Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 184, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 August 1915 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Big Land Opening ON TUESDAY, AUG. 3, ONLY At $9.50 Per Acre AUGUST 3D ONLY. Great opening of Swigart’s Greenwood Township Tract of 4,000 acres in Wexford Co., Mich. No land reserved or for sale until excursion arrives on ground. Not less than 40 or over 160 acres to one person; SSO down and $8 monthly on each forty or annual payments. No land at this price after cheap rate excursion, which leaves Chicago Tuesday, Aug. 3d, 11:30 a. m. Entire expense from Chicago and return. Including board, railroad fare, Pullman sleeper, etc., sl4. Write Immediately for map-cir-cular giving all particulars. These are choice farm lands, adapted for general crops, stock, dairying, poultry, truck, fruit; near towns, railroads, markets and adjoining good farms; quick transportation to Chicago, Milwaukee, Grand Rapids. Detroit. Opportunity of life-time for wage earner, farm renter or farm hand to get a farm home. George W. Swigart, owner, K-1248 First National Bank Bldg.. Chicago, Illinois.
University of Notre Dame NOIRE DAME, INDIANA Thorough Education. Moral Training. Twentyone courses leading to degrees In Classics, Modern Letters,Journalism.Political Kconomy, Commerce, Chemistry, Biology, Pharmacy, Engineering, Architecture, L*w. Preparatory School, various courses. For Catalogues address BOX H, NOTRE DAME, INDIANA One small hint may be worth more than a ton of advice. Drink Denison’s Coffee, For your health’s sake. r Heard. “Where did you buy the candy?” “At the jitney and dime emporium.’* —Boston Evening Transcript. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the /’’iff Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castorui Not a Black Hand. A stenographer was out of a job. He .was discussing the best ways and means of rehabilitating his ebbing bank roll with a friend who also was listed among the unemployed. Said the friend: “If I were you I’d write a letter for money.” “I have,” replied the stenog. “For how much?” “Oh, 13,000." “Well —?” asked the friend in astonishment “Well,” repeated the shorthand man sadly, “the letter asking for the 13.000 is all ready to mail, but I’ll be darned if I can think of anybody to mail it to." —Louisville Times. Mean Disposition. "Before engaging rooms in your house,” said the bachelor, “I want to know if there are any families with crying babies staying here.” “I’m afraid there is,” replied the landlady; “but we—” “Well, I was just going to say," continued the other, "that if there are. I want you to put me in the room next to theirs. I want to wake up in the night and hear their trouble, so that I can congratulate myself again that I’m not married.” No Use. “They’re using an awful lot of automobiles in the European war,” remarked the auto enthusiast. “I know,” said the disgruntled pedestrian. “But what good does it do? The manufacturers keep turning the blamed things out faster than those fellows over there can bust ’em up."
