Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 September 1907 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

• i“. • 0 Garment Mews That You’ll Like. We always try to secure for our customers the very best garment we can buy. / By that we mean that a garment must not only be correct in style, but must have the quality which insures satisfactory wear and a retention of those lines which give the garment beauty when it is new. Although we have canvassed the market thoroughly, we have found no garment line that contains as many points of excellence as The “ Palmer Garment” We handled this line last season and it gave great satisfaction. We are therefore pleased to announce that The “Palmer Garment” will hold first place in our offerings of Ladies’ Coats this Fall. Our selections comprise some of the best looking garments that have been seen for years, and the quality can not be disputed. All our shipments are in and ready for your inspection. Call and look at them leisurely. The G. E. Murray Co .

Miss Edna Peacock of Dyer is visiting Miss Opal Sharp.

— ■p*E Attorney A. D. Babcock of Goodland, was looking after matters in court here yesterday. Miss Spaulding, the W. U. operator, was called to Greencastle Monday by the sickness of a sister, Carl Duvall of Wolcott spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Duvall, in Rensselaer. I ■ l " , Mr. Bramon of Francesville has rented the James Mathoson property and moved into same this week. Carl Gorbet, son of A. A. Gorbet of Barkley tp., dislocated his elbow Sunday morning by falling from a horse. — 1 Emmet, the 10-year-old son of Bert Dowell, got his collar bone broken at the school yard Monday while playing football. Mrs. Wingate Downing of Little River, Kan., is visiting relatives and friends in this county and Newton, and in Logansport. Mrs. M. V. Burk and daughter Jeanese of Crawfordsville are visiting Misses Ethel and Opal Sharp and other friends here. A packed house greeted “The Missouri Girl” at Ellis opera house Wednesday night and all were pleased with the production. The merry-go-round has been moved back from Mt. Ayr and is again in operation on the Judge Thompson corner south of the Makeover House. Another excursion to Chicago Sunday, Sept. 22, $1.25 for the round trip. Special train passes Rensselaer at usual time, 8:47. This will probably be the last cheap excursion of the season. 4-. Rensselaer will be pretty well represented at Purdue this year. In addition to the return of Cleve Eger and Omar Day, Devere Yeoman, Firman Thompson, George Parkison, Rex Warner and Perry Gwin are attending, Monticello Herald: Mrs. B. B. Baker joined Mrs- S. R, Niohols and Miss Bertha Nichols of Rensselaer this week in a three weeks’ trip including Niagara Falls, New York City, Jamestown, Washington and other eastern points. Wolcott Enterprise: C. L. Duvall of Rensselaer has taken employment at the Leopold store, having begun work Monday. He is an experienced salesman and will be a valuable addition to Mr. Leopold’s sale force, which now numbers six. A. F. Shesler of near Pleasant Ridge returned Tuesday from a week’s visit at his old home near Woodland and Watseka, 111., attending the fair at Watseka while away. Crops in that locality are just about the same as here, and three weeks more are needed to mature the corn. An editor on being asked if he ever saw a bald-headed woman replied in the following vein: “No we never did. Nor did we ever see a woman waltzing around town in her shirt sleeves with a cigar between her teeth and run into every saloon she saw. We have never seen a woman go fishing with a bottle in her pocket, sit on the damp ground all day and go home drunk at night. Nor have we seen a woman yank off her ooat and say she oonld lick any man in town. God bless her, she isn’t bnilt that way.”—Ex.