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The Daily Republican from Rushville, Indiana • Page 4

Location:
Rushville, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 4 THE DAILY REPUBLICAN The Daily Republican Published Daily except Sunday by THE REPUBLICAN COMPANY J. FIUDNEE SOW, Office, Republican Building, Northwest Corner Second and Perkins Streets. Entered as second-class matter Marc 22 1904. at the postoffice at Rushville, Indiana, under the act of Congress of arch 8, 1897. One week delivered by One year in the city by carrier One year delivered by f3.00 TELEPHONE NUMBER, I II I.

Tom J. Qeraghty, Editor. Roy Harrold. City Editor. Saturday, April 24, 1909.

to his door through pity for her and the three little children why a year ago, as far as her people were concerned she would have been in the poor house. Now, can have their own ideas of the religion; Rev. Levi had better been thanking the Lord on Sabbath day for the Lord saving his Sister in law from being killed by the street car, instead of writing up the in the paper that are trying to live right, when they cannot help what George Wolfe done by going away off with that woman. of Hypocrites and Backsliders SHE LIVED HERE. There is a girl in our town Who knowrs what The wind got in her bell-shaped hat And turned it inside out; And when she saw what happened, With all her might and main, She faced the wind and made it turn It outside in again.

Saturday April 24, 1909. Speaker Cannon says some Congressmen their wings and crow and crucify the which seems to be mixing up the barnyard and a lynching bee. If the men trying to do somebody woul right about face and do something that would help themselves and help others, they would be of more use in the world. rolled by and the present is bright and the future rosy. The rub comes in looking pleasant when by all the rules of the game you should be blue and disheartened.

Some boys leave the farm, but as agricultural products in this country last year were worth $7,000,000,000 it is clear that many stick and make a good thing of it. It appears to be a difficut task to convict a pretty woman in a jury trial. It would not be though, were a lot of homely women permitted to serve as jurors in the case. It appears now that little lam was a real little sheep and not merely the creature of a inspiration. Additional strength and beauty is given to the poem this discovery and the application of the moral conveyed is made more practical.

The difference between being a citizen and a subject was not sufficient to prevent some 20,000 Americans from moving over into Canada last year and take up their residence. If some people would use about one-half of the time they take in talking about the heaven beyond in helping this world to become more heaven-like it would be time well spent. The citizens of Rushville, especially the business men, should at least feel chagrined over the perusal of the following excerpt in the Carthage Citizen: to Carthage to buy your goods. You find right treatment and right goods and prices. And if you are here on Library days, spend a while there among the books and magazines.

It will do you moral is behind the librarv movement Column Young Man With Legs Cut Off Will Probably Recover. LETS GO FISHING. feeling awful tired And you know what to do; Kind of feel you need the doctor, Find yourself becoming blue; Get to think you must be ailing enjoy your special dish; Drop your work and take to loafing Go away somewhere and The Connersville Examiner says: Harry Colsher, the Bushville young man who suffered an injury on the C. II. D.

tracks early Thursday morning and was removed to the Fayette sanitarium where both legs were amputated above the knees, is doing as well as could be expected, and unless complications arise the physician attending him believes he will ultimately recover. DON PUT IT OFF. The time for filing mortgage exemptions expires April 30, and those who have not yet taken advantage of the law should get busy. Several hundred people wait until about the day after May 1 to file their exemptions, and then get mad when the sign is hung up in the court house. Where the Fun Comes In After it is too late to prevent him from getting away with the goods the Southern American, an Alabama publication, comes out with the information that Taft stole the Presidency.

What do you know about that? The man we can most admire is the one who can smile when things go wrong. Who can cheerfully struggle through difficulties and adverse conditions. It is not much credit to be optimistic when the clouds have The following unsigned communi- cation received bv this office is self- explanatory There was a great mistake made in last paper by the Rev. Washington Levi, pastor of the Heavenly Recruit church, when he I stated about the Christians and Sini ners making up the donations, that they called the pound party for his daughter, the ones who Rev. Wash I professed to be sinners taken thipgs that was valuable, while one who professed to be a Christian, and a preacher took a sack of salt: that was to represent wife that turned to salt at the fall of Bablon what Washington said about the I Wolfe being kept from the door, if it been for the Wolfe going over COUPON.

Name Our Motto this number said a female voice carrying about fifty years behind it. was the pert and terse answer. is the information department, is it then please write down what I The woman proceeded to outline the work, program, time, place and importance of a meeting to be held by the women of one of the Rushville churches. The man at Eight demanded of her why he should take down such stuff. She told him the members of the society would call up and he could read it off to them when they inquired.

you know we he protested. alright. They all know it and will call she said hanging up her receiver. The woman has been offended because the local newspapers would not publish the notice on their front page, and in- isisted on putting it in their regular church column. The information man threw the notice in his waste basket.

Preacher Upholds Modern Press Name Street No. DISCUSSING SUNDAY QUESTION New York, April Motion Picture Patents Company is vigor- jously supporting the Liberal Sunday I League, which holds a mass meeting in Carnegie Hall tonight at which all sides of the Sunday question will be discussed. The Patents Company furnishes for this meeting motion i pictures hich will show exactly in i what manner Sunday is observed in the various parts of Europe. Extraordinary Style Ev The Coming Visit of rs. Lillie S.

Poundstone Expert Corsetiere and Special Representative of The H. W. Gossard Company Makers of COJtS If you are a Gossard Wearer, why, of wish to come in during Mrs. Lillie S. Poundstone stay with us and see the newest Gossard Models.

These models have been designed with demands in Hips and the complete elimination of too-common heaviness at the thigh. But if you have never worn these corsets, carefully and accurately fitted, why you know what Genuine Satisfaction and Keen Pleasure you have missed! The Gossard Figure is Noted at a Glance! OU can possess it YOU can have the smart lines which will give your gowns a distinction all their own Fail to Come In Next Week! MAUZY Sfc DBNNma The modern newspaper as an agent of public good was the theme of an address delivered last week by the Rev. Dr. W. B.

Norton of Evanston, a suburb of Chicago at a Methodist meeting. In a clear, decisive manner the clergyman pointed out the influence of good that newspapers are in the community, detailed a fewj of the difficulties with which they have to ermtend and corrected some of the misunderstandings on the part of mpny persons concerning what is In part he said: It is necessary for the church to understand the viewpoint of the press, the limitations and difficulties under which the newspaper works and its accomplishments, both in what it has done and in what it has saved society from. The newspaper is for all the people. It is for Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Christian people of all beliefs as wrell as for people of no beliefs. As the lines of the human face are an index of the character of the individual, so the cartoons, art pictures and general tone of a newspaper, which the people easily discern, even though in their curiosity they may patronize what in their ment they condemn, are an indication of the purposes of a new spaper.

The central stream and not the eddies and currents along the shores tells which way the river flows. What may seem the strangest assertion of all, the newspaper has saved society from irreligion. If the newspaper does not professedly favor religion, it never is arrayed against religion. Although it is often too flippant or at least too jocular in treating of religious events it never is wilfully irreverent. It never advocates biblical nor marriage infidelity.

Its utterances are ever demanding honesty in politics, purity in home life, clean streets, smokeless chimneys, a well governed and a beautiful Chicago. It is not surprising that the sensational should occupy much space in the newspaper. Like fiction and the drama, it deals with those phases of life which create the most intense interest and which spring from the most elemental passions of human nature. But the Bible is a book of sensations. Christ, I believe, deliberately chose the sensational method of expression in order to startle dull people into thought and to fix germinal principles in memory until they had a chance to grow.

WANTED 3,000,000 Pounds of Wool Having leased part of the Carr barn, on South Main street, Rushville, Indiana, we are in a position to handle all of your wool clip at the HIGHEST MARKET PRICES. We are wholesale dealers and represent the leading wrool of Boston and Philadelphia and will take care of all the wool can will pay full value for same. We will also pay highest market prices for junk, hides, tallow, furs, gensing and feathers. Call us by phone and get our prices before selling. Our representative will call upon you if you so desire, GREGORY Rushville, Ind.

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCX'OOOOOOOOOOOCX a GRAND THEATER TONIGHT FILM The Return of Ulysses Acted by Mrs. Bartet Penelope Mr. A. Lambert Fils Antinous Mr. Paul Mounet Ulysse Mr.

Delauny Grand Priest Members of the Comedy SONG Take Me Admission 5c The Old Reliable GRAND TONIGHT FILM THE JOLLY DREAM JONAH DUST IN HIS EYE and TOPSY TURVY Talking Picture THE NEW MINISTER SONG I BE A TIME FOR CHEERING, DEARIE I Al A7G00D SHOW ALWAYS price 7 to io Each Evening I 5c Admission 5c 4 41 iji 4 Palace Theatre FILM: SONG: Days in the Training of Jack a Noise Like a Hoop and Roll old friend Moore will sing a popu lar song hit with spot light effects and will also do a dancing stunt. 5c ADMISSION 5c.

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About The Daily Republican Archive

Pages Available:
55,550
Years Available:
1904-1968