Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 61, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 March 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
The Republican offie& — Fire did damage estimated atgoods In the center of the business district at Terre Haute Tuesday. The blaze was discovered m the E. H. Bindley & Co., store, wholesale druggists and soon spread to other stores. , C. W. Post, the manufacturer of Battle Creek, Mich., who was rushed to Rochester, Minn., from Los Angeles, Cal., on a special train, for surgical treatment, Tuesday submitted to an operation for appendicitis. “Mr. FosUbas an exceTlent chance for recovery, the surgeons declare. i i ■ i ■■■■■■ i - Miss Anna Burgett, daughter of Mrs. Nancy J. Burgett, of near Aix. has purchased through Harvey Davisson, the former Granville Aidrich property at the north edge of town, consisting of a small house and a half acre of ground! J. F. McCord had owned it for some time. The price was S6OO. Harry Pratt Judson, president of the University of Chicago, has announced that the physician who is to accompany ftlm on his tour of investigation in China for the Rockefeller foundation is Dr. Francis W. Peabody, of Boston, ber of the Brigham hospital staff. The party leaves Chicago March 18. Mrs. Charlotte George will again occupy her residence property on Van Rensselaer street on April Ist. when it is vacated by E. E. Flint and family and Philip Blue and wife will again take up their residence in his house, which Mrs. George has been occupying during the absence of Mr. and Mrs. Blue. Marie, the 24-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Smith, is now slightly improved, and shows indications of recovery from an illness of long standing and which has confined her to the house for the past six weeks. A year ago her parents moved to Globe, Ariz., for the health of her father and it was while there that she began to fail. It was hoped the return here would prove beneficial but for some time she continued to get worse. The present favorable indications are most gratifying to her parents and many friends. Chas. W. Bussell, of McCoysburg, was in town this morning and is starting plans for moving a few buildings. As a harbinger of spring, Squire Bussell has the robin, the groundhog and the marble game beaten in a dozen places and whenever he comes to town and begins to talk about moving a house or a barn, it is a safe guess that spring is just around the corner and it’s time to write your congressman for a supply of garden seed. One of the first jobs Charley is to tackle this spring is the removal of a large barn for Sol Guth, of Washington, 111., owner of the former. Kenton fa rm n ear. jSuxrcy..„... A barn that sets out in the field is to be removed about a quarter of a mile and will occupy a location near the farm house.
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