People's Pilot, Volume 5, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 December 1895 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
The nicest and tyest candy in town at the new grocery. H. J. Dexter. Long, the druggist, has the largest line of Xmas novelties in town. Be sure and see Clarke’s line of Holiday goods before purchasing. Wanted to rent, a house for small family, in Rensselaer. In* quire at this office. Adrertlmed letter*. Charles Ulark, August Krueger, E. Thomas, Mrs. Lawrence Oiler. E. P. Honan, P. M. For Hale—Lumber. All kinds of Oak mill. Pierce farm 2? miles so-jn of Rensselaer. J. W. Pierce. HoumeL'or Hale or Trade. A new live room house, large lot, in Weston,s addition, Rensselaer. Inquire at this office. Wanted, C. W. Coen wants 25,000 bushels of corn within the next 30 days and will pay the highest market price for the same. Cheap Farm Loans. Call on Valentine Seib, Rensselaer, for the cheapest farm,loans offered in Jaspercounty. Large or small amounts. L'or Hale. Four thoroughbred poland china boars, at O. K. Ritchey’s, four miles south of Rensselaer, and also some thoroughbred poland china sows safe in pig to the best boar in Northern Indiana. Found-A l ulieee. The undersigned found a mediumn sized vaiieoe about the 20th of November on the Ridge road one mile east of Rensselaer. The owner will please identify property and pay for this advertisment. Vance; Collins.
Furm Loan*. We are prepared to make farm loans at a lower rate of interest than any other firm in Jasper county. The expenses will be as low as the lowest. Call and see us. Office in the Stockton & Williams Block, near the Couft House. Warren & Irwin Fleet vie Hitter m, Electric Bitters is a medicine suited for any season, but perhaps more generally needed, when the languid exhausted feeling prevuils, when' the liver is torpid and Bluggish and the need of a tonic and alterative is felt. A prompt use of this medicine has often averted long and perhaps fatal bilious fevers. No medicine will act more surely in counteracting and freeing the system from the malarial poison: Headache, Indigestion, Constipation. Dizziness yield to Electric Bitters. &oc. and 1.00 per bottle at Frank B. Meyer’s Drug Store.
Marvelouh Re null*. From a letter written by Rev. J. Gundermun, of Diinondale, Mich., we? are permitted to make this extract: “I have no hesitation in recommending Dr. Kang's New Discovery, as the results were almost marvelous in the case of my wife. While I was pastor of the Baptist Church at Rives Junction sho was brought down with Peumonia succeeding ’La Grippe. Terrible paroxysms of coughing would last hours with little interruption and it seemed as if she could not survive them. A friend recommended Dr. King’s New Discovery; it was quick in its work and highly satisfactory in results.” Trial bottles free at Frank B. Meyer’s Drugstore. ’ (2 LEHLIE’S FOR JAM:A it y The first magazine for the new year is the brilliant January number of Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly illustrated with more than one hundred up-to-date pictures by the best illustrators of America an l Europe. The leading article, upon “Great Ship Canals,” by Arthur Vaughan Abbott, C. E., decribes the world’s principal artificial waterways of the present day, including the new Baltic, the Manchester, and the Corinth Canals of Europe' and the Welland, the Sault and Ste. Marie, and the Harlem, in America. * AlbertL.Rawson, the well-known artist and Orientalist, contributes, under the title of “A Bygone Bohemia,” a most inter-
esting chapter of reminisences of the* famous coterie of wits, writers, poets and players who brought celebrity to Pfaff’s resort, in New York city, a generatipn back. Mr. Rawson’s article is enriched with some rare and hitherto unpublished portraits, including those of Henry Clapp, George Arnold, Walt Whitman, Richard Reals, Artemus Ward, Mark Twain, Josh Billings and Petroleum V. Nasby. Other features of the January Frank Leslie’s are: an elaborately illustrated descriptive paper upon Morocco, by A. B. de Guerville; “A Day with the Sardinian Tunny Fishers,” by Charles Edwardes; “Chamois-Hdnting in the Alpsby Hugh E. M. Stufield; “Naval Cadet Days atAnnapolis,” by J. C. Gross; short stories by Howard Paul, Champion Bissell, Eileen Edar, and others; and poems by George Edgar Montgomery, Mackenzie Bell and Catharine Young Glen.
