Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 234, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 October 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
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.VOCAL HAPPENINGS. The first cranberries, Home Grocery. Mrs. I. m. Washburn returned this morning from Delphi. For pancake flours and nice table syrup, call the Home Grocery. If you want something really nice in fruits and vegetables, get it at Th© Home Groc&ry. * Mrs. D. H. Yeoman was very low last evening and it is probable that she can not last long. For fine eating apples, pears, grapes or bananas, go around the corner to Fate’s Model Restuarant. See our new fall line of Fried hats, the best $3.00 you ever looked at. Model Clothing Co., S. Leopold, Mgr. Keep the speech of Congressman Crumpacker in mind. It will be delivered in Rensselaer next Wednesday evening. Why pay 5c for 11 or 12 ounces of bread when you can get 16 oz. of high class Quaker bread at Fate’s Quaker bread factory. f Make our store your headquarters during the Horse Fair. Everybody welcome. The Model Clothing Co., Simon Leopold, Mgr. Dr. Charles Fidler arrived home yesterday from Milwaukee, Wis., where he is practicing madicine. He will be home over Sunday. For sweater coats and underwear we can’t be beat. A full line in all colors and sizes, from 50c up. Model Clothing Co., S. Leopold, Mgr. George Ives, a prominent young merchant of Delphi and .one of the best citizens of that city, died suddenly Wednesday. He was somewhat known in Rensselaer. *■
Robert Chamberlin and two children and John Stewart, of Chalmers, are attending the horse show and visiting the latter’s daughter, Mrs. J. C. Parrett and husband. Ed Bellows, of near Remington, had a fine yield of clover seed. On twenty acres he threshed out 30 bushels, which is a bushel and a half to the acre and regarded a very fine yield. Who can beat it? Mrs. Henry Amsler returned Tuesday from a visit of about two months spent with her daughter at Elizabeth, N. J. Last week she attended the national G. A. R. encampment as a delegate frpm Indiana to the Woman’s Relief Corps convention. Mrs. Amsler Had a splendid time and enjoyed the encampment. It seems to have been proven Friday evening that “the course of true love never did run smooth.” It is alleged that a certain young lady, suspicioning that her steady was about to go to a dance with another, went to his home and took away his dancing slippers and shoes, and that when he found it out, he went after them and a regular set-to ensued.
Shelby Grant recently visited at his boyhood home at LaFountain. When he was a youngster the town was called Ashland, and Shelby had not visited the place since 1861. The town is now a good sized place and it was with difficulty that Shelby got his bearings, but he finally reached the old brick house where he had formerly lived and it looked just as natural as when he was a boy.
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Zard arrived here yesterday afternoon for a visit of about two weeks with relatives and many old neighbors and friends. They moved to Mitchell, S. Dak., in the spring of 1908, Fritz having bought a farm* of 320 acres 6 miles southeast of that city. He paid $57 per acre for it, but states that he would not sell it now for SIOO per acre. This year he raised 1,700 bushels of wheat,* 2,800 bushels of oats and has 130 acres of corn which will make a fine crop. Other Jasper county people near Prosperous. FATE The man who is always there with the goods. This time it is nvsters kept fresh, cold and sweet in a Vac-Jac cooler. Fate ran out of oysters last Sunday, but this time he bought plenty and they are just the best ever. The last are just as good as the first out of a Vac-Jac. Don’t deny yourself, but get some of these fine meats fresh from Baltimore. Fate, the fat-dinner and oyster man. Same place. A Classified Adv. will sell It.
