Jasper County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 98, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 March 1916 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Mrs. E. M. Baker is spending the week at Wolcott with Mrs. S. H. Ilaskell, going over last Sunday evening. Let us fit you out with a pair of Lambertville rubber boots, the best rubber boot niade. Exclusive agents. —ROWLES & PARKER. Get your measure taken for your spring shirts. We have a One line of samples now on display and priced to $5 at Duvall’s Quality Shop.— j C. EARL DUVALL. Letters remaining in the Renssel-! aer postofflce for the week ending' March 6: _ Reldo Baker, Everett Mar-! lins (2), Jesse Marlin, Emma Roth, Mabel Blair. .The above letters will be sent to the dead letter office March 20 if not called for. The 10-day-old babe of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Flesher, who reside on the John Eger farm in Barkley tp., died Monday and was buried yesterday in the Prater cemetery, the funeral being held at the house at 1 o’clock. The Gore resolution for the government to warn American citizens to keep off armed merchant vessels of belligerent nations was killed in the senate Friday by a vote of 68 to 14. The house was to vote on the proposition yesterday. John Masefield, the visiting English poet, told a story of Tennyson the other day to show how human the, real poet often is. At a dinner the lady seated next to Tennyson had talked effusively to him about art, literature, and other high themes. Finally Tennyson broke his silence by saying: “I don’t like this mutton. It ought to have been cut in hunks!” A young man who gave the name of John Harmon and said his home was at Rensselaer, was arrested and lodged in the White county jail last week for stealing a horse at Reynolds belonging to James McQuade. The only John Hannon known here was formerly driver of the AmericanExpress Co. wagon, but he is said to be working on a faimi and has not been outside Jasper county for some time. Just what possessed the young man who stole the borse at Reynolds to give young Harmon’s name is a mystery. Uncle Tom’s ('abln. The show that for fifty years has appeared in all the principal towns of the country and never grows old, a wonderful story written by the most wonderful woman of the nineteenth century, dramatized and presented (o more people than any other show. It deals with the events of the ‘‘times before the war” and few now live to recall these times, yet the story never grows old and never fails to interest both old and young. It is booked to appear at the Ellis theater March 10 and 11. Prices 2He, 36c and 60c. Hear the saxaphone quartet.- A ivt. Red Cabbage n.s Cure. Dr. Simon Zeisel of Vienna is urging a greater cultivation or red cabbage, having discovered (hat it furnishes a remedy for infectious intestinal disorders. A factory Tor producing the remedy is now being erected in Vienna.—London Times.

COMING! - COMING!! BjHP-4. - ,j'* ELLIS ' " Friday and Saterdav, Hareb 10 and II HARMOUNT’g WORLD’S LARGEST $20,000 PRODUCTION UNCLE TOM’S CABIN 20. PEOPLE \ All New Special Scenery Beautiful Electrical Display * Challenge Saxophone Quartette Harmount Superb Orchestra A Pack of Siberian Blood-Hounds Watch for the Parade PTUCES: — 2S. 35 AfiD SO CEJiTS Reserved Seat Sale at Box Office. Phone 9s.