Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 January 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
mb work at the Review officer It don’t pay to bake raxes when you ran get such fine ones at McFarland’s for only 10 and 15 cents. Mrs. Ira Carpenter, of Lafayette, came yesterday to spend the day with Mrs. W. Frank Osborne. Mia. Austin Hopkins has returned from a visit of three months with her daughter, Mrs. Thompson and family at Sullivan, Ind. Thomas Ryan, of Richmond, Ind., was a visitor at the college yesterday, his sojuJohn, being a student there. He is a fancier of buff rock chickens and called on some poultrymen while here. Miss Elizebth Townsend, of Pittsburg, who has been at the Oomer House for two weeks as a patient of Dr. Tufler, went to Chicago yesterday for a brief stay and will then return here. Mrs. All Jacks returned to Lee last eVening after being here for several days to help her daughter, Mrs. Thors ten Otterberg, move from the Schanlaub house, which had been sold, to the former Jacks property. Mr. Otterberg has begun the buildling of a house just east of the house he vacated and will occupy that as soon as completed. Granville Aldrich purchased and will occupy the house vacated by Mr. Otterberg. His Btomach Troubles Over Mr. Dyspeptic, would you not like to feel that your stomach troubles were over, that you could eat any kind of food you desired without injury? That may seem so unlikely to you that you do not even hope for an ending of your trouble, but permit us to assure you that it is not altogether impossible. If others ran be cured permanently, and thousands have been, why not you? John R Barker, of Battle Creek, Mich., is one of them. He says, “I was troubled with heartburn, indigestion, and liver, complaint until T used (Chamberlain’s Tablets, then my trouble was over.” Sold by-all dealers. J C
