Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 September 1909 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Archie Williams of Remington, went to Huntington, Ind.* Wednesday where he joined his wise r who went there several (Jays ago, and they will visit relatives there for some time. If you haven’t tried a sack of Acme Flour we want you to try it; we take it back if you don’t like it. Sold nearly a carload in four weeks and not a sack returned. ROWLES & PARKER. The Lake County Democrat, the new democratic paper at Gary, is a welcome visitdw on our exchange table. It is a neatly gotten up sheet and is ably edited. We wish it unbounded success. Why pay exorbitant prices for your tailor-made suit? Rowles & Parker, representing the Royal Tailors, will make your new fall suit from all pure wool cloths and guarantee a fit, all at reasonable prices. Francesville Tribune: S. U. Dobbins will retire from the hotel business which he has conducted in the Koster block for the past three years, for the purpose of moving to Lafayette, to educate his sons in Purdue University. Ritchey writes us to send nim The Democrat to Stilwell, No. Dak., where he is at work with a threshing crew- He says they threshed 1,800 bushels of oats at one place in four hours, or an average of 450 bushels per hour. Rev. A. H. DeLong, a former pastor of the Remington M. E. Church, was appointed pastor of the Delphi M. E. Church by the conference which closed at Crawfordsville Monday. Rev. DeLong, we believe, was also stationed at Rensselaer at one time. Acme and Gold Medal Flour are positively the best made. Acme is made from the best hard Turkey Red wheat of Kansas, and Gold Medal is made from the best spring wheat of Minnesota and makes more loaves of bread to the sack than any other flour made. Try a sack. You always get the best at Rowles & Parker's, the Big Store. Lake County Star: People who have driven across the Kankakee country since the frost came say the fields of corn are badly disfigured in many spots, while some of it promises a fair yield. This year will no doubt settle the question of seed corn, and some earlier varieties will be used, for the frosts usually touches that region first and last eacl\ spring and fall.