JOHN A. DUNLAP. ts ~TOT BAM—Six aorta* pigs, pure sa. ■sst w Oct. 12th; also 70 acres land, wall located with residence and store bulld- . tag, good location for small produce station, would consider on this tract; also term ®t two miles of market on al level black land, all in with splendid Improvements; atop term of 86 acres, one mile of market. goop £1 R %

FOB SAM—City property and town lota, Philip Blue. Phone UA “ FOB SiTS-UO drained, most level;Mack ooU.«J room house, S®od barn, oora §ooa well. Une orchard, land all la eaiuva Uon. Can «ive rood terms on thia price SBS per acre Charles X *>oan * son. FOB SAM — Cut flowers and potted plants. Osborne's Greenhouse. IX FOB ner-w farm, about SO acres, one mile from Court Housa Fine trees, alfalfa 1H acres fine truck around, black river muck. Balance soU heavy producing red clay.. 4 wells and cistern. Splendid location for Dairy or hog raising. 50x30 nearly new barn, fair 5 room cottage and good cellar, old but comfortable. poultry house, other of hoc houses. 48-inch woven wire payment, small modern residence in Rensselaer. Terms on balance, session January quire of Schuyler C. Irwin. “ fob SAM— I»I» Model Ford Wuring car, in good condition. Price s»ov Mrs. Boy Stephenson, phone 555. ts FOB SAlß— Junior yeaxUng Hwapxhire boar. A proven sire, pedigree furnished. Russell Van Hook. >3B-A. FOB SAM— Jersey cow, FOB BAM— Good Guernsey coST fresh, splendid mlßrer- Mrs. S. a Oneda, 322 Oak street. ie-*» yea ««tv Flower and VandJvere Pippin and Northern Spies appSs at $1.75 per bu. Fred Waymire Plume 57L Se”r SSSr Ch«l~ Mojjgl .■ ll— — jkjveiiue* jpirst <Joor north h* liAmo

WAMTBMw-Girl for general housework. PhonL 114 or 18. Leslie Clark. WAMTKD— Dining girl at Barnes’ restaurant at once. 11-3 wiwvm -Girl for general housework. Mrs. Harry Watson. Phone 204 or 407. ' 11-2 wtwrm—To rent a farm one man can handle. - Can give good references. Address A. J. LEWARK. Rural Route No. 1, Lake Village,lnd. WAMTKD —A gentlemanly salesman who can furnish a team or light car to canvass Jasper County with an old established line of Proprietary Medicines, Extracts, Toilet Articles, Soaps, Spices, etc. Experience unnecessary, but not objectionable. For ticulars address The H. C. Whitmer Company, Columbus, Ind. io-z» — ■ -- r~~ ■■■ 11 ■" “S' r VAITXP-At once,, stenographer, one with experience preferred. A gooa position for the righiparty. Williams A Deon, Attorneys rt tav. ts WjUTTlD —Married or single men te husk corn, by bushel or month. Wm. Hough, phone 926-D. _____ WAMTOT—Man to husk corn. Orville Lambert, phone 902-J. 10-80 WAjmm—Girl for general housework. Phone 277. Mrs. Ray D. ThompSO JI. ■ - miscellaneous. TOM BXOTAMOT—Six-room bungnow within corporation, practically new, with basement under entire house with 1 1-8 acrea of ground. To exchange for uwa property. Harvey Da vis eon. “ XOim TO LOAM—Charles J. Deas A Son. „ . MOTICE TO WAMMOTB—We handle the Rumley Une Tractors, threshtas machines and farming Implements also Western Utility one horse-power tractor and Implement*. At the Whit, Front garage. Kuboske & Walter. ts TOmn>—A sum of money. The loser can have same by proving property and paying for this adv. Phone 447. _ - • “J LOST —Very large Maltese cat. Disappeared Tuesday evening. Mrs. Daniel Waymire. Phone 15. 11-8

REBECCAS, ATTENTION!

Each Rebecca is requested to bring sandwiches, pie or pickles to the hall Friday evening, October 29. John Evers, one of the greatest second basemen ever to step into a spiked shoe, will lead the Chicago Nationals in 1921, succeeding Fred Mitchell. Evers is of the dynamic type and will put life and color into the Bruins, something they have sadly lacked for the past few years. Evers played with Chicago from 1902 to 1913, serving the last year as manager. During the season just past he was connected with the New York Nationals as an assistant to John McGraw.

RTT""’nr“""T —| For The Children's Supper. there’s nothing like Bread with milk. Give the kiddies food that will satisfy their appetites; food that will digest easily; substantial food Hutt will build up their little bodies. Bread is that kind of food. Active days! Dreamless Nights! These are nature’s priceless gifts to children who eat. Bread is .your Best Food—Eat more of it. Good Bread —the Bread that Builds ■ Ralph O’Riley’s A Good Bakery

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

MONEY MAD DEMOCRATS

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these plants produced a pound of anything'that was used in the war. The plants cost $35,000,000. The French were .to pay the whole bill, but the War department settled with France for $14,000,0t)0. American loss, as far as this war was concerned, $21,000,000. FOR 391,000 HORSES THE ADministration bought 945,000 saddles, or more than two saddles for every horse and mule in the service; 2,850,853 halters, or seven for each animal; 1,637,199 horse brushes, or four for each animal; 2,033,204 nosebags, or five for each animal; 1,148,364 horse covers or three for each animal; .8,781,516 horse shoes, or twenty-two for each anima); (195,000 branding irons or a branding iron for every two .animals. The administration also bought 712,510 sets of spur straps for the Ordnance officers, or thir-ty-six sets for each officer. THE ADMINISTRATION SPENT for poison gas $116,000,000. Not a pound of American gas was ever fired in an American shell,. and only about one hundred tons of American gas loaded in shells ever reached the field dumps. Loss, $116,000,000. THE ADMINISTRATION SPENT $116,194,974 on nitrate plants at Sheffield, Ala.; Muscle Shoals, Ala.; Toledo, Ohio, and Cincinnati, Ohio. These plants did not produce a pound of nitrate that could be used in the war. Loss, $116,194,974. AFTER THE WAR THE ADministration bought 70,000 new auto trucks and automobiles, had them delivered, and stored them in the open air to be spoiled 'by the weather. Moreover, it assigned 25,000 officers and men to watch the machines spoil. The” total cost of the automobiles was $175,000,000; the- cost of having 25,000 men watch them was nearly >IOO,OOO a day. Total loss, whatever was the expense of guarding the camps plus $175,000,000.

THE ADMINISTRATION SPENT $250,000,000 near Norfolk, Virginia,, the native state of President Wilson and Senator Glass, the gentleman who managed politics for the President in the san Francisco convention. After the war it spent $70,000,000 on a new training camp ear Norfolk. The site of the camp was a swamp, so some of the 'bottom of the sea was pumped up to fill in. Then the camp was found to be so salty that it wouldn’t grow grass; and • now the administration wants $680,000 to sod it. CONTRACTS WERE LET FOR gondola cars to be used in France. They were made in Indiana. Shipments went right on after the war. In the summer of 1919 they were still going on.

THE ADMINISTRATION SPENT a great sum for the production of tanks, and did not produce a single tank that reached the front before the armistice. To complete the tank program it needed 1,200 tanks, which were to cost $25,000 each. To build these the administration started an immense steel and concrete factory in France, which was to assemble and turn out 100. of these tanks a day, or the supply in twelve days. The British were to furnish the guns and armor and ship them to France for assembly, while -the administration was to furnish .the engines and running gear, and ship them to France for assembly. The British supplied their part, but we supplied nothing. The factory was unfinished at the armistice and never produced anything. Loss, the whole investment; amount still unknown, but away up in the millions.

_ IN THE NAVAL WORK AT Newport News, Va., common roustabouts were getting S2OO a week SIO,OOO a year, or'a third more on a scale fixed by the administration in Washington. This was over than a United States senator receives. The manager protested, but Franklin D. Roosevelt, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, decided that the wage must stand. Mr. Roosevelt, aS candidate for Vice President, now represents the administration on the Democratic ticket. THE ADMINISTRATION AT beeinning of the war seized German shi?s valued at $215,000,000 and tried to sell them after the war to an ' English controlled company for $27,000,000. It was stopped by court injunction and a resolution of Congress. Attempted loss, waste or graft, $188,000,000. THE ADMINISTRATION BUILT a great terminal and storage plant at Port Newark, New Jersey. General Goethals opposed the project but President Wilson favored it When the time came to use this plant in the fall, the administration found that it was ice bound in winter. This useless plant was built on Mr. Baker’s cost-plus phm. Cost to the American people, $10,009,000. . • . .. Louis Woodworth had his tonsils removed at the hospital today. Mrs. Charles Tobias returned to her home Thursday, Mrs. John Osborne left today and Mrs. Bert Campbell will leave thPhospital Saturday. Mrs. J. R. Phillips, who had been visiting friends, returned to her home at McCoysburg today, accompanied by her -granddaughter, Dorothy Wood.

C ASTO R IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears 1 Jr"* the SjgnatuwV

LOCAL AND PERSONAL

W. J. Wright went to Irttiianapolis Thursday. • j Mrs. Jay Nowels went to Lafayette today. Mrs. Mathew Nesius went to Chicago Thursday. G. F. Meyers went to Frankfort today on business. Mrs. John Maher of Virgie was a Rensselaer caller today. Granville Moody went to Chicago on business Thursday. Ernest Abbott and grandmother went to Westville Thursday . Albert Atwood of Remington was a Rensselaer caller Thursday. Mrs. John R. Phillips of McCoys? burg was in Rensselaer today. Mable Eldridge, of McCoysburg, was a Rensselaer caller today. Mr. Thomas Lambert of Gifford went to Monon on business today. The general sale -of Firman Thompson is being held today, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. S«, J. Britton of Gillam township were in Rensselaer today. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Johnson of Milroy township were in Rensselaer today. Delos Pass and Henry Hendrix of Walker township were in Rensselaer today. Mrs. Ross Ramey, Mrs. Homer Harvey and daughter, Unetta, went to Lafayette today. Mrs. F. E. Burchard, who had been visiting friends at Knox, returned home today. Mrs. May, Free, who had been visiting here, returned to her home at Indianapolis today. Mrs. Lillian Wood and two daughters, Gladys and Genevieve, of LaPorte, came Thursday to visit relatives. Miss Nellie Waymouth and Dorothy Rarger of Delphi came Thursday for a few days’ visit with friends. H. A. Lyons of Brook, Mamie and Isabelle Bever, Verne Davisson and A. E. Sullivan went to Chicago this morning. Mrs. John Baxter of Bluffton, who had been visiting W. R. Lee, and family, of Mt. Ayr, returned home today. A. M. Clark of Gardner, Kans., who had been visiting his father, I. J. Clark and family, returned home Thursday evening. Mrs. H. B. Wangelin returned this afternoon to her home in Lafayette after a visit here with her son, R. G. Wangelin and wife. Mrs. Louis H. Hamilton returned Wednesday from Indianapolis where she had spent ''a week with her daughter, Mrs. Wm. Con Miller, and husband. Mrs. Nathan Fletcher returned this afternoon td her home in Frankfort after a visit here with her daughter, Mrs. Isaac Leopold, and family, of South Front street.

OUR COUNTY ADMINISTRATION.

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past eighteen years of Dick Hanley, than whom no better ever heard a law suit. His large supply of common sense and his absolute fairness to all parties at all times has made him one of the most popular officials that has ever served the people in this county. He was urged to stand for re-election, but emphatically declined. 'Under his training he had developed a group of lawyers, everyone of them thoroughly equipped to follow his splendid example in dealing out justice and caring for other court business. There was a real race for the Republican nomination. The fitness of the • candidates made it really embarrassing for Republicans to make a selection. But Hie matter was decided in the primary and George A. Williams received more votes than any other candidate and he is the candidate of the party. Everybody in this county knows Mr. Williams. His success at the bar has been accompanied by a public activity that has given him a large and most favorable acquaintance in this and Newton county. Mr. Williams will bring to this position of honor and trust a fitness, ability and a suitable personality that will enable him to discharge his duties with intelligence and fairness. „

OUR FIRST SNOW.

Thursday the approach of winter was indicated when the heavens scattered downy snow flakes upon the earth for the first time since the sun had driven the snow clouds far into the north last spring. Thus have we been warned that winter is fast driving fall from. us. Last. night the government thermometer registered 30 degrees above zero and this morning the beautiful green of the lawns had changed to a hoary white. This has been one of the most pleasant seasons known to this vicinity, and one should remember not to complain should some disagreeable weather be given us by those who take care of that part of creation.

MARKETS BY WIRE.

(Furnished by The Farmers Grain Market, H. H. Potter, Mgr.) Chicago, DI., Oct. 29, 1920. * Live Stock Market. Hogs, receipts, 13,000; top, 113.15. Cattle, receipts, 5,000. Sheep, receipts, 12,000. Grain Market. March wheat opened at 2.01 and 2.02; closed ab 2.03. Dec. wheat opened at 2.08 and 2.09; closed at 2.09% and 3-4. . May oats opened at .59 5-8; 1 closed at .59 3-4 and 7-8. I Dec. oats opened at .54 3-8; closed at .54 5-8. 1 May corn opened at. .8814 hnd %; closed at .89% and 3-8. Dec. corn opened at .82% and 7-8; closed at .83 7-8 and 3-4. | Friday’s local gram prices were: Oats, 46c; corn, 75c; rye, >1.48 and wheat, >1.95.

Tr * til SSTiS mN guaranteed by! NOW FREE! $1350 Worth of Alumiaooi Wore “Quality 20-Year Guaranteed. At our Sellers SALE! Cooking utensils of Aluminum, that beautiful, durable, lightweight, sanitary, heat-resisting metal so ideal sot cooking purposes—a complete set of 12 pieces of the finest brand on the market GIVEN AWAY OUTRIGHT! Think of it. And with this splendid FREE VALUE, you are promised all the years of daily relief and labor-saving which has made famous • SELLERS KITCHEN CABINETS •'Tho Be:t Servant In Your Home’’ This set of aluminum ware purchased by the piece would cost you not a njckle less than $13.50. But the Sellers makers have furnished us a limited number of sets to now give away with the Cabinets, so you get it free. . , Nor do you pay extra for the cabinet. On the contrary, you get this on special .« Sale Terms and Prices ' Free Offer is' good only during SALE. Come m and see the Sellers —the Cabinet famous for its “15 Long Wanted Features famous for its adoption in Good Housekeeping Institute’s Model Efficiency Kitchen. LET US SHOW YOU TODAY! Number of sets of Aluminum Ware limited! Don’t miss getting this valuable free set of useful cooking utensils. Come at once and see a Sellers demonstrated! Worland Bros.,- \ - • t . _ Furniture Undertaking Rensselaer, Ind.

STATE SAVED ENOMOUS SUMS.

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recovered a total of $30,673.66 while the Eschbach board paid all expenses in 1920 and made $182,962.22 over all expenses. The state administration supreme court department collected tens of thousands of dollars in fees that Democratic clerks refused to collect and in additional fees alone the clerk has collected enough to pay all the running expenses of his office and much more. . The state administration in the state auditor’s office shows net receipts of Republican administration over Ralston (Democrat) administration of $1,430,982.72, an increase of 64 per cent —a balance of profit over expense 0f5976,177.33. As To Coal. The state Republican administration organized the Fuel Commission. It was necessary in a grave crisis. Indiana coal was selling in* Indianapolis at $lO to ton, and in Vincennes at $8 to $9. Prices were brought down to $6.25 Indiana coal, a net saving of three dollars a ton to the masses of the people of Indiana. The saving is enormous in Indiana, and after a whole lot of opposition and heated talk, the coal men fell in line with the Commission and agreed to hold a steadier price.. This accomplished the saying in coal to the people which will amount to five million ($5,000,000) a month all .winter. It will be a saving of at least to the taxpayers. \ This is the record of 'the present administration. Yet the people give them little credit for it. We have here shown millions in the state saved—real economies practiced. Yet mendacious lying is trying to destroy 7 this good, i If these sums were not saved, taxes would 'be higher. Millions saved to the people and yet it is 1 all so small compared to the loss i and squandering of billions at Wash-, ington, where 300,000 useless clerks are kept on the pay roll because they are Democratic swivel chair experts, and Democratic political agitators.

WEATHER. Fair tonight with heavy frost and freezing temperature. Saturday fair and warmer. . ,

EAGLEMKADO” PENCIL Nal74 e Fendt Made fer mml EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK I - - - - . Il

TEMPERATURE. The f blowing is the temperature for the twenty-four hours ending at 7 a. m on the date indicated: Max. Min. October 29 48 30

EBl-1 ■■ * etiPl I H. A. LEE S I I Do It Electrically Phono 88.

MOriON ROUTE. awnmn.il* nn «ABMI effect July U. XMR 3 ~ • mmnßOtnm * « £e« s ass ntst Sh KW. “ aiss Hitt No. 30 Cincinnati to Chicago SzMpjn. No. IC Cincinnati to Chicago 1:17 aun. SOUtUOUI* No. 35’chlcago to CtoctoMmtl i:Jlt* No. 5 Chicago to Louisville l»:Majn. No. 37 Chicago to Indianans Hiltam. gi; ii ajsg if g 1 No_ IS | Chicago to Cincinnati 1:41 a* Train No. 14 stops to discharge *essengers off of the C. L A W. Train IS stops to take, oa lessen gers for points on the CIS w.