Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 73, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 March 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

See the fine Easter flowers at Holden’s, No obligation to buy. Mrs. Alda Parkison went to Chicago this morning to spend several days. Call and see the beautiful Easter flowers. You don’t have to buy.—J. H. Holden. Mrs. John Nowels is spending today at Parr. Mr. Nowels went up yesterday. Order a flower for some sick friend. Nothing so fine as a blooming plant. —J. H. Holden. ' Van Grant’s baby is improving from an attack of bronchial pneumonia. Don’t fail to call at Holden’s greenhouse and see the ’ beautiful blooming plants. Wanda and Genevieve Mead, of Hammond, are visiting Mrs. E. L. Clark. Poultry feed of all kinds. Try our starter and scratch feeds. Ask your grocer or phone the Mill, 456, C. W. Eger is reported some better this morning and it is believed he will continue to improve. If you want a first class high grade farm implement you can get it of Hamilton & Kellner. Arthur Tuteur is somewhat improved and the outlook for continued improvement is encouraging. You get fresh ground meal when you buy Sprague’s. Have no other. Your grocer or the Mill, Phone 456. Mrs. Fred Bartels, of Newland, has been suffering ‘rom gallstones and is to be taken to a hospital for operation. Ray Laßue, Ed Robinson and Joe Reeves, who are attending the Gregg school in Chicago, came down last night to spend Sunday with their parents. Mrs. Clint Brown has been ill since Wednesday with a recurrence of the trouble which came almost costing her life several months ago. She is slightly improved today and it is believed will continue to improve. Swift’s cattle buyer - from New York was here yesterday and bought eighteen car loads of cattle, mostly from B. Lyons, of near Foresman. The price paid was around $8.30 per hundred. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind Yon Han Always BongM

RENSSELAER MARKETS. Wheat—sl.4s. Corn —65c. Oats—6s c. Rye—9oc. Eggs—l6c. Butterfat —28c. Chickens —13c. Ducks—9c. A PROBLEM IN WATCH-WINDING. Thlt Will Interest the Man With a Mathematical Mind. Every night at 12 p. m. I wind up my watch, giving 12 turns. Should I forget to wind, the watch will run down at 6 o’clock the following morning. It occurs to me that I may be overwinding my watch, and I determine to give only 10 turns each night, and beginning to do so on a Monday night. Will the watch run down, and if so, when? Note: Turns in winding are all of equal value. The following is the answer generally given, though it is incorrect: As 12 turns carries the watch for 24 hours and till 6 o’clock—that Is to say, for 30 hours —10 turns would caTry it 25 hours, and therefore the watch would never run down. The correct solution Is aB follows: The watch, of course, always has six hours in hand. The problem starts*: "Every night I wind my watch, giving 12 turns.” If every night 12 turns are required, each' turn carries two hours, and therefore 10 turns on Monday night carries It for 20 hours, to 8 o’clock Tuesday evening and six hours in hand—2 o’clock on Wednesday morning. Ten winds on''Tuesday night oarrles to 8 o’clock Wednesday evening and two hours in hand —10 o’clock on Wednesday evening, when , the watch runs down. —Strand Magazine. - -- - 1 The Best Silo Roof Made. I havfe secured the agency for the Hoosieif Silo Extension Roof, a roof that is not in the way when filling the silo; a roof that will ‘fit any silo and work satisfactorily. A roof th t is not only right in theory-but guaranteed practical in results. Phone 955-L for full particulars. CHAS. C. PARKS. ' NOTICE. ' I would like to do your painting and paper hanging. Will guarantee my work to satisfy. My prices are yours. Wall paper sold at low as 2Vx cents a roll. JPhone 567. ' F LEE RICHARDS. Have you setting eggs for sale Republican readers will buy them if you will advertise.