Jasper County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 81, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 January 1911 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
I ■ ' t ' . • Reiss’s Clean Sweep Sale Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Underwear, Etc. are Sold at Astonishingly Low Prices ON this date one of the greatest money saving and most successful sales ever attempted in this part of the country will have passed by. WE HAVE SOLD IMMENSE AMOUNTS OF MERCHANDISE, BUT OUR SHELVES ARE NOT SWEPT CLEAN YET. We can please you as well as ever; ask your neighbors who have bought if the values we are offering are not simply astonishing. Do not miss them. We are anxious to sell. You will be more anxious to buy—when you see them.
John Eger was a Chicago goer yesterday. Try the new French peas at the Home Grocery. —- John Webber was in Lafayette on business Monday. Zacher of Newton tp., a son. Wm. Daniels continues in failing health. His son Guy, who has a position at Rock Island, 111., spent a few with him last week. A Washington dispatch is authority for the statetnent that Jesse Wilson, soon to retire as assistant seccretary of the interior, will return to Rensselaer and resume the practice of law. Miss Alice Ryan of near Medaryville, who had been visiting her uncle, Warren Robinson and family, and her sister, Miss Florehte, the past iveek or ten days, returned home Monday. \The funeral of Peter May was held from the residence in the east part of town at 2 o’clock Sunday afternoon, conducted by Rev. G. H. Clarke, and interment made in Weston cemetery. Fifty-two weeks of contract with all the news of home, town, county, state, country and all the world, for $2.00 which pays for The Weekly Inter Ocean and Farmer and this paper one year. XMr. and Mrs. Granville Moody akd Chas Moody and daughter Bessie were called to Urbana, Ohio, Monday to attend the funeral of the sister of the Moody boys, Mrs. Clifford Fyffe, who died near Boston Thursday. E. Simpson, district deputy, L. H. Hamilton, W. F. Osborne, Wm. Coen, Korah Daniels, Ephriam Hickman and Wm Simons were over at Remington Friday night and installed the new officers in the I. O. O. F. Camp at that place. They were handsomely entertained by their Remington lodge brothers.
Maxwell —nothing new—nothing radical —nothing to be tried out at your expense—not something new featured this year, only to fail, and possibly something worse pushed off on you next year, in a frantic “endeavor to • sell their cars, and to please a restless buying public—restless to own a car that allows rest and pleasure and business to go hand in hand —-such as the MAXWELL. Monticello Journal: Mat Rogers of Monon was seriously injured in a crossing accident at Monon Saturday. He was driving a coal wago i across the Monon track when the rear of the wagon was struck by a train. Mr. Rogers was thrown out on the frozen ground, landing on his head and shoulders, injuring him seriously. Mr. Rogers is a cousin of. Mrs. Sallie Benjamin of East Monticello. The Kokomo Tribune speaks approvingly of the public accounting law. It notes that the average cost of making an examination is SBS and it adds: “This work can be done right only by capable men and they are worthy of hire. The substantial 1 value of the service is not sb much in uncovering official crookedness as it is in proving public faithfulness."* There is no better service that can be rendered the people at this time than that which ascertains and reveals to them that their public offices are capably and honestly filled.
