Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 111, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 October 1909 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
I • I Flour. 6 ROWLES * PARKER. I • - • - V. L. Moore and wife arrived here tMs-morning from Kalamazoo, Mich., where they moved several months ago. They will again occupy the farm they formerly lived on in Barkley township. Mr. and Mrs. John Healy and Michael Kuboski attended the funeral at Remington Friday, of Ed Cummings, ’the man who was killed by falling from a corn crib which he was building near that town. Try a sack of the famous Acme Flour—just received another car. ROWLES & PARKER. - Miss Alice Bates, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Bates, who has been in a Chicago hospital for several weeks, is expected to be brought home Monday. She continues to improve very satisfactorily since her operation. A - J. F. Chadwick, a retired farmer, of Crawfordsville, wife and daughter, Julia, returned home 'today, after spending a few days with their daughter, Mrs. E. E. Pdwell, of the Nowels House. John Robinson arrived home today from a sojourn of about three months in the harvest fields of Minnesota. He wore home a collection of western grown whiskers of a slightly auburn tinge, with which he expects to part, as soon as he can bribe a barber into cutting them. Acme Flour: —$1.50 a sack—made from Red Turkey wheat —will please you. Try a sack. J r ROWLES & PARKER.
Mrs. Louis Wildberg and daughter, Edna, arrived yesterday for a visit of indefinite length with Mrs. Anna Tuteur and family. Mrs. Wildberg is somewhat improved in health over her condition following her many bereavements. Within a few months she lost by death her husband, their only son and her youngest sister. Mrs. Thomas Daugherty arrived home last night on the 11:00 o’clock train from her extended trip in the west, coming here direct from Denver, Colo. Her husband had preceded her several months. She was accompanied home by her sister, Mrs. L. H. Swan, of Portland, Oreg. . _J The farm which A. Gangloff and family sold to the Hills, when they moved here from Pulaski county, several years ago, was sold again recently for |IOO per acre. The farm consists of more than 400 acres and is two miles east of Francesville. Mr. Gangloff sold it for $55 per acre. “Uncle” John Sullivan returned this morning from the meeting of his brigade encampment at Lebanon. The brigade consisted of the 14th, 15th and 72d*regiments of Indiana volunteers, and he and W. F. Powers, of the 15th, were the only Rensselaer veterans to attend the reunion. An enjoyable time is reported, although the attendance was quite limited.
John Schanlaub will go to Chicago tomorrow to spend the day with his son, Prof. Will O. Schanlaub, superintendent of the Newton county schools, who for the past month has beenva patient in the post-graduate hospitWr where he underwent an operation for his eyes. He was almost blind in one eye, but this operation is expected to restore the sight. Republicans have been discussing the coming election quit a little the past few days and from all indications theyewill place a mighty good ticket in the field, and one that every republican and a good many democrats wMI support. Many able men are being suggested for the councilmanio positions. Every republican in the eity should make it a point to attend their ward conventions next Tuesday night and the general convention Wednesday night. See the calls in the Republican every day.
Mrs. C. G. Hammond returned to Big Bapids, Mich., thia morning, after a week’s visit here with her mother, Mrs. James Yeoman, They are well pleased with Michigan and Charley, who has a farm near that city, raised good crops of corn and potatoes, which were not injured by the frost of September 2nd that caused much damage throughout Michigan. Ralph Hammond, who graduated from the Rensselaer high school last year, it teaching a country school near Big Rapids, having begun his term last Monday. Boe and Ruth are both Juniors in the Big Rapids schools. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER S CASTORIA
