Rensselaer Journal, Volume 12, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 November 1902 — THINGS IN GENERAL! [ARTICLE]

THINGS IN GENERAL!

Daily Happenings Around the Prairie City. UMELY TOPrCS TERSELY TOLD! tews Items Caught on the Hun and Served While Warm Without Trimmings or Embellishment. Local and Personal Notes. A full line of the finest candies at J. H. Cox’s news stand. The public sale season has opened. Get your sale bills of the Journal.

Leave your orders for daily papers ■nd magazines with J. H. Cox. Mrs. Ott Clark is visiting in Indianapolis. All calico only 4c yard at Laßue Bros. Miss Myrtle Haus visited in Lowell •n Sunday. 21 pounds best granulated sugar for {I.OO at Laßue Bros. Mrs. D. B. Nowels, of Lamar, Colo., is visiting relatives here. 21 pounds best granulated sugar for {LOO at Laßue Bros. Joe Reynolds, of Delphi, spent Sunday with his mother here.

We keep a full line of Kennedy’s sakes. Laßue Bros. J. A. Robinson, of lola, Kans., is visiting relatives here. Try a sack of Occident flour, no better made, only 93c at Laßue Bros. Oapt. J. M. Wasson visited his mother at Union City over Sunday. We pay the highest [market price I for produce. Laßue Bros. Mrs. Frank Maloy spent Sunday with her husband at Sheridan. A large line of fall and winter caps at half price at Laßue Bros. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Wood, of Parr, Saturday. See our line of shoes, new styles and lowest prices. Laßue Bros. Mrs. W. G. Slagel spent Sunday with her parents in Hammond. We have the best teas in Rensselaer to 60c a pound. Laßue Bros. Hot biscuits and delicious coffee served free this week at Warner Bro’s. Be sure and see the Great Majestic Don’t get left.

Allen W. Bradley, of Wabash, is clerking in Fendig’s drug store. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Sigler, of Kersey, are visiting relatives here. Try our package coffee, 3 pounds for 25c. Laßue Bros. Mr. and Mrs. U. M. Baughman spent Sunday with relatives at Monon. Don’t fail to see the Byron Musical Family at the opera house Friday night. We have a few overcoats left, which we are closing out at less than cost. > Laßue Bros. Mr. and Mrs. Irenous Sbortridge, of Hammond, are visiting relatives in this vicinity. This paper and The Chicago Weekly Inter Ocean $ 1.40 for one year. “Special deal.”

Bro. Robertson, of the Wheatfield Telephone, took in the foot ball game here Saturday. T. J. McCoy and Charley Chamberlain bagged a nice lot of ducks on the Kankakee Sunday. John Jones, the busman, answers all calls day or night. Your patronage solicited.

Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Bridges, of Indianapolis, are the guests of Isaac Glazebrook and family. Buy your blankets, comforts, etc., now while stock is complete. Laßue Bros. Thomas Eiglesbach, of Chicago, is spending the week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eiglesbach. The rural route carriers have been given a vacation today and no mail will be carried over the routes, but patrons can get their mail by calling at the post office.

Mr. and Mrs. O. Milliron, of Monticello, visited friends here the latter part oFthe week. Why pay 25c for patterns when you can buy the New Idea for 10c. ** Laßue Bros. Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Coons, of Rock Island, 111., are the guests of her brother, Jesse Nichols. We will sell you any hat in the house at a great reduction in price. Laßue Bros. Little Robert Johnson, of Lafayette, is visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Clark. We have a complete line of the W B corsets. Best made. Laßue Bros

D. B. Nowels, of Lamar, Col., joined his wife here Monday, where they will visit relatives for several weeks. We have a fine line of home made comforts, cheaper than you can make them. Call and see. Laßue Bros. Sherman Renicker, who is now located in Wisconsin, is here closing up his business affairs. Why pay $1.15 and $1.20 for flour when you can buy just as good for 93c at Laßue Bros. Mrs. Isabelle Parker, of Frankfort, who has been visiting here, returned home Monday. All calicos, over 100 patterns to select from, only 4c a yard at Laßue Bros.

Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Hiatt, of Sheridan, were the guests of their son, Prof. Hiatt, last week. Try our pure uncolored tea, no better grown, for only 60c a pound. Laßue Bros. The little girl who has been making her home with Wm. McClintock, was returned to Westfield Tuesday. flee our line of dress goods; all the new things at the lowest prices. Laßue Bros. James Mead, of Chicago, and Miss Ethel Sickman, of Hammond, are the guests of Miss Myra Clark.

Mrs. O. E. Tyner and Mrs. Wm. Vanarsdell, of Monon, were the guests of Hiram Jacks and family Sunday. Don’t fail to see the Great Majestic Range bake biscuits in three minutes all this week at Warner Bro’s. Don’t get left. It is said that every bride has many friends, but in a few years they dwindle down to one. That’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Makes and keeps her well. 35c. B. F. Fendig.

All this week at Warner Bros. Majestic Cooking Exhibition. Yon are invited. Don't get left. We carry the Monarch canned goods, the finest in the market. Laßue Bros. Call on John Jones, the busman, when you want to make the train. All calls promptly attended to. Phone 257. See or telephone Joe Jackson, the busman, when you want to go any place. Prompt attention given to all calls. Day or night.

The “Bungholes,” one of the numerous foot ball teams, was defeated at Remington last Thursday by the Remington team, the score being 16 to 0. After you see the Majestic Range at Warner’s Bro’s, you’ll wonder how you have managed to get along without one. Don’t get left. Prof. W. H. Sanders was elected secretary of the city and town school superintendents’ state association at the meeting this week. We have just received 500 pairs of shoes, all new patterns, and at prices that defy competition. Laßue Bros.

A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Nelson, of DeMotte, Monday. The baby lived but a short time, its death taking place yesterday. Have you read the great Majestic cooking exhibit advertisement in this paper? Don’t get left. Warner Bros. Mrs. W. Burton, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. G. A. Strickfaden, returned to her home at Tolono, 111., Monday. Our fall and winter goods are all in now and we have the largest and most complete stock in town.

Larue Bros. Miss Elizabeth Spaulding is again in charge of the Western Union office here. Her sister, Miss Clara, will again enter a railroad office. Special reduced prices on cloaks for Thanksgiving at the Chicago Bargain Store. We want you and your friends to come in any day this week and see the Great Majestic Range bake biscuits in three minutes. Don’t get left. Warner Bros. “The best is always the cheapest.’-’ The Majestic Range is best, and we want you to come in and let us tell you why. Don’t get left. Warner Bros.

All goods guaranteed to give satisfaction or money returned. We make a specialty of delivering goods promptly. Laßue Bros. Harrison Warren has purchased an 80 acre farm in Whitley county, two miles south of Peru and will move there about March Ist. The purchase price was SBS per acre. Wanted: Manager for new branch of our business here in Rensselaer. Address at once, with references, Alfred Morris, Wholesaler, Cincinnati, Ohio. Wrinkles are smoothered away by its healing touch. Brain tired and depressed people will find a cure in Rocky Mountain Tea. 35c. B. F. Fendig.

A big haul by highwaymen, substitutes and others who steal the good name and fame of Rocky Mountain Tea made famous by Madison Medicine Co. ‘3sc. B. F. Fendig. Yea, the Journal prints sale bills and has the best equipped office in Jasper county for doing this class of work. Get our prices before placing your work. Shoes are the cheapest that wear the longest. We have them by the thousands at the Chicago Bargain Store. The Byron Musical Family at the opera house Friday evening. This is one of the best musical organizations on the road. They carry a full brass band and orchestra.

See the Thanksgiving linen sale. Special bargains in new goods at the Chicago Bargain Store. Remember, a set of the best cooking utensils, made of copper, steel and enamel, worth $7.50, given away absolutely free with every Majestic Range sol<\, this week at Warner Bro’s. Don’t get left. Wanted— A married man, middle aged preferred, with no children, to work on the farm by the year, and board from one to four hands. Inquire of C. P. Moody, Pleasant Grove, Ind. R. W. Marshall’s law office is in the county building, formerly used for the circuit clerk’s office, opposite east side of the court house. Mr. Marshall will give the benefits of his long experience and practice m the law, to any and everybody having legal business to transact.