Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 55, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 March 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Hear AmSbary at the M. E. church Monday night. ~ . New car of Jackson Hill coal received. Grant-Warner Lumber Co. Tom Jensen was down from Wheatfield yesterday. Henry Bosma and wife, of De Motte, were Rensselaer visitors Wednesday. ( A police canvass shows there are 10,411 unemployed men in St. Louis. Of these 8,725 are seeking work. / __ Order your coal of the GrantWarner Lumber Co. A new car of Jackson Hill just received, Mrs. Katherine O’Neill died Tuesday at Hartford, Cfinn., ageft-106' years. Her husband died sixty years ago. F. E. Cox and Miss Ida Jones made a trip to Chicago yesterday. Frank refused an interview with the reporter until his return home. Mrs. E. W. Allen and daughter, Mrs. Simon Fendig, of Wheatfield, were here yesterday. (Mrs. C. G. Spitler went to Wheatfield yesterday for a visit of Several days with her daughter, Mrs. H. M. Clark. The Blue Bell cream separator is one of the best on' the market. Investigate this before buying—Hamilton & Kellner. Mrs. J. T. Culp has been quite sick for several days and yesterday her son,' Harry Wade, of Lebanon, came to see her. W. L. Wood has rented his farm at Parr and will hold a public sale on March 19th. Sarley Stultz, of McCoysburg, has gone to the home of his uncle, John Paris, near Brook, where he will work the coming season. V • , ... Don’t miss Wallace Bruce Amsbary, the next number of the union lecture course. He will be at the M. E. church Monday evening, March 9th. „ Harry B. Brown was down from Kniman yesterday. Mr. Brown Is employing Republican classified ads in advertisng hs real estate business and has received many replies to them. i

Wallace Bruce Amsbary is one of the leading entertainers on the lecture circuit. He will be at the M. E. church next Monday night, March 9th. Dennis Gleason is here from Liberty on a horse buying mission. He attended the monthly sale at Monticello Tuesday and purchased four head there and will probably complete a load here this week. William H. Overmoyer and F C. Nelson, of Roselawn, were Rensselaer visitors today. Mr. Overmoyer has just returned to Roselawn from Winamac, where he spent the winter. There were just 7,500 national banks doing business in the United States at the close of business at> the treasury department Feb. 28. Their authorized capital was sl,009,884,675, with an outstanding circulation of $753,168,838. Philander W. Halliday, aged 60, for years a flagman on the Grand Trunk railroad in South Bend, has fallen heir to an estate of SIOO,OOO through 'the . death of his sister, Mrs. J. Crow, at Denver, Colo., May 13, 1913. Thomas Hardin, grocer at Bloomington, shot and killed his wife, Jessie Hardin, in her home Tuesday afternoon as a result of a jealous rage. He wounded her mother, Mrs. Joseph Richardson. The latter is near death. There is nothing better or cheaper for this time of year for table sauce than California evaporated peaches. Extra fancy, large, bright ones, 3 lbs. for 25c. California evaporated apricots, 15c a lb. JOHN EGER. Orders were issued Tuesday at the Joliet plant of the Illinois Steel company for resumption of work of day and night shifts at all three rod mills. This follows the starting of the third blast furnice and operation of coke ovens at full blast on Monday. John E. Bislosky, of »Fmville, Mich.; Mrs. M. A. Schneider, of Cleveland, Ohio, and Mrs. Josephine Middleton, of New Orleans, 111., are here to visit their sister, Mrs. Wilson Shafer, and to close up some business matters affecting the settlement of the Bisloskey estate. J. A. Grant, the drayman, has purchased of E. P. Lane, the cottage which Mr. Lane’s parents occupied for some time just north of Mrs. Alda Parkison’s residence on Forest street. W. H. Hogan has recently been living in the property and Mr. Grant will move to it shortly.

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