Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 157, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 July 1910 — Death of John B. Neal, Former Resident of Rensselaer. [ARTICLE]

Death of John B. Neal, Former Resident of Rensselaer.

We are in receipt of a copy of the Villisca, lowa, Review, containing an account of the death of John B. Neal, a former resident of Rensselaer, at the Provident Hospital, in Chicago, June 19th. Brights disease was the cause of his death. Burial took place at Vllisca, his former home. Mr. Neal lived in Rensselaer f r mi 1891 to 1894 in the Presbyterian parsonage. In the latter year he moved to Vilisca and in March of this year to Chicago, where his death took place. He is survived by his wife and four children: Mrs. F. L. Jenkins, of Regina, Sask., Canada; Mrs. John Kenyon, of Oakland, Cal., and Virginia and Arthur, of Chicago. One son, Herman, died in 1898.

&meß, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel McCullough, living near Oakland City, drank the liquid from a fly-killing preparation and died Tuesday night. John W. Daniel, senior senator from Virginia, died at the Lynchburg sanitarium at 10:35 o’clock Wednesday night, his death being due to a recurrence of paralysis. The immediate cause of his death was cerebral hemorrhage. Ft. Wayne at the present time has more jobs than It has men to fill them. This is because of the immense amount of building, pavement and track elevation work now going on there. All the factories and railroad shops are after men. Mrs. Charnley, age 68, wife of Mitchell Charnley, a wealthy broker, was killed in alighting from a Chicago,' South Bend ft Northern Indiana traction car at the Goshen station Tuesday evening. She had just returned from Jackson, Mich., when the accident occurred. An employe of a Richmond coal company while on the way to bank Tuesday afternoon, lost a pass book and $2,200 in bills and negotiable checks. Ernest Rockhlll, ten years old, the son of poor parents, found the valuables and returned them to the company and received $25 In gold, a new suit of clothes and an order for next winter’s supply of coal for his parents as a reward.