People's Pilot, Volume 5, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 September 1895 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

N. WARNER % SON. Rensselaer, Indiana. HARDWARE Next week a Tull line of HEATING STOVES First Class Feed Cutters at $7, sl3 and upward. $7. Peed Cutters. sl3 Among the latest inventions is the Dane - Corn - Cutter A thoroughly good implement; no danger of aeeident as the knife i* protected a spring guard. Carriages, Wagoqs, 4 A full line of earpenters’tools and Builders’ Hardware.

Ira W. Yeoman. ATTOBHET. REMINGTON. IND. Insurance and real estate agent. Any amount of private money to loan on farm security. Interest G per cent. Agent for International and Red Star steamship lines.

REMINGTON.

REMINGTON, in which place The People’s Pilot has an extensive circulation, is a very pretty village of over 1.000 population, situated in the extreme southern part of Jasper county on the St. L. A P. railway 125 miles from Chicago. Largest hay shipping point in’lndiana: fine horses, cattle and hogs: rich agricultural lands worth up to $75 per acre and higher: four warehouses: county fair; excellent high schools: tine churches: wellgraded gravel roads in all directions; two banka. TIME CARP. Trains go west at 9:35 a. tn.. 3;39 p. i».. 4:25 a. rn.; east at 11:18 p. in.. 11:24 a. tn.. G: 14 a. in. CHURCHES. Methodist Episcopal. Rev. I). Handley. Presbyterian. Rev. H V. McKee. Christian. Rev..! It. Carson. Catholic. Father Berg. Each of the above churches has an excellent Sunday school in connection. BEN EV< (LENT INSTITUTIt INS. Schuyler Lodge No. 254. 1. O. O. F. Remington Lodge N.35L F. & A’. M. Remington Lodge No. 58. K. of P. Remington Post No. s 4. G. A. R. Remington Lodge Woodmen of the World. Remington Court No. —. Foresters. Remington Lodge No. —. A. O. U. W. There has been quite an epidemic of hog cholera in the western part of Carpenter township for the past three or four weeks. Bessie Little, who has been dangerously ill with typhoid fever for several weeks, is at present convalescing. J. O. B. McDougle, who was severely injured by a kick from his horse some time ago. is nowattending to his duties in his store. William E. Seymour, who went to lowa with a party of landseekers last week, has returned home. He says his party was well pleased with the country and that some of them will locate there. He will go again in a few days with another party.

Remington was again blessed with an excellent rain last Sunday night and Monday morning, it having rained about six hours steadily. This rain is calculated to do an immense amount of good.

The Remington schools are now again overcrowded. The town trustees are called upon to furnish another school room. They will probably utilize, for the present, a year or so, at least, the hall owned by the town on Ohio street. It is not an elegant room, but it will probably answer the purpose for a year or two, or until the town can build another good school building. The little child of Mr. and Mrs. N. Littlefield of Rensselaer was buried in the Remington cemetery last Sunday. C. H. Peck is at present engaged in placing on the shelves a splendid stock of new clothing, boots and shoes and furnishing goods. Carpenter township schools opened with fair attendance on the 9th inst. Hon. George Major and family recently returned from an extended visit with relatives and friends at Frankfort, Elwood and Kokomo. J. W. Duvall of Rensselaer was on the streets of Remington last Monday. “Wes” is looking bet-