Jasper County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 64, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 November 1916 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
v Kenneth Groom, who Is now working at Goodland, was home yesterday to vote. Mrs. Walter Hopkins and Mrs. Vern Robinson spent yesterday at Surrey with Mrs. Clint Brown. Edson Murray was home from Wisconsin university this week for a short visit with home folks. Miss Mattie Hemphill, the trained nurse, went to Parr yesterday to care for Mrs. Dennis Healey, who is ill. Miss Mary Daniel of Tiffin, Ohio, came Monday evening for an indefinite visit with her brother, Rev. Father Daniel. Alfred Thompson, who attends school at Ann Arbor, Michigan, was home to to his studies yestercS£. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Webber returned home Tuesday from a week’s vhsit at Lafayette, Crawfordsville and Waynetown. It costs nothing to look at the clothes in HILLIARD & HAMILL’S windows. It’s clothes education to drop in and look around a bit. Clothcraft clothes sl2 to S2O. Fashion Park clothes S2O to s3o.^y The members of the Dorcas class of the M. E. church will give an informal reception at the church parlors on Friday evening, November 10, for Rev. Strecker and wife, instead of having the class party at the home of Agnes Platt as previously planned.
W. H. Barkley is preparing to move to town from Barkley township and for the present will occupy the J. H. S. Ellis property on Front street. His brother Earl, who occupies the Mrs. William Daniels property at the north side of town, will move onto the farm vacated by Will. Two Monticello stores started an egg war Monday, each boosting the price paid by the other 1 cent a jump. Before subsiding the price had reached 45c a dozen. Several dozen were taken in at the inflated prices, and the warring merchants will now have to dispose of them at the regular market value. Ray Adams, son of Walter Adams, who resides on the D. L. Halstead farm in Newton township, ran away from home last Wednesday in company with Mike Bibolar, who had been working in the neighborhood. Mr. Adams telephoned to the Chicago police, where the boy was apprehended, and he «went to the city after him on Thursday.
ARRESTED FCR INTOXICATION Webb Hyatt and Wife and John Platt All Pay Fines. Officers were called to the home of Webb Hyatt, who lives in the Ira Norris property on the north side of the railroad, Sunday morning on complaint of neighbors that a drunken fight was in progress. Mr. and Mrs. Hyatt were landed in jail and Monday morning were ar-' raigned before Squire Dean, and on a plea of intoxication were each fined $1 and costs, amounting to $8.55 in each case. Mrs. Hyatt was considerably bruised up, and Sunday said that her husband had done the beating. She denied this, however, in court Monday and said-that she had scratched her face from the trees out in the yard. Hyatt is an old soldier and drew his pension Saturday, it is said. Asked where they had got the liquor Mrs. Hyatt said she had bought it at Handley’s drug store in Monon. Both were quite badly intoxicated. After paying up some little debts about town and buying a quart of whiskey there was only about $lO of the pension money left, and they decided to lay out their fine and costs rather than pay any part of it, consequently both were returned to jail. John Platt, also of Rensselaer, was arraigned before Squire Dean Monday morning on a charge of being intoxicated in a public place the day before, and on a plea of guilty was assessed the minimum of “one .dollar and,” $9.05 in all, which he paid.
, FLANNEL SHIRTS Some more of those elegant flannel shirts, $1 to $3, that you liked so well last year.—HILLIARD & HAMILL. RECENT lURTH ANNOUNCEMENTS November 1, to Mr. and Mrs. George Blaze of near Pleasant Ridge, a daughter. November 2, to Mr. and Mrs. Fred/ Feidhaus of Barkley township, a daughter.
CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears _ SigrJmre of
