Jasper County Democrat, Volume 11, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 November 1908 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
rkyesterday morning was the cold- | «Bt morning yet this fall, frost of [ considerable thickness being formed on the windows of business houses. ; Uncle James Blake was down from Fair Oaks on business Wednesday. Mr, Blake is past 80 years of age and has been quite feeble for over a year now, or since he suffered a stroke of paralysis, but manages to get about a little with the aid of a cane. Abraham Miller of Barkley fpr; died Monday and was burled in the Dunker cemetery in that township Wednesday. She was about 70 years of age and has been in poor health, both mentally and physically, for some time. An aged husband and several children are left. Rensselaer is to be well supplied with bakeries this winter. A. Rosenbaum and Q. H. McKay are each to operate bakeries at their respective places of ,business on South Van Rensselaer street, making . three for the city. Ed Catt, who did the baking for A. E, Bolser the past year, will handle the dough at McKay's. Stick fa den, who formerly as the chief mogul in the saloon isiness in Rensselaer, going from here to Muncie and from thence to Noblesvllle when this place went “dry,” has lately purchased “The Vendome,” a swell saloon on Third street in Lafayette, and with his family is now located in that city. Sv When J. P. Hammond takes a sohition in the First National Bank, which will be, very shortly, President J. M. Wasson will retire from active work and will put in but little of his time there. The Captain’s face will be greatly missed from the cashier’s window, he having been the acting cashier for a number of years.
A box of canned fruit, 32 quarts, was shipped to Mrs. Lucy E. Sample of Pueblo, Colo., by some of her numerous friends in this vicinity. The Democrat has been requested to acknowledge her appreciation of the lift and to say that the., contributors 'have her heartfelt thinks. Also that the fruit was very flue and arrived in good condition. * Lowell Tribune: Mrs. Philo Clark, of Rensselaer, and Mrs. Inez Nichols, matron of the Jasper county poor farm, visited at the home of Mrs. Edgar Hayden and son, Seigle, last Thursday.... Ed Tanner, of Rensselaer, visited his brother, Fred, and wife and nephews, Frejl and’ Will Tanner, and nieces, Mrs. L. ikJFalk and Mrs, frank Worley, attfi family here Sunday. Mrs. .8. A. Hemphill’s handsome new cement block house on ; Front street-w now all enclosed, (he windowns are in and the interior read/ for the plasterers. it will be quite a long time before the house is finished, although the contractor has promised to have it ready to move into by Christmas. When completed this will be pne of the handsomest and most Conveniently arranged residences in, Rensselaer.
