Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 August 1882 — ADVERTISED LETTERS. [ARTICLE]

ADVERTISED LETTERS.

Letters addressed as below remain ■ recalled for in the Post Office nt 1;<- '.o r, Jasper county, Indiana, on tie l! -li «J v .if August, 1882. Those not e’aimi’ l wi in : four weeks from the date abov - - v.n v il be sent to the Dead Letter Office, Wasi in ; ton, D. C. Persons calling for any of (he I'Hers "n this list will please say they r. e ad veil is- !. Atwood, G. W. Conn. Mr Tlnun j Dart, Lora, Harris, .VI - ! -m ■>, I Irwin, Mr. Alfred, Lonard, M . .1 s.K. I McCashen, Mr. Neal, McNi- J. 1 off. Reed, Mr. Cbas. Ritchie. Mi-s h«t : , Singer, Alias Monta, Thompson. C. i!. Wood, Samuel (\ HORACE E. JAMES P. M. The Northern Indiana Con sere nee of the Churches of God, convening at Rensselaer on Friday next, 25th, to continue over Sunday, will have public services each day and night. Preachers: —S. A. Chaplin, of Plymouth, J. F. Wagoner, of Denver, and H. .V. Reed, of Chicago, will doubtless be in attendance. The public in cordially invited to uttend. D. T. Halstead. Died.—At the residence of Zimii Dwiggins, in Oxford, Ind., at tne age of 2 anti one half years, Ann i E. daughter of Frank J. and Arabelie Sears of Rensselaer. Last week we made a note of the departure of Mr. and Mrs. Sears for Watseka 111., on a visit. On Sunday afternoon last while driving across the country from Watseka to Oxford, on their way back to Rensselaer, Anna w.is taken sick in the carriage. At a distance of four miles from Ox Aid her sickness became so serious that the party stopped at a farm house and called a doctor from tne town. On Monday morning the child was taken to Mr. D wiggins’ residence in Oxford where at 9 o’clock a. in. ahe expired. The body was brought across the country to Rensselaer the same day, and was buried on Tuesday. The funeral took place from the residence at 2 o’clock p. m. The physicians pronounced the diseaae incarnation of the brain and stomach. Anna was a beautiful, and almost unnaturally bright girl, and being Mrs. Bears’ only child her loss is a very' severe blow.

j J. Waterbary the 100 tailor* h.w removed his s!»r p to the room recently vacated tty Pun upilo’o li-a-aurarit, where be wili be pleased to see a 1 of his- old customers', as w**ll as new ones.