Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 January 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Che Princess Cbeatre RBI FHTTiT.TFB, Proprietor. Watch This Bpsos Bnrjr Sty
. .. .... ■ t Miss RUTH CHESTER Student at the Chicago Musical College will sing at The Princess Tonight
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Fine dried fruits.—Home Grocery. H. W. Marble is down from Wheatfield today. Try the Demar and Elkhorn cheese at Rhoades’ Grocery. Good 4-foot wood delivered at $4 per cord. Maines & Hamilton. John Q. Lewis went to Chicago today to see his invalid son, Leon. Manor House coffee, the best coffee on the market, at Rhoades’ Grocery. Born, Friday, Jan. 27th, to Mr. and Mrs. Carter Garriott, of near Aix, a son. „ m The new ones, at the Home Grocery, potted cheese 10c, Pimento cheese 15c, Try them. Mrs. L. Clark and two daughters, of Wheatfield, came today to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ramey. James White, who runs the DeMotte telephone lines, was in Rensselaer yesterday and today. William E. Netherton has been appointed postmaster at Winamac and Calvin Myers at Francesville. We have for the cook stove genuine Jackson Hill egg, cannel egg and washed nut. Maines & Hamilton. The Wheatfield girls’ basketball team will play here tonight. The game will be played at Warner’s hall. This will be the last week to get 3 quarts of cranberries for 25c. JOHN EGER. Rev. J. P. Green is laid up with an attack of the grip, and it is doubtful if he will be able to be in his pulpit tomorrow. For this week only our regular 15 cent imported Singapore pineapple chunks for 10c, or 2 cans of California lemon cling dessert peaches for 25c. JOHN EGER. Judge Hanley and Court Reporter Folk came from Kentland this morning. There is still another week of court over there and their presence will be required next week. Earl Crowder, of Indianapolis, a fireman and substitute engineer on the Monon railroad, came last evening for a short visit with his father, M. M. Crowder, southeast of town. We are this week unloading our second car of flour for 1911. Quality is what sells the goods. Every sack warranted or money refunded. JOHN EGER. Will Woodworth will start back to South Dakota next Monday. He lives •in a new town there which has been nicknamed “New Hell.”'£ They raise something besides wheat ifr’that country too. Order Jackson Hill, Luhrig or One-Forty-One coal for ranges; Pittsburg, Splint or Smokeless for heating stoves, and all Bizes of anthracite for hard coal burners, of the Rensselaer Lumber Co., phone No. 4. " Misses Esther Frankenstein and Sadie Bernhardt, of Chicago, came yesterday to visit the family of A. Leopold. Miss Frankenstein returned home thlß morning and Miss Bernhardt remained Tor a longer visit. • Mrs. J. W. Smith returned from Chicago Thursday afternoon. !9he underwent a surgical operation there recently and is still very weak and the convalescent period will doubtless be quite long. -The trip from Chicago seemed to be hard on her. Now is your time to see where you can use a lot of concrete tile. They are the cheapest; pay for themselves; cost you nothing. You can string them out; they never crumble, but get better with age. They are frost proof. Rensselaer Cement Tile Factory, C. Kalberer, proprietor.
