Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 February 1920 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

BUY Better Furniture > > ===== > > You are going to buy better furniture than you have in the J past. > Good lumber is getting scarcer and advancing in price all the [ time. The difference in the cost of cheap, shoddy furniture and good • furniture is so slight that from now on you are going to buy ’ better. There isn’t anything that you spend your money for that ► gives you as much for your money’s worth as furniture and rugs. ’ A piece of furniture or a rug will wear for years and the whole family gets to enjoy it. Nothing will tend to keep the children > closer to the home than good furniture. J 'Most housewives in the past have prided themselves on how , cheap they have bought their furniture but from now on they * are going to figure how good they can buy. W. J. WRIGHT RENSSELAER, INDIANA

O. K. Rainier went to Chahners today. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Coen left today for their home in SouthBend. Zelpha Brown and son, of McCoySburg, were in Rensselaer today. C. Arthur Tuteur returned to Indianapolis after spending several days here with his family and friends. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wiles at the home of Mrs. Wiles’ mother, at Monon, February 16. . ■ ■■■■■■l ■■■■■■■■! Josephine Thomas, who is employed as a telephone operator in the Blackstone hotel in Chicago, is visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Thomae, ofSurrey.— ' 0. S. Bell returned today from a trip to Thorntown and Indianapolis where he had attended pure bred Hereford cattle sales. He made some purchases at the Thorntown sale. Mesdames W. I. Yates, D. W. Waymire, Harry Kresler and Chas. Grow entertained the members of their bridge club and their husbands and other guests at the home of the latter Wednesday evening at a six o’clock dinner. Mrs. Harry McGee returned from Indianapolis Wednesday evening, where she had been called to attend the funeral of her nephew, Chester, son of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Brennaman. The little fellow was almost three years of age. The funeral services were held at the home in Indianapolis and interment was made in Crown Hill cemetery. Many public sales are scheduled for the -next ten days, in some cases there being several - sales on the same day in different parts of the county. The first of March, however, will find the sale season almost over. The season has been a very successful one for those holding sales, and this as due in a great measure to the liberal amount of printer’s ink that has been used. There is always someone looking for what you have to sell and there is nd greater medium of sale than the newspapers.

PRINCESS THEATRE MATINEE—3t 15 NIGHT—7tOO ~~ ' ■ 11 . 111 . .... z —Tonight— ETHEL CLAYTON ‘A SPORTING CHANCt ’ * She was in a, ticklish precise*- She didn’t know hie foot were moat. Stood there and told that where they were though! * Come prison guard that she had seen ao to soew what happened. IPs a one, while all 'the while sho knew wonderful romance. that his quarry was right under Also her car. FORD EDUCATIONAL WEEKLY - . - _ i -, — ——~ j *' —' •’ “ -FRIDAYDOUGLAS FAIRBANKS IN I When the Clouds Roll By