Jasper County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 86, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 February 1911 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Albert Hammond, who suffered a stroke of paralysis recently, is still in a very critical condition. Miss Elizabeth and Wood Spitler went to Bloomington yesterday for a couple of days visit. vJMost of Sunday’s snow is still cm the ground, and yesterday morning the mercury stood at 8 above zero. Mrs. H. A. Sparling returned to Demotte Wednesday after a shprt visit with relatives and friends here. The senior class party to the juniors will be held next Tuesday at the home of Mrs. A. F. Lohg on River street.

Mrs. F. B. Lyons and little son returned to Delphi yesterday after a short visit here with her mother, Mrs. Healey. Kanne came Tuesday f|om Champaign, 111., for a week/s visit with his father, Michael Kanne, of west of town. The best way to find out the big values you can buy in men’s pants is to come in and examine them for yourselves.— Rowles & Parker’s. E. E. Harshberger and N. P. Miller went to Kokomo yesterday for a visit with relatives and friends, expecting to be gone about a week. J. W. Brown has secured a .position in a tinshop at Huntington and moved his family there yesterday, having sold his property here to George Hurley. Just unloaded this week another car of that famous White Star flour only $1.40 a sack and equal to any flour sold anywhere at any price.— Rowles & Parker.

Dr. Evelyn Bush, an old classmate of Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Turfler, visited them for a couple of days the first of the week. She is now at the head of the Bush Sanitarium at Louisville. Will Zard will send his connection with the Rowles & Parker grocery department tonight and begin preparations to migrate to the country and become ,a tiller of the soil. He will occupy the J. J. Eiglesbach farm in Barkley tP-

Jack Montgomery returned Tuesday afternoon from Hot Springs, Ark., where he had been taking treatment, looking as fresh and fine as a fiddle, and says he is seventeen pounds heavier than when he left here. Mrs. Montgomery, w’ho has been visiting in Illinois came home with him.

Mrs. Mattie Smith returned from Hebron a few' days ago, where she has been visiting" her son Roy and family for several weeks, and Wednesday she brought her mother,' Mrs. Searcy, home from Lafayette where she had been staying with another daughter during Mrs. Smith’s absence. Mrs. ,Searcy is quite severely ill but was able to be brought homp