Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 197, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 August 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
AT THE Princess Conigbt —•— PICTURES. When Old New York Was Young. SONG. Everybody’s Happy When the Moon Shines, by Roscoe Wilson.
Maines & Hamilton do custom grinding and sell all kinds of feed. The west front business room of the Republican building is for rent. This is a fine room for a small business and will be rented reasonable. Inquire of Healey & Clark. Mrs. A. F. Griswold went to Chicago today, having been called there by a telegram announcing the serious sickness of her son-in-law, J. E. Winters, with typhoid fever. For our Saturday trade we will have fancy Elberta pears, apples, oranges, bananas, fancy melons and sweet potatoes. JOHN EGER. Mr. and Mrs. William Coffel and son Cecil, of Marion, who have been visiting their daughter, Mrs. Ed Floyd, here since Saturday, went to Monon today and will go from there to their home. George Lowman returned this morning to Amboy after about a week’s visit here with his brother,. W. S. Lowman. He reports that at Amboy there has been a severe drouth that has resulted very seriously to corn. Among a class of eighteen pharmacists that successfully passed the examination by the Indiana board of pharmacy and were given certificates as registered phamacists Thursday in Indianapolis, was Everett D. Hess, of Brook.
Miss Maud Smith, of Grant Park, 111., was here over night and arranged with the ladies’ aid society of the Christian church to have Prof. J. Emerson Nye, of Valparaiso, an impersonator, give an entertainment here on the evening of Sept. 6th. Miss Smith is his advance agent. A rumor to the effect that Buick automobiles had made radical cuts in the prices of all cars caused the local agent, C. C. Shamberlin, to make a trip to Chicago Wednesday to investigate. He found that the reduction was much less than rumored here, where it had been rumored that the prices on all cars had been cut in half. It is thought possible that a big reduction on all cars will occur this fall, but the automobile men are arguing that .this will not be the case. The J. I. Case sulky plow is sold by Maines & Hamilton.
