Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 87, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 April 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

The Methodist ladies will hold their annual Easter market Saturday, April15th, at Perry Horton’s music store. They will have on sale homemade bread, cake, pies, baked beans, doughnuts, cottage cheese, dressed chicken; in fact, everything suitable for your Easter dinner. William Whited has moved from Wheatfleld to Rensselaer and has moved to one of A. Leopold’s houses. He expects to take a trip to Mississippi one day next week and will probably engage in the real estate business and sell land in that state. His 6-year-old daughter has had a severe case of tonsilitis since they moved here last Saturday. Baseball is receiving considerable attention and It is believed that a team can be organized that will make a good showing. Frank Kresler is willing to head an organization if he can be assisted by a number of responsible men) His idea is to' get a pitcher and to make the balance of the team up from the hom£ boys. That idefc seems to meet general favor and it is expected to oall a meeting soon to form an organization. Mrs. Charles Mustard came yesterday evening from near Hopkins Park, ill., to visit her brother, George Kennedy, south of town. Their mother, krs. Rebecca Kennedy, Is in Longcliffe asylum and is not expected to live. Another daughter, Mrs. Mary Taylor, is with the mother at the asylum. She went there expecting to bring her mother home, but found her in so serious a condition that she could not be moved and news of her death is expected any time. The condition of Mrs. R. B. Harris became so critical Tuesday as to serious al&rm. A specialist was called from Chicago in consultation with the local physician. He arrived on the 11 o’clock train that night and it was thought an operation might be resorted to, but her condition was too weak to admit it. She rested very well the latter part of the night but this morning was taken worse again and the prospects for her are regarded unfavorable. Babcock thinks that the county attorney and the county commissioners have the power to make Wheatfleld “dry” if they want to. Most people seem to think that the courts will get a whirl at deciding whether a township with less than 1,000 people shall have a saloon or not. But his argument is consistent with the law passed by the democratic legislature which provides that after the commissioners hav6 granted or refused licenses that there shall be no appeal from their decision. That is the first time we have ever heard of a legislature presuming to grant to officers any right that could not be reviewed by the courts. It will stand just about as long as Bab’s professed desire to keep Wheatfleld “dry” will stand. It will have a test in Newton county at once, as Ohauncey Smith, the defeated Goodland applicant, has appealed to the circuit court. A Classified Adv. will rent It

fHow to Be Fashionable Your Dressmaker can not make you fashionable. > She can make a stylish dress for you, but whether you will appear fashionable or not depends altogether upon your To be fashionable, you must be shapely, proportionately slender, and graceful. Then no matter how simple your frock may be, you will be attractive. And again, ask about the construction of a corset before you buy. Don’t judge a corset solely by its looks. The permanancy of the shapliness of your corset and HENDERSON the service it should give are deFashion Form pendent wholly upon the Corsets tion of the corset. Lenderson’s Corsets have double bones and side stays, which are enclosed in a double stripping. The front clasp is especially reinforced and will not break, and all metal parts of these corsets are absolutely nonrustable. > We urge you to buy a Hepderson Corset, because we feel confident you will get more style, satisfaction and wearing value from these models than from any other you have ever worn. E. Van Arsdel & Co.