Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 232, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 September 1913 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

trscmoiiui fjjj§§l | I For Infants and Children. ru STO DII The Rind You Have HiHHH Always Bought §§§ll 1 ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. A Rlil ! A\£getable PreparafionErAs- j r m P| aSSSSSSB Bears the //tj» U! I ftomotesDigestionJClieeifii of AA t r Hu | Ii nessandßestGontainsneitlw VA #L\ IT ||| | GpiimuMorphiae norMaeisL M\y HI i I AfrafMMmfflmaJL Ijf | E tiJ %J/ Use lifl ii Aperfect Remedy V 1» y ill ii tion,Sour Stoijiacti.Dlarrhpei 1 IV p „ Pan!: Worms,Convulsions Jewrisfr \ M I* Or II VRI Hi i; ness and Loss OF SLEEK ■I Ul VV Ul I -as* . Thirty Years 1H NEW YORK. __ V / _ jjjj j CUSTOM Exact Copy of Wrapper. THE oe*t*«* •ommnv. new vorkoitv.

Phone your coal orders to No. 273. Fifty tickets were sold Sunday for the Chicago excursion. Good baled straw, clover and timothy hay for sale by Hamilton & Kellner Born, Saturday, Sept. 27th, to Mr. and Mrs. William Van Cleve, of Fair Oaks, a daughter. D. S. White returned to Elgin, 111., today, after an over-Sunday visit with his sister, Mrs. John Mann. ' H. M. Tinder, who has been working near Goodland, visited over Sunday with Bert Nees, west of Rensselaer. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bunnell and little son, of Homer, Mich., are here to visit her uncle, H. E. Hartley and family. Mrs. Emma Turnpaugh, of Logansport, is here for a visit with hsr daughters, Mrs. Nelson Shafer and Mrs. Mel Haas. Mr. and Mrs. John Schroer and granddaughter, Miss Bessie McElfresh, have returned from a visit of three weeks at Zanesville, Ohio. Attorney G. A. Williams went to Monticello today on legal business, Halligan brothers being engaged in a suit involving the title to real estate. Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Hopkins and children returned to Ohebanse, 111., this morning after visiting over Sunday with his father, C. J. Hopkins, at Mt. Ayr. Now seasonable—pancake flours—and the brand new has just arrived at The Home Grocery. Virginia Sweet and 1 Geiger’s Buckwheat makes a quick breakfast. „ Anson Cox was here over Saturday and Sunday helping to pack and load his household goods for shipment to Hammond. Mrs. Oox andfLillus will remain here for two or three weeks. Miss Stella Bristow returned Saturday from a visit of three weeks at Kankakee and CullOm, 111. She was accompanied home by Miss Mary Bailey, a cousin, who remained until this morning. No stock is better kept up than that of The Home Gorcery. We receive our * goods often—insuring freshness, and we carelully study the demands of our trade day by day. John W. Medicus was taken very sick Saturday evening with an acute inflammation of the bowels and bladder. He continued very alarmingly sick over Sunday hut is somewhat improved today. Simon Thompson was up from Purduo over Sunday. Pie was limping as a result of a sprained knee In a football. game. "It was the last time I will let any one feoax me Into a football game,” quoth Simon. Newton Selby, of near Nashville, Tenn.. is visiting the family of William Holmes, northeast of town, and Sunday his son, Walter Selby, and Elmer Godshall, who are working in the Pullman Car Works, came down to spend the day. These lads are doing well at Pullman, getting 31 cents an hour in the steel car department. Selby works 11 hours at night and Godshall works In the day, 9 hours and 45 minutes. Advertise In The Republican.