Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 43, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 February 1916 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

H. E. White made a business trip to Monon Friday afternoon. Mrs. James Maloy will start next Tuesday for Melbourn, Fla., to visit her son, Dr. Bernie Maloy. W. C. Rose went! to Lafayette today for a brief visit with his son, Fred, at Purdue. Fred is taking a course in civil engineering. Miss Alice Eib, who teaches in the schools at Elwood, came home this morning for a briei visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Eib, of Barkley township. W. W. Wilson, who is associated with R. E. Yeoman in the concrete silo business, left today for his home at Keyranna. They expect to do a good business the coming year. TWO-SEVEN-THREE—Phone this number for coal, wood and feed. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Fendig and two children returned home Friday afternoon from their trip to the south, where they visited relatives for about a month. . . . , Samuel Fendig, B. N. Fendig and C. E. Garver will leave Tuesday for a pleasure trip to the south. They will attend the mardi gras at New Orleans, visit at Brunswick, Ga., Tampa and Jacksonville, Fla., and then go to Havana, Cuba, for a few days. M. P. Warner went to Reynolds today on account of the death of his aged aunt, Mrs. Delila Myers, whose age was about 87 years. She was a sister of the late Harvey Phillips and of Mr. Warner’s mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Phillips Warner. The funeral of Mrs. Myers is to be held Sunday at Lee and burial will be made in the Osborne cemetery. To Cure Children’s Colds. Keep child dry, clothe comfortably, avoid exposure and give Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey,,. It is pleasant, soothing, antiseptic, raises phlegm and reduces inflammation. The first dose gives relief, continued treatment with proper care will avoid serious illness or a long cold. Don’t delay treatment. Don’t let child suffer. Get a bottle today. Insist on Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey. 25c t druggists. ( 2 ) The Monticello checker club held a banquet at the Forbis hotel last evening. At the conclusion of the banquet a checker tournament was held 4n the Traitors of the hotel. The Journal, says the club is composed o? a bunch of good scouts. Rensselaer admits they are and wonders if J hey have learned angthing about checkers during the past year. Gertrude Voitlander, of Vikarabad, India, will sppk on the “Mass Movement in India” at the M. E. church Sunday morning, Feb. 20th. Miss Voitlander is a Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society field secretary of Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois, and has had many and varied experiences both in India and as a lecturer. She uses the native cosl tumes when desired. Admission free. Everybody invited. A collection taken at the close f r the advancement of missions in the Orient. M. W. Coppess, of Gillam towrship, has a two-headed Hereford calf. Omar Osborne and Will Simonds saw it while visiting Mack one day last week. The calf was then a week old. It was really more of a double head than two distinct heads, there being two mouths, two tongues and two noses. There is an eye on each side of the head and a soft of double eye right in the center of the head. The calf is being fed from a bottle and is keeping healthy.

You can now get the correct time in Rensselaer for the first time in its history. The new Western Union clocks are kept correctly adjusted all the time. Frank Samules, who is running the Western Union office during the absence of Miss Spaulding, says that he don’t know just how many people live in Rensselaer but that 1,763 men by actual count stopped into his office Friday to set their watches. The time is corrected twice , daily from Washington, D. C., in the W. U. office, where the master clock is located, and the other six are corrected every half hour from the masterHoctr^The correction is not exactly a correction but more a check to see that there is no variation. The court house clock has for several years been kept from 3 to 5 minutes faster than the right time. If it is now set with Western Union time persons but get out of the habit of depending on the difference when they want to catch a train. FOR RHEUMATISM As soon as an attack of rheumatism begins apply Sloan’s Liniment. Don’t waste time and suffer unnecessary agony. A few drops of Sloan’s Iyiniment on the affected parts is all you need. The pain goes at once. A grateful sufferer writes —“I was suffering for three weeks with chronic rheumatism and stiff neck although I tried many medicines, they failed, and I was under the care of a doctor. Fortunately I heard of Sloan’s Liniment and after using it three or four df.ys am up and well. lam employed at the* biggest department IT wbem »bev employ from six to eight hundred hands, and they surely' will hear all about Sloan’s Liniment.—H. B. Smith, San Francis co, Cal. —J an. 1915. At all drugaw.. < 2 >