Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 303, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 December 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Nice selection of pure toilet articles, for aale at Mr*. Purcupile’s. (Mrs. Guy Hudson and eon made a trip to Monon today. A 50 pound sack of our Diamond brand flour for SI.OO.— Iroquois Roller Mills. Born, today, Dec. 22nd, to Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Beiler, <rf Union township, a daughter. We have all otee* of Christmas oranges, highly colored, sweet and juicy navels at -from 25c to 60c dos. ROWLES & PARKER. Mrs. P. H. Hallagan and son, James, returned to Dunkirk, Ind., today, after a visit since Saturday with the Hallagan family here. Mr.s Sam Lowery was called to Warren, Ind., today, by the serious sickness <xf her mother, Mis. Abraham Waflton who is not expected to live. L. M. Rhode and wife, of Brookston, passed through Rensselaer this morning on their way to Osceola, lowia, to visit their daughter, Mrs. Earl Thornton. Dr. Gerald D. Strong came from Ann Arbor, Mich., this rooming, joining Mrs. Strong, who came a week ago to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Hartley. Tomorrow Mrs Simon Leopold will have a Christinas tree at her home on Van Rensselaer street for a number of neighborhood children. Sixteen invitations haev been issued and Mia. N. Littlefielld wall assist in entertaining the little guests. Rev. J. ißudman Fleming, the new pastor of the Presbyterian church, contracted quite a severe cold while moving here from Chicago Heights hast week and has been confined at his home for the past several days. Fancy head or leaf lettuce, radishes, cauliflower, celery, cabbage, cranberries, oranges, bananas,, and in fact nearly everything for the Xmas dinner. Phone 95. ROWLES & PARKER. The finest quality of perfumes, talcum, face powder and creams, at Mrs. Purcupile’s. T. F. Warne, of Parr, and son, Everest Warne, the drayman of this city, left this Thursday morning for Lorens, lowa, to visit the former’s son, Levet. It will be the first vacation Everet Warne has taken since he engaged in the draying business here more than ten years ago. We have a complete line of fruits and vegetables for the Christmas dinner. Oranges, bananas, radishes, head or leaf lettuce, cauliflower, cabbage and cranberries. ROWLES & PARKER. Fenton O. Churchill returned to Rensselaer from Montana about three weeks ago and will spend the winter in Rensselaer. He worked for the Maines boys thre and reports that they had a fine crop this year, raising something like 30,000 bushels of small grain, wheat, oats and barley. Holiday rates which were effective a fteW’ years ago on almost every railroad in the country, especially through the central west, have passed into the pages of history. There will be no holiday reductions for travelers this year and unless there is a mighty big change, railroad men say the widely-popular holiday rates will not be resurrected. B. H. Drollinger, of Laporte, who sells safes for a Hamilton, Ohio, company, was in Rensselaer over night, leaving this afternoon for Crown Point. He graduated, from Indiana University ladt year and he is a friend of Worth McCarthy and George Healey, Jr. Last year he won the conference wrestling championship but he has not wrestled any since leaving school. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sheets and children came from Sterling, HL* yesterday and today all but their daughter, Lulubelle, accompanied Mrs. Sheets’ father, James Garriott and daughter, Miss Madeline, to Fayette, Fla., near which piac eMr. Garriott owns a farm and where he and Miss Madeline will spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Sheets and son will spend only a few days there and then return to Rensselaer. Their daughter remained here with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James Ennis. Robert is now the signal inspector for the Northwestern railroad company and this will require his removal from Sterling to Chicago.
ANOTHER LINK WITH MONTICELLO. Monticello Citizens Add Their Praise. Another link with our neighboring town of Monticello is provided in the following grateful and generous statement of a well-known resident there, Mr. Thomas H. Graves, Railroad St., who says: “I had a severe attack of lumbago and my back became so stiff and sore that I could not stoop. I had a dull, throbbing ache through my kidneys and loins and a distressing kidney weakness. I doctored and used medicine of various kinds, but nothing helped me until I took Doan’s Kidney Pills. This medicine went to the seat of the trouble and three boxes made a cure.* Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Graves had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. T.
