Jasper County Democrat, Volume 17, Number 82, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 January 1915 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Dill pickles 10c per dozen at ROWEN & KISER’S. L Larkin Potts suffered a light stroke of paralysis Monday night. Louis Hamilton was in Bloomingten, Ill. ? the first of the week on business. - , ■ Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Vaughn, Mr. and Mrs. L. 11. Cook of Chicago, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Myers. ; Mrs. Vern Newels went to Chicago Saturday to be with her mother, Mrs. Smith, who was to enter a hospital for treatment there. ■ > ' • ' ' ■ ■■ -i President Wilson was made a grandfather Sunday, when a son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bowes Sayre at the White House. Mrs. Lesta Snively of Indianapolis, came Monday afternoon to Visit hei sister, Mrs. George W. Hopkins. Mrs. Snively went to Chicago yesterday. Mrs.. Clara Parker and Mrs. Geo. Phillips returned Saturday from a visit with Mrs. George W. Andrus and Parker Overton and family in Hammond. The high school basket ball team played the Lafayette West Side high school team at the latter place Friday night. score 25 to 21, in favor of Lafayette. Ralph Lowman went to Lafayette Monday to see his sister-in-law, Mrs. W, T. Lowman, who was operated on there last Thursday in the St. Elizabeth hospital. Attorney George E. Hershman of Crown Point, came down Saturday and returned Sunday, with' his wife and family, who had been visiting here with Mrs. Smith Newell. Mr. and Mrs. Elias Arnold of Barkley tp., gave a reception Sunday to their, son, Harry Arnold and bride. A large number were present and all enjoyed the occasion very mucHu. The Democrat is informed that the local “board of trade” office that has been operating here for the past few weeks in one of the up-stairs rooms in the G. E. Murray building, has closed up and quit business.

N. O. Chupp, who resided on D. 11. Yeoman’s farm just west of Surrey, was in Monday having a set of sale bills; struck at The Democrat office, for his public sale on Jan. 28. Mr. Chupp will move to Edinburg, Johnson county, and go in partnership with his brothers, Frank and Ralph, in a department store which they are running there.

Miss Clara Hagins of Chicago, spent last Thursday here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hagins, while on her return from attending the annual business meeting of the Photographers’ Association of America, held last week in Indianapolis. The National Association expects to hold its next convention at Indianapolis in July of this year. Robert Reeve and sisters, Misses Gladys and Hazel Reeve, and Mrs. Leo Reeve, visited the mother of the three former, Mrs. Ed Reeve, in Chicago Sunday. Mrs. Reeve is recovering from her recent operation as well as could be expected, it is said, and it is hoped to bring her home some time next week. Up to Sunday, however, she had not sat up any. Another effort was made on Wednesday to capture or kill the wolf that has been bothering the neighborhood north and west of Reynolds all fall and winter. A party of Goodland men with a pack of hounds spent all day in the fields and woods without getting sight or sound of the wolf. It is estimated that it has destroyed over S2OO worth of poultry and young stock in the neighborhood that it frequents.—Goodland Herald. The Democrat is indebted to some friend for a copy of the “Hoosier Kalendar,” a souvenir of the tenth annual dinner of the Indiana Society of Chicago, held in the Gold Room of the Congress Hotel in that city on "Dec. 5, 1914. This calendar is one of the swellest ones we ever saw, each sheet—each day having a page to itself—has an 'original cartoon of some prominent Indianian or member of the club, with some “take off” on the party cartooned. It is certainly a very handsome and much prized work, and each calendar must have cost several simoleons. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears of