Rensselaer Republican, Volume 24, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 July 1892 — Untitled [ARTICLE]

Miss Green, of Attica, is a guest of Miss Sarah Chilcote. Cantata at Christian church next Wednesday evening. The W. C. T. U. Will meet with Mrs. Webb. Reeve, next Saturday, at 2:30, P.M. •*n° * Ike Wiltshire is going to start, on a trip to England next week to visit his relatives there. He wilL go on one of Nelson Morris’s cattle ships. He wilt be gone* 6 or 8 weeks. Hammond Bros., are headquarters for bicycles and tricycles. 1 Joseph Nisius, of Milroy tp., took the train here Tuesday afternoon,for Chicago, where he expects to gather in some SSOO or S6OO, which comes to him from an estate in Germany. As many of my preparations are mads in my own laboratory I can guarantee them as to purity. 44-2 t. B. F. Fendig. J. G. Davis, the capable piano tuner was in town last week, but was called away on business that could not be post poned. He requests us toinforn his customers here that he will return and finish his founds about the last of July.

Auditor Marble was called to Chicago this week by Nelson Morris,, and it is said that Marble will either buy Morris out, or Morris will buy Marble out. Their land lies side by side in Jasper county, bat Morris’ piece is a trifle the larger.—Crown Point Star. - Neck-Wear. In Four-in-hand, Windsor and Teck, largest line in town. Ellis & Murray. W. B. Austin’s new house will be of the one story cottage order, but of very handsome design and elegant in finish and appointments. Its total cost will be about $2,200. Dowler & Banes are the contractors and are to £ - nave it completed by October 25th. The Monon Ry., has begun the erection of a $1,200 depot building at Salem, and will, it is stated, build several such along fee line, this year. Perhaps the company will yet see the justice of building a better depot at Rensselaer. . . Order your Sunday baking of *T. W. Haus, who succeeds to fee Women’s Exchange business.

The Rensselaer Creamery has something over two tons of fine June butter stored in its cold-storage room, waiting for higher prices. The creamery is now receiving close to 9,000 pounds of milk daily. It is not likely that the cheese making apparatus will be used this year. Grandmother Cotton has been in very poor health ever since her return from Omaha. She has a heart trouble and her sufferings are great and her condition, at times, very alarming. Her daughters. Mrs. Della Thompson and Miss Arilla Cotton, her. Ladies don’t miss it, buy your toil et* articles of B. F. Fendig ♦‘The Druggist”. He has the best and freshest line in the country.

Mr. and Mrs. F. J._ Sears left for New York, last Saturday. They will be absent several weeks attending the Christian Endeavor Convention, seeing sights and visiting friends. Mr. Sears also has important business to transact in Boston, in conjunction with Zimri D wiggins, who preceded him eastward, a few days.

There will be some wheat and rye harvested in his county this week, but not nearly so much as would have been had not the big rain Saturday night soaked the land, so as to make harvesting with machines impossable for many days. It is a very good crop, on the whole, although some fields have suffered damage from'the excessive rains.

We have knifed the prices in summer millinery, call now for cheap hats and bonnets at Hemphill A Honan’s. F. J. Sears and W. B. Austin went over to Knox, Starke Co., last Friday and closed up the purchasd\of the only bank in the town. Zimri Dwiggins will be President and W. B. Austin, Vice President. Fred L. Chilcote, now of the Citizens State Bank, of Rensselaer, will have charge as cashier; going there as sOon as Mr. Sears returns from his eastern trip. 1