Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 March 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Dr. F. A. Tur fl er had as hie par tients last week Dr. Frank Heiney, of Ashville, Ni Car., and Dr. A. J. Pennock, of Sumpter, S. Car. Sunday was another beautiful day. The weatherman forecasted snow for Saturday evening and again for Sunday evening and he missed it both times and Februany passed into ihistory one of the finest months we have ever experienced. Loren C. Sage s spending a few weeks at the home of his father, Warren Sage, south of town, and a bruise on the palm of his right hand resulted in an abscess that required lancing Sunday. Apparently it is on the road to recovery now. The deed has just been made .of the former Clint Hopkins property at the corner of Elm and Dayton streets to Henry Amsler. The property Consists Of two 70400 t lots and the old Hopkins home. The consideration was f 1,900. John Price, the Parr blacksmith, is the tenant. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morlan arrived here Sunday from a three weeks’ visit with her relatives in Ohio. They visited Toledo, Columbus, Dayton and other places. They wll start soon for their home at Alexander, N. Dak., stopping en route to visit his sister, Mrs. W. J. Anderson and family at Fargo. James Garrioitt and daughter, Miss Madaline, left this morning for Fayette, Ala., where he has purchased property and where they will make tlheir future home, although pending a little uncertainty he shipped his household goods to the home of hs daughter, Mrs. Robert Sheets, at Sterling, 111. J. W. Phelps, assessor of Carpenter township, accompanied by his deputies, John Ott and Jasper Guy, the fprmer to 'assess land values and Mr. Guy to assess town property, were here to attend the assessors’ meeting today. J. J. Porter and S. T. Hackley also accompanied them here.

For this week only, a 3 lb. can of solid packed spinach, or a 3 lb. can of peeled peaches for table or pies for 10c, or 3 cans of solid packed sweet potatoes for 25 cents. JOHN EGER. Col. C. C. Mlatson, formerly of Greendastle but now of Chicago, underwent a surgical operation last week for the removal of one arm. The cause was not stated in the newspaper dispatches. Mr. Matson was formerly a state tax commissioner and in that capacity has visited Rensselaer. John Keefe, of Indianapolis, who owns the former Zard farm near McOoysburg, is here today, looking after his farming interests. He saw .a quotation that seed oats were selling at 65 cents a bushel, but found that in Rensselaer they will sell only 2 or 3 cents above the buying market, probably at 55 cents. Trustee Stevens, of Gillam township, was in to attend the monthly meeting of the board of education today and reports that his father, 'William S. Stevens, who is spending the winter at Tampa, Fla., is enjoying the stay there very much. He will be 87 years Of age in April, but is very well for one of his advanced years. 1 Tom Cain is a poultryman who believes in keeping up his breed of poultry and Friday he received from a pure bred White Holland turkey dealer a fine tom to put with his turkey hens. Mr. Cain raises White Holland turkeys and White Wyrndotte chickens and then to have the barnyard entirely white he raises some white guineas, which he says are much better eating than the speckled kind. James Halligan says that he has driven tolerably well over Jasper county and considerably into adjacent counties during the past few days and that he never saw such fine wheat nor so much of it. He says he don’t believe there is a bad acre of wheat in the county. If the conditions for the next few months are as favorable as they have been through the winter we will have an immense wheat crop, probably the greatest in the county’s history.

William Rayher .was up from Barest, Ind., Saturday and Sunday to visit his daughter, Mrs. Lester Speaks, and his old friend and former employer, John Eger. “Bill,” as he was always called, has been getting along splendidly on his farm in Clinton county and last fall erected a new house on the place. He sold S4OO worth of hogs this winter. His farm is within a mile and a quarter of Forest, through which an ‘interurban railroad passes and he says that the farmers should all push hard .for interurban® and that he know® one would be a great thing ior Rensselaer. They offer a splendid opportunity for marketing produce and for getting to a trading point. Will went from here to Monticello to spend a day with his' daughter, Mrs. Will Roth, befota returning home. CASTOR IA For InlmiU and Children. Tte KM YMBmAtapßapt Bears the