Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 292, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 December 1920 — Page 2
CLASSIFIED COLUIN FOR SALK. MB BS.XJI—IM ton* of hard ooaL >l7 pet ton. Phono 113-D. 13-13 yijiii StTi» '“Tin —•; —r* K’s. iffi; lor, Bristol. Ind. 1-7 MBBST.B- Homo _nmdo x candy. Croama, chocolates, stuffed dates, roll figs and fud*e. Phone Id. 13-11 TMW lutomohilo crank. F>»ter please leave at thia office. J. W. xL&IgMHB* ••••> 1 MB BSJMB—Two Spotted ' Poland Sußd —s^cMtan— msmr ■' ' ■ 1 ' I MB liM Id acre farm -in Section Mun nstw s«> aamkrtnMnt of nlayor roUaT OMsr«ta£n at one* Phone Ml. l«-» MB BAM—TaMe cabinet Pathe phonograph, with about forty-five records. Sice >4O. Phone 104. 11-11 MB BAM—One ton and a quarter' Keo Auto Truck, run leas than 000 miles. Edward W. Kanne. MB llIiA-i pure bred Duroc male' hog. Nick Axen. phone ddl-L. 11-0' MB Bl bedstead, good rum oxl3. good rocking chair. Can be seen at fink Ray Overton’s Phone 333. I>-1» MB BAM—IOO acre farau well drained, moat all level; black aoll; 3roorn bouse. good barn, corn cribs, good, well. One orchard, land all in oalHvaUon. Can give good terms on thia, pries Old per acre. Charles J. lieen A —• ? »ar tsssS: FrQfat Oarage. Phone 304. If sewrAajg for some one. wanting good breeding stock: alee six-year-old cow. tresh Oct. 11th; also TO ocrea land. welllocated with residence and store building, good location for smaU atore and nrodwss ntntlML - would -coeadder trade Snthto tractfaleojtarm of 330 acres, two miles of market on etope road, al level biack land, all te cuttivagon, gai •susL!ta" Mag^ F - i MB BOM -lota M and 1A ooaupled by and L»ta 8 and • occupied by Everett Wama all in Block One and the James N. Leatherman three lots and residence and the BjM property, not including the barn. Those lots are all oentrally located in the city or Renaeeieer and HK..P wfifrug***’’ •*“* “3 ***s MB BAMThree pure bred Duroc bears. Two spring and one two-year-oJA B- Brack After, phono 471 tt - WANTED. .WJUHB-Two girts to week te kitchen. Wright Brothers. Phone MA WABrTWD—4 corn hnsker. Thomas lanergan, phone MB-K. v .. 13-0 " a'u~-1 |yp~ Mm ~ 'jwtM-ffg ; waMMB—WMs raw have poetry to aoU —w WftV*** B Bocath. phono M or 401. Pi? ts or M inues of The Youth’s OompianB 1
THE UNIVERSAL .CAR THIS COUNTRY IS GETTING BACK TO PRE-WAR conditions and the fanner who wants to make money in the future will have to cut the production cost per busljel of his products. To do this he must increase his own capacity and dispose of all excess animal power. The farm is a factory and will pay dividends on modem labor-saving faachinaiy the' same as any other factory. Farmers who, have kept costa on tractor and horse farming have invariably found that the FORDSON tnd ASSOCIATED IMPLEMENTS will return a large profit over horses even though the grain fed to horses be at the present low market level. rHF- CENTRAL SALES C 0.,, of Rensselaer, sewed approximately forty • <res of rye this fall using a FORDSON exclusively for j>ewer at the '.oilowing cost per acre: The ground was plowed, culti-packed, and .drilled. Total Kerosene, 110 gal. at .28c _s2s. Total Gasoline, 5 gal. at 30c Total Motor oil, 8 gal. at 90c_ 7-20 “Total Trans, oil, 2 gal. at 80c,--- r • < Total Man hours, 97 hours, at 40c cb.au . . Totall 74.40 Depreciation, interest, upkeep 56 67 Total ....——l .........1181.07 Which equals <8.27 per acre. For the Total# cost including Fertilizer and Seed CALL OR PHONE THREE ONE NINE.
I WABTBB—A corn busker. R®u*>en C. Yeoman, phone 88-M. Mt Ayr. 13-11 | LOST. Saldla reaidencea. R«y«f4 Offered. Catherine Shields, phone <B4. 11-11 LOST—December 1. ta Rensselaer, a black and tan hound. Finder please SOWA Vaughn. Phone 88. 11-8 BOST—Belt key-rtng holder containing two keys, one Yale type amd one padlocK key. Please return to this office and receive reward. , BOBB—Oaturdsy, Dec. 4, in Bensser selaer or on road to Mt Ayr, copy o> legal papers. Reward. H. C. Hobard, Thayer/Ind. 13-ls a ■ wwu MB MCMAMB— BIx-room .tongaow within oorporatton. practically now, with basement under entire heuSA with 1 1-3 acres of ground. To exchange for tswn property. Harvey Daviseou. <» MOBBT M MAW—Oarios J. Dean A Boa. , , ,• ■ « MTZOB WO ffAMSCnta—We haAdte Front garagaKuboske A Walter. ts ”fob BBMT—3 farms. 140 sores and 300 acres. Good buildings G. F. Meyers.lß-18 MB BRWT—Three rooms furnished for light housekeeping. Catherine Shields, phone 814.13-11 ATTENTION, LADIES* AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY The ..regular jneeting of the auxiliary to the American Legion will convene Saturday, Dec. 11th, at 2:45 p. ■ m., at the home of Mrs. Ora T. Ross, Mrs. I. M. Washburn assisting hostess. Mrs. Louise Shauer of Valparaiso, who is the district chairman, wjll be present and report on the meeting held in Indianapolis last week, at which time they perfected a temporary state organization and designated the next meeting for Jan. 18, 1921, at Indianapolis. Advertise in the Republican. , II , ,J» ■■HO • DAILY RATE LOWER • • IF PAID IN ADVANCE • • The rate for The Evening * • Republican is IS cento per • week. If paid in advnnoe the • • rate is 45 cents »or month, * • $2.50 for six months or $5.00 * • per year. , e .
GET FLOWERS for all occasions at . Osborne’s . Greenhouse PHONE 439 502 E. MerrHl St.
TIIXI SERWCf PHONE 567 WtsOUinn
THB KVBNING REPUBLICAN. RENSBELAJER, IND.
•> Say it With Flowers The Hmm Hants M He*are Am Nnoe 4M '
Taxi Service To All Trains City Calls Country Service St J»seph C#Uege di AND Rensselaer- Remington ’ LEAVES Rensselaer 8:00 a. a*. Remington S»3O a. ns. Rensselaer .4:00 p. Rentjngtoß •• •» • > P* ** ■ . Frank G. Kresler Pk~ l«7 >oegeeesoeeeee»suw*Mß»eeeef»»»e* FOR BREAKFAST DINNER / SUPPER PLAIN TOASTED , samdw, SJ£>n GS ANY TIME! ANY WAY! Eat BREAD ■ Bread Je your Beet Food—Eat m You°can eatahce »»er aiita efft when it’s really^good breed wfifc ge *•“* That mean*— G< i:i S r * a<l A ■ ~4- -
■ WhyS«if«rfro4BCoHß ■ TURPO epolMquick rsW- ft A E K MMI protection. D6«e not Mater M or stain. Oat tt at yow druggtet a M S I ! aatiedaS, your aaoesy is choir- S ■I MftMtoOta. WendM ■ mai ’ . - • *** i
WILSON GETS NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
The Nobel peace prize will be conferred .on President Wilson on December 10, it was aimounced Tuesday. The ceremony will be held as usual in the Norwegian Storthing, which awards the prize. The Nobel prize carries a grant of about *40,000, which is one-fifth of the annual interest on about $9,000,000, left by Alfred B. Nobel, Swedish scientist and inventor of dynamite, who died in 1896. The only two Americans who in-the past have received the prize were Theodore Roosevelt in 1906 and Elihu Root in 1912.
“PADDY” DRISCOLL
the man that discovered Northwestern, is here in the middle of our midst to round us into better form for the Morocco cont&t. Paddy is one of the really great players not ruined by his brilliant success. He is. a clean living, modest talking, hard-working athlete with business brains enough, to cash in on his remarkable ability. A hailfellow, well met and brings us the very latest gridiron strategy. See him', meet him . and LISTEN to him. Everybody attended practice last night but, “Dice” Campbell. “Bones’* was out of town. One player says he can’t keep anything on his stomach. Try bolting down your meals, Abe. Frank Schroer. was in town yesterday and took home a new Franklin car. Who said the farmers had turned their bacK to the sun. Fanners just naturally gravitate to the Franklin because it needs no heated garage and very little service.. When idle they set light on their i tires and they last over several years without changing style. The safest car to buy and the safest car. to drive. THOMPSON & KIRK. mi jh P R | ( i mi,L.i.Jf you need a good young draft horse, attend the Arnold sale Tuesday, December 14. All bays.
x TEMPERATURE. Th* f ©Cowing * the tampemtura for the twenty-four hows ending at 7 a. m. oo the date indicated: XULXs Jub« December 7 40 25 December 8 41 23
GET YOUR CALENDAR.
If you have a policy with the Gary National Life Insurance Co., R. G. Burns has a mighty fine 1921 Calendar-for you* It was painted by the grfcat artists, G. Sheridan Knowles. Get it at my office in the Murray building Saturday afternoon or evening. Very fine quality timothy hay, about 20 tons, at the Arnold sale, Tuesday, December 14.
Sblf/e stectricwssber, lift and Up the ▲ ■oltod fabrics is a tab of Ldsy wtt« —and it ■ is a good method - ■ Other stectfte ▼ wasbets roc* sad toss the soited fabrics to sad fro kffirs 4WP ■t ZagLzyjll ttateJS iq i»> -sMtolt —MM This Ends Discussum! If you have been looking at electric washen your mind is muddled concerning whether the lifting and dipping method or the rocking and tossing method is preferable. In fact, both are good. Why not get an AB C rtric IjatmJreu that uses f M methods—and so sends discuMon? AB C Es« tdrw JMeUUQft Owe M A. UB t 1 '
OFFICIAL Service Station FOR i BUICK, CHEVROLET and KE ■ AUTOMOBILES ’ Supplies and Repairs for Same. € W. RHOADES GARAGE
AUTO OWNERS URGED TO APPLY FOR 1921 LICENSES NOW
Automobilists of Rensselaer and of jpsper county who desire to receive their 1921 automobile license plates at an early date, are asked to immediately forward their applications to the office of» the secretary of state. Application blanks can be secured at any time from a garage or other establishment dealing, in automobile accessories and those persons who are first to send in their applications will be the first to receive their new licenses. Distributions will be started during the; month of December, and/ every auto owner in Jasper county may have his new license on hand by the first of the year, providing that this' important matter is not put off until the last minute. With the issuance of licenses during the early part of the present year, there were many autoists of this county who failed to receive their licenses up until March. This was due to the eleventh hour rush of applications into the secretary of state’s office. It is an impossibility to accommodate everybody at once and with the proper co-operation the state officials will be in.'a position to supply all autoists by the first of the year.
MARKETS BY WIRE.
(Furnished by Farmers Grain Market, -H. H. Potter, Mgr.) Chicago, December 8, 1920. Live Stock/ Market. Hogs, receipts, 26,000; top, SIO.OO. Cattle, receipts, 10,000. Sheep, reecipts, 16,000. Grain Market. Mar. wheat opened at 1.67% and 1.70; closed at 1.66 8-4 apd 1-67. Pec,-wheat opened at 1.71% and 1.72; closed at 1.69. May oats opened at .51 3-4 and ,52. 1-8; dosed at .52 1-8 and 1-4. Dec. oats, opened at .48 and -47 3-4; closed at .48 5-8 and 3-4. May corn opened at .76 3-4 and .77 -1-%; closed at .76 5-8. Dec. corn opened at .74 1-4; closed at .74 1-8 and 3-8. Wednesday local grain prices were: Oats, 44c; corn, 60c; rye, $1.35; Wheat, $1.65. _ <
CASTO R IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always beam the AT* njtfiiewrfi <rf /Ww<m nrosxcs or Mrrnre <»»-„^, rr ,. tmact iron oomnrr swwann, Notice is hereby given! that the Board of Commlsaipners of Jasper county, Indiana* will until K> o clock A. M. on Saturday, December 18, 1920, receive sealed proposal® for furnishing books, blanks, stationary and other supplies for the county, its several county officers and the Courts thereof, for the year 1921, all bids to be filed according to law. The Board reserves the right to reject any and all By order of the Board of Commissioners of Jasper County, Indiana. SCHUYLHR C. ROBINSON, ’ Auditor Jasper County, Indiana.
SPECIAL DELIVERY Rensselaer, Indiana, December 6, 1920. Dear Miss Bdston Fem:— On behdlf of my neighbors I want to say how nice you look and how nice you make a home look. But you must not overlook the fact that we —I mean Miss Pink Begonia, Miss Primrose and many fine plants grown by the same men will make a home look, just as ‘ I ■ ■ * homelike as you can. By Christmas you will find we will’be gladly received as a Christmas gift 1 ■ ■ Yours, MISS ALPINE VIOLET CYCLAMEN. * » ■ - • . .... ■ mas Something new. Orders taken for Christmas now, at ■ ... r ’ . '< ' - • - A/ / . ■i*< . WW IV 9 r* • q (irppnhniKfS ——»-«
INDIGESTION PAINS GONE IN AN HOUR
Hadn’t slept for 3 days. Relieyed in a hurry by Digest Well Tablets, “Recently while traveling for my firm, I met a friend, also a salesman, leaning against a telegraph pole in Auburn, Ind., and looking very ill. Be told me that he had indigestion and had been unable to sleep for three ‘days. I readied into my grip and gave hiip two Digest Well Tablets, which he took. He felt better, and we went on to Garrett where I made him take 2 more tablets. A little later I asked him how he felt. He replied, I am feeling fine as a fiddle and am having tfie first real relief I have had for 3 days*?. This-was about an hour and ten minutes after taking the first tablets. Digest Well Tablets have been of great benefit to me, and I would not leave on a trip without them.”—-M. L. Alien, rt. Wayne, Ind. . ■ » You have never taken anything for Indigestion, acid stomach or gas pains, that we believe gave such quick, sure relief as Digest Well Tablets.’ Let them help put your stomach in good shape, so you can eat and live in comfort. If your druggist cannot supply you, send 50c for a package prepaid. Money back if they fail you. One Day Doctor Co., Bourbon, Ind. j
TO STOP THE FLOW OF IMMIGRATION
Determination of house leaders to stop during the period of recon-* struction the great-Mood of immigration which has set in from Europe and other parts of the world was evidenced Tuesday by the action of the rules committee in reporting a special .rule under which general debate pn the Johnson bill would be limited to four hours and prob-, ably disposed of. at one session, The rule will be called up Thursday, de-< lay in taking it up having been agreed upon only to permit .the preparation of a minority report by Representative Siegal, Republic can, of New York. The Johnson bill would practically prohibit all immigration for two years,
AUTOLICENSES OUR NOTARIES any tune day or night We attend to : all the details, and have a car record z of nearly every car in the county, i See us at once. . " .. 1 * The Main Carage The Best in Rensselaer. :
