Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 176, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 July 1910 — Page 4
wjq| You Serve Good Health With XT agrees with your household —big folks, baby folks and all. A bracing, puremj/JIJ ill JL food fruit drink; warming, palate-tempting, energy-building. li/ilf lIUIIIII 111 l It’s the drink to do big things on. Puts you on your mettle —gives you Dill IMmMHI T* su PP° rts nobly—a prop that does not palsy; a stimulant that does not sap. BONANO is not a “near” coffee, but a wholesome table drink in a class of its own, with its own flavor, its own spicy odor, its own full, satisfying “body.” | Try BONANO a week or two. You will like it better and better every day llf / jig Ifl* 'I as y° u your health improve, your nerves get firm, your brain grow clear, your digestion become right—when you learn what it is to work like a giant and sleep ||l /■ BONANO can easily be made to suit each individual taste by boiling it more Kanl. Jl or less or using a larger or smaller quantity than directions call for. You can II iJrl easily find the way you like it best. ,|| BONANO is just the appetizing goodness of fully matured, tropic-ripened I bananas —the choicest that grow —dried, roasted, granulated —served as a golden brown, aromatic beverage. No adulteration, no artificial coloring or flavor. I 71 Your doctor will tell you that bananas are high in food value, that they are eas fly and quickly digested by the weakest stomach without over-taxing, that I ambm they e IP i n assimilation and digestion and are mildly corrective, that they contain or develop no poisons; and thus BONANO is pure and wholesome and can be given in perfect safety to an unweaned babe. I For Insomnia: Those who are unable to sleep find that a before-retiring cup of BONANO promptly induces restful, refreshing slumber. BONANO is an economical drink, too. It goes twice as far as coffee. It requires little sugar because of the fruit-sweet it contains. A 25-cent can of 3ePl§g3is\ BONANO makes 75 cups of the best hot drink you ever tasted. Ask your grocer for BONANO. For sale by The Home Grocery. Exchange Bank Bldg., Chicago, 111 ——
Classified Column. FOB SALK. For Sale—One good buggy; also one Axminster rug. Inquire of George Ketchum. For Sale—l sanitary couch with large bed clothes box underneath; 1 Regina music box with 30 music discs. Call before Friday at Mrs. Christman’s, 4th house from light plant. For Sale—Seven room cottage, with good barn and other out-buildings; plenty of fruit of all kinds; good well of water; two acres of ground, on improved stone street; a bargain if taken at once. Arthur H. Hopkins. For Sale—An eight room house, one Mock from the court house. For quick sale will sell at a bargain. G. F. Meyers. For Sale—Fine 5 year old draft mar 3, weight, 1400, in foal by a jack. Price reasonable if taken at once. Call on or address Francis Hilton, Medaryvllle, Ind. Residence near Gifford. For Sale—Notes, well secured. U.&00, 8 per cent, due 10 months; $1,250, 8 per cent, due 22 months. L. J. Lane, R. D. 4, Box 44. FOB BERT. For Bent —9-room house, good well and cistern, good outbuildings, garden Inquire of Miss Mattie Benjamin! \ F«r Bent —One barn and two residence properties in Rensselaer. Frank Foltc, administrator. Fer Bent— Six room cement cottage. Ray D. Thompson. For Bent —s room house with large garden and fruit. Inquire of A. H. Hopkins or Ellen Sayler.
WANTED. Wasted —Girl, neat appearance for dining room work. Hotel Makeever. Wanted —A man with a good farm to furnish stock and implements to aii industrious young farmer who wishes to become a partner in stock. ' Can give good references; is a hustler, an honest, sober young man. Address J. W. H., care Republican. Wanted —To contract 300 acres of land at $2 per acre. Apply B. B. Curtis, Monon, Ind. Wanted —Farm men and harvest hands. Extra wages paid. Lots of work. Apply at once. B. B. Curtis, Monon, Ind. MONET TO LOAN. Meney to Lean —lnsurance company money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of B. P. Honan. io.tf
LOST. Lost—Saturday night, a black leather handbag. Leave at this office or pr.oue 282. Lost—ln Rensselaer or on the Pleasant Ridge road, pair rimless double lens glasses. Finder please return’to Mrs. Isaac Parker or leave at this office Lost—Gold pin, with T. N. E. and Bkull and crossbones-on. Return to this office. Lost—Leather suit case, containing some account hooks belonging to Firman Thompson. Finder please return to him or leave at this office. Lost—A male rat terrier, white with black and tan spots. Return to Tkos. F. Murphy, Surrey, Ind., or phone 521 K.
* FOUND. Found—Woman’s hand bag. Inquire rt Republican office. Found —Man’s coat, brown, with black stripe. Inquire here. INDIGESTION GOES. B. F. Fendig Sells Best Prescription On Earth on the Money Back Plan. Almost everybody knows that sick headache, nervousness and dizziness, are caused by a disordered stomach. Upset stomach and indigestion happen just because the food you eat does not digest—but lies in the stomach and ferments or turns sour. You can stop fermentation and stomach distress in five minutes by using Mi-o-na stomach tablets, a prescription that has done more to cure indigestion and put the stomach in fine condition than all the specialists on earth. A large 50 cent box of Mi-o-na stomach tablets is all you need to get quick and lasting relief. Mrs Altie Etson, of 93 Dun Road, Battle Creek, Mich., used MI-O-NA and within two months was in as good health as ever, and has a good stomach and eats everything she likes, she attributes her present health to the use of MI-O-NA.
If you have heartburn, belching of gas, heaviness or any stomach trouble no matter how chronic, try Mi-o-na stomach tablets on money back plan. Sold by druggists everywhere and by B, F. Fendig, who guarantees them. Any skip itching is a temper-tester. >'he more you scratch the more it itches. Doan’s, Ointment eyres pjjes, eczema—any skin itching. At all drug stores. “I have been somewhat costive, but Doan’s Regulets gave just the results desired. They act mildly and regulare bowels perfectly.”—George E. Krauße, 306 Walnut Ave., Altoona, Pa. .
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK U. S. Yards, Chicago, 111., July 26. Receipts of live stock today; Hogs, i 4,000; cattle, 6,000; sheep, 25,000. Hogs steady. Mixed, $8.20 to $8.85. Heavy, $8.35 to $8.75. Rough, $7.95 to $8.30, j. Light, $8.55 to $8.95. "s Cattle weak. Sheep steady. Estimated tomorrow: Hogs, 22,000; cattle, 17,000; sheep, 23,000. CABK aha nr Wheat No. 2 red, $1.09% to $1.10%. No. 3 red, $1.09% to $1.10%. j No, 1 hard, $1.17 to $1.19. % No. 2 hffrd, $1.09% to $1.11%. V No. 3 hard, $1.07 to $1.09%. '\ ~ No. INS, $1,26 to $1.27%. No. 2 N S, $1.22 to $1.25. No. 3 S, $1.15 to $1.17.
Cora No. 2, 6 5 96c to 6594 c. No. 2 W, 6796 C-. No. 2 Y, 67c to 6794 c. No. 2, 6494 c to 65c.No 3W, 66%c to 669£c. | ; No. 3Y, 66c to 6694 c. \ \ No. 4 Y, 65c to 66c. v oats , fc t No. 2W, 4294 c to 4396 c. % No. 3W, 4096 c to 4296 c. • "No. 4W. 40c to 4196 c. | % Standard, 4194 cto 43c. 1, \ FTTTTOES t July; Sept. ' Dec. Wheat f Open ... 1.089409 1.069694 1.08%-,* High ... 1.0994' 1-0696 1-08% Low . .*. 1.08 1.04 96 1.06 96 Close ... 1.0896’ 10496 1.0796 Cora Open .... 6494 6494 64-63 High .... 64 94 65 % 64 Low 63% 6494 63 Close .... 64 96 65 % 6496Oats Open .... 41-% 3996 40%96 High .... 41% 3996 40% Low 40% 3996 4096Close .... 41 39% 4096 LOCAL MARKETS. \ Wheat, 96c, \ Corn, 54c. Oats, 33c. i \ \ \ Eggs, 13c. V ' V Butter, 23c * '| Hens, 11c. ' \ Turkeys, 10« to 12c. \ Ducks, Bc. v Roosters, sc. Geese, 4c. Spring ducks, Bc. Spring chickons, 13c to 14c. A specific for pain—Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil, strongest, cheapest liniment ever devised. A household remedy in America for 25 years. * .
WILD ANIMAL ACTORS.
Mansions Brute Artists With The Hagenbeck-Wallace Shows. The remarkable and complete collection of trained wild animal actors, comprising the most inportant specimens of zoology, assembled in the wild beasts performances which form an imposing part of the Hagenbeck-Wal-lace Shows, which exhibit here July 30, has never been equaled in the history of the world. No corner of the globe has been considered too remote to make this collection the most unique on earth. Chief among these wonderful creat ures is a hybrid lion-tiger, a magnificent animal of feline grace and terlible power, with all the peculiarities of both lion and tiger, but wearing’the tiger’s stripes upon the lion’s skin. One of the most important groups is composed of two lions, three Bengal tigers, two India leopards, two pumas, two enormous Polar bears, four Great Dane dogs and the singular hybrid lion-tiger. Here, too, we are confronted with the incredible spectable of six different species and the aforementioned remarkable mixture of two of them, each naturally the instinctive, implacable foe of the others, and some of them hitherto considered by the best masters of zoology as wholly untamable, performing together in a colossal steel girt arena, which absolutely ins-ires the safety qf the public, their bearing toward the trainer and oiie another being as amiable and considerate as characterizes the intercourse of an assemblage of human beings at a social function. Impreceptibly directed by a single trainer and of seemingly happy accord and eager unity, these formerly dreaded kings and queens of the seething jungle, the howling wilderness and the remote, inaccessible frozen wilds of the Poles build their skyscraping pyramids, balance with a skill rivaling that of the human acrobat upon barrels, play rollicking games of seesaw; with courteous consideration for the luxurious comfort of their master, form soft living couches of themselves and invite his confidence by opening their terrible, blood-red mouths for the temporary insertion of his trusting head. It would require pages to tell in advance all the startling novelties introducted in the Hagenbeck-Wallace Shows, which, besides the many trained wild animal features, is a circus vastly superior to any organization now traveling.
BARGAINS IN LAND.
.6* acres, on stone road, just outside the corporation. 20 acres, all black land, in corn, cement walks, good well; four blocks from town. 25 acres, all cultivated, fair house and outbuildings. 120 acres, near station, school, and three churches; 50 acres cultivated, and remainder pasture. Good fiveroom house, outbuildings, and fruit. Only S2B. Terms, SBOO down. 160 acres, near* station, all black prairie land in pasture; lies along large ditch, has good fence, well, and windmill. Only $35. 88 acres, Barkley township, all black land, in cultivation, lies along large ditch, has some tile and good sixroom house, good barn, double cribs, and deep well. Price $55. Terms, SI,OOO down. 105 acres, all cultivated or meadow, lies level and nice, has good outlet for drainage, and has good five-room house, fair outbuildings; is on gravel road. Price S6O. Terms, $1,500 down. 80 acres, good buildings, orchard, well, alj good land, and all in cultivation and well located. Price $55. Also have several farms from 80 to 160 acres which can be bought right, on favorable terms. G. F. MEYERS. The Ft. Wayne News refers to the “abject Mr. Kern,” and declares' that when Mr. Kern, “in the hope of placating men he formerly denounced proceeds from anathema to eulogy, he inspires only the contempt of his fellow citizens.” Some of Mr. Kern’s friends may say these are hard words. But thoughtful citizens will admit they are true. “Kern’s tribute to Shively at Freneh Lick, considered in relation to his charges concerning the manner of Shively’s election, brands Kern as a man to whom no form of stultification is too mean, too abject or too servile, if only it holdß out the hope of material reward.” And yet with all his praise for Shively, Kern did not re tract those bribery charges. He merely promised to be “temperate" in his language in the future. Think of “temperate” language in discussing the purchase of votes!
THE ONLY BJG SHOW COMING! j Rensselaer, Indiana, lulu Oft SATURDAY, UUIJf UU THE CARL HAGENBECK i: and I GREAT WALLACE SHOWS !i ;; COMBINED \ \
POSITIVELY Mk. ACKNOWLEDGED / Hirurcr GREATEST ■ mm exhibition | c MASTS ■
Biggest, Grandest and Best in AH Things. ;? All The Rarest and Wildest Savage Creatures! fl 11 The Greatest Arenic Artists and Animal Actors ! ; Vk 11 Most Wonderfnl Performances on Earth and in the Air 1 ; ’ * *■ ■ The Pageant Splendors that Can be Transported! ;; i: AN AMASING ARRAY OF EXCLUSIVE FEATURES ;; ; ► All Seen in One Vast and Prodigal Program, Interluded by An !! ;; Army of All-Star Clowns! '[ :: The Monarch of All Trained Wild Animal Shows! ! ► Ml||h|| Men and Women Than Any Other Circus ! V> IYIIII R Thoroughbred Horses Than All Others! I ♦ New and Original Ideas Advanced! jr I DON’T FAIL TO SEE THE MARRIED PAGEANTS OF THE t BANDED GIANTS! f PAMj Every Morning at 10 o’clock. i: TWO PERFORMANCES DAILY : 2:00 p. m. and 8:00 p. m. I! Rain or Shine! Under Waterproof Tents! i: GRAND BAND CONCERT f ' ► One Hour Before the Performances Commence! | i: ONE TICKET ADMITS TO ALL !
Yens Didn’t Like North Dakota Even a Little Bit.
Yens Anderson, of Hammond, fjrmerly of Rensselaer, and a brother of Otto and A. C. Anderson, recently made a trip to North Dakota, to visit his brothers. A. C. has lived there for some years and has prospered, but Otto just went there this last spring and struck it in a bad season. Yens says that Otto will be back to Rensselaer before winter. Of his visit and impression of that section of North Dakota, Yens is given the following writei.p in the Hammond NewsYens Anderson, leverman in the Hohman street interlocking tower reached home last night after a thirteen day vacation. The vacation was spent in northern North Dakota, and according to the local man, he found conditions such in that section, that he was ready to return almost as soon as he reached there, but the irregular service offered by the railroads prevented him from getting out. In that section he says, not a drop of rain has fallen since March, and tin: crops are practically failures. The high cost of living Is very much in evidence too, and Yens warns friends who are thinking of a trip to that part ‘ It costs twenty-five cents for a shave to equip themselves with safety razors, and fifty cents for a haircut in northern North Dakota shops” is his warning. Oranges are seventy-five cents per dozen and provisions of all kinds are mucl) higher than they are here. $ A “Classified Adv." will find it
A MISSISSIPPI ENTHUSIAST Mrs. Lena Gresham, of Clinton, Miss., Has a Few Facts to Tell Our Readers About Cardui. Clinton, Miss.—“ Thanks to Cardui,” writes Mrs. Lena Gresham, of this place, “1 have been greatly relieved.” “I suffered for three years from female Inflammation, and had taken medicine from four different physicians without much benefit. “I have received more benefit from seven bottles of Cardui, than from all the physicians.” Just try Cardui. That’s all we ask. It speaks for itself. It has helped so many thousands, it must be able to help you. Trying Cardui won’t hurt you. It is safe, harmless, gentle in action, and purely vegetable. try 3re ti re( L down and out, If you are sick, miserable, and suffer from womanly pains, like headache, backache, dragging feelings: pains in side, arms, legs, etc.—try Cardui. It is the medicine for all women. It is the tonic for you. N B.— Write to: Ladles' Advisory Dept.. ChatuDooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tenn.. lor Special iiutrvctions. and 64-page book. Home Treatment mt Women, seat in plain wrapper, on request.
Dyspepsia is out national ailment * Burdock Blood Bitters is the national cure for It. It strengthens stomach membranes, promotes flow of digestive juices, purifies jthe blood, builds you up. Want to sell or rent it? If you do, try The Republican Classified Column. Phone 18. -- -- - ;
