Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 203, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 August 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
AT THE Princess tonight 4k —•— PICTURES. An Arcadian Mold. j SONG. In Dear Old Georgia, by Roscoe Wilson.
For Sale: A couple of show cases. HOME GROCERY. The west front business room of the Republican building is for rent. This is a fine room for a small business and will be rented reasonable. Inquire of Healey & Clark. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Everleigh, of Watertown, N. Y., have been visiting his sister, Mrs. C. H. Tryon and hus-, band, since Tuesday, and today accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Tryon went to Chicago for a few. days’ visit before returning to their home. The township trustees of Howard county have voted to pay the teachers of the county for one day’s attendance at the Indiana State Fair. The schools will have opened before the fair begins and the trustees wanted to encourage their teachers to attend. Mrs. Frank Weber and Mrs. Jacob Wright returned this morning from a visit since Tuesday at Frankfort. They attended the fair there Thursday but a rain occurred in the afternoon that drenched the crowd and spoiled the races and other amusements. 1 "■■■ " 1 i ... i. i , W. H. Parkinson, who has been working at the automobile business in Indianapolis for several months, is in Rensselaer today. He came Monday and has been spending the week with his brother, Dr. Wallace Parkinson, at Brook. He is taking a little vacation and rest after a hard summer’s work. John Kepner has been home from Rome City for several days, biit will return there Monday to resume work. His daughter, Mrs. Tom Manley, who has been spending the summer with her husband there, will return here within a few days. The company for which Tom is a manager has just taken a contract for a new school house at Urbana, Ind., and it is probable that Mr. Kepner will work there part of the time. A letter received today from Mrs. Julia A. Healey, who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. E. F. Mills, near Hamilton, Mont., for the past three months, states that they were never in any danger from the forest fires, although the smoke and asnes from the fires was very dense there and clouded the skies for many days, while it obscured from sight the mountains that are ordinarily in plain view. Mrs. Healey expects to start from there for Rensselaer, Sunday, August 28th.
Mrs. Edward Baech and children, of Delphi, came this morning for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Kate R. Watson and Mrs. Jay Lamson. Her son, Charles Nelson, accompanied her here. Charles attends Lake Forest University and during the past summer in company with a young man named Allen Cook he took a trip abroad, visiting England, France, Hungary and Ireland. The boys worked their passage both ways and had a fine trip from the standpoint of experience. They arrvied home about a week ago. Friday George Hopkins started for Morocco, and when about three miles this side of that place his team became frightened at a covey of guinea hens and ran away with him, and collided with the hind wheel of a buggy in front of them, throwing him out and overturning the buggy on him. The team cleared themselves from the wreck and ran some •distance. Word was phoned in and Ed. Harris and “Jockey” Lyons went out iq, the latter’s auto and brought him in. He thinks he has a broken rib or two. —Mt. Ayr Pilot. • An ordinary case of diarrhoea can, as a rule, be cured by a single dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. This remedy has no superior for bowel domplaints. For Bale by all dealers. c
