Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 58, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 March 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM _ J ; ; > _ > * .. PICTURES. A Cowboy's Devotedness. Priscilla’s Engagement Kiss. BIG DOUBLE BILL TONIGHT.
Pure Hillside Cream Cheese at 15c per pound at Rowles & Parker’s. 1 - i J. W. Phelphs was over from Remington this morning. Sharpies Cream Separator No. 2 : regular price, $60.00; special price, $42.50, at Rowles & Parker’s. The impersonations of Mr. and Mrs. Beilharz are the best ever seen here and real artistic talent is displayed with genuine humor. Mrs. Robert vMannon came down from Wheatfield this morning to' visit her sister, Mrs. J. W. Tilton, and family. All kinds of canned goods, fruits and other good things to eat at Rowles & Parker’s grocery department. George Putts is building a barn and making some improvements on the Sternberg farm, south of town, on which a good farm residence was built last fall. Our customers who have bought them are urging their neighbors to get the “Plow a Man Can Pull.” This is one of the splendid agricultural implements sold by Maines & Hamilton. This is a balmy springlike day and all the snow has again disappeared. So far March has not behaved very badly, but has been backward enough to retard the advancement of trees, etc. Snow Boy Washing Powder, regular price, 20c; special price, 15c, at Rowles & Parker’s. ' Mrs. C. A. Armstrong"’ hpd her left hand severely burned Tuesday while •starting a fire in a stove. Wednesday there was considerable fever in the hand and it is apparently going to cause her quite a little trouble. We have sold fifteen Corn King manure spreaders this spring. There is no better spreader on the market. Our terms and prices are better than any other. Let us tell you what we can do for you. MAINES & HAMILTON. John O’Connor was down from Kniman today. Yesterday he had the American flag floating at half mast. It was the 49th anniversary of the sinking of the Congress battleship by the Merrimac. Today “Old Glory” is floating in the breese at full height, for it was 49 years ago today that the Monitor whipped the confederate ship and turned the tide of defeat to victory. -v H. F. Parker, Fred Hemphill, H. W. Kiplinger and some of the other duck hunters returned from the Kankakee this morning. There was no game where they had been located and they did not get a shot. Robert Lawrie, of Monticello, who belongs to the Diana Gun Club, of Chicago, and who was hunting in the south marsh, had about fifty ducks. He paid $75 for membership in the Diana club. Delos Thompson, W. J. Wright and F. Gi Kresler are also hunting on the marsh. They are on the preserve of the Indianapolis Gun Club, in which they recently took out membership at the coßt of $25 each. It was their camping outfit, and not the outfit of other hunters, that Cooney Kellner took overland to the river Tuesday. Karlen Will Remain Dry—Based upon fraud, which the commissioners of Grant county say has been clearly -proven in the city of Marion election held on Feb. 28tb, saloon licenses have been denied all applicants in that olty. More than fifty illegal votes ar > said to have been cast in the second \yard and the commissioners made a finding that the majority of the legal votes in Marion city were against the saloons. The grand Jury has been called and it is expected to Indict those responsible for the illegal voting. Perry for U. 8. Marshal -The position of U. 8. marshal for Indiana has been a plum sought after by many Hposiers lately. f)ow the name of Oran Perry, former adjutant-general, is proposed. Hlq friends in the Indiana- national guard would like to see him land it Call phone 273 for coal, wood and feed.
