Jasper County Democrat, Volume 17, Number 53, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 October 1914 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Next Monday is Columbus Day, and America will be 422 years old. Good potatoes in any quantity, 70c per bushel. —RHOADS’ GROCERY. Leave your order for nice large sand grown potatoes, 65c per bushel. —ROWLES & PARKER. Phone 95. J. T. Gray was over from Kankakee, 111., Wednesday, and went from here to visit relatives over about Goodland. Mr. and Mrs. John Mecklenburg went to Lafayette Tuesday to visit their son, Charles Mecklenburg, and attended the Jahr Markt. On account of the increase of our business we will have extra sales people every Saturday for your convenience.— ROWLES & PARKER. Mr. and Mrs. Harry McElfresh and two children of Chicago, visited here over Sunday with Mrs. McElfresh’s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Lee. , The Methodist ladies fed about 170 at their fried chicken supper at the M. E. church Wednesday night, in addition to the ladies engaged in the serving. Mrs. Albert Beilfus, who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Everett Brown, of Barkley tp., for a couple of weeks, returned to her home in Chicago Tuesday. Mrs. Anna Tuteur and daughter, Maurine, went to Indianapolis Wednesday, the former as representative to the grand lodge of Pythian Sisters from the Rensselaer Temple. A new plant and a special man to vulcanize tubes, repair casings and cut inner liners. Lowest prices. All work guaranteed. Bring us your work, we do it while you wait.— MAIN GARAGE. ts Mrs. Jefferson Smith and Charles Grant left Tuesday for Burke, S. Dak., to visit the family of Everal Smith. Mrs. Smith expects to remain for several weeks, but Mr. Grant will return in a week or ten days. John Hordeman and daughter, Pauline, went to Frankfort Wednesday to attend a big reception given there for his brother, Father William Hordeman, who has just returned from Germany, where his visit was prolonged considerably by the war. Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Brumbach of Douglas county, Ore., who have been visiting relatives in Illinois and also over about Goodland, came Wednesday evening for a short visit with his brother-in-law, J. h. Perkins. They left yesterday on their way home, but will stop off at different places enroute. Miss Alice Worland, who has been in Chicago for the past month where she underwent an operation for a knotting up and growth to the lining of the stomach of the intestines, which ailment has troubled her all her life, returned home Mom day evening. She is feeling greatly improved and it is thought will be restored to complete health by the operation.
