Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 262, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 November 1912 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

B. , Forsythe made a trip to Chicago today. >. C. E. Prior made a business trip to Lafayette today.

Call Harrington Bros. Co., Phone 7, for B. B. range coal. Dandy Magee has continued to improve and will be able to leave the hospital tomorrow. Our Grain King scoop boards have arrived. HAMILTON & KELLNER. The 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Iliff, south of town, is quite sick with malarial fever. Table meal, buckwheat flour and graham flour for sale by Hamilton & Kellner. Wood Spitler went to Madison, Wis., today, to be present tomorrow at the Wisconsin-Chicago football game. Fancy Michigan eating apples, 25 cents a peck; 90 cents a bushel; $2.50 a barrel at John Eger’s. Delos Thompson went to Ann Arbor, Mich., today, for a short visit with his son,* Alfred, who is attending college there. Wagons, wagon beds, steel trucks and scoop boards for sale by Hamilton & Kellner. Mrs. F. A. Ross, Miss Flora Harris, Misses Georgia and Muriel Harris and Miss Rebecca Eskew were visitors today. Lay in your winter apples now while they are cheap. 25 cents a peck; 90 cents a bushel; $2.50 a barrel at John Eger’s. i Ernest Mansfield, who has been working for Glenn Baker, of Barkley township, went to Lafayette today to visit relatives over Sunday. Marion I. AdamS, John Carmichael and Wilmotte Ritchey went to Monticeilo today to hear Joe Folk, ex-gover-nor of Missouri, expound democracy. Born, this morning, Nov. Ist, to Mr. and Mrs. John Donnelly, a son. And now Alf, the onion king, has a grandson and eventual heir to the throne. Harold Winegard, 2 years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Winegard, of Michigan City, choked to death Tuesday from a piece of apple lodged in his throat. J. N. Shields and wife and children went to Monticello today to remain aver Sunday. On Monday he goes to Logansport to cry a big sale for George Andrews. E. L. Hammerton and Fred Chapman also came in for the meritorious salary increase given to railway mail clerks, so that all the Rensselaer boys got in on it. Judge Albert O. Marsh, 72 years old, for two terms circuit judge of Randolph county and one time pension agent In Indianapolis, died Tuesday night at his home in Winchester. The widow survives. Cecil Rishling and wife, who have been living on Jay Stockton’s farm for the past year, left this morning for Fulton, S. Dak., where he has rented a farm and where they will make their future home. Mrs. Edna Hall, of Charlevoix Mich., who has been visiting Mrs. W. F. Smith and Mrs. C. W. Rhoades foi the past two weeks, left this morning for Indianapolis, where she will visit friends.

The election commissioners of Newton county have ruled that the name of Edward H. Marks, socialist candidate for congress in the tenth district, shall not be placed on the ballot because of irregularity in signing his petition. J. K. Davis, who has been here most of the last three weeks collecting horse fees, expects to go to Greencastle tomorrow to remain until after the election. He made a business trip yesterday to Wolcott and Monticello. P. N. Myer, botanist and explorer of the department of agriculture, has left for a three years’ trip through the wildest and least known regions oi Asia in search of trees and fruits that will stand the dry weather of certain parts of the United States. Mrs. James Matheson, of Winnepeg Canada, arrived this morning Tor a visit until tomorrow with Mrs. F. J. Sears and other friends. She was on her way from Winnipeg to Toronto and came by the way of Chicago ir order to look after some business matters. Pat H. O’Donnell, a native of Carroll county and well known in Rensselaer, has been making some republican speeches- the past few days in Indiana. He is a great orator, filled with Irish good humor and bubbling over with eloquence. At Lafayette last night he spoke to a good sized audience at the Victoria theatre and The Journal says it was the greatest treat the people there have had in years. Mr. O'Donnell is a lawyer in Chicago, where he stands high in the profession. A number of years ago his sister, Miss Nellie O’Donnell, ajk tended school here. Charges of wholesale graft and peculation perpetrated by commissary stewards attached to the Atlantic fleet have followed the arrest of G. T DavisV Chief commissary steward of the battleship Louisiana. The navy department is thoroughly aroused over the matter and many more arrests are expected. Davis is said to have made a statement admitting irregularities in handling provisions and supplies for the ship’s company and implicating five other stewards utacneu to ue fleet.

10 OTIEB STOVE 90ES THIS Cole’s Hot Blast Heater maintains a contlnooos fire; also a steady, even beat. It will hold fire from Saturday night until Monday morning <4B boon). It will bold Are over night wltt less coal than any other stove. Open the drafts In the morning and the rooms are quickly heated wltt the coal pot In the night before. Come In and examine Oole’i Original Hot Blast Heater. Price sl2.<M and up, mceosding to sßs. <»-“> WABNEB BWM3.’HAKDWASE