Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 188, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 August 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Judge Gifford and wife, of Tipton, are here on business. Buy your threshing coal of Hamilton & Kellner. Mrs. James Beckett, of Chicago, is here for a week’s rest She is staying at the Medicus home. - Mrs. E. C. Merrill returned to Chicago yesterday after spending a few days with Mrs. Ora T. Ross. Lean streaked mild sugar cured bacon, 20c pound. HOME GROCERY. B. J. Jarrette left yesterday on a business trip for Toledo, Ohio. He will go on to New York before returning home. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Long and Mr. and Mrs. F. J Sears autoed over to Ed Long’s home near Mt Ayr today and spent the day. Earle Reynolds met splendid success selling Ford self-starters at Monticello, where he cleared up all he had on hand, ten in number. (Mrs. C. L. Hill and two children are visiting Mrs. F. M. Haskell and others here. Mrs. Hill was formerly Miss Joeva Green and will be remembered by many Rensselaer people. A window full of ladies’ oxfords and before buying your next pair of oxfords. You’ll save money. Misses Coralea Seiber and Beulah Glasscoe, of Napierville, 111., returned to their home yesterday after visiting Misses Beatrice and Thelma Tilton for several days. Arrangements have been made for trains Nos. 32 and 3 to stop at Cedar Lake Thursday of this week, on account of the Van Rensselaer Club picnic. Misses’ and childrens' strap pumps, in velvet, white canvas and leathers, specially priced to close out, at the Columbia. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lobb and the children of Mrs. James R. Baker returned to Pontiac, 111., today, after a visit of several days with the family of John Newcome and the children of John R. Baker. Mrs. R. P. Benjamin returned home Monday evening from Lafayette, where she was with her father, Benjamin F. Magee, for several days before his death and until after hi* burial. You cannot be disappointed in Parisian Sage, the delightful and refreshing hair tonic. It removes all dandruff, takes away the dryness, and makes the hair seem twice as abundant. B. F. Fendig guarantees it. Mrs. W. R. Brown ,who has been spending some months at Evansville with her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Harmon, returned home last evening. Mrs. Harmon and her daughter, Ruth, accompanied her home for a visit. Miss Madaline Abbott spent Sunday with the Rensselaer young people who were camping at Edgewater, near Monticello, last week. The campers all returned home Monday evening. Frank M. McCabe, of Phoenix, Ariz., driving a Ford, passed through Rensselaer yesterday enroute to Lafayette and Newcastle after spending a few days in Detroit and Chicago. Mr. McCabe’s wife had accompanied him on the trip until Newcastle was reached and had remained there for a visit with relatives. This week we will have a limited amount of fancy Alberta peaches in bushel baskets for canning. Leave your order. HOME GROCERY.

The Misses Nell Drake, of Rensselaer, Ramona Cunningham, Emmett and Clara Plunket and Helen O’Neil, of Kentland, and Margaret and Irene Connolly, Margaret Carmody and Margaret Hayes, of Chicago, are enjoying a two weeks’ outing at Ravina. Yesterday dinner was served to 37, including the hostesses. —Monticello Journal. Advertise in The Republican and get results.

BOYS’ JUDGING CONTEST AT STATE FAIR

Ona of the best educational features the Indiana State Fair offers to the farm boys of the state is the judging contest, in which the boys show their ability to judge livestock and grains, the awards being free scholarships at Purdue University. Since this feature was started some years ago about twenty farm boys have won and used the Purdue scholarships, and to them has been opened the way to obtain an education along agricultural lines which might not otherwise have been available to them. The boys who do not win scholarships find it worth while to enter the contest, for it gives them opportunity