Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 136, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 June 1912 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Dan Coleman and wife were over from , near Brook today. Dan is hobbling about as a result of running a rusty nail in his right foot Marion Pierson came down from Chicago last night for a short visit. He is working in the collection department of Rothschild & Co. Miss Dot Hawkins, of Roundhead, 0., came yesterday for an indefinite visit with her sister, Mrs. A R. Zimmerman, of Barkley township. Now is the time for pineapples for canning. They are at their best. Get our special price on them in case or dozen lots. JOHN EGER. Willie ■Keen, of Wheatfield, and Harold Clark from Indianapolis today for the summer vacation. They had been attending school at the Institution for the Deaf. Mrs. John Makeever, who has been at the home of her son in Indianapolis for the past month taking treatment for her eyes, is expected to return home next Sunday. The Ladies Industrial Society of the M. E. church will have their regular 10-cent Social Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Tom Crockett in the east part of town. Everybody invited. The National Federation of Women’s clubs, which will meet in. San Francisco during the third week of June, will undertake a vigorous campaign for a national marriage and divorce law. ’i, Senator W. S. Kenyon defeated former senator Lake Young Monday at the primaries in lowa by from 50,000 to 75,000, carrying every congressional district and nearly every county in the state. The carpenter work on the A. P. Burton house on Weston street and the Charles Grow house on Van Rensselaer street is progressing rapidly. These will be two of the finest residences erected in Rensselaer in recent years. “Take out my incubator ad,” was Leo Reeve’s instruction this morning. He went on to say that he sold the incubator, had one or two other applications and one from as far away as Sheridan. There are many daily proofs of the value of Republican ads. We have on exhibition in our show window a mammoth sack of “Afistos” 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.— : * —JOHN MGER.
