Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 251, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 October 1912 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
George Lowman returned to his home at Amboy today after spending two weeks at his farm east of town, which is tenanted by Charles German. Mr. Lowman has been making some •ttie ditch and-otfeerdmprovements and will return in another week to. continue the work now in progress. £ Mr. Hansen is truly a master of the organ and his work was a revelation in the possibilities of that difficult Instrument, the pipe organ.—Matoon, 111. Morning Star. Recital at the Presbyterian church, Friday evening, Oct. 25th, 8 p. m. sharp. Admission only 25 cents. Company I of the Indiana National Guard, with headquarters tn Plymouth, has been reorganized, with Major Freyermuth,of South Bend, in command. Interest in the Plymouth company had been waning for six months, and conditions became such that something had to Another city wanted the military post, but finally it was decided to reorganize in Plymouth. J. Frank Thomas was elected captain; Fred Price, first lieutenant, and Edward Danford, second lieutenant. A rumor to the effect.that Jack Johnson, the world’s champion pugilist, had been shot to death in Chicago this Saturday morning proved to have no foundation. Johnson recently lost his white wife, who suicided. A scandal appeared in the papers yesterday about his having taken up with a 19-year-old white girl .from Minneapolis, whose distracted mother had tried to induce to return home with her. The girl is said to be stopping at Johnson’s Chicago case. The rumor was that her brother had fired five pistol shots into the dusky- fighter. Mrs. Mary D. Eger returned Thursday night from a visit of four or five days in Chicago. While there she called on Mrs. Matie Hopkins, who has been a patient at the Hahnemann hospital since June 9th, when she was severely injured when the William B. Austin automobile was struck by a street, car and all of the occupants "had~a, aafrbw escape from death. She is making slow improvement and is moved about the hospital in a wheel chair. She is very hopeful that she is soon to be better, however, and the doctors hope to have her able to walk on crutches within two weeks more.
“I have been somewhat costive, but Doan’s Regulets give just the results I desire. They act mildly and regulate the bowels perfectly.”—Geo. B. Krause, Altoona, Pa. Mrs. William Eisele, who was returned from Chicago a tew days ago. where she had undergone a second and very serious surgical operation, is able to sit up only-a little each day and her recovery is very slow, but there Is encouragement that she will eventually be restored to good health. For dyspepsia, our national ailment, use Burdock Blood Bitters. Recommended for strengthening digestion, purifying the blood. At all drag stores. |I.OO a bottle. Let your wants be known through our Classified Column, Phone 18.
