Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 124, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 May 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
For any itching skin trouble, piles, eczema, salt rheum, hives, itch, scald head, herpes, ambLs, Doan’s Ointment is highly nfeommended. 50c at all stores. Joe Minch, of Chalmers, and R L Jaques, of Lafayette, were in Rensselaer a short time today, on their way to Enos, northwest of Morocco. They went by auto out of Rensselaer. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Johnston and son, Charles, Mr. and Mrs. George Johnston and daughter, Grace, and Carl Johnston, of near Logansport autoed over Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. George Werner, west of town. Walter Kurrie, whose home is in Philadelphia, but who has been spending the winter in Florida and will spend the summer on the lakes of Wisconsin, is spending a few days with his brother, H. R Kurrie Heavy, Impure blood makes a muddy, pimply complexion, headaches, nausea, indigestion. Thin blood makes you weak, pale and sickly. For pure blood, sound digestion, use Burdock Blood Bitters. SI.OO at all stores. Oren F. Parker received a message yesterday informing him of the expected death at Indianapolis of Mrs. Mollie Pritchard, widow of David Pritchard, formerly of this county. Mr. Pritchard was a halfbrother of Mrs. F. M. Parker.
Robert A. Mannan and John Bowie, of Wheatfield, went to Indianapolis today to attend the 93rd annual meeting of the grand lodge, F. & A. M m the former as the representative of Wheatfield Lodge, No. 642, and the latter as representative of Roselawn Lodge No. 649. Dr. H. L Brown was called to Minneapolis, Minn., yesterday by a telegraffi from his brother, Fred Brown, who at one time was a student in Rensselaer high school. The cause of the call was not known to Dr. Brown, but he left at o nce. Burglars broke into, the library at Monticello Sunday night and stole over $6 In money and also a number of confederate notes of denominations ranging from fittycent ’notes to SIOO. Entrance was made by way of the porch and evidently by some one well acquainted with the library. x President Delano And the new board of directors of the Monon passed through Rensselaer at about noon today on a tour of inspection of the road. H. R. Kurrie, general attorney, who was in Rensselaer, joined the party here and completed the tour of inspection With them.
The senior program tor the week is as follows: Junior reception Wednesday evening; admission by invitation; commencement at the high school auditorium Thursday evening; alumni banquet at armory Friday evening; admission reserved to members of alumni association and those invited; tickets to banquet $1 each. Bert Greenlee, who attended school at Sheridan this year, graduated from that school on May 15. He came to Rensselaer today tor a brief visit with his old classmates, the members of the graduating class of the Rensselaer high school. He efpects to remain with his father at Yeoman this summer and in all probability will enter college in the tall. I ■ Rensselaer members of the Jasper county committee of the State Anti-Saloon League were to have gone to Remington yesterday to confer with members of the committee there, but it became necessary to postpone the meeting until a later date. The committee hopes to create a sentiment favoring a new constitution tor Indiana. Gardens and lawns are beginning to need a rain quite badly. Yesterday was the hottest day of the year and, in fact, about as hot as it gets in May. Oom planting continues throughout the country and many farmers are getting through. The fields in many places are dusty now and a rain will be a splendid thing tor the corn. Mrs. J. W. Crooks, who came from Rosetown last fall to educate her children In the Rensselaer high school, will return to Roselawn about the first of June and then come here again at the opening of school in the fall. Her son, Dorris Crooks, Is a member of the 1914 graduating class. Mr. Crooks is the Roselawn druggist. Mrs. Crooks will rent her home furnished during the three months she Is away.
Abe Might Rave Said But Didn’t Tell Binkley says he’s seen things since narrow skirts were adopted that he never saw before Eb Tripp says that chivalry is not all dead, as he was in a crowded streetcar the other day and there wasn’t a good looking girl standing up. As a part of its campaign to improve agricultural methods, the Pennsylvania plans to distribute among the farmers along Its lines 70,000 copies of a book describing the possible uses of concrete on the farm The distribution of these books, will be made through the office of the railroad agriculturist
