Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 104, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 May 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
CIK Princess Cbeatre * PMUJ PHITiT.TPB, Proprietor. Wat oil This Space Every Say
Princess Wanema And Chief Ogalala v In Their Indian Act.
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Mrs. Emma York was in Monoq today. Simon Fendig was down from Wheatfield today. George Hosmer made a business trip to Winamae today. A can of Van Camp's sauer kraut 9c at the Home Grocery. Use A. & K. Best flour and be happy $1.50 a sar’ at the Home Grocery. W. H. Miller returned this morning from Lafayette, wheT6~he visited over Sunday with his son, Wallace. Fresh Fig Newton Cakes only 12c a pound. JOHN EGER. ' George Stflickfaden and Landlord Slagle, of the Lahr house, at Lafayette, were Sunday visitors in Rensselaer. Miss Gertrude Bowyer, of Chicago, returned home today after a visit of two weeks with Miss Ollie Tanner, in; Barkley township. For this week only. Our regular imported Singapore ] Pineapple Cubes for 10c. JOHN E&ER. Parr defeated Fair Oaks at baseball, Sunday afternoon by the score of 8 to 5. They evened up scores with the Fair Oaks boys who had won a game earlier in the season. Mrs. Kohler, of Chicago Heights, t er of Harry Watson, of Rensselaer, reported very low as the result of a bowel strangulation. Mr. Watson went there Sunday. Mrs. A. R. Kresler, Mrs. C. Earl Duv and Miss Nell Biggs went to Chicago this morning, Where the latter will enter the Wesley hospital to take the trained nurse’s course. t 1 » -
J. P. Smith, of Delphi, was the guest over Sunday of his daughter, Mrs. W. I. Hoover and family. He returned home today, stopping off at Monticello to spend a short time with other relatives. Mrs. Cynthia Bain, of Kirkpatrick, took the train here today for her home, after having been at the home of her daughter at Brook since the death of the latter’s husband, Sherman Hess, about five weeks ago. Coonie Kellner is going to have the foxiest ice wagons that ever happened this year. They are already on hand and one of them in use. He don’t intend that his fine supply of natural ice gathered during the winter shall be carried to its consumers In ordinary wagons.
Mark Quinlan, who has been here for about a month, having come from Cincinnati with his father-in-law, Patrick Halligan, returned to his home in Fairmont today, Mr." Halligan has continued to improve since his return from Florida and is now practically In as good health as he was before he left for the south. We are receiving letters like this every few days: •,. * Mr. John Eger. Dear Sir; Enclosed find check for >6.00. Please send us by freight a barrel of Aristos flour. We have not had any good bread since we left Jasper county.
