Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 260, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 October 1919 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
EXTRA Moit Women Would Walk a Good Many Block* to O’R I LEY’S GOLDEN LOAF ~ BAKERY Where Cakes and Pastry, Bread and Rolls Are ' Tempting. The shining glass tops of theseshowcases fairlygtisten with Golden Loaf Bread made by O’RILEY
z Until further notice 1 will I ? be in Chicago for post-gradu-ate instruction on Tuesday of each week, returning at 6 p. DR. I. M. WASHBURN.
See how "rubber boots are made at B. N. FENDIG’S SHOE STORE. A free exhibit Saturday, November 1. A. E. Turley, of Lafayette, was in Rensselaer. Mr. Turley is with the International Harvester company. He owns 160 acres of land in Gillam jtownship. Learn the difference between good and poor rubber at the free rubber exhibit on Saturday, November 1, at FENDIG’S SHOE STORE. Mr. and Mrs. Van Hinds, of Arkansas, who are visiting Indiana friends and relatives, were guests Monday of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Sage, of- North Van Rensselaer street. Mrs. Hinds is an aunt of Mr. Sage. f-r- ' We are anxious to have every woman in Jasper county see the auto boot which we are introducing. This boot will be displayed at the free rubber exhibit which will be held in B. N. FENDfG’S SHOE STORE on Saturday, /November 1, by a representative or the Beacon Falls Rubber Go. -
D’Annunzio’s publishers are probably the happiest men in Italy at this time.—Des Moines Register. The soft coal miners seem determined, to make it hard for the consumer.—Nashville Tennessean. Since Hoover quit rationing the people of Europe they have nothing but scraps.—Columbia Record.' The only thing agitators haven’t asked for is the shortening of the speaking day.—Sedalia (Mo.) Capital. ■ i ■■ i Those Brooklyn barbers who struck for shorter hours evidently ‘believe in daylight shaving.—The Liberator. Well, anyhow, one doesn’t have to dodge to escape beihg hit by falling prices.—Webster City (la.). Freeman Journal. The gravest part of the yellow peril *is that the Jap can get rich on what the average American wastes.—-Asheville (N. C.) Times.
