Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 249, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 October 1912 — Page 1
No. 249.
The Ellis Theatre. Guaranteed Attraction. i- ■ llllUMlMllHllMllli-dL J ONE WEEK, -T Commencing Monday, Oct. 21. * ,?%*■,. MATINEE SATURDAY. E. TOMLINSON .'' And His Own Company. 1 JolHf Jw IA/ > OPENING PLAY. WHIRPOOL” PRICES: 10, 20 and 30c Seats on sale at Jessen’s SatMiss Maude Rinaldo. " urday.
The Place of Quality. Rowen & Keiser. 3 cans Campbell’s Soup 24c 3 cans Pumpkin . 24c 4 cans Corn 25c 3 packages Mince Meat ..........24c 3 Packages Macaroni .....f..... .24c Wild Rose Early June Peas, can.. 9c Pure Cider Vinegar, gallon 28c Potatoes, home grown, peck 15c Onions, fine ones, peck 15c ( Butterine, best grade, pound ....22c Best Ha® 'of Coffees in city, from, per lb. .. j-’. .'. .25 to 88c Plenty of other Bargains too numerous to mention. Phone 202, ■JI I 1 111, 1.. 1. > IL- ■IW Wallpaper Cleaning. R. A. Cdcil, expert wall paper cleaner, will be in Rensselaer the remainder of bhe week. Orders may be left at McFarland’s Grocery, Phone 99. We have just unloaded our 12th car of flour since Jan. Ist, 1912. Over twenty-five hundred bbls. Aristos still leads them all in quality and price. Only $1.35 for Aristos. Guaranteed to be the best flour made or money returned. Every sack makes a new customer or a better one. JOHN EGER. We Please ethers—-why not you? phone 202,
Fa Shine In Every B|| Drop! Black Silk Stove Polish ia different. It does ■SKiBiImMHIH not dry out; can be ~ W used to the last drop; liquid and paste one ' quality: absolutely no waste; no dust or dirt. You get your money’s worth. Black Silk ’olish I la not only most economical, but It gives a brllUantsllky lustre that cannot be obtained with any other polish. Black 811 k Stove Polish does not rub off—lt lut> four times as long as ordinary polish—SO it saves you time, work and money. Don’t forest-when you want stove polish be sure to ask for 1-dK Bleak Silk. If it Isn't the best stove )>ollsh you ever usedyour dealer will refund your w ~ money. H Black Silk Store Polish Works, Sterling, Illinois. Use Black Nik Sir Drying Iron Bassiel on grates, registers, stove-pipes, and automobile tire rims. Prevents rusting. Try it. use Biaek Bilk Betel Polish for ellverware, nickel, tinware, or brass. Itworks quickly, easily, and leaves a brilliant surface. It has no equal tor use on automobiles.
Given Away at The Rex. *« y Girl Baby WILL BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE \:. . - Rex Theatre November 2 Learn all about it by asking Manager Bex IVarner or at the ticket window.
The Evening Republican.
Dance at the Armory Tonight—'Colored Orchestra. A dance will take place at the armory this., evening, and the Douglas colored orchestra, of Indianapolis, will furnish the music. This orchestra has proven so popular that since it made its advent »several months ago it has been used for all the big dances and has been engaged by the Jefferson Club for all the holiday dates during the winter. Tonight’s dance promises to be a very enjoyable one. Several out-of-town guests are expected, including Virgil Robinson, of Purdue; Mallle Clark, of Wheatfield, Calvin DuCharme and several friends from Wolcott and several from Kentland. The dance will begin at 9 o’clock. Down goes the price on flour. Aristos, the perfect flour, only $1.35 a sack. JOHN EGER. Week’s Bulletin at The Home Grocery. X 3 cans Topmost vegetable 50up... 25c 3 cans pumpkin 25c 3 cans sugar corn ..25c 3 cans Bordens Columbia Brand milk ............ .25c 3 pkgs. Topmost mince meat 25c 3 lbs. Santa Claus prunes 25c 3 pkgs. Oceanic smoking tobacco.. 2sc 3 cans Velvet smoking tobacco ...25c 3 pkgs. Oriole corn flake 25c 3 pkgs. Owl Brand macaroni ... .25c 3 pkgs. Wool Soap chips 25c 3 large bars Royal Blue Soap 25c Bacon, fancy sugar cured breakfast, lb. 22c Corn, Topmost, sugar, can 18c Peas, Wild Rose, early June, can. 10c Olives, El Toro, ripe, can 20c Figs, Sultan Brand, pkg .10c Asparagus Tips, Monarch, can .. . 20c Lard, pure country, lb 18c Marquette Brand Syrup, 26-oz.
bottle , ...25c Jams, Bismark Brand, quart cans 85c Vinegar, pure cider, gal 25c Catsup, Monarch Brand, bottle 15-25 c Sugar, fine granulated, 17 lbs. for 81.0(1 N. O. syrup, 3-lb. can*.;... 10c Trojan syrup, 10-lb. pail 40c Shredded Wheat Biscuit, 2 pgs. for 25c Olive, fancy large, glass can ..... 25c Potatoes, home grown fancy large peck 18c Butterine, Purity Brand, lb .28c 7 bars Lenox soap for 25c 6 bars Swifts White Laundry ...,25c Scouring brick, Fairbanks 4c Reindeer Pork and Beans .10c 5 lb. evaporated California peaches 49c Large pkg. Argo starch .28c Millar coffees, lb. .. .25c, 80c, 85c, 40c A. & K. Best Flour % bbl .$142 Home Grocery. Phone 41.
Enter** Maaacy 1, U*CH wwaa olatai **ll matter, at the port-ottca at SaaMMlatr. Indiana, ante th* act of Maron 3, IWB. '- • : -A... -.. ■■ , : . ■ < : . .„. ,:.A . . ... .. 71. '. . . . .; ..' ---- _
Young Man Lost Toes and Part of Right Foot While Working at B. D. McColly’s SawmilL Glenn Baker, 28 years of age,’ son of John N. Baker, of Barkley township, met with a painful and shocking accident at the sawmill camp run by B. D. McColly, on the Barkley farm in Barkley township. He owns the engine that is propelling the sawmill and has been acting as foreman for Mr. McColly. He was running the timber into the saw and slipped in some manner and his right foot was carried into the saw. The blade ripped through his foot, cutting it frightfully. He was brought to town and placed in the hospital, where local surgeons found it necessary to cut all the toes and part of the foot. It was at first thought that amputation at the ankle would be necessary, but this was not done, every effort being made to save as much of the foot as possible. He stood the operation well and there is only remote possibility of infection.
KNIGHTS TO GET REAL BUSY AGAIN
Banquet and Smoker to Be Held Tuesday Night as Starter for Winter Membership Activities. Rensselaer Lodge, No. 82, Knights of Pythias, will hold a banquet and smoker at the lodge room next Tuesday evening, as an awakener for the fall membership campaign. Chancellor Davenport returned from the state K. of P. meeting filled with the Pythian spirit and hopes to start another membership contest by having the lodge divided with captains in charge. The friendly rivalry last year had a beneficial effect and brought in enough candidates to keep the working teams of the lodge busy until warm weather. It is also probable that the contest will conclude with a big banquet as it did last year. Chancellor Commander Davenport is especially anxious that a large number be present to enjoy the banquet ■and smoker Tuesday evening, Oct. 22.
CIGARETTES HARD ON HOWARD YORK
14-Year-Old Boy Smoked Them Almost to the Point of Delirium and Condition Is Serious. ■ i '• The danger of cigarettes ‘was brought close home this week when physicians found that Howard York, 14 years of age, was almost at the point of delirium in consequence of smoking them. Howard is the son of Mrs. Emma J. York, and is a clever and hustling youth, but he has been smoking cigarettes for some time and has become such a slave to the habit that he has wrecked his nervous system and for the past two or three days has been confined at his home on Austin avenue in a serious condition. His mother is absent, visiting a sister in Illinois and has not been advised of his coditlon, as the physicians said that the boy’s condition was not apt to result fatally. It will be necessary, however, that he refrain from using cigarettes after he recovers from the present attack. This should serve as a warning to boys and their parents to break up the deplorable habit so generally followed by boys in this city.
Many Delegates Here to Attend Missionary Meeting.
At noon today thirty-five from other places were registered at the M. E. church, where the district meeting of the Womans Foreign Missionary Society is being held. A number more were expected on later trains. Mrs. A. A. Fell, the local president, met the trains and had the ladies transported to the church in the bus. The first meeting was held at 1 o’clock this Thursday afternoon. This evening at 7:30 o’clock Miss Emma Knox, a returned Chinese missionary, will speak, and the public are cordially invited to hear her address on “The Awakening of China.” '(Friday noon the ladles of the local society fcill be hostesses at an elaborate dinner given in the church dining room in the basement The room is being decorated and will have a very charming appearance. The program for Friday provides for morning and afternoon sessions.
RENSSELAER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1912.
GLENN BAKER HAS BAD ACCIDENT
Marriage License.
Joseph James Dzlabis, born Jasper county, Ind., Feb. 8, 1883, present residence Remington, occupation farmer, to Theresia Trolley, born Dyer, Ind., Nov. 20, 1885, present residence Barkl ley townahlp. First marriage for each. *
We have just received new sweet and dill pickles. Try them. ■ -v • •
W. J. WRIGHT has enrolled already M MEMBERS in the Great fl j| Hoosier Cabinet Club of Jasper County. Don’t miss this chance 1 1 ]VIAi*A * s le liberal offer ■ tn num a “HOOSIER” MlliV * * JLVlvIv ever made by any manu- I -qabS w. J. Wright’s VY/nm pn Ca n , or T ro T‘., 1 Hoosier Club is about the W UlllVll V>dll an article of such high ; most successful ever con- merit and low price. ; ducted in a town of this «JO1I1« Join W. J. Wright ’s big 1 size by the Hoosier Mfg. club tomorrow. Let W. J. ' Co. Already in ten days Wright deliver this SI- ' the memberships enrolled LENT SERVANT to your exceed our expectations o 10 J home. It will save you for the entire first week, A- ’miles of steps and keep This sale is under the K ° f ' . > everything at your finpersonal supervision of ■ A- ‘ A® ■ gers’ends. The .. Hoosier Mfg. Co., ■ g ■ This SILENT SERand they have limited the ■ . - .• ■ VANT is just as strong number of cabinets to be W Vr B and willing hot days as , sold by W. J. Wright’s JkV _ BL cool. YOU CAN DEPEND , Club Plan. o ’V UPON IT to help you i The remarkably easy f when you need help. You j terms of SI.OO member- will use it daily and save ' ship and SI.OO weekly dues NaZ hours of time. Would You Pay 14 Cents a Day for a Good Servant?
A Dollar Weekly Dues Pays the Bill.: Why You Should Will You Be a Join Now “Hoosier” Member? First— W. J. Wright has been al- _ -‘ML A,' Third— The membership shall be i lotted 25 Hoosier Kitchen Cab- iX Y| py- , wwfl limited to only 35 cabinets, and inets to be sold at a special club ¥XY 09 they will be sold at , tbe national ‘ . ... 'VxA leVXiI urM . ifOTOVt 1 fixed price on special terms of ; price by the manufacturers of KX t VII ji.oo cash membership; fI.OO , this famous cabinet. JI L weekly dues. < 'mi T Fil F E3|nil«-- Fourth— Cabinets shall be deliv- ■ Second—The advantage of this SMBT . ** ered as 800 nas 41-00 member- ' club plan is to give you benefit ship is paid, to each member. i - / I w'l rIWII Fifth— Those who want a Hoosier , of the great saving that comes Z Ilf fa ]L3J‘ rfll 'P> II Cabinet should enroll their names 1 from the enormous volume of Hi at once to avoid disappointment ■ Hoosier sales to the thousands. g| when the club is filled. Rememwho like 25 Rensselaer women XwJnlllMriy in— ll ber, this offer closes when 25 enroll their names at once. members have joined. THE OLD WAY ' THE M'!' V/ CAVE'fl] ; Oteps I • ** PANTRY | cupboard! ♦ I Do you know HOW this Hoosier Cabinet Saves MILES of Steps? ! The Hoosier Cabinet saves miles of steps by time every day. Just look around your kitchen and j putting everything in ONE SPOT. Your table is realize what a wonderful labor saver a Hoosier Cab- g the center of all your kitchen work. Everything you inet would be to you. Picture having one piece of .« take to yoUr stove, to your sink, to your dining furniture that will combine your kitchen cupboard • table, first goes onto your kitchen table. Every- with your flour bln, your bread and cake box with , thing you bring from your pantry, refrigerator, cup- your kitchen table, keep all your pots and pans in < board and cellar, goes onto your table. one place, your tea, coffee, sugar and spices at your , fingers* ends! * * If you must walk from jflace toplace to collect Every woman in Rensselaer sljpuld own a < these things and put them back again, your kitchen “HOOSIER” Cabinet, but as we have only 25 to be < is not modern. go id on this liberal CLUB PLAN you must join now < You are working THREE or FOUR hours over or you will be too late. IV. 1. Wright Has Exclusive Agency for Hoosier j cabinets in HEHSSELAER.
The Cash E. Tomlinson Company All Next Week.
The patrons of the Ellis Opera House are promised a treat for the week of October 21st for which time Manager Ellis has secured the Cash E. Tomlinson company. This company has been in permanent stock all the past summer in Anderson, Ind., presenting all royalty bills, the best of which have been selected to make it? the repertoire for the week. These will be mounted with specia Iscenery and with, a cast especially selected tor these plays. Mt. Tomlinson, who heads the company, has a wide acquaintance through Indiana and neighboring states and has the reputation of always bringing to the theatres of the country a really good show. He is a clever young actor, natural and pleasing in , all the parts that he assays. The mere mention that Cash Tomlinson is coming is sure to pack the house, so well do the people trust his word that he is giving them the best to be had at popular prices. . Managers of theatres, where the company has played this season, are all loud in their praises of the company and are anxious to have them back for return engagements. Manager Ellis is to be congratulated on securing Mr. Tomlinson and company at that time.—Adv. Bulk oysters and fresh fish at Haus’ restaurant Friday.
Made Sister Present of Good Team of Horses.
Herman Schultz, of Union township, is not penurious in the matter of presents he gives. A little more than a year ago his sister, Mrs. Oscar Kadore, of Watseka, 111., visited him, and one day they were looking at the horses and colts and a team of coming two-year-old general purpose colts were among the bunch. Herman asked his sister if she would like to have them and she replied, “Sure, I would.” And Herman then and there gave them to her and promised to keep them until they weer well broke. Today, Mr. Kadore is driving them to Kankakee. Herman will go with him -as far as the home of another brother-in-law near Goodland, and remain there over night, returning home in the morning. The team he gave bis sister would easily bring |3OO any day.
Royal Neighbors of America. For the next three months the Royal Neighbors lodge will adopt beneficiary members, for the sum of 13.25, instead of $5.25, as has been the custom heretofore. Anyone desiridg to be adopted should see Mrs. Wm. Bennett, local camp deputy. For Bc, a full pound of fresh seeded raisins or a pound of 4 crown, loose muscatel raisins, or nice prunes. JOHN EGER.
Putting Another Story On New Depot Business.
After the side walls had been completed and the roof all but the shingles put on the new restaurant bunding, it was decided to raise it to two stories and the roof was taken off and the raising done. The building is being erected by Mrs. James Snedeker and Mrs. Lura Pennell, who will conduct a restaurant therein. They owned the former C. G. Spitler property, just north of the depot and this was sold to Simon Hochstettler and this decided them to put another story on the restaurant for a living flat There will be six rooms on the upper floor. Simon Hockstettler recently sold his home, the former George Barens property, to John W. King.
Electrical Repairs. If you have electrical work of any kind, wiring, repairing, motor installation, etc., see Jim Rhoades A Co., or Phone 227. If you want the best that money can buy at the lowest price, call 202. —__—— Everybody Shoot - If you are a good shot visit the shooting gallery. If you are not go and learn how to shoot A Classified Adv. wißtad it ? 1
TtLIYL
