Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 134, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 June 1912 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Mrs. J. H. Chapman has qualified as executrix of the estate left by her mother, Mrs. Candace Loughrldge. -i « r Mrs. James McCaffrey returned to her home in Lafayette today after visiting over night wUh Mrs. Mary Peyton. * Mrs. E. C. English went to Glencoe, 111., today to visit for a week or ten days with her sister, Mrs. Louis F. Hopkins. Remember we handle the famous Deering line of mowers, rakes and binders. HAMILTON & KELLNER. Joe Larsh and children, Jack and Doris, went to Kokomo today to visit with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Barnes, Mrs. Chas. Jouvenat returned to her home in Chicago today, after a short visit here with her sister, Mrs. Charlotte George. ~‘ : Now is the time for pineapples for canning. They are at their best. Get our special price on them in case or tkzen lots. JOHN EIGER. Mrs. N. M. Harris returned to her home in Grand Rapids, Mich., today after several days’ yisit here with Benjamin Harris, Sr., and family. Mrs. Isaac Wiltshire, who has been in very poor health for some time, will leave tomorrow for Town Creek, Ala., to spend several weeks with relatives. ,If you are going to want any strawberries to can or. preserve we will make you a special price on them in case lots this week. JOHN EGER. Mrs. E. L. McFadden, of Chicago, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Chas.'-Platt, and other relatives for the past week, went to Surrey to visit her parents. Mrs. Frank Lyon and children returned to their home in Delphi today, after several days’ visit here with her mother, Mrs. Julia A. Healey, and other relatives. C. M. Davenport, of Kentucky, is now working for his brother, W. A. Davenport, at wallpaper cleaning and if he finds plenty of work to do he expects to move his family here and make Rensselaer his permanent home. Miss Lillian Morland returned to her home in Frankfort today after a short visit with her uncle, Charles Battleday and family. Her brother, Raymond, who has been visiting here all this spring, accompanied her home. You can secure Mica Special Roofing from any dealer in Jasper or Newton counties. If your dealer does not have it in stock, call me up and I will supply you direct Prices the same everywhere. HIRAM DAY. - 1 " ■■ ■ ■ Miss Elizabeth Spitler, who is attending Western College for Girls at Oxford, Ohio, will start in a few days in company with college friends on a delightful trip to- Dayton and Columbus, Ohio, and Cedar Point on Lake Erie. Miss Martha Long may accompany her on at least part of the trip. We have on exhibition in our show window a mammoth sack of “Aristos” flour that we are going to give away on the 4th of July to the one that guesses the nearest correct weight One guess with every 50-pound sack of Aristos purchased. JOHNtEGER. B. J. Moore returned last evening from Dixon, HI., where he had' been in company with C. H. Sternberg. Ed Sternberg was also there. He is now located *.at Kansas City. They bid on an extensive ditch contract, which sold for about $239,000. There is five miles of rock to be excavated.' Sternbern A Son and Mr. Moore missed getting the contract by a narrow margin. While he is only an amateur in the sign, writing business, J.Harve Robinson has completed a job at the Princess airdome that might well cause any professional painter to “sit up and take notice.” The name “Princess” is executed across the convex front of the theatre in a bold gothic letter that, though not ornate, is artistic In its severity. The letters are painted in two colors, the upper portion red and the lower in black, which, on the background of enamel white, forms a very pleasing and serviceable purpose. Most disfiguring skin eruptions, scrofula, pimples, rashes, etc., are due to impure blood. Burddck Blood Bitters as a cleansing blood tonic, ii well recommended, fl.oo at all stores.