Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 January 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
WANTED—To buy young »milk cows.— J. A. Dunlap. Phone 16. . WANTED—Fat hogs for market. Phone 400—A. W. Sawiiu ~W ANTED—Country girl to assist in kitchen. Good wages. Apply at Makeever House. WANTED—FamiIy washings; will pall for and deliver.—Mrs. Albert Bissenden, Phone 106. — lost. ~LOST—Ladies’ ring, set with moonstone. Return to Mary Comer or to Republican office. - LOST—Man's gypsy ring, set with three stones, two diamonds with ruby in center. Return to Republican office. MISCELLANEOUS WE REQUIRE the temporary services of a capable, responsible, business man with good financial connections. The right man can make good money. The Dewey Drainage Excavating Company. Woodward Building. Washington, D. a ==========
Attorney Dunlap made a trip to Kentland today. Attorney Eimnet Laßue made a trip to Knox today. Mrs. J. L. Hagins has been quite ill for the past week. Baled hay and straw for sale by Hamilton & Kellner; W. F. Osborne was called to Kent! aml today as a witness In the Messenger trial. Weekly checker score: Hill 1014. Stevens 8 1 4. Maloney 8, Griffin 414. Haskell 454, Bwai tzell 4. • - .Mrs. Ralph Sprague went to Chicago today to visit friends until Wednesday or Thursday. Wolcott has a new general store conducted by Gargin & Bidwell. They -occupy the John Beckley building. A large 3J(b. can of California table peaches, apricots or black raspberries for 15 cents, at John Eger's. David E. Lowe returned to his home near Foresman'today after a visit over Sunday with his brother, Thos. Lowe. Miss Sylvia Robinson, one of the teachers at the Fair Oaks school, spent Sunday at her home in Morfticello. Mrs. P. W. Clarke has been suffering from a bad cold since Christmas and has been unable to leave her home.
Fancy New York apples at $2.75 to $3,00 a barrel, or 20c, 25e and 30c a peek. Extra large, juicy Jumbo oranges, 2 for oc or $2.50 a box. JOHN EGER. Word conics from Roselawn that Mrs. Farley, the aged lady who fell on the icy walk and fractured her hip two or three weeks ago, is not getting along very well; John Southard, of Milroy township. leoently received word of the death at Cherokee. Okla., of his nephew. John Lincoln Southard, who was born in Benton county, ind., in 1864.
S. M. Laßue returned Sunday from Gfeenfleld. where himself and brother. A. S. Laßue, own a hardware store. Mel spent a week there and Amzie spent part of the time with his family h-erp. ■ 1 - mm V ** t"~ You can still have one of those bargain spreaders at SBO cash or SBS time. This is a high class seventybushel spreader and warranted to be first class in every respect. HAMILTON & KELLNER, The funeral of Larkin Potts was largely attended Sunday afternoon. There were thirty of his old comrades at the fufteral and six of them acted as pallbearers. The obituary is published in this paper. Jacob Fouts, an aged man who recently bought the James Thomson property on North Main street and moved here from Logansport, is in quite poor health and his son, George, has also been ill for several days. Miss Trnia B. Holmes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Holmes, loft Saturday for Minneapolis, Minn., to visit her sister. Mrs. Holmes wHI leave in about two weeks and will go to Jordan. Mont., near which place Mr. Holmes has taken a claim.
The Lafayette Sunday Times has been discontinued. The paper was too good and too expensive for the revenue derived. It was Lfre Sunday edition of the Journal. It is proposed by The Journal to make the Saturday issue a special feature in view of having discontinued the Sunday paper. \ CASTOR IA Fox- Infanta and Children. Hi IM Y« flan Alwj* tagtt - Bears the
