Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 January 1910 — Page 2

POSITIVELY THE LAST SALE THAT WILL END THE CAREER OF THE GHIGAGO BARGAIN STORE Tuesday, February Ist, to Saturday, February 19th, 1910, Inclusive. Stock Then to Be Invoiced and Sold in Bulk. $17,000 - WORTH OF MERCHANDISE TO BE SLAUGHTERED - $17,000

Clothing at Half Marked Price, 50 and 60 cent Overalls and Work Shirts and Jumpers now 40c ■ "' ' "' " 1 1 ij. m "f* . ■ 1 . ■■ »' Shoes and Rubbers, 1 lot ladies’ kid shoes, lace, medium heel, were $2.50 to $2.95, choice of lot, now ■ s l> Men’s $5.00 Florsheim patent leather dress shoes, now.. . .$3.00 to $3.50 Boys’ or women’s rubber boots, 4 to 8, were $2 to $3, now. sl.Bo to $2.00 All other shoes same proportion. Hats and Caps, One counter, 24 dozen new good styles Men’s Felt Hats, all sizes, were SI.OO to $3.00, choice of lot, now ,50c to $2.00 The Longley $3.00 Hat, guaranteed equal to any haLmade, n0w...52.00 Men and Boys' Linen Collars. The Lion Brand Linen Collars, for men and boys, all good styles, sold everywhere for 15 cents, choice now 10 cents each, or $1.20 per dozen, and save 60 cepts a dozen. Dry Goods, Dress goods nearly all new, fresh, and clean, about half price, or 25 per cent less than we could buy them now. A large line of white worsteds, 19c to 78c yard

Remember the Dates-February Ist to Saturday Night, February not fail to come and bring your friends to the Wind-Op Sale Thanking one and all for their many years’patronage, zk. mm sa rs** ■rfk. _ we will kindly remember you in the future. Til© POTSyth© StOTG, od ßloek° W j R6l)SS6ldßf IflfJlSllfl

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY. The Friday Issue is the Regular Weekly Edition. HEALEY & CLARK, Publishers. • .. SEBSCRIPTIOir RATES. - Bally, by Carrier, 10 Cents a Week. By Mail, $3.75 a year. ■—d-Weekly, in advance, Tear $1.60. Friday, January 28, 1910.

BIG FREE HORSE SALE STARTS NEXT WEDNESDAY.

Committee Has Been Busy Putting Up Bills for Sale That is to be Monthly Event Hereafter. The effort to establish a regular horse market at Rensselaer has met a great amount of men all over the county who believe that it would be a fine thing to have a place where on certain days they could take their horses that they wanted to sell. Large bills Were.priuted and put ur over the county and mailed out to forty-five different buying firms and individuals who were requested to put them up in conspicious places. The sale should be well advertised and persons who have horses for sale or who wish to buy should not fail to come to Rensselaer hext Wednesday, Feb. 2d. If the sales are well' attended it means a big day in Rensselaer, which will of itself attract a crowd and each sale should add to the interest of succeeding ones. Remember, that you are sure tc have some one ask you what you want for your horse if you wirt come to Rensielaer on that day. I

The and mightiest little thing that ever was made is Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. They do the work whenever you require their aid. These tablets change weakness into strength, listlessness into energy, gloominess into Joyousness. Their action is so gentle one don’t realize they have taken a purgative. Sold by all dealers. c Hftiee Absnt Protested Orders. Rensselaer, tod. r -Jan. -25, me. All road orders protested before Jan. 25, 1910, are now payable and interest will stop from thi« date. R. D. THOMPSON, City Treasurer.

BURNS TOWN.

Orval Reed is on the sick list. Hollis Brown is on the sick list. Grover Brown spent Sunday with Spencer Holmes. Dan Hopkins called on Samuel Holmes Saturday evening. - Elmer Sulenburger’s little baby is jon 'the sick list. . Chris Morgenegg purchased a new buggy Saturdays George Casey and Harry Swartzell called on Samuel Holmes Thursday evening. Miss Gertrude Kolhoff called on Bertha and Ethel Holmes Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Whitaker spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Holmes and family. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Brown spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Hellengreen and family. L. A. Greenlee shredded fodder Friday in one of the worst blizzards of the season. The farmers in this neighborhood met at Burns school house Saturday evening to organize a threshing ring for the coming season. Philip Durant went to Chicago Thursday to be operated on for appendicitis. Alex Hurley went with him and will remain there three or four days.

Methodist Church.

Revival meetings continue this week. District Superintendent A. T. Briggs will be with us Saturday and Sunday. Preaching Saturday night and Sunday morning. Quarterly conference Saturday night after the preaching services. Subject Sunday night, “The Lost Sense of Sin.”

Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is not a common, every-day cough mixture. K is a meritorious remedy for all the troublesome and dangerous' complications resulting from cold in the head, throat, chest or lungs. Sold by all dealers. c . J NOTICR. —— ▲slam preparing to go to Colorado soon, I must insist on a prompt settlement at all accounts at once.* Please settle by cash or note and do not compel me to resort to legal measures. Respectfully, L M. WASHBURN.

Silks, All colors and blacks, nearly all SI.OO yard silks, cost 75 cents yard, will be sold now at, per yard go c Wash Goods, Ginghams, Lawns, White Goods, Muslin, Tennis Flannel, Etc,, at Bargain Prices, 800 yards soiled 5 cent cheese cloth, now at per yard •«. .lc 1,000 yards best calico, now per yard...... # 10 cent tennis flannel, now 7 cent tennis flannel, now. c All widths Pepperell bleached and unbleached sheetings, muslins, and shirtings, at cost, not including freight. CORSETS, ’ All the new models in the Royal Worcester. 1 lot medium length waist, were 50 cents, now each 25c 1 lot 98 cents each, now each ■ _ gAg ONE-HALF AND LESS LADIES’ CLOAKS, TWO-PIECE SUITS, PRINCESS ONE-PIECE SUITS, RAINCOATS, CHILDREN’S CLOAKS, LADIES’ SKIRTS, ETC., ALL ABOUT HALF MARKED PRICE TO CLOSE OUT QUICK. A museum of 5 and 10 cent counter goods, now 4 and 8 cent counters.

SOUR STOMACH.

Ml-o-na Puts the Stomach in Fine Shape in Five Minutes. If your stomach is continually kicking up a disturbance; you feel bloated and distressed; if you belch gas and sour food into the mouth, then you need Mi-o-na Stomach Tablets. Mi-o-na stomach tablets give instant relief, of course, but they do more; they drive out the poisonous gasses that cause fermentation of food and" thoroughly clean, renovate and strengthen the stomach so that it can readily digest food without artificial aid. Mi-o-na stpmach tablets are guaranteed to cure indigestion, acute or chronic, or money back. This means that nervousness, dizziness and biliousness will disappear. Druggists everywhere and B. F. Fendig sell Mi-o-na for 50 cents. “I was under the care of four different doctors during nine months and was cured of dyspepsia by Mi-o-na.” Mr. Joseph Grondine, 197 Fountain street, Fall River, Mass. Booth’s Pills for constipation—2sc.

Indianapolis saloonkeepers who violate the closing laws will hereafter be compelled to keep their saloons closed until they can produce a letter from a minister certifying that they have attended church on Sunday morning and remained throughout the service Such was the ruling of Mayor Shank in two cases before him Wednesday, and he announced he will deal with other violators in like manner. Have yon a weak throat? If so, you can not be too careful. You cannot begin treatment too early. Each cbid makes you more liable to qnothqr and the last is always the harder to cure. If you will take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy at the outset you will be saved much trouble. Sold by all dealers. e . ■ Mrs. Susie Hays, wife of William Hayes, colored, died at Jeffersonville Tuesday at the age, according .to her husband, of 107 years. Hays and his wife had been married fifty years and were both born in Kentucky. Cdttgii Remedy is k very valuable medicine for throat and lung troubles, quickly relieves and cures painful breathing and a dangerously sounding cough which indicates congested lungs. Sold by all dealers. c '

WEEKLY NOTES FROM THE PUBLIC LIBRARY.

More New Books and TVhat They Consist of in a Short Synopsis by Our Regular Contributor.

At the meeting of the Library Board on Tuesday evening, Mr. C- W. Coen presented his resignation as vicepresident of the board. We regret very much to lose Mr. Coen, as he was very faithful and much interested in all matters pertaining to the library. Home Life in Germany, by Mrs. Alfred Sidgwick. A singularly acute and intimate appreciation of home life in Germany. The insignificant trifles that make the common round of life in Germany as in every country are sympathetically and intelligently noted and vividly and humorously described.

How to Appreciate Prints, by Frank Weitenkampf. This brief survey is intended primarily for people with little or no knowledge of this interesting field, and is happily popular in style, technical terms being employed only when the context renders them easily understood.

My African Journey, by Winston Churchill. A vivid description of a journey from Mombasa on the East coast to the great lakes, overland to Fajao on the Victoria Nile, thence through the jungle to Khartoum and by tourists’ routes to Cairo. Besides its interest as a recital of hunting adventures, it is a careful study of the physical, political and racial conditions of a region that promises to be of considerable importance to Great Dfßhlh and is of immediate interest to Americans. Tuberculosis A Preventable- and Curable Disease, by s. A. Knopf. A readable, suggestive treatise by a recognized authority. Discusses infection and hygiene; the duties of the patient, family, municipal, state and federal authorities, employers, ednea-; ors, etc.; the home adaptation of sanitorlum treatment, and the relation of other ..reform movements. 116 illustrations from draw-l ing and photographs cover methods of prevention 'and cure. Co«h Remedy never disappoints those who use it for obaflflhta coughs. colds apd irritations. of the throat and lungs. It stands unrivalled as a remedy for all throat and lung diseases. Sold by all dealers. c

CARPETS AND RUGS, 8 rolls, good patterns, all-wool Ingrain Carpets, were 60 and 65 cents per yard, now per yard 1'.,. 50c and 52c 50 cent Union, now per yard <so c 28 cent Rag Carpet, now per yard... j, 22c All above carpets are worth at factory 2 to 4 cents yard more. Only one best Body Brussels Rug, 8-3 by 10-6, worth at factory $22.00, now .......J $15.00 $1.25 Ingrain Fringed Rugs, Ixl% yards, now each. •• •. .kc 35 pieces Remnants Straw Matting, 5 to 20 yards each, half price. 30 pieces all wool and some part wool Ingrain Remnant Carpet, 5 to 24 yards each, at nearly half price to close. Furs, Fur Scarfs and Muffs at 40 per cent less than we could buy them now. —■——i—— A Remnant Sale, Thousands of* yards in all kinds of Dry Goods, from 1-yafd to 10-jard pieces, large enough for dress patterns, about half price to close out. GREAT VALUES IN UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY, LACES, EMBROIDERIES, RIBBONS, UMBRELLAS, LACE CURTAINS, SHIRT WAISTS, DRESS TRIMMINGS, CARPET WARP, HANDBAGS, CLUB BAGS, SUIT CASES, GLOVES, MITTENS, TABLE LINEN, LUNCH CLOTHS, JEWELRY, COMBS, SCISSORS, COTTON BATTING, HANDKERCHIEFS, SILK SCARFS, DRESSER SCARFS, COMFORTS, BLANKETS, ETC.

A Chemist’s Opinion on Skin Diseases.

Mr. A. F. Long, the chemist and druggist, says that in all his scientific and business experience he has never found any remedy so successful as ZEMO for the treatment of Eczema, Itching Skin Diseases, Dandruff, Pimples, Blackheads, and all diseases of the skin and scalp. He says that not only do its curative qualities make it popular but also the fact that it is a clean, liquid remedy for external use. A wonderful improvement over the old greasy salves and lotions •frhich are not only unpleasant to use but do not destroy the germ life that cause the disease. ZEMO draws the germs to the surface and destroys them, leaving the skin clear and healthy. Can be used freely on infants. Mr. A. F. Long will gladly supply those who call, with a free sample bottle of ZEMO and a booklet which explains in simple language all about Skin Diseases and how to cure yourself at home with ZEMO. 2

Lecture Course Dates.

Feb. 15—The Columbian Concert Co., which has been one of the most popular companies on the road, and which the lecture course committee considers themselves very fortunate to have secured. March 25—George P. Bible, humorous lecturer and entertainer. Owing to the continued advance of flour and the fact that us Quakers are on the “square,” we will continue to give 16 oz. to the pound and maintain the high standard and quality in our loaves of Quaker bread. We will be compelled on and after February Ist, 1910, to sell our bread at 5c straight and advance the wholesale price onehalf cent per loaf. This is not done to get rich quick, but to meet our wholesale bills promptly. I would rather be a good fellow in rags than to be rich any way. To be rich I would not know how to act, but to be poor, that’s my long suit. Yours truly, THE MODEL BAKER, by GEO. FATE, The Fat Dinner Man. Itch! Itch? Itch!—Scratch! Scratch! Scratch! The more ymi scratch the worse the Itch. ’Try Doan’s Ointment. It cures plies, eczema, any skin Itching. All druggists sell ft f Li ""II!" ,g . Try the column.

IWP AND HER STOBT In Floral, Ark., Lives a Lady Who Feels That Her Strength Was Restored by Caraui. - ' r * ZiU • Floral, Ark.—“l must speak a good word for Cardui,” writes Mrs. Viola Baker, of this place. “About a month ago I was in very bad health. 1 was so weak and nervbus that I was not able to do my housework. "My husband bought me one bottle of Cardui, the woman’s tdnic. I took it according to directions and now I am in good health. “I think Cardui is a fine tonic for weak women.” And you are not the only lady who thinks so, Mrs. Baker. Thousands, like you, have written to tell of the wonderful benefit Cardui has been to them.' Cardui contains no minerals, or other powerful drugs. It contains no glycerin or other mawkish-tasting ingredients. It is just a pure, natural extract, of natural vegetable herbs, that have been • found to regulate the womanly functions and strengthen the female system. All druggists sell Cardui. See yours about it. N. R—Write to: Ladles' Advisory Dept, Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.. for Special Instructions, and 64-page book. ‘Home Treatment lair Women, statin piala wsapptr. on request' • Signs of Good Dentistry Are seen in the perfectly even and sonnd teeth of the children whose -mouths we hare bowrlfekhig eareTbf. It is never too soon to begin tairt» g earn of the teeth—-the sooner tike ;Vtter» ln facL We Baake a sneetaity ' of children’s teeth, and the parents of oar patron praise oar work. If yoa have anything the nutter with your teeth, cone to us. J. W. HORTON, Dentist. Rensselaer. Indiana.