Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 February 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM -• ♦ - PICTURE. A Tale of the Sea. Ramona’s Father. SONG The Bum and The Bamblebee, By J. F. Fredericks.
Mrs. E. L. Bruce and daughter. Miss Lora, are spending today in Chicago. Good 4-foot wood delivered at your residence at $4. 4>er cord. Maines & Hamilton. “7* Born, this morning, to Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Lewis, of Barkley township, at daughter. Mrs. C. W. Hanley and son Emil are taking in the auto show at Chicago today. 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. George Marr, manager of the big Nave ranch in Wheatfleld township, arrived here this morning from Attica, where he had been visiting Mr. Nave. > Mrs. John G. Shedd, of Chicago, and her brother, Warren Porter, and wife, of Walpole, New Hampshire, were guests today of S. S. Shedd and family. John W. Paxton was over from South Bend over night. He has not yet engaged in business but is looking about for something and will probably decide to make his future home in Indiana. B. F. Fendig returned this morning from his trip to the south. He has not been with Delos Thompson and Walter Porter for the past two weeks, but understood that they would be home in a few days. Cyrus Rice, whose little daughter captured about everything in the riding prizes at the Rensselaer horse show last fall, and who had many winners in the exhibit of horses, will hold a big public sale on Wednesday, February 16th, at his farm south of Remington. Mrs. C. A. Vondersmith, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. N. Littlefield, for the past ten days, went to Chicago this morning, where she will spend a couple of weeks in the wholesale millinery houses before returning to her home in Murdo, S. Dak., where she is engaged in the millinery business. William Taylor, manager of the Lowell opera house, was in Rensselaer today and arranged to start a roller skating rink in a room belonging to A Leopold, on Vanßensselaer street. Mr. Tqyloy has made a proposition to the local militia company to put on the play, “Under the Stars and Stripes,” at Lowell Saturday night of next week and it is possible that this will be done. Trustee Hillis, oi Colfax township, Newton county, was in town today. He is anxious for the building of an interurban railroad that will connect his part of the country with Rensselaer and a few other good places and says he believes that the building of such a road would double the value of every acre of land in his township. He would be glad to help along any company that can acquire the Purtelle rights. Mrs. T. N. Cofer left this morning for her home in Charleston, 111. She was compelled to go on crutches, owing to the injury she received last Saturday evening when leaving the train. She has suffered a great amount of pain and 1b still unable to bear any weight upon the Injured member. She is unable to account for the injury. She had just stepped from the train when something struck her a severe blow on the heal from behind. It caused an injury that made it impossible for her to walk and she has since been confined' closely to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Roth, where she was visiting. W. H. Cheadle, trustee of the Robert Parker bank, and his attorneys, William Darroch, of Kentland, and Dan Sims, of Lafayette, were here today taking depositions in the case of the trustee against E. L. Hollingsworth. This is the case that grew out of the transfer of the First National bank of Remington to Mr. Hollingsworth, just before the close of the Parker bank. Mr. Hollingsworth is represented by Attorney Emery Sellers. The hearing was under the direction of the referee in bankruptcy, Who was absent, but a reporter from his office made a report of the proceedings. Cant look well, eat well or feel well with impure blood feeding your body. Keep the blood pare with Burdock Blood Bitters. Eat simply, take exercise. keep clean and you will have long life.
