Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 105, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 May 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Local markets today: Com 60c; oats 33c. See our elegant stock of buggies. —Hamilton & Kellner. Mr, and Mrs. John Garland and children made a trip to Lafayette today. Dave Hines, of Delphi, visited his daughter, Mrs. Robert Smith and husband Sunday. \ The 2-month-old baby of Mr. and Mts. Tom Cain died at noon today of pneumonia. Mrs., Peter Wagner went to Chicago Saturday to visit her two daughters over Sunday. Miss Cinda Mack lenb erg and brother,^Leo, and Mr. Joseph Hiller, are spending today in Chicago. The boys’ band played at Dyer Sunday, taking part in a meeting of the Catholic Order of Foresters. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Brunsdon, of Hammond, spent Sunday with her father, Marshal Shesler. Isador Oberhauser and Theodore Vogt, two- religious students at the college, made a trip to Monon today. We have the highest grade of chick starter. Order your feed of all kinds of us. Hamilton & Kellner.
Emmet Laßue returned this morning from Bloomington, where he visited his alma mater and attended a hop Saturday night. W. R. Brown has received more encouraging word from his daughter, Mrs. Charles Harmon, in Indianapolis, and indications now favor her recovery. \ « William and Wesley Taylor, of Union township, returned this morning from an over Sunday visit with a brother at Logansport, who has been quite poorly. Mary and Harold Slabaugh returned to North Grove, Ind., today, after a visit with their father, Abraham Slabaugh, who is working in the Chupp cement tile i mill at Parr. The Home Missionary Society of the M. E. church will meet Tuesday afternoon, May 5, at the Watts de Peyster School. As this is the day for the fruit shower, each member is requested to take or send a can of fruit.
C. P. Wright made a trip to Indianapolis today, and Mrs. Wright, accompanied by her son, Zern, went to Chicago to be examined by a specialist, and it may become necessary for her to undergo another surgical operation.
A force of workmen arrived this morning from Logansport apd work will progress tearing down the walls and removing the debris of the college gymnasium, preparatory to the rebuilding, the plans for which have not, we understand, been completed.
Mrs. J. F. Irwin and daughter, Miss Marguerite, left this morning for a visit of a month or longer in the west. At Kingman, Kans., they will visit Mrs. Irwin’s sister, Mrs. A. M. Homer, and at Goltry, Okla., they will visit her brother, David Ravenscroft, and at Bentonville, Ark., another brother, Henry Ravenscroft.
A ball game at the college yesterday between the varsity and the religious students resulted in the victory for the former, the score being 3 to 2. In two previous games the religious students had been victorious. The pitching for the representative team was done by Moloney, a young man from near Tefft, who is showing up well this year.
Faye Clarke was up from Lafayette to spend Saturday and Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Clarke. Faye will graduate from the agricultural department of Purdue this year, having taken the full four-year course. He has taken a deep interest in his work and may take a year’s post work at Wisconsin before (he tries to secure regular employment.
The ihump in the sewer on the south side of Washington street is being corrected by an operation performed under the direction of Marshal Shesler. It will only be necessary to dig up the 400 feet between Front and Van Rensselaer streets. The sewer had been laid a foot higher in the center of the block than it was at either end. Whait should really be done would be to lay a new and larger sewer and put It deeper in the ground so that basements could be aocommodated. ' Try a Republican danlfied ad. Try a Republican COauified ad.
