Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 May 1912 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Rev. F. A. Morrow returned home Monday from Springfield, I IL, where he preacher Sunday. . Mrs. Mary Porter and daughter, Mrs Fred Hammond, of Coats, Kan., are visiting here with relatives and friends. , Quite a large number of Remington people were over yesterday to attend the funeral of James F, Irwim #; Mrs. Harve Critten and son of Monon were guests of Charles Rishling and wife Saturday and Sunday, when Mr. Critten joined them to spend the day. The Rensselaer Producing Company will have their place of business open band concert and Saturday nights until 9 o'clock, to receive poultry and eggs. ml 9

The second marriage license for this month was issued yesterday to Andrew Nussbaum of Remington and Emma Troxel of Wolcott.—Saturday's Monticello Journal. Reports from Chicago state that Mrs. W. I. Hoover is getting along very nicely following her recent operation, and may be expected to return home in a- time. Mrs. John H. Brown of Lisbon, No. Dak., came Saturday night to be at the bedside of her sister, Mrs. Candace Loughridge, who still continues in a critical condition. We have just unloaded 2 more cars of fancy northern grown Wisconsin potatoes. Early Rose, Kings, Rurals, or Burbank’s for seed or fancy table stock, at $1.50 a bushel. JOHN EGER.

I want all property owners to know that the Usona roofings are entirely different and superior to anything else on the market and are guaranteed for 10 years with a guarantee that means something. HIRAM DAY. Felix Erwin was down, from Fair Oaks on business Monday. He states that they had a very heavy rain there Saturday, night and Sunday,'* and that the Moffitt ditch was filled to the brim, the first time he had ever seen it in that condition. -Asa Tyler, aged 79 years, an uncle of J. F. Bruner, suffered a stroke- of paralysis Thursday at his home in Demotte and was unconscious until his death at 8 o’clock Monday morning. ’ He is survived by a wife and two children. The funeral will be held today. ■ ,

Our roofing paifits in red, green and black are strictly pure asphalt paints. And not tar dope- with which the market is flooded at a low price. The real stuff cdsts only slightly, more and you get a paint that will preserve your roof instead of eating it up. - See me or A. E. Kirk about that rusty roof. HIRAM DAY. Horatio Ropp was in from Barkley yesterday and reports a quarter of an inch of ice on water in his hog troughs Monday morning. The big rains Saturday night and Sunday made the ground too wet for planting, for which he is all ready. Mrs. Ropp is in the chicken business with both feet qnd now has something like 300 little peepers hatched out. Some 80 of the earlier hatchings are feathered out, and we’ll know* where to go for fr,ied chicken by and by.