Jasper County Democrat, Volume 9, Number 43, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 January 1907 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

EnojuidSaysjßW I NO ALUM Jmll In Food In England and France the Sale of Alum Baking Powder is pro- oiWMI hibited by law because of the in- ' jurious effects that follow its use. /dR&j|Z I The law in the District of Columbia also prohibits Alum \ WfW [in food. You may live where as yet you have no protection against Alum W The only Sure protection against Alum in your Baking Powder is so I Say plabsfy-- I ROYALKI™ I ROYAL is made from Absolutely pure Cream of Tartar,—a pure Grape B product * Aids digestion—adds to the healthfulness of food. B

LOCAL AND PERSONAL. Brief Items of Interest to City and Country Readers. e37c; oats 33c. .. lioretta Nagel is visiting in Lafayette. Ritchie of Anderson visited relatives here Saturday. Frank Kennel has moved to Lafayette, where he is tending bar in a saloon. Chauncy Wood, southeast of town, has gone to Purdue to take an agricultural course. But little damage was done by high water along the Makemself last Friday and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Turner of Kirklin, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Beam thia week. New subscribers to The Democrat this week by postoffices: Rensselaer, 2; Demotte, 1; Chicago, 1. ' \>Mr7and Mrs. James Lefler of "nder Pleasant Ridge, returned Monday from a visit with relatives at Anderson. Congress has done one good thing this session if it does nothing else, and that is to cut off the free garden seed fraud. Carson, the popular young grocery clerk at the Chicago Bargain Store, visited at Hammond several days the first of the week. \Mesdames John Greve and Lhuis Paulsen of Wheatfield visited the former’s daughter, Mrs. J. W. Tilton, a few days this week. Tom Bissenden is working up quite a business in his rubber stamp making, and receives a number of mail orders for statfips. Continuous vaudeville theatres are becoming quite an attraction in the smaller towns, and both Delphi and Monticello now sport one. Subscribe for the Democrat now and secure the opening chapters of “The Conquest of Canaan” by Booth Tarkington, Indiana’s popular author. yXjieo Tuteur of Indianapolis, acby Miss Selma Fox, also of the capital city, who, it is rumored, is likely to become Mrs. Tuteur soon, visited relatives here Sunday. Those who have read Booth Tarkington's “The Gentleman from Indiana,” or "The Two Vanrevels” will be sure to read his “The Conquest of Canaan?’ soon to appear in this paper. C. W. Bheeler, who lives with her son Wm. R. Shesler, east of town, slipped and fell Monday breaking her left arm at the wrist. It is very painful so; one of her age, she being past 76 years. Henry Eck of northwest CarK‘,er tp., whose public sale was Monday, left the next day for Okmulgee, Indian Territory, where he will locate. He hae Bold hie farm in Carpenter to Frank Eck.