Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 284, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 November 1920 — Page 2
THE UNIVERSAL CAR L .U —— . ■■* w ~ ThelFordjSedan w \ -X .* «•» ./ .1 .. - —-—*— - — —- ■••—vir»es» nr he I enclosed cars, offers you the delights of »the higher pneed cars I at the lowest first cost and lowest upkeeu coat. In Summer or * Winter, sunshine or rain, the Ford Sedan conveniences in , accord with your wishes. Only a minute is required to raise or lower Th* Sedan is a faverite family car. Beneath the ’Sedan body, the ever reliable Ford Chassis means an economy unknown m other enr A family car of exceptionall merits The. Heal car for the farmer’s family. It seat five comfortably; and is quipped with demountable rims, tire carrier, electric starting and lighting system and inrtrument board. Orders are filled in the same sequence in which they ■r* received. And ever remember the sure and certain and “aftr-service” we give. You know the solid satisfaction that comes ih the knowledge that your motor car is good for every day of the Y ea J nn mental worries when you drive a Ford. Let s have your order today. Think of it! The Ford Sedan, this handsome enclosed car costs you less than an ordinary touring car (except the Ford). Central SalesJCo. PHONE THEE ONE NINE. , «.
CLASSIFIED COLUIN ki J : ; ; FOR SALB. MW wank, please Iwn *t this office- JRainM. 12-4 TO* SAAB—Good guernsey cow; single buggy harnoae; some shovels and bay forka and crow out saw, a good m Mra BA. Canada. >M Pak BL 11-4 FOB BAJUB—-Two good milk cow* will be fresh soon, Oak dining room tabla 11 fL long. Edison phonograph, 4 mtn. attachment, stand and bora, good steel rang*. Cheater Halstead. FhoneS4C Green. 808 UMGood baeeburner. Can be asea at Warner Bros.' Store. Call Phone Ml-1 for price. Clara GowUmd. Am BiTiß Bft arrn farm in Section 17, Colfax township, Newton county, tIU miles from consolidated school house Fair house, barn, good graindry: all in cultivation except 10 acres timber. Will sell at a reasonable price end on easy terms. Manno Miller, Morooco, Ind.; BL 1. Phone ML Ayr. •1-F. U-U Am BAU—Pears for sale at 71 cents per bushel. Thomas Clarkson. 7M miles southeast of Rensselaer. on the Mra ChUcote farm. 11-10 ~*na~'st ts '.Twn pure brad Spotted Poland China sows. These axe good .ones W. W. Woodworth. R F. D. 1. MoCoysburg, Ind. 11-10
FOB BAUS—IBIB Ford touring bed. in excellent shape. Will sell winter top separate from bed. “Dock’ Adama, PhoaeMi. w>a etre y WT - nice Cornish rooatera. J. H. Hoover, phone 418Green. iOS Rachel Bt. I*~> PQB- BtT.W—Onlona at 40 cents per tMMbel at the Thomas Hayes place at abrth side of city. IM w>s roe tea acre farm. well drained, moot all level; black aoil;Sroom house. good barn, corn cribe, good well.’fine orchard. land all in cuiavatien. Can give good terms on thia 8M p£ acre. Charles J. Gow KB BAM-Btt amttag piss, pare bred large type Polands. wHI now wawh .about IM pound* worth while S?soS?one waEttag good breeding whwHt- . also alx-year-old cow. fresh also 18 acres land, well locatod with residence and etoro building. good location for small .store and nroduoe station, would consider trade entSSa tract;alao farm of 880 acres, two miles of market on stone road, al level black land, all in with sDlendld improvements; also farm of “ °y ■" tf aqgsj newm-Cnr finwere and potted plant* Osborne’s Greenhouse. ts FOB wsTw ieie Model Ford tourFront Garage. Phone 384. ts ~w>a -inf it and 14. occuniedw Mrs. Myers, and Lota 8 and 8 oroupUd by Kverett Warna * all, in Block One and the James N. Leatherman three lots and residence and the POB BAUS— Three-Quarter iron bod. ' . „ WANTED. pfvren-gMhmtT First dam stark, Phona 488-Btack. _ « ■aBIHD Hlhiii you have poultry to Bengali Wallace * Herath, phone ’cSi I ’pb«Sr 01 ts _ • ’ « mooth.। w» • —- * * : 7' L " jEwtf'i/'' rt- ’ " r V ■' *■</>
WAXTID—To renL * small house. A, widow and small child. Call phone 617. » IM MBKHUUbAMaOVB. FOB BXCMAMBB—BIx-room bungs; ow within corporation, practically now. with basement under entire ho us* with 1 l-» acres of ground. To exchange for town property. Harvey Davisson. ________ “ TO MAS-Charles J. WOTXOB TO TAMMHBB—We handle the Burnley Une Tractor*, threshing an<l farming ixnplamant>i also Western Utility one tractor and Implements. At the Whltr Front garageTKuboske A Walter. ts MOOT TO MAM—I lave. an unlimited supply of toon on KrnmlaSZ W <% without OOOUnIaSIOU MMTT—Nov. 17 two or throe bronse turkeys between the C. C. Doctor and T. C. Caln farms. Finder please notify—Lillie Meadworth, R. F. D. », Remington, Ind. U-W LOST—-A small green-covered cash book, containing names of amounts collected. Return to College Inn and receive reward. 11-30 A great many vamps look suspiciously like revamps.—Columbia (S. C.) Record.
Some electricwahcn )tit and dip the toiled fabric. in a tub of today water—and it ■ ia a <ood method - Other electric ▼ washeWroch Obd rose the soiled fabric* to and fro in sudsy water - and'll is a good method — The A B C Electric Laundroae doos both. Raw My it altermtea these good methode—end so it enafinee thoit ■BVMhßWktaoeeoeoeehbMeaMß ■ft acumen ' This Ends Discussion! If you have been looking at electric washers your mind is muddled concerning whether the lifting and dipping method or the rocking and tossing method is preferable. Tn fact, both are good. - Why not get an A B C Elec* trie Laundress that uses both methods —and so ends discussion? ABC BtMc@undnJS tart Tenet hiehe it BeejU O«* H. X * . fc < ...
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND,
V Taxi Service To AD Trains City CaUs Country Service St Joseph College AND Rensselaer-Remington LEAVES Rensselaer 8:00 a. m. Remington 9:30 a. m. Rensselaer .......4:00 p. m. .Remington 5:16 p. m. Frank G. Kresler Phono 107 i
Mu ' Scy It With Fluwwru The Hoom Plaate at Hub dea’a GracahMMoc aww Sae PhcM.dat.
CITY BUS UNE CALL FOR TRAINS AND CITY SERVICE Eapecial attention given St. Joseph College /Celia. F. t KRESLER, Prop. PHONE l«r.
I No. M Clnrienati to am. No. 4 LouUnrUle to CblMgo 841 OJO. No. 4t Lafayette to T 44 ajo. No. 88 Indianap’s to Chl««o l£Majn. Na 14 Cincinnati to CbiSgo B:ITaS to gnepmati 84Tam. No. 8 Chicago to LoulcvUla 18:88 an NAM ChioaE to ladtamp’c uJIaJB. Nntt Chgo to ZnSSArr 14TBM. No. 38 Chicago to Lateyotto 848 pm. No. 31 Chicago to mBmoFB T:3lpm. NA 3 Chicago to U>ulevl!le 11:18 pm. No-181 Chicago to Ctnotaaott 1:41 am. TnUB Y aengera oR bf the C. L A W. Train IS stope to taka on paaanngoaw tor potato <a IM Q 1 b V.
This year the Electoral College is a co-ed inatitUtion.—Kew York Herald. ■_ ‘
CUT PRICE OF STEEL
Independent Companies Return to Basis of 1919. —। ~ . i It Is Said the Reduction Will Not Affeet tite Wages of th* Employee*. Pittsburgh, Pa., Nor. 49.A Retain of steel prices to the base established by the United States industrial board March 21,1919, developed here when the Jones A Laughlin. Steel company, ‘the larg'est of nie independent interests, adopted new selling rates on certain finished steel products. This reduction, the first to be made by the independents In the Pittsburgh district, will not affect the wages, it was understood, of the approximately 25,000 persons In the company’s employ. „ The new prices, which are effective Immediately, are: Bars, $2.35; structural sheets, $2.45; plates, $2.65; base Pittsburgh. Adjustments will be made on the prices for wire and cold rolled steel products. The Jones & Laughlin company has not at any time during the last year been asking the top prices many other independents have been receiving. No statement was made by the company other than to say the lower prices are due to the'law of supply and demand. Youngstown, 0., Nov. 27. —Independent steel companies of the Youngstown district, employing about 80,000 workers, announced that they will meet the reduction of prices announced by the Jones & Laughlin company, -the cut to be -effective at once. Heads of the three largest independent corporations here declared a readjustment In the cost of both coal and labor will have to follow. They said that wherever labor costs with the Independents are higher than the United States Steel corporation’s the wages will have to be reduced.
EXONERATED IN HAITIAN QUIZ
Former Member of United States Marine Corps Not Guilty of Shooting Islanders.
Los Angeles, Cal., Nov. 29. —Freeman Lang, formerly a member of the United States marine corps and recently a subject of an official inquiry at Port Au Prince, Haiti, where he was charged with having shot Haitians when in the service, has been exonerated, according to a cablegram from him received by his mother, Mrs. Gertrude de Blin of San Marino, near here.
OBREGON RETURNS TO CITY
Takes Family to Mexico Capital to See His Inauguration on Docember 10. Mexico City, Mex., Nov. 29. —Gen. Alvaro Obregon, president-elect of the Mexican republic, who has been out of the city for a few days for the purpose of recuperating from indisposition, arrived here with his family for the Inaugural ceremonies. He is much improved in health. All engagements were canceled by General Obregon, who announced he Intended to observe “Thanksgiving.”
THE MARKETS
Grain, Provisions, Etc. Chicago, Nov. K. Open- High- pow- ClosWheat— Ing. eat. est tag. Dec. ..L64-55 L 66% 1.63 1.66 Mar. ..L4B-% ’ L 62% 1-47% L 51% . CornDec. ....65-64% .66% .66% .66% May ....71-% .73% .71 .78% July ....72% .74% .72% .74% OatsDec 44%-44 .44% .44 .44% May ....48%-% .48% July ..,.48% .48% .48% .45% RyeDec. ..L40% 143 L4®% Mix May ..L29-28% 1.81 1.28% Ml FLOUR—Hard spring wheat—Bakers’ patent, >7.9008.20; first clean, >6.800V.M; second clears, >6.4006.70; special mill brands, in 98 lb cotton sacks, >8.6006.90; warehouse delivery, >9.6009.75. , Soft winter wheat-Short patent, >[email protected]. Hard wifiter wheat—Kansas short patent, *7.900 7.60; first clean, >6.2006.60. Rye flourWhite patent, *8.9608.60; dark, *[email protected]. HAY—No. 1 timothy, >80.0008100; standard and No. 1 light clover mixed, >38.000 29.00; No. 2 timothy and No. 1 clover mixed, >26.00028.00; No. 8 timothy, *BB.OO @26.00. I BUTTER—Creamery, extras, 93 Score, 53c; higher scoring commands a premium; firsts, 91 score, 62c; 88-90 score, 43049 c; seconds, 89-87 score, 98040 c; centralised. 63c; ladles, 39040 c; packing stock, IMOOc. Prices to retell trade: Extra tuber 66c; prints, 58c. EGGfe—Freeh firsts, 70073 c; ordinary firsts, 62064 c; miscellaneous lots, cases included. 61067 c; cases returned, 60006 c; Wtras, packed ta whitewood cases, 80003 c; checks, 40043 c; dirtfea, 40047 c; refrigerator K4M4165%e. UVE POULTRY— Turkeyx. 36c; fogft, 23c; spring chickens. 23%c; roosters, Mfe; ducks, 26c; geess, 20c. DRESSES) POULTRY — Turkeys, 48c; fowls, 36c; spring chickens. 26c; roostarn 18020 c; ducks, 90032 c; geese, tec. POTATOES—Sacked and bulk, M 0 Ihst Minneapolis round, white, *1.1*8*43. CATTLBS—Choice to prims steers, UAOO 017.60; good to choice steers, *MMOU*; fair to good steen, *70.0001X75; wtoten stews. >840012.35; yearlings, fair to choice *10.00018.00; good to prime cows, I*4oo 11.00; fair to good heifers, 0.OO0UJ5; teir to good cows, *5.0007.25; canners, >2.750 3.75. cutters,' >3.760449; bologna bulla, >640 05. K; veal calves, *1850013.60; heavy calves, *7.00012.00. HOGS—Choice light butehesa, 88.7803*0; medium wt butchers, >9.9001415; hedvy butchers. 270-360 lbs, *3.8O0»AO; fate to JR? . •- , : j
HARDING READY FOR RETURN TRIP
Starts From Ancon by Train for Cristobal Whence He 600 D WISHES TO PANAMA Exchangee Assurances of Cordiality With President of Little Republic —Receive* Protest on U. S. Land Policy In Zone. Ancon, Canal Zone, . Nov. 29.—Senator Harding devoted the last day of his visit at the Pacific terminus of the Panama canal, for the most part to recreation, although be had several more talks with Canal Zone officials. The President-elect rose early for a game of golf and later took a motor boat ride. Late in the afternoon he started by train for Cristobal, where on Sunday he will board his ship to return to the United States, sailing for Norfolk, Va. His return to Cristobal will complete a three-day visit here, in which sightseeing was combined with a practical study of problems which will confront him after he becomes chief executive at the United States. Faces Problems. Not the least of these problems are the relations the new administration will maintain with the republic of Panama, with whose president Senator Harding exchanged assurances of good will at the banquet the president gave tn bls honor. “The cordiality of your greetings and the fine spirit of your good wishes stir me deeply,” he. said, facing President Porras. “It is a fine thing for one republic to be so assured of the abiding confidence and friendship of a sister republic. “We are rather, more than friendly neighbors, quaffing the cup of most cordial association. We are spiritual partners in one of the gigantic advances of Twentieth century transportation.” The question of a proper military force for the Canal Zone has engaged Mr. Harding’s active attention, and he will be particularly interested in plans of the War department to Increase that force to a full division. Senator Harding had luncheon with Brigadier General Kennedy, commander of troops in the Canal Zone. Protest Against U. S. Land Policy. A memorial has been addressed to Mr. Harding by 250 citizens of Colon protesting against the present American land policy along the Canal Zone boundaries And declaring that the United States is trying to enlarge her territorial holdings and sphere of influence in Central America by unjustifiable methods. The document likened the methods to those employed by the Washington government In Haiti and Santo Domingo and asserted that Panama’s sovereignty was being crushed little by little. Another problem to which Mr. Harding h|s given attention Is the question of the enforcement of prohibition in the Canal Zone. '
TORNADO HITS PORT ARTHUR
One Killed, One Missing, Several InJured by Severe Gulf Coast Gale.
Beaumont, Tex., Nov. 29.—One person dead, another missing and property loss of approximately *IOO,OOO Is the result of a tornado of two minutes* duration which struck Port Arthur, Tex. The Port Arthur Canal and Dock company’s sheds were demolished. Edward Ericson was knocked from his bicycleby flying Umbers and was degd when picked up. A young woman who was seen walking near the docks just before the tornado Is missing. Several persons were slightly injured. A wireless operator, who was near the scene of destruction, boarded a steamer in the harbor and sent a wireless call for ambulances and doctors, the telephone system being paralyzed by the wind.
MORE NEGROES IN 2 CITIES
'lncreases of 23,641 and %W 7 Show for Baltimore and Cincinnati, Says Census Bureau. Washington, Noy. 29. —The negro population of Baltimore, Md., Is 108,390, the census bureau announced. The total white population In 025,074. W»e increase of the negro population since 1910 was 23,641, or 27.9 per cent, while the Increase of whites was 151,687, or 32 per cent The colored population of Cincinnati was annunced by the bureau as 29,636, an increase of 9,997, or 50.9 per cent in Hie last decade. The total white population was 371,840, an increase of 27,621, or 8 per cent. .
COAL CRISIS IS NOW OVER
i—Order* Vacating Priority Orders " Affecting Preference for Open- . Top Cara. ' < -— S'- ' * <' * Washington. Nov. 29.—The coal crisis has passed. Ip the judgment of the Interstate commerce commission, which Issued an order vacating all reESSS f Mnigh* today. - -- —. i,i
SLUGGISH LIVER KEPT HIM TIRED AND SICK
Tock th* One Day Deter, and quickly regained health. “For years . I had a liver. I was so constipated take a laxative every night Xxion became almost yellow, and I felt £ed and sick I hope when I heard of the One D y Doetor. One day s treatment did wondera, so I repeated it neit day. loday J •well man. and urge wonderful one-day treatment. B. v. Gould, South Bend, Ind. If your liver » Irregular. you are a Victim of tirea reel SbeUache and biliousoees, and your system is inviting disease. One Day P°^.JS * course of treatment, regulating liver, kidneys and bowels. It cleans out your system thoroughly, tones you up and makes you feel like new Jake It todav notice the prompt relief, and see tow iivdf and well you feel tomorrow. C TyS not have itsend 25c and we’ll mail it, satisfaction or money refunded. Upe,pay Doctor Co., Bourbon, Ind. ..
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Michael F. Wehnan et ux to Jas. P. Bullis, Nov. 23, pt ne aw 26-28-T, 4.75 a., Jordan, $475. Frederick R. Waymire et ux to Omar Waymire, May 8, pt w% ne 2-29-6, 60.14 a. Barkley, $6,922. John J. DeCook et ux to The American Reformed Church of DeMotte, Nov. 19, pt nw aw 26-82-7, Keener, $6,000. George Arthur White to Herman R. Langdon, Sept 20, und. 6-8 It 6, ne sw 14-32-11, being ne aw 14-32-5, 41 a. Kankakee, ne nw 23-32-5, nw se 23-32-5, 2 a., a pt sw ne 23-32-5, 18 a. Kankakee.pt. sw ne 23-32-5, 141 a., Kankakee, $11,632. _ Marie Ross White et ux to Herman Langdon, 1-8 above $1,946. Lemuel Ross White et ux to Herman R. Langdon, Oct. 13, w% nw ne 28-32-5, pt sw |e 28-82-5, 18 a., Kankakee, $1550. Isaac Shannon et ux to L. B. Davis, Sept. 15, It 3, blk 5, Remington, SI,OOO. Frances Koza et baron to Albert Konovsky, Nov. 23, It. 6-7, DeMotte, Albert Konovsky’s add’, sl. Lucy J. Horner et al to Herbert H. Horner Nov. 23, se 36-29-5, aw ne 36-29-5, Hanging Grove, 200 a. William C. Horner et al to Lucy J. Horner, Nov. 23, nw 86-29-5, e% ne, 35-29-5,.5w ne, 35-29-5; n 1-8 nw se, 35-29-5, pt nw ne 35-28-5, 317.50 a., ne se 18-28-6, 40 a., Hanging GVove.
CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Um For Over 30 Years * Always beats the Signature of •
TAXI SERVICE PHONE 567 I CMs Osborne
GET FLOWERS for all occasions at Osborne’s Greenhouse ' PHONE 439 ’ 502 K. Merritt St _ aaaaHaHMaHß^aM ii ß^H Ma^M|agoigiMto^toNg|Npi*>te | e |B ' l|lN ** a d a w**- • i I V f gp j ppp BREAKFAST DINNER J X SUPPER _ J* . PLAIN • TOASTED SANDWICHES . ANY TIME! ANY WAY! Bmt mofa of it / ? ;; ■ You can eat shoe after jriiee of tt when it’s really good bread with — That means— ' . Good Bread tk.rfiv~.i~f ... r T> SfA-Good BilkerjSW ' Ralph O’Riley
