Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 December 1908 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

A telegram from Fowler to the Indianapolis Star of today tells of the sudden death at Earl Park yesterday of Harry J. Caldwell, a former member of the Indiana house of representatives, and prior to that at one ' time secretary to Richard Oglseby, when he was governor of Illinois. Mr. Caldwell was a wealthy farmer and well known throughout this section of the state. He had apparently been in the very best of health, and fell dead in his home at noon Monday. Mrs. Bert Goff and son Neal arrived here several days ago from Belle Fourche, S. Dak., where Bert took up a claim some two years ago, and where Mrs. Goff and son have been with him for several months past They continue to like their western home and Bert is getting along nicely with his claim. He is now engaging quite extensively in stock raising and he has remained there to care for it, although if he can find a dependable party to leave it to he will probably come back for a part of the winter. Mrs. Goff and son expect to remain here for two months or more, visiting her father, Marion I. Adams, and family and Mr. and Mrs. George W. Goff. J. Cecil Alter, son of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Alter, has evidently inherited some of his father’s literary talent. He is now the editor of the Salt Lake Outlook, an illustrated monthly magazine “devoted to the advancement of ‘The City of Opportunities’ and tributary territory." The current number contains 54 pages and is a magazine of merit. Cecil went west four years ago and for some time worked in the government weather bureau station at Salt Lake, but the map work was too severe a strain on his eyes and he began work for a publishing house and soon proved his ability, first in the business office and later as a contributor to the literary publications of the city. When the new magazine was published be was made the managing editor and the excellence of the early numbers is due largely to his untiring efforts. It is another case of a Jasper county boy who has grown to prominence in a far away state.

WEDNESDAY

A baby girl was born last Friday to Simon Hochstetler and wife. Mrs. 8. C. Irwin and Mrs. F. E. Babcock are shopping in Chicago today. Mi's. Chas. Pefley and son came over from Remington this morning to remain through the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Warner. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Rhoades went to Cincinnati yesterday to remain over Christmas with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Radcllffe. Lem Huston is assisting Leonard Rhoades at the store during Mr. Rhoades’ absence.

The Knock-out Blow. The blow which knocked out Corbett was a revelation to the prize fighters. From the earliest days of the ring the knock-out blow was aimed for the Jaw, the temple or the jugular vein. Stomach punches were thrown in to worry and weary the fighter, but If a scientific man had told one of the old fighters that the most vulnerable spot was the region of the stomach, he’d have laughed at him for an ignoramus. Dr. Pierce Is bringing home to the public a parallel fact* that th<Momackls the most vulnerable organ out oPlhs pr>M ring as well as In It Ws proteetpur haatts, throats, feet and lungs, but theShJhrahoWe are utterly indifferent to, until disebqKfinds the solar plexus and knocks us outT Make vour stomach guild .ftfld gtraag tojk-pfi oi.Bgctog you gruikO. TMtjßjuwimE able snot, "Golden Medical Discovery" cures "walk stomach,* indigestion, or dyspepsia, torpid liver, bad, thin and impure blood and other diseases of the organs of digestion and nutrition. The "Golden Medical Discovery " has a specific curative effect upon all mucous surfaces and hence cures catarrh, no matter where located or what stage It may have reached. In Nasal Catarrh It Is well to cleanse the passages with Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy fluid while using the "Discovery "as a constitutional remedy. Wh]/ the "Golden Medical Discovery” cures catarrhal diseases, as of the stomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvio organa will be plain to you if you will read a booklet of extracts from the writings of eminent medical authorities, endorsing its ingredients and axplalning their curative properties. It is mailed fires on request. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y. This booklet gives ail the Ingredients entering into Dr. Pierce’s medicines from which it will be seen that they contain not a drop of alcohol, pure, triple-reflned,glyoerine being used Instead. Dr. Pierce’s great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser will be sent free, paper-bound, for 91 onecent stamps, or doth-bound far SI stamps. Address Dr. Pisros as abova.