Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 97, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 April 1912 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Henr> Snow, who has been in poor health for several moqths with heart trouble, is still very poorly. He is living with his brother, Trebdore, near Aix. Mrs. Wm. Porter, of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Mrs. James Mead, of Hammond, returned to their homes Saturday after visiting a few days with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Clark.' We have taken the agency for Remington typewriter supplies add if you want the best typewriter ribbon made call at The Republican office or phone your wants. Ribbons for all makes of machines. Ernest ’Cavinder, the 10-year-old son of Lou Cavinder, fell under a loaded wagon which his father was driving at the Halligan farm, 4 miles east of town. The wheel passed over his right arm just below the shoulder and broke it and the bone was badly crushed. Dr. Gwin was called and placed the arm in a cast. The North German Lloyd announced Thursday that it had instructed commanders of all its steamships, both at New York and at Bremen, to take a course two degrees south of the regular southerly sailing lane until further orders. / Thursday was graduation day at the Moody Bible Institute, Chicago. Fortyone students, one of them a woman 80 years old, who had taken the twoyear course, received “their diplomas of Practical Christianity.” Rev. Dr. James M. Gray, dean of the institute, presided. The Butte valley district in Gregory county, South Dakota, lays claim to the largest boy in that state for his age in the person of Jacob Schimmerhorn. The lad is 15 years of age, is 6 feet 6 inches in height, and weighs 180 pounds. He went to Dakota with his parents from Kansas. Henry M. Dearing, 7$ years old, cashier of the defunct Albion National bank At Albion, Mich., and his son, Palmer M., were sentenced Thursday in federal court at Detroit to five -years eacFTn the federal’itflboh“at Leavenworth, Kas., for misappropriation- of the bank’s funds. The discrepancies totaled more than SIOO,OOO. - A break in the main levee along the Mississippi river four miles below Rosedale, Miss., and another in the dike along the Arkansas river added 25,000 persbns to the list of flood sufferers in southern Arkansas, northwestern Louisiana and northwestern Mississippi Thursday. The flood inundated an area of rich cotton country almost as large as the New England states. >

A WAY OPEN. Many a Rensselaer Reader Knows It WelL There is a way open to convince the greatest skeptic. Scores of Rensselaer people have made it possible. The publac statement of their experience is proof the like of which has never been produced before in Rensselaer. Read this case of it given by a citizen: Mrs. Aaron Hickman, N. Front St, Rensselaer, Ind., says: “In my opinion Doan’s Kidney Pills are the best kidney medieine on the market I have taken them at different times-when suffering from attacks of backache and other symptoms of kidney complaint and 1 have always received prompt relief. Three years ago I first began their use and they proved so satisfactory that I have had no desire to change to - any other remedy* ’ I was so well pleased with the benefit I received from my first trial of Doan’s Kidney Pills that I gave a statement for publication recommending them in the spring of 1907. Since then when I have heard anyone complain of kidney trouble or backache, I have suggested that Doan’s Kidney Pills be procured at Fendig’s Drug Store and given a trial. Different members of my family have taken this remedy and like myself have been greatly benefited.” For sale by ail dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. _ : Remember the name—Doan's —and ! fkke no other. r