Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 195, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 August 1911 — REMINGTON. [ARTICLE]

REMINGTON.

Mrs. Ford is quite sick. Fred Hicks was in Chicago several days last week. Mr. Hargreaves attended the airship meet in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Grant were 1.0-gansport gansport visitors Sunday. Mrs. Fitzgerald is in a sanitarium in for treatment. Mr. Mitchell, of Jnsonvllle, is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ashley. Nellie and Beatrice York are visiting their sister, Mrs. Elmer Holland. Miss Edith Hargreaves, of Chebanse, 111., Is a guest of her brother George and family. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Johnston reached home Friday from a visit of a week in Kokomo. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Spencer and daughter Dorothy went to Chicago Sunday morning. Dr. and Mrs. Ed Martin, of Watseka, 111., were Sunday cullers at the Frank Howard home. Virgil Clarke called Friday evening on his has been is Rensselaer recently. Mrs. Johnston, of Decatur, 111., will be a guest of her father-in-law, C. B. Johnston, during the Assembly. Mrs. Mary Dickstra left Tuesday to make her home in Chicago, stopping in Kentland for a few days’ visit with Mends. John Ott and family, Wm. Ott and family. Miss Wilda Green and Walter Johnson attended Mrs. Waymire’s funeral at Rensselaer Sunday. Miss Callie Bonner was a Rensselaer caller Monday. Miss Orpha Tim mons, who has been visiting there a few days, returned with Miss Brown. Fountain Park Assembly has had a very satisfactory opening in every respect The cottages are air occupied and eight or ten more could have been used. More tents are pitched there than ever before. The largest attendance ever on Sunday school day and first Sunday, one of the best in the history of the Park. The programs are excellent and Platform Manager Calhoun presents the talent with pleasing promptness. Among the cottagers are the Monticello families who have attended for years—the Heiny and Hannaway families; the Constable, W. W\ Washburn and Murray families, of Goodland. From Kentland are the A. W. Kenoyers, Mr. John Ade, and Mr. Martin faihilies. Many familiar faces and a great many first-tlpies constitute a happy village for the next two weeks. The hotel under the management of Mr. P. R. Hopkins and his mother is well patronized, every room occupied. The restaurants handle large crowds satisfactorily.

A well known Des Moines woman, after suffering miserably for two days from bowel complaint, was cured by one dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. For sals bj ail dealers. o