Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 January 1910 — WEATHER FORECAST. [ARTICLE]

WEATHER FORECAST.

Fair tonight and Sunday. Warmer Sunday. ' The small blizzard that struck us Thursday night continued to blizz all day Friday and Friday night and is still with us. Not much snow fell but a cold northwest wind has continued to blow and it has been quite disagreeable out of doors. Today is fairly fair according •to forecast and tomorrow is promised to be fair with rising temperature. E. B. Rowley, a real estate dealer of Mitchell, S. Dak., and a nephew of Ed Bruce, arrived here today for a short visit. He has been back from Dakota for about a month, visiting relatives in Ohio and various parts of Indiana. Wednesday he attended the marriage at Wabash of his cousin, Miss Faye Rowley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Rowley, to Mr. Lee Williams, of Amarilla, Texas. Miss Rowley formerly lived in Rensselaer and has many .warm friends here.

The Plymouth Chronicle says that Prof. Tebay, of Plymouth, the new high school teacher at Lapaz, has made a “hit" with the pupils. Somehow this recalls to our mind a teacher who taught our grammar grade in Janesville, Wis., about 45 years ago. Her name was Ann Burns —and she looked the part. She was nearly 6 feet tall, had red* hair and muscles like a prize fighter. She scored a “hit” witli a certain boy on several occasions. Gee! but, it made him sore! Whenever Ann made a “kH” there was a noise like a cook stove falling down cellar.—Culver Citizen. D. H. Yeoman made a hurried trip to the place not far from Star City in Pulaski county, on the Gault ditch where his dredge i» located one day this weelr. After completing the digging of the ditch the dredge was run up stream about 1,000 feet and fas-

tened with two seven-eighth inch cables. When the ice broke the first of the week It pushed against the boat and broke it loose from its moorings and it started to float down stream toward the Tippecanoe river. Fortunately when about half the way down the boat turned partly around and caught against the bank of each side of the stream. After Dave reached there he was able to anchor it and it will now be torn down and stored on the bank unty another job is bid in. Had it reached the river it would have floated . down stream until it collided with the first bridge, which would have been at Buffalo, in White county.