Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 November 1908 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
* ™ l|rs. Joe Jefferies went to Chicago morning tor & week's visit, Mrs. S. S. Shedd "(Sbicago thl| morning tat a short visits HlJorn, this Friday morning, Nov. fth, to Mr. Mrs. Harry Gifford, fceqjr Newland, a son. :tt -- - --ir- " . Gpuntv Clerk Warner ye tin-day *>ens to the sheets cour taining the result of the election in Jasfrer county. • Wft, Iswm «*d dftflgl t*r, Josephine, of Plimpton, Ohio, arrival here today to visit her sister,. Mrs. «N». Ulm. ' :: : t 5 Mrs. Tillman W*** aptf,, children, Mildred- and- Gladys, and Mrs. Hett^e sa&armite £ fni, emltK of Waal A. Rosenbaum and family havp about completed their removal to up stairs quarters, in the- oM Nowsls House and are going to & very nicely fixed and conveni ntly pranged. <t! * * t Neltker the 'higli 4 e 9Pjim teams hav ft a‘*pne f«g Saturday of thik - week and npt soy hopes to Have the Notre Dame freshfman team. for Thanksgiring ? ■ ■ 3\3 tV-U OJ. »" jj Taft has probably carried Missouri, the M&lp'land electoral, vote in probably split This will raise the Tafe electoral vote to .127, leaving Bryan 156, and making the Taft majority in the college 171, Mrs. Isabel - Sayler, who lived with her son Earl In Minnesota for two years after they left Rensselaer, is now with her son, Eugene, at Mauito, 111; She is enjoying very excellent health; ■ - ■ — — Salomon Ytarger, a, fre'ght conductor on the Monon between Michigan City and Lafayette, died iu a hospital -at the former p'ave -ye te.day. He was about 55 yeatß of age and was ope of, tt,e clue - <t height conductors aqd a very popular
W. K. Haskell, who is now located at Horton, Kane., started, for bis home. this, morning, after a vi it he e with-his brother, Prank- He came all the way from Kansas to vote for Taft, casting his vote at Mt. Ayr, his former home.
ISben Wolcott, of Monticello, was one of the successful men in the Rosebud, South Dakota, land lottery. His number was 4,482 and be diew 160 acres of land. He will have to pay $144 by next August and $576 in installments during the thioe succeeding years.
o Jk. ST O XiZA ■
It now seems probable that the republican state ticket aride from Watson, for governor, and McTu nan, for superintendent of public instruction, has been elected with majorities of a little more than a thousand. We are hoping that our friend, John L. Peels, of Mpnon, was elected state statistician. • President Roosevelt always keeps something on the boards The day before election when it. to look as though the ,blg„ show.- would soon be over, lie stepped out before the curtain and made his official vp- j nouncement of Thanksgiving, qgt ipg the .date for Nov. 26th. Eating turk- , ey. will not be near so bad -“8 eating.cro.w. Mrs. whose hysbwd was drowned in the Iroquolß ditch near the stock farm in August., left thiq 'morning with her children for' Cedar Rapids, lowa, where Shn wfu witli / her j father. Mrs. WKeeldon'thought after her deatK that she would remain heie And mike her own living, notwithstanding her father's entreaty that fJhe. shoul<| accompany hlnj home, but .she foujpd the of cartog’for herself and little ones a hard one and she decided to go to her father, whp it Is to have with him. Ag.old codger was put offrthe train base last night and - today - s#at on to. Lafayette. He was as dirty as could be and Tsustee Stockhouse found that he was literally alive with ticks. Hp said he was tired- of traveling and wanted to be-taken-to the couhtj*. farm-to live, but ae he- had been sent here from Hammond -Mr. Btockbesta»properly- did not want to burden theotaot payers with him tad -he di* not-like the impudent .manner Of the old man. He telde some fish stories about having -oomo from the west and having been Chicago. The “shove along 1 * policy ia about the only thing to baaed - to- aeSh
