Jasper County Democrat, Volume 17, Number 85, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 January 1915 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Order your calling cards at The Democrat office. 7 Yesterday’s markets: Corn. 10c. oats, 53c: wheat, $1.40; rye. sl. Buy your* typewriter ribbons and carbon papers at The Democrat office, ’ 7 •V.\ - V—. ■_ ■ . ■ ’ Mrs. W. O. Rowles left Thursday for a couple of weeks’ visit with friends at Greencastle, Indianapolis and Muncie. ' 1 . ■ ■■ ’ . / ■. Mrs. C. L. Harper of Delphi, visited, old friepds here • from Tuesday until Thursday. Her husband, Rev. Harper, was also here Tuesday night. Let The Democrat supply you with typewriter ribbons and carbon papers. We have ribbons for all makes of standard typewriters, and handle the very grade of carbon papers. The lower house of congress by ' a vote of 66 to 29 killed the amend-1 ment to the agricultural bill which! would have put an end to the “free I seed graft” and saved the government $200,000 annually. : -—■ ■ ■ ■ - - ■— . . C. M. Sands and family went to I the north end of the county Wednesday, the former to look after some' business matters, and 1 his wife ana | children to visit Mr. Sands’ people, I near Tefft, for several days. James. Ryan, the student at St. Joseph’s college, who was taken to Kankakee, 111., Monday to a hospital, was operated on there for appendicitis the next day. The outcome of the operation we were unable to learn. ” • . Call in and see our correspondence cards at 25c. 30c and 35c per box, the latter a gilt edge card. In correspondence paper we have almost everything you could think of ‘ and at prices ranging from 15c to 50c per box.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morlan of Alexander, S. Daft., who have been visiting here with his mother, Mrs. Amanda Morlan, and other relatives, left Thursday for Ohio, where they will visit relatives of Mrs. Morlan at Columbus and Toledo. Some friend sends us a copy of a special edition, of the Cripple Creek (Colo.) Times, consisting of five sections and colored cover, a very handsomely gotten up edition, showing the mining and other resources of that wonderful region. • * ■ The Lafayette Sunday Times, which had been published for twenty-five years and was purchased by Henry W. Marshal and merged with the Lafayette Journal several months ago, has been discontinued, the Indianapolis and Chicago Sunday papers having practically forced it from the field. A delightful surprise was given Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Smith, of north of town, Tuesday evening, when their friends and neighbors to the number of about fifty-six, went in on them with fell-filled baskets of all kinds of good things to eat, and reminded Mrs. Smith of her fifty-fourth birthday. Music was furnished and all had a good time. Remember that The Democrat will furnish 100 envelopes and print a return card on the upper lefthand corner and mail same, postpaid, to any address in the United States, for only 50 cents, cash witn order; 250, $1; 500, $1.50. These are not a cheap envelope, but a good quality, 6% (regular business size), either white or .colored, bond or plain paper.
O. L. Brown, president of the Lafayette & Northwestern Railroad Co.» came up from Lafayette Tuesday. It is rumored that this company has changed about face and will ask for subsidies along the proposed line. If so, the proposition should be turned down flat. Jasper county people ought certainly to have had their fill of voting on railroad this time and it is time to call a halt on any such propositions. James K. Garriott of Union tp.. accompanied by his daughter, Miss Madeline Garriott, expects to go to Sterling, 111., next Wednesday to visit his daughter, Mrs. Robert Sheets, and family for a couple of weeks, and will then return here and about March 1, they will go to Fayette, Ala., where Mr. Garriott owns a residence property, which is now rented, and will probably spend the summer there, perhaps taking up their permanent residence there.
CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears _/? the /JP* ..J/Trft Ji of *
