Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 January 1913 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

A can chuck-full of fancy white spears of tender asparagus for 15c. ’Try a can and you will buy more. JOHN EGER. Little Miss Gladys Hammerton returned to her home at Parr today after a visit of several days with relatives in Rensselaer. Chop, bran, middlings, oil meal, tankage, oyster shell and all other eeds sold by first-class feed stores, for sale by Hamilton & Kellner. Mrs. A. E. Alter, of Forest, and Mrs. W. B. Swazee, of Russiaville, came today to remain until after the death and burial of “Uncle” David Nowels. For 25c we will sell you 3 pounds of nice large peaches, or 3 pounds of nice large prunes, or seeded, seedless, or large, loose, Muscatel raisins. JOHN EGER. Mrs. Otto Adams and children, of Barkley township, returned today from a visit of three weeks at Fairbury, 111 Mr. Adams was there also for about a week. Itch! Itch! Itch! - Scratch! Scratch! Scratch! The more you scratch, the worse the itch. Try Doan’s Ointment. For eczema, any skin Itching. 50c a box. Mrs. George E. Hershman and little daughter returned to Crown Point today, after a visit of several days with Smith Newell and family. Mr. Hershman returned there Sunday. We have in stock a full line of hard and soft coal. We would appreciate your orders. HAMILTON & KELLNER.

Clinton C. Colvert went to Chicago this morning to attend the funeral of his aunt, Mrs. L. M. Fletcher. The body will be shipped to Fowler and interment made tomorrow in the Gilboa cemetery. We can sell you a first-class spreader at a lower price than you can buy of any cheap catalogue house. HAMILTON & KELLNER. E. L. Hollingsworth went to Chicago yesterday to join the family of his brother, G. K. Hollingsworth, at a theatre party, witnessing E. H. Southern and Julia Marlowe in a Shakespearean production. George L. Morgan has been having a severe time of it lately With a large carbuncle on his head. His son, John, has a boil, and Miss Cecil has just recovered from a serr ies of boils and carbuncles. Fred Liston, who has been working in Michigan as a traveling sign painter, is now at home, having returned because of the sickness of his mother, Mrs. Perry Liston, who is a patient at the hospital. R. J. Brown, who has been running a shooting gallery here for several weeks, expects to close up here very shortly and went to Lafayette, today to see about making arrangements to run his gallery there.