Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 February 1918 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Miss Anna Leonard went to Chicago this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Jacks, of Lee, were in Rensselaer today, We are paying the highest market price for good milling rye; also good buckwheat at IROQUOIS ROLLER MILLS. Phone 45t. Mrs. J. P. Warner is recovering from a severe attack of pneumonia. If you want to please your boy, buy a Shorthorn heifer at the Faylor sale Friday, February 15. If you have lost any stock, call A. L. Padgitt, Phone 65. Charles Pefley, F. A. Turfler, Gerald Hollingsworth and Cleveland W. Eger went to Chicago this morhng. Lester Warren and family left this morning for Lake Charles, Louisana, where they will be located permanently. H. B. Tobin and Ethel Fleming accompanied D. Boundy and Sebo Elmer to their homes at Kankakee, 111., today. THE COMMUNITY AUTOMOBILE SUPPLY COMPANY of Rensselaer, Ind., will sell you a guaranteed tire for SI.OO profit, each. Any size. Also gasoline at 1 cent per gallon profit. Portland Oregonian—Everyman in the state will be card-indexed for the next liberty loan, so he might as well begin putting by a few dollars. You will find everything at the Faylor sale that you need on a farm, as it is a disbursement sale, on Friday, February 15. Al-Co-Nut butter is delicious served on bread, hot biscuits, hot cakes or in fact it replaces butter entirely. Sold only and guaranteed by ROWLES & PARKER. Mrs. Frederick A. Phillip and daughter, Grace Augusta, left today drumright, Okla., where thjey will visit with Dr. Dale Warner and wife. Mrs. Warner is Mrs. Phillips’ sister. See Chas. Pefley for trees, vines and shrubs of all kinds. Guarantee stock to grow or replace free of charge. For spring delivery. John Eger and son, Trevor returned from Chicago Wednesday. They were very much encouraged, over the reports made by Mrs. Eger’s physician. A Hint To The Aged. If people past sixty years of age could be persuaded to go to bed as soon as they take co!4 and remain in bed for one or two days, they would recover much more quickly, especially if they take Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. There would also be less danger of the cold being followed by any of the more serious diseases. C Charles E. Nowels, in writing from Longmont, Colo., to renew his subscription, says; “I am enclosing $4 for two year’s subscription to keep the home news coming. We have had a very fine winter here so far until about three weeks ago it turned very cold and remained, that way. But now we are having the same good old Colorado weather again. No coal shortage here so far.”