Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 165, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 July 1913 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 6 [ADVERTISEMENT]

NOTICE TO PATRONS. We have adopted the name of City Bakery for. the shop recently purchased of Hugh Leave! and have decided to discontinue the baking of the small loaves of bread and resumed the pound loaf size and the former price of 5 cents loaf or 6 for a quarter. Your patronage solicited and appreciated. ' ," BEAVER A EIGELSBACH. Mon on Will Run Another 75-Gent Excursion Bunday. Another 75-cent excursion to Chicago will be run next Sunday, July 13th. This excursion will start from Greencastle at 5:36 in the morning and is scheduled to leave Rensselaer at 9:15 and to arrive in Chicago at noon. Returning it will leave Chicago at 11:30. The ball game that day Is between the White Sox and Boston. Wanted—6o Bushels of Cherries. Pick them with the stems on and bring them in market baskets. I will pay 75 cents a half busheL Don’t bring the mSaturdays after 9:00 in the morning.—Fancy Produce Market. First Baptist Church. Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Morning service 10:45. You are very cordially Invited to worship with us. R. P. Wright; Pastor. Secretary Garrison will start Wednesday on a tour of inspection of army posts in the United States. He Intends to visit every garrison except at coast defenses.

Glenn Harrison, aged 15 years, df South Bend, died Thursday of tetanus, contracted through the explosion of a pistol on July 4. Although his hand was lacerated, the wound gave him no trouble until Wednesday. The house lobby committee organized yesterday. It will first take up the MuHiall case, and will confine the scope of the investigation to the charges implicating house members. They are to be the first witnesses. Rural mail carriers tn session at Saginaw, Michigan, Thursday began a.state-wide movement for an increase of their salary to $1,200 a year and an allowance of S3BO tor each horse. They say that the parcels post business is so heavy that their burden is increased. Lightning struck and burned six barns early Wednesday morning and killed several head of Uve> stock during a terrific storm that swept Wabash county. The disturbance was followed by a heavy hall storm, which did gTeat damage to the orchards and growing crops,