Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 84, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 January 1920 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

/H sssl tWI J I We have just received by express 7 New Patterns in 9x12 Axminister in the better grade in beautiful patterns and colors. Worland Bros.

f Uofw 1 Methodist Rev. E. W. Strecker, pastor.— 9:30, Sunday school. There was a fine attendance last Sunday. Bring your children and come: 10:45, worship and sermon, theme: “The Noblest Thing in the World’'; 6:00, Epworth League, topic: “A Worth-while Life.” This is a worth-while topic; 7:00, service and sertnion by Dr. W. E. McKenzie of Lafayette. Dr. MCKenzie always has a splendid message.

Unusual Value—ln Tires for Small Cars X - - - \' Not only is characteristic Goodyear merit conspicuous in Goodyear Tires for small cars but ordinarily the first cost is found to be not S reater than that of other tires; often it jW is actually less* /✓VQ. Wfci The combination of unusual value in first MiIIpI cost an d very l° w cost, of course, is a » kOO? Millll I result of Goodyear experience, expertness /I ill I and care em P l °Y ed as insistently in the Pv\/Cl I making of 30x3*,30x3and 31x4-inch tires kXXj in ■= I as it is in the construction of the famous GvVv I I Goodyear Cord Tires used on the highest* If N/v I I priced automobiles* I I I For this reason more cars using these small . I I sizes were factory-equipped last year with MS® hSw I I Goodyear Tires than with any other kind* t 7 Get this unusual tire value to enjoy on your iWrrr / ■ I Ford, Chevrolet, Dort, Maxwell, or other I a I small car, at the nearest Goodyear Service / I Station. Get these tires and Goodyear Heavy / I Tourist Tubes at this station. -"YEAR — J J 1 ' jiiii-. -M? q . ~ t 30x3Vz Goodyear Double-Cure Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, strong tubes that Fabric, All-Weather Tread V— reinforce casings properly. Why risk a good casing with a / cheap tube? Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost little more 30x3V 2 Goodyear Single-Cure i-g rn AC than tubes of less merit. 30x372 size in waterFabric, Anti-Skid Tread 1. I — proof bag - J ; - \ A ' . . • ' '

Clinging to essentials he « along broad lines. Come and bear him A quarterly conference will be held following the service. Every official member of the church ehould be present ®.t this conference. The members of the church are also invited to attend. Presbyterian Rev. J. Budman Fleming, minister The Presbyterians of the Indiana Synod are planning to put pep into the New Era moveunient and boost it over the top. Sunday, Jan. 18, 1920, every pastor in the synod Is expected to be out of bls own pulpit and In some other. Rev. F. E. Walton, D. D., pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Gary, will -preach in the Presbyterian church of Rensselaer, and Rev. J. Budman Fleming will preach in Calvary Presbyterian church in Logansport. Every Presbyterian in the state who can go anywhere should go to his own church Jan. 18, 1920. Sunday school at 9:30; public worship at 10:45; no evening service. Church of God Elder S. J. Lindsay will be here for the following services: Saturday, 7:30 p. m„ Bible les--9:30 a. in., Bible lesson; 10:45 a. m., sermon, subject, “Jesus, the son, Romans 10th chapter. Sunday, Christ;" 7:00 p. m., sermon, subject, “Savior and Redeemer;” The Saturday evening Bible lesson stiidy will be held at the residence of Mattie Benjaimin. Everybody interested in Bible study will be cordially welcomed. First Baptist Rev. William Sayler, Pastor— Our regular morning preaching service at 10:45 . Are we loyal in our religion? What does loyalty mean? Rev. William Sayler is supplying pastor. Sunday school at 9:45. We have room for all. Everybody welcome. Our contest becomes interesting.—Mrs. Sidney Ash, Supt. Christian Science Rensselaer Christian Science society holds regular services every Sunday morning at 10:45; Sunday school at 9: 45;'Wednesday evening -at 7:30. Subject Sunday, Jan. 18: “Life." An invitation is extended to the public to attend any service.

PUBLIC SALE / Horton and Hcltzell’s big public sale will be held at “Suitsus” farm Feb. 20, 1920. Livestock and implements. Watch for particulars, ts Sale bills printed while you wait at The Democrat office.

THE TWICE-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT

“ONLY ONE THING BREAKS MY COLD! “That’s Dr. King’s New Discovery for fifty years a cold-breaker” NOTHING bat sustained quality and unfailing effectiveness can arouse such enthusiasm. Nothing but sure relief from stubborn old colds and onrushing new ones, grippy throat-tearing coughs, and croup could have made Dr. King’s New Discovery the nationally popular and standard remedy it is today. Fifty years old and always reliable. Good for the whole family. A bottle In the medicine cabinet means a shortlived cold or cough. 60c. and $1.20, All druggists. Give It a trial. Regular Bowels Is Health Bowels that move spasmodically—free one day and stubborn the next — should be healthfully regulated by Dr. King’s New Life Pills. In this way you keep the impurities of waste matter from circulathjg through the system by cleansing tne bowels thoroughly and promoting the proper flow of bile. Mild, comfortable, yet always reliable, Dr. King’s New Life Pills work with precision without the constipation results of violent purgatives. 25c. as usual at all druggists.

Happenings of the World Tersely Told

Domestic Robbers entered the First National bank at Pleasantville, la., and took federal bonds and stamps estimated to be valued at SSO,(XX). » ♦ » The New York Herald, the Evening Telegram and the Paris edition of the Herald have passed into the control of Frank A. Munsey, who now controls the New York Sun, morning and evening editions.

IndlctmeCV uxalnst seven men, officials of three wholesale grocery houses, were 'returned by the federal grand Jury before Federal Judge Carpenter at Chicago, charging them with profiteering in sugar. • • • Rivalry for a girl’s hand was responsible for the shooting of Henry O'Brien, recently discharged fromthe British army, hnd the arrest of Dr. Thomas Campbell of Wickenburg at Phoenix, Ariz. • • • One hundred new cases were added to the toll of Influenza at Great Lakes naval station, Commander Rufus F. Zogbaum, Jr., executive officer at the naval training station announced. This brings the total to 292 in 60 hours. t • • * Judge Edmund K. Jareckl of Chicago established a recdrd in the boys’ court when he held five youths charged with robbery on 15 counts, in bonds of $420,000. * • • The Great Lakes Naval Training station was placed under strict quarantine as the result of a sudden outbreak of influenza. Dr. R. T. Crandall, in charge of the station hospital, reported there were more than eighty cases under treatment ♦ * * Xnnouncement was made at the Detroit clearing house that state and national banßs of Detroit made increases in their capital and surplus accounts aggregating $11,000,000. • * * Indictment of Dr. Christopher G. Scott on a murder charge in connection with the death of Elizabeth Griffiths, his office assistant, was refused by the Jeffersort' county grand, jpry at Louisville, Ky. The Oregon legislature, In special session at Salem, ratified the amendment to the federal Constitution granting suffrage to women. Oregon is the twenty-fifth state to ratify the amendment. • • • The last contingent of troops quartered at the military camp at Brest arat New York on the transport George Washington, which brought 237 officers, war workers and civilians and 615 troops. * • • A steamship service from Boston to San Francisco by way of the Panama canal will be inaugurated about March 1 with the sailing of the steamer

Jurfteau x from Boston. Six vessels will maintain the service. • • • Washington Shipping board vessels earned about SIOO,OOO each In 1919, according to estimates completed by board officials at Washington. Twelve hundred ships were operated during the year. • * • Herbert Hoover told the house ways and means committee at Washington that the United States should serve notice to the world that this government, after the Immediate emergency, can no longer extend relief to Austria. While it was the duty of the United States to come to Austria’s relief this year, he said, European nations responsible for her downfall by the treaty terms should bear the burden thereafter. • • • Victor L. Burger, Milwaukee Socialist, was denied a seat In congress at Washington for the second time In record time. In spite of a fight in his behalf led by Representative Mann of Illinois, only six votes were cast against a resolution refusing him the privilege of taking the oath. The vote on the resolution, which was offered by Representative Dallinger of Wtssachusetts, chairman of the committee which recommended Mr. Berger’s exclusion last fall, was 328 to 6. - ♦ * * Authority to advance $150,000,000 for food relief in Austria, Poland and Armenia was asked of congress at Washington by Secretary Glass. ■• * * The United States, according to official information at Washington, has rejected the apportionment to this country of 2 per cent of the ships to be taken from Germany in retaliation for having destroyed her ships at Sea pa Flow. • * * The 8,000 American troops in Siberia will begin their homeward movement soon after the middle of February, leaving to .Tapan the protection of the Siberian railroad and the anti-bolshev--Ist Russians in eastern Siberia, It was learned at Washington. Director General Hines at Washington has signed a national agreement covering rules and working conditions with the brotherhood of railway and steamship clerks, freight handlers and express and station employees. * * •

Personal John F. Dodge. Detroit automobile maker, who had been 111 for a week with pneumonia in his apartments at the Ritz-Carlton in New York, is dead. • * * Guy F. Allen of Somerset, Md., was nominated by the president to be assistant treasurer of the United States at Washington, vice Hand, resigned. * * • Former Premier Paderewski will leave AVarsaw for Switzerland on January 17. ♦ • • Col. E. M. House, a member of the American delegation to the peace conference, reached Houston, Tex. He declared he went there merely for a brief rest. He was silent on Issues of the day. • • • Gen. Edwin S. Greeley, who was brevetted a brigadier general In 1865 for meritorious conduct in action and one of the best-known bankers in Connecticut, died at New Haven in his eighty-seventh year. • * • Foreign Jose Batille y Ordonez, twice president of Uruguay, was wounded in the arm during a duel with swords with Senator Leonel Aguirre at Montevledo. * * • Evacuation of the first zone of the province of Schleswig has been started by the Germans, as required by the peace treaty, according to a Washington dispatch. * ♦ • Lloyd George and Clemenceau reversed their position taken on Monday at Paris and accepted the nett plan placing Flume under Italian sov ereign ty.

XML FOR SALE For Sale—Good seasoned wood that will burn.—PHONE 352. ts For Sale—7-room residence, well located, close to churbhes and school. Terms. FLOYD MEYERS. For Sale Cheap—4 iron sled runners, can attach to buggy or spring wagon. Call phone 334. ts For Sale—Fine 119-acre farm with fine buildings, good soil and good location; $75 per acre. Ask me. —JACK BISHOP, Buchanan, Michigan. J 24 For Sale —Good, sound, 8-year-old mare, wt. about 1200; also one auto trailer in good condition, with stock rack.—G. M. MYERS, Rensselaer, phorae 640. Jl7 Wood For Sale—We have dry 4-ft. wood for sale at our farm near the Moffitt switch, at $5 per cord on ground; also plenty of green wood at $4.50. —D. F. MAISH. Enquire of O. W. Cedarwall, phone 910-G. . J 24.

SATURDAY, JANUARY it, IMS.

For gale—Six-room house, one iMk om Van Rensselaer street: WP condition. City water and lights. —MRS. J. J- EDDY, phone 608. For Sale—Two houses and 8 lots adjoining on Franklin street, one 4-room, one 6-roam house; well, fruit, etc. Lots 75x180 feet. Mbre ground adjoining can be purchased reasonably.—M ARION COOPER, phone 642-Black- f 2 For Sale—Fino navy beans, 10c per pound.—E. P. HONAN, phone 334- ts For Sale—lo-room house, including two large halls and pantry; two basement rooms. All in excellent condition. Corner of Susan and Weston streets. Telephone 603.— MRS. J. J. EDDY. For Sale—24o-acre farm, well improved, 3% miles north of Rensseilaer.—MßS. J. J. EDDY, phone 603. / For Sale at Bargains—All kinds of second-hand automobiles. Come In and look them over, in tne white-front garage.—KUBOSKE & WALTER. ts For Sale or Rent —Big 40x80 threepole tent, 10-foot wall; just the thing for public sales. We are through with it, as we are now in our new white-front garage.—KUBOSKE & WALTER. ts

For Sale—Nine rebuilt and secondhand typewriters of various standard makes, such as Remingtons, Olivers, Smith Premiers, Victors, Densmores, etc. Come in and let us demonstrate them to you and get prices.—THE DEMOCRAT. For Sale—l6O-acre farm, well drained, most all level, black soil; 5-room house, good barn, corn cribs, good well, fine orchard land all in cultivation. Can give good terms on this. Price SBO per acre. —CHAS. J. DEAN * SON. ts — ■ . New and Rebuilt Typewriters are carried in stock in The Democrat’s Fancy Stationery and Office Supply Department. We handle the Oliver, brapd-new and various other makes in rebuilt and second-hand, typewriter we can save you some If you are in the market for a money.—THE DEMOCRAT. ts For Sale—Farm of 80 acres, known as the Samuel (Hart farm, Walker township, Jasper county, mineral rights reserved. This is an excellent opportunity to own a farm at your own price, easy terms and immediate possession. If interested write J. L. LEONARD, Crawfordsville, Ind. f2B For Sale—Some real bargains in well improved farms located within three miles of Rensselaer. 120 a., 133 a., 212 a., 152 a., 80 a. I also have some exceptional bargains in improved farms of all sizes far-, ther out from Rensselaer. For furj ther particulars see me or phone 246, office, or 499, home- — HARVEY DAVISSON. ts For Sale—Good two-story, 7-room house, with batn, electric lights, drilled well, large cistern, lots of fruit, splendid shade troes; on corner lot—really two lots each 7Kx 150 feet, each fronting Improved street and Improved street on side. Splendidly located on best residence street in Rensselaer. Lots alone worth more than entire property can be bought for.—F. E. BABCOCK. ts

FOUND. Found—Fountain pen. .Owner can have same by calling at The Democrat office and paying 25c for this adv. Found—Thursday morning, southeast of Rensselaer, a wool blanket. Owner may have same by calling at The Democrat office and paying 25c for this ad. FOR RENT For Rent—4o-acre improved farm, 2% miles west of Surrey, 8% northwest of Rensselaer, known as the Henry Zacher farm.—JOHN BACHELDER, phone 92£-D, Rensselaer, R-4. j2l WANTED Saw Gumming and Furniture Repairing.—ELMER GWIN, phone 418. . ) ts Wanted—About 200 bushels of good milling buckwheat.—lßOQUOlS ROLLER MILLS, telephone 456. j 24 Wanted—Salesman to demonstrate in every home in JASPER COUNTY, IND. The greatest labor saving article for the housewife known. Big money in it for the live wire.— Address S. A. MARCH, 717 Spring St., Michigan, City, Ind. j-17 Custom Sawing — Parties having logs to saw in the neighborhood of the Moffitt switch in Union tp., cam now haul them in, as we have a yard located near the crossroad west of switch. —D. F. MAISH, Fair Oaks farm. Enquire of O. W. Cedarwall, phone 910-G. j 24 Cash Registers Wanted—Will buy your second-hand cash register if in gqod condition and pay spot cash for same.—THE DEMOCRAT. FINANCIAL Farm Loan*—Money to loan «■ farm property in any sums up to HO.OtO.—E. P. HONAN. M >. ■ ,„ u Money to Loan—CHAS. J. DEAN & SON, Odd Fellows’ Building,4 Rensselaer. • ts" Money to Loan—l have an unlimited supply of money to loan on good farm lands at 5%% and ual commission or 6 % withc/W commission, as desired. Loans will be made for 5 years, 7 years, 10 years or 20 years. See me about these various plans.—JOHN - A. DUNLAP. ts