Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 151, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 June 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
CIK Princm ClKatre > ms CTIIiTiTW, JProprlator. > Watch This space Stmt Say
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Big choice lemons, 35c a dozen.— Home Grocery. Mrs. Lon Kaiser and baby joined her husband in Surrey today, where he manages the W. R. Lee grocery. Try our new, mild, full cream cheese and new brick cheese.' - . JOHN EGER. Reduction in all trimmed hats until July 15th at Mrs. Purcupile’s. The selection is large and good. Jacob Rubin and Morris Kramer, two Chicago owners of Gifford lands, were in Rensselaer today. Get a parasol. $1.45 parasols now $1.16 during our big sale. ROWLES & PARKER. A quick, sure seal for your Mason jars—Keeran’s Vacuum seals, 10c a dozen at the Home Grocery. y-' Miss Donna Harmon and Miss Ester O’Malley, of Pontiac, 111., are visiting the former’s brother, L. A. Harmon, and wife. We are headquarters for fruit jar 3, lids and rubbers, and “H. & E.” granulated sugar, the best sugar made for preserving. JOHN EGER, You should supply yourself with one $r two pairs of shoes before our big sale ends. ROWLES & PARKER. Mrs. M. D. Walsh returned to Chicago today after a ten days’ visit with her daughter, Mrs.' John Murfltt, near Mt Ayr. Now is the time to buy. Get some of the unusual bargains before our big sale ends. ROWLES & PARKER. Alfred Bird, a former well known resident of this county, died some three weeks ago in Hammond. He was injured several weeks previously by a falL Our sales have been greater than we had expected. We now have extra salespeople. Better get some of the bargains before the sale ends. ROWLES & PARKER. Jim George recently quit, his job in a Chicago shoe store and is now working as a billing clerk in the Monon freight depot in Chicago, where Hurley Beam also works. / William Guthrie came over from Monticello this morning to see whether his Jasper county farm was still on the map and also to see whether the fly had beat his tenant in harvesting his wheat crop. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hilling and two of their three children, of Arvilla, N. Dak., are here for a short visit with Mrs. Alice Howe, who raised Arthur from boyhood. He is now engaged in the barber business in Arvilla. We are now unloading our 9th car of flour since Jan. Ist, 1911. More flour than all the balance of the merchants in the city have handled. Quality is what sells flour. * JOrfN EGER. Miss Marjorie Vanatta left this morning on the early train for Marion to visit her father, Judge Robert Vanatta. Her grandmother, Mrs. John R. Vanatta, accompanied her as far as Frankfort, at which pfacc Marjorie changed cars. Mrs. Agnes Kelley has sold the old Kelley home at the corner of Rutsen and Weston streets to her son. Chase V. Kelley, and it is understood that he will trade it or sell it. The consideration named in the deed was $3,000.
George Ade has been compelled to put up signs on the entrance of the * Hazelden grounds that they are private and not open to the general public on Sundays. This move was made necessary by the fact that they were getting to resemble a “Barnum’s circus” people coming in machines from fifty miles around to trample over the grounds.—Brook Reporter. A Classified Adv. will find It.
