Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 February 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
PROGRAM FOR TONIGHT. -■ —♦ — ' PICTURES. “Eventful Trip.” VGame of Chess.” - T 5 SONG. < “Will You Love Me In December as ! You Do In May.” ’
Demonstration and sale of tea, Saturday, Feb. 19th, at the Home Grocery. Sixty cent tea for 47 cents on that day* Don’t fall to come in and get free sample. The train due from the south last evening at 6:02 was 3% hours late, and the arrival of Miss Edith Barton, to fill an engagement at the Princess was that much delayed, consequently her first appearance will be tonight. - If takes something more than a cold to keep “Uncle David’’ Nowels in,doors and notwithstanding the fact that the temperature was hovering about the' zero mark at 9 o’clock this morning he was up town and looking unusually spry. He was 88 years of age last September. A At the delinquent tax sale last Monday everything advertised that - had not been previously settled for sold, except one town lot in the town of Gifford and two in Fair Oaks. In all 52. tax certificates were issued. B. J. Gifford made complete -Settlement of his delinquency. C D. Hopkins has been here from Delphi for a day or two visiting his father, Dewitt C. Hopkins, so well known here as “Uncle Clint.’’ The long and severe winter has confined the old gentleman to close quarters and he likes to look his boy's over once in awhile. He will be 89 years of age on March 6th. Many Rensselaer, people will remember Love Crampton, daughter of Editor A. B. Crampton, of Delphi, and will regret to learn that her husband, A., H. Cauikins, died Friday ”of last week. He was the manager in Chicago of the Eli Lilly drug company, and his death resulted from a break down caused by over work. Both Mr. and Mrs. Cauikins were graduates of purdue University in the class of 1901. 4 daughter, aged 7, and a son, aged 4, are left fatherless by his death. Mrs. Cauikins frequently visited in Rensselaer when a young and has many friends here.
T. G. Brown left yesterday afternoon for— Jamestown, N„ Dak., and will probably go from there to Fargo and then to Larimore. His family will accompany John Hellengreen and family about the first of March and Mr. Brown will decide on a location before that time. The Joint sale held by Brown and Hellengreen was a very good one. These are two good families and their removal is regretted in the various neighborhoods where they have lived but they are the class of men who are building up the great northwest and their friends will wish them abundant success. v-
The present cold spell seems to cover a wide area of the central suites extending well into the south. In the northwest the storm was the most Bevere, assuming the shape of a blizzard with deep snows and temperature, ranging from 20 to 30 degrees below zero. In the mountains of Colorado 30 degree Weather is also reported. In Kansas there were heavy snows with the temperature 4 degrees below zero. --in Ghlahoma the coldest weather in years is reported, resulting in much suffering and great danger to stock. In Tennessee, Texas and Kentucky there was low temperature, sleet and snow, blockading traffic.
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