Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 109, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 May 1913 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

ELLIS THEATRE TONIGHT THE DASHING WIDOW Lanham’s Lyric Players In a New Repertoire of COMEDIES AND DRAMAS Two complete performances each evening. The first show begins promptly at 7:30 o’clock. You can come.as - late as 8:45 and see a complete show. Positively no price higher than 10c for any seat.* Reserved seats now on sale. THE BIG TEN-CENT SHOW

Weak Stomachs Made Strong In If your stomach is so weak that food won’t stay down or fermentation takes place, causing gas, heaviness, and general misery, you need MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets and the sooner you get them the better for you. B. F. .Fendig knows what one 50cent box will do for he honorably offers to return the cost if you aren’t splendidly benefitted. Don’t be timid about trying this great Stomach prescription. It has cured thousands of cases of Chronic indigestion, gastritis, dyspepsia and catarrh of the Stomach. There is no reason on earth why MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets won’t make you healthy and happy.

RHE U M A DRIVES OUT RHEUMATISM After 25 Years of Misery, This Man Walks, Works and Feels Fine Again. Right away—the first day you start to take RHEUMA-the Uric Acid poison begins to dissolve and leave the sore joints and muscles. Its action is little less than magical. BHEUMA works so speedily you actually can feel the Rheumatism leaving the body. A bottle costs but 50 cents, and if you are not satisfied B. F. Fendig will return your money. Read this: “I wish to state to you the facts and nothing but the facts. I bless the day a friend brought me a 50cent bottle of RHEUMA. I used one-half of it and it did me more good than all the other medicines I ever tried. I had been afflicted with Rheumtism all over my body for more than 25 years; I could not walk, and was a broken-down man. During that time I spent a small fortune trying to be rid of the horrible disease, but without help. However, RHEUMA reached my case, and I thank God I can again use my feet and do my work. “Before taking your medicine I was staying with a daughter on her farm, and despite her loving efforts to tempt my appetite I could not eat. After I had taken RHEUMAtwo days my appetite returned. Yours for prosperity.”—Prof. H. H. Rolling, 7 S. Ninth St., Richmond, Ind., Oct. 10, 1912. * Warning About 0ow». Cow owners are warned not to stake their cows where they can get across streets or alleys or on sidewalks; also that they are liable to arrest if cows or other stock gets loose and causes damage to gardens or other property. There has already been some complaint and stock will be . taken up and arrests follow neglect to observe the law. CITY MARSHAL.

DEFYING DEATH. What is probably the most perilous, hazardous and sensational performance ever conceived is called the “Death Ride,” and is executed daily ■by the Great Raynard outside the show tents of the Sparks World Famous Shows, which are billed to exhibit here Wednesday, May 21. v The paraphernalia for this sensational act is so cumbersome and the space required for its erection is so great that it is necessarily given as a free outside attraction, and takes place just after the street parade. The Great Reynard, in what is billed as the “Last Word in Human Hazard,” rides down a hundred foot ladder incline while blindfolded, mounted insecurely on top of a unicycle. The hazardous part of this marvelous performance lies in the fact that the Great Reynard is blindfolded and can not see to maintain the perfect balance that is required in order to successfully accomplish this wonderful performance, Should he in the least lose his sense of direction or his balance he would fall from the ladder to the earth far below. This act is conceded to be the greatest thriller ever presented and the public are Invited to witness it free just after the street parade. Local friction at Owen, Leavenworth, Alton and Madison, all Indiana towns in the flood stricken Ohio valley, over the distribution of state relief funds, caused Gover nor Ralston Wednesday to dispatch Chas. A. Garrard, quartermaster general of the state militia, to the scene. Garrard will investigate reports of graft, discrimination and inefficiency. . - ~

. With the back of his skull crushed, both arms broken and a number of other injuries and bruises, the body of a man, who was later identified as John McKenna, of New York city, was found lying beside the Pennsylvania tracks near Spring Mills. The cause of the man’s death is a mystery. There is no federal statute covering the offense of railway conductors of “knocking down fares,” according to Judge Clarence W. Sessions, who in the federal court at Detroit Thursday quashed an indictment against John W- Merrill, of Chicago. Merrill was a Grand Trunk conductor, working on a run out of Chicago. The death rate in the United States is decreasing; according to statistics covering twenty-three of the states, in which 63 per cent of the total population is located, made public Wednesday by the census bureau. The mortality rate per thousand for 1911 was given as 14.2 in this section. In 1910 the rate was 15. Seventeen per cent of the deaths recorded were of infants less than a year old. The expected indictment of Jack Johnson, the negro pugilist, for violation of the Mann act, was returned Wednesday before Federal Judge Landis in Chicago. The indictment charges the negro with bringing Belle Schreiber, a white woman, from Pittsburg in 1910 for immoral purpose contrary to thefederal statute. Johnson was in court and pleaded not guilty.

Leave Orders for Vines And Plants With Holden. I have on hand planty of vines lor porch boxes and trellises, also plenty of plants for flower beds, boxes, etc., including several thousand geraniums. They will be ready to go out on and after May 6th. Call at the house, 2 blocks north o. the cemetery. J. H. HOLDEN. Rumors were current in Chicago financial circles Monday that Clkrence S. Funk, general manager of the International Harvester company, is to resign his position and accept another as virtual head of the M. Rumely company at LaPorte, manufacturers of tractor engines and farm implements.

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