Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 55, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 October 1909 — Page 8
Don ''t Do This— You don’t want to spend all of your time in a hot, stuffy kitchen. The Mother’s Oats Free Fireless Cooker brings you freedom from the tyranny of the stove./ As soon as your food reaches the boiling point you take it off the fire and put it in the Fireless Cooker. You can forget all about dinner until your appetite reminds you that you want it. We give the Mother’s Oats Fireless Cooker away free to users of Mother’s Cereals—the best made of all foods. They are: Mother’* Oat* Mother’* Coarae Pearl Hominy Mother’* Corn Meal (white or yellow) Mother’* Old Fashioned Steel Cut Mother’s Wheat Heart* (the cream of Oatmeal the wheat) Mother’* Old Fashioned Graham Mother’s Hominy Grit* Flour Mother’s Corn Flake* (toasted) Ask your grocer. If he doesn’t keep Mothers Cereals write us giving his name and yours and we will send you free a useful souvenir. The Great western cereal Company Operating more Oatmbal Mills than any other onb concern AKRON BOSTON NEW HAVEN NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO PITTSBURGH ALBANY ST. LOUIS
Country Correspondence
BY OUR REGULAR CORPS OF NEWS-GATHERERB.
PARR. Charley Aery spent Sunday with Ross Rowen. George Myers spent Friday night with Sam Skllon. Miss Marie Grant spent Sunday with Miss Lula Rowen. Miss Grace Price spent Tuesday with Mrs. Logan Wood. Miss Clara Hurle spent Sunday with Miss Hattie Shelter. Mrs. John Lakin spent Tuesday with Mrs. Charley Rowen. Charley Rowen and family were Rensselaer goers Saturday. Winifred Hurley spent Sunday with his uncle, John Hurley. Jeff Shelter of Morocco spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Otis Shelter. John Beasy of Chicago Heights spent Friday night with R. M. Hurley. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Shelter spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. B. Sheffer. Mr. and Mrs. John Marion spent Sunday with her father, George Warren. Charley Warren and family spent Sunday evening with R. M. Hurley and family. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Caldwell spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Newton Price. Quite a few young people attended the party Saturday night at Mr. King's north of here. The Rebeccas are going to serve a supper in the Hall Saturday night, Oct. 23. Everybody come. Miss Agnes Hurley and Eddie Warren left last Friday morning on the milk train for St. Joe, Mich., where they were married. There were 9 few people from here attended the funeral of James Snider- Interment was made in the Dunkard cemetery. * Miss Gustie and Chester Hurley spent last week with their cousins, Misses Deva, Ida and Clara and Winifred Hurley. They were here from Battle Ground.
Served as coffee, the new coffee substitute known to grocers everywhere as Dr. Shoop’s Health Coffee, will trick even a coffee expert. Not a grain of real coffee in It either. Pure healthful toasted grains, malt, nuts, etc. have been so cleverly blended as to give a wonderfully satisfying coffee taste and flavor. And it is “made in a minute," too! No tedious 20 to 30 minutes boiling Test it and see. Dr. Shoop created Health Coffee that the people might have a genuine coffee substitute, and one that would be thoroughly satisfying in every respect. Sold by John Eger.
MT. AYR. (From The Pilot.) J. B. Ashby and wife left Monday for a week's visit at Monon and Montlcello. Mra. Chas- Elijah returned Monday from a visit with her parents at Big Rapids, Mich. Earl Foulks and wife of Lee, Ind., visited here over Sunday with Rev. and Mra. 'D. E. Noland. J. H. Dunlap was on the sick list the latter part of last week and the Drat of this, but la now some better. Richard Witham of Montioello
visited here Sunday evening and night with his father, J. M. Witham, and sister Lillian. Mrs. Jane Jenkinson returned Saturday from a ten days visit with friends and relatives at Fowler, Remington, Monon and Lee, Ind. Chas. Bengston and wife, F. M. Makeever and daughter Jane, returned last week from a two weeks visit with relatives at Caledenia, Ohio. Misses Lillian Witham and Ada Miller visited Friday evening and Saturday at Rensselaer with Mr. and Mrs- Frank Critser, taking in the horse show. Monday was Lee Mauck’s 27th birthday anniversary and in honor thereof about forty friends and relatives congregated at his home northeast of here on the day before to pay their respects. A fine dinner was served and the day was very pleasantly spent. Lee was the recipient of several handsome and useful gifts from the guests in token of their esteem.
BOTH BOYS SAVED Louis Boon, a leading merchant of Norway, Mich., writes: “Three bottles of Foley’s Honey and Tar absolutely cured my boy of a severe cough, and a neighbor’s boy, who was so ill with a cold that the doctors gave him up, was cured by taking Foley’s Honey and Tar,” Nothing else is as safe and certain in results. A. F. Long.
FAIR OAKS.
A 1 Blake is plastering A 1 Moore’s house this week. We got quite a shower again Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Sweeny and family of Hebron visited Mrs. Ed Kesler Sunday. Mrs. Cottingham visited at Dr. Fyfs’s at Wheatfleld this week. Barney Dewitt moved to the Jake Junglas place west of Parr Sunday. Warren and Bark Crawford are loading cord wood for Lawlers nowadays. Lawler’s shipped three carloads of fat cattle from here to Chicago Sunday eve. Reason M. Dunn and family of near Remington visited relatives here Sunday. About all that went to North Dakota to work in the harvest, have returned home. Lou Moffitt and Fred McCay and Bert Umfries went down to Kentland the first of the week to husk corn. Mrs. Leavel of Chicago is vlsltng her sister, Mrs. Eggleston, south of town this week. Ben Zellers had a new floor put in his barber shop and pool room the first of the week. Uncle Joe Gaines and daughter, Mrs. A 1 Helsel, were callers here the latter part of the week. A. D. Washburn of Kentland and R. D Thompson of Rensselaer, were callers in our town Saturday. Chas. Manderville, who has been working at Kentland for a couple of years, came and Visited his mother Sunday. Floyd Baxter of the Otis ranch threshed Pete Wood’s rye Monday and Charles Halleck’s buckwheat Tuesday.
There to to be a spiderweb social to-night (Thursday) at Tom Mallatt’s hall, for the benefit of ’'the ‘M. E. Sunday school and church. Bert Warren and wife, have been holding a series of meetings at Gifford, closed Sunday. They went from here to Hoopeston, 111., Tuesday. Odo Geesa, son of Ben Geesa, a few miles south of town, was taken to a hospital in Chicago Saturday to be operated on, the result of an accidental gun shot he received In one of his feet several years ago. It had broke and caused him Intense pain.
Stomach troubles would more quickly disappear if the idea of treating the cause, rather than the effect, would come Into practice. A tiny, inside, hidden nerve, says Dr. Shoop, governs and gives strength to the stomach. A branch also goes to the Heart, arid one to the Kidneys. When these "Inside nerves” fail, then the organs must falter. Dr. Shoop’s Restorative Is directed specifically to these failing nerves. Within 48 hours after starting the Restorative treatment patients say they realize k gain. Sold by all dealers.
FOUR CORNERS. Geo. Swisher attendfe : -• O. r>. F. lodge at Shelby Saturday night. Miss Ida Pinter of Wheatfleld is visiting in Valparaiso for a few days. Our supervisor, Marion S. Davis, is finishing his road work this week. Ed Wesnar visited with his brother William, west of Medaryville, Sunday. t Sam Nichols of near Medaryville visited Sunday with Dave Wesner and family. Janies McColly of Virgie is doing some carpenter work for Geo. Stemble of Wheatfleld. Orville Fisher visited with his brother Homer, near Lowell Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. F. W. Fisher attended a family reunion of her mother’s people at Francesville Sunday. )John Allen of Kankakee# spent Sunday with his mother and sister, Mrs. E. W. Allen and Mrs. S- Fendig of Wheatfleld. John Pinter has greatly improved the appearance of his store by remodeling same with a new front. James McColly did the work. Mrs. Morton, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. J. A. Hixson for the past month, returned to her home in St. Louis Thursday. John T. Biggs is now putting on metropolitan airs—new cement walks and foundation under house and has treated the outside with a coat of paint. H. W. Marble, who has been very low with typhoid fever, is now Improving and if no complications set in will be seen at the bank in a week or two. The new bridge east of town, across the Smith ditch, is near completion and when completed will be one of the best bridges in Jasper county. •
EXTRA LOW PRICES ON BEDS AND SPRINGS
One Week Only The next week will go down in the history of our store as the recordmaker in low prices on Beds and Springs. Never before have our bed stocks been so ample, so varied, so attractive in every way. And certainly never before in this store have prices touched so low a mark. Here’s the reason—we are Giving Away One Bed FREE We want to interest the people of this community in our line of Sani--taire beds. So we are combining two extraordinary features—the lowest prices and a Free Drawing of one handsome Napoleon Style Sanitaire Bed worth $25.00, and an ornament to any home. THE ONLY GUARANTEE BEDS Remember that Sanitaire Beds are are the only beds sold with ten-year guarantee of the maker attached. Yet they cost no more than bedfc not so backed up. In fact v they are the best values we can secure because made in immense quantities by time and labor-saving methods.
rue mm Dim W. J. WRIGHT MS
F. G. Barnard of Loekte! brought some cattle buyers here Tuesday, expecting, to dispose of. his cattle, but up to this time no deal has been closed. Henry Coffin is building a store building at Dunn’s Bridge. Several new club houses are being built on this side of the bridge, and if the temperance people o- rorter would oust the- “place” on their side of the river, the moral-atmosphere in this locality would be greatly benefited thereby.
LEE. Frank Overton was re-shingling his house this week. Mrs. Ireland Is sick. Dr. Clayton is waiting on her. Hoy Rlshling and family visited Sunday at S. M. Jacks. Miss Mary Wood visited a few days here the past week. Will Overton and wife spent Tuesday at Frank Overton’s. O. A. Jacks and family visited his sister at Rensselaer Sunday. The Ladies Aid did sewing for Mrs. Gilmore Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Zable’s mother and sister and children of Illinois came Monday to make them a visit. Quite a large number from here attended the horse show last week, especially on Saturday. The teachers and scholars had quite an Interesting program at school Friday afternoon. Alvin Clark’s moved Monday in the Mrs. Ola Randle property where Mrs- Dodd formerly lived. Arm Lewis and wife moved Tuesday in the Arthur Parcels property, just vacated by Alvin Clark. J. H. Culp and family and Mrs. Holeman and Orville went from Sunday school to John Mellender’s for dinner. Mr. Kingery who lived on the Josserand place loaded his car of goods Wednesday and moved to Center, Ind. Mr. Ostrander, a blind man and wife, who is also blind, and two children, who are not blind, of Indianapolis have moved in the Maxwell property and he is helping the blind man. Mr. Saxton makes brooms upstairs over the hardware store.
BURNSTOWN.
Mrs. S. Holmes was a Rensselaer goer Thursday. Michael Burns called on Samuel Holmes Wednesday. Wm. Folger was in Rensselaer Wednesday on business. C. A. Reed bought some calves of S. H. Holmes Thursday. Emmet Pullins is building a wood and smoke house combined. Mr. and Mrs. S. Holmes called on Charles Greenlee Monday. Samuel Holmes had the misfortune to lose a valuable colt Friday. Miss Lucy Morgenegg spent Saturday night and Sunday with home folks. , "Wonder if Frank got his bucket
*rHIS $25.00 Napoleon Style Sanitaire Guaranteed Bed we are giving away is now on display in our window. See it. Then come in and look over the entire line while the prices are at rock bottom. r pHl6 BED will be given away on Saturday, October 30. The Bed will be given to the person whose name is drawn. You do not have to buy anything in order to try for this bed. There are no strings to the drawing. Jf you havn’t received a coupon, call and get one.
still? If thou did cozbe v th!s vfay, Frank. '• - • >,. -mmmm Mrs. Charley Pullins vtolted with Mr. and Mrs. Ad Shook and family Sunday. J. J. Eglesbach was in this neighborhood Tuesday buying some butcher stock. J 9 Ross, Ralph and Floyd Shook visited with Spencer and Esta Holmes Sunday. Philip Durant and Alex Hurley are doing some tile ditching for Werner- Miller this week. G. H. McClain of Rensselaer, the Continental Insuranee agent, was out in this locality Tuesday. John Hopkins returned to his home at Flora, after spending a few days with his father, 3. H. Hopkins. Winifred Pullins is making some cement gate 'posts on their farm that will stand the storms of many winters. John Daugherty’s substitute, John Knapp, is carrying the mail for him at present as Mr. Daugherty is on the sick listMr. and Mrs. W. H. Morrison and little daughter and Mr. and Mrs. John Scott visited with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Holmes and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Elkins and daughter, Charles Greenlee, Jim Stanley, Walter Smith, Elmer Brown and Miss Morgenegg called on S. H. Holmes and family Sunday afternoon.
ALPHONSE STAEGER,
Graduate of the Royal Conservatory of Music in Vienna, will accept pupils' for Piano, Violin, Organ, Vocal Music (Italion method) and Theory. Application can be made from 5 to 7 p. m., at residence 116 River street, former F. B. Meyer residence.
The Democrat for sale bills., NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned have given bond and qualfied as executors of the estate of L. H. Myers, late of Jasper County, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. SQUIRE W. MYERS. GEORGE M. MYERS. Oct. 20, 1909.
ft’s a Wise Economy— Jk " whenbuying wire fence to get the very best Iff peerless ks fence J? b ? l!t with just one idea in view—quality—hard galvanized steel wire—one piece cross bats the famous Peerless tie. a Peerless Wire Fence Co., Ltd. n 11
i Ellis Theater ONE NIGHT ONLY SATURDAY,' OCTOBER 23 . " ■ 111l 11 ' - r ~ : ' 1 “ v •' The Great Rural Comedy Mandy Green BAND AND ORCHESTRA Seats on Sale at Jessen’s.
The Democrat and the Indianapolis Daily News, each a full year for only |3.60.
Come Early Choicest Offerings Qo First You know the good things never last long. If you need a bed or are thinking about getting one, buy it now. You will never have a more favorable chance—never again will you see bargains like these we are offering . for the next week only. If you haven’t already filled out a coupon entitling you to a chance on the Free Bed, drop in today and let us tell you about it. We will also take pleasure in showing you through our line of beds—whether you purchase or not. SANITAIRE BEOS ARE GUARANTEED You have probably heard of Sanitaire Beds—they are widely advertised in the magazines and the makers guarantee them good for at least io years constant service. They are welded together to form practically one piece, enameled hard as flint so they will not chip off. They come in finishes to harmonize with any room furnishing and, best of all, are vermin-proof, dust-proof, germ-proof. There is only one way to appreciate the values we are giving this week in Sanitaire Beds, and that one way is —SEE THEM.
