Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 269, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 November 1920 — Page 4
H HI U I | I Oat of the more than 3,000,000 Ford cart : I I now in use, about sixty percent have been sold it I to farmers. Probably no other one thing has B |jl I brought to the farm so much of comfort and || UI profit as has the Ford car. It has enlarged I I the social life, doubled the facilities for marketI I ing, brought the town next door to the farm, h ill multiplied for the farmer the pleasures of living. i 111 A family car without an equal in low cost of -- | ill operation and maintenance. We solicit your [ 111 order for one now because the demand is large | ||| and continually increasing. || CENTRAL SALES COMPANY | Av** Thru SUS *hw II I j*. II
CLASSIFIED COLUMN FO* SAUL VO* gg”-* T ~** 13 Wid 14, occupied by Mre. Myers. and Lota 8 and 9 occupied toy Everett Warne, all in Block One and the James N. Leatherman three lota and residence and the Baker property, not Including the barn. These lots are all centrally located in the city of KenaeeUer and near the business center, church and schools Frank Foltx. ts VO*. BAJMB —Large size base burner, good as new, also enough good linoleum for an average size office. S. M. Laßue. VO* a*T,e—Steel wood stove with iron inner lining; also Favorite coal stove, large sixe. Phone 288-White 11” 1© FO* •***—Stove board and three Joints of stove pipe and elbow, used some, 32.00 for the lot. Also white enamel kitchen sink. Leßoy Kurts, 218 N. Front St. Phone 464. <f VO* Delicious, ripe pears for table use and canning. Any Quantity. Mrs. Henry Paulus, phone 938G. 11-18 ~ VO* *AU—Household furniture, cut glass, hand painted china, piano, electric lamp and other articles. Mrs. Henry Zoll. 414 Cherry street. TOT —B* meta Bad Oak. White Oak, Burr Oak. No Pina no Ash, no Willow. Everett Halstead. 11-18 VOTTaiYB—4B acrea well located, cultivated; housa barn, garage and orchard. Easy terma Pose seston at ‘”•6’ acrea, pike road. Joining station. With storoa church and school. Largo eight-room housa .large barn. Very easy terma Prion, 8185. ~ . 80 acres; farm housa barn. Very easy terms, ro—ooionat onoa Might taka property or stock. Price, ft*. 180 acroa oa Jackson highway; good building*. Would sail on easy terms or accept property, live stock or lag ouZt. O. F. Meyers ts VO* BiTB RIT iPriy PUPa pm bred largo type PoJanda. wUI now weigh about 168 pounds, worth wtflo for some one wanting good breeding •tock; also •ix-yeor-old cow, fresh Oct. 18th; also 18 acres land, well located with residence and store building, good location for small store and produce station. would oonsidM- trade on thia tract; also farm of 888 acres two miles of market on stone road, al level black land, all in cultlvatio*. with splendid improvements; also farm of 8* acres one mile of market, good land and good improvemonte. P. A Blus Wheatfield. Ind. ts
70* IHil oty propwty *d4 town lota. Philip Blu*- Phoao 4**. ts 7O*~*AX*—l*o acre taraou well drained, moot all level; black soil; *> room house, good ban. corn cribs, sooC well. Bne orinard, land all in ealUvaUoa. Can give good terms oa thia FrMx *** per acre. Charles J- * son. “ 70*"*BAUS—Cut flowers and potted plants. Osborne’s Greenhouse. ts OPO* farm, about >0 Acres, one mile from Court Honea Fine trees, alfalfa. IK acres fine true* ground, black river muck. Balance soil heavy producing. red day. 4 wells and cistern. Splendid location for Dairy or hog raising. « 60x!0 nearly now barn, fair * room, cottage and good cellar, old but comfortable. 14x1* poultry house, other buildings. Plenty of hog bouses. 48-inch woven wire ail around place, well tiled. Place ban been and is a inoney maker. t O*w nhanrinr occupation desires to seu. mco »",»•. would <>ond*dsr >s part payment, small modern residence In Rensselaer. Terms on balance. Possession tennery 1 or March 1. Inquire of Schuyler C. Irwin. ts 70* OSTi*—l*l* Model »Wrd touring car. in good condition. Prine WOO. Mm Boy Stephenson, phone W- ts 70* BAX*—■City lot **tlM. facing east on Weston street, just half .block north of Washington. High snd dry with sewerage for basement, also fruit of all description. A bargain for quick sale. C. W. Duvall. phone 147. 11-10 wmw ettw-Tn kinds of second hand cam Kuboske A Waiter. White Front Garage. Phone **4. ts 70* w-mnahire Boars. Best of blood lines. Also good general parpose 7 year old horse. Russel Van took. ***-A. H l* WiT» *. piano, a wooden bed; Kft SWKTirf Avenue 11-1* WANTED. WATT**— A man to husk corn. & A Awdd. Phono *l*-F-w^l*rEm W ■UI HIT Mar to work at poultry honas. Phone ill er MT « seo C. Su M or Hk ts nJrth of Karsowsky*a Call phone « — iraual house
rigs waams— Wanted to hear from owner of farm or good land for sale reasonable. L. Jones, Box 515, Olney. 111. 11-116 i WAMTOT—Married or single maa~» husk corn, by bushel or mouth, Wax Hough, phono Md-D. W*wwwt> .Tn rent a farm one man can handle. Can give good references. Address A. J. LEW ARK. ' Rural Route No. 1, Lake Village, Ind. 11-10 I WASTTB*—At once teams to plow onion and potato land, free of weeds. 33 per acre. Jasper Co. Farms Company. Newland, Ina. 11-18 WASm*—-Corn shuckers. Phons 90S-D. Fred Linback. 11-14 WANTED—Man to work on dredge. Common laborer. Wages 46 cents per hour. Call phone 917-A. 11-18 MISCELLANEOUS. - VO* MC*AJr»»—BIx-room bangsow within corporation, practically now. with basement under entire house with 1 1-8 acres of ground. To •»-. change for ts wn property. Harvev Davisson. ts *mo**t TO BOA*—Charles J. Deas BTOTXC* TO handle the Rumley Une Tractors, throehine machines and farming implements also Western Utility one horse-power tractor and implementa At the Whit* Front garage. Kuboske A Walter. ts 4 .... —— - - « ii. MOXIY TO BOA*—I have an usgm-—. ars 6 years, T years, 18 years or 88years. See me about these various plans. JOHN A. DUNLAP. ts LOTT-—Last Saturday, Grand Service Star. ’Bl to ’BB. Probably lost on Main streets. Please return to this office. 11-80 LOOT—Package from Murray’s^store containing two suits of ladies heavy drawers. Leave at this office. 11-18
JUNIOR RED CROSS NOTES.
It has been the ambition of all the Jasper county teachers to have their respective school rooms enrolled as Junior Red Cross Auxiliaries before the opening ,of the Senior Red Cross Roll Call on November 11. The time is ndar at hand andwe take this opportunity to announce the following schools whose applications for enrollment have been received: — s Barkley Township— Newland School, Primary grades Day Jordan Newland School, Grammar grade* Allie Morehouse Blackford School Irene Price Burstown School Jennie Eib Carpenter township— Hartman School Opal Hafey Gillam Township— Gillam School Lucy Grafton Fairview School Adele Gwinn Independence School, Martha Faris West Vernon School j Leta Hershman Hanging Grove Township— McCoysburg School, Beatrice Tilton Osborne School, Goldie Kessinger Banta School Ira B. Washbum Moore School _ Edna Reed. Jordan Township— Union School, Primary grades Helen Kessinger Kankakee Township— Consolidated . School, Four rooms .Addie Harris, Pnn. ( Marion | Rensselaer Primary Grades, Eight rooms, Minnie Hemphill, Pnn. Rensselaer Grammar \ Grades, Four rooms —-- ___-Hollis Leighly, Prin. South Marion Consolidated School, two rooms Mrs. Kerlin, Prin. Newton Township— Burr Oak School---Mary Norman Wheatfield Township— Kersey School— S. B. Llewellyn Kankakee township was the first to report a complete enrollment, but Gillam, Marion and Hanging Grove each need only one more school to make their 100 per cent |
Have you your tickets yet? John E. Alter, who went to Indianapolis Sunday to serve as a member of the Federal grand Jury, returned to his home near Parr today, having been dismissed for a short time. Ruth Ames went to Chicago today for * visit
THE WEEING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, DTD.
TALENT SELECTED FOR EXCELLENT LYCEUM COURSE
Attractions for Season of 1920*21 Announced. COURSE SURE TO PLEASE Numbers Will Be Both Insplrino and Enjoyable—Beason Ticket Bala Should Bo Largo. The attractions which are to appear on the Lyceum course here this season have been announced. The various numbers have been especially well selected and everything points to a large sale of season tickets for the course. The attractions were secured from the well known Redpath Lyceum Bureau, and this in itself is a guarantee of satisfaction. People are more than eager this year for instructive, inspirational lectures and clean entertainment, and the splendid attractions to be heard here are sure of a hearty reception. The numbers on the course are as follows: PROCTER COMPANY.
In presenting Mr. Harold Procter, the eminent Irish tenor, and supporting artists, Miss May Bees, violinist, and Miss Fleta Lawrance, pianist, the Redpath Bureau predicts that every community which enjoys an artist trio of extraordinary attainments, acknowledged ability and superior accomplishments, win find this company meeting or surpassing every expectation. Mr. Harold Procter has sung throughout the British Isles, singing in concert and oratorio under such men as Hans Richter, Gaul and other great English composers and conductors and In company with the leading singers of England. He later traveled throughout the United States In companies headed by Kitty Gordon, Frltzi Scheff and Charlotte Greenwood. For two years he was tenor soloist at the
HAROLD PROCTER.
Temple Baptist church, Los Angeles, the largest church west of the Mississippi. - \ Miss May Rees is of Welsh descent, coming from a noted musical family. She has studied with the masters of both America tad Europe. Miss Fiets- Lawrance is well equipped by nature and training for the Important plpce she has in the program of the Procter Company. As an accompanist, she is dominated by that fine spirit of understanding and sympathy so necessity as the background of an artist. As a pianist she displays in her solo numbers a power and technique which insures for her a future of unusual brilliancy. THOMAB BROOKS FLETCHER.
Thomas Brooks Fletcher is one of the real stars of the lecture platform. 'Thomas Brooks Fletcher,” says Judge Ben Lindsey of Denver, “is one of the most powerful orators of our time. He is not the old type of platform entertainer. He entertains but he also has a powerful message, and knows how to deliver it. People want to hear about the things that are being done and need to be done in this country, and that is what Fletcher is telling them about, and he is telling It In a way that commands attention, provokes thought and stimulates men to action. He leaves the impress of
Miss Addie E. Hinds of Paris, Hl., came today for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Leßoy Kurts and their son, Edward. Mrs. Kurtz and Miss Hinds are sisters. Get your tickets, please. Frank Reafsnyder, who had been employed as a printer at The Republican office has resigned and has been succeeded by Harold Clark. Mr. Reafsnyder has accepted a place , back on the Goshen Daily Democrat, the position from which he came to this paper. He has moved his family to Goshen. . Have you your tickets yet?
'Auto Livery •Call Phone 109 • Wallace Miller
LOCALAND PERSONAITI
Mrs. Laura Hatton and Mrs. Milton Witham were in Monon today. Mrs. Charles H, rorter went to Chicago this forenoon. Have you your tickets yet? Mrs. Bernice Shumaker and son arrived here from Three Oaks, Mich., today. Attorney John A. Dunlap and A. M. Robertson were in Crown Point today. President H. R. Kurrie, of Chicago, General Manager H. C. May, of Lafayette, and General Superintendent Frank E. Lewis, of Lafayette, high officials of the Monon Railroad, are enjoying a hunting outing along the C. and W. V. R. R. in this county. . The Rev. Charles W. Postill will give the address at the Surrey School entertainment to be given Friday evening, November 19. His subject will be "The Better School Movement.” I. N. Hemphill left today for Tarpon Springs, Fla., where he will spend the winter with his daughter, Elizabeth Hemphill, who is a teacher in thev public schools of that city. Mrs. Blanche M. Tices, of Chicago, who had visited here with Mrs. Clara Coen of North Cullen street .and Frank Makeever and family, who live west of this city, returned today to her home. Mrs. Tices is the granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Madison Makeever. William Eigelsbach arrived home today from Olene, Ore., where he had been visiting for the past several weeks with his sister, Mrs. Albert Marshall, and hunting in the Oregon woods. He was favorably impressed with the western country and will no doubt make annual pilgrimmages to the Pacific coast state in the future. Bill’s return has caused joy to reign in the football camp of Harry Parker, as he is regarded as being one of the greatest gridiron players ever turned out by Rensselaer, and will work at either quarterback or one of the halfback positions in the remaining games on the card of the Rensselaer independent team. Get your tickets, please.
COME AND SEE ME.
1 have Baldwin pianos and other makes. phonographs, several makes, including the Ampliphone. All makes of records. CHARLES B. STEWARD. South Side West Washington St
THOMAS BROOKS FLETCHER.
hlB message upon every community.** Mr. Fletcher comes with a reputation of being a dramatic orator. It is said that he dramatizes his message by an intensity of energy which holds his audiences from the very start. Writing of Mr. Fletcher to the committee In charge of the local course, the Redpath Bureau, through which Mr. Fletcher was secured, says: “It is difficult to write of Fletcher without using superlatives. He is one of the biggest men Redpath has ever had on tiie platform. His personality is such that, to put it tritely, he simply must be heard to be appreciated. No one can use the right word to describe Brooks Fletcher and his lecture. When you have told all about him you find that what you have said is Inadequate” Mr. Fletcher Is a newspaper editor. He lives In Marion, Ohio, and is editor «f the Marlon Tribune.
THE MONTAGUE LIGHT OPERA GINGERS.
Light opera, always popular. Is featured in costume by the Montague Singers. In the repertoire of tills veteran organisation are scenes from “The SmenadM* by Victor Herbert, "Robin Hood** by Reginald- DeKoven, and the “Pied Piper.’’ selections from “The Mikado," "The Bed MIU” and “Madam Butterfly,” and a complete operetta, Romance,” all of which are given in costume. Tariff ntal tiAim. duets and quartets
More Time for Recreation * TheTorrington Electric Vacuum Clean- - er gives you the time away from house- 4 work. Turns broom drudgery into an * * easy fifteen minutes in the morning. Keeps rugs and hangings colcr-fresh and fluffy. Pays for itself. I * XW ELECTHK VACUUM > ■ J Cleaners 11 mg Brush — powerful suction \ These are the things a Torrington with B \ its powerful suction and revolving carpetsweeper brush will guarantee for you. * ]\ Talk to our demonstrators. See the K A Torrington do these things. K Price . Sold on easy terms; a week. / ’ J Worland Bros. Swum} Brink
Mrs. Josephine Needham, who had visited with the following relatives, returned today to her home, in Dublin: John G. Hayes and family, William Florence and family, William Hayes and family. WhjUe here Mrs. Needham visited with Mrs. Harry Parker. Mrs. Parker and Mrs. Needham’s daughter, Jeanette, were very intimate friends' while the latter was a teacher in the Rensselaer schools. Mrs. Josephine Needham was a sister of the late Mrs. Frank Hayes, who for many years was a resident of Barkley township.
THE ZANDORFF ENTERTAINERS.
j This company consists of Athel Lin- ' dorff, harpist, and Florence Zander, ' reader and Impersonator. The harp has always held a deep place In the hearts of the people. It Is among the earliest known of all musical instruments. But the harp of today is much different from that of early times. The modern harp possesses three thousand separate pieces
ZAN DORFF ENTERTAINERS.
of mechanism and there are few who master it in til its complexity. Miss Lindorff is fast becoming known as one of America’s talented harpists- She is hailed in Chicago and other large cities as a most successful entertainer. Miss Zander is a clever character impersonator who has had t successful Lyceum and Chautauqua experience. Her readings and impersonations never fail to entertain and also to provide 'food for good, clean thought
from the best song literature give pleasing variety to the program. One or more reedings such as a Mretch from "The Blue Bird” by Maeterlinck, give further diversion without departing from the superior quality of the Montague program. Doubtless much of the success of this company year after year is due to the Diet that there Is no let-up in their musical study. New program features are constantly being developed and In this way return engagements are welcomed without the necessity of duplication. • ~
IN ’SQUIRE IRWIN’S COURT.
■The following cases have been ; disposed of in Squire S. C. Irwin’s court within the past few days: F. W. Hack on a charge filed by Mayor C. G. Spitler of having driven an automobile through the streets of Rensselaer without license plates; reprimanded and discharged. Philip Durant on a charge filed by Henry Randle, game warden, of hunting without a license on November 7; fined $5, Which with tax, amounted to $20.05. Paid. Henry Dyke, on a charge filed by Henry Randle, game warden, of hunting without a license on November 7; defendant plead guilty Snd was — handed a $5 fine, which rith th“ usual trimming totalled $20.05. Paid. Another case which is '“pending is that of Lovina Board well vs. Verdie Osman. An affidavit filed by MagSie Messenger charges the defenant with having struck Mrs. Boardwell while in an angry mood, in a rude and uncalled for manner. The case vnll come to trial November 19. kis reported that Mrs. Boardwell’s injuries are serious and that she is suffering from a fractured skull.
Get your tickets, please. Sohte electric w»»hen lift and dip the foiled fabric* io a tub of aud«y water—and it ib a good method - , ■ jDther electric ▼ wmhen rock and ioaa the toiled * fabric* to and fro in Hud,y water — ’ and it i» a good , _ . msthod I .... . - . The ABC Electric Leundreaa dona both- R*P- _ \ W. it alternate* theae good met hod*—and *o it combine* their advantage*. This Ends Discussion! If you have been looking at electric washers your mind is muddled concerning whether the lifting and dipping method or the roaring s and tossing methodis preferable. In fact, both are good. Why not get an A B C Electric Laundress that uses both methods —and so ends discussion? ______ ABC BtfacQundnM ifauj Ttrvu MakcitEmyta H. A. LEE 1 Phone S 2. f I Do It Electrically. ’
