Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 63, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 April 1909 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
visit her mother and sisiter. Her husband is a civil engineer and is now working in Virginia, where she will join him in a few weeks. - The injunction case filed by Reynolds & Sills, of.Mohticello, as attorneyg/for Saloonkeeper Ellis, of Wolcott, against the holding of the county option election next Monday, was argued at Monticello Thursday, but the result was not learned here up to ithejiour that the Republican went to press. M. J. Thornton, the dairyman, has vented the Dr. Hartsell farm of Philip Blue, the administrator, and will move there the fore part of next w&k. He expects to conduct his dairy on a •larger scale and also to sell cream and do an extensive dairying business. He rents 236- acres, largely pasture land. Frank Wolf, of Michigan City, the lumber salesman who resided in, Rensselaer for several years, was here over night last night. Mr. and: Wolf have no living children, all four of . their children having been buried here. Two died during their residence in this city and two died after they had moved away. Mrs. Wolf will be here on Decoration Day.' Thos. Abbring was down from DeM.otte today in company with -hie;, cousin, S. P. Swets and Benjamin, Ralpr, Of Lake county. Mr. Bhker' bought through Attorney Frank Foltz, the Tyler-Antrim 36 acre tract near DeMotte, paying S6OO for the same. He is a truck gardener at Hartsdale, but expects within a few years to’ move to this county and he will prob-; ably occupy the land he has just chasedIt brightened up considerably yesterday, although threatening clouds hung in the sky throughout the day. Today is much the same, and while the sun has been shining brightly since early morn it is .still quite chilly, and light clouds of foreboding appearance have been floating about the horizon. The weather man seems disposed to disregard the public demand for warmth and a few dry days. In a number of cases oats was not all sowed during the earlier good weather and the late oats, as a rule, does not have a first-class yield. Leonard Turner, of Monticello, the young man that operated the type setting machine in" the Republican office during the time that C. B. Reprogle was taking a course at the Mergenthaler Linotype factory at Brooklyn, N. Y., has been -given a position as an operator in Indianapolis, on a Model 5 Linotype like the Republican has. He is working for the man who was his instructor while he was a student at the Winona Technical School, at Indianapolis, and who has now opened up a linotype phmt There. His hotrrs are from sp. m. to 1:30 a. m. Matthew Waling, from over near Brook, was in Rensselaer today. He Is now the owner of J. 94 acres of Hanging Grove township land and expects to move to this county by another year. The land he has is part of the Samuel H. Howe farm, where R. B. IJorter nQW resides, just east of McCoysburg. Mr. Waling is very favorably impressed with Jasper county and Rensselaer and says this country looks better to him every time he sees it, and as he comes over about
