Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 January 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

’ i TONIGHT’S PBOGBAM ♦ PICTURE. A Day of Thinks* < . < SONG : To the End of the World With Yon, j By J; F. Frederick.

Trade at the Home Grocery this week to benefit the Monnett Homfe. Hear Booth Lowery at the M. E. church tonight. ___ s Naval oranges are good now. The Home Grocery is selling some fine ones at 20c a dozen. - • - The Ladies’ Aid Society of the Bap tist church will meet with Mrs. J. P. Green on Friday afternoon of this week. Remember it’s the Home Grocery that sells so much flour—‘‘Best’’ or “Northmore,” $1.50 a sack. Sheets & McNeills, of Chicago, bought thirteen head of horses here test Saturday. They will be here again Saturday, January 28th. We have all sizes of hard coal, as well as the most popular soft coals, for both ranges and heating stoves. RENSSELAER LUMBER CO, Phone No. 4. Lowrey is a humorist, whose lectures have been accepted with de light wherever delivered. He will be at. the Methodist church tonight, this being the fourth number of the Epworth lecture course. Rev. J. C. Parrett left this morning for Lyndon, Ohio, his boyhood home, where he has business that will require his presence for the next week. His pulpit at the Presbyterian church will be filled next-Sunday morning and evening as elsewhere announced. « The Wabash Pearl Button-company has been organized at Delphi with |i. A. Hall, A. H. Brewer and Wa. Donlin as incdrporaicrs. Tte institution is capitalized at $20,000, and plans to manufacture and deal in pearl buttons manufactured from mussel shells-, taken from the Wabash and Tippecanoe rivers. Will Woodworth arrived here from Newell, S. Dak., today, having come because of the sickness of his mother, Mrs. A. Woodworth. Will was married about 8 months ago and his wife was engaged in the merchantile business at Newall and Will has been in charge of the business since His wedding. The construction of a railroad through Newell has caused a change of the business location and Will expects to erect a new building at the new town site in the spring. He reports that a blizzard was in progress when he left South Dakota. There H& s been a lot of cold weather there this winter and on New Year’s day the temperature was 37 degrees below zero. We are now in the midst of the grip and the best remedy is hot lemonade, and to put the price in reach of all we will this week sell them at lc each, or 12c a dozen. JOHN EGER.