Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 247, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 October 1916 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Fendig went to Chicago yesterday and returned today. . - ■__ '~~ * + ■ -■■■■■• 50c for Champion spark plugs at the Auto Equipment Co. Mrs. E. C. English went to Glencoe, 111., yesterday, where she will spend a week visiting relatives. New fall line of goods are now in. Order that suit today and be prepared for falL Also do dry cleaning and pressing.—John Werner. Mrs. Carrie Hahn returned to her home in Virgie yesterday after visitmg Mrs. P. W. Wood at Wolcott for a week. Champion spark phrgs will sell for 60c at the Auto Equipment Co. Miss Marybel Ball came yesterday from her home in Dowagiac, Mich., to visit Miss Elizabeth West for a week or so. ”7“ We still have 30 barrels of those fancy sweet potatoes and will sell the balance of this lot at 3c a pound or $1.50 a bushel, while they last. JOHN EGER.

Miss Anna Clager went to Wheatfield yesterday to see her mothe 7 -, Mrs. John Clager, who has not been well for some time. For a Muddy Complexion. Take Chamberlain’s Tablets and adopt a <liet-of vegetables and cereals. Take outdoor exercise daily and your complexion will be greatly improved within a few months. Try it. For sale by B. F. Fendig. __ C Mrs. J. L. tMyers returned to hdr home-4fl Cifford yesterday after visiting her daughter, Mrs. Pearl Clark and family here for a few days. Secretary of the Navy Daniels closed hearings Thursday on the location for the government armor plant. He expects to reach a conclusion as to the site within a month. Lee Axworthy, champion trotting jaahien. Thursday at Lexington, Ky., furnished new evidence of his speed and class by going a mile to wagon in 2:02 3-4, a new world’s record. To test their -4-inch rifles against the navy’s latest armor plate the dreadnoughs Pennsylvania, Nevada and Oklahoma will shoot in a few days attthe hull of the ram Katahdin, which has just been covered with new —=

Judge Hanley stopped off in Brook on his way home from court on Monday. Did you ever talk to the judge about a case out of court? Well, if you did you come to the conclusion that if you had a case that had any merit- in it you’d about as leave trust him alone as any twelve of your “peers” you could pick out.—Brook Reporter. The new passenger depot at Monon is receiving the finishing touches preparatory to Installing the furniture. The floors are laid and the tile roof will be finished this week. The wood Work has been stained and the hard maple floors in the offices oiled. The radiators are ready to be connected, but the boiler has not yet arrived. Work is progressing on the brick platform and it will not be long until the new station and its environment will present a perfect model of elegance and comfort for use of the way-faring public.