Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 233, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 October 1911 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

7 additional today’s Locals. You can get Gold Medal Flour at the Depot Grocery. ' Fresh corn meal and graham now in, at the Home Grocery. Gall the Depot Grocery for Gold Medal Flour, the kind that has stood the test of years. The Monon will run another 75 cent excursion next Sunday. Possibly this will be the last of the season. Ladies desiring millinery and dressmaking, also ladies* tailoring, call on Mrs; H. A. Cripps, over Trust and Savings Bank. - » Mrs. W. S. Richards expects to leave this faternoon for Kansas City, Mo., to see her brother, W. B. Peterson, whose health is poor and who expects shortly to seek another climate. Itching piles provoke profanity, but profanity won't cure them. Doan’s Ointment cures itching, bleeding or protruding piles after years of suffering. At any drug store. F. M. Gordan, Of St. Louis, who has been taking treatment at the Mt. Clemens, Mich., springs, stopped off here today to .see his aunt, Mrs. Lyman Zea, and other relatives. He is sn inspector for the Metropolitan Life Insurance "Co.

George W. Marshall,. who recently sold his farm'near Fair Oaks, was in Alabama last week and contracted for 130 acres of land near Bay Minette. He left for there today, being accompanied by John Reed, who is also looking for an investment. Most disfiguring skin eruptions, scrofula, pipiples, rashes, etc., are due to impure blood. Burdock’s Blood Bitters is a cleansing blood tonic. Makes you clear-eyed, clear-brained, clear-skinned. Granville Aldrich has sold his resi dence at the north edge of town to Lee Mauck, who will move from his farm west of Surrey. Mr. Aldrich will move to Moffit county, Colo., where he will probably invest in a small farm. His removal is being made on account of the poor health of himself and his son George. a Ed Miller, who has been working at the C. (E. Prior Fancy Produce Market, - and George D. Zea, who has been deliveryman for several years at Roth Bros.’ meat market, will move shortly to Dr. F. A. Turfler’s farm near Gifford. Both are energetic men and will be gfeat hustlers on the farm, while their places will be difficult to fill acceptably. . B. J. Moore has been having a lot of bad weather to contend with in the construction of the Jacks stone road in White county, near Leb. : Last week he got in but two days and this week r started out badly. The poad is two, miles long and the stone is being blasted alongside the road and crushed right there, thus making very short hauls.

Harry Murray, who went to Hanrilton, N. Dak., with his father, last spring, and who has been at Longmont, Colo., for several months, arrived here Saturday night and will again take up his residence here. Mrs. Murray remained in Longmont to look after a little business and will join her husband here shortly. Harry reports the former Rensselaer people who are in Longmont, as getting along nicely. Mrs. George Henson and little daughter Defaun arrived several days ago from Jamestown, N. Dak., to which place they removed last spring. Mrs. Heuson did not like Nofth Dakota and states tfcat she will not return there another year. Mr. Heuson will come in a few weeks and they expect to live in town during the winter. Mrs. ijleuson says that from 110 acres of wheat they got but 60 bushels for their share. They had a good crop of •oats, however, and also a fair crop of millet and hay, but no corn. George also had out 150 acres of flax, which he was cutting at the time she left for home. C. H. Cannon, of Chandler, Okla., where they raise cotton and ship their feed, is a Rensselaer visitor. He is a brother-in-law of George Morgan, his wife who died several years ago, having been a sister of Mrs. Morgan. Mr, Cannon lived at Kewanna during the civil war and his four brothers were in the union army. He ran the postoffice during their absence. At the close of the war he was so thin that his physician* insisted that he must go west, and he located in Kansas. When the rush for Oklahoma was made he went tjiere, going in on the first legal train that admitted people who were going to make the rush for homesteads. But he found some two thousand people in ahead of the train. Himself and son ar4 now engaged in the fuel, seed and feed business. There was only about half a crop of cotton this year, owing to the drouth. If you haven't the time to exercise regularly. Doan’s Regulets will prevent constipation. They induce a miM. easy, healthful action of the v->letooto without griping. Ask your druggist for them. 25 cents.