Rensselaer Republican, Volume 18, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 December 1885 — Marriage Licenses. [ARTICLE]
Marriage Licenses.
Since last reported the Circuit Clerk has issued licenses authorizing the marriage of the following named couples: j Louis Groenief, ( Mary C. Thompson. } j Chas. Ginder, ( Belle j Benjamin F. Robinson, '. 1 Ida ,M. Maksever.
Montezuma. Albums at wholesale at the P. 0. Books cheaper than ever before, at the P. O. Ferguson & Goff will sell you good tile. Try them. If you intend to buy Christmas Presents, call at John Eger’s. See those lovely chairs at'Sears’ Just the thing forChrrshms presents. We mean just what we saj, our lamps must go, regardless of cost. F. B. Meyer. If you don’t you will when you examine H. J. Dexter’s ? books at the P. 0., that he has the best line, and largest stock in town.
So faT as new business is concernedjtfthe January term of the circuit court promises to be very light, as the number of new suits begun is unusually small. The “Boys of Rensselaer” are getting, up a big dance to take place on the night of Dec., 30. They will have to exert themselves to excel the dance given by the ladies on Thanksgiving ni’ght. Take Notice.—A 11 Persons indebted tome, will please call and settle theia accounts, by cash or note, December 25. We must close up*mH»dstsoks. » B. F. Ferguson. Mr. Seth Williams, now of McLean county, 111., but a native of this county who went from a Rensselaer printing office into the 87th Ind., regiment, returned to his home last Saturday after a weeks visit with relatives here.
A destructive cyclone burst into Leopold’s Bazaar, and demolished the prices on his stock of Dress Goods, Cloaks, Blankets, and Shawls into such small fragments that every lady is now able to supply herhelf and little girl with the above articles at the very lowest prices ever before known. , We learn that Leopold,, the progressive, has already contracted for the foundation stone for a new business block, to be erected on site of the building which burned in the fall of 1884, on the corner of Washington and Van Rensselaer streets, it is to be of brick, two stories high, and to contain two large business rooms on the ground floor.
