Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 101, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 April 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Get the habit of buying your shoes at a shoe store where we devote our entire 'time to fitting shoes to feet. Fendlg’B Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House Block. ' He told his twelve-year-old son to milk the cows, feed the horses,, slop the pigs, hunt up the eggs, feed the calves, catch' the colt and put it in the stable; cut some wood and split the kindlings, stir the cream, pump fresh water in the creamery after supper, and be sure to study your lesson well before you go to bed. Then he went to the farmers’ club to discuss the question, “How to keep boys at home.’’ * JHo remonstrance was filed from Union township and that township becomes automatically “wet” Monday, May Ist There is no application for a saloon license, however, and it is probable that an applicant would be confronted by a remonstrance a month later if he did apply. All other townships in the county are “wet” also where a remonstrance has not been filed, although until the court interprets the Proctor law there will probably be no license granted In. townships with a less population than 1,0001. The Republican was probably misinformed, although unintentionally, about John T. Murray’s North Dakota land deal. According to a reputable gentleman, familiar with the conditions, Mr. Murray was not deceived at all in the transaction he made. He traded his property just north of Rensselaer for a farm near Hamilton N. Dak., on which there was a mortgage. He knew It, but the mortgage was not enough to worry him greatly. He went to that state expecting to farm his own place and also the large farm purchased by William Baker. After being out there for a time he found that It would require so much stock and the prices were so high that he gave up the idea of farming the place and rented his ! own farm out and went to work by the month. His son Harry did the same thing. Doss Norman took the Baker place to farm and Mr. Murray and Harry expected to farm for themselves another year, and he has no thought of giving up his own farm.