Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 289, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 December 1913 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Dr. A. R. Kresler is in Chicago today. ' i * ii .1, i. Dr. I. M. Washburn made a trijp to Indianapolis today. Van Wood is attending the fat stock show in Chicago today. Tom Manley and George Kepner made a trip to Chicago today. Mr. and Mra A. F. Long are spending today and tomorrow in Chicago. Mrs. E. L. Bammerton returned this morning from a visit in Montieello. Fred Popp and William Dunn returned this morning from a visit to the stock show. Buy your coal of Hamilton & Kellner. Caries Criswell returned this morning from Fowler, where he has been husking corn all fall. He reports that the crop there was very good, irunning from 45 to 5Q bushels to the acre. Leave your order for potatoes in 2V a bushel sacks on unloading days, Wednesday and Thursday, at 85 cents a bushel. JOHN EGER. Mrs. B. J. Moore left this morning for a visit of some length at Ada, Ohio, her girlhood home. She will alo visit at Canton, Freemont and other places. Perry Gifford, of Hlinois, a nephew of the late B. J. Gifford, has purchased 320 acres of the Gifland, being half of section 35 near Laura. The consideration was S4O per acre. He will occupy the farm in the spring. - -- * - - John Kepner returned this morning from Bloomington. He will not be able to get possession of his farm there right away, owing to sickness of a member of the family of the tenant. This may delay his removal there until after the first of the year. Mr. and Mrs. Will Moore, of Mitchell, S. Dak., have been here for several days, visiting his brother, O. A| Moore, and family and today Will and Austin made a trip to Colburn, where the former owns a farm. Will reports crops good at Mitchell and they hade a very successful year. 1 M. Mrs. A. W. Douglas and three children were guests for a day and night of Mrs. Mary E. Lowe. They and her husband have been visiting relatives and old friends at Montieello and Monon, where they formerly lived. Their present home is in Oakland, Cal. Father Kaiser, a priest whose sudden disappearance from North Judson several months ago, gave rise to a suspicion that he had eloped with a girl living at that place, is now at Cincinnati, and it seems that he was done great injustice by the articles printed at the time. He made a trip to Germany and is now at the Dominican, an institution of the church at Cincinnati

Cured of Liver Complaint. “I was suffering with liver complaint,” says Iva Smith, of Point Blank, Texas, “and decided to try a 25c box of Chamberlain’s Tablets, and am happy to say that I am completely cured and can recommend them to every one.” For sale by A. F. Long. C How to Bankrupt the Doctors. A prominent New York physician says, “If it were not for the thin stockings and thin soled shoes worn by women the doctors would probably 'be bankrupt.” When you contract a cold do not wait for it to develop into pneumonia but treat it at once. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is intended especially for coqghsand colds, and has won a wide reputation by Its cures of these diseases. It is most effectual and is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by A. F. Long. C Fit His Case Exactly. “When father was sick about six years ago he read an advertisement of Chamberlain’s Tablets in the papers that fit his case exactly,” writes Miss Margaret Campbell, of Ft. Smith, Ark. “He purchased a box of them and he has not been sick since. My sister had stomach trouble and was also benefited by them.” For sale by A. F. Long. C

Prank Leach, of near Remington, recently gave his wife a check for S2O and she had it cashed at Collins’ shoe store. Mr. Collins sent the check through the bank and It went to the Bank of Remington, on which it was drawn. There it was discovered that the check had been dated in advance and it was returned unpaid. Mr. Collins then went after Leach and Wednesday he accompanied Sheriff Hoover here and squared the matter with Collins. Leach and his wife are not living together. . J. M. Lesh, of Menomonie, Wia, formerly of this county, has been visiting his daughter, Mrs. Eli Arnold and family here for the past week, and left this morning for Eaton, Ohio, because of the sickness of his sister at that place. He will return here before going to his home. His son, D. E. Leah, also of Menomonie, and Isaac McCurtain, of the same places both former Jasper! tes, are visiting relatives in this county. Dan had marketed a oar of cattle and Isaac a car of hogs in Chicago and came down here for a short visit. Ail are pleased with conditions in Wisconsin.