Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 98, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 March 1910 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Miss Martha Long returned Monday from a few days visit with' the family of G. K. Hollingsworth in Chicago. At the hour of going to press Capt. J. A. Burnham was still alive, but was gradually growing weaker and his death was a question of perhaps only a few hours. “The Fourth Estate” has passed its one-hundredth continuous production in Chiqfago. This great play novelized will be published in The Democrat, beginning with the issue of Saturday, March 26. Don’t fail to read it. Guss Phillips, who is playing with his company in Indianapolis this week, spent Sunday here with his father, Uncle Simon Phillips, and his sister and brother, Mrs. C. A. Roberts and Fred Phillips. Mrs. Frank Vanatta and two daughters of Fowler, a sister was also here Sunday to visit her father. Owing to his inability to secure convenient pasture for his dairy, M. J. Thornton, who has conducted a milk route here for the past year or two, will sell off his cows and retire from the business, and what the people of Rensselaer who have depended op the “milkman” will do for fneir supply of the lacteal fluid is a conundrum.

Advertised letters: Cad Caldwell, T. W. Harris, J. Schader, W. B. Yeoman, Clyde Antrim, Claud Bromenbey, Joe Grooms, Geo. Holeman, Frank Grams, Everett Johnson, D. M. Wrinkle, Jesse Hickman, Mrs, Barbara,' Dewitt, Clara Gasaway, Eliza Makus, Emma Nelson, Ann Price, Clara Timmon, Laura Drevos, Mrs. A. Lony, Mrs. A. M. Munden. To the Public. As I have bought the Kresler Buss line, I wish to notify the public that all trains will be met by us at the same price as heretofore. Calls made at all hours of the day and night. Hoping to be of service to the public in general, I remain, Harrison Wasson.