Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 192, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 August 1913 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Phone 273 for feed and coal. Thos. Lamson is quite sick with bladder and kidney trouble. Buy Thrashing Coal at Barring ton Bros, elevator. Phone 7. Mrs. Earl Duvall, baby son and daughter Helen are spending today in Chicago. A good church supper for 25 cents Friday, beginning at 5 o’clock at the parochial school. Attend the social on the lawn at St. Augustine’s church Friday evening. Music by the Foresters’ band. Misses Grace and Marguerite Norris went to Wheatfield today to spend a week visiting Mr. Tom Jensen. s - Miss Lillie Summers went to Surrey today to spend Several days visiting her siter, Mrs. John Murphy. Eat dinner Friday evening with the. ladies of St. Augustine’s church at the parochial school. Supper starts at 5 o’clock. > Sylvester Hatton is again quite sick, this time with dysentery. He has had several severe spells during the past few months. The Foresters’ band will play for the lawn social at St. Augustine’s Catholic church ’ Friday evening. Ice cream and cake will be served. J. L. Babcock and daughter, Miss Edna, were in Chicago Tuesday, returning to Rensselaer that night and going to their home at Parr this morning.

Mrs. Henry Amsler will leave tomorrow for Newark, New Jersey, tor a visit of two or three weeks with her daughter, Mrs. J. C Oarbalho, who will probably accompany hjr home for a visit with relatives. The ladies of the parish will serve a good 25 cent supper Friday evening at 5 o’clock at the parochial school and that evening will serve ice cream and cake on the lawn. Everybody invited. Mrs. Harrison Timmons and little daughter, Doris, started this morning for a visit of •’everal days at Francesville and Medaryville. Mr. Timmons will join them at the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. F. Spain art entertaining her two sisters, Misses Jessie and Criswell, of Monticello, and her two brothers, Ira and Henry, were also here over Sunday. Mrs. W. I. Hoover and little daughter Irene will leave tomorrow for a two weeks’ visit at Detroit, Mich., and Cleveland, Ohio. She has an aunt at the former city and a sister in Cleveland. Miss Mildred Biggs went to Chicago yesterday and was there .joined by her sister, Miss Nell, and together they left today for Bevier, Mo., to spend about two weeks at a house party given by a girl friend. Mrs. Granville Moody and grandson, Clifford Dunn, left this morning for Wichita, Kans., where Clifford’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.. Geo. N. Dunn, live. Clifford has been with his grandparents here for several months. Flem. Faris, formerly of Gillam township but for some years a resident of Caldwell, Idaho, and who has been visiting relatives in Rensselaer and throughout the county for some time, left this morning for Kansas City, Kans., and after a short visit there will go to Denver, Colo., and thence to CaldWell. His sister, Mrs. Malinda Sprague, of Medaryville, accompanied him to Chicago. Frank Fix returned this morning from a visit at Battle Ground. He reports that the attendance at the camp meeting at Battle Ground last Sunday was not as large as usual. The admission had been raised this year to 25 cents and was not proving popular. The crops in and about Battle Ground and Lafayette have been greatly damaged by the drouth and Frank is of the opinion that this also cut down the attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Gray returned last week from Bluffton, where he had been for three weeks and she for two. He has a farm there which he was looking after. They also spent several days with relatives at Kimmel, Ind., north of Ft. Wayne. On Sunday they went to Goodland to get Mrs. Gray’s father, George Mustard, Sr., who remained with his son there during their absence. Mr. Mustard was 83 years of age last Saturday and has recently suffered a serious breakdown and his condition is now quite critical. Harry Green says that he played EH, in “EH and Jane,” so long that it was making him snappy and grouchy as could be, and making him into an old man, and every time he would go on to play his part he felt like ho was about 108 years old. In “The Town Fool,” which ho plays hero soon, Mr. Green plays the part of a Young Man from Tennessee, who is "Tho Town Fool,” and it is really like walking into a now life. Special scenery for each act. Opera Rouse, Thursday evening.