Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 101, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 April 1912 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
ECZEXAT TRY ZERO Has Cared Wont Cases sad Yea Caa Prece It For Only 26 Coats. Yes, try Zemo. That’s all yon aeed do to get rid of the worst case of eczema. You take no chance, It Is no experiment. Zemo is positively gnaranteed to stop itching, rash, raw, bleeding eczema, make a pimpled face smooth and clean. Zemo is a wonder and the minute applied It sinks in, vanishes, leaves no evidence, doesn’t stick, no grease, just a pure, clean, wonderful liquid and it cures. This is quaranteed. Zemo is put up by the B. W. Rose Medicine Co., St Louis, Mo., and sold by all druggists at $1 tor the largest bottle and at 25 cents for the liberal size trial bottle. Try one 25cent bottle and be convinced. A. F. Long’s Drug Store.
Notice. The ladies of the G. A. R. will give a market Saturday, April 26, at Scott Bros.’ store in the Odd Fellows building. There will be lots of good things waiting for you there. Renew at Once. On May 1, The Ladies’ Home Journal will advance in price to $2.00 per year. New subscriptions and renewals, for one year from expiration of present subscription, will be accepted until April 30 at $1.50. Mrs. LEM HUSTON. Phone 81. We have only a limited amount at northern grown, early seed potatoes left. Rurais, $1.50; Burbanks, |L<O; Six Weeks and Rose, $1.60. Ohioe, $1.75. JOHN KGHR. Capt. Wilhelm and passengers of the Bremen, which arrived in New York Thursday from Bremen, reported that between 3 and 4 o’clock last Saturday afternoon, while in the vicinity of where the Titanic foundered, his vessel ploughed through fields at bodies of the victims of the disaster.' ..- 0 4 A troubled conscience of forty-six years’ duration was appeased last week by a contribution of $2,000 to the “conscience fund” of the federal treasury 1 , at Washington. The amount was received by Treasurer McClung from an unknown person In Chicago, who declared he had suffered under the weight of bis wrong for nearly half a century. , y v'v *; R. L. Budd, who recently purchased a farm of 80 acres near the H. J. Dexter farm in Union township, was in town yesterday getting lumber for a new chicken coop. He subscribed for The RSapublican, so that be. can get acquainted with Jasper eoanty people. Mr. Budd is a young man and moved here from Chicago a few weeks ago. Partial home rule for Alaska, with authority in the legislature to grant to women the right to vote, was approved by the house of congress Thursday when it passed the bill for a local Alaskan government. Woman’s suffrage scored Its first victory la the house when, by a vote of 81 to as .m amendment was adopted assuring to the Alaskan legislature the right to modify the qualifications of electors by extending the elective franchise to women. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Holden went to Chicago yesterday afternoon. He is in quest of geranium plants for use at the cemetery and is having much trouble in finding them. Plants froze out quite generally during the 1 winter and he has been informed by several large dealers that they cannot supply him with a single plant. This may interfere considerably with his plan t-f cemetery beautification. The beds have been spaded and made ready for planting but*he may have to change bis plans and use seed flowers instead of plants. — • Agent Beam, as well as all Monoo agents, has received an order from P. L McManus, superintendent, informing them that they must enforce the regulation forbidding persona from entering the agent’s quarters at the depot The order says that do not permit customers or others to go behind the bank railing and that agents must consider their office 1 “o - ,v* • •' counting room from which all except the agent and his aids are excluded. Mr. Beam has posted the order conspicuously and is enforcing it to the the window or over the counter.
