Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 August 1889 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Calves Strayed Away. Strayed from my farm in the southeast corner of Marion tp., seven head of spring calves. Any person giving information of their whereabouts will be liberally paid for the trouble, ltp. Thomas Penright.
REAL.-ESTATE TRANSFERS. Then the character of the instrument is no specified, it will be tmderstood that it is a warantce deed. The letters n, e, s, w, mean north, south, east, west. The letters in combination, as ne sw &c. stand for northeast quarter, southwest quarter Ac. The date . given in each item denotes the time the instrument was executed. When thiswas drrr- * ing the present year, only the month and day are }{iyen» as Dec. 13. When the instrument was made in some former year, the full date, but abbreviated is given, as: Nov. Ist, ’B4. Auditor Jasper Co. to D. J. Thompson. Aug. 12. ej se 3129 7, 80 acres. Newton,tax title, 41 Cornelia R. Van Rensselaer to M. L. Spitler, Its 5, 7.11, bl 15 Its 2. 11, bl 16;It 1. bill,Weston’s Add. Rensselaer, 125 Orson M cKay to M. L. Spitler, Aug. 5, wj ne and ne nw 8-30-5,120 acres, Barkley, 3000 A. R. Coleborn and others to Nowels & Robinson, Its 1 to 15, bl 21, an d 12, 3. t® 22, Weston’s Add. Rensselaer, 300 Austin N. Lakin to Helen Davidson, July 8. n£ Its 3,4, 5, bl 4, Fair Oaks, 150 Ollie W. Warren to Nanoy J. Shaw, Aug. 14, It 8, bl 34, Weston’s Add. Rensselaer, 775 Jas. R. Parkison to Mary J. Moody, June 12, sw sw se and s$ se sw 12-29-6, 30 acres, Barkley, 540 Noah W. Root to Arthur H. Hop kins, Mar. 18, w£ ne 19-32-5, Kankakee, 490 Frederick Greve to Mary Grimpe Apr. 8, se sw 2-31-7, 40 acres, Union, 100 Margaret C. Babcock to H. C. Bruce, Apr. 2 ’B7, pt se nw; sw ne; ejjr se 4-28-6, Marion, 150 Harriet E. Bruce to Chas. F. Bruce Aug. 4, ’B2. ne nw and pt nw ne; wj sw ne; pt sw ne 4-28-6, Marion, 4000 Chas. F. Bruce to Henry C. Bruce Oct. 7. ’B2, same as above, 3700 John A. Kent to Chas. Medary, Aug. IS, Its 4. 5. 6. 7, bl 7, Fair Oaks, 40
Thos. C. Lee, proprietor of the Lee Hotel, Arkadelphia, Ark., says that Swift’s Specific has bo strengthened his wife for her labors as hostess that he can recommend and emphasize the assertion that as a tonic for ladies and children S. S. S. has no equal. Mr. B. F. Whatley is a promiinent merchant of Huston, La. He says that he has sold Swift’s Specific to many persons and knows of some wonderful cases of blood dileases, and has never heard of a failure to core. Several of contagious blood poison wdre cured after all the doctors and all other remedies had failed./'' I am of thp opinion that S. S. S. should stand at the head of the list of blood remedies^. arrived at this oonolnsion from, jhe testimony of scores of persons who have told me of the good results from its use. I have been selling 8. 8, 8. for years, and it has won a large sale. G. A. Griffith, Mayflower, Ark. Mercury and potash mixtures dry up the secretions of the body, cause mercurial rheumatism and dyspepsia, and finally run the system down to such a condition that other diseases are induoed. Swift’s Specific builds np the patient from the first dose, and gives life and rigor to the whole human frame.
