Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 192, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 August 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

O. B. Lahman returned to DeLong, Ind., this morning, after a business trip here. He formerly owned a farm In Milroy township, selling it a little more than a year ago. Mrs. J. E. Carson and children returned to Lafayette today, Mr. Carson having preceded her yesterday. They have been on a two weeks’ vacation at different points add drove here from Francesville Sunday. Victor Yeoman left this morning for Muncie to attend the conference of the M. P. church, he being the delegate from the Rosebud and Mt. Hope churches. He will also visit Ed Mauck and family at Mhncie, Mrs. Mauck being his sister, > A. W. Sawin took a load 'of 200 watermelons to Qoodland yesterday and had no difficulty in disposing of' them. He sold 50 in Rensselaer in a short time in the evening and found such a big demand that he is shipping more in from his Fair Oaks farm today. They are fine melons and many pronounce them the best home grown melons they have ever eaten. Mrs. Jane Reed returned this morning from Payne, Ohio, where she was called last Friday by the death of her daughter, Miss Mary Reed. Miss Reed was 53 years of age and had gone to Payne, Ohio, to visit her brother Chas. Reed, and to take treatment for asthma, from which she had been a sufferer for a long time. She grew worse and died quite suddenly last Friday. The funeral was held Monday and was buried in a vault in the Payne cemetery. Her mother, Mrs. Jane Reed, lives in the Yeoman neighborhood in Newton township. We were out of * "Arlstoo” flour a short time, but we have Just received another car, making the tenth car of flour, of 210 barrels each, making two thousand and two hundred barrels, since January 1,1911. More flour than all of the balance of the merchants of the city have handled. Quality is what sells flour. We guarantee “Aristos" to be the bdst flour made, or money returned. JOHN EGJBR.