Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 165, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 July 1911 — ADDITIONAL TODAY’S LOCALS. [ARTICLE]

ADDITIONAL TODAY’S LOCALS.

Peanut butter, oilves and picnic goods galore st the Home The badly wrecked Halladay auto which Omar Tuttl?, of near Wheatfield, bought for a Dyer \ saloonkeeper, and then drove until it was entirely out of commission, is now at Fnapp’s garage and will undergo repairs. All the tires are gone and the wheels are worn off smooth. The body of the car looks to be all right. For some strange reason the saloonkeeper does not intend to prosecute Tuttle.

Sylvester Buck, who some thirty years or more ago, worked as a boy for Emmet Kannal in the drug store was here Wednesday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Kannal. His home is now at Mulberry, east of Lafayette, where he is successfully engaged in the barber business. He remained in Rensselaer Thursday to visit with old acquaintances whom he had not seen for a great many years.

Never leave home on a journey without a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is almost certain to be needed and cannot be obtained when on board the cars or steamships. For sale by all dealers. c

There is money in* cereal breakfast foods. C. W. Post, the millionaire postum man, eame through Logansport last week with his wife and chauffeur in a palatial Inotor car on his way home from St. Louis. The car is fully equipped with toilet and wash stand. It weighs 5,600 pounds, is 110 horse power, has 145 inch wheel base, is geared at 75 miles an hour and is valued at SIO,OOO. Post also owns six other cars.—Monticello Herald.

Right in your busiest season when you have the least time to spare you are most likely to take diarrhoea and lose several days’ time, unless yon have Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy at hand and take a dose on the first appearance of the disease. For sale by all dealers. c

Some people who wonder why they do not receive all mail directed to them, blame the postal department with incompetency, but the postoffice officials explain the mystery by saying that frequently the fault lies in the fact that messages, in themselves all right, are written on suggestive post cards. In accordance with a ruling of the national department, al! postmasters are given authority to determine for themselves whether a piece of mail is too. objectionable to be permitted by Uncle Sam. Consequently the department has issued the command that anything that hints or savors of objectionable ideas must be held up.

The July number of Motor Age, published at Chicago in the interest of the fast growing automobile and motor industry, contains an article by Darwin S. Hatch on “A Day with the Motor Farmer.” Mr. Hatch tells of a trip recently made to Washington, Ind., and a visit paid to a farm where farming is done by motor power. A big iron horse drawing four- binders is cutting the wheat crop, harvesting 109 acres a day. Following harvest gang plows turning eight furrows were hooked to the motor and, 30 acres of ground were turned over each day. Nearly all work on this farm is done by the gas tractor and Mr. Hatch describes the process with minute details. The article is very interesting and elaborately illustrated.

Sprains require careful treatment Keep quiet and apply Chomberlain’s Liniment freely. It will remove the soreness and quickly restore the parta to a healthy condition. For sale by all dealers. c

Mr. and Mrs. G. K. Hollingsworth, of Chicago, who are spending a few days with Rensselaer relatives and friends, recently returned from a trip to New York, where they had accompanied their sons, Donald and Thomas, when they started abroad. The boys were passengers on the North German Lloy’d steamer Berlin. They landed a few days ago in Naples and are now iu Rome. They will return home about Sept 20th. The itinerary for their trip is very interesting, including a short stay in Spain, 20 days in Italy, 8 in Switzerland, 5 in Austria, 9 in Germany, 3 in Holland, 3 in Belgium. 8 in France, 9 in England and a few days each in Scotland and Ireland. It will be a fine and instructive trip for the young men, who will enter college sodn after their return. Donald will be a junior and Thomas a freshman in Chicago university.