Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 56, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 March 1920 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
President H. R. Kurrie was down from Chicago this afternoon. MrKurrie is a very enthusiastic Wood supporter and regards the General as a very strong candidate, foth for the Republican nomination and also for election to the presidency this fall. • The school-book shortage must be /mi nwing the schopl-chiidren great worry—lndianapolis News. If we ever get hold of that Dove of Peace again we ought to cage jt.__Sherman Democrat. If Admiral Sims remains afloat after his present engagement he will deserve another decoration.—Indianapolis News. The politicians may calculate that Hoover is quite too conservative a food dispenser to officiate at the pie-counter.—Columbia Record.
If Holland should refuse to give up the ex-Kaiser, Belgium might be glad to take the assignment to go in and get him. —Kansas City Times. Paul Deschanel wears his mustache in the Hohenzollem style, but outside of that he may be all right. —Birmingham Age Herald. A man bearing the name of Roper should have no difficulty in rounding up violators of the Prohibition Dispatch. Hold up, there. The debts you make now to buy stuff worth fifty cents on the dollar will be paid later with doHars worth a dollar. — Columbus Citixen. ' ■■ The Navy won’t need any vindL cation in the eyes of the boys H escorted across.—Baltimore American. ' It’s hard for us to reaHxe that the Anti-Saloon League started aa a mere bush league.—Nashville Tennessean. ■ The United States may yet have the distinction of having been tirn longest in the war.—Shreveport We would not be ungrateful. We ♦hawk Mr. Burleson for all our bills have been lost in transit. —Columbia Recpid. After all, the former Kaiser showed some perpicaeity in not Bolland into the war.—New York Evening Sun. \ .
