People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 November 1893 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Here’s a Leader Just one item from our carefully i selected stock. A It beats the x* time and indicates the rhythm of all else, though. Every article ragfcQ we have is keeping step i with the lively music of like high value and v price. You will do well to prt examine our ■ BB stock thortN K? oughly. It will S Ss* mean a saving. Ellis & Murray.

This is the last week of court. Mrs. W. A. Huff is on the sick list. For a good smoke try the Crown Jewel cigar. Call at Laßue Bros’, and get prices before buying. Thanksgiving comes on Thursday, Nov. 23rd, this year. Charles Dougherty, of Hammond, was here last Saturday. Mrs. Joseph Yeoman has been on the sick list for a few days. Daniel Frazier, of Fowler, was here last Monday, on business. Our trust is in the people at Laßue Bros’, and yet our trade is cash. Bayard Clark, formerly of this place, spent Sunday with relatives here. Charlie Simpson furnishes the best of coal oil at your door for lowest prices. Harry Wade moved his household goods here from Hammond last Saturday. The time of the year has arrived when coal and wood piles are in demand.

Services' at the Christain Church next Sunday, both morning and evening. Orders foi’ job work or advertising in Wheatfield may be left at Fendig’s drug store. Judge Healy has a neat little four-room dwelling house to rent. Call at shoe shop. Miss Jean Stokes, of East Hampton, N. Y., is the guest of her uncle, J. W, Williams. Mortgages to the amount of $3,920 were recorded with the county recorder this week. A syndicate has been formed to guarantee the floating debt of the L., N. A. & C. railroad. Spencer Vick and wife, of Chicago, arrived here Wednesday, to visit the former’s parents. Cincinnati put 2,500 of its unemployed men to work one day last week in one of its public parks. The rich are wealthy, but their money goes no further at Laßue Bros’, than the poor man’s money.

We are needing a good soaking rain now. Wheat is needing it badly, and it would be a blessing all around. J. E. Newcomb, an attendant in the Longcliff asylum, at Lafayette, is here visiting friends and relatives. A. Oppenheimer, who has been visiting relatives here, returned to Orilla, Ontario, Canada, the first of the week. Ike Wiltshire, of Kentland, was here Saturday. He was on his way to Chicago to see the sights of that metropolis. The building now occupied by George Strickfadden will, as soon as he vacates, be occupied by Lafayette parties with a saloon. At present we are at a loss in regard to our Thanksgiving turkey Probably some of our friends are fatidug up one for •editorial use.