Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 56, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 March 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

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LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Call phone 273 for coal, wood and feed. W. S. Parks made a business trip to Roselawn today. Claud Loughry was over from Monticello this morning. Mortgage exemption blanks for sale at The Republican office. H. C. Hoshaw returned Monday from a 'visit with his brother Joljn in Chicago. Leave your orders with John M. Knapp for pure New York State Maple Syrup. Phone 186. Mrs. Rebecca Hurley went to Parr this morning to visit the family of Roy Hurley. i ■ ,1 Hear* the Beilharz Entertainers at the M. E. church Monday evening, March 13. Admission 35 cents. Delphi’s mayor is after slot machines and haa ordered all cigar machines turned to the wall. Just arrived at Maines & Hamilton’s, a car load of oyster shells to be sold at 70 cents per hundred pounds. D. R Brooks, a dredge man, who lives in Rensselaer, left this morning for Des Moines, lowa, to work on a dredge. Mrs. Eld Taylor, of Crawfordsville, returned to her home yesterday after a visit since Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Julius Taylor. Have you seen our stock of buggie <. Do not buy until you have examined them. There is none better and few equal. MAINES & HAMILTON. What would be the matter now with starting h civil service commission for bartenders. Why didn’t Senator Proc tor put that in his bill? —Hammond Times. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Irwin returned t 6 Wolcott Monday forenoon. They came here to attend the funeral Sunday of their little nephew, Carroll Warren. Mrs. Carrie D. Short has moved from the cement block house on South Division street to the house recently vacated by William Rayher and family on Austin avenue. Miss Gertrude Gosnell returned to Campus, 111., this morning, after a visit of three weeks here with her sister, Mrs. David Bare, and her friend, Miss Charlotte Kanne. G. J. Dean and William Augspurger left this morning on a prospecting tri'» to southern Minnesota. Their first stopping point was to be Blue Earth and they expected to visit other places before returning home. E. G. Warren arrived yesterday morning from Lawton, Okla. His trip was made on account of the death of of his brother, Prof. I. N. Warren, but he did not arrive here until several hours after the funeral had taken place. He went to DeMotte today to visit relatives. H. F. Parker, Cleve Eger, H. W. Kiplinger, and “Nub” Hemphill went to the' Kankakee river in quest of ducks today. The two first named will establish a camp in connection with Ed Dennison, of Foresman, and will remain for the week and Bpend considerable of the next four or five weeks there. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Timmons arrived home last evening from Benton Harbor, Mich., where they visited for several days with his sister, Mrs. Elmer Osman and husband, following their marriage at St Joe. They went to the home of the groom’s parents, where they will remain for a short time until their housekeeping plans are completed. They were given two enthusiastic charivaris and the groom was generous in his distribution of cigars. Our customers who have bought them are urging their neighbors to get the “Plow a Man Can Pall.” This is one of the splendid agricultural Implements sold by Maines £ Hamilton.