Jasper County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 68, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 November 1915 — Page 9 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

£§">3 I WEEK’S J

. J. P. Ry ah was down from Gillam tp., Wednesday. WANTED—Two girls to work in laundry.—McKAY’S LAUNDRY. Mose Sigo of near Remington, was .a visitor in the city Wednesday. Genuine Jackson Hill coal is the l>est for the range.—D. E. GROW. Talk to us about your winter’s ce®^.—HARRINGTON BROS. CO., phone No. 7. d-4 Kenneth Allman will be home from Indianapolis to spend Sunday with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Ryan of Indianapolis, spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Honan. Mrs. W. I. Hoover and daughter, Irene, spent Thanksgiving with her father and family near Delphi. ' » Miss LaVera Lee, who teaches Latin and English in the Wheatfield schools, spent Thanksgiving here with her mother. Piano Tuning ana Repairing—All work guaranteed, at the music store, north of Rowles & Parker’s store, or phone 566.—H. R. LANGE & SON. ts Harry Watson, the plumber, is another young man who is figuring on building a new house in Rensselaer next spring, and it is inferred that it will not be for rent, either. We can show you a nicer loaf of bread made from Blue Ribbon flour than you can get out of any other flour sold in Rensselaer.—lßOQUOlS ROLLER MILLS, phone 456. Omar Osborne, son of City Engineer W. F. Osborne, who has been in the state of Washington for the past three years, returned home the first of the week and will remain here until spring at least. George M. Babcock; eldest son of The Democrat editor, who has been in Washington state for the past 3 % years, is expected to return home some time before, the first of January, and will remain here permanently. One of the good new houses erected in Rensselaer this fall is that of Miss Maggie Hallagan, on the corner of Division and Harrison streets, which is now nearing completion. This is a nice, roomy residence, is provided with all the modern conveniences and is an ornament to that part of the city.

We handle all kinds of hard and soft coal.—J. C. GWIN LUMBER CO. The frame is up for Dave Haste’s new bungalow on Jefferson street. For a good heating stove coal try our Kentucky lump.—D. E. GROW. Miss Mildred Harris went to Indianapolis Wednesday for a few days’ visit. Try our B. B. or Kentucky egg for the range.—HARRINGTON BROS. CO., phone No. 7. d-4 Mrs. John Harmon has been quite sick for the past four weeks, but at this writing is improving. Watch for the bills and the complete list of stocks to be sold at the Randolph Wright farm in Newton township on Wednesday, Dec. 1. Call Rensselaer Garage and see the 1916 Dodge, compact and refined, built to last, |785 f. o. b. Detroit.—MAßlON I. ADAMS & SON. Mrs. A. Gangloff was called to \\ ashington, 111., Wednesday by the critical illness of her daughter, Mrs. George Mahle, who is not expected to live. Charles Yeager of Manson, Mont., left Wednesday for a -visit to his c-ld home at North Vernon, Jennings county, after a short visit with relatives here. Jack Reeder, of near Virgie, returned the first of the week from a visit to his aged father in West Virginia, who is afflicted with cancer and can probably live but a short time. Earl Hemphill and Harry Hickman, who enlisted some time ago in the U. S. navy and are now stationed on a training ship in Chicago, came home to spend Thangskiving under the parental roof. Emmet Pullins and son, Albert, of Barkley tp., and Len McCurtain of Parr, returned Sunday from a hunting trip to Pine River, Minn. Emmet brought home a fine young deer, a part of his prowess as a mighty hunter. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Long attended a family reunion at the Strawbridge home in Chicago Tuesday evening, at which their daughter, Mrs. Russell Strawbridge and husband of Niagara Falls, N. Y., were present. Mrs. Strawbridge will visit her parents here some time before returning home.

I f 0 u l in ■ ■ ,i ~ , J'l .. _* 1 J I I < r" I IJ \V i| mH g . mu 5 n? 1. iy 4H a « THE Dining Room should be a cheerful place, 1 for when you eat your meals amid pleasant surroundings you do much to aid digestion. And good digestion means health. >••■': ‘ ■’ • > Have Us Furnish Your Dining Room The variety of designs in tables, chairs, sideboards, china closets, serving tables and the like, is ample to satisfy your desires, whatever they may be, in the matter of style, finish and price. Come in and talk it all over with us. We are as eager to give satisfaction as you are to receive it Our Word Is a Guaranty of Honest Values D. M. WORLAND, Rensselaer