Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 189, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 August 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
1
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Airs. Maggie Talbot, of Indianapolis, is visiting her niece, Mrs. Cora Daniel*. The funeral service of Miss Nora G Kiser will be held in the Baptist church Thursday, at 1:30 P. M. Mrs. Addie Adams and daughter Laura, of Franklin, are visiting relatives and friends in this vicinity. Airs. Albert Uppenheimer, of New Orleans, a sister-in-law of Mrs. B. S. Fendig, of this city, died of consumption last Sunday. The funeral was held yesterday. Dried fruits for your threshing order - 4 lbs - fancy 'Sultana raisins, 4 lbs. choice prunes or 3 lbs. fancy evaporated peaches for 25 cents. JOHN EGER. Airs. J. L. Smith went to Hebron today to visit her son Roy and celebrate her own and her grandson’s birthday. This is her birthday and the grandson will be a year old tomorrow Miss Anna Dooley returned to Indianapolis today after a visit since Sunday with Mrs. Nora Worden and Miss Alargaret Gleason. Miss Gleason and Aliss Bessie Worden accompanied her as far home as Monon. how is this for a wheat fertilizer: 4 per cent nitrogen, 10 per r-cent available phngphnri|.-^,^p 5 per cent potash, at $21.50 per ton? Let us have your orders early. Maines & Hamilton, phone 273. J. C. Passon, Whitsell Lewis and Burgess Dillon appeared before the pension examining board at Delphi today, for examination for pension increase. The old soldier should have ?1 a day and the granting of it shoul 1 bt no longer deferred. Catherine and Bethel Arnold returned from Michigan and Illinois Monday evening after two weeks' visit Little Catherine Morganegg, of Illinois, returned with them to visit her grandparents, Air. and Airs. Chris Alorganegg. Mr. Luther Hill, of Lowell, who has been visiting in Oklahoma City, and Mrs. Belle Herland, of the latter place, and Mrs. Robert Livingston, are guests at the A. C. Pancoast home, west of town. Air. Hill is a Purdue student, and will enter the Junior year this fall. The many friends of N. Littlefield and family will regret to learn that they are seriously contemplating a removal from Rensselaer. For some time he has had his eye on Colorado, believing that it offers a fine opportunity for investment and business and i e expects to go there within the next week to investigate, with a view to removing there. In case he does locate there he will continue in the retl estate business. C. L. Wood, formerly of Fair Oaks, writes to have the address of his paper changed from Belle Plaine, Minn., to Lisbon, N. Dak. He encloses clippings from the Belle Plaine Herald, which shows the wheat in that part of the Alinnesota to have not suffered from the drouth. The wheat is commonly running from 22. to 28 bushels to the acre but one yield of 36 bushels has been reported. Oats is generally far below the usual yield. When Eli and Jane was written it was the Intention of the author to give the play the surroundings of human nature and realism. Those facts alone were looked after with careful detail and had much to do with the success of the play. Eli and Jane can’t be excelled for fun, originality and novelties, giving you an evening of s enjoyment that you will not soon forget, Ellis Theatre, Saturday night, Aug. 13th, last time htre. A “Classified Adv." will rent it.
