Democratic Sentinel, Volume 4, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 March 1880 — F. & A. M. [ARTICLE]

F. & A. M.

Hall of Piairie Lodge, No. 125, ) March 16, a. d. 1880, a. l. 5880. ) At the regular communication held March 6. 1880, the By-Luws of this lodge were so amended as to read; “The regular communication of this Lodge will be held on the First and Third Mondays of eaen month, &c.” “Take due notice, <&c.” By order of the Lodge. Attest: CHAS. W. CLIFTON, Secretary. School of instruction next Monday night. March 22d. Township assessors are required to cottuiouee assessing real and personal property on tiie first day of April and continue the work until their successors are qualified, which will be about the 15th of April. Bismarck is entitled to wear 466 decorations. and the New Orleans Picayune says that when be is dressed he looks like a speckled hen. * Our old time friend. Prof. A. L. Hurtt, called in to see us Tuesday evening. General Hood’s youugest orphan, a little thing in pink .<nd white, aged •tcveil mouths has been adopted by Mrs. M. Joseph, the wife of a wealthy merchant at Columbus, Ga.

Do not buy a pocket-book without looking at the new stock at the postoffice. - Having received a check for nearly the whole of t li e SIOO,OOO to which he finds himself heir. Chauncey Slater, foreman of a manufactory at Mansfield, Conn., continues to work as be fore. Sidney Bartlett is the Nestor of the Boston bar. It is said that he is the only lawyer in that city who has a grain of conceit. It wasliafus Choate who said of him as he saw him passing: “There goes Bartlett lost in tho’t. And I know what he is thinking about. It is whether lie made the Almighty, or the Almighty made him.”