Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 252, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 October 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM x .. . —♦—. ■*-' PICTURES. “A Handsomer Man” “Rory O’More”
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Oliver went Xb Danville, 111., Tuesday for a stay of several, days. Mr. J. W. Tilton and two children returned this morning from a visit at Wheatfield. Mrs. Isaac Stacker returned this morning from a short visit with relatives in Delphi. Have your piano tuned by Otto Braun. Leave ytpir order with any of the band boys. v • W. S. Richards has just finished a job of painting on the Thompson and Ham farm near Gifford. Mrs. Lillian Davis is reported quite sick at the home of her father, Dave Alter, in Union township. Mrs. Ed Ranton and daughter Helen, of Hoopeston, 111., are visiting, Harvey Wood, Sr., and family. Eat Mrs. Green’s Home Made 'Bread. “The Best Ever.” See ad in Classified Column, or Phone 477. Larkin and Haines Potts went to Greenfield today to visit an uncle, who is 93 years of age. Mrs. Almira Stockton, Mrs. Cordelia Williams and Mrs. C. W. Porter are spending today in Lafayette. Born, Tuesday, Oct. 24th, a son to Mr. and Mrs. D. Vic Comer, of near Virgie. This, is their third child. Mrs. Ross Grant arrived this morning from Bismarck, N. Dak., for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Alter. Ladies desiring millinery and dressmaking, also ladies* tailoring, call on Mrs. H. A. Cripps, over Trust and Savings Bank. Miss Ollie Stanley left this morning for hqr home at Pleasant Hill, Tenn., after a visit with her cousin, Mrs. 'C. M. Greenlee, at Parr. Just received another car of the genuine cook stove coal, from Jackson Hill, Ohio. HAMILTON & KELLNER. Miss Edith Shedd went to Evanston this morning tp spend a few days wi;u her sister, Miss Harriett, who is a senior at Northwestern University. Warner Bros, will give away a fine lantern Saturday, Oct. 28. How long do you think it will burn the first time it is filled with oil? Mr. and Mrs. Robert Van Gundy, from southeast of town, went to Strtlivan, 111., last night, owing to the severe sickness of her mother, Mrs. Ancil Powell. Mrs. John Bucks, of Royal Center, who has been visiting the family of her brother, Frank Burns, at Mt. Ayr, took the 11:20 train here this morning for Chalmers to visit relatives. A very pretty comet may be seen* almost any clear night now, between 12 and 4:30 o’clock, almost due east and not very high in the sky. It is almost as brilliant as Halley’s comet was in its palmiest days.
Glenn Wlshard and wife are now on the ocean, en route to ‘ Calcutta, India, where he will be stationed for several years at least in Y. M. C. A work. They will stop for a few days en route at London* and visit Oxford University. z June Hinkle, who suffered a severe attack of kidney trouble last Saturday night, has been recovering slowly since then, but last night had a long siege of nose bleed, lasing an hour and a half. Today there is practically no change in Ms condition. ' . Mrs. Kate R. Watson, as delegate; Mrs. A. J. Bellows, Pres., and Mrs S. R. Nichols, corresponding secretary of the missionary society of the Presbyterian church, went to Lafayette today to attend a synodical missionary meeting of all Presbyterian churches of the state. The meeting will be held in the Second Presbyterian church' in Lafayette and will continue over- four days. Representatives from both home and foreign societies will be in attendance.
