Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 67, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 March 1912 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Speaker Clark has appointed Representative Adair, of Portland, Ind., to Serve as chairman of the committee of the whole during the consideration of the free sugar bill. . .. With not a dissenting vote ca»t on any question,’ the republican state convention of Tennessee, in session at Nashville Tuesday, nominated two men for state offices and indorsed Taft for renomination, as was H. N. Cate for judge of the court of civil appeabu. •Mrs. Mary Bartholemew died last Thursday at the home of her son, Charles Bartholemew, in Remington, he was quite old and had been an almost total invalid for the past two years. The funeral took place from the Remington Presbyterian church Saturday. Arrangements have been completed for the holding of corn. Improvement lectures along the line of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad in northern Indiana, April 2 and 3, when the B. &. O. road has consented to furnish the Purdue agricultural extension department with a special lecture train. Mrs. C. W. Rhoades returned Sun-, day from Goodland, where she had been for a few days. Her father, William Townsend, held a public sale Saturday and disposed of bis personal property. He has also rented his property adjacent to Goodland -and will, come here Tuesday to spend part of his time with bis daughter. He will also remain part of the time with another daughter at Fort Wayne. —FrsnkYbri The program was a splendid one from beginning to end and well deserving their crowded house. The choruses were given with a vim and spirit that quite won over the audience at the first The musical numbers given by the Mandolin Club were very well rendered and the Club was forced to respond to numerous encores. At the Presbyterian church Monday evening, March 25th. James Redman, of Terrd Haute, married Mrs. Ellen Redman three different times. In the Interval he married three other women. Mrs. Redman, during the time Redman was with other wives, married a man named Piper twice. This marriage propensity was too much of a record to meet the exacting views of Judge Fortune when Mrs. Redman asked for freedom again, and divorce was refused.
