Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 July 1912 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
2 Packages Oriole Corn Flakes - - -15 c 1 Pound 60-cent Japan or Gunpowder Tea 3 Packages Reindeer Seeded Raisins -23 c A really good 40-cent Broom, only -29 c A. &K. "Best Flour, guaranteed - $1.39 4 Pounds Good Rice 2 ic
C. E. Prior was in Chicago on business Wednesday and Thursday. Fred Berger, John Wilson. George Besse and a few other Remingtonians were over Thursday on business. Mrs. H. J. Bartoo of Remington came over Tuesday for a visit with her mother, Mrs. E. Peacock. She will return home tomorrow. Mrs. Comer, of Winchester, who has been visiting here with the Comer Sisters at the Comer house, left for her home Thursday. Mrs. S. C. Irwin and daughter Genevieve left Wednesday for a month’s visit with relatives and friends in Minneapolis, Minn. E. J. Brownell agent for the Rambler motor cars with headquarters at Crown Point, drove here Wednesday evening on business. Rev. A. G. Work came up from Laiayette Tuesday to join his wife, who is visiting her father, C. P. Moody, near Pleasant Grove. Joe Hoover left Thursday on a business visit to Logansport. Winamac. and Pulaski, and will return here about the first of the week.
Advertised letters: Mr. Harmount, Mary Warn. Kate Houston, Mary J. Irwin. George Herr. D. D. Look. Tom McAliicter. E. A. Malsbary. George Morgan and Mrs. Mary Morgan came down from Chicago Thursday, and Mrs. Morgan will remain for a visit here with George and wife. | • Ellis Lowell Thomas and Blanche •Anetta Coffel, a young couple residing in the east part of the city, were united in marriage at the home of the officiating clergyman. Rev. D. T. Halstead, on the evening of July 16. Will Woodworth, of Newell, So. Dak., who came through to Chicago with a car load of cattle from that place, came down Monday for a visit here with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. Woodworth, and other relatives.
According to Postmaster General Hitchcock, chairman of the republican committee in 1908, the Taft campaign fund that year was sl,655,518.27. This evidence was brought opt by the U. S. senate investigation committee Wednesday. Harold Clark, living on the Mrs. Julia Peet farm near Monticello, committed suicide Tuesday evening by taking strychnine. Domestic troubles. His wife has confessed having been too familiar with a former farm hand. Chas. Burden, of Monticello. William Cooper of near Virgie hag traded his 14LSi_ acre._ arm there for the Robert Michals tenant property on South Van Rensselaer street and will move to town. The farm was figured in at $6,000 and the town property at $3,000 in the trade. Mr. Michals also owns a farm which is occupied by his two sons, just across the road from the Cooper farm. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children The Kind Yoa Hau Always Bought Bears the ’* Signature of
