Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 234, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 October 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Roe Yeoman went to Hopkins Park, 111., this morning to build a silo. It will probably be the last one he will construct this fall Eight French army officers at the East St. Louis stockyards Wednesday closed a contract for 46,000 horses to be delivered in ten days. Mi’s. H. H. Carr and family Friday picked 200 bushels of pears They are selling the hand picked ones at $1 and the fallen pears at 50 cents a bushel. | z We now have a lot of extra fancy apples, 25 and 30 cents a peck, SI.OO a bushel, or $2.50 to $2.75 for a 3bush'el barrel. JOHN EGER.

Joe Kight came down from Thayer today, accompanied by his wife’s sister, Mrs. Walter Hess, of Momence, who has been visiting at Thayer. Impure blood runs you' downmakes you an easy victim for disease. For more blood and sound digestion—Burdock Blood Bitters. At all drug stores. Price SI.OO. 8. C. Irwin is moving into his fine new residence on College avenue, and County Auditor Hammond is moving into the house vacated by Mr. Irwin, on River street. Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Porter, of Momence, 111., came today from Pine Village, wlrtsre they have been visiting and spent a short time with Sylvester Hatton and family. C. J. Dean sold a farm of 84 acres to William Klein, of Milroy township. The farm is in Michigan, a short distance from Holton and near two other good towns. L. D. Eiwin, the aged father of Mrs. N. Littlefield, has been quite poorly for several days. He is 85 years old and has hardening of the arteries. He is at the Littlefield home. John I. Martin, of Hoopeston, 111,, has been spending a few days with Ed Ranton, Sr. Mr, Martin is a city mail carrier at Hoopeston and for many years carried mail to Mr. Ranton’s home. We will have for Friday and Saturday a lot of fancy “Dqtchess” pears; the kind that are riice and juicy, and will do to eat or can. $1 a bushel. JOHN EGER.

Miss Charlotte Kanne did not remain at Henrotin hospital to take the nurses’ training course. She has decided to wait until the first of the year to enter and then expects to go to a larger hospital. S W. Hancock returned to his home in Harrison county today after having spent four months with his son, Charles Hancock, south of town. He wanted to get home in time to register and vote the republican ticket. Franz Wilhelm Zacher, of Newton township, who has resided in this country since he was fifteen years of age, took out his first naturalization papers today. He is 45 years old. Your Fall Cold Needs Attention. No use to fuss and try to wear it out. It will wear you out instead. Take Dr. King’s New Discovery, relief follows quickly. It checks your cold and soothes your cough away. Pleasant, antiseptic and healing. Children like it. Get a 50c bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery and keep it in the house. “Our family cough and cold doctor,” writes Lewis Manchester, Ohio. Your money back 4f not satisfied, but it nearly always helps.

The Boy Scouts under the direction of Dr. Gwin made the rounds of the town Friday afternoon and tagged unsightly and unsanitary piles of rubbish. Many of good intentions found it impossible to get teamsters to haul away their rub bish and the tags were used where-, ever ash and' manure heaps were found. The campaign for a cleaner Rensselaer should Continue day after day and nothing which the Boy Scouts tagged s"hould be untagged but removed and thus the owner will show his willingness to fulfill the aim of “disease prevention” day. There are things in Rensselaer which a good many of us do not know .about. Today, while the reporter was moving around he found a new grocery store located in the old Cleaver house facing the railroad near the old depot location. It is run by George Booth and Son and has been in operation for several weeks. Duke Nichols, who has had considerable restaurant experience, has rented the brick building where the Dexter creamery station was located for some time and is having it fitted up for a restaurant. He expects to get started up about the middle of the month.

A NOTRE NAME LADY'S APPEAL To *ll knowing sufferer* of rheumatism, whether muscular or of the Joints, sciatica, lumbacoe, backache, pains In the kidney* or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured" all of these tortures. She feels it her duty to send It to all sufferers FBBB. You cure yourself at home as thousands will •■'stify—no change of climate being necessary. This simple discovery banishes uric acid from the blood, loosens the stiffened Joints, parlies the blood, and brightens the eyea, giving elasticity and tone to the whole system. If the above Interests yon, for proof address Mrs. M. Bummers, Box B. Notre Dame, Ind.