Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 83, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 January 1920 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Farmers, Notice! Please bring in your raws fur and and get the highest prices for them. I will pay as much as any big concern in Chicago. Try once and find out. I have the money to invest and pay in cash for your raw fur, rags, rubber, iron, metal and hides, Sam Karnowsky Phone 577 RENSSELAER, IND.
PRINCESS THEATRE Wednesday, January 14, 1920 Madge Kennedy in “Daughter of Mine” Smiling Bill Parson . ln Another one of those splendid comedies. Thursday, January 15, 1920 Grace Davison, Warren Cook and Wilmuth Merkle • . in “Suspicion” At the gate where suspicion enters, love goes out. Be ever vigilant, but never suspicious. Suspicion always haunts the guilty mind. Suspicion is the poison of friendship. Suspicion (may be <no fault but showing it Is a great one. f Mary’s ’mouth costs her nothing for she never opens it but at others’ expense. Gossiping and lying go together. A quiet tongue shows a wise head. Better a slip of the foot than of the tongue. Man is caught by his tongue and an ox by his horns. The tongue of an idle person Is netver still.. a Friday, January 16, 1920 1 Dorothy Gish in “Fil Get Him Yet” She wouldn’t be the president of that railroad In name only! Not khe! As long as her father wanted her to assume the responsibility for his taxes by taking over his standard guage, four-track, warranted-to-firet-dlass-condltlon railroad, she d be THE boss, too! Nope! She’s not a suffragette! Just ia little girl with grown up ideas. Better than she was in ‘‘Battling Jane,” ‘‘Boots” and “Peppy Polly.” That’s saying something! She wallowed In wealth. He loathed the touch of a girl’s money. Then she got busy! She had to run away with her father’* whole railroad —cars, engines, triack® and everything—to do it, but, by cracky—! You ought to see Dorothy Gish in this great story of the girl who ran a railroad.
Elmo Lincoln In • The Seventh Episode “ELMO, THE MIGHTY” Saturday, January 17, 1920 Viola Dana « in “Please Get Married” She had a marriage license, a man, a ceremony, and they were on their honeymoon—but ehe wasn’t married. It had the bride and bridegrootmi guessing and It will have you, whem you see it. At last they were- alone in the bridal suite on their honeymoon. ■He was going to give his bride her first kiss. Then Fire! Fire! Fire! rang the cry through the hotel- Did She get her kiss? That is only one of the many hHarous situations of “Please Get Married.’’ It’s all about a honeymoon. The strangest honeymoon on record. For the bride didn’t have a chance to spopn. Wasn’t it a shame? A Screen Classic Inc., seven part special. Adapted by Metro. LARRY SEMON COMEDY “PASSING THE BUCK” PRIZMA PICTURE Scenes in Nature’s colors.
