Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 34, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 October 1901 — Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

I OOK HERE! If you contemplate building Tnless you call and see us before buying, you will a mistake you will regret. IJecause we carry A COMPLETE STOCK. Ih verything is guaranteed to be as rep resented, and ■Remember, we stand ieady to make this assertion good. We handle everything in wood you need in building, also Sewer Pipe, Flue Linings, Hard and Soft Coal, All at Lowest Prices consistent with good goods, BALES LUMBER GO. phone 4. Office and Yard opposite Monon depot

Success. i» •» i » ® “There is nothing succeeds like suc- :: cess” is an old adage, and there is no betH ter evidence that the M • * t I II New Hardware and Lumber ♦» ♦ * «i t j Yard at McCoysburg . • * •; is a success than the fact that its propri- ;; etor has not failed in a single instance to | place every order he has had a chance to •; figure on, no matter how many firms figure •; against him- He is there to save you monkey and on] y asks a living profit- Give him if one trial. Remember LEE is the propri- :: etor and McCOYSBURG- the placehim your bill

The Continental Fire Insurance Co. has a Cash Capital of One Million of Dollars* Cash Aseetts of over TEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS, a reserve for the security of insurance in force amounting to over Four Millions of Dollars. It has paid Losses to date amounting to the large sura of over Forty-Three Million Dollars. It conducts its business -under the provisions of the Safety Fund Law of the state of New York, and has in the two safety funds Twelve Hundred Thousand Dollars. In the great Chicago fir ed year 1871, it paid in cash, losses amounting to nearly two millions of dollars, and so strong were its reserves that it did this without impairing its Capital. Thirteen months later, it paid in oonsequenoe of the large fire in the city of Boston nearly Three-quarters of a Million Dollars. Suoh facts as these should reoommend the Company to all having property to insure. Why should you select a weak company when you can just as well select a strong one, which has been tried by passing through conflagrations in oonsequenoe of which one hundred companies railed? The best is the cheapest. BRUNER «£ RANDLE, Forsythe B 1 cik.Room 7.