Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 202, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 August 1911 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

TONIGHT’S PROGRAM — ~ > PICTURES. ' •- ‘-'f' f A DUTCH GOLD NINE. g HER BROTHER’S PHOTOGRAPH. CURIOSITY.

Mrs. E. E. Fritts and little daughter are here for a week’s -visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrj, J. Q. Alter. Eugene Purtelle is here today. He is not making good on the checks, we understand, but is again asking a few days time. _ : Z. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Brady will start Monday on an eastern trip, visiting his old home in Pennsylvania, and then going into Canada. They will be absent about two weeks. Samuel Borchardt arrived this morning from Tampa, Fla., not having been able to get away in time to join his family at Bass Lake earlier in the week. They will return Monday. Mr. Borchardt joined them there this afternoon. Judge Hanley and family left this afternoon by auto for Ridge Farm, 111., where they will visit over Sunday with Dr. and Mrs. Hinshaw. Mrs. Hinshaw was formerly Miss Luella Robinson, daughter of T. J. Robinson, now of Gillam., / Judge Hanley and family and Senator Halleck and family took in the Crown Point fair Friday. It was a fine show and a great big crowd was in attendance. Ed Duvall’s mare was third in the race in which she ran. The track was very heavy and fast going was impossible. Abe Martin says: Miss Fawn Lippincut says it’s clearly th’ groom’s place t’ stand any expense incurred in shortenin’ th’ trousers o’ th’ best man’s borrowed dress suit. Tell Binkley say’s there’ll never be any real pleasure in motoring till th’ farmer watches his team instead o’ th’ approaching

Railroad Commission Asks Questions of Express Companies. Thirty-seven questions were propounded Thursday to each of the express companies doing business in Indiana by the Railroad Commission of Indiana. The questions touch practically every phase of the express business as it relates to interstate commerce. The questions were sent out as the second step in an investigation of the rates problem <n the state, started some time ago by the commission.' The questions cover every feature of the express business down to the smallest details. Methods of computing rates and the amount of business and revenues of each line are included in the questions. The commission has hired an expert to oversee the investigation, and clerks and experts paid for by the various companies will aid the commission’s supervisor in the inquiry.

Wife Got Tip Top Advice. “My wife wanted me to take our boy to the doctor to cure an ugly boll,’’ writes D. Frankel, of Stroud, Okla. “1 said’put Bucklen’s Arnica Salve on IL* She did so, and it cured the boil in a short time.” Quickest healer of burns scalds, cuts, corns, bruises, sprains, swellings. Best pile cure on earth. Try it Only 25c at A. F. Long’s. A dispatch from Washington says that Colonel George R. Cecil, of Ft. Benjamin Harrison, at Indianapolis, has been appointed commander of the Twenty-ninth regiment, United States infantry, stationed at Governors Island, N. Y. The announcement *of the appointment was made by Major-Gen-eral Leonard Wood, chief of staff. r Falls Victim to Thieves. S. W. Bends, of Coal City, Ala., has a Justifiable grievance. Two thieves stole his health for twelve years. They were a liver and kidney trouble. Then Dr. King’s New Life Pills throttled them. He’s well now. Unrivaled for constipation, malaria, headache, dyspepsia. 25c at A. F. Long's. Cuts and bruises may be healed in about one-third the time required by the usual treatment by applying Chamberlain’s Liniment It io an antiseptic and causes such injuries to heal without maturation. This liniment also, relieves soreness of the muscles and rheumatic pains. For sale by all dealers. c A Classified Adv. will rut it