Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 May 1896 — Build Cement Walks. [ARTICLE]
Build Cement Walks.
Nothing iu the way of Bide-, walks and door yard walks ie 'bo good, ornamental and in the long run, bo cheap, as well made cement walks. And right now ia the time to make them. Call upon Ira Rinehart, the experienced and reliable cement walk builder for particulars.
Whi<?h is the cheaper ? money at 6 per cen,t int. and 5 per cent commission. or money at 7 per cent int. and 3 per cent commission. Call on Warren & Irwin for answer. Fergus >ri & Wilson loan money at 6 per cent interest. Ask your grocer for Parrott & Taggarts Lunch Milk Biscuit. The new McCormick binder load on truck without unhitching team Ferguson & Wilson can furnish all the money on f rm security wanted, call and see us. To Exchange —well improved farm worth $5,000. Want property in Rensselaer valued at about $2,500 or less as first payment, the balance in easy payments. Write or call on G. F. Meyers, Kniman, Ind. On opening days, May sth F. W. Smith, the tailor, will sell suits made to order S2O. up. Pants made to order $5. up. As a luxury for a lunch you will find that Parrott & Taggarts Lunch Milk Biscuit is just the thing. Try them. , Hay Stacker and Oatliercrs For Sale. For sale a good hay stacker and 2 gathereis, nearly as good*as new, for sale cheap, or will trade for other property. Call on me on the Henry Harris farm, 7 miles west of Rensselaer, or address me at Mt Ayr, Ind. C. M. Reed. Ferguson «fe Wilson will give you the privilege to pay 1-5 of your oan each year and put the contracts in the mortgage.
The Wolves That sloom in the Spring. | The fine weather of the past five or six weeks has brought forth an early and very large crop of young wolves. Up to last Monday noon Auditor Murray has paid the bounties on the scalps of 48 you' g wolves, of the vintage of- ’96, besides four old ones. The nnmSs of parties to whom the bounties were paid, and the townships where the wolves were caught, are as follows. Branson Clark, Milroy, 9 young ones. There were 10 in the litter but he saved one for a pet. Bert Welsh, of Jordan, 5 young ones. =• Milton Stack, Union, 11 yonng. It is not slated" whether they were alt of one litter. If so it beats Milroy’s township’s big brood of ten,, noted above. Wm. W. Warne also of Union, brought in three cubs. Scott Cooper, of Union, 6 cubs. John Kimble, of Union, 7 cubs. Wm. Bowsher, of Union, 7 cubs. I. N. Makeever, of Newton, one old wolf. F- M. Hershman, of Walker, one old wolf. t Wm. Knapp, of Wheatfield, one old wolf. fienj. Geesa, of Union, one old wolf. It will be noticed that Union township is the great center of the young wolf industry, and it may further be noticed that the hunters of that township seldom commit the indiscretion of killing an old wolf. The proverb of “A bird m the hand is worth two in the bush,” is modified up there into “An old wolf in the bush is good for six cubs at the auditor’s office” The bounty on old wolves, in this county, is $7 and on cubs $3.
