Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 79, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 April 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Paul Wood made a trip to Chicago today. - Order ydur chick starter of Hamilton A Kellner. —■■■■ $ George Casey was down from Lowell today. We have all kinds of bulk and package garden seeds, and onion sets. JOHN EGER. T. W. Grant made a business trip to Monticello today. Call and see the beautiful Easter flowers. You don't have to buy.—J. “H. Holden. John English returned this morning from a visit with his brother, Job, at Brook. Order a flower for some sick friend. Nothing so fine as a blooming plant. —J. H. Holden. Mrs. Evelyn Randle returned this morning from a visit with her daughter at Reynolds. '>■ Remember, Hamilton A Kellner sell the famous John Deere line of farm machinery. The local board of trade office will get the returns of the Johnson-Wil-lard fight Monday. You can buy Aristos, the best flour made, at wljat others are getting far lower grade flour. JOHN EGER. Mrs. Charles Woodworth, of Wheatfield, came this morning to visit with her sister, Mrs. Roscoe Nelson. 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. Mr. and Mrs. G. Sorensen, of Chalmers, came this morning to visit their daughter, Mrs. Louis Bolds, 6 miles west of Rensselaer. Mrs. J. H. Chapman is taking treatment at the Battle Creek sanitarium ami will be there for about ten days. Have you seen one of those elegant buggies at aHmilton & Kellner’s. George Healey is home from Illinois University at Champaign to spend the Easter vacation. School takes up there Tuesday noon. Our 2% Hour, fine for pancakes. Ask us about it. Phone 456, the Mill. V . ... —— ■ 11 ■ ■■ ■_ Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dobelbauer and Miss Maude Leak, of Lafayette, came this morning to spend Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Stanley. Mrs. Eldon Hopkins, accompaniec by Miss Goldie Stockton, a trainee nurse from Morocco, have gone to Redlands, Cal., to visit the former's daughter, Helen, now Mrs. Thomas Goodman, Jr., of that city. They will be absent about three months ane will visit the exposition at San Francisco.

WHOOPING COUGH. Well—everyone knows the effect of Pine Forests on coughs. Dr. Bell’s pine-Tar-Honey is a remedy which brings quick relief for r whooping cough, loosens the mucous, soothes the lining of the throat and lungs, and makes the coughing spells less severe. A family with growing children should not be without it. Keep it handy for all coughs and colds. 25c at your druggist. Electric Bitters a Spring Tonic. 2 .- y i The New York Central railroad has taken off one passenger train each way on the road through, Kentland. The northbound train at 4:33 a. m. and the southbound train at 11:45 p. m. have been taken off. On Sundays there will be only one train each wa y- 1 Your Child’s Cough is a Call for Help Don’t put off treating your child’s cough. It not only saps their strength but often leads to more serious ailments. Why risk? You don’t have to. Dr. King’s New Discovery is just the remedy your child needs. It is made with soothing, healing and antiseptic balsams. Will quickly check the the codl and soothe your child’s cough away. No odds how bad the cough or how olng standing, Dr. King’s New Discovery will stop it. It’s guaranteed. Just get a bottle from your druggist and try it. 2 Melvin A. Halstead, who founded the town of Lowell, died March 24th in Auburn, Kans., at the advanced age of 93 years, 11 months and 25 days. He was bom in Rensselaer county, N. Y. He founded the town in about 1850 and named it after Lowell, Mass—- ■ 11 11 A Sluggish Lava Needs Attention. Let your liver get torpid and you are in for a spell of misery. Everybody gets an attack now and then. Thousands of people keep their livers active and healthy by using Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Fine for the stomach, too. Stop the dizziness, constipation, biliousness and indigestion. Clear the blood. Only 25c at your druggist. 2 Tramps: were thick in Rensselaer yesterday. Umbrella menders and deformed mendicants and wagon travelers were plying their quest for nickles and dimes. The psychological condition of which President Wilson is wont to speak don’t' seem to account for the great increase in this class of unemployed. x