Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 February 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

FAULTY DIGESTION

Quickly Shatters the Nervous Sys-tem-Immediate Action Necessary—Use Mi-o-na.

When .you feel irritable, tired and despondent; when you have nervous twitching®, specks before the eyes, headaches, sour stomach, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, and pains in the colon and bowels—you are suffering from dyspepsia, which invariably wrecks the nervous system—you need Mi-o-na at once. Mi-o-na goes to the seat of your trouble and quickly ends stomach misery. It surely and safely 'builds up and strengthens the stomach walls and glands, quickly improves the digestive system—the vital force and nerve energy are restored, then you enjoy perfect health. Do not suffer another day. Get a fifty cent box of Mi-o-na tablets from B. F. Fendig. This treatment will help you get well and strong, andi immediate relief is sure.

New car of Jackson Hill coal received. Grant-Warner Lumber Co.

Wm. Lods and Cora Robinson will be married at her home in Francesville at 6 o’clock this evening. W T ill had a drive of ten miles today to Rensselaer to get the license. Friends and relatives from Monticello went on this afternoon train to attend the wedding.—Monti cello Journal.

Charles F. O’Neal, a prominent citizen of Lafayette, died suddenly in front of Rosenthal’s store in that city. He had just returned from Florida, where he had been with his wife since the first of January and where she was to remain until the cold weather was over. That 78 per cent of the fifty youngest officers of the Pennsylvania railroad are college mentis the encouraging word which the company’s statistician sends forth to the educational centers of the land. Of the 100 next youngest set 60 per cent are college men, showing a strong tendency for the coming generation of higher officials of the railroad to be college-trained

Lieutenant Garland}, Sergeant Robinson and Privates Parks, Wynegar and Gant returned Tuesday evenig from Culver, where they attended part of the indoor rifle match. Delayed trains at Logansport Monday put them into Culver after 4 o’clock in the afternoon, when the matches began at 10 o’clock. The room in which the shooting was done was so cold that the boys almost froze their feet. They were not permitted to enter the pistol competition as the matches had been finished when they got there. They were also handicapped in the rifle match and had to fire until after 10 o’clock at night in order to complete the schedule. They were all day Tuesday getting home.

Job work at Republican office.