Jasper County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 May 1916 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
The second band concert of the season will be given this evening. All kinds of seed potatoes at $1.20 per bushel.—RHOADS’ GROCERY. T. J. McCoy of Chicago was the guest of Grant Warner over Sunday. • The Boy Scouts took their first hike of the season last Saturday afternoon. . _v i $1 will buy you Wilson Bros, shirts that sell in big towns for $1.50 when you're Hamillized. Dr. C. E. Johnson went to Council Bluffs, lowa, Sunday to visit his mother, who is quite sick. Miss Mary Burris of Monticello was the guest Sunday of Miss Madeline Abbott of Rensselaer. The frame is up and enclosed for George Long’s new- house on the corner of Grove and South streets. > Duvall’s Quality Shop swell spring shirts, ties, hose, Stetson and Kingsbury hats.—C. EARL DUVALL. Mrs. W. F. Congdon is here from Detroit, Mich., to visit her mother, Mrs. George Morgan, whose health is rather poor. Miss Gertrude Leopold, who had been spending the past few weeks at Tipton with her sister, Mrs. Louis Haas, returned home Sunday. Look swell dressed in a Collegian or Frat suit. We are now showing the greatest line of suits in the city. All sizes.—C. EARL DUVALL. Jake Moore, Gaylord Long, Earl Ticen and Mike Wagner attended a dance at Kentland Friday night given by the Knights of Columbus of that place. v At the public sale of Jersey cows at Hemphill's wagon yard Saturday, promoted by Dick Land of Salem, good prices prevailed, ranging from SSO to S9O per head. Miss Grace Norris, who had been visiting friends in Indianapolis and attended a banquet there of her college sorority at the Claypool hotel, returned home Sunday.
See the greatest lines of tailoring in the state at Duvall’s Quality Shop. 2,000 samples to choose from, sls to $45. Every suit guaranteed to fit perfect and hold their shape.—C, EARL DUVALL. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Babcock, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. W. F.' Osborne, , motored to Monticello Sunday, going via Lee and Monon and returning via Reynolds, Wolcott and Remington. r We have the latest talking machine out, the “Solophone.’’ Plays any disk record that is made without change of receiver. We also handle Singer sewing machines and take old machine in trade.—H. R. LANGE & SON. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Hoover and Mrs. Jennie Jessen and son. G. J. Jessen, were called to Veedersburg Monday bv the death Sunday night of Mrs. Jackson, a sister-in-law of Mrs. Hoover and Mrs. Jessen, whose funeral was held yesterday afternoon. William M. Hoover of southwest of town, who suffered a couple of broken ribs in a fall in his barn one day early last week, was in town yesterday for the first time since the accident. He is feeling very sore but otherwise is doing as well as could ’be expected. W. R. Brown has sold a half interest in his large barn on McCoy avenue and the same has been moved so that one-half of it rests on the northwest corner of his lot and onehalf on the northeast corner of G. H. McLain’s lot immediately west where Mr. McLain is preparing to built a new residence. C. C. Warner is preparing to build a good new two-story residence, 28x30, on west Harrison street, just west of his father’s place. The latter’s barn, for which he now has no use, is being torn down and much of the material will be* used in Charlie’s new house. Pending the completion of their new dwelling Mr. and Mrs. Warner will live with Mrs. Warner'6 parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Purcupile, as they have to give possession of the house they now occupy to Boyd Porter and wife, newlyweds.
