Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 97, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 March 1910 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Frank Kresler spent Wednesday in Chicago. Miss Francis Irwin was in Chicago yesterday. Mrs. Cha9. Hemphill spent yesterday in Chicago. T Mar<!h 16, to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Swartzell, a son. Thomas Dougherty is critically ill at his home in the northwest part of town. Mrs. M. C. Mills of Newpoint is here visiting with her son, Xack Stanley and family. If you want a windmill, tank, or pump, call Gwin & Watson. Phone 204, residence 418. Ladies wishing a pretty Coronet braid or hair switch to match your hair, call on Mary Meyer. Thirty-four people were taken into the M. E. church last Sunday morning by letter and probation. 1 lelp boom Rensselaer. Leave an order at The Democrat office lor a box of those souvenir envelopes. M iss Carrie McKay of Fair Oaks took the train here Wednesday for Kirklin where she will visit relatives. Get the habit like a rabbit, get together and buy your spring and Easter suits and top coats of me. — C. Earl Duvall. Mr. and Mrs. Tobias Schmitter of Delphi returned home Wednesday after a few days visit here with their son Nick and wife. Mrs. Bussell, the aged widow of William Bussell, is reported very low at her home on the Pleasant Ridge road, and is not likely to get up again.

I defy competition on suits and top coats, as I know I can give you better prices and better prices and better quality than you can get elsewhere.—C. Earl Duvall. "AJBruce White and L. A. Harnron returned Wednesday from their trip to Jamestown, No. Dak. They were accompanied by Venus Cristler, an agent for North Dakota lands. You are cordially invited to come in and.see the new ginghams (Shetucket), percales, Unweaves, bastistes, lawns, calicoes, silk Panamas, etc. —Chicago Bargain Store. Ns lMarch is more than half'gone, no really typhical. March weather has come yet. Roads are dry and in fine condition and some oats sowing has been done on well tiled land. It is likely that next week oats sowing will be general if the fine weather continues. E. B. Smith, O.' R. Lewis and Mrs. Cleve Harkrider of Lee went to Chenoa, 111., Thursday to attend the funeral of the former’s brother-in-law, Henry Stiles, who died Wednesday in a Pontiac hospital of cancer of the stomach and consumption of the bowels. * Dignity, simplicity and refinement mark the dominant characteristics of this season’s styles. Exaggeration has given way to moderation. More dependence is placed on the technique of the tailor for expression and effect and less on oddity of design. For the kind of clothes, C. Earl Duvall.