Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 256, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 October 1915 — FALL TRADING DAYS ARE NOV. 3 & 4 [ARTICLE]
FALL TRADING DAYS ARE NOV. 3 & 4
Merchants Set Dates For Bargain Giving and States Will Be Resplendent In Offerings. Rensselaer merchants are again offering to the public a page of bargains and are putting their stores in attractive array for next Wednesday and Thursday, November 3rd and 4th, which have been chosen as “bargain days” by the Retail Merchants Association. Thirty merchants have entered heartily into the plan to make these days the best ever held and a wide invitation is being sent out to the farmers, the residents of other towns, the people of Rensselaer and to all who want to get in on the bargains to come here on those two days and spend a few profitable hours, a few effective dollars and meet theft" friends from all over the county and take home with them a supply of merchandise bought at right prices. The bright and warm days of the past three weeks have caused many to postpone the shopping that is ordinarily done in October and this sale comes just at the right time to prove most alluring to thrifty buyers. Our stores, and we have a number of mighty good ones, will be all spick and span and you can get clothing, shoes, drygoods, millinery, groceries, hardware, notions and anything you want to buy at better prices and have the guarantee of local merchants than you can buy through mail order houses or in the city stores. Rensselaer has beefi growing and the country has been growing. We are joint partners in our success. What is good for Rensselaer is good for the sdrroundihg country and what is good for the country is good for Rensselaer. Let us get together on the two days next week and boost and buy and bolster up the best little city and the best surrounding country in Indiana. Hip! Hurray! For Rensselaer. Don’t forget Wednesday and Thursday, November 3 and 4. County Surveyor Myrt B. Price visited his old home in west Carpenter township yesteraay and brought back with him a sack of very fine apples. He enojyed them especially as the trees were planted by him when a toy, which, he thinks after a little thinking, was as much as thirty years ago. Will'Clark, son of Mrs. Lucy Clark, was taken to Chicago this morning by Dr. Kreselr and will receive treatment for stomach trouble, remaining in a hospital there for several days. He has been frail for many years and for the past few weeks has been failing rapidly. He saw an Indianapolis specialist but was not helped any, and now he is to have an x-ray examination made and take treatment in Chicago.
