Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 281, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 November 1911 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
' t: > -r < .6-' • * • ffiPlryy CrtHifr 3 jwm.y " *Oi t Ob Accent es Thauksgh&J ’ *??’•■ * “ ‘■•‘ ' ' " The Friday issue of the Semi-Week-ly Republican will be issued a day earlier this week than usual, owing to Thanksgiving. The paper will be published Wednesday afternoon or Thursday morning. All advertisers are urged to Itear this in mind and get their copy in as early Wednesday morning as possible. There will be no Evening Republican Thursday and The Republican will be closed all that day. Will Be Closed All Day “- -x Thanksgiving, Nov. 30th. Our coal and feed yard will be closed all day Thanksgiving. Phone in your order for goods how. HAMILTON & KELLNER. . * -Notice. The Ladies’ Literary Club will meet at 2 p. m. Friday, Dec. 1, at the home of Mrs. J. W. Medicus. Mrs. G. A. Williams,
All home print joday. Alter’s pure buckwheat at the Depot Grocery.* a ; All kinds of fruit and vegetables for your Thanksgiving dinner, at John Eger’s. Mrs. E. N. »Dewey left this morning for Los Angeles, Cal., to spend 1 part of the winter with relatives. Feed Buffalo Glutin feed. It is the best milk and butter producing feed. HAMILTON & KELLNER. Henry V. Childers and daughter, Mrs. Mahanna, of Delphi, will be Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Childers. r- > John B. Ellis came over-from Monticello yesterday end this morning accompanied Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Hopkins to Chicago. , / Itching, bleeding, protuding or blind piles yield to Doan’s Ointment Chronic cases soon relieved, finally cured. Druggists all sell it? Genuine German dill" pickles, 10 cents a dozen; white Malaga grapes and California pink grapes, 10 cents a pound, at C. C. Starr & Co.'s. ' ■ ■ - . J;-';. . g" ■ Mrs. Rufus B. Knox returned to Chicago .today after a visit of a week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ns S. Bates. Her brother, Glenn Bates, accompanied her home for a short visit. Lots of things that will, give you good wear, in men’s, women’s and children’s clothing at George Robinson’s Second Hand Store. The city council held a short meeting last evening, Councilman Dean being absent. The assessments on the alley in block 9 were confirmed and the clerk was directed to make the final assessment roll, showing benefits and damages. The firemen present at the Drake fire were allowed $1 each. The usual grist of bills was allowed.
George Kepner arrived home Sunday from Keokuk, lowa, where he suffered the fracture of his left arm above the wrist The radius was broken and the ligaments were torn also. He will remain at home a couple of weeks while the arm is healing. His brother-in-law, Tom Manley, keeps busy and has about a year’s work contracted ahead of him. George expects to return there in a couple of weeks.
W. R. Meguire went to Chicago thia morning and Mrs. Meguire will join him there tonight and they will go from there to Champaign to spend Thanksgiving. Next Monday Mr. Meguire will go to Toledo, Ohio, to remain about three weeks. He denies that the operations on the factory here have been suspended and says they will not be. The work here will be pushed right ahead and he says they will be manufacturing matches by the first of January. In less than a month after its publication in England Buyer's book, describing his new system of cooking in paper bags, has sold over 60.000 copies, and the supply of paper bags, owing to immediate and unlooked-for demand, had become exhausted. American housewives have the opportunity to learn all about the new system of cookery through The Chicago Dally News, which is publishing descriptive articles and recipes every day. in this connection it is interesting to note the opinion of the paper expressed by Mr. Hugh Evan Smith, of London, on _his recent visit to this country when, speaking of the Chicago Dally News, be characterized It as "one of the most marvelous productions of the country." More people In Chicago read The Chicago Daily News'than read any other Chicago newspaper. Your Thanksgiving dinner not be complete without some of Mri Green’s home made bread, "The Best ■Ever.” Phone 477. Let your wants be known through our classified column.
