Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 280, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 November 1912 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Mrs. E. L. Hollingsworth is spending today in ’Chicago. •Have you seen Trail b & Selig’s windows this week? Try our cannel coal for the range. 4k KELLNER. Editor Judson Fitzpatrick, of the Francesville Tribune, was a business visitor in Rensselaer today. Thanksgiving market at Rowen & Kiser’s store, Saturday, November’US. Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Learning arrived this morning from Goshen and will take up their residencyJiere. Don’t forget Simon Leopold’s big remodeling sale. Mts. J. F. Hardman, Mrs. A. F. Long, Mrs. C. W. Hanley. M,rs. J. H. Chapman and Miss Marjorie Loughridge are spending today in Chicago. You can get the genuine Jackson Hill coal of Hamilton & Kellner. There will be no football game tomorrow. The next game and the last of the year will be with Curtis high school of Chicago on Thanksgiving day. Having received a carload of bran and middlings, we can make you a special price. HAMILTON & KELLNER. Most of the Indianapolis apple show prizes went to central and southern Indiana raisers. Fine apples can be grown in northern Indiana if the effort is made. W. B. Blankenbaker, of Parr, was here a short time this morning on his way home from Indianapolis, where he represented the Parr Odd Fellows at the grand lodge meeting. We are the only carload receivers in the city of apples and potatoes, and are able to save you money on same. JOHN EGER. Harry Walker, the well known Laporte county game warden, slugged Ad Mosher, a fisherman, in a Columbia City saloon, Monday night, and was fined $1 and costs, amounting to $9.55. Mrs. C. A. Radcliffe and three children left- this morning for Cincinnati, where they will again make their residence. They have been with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Rhoades, since May. Everybody is using it. Aristos, the perfect flour. Just unloaded another carload last week, making 15 cars for 1912. Lord’s Best, $1.30; Aclstos, the perfect flour, $1.35. JOHN EGER.

Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Edwards, of Logansport, were here over night. They were accompanied home today by Miss Blanche Frye, who has been visiting her father, Alex. Frye, for several days. You will find everything good for your Sunday dinner at the market at Rowan . & Kiser’s Saturday; home made bread, dressed chickens, cake, jjie, etc. - _ _ . . . - < Bert Stanley, employed by the Martinsville gas company, was run over by a Vandalia freight train Wednesday afternoon, dying two hours later from his injuries. He is survived by a wife and two children. Wanted—2s laborers for concrete work. Wages 22% cents per hour and more if man is worth it. Board $4..T0 and $5.00 per week. J. O. Hayworth, Monticello, Ind. Mrs. Elsie Thompson and daughter, Miss Jessie, of Bethold, Colo., who have been visiting Mrs. J. Jessen and family for the past month, left today for Harrisonburg, Virginia. They expect to spend the winter in Virginia and Maryland. T. F. Dunlap returned to Elwood today after having been at his farm near Surrey since Tuesday. They are pleasantly located in their Elwood homeland think they are going to like that place in every respect.

Recommendations that the health commissioners order the sanitary conditions at the Union station in Chicago improved, and upon failure of the owners to comply with the order close the station, were made by the council health committee Thursday. A. A. Fell went to Hammond today to attend the state cbnventlon of the Y. M. C. A. E. L. Hollingsworth, who has always taken a deep interest in Y. M. C. A. Work, will also attend part of the meetings. 1 Harry Moose, former clerk of Gary, Wednesday was sentenced by Judge McMahon at Crown Point to 5 years in the penitentiary for perjury in connection with the graft cases involving Mayor Knotts and several aldermen, who were acquitted. That the foreigners who are employed by the Pennsylvania road and who live in this city are good savers, is shown by the amounts that they have deposited in the Pennsylvania Company’s safftig bank. Some of the foreigners have on deposit as much as SI,OOO and $1,200. —Warsaw Times. Mrs. C. G. Hammond arrived yesterday from Big Rapids, Mich., for a visit over Thanksgiving with many Rensselaer relatives and friends. Mr. Hammond will arrive today", having shipped a carload of apples through. Today Mrs. Hammond and Mrs. C. B. Harrold are spending with friends in Newton township. The final accounting of the estate of E. J. (“Lucky”) Baldwin, millionaire horseman and rancher, giving all of the transactions of the executor, H. A. Unrah, for three years, shows the estate to be worth $20,000,000 hfter all expenses and minor bequests had been paid.

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