Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 170, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 July 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

AT THE Princess tonight

PICTURES. The Paleface Princess. SONG. Gep Ain’t I Glad Pm Single.

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ramey went t j DeMotte this morning for a short visit with her relatives. Rev. O. F. Jordan an-> family cxme down from Evanaton. 111., yesterday to spend the week with his mother, Mrs. W. N. Jordan and family, in Barkley township. Mrs. L. G. Ralston and Mrs. E. A. Manwaring returned to Mentone, 111., loday after a short visit with the family of Amos Mullenhour, some nine miles in the country. J. W. McEwen and family are receiving a visit from his nephew, J. M. McEwen and wife, of Fort Worth, Tex. He is a conductor on the Rock Island railroad. This is his first visit to Rensseiaer. Mrs. Milt Roth and son Harold went to Chicago this afternoon and were there joined by her sister, Mrs. C. O. Swift and her little son, and together they started to Longmont, Colo., to visit their sister, Mrs. Joe Jackson and family. t Mrs. Frank Foltz shown some improvement over her condition of last week and is now able to sit up a little and to stand a little at a time. She has regained full consciousness but is still unable to talk. The outlook for f arther improvement is very encouraging. Henry Secor, of the firm of Myers & Secor, arrived home Monday from a visit with his father at his former home near Dowagiac, Mich. He found his father feeling poorly and he turned in and made a hand of himself in the hay field. The fact that Henry has only one leg does not greatly incapaclate him and he says that he can get along with most farm work as well as a man with both limbs. Prof. Isaac M. Lewis, who has been home from Austin,. Texas, for some time, went to Bloomington this morning, where he attended the state university for a number of years. His trip there is to visit old acquaintances and he will return here in a couple of woeks to remain tne balance of the summer. Mr. Lewis is an instructor in the Texas state university at Austin, teaching botany and bacteriology

Judge Hanley had another application in the juvenile court Monday. It was to have the little son of George Antrim taken care of. The boy has beer, living with his aunt. Mrs. Rachael Scott, who has the care of her aged mother, Mrs. Antrim, and can not well take care of the boy. He is said to be a good boy and badly in need of a good home where he can be kept busy and given a chance for an education. His father is in Michigan. Manager Phillips has added another attraction to the Princess in the shape of two kettle drums and orchestral chimes. These musical instruments are handled very cleverly by Paul Healy, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. John Healy, and he was encored lustHy Monday evening. The chimes are used only in the leading motion picture houses in the city. Manager Phillips says the people want something new now and then and he believes in giving it to them. Oscar Welty, the Kokomo constable who killed the negro Edwards last week, Without provocation, will be prosecuted determinedly. The negroes cf Kokomo have decided to make up a purse to get additional counsel and many white people have offered to aid. There were about as many white as colored people attended Edwards’ funeral Sunday. Welty was' formerly a deputy game warden and figured some along the river. It is probable that he acquired his idea of shooting on sight while thus employed.

Texas Elberta peach sale this week—very finest stock—fiLM per bushel, at ♦he Heme Grocery. "