Newspaper Page Text
10 TIm monnwiqr'i***!*! Kama «f LoQrand. D, W. Krrnuaon and Abe! Rawyer ware «KT Dm Moines Tuesday on busings. DfcLCQ-UGHT templet• EUctric Light AMI Power Plant Developed by the name men who made Delco starters for automo biles. lESfl. the electric shop. M. J. RODERMEL, Prop. 14 North First Ave. CASINO Mary Miles Minter in "Anne of Green Gables" PATHE NEWS WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY "JUBILO" tkjaii'S** Frank Hichsrdi sold hi* home in the south part of town Wednesday to WtU»er KelloNg who expeots to take possession son. Sir. Richards has decided to rernaln In JXlrand nnd h&n jmrchasod the Oliver Austin place on Kn«t Mnln street nnd will take possession soon. Dr. W. W. Houthwlck's mother Is staying with them for few daya helping to cure for the "flu" patient# In the home. Glenn McCarel. of Albion, waa In LeQrnnd over Sunday on business. Mrs. Henry Hnmmond, or near Union, loft Monday for Kansas Olty, to visit her sister. Miss Elsie Xoyer. who Is teaching In the public schools there. On hrr return ahe will vlstt her brother, George Xoyor, at Des Moines. Tonite Last Times Mary Miles Minter Lives her part on and off the stage. A Remarkable Cast Seldom has a screem cast been recruited with more names known to the theater-goers than has that of "Anne of Green Gables." You simply can't watch mischievous Anne in her many pranks and escapa des without feeling that tickling sensation around your funnybone. You just can't help enjoying every minute she's on the screen. It's Better than a Tonic! It's Better Than a Tonic! ALSO "SNUB" POLLARD MUTT-JEFF NEWS-REVIEW STARRING WILL ROGERS Cfe. ADDED FEATURES AL. JENNINGS in "Lost In Society99 THE BLACK SECRET E OPE©Ef THIEAY BVSBY BROS., MANAGERS SUITE DEUjyeilistrf -ay. C.W. BELL 6r EVERY ROOM show PATHE REVIEW w-'A, vr.a V'-IW -.V I S I A N A A N "Funniest I've seen in 900 years, .T^ .T'* v^ '•f WW DM Fl REALTY MEN SEE MANY HOME LESS UNLESS HOUSES ARE BUILT. DEMAND PAR EXCEEDS HOUSES OFFERED TO RENT Heads of Familiea, Unable to Rent, Buying Homaa—Occupants Foroed to Move But Hava No Place to Go —Demand Cauaaa Bidding and In creased Rantala. What are people going to do who will be without homes .March 1? This is the question propounded by a local reul estate dealer In response to the query from a prospective renter who asked where *he could find house. If the Duslness housing situation of this city is bad the prob lems of housing the people is worse. Just liow serious the situation will I be March 1 and later iu the spring only a real csute agent may guesd, in the opinion of the agent Unable to rent residence property and not desiring to build with prlccs of materials at democratic altitudes, many have bought nomes and a goodly number of these are to take possession of their new residences March 1. With the transfer of such properties present tenants will be dispossessed. During the winter many farmers have retired from their farms and have purchased homes in the*clty. With every such purchase a family in the city la obliged to look for a new place to live. How Many Will Ba Homeless? Just how many persons will be without homes is a question which brings disagreement among realty men. One said scores, another said possibly a hundred and a third de clares a thousand persons must be housed withing the next six week3. With the scarcity constantly In creasing rentals have shot higher. As soon as it is known that a house is to be vacated there Is a mad scramble of prospective buyers or renters ready to bid for the privilege of moving in their goods. An owner of a small residence In the e-:ist part of the city, who lost a tenant, rented the place for $25 a month. lJefore night ne was beselg eil by house hunters offering more munpy. He declared the house wa? not worth more than $2." a month and that it had been rented. Still thore were those who persisted thai as he had not signed a lease the house might be re-let at a higher tigure. The original renter, however, got the place. Bought Place Ordered Out. I A landlord o£ a different type was the man who ordered a tenant out. after the latter had bargained to keep the house until April 1. The tenant held the house temporarily, having jjurchased a iiome which Is to be transterred April 1. itut the •andlord had an opportunity to rent the place and insisted that the tenant vacate at once. The tenant is suit occupying the house and insists on staying rie more weeks. Kt-iil i-siaie agents declare there arc no houses to oe had, and as soon us rumor is atloat iat a property is to be vacated housu nunters are on the scene and disposition of the lease is dependent largely on the one wnu I lids t. he highest. Few Vacant Houses Unfit. "There are not a Hail .lozcu empty houses in the city and tl.ose few are unlit for dog kennels."' one agent clcse to the situation said. "L'nless houses are built at once this city is going to lose some gooo citizens. Something must be done to provide living quarters. Marshall town is not keeping pace with other citics either in the matter of business houses or places of residence." A collector for a prominent busl ness firm of the city who visits every section of the city weekly, has care fully canvassed the situutlon, and de clares there are today four vacant houses in the town whlcii are habit able and all of these are In need of repairs. "The situation Is so serious," de- 1 I PRICES 50c, 75c, $1.00, 51,50. and $2.00. SEATS NOW SELLING. clared a business man, "that both the Marshalltown Club and the city council should get on the Job and sock some means of providing homes for our'peoulo. The situation affords mm Tomorrow Night wmm feel like a boy again."—Methuselah "•iwjt&t -,$£+•* •+,**»rn%u .iM«,. yq^. M*. mini aw ^•REPUBLICAN, MARSHALLTOWN, IOWA. the temptation for landlords to profiteer in rantala. There la no question more Important In thla city today and Immediate steps to relieve thla situation ahould be urged." FAVORS BONUS FOR SOLDIERS Former Commander of Leoal Feet Diaaflreeo With Clarkesvllls Patter. The sentiment of at least one member of Frank Lewie Ollck poet, American*.LetIon, which may reflect that of many of hla comrades, la pressed In a letter from Warren Steven*, vlco-oommander and paat commander, to a Dee Moines dally, explaining hla vote eait in a apecial session poll now being conducted by the newspaper Stevena favors bonus for Iowa soldiers. His letter, accom panied a ballot on which thero ire four questions submitted, oa follows: "Do you favor an Immediate spe cial aeaaion of the legislature for the purpoae of hearing the code commis sion report and revistng the code? "Do you faror having the legisla ture at this special seaalon grant a bonus'to Iowa soldiers who served In the world wart "Do you favor having the legisla ture grant primary suffrage to wom en at thla special session? "Do you favor having the legisla ture at this special session pass laws for betterment of schools ana teaching conditions?" "I vote 'yea' on the questions sub mitted for consideration," wrote fltevens. "In the first place they re flect problema that ahould be decid ed at once. One of the commoneat questions put by former service men is about the state bonua. 'T disagree with Re*. Thomas Sherman, of Clarksvllle. when he Bays that a bonus would sap their noblest enthusiasm to hustle for themselves. It has kept many a man huatllng tp meet the obllga tlons which he Incurred during his jibsence in the service. This is a cold fnct —if the former service man did not need a bonus to offset his fi nancial Ions during the war four out of every five men you now meet would not be asking abotit the bonus. Among what kind of men and women do the majority of the objections to a bonus orise? Did they experience a 'oss of time and money equal In many casts to from eighteen months to two years?" QUALITY COUNTS It Is a Trade Builder. We Have Just Employed Another Cleaner and Presser and Bought a New Delivery S Car. Our service Is now the very best. We always employ first class tailors to do expert altering and repairing for la.li'"s and men. We. hjive the 'only cleaning plant In town that em ploys first class tailors in connection, Our work Is guaranteed to be the very highest prude, and our delivery from now on will be prompt. Try our service—phone 302 and our car will. call. The National Tailors and Cleaners Over Strand Theater. W. L. Jones, Prop. SUNDAY SCHOOL-CONFERENCE. Worker* Plan. Tour of County for March 7 to 12. A new idea Is to be carried out by the Marshall County Sunday School Association in a Sunday schoo' workers' conference, to be held In the county beginning March 7 and con tinuing thru March 12. It Is to be a tour of the county, and Instead of holding the conference at on« place session.® nre to be held at different towns in the county each day. The officers of the state association are to attend all the meetings and as mans' as possible of the county offi cers will be present as a school of instruction Is to be held for the lat ter. The places and the dates for the conferences are as follows: Chris tian church, ('lemons, March 7 Pres byterlar church. Marshalltown, March 8: Reformed church. Mel 1 ourne, March 9: Friends church. I-eGrand. March 10-. Congregational church. Gilmnn, March II nrace Re formed church. I/8?o'mb. March 12 Delegates from Sunday schools are expected to attend the conference at the town nearest their church but they can attend all or any of the other meetings.. The entertainment for the visitors is to be provided by workers at the places where the con ference is tto be held. A general prosram ha« been ar ranged and will be carried out on the same plan each day, the only chansre being in the devotional periods, which will be In charge of the pastor at whose church the meetlnff la be ing held. The aeeslons will open at 10 o'clock In the morning with reg istration and a devotional period, to I be followed by an explanation of the object of the tour. Miss Dean, of Newton, and O. G. Herbrecht, of Des Moines, will give addresses In the morning and evening and have charge ff div'.son conferences In tho afternoon. At the afternoon sessions addresses will be given by Rev. Fred erick Cooper, of demons, and Rev. O. W. Llpplncott, of Gilman. the lat ter president of the county associa tion. General Instruction and an announcements will also be a part of each session. MAiRCH JURORS DRAWN. E. E. Benedict, J. W. Munro, 3. W. Whitacre, R. R. R«l, singer. R. P. fcdsall, C. B. Darling, Thomas Stotts, A. Welker, Harold Wfcdward. John H. Corrlck. 0. V. Crlpps, John B. Blue, "Will Wallau». E. H. Rhem, W. B". Beeson. J. P. Dleht, O. W. Darling, Anton Johnson. R. C. Warring, C.A. Landls, D.D. Schemlck^ A G. Burg, C, T, Stewart, 3. B. Var um, Klnsey, ,A. A. Novotny, Ed Oaunt, C. E. Edsall, J. H. Crabtree» Q. Iunde, Emjl Selelhe, M. R. Evert* sen. Joseph Strohmeyer. "W. D. Liv ingston and El. A. Francis. ... Local Weathsr Record. Thirty-five andr IS were the ex tremes of temperature Monday, com 'pared with S3 and 14 Sunday and 38 and 27 a year ago Monday. At 7 this morning the temperature was !2, compared with 13 at the correspond ing hour Monday morning. HUT. PI MEETS HEM MM •TATI BRANCH OP ASSOCIA- TION PICKS MAY 7 FOR CONVENTION. IXPICTKD THAT 100 OR MORE PROBABLY ATTEND Looal Branoh Haa Committee, Head ed l»y Harold M. Cooper, Whloh Will Have Charge of Arrange menta—Marshalltown Club to Pur* nlah Meeting Ptaoe. The Iowa branch of the Travelers' Protective Association will hold Its anuual state convention in this city May 7 and 8. The dates for the meeting have Juat been selected, fol lowing the action of the last con vention that met in Ottumwa in May, 1919. and selected this city as the 1920 meeting place. It is expected that perhaps S00, or even more members of the associa tion will attend. Including perhaps fifty or sixty women delegates. The memberahlp of the association in the state would give the convention an attendance of about S50 delegates If all came. At Ottumwa last year there were about 200, and it Is thought that the attendance here will be larger because of this city's central location and the ease with which It can be reached from all di rections. Directors Meet Hero. Preliminary arrangements for the convention are to be mads when the board of directors of the rttate asso ciation meets here March S and 6. Its members are coming to take up with the local branch and the Mar shalltown Club details regarding the convention. The local branch has already made preliminary plans for entertaining the convention and has formed a convention club of which Harold M. Cooper Is president. Harry E. Win ters is vice president and A. C. Volker is secretary. The Marshalltown Club will fur nish a meeting place and will assist In other ways In entertaining the delegates. The place of meeting has not been chosen and the program will not be prepared until later. The Travelers' Protective Associa tion Is an accident insurance organi zation intended especially for trav eling salesmen. It has headquarters I at St. Louis and state branches tn the various states where It does bus iness. (Jus Kckhart, of Davenport, Is president of the Iowa branch, and H. G. Br.iunlich, of Davenport, is sec retary. There is a state board of seven members and several conven tion committees will be appointed. WANT MERCHANT POLICE. Buainesa Men Seek Aid of City Pro viding Protection. Business men along Main street and others, today sought of the city council aid in solving the question of additional protection at night because of the absence of a merchant police. The merchants have always employed a man independently of the city, but at present have no one. The council Is" willing to furnish an extra night officer providing the merchants will pay the major portion of his salary, but insists that the of ficer be appointed in the regular way, and serve under the direction of the chief of police. The city'a approprl ation for police is not large enough I to provide the officer without aid of the bus ness men, and the latter are now working on a plan to get mer chants to sign up for monthly pay ments to be applied on the salary of a merchant police. If a sufficient number sign the city will make up (the difference In salary and appoint an additional officer for night duty. PARLOR, BEDROOM AND BATH. Coming to the Odeon Th«ater Wed nesday Evening. Abounding with snappy di&logue, original situations nnd a plot of never ending interest, "Parlor, Bed room and Bath," the A. H. Woods' famous farce festival which comes to .Three Drop Corn for Venlra of Thirty-five Selected MunlolpSl Court. Jurors for the March term of the municipal court were drawn Monday. Veniremen will be called for service as Jury cases are called In court. Ths list of Jurors follows! "QetS'lt Steps Pain Immediately and Corns 6o Quick, The way to handle corns Is the tried and proved "Gets-It" way—the way that millions have found quick est, easiest, safest and most reliable. few drops of "Qets-It" knocks ths hurt .out of any corn at ontie atid soon loosens it so tt lifts right off without any feeling. Oh, what com fort! How grand to walk'and dance «Ad jump without a single, twinge! W "dBts-It," the never falling, guar anteed money-back corn remover, costs but a trifle at any drug store. Ufa, by X. Lawrence A Co* Chicago. prmiip :iiT.iiiiiiifrpiiiiS|gi FEBRUARY 24,1920. the Odeon theater Wednesday eve ning, Is said to ba tho most laugh able entertainment of the pant ten years. Fresh from a season of tri umph that lasted five month* In Chicago and seven months in New York, where this attraction haa Juat ended Its engagement at the Hopub- Hawkeyaa lie theater, "Parlor, Bedroom and Boosters Hath" will bo given looal theater- Schmidts goers In Its entirety, with the same production and the usual oast of the Woods' standard. What transpires whsn a young husband ventures into an affair at a wayside Inn to con vlnoe his wife he Is the "rasoal among the ladlea," furnished a rea son for the unfolding of this laugh able tale. Odeon. MAY RETURN TO STAOK. T. Nelson Downe Has Offer to Prom Vaudevilla Agent. T. Nelson Downs, of this city, known thruout the vaudeville world as the "King of Kolns," who retired from the stage a few yeaVa ago after having been a headllner In this coun try as well as thruout Europe, may return to the stage. Because of in creasing popularity of magic the editor of the magical department of The Billboard, a warm friend of Downs has asked that the "wis" Downs, who has interest* here, had expected to keep away from theatricals but the call has proved too strong and he Is seriously con sidering a re-entry Into vaudeville with his coin act. 8hould he finally determine to accept a contract. Downs says he will not consider more than one or two tour*. St. Anthony Items. Peter Mayer and William Stought are sick with the grip. Mrs. W. J. Dunn, who has been sick for several days, waa removed to the Deaconess hospital Saturday. John Jay's little son Lyle was taken to a Marshalltown hospital to he operated on for appendicitis. Charles Wyatt Is sick with the grip. Samuel Meekim, who has been sick is some better. P. Pierce was In Marshalltown Thursday on business. Fred Russell was at Marshalltown Friday on business. Water* Powder Rob Off Matocwr yfchi mm*- able, abMutvIr haran ius. BUT b* wad lot day or analaa aabt-np. MARINELLO Phantom Powder Bgactl**. aiallr wlU, prol aasttftn. full, tt— tat d«ccnona ana aaapl*. MARY E. STROUD, 11 North First Street. Of •A THE BOWLING LEAGUE Standing of the Teams. P. W. ....11 ....» 14 1« II It 11 10 10 Camels SI Dunhams 21 K. C. Cycle* nt,i.*21 Iiqpertals 21 Mooo Quality 24 "V .T«a lI'.f.MS li:' .542 10K .624 .47« U, ,47« 1* .429 22 ,08S 2 The Mooo Quality five forfeited to the Schmidt team Monday night. Bower ,of the Hchmldts, rolled high game, with 190 pins, and also scored 'high average, with 176. The scores of the winning team: Miller 156 149 129 Hchmldt 147 126 186 "Wonder 126 161 196 Bower ..170 Taylor ...» ....,125 124 419 462 627 460 190 162 167 162 744 779 760 2,282 Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Miller and daughter, Marjorls, went to Belle Plalne, Saturday, to visit Mr. Miller's brother, Frank Miller. MY. Miller returned home Sunday, hut Mrs. Mil- stage a "come back." Scarcely had ler and daughter expect to stay there Downs received this communication this week. than he was In receipt of a letter from s^vaudeville agent In New York City asking him to sign a contract for the coming season. STRAND TBI Odaon Thaat MllT HO*., Maai Thursday, Feb. 26^ Cohan and Hsrrls proeent GEO. M. COHAN'S Newest and Meat Cehaneeqwe A story of love and the secret service with a soldier of for tune playing a winning game. —ALSO— "The Invisable Hand Great Detective Serial BRIGGS COMEDY School Children's Matinee, Wednesday, 10 cents REMOVAL SALE! Wednesday, Feb. 25 On all accessories. Sale starts Wednes day, Feb. 25th closes Saturday night, Feb. 28th. Having leased our room at the corner of State and Center streets to the Army and Navy Store, will sell all of our accessories consisting Tires, Tubes, Spark Plugs, Spot Lightsf 'Motometers, Chains, Etc. while they last at just what they cost Come early, as wp haVe not much left, but you can save money on everything you buy during is a 7 Saturday will be your last chance to buy at ^these low prices. v,| it OLDS MOTOR COMPANY Rear of the Armb and Navy Store, corner of State and Center streets. Our heW^y^if'lo^ ^i'at thl^Ketchtifef & Co., buijding, corner of Third avenue and Church street formerly the Buggy Company buildings—^ 'W Comedy "A Prince There Was* Prom Dsrrsti Aldrloh's Story ENCHANTED HKARTS with JAMES QLIASON And a New York Cast rtd Produotion Prloee—flOo, |1, $1.60 and 92. Seats on sale Wsdneaday 10 a. m. Mail orders now a« oepted. READ THE T.-R. WANT ADS. A smashing tale of the sea and of far-flung ports of adven tvjre. A tale of love, rogues and of brave hearts. —Also—* MACK SENNET COMEDY HOLMES TRAVEL I THE STAR BOARDER PICTURE Wednesday Thursday LAST TIME TONIGHT -M 19 'i 4 PBSaPSP