Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 67, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 March 1913 — HOUSEHOLD CARES [ARTICLE]
HOUSEHOLD CARES
Tax the Women of Rensselaer the Same as Hard to attend to household duties With a'constantly aching back. A woman should not have a bad baek, And she seldom would if the kidneys were well. Doan’s Kidney Pills are endorsed by thousands. Have been used In kidney trouble over 50 years. Read what this Rensselaer woman says: Mrs. Larkin Pptts, Clark & Washington Sts., Rensselaer, Ind., says: “I was weak and nervous and had but little strength or ambition. I rested poorly and was subject to severe headaches and pains , across my loins. I could hardly attend to my housework at times and I always felt tired and worn our. Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured from Fendig’s Drug Store, gave me relief at once and before J had used them long all my aches and pains disappeared. I am grateful to Doan’s Kidney Pills for what they have done for me.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50' cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. A Good Citiagns' League with several hundred members has been organized at Mitchell and will be in corporated. It will fight saloons. The Northern Indiana Law Col lege has been incorporated -at South Bend, with Joseph M. Callahan, a Notre Dame instructor, as president. Superintendent L. J. Montgomery, of the South Bend schools, announces that vacation schools for delinquent pupils will be held during the coming summer. Mayor. Zimmerman in police court at Richmond ruled that if a man takes only a teaspoonful of beer he can be found guilty on the charge of intoxication.
New Jersey’s senate adopted Monday night a join resolution ratifying the proposed amendment to the federal constitution for the election of United States senators by popular vote.
The University of Michigan has authorized tiie cstablslhment of a course in automobile engineering and designing. It is the first course of the kind offered in any university in the United States. Charles K. Klee, age 47, formerly a business man at Evansville, has returned from Spokane, Wash. He found that his family had disbanded and disappeared. Klee, seven years ago, left a wife and four children at Evansville. He told no one where he was going and never wrote to his family. Alter having deliberated since 10 o’clock Thursday night the jury in the case of Dr. B. Clark Hyde, on trial for the murder of Colonel T. H. Swope, millionaire Kansas City philanthropist, reported at 12:35 p. m. Monday a disagreement and was discharged.
