Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 197, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 August 1910 — Page 4

Classified Column. FOB SALE. Fer, Sale.— l6o acres of fine farm land In Union township; level, all improved, good house, good barn, double cribs, cow barn and other outbuildings, well fenced, close to station, good water, with crop that will speak for itself. On the bargain counter, S6O per acre. Will take a good automobile as part payment. R. F. D. No. 2. B. D. Comer. Fer Sale— An eight room house, one block from the court house. For quick ■ale will sell at a bargain. G. F. Jfeytn. . ■, ■

FOB BENT. For Rent— One 7-room cottage, centrally located- Inquire of B. S. Fendig. For Rent— Furnished or unfurnished rooms, near court house School pupils preferred. Mrs. E. H, Camp, South Weston street. For Bent— Two office rooms in Forsythe block. Inquire of E. P. Honan. For Bent— Front corner rooms in K. of P. building. Inquire of L. 11. Hamilton, agent For Bent— Down stairs room, comfortably furnished; first block east of school house. Gentleman preferred. Phone 290, P. O. Box 591. Fer Bent— A nice business ro jm la the Republican building. Inquire of Healey & Clark. For Bent— Modern 5-room cottage; all conveniences, on Front Street. Inquire of A. Leopold, at the Model Clothing Store. For Bent—One barn and two residence properties in Rensselaer. Frank Foltx, 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. Wanted— Few middle-aged Rensselaer gentlemen to cover Rensselaer, Francesville, Brook, Kentland, Morocco, Winamac, Wheatfield, Remington, Goodland and Monon. All winter s job. Start now. >2.75 per day. Glen Brothers, Rochester, N. Y. Wanted— To rent good farm, would prefer 240 acres or more 1 ; have had experience and well equipped for farming. Will furnish Jasper county reference if required. Address C. F. Lowman, Gobelsville, Mich. Wanted— Family washings. Mrs. Moses Chupp. "x Wanted— Two school boy boarders, opportunity to work out part of board; 1 block of school house. Phone 378. Wanted— Girl for general housework. Inquire of Firman Thompson, at the S. P. Thompson residence. Wanted— Two school boy boarders; three blocks from* school house. Phone 213. Wanted— To contract 300 acres of and at >2 per acre. Apply B. B. Curtis, Monon, Ind. Wanted— Far m men and harvest hands. * Extra wages paid. Lots of work. Apply at once. B. B. Curtis, Monon, Ind.

■ONEY TO LOAN.

Money to Loan—lnsurance company money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of E. P. Honan. lo.tf Skin Diseases Readily Cured by A Simple Home Remedy. If you are suffering from any form of skin disease, would you like to get prompt relief and be permanently cured by a clean, liquid preparation for external use? Mr. A F. Long, the druggist, has this remedy in stock and wants his customers to know that it is recommended for Eczema, Blackheads, Pimples, Dandruff, Tetter and other diseases of the skin and scalp. Zemo has made some remarkable cures and with each purchase of ZEMO, Mr. Long will give you a booklet on skin diseases and you can diagnose your own case and be cured in your own home without any inconvenience of loss of time from business by this clean, simple preparatiop. 2 A well known Des Moines woman, after suffering miserably for two days from bowel complaint, was cured by one dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. For sale by all dealers. c

CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.

CHICAGO lOVE STOCK U S. Yards, Chicago, 111., 4 Aug. 19. — Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 16,000; cattle 2,500; sheep, 8,000. Estimated tomorrow: Hogs, cattle; 3,000; sheep; 10,000. Hogs 5c lower. Mixed, $7.80 to SB.BO. Heavy, SB.OO to $8.50. Rough, $7.55 to $7.95. Light, $8.45 to $8.90. Cattle strong. Beeves, $4.90 to $8.45. Cows and heifers, $2.15 to $6.50. Stockers and Feeders, $3.10 to Texans, $4.25 to $5.60. Calves, $7.25 to $8.75. Westerns, $4.40 to $7.25. Sheep strong, $3.00 to $4.90. Lambs, $4.25 to $6.85. CASK GBAXX Wheat No. 1 red, $1.00% to $1.01%. No. 2 red, $1.00% to $1.01%. No. 3 red, 97c to sl.Ol. ~No. 2 hard, $1.00% to $1.02. No. 3 hard, 97c to sl.Ol. No. INS, $1.21 to $1.23. No. 2 N S, $1.03 to $1.09. No. 3 S, $1.02 to $1.07. Com No. 2, 63 %c to 64c. No. 2 W, 64c to 64 %c. No. 2 Y, 63%c to 64c. No. 3,63 cto 63%c. No. 3 W, 63%c to 63%c. No. 3 Y, 63c to 63 %c. No. 4 Y, 62 %c to 63c. Oats No. 2 W, 35% c to 36%c. No. 3 W, 34c to 35%c. No. 4 W, 34c to 34%c. Standard, 35%c to 36c. FUTURES Sept Dec. May Wheat Open ... 1.00%01 1.04%% 1.09%% High ... 1.01 1.04% 1.09% Low .... l-. 00% 1.03% 1.08% Close ... 1.00% 1.03% 1.08% Cora Qpen .... 62%% 60%60 62%% High .... 62% 60% 62% Low ..... 61% 59% 61% Close .... 61% Oats Open .... 35% 37%% 40% High7~. 35% 37% 40% Low ..... 35% 37% 40% Close .... 35% 37% 40%

Babtist Church Services.

The theme at the morning service at the Baptist church, Sunday, will be, “God’s Standard of Perfection, and How Attained.” Those who do not worship elsewhere are cordially invited to meet with us in the worship of God. J. P. Green, Pastor. Cuts and bruises may be healed in about one-third the time required by the usual treatment by applying Chamberlain’s Liniment. It is an antiseptic and causes such injuries to heal withcut maturation. This liniment also relieves soreness of the muscles and rheumatic pains. For sale by ail dealers. c Misses Carrie and Marie Maxwell, of Miamasburg, Ohio, returned to their home Saturday, after visiting their uncle, S. B. Maxwell. Ernest Maxwell, a nephew from Dunkirk, has also been a guest at the Maxwell home.—Francesville Tribune.

We want every man and woman in Jasper county to inspect our various lines of footwear before making their purchases of fall and winter shoes. Our new ones are here. Fendig’s Exclusive Shoe Store, Opera House Block. The dyke near Shelby, oh the north side of the river, will soon be completed, and then all of the low Kankakee lands in Lake county will be shut off from the river water and Jasper and Newton counties will'have it all to care for, but possibly if the dry seasons continue long that the Lake county people will be obliged to tap the river again to irrigate the parched lands. It seems this season that it is coming to that.—Crown Point Star.

We are the only firm in Rensselaer that sells pure cider vinegar of as high a grade as 45 grains. Six gallons of our vinegar is equal to 7 gallons of that sold by others, but we sell it at the same price as the lower grade. j. a McFarland. An ordinary case of diarrhoea can, as a rule, be cured by a single dose of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. This remedy has no superior for bowel For sale by all dealers. c $1 round trip to Michigan C|ty, Sunday, Sept. 4th.

ABOUT TWELVE ITCVDXID HEARD BEMATOR DOX.XOTER.

Continued from Page One.

tributed to his downfall and another receiver would probably follow in the footsteps of the two. Instead of reccommending that he be removed, we recommend that he be retained as he now has his hands full and will not be disposed to steal any more.’ “ Senator Dolliver thought that Tocqueville had overlooked a good many things of this kind that existed in 1835 and stated that a comparison bv any student would show that the evils now were much less than they were during that period. The abolition of the army canteen, thc.l>assage T of_th ( ejen}p_lQyeis’ liability law, the passage of the pure food law were all discussed as showing a gradual rise in moral conditions. He stated that recent legislation had been passed that a few years ago no member of congress dared to mention, byt that now, with the assurance that the people of the country without regard to politics are for the right; against the wrong, a thing that at one time seemed doubtfdl. He spoke of the removal of the saloons from the two wings of the United States capitol and stated that when he first entered the hquse of representatives twenty-five years ago he saw members of congress reeling drunk on the floor of the house, but that such scenes do hot occur now.

He lauded Senator Beveridge for bis effort in behalf of the passage of a law to protect the children of the land and to take them out of the sweat shops and place them in the schools. He said that this matter should be the uppermost in the mind of every citizen and it was now regarded as the most important thing confronting congress. Senator Beveridge was the man to introduce it in the senate of the United States and he should have the support of the people in seeing his effort through. Senator Dolliver said, “It is time to act together, think together, vote together without fear, without shame and without reproach. This is not a period as a correspondent wrote me, of ‘active private interests and somnolent people,’ but, while the interests are active, the people are awake and they are going to stay awake until the special legislation against the people is a thing of the past. We are not always able to escape the shrewdness of private interests, but we must be thinkers and must vote for men who have not. "deceived us.” He related how his father in his early days placed a $2,000 mortgage on his 400-acre Virginia farm inorder to send his sons to college at Morgantown, and how the panic of 187? resulted in a condition that made payment impossible and a hard hearted banker foreclosed and took the security farm, a thing which he says is impossible jin this day, because if the security is adequate there are plenty of good men that will come to the assistance of a good man in financial distress.

“I have always aimed to show that there is no occasion for alarm, for instead of going backward we are going forward toward a period of purer government and the exposures and punishment is a proof of a demand for purity that previously did not exist. This is a period of mutual confidence, mutual helpfulness, that has been born into society and is marching on to victory. You and I can aid it and it is our duty to do it. Don't be depressed for you can only be of service when you have confidence that the right will prevail. Peroration the senator summed up his argument with bright hopes and buoyant language and closed with an eloquence that brought the audience to long applause. It was a great speech and should have been heard by many more people.

The roads are now in fine shape, the park is a pleasant place and any day can be agreeably spent there. Miss Lamkin’s work with the children is very satisfactory and enjoyed by the old as well as the little folks. The Sunday program is a good one and the park will probably have a great audience on that day.

The Monticello band played fine music Thursday, giving a concert before the speech. The following from Rensselaer heard the address: J. P. Hammond, William Washburn, J. E. Duvall, G. E. Murray, B. S. Fendig, G. H. Healey, George Pumphrey, Mrs. Grace Pumphrey and son, Mrs. C. W. Hanley and sons Cope and Emil, Miss Blanche Babcock, Geo 'W. Hopkins, Fred Phillips, J. H. S. Ellis, A J. Bellows and wife, Ed Rapdie and wife, George W. Bond and wife, Frank Morrow, V. J. Crisler, and J. D. Allman.

A “Classified Adv.” will sell IL

DON’T MISS THIS CHANCE! MEYERS & SECOR’S Great Harvest Sale I Will Continue During This Week. I I J YOUR CHOICE I Any Suit or Overcoat I IN THE HOUSE I $13.80 TAILOR MADE. I MEYERS & SECOR Tailors I Rensselaer Indiana I ‘ '» ■ ‘ fl

CANNON CANNOT COME BACK TO SPEAKERSHIP.

Declaration of Nicholas Longworth After Interview with President, Fixes Doom of Danville Man. Beverly, Mass., Aug. 18.—Representative Nicholas Longworth, in a statement today, n3ade clear his position as regards opposition to Speaker Cannon. The statement follows: “In view of Mr. Cannon’s unequivocal declaration that he intends to be a candidate for speaker of the next House, I think it is incumbent upon those of us who are candidates for membership in the next House, who have made up our minds upon our, course of action and have positive views upon the subject, to state our position publicly. Had Mr. Cannon not made this announcement, and had it remained doubtful whether he would be a candidate or not, it was my intention not to commit myself before election as to whom I would or would not support for speaker. But since Mr. Cannon, in his speeches bo far in the campaign and in his recent declaration, has made for the speakership an issue, I, for one, do not propose to dodge that issue.

**< shall oppose Mr. Cannon’s election as speaker, and I shall do so in the manner that I consider proper and effective on the settlement of controversy in,my party, namely, in the Republican caucus. I made up my mind before the adjournment of the last session of Congress that Mr. Cannon could not be re-elected speaker, and my opinion .has been strengthened since, through correspondence and talks with my colleagues. “I am not referring to those who have openly opposed him in the past, but to those who, like myself, have supported him.

“I am absolutely convinced, if there is a full attendance at the Republican caucus, that Mr. Cannon can not be again elected. “I have genuine affection for Mr. Cannon as a man and the highest respect for his splendid fighting qualities. I have supported him five times fdh the speakership, having voted four times for his election and once against his remoyalrbuL-Lcan not do so again. “I repeat that I shall oppose the reelection of Mr. Cannon to the speakership, and that I am firmly of the opin-

ion that his re-election is impossible. I want it especially understood that I say this solely on my own responsibility and upon the suggestion of no one else.”

HOUSEHOLD CARES.

Tax the Women of Rensselaer the Same as Elsewhere. With a constantly aching back. A woman should not'have a bad back. And she wouldn’t if the kidneys, were well. Doan’s Kidney Pills make well kidneys. Here is a Rensselaer woman who endorses this claim: Mrs. Larkin Potts, Clark and Washington streets, Rensselaer, Ind., says: “I was weak and nervous and had but little strength or ambition. I rested poorly and was subject to severe headaches and pains across my loins. 1 could hardly attend to my housework at times and I always felt tired and worn out. Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured from Fendig’s Drug Store, gave me relief at once and before I had used them long all my aches and pains disappeared. I am grateful to Doan’s Kidney Pills for what they have done for me.” , < For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United spates. Remember the name—Doan’s—and t, ke no other. The rain yesterday extended to *ll parts of the country and was a good one, and today’s bright but mild weather makes it pleasant and accompanied with the assurance that 1 the crops of the country are now practically safe. The precipitation yesterday was 0.80 of an inch, which makes the rainfall for the week 3.1 inches.

Seemed to Give Him a New Stomach. “I suffered intensely after eating and no medicine or treatment I tried seemed to do any good,” writes H. M. Youngpeters, editor of The Sun, Lake View, Ohio. "The first few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets gave me surprising relief and the second bottle seemed to give me a new stomach and perfectly good health.” For sale by all dealers. c

BAD DREAMS.

Nightmare, Restlessness and NightSweats all Caused by Indigestion. Half of the nervousness in the world, all of the disturbing dreams and nightmares can be ended in a few weeks by a simple, inexpensive treatment. Upset stomach is the cause of nervousness and bad dreams. Your food is lying in your stomach undigested and fermenting; it is forming poisonous gasses which irritates the pheumogastric nerve that leads direct from the brain, and ends in a network of tiny braneihes running through' the stomad|h. It 5s also the irritation of this gieat pheumogastrlc nerve that causes headacheis. Many times people have severe headaches and know they are caused by t® stomach, but do not know in If you are nervous, have dreams or nightmare, and do not sleep sound at night, get a 50 cent box of Mi-o-na stomach tablets and take one or two after or with meals. They relieve distressed stomach in 5 minutes. Sold by druggists everywhere and by B. F Fendigf, who guarantees them to cure indigestion or money back.

How to Cure Eczema, Pimples and Dandruff. We desire to say that when we took the agency for ZEMO, we were convinced that it was a valuable remedy for Eczema, pimples, and dandruff. Yet, we must frankly admit that Zemo has far exceeded our expectations as a treatment for skin diseases. We are pleased to state that'we shall continue the agency as ZEMO has given splendid results wherever recommended. Our customers like ZEMO too, because it is a clean vegetable liquid for external use. ZEMO effects its cures by drawing to the surface of the skin and destroying the germ life that causes the disease, leaving the skin clear and healthy, it does not soli the clothing or linen and can be used freely on infants. With every purchase, we give a booklet on skin diseases explaining in simple words how any person can be cured at home of smy form of skin or scalp diseases by this clean, scientific remedy. 2 L ~ A F. LONG, Druggist