People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 32, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 January 1895 — Casey’s Cast Iron Cement. [ARTICLE]
Casey’s Cast Iron Cement.
For mending wood, glass, earthenware, china, leather, rubber, stone, bone, ivory, and merchaum. Manufactured and sold by John Casey, Fail/ Oaks, Jasper county, Indiana,
Laßue Bros, shipped a car load of horses to Chicago Tuesday night. W. E. Overton made a trip to DeMotte last week on business for Rob’t. Randle. Mrs. Frank Wood is about again after a week’s indisposition with the gripe. The handsomest new line of embroideries in town just opened. Chicago Bargain Store. Master Boyd Porter, son of J. J. Porter, is improving from a four week's siege of scarletina. No use of baking bread when you can get it at Lakey’s, one door east of Morgan’s barber shop. A rare opportunity to buy clothing, cloaks and capes, shoes, blankets, underware, etc., at the sacrifice sale. Chicago Bargain Store. Edward Catt is sufficiently improved to sit up after being sick two months with intermittent fever. He will probably be out the first pleasant day. It would be a great convenience to electric light patrons if a warning signa] were given a pair of minutes before the current is cut off in the morning. Miss Mary Washburn closed her visit at home yesterday and returned to her art work in Chicago, having spent a couple of weeks with her Rensselaer friends. Robert Ash raised ninety-nine bushels of corn to the acre on his new r eighty acre farm in Harrison township. 5 miles northeast of town.—Winamac Democrat Journal.
Two horses, harness and wag on for sale; will trade for town property, cattle, cows or calves. Also have one peddling wagon for sale. John Casey, Fair Oaks, Jasper Co., Ind. Mrs. S. F. Ensminger of Crawfordsville shared the hospitalities of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. K. Hollingsworth and Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Austin a few days, closing her visit last Tuesday. In the postoffice bulletin case are a number of lost articles, among which are several door keys, a purse, a black knit mitt, a bunch of keys and a large squars letter without address. The “wolf drive” at Kniman announced for Thursday, Jan. 17th. did not meet with the hoped for support of the community, and as but fifteen or twenty wolf catchers turned out the plan of campaign had to be abandoned.
A son of Thos. Knight, while chopping wood four miles north of town last Saturday, cut his big toe completely off. He was brought to Rensselaer to a surgeon and when his boot was removed the severed toe was discovered in the sock. The school board should provide each pupil with a tin cup for drinking purposes as suggested by the board of health. Such a movement has been inaugurated in many schools and has proved to be a blessing.— Valparaiso Messenger. Jesse Coen who has been a popular clerk in Porter & Son’s grocery for several months, left Wednesday morning to accept a position in the Banker’s National bank of Chicago, where his brother Albert is employed. Jesse is a graduate of the Rensselaer High school and will win his way to success in the great metropolis.
