Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 56, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 March 1913 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

A. O. Moore made a business trip to Chicago today. ■ . ■ Dr. Rose M. Remmek returned yesterday from a visit of a week in Indianapolis. 4 >’ :—: Th?-girls’ card club will meet at the home of Mrs. Firman Thompson Friday evening. - \ Mrs. Mattie Grant has moved to the house on Weston street recently vacated by Bert Hopper. The jiffy curtains are a feature of the ROH ears that are meeting with instant favor by the public. - You can have your hickory nut cake. Nice new shellbark hickorynuts, 5c a quart, 40c a peck, at John Eger’s. Miss Verona Barber returned to Chicago today after a visit with her brother, Roger, at St. Joseph’s college. Just like getting it fresh out of the garden—our fancy white as paragus, 15c a can. JOHN EGER. ■ . ■ ~■,■■■■ The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Barkley is very much improved now and practically alldanger seems to have passed. The girls’ sew club will meet Saturday afternoon with Miss Lamson and Miss Gregg at the home of Mrs. J. F. Hardman. Nell Drake, Pres. Mrs. Alvin Palmer and baby, of Brook, and Mrs. Lulu Blacker, of Yeoman, came today to visit their father, E. Kennedy, of Newland. You can find a buggy to shit you in our shipment of two carloads, just arrived. HAMILTON & KELLNER.

The industrial Society of the M. E_ church will hold their regular 10cent social at the church parlors on Tuesday, March 11th. All are invited. / ’ T < John and Ethel Hammerton, of Surrey, were Rensselaer visitors over night. Their father, Wesley Hammerton, recently moved to a farm near Surrey. A Bible Student from Chicago will deliver a Bible lecture under the auspices of the International Bible Students’ Association, at the Fair Oaks school house, Sunday, March 9th, at 2 p. m„ and at 7 p. m. that evening. / ' Z Julius Cohen and family arrived yesterday from Hobart and moved into one of Hiram Day’s houses on Milton street in the southeast part of town. "His stock of goods also arrived and are being arranged in the Williams room, where he will conduct a five and ten cent store. Judson and Walter Maines and their families will depart Tuesday of next week for. Three Forks, Mont., near which place they have a section of land, on which they will reside. Their many friends In Rensselaer and vicinity hope for them a prosperous and happy life in their new home. —— -h

When you trade with us you get the benefit of my thirty-two years’ experience in buying groceries. No high rents or interest to pay. Buying for cash in car lots and large quantities direct from growers or manufacturers, I am able and will save ydu money on your grocery bill JOHN EGER. Homer Leatherman, a young businessman of Chapman, Kans., and a nephew of James N. and Miss Mary Leatherman, of Rensselaer, and of David F. Leatherman, of Wolcott, paid them a short visit this week. His father went to Kansas some thirty years ago and this was the first time the Indiana relatives had ever seen this nephew. C. M. Paxton and wife arrived at Attica several days ago from Longmont, Colo., and he came on to Rensselaer today. They will move here if a house can be rented. Mr. Paxton disposed of his interests near Longmont, to which city he moved seven years ago. He also has a farm in Newton township, and it was business connected with that that brought him here today. Miss Willmer, the reader, was lost to the audience, for her listeners saw and heard some twelve or more men and women who lived in the time of Nero, thirty-two years after ! the crucifixion of Jesus. Voice was the medium through which these subtleties of human nature were conveyed to the audience—Valparaiso (Ind.) Vidette. At M. E. church, March ID, at 8:15 p. m., admission 35 cents. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Eldridge have arrived home from Medford, Oreg., where they have been for the past two years. They also spent one year in South Dakota after leaving here. They will be with his father, Nathan Eldridge, for .a time at least. He states that the climate at Medford is delightful and that former Rensselaer families, George E. Marshall. Bert Marshall and Charles Hansen, are all well pleased and all enjoying good health. Bowsher, the frog man, has been able to ply his trade some recently, notwithstanding the fact that the ponds are all frozen over and there are only occasional open places along the streams. He returned this morning from Monon with 16 dozen frogs and disposed of the legs at 20 cents a dozen. Local demand for them is such that shipment is not necessary, at least until he harvests them in larger quantities.