Jasper County Democrat, Volume 11, Number 78, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 March 1909 — PARR. [ARTICLE]

PARR.

Lucy Brusnahan Is on the sick list at this writing. Several from here attended the Yeoman sale Monday. John Cleager and son Frank of Wheatfleld, was here on business Saturday. Miss Goldie Gunyon, who has been visiting relatives at Monon, returned home Sunday. Misses Ethel Potts, Isabelle Longstreth and Goldie Bundy were guests of Grayce Price Sunday.

Eddie Reish went Sunday to Middletown, where he expects to be employed in the glass factory. Mrs. Andrew Potts is visiting this week with her sister, Mrs. Nathan Eldridge of Pleasant Ridge. The iv. M. Hurley blacksmith shop on Price and McCurtain avenue, is now completed and he is now ready for business. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Stephenson have moved from the Abe Myers residence to the W. L. Wood farm northeast of Parr. Oscar Rude took his little 3-year-old son to Frankfort Monday evening, where he will undergo an operation for appendicitis. Mr. and Mrs. James Longstreth’s baby, Martha Gwendolyn, who has been dangerously sick with pneumonia, is considerably better at this writing with strong hopes of her recovery. Those enjoying and wishing a good hearty laugh, along with various subjects of literature, are invited to attend the literary held in the town hall every two weeks on Friday evenings. Len McCurtain started from here Tuesday morning for Rock Springs, Wyoming, where he has a position as clerk in a store at that place. The best wishes for his success go with him from Parr. W. L. Wood was in attendance atthe Yeoman sale, and he never lets an opportunity slip by without grasping it,and purchased a fine

pair of mules, which now adds two more head to his livery, feed and sale barn. (Correspondence continued on last page)

A failing tiny nerve—no larger than the finest silken thread—takes from the Heart its impulse, its power, its regularity. The Stomach also has its hidden, or inside nerve. It was Dr. Shoop who first told us It was wrong to drug a weak or failing Stomach, Heart or Kidneys. His prescription—Dr. Shoop’s Restorative—is directed straight for the cause of these ailments—these weak and faltering inside nerves. This, no doubt clearly explains why the Restorative has of late grown so rapidly in popularity. Druggists say that those who test the Restorative even for a few days soon become fully convinced of Its wonderful merit. Anyway, don’t drug the organ. Treating the cause of sickness is the only sensible and successful way. Sold by all dealers.