Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 257, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 October 1916 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

TODAY’S PROGRAM AT Star Theatre Marifuprlfe Courtor . Pfatyimr a: itoubte parf' la “Dead Alive” A MASTERPIECE STAR THEATRE SPECIAL FRIDAY MATINEE AND NIGHT Mae Murray in “To Have and ~ to Hold” COLONIAL Miss Murray as Lady Joclyn Leigh, ward of King James, I, of England, who flees to America to escape an undesirable marriage. How her. loveless marriage upon her arirval in the new colonies brings about a series of exciting adventure, must be seen to be fully appreciated in “T<o Have and to Hold.”- Unusual in its magnifirance and one of the most lavished pictures ever shown here, requiring two specially constructed sailing vessels, one of which is wrecked at the height of a great* storm. A Lasky-Paramount Production. Those who can do so are urged to attend the matinee at the Star Theatre. FRIDAY Admission 10c and sc.

Soft, warm, comfy underwear, perfect fitting old fashioned qualities. .Men’s $1 to $4; boys' 50c to $1. — Hilliard & Hamill. - The following letters ETAOSHR Letters advertised for week ended Oct. 23, 1916: Fred Smith, J. W. Lynch, -Chester Downs, William Coen. These letters wall be sent to the deadletter office Nov. 6, 1916. While in Chicago this week J. J. Montgomery witnessed fche burning of the Ouilmette grocery building in the loop district. The loss from the .fire was $75“,000 and it took the firemen all night to put the blaze to rout. Nineteen fire engines and two fire boats were used. Jack's fireman’s badge enabled him to get inside of the lines, where he was better able to witnss the methods employed by the firemen in putting out the fire. . E. G.-Sternberg is down from Chicago and reports that his dredges, -seven in all, are employed in Missouri and lowa. Mr. Sternberg is bidding today on a job at Lancaster, Ohio, and if he secures this will’move the dredge from here, which is now being tom down, and ship it there. He states that they have eight million yards of dredging to lo now. According to the Knox Republican the farmers of Pulaski county do not care to be told how to farm by college boys, or at least think they should be given a chance to say whether or not they case for dwte;, advice. > Under the present ’aw the county agent must stay until that law is repealed. Evidently Pulaski will not have a county agent after this. Another law that does not meet with approval by our neighbors ii the gravel road law, and The Republican caries a table showing what it has cost the county since 1914.