Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 265, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM PICTURES. “Grandma.” “Dad’s Girls.”
Phone No. 273 for the best grades of coal. We have again commenced to handle fancy butterine, only "20c a pound at John Eger's. Born, Wednesday, Nov. 8, to Mr. and Mrs. James Moore, north of Pleasant Ridge, a daughter. Hot .biscuits and coffe6 this week at Rhoades’ hardware store, during the Malleable Range exhibit. Mrs, Louisa Stanley, who has been conducting a rooming house in Lafayette, has sold it and will remain here with her parents for several weeks. Eat Mrs. Green'd Rome MtCde Bread, “The Best Ever.” See ad in Classified Column, or Phone 477. Miss Ruth Sayler, who was in Kansas most of the paßt summer, and who has been boarding much of the time since her return with Mrs. Morris, has rented a room of Mrs. John Zimmerman and is moving in todays The male teachers of the Rensselaer schools all went to Gary today to visit the schools of the magic city. Superintendent Warren, Principal Dean, Professors William Lee and 'Charles Sharp constituted the Gfary visitors. Most of the grade teachers also went to Gary and most of the lady high school teachers to Chicago. Joe Kanne and the Indian School have each purchased grain elevators < for farm use. They bought the same kind of machines that have been used by Babcock and Hopkins for loading grain into cars since their elevator burned. They are handy farm' articles and save a lot of time and < hard labor in getting corn fyoan a wagon bed to the corn crib, f —(— 1 t % Elmer Ross, the yotfng man living at McCoyßburg who has the typhoid fever, Uy haying a severe period now and the chances for bis recovery are not the best. Yesterday his fever ran up to 106. Typhoid seems to be'uuuuually severe this year and there, have been several deaths from the disease in this county, the percentage of deaths being much larger tlyui is usual. \ New prunes, dates, figs and seeded raisins are now in at the Home Grocery.
