Jasper County Democrat, Volume 17, Number 96, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 March 1915 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]
BRICK, TIMBER AND ROUGH CAST. Design 618, by Glenn L. Saxton, Architect, Minneapolis, Minn. MrjBBTtSrRUBi OB HO mW MHfI RTF ;mp khl ’i ■ H ÜBsBM I 1 J m E —■. ■ j rkwlW< : t» -* ■ • - : ' ; Ekm dHmMWII“WIw? ■’' —7 #gfc *?X' > vk? S ' f ' ' ' V^^SSr 1 W > ' A ♦’ > ,* ,S»Y .X. PERSPECTIVE VIEW—FROM A PHOTOGRAPH. f[ ’ * | -■Hentky kitchen vn ■“"“ """■‘T'' l " " I ' " w ""ill nt " , f«f a tt-Txioe AU I _ I f —| | , r H t : BtT M C 1 2*4 n >i> I I CHAMBER n u t :2? r—‘l -I CHAMBER py| * I I DJ '■ zE T <1 I »4-<Xxtz-or F? 4 ph ; ♦ v 1 J K L! -c??p.. *4 y*4*|.|«< 1 -jk' ii jw I i^y[*" ] ' < msr E 5w.?3" ----x, J*.——l rHj srr i Ing poßcri J ' z7-tf x q-4 1 Im— b -J ENTRANT Irz—a—-J i. 1- F-«KCH ~] "“'"‘ FIRST FLOOR PLAN. SECOND FLOOR PLAN. This exterior has a very attractive treatment of rough faced brick up to line of first story window sills; rough aboye, with Washington fir half timbers. Second stdryt,contains four chambers and a sleeping porch opening off from rear chamber. Size, 34 feet wide by 32 feet G Inches deep over the : main part. Full basement. First story. !) feet; second story, 8 feet. Finish in first story is red oak or birch, second story pine to paint. Birch or maple: floors throughout. Cost to build, exclusive of heating and plumbing, SO,BOO. j Upon receipt of $1 the publisher of this paper will furnish a copy of Saxton’s book of plans, “American Dwellings.’’ It contains 310 designs costing from SI,OOO to $6,000; also book of Interiors, $1 per copy.
Yesterday’s markets: Corn, 64c; oats,. 53c; wheat, $1.30;; rye, 90c. Elizur Sage and wife have moved back to their farm in Newton tp. They have made no disposition at this writing of their fine property here in town, and we are unable to state what their plans are regarding same. j
Advertised letters: Mrs. Ben 11. Grube, w. F. Wilson, David Line, Mrs. Bill Bierly, Charles Nells, Arthur Denny, John Schanll, Edna Emith. The above letters will be sent to the dead letter office March 22, if not called for.
The Democrat is instructed to change the address of the paper it has been sending to Mrs. Stella Gray at Ft. Dodge, Jowa, to Mrs. Jack Dempsy, 1 16 North Seventh St., same city. Mrs. Dempsy writes that she was married Nov. 1 | to Mr, Dempsy but ‘they have been living at her old address until just recently. Mrs. Dempsy was formerly Miss Stella Dewitt of Fair Oaks, and Is known to many readers of The Democrat. v .• ? 1 The Trials of a Rural Mail Carrier.
The West Jackson and East Beaver correspondent to the Kentland Democrat, devotes the following eulogy to A. M. Bringle, rural mail carrier on Route 1 out of* Fair Oaks: Abe Bringle, carrier on route 1, out of Fair Oaks, has scant in Ws day and generation. Abe has well and faithfully carried Uncle Sam’s mail for twelve years, traveling twenty-four long miles each day, for the dozen years, means quite a bunch of miles, as a little figuring will demonstrate. Since hitting the trail, as a carrier, Abe has delivered enough garden seeds and catalogues to housewives along his route to clog the Missis sippi river, and to blushing damsels enough concentrated sweetness, in the form of love missives, to stock a taffy factory. During the twelve years aforesaid Abe has sung every song in the United States, from “Greenland’s Icy Mountains,” to “Kickin’ My Dog Around,” and whistled every tune under the sun from “The Devil’s Dream” to “181 Flo Chivy.” He has learned to talk the Navajoe language with the natives of Colfax and pigeon English with the Huns and Lithuanians of west Jasper; he has had bestowed upon him by a grateful constituency about everything in connection with the daily dietary, from hog bosom to piccalilly and from Hubbard squash to gut sausage; he has been made the beneficiary of enough free advise to start four information bureaus, and he has explained five million, seven thousand and nineteen times that a mall carrier is only
