Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 81, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 April 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
TONIGHT'S PROGRAM —♦ — PICTURES. A Bear Hunt in the Rockies. SONG. I’ll Be Bight With the Girl that Tries to Be Right With Me. The Harter Family.
We pay cash for what you have to sell. Home Grocery, The total receipts at the boys’ band concert last Wednesday night was $42 instead of $35 as previously announced. It don’t require much wind to sell a good flour like A. & K’s. Best. One trial will convince you. $1.50 per sack at the Home Grocery. Don P. Warren, who has been work ing as a woodsman under Orie Yeoman on the Kankakee river, arrive! home today. He cut his left fool auit€ severely with an ax, necessitating a lay off Remember an exclusive shoe store always has those things you want and can’t find elsewhere. Inspect our lines before you despair. Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House -Block. Van Grant closed his restaurant Sunday night and yesterday and today has been packing it up preparatory to shipping it to the northwest, probably to Glendive, Mont., to which place he and his brother Glenn will go on a prospecting trip in a few days. We have just received a fine assortment of Oxfords for boys and girls. We have the new things for them. Inspect our line before purchasing your children shoes. Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House Block.
H. A. Allen and sons Jay and Bert and several others from Brookston, passed through Rensselaer Monday enroute to Saskatchewan, Canada. The Allens have owned land there for several years and have succeeded so well that they want others to know something of the advantages in that country.
Special flyer for this week. $1.50 boys’ knee, suits, sizes 4 to 16 years, of good, all wool materials. The coats are just as good stuff as any. The trousers are straight knee pants. Therefore I wish to close them out. See the price, $1.78 per suit. See the show window. MODEL CLOTHIERS. S LEOPOLD, Mgr.
Emerson Coen, the Rensselaer youth who is now serving in the U. S. Navy, is now at Hampton Roads, and enjoying life as a sailor. He was recently in Washington, D. C., and spent considerable time sightseeing in the nation’s capital. He is expecting orders almost any time for his ship, the New Hampshire, to start On a cruise and as to whether he gets home for a furlough in May or not, depends largely on whether moving orders come before that time.
y. J. Crisler, the land agent, and Dr. I. M. Washburn left this morning for Jamestown, N. Dak. Dr. Washbum expects to return Friday and has Dr. H. J, Laws looking after his practice during his absence. Sam Pullins also left for the northwest, going first to Bowman, N. Dak., where he has a farm, and then to Townsend, Mont., where he has 400 acres of irrigated land. He expects to be absent from a month to three months.
Dr. H. J. Laws came from Crown Point yesterday afternoon. He reports that there was a very heavy rain in the north part of the state both Sunday and Monday and he was surprised on arriving here to find that we had had only a sprinkle. At Indianapolis and over the south and central part of the state there was also a good rain but up to today, Rensselaer and Jasper county has had but little. Today looks favorable for rain, however, and the forecast is for rain and we are hoping it comes. Wheat, oats, pasture, jfruit and gardens all need a good, soaking rain. o Try the Classified Column.
