Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 February 1916 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
The delinquent tax sale took place tod%y. j Forest Morlan was down from Chicago Sunday. * Attorney Emmet Laßue made a business trip to Frankfort today. Sob-Guth came over from Washing-, ton, 111., today, to look after his farming interests.— Miss Rose Platt, of' Danville, 111., came today te4ook after some business interests here. The Junior Aid Society of the Christian church will meet Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. G. H. McLain. We have a nice, clean burning lump coal at $4.00 per ton.—D. E. Grow. Another Ford party this year. Get Hamillized. It pays. Miss Madaline Kellner, while carrying a bucket of hot water to the basement at her home last Thursady, fell and severely scalded her left arm. Phone 7 and call for our B. B. range coal.—Harrington Bros. Co. It will pay you to be Hamillized. if you drive away in the Ford. Joe Davisson is able to be up and about after his long illness and while he looks a little peaked he is getting along very well and expects to fully regain his strength. Rensselaer high school defeated Lowell high school Friday evening in basketball 25 to 17. The game was the fastest and cleanest that has been played here this season. Each team has won a game this yea?: Eli Arnold and wife are both confined to their beds with sickness and other members of the family have also bfeen sick and the Arnold home has resembled a hospital for some time. \ . Mrs. W. J. Mills and daughter, Mrs. R. E. Rainsmeier, of Chicago, came this morning and were met at the station by ' John Murfitt, of Mt. Ayr, and will visit his family for several days. Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Irwin and daughter, Genevieve, returned home last evening from Chicago, where they spent two days. They were surprised to find that we had had no snow here, reporting a fall of snow in Chicago. B. B. or Puritan Egg for the range. Ly. B. or Carbon splint for the heating stove. —Harrington Bros. Co. Mrs. George Guire and daughter, Elizabeth Jane, and Miss Marie Wasson, of Kokomo, are visiting their mother, Mrs. Fannie Wasson. Miss Marie has been working in Kokomo but is not certain about returning there. We have discovered the ideal range coal. Ask us about it. Phone No. 7. —Harrington Bros. Co. Miss Berth Kepner, who is employed in Fendig’s Fair, went to Chicago yesterday and will spend the week there attending the instruction course in corset fitting given by the Gossard company. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Thompson returned last evening from Chicago where they were married last Tuesday at the Irving Park Christian church by Rev. Winn. They are temporarily living with the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hill. George Caster and wife, of Milrov township, returned this morning from Chicago Heights, where -they had spent Sunday with his aged mother, Mrs. A. E. Caster, at the home of her son, Perry Caster. She i» 82 years of age and has recently been quite sick, having had the grip. Miss Day Jordan returned home Saturday from a visit at Portland, Ind., Fort Recovery, Ohio, and Angola, Ind. At the latter place she visited her brothers, James and Homer, the former a teacher and the latter a student in fee Tri-State college. Dr. F. H. Hemphill, who was recently operated on in a Chicago hospital, was able to return home Saturday, being accompanied by his sister, Miss Mattie ‘’Hemphill, the trained nurse. He is getting along very nicely but will not be able to go to his office for some time. The marriage of Russell Hatton and Miss Elizabeth Putts is to take place Tuesday morning at St. Augustine’s Catholic church. Miss Putts is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Putts, southwest of town. The groom is now employed in a blacksmith shop at Earl Park. He formerly worked for some time in Fred Hemphill’s shop in this city. Made to measure, made to fit. Get your measure taken, at Hamill’s, of course. . . _ Mrs. Ed Becker, whose bad condition of health has caused her husband to advertise his property and personal effects for sale, will be taken to Chicago tomorrow for treatment. It j had been planned .to take her to 1 Rochester, Minn., but the plan has been changed; She has a caneer and fear is entertained that no permanent relief can be found. We have added a special order department, suits and Shirts made to order. —Hanull & Co.
