Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 233, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 September 1913 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Mrs. C, George and son, Theodore, have taken up their residence at the Philip Blue cottage and will remain there for the next six mouths. Mr. and Mrs. Blue plan to leave Thursday for the home of the daughter at New Boston, 111. Mrs. Hurley Beam will go to Chicago, where she and Hurley will board during the winter months. Bottled sunlight sold and Installed in suburban homes by the Watson Plumbing* Co., Phone 204 Mrs. J. K. Sanders came from Plymouth to assist her invalid daughter; ■ Mra Clarence Hamilton, and two children pack their household goods ready for shipment to that place. Today Mrs. Sanders and Mrs. Hamilton and the children left for Plymouth and Clarence is to join them there Saturday or Sunday. Good baled straw, clover aid timothy hay for sale by Hamilton & Kellner Firman Thompson went to Chicago this morning on an early train and Mrs. Thompson joined him there later in the day, to remain for the day only. Mr. Thompson will go on to Grand Rapids, Mich., where he will take treatment of a specialist—who—successfully treated Delos Thompson several months ago. Now seasonable—pancake flours—and the brand new has.just arrived at The Home Grocery. Virginia Sweet and Geiger’s Buckwheat makes a quick breakfast. John Kresler left yesterday for a stay of four or five weeks at Easton, Pa., and Trenton, N. J., his boyhood stamping ground. He had not been back there for four or fiv6 years. His plans to attend the Gettysburg semi-centennial in the summer were not carried out owing to the extremely hot weather and this will doubtless be a much more pleasant time for his visit - 'j - Mr. and Mrs. Mallie Clark had simultaneous bad luck Monday of this week at their home in Wheatfield. Mrs. Clark broke a needle point off in her hand and the accident had just occurred when her husband drove up in front of the house and tied his team. He had bo sooner entered the house the horses broke loose and ran away, totally demolishing the buggy. 7~ Rev. D. A. Rogers, of Union Mills, stopped off here yesterday for a short visit with his sister, Mrs. R. A. Parkison. He had been attending conference and was again assigned to the church at Union Mills. Rev. Thos. Mason, of Salome Springs, Ark., who had returned to attend the GiUam'township home coming, also spent a day or two at the conference and visited friends here Monday. Earl (Nub) Hemphill arrived home this morning from Aberdeen, S. Dak., where he has been working in a restaurant for some time. He left here the first of April and returned on account of the stroke of paralysis recently 7 suffered by his father, M. L. Hemphill. His father is now getting along without much change, being able to get about some and to talk much better than he could immediately after the stroke. Rev. Paul C. Curniek, D. D., who was assigned to the Rensselaer Methodist church, accompanied Rev. C. L. Harper, the retiring minister, here Monday afternoon and was introduced to many people by Rev. Harper. Dr. Curniek will at once begin his removal here from Terre Haute and will probably be installed in the „ fine parsonage home by the first of next week. Rev. Harper will also remove to Delphi at once. Both are well pleased with their assignments. Rev. Curnick’s family consists of a Avife and three children, girls of 18 and 10 and a boy of 13. A. I. Abel, agent of the Monon and C. & E. I. railroads at Fair Oaks, accompanied by his wife, went to Battle Ground today to attend the funeral of their brother-in-law, Ed Johnson. Ed was a fine young man of about 39 years. He was quite an athlete when young and came to this city several times as a member of the Battle Ground football team, to compete with Rensselaer teams. He bad been in failing health for some time and for several months had been unable to work. His death occurred in Chicago, where he had lived for the past seven years.. lie leavas a wife and one daughter and many other relatives to mourn his death.
Don’t Let Baby Suffer With Eczema and Skin Eruptions. Babies need a perfect skin-cover-ing: Skin eruptions cause thsfn not only intense suffering, but hinder their growth. DR. HOBSON’S ECZEMA OINTMENT can be relied on for relief and permanent cure of suffering babies whose skin eruptions have made their life miserable. "Our baby was afflicted with breaking out of the skin all over the face and scalp. Doctors and akin specialists failed to help. We tried Dr. Hobson’s Eczema Oointmcnt and were overjoyed to see baby completely cured before one box .was used,” writes Mrs. Strubler, Dubuque, la. All druggists, or by mail, 50c. Pfeiffer Chemical Company, St Louis, Mo. Philadelphia, Pa.
