Rensselaer Journal, Volume 10, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 March 1901 — Still They Come. [ARTICLE]

Still They Come.

Foresman, Ind., March 25, 1901. Acme Food Co., Gentlemen:—l have used Acme Food and I consider it can’t be be beat for stock of all kinds. F. A. Woodin. Foresman, Ind., March 25, 1901 I have used Acme Food for horses and calves for sixty days, and will say that it is a good appetizer. C. A. Mather. Pleasant Grove, Ind., March 23, 1901. I have used Acme Food on horses. I think it very beneficial. It is the best I ever used. Wm. Tanner. Rensselaer, Ind., March 19, 1901. I have been feeding Acme Food to horses. I think it is a blood purifier, a worm destroyer and a feed saver. I would recommend the Acme Food to all horsemen. B. L. Campbell. Surrey, Ind., March 25, 1901. I have been feeding Acme Food to cattle, hogs and horses. I would not be without the Acme Food. It pays to feed it to all kinds of stock. Joseph Lane. Rensselaer, Ind., March 26, 1901. I have been using Acme Food on cows and calves. I am well pleased with it. It is a fine stock food. I would recommend the Acme Food to all stockmen. John W. Mauck. Counterfeits of DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve are liable to cause blood poisoning. Leave them alone. The original has tne name DeWitt’s upon the box and wrapper. It is a harmless and healing salve for skin diseases. Unequalled for piles. A. F. Long. “Other People’s Business,” which played here Monday night was the bummiest aggregation that has struck the town for years. Before the con elusion of the second act nearly all the audience had left, but theperfor mance was carried out to the end. On complaint of the truant officer, Jacob A. Zook, of Barkley township, was arrested last week for failure to send his child to school. Squire Burnham fined him $5 and costs, amounting in all to about $22. It is reported that Zook is still failing to send the child to school and that hemay be arrested again. Like Oliver Twist, children ask for more when given One Minute Cough Cure. Mothers endorse it highly for croup. It quickly cures all coughs and colds and every throat and lung trouble. It is a specific for grippe and asthma and has long been a well known remedy for whooping cough. A. F. Long. Tuesday was the 47th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dowler. Their neighbors and friends, to the number of twenty-two, quietly got together and gathered at their home at the noon hour and prepared for a big dinner, to which they all did full justice.- The surprise was complete and a splendid time was had. Mrs. M. B. Alter returned last week from Washington, D. C., where she has been making an extended visit. Her daughter, Mrs. W. W. Watson, and children accompanied her home, but later left for Chicago, where they expect to reside in the future, as Mr. Watson has been transferred to that point by the pension department. The Presbyterian Athletic Club will give an exhibition of their work at the opera house Thursday evening, April 4th, under the direction of Mr. Stallard, the physical director of the club. Besides the athletic a musical program will be rendered. The admission will be 25 cents. Tickets can be secured at Huff’s or of the members of the club. A new three cent piece has been authorized by act of congress to take the place of the old coin so closely resembling the dime that it became necessary to stop its coinage. The new piece is to he nickle, the size of the old bronze cent, only thicker, and in the center is to be a hole one fourth of an inch in diameter. The coin is so designed that it can be distinguished by sight or touch. Prof. Ivison, of Lonacoing, Md , suffered terribly from neuralgia of the stomach and indigestion for thirteen years and after the doctors failed to cure him, they fed him on morphine. A friend advised the use of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure and after taking a few bottles of it, he says, “It has cured me entirely. I can’t say too much for Kodol Dyspepsia Cure.” It digests what you eat. A. F. Long.