Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 55, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 March 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

TONIGHT’S PBOGRAM —• — PICTURE. From Tyranny to Liberty, drama. SONG. Now She’s Anybody’s Girlie.

TheEllisTheatre J. H. 8. ELLIS, Manager. Friday, March 10 —♦ — t OUR STOCK COMPANY Presents the Greatest Love Story Ever Writtei, Dora Jhorne A Powerful aid Pathetic Play ■ from Bertha M. Clay’s famens level. Prices, . . 25c, 35c, 50c

Fancy hose of all kinds from 10c to SI.OO. C. EARL DUVALL. Mrs. Mary Patterson, of Shelbyvllle, in an application for divorce, complains that her husband is too fond of attending dances and allowing other women to wear his rings." Governor Plaisted signed a resolution adopted by the legislature submitting to the people the liquor prohibitory amendment to the Maine constitution. The amendment will be voted on in September. The national house of representatives has passed the bill to appropriate $250,000 for the erection of a memorial at Put-in-Bay, Ohio, in 1913, in commemoration of Commodore Perry's victory on Lake Erie in the war of 1812. V. Richard Whalley, the employe of the American Sugar Refining company, whose story of trick scale devices led to the discovery of the sugar weighing frauds, has been rewarded with a permanent job as a customs watchman at SB4O a year. The basketball games arranged between the girls and boys teams from Sheldon, 111., for last Saturday night - were called off on account at the death of little Carrol Warren. I/t is hoped to get another chance to play Sheldon yet this year and it may be necessary to arrange the game for some night earlier in the week, as the later nights of the week have about all been provided for. Roy Statton, the Chalmers automobile agent, who is associated in business with N. C. Shafer, the local Maxwell agent, went through Rensseber Sunday with two new cars, which he was bringing from Chicago. One was a big Stoddard-Dayton, which Jo-3 Minch, a well known Chalmers farmer and stock dealer, had purchased, anl the pther was a two-cylinder runabout Maxwell, which was to go to Tom* Howard, a farmer living near Cha 1 - mers. Statton sold 48 Maxwells and two Overtonß last year.

Lynn Sample, son of Mrs. Lucy Sample, was severely and It was for a time thought fatally injured last summer. He took up a claim in Colorado and while working In that country it 1b customary to have a high power rifle close at hand to shoot coyotes. Lynn had set his rifle down near where he was standing and it was discharged. The ball, whloh was 3S-caliber, entered his right side and plowed upward through the muscles of the back and came out at the right side of his neck. He was in a hospital for several weeks, but came< out in tolerably good condition. He will probably always be somewhat of a cripple, however, as his right shoulder droops considerably. Mrs. Sample, his mother, is here from Colorado. A P. Sample, who Is still, a telegraph agent and located at Augusta, Win., came here last Friday and expects to go to Wabash Wednesday for a short visit before returning to his home. He has a wife and 2-year-old daughter, but they did not accompany him on h’s visit here.