Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 January 1910 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

W. X. Wood Sale Wednesday. Several locals advertising the W. L. Wood sale at Pari? appeared in Monday’s Republican, Baying that the sale would be Thursday. Instead the sale will be Wednesday, tomorrow. W. L. Wood has a thoroughbred Jersey bull and some fine dairy cows for sale at his sale at Parr Wednesday. C. D. Norman’s family have already gone to Larimore, N. Dak., where they will remain with her brother, Elmer Arnold, until Doss can get through with hiß car of goods. He is still delaying his start until the strike situation clears up at St. Paul. - - 6 We are selling more Aristos and Gem of the Valley Flour than all the other flour sold in the city. If 70U have not tried them, ask for a small sample sack, which will be delivered to your house free of cost. JOHN EGER. * E. D. Rhoades, the hardware man, is grandpa again. He received a telegram yesterday apprising him of the birth Sunday of a son to Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Radcliffe, of Cincinnati, where Mrs. Rhoades has been for the past two weeks. This is the second child to these parents, the other being a daughter. H. F. Parker, the photographer, has purchased the gallery building of Miss Minnie Bartoo, of Remington. It occupied leased ground from the John Makeever estate and the building was erected several years ago by Miss Jessie Bartoo. Mr. Parker is making some interior improvements, and greatly adding to the beauty of the reception and operating rooms. All persons knowing themselves lndepted to me are again requested to call on me and eat my big meals and buy my Quaker bread. I need the money. The services were rendered a good while ago, and will be rendered a good long while hence. Respectfully, GEO. FATE, The Fat Dinner Man. While in Chicago on Christmas day Will Rlchmire engaged in conversation with a fine looking, stylishly dressed man on a street car. During the conversation he made himself known. It was Tom McCoy, ex-banker and politician. He looked the picture of health and prosperity and said that he was speculating at the stock yards and doing well. In other words he is one of the multitude who live off the labor of other people. A speculator produces nothing, be lives well at the expense of someone else. The depositors in the McCoy bank have ceased speculating. They know exactly what the genial Tom fixed up for them.—Benton County Review. Butter Wrappers for sale at The Republican Office.