People's Pilot, Volume 5, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 January 1896 — CITY AND COUNTY. [ARTICLE]

CITY AND COUNTY.

Healy for shoes. Siman Fendig of Wheatfield was in town Tuesday. Miss Eliza Tuteur is in Chicago visit ing this week. Indiana school books at Meyer's drug store. Our telephone system is now opened with our northern towns. William H. Eger took in the cycle show in Chicago before it closed last week. Blank books, writing material and incidentals, the finest assortmentat Meyu,er’Adrug store. The lecture of Dr. Willetts on “Sunshine” was received with the most popular approval of any lecture ever delivered in our city. Fred Phillips and Bert Brenner made a ride to Mt. Ayr and returned on their wheels in bicycle attire on Thursday, Pretty good for January 16. Coughing irritates “the delicate organs and aggravates the disease. Instead of waiting, try One Minute Cough Cure. It helps at once, making expectoration easy, reduces the soreness and inflamation. Everyonelikes.it. Long,Druggist.

Heat that bed room with one of our $5 hard coal burners that will keep fire all night with a hat full of coal. N. Warner & Son. George Pumphrey has some gilt edged Plymouth Rock cockerels for sale in the north-west part of town. Lost. —Ladies’ gold watchchain with two charms attached—one a horn-of-plenty charm. Finder please call at this office and receive a liberal reward. At the next meeting of the Hobby Club a general discussion will be entered into on the subject of “The Monroe Doc trine.” 2000, burr oak and white oak, fqr sale at 6c each, 3| miles west and one mile south of Rensselaer by Carr Bros. The teachers of Marion township met the teachers of Union township in joint institute at Fair Oaks last Saturday. A good program was rendered, and all report a good time. z The program for the Farmers’ Institute to be held in Rensselaer Feb. 5 and 6 appears in this issue of the Pilot. If farmers only knew of the great benefit to be derived from these meetings.a much larger attendance would be had. The Rensselaer Creamery has been leased to a party of Thorntown for one year with the privii ege of four. The consideration is to be $1 per day until the average daily delivery of milk reaohes 10,000 pounds, after which the rental will be S4OO a year. The patrons will be paid by the 100 pounds for milk, instead of receiving a per cent of the proceeds of the sales of butter. 4,

Lost. —Between the postoffice and depot on Friday morning, Jan. 3, a ladies gold watch. Five dollars reward. Leave at Pilot office. Visit Healys’ new shoe store. Hog cholera preventative, from state formula, for sale at Meyer’s drug store. Wise —Here’s an account of a man who shot himself rather than suffer the pangs of indigestion. Husband—The fool! Why didn’t he take De Witt’s Little Early Risers? I used to suffer as bad as he did before I commenced taking these little pills. A. F. Long, Druggist. Lesslie Clark, a former editor of the Pilot, has sold his paper at Red Key and is now visiting home folks in Rensselaer. Mr. Clark is an excellent newspaper man, and will soon be in the business again. Subscribers who-wish to their copies of the “souvenir edition” to their friends can obtain mailing tubes at this office free, as long as the supply lasts. The postage on the big paper, tube included, is but three cents. Extra copies can be had at this office for ten cents, three for twenty-five. • A child of Jesse Nowels near Parr died of some throat difficulty last Saturday and was buried Sunday. No dealer in town is so well qualified to select good shoes as Judge Healy, the veteran shoemaker. Examine his stock.

There may be no war with the beef eaters over the Venezuelan affair, but there promises to be a lively campaign down at Goodland between the rival papers. The Herald has hoisted a semiweekly signal and proposes to give the new Tribune pn interesting time of it. The Tribune is a protegee of Brother Kitt who recently sold the Herald. Good - land will prosper two live papers if any town of its size can. Married.—Dec. 31, 1895, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Jordan, parents of the bride, by Rev. R. D. Utter, of Trinity M. E. church, Miss Nevada Jordan and Mr. Harry Thewlies, of Linden, Ind. The Catholic young people to the number of fifty met at the residence of Mr. Keiper north of town, Wednesday evening, and proceeded to have a jolly time, the one making the most noise getting the prize. Miss Maggie Walters carried off the honors with colors flying. Judge Healy has fitted up his boot and shoe shop and put in an excellent stock of ladies’ and gents’ fine shoes. Call and see them before purchasing elsewhere. The sick people at the home of Ed Parcels are all better. The list at one time last week embraced every member of the household, except the two dogs and Ed. Found. —A nearly new shawl, near St. Joseph’s College, Jan. 9th. William Washburn. Judge Healy’s shoe store is the place to find a large variety to select from; the best grades at the lowest prices.