Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 57, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 October 1909 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Fireless Cooker Free
tcv users of Mother’s Cereals These cereals are famous for quality among the housewives of America. Carefully our .buyers collect the finest grain in all American markets. They are known as being finicky. Carefully our mills pick from this cream the ripest, choicest grains. Carefully our mill hands pick from these kernels the biggest, the fattest, the finest. Only the best grains ever find their way to a Mother’s package. Carefully this product is selected from the select, is cleansed, then sterilized and packed in a Mother’s sanitary package. Here is a list of Mother* s Cereals. Every one is the best of its kind. Mother’* Oat* Mother’s Yellow Cera Meal Not like other oats. Not only rolled The kind from which you can make to make their cooking easy, but the com bread, cakes, mush and crushed to make them easily digested. muffins. Mother’s Wheat Heart* Mother’. White Cora Meal (The cream of the wheel) Carefully prepared from the finest Is a pure granulated wheat food, gr^ns * Delicious for com bread thoroughly sterilized and easily di- an< * ca H eß / *“ c , dearest to the gested. heart of the southern housewife. Mother’. Com Flake. (Toa*ted) Mother’. Granulated Hominy tt,. . . _ ~ ~. Made from carefully selected white The best com, big, full, sweet com, com, by modem methods of manushaved as thin as a whisper and facture . A food far superior to the toasted mto a rich golden yellow. ordinary hominy. Old Fa»hianod s teel Cut Mother’s Coarse Pearl Hominy llauneal Made from selected white flint com Thoroughly pan roasted, all of. the of the highest quality. Coarser than natural sweetness of the oats retained Mother’s Hominy Grits and requires and makes the best gruel. a little longer in the cooking. The Mother’s Oats Fireless Cooker, given free with coupons found in Mother’s Cereals, needs no fuel of any sort. Ask your grocer how you can get one free. If he doesn’t keepJMother’s cereals, send us his name and yours and we will send you free’a useful souvenir. The Great Western Cereal Company Operating more Oatmeal Mills than any other one concern AKRON BOSTON NEW HAVEN NEW'YORK PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO PITTSBURGH ALBANY ST. LOUIS
LOCAL AND PERSONAL. Met Items of Interest to City and Country Readers. Come to the Democrat office for sale bills. J. H. Ellis made a business trip to Delphi Wednesday. Wm. Nowels was in Monticello on business Wednesday. . Fred Phillips was in Chicago on business Wednesday. B. S. Fendig was in Lowell on business Wednesday. J. J. Hunt went to Indianapolis Wednesday on business. G. E. Murray went to Indianapolis on business Wednesday. W. N. Jones is visiting relatives in Franklin for a few days. Mrs. R. A. Parkison was a Chicago business goer Wednesday.. John Eger was a business visitor in the Windy City Wednesday. Remember the city election next Tuesday. Come out and voteMrs. George .vetchum went to Chicago Wednesday for a few daysRoy Gundy of Fair Oaks was in the city with friends between trains Wednesday. Mrs. Ike Kight and Miss Afattie McKay of Fair Oaks were shoppers here Wednesday.
To-night is Hallowe’en. Unchain the bulldog. Mrs. H. L. Brown was in Chicago shopping Thursday. D. M. Worland was in Hammond on business Thursday. Butterfat 31 cents at the Rensselaer Creamery—W. H. MORRISON. Mrs. Lydia Martin of Goodland came Wednesday to visit with Moses Chupp and family. W. R. Willetts of Hanging Grove township was 1 a business visitor in the city Wednesday. Mrs. Martha Sharp of Monon returned home Wednesday after being here a few days on business. Come out to the polls and vote next Tuesday in the city election, or else hold your peace for the next four years. A. G. W. Farmer is now a bonaflde citizen of Rensselaer, having moved in from south of town to his property on Scott street. There were but 10,000 allottments, and some 81,000 people filed on these, so each stood about one chance in eight of drawing a claim.
The party who took the blanket and other property from John T. Murray’a runaway wreck north of town a few days ago is requested to return same to hriffT and oblige. ''v Earl Reynolds arrived Wednesday morning from New Orleans, where he had just completed an ehgagement.at roller skating at that place, and will spend a week here with his mother, Mrs- Hettle Nichols. 'VBro. Ragon of the Lowell TriHune has lost his office cat, named Robert, and offers 50 cents reward for its return. We have seen no Robert cats down this way, brother, but if a Thomas will fill Bob’s place we can send you up a carload for that half a plunk. A dispatch from Francesville says: A dog having rabies bit a hog belonging to Charles Garling, south of this place, and the hog went mad. Before it was shot the dog bit a valuable horse, which will be killed. Marshal Maxwell has shot all the dogs reported to have been bitten by mad dogs.
Mrs. J. H. Hansson of Monon spent Tuesday here with her husband, Dr. Hansson. Squire A. H. Dickinson of Carpenter township was a business visitor in the cty Wednesday. Mrs- Peter Zimmer of Chicago came Wednesday to visit with Mrs. Nick Zimmer of south of town. tiSph Hickman went to Delphi Wednesday to take a physical examination for an increase in his pension. f The fine new Catholic parochial school building at Fowler was dedicated last Sunday. Bishop Alerdlng of Ft. Wayne officiated. George Brown Knox, who has been visiting friends and transacting business here for a few days, returned home Wednesday. 7" Mrs. Hester Hoyes and daughter, Miss Nancy, went to Goodland Wednesday to visit her daughter, Mrs. Jadob French, and family.
Ernie Schlegelmilch found a mastodon tusk near the mouth of the Roberts race yesterday morning, and it Is now on display In the window of his father’s barber shop. It measures 8% fOet In length. He saw the tip projecting from the bank and broke it off In his efforts to unearth it. It was near where the mastodon remains were found mqny years ago in digging the race—Monticello Herald.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Goodnight of Colfax and Mr. and Mrs. John Edmund of Morocco spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Tsaac Saidla of Barkley tp. Miss Alpha Kenton of Mitchell, So. Dak., who has been visiting with her uncle and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Zard, for a few weeks, went to Elwood Wednesday to visit The Woman’s Home Missionary Society of the M. E- church will hold an all day’s market Saturday, Oct. 3h, In the postofflce lobby. The proceeds of this market will go to C. D. Royce for the work in the Black Hills mission.
Bingham and Mr. Curt were arrested in George StrUble’s saloon at Water Valley, Saturday charged with burglarising Gust Petenon’s saloon at Shelby the Thursday night before. > They were taken to Crown Point and lodged in Jail. They had their preliminary trial Tuesday. Bingham was released, but Curt was bound over to the Circuit Court. There were three of them, but one made good his escape and is still at large.—Lowell Tribune.
