Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 83, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 April 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Want to sell It? Our Classified Column will find you a buyer. Mrs. Martha Smith went to Hebron this morißng % for a short visit with her son Roy. W. I. Leatherman went to Wolcott today to visit old acquaintances whom' he had not seen since his removal from there thirty years ago.
Mrs. Simon Leopold went to Chicago this morning to meet her daughter, Miss Selma, who is coming from Ann Arbor for the spring vacation. Union school, Marion township, taught by Miss Carrie Pierce, closed a successful term today with the customary “big doings.” Miss Gladys Pierce visited the school today. *' ’K — ■ C. H. Coover, a young man, frpqj Keiningtoii, was fcefe GVer night* He has been running the picture staov there, ljut has closed it and is figuring on going to Idaville to take a job on the Observer newspaper.- He has considerable experience on the Kentland Enterprise.
Myer S. Cornfeldt and Leo C. Goodman, the former of Chicago and the altter of St. Paul, arrived in Rensselaer last night, this being their first stop since their start on a novel trip to the Panama canal. They 'will try to earn their way through to the canal by taking photographs and consider the outlook very favorable. George Putts, who fired during the fall and early winter on the Pennsylvania railroad at Logansport, has been spending some time at home, having received a 90-day lay off owing to lack of business. He returned .to Logansport today but not to go to work. It is surmised that feminine charms accounted for this visit ' Our Stock Co. arrived this morning to play St. Elmo tonight They have enjoyed a good business all week. The company IS. exceptionally good in this play, haying worked in it for three years. The Kentland Enterprise says that the largest crowd yet witnessed the show this week and enjoyed it hugely. Next week the company will play another of the old favorites. “East Lynn.”
The Monticello Democrat says that having saloons does not stop bootlegging nor drugstore whiskey selling. Logansport, which has saloons galore, has several bootlegging joints, arid two of these were raided one night last week. Prior to the passing of saloons it was not uncommon for men to drink openly ha many drugstores and they sold whiskey with less restriction than now. So the return of saloons will nonstop these two f%ls. The Monticello Democrat also believes that it is next to Impossible to have law abiding saloonkeepers. There are usually back door or annex attachments where ean be obtained ;st illegal hours. That paper also suggests that most of the present violators of the liquor laws are ex-saloon-keepers and that they could hardly be trusted to run saloons according ta law if licenses were granted.
A Classified Adv. will find it.
