Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 95, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 April 1912 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

TONIGHT’S PROGRAM The Yarn of the Nancy Bill i The Love of John Ruskin / SAVE YOU 8 COCPOXS.

High grade Tungsten Lamps delivered to any part of the city. Ray Delmer, phone 239. R. B. Harris and daughter, Miss-Mil-dred, went to Chicago this morning for a short visit. Miss Day Jordan returned from Evanston today, after visiting there several days with her brother. Mrs. Rpbecca C. Hemphill continues very low and is apparently sinking gradually away. It is thought she can live but a few days. If you need a gang plow or sulky plow call and see our stock. We can please you. HAMILTON & KELLNER. Mr. and Mrs. Eli Wood and Miss Mary wood went to Monon Thursday, after visiting at the home - of their brother, Harvey W. Wood, of south of town, over Wednesday, which was his 74th birthday anniversary. Lee Adams is able to sit up today for the first time in a week. He has been suffering greatly from a catarrh of the right hand, which made him very sick. He is now much better and on the road to recovery. Automobile insurance at 2 per cent per annum, against loss by fire from cause, any place in the United States or Canada, by a company that is as good as the bess. R, B. HARRIS. \ rMiss Lottie Robinson, of Morocco, who has been in Rensselaer for several months, went to Chicago this morning to begin a course in a nurses’ training school in Lakeside hospital. She was accompanied to Chicago by her aunt, Mrs. L. H. Hamilton and son Fred. George Repd is now improving quite rapidly at the hospital in Chicago and it is believed at last ?the infection is entirely out of his system and it is now expected to be able to bring him home one week from today. He has been in the hospital for more than two -months; f, —~ The Lake County Times, at Hammond, Wednesday issued a 40-page edition, _the largest paper ever issued in this part of the state. Thirty-two pages are taken up with industrial news of the Calumet region. Yesterday was the sixth anniversary of the birth of Gary. The rise of the steel city from the sand dunes, swamps, scrub pines, and jack oaks, to its present attainment, is now a matter of world-wide knowledge and is the marvel of the industrial world. The damp cold of Wednesday and Thursday proved too much for professional baseball players and most of the big league games were dispensed with. Indianapolis, of the American Association, has not won a game yet.The once famous Chicago Cubs are at the bottom of the National league and the mighty Pirates are next to thebottom. It looks like a great amount of early dope is going wrong and that some permanent hopes are to be shattered before the season is far advanced. .-