Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 January 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Extra Good Program and Song Tonight.

County Treasurer Will Cooper was over from Monticello this morning. All kinds of feed for chickens, horses and cows for sale by Maines & Hamilton. * Roy Torbet went to Indianapolis this morning for a visit of several days with relatives. J. D. Allman left this morning on a business trip to Indianapolis and the southern part .of the state. Mr. and Mrs. E. W- ..Irwin returned to Wolcott this morning after an Sunday visit with relatives.* D. Schmitt returned to Decatur,. Ind., today, after an oyer Sunday vißit with his son at St. Joseph’s colloge. Lawrence Blacker, who has been .visiting his brother near Newland, left this morning for his home near Monticello. Frank Shide returned to work on the dredge near Idaville today. Will McGinnis did not go back owing to the illness of his wife. For this week only, 4 packages of seedless raisins, or 3 pounds of good evaporated peaches, or 3 pounds of good prunes for 25c, at John Eger’s. A forecast for the week’s weather sent out from Washington says that Btorms starting in the Rocky Mouqtains and coming eastward will rea a this part of the country Thursday and Friday and cause a big drop in the temperature those days. Now is your time, to see where you can use a lot of concrete tile. They are the cheapest; pay for themselves; cost you nothing. You can string them out; they never crumble, but get better with age. They are frost proof. Rensselaer Cement Tile Factory, C. Kalberer, proprietor. You’ll need rainy footwear for these rainy days and we can save you 10 to 20 per cent on all kinds of rubber goods. ROWLES & PARKER. Horse sellers and buyers will meet in Rensselaer next Wednesday. Bring in any horse that you have to sell, a car load was, sold the first Wednesday in January. These sales are private, with no expense attached, and if the price you can get don’t suit you, take your horse back home. G. C. Clark returned to Fowler today, after a visit since Saturday with his sister, Mrs. Bert Amsler. Bert returned from the hospital in Chicago Saturday, where he, recently underwent an operation for hernia. He is feeling fully as good as could be expected and believes his trouble will be fully relieved by the operation. Prices on all kinds of fencing are sure to be higher, as raw materials have already advanced, but our PreInventory Sale prices are by far the lowest ever made on fencing and it will be to your interest to buy now, as we are giving big discounts on our already low prices. ROWLES 4b PARKER. Fred Berger came over from Remington this morning. Pbineas Kent came from Brookston on the same train and the saloon question came up as they rode down town in the bus. Berger thinks saloons will be reinstated at Brookston And Monticello. Berger thinks that Wolcott, also in White county, will vote “wet,” and that Goodland find Remington will follow. It will be a great pity, Indeed, if these communities take a backward step, and we trust that the estimate these gentlemen have made is not correct. Kent came here to see Ed Oliver, and Berger came to transact some business and left for Chicago 6n the 10:05 train. Tomorrow is the last day of January. The month has slipped by without much of a fund. Several varieties of weather have been handed out and mild temperature without an unusual number of cloudy days has predominated. There has been very little snow so far this year, about 4 inches being the greatest at one time, and It went off thirty-six hours after It came. Today’s northwest wind is far from pleasant and January may make a bad face at humanity as it passes out February is a short month, but may be full of troubles, if Prophet Hicks can make It so. He has storms, regular storms, reactionary storms, blizzards, sleet, winds and a lot of troubles booked for every day of the month almost. It Is not uncommon to have some real cold weather In February, bnt we do not recall a month quite so fall of woe as the one Hicks predicts.