Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 278, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 November 1914 — Page 3
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Children’s Dishes Gaines, Dolls, Iron Toys, Mechanical Toys Doll Furniture, Wagons, Doll Carts Velocipedes
U. S. Troops Left Vera Cruz—Mexican Flag Now Flies.
General Fred Funston and his army of occupation left Vera Cruz Monday, and as the troops embarked after seven months there; General Obregon, with a force of Mexicans, entered the city and.took charge. Officials in Washington view the Mexican affair at an end so far as the U. S. is concerned and the rival forces there are left to ‘Hvorls. -crtit their own salvation” as ft were. General Funston had instructions to turn the city over to none of the Mexican factions, for in doing so that faction might be regarded as recognized by the U. S. The customs ports will be an important acquisition to any faction and the fighting about Vera Cruz is apt to become active. The troops were in Vera Cruz seven months following Huerta’s refusal to order a salute to the American flag. He did not salute but he was forced to evacuate. This, however, did not end the troubles and Mexico continues to grovel in the dark.
NOTICE. ' AU members of the Council of Pocahontas are requested to assemble at their tepee on Thursday evening, Nov. 26th, 1914, promptly at 7:30. There will be degree work, followed by a chicken supper. The Good Cheer class of the Pres'byterian Sabbath school will hold a market in the Princess theatre the day before Thanksgiving, Nov. 25. Everything for the Thanksgiving dinner will be for sale. Orders solicited. —Phone 368. John Bunny, the funny-faced motion picture' man, has had his j face insured against the loss of its. funny look. The amount of insur-l ance is SIOO,OOO. John is no beauty,i but when a friend told him he was! getting better looking he was frightened half to death, for he don’t wjant to look 'better. He is satisfied with the face he already has and wants’\|o keep it intact. For the accommodation of our regular customers thay may have forgotten anything to complete their Thanksgiving dinner, we will accept delivery orders up to 10 o’clock Thursday morning. JOHN EGER. Wednesday, cranlberries wiU be 5c per quart at Rowen & Kiser’s. Give your otder to them and we will guarantee you will be satisfied with it. Phone 202. „ z’
10 Per Cent Discount For these 3 days only These goods range in value from 1 cent to $5.00. •ft/ '. ** Burchard’s 5 and 10 Cent and Variety Store Shop Early Opposite Court House This discount applies to advance orders of candies in 10 pound lots.
Another 'barrel of fine saur kraut just opened. Phone 202. Rowen & Kiser. Joseph Hixon, aged 87, postmaster at Fowler during' one of the Cleveland administrations, died yesterday. He bad been bedfast since May 30th. A household remedy in America for 25 years—Dr. Thomas Eclectic Oil. For ruts, sprains, burns, scalds, bruises. 25c and 50c. At all drug stores. Arthur Lepper, a young' man who was arrested at Lafayette recently for obtaining money under false pretenses and when the Lafayette newspapers wrote him up he made a big fuss and claimed he had been mistreated. He was convicted but released on, good behavior and last week was arrested again at Ft. Wayne on the same charge and this time the penitentiary stands him in the face. There are always a number of people who do not protect their own reputations and then want the now’spapes to protect it-for them. .Any skin itching is a temper tester. The more you scratch the worse it itches. Doan’s Ointment is for piles, eczema—any skin itching. 50c at all drug stores. A city man recently visited his “country cousin.” The man from the city, wishing to explain . the joys of metropolitan life said: “We have certainly been having fun the last few days. Thursday we autoed to the country club and golfed until dark, then trollied back to town and danced until morning.” The country cousin was not to be stumped in „the least, so began telling of some of the pleasures of the simple life: “We have had pretty good times here, too. One dAy we buggied out to Uncle Ned’s and f went out to the back lot, where we j baseballed all afternoon. In the evening we sneaked up into the attic and pokered until morning.” A sturdy old farmer who was listening, not to be outdone, took up the conversation at this point and said: “I was having some fun about this time myself. I muled to the cornfield and gee-hawed until sundown. Then I slippered until Hark and piped until 9 o’clock, After which I bedsteaded until the clock lived, after which I breakfasted until it was time to go muling again.” Doan’s Regulets are recommended by many who say they operate 'easily, without griping and without bad after effects. 25c at all drug stores.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN. RENSSELAER. IND.
Idaville Farmer Found Dead in Ditch Saturday.
Monticello, Jnd., Nov. 23.—John Ginn, residing south of Idaville, was. found .dead in a ditch four miles north of Burnettsville Saturday morning. He had started out Friday morning to search for some runaway colts and when lie failed to return by evening his family organized a search party. He was not found until the next morning. Mr. Ginn was subject to epileptic fits and in his weakened condition the exposure to cold was too much for him. He is survived by a son and daughter and a sister, Mrs. Re becoa Hamill, of this city.
India expects to have the greatest production of jute on record this year. - ■ Pumpkin and squashes at Rowen & Kiser’s. Egyptian cotton is being profitably grown on irrigated farms in Arizona. ’ Call phone 202 for your Thanksgiving order. - “Dreadnought gray” is a new color for blouses and for men’s neckwear in England Buy your'Thanksgiving order of Rowen & Kiser, Phone 202. Arkansas is the chief state in the production of bauxite, the mineral from which aluminum is derived. Some specially, grown plants for Thanksgiving. J. H. Holden. The Chinese government is planning to spend $10,000,000 for a number of high power wireless stations. You can afford to attend the photo play of the Rex Theatre at 5c admission. . u It is said that an excellent beverage, similar to tea, can be brewed from the common maidenhair fern. Our motto: good goods at less price than others charge.—Rowen & Kiser.
RENSSELAER MARKETS.
Corn—s7c. Oats—4sc. Wheat—sl.oo. Rye—7sc. Buckwheat—7sc. Butter—2sc to 28c. Butterfat—32y 2 c. Eggs—3oc. Chickens—9‘/zC. » Turkey s—l3c. Ducks—loc. Geese—9c.
Widow of Judge Marshall Files Suit in Partition.
Judge Albert O. Marshall, who recently died in Joliet, 111., left no will. He was about seventy- years of age and a brother of Ralph W. and George E. Marshall, formerly of this city. He had never been married until a short time before his death and his widow last Saturday began suit-in partition of his estate, as is customary in such cases. The Joliet Sunday Herald says: She was appointed receiver for the estate pending the settlement of the partition, and furnished $3,000 bond. Her attorneys, Oorlett & Clare, set forth in the bill that no one is in charge of the estate and the tenants are subject to no one authorized to administer it. Mrs. Marshall claims an undivided half interest in the whole estate and a life interest, her dower, in the other half. This claim being based on legal precedent. She recites that the other heirs are entitled to the following .proportions in the estate: One-eighth to each of the brothers and sister of the deceased, Griffin and George E. Marshall and Sarah Gillet. One forty-eighth to each of the children of Ralph Waldo Marshall, deceased, who was a brother of Judge Marshall; Frances B. Wigmore, Albert L. Marshall, Florence Brenner, Kathryn Goodloe, Caroline Brown and Edith Marshall. Property is fisted as follows: Store buildifig and lot on Ottawa street, next to the News office. South 60 acres se, % section 1, township 35. Eighty acres, w, 'A n’e, %, section 12. North 60 acres of e ’/« of ew %, section 12. North 30 acres of w ’/« of w’A,'se %, section 12.
Don’t forget Wednesday’s sale, 10c loaf of Piper’s ‘bread for sc, Wednesday afternoon only—Rowen & Kiser, Phone 202. The several suits brought in the Laporte' circuit court by Leo M. Rubin, of Chicago, administrator of the estate of Anna M. Rubin, deceased, totaling nearly SIOO,OOO, against the Monon, the Chicago. Indianapolis & Louisville railways, have been settled. About a year ago nearly the entire Rubin Pm ily was killed in a crossing tragedy For. dyspepsia, our national ailment, use Burdock Blood Bitters. Recommended for strengthening digestion, purifying th•» blood. At all drug stores. $1 a bottle.
F. A. Nave Vindicated in Suit Brought at Covington.
Attica Ledger Press. The investigation into the affairs of F. A; Nave in connection with his recent assignment, which has occupied the attention of the circuit court at Covington all week, ended yesterday evening in a complete victory for the defendants, F. A. Nave, Mrs. Nave, Will S. Baugh and Wallace & Baugh, of Lafayette. Each of these was put through a rigid examination but when this ended the plaintiffs had so far failed to make a case that the attorneys made no argument and Judge Schoonover at once announced a finding in favor of the defendants on each and all of the several counts in the complaint. In the hearing it was brought out that every bit of property owned by Mr. Nave and his wife had been turned over to the assignee, that there was no collusion of any kind and that the sale of personal property made just before the assignment was a bona fide sale, clearly within the law.
Excellent programs being shown nightly at the Rex Theatte. The U. 8. navy has perfected a searchlight visible under favorable circumstances for 100 miles. _ Nothing but clean, moral and instructive amusement at the Rex. French scientists have found the spectroscop a valuable and speedy instrument for analyzing mineral waters. Order your coal of Hamilton & Kellner. Phone 273. The .matching of colors has been brought down to an exact science by the invention of a machine for the purpose. Don't in need of groceries. French .knapsacks weigh fortynine pounds, which is considerably less than their weight during the Franco-German war of 1870. Call phone 202 for fine apples and fruits and vegetables. It has been suggested in England that ehewing gum, which allays thirst and wards off the pangs of hunger, is a suitable present for the troops. Best sliced pineapple. Large can. others sell them for 25c. Ou reprice this week, 15c can, pr 6 fur 75c. Phone 202. Rowen: & Kiser.
Fancy China, Fancy Baskets . Aluminum, Ladies’ Scarfs, Jewel Boxes, Toilet Sets Books and Stationery, Fountain Pens, Pictures, Pen Knives, Fancy Work
Telephone Holden’s greenhouse, No. 426, for blooming plants for Thanksgiving. Oliphant, former Purdue Star, who is now on the army team at West Point, was injured in the game against Springfield Training School last Saturday and may not get in the army-navy game Saturday of this week. Do you want the best groceries that money can buy? Then call 202 and see for yourself. For our Thanksgiving sale we will have plenty of celery, leaf lettuce, cranberries, mincemeat, apples, oranges, bananas, grapes, mixed nuts and sweet cider. JOHN EGER. The allied armies are placing big orders with United States flrms for blankets, shirts, shoes and various other articles for soldiers. According to the Hammond Times agents for France have secured an option on land in West Hammond and will start a packing house. Horses are to be butchered to supply horse meat to the French army. The Goshen shirt company has prospects of getting a big .order for army shirts.
CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. Thi KM YraHatt Altajl Beapt Bears the S/f/7 J Signature of
Üblca<o MorUwtn, Duuanapolla Cincinnati, ana th* South, Loal« villa and rrtuch Uek Iprlnra CHICAGO. INDIANAPOLIS LOUISVILLE RT. BEEBBELAEB TXMB TABLE. In effect Oct. 25, 1914. NORTHBOUND. No. 36 4:48 am No. 4 5:01 am No. 40 7:30 am No. 32 10:46 am No. 38 3:ls pm No. 6 3:44 pm No. 30 7:08 pm SOUTHBOUND. No. 35 ...12:15 am No. 31 ....a 7:41 pm No. 37 11:20 am No. 5 11:65 am No. 33 2:01 pm No. 39 8:12 pm No. 3 ...is 11:10 pm Nos. 37 and 38 stop on flaj at Parr oh Saturday.
