Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 182, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 August 1910 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Mortferer Admitted to Ball Creates Surprise at Delphi. Samuel A. Michaels, the Carroll county man who murdered Levi Pittinger, his farm tenant near Clymer station last Thursday morning, was yesterday admitted to bail in the sum of SIO,OOO. The Delphi Herald says: a The admitting to bail was a surprise to most people who had heard eye witnesses tell their story when not on the witness stand. The fact that Michaels went to the Pillinger hoiiu writh a loaded 'revolver in his pocket and the statement of witness that the fatal shot was fired while Pippinger was retreating gave a tendency to the general idea of first degree murder. Squire Collins made his decision c.» fix a bail after witnesses had been examined by both sides and arguments made. He said it was his opinion that if the defendant was guilty, the degree of his crime was manslaughter and fixed his bail at SIO,OOO. The Logansport Tribune says: “No wait for bondsmen followed as that had been previously arranged. Attorney Pollard, Kistler and: Kistler, Albert Michaels, a brother of the defendant and a son signed the bond.” Michaels went immediately to his home in Logansport, after shaking hands with the Justice and thanking him for his position in handling the case. Michaels declared he believed he did what was right.
Methodist Church. Subject Sunday morning at Trinity M. E; church, “Signs of Spiritual Progress.” Epworth League meets at 7:30 P. JVL Oycial Board is called to meet at 2:30 P. M. Can’t look well, eat well or feel well with impure blood feeding your body. Keep the blood pure with Burdock Blood Bitters. Eat simply, take exercise, keep clean and you will have long life. . Sol Fendig and Carl Wood are trying their luck fishing at the Kankakee river today. Louis and Temple Abernathy, sons of United States Marshal John Abernathy, arrived in Oklahoma City yesterday after their motor car trip from New York City. The Atlas Cement company has h contract with the government to furnish 4,500,000 barrels of cement for use in construction work along the Panama canal. Sarah Bernhardt became a greatgrandmother yesterday. Mrs. Gross, daughter of her son Maurice Bernhardt, gave birth to a daughter in I.ondon.
Drink It Because It’s So Good 'T'HERE is nothing strange about taking the meat of f choicest Tropic-ripened bananas, roasting it, granu- e la. ting it, and making from it a hot tabic beverage. < If fi Not so unusual, when you come to think of it as - taking the bitter coffee berry—poisonous in its natural state—roasting and grinding it and serving it as a H hot drink. Or brewing a beverage from the dried ffl and hand-rolled tea leaves of India and Japan. /j&ZA '// H We of America have our coffee, tea, cocoa f km/ B chocolate, and now our BONANO. Is there any reason to presume that BONANO—made from tpfSXwfM the most delicious fruit that grows—may not be the best hot drink, better than those you have been ' accustomed to? It is, and we want you to know it. j We want you to enjoy its tempting aroma, its spicy, appetizing flavor. We want you to see how wfutw/\ it strengthens, nourishes and refreshes. lttwr Drink BONANO for its own delicious goodness. That’s enough reason. And you will feel better for drinking it, too. Let the children have I Illllff all the BONANO they want. There’s nothing in it if nSiWMKrrfSllm 11111/ that can harm them—much that will do them good. ffl i nSWI ill IllWlP BONANO—pure and clean—handled in a I Iff W* lluf' sanitary way from the time the luscious, naturally |tt || I 'lff fi if f ripened fruit is picked until you open the sealed MI l|in(| Hfl |K/I |J|M package in your own home —is sold by your JIB I) Hff if [j iimm]J!i! i niff grocer. A 25-cent can of BONANO makes lilMlMtl MI Ml * 75 cups of the best hot drink you ever tasted. CZ..„ ■|B|( J |rJ| ’’'jF |y||||r The Home Grocery >a|MMM||||a^[ Jot«rttmtloß^B«n«n^P^o4C^CornJß^ e fa a *ij» Bwt BmL m.» ~ '—n *
