Jasper County Democrat, Volume 14, Number 64, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 November 1911 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Miss Cintia Macklenburg spent Monday in Chicago. Sale bills printed while you wait at The Democrat office Mrs, AJda Parkison and Mrs. Rebecca Porter spent Saturday in Chicago. The Uemocrat office is well equipped to do the better grades of j®b printing. Boyd Porter returned Monday from Chicago Avhere he had been on business. Brother Sylvester of the Indian School was a business visitor in Chicago yesterday. Dr. Fiddler of Milwaukee came Saturday for a short visit with his mother, Mrs. Newton Hendricks, who is quite ill. > Friday evening, her thirteenth birthday, Miss Mamie Beaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Beaver, entertained about forty of her young friends in honor of the occasion. Charles Albertson and wife and two youngest children of Raliegh, No. Dak., who have been visiting relatives in various places in the east the past few weeks, came here Saturday to visit his brother John and wife. Mrs. Clyde Carvalho of Elizabeth, N. J., who had been vistiing here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Amsler, the past several days, went to Chicago Friday where it w r as expected she would- undergo an operation yesterday.
Dr. and Mrs. Jesse Francis of Chesterton, 111., spent a few days here the first of the week as the guest of his sister, Mrs. F. A. Turfler. Before returning home they will visit awhile with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Robinson at Medaryville. Ready for delivery off our floor, two of those staunch, reliable runabouts that have 5 made the Maxwells “the great economy cars.” A car which can run on Jasper county roads at a total cost of 1 3-10 cents per mile. A nice carrying space on these ''trs, too. Step in and let us show yor how to save money.— Maxwell. Robert Fendig, who has been employed in the shoe depart merit of Mandel Bros, store at Chicago the past year, returned to Chicago yesterday after a short visit here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Fendig. He will now have charge of the shoe department in Mandel Bros, big wholesale house in Boston. The show at the opera house Monday evening, entitled “Cal Stewart in Politics,” was all that the theatre-going public could ask for. The house was kept in an uproar of laughter almost all the time, and although there was not a very large crowd, nevertheless it was one of the be*t shows of its kind that has been in Rensselaer for year?. The company left yesterday for Monticello. Clyde Davisson, notice of whose public sale appears in another column, will give up farming and devote his entire attention to the dredging business. He ow’ns a dredge himself and is now- engaged on the Randle ditch in Hanging Grove tp. He will finish up his contract there in about three weeks and then move' to the Akers d'itch near Wheatfield," where he has another contract.
ADVERTISED LETTERS. The following letters rema;n uncalled for in the Rensselaer postoffice for the week ending Nov. 13, 1911: Mrs. A. Kauffman, Velma Spriggs, T. S., Leake & Go., Charles Wilson, Fred Krueger, Sam Stevenson. The above letters will be seni to the dead letter office Nov. 27. 1911, In calling for the above, please say “Advertised,” giving date of list.— G. E. Murray, P. M. Subscribe for The Democrat.
