Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 158, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 July 1913 — HANGING GROVE. [ARTICLE]

HANGING GROVE.

Miss Merle Mooney, of Anderson, a teacher in* the public schools here last winter, came Saturday evening for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. R. C. McDonald and Incidentally will call on other friends. Mrs. J. R. Phillips and Mrs. Chas. Ferguson were shopping in Rensselaer Wednesday. They went on the milk train and returned on the new train that arrives in MeCoysburg at H:O9. This will be a big improvement over our former train service. The new train does not as yet carry mail, only express and baggage. Morris Jacks, Bob Cook and Merle Mooney spent Wednesday evening with Miss Ethel Parker. Mr. and Mrs. Wash Lowman and two youngest children spent a few days with his brother, Alfred, and family in Barkley this week. George Parker began putting up his clover Wednesday, Chas. Bussell did some cement work for C. C. Randle Monday and Tuesday. J. M. Ray was in Rensselaer Wednesday. Mrs. R. C. McDonald and Mias Merle Mooney took dinner .with Wash Cook and family Tuesday. Sam Cook, the local agent for the Krit automobile, and Cly<je Fulk, went to Indianapolis Sunday evening and drove back a new car for the latter. They covered the entire distance of 112 miles in fine shape. Ben Molitor, of Payne, Ohio, is here visiting his sister, Mrs. Otis Culp. Ben njured his hand soon after they moved to Ohio last spring,, which resulted in blood paisoning. He was taken to the hospital in Fort Wayne, where he received treatment for several weeks but the poison had gotten all through his system so thoroughly that it was a close call for his life. He is unable to do anything except visit. The rest of Mr. Molitor’s family are well and enjoying their Ohio home very well.