Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 77, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 April 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Milt Roth i» spending today in Chicago. ' Have you seen one of those elegant buggies at aHmilton A Kellner’s. Van Grant made a trip to Remington yesterday. Order your chick starter of Hamilton & Kellner. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Hammerton are spending today in Chicago. Remember, Hamilton & Kellner sell the famous John Deere line of farm machinery. Mrs. Ed Fay and children went to Mt. Ayr this morning to spend several days. Don’t fail to call at Holden’s greenhouse and see the beautiful blooming plants. - The Retail Merchants have decided to hold their next market day on Thursday, April 29th. * Mrs. W. H. Coover came from Remington the first of the week and is visiting J. D. Allman and others. We have -all kinds of bulk and package garden seeds, and onion sets. JOHN EGER. Mrs. J. H. Dunlap and children went to Mt. Ayr this morning to spend the vacation period. Order a flower for some sick friend. Nothing so fine as a blooming plant. —J. H. Holden. Lindley Sharpnack, principal of the intermediate department of the public schools, went to Chicago today to spend his vacation. We have pure South Dakota Early Ohio potatoes, free from scab and not worm eaten. Also nice Early Rose for early seed potatoes. JOHN EGER. Sheriff McColly today took Mrs. Frank Swartzell to the asylum at Longcliffe, a board having pronounced her of unsound mind. She was in the asylum once previously. Call ahd see the beautiful Easter flowers. You don’t have to buy.^—J. H. Holden. Mr. and Mrs. John Beckman returned today from Chatsworth, 111., where they attended the funeral of Mr. Beckman’s sister-in-law, Mrs. C. R. Beckman. You can buy Aristos, the best flour made, at what others are getting for lower grade flour. JOHN EGER.

T. W. Grant went to Chicago this morning to accompany his wife home from the Eye and Ear hospital. Her recent operation there seems to have been entirely successful and she is in better condition than she had been since before the first operation at Lafayette several weeks ago. Ditchers take notice. I have ditchers’ staffs for sale divided in tenths and hundredths from $1 to $1.50. —L. A. Bostwick. At the Passion Week services being* held at the Methodist church, Dr. Cumick follows each evening the events recorded in the gospels as having happened upon that day. Tonight will represent the Thursday night of the Holy Week when Jesus gathered his disciples in the upper room and instituted the sacrament of the Holy Communion. The public is Invited to these services at 7:30. Miss Helen Leatherman is making excellent recovery from her recent illness and operation and Miss Dorothy Freir, the trained nurse, was discharged Monday. Helen is able to be up and about the house now and may be able) to re-enter'school before the close of the term. The marriage of Miss Susie Kamstra and Walter DeYoung occurred here today. They are both from Holland and have been in this country (filly about two years. She has been employed as a domestic in Rensselaer and he has worked on farms and at wood chopping since coming here. They will-live in DeMotte, where he will work on the C. I. & S. railroad.

Stomach Trouble Cured. Mrs. H. G. Cleveland, Arnold, Pa., writes, “For some time I suffered from stomach trouble. I would have sour stomach and feel bloated after eating. Nothing benefited, me until I got Chamberlain’s Tablets. After taking two bottles of them I was cured.” For sale by all dealers. C

A Rensselaer businessman said to the editor of The Republican ,this morning that he had been approached by more people in search of assistance during the past winter than he had during his entire seventeen years business experience outside of this year. Men who want to work and will perform any kind of labor as well as an extra large number of beggars and tramps. Things are not very prosperous in Kentucky according to men who come from there in quest of farm labor in this part of Indiana. The tobacco crop there was large but not of very good quality, having heated in storage. Three mem none from there tint morning, Luther Martin, William Donaldson and Harvey Catron. They went to Fair Oaks and out'to the Hillis ranch, where Mr. Martin had worked several years ago.