Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 91, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 April 1913 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

JUDGE BARHORST DOES HIS .DUTY TO RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS If you suffer from Rheumatism and don’t read this advice, then the terrible disease mvfst have robbed you of your power to be fair to yourself. Read it: “I, John Barhorst, Justice of the Peace of McLean Township, Ft. Loramie, Ohio, do certify that after treatment by three doctors without result, I have been cured of a very bad case of Rheumatism by using two bottles of RHEUMA. It is now two years' since I used t;he remedy, and I am stiill as -well as ever. Previous to using RHEUMA I was a cripple, walking with crutches, and I feel it my duty to let other sufferers from rheumatism know what it will do. The result seems almost miraculous to me. I have advised RHEUMA to at least a dozen persons, and each one speaks as highly of it as I. I will" answer any one suffering from the disease if a two-cent stamp is enclosed.”—May 31, 1912. You can secure'a bottle of RHEUMA for only 50 cents at B. F. Fendig’s and he says if not as advertised, money back. It’s just as good for Gout, Arthritis, Lumbago and Sciatica.

Alex. Frye came up from Lafayette this morning to close up some business affairs here and to get his team which he had left in the care of Michael Ringeisen, who purchased the former Robinson, place of Mr. Frye. He left this -afternoon, driving his team overland to Lafayette. He says there is a great demand for labor with teams at Lafayette and he expects to put a driver to work with the team. Mr. Frye has purchased a 9-room house on Park avenue, near Columbia Park, Lafayette, and taken up his residence there, although he has not yet engaged in any business. For some time after coming to Rensselaer he owned and operated the cement tile works, which he afterward sold to Howard Mills and Wood Spitler. He liked Rensselaer and would have remained here had he found any business in which he thought he might profitably engage.

Now is the time to start your garden, so order your seeds and onion sets from Rowen & Kiser, phone 202. One-cent letter postage advocates have arrived in Washington from Cleveland, 0., to urge upon Postmaster General Burleson the early reduction of the.2-cent postage. At the head of the delegation was Charles W. Burrows, president of the National One-LTent Letter Postage association. - ■ ■ ■ ... , * The new 5 and 10 Cent Store, the store that has brought the prices down on all granlteware and crockery, is located opposite the court house. Three members of the Indiana delegation* Representatives Cox, Cullop and Gray, voted in the democratic caucus Saturday evening to put sugar on the free list immediately. The other members, with the exception of kepresentative Barnhart, voted, to support the plan of President Wilson and the congressional leaders for an immediate reduction of 1 cent a pound' qn sugar and that sugar shall go on the free list automatically aL the end of three years.

CASTOR IA •Star Infants and Children. Tki KM YNMan Always Bmgil Start spring right by having the piano tuned. Prof. Otto will do the work right. Orders may be left with any members of the boys’ band.