Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 229, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 September 1911 — Page 1

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i\ (ir \ \ >) > . w _ S # di—a y o r ML y| . A V I * y ,A *' r *flr JB ' BEECH NUT SLICED BEEF • ■ . Xj»»y••.-..*• ;;• . v "**. ..*,/ *, . >■•*. -,'v_ . , Is a very convenient food to have i* the home. Fine for luncheon or snpper. Try a jar—its flavor will v . RHOADS’ GROCERY.

Bear The Salisbury Family V Of Musicians October stb. ’ l V . V vV; f, ft? tfeat is in stofe for music and entertainment lovers. On October 6tb the Salisbury family of ten musicians will visit Rensselaer and appear at the Presbyterian Church. They are very talented and all' who hear them are sure to' be pleased. The admission will be 35 cents fpr adults; for children 25 cent 9. A refined entertainment sure to please all who attend it and certain to pack the house. Get tickets early. Have you seen our new steel wagon? It Is drat class. Hamilton ft Kellner.

Herman B, mmmSfmSmmlmmmammmlmmmmmmmmKmmmimmmmlllimmlmm luteur : ■' ••• « Tailor Made Clothes 1 have this season / around 250 samples , Blue Serges In Plains and • Fancies largest assortment in town to pick from; also all the Newest >. | Fabrics. :, I 411 in lengths. - M 1 know there if • saving.” * Inspection Invited. CLEANING. PRESSING. * |E R Tuteur? I Over Warner’« Stare, x

The Evening Republican.

VUIA A|l 1 /iptt ft •\ ’ < THE ACROBATS 'tf-Sra IHC AvKUDAId. 5 <

j We have a splendid wheat fertilizer for $22 per ton. Hamilton & Kellner. This week. Our Stock Co., on Saturday. Don’t neglect reserving your seats.' • V yMrs. J. J. Montgomery is home from Rockford, 111,, where she visited for a month with her parents. ■■»■'■ .■r.'.-.fa..—.1 • ! ■ Ellis Theatre, Our Stock Co. in Hearts of the Blue Ridge, Saturday, Sept. 30. Let us fill your bins with the best hard and soft coals on'the market. - HAMILTON ft KELLNER. • • i ■ ■’[, -7? Ladies desiring millinery and dressmaking, also ladies’ tailoring, call on Mrs. H. A. Crlpps, over Trust and pavings Bank. : --r ’- r • 1. ■ - \ • > Miss Bessie Findley returned to Chicago this morning, after 'a short visit with her sister, Miss Findley, at the Watts de Peyster school. y " Grandmother Parks, who has been making her home with her son, C, L. Parks; near Surrey, for the past three years, is very ill with kidney trouble. Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Gwin are attending the meeting of the Indiana State Medical Society in Indianapolis, and will attend the banquet tonight at the German House. v Earl Reynolds and Nellie Donegum are at Keith’s theatre at Philadelphia this week. They will start west in October and probably impend a week in Rensselaer, taking a rest from tltefcr summer work. ± • Mrs. A. Hopkins and daughter, Miss Gertrude, returned last evening from 1 Sullivan, Ind., where the former had been visiting hes daughter for a month, and where Miss Gertrude had been for the past ten days. - Monticello is tickled v because the Monon depot is being painted and with that town’s most popular color, too. The Journal says: “Two shades of green have been used for the exterior, making a very pleasant effect.” . Walter Lee has traded the Aix store j to Rev. borrow, of Morocco, for the latter’s residence in thAt town. Lewis Nichols, who has been running the Aix store, will move to Rensselaer utnd probably bd employed at the Home grocery. Jasper Pass and his attorney, J. A. Duqlap, and the attorney for the Medaryville Auto Co., G. A. Williams, were in Logansport yesterday. The auto company sold a machine to George L. Johnson, of Pleasant Grove, and Samuel G. Pass was security for Johnson. Soon after Johnson’s creditors began to close in on him Mr. Pass died. Jasper Pass la.the administrator of the estate. The suit aims to set aside a deed made by Samuel G. Pass shortly before his death. . 'f* * ,

Pearl' Maurice Allen and tale bride were dinner guests at the Makeever hotel today. They were returning from Chicago, where they had gone Tuesday, foUowlng their marriage in Lafayette. His wife was Mis.; Ruth Ann Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mm. Orlando S. Knight, of Lafayette. Her father is the candy man who conies to Rensselaer occasionally, making candy on the street corner Mr. Alien ia a dancing instructor and has an academy in Lafayette. He {is a graduate of the Chalif Dancing School oi New York. '> ’ Jack Johnson, the colored pugilist, is said to be broke. He got f 120,000 when he whipped Jeffries July 4th, 1010, and hss made a lot of money from\ theatrical engagements since then, but he goes at a lively pace and is Said to have spent it all. He Is also reported to have had troubles with bis white wife, whom he slapped recently in a Paris caffe. In. going from Paris to London Johnsonf Is said to have procured second class passage Tor himself and wife and third claim for alt members of his (mining party. He is said by all on the inside to he i

Bateirt January 1, 1897, as second elUf uU matter, at the poat-offloe at luawiMr, Indiana, under the act of March 3, 1879.

JOHN POOLS TRIAL TO BEGIN NOVEMBER 13.

Hart’ Wednesday, after a conference appointed to assist in the prosecution, and Elmer Becrce, of Fowler, who will defend Pooje. - The Benton county circuit court will close on November 11, and the date fixed by Judge DeHart was agreeable to both the state and defendant.

Poole, who has been in Jail here since the case was sent here bn a change of venue In July, immediately after his indictment for murder by the grand Jury, Is anxious for an early trial. He was in the court r&om Wednesday but was not asked to plead. He will be aVraigned some time next month to answer to the indictment He seemed nervous and restless while in the court room, but there was nothing unusual in his appearance or manner.

Mr. Barce says that Poole will plead insanity and that this plea will not affect his claim that he killed, Kemper accidentally. He says that Poole has been in the insane asylum twice and that there will he no difficulty in proving that Poole was insane'at the time Kemper was killed. Mr. Barce says that the evidence will disclose some strange and startling things about life in the Poole home. The money used in Poole’s defense \is furbished by his daughter (Irace, whp is teaching school at Wheatfield, She is she only member of the family who has been loyal to Poole in his trouble. Patrons of the school objected to her employment because of the charge against her father, but she pleaded her own cause and won. She told them that she was not responsible for what her father had done. Emory Poole is still antagonistic and hopes to see his father convicted and condemned. Mrs. Poole and her married daughter are indifferent and have done • nothing to defend the head of the ! house in his hour of need. The family Is divided and the trial will disclose some sensational domestic conditions. Mr. Barce Says: “The case has attracted much attention and the trial will be one of the most interesting ever held in t%is county, The people of several counties will watch every step and read every fragment of evidence. It Is believed that the trial will consume several weeks. A great mass of evidence has already been collected by Mr. Hall and more will be brought out before the trial begins. V - •* I, . ' ■;* ...

Hugh Burns Hot Here For Trial; @200 Bond Forfeited.

Hugh Burns, charged with wife desertion, did not put in an appearance when his case was called Wednesday and his bond was declared forfeited. It was In Hus sum of S2OO. Burns bad been’ bound over to the circuit court in that sum.

Burns is the man who went to the farm of D. D. Gleason, his father-in-law, in Keener township, several weeks ago, and raised a lot of trouble. He was arrested and brought to Rensselaer, but Sheriff Hoover refused to put him In Jail and he returned to Keener township and forced an entrance to the house occupied by his wife, and badly frightened her. After she got her father. Burns beat a retreat, taking the family shotgun with him. Since' that time he has failed to put in an appearance. It la understood that he is In Chicago. Martin Murphy and wife came from Henning, 111., yesterday. He hopes to get a Jasper county 'farm and return here, to live. }%:.*£, .. i Abe Long. Floyd Robinson and Grant Warner are pawpaw hunting in Carroll county today. 1 >'■> .. jj Heavy, impure blood makes a muddy, pimply complexion, headaches, indigestion. Thin blood makes you weak, pale, slekly. Burdock Blood Bitters makes the blood rich, red, pure —restores perfect health. Phone IS and reserve seats for Hearts of tha Blue Ridge, Saturday, Sept. SO.

Stops itching Instantly. Cures piles, eczema, salt rheum, tetter, ich,' hives, herpes, sentries—Doan’s Ointment. Any drug store. ~ - - . '■ * t * h- *

LOT PURCHASERS PAYING CHEERFULLY, SAY OFFICERS.

I Ohiis (J Soitlftr atii) T) Tactory here. The movement to procure factories and endeavor to make Rensselaer grow was a patriotic one and now that the factory is well under way it is up to us t o fulfill the contract to pay them the money. This means that all who contracted for lots will be seen and given an opportunity to pay. Like good sports, they are paying up and we will be able to fulfill our part of the agreement with the match factory company.”,

This will be good news to all who are Interested in Rensselaer and it is very creditable to know that those who contracted for Jots did so with the intention of paying them out. They expected a factory and the factory has been secured and they are doing their part largely to make good the. terms agreed upon by the chosen, officers of the commercial ctub. The factory, in the meantime, is going up rapidly. 1 The heating plant Is being installed and the matchmaking machinery has been ordered and will be shipped* as soon as the building is enclosed to protect it from injury by exposure. While the match factory peofile originally expected'to be ready to begin the making of matches by the first of. January, they now believe that they will be able to start work on December Ist. Mr. Meguire, the local manager, says that there are a lot of orders for matches already on hand and that there is a great deal of business in sight for the future. Every day’B delay means the loss of a lot of money. There are now thirty men employed in the factory construction. The payroll amounts to about S4OO per week. This money is all spent in Rensselaer. The success of the factory after it is in operation will have much to do with securing other enterprises and Mr. Meguire says that it is the intention of his company to locate two more factories here next year. Lot buyers are getting everything they expected when they made their buying contracts, the location of a factory, the prospect of others, and the growing probability that the lots

SIGNATURE j'

. • *\v- 't vP’-" 1 .,-; ,' »* - FREE! FBEE ! p "■■'■.■■ > -/ ■ i A SSO " Standard" Porcelain Enameled Bath Tub to be given away Absolutely Free of All Charges SATURDAY, Nov, 11th, 1911 - * *• ' r The above date is the last day ‘ of our exhibit on the ‘'Malleable” Steel Range, CONDITIONS s Come in to our store and learn what 1 , . * -jS« ■' ■ ', " >,lp>p?v '■ : >Tf ~ T;7.. r*^Wi the conditions are, ED,Rhoades & Son ... '

, TVEATHEB FORECAST. » ’ —— ’ Showers tonight or Friday morhing, followed by fair; warmer tonight. Sept. 29—Sun i rises 5:54; sets 5:46.

will themselves be worth in time all that was paid for them. vV [Along with the improvement of the factory subdivision, all lot owners should take pride in their lots. They should set out shade trees, fruit trees, and help to make the addition attractive. This will contribute to the success of the project of the factory company to boom the addition "and will add to the value of the lots and be generally beneficial. We should cooperate with the match company and tba commercial club to make a thorough success 1 of the movement wa were so energetic in starting almost three years ago,

Get in Horse Show Bills and Orders.

All bills or premium orders pertaining to the recent horse shpw should be filed at once with the undersigned. Unless presented by NoV. Ist, order* jvill upt be paid. It is important to get the business closed up as soon as pomiblq.

C. G. SPITLER,

For a mild, easy action of the bowels, a single dose of Doan’s Regubitual constipation. 25 cents a box. Ask your druggist for them.

TIE ELLIS TME J. H. S. ELLIS, Nanifer .•■•' ‘-v., „ -^r Saturday, Sept -Jv ' ■' . \ OUR STOCK CO. I> Hil Red's BenUf.l Sntkm Dnn p v* . V,,? “Rearts of the ■llllk Im&klklk * : -V ■■■■—'"'■flr, 1 1 "I r ; ~ Prices, 25c-35c-50c flflAM - .. - V.'.._£v • "! w•’

-• : r rycj* -Ty 4ya. J aIi"WSttMTOroWWBBBW I wlah t to announce to tbe public that I am now prepared to take bus calls. I hare made arrangements with Barnes’ Restaurant, phone 422, or Leek's hitch barn, phone 342, to take my bus calls. Will endeavor to gire good service at the same old prices. CaHs answered night qr day. Your humble servant, ' ' 4 ” JOB JACK3ON. Our Stock Co. Saturday, Sept. 30.

Secretary.

toj* jcr.