Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 125, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 May 1911 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Attorney Moses Leopold made a business trip to Chicago today. GM screen doors of the J. C. Gwin Lumbar Co. Strawberries, pineapples, bananas, nraagea. lemons and new potatoes at Starr's Grocery. Soft drinks tor hot weather; grape juice, root beer, birch beer, sarsaparilla and ginger ale. at John Eger's. James P. Overton left this morning for Charlottesville for a visit with A. M. Mundon and family. Strawberries, pineapples, bananas, oranges, lemons and new potatoes at Starr’s Grocery. Tonight at the armory occurs the alumni banquet, the final of the commencement functions.

Mr and Mrs. Holdridge Clark returned this morning from a short visit with their son, Alvin Clark, at Lee.

Measure the doors for new screens, then call Phone No. 6, and get good ones from the J. C. Gwin Lumber Co.

Mrs. Tom Jensen returned this morning from Wheatfield, where she had been visiting since Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Adam Nagel left this morning for Waterford. Wis., to visit his sister, Mrs. Louis Hoppe. They will return Monday.

i We have secured another lot of that soft soap in large cans, just the thinx for house cleaning, 5c a box or 6 for 25 cents. JOHN EGER.

I-ee Richards, the traveler, is now in Cheyenne, Wyp., and is working hik way to Seattle, Wash. He spent several days in Yellowstone Park.

Don't wait until the house gets full of files to put up screens. If your old ones are not first-class, order new screen doors of J. C. Gwin Lumber •Co., phone 6. -

Floyd Meyers is home from Franklin, and Nell Meyers from DePauw, for a short visit with their parents, Mayor and Mrs. G. F. Meyers, and to . attend the alumni banquet tonight.

Just arrived, another supply of ox- • fords for boys and girls. We have them, black or tan, button or lace.— Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House Block.

’■ E. J. Martindale returned to his home at Pine Village today, after a short visit with his brother, John C. Martindale, who continues in very poor health.

We arc always ready with the new •ones. Our newest is a tan button shoe for men, boys and women.—Fendlg’s Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House Block.,

Mrs. Jia! ph Sprague and little daughter Marjorie, of Gibbon, Neb, came today to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Woodworth. Mr. Sprague will come later.

Our lines of oxfords for men, women and children are still complete. We can fit you in the kind you want.—Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House Block.

T. W. Bailey and wife, of Topeka, Kansas, who have been visiting for several days with Willis Samuel and family, 8 miles south of Rensselaer, left today for Boswell, to visit relatives.

Bonano will delight the children, give them nourishment and pleasure. They will like it better than coffee, for the child's normal appetite instinctively prefers that which is good for the system.

Mrs. M. C. Powell, of Washington. D. C.. is here visiting her daughter, Mrs. C. G. Spitler, and attending the commencement functions in which her granddaughter, Elizabeth Spitler, is participating as one of the graduates.

Oar Barnyard Shoes, the best of al! shoes, afford comfort, durability and perfect satisfactftnrlo farmers, laborers and mechanics. Take no substitutes. —Fendtg’s Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House Block.

Bonano is the pure meat of choicest bananas, the delicate, sugary, juicy varieties we never see up North —ripened in the sunshine of the Tropics—peeled, dried, roasted and granulated by modern machinery. The school children returned to the school house this morning to get their grades and their promotion cards. This closed the schools and it is generally considered that throughout ic was one of the most successful school years of our history. Our Richardson seamless shoes for women overcome that tired, aching, bunting sensation so prevalent during these sultry days. Ask your friends about them and try a pair for yourself. Sold and warranted at Fendig's Exclusive Shoe Store. Four can* kidney beans, sauerkraut, or canned hominy for 25 cents, at John Eger's.